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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-05 - Orange Coast Pilot.. ., ' . ~ -~ .. Slaying Draws Curious 8·~<· ·. . . . ,.,..,_ ,... ' - • cl ' DAILY "1LOT PIMlto lW klllll Nltftltl•ld CROWO OF CURIOUS PRESS AGAINST POST OFFICE GLASS FOR BETTER VIEW Of:· WESTMINSTER MURDER SCENE The Body Was Reh-.oved the Crowd Prnsed forw1rd, Thin Post1I Officials Covered Windows With Cardboard , . - Juror Distr ~ht Randanq Bribery : Mistrial Called By TOM BARLEY 01 flit OlllJ PJloLSt1lf A distraught but determined woman juror gave convicted liquor hi jacker Gene Randano the kind of break late Thursday night that has never been given before in Orange C-Ounty Superior C-Ourl history. 1'1rs. Judith Arbon of Fullerton emerg- ed from hours of \\'rangfing in the jury room to tell Judge Claude O\vens !hat she could not go Along with th£' guilty \·erdict she had signed fi\'e hours before with the rest of the jury. - Her fel101v jurors. many of them angry and a!I of them tired and strained. freely admitted that a no-holds-barred session in the jury room had failed to eradicate the doubts that T\.lrs. Arbon first ex- pressed Thursday afternoon \vhen _the Randano jury reached a decision. The attractive blonde 's tears as the jury was being polled gave defense at· torney Lawrence McBride the kind of op- portunity that comes just once in a lifetime in criminal lriaJs. He took it by insisting that Mrs. Arbon go with him. Judge Owens and prosecutor Joe Hcneghan to the privacy of the judge's chambers. · The four did so and the result was that JUdge Owens sent the jury back to the jury room rnr t!fe decision at 9 p.m. that. led him to tear up the earlier verdict of the jury and declare a mistrial. Judge Owens, making no secret of his anger anrl disgust, refused to let :P.1rs. Arbon address him before the jury was discharged. He had earlier refused to Oraage Coast l\'eather You won't see too much sun th is weekend, especially in the pre- noon hours when fog and low --ciou-dS pr~. Top-iemperaturet will be 65 along the coast and 75 further Inland. ' • INSIDE TODA\' LOtte Lcnya will soon appear as Molh~r Courage at UC I and the l.\1eekender lios o story and pictures about her on Page 25, today, ' ...... INl!ftl " MutUlt "UIMh 11 Cltlftr~ll " Mllltllll llllWt ••• Cl'ltt•lll~ U1 ' °"'"" C-f'f " Cl1nlfiell ... llf1ll 1ITT1ntt ,,.,. Clt!lkt • ·-· ,.,. (l"IH_, u lltck M1,.tts 14•11 O.lril N1tk l\ " TtltvhlM ~ """'" " T""ltf"I ... ••ti.t111 ..... • •u-• PllltMt '"" W-'' N1wt 1J·H Wtrttt;eH " Wttl4 ··~ ••• Ann LlnCltn " Wffk11H11r ... -" . ..... ' > allow the Fullerton woman to discuss the Issues upsetting ,her in private. Judge William C. Speirs today set a new trial for Randano on .J:an. 10. Heneghan left no one in any doubt after the mistrial ruling that he intends tO put the 4s Vegas man back in t.he courtroom. Thursday v.'as undoubtedly Randano's day. He SUT\'ived a jury's guilty verdict that could have put him in state prison for at least 10 years on bribery and conspiracy charges and he earlier survived a liquor hijacking sentencing that could bave pro- duced an identical term. The panel hied back Thursday af· lernoon after nearly eight hours or deliberation to tell Judge Claude Owens that lt found Randano, 46, guilty of brib- ing a C-Osta Mesa policeman and con· spiracy relating to that charg:e. But Mrs. Arbon wept while the jury was being polled and McBride im· mediately demanded that Judp:c Owens ask the distr&ught juror if she did indeed feel his client was guilt y. T\.frs. Arbon, holding a handkerchief to her face , whispered "ye~" t1.nd Judge Owens seemed to be satisfied with a ,.·erclict .that could have put Randano in state prison for at least the next 10 years. But r-.1cBrlde took Hencghan with him lo the bench and the rival lawyers -and Judge Owens engaged in whispered but lively conversation that was obviously centered on the still weeping ~frs. Arbon. Finally Judge Owens took both lawyers . and Mrs. Arbon with him to his chambers for a discussion that ended with the jury being sent back to the jury room for further deliberation on the bribery. and conspiracy conviction. The panel hA!i: rul- ed not guilt y on charges that Randano was in possession of dangerous drugs on April 3, 1970. McBride did not let the matler rest there and he incurred Judge Owens' wrath for his persistence in the issue. He a!iked Judge Owens to declare A mistrial on the basis of Mrs. Arbon 's ep. parent reluctance-and ht brought-the- 11ngry judge half off the bench with the (See R.ANOANO, Page Z) NIXON LEA YES FOR FLORIDA WASRJNGTON (AP) -President Nix· on left today for his first weekend in Florida since early October. Nixon Is erpecled to stay at his Key Biscayne vacation home until fl.tonday, returning to \Vashington then. He will be off on another trip Tuesday to appear at Republican fund-raising dinners in New' York City and Chicago. Tuesday night with an overnight stay in Chicago . HELD IN SHOOTING Po,tal Clerk Alleman Hail of Bullets Ends in I Death At Post Office By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tllt Oillt Plkll 5110 The day started with a disciplinary hearing, was interrupted b9' a haircut and ended at 10:45 a.m. in death for PauJ Burtner, postmaster of Westminster. A meeting about Christmas mail presided over by Burtner was shattered by a ha.ii of bullets. When it was over Burtner lay dead -shot to death in the post office he had served for 24 years. Police are holding Phillip B. Alleman. a postal clerk for two years, on suspicion of Burtner's murder and the wounding of Ernest Gaulden, 46. superintendent of mails. Gaulden is clinging to life today at Westminster Community hospital. He is in guarded condition after undergoing four hours of surgery for a slomacb wound. Alleman, 24. of 2&11 N. Bristol SL, Santa Ana , was ttt-be-formally charged loday with' murder and assault with in· tent to commit murder. Lt. Don Savicrs, commander of the \Vestmin ster detective div Is ion . reconstructed the events police believe led In Burtner's dealb. l\l!eman, a. night clerk-, hag received o. written reprimand for t 11 r d i n e s s . Dissatisfied with the action, ht had re- quested a meeting with Burtner and the postal clerk's union representative. "He apparently became quite ang?y at that meeting," savicrs alleged, "and walked out in the middle of it.'' Pot'ice believe Alleman went to his parents: home In Santa Ana where he sot his father's .45-callber automatic pistol . He returned to the post oftice about 4S minutes later' and wallted in through a (See ~WRDER, Pago I) • AEC Chief Takes Ki.ds To Island AMCH!TKA ISLAND. Alaska (AP) - The head of the Atomic Energy Com· m1ss1on watched preparations f o r Saturday's scheduled u n d e r g r o u n d nuclear blast and declared, i'There is no risk." With his wife and two of his daughters at hls side, AEC Chairman James R. 'Schlesinger late Thursday peered inlo· 'the 6.000-!oot~eep hole where the fiv!- megaton device will be detonated. They plan to remain on this barren, windswept Aleutian island until after the test. "It's fun for !he kids, and my wife is delighted to gel away from the house for a while," Schlesinger said. , . The Schles1ngers watched as workmen were dumping 5,600 tons of sand and gravel into the shaft. sealing the nuclear device in a chamber where it is schedul- ed to be fired at 5 p.m . EST Saturday. Many environmentalists have ex- pressed fears that the blast could touch off n series of earthquakes or send a ti~al "·ave rolling across the Pacific Ocean. The AEC maintains such possibilities are remote. Officials of the test -code-oamed Ca11· nikin -sai d everything was on schedule for what will be the most powerfuJ un- derground nuclear explosion ever con- ducted by the United States. * * * Educator Cites Possihle~eril From Amcbitka ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Dr. Kurl H. Hohenemser, .,,roressor of aerospace engineering at Washington University, said Thursday the nuclear blast schedul- ed for Saturday on Amchitka Islaad presen13' "a small possibility of a major catastrophe." (Related story, Page 10). "'f.here is a great probability t.nai nothing will happen, but there Is A small possibility that tremendous disaster will occur," he said. ltr:lienemser told a news conference the blast will be "in an area o( earthquake activity, and an earthquake ma)' belrig- gered, although not caused, by the blast. · An earthquake that would be triggered by the blast is one that might have occurred at a later time.'' He said such an earthquake could be large enough ."to damage both the Asian and American coasts." "This blast will be five times as large as any in the paM," he said. "Nobody knows what a five-megaton blast will do." "We must balance the benefit of what the blast Is suppo&ed to l"CtOmplish with the risks involved." DAILY PILOT * * * 10 ' * * * FRIDAY. AFTERNOON, NOVE~BER S, J97r, ' "OL.14, NO. iii. 4 llCTICNI,. 11 , .... ,. Postntaster Dies Hail of Sho·ts Ends7i~ Death At Post Office JI • \Ji<.b BlasM)pinions . Now Being Taken By White House By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 !flt 0.llJ P'!lol $1111 • Bomb Foes Seek Help From Nixon WASHINGTON (UPI) -Awaitlng a final legal decision from the Supreme O>urt. scientists, senators. Conservit.· t!Qnists and pa~ifists appealed. direclly to President Nixon today to postpone the mighty Amchilka [:;land nuclear test as a potentially deadly mistake. Barring a last-minute stay from the court or the President, a red button will be pressed at 2 p.m. PST Saturday in a bunker on the northern end of the desolate island in the Al eutian chain. l.~ miles southwest of the Alaskan coast, triggering a five·megaton warhead buried nearly 6,000 feet underground. All hope of a legal delay rested in l.M hands of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who received late Thursday the appeal of eigh t organizations charging that the If you have ever had a nagging desire Atomic Energy C-Ommission had not fully to phone the White House and get considered the environmental risks of the something off your chest, now is the tlme test as required by law. to do it. Burger was expected to turn the ca&& As the nucfear lesl explosion on over to the full court for a ruling, most Amchitka Island loom s ntarer, the White likely following their regular Friday con· House has placed at least one special ference, on the merils of a stay pending assisl.i1nt on duty by a telephone to handle appeal of a federal appeals court decisioo incoming personal opinions on !he b!asL against blocking the test. The DAILY PILOT was alerted to the The White House, standing by Nixon's opiniop line by local radio station broad~ decision to proceed with the blast "for c'ast.s 4't the phone number (202-456-1414) overrJdlng reasons of national security," and a subsequent request to ~ress an channelled all calls to the AEC, which opinion on the tesL . reported it had received 6,700 letters, A check by the DAILY PILOT proved telegrams and telephone calls of protest the number to be that of the While House as of Thursday. It said each would b& switchboard. ln a businesslike manner, answered individually. our call was transferred to the special· The White House refused again todat assistant who, in a very low key manner, to estimate how many protest.1 it had .. received. asked simply "Are you for or against? The AEC has· c:onsistenUy discounted The assistant, by the tone of his gueslion, seemed · i0· expect '· conCise one-word the environmentalists' wamings that the responses. Reasons for opinions were ethaustively planned and monltored courteously but abruptly cut off. underground test, c&ie-named Cannikin and four limes bigger than any the \Vhen asked by the ~AIL Y PILOT _if. he United States has ever conducted, might was the only one ta~1ng call~ of opinion !ct off major earthquakes or tidal waves on the blast. the assistant said that any and harm marine and wildlife by leaking inf~rmalion wo~Jd h~ve to come from the _ , radiation. office of. Pres1dent1al PreSi Secretary The Sierra Club said eight leading Ronald Ziegler· . scientists, including three NObel prize Ziegler's aides said they had no winners, suggested "there -ls a real knowledge of a concerted effort to make possibility that the Presid•t made • the White House number known to the mistake in his decision" and urged him to public and that the publicity was pro-postpone the test until all scle.nUfic data bably undertaken by individual radio ata-could be made public. lions. ,. Among tho scientists were Nobel wio- A spokesman for Ziegler also said he ners Llnus Pauling of Stanford Urtiversl· had not been informed that the White ty, Harold Urey o{ the University of House was accepting these calls and that California and George Wald of Harvard someone must have been given the duty University. without his knowledge. The Sierra Club and seven olhe.r groups The spokesman did not know bow large leading the legal battl~ to block the ~st. a slaff was handling the calls but be said headed .b~ the Commtttee. ~r Nucl~ he suspected it was probably leS5 than Respons1bll!ty, ~k out full page ~ U1 five people. / the New york Times and tbe Waabington At any rate. he said, It appears 115 if Fofit asking Nlxon,,!n an OJ>:'n letter to the White House will accept one word ~clay !!18 blast tn I.be mteruta o( . . the ID le test fro JUSllce. op~nions ~~ A m m any Thlrty-four 11enators signed a telearatA private citizen. . • to Nixon from Sen. Edward W. Broo'k1 ~or the more budget consc10JJs, a 3-(R-fl.fass.), urging cancell1Uon because minute call costs only 35 ctnts between 11 "to proceed with the test ls to endlllgef' p.m. and 8 a.m. national security and world peace, not to Barring judicial or prealdet1tial orders furthur Jt." They chirged there was 1 hailing lhe test, ll should go oil Saturday "•mill lhough palpable risk of earlll- about 2 p.m. our time. • (See AMCHITKA, Pase I) • • . , 11 D,lll.Y PllGt Friday, Noiitmbtr 5t 19i.l Freeway Ban A·ttacl{ed Lagunan Calls Suggestion Irresponsible , . Tht 1Ufte!tion th&t the Pacific Coast Freeway route should bt eliminated en· tirely rrom the at.ale's freeway plan is "irresponsible. ill-conalved and olr- ''1ously arrived 11t through 1tmotfon rather than f1ct." 1ccording to Lagunan Victor. C. Andrews. who played a leadu1g role I~ the eight·year fight to persuade the St.ate Higb..-.·ay Commission to mo\ e the rout I' Ulland irom the coast. Andrev.•s expresses his ,·1ev.·s on !he la~t free.,..•ay discussions in a ltUer c.d· dressed lo r-.ta}or Richard Goldberg in which he concludes that corutnicllon of the freev.•ay \\'ill be the ·only solution 10 South County traffic problems. The people opposing the Creey,·a). Eays Andrev.·s. are ignoring the fact thal, in unanlmously approving the adopted rou te, Laguna literally ga,·e notice lo tht? state. tlie county and private landholders that they could proceed lo p!an. des ign and develop property surrounding tht Cl• ty on the basis of this route The c{lunt~ ·s master plan of artfrial roads \1a:> f1nal1i· ed and construction has proceeded. he noted. ''All of this has been done in good tailh," Andrews writes, "and it would be highly irresponsible if \\"e attempted 10 From Pagel RANDANO ... snapped comment: .. You've said enough, Mr. ~1cBride." P.lcBride then reminded lhe judge that r.trs. Arbon had asked the Judge if ~he could discuss her problem \\'ith the 3udge •·in private." J\idge Owens reminded :itcBride that he had denied 1he request. ··1 think v;e sbould hea r ~·hat she has to 1ay," McBride complained. ''I ask ' permission for ~trs. Arlxln oo be allov;ed 15uch a dlscussion." "Request denied," sll!pped Judge Owens. Tbe jury filed back to the jury room. The rejected vtrdict ~aQle hard on the heels of pleas by Randano that at least tempo rarily halted his sentencing on tbe liquor hijacking offense that spawned the bribery allegations. t\lcBride !Did Judge James Turner that his cl~nt has sufter"ed a series of heart attacks and his argumeJ1t at leost put off v.'hat could have been a long slate prison term for Rand8no's illicit switch of 300 cases of 1uqwr from the· former Sad· dleback Inn, Lagnn11 Beach, to Feli· ciano'1 Reltaurant in Ne"•port Beach. Judge Turner. called on 1o sentence Randano while the bn"bery lf-ial jury was still deilbefatlng in Judge Claude Owens• courtroom, Rt Nov. 11 for toUrt approval · of th e cardjologist that Henegban and McBri~e ha ye to select. : He will study the physician's reports and sentence Randano Dec. 2. "This sort of offense merits the stale penitentiary," Judge Turner commtnted. "But I don't want to make any kind of commitment that would endanger the defendant's life." McBride pleaded for a su!pended .sent.enct for his. client v.ith the argument that Randano hat suffered "one serious ail ment alter anotlier" during the period in which the former Feliciano's partner was successfully prosecuted for liquor hi· jacking, was indicled by the Otange County Grand Jury for bribing a policeman aniS was convicted in a 1t1on· tana federal court for mail fraud . He described the theft of liquor as being from "sophisticated corporations who ran a much greater risk than other businesses" and asked Judge Turner to bear in mind that Randano had "not rob- bed a little old 1Ady or held up a market." Prosecutor Heneghan blasted Rand ano as the pe~petrator of •·an arrogant. premedltal:2d fraud who knew that his corporation (Feliciano's Restaurant l t\'as 11oing under and who u·a!l even then 011 probatio11 for mail fraud." OllANCil CO.t.fT DAllY PILOT ....,.., 1MU1 Haiti..,.. ... II ...... IMc.ll fMefwllll 'V'4ky c.... ..... s .. c. ....... ~· COAST l'Vll..1SMIN4 tcM,AHY l f l ot•rt N. w,,4 PrRINnt tl'llll l'l*!Wllr l J••k l . Curl.,. ~ P'fliN""' ...... 6-r.. #Mt/lffl Tk•lll•• kee-1'11 .. ,,.. 1111t111•1 A. Jih1rp~;., M~ir. l!OllOI" c:li•"-" H. t... aich1rd r, Nall ' "-illtlftl ~ E•1Mn om~ •• c.19 ""-M! lll WRI llt'f' $1""'1 ........,.... a.en: »ii "'"""°"' •ow·-,. ~ '"'°': m ForR• "~'"""" "4\ll'lthlf*! ... C~I 1Jl1j l•cll leu...,•f'1f $011 "9nWl!t: .aDI Hw111 l.I Ct"'IM AMI t \iminate the Paclfle Coast Fretv.·ay now. Tht millions of dollars of planning and eo.nstruction that already have been spent v.·ill hare gone. for naught and chaos \\"ot1!d result. All this. because some misinformed people believe the growth rate has. slackened to the point that the need Jor an addLILonal major transit facllltv is no longer needed. Thi!! truly 1nust be the esst>nce of unreality.'' Although the gro"•th rate has slacken· ed. he continued. responsible projections still SlJggst that the area affected "'ill have more· than 600.000 residents by 1990. Even though Laguna Beach itself main- tains a loll.· density, surrounding areas such as South Laguna, Laguna Niguel, San Juan Capistraoo. Dana Point and all of the Irvine Company land will continue to develop. he states. and askll. ·''In the abs ence of a free"·ay. how \\'OUld you move this large number of people in 11nd 0111 of this highly developed area'?" ThP Laguna leader goes on to comment on alternative!> \\'hich anti·freeway pro· ponents have discussed with him. \\'Iden· uig the San Diego freewa y. he stales. \\"OUld be more eicpensive than creating a new free\\"3V, because of the cost. of purchasing .idjacent property, and would not solve the basic problem af ingr~i and egress ln yet undeveloptd areas. To the suggestion that 10-mile, rather than quarter-mile ;irteriala could serve the coast, Andrews notes that the 1state does not provide funds for extensive off. ramps and connecting arterial access roads and Laguna 's Jimited lxlnding capacity would make it impossible to participate in funding this type of arterial access. A suggestion that a mass transit system be evolved to take the place of the freewa y .seems impractical at this lime, he adds. •·J wish it "·ere possible to tum back the clock 20 years, thus"some chance for success for alternate solutions might have been possible, but at this point it is my candid and honest opinion that the die is cast and all efforts should be mr.-de to construct the Pacific Coast Freeway in iL'I present locatio n as quickly as possi· ble.'' Andrews concludes. "\Ye fought long and hard to prevent Lag~a Beach.tfrom being !>isected. A bypass freeway, one mile I " I a n d is presently assured. I would hope that emotion would not prevail over reason.'' El Toro N oi.se Concern '---Voiced by Airport Panel Serious concerns o\·er the elfttl of El Toro jet aircraft noise on future homeovmers near the ~larille fac1ht y and fast grovling traffic near Orange County Airport were expressed by County Airport Land Use commissioneri; Thurs- day night. They heard a 1tarUing partial sol ution to the airport traffic dilemma -a $6 million tunnel under the runways. Commission m~mbers debated for three hours before deciding to ad vise tbe Board of Suptrvisori that a jet p\a"ne noise monitoring program must be ac· complished before intelligent ans"'ers can be given on proposed land use sur· rounding the El Toro station. Currently a jet noise monitoring pro- gram is being carried out in the vicinity of Orange County Airport. Flotilla Ready To ,Clean Up Back Bay Waters- The Back Bay never had it so good. For lhe second week in a row, me mbers of the Newport Beach com· munity ate planning a clean·up of the · scenic estuary. Beginning Sunday at 11 a.m .. a citizens• flotilla of small craft will encircle: the water\\'ay to pick up debris on the beaches and islands. "Any person vdth a boat tbat can be easily beached is .. ·elcome to be lp, '' says clean-up organizer 1'.trs. Joan Co\'erdale. She said !he Orange County Harbor Qepartment's new noating garbage truck. "The Scooper," \I. ill pro\'ide escort. and litter bags. Participants are liable to find they "\I ha\·e to conce"ntrate more on the islands and v.·est bank than along Back Bay Drive, howe\•er. For last \l.'eekend. the Corona de! ~1ar lllgh School Key Club and its sponsoring organiza tion. the Corona de! ?o.-lar Ki"·anis Club. spent nearly four hours walking the east side from one end of Back Bay Drive 00 !he other. "\Ve .picked up everything (rom truck axles to tin cans." noted Key Club presi· dent Scott Hornbeak. Rizzo Selects Rizzo PHTLADELPffiA (AP) -?o.iayor-e\ect Frank L. Rizio has announced his first cabinet appointment . He ha s named his ~ounger brother, Joseph L. Riw>, as [ire commissioner. '·There has been a tendency to listen to ~larine Corps representatives and act ac· cording lo lheir recommendation!> on jet no!!e problems." ·said commission vice chairman Donald Killian of Newport Beach. "In my opinion stale noise at an· dards are mucb stricter than those or the ?\-tarines and should be follow ed." But, he add ed. nothing can really be done until ~ good sound monitoring pro- gram ls instituted around the air atation. Commissioners beard a gloomy report on traffic conditions both present and future around Orange County Airport voiced by county road department en~ineer Robert Voien. Voien said that e\'en if development Is carried out under the present industrial zoning on lands around the facility the roadways \\'ill soon be overloaded. The engineer said a full cloverleaf is needed at-the intersection of the San Diego Freeway and Mac Ar thur. Boulevard and. U-constructed wUI require at least three acres of airport land, Voien also · said campus Drive and 1t1acA'rthur would both have lo be widen· ed shortly and that eventually as dt'ttlop- ment increases around the airport the on- ly solution might be a $6 million tunnel under the runway extending westward from Campus to Baker Street. . Martlia Mitchell Tells Woman: 'Fly the Flag' SPOKANE. Wash. (UPI) -It took a telephone call from Martha Mitchell to get Dorothy Gardella to resume flying htr American flag . ··1 "'as disgusted with the ou~ter or 'faiv.'an from the United Nations," 1'.trs. Gardella explained Thursday. "So I sent a telegram to ?o.-lrs. ?o.titchell saying I "'ould no longer fly the American flag from my frOJ1t porch." A few days later. she was startled by a call from the t.rife of Attorney General John N. Mitchell. "The first thing Mrs. 1\-lilchell said when I came on the phone was : ·Yon v.'ave that fla,11: and keep on waving it.' '' ·Then Mrs. ~litchell said. 4'You trll all the people out ilier~ not to stop flying the nag just because of this," according to lt1rs. Gardella. 1'.frs. Gardella said she was so sur. prised at the call that she didn't know v.·hat to say, and she told !o.trs. ~Iitchel\ so . "'She told me to 'just keep talking and I'll ansv.'er you.''' ~!rs. Gardella said. "So that's just what I did." Jobs Pi~k Up . Unemployment Rate Drops to 5.8% WASHINGTON (UP I) t:nemp!oyment dropped to 5.8 percent in ()ctober "·hile the total number of Amtricans holding jobs reached • record high. lhe go,·ernment repqrted today. I! \\3! the second straight monthlv decline in the ~bless rate. follov.•in& im· position by President Ni:1on of the "'8.J:e· price frme on Aug. 15. Joblessness hfJ hovered between 5.6 percent and 6.2 per· cent of the v.·ork force for lhe past year. lt stood at 6.0 in Septembtr ind 6.1 per· cent in August. The Labor Dcpartmtnl's Bureau of l.abor Statistic~. \\'hid! reporttd the figures, said the total numbe.r of job ho{der5 rose: 320.000 In October, •rter u8sonal adJUSlmtnt, to 111n all time high of 79.8 mi!Uon. renected la ter at the consumer le~·eJ. Today's report said t6 mi 11 i on Americans "·ere out of 1\·ork in October. 270.000 fewer than Seplembe.r Tilt: dttline "'as grealer than usual for this time of year. the BLS said. and re:sulled larg ely from a reduction in the 1umber of men v.·ho lost their jobs. r\ontarm payrolls remained virtually unchanged in October. ind employmenl gi..lns in several industtie!I were offset by more men on strikt. particularly coal 1nlnus and longshoremen. Tht job report was good ntws for the \\"bite Haist afltr bad ne~·1 came from Capitol Hill Thursday in the fonn of a \'Ott by 1 key rongrtsslon&J c&nmltt~ lo force the Pay &a.rd to approve relroac· t1,·e \1·a~e increa~es that "ere delaytd by lhe ·current freeze . ., The P1y Board 11;.a Jnother meeting to- day, amid uncertainty O\ er how II~ ac· l ion~ might be rcslricled by tht. House Banking Commitlee'J aclion. which the \\1hite House condemned as possibly st"riously Jtoparditing the economic goals • • SHOT TO DEATH Po.stm11t•r Burtner From Pagel MURDER ~ .. back door and hallway w h j c h led I<> Burtner's office. At that moment Buiner, Gaulden, William Brown, assistant post mast.er; Orville Hopki11s, assistant superintendent of mails and Alfred ?o.-faislo, a foreman , were discussing holiday mail procedures. Saviers said the four men were seated in a semi-circle fa cing Burtner with their backs 'to the door. Police allege Alleman bursl through the door. aimed the gun at Burtner, said "OK . :you '\'e. had it.'" and pulled the trig· ~f'J'. "The ,::un 1nisfire<I." S<n·irrs asserted , ··but abQut that Point l'\'e.ryont ·realized what y,,•as happening and everything •started moving ., Accord ing lo polfce reports, Bro\l.'n ran out of the office and Hopkins and 1\l~isto scrambled behind a de sk. Gaulden apparent!\' was shot in the stomach when he tried lo take the gun 11way rrom All eman. polkc said. Burtner was shot once in the chest, but ·managed to run out or the oHice into the portion or the post office used by the public. 'T'here, policP said. he collapsed. Allrman allegedly \1•alked over the pro- strate Burtner, knell or leaned over and lired a second shot into the ba se of the postmaster's skull: ~teanwhile Brown had ron intn the parking lot where two \Vestminster patrobnen had parked lo eichange paperworlc and Information on another case. The two P:R-trolmen. Jae~ Hintz and TUn f.1Uler, said when they entered the post office, Alleman laid the gun on the noor and surrendered to them without of· rering any resistance. None ·or the customers or other em ployes in the post office at the time of the shooting was injured. Fisher said most scattered \vhen the shooting started . One bullet went through one of the v,rin- dows and flattened a tire on a ca r in the parking lo~. ...,,- J Bond Approval Joaquin Elated By State Help Officials of the San ·Joaquin Elemen· tary School District were elated today upon hearing of Thursday's unanimous approval by the State Senate of a bill to frM bond moneys to build needed elementary schools in the rapid growth' district. Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) got rapid action on his measure that \\'ould authorize the state allocations board to approve bond spending over the present five percent af assessed valuation limit. I The measure, which goes lo the AsSembly Education Committee ror con- sideration next week. raiiles the debt ceil- ing from five percent to seven percent of total district wealth for as many as five rapid ly growing California s c h o o I district.s. _ For Sa n .Joaquin, the raised debt limit could provide a! many as thret ntw schools. The two percent lxlnding limit increase would yield the district $4.6 mill ion based on its 1971 total assessed valuation of $232 million, a district spokesman said. · If the bil l passes the Assembly anj'.i is signed into Jaw, the prqvlsions would take effect immediately, Sen. Carpenter said. The "pilot'' school funding measure would remain in effect until Jan. 1. 19'75. Ralph Gates, San Joaquin su~rin­ tendent, credited Carpenter for in· lroduCing the emergency biU. "Al this nloment \\"e are extremely optimistic iibout solution.') or our school housing pro- blems. I hope ""e \\'i ll find the same cooperation and unde rstanding of our f:'.lblems in the AsSf'mbl~·." Gales said. Rex Nerison. ass istant superintendent for business servires. said his orfice was ''willing lo give an y additional in· form ation to the Assembly <"om millee thal tnight be required" to assure passage of the bill. The district's facilities planner, Dave King, sa id with Senate approval, "we're halfway there." The emergency measure. if approved , frees the di.strict to spend voter-approved bond moneys lhat the 1952 bond debl lin1it has preveilled being spenl. The distrirl has nearly $16 1nillion in unspent bonds. The bond <lebl limit. l"OUp!ed v.·ith shortages of stare school building fund 1no11e.1·. has put the district behind in its buildin,:: prograrn lo the point \vhere n1ore than 3.000 students are presently on double sessions. '(rustee Dennis Smith noted the bill <"ould use further <."Ommunity support in the form of letlen; or telegrams to Orange County representati\'es in lhe Assembl y. "A few notes of thanks to Sen. . Finch Plaus Trip WASHJNGTON (UPll -\Vhite House counsellor Robert Ii. Finch V.'ill leave Nov. 11 on a t1vo-v.·eek \'isit to six Lati n American nations in an attempt to im· prove U.S. relations in that part of the world. CarpentCr would also be approprlatt," Smith said. carpenter. ht said. got aclion on lhe bill. in less lhan a "'eek. "This i! really thrilling. 1l is the. systen1 functioning Jn a responsive way.'' Smith 11dded. He said an hour meeting in Sarramento \\1ith Assemblyman Leroy Greene j 0- Sacratnento t indicated lhP powerful education committee would consider the bill next "'eek. Greene chairs the educa· lion committre. f 'rom Pagel AMCHITKA. • • quake. liclal \\'ave and radioactive· con· lamination of the ocean." One of !ht' signers. Sen. Edwa rd ~f. Kennedy .( ().J\·lass. ), said Nixon 's decision "'A!i "indefensible'' and that !he test wa~ a "needless exercise in nuclea r one-u~ manship" that could not justify the risks involved. The public was urged to attend prayer ...and antiwar rallies against the explosion on campuses an d at cities across the country. \\'ashington area c ot I e g e: students made plans for a candlelight \'igil tonight at the Ellipse, the circular park behind the \\'hite House. Jn its open letter lo Nixon. the en· vironmentalists cited the decision of the l'.S. Circuit Court of Appeal~ hers \Vcdnesday in deny ing thrir ·rrqucst fo r an injunctio\\. '"The case docs prest>nl a su bslanlial queslion ;is to Ill{' lf'gali!y of the proposed test.'' the (Ol1rl 1\'<IS quoll'd. "()ur tailun· lo enjoin lht" trst 1s no t predicated on a conviction that th<' AEC has t.'Omplied ,.,.ith !lht' law) in setting forth the dangers o( environmental harm." AEC Chairman James R.. SchlesingEr, in sisting that ht have no apprehensions." was on the island u•ith his wife and two or their daughters to observe the test from an underground bunker 23 miles away. Schlesinger argues I hat the explosion is essential to test the Spartan intercept.er "'arhead of !he Safeguard antiballisllc missile systen1, and that all conceivable· hazards ha \'f" bcrn taken into account and deemed negligible. The test "'ill generate heat reaching three million degrees and the explosll·e force of 5 million lofls of TNT -up 111 250 1i1nes as great as the <1tomic bomb that de vastated Hiroshin1a in 1945. Jt "'ill churn I.he surrounding seas, pro- duce rock and land slides . and cave in the center (lf the 41:·m~e-long island. \ea\•ing 3 crater 100 feel deep and nearly a mil• v.•id,e. ~ A'lthough Canada. Japan and Sweden have protested Cannikin. the State Department said it had received no direct prote~l from the SO\'iet Union . 1hough the test site i!". about as close to Sifleda as it is to Ala ska. It v.•ill be the 2371h U.S. underground nuclear test since the 1963 nuclear test ban treaty. which outla"·s all but un- derground tests. HOLIDAY SPECIAL I • ' By Drexel , LILT TAIL! $99. HOLIDAY S,ECIAL DESK CHAIR-SWIVELS, TILTS, ~OLLS. $, 3 9 • HOLIDAY S,ECIAL TWELVE SPECIALLY SELECTED PIECES FROM DREXEL FAMED ET CET~RA COLLECTION. NOW SPE. CIALL y PR ICED TO MAKE YOUR HOLIOA Y SEASON MORE ENJOY ABLE. FROM GLASS TOP TABLES TO HALL CONSOLES • , • IF IT'S THE UNUSUAL YOU' RE LOOKING FOR, YOU'LL FINO IT IN ET CETERA , DEALERS FOR: HENREOON-OREXEL-HERITAGE HlWPOlf STOal 0,IN falDAT 'TIL t ' HEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wettdlff o,., 642·2050 OPEN FR IDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prof111lon1l Interior Dt1lgntrt Av1ll1bl._AIO '"•"Toll,_,.. MMt •I ONflfll C••Mf-140·126) , LAGUNA Bf,ACH 345 North Co.st Hl8hw1y Phoot: -494-6ll 1 This v.·as lhe ucond avor•ble report In "~ many days from the t1dm1n~lr111tion·s st:indpoint In ii ~ effort to 5low inrlation :'Ind reduce untmplo~·n1en1. On Thursday. !he l.abor Oepartmtnl reported a drop of O 1 percent In wholt11a.le prlces In Octo- htr Chan;:es ti llie \\"hll!e~ll lt !e\'tl u~ual!y perMlale do"n\\:ird In be !hal rollow the lrectt . 1---------------------------_ ..... __________ _ • , ( • . . . ' . . • San Clemente • • Today's Final Capistrano EDITION . N.Y. Stocks , VOL. 64, NO. 265, 4 SECTIONS, 50 eAGES .GE COUNTY, CA.LIFORNIA • FRIDAY, N(j)V,EMBER 5, ·197 f TEN CENTS School·s . in· San Joaquin· 'Must Stand on Own' By PAMELA HALLAN ct tlle Dtll»' Pllt! lt1tf If• the San Joaquin Elementary School District wants to "'catch up" with its growth and build enough schoOls to house its children in permanei:it facilities, it must ~ll with its own money. That is the opinion of Don Anderson, chi'f executive orficer of the State Allocations Board, the state agency that decided how much, when, and who will 1et state building loans. a Wile Slaying • Anderson, addrtss.ing the Bo8rd of Tru1tees Wednesday in E&st Irvine, gaid funding schools with local money is more costlY tha.n funding con!truction from state money. But under current legal formulas, San Joaquin could never "catch up" If it relied solely on state aid. Anderson copfirmed that the San Joa. quin District has done eve~thing it can to get stale allocations. But there is a great deal of competition for what little money ,the state has left to apportion and San Joaquin can not have it all. but we would then be .able to examine a~ He said the OM bright ray of hope, plications in view of where the money however, is Proposition Two which will will do the most good,'' said Anderson. be on the.June primary ballot. This pro-The state officer reiterated, however, position, if approved by a simple ma-that a district would still have to show jo~ of the voters, will provide $350 that it had unhoused children. And mili18n and would, to some extent, unho~ children. according to the state, remove the priority r~uirement and • are represented by certain numbers of ease competition for state money among homes' under construction, homes that school districts. will be occupied a year or more before a ") hesitate to discuss this specifically, school can be built. e ac es Trustees Johnson Handed Considering 5-to-lif e Term By TOM BARLEY Of tltt D1llY l'llot ltltf Convicted killer Mark Johnson of San Clemente was &ent to state prison today to begin serving a five year to life sen· tence. Orange County superior Court Judge William Murray imposed ijlat sentence on the young marine just 22 days after a jury returned to hi.s courtroom to find Johnson, 21, guilt)' of the 1laying on June 18, 1970, of his pregnant wife Connie Lynn Johnson, 20. Johnson, wbo has shaved his head s~~ tbe trial. smiled and shook hands warmly with defense attorney Ray Sharp after the. sentencing on the. 2nd degree murder conviction. His mother was present in the courtroom. Judge Murray rejected Sharp's 11th hour plea for the commitment of his young client to the California Youth Authority. . "I look on the CYA as one of the most ineffective agencies e v e r created by man," the jurist said. "I am going to order Mr. Johnson 's shipment to Chino, and t am also going to order that he receive every psychiatric treatment possible through the medical center at Vacaville. ~ Sharp left the courtroom to file en ap- peal against Judge hlurroy's g .u i I t y verdict. His motion for a new trial was denied this morning. He unsuccessfully argued today that a series of confessions played back during the trial were actually inadmissi~le and should have been ruled so at the time. Sharp particularly a I tacked '" videotape taken in the San Clemente police station while Johnson was under the influence or "truth serum" sodium amytol. The young marine admitted at that time that he clubbed Mrs. Johnson with a bar stool and -later washed off blood in the shower. But he could not recall the stabbing of his wile. It was succesfully alleged in the trial that Johnson slit his wife's throat and stabbed her more than 20 times with a butcher knile and then bludgeoJ)ed her head with the bar stool after a .quarrel over his smoking of marijuana. Orange Cout Weather Vou won 't .see too much sun this weekend, especiaJly in the prt- noon hours when fog and low clouds prevail. Top temperatures wlll be 6S along the coast and 75 further inland. INSIDE TOPA V Lotte Lenya wilt 10011 aprnar ~ as Mother Couragi at UCI. and the Weektndtr hQ.! 4 1to711 and pictures about her 01\ Pa.Qt. 2.S, today. l&lllflt 24 Ct lfftnll1 It Clll(lll111 UI , c111,llllolll Jil·M (llf!llc.1 u c .. 11-c u Oilll~ l'flllc11 11 Dlftf'cet 11 1:•ll1rltol ,lff ' 1'111111(1 1S.1f "9 .. K.,.. H Allll l.tMtn II Mt'lt" »a MvhMl 1'11!1111 1' 111111111 .. """ ... or1Mt c-11 it \ •111111r1t1ll 11·1' IHrll .,. SIM• M1A;•ts l"lJ Ttlt-YhiMI 1't Tttttl-»u WN-Werntll'I Ntwt tS.1• WWII! l'ff'l'I t-.1 w ........... The naked woman 's body was found sprawled on the bed in the couple's apart- ment at l16 Monterey Lane. John.son was arrested a year later. Amchitka A-blast Foes Take Plea To President WASHINGTON (UPI) -Awaiting 1 final legal decision from the supreme Court, scientists, senators, Conserva· tionists and pacifists appealed directly tG President Nixon today to postpone the mighty Amchitka Island nuclear test as a potentia11y deadly mistake. Barring a last-minute stay from tht court or the President, a red button will be pressed at 2 p.m. PST Saturday in a bunker on the northern end of the desolate Island in the Aleutian chain, J,200 miles southwest of the Alaskan coast. triggering a five-megaton warhead buried nearly 6,000 feet underground. All hope of a legal delay rested in the hands of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. who received late Thursday the appeal of eight organizations charging that the Atomic Energy Commission had not fully considered the environmental risks of the test as required by law. Burger was expected to turn the case over to the full court for. a ruling, most likely following their regular Friday con- ference, on the merits of a stay pending appeal of a federal appeals court decision agalnst blocking the test. The White House, standing by Ni..z:on's decision to proceed with . the blast "for overriding reasofl..'5 of national security," channelled all cal1.!1 to the AEC. which reported it had received 6,700 letters, telegrams and telephone calls of protest as of Thursday. lt said each would be answered Individually. The White Hoose refused again today to estimate how many protest.s it had received. The AEC has consistently discounted the environmentalisls' warnings that the exhaustively planned and monitored underground test, code-named Cannikin and four times bigger than any the United States has ever conducted, mlght set oil major earthquakes or tidal waves and harm marine and wildlife by leaking radiation. HELD 'IN SHOOTING Posj ol Ca.rk Alliman Hail of Bullets Ends in l Death At Post Office By JOANNE REYN"OLDS 01 ff!I ~Ur l'llol ll1rt • The day started with a disciplinary hearing, wasJnterrupted by a haircut and ended at 10:45 a.m. in death for Paul Burtner, postmaster of Westminster. A meeting about Christmas mail presided over by Burtner was shattered by a hail of bullets. When it was over Burtner lay dead -shot to death In the post office he had served for 24 years. Police are holding Phillip B. Alleriian, a postal clerk for two years, on suspicion of Burtner's murder and the wounding of Ernest Gaulden, 46, superintendent of mails. Gaulden is clinging to life today •t Westminster Community hospital. lie is in guarded condition after underg oing four hours of surgery for a stomach wound. , Alleman, 24 , of 2001 N. Bristol Sl., Santa Ana, was to be formally charged today with murder and assault with in· tent to commit murder. Lt. Don Saviers, commander of the Westminster detective d I v i s i o n • reconstructed the events police bellt,ve led to Burtner's death. Alleman, a night clerk, had received a: written reprimand for t a r d i n e 1 s. Dissatisfied with the acUoq, he had re- quested a meeting with nurtner and the postal clerk's union representat.ive. ' Planner Quits Ouster Figure Leaves County Rtl Gohara; Orange ~ Planning stafr member for the past three years and the centra1 figure in a Planning Com- mission move. to dump Stuart Balley 11 secretary to the commissioo..11 no longer a county employe. Gobar1, who was named secretary of ~. commlYion la~ :June, replacing aisistont plaMing director Beiley, Is now employed by CST Egnineering Co. with of{icei near the Onlnge County Airport. He quietly lelt his planning department post the latter part of Octo,ber. Gohara was caught In the middle last June when a S-2 majority of lhe Planning Commission voted to install him · as secretary Instead of B•iley . Hls appolntmeM wu ahort • lived however u the Board of Supervisor• ' refused to tndorse the move. A long peri<>d of negotiations followed which culminated with Plarming D i re c t-o r Forest Dickason naming atarr member John Lane as commission secretary, Gobara also figured In another COft. troVersial issue more recent1y wh., ht prepared a staff report recommeniling I.he rezone of 50 acres o( McDonnell Douglas Corp. land near the airport. Gohara's Aug. 31 report wu rebutted rour weeks later by Planning Director Dickason who recommended agabut the zone. thange .. The Cf>ntroversial rei.one ts slated to come before the supervisors· n_txt .Wedneldoy afler having h<f;n· •P~•d by the Planning Comml!Slon by 1 •2 ·~· I 7Members By PATRICK BOYLE Of !ti• 0111'1' 1'11•1 Stefl A plan to expand the Saddleback College ·~rd of trustees from five to 15even members will be presented at the board's next meeting. The plail calls for splitting the burgeon- ing Saddleback Valley -now represented by one. trustee -into three trustee areas. Trustee Hans Voegl, chairman of a ~tlee whi~b bas been l!llllYlng the proposed ch~nfe, u ld t.od~t6lf1iuch l moYe would save the taxpay'°' lhe er· ptnM of ,....ppor11on1ng U., large district evr:ry two yean. U only . five trustee arta11were maintained, Vogel noted, the rapidly growing Saddleback Valley would be the main cause. of this constant redistrict.Ing since the othe_r trustee areas have relatively stable populations. In revealing the pion to expand to seven district.s, Vogel defended the district'• present system of allowing each trustee to be elected at large by. all voter.! in lhe district. "Members who are voted at large," he uld in a telephone interview, "are more prone to act on behalf of the entire district rather than react to small pressure groups." Vogel said the recommendation, to be presented to the full board Nov. 15. has been worked out by himself and fellow trustee John Lund of Laguna Beach. The action was sparked, he noted. hy requeSts from school trustees in the Lafuna Beach and Capistrano Unified Schoo ·Districts. Whese two school districts early last spring passed resolutions urging the board to expand to seven members and have each member elected from his in- dividual district. The Saddleback College District, which comprises about 48 percent of the land area in Orange County, is presenUy divided into five trustee areas. Vogel provided statistics showing that ar~ one. in west Tustin, had 12,867 registered ~·oters as of the Sept. 14 col- lege bond election; area two, east Tustin. Jl,725 voters : area three , Laguna Beach, ll,345 voters; area four . San Clemente. Dana Point. San Juan Capistrano, 11,059 voters; and area five, the Saddleback Valley, 28,3SJ. Vogel said that by splitting area five, represented by trustee Michael Collins ol Laguna Hills into three separate districts, the populations of each area would be more equE-1. He said that, although each of the new areas will only have about 9,000 voters, the valley is growing so rapidly each area should goon catch up with the other' four trustee areas. Vogel predicted that, under the seven- trustee plan, the district would not have to he reapportioned for at least six years. If Ure plan Is approved by the trustees, Vogel said It must thtn receive the back- ing of the county ,;chool redistricting committee before going before the voters for approval. lf district voters agreed to expand the board, the five present board • membe'rs ~ould appoint the two new trustees, Vogel said, with Michael Collins continuing on the board until his term ex· pires in 1975. Vogel said that moii:t junior college dl.itrtct.s in Callfomi1 with trustee areas have seven-man ~ds elected at largeJ Va ndals Stone Swan RENO, Nev. (UPl)-Vandals stoned to death a black swan worth '500 al Reno's Piradise Park. and the city says It has had enough .. The recreation commission said there ·wu no sense buying birds "just to be 1l1Ughtered." and decided not to rtplate the swan . Two other black swans were killed earlier. ' • If the proposition is not approved, Anderaon told the San Joaquin board It will have to dig deep into its own pockeU. He suggested leasing more portables, increasing the bond limit, getting sub- dividers lo lease new homes for tem- porary schools, or le a se -purchase agreements for new facili ties with developers. But he admitted that all these memiures are cosily. And for every school the district builds • with its own money~ the farther behind it gets on the atate's priority system. He said the only way to improve tile .1 situation would be to change the law .. But rtfany4 l\ave tried and fa.ilftl. . He complimented the board for its ef. forts to raise the bond ceilb1g limit 's«t tha~ seven inst.ead of five prec:ent of itl assessed valuation can be sold annually. He said this is prob6.bly the best answer for San Joaquin . • ans1on ' Ho11ieeo1ni11g Prelt&de It was the senior's '.'~ittle Ki~s Day" at Mission Viejo High School Thursday, part of Sp1r1l Week 1n which each class entertain itself and others with innovative appr?ach. Here Dol ores Moran, 17, and Pat Hornbeck, 19, seem appropriately equipped. The Mission Viejo foot· ball team plays San Clemente high tonight with queen crowning at halftime. Sti1dent Marine Lab-Poses Question on (:ity's Pier The Cil.y of San Clemente has a long-.stonding approval of a student m31ine laboratory proposed for the municipal pier, but the vexing question of where to put it remains unanswered this week. Originally the permanent facility for students from San Clemente High School had been proposed for a platfonn beneath the ma in level of the pier. But Science DeP,artment Chairman Phil Grignon learned later that at Jleak surf and tide periods. that platform is awash . So he asked for city approval to build the lab on the main dec:k of the pier 01' the spot once occu pied by Snn Clemente Spoi'tfishing Inc. That business moved to Dana Harbor recently. But concessionaires have cotnplalned that placing the lab into the cramped cor· ner of the yier platform would hurt business. • Businessmen also have warned that electrical loads already are. at the bteak- ing point and adding even a little more eq'Uipment could mean pawer shhrtagu - that ·bum out electric · motors· on - · reCrigeration' equipment. Councllmen wrestled at length with the dilemma this week and finally deClded to allow a special cmnmittee. to detmnine the best location for the lab. City l\1Bnager Ken Carr, who is nol on the cornmittee, told councilmen he agreed with Crignl'ln's plan to place the lab on the upe!:r plltform. The comm1ftee of city department hea ds will have the final .say on the loca· lion. Other spoU ~ed include an area midway cul on the pier. . Grignon has promised that the lab, to be designed by local architect Leon Hyzen, will be an asset to the pier and will include a small, public aquarium. He added that the lab could prove a boon to attracting more visitors to the pier whicll is not receiving the same amount ol use Jt did when the spcrUishlng business was there. Adult Education Niglit Volleyball Ope ni ngs Ex ist Volleyball ~nd exe.rcise programs have be,e:un for South Coast area women at San Clemente High School's gym , and school district spokesmen aay openlnss still U• is~n spite of a large ~mout~ . • 1-ne potNJar exercise pttlod ts held each Monday nigh( rrom 7 .to 9_p.m. An avtrage o( SO women a week have at.. tended lhe classes taught by Mrs.' Charle~ Shepard as part of the adult education pfogram ln the Capistrano Unilied School District. Basketball for men also is available in the gym e a c h \Vednesday night. Volleyball (or men i!I of(ered Thl.lfsdays. The program will continue: through May. Except for regulnr scfiool hoUday9 or when special activlllcs are scheduled (or the gym . "'"' there is no charge and slgnups cm bl done at the bc&innin& or class ae:sslons. j ' \ ¥ OAJLV fll(n ~ FridJ11 NO¥tmbtr 5, l~i 1 Freeway" Ban Attacked Lag unan Ca lls Suggestio'n l'r responsible I The suatstlon that the Paeiflc coast Free.way route should 1bf: eliminated en· Urely from the atate's freeway plan i.• "irresponsible, lll·concelved and ob- viously arrived et through emotion rather than fact.•• according to Lagunan Victor C. Andrews, who pla yed a leadiiis role in tht eight-year fighl to persuade the Stale Highv.·ay Commission to mo\'t: the route lnland from the coast. Andre\\'S expresses his \"lt\\'S on the latest freewa~· disCtJssions in a letter ad· drastd to ~1ayor Richard Goldberg in which he concludes that construction of the freeway Yi'ill bt lht' OOly solution to South County traffic problems. Tbe people opposing the freeway. says Andrews, are ignoring the fact that, in unanimously approving the adopted route, Laguna literally gafe notice to the state. the county and pri\'ate landholders that they could proceed to plan, design· and develop property surrounding the ci· ty on the basis of this route. The county's master plan of arterial roads 1,•;as finaliz- ed and construction has proceeded. he ~oled. "All of this has been done in good faith," AndreW!I ?.•rites. "and it would be highly irresponsible if "'e .al\empled to Fro1n Page 1 RANDANO •.. snapped comment: "You've said enough, ).fr. ~fcBride." I McBrrde then rem inded the judge lhat ~lrs. Arbon had asked the 1udge if she could discuss her problem \1,•ith the judgt "in private." Judge Owens reminded f\fcBride that he had denied the request. ··1 think y,·e should hear what she has to aay," McBride complained. "I ask permission for Mrs. Ar bon to be allo"·ecl auch a diacussion." "Request denied," snapped Judge 1 Owens. The jury fil~ back to the _jury ..toom. The rejected verdict ~ame hard on the heels or pleas by Randano that at least temporarily hailed his sentencing on the liquor hijacking offense that spawned the bribery allegations. McBride told J udge James Turner that his clie'nt ha.s suffered a series of heart attacks and his argumeat at lei.st put off ~-hat could ha ve been a Jong state prison term for Randino's illicit switch of 300 cases of 1liquor from the · former Sad· dlehaci Inn, -Lagn na Beach. to Feli· ciano's Retitaurant in Newport Beach. Judge Turner. called on to sentence Rand ano while tbe bribery trial jury was still deilbtiatlng in Judge Claude Owens' courtroom, Rt Nov.11 for court approval - of the cardiologist that Heneghan and eliminate the Pacific Coast Freeway now. The millions of dollars: of planning and construction that already have been spent. v.·ill have gone for naught and chaos ,.,·ould result. All thi s. because some misinformed people believe the growth rate has sfackened to the polnt that the need for an additional major lransit facility is no longer needed. This lruly must be tht essence ol unreality." Although the gro"·th rate has slacken· ed. he continued. responsible projections shll suggst that the area affected v.·ill have more than 600.IXIO residents by 1990. Even though Laguna Beach itstlf main- tains a low densily, surrounding areas such as South Lag una. Laguna Niguel, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point and all of the Jr vine'Company land will continue to develop. he. states. and asks, "In the ·.absence of a free"·ay, how \4'ould ~·ou move th is large number or people in and out of thi~ highly deleloped area?" The Laguna leader goes on to commenl on alternatives v.1hich anti-freeway pro- ponents have discussed \vith him. \\liden· ing the San Diego lree\\'ay. he _i;tates. \\'Ould be n1ore expensive than creating a ne1v free1ray. because of the cost nf purchasing adjacent properly. and would not solve the basic problem o( .ingress and egress in yet undeveloped areas. 'ro the suggestion that 10-mlle. rather lhan quarter·niile arterials could serve the coast, Andrews notes that the slate does not provide lund!: for extensive off. ramps and connecting arterial access roads and Laguna's limited bonding capacity would make it impossi ble to participate in funding this ty~ of arterial access. A suggestion that 8 mass transit system be evolv ed to take the place of the free\\·ay seems impractical at thi s time, he add!. · ··1 v.•ish it v.·ere possible lo turn back the clock 20 years, thus some chance for success for alternate solutions might have been possible, but at th is point it is my candid and honest opinion that the die- is cast and all efforts should be mr.de to construct the Pacific Coast Freeway in it.c; present location as quickly as possi· ble ." Andrews concludes. "We fought long and hard lo prevent Laguna Beach from being bisected. A bypass free\\·ay, one mile i 11 I and is presently assured. I ~-ould hope that emotion would not prevail over reason." El Toro Noise Concern V oiced by Airport Panel Serious concerns over the elfecl of El Toro jet aircraft noise on future homeowners near th e i\larine fac1lt1.v and fast groy,·ing traffic near Orange County Airport \•:ere expressed b,v County Airport Land Use commissioners Thurs· day night. They heard a slarUing partia1 solution to the airport traffic dilemma ~ a $6 million tunnel under the. runways. Commission members debated for three hours before deciding to advise the Board of Supervisors" that a jet plane noise monitoring program must be ac· complished before intelligent answers can be J:iven on ·proposed ~and use tiUT- rounding the El Toro station. Currently a jet noise monitoring pro- gram is being carried out in the vicinity of Orange County Airport. '·There has been a tendency to listen to ~larine Corps representatives and act ac· cord ing lo their recommendation~ on jet noise problems." said commission vice chai1111an Donald Killian of Newport Beach. "In my opinion stale noise &tan· dards are much stricter than those of the Marines and should be follo~~d." But. he added . nothing can really be done until a.· good 80\Jfld monitoring pro- gram is instituted around the air:station. Comm issioners heard a gloo"SUY report on traffic conditionfi both present and future around Orange County Airport voiced by county road department en~inear Robert Voien. Voien said that e1,·en if d!:velopmenl Is carried out under the presenl industrial 1oning on lands around the facility the roadways \~ill soon be overloaded. The engineer said a full cloverlear is needed at the intersection of the San Diego Freeway and r..t a c A r t b u r Boulevard and, if constructed will requir• at least three acres of airport. land .. lwicBride ha'(e to select. · 'Flotilla. Ready To Clean Up Back Ba y Waters Voien also said Cam pus Drive and i1acAJjhur would boti) have to be widen· ed fihortly and that eventually 1s develop- ment increases around the airport the on- ly solutiort might be a $6 mill ion tunnel under the rtlnway extendin g westward Crom Campus to Baker Street. He wJII study the physician's reports and sentence Rand ano Dee. 2. "'Thi.s sort of offense merits the state penitentiary," Judge Tumer commented. •·eut I don't want to make any kind of commitmen t that would endanger the defendant's life." ,.. McBride pleaded for a suspended sentence for his client with the argument that Randano has suffered "one serious ail ment after another" during the period in which the fonner Feliciano's partner was 1uettSsfully prosecuted for liquor hi· jacki ng, was indicted by the Or.ange County Grand Jury for bribing a policeman and was convicted in a l\1otr tana federa1 court for mall fraud . He described the theft of liquor as being from "sophisticated corporations .who ran a much greater risk than other businesses'' and asked Judge Turner to bear in mind that Randano had "not rab- bed a little old lady or held up a market." Prosecutor Heneghan blasted Randano as the petpelrator of ''an arrogant. premedltat!'d fraud who knew that his CQrporatlon (Feliclano's Restaurantl "''as going under and who was even then 011 probation ror mail fraud!' OU.NGI COAIT DAllY PllOT N..,..rt IHdi Hul'tl.,._ .._. L.eof9H .... f •dtelll 'l'l!lfley C-N M•• S• Ci-.ta,. OMMGI C0UT "11LISM1MO toMl'AHY ~ ~ lt•t •rt N. Wtei P't•loWlt fl'lll f'\IOI~ J eek It, C11riey • Vilt ,,....,,. _. G-•I '1.-flt l'lltfllt• Keevil ...... 111011111 A. lii11111S.ifto ,,.,.....,'"' f:dl!Or" QarS.. H. L-. lt!ekenl I', Nill Mll'IWll .,,-.i. lidL'°"' Offft.ff ~ MIM: »O V."ftf lay ll:ll'ft'I ~ •~11: l1i2 NIWM'1 I M;'Ml'f t.et~flt aftldl: m ,.., .. , ,..,,~ ... MUl!tlfllrlwlt I MCll' 1111J IM<ll toi.levlrd k# CJ9n'IW!lil Jiii Horltl f.L CAl!llrlt 11 .. 1 The Back Bay never had it so good. For the seco nd week in a row , members of the Newport Beacb com- munity are planning a clean-up of the scenic estuary. Beginning Sunday at II a.m .• a citizens' flotilla of small craft will encircle the water\\'ay to pick up debris on the beaches and islands. ·•Any person with a boat that can be easily beached is y,·elcome to help." says clean-up organizer Mrs. Joan Coverdale. She silid the Orange County Harbor Department's ne\Y fl oating garbage truck. "The Scooper," "''ill pro,.ide escort. and litter bags. Participants are liable lo find they'll have to concentrate more on the islands and ~·est bank than along Back Bay Drive, however. f or last \\'eekend. the Corona de! ~far High School Key Club and its sponsoring organization. the Corona del Mar Kiv.·anis Club. spent nearly four hours walking the east side from one end of Back Bay Drive lo the other. "\Ve picked up everything from truck axles to tin cans." noted Key Club presi· dent Scott Hornbeak. Rizzo Se lects Rizzo PHILADELPHIA (AP) -f\.t ayor-elect Frank L. Rizzo has announced his first cabinet appointment He has named hi~ ;.ounger brother, Joseph L. Riu.o , as fire commissioner. Martha Mitc1iell Tells W onian: 'Fly the Flag' SPOKANE. Wash, tUPJ J -It took 1 lelephone · call from ~1artha Mitchell lo get Doroth~· Gardella to resume nying her An1erican flag . "I was disgusted ll'ilh the ouster of Taiwan from the United Nations." r..trs. Gardella explained Thursday. "So I sent a telegram to l.1rs. ~titchell saying I "'ould no longer fly the American flag from my fro11t porch." A few days later. she was slartled by a call from the v.·ife of Attorney General John N. Mitchell. "The fir.st thing Mr!. f\Iitche.11 said whe n I came on the phone \.\·as : 'You wave thet fla)Z' and keep on wa ving iL'" Then Mrs. r..ntchell said. ''You t.ell all the people out lhere not to stop flying the flr.g just because or this." according to :r..trs. Gardella. ~frs. Gardella said she was so sur# prised al the call that she didn't know 1\•hat lo say, and shfo told ~!rs. r..Utchtll " "She told me lo 'just keep talking and I'll ans~·er you.'" f.frs. Gardella said. ".SO that's just what I dtd." Jobs Pi~"-Up Une niploy 1nent Rate Drops to 5.8% ' WASHINGTON (UP l l t:"nemployment dropped lo 5.8 percenl in ()Ctober "'hi!e the tot11I number of Americans holding jobs reached a record high, the gO\·emment reporttd. today. It "·as the second straight monLhlv derllne in the jobless rate, folloy,·Jng irrl- posilion by President Nixon of the "·age- price frme on Aug. 15. Joblessness has hovered between 5.6 percent and 6.2 per· cent of the work force for the past year. lt stood at &.O in September and 1.1 ptr· c:ent in August. The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor St.ali11tic!i, "'hich rtported the figures. said the total number of job holders rose _320,000 In October, 11rter seasonal adjustment . to an all lime high cir i9.8 mtlllon. This ~·as ihe serond avorablt report in as many days from the adminii lration's standpi>int in its effort to slo11· infll'IUon nnd reduct unemployme~t. On Thursd11y. the Labor Department reporl~ a drop of I) I percf'nt ln w}'1ole11~le price• ln Oclo- her Changes 11 the 1i"hole1ale level usuaJI)' per colate do" n\1 ard 10 be reflected later at the consumer level. Today's report said 4.6 m i 11 ion Americans y,·ere out of "'ork in October. :.!i0,000 fe~·er than September The decline ll'SS greater than usual for th is. 'time of year. the BLS said. and resulted largely from a reduction in the •Umber of men who lost their jobs. flionfarm payrolls remained virtually unchanged in October, and employment g.i.1ns in St\'tral indusLries were offset by more men on strike. particularly coal mlntrs and longshoremen. The ;ob report was good news for the White House after ~d news came from Capito! Hill Thursday in the fonn of a \'Ole by a key congressional commillte lo force the Pay Board to approve retroac:· fi\'e \\'3 gr fnl'rt3Sts thal \.\'tre delayed by the currenl !rttze.. The Pay Board had another meeting to- d11y, amid uncertainty O\e.r how its ac· l ion~ might be restricted by !he House Banking Committee's ac:tion. which lh~ White llo115e condemned as possibly striously itopardizlng tht economic goals that follow the freeze.. • . . SHOT TO DEATH Postm11t•r Burtn•r l"rom Pa9e 1 MURDER ••• back door and hallway which led io Burtner's o(fice. At that. m o m e n t Bulner, Gaulderl, William Brown, assistant•post master; Orville HopkiAs. assistant superintendent of mails and Alfred Maisto, a foreman, were discussing holiday mail procedures. Saviers said the four men \\'ere seated in a semi-circle facing Burtner with their backll to the door. Poltce allrge Alleman bursl through the door , aimed the gun at Burtner, said "OK. :i.·ou '\'I'! had ii.'' and pulled th~ trig· ~111·. "The ~un tnisfired." Si!l'1Prs asserled , "but about lhal point everyone · reallzed Wh<il y,·as happening :ind everything •started moving ·· According to police reports, Bro\~·ni-an out of the office and Hopkins and ri'laisto scrambled behind a desk, Gaulden appa rently was shot in the stomach when he tried to lake the gun away from Alleman. poltre sa id. kurtner was shot once in the chest, but managed lo run out of the office into the port.iqn of the post office used by the public. There. police said. he co!l'apsed. All t>man allegedly w;1lked over !he pro- strate Burtner, knelt or leaned over and I ired a serond shot into the base of the postmaster's skull. ."-1eanwhi\e Brown had run into the parking lot where two \Vestminster patrolmen had parked lo exchange paperwork ·and 1nlonnatlon on another ca,e. The two patrolmen, Jae~ Hintz and Tim Miller, said when they entered the post office, Alleman laid 'the gun on the- noor and surrendered to them without of- fering any resistance. Nooe of the customers or other cn1ployes in the post office at the lime of the shooting was injured. Fisher said most scattered when the shooting started. One bullet went through oue of the win· dows and fl attened a tire on a car in the parking loL Bond Approoal Joaquin Elated ' By State Help Offlclals of the San Joaquin El,men- lary School District were elated today upon hearing of Thursday's unanimous .approval by the State Senate Or 1 bill to free bond moneys to build needed elementary schools In the rapid growth ' disfrict. Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport . Beach ) got rapid action on his measure that "'ould authorite the state allocations board to approve bond 11pending over the present five percent of assessed valuation limit. The measure, which goes to the Assembl y Education Committee for con-- sideration next .week. raises the debt cell· ing from five percent to seven percent of total district wealth for as many as five rapidly growing California s c h o o I districts. For San .Joaquin, the raised debt limit could provide as m·any as three new schools. The two percent bonding limit increase would yield the district $4.6 million based nn Its 11171 total .assessed valuation of $232 million, a district spokesman said. I! the bill passes fhe Assembly and ~ signed into law, the provisions would take effect immed iately, Sen. Carpenter said. The "pilot" school Iunding measure v.·ould remain in effect until Jan. 1. 197:i. Ralph Gate!, San Joaquin suwin- lendent. credited carpenter for in· traducing the emergency bill. ''At this n1oment v.·e are extremely optimistic about solutions of our sthool ho11sing pro- lllerns. I hopt "'e .,,•ill find the same cooperation and unde rstanding or our prublem.c; in the Assernbty:· Gates said. Rex Nerison. assistant superintendent for busiaess services. said his office \'las ··willing to give <iny additionaJ In- formation to the Assembly committee thal 1night be required" lo assure passage of the bill. The district's facilities planner , Dave King, said with Senate approval, "we're halfway there.'' The emergency measure. if approved , frees the district to spend voter-approved bond mont>ys that the 1952 bond debt limit has prevented being spent. 'rhe district has nearly $16 1nilhon in unspent bonds. The bond <lebt lim11. l'OUpled \\'ilh shortages of stale school building fund money. has put the district behind in its building progra111 to the point \1·here niore than J.000 students are presently on double sessions. Trustee. Dennis Smith noted the hill could u~e further community support in the forn1 of letters or lelegrams to Orange Counly representath·e~ in the Assembly. "1\ few note~ of thanks lo Sen. .Finch Plans Trip WASHINGTON (UPI l -\Vhl\e House counsellor Robert H. Finch "'ill leave Nov. 11 on a two-week visit to six Latin American nations in an attempt to im- prove U.S. relations in that part of the world. ---- Carpenter would also be Appropriate.'' Smith said. Carpenter, he said. got action on the bill in less than a "'eek. "This i.! rta11y thrilling. It is tJ1e systen1 functioning in a responsive way, n Smith added. He said an hour meeting in Sacramento 'tl'ith Asse mblyman Leroy Greene ! [). Sacramento) indicated tht' powerful education committee would consider tha bill next week. Greene chairs the educa· tion committee. From Page 1 AMCHITKA . • • quake, tidal wave and radioactive ('On· tamination of the ocean.'' One of the signers, Sen . Edward ?i.f. Kennedy ( D-Mass.), said Nixon's decision was .. indefensible" and that the test was a "needless exercise in nuclear one-up-- manship" that could not justify the risk!! involved. The public was urged to attend prayer and an tiwar rallies against the explosion on campuses and at cities across the country. Washington area co 11 e g e students made plans for a candlelight ''igil tonight at the Ellipse, the circular park behind the \Vhite House. In its open letter to Ni.Ion. the e:n· vironmentalists cited the decision of tht! U.S. Circuit Court or Appcal c; hera \Vednesda,v in denying tht>ir request fo r an injunction. '"The case does present a substantial question as to the lcgalily of the proposed test." th e courr was quoted. •·our htilure lu enjoin the test is not predicated on a conviction that the AEC has complied .,,,ith (lhe !av.·) in settinJ? forth the dangers of environmental harm." AEC Chairman James R. Schlesinger, insisting that "I have no apprehensions," ~1as on the island \Vith his wife and two of their daughters to observe the tes t fr"om an underground bunke r 2.1 miles away. Schlesinger argues !hat the explosion is essential to test the Sparlan intercepter \1·arhead of the Safeguard .antiballistic missile systen1. and thal all conceivable hazards ha\'c bePn taken into account and deemed negligible. The tes1 "'iii generate heat reaching three million degrees and the explo.sh·e fo rce of 5 million IOllS of TN'!' -up lo 250 times as great as lhe atomic bomll that devastated }liroshima in IMS. It will churn the su rrounding slas. pro- duC1? rock and landslides. and cave in the cen ter of the -4?-mile-long island , leaving A crater 100 feel deep and nearly a mil• y,·ide. Although Canada. Japan and Sweden have protested Cannikin, the State Department said it had received no direct prole<;t from the Soviet Union. though the lest sile is about. as close to Siberia as it is to Alaska. It will be the 2J7th U.S. underground nuclear test since the 1953 nuclear tes t han treaty, which outla"'S all but un· derground tests. HOLIDAY SPECIAL • ' By Drexel ~ • LILY TAIL! ----,,... HOLIDAY SPECIAL '99. DESK CHAIR-SWIVELS TILTS ROLLS. ' ' HOLI DA Y S'ECIAL 5 139. TWELVE SPECIALLY SELECTE D PI ECES FROM DREXEL FAMED ET CEHRA COLLECTION NOW SPE CIALL Y PRICED TO MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY SEASON MORE ENJOYABLE. FROM GLASS TOP TABLES T~ HALL CONSOLES ••• If IT'S THE UNUSUAL YOU' RE LOOKING FOR, YOU 'LL flN.O IT IN ET CETERA. DEALERS .. fOR: HENREOON-DREXEL-HERJTAGE • _1 ' Nt:WPOIT sro•1 OPIN PllDAY 'tlL' fl EWPO RT BEACH 1727 WHtdlff Or., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Profts1lon1I lnt1rlor OeJfgners Av1 il1bl._AIO rhe119 Toll Ff.. M"t •' 0,.11 .. C•11~tf-.140·12ll ( LAGUNA BEACH 34.S North Coast Hig hwa y Phone: 494-6551 --' • .. 7 , ' .. • . .. .. . . ..... ,, .. . .. .. .. . . ·Huntington Beach . . " Fountain. Valley Today'• Final N.Y. Stoek8 VOL. 64, NO. 285, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,· CALIFQRNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBE·R 5, 197f TEN CENTS • as eas Ill our ' Atom Test .. Saturday • ' . ....IL Y PILOT ....... 9V a.a ....... ,11111 CROWD OF CURIOUS PRESS AGAINST l'OIT OFFICE GLASS FOR l'TTIR VllW OF WISTMINSTEll' MURQIR S<iENE . . TIM Sody W11 Rtmovod, tlHI Crowd PruMC1 Porwtrd, T""' Postel Olfleitlt·Covtrtd Windows Wlth·c;1"""'rd .. l '. • SHOT TO DEATH Postmaster Burtner ,, Dead Postmaster Had 6 €hildren, ~ Active in City Westm inster Postmaster Paul Burtner was a famil y man and a man of the com- munity. At 51. be was the head of a fam ily th11t include<ffour daughters, l\vo.sons and six grandchildren. and .w.11s a . lea.ding member of numerous c1v1c organ1zat1ons. ·Monda y morning his friends and fam ily Will gather to pay their last respects. services will be held at 10:30 a.m. at Westminster Memorial Park Chapel, Westminster. :~tr. Burtner was born in Koppel , Pa. qnd entered the postal service in 1948 .as a-rural route carrier in Westminster. In December of 1970, he was apJ)ointed postmaster of Westminster -one of the first in the count.y to be promoted on the merit system rather than by political ap- pointment: He had served for two years at acting postma ster and before that he w1s <MJperintendenl of malls. • J\.1r. Burtner had lived in Westminster for 26 years and serv~ i~ a variety of tervice.-clubs and organizations. He was a •ember of the \\1estmlnster Rotary, a past master of the Westminster, Los AlamitOI and Huntington Beach Masonic ,. lodges, past AS90Ciale G u a r d i a n o( HunUnglon Beach Bethel 321 of Job'• Qaughters and a past patron of the Westminster Chapter of the Eastern Star. " PuniShed Carrier Held In Postmaster Slaying By JOANNE REYN9LDS 01 IM D•!lr fllot Jltff The day started with a disciplinary hearing, was interrupted by a hair.cul and ended at 10 :45 a.m. in death for Paul Burtner, postmaster of Westminster. A meeting about Christmas mail presided over by Burtner was shattered by a hail or bullets. When it was over Burtner lay dead -shot to death in the post office he had served for 24 years. Police are holding Phillip B. Alleman , a postal clerk for two years, on suspicion of Burtner's murder and the wounding of Ernest Gaulden', 46, superintendent of mails. Gaulden is clinging to life today al Westminster Community hospil.al. He is in guarded condition after undergoing f0ur hours of surgery for a stomach wound. Alleman, 24, of 2801 N. Bristol St., Santa Ana , was to be' formally charged today with murder and assault with in- tent to commit murder. Lt. Don Saviers, com mander of the \Vestminster detective d Iv is ion, reconstructed the events police believe Jed to Burtner's deaUr. Alleman, a night clerk, had received a written reprimand for t a r d i n e s s • Dissatisfied with the action, he had re- quested a meeting with Burtner and the postal clerk's union representative. "He apparently became quite angry at that meeting," Saviers alleged, "and walked out ln the middle of it." Police believe Alleman 'went to his parents' home in Santa Ana where he got his father's .45-caliber automatic pistol. He returned to the post offict; about 45 minutes later and walked in through a back door and hallway w h i c h led to (See~MURDER, Page 2) Beach Hearing to Re-open ~ ·' On Officer Reinstatement The reinstatement hearing. of a police ()fficer fired f()r alleged mishandling o( merchandise will be re-opened Thflrsday nig ht by the Huntington Beach Personnel Commissl\)n. The purpose of the 7:30 p.m. session at city hall ill to hear new evidence which could potentially· clear 37-year-old Gilbert Coerper of the charge and restore him as motorcycle patrolman. ume security guard al the sto're durlng his off hours, however has ('()nsistently maintained that he was authorized to dlspOse of the merchandise as he "saw fit ." • His attorney, Cecil Ricks of Fullerton, claims that Miss Deane. uncovered after completion of tbe initial hearings. could corroborate the ex-policeman 's te stimony. ' The hearing was ordered re.opened last month by Superior C.ourt Judge ClaUde Owens on t.he groµnd:s thal the fiv~-man corrimlssion had failed to consider 'the testimony of a new witness, uncovered after the commission upheld the firing'. .,.Thurmond Says Move Red-dominated U.N. That witness is Nancy Deane, a former Montgomery Ward s e c u r I t y employe who claims she was aware of an agree- ~ent between Coerper and the. s~re· for · clispOsal or marked ()Ut merchandise. Coerper was dismissed from the police force last year for allegedly keeping some of the merchandise for himS'elf. During a subsequent series oJ hearings it was discl osed by Jack Whittaker, fonner security chief for MQQtg<imery \Vlird~ lha('Coerper was to have repaired the Items for charJty activities of lhe Police Wives Guild. Coerper, who was employed 11 a part ·WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Strom Thunnond says the United Nations head- quarter1 In New York is a base of C:Om- munlst subversion and should be moved to an Island or &0me other country. · In a Public Broadcattlng Service In- terview Thursday, the Soulh .Carolina Republican said Olmmun.lst nations are rast coming to,domtnate the United Na· lions !ind are Working to "destroy the prestige or the. United States. II Thurmond aaid he would prefer that the world body l>ec:on>< 111 orianliaUoo ol free world naUona only. HELD IN SHOOTING Postal Clerk Alleman ' Los Al Facility Future Tenuous But S~udy Set The future of.,,Los 'Alamitos Naval Air Station is still in question, but a Senate· House confere11ce committee has ordered further study before all owing an Arm y reserve helicopter unit on the base. Thursday. the committee to I d Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird to review plans for the use of the air base as a reserve helicopterltralnlng facilit y. Government officials from the city leve l up to the federal leveJ have been battling over the future of the big air b_.»e sinee the Navy announced more Ulan a year ago that It was easing flight operations there. On Oct. 6 the Senate adopted an amendment by California's Senator John Tuniley to the military authoMzation ~ curement which banned use of any money fot the air base U!]til , Lalrd reviews the helicopter proposal and other possible use!i. The Senate-House committee deleted Tunney 's amendment, but gave a similar ln~ruclion lo Laird. Tunney said the Ntivy Ms just com· pleted the phaseout ()f flying adiVlty Jt Los Alamitos and that It appeared un- ~sarlly dangerous let brin& another flying milsioo Into Utt hlahJy· w-boolzed . area. • ' If Unstayed WASHINGTON (UPI) -Awaiting a final legal decision from the Supreme r.ourl, scientists, senators, Conserva- tionists and pa,cifists appealed directly to President Nixon today to postpone the mighty Amchitka Island nuclear test as a po~tially deadly mistake. Barring a last-minute stay from the court or the President, a red buttorr will be pressed at 2 p.m. PST Saturday in a bunker on the northern end of the desolate island in the Aleutian chain , 1,200 miles southwest of the Alaskan coast. triggering a five-megaton warhead buried nearly 6,000 ieet underground. All hope of a legal delay rested in the hands of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who recei ved late Thursday the appeal of eight organitations charging that the Atomic Energy Commission had not fully considered the environmental risks of the te$t as required by law. Burger was expected to turn the case over to the full court for a ruling, most likely following their regular Friday con- ference , on the merits of a stay pending appeal of a federal appeals court decision against l:ilocking the test. The White House, atandlng by Nizon's decjsion Lo proceed ,with the blast ~'for ovenidlog ....., .. ot...UooeJ ~." chanrtelled all calls lo~ AEC, which reported it had received 8,700 Ietter1, telegram1 and' teJepltone calla of,protat 11 of Thursday. It uld each ~ bl amwered Individually. The White J:louse reftlled again today to estimate bow many protest& It had received. The AEC has consistently discounted the environmentalists' warnings tbat·the exhaustively plaMed and monitored . underground test, code-named. Cannikin and !our times bigger than any the United States has ever conducted, might set off major earthquakes or tidal waves (See MICHITKA, Pace %) * * * Educator Cites J>ossihle I'eril From Amchitka ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Dr. Kurt H. Hohenemser, professor of aerospace engineering at Washington University, said Thursday the nuclear blast schedul· ed for Saturday on Am chitka Isla11d presents "a small possibility of a major catastrophe.'' (Related story, Page 10). "There is a great probability that oothing will happen, but there is a small possibility that tremendous disaster will occur," he said. Ho]linemscr told a news conference the blast wiU be "in an area of earthquake activity, and an earthquake may be trig- gered, although not caused, by the blast. An earthquake that would be triggered by the blast is one that mlgqt have occurred at a la ter time." He said such an earthquake could be large enough "to damage both the Asian and American coasts." "This blast will be five times as large as any in the past," ~e said. "Nobody knows what a five-megaton.. blast will do." "We must balance the benefit of what the blast i.s supposed to r.ccomplish with the risks involved ." ' Reagan Yields Reward Power SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan has signed away his right to offer rewards for the cap- ture or stagecoach and ,wagon ban- .dits. Reagan did it as part of a bill ex· tending the rewards statute to bombers of public buildings and airplane hijackers. The bW by Democratic Assetnblyman Leo ~1cCarthy or san Francisco also raL,es the maximum reward the governor may offer from $1 ,000 to 110.000. Stageroac.h and wagon bandits were stricken from the 19th cen-tury 1tatut.t In · a section of the ·McCarthy law redtllnlng ...ior crlrnu. • , Blast Opinions Now Being Heard By White House By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tlHo O.Jty l"llol St11f U you have ever had a nagging desire to phone the White House and get something off YOlU' chest, now is the tiirie to do it. AJ1 the nuclear test explosion on Amchitka Island looms nearer, the White House has placed at least one special assistant on duty by a telephone t.o handle incoming personal opinions on the blast. The DAILY PILOi' was alerted to the OP.inion line by local radio ~Uon broad· cast& of the phone mnnber (~1114) and a subsequent request to express an op.inion on the 'test. ·A check by the DAILY PILOT proved -!ht number lo be that of the Wblto House rw1tc;hboard. In a buslnesslike manner. our call was transferred to the sPeciaJ assistant who, in a·very low key manner, a~ked ~imply "Are you for or against?" The asSistant, by the tone of his question. seemed to expect concise one-word responses. Reasons for opinions wi!re courteously but abruptly cut off. When asked by the DAU. Y PILOT if he was the only one laking calls of opinion on the blast, the assistant said that any information wou'ld have to come frorri the office of Presidential Pres.r Secretary Ronald Ziegler. Ziegler's aideS said they had no knowledge of a concerted effort to make the White House number known to the public and thst the publicity was pro- bably undertaken by individual radio sta· tions." A spokesman for Ziegler also said he had not been informed 1hat the White House was accepting these calls and that someone must have been given the duty without his kno"·Jedge. The spokesman did ribt know how large a staff was handling the calls blJt he said he suspected it was probably less than five people. Al any rate, be said, It appears as if the ·While House will accept one word opinions: on the atomic test from any: private citizen. For the more budget conscious, a 3-- mlnute can·costs on1y 35 cents between U p.m. and 8 a.m. Barring judicial ()r pretidentlal orders halting the test, It should go oJf Saturday about 2 p.m. our time. · · Orange Coan Weather You won't see too much sun this wef!kend, especially In the pre- noon hours when fog and low clouds prevail. Top temperatures will be SS along \he coast and 7S further inland. INSmE TODAY Lottt L.tn~a will soon appear ot Mothtr Courage at UC! and the W tekendtr has a .story and pleture1 abouc her on Pagµ5, today. llllll'lt " C1llferrlt. 11 (llftkllll u, ' C11HlllM ,M..JO CM!la U Crfltwtrl n Dlllll lrttlktt u 01 .... rc•t 11 lrdllo•fll ..... ' 1'111111(1 '"" HI~ 14 .t.1111 L.all*n 11 ..-•a M~h11I Plllllll I• Hllltftll Nf'#I ... ~'"" CWMY lt RUIWtllllt V•2t ..... ..N lttdi Mlrttth lf.11 T1!nlMfll n Ttlffltfl ~> W11ll!w 4 Wl!lttlr'• Htws 1J.U w.n.....,. ... WMfl__. twl • • 2 D.&11. Y PllOT • H •• I t Full-time Mayor'·s Liaison Staff· Studied 8)' ALAN DIRKIN ., .......... ""' 118" nae atalJ ot five or 1lx employes btlnC recominended for the elected mayor of Huntin&lon Beach-if the position i~ ap. proved by voters -may not have job aecurity and benetlts provided by civil Oil Sanctuary Opposition Worrie s Solo11 By BARBARA KREJBlCH 01 IM 0.llY 'll•I Sr.ii Sen. Alan Cranston ([).Calif.) said to-- day he is "very concerned " about ad· ministration opposition to his attempt to pu~h thraugh a series of bills that would establish six ail·free sanctuaries in federal waters off the California coast. "California hu the right to p~tect her shoreline and the federal government should not attempt to prevent this with no valid reason ," the senator said. The bills (S 1446 through 51452) /low the subject at hearings before the Senate 1.!inera!J, Materials and Fuels .Sub· e<>mmittee. ha\'e been misinterpreted by administTation officials. notably Assistant Secretary of the Interior Hollis M._ Dole. Cranston said in a telephone interview fram his Washingto n D.C. affice. Dole walked out of the subcommittee. hearing Thursday as Cranston attempted to explain that revisioru: cf his ariginal ail sanctuary bill had removed objections to jt. The proposed bills would prohibit oil drilling, but not oil exploration. in FederaJ waters seaward of six existing state oil sanctuarits. These ertend from the Mexican border north to Humboldt and 1'-tendocino Counties. They include the coasts of San Diego and part al Orange County and the offshore islands of San Clemente and Catalina, the recreation beach areas in Los Angeles" Couhty and San Luis Obispo County, the Monterey Bay and Big Sur areas and state sanctuaries off the shores of the two r..1orthcrn California counties. "These are 50me al the most beautiful and recreationally used portions of the e<>ast," uid Crll11l!iton, "a~as where the people, Jn es!ablbhh:ig the existin g state sanctuarler, h•ve voluntarily given up the economic bloefit.s of o" because they place a bicUer' vaJm on the coastal en- viromrlent." Roughly half of the California coast would be affected. Specifically exrtudtd, he added. are • areasWltetloif,;,,,,il~riroductdmd . "wheri !lie ~ want to .hive op pro. ductlon;" cu.CJi ~I ' ~ng Beach, Seal Beach ,nd ~Ions cf VentUra County. Also included !ft the revised legislation fs a provislan that would ·empower the President to , end the Federal · ail 1anctu1:fies in a national emergency re- quiring additianal all production. Core drilling' and exploration. but not leasing, would be· penniUed in the pro- posed Feder.al sanctuaries, which v.·ould ertend from the edge or the state preserves at the three-mile limit. seaward to the edge of the e<>nUnental 1he/f. ··nus is 11 way to co~rve cur resources," said Cranston, "to find out if oil is there and to keep it there , available 1f it is needed. Opponents of the bills choose not to understand this." Cranston said he first began to think about the Federal sanctuaries during the Santa Barbara ail spill "'hich occurred during hls first 10 days in office. though he had been interested for a long lime in the problem of keeping oil drilling away from coastal areas "'here people object ta it. His first bill was introduced in 1969. Sen. George ~1 urphy cooperated in drafting the new bills lo meet ad· ministration objections. Cranston said, and now Sen. John Tunney is serving as co-sponsor of the legislation. OIAN61 COAST ' DAILY PILOT ' / \,,,,,.,, O».IT l'UIUIH!Wt t!OMPAXY 1.MftN.Weff -... -\ J•tk a. cur., ·t '"' ............. ~~ n.. .. 1tt .. n ·-,..... .. A. M~hto• """91111 llOllll" Al•• Ditki1 ...., en,... c-.tr tlltw H""""'• a..tll Offke 17175 .. Kii h111.1'•rd M.tUltt-AU"'" P.O. ._ 7t0, '2641 --'---SWdi: m '°""" a-. Cata ... , "' Wiit .., s-~ ,_.! :am H..,....t ._,......,.. .. ~ -.... El QiarO ••• service and per10nnel system reg ul1Uons. "Tiit mayor wuld he able to fin them at any time for no rt~ion at Ill If he wiabea. 11 s•id Larry Curran. a member ct the Cl!arter RevlJlon Committee studyina the proposition at a meeting in City Hall Thursday night. ' A staff that u·ould servl!! both the Rather Sco ot Tlian Shoot An att rac11ve 22-year-ot8 Orange womao told police 5ht "·as kid· naped by an anned ~Tarine Thurs. day night , but offi~rs said today tha t she "'°" the "·ar. The vicym told investigators a ~Iarine forced his \fav into her car when shf-stopped fo r a traffic si~al at 700 N. Glassell St. He forced her to drive around at gunpoint, but when they reached the intersection of Katella and Struck Avenues she stopped the car and said, "Shoot or get out." Police sa.id the Mori11e got out: He was arrested' shortly thereafter while hitchhiking in the 1000 block of Batavia Street. From Page 1 MURDER • •• Burtner's office. At that mom en I Butner Gaulden '\'illiam Brown, assistant po St master; Orville HopkiAS, assist.ant superintendent of mails and AUred Maisto. a foreman, were discussing holiday mail procedures. Saviers said lhe four men were seated in a semi-circle facing Burtner with their backs to the door. Police allege Alleman burst through the ·door, aimed the gun at Burtner, said "OK, you 've bad it," and pulled the trig· ger. ''The gun misfired," Saviers asserted, "'but about that point everyone realized what was happening and everything started moving." According to police reports . Brown ran out of the office and Hopkins and Maisto scrambled behind a desk. Gaulden apparently was shot in the stomach when he tried to take the gun away from Alleman , police said. Burtner was shot once in the chest . but managed to run cut of the office into the port.ion of _the post office used by the public. There, police aaid, be collaP6ed. Alleman allegedJy walked aver" the pro- strate Burtner. knelt ar leaned over and fired a second shot into the base of the P'!b"•'*er11 akWI. ' • • Sea·l Beach Man Dies in Crash A 20-year-old Seal Beach man was kill· ed and his passenge r critically injured v.·hen their fofl!!ign car went out of control and crashed Thursday night on the San Diego Free"·ay near Brookhurst Street in Fountain Valley. Dead an arrival at Fountain Valley Community Hospital was Steven Lee Runnels. 605 Southshore D{h·e. In critical condition al the same hospital suffering from head injuries is Beverly Ga il ?\1ohler. 20, of 604 Beachcomber Drive, Seal Beach. Highway patrol officers said RuMels' car. northbound on the free1vav hit the center divider fence, veered baCk across the traffic · Janes smashing into a guardrail and overturning. Both Runnels and ~liss ~lohler were thrOWn from the careening ,·ehlcle. mayor and council w.11$ recammt.ndtd by Or. Paul Schmidt, assiatant prolt&¥r ot po\IJical science at Ct1 State-, Lona: JllKb. He aees th\ mayor and" his stall work· Ing as a liaison between lhe council and administrator. interpreting p n I I c y • playing the role of an 01nbudsman In AEC Chairn1an Tai{ es F a111ily To Amchitka A1\1 CHITKA ISLAND. Alaska 1AP1 - The head of the Atomic Energy Com· 1ni~sion watched preparations I o r Saturday's scheduled u n de r gr o u n d nuclear blast and d~lared, "There is no risk." With his wife and twa of hls daughters at bis side, AEC Chairmin James R. Schlesinger late Thursday peered into the 5,(l()O.foot-deep hole where the five. megaton device will be delonated. They plan to remain an this barren, \\'indswept Aleutian island until after the lest. . "It's fun fGr lhe kids, and my wife is dtlighted to get away from the house for a "'hile," Schlesinger said. The Schlesingers watched as workmen v.'ere dumping S,600 tons of sand and gravel into the shafl. sealin4 lhe nucle;.r device in a chamber where 1t is schedDI· ed lo be fired at s p.m. EST Saturday. f.-lany environmentalists have ex· pressed fears that the blast e<>uld touch off a series of earthquakes or send a tidal wave rolling across tbe Pacific Ocean. The AEC maintains such possibiliti es are remote. Officials of the test -code-named Ca11· nikin -said everything was on schedule for what will be lhe most powerful un· dtrground nuclear explosion ever con· ducted by the United States. Schlesinger, several aides · and tv.-o n1~mbers of the Joint Comm ittee an Atomic Energy arrived Thursday after stopping in Anchorage to pick up a group of newsmen and other AEC afficials. The congressmen are Reps. Cr,a ig · Hosmer <R-Calif.J and Orville Hansen j R·ldaho). Hosmer was accompanied by his wife. Tfie members of Schlesingtr's family included his V>'if~ Rachel , .and daughters, Anne. 13. and Emily, 9. Six other Schlesinger children remained ln their suburban Washington home. . ! ' Beach:s Ma yor Praises Clinic In Fund Effort cht<'kln& t1Uuns' complain~. and handl- tni pubilo rt11tions chores. The selup proposed would 1J11e the mayo~il branch or a.o,·trnment a chief adm lnbtrative 1$!il!ihtnt -Public Information Ofrtcu Bill Reed '''OUld be mo1·td lo thJ.~ post -an economic de velopment officer -Bill Back 1s Grads .. pretenUy doing this job and would be tranalerrtd -two leCl'etarles and one or two part-time 1dml.nlatraUve interns. Se\·eral revl!IOn committee members stre:i:i!d that the staff should be loyal tG the mayor with ~1n. Cornelia Johnson co mmenting that the job~ would be quasi· poll!Jcal and chairman Tom Llvengood Return H 11 ntington Slates H 01neco1ni11g· Traditional homecoming celebrations l\.'i ll be htld tonight and Saturday night at tn·o Huntington Beach high schools and Golden \\'est College. One af the more elaborate displa\'s js 5cheduled during tonight's halftime ceremonies of the 8 p.m. football game bet"·etn• Huntington Beach High School Oilers and the Santa Ana Saints at Sheue Field. Last year's Oiler queen Kathy Crouse will take o; hot air balloon ride to the cent.er of the fie ld where the new queen will be selected from finalists J\felinda Armslrong, Lynn Terry. Karen Rochester, Cathy Rogers and Cory Shaf· fe r. fo~ollowing lhe coronation, the 1971 quten will rise over tht field and land near a stagecoach which will carry her for a ride around the track. i\larina High School's homecoming game between the Vikings and the Loara High School Sa:tons begins at 8 p.m. tonight on the \Vestminster High School gridiron. Themt of this year's h a I f t i m t ceremony is "Echoes of Valhalla." meant to symbolize the return of ~farina's alumni . Ten finalists are vying fo r the homecom ing queen lllle and include Cheri Baroglio. Slephanie Blase. Terry Carter, Carolyn Clark, ~larty Fugita, Sue l\a"•ashima. Shery Marquard!, Diane Parktr, Trish Waters. and Jolie Zeltler. The winner's name will be spelled out In fireworks just prior to the coronation and presentation of a football with the team's autagraphs. Golden West College's fifth annual homecoming begins at 4:30 p.m. Satur· day with campus tours from the e<>m· munily center at the Gothard Street parking lot. A box supper will be served iii the cam- pus center at 5:30 p.m., followed by the Go lden West.Cypress game at 7:30 p.m. at LeBard Stadiwn on the Orange Coast College campus, Costa Mesa. Queen candidates are Debbie Brewer, Christine Briggs, Blanca Camargo Beth Fe iler, Lee Ann Johns. Joni Mat~uura, Jenny Nakano. Etenesh Negalu, Becky Perez. ~larianna Roman and Teri Vance~ Homecoming dances are scheduled for 10:30 p.m. Saturday at the Golden West t:ollege Center and immedialelv after the game tonight at Marina High School. There will be no homecoming dance at Huntington Beach High Scliool. From Page J AMCHITKA BLAST. • • and harm marine and wildlife by leaking radiation. The Sierra Club said eight leading scientists, including three Nobel prize u•inners. suggesled "lhere is a real possibilily thaL the President made a mistake in his decision" and urged him to po!tpone the test until all scientific data could be made public. national steurity and world.peace, not to furthu r i~ey charaed there was a "'small fhpugh palpable risk of earth· quake. tidal wave and radioactive con· lamination of tbe ocean.'' Services Held For Carl Stair Among the scientists were Nobel win- ners Linus Pauling cf stanfQtd Universi· ty. Harold Urey of the University of Funeral services wert held today tor a California and George \\'al of Harvard F'ountain Valley man who was killed in University., an iodustrial accident in Orange. The·Sierra a~ and sevin»otl)er groups d~ibing tbe staff 1s "lempor&r)' helfl\' Dlscw&ion wu held on how the ch11111 from Reed's and Back's present poaltiont could be effected, whether they could ht transferred or fired through abo lishment of their positions and rehired to the ne w posts. Personnel Commissioner W a I t e r Young, l\.'ho sat in on the meeting, said the sY.'itch may be complicated. 1'Ha ving fringe benefits and insurance and moving them under the mayor or firing them and rehiring -this is sticky." Young promised to research the city'• personnel regu lations to see what ar· raogement would be possible. He will report back at the committee's next meeting scheduled for Thursday, Nov. II. The commillec is to present its fina f report to lhe counc il in Decemh<'r. Currently a majority of the commillee appears to favor a four-year term fo r the elected mayor with no limlt on the number of terms that mJy be served. Reed ha S'· given the charter committee a memorandum in which he recommends against staffing the mayor's office with po I i tic a I appointees. Reappointment l\.'ould depend on the mayor getting re.. elected, he pointed out. "If a staff were developed either ·1m. mediately er for an elected mayor by looking to tqe presenl staff doing the in· fonnational chores, the.re would be no need to hire .more people except in those areas where the staff is pr~senlly in- adequate.'' Reed said. "I have in mind principally !\ecretarial assistance and a · publication technician. both positians which wiij have to be filled anyway in lhe next year or so." . Reed agreed with Schmidt's report'that the duties of the mayor's chief ad· ministrative assistant include many of the functions now performed In the public information office and "the present PIO is the logical choice an the present staff to assume this position." Councilmen have indic&ted that the position of full·time mayor--defeated as a proposition by 163 votes in an election I t ear -should be resubmitted to the . The issue is expected to be an the in the April councilmanic election. Fonner Citv Admlnlstrator Doyle 1'1iller. fired by the city council last month and who has said that he may run for the ofrice of mayor If it is approved by vate:J'. sat in for part of Thursday night"s n1eeJing, but made fe~mments. Comn1itlee membell6 ~Ve '"not iron~ out ful!)I the duties of an elected mayor \\•ith some favorin2 an "o pinion maker'" Md lobbyist and others fa voring a strong leader. Curran recommended that in additJon to interpreting policy. as suggested in the Schmidt report, the mayor should form ulate policy and the budget. Schmidt responded that such a rtsponsibility may undercut lhe city administrator. leJding the legal battle to block"'the test. A spokesman for lhe coroner said Carl headed by the Commillee for Nuclear oav;d Sta;r, 34. of llS49 ROO.mary Av•. Synod ReJ· eels Paper Responsibility, took out full page ads in died 'at St. Joseph 's Hospital Tuesday the New York Times and the Washington morning after his chest "·as crushed bv a VATICAN CITY <UP!l -The third in- Post asking Nixon in an open letter to steel l·beam. · temational synod of bishops rejected to- delay the blast "in the interests of 'T'he accident occurred at the Oran ge day all but one section of a major docu· Justice." Iron \\1orks. 838 No. Cypress St.. Orange. ment dealing with the modem day crises Thirty.four senators signed a telegra1n i\lr. Stair lea ves his wife. Dorothr of 1var. hun ger, torture and injustice. \tayor George McCracken is writing .1 lo Nii on from Sen. Edward \\I, Brooke parents <..:ecil and ~lary Stair : sisttrs: Synod sources said the 202 delegates letter of commendation to the Free Help I R·Mass. ). urging cancellation because ~larlene Caraba and Sandra Williams, rejected the document because it was too Clinic of Huntington Beach to assist it in .. ,o proceed with the test is to cndange~ .and brother, Cecil Stair. general. obtaining United Crusade funds. 1-------------'-'-------------------''--'--------'------ The letter was asked for by Coun· cilman Norma Gibbs who lauded the 1·Hnic's efforts in treating 5,003 persons since April. C nited Crusade spokesman Bud Greene said the donation-funded clinic had not ret applied for United Crusade monies. He said if the clinic enters ils ap- plication by April, it will be subject to the re\'iew of an admissions commiltet which 'r1 1J scrutinize its directorship. operation, books and usefulness in the comm unity . "This has been a tough year for us,'" he ,:aid. ''"1e don't give the money out "tlhout looki ng into everything." HOLIDAY SPECIAL By Dr'exel . ' Newport Planners Slap An E[aser on F,reeway By CA~'DACE PEARSON Ot "'' Otlff 11'0.t stiff The Newport Beach Planning Com· mission Thursday night did away \\'Ith the Pacific Coast Freeway. Commissioners. in a surprise action. officially declared that the e<>ntroversial superhigh"•ay has ne\•er existed, docs not exist and "'ill not exist -at least in ?'ewport Beach. Acting on a mo!ion by Chairman Curt Dosh, the commi~sion unanlmou~l v ordered tts staff to "dtlete from future reports. maps and "·orking papers th e projtcled route cf the proposed Coast Freeway " In proposing the aclion. Dosh said any such references ··ro lht freew·ay or ' to alternate plans arc a burden and in· ttrfere with the orderly discussiom and actions of the stsff.'' The co mmission. llseU. ~ho u Id ''proceed tts it ne,er exist~ and never will" and "should make a stal@mcnt lo !hat @f€ec1:· Dosh urgtd. "I "'ill disregard it." he pronounctd. City Attorney Dennis O'Ntll asked "·hat about 1 suit filed agalnsl tht city by E. O. Rodeffer saying that the rtftrendum t lectlon In which the people 'otcd 6 to t agai nst 1be frttway be declared null and ' \'Oid. · Th is legal delail seemed of httle con· cern to the commi1sioner1, ""ho made nn CQmment on the problem. Commiuioner Jackie Healher balked n. e pro sai, although she did \.-Ole for It. "I an' liee thal if ~·e don"t talk about 11 it 9-'on't exist Il doesn't go away that easily." she. said. · O'Neil admitted that •·tht state by all indications won't force lhe freeway o:i t\ev.·port Beach. Bui .thert a r e movem ents 1n other cilles for free"·ay referendun1s also." ~le "·arned , "There is a chance lh?-- slate will take a stand somewhere because all its freeways art being shot down by the cities." But Commissioner Donald' Adk inson -told fellcyw com missioners at lhe mid· night discussion th.it. "\\"e hil\'e to start planning for reality. Thert \\•ill be no freeway and 'll'e might as \veil plan for lhat re<1lity."' His declar&lio• abrupt ly end 'd the debate. Commissioners \\'ilUam Agee and '\IUUarn ~lartin .supparted Adkinson. although Marli n \.\'an ted lo Include the Newport and C<lrona del ti.1ar Freeway~. Cornhlissioner C'.ordon Glass suggested Lha l ··perhaps some things are bes! left unsaid," but his idea "'as disregarded and the \"Ole taken. Trying to understand the changes in wording the action would require. James He"•icker, assistant communily de\·tlop- ment director. said. •·)'ou mean now y,·e'll talk About lhe inlerchange betwttn the Newport f'reeway and the Pacific Cotl'it tflghway7" And com munity de velopment Director ftlch&rd Hogan offered that inslead o( referrin& to land In the 1t1te right-of· w1y. "New we'll ta lk about acq uirlna the excess !late land.'' • • LtLY TAIL! S''· HOLIDAY S,ICIAL ' DESK CHAIR-SWIYILS, TILl'S. ROLLS. • HOLIDAY snclAL 'I 39. TWELVE SPECI ALLY SELECTED PIECES FROM OREXEl FAMED ET CETERA COLLECTION. NOW SPE. Cl All Y PRICED TO MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY SEASON MORE ENJOYABLE. FROM GLA SS TOP TABLES TO HALL CONSOLES ••• IF IT'S THE UNUSUAL YOU' RE LOOKING FOR, YOU'LL FIN D IT IN ET CETERA. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-OREXEL-HERITAGE NIWPO•T sro•• ONN ,.IDAY 'TIL t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W11tellff Dr., 642·2050 O,EN flUDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS ProfMtlonal Interior De1l9nert Avall1hl--.AID Ptl•111 T•R ,,_ MMt •Io,..._ c.....,, ....... 40.12•1 LAGUNA 'EACH · 345 North Cots! Hlghw•y Phono: 494-6551 ''Now you 're aetting the ldta.11 smiled _,...._. C'ommiss1oner "'illla1n Haze"·lnktl. !-------------+--------------------------------··· - • • • ' - PanelOkays . Retroactive Pay Hil{e s WASHINGTON (AP l -The House Ba11king Committee Thursday angered President Nixon and delighled organized labor by approving retroactive payment of mosl previously negotiated wage in· creases stymied by the wage freeze . The provision Y.'Ould require payment of alt bul ·'gro~sly disproportionate" pay raises negotiated before Aug. 15. The committee also added a number of other drastic revisions to the ' President's pro- posed Ph&ose 2 economic legislation. Organized labor, 1,1.·hich repo rtedly has been fighting 1,1phill for refunds of frozen- out raises. saw the coNmittee action as a victory. ''It's a 1,1.•hole new ball game," an AFL-CIO spokesman said. Nixon reacted sharply in a statement read t~eporters at the While House. ';The c mittee's action is clearly in- consist nt with the purposes of the economic stabilization program," he said. •·11 v.'ould provide for a piecemeal ap- proach lo the development of the pro· gram.'' he said, find "limit the fl ex· ibility'' of the PaYBoard and the Price Commission. The AFL-CIO sa id of the \\'hite House reaction. "It is obvious that Congress has more regard for the validity of contracts than does the While House." Thfre hav'e been repo rts that the five labo r members of the 15-man Pay Board are read y to walk out unless the Board. allows existing contracts to remai n valid, and approves a refund of pay raises lost because of the freeze. Donald Rumsfeld, director of the Cost ()f Living Council and an ex officio member of the Pay Board. commented at the \Vhite House, "There have been reports about everything, most of whi ch haven't come true." Rumsfe ld sai d he' thought the Bankin~1 Commiltee action "direc tly undermine s' lhe tripartite idea behind the Pay Board in which labOr, managemerlt and public representatives are to decide pay policy. But he added at another point. '·I am not a spokesman for the Pay Board. They are doing their work in an orderly fashion •.. progress is being made ." Beaches to Keep Abreast '"in LA? LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The city parks and recreation commission has expressed displeasure ,over a city council committee recommendation which would allow women to go topless at beaches. The council's recreatiol) and parks committee, while reviewtlfg a proposed beach and park ordinance in September. penciled out a ban on exposing the female breast. However, the commission turned down the council committee's recommendat ion Thursday and adopted o: sta,ff report which said such a move might "encour- age public nudity." The proposed ordinance now goes to the full council, where the pros and cons of the exposed female breast will be debated. NIXON LEAVES FOR FLORIDA \VASHING TON (API -President Nix- ()n left today for his first weekend in Florida since early October. Nixon is expected to stay at his Key Biscayne vacation ho~~· until Monday, returning to Washington then. He will be off on anot}ler trip Tuesday to appear at • Republican fund-raising dinners in .New York City and ChJcago Tuesday night with an overnight stay in Chicago. • \ Cigar Puffer Yugoslav President Josip Broz 'fito can puff a cigar with the best, as he shows new smen at the National Press Club in Ottawa prior to departure for · Quebec City. Judge Sentence~ Marine Killer To State Pris·on By TOi\1 BARLEY 01 1111 DtU~ l'llM S!tll Convicted killer Mark Johnson of San Clemente was sent to state prison today to begin serving a five year to life sen· tence. Orange County Superior Court Judge William Murray imposed that sentence on the young marine just 22 days after a jury returned to his courtroom to find " Johnson, 21 , guilty of the slaying on June 16. 1970, of his pregnant wile Connie Lynn Johnson, 20: Johnson. who has shaved his head since the trial, smiled and shook hands warmly' with defense attorney Ray Sharp after the sentencing on the 2nd degree murder -conviction. His }llothcr v.•as present in the courtroom. Judge Ji.1urray rejected Sharp's 11th hour plea for the commitment-of his young client to the California Youth Authority_ "I look on the CYA as one of the'most ineffective agencies ever created by man," the jurist said. ··1 am going to order Mr. Johnson's shipment to Chioo, and 1 am also going tc. ~der that he receive every psychiatric treatment possible through the medical center at Vacaville. Sharp left the courtroom to file an ap- peal against Judge Murray's g u i I t y verdi ct. His motion for a new trial wa s denied this morning. He unsuccessfully argued today that .1 series of confessions played back during the trial were actually inadmissible and should have been ruled so at the time. • Sharp particularly a t t a c k e d ;;,· videotape taken in the San Clemente ~ police stat ion v.·hile JohnSon was under the influence of "truth serum" sodium amytol. The young marine admitted •at that lime that he clubbed Ji.1rs. Johnson wit h a bar stool and later washed off blood in the shower. But he could not recall the stabbing of his wife. It WiJ.S succesfully alleged in the trial that Johnson slit his wife's throal and slabbed her more than 20 times with a butcher knife and then bludgeoned her head with the bar stool after a quarrel over his smoking of marijuana. The naked woman's body wa~ round sprawled on the bed in the couple's apart· ment at 416 Monterey Lane. Johnson was arrested a year later. Crewmen Describe Death Of Fan1ed Scripps Yacht By ALMON l.OCKABEV DAILY l'ILOT SHllM E~lt.r There are those who will tell you that a yacht is just another inanimate piece of property. John Scripps of La Jolla, chairman of the board of Scripps ne"'Spapers, l5 not one of these. "John "·ill take it hard. The t\ov\a "'as ()Ile of the great treasures of his life." Thus spoke Mrs. Scripps as she greeted the crew of the 89-foot ketch Novia del ~·lar "'hen they arrived in San Diego Thursday afler abandoning the vessel 46 miles nort of desolate Cedros Island as she sank in names Wednesday morning. \\'hat ~1rs. Scripps meant wa s that, as cif late Thursda y. Johnny did not yet know that his belO\'ed Navia rsweethurt ()f the sea) was a charred hulk ln 900 fathoms of water off the Baja California Coast. After skippering Novia de! 1'-lar to Cabo San Lucas in Ne"·port Harbor Yacht Club·s Cape San Lucas race, Scripps turned the yacht over to h.is professiona1 crew and went on a hunti"J trip deep in the wilds of Baja Californ ia. The Navia del ~1 1lr, one or the last of the clas.sic old yachls on the West Coa!I , went down In names early \Vednesday morning as the crew watched from a 1porl fishing t>o;it that had rescued ~ frorn the burning vessel. "The last we saw of No\•ia at about t a.m. Wednesday she was blazing like a huge Chris tm as tree," said 63-year-cild Sam Davis woo had celebrated his 25th yeor as professional skipper of the Novia last Tuesday, Another survivor was Stan Gregory, 54, v.·ho had spent 23 years of his life: on the yacht as professional steward. The other survivor was Charles Ladow, 64. reported to be a relative by marriage of Scripps. How did it happen? No cne will ever know for sure, but Davis theorizes that the fire in the engine room was touched off , by a hot ex~ijust of the auxiliary engUle. · The first th'e three-man crew knew (){ the fire was when Ladow came on watch at 10 p.m. Tuesday. He told Davis he thou ght he smelled snoke as he came through the saloon. \Vhen Davis and Ladow 1lfted the engine hatch for inspection they were driven back by a cloud of smoke and flames from the: diesel engine. "We tried to fight the fire with ex· tlnguishers, but it was already too far along," said Davis. Bolh men said they could hear fire extingulsber1 popping i1 the engine compartment. Soon the names were coming out the after ha tch and set the mlu.en mast and !I.ii afire. The heat was so Intense that no one abolrd could get to the radJo to get off a dlstres.s ca ll. IS.. NOVIA. Page ll I .GOP Attempts ' ' To 'Hijack' Remap Bill · SACRA1.fENTO IAP ) -Se n ale Republicans, taking advantage of Democra tic absences from the Senate floor session. attempted today to hijack a Democratic reapportionment bill and rewrite it as their O\Yn . (Earlier Story Page JO). Republicans reached lhi;lr one absent colleague: Sen. Donald Grunsky of \\latsonville, and arranged a private plane to fly him to Sacramento from a leitislative conference he was atteilding this morning in LagWla Beach. Sen. James Mills. Democratic presi- dent pro tern of the Senate. responded with a warning to Republicans he would lock the entire Senate in chambers until he rounded up all of his votes. "even y, the extent of bringing Sen. Albert Rodda~ back from his vacation in England ." "If you proceed with this course," ~1ills said, "I suggest you all go to your phones and let ·your pi!ople know you are not going to your home church on Sunday morning." After 90 minutes or bitter debate the complex maneuvering lapsed into private party caucuses on a compromise pro- posal to put all reapportionment plans on the Senate inactive file - a sort or legislative deep free ze -to·auow more nejilotiations. Observers specul ated a fl oor vote on the Republican move "'ould probably en"tl in a tie. Sen. 1.Iervyn Dymally. Democratic chief of reapportionment. condemned the GOP move as "dishonest'' and "lacking in integrity." His Republican counterpart, Sen. J ohn Harmer of Glendale, denied ~DYIT11lly's assertion he had ever promised llllt to make amendments on the. floor. "This is not a personal matter," Harmer said. '-'This is the only mean· ingful way we can proceed .'' ' • • .. Frld•Y, N0ttmber 5, 1971 H DAll.Y Pie~ 3 $18,000 Bill U.S. Jobless Legal Fee Fight Rate ake . Dip t~S.8 · By LAFC Looms WASHING ·TO N (UPI) Unemployment dropped to 5.1 percent in October while the ootal number or By JACK BROBACK Members or lhe Local Agency Foima- tion Commission will stir memories of a bitter feud believed ended more than a mooth ago when they debate payment of a $3,894.74 bill for legal services Wed· nesday. ,. The bill is to pay the Santa ·Ana law firm of Stewart, \Yoodruff and'Frazee for legal services ,in the lawsuits betWeen members or the LAFC and the League or Cities and two members of the Board of Supervisors. , The total legal bill is $18,000 and on Oct. 21 the mayors of county cities in- volved in the LAFC dispute decided that the cost would be divided pp between 15 t members of the City Selec.tion Com mittee and four members of the LAFC. The LAFC members in volved ·are Charles Pearson of Anaheim, public nlember of the commission; Tony Coco, mayor of Tustin and LAFC alternate city representative; William D. Ji.1arlin o( Laguna Beach, alternate for Pearson, and Loui$ "Red'' Reinhardt of Fullerton, a city representative. Fifteen members of the City Selection Committee and the four LAFC members par1icipated in the legal .actions which disputed a special meeting Or ·the LAFC at 3 a.n1. on August 9 which named Anaheim attorney Herb Licker to Pearson's post ()n the commission and a previous action v.·hich placed Los Alamitos CouncH.man Joseph Hyde in Reinhardt's position. Now the bill has to be paid. Several cities have indicated th2t they will pay their $768 share of the costs but there is a problem with the $3,894.74 LAF~ share. Colttw••?Ol•f Mod.nl Wa/INlf Styling The commission operates on a very Light . budget dictated by the Board or Supervisors. The stipend covers the salaries of Executive Officer Richard Turner, a full time and a part ti~e secreta~y, plus needed supplies. There is no extra money in the budget so if the commlssipn should vote to pay the bill it would be up to the supervisors to provide the money. Making the whole plot more interesting is the lact that the defendants in the fonner lawsuits. Supervisors Robert Bat· tin and Rona ld Caspers are stiltfnembers ()f the LAFC and entitled to vote on the action. ln facl they will probably have two chances to express their feelings about pa ying a legal bill which was used to at- tack them, once next Wednesda y and later when the supervisors get a piece of the action. Ironically: the whole. situation is moot today following the surprise actio~( Supervisor Ralph Clark on Sept 22 Which re-seated Pearson officially on th:Ccom· mission before the laws suits could be completed. Clark was sitting as alternate for Casper!' who had beel) called lo \Vestminste r on business. 'Caspers "'BS irate when he returned to find that · Pearson had been re-seated but the vote stood. Dog Has Green Puppy COAR S EGOLO (UPI) -Chorles Arrii strong had a hard time convincing friends that his pet dog's litter included a distinctly green female pup. M913LPJI M•dit.,,.,,..,, Pac.,, Styling Americans holding jobs reached a reeord high, the gove rnme nt reported tuday. H wa s the second st raight monthly decline in the jobless rate, following ~ position by President Nixon of the "'age-- price freeze on Aug. 15. Joblessness ha! hovered between S.6 percent and 6.2 per· cent of the work force for the past year. lt stood at 6.0 in September and 6.1 per· cent in Augus t. The Labor Department's Bureau cf Labor St~tistics, which reported th e figures. said the total number o{ job holders rose 320.000 in October, after seasonal adjustment, to an all time high of 79.8 million. This was th e second avorable report in as many days rrom the administration's standpoint in its effort to slow ~nfh1tio11 and reduce unemployment. On Thursday, the Labor Department reported a drop o~ 0.1 percent in wholesale prices in Octo- be r. Changes at the wholesale level usually percolate downward to be reflected la ter at the consumer level. Today's report said 4.6 m i 11 io n Americans were out of work in October; 270.000 fewer than September. Th~ decline was greater than usua l for this time of year, the BLS said, and resulted largely from a reduction in the RUmbe.r of men who lost their jobs. Nonfarm payr.olls remained virtually unchanged in October, and employment g::.ins in several industries were offset by more men on strike. particularly coal miners and longshoremen. The' job report was good news for the White House after bad news came from Capitol Hill Thursday in the form of 'I vote by-a key congressional Committee to force the Pay Board to approve retroac• Uve wage increases tJ'iat were delayed ht the current freeze. 25''01AG.tONSOLE COLOR TV 2J'' DIAG.CONSOLE COLOR TV !fo.llJAT ..-o~ 11,AC., o;)l.Oll 'n!:U."V15IO!'f GUARANTEE n. ........... G[ 25• °""' S.--r&itll ~ T __ TM •ltr•.fwillo.nt ,..,....,,_._ ,.... • ., -"'- ...... ie.ftioft ~ ........ bl" ....... ~ ....... GE ~fROO"/' • • Gf REL~ CMASSIS -£ ......... T• G-v .. *""'" $twp, T-T..ut. Cob -• "'SENSITROMC ..... US'" T ....... S.,-- • GE INSTA.CDlOR ptCTURi -~ ... ~,,.,.""""""' ,_ . "" .. -v--.... s5qq9s Ea ct.a.Iv• ilE Port•·Colot ''lt1·lin•'" 'Pktur•Tube $f88•• A ll•all'f p_,,,. ta-"' TV \w1UJNS ON~Y M 1..as,J • ,.._,... •-ily TV • 110h.l<d!V-ir.·.-... . ·• .. ._,...... r-eon..• . ..... ..........,~ ._..--.rw. • ,. .. C'--' ,. ... .... • ._ •• 6..... .,.,,._".,,..,. ,_,,_... .~,. ..... ..... --i.111-.. •!klllllr• • . ~ .......... ..... • .115 ... lftffl v .... ...... s4qs•• 46 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE! 60LDINWIST & WARNIR HUNTINGTON lfACH SALIS ONLY 142·11t6 ' 401 MAIN STRltT H'UHTINGTON llACH Sll\'ICI I SALH 136·7161 llOOlt'HUflST • WARkil fOUNTAt N'YALLIT SALIS ONLY tlJ.J416 I ' I .I f CAii. Y '!LOT • Cut 40% ·. U.S. Foreign Aid Slashed, Revived ·Army Seize·d by Sadat· Mo ve S tudied in Lig ht of W ar Cr is is WleJu WASHINGTON IUPll -With help from 1 Republican senator who his been , fb3ent for two ye1r1, President Nixon Thursday won 1 breath of life for his foreign aid bill. The Senate Foreign Relations Com· mittee revived the mea sure after 1lashlng it by 40 percent Md cutting it in· to two separate parlll in an effort to get it by a rttalcitrant Senate. . By United Prt111 lnternatlon•I , Egyptian President Anwar Sadat m()V· ed into lhe h.eadquarlers of the high com· mani today and assumed direct charge ()f Egypt's estimated 800.000-man armed for ces. A communique said he did so "in view of the importance of the political and military !iilualion." Political sources in Beirut noted that the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser made the s.ame move shortly before out· break of the June, 1967, war. The sources said the Sadat move was an indication to the world that the Middle East deodlock cannot continue. , SAdat has said repeatedly the l\tiddlf: East crisis must be settled by peace or ~Ar th.ii year. Mohlmmed Hassanein Keikal, edll()r or the semiofficial Cairo newspaper Al ,Ahram, said Sadat has made the decision but he did not say what it was. In Tel Aviv, Israeli military sources !iaid they saw Sadat's takecver ()f the Egyptian army as a possible sign he felt threatened. by officers anxious to resume the war with Israel. They said the picture was not yet clear but "it Is a good sign be smelled 1omething wrong in his Army and found it necessary lo have a stronger hand." "It might have been that some office.rs were unhappy with lhe postponement or the 'date of revolution.' ~1 another said. "A Jot of Ideas can be put forward' •n this." Beirut polilical S()Urces said the Arab world was angered at Israeli prime Minister Golda Meir's speech last week ~ejecting Egypt's conditions for a reopen· tng of the Suez Caria! and that Jn view of Sadat's repeated warnings that the pro-~blem must be solved this year move!! tO bring the crisis to a head were l~evitable. Sadat already was supreme com· mander of the Egyptian forces but his new positi()n will put him in ~ffective, day-to-day control, political sources said in Cairo. The two bills totaling $2 . .1 billion now go to the floor where se1ators one week ago killed 1 single pc.ck1ge of economic and military aid after cutting the ad· ministration's request of $3.6 billion down to S2.9 billion. Hundreds of U.S. Planes A military· communique from Gen. f\.1ohammad Ahmad Sadek, the Egyptian war minister, said Sadat had decided to assume his command functions from his headquarters at the high command ()f tht armed forces. Uli'I T1lff111tw W,(,ks • 'Hs ,_gave and I'm not_, foreign/' ~ Nixon let it be known he was displeased at the latest cutback. "\\'e are not satisfied with that level," said Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. "\Ile do not think it is sufficient." NI XON GREETS GANDHI Whitt House Wtlcomt Bomb Ho Chi Minh Trail The communique said "the decision was taken in view of the Importance cf the political and military sltuaUon through whic h the nation Is passing at present." New Aid Total Not Sufficient, Say s Connally JAKARTA CUPl) -U.S. Treasury Secretary J~ C.0Mally said today the $2.3 billion aid bill which cleared the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was not adequate if security was to be main- t.t.ined in Southeast Asia. Connally met wilh newsmen afte r talk· ing for an hour and a half "'ilh President Suharto on the Nixon Admlnistration for,ign aid program and the Senate ac· tion cutting off American fori!ign aid . He said Suharto was •'enormously in- terested" in both subjects. Sen. J. William Fulbright (D·Ark.), who will manage lhe bills, said the chances-Of passing either were marginal. The committee's deci~ion to revive the aid measure, however, heightened chances that Congress will act to prevent lhe program from expiring Nov. 15, when authority to obligate new funds runs (JUI. Thursday's decision to extend the aid bill on a sharply reduced level until June 30 came in a series of 14 separate com· mlttee votes. li.1any of them were close. The c&:ilical one was an 8 to 7 roll call on splitting the program inlo two separate bills -Sl.2 billion for military assistance and a SJ.1 billion for econom ic and humanitarian program!'!. lt was Sen. Karl Mundt (R-S.0.) who provided the margin of victory fo~ that proposal. Mundt suffered a stroke on Nov . 13, 1969 and h11s not set foot in the Senate since. But Sen. Hu gh Scott IR- Pa.J, used his proxy to provide the "'in- ning margin . The 16th member of the committee, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie ([).J\.1aine J, a leading contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, was absent. If he had been pre.sent, the proposal would ha ve been defeated and the a/te ntative plan for three separate bills on humanitarian, economic and military programs would have carried. India, Pakistan Confli ct Grows, Gandhi Warns WASH!NGTON CUPJ ) -Indian Prime J\finister f\lrs. lndira Gandhi today scheduled her second prh'ate meeting in as many days with President Nixon to follow up her plea for U.S. understanding and support in her nation's trouble with Pakistan. Mrs. Gandhi planned visits with members of Congress and a luncheon Speech at the National Press Club follow- ing her scheduled 11 a.m. White House meeting. J\1rs. f;andhi told a formal state dinner in the \Vhite House Thursday night that unless the problems between India and Pakistan are resovled quickly "There ls no foretelling where it will lead. I cannot avoid the responsibilify or my duty to safeguard the safety of my country." SAIGON (UPI) Hundreds or American "'arplanes pounded North Viet· namese supply lines in Laos today in a major new bombin~ campaign which be¥an shortly before the arrival in Viet- nam of Defense Secretary Melvin R. "Laird. The U.S. Air Force marshaled its en· tire Southeast Asia strike force of 30 B~2 bombers for intense raids against the Ho Chi r-.1inh Trail. Hundreds of Thailand· based Fif Phantoms and F105 Thun- derchiefs joined the strikes into Laos. U.S. military sources said the new stepped-up raids began Wednesday only hours before Laird arrived in Saigon for a look at the progress 9f the Nixon Administration's Vietnamization policy and prospects for sharp new reductions in American troop strength. Beside~ the Air Force heavy bombers and fighter-bomber strikes, the Na".Y put the aircraft carrier Constellation . t h e largest conve nlion 1hip In the 7th fleet in· to action off the North Vietnamese coast, sending waves of fighter·bombers against Laotian targets, the &0urces said. • Connally said he told Suharto that the Nixon Administration "deeply regretted the action of the Senate on lhe foreign aid program" and considered the Senate ac- tion not in the best Interests of either the United States or recipient nations. Connally said he told SW!arto that the administratkln intended to make every possible effort to convince Congress that the cutoff in foreign ald was wrong and that he assured Suharto the American withdrawal from South Vietnam should not be dee~ a withdrawal from Southeast Asia . It "'as Muskie who originally proposed three se parate bills. .Mundt"s stroke left llim part ially paralyzed but, before the vote, Sc1>tt circulated an earlier written proxy Mundt had given him. The committttt's deeptsl cut in the aid program was in the category or ''J;ecurlty supporting as.sistance." r Her voice showed deep emotion when she described the plight of the 9.5 million Easl Pakistan refugees who ha ve ned to India and she said "we are piying the price ()f being an open society." Nixon carefully avoided mention of in· ternational affairs, including the India- Pakislan problem in his formal toast. He ,,. discussed the historic importance of the state dining room and recalled his vislt1 with the I.ate Prime Mini!ter Nehru, Mrs. Gandhi's father. * * * Cambodia Begs U.S. Senate To Continue Aid "I told him the U.S. would contlaue to maintain• presence in Southeut Asia for 50me time to come," he uid. Connally aald that the Nixon doctrine had proved Itself very beneficial in strengthening security ()f na li<>nJ in this region and "we coul d not fors1ke the pro- gress which has betn made." Chilean Marxist Asks New System SANTIAGO tUPt) -President Salvador Allende will send to congress Tuesday 11 bill to replact the chamber of deputies and Senate with a unicameral "assembly of the people" in whal could prove to be a risky political gamble. Allende announced the proposal Thurs· da y nighl before IJ.000 cheering Chileans "'ho packed the national stadium to celebrate his first year as president. The socialist leader said t h e unicameral chamber was needed to streamline Chile's cumbersome Jegish1tive process. It wa11 among the campaign planks of Allende's ''popular unity" C<>alilion, which is dominated by socialists and communists. The proopsed constitutional reform replacing both legislative housrs ·with the ~nicameral assembly would Like place when the rie.rt pruldent ls elected Sept. 4. 1976. Thia Is to help countries that have tc0nomic problems resulting from grave thrub to their .military security. Recalling a 1953 meeting with Nehru Nixon said, ''He told me then that whai India needs, what the world need1, 1S a generation of peace." Blnzing Jet Gas Falls On Autos; Se ven l(illed RAVENNA, Italy CAP) -A doadiy curtain of flaming fuel from a fa lling Jet fighter-bomber enveloped s e \'er a I automobiles Thursday, killing si x persons in the cars. The jet pilot also died. The plane, which had been J>t:rformiog in an Italian Armed Forcts D8y aerial show. barely missed a restaurant crowd- ed with holiday diners and crashed Into a flock of sheep. The pilot. Lt. Col . Luigi Weber. ejected rrom the naming craft, bul his parachute failed to open and he fell onto a state highway. Flaming fuel Spe\ved from the plAne'g ga~ tanks as it passed over the san1e road, enveloping several moving and parked cars. Four occupant.x of one c11r and a baby girl in another \.\'ere burnec1 lo d~alh The parents of the child "'ere cr1ilcally burn- ed and 1t least one other person was in· jured. The crash was near the town of P1narella di Cervia. Authorities said the plane, a Fiat-made G91Y. "·as taking part in an aerial show oul of the nearby Cer,•ia military airport. Spectators saw a column or 1 mo k e shoot out from tbe plane as il "'"eaved and spun in the air. P l'isonel's Remember Ba iliff's Birthday FRE:SNO (UPI) -Munici pal Court Baili ff Ben Kasparian Thursday @Ot a surprise chorus of "happy birthday" on hi s 5oth hirthda,\'. A group of jail inmates lacing drunk charges burst into a dis cordant but enthusiastic version of the birthday song. Most of Nation Pleasant Cool Arctic Air Sweeps Over Rockies; Warm Else where Cnlifarnln ........ SHOWllS ' Temperatures If ,Ulrll1'1C li'JllJJ llrtTl ltlrlATttllrlA!,. ''"'"'""'"' '•nd 11~1cl•lll!l11t1 •~r Ill• '•·PllW~ etrlOd •mil~• •• • • "' Hr111 l.Ht ll'r•t. ,llhvauP•ttUI " ., Jlncnor111e " " .r.ooni. " " B•~t.,litld " " Bo11on .. " Cntc1.e • ,, (Jn,lnnlfl .. " Cl•vt11nlf • " c1n•1 " .. ""-" M Cit Me!ntt " .. Dttr111t • • r1l1&.!n•1 " ' l"rt tr'lfl " ~ '"Ol1n1NH1 " " ,_, .. .. llurl el tftt ll:et,••I t i\d Ill• •lf lf'i Can•t nl. I('""'' en. " " l t1 VIII• " " ~ • • '~" l.•tnt "•"•blr ""''Id'\ lOllJJYllll " PHNOM PENH (UPI) -The Cam· bodian government appealed directly to the U.S. Senate toda y to restore aid to Cambodia and said if it did not the result could be disastrous in Cambodia's war with the North Vietnamese invaders. The appeal, signed by Information Minister Long Borel, sa id it would be "Unthinkable for the American people and g.overnment to abandon the Khmer people who wish nothing more than to de- fend themselves without appeal ing for foreign troops." The government said the consequences of cutting Cambodia n aid would be disastrous but that it had been a little reassured by Defense. Secretary li.1elvin C. Litird's statements in Saigon he was convinced Cambodi an aid "·ould not be killed. "We consider President Ni:a:on',c; policy of helping small countries to defend and develop themselves on their ()Wn as a juM And dignified policy for the "·orld's largest power," the appeal said. It said the Khmer Republic should be the laSt country where this policy should be negated. "On the contrary, the consequences would be disastrous and reach far bryon d Cambod ia if American aid to our country were cut ()ff in midstream. sin ce the North Vietn&.mese aggressors. \\'hatevPr decision is taken \on aid) by the Americans, continue to receive mQre and morP eC'nnomic anc! military aid from the Communist powers.·• Raindr~ps Slo'v Irish Violen ce -A Little Bih BELFAST, Northern Ire,nd (UPI~­ Heavy raln cut bombing and sniping al· tacks across northern. lrela.nd today, an army spokesman said . Jn Belfa st. a.n army team in a 12-hour operation disarmed a time bomb in a. holel. The spokesman reported only onP 1n- C'i0ent afler dark Thursday -a gunman firing at a patrol in Belfast's RomM Catholic Batlymurphy area . No one was finjurcd. he said. An 1umy source speculated th8t in ad- dition lo the rairr, violence mav have been cut by Thursday's raids in ·Roma.n Catholic Areas of Belfast and Lon· donderry involving 1.400 soldiers, <>ne of the bigtst searches yet. 11te 1rmy said S2 persons were ta.ken into custody, bringing to more lhan JOO the number arrested slnCfl Mondav. tn IHlclihon. 11 number of firearms weri scit· •IHwllt •11'11-rtt•H'hl•ot11 .. ,ted ttvt• I ... ltll I ntl '"''0"11 t llf I i.lt. or¥ 111tt rn "'II ISOft\!111111 111 ll'le ltlUiMr11 P\111 of IPlt 111l111n, ~'"" ''"' me"""' neu,. btce••.,~• Wf\ll rfY I '9 II -flOIJ In t l!ltll(!!!fll '""" i nti &11unr1v Mith lodt ' ., Ce>olt•I lffllte•llu<ll tlllff I•-$2 M""•l!ll ..,.,.,.., M•lw•.,..,I• • H " • " ,, g .OI ed . • M<,l(J\ Coldn '" Wl l t•llftll'd ~ Yl'l"41 O\ltr ,..HI el tl1t '"iont ff6M ll'lt -f.r MIU IH•flfl Vllll~ 11 .. _11 ll>I '*1fw"' t/ltl ttr'llflt llot•'lfl lo , ... ""'"""' 1/ltl (tl\tr11 li'1Cll1t Ci>ill °Ntt""r t lr Wll fll\ Ill le!' f ... ,,.. 111t lN1tr t! m. 11tho11. V1•l•lll1 "''" clovllo tOV•rl'd "'8'1 nl i$111Ptt•l'I <:1111,,..,,11 .... lfll'lf ·-···· ..,,.,"'""'-"°'· . The Ml1111'1 ~II~ Ti'Mlnd1~ 1!'1"CluOl"9 fc!tWf lf fl\ll "!tiMf , Wit flot!l'd tn C1tlfornl• wilt! ~rt~• of 41 •' Ofl!lr10 t nd 1111' fnt A lew et 1 M•'"' M10t 'YI~•""· M•"', 1111 dli!lltll toot '" ~t "t!lan, ta Ii lnlonf ,,,.,,..,,l\!>11 ••nit l•eM $j) to 17. W11., l9!T'Nr1lurw M. Su11, /ll noH . T ldu l'll:IDAY ~ 1!1•11 looatnl lew I t• • "'· .C t • ' IATUllO•V , f lnl hit~ • ll;U o "'· 11 I'll'\! (0... • •• , ....... •.II 1,m. J,1 1-eor>tl +.It+. . IO·l/ltM, fl ~ .... ., ... ~""' .,., ..... , \IJll ffl10J lj ,, I "' ,\~I' j JI r"' .Yoon ll 1n11111m ~'"'.)I '"' M•nnu t10•i. ~· .. 0..1~11& _._ ~llle'lll Cll\I' l~~'""f.'' l'h1ltt!tllll I ,.,,_IT Pilll~1t1' f'11,1l1n1. Ort ·~· •1th,.,Mf 1"f:l:"''"'O li ~" H 1:·-· (111' II rtntl Kll ''"' """"''"' V1,,~v1• \'Ill "''"' { " H li •• •• • ll " • • " 11 ~ " il !! i; I. .~ An army bomb disposal team just after midnight t1ts"rmed .a Ume bomb I.hey removed from Belft1st'1 York Ho1ct on Botanic Avenue , just south or the downt own 11rc11. The operation took 12 ,01 hours. A barman 11id two 1i:unmen walked into tht hotel about noon Thursd11y, p1anlcd 1 big white box l•beled "bomb'' in rtd let· .u. l~rg tn the lobby. Anii w&.med everyone to get out be!ozi: fleting . The hea vy ne111 air slrikes marked the opening of a carnpaign similar to ()ne last year. In that campaign, ()ne of the longest and most intense in the history of aerial \\'arfare, American Air rorce and Navy jets dropped hundreds of thousands of Ions of explosives On Communist truck routes. Despite the earlier massive; air strikes, the South Vietnamese had lo invade Laos "'ilh heavy U.S. support from across the border in order to halt the Communist supply traffic. The South Vietnamese invasion of Laos came within a month after Laird's last visit in January. . The Commu.nisls charged Thursday night that Laird had come again to "hatch new plans." Laird had lunch toda y with President Nguyen Van 'Thieu and discussed ne\v U.S. troop withdrawal.'! with South ViP.t· na1nese officia ls preparatory to an ex- pected recom mendation to President Nix- on !hat U.S. forces be cut soon to a 40.~-man noncombat Advisory group. Laird and other top U.S. officials also n1et with South Vietnamese Defense Secretary Nguyen Van Vy on the pro- gress of the Vietnamizat ion program and prospects for stepped-up U.S. troop withdrawals. • llot l!1tde1• Collar Vien1ia Gunmen Flee With Trio VIENNA (U Pll -Three convict! arm- ed with pistols and a police promise of free passage escaped with three hcstage.t and a taxicab toda}!. They later freed the hostage! unharmed, switched to a privatt automobile and Oed into northeastern Austria. The fugitives bargained with police in a two-hour parley inside the ta:a:i parked Thursday night outside r;;tate police head· quarters In Vienna's Ringstrasse. Crowds cf teenagers from a disoo- theque g<1wked as the talks ended early today and the taxi sped off northwast toward the Czechoslovakia border. The border is heavily guarded a n d p<tlice said they felt the convicts \.\'ould hide ()Ut with friends or relatives rat.her than try to flee into a neighboring coun- try. The episode began Thursday afternoon at Krl"ms·Stein Prison at Krems . 50 miles up the Danube River from Vienna, where all three were serving time for robbery. This Ch.icago \v~lder appe_ars to be really hot under the collar as he pokes his he~d 1nto a section or natural gas pipe 19 \veld a i;eam . The v.·ork 'vas being done on the lower level of Chicago's \Vacker Drive. Ready. to Dje. • 1,n Th,ey Slioot Thiev~s lrnn SAN ANTONIO. Tex. ! UPI) -T"·o Iranian rug merchanl!i who thought ~\ they .wou~d be t.aken ou~ and shot for bank theft will just be deported instead lmm1grat1on officials said Thursday. ' \V.hen !He two merchants were taken from their jail cells to be arraigned they. cried .and hugged each other as if they were parting for the last time offlc1als sa id. ' ' Ta ylor CounLy Sheriff Ray Trammel thought th• reacli()ll strange 50 they looked for someone who could speak Pusian. Finally through an inter· prettr. Trammel found out they thought they "were going tc be taken out and shol, a C()mmon penalty for such a crime in Iran . The carpet .n:ierch.ants. Abdul _Monta~e~ Faoyj, ~. and Nnrlhea$lln,, !. ~a~dous. 19, are 1111led 1n San Antonio awa1tmg deportation. lmroigr111fon of. rtc1als .hav~ ruled they. violalcd thclr visitors' permits by stealing $3,300 from· ~ banks 1n A1blene. Austin and San Marcos, Te:a:. I _ They told re:porters lhrough an interpreter they hoped their countrymen t ne\•er learned of their·the.ft conv(ctlon. "In Iran . 11~ \\'ell A~ in all Middle East countries. a the.ft conviction brings shame to the entire family," they s"id. "F'Ortver 11fler ont Is rtrcrred to as 'The Thle:C'." . Roth lran_ians, who have been in the country several m()nlhs. plellded guilty to snatching the money from various ttlt~rs' hands. Authorllie~ said thry ha ve made restit.ution . .. 1 don't know what they're so UPM!I abou t." said deportation offic:'r ~ \\'. C. Henry. "They're just gelling 11 free trip hnme 11fltr robbing: blinks Jf you or I did th11t we'd be sitting in tbr. penitenll&.ry." · I I Rehnquist Wii1s Points With Solons ~ WASfONGTON <UPI) -William H. Rehnquist's nominetlon to the Supreme Court apparr.nlly "'ill be confirmed by the Senate with little difficullv. Rehnquist . ~educed <.'Onsid~rably his liberal oppos1t 1on by talking more frC'tly Thursqay a~ut ~is judicial philosophy. After ~efus1ng ln almost t1ro days of in-ter~oga~1on to. ta lk about his personal ~hef~ in the field of civil rights and ciril hberl1es. he reversed himself. Rehnqu ist had pleaded that tcr take public positions on many such questions now would jeopardize his freedom to decide cases in the field after con· firmation. He also said that beeause he served as counsel to the attorney general, he could not talk about administraliori positions on civil rights and civil liberties ~~ause to ~o so "'ould violate the prO" h1b1llon aJ:ainst a la\\'Yer disclosing hi:'I advice to his client. But in a late artcmoon reversal 'Rehn- quist answered a series or questio~s from Sens. J ohn V. Tunney (D.:Calir. ). and Charles Mathias fR·Md.), that he had refused to discuss before. To Mathias. he said he had adv ised f.1 itchell against taking an official posi· lion that the President had the inhertnt J>O\l'er to tap telephones \\'.ithout court , orders in domestic security cases. To Tunney, he said he though t that any government surveillance of peaceable assemblies that had a "chilling effect" on the exercise of the right to assembly Y•as un constil.JJ liono.i. Following this testimony, Sen. Birch D. Bayh (D·lnd J. said he was "impressed" by the ansy,•ers. "They suggest "'e are at last gell ing some of his personal philosophy," he said. Just before Rehnquist began answer. ing, Bayh had written attorney general John N. Mitchell and President Nixon asking them to waive Uie la\\'yer~lient privilege so that Rehnquist could answer. \Valter E. Craig, a U.S. district judge from Arizona, also testified that Rehn· quist was not a philosophical racist as charged by the southwestern chapter of the NAACP at Phoenix, Ariz. Ca11didate Loses To Do11a1.d Duck! .. F'r!dJ.t Novembfr S, 1971 ·-----.. --DAILY Pll l7!' $ Dete1·gents' Peril .Cited 'False Clai11is Critics l\.nock Ecology Ad s To .Public ~'EW YORK (UPI ) -A report. ''corporate advertising and about the slgnlfica~ ot nonprofit research group said and the environment." the c ont rib u t Jon of Thursday that a nwnber of the The council said it surveyed automobil es to the total air country's major corporations, pollution problem. in advertising stressing what environmental advertising in The uport aaid the ca n and they have done for the en· Time, Newsweek and Business glass container manufacturert vi r on men t , hav e been Week magazines in 1970. Jn overemphasized the role of In· misleading and in some cases addition it 11tudied an ad-dividuals rather than lndustr1 false. verti!'llng supplement to the in the growing aol\d waste WASHINGTON {UPI) -A Chicago n1edical researcher today disclosed test result3 alleging that n on p h o s p ha t e detergents are far deadlier than drain -cleaners if S\\'allo\\'ed. and could lead to catastrophic results if \\'idely used ill American hoil1es. • Three Found. The Council on Economic September, 1971, issue of disposal problem and stre!'lsed Priorities. a group Yi'hich Reader's Digest. the public. would not us11 specializes in reporthrig the Ford and Genera.I ?i.fotors returnable bottles and cans in- £OCial impact of corporations; were criticized for misleading stead of the disposable va.rie- said indi.vidual advertising of the public about the amount of ty. It said surveys showed the Southern California Edison, ;:=po=ll="='·="='''--'-th..:ejir~ca=:r=s=e=m~i~tt=e<lt~'~P~po~s~it~e~. :;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;~ the Standard Oil Co. ofll U~I 'ttlt~tf!t Shot D~d Dr. George E-. Block. a profes50r of surgery at the Unl\'ersi!y of Chicago. said new laundry product s developed to replace environn1enlally susp e c ted J 11, M icliigctll phosphate detergents are SI> hi gh I y Californ ia and Pot I a c h J.'oresls, Inc., "'ere "blatantl y false." Those making misleading sla tements. the council said, included General f\1 o t o r s V N ITED STATES NATIONAL BANK . TELLS PHILOSOPHY William Rehnqulat ¢ caustic they CQU]d kill or maim those \\'ho ANN ARBOR. ~lich. <UPli swallow t~m -particularly children. lie -A 'psychiatrist, his wife and !uggesled they should be banned. daughter \vere found 'shot to Corp.; F'ord f.1otor Co.; Stan-11<:=;;giii dard Oil Co., N.J .: GeneraJll SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH Officer Alleges Arni y Harassing After Accusation Bloc k was called to testify before a death in the kitchen of their Senate Environment subcommittee on his home today. Police said the recent research into stomach and throat dead Cf>uple 's son reported fin. injuries caused by caustic substances. A ding the bodies. copy of a pa per detailing his findings \\'as The victims ""ere Or. Alex· made available to UPI. • ander DuKay, 52, former The study, made on cats. shoy,·ed that medical superintendent or the more than 80 percent of the animals ''psilanti Slate Hospital. his given a si ngle small dose or nonphosphatc \\'ifc, Madeline, 52. and their detergents su ffered severe or fat al 111 · daughter Lori l\larie. 12. juries. By contrast. no cats \\'ere harrned Tht-bodies 1vere found about ATLANTA. Ga. (AP J -Lt. Col . by the phsophate blends, "'hich are ban· 8 a.rn. by DuKa,v's son. Dr. Electric Co.: leading steel manufacturers including U.S. Steel, Armco and Bethlehem; Boise Cascade Corp.; 1nany paper manufacturers and two trade associations -the can people and the Glass Con· tainers f.lanufacturers Institute. "The $4.7 billion advertising expendit ures made by !he top 100 advert isers tor all ad· ve rt isers\ 1n 1970 \Vas $2.2 NOW OPEN SATURDAYS t tti 1 P.M. MON.•THURS. 10.1 P.M. FRIDAYS 10°6 P.M. 17141 140·5211 . Loceted h1: 2125 HARBOR BLVD. S.. c ... , Pl .. , Cotto M ... COSTA MESA call 540.5630 H. M. STOLTE Anthony Herbert . the most decorated ned in n1any eoinn1unilies as pollutants. Alexander DuKay Jr., 23. American enlisted man in the Korea n "La\l'S "'hieh pre\'ent the use of police said. The son had come \Var. has been the target of continuing phosphate detergents and necess itate the lo visit frorn Tra\'erse City. bi Ilion more I ha n the entire I ~;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;iii:iiii:iiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiii outlay from all industry for li pollution ('(lntro l the sa1ne year," the council said in its harassment by supei'iors and was given substit 4tion of highly alkaline non· "'here he is associated \l'i\h instructions in the proper manner for phosphate detergents should be re\'1e\1'· the Traverse City St ate saluting, his civilian lawyer alleges. i>d," Block's paper sai d. "The in· fl ospita l, police sa id. The deputy commanding officer at F't. trocl uction of these caustics into n1i\lions · Police said they were in· 11 [ d' l 1'1cPherson, Col. Tom Reid. denies these of Ameri can homes \1•ill inevitably lead lo \'estigating a possible_ double . 11, lClel allegations. but says he did reprimand catastrophic accidental ingestion!'!.'' murder and suicide. Herbert for failure to extend proper Elsewhere in his paper, Block said Jay,·s DuKay, clad in a robe and [ B • R • military courtesy. banning phosphate laundry producls as pajamas. \\'as shot in ·the ll ig J,Jtg Attorney Charles t.-torgan contended \\'ater polluters "should be repealed." mouth. His \\0ife and been shot Thursday that Herbert, who earlier ac-New phosphate-free laundry produ cts four tini es in the back and • CHICAGO (UP I\ -Eleven cused superior officers of concealing war are high in sodium carbonate. some of sto1nach, and the daughter men. including reputed crimes in Vietnam. is being harassed_ and wh ich Block said are nearly as caustic as had been shot in the back of kingpins of crime syndicate that superiors have given him in· lye. ihe head . units in New York and structions in the correct \\'BY to sa lute. DuKRy "'as born in Hungary Chicago. ha ve been indi cted by hO\I' to stand at aHention and how to pro--and received his tnedical a Federal grand jury on nounce the word "sir.'' Nude G" J S d degree there. He came to the charges of OJ>(>rating a $446.000 l\1organ, Southeastern regional director Jr 8Ve Uniled States in 1951 and stolen securities ring. of the American Civil Liberties Union. became a rP.sident al Ypsilanti Terry l...ord, special attorney al so said Herbert has been given the im· From Death T ~ap State Hospital. He received hi s for the Justice Department's "'pression he should QPl talk to ne wsmen ~ rnasters degree at t he Chicago strike force on unless superi or oflicers give him wriltl'n liniversity of t.l ichigan where organized crime , said the permission to do so. BELLAIRE, Tex. (U PI 1 -A caller he "'as a clinical associate scheme actually in v o Ive d Rt>id denied t.1organ's allegations. in· told police Thursday that a young woman professor of psychiatry. n1ore than $500.000 in eluding the one that he reprimanded \\'SS taking her clothes off on the seventh· lfe became su perintendent securities. even though the Herbert for fail'u re to salute properly. floor platform of a building still under of the Ypsilanti State Hospital nine-('(lunt indiclment returned "An incident to which I believe you ('(Instruction. 1n late 1965. DuKay retired Thursday specified on I Y refer took place on .f..fonday, Nov. I, in Police Chief John \Vheatley strapped a (rom the hospital la.st March $446,000 in stolen securities. which I found it necessary to motivate safety line around his waist. crawled onto to go into private practi~ full Lord said it was one of the Col. Herbert in the rendering or proper the platform and grabbed the woman, by time. largest series of' thefts yet military courtesy that should be ex· now totally nude. Her b r 0 th er .1--~--------t char:ged in the government's FOR RESERVATIONS CALL NEWPORT CENTER TRAVEL 644-1412 Lola lol>lottt ---· + --~ ----__,.~ - --= ..--- W'E.MOVED COSTA MESA BUILDING SUPPLY Now at 120 VIRGINIA PLACE COSTA MESA S4B·2&26 1x12 PECKY CEDAR "'' ft •.•......•.••• , 1 lc l/8 4x8 !Exl.) PLYWOOD •••••••• , •••.•.• l.99 QUART SPAR VARNISH ................ ·• 9Sc GALLON ENAMEL !Reg. $5.95) . • . • • . . . • • 2.9S GARDEN HOSES 7/16xlS ft ...•.•.•.•••. 1.79 2x2·8 FT. CD.F.) ......................... lie NEW HOURS: Mo11.•Ft-I: I to 5-Sef. I fo 4-cloMtl S.N., SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -Jeff Bowers may ask for a recount after apparently being outpolled ln the school board race by Donald Duck. Unofficial tallies show the margin was narrow. Donald got two votes and Jeff one. changed between members of the me~n\\'hile, had been trying to talk her LEGAL NOTICE crackdown on the stolen b k f th ·" l~se:c~ur~iti~•;s~r~a~c;k•;t~. iiijiiijiiijiiij~::::::::::::::::::~~~ military." Reid told a newsman. a.c rom e IC\Jge. F-uTn Reid said the incident occurred in his ''She lunged fo~·ard an..1 I grabbed l'1cr1r1ou5 1u11NES1 ,.. NAME 5TA TlfMl!'NT post headquarters office while "im· hl'r," \Vheatley said after his rescue Tht 1011ow1,,. P"''°" 1, doln• bu•h~u "Imagine gelling beat qut by Donald Duck!" protested Mrs. T. E. Nesbitt, cam paign manager, publlcity chainnan, general vote getter and sister of the 22· year-<>ld Bowers. ~ parting some instruct ions'' lo Herbert. Thu rsday. ''She had never looked around . •l . L1v1 NG wATE11t P111:ooucrtoNs, fln "He was looking out the \vindow , not She definitely had decided to jump." LltcM111d Drh11, Hun111>111on e11cn. paying attention to wh at I was saying and "I had to grab her and hope we both ~~h•t' l(lrk M•cln!osh. , J,, his attitude was Jess than attentive. didn 't go ove r the side." ll!Chtlt1d D•lv1, Huntington 1i.1cn. These actions required me to set the The 2(}..year+QJd on·oman's mother had 1.:!r~fd~~1~1"1'' is b•1"• co'ldvcitd by •n record straight,'' Reid said . called police. saying her daughter left Th;, ~;e!e~"~· ,~.:ic1~~~" thP COllniv Reid specifically denied that he had in· home threatening to commit suicidl'. She c11rk 01 Or1ng1 coun11 on: Oc•. n. 1t11, AR,TISTE DE LA RUE Art Exhibit Now South Coast ?Jau Bowers' slogan in hi& write-in cam· paign was "Our school board will never be the same if you cast your vote for \\'hat's·his name." s\ructed Herbert in the proper manner \\'as upset because or the breakdo\vn of ~r ... ~•vt•11 J. M1ddc" Dt1>11•v C01Jn•1 ror salut ing and ho1v to pronounce lhee ii~h~er~m~ar~rii;a~g~e~a~nd~"~w~as~in~a~de~e~p~s:ta~te:or~~·~:'~'·:·~~':'~'"~"~'=~~"':':"':"~';]"J' ==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=:= word ''sir." ii depression," Wheatley said. ~;:m-r 11• 22• ,., '"" Nov•rn~j,}j ·:mf't PIANOS & ORGANS HAMMOND PIPER AUTO ClfORD SPINET PIAN BY WURLITZER USED s995 MODEL !~! s595 FARFISA SPINET ORGAN s395 Wl ll'lllt fllillll WAI NU, NOW ···" AIYTRIND BUSH & GERTS ~;~ $1099 HAMMON ORGAN BRAM BACH cNo~~o~; PIANO ::::··5570 ~§§UNBELIEVABLE BUYS ~§§ Himmond 0''"" STEINWAY T l WURLITZER CONSOLE SPINET ORGAN GRAND PIANO •• WAS $1495 NOW J ' I", E-.iny 11"1"' r Sev«al Finishes $699 WAS $3495, NOW • WAS $855, NOW ....... . • $2995 P. ·~:t~·::· SPINETTE ORGAI WURLITZER ~. Model 4l0DD $169 5 Coocfff ConMle bl WAS $21l5, NOW WAS";,::::·NOW ti BALDWIN GRAND PIANO $1095 ~ S' 6", Walnut Flnl•h $21 $0 ~ WAS $25H, NOW All Plan" Gua ral'ltffcf 10 Yra., Wit h A f r .. Tunlnt 11'1 Your Hom. DEPAllTMI NT STOA I 0 ' MUSIC • South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa "00.~~:.S:'llo.~r:, .. , ~~~~~ ~I '.For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT ' I Prices Will Never Be Lower-Layaway Now for the Ho&days!. , .~~tdar.s~ J~.~~ ;;;,~ ~~Ur5erf&; ~ioPYl!J1/fr;,,£...~/i(/t'inC MfPF.··'lM-~ ~mt&'(,~ 1 , " •' 1 D AILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Best Solution for City _J A private development corporation apparently i!: eager to rebuild part of down to wn Huntington Beach . The problem the company faces is one that bas hampered revitalization of the district for years - whether enou~h lots can be acquired to make a package capable of being developed. The corporation would like to build high rise hotels, banks, restaurants and offiCes 11\ the five·block area from Fifth to First streets which the .. city is planqing to raze and replace with a parking loL What and how much might be built will depend on wJ!at can be acquired. Not surprisingly; the city is encouraging property owners to cooperate with the developer by giving him a six·month option to buy their lots. This would enable private enterprise to do the job, which ls generally com· rnendable, and get the city off the hook or its commit· ment to construct the parking lot, a project with which • many city officials have become disenchanted as pro· jected costs have spiraled to $10 rnillitftl. It-is the solution th at most people would like to see artd one can only hope that sufficient property owners will be attracted by the development company's offers. Education on Drugs, VD While it is common kowledge that drug abuse and venereal diseas~ are two major curses of the younger generation, efforts to curb both have been largely un- successful. The administration of the Huntington Beach Union High School District is hoping to change that COl,ldition this year by offering a comprehensive Youth Service Program. As a result, each one of the district's 13,000 students will be exposed to factual, undistorted information about both drugs and venereal disease. One of the key features of this program is that the teachers will receive intensive training In both subjects High school officials say they will know what they are talking about. } Other vital aims of th& Youth Service Program in·\ elud e increasing the understanding of today's youth and · \. Jts subculture among parents, i"mproving communica· l.-....__1io ns and counseling skills among school personnel work· ing with youth, and making the community aware of problems facing youth. .High school administrators have correctly pictured these problems as being capable of solution through education. Instruction in drug abuse and VD can be just as useful as English and social studies today. Opportunit y to Guide ?tfuch talk is heard in local government circles about getting greater participation of citizens in civic affairs. Little action follows, either due to lack .of encourag~ ment by councils and the staff or apathy by residents. Huntington Beach has a Citizen Commitiee for Goals and Objectives working on a preliminary policy plan for the community that is helping this trend. Near- ly 150 residents are involved in studying goals and the partici pants include many who have not previously play· ed active roles in civic organizations. Eight study tea ms have been set up and have done much work. But there is still time to sign up at the plan· ning department to join committees on fiscal planning, public ser-vices. non·structural blight, oil production, in· dustrial and commercial. A full report on the citizens' conclusions will be given next summer. reviewed by the staff, planning com- mission and council and written into the policy plan. ' The Goals and Objectives Committee iS proving t:> be a GO Co mm ittee as the initials suggest. It represents a challenging opportunity for residellts to guide the city in the direction they wish to go. H Male Buy er Is Confused, Embarrassed Dear Gloomy Gus Jtuficlary Comnaittee Favors Cotirt Not1ainees I tt is getting 'SO · that men are em· barrassed to buy certain presents for women. Last Mother's Day, I stroUcd downtoWn t.d plci: up ·some gifts for my wife, .my mother, and my mother-in- Jaw. In the end, I got flowers. Everything today has a coy name, reeking w I th cute- ness or allure. Once upon a time, goods offered in a sto re had a homely direct-, _ ness: "Genta Underwear'• or "Z-x;t r....a_ F irm Corseb," or some such plflp' ond honest title. ¥-• Now we are urged to buy Scanties and Slenderettes and Short-Eez, and dozens or similar items dripping r with whimsical trade-names. Women are no longer sleep- ing in nightgowns: they put on Snugglies or Slumbersults. For daytime relaxation th~y wear something called a Sun-and· Fun Set. OF COURSE perfwnes have been a legitimate target for satirists for many years. How can a man approach a ais- metlc counter and ask. for a bottle of My Night of Rapture, or a phial of Pagan Delight? And even men's underclothes have been awept up in the tide of fancy nomenclature . BtJij:ing a pair of shorts, [ am' confronted with a dozen different names, all suggesling impossible feats of heroics. I am sure these new merchandising techniques have proved effective in somo • There's more than one kind of contrast between Laguna Beach and Hunlington Beach. The former fights off high rise on the ocean front, the latter is encouraging it. I guess it's a matter of dif(erent terrain: • ' I ' ' • ·C~ -D. T. L. ~~artgs: but I get a qu~S'y feeling at the ~ of entering • atot..·~ ~ring • M . of Maglcllne hose· or a fluffy C!Oudt'and angora sweater. " ~1,AIRNESS to~ manufpCturers, it , musttt:b.e admitted that modetn clothes are illcire attractfve, more comfortable: and . inore durable than they:-were a gener.Jion ago-especially children's thine*' which were-a nlghtnl.are of ugliness and Itchiness when I was a boy. But each rose has it& thorn, as some bad poet has said. and along with the tastefulness of modern apparel we have inflicted upon ur the tastelessness of smirking and suggestive names wh ich on- ly confuse and embarrass the diffident male buyer. THERE IS A KIND of rugged charm In such old-fashioned words as "pants" and "hair oil" and even "long Wlderwear". They pretend to be nothing but what they are, and do not promise to transform a portly middle-aged woman into a flaming seductress or to turn a paunchy middle-aged man into a dashing steeplechase winner. But I suppose I am just fighUng another losing · round in the battle of words. What we are selling today are im· ages more Ulan products. . L dt the Le{iists Bray Tbe Dally Callfomlan El Cajon The loutish leftista who view U.S. foreign policy 'alms from lime im· memorial to the present as unending ex· ploltation by an "imperialist" power of olher countries display an amazing Jg. norance of the facls . They parrot the Insults hurled at this country by the CommunL!t cliques abroad, as If anything muttered by Mao or culled from the clacklngs of Castro had automatically passed the test for truth. Any contradiction or these half·baked lrilnlties by official U.S. government 1pokesmen is, of course, considered self. preserving gibberish IJy the leftlst orac.les-!Omething one "&uld expect of devious repre&enL'\l.lves o{ a wicked and morally corrupt nation. rr TAKES SOMEONE w1lh a historical per1~ve that goes back farther than the bemocratic convention in 11168 to a~ predate what, lo fact, was the ~ B" George --~ Dtar G'Ol'le: Wbat II the population of New Zeallmd? ART Dtar Art: You know wha~ Art? !i's people like JOU who make life re1lly tough fOr U1 lovelorn columntsll:. Haven't )1911 aoi one Jittle domestic strife? .Quit worryfnc about New Zealand, Art. Go ret In big tmuble. I don't think yOU'IO trying, , .• precedented generosity of the American people toward friendly foreign nations after the tnd of World War II. One such person with that insight is Prime !\1inister Edward Heath of Great Britain who has Jed his country into the. European Economic Cofflrpunlty with a speech in which he asserted lt is time for Europe to end its reliance on the United States and miike its own way In the world. . tn paying tribute to America's role in helping prostrate Europe emerge from the ravages of war lo vigorous economic health, Heath said: "NEVER IN MODERN time h11 a great power u.sed its energy and its generosity with such effect to protect I.be· jnterests of Its friends."' 1be rewrd show• that almOBt '150 billiori tn American trea.sv.re hat been glvt.n to improve economic co~Uons in scores of COlldria around the Jlobe! True, some or-tt his-been mlS!pent. But much o[ It has BOf1< !or good purpoxs and "those tnvestmenlt have made It poulble for other nations· to prlmt their economies and brlng about a general me tn property and living stand.- ards. 'wE NEED NEVEi\ honi our ht1da In abame for ahJrln& our riches with the needy nBtions Of the world ll I time when their survival depend@<! upon our charily and 1oodwill. 'Ibe leftist$ can bray all they wantl but they will hi"" • dllficult time polnlin& lo any historical parallel ln which the ple1 for uslstance hu been mel with aucb a quick and generous response. Rehnquist,· Pow~ll Will Be Approved WASHINGTON The two Supreme Court nominees Asst. Attorney General Willia ehnquist and Virginia attorney 4w· owell -will be decisive· ly nded for confirmatiOn b the Senate J icia Committee. The like! biparti-. ..,. san vote appf-oval' will be I to 5. Thai as the line- ~ ii) an authorit&o . tlve-canvasi Of the m~m~rs of this key , coW!mJttee -nine Democrots, s e v e n Republicans. .. This private counr.~ that all of ·the seven Republicans .:and four of the nlae Democrats favor the t.wo appointees . The opposition consistS eniirely, of the five liberal Democratic committeemen - Sens. Philip Hart (Mich.), Edward Ken- nedy (Mass.), Birch Bayh tlnd.), Quentin Burdick (N.D.) and John·Tunney (Cal.). ,OF _TIDS GROUP, ,none has had legal experienef: of note or consequence. Several ha ven't practiced at all. Their opposition is based on partisan and ideological grounds. Secret strategy of the·opposition Is to concentrate their fire chiefly against Rehnquist -on the theory that if he can be deJeated it will be easier to eliminate Powell, former head of the prestigious American Bar Association. Rehnquist will be assailed as racially biased. partial to bugging and use of other stern police measures. To compile "evidence" against the two appointees. Sens. Kennedy and Bayh have enlisted the aid of civil rights activists. b!ack.s and ultra.liberal members of cer- tain law schools -foremost among them Harvard and Yale. . REHNQUIST, Who bas been making courtesy · calls on Senators, includiog known opponents, has had the·unt1sual ex- perience of being told by Democrats to stand pal: . One influential Democrat advised him: "I hav~: examined your personal -and li!pl re(frd, and found it wholly satisl~O. · fory. BOfl't fit 'unduly disturbed 'by" the outcrles·so far made against you. I round no substance in them , and I Wouttt 'say they were motivated for grandstanding purposes. So hold firm, and I ha ve no doubt you will be confirmed.,.. Sens. Kennedy and ~ayh may find lh~mMilves hit with statem~nt~ they made in opposing two previous Supreme ~rt appoin!ees if they as.sail Rehnquist and Powell on Ideological grounds. Adtninistration forces have a big afsenal of their quotes to throw at them. ANY MOVE TO revive the Senate.kill- ed foreign aid program will be: met head· on vdth a powerful bipartisan filibuster. That· was decided at an unannounced meeting of leaders or the coalition that staged the dramatic surprise upset. Although only a small group participated in this strategy discu.ssi<ln, firm con- fidence was expressed that sufficient sup- port can be rallied in the Senate to main .. lain an effective blockade against a counterattack.. As one of the leaders soundly pointed out, "At this late date in the session. v.·ith members increasingly impatient to ad· journ, the mere threat of a filibuster is enough to stop anything. And we 're not fooling: we mean business." At this gathe ring, there was con· siderabl e discussion of one factor that particularly played a major role in the defeat of the 25-year-old stupen dously costly foreign aid program. Senators were still sputte ring angrily over the matter. TARGET OF THEIR iftdigna\iotn·WBS that the -$3 ·billioo·plus ·forelgn 1 aid authorita.tion. bill pending · before·l.the Senate listed hundreds of ·millions: o{ d~\lars eal"markcd for 4a: of· the · 7i-~I tries that yoted \o seat P.ekµJg .anQ~t· T,a.iwan frof\ t?:iP<United N~'ijo~ · In other WO(&,• 'al.though ·~4~ons had. no . hes!~; in sluggln~ lJ.,S., some with op'hi glee.~y wrut~·lll1ll"ro!\" tinue feeding heftily under the measure at the foreign aid trough . . Not hing wa s said publicly about this during the Senate debate. As a con- sequence, there was no press or other publicity aboul !it. But there was a lot of irate talk in the Senate cloakroctns. Particu'larly resented was the spectacle of the representatives of "Tanr.an ia and Zainbla s.t &: g'i•n iz trtumph&nt boogaloo dances on, the UN ro!trum. BOTH A1'RICAN countries were on the foreign aid handout list-Tanzania down for $7.8million ,1.am~ia for Sl ·mil!ion. M of July I. j971~ Tanzania h~ benefit~ from U.S. ad lo the lt¥le o( $f3.4 mlliiorl, Zambia $6.l million . Also slated ior big handouts in the scut- tled legislation and who voted against the U.S. were : Ceylon $23.4 million, Chile Sl4.1 million. Ecuador $25.5 million, Ghana 116.9 million. Ethiopia $31.8 million, India $419.7 million, Laos Sl78 million, Morocco $45.1 million, Nigeria $34.3 million, Pakistan $225 million, Peru $34.3 million, Tunisia $32.7 million, Turkey -$242.5 million. ALL OF TJfESE countries have receiv- ed hundreds of millions in U.S. aid, as follows : Ceylon $176 .6 million. Chile $1.28l billion, Ecuador $296.7 million. Ethiopia 5394.1 million. India $8.003 billion, Laos Sl'.449 b1!lion, rvlorocco $731 million, Nigel'ia ~ j :'"' million, Pakistan $4.484 bjJliop, Pei $465 million, Tunisia $699 mjlliop, Turkey $5.640 billion. Those §late Department and other of- ftc;ia}:denials and ~xplanations to the con-tr_arY:;,t.6~ indisputable facts are that the f6~:~d "pipeline" is literally choked w~b.~s of unspent approprlations. '.'!ll'"i:ti ~tmrORITY FOR that flat declaration i~,Re:p. Pt.to Passman (0.La.), chairman ·qf. the' ApprDpriations subcommittee that 'bamtle.s.O;te fore ign aid budget. He puts 1.1nspent foreign aid funds at the stupendous total of $24 .567 billion . Arid he:·proves it with a detailed list, which ·this column disck ~d several weeks ago. As then reported. the major items o ( "unexpended balances for foreign · a,id in pipeline from previou s yeq,rs appropriat ions and authorizations'' are: ~?rei_gn assista nce act. inc I u din g military assislance, $4.403 bi 11 ion ; Export·lmport Bank . uncommitted bor· rowing authority. $5.230 billion: Export· Tn1port Bank. long-term credits, $2.937 billion: Export-Import Bank , regular operat ions, $624.6 million: T n t er . American Development Bank $2.304 billion : . World Bank, $5.715 ' billion; International Development Association $460 million : Asian Development Bank: $150 million : foreign military credit sales program, $290 mill ion ; mi I i tar y as.si~tance On Defe~s~ budget), S945 m1ll1on ; permanent m1!1tary construction overseas, $210 million; Overseas Private lnvestment Corporation (OPIC) $203.538 million: Public Law 480 (agricultural commoditjes), $664.439 mi!lion. Schmitz Report Shocking to Reader TO the Editor: I thank Congressman John G. Schmitz for being concerned e·nough to send out a report to his co~itueots. J am, hov.-ever, in ' full :support of the President's new policy toward Red China. The con~man's ~rt. in general, shocked and dismayed me. It does not seem ·correct to assume that because President Nfxon is planning to meet \1tith the government d Red Oiina he is "abandoning Chi an i. Kai·shek and all our friends and allies in the Republic of China." His report appears to me to be mainly an outcry a~ainst communism rathe r than an . ObJectlve. intelligent, realistic evaluation of President Nixon's first step toward dealing openly with the Red Chinese. I llAVE RECENTLY retumtd to Cl\lfomia •ftef wor)tjng for two years with lhe Department · o~ State; first. ln the Central African Republic and this spring at the U.S. Delegation to the Ptace Talks on Vietnarn In Paris. Inter- national politics and economics are ,·ery sophisticated. How can we continue "ignOrtng'' a country the size of R~ China~ Our government must lake their tctkms into consideration. covertly or O\'trtly. Conslderlng the latest United Natlonl decision to reph1ce Nationalist China with Red China in the representation of fie Chinese people, l believe that President Nixon's urlier moves were very wise. At strong a nation &$ we arc, we cannot disegree with the r4.'6t of lht. wt'l'ld, frte and Communist, for long and still remain rn lop. -. r ~a._ilh-~x=-= '. ,J the Halloween treats that chil dren get -when-they eo trlck,oT .treating. • ~•ttlti '""" reM.,._ •rt W.k-. NemMlll' wrilt,., .ii.u1t1 nnw11 lllllr lllh._.. lft * -•• 1r le11, Tiii rl9lll "' CO!lffft~ 19tt~ 1<1 fll -.ac. ,_, •!11111 ... tt Ui...t I• nMn'H. AH ltlttn 11111ti l11o uUM 11tn•••re ,,.. l'll•lflllt .,..1'9H. lllUI n1"""1 111•1 k wlt~~lloll 911 r-t Ir Alfllcl9!>1 nl-II &HlreAI. ~'" wUI ,,., Ill 11Ullli1!11f. !\IOST A~1ERICANS have had an ex· ctllcnt indoctrination a g a i n s t com· munlsm. I am well aware of what it is and how It works. The people of China. Russia, Cubi·, Hungar y and Czechoslovakia were in entirely different economic positions at the time of Con1- munlst takoover than is the United States. As a regi!itered Republican and flnn bellevs-in the -principles of democracy and free tnde and staunch supporter of the .government of the United Stafes of America. I am sorely dlsappointed that one or my elected represeotatives In Congress has no more to say about the Presidenl'5 new policy toward Red China than to re!IOrt to antl-C:Ommunist pro- paganda . BONNIE L. JOHNSON Hallo1ceen Tr eats To the Editor: I have just finished reading the Nov. I DAILY PILOT. There were two articles about lhe mAny horrible things that can ~ppen to children when ihey go trick or treating. My blood runs cold whtn J hear about razor blMts, drugs, ground glass. nefdles and other things beiriJ 1ound iD ' I WOULD '.µK,E to see our city do something to eliminate this sort ol t.hing\ I would like to suggest that the parks in ttie citY have Halloween programs to en- courage the children lo go there and en- joy a sare celebration instead of risking being attacked by .s I c k molesters or receiving terrible 5urprlses In their Halloween treai.s. I am -sure there are many other parents that feel as I ~o and ,would ap- preciate anything that ·could be done to protect their children. MRS. CONCE.'T'fA KE RN E11d Tr ick or Tr e nt 10 the Edilor: At the risk of alicnatttg my favorite people. the small fey, I sltould like to see an end to the custom of l:;ialloween ''trick or treat" eicept for UNICEF, a worthy cause. Much has been said' about the cruel pranks of adults wbG put pin!i. razor blades. etc. In the treats they give the children. , What of the case of lnoocent adulls confronted by police wlth ·an apple con- cealing a razor blade? They were beautiful apples bouB;ht frorn the Kiwanis and tho case w:as opened just ~forl!: the door bell began to. ring. The police never pressed the mall!r but the donors fell so bad that tht followln(l yenr they turned out the porch llght, refused to answer the d"oor and gav.e out nn lrea~. deprived nf the 'fun o( seeing lbcir various fancy cos- I tumes. -WHEN. SfX-.E.QQT·TALL "kids'' call it i.s ridiculous, but finally ii wa-s surml~d that some mischievous "trick or treater·· had 1 sllpptd the blade into a younger ?<>Y s apple and thus put lhe apple.givers 1n a harrowing position. Perhaps other in· nocent adults have had such an ex-perience. PT A car~iva\s should be enough fun , or home parties -but no. the kids thlnk trick or treat is THE thing to do besides the carnivals and parties. · Surely parent~ can get together and put an end f"o a risky way f('lr children to celebr11te. G\VEN PATON ORANGl COAST DAILY PILOT I Robert .v. \\'tcd. Publislitr T>tomas Keevil, Edito r Albtrt \V. Bntts !d1!orial Page £d1l or Th" cditonel ll'llU' 1"1t \hf" D111ly Pilol :olf"l'"k& lo lnlorm llnd ,llmu· littC r"lld•'l'1 hy prr .. rntln~ th1:o1 neo.~f)arw-r·~ 011inion~ 11nit t'nm• mrnnt.ry on top\~ or ln1 ... r ... ~t 11nr1 '-i1tniflc11nc:o, by provldtnc: 11 forun1 fnr th~ cx11rrt:~ion <lf nu r 1·r11d .. ~' ()pin lon!I •. 11nd by 11rr~rn11n~ 1 h~ dlV('l"'l'-f! v1ewJ)()ln1' or infonnl"d oh-ll.\0rvcr11 "lld liDOkt'!mcn on toulc.s u! the day. Friday, November 5. I 971 7 I I • Ne rt Beaeh:' Today's Final EDIIIPN . N.Y. Stoeks VOL. ~. NO. 265 , 4 SECTIONS, SQ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER S, ·197 f TEN .CENTS . Newport Planners Do Away--With Coast Route By CANDACE PEARSON Of lfll DlllY ,. ... lltlf The Newport Beach Planning Corit- misslon Thursday night did away with the Pacific Coast Freeway. Commissioners, in a surpr,ise action.. .officially declared that the controversial 1uperhig_hway has never existed, does not ezist ancf will no( exist -at least in Newport Beach. Acting on a motion by Chairman Curt Dosh, the commission unanitllOusly &rdered its staff tG "delete from (uturt . reports, m.1ps and working papers the projected route of the proposed c.oast F-reeway." In proposing .the action, Dosh said any such references "to the freeway or · to alternate plans are · a '6Urden and in- terfere with-the orderly discussions and act.ions of the st~ff." The commission, itself. sh o u Id 11prOC$d as it never existed .alid never will" and "should make a statement to thai effect ." Dosh urged . "I will disregard it," he prQnounced. DAtLY->P'tLOT Stiff P'~o!• SHE WANTS TO KNOW WHO SWIPED HER TRASH CAN Eastbluff's Mrs. Peterson Takes Her Case to City Hall Jt->s Dirty Pool W: oman Sues Ov.er Trash Can Loss It didn't bother f\.trs. Ann Peterson of Eastbluff that someone made off with one of her beat-up garbage cans a couple of months ago. But she's thoroughly incensed now that lhe same thing has happened to the new one she bought to replace it. In fact. she is so angry. she has filed a claim against the city lo get her '$8.49 back. "It was a large. green plastic ean." Mrs. Peterson says. "I didn 't say anything after they took the old metal one, but this time they've gone too far .... "They," so far JIS Mrs. Peterson is con· cerned, is the refuse crew that works her block. ~·1 went._to work Q.O_Lday and when I came home it was gone." said the fifth grode teacher at Eastbluff School. "A search of the neighborhood proved futile. Everybody else had theirs so I figure the garbage men threw it in the back of their truck. "I doubt somebody came along the street and picked the can up." she said. . h1rs. Peterson conceded she has no proof the sanitation crewmen a re the culp~I " now I've got no way to prove they too il." she said, "I've got no evidence." All she has left is the lid. , "I'm just getting tired of this," .gtJt uid. Cou11cilmen will consider lbe claim at Monday ni_gbt'a meeting. .Canal Residents .Request DredgiI1g-Not Bulkheads By L. PETER KRIEG Of tM OtilY P'llel 11111 Newport Beach public works chief Joe t>tvlin is all wet ln his analysis of. the problems ot Balboa Island's Grand Canal, according to a number of long-time residents along the controversial waterway. , "All the canal needs is to be dredged and hive the sand thrown up against the seawaU," molntains Dr. Horace Parker, 117 Grand Canal. Devlin earlier this week said the crux of the problem with the deteriorating channel is the inadequate bulkheads alongsi~ it. He said lo solve the problem they woWd have lo be rebuilt. "That will just create a decp-w1ter channel, and most of the resldent.s here don't want that." Dr. Parker s11id, ·•we·wanl our small beaches," he: Hid. He said residenll art angry that the ci· ty has ignored maintenance or the canal for so long. lt hasn't been dredged In tight years. And he 11nossed that ll ls the city's pr<> • blem, not the Harbor District's, as Devlin and Several city councilmen have claim· ed. "The canal Is a dedicated city street," Dr. Parker pointed out. Devlin had Aid that dredging isn't the answer to the problem of keeping the canal open because lhat is on1y a stopgap measure. · "If we dreqge the middle and pile die sand up against tht wal.15 it will Just ailt back into the mkldle," he said. \Veil, that's the way the canal was ·designed, that's what most homeowners along, It want and thet's what tM city 1hould do, Dr. Parker Wl!ti. He said the city ahould just ttpair sCKTie or the stel!I reinforcement that Is jutting out in numerous places and gun- nile the top of the walls -like it did to the bridge pilings many years ago. He spoke of the bridge over the Grand Canal. which itself 1eparAtes Big and Lit· lie Balboa lslando !or BAiboa Ialand and !Ste CANAL, P11• II • City Attorney Dennis O'Neil asked what about a suit filed against the city by E. 0 . Rodeffer &aying that the ttferendum election in which the people voted 6 lo 1 against the.. freeway, be declared null and void. This legal detail seemid of little con· cern to the commissioners, who made no comment on the problem. Commissioner Jackie Heather balked at the proposal. although she did vote for it "l can't, set that if we don't talk about Blast it it won't exist. lt doe!n't i;o away that easily," she said. O'Neil admitted that "the stale by all indications won't force the freeway on Newport Beach. But there a r e movements in other cities for freeway referendums also .,, He warned, '1There is a chance the state will .take a stand somewhere because all ils freeways are being shot ·down by the cities." But Commissioner Donald Adkinson told fellow commissioners at the mid· Time night discussion that, .. We have to starl planning for reality. There will be no freeway and we might as well plan for that reality.'' His declaratio1t abruptly ended the debate. Commissioners William Agee and William f\.1artin supported Adkinson, although Martin wanted to include the Newport and Corona del l\.1ar Freeways. Commissioner Gordon Glass suggested that "perhaps Mlme things are best left unsaid," but his idea was disregarded and the vote taken. Trying to understand the changes ln Ticl{s wording the action would rtqufre. James Hewicker, assistant community develop- ment director, said, "you mean now we'll talk about the interchange between the Newport Freeway and the Pacific Coast Highway?" And community development Director Ri chard Hogan offered that instead ot referring to land in the state right-af· way, "Now we'll talk about acquiring the excess slate laOO." · "Now you're getting the idea," smiled commissioner William Hazewinkel. Away Groups Make 11th Hour Appeal to .President WASHINGTON (UPI) -Awaiting a final legal decision from the Supreme Court, ~ientists, senators, Conserva· tionists and pacifists appealed directly to President Nixon today to postpone the mighty Amchitka Island nuclear test as a potentially deadly mistake. Barring a last-minute stay from the court or the President. a red button will be pressed at 2 p.m. PST Saturday In a bunker on the northern end o( the desolate island in the Aleutian chain, 'Concerned' 1,200 miles southwest of the Alaskan coast: triggering a five-megaton warhead buried nearly 6,000 feet underground. AJJ hope of a legal delay rested In the hands of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who received late Thursday the appeal of eight organizations charging that the Atomic Energy Commission had not full y considered the environmental risks of the test as required by law. Burger was expected to turn the case over lo the full court for a ruling, most likely following their regular Friday con- ference, on the merits of a stay pending appeal of a federal appeals court decision against blocking the test. .• The \Vhite House, standing by Ni.Jon·s decision to proceed with the blast ';Jor overriding reasons of national · security," c::hannelled all calls to the AEC, which reported it had received 6,700 letters. telegrams and telephone calls of protest as of Thursday. It said each would be (Stt AMCHlTKA, Page %) * * * White House Oil Sanctµaries U1·ge~ ' r~pg .~~-,' ~ ':.., I I > ~ on Atom Test Off California Coast By WU.LIAM SCIIRfulR By BARBARA KilEmICB Of .... ~ "'"' '''"' Sen. Alan· Cranston (0.Calif.) 1aid to- day h! is "very conce rned" about ad· ministration opposition lo his attempt to push through a series of bills that would establish six oil-free sanctuaries in federal waters off the California coast. "C&lifornia has the right to protect her shoreline and the federal government should not attempt to prevent this with no valid reason," the senator said. The bills (5 1446 throu}l:h 51452) now the subject of hearings before the Senate Minerals, Materials and Fuels Sub- committee, have been misinterpreted by administration officials, notably Assistant Secretary of the Interior Hollis M. Dole, Cranston said In a telephone interview from his Wa11hington D.C. office. Dole walked out of the subcommittee hearing Thursday as Cranston attempted Anti-Co1nmunist Youths Destroy Picasso Works MADRID CUPl) -' Anti-COmmunist youths invaded an art gallery today and destroyed 24 Picasao engravings worth $85,700 whk:h were on display to com· memorate the Spanish master'• 90th hirthdly. G&llery owner E!Vlfi Mlgnonl said one of the youths held an attendant at knife. point while six '.ct.hen: poured acid over the Picuao1. The youths left behind leaflet! praising Generalissimo Francisco Franco and calling Piscasso a "Marxist. Communist party militant, anti patriot, homoseiual, pornographer a n d ii· legitimate child." Police Sllid they ·are looking for the . vandals, who call themselves "com· mandos of the anti-Marxist struggle." Youths leaving behind similar leanets' raided three Madrid bookstores which sell politically liberal literature earlier this week . The youths left the gallery Teo in downtown Madrid a shambles and there appeared lo be no hope ol salvaging any of the engravings, which were on Join from a French gallery. Leading Spanish intellectuala attended the opening of the exhibition Oct. 26. It wos the second hOmage to Pitas90 to come to gri~ in Madrid. The other had been scheduled Oct 2S at M1drid University where author tnd art crlUc J.,..Marla Monno Gtl..,, waa lo !" .. lectuted on Plcauo llld his art. PoHce bannld the lecture. disper"Sed more than 1,000 persons tryiJI& <to a(ttnl'f Jt and arrested Galvan as be exhorted students to "Jive I rree lire, 11 PJcasso does." He has betn flntd 13.~io ind b still in jail. , Picasso has Jived in France 1ince he left Spain after Franco's victory over the Republicap 1ovemnent.. .. to explain that revisions of his original oil 1anctuary bill had removed objedio111 to Jt. The proposed bills wouJd prohibit oil drilling, but not oil expl oration, in Federal waters seaward of six existing state oil sanctuaries. These extend from the Mexican border north to Humboldt (See CRANSTON, Page Z.) State Senate ' Frees Moneys For District Officials of the San Joaquin Elemen- tary School District were elated today upon hearing of Thursday's unanimous approval by the State Senate of a bill to free bond moneys to build needed elementary schools in the rapid growth district. • ot ffM O.llJP'U•f IJ9ff If you have ever had a nagging dulre to phoite the White House arid get something off your chest, now is the time lo do It. As !he nuclear test explosion on Amchitka Island looms nearer, the White House has placed at least one special assistant on duty by a telephone to handle incoming personal opinions on the blast. The DAILY PILOT was alerted to the opinion line by local radio station broad· casts of the phone number {202.-4~1414) .and a subsequent request to express an opinion on the test. A check by the DAILY PILOT proved the number to be that of the White House lWitchboard. Jn a businesslike manfler, our call was transferred to the special assistant who, in a very low key manner. asked simply "Are you for or against?" The assistant, by the tone of his question, tieemecl to expect concise one-word responses. Reasons for opinions were courteously but abn1ptly cut off. Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport When asked by the DAILY PILOT if he Beach) got rapid action on his measure was the only one taking calls of opinion that would authorize the state allocations on the blast, the assistant !laid that any board to ,approve bond spending over !he information would have to come from the present five percent of assessed valuation office of Presidential Press Secretary limit. Ronald Ziegler. The mea5ure, which goes to the Ziegler's aides said they had no Assembly Education Committee for con· knowledge of a concerted effort to make sideration next week, raises the debt ceil· the White House number known to the ing from five percent to seven percent of public and that the publicity was pro- total district wealth for as many as five bably undertaken by individual radio sla· rapidly growing California 1 c b o o I lions. districts. A spokesman· for Ziegler also said he r'ITT'Satr.TO'aqulr.the-ralsed.-deb~limit--had_noLbttn ·nipnned that the ·t could provide as many as three new House was· accepting these call1 and that schools. someone must have been given the duty The two percent bonding limit increase would yield the disti ict $4.6 million based on its 1971 tota l assessed Valuation of $232 million. a district spokesman said. tf the bill pas.~ the Assembly and is. signed into I.aw, the provisions would take effect immediately, Sen. Carpenter said . The "pilot" school funding measure would remain ift effect until Jan. 1, 1975. Ralph Gates, San Joaquin superin- tendent, credited Carpenter for in- troducing the emergency bill. "At this moment we are extremely optimistic about solutio111 of Otlr 1eh00l housing pro- blems. 'l hope we will find the same cooperation and understanding of our probltms In the Assembly," Gat~s said. Rex Neri.son, assistant supei1ntendent for busineSI services. said his office was "willing to give any additional in- formaUon to the Assembly committee that might be required" to assure !"!"age ol lhe bill. The diatricl'a fa-0ilit.ie.s planner. Dave ~ $8id with Senate 1pproval, '1we're haUwey the.re.'' The emergency measure. U approved, frees lhe district to spend voter-approved bond mon<ya that tht 195% bond ~t limit has prevented being spent. Thr district bas nearly $15 million ln Un&peht bond.I. Tbe bond d<bt ''limit. coupled with (lie< JOAQUIN, Pill!' SJ without bis knowledge. The spokesman did not know bow large a staff was handling the calls but he said he suspected it was probably Jes! than five people. At any rate. he said, it appear~ as if the White House will accept one word opinions on the atomic test from any private citizen. For the more budget consciOU5, a 3. minute call cost.sonly 35 cents between 11 p.m. and 8 a.m. Barring judioial or presidential orders halting the test, it shou)d go oU Saturday about i p.m. our time. Eatery Missing 39 Table_ Lamps Lookin& '"' a nic., dark dining spol with a plcturer.que view! Try Berkshire's at 3450 Via Oporto, NeWport Beach. a baYside rtslaurznt to which hostess Helen Fra.nke.s called pOlice Thursday to make a grand theft report. somehow, somebody swiped all 39 ba~ tery~powered care table lamp« during buslnel!S ho\lrs. 1lao grabbing three pot- ted 19pruce tretS on the way out, making the lllq 17'1. sh. .. Id. I Educator Cites Possible Peril From Amchitka ST. LOUIS !UPI) -Dr: Kurt H. Hohenemser, professor o( aerospace engineering at Washington University, said Thursday the nuclear blast schedul· ed for Saturday on Amchilka Island presents "a small possibility of a major calastrophe." (Related story, Page 10). "There is a great probabilily tha t nothing will happen, but there is a small possibility that tremendous disaster will occur." he said. Hohenemser told a news conference the blast will be "in an area of e,arthquake activity, and an earthquake may be trig· gered, although not caused, by the blast. An earthquake that would be triggered by the blast is one that might have occwred at a later time." He said such an earthquake could be large enough "to damage both the Asian 'and American coasts." "This blast will be five times as large as any in the past," he said. "Nobody knows what a five-megaton blast will do." "We must balance the benefit of what the blast is supposed to accomplish with the risks involved.'' Vandals Stone Swan RENO. Nev. fUPI)-Vandals stoned to death a black swan worth $500 at Reno's Paradise Park, and the city &ays it has had enough. , The recreation commission sald there w~sense_buying...bird~ust_to.,.beo----W slaughtered." and decided not to replace the swan. Two other black swans were killed earlier. Orange Weather You won 't see too much SlD1 lhlt weekend, especially In the pre- noon hours when fog and low clouds prevail. Top temperatures wUI be.65 along the coast and 75 further inland. 'INSIDE TOD~Y Lotte Lenyo will 1oon appear M MotMr Courage at UCI and the W eekendcr ha.~ tJ 1toru and picture• about htr on Pag« 2S, •od<iu. IN11111 M Mllt\111 ,oMs " c1111trnt1 .. MllellM Hlwt .. Cfttclclnt U' ' °''"" Ct\Hltr " Cl•OHIM .... ... ,llllftllh ll·Jf Ctfftl<' • ..... .. M '™-• '*" fMftl:•h. 1~1r ONllil Mellett " T1lrr1Mtll " Olnl'ft• " ~llHttn ..... l!d!M"-1 ""' ' ...... • fll!l'l'lc• 1s.1r WOPIM'I ~ lt.!a --" W_... N .... .. •1111 unM11 " ·-.... _ .. .... • - Tun..el Proposed Land Use Group Ey·es Air Base , Serlotls con«.ms O\"fr \ht t.ffect of El TGf'O jet atrcraft noise on future homeowners nur thf ~farlTie facUity and fast £1'0win& traffic ntar Or~e County Airport wert nprtssed by County Airport Land Use commissioners 1burs· day night. The v htard a startling partial solution to the airport traffic dilemma - a $6 million tunnel under the runways. Commi.Uion me:mbers debated for three hours before deciding to ad,·ise the Flotilla Ready To Clean Up Back Bay Waters The Back Bay ne\'cr had it so good. For the second -'etk in a row, members of the Nev.'port Beach rom· munity are planning a clean·up of the 1eenic estuary. Beginning Sunday at 11 a.m .. a citizens' flotilla of small craft will encircle the waterway to pick up debris on Ult beaches and islands. "Any person with a boat that can be easily beached is welcome to help." say:s clean-up organizer h1rs. Joan Coverdale. She said tbe Orange County Harbor I>tpartmenl's new floating garbage truck, "The .Scooper," will provide escort. and litter bags. Participants are liable to find they'll ha\'e lo concentrate more on the islands and west bank, than along Bac k Bay Drive, however. For last weekend. the Corona del hfar High School Key Club and its sponsoring organization, the Corona de.I Mar Kiwanis Club, spent nearly four hours walking the e;,st side from one end of Back Bay Drive to the other. "\\'e picked up everything from truck axles to tin cans," noted Key Club presi· dent Scott Hornbeak. 'l'rom Page · 1 CANAL ... Board of Suptrvisors tbat a jtt plane noise monitoring program must bt ac· complished before intelligent answtrs can be gh·en on proposed land use 1ur· rounding the El Toro station. CurrenUy a jet noise monitoring pro- gram is !>ting carried out in the 'lclnlty of Orange County Airport. .. There has been a tendenc)· to hsten to ]i..tarinc Corps representati\'cS and act ac· co rding to lhe1r rtc1>mmendations on jet noise problems . ., said corrunission \'ice chainnan Donald Killian of Newport Beach. "In my opinion state noise &Ian· dard& are much stricter than those of the 1t1arines and should be. foUowed." But. he added, nothing can really be done until o good sound mM.iloring pro- gram is instituted around the ail' station. Commissioners heard a gloomy report nn traffic conditions both present and future around Orange County Airport voiced by county road department engineer Rvberl Voien. Voien said th;it even it development is carried out under the present indUstrial roning on lands around the facility the road"·ays will soon be overloaded. The engineer said a full cloverleaf i_, needed at the intersection of the San Dlego Freeway and J\I a c A r th u r Boulevard and , if ronstructed "'ill require at le~st tflree acres of airport land. Voien also said Campus Drive and l\facArthur would both have to be widen· ed shortly and that e\'entually as de velop- ment increases around the airport the on· ly solution might be a $6 million tunnel under the runway extending wes tward from Campus to Baker Strttt. From Pagel CRANSTON. • • and Atendocino Counties-. They include the coasts of San Diego and part of Orange County and lhe offshore. island! of San Clc"mente and Catalina. the recreation beach areas in Los Angeles County and San Luis Obispo County, the fl.1onterey Bay 11nd Big Sur areas and state sanctuaries off the shores Channel lsland, the tittle island 's real of the two Northern California counties, name ). ~ "These arc &omc of the most beautiful Dredging and l9Q!facing would cost and recreationally used portions of the about $50.~. Dr. Pmter esUmates , a lot coasl," said Cranstoo. "areas where the leis than tbe $300,000 or moi:_e 1t would ~pie.Jo ut.abriahtne: the existing st.ate take ~ ~~ 'Wllr • , eanCtu~ blvt nhmtarily given np But 1t • a ~more i:noney than the dty . the economic beneftt.s of oil because they &as. • . place a higher valye, on the coastal en· There lS nothing 111 the current y~s vironment." Roughly half of th• 1ustere• fiacal package for any un· California coast would 'be affect ed. pro.vemen~. a ~act that gets a number of SpecificaUy excluded. he added. are res1dehts infuriated. areas where oil now is bein!: produced ;,nd .. Do you know how. much we pay in lu· .. where the people want to have oil pro- !S," says Herb Ford, 213 Grand Canal. duction," such as Long Beach. Seal "there are 73 homes along the canal and Beach and portions of Ventura County. we must pay at least $1,000 each to the :jty every year.·• "If it was a nonnaJ strtet in this con- Ution. they'd do something about it," 1dds K. F. f\forgan ,200 Grand Canal . He also stressed the need for harbor ~•trol s to keep the speed down in the :hannel. ·'That causes as much erosion as inything else," he said. Dr. Parie.r said the city or harbor lepartment should control the speed of :he boats. but he said the city should also W! prepared to pay for the dredging 1very seven years or so. "Years ago we ask~ they put 1 little nonty a"'·ay each year for the project. 1te went down there with petitions al'!d !verything." he said. Dr. Parker said the residents may go ,a,ck lo the council with their pleas for 1elp. but added. ''maybe this time "'·e ,·on't be so friendly aboul it" OWUCOAST DAILY PILOT ' ---CDYf "-' '' ... asl#lt From Pagel JOAQUIN ... sho rtages or state school building fund money, has put the district behind in its building progr3m to the point where more than 3,000 students are presently on double sessions. Trustee Dennis Smith not ed the bill could use further community support In the form of letters or telegralTI! to Orange County rep~sentativ& in the Assembly. "A few notes of thanks to Sen. Carpenter would al$<> be appropriate." Smith said. Carpenter. he said. got action on the bill in less lhan a "'eek. "This is really lhrilling. It is the syslem functioning in a responsive "'ay ," Smith added. He said an hour meet ing in Sacramento \vith Assemblyman Leroy Greene 1 [). Sacramento) indicated the. powerful l!ducation committee would consider !ht. bill ne1t week. Greene c.iain the educa· llO"?comm.ittee. . . • I Reagan Y:ields R eward Power SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Gov. Ronald Reaaan has signed away his ri&hl to offer re•·ards for the cap- ture of 1tqecoadl 1od w11on bin· di ts. Rfagan did 1t As part or a bill ex· tending the rewards statute to bombers of puhhc buildings and • airplane hijackers. The bill by Otmocratic Assemblyman Leo tilcCarthy o( San Francisco also ra1s1"s t~ maximum reward the go\·e~r may offer lrom $1.000 to SJD.00o. Stagecoach <tnd wagon bandit.s were strirkrn from the 19th ten· turY statute m a section of the :'<!cCarthy law redefining maior <'rimes. Laguna l\'lan Backs Coast Freeway Plan The suggestion that the Pacific Coast Free"·ay route 5hould be eliminated en· lirely from the state's lreell'ay plan is ''irresponsible. ill-concei\ ed and 01>- ,·1ously arri\"ed at through emolion rather than facl." according to Lagunan Victor C. Andrev.·s. who played a leading r.ale..m/ the eight·.\'ear fight to persuade the Slate High\\'ay Commission to mo\"e the route inland from the coast. Andre1vs expresses his views on the latest freeway discussions 1n a letter ad· dressed to 1'1ayo r Richard Goldberg in v.·hich he concludes that construclion of fhe freeway will be the only solution to ~uth County traffic problems. The people opposing the freeway. says Andrews. are ignoring the fa ct that, in unanirnous.ly approving the adopted route, Laguna literally gave notice to the sta te. the county and private landholders · that they could proceed to plan. design and develop property surrounding the ci· ly on the basis of this route. The count y's master plan of arterial roads was finaliz:· ed and construction has proceeded, he nvted. '"All of this has been done . in good faith."' Andre"''~ "Tiles. "and It \\'OU!d be highly irresponsible ii ,~·c attempted to etimi11ale the Pacific Coast Freeway nov.•. The millions of dollars of p!anni~g and i::onstrucfion that already have been spent \1·i\I ha\<e gone for naugh, and chaos would result. All this, because some misinformed people believe ihe growth rate has slackened to the point that the need !or an additional major transit facllity is no longer needed. This truly must be the essence cJ unreality From Pagel AMCHITKA. • • answered individuaUy. The \Vhite HoUJe ref~ed again today lo estimate ho"' many protests it had received. The AEC has consistently disCQunted lhe en\'ironmentahsts' v.·arnings that the exhausti vely planned and inonitorrd underground tes11 code-named Cannikin and lour times bigser than any the l'ni!ed States has C\'er conducled. mighl set off ma)Or earthquakes or tidal v.•aves and harm marine and wildli{e by leaking radiation . The Sierra Club said eight leading scientists. including three Nobel prize ,.,.inners. suggested •·there is a real possibility that the President made a mistake in his decision" and urged him to postpone the test until all scientific data could be made public. ,. An10ng the scientists were N'obe.I win· ners Linus Pauling of Stanford Universi· 1_1", llarold Ure\' of rhe University of C.ilifornia and (;eorgc \\'aid of Harvard l ini\·ersity. The Sierra Club and se\'en other groups leading the legal battle to block thr test, headed by the Comn1ittee for t\uclear Respo nsibili!y. took oul full page ads 1n the J\e11• York Times and !he \rashington Post asking Nixon in an open lettc.r to riela"y the blast ;,in the Inte rests of JU.Slice." ; •.a..t"" w."' ---' Jedi.~ .. .... .._ ... o......_. ___ ,.._~...a=~--....... " -·- Lady Juror D1·op s Guilty Verdict in Randano Trial L '•'" tc,;., . ....,.,. ._,. Oy """ ---l )J) H..,.,t 1"1f'f'•r4 M1., AM~ P.D. lft 11n_ t:'4J --c-. .... -w.t .... tlrwt ....... hldl: :m ......, ·-....... 9-d\:. ,,.,. ~ ~ '-' ... ~ -... &I ClllllifllJ ...a ) . • A distraught but determined v.·oman juror ga,·e con\'icted liquor hijacker Gene Randano the kind of break late Thursday night that ha!i ne\'er bei?n given before in Orange County Superior Court history, :-.1rs Judith Arbon of Fullerton emerg· eel from hour" of "·rangling In the jury room to tell Judge Claude Owens that she eould not go along v.•llh the guilty \•erdict she had sign ed fi\'e hours before with the rt~l ol the jury. Her le/low Jurors. many of them angry 1nd all of them tired and strained, freely admitted that a no-holdJ·barrtd 5ession in the JUry room had failed to eradlcete the doubt! that ~lrs. Arbon first ex· pressed Thursday altemoon when the Randano jury reached a decision. The 11tlr1~tlve blonde's tears as the )ury "'AS being polled ga"e defense at· torney Lawrence ~tcBrid& lht kind of op- portunity th.at comes 1·ust once 1n a llftlimt In crlmln1l trta 5. He took it by insisting that ~trs Arbon go with him. Judae Owens and proseeutor Joe He"'gh.ln to the privacy ol the jud,iie's thambtrs. The four did so and the result v.·as that Judge Ov.·ens sent the jury back lo the jury room for the deciSfon at 9 p.m. that led him to tea r up the earlier verdict of lhe JUTY and declare a mistriaL .Judge Owens. makin,R no secret of his ang er 11nd disgust. refused to It! i\trs . Arbon addres.~ him before the jury was dlsc harged He had earlier refused to allow the Fullerton woman to discuss the Jssues upsetting her in private. Judge William C, Speirs tod1y stl a. new !rial ... for Randano on Jan. 10. Heneghan left no one In any doubt after the mistrial ruling ftiat he Intends to put the! Las Vegas man back in !he courtroom. Thursda y was undoubtedly Randano's d" ii{' survlved a jury's guilt}' l'trdict lh1t could ht1\'e put him in state prison for at lf'ast 11'1 yea rs on brib~ry and C'Onspiraey charges and he earlier survived 11 Uquor h)jacking sentencing !hot could ha,·e pro- duced an idtntical lcrm. The panel filed back Thursday af· lernoon after nearly eight hours of deli berallon/.10 trll Judge Claudt Owens that it fo1Jnd Rand11no, 40. guUty of brib-lns 1 Cosla l\lesa police.man and C'nn· sp1racy rrlaung to that chargr . • !' I AEC Cliairman Takes Family To Amchitka Ai\fCHITKA ISLAND. Alaska 1 AP ) - The head of the Atomic Energy Com- m1ss1on \l'atchtd preparations Io r Salurd1y'1 scheduled un derg r ou nd nuclear blast and declared, "Therl!: is no risk." \\!lth. his "''ife and two of his daughters at b.Js side, AEC Chairman Ja~1 R. Sc41tsinger late Thursday petrtd into the 6,000-foot-deep hole where the fi\·t- mega1on de\·1ce wiU bt delonated. They pla n to remain on this barren. "·indsv.·ept Aleutian island until after the test. .. Ifs tun tor the kid:!. and my wife is delighted lo get a'A·ay from the hou.st: for a v.·hi!e," Schlesinger s~. - The Schlesingers v.·atChtd as v.·orkmen "·ere dumping 5,600 tons of sand and graVel into the «hilt. sealing the nucle;.r device in a chamber where it is sc:hedul· ed to be fired 1t 5 p.m. EST Saturday. Many environmentalists ha,·e rx· pressed frars that the blast could touch off a series of earthquakes or send a tidal v.·ave rolling across the Pacific Ocean. ~The AEC maintains such possibilities are remote. Ofhc1a]s of lhe test -code·na ined Cai. n1kin -said eveI')1hing was on schedule for whal 11d1J be the most po"·er.fu! un· dergr ound nu clear explosion e\er con- ducted by the United States. Schlesinger. St'\'eral aides and lll"O 1nembers of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy arrived Thursday after stopping in Anchorage to pick up a group of newsmen and other AEC officials. Gem Thief Gets State Prison Term of 5 Years Jewel thief \Valier Seiffert was sent lo stale prison today for not less than f1\ e years for his role in !he heist of gems \lalued at nearly $200,000 front the Lido lsle home of socialite Polly Pierce. Orange Count.v Supe rior Cou rt Judge Kenneth \Villiams or der ed the im· n1ediate shi pment to Chino of Seifferl . 43. J·le denied Seifferts' request for a stay of execution tbat would have aUowed the convicted man to visit bi.a dying father . Seiffert admitted to being one of t"·o men who were waiting in ~; Pierce's ~e at 444 Lido ~ord on~ .. 28. 1968, when 1bt returned from a trip lO Atlanta, Ga. She and her butler were bound and gagged while Seiffert and his companion emptied the v.•oman·s jewel bo1 . None of the· costly jewelry has been reco vered . A man stated \ly the proseclition to be Seiffert's companion in the robbery, but not identifi ed by them was scheduled lo l"stify against Seiffert in thP. !rial. Seif· fert. preaded guill.v befo~ the unknown "'itness could testily. SHOT TO DEATH HELD IN SHOOTING Po•lmH.tor Bur,tnor P7Attwm.n Punished Carrier Hel,d In Postmaster Slaying By JOANNE RE YNOLDS 01 th o,wty ~1191 Slftf The day started with a disc iplinary hearing. "'·as interrupted by a haircut and ended at 10:45 a.m. in death for Paul Burtner. postmaster of \\'estminster. A meeting aboot Christmas mail presided over ·by Burtner was shattered by a hail of bullets. When it was over Burtner lay dead -shot to death in the post oHice be had served for 24 years. Poiice are holding Phillip 8, Alleman. a postal clerk for two years, on suspicion of Burtner's murder and the \11ounding of Err,es,t Gaulden, 46, superin tendent o! ma1fs.._. --- Gaulden is clinging lo life today at \Vestminster Community hospital. He is in guarded condition alter undergoing f'lur hours of surgery for a stomach \\'OUOd. Alleman, 2t of 2.801 N. Bristol St.. Santa Ana. v.•as to be formally charged roclay \\'ilh murder and assault with In· lent to commit murder. Lt. Don Saviers. commander of the \\'estminster detective d i v i s i o n , reconstructed the events police belie,'e led to Burlner"s death. Alleman, a night clerk, had received .: \Yritlen reprimand for t a r d i n e s s • Dissati sfied with the action. he had rt- quested a meeting with Burtner and the poslal clerk.'! union reyresentative. "He appatfntly became quite angry at lhat meeting." SaVie'ri alleged , "and .,...alked out in the midille of it." Police believe Alleman went to his parents' home in Santa Ana whe~ he got his father's .4f>.calibe r automatic pistol. H.e returned to the post office about 45 minutes later and walked in throug h a back door and hallway which led to B"urtner's office. At that mom en t Bu tner. Gaulrien. \Vi!li <..n1 Brawn, asslstant post1naster; Orville Hopkills. assis tant superin tendent of mails and Alfred i\.faisto. a foreman, we~ discussing holiday mail proCedurc!. Saviers said the four men we~ seated in a semi-circle facing Burtner ~·ith their backs to the door. Police allege Alleman burst through the door, limed the gun at Burtner, said "OK, you 've bad it," and pulled the trig· ger. "The gun misfired," SavierS asserted, "but about that point everyone realized what was hap~g and everything started moving." Accor4ing to police rcix>rts, Brown ran out of the office and Hopkins and ~faisto scrambled beh ind a desk. Gaulden apparently was shot in the stomach when he lried lo take the gun away from Alleman, police said, Burtner "'as shot once in the chest. but managed to run out of the office into the portion or the posl office used by the public. There. police said. he collapsed. Alleman allegedly walked over the pro- strate Burtner. knelt or leaned over and fired a second shot into the base of the postmaster's skull. Meanwhile Brown had run into thl parking lot where two Westminster patrolmen had parked to ei:change paperwork and inlonnation on another case. ' The two patrolmen, Jack Hintz and Tim Miller, said when they entered the post office, Alleman laid the gun on the noor and surrendered to them without of· fering any reslstana. None of the customers or other employes in the post office at the time of the shooting was injured, Fisher said most scattered when the shooting started. One bullet went throug h one of the win-- dows and flattened a Ii~ on a car in the parking lot. HOLIDAY SPECIAL By Drexel LILY TAIL! HOLIDAY S,ECIJ.L DESK CHAIR-SWIVELS, TILTS. ROLLS • HOLIDAY 5'ECIAL s99. $139. TWELVE SP ECIALLY SELECTED PIECES FROM OREXEl FAMED ET CETERA COLLECTION. NOW SPE· CIALLY PRICED TO MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY SEASON MORE ENJOYABLE. FROM GLASS TOP TABLES TO HALL CONSOLES ••• IF IT'S THE UNUSUAL YOU'RE LOOKING FOR. YOU'LL FINO ITj N ET CETERA. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HERITAGE NIWPOH STOii OPIN •llDAT 'Tit t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wo1tcl lff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIOAT 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prof1nlonal Interior De1i9n1r1 Avallabl.-AID PHH t.tl "-Mftf .t 0,.... c:.wty-14f.1 Z'-1 LAGUNA BEACH 145 North coa~Jhw•y Phont: 49 1 I I ' • .- --Relmqui st Witt s Points With Solo11 s ... ' "'ASHINGTO~ (UPI ) -William H. Rehnquisl's nommptlon to the Supreme Court apparently 11•ill be confirmed by t~ Senate 11·i1.h little· difficull v. . Rehnquist reduce d consid~rablY his ·liberal opposition by talk ing more: ·fr~ly Thur~ay about his judicial ph ilosoph\'. After refusing in almost t"o da\'s of 1n-ter~oga~ion to. lalk about his Personal ~hef~ m the field of civil rights and civil l1berlles , he reversed himself. Rehnqu ist had pleaded that to take: public positio_ns on many such questions "°V.: v.·ould Jeopard ize his freed om to decide cases in the field after con- firmation. He also said that because he served as cowtsel to the attorney general, he could not lalk about administration positions on civil rights and civil libe:rtie.s ~~a.use to ~o so would \'iolate the pro- h1b1!1on against a la\\'}'er disclosing hi.s · advice to his c!ienl. ~ut in a late afternoon reversal, Re,hn- qu1st ans"·ered a series of questions from Sens. John \1• Tunney (~alif.), and Chai;.les l\1athias ! R-~1d.). that he had refused lo disc uss before. To l-.1alhias. he said he had ad\•ised r-.titchell against taking an offirial posi· lion that the President had the: inherent po"·er to tap telephones without court orders in domestic security c~ses. To Tunney, he: said he thought that any go\'emm.e:nt sur\'eillanee of peaceable assembhes that had a "chilling effect" on the: exercise of the right to assembly was Wlconstitution:. I. Following this lestimony, Sen. Birch D. Bayh (0-Jnd. ), said he v.·as "impressed'' by lhe answers. "They suggest \\'e are: at last gelting some of his personal philosophy." he said. . Just before fl.ellnquist begaO answer- tng, Bayh ~ad written attorney general John N. Mitchell and President Nixon asking them lo wai ve the lawver--elient pri\'ilege so that Rehnquist could ans\ver. \\railer. E. Craig. a U.S. district judge: from Arizona, also testified that Rehn- quist was not a philosophical racist as charged by the southwestern chapter of. the NAACP at Phoenix, Ariz. Candidate Loses To Donald Duck! SPOKANE, \Vash. (AP} -Jeff Bowers may ask for a recount after apparently being, oulpoUed in the school board race by Donald Duck. UnoCficial tallies show the margin was narrow. Donald got two votes and Jeff one. "'Imagine getting beat out by Donald Duck!" protested 1-Irs. T. E. Nesbitt, campaign manage:r, publicity chairman, genera l vote getter and sister of the 22· year-old Bowers. Bowers' slogan in his write-in cam- paign was "Our school board \\'ill never be the same if you cast your vote for what's-his name." HAMMOND PIPER AUTO CHORD USED s995 MODEL FARFISA SPINET .~.~~~.N s395 WAJ JOJ, NOW HAMMON ORGAN ::::··$s7o u,.,...,.... TELLS PHILOSOPHY Willi1m Rthnqui1t Officer Afleges Arniy Harassing After Accusation .o\TLANTA , Ga. (AP l -Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert. the most decorated American enl isted man in the: Korean \\'a r. has been the target of continuing harassme nt by superiors and v.·as gi\'en ins tructions in the proper manner for saluting, his ci\'ilian lawyer alleges. The deputy ('()mmanding officer at Ft. f\l cPherson, Col. Tom Reid . denies these allegations, but 5a\"S he did reprimand Herbert for failuie to extend proper military courtesy. Attorney Charles A·lorgan contended Thursday that Herbert, who earlier ac- cused superior officers of conce:a!in'g \\'ar crimes in Vietnam. is being harassed and that superiors have gh•en him in- structions in the correct v.•ay to salute. ho1v to stand at attention and ho\V to pro- nounce the word "sir.'' l\Iorgan . Southeastern regional director of the American Civil Liberties Union. also said Herbert has been gi\·en the: im· pression he should not talk to newsmen Wlless superior officers give him "'ritten pennission to do so. . Reid denied ~1organ's allegations, in· eluding the one that he reprimanded Herbert for fa ilure: Ul salute: properly. "An incident to which l believe you refer took place on ~1onday, Nov. 1. in which l found it ne:cessary to motiYate Col. Herbert in the rende:ring of proper military courtesy that should be ex- changed between members of the: military." Reid told a newsman. Reid said the incident occurred in hi!'l post headquarters office v.•hi!e ·"im· parting some instructions'' to Herbe rt. "He \\'as looking out the window, not paying attention to v.·hat I was saying and his attitude was le ss than attentive. These actions required me lo set the record straight." Reid said . Reid specifically denied that he had in· structed Herbert in the proper manne r for saluting and how to pronounce: the \\'Ord "sir." J Deterge11ts' Peril Cited To Public U'ASHINGTON lUPIJ -A Chica10 medica l researcher today disclosed test resultl alleging that n on p h o s p ha t e detergents are far deadlier than drain cleaners i( sv.·allo.,.,·ed. and C"Ould lead lo catastrophic results if vddely used Jn American home:s. Dr. George E. Block. a professor of surge ry. ot .the l:niversity of Chicago, said new laundry products de\'eloptd to replace enYironmentally s u s p e: ct~ d phosphate detergents are so high l y caustic they could kill or maim those who 1wallov.· them -particularly children. He suggested they should be baMed. Block was called to testify before a Senate Environment subcommittee on his recent research into sUlmach and throat injuries caused by caustic substances. A copy of a paper detailing his findings v.·as made a\'ailable to UPI. The study, made on cats, sho'>\-·ed that more' than 80 percent or the animals given a sing!e sn1all dose of nonphosphatc detergents suffered severe or fatal in- juries. By contrast, no cats v.·ere harmed by the phsophate blends, which are: ban- ned in many rommunilies as pollutants ··La\\'S v.·hi ch preve:nt the use of phosphate detergents and necessitate the substitut ion of highly alkaline: non. phosphate detergents should be review. ed."' Block's paper said. "The in- troduction of these caustics into millions ()f American home:s \\•ill inevitably lead to catastrophic accidental ingestions." Elsewhere in his paper. Block said laws baMing phosphate laundry products a.s water polluters "should be repealed." New phosphate-free laundry producl s are h.igh in sodium carbona te. some -of v.·hich Block said are nearly as caustic as lye. Nude Girl Saved Three Found Shot Dead In Michi gan AN'N ARBOR1 l\tich. tUPl) -A.psychiatrist. his y,·ife and daughter were found shot ta death in the kitchen of their home today. Police said the dead couple's son reported fin· ding the bodies. The victims u•ere Dr. Alex- ander DuKay, 52, former ntedical superintendent or the Ypsilanti State Hospital. his l\'ife. l\Iadcline. 52. and their daughter Lori l\larie. 12. The bodies \\'Pre found about 8 a.m. by DuKa.v·s son, Dr. Alexander DuKa v Jr., 23. police said . The sOn had rome to visit from Tra\'erse Cit\' where he is associated y,•iih the Traver~ Citv St at e HosPital, police said. · Police said thev v.·ere in· vestlgating a posSible double murder and suicide. DuKay, clad in a robe and pajamas. v"as shot in the mouth. His ydfe and been shot • DAILY PILOT S 'False Claitns' Critics I\.nock .. Ecology Ad s NEW YORK (UPI ) -A report, "corporate advertisb'lg and about the signilicance of nonprofit research group said and f.he envlronment.'' the cont r J but Ion of Thursday that a number of the The couocil sa id it surveyed automobiles to the total air country's major co'rporatiorui, pollution problem. in advertising stre:sslng what environmental advertising in The report said the can and lhey have done for the en-Time, Newsweek and Business glass container manufacturer1 vi r on men t . have: been W~ek magazines in 1970. In overemphas ized the role of in· misleading ·and Jn some: cases add ition It studied an ad· dividuals rather than industry false. vertising supplement to the in the growing solid v.·aste The Council on Economic Septem ber. 1971, issue of disposal problem and....'$lressed Priorities, a group v.·hich Reader·s Digest. the public would ifcit use specializes in report ing the F'ord and General l\.lotors returnable bottles and cans in· social impart of co rporations. v.·ere criticized for misleading stead of the disposable varie- said individual advert ising of the public about the amount of ty. It said surve:ys showed tht Southe:rn Californi a Edison. ;=.po=l='"=''="="=-lh-•iirr·=c=a="='m=it=ted"ii~op~pos;;;;;l;;l•;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ the Standard Oil Co. of I California and P o t I a c h Forests, Inc .• \\'ere "blatantly false." Those making misleading ~tatements, the council said, included General l\.I o tor i • Corp.: Ford l\1otor Co.; Stan- dard Oil Co., N.J.; General Electric Co.: leading ~tee:I manufacturers including U.S. Steel, Arm co and ~thlehem · Boise Cascade "Corp.; man). paper manufacturers and two trade associations -the ca n people and the Glass Con- tai ne rs l\I an u f a c tu re rs Institute. "The: $4.7 bill io n Advertising 2626 HARBOR BLVD. expenditures made by the top COSTA MESA 100 ad\·ertisen; !of alt ad· VN IT E D S TATES N ATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH HOW ONiN SATURDAYS t to 1 r.M. MON.•THUU. 10·5 r .M. FRIDAYS 10·6 r .M. 1714} 540-5211. l.coted 111: So. C... '1na, COIN MtMI H. M. STO LTE Yert iserSI in 1970 Y,'aS $2.2 call 540-5630 billion more than the: e:nti re l~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ outlay from all industry for ll pollution control the same: year," the council said in it.s 11 I ndictecl In Big Ring FOR RESERVATIONS CAU NEWPORT CENTER TRAVEL 644-1412 Lala Robloett £our times in the back and CHICAGO I UPI \ -Ele\'en stomach, and the daughter m~n. including reputed had been shot in the back of_ kingpins of crime syndi cate lhe head. units in New \'ork and W 1E MOVED Dul\ay was born in 1-lungary Chicago. have been indicted by ;ind received his medical a federal grand jury on degree there. He came to the charges of operating a $446.000 ,United States in 1951 and stolen securities ring. COSTA MESA BUILDING SUPPLY Now at 120 VIRGINIA PLACE became a resident at Ypsilanti Terry Lord: special attorney From Death T -ap State Hospital . He re<'eivtd his for the Justice Department's ~ masters degree at th e Chicago strike force on Uni\'ersity of !"-1ichigan where organized crime.. said the BELLAJR-E, Tex. (UPI) -A caller he was a clinical associate scheme actually 1 n v o I Ye d told-potfCe Thursday that a young woman professor of psychiatry. more .. than $500.000 in COSTA MESA 548-2826 1xl2 PECKY CEDAR per fl ............... llc 3/8 4x8 (Ext.I PLYWOOD ..•....•..•..••. 2.99 QUART SPAR VARNISH .... , .......••... 9Sc GALLON ENAMEL !Reg. $S..9SI •..•.•••.• 2.95.. was taking her clothes off on the sevenlh· He became superintendent S!Cur1lLes, . e\:en tl'IOugh the noor plat(orm of a building still under of the Ypsilanti State Hospital n1ne--ctiunt 1nd1clf!1~nt returned construction. in late 1965. DuKay retired Thursda¥ spec1fted . ~ n I y Police Chief John Wheatley strapped a from the: hospital last March $446.000 in. st~len securities. safety line around his waist. crawled onto to go into private practice full Lord said_ it was one of the the platform and grabbed the woman , by time large:st ser1e:s of thefts yet now totally nude. He:r b r 0 th er , · charged in the gove:rnme:nt's GARDEN HOSES 7/16x2S ft ............. 1.79 2x2·8 F.T. (D.F.I .......................... 1 ic ,N(W HDUllS: Mon.•Ftl. t Po S-s.t. I to 4-C,_IH Su.,J.r meanwhile. had been trying to talk her LEGAL NOTICE crackdov.'n on the sUllen b k I th ed 1-----:==------~·~ec:u~ri~ti~"~ra;c;k;••~·-···~==========~======:~~~ ac rom e: ge. ,..unt "She lunged forward and y grabbed ll'1cr 1r1ous 1u11NEss h NAME STATIMINT er." Wheatley said after his rescue T".• •011owlnt "'r.~ 11 doint 11<111""" Thursday. "She had never looked around. '" L IVING WAT Elt ll'llOOUCTION$, fl71 She definitely had decided to jump." LTtthflt ld Orlvt , Hun11n111on llt•Ch. "J.. had to grab her and hope we both '~Ch1t1 1e1r~ Maclnto111, , t, 1 didn't go over the side."' lltlhllekl Drive, Huntlntton 1111c/!. The 2{)..year~ld woman's mother had .~~~:d~~11lneu. 11 b11n1 co!ldudfd bv ,,, called police, saying her daughter ll'!ft Mlc11ee1 IC. M1ctnro111 h ; Thil tll!emtnl fllfd w ill! !ht Counl\I ome threatening to commit suicide. She c1.,\ o1 O••n•• counh' on· Oct 1), 1t11. was upset because of the: bre:akdown of av eeverlv J, Mtddo~ Oe•utv c0un1 v h Cit•~. ( er marriage and "was in a de:ep state: of Pub!11~fd O•l"il" Cot1t o.uv P11o• depression " Wheatley said Oc•-• u, n. lf, •net Ho...-...,,w s. • . . ltll 1111·11 ARTISTE DE LA RUE Art Exhibit Now South Coast'11aza Prices Will Never Be Lower-Layaway . Now for thlJ., Holidays! SPINET Pl N BY WURLITZER ~caW-=k µ,?~-~~ h~ a~~~Wt6trl4; d~iorMf9!1 C..C.. 0"7liVt'ie£. liAtpZF--··fh6..~ ~,u£,1i4~ !~l 5595 ···"BABY GRAND BUSH & GERTS ~t~ 51099 ~~UNBELIEVABLE BUYS ~~ H•mm°"d Dolun STEINWAY .T..' WURLITZER CONSOLE SPINET ORGAN GRANO PlANO -... WAS $14fS HOW 5995 WAS S:S~f5, NOW i' s ..... 1 flnlolln $699 • WAS $85S, NOW ....... . • J' I", £bo~V linlol! $2995 ;;. ·~:~~·::· SPINETIE ORGAN WURLITZER .1,;, Model 43000 $1695 Cot1~:.~,.,~~nsole bi WA.S $2135, HOW WAS $1245, HOW 17 BALDWIN GRAND PIANO $1095 ~ s· , .. , w.i. .. Fl•tlll $2150 "1 WAS $25'9, NOW . A ll Pl1no1 Gu•r•ntffld 10 Yr1., With A FrH Tunlnt In Your Homt DIPARTM E:NT STORE OF MUSIC South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa -.~g:.si~.-~;:.•n For Top Sports Co-yerage Read the DAILY PILOT ! .• .. I' • • DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Let Zone ·Change Wait Orange County supervisors almost have to be con· sidered lame.duck legislators over territory that \'ery likely will become the City of Irvine alter the Dec. 21 incorporation election. For that reason alone. the board should hold back on all matters concerning those 18,000 acres on the cen· teal Irvine Ranch. One of these matters Is the pending l\1cDonnell Douglas zone change. It is certainly not so pressing tha t it could not \vait a inonth or two for action by Irvine municipa.l officials -Presuming, of course. the inror· poratioo election carries. Odds are that it "ill carry. Supervisor David Baker urged such a delay. There are other reasons that make the proposed intenslfied use of the 50-arre tract across ~tar.-\.rthur Boulevard from Orange County Air port a matter that "1 perhaps the su pervisors nlight best not handle. One of those reasons is th e rumor that a deal ,,·a.s made to get the needed fourth vote from Supet\·isor \ril- liam Phillips by gerrymandering a potential opponent out of his district. · There are other stories that cloud the issue to the poiiit that -even if none of them is true -serYe to tarnish the actions of supervisors if they do tlle a Yote. The four-fifths vote of the five-member body wo ul d be needed to approve the zone change since the pro- posal has been turned down by the Airport Land l "se Commission which feels the proposal deserYes much more study by county planners. One aspect the commission feels deserYes more in· sight is traffic circulation. That subject "·as taken up by the panel Thursday night when they heard a consultant's report on general traffic patterns around the airport. The proposed zone change would allow commer- cial uses, such as hotels, office buildings and banks, on the property that is now master·planned for light indus· trial development. The supervisors have delayed a scheduled public hearing on the reque•l until next week when Fifth m .. tricl Supervisor Ronald Caspers will be back In town to vote on the proposal. In moving for the delay or one week, supervisors sald only it should be postponed because of Caspers' absence, since the land ls in his supervisorial district. Fair enough. But, they did not mention the fact that he also could be the fourth vote needed to overturn the land use commission's recommendation. Trustees in ·a Tight Spot The Saddleback College board's decisidn to levy a 34-cent permissi ve tax for one year, on the heels of los· ing a $24.8 million bond issue vote, set off a mini·'A'ar of \\·ords in the South County press. On one hand, the trustees ,,·ere roundly criticized for riding rough-shod over the implied wishes of the ,·oters. On the othe.r. they were applauded for taking a courageous step 'vithout which \be coUege stood to lose $2.2 million in state funds. . The trus tees '''ere clearly in a tight spot and perhaps should not be judged too harshly. They are obliged to pro,·ide a junior college education for a burgeoning population and obviously "'ill have to provide some halls for all this learning. The campus no''' consists of several re-locatable buildings and one budding library. Contracts for a science-math center had been signed when the bond issue failed. The one-year permissive tax will raise $2.4 million to match available state funds and complete at least this project. Ho,vever. the fu ss does raise some questions about the trustees' rigid policy of refusing any aid that comes in the form of federal funds. It may be just a little hard· er to explain in the future -particularly when they worked so strenuously to obtain state funds. . •• • N Male Buyer ls Confused, Embarrassed Dear Gloon1y Gus Jaadiciary Committee Favors Court No1nitiees ~ ........ ·, . ., lt is getting 6-0 that men are em· b&rrassed to buy certain presents for wotnen. Lasl Mother's Day, 1 strolled downtown to pick ·up some gifts for my wife, my .. mother, and my mother·in· Jaw. In the end , I got flowers. Everything today has a coy name, reeking w i l h cute- ness or allure. Once upon a time, goods offered in a s t o r e had a homely direct- ne5s: "Gents Underwear'• or "Extra Firm Corseb," or some such pJain ind honest tiUe. Now we are urged to buy Scanties and S\enderettes and Short-Eez, and dozens of similc.r items dripQing wi th whimsical trade-names. Women are no lpnger sleep- ing in nightgowns: they put on Snugglies or Slumbersuits. For daytime relaxation they wear something called a Sun·and· Fun Set. OF' COURSE perfumes have been a legitimate target for satirists for many years. How can a man approach a cos- metic counter and ask for a bottle of My Night of Rapture, or a phial of Pagan Delight? And even men's underclothes have been swept up in the Lide of fa ncy nomenclature. Buying a pair of shorts. I am confronted with a dozen different names , all su·~sting impossible feats of heroics. 1 --':-. -~ I am · sure these new merchandising techniques have proved effective in oome For $30 you can be a Big J Boost. ers White Club member. Do you think they can save the neighbor· hood? -S. D. Jr. ~ .... hlf" """" """" ¥1ewt, tilt MICt tMrli'Y "--ef tflt . ..._...., kM ,_ "' Hive ....... ,. 1911\0 D911Y' 1"119T, .,.. ' , . . ' ,. ... . ~ quatjf's. but 1 get a qi:aeasy fee.ling at the ~·of entering a store and ordering a 't>ilt. or Maglcllne hose Or a fluffy Cloudland angora sweater. IN~F AIRNESS to the manufacturers. It mus~:be admitted that modem clothes are more attractive, rhore Comfortable and ,more durable than they were a generation ago-especially children's things; which were a nightm8.re. of ugliness and itchiness when J was a boy. But each rose bas its thorn, as some bad poet has said. and along v.·ith the ta stefUlness o[ .mOdern apparel we have inflicted 1upon us the tastelessness of smirking and suggestive names which on- ly confuse and embarrass the diffident male buyer. THERE 1S A KIND of rugged charm in such old.fashioned words as "pants" and "hair oil" and even "long underwear". They pretend to be nothing but what they are, and dG not promise to transform a portly middle-aged woman into a flaming seductress Or •to ,turn a paunchy middle-aged man into a dashing steeplechase winner. , But J suppose [ am jusl fighting another losing round in the battle or words. What we are selling today are im· ages more than products. Let the Leftists Bray ' Tbe Dally Callforn1an El Cajon The loutish leftists v.•ho \'itw U.S. foreign policy aims from time im- memorial to fQe; present as unending ex· ploitation by an "imperialist'' power of other countries display an amazing ig- porance of the facts . They parrot the Insults hurled at this country by the Communist cliques abroad, as If anything muttered by li-faG or culled from the clackings of Castro bad automatically passed the test for truth. Any contradiction of these half·baked Inanities by official U.S. government spokesmen is, of course, considered self- preserving gibberish by the leftist orac.les-somethi'ng one could expect of devious represe:nt.&lives of a v.·ic.ked Md morally cocrupt naliori. IT TAKES SOMEONE with a historical perspective that goes back fa rther than the bemocratic convent ion in 1968 to ap- prtcl.ate what, 1n f1ct, was the un- ..---By George ---, Dear George: What ii the population or New 7.oaland? I ART Dear Art: You know wu~ Art? 11•1 people like you who make life really tough for us lovtlom columnists. Haven't )-'OU got one UUJ.e domestk strife? Quit worryln1 abool New Zeil1nd, Art. Go 1el In biR trouble. I don't tbJnlc )'OU're trying .••• precedented generosity of the Ameri can people toward friendly foreign nations after the end of World War JI: One suclr person with that insight Is Prime Minister Edward Heath of Creat Britain who has led his .countty into the European Economic Community with a speech in which be assert~ it Is t!Ine for Europe to end its reliance on the United States and make its own v.•ay in the •·orld. In paying tribute lo America's role In helping prostrate Europe emerge from the ravages of war to vigorous economic health, Heath said: • • "NEVER IN MODERN time has a great power used Its· energy and Its generosity with such eff~ to protect the Interests of its friends." The record shows that almost $1SO billion 1n American tttasure has been given to Jmprove-economic conditions tn scores of countrle.s around the globe. True, 9Gl?\e or it 'has betD "Ml.upent. But much of it-has gone for good purposes and those Investments hi\19 made ft pt15S\ble for other natiom to prime their economlts and bring about a general rise In property and llVing stand- .ards. WE NEED NEVER hang our heads In sfiame for sharing our riches with the netdf natioos or the wwld at a time when thtlr survival depended upon our charity and goodwill. .. The leftl!:t.s can bray all they want, but they will have a difficult time pointing to any historical parallel 1n which the plea for assi3tance hes been met with such 1 quick and generGus response. ' Rehnquist, Powell Will Be Approved • WASHINGTON -The two Supreme Court nominees -Asst. Attorney General William Rehnquist and Virginia attorney Lewis Powell -will be decisive. ly recommended for confirmation by the Sen a t e Judiciary Committee. The likely tiiparti- san vote Df approval wilt be II to 5, That was the line- up bi an &uthorltai. tive canvass of the membe rs of this key • committee -nine Democrots, sev en Republicans. This private "count sho1P"td· that all of the seve n Republicans aiid· four of the nlne Democrats favor the two appointees. The opposition consists enUrely . of the five li beral Democratic committeemen - Sens. Philip Hart (Mich.), Edward Ken- nedy .cr.tass.), Birch Bayh (Ind.), Quentin Burdick (N.D.) and John Tunney (Cal.). OF Tms GROUP, none has had legal experience of not~ or consequence. .. perience of being told by Democrats to stand pat. · One influential Democrat advised him: ''I have examined your personal and legal record, and found it wholly S<!tisfac- . , 1 tory1 Don't ·be .unduly dis\urbed ·~ the Several haven't practiced at, all~ Their outcries so [ar made agaiMt yq1.1,. ·'f foUI!9 no eubStanf!e in them, ani:l. I woWd ·~ay opposition . is based on partisan and they were motivated for . grandstandiilg:,. ideological grGunds. purposes. Sb· hold firm , /arx:I 1· have no Secret strategy of .the OJ>pOSilion IS:to doubt you .will be confirmed.'' : , · con~ntrate ~ir fire .,th1eny against. Sens. Kannedy · and Bayll ·ma7 find ~~~ ...... -:on the theory that If be•dlll themselves 1:dt. wilh stateh\tnts ~they ».'C!et:tated ·it will be easier tl.l. eU"ir!1na'te ·"·&Ide in op~ing/.tWo p_revioui~u.tf-e POwel.J, .. former he~ ?f the prestigious -~ appointees:jf. they assail R""·'~ lain an effective blockade against a counterattack. As one of the leaders soundly pointed out, "At this late date in the session, witll members increasingly irppatient to ad· jolll'r(• '\hf: .mere threat of a filibuster is enou.ih .to 1Stop anything. And we're not Joolin@:! • .-v.:e mean business." Ai' this gathering, there was con· side(jl:bfe discussion of one factor that palj.uilil¥1Y played a major role in the d~at"oJ the 25-year-0\d stupendously c~ .. fQl:eign aid program. Senators w~·v:smt sputtering angrily over the ~iw.iu Arner1c~n Bar-Ass~1alion. Rchnqui!t will aild Powell on ldtological gi'tiu · . · be a~Iied as racially biased, partial _ to Administration forces ha ve a big arsenal , ,'PAR()~'J"·.{>F THEIR indignation was bugging and use o~ other stern police of their quotes to throw at them. ~ r ~fl' Qi~ .$3 billion· lus foreign aid. measures. ~ ·.11.·l'.l:s...t.: · p · be! th ANY J\10VE TO ~vive the Senate.k)U.,\ ~._'fa.~ bill pending . o_re e To compile "evidence" against the two ed fore ign aid progr will be mel~. · SenaJe. ~~t~ hundreds of millions of appointees, Sens. Kennedy and Bay)'I have " d liars e<>......,arked fo r 4fi or the 76 coun enlisted the aid of civil right! adiyists, on With a powerful partisan riliblister. ~ 't ""'"·~· . • That was decidl>A, at an unannoµnced' tr1~s t~a.t·f~ted tG s~at Pek1_ng and oust bl;icks and ultra-liberal members Gf ctr· meeting of leader~,r of th. e coaliliori that Tar"@ fro_m the United Nations. . tain law schools -fciremost aniong them Harvard and Yale. staged the dramatic surpriSe' upset. In.other words, although these nations REHNQUIST, who llas been making courtesy calls on Senators, including known opponents, has had the unusual ex- !>-!though only a st/l~ll gro.ulf P,3~ticipated had !"!.hesitancy in sluggi ng th~ U.S., 1n this strategy d15cuss10n. firm con-some with open glee, they would still con· fidence was expressfid that sufficient sup-tinoe: feeding heftily under the measure port can be rallied in the Senate to main· at the foreign aid trough. • • Schmitz Report Shocking to· Reader To the Editor: I thank Congressman John C. Schmitz for being concerned enough to send out a report to his constituents. I am. ho"·ever, in full support of the President's new policy toward Red China. The coogressman 's report, in general, shocked and dismayed me. It does not seem C'01Tect to assume that because President Nixon is planning to meet with the government of Red China he is "abandoning Chi a n ~ Ka i·shek a n d all our friends and allies in the Republic of China." His report appears to me to be mainly an outcry against comm unism rather than an objective. intelligent, realistic evaluation of President Nixon's first step toward dealing openly v.•ith the Red Chinese. 1 HAVE RECENTl. Y returned l.G California after working for tv.·o years with the Department of State ; first, in the Central African Republic and this spring at the U.S. Delegation to tile Peace Talks on Vietnam in Paris. lnter- nalional pc>Utics and economics al'! very sophisticated. How can we continue "ignoring" a· country the size of Red China? our government must take thei r actions intq C(lnsideralion, covertly or O\'erlly. Considering the latest United Nations decision to repla~ Nationalist China with Red China in the representation of the Chinese peop!e, I believe that President Nixon's earlier moves were very wise; As strong a nation es we are, we cannot disagree wltb the rest of the world, free and Communist, for IOfll and still remain on top. · MOST AMERICA.r-.'S have had an ex· c.ellent Indoctrination a g e i n s t com- munism. I am well aware of what it Js and how It works. The people of China, R ussi a, Cubi.·, Hu ngar y and Czechoslovakia were In entirely different economic positions 11t the time of Com- munist takeover than is the United St1tu. As a registered Republican and firm believer ln the prlnciplts of den>OCMcy and free trade and staunch ~pporter of the government of the United States of America, I am aortly disappointed thal .. one of my elected reprtsent.atlves in Cangress has no more to say about tha President's new Policy toward Red China than to resort to anti-COmmunist pro- paganda. BONNIE L. JOHNSON r Mailbox • Letters 1rom T"eadtrs art wtlcomt. Normotly writers should convey their messages tn 300 words or ltss. The right to condense lt'tltrt to fit spact or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ttrs must include signature end mail· ing address, but names m.a11 be with· held on request if sufficient reaso~ is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. ' Hom iUony Will Ce1ne? To Uie Editor ~ Bedspriilgs, hotwater tank~. furnJltlI'f:, tires, engine blocks, car axles, T.V. set.s , oil drums and endless soft drink. beer and liquor bottles were included among the hundreds of SO.lb. re.fuSe bags of paper and plastic disposables picked up along the road and shore of the Upper Bay last Saturday morning. The work . all done by members of the Kiwanis Club of Corona del Mar and Jhe.ir willing helpers. the young men of the Rey Club of CdM High School. Plus, the absolulely essential help of a large ttuck frotn the city through the PBR Com· mission. T.HB CHA~GE from the disgraceful dump along the roadskte will be. welcome to aU. Th is ~Id encourige othfl's to try to keep up the lmpro~ standard !Jf cleanliness. It·ta: tbe un119Ual c(Uzen who doesn't adopt the, "what's the'use.'1 air titude and Just. add his trash to all he sees &round him. ' The city should now take immediate action to place trash ba1Tels and to post LARGE and FREQUENT signs pro. hibiting li tter and dumping (obvtpusly, many cart had found this a cber and more c:onvenlent spot than the county dump). LlKE ADVERTISING, wt must repeat and repeat and Stll and sell unlll the con· st.iousness of these ~lterbugs changes from one of, "who cires ... what Is ooe more paper bag." to one of being part of the ahswer, not part of the problem. I salute the Kiwanis Club and the Key Club for leading the way. Another opportunity for citizen help is being led by Mrs. Joan Coverdale of Newport. She is organiiing a "Clean Up the Water'' effort for Sunday, Nov. 7, at 11 a.m. Anyone who can get a boat should join the group at the Big Ca nyon laun- ching area . TIJE HARBOR DEPARTMENT \vill be on hand with a bOat to collect the garbage and refuse that we can fish out of the waters. The Upper Bay waters are a disgrace to those who see them close up. and a disaster to the effort to improve water pollution standards in the entire bay· area. We have ·an ria! hf other parts of the country whei'e willing people have clean- ed up their rivers or lakes, but. it takes many hands and hearts to ma ke a dent in the debris. How manr will come out to help? JEAN MORRIS End Trkk or Treo t To the Editor : At the risk 0£ alienating my fa vorite people, the Small fry. I should like to see an end to the custom of Halloween "Irick or treat" except for UN ICEF". a \\'o~thy cause. Much has !>ctn said about the crue:I pranks of adults who put pins. razor blades. etc. in the treats they give tnc children. What or the case of lnoocent adult$ C(lnfronted by police with an apple con· cealing a razor blade? They were &eautllul apples.OOught from the Kiwanis and the 'Case was opened just before the door+bell began to ring. The police never p...Cssed. the matter but the donors felt so bad that the fGllowing year they turned out the poreh light, refUM<i to answer the door and gave out no treats, deprived of the run of. see.Ing their various fancy CO$· tum es. WHEN SIX·FOOT·TALL "kids" call , ii Is rtdJculous, but finally It was surmls~ that some mischievous "'trick or tre11ter '' had slipped the blede into a younger boy's apple and thus put !he apple.givers in a harrowing position. Perhaps olhe:r In· nocen1 adults have had such an ex. ~rience. PTA carnivals should be enough fun , or 1~ -- home parties -but no. the kids thi nk tric k or treat is THE thing to do besides t~e carnival s and parties. Surely parents can get together and put an end to a risky way for children to celebrate. GWEN PATON ffallomeeta Tre ats To the Edit:or : 1 have ju·st.flnished reading the Nov. 1 DAil. Y PILOT. There were two articles about the many horrible thingS that can happen to children when they go trick or treating. My blood runs cold whe" I hear about razor bl?lles, drugs , ground glass , needles anct other things being foand in the Halloween treats that children get vlhen they go trick or treating. I WOULD LIKE to see our city do something to eliminate this sort of thinr;. I would like to suggest that the parks In the city have Halloween programs to en- courage the children lo go there and en· joy a safe celebratioh instead of risking bei ng attacked by s ic k molesters or receiving h:rrible surprises in their Halloween treats. · t am sure there are many other parent s that fee l as I do and v.·ould ap- l)rttiate anything that could be done to protect their children . f\1RS. CONCETTA KERN ORANG£ COAST DAILY PILOT Robert iV. 1\'tcd, Pu blisher Th.omn.s KteuU, Ed l!or Albttt \V. Bates Editorial l'age. Erl1tor Thlf Nl!frwilll P•t:r ot the Ollily rllr>t. !K'('k!lo 10 lnlnm1 find !tllmu-lllte t'l"lld11r~ b)' prl'M'nlinll 1hi!'I nc''"'l"'Per'!'I opink.or~~ and rr.m· tr'lcnWy on topie5 Ol inlt'f't'!l;l 11.nrt $IJ;niricanN>. by pro\•ld1nit 11 rorum ,,~r 1ht" ('Jlfln"o'llon nr •}\lr rr11drrs' opinion~ . .11nd by prrsrt'ltlni:-the div•'l'I'<' ''ir"'l10int11 or ln!ormt'd nb· sirr\·rr~ 11nd lf:oOk"Smcn on lopiQI 4•1 lhf'dlly. f~iday, November 51 1971 I l • • • Cosia Mesa Today's Flnal ' ED If.I 0 N N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 64, NO. 265 , 4 SECTIONS, $0 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, 'CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBEI( 5, ,.1971' JEN CENTS Tearful Juror Prompts Mistrial for Randano By T0~1 BARLEY Of ltlt DllllY l"H•r.Stt H A distraught but determined woman juror gave convicted liquor hijacker Gene Randano the kind of break late Thu9day night that has never been given-belore in Orange Gounty Superior Court history. Mrs. Judith Arbon of Fullerton emerg- ed from hours of wrangling in the jury rt10m to tell ;Judge Claude Owens that she could not go along with the guilty verdict she had signed five hours before with the as rest of the jury. Her fellow jurors, many of them angry and all of them tired and strained, freely admitted that a no-holds-barred session in the jury room had failed to eradicate the doubts that Mrs. Arbon first ex- pressed . Thursday afternoon when lhe Randano jury reached a decision. The attractive blonde 's tears as the jury was being polled gave defense at·, tcmey Lawrence McBride the kind of op- portunity that comes just once in a lifetime in criminal trials. He took it by insisting that Mrs . Arbon go with him , Judge Owens and prosecutor Joe Heneghan lo the privacy of the judge's chambers. The four did so and the resull·was that Judge Owens seilt the jury back to the jijtf room for the decision al 9 p.m. that led tum to tear up the earlier verdict of the jury and declare a mistrial. Judge Owens, making no secret of his anger and disgust, refused to let Mr5 • • Arbon address him before the jury was discharged. He ~ad earlier refused to allow the Fullerton WOJT!an to discuss the issues upsetting her in private. Judge William C. Speirs today set a new trial for Randano on Jan. 10. Heneghan left no one in anf doubt af.ter the mistriil rullnj that he intends to put the Las Vegas man back in the aiurtroom. Thursday was undoubtedly Randano·s day. eas Ill He survived a jury's 1nllty verdict that But Mrs. Arbon wept while the jury could have put him in state prisop for at was being polled and fl.fcBride im· least 10 years on bribery and conspiracy mediately demanded that Judge Owen• charges and he earlier survived a liquor" · ask the distraught juror if she did indeed hijacking sentencing that could have pro-feel his client was guilty. duced an identical tenn. 11rs. Arbon, holding a handkerchief to The ,panel filed back .Thunday af· her face, whispered "yes" and Judge <ternoon after nearly eight hours of Owens seemed to be satisfied with a deliberation to tell Judge Claude Ovfens verdict that could have put Randano iJl that It found Randano, 46, guilty of brib-gtate prison for at least the next 10 years. ing a Costa Mesa policeman and con· . But McBride took Heneghan with bim spiracy relating to that charge. tSee RANDANO. Pa&e Z) Atom Test Saturday If ·unstayed WASHINGTON (UP!l -Awaiting a final legal decision from the Supreme Court, scientists. senators, Conserva· tionists and pacifists appealed directly to President Ni1on today to postpone the mighty Amchitka Island nuclear test as a pol.entially deadly mistake. Barring a last·minute stay from the court or the President. s red button will be p~ al 2 p.m. PST Saturday in a bunker on the northern end of the desolate island in the Aleutian chain, 1,200 miles southwest of the Alaskan coast, triggering a fi ve-megaton warhead buried nearly· 6,000 feet underground. our _•I J.\11 llGjle o1·a legal 4ellf rata4·~!11o · hands o~~lef'Justlce Warren E. ~ger, . • who received late Thursday the appeal of eight organizations charginc that Ule Atomic Energy Commission bid not fully considered the 111vironmentallim'of the test u required by law, Educator Cites Possible Peril From Amchitka ST. LOUIS (UP!) -Dr. Kurt H. OAl/.Y PILOT l"fl•M by ltlldf<Nletx1"11111 CROWD OF CURIOUS PRESS AGAINST POST OFFICE GLASS FOR BETTER VIEW' OF WESTMINSTER· MURDER SCENE The Body Was Removed, the Crowd Pressed Forward~ Then Postal Official1'Covered Windows With Cardboard • ' SHOT TO DEATH Postmaster Burtner Marshals . Seize Arson Suspect Orange Fire Department officials reported ·the apprehension this morning of a 17·year-old .student on arson charges in connection with the Sept. 18 fire which did Sl00.000 damage to Portola Junior High School. Fire Marshal H. L. Johnson said an i~ tensive investigation by his staff and Orange pOlice fed to the arrest of the yoolh. 'The fire which gutted the .11d- n\inistratlon building In the early morn- ing hours of Sept. II wa~ lgnittd .b~ at least five different Ure5 in lbe building. ·Johnson said. -· . Punished Carrier Held In Postmaster Slnying By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of "" 0•111 ruot s1111 The day started with a disciplinary hearing, was interrupted by a haircut and ended at 10:45 a.m. in death for. Paul Burtner, postmaster of Westminster. A meeting about Christmas mail presided over by Burtner was shattered by a hail of bullets. When it \\'as over Burtner lay dead -shot ti) death in the post offi~ he had served for 24 yeari;. Police are holding Phillip B. Alleman. a postal clerk for two years. on suspicion or Burtner's murder and the wounding of Ernest Gaulden 1 46, superintendent of mails. Gaulden is clinging to life today al 'Ves tminster Community hospital . He is in guarded ctlndition after undergoing f'lur hours of surgery for a stomach wound . · Alleman, 24, of 2801 N. Bristol St., Santa Ana, was to be formally charged today with murder and assaull with in· tent to commit murder. LL Don Savien, comm·ander o( the Westminster detective d I v i s i o n , reconstructed the events police believe led to Burtner's death. Alleman, a night clerk, had received r.· written reprimand for t a r d i n e s s • Dissatisfied with the action. he had rt.- quested a meeting with Burtner and the postaJ clerk's union representative. "He apparently became quite angry at that meeting," Saviers alleged, "and w11lked out in the middle of it." Police believe Aile.man went to his parents' home in Santa Ana where he got his father's .45-caliber automatic pistol. He returned to the post office about 45 minutes later and walked in through a back door and hallway w b I c h led to Burtncr·s office. At that momen t Butner, Gaulden, (Se• MURDER, Pac• %) HELD IN SHOOTING Postal Clerk Alleman Bicycle Cpncern Growing, T·wo Mesa Co1nmittees Study Theft,s and Trails A three-point program toward greater bicycle safety and lewr bicycle losses through theft is in progress in Costa Mua, with the city, two Citizen com- mittees and private firms involved. Representatives of Cost a Mesa's Crime Preventkln and Bicycle T r a I I s C.Ommiltees are lt work pn the project.. Oiuck McDonell, chairman of the bicy- cle panel, asktd permi!llkln to make It • joint effort in gpeakin1 tc the city council Monday, wlnni'fi't.f.llthusiastic approval. Various facets -one potentially con· troversial -came under di!CUSSion at Monday's city councll meeting : -A mandatory city bikt licensing pr~ gram, with fee and provisions to cite violators. -Simplify a free bike registration pro- gram to assilt in tracing 1tolen ones. -Cllnic1 for in6trucUon in safe bicycl- ing techniques, emphasizing adult as well as child enrollment. -How to organize, finance and establl!h a bicycle trails network offering miles of riding enjoyment 6lresslng scenery as well as safety. -Enlisting the aid of private enterprise to cut cosls or bicycle locks and thus (See BICYCLES, Paae %) ) --- Burger was expected · to tum the case over to the full court for a rullna. most likely following their regtilar Friday con- (See AMCHITKA, P•ge %) * * * Blast Opinions Now Being Taken By White House By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 flMI 01ll'I' PJlll Stiff If you have ever had a nagging desire to phone the White House and get something off your chest, now is the time to do it. As the nuclear test explosion on Amchitka Island looms nearer, the White House has placed at least one special assistant on duty by a telephone to handle inc.oming personal opinions on the blast. The _DAILY PILOT was alerted to the opinion line by local radio station broad· casts of the phone number (202-456-1414) and a subsequent request to express an opinion on the test. A check by the DAILY PILOT proved the number to be that of the White House switchboard. In a businesslike manner, our call was transferred to the special assistant who, in a very low key manner, asked simply ''Are you for or against?" The assistant, by the tone of his question, seemed to expect concise one-word re sponses. Reasons for opinions were courteously but abruptly cut off. When asked by ~he DAILY PILOT if he was the only one taking calls -Of opinion -0n the blast, the assistant said that any inf-0rmation would have to come from the office of Presidential Press Secretary 'Ronald Ziegler. Ziegler's aides said they had no knowledge of a concerted effQ.rl to make the White House number known to the public and that the publicity was pro- bably undertaken by individuhl radio sta- tions. I A spokesman for Ziegler also said be had not been informed that the ~ite House was accepting Lhese ca\11 and that &0meone must have been given lbe duty without his knowledge. The spokesman did not know how large .11 staff was ha"ndling the calls but he said he suspected it was probably less than five people. At any rate. he said, it appears as if the White House will a~pt one word opinions on the atomic test lrqm any private c1tizen. For the more · budget conscious, a' 3· minute call costs only 35 ceoil between ll p.m. and a a.m. ' Barring judicial or presidential orders halting the test, It should go oU Saturday about 2 p.m. our time. • / Hohenemser. professor of .11ero1pace engln~ring at Washington University, said 'Thursday the nuclear blast scheduI· ed for Saturday on Amchitka Isla11d presents "a small possibility of a major catastrophe." (Related story, Page IO). "There is a great probabi!Jty that nothing will happen, but there is a small possibility that tremendous disaster will occur," he said. Hohenemser told a news conference.the: blast will be "in an area of earthquake activity, and an earthquake may be trig· gered, although not caused, by the blast. An earthquake that would be triggered by the blast is one that might have occurred at a later time." He said such an earthquake could be large enough "to damage both the Asian and American coasts." · "This blast will be five times as large .11s any in the past." he saJd. "Nobody knows what a five.megaton blast will do." "We must balance the benefit of wha t the blast is supposed to t.e-compUsh with the risks involved." U.S. OKs Livestock Feed Sale to Russiar WASHINGTON (UPIJ -The ad- ministration has approved the: sale ot about $100 million worth of livestock feed grains to the Soviet Union by private U.S. traders, government sources reported to- day. The: sale would be the first U.S.· Russian grain deal since President John F. Kennedy approved the shipment of over $100 million worth of wtieat to Russia in the winter of 196.1. • Coast Weather You won't &ee too much sun this weekend, especially in the pre- noon hours when fog and low clouds prevail. Top temperatures will be 65 along the coast and 75 further inland. INSmE TODAY Lotte Ltnya will soon appear ~ Mother C-0urage at UCI and the Weekender has u itory and pictures about her on Page 25, today. IOlllRI " Mllhltl P\llllh I' (tlll9nllt' " Mtlltll•I Mtwt W Clltdll!rt u, 7 Orl ftl' CM,., II Cl•UlllM ,.._,. ltttlllll"Hll ,,.,. Ctntk1 SI c,. ....... ' u lllOrtl ,..,,. Stock Mtrt1h '"" Ottltl Ntlktt It Ttlt•lllol! ?t Dl,,.l'ttl 11 Tlle•ltn •n ltlli.NI PtH I W .. !Mr 4 '""II(' 1•11 Wtf111111'1 Mftft IJ.14 llwHcffe 14 WtrN """" .., A1111 L.tlldera 1s WMllefttltf' U<U -•u .. - • - 2 DAILY PILOT C From Page J RANDANO ... to tht bench and lhe r1\'ll lawyen and Judge Owtns engaged in v.•hi,spertd but h\'tly conversation that was obviously conttrtd on the slll1 wteplng Mn. Arbon. Finally Judge Owens too'r. both lawyers ind l\.1rs. Arbon \11ith hlm to his chambers for a discussion that ended with the jury bting sent back to the jury room for further deliberation on the bribery and <'Onspiracy con\1iction. The panel has rul- td nol guilty on charges that Randano '*'1l5 in po5session of dangerous drugs on April 3, 1970. 1t1c8ride did not let the matter rest there and he incurred Judge Qp.•ens' v.·rath for his ptrsistence in the issue. He asked Judge O.ve ns to declare a mistrial on the bas is ot l\.1rs. Arbon·s ap- parent rtluctance and he brought the angry judge half off the bench v.•ith the snapped comment: "You've said enougti, 1-lt. l\.1cBride."' McBride then rtminded the judge that l\.1rs. Arbon had asked the judge if she could discuss her problem with the judge "in private." Judge 0\\'eM reminded McBride that he had denitd ~e request. "I think we should hear what she has to say," ~tcBride complained. "I ask pum.ission for M~s. Arbon to be allowed !Uc:h a discussion." "Request denied," snapped J udge 0w·ens. nte jury filed back to the jury rocm. The rejected verdict came hard on the heels of pleas by Randano that at leasL temporaril y halted his sentenc ing on the liquor hijacking offense that sp~wned the bribery allegations. ~le.Bride told Judge James Turner that his client has suffered a series of heart attacks and his argumeRt at least put off what could have bttn a long state pr{son term for Randano's illicit s"'i tc:h of 300 cases of liquor from the former Sad- dlebac:k Inn , Laguna Beach. 10 Fell· ciano's Restaurant in Newport Beach. Judge Turner, called on to sentence Randano whlle the bribery trial jury \\'IS still ,deliberating in Judge Claude Owens' courtroom, set Nov. 11 for court approval ol the cardiologist that Heneghan and iic:Brlde have to select. He will study the physician's reports and sentence Randa11c>' Dec. 2. "'I'hi! sort of offens~ merits tbe state penitentiary." Judge Turner commented. "But I don't want to make any kind of commitment that would endanger the defendant 's life." ~tc:Brlde pleaded for a suspended sentence for his client ~·ilb the argument that Randano has suffered "one serious ailment after another" during the period in which the fonntr Felic:iano's partner ~·as suca:ufully prostcUted for liquor hi· Jacking, was indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury for bribing . a polic.eO\ad met was convicted in a Mon· tana federaJ court for maitfraud . He ... dt:s:ribed the theft of liquor. M being from "sophisticated corporations who nn a much greater risk than other . busU..a'' · aod uked Jl14ge Turner ,to.,. bear 1n ~ind that Randa00 had "not rob- bed a little old lady or held up a market.'' Prosecutor Hcnegban blasted Randano as the perpetrator of "an arrogan~-. premeditated fraud v.•ho knew that hJ.S corporation (Feliciano's Restaurant) was going under and who was even then on . probation for mail fraud." Mesa High Tells Queen Hopefuls Costa ?ifesa High School l 9 7 I Homecoming Queen candidates were an- nounced at a pep rally on campus today. Senior princesses Mari Snyder, Debbie Cottle and Sue Van Atta ~·ill compete for the crown. The queen will be named at halftime of tonight's ~ame with Fountain Valley at Osvidson Field. Others in the Queen"s court 11r' He idi :r.ie·isenheimer. freshman princess: Kim 0\\'ens, sophomore princess, and Teresa Sala!.!1', junior princess. ow•• COAST DAILY PILOT I ouii.. OOMf fWUIMtMO OJUIM'f l •Mtf N. WtM ,.,..... ... t'IMWlll' J•tlr: a.. Curl.., -.......... o..tll ... """ 1Mm•• lttHil ..... 1\olll•• A. lii'V'-~I~• ........ Ed.llW Clt•I" H. t.... a.;"i.m P. NeU ~~EGlkn .;.... M-Offk• tlo w .. t '" $tr.et M.cr.., Mi""'2 P.O. la 116"0, •2•26 --......... leldtl sm .. ....., ...,....,. u,-•-.dl1 m ~' ,._ M!H~~ a..dll l1l1J ~ aou...,,,.. ... ~ ....... f.) c.niltwJ ... Ol9L'f' """'· ............ "' ~....,.,... .. ,..,...., Airy ~ a-_, ............... ~·-~ ........, "*"' C-• ...... 11...,.,..,.., """"" ~ \/•Iliff', &M '*""""""'' <tfll1f-,,.. SM!~ ... -'"' -,...-..i tillliM ~Ml .. lrlliflf plf4 .. ........ .., JlrM. CA9 ...... T ..... m4lMMJn a....., Al:•rt'Wlt '42:-1611 ~ ""' 0.... CMll ~ ~. ,_ ....,. ''°""· m-....._ tfllWllll .,."" " ••-11.-n ~ _., "' ........ Wl!Nlill .,..., .... ........ ..,..., ........ .... "*'-..... ""It ............. ..... Ott. Mtw,. C:..t,..,,_lf i....-crtp- "" aortltl' 11.1'1 -"'"'r ,.., ""''' U.IJ _,.,; ~ -lfrt,t·-· .lf,ll _ ... ..,. . ' / ~All Y ,ILOT Stiff Phelt ' " ·, .. • ~ ' -~ < ' ' AEC Claims ~No Ri .sl{;'.· Chairman Views Amchiika Prepar~tions ;\J.\t.ClllTKA 1SLAND. Alaska t AP) - The head or the Atomic Energy Com· mission "'atched preparations for Saturday's scheduled u n d e r g r o u n d nliclear blast and declared, '"There is no risk." \Vith his wife and two of hls daughters at his sid,, AEC Chairman James R. Schlesinger late Thursday peered into the 6,000-foot-deep hole where the five- -tr megaton device will be dttonated. They plan lo remain on ~his" barren, v.·inds"•ept Aleutian Island until.alter the lest. "It's fun for the kids . .and my wife i8 delighted to get aY.'8.Y. 'froi:o the.house for' a "'hile ." Schlesinger said. , The Schlesingers watched as ·-."Ol'kmen were dumping 5,600 tons of sand and gra\'el into the ·ibaft, sealing the nucle&r -u. device in a chamber wber~ it is schedul· ed to be fired at S p.m. EST Saturday. . Many ' envircvi mentalistr; ha\'e. ex• pre55ed fears that the blast could \,ouch off a Series of earthquakes or send s Ilda! \l'ave rolling across the .Piclfic: Oc:e:a.n. Tire'• AEC main1ains such'· possibil.itJes are remote. •• From Page l ) Officials cf the test ..:. code-namtd Ca•· nikin -~aid everything Y.'as on schedule fcn' "''hat will •be the mos.t po)l'erfuJ un- dergfound nucle.ar txplos ion ever con- ducted by the Un ited States. ScblesDigeF. several aides and t"'n mamb8s of \Jle Joint Committee on ·Aton'l.ic Energy arrived Thursday after ~topping in Anchorage to pick up a' Croup AMCHITKA BLAST. • • ference, on the merits of a stay pending appeal of a federal appeals court decision against blocking the test. The \\'hile House, standing by Nil:on 's decision to proceed with the blast "for overrid ing reasons of national securitv:• channelled all calls to the AEC, which reported it had received 6.700 letters. telegrams and telephone calls of protest • as of Thursday. It ~id each would be answered individuallv. The \Vhite House J.erused again toda v to eslimale hov,• many protests it had recei ved . The AEC hasr}Jnsistently discounted the enviro nment ts' "'arnings that the exha usti\"ely panned and monitored underground lest. rode-named Cannikin and four umes bigger lhan any the United States has ever conducltd, might sel off major earthquakes or tidal wa\·es and harm marine and wildlife by leaking rad iation. .. · of newsmen arid other AE C officials.- could be made JIUbliC'. the congressltien are Reps. Craig • Among the scientists were Nobe'! win· Hosmer IR-Calif.) and Orville llansen ners Linus Pauling "of Stanford Universi· IR-ldaho ). Hosmer \\'as accompanied by ly. Harold Ure~· of the 'University ·of !tis wift. The members .0f Schlesinger"s California and George \Va id of Harvard ramil y. included his ,vife, Rachel. and University. daughters . Arµie , 13. and-Emily. 9. Six The Sierra Club and seven other groups ~other Schlesinger. childr.en remained in leading I.he legal battle to tllock t~ test, ~ · !heir suburban Washingfbn home. headed by the Committee for Nuclear · , Responsibility, took Qut full ' page .ads ' in the New York Times and the \Vashington Post asking Nixon in an open 1ettt:r to delay the bla st ''in lhe interests of justic:t." . Thirty-four senators signed a telegram lo Nixon fron1 Sen. Ed\\'ard \V. Brooke IR<\lass . f. urging canc:ellalion becauSe ''to proceed \\'ith the test is to endanger nationa l securily and world peace. not t.o furth ur it." They charged there \\'I S a .. ··small though palpable risk of earth- quake. tidal "'ave and radioactive con- tamination of the ocean." From Page 1 .. ·. fro11> P~ge J · .MURDER ... \\'illit.TQ Sr~\\11, .assistanl post.master ~4 Orville Hopkbts, as sistant supetil)tendenl · of fll~ils and Alfred ."Maisto, a fort:miin,_ '~·er~ di~cu~.sfng holiday 'm~il Pfoc'edurts. Saviers sai4 "the four men wert seated in a semi.Circle £acihg-Blll1ne~ with their backs to the door. · TIM FLANAGAN SWINGS AND SINGS AS CONRAD BIRDIE Meui High Studt.its Prep1re Musical Produ·ction The Sierra Club said eight leading scientists, including three Nobel prize "'inners. suggested •·there is a reaJ possibility that the President made a mistake in his decision" and urged him to postpone the test until all scientific data BICYCLES· ... encourage theft rtduction . Police allege A1lem!n burst through the door, aimed the gun at Burtner, said '·OK, yo u've had it," and pulled the trig· ger. '"The gun misfired ." Sayiers asserted, "but about that point everyone rea!ii ed what "'as happening and everything started moving." Bye, Bye Birdie To Be Staged At Mesa High The reorganized fine arts division al Costa Mesa High School is staging its first musical production. "BY'-Bye Birdie," ope.rung next T h u r s d a y November 11. Tiffi Flanaga~. 16, plays lht teenage, solid gold lame idol who turns Sweelap- pte, Ohio upside do"'n. DoMl Kristiansen. drama instructor. ts: direttlnl t:bt. Adams-Stnuss mW!ilcal comedy. Edward Brahams. voca1 music instructor. has ~prred the vocatisL'! and Earl Treichel, iMtrumenlal teacher, will dirccl a 19-plece ordtestrl . 1 • l\1iss Deneige Feducia, modern dance instructor, has choreographed dance numbers. Karen Schultz is assistant director and another student. Cheri PauJ is stage manager. Conrad's manager. Albert. is played by Steve Thomas; Becky Kennedy is Rose and Karen Goodman is Kim Macafee - the lu cky recipient of a kis.~ from the teen music slar \~hose swivel hips are reminiscent of E!Yi.s Presley. Others in the cast of 40 include Chriss t issner as 1\1acafee: Leslie Smith as i'olrs. :-.tacafee, Joel S v.· e n s o n c.-s Hugo and Ka ren Lundell as Albert's possessive mother. Performances will be at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets at $2 may be reserved by call- ing the fine arts office, 545-9431. Residents Slow With Fairview I Park Proposals Deadline for submission of suggestions for what a proposed JOO.acre wUdemess park in Costa l\lesa might include is dra\\'ing near, but so far community respons' has bee.n poor. Project 80 committee. members must have them by nert Wednesday, to begin dra"·ing up a tentative gtneral plan for !he fac ility. A public hearing 01 the proposed park's ~eneral plan is set Nov. 30 before the Costa ~!esa City Council. Only about a dozen replies have been received to 200 letters sent to virtually every civic group. churc h. school and youth organizalion in town. Anyone ~'ith such suggesti ons may send or deliver them to Duggan's office at 77 Fair Drive . City officials assigntd the so-call!<! Dream Team appointed by l\tayor Robert ~l \\'ilson to probe lons·range local goals to develop 1 PJrk la >·oui. Pol ice Marchers Wi1t in Parade A first pl1ce trophy has been add!<! to the Newport Beach Pollce Oep11.rtment '' a"·ard cottectlon by Its crack color iUard drill team. "on an Founlaln \'alley·, Halloween Paradt Captain James 1.. Parker patrol dl\'ISion commandtr. rommended oHicers Al Ooum , Doua Nichol!.On, Al Fischer and Larr)' Gabriel for the performance. ThtY h"''" l\On hooorr before. but nt\er'hr.•t pl111·r El Toro-N oi-se Concern . The. proposed mandatory city bicycle licensing program -conceived as an im4 provement over the existing voluntary m~thod -drew some sharp criticism at Monday 's council meeting. According to pclice reports, Brown ran out of the office and Hopkins and Maisto sc rambled behind a desk. Voiced by Airport Panel "ln my opinion it 19 ridiculous.'' decl_ared City Manager Fred SorsabaJ. adding that county and state agencies should not only handle such systems but are actively organizing one. He also noted policemen would be tie<t u_p right and left checking out unlicensed bicyclists to determine if th{y were violators living in Costa t.1esa or visitors "·ho bicycled in from a license-exempt ci· ly. Gaulden apparently was shot in the stomach when he tried to take the gun away from Alleman, police said. Burtner \\'as shot once in the chest, but managed ·to run out or the office into the portion of the post office used by the public. Serious concerns over the effect of El Toro jet aircraft noise on future homec"'·ners near the ~larine facility and fast grewing traffic: near Orange County ~ Airport were expressed by County Airport Land Use commissioners Thurs- day night. They heard a startling partial solution to the airport traffic: dilemma -a $6 million tunnel under the runways. Cominlsslon ~ members debated for three hours before deciding to advise t~ poard of Supervisors that a jet plane f\oise moo.itoring pt0grlll\ m\)st be ae- conipllstied beftlre iriteWa:ent answers can be given on propcset" land use sur· rounding the 'ti Toro station . CurrenUy a jet noise monitoring pro-, Job Shuffling Taking Place In Costa Mesa .I\ stries or personnel changes at Costa :\lesa City Hall is under way, invol\·ing JOb--juggling. redefinition and addition of t"·o beginning planning aides. The city council authorized City 1\lanager Fred Sorsabal to proceed "'ilh the personnel switches l\ .. fonday. A new traffic engineer will be hired. v•1th a salary range of Sl.147 to Sl.394, roughly 10 to 15 percent less than the prior job paid . Traffic Engineer Jim Eldridge was rarlie r promoted lo Director of Public \Vorks Services, taking some trc.ffic: du- ties 'A'ilh him and thus leaving fe11.·er for his successor. Hence the pay cut. A ne \v classification. eng ineering assis- tant, was established as !he c:ily's highest ~ub-professional engineering post. with a S8.1fi to Sl.015 salary range. The engineering post will be filled from 11 Klin the deparµnent. A hca\'Y backlog of various studi's ordertd by the city council or sent back for planning department re,, i s i o • results in the need for two nel\' planning employes. city oUicials said. The begiMers v.111 receive S757 to S925 nn their pay scale, doing the routine daily "·ork and clearing more experienced men for advanced planning. ' ()ff icials Mttll 1'ennis Shop To Rai se Ftu1d s CosLa ~lesa c:lty officials are thinking about establtshing a tennis pro ~hop as on e means oJ helping city recreational fac:11iti'1 pa~· for themsel1·es. The facility would be at tile popular. n1s:ht-llghted Te\\'inkle Park tennis court complex City ~tanager Fred Sorsaba\ ser\'ed the idea f\1onday night and cit~· councilmen retumtd 11 "ith a rapid authorization to 1n\·esti~sl' the pro shop idea . , Son:abal said he "'ants lo contact prn. ft5skinal tennis players In the Orange Coa~I arr11 to bounce the idea off them for potential interest. The pro lhop ~·ould, pro\·ide rackets, hsills. shoes and related tennis equipment, phr' nfr~rln"R instructiOn by the pm at a ~l""" inl ftt gram is bfing carried out in the vicinity of Orange County Airport. "There has bee:n a tendency to listen to ~t .. ine Corps representatives and act ac- cofding to their recol'JIT'llendations on jet iloise problems,'' sa(d commission vice chainnan Donald Killian of Newport Beach. "In my opinion state noise stan- dards are much stricter than those of the t.tarines and should be fol.lowed." But, he added, nothing can ttally be done ~n~I ""'. good sound moni~g pro- gram Js tnslltuted aroUD!I tbe air station. Commissioners heard .a gloomy report on .traffic condltims both prestnt and ruture around Orange . County Airport voiced by county road department engineer Robert Voien. Voien ~aid that even if development Is carried out under the present industrial '1.0ning on lilnds around the facility the roadways will soon be overloaded . Councllman \\1illian1 L. St. Clair ap- prO\'ed, but suggested going further. '':\1ake it mandatory, with a $5 ll~nse fee. maybe-ror five years, and use the money for bike !rails." he said. Counc.ilman St. Clair also urgedrtaking adult b1cyclisl!!'. who commit traffic of- fenses to ~urt and imposing fines, a system police already observe where ap- plicable California Vehicle Code sections exist.. Councilm en agreed to1::lkt1no action on 4the bicycle recommendations pending a report on ~unly and state licensing pro- grams due at their next meeting. F'indings of the ccmbined crime prevention and bike trail panels wUI Also be submitted at that time. There, police said, he coll apsed. Alleman allegedly "'alked over the pro- strate Burtner. knelt or leaned over and fired a second shot into the base of the postmaster's skull. ~!eanwhile Brown had run into the parking lot "'here two \\"estminster patrolmen had parked lo exchange paperwork and infonnalion on anothe r case. The two patrolmen, Jae~ Hintz: and Tim l\1iller, said when· they entered the: post office, Alleman laid the gun on tht noor and.surrendered to them without of~ · ferlng any resistance. No ne of the customers or othe r employes in the post office at the time or the shooting "'as injured. Fisher said most scattered when the shooting started. One bullet went through one of the win- dows and flattened a tire on a car in the parking lot. • HOLIDAY. SPECIAL ' By Drexel LILY TABLE HOLIDAY SPECIAL DESK CHAIR-SWIVELS, TILTS, ROLLS. HOLIDAY SPECIAL $139. TWELVE SPECIALLY SELECTED PIECES FROM DREXEL FAMED ET ' CETERA <lOLLECTION. NOW SPE. CIALLY PR ICED TO MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY SEASON MORE ENJOYABLE. FROM GLASS TOP TABLES TO HALL CONSOLES,., IF IT 'S THE UNUSUAL YOU"RE LOOKING FOR , YOU'LL FIND IT IN ET CETERA, DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL"'°HERITAGE NlW,OlT STOll 0'lN fllDAY 'TIL t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 We1tcliff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 ' INTERIORS Professional Interior Oetlgntrt Av1 1labl~ID Pll•rie T•ll,.,.. M .. t ef O,.rtte C•••tor-l4t·lJt) .. , LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast Highway Phone: 494-6551 ' , f • " ·. • • • \ • ' frld.ry, Nowmbtr ~. 1971 (.Detergents' • Peril Cited 'Falie Cl.aitns' C1·itics l{11o~k Ecology Ads Rehnquis~ ~ Wii1s Pofut·s To Public NEW \'ORK (UPI\ -A report, "corporate a~vertising and about the significance of nonprofit research group said -and the environment." the cont r i but lo n of Thursday that a number or the • automobiles to the total air country's major ciirporations, The council said il surveyed pollution problem . . With Solons •• ... in advertising stressing what environmental advertising in The report said the can and they have done for the en-Time, Nei,i.·sweek and Business glass container manufacturers v iron men t . have been Week n1agazines in 1970. In overemphasized the role of in· misleading and in some cases addition it studied an ad-dividuals rather than Industry fal se. \'ertlsing supplement tc. the in the growing 1olid waste .- \.VASH._lr\Gl'ON <U PI' -'Villiam ·1--1.. Rehnquisl's nominatlbn to the Supreme Court apparently "'lil be confirmed by the Senate \1'1\h little difficulty. . Rehnquist , reduced considerably his hberal opposition by talking n1ore freely ~hursday a~u.t ~is judicial philosoph y. After ~e.fusing m ~lmost tv.'o days ·of in- ten:oga~1on to .talk about his persona l beliefs ¥J the field or civil rights and civil liberlii!s, he reversed himself. t ReRnquist had pleaded th.if 10-take public positions on many !fLlch questions now would jeopardize hfireedom to d~ide_ ("ases .. ~ the field after con- firn1a11on. He~ al so said !hat because he ser\'ed a~ couns.I to the attoi:ney gener~, he could not talk about administration UP'I Ttll•ll1'9 TELLS PHtlOSOPHY Willi1m Rehnquist h1b1\1on against a lawyer disclosing his · · 4-lleges potitions 'en civil rights and civil llb{rties ·~ Qff, . ~c.a_use to ~o so v.·~uld violate the tii:~ . ice r advice to his clieoL , · ~uf in a late aften_ioon revers.al , Rehn: Ar1111y H arctssi11g· qu1st answered a series of questions c • ·• Sens. John V. Tunliev (0-Cali and c~ar1os Malhi" 1R·Md.l, that h; ,,..-.._-.&"'te· r Accusati'oi• refused 10· discuss· before. " To ~1athia's. he ~aid he had advised -ri,-1itchell ,against t~kirig·an official pOsi- tion that file President had t-he inherent p<>\\·er to tap lelepbones \\'ilhout court orders in domeStic security cSses. • -To_ Tunney, he said he lhought that anv go\·ernn1ent surveillance cf pea~abl"C assembli~~ that had a '.'~hilling effect'' on ,the e!i~r<:1se ot the tight to assembly i,i.·as unconstitutional. Followin2" this testimony. Sen. Birch D. Bayh (0-Ind.). said he was "impressed'' by the anS\VerS ... They suggest. "·e are at last gel! ing some of his personal ph ilosophy," he said. Just before Rehnquist began answer- ing, Bayh had written attorney general John N. !\1itchell and President Nixon asking them to v.•aive the la1vvcr-client privilege sc that Rehnquist cculd answer. \Valter E. Craig, a U.S. district judge from Arizona, also testified that Rehn - quist \vas not a philosophica l racist as charged by the south~·estern chapter of the NAACP at Phoenix, Ariz. Candidate Loses To Donald Duck! SPOKANE, Wash. (AP J -Jeff Bowers may ask for a rf!CQunt after apparently being outpolled in the school board race by Donald Duck. Unofficial tallies show the margin was narrow. Donald got two votes and Jell one. "Im agine getting beat out by DonaJd Ouck1" protested f\frs. T. E. Nesbitt. campaign manager,. publicity chairman, general vote getter and sister of the 22- )'ear-old Bo\\'ers. Boi,i.•ers' slogan in his \\Tile-in cam- paign "'as "Ou r school board \•:ill never be the same if you cast your vote for what's-his name." ATLA{'liA. Ga. (AP_, -Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert. the most decorated Arrrerican enlisted man in the Korean \\'ar. has 'been the target of continuing harassment by superiors and was gi\·en instructions in the proper manner for saluting. hi s civilian lal''yer allege s. Th~ deputy commanding cHicer at Ft. l\tcPherson, Col. Tom Reid. denies these allegations. but says he did reprimand Herbert for failure lo extend propt'r military courtesy. Attorney Charles !\Jorgan contended Thursday that Herbert, who earlier ac- cused superior cfficers of concealing ~·ar crimes in Vietnam , is being harassed and that supe riors have given him in- structions in the correct \\'av· to salute. hov• to stand at atlention and.hO\V to pro- nounce the word "sir." ti-lorgan, Southeastern regiona l director of the American Civil Liberties Union. also said Herbert. has been gi\'en the im- pression he should not talk lo newsmen unless superior officers gh'e him ""ritten permission to do so. Rtid denied !\1organ·s allegations. in- cluding the one thal he reprimanded Herbert for failure to salute properly_ , "An incident to which I believe you refer took place on Monday. Nev . 1. in \Yhich I found it necessary to motivate Col. Herbert in the rendering or proper military courtesy that should be ex- changed between members of the military," Reid told a newsman. Reid said the incident occurred in his post headquarters office while "irn- parting some instructions., to Herbert . "He was looking out the window, not paying attention to what 1 was saying and his attitude was less than attentive . These actions required me lo set the record straight," Reid said . Reid specifically denied that he had in- structed Herbert in the proper manner for salutin~ and how to pronounce the v.·ord "sir." ~ HAMMOND PIPER ·AUTO CHORD USED $895 · MODEL FARFISA SPINET .ORGAN s395 w•"""' llflli.11 WAI Uts, NOW HAMMON ORGAN PIANOS & ORGANS "w "" PIANO CONIOL• \\IASHlNGTON \UPI) -A Chicago medical researcher today disclosed test result.; aJleging that n on p h o s p h a t e detergents are far deadlier than drain cleaners if S\\'allo"·ed , Md could lead lo catastrophic results if widely used in American homes. Dr . George E. Block, a professor af 5urger)' a.t the t.:niversity ot Chicago, said new laundry products developed lo replact en\'ironn1entally susp ected phosphate detergents are so hi g h I y caustic they could kill or maim those who l~'a\lo"' them -particular!~· children. Ho suggested they should be banned. Three Found Sliot Dead The Council on Economic Seplember, 1971, is~ue of disposal problem and stressed Priorities. a group which Reader's Digest. the public would not uMt specializes in reporting the Ford and General fl.Iotors returnable bottles and cans in• social impa ct of corporations. were criticized for misleading stead of the disposable varie- said individual advertising of the public about the amount of ty. It said .1urvey1 showed th• Southern California Edison. f"po"l"l<='"="="=-'=h~e~ir=-'car~s=-'•nu;'t~ted"';-~'~P~po~s§i~t•~·;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;; the Standard Oil Co. cf 1J l n M icliigan California and P o t I a c h Forests, lnc., ~·ere "blatantly false ." Those making misleading statements. the council said. included General !\Io tors Vl'll ITED STATES ANN ARBOR, !\1ich. (UPI J -A psychiatrist, his "·ire and daughter \\'ere found shot to death In the kilchen cf their home today. Police said the dead couple's son reported fin- ding the bodies. Corp.; Ford !\totor Co,; Stan-11~:YdliiJlB dard Oil t·o .. N.J.; General I'll ATIOl'll AL BA I'll K SOUTH COAST PLAZA 8RANCH Block \vas called to testify before a Senate Environment subcommittee on his recent research into stomach and throat injuries caused by caustic substances. A copy of a paper detailing his findings v•as tnade available to UPI. The viclims "'ere Dr. Alex- ander DuKay, 52 . former medical superintendent of the Ypsilanti Slate Hospital, his y:ife, Madelint'. 52. and their daughter Lori f\1arie , 12. Electric Co.; leading steel manufacJurers including U.S. Steel, Armco and Bethlehem: Boise Cascade Corp.: many paper manufacturers and two trade associations -the can people and the Class Con- tainers !\-1 an u fa c tu re rs Institute. "The $4 .7 billion ad\'e0rtising expenditures made by the top 100 advertisers (Of all ad- \'ertisersl in 1970 "'as $2.2 2&21 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA call. 540-5630 NOW O,iN SATURDAYS · t te t P.M. MON.·THUllS. 10·5 ,.,M. FRIDAYS 10·1 P.M. 1714) 140·!1211 . lK.ted l•I S•~. C:.• Pl ... , CMhl MMe Aul. Vic' ,...._.Mentter H. M. STOLTE The study, made on cats, shov.•ed that more than 80 percent of the animals given a single small dose of nonphosphate detergents suffered se\'ere or fatal in- juries. By contrasl, no cats were harmed by the ph50phate blends, "'hich are ban- ned in many communities as pollutants. ··Laws "'hich prevent the use Clf phosphate detergenls and necessitate the substitution of highly alkaline non- phosphate detergents should be revit\\'- cd."' Block"s paper said. "The in- troduct ;on of these caustics into millions of American homes "'ill inevitablv lead to catastrophic accidental ingestionS .·, The bodies v.•ere found abcut 8 3.m. by DuKay's son, Dr. Alexander DuKay Jr., 23. police said . The son had come to \'isit , from Tra\·erse Cit~·. where he 1s associated "'ilh the Traverse Citv SI ate Hospital, police said . billion more I han the entire I ~;;;;;;;;=====;;;;;;;;;;;'.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii:i:i'iiii;iii;iii;iii;iii;iiii~ outlay from" alt industry forh Elsewhere in his paper, Block said lav.·s banning phosphate laundry products as u•ater polluters "should be repealed.'' Nev.• phosphate-free laundry product~ are high in sodium carbonate, some of v.1hi ch Block said •re nearly as caustic as lye. Nude Girl Saved From Deatl1 Leap Police said the \· \re.re in- \'estigating a pos~ible double n1urder and suicide. pollulion control the same year,'' the council said in its 11 l ndicted OuKay, clad 1n a robe and J B • R • pajamas. "'as shot in the , ,, zg 11·ig mouth. His "'ire and been shot four limes in lhe back and CJllCAGO (UPI l -Ele\'en stomach. and the daughter men. including rt' put e d had been shot in the back of kingpins of crin1e syndicate the head . units in Ncw York and DuKay \\"as born in Hungar~· Chicago. ha\'C been indicted by tind received his medical a fedtral gran5l_ jury on degree there. He came to the charges of operali~~446,006 United States in 1951 and stolen secur'1!ies ring. . became a resident at Ypsilanti Terry Lord. specia l attorney State Hospital. He-received his fbr the Ju stice Department's masters degree· at the Chicago strik~ force on Uni\'ersity of J\llchigan "'here organized ·crimt, sald the BELLAIRE, Tex . 1 UPI) -A caller he i,i.•8s a clinical . associate scheme actually i n \' c Ive d I told police Thursday that a young "'oman professor of psychiatr~•. more than $~.000 i n ~·as taking her clothes of{ on the seventh-He became superintendent ... securities. e\'en thou gh "the noor platform of a building still under of the Ypsilanti State Hospital nine-count indk tmeqt returned 1 «instruction. 111 late 1965. DuKa\• retired Thur~RY specifiea-on I y Police. Chief John \\'heal\ey strapped a from the' hosp ital JaSt. ti.larch 5446.000 "1 stolen securitie~. safety line around his waisl. crawled onto 'to gc into pri\a\e. practice full Lord said it ~·as one of the the platform and grabbed \he wcman. by time:· largest serit!l of th~fts yet now totally nude . Her 'brothrr .<------~-----' charged in the government's FOR RESERVATIONS CALL ! NEWPORT CENTER TRAVEL 644-1412 Lole . ....... ----------=-=-~ ---~ -- W,E MOVED COSTA MESA BUILDING SUPPLY Now at 120 VIRGINIA PLACE COSTA• MESA 548·2826 h12 PECKY CEDAR .. , ft, ............. , 1 lc S/8 4x8 !Ext.I Pl YWOOD ................ 2.99 QUART SPAR VARNISH ....... , ... , •.•.• 95c GALLON ENAMEL IReii. $5 .951 .......... 2.95 GARDEN HOSES 7/1 6x2S ft. _. __ ... , ... , 1.79 2x2'8 FT. (D.F.l ......................... 18c meanwhile. had been trying 10 talk her , -~-L_E_G_AL __ N_o_TI_c_E ___ , crackdo"·n on the stolen b k f th ed .-\-f·~•;c~u,~i=ti~"~';"';k;•;'·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~=================~=:~~~ ac rom e ge. • fl.1n1i. "She lunged forward and I grabbed . "'ct1T1ou' •us1M1ss MAME STATIMENT her.'' 'Vheatle\' said alter his re&eue T~• roll owln• ot•Ml'I Ir do·n• 1>111l~tu Thursday. "She had never looked around . 11= LIVING WATl'.JI PJI00UCTIO...i5, tl7l She definitely had decided to jump." t 11cn1111<1 Drive. HYnflnt•on 8t1ct1, '' f had to grab her and hope we both n::1~11.,, 1(1•~ • ·Mac! 10.i.. , J 11 • didn't go OVer !he Side." L!lcMl•ld Orlv!, Hunll"9~n 8tf(.l'I, Th 1111 Thl1 !Wllnt JI 11 M ini condvdf'd bV f o e ~year-old woman's mother had 1n<11v111u11. cal led police, saying her dau~hter lefl T,,,1 ~~~:~n~· ,~.!,c'':!~i." 1n* cconiv • home threatening to commit suicide. She Cttr~ ot 0'1nt1 coun!v en. Oct. n. 1t11 "'as upset because of the breakdo"·n of ~r.,.~ev1rt1 J . M1d<10-QePutv covnr~ her marriage and "was Jn a deep stale of Put11i1h•<1 O••n•• co11t 01•1v Pilot · depres sion," \Vheatley said. ~i~' u. 11• "· '': Nov•m~;,}i · ARTISTE ·DE LA RUE Art Exhibit Now ' South Coast ?tua Prices-Will Never Be Lower"".'"L~yaway Now for the Holidays! ~~,spz/;. ,,.,?~-;;;,_(~ ;;,.,,/_,,£_ ~~1""6"14; ! • • I. ' ""~~Cutt:. ~lic-t'ie:C' M~-IM-~ ~~ G"" ''$5'"7'""'0"' V170 ~t~ 5795 UNBELIEVABLE BUYS -- SPiN[f'oRGAN "iI~1:"'tt;.rNo I-' wuRLITZElt c~soLE s· '"· lb.ony tlft1lfl J Stveral Fln11hn $699 WAS S14tS NOW 5995 WAS $24'5, NOW WAS $155, NOW ·-····--• $2995 ~ ·::t~·::· SPINETIE ORGAN WURLITZER -1.. Mod•I 43000 $169 5 c .. c.,.. con,.J• fJWAS $21J!, NOW w.:·~;,:::·Now ·g BALDWIN GRAND PIANO $1095 ~ S' 6", Walnut flo l ... $2150 •WAS $ZS,,, NOW All Pl•n•• Gt.i•rant..C 10 Vrt., With A ''" Tunlnt In Your H•fM DEPAATMINT STORE 01' MUSIC South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa -.~~:.-:~~i:,ur For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT • - -' c DARY PRltT EDI TORIAL PAGE OCC' s Midmester Plan For years politicians and educators have bandied about catch phrases like "all-year sc hool" and ''flexible scheduline" to the point where most observers of the educational scene have become cynic.al about ever see· ing the ideas put into practice. Now, Orange Cnast College is prepared to launch a "mldmester" program that Dr. James S. Fitzgerald be- lieves may grow into a realistic offering of classes to make all-year use of community college faculty and facilities. In a nutshell the "system to end the semester systemu features short fractional credit classes starting at times convenient to the student, not just the college. Fanighted fa culty have broken their courses down into shorter eeriods of classtime. Each sub-unit course begins followmg the close of anctber sub-unit, freeing the student to continue in the same general class, drop back to repeal or shift to something that means more to ·his personal college goal. The Nov. 15 beginning of the midmester program is an encoura:ging sig,n. It is to be hoped the flexible, "with -it'' program continues, expands and flourishes. • Let Zone Cl1an ge Wait Orange County supervisors almost have to be con· sidered lame-duck Ieg1slators over territory that very likely will become the City of Irvine after the Dec. 21 incorporation election. For ·that reason alone, the board should hol d back on all matters concerning those 18,000 acres on ~he cen· tral trvine Ranch. One of these matters is the pending AfcDonnell Douglas zone change. It is certainly not so pressing that it could not wai t a month or two for action by Irvine . municipal o!Ilclals -presuming. of course, the incor· poration election carries. Odds are that it will carry. Supervisor David Baker urged such a delay. There are other reasons that mak e the proposed intensified use of the 50-acre tract across ?i1acArthur Boulevard from Orange County Airport a matter that perhaps the supervisors might best not handlP.. One of those reasons is the rumor that a deal was made to get the needed fourth ~ote from Supervisor Wil· liam Phillips by gerrymandering a potential opporient out of his district. There are other stories that cloud the issue to t he point that -even if none of them is true -serve to tarnish the actions of supervisors if they do take a vote. The fou r-fifths vote of the fi ve-member body would be needed to approve the zone change since the pro· posaJ has been turned down by the Airport Land Use Commission which feels the proposal deserves much more study by county planners. One aspect the cQmmission feels deserves more in· sight is traffic circulation. That subject was taken up by the panel Thursday night when they heard a consultant's report on general traffic patterns around the airport. The proposed zone change would allou• commer· cial uses, such as hotels, office buildings and banks. on the property that is now master-planned for light indus- trial development. The supervisors have delayed a scheduled public hearing on the request until next week when Fifth Di s· trict Supervisor Ronald Caspers will be back in town to vote on the proposal. · In moving for the delay of one week, supervisors said on ly it should be postponed because of Caspers• absence, since the Ian~ in his supervisorial district. Fair enough. But, they did not .mention the fact that he also could be the fourth vo te needed 1Q overturn the land use commission's recommendation. ) c Male Buyer · ls Confused, Jtulicia1•y Co11at1aittee Fav ors Cou1·t J\'011aitaees ' . . . Embarrassed Dear ·· Gloom y Gus Rehnquist~ Powell .. Will Be Approved I can't understand why there's a bank or filling station on every cnmer, but no JX!Sl office at South. Coast Plaza. To mail a package ·we have to drive for miles and miles. l don't ·get it. . WASHI NGTON -The two Supreme Court nominees -Asst. . Attorney General William Rehnquist and Virginia attorney Lewis Powell - will be decisive- ly recommended for confirmation by the Sen a I e Judiciary Comm;,uee. It is getting so that men are em· barr1ssed to buy certain presents Jor women. La~~ ~9t.her's . ..Oay, I strolled downtown to pick up some gifts ·for my wUe, my · mother, 10d my mother-in· law. ln the end, I aot1lower1. • -Confused Tlolt . ftthi" ,..Ii.a. 1t'4tr7'· Vlftn, ...t • -•SM'itlY • ft...1 fl llte llf""H"r. SI"' """ "' _ .. i. oi.mr 0111., Ollrr PllolL· . -. ' The likely biparli· san vote of approYaJ will ~ II lo S.· That was the line· / up in · an· aulhorita- '--'----'----'---------' live canvass of the • · mem~rs of thts' key quarters., but I get a queasy feeling•.at t~ committee -nine Democr;.ts seven .tbou:gft;°'.of entering a store IDd ordering Republi cans. ' Ev,rythlng today has ·~•coy n 1me, reelJj.Df w J t h cute. neu ot allure. Once 1.. Cl~~ fmgora sweater. This private count showtd that all of a pair. of Magicllne hose or a fluffy the seven Republicans and four or the upon a · time goods ~. ~· fl!i "'· · offered '~ a i t 0 r e ·' ....., IN F AUlNESS to the manuf1ctµ:rers1 It bad a homely direct.-, . , -; .mu~be 8".1mltted that modem· c!ot~s ness : '.'~ts Underwear'• or "Ext r--.t are lnor~ attractive, more' cmn'tort11ble. Firm Co~,'' or some such plain &J.ld' .-•nd~r,e . durable tha." they were I · honest title. " • genlifi.UOn ago-especially children's Now we 8" urged to buy Scanties Md f thing$'; ' 'which were a nightmare of Slendereltes 111d Sho rt-Eei, and dozens of ugliness and itch iness when l was a boy. 1lmilr.r items dripping with whimsical But eactl rose has its thorn, as so1ne trade-names. \¥Omen are no longer slee~ bad poet has said, an~ along with the ln~ ln nightgowns : they put on Snugglies tastefulness ()f modem apparel we have or Slumbersuitr. For daytime relaxation inflicted upOn us the tastelessness of they wear som~thing called a Sun-and-s"'irktng_and 11uggestive names whlcb on- Fun Set. ty confuse and embarrass the diffident male buyer. OF COURSE perfumes have been a teg:ltlmate target f9r satirists for many THERE IS A KIND or rugged chann in yean. How can a 1q1n approach a ens-\ such old-fash ioned words as "pants" and metlc counter and asj for a bottle· of My "hair oil " and even "long underwear". Night of Rapture, or a phial of Pagan They pretend to be nothing but what Delight? they are, and do not promise to And even men's underclothes have been transform a portly middle-aged woman 1wept up In the .tide of fancy into a naming seductress or to tum a nomenclature. Buying a pair of shorts. I paunchy middle-aged man into a dashing am confronted with a dozen different steeplechase winner. names, all suggesling impossibl'e fea:s of Bu't I suppose I am just fighting-• her_oics. another losing round in the battle of I am sure these new mercbaOOfsfug woras:-whatWe are "Sell!lig today-atnttl· nine Democrats favor the;two aflpointees. The ~PJ>OSltion_ cnnsists ltQtireily of the five ltberal:Democratic committeemen - Sens. Philip Hart (Mich.), EdWard Ken· nedy (Mass.), Birch Bayh (Ind.), Quentin Bu[_dlck (N.D.J and John ·TUnney 1Cal.). •OF THIS GROUP. none has had lega l experience of note or consequence. Several haven't practiced at all. Their opposition is based on parfisan anq ideological grounds. Secret strategy of the opposition is to cnncentrate their fire chiefly against Rehnquist -on the theory that if he can be defeated it will be easier to eliminate Powell. former head of the prestigious American Bar Association. Rehnquist will be a~iled as racially biased, partial to bugging and use of other stern police measures. To compile "evidence" against the f\1•0 appointees. Sens. Kennedy and Bayh have enlisted the aid of ci\'il rights activists. blacks and ultra-liberal members of ~r­ tain Jaw schools -foremost among them Harvard and Yale. .BEHNQUJ_S'[, who. nas ,been making ~ ' · Ro]!ert S. 74llen• '-' -= ~ eou~tesy calls on Senators, including known opponents, has had the unµsual ex- perience of being told by Democrats to sta nd pat. One influential Democrat advised him : "I have examined your personal and )~gal ,record, and found it wholly satisfac- tory. ~·t be unduly disturbed ~ the outcries so· far made against you. I found no substance in them, and I would say they were motivated for grandstanding purposes. So hold firm, and I have no doubt you will be confirmed." Sens. Kennedy and Bay)J._m~ find themselves hit With Staiiilientl they made in opposing two 1 f,reyi0Us',S~ezue Court appoi ntees if they ~~1 1\e{inquiSt afld Powell on ideologic31 giolinds. Administration forces have a big arsenal of their quotes to throw,.-et them ..• · particularly played a major role in the defeat of the 25-year-old stupendously costly foreign aid program. Senators were still sputtering angrily over lhe matter. ed hundreds of millions in U.S. aid, as follows: Ceylon $176.6 million, Chile $1.281 billion, Ecuador $296.7 million, Ethiopia $394.l million. India $8.003 billion, Laos ~ · ' $1.449 bOJion, Morocco $731 million, TARGET OF THElR indignat.ioh was Nigeria . ~~ million. Pakistan $4.484 that the l3 biltion-plus "fof.etih Nd billion, Peru •$465 million. Tunisi~ .$699 aulhorization bill pending befate the million, Turkey $5.640 billion. Senate listed hundreds ot mUllons of Those State Department and other of. dollars earmarked ~or 46 of the 76 ~coun-. fi cial din~s and ex~lanations ta the con. fries that voted to seat Peking and oust trary, ttif,"fudisputable fa cts are that lhe Taiwan from ~-On'i,ted Natio~ · foreign (~id "pipeline" is literally choked Jn other words, attbelugh these nations witbitiiffions of unspent appropriations. bad rlo hesitancy in slugging. the U.S.,, .J · · ~ ~e with .open gl~e. they woold still con· AtrrH0RrfY FOR that. flat declaration tlnue feech~g h~ft1ly under the measure is Rep. QI.to f..assman (0-La.), chairman at the foreign aid trough. , · of Ole Apprptlrjations subcommittee that Nothing was said publicly aboutlR ,, _.:.l)a~tAe~~ign aid budget. during t.1': ~nate debate. As a , ~li .. ·· nt foreign aid funds at seqUence; tfier:e w's . · '. · · ' .. \te stu~. total of $24.567 billion. putillcity-a~ufit .. Pl . , , And 1}e:1 s it with. a detailed list. irat'e tal~ in'Uie Seq8tt' .. cJ l ." -which. · t~ . p<ilumn di sclosed several Particqlarly resented \\'IS a-e'~ _.w~ Uf>. ,~s then reJXJrted, the major of th~ repre~htatives of , _ a'« itev$,: ~ 1 -' 'unexpended balances for Zambia st 1.:g i i1 g triuryi~galoo'::t .frujrigri · aicf~,jn pipeline from previou! dances on the UN roStrulh!!'-• yettrs~3ppropiiations and authorizations'' ANY l\10VE TO revive the Senate-kill-are: ed foreign aid program \Yill be met head· Born AFRICAN countries wati'on the Foreign assistance act. inc I u ding on with. a powerful bipartisan fffibUstei. foreign aid handout list -Tan008 down military assistance. $4.403 bi l 1 ion ; That was decided at an unannounced for $7.8 million, Zambia for $1 mYilion.:..;.s -El}>Ort-lmport Bank, uncommitted bor· meeting of leaders of the roalition that of July 1, 1971, Tanzania had benellied ... row1]lg authority, $5.230 billion: Export· staged the dramatic surprise upset. from U.S. aid' to the tune Of $73.t_•mill,Bni,' Impqrt , Banlc, long-term credits, $2.937 ~lthough only a small group participated Zambia $6.1 million . • ... billiOTI: ·.Export-Import Bank, regular 1n this strategy discussion, finn con-Al~ slated for big handouts in the scut-operations, $624.6 million; I n t e r. fidence was expressed that sufficient sup. tied legislation and who VQted against the American Development Bank, $2.304 port can be rallied in the Senate to main-U.S. were : billion; World Bank, $5.715 billion; lain an effective blockade against a Ceylon $23.4 million. Chile $14.l million. International Development Association, cnunterattack. Ecuador S25.5 million , Ghana $36.9 $460 million; Asian Development Bank, As one of the leaders soundly pointfil million. Ethiopia $31 .8 million, rlndia $150 million: foreign military credit sales out, "At this late dale in the session, with $419.7 million, Laos $178 million, Morocco program. $290 ntillion: mi I i tar y members increasingly impatient to ad-$45.1 mi1\ion, Nigeria $.14 .3 million; assistance !in Defense budget ), $945 journ. the mere thre~t of a filibuster is Pakistan $225 million, Peru $34.3 million, million: permanent ntililary construction eno~gh to stop anything. And we're not Tunisia $32 .7 m1lhon, Turkey $242 S overseas. $210 million: Overseas Private foohng: we mean business." million . :.. . Investment Corporation (OP IC) $20.1538 , Al this gathering, there was con-1 • I': fi r • mi'llibn: Public Law 480 tagricultura l s1derahle d15cussion ..of.-one factor that-ALL.OF THESE countries have receiv._cqmmodiµes )_,_$664.439 million _ teclmlques have proved effective in 'so me ages more than pr'oducts. Let th e. Leftists Bra y Schmitz ~Report Shocking t~,.Reader ,,.. 'lbe Dally Californ ian El Cajon The loutish leftists v.•ho \'iew U.S. foreign policy aims from time im· memorial to the present as unending ·tx· ploitatlon by an "imperiaUst" power of other countries di splay an amazing ig· norance of the facts. They parrot the Insults hurled at this country by the Communist cliqulllli •braid, as if anything muttered. by t-.ta'o er culled from the clackings of Castro had autom1tica1ly passed the test for lruth. . Any contradiction of these half·baked lnanlUea by official U.S. government spokesmen is, of course, cohsidered sel£. preserving gibberish by the leftlst or1cJet-samethlng one could expect of devious rtpresentMlve! df a v.·icked Md morally corrupt nation. • 1T TAKES SO~tEONE with s historical per1pective that goes back farther than the Democratic convention In 1968 to ap- prtdate what, In fa ct, wa1 the un- ~--Bt1 George ---. Dear George: W1W Is th< population or N•w ~•land? ART Dur Art: You know what, Art? It's people like you who make life really tough for us Jovtlorn columnl1t1. Havtn •t YoU eot one IJttle domestic sltlft? Quit worrying about New Zealand, Art. Go gtt In big ttOUble. l don't thin-yoU'ro 1rytng ..•• precedented generosity of the American people toward friendl y fore.ign nations after the end of World War JI. One such person with thal insight is Prime Minister Ed"·ard Heath of Great Britain who has led hi1 countr1 Into the European Economic Community wilh a speech in which he asserted it Is time for Europe to end its reliance on the United States and make its oy,·n way Jn the y,·orld. In paying tribute to America's role in helping prostrate Europe emerge from the ravages of war to vigorous economic health, Heath said: "NEVER JN l\tODERN time has a great power used its energy and its gi!:nerosity with such effect to protect the interests of Its friends." The re<:9rd shows that almost $150 billion in Amttlc111 tru.11ure has ~n given to improve economic conditions In scores of countries ar-ound the clobe.. Tnte, some or it hits been mlssprnl. But much of it has gone for good purpoae1 and those inveslmenls have made it possible for other nations to prime their economies and bring about a general rise in property and Jiving stand· anls. l WE NEl':D NEVER h••a our h .. ds In 'stiame (or sharing our riches willl the needy nations of the world at a lime When their survival depended upon our chsrity and goodwill. The leftists can br11y all lhey y,•1nt, but tht?y will havt a difricult time pointing to any hll!torical parallel in which the rilca ror assistance ha~ been met wlU1 such a quick and, generous response. To the Editor: I thank Congressman Joh n G. Schmitz for being concerned enough to send out a report to his constituents. J am. hoy,·e\·er. in full support of the President's new policy toward Red China . The congressman:.S report. in general. shocked and dismayed me. It does not seem cnrrect to 2&Wlle that because President Nixon is planning to meet v.·ith the governmoot of Red China he is "abandoning C hi an a Kal-shek a n d all our friends and allies in the Republic of China." His report appears to me to be mainly an outcry against communism rather than an ohjective. Intelligen t, realistic evaluation or President Nixon's first step toward dealing openly wilh the Red Chinese. t HA VE RECENTLY returned to California after workin' for two yea rs with the Department o State: first. in the Central African Republic and this i;oring at the U.S. Delegatkln to 1hc Peace Talks on Vietnam in Paris. Jnter· national politics: a"'nd economics are very S()phisticated. How can we conlinuc "Ignoring" a country the size or Red China? our govtrnmtnt must take their actions lnlo consideration, covtrtly or overtly. Considering the latest United Nations decision to replace NaUona\i!;t Chln11 with Red China In the representation of the Chinese people, t believe that President Nlxon's earlier moves were very wise. As strong a nation as we art.. we cannot disagree with tfie. rMl of thC! world, free and Communist, for long and still remain 'on top. Ma ilbox ~ttl•n ,,..,., rttl«I -wtk-""""'"" •rlltn 1twn11• <.., ... , ttt.lr ,,,_utl tl IR * _... ff ten. Tllo rltllt It ctMitflM ltlt9tt It nl .. 1(1 tr 111"'1"111 ff111I II nS«Y911. AM Mtlotn -ti "'° Cll#llt 111"111/A t fMI 1111111!11 ... reu, IMll ftl ,,,_1 ,., • ., ... wlllllltMI .,, '"""' II 1MUkkoll rllM-11 II 11111•1~1. '"'"' wilt llfl '" "*''"*"· t.·fOST AMERICANS have had an ex· cellcnt indoc trination a g a i n s t cnm· muni~. I am well aware of what it is And how it works. Thi: people of China. Ru ssia. Cu b r.·t Hungary and Czechoslovakia were in entirely different economic positions al the time of Com· munlst takoove:r than is the United States. As a registered Republican, and flnn believer in the prlnclples of demo;crtq and free trade and staunch supporter of the government of the United' States of Amerk:a, I am 50rely disappqinted that one of my elected represcn\ativcs 1n Congress has no m9rt to say tbout the President's new polky toward Jled China than to resort to antJ-O)plnftmlit ~ paganda. BONNlE L. JOHNSON Ualloweett· T reals · To the Editor : t have just finished reading the Nov. 1 DAILY PILOT. There were two articles about the m1tny horrible things that can happen to chlldren wh n Ibey go trick or• treating. My blood run3 cold when I hear about razor b!Mes. drug$, ground glass. needleJ and other thlncs being found In •• ,, the Halloween treats that children get when they go trick or treating. I WOULD LIKE· to sei our city do something to eliminate this sort of thing. I y,•ould like to suggest tha t the parks in the city have Halloween programs to en· cnurage the children to go thei-e and en· joy a safe celebration instead of risking being attacked by s I c k molesters or receiving terrible surprl~es in their Halloween trests. I am sure there are m11ny other parents that feel as 1 do and would .ap- preciate anything that could be done to protect their children. MRS. CONCETTA KERN End Trick or Trea t ' 'fo the Editor : Al the risk ot alienating my favorite people, the sm•ll fry. t 'hould like to see an end to the custom of Halloween "trick or 'trt1l" cxttpt for UNICEF, a worthy Callie. ' Much has been said about I.he cruel pr•nU of aduJIJJ who put ptnS. r3zor blades, etc. In tht treau they give the children, What of the case of Innocent adbtts confronted by police with an apple con- ce"ling " razor blade? Tbey were beautiful apples bought from the Kiwanis and the case wa' opened just before the door bell began to ring. The police neve:r riressed the matter but the donors felt so bad that the following year thty turned out tht porch light. refused to answer the door and gave out no treats. deprived of the f1.1n of Heing thtir various fancy cos- turn es. WHEN Stx-FOOT-TALL "kids" call, it is ridiculous, iPul finally ii wa s surmised that some mischievous "Irick or treater'' had slipped the blade into a younger boy's apple and thus put the apple-giver, in a harrowing position. Perhaps other In- nocent adults have had i;uch an ex· perience. ~A carnivals should be rnoug h fun, or home parties -bul no, the kid5 think trick or treat is THE: thing to do besides the carnival~ and parties. Sur~Jy par~nl~ can get together and put an erid to a risky v.·ay for children to celebrate. GWEN ~ATON oaANGl COAST DAILY PILOT Robfrt ;v. \Vt>ed, Publi.~he r Tlloma.s Kecvrf, Editor • .\lbtrt \V. Bares Editorial F'agc Edrlor The cdltori"I llfl~ or the Dally Piiot i;;~k9 IO inl nrm and stimu• Ja1e re&drrt by rir~rntln>:" thi1 n~·5fll\l\('t'.~ OJ•ininn!r io.nd; l.'r'IO"t• ml"nttTy "n loJi1rt; nf lnll"~t. llnd tl~nlfleantt, b>' pttwldln~ 11. forum for the c,,;11rr!'ision or n11r rr11dt'n• npinionti, 11nd by ('ll'f'"~('nt1ni: the dJl'<'r~c \·1"'"'l10in1s of 1nformct! nh· $<'r\'t'rll llfKI 'l>tlkr,mt-n nn topics of th<' d-!ly, Friday, Novembe r 5. 1071 • Saddlehaek EDITION Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 64, NO. 265, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF<:lRNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER'· 5, ·197)' · TEN CENTS , I School·s • Ill San J·oa.quin 'Must Stand on Own' l By PAMELA HALLAN Of !~1 O.lty Pllll Stiff !( the San Joaquin Elementary School District wants to "catch up" wilh its growth and build enough schools tc> house its children Jn permanent facilities, it mu9~ do it With its own money. • . That is the opinion of Don Anderson, rhief executive officer of the Stale Allocations Board, the state agency that decided how much. when, and who will get state building loans. a Wile Slayittg Anderson, addressing the Board of Trustees Wednesday in E:.st Irvine, said funding schools with local money is more costly than funding construction from 11tate money. But under current leJal {ormulas, San Joaquin could never "catch up" if it relied solely on state aid. Anderson confirmed that the San Joa- quin District has done everything it can to get state allocations. But there is a great deal of competition for what little money the state has left to apportion and e ' San Joaquin can not have it alt He said the one bright ray of hope, however, ls Proposition Two which will be on the June primary ~allot. This pro- position, if approved by a simple ma· jorlty of the voters, will provide $350 million and would, to some extent, remove the priority requirement and ease competition for state money among school districts. ''l hesitate to discuss this specifically, but we would then be able to examine ap. plications in view of where the mo~y will do the most good," said Anderson. The state officer reiterated, however, that a district would still have to show that it had unhoused children. And unhoused children, according to the state. are represented by certain numbers of homes under construction, homes that will be occupied a year or more before a school can be built es Trustees Johnson Hauded Considering 5-to-life Term 7Memhers By PATRICK BOYLE 01 tflt 0.llY ,.llll S .. lf By TO~I BARLEY ._. ' 01 l~t DlilY l"llot Sllfl Convicted killer ~lark Johnson of San Clemente was sent to state prison today to begin serving a five year to life sen· tence. Orange County Superior Court Judge William Murray imposed that sentence on the young marine just 22 days after a jury returned to his courtroom to find Johnson, 21, guilty of the slaying on June lfl, 1970, of his pregnant wife Connie Lynn J ohnson, 20. Johnson, who has shaved his head since ..,the trial, smiled and shook hands warmly with defense _attorney Ray Sharp after the sentencing on the 2nd degree murder conviction. His mother \.\'as present in the courtroom. Judge ~1urray rejected Sharp·s 11th hour plea for the commitment of his young client !o the California Youth Authority. "J look on the CYA as one or the most ineffective agencies ever creat~d by man," the jurist said. "I am going to order Mr. Johnson's shipment to Chino, and I am also going to order that he receive every psychialric. treatment possible through the medical center at Vacaville. -Sharp left the courtroom to file an ap- peal against Judge Murray's g ,u i I t y verdict. His molion for a new fnal was denied this morning. He unsuccessfully argued loday thal a series of confessions layed back during the trial y.·ere actually tnadfilissllile and i;hould have been ruled so at the time. Sharp particularly a l tacked 1• videotape taken in the San Clemente police station while Johnson v.:~s u~der the influence of "truth serum ~1um am}1ol. The young marine admilted at that time that he clubbed Mrs. Johnson y.•ith a bar stool and later washed off blood in the showe r. But he could not recall the i;labbing of his wife. It was succesfully alleged in the trial that Johnson slit his wife's throat and stabbed her more than 20 times with a butcher knife and then bludgeoned her head with the bar stool after a quarrel over his smoking of marijuana. Orange Coast Weather You won 't see too much sun lhl!'i ·weekend . especially in the pre- noon hours v.·hen fog .. and low clouds prev11i1. Top 1emperatures will be 6S along the coast and 75 furtMr inland. • INSIDE TODA\' Lotte Lf!nya trill JOOtl nppt l'fr as f.foth Pr Courage at t1Cl aiid the \Vtekcnder !ins a story and. p1cturrs abou t ht r on PoQr 25, todo11. •••llftt ,. Celli.11111 II Cltftklflot Ut 1 Cl1ut1IM MJO Comltl JJ Cr1u~ U 0.ITll lottlkn lf Ol.-orc•t II l'dlterl1I ,.at' I P:llllMI 1~11 '4on1KIM 1( A1111 Ltlldl" 11 ~lritJ ... M~h1at ll'~l'Hll '' HHi;t11I! Htw• .. J Cr1""l CMllll'Y It ... 1111r1ntt t1•tt ,...,.,, *'• Stt<k Mtril;ll' ,,.u T t 1t¥11lo11 1t TIM1ln •n w •• ,,..,. • ' Wt"'tll'I HtWI ll·lf worlll Htwt , .. WNlftllCllr JWI ' . The naked woman's body was found sprawled on the bed in the couple's apart- ment at 416 ~1onterey Lane. Johnson was arrested a year later. Amchitka A-blast Foes Ta:ke Plea To President WASHINGTON (UPI) -Awaiting a final legal decision from the Supreme Court. scientists, senators. Conserva· tionists and pacifists appealed directly to President Nixon today to postpone the mighty Amchitka Island nuclear test as a potentially deadly mistake. Barring a last-minute stay irom the court or the President. a red button will be pressed at 2 p.m. PST Saturday in a bunker on the northern end of the desolate island in the Aleutian chain, 1,200 lniles southwest of the Alaskan coast. triggering a five-megaton warhead buried nearly 6,000 feet underground. All hope of a legal delay rested in the hands of Chief Justice \Varren E. Burger. v:ho received late Thursday the appeal of eight nrganizations charging that the Atomic Energy Commission had not fully considered the envirnnmental risks of the test as required by law. Burger was expected tn turn the case over to the full court for a ruling. most likely following their regular Friday con- ference, on then'feflts oflf-stay· pending appeal of a federal appeals court decision against '>locking the test. The \Vhite House. standing by Nixon's decision to proceed with the blast "for overriding reasons of national securily.'' channelled all call~ to the AEC. which reported it had received 6,700 letters, telegrams and telephone calls of protest as of Thursday. It said each would be ansv.•ered individually. The White House refused .again today to eslimate how many protests it had received. The AEC has consistently discounted !he environmentalists' warnings that the exhaustively planned and monitored underground test, code-named Cannikin and four times bigger than any the United Stales has ever conducted, might set off major earthquakes or tidal waves and harm marine and wildlife by leaking radiation. · HELD IN SHOOTING Postal Clerk Allem1n Hail of Bullets Ends in 1 Death At Post Office A plan to expand the Saddleback College board of trustees from five to 15even members will be presented at the board's next meeting. The plan calls for spliUing the burgeon- ing Saddleback Valley-now represented by one trustee -Into three trustee areas. Trustee Hans Voegl, chair'man of a committee which has been studying the pro,P.OSed. chan,ge,._s ... irt tod~} sucb·a • ...,qi~"""~ tax' . Iba u,.. =e ot 're-apiW:irtforiing th~1Mge district every two yean. U only live trustee areas were maintained. Vogel noted, the rapidly ,rowing Saddleback Valley would be the main cause of this constant redistricting"'since the other trustee areas have relatively stable populations. In revealing the plan to expand to seven districts, Vogel defended the district's present system of allowing each trustee to be elected at large by all voters in the district. "¥embers who are voted at large," he said in a telephone interview, "are more prone to act on behalf of the entire district rather than react to 11mall pressure groups." By JOANNE REYNOLDS Vogel said the reC<>mmendation. lo be 01 "" 0111' r 11o1 11111 presented to the full board Nov. 15, has The day started with a disciplinary been worked out by himself and fellow hearing, was interrupted by a haircut and trustee John Lund of Laguna Beach. The ended at 10:45 a.m. in death for Paul action was sparked, he noted, by requests Burtner, postmaster of Westminster. from school trustees in the Laguna Beac'1 A meeting about Christmas mail and Capistrano Unified School Districts. presided over by Burtner was shattered Whese two school districts early last by a hail of bullets. When it was over spring passed resolutions urging the Burtner lay dead _ shot to death in the hoard to expand to seven member~ a~d post office he had served for 24 years. h~''.e each. m~mber elected from his m- Pnlice-are holttlng-PliUlipB. ;&Jlenlan, ~dtV1dual d1str1ct ---- postal 'clerk for two yeais, on suspicion of The Saddleback College District, which Burtner's murder and the wounding of comprises about 48 percent of the land Ernest Gaulden, 46, superintendent nf area 'in Orange County, is presently m;:iils. di vided into five trustee areas. Gaulden is clinging to life loday at Vogel provided stati stics showing that \Vestminster Community hospital. He is area one, in west Tustin. had 12.867 in guardC'd condition after undergoing registered ·:oters as of the Sept. 14 ~?I· fnur hours of surgery for a stomacll Jege bond election; area two , east Tustin, wound. 11 ,725 voters; area three, Laguna Beach, Alleman, 24, nf 2801 N. Bristol St.. 11 ,345 voters: area four, ~n Clemente.-. Santa Ana, was to be formally charged Dana Point. San Juan Capistrano, 11,059 today with murder and assault with in· voters; and area five, the Saddleback tent to commit murder. Valley, 28,353. Lt. Don Saviers, commander of the Vog el aald that by splitting area five. W.estmins:ter detective d I v i s I o n , represented by trustee Michael Collins of reconstructed the events police believe Laguna l~ills into three separate districts, led to Burtner's death. the populations of each area would be Alleman, a night clerk, had received 1.: more equal. He said that, alt~ough each of written reprimand for tar di n es s. the new areas will only have about 9,000 Dissatisfied with the action, he had re-voters, the valley is growing sa rapidly quested a meeting with Burtner and the each area should soon catch up wilh the postal clerk's wUon representative. other four trustee areas. Vogel predicted that, under the seven-. / Planner Quits trustee plan, the district would not have to he reapportioned for at least six years. If the plan is approved by the trustee!, Vogel said It must lhep receive the back- ing of the county school redistricting committee before going before the voters for approval. If district voters agreed to expand the board, the five present board members would appoint the two new trustees, Vogel said, with Michael Collins continuing on the board until his tenn ex· pires in 1975. Ouster Figure Leaves County Roy Gohara, Orange County Planning staff member for the past three ye.ers and the central figure In a Planning Com· mission move to dump Stuart Bailey as $CCrctary to the commission, is no long'r a county employe, Gohara, y.·ho was named secretary or the commission last June, replacing assislbTlt planning director Bailey, it now employed by CST Egnlneering Co. with officts near tbe Orange County Airport He quietly left .his planning department po5t the latter part or October. GohRra was caught in the middle last June when a 3-2 majority of the Planciing O>mmission voted to install him as secretary Instead of Bailey. His appalnlment was short • livtd however as the Board of Supervisors refused to endorse the move. A long period of negotiations followed which culminated with Planning D i re c t o r Forest Dickason naming staff member John Lane as commission secretary. 'Gohara also figured in 11nother con· troversial issue more recently when he prepared a staff rtport recommending the rezone of 50 acres of McDonnell Douglas Corp. land near the airport! Gohara'1 Aug. 31 report was rebutted four weeks later by Planning Director Dickason who recommended against the zone change. The controversial rezone is slated to come befo re the supervisors next \Vednesday after having betn approved by the PlaMing COmmission by a H vote. Vogel said th.et most junior college districts in California with trustee areas have seven-man boards elected at large. Vandals Stone Swan RENO, Nev. fUPl)-Vandals stoned lo death a black iWan worth $500 at Reno's Paradise Park, and the city says U has had enough. The recreation CQmmlsslon said there was no sense buying birds "just to be slaughtered," and decided not lo replace the swan. Two oth~r black swans were lcilled earlier. • • .. If the proposition is not approved, Anderson told the San Joaquin board it will have to dig deep into its own pockets. He suggested leasing more portables, increasing the bond limit, getting sub. dividers t!;) lease new homes for tem- porary schools. or le a 1 e . purchase agreements for new facilities • with developers. But he admitted that all these mea,sures are cos Uy. And for everJ school the district builds with Its own money, the farther behind It gets on the state's priority system. He said the only way to improve lhe situation would be to change the law. But many have tried and faifed. · He complimented the board for its et• forts to raise the bond ceilllg Umit so that seven instead of five precent of ill assessed valuation J:an be sold annually. He said th.is is probo"bly the best answer for San Joaquin . • ans1on DAILY ,ILOT Sl11f Pllole Honaeconaing Prel1cde. It was the senior's "Little Kids Day" at Mission Viejo High School Thursday, part of Spirit Week in which each class entertain itself and others with innovative approach. Here Dolores Moran, 17, and Pat Hornbeck, 19, seem appropriatelr equipped. The Mission Viejo foot· ball team plays San Clemente high tonight with queen crowning· at halftime. Sti1dent Marine Lah Poses Question on City's Pier The City or San Clemente has a long-st.t.nding approval of a student marine laboratory proposed for the municipal pier, but the vexing question of where to put it remains unanswered this week. Ofiginally the permanent facility for students from San Clemente High School had been proposed for a platform beneath the main level of the pier. But Science Department Chairman)'hil Grignon learned later that at peak surC .end tide periods. that platform is a~ash. So he asked for city approval ta build t.he lab on the maih deck of the pier on the spot once occupied by San Clemente Sportfishlng Inc. That business moved to Dana Harbor recen'tly. But concessionaires have complained that placing tM lab into the cramped cor- ner of the pier platform would hurt business. , Businessmen al.so havl!! warned that electrical loads already are at the break· Ing point and l!lddlng even a little more equipment could mean power shortages th.et burn out electric motors on refrigeration equipment. Councilmen wrestled at length with the dilemma this week and finally decided to allow a special committee to determine the best locaUon for the'lab. City Manager Ken carr, who Is not on the committee, told councilmen he B.Rreed With Grfgnon's plan to place the lab on the upper plaUorm. . The d:lmmittee of city department heads will have the tlnal 11y on the loca,. Uon. Other spOts proposed include an are1 midway out on the pier. \ ' Grignon has promised that the Jab, to be designed by local archilect Leon Hyzen, will be ao asset to the pier and will include a small, public aquarium, He added that the lab could prove a boon to• attracting more visitors •to the pier which is not receiving the same amount of use It did when the sportfishing business was there. Adult Education Night Volleyball Openings Exist Volleyball and exercise programs havl!! begun for South eoa,t area women at San Clemente High School's gym, and school district spakesmen say openings still ex· ist in a:pite of a large turnout. • The popular exercise period ts held each Monday night from 7 to t p.m. An averajle or 60 women a week have air tended the classes taught by ~1rs. Charlene Shepard as part of the 11dult education program in the Capistrano Unil\ed $chool District. BaskeCba\l for men also ts available in the llY11l e & c h Wednesday nlgbl. Volleyball for men Is offered Thursdays. The program will continue through May. Except for regular school holidays or when special acUvlties are 11cheduled lor the Bl''"· --- Thet'fl Is no chafie and slgnups can bl done at the beginning of class sessions. ' -' , • • I DAIL V PILOT I SC Group Maps Saddlebacl{ . .. Rec3ll Bid A ccm.mittee of South county residents ha\'e decided to begin a recall campaign against Saddleback College trustees over the board's imposition of a 34-cenl permissive override taL The group. f~ by Dana Point resi- dent Paul Sayre, came to the decision after learning that a court injunction to stop the le\'ying of the tax "·ould cost at least $5,000. . ''Not only would we ha ve to pay our ""'" expenses." Sayre said in aMouncing the recall move instead of the injunctiOn battle, "but we would have to pay theirs too.'' He was rtferring to the board's bting able lo use the services of the coun- ty counsel's office for legal matters. Sa}Te, emphasizing he y,·ould not be a candidate for election to the five-member board or trustees, said his group hopes to begin the legal moves required for recall within the next \.\"eek, The committee proposing the action is licheduled to meet with its parent citizen's group Wednesday to present the decision to the full body. At a similar meeting October 28, some 100 residents met in San Juan Capistrano a·nd, by a show of hand!!, the majority of them favored recalling the trustees. Even though the 3kents tax was ap. proved by only three of the trustees, Sayre said his group would attempt to recall all live board members. At the Oct. 18 meeting when the tax v.•as ap. p~o\•ed, trustee Michael Collins or Lagr11 Hills was absent and trustee Patrick .Backus of Dana Point voted agairat le- \'ying the tax. The tu of 34 cents per $100 of assessed vaJuaUon will be levied for one year to r.a~se $2.2 ~n. Thi! money, college or- f1c1als say, ts needed for the district to receive $2.3 million in state aid for eon· :struction of a science mathematics building. Sayre said he feels the tax is un- necessary and that the state aid can be obtained at another time. "That money will aJways 'be available someplace downstream,.. Sayre said noting the district could apply for federai funds if state monies were not available. Board president Alyn Brannon said he citizens were entitled to have their owllo. <lpinion <lf bow the money should be ob- tained and invited them to attend the board meetings c.ltd express their views. He said the board had only passed a resoluUon calllng for the tu but that the tax rate hu not yet been set. • "If a majority of the tupayers are op- posed to such a move," Brennon added, "then we would be glad to take another look at it•• Trustee Hans Vogel, put president of the board, u1d more state funds would not be available tor the romtruction becaUN the aJd was to come from the last rem~nlag money of the $65 million Junior College Construction bond elec· lion, held statewide in 1967. Vogel said that if the state aid is not received, the district voters would even- tually have to pay for the entire '5 milllon q>ratruclion cOJt. .. The taxpayers are already paying for It (the construction) through the $65 million bond issue," he added. ''If we don't C<l me up with the match- ing funds v.·ith the permissive tax." he noted. "v.•e will ha\'e to stand the cost of that building by ourselves." High Stepper It \1•1as Spirit Week at Ji-fission Viejo High School. These girls were right in step. Their part of the celebration -a prelude to tonight's homecoming game against San Clemente -was senior's Ll{Ue Kids Day. 11'1aria Garcia is the deft rope jumper •. Holding rope are Yolanda Ochoa, Janella O'Con· nor /right). Looking on are ?11eg O'J\Ialley and Vickki Stocker. The football game tonight u.'ill include queen crO\\'n~g at halftime. Oil Opposition Charged _ Cranston Scores Officials on Sanctuary Bills By BARBARA KREJBICB ot tM D•llY """ Sl•ff Sen. Alan Cranston (0.Callf.) said to· day he is "very concerned" about ad- ministration <lppositi<ln to his attempt to push through a series of biUs that would establish six oil-Cree sanctuaries in federal waters off the California coast. "California has the right to protect her shoreline and the fed eral government should not attempt to prevent this 1\'ilh no valid reason," the senator said. The bills (S 1446 through S1452) now the subject of hearings before the Senate Minerals, 11ate.rials and Fuels Sub- committee, have been misinterpreted by administration officials, notably Asslstant Secretary of the Interior Hollis 11. Dole, Cranston said in a telephone interview from his Washington D.C. office. Dole walked out of the subcommittee hearing Thursday u Cranston attempted to explain that revlsion1 of his original oil sanctuary bill had removed objections. to iL J>Ian.ners :Erase Coast Freeway Newport Routing The Newport Beach Planning Com- mission Thursday night did away \•.'ith the Pacific Coast Freeway. Commissioners. in a surprise action, The proposed bills "·ould prohibit oil drilling, but not oil exploration. in Federal waters seaward of six , existing state oil sanctuaries. These extend from the 1\1exican border north to Humboldt and hlendocino Counties. They include the coasts of San Diego and part of Orange County and the offshore islands of San Clemente and Catalina. the recreation beach areas in Los Angeles County and San Luis Obispo County, the Monterey Bay and Big Sur areas and state sanctuaries off the shores of the two Northern California counties. "These are some of the most beautiful and recreationally used portions of the coast," said Cranston, "areas where the people. in establishing the existing state sanctuaries, have voluntarily given up the economic benefits of oil because they place a higher value on the coastal en- viroMlent.'' Roughly half of th e Ca.lifor.nia coast would be affected, Specifically excluded, be added , are areas where oil now is being produced and ''vi•here the people want to have oil pro· duction." such as Long Beach, Seal Beach and portions or Ventura County. Also included in the revised legislation is a provision that would empcn1•er the President to end the Federal <lil sanctuaries in a national emergency re- quiring additional oil production. areas touchipg the state sanctuaries. Fiflh District Supervisor Ronald Caspers and Harbor District Director Kenneth Sampson also tesUfied in its favor before · the subcommittee, But the administration and the oil com- panies, said the Sewator, maintain their :;trong opposition . "I cannot understand !he administration's refusal to accept the ract that the revised hills have mel all the earlier objections." Principal objective he said, is •·to pre- vent another Santa Barbara. The legisla. lion could easily be repealed in the event the <lil companies could come up with a better drillirlg· method. e I Im i n at in g unsighUy offshore islands, develop a sure system lo prevent leaks and a better method of cleaning up spills if leaks should occur." The only oil drilling in Federal waters at present Is in the Santa Barbara chan- nel. Cranston. l~ld. There 21re Federal oil sanctuaries now ln existen ce, he added, "but talk of drilling off Cape Cod is arou sing some concern there, I un- derstand ." The Senator concluded, "I know how deep an interest there is in California In 11\is matter and T hope that an o.roused public y,•ill support the passage of this legislation." • - Jo·aquin·· Elated By State Help Officials of the San Joaquin Elemen· tary School District were elated today upon hearing of Thursday's unanimous approval by the state Senate of a bill to fr ee bond moneys to build needed elementary schools in !he rapid growth district Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newporl Beach) got rapid action on bis measure that 'A'Ould authorize the state allocation., board to approve bond :spending over the present five percent of assessed valuation limit . The measure, which goes to the Assembly Education Committee for con· sideratlon next week, raises the debt ceil· ing from five percent to seven percent of total di.strict wealth for as many as five rapidly growing California s c ho o I districts. For San Joaquin, the raised debt limit c:ou\d provide as many as three ne1v schools. The t\1'0 percent bonding limit increase v.·ould yield the district $4.6 million based on its 1971 total assessed valuation of $2.tJ million. a district spokesman said. ' . If the bill paS!es the Assembly and is signed into Jaw. 'he pro visions would take effect immediately, Sen. Carpenter said. The ''pilot" school funding n1easure 11·ould remain in effect until Jan. I. 1975. Ralph Gates, San Joaquin superin· lendent. creWted Carpenter for in - troducing the emergency biU. "At th is moment 've are extremely optimistic about solutions of <lUr school housing pro- blems. I hope we will find the same cooperation and understanding of our problems in the Assembly," Gates said. Rex Nerison. assistant sµperlntendent for business services. said his office was .. willing lo give any additionat in- formation lo the Assembly committee lhat might be required" to assure passage of the bill. The district's facilities planner. Dave King. said with Senate approval. "we're halfway there." The emergency measure. if approved. frees the district lo spend voter·approved bond moneys that the 1952 bond debt limit has prevented being spenl. The di strict has nearly $16 million in un spent bonds. The bond debt limit, coupled with shortages of state school building fund money, has put the district behind in its building program to the point where n1ore than 3,000 students are presently on double sessions. Trustee Dennis Smith noted the bi!I could use lurther community support in the form of letters <lr telegraro.s to Orange County representati ves in the Assembly. "A few ootes of thanks to Sen. Carpenter would also be appropriate," Smith said. Carpenter, he said, got action on the bill in less than a week. '"This is really thrilling. It is the system functioning in a responsive 1vay." Smith added. He said an hour meeting in Sacramento \\'ilh Assemblyman Leroy Greene (0- Sacramento) indie1ted the powerful education committee would consider th• bill next week. Greene c3air1 the educa.· lion committee. Funds Sought For Laguna Police Unit A proposal that the county should con. tribute financially to the operation of the Laguna Beach policed e pa rt men t' s ju,·enile division ~·as put forward this 11·eek by Counciln1an Ed1vard Lorr. Referring to lhe Orange County Com- munity 1\lental Health vice team's report on the ''staggering" rate of drug arrests in Laguna Beach, by C<lmparison with the rest of the C<lunty. Lorr said, "Our juvenile department deals "·ith cases From the entire school district. not just 'vi thin !he city boundaries. People from · Emerald Bay. South Laguna and 01her county territory in the school district prefer lo deal with the Laguna juvenile department for help with youth problems, counseling , probation and so forth. .. This means they are actually doing the \\'Ork of the count.v and since 4guna Beach is carrying this burden I would sugg est the county provide son1e funding for our juvenile department. \\1e are in a position to deal with cases in the area more effec tively, but the county &hou1d help." Councilman Charlton Boyd said that Lorr apparently was not aware of the <:urren l status of county assistance to Laguna Beach. "There is n-o question in the minds of the county department head s that Laguna does have a monumental problem," said Boyd, "and th e county right now is giving help in term~ of thousands of dollars that are being poured in ." The dollars. said Lorr. are not helping the polirc department which has to deal 11'ith th(' problem . Boyd suggested that Lorr confer 'vit lt :\lrs. Helen Keeley and her board \rhiclt is handling contacts with county departments in setting up centralized t'Ounty services in Laguna. "One dep~ 1nent cooperating right now is pro- bation," he said. ''\\1e 'A' ill have <lne coun· ly probation officer here at alt times and other services as soon as space is a\·ailable." "In that case.'' said Lorr, "I question lhe policy of !he police department in providing juvenile services to non- residents at the expense of the Laguna Beach taxpayer." Councilman Roy Holm said this seemed a valid question and asked what percen- tage of juvenile cases handled by the Laguna police involved non·residents. Police Chief Joseph Kelly said he would have to revie1v juvenile department figure s to give an exact response . Synod . Rejects Paper Ou War, Social Ills · <lfficlally declared that the controversial superhighway has never existed, does not exist and will not exist -at least in Newport Beach. Core drilling and exploration, but not leasing, would be permitted in the pro- posed Federal sanctuaries, which would extend from Lhe edge of lhe state preserves at the three-mile limit. seaward to the edge ol the continental shelf. "This is a v.•ay to conser\'e our resources ," said Cranston. "lo find out if oil is there and to keep it there. available lf it is needed. Opponents of the bills <:hoose not lo understand this.'' HOLIDAY SPECIAL .t VATtCAN CITY IUPJ I -The third in· .emaUonaJ synod of bishops rejected to- lay all but one stction <lf a major docu· IJlent dealing with the modern day crises If war, hunger. torture and injustice. Synod sources said the 202 delegates -ejected the document because it ''"as too ieneral. / DAILY PILOT \CllNIOe COAST PUlllSMIMI) O:W.!'AXY . . '•""' N. w,,, ,,....... 1111111 l'UlllW... \ J.c.lc I. Cttlrr , ............. co.w.1....- n." l•nil Edllol" "'-""-·A. ~ ........ MMltkW '""''°' -. Acting on a motion by Chairman Curt Dosh, the commission unanimously ordered its staff to ''delete from future reports. maps and \\·orking papers the projected route of the proposed Coast Freeway ." In proposing the action, Dosh said an y such references "to the free'A•ay or lo alternate plans are a burden and in· terfere "·ith the <lrderly di scussions and actions of the staff." The commission, itself. sh o u Id "proceed as it never existed and never will " and "shou1d make a statement lo th1t effect, '1 Dosh urged. ''I will disregard it," he pronounced. Cranston said he first began to think about the Federal sanctuaries during the Santa Barbara oil spill "'hich occurred during hi'.'; first 10 days in office, though he had been interested for a long time in the problem of keeping oil drilling awa.v front coastal areas \1·here people objert to it. His first bill "'as introduced in 19ii9. Sen. George l\lurphy cooperated in drafting the new hills to meet ad· 1ninistrarion objections, Cranston said. and now Sen. John Tunney is serving as co-sponsor of the legislation. It has won the support. he said, of all c-rty counc!ls and boards of supervisors in Lady Juro1· Drops Guilty Verdict n1 Ra11dano Trial A distraught but detennined l'Oman juror gave convicted liquor hijacker Gent Randano the kind of break late Thursday night that has never been given before in Orange County Superio r Court history. ~trs. Judith Arbon of Fullerton emerg- r-d from hours of wranaling in the jury room to tell Judge Claude Owens that she could not go along with the guilty verdict sh e had signed five hours before with 1he rest of the jury. Her fellow jurors. man}' of them angry and all of them tired and strained. freely admitted that JI n~holds·barred 1esslon l.n tht jury roo1n had failed to eradicate the doubts th11:t litr.s. Arbon first ex· preised Thursday afternoon whe:n the Randano jury reached a decision. The attractive blonde·, tears as the jury was being polled ga\'e defense It· torney Lawrence ltfcBride the ldnd of <lp- portunity that comes.i·usi once in a lifetime in crlnilnal trl s. He took it by insisting that "lrs . Arbon go with him, Judt;c Owtns and prosecutor Jot Henegh11n fQ the privacy of lhe Judge·• thambers. The four did 10 and the result was that Judge Owtns senL the jury back to the jury room !or the decision at 9 p.m. that led him to tear up the earlier verdict of lht jury and declare a ~istrial . .Judge Ov.·e.ns, making no secret of his anger and di~gust, refused to let ~tr~. Arbon addrtss him before the jury ~·as discharged. He had earlier refused lo allow the Fullerton V.'oman lo di~cu~s the issues upsetllng her in private. Judge Will lam C. Speirs today set a new trial for Randaoo on Jan. 10. Meneghan left no one in any doubt after the mistrial ruling that he intends to put the Las Vegas man back in the court roon1. Thursday 11•as undoubtedly Rand;1no·s da,· He survivC'd a jur~{s guilty verdict that f"oul d ha,·e put him In state prison ror at least 10 years on bribery and con!ipiracy rharges and he earller survived a liquor hijacking senll!'ncing that could h&\'C p~ duced ;in iden!ltal term. The panel filed back Thursday af- ternoon after nearly cighl hours of deliberation to tell Judge Claude 01\•ens !hat il found 1Wid1no. 46. guilty of brib- ing JI Costa ~ltsa policem~n and COii· ~piracy relating to thiit charge, By Dl'9xel I u LILY TAILE HOLIDAY SPECIAL DESK CHAll-SWIYRS, TILTS, IOLLS. HOLIDAY S~ECIAL $99.- '139. TWELVE SPECIALLY SELECTED PIECES F&PM DREXEL FAMED ET CETERA COLLECTION . NOW SPE. CIALLY PR ICED TO MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY SEASON MORE ENJOYABLE. FROM GLASS TOP TABLES TO HALL CONSOLES ••• IF lrS THE UNUSUAL YOU' RE LOOKING FOR, YOU.LL FIND IT IN ET CETERA. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HERIT AGE NIWflOllT STOil OPIN PllDAY 'TIL 9 NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHt<llll Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prof1Ulon1I Interior Desl9ntr1 Av1ll1bl.,...AIO Ph•11• Tell,,... M•.t •f Ore ... C•111ry-140.126J . --·· I LAGUNA BEACH 345 Nortk Co11t Hi9hw1y Phone: "494-6551 i , I I , J ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' • • I .... - • Laguna Beae)J EDITION Today'• Flnal N.Y. Stocks VOL 64, NO. 265, 4 SECTION S, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • FRIDAY, NOVEf.AIEJ( 5, ·197f TEN CENTS Saddlebacli Board Expan·sion Bid Und·er Study By PATRICK BOYLE Ot lht D•ll1 "IOI 5111! A plan to expand the Saddleback College board of trustees Crom five to seven members ¥:ill be presented at the board's next meeting. The plan calls for splitting the burgeon- ing Saddleback Valley-now represented by one lrustee -into three trustee areas. Tru!t.ee Hans Vogel, chairman of a committee which has been studying the proposed change, said today that such a move would save the taxpayers the ex· pense of re-apportioning the large district every two years. li only fivi trustee areas were maintained, Vogel noted, the rapidly gro~ing Saddleback Valley would be the main cause of this constant redistricting since the other trustee areas have ·rela!ively stable populations. In revealing the pl;.n to expal)d to seven districts. Vogel defended the district's present system of allowing each trustee to be elected at large by all voters in the district. "Members who are voted at large," he said in a telephone intervie"-'• "are more ' ~oas Bomb Foes S~ek Help From Nixon WASHINGTON CUPI) -Awaiting a final legal decision from the Supreme Court. scientists, senators, Conserva- tionists and pacifists appealed directly to President Nixon today to postpone the mighty Amchitka Island nuclear test as a potentially deadly mistake. Barring a last-minute stay from the court or the President. a red button wlll be pressed at 2 p.m. PST Saturday in a bunker on the northern end of the desolate island in ihe Aleutian chain, l .200 miles southwest of the Alaskan coast, triggering a five-megaton warhead burled nearly 6,000 feet underground. All hope of a legal delay rested in the bands Of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who received late Thursday the appeal of eight organizations charging that the Atomic Energy Commission had not fully considered the environmental risks of the test as required by law. Burger was expected to turn the case over to the full court for a ruling. most likely following their regular Friday con· ference. on the merits of a stay pending appeal of a federal appeals court decislon against '>locking the test. . . . The White House. standing by Nixon s decision to proceed with the blast "for overriding reasons of national security." channelled all ca\1$ to the AEC. which reported it had received 6,700 letters, telegrams and telephone calls of protest 11s of Thursday. It said each wou!d be answered individually. The White House refused again today to estimate how many protests it had received. The AEC has consistently discounted the environmentalists' warnings that the exhaustively planned and monitored underground test, code-named cannikin and-four times bigger than any the United States has ever conducted, might get off major earthquakes or tidal waves and harm marine and wildlife by leaking radiation. Class Text Boole Session Delayed A controversial study session on school text books. which had been scheduled for Tuesday, has been postponed by the Laguna Beach school .~ard. . Board president \V1lham Thom~s .. in 1nnouncing the postponement, said tn· dividual trustees ha\'e not had enough time to study the educational materials lo be dlscussed by the board. A new date has not yet been set for the session. Text book purchasing practices in the district have rccenlly conte under fire by trustee Gerald Linke and he was instrumental In scheduling the study session. Happ y Faces Recognized Properly decorated with huge buttons given them by Miss Smile, members ol lhe county Board ol Supervisors have named Nov. 7 through Nov. 13 Smilt Week in Orange County. ~llss Donna Rae Wood pf Ana- heim former Miu USA and Miss flinol~. appeared al \Vednesday's hearing of the board 11nd presented lhe happy face buttons. • HELD IN SHOOTING Post1I Clerk Alleman Hail of Bullets Ends in 1 Death At Post Office By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of Hie O•llY l"lkil SlfJI The day started with a disciplinary hearing, was interrupted by a haircut and tnded at 10:45 a.m. in death for Paul Burtner, postmaster of \Vestminster. A meeting about Christmas mail presided over by Burtner wa s shattered by a hail of bullets. When it was over Burtner lay dead -shot to death in the post office he had served for 24 years. Police are holding Phillip 8. Alleman, a postal clerk for two years. on suspicion of Burtner's murder and the wounding of Ernest Gaulden. 46, superintendent of mails. Gaulden is clinging to life today at \\lestminster Community hospital. He is in guarded condition after undergoing four hours of surgery for a stomach wound. Alleman. 24, of 2801 N. Bristol SL. Santa Ana. was to be formally charged today with murder and assault with In- tent to commit murder •• Lt. Don Savicrs, commander of the Westminster detective division , reconstructed the events police believe led to Burtner's death. Alleman, a night clerk. had received o written reprimand for t a r d i n e s s . Dissatisfied with the actlQn. he had re- quested a meeting with Burtner and the postal clerk's union representative. "He apparently became quite angry at that meeting," Sa:viers al!eged, "and ·walked out in the middle of it." Police believe Allen'lan went lo his parents' home in Santa Ana where he got his father's .45-calibe r automatic pistol. He returned to the post office about .S minutes later and walked in through a back door and hallway w b i c h led to Burtner's office. At th•t momen t Butner, Gaulden, 'Yilliam Brown, assistant post master; Orville HopkiAs. assistant superintendent of mails and Alfred Maisto, a foreman, were discus sing holiday mail procedures. 5aviera said the four men were seated in a semi-circle f1cing Burtner with tbelr backs to the door. Police allege Alleman burst through the door. aimed the gun at Burtner, said "OK, yt>u 've had It." and pulled the trig· ger. "The gun misfired," Saviers 11sserted, ''bul 1bo11t that point everyone realized wti;,t was hapP'ning and 1vtrythlng started movln1.'' ' prone to act on behalf of lhe entire district rather than react to small pressure groups." Vogel said the recommendation. to be presented to the full board Nov. 15, has been worked out by himself and fellow trustee John Lund of Laguna Beach. The action was sparked, he noted, by requests from school trustees in the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified School Districts. Whese two school districts early last spring passed resolutions urging the board to expand to seven members and have each member elected from his in- dividual district. The Sa.ddleback College District, which comprises about 48 percent of the land area in Orange County, is presently divided into five trustee areas. Vogel provided statistics showing that area one, in west Tustin, had 12,867 registered ··oters as of the Sept. 14 col· Jege bond election: area two, east.Tustin, 11,725 voters; area lhree. Laguna Beach, 11,345 voters; a'rea four , San Clemente. Dana Po!J)t, San Juan Capistrano, 11,059 voters; and area five, lhe Saddlebaclt Valley1 28,353. Vogel said that by splitting area five, represented by trustee Michael Collini of Laguna Hills into three separate districts, the populations of each area would be more equ;.t He said that, although each·of the new areas will only have about 9,000 voters, the valley is growing so rapidly each area should soon catch up with the other four trustee areas. Vogel predicted lhat. under the seven- trustee plan, the district would not have to be reapportioned for at least slJ:·years. U the plan is approved by-the truatees. Vogel said it must then receive the back· Ing of the county ·school redistricting aimm.ittee before going be.fore the voters for: approval. If district voters: agreed to expand the board, the five present board members would appoint the two ne w trustees, Vogel said, with Michael C.Ollint continuing on the board until his term ex· pires in 1975. Vogel said that most junior college districts in Calif.ornla with trustee mas have seven-inan boards elected at large. • reewa ss en 1a ' Vic Andrews Still Bacl{s Inland Line The suggestion that the Pacific Coast Freeway route sboclld ~ eliminated en- tirely from the state's freeway plan is "Irresponsible, ill-conceived and ob- Vious\y arrived at through emotion rather than fact," according to Lagunan Victor C. Andrews, who pl~yed a leading role in t.he eighlryur fight to persuadt tbJ Stai. Highway Commlasion lo move the . route inland from the coast. Andrews expresses his views on the latest freeway discussionJ in a letter id· dreSled to Mayor Richard Goldberg In which he concludes that construction of the freeway will be the only solution to South County traffic problems. The people oppo!ing the freeway, says Andrews, are ignoring the fact that, in unanimously approving the adopted route, Laguna literally gave notice to the state, the county and private landholders that they could proceed to plan, design and develop property 5urrounding the ci- ty on the basis of this route. The county 's master plan of arterial roads was flnaliz· ed and construction has proceeded, he noted. "All of this has been done in good faith," Andrews writes, "and it would be highly irresponsible if we attempted to eliminate the Pacific Coast Freeway now. The millions of dollars of planning and construction that already have been spent will have gone for naughl alid chaos would result. All this, because some misinformed people believe the growth rate has slackened to the point that the need for an addltional major transit facility is no longer needed. This truly must be the essence of unreality ." Although the growth rate has slacken- ed. he continued, responsible projections still suggst that the area affected will have more than 600.tn:I residents by 1990. Even though Laguna Beach itself main- tains a low density, surrounding areas such as South Laguna, Laguna Niguel, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point and all of the Irvine Company land wiU continue to develop, he states, and askS, "In the absence of a freeway, how would you move t.his large number of people in aild out of this highly developed area?" The Laguna leader goes on to comment on alternatives which anti-freeway pro- ponent! have discussed with him. Widen- ing the San Diego freeway, he states, would be more expensive than creating a new freeway, because of the cost of purchasing adjacent property, and would not solve the basic problem of ingress and egress in yet undeveloped areas. To the suggestion that 10-mile, rather than quarter-mile arterials could serve the coast, Andrews notes that the stale does not provide fund::; for extensive off. ramps and connecting arterial access roads and Laguna's limited bonding capacity would make It impossible lo participate in funding this type of arterial access. A suggestion that a mass transit system be evolved to take the pl!l'Ce of the freeway seems impractical at this lime, he adds. "I wlsh.Jt were possible to turn back the clock 20 years, thus some chance for success for alternate solutions might have bee.n possible, but at this point it Is my candid-and honest opinion that the die is cast and an efforts should be mode to construct the Pacific Coast Freeway In its present location u quickly as possi· ble;" Andrews CQncludes. • "We fought long and hard to prevent Laguna Beach from being bisected. A bypass freey,·ay, one mile i fl I and is pruently assured. I would ·hope that emoU011 would not-prevail over reason." • DAIL'I' PILOT Sleff PMM Gernaatas Visit Thurston T\VO \Vest German of(icials are shown during tour of Laguna's innovative Thurston IntermeWate School. seated with earphones is Karl-Heinz Meyer from the Ministry of Education at Cologne, Ger· many. He is listening to tapes that students hear. He called the school "fantastic." Standing are tour guide Heidi Hendrickson. eighth grader, and Mrs. Ingeborg Kurtze, cultural attache at the West German Consulate in Los Angeles. Laguna Okays Housing Act Supervis ors Advised of Approval of Federal Pl,an By a 4·1 vote, wllh councilman Edward Lorr dissenting. the Laguna Beach city council has advised lhe Board of Supervisors that it would approve the concept of a federally assisted Ho~ing Authority for Orange County. The action, taken in res~nse to a re· quest from Supervisor Rot>e'?b. W. Battin for an official opinion on such a project, followed lengthy discussion during which councilman Lorr condemned the proposal as "legalized plunder" and BR attempt to "disperse minority groups throughout the county." The proposed Housing Authority would be established under the Section 23 Leas- ed l~ousing program unjer which a fi ve. member commission would function in t h e capacity of a developer a n d I o r manager of a low-rent housing program. The Housing Authority would either lea se or own dwelling units and perform such functions as leasing units, collecting rents, maintaining properties and related duties. Under a financial assistance contract with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the housing authority would be entitled to federal funds to make up the difference between its cost in leasing the dwellings and the rents it would collect from su~leaslng to low-income tenants. A principal aim would be l<> avoid ''public housing" type projects by dispersing the-program w i d e I y throughout the community and using ex- isting private dwellings that meet health and safety standards/ giving tenants a maximum choice o neighborhood to avoid low·income "ghetto" situatioM. Families qualifying by inaime and Resolution Hit's Freeway The. board of directors of the. Laguna. Beach Civic League has adopted a resolu- tion oppo!ing ain.struction of any new freeway in the Laguna area at this time, but v6th the qualirlcatlon that, "if the freeway is necesury. we adhere to the proposed corrki<lr (inland) recognizing the dangers of attempting to renegotiate. the route .'' This position wa!I presenu,t lo the city council by clvic league President Jon Brand, "ho also read a long nst of ques- tlom pertaining to the proposed freeway , wh!ch he sak! the Ltague directors !eel ne<d aoswerlng, Including: • ' First, do we need the freeway? Is it dangerous to reopen negoU1Uona with the state when we have. alrtady forced the trteway out of Laguna'? ls lt really postil· ble the Highway Comm.lsslon might once again try to biaect the community? Should Llguna join other cUiea in aaking for deletion of that portion of the freeway that pwes through Laguna Beach? Will the freeway bring more pe<iple to Lagun1 and increase traffic conge!ltion? Will tract homea be bullt along lhe freeway? Will the growth rate of Oranae County conlinllt to-slow down? -. ' family size would inchide those without housing because of government action, such as street widening projects; those whose home!! have been affec~d by a natural disaster; Ume residing in unsafe, unsanitary or overcrowded dwelling1 and those wix> are paying an unreasonable proportion of income for rent. Oran1e Weather You won't see too much IWI this weekend, especially in the pre-- noon hours 1Yhen fog and low clouds prevail. Top temperatures will be 6S along the coast and 75 further Inland. INSIDE TODAY Lott• LtnllB will soon appear as Mothtr Couragt ae UCl and the w tektndtr ha.I a 1torv and pictures abo"& htr on Paot as, today. ... 11 ... " Mutv•I hnds .,. Ctll!wllle " Nllltllll Nt'WI •• Clllc'IM Up ' °''"" CNlfY 11 Cl•nllltd •·• •••11.ir•llh 11..n Cemlct • ..... ,.,. CNH--'I • lltetf Mlfbtt 1"1' DMll'I Mtlkn " T1!emtMI " Dl'ftl'Cfl " Ttltlten ...,, ldl!IJ1t1 , ... • ···'~" • """'' , .. ,, WtrMR't N.-l»-14 -" w .... , ... ..'J Allll Lllllltn ,, w-Mevlt• .... F ' % OAIL V PILOT SC Group Maps Saddleback Recall Bid A committee of Soulh ~?unty resid~U: ha,·e decided to begin a recall campaign against Saddleback College trustees over the board's imposition or a 34-cent permissive override tax. The group. formed by Dana Point resi· dent Paul Sayre. came to the decision after learning that a court injunction to 6tOp the levying of 1he lax \\'OUld cost at least $5,000. '1Not only wou ld we ha\·e lo pay our cwn expenses,'' Sayre said in announcing the recall move instead of the injunction battle, "but we y,·ould have to pay theirs too." He y,•as referring to the board's being able to use the services (If the coun- ly counsel's offiC't for legal matters. Sayre, emphasizing he would not be a candidate for eleclion to the five-member board (If trustees. said his groli.p hopes to begin the legal movts required for recall within the next week. The committee proposing the action is gcheduled to meet with its parent citizen's group Wednesday to present the .decision to the full body. At a similar meeting October 28. some 100 residents met in San Juan Capistrano and. by a show or hands. the majority (If them fa vored recalling the trustees. Even though the 34-centa: tax was ap- pro\'ed by onJy three of the trustees, Sayre said his group '\'OU!d attempt to recall all f1 1"e board members. At the Oct. 18 meeting Y.'hen the tax was an- proved. trustee ~fichael Collins of Lagl"l l Hill s \\'BS absent and trustee Patrick Backus of Dana Point voted against le- \"ying the tax. The tax (If 34 cents per SIOO of assessed \"aluation will be levied for one year to raise $2.2 mil.lion. This money, college of· ficials say, is needed for the district lo receive $2.3 million in state aid for con· struction of a science mathematics building. Sayre said he feels the tu Is un- necessary and that the state aid can be obtained at another time. f .. That money wiH always be available .someplace downstream," Sayre said, noting the district could apply for federaJ funds if alate monies were not available. Board president Alyn Brannon 1aid he citizens were entitled <to have their own ()pinion of bow the. money should be ob- tained and invited them to attend the board meetin&s ond exprtss their views. Ile oald the !>Oard had only passed a resolution Clll1ne for the tax but that the tax rate baa not yet been eet. "If a maJorltj of the taxpayers are op- posed to IUCh a move," BreMOn added, "then we would be glad to take another look at ft."" Trustee~ Vapl, l"\'I pmid'!ll of ~~ ~blt"4! 11':1: ~~ because the aid wu to come from the last remainlng money of the $65 million Junior College Construction bond elec· tion, held 1tatewtde in 1967. Vogel uid that ii the state aid b not received, the district voters would even- tually have lo pay for the entire $S million comtrucfion Cost ''The taxpayers are already paying for it (Ille conslruclion) through the l6S million bond Issue,'' he added. "ff we don't come up "''ith the match- (ng funds \\'ith the permissi ve tax," he noted. "we will have to stand the cost of that building by ourse\\.·es." Synod Rejects Paper On War, Social Ills VATICAN CITY (UPI ) -The third in· temational synod (If bishops rejected t(). !ay all but one &ection of a major docu- 1nent dealing with the modem day crises U war, hunger, torture and iJljustice. Synod sources said the 202 delegates rejecttd the document because it \\'as loo central. DAILY PILOT C111Mm COAlf PUILtsHIMct CCl&PAaV f ••"" N. w • .4 ........ WNMllW , J•ck I. Corl., $., .,. ...... -S ~I,,_.., n.." r:....,n .... ~'' A. M..,lrila• IM'llf~ EdlJOf a.llt H. lee• 91icJ.trl P, H•h Alllst1~t M~ E•~ &..t•M ._. Offlc• ll2 f•,.1t A""ftU• M1iTiDt Mil,.111 P.O. tow•••• tl6$2 s.. c1 ........ Office 301 North ti Cuilft• •••I. 92,72 ,.. ..__ ca... •-· aJO "'"' ..., ''"" ...._. &Mdro: »13 ,.._... ~~ ...,__, •Mdll 11l1J 11..:11 ~r• Frldi:f, Howtt1btt 5, 1971 DAILY .. ILOT Sit/I .. llllt High Steppe1· Joaquin Elated By _State H~lp ' Officials or the San Joaquin Elemen- tary· School District were elated today upon hearing of Thursday's unanimous approval by the State Senate of a bill to free bond moneys to build needed elementary schools in lhe rapid growth districL Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) got rapid action (In his measure that Y.'Ould aulhorize the state allocations board to approve bond spending 0\1er the present fi ve percent o( assessed·va luat ion limit Sacramento) indicated the powerful education committee would consider the bill next week. Greene c."lalrs the educa- tion committee. Funds Sought For Laguna Police Unit The measurt, y.·hic h goes to the 11 Assembly Education Co mmitlet for l'On· A proposal that the county ~hould con· sideraHon next week. raises the debt ceil· tri bute financially to the operation ef the ing Crom five percent to se ven percent of Laguna Beach policed e pa rt men t ' s f.otal district wealth for as miny as five juvenile division was put forward this rapidly growing California sch o o I .... ·eek by Councilman Edward Lorr. districts. RefeITing to the Orange County Com· For San Joaquin, the raised debt limit munity Mental Health vice team's report could provide as many as three new on the "staggering'' rate of drug arrest1 schools. in Laguna Beach. by comparison with the The two percent bonding limit increase rest of the county, Lorr said, "Our would yield the district $4.6 million based juvenile department deals y,·ith cases It "'as Spirit \\'eek at ~fission Viejo High School. These girls \Vere right in step. Their part of the celebration -a prelude to tonight's homecoming game against San Clemente -\\'as senior's Little Kids Day. Maria Garcia is the deft rope jumper .. Holding rope are Yolanda Ochoa. Janella O'Con· nor (right). Looking on are l\teg O'hlalley and Vickki Stocker. The football game tonight will include queen crowning at halftime. on its 1971 total assessed \."aluation of S2J2 from the entire school district. not just \vithin the city boundaries. People from million. a district spokesman said. Einerald Bay, South Lag una and other lf the bill passes the Assembly and is count y territory in the sc.:hool distrir t signed into la\v, the provisions would take prefer to deal with the Laguna juvenile eHect immedialely. Sen. Carpenter said. department for help \\•ith youth problem$, The "pilot'' school hinding measure counseling. probalion and so forth. y,·ould rema in in erfect unlit J an. I. 1975. "This means !hey are actually doing Ralph Gates. San Joaquin superin· the \\'Ork of the countx.,and .s~· ce Laguna tendent. t.'reditcd Carpe nter for in· Beach is c.:a rryiff(this burdc I y,·ould troducing the emergenry bill . "At thi! suggest the COWlly provide som wnding moment ~'e are extremely optimistil' for our juvenile department. \Ve are in a about solutions of our school housing pro-positiqn to deal wit h cases in the area Oil Opposition Charged blems. I hope we will find the same more effectively, but the county should cooperation and understanding of our help." ) problems in the Assembly," Gates said. Councilman Charlton Boyd said that Rer: Nerbon. assistant superintendent Lo rr apparently was not aware of the Cranston Scores. Officials 011 Sanctuary Bills By BARBARA KREJBICB Cll t111 0•11¥' "'Ill Sllft Sen. Alan Cranston CD-Calif.) sald to- -day he .is "very concerned" about ad- ministration opposition to his attempt to push through a series of bills that would establish six oil -free sanctuaries in federal waters off the California coast . "California has the right t.o protect her shoreline and the federal government should not attempt to prevent this with no valid reason." the s@:nator said. The bills CS 1446 lhrough Sl4.52) now the subject of hearings before the Senate Minerals, J\faterials and Fuels Sub- committee, have been misinterpreted by administration officials, notably Assistant Secretary of lbe Interior Holll1 M. Dole, Cranston said in a telephone interview from hi!: Washington D.C. office. Dole walked out (I{ the subcommittee b=earing 1'bursday. as Cranston attempted . IUI l!vlolooi Ill hilortgm.1 oil ary b!U bid renioftd objectioas to IL Planners Erase Coast Freeway Newport ·Routing The Kewport Beach Pia.Ming Com· mission Thursday night did away v.·ith the Pacific Coast Freeu•av. Commissioners. in a s'urprise action, officially declared that the controversial superhighway bas ne ver el.isled, does not exist and will not exist - at least in Newport Beach. Acting on a motion by Chairman Curt Dosh, the com mission unanimously ordered its sla!f to "delete from future reports~ maps and ~·orking papers the projected route of the proposed Coast Freeway.'' In proposing the action, Dosh said any such references "to the free\\'3Y or lo alternate plans are a burden and in- terfere ~·ith the orderly discussions and actions of th~ staff." The commission. itself. sh o u I d •·proceed as it ne \'er existed and ne\'fr v.·ill" and "should make a statement to that effect," Dosh urged. "I will disregard ii," he pronounced. The proposed bills ~·ould prohibit oil areas touching the state sanctuarie!. for business services, said his office was current status or county assistance to drilling, but not oil exploration. in Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers "y,•illing to give any additional m. Laguna Beach. "There is no question in Federal waters seaward or six existing and Harbor District Director Kenneth formation lo the Assembly committee the minds of the county department state oil sanctuaries. These extend from Sa1npson also testified in its favor before lhal might be required" to assure heads that Laguna does have a the Pt1exican border north to Humboldt the subcommittee. passage of the bill. niohumental problem ," said Boyd. "and and Mendocino Counties. Bur the administration and the oil com· The district's facilities planner. Dave !be county right now is giving help in They include the coasts of San biego panies, said the SeJ'lator, maintain the ir King. said with Senate approval, "we're terms of thousands of dollars that are and part of Orange Count y and the strong opposition. "I cannot understand halfway there." being poured in." offshore islands of San Clemente and the administration's refusal to accept the The emergency measure. if approved. The dollars, said Lorr. arc not helping Catalina. the recreation beach areas in fact that the revised bills have met all frtts the district to spend voter-approved the i'!Tiice department which has to deal Los Angeles County and Sa.n Luis Obispo the earlier·(lbjections." bond moneys that the 1952. bond debt with the problem. County, the Monterey Bay and Big Sur Princ ipal objective he said, is ''to pre-limit has prevented being spent. Boyd suggested that Lorr confer with areas and state sanctuaries oil the shores vent another Santa Barbara. The Jegisla· The district has nearly SI& million in i\lrs. Helen Keeley and her board y,·hich of the two Northern California counties. lion could easily be repealed in the l!\'en\ unspent bonds. is handling contacts \\'ith count Y "These are some of the most beautiful the (Iii rompanies could come up v.•ith :11 The bond debt limit. coupled with departments in setting up centralized and recreationally used portion• o( ,._ .__11 ._.11-t•-• 1. . . shortages or state school building fund county services in Laguna. "Ont depart· u"' ~ er w-1 1ng me 1iuu, e 1 m 1 n at 1 n g h th d' -h t 1· · ht J coast," laid ""&n1;ton, "areas lVbere the · htl ff h money, as put e istr1ct be ind in its men coopera mg rig now s p~ "I'_ unsig Yo s ore islands, develop a sure building ~~am •-1•-po' I h ba11·on." he sa1·d. ;'\Ve will have one coun· people, ln establishing the existing state .Rystem lo prevent leaks and a better ,.. vi>• w ur Jn w ere sanctuaries, have wlun•--,·Jy g1·v-up thod r 1 . 1nore than 3,000 students are presently on 1y probation officer here at all tim es and Wll "" me (I c ean1ng up spills if leaks d bl · · the economic benefits (If oil because they should occur... ou e sessions. other services as soon as space 1s place a higher value on the coastal en-Trustee Dennis Smith noted the bilJ available." Virodtb.1r1t." RQqghly half . of & }1 t The only oil drilling in Federal y,·aters could use further community support in "In that case,'' said Lorr, ''I question OilifDrnla ~ wluld lie: aff~: , at present 1' in tl>e Santa~ chan-1he form of letters or telegrams to the policy of the police department in( Specifically excluded, ht , added, are nel. Cr a n s t on sc.;d, There a r e Orange County representatives in the providing juvenile services to non· areas where oil now is being )lf'Oductd •nd Federal oil 1anctuaries now in ui!lence, Assembly. "A few notes of thanks to Sen. residents at the expense of the Laguna "where the people want to have oil pro--he added, "but talk: of drilling ()ff Cape Carpenter would also be appropriate." Beach taxpayer." duction," such as Long Beach, Seal Cod is arousing some concern there, l un-Smith said. Councilman Roy Holm said this seemed dersland.'' h J'd t' d ked h t Beach and portionS of Ventura County. Carpenter, e said, got action (In the a va 1 ques ion an as w a percen· Also included in the revised legislation The Senator concluded. "I know how bill in less than a week. "This is reallv tage of juvenile cases handled by the Is a provision that would empower the dtep an interest there is in California in lhrilling. It is the system functioning in 8 Laguna police involved non-residents. President to end the Federal (lj) this ma tter and T hope that an c.roused responsive way," Smith added. Police Chief Joseph Kelly said he wouJd sanctuaries in 8 national emergenCy re-public will support the passage (If this He said an hour meeting in Sacramento have to review juvenile departmen& quiring additional oil production. , ,_le--'g_i.!_l•_t_io_n_." ___________ w_i_th_A_•_se_m_bl::_ym_a_n_L_e..:ro_:_y:_G:_re..:•..:ne:_(c:D-_:_fi:_gu__:r..:e:._s_t_:_o_:g'-iv_e_an_e_x_ac_l_n_spo:_n_se_. __ Core drilling and exploration, but not 1 leasing, would be permitted in the pro- posed Federal sanctuaries. Y.1hich v.·ould extend fr-om the edge of the state preserves at the three-mile limit, seaward to the edge of the continental shelf. "This is a \\'ay lo conserve our resources," said Cranston, "to find out if oil is there and to keep it there. available if it is needed. OpP.Qnents of the bills choose not to understand this.'' Cranston said he first began lo lhlnk about the Federal sa nctuaries during the Santa Barbara oil spi ll "'hich occurred during his first 10 days in office. though he had been interested for a long time in the 'problern if keeping oil drilling ay,·ay lrotn coastal areas where people obiect to 1t. His first bill 1vas introduced in 1969. S<'n. George J\turphy cooperated in draftir.g the ne11o• bills to meet ad- ministration objections, Cianslon said. and now Sen. John Tunnty is serving as C().Sponsor of the legislation. tt has \\'On the support. he said. of all city councils and boards (If supervisors in HOLi.DAY SPECIAL By Drexel - • ' Lady ~uror D1·ops Guilty . Ve1·dict in Randano Trial ~ '1 A 'diStraught but detennined woman juror gave convicted liquor hijacker Gene Randano the kind (If break late 'f.hursday night that has never been given before in Orange County Superior Court history. ~1rs. Judith Arbon or !'ullerton emerg- ed from hours or \.\Tangling in the jury room to tell Judge Claude Owens that she could not go along with lhe guilty •erdict she had signed five hours before with the rt.st of !he jury. Her fellow jurors. many of them angry and 1111 of them tired and strained. freely admitted that a no-holds-barred session in the jury room had lalled to eradicate tht doubts that 1ifrs. Arbon first ex· prtssed Thursda}" afte rnoon whtn the Randano jury reached a deci sion. The attractlvt blonde 's tears as the )ury w11rs being pollM gave defense &t· lorney Lawrence f\1cBridt the kind of op- portunlty that comes /'us t once 1n a UJetlme in crlmlnn l trla s. He took ii by lnslstlng thal ~1r!i. Arbon 10 y.•ith him, Judge O~·e.ns and prosl!C:ut or Joe Heneghan lo the prlvacy 'of the j udge's chamber!. Tht four did En and the rtosult was that Judge Owtns stnl' the jury back ill !ht jury room for the decision at 9 p.m. that led him to tear up the earlier verdict (If the jury and declare a mistrial. Judge Owens . making no secret of his anger and disgust. refused to let f\.1rs . Arbon address him before the jury Y.'aS discharged . He had earlier refused to allow the Fullerton Y.'oman to di scuss the Issues upsetting her in private. Judge William C. Speirs today set a ne:w trial for Randano on Jan, 10. Heneghan left no one in any doubt after the mistrial ruling that he intends to put the Las Vegas man back in the court.room. Thursday wa s undoubtedly Randano's da~·-.. He sur,•1ved a jury's RUilty v~rdiet that eould ha\"e put him in state prison for at lea~t IO years M bribery a'nd conspiracy charRl'S and he earlier survived 1 liquor hijacking srntel'l"ing that could have pro- duced an idenllct1l term. The panPI filed back Thursday af· temoon artef nearly tight hours of d~liber111\on to tell Judge Claude Owens lhat It found Ra.ndano. ~. guilly of bri~ Ing a Costa ~1esa pollctman and con· spiracy relating to that t!1arge. ' LILT TAIL£ HOLIDAY SPECIAL DISK CHAIR-SWIVELS, TILTS, ROLLS. HOLIDAY SPECIAL '99. '139. TWELVE SPECIALLY SELECTED PIECES FROM DREXEL FAMED ET CETERA COLLECTION. NOW SPE- CIALLY PRICED TO MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY SEASON MORE ENJOY AILE. FROM GLASS TOP TABLES TO HALL CONSOLES • , • IF IT'S THE UNUSUAL YOU' RE LOOKING FOR, YOU 'LL FIND IT IN ET CETERA. . ' DEALERS FOR: HENREOON-OREXEL-HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wutclllf Dr., "42·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 HIWPOIT ITOU OPIN PllDAT 'TIL t INTERIORS Proftulon1t Interior De1lgner1 Avallable-AID "-•Ttft "-"MHt .to,.... C•ntp-140.12,J ' LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Ce11t Hl9hw1y Phone: 4944551 \1 I -• • . . .. • ' ');._ • J .. ' • ,. -•· ' San. -Cleni.ente ·. • • ' Today's Final (apis.tra:Oo . --~ITION N.Y. Steeks VOL. 64, NO. 265, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAllF'<>RNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER S, '1971 TEN CENTS - School·s in San Joaquin 'Must Stand on Own' By PAMELA HALLAN 01 1"-OaflY l'llel Sllff U U1e San Joaquin Elementary School District want! to ·•catch up" with its growth and build enough schools to house its children in pennaneot facilities1 it must do it with its own money. That is the opinioo of Don Anderson. chief executive officer of the State Allocations Board, the slate agency that decided how mu ch, when, and who will get istate building loans. a Wife Slaying Anderson, addresslni· the Board of Trustees Wednesday In Eost Irvine, 1aid funding schools with local money is more costly than funding coristruction from state money. But under current legal fonnulas , San Joaquin could never "catch up"µ it relied solely en state aid. Anderson confirmed that the San Joa. quin District has done eveeything u· can to get stale lflllocatlons. But there ill a great deal (}( competition for what little money ,the state has left to apportion s.nd San Joaquin can not have it all . He said the one bright ray cf hope, however, is Proposition Two which will be on tht June primary ballot. This pro- position, if approved by a simple ma- jority of the voters, will provide $350 million and would, to some extent, remove the priority requirement and ease competition £or state money among school districts. "I hesitate to discuss this specifically, e ac • Johnson Han ed 5-to-lif e Term By TOM BARLEY Of tti. D•ll'f f'llel Sllft Convicted killer Mark Johnson of San Clemente was sent to state prison today to begin serving a fivt year to life sen· tence. . Orange County Superior Court Judge William Muccay Imposed that aente.nct: on the young marine just 22 days after a 1.i jury returned to his courtroom to find J ohnson, 21, guilty of the 1l&ying on June lfl, 1970, of hi.a pregnant wife Connie Lynn Johnson, 20. 1 Johnson, who has shaved his head since the trial, smiled and shook hands warmly with defense attorney Ray Sharp after the sentencing on the 2nd degree murder conviction. His mother was pre.sent in the courtroom. Judge Murray rejected Sharp's 11th hour plea for the commitment of his young client to the California Youth Authority. "I look on the CYA as one of the most ineffective agencies ever created by man," the jurist said. ''I am going lo order Mr. Johnson's shipment to Chino, and I am also going to order that he receive every psychiatric treatment possible. through the medical center at Vacaville. Sharp left the courtroom to file an ap- peal against Judge f\.1urrioy's g .u i I t 'I verdict. His motion for a new trial was denied this morning. He unsuccessfully argued today that a series of confessions played back during the trial were actually inadmissible and lihould have been ruled so at the time. Sharp particui'arly a t t a c k e d &' videotape taken in the San Clemente police station while Johnson was under the influence of "truth serum" sodium amyt.ol. The young marine admitted at . that time that he clubbed Mrs. Johnson with a bar stool and later washed off blood in the shower. But he could not re.call the stabbing of his wife. It was suceesfully alleged in the trial thal Johnson slit his wife's throat and stabbed her more than 20 times with a butcher knife and then bludgebned her bead with the bar stool alter a quarrel over his smoking of marijuana. Orpge eo .. c 1''eather You won·t see too much sun this weekend .' especially in the pre- noon hours when fog and low clouds prevail. Top temperatures will be 65 along the coast and 75 further inland. INSIDE TODAY Lotte Leny.a wilt 1oon appear a& Mo ther Courage at UCT and tht Weekender ha& a 'tory and piciurtl about her on Page 2.S, today. · l61flftt .. MlllMI \Slllllllt ,. c1u,,..,q "' Nllllllll N.wt •• (fllock!M UI ' °'"'"" '""" " Cl•n lfl .. ••• flnttllflllh ~ ... (Mllkl • -· ... (fHIWWI .. SMCll M"'1UH 1'-U Dell~ "'"" " Tt ltwtllefl " Dh•lrCfl " T~tllltl'li .... lllllftri<ll I'-• WM""' • l'lfllllC• 1•U W9'Mll"t Ntwt U-lt .. _ ... .. w., .. "'"" .. """ \.l!ldtn " _,..w ..... -..... I I The naked woman's body was found sprawled on the bed in the couple's apart- ment al 416 Monterey Lane. Johnson was arrested a year later. Amchitka A-blast Foes Take Plea To President WASHINGTON (UPI) -Awaiting 1 final legal decision from the Supreme Court, scientists. senators, Conserva· tionists and pacifists appealed directly to President Nixon today to postpone the mighty Amchitka Island nuclear test as a potentially deadly mistake. Barring a last-minute stay from the court or the President, a red butt.on will be pressed at 2 p.m. PST Saturday in a bunker on the northern end of the desolate island in the Aleutian chain, 1,200 miles southwest of the Alaskan coast. triggering a five-megaton warhead buried nearly 6,000 feel underground . All hope of a legal delay rested in the hands of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. who received late Thursday the appeal of eight organizations charging that the Atomic Energy Commission had not fully considered the environmental risks of the lest as reiruired by law. Burger was expected to turn the case over to the full court for a ruling, most likely following their regular Friday con.:' !ere.nee, on the merits of a stay pending appeal of a federal appeals court decision against 'Jlocklng the test The White House, standing by Nixon's decision lo proceed with the blast "for overriding reasons of national security." channelled all calls to the AEC, which reported it had received 6.700 letters. telegrams and telephone. calls of protest as of Thursday. It said each would be ans"•ered individually. The White House refused again today to estimate how many protests it had received . The AEC has consistently discoun~ the environmentalists' warnings that the exhaustively planned and monitored underground test, code-named C&nnikin and lour times bigger than any the United States has ever conducted, might set off major earthquakes or tidal waves and harm marine and wildlife by leaking radiation. HELD IN SHOOTING Postal Clerk Alleman Hail of Bullets Ends in 1 Death At Post Office By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of HM DlllY l'llel Sllff The day started with a disci plinary hearing. was interrupted by a haircut and ended at 10:45 a.m. in death for Paul Burtner, postmaster of Westminster. A meeting about Christmas mail presided over by Burtner was shattered by a hail of bullets. When it was over Burtner lay dead -shot to death In the post office he had served for 24 years. Police are holding Phillip B. Alie.man . a postal clerk for two years. on suspicion of Burtner's murder and the wounding of Ernest Gaulden, 46, superintendent of mails. Gaulden is clinging to life today at Westminster Community hospital. He is in guarded condition after undergoing four hours of surgery for a stomach wound. Alleman, 24. of 2801 N. Bristol St., Santa Ana. was to be formally charged today with murder and assault with in- tent to commit murder. Lt. Don Saviers, commander of the Westminster detective d I v i s i o n • re.constructed the events police believe led to Burtner'& death. Alleman, a night clerk, had received 1: written reprimand for t a r d I n e s s. Dissatisfied with the actioq, he ha~ re- quested a meeting with Burtner and the: postal clerk's union representative. • Planner Quits Ouster Figure Leaves County Re.; Gohara, Orange County Planning staff membe r for the past three years and the central figure in a Plannlng Com· mission move to dump Stuart Bailey as .secrdary to the commission, is no longer a county employe. Gohara. who was named secretary or the commission las\. :Jnne, rtplacing asslsU.nt planning director Bailey, is now employed by CST Egnlneerlng Co. •Ith officei near the Orange County Airport . He quieUy left his plaMing department pogt the latter part of October . Gohara was caught In the middle h11st June when a 3-2 majority of the Pl•nning Commission voted to install him 11 secretary instead'ol Bailey. His appolntmut was short • Oved however 11 t.be Board of Supervlsors I re.fused to endorse the move. A long period of negotiations roUowed which culminated with Planning Di rec t.o r Fore.•t Dickason naming staff member John l..azle as commission secretary, Gohara also figured In another con- tro~ersial issue more reunUy when he prepared a staff report recommen~ing I.he rezone of 50 acres o( McDonnell Douglas Corp. land near the airport. Gohara's Aug. 31 rtport waa rebutted four weeks later by Planning Director Dickason who recommended against the zone change. The controverslal rezone fs slated to come before the supe.rviaors n'xt Wedn•sday after having been appi<of<d by the Planning Commission by 1 :l.:J vol<. I I but we would then be able to examine ap- plications in view of where the money will do the most good," said Anderson. The state officer reittra~. however, that a district would still have to show that it had · unhoused children. And unhoused children, according to the state. are represented by certain numbers of homes under construction, homes that will be occupied a year or more before a school can be built. es Trustees Considering 7 Members By PATRICK BOYLE 01 t11t: D•ll'f Piiot ll•ff A plan to expand the Saddleba ck College. board of trustees from five to seven members will be presented at the board's next meeting. The plan calls for splitting the burgeon- ing Saddleback Valley -now re.presented by one trustee -into three trustee areas. Trustee Hans Voegl, chairman of a _.,it~ which has h«n.Jl'!(IY!ng the prVpoaed chanie, aki todly"U\flt 'euch a move would u.ve the taxpay ... the ex· pense of ,...pport1onlng the !all• district eVery two y~. U only . five trwtee arw were maintained , Vogel noted, ·the rapidly growing Saddle.back Valley would be the main cause. of this constant redlstrlcting since the other trustee areas have relatively stable populations. In revealing the pl&n to expa nd to seven districts. Vogel defended the district'• present system of allowing each trustee to be elected at large by all voters in t.he district. "Members who are voted at large," he uid in a telephone interview, "are. more prone to act on behalf or the entire district rather than react to small prtssure groups." Vogel sald the recommendation. to be presented to the full board Nov. IS. has been worked out by himself and fellow trustee John Lund of Laguna Beach. The acti on was sparked. he noted. by requeSts from School trustees in the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified School Districts. Whese two school districts early last spring passed re.solutions urging the board to expand to seven members and have each member elected from his in· dividual district. The Saddle.hack College District. which comprises about 48 percent of the land area in Orange County, is presently divided into five trustee areas. Vogel provided statistics showing that Brea one, in west Tustin, had 12,867 registered~·1oters as of the Sept. 14 col· lege bond election: area two, east Tustin. 11,ns voters: area three, Laguna Beac h, tt,34S voters: area four. San Clemente. Dana Point. San Juan Capistrano, 11 ,059 voters; and area five , the Saddleback Valley. 28,333. Vogel said that by splitting area five, represented by trustee Michael Collins of Laguna Hills into three separate districts, the populations or each area would be more equot He said that. although each of the new areas will only have about 9,000 voters, the valley Is growing so rapidly each area should soon catch up with the other four trustff are.as. Vogel predicted that, under the seven· trustee plan. the district would not ha ve to he reapportioned for at least six years. U the plan 15 approved by the trustees, Vogel said it must then receive the back· ing of the county school red istricting committee before going before the voters for approval. If district vote.rs agreed to expand the board, the five present board members would appoint the two new trustees, Vogel said, with Michael Collin~ continuing on the board until his term ex· pires tn 1975. Vogel .said thilt tnofit junior college diitrtcts in California wtth trustee areas ha\rC seven-man ~ elected at large. Vandals Stone Swan RENO Nev. (UPl)-Vandals stoned to death a black &wan worth 1500 at Reno's Piradlse Park. and the city saYs it has had enough. Tbe recreaUOI\ commission 11aid there was no sen1t buying birds "Juot to be sliughtertd." and decided not to replace the 1wan.,. .,....o other black 1wans wtr• lilled earlier. , ' If the proposition is not approved, Anderson told lhe Sl!_n J~quln board It will have to dig deep into its own·pockets. He suggested leasing more portables, increasing the bond limit, getting sub. dividers to lease new homes for tem- porary schools, or le a se-pure has e agreen1ents for new facilities with developers. But he admitted that all these measures are costly. And for every school the district builds with its own money, the farther behind it gets on the state's priority system. He said the only way to improve the situation would be to change the law. But many have tried and failed . . He complimented the board for ill ef~ for!s to raise the bond ceili11g JimJt so that seven instead U five precent of It.I assessed valuation can be sold annually. He said this is probo·bly the best answer for San Joaquin . • ans.ion DAIL V .. ILOT Iliff l'twt. Hot1ieeo1ning Preltide Jt wa s the senior's '.'~ittle Ki~s Dar" at Mission Viejo High School Thursday, part of Sp1r1t Week m which each class entertain itself and others with innovative approach. Here Dolores Moran, 17, and Pat llornbeck, I 9, seem appropriately equipped. The l\.1ission Viejo foot· ball team plays San Clemente high tonight with queen crowning at halftime. Student Marine Lab· Poses Que stion on City's Pier 'I The City or San Clemente has a long-st.&.nding approval of a student ma,rlne laboratory proposed for the municipa l pier. but lhe vexing question of where to put it remains unanswered this week. Originally the permanent facility for students from San Clemente High School had been proposed for a platform beneath the main level of Uie pier. But Science Department Chairman Phil Grignon -learned later that at peak surC and tide period s, that platform is awash. So he asked for city approva l to build the lab on the main deck of the pier on the spot once occupied by Snn Clemente Sportfishing Inc. That business moved to Dana Harbor recently But concessionaires have compla ined that placing the lab inti:> the cramped cor- ner or the pier platform would hurt business. Businessmen also have warned that electrical loads already are. at the break· ing point and -lidding even a little more equipment could mean power shortages that bum out electric • moton on refligeratlmrequlpment. Couocllmen wrestled at .Jcngth with thft dilemma this week and finally d!!elded to allow a speclo l committee to determine the best location for the lab. City Manager Ken Carr, who is not on the committee, told councilmen he agreed with Grlgnon's plan to plJce the lab on the upper platform. The committee or city d~partment heads wUJ have the nnal say on the loca- tion . Other spots proposed include. an area midway out on the pier. Grignon has promised that the lab, to be designed by local architect Leon Hyzen. will be an asset to the pier and will include a small, public aquariUm. He added that the lab could prove a boon to attracting more visitors to the pier which is not receiving the same amount of use it did whe.n the sportfishing business was there. Adult Educati,on Night V olleybal,l Openings Exist Volleyball and exercise. programs have bei::un ror South Coast a.re.a women at San Clemente High School'f gym, and school district spokesmen say openins;a stW ex· 1st ln .spi,te of a large~ium<>U;t, ': • The popular uerclae perloil ·i. htJd each Monday oight ll1lm 7 to 9 if.-ip.' An average Qf 60 women a week have at.- tended the classes taught by Mrs.' Charlene Shepard as part of the adult education program in the Capistrano Unified School District. Basketball for men also is available in the gym e a c h \Vednesday nlghL Volleyball for men is offered Thursdays. The program "·UI continue through May. Except for regulnr school hollda,y1 or when special actlvltles are scheduled for the gym. There ls no charge and sJ&nups can bl done al the beginning of clw sessions. . ·, l • 2 DAILY PILOT SC Group Maps Saddlehack Recall ~id A committee of South. county residents have decided to begin a recall campaign against Saddleback Collegt trustees over the board's impositio n ol a 34-cent permissive override tax. The group~ formed by Dana foint resi- dent Paul Sayre. came to the decision after learnrng that a rourt injunction ID 11top the Je\•ying or the tax \\'ould cost at least $S,OOO. "Not only would we have to pay our own expenses," Sayre said in announcing the rec•ll move Instead of the injunction battle, ''but we v.•ould ha\'e to pay theirs too." He was referring to the board's being able to use the services of the coun· ty counsel's office t'or legal matters. Sayre. emphasizing he would n~-~ a· candidate for election to the five-member board of trustees, said his group hopes to begin the legal moves required for recall within the next "'eek. The committee proposing the action is scheduled to meet with Its parent citizen's group Wednesday to present the decision to the.full body. At a similar meeting October 28, some 100 residents met in San Juan Capistrano and, by a show of hands, the majority of them fa vored recalling the trustees. Even though the 3'kents taJ: was ap- proved by only three of the trustees, Sayre said his group "'ould allempt to recall all five board members. Al the Oct. 18 meeting when the tax "'as ao· proved. trustee Michael Coll ins of Lag1· 11 Hills was absent and trustee Patrick: Backus of Dana Point voted against le· \'ying the ta:i. The tax of 34 ctnls per $100 of assessed valuaUoo will be levied for one year to raise $2.2 million. Thls money, college of· !iciaJs say, ls needed for the district to receive $2.3 million in state aid for con· struction ot a science mathematics building. Sayre said he feels the tax is un. ntt:essary and that the state aid can be obtained at another time. ''That money will always be available wmeplace downstream," Sayre ·· said, noting the district could apply for federal funds iI state monies were not available. Board president Alyn Brannon said he citizens were entitled to have their own opinion of bow the money should be ob- tained and invited them to atteod the board meetings r.Jld upress their views. He said the. board had only passed a resolution calling for1be tax but that the tax rate baa not yet been set. • "If a rujority of the tupayen are op- posed to such a move," Brenoon added, ''th en we would be glad to take another. look at ft." Trustee Hans Vogel, past president or ihe board, aaid 'more ttate funds would not be available for the construction because the aid was to come from the last remaining money of the $65 million Junior College Con,truction bond elec- llon, held statewide in 1967. Vogel said that If the state aid is not rtceived, the district voters would even-, tually have to pay for the enUre $S mill ion construction cost. •·The taxpayer! are aJready paying for It (the construction) through the $65 million bond issue," he added . "U we don't come up with the matcb- 1ng funds with the permissive tax." he noted. "we will have to stand the cost of !hat building by oursel ves." Synod Rejects Paper On War, Social Ill~ VATICAN CITY IUPI I -The third in· :ernational synod of bishops rejected tcr lay all but one section of a major docu· :nent dealing with the modem day crises 1f war, hunger, torture and injustice. Synod sources said the 202 delegates :ejected the document because it "'as too ie~eral. OIAJlll COASr DAILY PILOT CM1fC1! <OUT ,.UILUHIMI) CM.PAH'f" \ ~ob•t1 N. w,,d "91Mit ..., P\lllltsl'M' I.'' Jeelt R. Carl., 'f. 4. ~ ,,... ... "-"' ...... ' ,-,.. ••• l'trril l dllor ~A. M..,lila• .. Mlirll51ir.9 Cdttor • a..-H. LMJ •ict.11'1 P. tf4U ~~h,.. --·-222 fore1t """•~u• Mtit.,, •dd,.11: r.o. l o• 646, 92452 .t.. S. Cle.-.offk• IOJ NorlJi £1 Cimino Pt1!, 9l6n " ' . ' Frldq, Nowmbtr 5, 1971 DAJLY PILOT Sltll PbOll Higli Stepper r Joaquin lated By State Help Officials of the San Joaquin Elemen· tary School District were elated today upon hearing of Thursday's unanimous approval by the State Senate of a bill tG fr ee bond mo neys lo build needed elementary schools in the rapid growth district. Sen. DeMis Carpenter (R·Newport peach) got rapid action on his measure that would authorize the stale allocations board to approve bond spending over the present five percent of assessed valuation limit. The measure. which goes to the Sacramenta l indicated the powerful ~ducation committee would consider th• ~Ill next week. Greene c!?ail'S the educa· tion committee. Funds Sought For Laguna Police Unit Assembly Education Committee for con· A proposal that the county should con· sideration nex t v.·eek. raises the debt ceil-tribute finan ciaJly to the operation of the ing from fi ve percent to seven percent of Laguna Beach police d e pa rt men t · s total d,istri ct "'ealth for as many as fi ve ju\•enile division was put forward this ra pidly growing California s c ho o I \Yeek by Councilm an Edward Lo rr. districts. Referring to the Orange County Com- For San Joaquin, the raised debt limit munity J\1ental Health vice team'i. report could provide as 1nany as three new on the "staggering'' rate of drug arrests schools. in Laguna Beach, by comparison with the The two percent bonding limit increase rest of the county, Lorr said, •·oUr '\'ould yield the district $4.6 million based juvenile department deal s with cases It \\•as Spirit Week at ?ifission Viejo High School. These girls \1Jere right in step. Their part of the celebration -a prelude to tonight's homecoming game against San Clemente -was senior's Little Kids Day. Maria Garcia is the deft rope jumper. Holding rope are Yolanda Ochoa, Jonella O'Con· nor (right). Looking on are 1Y1eg O'lV1all ey and Vickki Stocker. The football game tonight \vill include queen cro\\'ning at halftime. on its 1971 totaJ assessed valuation of na; from the entire school district, not just within the ci ty boundaries. People from million. a district spokesman said. Emerald Bay, South Laguna and other If the bill passes the Assembly and is county territory in the school district signed into law. the provisions \vould take prefer to deal with the Laguna juvenile effect immediately. Sen. Carpenter said. department for help with youth problems, 'rhe •·pilol" school fundini; measure counseling. probation and so forth . 11 ould rf!mai n in eftcr l until ,Jan. I. 197~. "This n1eans thcr are actu:illy doing R:ilph Gates . San Joaquin superi n· the y.·ork of lhe coun ty and since Laguna tendenl, c!'Cditcd Cvrpentcr for in-Beach is ea rrying this burd en I \1·ould traducing the einergency bill. "At this suggest the county provide so1ne funding moment \Ve are extrenlely opliinisUc for our juvenile department. \Ve are in a about solutions of our school housivg pro-position to deal 9.'ith cases in the area Oil Opposition Charged blems. I hope "'e \\'ill find the same more effectively, but the county should cooperation and understanding of our help ... problems in the Assembly," Gates said. Councilman Charlton Boyd said thal Rex Nerison, 'assistant superintenOent Lorr apparently was not aware of the Cranston Scores Official,s on Sa1ictuary Bill,s By BARBARA XR EIBICH Of Tiit O.llr PUii Si.fl Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) said to- day he is "very concerned" about ad· ministration opposition to his attempt to posh through a series of bills that woold establish si1 oil-free sanctuaries in federal waters off the California coast. "California has the right to protect her shoreline and the federal government should not attempt to prevent this "'ilh no valid reason," the se nawr said . The bills CS 1446 through Sl452J now lht subject of hearings before the Senate Minerals, Materials and Fuels Sub- committee, have been misinterpreted by administration officials, notably Assistant Secretary of the Interior Hollis Af. Dole, Cranston said in a telephone interview from his Washingtpn D.C. office. Dolt-walked oof'or the subcommittee hearfuc Thursday u Cranston attempted to explain that revisions of tlis original oil aanctuary bill bad removed objections to it. . Planners Erase Coast Freeway Newport Routing The Newport Beach PlaMing Com- mission Thursday nighl did a"·a.v \1·ith the Pacific Coast Freeway. Commissioners. in a su rprise action. officially declared that the controversial superhighway has never existed, does not exist and will . not exist -at least in r-.·ewport Beach. Acting on a motion by Chairman Curt Dosh, the commission unanimously ordered it.s staff to "'delete fro1n futu re reports. maps and 1Yorking papers the projected route of the proposed Coast Freey.•ay ." In proposing the action, Dosh said any suc h references "to the free"·ay or to alternate plans are a burden and in· terfere with the orderly discuss ions and actions of the staff.·· The commission, itself. s h o u Id •·proceed as it ne ver existed and never \.\'ill" and "should ma ke a statement lo that effect." Dosh urged. "I 9.'ili disregard ii," he pronounced . 'fhe proposed bills \You\d prohibit 011 areas: toucfiing the state sanctuaries. for business services, said his offi ce was current status of county assistance to drilling, but not oil exploration, in Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers "willing to give any additional in· Laguna Beach. ''There is no question in Federal waters seaward of six exisling and Harbor District Director Kenneth formatio n to the Assembly committee the minds of the county department state oil sanctuaries. These extend from Sampson also testified in its favor before that might be required" to assure head s that Laguna does have a the J\'lexican border north lo llumboldt the subcommittee. passage of the bill. monumental prob!em,'1 said Boyd, "and and ~lendocino Countie:.. But the admirlistration and the oil com· The district's facilities planner. Dave the county right now is giving help in They include the coasts of San Diego 11;inics. said the Senator. maintain their King. sa id ~'ilh Senate approval. "\\'e'rc terms of th,ousa nds of doll ars that are and part of Orange County and the strong opposition. "I cannot understand ha!l11·av !here." b£>ing ponred in." offshore islands of San Clemente and l hc admi nistration 's refusal to accept the The 'emergency measure. if a'pproved. The d1Jl!ar!>. s;iid Lorr. are not helpini? Catali na . the rectfea tio n beach areas in fuel that the revised bills have met all frees the district to spend voter-approved the poli"t:> de partment ll'hich ha s to deal Los Angeles Coun ty and San Ltus Obispo thl' earlier objections.·· ,. bond moneys that the 1952 bond debt \rith the pl'oblem . County, the J\1onterey Bay and Big Sur ~ Principal objective he said, is "to pre· limit has prevented being spent. Boyd !>uggested tha t Lorr confer \.\•ith areas and slate sanctua ries of( lhe shores The rtistric't has nea rly S16 million in \Ir~. Helen Keeley and her board which ofAhe tv.·o Norlhern California counties. vent another Santa Barbara. The legisla-unspent bonds. i;;; handling contacts \.\'ith co u n l Y lion could easily be repealed in the event I zed "These are some of the most beautiful the oil companies could come up with a The bond debt lhnit. cou pled v.'ilh c!epartmenls in setting up centra i and rtcreationally used portions of lhe better drilling method, e 1 i min at in g !';hortages o( state school building fund ('oun ty services in Lag11 na . "One depart- l.'fl:!St.'' said Cranston, "areas where the · htl rr h · 1 nds d 1 money. has put the district behind in its ment cooperating right now is pro-·-,.. . unsig Y 0 s ore ts a · eve op a sure building pro••am lo the po·1 L , h balion." he said. "\\'e will have one coun-peoplc. In estab1ishing the existing state syslem tG prevent leaks and a better "" 11 v ere slµlCtuarie s. have voluntarily giVen up method of cleaning up spills if leaks 1nore than 3,000 students are presently on ty probation officer here at all times and the economic benetit.s of oil because they should occur.,. double sessions. other services aS soon as space Is Plice a higher ,,8Jue on the """'Sia! en· · Trustee penni'i Smith noted lbe bill available." ..._ The only oil drilling 1·0 .~·•·ral waters Id I th ·t t · 1 h " 'd Lo "I ti vlrtinment.'' Rough!)' 'flail of the ,.-cm: ('OU use ur er commun1 y suppor in "n tat case. sai rr, ques on CaJlloi'nla coast would be af!ected. at pres:ent is in the Santa Barbara chan. the form of letters or telegrams to the policy or the police department in Specifically excluded, h"e added, arr ne l. Cr a n s t on s&id, There a re Orange County representatil·es in the providing juvenile services to non· h .1 Fede ral oil sanctuaries now in 'existence. A<sembly "A fe"' ootes of thanks lo Se•1 res•'denls al the c'pense of the Laguna areas v.· ere 01 now is being produced and "' · " · '"where the peop!e want to have oil pro· he added. "but talk of drilling off Cape Carpenter \vould also be appropriate.'' Beach taxpayer." cluction," such as Lon" Beach. Seal Cod is arousing some concern thl're. I un· Sinith said. Councilman Roy Hohn said this seemed "' derstand... I 'd · d kcd h l Beach and portions of Ventura County. Carpenter. 1e said, got action on the ~ vah quesllon an as \.\' a percen· . Also included in the revised legislation The Senato r concluded. "I kno"' how bill in less than a week. "This is really tage of juvenile cases handled by the is a provision that would tmpower the deep an interest there is in California in thrilling. It is the system functioning in a Laguna police involved non -residents. President to end the Federal oil thi.o; 1nat1er ;ind I hope that an aroused responsive "'ay," Smith added . Police Chief Joseph Kelly said he would sanctuaries in a national emergency re· pu blic will support the passage of this lie said an hour meeting in Sacramento ha ve to review juvenile department quiring additional oil production. 1 _1e_g_is_1a_t_io_n_." ___________ w_·i_th_A_ss_e_m_b_:ly:_m_a_n_Le_ro..:yc_G_r_ee_n_e_:<_D-__ f_:ig:_u_re:Cs'-lo:....:g_iv-'e-•_n_ex_a_c_l_r_es..:po_ns_e_._ Core drilling and exploration, but not leasing. would be permitted in lhe pro- posed Federal sanctuaries, which wo uld extend fron1 the 'tdJ!€" of the state preserves at the three-mile limit. !'>eaward lo the edge of the continental ~helf '"This 1s ;i 1rav to conserl'c our resources."' said Cranston. "lo find out if 011 is there and lo keep it there. a\"a1lable 1f it is needed. Opponents or the bills l·hoose not to understand thi::.·· Cranston said he rirst began to think about the Federal sanct uaries during the .Sanla Barbara oil spill ~·hich occurred during his firs t 10 days in office, though he had been interested for a long l.in1e in lhe problem of keeping oil drilling away front coastal areas \\'here people object 10 it. His first bill was introduced in 1%!). Sen. George fl!urphy cooperated in drafting the 111'\Y bill~ lo meet ad- n1inistrat1on objections. Cranslon :-aid. and nO\\' Sen. John Tunney is serving as co-sponsor of the legi~letion. Jt has 1vo n the support. he ~aid. of an r1ty councils and boards of supervisors 1n HOLIDAY SPECIAL By Drexel Lady Juror Drops Guilty Verdict in Randano -Trial A distraught but detennlned woman juror gave convicted liquor hijacker Gene Randano the kind of break late 'J'hursday night that has never been given before in Orange Coun ty Superior Court history. ~\rs. Judith Arbon of Fullerton emerg· cd from hours of wrangling in the jury room to tell Judge Claud e Owens that she could not go along v.·IU1 the guilty verdict she had &igned five hours before witb the rest of the jury, Her fellow jurors. many of them angry and all of them Ured and strained, freely admitted that a no-holds·barrtd :session .in the jury room had fail~ to eradicate the doubts that l\1rs. Arbon first e:it· pressed Thursday afternoon when the Randano jury reached a decision. The attractive blonde's te11rs as lhe jury was being polled ga1•e defense al· tomey Lawrence J\lcBride the kind of op- portunity lhat comes 1·ust once 1n • Jjf~lime in criminal tr1a s. He took it by insisting that J\.1rs. Arbo n i:::o with him. Judge Owens and prosctutor Joe lteneghan to the prh·ary of the judge's thambc:rs. Tho. four did so and the rtsuH was that J udge .0.''ens stnt the Juty back to the jury roo1n for the decision at 9 p.m. lhRt led him to tear up the earlier verdlct of the jury and declare a mistrial. ' Judgt Owc.ns. 1naking no srcret of hi~ anger and dis gus t. rrfused to let 1\lrs . 1\rb1)n addres~ him before the jury 11•1" discha rged. He had earlier re fused to allow the Fullerton \\'oman to discuss lhe issues upsettlng her in pri\"ate. Judge \Villiam C. Speirs toda y set a new trial for Randano on Jan. 10. lleneghan left no one in any doubt after !he mistrial ruling that he intends to put the Les Vegas man back in the courtroom • Thursday ""as undoubtedly Randano's day, He l'iUrvivtd a jury's guilty verdict that could ha\'f.I: put him in state prison for :!l least 10 ytit.rs on bribery and conspiracy rharges and he earlier suf\·lvcd a liqu('lr hijacking stntencing that could h11'c pro· duced an identical term . The panel filed b::ic~ Thursday ar. tcrnoon after nearly eight hours of dellberation to tell Judge Claude O\\'tns that It found Randano. 46, guilty of brib- ing a Costlt Tltesa policc1n1n a.nd con• splracy relating lo that charge. • LILY TAILE HOLIDAY SPfCIAL DISK CHAIR-SWIVELS, TILTS, ROLLS. HOLIDAY SPECIAL $99. $139. TWE LVE SPCC IALLY SELECTED PIECES FROM DREXEL FAMED ET CETERA COLLECTION. NOW SPE. CtALLY PRIC ED TO MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY SEASO N MORE ENJOYABLE. FROM GLASS TOP TABLES TO HALL CON SOLES •.• tF IT'S THE UNUSUAL YOU ' RE LOOKING FOR, YOU'LL FINO IT IN ET CETERA. DEALERS FOR: HENREOON..ioREXEL-HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Westcliff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIOAY 'Tll 9 J NIWPOIT STOU ONN PllDAT 'TIL t INTERIORS Prof111lonal Interior Designer• Avallabl..,..AID • r11011a Toll ''" Mott of Or-.. Co111ty-S40·1261 LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coa1t Highway Phono: 494-655 I l 1, ' J .. • Frld11, Nowmbtr 5, 1m NOTICI 0" tAi..• o• IUL Investors Apathetic LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'llCB u:GAL NO'llCE OIOINANC'a NO. n-tt llf IK/11,_.. te wJt) Mollardl ••Y .. ltt•, l'ltO,lltTY AT "lllVATI SA.._. .... "" Alll OltOIHANCa oP Tllll CITT OIOINANCI HO. ""' loul•t IOI. ll'IU ... 1•ill•wl, Ctllter'lll• ... , .... lMn tilOTtcl TO CllDITOltl COUN<IL 01" , ... CITY °'" COITA ,.,. OltltlfAHCI 01' ""' CITY ,_1, ... bY Swtl<oft un of "'' Ltbet '" tlle SuMllOI' Covf1 of !ht SI••• ., ll.ll'lllllOlt COUltT Of' THI MllA, AMINOINO THI! 1.tJt IOITtoM COUNCIL O' TMI CITY 01' COllA Codt, ~ (MlrMter kl ..,..., tht C'•1llOl'nl1 In •114 for m1 Coimty et STA:tiL.ol' CALll'OllNIA l'Oll 01' THI" U•Ol'OllM IUILD•N• COOi, MllA, ~INOINCl llCTIOfll "",u, <O(ll•K I h«efar II •W&fottd .ii.u _, I 1Uv1•1lclt. THI COUNTV 01' OllAH•• IY AOOINCl -A lUl$1CTIOfll Ill TO COITA Ml:IA MUNICll'AL COOi. UCIV !Mrw ,, ""' lello .ii.. 111 .... lnl"•r ti .... I J!•lt tf JAM•J NI. A-~ tllCTlott .... l'loYIOIN• 1'01 TMI Al'PllCATION l',.,,lclll'lf 11111 -tllll ~JI 11...-t MlltoUllN( FlltlWOLO IOfMtllnlt Eiltll o1 JACK J, TllllV, O.C:taMd. THE (ITV CQ~HCIL OF THI CITV Ofl Of' 10.1 PCll"TION l"•llMITS TO IM Ultl .,tV•lll.,..'r1I• ti Wt .. 1 ... M Ill k,_n I t JAMES M. JlllllllSWOlp;. NOTICE IS HEltEIV GIYIEN " IM COS'fA ME"'-·co1s HIEllilV OllOAIN INOUSTllAL lON•• WITHIN THI Niii .... tnv -1i;lflt 11PM IMtt min OICtlltd. ~easons fo r Plunge Oil Mar ke! A naly~ed erH!torl o1 1111 Rc!Y't 111111lcl decitOtnl AS FOLLOWS: 1 CITY. tlll>I llour1 011rl"1 1ny -c1ltndlt, dtY Noll~1 1t '"'"r tl~tn !lltl 1111 "''' 1 11 HtllOlll llt~I ... cl1lmt tt1ln1t l~t llCflON J, TM CllY Council If tN THI (ITV COUHCll 01' THI! CITY Wllt'rt 111UI w0tk It •-l•tel In <• .. , OI 11no t r 1 f ' n t d loll /Ny Ht,...,. NE\V YORK IAP ) -The mutual funds of a •:ertaln have mon•y tn his pocket •• w l" 11U1Hont •r• reowlrt<1 10 1111"""' c11~ of c"" ,..,... t1111b tM Hti.'" OF COITA MISA. OOES HIJIEIY ••IT.ort!INrv -""'llt c111Mc1bY11••· A11m1n11t,1trl• w111 .. u11 "'h'•'• ..,11, ,. "' ..... • . wllfl "" nt'CtlM,., VOll(lwi't. In ""' olllcii IMI the "''''"" Saflltv tnd WIWMt ti ""' Oii.DAiN AS FDLlOWI: llood. Ot .st-.. lilt Of" ''-'"' 11\0 Ill• 11J.i.t1t Dldcl ... rwt to 1111 Ulllt, 11-f acl that thousands of people lreedom of action. H i "h well a.s one hlS mind. and he 111 1111 cttB tt""' lbOw 1<11111"' cou11. 1r cornmu111tv '"'ul•n •11~111"1ti• i1cT10N 1. s.. ""·''· Cotti Mtu 1t&.101to 11rne on lllfldlv •lid 1111 wv1<1 111e "'''"• 11111 CO!Mlltlon• ,,.,,1,..,,.,. o d · ... h ' f 11 "ftlf'I ..._ wllh 1119 MC .. 11rv 1t10 U11Horm l ulldl1>1 ( ... , ,..111111 10 ....... 11!clNI Cod• II lllrttw tfl'lll\IMd to i..11 holidl)''-11 wll: New Ytlr'I Dty, meflflll'fCI 1nd tubltel lo tOl'lfltfl'll tlOl'I llV makt a hving selling stock red@mption.s mean Jess money eser~es It. ui::<..:ause IS eat v-,..,•· ,0 "'' 1111C11riltn10 ,, '"" e1nct •utotr11t1c 11r~ •••lntvl1o1>L.,. • .,.,.,.,. 1flf •MCI •• toiiovo: ~1.1 D••· J111v .tm, Labor 0 1r. lflt w10 SuHrlo• co.,.11, on or 1111, •h• m.rkel rorecast. to Olller' \1•111 be greiter than foretelling of 111el• 1nor111w1: JC.All.NS a. l(AllAllAN. •(<»tdln11r. ,,.. tci11owin1 •mer>dl'!lt ftt It sw. t1J1.I• ••n,11111 -lll41111r111 ve1tr1111 D1r. lll111k111v1no Div •lld 2•111 01r 01 H~n..r, 1t11, 11 1111 otri<.t tO \nve:J. J-""'undS Which ShO~'ed , teo Wlllll!r. BM!.. Suite 1))4, l.1111 m.O. I»' 10dh'll t Mlll<i«ll~ !ti lo l.tMt -l"rovltlOl\l ""' l-l!!•ctoll(lll (hrl11T1111 0.yj P1'oylclH. l'urt"9t, 11111 ot COLLINS AND $NVDEI, 11$ Vt. to I• d lhe reappearanct or HaJey S An••lfl, Ci lflornli MOl7, wflidl 11 "'' SKll9" *2, 1'70 Vnll-lllltdlnt Cldl, l'trmll1 •r1 •HllC1bl4 lo ol'l.ilrfff Ille PIY "' lotttn111 IO< II(/\ t llhl•flll.lt P11, ~1clllc l'llilff•1, C1lilor11!1, ti02n oesn't mean that lhty ;ire ac-great \'etS&tillty when the Comet in 1986 11aq ot tK.>i!llfw .i "'-' vncltrtl•l*I in •II w111c11 wu ••td 11 191'-t: Ntkl"' ,,... io •II ,_, wl"1!111M l•"' .,., 111111 111 not 11U 111111 T~ Oollln CllY ., L• A""'"'' c1111111y ot l .. uralt N t ti • m•tt•• •ll'llllllllf lo 1119 ""'' ol ttltt s•CTION t. "'''""'d 11/lomt llc ~·· VM Ordl111nc1 ... , ... 111 ,.... llldv51fl•I 111.COI tnor• thlll lll!flleYll'lln ,.,, "' Artff(ta, Sl1\1 d C1lllOl"nl1. •II .... •lo'IJ. c · O al a • because the money "'as pouring in feel OK_11,, wlltllfl ...,, """'"' 1,11, tnt ,..,;no~11111111 ,.,,...,, 111111 ,1.., Df .z-. •1111 '""" on1r •• 1111,..,ltte1 1rom 1111 c•.n or workt'9\l11 111\IOlv.o. rui. •IMS 1 .... ,,,, ot v lo 0•1,1110 •t 1110 laws go e lh k · b 11,.1 ""-11c1111n of 1111• nollc1. !11tl1lltd 1114 m1i111111*1 In _,1111t l!m1 1o t1l'n1, bv r1.oi1111-C111lr n t111n bl mend•TOl"'I' ,,_, 111Y Time ot d••ftl 11\d 111 "" rlont. 111~ .,.. v r ning 'rnar el ar' strappers as tl leeds away. LEGAL NOTICE O.ttd 5-Pt....ri.r v. 1t11 c-111on ., 11>telfltd In"'-'• c1111111r 1n 1111111..i _,, 111. c11~ C11U11tll. con1r1uw to w11om 1 $'.'Kt It 1w~'"" 11111r111 111.1 •hf ... 1111 ot .. 1, dtC•ioM not fully "oderstood. 3 u t • t I I tol bl WILLIAM t4, TILLEY •1'111 1111 Fonc ... 1111 loctllont: t-he111TI011 l'tfl'!lllJ will Ill .... -..... ·~tr llnclff lllfrl lo lllt •Ct.ul"" or -•tlon ol LI W or ,. · neer Aln Y S U e:ra C, M<I JOA.NITA I". i"lllEV 1, lft CrOUP F, OIYlllon J OCCU•tntli'I i\llNtllld In lllOlltf'1tl lOMI. ll'llY ..... 11111 1111 "1t n 11\t Ml tMCllJ.O liltl OfllotrwlM, Olllt• lll•n or 111 tdtlllon I• A comet's patc h n the sk and ·t enerally ·s cfl~ttd · 1u,.l!!ll01 cou11T OI' Tt41!! Co-l!!•K11•«1 of ~ w111 uNI tor w111Muo11 11111, t1uor11a ,,Ml """'" wld t-E•cwt\Ofl ,..,"'" -io 111 l•bor•., won.,,,.., •"' m«h•nlc1 11111 o1 ,.1c1cite••*11 ""11..,. 111 c111r11. be l y I g I r . tn ITA.TI DI' CALll'O•N14 '" ol lllt ·~ "'""' dtct'Ollll -~"""''~ 11111111 <"'"lllllHblt lnil•tl•I, nol l llftlOtllt. UM rt1•v"ll lo lllOthH .... l'lfi'ttl by l1'llm In ""'•llttllli(lll ot !!It In •llCI lo Ill lfltl (t•l•ln •NI .,,_,.,, c an foretold dec ades berore lalllng prices. THI COUNTY OI' 01A1o101 l(AllNJ & •AllAl•AN or 1•0•••• Of comt1u111~1, 110111 wll•n 1-. <Olll•a<t. Th• Hn•llv 10• 1111u,• 10 ••rtlc11lt•I., 0ttc•l0tct ,, 1o1iowa. lo-wit: 11.'i appearance. But t/ie ra· Seldom has It been m d 'f "''· A·11•11 .. w111111r1 11vo .. 11111. 1m 111e ou111>1N;v it ovt• i1.ooo 1ou••• '"'' ••t:TION t. T1111 ortln•..c• •n1n '•k• COl'l\111., ""'""'"' h '' 1H<-lllt0 111 St<tlon PA.llCIEL "10. ,, '"•' P""lori o1 Lor • ore I • HOTICI" 01' tllA.lllHG 01' l"ITITIDH lll A111111" Ct HI, ,.." In • 1111011 HOO< .... °' MOl"f "11n tofO .tit.el •IMI tie 111 tvU tore• 1111•1'1' !JO) llYI 11U ti"" LlbOr (odt. ''· Tt •CI l'tO, 06 ••• ..., """ m.,..., lionale ot lhe n1arkel cannbt f1cult to know the immediate l'OI 11101ATI or HOlOOIAPH1c Tit: ttni .. .,,a 1rot1n ~11 11.1.,..1. •f'll'l'I 11111 '"'' 111 .,. ... ,,. 11111 ... 1or-to Th• c .. rr1<tor """ ••v 1r1vt1 end ,_"'"0 In 1_ 11 ,.,.. ,,, be full ,, tood · f t Th \Y (J Will ANO 11101 l I TT l IS Allonlty1 ,_ Ce·l •Klll«• t Tllrouol\Olll Ottllnt Ol•e .. I -tt1t txllrlll~ tf llltM11 CU) dlYt lrll'l'I ltt lllblltltt1c:1 p1W11en11 10 ttcll "'11lm111 M!i.c:lll•,_1 M••'• tt<Ottll of D•t nto Y u1i. .• ers , even e conomic, u ure. e a TISTAMEHTAIV Pvbll\Jltd Dr•n" Cotti o.11v P11o1, •.ooo 111111•• '"1 In ,,... ...u .... t11111 bl 011t1llllllll 1r1<t 1n n.. """"' 1o t111C11I• 1111 wClfll;. •• •litl' counl'/'. c 11r10t11I•. 0,1,,10.0 11 lClllowi: restrospeeti\'ely. Street mind readers are con· E1ttt• al HENllY BENTON JAMES, Octot>tt 1i. :it 111C1 Nav1mk t ~. 11. 3. Th•11U""6ul aow11no A!l1v1 ov., Or1nv1 Co••' D•llv ,.1111, • -1P•111 o1 ,,,.,1 •Fld •11t11!o1t"(1 1>1Ymt11ts ''' e111111nr1111 " 1 001111 In 111 0 N h I Dec•••.O. 1'11 1191·11 ,,ooo 1QUlff '"' 111 •••• -••I clrcul1llll'I ''lntt<:t •lld ...,111;111.o dd!ned In 11\t •••llc1bl9 (OllKtlvo Horllltttl!f"IY 11 .... a1 u 11 lot 11 ttlt evert e ess. a ma r k et fused, because the government NOTICE ts t-iEll:E BY GIVEN 111.1 M•rv • Tnroui11ou1 ,,,1111,11111 1vtr •.OOO 1,,. 1t1t c11., Of C•t• M11•, '"'"'*' w1111 wro11N.,. o,,..,...,,,, 1ute1 wlm "" '°'"' N ine tl.oo '"' 1'°"' Tiit ' "'°'t analysis after the fact is much minds thev mus t read are not Elltn Jarne" II•• 111tt1 t1tt11n • H11ri.,. ... 11111 '"' 111 •'••· 111e ..,.,.. .. 11 111, mtmber• " 111e c 11Y 01Nn1n1 .. 1 a1 111C11111r111 11..1.11t111 in Nortllt•r., c0t11er 01 .. ro Lot ,11 1111net f h · Ito Dr-It of t1olo9••P~I< Wiii •"' lot LEGAL NOTICE s. T11•11119'!llUI 111 111111•1"'' ..,.td o• COllfltH ~1111 tor I nd"''''"' 1t11 11mt. K<Mlll N;t wllh 5tctlon 1773.I ol !~• Sou"1 ,,. 41• u• Weit l'•r•llol wllll -sa er t an a f of e cast , made up on the character of 1u~nc• ot L111er1 Tet11i;n-n11rv 10 "'' PIACt• of PUbllt .u .... blY h•~lnt • ~As1Eo AHO ADOPTEO t1111 IM 11r o1 L•bol' coo.. ""'~Wi•IH!r 11,,. °' 1,11 Lot 71, • Here~·ith then arc some or the Ph s 11 pt•lill-•, ttft1enc:t fO wl\.cfl 1' mldt "' llltt. NOVfinblr. 1f71. Alttlllloll I• 111,.Cltol to I~• Pto•l1I011• !ft l it"ftCI of •M 11 letl lo . llOinl In !tit a e ' lutltllr Ptrllcul1r1, 11111 lhtl Int !lmt I nd NOTl(I!! TO Clll"DlTOlll '· ThlOUO!IOUI t it lllllldlMt i ll1•lnt e llOIEll.T M: WILSON IKllOl\I 1777,J Incl 1717.1 Of !flt ltbor Soulflwtllet-lr ilnt If iilt lot 21 M id reasons g iven fol' the two· \Vhen investors feel certain Plac1 of ne1t111, th• wm• 1111 Oltn '" N1. A·10111 Plt{t of oubilc ,, .. m111v 1bov1 1111 '''" Miro• Dt 1111 Coclt c011Ct r111n, tho lfl'lplO'l'm•nl o1 oqi,,.1 tit!"' 11_00 ''"' ,,.,,,, ""'moat \•;eek plun"e o f neorty 63 about Ille future th feel '"" "lovtmtltr 10, 1,11 , •t t :)O •.m., Jn tl>c! SUl'EllOll cOUIT OF THE tlclor w1111 •n ocC11111n1 INCi o1 ""°'' c 11r"' (00!1 Mt11 1PPren11ce1 c.,. "" C0111tKTor or 111y w.,tt,IY ,..,~ of .,1a loc n i lllent• ti ey CllUtltoom DI De1>1rtmen1 No. J ol tt ld STAT• OF (ALll'OllNLA 11"01 lh•n 100 ATTEST: tubc:9"tr1t10t 11ndtr him, SDU!tl 50' II ' <5" Eltt l lOl'IO ttld points in lht Dow Jones more certain also about their CllU,l. ti ~ Clvk Cent ... D•lw W11I, Jn THE COUNTY 01' OIANGE ' Th<llUfhllUI I ll l>ll!I0 .... 1 will\ • EtlIEN ~. l"HINNEY $ICU .. ""·'· •• llT!fndtd, 1ewlt11 !ht SoYlhWtt!t rlY ""'" LOI 11 • dlll•llCI ] d t · t A h J · ll'ot CITY ol S..nlt A.111, C11!tor11l1. Ella!~ 11 l'EAll ONETA CDX. tlMI u1~1111 1100! ••fl~ It "'°'' !11111 .U Cltv Clri ot 111• (M!rtc!or or 1ubcontr1c1ot 1mp1orlno Ol l~.ocr 'lttf ; inenc:t "lorin')9• ... .U!' n us r1a veragt t at ntay o~g·lerm com!111~ments. 01lt' 011.0 ,.0 ..... 111, '· 1t11 know~ •• PEAAL D. cox. Dtte1std. '"' ·-• 1r1at, c11.,.111 c ... ,, Mt•• "•dt1m1" 111 •nv 1 o" , t " 11 c , 1 11 1' Et$t P•'ll't' 10 u io "°'"'.,..111,1, Hne or may not have ended. hurly safe pred1cl1on therefore w. I . st JOHN. "IOTl<e 11 11~rt11v •Iv•" 10 crtc1l!o<• 01 1n 111 ·c1sa oe1 '°''"' '""''· ~•n.. STATE OJI! CAllFOINJAI ss occu ... 11C111 " •llfllv 10 111e 101111 of .. 11 LP• 11 1 oltttn(e o1 .u.n '"' I A r · h he Ph ' 1.._ CoYntr Clt•k "1t tboVt Nmed dtc-nt lh1t I ll rtlol>KllVt IN;rtffH IOI' 1,.1 11'11 ll•llhl C0uHTY OF ~NGE I fP!lttfl!IC..11'11• corn.m!ttff Mlr .. I lllt tilt lo 1 llQ/nt Ill ltld Nortl\etlltfl'I' ll!\e (If . great number 0 in· IS I at w n ase ll ~omes OllAHAM .. JAMSJ ot•IOll1 h•YIM cttlm• "'"'" "'' ttld w-llltel In Stctl-la. •nd "°' 11'1111 " CITY OF CDSTA MEIA I ol 1111 oub11c work1 Pl'oftc1 1no wnlc~ lot 11: 11\tnct North )ti' 11 ' 4$'" Wnl dividual investors not all of clearer so will investor in-..,. wu1 0c .... •t.'-ll••:t•'-'" "' r-.iul•.O 10 1111 ''*"' wi.111 "''"1"..i." 1. EILEEN " PH11otNfV, c1iw C1trt; 1dm1n111_.,,"" •1tor11111n111IP P'°'''"' 111 •Ion• 1110 Nor1._,1,,1v u111 Of lot ?I·• ' , ' L-INdl, CIUltrnll 1'11102 1111 ftKtHtry YDU(l\e'I, In 11\f olUCt ol SECTION 1. TMJ Otlllll•not '11111 !1~t •r>ll •x..+l!clo Clt rl< ol mt CllY (OUllCll ol ll'lt l ,, ... Ill' • ttr1ltlc1t1 o! •l'P«IVl l litllnc:e of U0.00 IHI to lllt "°'"' of, them s m all. are disaffected. lent1ons. Ttl; Uul 4H....UJ tne Clltl °' 111t •bov• 1111111111 court. or 11111;1 11111 tit ;11 lull toree 111lt1v uoi d•ys !ht cnv o1 Cot•• M•••· htrtlw ct ttltr T,,.. nr1111,111 wilt 11.., II• !he ••!lo o1 btillnnlnt • They are frightened b , la 4 Th stock market • 'd A1t1""'1 lor: r11111-r 10 PftMnr llltm will! the 11ec1111ry lron'l 1no 11ttr '" ..,, ..... , •llCI Prl"' 10 11111 lht •boll• •llCI ror-lno o.,1n1nc1 1111>r-.n11t:n 1o i1111rntv""" "''' w111 bt PA.llCEL NO 1• Tkt Sourn~••ttY . y re\e -• e IS sa1 PwQlll/led 0111111• Co.ill Dt ll'f PUDI. vouchttt IO ll'lt und•••l11-,, ,,.. o!lkt '"' •~1>lr1llPll ol llllttfl {II) Cl•Y• from lH No, 71·JI Wll lnlroduced •llCI C0'\11 ..... lld UNI 111 tl!t .. '1orl'!ltn1:• .. IM COlll•td . ""'41 '"' o• ·-· fol i-lno dllc•IW lions of ineptness in !he to reflect business and Nov""""' 5, '' u. 1"1 :ioo..11 o1 11rrt11. sre1rnt & cl111111. 1150 U111C111 PtHHt wu bl pullll~ OllC't Jn '"' .. e11o" _, 1ect\Ofl 11 • ,...,i., "'"""'DI Tht r•tlo o1 •-•ntlc1t to lou•M~m111 111 Pl0...rtv. '<I wli: Tll•t "°'"11°" ol l01 21, brokerage industry. They ha.ve ecooom· conditio nd th 11111< Towt•. Dt1 .t.mo l111Ml11 c1n1tr, D••-Cot•• 0 111v l'llDI. • MwsP•-o1 111d c1..., CllUN;U on "" 11111 d•Y Pl """' e.tt.,. •1'1•11 no1 11e ••11 thin -'° Tt•c• No.. &. •• per M•P l'lltl'tOOf , IC ns. a e LEGAL NOTICE Tor•t N;e. Ct lllornlt Jll501. wlllCll It ftlf ·-·1• c!rCUllllol\, D•IMtel Incl OUllll•htct Oc!ot>er, lfn, ..... tl!trt1ntt t•l..0 •1111 llv• ••c"i>•~ •tcOtdod 111 look " f'lllt t personally felt the e ffect of outlook for profits 1n Pl1ce °' ou11,,.111 DI "" ul'ldtttl111ed 1n_111 111 1nt Cllr ot Cotti M•w. Tottlh1r w1111 16oo>tec1 11 1 w1101, 11, rHvl•• mH llnt A. Wilt" untmolO'l'ment 111 tne ''"' o1 MIKtU•neou• M•,., RKorch ot D<"•~ - h . h · · · I Wh'J I' l)tll m111ttt 1er111111...., •o l~t ettilt of ttld 11\t n1mt1 ot ll\t m"ri1>e11 1! 1111 Cilr of "Id Chy C11U11tlt l!tld 11'1 1111 lit d1r of COYH•N llY Th• loin! 1111>r1"!\c111'1IP Cllllll• Ct llfornlt ltK•I-1, lol1tws· tg ~r comm1ss1ons and poor particu ar. · 1 e p rospects FICTIT IOUS iusiHl!SS a1etct1111. wlftlln tou• men1111 ''"' tilt C01111el1 .111111'°'1no 1f1l1111 111t '""'· H<>vtmblr, 1t1 1.""' "'' toti-in1 roll can '°""'"'""ht• t•cffded an,.,,,..,, o• s1111nnint •t tn e :n..1 Northl•IV CHnt;. ser~·1ce. are better than they had been NAMI ITA.TEMINT 11 ... 1 l>Ullllc•!lorl ol 11111 llO!ICt, PASSED AHO A.DOPTED 11111 hi •• ., ol vote: 1J"" '" ,tt.t fO cllYf Piiot to"" t-.iuur ol Wld Lot Jl ; 11\ttl(I Soul!I .wi• 11' d" ~. . th h ... . d • Tnt lollowl119 PttlOll I• toiftll bl; .. ntll Dtled Oc:loOtf 211. 1971 Novtmllt" 1911. A.YE!: Cou111:llm•n. w11,..., Jordtfl. ,.,, Ctrl.rlc1lt. °' E••l •• 00 '"' •""9 "" Nortf'te!ltt"IV uur1ng e pas! year I e 1nany 1.1US1nessmen an con-11 . EUGENE s. cox. ROBERT M. WILSON 1"111-1 .... s1. c111•. li1ml'M'lt a , w""' 111e r1Vmt1e• 01 111o•en11<:11 in t+nt o1 ;,1, lo1 71 1 """"'• Soutl! ,.. 41• number of odd·IOt s~has sumers remain 5 0 mew hat s "' Do l E 1111 c I( a u 1 L o 1 NG E•Kut0t a• int w.11 Mtvor o1 "1t CliY o1 Co1t1 Mt1• NOES: C01111tllme"' N-1111n1no 111 l!>t 11t1 •AceHr• 1 •1!10 01 •J" w.11 P•r•ll•! wl"' 1 h"I . . • MAINTENANCE. U91J Poll<ltrOSI $ult• o! tlll nectttnl. A.TlEST . A.ISENT: Cwncl1m1111 Nont 11\t IG llvt , or Not11!"'~•1'tly li<>1 of st lO l OI JI • been h igher than pu1 ses apa thcl1c d espite the JOit they .. C". Stnll Anl. C•1H. •••rett, $111 ...... telll"I EILEEN p Pt-l lNNY IN WITNESS WHEll.EOF, I !11Yt c. Whtn ,,,, tr1d• c•n I/low Intl Ith dltltlloC• al llol.11 '"' lo I PO/Ill 111 '1~ ... almost dail)'. Jn four of the received Aug 15 wenc1111 w. W•l•M. 13361 Vi• s.n 11'0 U~klfl ••11k T,,..., C!i. citr~ or •nt h .. tunto 111 mr h1nc1 1nd 1tll•l'CI tl'lt s111 rtol•cln9 11 "''' 1 JO "' 111 sou111..,.11erJY un.e 01 ••II lO! 11, ,,11 , • • . ~ G•O•l•I. l19UM t-1111~, (Ill! fflll. DI! All'\I l'l"•n<i•I Ctfll•f (01' OI Co1t1 M•.. of me Clly ol Co111 Melt 11111 JFl(I •• , ol mrmtletllllP lll•ou~ t.PPftnlfthll•P DOlnl N I"' tt.00 IHI !tom !tit .,,.., past five months !he sales o f 5. Tight money. The Federal Tnl• Ql/11,,.11 1, IH'lne t01111UC1•t1 11y i n T•t•nc•. c .111 .. 1111 ttJts itATE oF CAL1Fo11N1• ! NoYtmllll", 1f11. 1.,1n1n1 on 111 •M•111 t1t"' .i1tt..,ldr or Wt<1tt1y c0tne• o1 ••id Lo• 11, th•N;t t t f d h d ... R h . bee I . h tnol•lol~il. Allorftln ,., l"ltalltl' COUNTY OF ORANGE ) IS EtlEEN P, l'HINNEV loct l!r,.,. Not!ll j(IO ll' 4~" Well ffOO 1911 ....... mu ua un s ave exc ee = eserve as · n s ov.•1ng I e wenoeu w wu'°" ,...,,. . CITY OF co~T.1, MESA. ) C:lh Clttk •Fld 1x-ou1c10 o. When tht con1rte1or otov11111 1,111 Sauthw•tterlv 1111, 01 ·loT ll,. ,,,. purchas es. The s mall investor rate of nioney growth each Tlllt ,1,1tn11111 1111<1 w11~ !ht covn•~ Puo111111<1 O••P>O• CN1t 01.1r Pll11. 1. EllEEN P. PH!NNEV, cut Clo!•~ 1Fld Cit•~ °' tne Cl!Y C""M!I evklence "'" ht tmPloV•• tt•a1111rH1 most Wt1torrv <orM• " t..tll l"' 11 • • • b · k • j Cler~ of Otintl COUft!Y en Oct 11 lt11 Oc:IOller 11, 2f •llCI Novtmlltr S, n, tll-Olllclo Cle•~ o1 11\f Chr Coun<ll of If!! of Ille (lt'f tP CDll• Mt.. tP!lttllllCe• 11'1 I ll II hi• tonlrKls on'" lll•'l<f N0tlh 39• 4t' .c5" Et•! t lono u !d JUSt isn I uy1ng wee since ate August . Now Bv aiverly J Mid-. 0 .. 11t:, c'.ou~tY 1t11 71'2·71 cnv o1 cotr• "'•"'· ll••IO'f ctrtllr m" 11uoi1~ 0<11111 ca.11 O•llv l'•lot, 11111U•• ,.,..,•o• of 11o1 leu 111111 -Nort11w11tt•lr 11,,. Of ••Id ld 11• • If this is so. 'what is he doing there is less money in circula-ci.r11. """,.,,,..., •nn toregolnt oro~n1<>ee No, 71· Novombt< i. ,.,. nu.n •PP•tflllco 10 •ltM 1ourn1ym1n. 11tt•11ee of 1:w.11 '"' 11 1111 p0lni '1f . h h ' . h Publill'lld o ...... Coif! 01Ur PllOI. lt Wll lnlroclucld 1no COfl"clt•ld HCll9" Tiit COf>ltKIOI" II '"Wittel lo m•k• ill'O!ftnlnt. Wt! JS money"? lion than l ere \\.'a s tv.•o cicto!Mlr 19 '"o NOvtmllt• s, n, "· LEGAL NOTICE 1>v •tctlon •' 1 •ttul1• mffl!fl!I of 1110 C011trllllltlon• to "-'net• ••l111u111tc1 for 11>• EXCE"T; Tnir """'"" 11 Liii 11, The answe r is revealed b y a months ago which meaos Jess 1t11 291'1·1! <'.llY cour>ell ~" 1h1 lllh °'' et Oc:llbtr, LEGAL NOnCE •dm!11111r•r1on of 1PPre!lllc11111p P•111•1m1 T•1d No. 06 11 .-11 on 1 m .. , . ' NOTICE TO Cll:D1TOll I'll, arMI lh .. tll1tr' PllHd tnd tdOPltd II llt tmPIDVI rt11!tlHICI 101111"!kt1 or r~ \11 8oo11 U. -,0111 t. glance 2J. housing starts. now lo invest 1n s tocks. SUPllllOI COUllT 01" THI! II • wnol1 ,, • •tlllllr mte1!110 ot .. 10 NOTICI OP l"U&LIC HIAllNO lou•llf'fmen ln '"' tDll•tft!ICHb\e ··~ M!KflllnlOUl M1p1, •Kori! Of Or11111 averagiog more thar. 2 million \Vhelher these likely ·ex· ITATe-OF CALll'Ol.NIA '01 c11v counc11 hfld on tne ltl "'"' of •l:l'Ofll! TM• clTY COUNCIL on l'Kh conr.1•11 ""' 11 olher '~''"'""' CDUll!v. c1111or1111. Wl'lkl'I nn w1111111 • . TNli COUNTY 01' OIANGI "ID~fmOt•, 1911 , bY ll'>f! IPllowillll toll till OP TH• °" Ille Pllllllc wotk1 1lle l •e "'lk•!'ll l'Kh •!rlo ol' ltnO 50.00 l"I 111 wltfh, ll\tl a year : at the savings rate, planallons of the market's Ne. A·nns ~01t: crTY 0 ,. FOUNfAIN VALLIY corrt•11>w110111. sou1111.1r une 11 ••let 11r1p btln• whi'ch remai·os welt O"er 1 past beh ,;0, •an be ed 1 E1111t or M!n11le Sttll• Tt1omo1on , 1110 AYES: councllmen: w 11 •o n, NOTICE 15 HIEll!IY GIVEN 111•1 011 Th• Cont•eclOf '"" •nv wKe,,.t•1cto• dH<rllMll •• 11:1i1ows: Y a '°" . US 0 •• " known I I Ml11nl1 S. ll'IClmPtoll, Oecet tl'll, 'JO<d&ll. P•nKlty, 51 Clilr, Himmtll Tuetdl•. NcvtmlH'• II, \ti!, t i t :OO P.M. l!Nllt him 1h1ll tomolr "'l!h lht Be11111nl1111 ti IM l11ltr11Clion of percent; at Savings Bonds foretell the future LS another C,.. l FACfS NOTICE is HEREBY GIVEN to ll'f NOES· counc:l!l'!lt 11· N-111 1111 Counc:ll cni mt>ett, citv Htll. 101«! r,-,,.''-'•' ot sec:.11ori• 1m,.11 ""' 1111.6 1111 centtr 11111 If Tuillll A,,_ · · h ' h h •tt Th ft . I (rllll!ot1 ol' Tiit 1bovt ntmed dtcedtnt ABSEHT:C11in<llmen· HOM" Sl•lf• A•e<>ue. F11Unl•ln V•l!t r . 11 111'1~ tm1111 111<1rt11 c11. 11 <l•w:tlllt'ct .ln • ~ rec:o<dlct stat1st1cs. ~· IC s ow an in· ~a er. e , U ure IS a ways '"" 111 P'"""-' h1vino c11lm t 101111t1 1111 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, nivt Ctlllorni•, lht Cl•r C11Uncll will Mild 1 •n•orm•I•'" rel1t1ve IO •111>•f!'ltlct1hl• 1" llook lstl. Pitt 171, OHlclil llKordt c rease of $1.lH billion in !he different than lhe past. 0 n I~ a f ",,q Ory d ite Ct !:i~~ ~:;~:;;n•11~ ~:'~~1.'r~ 1:~t1 ~~~; ~e, ,.:"'" "':,,•f' ;"~ ":1111 .. ~n0 •,~:1~;-inoth•"'o1'1 1>111111, ht•tl"" en ·~~ 1011ow1111: 1 ~:::cr:;~1:·~:~ ~e::!i~·~om"~~; ~'.-Mid c°"'"'y,_w11~ tt>t ctn•t~ lint of rirsl 10 n1onlhs of 1971 : at car The small investor h as for deal'r EP..!l t!fOVIQ..e YO~ the 01 Tht cit•• o1 1~1 •l>o~• 1111111td '""'''· o< 0 e '" v 1 '"01 • ....... 1 "" •1· 10"-Ch•n•• H•. 1•• • 111 11•1tc1 tiv 01rtC11r o1 1N:1u11r111 111111on1 .,. ottl(!il ..... ,. D<lvt 11 111ow.1 on • m•o of Tttd ' Com""efe: f~;,!f;"-.,,,iCe Novtml>o•. 1911 "'e Pi11111l111 Comm!nlOll IO •tJOll• Ill JI 1 1 1 • Ip Sin No. lll •Klrd.O 111 8~ l S, l'llf 2f, sales. "'hich topped one instance. been estranged ! .... '•···=fr/'!'"~;;;,..-.... 1v0~,:::..,:0 ;~::· .... ;;~·.~,.:·.,~~':::~: ~~LEiN~P Pt-11N:~ Cll~ ,,,_,,, ~'"''tel ,, 1111 1011t111111F,~~::.."t~~::'1or'::'i.~~~111 <1t,:=.,, ,,,. ~1"<1111,,_,, ~··· •occ•d• of ••Id million units In October. before a nd come back The YQU,,M9U "''""9 o1 Tl>Olll•• w. t-itnOH...,,, J r .. w E•.i 'v ''· '"" •• " ' '°"',.., °" W••• •fld Sltte• 1'°"" "-1 10 01v111ori ot A11<1••11llce1111'> s1111c11 rd1 •'Ill ouniy, u ld 111'""..cllon •1M> btlno ' Wanl. ·cer-o, ¥J18rlS Clis-11!11 51retl. Sul!e "lumbtt f!1, (Piii ot 11" C•lv Council OI !l\t Ill P().)500. iii brel\Cll offl(e~ J~OWll 111 Or•nt1 Count'( Survnor'J The Small investor iS buylng OUlflOW Of money from mutual :\ r\ IW ( · Mtl•, CalUernll t'lt?I. wlllCll 11 !!•t OllCf Cllv of Co!lt Mt•• l"!t mttt~I ls btl"I or<><eUHI PW•wt nl NOTICE IS HEAES'f GI VEN llllt l~f Al!011m•nl look A.ISW·IR.,., on 1"191', the house he couldn'L buy dur· l'u d ight be t cus ·your ~~ carfc. ro-ot 11u11"e1i GI 111t unoe .. 1ent11 111 •II Pullllil'lf'O or~nt• co.ii 0 •11v •1101· 111 lh• Plinnln• l•w• of lllt Statt °'Moulton Nltutl wirer 0 1t1r1c1 wlll •K•IYe "9; "'eMt N. 39" 41' JJ" e-.•• 1.,, "'• ll s m emporary. grall'fil belou~. you d, cide mlll••i M•'•1"1119 10 "'• "'''' 111 1111 Navemtlt• s. 1971 ?t11.11. C1ll1ot111e (COY''· Code tJ.~ t1 1..i.1 •nd lltltO tildi 11 "" oltk 01 11<1vit Nor"'"'""'v oro1-111on o1 wllll ing the months ol extreme Uncertainly m ight diminish ·-on 8,..,., leasi, anywh e, at dtct<1ent. wu11;11 '""' monlll• tlltr •l'lf '"' Fou1111111 v1111r Zor>r111 °'""•nc:t. Eni lnttrln,, ,11 .Savm LyOl'I 's""'· 511111 con1t• 11"" 11 _Tut!l11 i.""u' 110.00 ''" · h h • k•' A h . '• ''' 01 1 0 1 01 T~• ZDl'll1111 Otd!n1nct . Z011 l111 M•llS. 11\d •-· ,,11 .... ni , .. , ,, ., ~-·• ot 10~00 ro the 1H-1l11n•"" o1 • 11111t~1 curve money Ilg tness; es buy ing mar o;uly. pat y, being the anyti~ 11'Q~1';, ~0;, ~. 1;1~."" "· LEGAL NOTlr.E E•hlb1t1 ,,. Pll' 111e 111 "" 11111111tn1 A·.M. °" N';em~r 10, 1911• ",t' ..,.1c11 timt <Dlll•v• s""111''"' •IMI ~•vln•, r1o1us t h e bonds that once didn't pay other side of enthusiasm. can 1 ~omi• w. wenc,,.on, J r.. Dtc1r1me111 11111 '"" 1v1ll1b!e '" oubllc '"" ,11,, 1111y will tit oubllctv" -ntct •>111 ot iooo.oo t""'' lhen<e Northetttotrl'( -E~eculor of"'' w111 ot QllDINANCI NO 11·ll l111P1Ctlon tnd e~1mln1tlon. rttd $el0 1111te1 -rd, 111111 tit '°"' "" •lone 11ld cu•vt lh•11U1h • ct11tr1! 111tl1 \\'ell but which now yield 5.5 flipflop. And. as has happened ll'I• i tiove "•'"ed lltc.ell•"' AN OllOtHANCE 011 · THI!! CITY Tn<M on1r1111 to IHtlfv 1" 11.or o• 111 111119 11 "" P11llllt wort. hu1tna.•0t• Of 39" :rl'' O:J" •n ••c a1111nct 01 MO.oo percent; he's buyiog lhe car before tighl money might ,,,0.,11, w. HtlMl•rwft, Jr,. COUNCIL OF THE C1TY o~ cosTA -!•Ion •0 111l1 .,_., will lilt t lvt n dtKrlbed •"" °'"'tel !ft the. ••Id ""'to Pt1111 "C". A.h1 ••'•IP ot lllld • ' . Ill EUI 1'111 llrttl. MES•, AMENDIHO THI UNlf"OIM Ill OPPOl'"lunlly ID clo •o II turlhtt rtlOIUllOll. •S.00 lffl In w!dlll •nt 5e><.ome•lv lint of that may be a bargain because quickly become easy m o ney Jf 111111 H1lmlttr 11 ,. IUtLOtNQ coor, ro r11ov101 "O• !Morm111on 11 t1t1lrte1, YOU mt¥ cOt1tecl Ettl\ 1110 or PrQPOui ,1110 ff mtlle out Mii 11tl• 1>1!1111 dtKrlbtct •• tatlowo: of the freeze; he's putting h is the Fed also flips ·ts mind Co••• M•"· c1111H11lt .un l'llE ZONES ANO Ao o,. T 1 "'G lllr Pt111nl"' Dt1t•••m1111 •1 "1·1•1• '1111 •ncl •ubm1t1t11 Oii • IOfm 1c t1t o1>11111e<1 11 ., ~!"1n,,.ino •I the 1•1rte1rKtl11tc1 Pol,rtr I • Ttl• (7141 5'11·71M Sl'l!Cll'IC I' !IE J 0 N If I AS •tier lo lht tl>a~t Utm, !ht otllco ot BO'l'le E!\llllllfllllg, Ill $ou1h C ' """'" conttn11ln1 tlOllO lt.10 cur.,. money where his confidence is Anyone who can assess all 2626 HARBOR BLVD. A11.,...., lo< f•-wtor esTA•ltlHED •Y OFFICIAL l'lAT CITY couNCIL OF TMI!' Lv'" sir,.1, ''"" A..,, cimornii. E•cn 111rouah • c..,,,.1 •nti. of 5" a ..... '" -in the b<>nks rather than the these poss'1b'1l1't 'es aod l'ubllslle<I 011r-Cotti Dtilf Pllol, AND MAl(INO l'IOVISION5 l'DI THE CITY OF FOUNTA,tN VAlllV bid"' O•oPM•I "''"' bt 1ccornp111l@(I b¥. ••c: al1!1nce ol 10000 '"'· "\ 1 . • COSTA MESA Oc1•r u, 2'1, ,., i nd Nov!fl"lb'" s, FILING 01' SAID l'lAT, 1N THE MAll.Y E C:OlE ctll'lltt'• chtct. or 1 cntck ct t1ltiet llY • loc•.•f'd 111 ~ c..,11h 01 0..•11ttt , i1111 securities markets. others such as 1nternat1onal 1971 1111.71 OFl'1c• oF THe-c1TT c1..1111. c1"' C14A •••POt>i\til r ti•nt< 0,, 111~,,·, 11and tOf •n o1 c 11.1or11111. 2. On. elf.cl Or thl.S. "O· , · d call 540•5630 Tt-IE CtTY COUNCIL OF Tt-IE CITY Pullll!hllll Otl"'e Cott! 01l+r PllOI, i rnounl nof ltu lllin 10"o DI !he imounl SA.10 PllOPEl!TY SHAll I E SOlD IH u monelar~. e<:onomtc an OF CD5TA MESA, DOES HEREIV Novt mb1• 1. \fll 2'9'1·11 al the bid o• of ""10111 tMl<llll lo• AN "AS I~" CONDIT ION :~d~e;rs~t~a~o~d~a~b~ly~~· ~is~~t~o~d~e~'p~1~·j~'';';;;;;po~l;il;ic~·a~l~d~e;v~e~lo~p;m;e~o;b;· ;-~;w~i~ll~;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1:~;.Y;~L~E~G~·~L~N~'OTt:'C~E~~;;;:~I OROAIN AS FOllOWS. w111c11 mt~ wlll acceo! 1 c""1r•tl 1na THmt or S.ie: Ct lh 111 11w1111 mot1eY ot COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS FOR THE MONTH OF NOVEMBER COASTLINE·s OWN PROTEIN POWDER SECT ION 1 Thi! lllt Cil• CllUncll ct m.ct1 Ol••lllt lo !ht .,..o.,. or In !ht ll•Ot !llt Unl!ed S1Utl on Confllm•llon ol N it, NOTICE DI' PU&LIC t4 EA I I"' C !flt Cl!• ot CMI• Mtll, dill DY Dtll11•r'K'e LEGAL NOTICE of tlle Moul!Ofl Nitut l W•lu .O>tl•kt °' Plrl c1111 I ncl lltl•nu tvl-tel liY . •ll'DllE THE l'lANNINO COMMISSIOH No. n.u ICIOP!tO. on,.,.. 2hl d•Y ol Juflt. E•Cll IVCh blO.,. Dr-..1 ll'lwll be •••IHI no!e Sl(U!tCI by m<1<llllll o• l !Ull Detd 01' THE CITY Dll 'DUNTAIN VA.LLIY !911, odoo! the Untlorm !1ul10l1111 (ode O! MOUlTDH·NICUl!l WATl:ll. OISTl!CT 1no llltel 1t th• ol\ICt ol ltlt Ol"rlcl '1 or D" lllt orOPetry W tole!. Tt" Pf' ctn! ot NDTICE IS t-iEA:EIY Gl ... EN 111111 Oelf 1910. p1trtu1nt to Cllftp!tr VIII. A.rliclc 1, NOTICE INVIT1NO St!AllD •IOI IHllOtl !~t r!m1 I" t~!! notlct provllltll. tmount bid lo bt ~01ltlld w!fft -II S1u1ra ht• Pt!lllDlllCI lllt Pl•nnln• ~ectlon 1100. Costt Melt MuniclP•I Coc!e, l'Oll THI! CONJTIUCTI~ ·ol' Tnt •bovt mtn!l-1 cn~k 11' boll<! Bkll or of11r1 lo bl In w•lllnt 11\d "'rrt Commlu lcn IO •tverl l oll 1• l . 5. 1· '· 1' !I bll11q PIOvlctHI 111 Stcllon 11111 ti ••kl EL. HtOUl:L ltl:Cl.t.M.ATION shill .... 91Vto'I ,, ''"''"'" "'" th• bl rtc1lwlld 11 "'' 1!ott11I• lfflct ,, 11\jl ot l lodl; ), T•ICI !l)O lo t t•ffGe Dllrtulllt U"llO<"m l ui!dl'\' CD!lf 1n11 f!rt IOMI , 1'011.CI MAIN OICHHr wlll tflltr lllto t contrtcl II !lm1 •lltr H•t 1!•11 PllllllttllOll iltrtol 1nd IO ll\f Pl"OVillOlll ol (ily CO<lt •1111 .n may b~ O•dlfttf\tf bt C•Nltd .no Tftf IOl•d ol Dl•Kllfl ol Ille Moul!Oll IWtrltel the work •!Id Wiii be cl1!mtd II DtlOtt d1t1 ol lllt. Admlftlltrtlflll IC~Ol'dlN;t "'1111 Ille P•ottH oulllntd In e1tabllshM wllll ift 1n1 (I..., ol Cotll Mt~•. Niouel Wit•• Olilrlct Of Oit ft•t county, tlavld&led l1m19t1 H Ille succeUlul •estr11t lllt 'ltnt lo •1/ec! •nv 1rid 111 Sttlt Sutll!lvlt l1>11 M•o 11"· lnis oroOf•IY Tiit Cl!¥ ol Cost• M111 dots M•tlw Ct lllotnlt , ~ertl,,.llltt In iom• 11111111c11 tllddt• rtlunt lo ff'lft Into Ille tO<llll CI. bldt. la 1llu1ted •1 lllf •outh111I Ca•n&r Pl 111111 1'111 Ot'Cle•t !~ti II h !n lht lle1I ltltrrtel lo 11 "Dlitrlcl." 01 Mttby lnYlll Tne tucctHful ll!Od., will bl ,...11lrte1 D•!H Octolltr inn, 1171. Ttl!Mlt"I 11111 l!ll•d •no comptllt > •.It lnlttt•h 01 l~t H11n~. S•lt..., 1Fld ltlled blll• tor "1t 1011-11111 destrltlttl to 1'Ur111111 • ltoor eno m11erltl boncf In t n LcOt MIY t-11"11n. i cres. A Print 01 111• PrOPDIHI Wel l••• OI !hf c0tnmu11ltv, "'•' ctrt1l11 public -~; Tiit Collit•11c:tlon of El ,,._nt tou1t lo 100"0 p1 11\t corit,I CI Adrril11l11rt1rlw of l!ll•le Of r.'!_tublllvl.ion of lell<f •I on ll!. In Tiit t ! I 1f1t Cit of JAMES M Fll.ISW"'O ""'""In• D!rtc!Ot't otfice •ncl' mer bt lrt 1-• ~ t OOP!td w th ft Y Nl1utl 11.e<lemtllorl FMn Mtl11, lottllltt "let •llCI • l•llM1tl P<!rlotll\lnct bOl'ICI tn . ..... (ot1t Mt11. wllh I ll ••DUrllnllll wor1i 11111"110. 11 •n •mount OClllll lo !~ of "1t tonlrtcl COllllotS ANO SNYD•ll. e~•mlntct bY 1ny ln~rtllf'd l>ttlOll. • TN CllU"Cll 111111\t• lll'>d1 '"d dKlt•I• ""-~ In Oe!tll •Fld oescrlbtd In "'' pdct. 11ld bond• tw:i bt 11curtd '"'"' I Atlornot11 Al l 1w Tllose lll1!rl"g to ltttlt'f 111 ltvor or t11 r~ar lite JOtlt J, shOllld tor !tit 111111, 11,,,111,,, l r•wll'lfl. U(:llons. tno wrt l'/' Cl)nlplnJ tllhfl clotY II lht llJ Vl1 Cit It 1"11 OPJ>OSltlon to 1111• tMut•I w!ll boo t lvl" 1lo•em111llontd •~•IOIOI Ot ldoorltd wllhl11 IHClllct flont on lllt 111 1111 offlct of llovl• Moullon NJ-I Wtlt• Dlt!rlcf. 1'1clllt l"illltdtl. Clllltt"ftll, t12'1 1m1>le -tunil'/' lo do 10 ti lht !he (llv ot c ... 11 Mh1, Accl!'dln•IY. E"9IM•rllio, 112 so.rtll l"'" Slrttt. s.1111 All toro•111 11111 c-lllonl COl'lltfnld 111 JUU , l'l1n11lnt Commlu ion ml'tllnt lo be htll 1111•! It .oGpted 11 51crlon llOI of At1i<:lt An•. Ct ltl«Qlo, Whitt! Ooc~m'"'' i tt llV Ille fnformtllon IOI' bl-1, t lltchHI to ~ubl1111td Ort"'t COid O•lly l"f!OI, • Wtdfltldl,, No.-rmber 11, ltll 11 l :JO t. \.htPltr VIII, II ltlt ~o•lt Mtll llllt .-eftr"'CI lnc:or,...lltd htttJn. l"ot Incl 1 ~lrl ot 1t11 lllO t«m 1"11l ..,vtr11 I t Novembe• J, •· 11, 1'11 JtU-1' 1: Pm, !n lht CllUn<il ChemPt,., Citr Hfll, Munltlptl Coclt, a 11ct!Ot1 wh•Cll wlll •ttO rurll1tr parflt1jltll. ••le•tnct It hetellY lllOUgh fullv lleKrlbfd htrtlll 11\d 11'1111 LEGAL NOTICE ' 10100 SlllH Avt""•• Fovn!ti" VtlltJ, 1, fpllowl: mallt 10 ••Id 01111,, P!"ollln, -•tWll'ltt. l lto Ncome 1 pttl ol lht CPlll••cl. deriv1d 111fi•o ly ftol'!I 11yb1•111 -w ith Lec i• th in tnd p1p1in. C1Utot"~'LAN"llNG COMMISSIO"I $ECTION 1. "SKlkln l lOI, f'lllE lDNE ttclloni tlld M>telllt•llont t0t rht ffl>vt Tht Mwllol Nltwl Wiler-Olal•lct NOTl(E OF TIUSTl!!E 'S SALi OF' THE (ITV OF. O"IE dt1ullltd lmptOVtmtfll t11litltd "Con!rtcl rtMl'lltl "1e rlOlll lo •tlttl 1nv t llCI •ll H• FC/4'U F --;_ FO T V l EY Tllert It llHtOr tdollltCI lltt l-Ollt Ill Docvmtflti tno Co n 1 I r u ( I ; o 11 bldt ~ PottlOlll ol 1n¥ lr>d t i! bll1 or lo On Dtc lier • 7 lfll t Tl ·OD M ~, EL MOLINO BREAD MIXES Whole whe~+. w11b!1•ch1d "'hil1, tyt , p11m p1•nic~e! -l tb .tl111. M1~e your b111d -Your l~mily wilt love it, REG. $1.09 SPECIAL-99' HAI N AVOCADO SHAMPOO Vo11 m11tl try 1ni1 -11•1 •~t ~re•lttll II E G, II.SO SPECIAL $1 .19 VITAMIN E D ALPHA OR MIXE D 100 i.u. R19. Specl1I 100 site $2.45 $1.98 250 lit~ 5.79 4.95 '200 i.u. I 00 size 250 siie 4.75 t 1.49 3.59 8.97 IEMEMIEli Dtn1 our ViUmln1 ,, ,rlrt thtllt - Qvtl!!f 11 11'1111 llnH!llft._ ·- WHILE THEY LAST C-BEST UH Sill 0111~ 150 int Vlt. C 1 00 "" ll11flovt11o!Os SO "'' R11tl11 •111111111, ,,!< ..... , ~ ... S'ECIAL '3.98 LtT'S GET WILL W o htv• 1omt lt fl "••• 1t 1i., SS.•1 ptic1! G11 lhtm ~•w!' WJ,1! • Chrhlm•1 9lh idt•I ' ... "" ·~· $2.49 t1.tf, SPECIAL CONTINI NTA L'S Acidophilus Culture I ,.i11I Slit IEG. -tt.1J ""'" $1.98' Thompson's Seedlen H~ Dlppff Raisins FLAVOR TREE SNACKS I Ol. Slit Sft.t!l't '""'" J.ull\e St1«•1 lt't.-4tc SPECIAL-39¢ 2 SUPERSTORES TO SERVE YOU! Cl1't~o~Nsl-f:R~oD ~!.e~;~v 0:'1nc'::i,11'fe:1:·,, ~ 17:: 1~~ !.":'~~~:,':":c~ic!"! ~~1~vu~l~:i~·~~111.: :';1~1t11~~ 1!~'."m1111" in • tt!d noir ~~LO~~~~ ~ottTGAGE ~E11.V1cE"' co~ ) Stcrtl•ry !o tne Ofll(f of l~t (11'1 C!fr~. w!llch 11111 llrt F0<ct Ml ln Stld oltnl •ncl IPIClflcitilll'll MOULTON·NIGUEl T 1 0 NIA 41 llVIY t lH'llftltd I Pul>li1~~"11~,~nc•";'~~:~~n OlllY Pllo!. tent on• tlllll b• 1ubltc! !o 11! ot Ille m1v boo PU~ch•ltd •• Ille etllct ct I OYlt WA.TEii DISTRICT 1:":;f~.r:~~ ·~II ~u7:!tnl to ~II:· NCNemlH'r J, !2, 1911 7"l·1l •"'IOitlmtnll el !hf u"i!orm Bvildl"O Enilnterlllll '"' l l0.00 "'' iet. C~tc~ By AltAtnclt• l ow'" ...,1"1 A, kP• • • ••tell V C<>11t o• 1t10, •OPik10lt 111t,elo". muil bf mtOe PIVlble 11 lhf MoullOtl S#(rt tl •V v 11 · ltc •• Ind Dotrh C. l•cl 1s, ---------------1 SECTION l . Th;I ordln•ncr •hi ll ltkt Nl•utl w,1.., Dliltlcl. Pi;lllhl\ell Or•l)Vt (1111 Diiiy P!M>I. l\uMlt ntl I nd wl!t 111<1 'fC"'dHI WY 5, LEGAL NOTICE rilftt tM bf in lull to<c• lnir1y !JOl at•• l"un ui nt 10 llw ltbor Codt pf !~t Sltte Novtmtlft l, ), 1t11 1t•9·71 ~r'D, ••+~!It. No. 10)1, 111 !look 9111 . OIQt -------cc-------J!tOll> ~l\d •!Irr 111 ~•nit•. •nO prior IC 01 Ctllfornlt. 1111 IAOllll'On Nliw~I Wlltr .i.. If Oll•cl1I R11<ord1 In !ht otlfct ol !'S 1ne •~Pl•lllo" 01 1111..,n 011 01v1 ••om lh Oh trl(t h•t •l<t•l•IMll in, pr,vtrH11g LEGAL NOTICE ~11~11C""i"ty ~~tt'llt;Eoll Or111tt C11U111~,. IU,EllOll COUil 01' THE P•IMQt '"'II ff Pu&!l!llPCI on<:' I" !ht rt!e Of otr ditrn Wtltl of !flt locl l!l'I lft 1 or" e, L AT PUil i STATE OF CAllFOllNtl FDA Ot•1>11e (1N11I D•ll• Polo!. 1 n1w1p1P1• 11 w!llch 11111 w°"' h lo IH' ptdotmtd to !Ml Sii llUCT ION TD HIGHEST l lDDEll FOii TllE COUNTY OF Oii.ANGiE ,e,...ttl tl1cu>11lo11, Ot•llfl•I •no Pllbll.nHI 11 llttt ltect In lht SllUlht•n CllUl!'lllt NOTICE OF INT•NDED CA.SH IPt~•llll ti llmt ol Wll In 1 .... 1111 No. A·70fl7 In Ille Clly OI (Olli Mt11, IOllffnt r W(lfl Mllltr L•IK>• ,,1,.,.men! tll tel In ll>f &ULI( TIANll'!ll mOlltY of 11\f Un!!.O Sl1tf tl II Sou!ll NOTICE DI' t-il!AlltNO 01' 'ETITION me n&mt• ol lht mfmQftl O! lh~ Cily olllCt ot "'' AllOCl•IHI G 1 " t t t ! NOTICE IS HEllEllY GIVE N lllel Jahll frOll1 tnlt•l!CI lo tho Ot•llllt Cat!ftly olO fOI Pl08All! OF Will ANO FO• Council YOltnQ ,., ""' •t•l~ll lht MITlt. COftlf lC10ll of Amf•k•. s 0 u I II t r ft p D'-'•lo, clol11• butln., ••• o•onotrlil'I ,'O::"l'IOule. cu.,. or 5•1111 At11. S!tlt of llfTl:l.I TESTAMINTAIY PA.SSED ANO ll OOP1"ED fhll h i dt Y ol (illl0tnlt ChiP!tr t1•rbol' l••t co. wlloM llllllntH •dct•tH 11 I lorno1, 1!1 r.91\1. Iii!. t llCI lnT1r111 Etla!t ol EDWARD GO 11 O ON Novtmbt•,-1971, Coorlti of ""° tt;,.,.•I o•tvtlllnl ••tt ot :lODI Htrbor •IY<I,, Cotlt Mt .. , (1, t'Jl7i, COl'lvtyHI IO •llCI ,,_ ht ld Or fl lllllltr ttlO HAMILTON. 1110 known ti E. GOllDON l!OIEllT M. WILSO N Pl< tlltm Wlott 01 OtltnnlMd llY "'' County o1 Or1,,.e, C•!!lor"lt . II t l>oul IO Dttd Of Trull 111 lht llf-;lr tltu.ttd In t-IAMll TON, DKf••HI. MAVOll OF THE CITY Ol11tlc1 ••• on "I• 1! Ill prl111:l•1I Pl•C• m1kt • 1111111 lr•n•t .. ••le lo Jame• Hiii lh.:i ~lfv of Cot!• Mtt..t. In ••kl c-rv "IOT•CE IS HEllEIY (;!Vf"I th•! OF COSTA. MESA. ol bullMll, lo ... 11 l Mtrllrth ll•r Pliit . 0111gMrv, wnou t>w1ll'lf"H •dd•tH l• 171i I tt!t dtsc•lbfd ,,, Eileen Hem!lto~ Wllwn ~ti lilt<! !lfrtln 1 ATTEST: Suite 101, l t t uM "llg~ol, Celllornle. At WJnOovtr" Or., Cotont llel M11, Cat1n1r of Lot 7~. lttct l..C'/, 111 !I'll City Ill' COii• Ptllll<111 lo< Probitt 01 will t no lot EILEEN P. PHINNEY r-.iul'td bY SfcllOll 1173 ol !flt labor Ort nff, C1llt1rnl1, lllt foltowln 1 M111. CllUlllV II Or11111t. II Ptr mt• ln u1111:e ol ltl11r1 Tttl1m1n11ry lo '"' Cl7V ClEltl( OF THE (ITV COllt. """ (Ofl!tl dOt !O Whim lllt p<-tly: , ~::1r:.,.oi:11 Biik •• 0191 I, otl!lllll\el' •tltrfl!Ct IG Wl'lltn Is m•llt To• OF COSTA MESA., COlll<tcl l'lttriot 11 I Wl fleO 111111 -· • All " !ht 1qulpm111t, l'!ltlt•••lt. I MllPI, In"" otllc• ol the t11rllltr Pltll<ul•r1, 1Fld lhll !ht li'flt 1no SJAJE OF CAllFOflNIA ) c""y !hfrt'Of t i IKh loll Iii• •U11Pllt1, me•tn•IMll1e 1no olhrr 11\Vt<'llO•Y covnl'/' rec.o..dtt ol will COll"h. plKr or h•••lni lht Mmt h•t bet" •e! COUNTY OF ORAN GE ! Pro.-ldlno ma! -•Fld ..;...h•lt l/mtl of 11111 cetU!n rel•ll 11wlln1 iervlce P Mort commonly -llOWn ti: no 7•1h IO• Novembe• II. 1971. •! 9:J(! 1.n'i., In ,hi CITV OF COSTA MESI\ I $S lht 11111 0•1v1lll111 •tlft ol Wiii lhtil bf 11111011. ~llOWll ., o ·-•rla'I Ht•l>a• c::.'.~r. Colli Me11, C•lllorftle, 0•1111e •• CllU<lloom ol OtP•••m•"' No l ol \lid '· EtlEE"I p Pt41NNEV, City c1 .. ~ p1ld lo• 111• workl110 llmt mote ltrlll Tt•ICO. s "' . ! ·11 II Id 11111 I CllUtl, 11 100 Civic Ce111er D•IY• Wttl. In lflll e•·oll!cfo (ltdr. pt lltt Cl!~ COVM!I OI filhl hOUrt 0Utln1 t nt 0r>t ctlt11<111 d1r Tlllt P•OffflY ll IOClltd t i JOCll :••bot cov~'n111~1:, =~rran~y, ~i.:~.. , 1:;, 'ii:' ll'>f! Cllv ol S1111t Ana, (1llforn11. "1• Cl1v ol COi!• Mitt. htrtll• cerlll'/' Wl\Ht •utn -•k 11 r1<1<1\ttd 111 ctM• of &!Yet., Cotlt Mnt . Counl'/' ol ••no•. •eoira·,,. l"ll f P ' Ollecl Octotwr 16, 1911. !~II the •~~vt t nll loteoolnt OrdiMN;• ••l••orCllllltV tmt•tt••'•dti t•u•tel !Iv flrt. (t1\+0t11l1 ' ' e, P 0 1 '•'1 D h • Ot w. E. s1 JOHN, No ll·JCI w1, lnt,oductd 1no co"•ldttt<I llood, Ot "M•r 11 111, .., proi>tr1r •no 1nt bulk !rtnl!e~ wll! bt ton1u1nm1!f'd ·~~~~br1tnc~. lo OIY tl'ltr r11n11111~• Covntv ci .. ~ 1tCl•011 DY •t<lion ti • •nult• m1tlln1 ft! llo\lble 11me on !vno•• ~no rnt iev•n 011 "' 11w-r O•c, h i, 1911, 11 int e1trow ~flctc 0:1 '¥t ,r '!"..,'i:~t ;;f~Wsi'' ·~~~ STECK AND MAllSfON ~•o CITY COlln(i! on lhf 11!~ dlr .. lettl 11o1101r1. IO wl•: New Vet•'• 01r. OtPl •!mt<'ll OI WESTW.t.rto ESCllOW I II ' 0-• • .• w 7,_ ~Ill C1!H1clo l tyd, Otlobe•. 1'11. 11111 "1tre.lltt DIHtd tllCI Memorial Dlf, J UIY '1h, llllor Otv. CO., 1011 Wtfl Stvelllf'!ntll. Slttel, S•nll lh 1ert1! ~~om W1v:m11t1 I. ltlO, II lh Mid "'""""' C•lllotllll tlltl tdOPll!'tl •• , wnol• 11 11\f 1eoul•• mtfllnf Vtltr•M O.r Tllinkltlvlne Otv •"" Anl, CllUftlV ot Dt1n1e, (1111.,1111. :'° e Pro l ed. Id 11\Ctl. If 111r, UIMll• Tiit Ttl: !JUI 1'1'·111t dl•tUt el w 111 Clh CowMll ht lll on !ht ht l •r of Cllrl1tm•t Di;: P•Pvlaed. lu•lll••· lh•I Wllnl11 lht Piii lh•tt r1t11 1t1111tr•o< .~'"!x~~~~ ~tel111~ ;:~:,'e,'':,;., m.:•:i;; A!ltri.tr1 to.: l'trlll•i.t' N""rmbfr, 1911, bv ttrt 101111Wl110 rpu t•11 1111 otv 11>1" fQt"t m•" '°" 11,11 elotit nour ~11 11.0 ullPd !ht 1011-11111 llllil"'" 1' ,1, crrlltt llY 1110 Ot:l(I ol 1 l1 P11llll111ecr 0 •1no• CN•! 0111r Pllo! Volt: div th Ill be nor lt11 1~111 TWo Dollltt "'""' •! th• lallowlng b V' l "t I I Tht btflef,ClttY vl\Clt t ltld 'Dffo ol Ol:lober 2t, 30 t nd Nottmbtr S. 1fl1 AVES· CoYt>Cilmtll! W111cn, Jor01~, !17.00) mort lh111 l11Urr1er11'11n rtlt lo< !ht lckl•tlllt. NDllt lrusl tiy rttlOIO ol' 0 ll•ttch Of llllllllT I" ltli-11 Pillkl9•. $1 Cltlr, H1m11'11!! ttlll Of work""ln f"volvtd. Tne Pllrtllt"' ptl(e wilt be N II It "' 'et1H II tel I it· /11----,-,cc.,..,-,.,..,-,,,-,,,,----NOES. Covn<llmt": N-11 tllltl 11t mtnoilorY llOllll 1nr IGll-S: C1sll 1111111'11! t Krow. f ti °"~ MCIK '' t I V• LEGAL NOTICE AllSENT Counc:llmtn: N-C011lrac1or 10 wllpm 1 conl•tcl 11 1,.,1,0ec1 T••n•tet•• n11 11tr11 ~ut11IOfl ol !lie 11"::,l!tol10t:...,txKutH1 .~no ·~~~tred 1 to ~~ '"' WITNESS WMEREOF. I hlVf lllCI UllOl'I •nY wbf.onlrKlor llncler hlm lo pr .... llH 1no proPtrlY lltlllt Miid u .... • w .. tll ~l••llon ... ~tr11111to 1tt my 1111111 11\d •11!•HI th• St•I P•Y llOI 1,., "''" m• SOiid YKlllHI ,11.,. !ltrt11nd1r to"ly •• lht Aei!'l\t al Of'l•vll '"" Dem1no 111' S•loi, •llCI "''"I"' NOTtCI OP PUlllC Hl!AllNO ol' lht (l!Y of Co•!• Mts• '~·· 2llCI dtY ol to I ll l1bore" -·~men .,,., mteh•n!U Tr1n1ftror Ptncllflg c1111Cl111lf)fl ol lilt :let~· bt•-: ,'"" ~: •l~\Ofl l~u~· 111~~:1~1,1!!. :~11t~Y111~1~~N1111T~~,! N6wm!\'f.._ 1tn, tn'llltivtd tw .,;em 1n"" ••Kullorl of Th•""· Tht 'Klltdulld clo1ln1 0.11, '' oe· "'"'~" :;1~0~101r1:, ,:.:, 1t1:'rt":1t., .! c ! EILEEN P. P>11NN£Y CIW\ltlCI Tiit ""'!"' lor !ollu•• to 11Mtl In Clvfl SKl!on 34«1.1, lll•M llt no J ly 16 1t1l Int ,,., • I eel std • lei No;:::,:..,: 1~ "~;~ ,r lh~0·~ ~,. .,t; cur C:ltrk •1111 ex.ofl"l;<:fe Cl>"'D1., fi11tw.1"' It •• •H<.lfl1t11 1n.$tCl\Ofl "'lltt '"'" •bov• d•'' 111d ., tuc11 11..,.. ,:,i(t ;,. br~•tl'I 11,nt"~on,,_;!.!:, 10 M bl i .m .. ~ 11 -the--eillt• 11 1111 miner (IH1t. of ftlf (fly Ct1111tll ol Ille 1115 ot Tiit l •bor Colt. • 11 •II EKrow conOl!!Ol'll ht vt b«ll com. •e<:o<dHI 111 boolt; ti').! Pitt »t of ttld """ bt "°'Cl· ln lilt Council Cll•mbu ot Cir, ol CCII~ Mttl T~1 C1111r1c1or thlll ''' lrt vfl 1nd 1111'!111 Dr l~t ,otr11tt htttlo. O!llc!e! lttcordi ' ' lh• Cl tv t-lell , 77 F•lt Otlvt, C051i Mtw. Publl,llcd O•t nOe CNll Dtllr Pilot; 11ibol1ll11Ct PIYmtnti to ti~ -llrnlri DATEO: Nov, !11, 1t11 Dtlt: OclODe,." lt, UJI C111fornl1, on lllt llllowl"' lltml' Novrmbt• J, 1971 ltll·7 ntldtd to "'tcult !ht wort., 11 tl>tll J•m•i ti, O.utll••r (_ o l ON I II l MD"-T GAG € llEPEAl OF OllDIN,,.NCE to lr1v1I •nd tllbll1tt N;• Ptymrnh l tt Tttfttftt" SEllV)CE CO Df CAl.IFOltNIA ts!ltlllllrl.,. 1 ree• Ylrl tt lb•d: of SO LEGAL NOTICE Otllllld 111 11\f IPPllttblt collec:rlv1 WliTWAllD l!ICllDW CO. •• ttlO TrVlie. b1rt&!11lno 11re•mtn" tl1HI wl"' If>• 1111 W. ln111ltlftlll St. • let! IOr Ill PtDOf!fl ltt Mlwff'n H1mll1011(----------------(0tPtflmtnl of lnOv•lllil llt!ll"llOlll Jn S1nt1 Ant , Ct. nl'M ,''.,,',',',",~.'.",,",'•r~,1,',· Sit"! lo ltlh S!rtet 1110 OtlwHll I' llfft O It v ""' v Pomo111 I ncl Pl&c,,,111 Avtn11~ •"" FICTITIOUS BUSINESS ltCOl"dtntt W\111 Stct!ori 1m.• ot lht ElttOW Nt .. q SI'S H711 NAME STATEMENT L•bot (Ollt P1111ll111td O••ntt (NII 0111¥ Piiot. btlWffll Pom1111~ Otld Wt llttt Avenut~ I MOULTON• HIGUIL WATll DISTllCT NovHtllltr ~. 1111 .JCICIJ.11 Pullll-O••~t CNll Ot 11Y l"ltll!, wilt" !Ill tf•t r t rdl •IN! Of\ !llf-Th• t0Uow,11q 11tn111 It dli119 but ntlt rr.tOflCE INVITING SfALID •IDS No.......,blr S. 17, lt, lt?l "'9·11 t•l1!111v t lltYI ln 1•11 1•t8 ~PEC1f'I( 11• 1'01 THE <O•STllUCTION 01' LEGAL NOTl~E LEG'L NOTI CE PLA.N l"' P•-..0 •llev ll-n •• "IEWPOllT HOMES. 11tlS Sk•,··~ '' ' 1-----'--,,,m'-~----1"==~~~~-;,~~~~~~~= l'lllCt Avtll\/t l .II) IHI In w<dlll, llKtltG (l<ell ' Sufl1 E. P,0 BO• (I(, "l•wpor! MIGUEL lllCLAMAT ON l"UMl'INO F 11141 blllwt~n 19th S!•rtl tnd Html!ltl" S!rttl 8f t cll, C1lll. STATION !'ICTltlOUS lUllNE$$ NOTIC~ 01' PUILIC HIAllllotO TO t• tll(I btlWetn w,llKt •Fld PomOtlt D c l("tubuhl . .)tit Str>d~n• ltnt. ,~. lot•I ci Ol•Klor• at l'h• MoullOl'I MAME lTATIMl:Nl HILO I Y THI BOAllO 0 ,- A'tt!lllltl, 111 !llt Cily of Co"t Mfll (Ottnf cfel M••· (_t lllornll. Nl111tl Wttfl Dlt!rlcl al 0..1n1t (llUnlY, lllt fol low!"' Pll"llOll It llOl"' Ill/~'"'" ,'",,',','o',',101,•,• .. •• ,••,•,•,•,•,,,cou,',,',' NOTICE IS FUltlHEll GIVEN 11111 •I Tki1 t>vtl ... u 11 conducltd llv All (1lllornJ1, htrt!ll.flltr In '°"'' lnJl•tw:t t Ii: .. tct llmt -ol1ce 1nv fll(I t ll ptflOlll lfld!~ldutl. •tlttttd 10 II "Dlllr!ct," do llt•fl;IV tnv!lf Tt-1( GOlD MINE, 111 Mi in SI .. Stt! 01' HIQHWAY 4l10NMlHT, 9HlllT l11llrt11fl:I mtr •-•• l lld llt huro II• O. (. Kntullull! l•~ltd l>llllt lo< lllt fol10wl110 dl!<tll>ell ltacl\, Ctlll, 11·1 ·1111 Cl"t Co;mcll o1 111• Cllt o1 Cott• Mo• Tn11 11111me"' "''' lllfod wltn 111• outillc "'ort; Tiit Con11r11cdOl'I ct , El ltnl•ml" •. lhin•min. 1009 E Natl<• 11 kffll»' 1lv111 lllll 1110 '°''d el tft 1111 11.....,.111tl0flt<:I !ltml. C11Un!J C1t r-ol Or111tt '(ou"IY Ol'I Nlo11tl l.tcl1m1flon l"um11lftt Slt liOll, N-oocl l"I,, Allltmflri, Ctlll, tlto1 Sol-•111!'1 ti 111, (Ol/111'/' ol 0r•ftlt. EILEEN I". P11!HNEV Oc1obtt" 17, ltll lottlhfr wlrh l h t_rt....,~l wort Tiii• IK.>!JllfU Ii N in• tondvci.tl Dy '" $lilt ol C1llforn.1, Wiii hold I l'Ullllc (II'/' C!"k Of rtlt J•1111' T. CllH'l'll ltittl'!o. •1 ~ In lft!lll I~ dtscrlbltd lndivld\ol l llttr!ne Oii t l'•td M l"lfn of HJlhwlY c;1y ol cent• Mf'tt Al"""" 11 l.w In IM 111111, ordllll. clr1wt"'1 1tttlon1 a;nliml" •• -Shtllllmin Allt nmont for Vnlv1r11ty O.lv1. t~lblt ~u-lillltd O•lftff (otll Dl<IY l"Uol, Jin °""°"' OrlYI. S\111'-..k • •,nd "IP!,C!~~~I~ 1lll Ill fb•..o.ttk o of ,.,,lr1111tfl'tthl flllll wlftl "'' County l"l•I. Flttl'I SU IMl'Vllll'lll Df\ITICI. lo,,,,,. NO~fiiiliir $, U lf 7fl0.'1 NIW-1 •flC!I· C1l/forfti• '26'4 111'•1 ~"l.._rlN---;-tl? lovll'I Lron Strfft, C!trk of Oro .... (llU"IY Oii : ()(-1. U, 1"1 1111'1 ""°' ctnltflfAI 1110 111tl"lllt rlP,1 or C:i:..:..:...::7::,0:-:-:::::=;;::-..:..::.::1 T•~·-1 CTUJ lll·Mn S1n1t ...... Ctlll .. ftl., w11lc11 dO<lll'!ltnl• IY Btrtrty J. M•OOO>. °""""' (wnty WIY 111111 Iv • DOlllOl'I ot 11'111 I""' ... LEGAL NO'l1CE Pllllllll'ltct Or.,.. Cotti D•lly l"ltll, •1• I»' "'11 ''"'~ lncor-1111:1 ntrl lfl. Cllr-•' rwee11 S•"'' AM Avtnllt 11111 tl'VIM · OOOl'lll' " 11'd NO¥trnllll' $, U, It , Ftll lli!r"'f• •trllcult tl, rtttrtlltt It Pu.,.ltMO Drt l'ltt (Ott! D•ily Piiot, Avl!lllfl In lht ffl)ll'ly (Ollt Mt'NI «M. ,.1.,•• 1•n 1'U·ll "'"'"" lllMI• It 1•" 111"" 11rofll•1• OClobtr u 22 2t •1111 NoYln'lbt• s. s Id M fl 111 bl Ir.tit Oii 11\f '""' ,. dr1Wlft111, 11(11(1111 11111 t ot<lllt1l\Of11 lor ' ' ' 7tol t1 I ' llt W l'ICTITIOUS IUltN•is LEGAL NOTICE 1111 1110V1 te1crl11te1 11no1ov1mmt 1nt1!1!1<1 *'" · ••v cf NovM'lbe•, ltll, 11 •11• hOl<I or f~all NAM• $tA.TIMI NT .. Conl•kl Dt<1IMtnU IP'ICI Cll\U•UC:llon LEGAL NOTICE a'ctock A.M • In "'-Chlt!'rbln ol 1111 Tht lolllwlne --••t Oolllt ... 11111 S01Cllluli0111 •nd (tllt!IU<lloll l"tl"' !or 9ott0 of .... ..,Vl\Ol't In ,,.. o.;,.,.. IMllltH II~ l'ICTtTIOUS •U"H•SI Ille COl'llltllC'llOll of II Hloutl 11.ec:l•mt llOll ' UNI CDUlllY AOml~ltlllllOll B11lldl"', JIS NOl"llt lt11n1l"'IOll •••ch •llir Shoo. 1!162 N•MI ITATl:Ml!NT P11mll"' S111\0fl, ''" oltllt I... l'ICTITIOUI llU)ll'IEIS srum .... "'ff'· Slftll An•. (l ll10<n!1 $0tlnH11t S•.. t-l\lftl•f'\110tl '''°'· lht tollowt!\t H•IOll 11 d<>lftl 1111111\nl \P«lllc1Hon1 m•v llt PU•ChlN'lt •' "" NAMI ITATtM•NT Copl11 of 111111 PIOOOUll ., ..... ,,,, •11111 Calltorn!t. ''' oflltt of a ovtt e~1lnff•l1111 lo• 110.00 Hr '"-1011ow111, ,o1r1011 It dolnl blll!ntu !tw Ci.•• al !hit BNtd O! luH•vl•ot"• ·~ I' i ' l C~1rlt1 A, l •OUcl•. 21'1! N r rffmtft V0·V0 '°Ull.NITU llE $11tll',!ll.S, It! Cl'I«• mutt 11t "''d• oivib!e to 111• •a: ,.1,t1ll(I II htl'tlnt ll'ltdt It 1101 COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS l•~, S1nt1 ..... C•Hllt~lt ,SU Nf<l'l'l)Orl l lYI ., (0,11 MUI. Mo\11!0<> Nlt utl Wllot Ol'lrkl. SONllllM P11111!111i.,. ComNftY, 1)11 ll•otoo1l1 '°' IU'""' 11rucu1111. l\llct P l rouctY, J"J N, Frtpn111 Ct litornlt 'U~f. l'~•w•nl to tl'lt l1bot Coctt ot ft1e 51•11 LIN;f Drive, T11111n, (tlH ,0.ltllr OCtoCMr lt. 1tn. <-. """ '"'· '°""'"" '°""' """" '" '°'""" ••o., o (001'°'""• "'° Mw•M ,,_, Wo•• A. """" P-UJI Lo~o °'"'' 9' OoO" O• '"' ....... fl\[1 llutlllfll 11 btlne Cllllll..c!"9 llY t ~t 1111 Mt•. C•llfor!"t. 'IJt)i. Dlt11lc1 h11 11ctrltlllt0 lilt '"tv1Hln1 Tu1n", (.elll SU~El;v!SOllS 01' 011.AHGE COUNTY, H•ll11''11!1. T~ •• t1111t"'u I• bilnt ~ucttel by •n !llt of Ptf dltm w••H ol tht lo(tlllty 111 Tl\11 llutllltH 11 bllftO <ond1K!ICI bY '" (A.Lll'OllNIA,, TUSTI N-10'4 /RV/NE ILVD. (neir S••·On) 544.7134 C114•1ff A. llrovc!Y !nd!vlt1u11 lM\J(lt thJ1 wor• J\ to 111 ,.,..,fl'ltd 10 tit lnt!vl011•I, (S EAl) -• • • T~l• \ltttfl't•ll! ffltel ... 1111 Int (Oyll!y "flit• 1111-111 lfltct wllll "" County M•1t1r Ll bot A•t-M fllltd I• "" Tl\lt tllltl!ltlll lllN wltll ,... to.111tv Ctllm!Y (ttnl 11111 ••..itlClo l Hll~rl.l'I l~u·r• Cltrk ti o,.,,.. (...,.,,., ... Ol:T. h . lt'1. (1tl'k ., Ortllllt COUfll'/' Oii' CXI. u , ""· llllflCI ol tho A1toe111M G . ".,.I Cierti "'Otlnto CIUflfv ... ~ Od. ,,, ltll, Clt r'9 of,,,.·-· ti $\,lptrTIW t ~ COSTA MESA 270 E 171" ST AllC• I" l rouclr ~t1111n Ur1u11 11 lllt11ltd In Tiit $ovlllt'n C1Hfol'nl1 A, MlllOtd p-WJl.llAM E 11 JOHN , ~ .. 9537 I V .,....,1, J, Mt1C11111. 0flll'l!fy COUMJ' ll'f ,,v, .. r., '· M1ttd0«, OthtY Cou~IY Con'lrtelln ., Af'l't.•k•· I 1!11111, n •r ••v•ll' '· Ml dolloll DllVIY c-"' Of Or•ntt COllllty. C.11forhll I (lt•M ' Ci.tk c .11 ... n11 (hl!lllf, Clttll. av ~bll I,. Ct•l•l• ••nkAm•rlc1rd M••tlr C"•rt• •uD1!1hld O<l ftf• ct111 Dilly Piiot. ,lllllllhtd Ollfttl (_0111 0111¥ l"llel. C11t11 ol !ht ........ 1 -••lllllt r•+• 114 l"\lblllhttl Or•lllf ("II O•LIY 1'1111. Dtltuh' t l"-.,.,,..,.,,...,,,...,_..,_..,_,._,.._,...,.,,...,.,,...,.,,..,.,,...,,,...,_..,_..,_,._,...,.,...,.,,...,.,,...,.,,..J OCIQibl1 u . n, 111. lllCI Novtrnlllr J, Oclolltr U, 11. :It 11111 toov...,.btr s, ,., •ltfl't w1t111 '' dtttr!Tllllfll ov "" Octobor ,. tnO N....,..btr a. 1t. It, "111tlltlll'll O<lflff t..1t D•llv •111\j lttl -aJl..11 ltTl 'l;U.11 Olttrlc l 1rt 11'1 fl!1 ti 111 •rlt'lll,tl oltet 1'11 2'11-11 HoYlrtlW t. 1tll Jf1'Wt ....) '\ • -• t J •t • . I I. • 11 OlllV mor , \Sltl lllc.TIT10U• IUllNlll NAM• f'tATIM.INT T!fl tollOW!l'lt Mr-II delt\t M 1MN •• u,uv u•sv *1 MtrW 1iv.i C-1• ,..,... """ TW'Alllte 6 J•c-llnt OtM'tl U0.1 ""11/Mfl \.lfll. Huftlll\tFeft 111(11. """ Tlllt N!flttl [1 "'"' (Md111!M " I 11!11"'-t\l'lr,.lltnMind • "'"' l•r"""' °""11 n 11 t1•1.,..,tnl tllM wlt11 ll!t County S!_trt ef Or11'" tel/h!V.., Ott 13. 1t71 er. lt-IY J MMIO"" °'""'" C.111.mlV ~lltttol Or1ntt C...11 Da ll• P lot QctOOw If. n, 11 t l'll W9'Ve!'llbe t ltll !IU.71 LEGAL NOTICE ., 1"" ,J(TITIOUS •UtlNlll NAMI STATIMINT Tii4 i.ltewl .... MrlOll 11 llol.,. tul ...u u C.M ... ltTllt ,:,1HA~Clf.L IEllV CL!'S Ille I Ill llff Sul11 I t onlt A11t ""' Mlt.11•11 Jtfl'ltt C.1"1111 1 f 1 I I J,.1 kl'-0 Stn•t Ant flJo.s 'nol1 llut nen la tit flt ~llld Liv I" lft'1111du•I M~ J C.1~1 ~ 'no!t lltl•-'1 ll ltol WI"' IM (D'J""" t llf'; el Oo"tlllt C.eUlllV Ott Del 11 1911 ay ltvt•' J M.ooe.ot Cff\lty C.e...n1y "'"' •ollthllf!od 0 tn9f Co.1 Odelllr :tt Ind Nove,..,bo "" Ot y ~llGI J II It 2'11 11 LEGAL NOTICE ' utt• lllc.TITIOUS I Ut Nflt N,t,MS l lATIMf.NT l~I lll!tewlllt)>erlortl •I Oltlnt hi/I ..... •• lttT•O.-•AY 111' Ort nlO Avt - Sc.111• I C.&111 MIMI C.1! I tUl1 'Cllt:tter L I t rv JllJ C1u 1 5tre..t H--' l..U. C.tl I '2Mll J t..,.I 11 l udiley 1 16J I "'ht,..,tOI' (lrtlt Hll!'ll 11tl011 lttdl C1llf •lrtf6 G• t" L l uckl•Y t \11 IClllU un °'VI Mu11tlntf0fl lttc~ Ct l l 'Hl6 11111 bull"9U !1 Mint Clltl(IUC td It\' IA. GtMrt l PtllntrJ~I~ Jtmfl " llKll tY Tlll1 1104tmtnl !I Kl w *' ~• C&J~tv Clwlt .. °''"'' C.aunt'<' 1t11 OC!Cllt JI 10 1 I Y ltvtrlY J Mt ddM OePuly C""""'° Cltrk Publl..iltd Orl fl.. C.otll Ot Oclcltl 11 t r>CI Nevtmbo J "" LEGAL NOTICE • 1m2 Jl(TITIOUS IUll"'l!l!I tl&MI: ITil.TIMINT ••• " . 1'!111 TI\1 l0How!n1 ~ 1an1 1 o do 111 ~111111 I I THf GElllt E COMP•NY O<:ovt •lll• Ul O..vtr I) NIWP0'1 ltt<ft " ..... Wm S Gtrrlt 113) Oevt r Or Ntw-' Btt<ll C.• • ~.._ Gtrt'lt •Httor im o.w ... O vt NIWPMt l~ftr> C.I .JllJ1 bullMU II bt 111 COfldU(llll tw I n !"lllvlduol! Wml..Gt • Tll 1 1f1t""'"' It td w 11 l'l'lt (Ollfl!V Cit ric ol °''""'' Ceiu..tv .,.. Oft 11 1971 I W ....... ty J Mtddax 0to11tv (!11/nly crerlt Publltl\M ,,_, " 0.•11tf Cotll DI Iv ~ al I M Nov...,bor J 1) n 1'2).11 "" LEGAL NOTICE II 11144 'ICTITJOUS I UtlHIJS flolAMI tTAlSMSNT TM !ellow hi "'''°"' tno eo ~• ~ ... Ull PRIMO •11o NT NG ASSOC /I f!:~ 11loll ,._, Ne 1 c:o.i1 MMI m11 G• Y ft~rt LfWt n lltll "ft"'MI NII 15 Coalt Mtlt '"'' ~d f llh., Gt ttl! J ).111f11f"lfM th lN1 bu" II N ine (-ut:lfd bY a Pt~r.tll• Gtrr It l ew1" Tlllt Slflemlr11t rlltd W ttl n11 (PUl'IT'tl Ci.rt. DI Ort llff C.ountv °" Oc \J ltll If l•11t r \' J MlddOJ 011>uly (OUM\' Cter~ )"\lbllltttd °""'" °""°"' u 22 l'9 (pt'I Ot y J!'llOI t "a NCl\le,..,11• l 111111 "" LEGAL NOTICE II 11'4l t ,IC.ltTIOUS I USINISI H,t,MI ST,t,lt:ML!'NT TM lot!owll'll "''°" 11 dOl"I Dulll'ltU .. 0 P IN ol: 0 A 0 ltEC.ltEATIONAL .\l!H C.LL!'5 501 Mt rbor l lvd 5•" • ),.. C.1 111 """' Nllftlfl DI t Tv•nt r llllJ '1nt t Anl I Faunlt l" Vt lff C.tllf '1IOI TJI 1 bu11'1tu 1 be"' (Ofldutltd bY ,,, lnif ... dlltl ~ Ntl~lll Ot e Tu "'' Th!• 1111-flt flied ... tft .... (OUll!y C.le<'t al Or111;e C.Ollfltv Ofl Oc• 1] 1111 I Y atvtr1¥ J Mt dl!O!C Otttll!Y (!11/l'll'J' CJ.,• #t191!sl'IN Ort~tt ndoilt IS 21 :tt Cett1 01 IY P lot '"" NCl\ltmbl i 213211 "" LEGAL NOTICE , JJ11' ,l(.flTIOUS IUllNlll NAMI tTATIMINT ~ fDllCW .... Hrtotll • I do"' llu,!'ltH I I Pil.UL~EN Pll:OOUC.lS COM~IA.t.IY )101 Yt lowr O~I 0 COl!t Mt ll Ct torn • '161e L&J1o Jer.n P1 ul111'1 J G Yt low1I011t Cit (Ollt Mt!• C.t ! lo n I Mtrvf" l'•td ••ul u n m so (lllirPW A11111+I,.. C..t llor~ I 'Th I butl"'H I be ~I tOfld.icttd by I tW.trt l e1r1nervi a L!lllll J P1~ "" T~ t 1!1ltmt~I I fd w tt. !hi C.eunty C:!trt et O•t.,.~ COUftl'f °" Oc 1• 1011 11¥ atw.,rv J Mtdde~ 01outv C.DUnlv , .. lll'UllUlllM Ot::lcblr 1s "" Ort"'I (OIJ~ 01 IY Plfol U 1' t M Howom~ J 1!)1 1 I.EGA~ NOTICE 'Whatsit' 111.. "" '''-filtf leltl M .. i llHM ) Mltfl L"" CltM Cllt. llMh I Hltll i,.w C1'M Cll• 111• ) Hit~ Lew CIM Cltt OVER THE COUN1 1ER Complete-New York Stock List Harnesses • ..,...., .. ,.. Wtf'4tt141t -llllMI .i ,,.,..,.....,.,, t A.M. fl-I"' N.UO. ~ c6\i' .• l "" l§ r:l• _"' §'" lftd Jlf l M ~ tt JO H1r~A111 .a 1• 1\-i H ~ 1 4t -141 fll'lfft •..,IM..,.. nrtn •r llWl'tl"" IMtll .. n tr -MIUIM. -·~ ,-l ~ •YCOC• I 11 , tt It" -\I Mtw t:I 14 j h llo -i. NASO llttln9t fo r Thursd•y, November 4, 1971 ~i3 ,,, ';1 ~ ,~ jS ':' ~ :~H~l~ fl f ~" ''"' _. 1• ~:::~~bl\ 1 1 1!:! .-. 1~ + t'9 E ·----------~-..,_ ...... _,,,.,,,......, ... 11:~'-"i •• 4 llli U'1 I "::....ri .. I ti!! ... ~ .. =·-~m:..~':' .... : .:; J tt'~~:: nergy 1-!t'll'i':1~'°: ,, J~ ~,1h \ ; : :r.rif1~ 1 n ' in! lr: L'S =~ s:~t\,~'f,. !~ ~~ ¥.! u-= ... ,1 _ .. J;:.!~0~11~~r.1 1,t:.'s" ':'wJ'Dl ~'~r,~:::"Gt:,: ,l~J~a~::"A':~ lJ~ :~~:~ft o ft: l""~:1~tri.1 11 ~"' "' -~-• ~11 A , so \4 u1o u~-1.11-1•r.t i;;.,.1 • 011..t:': 1"' AUSTIN Tex t UPO -It 1 ~11~11 i 1::f.1t1 ~ k:, ~~; 0 ln: l ;: ~:~~ -:;'" J ,!~ ei1• 1:i,, 's :1 , ~ ::.:. 0H lt 11!: :;1~·i~c~, Is 1l~ ti~ 1~ 1~ ='t, =~~flf t Ill ~ Ji!~ ~ ~=.~~:; "19.1 ii ~~ ~ 1~ = t: .bout U l •• t '•'I a-.i _,.11_,. ~'-',!...~·.~ ~ :~ •• •.•JI rlfOll U<.it I• • FllW~F 1,., ~ ¥•.... J l"' •1 1l11 G1 t \1 '"' Al Vo ltl l llW 1 I > • I ,•, -1.. rM11.,.f111 I a'O ~' 0 -... it"_,,. IPll (:, ) ~I .Ao ~'' 1.&.1 &nu ._..,,..,ui. .. I''" -"' ..,. '11111 1 n. 'k~llf' 11\~ II H11p1 ~ '1"11 P1rkw H I!~ llh ~,111:1e11,:.!!IO 1 J11::2 • f -rn·'\ "' O I"' l 11'4 t i.a Him /IC Jr II lh .. 01 I• ····ghnut •h• ..... -p-r n1ur1ll(AI & I lit> l llCk..... II it• • Flt T1! XI 0 11"' Ht1HM I • J ' Ptl "~ ... "" ., ri 1." 1. .. ' • fJ ... 14 XI'-' " .. HlrCUhl' I * s .. 50 " 511~. -v uvu ~ .,..., .-. trli! ''""'' """'" L11J lllo 11to ' 1 w11U f" Jlifl Kt11rl'! f 4.21.. 41 'Ptulfy ' ·~ 4, A O "b~~· p--1.. 11 d 1 ~I I 111 4 ~ ;•[J;'" I o isf J{: ?ii tt "T 1.. discs arrarq:ed Ill a clrclt 1,r·~ll<!l'MI 1•u11 ~~s:"' i~ ili.. J'" ~:0:1,f ,j 1,"' 1:.., ~:·t: t:" ;~ ''-" ::;'L1• _ 1 '\ .. ,~ ~ :~1::::,~ r.:. 11 !~ 1r; ~\<o -; ~ I 3 gJ~ N10 1 Iii~ l~ :+I : ... ~~k 1\o 11 3~ ~ , ; ~ 3i ~~ A cylinder h ned w ith quartz II l!lk Sy JN 'II ~ llflll'• N ~ Syll •• •"' ,,,, .. 1, ,: •, J~~ ~fd!. ·.~ ,• 0 ~!".':""'I.fl~ 1111 'J 0 ~:~: t:-: J J . .., -r~ ~.~5 .)0 1l f Va n:z u -.. ~ ....... ~ tfy1r1 111'1 ~~ 41 • .,~ :!: .: nd d llh I in ltfm~.SU~t••l""M tl ~11 11 1 o l\J fol!G"! "" ...,. ·~ U'l l ifl A~(O•l1XI S,':"'~•»,•-'1•mlll!l l• u...,,..,, -\I n 11 O 1"6 l oti h l COthrovere h Wits I um1 Umft ~'~:' 1~~ ~~ ~ !~;'!; i .:tr~I }~ ~\'I ~~~1~1 k~ }~ ~!o~"' J~ ,i~ ::"Gt.:c 21~ 1J!: ~~ 111\-1• I!, fo"" '9G"', ~'t_, + 1' tm 1111m 1 ,. 1• !J""• 1 4 14 M!f. 11W~ to I !jt, f4'• if.: runs ug cen er ·~· 10. '1"' n"" ., Ml•• :1.~ It !i: :.:'"ic~• .! • ,!~ :::...:.ci 11!' 1~v, J,,., :::111,~w J" .!"':~tr 1~ 1fi r-r: ?l: Hv. :1:; l~~.)'61.lo J r~ rri q~ -t~ E~~t~1e~ •1 • ~ 1,1 • .1 '_ ., costl $1 mllllon What IS 1t' ~.: ::: Yi: n •• ~::1~"'l1'r pS 0 I 1f'° :~· g:111 ~~~ J" 1i : ~~k"'~1. l~ ~"'·~!Ii.~ 1~:: 1: --B-ldlkl~ r. H"" Je!,j, -l• ~lltne•/rt • In:' 11 ", .'rJI: ,'ru1~ :1.~ Sc1enUsU at the University FIO u~"t~'''n' JJl.'J :•, '~ ~1: i: 1 ~ l"" G•rt .. kl n n ~ M11<11 P-1> 11 • 21 P11atot1 s ~ • ~ l!~YrT 3:4li '!1 ~ ~'r. ' \ -~ lf:.11i':1• t!:1 30 5, 1~ ~ =-~ :;:"' \ ~ , 1. .,; .. \; of Texas call lt lhe Magnetic 11111uo•l•t• 1•11 e • .u J111 • G•Y G "" 4\lt J Mur1 " 6'-• • ,,.d,..,t A • ''"' 1.,;·0, 1 12 11 ~ H .ct•• "" -1 '" W Id I AAI (• I t ""C.l r!G • ol" J o Ht Gt11 A!•c J i. J\lt M1Jt Cl> )l o !J""P ~krt~ 't>.,,I01 l !oltU.50 ~~ tl\'j 11\lt lfOfl (f IO ; U 11 H°' n" ... »o.1 ffl0 '>C Bo e and 51Y 1t cou .so ve AF/A. PrS Ullo !J\~ C.1K NG 0 .... 01.1 Gen II El I i ' MYI I In! 1,,• • ',,.'! :11,,• I~,, ""' lJ\.'I , ..... or PUfll 't• I~-lh ~~"" .:1 ~ 1!:'!:11111~ 1 ! 1~:: 1 I\ !ftj = ~ .. =::t J'1' 1'.fs 112 lli. ~. ! = il the \\orld a energy crisis by ',','· ·,~. ','•, ',.', '.·~.·.•," ' • lee • l 1"' G 41'" "' 1" ..,101 51 " "" n,. 20 ~ •l'oOP 01 ' ,,1 11.,,. !'" 1·1 -~ .. ,,,.,,., ~ 11 1v. "' '"" -" .. _ M" -o '1 ir-111. 1• + .,. T~ ·~ ' " r.::~~~:"c~~o ·.: 01.~:~1:flt W ;~"'l:.1...~1\j~~r ,~·11'":~,PM ~,: i·1~11fCJ1N }~ l~'1 ~· ~~=-~ ~~11 11': IM R!t !"' n v. ... '"'ti:.,u;J"~l.}AO 11 !! .50 1 ~ hart1eliSlnj the .!lame kind of:~~1 1~ Jl"lltt~:;:~tL~: ~l~~~~',Do:"••E ~i: l~G::,odcrfl :~1:~ ~:ro ~ !\: ~ ... ::oG~:fl J ! ~:lzt~li 111ti ~ ,f~ ~t~ ~ -V.~'"'':, = U ;i\: J!r Jl"1+1~~ou1F Ofl .}! i fl~ tt~ jl~!~ energy that 11 released when :~~Z~1 '~~ '!i:;. ~~~(t01~ 1 0 1.,.. '1r><1 11 1._ , , Gow E"lfl 11~, 11 1 tn• , ,,., 2.._ 1 , Pufls N,,. 11 • • !•rd 11 u. 10 u~ ,J~o ta!: _ i~ """ "• :io tloo · ilt •~ M=~~ iOf, J1 g:; ~ • 1J1-, -"' Hbo b Ind ••• W >!"•O)•• • )" < >>• > o o ' >"• , •• 1 •.. ,• •< >••l o t i(...:'° IS-,..,. l't -, .... > f\ftlt¥ 41 llO 1'll J•V, J•V.-ltHowJGll~ IO >> • V -• an m exp es ""'" ,. t'9 C.11m L11 ,., ,.,:i,., O • l • 1..,. fl l n ll'l n "" ... ¥ ~ I , -_ .. 1ccp n u '°"' 1tio n1-\IO 31J:o ll • .. • J IA.d\'ltaaf l ... I C.llHl fl •"11 1'.,.M l40..1••1 GPhSC J l 1 !fl1'\IG l •lJ"°PuD•h •1•'t 1tHMl l J l1V:ir'it"=~or011wer 14 12"'11 ~17-~==~~l l":o I J 1~)>,, At the moment we rr ust A'" s1. 1•1 • Chtu u• ' 11 F1t 1011 ,. ,, G A Mt• )l . ill.1118' w.n •"' "' P~••a• ,..., 1 1:,~·~'[ :J 1 '° ""' .., .,,,, _ \ o•i.e ... 10 • 't,"" '"" 1~ -H1;11a, ... ~· 11 n , 11 ... J2, + ~ I lot Of longh&Jre<J SC'it.n!ISls:bet""Ho 1~ ~':~~nt:n q ll~~H 'I l~~,5~,c:,~ !302~6.lO)!~llo=~.·on<tM~~ 3!.:J!~&:~r'i.hlbb 1° ':f 1#;t 1~ 1U:;=I~ ::,~h~1 1lo to°t ~1" !l'llo ~ =·~~~!.h,,H.~ <D00 ,', 1 1 1, 16:, 16t'_ l.i I th Id Abo"• t 1 (~r lSf 1 1 " n r'Wl'f ., ..,. ¥ 11-t I llfvll fo )6 I 10loi \O~o f/»: .. Pf In< 41 1 ~ Ill.) ~ -~•"w" •w., i 'l 1S J> uymgwecanaove ewor I/A.coli< f'.\ '"''""u'" :io »\loe:::::3".Jo'1 '"4 t t 1,,.,u nc 1 '1•l Sn t s l Bi•ri.,.11 511 ! 11 31 .,,., .n +n •~PC1> ''° l lt~ ltV. l't\+wHllwt~c.. •• t1 .n .,..,. o + 1 bl d DIA.Iden El 1 .... C.ll"U ' H "" J1co~F1.. l 1• A•;rfl ilr 11 .1.1e~•'•Hl f I i()io)tt;)li -1 .. r1ulfld l 60 nr:u 1tv.ln.-1•d11\oPw!~ •lJ 1Jl~ll ~ 'lo eAnn't'honiY-y pcEo emRo•b., ... ~aJ ch•e'f !Jl'~~11d l~ ;~~l!~,,.Mt 'l~ Jl.! 1:"..i'~!i ii . ,1"1::~:::_ cE 1:' i:~ ~~~c~ ~ 1~ ~l~ ~, •"• ""' r:!'r"~1•'" jj ,l: IB"' ~rt= t :g:: f!: i':' 1~ ~~t H • it" • ""' A!l<f l tw '" .... c. nln 011 I • 2 MUTUAL J1,..,1tw I 1 I ·11t1wc~ C• t i 'f 11'et~A IOb ll !Pi u ..... a~= ::? ..... ~, ,,, I 114 ,,,. 4" -~· " ''"' 1 u i4 31>ro Jl .. lJ'Ji -designer of the $1 rnilhon A• <1 Eou1 6 .,. c1-c.1 U \o 2J , J ff1 Fa• 1 .. 2"' A•"'"'"" 11"9 l• • eec~ c k Jl«I • no • "ij «l _m ,u~"' '"' 11~ -"'111 '"" pfJ ~ • .i•to ,i;no ''(o + ~ h N II 'I Yn lie t:i., .. tlo C.otlr I lt\'J Jos 1n M II~ 11 1 AKot EC! 11 ll't ltll:oP, •¥"' 6 1Ho IS\; 1• -\lo t • II. 1~"/ 1 1 IOI -l Ill Powr l 10 !I 3.1 ~ ll • 3J1o mac•n~ owa wevtgoto•-<-''''''''"'' ''""" '"''"' ,i.111~, 1,,,1.,._ e aen l ro ,.,_,,,2011 t\ t''1 """''' +•4111 Pow1111 J1 rjOJ11o1J1 ,J,_.11 -"' •• ., ~·· -... Btld~OH -, 3.! ~ JS " "' I/fir. d • 111 •1 \ '°" '°"' -~ lflDr C.a '"'"' OQ '~ to do l5 prove 1t" :1:r:'G1111 , '-, ': ~~ i: 1l~ ·~~ FUNDS ~:::s Is~, ,:;: :~ :::~ ~~v ~ ~ 1iV: la: .... ~~': :g II .. 'l"' ... 1-\to u~o~~ U:;, ' ,u~ 11!il!1~ 1llU :; \.'t INA c. I •o ld ~ 1r~ ~ ~ =-.: ,1.,.., Eu1 1 '" 7'11 Ofl'\W p1 1•\to ll~o Kt..,f" A Utt 4 ltoller!I J 10 0-. llMdl• or l l 6111/o IO ~ duPOfl! l iCI I S5\i l ¥.J"' -·~ r.dl•n Md IO 0 11 • llV. 21\'I The machlJle named the A E Lib Sl't • om G1J l l 13 1(1111• ! l '> lloti n M UV. 11 tMJI• "1 IO ~ ~ 0 U~ ~~ +: l't d11PM a' lO J 111JJo II»\ + it 1"<0l!'lt Ctp r I t.li. t\ 9'U -\Ii Texas Tokamak wa1AmF1"1 ll'l.1',~C."'PI C m 6~1 K11Gr1 l J ~Restlon 1~1 1n11 c.0 11ct Jl st"sa"" v,~\"" iiµ, 1»-"'-ta lld11•G•l'1 •l l• lS'oi.2~ " F111I LS ' , '" C.mll I~•' l"O 14 K1¥11m l., J 0 Rov•t t l\o "°"' 811)111 ol• JO •!! u ,,. If -\ ••I 1 11 "' Kt\ • .,,, '"""11PL l ..50 :tt U\lo 2• i'f 26 t dedicated recently Th• main IA.m Fur" n•-,. c-, ,,, '"' l "'I K•• Tr '"' '"' cw111 111 ,,, '"' Btrwf .,., )) ·~ •11... ... 1.s.on 11 11 v. 11v. 11w + \II lldtll N•1 '-' 6 1• • ,, 1t ... ~ l• •• "·•· I 1 S..1 .111 » J vmol"" '••• h \i I•"~ l'°"r lil1""1 11 $) 11'1 S1"0 ._ speaker was Dr Edward E :"',.:;.,;:: '!"~::~:-·::1> ~1 J.., •Ew '''' ,,,,,-,,, "''"''~~;~'" ~ r"~:;;1av ~~0 :1911! :-11' J1o. "~. ~ 111m A"' 11 '"" 1 • -h ~Ro""" 12 •• ll'-lilt -" T.i '"• ''" c 11 It u 2 "" IC wil )Cl ~ ~ Sct11 o1 ,.._ o ,,..,.~, 11 i •"" 1>0 Ii! -E·F-fl 111C1 _.l11 2 l1 211, J1V, 11\' -., David Jr President Nixon s .:;: wt~~ 1 ~. f • ,:::,,.:C 1-11 .., ;;;~11o~~r1r:.i ~r-1 K':;~or;,1 ~~~ts 00 K:i ~ A ,. • 30v. seen .. E• 1, "'.,, • ~·; P~ ,!l ;: "' 11•0 ~~: _ ... 1 .. ,11c !I! 1 21:i. 1.,, I' , + ,. l~~~' ~oro ~( 1~1~ i ~~ \~~ :: ': !Cl!nCeadVISOr l.n1dl 1 24 211C.0~«1 J~~l~ t~t NllC"& Alm bktYllOfltFundl t<1uttEu 1 11\oScl'IO ~ Jlo 21.o lf0 Tn t\.j 7 , 39 ~.~ ll'4 -~ l5C:O s• J;; n lP<l p.~ l"--"'n1•r(o11J 1' )\'o 30 31,..j. .. D d ed led the T :~11,tut 1 I J .::' 111 <,o tt $v 1.; , • '1!o,'••" ,sirc:ur 11001 "'"° 0 1 oo Jo! K,•",F b" ~ ,• 1:"', !~,',,',' " 1 11 I '"~ j o 'j fl"' IH1 -1'' ::,G!: ~t, 1 6~ Hi!," fi" ~1 ~ _ ,0 lfl t co 1 l'O 1 • •1 , •2 11 _ • avi pr JC exas "'" n • 1 "' asm 1 ..... nt •• c.ua a t 11 10 1J •v u' .... ., • • 1 J " • ' 1 1o J •J -"" 1,1v1 ·(JO 1, ~ _ \~ 111 lk"' IO J 1•, J6 J•i,, T k k U I A <1 nd .P.o 5 1( IW C.o U ! 11\t 1><Ctl t i wftlck C. Bl 1'0 M l1llt(f~' PC. Pl U \'J Scr ato l o :J.:i.I ., 1 JI) 16"° it I.ill .. \lo lll(l)dt~ h J:JS ..,_ IBM JXI •lit JOO 'l'H 'J .):JO ..I I • 0 ama Wl p ay an Im IA.rd M•v ''-lo C.ron C.o J• ~ 11..., ,,,.,,, •ecu 11111 c.~: B• 1 ,1 , 16 te ""' " '• • St• eo Pa ,. .. ,, • «• u • »" ~ ll1" .. •tori 1 ..,. 41 ~ 11 ~. _ ~ nrc.11m N11e 11 , I> 11 11 ,, _ ,, ~-I I ( t th "••WIG ll t:i. Crul 11., 6"\o1 •,•",~.,•,,,~"•v,• .,..tit!' C.ui IC 1 t 1 u I( "9• El J l ., St• e Pl 11., ,1 81" 6e 60 j• :J2h .., .n -1\!o cl\lln Mf '° lO ,,.,, It " _ \o nlFlflF tOO 11 n1a l1\o 11'<, .._ poi ..,n ro e lll race 0 US t: IA.rl\lv ~ 1 o ]\o ut Ff'd "'l " C I() l it 'o t<1 l Ca 4 I" l' \ Corn '-I' I OOll 1 Brkt ! lf•o 1111 1•"-+ .. ck dJk lj 101 n1 .• f'•· ~\Ii -1 .. Int Mt v l IO 65 75 .. JJ 0 Ill• + •. Hbombs energypeacefull~ lt!v'1:.H J:,,;U!o:~.~'r ~. r:4·•~rdl ~~i:v ,.,,. c~:s l:nJ;o~;~."~ :·:: s::f•"F f, r ::-;c:,c0ub° 1JU lt' 11 .. ~r".:~,~~~:'r1 1l se .... YI .... l~,Hr..::=,,43• ! 11 .. Jlo 13 ... -. Y;!ll be as important to"'""!Y ""J&Ot n 1M 11 "'GE F""! Sl Cut~J 1 ,1 ,1 t 1nd lle1 l •J'o5t••nU •111J B°"d lfld ;o o 10 10 G&G 101 110 -1 .. 1n1""""1 1 ~ ~ i: it +~ IA.1C.C 8o1 1)l.1 1 ~0~11CP l\l )/>il.Mdn J 11l ll ~Ul sl •to J J1 L•~ ...... ~ •••ll S~OllA:llt u~1 ~8<>dtnll0 ~11 .. 16 1 1/ -t \o lt<IAllllC l• ·~ l h 1 1!-~ln!MM OJg ~16 0 16 0 !6 0 1 ~ ~:"!~:~\ a:iet~:1~nvenlion of !~ i•~:~ 11 : 1:: 8:': ~; .~ • ,! ~ A~G:~~ ¥ !u;1°'! ~ t<:~:~ 4 ! ,; ; ~ t:~d(n~a ·~ ~:!u\ ;~ 6~ ~ 1~ i~1~~ 1 o! 1 11 ~; 1 ~·: ;Jt. '.; ,, 1:; ..... 0~:T H ~:; :~.. '}~ _ ~ '~lM~r7~ 1 ,0 1~ 1~ t Ji ~ 11 ._ : d h BCC"" '1 .. 0••"" f~ J • ln1u ;i.o of:Jtnck~d ~Jl:~t:;~Gs"" 11 11~c~~l "'t!/1:~~h :~~~~P~lt '~\f\:l l 1 1 , /~n~~'\'1 ,J 1:1.! ill! l\t '\~\~,c:•1so i•~~;~ ~f~~~ .. .:1~ Robson sa1 researc ers Bt d Al l.,, l'i O•v I Fd o•. Adv.,, 06 ....... • '' • '' L n l c•1t 1 .... 11 0 iw G! CP H I J ' 11 11 \ -.. , ·,· ~ llta -.,., '"' Rirc:t I., ' , , ' B p C. \ t,_,11t Atln1 " 101)1 llLf•G I~ B in i Aw Jll Iola •\o 101 -l>I tr11 10 1l'.\ 1'1f J'"t l"I T .. T I l 0 ' I -• hope to.have the Tokamak in,•,.!.;:,' ,•,•, t.",,.r~~. '," ,, .. 11 .. AH l••d f ll I01 L•• 11:1~ u u ia11 Lloa11c 1 J o Sw EI sv ,,, I a "s 1 o0 19 11 1 '"' 11..,.,. "° "'' E 1 ' 111 1•• n • ""1,.T .. T otM• f..11 s1 io , s1 .;. , ··• , .. <.¥ ., ...... lu 11 1F \llJ l lJLb !'<Fdl•6I06Lobl1w '"' Sov n C1 :IO 10 B o1Mv110 ll0 6l,.'1t.ilJ\1 +'o "'l"'A"1 '76tllo •l 16' I IT&T l>ll •• '16 >9& "" operation by January It IS the ::·r:.. It~ J!. 11,~ o,,.,~o. ·:. 0 . 11 ~ AllAm I'd ,, &$ Lllf s k s II • 3' t e>f E " ... 0 . SPfCf"' ll.t. 1 • B • Mv D 1 111 •S, •I l!V. -" "'''. fl J!l l 1)1,, !Ho !Ho + ~ " t&T pfJ • ' ., ' ~ t lt.. -l4 fourlh such device ln the a ... ~· , SJ~ 5'' Or~ 0 t° \; 4 1 ~ :1a·~:11 /, si 1~ u ~:~·, :·. '• ,', ,•, ~ ~l."dc:" c G i~~ J; • ~ ~""R.!'v. ~!~ J! : ~~· n11:... 1~ n: 1~· \µ., -Vo M~'Llo I D;, ~ l1l:: J~"" l t' -\\ ln1T .. l .. 1(1 2J :2~ :i ::~ •... "' 81um ! ;u ,. 36\ 011 Ct"T J\o 6 Amt tP 6 21 6 1' t lnv f 61 "M11 Poo ?\0 )1.1 51tn MPd I) 1 4S Bdwv Hit J ll 1' !t"' 3"' "'DOI• 1., ' r. :1t ,J .j. ~· nTT ~IL 5 50 f~ 1l•~ ll\ IJ\, Un i!t:d State.s and the hrst etv • Mk 2 110 1 1o Orr '" sr ?~ , 11~. A"' •~· 1 1 j .a , __ , ,,. ,, ,.,., 11 ,, , .. • s , 9 i;r 131 • Bdwv11• a 1 10 19 .a :, + , mal ~ G11 11 &>;, 1~-. f4a. -"' 1,",T,PfN '11 ... "• 6lll! 6'V• + • 811! nf ~ ~ 1'4 OtWIJ E1 2\o 11, IA.m Dive 10 Sii 1 S6 '"-"' ' Ml -SJ I> l l i, S 1wb Cl 3£ JJ ~ 8 kwvGll 10 '' 2J t. 11:i.. J?'.4 t. ll{ll~M " IO 361 ll'll 11 4 1lV, +I 'I t:;.' U Tl olO Ji I It U '-1 It ._ btnlt at a nongovernrqea\ a,11 t~b u v. d '4 o 1m c. y •,, 1• ""' EQlly J 11 J 11 C•11•d 11 lO 21 10 M.i or c-s"' ,.,.. suboc T v 14 , .. a~ "'"u11 n 20 74'9 2• u -" 119 M Pl• lS 1 10 10 la 1 1 .a IJ ll • JI\'> JI» -"' •,,, •• ,. '''" • " ' • ' C.tD 1 ' ' " ' • ,, " -nnl"' ~ J6 f~ P. • +,. tn!UI A • d ll\o <H .i • Jaboralory '' O ••• ,,, >> .•,,',',,, P " ' lfll' ~ar1u MU 4 ).I f }I M H O'WI F 10\lo 10lo rpw" 0 6' O " ,.,..., -~~ QI/ mrk , l"o tf.\. Jjnt + 111 l'l>ICf 1 t Ii ' Jl\lj 1™ _ ,. -• >1!• l, ',!...o.!., ,v,0 •,,",Lo alA.1:11 Otl M1ul LP 11 /'Jltll BwnS~tt l'(I / !.,.. --. Q\llGI \ ! :V.o ll'lo (o -~'"'PbGD Ula 1 1 J? 'j > "'-' ~ llct M .. ll'rt 11,,., I) •11 ( ... 17.... • • lflVfll I IO 'H tu•~ Bro 11 lt It 1 M<OlllW :ttt 101 BrunJ'W~ 11 250 12.. xw. 32 ' ... I 4 ouf\lit~ IOt 11! ' ,,..~ ... ,,., I""'"'"' , ,. 11 II ' ,, 11\, + •• Th' Ob)"'l>Ve >S lo c•ea'· 81• ell 1•• l OIK Inc " """ 1 M<:Ce-r 11 , It lwnS""' ' 50 ? ll ll~ lf -.., Q\l ILi 1 fl l\" \1"' , + v. '" 1Br1 .. d " u 170.. , -" the game sort or cnnd1tlons 8ot111e El 1 ... 1•-Oocul• ':"' "°"' 10:: I# t J1 ~:~· .. II : li ; !f Mrd ( H 1•.,, 14'0 BIK \' E 110 4 "" ,, • 1' 'I -"' I" I"' 'XI 160 .nllo "' » -"' •~te•JI S! I 11 10 ' • '. tht xll th heir ... ,,.,~ 1i \ '"'°""' LJ ... Am Gn' •11 111M~! Gtn SO l )M ..... ,c M )'J Jy.e,vodFCo 30 ll~ 11\'i n o •Ou • )0 lt li t 1\.,. ll t.-.1o l""''''" ,,6 ?D~. 10"" l'C>l"O -) a e s tn ' y ogen n li 1!.,, \XlQ DI IO l 1vo I ,, ,_ 0 "'~In 1.211 lt Jfl> lf'-:!ll \'o IO'Wtfl I)') 11,. 1~ l'Ao .. ' A"' Inv I lit .! lO M1111t~UU I C.o M O 0 <" >'-BudPtl »cl > , ... , 0 I -lue• eJ ti' 1 Jt .! !I i i low~ Gt 1 JI J1 9 I , , bomb but In. -ntroUed •late A"' M11t Ill toll! F .~ 1 04 •• f •• ,. 811 /Fo g 10 " •• ' .. •• ! ! .. '' '"" ""'NGtftl l•>••···• ''''""•'•'••'<w n 1J1 o····••"' -• ,.-•1111 -, lvt .,.ow1 ow .,, !' l' ~ d U I R b "'' ,.. • ,. 6 w ~· -11 64 1! • 16 -'lol lh vl 'f .16 JI 21-. t i, 21"° _ V. lcw1PS~ 1 •O i j , ~ , ..._ \\ an on asma scat oson ,\nth.,,. Gove M111 1 J 11 11 ,,..., •a .... ~ "•"'o 110 6,,.. '" '11. th~1 0Jt11 t ~"' •:i. .Mo~ 1ajHo1 lid 31 J • 1 3 ~ J>.:. U S M C.111 I I iU I ft Min Fl11tnc Md U l l/o ·~ Bun-It •fl !O IOI 1J:i.;. 11,,, !JV. -~ VtnfP i4ll 71 41.o 41~ 4 "" _. '• IT 11f1P 60 o l j l l) ... ill'_ I.lo Sa>d oney G<Wlft HUll H MIT l11 11 '1 M OW GI 1 ""l1 1 Bu t"Cl l MI '4 31 .. lo-I. Jl:it + ~C.tlO LJJ j> 11'· U\o "c +'•"" C o ft l ' •• -ln<rt\e 710 14' MG 1'1l 111MI pr 1 ~ ""1u Nor l !O 31 .,.,., .. ~ ""' .... '4 "'""""'' I xr\; lt\.'t 11\;-1,,. IT S• o1 (J.Q I l ifl " 121 ' ;~ Sc1ent1sts havr been v;ork1ng • • ~d •n• '" 'u ""o u,, , , Ml ~ Mui 1:i,. 1 1 u Nor a1" :JS" ,,. 1 , '"" •bl " .o tJ 11"' 11~. u . _ \o J K nd v en1 •lll HOO Mae• l.ct l lCIM,,." 1 ,.,,u ,,., ... 10 J3""ll&U""-•F•ctor"IO S.JJ J ,,.n,,.+u. --lor 20 years to f1 a way to :" ~ h • o • n M• "• 5 n 11 111 Nol• ,',• 1J .. J 8e11 ••llu• ,M Ill """" n , 1 +1,, ~·1 ci> ,<•m, !! 21 ,,~. 1JI'> -""J eeoe 1n i 6 1 ~ , 6 __ ,, lu'' Or lock log.th•• the Exhihi' t •e au• on M d AM t 11 J ti M 11 3 IO l\o u1~ 11 v 6 !'lo 1 1' 1 "-"-\.t • • " l!a ... t ll t J•~•F JI 1il J.! , J•>;, l•'~ '\Ii ~ Fr>(l lA. l61 • Mood I ll 111 Mu V G 2 1 C Fal monl I 16 lj" 1 lltt -J~cnFj 16~ 10 9 ~ B '9 I fl ht I " th FnOB 1!1 llJMOOd~i l!lf !J )I MD lticn / .. 1.. - -Fa1li/I Hl6 o Sh !V.-J pnF nl fol~ ! I I I O nuce10 1g eemen -e !,",'•' •'•"'••4lMF Fn 10 t'6 Mcn co 11 11"°C•t>o'ca10 j 'l 11 4 11 ~-1~"1mvFn oo JS 12 1 101 1,_"'J eftnPl o!,. ·~ 1~ ,5 , '6 .i.~ lh tlk I .' a Moo •P 0 1o"'C.td•nc•-Jnd ' 6 > 6'> •F'"''" 11C Ii 11> la'°" +•'J e CPltlt..16 i1G11J 111 113 .. 1 process a aespac n B1b10" 01 •1j MF G n JlJ51 1 J' 31 c11 F 11a~ 5J P o 1v. ,,,._4 F•rWu•Fn 101u 1 11 4 11 ,-•.Jew1 Col ol0 51s1'JS•ll"lo -•• hydrogen bomb explosion_ At Bank 1••-'d •»to MOmaG '01 •51.::11>G ~"" 31, li..c a1.n .. Mn1 11, 1~ Ho -1•F••llM'1l u 11 l:ltt n » _,.J mw1 !O 1 , =-·ii Jl"i•"' •v ~ G !•? snM O,..,•M OJ.I 1111 .. f , 1 , 1~ C•,~a11,L0•, •,s 11 11\• 1tu 11 ~ +1"" Ffodclt I 50 101 •l .oo. •Oto .i. o J rnw pf 1 i.o 1 ., , 11 , ,1 ,_ b t •'-••! h I B1ac11 H1 101i 10 31Mur Sh• 16 11 1•11•""'1 , ... "'l'• !', H~ 111* 1 F1<1r1 11'1 n 73 ~ J:"" 22 _..,Jm w1 11>1 1 1111 11i. hi. .-.+1 u Wlu""' av1ng 0 use a Bttcn In l)J IJ l!MUI ln! H I "•'• .w '0 •• dll 6 ow oO • ~ l"-. Fi!'dMoo llO u I' '" 16""-\'o JHtn!n~ "" )I n J?. n .i ~ nuclear fusion 1atomie bomb) ~t• t<en '" •MNEA M~• '" ,,, 0 < 3 .-. J ' d11 Pie r 11 1::M. 1>' 1 -'4 FKINM t)O m '"" f'llo ,,,,. + i..,; Jo11nM1n 1 20 111 oo 3, 19, ~ l erk Glh 5 o16 J ti N1r "" 10 11 10 H MG ( ulJ I • 1 • •11• A: I 10 li 16 'o W l 4 FtdP108d 4 11 o 1! o 2SZ°• -h JohnJoti •G• UT 1• • I! 19,. , ·~1.,1on to trigger-the on An exhibit chro nichng the Ofldtlk f 1 '"'"•' Stcu 5., Mu•• ,1.11 ° •P C Bdc!P .~ n ll! <fl\j,-•1'"K1s1o"s '° o 4 h ''"'li t. Jon11,svc an J' J JG JO\'lo -1o _, !Cl Fdn 10 11 ! IS Ba on 011 ~Mu pll P 7~1 7> 1ptMc d 4ol I .. 1'I' l9 _.,,Et0rr111 Inc 31 f' 6 f o -~JOl\fl $11C D 7 O I• SO I• ,.ti. CO!OrfuJ hlS!Ory or American rw" Fd l 11 I GI Bond S 1 J 6! NC( "d ~ o 1 • D•IJ'I !"loll 'II SI\'! j~ 1~ -A ~tOOfDIS I 1.50 ~V. ....... fl >'> _. 'o JonLoon 10 1 SI JI !8 Accountant Meet Set In Anaheim u l«kC•v " O v d ,1,,wN•"l!Q C.11 11 16 tl1e_._..., 11114 U 1v,.+,..."•lk•t0111 ,•, t \lo n. t'h JanL111; I!><! n n . 1 . ,,,. money w1J[ be• featured al t ulle• 11 d u &$ G .., n t 116 , te N• C• R JCI"' 11 1ra<:&vn 5 ilJ 74'• l•i'> 7•\'o + !Ai "~ 0 C.o !j, "'"" 19\o l'9'h + :i. J-t •u pl 5 1721.1 11 311 !' " , B k I .flo' C•""~ 11'1 10 •1 '' '' , 1 ''' 1111 G&O s~ fl-. "'" Ptr 1 ol6 ,.. 1110 10• 11~ "llt'tlJ O 14 llt. tt'>!• ?:!>.:. -111 Jorqe"\~ 130 J o , t 1 9\1 _ 0 an o America s Newport 01~ d J" 111 N Ho ,. 7J"I 21 • o l r< 1 :io I' '..!. 11'-• 11,. • • 'ldUnBn ' t "°"" ~ .ov. + "" J01tt 11I 10 1 16 111~ 15'~ _ ,. B hb h 344V Ld N1WS tou 1 11 ncorn 531 111 N11L 1J 13V.?4V.!~~o 1~ lJ ••" ~~+~~11~1":..l."' f~i..U"'>s• J,,.Mv 14D tTUJ t'' 11'4 1 . eac ranc 1a 10 Nv vn1 10 7t11 11 ~:::: 716~1 1 fi NP1,n1 1"'•••tw• 601 11~1:::11 11,1 F n FNor•" 1J 17 ,l.l;?f +~~:\~",,.'::r i~ 1~"" ~.1~•-J.t untl\ the end Of the year an 1'""11 Fd 1lll \l'l1 Nt G II •51 lOll N 5K R>ll 1 • IGV. 81 eC.-• ~ G ~. 111 !~ I FlrHI"' Itel 13' 4 10 .. .,, l,!i\li + ~IC1 1 C.em SO 7~ t: .... • ·:~ f,i;: :1 .. , eu1 Mii '1• 7 ll N s n~ 13 !J 'tCl NII Sl'IOW J ' ! • ate l r e 211 ~~ '5 . 11 ... t "' Fl .,,.,... "' 11 2'~' l' 1~'" -.. ICtr>eM!r IOI! fl )I\ 1'•· J' nounced \Jee president and l ;p:,::"CI ;j)1f U N:uw ce1 11 J• !"',",",•"" •• "' c coo •'•' ,,~! ,,,. ·~-~~1 c. 1 021 ff 21-. 1 111o ic!"'PL 1ot s J~1• l•• • =~ RhetAGood 1 tDI Glh l JIJIONtuwFd 1GtO t l "'" 1~,,,.,t<P(orolo(I .,J7 ~7,, F1 Mol61a j>0 Jl.\.ol'lljl"-lo K PL a"50 110 1• 6f 14 .j.1 manager 0 r win IPtSh •1C 101 N1'WWd 1 JJ 1)uNJ N11 G J\'o ' elan~ta IO 11 11 'I -\iFtlN•!IOIJ ~ .. .,., • .,. IC J>t pU lS l lOO ,., 6 .. 6 .+' IP"rrln ll l 113 !t N•w!an 1 ~11 1 1 N chll11 F '"'10 .. •18"o•A•.!ll 11 "'I • -~fJ N~ y\JJ 111 j 0 .... ·-IC SDU IMll ll jj • '!,,. l~~ The d isplay tncludes hun-t fl! y ~ 1) SI u .. N c~ s I 1 11 1 j) =ti'" ~ 1 • l ~ r,i(0Mud'1 = fl ~ ~ ~~ ~ 6 v. :::~~~~ l.. ,;, ~ t1 #.,. = \) ~.ft '&"Eal :, 1'f " " J1 ~ 11.,, + ~ d •e•· ol actual samples 01 ~'"""" F"""I Nar•••1 II n J Jl u.!.-'" , 14"' 1! 'o onll U Sf :tt 11.,,121 11•1, > ~, F1I V18k1 o0 1 0 t • t , -0 IC•nN~llNG " fl, 11 , 1> »,,, -'-'~ B•tfl llfl3U t1119r l it I ,...,..,, ul 6>.io 7., n L! al• . .50 tlO l>l\'o 6'\o\i .,...,_...,,t1W1c 160 l "' 11~ J"' !t nPL! l ll 1 '.16 1> jf u ';-• nd I I Com $1 1 ti 1 7'0mttt 1 )2 foll N Eur 0 1 ll~ l l\Ci •nl P! I)(' 2l 11.,, 11'41 ··~ ... llio f iclllXh IC ll" ,,, 311" -~ t!Y '"" \j Ii .. n ... rarea unusua moneyco Grwth 161•1•1oo Fu,,.,ll n •'9Nw N1tG J,.Roefl L~E lf'l'"'ll11i +1o "1~~1•J~ YIS\lill"15\'J-"• 111"", 1 -• The Orange County Cha pter lected ove• s•ve•al ) ea•s by "'°"' '16 • ,_ o Fur>e1 ' J1 o 2• Nw l'lus... 1~ 10 o 'flMPw 1 HI i "' 16h 11-. + v. F .,,., <I 11 1 12'4 , .,, 11'> _ v. 1u1 /.<1 10 11 ,r, ~ ~ J: .. .. ' 1 ' ' SH< 1UJO! nt WmS \J)tlJ)tf'il);jt (I 13,.ll • tnt$Wst2 l •Jh ...... O o +\o,'1"""~1 l'9G l ~\ JCI\:.+ 'I l'WK8r JO ~t o fl 11~+4' oflheNat1ona!Assoc1atlonor numismatistCyrusH Phillips C.11•uGr aa1 NP ! 1i11111 1Nu<1 1t t.e 1~ ,,., en1 sov•I • ~1 0 1• 21'o '"'11<1 1 11"' ., ""-AY•~lil o .M 20 70\:o 21)1*.J., II h Id th C8DI 1 7~ '"oa..enh ''° t 110.l•Y M t '" !1'!1"~1Ut ~a HJ' ""' • !~l'H~•o · ~ l1> )O>j, ll l(!f:br 10 I lo o ll .. ll ' Accountanl.!l w1 o e1r It illuslrales the extreme ~una •11 1011.0,.,,,.M uoJ llU Dhof.'1 f \\, t"O C.o to 1u 1J ,.._ u ~ "'Ftln a11A.1 JO 1JO at u u 4-~,t<:i;••i"".., I',,.,"' 40,,:=,: re5ular Novembe1 dinner '0"' &$JI r cs.c 0Jt 11 n°"'0 "'' ~'°" :,,;ra1\ '° 0 "' "~ 1.114 1"-~/•S,C.a.U i J•"' 1'"'14""-K•t "?w J1 • ~1 ~=-,. I varu!ty or forms through which J~ d \~\1 11 st "' 1m M 1 :it • 11 2~ ss~11• • 1\t c.,1n~" 60 ~ g~ g~ g.,t = ~ ": '.':!. 1" .h J" ~!"' ,J :. ., ~:i~':. 1 30 ~ ~. J/• "° _ , meellng1nlheSkyRoomo our monetary s ystem has '"•mlt• 1M 1t11 P1u1 11w 1n 1 u.,,.: c;n 1 •1 .. CF1 s 111.o 1 11"'n":11 .. -11 ,•,••, ... L1 2 1 '11<.•1o 63 Kt""•'° 1,,.,,..,...,,.,,, , h G d H t I A h c.o-111 PtM Sq 'fl I 0 c I( ll .. ll • '""dD fl Int •l )\I Ji., J\11 -.... • ,,,, 1 II 15.. lJ'I> Ullo -!~ ICtlll'lll'tll IO 21 lJ" 1•\o 1•'4 -~ • t e ran 0 e in na e 1m e volved over the years Eautv 1 11 • '' P1 Mu• 1 • l • o." "'" J • •\t Ch&aD al :JSa 1 Jl l'>4 '"' ,,. ;. fluorC• 1111 11 """ jJ J!\'o + ~ teen,,..con l Ja, 1 1 11 0 J .... he I < 30 Fund 10 4111 JI Pllll1 1•11 U M "'00. 2 lo l'1l~!~•ma$ l :IO 1IO 41 1!1~ 11 _ o,, l'uor Dfl J J 11\1; J\'J 511.'J +\Ii l(v Ulll I fi.11 J 16 • l' -•' giM1ng a ., P m Included 1n the exh1b1L are Grw111 • • 1 is P 19~... o '11 1 00ne .:" 31 11 ~· ~ Nii ! 11 JI), ~ :io ~ "wT .. , 11 5i 1•~~ i• , 3,.. , Kt Mee> "° 1u ,..,, :1o1 ·J 1 ~ =..; Wed d n<am 1011110!P nt ~l 11 6 11 16 •t "'°' ?• l ~ l>f•~M~n~ 1'1(1 J,\'o 51 1'~'.L l,iFYTo 01110 U '6 o JS\\ l'l:,=~IC1rMt Plll(I l fl fl~ 9J +'14 nes ay examples of Indian wampum \ltn • '' so" en Ent 111 1 is o., c.1 ,11.., n h•MT i a;., .l!I ~ 511 ~ g., FMC. c.o u 109 " , 16 1 " 1CfY1t~ JJtt s i• • ~ 1• , Th f t d pe ker a t (he Co u Gr h U 10 14 0 P on f nd 1..1111 1102 1>&111 B li. )>I, !h'Ck• Mo l JD I> 10~, 1'0 > ~MC Pl? l.J 1 lt ll\'I I :Z j( ddt It 60! ,•, 27lo )6 • J1"° e ea ure !i a and currency brought to this !oms ed J 11 1 n Pl•n 1 .. ~ 1G"•1 1 tt P&( G Ra 11 • •, l:: soi i. 11 n 1110 11-. _ , FOO<T F1 to , s ~ 1 11 _ ' te ,..,~~ 1 :io 1~ j6 . J6~• _ t• mee\1ng will be Mr Ediriard country by early s~ttlers in :1:~tB l ll l~~1~~hF u,,.,;" 1 11 c.~~~.,,~~A-1 ,/1/0 J2~·!~~::~~:l:'J1160 t ~.'.:, W \~\(, f ""~t~: .. /~ 11 ,!! ~ J!• M ::~ p 0 Dea the data processing I din th f f °"'" AJ 6 Sl 1 15 G........ " n ,. Jl C.h ...... .... ~ JO 10~. ,..,, _, 'oo I ol 1 XI ! ,. is.. 1f ~ ~ nr>e¥ ..... , l '~ ... 103 111&-U • .,. cu g eamous p1eceso -•C• 6 11 ••1 NE 8 •nt4l NEwvo11 te AP ) F dav•cn"'01 ,,~:!~·a1•0 1:110 "'IO ForaM110 11 •1'4 •n..6,,._ ~L~"...~0 ~10 '~g 'jf 1s )' director Of adm[nlS!ratJon at eight S\IVer COin~ rrom Which ::::: J: : ~ ~ ri N Ha 1 J .50 J !O ~t'W Yorlc • oc:k e,cclo•na• e-r <<I C.~I Ef I 1 l1 Jl~ J: ~ J!~ = ·~ ~~~l(c~~I : 'i W! n l 11 & -~ ICOll n• '109 Ja 1 ~ - IBM Mr 01Dea has been w ilh I ""d lD7' 010 " ° Fu"" !OJI OJ C.lo M! SPP 11 o o• o., Fo1tWM ID 1 31 ~ -"l(ooat • 160 6 "" l .l1 -1 ' (BMfo•ove·•J yea•s Heh•• the express1ons twob1ts and ::,,~ .. v 111 1l1 ProPo 116• ,, S••• N11 c1o M 5Pa 1 761) 1,' , • .::''FoitWNafl ! 1" 11 1~ tCcoo ar1 11:ro 51,, ·" """'-~ • , • I b I I d Otll e Gt $ ~ 'o P "9 ~d j 1 It lh~I Hl•h Lew C •n Ch• Ch ""•uT 1 71 ~ '>-l!, 3~ o, _ ,,. Fo•bo 0 109 11 3', JI j' ,., Ko aca a nd ; '"" t la ,..,, _ •\ h Id t our IS orginRle Qnt Mu 1D110 P o11d •II I ll c1o11P c UP 1;. 1 J1.,._.1 ~ank!! •O B io 5 1 -tC1trco 10 •• '' •, .i ~-, e v a r 1 o us managemen Al•• fe tu ed 1 the f 1 on G h • ~ D °' P u s" 10 1 DI -A-c1o R c Nw JI XI :io 10 + F 1t11M " '° 3'' 11 "._ 16~ t< titt5~ so ' tl , ' ~1 _ ,, t th d I =' a r s ITS o oLl u .oi.11Pu"•m f'll~dl Abl F I ! r.l'IQc:Fu! )l)d J) 1 -"u•M 7tt 3'11 l'"' 3.1 \'o 1Cr1111t !JO lJI 1' 21 .. 111!-{'f post ions tn e a a pr(). coin struck in America the trw c o J " '' n Eau ~ ~r ~ l: J.!)D<~~ ~"' 106 ;,.,.: ~~; ~.: -"",.,,' '"'" d 6 ~ '; 6 +. ..., F1111u1 i,. ut ''° '" II"• 11-lii -L- c.'s'ng d'''s'on h'•dqua•te•s '"w "'1 "'1 f 41 Gf<l 9 ' "c~ nOt60 11 , .n ~· •. ch ...... 1 let ,, 1 110.t 1111o -G-. '' , " ' ' 1653 Pine Tree Sh1\hng nW •I 1to 151 Grw~ 101111 •Ac'l't'C t v IO 1 1 , 1 2 •-.... c.~ro"'I or! ., n , '' • GAD •I--' ~•• •• •J O 11 11"-n -,. of IBM and has held his n1Vean 10 i. 10 11 •"<orn 1 °' 1 I ii.cm~ M• D , 1 ) s ' c1o.,., IO olG2 it 111, 11 "" o 11 11 • !1 L•"'1" SeH f s • u • ~·· .. currency iss ued b y the ln Oel•w• ' j nuP "wt1t I ll •" Adm11:~ 1&13 , i 1 2 1 -~ c~ Y• • w J6 , 3,. , .i , g:~ ~: 0,-or ..111 o • o D L•11•8 11" ~s l l7 J t. 3 \:. -"' present pos1t1on since 1969 As h 0ec11 i .111 11.. v 1 o 1 !6 '~•a M , 1v 1 u" 1u, o. c 1 M"' "~ Ja ~1 ,, J6 1 + G , 11 o u + , L•t•oto. s ' a • a1o 6~• d'•ecto• he,, •espons•ble lor d1v1dual colon1e11 prior tote Oe•w 16 nn vovAo 1 60 1 l0 1A.aa•11 -60 n 32 31,0 _,: 1 ,.,,.,. JO 1 i ~ 1 ~ ~.,, -G:,cora o0 1<1J 10-. '" :!Ol\.,. Lt•S"' 10 1io ,•, 1 1 1,,. .. , ' ' • Co ( ( db 0.a 1l6 11J R~v ... ~ 16 050Aa"'t Io A > &'1 C ~11 GE: S6 J Jo~ 14 , 1,.,.,.,. G ~~1 10 ll l~>.. lJto 21 _.,Le1 Sgp!))J l l2 Jl b•anch o lf>ce adm•nlsl•ation nsti utlon a no e issue Y g ",', ,• •0 •, !! 11 nf • 11 JJ s 2s Ar "eL t ao 1Jl 591.. ii J• -~ , c nG o~ '.11'1 ID •~'> 1 1 1 c;.::::1 ,1 ', ~,, 16 l" » , JI', -~ t ,11co co o J 1 1 o 1 .. 21" ~. • ' h t IM h I •• • "'Stvl8 1 l J! l lS Ar n.1 L "'l s , J ~ It"' ,,CnG otl:t u o 1 '~1 1,,., 1 "°""' .Olli '°"' + l4 Le1~co afJIO l1 JI J~ l6 , _ 0 Sc hedul'ng Ind .ss't ma"ag.. I e sta e o assac uset s 1n Oo<11 Co• u 10 • 10 Scftui 1 ,0 11 1 "ou • Lo •l 1 , 1~ 1 1 _ c ~M I•( 'II 11 ,1 JJ" lW _ G•m ~· 1 IO 1~ » l• J• -\.'t Lta•w•Y 100 s u > • .,~, ,,,.,, _ • "' 1111 ed b p I R R'"'1 I) 06 l Of S(uCd• ,und! 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U• 3P.t-l\oont !~11111 1•11~.,l a l .,-\,GIL•O l 7tl• 'r. )OloO M~l""L~OO ! !J ~ !>=~ I UllllltlOR COURT 0, TNI t'i•l~l'd A u 01 w~ Pl'I J 11 \o .... ,.,,.., 5 '"" •0 l ' ll" J 1)1• -~ 00\Mll I.. ~' lf Y, • It -~ g~Mlft>fl '• ,•, a~ IO'o, ~ ... ~ M• .... l lCI .., 6) r. - LEGAL NOTICE tTATIOPCALl,Oltl'ilo\"0.. son Gr~lr>C1 1th t •• •Stcrcll ll Jll Jl\lst ,~• ->..(,,.,1 0 1 1 !0 /1 11:.011 JI -· 11'toN,~1 6CI ~Ml· .\IO M•~•6;t ''°I,' I TMI COUNTY o' Olt,t,1'101 0111,.,.. M U 1.1 Jl M ';. ~m r:unc1,slf 1 u Am S • It J7 •• JOl1 .xµ. JI»• -• '""' f, IO •J lllo 1~. ~ 1 -• NN •II 160 •'> " Y" Jl '" f ... M~ n11!! C.•m 1 ID.. - b1111 fl 111111 M "klfltn •Ml ~newn o ...,.,1ft 'i 1 1; C&n "c 11 P 1J 61 ,.,.., T"T e1 1 1 ~ JI i fi1• = ~ ~=-:: 11 ~ ~ 11~ ~." J1~ !. ~ :.W~~" J 1't ~! J:: W: ~ i' :: 1~~ : •g an fi~ ~~!! f,1' _ ' ~ H .. A,.,,. Ht"!"!•' ,'o~1 4 'l "~ c~n Gr 1 DI u Jl :~·~,it 1 ~ ,rl!~ ,; : ,?~ '"' -1 c0n1 01 0111 n .; ..19 .111. lt , I' w,11 F 111 111, '','', t • -• M~• fft rt u 1 J1 ~1"' .. u. .. _ " •• !lltft ••1-"IOI'"" Dttftlfd ERCURY !'Korn "°" l" ft(ftm !l l61' '4 •W1!W\ llO , .. ll' l • -\. ,_,,n IA II ,, ~· fl tr Wtlll lhY ... .... -~\ Mr .. kl(r. 541 J. """ a " "OltC..l 1• ME•!aV OtVlN '' "'' M~ I'd U IJ I U S< t n 1 H I )t IA.W flftf 1J 1110 16~ lft !"" -.. c.-L11tt t) 2J"' 1J\l lJ"' _"" "G 1111 "' JI l• 1 ff 1• -MIKO • l'I I l' ~ Ml v,ildlte<''" 1111 •llDYt "tflllll .. c..e•"' "' L*Y 11 11 11 11 v .......... ,. ..... Oii .ie 10 B .. 1$ 1, .. l ... ,_.TA: If 11' If• 16'•-'•o'"~_}K ',, • Mt lOflllt I) , ,, • .11 ,:1, .. I! n k v\ftt clt fl'll l t t lnu n.t !:l Cor J l1 ,,.,u ~~(.ill 1111"Arn•t•k to. 11 16 u:, C-T ""l lL._ j 11\l 11 1 ?\'I ••1 . .,.,. .... l 'l 11.. llt _!,M1u t Y F• h '"" •• '" !:r~=:=~~~"'ft':.::t 2628 HARBOR COSTA MESA a:r:.11 111ff~l-~ YEor!;~1M::! ;~::~~=60141 ~~ ll~ n\: 1~: :1 ~~=~;.j~ !l>r ~~ ~~ T~=l:f.!:Ci', 1~ 1f; d~ !~:~1 5iYoiwM1J•~: a llJ,C tj:~ u~\i~; d"" Cltrll f/ 1!'>t '"°"'' tnl'lllt<d court et IClt'. l'fn lt • "' S•• $1 • ' 1 lt ""'~"•ft )1.9 j~ ' I . I ... ~ C.orG w 'JOii 11!11. ,~,n tll'4 -... Gu"1MI ~~ ;i ... I "'I Ii Mtw r iJJ • JI tt .. lo frtitlll 1t1tom w '~ "" fll(lfU ~ IS n -•kt~ S•""t" "'"'~' \"'~ .01 !'"', 13 • ,,... ' •• C.awl•s ,_ • JI~ II 11 • .J. l1 ~,~ •• l~d' •, 'l •u " l.J ' ''" •• M~YIJ ,soo • 1\. I. 2t"' - v""'"" ... -. "'' 11..aen ,...., 1 ..,. olflc'' ~= i ~: ~i't t:'~c.m , 'l I~:::':~ ,l:. ': ~, J:i: , • .. ,,,_, eoc• )ii 11 1 », 11 +. • "If 01, 1 30 ;g 1 ;:1: 1~ 1 :~-::·~ ,1r :· .J.' • p'· 1tt'' : a'"MIA.RWOOD IOOIEN & ... 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II~• '"'•fl'!\/••'~ p lM •n:~c~ ",~,., 111 . llllo 40•• -• DmOK .... }j I It I ~lfWft '° •• JHo It . 1••• -Mc ·O ' !'!'D I ;1 I • 1 :lit'! ·-_,.,,. 1ner Ill• I I ,,,.. .. ..... 4 "' I il '"I, ' •' ,•: ,• !,) Atrf":fe u I I 11 14 •DllY"' l'l'I JO J1lo '11. II • 6 ~ I,..," "" .. , J~ I J ' -~Mc d •u ., l' ' Jttfl~~ "' "'. Nll!tl-Ki' ds Love Uncle N'GN • I ,~ IA.0(00 '"'' l ' .. 1 • ~ -,, roY..Ccl I" ltl '" • -• u IW r.J" l ., ... JN ~~ru ~ \.Mt •wH 1(1 ''• '·'·· '·I ·" • -· ti « •11111 • Wt•~ M t llJ 1'1••-o<• I~ JI , ~ ~. nwn (fl tj 19'.0 tlt ""--• ... ~ ~ > ''-Mc ~ t'W\ ""''"' 0t1e11e H " nw n u " ,, 1 , w, 1 "''" G ~11_11 A'F <•~ 11 ~ , r:· 1 _"' e,,-z•tl :ir. I 1 , :IO•• 1 ~ , -' -'Mc~1v .~ 'j '! • I , CLVOll"l "LOTTIN ~·""k 1 ~1111 lb • fC \1 11 \4~11 e , ... •!91. '.i:cu111•"'' 'I"'"'\' ... , -,__ Mt tt .(io ,,,,:t •. = .. li•tw •o• '""'' • .,. ' 1• u ., tve<il 1S ,111 11 ""t "' JO I 11 ~ I -•• CummE11 II ' • I 11, -.... c~W-1 :'fl j H .t ~\' w,, ~.( ~ .. "~ ~~ '! lb • "' "'' win ti "'' s d , '"""'to • c 1><"' ..,..,. 1 l 11 • ,.,.,..1 ro N •• R 1 ' • 4 CIH'• o"'' 11 ' g 1 H4 lli1<! ,, 111 " iJ'I i.11 1 1,111 ff l IJ ·-IM""fd dlUdlM Le tur . •0' Mii l jjt , ,, l"""' 'l1 IA.It• Svc ! • 1q UI 1#l' -I C:u" OW•! " l'l• 'l II .~ ........ Wt ~ j , • •lo ~ 1:<"~tor1 ' 11 l j . 1 lf .... ..-..."I OOllf a AOICllltOll n, a aym AAu'1 ''l~"l...,.1 ll M llU •c110 >H, ~'"n~1 • '-,,c.wn .. w1 1 4 l~•''u '-"'~t111mf'-1•l il tT.Ut.11 '-I.al ..... ~,,.,1 ,8 \tt i -i '<' .,......., .,,,. '" !1 w .. t! ''I HIOIA. C~ >[ft 0 -I ~lllltrt! 10 ll ~ >l 1 •1 ._ ~ H•l!'l"ftft ~ •lot 1, t , t •MJ 1111 10 .... Oi'Htt ler 1'17 ltto;l o" 10 i\ Wt"lll 11 '11 JI i"'~' J.f.nt'& l ' ' 1 -"O "C ~· 11e IJ r.10 flj -~ lol o,..,lmft >.I " ~t. )t o ~ Htl"Cl\f'll(; 10 • '" 1 r. l llitoHrl ttHll. (I tMoU .... ,~ ,, ":10 •• Wffltl• I " 'II f l ·~ 11 ~rn r: i ·~· -' ~eru1 ""ft •C .It . l IO .. _, .. >h ...i ... ~ ' do I•. Ii .. ~ "'Al !e ~ lJ 1,. ,. ... lfll th DAILY PILOT ''( .. ,1n1 •1W·1 ~ I'' l"A:r:i:it11YrN "~ U • .,~ -D-M•"''"' 11 '" u 'l -··1Mit ... "C II' Ir r W: ~ ""''""'" ltr l •ttllltf' e ,.w 11!1 311\tll(• ,_II 2l J U,.,.,,ee ! l I' 101. .i. j, ,.,...,,'lo 1 '"'• u',' '! + '•Mf1w "' • 1 rltl I o ~llMt Ortl!M (Mt' 0 111¥' PIM e ~v ltHft 1M l 11 W~le ~ I M IO ,t,.,..c ot\!' p• ,t ,,..;_. •g'~"C.e • !' 41 • ••1• _.,+•H•r~~r•t U1 ''' [ .... j~lf' ••• 1 1}, er:.itrltft "•llf ~llw• '''' 1~1·1 •W 1(I'~ 1••1ll"•-•efl 1 f, M -•• 1•1t ... '"' r,1 11.t tf'"'11 1•1 """' -• "'•rt:t 1 «1 'I ' 'l•I • .. ,, " 11,.... 'II! , "Wt"" tl .l: r. t '"1'' c.1 ,.tn •• ,. , -, ••• C.1 1 JJ n l:"• I to "1 -t •rn:o e 1.1. ,•,..., • :;-•' ~.•,•,.• "• •, ,J ",,"'ii 1711 " IJ M111t• 1 6f 1 lJ Itl•lll 11 'I' I '"' Ru I IO .t ,._ ll • h Otrl lfld "°" II U ) i f'I U I 1-'••l!l'oln; to ..., 'It"! .., U , ... • _,, .. •• • I I I I I I • Frldl}', Nowmbt' 5 1971 Friday~s Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List SC DAil Y PILOT J 7_,_ , S1le1 .... IJ!dl l Kl• Le. C ... Cbt. - Finance Briefs NEW YORK -Burroughs Corp ls not talking with RCA Corp about buying parts ol RCA S computer m1nu~ luring busmess, President Rlf.: W McDonald told 1 New York- Security analysts meet 1 n g, Thursday But he a a ~d although no talks were In pro-. gress, Burrough'• w1& m· terested in buying some RCA", assets that RCA so far he,-: been unwilling to sell except as part of a larger package. \ • . • • . ... . J8 DAI LY PILOT Friday, Novtmbft 5, 1<171 Costa Mesa Store ONLY Sears Comfortable Slumber Bag Low Priced! 697 Durable cottoa top. poly- ester filled . Ret·erses to solid color. Multi-color floral. Lov.1 priced. Sporting Goods Dept . SAVE 3JC! Sears 126 Print Film Regular 88" $1.19 y Stock up now in time for the holidays with film from Sears! 12 exposures. Camera Dept. SAVE 'JO! 4-Ligbt Ceiling Fixture Regular $16.9; 699 Big 4-light ceiling fixtu re uses 4. 60 Y.'att bulb::. SAVEnow atSears! Electrical Dept. S.4 VE "6! Door Mirrors Regular 588 $11 .98 14x50-in. elegant 11-in. plate glass door mirror y.·1th beveled edge. Lamp and Chi na Dept. CUT '27to '57! M•n's Suit Values Were 3ror$100 $60 10 $91l or 36.88 each Your choice o( single or double breasted style s in many fabrics. In mens' sizes. Ptfens' filrnisbings Dept. S.4VE '6! Ted Williams Sleeping Bag 2 Re~~tar 488 Standard size sleep ing bag of Dura-Puff pol.v· ester fiberfJIL 34x75. $34, 43x80 •••.••••• ..26.88 $38, 40x8~ ••.••.••• 28.88 Sporting Goods Dtpt. S.4VE'20! English Dinnerware Set Regular 1988 $39.00 Blue and gray noral de- coration with Y.'hite em· bossed roccoco border. Ironstone. 45-pc . set. Lamp and China Dept. S.4 VE "4 to '20! Christmas Trees Regular $8,99-$39.99 411_1988 '\·our choice oI 4. 7. 8-ft. :-cotch pine. 7.ft, flock ed :-cotch pine. Flame proof. Trim Shop SAVE'llO! ·· 3/4-HP Reconditioned Paint Compressor \\"hen~ew ~99 $209.99 • Ideal lor a round the hou:-e and rorhobbie,..;. Low. lo"'· priced at Sear"! P~Depl. SAVE ·~·10,~l 15! Scratch and Dent Sale S2:74.95 Automatic Wa~ber, 10 Cycle, $159 %·Speed. 12860%. ••••••.•••..•.•••• t244.95 Gas Dryer with Electronic $159 Sensor. 178802 ................... . S?54 .95 Automatic Washer, 6 Cycle, ?·Spe ed. #20702: ..................• $274.95 Automatic Washer ~·ith bleaeh, rinse di spense r. N28804 ••••••.• , ••••• $150 $159 5244 .95 Gas Dryer ":i tb ''Soft -Heat" $159 Cycle . 178801 ...••..•..••.•..••.• 1239.95 Auto . Washer. #29750 .........• $179 1169.95 Electric Dr) er. Nfi0:,00 •••••.•• SJG4 .9S Automatic Washer \\'it h Soak Cycle . #20854 ...•........•••.••• , $87 $219 Sl89.9S Gas Dryer, ''Soft-Heat" $149 Cycle. 179760 •••••.•.••.••••..••• , S229.9~ Automatic Washer "'itb $199 Rlnse Dispenser. i20610 .....••....• S\99.95 Gas Dryer with ''Soft-Heat'' $169 . Cycle. 170600 ..•....•... "'\, .••••. SzM.95 Automatic \Vasher. #2066% ••• , $219 · Sl79.95 Ga' Drye r. J Heats. #70400 •.• , $149 $304.95 Automatic 'Yt'asher, 10 Cycle, $259 ?·Speeds. #21856 .•............•.• $159.95.Gas Drye r, Full Size . ~70110 ..• $139 $239.95 Au tomatie Washer. ;29750 .•.• $199 $284.95 Gas Dryer, $229 Sears Best 171900 •.•......••.•.•• $259.95 Automatic Washer \\'ith Self Cleaning Lint Filter. 120660 ...•....• $219 ~J!~~~ ~;~?o:·~~'.~'~.n~~e ........... $169 $279.95 Automatic Washer "·ith Roto $239 Swirl Agitator . .121800 ............ . $229.95 Eleetric Dryer "ith $189 Electronic Sensor. N61850 ..........• $199.95 Auto matic Washer. 1'20500 ...• $189 $239.95 Ga s Dryer "'ith Electronic $199 Sensor. #71800 ..................• ~~~:~9:d~~;~~~~ ~a.s~~~· ............ $209 \lisel' Ila neous 2for65¢,8-Pack · 8 99' Light Bulbs . . . . . . . . for $21.95 E lectric Fondu Pot. 11 88 Li mited Quantity . . . . • $9.99 Mixed Paint. 1 88 Assorted Co lors • . . . . .. • Gal. Was $35 Salt Water 17 99 Spinning Reel . . . . . . • $1.19 Utility Fuel (Li mit 4 59' Cans Per Customer) • . . . . Gal. $50.49 New Moon China 24 88 47-Pc. Services 8 . • . . . • Sel $6 Panty Gi rdles. White, Sizes S-M-L·XL (Not all 3 99 sizes in all styles). • • . . • $5.77, 32·Pc. Glass· 2 88 ware Set. Colors . . . . . . • $16.95 Chrome Reverse 10 88 Rims; 14-in. Size • . . . . • \ $199.95 Mini-Bike, f·HP ·$139 Model 8078 ............ . $39.98 Blossom Tim• China .19 .88 s.1 ' . . ONE DAY ONLY! ·1 \ Saturday, November 6tD· SA VE ·~·3010 $134! Scratch and Dent Sale $449.95 Refrigerator, 18-Cu. f't. #6184%. 359 • 88 $169.95 Rtlrigerator, 10-Cu. Ft. ;68100 .. $100 $439.95 Refrigerator, 18-Cu. Ft. 359 88 Top Freezer K61840 ••••. , .. , • $334.95Refrigerator,17-Cu. Ft. 269 88 Top Freezer #61712 . . . . • . . • . • 1444.95 Refrigerator, 18-Cu. Ft 359 88 Top Freezer #61846 . . . . . . . . • $399 .9S Refrigerator, 18-Cu. t't. 319 88 Top Freezer #61820 . . . . . . • . f • $274 .95 Refrigerator, 13-Cu. Ft. 239 88 Top Freezer N613l? • . • • . . . . . • $18'9.95 Refrigerator, 8.6 Cu. Ft. 159 88 Top Freezer 190820 •..• , . . • • 5339.95 Side -by-Side Refrigefator, 309 88 14 .8 Cu. Ft. N61110 . , . . • . • . . • $349 .95 Refrige ra tor. 18-Cu . Ft. 259 88 Top Freezer N61810 • . . . • . • . . • $439 .95 Refrigerator, 18-Cu. Ft. 259 88 Top freezer #61840 . . . • • . . . . • 5439.95 Refrigeralor, 18-Cu. Ft , 359 88 To p Freezer #61840 ..... ·~· . • ' Si39.9.i Side·by-Side Refrigerator, 659 88 %0.6-C u. Ft. #6!080 • . . . • • . • . • $.134.95 Refrlgerator.15-Cu. ft. 279 88 Top Freezer K61524 . . . . . . . . • 5239 .95 Refri~erator, IJ-Cu. Ft. 199 88 Top Freezer #61300 .• , . . . . . • $?99.95 Refrigerator, 16-C u. Ft. 229 88 Top Freezer #61650 , .. , . . • . • $2i4.95 Refrigerator, ll·Cu. Ft. 219 88 Top Fretzer #61314 . . . . . . . . • M44 .95 Refrigerator.18-Cu. Ft. 359 88 Top Freezer N61842 . . . . • . . . • • $724 .95 Side.by-Side Refrigerator, 659 88 23-Cu. Ft. #68-084 . . . . . . . . . . . • $559.95 Side·by·Sidt' Refrigerat,or, 504 88 21.4-Cu. Ft. #60064 . . . . . • . . . • $384.95 Refrigerator, 17-Cu. Ft. $250 Top Freezer #69642 • , . , .•..• FREEZERS Scratch and Dent Sale SAVE ·~35 to ·~·701 $159.95 Ches! Freezer, · 124 88 6.6-Cu . ·F t'.'#1106.. . . . . • $129.95 Upright Freezer, 94 88 3.9-Cu. Ft. #2104 . . . . . • . o $299.~5 Upright Freezer, 229 88 lo.3·Cu. Ft. #2124 • . . . • $349.95 Chest Freezer, 289 88 2%.l·Cu. Fr. 11164 . • . • $31 9.95 Upright Freezer, 249 88 17.0·Cu. Ft. #2044 ... . o $3f9.9S Upright Freezer, 279 88 19 .5·Cu . Ft. #2154 . . . . o • SAVE $3295 Regular $199 .95 Ha ndsome n1oclern ~ofa ope ns into con1fortable full· size bed v.-ith 220.coi l i nne rsprin~ mattress. Choice of long·Y"eari ng plai d Vec tra fl !Olefin fib er I or easy- care vinyl cover. Re\•ersible pol yu rethane foam seat cushi ons. Recessed casters. .. • Corner Studio Group for Family or Teen Room Sea rs LO\\', LoY; Price! 13988 • T\\'O contempo rary 3·i n. lounges v•ith polyurethane foam ma ttresses and foundat ions for comfortable seatin,e: or sleeping. •Quitted Scotchga rd ' t reated print covers. vin\·J ba ses . Foam filled bolsters. • \~·a lnut fini sh pla stic top corner table S.4 VE '30! Twin Size Mattress Sets Regular $79 4 9 8 8 Po\~·urethane foam ~Jeep sets. Non·allergenic. Attractive covering, ' ./~ ~ . -.! ' . '- ·-"'ff -·· • ;_, • ."If. ~ CCT '.10! Now on Canopy \\t rt ·~· 49ss \\11itf' Frel'!Ch prnvln· c1~1 st~hng f ull or fl"ln Matchln(pi,ct5 lll rtdU<:ed prittl. Sears COSTA MESA ONLY ONE GIANT DAY ' ,,, .. .,. <• TUMBLEWEEDS W\1A1'S WRONG, LIMPIP LIZARD? 11 .. ' .... • -~--·. ... ,...... __ .. : . . .. MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS ' PLAIN JANE ACROSS 39 5urve~, i1 plimlng a l FJat-WtOrDed crime bolt 40 A dttennlned 5 Rain lo a fine f1ct " show!!' 41 Treats wltb 9 Moccasins, defl!tence e.g. 43 Large but 14 Apiece n01specifie lS To the nurn~rs Inside of 44 Rectangular lb Tightly pier ll·S • " stretchtd 45 A rising 17 -Nie lsen or of spirits 1115nl the silent '16 Reeordtd 3 E'ight: prefix 28 Moves at movies Items of debts 4 Rodent that top spted 18 A lot Var. 49 - -Infests octan 29 O!scharg!S: 19 "°"' upwani Certmonles: shipping: Slang 20 Explored 2 words 2 words 30 Take place 22 Brooding hen S3 In harmony: S Bad luck Stbseqll!ntly 23 Of zero· 2 words i eay leading :n Fcrms .. ~ni~ tLNaturl!' 54 -Arthur: inland from an l3 Dou;h !Md 24 Narrow str ip f«rl!ff OntaJlo ocean In ravioli of wown city 7 Uprli;ht post 36 Trtatits fabric SS -Scotia: 8 Part of a shoe 37 Caustd to 2S Subordlnatt Can. P'"CJil inct 9.H!Ving narrow movt swiftly ru!tr Sb Guldt a vtsstl barids 39 Cores 28 Wattr· by mtans of 10 Otvlct giving 40 Giddy cavtrtd a rudd!t off warmth , .CZ Achtd arta of a 57 lmPtl ll "Sttp -!": 43 Titre d l!Sp!d wattttourst 58 Constantly H11TY up: 45 Of tonSlder- 3Z Grte~ tPic: 59 Groups of 2 words ablt size poe:n1 animals 12 Aetual being 46 fulctuaUon 33 Removtd by 60 Mall lJ Palm reader, matlc cLZttlng btYtl'a;e e.g. ~ Sdistltute kr: 34 Unit 61 Skin laytr: n Dresstd SufOx 35 Caust lo slqie Suffix. 22 K~ for 48 South African by ra ising Murt ust 49 Greater In one end DOWN 24 Fatiqutd dtgtte 36 Wal1u~d baclc 25 Hindu gu!la:t ~ Wand tr fNfl _. and forth 1 T11cts of 26 -Marblt, wide •ea across water within ttnnls grtat 51 DOM 37 Stockings an ocean 27 Plects of 52 Produce cr'ops. 38 Card 2 lr1 '111y -flooring 54 Im ' ' . ,. 17 lO " " " n " ll ., . . • . I MISS PEACH • • Jo1 111 Tiii! MIMD- READElf Of AMill"A I. 'II ;!lo • • (j • PERKINS . • • j • ly Chester Gould • • 0 0 • ' ly T"m K. Ryon .. · . . ' VJ!;AIN'T MARRll'P '1'1::1; S100P!P . .... . • .. • . . .. By Al Smith By Dole Hale \ tl'L ABNQ ™E SlDBeoJIA>.J Cl)LTLIRAL ATTACME WISMES INFORMATO.J 0-~ A LOCAL. ~--\ CUSTOM- /' SALLY BANANAS GORDO 7)/!/lt 5Ptt.J.'/S //A vi;, JH#f;/J l/JE ~1'1!.C:fj;//1 .f©$!1211 ilOP/N (} 10CUT IJS DOWN IN M/E.SS!JoJf# W!Til OtJ1Z:S6X J.JVPSf MOON MULLINS Friday, Nowmbtr !i, l 9n * DAILY PILOT p IFIT WAfWT i::o' n; WI I ~-....... WOULDllT &E MARRIE!>- By Charles Banottl By Ferd Johtison NOP6-'TIUS IS l!NJet<Pl<1S&" • . iflB IN4!BNUITY IS Fl.ATTBNING ')bUR ,.AXl 15 11..'.!:~=s-:__.....,.,. By Frank Baginski ANIMAL CRACKERS He~e15 A PHOrO-STOA' Oil l'Ol-K-~ STAR eu..eAllLIQOD Mll..L.EF!· • L )l r· \ lHA.T P-'GE WA.S A DIP HE HE! ~~. ' M<l M11$1C. JS MIJ 1-IFE JJJD :r. D0Al1T GtUf: A HOOT" A600r T~e MOAlf.l/ !':.: ' By Harold Le_ Doux MESSAGE i:ROM Erle! SA.V MOW ME'LL BE i..IELP UP.. LOMG l-IE'LL WO! 'TllE RESTAURANT WE'RE GOING TO 15 WEUER MIS HOTB. TMA.N Olllt'S! ru SEE WMETME~ He'S STILL 11-IER:E! IF HE 15, WE CAN HAVE HIM. MEET US &uT WANTS US &E MELD TO W,t.JT! UP ? A.T THE' R:ESTAURANT! OTMER:WlSE,. • WE MAV NOT MAKE TME TME.\TE2! Ii 'I THE GIRLS "I 1bould th lat, for $165, It would have had a happy ddtn&." By Mel I DENNIS THE MENACE ~ 1/-S ' \ I \ l ' 4- - 3 4 . DAILY ·PILOT fr~ay, Nowmbtr S, 1971 AT~LAS • .' CHRYSLER PLYltfOIJTll/lltf PERIAL . Costa Mesa · . . . . . t>aire is your lu::;i oppor• 2uccity to s av e on any iiew 1972 Chrysler Ply· r.HJ'lltt1 a t 1971 prices, ~!us {·he excise te11 x re• &cr.t!te as gf Aug . 15~ ·,,, ,' ' . : I •:::D 197.2 DUSTER ' ... . . USED CARS ChooH from practlc· ally every make and model ••• from trans· port:at ion to late models ••• I -ALWAYS-AT BIG SAVINGS • ..,J . . . GALAXI E aulometic, radio, he.il1r, power 1lt1rin9, whilew1U t ir11, .•ir c:onditionin9. 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ISVV605 l '69 VOLKSWAGEN SUNDIAL CAMPER 81•utiful con~•r•ion wilh ic1 box, 1inlr, bunlr1, Dubbi l1 top, etc, IZVZI 20 1 $AV E ALL P'll!Cll Alll: P'LUI TAX AND LICE~ll ALL P'lllCll Alll VALID 'TIL SDLD SUN .. NDV, ,, 1'71 ' .. \ ' , frldu. November --5.1971 s DAILY PlLDr :/ -Irate Citizen·s Seize .~Anin1al Death Machine' fORT LA UDERDALE:, Fla. IL:PI I -A $2.000_ air co!llpressor -a key part of a 1nacl11ne designed lo kill stray dogs and ca1s -was being held as a •·mechanical hostage" \oday lo for ce the local Humane So:ciety to give up the device. The p~esidenl of the Humane Soeie!y says he intends to press charges against lhe group or irate citizens who walked off with the five-fool high, 800-pound com- pressor. O'Keef e Wants Traf fie Stud y Of Raillt·ay Area The second railway pedestrian death of the year in "the San Clemente area has spurred a renewed request by San Clemente Councilman Thomas O'Keefe for a traffic engineeting studv on the braking distance or trains 81ong the tracks in the cil_v. O'Keefe, reacting to the death early last week or a La Jolla man near the Beach Road Colony. asked that police drafl a report shO\•:ing the distance re- quired for trains. lo slop at given speeds. O'Keefe said he asked for the report to determine if the eHy could set harsh speed limits for rail traffic. f ellow counciln1cn, however. seem¢ resigned to the fact !hat more safety con- trols for the trains would be futile . .. Ir ""e slart setting eXC'essively IC1w speed limits the rail"·ay company might fence its entire right-0f·,~·ay," said l\1ayor \Va!ter Evans. pointing out that beach ac- cess throughout San Clemente depends upon no fences along rights-Of-wa y. '·But then again, it might make them move out of town ... O'Keefe replied. O'Keefe stressed that figures on stop- pintr distances exist for automobiles . "I'm sur_e someone has them for trains as well ," he added. Beaclies to Keep Abreast in LA? LOS ANGELES I UPI l -The city p arks and recreation commission has expressed displeasure over a city council committee recommendation \Vhich would alloy,· women to go topless at beaches. The council's recreation and parks commitlee. "'hile revie"'ing a proposed beach and park ordinance in September, penciled out a ban on exposing the female breast. HoY.1ever. the commission turned down the council commiltee's recommendation Thursday and adopted ;/' slaff report which said such a n1ove might "encour~ age public nudity." The proposed.ordinance now goes to the full council. where the pros and cons of the exposed female breast will be debated. 17 Canines Said Starved to Deatl1 LOS ANGELES IAPJ -Seventeen puppies and adult dogs that possihly were. starved to death have been discovered wrapped in newspaper along ~ remote canyon raod in the San Fernando foothill s. authorities say. Sheriff's deputies said !he animals y,•ere found Wednesday night after of- ficers received an anonymous call reporling a body \Vas :ying along Lopez Canyon Road. Kennelman Van Savage of the Baldwin Park Animal Shelter where the dogs "·ere taken said the 12 puppies and five adults were mostly of a mixed terrier variety. ''It looks like they have been starved to death." Savage said. addint there were no signs or mutiliation. ''\\'e are in contact with the Sheriff's Departmtf\t," R. A. Swie:r.y, he.ad of the Broy,·ard County Humane Society, said 'fhursday njghl. "This is larceny and we do intend to pro.!lecute." An undiscloSed nUJilber of men and "'Omen "'ent to the l Humane Society fa<:llity Tuesday night Ind hauled off the compressor used to operate the vacuum- chan1ber device for killing unclaimed dogs and cats. The Society had recenUy HIS OUTLOOK CHANGED SPCA's Ryland and "Minnie" Retired Colo11el Looks Forward ToHumane Work A retired Air Force Colonel who says humane work has changed his outlook on life has been named head of the Laguna Canyon animal shelter. Byrd Ryland \vas named to !he post by George Crosier, executive vice president of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelly lo Animals ISPCAJ. "I thought if I could help pul a man on the moon .'' the retired officer and former engineer said, "I could certainly help in trying to stop the inhuman treatment of animals on earth.'' "The training I have received in hu- mane work has changed my total outlook towards life," he added, "and I like it \1ery much.·· Ryland, born and raised on a Kansas farm, will oversee the Laguna Beach SPCA shelter operation, which is unique in that it features a barnyard of farm animals for children to visit. The shelter is located at 20612 Laguna Canyon Road. Dog llas Green Pnppy COARSE GOLD (UPI! -Chr.rles A~m strong h~d a hard time convincing friends that his pet dog's litter included a distinctly green female pup. C1·ewmen Describe Death Of F an1ed Sc1·ipps Yacht Iiy AL~IO.\' LOCKABE:Y DAILY l'llOT 101111111 l'clll9r There are those who will tell you that a yacht 1s just another inanimate piece of properly. John Scripps of L:i Jol!a. chairman of the board of Scripps newspapers. is not one of these. "John \\'ill lake ii hard. Thr r-oo~·ia was <lne of the great t.reasurcs of his life.'· Thus spoke ~1rs. Scripps as she greeted the cre\V or the 89·fOOI ketch Novla del J\lar y,•hen they arrived in San Diego 'fhursday afler abandoning the vessel 46 n1iles nor! of desolale Cetlros Island as £he sank in fh1mrs \Vednesday morning. \\'hat Mrs. Scripµs meant was that. as <lf !ale Thursday. Johnny did not yet kMv.' that his beloved Novi a ! sweetheart of the seit I "''as a charred hulk in 900 fathoms of water off lhe Baja California Coast.-~ After ski ppering Novla de\ Mar to Cabo San Lucas in Nev.•port Harbor Yacht Club's Cape San Lucas race, Scripps turned the yach t over to lus professional crew and "'ent on a hunting trip deep in · lhe wilds of Baja Califomia. The No\!ia de\ P.1ar. one of the last or the classic old yachts on the West Coast. went down in names e11rly \Vednesday mornlng 9!1 the crew watched from a sport fi~hing l:>Mt that had rescued them from the burning viesseJ. , .. The lasl we ~aw of Novia at a'boul I 11 .~. 'i\'ednesday she was blazing like a huge Christmas tree," said 63-year-0ld Sam Davis who had celebrated his 25th year as professional skipper of the Novia lasl TueSday. Another survh•or y,•as Stan Gregory, 54, who had spent 23 years or his life on the yacht as professional steward. The other survivor was Charl es Ladow, 64. rieported to be a rclati\'e by marriage of Scripps. HOI\' did it happen? No one will ever 1010\v for sure, but Davis theorizes that the fire in the engine room "''as touched off hy a hot exhausl of the auxiliary enginC' The first. lhe lhree-man crew knew or the fire was when Ladow came on watch al JO p.m. Tuesday. }le !old Davis he thought he smelled smoke as he came through the saloon. When Davis and Ladow lifted the engine hatch for inspection they were driven back by a cloud of smoke and flames from the diesel engjne. "We lried to right lhe fire with et· tinguishers. but it was already too far along,'' said Davis. Both men said they could hear fire extinguishers popping In the engine compartment. Soon the. flames 1,1;ere coming out the afler hatch 8nd set the mi1.ien mast and sail aflrt. The heat was 10 intense that no l)ne aboard could. get to the radio to aet off 1 dlstrcss call. (See NOVIA, Pa&< I \ • obtained the machine to use in place of the current method of sOOium pentothol injection. and planned to put it into operaHon \\'ilhin a few days. f\trs. f\1ary Novak, who idenlUWI herself as a Fort Lauderdale businesswoman, said in a telephone In- terview Thursday the compressor , is being held as a "mechanical hostage" as part of a nationwide fight against destruction of animals by vacuum ~·· chamber. She said la ..... ~Jits are. under way Ul New "li'ork. CJllfomla and Florida to halt the use or lhe device,. whlch is made by a firm in Wh ittl'-r. ''Wie know the court battle wil l take linie," 1'frs. Novak said. "Jn the mean· time, an imals are dying a horrible death in the~e things. We decided to preclude this lnhu.rnan slaughter by rendering the machine inoperable and then go into the legalities latter. "We haven't damaged the machine. It's a mechanical hosta9e.'' She said the group, which has no name or formal organization, will send the compressor1 to the manuf<ft!t.urer if the • Humane Sociely agrees to send back the ren1a!nl ng pieces and promises not to ac· quire such a n1achlne again. "\Ve are proud of what we did and we are not trying to hide. We are ready to go to jaH," ri1rs. Novak said. Lyle Benjamin, director of the Humane Society. described the chambers u a painless means of putting animals to death by creating alrless conditions com• parable to those at 30,000 to S0,000 feet altitude. He said the animal becomes g:id· dy through the slow eliminalion of oxygien to the brain but does not fee l pain. ''The animal does not su!ficate, .. Benjami11 said. 1 LAFC Hassle on Legal Fees Looms By JACK BROBACK ·oi ""' O.ilv ,, .. , Slt U J\1embers of 1he Local Agency Fonna- tion Commission will stir memories of a bitter feud belie\'ed ended more than a month ago when they debate payment of a $3.894.74 bill for legal ser\'ices \Verl- nesday. The bill is to pay the Santa Ana law firm of Sr.ewart, Woodruff and Frazee for legal services in the lawsuits between members of the LAFC and the League of Cities and two members of the' Board of Supervisors. The total legal bill is $18,000 ·and on Oct. 21 the mayors of county cities in- \'olved in the LAFC dispute decided that the cost would be divided up between 15 members.of the City Selection Committee and four members of !he LAF'C. The LAFC members in\·olved are Charles Pearson or Anaheim, public member of the commission: Tony Coco. mayor of Tustin and LAFC alternate city 1epresentali\'e: William D. f.1artin of Laguna Beach. alternate for Pearson, and Louis "Red" Reinhardt of F'ullerton. a city representative. Fifleen members of lhe City Selection Committee and the four LAFC members participated in the legal actions which disputed a special meeting of the LAF'C al 8 a.m. ei August 9 which named Anaheim attorney Herb Licker to Pearson's post on the commission and a previo~ action which placed Los Alamitos Councilman Joseph Hyde in Reinhardt's position. Now Lhe bill ha& to be paid. Several cities have ifldJcated that they will pay their $768 share of the cosls bul there is a problem v.•ith the SJ,894.74 LAFC share. 1'he commission operates on a very light budget dictated by the Board or Supervlsors. The stipend covers the * * * * * * Bitte1· Ck11ie11te Pays Up Several ~ cnuncilmen in Sa n Clemente muttered lhat it Smacked of a "racket," but th'!y gruQgingly approved the donalio,. ::f $768 Wednesday as San Clemente's share of the fluge cost or fighting the battle for the chairs at the Local Agency Fonnation Commission . The early, preliminary costs as the city's share in legal expenses ·"·as in lhe $200 range. · · And councilmen here Wed n es d a y repeated their shock at the $30,000 sllm "'hich lawyers are charging for their ~rvices ·lo the 'f..layor's Selection Com- mi!tet \\'hich battled in and out of court with two county supervisors earlier this season. ConNffrpOTlfryMod#n Walnut Styling ''It just doesn 't seem possib le,'' said Mayor Walter Evans, ··but those are the · charges.'' · The ntayor -one of lhe prime war. rlors in the battle -blamed the reams of paper work and other int ricate lega l functions neetssary for taking the fight befor'-the appellate rourt in San Bernardino. The P.layor·s Selection Committee launched !he cnurt batlle against Supervisors Ronald Caspers and Robert Battin during lhf' biller dispule over who should be allowed to sit on the LAFCO panel. Councilman Wade Low'-r reacted lo the city share by saying, "What a racket." Medit.,-r•neu P11a111 Styling salaries of Executive Officer Richard Turner. a full lime and a part time secretary, plus needed supplies. There is no eii:1ra money in the budget so if the co1nmission should vote to pay the bill it \\'OUld be up to the supervisors lo pro\·ide the money. Making the whole plolmore interesting is the fact that the defendants in the former Jav.·suils, Supervisor!! Robert Bat• tin and Ronald Caspers are still member.t of the LAFC and entitled to vole on the action. In fact they y,·il! probably have twCJ chances to expres.~ their feelings about paying a legal bill which was used to at· tack them, once next \Yednesday and later when the supervisors get a piece of the action. Ironically, the Yi'hole si tuation is moot today follo\\1ing lhe surprise action nf Supervisor Ralph Clark on Sept. 22 wl\ictt re-seated Pea rson officially on the com· mission before the laws suits could be completed. Clark was sitting as alternate for Casper.; v.·ho had been called tCJ Westminster on busi.ness. Caspers was Irate when he returned to find that Pearson had been re-sealed but the volt stood. 25''01AG. CONSOLE 2J'' DIAG.CONSOLE I I GUARANTEE COLOR TV Ti. ...........,.. CE l!i• 00.,. S,..W.8ri•• """""" T-. Tio.....,...111 ..... ~ .. plio•., _.__. -c>pl~O'\ion ,.,..._, ·-floe bJig.lllftl.•~ c<>kw in Gl h•1,,_,. • CE-flELIACOLOR CliASSIS -E..,._ .. To Gi.. Yo. Stith!, Sh..,.. TN•·T•llf• Co ... .. ~ ...... • -SENSfTAOl':: ...... LUS"' T ....... Sy- • GE INSTA<:OLOR PICTURE -~ •nd Soutlll ""' ""'"""' ·--:/!!, • 3 15 ~ Inch Vi .... A-s::Jlqqqs f.•clu•iv• GE Pott•·~ • .. ln·Un•'', Plcture Tubti- .. -·-.... SJ8888 COLOR TV WllQMI OllL\' II L•S.I • --'"""",_It, TV e llO h. lfldl Viw>o ... _ . ,_....,_.. ,._c--. . .......... ;.....,. .....,,.n..,.T• e AJIClwlfotl0lli...: .... • ,. .... olot a.it •.t..i-k.FiN T11llt"1~•0I •s...iilf9flll: Tlll'I,,,_ •Aut-•llSkilll-. ..-. •e.!w ~-ved T11t1 ... •~1• h . lftdl vi.-. ... _ 46 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE! 90LDINWBT I WAlf\111 HUNTINGTON IEACH SALIS ONLY l41·SSt6 401 MAIN STllllT HUNTINGTON IUCH SlRVICI & SALIS Sl6·7S61 IROO kHURST &- ~ONIO FOUNTA'fiN YALLIY SALIS ONLY t62°14S6 "' I t1 ... .,~c-.i.10CN'•n ""''!.-1'>'"'"-•ll".~ t-.,w TV r..., • P•"l>n-~·-m.i., • ...1 ,. .... ... --·1 ..... u,,.,.. ... ,.,., ""'>l'•l•l•I• .,.,,._, ... ..... '""' <>~•,.nt.o-C..tilo< ... ... '"" ~ •• 1 .. •..-·-'"" ... «h•-S ......... _, .... '" 11"'' 4,,., H• ..,n ... h..-~ "'" .... -..,...... T~ .. ~~ ... ft,.,~1 .. M ,,.. • .u...,,...,.. .. Clflr:c-31,1')7 1 • I ' ') • • -.. 4 ~i:j PILOT C11t 40% U.S. Foreign Aid Slashed, Revived Army Seized by ~ Sad.at Move Studied in Light of War Crisis WASHINGTON iUPn -Wilh hel p from a Republican senator who has been absent for lwo years, President Nixon Thursday won 1 breath of life for his fore ign aid bill. ·· The Senate Fortign Relations Com- mittee revived the measure after slashing it by 40 percent and cutting it in- to two separate parts in an effort to get it · by a recalcitrant Sena te. By United Prt11 Jnte matlonal 1 _Egyptian President Anwar Sadat mov- el:I into the headquaf;ter& o1 the high com- mand today and aslumed dirf!Ct charge of Egypt's estimated 800,000-man armed forces. A communique said he did so "in view of the importance of the political and military situation." Political sources in Beirut noted that the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser made the same move shortly before out- break or the June , 1967, war. The sources said the Sadat move was,..an indication lo lhe world 1hat the Middle East dec.dlock cannot ro nlinue. Sadat has said repeatedly the Middle East crisis must be settled by peace or w11r this yeir. Mohamm!d Hassanein Heikal, editor of the semiofficial Cairo f!ewspaper Al Ahram , said Sadat his m11de the deci sion but he did not say what it was . In Tel Aviv, Israeli military sources said they saw Sadat'li takeover ot Lhe Egyptian army as a possible sign he felt threatened by officers anxious to resume the war with Israel. They said the plclurt was not yet clear but "it i& a good sign he smelled something wrong in his Army and found it necessary to ha ve a stronger hand." .. It might have been that gome officers \\'ere unhappy with the postponement of the 'date or° revolution,' " kt.her 1a1d. "A lot ot Ideas can be put forward on this." · Beirut political sources said the Arab world wa11 angered at Jsr11eli prime Minister Golda Meir's speeth last week rejecting Eg ypl '!i conditions for a reopen- ing of the Suez Cana l and that in view nf Sadat's repealed warni ngs that the pro- blem must be solved this year moves ID bring the cri..'lis to a head were ioevitable. Sadat already was supreme com· mander of the Egyptian forces, but hil new position will put him ln effective, day-to.day control , politlcal soarets said in Cairo. Tht two hills totaling f.l .3 billion now go to tJ:le floor where se•alors one week ago killed a single p.;.ckage ol economic and military aid after culling the ad· ministration ·s request of $3.6 billion down to $2.9 billion. Hundreds of U.S. Planes A military communique from Gen. f\tohammad Ahmad Sadf'k. the Egypti11n war minister. said Sadat had decidtd to assume his command functions from his headquarttrs at the high command of lhe armed forces. Ul"I 'f1lttOlle" Nixon let ii be known he was dis pleased at the latest cutback. "We are not iatisfied with that level," said Press ~retary Ronald L. Ziegler . "We do not think it is sufficient.'' NIXON GREETS GANDHI White House Welcome Bomb Ho Chi Minh Trail The communique said "the dec:isKin V.'as taken in view of the 'import11nce of the political and military situation through which the nation i& passing a• present." New Aid Total Not Sufficient, Says Connally • JAKARTA (UPI ) -U.S. Treasury Secretary John CoMally said today the $2.3 billion aid bill which cleared the Senate Foreign ReJatinns Committee was not adequate If security was to be main- tained in Southeast Asia. Connally met with newsmen after talk- ing for an hour and a half with President Suharto on the Nixon Administration foreign aid program and the Senate ac· tion cutting off American loreign aid. He said Suhar1o was "enormously in- terested" In both subjects. Connally said he told Suharto that the Nixon Administration "deeply regretted the action of the Senate on the foreign aid program" and C<1nsidered the Senate ae.- tion not in the best interesl3 or either the United stales or recipient nations. Connally aald he told Suharto that the administration Intended to make every possible effort to convince Congress that the cutoff in foreign aid was wrong and that he assured Suharto the American withdrawal from Soulh Vietnam should not be detmed a withdrawal from Southeast Asia . "I told him the U.S. would continue to maintain a presenct. in Southeast Asia for 50me time to come," he said. Connally gaid that the Nir.on doctrine had proved Itself very beneficial .in strengthening security of nationa in this r~ion and "we could not forsake the ~ gress which hali been made." Chilean Marxist Asks New System SANTIAGO 1UPI ) -President Salvador Allende will send to congress Tuesday a bill to replace the chamber of deputies and Sena te with a unicameral "assembly of the people" in what could prove to be a risky political gamble. Allende announced the proposal Thurs· day night before 80,000 cheering Chileans who packed the nationa l stadium to etlebrate his fir!it year as president . The socialist leader said th e unicameral ch11mber was needed tn streamline Chile 's c umbers nm e legislative process. It wa~ among the campai.gn planks nf Allende's "popular unity" coalition. whi ch i!I dominated by 50Cia\ists and communists. The proopsed co nstitutional reform replacing both legislative houses with the unicameral assembly would take plact when the next president la elected Sept. (, 1971. Sen . J. Will iam Fulbright ~ 0-Ark . \, who will manage the bills, said the cha nces of passing either were marginal : The comm ittee's decision to revive the aid measure , however. he i ghtened chances jhat Congress will acl to prtve nl Ute program from expiring Nov. 15. when authority lo obligate new funds run,; nut. Thursday's decision lo extend the aid bill on a sharply reduced level until June 30 came in a series of 14 separate com- mittee votes. Many or them were close. The critical one was an 8 to 7 roll call on .s~litting the program into tv.·o .separate bills -$1.2 billion for military assistanc• and a SI.I billion• for economic and humanitarian programs. It was Sen. Karl Mundt (R-S.D.), who provided the margin of victory for that proposal. Mundt suffered a stroke on Nov. IJ. 1969 and has not set fool in the Sfnate since. But Sen. Hugh Scott t R- Pa. ), used his proxy to provide the win- ning margin . The 16th member of the committee, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie 10-M&lne l, a leading C<lntender for the Democrat ic presidential nomination, was absent. If he had · been present, the proposal would have betn defeated and the allernatlve plan for three sepa.r;ate bills on humanitarian, economic and milita ry programs ..-·ould have carried. It was Muskie who originally proposed three se para te bills. Mundt's stroke lert him partially paralyzed but, before the vote, Srott circulated an earlier written proxy Mundt had given him. The committtee·s deepest cut in the aid program was in the category of "security suppor1ing assistance.'' This is to help countries that have economic problems resulting from grave threats to their military security. India, Pakistan Conflict Gro·ws, Gan<lhi Warns WASHINGTON tUPI J -Indian Prime '-linisler l\1rs. Indira G11ndhi loday scheduled her seconq private meeting in 11 s ma ny days with President Nixon to follow up her plea far U.S. ~~erstanding and .support in her nation's trouble with Pakistan. Mrs. Gandh i planned visits wit h members of Congress and a luncheon 6peech at the National Press Club follow- ing her scheduled II a.m. While House mee ting. Mrs. Gand hi told a rormal state dinner in the White House Thursday night th at unless the prnblems between India and Pakistan are resovled quickly "There is no foretelling where it will lead. I cannot a\·oid the responsibility or my duty to safeguard the sa fety of my country ." Her voice showed deep emotion when she described the plight of the 9.5 million East Pakistan refugees who have fled to ln~ia and ~he said •·we are paying the price of being an open society.'' Ni xon carefull y avoided ment ion of in· ternalional affairs, including the India- Pakistan problem in his formal toast. He discussed the historic importancf: of the state dining room and recalled his visit& with the late Prime Mini.stu Nehru, Mr1. Gandhi's father. Recalling a 1953 meeting with Nehru. Nixon said, "He told me then that what India needs, what the world needJ, b a generation of peace." Blazing Jet Gas Falls • On Autos; Seven l(illed RAVENNA. Italy /AP\ -A deadly curtain of flam ing fuel from a falling Jt'I fighter-bomber enveloped ~ever 11 1 automobiles Th u r s d a }'. ~l lling !I 1,; persons in the cars. The Jt'l pilot also died . The plane, which had bt>en perfo im1ni: in an Italian Arn1ed Forres Day aeria l show, barely missed a restaurant crnv.·d· ed with holiday diner s and crashed Into a flock of 5heep. The pilot. Lt. Col. Luigi \\'eher. ejecled from the flaminjl cra ft. but hi! para rh11!"t fa iled to open 11nd he felt onto a 5lale highway. Flaming fuel ~p<>wed from lhe plane's gas tanks as il pa~sed over the sa rne road, enveloping several mnving and parked car~. Four oceu pants of one ti:1r and a hi:1hy girl In another were bur ned to de ath. The parent& of the child v.•ere crit!cally bur n- ed and at lea.st one other person was in- jured. The era.sh ·w11s ntRT the town of P1narella di CerviA . Authorit ies said the plane. a. Flat-made G!l\Y, was taking par t in an aerial 1how out of the nearby Cervia military airport. Spectstors saw a colu mn of 1 mo k 1 :shoot out from the plane a~ it weaved and spun 1n the air. Prisoners Remember Bailiff's Birthday FRESNO (lJ Pl ! -Munici pa l Cnurt Railiff Ben J\aspa n11n Thursday gnt a surprise chorus of "happy birlhdAy" on hls 50th bir!hda\'. A group of jail inmates f111cing drunk charges burst into a discordant bul enthusiastic version o! the birthday song . Most of Nation Pleasant Cool Arctic Air Sweeps Over Rockies; W c1rm Elsewhere C&Uforttla Pll:lV l(W or NO•• NAllON•l W[AIH{JI SlllV ICl 10 ' 1\0 A M rs f "." -II Tenaperature• SAIGON I UPI) Hundred s or American warplanes pounded North Viet- namese supply lines in Laos today in a m11jor new bombing campaign which bep:an sho rtly before the arrival in Viet- nam of Defense Secretary Melvi n R. Laird. The U.S. Air Force marshaled its en- llre Southeast Asia strike rorce of 30 852 bombers for intense raids agains t the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Hundreds or Thailand- ba.sed F4 Phantoms and FI05 Thun- derchiefs joined the strikes inlo Laos. U.S. military sources .said the new stepped-up raids bega n Wednesday only hours before Laird arrived in Saigon for a look at the progress of the Nixon Administratioo's Vietnamization policy and prospects for sharp nev.· reductions in Am erican troop strength . Beside!'! the Air Force heavy bombt>rs and fighter-bomber strikes, the Navy put the aircraft carrier Constellation. 1 h e largest convention 6hip in the 7th fleet in- to action off the North Vietnamese coast.. sending waves of fighter-bombers against. Laotian targets, the 1ources said. * * * CamhQ.dia Begs U.S. Senate To Continue Aid PHNOM PENH (UPI ) -The Cam- bodian government ai:ipealed direclly to the U.S. Senate tnday to restore aid to Cambodia and said if it clid not the result could be disastrous in Cambodia·s war with the North Vietnames~ invaders. The appeal, signed by Info rmation f\1inister Long Boret, said il wou ld be "Unthinkable for the American people and government to abandon the Khmer people who wish nothing more than to de- fend themselves without appealing for · foreig n troops.'' The government said the consequences of cutting Cambodian aid v.·outd be disastrou s but that it had been a little reassured by Defense Secretary Melvin C. Laird's statements in Saigon he was convinced Cambodian aid would not be killed. "We consider President Nixon·s policy nr helping smJ!ll rountries to defend and develop themselves on their own as a just Rnd dignified policy for the world's largest power," the appeal s,a1d . It said the Khmer Republic should be the la st country where thi s policy should be negated. -. "On the conlrary, the consequence.'> \VOuld be di!iastrous and reach far beyond Cambodia if American aid to our coun1r.Y ,.,.ere cut off in midstream, ~ince the North Vietni..mese aggressors, wha tever decision is t1tken \on aid) by the A merican~. ronlinue to receive more and more economic and military aid from the Communist powers." Raindrops Slo'v Irish Violence -A Little Bit BELFAST, Northern Ireland flJPI ) - H@a\'Y rain cut brlmbing and sniping at- t11cks 11cr05s northern Ireland toda'" an army spokesman said. In Belfa~i. An 12 I fltllllHG '""" "j \_ SNO~., "'"'"<! , I • UNITfO P•lll INTflHIATIDNAL ' " ho ' r•"'•'•'~'" t nll e••ti•ll•TI""' i11r army team 1n a 1--ur operation • COLD .... '(_"'f; /{./Jl.-r.~ · ' • ~. /1 r.. ~ --~~.,.~ .\.!: r7'i11 ii~G~.,~.1 "~ •Alli! 1 ""-,.;, • .,,.,,•JIAIN 1· ( J .. J2- -. 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Ml•~ L ... l"r•'· The spokesm11n reported only oni in· JllbU<OU,.llV. !l"t~~·••t ........ aa-... llot ld llln lM C.~lt~•n (111(11111•!1 Clu1'11nd O.il1t o~n .. ., 0•• Molnt ) o~""'' F~•'Nll-J Ft1- '""1•"4"0111 ' '" K11\J~1 C.1•¥ l •I Vr.~1 k"llll llllit ""''~'' ,,. ....... N•r ... au•H M"'"H~" New ()rlf•llf N'IW Y(ltl 0~1•"""'• (I!) ~"'Ill• •Im '"""'' l"llf(t!ltt ..... "i::':/" "1t11tur.,. "°'"•""· O•w. ·-11:1e11mon11 1K •l mtf'l!ll '• I, It ~It 'f5.-· (ity f•" ••lltillt(I .. 111• !.fl&0:•11• V1ntr,:'"' Wttll 11•"~ " " " " ~ .. .. • n " ·" • " " M M .. " ~ ~ •I ., .. r, • P. .. " 'i J, .. .. " 11 .. " ·~ c\dcnt aftrr <lark Thu rsday -2. gunm111n ~ rirlng at a pat rol in Belfast's Roman .u Calholic Rallymurphy area. No one was ,, Injured. he said. ~ An army source Speculated that in 11d- "" d1tlon to the ra ln. "iolence ma v hi:1ve Yi been cut by Thur.;clay·s ra ids.-in "Roman » •• Ca.lhOlle areas of Belfiist 11.nri Lon- 7'1 donderry involving 1.400 soldiers, one or ~ Lhe biggest !iearch~ yet. ,. The Ar my i;aid ~ person!! wcrt LAken ~ lnto custody, bringing to n::iore than 100 )0 • the number arrested sinct Mond11y. In ~ _ Aclclition , a. number of firearms were i;e_iz· •l .t i ed. g An 1rmy bomh di~posal team j ust artt!r '~I midnight tfisa rmtd a ttme bomh they ·~ removtd fmm Re\fast'1 York Hotel on J~ BotAnlc Avenue , just south I'll the f~ down town Area. The operation 1ook 11 •~ ~•1 hours. ll il A barmAn said two gunmt!n walked into " lhe hotel about noon Thursday, plantttf a ff big whi le bnx labeler! "bomb" in red lrl· ff » ltrs in lhr Jnbby, anli warned evrryone to ~ ~t.I out before fleeing, Vienna Gunmen Flee Witlt Trio The ht.a vy new air strikes marked the opening of a campaign similar to one last yeM. In that campaign, one of the longest and most intense in the history of aerial warfare. American Air· Force and Navy jets dropped hundreds of thousands of tons of explosives on Communist truck rou tes. Despite the earlier massive. air &trikes, lhe South Vi etnamese had to invade Laos v.·ith .hea vy U.S. support from acr<fss the border in order to halt the Communist supply traffic. The South Vietnamese invasion of Laos came within a month after Laird's last visit in January .. l11ENNA (UPll -Three co nvicts arm· ed with pistols and a polire promise ol free passage escaped v.•ith three hostages and a taxicab toda y. They laler freed the host.ages unharmed. switched to a private automobile and fled into northeastern Au stria. The Communists charged Thursday night that Laird had come again to ''hatch new plans." The fugitives bargained with pol ice in I two-hour parley inside the taxi parked Thursday night outside slate police head- quarters Ir. Vienna's Ringstrasse. Laird had lunch toda y with President Nguyen Van Thieu and discussed new U.S. troop withdrirwals with South Viet- namese officials pr~paratory to an ·eJ- pected recommendation to President Nix- on that U.S. forces bt cut soon to a 40.000-man noncomtiat advisory group. -· Crowds of teenagers from .a disco- theque gawked as the talks ended t.arly today and the taxi sped off noct hwest toward the Czechoslovakia border. Laird and other top U.S. officials also met with South Vietnamese Defense Sec re tary Nguyen V11n Vy on the pro- gress of the Vietnam izalion program and prospects for atepped-up U.S. troop The border is heavily guarded a n d police sa id the v felt the con victs would hide out with friends or relatives rather than try to flet into a neighboring coun· try. wit hdrawals. • The episode began Th ursday aflernoon at Krems-Stein Prison 11t Krems, 50 miles up the Danube Ri ver from Vienna, where all three were serving lime for robbery. UPI Ttltllflltl Hot IJ1ader Collar 'rhis Ch!cago Y>~lder appe.ars lo be really hot under the collar as be pokes his he~d into ~ section or natural gas pipe to weld a seam. The "'Or k \\•as bein g done on the lower level of Chicago's \Var ker Drive. f<-. ..a.=.,, • Ready to Die They Shoot Thie ves in I rnn SAN ANTONIO, Tex . (UPI ) -Two lrAnlan rug merchnnts Who thought ~ey .wnu~d be t~~en ou~ and shot for hank theft will just be dtpcirttd ln.!:lead . 1mn11gr11tion nrf1c1als s11d Thursday. \\'.hen the lv.·o merchant!! "·ere takt!n from their j11il etll!'i to be i:1rraig ned th~y . crttO .and huggtd each othtr as U U1ey were parting for the 1Asl lime. off1c1als sa id . T11 ylor Cou nty Sheriff Ray Trammel thought the rea:clion str11nge so thty lookccl for !IOmecne who l'Ould sptak Persian. Finally through an inter- preter, Tr11mmet found out they thought the)' "were going to be taken oul and shot. a common penalty for such 1 crime in Jran. The carpet mcrchanl3. Abdul Montaleb F'aoyj. 1.8. and 'Norlheaslans ~ardous. 19. are·j1tilcd in San Antonio awaiting deportation. Imm igration nf. f f1cl.-ls have ruled they vkl\ated their visitor~' permili by steeling $3 300 from blnk11 In Alblene . Austin and San Marco!!. Tex. · They told reporter11 through an interprrter they hoped their countrymr.n never lc8mcd of their theft ronvlctlon. · . "In lr11n, a.~ well as in all Middle E11ost counl rie&. a theft ron\·lcUon br1njils shame to the entire family." they !laid. "Fnrever after one Is rtJtrred to Ill 'The Thief ... f\olh Iranians, who have been in the country !'!everal months . pleaded li!Ullty tn !!n11tchlng tht money rrom v11riou!I tellers' hAnd!I. Authorities 111id they have m1de restitution, "I don't know wh Al lhty're 80 Up8tt Abotil ." 811id tltPorta!lon nf fictr W. C. Htn r~·· "They·r«i' ju~t j!tll lng 11 frt11: trip hnme after rohbinJt: banks. Jf you or I did thnt we'd be sittln• in tht peni lentie ry.'1 J I • ' Rehnquist 1 Wili s Points Witl1 Solo11 s .. \\'ASHl;\G'T'ON IL'Pll -\V1lhan1 H. Rehnquist"s 11om1nal1on to the Supreine Court apparently 11•1]1 be ronf1tn1ed by the Senate 11·11h little difficult~·.: . Rehnquist reduced considerably his liberal oppos1\Jon b.1• talking inure freely Thursday about his judicial philosophy. After ~efusing 1n almost tv.·o days of in- terrogation lo 1alk about his personal beliefs in the field or civil riJ!hls and ch ii liberties. he re\'ctsed hin1self. • Rehnquist had pleaded that , w take public po~it ions 011 rnany such questions no11· 11·ot1!d jcoparrli~e his freedo1n 10 dctide cases in lhe field af1er con- lirmatlon. lie ttlso said th<it because he ser1·e<! as <:ounscl to the allurney general, hr could 1101 1alk <1bout administration positions on civil r1gh1s and civil liberties be('ause to do so \l'Outd violate the pro- hibition again~! a la\11yer disclosing his advice to his client. But Jn a !ale afternoon reversal, Rehn- quist answered a series of questions from Sens. John V. Tunney (D-Calif.J, and Charles ti.1athias (R-Md .), that he had refused to discuss before. To ti.Iathias, he said he had advised ti.litchell against laking an official posi- tion that the Preside nt had the inherent pov.·er to tap telephones without court orders in domestic security cases. To Tunney, he said he thought that any government surveillance of peaceable assemblies that had a "'chilling effect " on the exercise of the right to assembly v.·as unconsl iturion:,t. f0Jto\1•ing tlus resti tnonv. Sen. Birch D. Bayh (0-lnd.). said he \l'~s ''impressed" by the 11nsv.'ers. "They suggest \l'e are at last gelling son1e or his personal philosophy," he said. Jusr before Rehnquist began answt>r- lng, Bayh had written attorney general John N. Mitchell and President Nixon asking them to waive the lawver-client privilege so that Rehnquist coul~ ansv.·er. 'Valter E. Craig, a U.S. disttict judge from Arizona, also testified lhclt Rehn- quist was not a philosophical racist as charged by lhe southwestern chapter of the NAACP at Phoenix, Ariz. . Candidate Loses To Donakl Duck! U'I T1l1•l>o1t TELL S PHILOSOPHY Wil liam Rehnq uist Office r Allege s Arniy Harassing A fter Accusation ATLANTA, Ga . 1API -LI. Col. Anthony Herbert. the most decorated American enlisted man in the Korean \Var. has been the target of continuing harassment by superiors and v.·as given instructions in the proper manner for saluting. his civilian lav.'yer alleges. The deputy <'omrnanding of11t·cr al Fl. :'llcPherson. Col. T1)tn Reid. denie s these allega1ions. but Sa) s he did rrpnmand llerbert for failure tu extend proper military courtesy. Attorney Charle~ il!organ eontcru.lcd Thursday that Herbert, \vho earlier ac- cused superior officers of concealing \\'ar C'rimes in Vietnarn. is being: harassed and that superiors have given him in- structions in the correct \\'BV to salute, how to stand at attention and-ho1v to pro- nounce the \vord "sir."' Morgan. Southeastern reg ional director of the American Civil Liberties Union. also said Herbert has been gh'en the. i1n- pression he should not talk to nev.·smcn unless superior officers give him V.Tilten pennission to do so. ~eid denied ~1organ's allegations. in- cluding the one thal he reprimanded Herbert !or failure to salute properly. - Detergents' Pe1·il Cited to Public '\'ASHINGTON tL:PJ) -A Chicago n1edical researcher today disclosed test result;; alleging that non p hosp hate detergents are far deadlier than drain cleaners if S\1·allo11ed. and could lead to catastrophic results if \\•idely used in American h-Ornes. Dr. George E. Block. a professor of surgt'ry at the Lnil'ersity or Chicago, said new laundry products de\'eloped lo replace rn\'ironn1entally s us p e C' t e d phosphate detergen!s are so h i g h 1 ? caustic they coutd' ki!l or.maim those "'ho sv.'allo\1" then1 -partitularl~~ children lie suggci;ted they should be banned. Block \1as called to testify befor" a Senate E11vironn1ent subtornn1'i ttee on his recent re searl·h into ston1ach and throat injuries caused bv cAuS!it' subsla11t"es. A c.:opy of a paper dftaillng his finding:; was made avai lable to l 'Pl. The study, made on cats. shov.·ed that more than 80 pert:ent of the ani1nals given a single sn1all dose of nonphosphate detergents sufferrd severe or fatal in- juries. By contrast. no cals 11·ere harmed by the phsophale blends, v.'hicb are ban- ned in n1any communities as pollutants. '"Lav.·s \\'hich pre\'ent the use of phosphal_!" dclergents and necessitate lhe .substitution of highly alkaline non- phosphate detergents should be revie11-·- cd." Block·s p..1pt>r said ''The rn- troduel1011 of these {"lH1~1u:-s inlo rnillion~ or Ameri<'atl hoinf's \\"ill ine\'ilahlv lead to eatastrophic aeeldenlal in}!est1unS.·' Else\\•here in his paper. Block said laws banning phosphate laundr~· producls as "'Rter polluters ··should be repe:tlt'd " Ne\\' phosphate-free laundry produt;ls are high in sodium earbonare. some of v.·hich Block said are nearly as caustic as lye. Three Found Shot Dead In M ichiga1t A;.JN ARBOR. toi!ich. I UPI t -A psychiatrii;t, his v.•ife and daughter \~·ere found shot lo death in the kitchen of their hoine today, Police said the dead cuuple "s son reported fin- din~ the bodies. The 1·ictims \\'ere Dr. Alex- ander DuKay. 52, former niedical superintendent of the Ypsilanti State Hospital . his l\"ife. ri.·ladeline, 52. and their daughter Lori ri..larie, 12. The bodies v.'ere found about 8 a.m. by DuKay's son, Dr. Alexander DuKav Jr.. 2.1, police said. The scin had co me to \'isit from Traverse Citv, 11·here he is associated wlih th(' Traverse Citv SI at e Hospital, poliCf' said. Police said lhe\' 11·ert in- \"rstigatinJ:: a posSible doublr 1nurcler and suicide. ·. l frldiy, Novtmbtr S, 1971 DAILY PILOT 5 · 'False Claims' • Critics lu1ock Ecology Ad s NE\V YORK *"UPI) - A report, "~rporate advertising and about the 5il:flificance of nonprofit resear group said and the environment." the c o n t r i b u t i o n of 'fhur5day that a umber of the The council said it surveyed .automobiles to the total air country's majQr corporations, pollution problem. · in adverlising stressing what environmental advertising In The report said the can and ): 1'Y have do:ie ror the en-Time, N•wsweek and Bu5iness glass container manufacturers : i ron me n t , have been Week magazines in 1970. In overemphasized the role of in· misleading and in some case!! addition It studied an ad· · divlduals rather than industry .false. vertl5ing supplement to the' in the growing solid waste 1 The Council on Economic September. 1971, issue of disposal problem and stressed !" Priorities. a group which Reader's Digest. the public would not use • specializes in reporting the Ford and General ti.1otors returnable bottle!! and cans In. ; sociaJ impact of corporations. were criticized for 1Jli5leading ste<1d of the disposable varie-f said individual advertising of the public about the amount .of ty, It said surveys showed th• l Southern California Edison . .:po=llu;ta=nl=•:..::th~eji'F''~';";.;'=m;i;tt~edl;~o~pgpo~s~ite~.:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;; lhe Standard Oil Co. of I California and P o t I a c h forests, Inc., v.·ere "blatantly fa lse." Those making misleading statements, the council said, iocluded General ti.fol ors Corp,: Ford ri.101or Co.: Stan- dard Oil Co., N.i .: Gene ral Electric Co.: leading steel rnanufacturers including U.S. Steel. Armco and Bethlehen1: Boise Cascade Corp.: many paper manufacturers and two trade associa tions -the can people and !he Glass Con- tainers 1.la nuractu rers Institute. "The $4.7 billion advertising 2628 HA"BOR BLVD. expenditure s made by the lop COSTA MESA 100 ad,·ertisers (of all ad- V/\'IT.ED STATE S 1\'ATIO/\'AL BANK [ SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS 9 ta 1 P.M. MON.-THURS. 10·5 P.M. PRIDAYS ·10°6 r .M. (114) 540·5211 . loc:etad 111: 5a. Coost r1e10, Coshl M"• Altl. Vite P.-.s.-M•n•ger H. M. STOLTE ''erlisers ) in t970 was 12.2 call 540-5630 billion more than the entire l~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·~-;;::'iiiiiiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~ outlay rrom all industry forl • pollution control the same / year," the co,ncil said in its FOR RESERVATIONS 11 Indicted CALL NEWPORT CENTER TRAVEL UuK<ty, elad 111 a robe and J B • R • pajarnas-. "'as shot in !he IL l![ lltg 644-1412 Lola Roblnott n1oulh. llis "'ife and been shot u four li1nes in the back and CHICA GO ~UPI I -l;:le\'en stomach, and the . daughter men, including rep u t e d had been shot in the back of kingpins of crime 5yndicate the head. units . in New York and DuKay \\'as born in Hungary Chicago. ha ve been indicted by and recei"ed hi5 medical a federal grand jury on ------------------_..._....-- W,E MOVED Nllde GI. rl Saved degree th ere. He came to the charges of operating a $446,000 United States in 19:'.il a'nd stolen securities ring. COSTA MESA BUILDING SUPPLY Now at 120 VIRGINIA PLACE became 11 resident at Ypsilanti Terry Lord, special attorney Fl'OID De_!l l]l Leap State Hospital. He received his for the Justice Department's masfers degree at the Chicago strike force on , _ University of ti.1ichigan where organiied crime. said the BELLAIRE:, Tex . rU Plt -A caller he v.•as a clinical associate scheme actually in vo lved told police Thursday that a young woman professor of psychiatry. more than $::.00,000 In v.·as taking her clothes off on the seventh-He became superintendent securities. even though the floor platform of a building still under o[ the Ypsilanti State llo.spital nine-count ind ictment returned construction. in late 1965. DuKay retired Thursday specified o n I y Police Chief ,John Wheatley strapped a from the hospital last ti.-1.arch $446,000 in stolen securities. safely line around his waist. crawled onto to go into private practice full Lord said it was one of the the platfonn and grabbed the \\'Oman. by time. largest series or thefts yet now totally nude. Her bro t her .•------------' charged in the government's COST A MESA 548·2826 1x12 PECKY CEDAR per ft ................ 11c - 3/8 4x8 (Ext.) PLYWOOD ....••••••.. , .•• 2.99 QUART SPAR VARNISH ................. 95c GAlLc;>N ENAMEL !Rog. $5.951 ...• , •.•.. 2.9S GARDEN HOSES 7/16x25 ft ..••••••••.•• 1.79 2x2·8 FT. (D.F.) .............. , .• , • • • • • • . 1 Bc NIW HOUIS: Ma11.0Ftl. It. 5-Sot. I ta 4-CIOMCI 5ull4~ SPOKANE, \Vas b. {AP) -Jeff Bower!! may ask for a recount after appar!nUy being outpolled in the school 'board race by Donald Duck. Unofficial tallies show the margin was narr~w. ponaid got two v.otes and Jeft Onf'. "An incident to which l believe you refer took placl' on Monday. Nov. 1, in \vhich J round it necessary to motivate. Col. Herbert in the rendering or proper military courtesy that should be ex- changed ~tween members of the military," Reid told a newsman. Reid said the incident occurred in his post headquarters office 1vhile "i1n- parting some instruclions" to Herbert. n1eanwhile. had been trying lo talk her, ____ L_E_G_A_L_N_OTI __ c_E ___ , crackdown on the 5tolen b •-r th d ·-1 --se~c~u~ri=ti~es~r;ac~k~e~I~ .•••• ~::::::::::::::::::::~~~ aCr'. rom e e ge. l"-u112 "She lunged forward and I grabbed l"ICTITIOUS IUSINllSS NAME STATllMllNT her." 'Vheatley said after his rescue Thf 1011owlnt peri.on !1 doln11 b~11nr11 Thursday. ''She had never looked around u : L1v1Nc; wA1E11 P11oouc11oNs, ,111 She defi11itely had decided lo jump." ll!tl!Oe!d Orlv1, H~n11n11on Bt•cll, "Imagine getting beat fiUt by Donald Duck!" protested Mrs. T. E. Nesbitt. campaign manager, publicity chairman. general vote getter and sister of the 22- year-ol d Bowers. .... Bo,ve~s· slogan in his "'rite-in cam- paign ·v.·as "Our school board \viii never be the same if you cast your vole for \vhat's-his name .1' "He \\'as looking out the window, nol paying: attention to what I was saying and hi s attitude was less than attentive. These actions required me to set the record straight." Reid said. Reid specifically denied th at he had in- structed Herbert in the proper manner for salu.tini;: and how to pronounce the. \\'Ord . ''sir." "f had to grab her and hope v.'e both ~1~h111 Kirk M•c1n10111. t J11 didn't go over the side.'' l•ltMltld Orl•t, 1-1un11neion B••ch. The 20-year-old \voman"s mother had 1n!~~~d~~.~1n111 11 IMI"' conduct..:r br •n called police, sa.ving her daurhter Jefl M1c111<11 '" M1c1"1.,.11 " T11:1 1tatem~nt !lift! will> It!• t<11Jntv home threatening to commit suicide. She cier~ 01 or'"'' c"""'Y on: 0c1. n, u11 was upset because of the bre'a kdown of Bv B1ve.i~ J, M1ddc• DtPYh tountv Cler~. her marriage and "\\·as in a deep state of Pub11111td or1n1• t11111 0111v Pilot depression." 'Vheatley said. ~;;*r IJ, 11• ,., •NI Nov•m~~,)i ARTISTE DE LA RUE Art Exhibit Now South (oast ?la.za :ml't Prices Will Never Be Lower-Layaway Now for the Holidays! PIANOS & ORGANS HAMMOND PIPER SPINET PIAN BY 'WURLITZER AUTO CHORD !~l $595 USED $895 MODEL ·~"BABY GRAND FARFISA SPINET BUSH &GERTS ORGAN $395 ~t{: ·$1099 .......... , llllhll W•S $US. JjOW HAMMON ORGAN BRAM BACH "" ... PIANO Gr••t For l eglnntrll CONS.OLll V170 $570 rrr~ s795 ~ --UNBELIEVABLE BUYS Hemmond Dehnre SPINET ORGAN WA SlS149S NOW• STEINWAY GRAND PIANO S' I'', 'ElltnJ ll11li.ll WAS $U9S, NOW J.' WURLITZER CONSOLE ~ Se•«ol Finishes $699 • WAS $855, NOW ·-····· • $2995 ;. ·~:~~'::· SPINEnE ORGAN ---'-------' WURLITZER ~. Model 43001L. $1695 Con~~,l!~ ... ~nsole 4J WAS $2115, NOW WAS $1245, NOW ·~ BALDWIN GRAND PIANO $I 095 ~ 5' 6", Wolnut Flnllll $2150 ~WAS $25'9, NOW All Pianos GuarentHd 10 Yrs., With A l'rH Tunln9 In Your Home D!PARTMENT STOR°E 0 1' MUSIC South Coast Plaza, Cosfa Mesa -.~~:.":'ll".~T:,111 ~I For Top Sports Covei;a "e Read th,e DAILY PILOT • ·' • ~ _,l/1f?!!ficcd1.ltA6f.r~! I ... ' ' I I • • • ., ) -. • ' • • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ' Danfl P _oint Needs -Help It's not a common topic for cocktail conversation1 but one o( the most Critical factors in a community's development is its abD.ity to trea\ sewage. And Dana Point is fa cing a s~vere c.risis which could hamper its rapid expansion unless the Dana Poi~t Sani· tary District can find a Short-term method of easing the str-J.i.n on its only waste treatment plant. Administrators of the district have proposed to lease some unused capacity in the San Juan Car.istrano treat· ment plant ,for the next year -the per Qd needed to_ expanjl that same plant to serve four districts. The four \\'hich will &bare the expanded facility include Dana Point and San Juan. The lease idea bas not reached the formal document &Lage, yeL and whe n it does some apparent aniqi osities between the two districts should be forgotten so· that a quick agreement can be worked ouL If 11ucb a remedy cannot be !ound, the San Diego Area Reg ion al \Valer Quality .Control Boud has threat· ened to freeze any more sewage hookups in Dana Point. And ii it came to Iha~ the fi{rt substantial boom in Dana Point in years would be bud agn>und. - Recall That Fizzled Ever since the Laguna Beach City Council election of April, 1970, mutterings of "re<;all" have been heard around the Art Colo ny. The new majority on the council, it appeared, had a truly extraordinary talent for stepping on the toes of the citizenry. Once dreary and ill;attended council meetings turn· ed into a town circus, with overflowing crowds alter· nately booing and cheering as the hapless city father• juggled one hot potato after another. There were problems with cave-dwelling hippies, a miniature riot · and subsequent investigation, a refer· endum on the new dog control Jaw, the controversial Christmas "happening" and, fi nally, the remarkable initiative campaign that banned high-rise buildings in. the community. At long last, a lone Lagunan decl :'ed lhe time for • a recall was more than ripe. But his announcement 1 \ brought public condemnation from , .o! all .people, tlie m6st vehement opponents of ~he administration. An attempt to gatber sufficient signatures on peU· lions to force an elecllob fizzled and tbe recall' was over before it really got off the ground. Why? Perhaps the natives wereJ"ust plain e1haust· ed. Maybe they thought the counc· men had learned their lesson. Or possibly the gap between calling a fello'v names and kicking him out o( office in disgrace is big· ger than any figured. Trustees in a Tigl1 t _Spot The Saddleback College board's decision to levy a S4-cent permissive tax for one year, on the heels of los- ing a $24.8 million bond issue vote, set off a mini-war of words in the South County press. On one hand . the trustees were roundly criticized for riding rough-shod over the implied wishes of the voters. 'On the other, they were applauded for taking a courageous step without whiCh the college stood to lose $2.2 million in state funds. The trustees were cl~arly in a tight spot and perhaps should not be judged too harshly. They are obliged to provide a junior college education for a burgeoning population and obviously will have to ptbvide some halls for all this learning. The campus now consists of several re-locatable buildings and one bud<t;..ig library. Contracts for a science-math center had been signed when the bond issue failed. The one-year permissive tax will raise $2.4 million to match available state funds itnd complete at least this project. ' However, the fuss does raise some questions about the trustees' rigid policy of refusing anr aid that comes in the form of federal funds. It may be Just a litUe hard· ~. er to explain in the future -particularly when they " worked so strenuously to obtain state funds. ' . " I . ' . -. , ' ·' ~\ -· . ~ .. \ . .'. . ' . . ·-., • . ' s Male Buyer ls Confused, Embarrassed Jtufieiary Committee Favors Court N o11ii1iees ., ·- lt 11 R;itli'ng' aO that men are em· barra1sed to · btlJ certain presents for women. IA~t. Mo.tber's Day, 1 strolled downtown to pick up some gifts for my wire, my · lllOther. and my mother·in· law. In the end...,l got flo•en. Everythlng today has a coy name, reeking w 1 t h cute· ness or allure. Once upon a time, goods offered In a store had a homely direct- ness : "Gents Unduwear'• or "Extra Firm C.Orset.s," or some l!IUch plain 5nd honest title.· "low we are urged to buy Scanties· and Sl~n1erettes and Short·Eez, and dozens or &:imil&r item.s dripping with whimsical trad~names. Women are no longer sleep- lno: m nightgowns: they put on Snugglies or Slumbersuits. For daytime relaxation ti· ·v wear something called a Sun-and· Fun S.L • OF COURSE perfumes have been a legitimate target for satirists for many years. How can a man approach a cos- metic coun ter and ask for a bottle of My Nl~ht of Rapture, or a phial of Pagan Dc>llght ? And even men's underclothes have been swept up ln the tide of fancy nomenclature. Buying a pair of shorts, 1 am confronted with a dozen different names, all suggesting impossible feats of heroics. \ I am sure these new merchandising techniques have proved effective· in aom e Dear Gloomy Gus Read the weights for Laguna High 's football team starting line- up and you'll understand why the coaches allow long hair. They need whatever e1tr1 poundage they can put on. . -E. E.G • ' . 1'fl . ...,, nftMtJl ,..,.,.. ·~ .. _.,..,.,.. ...... _ --·-,,,.,, ..... ,_-~"":."::tr" 9"o ... " Pli.t. ~ \·, t quarlu1, but J get a quea11y fttlina:.1t the though\ bf. entering a store and ordering ' a pair ~ Maglcllne hose ' or a Duffy Cloudl~d ang~ sweater. '' ' ) . IN FAI.llNEs.s to the manuf1e~Us. It mu.st be admitted that modem clothes are more attractive, more comfortable and m~e durable than they were a genera n ago--especially chlldreil's things; which were a nightmare or tijtliness and itchiness when I was a boy. Bul each rose has its thorn, as some bad poet .has r;aid, and along with the tastefulness of modem apparel we have inflicted upon us the ta1telessntss of smirking and suggestive names which On· ly confuse and embarru:s the dllfldent male buyer. THERE IS A KIND of rugged charm in such old·fashloned words as "pants" and • "hair oil" and even "long underwear". They pretend to be nothing but what they are, and do not promise to transform a portly middle-aged woman into a flaming sed uctress or to tum a paunchy middle·aged man into a dashing steeplechase winner. But I suppose I am just fighting anothe r losing round in the batUe of words. Whit we are selling today are im· ages.more than products. Let the Le ftists Bra y 1be Daily CalUontlan El C.joa The loutish leftists who view U.S. foreign policy alms from time im· memorial to the present as unending e1· ploltatlon by an ''lmperialist" power of other countries display an amazing ig· norance of the facts . They par~t the Insult. hurled at th!! country b the Communist cliques 1broad, ~s anything mutt,ered by Mao or culled rom the clackings of Cl.'itro had aut aUcally passed lhe test for \n!\h_ Any contradiction of these half-baked tnanltles by offlclaJ U.S. government spokesmen is, of course, considered self· prnerving gibberish by the lefli•t oracle:s--something one tould erpect of devloua npresentM.ives of a wk:ked Md morally corrupt naUon. IT TAKES SOMEONE wltli 1 hll1«1cal ptnooctlve that lotl baci farll>tr--lhan the bemoa1Uc convention In 1968 to ap. pnetate what. ln (act, was the un- .---B11 George---· Otar George: Whal lt the popolalloll of New 1.<alllld! ART Dear Art' You ~ w!lat, Art! It'• peopla lll<e you who make life really tough for u.1 lo•C!lorn columnisll:. Haven 't JOU Col one little domesUc 1tr1fe? qun .......,.1ng ~bout New ZWand. Art. Go Rel ln big !rouble. I don't lhlnk you'no lr)'inl ...• prew:lented generosity of the: American people towan:l friendly foffi&n nai&Jons after the end of World War II. One 11uch ptrl!On with that insight is ·Prime Minister Edward Heath of Great Britain who haa fed hiJ cowitty into I.ht European Economic Communlty with a speech in which he: amrted It is time for Europe lO end lta rtllancti on the United Stites and make it.a own way 1n Lhe world. · In paying tri&ite to Amer1ca'1 role in helping prostrate Europe emerce from the ravages of war to vl1oroua economic health, Heath 1ald: "NEVER IN MODERN time has a great power used lta enera aod lts generoslty with such effect lO protect 'the interests or its frtendl ." The r-.1 ahow1 that almoot $1111 billion In Amer1can trec8Ure bu been gtvu to Improve economic condlti.., tn acom·of cotllllrf" l!'Olllld lHe Clobe. Tnle, IOmt of It hu bttn mllspenl But muclt of It hu ,..,. for 1ood purpolff and those Jnvptmenll Mve made 1t possible for other n1tlona to prime thefr economies and bring about a general rt&e In property and llvlo11tand· anl~ WE NEED NBVER hans our helds In shame for 1h1rlnc our riches wftb tht needy n1tJons of the world at a Ume when their l\U'Vfval depended upon our charily and goodwill. · The leftblt can bn1y •II ~Int, but they will hive • dlfflcu!ptm• lnUng to any hittortc1I par1llel In whlc the plea (or uafstance has been ipttl with auch a quick and aenerous response. , Rehnquist, Powell Will Be Approved WASHINGTON -The two Supreme Court nominees -Asst Attorney General William Rehnquist and Virginia attorney Lewis Powell -will be decisive- ly recommerided for ci>nfirmation by the S e n a t e Judiciary Committee. The ·likely biparti-• PD ~ of .aPJ!i:ov'al -: will be 11 lo· s.-- · ~t was the ·Urie~ ·~-~ an. authorita.' ,\iye 'C'1tVaq of the "' me.mben of th.is key · · "' commlttet. -nine Democrlb. a e v e n Republicans. ~ 1 • This private count showed' that all of the ·seven Republicans rarid four of the pine Remocrats favor the twq appointees. The opposiUon consists ent~ly ·of me fi ve liberal Democratic committeemen ~ ,Sens. Philip Hart (Mich.), EdWard Ke.,..· nedy (Mass.), Birch Bayh (bid:). QuenUo -Burdlcll (N.D.) and John Tunney (Cal.). OF TlllS GROUP, none has had legal e1perience of note or consl!quence. Several haven't practiced at all. Their opposition is based oo.. partisan and ' tory. Don't be unduly disturbed by the enojlgb to stop anything. And we'°1·-not outcries so far made against you. I found fooling; we mean business." "Reibert s.~ ·Allen !' no substance in them , and I would say . At this .gathe~ing, there was con-£-· <' .~ t 1<~ they were motivated for grandstanding s1de~able d1scuss1on of o!l' fa ctor that t .~ · ~ purposi:s. So hold 'firm and I have uo particularly played a ma1or role In the 114 : ~ ' . . · doubt you~)16e~confi~ed." · , def~~:or .. ~.the 25-year-old stupendously 'l('eo oglc8l gl'O;Wld!. , ·Sens Ke~ . and Ba h f d cosily.' forei~ aid program. Senator• ' . ~~et strat~ of . the opposit,ton -~ to ~1 ea b'W .JI • ·ffi tar __ mtsay • ,~n .we~;flitll.:. Ip.Uttering angrily over the concentrat~ their fire chieflf. ~g!lnst 1 · •. v · .4~ WI s ~uen 1.uq matter 1; '}Jihrlquist -··on· the theory that~if ~;; ma?e in OJ.po~ two pre•~ SuiM-e~ !~--:,... ·-,..:." ~ ''.lii:defeate1f u··"'JI' be easier to eU · Court a~~ ~ey a~ '~"'t-' ; i:a~ OF 'JlllEIR indignation was 1>owell~ fqrmer head of the prestiglotis . and . ~ow~; q~·. ideologlcill . growit:1.s •. · J~~l3 billion· !us tore! aid Am~can Bar A·-...iation. Re~· ·ur -~~~1stratlon. fo~s have a big .amnal u--. b'll Pndl bellft !he · -~' · ~ _U</'t.-_.. .a M...tr m~t-"'•• •<~ at n. · ti n I pe ng ore ~J!s~ailed, al ~ally biased,, ,·. W ~ .~~ ... -~;.. UlroW uiem. Se :. ,~ hundreds of millions of blJWlll and ua of. other s ; • "' • 00 MOVE"io· vfv lh S.-t kill do -~arked for 46 of !he 71 coun-measures. . . .rt e. e na t>, trie"ftliat '\toted to seat Peking and O\llt To compile "evidence" against the two ed fo.reign aid progr~ V.:1ll be_ ~et head. Ta~wan from.. the United Nation&. appointees, Sens. Kennedy and Bayh hav.e on with 8 powerf.ul bipartisan filibuster. Irl •ther words, although these nations enlisted the aid of civil rights activists, Th~t was decided at an una_n~ounced 'had !.DO .l\Wlancy in slugging the U.S., blatjts an~ ultra·liberal m~mbers of cer-rnee!1ng of leaders o_f t~ co~ht1on that , some ~fh:,oP.Fn glee, they would still con· tain law-schools -foremost am~·lhern _stag~ th:e .dramatic ·surprise . ~set. til)ue~nt· heftily under the meuur1 Harvard and Yale. • !t!~gb ·only,a sm~l ~up pa~t1c1pated at th~~fOJ:eigl'.l aid trough. L ·• • ... .I~ this ,strat~y dJ.SCUSs.1on, finn con· NoQ»og was said publicly about this REHNQUIST, who nas· tieen,. ~a~ng: 'f1~ence .was:e~~ that sufficient sup. 'diuib2' · the ;Senate debate. As a con· ~UUe:sy calls on Senators, including po_rt can be r.aU!ed 1n the Senate to main-seq_uence, there was no press or other ~n opponen_ts, has had the unusual ex-ta1n · an e(fecbve blockade aaa inst a .publicity about it. But ther! was a lot of per1enee of being-told by Democrat.s to ·C(M.lnteratt.lck;. ·ira'A •-!k · lh •· t I •--·--sta nd pal A 'f "' 1 d . ~ ui in e .:x:na e c oauuuu~ _ . . . . s .. one o_ "!e ea e~s soundly pointed Particularly resented was the spectacle "One 1nfluenha.l Democrat adv!Sed.hun : out, At·tb~s tlite ~ate 1n_the s~ssion, with of the representatives of Tanzania and I have examined yo~ personal. and ~embers 1ncreas1ngly unpahent to ad· Zambia st~· gin Jt triumphant boogal legal record, and found 1t wOOIJy satisfac· JOur~, the mere threat of a filibuster is , danCU>ori.1the UN rostrum. 00 Schmitz Report Shocking to Reader To the Editor: I th~ Congressman John G.· Schmitz for being concerned enough to send out .a report to hi.s constituents; I am, however. in fUIJ support of the President's new policy toward Re(I China. The congressman's report, in general. shocked and dismayed me. It does not seem correct to assume that because President Nixon is planning to meet with the government ol Red China he is "abandon.ing Chi an l Kal-shek 1 n.d all our fnends and allies in the Republic of China." His report appears to me to be mainly an outcry against communism rather than an objective. intelligent, realistic evaluation of President Nixon's fif$t ste,P toward dealing openly with the Red Chinese. I RAVE RECENTLY returned to California alter working. for two yea rs with the Department of State :· first. ln the Central Ahican Republic and this spring at the U.S. Delegation to the Peace Talks on Vietnam in Paris. Inter· national politics and economics are very sophisticated. How can we cOntlnue ''Ignoring" a country the siie of Red O.ina? Our government must take their actions into consideration, covertly or overtly. Conslderina the latest United Nations decision to replace Nationalist China with Red Cll1nt tn the reprr&entation of the Oilntae P'OJ)le, t btUevt that Prtsldent. Nlxon'1 earlitr movt1 were very wise. As ltrODI a nation n we ere., we cannot c!ilaam >ith tile r"' of !llO world, fr.e and Communlat., for IOlll and 1WJ remain on top. MOST A.'d!RtCM'S have had an ti· cellent lodoctrinatioft a 1 a I n s t c:om· • Quotes P1al Slmoa1 Lt. G<lvtnior of l1lhlol1 - i•rt ll not enough to 11y, 'l love my coun· try.'. We must uy instead, 'I love my country tnough to do what must bt done to malce It a bt:Uer place. ln which to live -not jutl f0< myHlf ltld my family. bill a!Mi for my ' fellow .citizens., wen.· That lyp< of palrlotbm\ wilj always be need· ed.'· •• Mailbox Ltlttr1 l1'9m ,....,,... • .,. ,..lnm•. Htrmtllr writ.n llleulf 1:9nV'tY fhtlr IMJMPJ .. IN wwf• er !'•t.. TM rltM .. ~ Mlt9,.. .. flt _.. er t ll"'l,,.tt UHi 11 ,..-... All 11""1 ll't!ISI IJlo lllllll• •1t11•M • trltlll nitnillt ...,..., '*' umes rMJ lie WllllfMololi Ill ,...._, If lllffkltftt --19 .,,.Aft!. ""'"' Wll ...... .-,.,.,.... munism. I am weD aware of what i\ •ts and bow It wOrts. 'lbe p.!Ople of China. Russia, C ubr.:, Hungary 1and C!t~slovakia were in entirely different economic positions at the tlrne of Co!P· munist takeover than is the Unlted Slat.ea. As a registered Republican ind firln believer in the principles of democre.ey and free lnde and staunch supporter of the government of the United Slates of · America. I am sorely disappointed that one of my elected representatives in Congress has no more to say about the President's new policy toward Red China than to resort to anti-Communist pro- E11d Trick or T reat To the Editor: • At the risk of alienating my favorite people, the small fry, I should like to see an end to the custom of Halloween "trick or treat" except for UNICEF, a worthy cause. Mu ch has been said 'about tile cruel pranks of adults who put pins. razor blades, etc. in the treats they give the children. What or the case of innocent adults confronted by pol jce with an apple con- cealing a r azOC blade? They were btautiful1apples,bought from the Kiwanis an¢ the ca.§e·was opened just before the doOr belt began to ring. The police never -Jn"e'sed ·the matter blit the donors felt so bad that the f )Owing year they turned out the porch Ii t, refused to answer the door and gave t no trt.ats, deprived of the fun of see.in heir various fancy COS· turn es. WHEN SIX-F -TALL "kids" ciill, it 1, ridiculous, but finally it was surmised that some mischievous "trick or treater" had slipped the blade into a younger paganda. BONNIE L. JOHNSON boy's apple and thus put the apple-givers in a harrowing position. Perhaps other in· Hallotoeett Tr e ats nocent adults have had such an e1. perlence. PT A carnivals should be enough fun , or To the Editor: 1 home parties -but no, tile kids think 1 have just finlshed reading the Nov. 1 trick or treAt Is TltE thing to do btsides DAILY PILOT. There were two articles the carnivals and p&rties. about the many horrible Urings th~t c~ ,. S1¥'ely parents can get toeether and put happen 'to children when they go trick or 111 tn end to a rilky way for children to. lrtatlna. My blood runt cold wt>ea I heir celebrate about razor bledes. <Jrui!, ground _J1lass, ·" needles and other thlogs l>fl•I foiiild lit GWEN PATON the Hallowe<n trtab that chlldr<n gel when they go trtct or treating. I WOULD LIKE to see our clly do something to ellmtnat.e this sort of thing. I would like to suggest that the park!: tn the city have Halloween programs to en· coura1e. the children to eo there. •nd e ... joy a nfe C!lebradon Instead of riiklng beln1 attack.ed by s i c k molesters or receiving te.1Tlble surprises tn their, HaUowten truta. I am sure there are many other parents that lee! 11 I do and would ap- pre<late 1nytlilng thal oould be done ID prolec\ lhelr<chlldrtn. MRS. CONCE'l'TA KERN L .. 111&a's Bea11t11 To tbe ~ltor: Laguna Bt:ach has the most beautiful site on the West O>ast. However, Laguna pay11 for this site In traffic problems, and the possibility /Of future growth. Therefore, Laguna'a site Is Its main ad· va'ntage. That site Is one of natural beau- ty_ Look. dO\vn from the "top of the world'' and vlew LagUna. Then, look up into the hUls from He isler Park, especially when tht"lse hills are 1 mass or flowering suc- culen~ and other flowers. or decorated for Cttlstmas I Look down towards the beaches and behold more natural beauty . Thus. Laguna's main attraction is also !ti views. LET US THROUGH careful planning retain and add to what we had and still have through the plan for the Main Beach. ·"The Window to the Sea": save our '1"ees and promote the greenbelt ! I~ t~at small minority harassing the ma)Or1ty Q.f Laguna's citizens, despite hours of hard work and money e:rpended o~ an .initiative; if that small minority ot h1gh·r1sers who once again are promoting the large city commercialized at· mosp~ere a.nd the ruination of Laguna '• beautiful site, would help the Traffic Operations Program to Improve Capaclt)' r.nd Safety !TOPICS ) solve their almost impossibl.e traffic and parking problem& (the mam argument against possibl e growth) then they would prove their gt-- nuine intere!l:t in their city. FOR, UNTIL A city can park or move about In or· out of a city, growth ls not feasible , nor can we thus plan. Then, when La guna becomes as It could become. the mos t beautiful city in California, property values will increase for peOple will pay for what is rare, for what is beautiful. for what is unique ! People are tired of bustling cities. skyscrapers, high-risers and traffic hassl· ing. ELINOR S. DA VIS OlltAHOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robtr' N. Wetd, Publi.rhtr Thom4S' Ketu!l., EdUor Albert W. Batts Editorial Paae Editor '!h~itorl~ or t~ n.ny -Piiot actk5 to inrorm 11nd •Umu· lat.11'· rc1.dC"n1 by rrtACntlnc this nt!""&l)ltfl('r·J opinions 11.nd com-ml"nt~ry on toplr.!'1 of lntemt "net :dgnUltllnce, by t)rovidln g A fl".lr11m fl".lr the cxprc!{!ion of ·our re11den.' •1>tnton!, 1tnd by prcsrnllnr the d V<'n:c \'l11wpolnt1 ot lnfonncd ob· srr\'c.'T"S 11.nd 1Pok"men on topfca ol the d11)'. . Friday, November s.' !!Iii ' . I. ! • t r CHECKING ··up .. .· ) Next 'Elevators Will ,Go on Cue . By L M. BOYD THAT FAMOUS lanp1ee man Charles Berlitz ls quoted •• once . ~Yin&: the aecond word you ought to learn in a forefrn· 1.on,Ue is "no." First expression you should mem· oriU, he said, is·';Jo:ok. out!" ... ·As FAR AS the intelli- 1enc~ ,of mammall 1oe1, that middle-of-the-road rat is haU· as dumb as thf: dumbest and half as smart as the amartest, it'a uld , ••• YOU J UST GET into the empty celevator and 1l:na: out the floor you want and away you go. n.e' ell' will atOp u ordered. That's what the elevator mak- ers are tinke~g with· now, 'an. "eleclric car. DOOllS LEFT AJAR mak"e me uneasy. Not only front door1 and .back doors. ·Nor jun bathroom doors and bedroom doon. But even TV cabinet d901"$,. kitchen cupboard doors, hall c1oeet doors. Trµ.st that confession is not incriminating. At any rate, am now informed what ·we fellows so afflicted. tuff;r 'from la ~phobia. And we are said to make first- 111' submarlot llilon, if properly trained. • ·IN ~, ~ :htisband's pillow is somewJl,at larger than the :wlfe~1., cus\olnarily .••• YOU'VE GOT 52 cards in a r~plar playin1 deck. 1ranted? So how many lciok identical 1i'hert !tutned either way? Just .22 ••.. THREE out of five wortin1 women hereabouts are mai;ried and half of them have youngster& •••• GJlEEN THUMB authorities claim the best tfme · to water plants is in the evening. To water ~gs, in. the wly morning , , ••. THAT BELOVED FAMILY tradition known as the Sunday dinner o~'eS its demise, I think, to professional football . CUSTOMER. SERVICE: Q. "How long will salad dress-fnl" Jut in tht refrigerator?" A. About three months. most dreasloa:• •.•. Q. "Exactly what sort of. plants were· those ~ mtlntioned in the Bible? Cattails?" A. Papyr;us ·..:. ' '· ' '·- • QURNIE By Phil lnterlcmdi . . " ~ .T ' ,'.," • 11-5 0 Yes, in a w~y this is a 'Man on the slreei'.poll-I'm ~ man on the street who'd like to have your phone ·number." . P11Jnts. Pint' paP,er ."'.as pulde out of them ..... Q. "Any way to get .the smell off your fingers after you've cleaned fish?" A. Might rub a little vinegar on your hands after-you scrub up. Your qtustiom and·comments are 'welcomed and wiJi be Used' in CHECKING UP wherever-pqs.rible .. Please address your letters to L . M. Boud. p:o. Box 1875, Newport Beach 92660, PURE DYNAMITE! IHCRl"DllLI ltlJl'l!NSI! -H.V. TIMl!S • · · 1 1 I• THAJij "IU .. Llf" DAILY NIWS -I XCLUSIYl"I. Ltoo-HIW~o·~y aEAc'H• IOW! : '. ·' ' F rlda1, HMmbtr S, 1971 DAil Y PllllT 7 Solo11s V oie-iti Ban lfunting F1:om Skies WASHINGTON (UP!) The Senate voted Thursday lo ban the shooting of\eagles and ·. other animals -i,ncluding fish . -from airplanes. Members appl"O\"ed and sent ·. back to the House a bill calling for a fine ·or up to $5,CKKJ and up to.·a year in prison £or kill- .ing animals from the air. · The leglslaUon was ap- proved over the objections or the Agriculture and Interior departJTit nts, · and dou'bts in the iJustice Department as lo Its constitutionality . The llouse-passed bill was amended in the Senate to re.- by· persons licensed to hun't from the air to prol.(ct live- stock, ·people, crops Md prop- erty •. Pacific Goldfish~ Farm . .. . • PfF;::fll -'-.:.. 59995 "ARIAKE" i1 d•1i9n•d .for fil- t.ri119 w1t11 irt 1m•ll polldl, •1- P•ci1lly.cio\1 with 1!1ndin9 WI• t•r th1t·t•nd lo 1!19111!1 . "ARI- · AKE " 1ulom•lic1Uy d11n1 ind no"11riili4i1, 9ivin9 1b11nd1nl · o.xv;•n f,,, und.rw1t1r lif•. II l1fl 1h1ndln9, pond w1t1r b1- '""''' .foul, 1m1Jl1 b•d 111d 1v1~ bfCC!fllll bioch.mic1lty d11d, irt whic h 11olhi119 will liv1 1iic1pt li1cl1ri•, But by' 'filt1r· int 1uch W1i•r, will\ "ARIAKE" ·you ·'•" ·•••p cl•1n 111d fr11h , w1!1r witho11I continuou1 nip-. I ,pli1i,of.n1w w1!1r.$6 9 • 95 1 . · $111allar Mftel Awallabl1I "IMPOmD Flecrri119 Type KOi FOOD Nciw cia $al1 LAYAWAYS I KOi -Flitt,. Ta11k1·S t•I. ta 120 Gal. -•cc~1H1rin · HOLIDAY KOi Ntw Slllpmlllf 2V." to 11" S2.SO to 55.00 OPEN DA ILY 10-5 Cloted Tunday \.:.:!~ s93;n 05 . 14842 EDWARDS ST., WESTMINSTER - OFF THf SAN D/fGO FWJ'. AT GOLDIN wrst .... IOLSA • . '. ... • • , l I .. DO SOMETHING.BEAUTIFUL · T~ke a.walk in the park.· Picnic under .the trees. 'Plant some sunflov1ers. Make Your anrliversary· memorable. Rings illustrated are priced ·frci,~:r $4.soo; Others from $1,000. .HIDE.A..Vv'AY FOR: CHRISTMAS ' Cll~'11• )~!'I lfl'."M • A""r1c111 la~ SLAVICI('S "'Jew"elers Since 1917 18 'FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644·1380 Open M.on. a nd Fri., 10 ... ~ fo 9 :30 p.mi .. -Kids-Like to Ask Andy r • .. • .. • . I I I DAILY PILOT Nations' ·Papers Muzzled CHICAGO (UPI) -Press freedom in Latin America i.5 the exception rather than the rule. a Brazilian publisher said Tuesday. juJio de fl.1esquita Neto, retiring chairman of the Inter· American Press Association's Committee oii Fri!edom of the press, said in L:atin American nations press free- do1n .has rarely been 80 gra vely threatened. restricted or sin1ply eliml'hated as it has been in the past year. "It is solid only in Venezuela and Costa Rica," f\.tesquita told the IAPA's 27th annual muting. But he said even Costa Rica faced a serious threat this past year in tbt ·-· fofTI}:' of a bill which would force newspapers to prlnt stories suggested by the ceun- try's rulers. However, Mesquita said the government waa dlssua4ed from approving the measure by the IAPA's Committee on Freedom of the Press. MeMtuila, . e d i tor and publisher of Estado de Sao Paulo, said the committee scored • ' s om e measurable moral victories" notJbly over Chilean President Salvadore Allende who criticized and tried lo refute statements in an JAPA executive report. "It was obvious the Chilean President had not read the report and had been badly briefed by his advisers," Mes- quita said. "The JAPA came out of the incident with its moral auihorlty reinforced." Mesquita said during hil ,. time as chairman of the com- mittee, "Ntver a month or even a half month went by during which the committee was not forced to take a stand against attempts or threats against the freedom of the press." "It was truly an extremely hectic year," he said. The committee sent 2S telegrams or l~rotest.s or appeals) to presidents, ministers or )dJh. authorities in 10 nations -Uruguay, Chile, Peru, Bolivia, Br1zll, Ec uad or, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Guatemala and h1exico -"°tesquita.said. "The responses to work car- ried out by the comm1tl.t1 \·aried a great deal. We 1ot words of encour1,gement fr6"1 President Rafael Caldera ol Venezuela, and we found Jh! governments of Colombia and Costa Rica understandlna:, '1 "' said. B u t , generaJly speaki111, f\-les<t_.llita sa i d the governments in c o u n t r J t 1 v.·h.icb were directly resporisl- ble for measures incompatlblt With pfess ffeedom -aoo for harassing journalists reac~td badly to stances taken by lhl IAPA.· .......... . . . i . . . . . . : PLAY TENNIS LIKI A MILLIONAIRE! O.•---""' -·""7==== ·. . ,;..-. _____ .. _.. : .................... ~ ................ . • frld17, No'l'tmbtr5, 1971 , starts tomorrow, saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.n1. all stores 1 '>i ' .. _{ ' ' ' . perm. pren dress shirts 1h. sl., r•9. 4.50 ···············--····-2.tt !9. 11., .. 9. $6 ·········-··-·J.H, 2/7.50 6S Y. D•cror4 pol.ye1tor/35 Y. cot- . ton •nd they nood no ironing. Feth· ion collor 1tyl•, white •ncl colon. 1-4 1/z -17. 2.50-$5 famous n•m• ties ................ 1.3', 2/2.50: 1.7', J/$5 $-4,$1 O Jewelry boxes, famous melt•• ........................................ l .H•2.H $5-$10 Oe1itn•r wellet1 ... .1.tf..5.H cotton flannil ,,-jamas $5-5.SO v•lue1 ····----··----J.H "Lont log, lon9 1loeve style in P.t:f· tern1. Coat or miclc:fies in A·l -C-0. 1.25-1 .50 Ro-Knit cotton undorN••r ··················---l /2.tt $1-$2 Famous nom• socks ______ 7tc $6-$1 Pojame1, femous n•m• .... l .H MEN'S SPORTSWEAR r · ~lpaca/wool cardigans ,. •• :{ ,.,~ ,, ~· . . . ' > " . ~:. •• ' . r. l $25 valu• ····--·-···-······-··············15.H By a f•mous mak•r in cli1continued colors. full cut in thi1 •I stylo. ;<•' ' • . ' $11 ·$I l ceortlinatlnt knit 1hirt1, ..... ······-···-··-···············'·""·" $5-$7 Catton lc111it 1hirt1 ......... _..2.9t $!5°$15 Jechh ........ -.. 24.H•Jf.H $9-$14 Sl1ck1 and i••n•, p1rm pr••• ...................... 4.tf .. 7.tt $14·$20 Full IHhie"'d iw11t1r1 ........................ l.tt-10.tt UNIVERSITY SHOP body shirt. .. 9, $10·$11 •·····-··•·,.••.,··u•··•···••ff Knit• wlfh lt111el 1uffa. ,.111tetf ••'· lar, lont ·sltt'''' Pely11t1r/1tff•" knits. $5-$10 c.11 •• ~·l• w.11.u lury "''•k turll• shirts _ .. 2.H.J.H-4.tt $ll•fl0 ,all 1WHl•rs ........ 7.H•f.H $1f.,ll Nylao ,.,h, __ ll.H.Jt,ff fa1111111 lll•h ~'"' flaros r•t· .... 14 ........................ 4.tt·•·" N•·lr•• ,,1~11tor/1•tt•n lloru lo • f1llul1u1 1tl11tl1rt of 1tylet1 ttltr1. IOY5' CLOTHIN• - famous "'1k1 ltty1' '""' .. 9. $6-$1 ...... , ....... , .. , ........ l.tf ... ff A v1ri1ty of #1~rl11 , ht1 futll111t c1H111 corduroys, no-ir•n poly11tor/cotton1. . ' BOYS' FURNISHINGS long slHv• knitshirts • ,4 valu•1 ·-·················-············'···1.9, E•1y-car• cr1w neck cOtton1 in 1olidt, 1tlnttripe1 •'9d hltier 1tripes, 1-11. t4 Cott•• llo~~tlttt• J,.i''"''· I-It ........ ,. .. I.H J I/I.SO J.JO,t4 Koll ptl• s~lrt1, t·lt , ..• l,tt ti C•ll•• vtl1ur 1hlt11, 1·11 .•.. 4.tf 0 ·"0 ~·~''' l·JO ............ , ... .,$.,, tfc.Uc lulky acrylic slr•tch ll•u, t-11, 10,IJ .................... If• MIN'S CLOTMIN• ,,,,,.., tuif• f IOO·fl 10 Ytl•t• ·····-·········"""·" ~ ~r,ce '•untry 1UltJ wJth ••nfr11t- 1!1c~1, twe lrtu••r 1ult1 1r14 •••Pl ''"'' tl•11ltl1 •nits. tl21 C1111tur.S fw•-tr•u11r sult1 ---·································19.99 $75-$f7 Wool 1uit1, y••r-round w•lthh .................... tl.00·110.00 "' AH·••athtr c11t1, ,;!ri·~~~~.r. .. ··;h;~·;·;·~--~~-;j~~~v. , .. ,,, .. MIN'S S'°RT CLOTHING tleultle knit slacks tn .. , ..................... ~.11.tt, 11t11 Loo•;, 1"•lyest1r '" ~.,..,,..,. •• , ,, 1lt l11p fJ1r1 Mt.ttl1. •••4 11f1r1. flO ·OU Cootur-41 ,,.,. ............................ ,Jt.ttoo4f.ff UO·IH e 111 ,.~,. .. _ •. ll,ff·lt.tt hi•ll 1~1r1tl•1t chart• •11 •II 111• 1111••· AHAHllM 444 N. lutHtl ' 1714) 111.1111 (~J annual ' h~liday sale '65 Young m•n's suif1, Centur1® libel ·············-····49.99 $45 C•ntura® sporlco•ts, country 1tyles .......... , .......... .29.99 Sm1ll •ller•tion charges on all 11le items. Talklnt Baby Tendlf' Lowe Doll by M•ttell, r19. 15.4t 9.94 Just lik e Baby Tender love· but gro"wn up enough to t•lk_: 8 b•by- tal k phr•ses. You ci.n bathe her &. too, without dama9e to voice unit. Mov•ble arms and le9 s. " • IV 0 . b 1199 i::' 8.96 FisherJrice Chenge-a-Record ¥' ' I.' • • • MEN'S SHOES I~ Sit Mara-em•· cot ............ · i; m .. ,·,, bo• 6 86 $21 Roble's Westbroo'k slipons 15.99 ; " .. .............................. . I 5.99 Play Family Fun Jet fo ldin9 cha ir ........................ 15.99 Spe cial Purc;h•se : -Lucit.• J $1 8 13 " Ma9 nalite cov. 5-qt. . ovel roaster .......................... 14.9~ ... icebucket ............ ." ....... ~ ........... 9.99 17.50 l -pc. Farber stainless cookset, ' alum. bottoms ---~ ...... 10.99 Special Purchase Busy Bird decorator colors . ,, ................ 1.99 Ill!!~------------, $4 Boston -decorative fern ........ 1.99 :u SamJOnlte FOlclin9 FUrnlture 7-light candelabra for 24.95 table 18.99 /,ii tiny tipers ................... -. ...... .2.99 ~, 12.95 ch•ir a. 99 ~ DR PER .I.ES '~ Kin9°s ize 34 " table with Oani§h r A -· i'.t• walnut l•m in ated top, ch a,ir§ with Dan ish tan fabric on padd'd seat I< and beck. 76.95 value 5-pc. set STATIONERY by F;,h,. p,;, •........................ 4.44 " Gr•t Drapery Ewent! Our Two Most Popular Drapery Fabrics White •ntique rayon satin pleated to 200 1. fullness ... or rich tex- tured dr•peries in choice of white, of above ..................... 54.95 loy91 "Apollo" Eloc. Typawrlt"' ..... "·" 89.99 ll-cli1r1cter keyboard, pica type s t y I e only, 5-year 9uerantee, touch-set margins. Case incl. CAMERAS, SHAVERS 99c Norelco Flaihcubes, pack of 3 ......................... , ...... lie 1.59 Sylvania Ma9icubes1 peck of ) .............................. 1.38 J,69 Kodek 126 Inst; l5mm Color 20 expo•ures -.............. 1.48 4.49 Polaroid TI 01 Color Film ........... -·-· LUGGAGE Sen-• 2r1 •• 37e;e1 Samsonite 0 Sherbrooke" ladies luggege in disc. antiqu• 9eld: $32 Petite tote .................... 21.99 $35 Hon41 tot• .................... 23.99 $40 B1auty c1s• .................. 27.99 $45 21 " O'oll• •................... 27,99 '10 24" 'ull111on •..•.............. 34.99 ''° u~· ,,11 .... --······-···-·41.tt TRIM THE HOME SHOP IM,.n Llltllh 61/1' ,..,,,,,., ... ,, .. ..... 1 ... 1 34.t9· 3.25 30-lite minitturt indoor lithl ..................................... 1.0 •• 10.111 .... , .... . with .. llHl•n •. , ..................•. I.ti ~APIOS, STfREOS, RECORDS AM/PM/PM•lt•ff Rodie nus "'""· 99 88 yeur choice • w •• .,.,,.in c1binet. 2 separ•t• •1t11k1r1. ~· lCA Pert. t'h•• .. ••p•/AM Rodie r ... "·" 22.99 Soli" state. 2-speed turnt1ble, AM r1dio with bu ilt-i n 1.ntenna! Btt- t•rie1 not included. 4t. U nluo Ll•y4' 1 l·lruk 4ock ...................... ,.H .81 o .n •• 1 .. Ll•y''• 1to1H turnle~I• .................. If.It 4•TrM1. D1t111To,.1-4tt r ... "·" 12.99 Carrying cese, mike, tape, btf· t•rie1 included. BOOKS l.tf.7,tl D•U9htlul beeks fer chil4'r•n ··················-······1·2.99 1.u.1 2.u Art ••' -111t ~••h ....................... J.ff•7.H 2.u .1.u Croft••' Hom•· .... 1., ~ .. ks ............... ,, .• , ... .. NOTIONS "A"'tl TrNll" 11,,_ W. .... 2.114 ... 1.19 Famous, fever•' softi es by R. G. l1~ry in 1111rted styles, colors, I, M, l 1l1t1. luy a1ver1I p1 irs l $1 Cetton lorry 1hilto by llf:ry, ,, ••• ,,h ............... .1.n TOYS Mtlttel 11ht TN1kt1 IHI let "'' 2f," 13.61 Callf1rRle 'tOO' r•c• set: Ftt Tr1_clc: c!rcult ~ltl! Juic:e M•chine rechtrttr, 1t ttc;b cars pl us l•p c.,..pvftr, SCr•m le-Start 10' Fat Tr•tll, 17.99 Tykeworld Lock-up Zoo by Play•koel ........................ 13.33 7.94 Tyke. Bike by Pla yskool ...... 5.68 JS.99 Sm•rty Pants doll n•tural. 48x84" 6.99 144'84" 24.99 120'84" 21.99. 96x84" 17.99 72'84" 14.99 Toattmast•r Broiler-Oven 19.99 by Toppor ............................ 10.24 ""'---~--------' 24.95 value R'eversible-broil or bake! Easy- cle en with automalic-thermostat. Polished chrome with 1ee-thru door. 16.99 Crumpet doll by Kenner 12.36 12.99 Mo vi n' Gro.ovin' Velvet by ld .. I .......................... 8.63 1.5.99 Kenner 3-m inute C•ke Saker .......................... 12.87 CHINA, GLASSWARE •;, PRICE! 98'J'C• CHINA SET r'l.flTD $55 Corraplete service for 12: 12 e•. din- ner, s•lad, breed-•nd-butter, sau- cers, soups ind fruits; 18 cups; I each 12", 16" platter, 9r•vy/stand, covered sugar and creamer; 2 e1ch 9" vegetable. $5 H1nd1ut l11tl 1ry1tal h;ball1 or 4.o.1 •• :.,, ............... 3.H SZ ltellan hantlbl1wn 1tem- w1ri, l color• ...................... 1.4t 2.10 Hal'ltlltlown 'rys. 1tem- w•rt, plttlflum lt1nllll ............ 1.H SILVERWARE · $110 15-pc. punch s•t, Oneidt silv•rpl•t• ................ $88 Ill Silver ch .. t, h•"• ' 200 p1111s ..................•......... u .tt Ill Mt41torran•••·•fylo 1h .. 1, hil41 200 ,; • .,, ..... , ............ U .H TABLECLOTHS Pllt!IMI l'r•s Do1!11tks - 40'/• • 50'/o Olft r... ...... ..49·1.99 "Mums" pettern soil releese t1ble- c:loths in white, gold or moss . $9 52x70 4.49; $12 60xl4 oblon9 or ovel 6.tt: 115 60•102 l .H: $12 61" reuntl •.tt. Cannon "9ueen V•lour" Towels ltoyel Family Nrle1, beth 1.99 Selid' color velour, lowest price •verl All first quelity. Ha nd towel now 1.19; w11h cltth new 191. LAMPS, PICTURES TNtlltl-' T1~I• ....,,,. 19.99.29.99 nv• 21~ ti 18%1 From ttrtl met1!-ton14:J A~1m urns-to •ntique bronie0 look_fi9ur1 metlf limps. 35" -'46" hi9h . Fab- rl1 -1ver-vinyl shades . fJD-SSO Bl•ck· and whi~e llthogro phs ............... .24. 99-39. 99 $40-$70 Fr1med mirrors .............. 2t.99·39.99-4t.H·59.H $8-$12 Gold leaf•d mirror1, hand-c•rv•d look ............ 4.99·6.tt $15-$70 Gold lul•d wrou9ht lro" sconces .................. t.tf-49.H 191FTS $25 S.114 ~ .... 9.11,h~ - cantltla .. ra ............................ 14,ff Fondu e Su•tn, 1t'l111 ln1•rt•, with forks ........................ -.1r.tt Shishkebob set with s•twtrt _ .. 11.tt $20 Import cane-seet Save 20°/o ••• Europa SWOCJ pon- els, adj. hems, 7 colors! 48 x36'' 5.99: 48'45" 6:99: 48.•54 " 7.99: 48x8 I" 9.99. • SHEETS, BLANKETS ~ ['-----------' ;~ ~----------,::-1 •~ Fieldcrest No-I ron Prints Save 20 1." ••• I 00 "/. Da cron® poly· I);' ester bati~te panels , extra wide: . . .twin fl•t or fitted 2.79 "Madiera" prinfi; in warm' or cool 60 x 54" 3.99; 60 x 81 " 4.89;,, colors; no-iron ease full flat or fitted 3.79; 42x3 0 pill ow cases 60 x 95'' ................................ 5.59 . p•"•• 2 98 . . Serve 25°/o D•cron® poly. b•tiste voile, 8 colors, 12" bottom hems, I " tuck .•• 64x54" 4.79 "64x81" 5.99 CARPETING 100'/o D1Poot De""® Poly .. •• ru. 9.88 sq. yd. instl •. reg. $13, llVe $:11 Hi-lo rentom •h•1red plle •• , 1t sale 1tvlne1I hwt IHI Ptl•1od NylH .... '""' .... .... .... •••• 21 99 er 6' rounli _.. - "Sprin9 FeYar" pattern. 42 x66" size. nc:iw ............ 19.99 "Suooy" b•lh kit: '2f h6 It.Hi $45 6•9 ............................ 37.tt $70 ''Erica" 2-tone f•shion ru9, 4,9 ............................ It.ti "T•vern" rtver1.: '' 24xJ6 4,tt1 $1 24•41 ····························'·" "Erica" 1ha99y: $27 36x60 11.991 $40 48'72 ...................... 29.9t CUSTOM DRAPERIES 1.99·3.99 yd. Wonderful seltc:tron of decorator f•ltrlc1 In huntlrecl1 of ctlors. Prlc:e1 ltattcl •n 70" min. finished l'"tlh. HOUSEWARES 6·Pltce.Ekco FUnt Cutlery 24.95 velue 15.99 M•ho91ny holdst•r includes p1r- in9, utility, sandwich, ilrtacl, rottt beef slicer, French cook kn ive1 . l ·P<. R .. .,., Cffkoot 47.sD u l"' 29.99 Copper ltottcm 1ttinle11 steel cookset con1l1t1 tf: I.Vt encl 2 qt. covered s•uc:ep•n, 4 qt. cev1red clr.it•h •ven, 9'! aptrt fty /.'" I tutch ov1n ctvtr flt1), enii •u· ltl• lt•ller ln11rt. ft1ltul1u1 buyl Thermo! Blanket Speclol "'"' 6.99 ki"• ... ,.. 10.99 "Claridge" top qu•lity, 100 ~. tcrylic t.l1nktt in 9old, verdi an trttn, 1tlnk , c1nary, blue or white. TELEVISION RCA 1111 'Accucolor". Portable l dia9ontl pert•ble television, aui matic fine tun ing .................... 14. .,..1,11, .,1.... 339.88 RCA's f1meu1 "Acc:ucolor" in 18" SLEEP SHOP l,fflolly Prtttti SIHp Set• , • • O•r Thr• lest Sellers! ' I Slnunel'I• "Ctrrect Posture," Serte '10rtht Z:tftt'1 •r Sealy ''Supreme Super Firm ." AU sets fe ature ex- tra firm construction, qu ilted tops, top cr1ftmanship. 161 twll'I 111• ........ each piece $45 , i 269.9S Double Studio complete with cap c:ov•r, four bolsters, wood end1 , 2 twin m•ttresses ... 229.95 hH 1701 I ' ,lllow-lock Sola .... 349.95 279.95 Ei9ht-fc:iot sof, with loosepillow lta1k, arm p!Utws, Ma rflex seat cus hions. H•rt ufon® cover in teii:- turellll brewn.bl1ck~wh ite or brown. tcld-whlte •tripes. FURNITURE ;. Modi!. I·""' .W. Dlnl119 Roam r: ........... 219.95 0 'f'al ••tension table l8x50 ex-· tent1-to 70" 19rain ed plestie--Ar·-r mor Gird top I, 4 spindle -back side cheir1. o.k solids •nd "Ve-· neers . in M1dera fini sh. 319.95 valu • .M1tch in9 ch ina 40x I 6ii:78" high, full 9la11 end pa nels and fr•nf, removatl;le glass shelves~ •210. MAJOR APPLIANCES Frl1!4elra 11 Cu. Ft. Frostproof , I .... ... 299.95 rl JO" wi"e r•frl9eretor, 166-lb. top free11r. • ~=======:::::::;' • it's at the ·broadway NlWl'O•T 47 F11hie11 hl1"d "'" """" • 1· HUNTINGTOt:!_ IEACtl 1111 tdinf•r A"•""e 17141 lf?.~lll SHO, SUNDAY 11 :01 A.M') TO • P.M • TH£ l ~OACWAY O~ANG! Mtll 1tJ Ot•"t' -2100 N1. Tu,tin Str11t • \ 17J4) •91.1 111 \ • r f r1d1y , Novtmbrr S, 1971 DAILY PILOi 8; flt'Olll l'fJ9e 3 NOVI A • • • starts tomorrow, saturday 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.: all stores ··"'e shol orr a couple of fia rt s and I ordered the Bosto n \\'haler launched for abandoning." said Davis. The nares "'ere what al· tractecl the attenllon of those on hottrd the Red Rooster, a sport fishing boat headed south, only a few hundred yards avnty. "If it hadn 't been ror the Red Rooster we u•ould ha ve ann11a·I l holiday sale had a long row back to• 1:.r--;""':i:~~:Jt::;:;~~=t"~~'.ai!'.r:•':l•'.=::::;:;?:;::i;::::-::J:-..--,~==~-7-· . ...:. . .x ' _. Ccdros," quipped Da\'is. .. ' -. The sou1hbound Red Hoosier REGENCY ROOM • FASHION SHOES IN FANT~' WEAR disentbarked the three crewmen al Cedros "'here t~ey hoarded the Quahfier-105. another sport fishing charter • vt>s..<:el for the sad trip lo San DiCJ:O. Friends of Scripps said the armnsphcre at San Diego )'acht Club \\lednesday night \\"ilS that n[ a wake. Despite her <'l ge -built in 1927 - Nnv ia de! Mar was considered e Designer Fas;hion Clearance 29.99-89.99 Orig. $50-SlhO. Dtytime end eve· ning dresi.as, mtny on•-ef-e-kind. ~iises ' 1i1es_,1 MISSES ' SUITS Skirt Suits 29.99 Reg. tim• Bel.Air ''Gratia" Shoes 13.99-15.99 18-$2 0. A large group of day. a nd d ress 1hoes all in our own ,. ••clu1i¥e ,tyles . $1 11-$20 Bel-Air® holi day g litter ,_ shoe1 ........ -.-· 14.99-15.99 $2S -26 Me1101s new-ieason shoes ............ -19.99-20.99 $3 Cradl. Ccowd® sleeper, brushed cotton kn it ................ 2.49 $4. Curity gaute di1per1, 2 I x40" ............................... . 2.99 3.SO Birdsay"! diaperi. ............... 2.59 i 1.80 C urity no-iron sheet, J fitted, print1 ......................... 1.19 • 4 Crib blanket, solid with print ~ binding .......... _.......... .. _ 2.99 INFAN TS' FURNITURE the quee n of the SDYC fl eet. ,·. , Oldtimcrs on the yachting SpeciU ~urch•t•. P1>lye1fer1 ., -----~~----~1 Dolly Madison Group [ CASUAL SHOES scene can rcc<lll ni a 0 y ~ ve:y 1pec1•I group. Ahe 1ome pint dramatic moments in the su1t1. Leather Boots 172.99 - hislory of !he Alden-designed ' ----.,-IS_S_E_S_' _C_O_•_T_S ___ f,; 21.99 wooden y;icht. IYI ,... One of the hesl remembered Reg. $29. From Italy , , • da,hing , stories is that nf the death of ... Suede Jackets; ~ dramatic boot styles in leathers and Reg. :221. 3-pc. hardwood ensemble by Childcr1ft. Crib, chest and ma t - tres1. Yel low, white or m•ple fin ish, $1 67 Cinderella 3-pc. • Nnvia's previous o"•ner. John 1 d I S . I 69 99 " "" iue es. . I Scripps' uncle. who died o. n , pec1a • • ~ ensemble' ............................ 134.99 f:. bo d h I hi $19-$20 Be l-Air® dres1, ar 1n l e ea r Y Hl40s w I e Several styles in v•rs1tile length1. the ~·acht "'"sat the Cape. ~ walkin g shoes . ·-.. 14.99·15.99 · $I SS Dolly M•dison double dres1•r ..... .... . ......... 119.99 Bec<'luse of " ;\1exlcan law !hat riecrctri that a person \vho died in f\1exico had to be buried !here. the crew bribed a r\lexican doctor lo say that Scripps .,.,'<IS still alh·e. They !hen set sail and rnade 11 non·slDp trip to .San Diego t \\'ith the body on board. i Then !here was !he headline ' making story a rew years ago v.•here a young Na,·y sailor came on boa rd at Sa n Diego with a gun and li1·e hand ~rcnade and den1anded tha l Scripps get un der 1va.v and lake hin1 In Me xico. After a tense couple or hou rs the sailor surrendered !n police. ll 1\·as in the 1!167 Transpac race that 1he big kelc-h 1,1·as knocked nat in the J\1o\nkai Chiin nel \\'hen she broached in I heavv ~oing off Diamond I Head. The decks \\'ere swept c-le a n of gear a nd miscellanrous sails bul none or the cre1,1• 1,1·ent O\'erbnRrd. Scri pps rarely rnissed a "1esl Coast blue 1,1·ater race. He ne1·er worried about v.·in- ning or losing. His philosophy y,·as: Enjoy lhe tri p. Crev.·men y,·ho have been on board in the A c a p u I c o , Transpac. J\1azatlan and Tabiti races nrten joke abou t Scripps' racin (( lactics. WINDSOR MISSES' DRESSES Dressesr Costumes SAVE IfJ.lf, BUDGET FASHION SHOES $8-$ IS Famout name cesu al shoes . . ................. 4 .99 $55 Twin size headbot rd .......... 39.99 $30 Strolee delux e napper- stroller . .. ............ 23.99 $32 Port-A-Cri b, natura l ···-·--27.99 $1 8 Pe terson car teet ............. 14.99 Reg . $30-$10. Famous m1k1r styling • for misses' .sites •• , holidty style1 ..;. included. , $I 0-1 5 Fa mous name dress, · sp ort shoe1 ··--········--·.·:-.9.99-11 .99 ~ CHILDREN'S SHOES $5 c.ntury infa nt ,.at ......... 2.59 UTILE BOYS' WEAR 1 WINDSOR WOMEN'S DRESSES i;" tt -S 14 Luy 80,.,® P'''"" [ D D ~ for g irls .... ···-· .7.99-8.99 r 4.50-6.50 Boy' p•nts, f•mous make, '4 -7 .. l .49-l.99 , '$11 Hooded nylon jacket, 4.7 .... 7.99 $3-3.SO Sport shirts, perm aywear resses ) $t 1-$14 Laty Bones® boot:shoe1 r 19.99-24.99 1 for boys ...... .. .... .7.99-8.99 pres s, 3.7 ....... . .............. 1.99 4.99 Reg. $34-$50. One ind two piece !!I $7 Boyt, c.invai. shoes, styl@s in. e11y·c•r• fabrics. Misses, t'" famo us makes half sit•s. ·J --------------- 3.SO Cotton f!.t nnel pj's, top name, 4-8 .2.19 ---------------, FOUNDATION S TODD LER BO YS' WEAR CAREER DRESSES ( ~ -----------------------r Jantze n Pdntie Girdle " $6-$12 Slack and sh ort sets, Knit Dresses 12.99 Special. .A v•rietr. of styles ind f•b- rics including Or on® 1c.rylic.1, poly- ' est•rs, etc. for mi1sas, half sites. PLAZA DAYTIME DRESSES Jersey Dresses 12.99 Reg. $22-$2h. Nylon •nd Anfron@ . nylon ·jf!rt ey in many prints for mi1ses, helf 1i1e1. $16-$24 Easy ce re dres1e1 7.99-9.99 JUNIOR WORLD DRESSES Knit Dresse' 15.99 b 59 2-4 .. . .... -·"-.. 2.99-4.99 t ' ~ $10 Nyl on hoodad jackets, 2-4 . 6.99 "R•g. I I. Gartariei.1 wit h f ront back Sl 2 2 •II I · ·1 499 • ,-d ,,·d, I Wh't ' ti 'Ii -pc. o • , ·pc. 1umpsu 1 ' , .. pane'· 1 e or ye ow, . . S-M-l . r i $S Nylon rib polo shirts .. -···· .. 1.99 I TODDLER GIRLS ' WEAR : Peter Pan Bra 2.79-2.99 ~---------~----.; • S.S0.$9 Famo us ma ke dresi.es, 2.4 ............ .. ....... 2.99-l.99 1 Reg. 4.50-$5. Nylon tricol contour $ 0 N I h d d · • t 6 99 · I y on oo e 1ac 11:e s ..... _ ... or nylon Crepeset® w ith polyester 4.50-$S C ardigan swe•ters, full pad. A,·B~C in white. 1 1 wash•ble ...................... ···--· 3.49 6.5_0.$8 V_a11arette Fre nch Curve ~-~ $6-$12 2-pc. pint sets, 2-4 2.99·4.99 underw1re bra . ... ..3.49-4.49 : 1 $'4-'4.50 Gownt, pajema1, • $6-6.SO Va s1arette underwire, I j famous make ................ 2.59, 2/$5 ! nylon Crepelon®, B-C-D . ..3.19 f\ 1 . I DD . .. · _ . . l.29 I GIRLS' SPORTSWEAR wired bra, B-C 3.99, 0-00, 4.99 Wathable cardigans , '4-6x ....... 4,29 "\\'hen i! carne time lo gybe !hr chute. John 11·ould usually call a board meeting and disc11.c;s the matt er for 1n;i,vbe 20 rninu1c11 10 a hair hour.." 1 sairl one Nn1·ia ve t er a n · "\Vhen the decision lo g~·be \\•a.c; finallv marle . it usualh· look nine· nr 10 minutes tn rnmplele the operation. After that thC'fe v.•as ah1·ays a 1 ~ celebration " I i Reg. $22 . Choice young styl•s in 1 Ac rilia® acryli c kn it, Fa1hien c:olort, sites S-M-l. $6-$7 Ma id •nform nylon Crepeset® ~ l' $6 Olga nylon t ricot contour 7-l-4 . .. ...... . ..... 5.29 1 bra, A-B-C ' . _ ........ 4.49 ' Reg. $5-5.50 J aao1, 7-14 ....... 3.99 $5-S.50 Kickarnick contour or Scripps .... ·as best kno\\·n in Ion~ distance races for thl' "happ~· hour" shoY.'S he put on I 01·er !hi' marine radio. Every n1ember of lhe crev.· "'as recruited for the cast. ll never ceased to be hilannus. Cnntrar~ !n previous reports. the Scripp~ f;:i1nit.v 1~·a~ not the or1c1n;il n11·ners nr I NOl'UI rlrl M:ir. Shf" wa.~ I launehed in 1!127 under the ll<l me Ripple. She was laler l1 na med l.~l<ir and brought In 1he \\le!'t Co;ist by one George Mitchi?ll. I ''achl broker G c n r g e ~·1ichaurl of Newpnrl Beach I ha ndled !lie :;ale of !he yacht y. to the Scripps fa m1I~·. full pad bra . 3.69°1:99 r~ $7 Vass arefta garterles1 panty, -------------' S-M-L .. . . MATERNITY SHOP Sportswear Separates l .49 12.50-l l .50 Youthcraft gird le or 5.99-7.99 ty panty, firm _ _ .-6.99-7.99 Reg. $9-S l2. Pants ind pent tops in $11 Venus longlf!g , panelled 'solids , prints, c hacks. S-M-l , 6-18. \. S-XL _ .. 6.49 MISSES' SPORTSWEAR DRESSES tJ $8.$ l 0 Fortune pent liner, below the ~n ee , S-M-L, &.49. 34-40 (e..,en onl y ) 8.49 Polyester Dresses ,. i Sorry, no ma il or tele phone orders 15.99-18.99 l· Reg. $28-$3 2. Famous name all-1e•· j 1on dr&JSIS , wash•ble, a. I 8. l ---~-----I MISSES' SPORTSWEAR I Ribbed Sweate" $9.99 !. Reg. S 16-S 18. Acrylic ribbad, 1s1orl-f ed styles. 5-M-l . $1 2-$16 No ... elty Ban-Lon tops, nylo n, 36-'40 . 4.99-1.99 ~ $14 C ardigen1, lacy Orlon® •crylic . ___ 9.99 j SLEEPWEAR LINGERIE Sleepwear <!ind Se ts 2.99-13.99 reg. $4 to $27 Choo1e from gowns , pe jamas, peig· no ir sets and fem inin e sc uffs by famoui ma kar1. DA YWEAR LINGERIE Briefs, Bikinis, Hipsters 79¢, 6/4 .50 and 1.19, 4/4 .50 GIRLS' DRESSES $1 4-$15 7.t 4 Pintfor e d resses, J .6 .. 9.99 10.99 $6-S7 Ore11as , •cryl ic bond@d to aceteta, '4 -6x, 4.49 7-12 .. 4.99 GIRLS ' LINGERIE $5-$6 Sle•pwetr, cotton flann el, '4 -1'4 .. $8-$9 Quilted cotton robe~, l .59 polyester fiberfill, '4-14 5.99 90c Cotton kn it panties, ros ebud print, 4 -14 ·····-··· ............ -3/1.99 FABRICS Sweater Knits yd. 3.99 SS Polyester peau, mach wa1h, l JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR J unior Sepa~ates 6 .9 9-13.99 Re g. SI0-818. F.tmous make swe a ter~. 34-40, 5-1 ]. ski rts, HI-DEB SHO P J ea n G roup 4.9 9 Orig. $8-S! t. Cotton corduroyi., d en. im 1, bru shed denims in low-rise sly!e1, 5. t 3. ,.$8-$11 Sweaters, no..,elty knit,, as1t. . .. 5.'19 $11 -$13 Skirts, a11orted fa brics, styl es . .. ... -· 6. 99 $1 4-$18 Ores1es, fl ippy styles, J-1 J 9.99 FAMOUS "LADY" SHIRTS , Blouses a nd Shirts · 3.9~-4.99 Reg. ~7-$10. A wide assorf mf'n t of ' styles in prints <'Ind ~oli d s. Misses' ' si tes. Pant tops, short, long ~lea v es $5-6.99 Blous es, soft knits . 3.99·&.99 STREET FLOOR SPORTSWEAR Famous Make Knit~ r ,. 2 .99-8.99 Reg. $8-$22. P<'l nt ~. skirts, sh ort\, vests and j<'lckets color-coord inated in Anlron 11 nylon knits. $10 Prop. knit p.inl\, Acril11 nf1! dt rylic 6.99 1 $1 2 Acrylic c<'l rdigdns, 36-40 .. 8.99 I MILL INERY --- N <!!tur<!!I Mink tail' H <!!ts 15.90 Re g. $23. lo natural ra nc h, Oy@d .. wh il e or pasteh . For holida y wf!ar· in g, gifts. ..Fur products l.Jb clcd to show coun· try of orig;n of im ported furs. HAT BOX ------ 19.99 C11 ret>r girl wi g, Dyn el® t modacrylic 9.90 12.95 "P11 tric.o" Oyool "t:i modacrylic wignel 9.90 ' -- FURS --- Naiurd l M in k Coat '" Fingert ip Length $588 Natura! P<'lstel, Tourm alin e•, Aiur- I I ; ' f!ne•, Shadow or dyed Ranc h min k.. I Dyed min ~ trimmed dyed broad- ~a ii processed lanmb finger lip coals .. $298 Nd tur al blt'lck cro\s min~ with leather, fingertip coa t .. -$498 Dye d squirrel fingertip co11ti. $398 Oyster white dyed bc.i~tir fin gerlip len gth co11I, ndtural mink trim $588 ~T.M . Embt1 Mink Brc oders As~n. ''Fur products labeled l o sho w coun- fry oi origin of imported furt. ' - BEAUTY SA LON ' Half Price Dua rt Perma nents Polito s .. lon, with custom cul 8.7 5· I 0.00.12.50 Style Salon, with custom cul 15.00-17.50 HOSIERY ' • •• ' .. . ' ., Bel Air® pantyho$e $3 Sheer-to-waist non ~run sand alfoot ...... : .. _,, .. _ .2.40,2/4.70 J " " ' $3 Soflon~ nylon bikini .id em i-toe pd ntyhose _ . ..... 2.401 2/4.70 ).SO Agilon® nylon full-fashion · ·-bikini demi .. . 2.80, 2/5.50 3.SO C antrece II ® ny lon laca bikini pantyhose ..... . ...... 2.80, 2/5.50 2.SO Empres s out-site demi-toe _ $2, 2/l .90 4.SO Spandeit lec:e bikini pantyh ose .-. _ ).60. 2 /7.10 , SS Girdle-top pantyhose . $4, 2/7.90 I ; S. 9S Dem i-toe support • ., pdntyhose . . 4.75, 2/9.40 Bel ·Ain!!) stockings I.JS Seamless, heel-and-toe I ... , .. 1.09, 3/3.15, 6/$6 1.35 J O.Denie r seamless stretch-tops . 1.09:·3/l.15. 6/$6 l .65 Cantrece II® nylon seamless de mi-toe ···-1.29,3/3.75, 6/7.15 $2 She er, seamless, gdrterle11 thigh-hi 1.60, ·3/4.55 , 6/$9 ,. l.2S Sandalf oot knee-hi .. $1, 3/2.85 $4 Sh eer support stockings .. 3.20, 2/6.lO ' COSTUME JEWELRY_ I_ Chain Ropes 1.49 Reg. Sl -$4. Daztlin g ch ain rope1, an. tique or polished finishet. $2-$4 Hoops, weddi ng-band ea rrin gs 1.29-2.4t ' ____ HANDBAGS f i · Leathers, Suedes, Crinkle Vinyi;' · :• i ·~ 4.99 • Re g. q.$J I . Many f ash ion i.hapes for ·'t • town, casual a nd tra ... el cerryin g. ~ ' Good color selection. t t ~ SB Casu al a nd dressy bags . 3.99 ~ '$1 S Casua l, dressy, le alh•rs, . ' suedes 6.99 $17-S20 leather o11nd sued e b.tgs 9.99 ~' GLOV ES 7.S0-$12 Mitten1 cap 1et. Some with sca rfs J.99-7 .'9 3.S0 -$4 Fa br ic g lo..,es, famout mo11~ers . .. 2.69, 2 /$5 1 ' $4-SS w .. shable t ... tu red gloves 2.99 ~ PERSONAL LEATHER GOODS 11 .. $3-I 2.50 Fa mou1 n11me purs e ~ items -1.49-7.99 $ l 0-$1 S Jewelry Boxes ........... 7.99 $5-7.SO Man"s pocket . - accessori es .. . 2.99-l .9' $S-$8 Umbrel!a1 , c.lass ics, s fy1es 2. 99-l. 99-4.9' ' oow COSMETI CS ' Helene Cvrtis W igs 14 .99 ~ Reg. $32-$40. 100 % Kaneka lon mod. acrylics, pre-cut and pre-1f yled with r ha nd-t if!d hairl ines. -$ J 2-S 18 Gold-plated boudQir a ccessories 5.99-7.99 . 1.75-SS Bro adway's own hair 1 bath be111uty .. 99c-2.49 2.SO Bro adway's own bath soap, bo~ed 10/1.99 $30 lighted mirror, 24 -K gold plate trim 11.99 $4.$6 Hand mir rors, 24-K gol d > plate trim . 2.99 $4-~5 Eye lashes, including wa1h-n-wears ............... 1.99-2.99 / $3-~4 Atomi ters, gift • selectii n . . .. 99c..1.9f 6 ' $l5-*2S Lighted make-up mirrors .. 6.99-9.99 1.75 Eitecutive . "Russ ian Leather" • . after-shave .. -·"·I< ; ACCE SSOR IES f .. •/ $7-$8 hand crochet fr inged thawls 4.9' ' ' SS-$6 Knit shells, a1st. . 2.99-l .99 $1 2 Kni t capes, Orlon® a crylic:, ' \\lire $Cr\"il'e reports that 1 the No\·ia del ;\lar v.·as a \· $600.000 .~ ach1 pr11b~bly refer- red to her replacement cosl under 1nda.\''s prices . Despite I the mndrrn equipment ahoarrl the \·essel. ~he would pro bably not hal"t' brought inorc lh<'ln tsn.noo In tnrln~·':o; market. I $22 Bla1er c1rdj91n1, _ecryl;c:.,..,)4.9t $12 -$14 T urllenacks, famou' 1 Nylon crepe 1 ,-sat~ett e·s, tri'to-tr ... -"1S'' . .... . ............. yd. 3.49 --white , .............. '·" .. t-Rut she v.·as not nn the market Friends nf Se ri pp$ I agree tha1. in ~pile of her age and cnnrli!inn. he "·oul d not h;i1·e sold hrr for a mi llion d(l1\;iri:: N(lvia rlrl r\1ar was not only I fhP ··i::\\·rrlhc;.··1 nf the sea ... she ~·as ;ilsn (lc;ir In the hr.fir! of .John r. Scrippi::. ;:ind ever~· pPr~on \\"ho e\'er i::ailed ahnard hPr. nama ................................ 6.99 Proportioned Pullon Pants 9 .99 Reg. $16 . 100·1. polyest er knit, ma chin• wa1h1ble. SI 8°14 ) M 110- 1 o l T 11 2-18 1. $12-$18 Pants, t opt, mike .. famous ... t .n .11.n jewels by jo5'ph sea rches for jewe h I" 'Reg. $7-$1 0. 01cron® polyastar/· C111vtrl u""'""'"' 11-lry hi l"'mMll· •hi ,.,~ ,, ,.,, ,, • '""' _,. k.,. ......... ,,,.,,ht, •"d H1t"r11r IU\ltl "" c•r.iut t Vl ll,ftlt.11 I I .. I cotton sh irt' from • f1mou1 mtk•r $18-$20 Wool skirts, e11t. '''' m1f1119t ••Ille· '- WI w11t .... ltl:HWl<i N t••ll"lllt ""'" "'"" •11• H vln tet•r"''' lhtir dl1-001•I. C•ll Mr, JIH!lll er Mr. r:11tt 11 I...._ -· Souih Coftll P!111 !ri1tol 11 !ht Sin Ditto '""'Y· Co1l1 Mei • ~'40-110 1>6 1tylas ., .... .. .... 12.99 A.NAHEIM 4•<4 N. Eut li~ r,14) SJ S.at2! ' a nd cottont. T edored dnd fa ncy t $4 Polye1 ter crepe ma c:h wash styles in white a nd colort. 4-7. Briefs 45" ' ..... yd.' 2.99 ins i1es 8-9-10, 99c, 6/5.50 and 1.49, 4/5.50 $6-!58 Non-cling slip1 3.99·4.99 $].$4 One-site stretch bre, brief . &a. 1.49 $3 Petfipant,, lac•-frim nyl ons .. 1.49 ROBES Long Fleece Peignoir 9 .99 , Spec i•l. W ashable acefafe 'nylon ' fl eece, nylon sa tin trim, Ro1e or blu e. Si1a1 S-M-L. Short quilted nylon lou nger, polyesftr fiberfill . 9.99 1.40 Polyester lini ng, 4S" .... yd. 99c 1.50-$2 Sportswear fabrics, cotton pr int1, 45" yd. 79c FINE JEWELRY $2 50 ladie1' or men'' 1/i carat 1olit aire -· 199.00 $19S Wedding b11 nd, t otah 1/1 car•t . $350 Oit moncl wedding sat, 149.00 fot•h I ctr•t 279.00 10.95.$65 14-Ka rat gold w•dding band1 , men's, woman's 8.20--48 .75 us e our con¥tnient payment pl•n BF:l AIR rt) SHEF.R -TO·WAIST SANDALFOOT PANTYHOSE Rog. 2.SO 52, 2/l . 90 SFL AIR•11J ONE-SfZE DEMI -TOE PANTYHOSE Rrg. 2.50 . S2, 2/l . 90 BEL AIR111/ SHEF.R0 TO-WAIST OPAQUE PANTYHOSE Reg.SJ 2.40, 2 /4.70 B~L AIR n\ SHEF.R-TO·WAIST SUPPORT PANTYHOSE R@g. 4.'15 l .85. 2/7.50 . -, -- it~·s · at the broa ay NEWPOllT 41 ~11llit.1" 111 11'1~ ~11 4 ) .44d 212 • HUNTINGTON REAC~ 1111 Ed'"''' ...... ~UI !7141 1•2-JJJI T~IE 6~0A0WA't' OltANG! Mi ll ol O<•~q~-1100 N~ 1 ~1!111 Slft•I l 71<1) •111 .1 111 ' • ' , • .... " ... $12 C ardiga n 1weaters, I washable . ......... ... '·" $1-$6 Scarfs, ai sorted ........ 99c·2.99 $2-$3 Hanki es, Sw ;,, emb. Medieras ... ....... 6'c-'9c ,i STREET FLOOR LINGE RIE l ong gowns , brushed nylon I acet ate -... 4.99 Brush.ed gowns, paj11mas . l .99-4.n l .99-4.9' po11 1amas - $6-$7 Nyloo waltt and long gown s .... ......... l .99-4.,, $6 Full 1lip1 , nylon fricot, t affeta 1.n 2-S l Bri@fs, bikinis, '4-7 .. 99c-i.n $4 H•ll sli pi, nyl on taffeta .... 2.99 S-4 -h Pant y girdlti, S-M·L . ·-2.99 ·' -.. CE•~1tO!i .SOO Le• c ,,,;1e1 Mtll !2111 t•o.0•11 I • • • . ' ' ' . .. . ' ' ' • ' I I • \. I JO O.l!LV PILOT F'rlda~. Nattmbtr 5, 1971 !2--.:=c..:..::.:.c....~~~~~~~ Settnte Re111ap Reaga11 Figl1tii1g Fo1· 'Fan· Sl•akq.' I I WOINIA Test Blast Saicl ~o Quak J Peril PASA9E1\A tAP I -~lost e.arthquake experls behe\"e no large earthquake or tidal v:a1 e t>."ill be set off by the Am chitka nurlear lt'st unless a quake ·IS des11ntd to occur any"·a~. !h(' leading seismologist al U;ie California I n ~ l 1 I u t e 31 'ferhnolog~ said Thursda~ .. The ('Onsens us lS that the probab1hl~ of a ma ]Ot earth· quake or tsunan11 1 t1da\ \.l"a\'e I 1s 1 er\· lov: but not ze ro ... said Dr. oOn Anderson. director of the C a l t e r h seismological laboratory. "On the basis of geologic e,·\dence and past nuclear tests in the area. it appears unlike!\• thal an underground nuclear explosion on Amchitka Island can induce a major earthquake,'' Anderson sa id. He addtd that s evera l studies of the Amchitka region during the past lv•o years ha\'e diminished scientists' concern about the dangers of an underground blast. Ne'v Sheriff Hires Negro SAN F'RANCISCO 1 AP~ - Richard D. Hongisto. 11·ho campaigned v.-ilh a peace symOOI for an upset victory as San F'rancisco's sheriff. already has made his first in- novation: !he city's first black undersheriff Hongisto. a 35-year·old pipe- mioking rriminologisl. also reaffirmed Thursday his c"am- pa ign pled~e to donate one- third of his $26.337 annual salary to communi ty ser1·Jce groups. · '"It 11·111 go lo neighOOrhood and local social and criminal 1ustice." he said. SACRA;o.IE:'\TO I UPI I - loo,·. Ronald Reagan has met Senate Democrats head-on over draflini; or a reap- portionn1ent plan and says he "'ill \·eto their current pro- posal wiless Hepublicans get a better shake. !\l ea n "'hile. Democralic sources told UPI they have begun drafting an alternate plan dra\1'n strictly o n partisan lines and designed to re-elect lheir '.?! inC'Umbenls and se\'eral ne"' Democratic stna.lor$. They tndicated \f Republicans don 't support the· exist ing Democrats' p 1 a n they'll push the more partisan one. And Sen. John L. Ha!'mer. Republican caucus chairman. h<ts prepared a third proposal he calls ··an incumbenl plan" geared to protecting present Senate mernbers at least rhrough 1974. The rapid-fire action follow- ed ihe appro\'al Thursday of r he Democratic-sponsored plan b~· the Senate Elections and Reappl.)rtionment Commit· tee. In a ~second meeting. the Democratic-dominated panel s'en! on the measure by Sen. ~!er\·,·n O\'mallv to the full Senat"e. Ttie fotir GOP com- mittee members boycotted the session. Se\'eral hours later, Reagan '''as asked by n e u· s m e n \1·hether he would veto the Democratic plan if it passed. He replied· "That's . the bill I'm opposed to and I \\'Ou!d ,veto it.'' The measure u·ould combine the districts of Republican Sens. ~1ilton ~1arks of San Francisco and Peter H. Behr of Tiburon and force them to contest each other in a showdou•n for their political careers. It u·ould also push the district of Democratic Sen. La"-rence \\'alsh of Huntington Park into Orange C.Ounty. A predominantly ~1 e x i c e. n - American district \1·ould be created from his former ter- ritory. San Francisco Bicycli st Di es SAN FRANCISCO ( UPl l Doris Burl.On. 35, died Thurs· ·day v:hi!e riding her bicycl e on Lake J\ierced B o u l e va rd. Coroner's deputies said cause of death "'as unknown-:' They said a truck driver passe d Lake J\ierc ed Boulel'ard and \Vinston Drh•e v.·hen he looked in his rear view mirror and sa1o1' J\1rs. Burton's body on the pave· ment. Jet of Futu1·e~ Air Force Unveils Bl LOS l\;\(;ELF:S ! AP I -The L·.s. Ai r Fore(' Thursday un veiled a full·sca!(' mockup ol the Bl. the !our-engine jet ii l1opes \\'ill be America's strategic bomlx'r unU~ the 21 st cenlury. "\\'e·re designing lhe Bl lo last al leas! 25 years.'' ~laj . (;en . /..louglas T Nel son. direc· tor of the project. told a ne11·s co nference with th(' gleaming 11 fiite. s11·ing·11·ing a i r c r a I t 1nodel as backdrop. "It isn'I something 11e're ,::01ng lo ha\·e Lo 1·ush out to repl&ee ·• Nelson and officials of r\orth American Hock11·ell C orp . v.·hich is building lhe Jet. and General Electrir. 11·h1ch is constructing the engine~. said they expect to bnng the plane in 1ln schedule and on budget. The inter c ontin('ntal bo1nber. \\•ill I)(' n)}l(' 10 1r:l vel <11 1\11ice the ,PCf'd of sound '1t \arylng 11l1iludc!l 11·i!h dif· ferent payloads. its designers say . Scheduled lo make 1\s first night in 1974 and to be opera- tional in 1978. the plane v.·ill rnatch a similar one being del'eloped in lhe So v i e I arsenal. Nelson told ne"•smen. He said it 1s" probab!)' a stand- off" bet11·cen the quality of the h\·o planes. In an interview, i\elson said the Sol'iet plane. cOOe-named Backfire, ls a slightly smalller tv.·o-eng ine jet "'ith a lesser payload. If the Sol'iet Union decTCles to go ah-ead v.•ith pro- duction. he said. it could be operational by 1973 -rive years ahead of the HI. · lie also said he has seen n1ore evidence in recent months of C.Ongressional back- ing for productiDn or the plane. "I have talked to 3 lot of people 11·ho h111'e told me they see the need for the pl11ne . ·• he said . CUSfOM TA1t0l~ & SHltTllo\AKllS IN OIAN<:;f COUNT1 PIRMANtNT SHOWROOM i".c,,.--~,.~,,~,,.,-,,.,..,,,.-,,,.-,.--,-.,~.... ,.f.(HIUSTMAS 'ALI 2 SUITS S AT BIG SAVINGS 135 Ph•. I "'"" Ntw, n !t '"' .. ,."" .~~~~.!'.~~'-, ...... SAVE UP TO 50°A iPICllL l'tllCI lf1, OOUllf ~Pfll .. J ll' llll ""011.111" .. •• USll"'l•! . , • . . II S""l~l~!f'I , , ,. I) IHI WOOi "" 11 11111T1 •• ...... la •• """" l•ll-C.v•,..• M• MOW H•ll, !.,,.,.,.., ... !.l•<h , !.~!1+1. Sat 100'4 Cl••'"" .. " le•i•htt•loo !! : :;·:~~,c~;~o :; : ~::: ~~'~! .. ",~~:. • • 4 WlllC DfllYllT • IASY PAYMlNTS .,.,. -"'ff I ctu•• TOOO ,ll•llt ll1"01Tlt ~ ~ I WOOLfMI • OOUILI INlll 'iiiiii ~ ,., "•••hit-~I Y•tlil. ....... 1).J-Offl..,. SJ7· 111' 2012 MICHIUON--SUftt 10S-NIW,O•l lfACH 10-ho .J<e~p f'• ,1 ,..-n--H•"' Al•..,,.. I••°" Mt1A"~..-llo'f I starts tomorrow, satw·day, 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. all stor,es • annual l holiday sale big savings _) 'varm sleep,vear 3.99~4.99 Cuddle up to winte r in cozy warm sleepwear of b ru~hed ac.etale and nylon. Choose long gown, wa ltz gow ~s. pa jamas, all beautifully desi gned with appliques, lacy trims and embroideries. In pastel s and brights. Sizes s-m.I. Street Floor Linger ie • NEWl'OlT HUNTINGTON EACH \ semi-an11ual bel-air event You'll find stockings and panty stockings fo r all your fashio n needs in this vast assortment of styles. And you'll save too! sh eer panty stockings reg. $2.50 , # 165 ont; stot;c one s;ze. $2.00, 2/3.90 reg. $2.50, # 1160 empre" for th e queenly f;gure, reg . $3, # 170, opoq ue. 2.40, 2/4.70 reg. $2.50, # 1080, sheer lo wo;st, "ndolfoot, 2.00, 2/3.90 reg. $3 , '# 1380, sheer, sandal foot, Cantrece® II nylon 2.40, 2/4.70 reg. $3, #I 050, Soflon!I nylon, bik ;n; ponty. 2.40, 2/4.7 0 re g. $3.50, ·#I 340, Agilon® nylon on bikini, 2.80, 2/5.50 reg. $3.50, Cantrece® II , ny lon on lace bikini , 2.00, 2/5.50 re g. $3. # 1450, Soflon® nylon on full foshio ned b;kini, 2.40, 2/4.70 control top panty stockings reg. $4 .50, Cantrece® II nylon, control bikini, reg. $5, Girdle top, 4.00, 2/7.90 support panty stockings reg. $4.95, sheer to wo ist, 3.85 , 2/7.50 reg. $5.95, she er support, 4.75, 2/9.40 stockings ~ reg. $1.35 , 15 denier flotknit , 1.09, 3/3. 15, b/b.00 reg. $1.35. wolking sheer. 1.09 , 3/3. 15, b/b.00 reg. $1.65, Contrece® II nylon, sheer, 1.29, 3/3.75, b/7.35 reg. $2 , Stoy Up hosiery , I .bO, 3/4.55, b/9.00 reg. $4 Sheer support hosi ery, 3.20, 2/b.30 reg. $1.25 , Sheer knee highs. 1.00, 3/2.85 Hosiery THE IROADWAY ORANWI: C ElllfOS . l • Ma ll of Oran4.11 • 2JOO No. Tu1ti11 Strt•I 11141 tt1.11 11 ~00 Lc11 Ct lfilo1 M.n i21l) 1•0·0411 ANAl-l(:l M ••• N,. Ew,!irl 17141 SJs.1121 47 F•I~''" 11J,"9 171 4 ) to44·1Z l:J 1777 Erli11••• A..,t 11u1 !71 4l 1•2·Jlll SH0' t .JO A.M. fo •~JO ,.M. MONDAY 1HROUGH SATURDAY SUNDAY 11 A.M. to 4 ,,M. I ' • • ANIMAUgic •J:ll1E.'5 OJI! !tlU. lllO'; GOtblA Alf£ ~I~ OCl!ll. CA~~ 5R~ ! · Journalist Sees U.S. Is0Jatio11 l,ONDON I AP 1 -The \Vashington correspondent for Britain's Guardian s a v,,; there's a new n1ood or iscila- tlonism in the United States. I lella Pick ~Tote last week that "there are influential Americans ~·ho claim it is lime for a J\1arshall Plan in reverse: for America's friends lo come to the 'rescue of the ailing econon1y. ''The sad fact is that ·a brna(I splctru1n of Americans no1~· have 1 er,\· little interest In the oulside 11orld.'' lhe cor- 1·espondent sa id " it is slnkingl,v obi iou.~ th a 1 An1er1C'ans are tar more preoccupied today by !he disturbing slate of their socie- ly than by external hap- penings." By the end o{ the week, the Senate had voted to cut off all foreign aid. The London Daily Telegraph commented 1hat .. American aid on a big· hearted scale has become such an accepted part of the in· ternallonal c;cene that the Senate vote .' .. seems like an iinpious interference with a /av" of nature.·· "President Nixon 11·i!I do "·hat he can lo re\•erse ii. but sha rp cuts there "'iii be," the p.1per said. " The Senate's \'Ole wa~ like an ex· plosion or resentments that h<id long been accumulating at the excessive burdens left kl America by her often ti ngrateful friends and allies." 1he Telegrl.ph hlso defend· ed Nixon's decision to go ahead with the nuclear test on Am chi tka island. say in g : ··so1ne of Alneric;.i"s critics take fo r granted continuance of the An1erican deterrent ''•hich protect then1 but lash out against atten1pts by A1nerica. at great expense, to keep it eHecti\'e." But th e Times of London had reser\'alions about the blast. "No scienti£l <:an gh·e an absolute assurance about thr elrects of causing a release of energy of such a magnitude in an ("arthquake zone ... rt is !'aid President Nixon could not tollo\v the 1 example of the French '''hC> earlier this year suspended Jests in the Pacific after requests fro1n Latin American countries." La Stampa of Turin \\TOle that the troubles of the U.S. economy don't extend to American hippie capitalists . .. The counterculture It beroming industrialized. Even its lnughest representalivea ha\·e given up revolu tion." the Italian paper s;iid. "The most C\ ident phenomenon is the lr;insformatlon of lhe hippie n1oven1enl 1nt11 ;i form of cap1talism or 'hippita lism.' Its (')a11dcst111e publicalio~ ac- cept industrial publicity, 'pop' supermarkets are c re a t e d 11·i!h !heir 011'11 suppliers and facto ries. and the dollar is no longer considered rel'o\ling." La Slampa said this new capitalism was limited mainly o fash ion, cosmclics. art and nterlainn1ent. adding "while he American eco n omy anguishes. ii is experiencing a ensaliona l boon1 ." AREER OPENING for SALESMAN LAVICKS JEWELERS :11 "'a1hio11 hla11d Nowport hoch ' tmplov•• bo11ofih i11cl11d•; cfit 5h •riruJ, 1tcck aptio11, dicol +.otpil•li11tic11 i11t11•· co, .rtd othott, KIDS L IKE CLE LEN • .- . lazy bones s hoes and shoe-hoots '7.99-8.99 Save on stu~dy shoes for girls and guys! Reg. $11 • $14 g;rls' block pot- ent, leother party shoes, 5-12, 7.99: fi2'!Y;-8, 8.99. Reg. $11-$14 boys brown leather shoe-boots. 81/2-12, 7.99 .• 12'/;-4, 8.99. Children's Shoes ·infant's fashions at savings 2.49-3.99 Sdve on these great gifts for the little ones! 4.SQ. 7.00 Diper sets: boys ,g·rls, S-M·L ... 2.49 : 4.50-7.00 Washable dresses, 12-1 7 months, 2.99 . 4.50-6.00 lnfont creepers. I ond 2 pc., woshoble. S-M-L. 2.99. 6.00 Crawler sets; boys, girls . 2-pc. washable , 3.91. Infants' Wear famous.. nan1e 1111rsery furniture 172.99 Save on Dolly Madison hardwood furniture by Childcraft. Group in- cludes cr(b with classic turned spind- les. stabilizer bc9r; tong ue and groove 5-drewer ches t; Kant wet triple !drn- i~ant inn er-spring mattress. Yellow, wh;te. mople. Reg. $90 cr;b, 71 .99 . Reg. $110 che st, $84.99. Reg . S28 mattress. 21.99. Infants' Fu rniture ' .A NAHEIM 4'4 N. (u,lid !71 •1 •JS·&I J I I l. • YrlOa,v, Novrmber '· l'7l DAILY I'll.OT JI. I annual • I holiday sale \ s tarts tomorrow, Saturday 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., all s to,res long quilt robe 5.99 from a group by famous makers. Shown, flora-print cotton, qu ilted to worming ocetote tric ot, trimmed in lace. Sizes 4-1 4. ' I !""' ~ • stretch terry j111npsults 3.99-4.99 • Reg. $8-$11. Greol ploylime fosh· ions .•. jumpsuits in two-woy stretch terry of machine woshoble cotton/ nylon. Mony styles ond colors, sizes 4-6x, 4.99; 7-14, 4.99 . Girl~' Sportswear t~ddler's, little boys' wear 1.99-7.99 Reg. 4.50-6.50 lomous-moker ponti. may styl~_sl fdb rics, Colors, sizes 4-7. sJ;m & reg., 4.49·3.99. Reg. 3.00. 3.50 perm-press sport shirts, sol ids, stripes, .patterns, 3-7. 1.99. Req 4.50-6.00 v1dshable t1crylic cordi· gons, 3.7 3.99. Reg. $i I nylon jock· els, hooded.· 4·7, 7.99. For toddler .,. ,, girls: Reg .. 5.50 group of holid"Y. "' l d resses by o famous moker, 2-4, 2.99· 3.99. Toddlers' • Little Boys Weor washable acry lic dresses 4.4 9-4.99 Reg. $6-$7, Groot 1av;n9s on oil ho• favorite ::ilyles, colors and prints il'l a famous-name dress group. Wash· able acrylic is bonded lo acetate to keep in shape no matter ho w active she is, s;zes 4-6x, 4.49; 7·1 2. 4.99. Girls' Dresses at the hroadway NlWPOltT MUNTlNWTON I EACH 41 ~.,h!o11 h land f11 4) 6•4-1 112 1711 Eci i1191• Aw a11110 {71 4) t•l·ll JI SMC, SUNDAY I I ·00 A,M. TO t :OO, t,t • THE lltOACWAY ORANGE Mell of 011110• 2JOO Na, Tu1t1 11111 17141 ''l •IJl l CEAAITOS lJOONe.T111+1,.Sfrt •I !)!J,91·1111 I __) f DAILY PILOT Friday, Nowmbtr S, 1971 Cl, Cal State Return to Ancient Teaching Methods 8~· GOE RG t~ J.El'DAL 01 "'-01Ur Plltt lltll JR\llNE -Arisfotle v.·ould be proud of higher educalion For the Record . -- Dissol1itio1is Of JtJar1·iage FUM Ntvemi..r l F•lietldl. G't90•V GPO<gf • n II f lil•IMln Ann Plut..,.r. Lowtlt flr•ll!D•d &nd DDr"'' ... Cll•"1Dlln, J•nlce M•rit •nd N•(llOltl Gl'l'lr'" ~ W•al!, G~••lll•'ll' •nd Po~,, H fom""' ""'""'It A!l•)Dn '"" Rodntv W•vn• .a.111m1. Ct••tr><• Ello•r ln!I En• ~It fl1"!n•n•n (Dl'l••n<~ ,t. •no ~n•un M 0.•"· Let •nn ""° C.tll'Qt W•lll1m N•ucng11~. Mt•ot•Pt JI 1011 Willltm ' COOd•ll, 1:1'0'" ,t. Anll L"-11,t G H"•OY. lvlo J •nd J•n•t 5...e Tllom••· NA<>CY Lou """ lDul• C1>adt' 1Cun1m1n, 8•r~''' Loo ln!I Roll'!f! Gro•g• H~l11,1n, Lnl1t Karl tnd Ch•rlenr Eltral>.r" Mo<1e, Sht•·Of' L. and ll1y C. M11nl), 0<,.olll• 8 1nd Cn1<1e1 .a.. Gll>ll1. MA""" V, •nO llo~t! R.' Cou1•n1. 8P!I• L. 1no '"•" II Mo,..is()fl, P"td<I• M. •nll Tno"'n J. Ao""'· Rov t<. 1nd .Y.tr•on P Wlk1ow1kL Sol>l\lt t<•len 1nol ~It•• LOU•\, Morri1, Mt•lnt E. and C1>t•l•1 R, Tlr>n;n, MA•Y F, Incl Pt "I 0. lhuel, IClth,•n M tl!CI LC11•0 M, F1111 Novtmbtr 2 Ca>t,c. GIOtit I. tnd Ern•1t V. ltlll>f'fl_,, JOl>n J , IV tnd Jo ,t.nnr Truelavo, L•nOt 8. tno Al!rt'd D. R~•I Ez•llol P ttld Elm ... /lo flocatqh,, 8•-• Jovco •n<t Powoll 8 .Y.~<I•"•· Pnltho J. 11111 Mortf>t L. T1v1.,.., Ctrolyn IC. •nil Jot>n R. V1n<f nl '-'cCllM1t, ""'' t k T •n<t Ctrolyn J. Ltw. F<tnk R-t tn!I ftDl!fr!t Juno w ...... "l· M••Y Jin•'"" Oe!IM!•I Lc•en llDOlle r. M••ll'><r• t nd 11;cn1rO W. "lHl'le<. Lll'•••M '"" llavmond Htn)On, Pttd(lt Jetn t ncl Jttlo Dw1ne Gl•11~•. Morris and Glo"t l:lcberl"°", H•,rlet ln!I Don•ld 9 1...,m~•. IC•rrl .a.. ona JCl'ln JDlOQft !Jnercack, B•rnl(t "'d Ktnnat~ E1111en• l-1•u1htl!e•. Julit 80'1 ano IC1rl ,t.u9u>I 11eve1. Jr , lu.:lllr •11(1 lou•I CellO 8•own. Se•l•lc• K~• """ Gtt0r•• Mf'>lltl Connell. Yvonnt •nd Eow,.,d A, F•li(1Anc, MArl/\A lf>ll Wilham Molc:lc~. Au11ine rietlY •nO Rowrl W&vM Robln1on. Htr•V G. •nd Jc•n I C11mm!n9>, Maxine ~nnt l'l<I ROl>f" Bvt•1 V•nat>, 5!tlll RoOe,t1 t nO Vt•n~ V<r><t nl ,J u1llct. 5An0r• af>ll Stev•n All~n ll•c•~. Jot nnt Marlt 1no Mlt"a•I Jtm"1 Wl!l&rd. flf'lll•I Ann '"" Vi n Dtlt Cl "· E1l11beln C. and Dtnn11 II. E"91Anll. S••• Jtne And WHl1rd Lo•,tr L°""'. Jot>n Dautl11 and .Y.1'11 M Ct•Oaw. G••ton Jt1u1 l tl<I Mu .. Dtl C•r~ Flotrl lleO\rtndl. St1n!ty (;, 1nd M&rlh• W. 5..,.tr1, J1"'t' Pt"I •<'4 1flf<fll Ch••ltrit •0'!1, Pa...,.11 Jean and L••rv .a.1notd F ...... u. M•tlltlt JI ... Ind Anl!1onv An11rew B•DOlll, LOlllll M•rv 1110 Brildlf'!' fl. 1-i'l'llGI\, Jt1n MlrV I nd Hat Cati 1(11'9/!t. 81•1>1•1 E. ,,11;1 Chtrlti W. Cotltt, Ltt .-,,..,. &nd P•ul S!"fMn Mltud<'I', ClrOle L. lllCI J9'!11 M. Z1balt. Ju<ll!n Fr•ncn •ncl L•W•H!Ct Elll1, N•ncY l aul11 Incl Robert Ro• mt•IW eeulnt h111ien. Dann• z 1nd Edwtrd P •w1e, Htr<r lrtnt •nd ~•rrv N•ll Lorino, Eu1•n1 Tllom11 111d IC•ltll•en .......... ~, ll011d1n, Prtrld o .Y.. and Wille' R. Vlh•~lrr. Pr"" tn<I Calvin l. 5-Anller1, Lindi J ean Ind Wl111Am Evin Dealh Notices AOSIT Louh H .-o,1t lOt Ptrilmm°" L•ne, San• 11 ""' 01tt o1 01ath. Novtmtlf• •. 1911, l~'\~i"er, ,bvol w~:i~~·\i,!f~,,jo~"~/ A010!, LC1 .a..nutl"•· •I• 1ran0cnlld,ff0; l1Y• ortAl q•~nO<hlldrtn Se'vlct•. St!u" ~~:.;,.' :~.,.~·,·~·~wv'":.~r.t11. ~":~k: PaC•ht V•IW 1···· f);•ec1 ...... (,t..Y.PBELL F•1nce1 McY.~·' C1mpl:lfll. JIOI W. 0•"•" Nt*""'' t,.AC" Diie OI Ot1tn, ~.~~~";~~~'~' 1~!u,~u',~~~:;' 1~.f,!~ul~::i M<Kfft1't. t .. e •••ndthol~rtn. one grut-!:~~~'.lo~,,~~~~v 'i?HiQ'p~'."~ff":'~l. ly COIMlll """'. 't CULP Cit•• •. Culp •1• L UM·• ..... Corona eel M., l'l1te o! o~olh N'•em~ J. ltll ~u,vlvt<l b• •on. 1 lll'•Ol'I F ("111, Cc•on• d•I N••. 01uqh,tr•, N"• WH!iam r,.,....,, •. N•""DO'' 81•ch; Mt1 Ktn'"'tll (,;11, ... ~ant• J101t . g•1nd-<1a119h!e<, M" l;v.,rl! (;"'' lltwPOr! 8tl'1• G••Yt\lde •~'"'~"" !<><la-, ffldav, Noven1t••• s. Pa(Of<t V1tw ,~..,nc•!al Park 811!1 Corl!',. dtl Ml• "'''"•"'• Dlre<!o". DlffRICH J!u1n J o, .. ,.,,~ "I~ C•llr ,t.rAgon. l~gun~ •1•11• 0 .. 1• ~I <lrM~. Nnv""'"'' l, Ull ~Y'"'''~O I" hu'""n" .a.••hur; '"'"' t"0"1t•1. Frto< ar><:I (n~r1,., J<'l'lfll two ~ .. ,~,.. M" Olul~ mn•• AOll ..... ,. Lt\!•• Mllhno!~n •II nl '"'"'~"' l'!U•,.m•nl w,11 flt At l•l ~Y••W (•'"'"'~"· f\~•i1f<Ulon. \l~rmo<1I llu•I Uro .. dw~, Mot!uM1, "C'"'~rOlng Q,., ' DJl1SCDLL f ~'"'II"~ Q•;•tnll J•·~ ~"''~do '<!, Co••• M•'A DAI~ cl d•"I~ N"""'"'°"' i 1911 llO•A<V. ~unO&~. / J(l PM. B•" ll<M·•~~ •• (h•""' """'""'' Mo\" Mnnd•v. 10 Al~ '.I Jll~O ,,.,. 11 .. 111•\I C· .. hOI>< (nu .... Bell ~·o~OWA• llo•lu••• fh,t<I~··· HOL~ r·~'''" ~ t-<nlm ~7~ "'" ~I , lhmt!o<>!~n l'!e~rn D•te of oe11h. "'°"""'Ile• J, !911 ~urV•«'<I bV Witt. (1MI IM•• ""'"""'< .,,.,)~II Malm. ~00 ~'Kl •·•~u• ln~·,.u~ •ncl m~ny llioKH SUVl<t l Mond~•. 11 l<Y,, s....111,. C"-'IH'I lnl~•m•nl, IMltwond ,..,.,,.,,,.,,1 P1r1<. ~,.,,.111, Mortu8ry. o ; •«!Ori, ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUA RY 4?7 E. 171b St.. Costa ~l1:1a 146-4888 • BALTZ l\10 RTUAR IES Corona df'I l\1ar ()R :l-~Hfln Cosla J\lcsa l\11 6-2424 • BEl.L. 8ROA 0\\1 AV l\IORTUARV 110 Broadway, Costa J\lcsa LI 8·~13:t • J\lcCORJ\11CK LAC.UNA 8EAClt l\10RTUARY 1795 La guna Canyon Rd. 49t·9415 • P,\CJFIC VIF.\r l\1El\10111AI. PAR K Cemetery l\lortuary Ctlnpel lSOO Pacific View Drive Newport ~acll . C.liforal1 141-170I • PEE~ FA~llLY COLONIAL FUNERAL U0~1E 7801 Rois• Ave:. Welilmln5lf'r Sl!""3$U . ' SMITl1$' l\IORTUARY 627 J\-faln St. Hunlln,::lnn lk'ach 13"'531 in Orange County. At either the UC Irvine nr Cal State Fullerton campuses he'd probably be right Al home engaging in a logical discourse seated on some _grassy patch and the oleMders. He might plellsure in the irony that the grf."t1l slOJH?. "'alls that traditionaUy have conflned higher education have fostered a return to the anc ient learn· ing methods. Al both l 'CI and CSF. ex- Prices effective thni November 10. 1971 pcriniental colleges ha\' e laken root and flourished with n'IOre than 60 offer i ngs available on both campuses. At Fullerton, an array or 50 subjects offered this semester reflects a shift from the lighthearted samplings of the early years of the ex· perimental college. In past years. the student sponsored courses h a v e seldom dealth \\'ilh subjects beyond the ken of t h e n1on1en t's passing fad . Some of these, "Witchcraft and the Occult", "Draft Counseling" and "Gay Awareness" remain in the experimental college curriculm. Gone, at least this year, are the fluff courses like last year's "How To Cheat on Your Final Exam . Without Really Trying." Bu~z Gladstone. a 20.year old junior from Claremont, organized thi s year's ex· perimental C<Jllege at UCL Enrollments this quarter in· LONG HANDLED POLE PRUNER Free Class November 10. 1971. "Roofing and Insulation" by Johns· Manville. La Mirada store only. 7:30-8:30 P.M. Coif•• and Goodies. Nice to have unless you have a giant for a gardener. Gets to the high. hard to reach places. Comes in two sections. made of hard wood. 497 BLACK Ir DECKER 7 1/4" SAW dicate a shift In emphasis to the useful subjects not usually found In the credit class listings o(fered by the establishment university, he said. 'Pottery mak.ing is our most successful class. There ar~ 68 signed up," Gladstone noted. Next most popular offering at UC I is photography, with about 45 enrolled. Other UC I offerings, available to both students and members of the su rrounding community, ace courses in radjo broadcasting, gourmet cookery, macrame .piactical accounting, Israeli history and guitar. Gladstone notes that as many as 20 courses are being lined up for the winter quarter which begins the first week in January. The classes provide no or. ficially sanctjpned co l l e g e credit .They are generall y of· fered free of charge. At Irvine s l u d en t ins tructors I may earn teaching credlt, Gladstone said. The Fullert-On array in- dicates the targes~shift in em- phasis lo cou rses with a prac- tical bent. A sampling of the 50 courses listed at Fullerton denotes .the sh~: ·· 16mm. Film Produc- tion," "Organic Gardening", ''Mow to Write a Term Paper," "Piano" and "Wed· ding and Reception Planning" are but a few . Less practical. bul no less SN'T, • .. ANEL T • • • serk>WI. are the listings for~ courses in "Changing the Polit ica l and Social~ Environmenl'', "The Baroque Era", "Beyond Christianity", ''Black Political History of the U.S.", "Social Action hi Latin America " and "What ill Communism?''. Courses to improve the body as well as the mind Include sludy of karate, skiing, Kung Fu. yoga. frisbee, ,biking, aikido, and even a1rplant piloting. ' EL DORADO PANELS, choice of Avocado. Nutwood. Coral and Sand finish. First quality. With a name like El Dorado how can you miss? 4x8 STUFF TURNER PROPAJIE TAllKS AUTOMATIC GLUE GUI m Easy beYtl and depth adjustments. Burn.out prot9Cled motor. 1 HP. Fine general purpose saw at a great price • .Refills for your unit. Very good for sweat 1olderlng. If you don't belleYe me, ask aomeo~e who knows.like Shorty. They're a recd gas. Like a shoemaker's glu• gun. Hot glue or aecler with automatic feed. Did you bow that gelatin 11 made from horses' hoove1? (So whatO 597 1999 CEDAR GRAPE STAKES Great for fenc ing, or why no! build a forl . like the; ones in the old west. Have guards, buildings. and just think -you can be the General. 21 c EA. 6 FT. PARTICLE BOARD TOY CHEST Jusi pain! it and it's ready for the toys. A great way to keep the kids toys picked up and out of the way. Or the kids out of the way. a87 DOOR MIRROR Johnson looked into this mirror and asked. "Mirror. mirror on the wall. who's the best loo kin' of them all?" "You are," it replied. (Who'• Johnson?) I 9 712"x48" TIRE CHAINS Planning a trip to the mountains? Best pick up some of these first. Just in case you get snowbound. you'll 1till be able to get back to work on Monday. (So who needs lo get to work on Monday?) 997 • 77c JOHJIS·MAmLLE ROOFING SHINGLES 235 LB. l 1houldn't be writing about this. I should be buying it. Last rain - 12 gallons of water leaked into my bedroom. {The fish loved it.) 15 year guarantee. choice of colors. 100 SQ. FT. 11 88 BASEBOARD.HEATER Comes with a little fan lo help spread the heat. Who knows. it may get quite cold this winter. (DA SHADOW KNOW) 30 INCH 1488 SHAG RUG RAKE Beautify rugs ln1tantly. Use especially after shampooing. Makes tbe shag stand up, look: fluffy and more fua to roll around ••• 197 MONOCOOL ANTI· FREEZE If you don't make it back to work. this will keep your radiator In good condlllon 10 you will be able to get around In the snow. 129 G,AL. • .. VINYL POOL COVERS Almost a must for winter protection of your pool KHpl dirt out and saves on chlorine. Beata cleaning leaves out every day. !9x3S ............ 23x•3 •••••.•••••• PLASTIC 11•• '1888 TUB ENCLOSURE No danger of breaking glms. Slides open and closed. Saves work when it comes to wiping up water from half open abo curtains. 1688 MINI BAIR DRYER. Great for the children or thoH of u• with thin hair. Not the best for hippier. flower children. long hair• or Tlny Tim. 388 TY·D-BOL Thli 11u!l 11 reclly bettor than tbe little man who rows a boat mound ln the water·clo1et. Dl1lnfeet1 a1 It cleans. 57c I ' ' Hand tcY Rock Cradle Around Clock? I By JO OLSOr:i_ 01 Ille 01llY 1'1111 Slrfl There's good news coming for the .,..,o rking mother and the worldng father : day cate centers are on the horizon. Mrs. Patricia Reilly tlitt. assistanl secretary o( Health, Education and Welfare. told more than 200 participants in a conference on day care at Orange Coast College that "Day care truly is an id'ea .... ·hose time has come." - As keynote speaker for the conference. sponsored by the Children's Serv ices Council of Orange Counly and Orange Coast Evening College, Mrs. Hill told of the government's evaluation and steps toward solution of the problem. "All women who work need day care - not just poverty mothers.'' !!he said. "~1illions of children do not have ade- l'!Uate care while their mothers are away." A large number Of families earn under $6900 per year, which usually necessitates both parents working. she stated. This does not Include the career mothers and the families supported by the mother. "It is very unlikely w~ wlll ever return to the working pstternJ of the past.," she @dded. '"Six mil lion pre school children need day care, but less than 7,000 are in day rare centers." she said, "Where is the care coming from ?'' Family. fr:i ends and neighbors are call- ed upon to provide it,. Mrs. Hitt told th e audience. "Parents are often forced lo leave them with other children in the family or to \\'ander in the streets until they get homl'." Paren ts of handicapped children also need rt:tie( from 24-hour care of thei r child ren. she added . Prl'sident Nixon has committed his ad· mini stration to pro\'iding helpful and stimula~ing development for children ear- ly in life. Jl.1rs . Hitt said. Head Start is one effort and the CbiJ.d Development office created in the depart- • ment or Hea~h. Education and Welfare two years ago is another. lShe described three tyf>es 6r possible child development programs : custOOial, compreh.-?nsive, which includes meeting educational. nutritive and health needs, along with providing prenatal care, emergency service and f~mlly planning ("the very best -clearly expensive"), and devel opmental day care. The later has as its objectives to enable mothers to work and to' ensure that children have the optimal physical, sbcial alld educational development , she said . This would include dental and medical exams. snacks, the right books and "much that is found in homes that fosters development and growth of children.~ "Developtnenlal day care ensures the . development of a child when he is away from his mother." This is oni..tPe horizon, Mrs. Hitt said, through two oµtniow being considered by congressional committees, S2007 anti OA tlY "ILOT ,. .... ,. ltY kl<lltnl K11hler MRS. MICHAEL CURRY AND CHILDREN READY FOR FALL Season Falling in step ~·ith enthusiasm for the coming holiday sea~on will be members of the Women 's Society of Christian Service of the First Uniled Methodist Church·or Hunttn-gton Beacti:-- Members are busy ntaking lasl minu te preparations for the society's annual fu nd -raising ba1.aar, themed Fall-in. The affair is to be staged from JO a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 10, in the church. Those interested in getting started on their Christmas lists will delight in the array of gift ideas. For friends and relatives 'ol'ith an artistic eye, one might ~ • Falls 1n Step _ find an original ""'alercolor of oil or search the handicraft table for "just the right" stocking stuffer. The -holiday season may sel .some peo· ple in too much of a hustle to get an y new decoratiQns made or edible gifts baked - the decora tions and ba ked good tables \\'ill keep them in the spi rit of giving. Other gifts may be found at the antique or needlepoint booths. The baiaar \\'ill f e a I u re antiques . need\ev.·ork, orig inal watercolors. oil paintings, handicrafts. holiday decora· lions, baked goods and a snack bar. Proceeds from the event will support missionary and cultivation projects along with other church activities, accord ing to Mrs. \.\'i11ia m Okey, general chairman. Among those asl!isting Mrs. Okey 11.re the Mmes. Thomas Harlow, decorations; Verda Hinkle, snack har; Charles Staf- ford, plants. and Marjorie Thompson Circle, antiques. Others assuming responsibililies in- clude the Mmes. Robert Ke Is e y , Chrislmns booth: Harlow, nuts a11d Ciln· dy: \Vesley Cart~·right. baked jloods, and Jack Clapp and Joe Cady, games. Wife: s Strategy a Winner DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm back from a trip and am just catching up with the letters from women who ere mad at you because of your advice to the lnfan· tryman's wife. I thought your ans\Yer w11s great. You pointed ou( what can hap- pen when lhe guilty pa_rty fs told repeatedly what a skunk he IS. As the i;:uilly party rand the skunk~ may I tell you how it feels when a wonderful wife IS willing to forgi\·e and forget~ Ever y m11rried man w~ chcals has periodic nig htmares ~r w~at 1t would be like to be caught by his wife. I mean REALLY caught. That nightmare tu rned into reality for me 10 years Ago. 1 remember it as if it "'ere yes terday. My wife slmply &aid, "We'll talk later" -and we did. She'told me u t wanted llnotl'ler chance I could have it -lhat she would forgive me and ·not mentiOl'I It a1a.in. She kept her word. l fclt like ttie lowc1t creature In the world. ~1y lovf' and admlratkin for her grew tenfold. Thlit Incident Jtrengthcned"'"our relationship 100 heirtltened my respect for her. The psychoTogic11J 1c1r is still there -bul lt'1 a scar. 11nd not 11n open wound because she let It heal end didn't ol~ al IL So slick by ypur guns, Ann., ~lltYbe not evuy v.·oman Is capable of j fnrgi\"ing and rorgelting, but I'll bet most v.·i1,1es could do better if lhey gave It a try. -MR. LUCKY DEAR ~fR. LUCKY : In a book by the l"le Dr. Eric Berne, "Games Ptcple Pl11 y," ht. descri~ a game callt.d "Now l'\'e got you -yoo S,0 ,8 .!" ll'I the ap- proach mnst wives use 1g1!11t a caui;:ht husbaod. lt'a the wi'on~-O'H. Your v.·lfe usf!d the right one ind my hat la off tn her. lnstead of tossing out the leronn, she made lemonade. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Yw printed a letter about a young wom.t!)_. who !mth~ _ twl~e , a day, used ant1-pc.rsplrAnts, deodorants and colognes -but stlll she W1'l\ sure !he. h11d an unpleasant octor. She had even gon·e kl several doctors and they could not detect lhc offensive odor wbic~ she said was ru ining her llf'r You told her she needed a head doctor, not • skin doctor. ' The person I am writing about has !he reverse problem . She really dneK h11ve an offensive odor and is not aware of it. Those of us who work with her are a~ palled by her insensi tivity. She's smartly dreiSed and attractive -what m,y mother used to call "cfean on top dirty underneath." Please tell us what to do. Would an anonymous letter be in order? • There are five women in this nfflce arid four men. Thanks· (rom NI of ua. - TONGUE· TI ED DEAR. T.T.: Dulde among yourtelvr.s wbJch '6"J'lm:t., ln lht offlee cemmunlc1tn mbst t.as lly with ~11ss Cle1&n On Tnft. Th111l • pcrM!n 1hl'luld then tell ber how lhe, h1,r11cll 1otved the very t11me problem after snmttine V.'IUI 11:ood cnnugh tn J(lve her the word. E1&sy lo dn? Nn, But auf· rerin~ In 11llence 19 not ea9y either. Some· one 1hould 1ptalr up. HRlll.151. The major differences in the bills, which must be Ironed out yet, are in the authorization of funds (one is open-en- ded ), the prime sponsors, the free services to be included, and the parental responsibility, she explained. When the Senate and House agree. the final version \•!'ill be sent to President Nixon fo r his signature. ''This does not do everything but it ls a very impressive beginning," Mrs. Hitt said. "The (federal) government cannot do it all. State and local government commitment is needed." A panel of five parents. all of whom had bad experiences in see.king day care, reviewed their problems and offered a •·perfect" solution in answer to the ques- tion. "If funds were available, what would you want?" Thelr , ldeas included 24-hour care for parents doing shift work. facilities for ex- tended care where children are alone for se~eral hours after ichool, care ror chUdren who are ill, infant care and "respite" care for mothers who don't work but need a break . Day care centers should be "locall'ied and very close to home," the parents 'said. "We have to get involved as parents, no matt'r .how tired we may . be." Day care centers shoold include men as teachers or volunteers, the y SAid. Parents should fee.I free to spend time at the center when making a selection and the profit motive should not be the biggest fa ctor in a day care center. Counselini. testing and diagnostic se.rvices should be included, as well as "homey'' atmosphere with "junk-style" things to work with. teachers who can talk to the children as friends , good equipment, time In the fresh alr and field trips ... A slide presentation, narrated by Mrs. aettye Lewis Of Santa Ana College, show~ ed the .1tructur1 of an "ideal" aystem. Neighborhood centers were augmented by private homes, which would serve as isolation W\its for sick chlldr~ as well as giving the child a break from the pressure of always being with a group and a mobile unit to take diagnostic services to the children, including medi cal , dental. hearing, sight, &peech and mental health testing. The centers would be used at night for various classes and parent consultations, 1'1rs. Lewis added. Participating were 1.-trs. Peggy McGlll, mother of t¥.:o, divorced and employed full-time ; Mrs. Lennis Kirkpatrick, mother of one, married, housewife; Mrs. Pat ~farquez. mother of siX, divorced. employed full-time; tt.frs. Nancy Singir, mother of one, divorced, employ,U fuJ~ time, and Don Ventura, ther""of two, student, employed f II · e. Ttieir challeng the conference •wai .stated by Mrs. · kpatrick: "A child ii Lhe awn of h.11 tr actions." I Travel Shelves Books When a librarian goes behind the Iron Curtain, what's the first t h I n g she looks for? A library, naturally. Mary Uiu \Vilhelm, head librarian at Orange Coast College, didn 't visit the countries of Hungary, B u I g a r i a , Yugoslavia and Rumania last year with the so le purpose of comparing libraries, but did so and found it fascinating. Born in the Black Hills region of South Dakota, Mary Uiu attended a one-room school and spent her childhood on a ranch where there was no electricity and no modern plumbing. She earned her bachelors degree from ·· Concordia Teachers College and taught in Anaheim, Orange and SeatUe before deciding i;he 'A'anled to change pro- fess ions. She an swered an ad for a library assis· la nl in Anahf'im, and was offered a trai nee's posilion instead wh ich included tuition for her masters degree at the Un ive r!i>il y of Southern California. Five year! later, while working for the San Marino Library, she heard that OCC had an openin g. called "just lor fun " and was hired within a. day. ~iary Lou, so young she looks like one (lf the students using the library, said sa1es1nen are often startled when the y vi sit her office because they 're expecting a "grouchy old woman . lt sort of startles thei r thinking. They don't come on with th eir usual pitch.'' she added. RUSSIAN TRIP The shag-cut librarian has visited Cam' bodia, India, Thailand, Greece. Turkey, India and Japan, and hopes to get into Russia before it becomes too westemlz· ed. She writes lo many people she met on her tr ip to Eastern Europe. and has filled her new Laguna Hills condominium home with art objects and Oriental rugs from her travels. ''We were subjects · or interest." she said of her trip behind the Iron Curtain, which she made in a car with a friend. "Not many cars or Americans were seen.'' The y once picked up a hitch hiker. an Ea st. German youth whn spoke English. They asked him why so many people were honking their horns at them and he reolied, ''That is a small flirt !" On the beach at the Black Sea they became acquainted v.•ith a family when Ma ry Uiu's head was cul by their um· brclla. and one of the uncles told her he h;id only met two Americans -President Ni xon and her. She found the libraries •·s maller than v.1hal yo u would expect for national libraries.'' The average library in Eastern Europe had , for example. 75,000 volumes for a population of 19 million people. and tile OCC library. whicll she (Se~ LIBRARIAN Page 14) Mary Lou Wilhelm , new . hllQd librarian «t Orange 1::oast College, applied for the position 'just for fun.' • 6men BEA ANDERSON, Editor . l'•!lllJ, NOVtmMr 1.-1n1 ..... II ' Stacking _ up the Goods for ·Girls' Club Cindy Gurr and Jenna Peterson. "teen members of the Harbor Area Girls Club. gather goods for the club's rummage sale, to b! staged rrom 9 a.m. to . - 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Nov. 12·13. in the Costa Mesa clubhouse. Toys, dishes. pots. records a.nd clothing wm be sold to-raise !unds for field trips. l \ ! l ' ·~ . ' . · J 4 DAILY PILOT f'rld1y, NoYtmber ~. 1971 ' .Club Celebrates .. ·An 'n i·versa ry . A 15th anniversary ctlebra· tton In cionjunction with the in· ltallatlop of new officers highlights club evenu for Thursday, Nov. 11. GrGndmo thers :Newport H&rbor Gi"andmothers will celebrate lJ years as an organiiatilln "~en they gather for a lun· cheon in the ~'Jesa Verde C.OUntry Club. 'Honored guests will be ~irs. Mildred Cart~ of Long Beach. nationll treasurer who \\'ill serve as installing officer. The club, which now claim! 110 members, has g i v e n generously to !hose l e s s fortunate over the past 15 years. Some recipients are needy families y,•ho are aided through the Newport Beach Elks Christmas baskets pro- gram, Services for the Blind . City of Hope. Harbor Area Girts Club, Fairview State Hospital and Veterans HoJpital in Long Beach. Leading the group for the coming year will be Mrs. Paul' Huffman. a&i!ted by the Mines. Earl Nordland and Richard Green, vice presidents; Ronald Evans and Elrl Schetne. secretaries, and Art.emio Avila, treasurer. The session will begin al 12:30 p.m. Thursday. Nov. 11. AF Mothers A representative f r o Tl Services' for the Blind will speak before Flight 19. United Slates Air Force Mothers when the group metts at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 11, in Hyde Park Mobile Estate.s, Santa Ana . Members also are planning to attend the national Christmas luncheon at Norton Air Force Base Dec. 4. Business ·women John Freitas. a member of the crew aboard the Kamalii which was hijacked on the transPac race will talk about his experiences when he ad· dresses , tbe NeWport Beach Americal2:'.Business Women. The lr9Up Will meet at 7 p.m. TnGYsday. Nov. 11. in Richard's Coffee Shop .. Members will conduct an all-day bazaar and bake sale Saturday, Nov. 17, on Richard's patio. Las OIGs • -- ~ --:---.... -~---.... Scouting Calendar Sa/es -• Your Horoscope 1 Aquarius: Emphasize _Original Appro?ch SATURDAY NOVEMBER 6 By SVD!'IEY OMARR When I am invited to dinner, I usually hope that a Caneer woman will dG the cooking and that a Taurus man will serve -. the beverages. ARIES (March 21-April 19): • Concentrate on completion. Leave new territory to others. Perfect what you possess. Your own technique, polished and sharpened, will be pro- fitable. Stick to familiar ground. close to home. TAURUS (April 2D-A1ay 2CI): Get around ; try something new. Write letters. make calls. Be i"n touch with key people. Display humor , versatility. Cooperate with Leo individual. Situation that appears suious is really runny. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Hunch can pay off ; follow through -be direct. Accent on finances , personal possessiGns. One who teaches can provide valuable hint. Aquartan could be involved. Progressive viewpoint is necessary. CANCER (June 21.July 22): where prtvtously you were not recognlzed. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Some restrictiqns may be necessary. Accept with good will -don 't feel you are being picked on . Work quietly behind scene:J. Cooperate in project aimed at helping IMse less fGrtunate . VIRGO (AUR. 23-Sept. 22): Accent on how to transform wishes into 'realities. Key is In make changes, to enlist aid of Gemini individual. Be sure tG check messages, return calls. Social contact can be im- portant. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 1: Congratulations may be in order, Praise is received; con. cerns family member and career. Spotlight nn ambition. potential. Aim high: don't underrate yourself. Bring forth innate qualities o f charm, graciousness. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): 19): We !Gw ; play waiting game. Relationship may be on the brink. Slrive to understand moti ves, needs of one wha means much to vou. A void jumping to c on c i us ions . Observe and learn. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q.Feb. 181: Activity now may involve Gemini person. Accent on work, health. how ynu relate lo those who share interests. Stress original approach. Be independent wilhnut being ar4 rogant. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Stress creative a11tions. Means dance lo your own..tuas. Young • person may attempt t O dominate. Use Josic. ff that doesn't work -put foot down. Be fair but firm. Romance is in picture. TF TODAY IS YOUR. BffiTHDAY you are intense, vibrant. seldom lukewarm. You have been through period Gf responsibility. But you have accomplished -and much of what was achieved will begin to pay dividends. You have problems with Leo, but .th• relationship can be productive. Good lunar aspect now coin- cides with travel, Jong-range planning, decisions affecting special studies. Tendeacy is to permit heart to rule head. Key is to be perceptive. See beneath 'urf.'.. T11 find ""' mor• 1bDUt Vllllrstll '"' 11itc>JOQv, ordfr ~YllMY 0tn1rr'1 5D- SAGmARIUS (No 22 0 .. 11 ~It!. Tht Truth Allout V. • Ai1rolOQv. ~'nd bl•tl'>dttf lri<I 15 ttnll Dec. 21): Study Scnrplo le Orn•rr BDDl<l,1. Ill• DAILY PILOT. Concerts .Joe Longstreth and John Eacosa, duo-harpiSts will ap. pear in the Newport Harbor Hilb School auditorium Thurs- day, Nov. 11, as part of a series sponsored by t h e N!wport Harbor Community Concert Association. A 3G-rnlnute workshop on Tabletopica will be conducted by Mrs. Walter Simmoos, chairman of Council Six when she is a guest of Las Olas Toastmistress Club of Hun· tington ~ach. The group will meet at 1:30 Brownie Kim Groff Oeft) learns 1. lesson in salesmanship from Junior Girl Scout Kim Lynam, making her first sale of 1972 Girl Scout calendars to Mrs. Alfred Broward, Newport Beach Community Association calendar manager. Funds realized aid Scout camp facilities. The sale ends Nov. 16. Lunar cycle high: your judg- men't. intuition apt to be ac- curate. Be confident. Accept assignments. Welcome new contacts, challenges. Y o u become papular in circles 811x 32•0, G••~d (tntr1[ Si.lion, Mllll message. Dig deep for in. ¥11t1t. ~.v 111011. formation. Money is invo!ved:-='-"'-'-=----- so is marriage, partnership. Something is being deliberately hidden. Right is on your side. Know it -act accordin~I.v. p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 10, in ilieMercurySavingsandLoan,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, building, Huntington Beach. '.Curtain time is scheduled at 3:)5 p.m. . Gamma Phi Beta Founders Day ·will b e ob~rved by Gamma Phi Beta, Balboa Harbor Alumnae at 11 a'.rf'i. Thursday, Nov. 11, in the Fisherman, Huntington Beach. Honored guest will be Mrs. M. A. t.!ichele ol Pnotnil, Prov- ioCe IV director . SC Jun iors ,Mrs. Dan Gordon will open her Fountain Valley hoine for a Juncheon and workshop for alJ cltllrmen of the South Coast Junior Women. STARS Sy~y Omarr Is one of th~ wwld's ll'e•t astrolo-gttS. His column Is one of the DAILY PILOT'S creat features. Fa ir Housin9 Robert W. Battin, chairman of the Orange County Board or Supervbors, will address the cqunty Fair Housing Count;il at 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 11, 1n ilie Veterans Foundation, San- ta Ana. MesG·Harbor Miss Rosa· Brock from a floral &upp!y company will demonstrate holiday decora- tions for the "1esa·Harbor Club. Members will gather at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Nov.•11, in the Mesa Verda Counlry Club. . Miss Brock's program will include Ideas for the mantel, table, door and tree. The new Arts and Crafts Section. under the direction of Mrs. Philip McNamee and Airs. John Salter. will conduct workshops for Christmas decorations and will in clude a special one on tree ornaments. • Nutrit ion Aides Get lnvolv.ed Orange County Medical Center is launch- ing a pilot program. but volunteers are need· ed before it can begin . The program will be a counseling one for patients in the clinic area on subjects s~ch as general nutrition and consumer economics. Before counseling starts, volunteers will be trained in a preservice education course which will be con9ucted two mornings a week for (our weeks by a nutritionist Topics to be covered for Nutrition Aide Volunteers include Stretching Your Food Doi· lar, Are You Buying Wisely?, How to Give Your Husband an Early Heart Attack. It is fell thal the supervised training not only will benefit the patient bul a1so will be valuable to the aides in their everyday life. Those interested are asked to call the Orange County Medical Center. - You are cordially invited to CHAMP AGNE PREMIERE OPE NING . ' of the netv HARBOR VIEW CENTER sponsored by HARBOR VIEW MERCHANTS and THE IRVINE COMP ANY For the benefit of- VIRGINIA CASTLE AUXILIARY ASSISTANCE LEAGUE OF NEW PORT BEACH TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1971 6 /.o 9 p.1n. No Tic kets Required Denot ion $1.00 ADULTS ONLY PLEASE Mu sic by Mariachi Guadala jara Door Prizes Include Trip For Two to San Franc isco via Air California -· Guild Drug ShtU Oil FrtngeBtnefit Ca.mto Cleantr' Richard's Market The Magic MiM"Of' FLowtrs b·v Morri SandccatLe Gift! Tmptrial A'ardwcrt Caldwtll Candles Howa.rd's Nutrition Ntwport Stotiontr& Children's UnUmittd Naenab-lrvine Realtu_ Southtrn California Ffrs' Nati-On.al Ba1lk J SAM JOAllJI lS IOAD • i ! ..... I I ' (M'1'9ll .HIWPOltT ll:i.Qt, C:AL.IFOIUO~ From Page 13 CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jaa. HELP KEEP • • • Librarian Date Set For Dinner NEWPORT BEACH said she considers "inade- quate," has 65,000 volumes. The librarians there had many questions for her, as well : who uses the college libraries, where funds come from. how much freedom librarians have in selecting books and who decides what will be purchased. They were fascinated with the pictures of the soft chairs and plants in the OCC library. which they saw in the dedi- cation brochures she took along, and the fact that Americans can check books out. While not doing her "book· work," Mary Lou likes to A turkey dinner with all the hike and cook. especially trimmings will be served by duplicating foods she's en· the Costa A1esa-Bay Cities joyed on her trips. She Ukes Branch of the California Na- •· 1 rt . " 1 h l"ke lional Fuchsia Society at 6:30 wen e a1n peope w o 1 d · h p.m. Mon ay , Nov. 8,. 1n t e to eat ~d enjoy good wine American Legion Hall, Costa and conversation." Mesa. Mary Lou's goal for Ole OCC The program at the tradi· Jibr~ is to maintain it as a tional pre-Christmas dinner "library for everyone." She wili be provided by Loren added that the staff is very Paulsohn, who will shaw slides people-oriented. including her· of fuchsias. self. A "superfluous" plant table While she finds it's still very will be included, as will a much a "man's world," she business meeting, election of admits it's a Jot of fun to officers and fruitcake sale. BEAUTIFUL •. Trim down and 1tay down with our proYtr. Wi&ig~~yon_t~~I ~am. fCALL llS-55051 WEIGHT@. WATCHERS. ~ 11•iil&. -tit!"'""' IM . ,.. ....... 1 ~·· watch people's faces when Mrs. Charles Laudenberger they find out she's the head -~is~a~cc=•=p=tin=g:...:d=in~n=e~r ~'='="=rv~a~·!=:=========:: librarian. tions. ·California's Largest Display of Dining & Game Sets DINING-GAME FREE' I TABLE •• 48" Octagon No Mor Top WITH PURCHASE OF 4 CHAIRS Table and Chairs as pictured OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MOND AY THRU FRIDAY 10,00 A.M. to 9,30 ,,M. CONTINENTAL DINING & GAME PLEASURE Choitt are of finest tingle unit con· llr\KHOn with springs. Covered i" $599s Each Ch1lr SATURDAY 10.. • SUNDAY NOON.S . ,_ . .....,. "* Nouoahyde. Block, olive, gold or chestrrut. f'"""::::3~;==;=;;;_:;;;i_ 18085 EUCLID ST. FOUNTAIN VALLEY ~ SAN DIEGO FIEEWAY ANO !!!! i;;:x:iJ EUCLID ST. TURNOo'f 'liliF 962·3325 or 546-1611 .. • _, • \ Frld1)', NOvtmbtt 5, 1971 DiJl.y PILOT JIJ OAOIHAHCl HO. 11-lf of ti.It!._., lo wit ~ ,,....,Cf! l•'i' l't.1•. "ttO•l•T't •T •IUV&T• fiAt.i ••it Ult AN O•OtNANCI 0,-THI CIT,, OAOlliJ.MCI NO.. n <1I Sl.llit 10:, ~ Ni-1, C-•llfenll9. #II Ht. ~ #OTICI TO Cal!Olf'Ol;S C:OUMCU. 01' TMI CITY °" COITA .... OllDINANCS ... TMI tin' r..ulr.11 "' S9dloll ,,,, of TM L1tiot ." ~ SlltMrjO<" Coull of tl\I SI•!• ti: Sl.U'IAIOA COUltT Otl TNI Mll A, AMINDINCJ Tlfl l'1t l'DtTION COUfllCIL 01" THI CITY O• <OITA Codf, Ille Cooitt.ctor l<i wt>Om lhl Collfo<nlo 111 11\d for ftlll CAl/"'IY .,- STATI 0, CALll'Ol;NIA 110 • 01' THI UNl•o•M I UILOIN• CODI, Ml$A, AMINOIM• tlC,IOM fttt.14, COl!t•KI IM~tto.' ,, 1w1rdM ~u ,., I lilfwttld• TNI COUNTY 0" OlilANOI • .,. ADDING A tU••ICTlON Il l TO CCtTA MISA MUNICll'AL COOi, tOOll lhe!'Mf 11 H<l'I lall 1!11. 111 lht m1tt1r o1 1M 111111 fl .IAMl!S NI .._1t)M Sl!C'ft°" )ltt. l'iltOVIOtN• l'Ollt TM• Al'l'LlCATICM 1',....lflflt lhll -11ld --"Ill """'• MELM>l,lill:Nf FfU)WO\.O MIN'!llflll A al y ed 1:1,.11 ol JACK .J Tlt.LlY C..i llll TtlE CITY COUNCii, OF THI CITY 01' 01' ZOMI l l(Cll'TION l'lll:MITS TO l'I' .. N ld trl >'l lilnt r1tw of wt .. tl'lt lr bl kllf"ln 11 JAMI!°' M, l'lltlSWO'tfl• Jl Z NOTl(I' rs l<l!'lt.l!'.8 Y 01Vt:N lo tti1 COSTA MESA. 00£$ Hl!lltl8 '1" ORDAIN INDUtTlltt•t. ZONlt WI THIN TNI .. 10 IOI' 1ny -"l"I tllfl<I ,,.,,,. thi n 0.111H. Investors Apathe.tic LEOAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE . LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE UlGAL N<mCE Reasons for Plun ge on. Mark et trlOllw• of ff1t t09v1 MmM ft(td1nt Al FIX.LOWS Cl1'Y, tflht ,_,,,, 011rl"' t nv "'' t l lMC11t MY ... Olltl It h.,..., 9)vwi 11'111 tlll tril l ill"''°"' 111vi.,.. c11rm1 lt t lll>I tN SICTION I. TN Cl" CeullCll ol IM 'Ill CITY C:OUNCIL 01' THI CITY,,..,..,. •11(.11 wwk lt , .. 11lrtd ln Cit .. Ol 111101r1l11110 L..ro Mtv Ht -. NE\V YORK tAPt • i'he mutual funds or Iii certain . have money In his pocket JS attd ffcfOt<\I ••t ,_lrH to t•!1 t111m. Clh (If (otlf Mt'll flMt ...... d .. t11r11 01' COST• MISA. OOEI HEllti l 'I' ••"AOflllllt rY ""'"''fl(lff <•llttd llY "''· Ad"'l"l1trt1rl~ Wlfl Wll ,, •rlv111 .. ,,,,. • . wlltl l'hl fllol'.•Hl •V "OW<M~•· 111 ..... olllC• !Ml 111, HN Ull, S.ltlV lllld Wt llt11 el ttlt Olll:OAIN AS l'OLLOWt; 11oeo. M ,,. ... ..,. 11 lift °' •'-rt'I' t llll 1111 lllollltl tlOCltf' nll ,, l'hl ....... 11-fact that thousands O[ people (reedO!'I\ Of 8CUOn. H t1 h \VelJ 8S One hi.9 m 1nd , and he 01 1~ tltflt "4 1111 ,00\'ll 1111:11et1 '°"''·er commUfll!y lfOl~I,., 111 tM-'ldfn.,,I to 1111 s•CTH)N 1, Sec:. t1W.lf, C11t1 M111 00\llllt II~ Ol'I '-'Ot t •l'ICI rhl ...,..,, l!Ho 11•1•'1 tlld ctftel:lf-N<tl .... nlf' o d · c .. h' f ft ,_,,.,.. 1111!1'1, ""111 .... llf<flH"" lt14 Unllell'ftl l~llcll"' Codt, ft111/nt IO M1i11ICl1t1 C-II l\HfllY t lMl\llH loo .... t i MllH tt. le WI!: H-Yt.,.t Ott . mdlllOQH tlld 111Dl1tl to (dnllrrn1llon lit make a living selling stock redemptions mean lt1!s.s monty esenoes It. ~ause l8 eat v011C.11t• .. _ w.. ""'"''''Md " 111t ottl<• •~lofn1t!c fl•• ,~11-1 .... 1111 1¥1t....,, 11111 tfld •• h:iu-11 ~ ~111 Ott, "~'" 'fl" Lt lllf' 0 1v. t111 "'• su.1r1M coun, ., M 111,, 1111 mark.I lor·-asls 10 others will be grea te r than Foretelling o1t11trr 1u0f'111n i KAlltHS .. kARAl lAN , 1ccoo~l1>111v, 111t to11...,.1,,. 1mltldm1nt 11 t 1t. ""·'' ••dftlN -111W111111 v,, ... ,111 D•t . Tll111kN!vln11 D•¥ •"Cl Hlh ••v ot HovMtO.r, 1111. 11 "" effl<• ~ lO invest. Funds which s howed ' toO Wlblll•t 11"11 51111• 1)24 LOI !'lltdt DY adcll"' • tull-MctlM IOJ 11 :i--Pr011ltloll1 ,., ,_ E•(flllwl c11r1~. OtY I f(Ovldtd. t11rt11er. llttt ol COLLIN' ANO $NYO(ilt, Ill VII ell II the r eappearance ol Haley s An"l"' c111'°'"'' ·· .. 11• Wlllai 'i. 11\t kodlM *1. 1t1t un1fol'"' 11111t11.,. '""· P9mlltt ••• -\lclblt 10 itff·1trwt t111 ,..~ tor laffffl"" frOt' "(fl 11-'ll·/\eut Ptr. l'1,111c P1t1'"°''' c1ntor1111• totn doesn't meBn lhal Uley are ac· great versatility when the Comet In INS •!1e1 of bulfllfl» of !ti• .,,..,.1111tt1 111 111 WlllCll 111111 ••td ,, 101io...1: ... -1~ 11W1"' 111 ._. .1111111 111• L•"' MY 111111 "' 11C111 .. ,, 11\tn t .. Do111r1 ''"' .. L• AllN'"' Ceulllt of LH ( N I I JI i..~~ h ' mt "eti ttrltlnllltl to 111.· t:altlt o1 .. Id SICllON 2. "jte ... t rO 111!~1nc llrt Uot Of'dlntroc:t tllCIM>I In fM lnG1111rl1I (0 .llOI "'°'' lt'ltti laurM'ltfttll r1t1 tor Allttlllt. $1tlt of C10!ii.-n11, i ll l!\.f r(tfl,, cura e. O a a ' ""''au~. I c nioney 1.1•as pouring in feel 0«.,_111, w1111111 tour ,,_111, .i11r 111, e.i!ntv•,,.111• •~llell\• 111111 11N M ZCollt• 1nc1 111111 "'l'I •• 11o11N!'ln c1 ,,_ 1111 ,,.,,.,...,km•" 111~....... r1111 ,,.. 111i.r111 o1 .. ,. e.c.111111 ,, "'• I o ing th k I · bl C 11r11 "'"II'''..., of 11111 llOf/(.Oi, 11111111..i '"" "''1n11Jntt1 Ill -•Dlt Ull'lt te ti..... IW rt10111t11nt ..,1y u 111111 "' m111C11Mrv u..., '"v 11"'1 of 0t11t1 •l'WI 111 1111 •/tl!I, 11111 11111 !IWS g vern e mar e are strappers as 1t eedJ away. l..F.G AL NOTI E o.itc1 illll.,,,bl, 21, 1,,1 ,_111011 11 SH(l•:H 111 11111 c~'""' 1~ .-rid ·~"'' c11~ cauncu, C011tr1ttor to .... ....,,,. 1 --''.c:1 I• 1w1rdtd 1"'ut 11 111t1 ,~, "'•t• of ttNt d•<••llll -t fully understftft,j 3 u ( ' I I I bl 1----------------1 W1LLIAM H. llLLEY 11\t ,,.,. ,DllOWln1 1«1tlon1: z-e~'"'llon l'ltfl!\11' w\11 .... •fid -1n1 l~bc:Oll!r~IOI' Ul!dtf hi"' lo hit KQVlttd by -·•Hon ol ll W fJI '"' """'' ncer a1nty s nto era t , sM JUANITA "· Tu.LEY 1. rn C•ewo F. 1>1v111.,..' oct~HftiCI•• 1Y111otl1td 111 ll'IClll1•r111 1-•· Olllv ••~ l'IO'I I•» t11111 111t tllNt *"'111td r1111 0111-111, olhlr 111111 ., '" teldi11,,., ,. A comet's patch in the sky and !t generally is i·efltcted In su,.11uo• c ou 1T o• lHI c .. E~K111tr1 °' ""' w 111 u1td '« w110 .... 1t 11111. 11e1w1tt aM -· 11\1 z-E'.il'"''lofl ''""" °°'' re 111 l1kff<., _.,,,..,.., '"" MKh1nlc1 "'"et wio dKt1tt11 11 me ilrnt .,. ,,.,.,.,. STATll OP C&Lll'OllNl.i. 11'01 of 11\t ..,.,.., .,.!Tiff "'""""' _k,.,,OPI llllnt comllllo!lblt mtl1tl1t, Ml t~tt\Oflrt I 1111 rowv .. It t lldlh1r '"''loYH tly ...,,.. Ill 1111 l~KVllOfl of lh• In I nd ID t ll thtl cl•ltln rw t ,__,Tt can be forelold decades before tailing prices. THI COUNTY 011 01111.«iNGI KAINS a JlAill:Al lAN "' 110t101 °' Rt11bu1111111 eooc11 ""'-" 1-. «"''''"· lh• Pl<MllV for 111111•e to t1111c1111r11 °'"''"*' •• tolld't'i. i.wi.: -r- ils appearance. l:lut the ra· Seldoin has it been mort d if· "'· A·11•1• ,. 1'111.,.1r, 1•vd •• sw•ts UN ·~• oa:-uii.ncy 11 1r1tr u.~ •qv••~ 1"1 s1c T1011t t. T~I• "'itl"tnn 1111n t•k• COll'l•t' w .... 1t11 t1 11 1111(]/lta 111 $1CllDl'I PAll:CEL NO. 1: ,..,,, "°'"°" ot Lot NOTICI 01' Hl!Allt1HO 01' "ETtTION LH AMllfL (IUf. M ll 111 t 1lnele llOOf' , .. , W ,,...,, ltlt" two tl!td l ftO be 111 fvll IMtl ltllr!y t)U ~1v1 1111 ol !tie Ltblw' '°81, 1!, Tr~! Ho, .U, t i "°" lflla 1""111' lionale of the market cannot ficult to know t he immediate FOR P11101a.t 1. o" MDL0011tA .. 111c 1,11 niii '""t•n 110t1 ... ;n 11e1""'· ,,..... '"° •ti•' u, 11111", ,,,.. .,1., 10 Tht C1111r1UOI' ...,,u H v "•~e1 111C1 reoeoto.o 111 Book 11 "'" ,, be fully unders 1--", e''" e-nom1'c future. The Woll WILL AHO ll'Ott L •,T t I Its Al"""Y'1 IOI' c ... 1.«ulln 1 Tl\fWef\OUI ••rkll\I ''""' °"" Ille ·~pl•11l(l.fl ,f11 llt ..... OJI d•Y•.f•Ol'll 11t 111l»l1rt<>e1 Pl¥"''"'' 111 t l(!I °"'°' .. "'•" MlllC•ll•-· M111. fltOfOt ol D•enM l'll\J '-V T•STAM•Nt•lltY "1.obffthld 0•1n" COIHI Diiiy "llot. •.ooo wiv•rt '"' In ..... 1111 .... tl\•11 bl PUD!llllld -Ill "" ""'6MI lo t •K ... 1• '"' wl)l'1<, •• •ucfl c .. 111~. f;tl!IOl'nlt, dlKrftlell '' tvllow1· testros peCtiveJy, Street 1n\nd readers are ron• Et11l1 of HEMRY llENTON JA.ME!I. C)c:tlltler :t2 l' 1nd Ngvfml>tt j, 17, ) lhrow9hovl 8owllfll AUt~I Wr• Ot1"" Cou t 0111\t .. Ill!, I_.,, .... vi ltl WI IN! tW1\1llfltt PtYmtllll 1re tlt11ln11l111 ti t l'O!lll Jn lllt N hel Oecttnd. ttn . ''"·11 •.eco •QUI,.'"' In l ftl. ...-.1 <l•cultllCO'I ... 111ttc1 •1'111 ~ltl'IW OttlNCI 111 !IN ll*li«bl• (Ol!tc!IVto N0rthtt•1t•IY lln• of N ICI LO! 11, ••Id ever! ess. a mark el fused, because the government NOltC.E 1s HER.EIY GIVEN 11111 M•n: , T11'°"'"°"' •t,11ure111> ovtt ~-1" t111 City o1 c;.,,,, Me,1, ._,,.., w!lll N •111n1n1 '''""''n" llltd wl!h th• POlllT wi,.. "·00 ""' irom ,,.., mGit analysis art er the fact is much minds they n1ust~reed a re not En"' J11M1, h•• 111tc1 t1ere111 • •lll!on _,.,, "'' In ••••· ""' n1m11 . gt ltlt mtmW • v1 "" c11., o...r1m1111 e1 •N1u11r111 R1Lt11ot11 '" NM1,....., cot"'9' °' ,.10 LOI 11 , llllllC• r h ( trv 1>•-lt o1 Ho1ot•1.,.lt Wiii tnd ~ LEGAL NOTICE s. Tk•lllfllDUI 111 1iuno.tn11 vi.tel 11 Caunc:H "°''"' tor 11111 111111•1 'tit -· Kc0ro1..c• ""'"' S11<1lon Ull.t of 11\t Sou111 JtO ,... •J' w.11 H ft l!IS wllll "" sa er I an a ore ca s I • 1nadc -lip on t he character of 1uu1fl(e of L'""' T.-11 ... .,,,.,¥ l'O '"" 111,,,, et ~Du, ....... 111r 111vi111 • PAISEo ANO AOOl'l•o ttol1 '"' c11y 11 L•bor CllClt. Nortllw•He<ff 11"' '" 111., Lot 11 , Herewith then are some of the Pha•e JI "'1r1-r, rrftrt<Kt to Wfo•<h 11 "'•°'-l'O• '"'' Novff'l'lbtf, lt 71. A11 ... 11ot> 11 e!•tctld 10 "'' •ro~1,1&<>1 i" dlitt fl(t 01 ,M.11 t••t 10 1 """1 In •111, • funner Plnlc:u!1ri. •lld lktl '"' !Im• t nd NOT/Cl( t o c ••o1ro•1 •. Tl\rauthDUI Ill blilldlnt• ll1vln1 • llOll(RT M· WILIOH Sf<lhH\I 11n.s '"' '"' .. of l'ht LtDCU' Soutll~tletlr llllf ,,, w ld Lei ,, Nld reasons given for lhe 11'.'0· \\'hen investor s feel certain 011c1 o1 "•••1119 ttit , • ...,,, t.11 bffn H1 N1. A·rt1 11 Pl•ct o1 ~11, 111rm111~ .11o .. , "''" 11r11 M1yar"' 1111 COlh c-111.,. "'' tn'll>lovm111t o1 llOlni .,.1,,. "00 _ '"''" lllt 'inott · "'eek piungr Of nearly 68 bo ( th f t th JeeJ lw No¥....,1Mr !4, 1'7!, ti f :J6 e.m , 111 1111 IUl'•t.IOJI COUltT 01' 1 1'~ floar wllll t n O<;(YPIM lolCI o! llllfl Cltr Ill (01l1 M1it ,....,.....rlctt b~ lllt ~Olllft(lor II( 111~ Wt1llotlY (Gl'l'lflr of N!d Lof 1!: llltfl(;I a u (' u ure ey CDU•Uoom ol Deio1rtmtnl No. l ol '''" STATI Ofl CALl,OJINIA "Dill: """ IOO ATTEST: "'""'''''•<1or undt• M.... $01.1111 50' ti' •I" IE!lll •lone •• ra p(}inls in lhe Doi\' J ones n1ore certain also about the ir co...n. 11 100 C!vk c'""' 0.1 ... Wt sl, 1" lM• c ouNt Y 01' ORANGI. i T11ro.iDno...! 111 buHalnt 1 wit~ • EILEEN ~PHJNNIEY S«llOl'I un.s. 11 '"'tlldeot, •tGulrts "'' s.ou111..,.,,1erlv UM o1 Liii 21 1 Cl!ll•l'IC• J nduslr'.a l A'•era'e that •••ay I •. 1 lht cir~ of S.nt1 Ant, (1lll'Ol'11l1. E1t1t1 or '"EAA L·OHET• COX, t lMI u11Dle 11_. •re• Th•l I• 1110.1 tk•n D CllY ci.,., of 1111 COlllrtetw or wbc:or11rtc10r l!'llllioyl.,. of uo.OI) fff1 ; lllenct Nortn'n• 411, ~·· .,, ong·term com mt ments. Oae 011..i No•tmbtr '· ttn kllerWn " Pl!'.ARL o . cox. 0tc111td. IHI •Dov• ''"°'· Chy of COit• ,..,.,, trt dtMNn In t nY 1 •Pr • n tr <• 1 b1 , E.tll 11111111 10 'llld North-•ltrl~ N,.. or may not ha\:e ended. fairly safe prediction therefore w . E. s1 JOt'IN, NoHt• 11 hfl'N¥ .rvon 1G cr1111ter1 '' 111 •LI t•M• sti 1or111 111o<11. 111e STAlE OF CAL!l'OlllNIAI fl(t~ .. 11... to 111P1v to ''" ;..rni 01 u lo Lot 11 , d111111,1 e1 ''"n ,.., . Ceunty Cltrk Ille 11>ov1 "'"'tel G«edtnt 11111 111 r11111<tlv1 lncrtt llt tor ... , t ncl ~llthl COUNTY OF OR,t,NGE I IS t PP•.,.llct-11111 tommlllfl n1trtll !IN t ilt to 1 pQ/M Ill otl<I Nan l'HlllltrlV 11,.. et J. A great llU!Tiber Of in-IS that \\'hen Phase JI becom es GlltAN,t,M a J•Mll i>ertonl ht"111t cl1lm1 1g1I"'' Hit N ld 1.1>e<ll!ftl In Std!~ SOii t <'d fOf 1n111 IHI ClTY OF COSTA MESA J of "" ll!.IDllc -kl .,o!W t<HI whl<ll Lot 't; ~'Kl No.Ill ~· 11' 4S" Wt,tl dlvidual investors, not all of clearer so ~·ill investor in-"' wn1 OCM• •1¥1, G«..stn• ''' •Mul•ecl 111 1111 111tm, wlt11 """''"..," 1. e:tLEEH P. ,.MINNEY. Clf'f crtrt. 1ttml11l•ttt1 1111 1119r1"nc1J1ol• ••coo••"' In •long ••Id Nort11e1,1 ... 1t 11.,.,. Lot 21 , ' Llllt l et lh. CatH .. ~lt "'"2 tllt 11tet111,.., ¥DIKN:fl, In the llffl(t of SECl!OH ), Tlllo ordlfllf\Ct "''II ll~f Ind t •'61tltlo Clerll: of Ille Cit¥ C111tncll ol tl\tl trtelt tor t <trllfktlt of IP<lr<!Vt t, d(oltr.ct « lolO 00 fttt le flll l'Olnr of them small. are disaffected. lentions. t at: 111i1 •sl-4Ut "" Cllrt. ot tllt •DO•• 1n1111et1 cov11. or tfftct t ncl .,., !~ tun tvrct lllirtY uc11 a1v1 1111 cuv 111 Coott Me11. ht,tbY , •• 111y T111 c111u1c1•• wlll •IN t!• Tht rt!lo o1 bfffnlllne. · They are rrinhtened b)" reveta· 4 The stock market ., s 'd Atffl'Tl•Y• IM: l'tlllitrltr to O•U~fll triem with 1n1 n.Ul'llfY lrom tnd 1tlPf lh Pl l11te, '"" prior 10 lhtl "'' •boVf •M IVl't<)i/11 Ordlnt l\CI ......... 11c:11 IG feurnev""" ,,.,, will "" PAlllCEL NO. I: T"' 5'Gutrwte1t1•l\' "' • I a J P11bll1~ Or1ntH (11111 Otllv t"llol. vdlldltrt to 111<1 unlJenit nld 11 !Ill offk:t !!It 1x11l•t l1.., of n11"" \\!) 01v1 lr<m 111 No. 11-31 w1' l"trCIOuttcl t nd cemkltt .. uucl In tl'lt "rtonn1M• Of lllt nwitra.;t. '"·d lef! Of 1119 toli-1.., Cl.-C:rltied tions of ineptness in the to reflect business a n d Nw'"'"'' 5, •· 11. lf11 :J00.1·11 of ll1tr111, 111'1•111 .. Col\1111, 1uo U"IOn HHIN .,.,u 1>e 11uDlllhf<I one• i11 Ill• M<llOl'l llv 1ttlloll 11 • '"ult • "'"'I"' ol Thi r1110 of ••Pf•nflc11 10 l0ti•11tym1n 1" Pl'llPf<tv. 10 wii: 111,, po<1!on or Lor 11 , b k · d Th h • d 't ' nd ll 8 11'111 l-1•, Ot l A!llG Fln1ncl1I Ctntlf. Ort""• (0111 Dt ll V Pitel, • llfWIUPlr o! 111<1 (11¥ (our.ell Oii lllt !1111 fl¥ GI 111cll Ctltl lht!I llOI Ill ten lhtn 011oe to ltt cl No .st 11 per MI P ll\t fioOf ro erage in ustry. ey ave economic con 11ons, a le LEGAL NOTICE '°'''"<11', c11H'0""1' f05Cl. whl'" 11 111, oft'l••11 ,1rcu1u1on, ..,1n1..i 1"" PV~11111M 0c:1ot11r. 1t 11. enct lh1r111i.r ,....., 1/ld 11v1 ••ctPt; r01:oree<1 · 1,. ' 8....., 11 Pen , perSOOaJJy feJt !he effe~( O( OUl/UOk fOr profits in pl1c1 ol bullntd of tl\t ul'ICl'tr1l•"fd i11 t ll 111 1111 Ctlt o! Co111 Mt ... 1094'111., wltl\ •dOPltd ti t wl>l>!I t i I r19y!1t "'"'I"' A. 'N!l.11 11n1m1lOymt11! 111 lllt l t•I ol MllCtlte-.o Mtpa, Rtcprdj or Ora* . mt tlttl 111'111111111 lo "" .,111t of itlO "" "'"'11'1 of tl'll memt>tri ol It!• City at $11d City CIVMM htld .... -lit d•r.. tGVtr•ee DY "'' loon! fPJN'•'ltf(t M'llP c .... "rv. (1lll1><nl1, !Hictllle<I ll 1111owt: high~r commissions and poor particular. \\lh1le prospects ,.JctiTu:u~n:'usiNESS "~"'""· wu111n '°"' "'<'""'' 1ttt r 1114 c°"'fl(u va.i t"' tor 1nc1 1g1rr111 '"' 11mt . NOY•"'"''· 1'71 . Dv '"' IG!lawln• ''II c111 cornm111~e 111s e•cHOtcl •n 1v1•flt gt B1i'ln111n11 •• 1~. 111"'' NOl'lllt•I'/ eotnet ser\'ICe. are better than they had been N,t,ME STATEMl:NT flor ""'D!l(i!IOl'I al !Ml nol!tt. Pl.5SEO AND AOOPllED ,11 Ill d•r GI "°"' u"" ln tllt tt ~IY\ •rlof 10 "''·~\It'll of ltld Loi 21; tlllnct '°""'JO• 11· •J" · h . 1 f~t foll-Ing Hfllll'I II 6Gi"' llullf!IH Otttd Oclaber 10, 1t71 NOYl!Tltltr, 1t7!. ,t,YES: Coulldlmf!I~ WllHn. JDtdl ll, for <t rllllclle, O< Et\I tt.00 IHI t t..,tl tr\t NOrlhffttttt'f"' D uring l t past year the n1any businessmen and COO· ••. EUGENE 5. COJI:. ROBElllT M WtL$0H .. !11kl1Y. SI. Clt lr, H•!'llrnttl 8. Wiien "'' ....... .,.. "' t PPft"tit•s •n li"f QI ••ld La! 11; lt!fn(e Soul~ :it· ,.. number or odd·lot sales has sumers r emain 5 0 m e w h a t s A 0 0 L £ B Ac K B u 1 L 0 1 NG E•1<111o< ot 1~1 wm M1¥« o1 111t en~ o1 cos11 MHt NOES' C0t;.,.l!men: NOflf 1r1rn1"' 111 It!• •••• ,.,~, • ••llo gt d " we11 Pt••lltl with 111 , ' MAINTENANCE. 1)912 PondefOll r.u11, o! ••Id drte<Stnl. •nESl ' •aSENT: Cou<>ellmt11: N-Oii• lo l!vt , or N0tlllweuer1v 11 .... OI u \d Lo! 21 .. been h igher than purchases apathetic despite t he jol t tliey "C", Stnlt Ant. (•Ill, •••'-"· Stt1rn1 ' Ctitl"• EILEEN p P-.!NNY IN WITNESS WHEREOF. ' lltY~ c . Wlltn Ille··-Uft .-11111 II 1, <l·llln(t ol ill n IHI 10 • llO!nl in ·It!, almost daily. In four of the received A ug 15 w-...1 w. wi11o11, 2U.1 v;1 .r..11 1u1 u11;.., ••nt Ttwtr Cl1y Clerk o• 111t ~1rountv "'' m¥ 1111111 Miii 1t11-..i 11\t SH I r"eDl1c1111 11 It ••! 11>0 o1 ti' S0titllw•1te•lv fin• 01 ••Id LOI 21 ••lit • . . ~ G•b<'iet, Lt111M HU~. C1llt. 9'"3. Oii ...... l'fft1ncl1I Conllf' (11¥ Ill Coat• M••• "' ,~. Clty o! (Qlll "'-•1 lr!I• tlld f ar GI "'tmlltfl/liD lllrDUllll I PP•t "lltell'hD Point 111r ... fl.Oii '"' lrdll'I ,~ •• motr past fi\:e months tlie sales of 5. Tight money. Tbe Federal TM• 11uiineu 11 llelnD cOlldu<1tc1 bv '" Terr111t•, C1ll11,,.11 ,.,., STATE OF CAL l,ORNIA ! Novt mblr, ""· 1t1lnl~ Co11 •n •Nlll•I t11111 11111wld1 D• wn1erl¥ (ornt'r °' ••1d Loi n, t11t1K• t I r d I ' ed 'd R h •--I · I I Ill I ,l,llGt....,1 lw l'•tc11ttr COUNTY OF ORANGE I $$ EILEEN II, l'HINH EY lOCt t1¥, Gf Nortri 50'" 11' 4J'' Wt il ttOI) '"1 l lO<lll mu ua un s 1ave exce e eserve as ~n s OY.'1ng the 1111 ¥ "'!tr'ldt1t w w ;r'°" . tuv. c11v OF cosTA MES1. 1 c11v cier~ •lld 1x~111c10 D. w11.t11 th• '"""•ctor oro..id•s ••I• SPu111"'"'"1¥ une o1 ·La1 11 10 th• purchases. The s mall investor rate of money growth each 1~11 11111m1111 1,1 .. w1111 "'" cwniw ,.vbh•lll'I Or•n., Cot•' D1;11 "•lo!, 1. EIL{f-N '"·PHINNEY'. ciw Clerk •lld cttrk"' 1111 Cl!y Co.iMll tvlcllllce th1t ht t "'Plll'f"' r111111u l!CI mo11 w1111,1w ,o,_. of wld Lot ,1 · C k ot O C I Oc 2J 1'f1 Octobe• '1, 1t ll>tl Ngvtl"tt.• i, 11, tJ.a!tldo Cl~rk O! !he Cllv CouMll of the at 111.t Cll't ot COl!I Mt ll IPllftntlct~"" t it of M1 «>ntrtC!I ~n t n 11\tfl(f Nr><ll\ Jt' ~I' 4S" El i! 1~ oild just isn't buylng_ \Veek since la te Augu st. Now e!'' 8,,.,,1~17.' M':,,':iJ...""b.P~~ CountY n11 11n.11 cnv o1 Cott• Mew. ner1t1v t•rll!v 11111 ,.~l!ll'>l!CI O••n.., Cot11 Delly "ilot. 1nn1111 1v1r1" ot not 1n 1 '"'n -Nwt11wc11t•lv 11.,. oi seld Loi 21, 1 If th is is so, what is he doing there is less mooey in circula· Clerk, nw ,_, '"° lwMolnt Ordlntfl(t l'lo. n. Navemller s, rtn Hll-11 ,..,.,...,Ike 10 t ltl>t leu•ntvmtn. dl1t111C;e e1 •M.11 '"'' ,0 111e pe1111 ol ' P~toll\lllG Otlftllf C1111I Ot llY Pllol, :pt Wt1 1111•0<!~'"' tnd UHl$\dettel lt<:t\on Tt>r Coritr1t1or ls •N ulrl'd lo m•~· bttl11"ln1. with his money? lio n than there was h\'O Oclobtr 11 1..., No~..,,,.,, l. 12. 1,, LEGAL NOTICE ~Y 11<tion •I 1 '"u11r ..wetl"I) al 11ld (onlrlbullon1 111 tu1wh u t•bllllitd for 1h1 EXCEPT: T~'' "°"1"" ., LOI ;r, The answer is revealed by a months ago which m eans less ,.11 11n.11 cuv covr.c.1 on 1h1 1t111 ""v c• Octgt>tr, LEG AL NOTICE .om1nr11r111r><1 of 1P1•tntk•1t1l11 •rcoo•1m1 t •1<1 No. u. ,, 1110..11 Oii , ,..,,, • _ ' NOttCIE TO CltEDITOttS 1'11, i ll<! tllt•Hller ... !.ttl t lld 1-ted It ht ..,.DlllY• •tfllttrtcl •-tnl!ce1 Gt rtcorilta !11 BllOI<. IJ, lltllf t, glance <i housing starts. nO\V to invest 10 stocks, 'UPtt11:1011. COUlltT oF THI' ,1 , wt>ol• a1 • 1e1Wl•r nw111n1 o! .. 10 NOT ICll 0,. l'UILIC H••t1tlHa !°"'"'¥"'"' In •nw 111PrtMlce1b1, 1r1de Ml«•ll•newi Mac•. rec:prdi or °''~ a 'erag•'••s mo1·e lhar 2 m1'll1'nn lVh th th l'k I STAtl OF CALIFOlltHlo\ ,Ott (oti Covntol ~lid .,,, '"" lit l:llV or lll"Ottl THE CI TY COUNCii. o" IUC~ °"""•ch t nd If o!htr CGn!••c!or' COi.iii!¥. Ct lllor11!1. wlllU. 1111 wlltllfl • e. er ese l e y eX· THE COUNTY 0' OlltAMGE Movembfr, 1911. Dv lllP tollowlni r•ll clll DI' Tilt: on tllt ~bHC wor~1 •lit "'' "'•kine well strip of lt<HI ~.00 tH I ill wldl!'i, Ille a year: al the sa vings rate. planallons nf the marke t's N•. A·HSlS vott c tTY 0 ,. FOUNT••• VALLEY uin1r1out111n1. sau1111r1t 11 .... or 111d 1ir1p "'"' beh • be ed E\lf1t ol Minnl1 S!tlll ThO<'ftPIOl'I. t lN AYES: (GU11C;ltm111. W 11 1 1 n, NOTICE U HE RESY GIVEN l!'lt l en The (Ot1t•1c!or t tl<ll t nY WllC:~n1r1cto• dHC•lt>ta 11 loHOWI! \1•hich remains well over 7 past a 111or can us to ~llO"'" ,, M!Mlt 1. Tnom-. O.c•11td. JOrd•n. Pln-ltY . St Cl•I• • .,.."'"'"' Tuel'!iy, Novimbtr 11, 1911 , ,1 1,00 P .M. ~nd•• Mm 1h111 <omPIY w11h 1~t 8"111"1"~ 11 111, jnttrNctien 1, percent; at Savings Bonds foretell I.he f uture is a nother NOTICE is !'IE llEa v GIVEN to 111t NOES' ceunc<1"'"'' wo... 111 ""<:ou111:u c111111bt". Clt't Hi ll, 10700 •1!'1Ulr11•11n11 GI SKt!11n1 un .i 1...:1 1111.1 fflt c•nter u"' o1 T1tJ1!n AY""" . h' h h It Th r I . I u"'h"" OI "" ·-· ntft'lld d«tclffll •BSIENl ·Co...n<llmtn; Nono Sl~I•• l"""nuf . Feunl1in Va lt t v, '"lkt .... OIOl'l'l'llnlol tllP"tnU(tl, •• d11erl bld In • """'° rtcGtdtd statistics, w JC s ow an in· 1na er, e U ure IS a w a ys 11111111 Pt"a<11 h1"'1"1 cl•l"'• 1011,.,1 mt tN WllNEss WHERE.of , 1 11,v1 centorn!t. 111, City Caunca ,.111 11<ila t 1"'"""'•llOl'I rt!•llve 10 1pPr1"1\tpll>IP In eao11 "''· Pige 12J, otllclt t Rec•tds crease of $1.04 billion in the d lfferenl than the past. ••hi dee"'•"' ''' ''""1'"' 10 tile '"'"'· ntrP11nto •ti mw h•"ll tnd •ltl~l'd 1111 1e11 11<.1bllc ~•••lnD on 1~r 1011ow1"0' ,'.!~,·.~~,,·•.",, ' .. '-,.",',',~_,•nd,,_01':!: of sild co...11tr, ·,.1,h "'' ''"''' 11.,. al Wllh !111 <le(f11&•V voucl'lf!", In lhr Olloltt I 111.t Cl"' of C t M ttol 7nd ti at z ' ' O .,v ~,..,. ,..., _ .. ""' first 10 months.of 1971 ·• at car The small investor has for c1 1n. ctt•k •f tkt 111ov1 1111111.ii c"""· or D 111 • ,.. ' iv 1• -C~•-t . "' • 1n1 11'"' v Dl•K•or o1 1ndu11ri11 11t11111on1 ,. o111tta Meii Dl'ive •s lhelw" .., • m11 o1 Tr1ct • Novembtt, 1''1. ll>e Pl1nnt111 Commllliot> 111 •HMt Ill I I 1 1 or A I' I S•n No. 376 rtcorOed In 800IC U. l'l tf 11, sales, w hich topped one instance. been est range d 10 "'"""' 111em, .. un •he 1>1<e•u•v EILEEN P PH1NNE.v ""'""'¥ 111u11tt1 ., 1111 >G<.11t11e11 F•~~~':'.~ 1 ~~:ri ... 111,, ""~~111 ',~':,;· tne Ml•<•ll•-• Map1, llltcordi of ••Id million unils in October. bef d ba k Th ~eu~~~:ew~1Hu1':!':,1!':--J:.'. 'i:, "~~;~ cn~ Cfrk 1"" e~<ol!•tlo Cltrl. cr><ner °' Wlfd •nd 51•1t r t•em ttl 111 01~111011 oi A1111•1n•k•i.hl• s1111111tds 1nc1 Cou"•w. 1110 lmt,.«llOl'I •1111 tiel,,. Ore an come C · e Ulll S!rtet, Sllht Nvmlltr Ill, Coolt of Ille (llv (our.ell et I~• ltl PO.BOO. IU brt<>eh elllttl :illown Jn Ort 1'19t Cauntt Su•vrvor·• .T he s m a ll investor is buying outnow o( money rrom mutual cus Mn•. c;,111or111, t2111'. wl'lk~ 11 11.., •IK• 1c;iv 111 coot• Mt.. T~1s m•llH r. M int ••ou111c1 t<J"u1n1 NOTICE 15 HElltEllY GIVEN 11111 "'t All.,,"'t 111 a-Alsw.111 11, ....., ,.,,, h h h Id c.. d f nd ' h be ( YOUr • "•Int l• ·• 1111 ulldt'l!Ontcl ln 111 '°11bl "'"° O••<>Clt COil! Ot •lt '°1101' !o 1111 Pl•""1"' Lt wl ol lllr $!Ht ,JI MOUl111n Nltu1I Wtltt O!otrlcl wm r..:tl¥t 711 ; llll<>tf N. 199 d ' M" E., l'°"O Ille I e ouse e COLI n't ,,...y ur· U S m1g t emporary. gra befo ..,11,;,, 11triiinino 10 111, ,,,11, ot ••Id ND"'•'"'be' J, 1911 19111 ·11. ca111orn11 1c;ov•1. CDdt •i,COO •t 110.1 1nc1 1t1ltc1 llloi 11 11,. offltt 01 Bovio Norll>~••tt•I, ••atOl'l91tJ011 of ••Id ing the months of extreme Uncertainty might d iminish on a leas OtcfdeM, wlrhl" iaur monlt1i 1n1r •~e in. F"''"''1" vaui .. l Co11fnt O•a111anct. E11o\11etrl11t, •l2 sou111 LyOl'I St•ttl. S•n1I ''ntt• Hne o1 Tu111" "'v'""' 110.eo "" h • h , be' II DI! II I !hi II The l0tolnt Ord\111r<t , ZOlll111 M101, ·•rd Ant, Ct llh>o'll\I uo to I~ llour ot lO:OO 111 !ht Dttlftftln$ o1 1 11~""' (U•UI n1oney tightness: e·s buying markedly. Apat ~. 1ng the anyti ·~~t:i ~!oi:', ~. ltl~.no <•. LEGAL NOTICE E•~ID11' ••• on Ill• 1~ 111t Pl1nnlne A.M. °" Nlllltmber 1~. ,,,1, 11 whltll 11,.., cOl'!t•v• Jourht•I~ •nd 111v•no • r•d•u• !he bonds that once didn'I pay Other Side Of enthusiasm Can lllorntJ W. H•ll!k•1an, Jr,, OeP~rlmt~t tnd t rt avtdt blt !er euOll( 1nd OIK• tk•y wlll llt ""b11clv o""ntd 1ftd O! lOOCl,00 Itel: tntnct Northe1'11rl~ . • E•tcuto• of 1111 Wiii OI OttOIN•Nc• NO. ,,.,, ln1....r:t1on encl 1x1ml11•llot1. ,,.., S1ltl IHlt'll bid• .... 11 Ill for ""' ,,_ lt!d (UfVt lll•aullh . CtMrl l •"911 "'ell but w hich now yield 5.5 flipflop. And. as has h appened 111, •llG>tf n1m~ dt'*""'1 AH DRDtMt.NCli DI' lHf. c 1lY T-• ae11r1.,. 10 tt11!1¥ l" ''""' o• 111 001119 e1 "" .... 1111, -• t.e•tlNlt!or• o1.lt· n · 03" 111 ,,, Gll!•n<t ot 6'0.00 pe rcent: he's bu."ng the car before tight money m;ght ,.,,_,, w. Ht N'"""' Jr~ COUNCIL Ot" TME c1tY DI' COSTA -iii... 10 llllo "'"°OH~ wrn ""'1"''" at sc•llltd trHI oodered In "'" 1110 1"' '" Po1n1 "C". Aho • •trip el ••1141 ' UI Et ll ll'lll Slrtt l. MESA AMf.NOINO TKE UNIFORM 111 OPPo•lunlty lo tlo Ml. II IU<111., tlloluf/jjn 4.S.00 fff! 111 wldlll 11\t S.OUtlle•IV !Int cl that may be a bargain because quickly become easy money if 111111 N11,.,,,.,.11 1, 1u 1LOING cooE, TO PltOVIOE FOR 111torm111on 11 tlt•l••d, ¥o.i m1¥ <OM1t1 Etch'"bl'tt or •rOPoti i 111111 bi "'""' out u 1a •trip 1111111 oe1crlbed 11 lo!lowl: Or th' rreeoe·. he'• putl•O" h1's th 0 " I fl ' 't . d Ctlll Mell, C1llf1r~ll t1UI FIRf. ZONES ANO A 00 p ' I H 0 "'' "l•11~ln• Otp1r!mt "! ., "1·2•2l I ncl ..... ..,.,..,\!ltd Of! I'"'"' 1G bt DllllO!lt<l ti •• ~~ln"lnt., !he t lOl'edt!.<tll>tcl Po!11I " ~ e r tu a so lpS 1 s min · Ttl: tn o Ut.IJK ,,f.t lFIC F1Jtf. z o N 1. s •t •eh• 10 1~1 •bcl\'t hem. 111t ofll<t of 811Ylt Entlrwerlno. t1 l $.outh c • lt!enct eo11tl"u!n1 •I-.. rd t ur;1 money \\'here his confidence is Anyone \\'ho can assess all 2626 HARBOR BLVD. Att°'"'' '°' EJtcvtc< IESt,t,BLISMEO 1 v OFll'IC1AL l'LAt CIT'I' COUNC.ll OF lHE LYOI'> stre.t, s1n11 Ant . c a11111r,.11. Eotll th•l)ll~h • c1nu11 •noltt ot s0 .:i· 4'" tt1. -,., the banks ··ather than the th 'b'l't' d P11Dli1h1d 0••~.ilt (1)111 0•11~ Pilot, IND MAK ING .. AOVISIONS "011 TMt: CIT Y~ FOUNTAIN VALLEY blO Dr P•-•l 111111• bt l t<Gmlll ftl tcl llV . '" dl1!1nct of 100.00 , .. ,. ese possi 1 1 ies an COSTA MESA Oc!Otlf• u. 22, n, tt>4 NovemDlt• \, FILING OF s,1,10 ,.u.t. 1N THE MA•Y E. coLE ,,,~;1,·1 ct>tck pr , <"«t ct•tlllfd bY , L«11.o 1" '"' '°"""' o1 O••~. s1111 securities n1arkets. -others such as international 1,11 1a1!-7I o•FtCI! o' TNE c•n <:Lt:RK. ciw c11n: ''""°"'IDI• b•nk "' • DldOu 's Dond ro• '" -' c11.i,,.,n1 •• · call 540•5630 TtlE CITY COUNCIL OF TME CHY Pulllloh•d Or1not CIHl>I 01\ly JOllOI, ""'"''"' f101 ltH tkell IO'<o of tl>o imounl S,t,IO PROPIEJITY SH•LL •E SOLi) IM 2. One effttl of thi.s. un. monetary. economic and LEGAL NOTICE oF cost A MESA. ooes HEREBY Nll'ltmn•• 5, 1tn "'1·11 Gl 111, bia .., ,, tt.t klu l '"'w"' for AN "Ar. IS" CONOITtON :;;d~e;r;s~t~a~nd~a~b~l.v~.,~;,~~lo~~d~e~~r~";'~~~~J~;t~;~c~a~I ;d~e~'~";lo~~m~e~n~t;s~~w;;~11~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:1:::1~~~~~~~j~::,;f,\~:I ORDAIN AJ FOLLows. wt.kh tt>tv win t e<;tPI • t..,,..~, '"" Term• of "''~ <••h 111 11w1~1 m1111e1 •' COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS FOR THE MONTH OF NOVEMBER EL MOLINO BREAD MIXES W hclt w~e1t, ,,~blt1 ~h1d while, •y•. p~mp11nick•( -l lb .1i1~•. M1k1 yo~• b•••d -Your f•mily will lovt •I, REG. $1.09 SPECIAL-99' HAIN AVOCADO SHAMPOO I 01. Si1• ....... m111I IT'Y 11111 -11'1 lllt .... 1111! ll l G. 11.Jt ........ SPECIAL ~1.19 - COASTllNl'S OWN rltOTllN POWDll ii11iv1d t nlirt lv f rom 1oyb 1111' -with l 1t i• fhi11 i nd p•p•i", I II. 1!11. 11'11· $2 49 12.fl. SPECIAL J CONTININTAL'S Acidophilus Culture 1 111111 Jl1t "£G. -11.15 "'"" $1.98 SECTION I Tllal Ille Cllv Ceunt!I IJI ml!le llYl btl loo !Ill Ol'dtt or 111 ,,.... tavor ll>t Unhltl Slllt1 .., t(l.flflfmtllO!! ol u lt, NOllCI. 0 ' llU I LIC M E A Ill ING 1f>e Clh< of Colla M•'•· OIG bw 01dl111<>e~ LEGAL NOTICE Gl lht MOllllOl'I Nltutl Wt ti r 01.irlt!. Pf Nrl t lSll Ind b.tltn<t tvlOer'lt td D¥ l l!t"Ol.I! l KE Ill.ANNINO COMMISSION No, 11·11 1d01>ll d. Of> !ht 11JI City of Junt, Etell IU(!I bid M Pl'OllOlll Sflt ll be Htltd nolt )lturld bv morttt" M Trv1t o...f O' THE CITY OF FOUNTAIN VALLIY 1971. t dall! lht Unlrorm llulldlnt Code of MOULTON·NIOUl!L WAT•llt O/STltlCT tt>d llltd 11f1N olfl(t el111.t Ol"tl(l 11 Dr..,"''..,._,,,, Ml told. Ttn M r ce111 11 Nl)TIC.E IS HERE IV GIVEN 1'1111 Otlt 1tlO, ...,rwt"I lo ChtPltr '1'111. Arlk:lt I, NOTtcl INVITIN9 SlALID ltC>t btfort lllt llMt Ill 11111 nolit• provldl'<I. l lTIOl,tnl 1110 Iv bt """°'ltlO wftll bld, S!ut rO ht• ~Ill°"""' 11\t Pllfl"lnt SetllOfl 1\00, (11$11 Mt ll M~nklo1I Cllllt , t"Oll JN!l CONSTJlVCTION Oii Thi t bovt m111tloned (hfCll. or bond flloit or Olfl tl lo llt I" wtlllne t 114 Will Con>miulon lo tt ¥trl Loll t, J, S. 1. f, II 11 Wino ••Dvl<ll'<I in $tct10f> 16()1 ot 11ld EL HtOUEL ••CLAMATION illtll IN t l .. tn 11 9Ulfl MH fht! lllf bt rtttlvftl ti Ille tlort111d ofllte t i l~Y of 8 111C:ll l , Tr1<1 150 IG t t•••oe l'OrJUI~! Unllo•m aulrdlng Codt !1111 li•t I_, 110•.c• MAIN l>!ddtr wlll tntf• Into I (Of>l••<I fl rllll t t11tt "'' l1•1t PUDl!ct tiOll Mreol '"" lo l'ht Pt'ovl110f>I o! City Codt i nd '" m1v bY Ordinl n(t ti.t ""'"' t !ICI Tht 11<11•0 or Ol•KIOrt of lllt Moult.., ewt•de<I 1111 wr><k 11111 will llt cl1i"'tcl •• btlort dllt ot 1tlt. Adlll!nl11t1lri• tCCOl'dlllC'.I wlth tl>t Pl'OC.I~ o.illlntd 1" e1t1bll11!Pd wltl>lh 11>1 Clh"' (OJlt MHI. Nlt utl Wittr D!ll<ICI of Orlntt C0<iP'11¥, i!lluldt!td <ltrTit gn II tl>t lllCCt u lur rt1t •Vl'I lllt right lo rt /Kl l "V I nd Ill Slllt S\IDIJIYl1lOl'I M1p A<1. hi• P'Ollfl'1Y T"~ (lfy ot (OSll M111 d06 htreby (tlltornlt htrelnt!tt• I" tomt lftlll fl(fl Dlddtr teluSt• kl tnltr lnlo !hi contrt cf. Didi. 11 JllUlled ., mt 10u!ht ••1 (Ol'flef ol rind '"" <lttl•r! lht! II 11 111 ll>e """ •flefftd !~II "0/1/rlcl." Clo f',tt11)y ln~ltt Tk• •YetHllvl bldcltr wl!I bt tfOQUlftd DttoHI O<tlllltr tf'lh, 1t11. 'f1l~r! •lid flll•d .IN! rornprl1ft ·"' '"ltl't lll of lht tltt llll. St fely end u t !td lllctJ for 1111 1otlowl11t ancrlbtd 11 lurnllh 1 111111' end mt !H l•I llOfld '"In Loll M•Y Ht ,.ffn, let•'·. ": Print o! 1111 prol>OH<I Wellere at lht comm11ni!y, lht! cerl1ln P!Jb!lc work: t llt COl'!tllUCl!o" o1 El 1meu111 t11u1I lo IOO't> of 1'11• c""l•t<I Adml"l1tr1lrlM DI Eslt11 of •tt.Ybcl•vl1>011 GI l•nd .<; Ol'I lilt In !hr lht iones llt 1doo1tc1 wllll!'I lllt (lh of Nlewl Re<lt,.,•llon Fotct Mt ln tcooe!~e• 11rr(t 1NI t l11thful 11t•lorm111C;t tlorld 111 JAMES M. FRISWOLO Plan"lno Olrtclor'I o!!lct Ind "'IY Ill Co,11 M•u wltri Ill 1...,11t nt llt ~ tll~fllo II .., '"'°"'"'' MUii ro !~ o! tt>t c..,t,tCI COLLIN' ANO JNYOf llt •~•mined b~ 1nv lnlffetled ~,..,., TM cw,,C11 rvr!htr fitlds 1"!! GtcltrH lkPWll 1~ dt!llt it>d dfKl1bed 111 ' tlle Pfkt. u la ""'1cll lg Dt 1tcu•ed trom t AllWlllYI At Ltw TIOMt e1t1.rlno la lelllfv 111. lt~OI' or In '"" llrt ,_ !. V>Otild tor the l>ltno, pfOflltt. drt wi..,,, l,Cll-I nd iur"Y "'"''Pt ny wll1f1(torv •o Ill• r7S Vie ft 11 P11 OPPOllllOn lo ml~ rtfllunt w•ll bt t lY•n 1lorrm111Uontd •e11ont bt tdOll!tcl wllh.I" •OK!Ucttloni an lilt 111 tht otllct of BO\'lt MOUllM Nle11..i Wi ler 01,1rt<1. l'1cltlc '"•llll dll, Cllltofn/1, "'"' ample oppcrfu~,I'/ ro do IO •I lht t~e Cll¥ 111 C011t Mru l"ccordinDlv. Entlnetrll!i , t\2 So\llll L¥Ol'I $ll'ffl, Stnlt AU 1trm• t ncl collCllllOl'IS tOflllinlCI In J.UtJ • . Pll11"ln1 Cornmiulo" "''~tlnq Ta !IOI ht!d lhtrt lo ad()pte<I 11 Stcll0<> l lot ot l.•tltle A,._, Ctll!Or"lt, _,,ld'I ODt;umft'lli tit Dt 11N f11formt!ICO'I IOI' Olddtr&, t it-111 P<Hllltl'ltd Or11111 Cotti Dt lly .. Ui:itf Wtdneld•~. NOYl'i'~' U, 1"1,1 •1 '·r I, C1"1Plt• VU!, of !hf Ccl!t Mtu thl1 rtl9ttn<:t lfl(orpl>fl led lltrt ln. FOi' •lid . !>fr! of 1111 bid !Orm •i'>tll IOVtrft ., Nc!Ytmbtr S, •• 12. lfll 29U-I p.m 111 ""' CouN: I h1~b<'•1,_ 1~ ~1t 1, Mun!<!Pll Cllllt. I l ttllon wn1c1> w•ll •Ol d lurlher 1>1rllcult'I, rtte•tntt lo hertD~ th-h fully dt1Ctlbed l\trtlh trlCI '11111 LEGAL NOTICE 1C1tv Jitter l"~•nut, OU"11'" , 1 tY. 11 follow~· m1dt lo t.t ld •l•ru. PrOIU,1, draw!11t1 11111 °''°""' I ptrt of Int con!rt(!. Ctlllorn~tLl.NNING COMMISSION SECT ION~ ... Sl'Cffot> •tot. Fl•IE ZONE !A'cliOl'lo I nd ll'tclll(tllll'!f tor 1111 tl!GY~ 't~t Moltllllfl N!111tl Wt ltl' Olo!rkl HOTIC I' DI' Tllll,ISTl.l'S IALI ONE d.scrll>ed lm11r&1 ....... I 1ntrf(ttl' "C..,trtcl ftMfVI' !ht rlllfll la rll•cl t"Y t lld I ll C OF TtlE CHY OF fhftf it l!trebv l<loP!lld Urt llH'lt -I" "-""''"' '"' C 0 , , ' , ., <" o n llldt or POMfon s '"' 1ny 1114 t i! Dkb or lo No. , /4'1J F -FOUNT ,1,1/'I VALLEY t ""'• v I 011 OectMlltr 1, 1971 , t i 11:0!) I".&. --> ' < O !hf Ci Y GI C0tr~ Mflt , II lht '""'~ Sof(lfk1llon1 1nd (Oflllrut!I.., l'ltlll !of wllvt' 1nv lr>!orfl'ltlilV in I Did t111 COLONll.L MORTGAGE SElil:VIC E ci/,-CLIM ON H RR 0 tPllf"I on Ill oflld1t 111!, Oii lilt In lht f/te conilruclfOl'I of El Hltvr l ltd tml !IOll lflt<ll!d bv ltw. Stcre~try IO""° otfkt ol lllt (ltv Cltr-. wt.lei! wold lire FOl'tt Mtl". Stld Plllll INI tlllellk l llOl'!I MOUL TOH·NIGUEL OF CALIFORNIA ti dult I PPOlnttd . Pl1n"oht Ccmmln lon. lOl'lt Pn~ 111111 tit 1uDJ1tl la •n of ltlf mtw btc tu•<h••l!d ti !hi elllce ol e wi• WAT EA 01$lAICT Tr111ttt unclrr Incl Put1111nt 1e Oetd or Pub!<Slltd Ort nVt Coeol 01>11 Pdo1, reoulro111tnll ol ih• Un!torm llullOln v Ent lnHrfntr lor l10.00 "' Ill. Cht (-!IY Al•••lld•• !lowlt l tu1t dt t..i Apr/I >Cl, lfTO, tvKllfld Dt Novem!Wr $. 12, 1'1! 1991·71 Codi o1 i,10, t lllllktblt thereto" mlltl Dr "'"'r PIYIDie, lo 1111 Mo..llGn Secrett"" Alvl11 A, LKkt' t ftd Donis (, Lt ck11, EG L 'OTfCE SECTION l. l kll ordlll•I\(' 11>1!1 !Q t Hl9<1t l Wi ttr Olilrlct. llublltt>ta Ot•~• C11111 Otoly Piia!, ~~;:·:~ 1~~. r.1:; .;,-;:, 1~K,;:.!_td,,,';':';,,s~ L A N etlttl t <'d bt in lull torct 1111•1'1 UO) a1w1 Pvrwt nl lo tllt l•~Odf el tllt $l1ff Novt mlltr I. J, !'1'1 ?t4f·1l 91•. of Olllclt l Rttordi In th• oHlc.t Gf rram end 1Ut• •II P~n•w~. anel P•lor 1o of c 11u.,."11, "'' MOl.lllO" Nl11>1I W•tt• !4J • t"• ,•ol••llM o• 1,n"" !ISJ <11¥1 '"'"' 111 Oll!rlct ,,,., •1Ct flllntd 111• .,, .... uinto LEG AL NOTICE "'" Ceu~ty ll ocordfr of Or1nt1 '""""'· IUPEttlO• COUJIT OF .THI!: Hlll'llt •h•U De P<JDll$f!ed onte I" "'' r1tt ol "' alt"' ....... ot lfll loc1l11'1' '" C1!11oo'"l•, WILL SELL AT PU!ILIC ST&T I! O, CALIFOll Nl,t, FOlt O•l"Q• CIHlll 01itv Pl/ol, 1 ntw•PUl<lf of whlc~ !hit Wo<k Ii lo bt Ptrlatmed 111 Df' Sil AUCTION TO HIGHEST l lDOER FO!lt ftlf. COU NTY 01' ORANCf. tenert! tlrcu1111,,.,, cr,ntto Ind ""b!! ..... d 81 atltll•d In llltl 5,,.,t~trn Ci llfornlt HOTICI[ 0, INTE/'10 1(0 CAS!i IPt VIDlt II llmt of 1111 111 ltWfut Na, A·IOtSf In lht Cllv al Co•le Mt!•, l°"tlhl• will'> Meiler Ltbo• At•tf''""' llll'd 1" l~t aULI( TJlANll'llt "'°"'tV of ttlf Un!fl'd Sll!nt I t Sau!ll NOl lC I or: Hl!AllllNC OF t"ETITION ln~ "'"'ti ol ·~~ "'fm~,, 11• rn~ cu~ ofllct ol Ill• Anocl1!1d G I ... f . t NOTICE t~ 11ERE8Y GIVEN 11 .. 1 Jol\11 lrOl'll llllr9fl(t to "" O•tOlll Caunly Old FOR 'JtOI ATf. O, WILL ,t,/'10 FOllt COtJMll vollnt \or Ind 10111111 !hi ""'e (Ol'lrrtclOfl of Amttlct. 511 u I 11 1 r n P. D'onotrlo. Ck)lno DU1lr11u 11 D'onoltlG'I C111.1rlllouJt, CllY of S1nl8 A11e, Sl•le el' Ll!l t ER I t E$TAMENTt.ll Y PASSED jl.ND AOOPTIEO !~•I It! di~ of (~lllornl• C~•Pltr tll•bor l 111co, wtiast bu1l"tll 1Mtdr1" 11 Ct!llornlt , t fl rlthl. tlfit I nd lnltrt ll Esllt11' ot EOW ... RD GO 11 DON NovtmD1t1, lt11 CoPlll of tnr ltllf•l l prt ¥t illlll ttlt o! 3001 Ht rDor Bllld .. CD1l1 Mt 11, Cl. •t626. CllllVfY"° to •NI,,_ MIG bY It lllllltr 11!d HAMILTON, 1110 1u1own 11 E GORDON ROBE:lll M WIL$0H ur dltm wttfJ 11 df!e<m1f!fd bv 1111 Covnly ol 0"'""' Ct llfor11i1, It tOOllt to Ott<! of trv1t I" 1111 P'-l't' 1ll111ted In HAMILTON. Dec:et•l'd MAYOR 0~ TtlE (!TY Dli!•ltl i rr Of> tilt ti 11, trl"CIPtl Plttl m1~1 t bulk !r1n1!t• l &!e to Jtmet Hiii ll>e Cllv of Coot1 Mt ll, I" ttl<I (oufllt NOTICE IS HEREllV C.IVEN lhet OF COStA MESA of buioni u, lo wll 3 MOl'lorch Bey P!l ll . Dt uthlrv. who11 Du'!M11 l ddreu !1 ?IU l nel Slt!e Otltdbed I S: Ell~n tlem!!to11 Wll1c11 llU !lied ~ereln e AllEST : Sllilt 101, Lt gun• Nl1.,.1, C1!llar")1. Al Windover DI' .. C1110t11 d•I Mt r. Cou"'Y Ill lo! '4• Trtcl 1'4, In 1111 City of(Olll Pt!lll"" lor prob•tt of wfll tlld fer EILEEN P Pl-<INNEV r~ulttd bY Slct!CHI 1'7) Df int Liiio!' Ottnff, Ct lllDrflll . ll>t tolt11wlnt Mtlt, Cauntv ~ Ortt!lt. ti Plr mt • !Hut .... at Lt!lf<S lt•ll"'e11l••v to lh• c11Y CLED!( OF ttllE CHV Clldt, l~e (Mlrl UOI' •o WllOm "'' P•-1¥: •Kordl'<I In 80Cllc •• Otte 1. 11tlllloner •f'lert nct to wt.kn 1, "'l at lo• OF CD~T~ ME$A. COl'ltrltl ll1tolor 11 t wi rd•d ll!t ll Pdlt 1 All ol 111t tQu!omenl, mllttltll. Mll<t ll•newt Mt11t, '" l~t Olflet Of !~1 l11r11!1r Pl•'1tull tl, •nd m~! It!~ 1.m. Ind s1 ... re OF CALIFORNIA '""Y '""tof •! eM:~ loll •llt . ·~ptlu, Mttcht ndllt •roct !llllf• lft~f~l11•¥ (OUlllV r~order Ill .. It! tO<illlV. •IKt of l'ltlrlng !ht ''"'' hi> Min HI C.OUNTV OF ORl.NGE Prgvfdlnt lhll -t nd -"!I ll li"'ll of l~tl Ct•ltln •tlt ll •tNll~ H•v!c1 Mo<t toml'llOl'llV know11 '': 'M ln~ fer NGv•...,IM• 11. 1111, tit:» 1.mH I" It.I C\JY OF CDSlA ME}.... l $} 11>f llld f>l't~t!llnl •tlli f11 Wtlt Jht ll.,., rt1tlon. k-IS 0'-l<lfl't Ill•"°' P!tct, (Olli Mflt , Ct llfor"lt , Ort1111 tOfol•lfOllf'I ol Ot~•·'"''"' No. J or .. Id I, EILEEN P, PHINNEY. ,,..,,. ((ff-ptlO tor lftY wa•kl"I II"'• ""''' tht n l lllllO. Co.in•'I, co..•I, •t 100 civic Crn1er Orlve Wtll. I" •"" 10.ottlcla Cltrk o! !~• Cit¥ Countll of eltr>I hOl.lrt du•lnt ,,... OM caltndlr dtY Thl1 111goerl• f• IOCt ltd 11 l!IOI ti•r-Stld Slit wl!( be 1111dt. but wltllaut 111r City Of 511111 An•, Ctllfor11!1. lllt Cir¥ at C~tA M•tl, herobv ctrll!r wlltrr iuU. wo•k 11 rtoul•td 111 CINI ot 8 1vd .. Cott• Mitt. Covnl)' of D<t n", ((l'lllllnl Dr w11 r1nr,, t }CPlfH or lm•lftd, Ot!fd O<t"°"r ''· "11, rn11 1111 ll>•we tncl IOl'•oof~ Ordln1.,.t t •lrtlll'dlni•¥ emer1tnclei t t llltd by lire, CllllOO'n!t . •"9trGlr!O 11Ut , "o 11 t t I Io n • o~ W, E, St JOHN, No ll·lO wt1 111lrodoxed tnd <""l\dfrtd llODd. or d•~••• re lilt °' •r-rf't' i nd l 1'1 blllk t•t n1ftr will llt (Oll>ummt!td e"cumbrt nc••· la PIV 1111 nim1ln!111 Co.inly (le•~ ~KtlOll DY 1tC!t<1" et • •l'llultr mHllflt of lloublt t!mt Oil 511...,1y 1...., lht wve" 111'1 Pf ,,,,., Ott. 111, lt'1, t i lllt tl(row prlr.c:l111I tu"' o! ll'>t tlll!e lt(U•t<I b• stld STJ Ck ANO MAltStON •ela Cl"' CDU"<ol O" lh~ Ill~ <It• GI' Intl floliell~'· to wll: Ntw Yttr'I Div. d11>t•tmtnl ell WESTWARD f.SCAOW Dltd Gl lr~1I, IO-Wll: 111,Sll.5', wlrll U4 e i t l Celorido 11••· Oc!-r, 1'11 , 1/ld tllttttllt• Dtlll<I t nd Mtl'l'Mlrlel Dty, Jul~ •lh, Lt bo<' DIY. CO., )017 Wttl 5t~e"!tt,,111 S!•HI, St"ll lnte•ell '"''" NoV<!mlttr I. 1flO, t i 111 llld '"'''""'' Cilltorft!t 11111 ~dooltd ••a wtm., 11 tlle te1ultt mt•lln1 vett•tnt OIY, T~inkiolvl"' OtV t hd A111, Caun1, at O''"'•· (.1"fo•11l1. llO!e P•Ollldttl. 1Gvantt1. II t ny, Unclt l 1111 Ttl: t1UJ 1H·J111' 111·tUI ol $tld Cl!v C""r.cll 1111<1 t11'> 1111 111 Gt~ ol Cllrlitm•t Devi (HOYIOtd, tu•!~tr. tho! Wlr~ln Ille Ptil l~ttl Ytl tl t•1n,!1•M ttr"'1 at \tld Dtttl Of Tr11\t, lte1, t~1rv11 ,t,tter"•V• "'' lltllt11n1r NGvembe•. 1t11 , llv tnt tallow-I~ roll tt ll lht .,.w 1111' rortmtll '°" t Kll tlo/lt ~ovr lltt 1Jso uttd l'h t •oll-l"t • bu•lntH tnd t•ll'fns11"' Hit TrvsrH end ot lhl PuDll!loed o...... CN•I Oto I¥ P{!ol voir· di¥ llWIU be not len lhtn Two Dc>l11fl 111m11 " "" lollowlft!I "11 1 I ft . s I lfUlll trellttl "" WIG Dffd ot Trull '' C WIO • .~ N TM bet'>1!0Cl1r¥ 11lldtt $lld Ortd el' Oc:1ol>tr 2t. JO 11141 HOV .... llt• $, 1911 • y . GUN:ll"'•n1 IOI\, 4D•dfn, (13.001 "'°'' """ laurn1Y"'4ll flit IOI' '"' ........ tHt l: Ol'll l •ull, bv •t•i.vn cf t DtN CI\ or etft vll 111 ?t~11 Pln•ie,y, 51, Cl•lr. l'l•mmlll t•tlt or -r•m•" involve-a. The Puttht lt price wlU be Gi id '' ' 'l ·---:-=:,..,:-C:C:::CC:=----NOES• C.o.i"cllmen· N-It "'I ll Ill ,,.,111111ory llllO!'I t nt IDilawl ; Ct lll lllfOUll\t l(rllW. lllt ellllg1tl0111 IKV•tcl lh ••t ll v. Th I LEGAL NOTlCE AllSIENT (Ofol11dlmt11: tl-Cllftfrt(lor lo wnom 1 c""l•t<I 11 •w•rdee T•t"tttfff ~11 lti11n pesn11ID11 of 1111 flert1Dfort eJtc~led tnd 4tllvtl'e<I lo Int Ompson S IN WllNE•~ Wl'IEREOF, I llt vl i nd llPOl'I t~V IUl!tllnlttc:lor ll~l'I' Ill"' to 11rtml111 •"" 11r-r'!y Otln• Nit! ~Nltfll9fttd I W•l"l n Otcl1r1ll(l.fl gf VITAMIN E D AL.PHA OR M IXED I· \ -__ ,,-:~~~'I:;j~~~::~:;;~: htrtllftlO HI mr ~Ind tnd tlll•fd lht \rt! pay 1101 ltll lhtn Ille 111<1 I P«llltd rt lfl ~ ... evNler 1alely •• 11\t •01nl ot Dt1111lt l llCI Oemt l'ld lor Se\f, tnd wrll!t,, s..4lt1t-H-Dtp""-.t MOTICI 01' l'UI LtC Nl,t,JtlNO of Ike City cl Cotlt Mt •t thl1 1nd elf~ at to •II lt!)Ol'l fl wert"'tn t lld ml'1\tfll(.t Trt nlt-p.ndl"I) (Of!(IV1lon ot 1111 l'IOlftl of b'ltcll I nd of tl~lorl IO tllltl ..... NOT!Ct!-Y5 HElll l!'.BT~GtYE"' lKAl llO•ttTib(il';"1'71. tmllhtvlll 11¥ fh,,,.-.n llllrllKUtloll or "" ttle. T•Kl'lcll<led clMlflfl ""''· I L lll· "'" unclt rll!!_l'IH 10 H,!!.Mld ptlll)HIV '"<-----Ral's1'ns M iit httrl"I will bt Mid D¥ ll>r CllY EILEEN '°· PHINNEY tonlltCI TM lll fttll¥ l'GI' ltllUtl It flntd I" Clvlt Slt1ffltl ~11).1, \t\111 tit no 11f\1tv Nl d Oblli1llorl1, t nd"i!wnliffir: ail 100 l.u. Rtg. S ptcltl tOO 1i:1.1: $2.4S $1 .t8 250 sit.1: 5.79 -4.95 200 l.u. I 00 si1• 2SO si1e 4.75 11.49 l .59 1.97 •IMf.Mlf.111 1 DI~'!""°' •tllmlfll ty ~Vllily ii ll'lflll lm"rt ..... WHILE THEY LAST C·BEST I SO 1!1f Ylt. C 100 "'' l iofl11•l.,11i41 I D 1119 Jh1tll1 llt"fultrly l'rlttol At t•.K S,ICIAL '3.98 LET'S ~n Will W 1 ht"• 1e1111 li lt h•r1 11 1h1 Sl .fS p ri•t l Gel lh1111 11aw ! Whet .1 Chd 1t1111, 9ih iii 11 l FLAVOR TREE SNACKS SHll'flt (~!,., lll.6!M alllb, S....1111 Stltlcf ... .-4fc .. I C tA.,_ 39( 2 SUPERSTORES TO SERVE YOU! COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS TUSTIN-10'4 IRVINE llVD. ln .. r Sa...On) 5-44-7134 l1nkAmt rlc1r4 ~ COSTA MESA-270 E. 171l ST. Hlll1reP1 Sttu•r• 5-41·'537 Cauncn-111 IM Crh of Cot1• """'' Oii City Ct••~ 1na ••.oll!tlo comP!¥ htrt wlltl 11 t i l"1C111ta I" Sett!On "rlter '""" '"°"' "'"' 1114 11 w<ll tlmt :!:!!.V "·•"•11, ~~ ..,,,.."',.'"'', ",inld 11!d Ncvt"'blr 1$, 1,11, II !ht """' DI ~:JO Cit•~ ot mt cur (OUM~ ol tllt 1171 ol "'' L•bof CoGt . II t it Eoc•ow (Ofl(lllllWll llt~f bttn (Ofll. '"" t •-' "--· .·~ ·~~"" to i..,, l .11'1 ' or I t IPOl'I ll'>ett8'IU ., "'' m•"'' (1h of '°"'" Mtu tt.e C011lr1tlor 111111 ~·y lflVl l .... lllllld by t~ N r1111 """°· ·~r) n ..... --et 11 '""'bl ""rel. '" 11>1 Ccllroclt Ch1f'l'blr of 1'11bll•httl Ortnte C1111t D1llt PHot, tvbeli!tf'<I lllYmtnll IP t tch Wll(kmt~ DA TEO: NOY. h i, lfll OfOo<o','. ~~ .... ~','· -. '''' llw (lh Htll, 11 Felt Otl¥f, (0511 Mt it, N Ill i, lffi 1''2 11 J _. 0t h """ u C1ll!cw"l1, Oii 1111 !Di low I no llt r>'11; ovtm r . llMdtd ID tllf(ult 1111 wor~, I f llldl l llll l ' UV lrY C 0 I. 0 N I A L MO lit T G 11 G E REPEAL 0" OlfDINAMC! IO !rt,,•! 11111 wb•!tlt!>C:I ~l'rlftfllll trt TriniltrH SElltVICIE CO 01' ~1FOl:NIA LEGAL N011Cf; 6t!IJllCI 111 ""' eo1111c1Dl1 '°'JIKfl¥t Wl tTWAiltO l l Cll'OW co. • til•Dll1111 .... rtt f ¥ .. d N1bltll of !iC D•rt t llllllt •••ffl'l'lt"ll l!lt<I wllh "" "" w. ""'""-'~ SI. •• Mid lnnlft, tft'l l'Of •II P<Oltrl~ bt""'"" H1m!l!&<>•l-------,,..,,c,..,.,.------l.,.P,rl1M"! of !ndllitr!il llll(l1forit fn 111111 •~1• Ct . n1'6 et k1111v Fltioert ld, !=.,.10,n~"11P1.!::.i~: !:i!n:W:; l'ICTlllOUI IUllHl!JS ICtOl'Ol llC:f wit~ S~IOll 177'.I .. 11\t l lCtlW Ne. O·n • Aulhorlz;:.,,•t·-~~r1 llotl'wllttl I'-• t 'l(J Wl ll•C• Av"""I No\ME SfATl!MIENT Li iio<' Codi. Plllltlthl'I 0!'11111 COin Dlllv l lt!lt, p DH Md O C I O t .. ll wi..,, lllt '*'' 11rdl 111111 °" ~ Tll~ loll-Ill' pet""' 11 lllelni tlulllltSI MOULTOllt NIOU•L W•T111t OISTllt lCT Novtmbtr J, 1t71 JOOi·'1 Y ' •tflft. Oi i I l't of, ••lul.,. t l!t n 111 ul4 ,,.,, SPEC IFIC •• HOt tcf IM'ltTIHO 11,t,Llll a1os LEGAL NOTICE No...,,,wr 5. U, If. f'1'1 1'~-11 ,.LAM tor P•GRtl!G 111.v !know~ 1, NEWPORT HOMES. nus 5t••t•l 1'0111 TNI CONIT11tUCt10 N OP LEGAL NOTICE Pl lttf Avt""t ) 411 tell In wlOlll, IOCl!t d C"cle, $wile E, l'.0. Bes C.!(, Nt""'°" IL NllUeL ltl(CLAMATION .. UMPIHQ11 -------,;;-;,;,;,Q0------11~=~~~~~':.~'!:~~~=~~ btl-11 \t111 $1•ttl 1<HI Htmlltan l'TIPI f,N1cl\. Ctlll $T,t,TION PICTIT\OUS I USINISS NOTICI! ,O" .. UI LIC MIAiltlNO lO 11 •lid llt!Wlln W1111c1 •rid Pom0111 0 . c . Ol"tll!)UM, Sill $•ndwM LIM. Tkt 8111rd Of Ol•«lo .. Ill ..... MOlrllon N,t,ME $TAlt:MEHt Mt:LO .... TNE I OAlltO 0,. A•enue~. In tl\r Cl!¥ 01 Coll• Mttt, (OfOf>I 111<1 M~•, Clllf01~1•. N!1vtl U/11'1 Dl1lrlct Dt Or1"tt CountY, The '9ll0wl!ll ,etlOl'I 11 dollll b\111.,.U SUl'RJlVISOll.S O" ORANOa COUNTY HOllCE IS "UllttHEll GIVEN "''' 11 ,.,1, bullMll 11 COll<luCllO bv An C1ll!ornl1, lltrtr ... tttr In -l"•ltfl(l l I I! CALl,.OlllNtA, O"f • l't1tec1s1. .. LAH " .. ""'' '"" •lt(e .... •"Cl •II O-f'\O'll 11141WldUtl '"'""to I I "Olittlct.'• "° llt•tby 111v1tt lHE GOLD MINI., 11 1 Mi ii\ ''" Sttl 01' MU;HWAY ALIONMeNT, .... ,,,T lflltrtoltd mar t-•r t nd bt htt•d bl' o <: Kneu~vlll it•IH Didi tor ll!t 10llowl111 °'IC•fbttl 8,1,11, C•lll. 11.1 mt CllY C""Mll GI !ht City .,1 (0.11 Miii Tl\11 11~t1mpftl ,..., !.ltd wll~ I'll• PUDllC work; T~t Clltls9'UCllO'I Ill El 8tr1111'11n I , Slllllkll\ln, 1'i0t E, NOl•Ct I• fllrellv •lvl11 1'1111 1'111 IJlllrcl ol ori 111t llOf'tmtnl!oned 1t1m1, Covnl~ (ltt~ of Orthf• COVIii¥ M NI-I Jl~ltmtllt" Pvt1111l"' SllloOfl, MOl'WOOO Pl., Alhllllbrt . Ctlll '1IOI ~tlt••ltor1 of 1111 Cwnr,. o1 Cranor. EILEEN P, •HINNEY OtlollPr J1. ltll totttt>tr ... r.... t M '""'"'111111 -~ Tlllt M IMI! It ... 1 ... COl'rdlltlt'll IW Ill Mt l1 of Ct ll10r1111. Wltl l'lf!d • itoubllc C!I¥ C!trl of Ille J1mt1 T. Ct.,.;f tl\trtfD, I I tllGWll l'I dlltfl tllll dfltr\llfd lrldlV~fl, ~e1rln1 "' 1 Prttltt Pl111 "' Hl911w11 (.II~ of (Diii MfU •tt1n111 11 LIW r .. lllt "'"'· ••otlln, drt wl"'' NCllDl!t li•"''"'lfl •. Sll t i*ITlt ft All•-' tor Ulllv1111no D•l\'ll, E•h10lt ..... 11.,,.. Ottnt<t (Oiul 0 1111 Pltot. t lll Dll•eftt Ori .... lyUI I '"" ll!f(llltlllflo'll ..... II .. Ill "" lltltt Of Tlllt lllltmlfll !!ltd Wllh rllt CDUllf'( 71.1, ""'" $11P1rYl!Of\11 Olttrkl, te HltD· NflY~ I, 1'11 ttlt).'1 H""'"'1 l udl, CtHfotnlt t21M 8o¥1t Entl""'IM . .,, $wtll Ll'lft Slfffl, Cflfk el Ortn" Ctu"f'f oni (kl, U. 1'71. II_,, fl'lt Cl"lel'llM l"ld 11!1f1Nlt rllht ef Tt.._....,, 1n 11 11).Jt72 S..n11 Ant. C1llfol'nf1, wlllth dkltn'lfnfi ay ltVt tlY J, -MtddO•• Ott11t'f C0itn1t w1v llneo tor 1 l'0!110n f! lltlt 1trfft .._ LEGAL N011CE l"llllllt~•d O••"fl co.11 0111y PHO!, ••• 11, t1111 r1l1r111C• lll(oroor11«1 t.111111. f;r.rt lwftft 51,.11 Alll Avtnut I/Id 1...,1,.. ()elotltr 1' t...i Hovtfllill< S, \,, U, For l\ltllltr .. rtttvtir.. rtttttllCI Ii .... ..:ui.11111 Ottlltl CDIJI Ot llr l'!lol, A-111 tl'lt IOllltl'IY COiii Mtu ltM, 11------~---------1 ,.,, m.!-n lltn11¥ f'IUdt ti ,.,. "'"1• r,rv111••· Oc:toblr ,. 2L " •NI Mtvtml!lt I $IHI ll•i•lnt WUI "" l>lld lllfl 1111 lrtlt ff·117tl EG OTICE dr1""111111. ltC;llen1 ,,... 1Htlfle1t 0111 '°" 1," • • M ·fi ••v" ,_.,,, "''· ,, , •. ·-·r -• ''" ''"moos-I Ullflll:St L AL N "" 111GY• 1tt<•flff 1"'lll'G11tr11ao11 1111111111'-'---;;;;rc;;-.;;;;;;;;;;--=---1 ......... ,,.. ......... N•,,. STATaMI Nf ''C....,lr1(1 OOtu"""'' 1nd COMl'l'K!lanl LEGAL NOTICE ,.tlock A.M., 111 tt11 ~ « ff'I TM loltowl"9 .,,_ trt 11,,int F-1UJ7 IHdtl<tl~ t f'ld (1t11lrvttlCo11 '"'-!or kt•d d ,._...,_, lf'I l!\t OrtltP Mlrlltt 11~ -, FICTITI OUS IUSINISS Ill~ cornlrvctlan ot JI Hlt utl 11t1el1111111on " 11"1 '°"'"'• AdmlT1l1!rtll011 l 11lk1!11t, SU Nlf'I~ Noi11ll11tlon ... ttd'I Ilk~ ...... ISie) NAMI: I T•ttMI NT '11m!lln9 $1111(1.11, t 1ld •ltllt l ricll l'ICTITlOOS IUU"'f!SS 5W..,...Oft lll'ffl, S1n11 l.N• Ct t!IO!'lllt . StrlM'dlllf St, N111ttlnttan 8t ocll. ~ tvll1111fl"' "'"" f1 Ool~e bllllntll •-\ll<tl1Collt m•Y llf 1111rch11f'd 11 l't:lt HA.Ml STATIMl NT C•I" ol H id oroeo..11 ttl Oii fl it wiu. C1ll1or1111 11, • f!/l(f qt lnlt E111l11ttrl11t fir 110.00 -TM telt-\111 1>1r-Lt llolnl lllv11t11u ""Ct••k o! 111\t I GlllO ,i S_,..,llltl , .... (ll1rt11 A. t r ..... v. )1'S N, "•Hmlfl YQ.YO 'UlltNITU~E. llllliPPl!;lt,, Ml. Clltc~ mvtl N "'idf PIYHlltt 10 1111 11; ft/lnflCt f1 -.c>Y !•lldl IO 'l !lf Lt'1t• 111111 Afll, C1IUor11J1. ).kt Ntwtor! &lvf,. Cotl• Mtot , MOlll!an N!t~I! Wtt1r Ohl•ltl. SONll'llnt Publ!1111111 C°"'Pt ft¥, 1>11 er-111 tor llir111tr P1r!l(lll1rt. Allt t P. lira.,oy, ,ns N, Fretmlfl C•lllor11l1 '1621 .. Ufllltfll to "'' l•bor (Odt ol 11\t Slt1~ Ltfl(t o'"''· """""' Ctllf. Dtlttl! «)("°"" ,., 1tn. Lt~, S.ntl A.111, Ct~lor"lt. Lillltn '''lvlt J1• t-trf\INt AVt,, of C11lfflfl'tlt, 1t>t ,,.,_,""' "19\114 Wt i.f' A, Ml"-0 ~. Ull LtnCt Dtt...1. IY OROlll' 0" TH6 t0ARD ~ Tilll 111/alntn 11 Mint OC9nd11t/N 0¥ t C-t .. , Mfr. Ctfffot"lt fUJS. Ol1l•kl 1111 •ictrl1lntd ftlP pr.,.elllntr Ty1rt11o.C1UI SUPfRUt,OlltS Of' Dllt~NGE: CDUNlYo "'"''"lllp Tiil& bu1IM1t I' bti1"9 t-IKltd Or f n •t it of -41tl'TI wttft ol !flt locellty rn thlt bv1lr111I It bt!n1 tondvr!lltl by 1n Cl.1,.tl'ORNl,t,. • ' Cll1r111 A. tl•oudv IMfo.\01111 ""'1°' !Ill• w11r~ 11 11 bt ""°'mttl to bt lfl(llwlOvtl. !S,ALI Al!t t I' l•DUdw L!U!1~ StltV•t tt 11tt111fd 111 ltle kNll'llot" C1Jl!vrnit A. Mllflll'd P-WILLIAM l M JDWH T~lt 11tt"'"efll 11!td wotll l!li C ... lllY Th\\ 11tll!Tl'lfll llltd wUll 11\1 (evM~ Mt11tr Liii« A1r...,,...1 fflH In Ille TMt tlll'""""' lfll'd wltll 1111 ((Nfl!v Cou~tV (iel'lt t hCI fll"'"lclo Citric ol Oft"" C011nl¥ Oii Od, ,,, 1'71. Cl .. -or D•t!TVt (.ovnly .-1 Oct. l4 lt11, ofll(t a4 1111 AttO(ll)td c I n ••• ' C.lt fll ol Ori -CllUnlY M: Oft. 21. ""· C!tl~ "IM 81H1••"' ""'_;..,, ., ......... , J, MttHOll, o..,i., (;euflllo ·~ •• v ...... J. M~. DRiltl, Clllt"IY Colll•tttot• .. Am••l<.1. s • "I n t , fl l y ..... ,1., ... Mtdlflll: O.C.Un Covnn OI °''"" C .. nty, C11Hfll'lll1 Cltt-Cle•lc. Ct lller"lt Cll.rtr. (1111. If M.lbtl I., C11i.!11. ,llllllfllflttl' 0.-tnt~ CIMlil 0111\' 111"1. l"vlotf!Md Ortflll (;!Hitt 0•!1¥ '"!Ill, Co.In fl Ille -•t -vl illl\tl riff "4 l'ullllwlttl' Ori"" C11111 011/y P)tlrl, Dfllutr 0t10btt' U, "· l't. tlHI New""btt' 1 0ClotiP:r II, n, 2t t !MI NOY""Otf J, -flt m wttft tt otttt,,.1ntll b'f !flt Oclolrlr tt t nl H-W J. ll, 1', P-lr11111""4 Ot1n• (Otll 0.111 _.,..,, t. .......................................................................................................................... 1 ·f/1 1*M-1l 1'11 ?U>·ll Oltltlel 1•1 lf'I f)lt ti j" PJ.lclN I llKf lfll 2t?ll·1\ Nflvlfll,_. t. 1tll .. ... • T ' • -.,. __ _ -. -- ' ,. DAILY ~IL9T s ' LEGAL NOTICE ' U]fl •ICTITIOUI l lJSINISI .I. NA.Ml ITATl"llNT 'Whatsit' OVER THE COVN11ER Complete-New York Stock List ' lelle<#lflt ....... II ••1 IN~ , ... ,, Olllv !'lllO ..... "-· s. ...... LEGAL NOTICE ..... ~IC.TITIOUI I UllN 111 MAN.I SlATl~lN1 ltlltlwlfte --1 ""'"" llllllf'<ttl c.H.1111111• l'IN,l,"l(tAl !llVIClS I.MID I I!• "9f' lu I• I l eMo ..... ..... ' Mk:ll.-1 Jtmt• Ctnll~ I I 1 I ! li11t1'-Dr 1•~'' .lftt 11105 Thll .... ~tit It be fll CO"llU<llll 11¥ "" IMl\lttut l. Mlctoftf J Ct n I~ 'fllll tlt'-1 Hltd wi"' '"' Ceu"'Y d..-el Ort.._ .. CllOH'llY INI OI: t1 lt n t ¥ tt ..... I~ J Mtd<le• ~ C9"" • ~II-Or1..., C .. t fl• Iv llilel Oc1'etlot• 1" '"" N11¥1"'1M J IL 1• llf1 1"1 " LEGAL NOTICE ' l:tH' !'l(TtTIOUI I Ul!NllS NI.Mio JTI TIMINt l~t !fl 1ew"' lfflll<'I t rl dlli~e &vi flfH _, llllTl:0--11.... 1116 0 t ftl• Av.,,\lf 111111 E CDS!• Mtsl C1I' "'11 CM11tr l ltrrr 111! Ct» 1 \ .. , H•w_.i llttll (I II l'JUI! J1m1s f t 11<-ltv J\1'1 91n•~lll"lllll (It~ p t-IU"I f\910" ltlCh ttt I. '1146 G• '" L 8utllll'f' tlll lr.1h11!ull O<lvt Nuflt!"t lcn lttefl Ct ! I ft.M6 1°M1 ll\ltlfllU II Ill flt CllllCl\11: ff l>Y A at ..... t l ,.lrl"I.,,,. D J1mtt , lluOltY "fJ>11 ""-"' ll~ w 111 Ille Countv Cllr't el °''"" Ceuntv 1111 Ort-• 11 lt11 I v 8tve•flo J MtOd&ll O<owty Cl!U11!\' Cit l Pt1~lllo-ci t:l•t~I~ (Otlt 01 Oc,_r 1t tl!d N0 ....... 111 J "" LEGAL NOTICE , UHt l<l(TITJOUS &USIN I SI NI.Ml ST,ITfMl!Nt ' ... 12 H 1tlS 11 T"9 1ouow1 .. , a~ '°"' • t 111'11"' bltl-• •• TM! (;£11111' E COM• .. NY Dovt '91111 133 Onv• tlr Nt ...,.ert llK~ " .,..,, Wm S Gt rrlt I!! DoYe D ,)ll•wroon llttc:~ c. ~-Gt,,. I ft:11 le• ll:I flovt D lvt loltwll)I"! lftell Ct r11i. &111!neu 1, IM ftt c-u<r.ti bv ·~ 1Mlvl- W... s Ge"lt ""fhll 11tlt,....,.1 IUtd w l!I .... (911ntv (11111 el Or111M C911111Y on Od Jt lt'1 rt .. .....,IY J Mt-~ °"""" C.out1,., "'" "'""'""""' ..,_ ~ Ori "'' C.CMIU DlllY P IOI Incl Ne-.<.,..lltl .I Ii It ml n ·1~ . , LEGAL l'IOTICE ,. 1S14t "tCTITIOUS &USIMISt J NAME ITATIMIMT :T1'I lellewln1 M•lill"t ttt dll<llt kttll'llU •• • PltMO lll lNT ~G A~SOCIATES 11'0 .,._, ~ IS C111lt Mttl '2621 , Girt lllotMrt '-'"''" 1160 P.11'111>"• ~o lJ Celli Mtlf Jlllln H•reld "' '~" m "~ t. "1-1unll111ien 8t1dl ~"1111 bull"") J ~ '11 eollilllt'M hY I ~rln1rtt1!1 f Gt rr I Ll'W1~ 'T~\1 1111tme"' llltd w Ill ,,,_ c-tv Qen. e1 o ...... c-...niv II" 0c1 1l u11 11W '*"' 1¥ J Me&dll• DtPlltv Co..lllY 9 :.rlllll'lld Ort <let C.0.11 tit IV •I el CIJ16M• U t1 l't •nd New""a. ! ltfl JIU-11 , LEGAL NOTICE , ' I' U1U J tCTttlOUS &USIMCSI MA.Ml STATE.MINT "' .. f'Ollewl"' Mr"'" 11 dol"' 11111 ntlt 0"lN llOAD lf:CIEAltO"ltl V!Hl(lES !01 Ht r&er llvtl ll~lt Atll (t If '1111 N11!11" Ott" T11rnt ll•U l t nll ... "111 "-ou~lt n Vl lllW t i Ip 11/0I .,Ills bu•"•~' • bP nt c&l'llil111:1..i e~ 1n ttld ~ldvt Mttlltn D1lt lllt'"t' Tl!ll •lt l ..... tllf llltd ... 1111 ""' '""'""' Cltrt. el Or111tP (-ty Dn Oc.t I) 1'71 • ., •tvtr"' J MMioMJ o-,ty C-""' ~\lbl"'*5 0r.,... O(ld)er 1J n l1' CCM11I OI I~ I" lot '"" '(OYefl'lbe• J Ult n "" ,. LEGAL NOTICE • , fl 1113' ff lC:TITIOUI ltJS NI SI NANI ( STATIMIMl ,.,~, fell!rwl~• .., '""'' • • de "' ""9 llfU I t •t.ULSEN "IOOUCT t COMP.•IN 41&1 Y•llowtt-Or Cm!1 Mt11 Cl'! !emit '1611 L9111• Jllhn 1'1u 11~ 1101 v,11~,,­ c o;,_. '61 1 Mist Ct llD~I IW'WV" " "" P.1wlM~ m so ,,c Ll'lroM Anehtlm Ct fer~ t Tl'l1t but fltlsl II lit flt '!l<ldUf f~ hi' J ...... ,,.,,,..,.,. ~ t.ev1J ll1u11n ""Jnlt 1111etT>t11t ti .., wlll'I "'• Ceo.only CJtr!! ti Ott"I• (e!JM'f ""' (kl If 1'11 •v tevtrtv J Ml<tlle• Otevtv Ceuntv C~•k •ubll•""" -" •m o •• ~.. ce11t 01 1y P.11et J2 7t l '!d ~OVtm"'r J ?Ll1 11 LEGAL NOTICE .......... """ ......._ ....... ,.._ •t •••ff"'""' t .I. M ....... lllAIO. 'A 1 1:1 o.. l'ttlllt .. .,. *....,,. ,.., .. w--... ,.....,....,. 9f' ""'""''"" ... ~~o ~/'(' r NA.SD Llttln11 fer Thur1d1y, November 4, 1971 i;r-,:~{1.~~ ,.,..,..., .............................. ,.. ... """""..,"'",...,..1 1~:rw I ~ Ari Ct1111 tO Energy Harnesses Nl!W VO"K l"il'J l•Mtfl f 1 Oow .._ ''"' •1 .... IFll GMlll l~ ~111 '"" Mt t)'V1'111 l'1~qo l!io ,,. ~~tii.'f41'.JO -.,,.. i.tlowl"' 1111 lr)ftkl """ """' Dtvlt og 11" tt\to FalP 111.1, ,...., lll\lt r•v ,lridv ltt. 1.n. Jl'1t10U 0 th A"' '"" It I Nled td lrl• kl 10'9 JDtt g11t111.lt1 11 .. 12"" FIPlll. WI J ffi t 11 1 l.ol ll11k Ot 11'k IN ~ AUSTLN Tf!I (UP'll -111 N1lleti.t IK111rUl1t ,,.... Ar 1J'4 II u.~P 11 .,,, 11 .. ffft>MJ 1,111 .U )I Gull lflltl SI\ 1• ll1r~1 M '"" '"' ~·:: '"'/.19 -"' • ---W"' , .. > H'''-''" ••" ,,,~, '" I" ''"" J ,,., ll11kv Gt ti.ii , .. ..._:," "' •~ .. t 12 Ifft t·'I ind cons'"'·,.. ..... ~!...-,','," ,·,·x ,,.., •'"' ..... " .. ...,, .. • 1,. ,,.. • ........, IU 13,. ..........., "" \' 1,.. z ll1lfll J All llltk111r 11\'i I M1rff ll lJW 11 ll1rltw .. Al~ "'~ .I II dou•hnut •• ,_. COp-r ,'",,',~·.~. & • ..._ ., ..... ,_ w0,,t it4t 11• IMrln I~ ,_.. t l<lt l°fl W.\ J .. Ht1llll! tlft J \ P1I l'lt!I tlo "'9 A II -, e au ~..., r'" ....., ·~· Oi S\lt (Ofl Lib fJ\o t1h I'll WtlU j ~ 7-1-ifllfld I' t114 ~ P111~v I" '"' d o All v~I ' di'' •• rr."'"' in I c•-Je lt~k tl!O Trvtl llum Sim 'U\lt M dUC:I $y J\lo H4 I'-l'•I" ~ I 1-itrll Jll"I lt~ !Jljo Ptvt If •1' J ..... Al/ It (fin J ~.. '" 111 I•~• 1fW5v JJ\lt 11 E1Pt1 El 111,;, 14" l'ert,I O t !IV. Hrr!I t 1> J 4 jl'1 l'•v L. 11w 11 :t. )2\' Al lti,~ lrl It Aclllnd.r hn·.1wlthquartz 111~sv ~..,, 1mbr H l ,._!1~sv11 ,.,., ,...,,.,..,1,11 •· •"1-11t1AP 1 l'I .. rtM• 1v.n All111ci\'11 f{li f;l,I llfm~.$ 2J"'ll\4 1nn Mm ff\o'll OO\.'t ldtl It l'I,\ 1ttl<011 Grnt Jl\'t"'4 Hd1X In ~~ .W eorltl T lti'l ltl)J AI CCII and covered with aluminum "''" we ?t n~ 1n111111 1 " tt llK Nud 1)\'t l• 1<ok1""' Jill H• 1101o1>m 11.o ,.,, "'" P•< '" , .. !V&1 t111:.,0oa. It Mldl lit• ""' IO\o\ ... ,.d ,. '"' JI.I, El«l•m Ai M ...... 1 cl ~ Jto ~· "" ...... ,.. G&W nh ,~. ""'°"' Celt runs throuJ!h 1Ls ctnter Jrt.w '°' .11 .. .l1Vt • ., Miii• Jl\o\ 21 11ec ~ ?\I ~\\ 1<ri1111.. 1 '• ,.. Ho•11 ••• 120,, 1) ..,.1 •w m ""Au1oni111· 11111 •• II Ill'• Wh l I it' U V• l1t1 110,, ll N Sw1t Iii. ~ Electr (II ,,. '"" Frlld le• Uli '-I~ ttow...ci GI I l'll e1rolll d .. Avce Cer• COS1.11 m ,...n I S v. ~ en• n • 1111t ••In Al• J\t l" I'""' on 1,,. '" 11 c..... j llll H-mci , t1 """ "'" bofl 1~ 1•'4 i\vco Ce wt Sc t •• u l llltltlt11'U ,. lt• :l\'O ,,, 111r1v c IS I G1!1t Mot l""' Uh Huc k Mlt J .. ' PhlUa L I'll. ' AV(ll etJ~· 1e.ntisU1 ... t n1vers1y,_ltUnLI" U\'J '"'" I~ l\li "''TY .. '"' l"Gtrlnk l 1l~•HU11111 P•P 'l•U\liPhellNI t"' .... A .... <YP Jj of Texas caU 1t the MagM:tlc 1""*111111 Ct•!• 111 1"' i .. t .. 1w111 1'-"'G•• Gltin '"" .1 Hu"1 P i. •hPl..im1 • 1 '"'"'"net 1 AAI C• I !.,, 1r1 Gl'll 19 1 111' EP1co n J • 3•t G.., Al•c n' JVa Hvtll C• l•h j5't Plnk•ln 1~ TO'f't,.,. ~~~~ 1,11 Bottle tnd Say ii C()U\d IO!Vt A"-A _,, lt\li I i. tac NG 10 !°" fovtv 011 •1.t 10\t Gen I 11 It t Hvtn In! 11 1" Pl1lllfn ,..,. .,,.. ~ Id I I b AIO IM .... lllt tvf\9~ C 6"' ..,_Ir t 1tt t "'i '" Glllfn >I• :i,.,, lmtt• Sv 1011 ll"r Par! HI( I ~ 20\lt the wor s energy er s s Y a.11s •nc • ~ • 11 t1n11• """ »..., FPA t P t~ 10 1111111 11" 111.1i 1m111 co I "r 1~ Poul• M 1\'o ,,,.. l•btkW 50 harnessing the aam• kind of :~~1 ~!. 1f1.o 1 f~ ::~' 1.:: /1':' lf: =:b 'r'i: ~ ~:! G~:'ir~1 1!: i~~ :;:r11,"'~' 1:~ 'J: :-:c <>':\, J}t ~ ••••Ohr 111 .n.r•• thal I! rtleastd when A<u•"n' t'(.O u11 Cll•nt• .., 11v. 11 F1rdvn E ~ .l\o'I Gould T '" I tnlo DI"' •"-'Yi " Lid Min 1'o 1.! ::~~EP1.:. ., Ad"'" !"" l81o Clltn 011 t~1 t\.'t "-lncll1Y S'°I ,,,, Gtv f:l'lfl J14'i 211<1 l11lr1 ltld l'-11'1 ""~ NM 11\o ltllo lt"'P .. 1 an H bomb explodes Aac111n W • 11oo c""" Lt• l'\lii 111.11 Flnt O•• N 3i.. ,,.,. Cn 11"' 1111 1t11r'"k '" , .... ""P.11b s NC '"' 111'1 '"'"' 11,, 15 At the moment we re JUSt :~ 11 sT!1 ~i,,t J~:::!: tJ, 1:" u ~~';'~, ;:\' J:'-~:': ~c,i, ll .. ~~:~~k"'w~" 1!: '?:% =~• 1;~ 1:" :~,:~·w~1; h t A r Incl J • l .. Cr.I l rldt l"">Ut ' lfllp\1 C• I~ .... Uh P. l.enNI lli.. ""° l•nk Tr J Ii a lot of long aired sclenhs s Albl• Ho • :Moo Chll!1>11 101'111 1n1 sv11m •1li. '-!~ P.1110 ''" '" .,,. 111~0 , 111 I th id Albtr!1 14 11 (l'lrl1St 11• '' lnt,.....IY Mo. HI Ou1t CM '"° ' l••d \' >~ say1ngwe can so ve e wor s A1cel•t , ., '"' c1unu1 a. )(Ii,;, >01. 111111n 111( 1\4 ' AT SY•• ,,,. ~ 1,,k "' "° bl m. .Id Or Aldtn f:I i. \1(1!tnU a H ,...., J1cob I'\. l'-1 I Ai ll 111n Pr 11\:o 5..., I••< •t2XI energy pro e S A co L~d ... u " c11rk Ml '2\t ''"' J1au111 c n 111,1 ll •h•lt c •~ '""' 1,,,, M,. Anthonv E Robson chief ._ 1 Te<" 1• 1;, c11u1nt '• "" UTU L J•m W•• 1 ~ l4 ll•Mbs E it '°"' 1, ,, M1 ~' 1 ._ 1 '"' •~· Ml Cllntn o I •• ~. 1,. M A ',',,"~"•'•• 111 l\•r;•Ych C• fl " I• l'ltf\cl 10 de51gner nr !ht SI mllhon AH<I Eciul ~ """c1-(• "'"" '"" N4o lllV'""" lJ•• lto.t •~1.r1cl•LD IO • h•ft B•c ,._ f (o ("I' • f 'll Jot v" M '"" \11' II.KOii £~ , I .., ··-I LIO I machine Now all we ve got ••et C•m .., 1111 c1111111 "e 11111 >l 1Cr.11 1...i ... 1 11nc1 H-Yo Jni. l•Y-c11 so d I AIPll""' I'° " (-( r 111 ~ Kt 1r Sii ll~o ""'llt .. f:nv lto 1\1' l et• .... SO lo o 13 prove 1 Atoir G" 1 1.,., c11m1 s11 110,, 1f , FUNDS 1(111s11 ,, 11•• '""' 110.a E• l-lvt ls~ atti"ds , The macbine named the A IE L•b ''°' • COM Ci:•, n l K• v•r u 1J1ot •11111n M 1• 1 11111 1111 I'd• o , Am f:~p 11,11111\ltC-Pt Jt"1o Joh K•mtn A lllt 11 11.el)erlo J IG IO!lk 8..:-min SO T ••• ' T 0 k. m • k was """ Finl lt:W. l"llo CmPI '"" ~ '~ Ir.ti• G • l 3,, •ff•!(!tl '"' "'I 'OIU; 5(1 A Finl LS t\o ,.,_ ('"p ln1t ~ J1;t 1(1v11m lU, ~ ·-75:W. 1'16 l~Pt,lri IOb dedicated recently The main Am F'urn ""' 11h mp• Tee '"" '" K11• T• ''" .-. 11.ow1n 1,. 1" 1" lik:oP11 JOb Dr o• rd E Am Grett MW .... cm •• I .. l 1(-C• I"" ~ ll uo SIOv JI' 1'\<t li!llll!n 1 XI l'lptaker was l:AIW8 A Prolod t 114 (en P•1> XI )Olo' Nf:W YOll'I( t Al'l J<if'fllln 11 IJ:t11) tCtl!tH 1~, Jlil Stdlltr ~ 7\t ltlcl""H 60b 0 d J P .'ld.nt Nlxo ' Am Ttltv ''" t•"I Con II<><:* 110 1 -r~, ,,,,_ 0, ,_ ,,,,, .. , Fu..... 1C11Wd :IO'i. )1)'111 5'•" 011 fl• 10 ,,11 Hew '° 8Vl r r n lmW~!cl !,_.I ~eo11t1n J~.Z:u~lt!lj,'"1 1~;;'~td l>Y Apo\'i~ 11'i°iiJ oolCtl y SW 7tV.lOl4 Sc•nl11 El l l'loa1ltn!tc1111 SCltnct 1dv180r !~:~1: a ,!1~ J:Z c:::::"'f 1" n. '"' NtllO"\ •• "'!~, I blo;ovl!-",',~'~ti~:~: /i~1 1li. 1~ l~':'~e~~ ~" ~ ,•,•,m,•, '•'•" ••· T , 0., tll1>11 er ...-.ur 111 Apello .... • n•· David N'ecfiCted ll1': tXIS A11kt11 I" i-. .IV. CDSm Y • • "' Dt tl1r1 Inc I•! Cul I I It l-1 ICtv Cu11' 10. lh ~crlH• '10. .,. fle'ldl• 11 J ,.. t.ru 1no Jl.t n 1 Crt• Co l•~ 1,•,,_ 1111 1>•1tei 11 w111c:~ Cu• 'l 19 » n 11 1C1y1 PC. UlO. 1111> !oc•fPID l.,. "1 ltl\lllC• 1 '° Tokamak "'111 play an Im t.rd Mt• tto 10 Creu Ce ,,_ .. """" ,ec11<IHH c 9 •ff t 26 1CI,.. 1n1 1 .. Jlot s111e<1 Ila ?•loo 1• • 91,..n ,.i. so th ArkWIG U 1!'4i Crvl ll'H ..... Io ~1111~ l\.twr _,, U' 1 fl I 6I IC "'' £1 l "'SN•lt pl 11~ Jo ltr>ert p!• )0 portant rolt m race to U5e e Art11v 1n 1" l'-ut1• "-O>d 1 1 llllc1 1e1c1 1 c• botl91'1t ~~: :J 1 ., 6 ,1 1C1.-C• •:i. s.,. s1r1 c11m 1 ~ "" •~"' 1.i 1 Jl:I H bo b g -ac luJJy It t.rrew "" 11~ 11\ti YP C-•, , °", , lttkt<ll lf'.u0,~, •,,, tu1 SI \t l5 l l ?C ICn•D Vt11 16'11 .. S~t F J ~ HO fl.,,tlJtl II m ... sener y1m~por't1nt to :=•s. If!: IJ~o::~·';.. i, u AGE Fnct JI! J.l Cui SJ 101J 111 L•nt• '" ~~ ';:i!.,"!~"u J~,1 •,•,",,,',"'~~ 1111 uor: I~ I.ICC lo• O~ 1'4 g111 C' J~~ J 'I AC>trdn J l! 111 ~u: ~! ~ !: ; 11 t:~lte~ t tV. Sl!op 1tl11 1\:o I Iii Btlh $11 1 )0 mankind l IS the lTI\entJon Of t.llG•' I.I 11 11\1 tit ~ )"° ., .A<lmr1tv l>llO! 11 t ll 1 ut.etclv Ct 11 .... 11 .. Sm8u1 lfl Jn 6!. 9 1 nue• .17 .. VIII !oc 0 I <o D•lt Gtn .. OVt G•wll'I I~ I 01 lllll•• 6 '1 ) " I.th Co-I 1 !Vi Snip Tio llV. )0 l !eckDH• 1 th. Wh •• I h. Said t.u 11 St l• l i'o 01!1 Pko '"' I 'ncom 'Jl ' .. ICnk:kb t.1 1 G 11 1'1 l 5 tCI Wt! IM 15 I , "'" • '' '' n1u '.S0 001 Kn ick GI l tl 11' ' 1 ' •, '' II" "'" R.•··n •aid researchers',',,',"•• ', .. ',~',',,','",'• , ,,'Advl•• JINJ!lL1t10•"ll 11 ,,.,L1wl1t1 1~soN£ '' ~ .... l lnL•u1 1 ~ "' -,•, ' ... Aelno ,_ !0 )j 11 llJ Lt~ Gt !'I I 6J 10 Jl t.ln l c•ll 11 i> lit~ Sw GJ (11 Hh 1J lo Bleck Hll ll \.,. .... to have !he Tokamak in I:~":;"~ 1,••, '"' ~v1,~ c" ~ Atllll1td 1 Jl 1 o Lt• 1t111 1~ •• 117 Lllldnl< > 31.t sw E sv 11 It 1• llut 1111 Ml '"'V" ... ..-. f&V. n..; Af11t.,rt I' ll H 11 H Llb<tv ~cl I 01 I (N LDbl tW ~~ ~fl ~::~~r;D ,,~ ~ ::r,,: C~ k~ operation by January It IS the ::~~ 11~1 ~~ ';1: 0g:"i% ';. : 1 A• Am 1<c1 " 11 LUt s1• J n • » LOii E•cn 11,, 11 11.,dvn 1,.,,. n" ':!:f ,., I th h d I th • ' I , ' , 0 ~ •, ~ Alllltlt 11_1 111 ''LI•• I"" I 1l I" t.vnc,• 0 '''~ ,, .. ''' ,_,, ' ,. '' I •11,,J our sue ev1ce n e •n~n J.., 111'1 1 1 ~ '"'""• 11.J311"Llfl< w11 10 1311 ,,M•••n ,... -.. •• •·· l1umrll M ~ :Ml.lo 011 C1nT IJ o 14\lo AmtlD I 11 • 7' Llf\9 , 1 M•l Pool )', l'-' tin HPd -1 .... I] Dlli<M"' 111 United Stale~ and fhe first 111v • M• 11"' 11"• o..i 1n1&1 7•11> ll ~ ...,,, ~~ J 11 1 • L_..h 11y e• Mtl ll'nv ••• • IP la srr 111.. ro • 1orden 1 fO: letltr11 ,. '" ,,. OIWPY f:I ,_ 111 A... w 10 ti 11 JI C•nad lJ Jl1 u lO M• ·-·' )4 ,, u"' S! 1wlt c l•" " ~ orvW•• 11 bl.ult at & nongovernment 1111 L.•b .. ,~ d '4 0!1m C•v llVa 1f Am a 1v J 11 J ,. c ... 1 11 1 11 11 11111 ..... c !11 ,.,. 11bK T•~ 1'.l. Jh ~W:1~ ~1~ labora tory o1 ",, ,•.'.. ,','! ,•,",',,",".,A• l•• • .Ame f:•o eu Mut • 31 u lt M 8 owr )6~ '1 S110<11l I' 10 10l/o 00 Ed 1119 II ~· " v 1"" Ce1 I I JI I U t. a A.bl lO fl M~ul L.. I • t-. 5~Pe El ll'h It lo ou nt Int Th b t t t l!t~ 110 ) g•ctnc 1>.i. J Inc••,. llOt•J o• Mc(o )tl<,16 fMf:OC 11 1 t !Jftll/l rw e 0 JtclVe IS n Crtat l cl M, Jo -t lJ'-'1 l•n Cru 11 '111 l~•fl tto •11~ull'I e,o 11? ~llM~Qu•' 11h11,lll'l'IPIK 79' 1°' tlO<ISI liO lht same aort of rond1t1ons ,'!!,"','•' ,,•,• ,.~~ ~",',•!, lC " ic• trc~ l.lt , 11 "":~~~ .. " •,. J •l Mtdk H t • 1 •uwY 1•, 1o ·~~. ,",'/•"•' ,•,~, ~· ~""" .. t fl• ._m"tr1h 6J1 11 MU Gll'I 'Q~JMf<lk M ll' 31 /o l••ICI I '-' p lhat tlllsl In the hydrogen,.----------------1.m In• s lCI s JO Min•<l'luu n co MH1~ n111 45 '1 •• ~ lovl• WI J!~ 1:~ ,~.:..., "H•~ bomb but1n.1eontroll@dstate Am Mun 111 'to F•~ tOl It Md',, w J~"\! ~:~:",.b 1,. 151 clWYH1!e11 A"'N Gll'I 1 lt Jn ncl•P o SI I lO Mlcl.; Ct I" 64' le!oc:Ofl\ Ii. 1-\lo lwyGl1 Ill and on a small scale Robson A1tc11e< Grou• .v..11 n 11 u 11 1,. , ., c-,,. .,,. k~UG0• n U S M Cttlt I OJ Ill Mou Flnt J\CI MIOll• • -·· •-·· l .. Ld G ..... 111 1115 11 JJ MtT 1 d \i II Mldw GI 1•'4 1''4 Ttnn1n 114 111'1 w~Sllro 19 Oney ll>C"'' I 10 t to MG 17 71 1] JI M lllpr M ISA. Tt• "-"'° 1 ; "-wnS/let I~ Sc1enhstsh.avebeenwork1nf' • 1 J:c11 "v 1t1 ••l MID 1•111111 r.111 "'"' IJi'o ~"'r"''"' ,._ ~ ·~1•un1w11 1u •-e Ytnl 4] 11 •I t0 Mt t ! ) tll l •OM 1>Pr In f'4 10'-'l Tiffi• Ce I V. l\o UCY ~' :le for 20 years to hnd a way to ,A•t ori ••1 •ll M• ,., • 1111 711 '-'"t G• ~ Jolh r 1ff"v " n,!'! 1?..._ l:;',g,_ ~' .e h E hih 1 i P Houthl!)ll M d AM s tJ J tt Miu ll'T 15" 510 TUtn G I ,. ...,.. V!llltl lflll fuse or lock together I e X It ~""' s.u ill ........ , .,,,11 .. M••" G u'4 1sv.T••cD c 1 tv.l[t"°'' 1 .... l'ncll ISi in ~..... •'Me l!"h 1'4 1 1~ncn!Ci 17'\'0 11" ~ 1w "1"" nuclei of light elements -the s•ock s u 6 •1 MllOdv • n 3' 17 :it Men• coi t\• 11. r.1,,,B o u~ ~ "" •i-sc1en 4'6 •1JMIFFc1 1 01 1'6 •• ,. "'l"T '" ....... proctu that lakes place in I l'n'""' • 1 f 11 M" co111 J ' 1 i.. "'00 • 1 ,... .. • ""' u~ ,. 1 ]I hydrogen bomb explosion -At Bank ::~~ ~~ ~ rJ ;~ ~ 8::~. ,~~ 1t ~ s=~in ~ H ~I~ l::~~: Jr-]:: ~rl~:rt5" but without hav1n11 ·~ ...... I tlCtl .. II 10 j.j 10 St Mui sn .. ,, 11 11" "'lll wl I Ito TYlll" F "• t it "'MV Ill --e ""....... tt(fl .. 1j"'jllMUI 1 11 I ll I H ••• 't, M •'lo i··u... l • ,,, urrtllJ '° I •·· f'· bob) 1••1 Ktn,,. ,,.NEA Mutln•n"""c " ,~u111w nuc ear 1=1on awm1c m ••• G" , a.i 1,1 "'" 11111 10 11 io11 Mo• Ctub » l2'n u .. c Ho• 1 • 1 • .., explosion to tngger thl! on An exh1b1t chroruchng lht 1::1;1~ n 1~ ~ 1f H "'~.1:~11 0s;; 1 so:_~·~~ ,. 1~ .. 1'tt: ~~ U~Gl1 'r~ 1~ ~•bot ,. 111 colorful history of American ,,.n d , 11 • m '""" 111 s 1s wee 1",' , ", ! ,•, • "u! ',".~.',,' •~ 1 i •deM• tM fluloc-(tlvn DI II 1 •• 166 Na ~• D " "' • 15.,.. • 1 Flntn money will be featured al 1111'-'k u •I IJ 11 G~ ~ , 06 , to N• c. 11. '"' n. us r kLn :IO"' 1 11111111 r.1 ... B I A C1nctn 11" lO •l Ill Stk 7 1! I II Nfl G&D 11 ti>, Un Y Air Jlllo 14 em1>lllk ~ A Ink 0 mer1C8 I Newport 0 vld J If l I! l~<em J ll I II N Mo11> , UD l'@n !' 12'11 1l tmD SD I ~ ccom1tant Beach branch 344 Via Lido ~~1't .. ~ Jg~ 1l ~: ~:~~ 1'1f'. l~ :11p.~~b .. , ;j~ mt~~~\ y1'1Br 1~.~ i:,,; In" J.~"I "Ith d Ith ...... hl'cl\11711,, ·~10 1N~Kll•h '"''"•tltYG• t ,o,.~~4'11'0 unu een o t year an '111M11 '" ru "~~1 th 1t 55 ,~w.1si.w .. 1o;.v•u•LD t ,, P\ ia C ldc1<1 Meet Set nounced \ice pres1dtnt and c~..:.:::tld f ~ 11 H = ....... ~·,, . ,, I tt ",",.',11.:•, ,. • • V•nD Alr ~ ... ,., 10.ltfclll .... R bet A Good (101 Glh lll )JG N•uw I'd 10 1(1 1 f trJ N "G It\,"~• Ytnl"" 6"' l't ••brun 1 4 manag!r o r Yiln c1 .. 1s11 6 .00101 Neww1d 11 s1n1•,.,1 i.1•,. ;~~~~:z:~~:~ 1Wl:,. !J..~°"14 J h 111T ln 1J llllJJN•won 1!'3 1S lltr{'"a.it J'I Rd '•l\••oPL l .. In Anabel' m The d15play lnCJUdeS Un 1nl V S~ l Sol I IJ.I H Ch 51<1 11 •l I '1 ~•in I 1' , it:! N•ll t:G• I•» U~~ 1 a T~, t.10 d d I t I I I ~•nn nt l'11"4li No,.•11 lSJl!JJl C::'" c; l l~ i~ JI ,,. '' l ff t (ll I!! re II O llC Ull s amp es n t •l•n 1 11 t7 t1 oc~1na 1 t 1 t: ,• 01~ .,. \o Wtbl> w' '''"''' •• c;,11 ""' od I I om51 16-1 rtDm•a• ,,, ••• " ... Wt•" •IWI! ••• rare a unusua money co rw h \•7 , • 100 "~n.i l n , """" N•lG 12 u • w1 c11 n ~. Jt• •it ..c~, '° Th. Or.ng. """'nly Chapter J t·• I b nccrn ~ 1.U 01 ""net t v 10 1• NW Pu... l l u We Int M Joh 10'• ~!•·T, IG ........... ec ~ over It\ era years Y S1>1<t 111 JM ,,.. wms 1s Jt IJ Jt ND•"' Ct 11":. 3111, 11 ,,_ M no. 11 • c1 ccro of the N1t1onal As.!!0(1ahon of num111mat1st Cyru.~ H Ph1lhps c"':! 1 Gr 17'11 1 4 ":.~h f'J1 : 1: ""'ft!...."~ :J ri~ w::,, G"•,r 1: 1: ~ r-,"ni:la 'r Accountants ulll hold tbe1r 11 illustrates the extreme ~...... •1110 1t 0,.,, AIM 110311 1t hci •r1 ,,., ' wirn Mit ~ ... 1 •l•n olA4JO ~•11n1 1131 OlC s JQ )fll 11Ql'lle l'~rr lJ,.114WJln •ul> '°*"'°'• ...,_. 1,.. JO regular Novtmb!r d 1 n n t r variety of forms through whic h 111·~1a \10•0\ 11 s. "•••m .. M I l'I , 11 oo SPiii• 1,, 1:ii. w11 s1 C• , •, 01~ ':i",~~1',• t th Sky R 01 NC p l l r 1111550PI Sc•ll 7''0 l11 WHtfl .. " mee 1ng in ! oom our monetary system has ~:-;:1~i n 0t n 11 ,.:;;.. ~: , ., 1 0 1, Tt<. ~ •\OJ estmd ,, .. ll•• "' • l>l•.50 the Grsnd Hotel 1n Anaheim I d th ! 111 • 1 , " P• Mut 1, 1 •1 '"' M11 1 • l • w1!'1 w"1 l'• ""' "'1t.."i 1 l° evo ve over e years =.,0y 10 , 11 31 ,.111• 1, 11 u .w o,..,.on io ... 10" w11c PL "'' 111~ ~'w , " beatnrung at ~ 30 p m lnclud·" 10 the exhibil •re Grwtll 6 11 , 1J Pl ,~ m o 11 ~ 111>111 TP 11" ""' w aw d l Ji J7>.G ~" sw.1 , cu ll>(orn 10 11 11 OJ Pin• !I II 16 1 11 Ovtr "'" ]> .. • Wt Ow f: l•I 11' fnl Sciv1' Wednesday exampl!~ of Indian wampum V•n •" J ,, Pl1>11 Ent 1 5J a u O•v, ,",, 1""' 1flo .,.,., •M w ' "'11 1nTe u '!! Th I •• k t th !DJU Gtlh h 10 1~ lt P Dn Fl!d t 'JI 1 01 i>t I 61 61!/I Yrclfly IE l'lo )lj "11 CD J t: eatur~ spe.a tr a e and currency brought In lh1s ""1! 10 l • s 6l Pl•n t"• 1£11 1 "Pie G Ille '' • ''ft l oriu1 11 11 11 ~ u• ""' t0 t ill '·Mr 0 • d I wllhA8 l l"l t0p11 11'1 Utl UI ~ e•lteO'OIO!I mtt Ing W 11'; c.uWIT country by early settlers n-w!lll C 1 63 l n 11 k• FutldJ V1'":: .,. ~ P 0 Dea the data proeeMlng clud th I I Ofl>ci t.1 ~ n 1 IJ Grwlh 71 11 11 n ll•cltirn Inc tng e amous pieces o °""' c.a • n • '3 N Ert t 01 t., Nf:w vo11.ic IAlll l h.,nd•v , ""'"''"'"' 11tob 15 director of admm1strat1on at eight silver coins from which °"'" fd, I~ 1~ VJ H He• r 31 ~ 1 so ~ ..... Ye•~ siocti f:~e111,.., ., c11 111m0f' 1 ~ IBM M Q Du h bee th I""'" 10 ?t 1 711 Pre Futld 10-21 !112 lltr t "'' J r as n wi the expressions two bits and g,,'1°1~v 11 11 1? j1; 0"D;~ ; :• ~ l ~~~ 1 wieti L"' '"" c~:•i ::rur·~~"' IBM for O\ er 23 years He has four bits originated :r1~11G l ~ tol P : c1 4 18 5 ll "Kk•• Mo h.Jd 'a r 1 ou • m•nagement 1 I t ,, h 1 t '" • , rn••• "'" s " 10 • os A llt!Je• 1 A so ea urcu IS f ! 1rs 0 ., l'.d 15 .o" 11 P11t~'"' Funos ,, , , -,, ,-, , ,,.. neme, • • pos1l1ons In the data pro t k A th lrY C•o J u 11 SJ e~u 1 1 51 • .M ~cu• •• ... J'• • ~"' v ~ cess1na d1v1s1on headquarters crnn s rue in merica e '" wg1v t ~ ' '' G,.., • • J 5 11 :~~Lr,.,, /'"' 1;~ ~ ' ;g fl~ 1 ~ he~"8c.,1i:' " 1&53 Pine Tree Sh1\11ng rnW. 61(1 llt Grwtl'I ~~,~·'•cmt'Cli'v IO '111.t ,,, ,,,_. lltJbthl O• nf IBM and has held his deV''" 10 1• 10 h Mcm ' A.cm•"'-lb 13 w 51 u _ '" 111 £111 11 currency issued by lhe In °,;:~.~. er:~ l u v'i:~:t : u I ;r :~1~·. ~· J: 1z~ 101. :.' • • ~lMMH5s"/,, present position s ince 1969 As di\ 1dual colonies prior tn the gt •w u •L u 11 vcv•• 1 ~ I JO Ado tu '°' • ' H' •· , ,, ' -, ' ~ ~neut 1 d irector h. I' r.'pons'bl. for t i!• 111 If) ltVtr• t 11 11150 A-I OI 4 ...... "' ~••P cl Ur' Constitution 411 note issued by E''I 1 S6 11t 11n1rt l • JJ u 1s A~i~•ll• 641 /~ ,0 , ~" •t • ~ 111 (I NW branch of ft Cf adm1nlstr11!1on !ht: state of Massachusetts in ••; ,:. l~ :i ~ :g ~~~~:," 11_~ ~ l: :;~'l~L,1 ~~ 1 1: s~ ~: ',~: f:~ _ 1 ~ ~i"~~AJ"' scheduling and asset managP-77 ·• b p 1 R •••• JOI llN scuda1r F"n"• 1.11ttn 1~ .. 1, 11 jl , 11 11cn cvor m.nl a' W.11 .' d, .. ,510081 10 1 7 engrav cu v au evere D 1v1 Fd 1 l' 116' " Inv i" JI• ll , P od 10b • n , 51 7 • -• "• •"m'"• "•"' • d •·f787f lh Drevllv •l61J'3 ~~·• l6&llt6 A ,nnt IC• I !lat 6"' I lorm.tlon 'y.t.m .ctlvltl.' an l1n: ugtonpenny !E•Dn&How•11 ii.on 11 11 tJ)AJ ~11.,1, ,, '' , ,,, •,•-;-~Y1 r 60 h db h e .... •'5 1011 c '' •• ••••• ' • •• •(l'l v11e wt hrs1 co1n aut or1ze y I ! Grwll'I u" i. 11 ""' roni • W• lH• l.I>. 1 • !/ Mtt , •~• ODe11s topic Will be Ac lnco"' 1 o 1015 ... ~tlh F~!lrll A• G•1 110 1 11~ 11 I•• • nnBo llCI COunt'R.cel'.bl.w'th.R •• I new Congress SPtCI on'" fGu• l lil llO A0,!!~'oe ~"1 ,s. in~ 1~ 11 Inn GE 1 u Sloe~ 1311 •lt lnvnl I OJ 111 .,...,, l) )fl,, II 1'11 I ~ I""' ' T'm.sys'·m W•tho"er!IOO lnadd1t1on thertllr!com l "id l1 M t•19 Ut 1 11 1 1 Ai..1.,., :w. '111 . 11o H _,,. ,.,..,J 1'.oo ~ " f r. ,._. DIE Sci 71ItU1t St K td Ful!OI Alctn .Alum I l.W IT',, 11 11 .._ "' CIT F nl l \ taual display terminals on plete sets n ....,n cutrat! cur • p1 c;t ...... 1 511 Am •"' o" !1~~ t"" :io 11 1~ J"' it;,, , !'T DU Jee: hnt to central r t c o r d s rency and bills ISSUed by local ,~, r,, 1; U 4 oa l:1 ~:i° i; ~ l~ ·~ A~,,•C J: l~ Ji : 21 ;1 ' _: ~ 1:~,,~"; lo'° d t I b k d no1v I MH »Stn G~ I " l2l A!Amlf l•t l•.i I•"' 4• 1''-l"'lllYwl handles a ccounts recel\.lblf state an na 1ona an s ur Gunv •ct t•>srntry • •llUJ1A11!•CP 1~ ,. ,r·'i 11 11,.,." 11.,, •• ,111 tr.nsactlon' In S.cood' .nd Ing the wildcat era of the au Gi~ 1 u • 10 Sh•"' Fd 1 CJ 11 OJ !1'::t~ ~' J • ,1,, ~r,.1 1f • • \.o llY "~"t' aul! P D J 17 l lf Sl'lt 11'10 df•I Ga Al !Ollw I Ji\ I• • t 11•~ 'I Oii lected records b" a sing\! Federal Reserve Board 11nd :::11 ftuG !.!' • 51 "~' c c ; •1 : n :1 d~Mll~ ~ •1 u 1f'"' 1' lit.) -; ':~E~111111 : n I AI UH ·' UST d Y • F •t~d 5'1JMAt dMl!il! ,~""tt ,n '-•v P11, simultaneously updates all af m1i:l l800 .!I 11nd notes of the ,.~ .~~" : !; 0 0, ~:''"'~ • .O • n All1nE1fi 111 U 11v~ fl'• ,," " 11~ ~ ' ., ..or1ct To c11erT011 transact1on The system pro reasury an evtn ~me J~~ft tt' 1: 1 _, H1rc • •1 • n 1. t "" Pd ,, 1 '""' 1 , 'l , = : l~~f,.!: " 1u~1•1ot1 cou111r o• Tiii ''"'' ~ 000 r, c, 1 ,, 1 b 1 , early Bank of American notes l11111•c1 1 n JI '•<• •, •,, ! "•" o:osir t ., '' n"" J? ,, \ -"' iwnP •' 1 STATl 0, ULlll'OllCIA 'Oil 4N ~ r,1nv ,.. Sl>t•" 1• l "" .. , ~ 5UI># 110 I• I • 7 NA F11!1 SI ~ T111 co~:T: :~1e1tANCl1 transactions per day ofr:~~lycoi~~e~d a;n~e:~~~r."~ ~ld':r li~ H ff :~:m,.80" ~i f. Jltl ::Z~ic.,ioo: 'J ~~: H~ Hl01o -• i:r;G:l,~.;: E•1t~ e< eo1rM J HUl-•"r Guest! are welc:omt to II 11u1111 •11 1o 11 s !"'• Funo• ••o• 111() , .. •? ""' 01""-" <><:•CDI 1.u c.c1111c1 tend th• meet1na and can nb-owe their value to un1quents.!I s. ,... 5 01 1 s. •• 1 • 6l • •i A,•.•, '"i• .e 1 u., 1,,' 1 ,. ... oc:• 11 1o ,, •• ••cE '' "''''' G'"'" •• '"' • R l -· lJ XI>• M lnv••I 11 DI 2 e7 " J(I ll 11" > '/'• O·"• ' ,. • " b Ill Ont hi ll'te 177R Onf! ~ n~~"'11 P o. l 1111 1" '51 .,..,. • it ,w, 20 ~ It• 10 + .. !o t<~ln ''"•• cftll!lllor• ol IM 1ti.ove ~1mll9 <11t•d•~' lain Ill reservation Y ca n& I h h Ovn• 116 •si m t~ 8 105,101,AmE• •'J'° • • • ·· 00 .,~ '"° "'" • 1 " ""'' "'""' • • "'' t •• "11 ,,,. Mr Oscar J Jlmenez 1t (714 ) Dollar piece n w 1c cur ltldu11 '1'tl • M sw 11 .. , 1 51 t 11 AmH~u 1ll •3', ., , • ~. d 1 • ''I a1a P ~> • ··~ dtCHtnl ... ·-u .... to • • ,,.... Jj-.1 lncem • tJ 6 Jl $Win GI J ,. I" ....... M pfJ JO H tJ.., I? ., • 0 ! ~•All! 51 "'""" IM fllCIUf ... .._ ... I " "'' etflt t 547-8371 renev IS m1sspe Cl.I v,~1 • 11 • JI Sov• lflV \)" 1• 5 A.Al ~ I NI 133 " 11, " • "' "' li1d flf 111t tl«k Ol lllt •l>Ow •"'1 1C1 tlll.!'1 "'!------------------------------"-•t~tl V1 1\ 1J 11 :11 SPIC!,. 10'1 IM Am A.I I -117 31 i :161'> JI -:1 el°"~ I •O. -••••~t "'"" with 11'1• flf(tntrt f"1! fnv1s!111,. 51Fr"' GI 4 ,t!IAle~o :lOe !l !I ,,.,, \J, , eten!ll 160 _ -· ~11<0 , .. 1 n ,1 t. ftrnd1 tl'O ~ltJ lt JI' 1' I e • 1nc1 tO -..d'>lr1 lo tM .,_.,II...,. ti lflt OftlCt .,. rw111 t f6 10 11 Sl•I• St 15 ' .. JO A.mld(!I 1 lt •J o i., oJ • <Jlo !o, In ou 15 ,. l'IH Ill-~ At.ICf MOOll.f: QI Teet I 11 t M llttGmt n i<~n11 A'"ll<lltM If ,.' )f\o lf"' Jfl, .. • et! In Dll.ff lfthell'llM NO 1 I Cer ... t Ot Mt• Cttll •it Mi.ti 119 I OJ "-"' Incl ) I J fl • .., Ct~ l lO J4 ll<.. ll>t _ 0 1s 1 •Otl "'2J;" er ll.11T~n .. 11-oe 11.t!C'T~ "'"'' NII "" I '" ,4.l.511 E I 11-1.ll A , ... .,il. l".I ' ,,.., ~.. H ... • • i.---... 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Dn•f< '° """""~ ttr l •KV!rl• , t 11 I Tw~c Gt l 03 l l1 ll Homt 1 TO •1 11 • 11 • ' :, ~ on Edit l M ,.,.11111c1 °''"'" c..11 01 "' •11111 • ..,,,.. ! lll 1 tw .. c '"' l ta , 11 A Ho,,.,. o•' 1 q• 't •nl>t 111v. ~ 1a1l " , C)cl<!Mf lJ " :rt .... Nov-Mr t i''""" .. 10 ., USllA r.1 10 5110 n Am Ho1~ " ~ 1' Jllo ll. ' I on Ed'~ l u1o n s & 1 ,.,, u i Ge¥5• 1ou 1011 Am1""'' so. .SI 1,..,, 11 t-o 17 , .._ 1111£ 111c11 ''" '" ~... ""IV~ I Un ' Mui 0 )I 11 J.j . Mldlt• 1) 101 J(•\ )1 • JI' .j. Dfl ,d, I ill l"Dr1ltr • N • n Un 1unt1 10 n 11 JO A MHl<ore lll 11t1 !I" i• • ., Fd llf• 50 LEGAL NOTICE ,,.,,. ~f< u~ Oft Svc Grt • Mt!Ct> I 1~ ,71j 111. '', I"' 111 1111 ~'"~r 1 ,lrillfo • ll •" llrtiAd Jo d IS 1't A MtlCt• II I • 11 l" , I t J Of' LUll"t ' •1•" In'" N11 1~v 111 1 t1""' Melllf• J!f 1' 7'1 '' 1 enN•IG 111 NOTICI TCl CllOltOIJ O"' $t I JI lj !.I U Ct• 10 t1 1" AN~IG•1 'Jtl !II lt.'9 :i. lll" '4 on1 •""'t'J IU!'S:lllO• COUIT OP. THI &ttllF.d A .]I 01 Wh!f~ J 11 It u All'fl0V ltl 1d •1 ~ •f!O CJ\. lllll'w ~'' ITiT• OP ( .. ltl'OlllMI" JOll son '"' ltld 1 'i "to Unh-O 1'\ttld! A"' $.o>•I 11 •S 1 '-""-•, i. llllP'" Ill• T~•COUMT'l'OP:Oll'AN91 ~ ....... lJ&<)l~ A<fm 11• 1•1 ""' Sl'llD Mlll "J.j Jl>o J)I• °"'"c' \' Nt A"6ll H•mlto" (1>11G• j~llJ))A~mftllll !XI 11 I•' It) U•• Of>'" '° t l~1lt el •• , ... M l!IO!ltfl ollfl k-u ~~:-· :!J ::i CINI 11'1: \ ~l U •I A"'iri:' 10 JI l• ll t Jl'1 -• ~~?c"oe°'~ •f.lotn l1t-!!lttt111 oee .. ~.., EAC RY IMll'll 1oi. !ff lncll'ft 1a u 10.,!'",1' ~~: ,i 13 ' lJ' 131 on tore'~ MOTICl ll 1-<fft:EtY 01\'tN le 1111 ~ti r: Jlff\ ~~I~~ l:f ~c A11d :."°'..11 >It~~,_ U''l1 ~ :~: ::l"1!J! U'Mlllrl °'"" ttwlw ... ...._ 1111:1'11•"' "!fdl) ";, ,~, )U F~c·~ 111 , ........ M~ I 't ,, -JO• JO'\ onl JI }!; .. , •II --hl~fll tl1lm1 lltlfltl"" COSTA MESA M..,.. 111!\IVt l! • .,. Lint F~ Al&.T.., ... , ,.,_, "~ ,, + • ""' '"·~· •1111 .......... 11• tMUlrot '9 fllf !lleffl MfflO .. 72' JJ1 lltl ~ I HI .,,.A,., f'&.l 1.t 1711 '3 •7't qi, ... '-t nMfln-.. "'"'""'M<lti.to'_N .... .,,heHkt HorM111 ,,,llt.l't ll!c(ll'tl •It ltSAmJ .. T .,i I !'It""' Jjt f;"' lllllXii(~ " .. , .. ~" .. ,,.., -~-• o-·f1 ., ICM '-Int I If t fO '" Slj 1 t l.31 l.W•!Wl ... 1:1 I)~, 1jt )lo Dnl I > ., ""'"' "" ..,.,,_ -1$1 Qr-9nc1 """••on I IS\> I IJ 1111t !" < ... ,,_, "'-•I"' tM MUAI,.,. Gl'Wlll J 11 0 If 'ti':. rl, 1,. Am•!" IGf 1' 11'41 ur, 11 ~ !l:..,f.f::"~ -..d'lerl.. '9 lllf .,...,II_ t i tlw. effl«I '!<Of'\ I.ti t U " AM~ ll'IC 1 J!l 'l • O(I , 11 o I\ .,..,, llll.14,lrill.WOC)O tool'M•ADll:lMSON -"------------------------------~! '""" '~ 11 11 1111 :::c.fm l?l 100;A"''o< If/ '~ n .. 17~ ,,..,_.... nO.I I .. -... ,',,0:.'!'.10°'',..w,.,"",•, ....... ~~I 1.:l"), II~ l k. t0 IO 11111 I)! '-16 I DI ::: .. ~ ~. ~ ':'" .s::: 5:lo _! "t :--,;::i, l ~ ....-n .,., ... ., lmt>~;ie l»l~IV•fll!I Ill l f)IAfftllfltC"'• tll II 11., Ulo -'f _.,l~l •O M !l\tlltl1Mlllldf<1 ..... 111 tll 1•11~ II>('"'"' lf.JI' ff ~'"!',' •,M.1',~A'"•!tf !If U ~·· )ll -> llOllf'\it~' .,.,,,1111111 wi t11t "'''" .i 1114 ~"' lft(" ftei 1 "'' ~ .. A"'''' -'' ! 1 1t " o =tr 11.n """""" teur "'Of'"'-• t!'lff "'' f\'11 1111uo1rt t n • ,vr~l"I •11 ••>A,,.,1 .. efll 1} 1 ~ ti 1 1 *1,,,; !1'11 .-r;utlftn fl.,,,.""kt Kids Love Uncle 1Nf~"' 1, tonw·" G , ... ·nA'"''""'ll& 10 .Ml1 H )I ... , ::11:~ :•ii .. , .. O<...-ll !f'1 ~ >1 '11,j..,WttllM !lJ1S1 ""''"'XI IR w, •• n. llll!'lct -''•'• ,,,....., ., u t_\5 wtm11t n a-"""c""" -. l• 1 •l '"-· -" • orcrw-. CL'l'Df Ml l'LOn1N c--1111111 l!•ef• ?Cl1'1U Ancl'IH«l 1 JI' > ,, , U l-~ ewt~ Com l!Jr1<uter __,,.,..... I 1 11 tt OJ vo l "" U JI Atl(e<') ,,,. 11 14\o • 1"• -,. l«"ft ..JO Ill "" .. II fll "" s d . '"~f\le"I (%r(ly1> Mllft 11 ll u ,, "~ ci.¥ I,., 1 II • '"" •I . -( Intl 1.Je •-,.."'.,.. ~ Le t o' ...,, I~ $J1 '•<""' 1 n All•t~Kie 1i l: ~'· IJ n ~ • ·~ '~ tc.1•W000.10o••••D•l•Mt• n, a ur ay m. :~ .~·~:; ~:·.i 11i':~ri~~~c~~, ,l ,. '~"' i~1 i~,r··.~111,-,i """ 01f1t1 ... Uf1 Ste« 1• 1' :it\ ll W•n111 '\ f 1' 1~ ~;"'; ~ 11 ~ r~ ~jl ~ ~ " "' ... ...,.~<•""' ''!!It• 11;,,,..c w~~ ,, ''"';;..'\ -¥•~ I , .. ,,, 1,_ .. ,=~~,:, .. ,,., th DAILY PILOT S•l•t' 1tt 1e11wti• ln(I J •1 ', ,~rvc ,1, ~ '"'"" 111 , ,., .. 1• i1PWte11 .,, .,,.,.....,. t.r '''"""" e \I• .., t"' • "lw!~c~ ~· Ju s s 'tt•I __ 1tJ ,, , !''• 1(, _ " ':r:~~·:.,'"•'r ~tf\M o ... _ e..11 Otl!V ~,.. "-" -"" 'f.I J •f Wini . f •lit • Q "'"~ D·~ I ,,,~ "' ,,., -,, !I • "' -• '" I 5 rl .. \\lo( r1 ,,. T0t ,1"'!:'1t__I~.,,_ u .,,.. ""'-,, ~ tJ .,. " • "' 11¥'1' , lfl w~•lfl ''! t1 ••IJ •r~ 109 " 1ro u\li ~. ''" X ;"";:: ___________ _:•:n:.C~.J.------------------------------JJ o.11~,1 p 1J1•11" t 1:1t11 1,11~1 OStr .Jt ~ Ji J1 I ll'T"!lf:~·h r \ '1 .,: • • • r 1'171 Thursda}''s Closing Prius-Complete New York · Stock Exchange · List DAil V 1'11.Dt S11t1 -Old•, Hit~ Lew Clett c~ .. ( I - J8 DAILY PI LOT Friday, Novembtr 5, 1971 . .. • Costa Mesa Store ONLY Sears Comfortable Slumber Bag Low Priced! 697 Du rable cotton top. poly· ester filled . Re\'er~es to solid color. ~'lull1·color flora l. Low priced. \ CUT ·'27 to '5·7 ! Men's Suit Values Wer• 3ror$100 $OO 10190 or 3S.88 each You r choice of single or double brea sted styles in many fabri cs. In mens· sizes. !\tens' Furnishings Dept. Sporting Good •. s::D::•:P'::_· -:-:::-::~:;_:-~.,---' -SAVE <6! S.4VE 3JC! Sears 126 Print Film Jlegular 8 8 i> SLJ9 'r' £tock up nov.' in time ror the holidays with film from Sears! 12 exposure~. Ca mera Dept. . .,.,,~ . .," Iii . . ' .... ~.._ '! '·~. \. .., I • •• .lilt . . ,.... .I. L_j,' '-~,.,~r!l. .. ~If) SAVE 'IO! 4-Ligbt Ceiling Fixture Regular $16.95 699 Big 4·1ight ce iling fixture uses 4. 60 v.'att bulb~. SA VE nO\\' at Sears! Electri~al Dept. SAVE ·'6! Door Mirrors Regular 5ss $11.98 l4>:50·1n. elegant 1 1-in . plate glass door mirror ~:ilh be\·eled edge. Lamp and China Dept . Ted Williams Sleeping Bag Re~~lar . 2488 Standard size sleeping bag of Dura-Puff pol.,·· ester fiberfill . 34xi5. $34, 4lx80 ..•... , •. '.?6.88 $38, '40x85 .•....... 28.88 Sporting Goods Dept. SAVE '20! English Dinnerware Set Regular 1988 $39.00 Blue and gra y floral d~ co ration v.•ith v;hite em· bossed roccoco border. Ironstone. 45-pc . set. Lamp and China Dept. SAVE <4 10 <20! Christmas Trees llegular S8.99-Sl9.99 4ii_19ss '\'our choice of 4. 7. S·ft . :-c~tch pine. 7-ft. flocked :-cotch pine. Fla1ne proof. Tri m Shop SAVE'llO! 3/4-HP Reconditioned Paini Compressor • \\'heftN~v -5 9 9 1!09.99 Ideal for around lhe hou:-e and forhobb1e:-: Lov.. \01,· pnced at Searti~ Paint Dept . _:....J ~ ·')): L:::0 1 ; 0~' r---- ' ~' SAVE$JQ,t'l 15! Scratch and Dent Sale $2i4.9S Automatic \\1asher, 10 Cycle', $159 %-Speed. 128802 ........ , , , . , ...... $244.95 Gas Dryer with ElectronJc $159 Se nsor. N78802 .•..•..•••.......... $%54.95 Automatic Washer,.6 Cycle, 2-Speed. 120702 .•....•......••• , •• $150 $159 "' $159 $179 $87 $219 $149 5274 .95 Automatic Washer with bleach, rinse ~ispenser.128804 •••••.•..•.•.• S?44.9S Gas Drye r with "Soft ·Heat'1 Cycle. !78801 , , , , . , , . : , .. , , , , $239.95 Auto. Washer. 129750 .. , ... Sl69.95 Electric Oryer. 660MKI •• , ••••• '304 .95 Automatic \Vasher with Soak _Cycle. IW&~ .•••.... · .....••..••. '$189.95 Gas Dryer, "Soft·Heat" Cyclf!. f79760 ••••••••• , , .••• , ••••• S?t9.95 Automatic \\'asher ~·Ith $199 Ri'nse Disptnser.120610 ••.•.•••...• Sl99.95 Gas Dryer •·itb ''Soft.Heat'' $169 Cycle. Ji0600 •••••...••.•••••••• 5264.95 Automatic \\'asher. #20663-.: •• $219 Sl79.95 Gas Drye r, 3 Heats. #70400 .... $149 S304.9~ Au tomatic Washer. 10 Cycle, ... $259 %-Spe•ds. 121856 ............... , , SlS9.9S Ga! Dryer. Full. Size. NiOllO ..• $139 $Z39.9S Automatic Washer. #29750 .... S2&4.95 Gas Dry~r. Sears Best. #71 900 ••••••.......... !!59.95 Automatic \Vasher "'i1h Se lf Cleani ng Llut Filte~. 1%0660 .•....... S219.95 Gas Dryer, \\'rinkle Guard. 670070 .••••...•........... $279.9~ Automatic Wa5her "'ilh Roto Swirl Agitator. 1!1800 ............ . $199 $229 $219, $169 $239 S22:'9.9S Elec tric Dryer ""'it h $189 Eleclroni c.Seoso r. 161850 .•....... , . $199.95 Automatic \\'a5 her. NZO:.oo .••• $189 $239.95 Gas Dryer "'Ith Electroni c $199 Sensor. 171800 .......••..•. , ..... $229.95 Portable Wa sher, $209 !-Speed!. #17000 .. , •..••.......... \Ii Sl'l' Ila nt•ou s 2 1or65t.8·Pac k 8 '99' Light Bulbs . . . . . . . . for $21.95 Electric Fondu Pot. Limited Quantity . , , $9 .99 Mixed Paint, Asso rted Colors .... .11.88 .. 1.88 Gal Was 535·s.11 Water 17 99 Spinning Re~I . . . . . . , $1.19 Utility Fuel !Limit 4 59 t Cans Per Customer) . . . . . Gal. $50 .49 New Moon Chi na 24 88 4i·Pc. Se rvi ces 8 . . . . . • Set $6 Panty Girdles. While, Sizes S·M·L·XL !Nol all 3 99 sites in all styles). . • • • • $5.77, 32-Pe. Glass-2 88 ware Set. Colors . . . . . . • $16.93 Chrome Reverse 10 88 R im s, 14-in. Size • • • . . • ' $199 .9; Mini -Bike, 4·HP $139 Model 8078 .. .. . ..... 539.98 Blossom Time China .19 .88 s.1 • 12 H ONE DAY ONLY! • Saturday, November 6th ·· 9 SAVE$30,o·~J34.! Scratch and Dent Sale $449.95 Relrig;rator, 18·Cu. Ft. f 6134% , 359 • 88 11&9.95 Refrig erator, 10-Cy. Ft. N68100., $100 $439.95 Refrigerator, IS.Cu. ft. 359 88 Top Freeier 161841' •• , • , • • • • • $3l4.95 Refrigerator, 17-Cu. Ft. 269 88 Top Freezer N61712. , . • . • • . • • . $444 .95 Refrigera tor, 18-Cu . Ft. 359 88 Top Freeier #61846 • . • • • . . . • $399.9:> Refrigerator, 18-Cu . Ft. 319 88 Top Freeier #61820 . . . • . . . . • $%74 .95 Refrigerator, JJ.Cu. Ft. 239 88 Top Freezer N6131? •••.• , . • . • $18'.95 llelrig•ralor. R.6 Cu. Ft. 159 88 Top Freezer N90820 •. , , • • • • • $339.95 Sidr-by·Si de Refrigerator, 309 88 14.R Cu . Ft. #61110 . . . . . . . . . . • !349.9:1 flcfri)leralor . IR·Cu. f't. 259 88 Top Freeze·r #61310 ... , ... , , • $439.9.i R erri~C'ra1or. 18-l:u . Ft. 259 88 Top Freez er ~61R40. . . . . . . . . • S~39.9j Hefri ~era tor. 18-l'u. Ft. 359 88 Top 1-·re<'ter #61840 . . . . . . . . • Si39 .9~ Si de·h,\·~ide B.efrigeralor, 659 88 .o.6.cu . ft. ~61080 . . . . • . . . . • S3J4.9.) Refri11:erator. !j·~u. Fl. 279 88 Top F reezer t6!.1.4 ..... , . . • 5~39,9;; Refrigeralor. 13-Cu. 1-·1. 199 88 i:op Freezer .ffillOO ... , . . . • • $299.9:1 Refri~r ra tor , Jfi.('u. F"t. 229 88 Top 1-'rrezer f61 6.l0 .. , . . . . . • •• $Zi4.9j llefrigerator, ll-Cu. Ft. 219 88 Top Freezer w6 1314 .•••• , • . • $444 .9:. Refrigerator, ~8-CtL Ft. 359· 88 Top Frtezer ~61842 ..• •. , . , , • Si24 .95 Side·b~··Side Rrfrigera tor, 659 88 23.Cu. Ft. N68084 . . ... . . . • . . . • $559.9:1 Sidr·h~·~id~. Refriaera lor, 504 88 21.4-Cu. Ft. w60064 • • . • • • • . • • $384.95 Refrigerator, Ii-Cu . F't. $250 Top Freezer #69642 , •• , •.•.• I FREEZERS Scratch and Dent Sale SA VE -~3 5 to .'f.·70 ! Sl59.9; Chest Free~r, 124 88 6.6-Cu . Ft. #11 6 ... , , • $129.95 Upright Fre zer, 9· 4' 88 3.9-Cu. Ft. #210 ••.•.. , , ,$299.9; Up•ight Freezer, 229 88 15:3·Cu. Ft. #2124 , • • . • $349 .95 Chest Freezer, 289 88 22.1-Cu. Ft. #1164 . . . • S319.95 Upright Freezer, 249 88 17 .0·Cu. F t. #2044 , , . . , $349.95 Upright Fre~zer, 279 88 19.5-Cu. Ft. N21>4 .. , . • ' SAVE $3295 Contemp 'Jra Regular $199.9; 1-landsorne rnodrrn ~ofa opens 1nlo co111!ortoble lull· ..;;1ze bed \\'i th '.!20-l'Oil inner~pring mat tre!>s. Choice nf lnn2·"'·ea rin,2 pla1tl \'ec1ra !I tO!efin fiber I or ea!'y• t·are vin~·I cover. Re\'er.~ible polyurethane roam sea t cushion~ Reces~ed caste r~. Corner Studio Group for Family or Teen Room Sears LO\\', LO\\' Price! 139 88 • Tn·o contemporar:-i 3·in.1oun,1?es "·ith polyurethane foam maures,es and f oundallons for comfortable ~eating or sleC"ping. • Qui !led ScotchRa rd @I I rC"a IC'd print c:ove rs. vin~·I bases Foan1 Idled bol'-lc r~ • \ra!nut f1ni.;;~ p\a-.uc tnp cornC"r !able T\vin.Size Mattress Sets ' Regular i'9 4 9 8 8 Po\~·urethane foam sleep sets. l\'on·alle rgenic. Attracti\'e covering. Cl'T '3 0! Now on Canop y 49ss \''hill" fl'renth prav11t- !"11l !lyllng Full I»' tw111 i\t~t~hine piPCe! a1 rtduced pr11:es • Sears COSTA MESA ONLY ONE GIANT DAY ' HOUR SPECTACULAR . · 9 :30 AM to 9.:00 PM ..ir,ary-Style Sofa Sleeper ;,.- Modern Double Studio Lounge SAVE'40! Regular Sll9.95 7988 • Rerersible· scat cushi"on. Black vin,1,·l and hounds· looth check color combination. Ideal for fa1nily room. den or sma ll apartrnent s. !\fakes 2 singl e beds or 1 double bed. \\'ith ball·l,\'Pe casters. I SAVE 'l10! -· . .• . ~ ...... ' "Sears-0-Pedic" King Size Sleep Sets Regular $279.!l:> lnner-spring sleep sets in king sizes. !\lulli· colored. Limited quantities. 16988 SAV£'10! Maple Rocker •·•"" 19ss $Tt,ti ~p1ndlt bark rockrr rn S.!ll~m-Maple ftn• 1sh. Charmlngdtt;i\ on hradrnt. Curved arms and turntd lrrs. frl4a,J, NO¥tmber .5, 1971 DAILY-PILOT Jf r···············-·········~~---, I · i : THE FIRST 2SO LADIES : FREE DRAWING llepo,.it Tilt " ~lip ln 0111-. .. Jl'\\'t'll'y Dcpartrnrnt and \'ou l\la r Be The J.uckv \\'inner of a ·rv.ro Ca rat Simwlated [) 1 'a n1 o nd. rour· of These Beautiful Stone~ ·\\1111 Be Given .A11·ay During Our Birthday Celebration I I ; I To Present Thi s.Coupon in Our Jewelry Depart-1 1 ment Will Receive Absolutely FREE A 3/4 Carat 1 I White Sapphire I' I I "AME ·-' ~------------------------------J AODRESS--------------t CITY---------------1 .. , HEY, KIDS! PHOXE llra .. ini \\ill Be Held ~londay. '.\01t-mbi'r J. \\inner :01ited. .~Of Be Pre~rnl. Stirs aM Alluatt Empl113te1 ind Their Familit s Are :'loot F,li1lblt. Meet Miss Mary Ann King 01 K.C.O.P. TV · Romper Room School NO PHONE ORDERS;, ~ksE Hurry! _Some Quantities Limited! !0·30·AM to 2:00 PM In Our Toy Department •• llorn e Entl·1·tainn11·11t Bu~~ Floor Models And Demonstrators SAVE ·~-:10,1·1ao: Off Regular Prices $89.95, 16-ln. Black and · 39 95 White TV (!Only)...... , $i9.95. 9-ln. Black anil 49 95 White TV (I Only) . . . . . . , $99.95. 12-ln. Black and 69 95 White TV (I Only) . . . . . . ,. $l09.95 .. 12-ln . Black a nd· 79 95 White TV (I Only ) . . . . . . , $119 .95, 16-ln. Black and . 89 95 White TV (I Only ) . . . . • . , $159 .95, 19-ln. Blac k and 99 95 White TV (I Only) . . • . . . • '$179.95 , 2l·ln. Black and 119· 95 White-'TV (1 Only) , • . . . • $195 .95.11-ln. Portable 138 95 Color TV (I Only) . . . • o $259.95, 12-ln. Color 179 95 .TV, (I .Onl y)....... , $289.95.15-ln. Portable 199 95 Color TV (I Onlvl . . . . . , $349.95, 16-ln. Portable 249' 95 Color TV 11 Onl y) .. , . , $329.95, 18-ln. Portable 259 95 Color TV (I Only I •.• • • , $389 .95 .18-ln. Portable 249 95 Color TV (I On lvJ •• , • , $389.95, 18-!n. Portable 269 95 Co lor TV 11 Only) , . • . , $329.95 , 18-ln. Portable 279 95 Co lor TV 11 Onl vl . . . . , $439 .95. l8'!n.'RemoteControl 339 95 Portable Color TV (I Only) • --$4'59.9>,20-ln. Portable 349 95 Color TV I I On ly) . . . . , $539 .95, 23-!n. Console 439 95 Color TV (I Only) • • . . • • $579 .95. 25-ln. Console 389 95 Color TV (1 Only) . . . . . , $669.95 ;25-ln. Console Color 489 95 TV in many styles (4 Only) • , ~69ii~r~!~t~~.p~~~r: ..... 269, 95 $299 .95, Spani sh e redenza Stereo W /8-track recorder 259 95 (2 Only ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , $459.95, Spanish and Colonial 369 95 Style Stereo (1 Onl y) • • . • . • $119.95 Console Chord 89 95 Organ (Z Only) • • .. • .. . . • $739.95, 25-IA. 669 95 Console TV'(! Only)........ • Many other outstanding bu ys on Components, Radios and Phonographs. Outstanding Ha rd\\ a rl' Buys Assorted Hammer Handles •..... 15~ 159.95 Companion 39 95 Edger· Trimmer... . • • .. . . , $1.29 White Glue, 16-oz .•••••• 44 c Separately Priced $26.54 19 99 Craftsman 30-Pc. Socket Set , $7.99, Companion Vise, 3¥!-in. size ..•. , •..... $2.99, Companion 6-Pc. Screwdriver Set ...... . 4.88 1.99 . Craft sman 3-H .P. 64 99 $99. Lawn Edger· Trimmer , Long Handle Garden Shovel ...... 99¢ . ' \'a1·1111n1 Cll'an!'r Bu\' 10%,o5 0 %0FF Regular Prices Floor Models and Demonstrators Sewing Machines-Vacuums ~!1~f\·~·a·n·d· ~'~·c·u·u·~· ............. 6.45 ~it!fir~~i_s.h::~ ......•......... ~ 11. 45 $39.95 Porch and Patio Vacuum 22 45 CJea ners (J Only).......... , ~it~~' r.0.~~'. .s."~~~~ ............ 16. 45 ~J~;~; ~.~r.i~~t.V~~~~~ ......... 88.45 ~~~:~.~~~i~~.1 .~~~~~.~ .......... 88. 45 f l~!j~.~~~i~·h·t .~~~~~.".' .......... 68. 45 Sewing Machine Values $249.95 Portable Automatic $189 Zig ·Zag 11 Only I ......... , ~fii!i;,,~t '.a.igh·t ·Stit~~ :.~'.t~·b·I ~ ...... $59 n~:~~~~'.i~~ .c:~·'.'. ................. $6 fi~nl~~ ~~~~~~hc_Zi.g-~~.g ........ $199 ~l ~.~llg~.t'.".e.i~~~ .~i~--~~~ ............ $99 Sheer Stretch Panly Hose Super 2 SJ \"ah1e for Shl'l'r sl r<>tch pan(~· ho~<' in ba re bei11:c. sun!'et. and n1ocha . One llize fits all. Hosiery Orpt. _ __;~--·" :...---~ 54 11 "' ')-r·· . , ........ .., c lo 66Y, ! Bra Clearance "'"''"' 2 s3 St to S4 for .\ c;:<:orltuenl of n<i\111 al 1·11p."-. l'On!our and p<1d - 1le1I .<;l_\·J<>>:. A. B. C. rup-:. U. Ctip Si7.('.~ .... t fnr $~ Rrl'I and Girdle [)cpl. (~ ' ' SA Vt:'l to '6! Ca nva s Shoes R•~ular 2 r $3 $2 .99 to ,~.99 or or 1.67 Pr. cu~hioned in-:olc and her!. Rubhf'r --olrc;. \lens, n1t'n'. \\'Olllt'O<;. bO\":i. child ren~· :-i zr~. · ~hoe r>rpt. SAVE ·'2 to '3 ! .i\ssorted Nig ht\\·ear He~ular 3 97 S6 to 5& Choo,'>{' f rnm ~hi ft ~O\\'MS, habv doll .:, and lnnll:" go\\·n~. Si7.es S .. l\l.. L. l.i ng erie l)l'pl. a I Roys' -Studen ts' Ski S"·eaters Sea r~ L-Ow 3 66 Price Pullnvrrs \\'ilh imrress1ve jacquard·s t.v\e yoke. As· sorted colors. 8 to lR. Boys' \\'ear Dept. Cl'T SS %! Boys' Denim Jeans Were 67" $1.0 v Polyester and cotton jca ns. 3 color.s . l\1achine $79 95 K S · D k ( · ) "·ashable . 2-6X. ( 1 OnlyJ .e.~~·o·r·e·. ~~~·~·g· .. '.s ... ~~ ~~ .. $29 Infants and Childrens ' ' Dept. -·11--=~-.,-I -, .-,;-,-:3:!-=-se-ar-s~-=--._-_,.,:__~~=,,,,.., Range Sale-S.4 VE ~J 00 f Double Knit Fabric Re2ular 2 s5 $399.95 Double Oven, 299 95 A.utomatic.177400 ••• ,. ~ •••• ,.. • • • • fi;\ii~ .~?~~~~ .~~·~~'. ~.''.t0.".'~~'.~ 254. 95 Ask About Sears Convenient CAdit Plans. SAVE '70! Regular $79.95 Classic 9 95 Style Hood, Coppertone ( 5 Only). . . • SA VE'30! · Regular $239.95 x~~e.r ... o.~~t ... r. ?~~~'.".~~~~~ ..... 209. 88 $j.98 yd. Pern1a·Prest double knit fabric in handv 60·in. \ridths. Fall cOlori>. SA Vt: 61 c !"Lisa and ''Ka smyl lon"Yarn Rc~ula ; 7 7 I> $U9 V • Ideal for swea1crs. In f·Ol. skein~. 4·ply, ~toth-. proof . ~1achine v•ashablt NoLion Dtpl. 3333 Bristol Street-i .Costa Mesa Phone: 540-3333 ' . • ' • • • • • ff"' OAILV PJLOT Frld•y, Ncwmblr !, 1971 ... Baylor Pulls Down Curtain on Playillg Careet LOS ANGE:Ll::S IAP) -Elgin Baylflr has• pu lltd doi,1·n the cur1t1in on his epic playing taretr ln !ht N11llonal 811.!!ktlball Asi:ociat1on, all 13 years In thP color~or lht l...o.<1 Angtlts Ulkcrs. Raylor, 37, anrl the tc<1rn t:aptain, i;aid 'rhursda\' he "11s rctir1njt as an act1\'e pl~yer but \\'ill rcn1a1n wilh the Lakers another thrcP years in scnuling and p~blic rrlalions acliviti.es. Jack Kent Cooke. nwncr of the Lns An2rlts club, said Ra~·lor"s No. 22 jcrsry will be reti red forPvtr. During hi~ professional carter af!er graduation from Seattle l.J n1vers1ty as an Old Driver, Hot T1·evino Rip Cou1·se t.IEXICO. CITY (AP I -···rm just drE1ng it so straight I can't hr1p but 5C'Ore good. I get on somf': of them narrow holes and JU!t automRticRlly i:zo !o the old drl\'er and hit it right down the middle." Ltt Trevi no. admitlrdly ";i lilt~ weary." was holdin.ii: forth ilF!Pr shoolin,11 I brilliant. SPVPn-undPr-p;ir fi.) Thursday foT a thrtt·slrnke lead in the rirst round of the ~1exican i\:itinn;il Open ~olf lourn:iment . Tre1•inn. ii hcal'.1• f;11·nritr tn ;idd thi! nat ional 1ille In hi i; 1·nl!rrl1nn nf British, Arherican and ("<inadian Open crowns, didn"t miss a Jairway and d1dn"l miss a gret'n in his stunning eff~rt over !ha 7.f74-yard Club de r.olf course, ca!li"'d by many pros one nf the wnrld"s hesl. "1 said when I came. in here rd like to shoot 10 or 14 under for the tournament," the 31.'year-old Trrvlnn 1?,rinned. "Well, l"m on my way. ··t came in here playing good and r took a look at the course and I said. 'Helt, I can play this lay&Ut.' l\"s a tip.ht course and I like light cou rses ·· Re put together his remar\rnhle effort de~pite a bo~cy on the first hole. He, three-putted v.·hen a camcriiman jumpffi in .his line as he v.·as mak ing his second sh9t. "Thal l!,OI me. hot." he said, "but it really got me going . I lnld myself, 'You've ~ot 71 more holes to play and you might shoot 'cm in nothing . So I Just cafmed down.·• three strokes baek And tied for S<'Conrf ln fhe American-dom inA!cd event were Rocky Thompson and veteran Billy ft1ax-·well~ along "'ilh f\.texicu's Juan Neri Rnd Ernesto Perl!z Acosta and Ang el GAiiardo ()f · Spai1t·· R.H. Sikes had a 119 wi1h tour regul;irs Bnb Rosburg and Larry Ziegler and clu b prO Jim Barker of San Ant onio, Tex., al 70 ""I thouj!hl I had a pretty j!ood sco re.'' Th'ompson said. ""But that Trevino is too much." Hr hAd eight hirrfies. l"'icc hi1finli! frnm 12 feet. twice frnm eij!hl ;ind scorinJ! A t"·b-putt birdie nn the par fil'r second. HP ""edi;tcd In four fert 'on the si xth hole And clOSf'd "'•lh bird ies nn tu~ last l\\'O. run· 11in1" in a 20 Font putt rin tbe 17th and lap- ping in from three feet arter a beautiful pitching wedge shot on the 18th. Colts Prexy • l)enies Re11ort Tea111 Movi11g BALTll\10RF: tAPI -A publ1shNl Ar· cobn t thAt the Baltimore tohs football learn \\ill rlrf ini trlv mc11·e 10 t"nh11nhi a, f\fif . for the 1!17:'1 ~·asnn is not true. Str1e· Ro.~enbloom . ('nit~ president. SA1d Thurs- c:h1\'. "\\'e t't'ased 11c,i::o1111111Jns with lhc 1·11.v afjer MP of our cxh1h11ion l!Ame!'t. \\'e are nnl 1n1errstcd 1n rtoJl('n JnR lhf' lhln.I!."' --'R"osenffioom sitTrr o itlk~ 111.lh The Baltimore Park Bo;ird <1bou1 a pn1rt1ce f1eld and ~1emorial St a ri i um 1n1· provemenl$. ''f'he Sun sa1ri in Thursday's mnnun~ editions the Coils dehnitt'ly 1\-"i!i rcl()('ate in Columb111 riespite a ho11rd offer \Vednesday !o build a Sl million practice 5fle in Balt1morf' County. '"Nobody from the pitrk hoarri h11~ e1·<'n called us 10 tell us of the1r -dcclsion 11nd plan.~." Ros('nh!ft(1111 .~r11d. "\\'e kne\\ there 11as j;o1ng lo ilf' a meelinf but 11e 11111 n111 krl!1w !ht' result. The first I hea rd \\as when a reporter cai!ttl. "\\'e are 1ery Lui~ui·e of nUr plans ri~ht no..,, There are ju.tt lf'•o many nlher pieces In cons1def. \\'c rrall~· 1hdn't know yet "'hat "·111 happen ." .~11id tht preslrlent of the National Footb111l I. e 11 g u e American CoofermL~ learn. The 11uggestlon of olrerini: the l'.nlts the pnicliee !lie aros(! 11f1er the team 11n. nounctd il would mov<' 10 CG111mb\11 where l1nd fo r a new 11tarl1um com pl<':t° tips been offered. said Samuel Hopkin_., ~ bn&rd membtr. ;The Colts now practice 111 thf' 11t11dtum bul rluring bR!l!ball ,cf!aSM! they prarlicr al M<'Donnugh High Sthtlol in H;illimnre County. ·The board orfcr C'"ll.1 ror ilht C4'llt.~ In Pfovirit the $1 ml/lion lo bu.v the ~lte •nd build F11rilltlt.11. JI 1190 Y.'OlJld C'llll upon'lhe Col~to 11i~n .11 11/x·ytar conlr11ct lo use Memo'ritl Slad1um for the~r games. All-American , 811~•\or pl11ytd In 846 g;imes. scoring 23, 149 points. )Je. .is.. the !hirrl hij:hest scorer in NBA histQr)'. The 6--foot-S forward w;is .sictJ?l\ned mosl of last year with a pulled Achilles tend"on and had played in nine games this season, averaging I l.8 points per game. '"I had hoped to end 1ny career after one last successful Season." Baylor liAid. "Out nf fai rness In the fans, tn the Lakers and to myself, I have alwilys wan!ed to perform on the court up to !he lf'l'el and up to the standards th11l I have established throughout my c;ireer. "1 do nol want lo prolona my career at 1 time when l cannot rMintain these stand•rds." .Club owner Cooke said "onP. (lf lhe privileges I ha\'e enjoyed as the own('r of the LakerS ha s bttn my association with the man who deserved the reputation superstar as mu ch. as any athlete that has ever lived." . Coach Bill Sharman, who played aga inst Baylor in the' NBA said: "I have always admired Elgin Baylor ;ind kn<1W him to be a superStar. J have found him to be a super person also. I felt that Elgin made a tremendous tffort considering hill many Injuries, including the surgery on his Achilles tendon." Fred Sch.aus, Baylor's former coach who now mari11ges the Lake.rs, said, "l s;iy without reservation that Elg in Baylor 1!1 the greatest Comer man to have ever played professional basketball." Baylor turned in some. spectacular performances on the hArdwood but some of his teamm ates and former teammates gave these personal glimpses ol the basketball great. Hot Rod Hundley, rncalllng when he and Baylor played for the Lakers when at ill at MJnneapolis, I old ot this incident : LAKERS STAR ELG IN BAYLOR ANNOUNCED RETIREMENT THURSDAY BuJJets Owner Refutes CJaim s By Monroe BALT!i\fORE IAPJ -Abe Polhn, owner or the Nation:il Ro:iskrlball A~soc1a­ llon Ral!in1nre Bullet~. empha~l1.rr1 Thursday he harl no intenlinn of lrarling guarrl E:.:lri Monroe ju s t because !he i:uspcnded superstar dnc's not want to play in Baltimore. In a slinging lhrcr·11age ~l<Lt rmrnt refuling claims by i\lnnroc and hi~ A1- lnrney. Larry F\eishrr. Polhn eKprr ssrd his unhappiness \\'ith lhe situalinn. Pollin maintai ned h<' doesn't bcl1r\"r 1n debating ront rovers1e.~ 1n the new~ media. but said he "fe ll he n"•ed 11 tn nll professional spnrls fans to make puhl1c his pnsitinn in the m<1tlt'r ·· The owner rejected Fleisher's pubhc cnntrnlion \hAt Mnnrnr·s desire to be trAded has been a rnat1rr of recorrl rlur- inl! cnn!ract talks durinl! the off.sea.~on ;ind said it was not until Sept. 22 that boll'\ parties got togrlht'r. Jerry Sachs. Bul\els' r.'H'rut1vr \"i<·e president, said hr ialked v.•ith FJc1ti:her Thursday concern1ni;i 1h<' stall1s or rhe C.I· tempted tradl's and hoped to meet \.\'Ith !he lawyer nrx1 11('rk. Polhn sAiri 11 hrn he f1n;illv 1nrt 11.•11 l\1onroe nn Sept. 22 , Ollc d;1\• after c Rullcls opened lheir rrl':-;casOn sched le, hl'\\·;inntormc-d nl tht i;uartl'n!cstr 10 hi' tradl'd -lo Philadelphia, Chicago r 1 "1~ AnReles. Pnl11n al so look shanl is~ue "•Ith R r('- 1·rnt quote attributed In ~lonroe l>y ~111ton t;ro~~. nation1tlly synd1ratrd m!11mn1sf nf the Nr11· York Po~t. :'11onroe w:is qt1nted as ~Aylng · "'fhry f'~f>C'C1 lnyalty to !he nrgan1za11on . b11l the orR::ini~.:ition hAs no Joy;:ilty to ~nu." Ace Montrea! Goalie • Vachon in Ulti1natum -Then Traded to J(ings ~fONTRF.AL (API -l\1onlreal Roit lten- dE'r Rnj!at1cn \lachno. who dclh'ererl a ''pl11~· me or trade me'" ultimatum earlier fhi.~ \\"Pl'k, rcc<'i\•erl hi!' "'ish Thursday ;inti "'as s11·1tppcd b~· the C;inadiens nf lhe: N<1tional Hoc kry League lo the Lns An.i:rles Ki nJ?s for four players. \'aehnn. 26. joined the Canad1rns in 1966-1\7 ;ifler pl;iyinl! 19 games .,.,,ifh the nnw·def11nrl Quebec Aces of the AH L and Hnul'ilnn Af)(lllos of the CHL. The fo l\o"'- in~ sca.~nn he .~harrd lhe Vezina Trophy 11·i1h vctcr;in (-;ump \Vor slcy and playeci in ~9 i;:an1cs, pnsting a 2.48 goals·againsl 111·eragc And four l'ihutout:t;-·r11 Kings traded gonlie Den i s DeJordy, defensemcn Dale Hoganson :ind Noel Price and forward Doug Robinson . The trans11 ctinn left J\·lontre111 "'1th thrl'e goalies -Krn Dryden , Phil "1yre the newly acquired DeJordy. .'den. last ~car"s Conn Smyt he Trophy 'winner as lhe ti.lost \'alu"ab!e Playrr in the Stanley Cup playoff~. ap- pe1tred in all 20 playoff games leadini:z lo ~fOnITTarsSt:filley-CUp-triumph and h11!1 played ;ill but 20 minutes of the games the Canadirns h11ve. played this season. The Lns Angeles lean1 has been shred- ded with i;:o;ils sincr the se.asnn started - 4R in 12 g11me~. \Vednesday ni~ht !he Kina.-. dropperl 11 7·! decision tn the New \'nrk R;ina:ers, lcadl'.'r!'t in the NHL East. Dt'Jnrrfv. 3.1. comes lo l\·lontreal t1f1Pr Almost t~·o seasons with thP. King~ He went lo Los i\ngelrs in frbruary l97Q ROGATIEN VACHON from lhe Chicago Blatk Ha"·ks. ln 19fi6.67. Chicago finished in first plACP ,cind l)(oJordy l'ihari"'d the Vezina Trophy wil h now retirtd-GIMm.-88\J,.-. Last year OeJordy appeared in 60 ~;imr~ and hac:I 11 3.80 11ver;ig<'. This sca.~nn he played 1n four ~am('!'> ""ilh the Kin,i:s end had a 4.2S ,l!Oals-against figure. HoGa nson. 22. Is in hi~ fourth sPasnn as ii pro. He is considrred 11 bright.. young nro.spect after two seasons v.·ith the J\ing~. Prier I~ 36 and ii former member nf the Can11diens. while Robinson is 31. "The club wu r~tumin& to Minneapolis and Oylng OYf"t Iowa, We were le.st i,n a driving snow 1tonn:' runnlng out of 1as and. had no lighl..!I in the cabin. "The iitewarrless came Mck 11nrt in· formed us that we may bave lo try 11 crash landliig. Elgin got up from his seat ;ind carried a blanket and pillow to the rear of the plane. There he atrelched out across the ca'bin with his hea d on the pillow and col'ered himself with the blc.nket. Then he sai d, 'Boy:ii, if I'm gonna go. I'm gonna go in sty!e. · ·· The plane. la11ded safely in an Iowa corn fitld. Baylor 7s -known as a talker at1d ~am· mate Walt Haztard recal!td "One time he ran his mouth ~1tl1~t stopping. five and a half hours, non~tii> mouth· and plane , Boston to LA." Perhaps Baylor's mn~t complimentary note came from Schaus. Scouting .in North Carolina sever.al years ago Schaus was asked if he thOtJght Baylor "'O.S tbt lulest ball pla.ver ever. Schaus smiled J!ld thought about it for · minute. "Ve.ah ,. he said ."!£ there "'ere. mooey • bod .. on the table I'd take Elg o\'er any Y· Sports Clipped Short Caruthers Dies; HB Driver WiriS RIV ERSIDE -Twenty-year~ld Danny Caruthers of Aii8hf"im , the youngest driver ever to win the United States Rae· ing Club mldgel championship, died Thursday at Riverside General Hos pital. ·· Carulhers, who sustained massive head and Internal injuries and a broken ne.ck in a crash last Saturday at Corona Ra ceway, died al 2:20 p.m. At' the time or his smashup into a re- ining wall on ;i warmup lap for ;i USRC ce, Caruthtrs was driving a car owned Newport Beach"s Jack Fitz patrick. Caruthers is survive<! by his father, Doug, a midget racing campaigner: mother. LaVey: hrother. Jimmy, 26, A defending nationa l midget titlist; and sisters Dee Dee, 19. and Jean, 16, all ol Anaheim. Funeral arrange ments are pending. ,,, ENSENADA. Mexico -John Steen of Huntington Beach and his partner. Mike Burke of Chatsworth. won the Baja Bug VW dJvision 1n the Mexi can 1.000 off-road race. Thursday in 19 :59. The duo finished <olmasl 212 hours 1n front of the second place team in their clnss, Gordon D. Toff and Andrc}4' "-'· TnfL both of Sea! Beach, with a lime of 22 :38. Only other Orange Coast' area dril'cr lo finish in t~ tnp three in any or lhe various ca tegories was Rill Rush nf Newpnrt Beach. Rush and pArtner na ve Krieger of Las Vegas, drove l'I four-wheel drive Whittaker Bronco to second pla ce in that di vision in 19 :36. The overall winners in the race were. Parnelli Jones, former Indianapolis 500 winner, and hill navigator Bill Stroppe. They piloted a F'Ord Bronco to Hrsl place in 14:59. The lime surpassed lhe for mer record held by a Costa Me~a driving duo of Drino Miller and Vic Wilson who set the previous mark a year ago in winning in a Volkswagen·po"·ered dune buggy in 16:07. ,,, INGLEWOOD -\le eran .Je.rry We.~t i.'l expected lo be back n the lineup tonight "'hen the Los A eles Lakrrs mett Ba ltimore in the f um . The Lakers have "t played !'>1nce last Sunday. when thl'.'y lo thl' Golden State. Wa rriors. Gait Goodrich. the Lakcrs' top srorP.r, "'ill lead them into the match with the Bull etls. Dr. Robert Kerlan. team physi- cian, said Yi1est appears to have recovered from a sprained ;inkle anrf could Sf"e. acl\on. \\1est has missed the last five games. ,,, STOCKHOL~1 -Arthur Ashe of Rich· mond. Va .. routed l\-lart.v Riessen ()f Eva nston, Ill.. 6-:J. Ii-I, Thursday night to gain the. quarterfin;i!~ of the Stockholm Open lpnnis tournamenL Ashe next will meet Tom Okkcr of The Netherlands, whn also ;id1111nced by trip- ping Charles Pasarell of Pucrt () Rico , 6-1. .. ,. In other lhird round n1a1 ches. Aririres Gimenn of Spain upsel lhircl·set'df'ri Krn Rosewall nf Aust ralia . 7-fi. i-6. 11nd Australia's Jn h n Alt'xanrler defeartd Brian fairlle of New Zealand. 1.n. 11-4. ohn e tn oz;i nr En11iliilcl mol·rITn.- tn the semifin~ls by e I i m 1 n 11 t i n g Jtnm~nia'.~ Jon TiriAr, &.2. li-J Jn "·omen·s quarter-final pl11y. F'ran· coise Durr of Fr11nce topped Patti Hogan of La Jolla. &.2. &.O. ,,, PTTI'SBURGt! -The Pi!t sburgh Con· dors. a fragil e franchise in the American Bagketball Association. ti.ave made yet another change. In five. years. Pittsburgh ';, entry mt" the ABA has had . three name.s, '"'" homes. two owners and three general ' managers. , Now they have another new coach ~ their sixth. Mark Binste1n. ~!so !he .general manager, replaced Jack Mc~tahon 11 coach. the club announced Thursday. The Condnrs. paced b~· John Brisket's · :'17 pints. upent1f'ri the Vtah Stars, 135- 129. Thursday in their first 11ame under Binstein . f..1cMahon \\'as namrd rxt>cut11·e assis· lant to I.he general manager, responsible for instituting community rf'lations pro- grams and scouting. He is in the second year of a '"'o.yea r contract and has a salary of about $30,000 a year. ' SYDNE''· Austraha -Amencan Jack Nicklaus S\\'ept into lhe lead in the S23.000 Dunlop Internat1onal .Gnll Tourna.men~ t.n; day v.·ith an amazing JG.under.par srcond round of 62 to give him a 36-hnle total ot 131. This was se\·en strokes ahead {'If the nrarcsl challenger. Australian Bruce Crampton. who lacked li8 on to his firsl round 70 for a 138 total. Conditions were perfer! for the bii;·h1t: ling Nicklaus. "'ho only nnrp failed to reach !he green in !he regutatlnn figures -on the 18()..yard. 181.h hole whpre he had· a txigey 4 after landing in a s<1nd frap . · A crowd of ~.000 fol\o"•ing !he :n.ye;ir • old Nicklaus around the 6.6~2-yard ~f;inly course. roared approval on approval bt1 every shn!. Nicklaus said, "l"ve never been so fa r under ·par in the opening section ()f any . competition round. Conditions '.\"l'.:r1. great." Lightweights Go For Title ~·1ADRID tAP l -~1ando Ramos ru Lo.! Angeles and Pedro CarrasC'o nl Spain bat- tle here tonight for the ,·acant World Bo11ing Qiuncil lii;ihtweil!h L rrC1\\·n and both fighters predicl the bou! 11·111 end 1n a knoc kout. "Either he knock~ mr nu t nr J l! knock him out within the first Ill r!'unrls."· Car· rt1~ro said. Ra1nos . .,.,·ho h;i~ hrcn b ;it t 1 i I! i: '• overw eight problems . ~Aul he "·ould h.:llt r Ca rrasco within eight round~ The. cro\\·n was left varant when the \VBC withdrew rerngniltrin from Ken! Buchanan nf Scotland for fa1IUrf' to rilr~t Carrasco. BuC'hanAn is .rerogn1r.ed a3 champion by the \\"nrld f\oxin1t Associa· tion. Carr;isco. _t.t 28. Five ~cars nlder anrt more e.xperie.nced !hitn hi~ for. is a cl11ssic stylist "'ith A ii!nnd left JAb and damaging bolo punch. it kind nf ~·win,eing ri~hl uopercut thar h;:n, hrlf'<'d him C'Om- pile a 8'1-1·2 rrcnr ri Ramns. ronsidertd mnre 11dept a1 1nhgil1inli! th~n Carrasco is 31-4.--' Carrasco is thp rurrl'nt Europea n lil!,hlwf'ight litlehnlder Ram o!'> "·as f\\'n pnunt1 s over the ta~ pound \ighf1\•eigh1 hm11 Thur~d;iv but tX· pressed confidence he would make the "'ei1iht today · ·:1~ "'.ii) nnl~· mran 1'11 h;i1·e to extl.!nd mv tra1nmg a bit morp .:ind nothing elst . J"ll hf' all right and read.\' to knock out Carra~co. ·• Admi tt ing hr wa ~ ' ' part i <' u I a r 1 \' angerer1 ·· by th1 ~ .~t:itrrn("n!, P1i!lln ~n1{I hr alw<iy~ prirlt•d h1Q1~<'H nn a rlo~I' rrla· tinnshlp 111111 his pl11yrr~ 11nrl rr!itlt'<l ~ever Al 111~1anl'C.!l 11 hrn hr pf'r~"n:ilh in- terceded to h<'lp ~lflnfO<"• thrnui;:h .~e1 era I financial 11nrl JM'r~n11l prnh\!'n1~ TCU's Tohill--a Dedicated Coach "If all lhrse i111oht·111c.nts :u·c an 1n dic'!rltion nf m1 rlis-lo1111tv to F:irl l\1onrne .'' the ny,nrr 111t1ri, "th<'n lndcrd I mu.-.t bt cons1drr<'rl 1,?u1l11 "' Pollin ~&Id ht m11rle h1, ~!~lrmrnt rinlv btrau~f' the s1tuat1nn ·ha~ bern l'loud!d by so many trr~rou.'l cllums .. Hc,vitt 1'ops t' oe ARF.RAVON. \\'itlf'~ -Tnp..-.rf.>drt1 8nb He;riH of Slluth Afnrl! rall1rrl After 11 01s1t~trn11~ hr~! srt tri fl \'f'r('nm .. Bril;i1n ·~ unr11ted ~111rk F"11r7'l1 o.~. 6-1, « .. 1 i.nd rr11ch !ht ~m1fin11l ~ rlf lh<' D"ew11r Cu p tenn i' tournamr nj Thur.\dlly. ,J3iml' f'lllri! of Chlt~ Al go ·'l~•nf'd lh<' srmffln11J" with 11 ')'.fi ~.o-v1cttfr) 01•er George~ Go1·en of France. . rnRT \\"O.RTH . Ttx. (AP ) -Biily TohUI. nan1 td htAd fnotball e-0ach Thurs- rlA}' 11t Trxll.' ChrLsti11n UnJvprsity, is a Int llkl' .ltrn Piltm1tn. the. m1tn he. "uc:- rctdrd-a 'dtd1c11ted Athlete alm~t from thP cradle Both came. fron1 .~11111\1 ~ii11i~!'lpJ'li to"'ns -f'it1mAn !mm R(l_yll' .iind 8111~· from 8atP.tv111e. Roth pl1tyl'd 1t t l\!1!1111.-..~ippi St11tr. "l s1nrterl nut pllty1ni:: pee v.·ee foot · lµil\.'' Tnh11I 5111'1. ""th('n "'COi up thrnu~h h\R:h 1chool. There Wf'rtn '1 m11ny kiri,, lo our hl~h 5Chno1. go YCIU pl8_\'td 1111 Speir! s." Tht olhers wrrt ba~ke.tball. bil.'tball and trn rk Rill~· d0tsn·1 fnllov" I.ht !)'Hern of lht lithe. supple track star. Neither is hr !In bulging with musrle that he can't I it h11 !ih!Mos. '"I "·asn't f;ist ennu~h ln hfo a sprinter, :ind I didn 't h8\'e tht Pndurancf' to be a dl~tiince. mlln," he. said. '"If somebody goL hurt. I did wh11t hr w:i~ t1nini::." The: 11<:hool·bov All·Amrrlc11 n 1 1 i; 1 s rec'Ol!.nized Tohill when ht. wits doubl lng 111 tiu.iirterl>ACk and fullh1u•k 11t B1Hesvllle Hiqh He rcr.iillet1 . ''Th11 prnudr_.t timt nf mv lire 1n 1port1 w;i~ In lhr r;irly !1\RRC~ '1 WA~ (n lh• sixth 1;ri!tl!' 11nd they let thf' junior v•r1tty . drrss out >A•\th the. high 11rhnol hoy~. Thty sen1 me in 11t lht' ent1 nf th,. gnme.. and 1 <'Arrled ont lime !Cir ttlx ~·11rds and ;:i tnuchdo"'n against Crowdrr. ' !'I wr1111 proud when we 1Tul11ne1 ~·on tht l.ibfrty Bowl ISAlnst Colorado. Nnbnrly thnugh1 >A'f" C"t'lll)d "'in except the cnacht." And plA,\'flr~ " Tnhlll w11s on Pillm1tn'J1 !:laff 81 'Qllane Rod mnved lo TC\1 "'hen PlllmAn . whn ditd during 11 i;:am, 1~$l S11111Nl~)', ~1.me tht Hnrntd Frogs · coich lasl Otre.mber. Tnhill '~ tnaeh ll l\1is51!1~1 pp1 Sl11tt, \\1At1t WAiker, ltft his m11rk on Billv. \\1-lker nov.· Is Oklahoma·g athletic dlre:C. tnr . "Hf" lnflupncrd me.'' Biiiy !II)'!, ··bfcau.-.e: ht w8s !llch a nice J>!r50n - kind and loy1JI to el'e.rybody. You couldn't help but Appreciat11 him He was e.ll - pec.iallY good to me AS a playe.r , t dQn'l know why ." "S6riie.of lhe th lngs hr tr1e.d to teict\_ me As & young ma n and plal'rr sfuc k \(1!h mr.. He sr.ldom rai~ed hi~ 1·01ce but he ;ot his poinl acroes a differ1\ll1 11a1" Coarh,.5 Are dlffertnt Some of ·rm talk. And hri'Pe ynu underst11nd. Some of 'coi add a JUI/to t.o that. l hope to be ;i comb1nat1on cf j)nlh." At :12 TohLil IS ont nf \h(' ynll'li:!l'SI h~~ coaches in major collrge rAnk~ !Jp·_. rriidy, '"The. saddest day of' m,1 Hie · 8"111v ttaid, "WI~ Whfln I rfl111t1ed Pitt "·n1111fn:t ht h11ck Six years v.·nh Pitt ~e"mt"d ffk;, elt!rnit y lo mt An eternity !l f ftll0Y.'5hip .. , ' Good Back ~righten s Tl1e Future Bil! here and there: Santa Ana Valley '5 rl5e to football prr>- minence is duly not@d with the Falcon5' current 4·2 mark snd the future appears pretty bright for C'flach Dick Hill'g crew. A good prospect fnr the Fa lcons' var5i- ty Mxt :-oear is freshman Myron Wl11tt, a · --ROGER CARLSON ·------=-*=" 5-11. 175·pound speedster v.•ith some pret· ty flashy movt!:s . He 's the younp:er brother of Jackie 'Vhile . formerly of Santa Ana High. * * * Out of state junketi for area prep basketh'lll team~ ire 1lated for Costa l\-1esa . Newpnrt Harbor and Westminster. The fnrmer pair gn to Lii• Vegas for the fourth con5tcutt,•e year for a doubleheader with Nevada quintets whlle \V~1t.m.in1ter ventures out of 1tate for the first time at Las Vegas. ~1artna's basketball team "'ill trek to Ventura for a tournamtnl. * *· ·* F-0untain Valley H1gh's <l'thletic pro- ~ram takes on soccer th is yea r with an entry in CtF compelilion. The Barons . coached by Bob Rathman, open their season Nov. 16. * * * Lnok ror lht Fountain \lallev·Edh1nn football clash in the final regula~ season "'eekend lo ht changed lo a Thnr1day nig ht. And you can Allin count on 4.500 1tudenti; to bf. enrolled •.t Fountain Valley come Stptember -perhaps making that !chool the largelit hi the CIF Southern Section. I~ seems ironic that they'll be turning "'them away at the gate Saturday night al Ne"•port Harbor "'hen Westminster"s Lions battle Newport in a Sunset League crucial. At the same lime some 6,000 empty seats will dominate the sc-ene at Oranp:e Coast CQJlege where Golden \Vest Colleje pla ys Cyprtss. * * * A S.:1nta Clara Univl':rsity football player drnp kicked 111 PAT h•lit wr.fkend , which must ha\'t been an odd sight. Ont wonders what "'ould h111ppe11 If lhal wal 'he only way PATs or field goals couta be attained. * * * A verbal agreemenl between Santa Ana and Corona del Mar insures the footba ll series between the two to continue on a year-to-year basis. The two-year contract finished this year. * * * Thto Orange Coast Wre1tlln1 1.nvlta- tioo.al has becomr. thr. Costa Mesa Hia:h wresl\ing tournameo.t with the l1ttr.r a!suming full responslbllll}'· Like last vear it'll be held in the ~lesa gym. Itl!i sl~ted for Jan . 15. * * * Upset of lhe \\'eek : Costa t.1esa over fountain Valley. Fun11y Cars Qualifying On at OCffi Orange County lntemational Race"'I Y is hostlni? the fifth annual Manuf111cturer11 F'unnv Car Championships today and S&iurd11y. Th~ meet \\'as slated In begin at noon today wilh qualifying \astin.11: until 11 p.m. Sa'turday "i;. slate begins "'ilh the g11tE'S npenin.1: ar 1:30 p.m. and contlnul'.!s "'ilh _acti~itit.sJ.hr.nu_ghout the rest or lhe after· noon and e\'enin.11:. The two-<lav Cflnh1b, \\'hich drew an OCIR record 'crnwd of O\•er 17,000 last vear. is expected to attract in ucess of 24~o0n fans for both d1y5 this time arO\.ind. Co.111petitors are spilt up · Into four te.,11s 111nd are spon5ored by either cqt.vrolet. Dodge. Ford or Plymouth manufacturers . The ei.R:ht quicke~I qualifiers nf eAch manufacturers' jlroup race three non· Plimlnalive rounds of ~8 r11ces to decide 1he winning m11ke:. Then. 1he two low elflp!!M tlmf' c11r!I from the; te11m competition r11c-e 11 fourth rnund to determinr. tht indlvldusl drivers champinnship. Of . the more lh11n 80 runny csr sptCi11tlsts on hand to try 11nd capture totaLpr1ua of $50.000, one of them will be deleh.ding champion Jake Johnston of Fort. Worth. f{Q_ftver. Instead of driving the ~ue P.~ff Mustang which ne piloted to victory la§l ,Year. Johnston will be at tht wheel of t~Ro. 2 car of his old boss. Gtne Snow. the Blue f\t1x wtll bf: on hind, though , wup Richard Thitrp of 011111& drlv\ng It.. 'St~thlsnd drag racing buffs win also l:t!l l n(lthtr chance to w11tch cttrvaclous Shirl~ 1Cha Ch1) Muldowney of SCtieotctady. N.Y .. In action. ~"' holds the current oc1n. track rltCl)'rds of &.82 5et. e.lapl.ed lime arid 226.13 mph. I , ' .· .. • OAILV i>1t.OT U111 i>11ti. ··-' . F'rlda,, Nowrnbet 5, 1971 D4I(Y PILOT ' At Santa Ana Bowl Marauding Y outli ·• Harassing Fans ' ' By ROGER CARLSON 01 '"' 01111 f'll~t 11111 Perhaps the· finest football facility in ~ Or11nar. County 11 Santa Ana Stadium, - referred to RS the Santa Ana Bowl by many. The stadium holds ID.OM. t.\'e.ry seat in the houst Is 111 Kood one. the press facllitie5 are excelle;nt, lighting is anod. dressing quarter"' are good, everything see.ms ideAI. Yet the Bowl Is becoming a point of ir· rit11tinn fnr ~igh school 11dministr.11tors .. Bands of marching youth 'in thP. 11 ·13 a11e br11cket harassing fans following prep football games are spoiling the Bowl's image. ' There have been few reports of outright violi-nce, mostly \l's a C3se of har· assment, such 11.s grabbing porn.pons from the chee;r leadt:rs as they exit. pushing and shoving and the use of foul language. l\1srina High's recent confrontation with Santa Ana High resulted in a report to the CTF office re,i;:Rrdlng crowd conlrol and althoURh principal Glen Dysini.;cr says no violence occurred, he doesn 't reel ~111rinP. students should be in a situation rt'a m around after every game," say1 , Knral. ,,,,. • The; stadium rental ftt for a niaht '1 gamr. is $250 nr 1~ percent of the (1'0511: 1 gate, whic-hever ·is 11reater. Knral statet~ th11t 18 of last year's 26 games failed to: .. provide payment higher than $2.~. •j The Santa Ana Parks Departmt:nl p~ \•ide!IO polire with monies out nf the. rental1 fee and Knral is of the opinion the base ft>e may be raised in the near future _l.. "It costs us $470 to open the sladiu"' up," he says. · · Sa-": Clemente, Mission Viejo Duel Tonight Mission Viejo High 's Diablos and tht,t San Clementt. Tritons collide tnnight in.I ~ Crestview League foolhall test on lhe 1 ~1issinn Viejo gridiron with lhe kickoft:\ slated for R o'clock. to endure an v harrassment. -Corona drl.MAr High offi cials ht1\'e also The clash pits two leams w1Ut related ha rassment al the Sant.A Ana dissimilar problem.~. The host Diab\°' • Bnwl foll o\\•ing the St>a Kings football ( hAven't had any troubli> moving the ball , gan1e with St1nla Ana Valley. all season but have been unabl e In con· .,1 One tracher \\'renched a ynuth "s 11rm tain the: opposition. .1 • Across his ht1lf·rolled up window whl'n lhe ESTANCIA'S DAN PRINCEOTTO 1311 DRIVES FOR A PORTION OF HIS 742 NET YARDS. boy i;hoved his arm throu,i;:h the opening On tlt_e other hand.· t'f!ach Tom 1:-:ads' "'hile the vehicle was idlin11:. Tritons "liave had I.heir trouble "'ilh \h t , Two·· Spoilers, GW, Cypress Vie Saturday The Golden \\1est CoHege football team has ~n rele~ated tn lhe role of spoiler in the Southern California Conference nag chase. But the problem thi s "'eek is that the Cypress Cnllege Chargers are in the same category. Both teams ha ve dropped two decis ions in league play \\'ilh three· games re- maining. This me11ns neither h:is . a chance to "·in the coveted championship. \Vhatever the role it will play in the final two games of the season. Golden \Vest will host Cypress in its fifth 11nnual homecoming encounter S;iturday night at the Or.:inge Coast College Stadil.~m. Coach Ray Shacklefo rd at Golden We.~t is pr iming his ch11r~es to keep them from setting a consecutive game losing streak. The Rus~ler~droppcd three in a row fl"I close out the I 70 campaign . One of the culprits in tha lhree -_camP s_t rini: was Cypress. a 13-0 victor O\"er the Rustlers a year ago. "Cypress has the bal11nce lo defeill any lt'am in the conferrnre. ThP~' are a vastly impro\1ed team this ~·e2r and their quarlt"rback (Rob Dil\J has been throw· ini.; a lot. '"Cypress is lhe only te;:im In defeat \\·est Los Anp:ele!i th is yt'ar. And they hold a win ove:r S;:iddlrback.'' ~ Losing in the clns in~ secnnds !11 Lns Angele~ Cit~· Col!PJ!:t' 1;:ist "'E'Pk in 11 J,?ame !hev led nn fnur~occasions. '>''as a tcH i n~ hln;.., hut Shackleford ffr!s the team has the spiril lo bounce back. .,_ Bill Comelius. !ht' Rustler quar1crbac:k. is in the process nf rewriting the record books in passing and added to his season totals with 17 completions in as attempts against LACC. The 296 yards p:ained throu!!h the air mnvl's Cornelius into second plAce nn the all ·time Golden West passin!{ Hsl hehinri ,John lnglehart nf the 191l7·611 Rustler s(lu:ids. Cornelius RO\\' hAS am:isst.d 1.274 y11rds p11ssing this season and lrt1ped pAst twn rnrmer G\VC stars last week. Steve r.riffilh wa~ second wi!h 1.2.15 vl'lrdS and Sha"'" ~1cKinney third \\'ilh 01.173. Cornrlius needs ~II yards t.hrou11:h th·ntrin )he fin11\ three game5 ln set a ne"'' single sea~on stand11rd. His current 101~1 is second only to lnglehart's tqtal of 1.784 in 1968. Area Sports Calendar L Estancia' s Prince( otto) ls Pleasan:t Surprise By PHIL ROSS Of !PHI 01llJ l'li.t tt1ff ''Gel "e.m ! Stop that No. 22. "Hold iL that's not 22.'' These cries of futility must have echoed amnng the Tustin High football learn in the Tillers' season-opening 13-0 lo~s lo Estancia's Eagles. The No. 22 the Tillers were after was tht Eagles' 5-6. 160-pound Jim Schultz, fhe; top 1970 ground gainer for Estancia '>''ho helped his side rip Tustin in the 1970 npener, 30-0. And. nf course, Schultz was exJ)ef:ted In be back in, thi~. his senior season w:!h !he Tillers ready to · pursue him in the name of S\\'Cet n;:)'enge. Well. tile Tillers had their hanrls full .11gain with another Estancia mini·b.11ck. But . 11•ith Schullz sidelined in the injury column. here was a heretorore unknown named Dan Princeotto pbpping up with sudden e11se. Princcottn, a 5-4. 145-pound junior . w.11s so impressive in his debut ~'ilh 19.'i net rushing yards in 29 c::irrit>s that he repla cC'd Schull1. a.~ the Ea11les' toy ta ilbac-k-in '.residence. Sa~·~ the Ea_llle head me;nlor. "Schultz hi!s a little m(lre ~peed but the two art very similar otherwi-"f', like in their physical sll'llure and in the way they car- ry the b8ll. '' .., . Rrown has found it hard for nppnsing defenses to ke y severl'll people on the slippery Princcotlo because ht says. "even though "'e ha ven't done that well passi ni::. "'C do ennugh thro\\·ing to keep the rlefenses honest. "Allin we run enough fakes and 1]\l.11r1erback keepers, and our fullback Dixon is doing a good job too . "Therefore the defense can't con- cl'Titrale exclusivel y on D:in." Princeotlo ran oUt nf the tAilback slol last fall nn the Eagles' sophomore team in the ~ame type M\Ver I 11ttack used by the vRrsity. Rrnwn is keepin.11: his fingers eros scrl that the same injurinus fate 1vhich l'ieff!ll Schultz prior lo this season doesn"\ work its way around to Princeotto before the latter 's senior yea r. As one l\1arina supervisor tell s hi.~ offensive phase of the i;i:ame as poor fiel d , ~lurit'nl s. "Roll up your \\'indow.'i 11nd be IJOSition ha s kt'pt San Clemente In the,,. earPful when you 're Al the Santa Ana Bowl .'' hole nn numerous occ~siops. l .. \Vha\ "''r.'re doing is sugaeslin~ thal Missicn \liejo's crew must go withnut the City nf ~AntA Ana and the Sa nt11 Ana the services of three-year s1arler Aundrt ; Recreation Oepartment l which ru ns the Holmes. who suffered a sprained ankle in munic_ip11J stadium l~rovide ~nre l:\lhe -Vill.11 PArk loss. following !hf' game.' ~Dysinger. . "\Vf. wouldn 't lhink 0f ~ fnur Da\te C11ldwel1. a 14fl.pnunri iun\or, to ~ix offi c-eri; iit Weslmi nster followlng assumes Holmes' role Al tailbt1ck behind 1 nur home games ." the potent passinR: nr Gary \Vood. Dysinger explains the situAtion further : Wood has been impresi;il'e, chalkin~ utt· · "M ainl y it was a situation nf 40 tn 50 784 y&rds on 50 <=ilmpletinns ;11 1:11 Al· junior l:ligh and elementary kids running tempts. His tolal yardage lhrnu"h the. alt ' around adjacent tn our buses. "' ''It didn't appear tG be a cASf' of Santa is second only lo \1estminster"s Je.fl ; Ana High students involved. Siemens in the Orange Coast arPa . "1'he m;iin problem is that there were But a porous defense. especiaUy in th e 110 police visible or in the :r.rel'I Iha! secondary and the flanks. hl'IS Alln'wed n ~ l\111rin11 studenls were rxiling and frAnkly \Ve feel th:it il wouldn't have happened if points to fnur Crestview Lel'lgue OP; ., pnlire wrrf' in the area." pnnents -the most gi\'en up by any Sant;i Ana Parks superintendent Rnmn circuit eleven. Knrl'll told the DA ILY PILOT, "This i.~ San Clr.mente"s UJ>'Anri·down Trilons ,:: the first I've h<-ard there wa:ii any pro-also ha\•e a quarterback with sparklinr blen1. credentials. , "Howe1•cr. recallin,ll' !he Marina -Sant.:i Bill Kenney i.~ a fi·:l. 21 5-pnund junior ,J An.11 gamr !herf' WAS a crnwd in the and his passes have clic-ked at a 4~ per-. ,1 neiRhborhood of 2.000 and \\'e hAd silt: cent tale for 444 yards. i uni formrrl pnticemen there. • The figures .:ire morl' lmprrssive when 1.., "We feel we h11ve the hest i:ecurity it'i; considered that coach Tom E.:ids' San poi;sible ins ide the stadium but of course Clemente elevens llre ground oriented. :· once you 've left the st.11dium 11nd are on His chief hatcher men in the runnin g ' puhlic .~t.rl'f'L~. you'rr on _your own. J,!ame are tailb3ck Clark Jarrett and Jnse.~ '"\\Te can't 3C1 as mnther And father. Malagon . There are·a number of younger kids who Jarrett has scampered for J."t2 yitrris in.-; • 76 carries for a 4.5 average and Malagoi:i ... h:is punished the opposition for a 4,7 ' average in 6J r arries. ~, Mala.11:rin has a 2.'>-y11rri TD run to hi•, , credit while Jarrett"s lon.11:est scoring ef • ., Subsequfntly, when Schultz finally did return tn close In 100 percent efficienry, ' ii "'aS a belated erfort :ind practically 1n \";11n. Beca u!>e, in Addition lo the Tust in ennlest, Princeollo has been galloping fnr chunks of yardage as if they were 11•hnlesale cuts or roast beef. Seaso11's 011 tl1e Line fort has bttn from 26 y11rds out. S111 Cl1mtnl1 Ll11tvtl OlltnH Ooftn" tiff. iOllytr WI. WI. ,.llYI• ' ..... ~. Thus he·s nailed down a permanenl starling berth. Eslancia's newest sf"nsa1ifln ha~ hePn sn consistent t.h.:11 he 's currently Nn. I Jn Orange Coast area ground gaining wi!h 742 ya rds in 125 cracks for a neat 5.9 average. And while coach Phil Rrown's Eagles !2-4J haven't been nearly as successful 11s last season·.~ 9-2 outfit. Princeotlo and VPt.er11n fullback John Dixon have been .11hle to pierce enemy linel': fnr better then 1.000 yards in somethinp: reminiscent nf the allier! tank corps breaking through the Sleii;frierl Line. In an otherwi~e dubious campaign, he11d Eai.;le overseer Brown re_l!;:irds Princeotto as lhe mn~t pleasant ~urprise of 1111. "Well," Brown elalxlr:r.tes, "whf'n he firsl c11me out and did that nu\sl11nding job against Tustin. you might say our sttiff--wa·ne:tll~surprised with Ot1n. "But "'e weren't surprised after that because he's certainly run the 1>811 very well for us with consistency . • "Dan knows that's his job f Princeottn rarely is called upon to block. with a veteran line and the 21D-pound Dixon amundl and he runs with 1111 his he111rl.'' As ls the case with most coaches, Brown doesn't fttl it's entirt!l y fair lo make open C1lmparlsons between any two players. He does nfler somewhat of a collAlinn be:tween Princeotto and Schultz though. For CdM's Sea l(ings Corona ritl Mar Hi~h'i football team h;is heen running hot and cold during the rirst. four games nf thr Jrvlne League season and 11~ 11 re,;ult the Sea Kings h&ve divided !he four till~. But there is lillle doubt rhal rna ch Pave Holhu1d'~ Se.a Kini.;! will h11vP. tn turn it nn tonight. a,l!.:iinsl rue;gtrl ~lAi.;nnlia at ta Palma Stadium 18 •o"rlnrk 1. C.:nrona t;.:iil!> 1·0-lparif"rs t.1a11:noli11 and Edisnn by r.ne e11me l'lnd l'I lnss "'Ollld ju~l l'lhnut f'llm1nate Holl11nd "s cre11.· frnm 11 • shot at the. titlt and a berth in the CIF plR.l'flffS. Thui; ir~ a w1n-nr-else sitoation (nr Coron;i. And it won't be l!llSY, ~faf{nol:a went through a 1-8 campaign in Hl70, but new coach Glenn Thomas has revilalizt.d the Sentinels into title con· tenders. Thom111s wa s &n aide at· Loara l11st year. M11f(nolia 's strength is built 11round 175· pound ~cnior tailback Hank Bauer and junior quarterback .John Kindred . 11 185- J>O!,lnrier who has been improving evl':ry week In the Sentinel~' rise to the tnp. Holland feels if he can contain these two and add a litUe mnre b:ilance to hi~ own attack, !he Sea Kings havr. 11 good ~hnl 11t n11bbina their third Jrvint. victory. Last wef!k in 11 1!1·7 las~ to Fountain \1111Jey. Holl::ind relt that his team didn "t pa~s enough. But that w11s primarily hccause Sea King quarterback Reed Johnson was nursing a 11orl" 11rm. Johnson is okay nnw and Holl and i~ hol)(!ful he can blend some balance to the Qirnna runninji( att:r.ck led by !BG-pound (ullbnck Bob F'crraro. f'crraro i!i the fourth \e11ding n1shi::r in the ;irea with SS& yards in 94 carries for a ~.!I average. Johnson has completed 30 of 69 passf'S for ~58 ya rd s. "l\lai;:nnlia ha.~ looked belier f!arh \\"tek .'' sl'lys Holland, "especially their defense and Kindred. We're fighting to ~lay in !hi!! thing-and our kids art pretty Oetermined to get things going again ." C1,.1u •ti Mi r t.Mtu•• Olt1111t Off Mitt 'ft•. ,.11y1r WI. WI. i>l1y1r Sf. ,t,!ldrtw\ tJO '103 t.y11t~ r c1e~cc '" Hl C11ty G Cl)l!fll\ 11i· 1.U Tl llllff c. D&Mlllt UO UO C••l!tl'r>titr G Ct rf)tf!ttr 'Ml 145 !tH ri r Powtr 1') 10 (11..0el fl!" Stt\111 1~ 157 WllMlll QB JOhlllO" 115 1611 Alldrewi 1111 M!lftl 11J 151 G~wtr Fl F ... t l lll 1111 11) illl lhtr F_l C. Teti! 17' U5 C!Mn1r ,. ... ' G G ' LO "" " " " • ' Sf. l(lno l•O 110 r'•ul "''' T ~omt•o 115 7)5 llamt•e G M1dd•11 11S 180 Gl•coml11I c P111l•&n 11n 100 c~1mo111 G llOIJ•O 1~1 165 Ourh•m T G i1cc.,.f111 1111 115 Hu"• TE HIJlh 115 115 M~d~n Q!I l(~ne~ llO UO M t llll'lfl l B J l "l'I "! !Ml 5•11~•' 118 Mel•~&n 150 lU J•rr•ll Fl 5~11e•~ IMt 11Q O••a•" Mlui.11 VltlO l.l"tUI" Ol!e"U 0'111\H ""'· P!•Vtf Wt. W!. tll1y1r se: Gdi81V8 \~.\ Ml l,\(G••w T Olm.,.l(l UO 7M .~cl•"""" U Wl rrlll 11.S It-() C.1r11 C ChurchUI l'll !'1(1 51~!111• G S111d"• 1'11 lH ec~~ilkl1 T ~'llr<ftll• Xlfl Ull )M -S T! l'•ettw()Qtl U5 IU Wl<'d oa WOii!! 1'11 uo c11ow111 "II J~e, 110 ,,, O•fl•"•• TS C••Ow.11 1fll 1~ l l VDO•! FI. l t yl)l)rl U(I I 00 t111rert Cycle Finale I ',,.. ' •• ' ti) " '~, ~ j ,, .. • "l' " " ": "\'"' ., A trio or match races '>''ill hlghhaht thr·:.. final portion Qf the Anfllo-American Tes1••t Series speedw11y motnrcycle racing com·•T pelition tonight at Costa l\iesa·s Orangtr: County Fair~roonds. "' First race; is slated for 8: 15. ''• Three-lime world ch11mpion I\' a !'I Mauger of New Zealand will take nn lht• challenge nf Hun tington Beach·,. 1970 na·· !Jona\ titlist Rick Wood9 in a special best.-1 twn-nf-three m11tch battle with 3 series of, 2.1 nl her races ;\!so scheduled In both han· dic11p aiid scr11tch c111tei;:orles. Tonight's com petition m11rks lhe cloM : of \he 1970 camp1lgn for speedway cycl· ing artists. Psy~hology Battle Pre~edes Bu~ Biggie 'l'he Orange Coasl-Q:rritos Qillege foot- hill titanic Saturday niaht ha11 t1ken on the aapects of a back·sl1pper1 t'(lnvention the past week with both opposing coaches .. lavishing praise on Hl eir opponent. In fllct Cerritos Colleae coich Ernie Johnson ha s gone $0 far as to liBY that OCC has a number of players sitting on llA btncb that could play first string for hi! Falcons . ... Here '!! some other capsule comments frnm Johnson : "I r,a11y· don "t know how we can scorr. 8 lot or points agalnsl Qr3nge Coa~l. Thty have 11 rinP 1econd11ry 1nd An ex· tremel~ well eoached dclense. "We 've hung in well defe.nsl\te\y, N we 're not llke Orange Coast. ·0range oust assaults 11.n offense. They just rub lhMTI oot. Our offense ls likr. 11 guy sittJng on a runaway i;tagtc('Jach. We just don't knnw where we're going, "Orl'lnge Coast doesn 't beat itself on of- fen~e. It has great b11\1tnce 11nd ha!! (Uys In the skilled posllions. And lh11fs the Answer. The.re's no ~ubstitute for thct lik.illed Athlete whn riOf's !he. job. "We: have: been fortun•te In not having tl'le long aaincr ag1in11t ua. And we've on·I ,. ly l'lad three Interceptions .. , of course "'' h11v,n't paSlied very much. And we haven 't fumbled a IJJ'e•l deal. We. h1ven'l beattn ourselves. Tf we've d6ne anythln( rlahl that's II," says the crafty Johnson. Or11nge Qiast ~Reh Dick Tucker i5n·1 calling JohnSon's statements blarney. but he dats sl!ly th11t A ltam cannot afford to be: lulled Into 111 scnat ol 11ecurlty by whit thP. former El ~ncho and Newport Hitrbnr Hljlh c:ol!lch lil!lys. "Any team lhAPl buys what t;rnJ, s1ys is J!!Oln& to get bflat. We know we're up Against a tough team. Cerrito& Is dmn gnod. They've always been tou11th on uS. "We'rt re11\stlc ... we know snythlnr: can happen ttn A fool.ball field. -But we e1i- pect to win ," says the 9CC he1td man . "Johnoon i11 a master psychologist, bu,~ we know this is •oin11t to he our loughtsl aarne or the year. II ough!111 be a hell oft -battle. • '"fou knnw wt w~re stiling \n this pos" tkln 1.wo yeAr!I 11111:0 AnO Cerritos knocked U5 off '2.1·141. But "'e'vt got I \Ol or m111.urP i;u_vs on this tr11.m, They dnn't ael1 up nr dnwn • » they just play t0lld '* b8ll . We'll be ready for tbtm." , • ' • - zz DAILY PILOT Frld1y, Novtmbtt .5, 1~71 Releaguing I Of Jaycees Not Fa1· Off There's going ·to be a little shufning 11round in at least a couple of junior col· lege conferences prior to the 1972·73 scbool year. It all got started 10 days ago "·hen San· ta l'\.1onica City College a~ked a Southern California releaguing committee if it could get out of !ht' i\lelropolitan Con· ferencr. The relcaguing group said okay and ·cRAIG SHEFF recommended that Santa l'\.1onica be plac· /d in the Southern California circuit. ( Since the SoCal 'conference \\'ill be ex- panded to seven football teams next season (LA Southwest CQmes in) the ad· dition Of Santa f\1onica would make it too big. So one of the SoCal teams \Viii either .. have to be switched lo the i\le\ro or ~ome olher conference. There is some feeling that one of the SoCal teams 1 possibly Golden \Vest i ('-OUld be moved to the South Coast Confe~ence. Of course this ~·ould mean moving a South Coast team ii»o Ufe ti1elro. Eventually lhere ·s going lo be a massi\'e shakeup among Southland !Cs. It's quite possible ~·e'll see a San Diego junior college league -and an Orange County loop in the next couple of years. ('.olden West :say:s it's quite hap~y v.·here it is no"' -but Rustler athlellc director Fred Owens says he'd much rather play teams closer to home. One. the dra\v would be bette r a.nd two. thf rivalry would be a litt le more intense. Saddleback is growing and although Gaucho athlttic director ~e<>r.ge Hartman Is against a S\\'ilch at this time _-~a?­ dleback ~·ill probably be r~ady lor 11 in l'wo or three years. . The reason ror Santa l\\onica 's motion \vas simply that the Corsairs a.re .tire? of taking their lumps in the fl1etro circuit.. The releaguing committee meets aga in taler this month and there should be some later developments . * * * One other case 'l\'88 pre~ented to the releagulng group last ~·eek I which met at Golden West). College of the Canyons has asktd to bt taken out of the Dese rt Confertnee. The rest of the Desert schools feel that Canyons bas too big a recruiting edge (10 btgh schools compared to about two each for the others I thus Canyo ns "'as asked to get out. No action will bt taken on I.he Canyons casf' until next rear, says Or. Dale fi1iller, chairman of the commlltet. * * * San Diego City College's foolball team. v.•hich hasn't ~·on since the fift h game of the 1969 season la 7-3 victory over Santa Ana) should schedule Barstow. Barstov.• lost all nine \8st sea~n although ii finished v.•ith l·8 record ~·h~n (.'ollege of the Desert had .to f?rfe1t 1!s v.·in. And in ·71 B11rsto\\' 1s win.less in seven outings. ha\'ing scored JUSl 21 point s v.•hile ~llowing ~14.. . San Diego is {>-19-J 1n its last 20 hits. The ~ tie v.·as \vith Orange _ Coast l\\'O 8easons ago. * * * Bakersfield tllemortal Stadium will bt the sltt of the fifth annual JC football championship ttiis year on Saturday afternoon. Dee. II. Tht stadium hai'i a 11t:iling capaci ty of 19.46i. II ,ou'rt ao Ora nge Coast football bu ff, 1 v.·Outfln 't make any plans lor lhal \\'eekend. * * * ~lnce eight JC \\'aler polo teams go to the Southern California playoff ~ 1T\ov. 2.1· 24 1. it's probable that three or them \\'ill be from the South Coast Conferen ce - the toughest in the slate. Four of the entries ~·ill be conrerl.'nce winners and the other four are at-large entries. Lagu11a, Uni · Give11 Wi11s The Orange League football standlngs have been juggled following disclosure lhat-.Saddleback High School must forfeit a1J of its 1971 victories due to an In· ~gible player. . . Orange IA:ague victories over Un1vtr~1· ty (2().0), Laguna Beach (_46:6l and Brea , ~) do not count due, to a transfer frotn rttater Dei High School v"ho allegedly (Jlslfied a residence statement. 1 Thus Brea and Sooora reside atoP the league standines with 3-0 nlarks. O•AirtGI t.l.&C>Ul •rt• -· 1111~1· U!llttrt!IY et 00!'.00 UOlllW ttltll ·-1-.Cl > ~ 0 ., Sol iCtl lt 1 I II ?• 1 1 I t• ' ' •• 'It I .I }j 11' 0 ' 111 ., lll'lftllll'I GM" UJ'li• .. t lfll •I l.ltllNI l~Kll '1111-.11 " ., •• hc!Ol,.,.cll. \'I, t.I Qul!llf 11 $A l e""' '""' 111'·~) l1hl,...r't G-• 11 Dtr1ft 11 ~· ' TWO-WAY TACKLE GARY JENNINGS FACES BIG . TEST. Jennings l(ey Figure In Nifty Lion At(ack By RON EVA1"S 01 !ht Dilly l'l/OI Stall \\lhen you have a quarterback who has completed 64.9 percent of his passes for 1.104 yards there has to be more reason fo r success than simply an accurate arm. \Vestm inster High's Jeff Siemens has confounded the opposition during the 1971 football campaign \Vith his aerials and the Lions currently ride atop the polls as the No. I tea m in Orange County . · One of the major keys to Siemens' and the Lions ' success has been the in:ibility or \Vestminster-foes to prtssure the lalented QB defensively. And the line pass protection of Gary .Jennings has been one of the prime reasons Siemens has lost only 26 yards in six games while attempting 124 passes inearly 21 per game L • The &-4, 225'-pounder v.·ill be in action Saturday night \\'hen he and his \Vestmins ter mates square off again st host Ne"•port Harbor in a Sunset League crucial. Ifs also a conrrontation between perhaps the l\\•o best tackles in the Sunset League . Newprirt's 'ferry Albritton f6·4 . 228) is the mainstay of the Sailors' forward wall ., and the two are due to collide Saturday . "\\'e have Gary lined up to oppose Albritton offensively and defensively in Newport's normal alignment:' says \VeStminster coach Bill Boswell. Boswell says Jennings. a three-year starter. is one of the best he's ever coached and opine s his mental toughness is his best asset Jennings is al so adept ,at neutralizing the enemy 's double·leam blocking on of- fense. The Lion .Riant possesses a 3.4 (;PA. ~iving him an advantage in regards to future gridiron glory at the collegiate level. "\Ve 're cilso ver y happy with G{l.r}'s ability to move his feet as an offensive tackle . If you can't stay in the right posi· tim1 you can't suStain your block," says BOS\Ve\J. Anf.i Saturday nigh t he 'll get his n1ost severe test of the season when he tries to \vard off the pass rush of Albritton as Siemens goes back to pass . and pass. and pass. Ora11ge Loop Test Lagu11a 011e-point Piel{ In Clasl1 With T1·ojans Because of a slight home field· ad- \·antage, Laguna Beach's Artisls are one- point favorites when they face the Uni,·ersit.v "Trojans at Laguna tonight. Kickoff is at 8. The slightly.favored Arti sts are 1-3 in Orange League action (3-3 overall) "'hile University is 1·2 11·5 overall I after each team \.\'as awarded lorfeit wins over Saddleback's Roadrunners Thursday. Allhough the _Roadrunners soundly lrounced both area squad s, it \vas dis- covered they \1•ere 11sing an ineligible player and , subsequently. n·ere forced Lo rorfeil their trio of loop ll'ins. Bul the back yard scuffle between the two ·winless Orange League entrants lnlln this area figures to be dead even. If there's an offensil'e edge in the first· erer meeting of ~·h;1t could turn out to be a n<1lural rivalry. the hos t Artists may ha ve it, having !allied 2;1 points in four league starts to only seven in three loop outings for University. Although the fa stest player on the squad -tailback Telford r..ottam -ha!! been lost for the season, Laguna still boasts potential firepc11ver in the running of Cottan1 's replacement. Larry Pannell : fullback Skip \Vinship and the passing of quarterback Gary F'isette. Akins s.nys of lhe Artist air attack. ''f isette's a J)rrttr good pass<'r when g1vt11 the clutnce to throw "But lhere are a lol of tuneJ1 he gets thro1vn lor fl loss be('ausr our tinen1an don,fkt'f P OnrushinJ,: defendt>rs out.·· Fisette will Or \\'t!hout his t'hit>f larget -llplit end Titn Sweany -\\·ho surfered a contusion (1'-0m accidentally running in· to the goal post three ~·eeks ago agalnsl Saddleback. \\'ilh a slighl advantage in the physical departntent. Unh•ersity boasts perhaps a better i:tefense, havini!: relinquished 68 1narkers "'hile Laguna has su rrendered a leai!:ue hii.'(h of 129. A1\1Jough they'11e gh·en up Rn a\'erage orlhret !ouchdo"'ns Iler ga n'e in Orange loop action. lhe Trojans h.i11·e Ix-en slln~y on inslclt runni ng with the defl'nse lorcing mo~t npponen ts In g-0 to lhe outsjde. ~·here Unlvcrsil r has been hurt the rnost. \\'h:it little ofltnse the 1'rojans ha ve ex· hibiled thus 1ar has been mostly a bypr odutt of perform11nct11 by fullback Bob GUI, halfback Bill Riddle and QB Ed Call. Ciill . a convel'ted guard \\•ho was tlie :;quad 's tailback up until last week ~is the · le<1ding Trojan rusher \vlth 238 yards in 69 carries. Riddle. moved recently frorn split end, has responded \\'ilh 83 yards in 19 tries. Also on ~t runner \.\'ho played halfback last f 1, Call has clicked on 28 of 62 passes for · 99 yards. \Vith both sides knowing they have good chances of winning. it should be quite a dogfi ght . \Vith both sides knO\\'ing they have good ch<inces of '\"\'hu1ing . \\'ilhout bene· fit of a forfeit. to should be quite a dog· tight . uri .. ttt+tv 1.1ne~•1 OlltnH Dtttnu Po1. Pllvtr WI. l't1. PltYlr SE P.oHtnoot 110 16) "'""'" 1 J8rm~n 111 180 Cre90 G (rMo !~ :000 Rog•r• c Oa¥+• 11J 111 O•vl1 G T~yye 161 Iii J8r,,,an T, 0.. Rtoo 13' 111 8 •b• TE 81ba 111 165 GHI Of! ("II 110 1JJ Gf0t" 1'8 Rl<'ldle 15.l 16S D'>\nn~MJ10 FB Gill \M 15.l Riddle FL l-1ernev 1•7 J.10 It~ \.f,l/na IHCll t.lnll\llll Olltnll Dtlt ".-Po1. Pllvtr WI, P•t. l'laVff' SE Moennen 160 US Whitt "' G•ll 1 n t&S Diercks c; f l•hlvr us 192 Ullom C Si°"'l !6$ 1'~ f l8hi¥f G Oitrc~1 lfS llO A~rton T 11."<lt •IOn l/!J HO l lrd TE WM!r Id l ol(I Wln1hi1> QB f ,•t llt 150 165 l•n~nlll ' TB P•l'll'\rll 110 ISS P. Contm F8 Wi...,1111> 1(0 lei ROllerlJOO Cl Ro~!son 100 l!oC M_.mt n • •• ' ' "' ' ' " " " " ' ' ••• ' ' G G ' ' " " " ' ' PE ACOCK WI NN ER IN SINGLES PLAY Paced by Steve Peacock 3nd Chuc.k Scribner. the Laguna Bea<;h tennis association opened the Orange County \\1intcr League Sunday "'ilb a 6-3 victory over host f'ullerton. ' Peacock \von his singles match. 6·2. ~3 ;\•hile Scribner triumphed , 6-.1. i-2. Rogl'r .J111ncs also posted a 6·2. 6·3 singles vie· tory for lhe Lagunans, ln "'omen's. si ngles. Laguna's Linda Cu~hing v.·on. 6·1. 6-1. 1\teanwhlle. Norm_,,Pov.•ell and Harvey Klyce teamed 10 give the t.agunans a 2~, 1·6. M victory in men·~ doubles. In mut· ed doubl¢-s Linda Cushing and James \\'On, 6-4, '7..S. . -' .. Bar~s Try to · Aver! ]\lesa's ·upset Pla~s • . • ' '• Upsets have been the rule rather than the exception in Irvine League football warfare this season and coach Bruce Pickford of Fountain Vz.Jley knows full well the end results. He wil l send his Baron squad into ac· tion tonight against upset·minded Costa . Mesa on the Newport·Harbor High field with kickoff at 8 o'clock . r The Barons are favored by seven points and this is what worries Pickford . . "Costa Mesa has proven itself a spoiler with its win over Magnolia. It is a typical Mustang tea.m we will be facing tonight -one with three or !our big kids who are strong as an ox. "We haven't been moving the ball well in recent games because we never have the same people in the bacJdield for any two successive games because of in· juries .. , · To which coach John Sweazy of Costa ~iesa adds; ''Our kids have to play with a bit more enthusiasm than they did last week or we might get blown right out of the stadium. fo.untain Valley is big and physical afld it will be a matter of our kids being up for the game." · , The Barons have suffered several in· juries but early starters appear ready for action once again tonight. On offense , the full-time return of Tony Sepulveda and Les Becher, in addition to th~ improved ·play of Mike Malcolm and 1\1ark Mitchell. will give the Barons a formidable running attack. Satactio11 Not Li·kely Baseball Expenses -Sliced Witl1 Use of Metal Bat By CRAIG SHEFF 01 th• OallY l"ilot Stall Despite the fact the 1971 \Vorld Series wa:s as exciting as any of the annual classics in recent years. there are nlany v.·ho believe baseball still need s a little more punch. Ne"' stadiums. shorter fences and artificial turf have all added to the game in the last couple or seasons -making i~ an even better spectator sport. perhaps. But there are many who fee l that the sanctioning of the aluminum bat will make the national . pasttime even more exciting. ( pitcher. 1 think many of the pitchers would refuse to go to the mound.'' Saddlebac k College coach Doug Fritz agrees with Hoover that the bat should not be sanctioned. primarily be<: a use of the liveliness. Fritz says his bat costs were cut in half last season -but he also brings up two other point.~. "One big problem is the \Yeight balance. They tend lo be a little heavier and the average size kid has a to.ugh time swinging it. "And also there is that ping sound ,1·hen !he bat hits the ball. You just don't hear th<1l good cracking sound." Tony Scalisi. starting halfback, Is out v.·ith a knee injury but is being replaced by fonner starter Becher. At Cosla ~1esa, starting quarterback Flip Darnell is a doubtful participant and will be replaced by Frank Fregosi or Pat Kalama. ,Darnell suffered a shoulder in· jury in the Estancia game two weeks ago and still can't raise his arm lo pass too well. Both coaches t'-Oncur that the Costa Mesa defense is capable of stopping any team in the league on a given night. "OUr defense is · capable of holding them if they l\'?11t to play football.'' Sweazy says. "We have to try and moxe the bal! on their tough defense." Pickford says. While the Barons are wary of an am· bush at the hands of Costa Mesa, Pickford's cha rges will also have an eye peeled in the direction or other Irvine League encounters. CurrentlfT-2.in league play, the Barons must win to remain in contention while Costa Mesa at I-3. is desti ned for the role of spoiler. barring a miracle . And neither ~o.ach n1entioned the Baron secret \veapon -Gary Hernandez -of· fensi','.e spilt end , defensive cornerback and punter who almost single-handedly defeated Corona de! Mar last week. Founlll~ Vt lltll LiM UPI 011.n" De!•"JI WI. l'!f,er PPI. WI. l'ltyer SE Mtrn•r>d•Z 16!i 150 "lro••ll T Du¥al! l'S 200 Kl"d G StO<I• !IQ 1]1) Ptr•l c Caren• 190 1~ Ditcn•ll G B~rnh•r~ 110 115 S!on• T M1yme1 190 160 Mnbl•v TE p_,,c.,., ll!i 1SS P•l•.,cn QB Meuni•r US 15S D\111,.v TB Ma1co1m l!.O lM !-1trnoll(!•1 f B M)1cne11 1~ l~ Krut1ln9r• 118 Bechtr 175 160 Va•nev CH!t Mtla Llntupl O!lt nH Ot/l nH WI. l'lt YI<' Ptl. WI. l'lt•e< SE S<"'U~O lSS 1911 Parktf T P••~er ll!i 16S Brown c; J""n~on 1111:1 16S S1roicn C Ambu•vey 115 195 0.l•nv G W&rr.., !IS 17S 11.mCurGtV T Sche~"' ?OS HU WJrf~n TE Marc~torlt!!t 701 160 Gl1!PY ca K111m1 1~ ;,>01 Mo«Morla111 TB ~m•! 160 l!S 0.1m01 SI Hu"9trlort 1~ 1&5 K•lam1 Fii GlalPY \6() !JS Sc,.ruoo 1'01. ' ' ' ' " " " " " ' • Ptl. ' ' .. ' ' " " '" "' " • The metal bat is sti!l 1n the ex· perimental stage -but two big questions have already been ans\vered: ( 11 The use of the bat has curtailed baseball expenses trerl)endously. Mate1· Dei Solicl Cl1oice (21 A ball is hit much further when struck bv an iiluminuTilbat. :111 thfee of the area junior' inllege coaches use the melal stick during pr11c- tice sessions -primarily because of the mnnev saved. Bul l.\VO of the three feel that <1lu1ninum bats v.•iH never be sanctioned b,v the ruajor leagues -let alone thei r O\\'n conferences. ,. Orange Coast College·s Barry \Valla,ce would like to see it sanctioned. "The aluminum bat seems to jump off quicker than the 1vooden bat and some of the gu.\'S say it carries further. But I doo'l think it's that big a difference. l think it would be fanta stic for baseball." savs \Vallace. The OCC coach [igures he saved,. about 12 dozen bats last vear -because of the unbreak<1ble metal· stick . "We went through 18 dozen bats the vear before but last year we. used only Six dozen bats.·· (At $4 a bat that 's a sav- in,e:s of $576). \Vallace's Counterpart at Golden West College -Fred Hoover -also likes the savings involved -but feels t~at t~e .. aluminum bat will never be sanctioned 1n the major lea.e:ues . "Aluminum bots are the No. 1 savior to the baseball budget-especially in high school. But they're definitely livelier and 1 \\'OUld hale to see them legalize it. There would be no protection for the - At St. Antl1ony Tonigl1t LOl\G BEACH -l\laler Dei High beaten by two of the toughest prep fool- ball learns in Southern California in the past l\\'O \veeks. tries to reg roup tonight against host SL Anthony. It begin s at 8. The 1\-lonarchs. now 4·2 after setbacks to Bi~hop Amat and St. Paul. are lopsided favorites over the Saints. St. Anthony conie s into the Angelus League tilt with a 1·5 mark. having lost five in a row . illonarch boss Bob \Voods says he plans t.--, use a great many underclassmen in , !he remaining three games in prepara· lion for ne~t year. 1\iater Dei's offen se will depend prin1arily on the' running of halfb~ck Rock v Simpson and fullb11ek Rick She\d.on. And s e n i o r quarterback Bill Clough is expected to use the airlanes more tonight. The 165-pounder has completed 45 of J04 passes this season for 619 yards .. . Sheldon is the leading ground gainer 11·ith 261 1yards in 66 carries. \\locxls plans only one chan ge in his st;:irting lineups. F"or the third straight 1veck. he'll have a different right halfback. Ray Sanchez steps into that .- spol replacing Da\'id Burchardt \vho has a torn tendon in a hand and is out for the season. The 1\1ona rchs' No. 1 right halfback, Nick F'istonich. has been nursing an ankle: injury and may sit out tonight's tiff. • St. Anthon~· coach Bob Arhoit is work· ing in his first season at the helm of Saint football and he says it's a rebuilding year. "\Ve have quite a fe"' young kids in our lineups and because of. that mistakes have killed us this season. tl·later Dei is just too physical and too tough for u~. .\Ve're just looking for a good overall performance from our kids." says Arhoit. Junior quarterback Ken Knorzer. a 6-0. 175-pounder, and senior running.ba ck Dan Ponchak . a 5·11 ., 185-pounder. are the keys lo the SL Anthony offense. Mfttr Del LhlfMPl O!l•nl• DtlenH l'o•. P IJYtr ••• w: . l'!aytr lie•. " T M~r1'.r>da•t '" '" Moore ' ' e •rtt> "' "' Mans<>" ' ' Rott> '" '" KnC• ' ' Cou~•n• "' "' p~,no ' ' O•~lb& '" '" Cl.,~ LO ' Per~mpl! '" "' ~t~nbr~ " " C<~'" '" '" Me<"I>~" " 0 0 Clough '" "' "an•• ' " Slm p50n "' '" , ""'"9"' "' '" S•ncnei '" '" ' Poe119;n "' " Snt•don '" "' Mam111on • ·· I NON·BREAKABLE ALUM lNUM BATS HAVE CUT BASEBALL BUOGET COSTS IN HALF. That's tht Opinion of S1ddltb1c.k Coach Doug Fritz {left), OCC's Barry W1ll1ce. I • I ' . •"' , 1 ' • FridA)', Novtmbtr S, 1971 DAILY PILDT J Start Mesa Wins Again H-B, Saints In Sunset ' The-.4.wU Palmer Method Yodr Engi:Des! Get Out · Of \Cellar?- 7 Area Sc1'.nols "'.Anu.tn QI' TNC l>ICADr " . SWING nuiHEAD ALONG THE LINE ' In -Lion's Meet Encounter Here is a basic p{inc:iple or JOll lhat many playen fail to consider: TO HIT A STRA!OHTSHOT, YOUR CLUBH EAD MUST BE MOVING ALONG THE TAR· OET LINE DURING IMPACT. • by Deke Hou/gate , .,.ll!'lm,......,ICll._.., .. _.._..,..,r::c:aa . l'h_e s,peech Is a little bluned and the memory isn't every- thing Jt used to be. But Jim COok la very much on the road to recovery. • . · Nobody expected him to survive the brutal 160 m.p.h. crash on ,Jan. 18, 1970. al Riv~rside Intqnational Raceway lhal des· . troyed everything in his stock car in fronl of the steering wheel. C~k's life hung in the balance (of' weeks in a local hospital, lhe driver unconscious much or the time while teams of doctors lreated him for'mul tiple head and body injuries. He broke bones irf his hip, elbo~'. ribs and face and required several operations. So now that Cook is up and around, gradually eitjoying a return of his facult ies. what does he have to look forward to? "I'm pl-anning to build a new car." he said. "rm gorufa do It l'fry soon." • , Already he knows what kind of stock ca r he will build, a Chevrolet. and how he will build it. All Cook says he needs is mone y. "rl! do most of the work myself," he said. "If you let some- body else build it, it won't gel out of its lrack.!i. A lot of the sPted i~ a stock ~ar is ii;) the chassis. And the weight. You've gotta figure the size of the eng ine and the speed you want to get .1 ' Cook is still a little unsteady on his legs and all his strength hasn·t returned yet. Doubtless, it will be some time before he can really drive a race car again~ But his determination is im- prc55i ve. For one thing Cook doesn't consider his age (49 ) is a handi· cap. , "f\tost of the younger group just don't know what to do on a race track.''. he said . "They just don't seem to care. All they cace about is getting the checkered flag. That's wrong. "'You have to think all the time. The condition of the track. \\'hat your opposition is doing. Yellow flag laps are the times v.·h~ you win a race. The reason is you can follow around in single file at low speed and~'gure out where you are in the race. It gives you time to think o your moves. Dirt Easiest hirtg to ftoce on "Dirt Is the easttst thing to race o~. You get on asphalt and you bit a piece or oil you can't bold. On dirt you know you're gonna slide. , "\\'h y, a regular midget on a quarter.mile track, you back It Into a turn and go all the way around backwards and still drive lt out onto the straightaway. That's bow good dirt ls." These days Cook 11· a little hazy on the: details of bl1 caref:r. He remembers some ra'~es and not others, and ha bis mind be bas won a few times when jl reality be wasn't even there. But time Is Improving his percepHon. "I'm ready to go l:frack racing right now," be said. "The only thing that Is holding mt back is' money." His "''ife l!in't ruling out Cook's return to tbe sport. "Will he race again? I .,.,·on 't say no," sbe said. "He stil(bas 11 stul plate In his right arm. It allows him movement. Tbe left knee is "·obbly. He's lucky be can walk. What be needs Is time." "'hat Cook also needs 11 lo hear from bis friends and Jormer fans . Letters can M addressed to him care of Ken Piper, NASCAR Wesi Coast representative, Riverside lnternational Raceway, Rh•· erslde, 9ZS08. Piper will forward them. .. "I sure appreciate. the call.'' Cook said. "E\'ery word said Jtbout a guy who 's In trouble, not just me but anybody, It helps 100 percent.''· ~.nfe111 Offleinb Take It on Chin Auto racing safety officials took it on the chin frol'I'! world driving champion Jackie Stewart at Riverside Internation~I Race- v.·ay· at the Times Grand Prix over the weekend_. a~d while they are admittedly sma rling from the attack there 1s htt1e they can di sagree with. What Stewart talked about referred mostly to Riverside. but his critique on safety applies generally everywhere;. Stewart compla ined mostly about a row of utihty poles on the' backside of the course where speeds of 180 m.p.h. are at· tained, and the poles were immediately removed. Jackie pointed oul. howt>ver. that he wasn't the only person with eyes who could ha\'e setn th e poles, and il shouldn't have been necessary for him to po.int !hem out. . . . In fairne ss tn Sports Car Club of America officials and the track's exlremcly safety conscious ma.nagement. however. thos.e poles \\'Cre never an issue before bec~use no _car had ever hi t one in the 15 years the track has been in operation. That "s lhe sorl of problem that keeps cropping up in auto racing safety. \Vhat was safe two yea rs ago is a hazard today, because C\'erv vear the speeds increase. ''\\'e reccigrlize a lot of problems." said Bob Bledsoe. safety co-ordinator for the SCCA ·s Southern Pacific Division. "The ques· lion is one of reason. You ha ve lo C()nsider when you seek safety im provements. Often we have to consider the financial ability or a track to make the improvements we want them to. "There isn'! any valid argument against what Stewart said , there's only logic.·· .Slewnrl'• Cruelest Cut of Al/. The cruele~l cut of all by Stewart was bis bombast against the fir+-Ughting capabilities of Ri\·erslde'1 emergency crews. \\'Ith the memory of watching ,Jo Siffert rGBsted to death In Eng- land btcause firemen were unable lo rope with the fire In bl11 n\'erlurned ca r still fresh in bis mind, Ste~'art was causll<' about th e firem en. Re claimed the crew~ were all volunteers, wher~s al near- b)' ~larch Air Force Base there were trained firemen available. The truth Is. Bled50t said. most of Riverside's firemen •re pros from lbe neighboring base L blghly trained, exptrlenced both with aircraft and •uto racing fires ud •• capable as any In 1b.e "·orld. One thing Is certain about lonlght'1 Sunset League foot· ball clash between Marina's Vikings and Lhe Loara Saxons on· the Westminsi.tr High field -the winner wlll escape the cellar. Kickoff is al 8. Four teams are ettrrtntly tied for the bottom spot v:ith l-3 records and the four are playi ng against each other this evening. ln.Jhe other battle to escape the cellar. Huntington Beach and Santa Ana are the rom· batants. In the clash at Westm inster. Loara is favored , b,v four points over coach L e o n Wheeler's charge, but coach Herb Hill doesn't buy this summation. "The game is a tossup any way you look at it," Hill sayi;. "Marina has a jrood football team and coach Wheeler has them hustling all the time. They move the ball well and c~ate a lot of problems for our defense." The Marina C()ach joins the mutual admiration soclety in his summation of the Saxons. "l...()ara is a very healthy looking team . On film. it ap- pears they should have beaten Anaheim with their passing game . "With my short haHbacks, there won't he any prnblenl tor their receivers· -they'll catch 'em ." Marina's attack is directed by junior quarlerback Greg Foster and when given time to pass, does a creditable job. "With any kind of pro- tection. we"ll get the job done ," Wheeler says. Foster's C()unterpa~ at Loara is senior Dean Lappin. a boy who runs the option play Y{ith success . Lappin's credentials show ~9 completions in 139 attemp\i; for 666 yards and f i v e touchdowns . \\'hen he turns the corner and holds onto the ball. he is also successful vdth 344 }'9rds rushing and four touchdowns. His trailing halfback. Tom Bjamason. is equally effective in the running ii:ame with 336 net yards and three scores. Perhaps ii will boil down to the bane of all football coaches and players alike - the team that makes the ·fewest mistakes (fumbles. in- te.-cepted passes. etc.l will be the ultimate victor and escape the cellar position. ••• ~· G ' G ' " •• " " .. '"· ' ' MG ' • " " " " • ' MAllNA Untu•s Gllt111• "'''' 1100 ltrown lad H1rtl• Bc•d Hollimon C:1llen M<M~•lry e,..,..n Kt•"~ ltad Ml '"' Biii Slut •t C.rtt Ft>0t•1 G1rr lm1v~n1•\t• Hor••Y l<lttl• Mlkt l l tV lltltntt l'llYtr OO<'I S!T't• Rod H1ttl1 l'Ytn 1Ctrn1 Crtlt Hou I"' tjl(lt Vorono 01v1 lllllln• Bo•~ Holhm•~ Slt~t Rtn!,OW K~n GIMI• Scon w11ee""'" Ml~r LO(Y • •• "' "' •m "' '" '~ '" ·~ .. '" '" ••• •m "' '" '" , .. "' •m ·~ "" OM "' Grid Standings .. " .. " " .. ,a Westminster High School will host its 13th annual in- vitational cross country meet Saturday morning with seven Orange Coast area schools In· eluded in the list of 30 en- trants. Competing from this area will be Marina, ~iisSinn Viejo, Es;ancia. Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley and Corona de! ~tar in addition to the host school. ·First race is set for 8:30 vt'ith the featured final at noon. Four dh•isions C()mprise the action -'Varsity, junior varsity, sophomore a n d freshman. The varsity _,races v.·ill he run on the quarter-mile cinder !rack with the others on the cross country course. Times will be sent to a central point and compared with others across the nation. In the s~ded varsity race are Marina. Mission Viejo, Foothill, Palos V e rd es , Rancho Alamitos and St. Bernard. Three course records were set in dual meets Thursdi.y. Costa Mesa's Doug ~tacLean lowered the old mark by 20 seconds in 9:45. Teammates Tom t9:58l and John j J();CM J Olsv.·ang were also below th!! old record . Costa Mesa posted its 24th straight dual meet viclory in defeating fountain Valley. 15- 50. Ed Radermacher p a c e d Mission Viejo to a 15·50 win over San Clemente with a 9.58 record performance in 'the Crestview League meet. Laguna Beach's Joe Prickitl lowered a week-old mark nn the hilly Artist course to 11 : 55 as Laguna stopped University, 19-38, in Orange League ac· lion. Marin<1 and Newport Harbor both won in the Sunset League lo run .their records to 6-0 (or the year, MV Poloists Dealt Loss By Az tecs La Quinta High School v.·at.er polo team hander! the ~1ission Viejo Diablos a 7-~ de.feat Thursday afternoon in non- league action in the winner's • pool. Coach Doug Burt's Diab\os di vided the scoring betwee" five players including Scott Campbell , Steve Lyle, John Leogue. Bob Sturgeon a n cl Gary Piper. In the junior varsity game. La Quinta won, 7-2 , and the frosh-soph team copped a 4-2 verdict over the Diablo yearl- ings. Vtrsllr Lono Beach l · " Tests FSC Fresno State College · ls rlding the crest of ii' most .#;essful football seaM>n in ~nt yea rs and three former ·tir.ihge Coast 11rea star' w\\I !),Jn the lineup lonighl As the ;$ildo$!S h1ce Cal state (Long ~ch) al Veteran's Stadium ~th kickoff at 7:30. What you can expect from a little American car priced $335 * less than vw 113. .. rtctlng the Fresno State slvt 1Uack Is former tmhmer High and Golden ' Wnt College star signal caller John lnglehart. He is in hls se- ,. cond year with flle Bulldogs "'itKI holds most of the .passing t~rds for Golden West. -Bob Serowik. an . alt-co~ rtnce dtfenslve end 1t 1G<Mden West and also a former stilr undr:r Biii &!well llt \Vestminster High, Is a Junlor •llnd Is playing orfensive lack le. Richard Timmerman, 1 Fountain Valley lUgh graduate ' and former Golden Weal star, ls a defensive h1Jlb11ck. You ·can expect an engine proven by 50 million miles in Ford•bullt European cars. A body that's welded solid and painted six times. Rack-and-pinion .steering like a spbrts car. Exc•plionally good handling. In short, a car ~ery bit as good and maybe better than the li(tle .foreign cari. As a matter of .fac~ we bui~ Pinto to selrtor about the same price as these little foreign cars. And if we're rrm priced below thfm c$335' less than thal WI 113, $22a· less than Toyota CO!olja 1600, $300' less than DalsUn 510), It's not because we've taken anything away from our car. . ' It's because their p<ices have gone up. See )')UI Fool Dealer ,-:; PINIO .. 1912 Pi"to 2-Door .Std•n 11'\0Wf\ w1tll 1pt1an•l }'flllt• 1ldew1ll Urt1 ISA2) illd tccent 1ro11p ($72). •A. c.aMp1r1\011 ol "'""ul1ctut1t1' 1~111111d r1t11t Otff;1t., 111d 1ppltc.ebt1 1m11art 1ur,ll1111a. far lht trtw 2-deM'.lf "''"""· 0t111r pt1per1tlon cf\11111 {11 eny), 11111 ind loul t1•e1 end 6t1ttn1ban c11·1r111 {SlOS tor lllnto) tl'I tdra. I I· \ UllVl:.4. Ll!AOUl V•r•lrr IC•~ M~~lf ",."'t"df,1"t~~lltryto'!tf. ••<&r"dl 1-, Tom &1,w1111 IC:I. t ,lt1 J· J""ll Ol1w1n• (Cl. IO:Ool; I. Miki Hol! • d•Y. (CJ; J Hl~k p,1,,1 IC!; • Ml•1 Srulsm111 !C ll 7. llm G<lllnic .. IC \. ~ J1n<1l<111 ff'I• t .Crld (Fl: lC M'>!!tf IF!t.•I. Al•••nde' (F )· n. Putt (Fl; l. Ml rU (F•, u Sl•ln••• {f \, Junlw V1"1l' C11t1 M111 IS, i<wnt1 " v1ll1r JI 1 Dive irn••~ 1(1. 11 117:. 1 • C:••Pe<llfr ((I; l . G1ll11l>or !Ch •. G111ly f(lr S. Hlh>l>t 1C ll '· M11I !(1: I Ll1-t \Cl, Ol!lt ri• U, K-11 IF ); 11. (IUO (F , Fr11ll·S01!1 Forl1\I lo CDS!, MHI . V1nllY MttMlll :ti. (IN'°"I HI Mir .. 1 MllUM• jM), ;. 17; 1 IC1111>1 ((1, 10 JO. J Murillo IMI .• "'""'" IMl ; s C1nt1 CM1. '· O.L•ll(• 1c1· >. R1mlt11 IM I: I LU<ll CA•l, t , H klrn• ~••I'd !Cl; 10. i..tl1l'llm1 (M!, Oll'lt<I : 11 0.111..-1..:l; 11. Croet•1r lCl: ll. Au11111 !(;'I. Junlff Vl "l!Y M .. AGIU 17, CllONll dtl M•r JO I IClnll (M • IO:M; 1. sn.u~, IMI; ~c~·~~·~.1.~~= 1c~11Y'."~l~r'.!i ~~1~ Ollltrl ' Ill ""!" (CJ: 11. Gald!ml!ll IC), !J. M lit• f ), Two prep football teams w.ith a co1nn1on problem clash tonight at Huntington B~ach High School when the Ollers of coach Ken Moals mcel the Santa Ana Saints in a Sun~t League skirmi.5}1. Kickoff is slated for 8 o'clock. Both elevens are 1·3 In cir cuit action and both haven't won sinc.e upsetting Anaheim. Huntington Beach is a Iv.«>· point underdog p r i m a. r i I y because of the Oilers' lack of abl111 y lo hold on to the ball when sroring opportunitie.s arise. Tht> Oi1ers ha\'e scored only one touchdo"·n in the last three games and handed Loara an 18-0 victory last 11·eek with key flunb\es and in- terccptiofis turning the tide. Jmaginc a path through the ball and try ·to swing your clubh~d along that ·path through lhc hitt.ia1 area (main illustration). I I I : ': I 0 v /'. : 1:: I 11comtrcr I ~•>ll·SN!I HI ,., •. Ln six gan1es Hunlington Jn other words, you cannot Be<ich quarterbacks ha ve been hit the ball straight if your clut>-intereepted 17 times. Moats ha s made son1e ad-head .ever cro&scs the target Jinc justments for !he Santa An11 in. the hilling area. If this happens, (!a.me in hopes of improving expect .a altce or a. hpok if the the running game. ball should fly straigbt. lt will go He's moved flanker Tony to the Jc!t of right o! the target. '··· ·~· Ciarl'lli (1801 to ti1:.ht end and switched Brett \\fhite 12051 to ~emember th.is principle and the other side of the forward apply it to every shol you make, \\'all for blocking purpose~. ';::f:;r•;,m:=d;:r,:iv:;•;:•,:l:;o,:p;:u:,11:;•:,· ===== ... :":;"":="'=:"-;,-:;;:"'=:-=~ Spl il end David Clapp moves 1 CltESTV!EW LE•GUE V1r1ll• MIHklll Vitia I~. S1n Cl•mtllll M .~ .. r~~; R;_o~z;~'~i;~.~,i~l! jc~;~: Thlltr11• !Ml• I . M•rk Co111l1"" !M l. \ Chl.ICk Glddtnt lM\; I. C.Of!IOll ltover• (ML 1 JQOI Buono Ml·! Munn ISi. 9 SmHll 1SI ; 10. Pr1tr {s ; 11 L•ollam (51; 11 P1.coe !SI; lJ. Vic k (51; 1'. Geddt1 1$!. JUllllN' V1rillY Minion Vl•I• n , Sin "'"''"" 11 I K~n Mower !Ml, 10 'l ' 1. McC1d~. IM1l J. o·o..nnrll (Ml; •. 8•~· IM\; s V•nt r 1M!; 6 W~l•ll !Ml' I lt!tO IM \; •. Vouno (Sb • Minn 1MJ. 10 1Cr1rne• IS\ 11 P1t1"" (Ml, 11 Kru~t (S), n. s1.,.,.1, !SL I• Wal m on (SI. .,,..,.,.s.,.,11 Minion Vlolo 11. S111 C1tmr11" :M 1 Jnn C""l (Ml, 10 '' 1 "'"~~ro,M IS!. l l•n1!•! 1Slr • 11\~u 1M\, l Mrlrll M1n11 (Ml. 6 AlotCOll !S I; I. Ltwl• IMll I. L1nau1 !Ml; • Joron•"" f!o). IO, 8•1h (M l. SUNSET lE.•GUE V~'lllY M1rllu IS, Lo1r• U 1 BMI Pllllllo1 IM I. 10 Oll 1 ~lry~p Rt"<f !Ml; J G11v Illume !Ml. < J•> Rorlfft\ IM !; J. !(rn Marlon 1M); &. $11ve Bui!\ lL); I. Jim 1<~11 !LI• ~ Kurt Ol1unl•lnrr fll; 9 Dou• T11!m1n (M\; 10 Rkhard BtH!r.c• 'Ml. Junior VH·10y M•tllll II, lN•I 4' !. ScOll Melnt,rt IMI. 10 U; 7 01"· n• C:•d•n fMI; J John Niel""" !ML • 8•"~ IC•!1m•n IL ); S. S!tVt Mo•eftt&d IM)'"· John Mvnlo• !Ml: I. Jo1~ ~ko Ml, Ot111rt : I . •nt:t•l~t <M>. FrDSll·lOl>!I Forltll !o Marlnft, v ... u. NtwPOrl n, Wttlmlnslor 41 1 J""" Hol<omb (NL 9 </t I (rO\$ ~':.:,'~ ~1 N'11:''f.' J:~~ .. ~ Pv~1 j ~!;,~; h~/~ol~ ~~~~ !l~i..:~,~~;!~~i.::• l't/11' :~· Vnun1 (Wh n . r>ou IWl1 u 01~11. jW\, Junior VH11t~ W1stmln•l•r 1•, NtWPOrt )t 1 •lvt,t> IWl, 10 Joi. I Polllol! !NI: J Mft(lnne• (Wl. I C:ollm' no. ' Mendo" (Wl. 6 i.::1111i if'v (HI; 1 JrMS lWh . ~;m••I• l NI , ...... .,,. .. , IH): 10, CtrnlCk• IWJ: !! Jordan INl; II 001 IW\, I) HOut1o•n PO I; \1 Wf)nlmac~ !W! F'111ll·So•" W111mln1tu I!, Ntwoor1 JO I 1>1',,..G fW!, II 11. ) M1111~, ftj l, l (otd•AY IWL • Vttllt• !Wl; J 1Cuo!t rm1n INI; & IConp !N); I IVeC:un• !N)· I N~ely (WI; t. V•,11 {Wf, 10 N!WVf th INI \l•"llY S1nt1 An• 11, Huntlntlan )I 1 C.t~ 151. t •11, 7 C011<1oll~ tS~,) •n~• IHI; I. W~1ler IH I. .s I( (011• nollv !Sl, t , Mllc!lell (H); I Empfield !Pl!t I Ml ..... l'IO•I (S); ' Seo!! !SI. lO Ht~ntY (5!. Otllers· 11.' MrNtir (H); l) Mt!IOn IH): tl. TOOmolOll 4Hl. JunllN' Vtnlll' Hunll<1t lon H,_Stn1t Ant 11 1 Fron• II<), 11 •119; ). C•ll'l<>brll (Sl: rs1~10:0 sh'!ia.~· t~r7 ;s)i,..ie1i'"r~1: Ql~t<I 10, Klt~po!•ltk· !Hl. Fro•"·Sooh Muntin•lon JI, S•nll A111 U I WlliO<I !HL ll U : 1 Oodd l~I : l . ;~c:t:i"1a0l l .(~), B.'mm~(~1i1~1 1, 1J~~;.,10~ !HI om rri 10 H•"ou• tM\. back lo flanker. Santa Ana has had its trouhles, too, and coach Toni Bald win said earlier in the \1·erk that if his eleven played si1111lar tu its performance against Newporl last week it \\'ould not v.·in ano ther g_ame. Santa Ana has lhe 'ho'rses, hO\\'CVer, and one ff t'fif; best stallions in camp is wide receiver \\'alter Mead. Mead is a eollcge prospect and he appears bigger than !he S-2, 180·pound listing in the game program. i\1ike Molina wilt be h;ick at quarterback afte r a siege or flu and the Sai11ts' Louie Perez 1s a dangerous lhre<il al l<11lhack . llunl ing1on's runn\n"g J?,ame appears ready \.\'ith Steve Pickford and Paul Fiskness rPady to mll IM>hind quarter· back Jinl ~1a r1in Pic kford is the No. 10 rusher in the Orange Coast area in tnlal yardage with 295 yards in i6 carries and a 3.8 average . Mw"llntl"" lt•c!I l ll>tl.l•I Olftnlt PM. Pl1y•r lE Ton• C:lt ,elll T P~!• 81~.,, G Jim Poll•r C J OOn 11091 c. Ml~t 1101>11v 1 J im lr.i T£ ere!! W~llt 08 J I,., M•rt•n lB 50f•I Plc~tord ~e P•v' Fllkn•u Fl D•~• Cl1p1> Otft~tt ••• ,., "' '" ,., '" "' '" ,., '" '" ,., Poi . Pl1•tr Wt, E Box:-• Bond 17j T Mi~• Cunn•nRl'l•m 11/t. T W•lly NIV)IJ"" !/' E Fll\wl'.>rt~ El~•Y 19\ L8 J'*'n C.ett•lld H I LP. M11~ And1M1, \o(I Lii P•lld• Mlllo !/O (!I K•I• ""'' lt.mo,.lort 1 ~1 CB A•nt'll(I fl u•t IM\ 5 J•rtY A•~'~'(I 1111 i Tern t•unl< 111 Water Polo Showdown The hour of decision is al hand for the f\.farina High wat.er polo team with coach Tru11 Lloyd's sriuad hnslini;: un· defeated Newport J-1 a rho r Salurday morning at 11 1n the FY Niµ: ht Caine Golden Weit College pool. Coal'h Bill B a r n e l l 's r ountain Val\C'y 11 i g h 's Ne\.\'P<H'f T:irs are derendinR \.l';ller polo team will be in ac· CJF ehampions~d are lion under the !i~hL<; for the favored to .,.,·1n t Suns t t fir s 1 time evt>r \Vrdnesda y Ll'<1gue cl:ish wi\f !he Vikin11s . whl!Jl the Ba ron~ of coach Tom Both learns are )1ndefeated in Landis' Irvine I.ea g u e league pl;iy tn d<1ll'. loughies meet Los Amigos at Robbie Robinson is the ke,v Orange Coast College. In the Marina success "'·hile The nOn-league skirmish ii; Kevin Ashe and Jay Farrer "HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUmNG"J Her. Is Arnold Pa1mer'a t ully illustra!td guide to putting st1nc1, llne-up, s.trok1\ Send 20C along with 1 s.lamped, self·1ddr1ssed 1nvt10petoArnold Palmer, In cere of this nt-spaper. ... .· Playoffs Taking Shape ~ ... In JC Grid Circuits . '· Most of the slate JC foot ball' playorf entries in the large schools division are expected to be se ttled this weekend ""'ilh man~ qt the co -leade r s clashirfg' head on. Mtlropolltalt Canlerencr. Pierce (2-1 J at Santa Monica , t 1.2,. Bakersfield (2·2) at Loo&,, Beach j2-l 1. El Camino J4·0), bye . f ollowing are the pairings Southern California for the Nov. 27 playoffs ""'ilh LA Harbor \l·I) ~t LACC (J. the leaders in parenthesis: 01. East LA (2-0) at Rio Hondg.. Top Bracktt (1-1 ). Mission. iCiLrus, 4-0) \'S. Golden Gate ~1etropolitan lEl Camino, 4-0J. San Mateo {4-0 ) at Chabot Southern California tEast (4-0 l, tonighl. LA and LAcc: 2-01 vs. \'allr.y Western State (West LA and San Joaquin Delta 13-0) at Fresno (:'I-DI. · l ... Santa Barbara, 3-0). Soulh Coa1t ': ! Bollont Bi'acket Orange Coast t3-0) al Ce!"o f;o!rlen Gale I San Mateo and ritos (3·0). ,'..,1 Chabot, 4·0) vs. Valley tSan Camino Norte ~ '• Joa<]uin 0 e 1 ta Md Fresno. Santa Rosa (2-1 I at We!( ' 3-0 I. Valley (3-0 I, '"" South Coast !Orange Coast ---'--------~·' a'nd Cerritos. :1-0l vs. Camino Norte 1 \Vcsl Valley. ~-01. This \\1et'k's Game.s lnvolvlni: Contenders r\lission Cit rus (-1·0 ~ \'5. Saddleback 13·1 t at J\lissron Viejo High. Grossman! t1·3) at Chaffey (3·~1 ). Pioneers Win, 19-14 C.oll "" ~our own IB·hnlo .,..,,._ poonoh>P '°'" ... 11 !>•I<"•""' Canv°" l•~•! Tl'lio ••<iu•"• SCGA "ltd UIU,_ i'I• -dlft1, c!>t!lo"9'"'1 l1IJ• . .. .. .. i ;, . .. :• i ........ . :, Th.,o'o • priv1!1 11••. loo. p..-. • bol•"''JI S.•ll"'l1 W1ttt••1 bn 1 3-milt p '"'""' "" 1l1g0t>! lo<!vl .... 111 ttllOIJ• ~ ""'t ...., 1 .... ,.. " ..... ~"''"" pool. i ,. H¢f,.blc~ rid•ntr ''"I''"""· 100, .. C.nvan Lo~.t. 73 mol11 ..,..,,_!of. •:" l<>I A"90I .. , • , !/If !\IW P< .. !>!11 .cl• : <ir•K !or"'" .. ot d•IC"mln11I ... IMtfl. : Wl\1•1 ~"" ,.,. h•O ond PllY h•1 1111 : 11>•IT•Oll•"lll ; l o!t ho"' Sll.100. '• , ........ , ............. ~.. '}' "'4 y f ........ -.1. •, O f 'L 11 !71•J 67•·2113 'z.'> •@" I) u~Jt11.,l.,.1 Plor : , .~ Cohn.,. f•~ . .,. -11: :,• ... (: ......................... . ....~ ...................... . ...... ... • •• :· slated al &:30. pace the Tars. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~, I LOTS OF FREE SKI STUFF! HAS MOVEDI COME SEE OUR NEW STORE GRAND OPENING SAT., NOV. 6 • SUN., NOV. 7 l Plenty of FREE Parking (No parking tickets!) NEW STORE 2600W. COAST HIGHWAY 2600 W. Coast Highway Newport Beach, Calif. 92660 ' (714) 642-8335 . Allo In BELMONT SHORE 53321. ~"ti Str•et, lo"g lea<h, Calif. 90103 (2U) 439-7667 r I I I r, i • • • , ·-• ' .f tlAILV PILOT ,. Fri~&Y, November 5, 1971 ., Nov. 10 Evett( ~ ~'tiff1e ·o1d··Lady' ·college Yachts PURE DYNAMITE! 7 Sloops . -KIDS LOVE '";'""" ., ........ "'" nMn ., . . JJNC LE LEN !'°"'"'"""""'-' [jj)•1 · I ,,-. ••• ! !:i ·C,ompe~1• S · :., S · · ·; da · ·.· Saturcjays in .TBE.ClcotQCTION':'W 0 ; ~:· .. ai .. · atu· r . y :-·. rh LY T . • .. TTiR THAH ... u,t.:~IT· ... -·OAILl'dUl:'#S Se>en L-36 stoopS will cpm·", "· e DAJ PILO "'""'"" LIDI ""'"'J"""·NOW! ~! Regat~ on Tap .;. ~ ... l pete ~saturaoy for the Al" 1~F~~~~~~~~;:;~i Adam! & Son challenge Ir<>-Quarter 0f1nals of the Paci~ic three out of five:-competiti~. pliy w i t h Newport Harbor r Winni"• team' lhi's weeke d Ya 't Cl"b h d r d Coast lntercolleg1ate Yachting ·~ coi .. as 1 e e en er. ·will be matched in the finals I ,. .... , 1' ·~,. ,.. Women seem to 'bt :~h+ -Day Regatta or Alamitos Bay onlng the mid-d~y bniJge ·•Yacht Clul:t which drew more ~ables in , favor of .mid-day, ,than.1Ui v•omen skippers .for a NH.YC won the coveted trn-Association team r a c i n g · Phy ea''l·er Ibo's yea' 1·n a b' .11 •· .1 d . and semi-finals the following .. cham plons 1p .wl vc sa1 e in k d N 2"21 ' race in Columbla·SOs at Ca-wee en -ov. .,.. · \ ' --brillo Beach Yacht Club in Newport Harbor Saturday and UCI will be represented by ,. ~ id:week yachting· .if the fall nlidweek event. Los Angeles Harbor. Sunday with eight teams com· skippers J e ff McOermaid , -\ -t Under the Adams Trophy peting. Dave Hodges, John Billings ·,. T,. Y ...._ ~;)'achting calendar is any in-Cooperating in staging ·the deed of gift the award may Trophy for the inaugural and John Latlebow. Skippers be sailed for twice in one event has been donated by on the OCC team are Pat "dication. local r11gatla are 8 ah i a ~-' Four Ne"·port ~rarbor yacht Corinthian Yacht Cub, Balboa ::clubs are Joining fiirces to Y;:ichl Clu b, Lido Isle Yacht year. . Carte r Ford, coach of the USC Scruggs, Dennis Durgan, John CBYC with J im Cowie was team. Dai,e;h and Bruce Humann. ;;tage !he Ne"·port Beach Lit-. Clu b and Newport Harbor lhe original challenger j n Saturda y's racing will be USC'S team is composed of the second rac~ this year. He between Sap Diego State skippefs Jack Jakosky, Peter Yacht Club. • lie Old Ladies Regatta on The regalla ~ill be sa.lled in :, l\'ednesday, Nov. 10. The Lido-l•s. Win'ard SBbots and ~:tvent is invita tional to all Naples Sabots. will sa il ·1 h e 1.,.36 Tortolr•. College and Cal State Long Wilso n, Doug Rastello, Steve NHYC will defend .the· trophy Beach, and UCI versus UC San Hathawa y and John Weiss. with Tim Hogan at the helm Diego. The team racing will round of Brava . On Sunday· UCLA will meet out the PCIYRA program of -~uthern Calffofnia ya ch t All participants are urged to Seconda ry challengers are USC ilnd Occidental will go yacht racing , according to Balboa Yach t C!ub, Argyle against Orange Coast College. Ford. It has been in the plan· "' lubs. register at Balboa ''acht Clu b .... ,. It follows py only \\'here skip~rs meeting. is Campbell in Jezebel. The series Will be sailed in · iling stage fcii-several years, · 1''eeks ihe successful sc heduled for 10 a.m. Flying Jr. dinghies in a best he added. W-1-D-E General Calibra~ed ® Jumbo780, e ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT on r.ew 1971 c;i1$ •GLASS-BEL TEO IOI' K>ng mileage • POL YEST ER CORD body IOf streng1h e CALIBRATED ~ •. , compu1 e1-processed for 1 smoolh nde CHRYSLER FORD MERCURY S IZES, H78x1 5 2895 Pl111 Sl.01 ~F.l.T. Fits BUICK SPECIAL, CHAAGfR, TEMP£ST, F·IS, TORINO, IMPALA, BEL·AIA and many ot~r• s1 ·9ts ea • S•l• F78-14 & F78-1S hJbeless· blackwell plus $2.55 aod $2.61 Fed. E•. Ta• per !irt Only $l .00 ;nort p!r tire tor Twin-Stripe Whih w1Hs! Flt$ MUSTANG, COUGAR, CAMAAO, FIREBIRD, C HE~Y II and many olhan 5 18!~ 8i1e E78-1 4 lubeless blackwall plus 12 35 f!ld. Ex. l1• per'"' Only $3.00 mort per lite tor Twi•Slript Wlrit•waUs! Fit1 MONTf CARLO, BISCAYNE, CAPRICE. CATALINA, FURY, MONTEREY and many o~r1 5 23!:. Site G78·1S, lubele•s blackwa~ pl1.1s S2.71 Fed. E•. la( per twe O•ly $3.00 llOfl 111r tire tar Twi•Sttipe Whiltwallt! , . Fits FALCON, VALIANT, DART, CORVAIR GREMLIN, VEGA. PINTO $ 95 ~1ze A78-1J, tubel~s blackwall plvs $1.90 Fed. EK. Tar P8f tire ONLY $3.00 MORE PER TIRE FOR WHITEWALLS! "'"' "' ., .. , '"" ,,,.,., °'""I ''"' ,, .. ,, ...... ..,, ..... , ............. -... .... , ....... ,, ............. '"" ..... . CAMPER TIRES 39 95 ...... '·" I Ply -11·1'·1 5995 .. ,, •. u SUPER WIDE! 60 SERIES Belted-Raised Whit• Letters 15 F60-14 or $35.95 F.1'..T. 2.81 ·l.OO G60-14or15 $39.95 F.l .T. J.72·2.f5 BRAKE RELINE I fi 'rii~. I 1l1l~·~ ~::·~.:;!,!~";~:;~~: 2 495 O!K l •••H •nd llhlr c1r1 •lltnlly ll!1h1r. IUEll l:'S WHAT WE DO : Our 111«1•11111 ••llr• •II lour WllHh willl Wttnt r br1k1 Wnl1191 •• , 1"1Pf'CI •H teur druml , , • (llK -wfll .. (yllltd1n i nd rt · turn ,,...inti ••• CINll 1nd lubrl•"• .,._<-· Int p1111 • , • 1t1p1ck 1ro111 WllHI i...tri11fl • • , Adl111t brl k", ""'',. lh.tld , •• INol 1111 ~•11• '''· W1 1111 ..,,., """" l1c1ory t"fin11rlld M rt• , •• not rffum. SNOW CHAINS All PASS,:NGtll T•UCI &: CAMl'l'.ll SIZIS 700°11 to 12·1615 Crooked wh .. , rob your tor of 1110.-111111111 perfor111011ct , rldt, ttMrl l'HI 011d tire ""'''· Wt correct costtr, camMr, lot·lll, toa•o11t to yow c.01 111011ohtct111·or'1 t,.c:I• flcotloM, 011d 1ot.f'y chtck 011d edj111t your ttffthUJ. Duplex Wheels ................... 29.95 ea. • 3·PIECE . (:h WIND 'N RAIN SUIT . , · • JACKET • SLACK S I I ( •HOOD •Wind ;ind r111nproof • HIQl'I vt~1 n1!1Ty heavy du ty p1as1+e Specia l This Week Only . ......... $1?,? 't1 IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE Take Your Pick! USED TIRES Iott ef ao••tkld head eac:h p!yt •• ,,,. ""~ lc"•I '••11 COMPLETE C~R CARE Since 1959 Hou rs: •7:30 lo 6,00 Dilly ' PHONE: 540-5710 646-5033 ~ BOB . HEUSSER • AND HIS ALL ST AR TEAM AT SUNSET FORD PRESENT FOOTBALL F:ORECAST HIGHLIGHTS FOR NOVEMBER 6th by BOB HEUSSER "i..tt'" ••. ""• 99t lattt rt!" YM, -do! A11d ''""' of thtonl '~eta to our rori11gs ef 011r ToJ Twattty t1Gm1. To ••plola 090111: o tft111'1 r .. hHJ 11 bosed 011 ltt p•w9t' q11atl111t, not on 91111Ms wen 011d lo1t. This 11 t1et+ti119 MOrl tll,011 the n1r091 of Its past perl1rmonca 09ol111t oll oppotitlo11. Each of the 640 footboll tao"" tltltt we follow r.celvno11 .cliu•ttd rotilMJ ooc.h -k. This a1plol111 why Mlchlto11, f., tlf'O"'ple, co.. be #1 o ... Wffk, :r J ot1ottt.f w ... , ate • .Althou9h t hey remah1 1111dil· raa .. d, ttt.llr powt'r 11~otfat1t Hui:u1.citft from Wffk to w...-. l11t -the , .. ,,,. 111 011r Tap 20 ore 11ot oll of tho major 1111dafaotad taont1. Ccilibra of &om• potltlo11 pre•.-tt. '°'""' ,..clrt 01 Dortmo11th 011d T1led1. "fir ••al'llpi,, from re911lorly estobHshin9 • 1tT0119 e11ou•h power rotlltl), How••ar, l l ·••-w luer Toledo 11 Wery close. A11d, OI i11 the Clffe of Southe1n Collfor11lo, rot.d 14th, o teem co11 be a tllfff or fou .. tl-lour and still ff roflk•d 111 111r top •••up. The Traia111 ho•1 lost f•ur •amn, tttreo of tfielft to taollli 111 0 11r Tap 20 -Aloboma, Oklohoma, a11d Sto11ford, IOHd 011 their power 1111ollent, tttey would hllff t1 rot• Cll • finorh1 09oi11st 80 •/• of th1 moj1r taa"'1 In the co1111try. S1 ••• it's lust our wey of 111othomotli:olly spec:11leti119 011 th1 relative power of co1le9e foot• ball teolftl. Wa c1111 M • wro119 °' a 11yona, b11t w1 fHI lt'1 °' raliablo a 1y1t1m as any In d11tarml11· Int wl1111er1 1111d loH rs. ' · And It's ti-to leek ot •h111er1 and loHr's for this Sorurdo'I. Tho football 1potlitltt facuws 011 one goma 11'1 portlculor -Aloboma, ronkl'd 11 ), l'llffh L.S.U., ratad 1Sth. Tho Crim1on Tide II I 011d 0, •hll1 L.S.U. 11 l and 2. Another l1s1 for tk1 Titers wllo w1t1 cauqllt nappln9 tau w"k °'ah11t Mltsl1•ippl will ei,,,i1to.. tllem from ttla So11thaa:st Confore11ce tltl1 raca. Tiiis lffnll to be 011 Ala· bom• ...... II wa'r• pie.Jal .. tlta TIM. ti blfot L.s .u. The ., ... , 1llould be 10 '''"''· NUmffr ON ottd Numb.t Two, Nebra•• ottd Okl11h0Mo, wlll 19111oi11 111td1featad .. rhay ap. praodl tkir Th ... kMJl•i.. Day fh1al1. Thi fornhulkars wlll subdff Iowa Stete by 29 pol1th. 011d rha s .. ~ wlll wWp Miuourl by 42, , .A11d we all k11ow ab1ut tfte bl9 Ollft hero 111 tfla coo.t, Tllo Co119ors fro111 Wo.hl119to11 State ''' 9oln9 to •auH oll •lftds· of fireworils wltt. So11ther1t Col. Jo1t abo11t ''flYOllll 11 plckl11t. SC t.y ot'I t 14 poloh, l11t lo11t: for WSC 11 wl1 by l , 1r my 1t•-lp't l ob Haussar. ' The Bob Heusser Football Forecast 1-NEBRASKA I-GEORGIA 11-ST.\NFORD 12-WASHINGTON 13-ARKANSAS 14-SDUTHERN CAL 1~S.U. 16-tOLDRAOO 17-ARIZUNA STATE ti-TENNESSEE 19-HOUSTON JO-MISSISSIPPI 2-0KLAHOMA 1-AUBURN ~LABAMA &-OHIO STATE ~MICHIGAN 9-TEXAS 5-PENN STATE 10-NOTRE DAM! Saturday, Nov. &-Major Colleaes Other Games-East Alab11m1 Arizom1 Sl•I• Arkan111 Army Auburn Boston COil•,. Boi.llns GrHn CfncJtmatl Co11111 Co1or1do Colorado Stm COrnlll Dartmoutl'I D•)'tOfl Duke E•sl C;uolln. Geor1i1 Georal• Tech Holy Cros1 Houston Idaho IUlnoi1 Kent Stlll• Loujsvil!1 ••Miami, f fa. Mlchipn Mluissippl .,.ebr••k• New Mellie.I New Me•ico Sl•t• North C1rolin1 Northw~stern Nol•• O•m• Ohio Stal• Okl1hom1 Okl1hom1 St1t1 Or11on o~ion tt1t1 Pie fie ~tin Stal& Prlncelon Pll•due Richmond Sin Ole10 Stlt. Southern C1I S.M.U. Southern MIMbtippl Stanford TennessH Te•1s TeKIS Tech Toledo Tulane Ut1h St1t1 Vanderbilt Vill1ncv1 V.P.I. Wal!e forest W1~h!ncton Wesi.m Mlcl!<11n Y1le " " " " " " " " " ,. " ·" ,. 23 " " " .. " " " 21 " " " " " " ,. " ,. " " " .. " " " " .. " 21 " " " " " " " .. " ,. ,. " ,. " " 21 " 21 " L.S.U. Bri1h1rn Youns Rice Rut1crs Mi11issil!l)I Stata Syrac1111 Arlin1ton North Tet11 Bucknell K11ns.1 Wichlll Brown CoJ11mbl1 X11vier Wist Virslnl1 Davidson Florida "'" MISHChusettl t,'lemph1J State We~r lndi11n1 Marsh1U Tulsa " " , l " • " IO • " " 12 " " , , , , " , • " " North Carotll'lll Iowa Mttl 1 Tamp• Iowa Stat1 Utah We•I Texaa Clemson Mtnnesot1 Pittsbur1h Michi11n Smt. Ml$SOUri K11ns.s Stal• Ai• fOrCI ~rtton1 IWlll I aryland H1rv1 rd Wiseonsl" Thi Cit11del San Jose Stall Wa11!in9ton Stilt Te••• A & M \l.M.I. U.C.LA. South C1rotl,,1 Baylor T.C.U. Northern llllnol1 Ohio U Wyomln1 Kenlucky Boston U \lirRlnl1 Willilm &. Miry C1tliforni1 Ml1ml !Ohio) P1nnsylvanl1 • " • -~~ " 17 • " , ' " " " , " " " ~ " , " " " " " " " " • " " 1J , 17 AllniQ.nt 23 Allred 40 Amherst 27 eowdllin 21 Bridfepart Jl 8 rOCkpOrt 22 C w Post 26 Centr•I Conl'Mlctlc:ut 20 Cl•rion 30 Ot!llW•ffl 21 Delaware Y•Hcy 21 HIUld1lt 22 Hobart lS Mtine 20 MJddlebury 24 Montcl1ir 30 New HampShifft 21 Northeastern 21 Penn Military 27 SliPIM'Y Rock 21 Soulh••n ConnecliC.!ll 24 Temple ~ 35 Uou11 21 We•t Chester 45 WiUitlf'5 27 Wo1cest1r T1eh 24 Leb1non V1!11y Ha milton Tr!nity Tufts Gl1ssboro Curry lthlCll Amt•it11n lnte.m'I Shlppe111bur1 Lehi ah Lycomin& lndi1n1 U Dre•el Tech Vermont Union Jersey City Springfield Cortt1nd Muhle11ber1 Lock Haven Adelphi Rnodt lsl1nd Mor11v!1n M1nsfield Westey1n No,..,..jcn Oth1r Games-Midwest .. , ,., ,,,. " • • " 17 • 1 " 21 " " " • • , " " , ' 1J • • " - Adri111 20 Hope 14 Akron. 21 lndi11n11 St11t• J Ashl1nd J2 W1ynesbur1 O 81ldwin·Wtli.e1 38 Caplta! g 8111 Slit• 22 Wjnenber1 21 C1rroll 11 Wheaton 6 Cen1r11 Methodist 17 Colle'• of £mciol'i1 14 Centi•I "6ltnia•n 21 Illinois Sllle 10 C1ntr11 Ok11hom1 10-27 SE Oklahom1 J Cornell (tow1) 2l Lewrence ll Cu1v11-Stockton 19 Peru o Oeli1ne• 14 Ande•!Wn 13 Or11ke 22 Southern ttllnoi• 10 E. Centn11 Oklll'lotnl :2'6 L1nis1on 6 EuJeka %0 Illinois Col11p 19 Fr1nk1o n 19 M1neh•ster 7 H1mllne 2& St. Thom11 13 K111m1zoo 22 Alblon 12 Kenyon 20 Hirlm 16 Lincorn 25 Cen1r1r Mis!lll<I"' 20 MichiJ•n Tee~ 28 Morris 6 Mdlik•n 20 Auaus\ffl•, Ill, 17 Mi5!WU•I V1lley 20 G<acellnd 7 Mt. Un!on 26 OePauw 7 Nebr1sk1 We5'W1n 21 Has1JnR1 to NE Mi1$0Url 21 SW Missouri • Northern Mlthlp""' .J2 St. No~r1 7 Northwood 21 Rluftton O Ohio Wesley1n 45 Otler1;n o Pithbura "' 21 Om1h• 2.1 Ripon ~ 24 Coe T St. John'1 :ro M1c1!esler 6 Other Gam1S-South and Southwest St. Jos1pf1'1 21 [vitMSville lfi Sl Missouri 24 NW Missouri JS App1l1cn11n A•k11ns•s Slit• Arkll'lll' 1ech Au1tin Pe1y C11r&Oll•Newm•n [tilt Tillis E11te1n Micn11111 fUnnll'l Glenvtltlt H1mpden-Sydney Henderson l lvin11ton Louis;•~• Tech Martin MeNe111• Morellt•d New1>1rry Pre1byteri1n R1f11olph-M1c-on S1mtord Southern Stall sw Tu•s • St•t• C11u1r. Mo. Tennesse• ech TUIS A • I Tex11 Lutl'torl11 Trinity W•~h•naton • L11 W••r Liberti Weslern C•T':!lit11 WUtl<ll K111tut)()' w ....... " " " l7 " " " " " " " " " " " ,. .. .. 19 " " ,. " 21 " " " " " " " " SW Okl1hotn1 29 NW Okl1hom1 12 Va+p1r1iso 23 Butler 12 W1Dash 14 Sew1nee 7 W1shDurl'l 2~ [mp0fi1 State lfi w1shinato11 u 28 u.s.1.u. 21 W1yne, Mith. 22 Milw1 ukee 7 W1sler11 1111ncl1 lJ../ Eastern ll!iinois f Willitm JeWi!ll U:: Bake• 1 Flor1nce I SW Lou1111n1 7 Ou11chJt1 lZ Mu•flY 1~ M•ryv11!e 10 Sul Row t NE Lou1.i11'!& 10 Guil!Ofd 0 Concord 7 Towson O Other Games-far West H1rdin1 12 !loise 2( North1rn ArllCM b Della Stile 20 Cal luthe•1n 26 Sonom1 1 Ch1111noo11 1 011 Poi, (S.L.0.) 22 ~v•d• (l•s Ye11sJ :tO Troy 14 Cen!11tl W111'tlnatp11 2) Southern 011111on 13 NW l ou1s11n1 fi Chico Stile 21 S•., franclsco Slllf o E1u T1nn111M I Co1cr1do Co11eg1 XI Kansas Wesleyt n 16 Eton 14 Colorldo We11er11 17 • Adams St1t1 1 <ttt1dner-WebD 12 Eastem New Mexico lO Roll• 17 Bridgewat•r 13 fUlltr1on Jl River1id1 O Mis1isliPJl'i Co!l1.. ' H1yw1rd 21 DllV<i 14 M11isap1 · 14 Humboldt 26 S11cramtnto 20 How1rd ,.,yna 21 lont BNcl'I 24 Fresno St1te 21 Ark. at Montie11!1 15 ~•••d• (Reno! lO San fr1nc;1co U 7 E1st1rn K1nluc)()' 14 Northern Coloritdo 21 Soutnern Co10111d0 u Sim Houslori U Patlfie Luth1n1n 25 l1wi1 & Cl1rk lj P111lti1 View 22 Puaet Souna 14 Simon fr1ser llrnlf ll Rodlllldl 17 0Ccidf1'11al tA Soulhw1starn, T-. 11 Si n farllll'ldO 21 Cal Poly (Porroon1J 2:0 '"""ont 14 S11111 !11rt11r1 30 Los Al'l1e!es t f West \11. St•t• 0 SOutnern lJlll'I lO Weste1n New Muleo tO Middle Tennu-10 Wester., W11hlnrton 12 0111on Ta<:l't t CatlwM 17 ~ Wl'littler 22 Pomon11 f PROFESSIONAL FORECASTS Atl111t• ••• '. • 24 Chlcctt• • , •••• 23 c1 ... 1j111ll 24 Dolle• •••• , ••• D"'o" H1 .. fa1t •••••• 27 JI " Sunday, November .7 Cl11,f11nctti 11 11.,,.., City • • 26 GrMlt l ey •• , • 20 MloMI • , • , • • • • JI r ltttb11"h •••. J l Mlflt'IH1to . , .• 11 St, Lo11ls , • , ••• 24 H1w York Gla11h 24 De11 .. r 20 Oakland , , • , , , Jl Hew l*Jl•IHI • , ll Wnhl111to1t •••• JO Monday, November B Ln ·A"""' • • 20 laltlmarl 17 Coll ad lof a lt:1tow wtt.t' ya1 thlltlt: Oovt '"' Foetball Fol'ffCllt N1w York Jett; 11 luffal1 14 Sall 'tflllclK1 •• 16 s ... 01991 •••• 21 N•w Orl1a1t1 1 0 rhll adalphle 1 l ' TAKE VALLEY VIEW OFF RAMP FROM FREEWAY! " . DIMONSTlAfOIS NOW OH SAl:E OY'' 26 TO CHOOSl FROM • AT TllMINDOUS SAVIN~S .I • . . ~-. ( .. f ridO', NO¥!mbrf' S, 1'971 --DAIL y PILOT D ' ·. ·. A ··complete Guide ••• ·Where to go • •• What to do • •• LOTTE LENYA IN REHEARSAL OF BRECHT'S 'MOTHER COURAGE' , Workshop /(ids to Stage Benefit Show Saturday Cancer has ty,·ice struck the family of a ''straightlaced t.1ormon" Costa i\{esa dance teacher, Gwen \\'illiams. As a woman y,•ho keeps herself busy as \\'ife , mother and (lwner of five busi nesses. Gwen notes that until cancer struck close to home "I didn't see the suffering ." Loss or her father two years ago and word that an aunt is hospita,lized v.•ith the disease "made me want to do something." Luckily, the students of her summer dance workshop had "neared perfection" in their preparation of 1he musical "Gypsy." Gwen sqirl. "They were ready to perform . it. Read y and good enough that the show should be seen by more than just· their immediaie families." So. with lhe help of Edwards Theaters. the production will be ,e1vcn as an American Cancer Society benefit at I I a.m. Saturday in Edwards Harbor Cinema Theater, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa i\1esa. A SI donation is asked and reservation!\ may be made by calling 546-2312. A rented stage. "real. Broad...,·ay sets and costumes '' and lhC' zeal of the cast of 60 are the ingredients Gwen hopes will raise more than $600 for the cancer socie· ly. I Later. the show will travcl to Beverly Hill s for a benelit for the Rainbow .· ... Children. and as they've done in the p~ the students will mount the produclion for patients 'at Fairview Stat'e Hospital, Costa J\fesa. The cast includes children from f.1ission Viejo. San~ Ana . Newport Beach. Fountain Valley. Costa Mesa. Anaheim , Huntington Beach. Irvine and El Toro. Cindy Sandeen. 7, of Adams Elemen· tary School plays Baby June \Vhile Grace Jasmine of Davis Middle School plays the older version of Gypsy JWse Lee baby sister role. Courtne~· Cargill. 1~. a student at Estancia High School, ii:: Louise, although Chris Marcoux will · play the matured Louise after ste's begun her career as a stripper. The younger version of Louise is played by Robin Bolton R student at Davis Mid· dle School, Costa l\1esa. Bill Pardue. 17, Qf Estancia High \viii be Herbie the close friend of the classic slage mother. Rose, played by J\1rs. Williams. John Urdea. 16, another Estancia student. plays both the Uncle Jocko and \Veber parts. J\1rs. James Conrad is slage mana.gcr. ''general chairman" and handler of 1.000 details necessary to mount the large pro- duction. Gwen said . A six-piece students will companiment. orchestra or high &.eboQ.1 provide the musical ac\ 'Loves Vniversity' ,Lotte Leny a Is 'Mother Coura·ge' By GEORG E LEIDAL Of !111 0.111 Pl .. ! Siii! On a chill'Tlight in 1954 a Jewish actress who'd fled tb.e rise of the Third Reich in 1935 stood outside the tiny Theatre de Lys in New York's Greenwich \•illage looking at her nan:ie on lhe marquiee. Turning to her composer-husband Kurt Weill, the red·haired star of "Threepennv Opera" asked, "Is that all · you get out Of It?" "I didn't find it as exhilarating as I had thought I would." L.olle Lenya said. "I was almost frightened.·• Despite the letdown, Miss Leriya pl;i vrd the role of Jenny in the history·n1aking off-Broadway hit for no less than three of the six years it made theatric;il historv. The marquee 2l the Pine Arts Viliage Theater pt UCJ certainly is no larger than that of the 1'heater de L.vs. Yet. the appeara~ce of Lotte Le:yna's name on it in l~ title role of tlie Nov. 20 produ~ may carry ai lot more meani~. "I love· .the·. university." the film and stage star says. "I like to work with gtudents.'' As the Jone professional in a cast of 32, Miss Lenya has shared trade secrets AS the students have prepared Bertolt Brecht's "Mother· Courage" for the UCI boards. Herbert Machiz. a New York pro- fessional actor. singer and ·d!reclor, is directing the student production. This is his fifth visit to UCI at \he behest of Fine Arts Dean 'Clayton GarrillOn. Garrison and Machiz , convinced P.tiss Lenya to spend a quarltr in residence al UCL Both New Yorkers -Miss Len;.oa and > •• Machiz -deny that it is the clin1ate ·of that city that drove them to C<ilif-Ornia at this time of year. Nor has it been· our · weather which Miss Lcnya shrugs off as unpredictable·-"sooo hot one .da'y and cold the next. Agh." Rather ii is the intellectual climate and the talented ·students assembled for this production that brought them ; they say. "In five times here, I've come to de- pend on several students." M~chiz said, "Depend on then1 in the i;ame way a director does in New York. \'nu get to know their quirks. \\1hich ones need only a gn1nt to know y,•hat you w;int from lhem and which need a lengthy, detailed explanation." Rolh contend lhat the University is tOday's theatrical training grciund, thcugh neither had such an opportunity as is available <it UCL Miss Lenya , born in Vienna, d;inced •in a neighborhood circus at the Age of six, went on to roles in the Zurich Stadt· theater and•appeared in various theaters in Berlin before:coming to America. l\1achiz. who worked his way up through the.stage ranks, says simply to a would -be act-Or, "Get thee to a University -preferably one that is not in New York City." A second-bes t choice. one that is really not 1nuch less expensive than a universi· ty, they suggest, is one or the few acting training SchoOls in New .York. They both.. endorsed Sandy Meisner's "Neighborhood' Playhouse" as the be5l of the private theater schools, followed by Stella Adler's school The UCI production of ''t\olother DAILY f'ILOT ll•fi Pflo'" CINDY SANDEEN, 7, PLAYS THE ROLE OF BABY JUNE IN 'GYPSY' 'GYPSY' TO BE PERFORMED AT EDWARDS HARBOR CIME • • DAILY 'ILOT S!IH ,,,. .. LOTTE LENYA WITH DIRECTOR HERBERT MACHIZ AT UCI Couraj:le" tests the prevalent theory that theater will survive best with en· couragement of the decentra.lization o{ Broadway innuencc through rirst qua lity productions throughout the nation. A ne~ translation oC the Breent book will be heard at UCL The text will be cut to shorten the evening, not to change con· tenl. "Germ<in productions run for four hours." .l\1iss Lenya notes. "Americ an nu· dicnces are not conditioned to spending that much time on their seats.'' The English translation. done by a BriUsher, will be further altered for Callfornia .audiencet, Machii: s2~d. "But, we're trying for a JS:ns:u<ige style exactly the same ai; Brecht in'tendad." •That is a t11sk made somewha.t sirnpler sin~e Miss Lenya's theatrical caret>r has been closely intertwined with the German dramatist ;ind poet. Her husbarid. Kurt \Vcill, collaborated with Brecht on "Threef)Cnny Opera" and the "Rise 3nd Falt of the City of Mahngg any." in 'A'hich Miss Lcnya also starred. The ch;inges are not dra stic ones, J\ilachi7. promises. "No man in the U.S. calls his mother 'Mums '," he notes as an ' Intermission example of the type of rewrite that is! being done. ~ Miss Len ya's role as Mother Courage is one of the fivl' longest Je;id roles ill- thealrical literature. ti.tachiz said. The~ µ,art places Miss Lcnya on stage for ll · the play·s 12 scenes, :;.o She notes that the role is similar to het'; smaller, yet unforgeltabte part irl' ''Threepenn y Opera." "The courage in 'Mothe,r Courage' is Uif! same courage of Jennie -both women are engaged in a fighl for survival." .Further evidence of Miss Leny1'1 familiarity with Brecht's intentions is hinted by her success in the 1963 New York produclion of •·Brecht on Brech~.'' also at the Theater de Lys. The hit later loured 2.'i campuses throughout the ll5 • with Miss Lenya in the lead. Both agree tha.t packaged touring pro- ductions do not ma~e fl !<isling coo· lrihution lo Jhe theater. Machiz notes the touring star packages that have replaced summer stock productions "destrnyed one of the last meaningful training grounds for young talent." See LOTTE; Page %9 • Noveniber Mad1iess Starts On Orange County Stages By TOM TITUS Ot ll!t Ol llJ '''-' Slit! Comes now November and the biannu;il deluge of live the;iter across the lncaf stages, the last hurrah of 1971 rrnm Orange County's 11mateur producing grouJ>5. November i!i one or two months (·ti.tarch being the other) during which it becomes virtually impossible for the theaterp:ocr to altend everything servod up by the plcthors of community o11nd collegiate groups. At last count there were 17 new attrac~ions opening within· the county's borders during the 30 days which hath November, A positive note. I suppose. is the fact that-all fl theaters are putting on dif- ferent shows, 11 ci rctJm slance which doesn 't always hold true during these heavy times in the seas111n. Some of the attractions, however. ;ire still prelty familiar -like this weekend 's opening of ''Plata Suite" in Anaheim Nevertheless, the schedule abouods in variety. There are a few exciling spots in the November crush, however. Two com· munlty theaters have scheduled revivals of classic American dramas -San Clemente's ''The Glass ~fenagerie" and Irvine's "°1ath of • Salesman." These '" challenging assignments for any group. ON THE CO~LEGIATE front . the big forward ln the first county production ~f Woody Allen 's "Play It Again Sarr\•,. by the Lido Isle Players. For thnse w~ go for the big , splashy musical, the Laguna Moulton Community Playhouse has "The Boy Friend" on the boards for the. _pa.' two weeks. ""' Revival fever seems always in the a r and two shows in that catego ry are open: lng tonight -South Coast Repertor;''• "Our Town ',' and the ~anta Ana Player.a' ' ' See INTERMlSSrON Page %9 • \\ _ -·~ENDER ,_; INSIDll FllA.TURES " LUCY BELL, Edit.or Friday, November 5, 1971 • George Letdal reviews the ~" lion picture "Fiddler on the Roof" 1 in today's \\'eekender on Page 31 . The film opens in Los Angeles to-""t dar. Sta n Delaplane .Page lt hr tbe Gallerlt1 Page • New Academy Head Page M" Cossack's Sing Page 2:1 'Godspell" at Forum Page • Out 'N' About Paces Z7 • • , Gulde to !\tovit• Page ' ... hews is being made ~Y\IC Irvlfie'5 moun· ting of ''fl.1othcr Courage" with Uitte 1.enya In the tllle role and Orange Coast College's county premiere of the C(ln· temporary thtnk piece, 1'The Trial oCthe Ctilonvllle Nine." Al usual, the)':ll ~ coocurrcnlly the third week o~ November. with the UCI production Llve Thealtr Pace !\tazatlan Pq:e a Golden Wl\•t Concert Page • "Fiddler nn the Roof'' P1ce 31 Gulde to Fun Pagf st IDlsneyland Audition!! Ptt:e S1 ' "T. R. Baskin" r aa:e It BoWers' Bus Tour P11t1 31: Coml ~ -P•ll holding over a tra week. Devotees of new comedy can look • .1 • • I r. • • -• :r 6 DAl LY PILOT Travel Corftl Sparkles in the Fall &y ST AN DELAPLANE IN THE • MEDITERRANEAN -The French cruise ship Mermoi sailed all day alongside the 'Greek island or Carfu. Dry and bro,rn. Spotted \\·1th dusty gray olive trees. October and i\'o,·en1ber are the best months in the ~ted. i\lidday, front Cannes In tire Galleries .. Lagi111a Holdi11g All l\leclia Sl10\v L.\GL'"\'A BE.\CH ART ASSOflATIO'.\' -307 Cliff Drive, La· ~una Rtach. Hour$: noon to 5.p m. daily .. \fembers al! media ~hn\1 . ~(I\. fi • 3{l FACL'LTY ART EXHIRIT -Cahf. State College, Fullerton. 800 X. State f(llltge Bh·d. Fullerton. Hours: I • 4:30 p.m. '.\Ion to Fri : Sun . I • ~ p nl. Closed Sat. A special show of 18 Cal-State facult~· members art v:nrk through Dec. 2. CHALLIS GALLER IES -1390 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach Hours: II am to 5 pm. dai!~-. \\·atercolors and oils by Phil Dike on exhih1t r\o\". Ii -Dec. 3. . ARlSERS LIBRARY -2Q(H Dover Dri\·e. !\ewport Beach. \\'orks b~ Lucia Anderson on exhibit lhrough I\'ov. during regular hbrar~ hours. SHER\I AS FOL'S"DATIO~ GALLER\' -2625 E. Olast High- "a~·. Corona de! :\lar. 1 Formerly Coffee Garden Gallery.} Hours : 10 30 am. to J·JO pm. 'Inn -Sat. The Jun io r League of !\"e1,1 port Harbor cu rre nt exhibit features paintings by Irma (a\ at 80" ERS 'it:SEl~.\I -2Q02 :\. '!atn St.. Santa Ana. Hours: 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tues.-SaL; I to 5 p.m. Sun., and 7 to 9 pm. \\'ed . and Thu rs. Xo char,i::e. Pacific Coast Archaeo- logical Society 10th annhersary exhibit and artifacts from Rancho Sa n Joaquin. throug h No\·. 28. r.I ES..\ \IERDE LIBRARY -2969 ~fesa \1erde Drive East, Costa !\tesa. On exhibit during regular library hours .are oils b~· Jackie Lo"·ry through !\o\'. ?\E"'PORT HARBO R ART ~1 USEU~I -2211 W. Balboa Blvd. Ne"lJOrt Beach, /lie"' gallcfy opened "'ith showing of Contemporary Art from Orange County Collections. Hours, noon to 4 p.m. Tues .. Sun . 1hrough No\'. 14. Resin paintings by Dennis Ashbaugh sho"TI in entrance gallery through f\ov. i . fORO~A OEL ,\l.\R LIRR.\R'' -420 \lang0ld St. (ornna dl'I \1ar. \\ork.i; by Linda A!i::a7.1 and -~<:ulplu~e by \'irg inia 'i'eomans on exhibi t during regular library hours through l hr~ugfi :\o\·. COSTA ~I ESA LlllltARY --Sil f<'nlrr St .. Costa ?o.tesa. Paintinl!:S by Le \'ene Charr0n on exhibit during regula r li- brary hours through ~Q\'. FIRST SATJOr\AL RA\'K OF OC -1650 Adams St .. Costa Mesa. Pai ntings by Fred Olds through :\ov . during regular bu~incss hours. TRANSA~TERICA TITLE CO. -lifl E. 17!h St .. Costa !\tesa. ~ by Shirley Lcyher through :\o\'., durin g regular bus- "lntss hours. . OCC G . .\l.LERY -2701 Fa1r\'iet1 Road . Co~!a \lesa . Hours: !'ilon . · Fri. 9 a m .. 2 pm : \\ ed . i · 9 pm. On exhibit in the Art Center Gal lery throu~h ;\O\'. I~. works of Tom Fris- cano , 00\\':'\"E\' SA \'l\(;S-360 E. lith St . Cnsta .\-lesa. On exhiblt during regular busine.i;s hnurs. oil paintings by Cloveis Bink- le y \lanan Heizer. Franc1s·~1orrill and Diane f\eher. through :-.-or CROCKER HA'\K -'.!4110 Harbor Bh·d...-Costa Mesa. On e~htb1t dunn~ re~ular busines~ hours, oil paintings bv Phyl· l1s .\lcCanh~. during '.\1·\. · . , • ~Erl'RIT\' l'.\l'IFIC -Ir.& E 17th St -. O>sta l\1es;i. On ex- hihl! dunno: rr11ul;i r husintss hours. oil paintings by Alma l'h1\l1 pc thrr1u ~h "\o\ f.LE"\U \L E !-.\\ l"\GS -5•!0 :\'e~·porl Cent.er Dri\'e. Fash· ion J•land "\ev.·pcJrl Beach Landscape and floral 011 paint- in;::~ b\ f<i \" Curtis on e1:h1bll during regular business hours, lhrnugn :'\r.1. to Athen's, is.a warm 75 degrees. The sea \vas c.alm, deep blue flashing \vith instant diamonds. Bikini girlston sunstruck decks. Tu10 swimming pools. Deck snac~ bars. A French orchestra. Iced Chani.pagne in S\\·eating 'f'ilver bllckets. Before noon we tied up below the town whose stone forts knew the occupations of Naples and Ven· ice. Napoleon and England. The Mermoz began dis· ~orging 400 passengers 1300 French) and the Corfu merchants \\'ilh bro"'" peasant faces, prepared to empty our pockets. A one·day gold mjne come to Corfu: * Sliopping tour: Found nothing I \1·anted in (."or· fu ... Gay, Kn it t e d cotton carryall bags ..• copies of Greek temple reliefs 1imported from .\thens and marked up). Local brandy made of kumquats ... J,ong line of temporary shops set up bv the boat. Prices a third more than in town ... siring of sightseeing hacks dra\'.'ll by horses v"i th gaudy sun hats covered with plumes. bangles and beads ... \1ery elean IO\\'TI \1'ilh bi g open parks ..• String of si de\\·alk cafes under arches, a leftover from Napoleoni c days ... Fine British Governor's Palace is a museurn ... Narrow walking and shop- ping streets with no traffic ... fe\V restaurants. f'oOd plain and quite good. Local 'vine ra\V, leaves dry·aS·dust aftertaste . {Spoiled by French ship fare, I guess.) ... Handsome, brO\.\'O, pleasant people .. , Prices reasonable. * "Are there any shortcuts to getting best buys when you get off a ship and ares only there for a d11y?" The ship ties up at the dock. The tour bus stops in the central square. Now around you are the tour· isl shops and the H I GH_~ prices. Keep \.\'alking a11·ay from that area. pr1c1ng as you go alon~. \'ou find that E\'F.R\1 shop is sell ing the same th1n2s- usually \\'ilh an asking price which ca n be bargain· cd do"'"· NO\\' you're four or five bloc ks a\\•av and have gained kno\vledge. Start ba ck and shop' vour \1•ay into the square. · · * Prices ai"'ays go dow n at the last moment - a.s every.body is heading back to the ship . Ship's bou· t1que prices go on sale a day before the cruise ends. Pretty well picked over by then, bul what's left are the bargains. · * Stores plastered with Diners Club and Amert· can Express signs are highest priced. The credit card companies bill the store 7 to 10 per cen t on each charge. You don't think the owner is pi cking: that up . do you~ (Should say these shops usualtv have the best quality thin,gs though. If vou do NOT use the <"redi l c~rd and -offer cash. You can ask for and often get a discoun t. * ''We had thought of a 1 • t e v•cation on the French Riviera ... " '\'ell . the \l'eather is magnificent noJA•. Cooling off to about 57 high in December-January. \Varm· i~g up into the mid·60s in February. People who can give you best brochures on this are Air Prance. /Re· cause they're pu shing vacations there). Fifteen day tours from New York and ba ck, $399. r~ron1 Los Angele,. $553. THE WEST'~ FINEST BOOKSTORES HUNTER'S BO.OKS FOR 120 YEARS-SINCE 1851 Located At FASHION SQUARE • IN SANTA ANA Phone (7141 543.93~3 66,500 looks & Paptrbacks 32,000 Unusual GreetlnCJ Cards ,. BARGAINS G.lLORE! OPEN EVENI NGS 'TIL 9 P.111. ... 'GOOSPELL' SPELLS JOY AT THE MARK TAPER FORUM Peggy Gordon, left, Dav id Haskel I and Je<11nne Lange Mug for. Fun 'Godspell' Hit Opens N Y Gospel Mu sical Coni es West 1 Ten exuberant you 11 g per f n r m er s tra nsformed lhe s!a,Re 11f the l\l11rk Taf>('r Forun1 into a place nf hope, Jl)Y, anrl love 11•1th "Godspcll," the llC\Y !TIUSiCA[ hased up<•n the Gospel according to St. Matthew, 11•hich opened as lhe concluding event of the 1971 Taper subscription sea son. All members of the cnst ha ve 8.p- R'ared in the Ne w York pro- ductin n of the sho"' which V.·as· conceived and directed b.v .Jnhn !\l1chael Tebel.<1k 11·1 th music arid new !~T!CS by Stephen ~:h1,1art1.. L.<1n1;r Alford. R oh e r la Rauni. Herb Braha. Peggy Gnrdon. Da,•id HaukeH. Robin Lam,ont. Jeanne L1¥1ge. Jef. frey ~l.1·le!I. And y Rohrer and Lynn Thigpen ha1•e been set for the 'J'aper engagemenl v.·hich concludes on Dec . 19. It is presented· by arrangement \1•ith Edwar d Lansbury Stuart Duncan, and Joseph Beruh. The musical recently won three coveted Drama Desk A"·ards \1•hich honored Tehelak as most promising director and Schwartz as most pron1is1n.i: composer a n d lvricist. along 1vith Susan Tsu. the productinn's innn1·ati\·e cnstun1e designer . for her creations. Sch\.\·artz and ~1iss T.asu also garnered Variety Cri tics' Poll awards. Tebelak and Sch wartz are both 23 years old. and t-.tiss Tsu is 22. Peter \Vexler and H. R. Poindexter have designed the setting and lighting for the Taper Forum staging o f "Godspell .'' The musica l has been called everything from a musical circus to a vaudeville show to a deeply moving experience but. according to Schwartz. it is really just ten young prople telling !he story of the Gospel in the Y•ay that they v.·ish to sa\' it. It is a celebration of lire and man. . Cossack '• Dancers· . . \~~~~::~rt~· CoolCk Chorw and Dancers under the direction of Nicholas Kostrukoff will be ,prtsenled on Saturday evening at 8 p.m. in the Anaheim High School Auditorium . 811 W. Lincoln, Fullerton as the seco nd pro- gr~m of the Fu llerton Junior Colle~e Artist Lecture Series for the 1971 ·72 season. Originally founded" in 1933 ti Czechoslovakia. the 0 on Cossack Chorus has gained v.·orld renown in more ~an 7 ,SOO conctrts on six con· tinents. The original founder of the group. Nicholas Kostrukoff is still director. Season after season. the 25 dashing C',ossacks. ~U of them now American citizens, travel through out the United States and Canada and have become a part of the Amer-l ean scene. A varied program presented by the Don C',osSack Chorus and Dancers will include liturgical music, fol k songs, love songs. Cossack battle songs and dances, and a group of English songs. In a'1dition, they \\'.ill present the authentic dances of the Cossack regiments, national dances, and the thrilling Cossack S\lo·ord Dances "Lezginka." One of the most colorful of ail the troupe is G. Soloduhin, '"''hose hair·raising dagger dance is one of the most ex· citing interludes in the entire program. Soloduhin has made dozens of motion pictures and is regularly summoned to Hollywood whenever thfre is a call for a colorful Olssack in a movie. A daring horseman, trained by his father and his graadfather, he also has been featured by Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailty's Circu-i_ in riding spectacles, performing the f a m o u s Cossack trick of riding strap- ped to a horse's belly. STAR S S~dll"Y Omarr is rin,.. r>f 1he \1orld's i::rra l a<;lrnlo· J:"rs. lits co\un1n io; onP rir 1hl' DAILY I'JLOT"S great frat urr.5. FOR SIT MAR MESA TRAVEL AGENCY 2790 Hort»or at A.deMS 546·8181 RESERVATIONS A\'CO SA \"l\GS :\\"ll LOA\" -3310 Bnstnl St .. Costa t-.1esa. 1Pa1nt1ngs by E\aabeth Cr1sse!l during business hnurs thrnugh '.'"' .-1· ----;---::--~. -.~~~~~\ -~ ... 'It" .... - 'Robert s 1 We Sure Love Squeezing "Your'' Oranges! o Head • cad cmv ame~ :;-.1 RrnE:rts h-'1s been mtd e~"'ci.it,·.e director of l 'Ararferr '•' \\ntinn Pie· e Ar'' ar.~ ~: rnr es, sue· d1ni:: S-a:-n E Rrf'J'>' n. I ro1,1 n°< T"'i:"i!\On [or so~ ,,, r .. c..~n .,.;i~ ;ir-1 ted 't •. ·-:., ,\r adf'nt~··s arr! r.f !, ',,.rrrr< Brnv.n \1 cnntirrue J-ro; ~""ntiationl th the -A.rild"m~ 11 h1ch ~an in 1938 .~. ; (")TI!iUltin~ parll \'. nbt'rt~ Jf'.r·•·r. ··~ 'i'ildf'm\' 1954 R~ M ""•• "r \.i1~! hruary htt "a• a ~pninttd s1stanl l'Xe<'IJ\l\f' dirr,.tnr nl ' Acadrm\. ' . n a noou ncin~ B r r. 1' n ' s 'Fn:tonn 111\d Rtthl'rlo;' RI)-- jntment. Ac:idem~· Presi· t Daniel T11radash said . ·The Roard of fril\f.'rno"rs I -and the enllre ademy -regret deeply the ignation oLSam Drown and c.lrcumstance.11 lhHl ha ve de lt nece1s11ry. rh;it ret 11 mlllA&ted only by the t that Sam wi ll bt able to 1Uiue h.11 11.11~h1llon \.\1Uh Ae.tdemy. if Qnly"' on 11 Since we st<11rted squeez ing fresh or<11n9e ju ice l<11 nd sell ing it cheaper th11 n the "other kin ds"!, we have done a "l<11nd offic e bu1in111 ." It 's unbeli1v11bly good! The fl<11vor i\ out of 1 i9~t <11 nd the pric e is "fer out." Corn1 111 whet reelly fresh or1n9e iuice ta,fes like! Try it onc1 , you 'll use it 11lw 11 y1. One car fo11 d of oranges sque11ed weekly!! It has to be unbeliev ably good! THOUSANDS SAVE HUNDREDS WITH THESE COUPONS! •• • • • I • • • • I • DOUBLE HEADER .. -... FLOWERS IY • • • • • • • • • • • • • P'RESH MUMS • • • . ROSES • CARNATIONS • DEBRA :BABY POMPOMS: • • • "•m 99¢ o ... y.,, 79" Choice .. DOI. • • P:1aturln1 "rl11 • Wlnnln9 Arrante"11nt1 .I • Comp11t• Wlddl"f' • • P:uneral 'l1c•1 'lit • l imit-2 Doi. • With Thlt Coupo" • Sen1lbl1 Prlc1s • ................ ~ ..... • • • • WI HAYI THI HOTiiST W1 h11vt plenty this w"k • PRICE IN TOWN l • 1 Carload for thl1 1v1nt • • """ SQUEEZED •RUBY RED TEXAS. • I • With This Cowp•it • ORANGE JUICEI GRAPi~RUIT I • 29¢ QT, : 6 for 49« : l l"'41T-1/i CiAL. • ll1t1lt-• • With thi1 coupon 59C b""ch • • • • Limit -2 bunch•• With thll coupon •••••••••• • Jtc E:ACH MOST STORES 8 ICEBERG LmUCE 6 •• , '1 • • • • l l1t1lt -' • Witt! Tlrlh C1•pe11 • I e • • • • • • • I I ••• -••••. :. couroNS IX,IRE NOV. 10 • • I • • • • I e ·na11 re1taur<11nt1 dem•nd th • fin11t for th.ir cu1tomer1. Th at 's why they fe•turt Nt wport Procluce! Petroniz1 them! L. & I . Food Stnlct with cef1t1rie1 in At. l•ntic Res1arch, B1rlee •nd Collini Rad io; ltrkshlrH, Newport Be11ch 11nd Air- port, S•nl• An•: Tht Vlkln45, Co1t 11 Me1e; Alley West, Newport Be11ch : Gos· llght Broiler, Newport B•ach;-end o•er 275 ot+.ert. How-11 bout yourulling-u11 • N 0 W I Nationelly Acclaimed World's Finest PrOduce Houn ~ N~!~Q~!.k ~~.Q~~cE · 2616 Newport lot.llevard on the Penlnswkl 'hone 67J.a71J 67J.t711 671·6tt1 "35 )'t"l7rt 01 Produ ce "\Vhtrt quality f.! the Know How .. J .., Orde r of the Houtt" J;rited bll1il, 1ud by the fact •hit Jim Robtrts is \:, ptrl1tlvely e, 1 p I b I e 1d· ttr1tor.'' !..-=--IOHOIO 'llUlf SMll",11$ •OI lt YIAlll, ~.-...,,_ - 0 \ ~ ...... \ '"·. '· . SITMAR MEXICO CRUISES. THE YOU HAVE TO SfA,TO PLIEVE. ,, & 12 Days Ft'om $395: First you get a S28,000,000"floatlng resort. It has three swim pools, two nightclubs. e lght pubs. a spacious theater, gourmet restaurants, outdoor sports. an d indoor games. But this perfect vacation setting doesn't just hang arour.id and let you yawn at the same·old geog raphy. Yo u get.a spectacular ocean view that changes every second. You get Acapulco, Zihuantlnejo, Puerto Vallarta, Mazatlan. And you explore each fascinating port from the best hotel 1n !own. the one that brought you. You ·11 meet new ll iends. You 'll let the sun a nd sea subtract a fe w years from the way you feel. We 'll even be nic e to your wa llet. Our unpreced§!rtfeQ' low lareSim:lude~round trip transportation, air , conditioned stateroom, all meals, and entertainment. The T.S.S. Fa irsea is of Liberian Registry with an enchanting Italian c rew who indulge your ever;y wish. It's the vacation value or a llf~t1me. Catch the Fai rs~a during-her gala maiden season! Salllng Dates From Loa Angeles: Dec. 17, 29, Jan. 10,·21. Feb. 2, 14. 25, Ma r. 8, 20. 31 . Apr. 12, 24, May 5. Add itional 1972 sailing dates on request. Call yot.1 r travel agent now! 'Bn.d °" l!~l!Hri;""''"lltr• ib!D!.' OOQllOlllC)'ll'lil 1UtiitC1 JO .,_ .....n.bilil\I. ) SITMAR CRUISES + ll..vacation you h.v. to , .. , to b•liew. 1000 Wll1h1rl Bl~d .• LOI AngtlM. CA 110011 • Phone {2:13) .CIS.llla I t6 a 31 cW( South P1clllc Crul1c1 from •rJo. FJ?.11llln1 lrom Loi An91la M1y t•, ttn. \ • • Friday~ ~owmbtr '· 1971 DAILY PILOT £1' WEEKENDER o .u ·r ' N I ABO .UT B11 /\'Oft/II STANLEY ORANGE COUNT.Y'S RE s I A u RANT I NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT S·CENE l\1e rry n1 ac Chalk anolher 011~ up to the department of: ··~1y, Ho\v Time Flies." It's getting so birthdays and annlversaries seem to (all by the month instead or .... yearly. Latest case in point is the fact that Corona del ll-1ar's Merrimac just celebrated its third birthday. And there seems to be an added measure of festivi- ty in the proceedings around this rolicking place now that the fourth year is under \vay . TAKE A BOW, MARY Q\vner rt·lary Pike justly deserves to take a f~w bo\vS for the smashing anniversary party -and her acco mpli shments generally in giving shape and form tt> the ~1errymac. lil only a fe\v short years she has managed to co tnbine all the right ingredi- ents to create one of the South Coast's great run spo ts. But having a · good time is n·ot the sole fac· tor that attracts patrons to the restaurant. No eve- ning visit is co mplete without dinner to lead into the later merriment. FINE FOOD And the al\vays fine food seeqis further en- hanced by the ~·Jerrymac's art gallery-like setting. The \Vall s hang heavy \\'ith so many excellent oil paintin gs one gets the feeling of dinin g in a private but ho1ney little museum . 1\fter dinner you \\'Oll'l be able to escap e th e hospitalable spirit that charges the atmosphere. And the \vellspring of all this an1usement is the fine piano bar its taienled entertainers. \\iith everything the ,?i.1errimac has going for it as a night spot, the fact should not be overlooked that it is also a likely place to enjoy a very satisfy· ing luncheon . The menu provides a lot Of sa vory prospects for 1nidday eating. Open seven days a \reek. the T\1erry1nac is lo- cated al 3344 E. Coast Hi gh \\·ay , Corona del T\1ar. t\~M~ ANCHOR . INN HOUSE OF SEAFOOD DINNER • COCKTAILS OPEN DAILY 4 PM TO 11 PM SUNDAY 2 PM TO 9,30 PM -CLOSED MONDAYS 1814 N. Coast Hwy. IEI Camino Reall SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571- HAPPY HOUR AT THE OYSTER BAR Mo" .• ,,;, I WI , ,, ..... 1.., ,. ..... C11Jtor"l1 Letnrtr CONTINENTAL CUISINE e SEA FOOD STEAK~ e COCKTAILS TO 2 A.M. LUNCH & D~NER DA ILY 11 A.M. to 11 ,30 P.M. Sll/\'DAY BRl!NCU 9:30 • 4 Now Appearing Tue. thru Sat. 8:30 to I :30 BRANDIE BRANDON DUO Thur1d.1y F•shion Show-141:15 32102 Co.1st Hwy. (At Cro•n v.,jl•y Pkwy.) LAGUNA NIGUEL 499·2626 496·577l JOIN US IN THE CROW'S NEST. Now Appearing DEE ARCHER 2300 Harbor Boulevard Costa Mesa (714) 540-8535 I • ,, I. I • I Boon Docks Nature. it seems to us, created a fortuitous con· dition for the area's out 'n' abouters that too man y tend to take for · granted. A few we've met , incred· ibly, have e.ven become apathetic and blase about this lucky status that should never fail to impress. I . ' • Our \\•indtaU for added dining pleasure is the stunning coastline. fl provides on unprecedented number of sites for restauranls \vith a fabulous vie\11 or o<;ean or bay. , It goes \vithout saying that diners in Denver or Omaha have nothing comparable. Certainly our good friend s from those mid-western cities \\'ould never lack full appreciation , and \Ve shouldri't either. ' . ENJOY THE VIEW There's nothing unsoph isticated in ackno\v· !edging the tin gli ng sensation one feel s \\•bile occu· pying a window seat at any of our '"aterside res· taurants. Jn fact we openly commented about it dur· ing a dinner outing last Tuesday to the Boon Docks in Newport Beach. Jt \\•ould have been hard to do other"~ise. Tn its ·con1manding loca tion on Ne\vporl Bay, this res· taurant has one of the most sweeping an d impres· s1ve views to be found any\\'here along the entire California coastline . ·· Fortunately the picturesque setting ren1ains un· altered but many other ch!lnges have given this spot a -v.;holly ne\v tone and character. REMODELED First off, lhe Boon Docks has undergone ex· tensive interior re1nodeling. The net effett of these labors is a greatly increased se nse of lntiinacy in what is actually a rather sizable establishment. Ne\v decorative objects. carpeting, lig hting fix· tures (invitin gly ro1nantic \\'ilh their din1 illumina· tio nl and tosturnes on th e \l'aitresses are additional • I • CONTINENTAL Cl!ISINE SEA FOODS CU1lRCOAL BROILED STEAKS Lunch • Dinner Entertainment FC"atur!ng NORM PANTO DUO All Major Credit Cords-Plenty of Parkln9 $375 EARLY DINERS COMPLETE DINNER Including Soup or Salad, lkvrral((' & Dcs.scrt • , ENJOY NEtY OllR BEAl!TIFl!L VINING R00/11 NEW HOURS D•ily Mo". th rw Fri. I t :lO 1.m. lo i •·"" 51l11•d1y ]:JO p.m, lo 2 •.m.-Cloied 5u"dty 1670 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA 642-8293 D II<<-·->> R<<-·->> p <<-- ·-· Wo4. ...... .... • Proudly Annourice1 The Return of . . HEAD CHEF DANNY TAYCO Try Hii Exc iting Menu f••turing STEAKS e SEAFOOD e CONTINENTAL AND POLYNESIAN ENTR£ES NIGHTLY DINNER SPECIALS Polvne1.'•~ 0 .11n•r Combo , •.. , .•.•.••.• SJ.JS 810 Rib1 . Sluurip . E'J'i Roll l'ott,d 5,.,., Sl•~\. m w•~•oom• ..•.••.•• , I .ti l.tS 1.95 FtL -Prirrie II.lb S11•c.i•l1 •••• , .: •••• , .• J.ti a. 4.50 All ••rwtt.1 with c.hoic• of 1o~p Of 1t!td •11d d'''''' ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCING NIGHTLY .AT 9 P.M. IN THE LOUNGE 264S HARBOR ILYD. COSTA MESA 54S·9471 • innovations spelling change from .the moment you enter. And far from least or last iS a brand ne'v me nu. EP\ ·~ NEW MENU Thi s bill nf fare is strikingly small but it's grounded in solid provisSon for all tastes. A total of seven entrees range Crom soles of ·Dover, tartar. 53 75. to steak and lobster' cornbo. $6.75 . ·rhe other selections are jun1bo Pol ynesian shriinps. $4.25; bar-~q ri bs Bora Bora . $4 .25: aba- lone steak. ahnond p'otted. S5.2!'i: eastern top sir· loin . mu~hroon1s. 55.25 : Ne v.· \'ork steak. 14 oz .. $6.25. All are served \\'ilh a thoice of sou p du jour or i.alad. hot bre¥t and potato or rire pilaf. DINNER SPECIAL 'l'he regular 1nenu is aug1nented, ho\vever. by a nightl ,v dinner special. Tuesday through Sunday. Unifo r1 nly tabbed at $2.95. they run from chicken and dumplings on Tuesday to Sunday's veal cutlet Holstein. -~ '~'ednesday. Thursday and Friday. tbe dinner speci als are beef brochette. pot roast of beef \Vith potato p·ancakes. and fil et of sole. bonne femme . Sa turday's enlrce is beef Stroganoff. .. 1\londay evening the n1enu steps aside for a ~in· gle 9ffPring-a full spaghetti dinner priced at $1.50. It's also sports night in thc ... lounge \\'ilh all . eyes glued to the gaine of th e \veek on television. ~ OUR CHOICES For entree se lections three of the four mem · bers in ou r party chose the steak and lobster combo, \\1bich \Va s accompanied by little in dividual contain· ers of melted butter and bearnaise sauce. Both the seaf0od and beef dem onslrated perf~cti on in broil · 1ng and the steak. in addition to being topped by a 111ushroon1 cap, \\las se rved on a delicious and \\'ell· i:;caso ned slice of e~gplant. The fo urth order for abalone steak netted an TEMPLE GARDENS ~lk-tE:S:SRestaura11t RONNIE lUCKS!:fA COCKTAIL ~~~~~E Fri. & Sa,. I ta 1 fC"alur!ng .Exotic Tl'opicaJ ·Drinks luncheon & Dinner D•ily IUFFET LUNCH 11:30·1 :30 Moncl1y thru Frld1y 1500 ADAMS (•t-H•rbor) COSTA MESA 540· 19l7 540· 1'2l mITIIf.I MEXICAN REST AU RANT "FINEST MEXICAN CUISINE IN ORANGE COUNTY" FEATURING TOP ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCING fRI. AND. SAT. NITES 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. Din ing Houri 11 to I I O•ily A1tec11 l ounge Open To 2 a.m. Fri. and Sat. S47 W. 19th sT .. COSTA MESA FOOD TO GO -642·9764 ex tremely generous "ana savory portion of this great se afood · delicacy. 6 ovcred \vith almond slivers, it could al so boast a c~isp and delectable batter, CRISP SALAD The salads ordered all around tu.rned up one of the most unusual tand palatable) mixtures we 've en· countered in some tin1e. A large oblong platter of crisp greens. came topped \vith kidney beans, gar· banzos and yery thin carrot slices, to "'bich you could add your choice of dressing. After dinner v.•e took advantage of an oppor· tunity to 1neet the head chef responsible for our ex· <·e llent food. This rare event \\'as arran~ed lw tlie Boon Docks' affable hu sband and \rife manage rial tean1, Gene and Loretta Both\\·ell. MEET CHEF GEORGE ELDRIDGE In our brief chat \ve learned the master of the kitchen, George Eldridge by name, is himself one of the newest add itions to the restaurant. As a con· sequence he's had _a large hand in instituting the ne\v lunch and dinner m.fillUS. A native of Maine, G!orge has been in Cal.ifor· nia and .the restau+ant bu siness since 1954. Five years of training at the Beverly Hills Hotel \Vere follo\ved by posts at various Southern Cal ifornia spots including. local!~'· the Mission Viej o Country C'lub and the Ne\\1port Beach Tenn_is. Club. ~ LUNCH SPECIAL Like hi s nightly dinner specials. George ha s also come up with a $1.50 lunch special, Tuesday through Friday. In order they are beef stev.'. Veal cutlet f\.1onterey, stuffed cheddarburger and boned sand dabs. ENTERTAINMENT To \\'rap up our evening at the Boon Docks. \l'e moved to the lounge for several sets of enter· talnrnen t by \he !\·lark Davidson. One or the area's Continued on Page 28 1t'aMois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE F•mous For FLAMING DUCK Op•n 11 :00 A.M. -Clo1ed Mond11y HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA 18151 BEACH BLYO. 842.1919 " fl.' ol.i j //) . Wt Promise Yoq Good l<e:Jlauranl ooa. 11nd AMERICAN CUISINI TROPICAL COCKTAILS ENTERTAINMENT POLYNESIAN SHOWS Thur. thru· Sun. Nl,hts NOW APPEARING Thurs. thru Sun. Nitei 8:30 to r :JO Th• Sen1af ion11 I Sam o1n Vocalist/Guit•rii t ,..---, ,.. ,.-....._ ~ ,........., ,- ......... ~ ........ ~h..........ll~~~lr.._..JL...J ·~C~ILI PEPPER Proudly Presents ~· C!l!BtiTiES • Larry •Danny • Ric~ • Edd'ie Steaks • Sonora Style Mexican Food *DANCING ·*SHOWS tvesday thra s1llllay attitude adjustllent Bl. COCKTAILS three 'til sir reserntions 673-8950 3201 I. '••Ille Coest Hwy CORONA DEL MAR • ' I I • ~f=-DA!LY PILOT Friday, Nowmber '· 1971 , Real Cantonese f~od e1t her• or take home. • WEEKENDER OUT 'N A·BCTUT ST AG CHINESE CASINO 111 211t .pl., Newl,ort Stich ORiolt 3·9560 Opell 'f-ll:r,11fHI D•lly 1J012-,rJ, e11; l•t, 'tll J ••M• Special FRESH LOCAL LOBSTER·! S4.9S NIGHTLY PLE NTY OF PARKING The New111t In Enfertainm11 nf,.,,. , ...• Accom panied By The Finest In Food PRIME RIB • STEAK • LOBSTER ITAUAN SPECIALTIES ... ,- Now Appe•ring ROMAN BACKED BY THE JIM MURPHY TRIO . Dancing Nightly In Our Cocktail Lounqe 3 to 7 p.m.-Mon. thru Fri. DAILY DOUBLE HORS D'OEUVRES . 1262 PALISADES ROAD !NIA.It OltANGE COUNTY AlttrOttTI COSTA MESA 546-8390 THE BOON DOCKS Proudly Announces AN EXCITING NEW MENU Feeturin9 The Fin est In SEAFOOD • STEAKS • RIBS And Our NIGHTLY~ DINNER SPECIALS T11•1day thru Saturday Campl•ttt-$2.95 ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY TUE. THRU SAT. IY THE ..r ..._ MARK DAVIDSON I (( .. ..... TRIO SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH 11 to 3 LUNCH e DINNE~ COCKTAILS e DANCING • Continutd from P1gt 27 ' long·ti1ne performers, his engagements at nu mer· ous local spots during the years have ea rned him a \\1ide follo\\'ing. THEY ALTERNATE ~1ark's ·un i<iue pia r\o slyli ng s. are currently be·· Ing backed by .Jack Prather Qt Bill Plun1mer on bass, and one of three drumme'rs -t,hriz Harris. Michael ~1cKin1ey or Ronnie Dunn. 'l'hE'se fello\\'S in ter cha nge due to other commitments but "'e chided ~1ark that his ii; the onl y trio \\'C kno,w \liilh the mak· ings of a six·man band. 1~ tn return he explained lor \vhatever you'd like to cal l it) that Prather and McKinley are currently, - and generally. appearing on Tuesday and \Vednes· day~: Plumm er and Dunn generally on Thursday, Friday and Sat urda y, Ha rri.c. appears \\'hr.n he's in to,vn. llavidson tries to appear each night promptly al 9:00. • Lccated at 333 \V. l'oast !1ig hy.1ay, NewpOrt Beach. lhe Bonn Docks serves dinner from :> to 10 p.m .. Su nday through Th ursday. and until 11 p.m. on Frida y and Saturda y. Lunch is served from, 11 a.m. to 5 da ily, and there's a speci al Sunda y cham- pagne brunch· from 11 a.m. to 3-p.m. At the Village lta1a The R'on and Marty Duo, 'vith Ron Harris, left and M;trty Plautis. are ~rrenUy appearing at the Vil· Ja ge Inn on Balboa Isl and, Thursday throu gh Satur-- '0,~ .... TUES. (11/9 Through Thurs .11/11 )• .. ~ GALA BAVARIAN DINNER I I I I I $4.75 f'r-1~, ... I""' W.10 ... 1n ..... ( 1 ...... ,. ~.1 •• 1. f.;( J~~r '\[If "~~~ I J ... 'l ([I ~ ........ , ...... Stlu• l •l"'-';t, <~'""" l'•1n~. ~1,.c..O "rf'IP !:•"~· l'un>f1P""' \.•I f11~1<i, ~O•f11 ChN:'lt1·e l •~~, Arp1r ~!r\ldtl or LhOKt n1 I• p ( ...... ,~ ... ,,fa .. , R~'~"'' Bavd tian Hats To All A 10(! Jt r"ing ou r romplttt KOurmt! mtnu. RESTAURANT Reservations Sugg es led ftIVIERA 1'1£5TAUftANT Continental Cuisine Cocktails Serving Luncheon and Dinntr Monday through Saturd11v. ~ ~-224 l W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach ll iiiiiii~-~~-~-~ ...... ~-~~.,....~-~,....~-~~-~iiii~~~iiiiiiii--\I Closed Sundays ~e ar• located ne xt to th e May Co. in South Coast P1axa . BY POPULAR DEMAND MONPAY NOV. 8-TUESDAY 9-WEDNESDAY 10 ' - Santa Ana Henry's Newpo•t l<h. Our Grand Opening Menu Of 1970 Henry's Combo #4 Two $5.00 El General #2 Two 6.00 Pancho Villas Favorite '# 5 Two 4.00 Any Steak Two 8.50 With Any Dlnn•r ., , t°'la11 Of Wine, Cold Duck or Ch1mp19ne 2122 PALISADES 2530 W. COAST HWY. STEAK & LOBSTER • • • s3. 99 USDA .,. SALADS CHOICE CONDITIONED SIA FOODS COLORADO WAITRESS SANDWICHES BEEF SE•YlCE CH1ClllN Mr.STEAK STEAK DINNERS FROM $1.65 OPEN DAILY 11 A.M.·9 P .M. BEER & WINE 2267 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA lAT WILSbNJ 548·036B JJJJ S. lrlttel 140-1140 ALLEY 1111! PRESENTS ~INO LANZI Monday thn• WedM1dey • TONY FLORES Tliwndor thr11 S1111der Appeorl11• ' te 11 p.,,., 111 The Wine Cellor-11 to 2 Up111ll'I FEATURING DINNERS In tho s~n F1t nc:1co Mtn11 1r RACK OF LAMI STEAKS e SEAFOOD "5 TO 11 NIGHTLY IUSINESSMAN'S LUNCH 11,00 TO 5 - SATURDAY-11to5 LUNCH OR BRUNCH liquor 011d Food Ceteri1111 For Portle1 .SUNDAY-BRUNCH OPEN EYiRY DAY ON TMI! OCEAN ADJACINT TO NEWPORT llli,tCN 1'!£11 Zl 06 W. OCEAN FRONT NEWPORT BEACH iiC_x$~J..~X~ I EVERY SATURDAY I 2 STEAK DINNERS FOR rJ.ou> Of>C"ll Succulent Beejfrom Captain Cook 's broiler: Del icacws from 1.he Seven Seas. Magnifi cent Harbor View. Cocktails, Luncheon ~'p.. P0/, . !' French Fr ies .• • French . Fried Onion Rin gs • Tossed Salad • Roll and Butter Brinq 1 friend! Ta ~• adv eni ag• of th i' d11lic ious din· ntr for 2, 1t a ju,t ri9hf pric•. 1/i lb. tander ,he ic ~ stet~. cut to Bradford Houst sp eeif ieationi. Be qood -to t friend, or mayba fh e f•mi1y? Th it mtal. i• a ra vorit • with .11 •.. you 'll be a winn 1rl 01t1n Dtlly Men. thru Sit. ? 1 1 , , f :3D 1.m. te f ,.m. ~J i lun••r 10 '·"'· t• 6 p.m. GllAHT PLAZA -IROOKHURST lo ADMIS -.HUN.TINGTON BEACH t 25001 DANA D"IY! DANA l'OINT HAflllOR 496-6195 ~~Rae~ day evenings. On stage Marty plays guitar and Ron a!lernates on ~uitar, flute and ba njo. \Veil worth a listen after enJoying dinner at the Inn. ,. euben·s fnckmwt All t.nfret!I. ser111d 111i•h ~our choic.e of tossed !Jf't l n selad or shrimp and tom ato vinaigre.tte. and our own hot fre.sh-b.i~t.d breads • GP.DUND sr£Lorn STEAK. 3 .2!5 . Tei? 5!llOIN STEAI<. 4 .85 NY. STEAK. SANDWICJI Served with FrtllCll frit.s +onion rings 4 .2 5 TEP.IYAK.I STEAK. 4.95 Cl(.{ LAMB, 4.25 Oven roasted-s1r~1d with spiced peach +min t j e.lly SnAK..J ENC!l!LADAS COMBO A beaut iful combination of top Sirloin and chtese enchiladas topped with sou r crea m 4:25 'PLAN!( STEAK FOR. TWO >. g1tnt s 11t ~lrJoi nSte.1li:: broiled t~ ptrftelion -urvtd .t \jOW' t1bl• 4.85 P•r pt11M . SCAMPI, .9!J.-fu4 , G11nt Gulf shrimp sauteed in 1 ,it'rl ••~• of lemon butte,, g_tr!ie, chopped parsley oil'ld rrel'lch capers 3 .95 STEAK...J. LOBSTER. COMBINATION 6 .95 00: BROILED LOBST~TAIL '5ar v1d wit h rice pil 1f 4.95 NEW ORLUNS BOUlLLAllAJSSJ; A" e11e°i+i"'9 ~afood sfew of 111ho1e V.rimp, sc1 ll0111, cl1m\ ar>d frash f~ filat b\u.d1d ..,ah torW& 11uct ,111ittd .,;th 11.1irie 111d coo~ed tl'.I p1rf,ttio11-'Se1~td wit~ 1 tMsed salad 11111d toa~r.d qarllc. !'Oil .495 G~~a,fu,w±u, IDAH O BAK.ED POTATO .60 FR.ESH MUSHROOMS ~t,.JJ,J; I.JO A~TICHOK.E .9~ SPECLAJ. DESSJ:ll)'S,.60 BlV1'P,AG'9, ,:25 R eiiben 's ' '647 M.c:ARTHUR I L\ID., pij(WP()Rl BU.CH, C.liLlr. I '· l 1 I .. : l ' ' • ' '· :· ~'. . • . ' ' • ' -. I I I. • I I. I ', . . . [ I -BREAKFAST; LUNCH, DINNER TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE JIMBO'S COFFEE SHOP )050 E. Co•st Highway, Corona d•I Ma r QPEN 24 HOURS A l>AY ~- GOOD 14 HOURS A DAT THIOU;6H SUH., HOV. 14 Not Appllc1bl• With ·s.,.ci.11 Chinese Cuisine BAMBOO TEIR&CE C0'-1:81NATION LUNCHEON PLATES FRO!\! $1.25 co'!\tPLETE DlNNERS FR0~1: $2.95 ">'!;!I 1f'-! 'rt' Oriental Cl)('klail l.Aungl! Featuring 'J'T'oplcal Drinks H<Jr~ D'rl('u1·rps 4 tn 6 p.m. OPllN 0.1.llY 11 .t..M·ll PM (lOSED MONDAY Ill -11 - PHONE •••• 645·5550 153 EAST · 17TH_-•1 COSTA MESA. NOW APPEARING THUS.· FRI •• SAT. NITES RON & MARTY "'The Versatiles of Orange Cotinty'' Wed. Ii Suft, Nites PEPE VILLA The Inter national Guitarist DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS-99< CORNER OF PARK & MARINE BALBOA ISLAND 673-4530 BIG NIGHTS SAT., SUN. & MON. Cal Tjader WllLIE BO.BO NOVEMIER 12·1 1·14 SUNDAY JAM SESSION 3 PM . CONTINUOUS MUSIC SATURDAY i. SUNDAY PATIO IRUNCH CHOICE OF I. HUIVOS lANCHEROS 2. STIAIC & EGGS J, IGGS llNIDICT ,1111 IXTIN51YI llUNCH MENU CALL FOii •UlltYATION5 -S41-1TW Z,01 W. COAST HIGHWAY -NIWPOlT llACH THE ~!SHERMAN AT THE HUNTINGTON BEAGH PIER INVITES YOU TO SUN DA y · BRlfNCH ID A.M . to ~ P.M . ALSO A PRIVATE ART EXHIBIT J 17 PAC IFIC COAST HIGHWAY HUNTINGTON BEACH SJ6.l55S DON JOSE' Now AppHtrlnllJ The Noted J•r.1 Pian ist CHARLOnE POLITE Nation1lly Ac:c:leimed e1 one of the Coun try's· Five Top J e11 Pieni,+s Enclill1d1 ind T1co ......•..•..••... $1 .35 Chill Relleno • En chll1d1 .......... ., . $1.50 ~-wltti •Ice, leea , Te1todlt1t e11ll ktM 'INIST MIXICAH H>OD AT •IASONAILI PllCIS . e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adams IAt Magnolia) Huntln9tan Beach 962-7911 • - • Friday, NO't'tmbtr 5, 1971 DAILY PILOT -~ Your Gulde (o. Jllovles 1 I ' I I JW .DAllY L 'Kotch-'-(-GP) Sta~s Matthau • Edi t or• r Nore: 'I'/1/s Louis L. Am our's novel about rnovie guide is prrj)nttd l•w 8nd friendship in the by rl1e fl/n1s conimittce of \yest. Richard Crenna costars . llorbor Cou11cit PTA, ltf rs. Or. Zht\·agn tGrf: On1ar J(nrry Afellor .is pre.1:idcnt Sh11rif portrays young Jtus~ian C111d. /if r.s, ·Bruce Nordla11rl 1 doctor and poet caugHt up ht is con1 111itLt>e chairn1a11. Jt his country's revolutionary is i11te11ded as a rtfertnce upheaval. Geraldine Chaplin il'i ;,, detertni11ing suitable his .wife and Julie Christie f i I trt s for certain age ·portrays the ntistress he got to proups and will appPar know during Army duty. weekly. Your views are Gone Wll.b the 'Ylod (GP I: solicited. /\foil t11tn1 to Mo· Reissue of film versiop. or the vie Guide, care of the :\1argaret ~t itche ll classu.·. DlrlLY PILOT. Story of tht Old South during * lhe Ci\.'il \Var and R-eooa.stru<·· "Kotch" (G P): \\'aker ~1al· lion Era. Clark Gable and V1· thau is talk.ative, opinionated, \•ien Leigh Slflr. Jo\•able widov.·er retired from Lion in \\'int er lGP f: hardware store and living with \\filh romantif' lo\.'e long past, son's famil y. f'amily tries to tv.·o strong willed monarchs . mo,·e him to rest home. Jack battle o\'er "~o 11·IJI be sue· Lemmon directs this drama-eessor. Eleanor of Aquitainr comedy dealing with three 1ron't.forgive King Henry !l's gen(!rations under one roof. philandering and he impriMns ADULTS her for scheming fl)::flinst him. The Devil!! IXf: Vanessa ~Stars _Peter O'Toole and Redgra ~ PI a Y s hysterical' Katharine He pburn. hun c hhacke d nun used The Skin Game tGPl : Quin· l'Y and Jason are pre·('il'tl \\f11r con men v.•hose game is 11 phnny -~lave trade. Jason wrep~ l'i'hen his n1aster sells hin1. Quincy then reseu!'s hirn And they rnove on to neece the next town. Then one day Jason f'11n't eseapc. Stars Ja1nes l~11rner and Lou Gossett. Sunno"·er iG P): J\lelodr11n1a ()f \Vorld \V;1r 11. \1.a lian 11•1fr scarChes vast USSR to find hu sband n1issing in actioo. Finds hi1n living v.·ith beautiful Russia n girl "·ho had nursrd hirn back to life. Stars Sophia Loren. \\'ait Until ll:uk \G I'): Th riller in }l'h1ch 111-0 lhu.cs tr~· to fnrc·e blind gi rl to re1·eal 11·here11houts of doll stufferf with hei-oin. It had been Lhrust upon her husband by <1 ~!ranger. Audrey H epburn st~rs. \\'ild Ro\'trs !GrJ: \\'cstern Live Tl.eater politically tn incite 11 witch hunt. Oliver Reed portrays 1vordly priest bU rned at stake In Ald ous Huxley stnry of torture and deb11uchery in 17th Cenlury France. French Cflnnec1ion I R ~ : Suspense n1ystery starring Jean Hockman and Fernando Rt'~·. Repe1~tory to Stage 'Our T~ Class ic J esus Trip 1Gr1:. Tippy Walker and Rober.I Pnrler star in stnry nf a nun kidnP.ped rrnn1 her convent by an outlaw motorcycle gang. The I.a ve ~tachiDe t R): John Philip Lav• portrays hoy 11·onder executive of television world whose affairs lack permanency due to psychological s ca rs o( childhood. Dyan Cannon and Jackie Cooper co-star in i:;tory based on Jacqueline Susann novel. Summer or '<12 t R ! : Nostalgic return to early \Yi:I!"· years depicting three teenage boys awakening to romance and sex . They 11·hile av•a r summer at an 1-.:astern shore resort p l " n n i n g conqucsls. Sensitive ller111ie Falls in love with beauliful Armv 1vife. Jen- nifer O'Neill and c ·ary Grimes star. T. R. Baskin (GP): Candit·e Bergen and Peter Boyle star in the slory·of !hose \\'ho go to seek fame and fortune in the big city, There the y discover the depersonalizing fl spects of metropolitsn life. Valley or the Dolls (RI: The Interwoven story of the lives 'of three aspiring you ng 'c· tresses who become scarred by sex and drags In the rough world of show business. Stars Barbara Perkins and Patty Duke. . ~1ATURE T~ENS AND ADULTS Catlow (GPI : Yul Bryr'Jner i's hrro in sCreen version o( "Our Tn\,·n" Americana tlass1c on slagP at South Coast Repf'rlfl(',v, 1827 Ne\\'fW"lrt Rll'd., Cflo;ta Mesa . l'\O\'. 5-7 : 12-14 : 19-20, at 8 p.n1 Reservations -646-1:!6.1. "Plaza Suite'' t-;cil Simon c0mcdy done, bv the Ana·Modjcska Players in Loara School Auditoi:•um, 21.1 S. Loara St.. Anaheim , R: !.S p.m. No\' .. 5-6 and 12·1:!. Reservations -535·5814. "Stalaz 17" \Va r-time comcdy-dran1a on ·stage rit the. Santa AnR Cnm. 'munily Pl11yers, 500 \V . !1th S1., Santa Ana, F'ri. -Sat. at 8:30 p.m. '.'/ov. 5 !hrough 20. Reser- \'atlons -531·9738. •·narefoot in the Park " Neil Simon comedy produced bv the lrrtne · Commun ity The;iter in Humanities Hall on the UC Irvine.campus, 8 p.m, Fri . .S2J.., through Nov, 6. Res. crvations -547-7733. "You're a Good ~Ian Charlie Bro\\'n ~' Comedy by the \Vcstrninslcr <:ommunity, Theater at the FipJey School auditoriun1 , Ed- 111irds al 'Tn1sk. \\le.~tminster. at 8:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat.. through Nov. 6. ReservP.tions -897-1164. "Tv.·elflh Nighf' Shakespeare pray by 1hc NA- tional Shakespeare C-0., pre- sented by SMdleback College in the Laguna R<'ach High Sehool, 625 Park Ave., Laguna . at 8 p.m. Nov. 11. Admission free. _ MR. eMIKE'S HOUSE •. OF PRIME RIB Mende'f' Throwgll Thwrsde'f' $2.75 !)INNER SPECIALS MONDAY•••••••·••··•·•••••••••••• T·IONE STIAM: TUESDAY , .. , , •••• , ••••••• , , •••• , • , .... PRIMl 111 1 WIONISDAY ~·.,, •• , ••• , , ••• , , •••• , , TOf' SIR LO IN THURSDAY .: •••••••••••••••••••••• STUFFID CllAI Com~l tlt Oinnt r !ndudt 1 Gl1u of Ro11 'Wi~t 209 Palm, Balboa 675-5774 , l.r 1~1 ••l&o1 PttrV Ltndlnt l Wht~ I~ Downt y viii! f<l••m•t '• Pr!mt II.lb R11Uurtnl Fine ltalla11 Culdt1e Cocktails 2125 E. COAST HIGHWAY .... 673-8267 1 ... ,..otlo111 Dilly -& I'·'"· te 2 •·•· CLOSID MONDAY' "Tonuny·• A 1·04..-k npcra on :-ta,i;e ;i l Soul h Coast Rcpcrtor.1, 18:!7 Ne"·porl Rl\'d., Cost;i i\irsa, Nn1·. 9·11 ; lli·l8 til 8 p.m. Rt>S· er\'ntions -646-1363. "Arsrni<· and Old l..al't'" Con11'1'1~··myslery on st.-.i.;r ;1l thr Hunt ini;tnn Reach Pla_v. hou ... e, 2110 Main f't., Hunl in.c:· Jon Reach, Fri.·Sat. al fl::JO p.m .. Nov. 12.fk>C. 11. Reser- vations -536-8861. "The Boy Friend ·• S;.indv l\'ilsnn's Ht20~ musical prndur"ed b_v the Laguna ~1nu!- 1on Co1:imuni!v Theater. L;:i. guna Cttnynn Road , Lnguoa Rl'a C'h, 8;30 p.m., Tues. · Sal. through No\'. 20. Reser\·a· Hons -.J,94-0lf; lnYcr~is ion fContinurd rrnni r :ige 25 I "Stalag 17," Ano1hrr. mnrc rrcently rl'vived 1·omedy tu1- deri;:oes anothrr resurrct"t1nn nc);I '>IC'l'k when ··Arsenic :ind Girl Lflce'' hits the Huntington Be;.ieh Playhouse. 1·11 1!: E\'ER·PRESENT N.•i l Sirnon eonlinues tn be the pntron s<rint of !he cornrnun· Hy lhecitcrs. and a college too. 1his \\'Cekend, 11•ith lh rre diffcrenl oprnings I Ana-ti Ind· }cska's "Plaza Suite," Buena PArk".<; "Como BlO'>I' You r llorn'' and Sa'nla An;i Cot: Jege·s "The Star Sp;.1nl!led (:irl"l ;ind one closing. Ir. 1·1nc·s '·H;1rl·fon1 in the Park." Also in thr <·atti;ory nf lii;:h!~ r r. aud1enee-j!rabb1ng fare are ''Linder lhr Yum Yu1n ·rrce" :lt 1he Costa ~lc.~;i Ci1 ic Pla.1·- hnu"e and "Never Tnn Late" bv thr rcvh,rd Garden (:rove Cil ic The11ter. IL,,I adds up lo seven open· ini;<; !hi~ week. three ne);l \\"1.'rk and rive more• th ird week. The name of trrt' J:Bme is "get Of). the boards and of( Rgafn bc(Jre Christmas," anrf il's played with more teams rvcry year. At lcasl ttus 1in1c thry'rl! nnt all using the san1e ball. ROAST PRIME RIB Of BEF.F Au J~s AMONC. ZO SELECT DINNIR INTRllS sW.rrln~ \Vllli~m •totden 11nd Ryan O'NeAl AS cowpokes on Kar·1 M;ilden's \'ilSt 11-lnnlffna ranoh. ltehing to g~l rich too, they rob the loca l bank. FAMILY Tht A(r iea n Elephant (G l: l)f)cumentary whic~ follows bir1h, life. brauty and power of the bull elephant tn hls na!ural habi!at 111 Africa . 1\ mrrlr an \\'lldrrness I GI : S!udy of an in1al hfe fron1 :'laska lo Bi!Ja Califor nia, Pacific \'ihration1 j G ) : Surfing film with rock mus1e baekground. * 'l'ltc lctlt'T im1nl!.<iinlrl.11 af/Pr flit 111/e inclitnte.~ tl1c ro/11111 pivr·11 1/1e picture by tl1r ~lot1n11 Picrurr Corle 1'11r Cndr A11rt Rntit1Q p1n: prrnn n1ny be fn11nrl 011 n11r (J/ Ille r11nf1011 picture page.~. Friday ~ven1n~ N VEMBEt f) l it "" Jtrry nphy B ltNIC Nt"' Tom Snyd11 •l'INM Don't [•to tflt Dtll!H 0 Nrn BenU. 5ehubeek 0 @ Wiid Wlld Wttl @) .t.u1111rnt11t rn 1t1111t1111n I m MnM: "ltttlt HIW" (dfMI '5S--Rld'l1'1 Todd, Wiiii am H11t11rill. m Me¥11: (C) "'CMuul ti ...... (JdVt•~u11) '61-Ro'J C.li'WMlll, llD"" ... 1:00 (J)011 CIJ lfijj - Saturday Morning NOVt MB!R 6 m Tht rlinblo11t1 6) I Dn1t11 of .H1n11lt 1:00 Cl) TY I ClttlfMlll llj) Tht frtMll Clltf 1;30 8 CIJ SllnriM SIM .... ED l+od11pocl1• Lodrt 0 llKk [Jperltlla m m Newi 1:00 a "•• worf ...... w.,. m o.wrt ••'°" I ..., OJ m Dr. Dllltttt CJ• • .,...., "' I o m ~"' ''"" -1:30 0 Stt.,. Allt11 S1IOW Guests: Ptl (I) TY I Cltlll'Mll Harnn(lon, Sll lllOfl friedm1n and m Tllutl4trillnh Or. Robtrt B1•1r. ID Spid1111111 0 BURT LANCASTER & 7:30 fJ Dlllty's T1KllovM *SHIRLEY BOOTH·"COME 0 m """ ""'""H BACK. LITILE SHEBA" OArtti•r S.ltll O ffi00 """"" 0 MO'lit : (90} "Cem• lad. Uttl• 0 Tout:M Tllrtlt S111b1" (clr1m1) '53-llurt l ancas· ((4) Ulldf Ruu tfr, Shirle1 600U1, ltrry Ml)Oft . Iii lrwtlltr lun R1cll1rd J1ec~e!. G) IHllt ltlltt (l l (1QI riD Ntws 1;00 fJ lu1• lullll)' m And1 'Griffith Show CiJ m O.pu!J hwl l l ) ' ' ' ' • • ' ' • W llllt CosbJ Show 0 CountFJ Mullc Kitty Wtllll . O'J1 P11111dtlpllil OrelltstT1 0 CJ) C1) run-, "*9b111 ' Et) Tiit rrtnth Clltl rtJ C.rtoon C1rnlv1I • L01"fE ... iD B11t tht Odds 0 MOYie: "11tt St1w Sllf" (1Mn· - CW Grttn .lc111 turt) •M,-[.,. G1bof, !Continued from rai:e 251 CE Dullo tn 1'1tlnt1 m C.rtOOlll H 7:00 II (I) 0 m N"" CD Snutty Sllllth en('c, j he v.·ltlingness of the I'{) Truth or Contt(!utnces l !30 .. IT\ ScoollJ·Ool pair to leal"e New York Rt th(' I]) D11rr11t -~ h<"1i:ht of the theater season, -W111t'1 My Unet O ®l m ~nk l'ftthtr -O C.mp111 l"fofllt • to \\'Ork with students al UC!. nQl It T1ku • Thltl O CJ) (j) Thi JKboll n.. Bt>s1dcs the experience they m I LM llltJ m MeY111: (C) ''Rldt ltMMMt" \1·ill share \\•ith the dratna m I °"'1111 el Jtinnle (w11ten1) '59 -Rtndol11h Scetl students, the Brecht ('hou:e. ID Hlste t)' '1 Meriel Kirin Stetlt. ''Celdtn Hlllll11t l11fl.. '1 h. f I . ood f a;) Lt lnlrust ,,,. (od••ol""} '66-Klrk '"'n, • " ac 1z cc s. 1s fl ~ one nr ... , 09. Sid Cill1111n m eo.t MtCotil a unil'ersl!y prod u c I ion . n-. M 1 ~ t0U In fl p 9:00 I) C1J H1r1t• Slobtlrotttri ''Rl'echl ts required rending in 7:30 tJ Citt111! 0 IJQ.l m Burler lhtl colle,e. ·It 1nade "Ot>ttnon O PREMIERE' NEW .. . . 0 Mol'it: "'N•• Ytrk TOd~ (U>m· srn!<e to brin~ a Ii v c -* NIGHTIIME VERSION of !dy) ·•t-frtd M.eMuruy. pcrfonnance 11f his \1·ork." HOLLYWOOD SQUARES ri)Tll111n1: Willdn t. tM Soul! i\liss Le n.vn's vls1\ l!l the Peter Marshall hosts O @ Btwitclltd ran1pus ha s put her career in 0 Hollywood Squ111i Cliff Ar· (!)Simson R ne"' pcrspccti\'e as a resull quette. Willy <Aix ind Paul Lyndt l al Chit 1n S.. C.11 of ton!aet l'i'ith students. Ruest on the new niehttimt v•rslon l CE 1'1no11m1 ~allno She Sii id one stude n t of the po11ulu daytimt 11mt ~how. 9:30 O @ Tht H11r l11r lunch reeC'ntly told her he was sn Pf.t~r Mirr~h•ll hosh . ' I 0 \lj m T1k1 • Clint st•J i.;ltid to 111eet her bec:tuse of [l1 To Tell !ht Truth @ Mobilt H~mt Show · rT1 I Dr11m ol lt1nnit 0 (}) Ud1v1Ut the fine job she did l'i'ilh hrr O Miiiion $ Mevie: (C) (Zhi) "Tht 0 Movie: "Soutll'"st r11S11t• rnle a1' f\ Comn1unist in ··rron1 Prirt" (drimiJ '6l-Paul Newman (we~tern) '54-Rod C1m1ron. Russia \Vith Lo\'e." '"11'11 [dwaid G Robln~n. [lkt Sommer, m Ap1rtm1nt Hu111tn' Sllew hccome my road to fame ," Diine e1~er. 10:00 f) (j) Ptbble1 111d 14111111 11•11 she quips. •·it is pla yed sn ffi Ho11n'1 Hrrot1 0 CI) (i) Cur101lty Shop • of1 en on te]e\'1siun." ffi (Jl Or1.-:n1t tO:lD 0 (I) Artlll1'1 T'i' runn!n Another student ~racious\y ff:} !fil Civili11tio11 0 llQ) m Tiit l u11loo1 infor1ned her rhal ~he is ;'lhotJ! (T.) l1s Cemldrts 8 M.vit: "lnnoctnb h1 P1rb" (td· '·-"'Unl11ned Worid venlure) ·•1 -tl1i11 Bloom. to m:ton1e •· 1•ery r i l" h ' ' ~ b~ ~ Nrl Samt el lht WMk tl:OO ()(fl S.brln1, \ht T1t1111t Witch bccau.~e the rock niusic t:ibloltl ..u .r.;.\ .:ft I d 1:00 0 fl) Ch\c111 TtddJ 81111 0 uWJ u:.o Mr. W JI! ''Rolli11i; Stone'' had fa1·urr1bl~· 0 (fOl iD Tht DA '" r6) Rttl lstltt llenl1l1 rl'1 ie1\"t'(I her latl'sl rf'<•ord 0 Mom: (Zl/,hi) "tlttk Fe1rs" O [3) .lor1117 Q!llrt "f:1£'rybocl.y, hut everybody (di1ma) ·11 _Betti 01~il, Herbert D M11 l1: (Cf "S•••1• C1ft .. \\'ill buy it." she \\'<IS told. M~r~h•ll. Rich1rd C.tl~n. {westtrn) '62 -Rith1rd 8as1h1rt. She says her contacts 1vith O .f:Jl ri)G)Tht lrtdJ l uft<h W Co111u•11'1 W•nd the s!udent aetors hare bC'eo m Trulh or CotlstqlltlltH i?Jl11th1 llb rt in1pre~si1 e. ··They ;u1u1 1.e 1ne ffi lltt Yir1inl•~ CE ~ui!d1d ('\er~' tirn r they Opt'!! their Ri) C..d11Jiw1s G) IUJ·Urtt · nioulhs.'.' she said. "how they 09 film: {C) "Min from l1r1mit" ll:JOU(j)JoJ11 1rtd 1111 Pussyub a!) Nino Q ®j m Tiit Jtbons 11nderslflnd so per:frclly.· Nol * Movie of .the Weekend D Cil L•Mtlol Link one line they read is wrong." 'SHELLEY WINTERS • m Mo~•: Nllue Mvnltr IC St. Trtfto "1'hey're very bright kids," STUART WHITMAN lin'•" {comedy) '5'-T1rry·Thmnl1. Machiz adds. He notes rhey have to be lo Tomorrow~BC S:OO Afternoon h l :lO f.l CI) D'H1r1 "b:~rtltllt)' get ··i\1ot er (.;our11,:tc".ready O m NIC l'rtlllltr1 Mo~t:. (C) 12:00 .:11 (J) Thi Monllfft for its thre(' weekend run . -I (2hr) "A Howlin1 In the Woods" D Movit: "A StDJ1n Uh" (d r1.m1 "It's a sho1\' tha!'s frau~ht (df".lma) '71 -Birblft £den, L1rry '47-11111 D1vl1, Gltnn ford. \\'ilh leehnical eon1plerity," H3gm~n . .lolln Rublnstei11, Vtr1 Milas 0 (})Cl) ft) AIC'1 Wldt Warlll rf r-.J al'hi z s:iid. 1'here are 12 set 0 (j)(j} GJ Tht 1'1rtrld1' ftfll · Sport. Tht N1tion1I 500 ShKk t.lr changes, plus shifts using ll'i'n itr '01ys ol Acne 1nd llostf R1c1 and the Wotld W1irhtllltl n1 revolving s\aj.!es. an eight (10) Morie: (C} f2hr) "Tiit lldt to Ch1mp1onsh1p1 •11 l11turtd 1'ltnt1. piece orchestra and nine songs H•na:m1n's Tm" (western) '67-m CLINT EASTWOOD & ,1ug-mcn!ing 11·h;il is con-Jack Loid. *JACK JONES & DAVID! sidered to be n straight play. m LUCILLE BALL IS m D1Wd rmt Shaw GutSls 1r1 The songs, he explains, arr * FROST'S ONLY GUEST "''" Mine, J1ek .!ones, Clint E1sl- •·exlC'nsions of the lerl." W Drtid past Sflow Comt4itnllf twOOd, J1nt Goodall 1fld llidl Uttle. '"They're nei·cr i.lccidenlfll lo l 1Jtil!e B11fis !he only ru•st. (tO) Mno• Y1111r l lblt rfsl M1sterpitct Thtltr1 m Drtid frost Slttw lhe plot.'' ~1 iss J . .enya scolds ff) Tht SJ.t•dJWi11t Tr~iUon if3 s,orts Wlf14 the int11:r viewer. She sings fil'r g:OO O (Jl (6)®1toonr 222 ~Unclt W11d1 nurnbcrs in<"luciinF lhe ''(ir!!lll l'n Cur"nt E•e"h (E V11j1 Tr1v1I Cop Out'' son~. one hi he led €E L• Gil• 112:30 10 You A1t Thtre '1111 Fill ol Trt!Y'" ''KRpitilalion" in the original CE Rosts ptrt Ytrori lt• O MOYie: "Man In Ctf'I(' (111m1r.u) tert. 9:30 'AS-limes M•~n. It . Is an exhorlalinn In -g A gripping tale of 0 Shtr1ot .. Hohntt Thttt11 undt>rstanding lhat MolhC'r · h f d l1ij) MOCiO'• Comlf * w1tc era t an terror m U:itom1t11 Courage sings · to A young "8LACK NOON" ON THE m N•VJ rro10111, soldier who nerds lo learn 'CBS FRIDAY MOVIES 9 Rocky 1nd Frltnd1 • '1 ideals sometimes must hend lo 0 ({l CBS rrid., Mtwi•: (C) 1901 1:00 fJOO cas Chlldr1n'• n1111 Fn1ft1 rea!i!y's demands. "'BJtck Noon" (susprnse) '71-Ray (D N-.i Nick C•rtu ; At l1rsl brush, lhis <ldl'i('e l'hinnes, Ray Milland. g) tor.1..1en S.lv1l1 rniJ:hl seC'm \fl c11n1C' from Lhe fjll (3) (i) m The Odd Couplt €E Amtric1 In Sp1et heart, considering the change O B11ltr W•rd Ntft ~ 1'11tJ Du~• of plans Miss Leny a and Weill m I SPiC1A~I Movit l'rtinirre Ct~· -m Df11111 del $1bad1 ' ~ cntounlrred iri Cerrnany In 1r1rt "Fiddltr Oil the Roel" Ryin ~l0-0.{])@)CiIJNCA.I f11tll1tr l!l3~. Bu1, she a\"OWS, ''\\·e D"Ne•I. Lucille BJll. Grt~ory Peck W1sMna:ton 11 C1ftlor11l1. \\'('fl' lucky. ITT) HotlJWOO(I Ttlel'ision Tht•ltt ('@ Mal'i1: (C) "Wl1111 ef thence" ''\\"c had sern ;111 \h t' ,0:00 0 [3)(6)QllO'H,Allltrk1nsty\t1 (dr1m1) '61-lim Brown. i\!1ll'rlf';Jfl lllOl'Jes, rC'ad a!I () Counti1 De~le llC-ltl)l.lf~t. m Unt1me4 World ;ihout i\tnl.'nf'a . To see New ID Ht'll'I Pu1m1n, flshm1n IE M11it: "Y~I Dru111" (wut11n) tD $9ttf1I el !flt WHk '57-Rod C.m11on. ·~'ork's famous skyline (or the ,airv Muaitil 0s11rt fl!!TH Iii l'icturt first ttme eorn1n~ 1n on the ·'cw, fitm: •1111 Fror•lfl" 9 Tiit Mt111111 F1111ly hon I \\'as (or LI~ like coming m l11tll1 llbft 2:00 IJ fkmf'• TrHhOVM ho.~1,c." . . 10:30 0 Clost·UP "J1w1!ry/Htb" Q NF\. 511111 ti Ult Wttl Since we arrived I h11ve O Nt'is Morris, McCormick 00 TV I LMb It lu""111 felt nol one d11y like a stranger @) Tll1 Celddlu•n O ""'" Dtrbf in this country, even though il 6) Kiwi Bill Johns m JOvl Trlltl was not easy for Kurl lo start (Jtl Arfltr1ctn DJ1111 MtchlRt ml fn11 Adwtlfvrt over flgain here,'' she said. &I) El R1tr1to dt Derltn S"7 1 QfJ The MVftrtln; The early years in Ne w m Dr. Simon lotb G)V1rt1kt (R) (4hr). --v York l'i'ere spent working with 11:00 IJ Cl) Q) Ntw1 2:JOG .. ,. to lul'Rl111 people li ki; 9 a K:izan, Sletla 0 9 €D Ntw1 0 stltltll '9 thtiM Adler, Clifford Odels and Mor· 0 Wt1let11 H1ntt• lteln1 0 Ott MuNc kl PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT GENE MEGS A.NO COMPANY Enltl't~i ning ris Kano\'sky Rt the group CJ) M1rshtt DUlo11 (I) ln .. n11t1tn1I Hollr th I r h lh~ll 0 @ GD N1w1 @D Spetllfht M lwtll ea. er o I e 11 es. o Movit: (C) "Sh1111" (westtrn) 9 lhl l'ltrtl 1\11ss Leny11 count~ herself "SJ-Altn l•lld Jtin Arthur fortunalc "lo ha ve met my Ql Tt Ttll lh• 'Tn.rth · 3:00 £1 lllt Sltitl It °"" h b d " h '---0 Artkulturt USA us an , . to ave uet:o con-m 1111 1111 croc:.- t d lh t b t t U lk...l·~11111 ~ ec e WI M On(', u . WO 11:15 mi Cln11111 34 ! 0 Me'l'lt: (C) .. ~ (Wat· SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now M• 'n Ed'• mobile 0vtns speed d11lclow pipln1·hot plms to your door In minutes. Tor prompt 1ot11ice phono 646-7136 (Ntwport a each/Cot.ta Mtu-17th 1ndTuslin) i J or 847·1214 (Huntrn~n Beach-Beach and Hiel). .fll. ir: .. PRIME Rll e SEAFOOD STEAKS e COCKTAILS ~en \\'hose work has remained ll:lO IJ Mevlt: (C) "Stcitt 11 the hiu1~ em) •53 _ C1t1rlton H..- hmcly 30 ytats later· (idvtnlu1t) '54-tllultort H1ston, Q'j SdtllCI nctitl DMtN ~ Her stage crcdlt!I Include 1Jd)£)Jth ••Y Ci r••• from m Mtwtt: -t11ll1lc111I...,.. three years in "Caharel" In eumn•. C1l1I. (dr1m1) '43--l.klrd No1111, ;, New York. the role of Annie In a Merit: "Ltst W.UIMI" (d11m1) at St•• the danct-drama ' • S e v e n '45-ltiy Mi111n6, J1n1 W)m•!L Cit .. • ,.... Deadly Sins'' In Nrw York And D (J)Cll U) Dltt CMtt 8 Tiie Weetlfllt,, Los Angeles and "Barefoot In OPEN 7 DAYS Athens" on Bro11dway, With "time of( from 1--------------------''-- LUNCH 11 to 2:30 "Threepenny Opera" iihe film · DINNER 5 to 12 ed "The Roman Spring of Mrs. St6nt" with W1rrcn SUNDAY . BRU NCH Beotly ond "The Ap- Get the PiUI with PiZZIZ FROM I 0 A.M. polntm<nt" •n Engl~h lllm . e.•· N~rl y Everyone Ent1rtainmenf W1.dn11 ny thru uii,d1y "Tho~gh It bombed In CAn· Listens to Landers ''\nenifas d S never rtle•sed In the U.S. 101 N. IAYSIDl DR., NEWPORT IEACH ne"" "1e rtett'llo. "II mide -______ _!'.!'.:!'.~:_-~~~~~----__: _ _:__:_ __ ·::_ __ _.'.._l!!o~l~o ~T~h~·~M~t~d~,,~D~u~n~•~·!!":~~~~~~~~6~4~4~~~0~l~l~!j mon'y In Europe because 1t starred Omnr Sharif." ·--------------------~--- ' . I • I ' . G(r.I Watching, Too Mazatlan Scenic, Sporty· If fishing , hunting. sun. bathing and girl·"'alching are your cup of Tequila , we ha,·e a suggestion: try Ma :r. at la n, f\texk"O v.•here all four sport s are popular. Once it "·as P. hidca"'ay fo r pirates "'ho cooled their heels after pulling a job on thr high seas. Today, ~1 azatlan is a vacation-fun port whert' the jet set has replaced tlle skull- and-crossbones. Situated on a rock\•. l\l.'lst.ed . ~n1c ptninsula. thiS beaunful old port city extends itself along !he ocean on ?. main c r escent-shaped boule1 ard. The malecon. or seav.·atl. the lf>ng: graceful ~n1bankm,ent v1hiC'h separates tht> Cit}' from the heaches and the Pacific. sets the tone for the city. Here Jire the modern holels. the chic gi ft shops and the delightfu l seafnod res1airants. SiUing in one of the cha rming side"•alk t?lcs. one c;in \\'alch for fishing boat s. stroll ing IO\'Crs, and other more or less natural phenomena. Huts of thatched palm dol !he immacula!e sands washed by the frothing waves of rock· bound Olas Alias Bay. The beaches at ~iazatlan Ne long. sandy and free. Food. cha irs and umbrellas and a \'ariet~· of other' merchandise arr 1(1t free but aren't f"Xpens1,·e. During summer \'acat1ons. the sQrfboard-set drh·es d o w n from the Lnlted Slates with boards str2.pped to thr !Op of 1he1r cars 10 I.!)' the excellent surl1ng. Aii~ gil en morning \\'lll {ind ;..1azat\an in a· leisurely m6od. Foundf'd in 1806, it is a to"'Tl of rarr and Quaint gentility. Its old Indian name means "place or the dttr." The 75 .000 1n- hab1tanLs are mnsll~ 1nvol,·ed in C'atctting and exporting shrimp or in catering .to the tourist. 0!1('n·air bistros provide ne.tive ;..1ar1achi bands fpr the 101.1 nspeople and \:isltors who stroll among the iti"·s of ma- 1est1c coconut palms. Vendors of mangos. bananas. papayas and coconuts rattle their little t•arLs along Olas Altas Street. Quaint and colorful 2.:'anas .. 111·0-wheer-horse-dra"'n sur- re~·~. 11·ait patiently ror a tourist To pay a fe1•1 pesos for a ~cenic cil\'·Wide ride. Locals alSo like to point out that ~1azallari is on the same latitude as Haw<>.ii !only 15 miles south or the Tropic of Cancer J. as if this guarantees not only beneficial climate. · lee's i uedl! cloth 1aara / h•nk1"'••it•rd e m 1il1r t~1•9 1 7 f11h ion i1l1nd, n1wpo rl t enltr 6 4•·5070 On ourJan.14 cruise to Mexico, wc11 take you to the setting in Puerto Vallarta where Night of the Iguana ~·as film ed. l t "'as the movie that made P ue rto Vallarta famous, MGM.Seven A rts' Night of the Jguana. Now you can 'take a tour of the rno,,ic's roman- tic hoccl. One of · the key mcmbccs of the fil m will be(' your guide. Afcerwards, a ,.., .... · ·· .r ::.. delightful ;. :..,. ~~··:./ ..;;,: ... , b fl 1 ch ·1l::'"i~~· ..... .• ~~ 11 ct un · ......._.~.'.:"."~/j.-:_,...._~t~·..:,..·- v:ill be served on '··~ · M ismaloya Beach, bclo"', as a Mariachi band entertains. On tbc '\\'a)' back to tolvn you'll drive by the fan1ous Burton residence. \Ve' JI show the movie itself several t in1cs on board. During the 14 day cruise yol1'll also visit Aca· p ulco, Mazatlan, :}.'1anzanillo and Zihuatanejo. )'ou sail from Los An_cclcs on the all First Class Princess Italia. The M/V Italia;, of Italian registry. H er Italian crew are all specialists. From your stateroom to the dining room you'lf ieceive t he kind of service once the prerogative of royalty. Call your travel agent now. Or Pri ncess Cruises, at (215) 380-7000. For all the details, a~d brochures o n our other cruises, mail the Coupon. r•••••••••••··~-~~·····••••••••••••••••• Pri11cr;s Crull~ · --::-G·2111t·11.J J4 lS Wilshire Boulenrd,LoJAogeles,CA 90010 Send me brochurn 011: 8 Niih• of rti~ 1,. •• ,, ..... w kd ~f~ri«• Ca111i1ill Cnlfkt f•h. 11 D Cuibbeu/S. Amedc& ; snie Zip ' : Princess CruiseS .a : I M~rlm• ('.aribbe..11/S•••lllt Ameri,.. • Ala1ka/Ca11ad• I ~ ...................................... 4 Night of the Iguana ... re\'isi~d. • I • .. ' . . . . -·· r'- Piarw Co .terie To Make Debut .. MOVIERATINOS FORl'MENrs AND \1JUNO PmPLE ,,.. ~,..,"',,,. ,.,...,. '"r•.,.,.,,,. ---,,,. -~" -·· ·-· ........... -~. ............................ "'"'G ~-~,..., ... ., ... -..... o ..... ... _,....__ .. HV .. ...,, .... , SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH i& ACADEMY AWARDS DAVID LEAN 'S DOCTOR ZHiVAGO SHOWING NOW! CALL THEATRES .-I! -: FOR 2nd FEATURES ' ''AF LM OF ALMOST INCREDIBLE SUSPENSE! It includet among a great many chilling delights, the most brilflantly executed chase 1141uence I have ever seen. A very good new kind of movie composed of 1uch ancient material as cops and croolcs, with thrills and chases, and Jots of shOot 'em up. It moves at m nif icent speed." -Ro~., Grt•"'Pun, 11-Of• f lm• "THE NIFTIEST CHASE SEQUENCE SINCE SILENT FILMS. As• ~ops-and-r bers thriller it is generating more sustained d excitement than any action film in years.'!..r.~1 o zi,.,.,.._, "I SAT ON THE EDGE OF MY SEAT. I don't know of a more exciting movte e"tertainment today." -H ..... ~..,, s.1.F ... 1, .. "PURE DYNAMITE. "s tri11er-fast, expfffiye scenes and high-tension chase sequence (thi OM W.1Bullitt1 pates by comparison), wiH have you 1ittralty 1aspih1 for 'breath." -Kathi..,. earra", N ... v~ o. 1y N- "THE BEST THRILLER OF THE YEAR. It's so . exciting, so real, so intense that you come out of it feeling as if you had a physical workout Director William Fried kin has kepi this action hopping, frequently in·a manner that puts you in the role of an extremely fast moving bystander. Put It on the top of your must see excitement list and eel there earty to 1void the rush." -M~.., Winoton, N..., vori. root "SMASHING pjTERTAINMENT. A SUPREME MOVIE-MOVIE. The many things that a thoroughly 11tiIDinJmorie-movie should be : a topical dramatization , •perceptive COnfiiiporarfcomme-nt-iiia 1 fine , .. ?Q.TllE _., ... FRENCH CONNECTION piece of filntofnlkln&." -,llMhllt Cl ot "A SLAM-BANG ·DOOZEY OF A COP STORY. A ntek .. nd-nock pell-mell me with an elevated subw•J trf!n, belie.,. ~ or not, mak.@ U!• tHltd chlM in 'ltdlitt' seem •• • Gi~ Seoul rell)'. lt'R lilt ya ..i of your chair. -9oll~1111.oo1.erwow R1d • fN THttJ!ll4T TlfAO/TPON OF AIJtftfCAN THlfJLLtll& 2lllir C00\11'·"11 PIE£JfT1 "Tl(' A'(lOI Q'.INCt'Of' A Ml' frAHTOt l'llCD.Ct'Ot ., _ _,. ~ R1'WOJ lilf'I o SOU'tfl TCM'tt=I liWICB-IOU\ffl -~ _,, ....... O'#lftllf - -rt(Ml(Tll ll!T --IDIWDIOl'IE_,.~ __ ,._11DW.C CXlOllll'DEWlll' NOW IHOWING AT THiii THIATRll jRJ...,_W"J STADIU!il # 4 OtANGl 63t·•ttO IATIUA 111 ITIDlllM •I•• "WMl•l IAlllS DAii• UDO THEATRE . JllW,O•T UACH Ol'J·l3SO UITIAIKI Of flll UH tsLL Oo·,,1QO&t.IJ '""' c..,1, l•ft"', Founta in Va ll ey Drive In tOUNT A.IN VAlll'f t62·2411 ~· 0 '!Jlft '~ 111 troo•h"j" AIM '11Tfll MU•DEI ,. , . . • cot,:.'.;;.~.~:..":".~ ... • • HILO OVllt . ,s~o GlfAT Wiii CANOICf 8.EltGfN • PElfll BOYtE T. R. BASK.IN )!Ml OiUUANllfM AlfUi(l1111 rtlHNY HOW lOV'fRS STARTl.S .• , "fri~nds" !R. TECHNIC!XOA' OIRKHO !Y JACK LEMMON (5') JACKIE-$AIDT DEmS ' &•1-STllT .... ~ .. -1 ~ • ...rx, "The African Elephant" p,o..-:-'>1Sll.•';• ll(.'li ·"~Ol.'.J~· ~ °' ~1•1 -.l 111 & A Girl roct 1~1 CM1- l"'I• •I llM Wirt•·· L11t fr11ti1r. !GP) WalkBltoat IEDWA"D8 ~ARBORa\':'1.1 ......_ ...... ,~··. Co"• "'Ill 1•1 Mii r ""' '°""" °" ...,.. °'''° rn. NO ONE UNDtlt 17 ADMITTU> VANESSA REDGRAVE .... OLIVER REED ..... N RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS ........... - ·~ .... "'aii11.wy ~WJ .... ~ .... ~ ALSO lST RUN Iii. "DEEPEND" "GONf WITH fH[ WIND" 111d "l MUllS FOlt SISTER SAIA" ·NDW Pl.I.YIN«» lOWA•OS ClNIMA VlfJD Mission Vi tio, 136-6990 BILLY JACK (GP) Al 10.lr~t lrtwtt' • f 11111 "ON ANY SUJIDA Y" . . . • • '\--~ ' • ( Set ita c%arist Russia .. " ------· •• ' -. • • -- DAILY PILOT 3J. 'Fiddler on the .-~oof~ ~anks Among ·Film' Greats By GEORGE LEIOAL 01 tM ~u, 1"1i.1 ~11tt "Fiddler on the1 Roof'' . ' It ts a "G" rated picture 'wliidi -ret; the standard for ·a ls · family film. warmth. ~ The United Artists release of the Mlrisch Company film ranks among the greats. It is a movie old .iHollywood would have beeo prOud of and would have made if they could. It tells a violently iluman story in the setting cf Ciuist Russia before the Revo\Ution. It eschews. blood and . gore, yet establishes human un- derstaiiding for, the exiled turn of lhe century Jews by spark- ADULTS $2.00 JUNIORS $1.00 I l I I c~1w,.,, v~4•1l1 flH •ith '•••"'•I nl!TMI Ntw DOMUTlt I k)lllllN U.llJACIOl;f OML.l.TIJt010·1Yl'fl IHC1Al UIOW CAIS..JIOTOll llOll.U A VACAllON Vll<ltUI All UllOH OMi 11111oon lllC\,1,,1 DllCOUNT TIC~ITI AT TOUI fAVOIJll OllAMGI COUNT'!' Mlll CAI OfAlll,YOUI llEAl\¥1 All'HA l f!A IA&d T, IHlllFTT DUIG ITOU 1 I Uffl.I. r•11 CtlltU, 'I , St1y and pl1r at kings Cutls, l•lr• Tthoe, !or lha low low pric1 ol only $\7.95 per d&Y (per peraon -doubl• occupa.cy). Thi' Includes: Oehnca "°ccom.noda!ions. Breakfast &l"ld dinner. (also avallable rooms Wltllout meals) Ski Ma911zlne sayl: "Ont of the 10 b~~I .,, the big pl11c1t is Kit1gs CaJ//I 'j . , . King• Castle wm~ pri'tes tor com/01t. ll11mboy1nc• · and c1n1111/ /oca//on." For Reservations·caU: Zenith S.9944 Their only crime ••• they wanted to be free. EVE MOtR """Sf"" ,JOO[P!HEURY . SAUL BRANDMAN ~- CO-HIT "DEVIL RIPER" • ing a universal empathy for a people scorned, beaten and routed. never geta in the way. ll la believable. It is good theater. "Fiddler" wit t-jewelers' T~' bulk of mid·America precision re\e811es a brilliant probably knows little of those gem of unders~anding from assembled to portray the the clouded rock that burden11 screen ·version of Joseph man, that slows his ability to Stein's stageplay, l\.fter. seeing adapt. "Fiddler," there are many In Fiddler chlpa away at tradi· the cast they'll probably not lion Jn human, as oppo11ed to forget~ iconoclastic, terms. . As Te'zye, the Israeli actor Not.ably T,opc)L wbO starred In "the London stage pro-T ~ P 01 ',bridges the gap Of duction, and who breathes a m1sunderstancUns that parts · present day generatklns. Torn nesh and blood Tevye into as he iii between the traditions being. that bring meaning ta his· life Leonard Frey as Motel , and a prolound love of his chieny known for h i 11 family, Tevye struggles to ' Broadway and film po trayal understand hi11 changing life. of Harold in the "Boys the rou~s of dough kneaded, the cast for whom "Fiddler" by Antony Gibbs Bnd Robert pun~ed and , baked into the is an impressive beginning. Lawrence. staff of life. • _ No aspect of technical ex-Tom Abbott, Jerome Rob- rne young of Anatevka ce\lence is overlooked in the bins' assistant in the ChOre- launch a revolutio11 of the i r film production of "Fiddler.'' ography for the Broadway own, each In his own way, Elizabeth Haffenden and production, retained the life of Fine performances are given Joan Bridge, Oscar wiMers the dance and • admirably by Rosalind Harris as Tzeitel; for their costumes for •Ben suited the ensembles for the ,_1ichele Marsh as Hodel and Hur, have equalled their track camera's eye. Michael Glaser as Perch.lk. record in thiS film. '.I'helr Norman Jewison produced Hodel. falls for the revolu.hon. designs are flawless. and directed this masterpiece spout .. 1g teacher Perchlk 1n a · . . , f 1·1 nd ill h way not unlike latter day , John W1lll,ams adaptation of o 1 m a ustrates t e text coeds must pine for their Jerry Bocks Broadway ~re in a manner as obviously lov- Joaghaired, petulant radical and control o~ th~. music~! Ing as that of a renaissance h'eroes . forces at work 1n this gigantic monk illuminatins an abbey's · . work help achieve t h e parchment pages. Motel and Tze1tel and Hodel aforementioned musjcal stan· The opening chorus detailing a~ Pcrchik be~d Tevye's will dard for films . tritdition's binding force on the ~&l~ ~t~~':-ti~ ri•-.-.... , MON,, tH•U Fll, I P.M. SAT. AND IUN, 1 • 4:JO ·I "'Ith heart ·rendins .. u t: gen t Not since David Lean'11 roles of the community is demand; f?r excep~ion to the "R,yan's Daughter" has this painstakingly Illustrated as no vu1 ,,..,._. . alchtna~ing marriage rode. reviewer enjoyed the clear, film before has done, \\ilh ac-. •oe•TL:;:," 10'1 For .Tiettel .to .marry M~lel, unfussy' views of a coontryside curate brief glimpses of daily "WJLo •0v••t" 10'1 That struggle brings to lhe Band," unleashes a lorre of· screen one of the rare depic· talent as the adolescent tai or tions of what lcve really is. A whose ~ite de ""p a s s a g e strOngly sexual mood prevails threatens the matchmaking thrOugh m a 11 t e r f q I ex-institution of the peasant ploitation of earthy, musky village of Anatevka. ~e\'ye s permission and viola-community. Oswald ,_torrls, tasks. The effect works. The =1e'1'1~~~ M~1'i:i: hon or an . agreer:ient with director of photography, brief series of images set to,1~~~"~"~,.,~,~-~"~·~·~··~· ~!!!!' Lazar ~olf 1s .req~ired. Paul deserves great thanks for this. music sets the stage, lnvo\vesl; tonalities and understated At 72, M. o 11 y Picon is the deep passions. There iii no senior member of the In- nudity. There is no sophomoric ternational cast. She is Yenle, sex. t~e, matchmaker. Except for "!ann is the aging, lo~ely Plaudits are due too for the viewer, pleases the mind's v1\l~ge, butcher who desires superb editing accomplished' eye as never befOre. Tze1tel s hand but loses It toi------------------------1 Fiddler offers a'banquet ar· her accent which carries a bit ray of life simply a n d too much of the New York ta stefully arranged. ' twang to be believ5ble in this Lest it be misunderstood, Eastern Europe setting, she "Fiddler" is a musical. ).nd creates a credible meddling \\•hat a musical it is! From the old Woman. solo Violin passages, recorded Norma Crane is Tevye's by virtuoso Isaac Stern, to the loogsuffering wife and mother precise choral treatments and to his five u n m a r r i e d the outstandins vocal soli and daughter11. She exudes the duets. the music of "Fiddler" honored traits of entrances. everywoman's inner strength The musical treatment sets seasoned with dashes of joy, another film standard. Seldom · patience and sorrow to create ha s a musical been filmed so a living character the equal of well. The transition from the dominant Tevye. Golde is spoken to sung text is never a tightly drawn character and obvious, as it sometimes was Miss Crane fills the bill ad· in "Sound of Music." mirab\y. No hand lotion salves .The... music moves the story the bruised knuckles cf this forward unobtrusively. It peasant woman , only endless Winner of' A.c•H""' •w1r111 Hild Ovtr "O• ZHIVAGO" WACO'S BUNCH RODE HARD AND FAST TO MEET THEIR FATE ... and Sister • Anna·rode with them. youth 's passion, and Tevye's i]J.fought battle against tradi· lion His "·ill ~ill not yield, however. when it comes to the marriage of his thirdborn to a Catholic. In the most moving of his conversations with his God, Tevye cnncludes, "If I try and bend that far I'll break ." At this moment the play's most urgent sjatement is most clearly drawn\ and the dilem· ma of the generations is sym- pathetically understood . Neva Small is Chava. Teyvye's third d au g h le r , whose s i m p I e understated romance with Fyedka the tolerant Cossack. wracks her f i:1 t he r's tr a d i 1 ion a I sen S·i b i Ii lies. Raymond LQvelock as Fyedka is one of FUNNY HOW LOVERS START AS.. ., . For Advertising Out 'N' Abou·t • 1n • Phone Norm Sfanlet 642...4321 •••• NOW PLAYING ••• , "I I dreamed I. ·'!saw · Joe Hill l:ist night. -; , Alive as you or me. Says I, but Joe 1~. you're ten '1 · years dead. ,;/ " l nev~r died says he."* • Paramoun1 PICl\ru Prmnts A Sagittari.Js Ptodoctioo A BO WIOERBERG Fft.M _ "Joe Hill~ THOM MY BERGGA£N --... -.. ao WIDER8EflG .......... ..k'lAN BAEZ [GP[_.._=--=+[•::=.::::::· [ """ ,._..,_,ift:/ ·..:..-:-..:::.':"..::.·::.:.:~= .. ":':: t,_!...,__.: PREMIERE ENGAGEMEN'F NOW AT IOTMTMUTll • 21110 AT NAllOl #1 . TOM LAUGHLIN IN "llllf JAfl" (IP • JND AT IUINA PAlk• There's No Power Strong Enough to Keep A Brave Heart From the Kingdom in the Clouds. _SPECIAL MATINEES-ON SAT. 11 /6 SUN 11/7 lJ;JI AND 1:00 P.111. ON IOTH DAYI !"-•lWfl.f~I )'> CINEMA VIEJO ' . ... o-p,.., --·-4'J·•MI et. -P«C•rt-4 JOUTSY'Jl,.,.D/NG HIJ'S "McCAtl & MU. MIU.l'I" (I) "TM·l~~-~~~~ ~~=~ 7.':! (I) ' • '.1 \ " r 32 DAil Y PllOT Your Gulde to Ji'uu UCI Orchestra • Ill Concert r I' NOV.' UCI Of¢BEsTR.A -Peter OdeJard conducts the opening concert at 8:30 p.m. F'ri. in the Fine VU Villa1e Concert Hall, on the UCl earnpus. Tickets, Sl. Call, 833-6617. NOV.H BAZAAR -The Newport Haibor Business and Profess.ional Women a{'t staginf a "Fuh and Fancy Bazaar'' this week· end in Island House at Fashion Island . Newport BeacQ . Hours are 10 a.m. to -i p.m. Nov. 5: 10 a.m. to S p.m Nov 6. All mannei of. goodies v.·ill be on sale.and proceeds 9'il!·go to the club's projects. • 1 b'OV. I • 11 PLANETARIUM SHOW -Concepts of matter. motion time and space will be delved into every \\'ed. and F'ri. night at 7:15 p.m. in the Tt&smann Planetarium on the Santa Ana C:Ollege campus, 1530 W. 17th Sl, Santa Ana , with "Ein- !1.ein's Crazy Cosmos.?' AdmisSion is free but reservations , are necessary. Phone 547-9561 ext. 317. NOV. I FAri-'TASIA MEXICANA -Padu'a Theater fall presen· tation ttlls ancient Aztec love story, 8:30 p.m. Wed. -Sat. and 2:30 p.rTI. Wed. and, Sat. Theater and reslaurfJl f locattd on Padua Ave., three miles north of Foothill Blvd~in Clare- mont, Reservations, 62~1288. • NOV. 5 • 13 MEXICO AND GUATEMALA -Orange Coast C.Ollege Pro- fessor Lloyd Mason Smith continues lecture series with dis- cussion o! Guatemala : TikaJ, Chiehicastenago. from 7 to 9 p.m.' today in the science hall of Orange C.Oast College. ~ The Friday series ls free ~pen to t~e public. • NQV. 6 BEh'EFIT The Laguna Hills Philharmon ic Committee Is presenting a Concert to benefit the Orange County Phil· ha nnonlc Society, Nov. 6 in the Laguna Hills Clubhouse Three. Laguna Hills, at 8 p.m. The Schoen!eld Duo, violin· ist Alice Schoenfeld and '~llist Eleanor Schoenfeld. will be accompanied by June Lusk Nelson. Classical and contem- poriey music will be played. Tickets, Sl.50 by donation, may be reserved by calling 1714) 830-5287 or 837-5328. NOV. & • 28 ART FESTIVAL -Event s featuring the v.·ork of artist Mar· : eel Duchamp (including film s). are being span.sored by the Fine Art& Dept. of. UCt in the Fine Arts Village Art Gal- ~ J~ry on Campus, Nov. 6-28. NOV.&.7 MISSION LIBRARY DAYS -E1hibit of rare libr1ry col· Jections from California .mission 11.rchives. Sat. . Sun. at lttission San Luis Rey, near Oceanside. on Highway 76. ..... _tiJlV. 10 CONCERT ~ Avant o'iarde Music of Three Centuri~: 1Joo. 1600'' Early MU.le Quartet, will be presented in the Fine Aria Village Concert Hall on the UCI Campus. at &:30 p.m. Nov. 10. Tickets, $3, available at Fine Arts Box Office. NOV. II· 25 STORY HOUR -Colt.a Mesa Library, 566 Center St., Costa Mesa. offen a chlldmt's story hour each Thurs. at 10:30 a.m. Pecifk VibfGticw j (Xl.(lA ... -.-.... --....... ,..,, ..... · TODAYMORe THAN EVER ... --SUPPORT • NOV. 11-14 • DANCE CONCERT -. The Dance Theater of Orange County is presenting: two programs of dance Nov. 13:14 in the Ana· heim High ·School Aud, 811 \V, 1,.incoln. Anaheim , at 8 pm, Nov. 13 and 2 p.m. Nov. 14. Tickets. $4 for adults. $2 for stu- dent$, or phone 637-4449 after i p.m. NOV. 13 UCJ FILM -"Buckminster Fuller Aboard SpactshJp Earth," a film by Robert Snyder. will be shown in the Science Lf<:. ture Hall on the UCI ca mpus at· 7 and 9 p.m. Nov. 13. Tick- et!, S!.50 at Fine Arts bOx office. Phone 83.1·6617. NOV. 13 CHILDREN'S TREATER -Learning Unlimited is present-' ing a <:hlldren's when South C.oast Repertory stages "~fagic Theater.'' for two performances. at I and 3 p.m. Nov. 13. TicKet prices are Sl.2& for youths; $2 for adults and may be obtained by calling 833·2305. (Group rates available.) University Park Elementary School, Sandburg at Michelson. Irv\ne. ' ' NOV. 14 PRINT SALE -The Newp:irt Harbot Att Museum's Sales and Rental Council is sponsoring l\t.One-day. ·sale of fine:. •prints, etchings, .engravings. lithographs, woodcuts and silk· Screens on Nov. 14 from noon to 4 p.m. at the Museum 221 l \V. Balboa Blvd .. Newport · Beach. Prints by old masters will be for sale as well. NOV. 14 CLASSICAL CONCERT -Golden \\'est College is present- ing a free concert by Piano Coterie of Qrange County and the Long Beach City College Symphony Orchestra, Nov. 14 at 3 p.m. in the Community Theater on campus, 15744 GOiden West St., HuntJngton Beach. -NOV. 18 BON MARCHE -friends of the Newport Harbor Art Mu-- seum will provide the "best of everything'' for the annual Le Bon Marche sale on Nov. 18 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Museum. 2211 W. Balboa Blvd ., Newport Beach. Open to the pu'blic, funds raised go to the Muse_µm. NOV. 19 SURFING FlUf -Sea Dreams'' screens at 8 p.m .. Friday, Nov. 19, in Forum II of Golden West College, 15744 Golden West St., Huntington 'Beach. TiCkets $1.M>. Disneyland Has Tryouts For Big Holiday Parade W a n t e d hissing dragons. silty reindeer , twirling teapots and encha,nted trees . CANDICE BERGEN STARS IN T. R. BASKIN T.,i GP Rated Movie is Now Pl1yin9 in Orange County T_liree Soaring -Stars Together in 'Baskin' Paramount Pictures' "T.R. Baskin", cu rrently sho"'ing at Newport Cinema Th.eater, brings together three stars at the apex of their career.s in a brilliantl y perceptive screen· play about the depersonalizing aspects rX modern big city life. Bergen are Peter Boyle. fresh from his personal triumph in "Joe," and James· Caan, v.•hose roles in "T.R. Baskin'' and as Marlon ffi;ando 's oldest son in Paramount's "The Godfather" ha v e catapulted him· to t he · forefront · of the °"screen's leading young men. Caan . made his screen debut in "Lady in the Cage" and :also had a starring role in "Rabbit Run."· Disneyland is in need of more than 500 people to play these and other roles in this year 's 17th annual "Fantasy on Parade." the Park's col· orful tribute to the Holiday Season Candice Bergen. who i.s win· ning wide reCQgnition as a d/'al1'1atic actress of ex· ceptional magnitude, is star· red as "T,R .. " a young girl who leaves home to escape the boredom of small town Life. Settling in Chicago, s h e becomes ~ust another sec· retary in huge corpora. tion . ~iss Bergen includes _:_:.;r---.._ong-mr screen credits "Carnal Knowledge.'' "The Hunting Party ," "Live for Life," "The Magus," "The Sand Pebbles'' and "The Group." The film was directed by Herbert Ross on ·locations in Chicago from an original screenplay by Peter Hymas, who also produce<\, the film. Hya ms, a journalist and d ocumentary film·maker. achieved prQll1inenee as a CBS newscaster in Chicago and Boston . He marks his debut in feature production w i I h "Baskin." Parade auditions v.•ill be held this V.'eekend ("Nov. 6-71 at the La Palma Park Recrea· lion Center. located at the cor· ners of Harbor Blvd. and La Palma Ave .. Anaheim. Tryouts for young people. who should have dancing abili· ty or a good sense of rhyt hm t and movement, \,\•ill begin at 8:30 a.m. each day. Saturday's auditions are for ' girls only. Those 12 years and under will audition from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m. High school and college-age girls with dancing ability may try out from ~2 :30 to 5:30 p.m. Sunday's audittons, for boy;; WHATTA BULL! In L11Jt 'Fanta1y' Appearing opposite P.iiss YOUR NEWSPAPERBOY IS A CREDIT MANAGER MwylM ~ "1Mt111le1" in..,ol'nMI d.i1·1 Mt9fll l"'!ilOrtont te you w"-n yo~ put off p..,1119 -.r •"'ff for9et to p.., -tho ~"'OIUh• ly bltl. for doll.,.,., of your ntwspap•r. lvt Heh 'DAILY PILOT .cerTI..,...,. ''" ltudt!.srfar•ltl1MOH~-Hrtriis,,._y .. --to~,..,..ftf•n4 •• h• to ,.., for tlto 111~,en ho doU ... 0111 to you. GIRL SCOUTING , . BUY GIRC SCOUT CALENDARS! No Wedlock For Twiggy? only. will follow Saturday's format, except that boys wtttr dance ability will try out from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. only. The gene·ral audition will begin at 10·30 a.m. Further information con· cerning all tr)'outs may be ob- tained by calling th e Di s neyland Entertainment Carrlen are od.,lsecf to •tot1 cellM.ti119 011 their ro11tet es _.,1., .. ttt. 15th of each 1no111h, or c.rtolnly by tM 20th, 10 they can be . os.111red of Mint pold by tho end of1 1to 1nonth wllon tfrloy hno t• f'CIY their blll1. If you'll poy yo11r J11011ttlly bUI oorly It 11ot only will k••P your ccirrl1r hoppy, but It wlll The perfect CWtmu •tocking otuffer for te1chen, dad.1, grandmu, coache1, friend!, aunt. •. everyone! Girl Scf?ull believe in urviee •• .and they aene their family, their friencb, their community. Girl Scoull believe in the Prorni1e: •10n my honor, I will try To do my duty to God and my country, To • help other people at all timet, To obey the Girl Scout Laws.'' Girl Scouts belie,·e in Friendship. Girl Scouting is offered to ALL girls between the age1 of 7 and 17. Girl Scouts are young in years -eager to conquer new worldo! They need YOUR SUPPORT- for troop program and for their campt. Please buy 1eYeral calendars when the girla in green come knocking on yom door. ' • GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL OF ORANGE COUNTY 1320 EMt Chntnut:o Santi An1, 92701 T•ltphone: 541·61501 • Assoc:iated Students U. C. Irvine Presents: In Concert NOVEMBER 1-a:lO p.m . U.C.1 •. CRAWFORD HALL TICKETS: p.oo ind $2.50 Av11l1ble 11 Tlcketron ind ASUCI "'" I • 'fwiggy. who makes her movie debut in EMI-MGM 's Ken Ru ssell film of ''The Boy Friend," should rate high with v.·o men's liberation. The 21· year-0ld former fashion queen emphaSizes. "Honestly, i t makes me so mad the way everyone assumes a girl has to be married before she can be happy." WMATMOSTOfUS DON'T KNOW AtOUT AfltlCA COULO fill A MOVU. AND THIS IS THI MOVll, .. Divisio n at (714 ) 633-4456, Ext. 264 . School musicians v.·ill be auditioned Sunday, Nev. 14 Information concerning this aud ition may be obtained by calling Ext. ).i7 at the same telephone number. "Fantasy on Parade" will be presented 27 times between Dec. 18 and Jan. 2. A B01' AND GIRL lACETHE CHALLENGE .Of THE WORLD'S LAST fllONTllR • 2olh Cer.!u~·Fox presents Walkaltiat COLOR ev dELUXE9 C3t HElltOVER 3RD GREAT WEEKI RATED (GP) ' I ' ASSURE PROMPT COURTEOUS SERVICE DAILY PILOT CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT I ' COLOR·b~ OEl..UXE •PANA: ISJON ALL -ADULT PROGRAM • Bus Tou1· Slated To Cowboy Ranch Bowe rs P.1useum. 2002 N. "hacienda'' and the superb Main St .. San·la .. Ana will offer collecllon of v.•eStern art a special .opportunity for buffs t 1ncluding oils by Charlie of the old west. old movies, Russell ! bronze .aculplurs. fn· and romantic Ca J if or n i a dian rugs and other authentic architecture on Nov. 20. Indian costumes and Rrts. On that day the Bowers This excursion is part of the Museum Foundation has plan· ·Bowers Museum activities of ned a bus excursion to the . the v.•inter honoring .Willi<1m S. WUliam S. Hart Ranch and Hart, the f~st to develop and Park in Newha ll. Leaving the act in adult western movies. Museum parking lot at 10 Movies of the silent da ys are 11.m., the party will .enjoy an being shown at the Bowers exceptional catered barbeque Museum On the third Thµrs• luncheon, followed by a speeial dav of each month at 8 p.m., tour of the Hart Ranch and his and a spa:ia l exhibit of .still retirement mansion don e in photos from his movies will the Spanish revi val mode . or continue on exhibit through the 1920'11. The groop will be November 7th. back at the Bow..ers Museum \Vill i:im S. Hart v.·anled tit about 5 p.m. • lcRve his ran ch for th!! en· Bus fare Md luncheon are Sfi joyment or the p_ublic whic~ per person. (:hacks mad(' out had so \varmly supported his In-the .Bo"wers Museum Foun· e(fort'I and built hi~ -fortune. dation must be received at the===·='==='======. museum by November 12lh. No refund (or cancellatioos after November 16th. Highlights at the Harl ranch Include the old ranch house, buokhouse, corral areas . Buf. falo herd, the fine California French Art Show Slated A festival centering on the man and work of Fren ch Dada . artist J\1arcel Duchamp 1\•ill be held al UC Irvine Saturday through No1·. 28. The festi val will e)famine the <irt and inte-rests of Duchamp, explore his in- fluence in the art of the 1960s and present a setting i11 • which students and t h e neighboring community can meet. Events include an exhibitio n, lectures and symposia featur- ing critics and artis.ts. movies, •. tapes and slides. Works by Duchamp and re· cent artists who respond tn or paratle\ Duchamp will com· prise the exhibition in the Fine t\,rts Village Art Galley . The · gal!cry will be open from 6 to 10 p.m. S11turday: f.rom IO a.m. lo IO p.m. Sunday to Tuesday and from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily, Nov. 10·28. ...... Al-ASKA ,. .. BAJA!,· ' /• At.,SO , JIUDRlY ALAN HEPBURN ARKIN -'1111 lllCHAllD !fl'' CRENlllA . WAIT UNTIL llAllll' --· F cl~8h~g Outdoor P icture l~l• C•illt !-1ft~ Evtr -SIXli<~~e (hrc~•tle WEEK DA rS-4;)0.7 :00·9: 15 SAT.-l 2 .00·1: I 5.4 :l0-7 :00·9: ! S SUN.-2: 15·4:30·7:00·9: 15 11 'KClTCH' IS ABEM ANDA · JOY." -~ lltffr, L.A. nmtt • Walter MatlhlU in a ro!e on!y !'le could mal.;e sc excitingly • different,,. you'll start llllklrig about it from tne opening seen.. 3 rd •dwerd• I RECORD CIN•MA · WEEK COltl Mw • WJI02 t .&U l"l.&111101 $!00W T!,.li r ,, Jack. Lemmon d•rec:s He takes'his talent "behind" thecamer1 for lhefi~l time toadda~w. fresh dimension to hisbflll!antcareer. .. ··- .. . ' ·DICK TRACY . TUMBLEW~EDS . . WHAl'S WRONG, LIMPl!I LIZARD? ~ri'. •, ll"l.1'o0...:.. ... ~-· • .... . . ~ ·. .. ,.: MUTI AND JEFF , . . MUTT, WHAT OOTl-IEY MEAN'rnev uUST. WHAT BUT IF THAT'S RIGHT.' MAY CUT TAXES? IT SAYS! TAXES ARE IF TAXES ARE NEXT CUT THE CUTTljEN lbU '' YEAR GOVERNMENT WILL HAVE WE MIGHT WIU.. GET MoRE MONEY PAYLESS LESS "TO SPENO! TAXES! MoNEY.' FIGMENTS • PLAIN JANE ACROSS 39 Surveytd, In plaooin11 a 1 F'!at-boltot!M!d crime boat 40 A dri.trmined S Rain in a fine fact stiow!r 41 Trtals •itb q Mixcas ins, deference e.9. 43 Large but 14 Apitt.e nonsf)!tlric l5 To the numbers inside of .114 Rectangular 16 Ti9htly pier stretchtd 45 A rising 17-Nielsen of of spirits 1115nl the sllent 46 Recorded ) Eight: IJr!nx 28 lilO¥ts at movies it!lrls of debts "1' flodent that top s1ft!f 111 A lot: Vir. 49 - -• Infests ocean 29 Discharges: }q Move upward Ceremonies: shi pping: Slang 20 Explored 2 words 2 wOfdS 30 Take place 22. Brooding hen 53 In harmony: 5 Bad luck subseqllf:ntly 23 Of zero 2 words · ft Bay leading 31 FO"mS mt CJJ{nlCll curvature S4 -Arlhl.lf: Inland from an 3J Dough~ 24 Narrow str ip Formt:r Ontario ocean h1 ravloll of woven city 7 Ui:right post 36 Treat:IH fabrrc 55 -s,otia: B Part of a shoe' 37 Caused to 25 Subordinate Can. i:rovince • 9 ,Having Mn'OW move swil'l.lv ruler 56 Guide a vessel bands 31 Cores 28 Waler~ by means of 10 Oevi'e giving 40 Giddy covered a rudder off warmth 42 Ached area of a 57 Impel 11 "Step -I": 43 Titlt d resJl'd watercourse 58 Constantly Hiwry up: 45 Of comldtr• 32 Greek epic 59 Groops of 2 words able size poem animals 12 A'twil be!~ 46 Pui'tualion 33 Removed by 60 Malt 13 Paha reader, mark 'utling bem'lllf e.g. (7 SubsUtul.t f(I": 34 Unit · 61 Skin 11)'tl': >71 Dressed , Suffix 35 Cause to sl~ Suffix 2Z Kept far 48 South African by rals lr1g futl.lfe use .(9 Greater ia one end DOWN 24 Fatigued degree 36 Walked baclc 25 Hindu guitar )0 Wander tNet l and forth 1 Tracts of 26 -M•ble, wide 11ea across water within f2nnls oreal 51 DOllf: 37 Stockings an ocean 27 Plecrs ol 52,f'roduct crCcs '.jiJ Ci.rd 2 In any -flooring 54 Im l J -i 910111a1J " " " " " " " " • • • Friday, November 5, 1971 PEANUTS • • ly Cli~ Gould ct •c "m.-• • 0 • • By Tom K. Ryan .. .. .. By Al Smith ANO IF 'BUSINESS INCREASES THEN THE GOVERNMENT ? • WILL. COLl.ECT MORE TAXES! By Dale Hale B Frank Baginski LI'&; :ABNER SALLY BANANAS .. GORDO /~YJ. i!JO'. J.IJ. MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS weize1s A PHOro.s-rOAI OIJ l"O~K-~ STAR W£JJW000 MIU.El<:• ) He ~Si '.Mil MUSIC. 1$ MCI Ul'E AJJD :t. DOAl•r GIVE: A HOOT' ABOOl"r~ MQl.li!l/ l ~ Bv Charles M. Schulz JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le DoUll · NOi TME llESTA.URA.NT WE'RE, GOIN6 TO • 11-1,t.T PA.6E WA.5 A. PIP HE M.ESS-'GE RlOM EIZIC! SA..Y HOW~ HE'LL BE l-IELP DP.. lDNG l-IE'U. !I.If WANTS US BE MELD . iO WAIT! DP ? I'S NE.l.RER MIS MOTEl. THA.N OUll'S! rU. SEE Wl-IETMEIZ ME'S STILL TMEllE! IF ME 15, WE CAN HA.VE MIM MEET" US "T TME RESTAUltA.NT! OTMERW15E,. we W..Y NOT M.t.KE TllE TME.\TER'! ' I By Al Capp By Charles Barsotti By Gus Arriola By Fer~ Johnson NOP!-'llllS IS l!NTi;l'<PF!ISE'. 'THE' INGENUITY IS Fl.ATTE'NING 'lt>UR 'T,b.X1 19 ilFi!::;E::: .. ·~""""'I By Ro13er Bollen S • f!11 Eit::eS O/J 1"0 $Al) 'THAT HE. 1 A~ DOE:SIJ'I -"IVe A Hcor A6ror HI$ llfiel /l.1.81)M, llJHICl4 wi·~I-611 ~I.EA~ /Je;lr llJEE1'1 HIS ~1Z>-8e·tcJ.CASED 1<011e1 !lJj. AUfOSIOd.AP//IJ (Al'.XI) AVAJIASJ..is Ill PAPe~) ()I!. HS Q/Alll OF11~E~~.~-- TH~ GIRLS ~ ll~u~ 1111b<1uld thlDt, (Gr '115, lt would have bad a baPQ tading." MISS PEACH I, fl • Jo1N Tiii!' Mlli/1>· ltEAt>Elf Of I~ • AM~lllC::A .:ti:>. PERKINS ly Mel · DENNIS THE MENACE ; fl By John Miles I I \ • • Fridll, Nowmber 5, 1971. • ATLAS ·' CHR'YSUR . .. . PL'YltfOVTH/ lltf PERIAL Cos.ta Mesa • USED CARS Choose from practic· ally every make and / model ••• from trans• portatio·n to late models ••• At;.WAYS AT BIG SAVINGS .. . . .. • • ·ACT NOW! Here is your last oppor· tunity .to save on any new 1972 Chrysler Ply• mouth .. at 1971 ·prices, plus th.e excise ,tax re• bate ·as of Aug. 15. '64 FORD, '67 MERCURY GALAX IE MONTEREY t ulom•li t, rtdio, .... t.r, VI, tutom1i'it., r1dio, hetler, pow•r 1l11rin9, whi11w1ll lit11, powtr tle•rin9 I brtkt1, w1w, t ir co11ditionin9. !Sll774 ), ' •ir t.ontlttionin9, IVUN2 14 ) $495 $7 95 '68 CHEVY NOVA '60 DODGE ~ 'h TON PICKUP VI, 1ulom1tie, pow1r 1t11rin9, E11c1ll1nt for ofi job1. fllO· r1dio, h11t1r. IVHR.737) Jll) 1$1095 $495 .. . . • r • • I r • \ BRAND NEW ~ , ~ --.. 1971 CR.ICKET '65 BUICK A / '66 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE. °!KYLARK LE SABRE . VI , t ulom1tic, rtdia, h••ltr, I VI. t ulom•lic, rtdio, ht•+•., VI, o1ulomtl ic, rtdio: httltr, powtr 1l11 ri n9, whilt wt ll tir11. powtr 1lt1rin9 & brtkt1, pow. powt LJJttril!.!I & br ~kt1, _whli1 ":' window1 & ttth, ,;, cond., wt ll1, t ir conlfiioning . fREB· fJZZl42l _t;it whttl. ! SYV605 I '"'$595 $5 95 $695 -> '7 0 TOYOTA '70 PLYMOUTH '69 VOLKSWAGEN SUBURBAN WAGON SUNOIAL CAMPER 4 1p••d fr•n1miu i•n, AM-FM C u1to111 , VI, •utom1tic, r1dio, r1dfo, whit1w1 ll tir11. 1146-li11t1" power 1t11rin9, f1ctory B11utiful conv1r1ion .,.ith ice 1ir, 1~c1ll111I condition, 1241· bo11, 1in~. bunk1, bubble top, AS ll AUH l 1tc. (ZV2 120l , $1595 $2195 $AVE ALL l'lllCll Altl PLUS TAX AND LIClNll ALL l'ltlCll Alli VALID 'TIL SOLO SUN., NOV. 7, 1f71 • 'rli1,.Y, November'" 1971 DAILY PILOT :JIS .. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY LEASING DEPT. ' • I • !tf DAILY PILOT °1"riW, Novtmbtr 5, 1971 Every4n~ Has Something lhat Some one El.e Wants DAILY Pl·LOT. CLASSIFt ·ED ADS -You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It Witn a Want Ad ·1he Biggest Mark~tplace on ·the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results I -... r-1~1 _ ... u. l~I -.... I~ 1 · ---I~ I _..,,. General General ·.. Gener•I MACNAB -IRVINE. The staff or Afacnaf>.lrvinf' is happy tu announce the opening of their new office\in the exciting HARBOR VIEW SHOPPING CENTER. This '''onderful ocation v.·ill help us to better serve our many friends and clients fror\l <~an1eo Shores to lJniversity Park. and fronl East· bluff to ·J·larbor \1iew Hills. \\'hen you are shopping at one of the, many fine store", \1·e invite you to drop in & say hello. John l\tacnab~ UNHJUI' t1()Ml'S . . FINER HOMES , .. HIGH ABOVE THE BLUE PACIFIC i\lagnific·cnt 'ie\\' of ('atahria from this 4 Bl~ ho1ne.. F.xoliC''sun kl.'n pool \\'/founta in & \vaterfa ll. ~urround· ed by lush tropicals for total prt· vacy. The underground '\'ine cellar \Vi ii fascinate the enologist. Call 644-6200. $79.500. LUXURIOUS 60' ON BAY . Pier & float. Newly redecorated. 33' living room & master suit e Bay ie\.\'. Sparklin~ pool. Immediate occupancy possible. EAST BLUFF .•\ reall y gol'geou!' fan1ily hon1e. Beautifull y dec:oratcd. Exte pt1on al la ndscaping. 4 BR's, great FR. larJ!.e secluded patio. imm aculate and fresh· throughout. 553.500. LIVE THE FULL LIFE Tie up the yacht in front of .vour charming DOVER SHORES bay· front home. 3 BR's, FR. gourmet kitchen • fabulous for entertaining. $129,800. Call Berl fehren 644·6200 for appt SHEER DEl.:JGHT Breathtaking beauty · ·a joy to s"e , or sho\\'. 3 BR 's, 3\12 baths, hu ge master suite. Very Jg. ne'v pool v.·/ autOinatic S\.\'eep, plus lawns. fruit trees & lots of flowers, statues & exquisite fountain . THE INDOORS IS OUTDOORS Large. light rooins all op;ning lo an atrium .. (A perfec·t plan for yo ur art display). 4 811. bedrooms and Jg, roomy baths. 01\'ner con1mutes to San DieE!'o so hurrv. BUY OR LEASE OPTJON Beautiful 2·story, 5 BR . 3 bath ho1ne \\1/FR & formal DR. End of quiet cuJ-de-sac. 3 yrs. new. $52,500. Call Lob Egan 644·6200. BAYCREST BEAUTY Lovely grounds & µool. Spacioui; LR, forn1al DR, FR. 4 BR's. 3 bath);. · !\raster suite separated frorn other bedrooms. $89.500. Open Sat. & Sun. 1·5 .p.m. 1609 Antigua \\1a v Newporf Bearh. · ' SOPHISTICATED LIVING ln Prestigious Dover Shores \\'/pool for y~u! $_122,500. 1-'amily enjoy- ment 1n !his \\·ar1n . eomforlahlc 4 BR home \V/FR. !or1nal /)ft & br17akf~st rm. Enjoy your µrivale ~1\r1rn 1n1ng pool local ed in the spa c· 1ous patio. Call \\'alter King at 644-6200. HARBOR VIEW HOMESll FRONT ROW VIEW 2 bed • illonaco . .S1uall famil y de· IRVINE TERR. light . {1'll•\·k lhr l1113tll in th(> <·tuin- 3 bed .... Carmel ~tedi um fanlilv • 1~1or11 a1l·h tilt> \\'1·rlge and ju st right · L.i..land. ·1111s :<:pffcioull cu~tom ha.s 4 he'f.lruon1~. 1~11:.f' lam· 4 bed ~ Portofino • Bi~ 1-'amil y ·out ily, room. 8 i;hel!ert>d pool of sight. and a fr<'Jh spark/I', \'ours Best values available\ICome see for ror Sl25.000. Call for an a~ )'ourself. Open Sunaay 1·5 p.m. poi11in1t'nt 67;;.ro')'J 5 BEDROOM EASTBLUFF UPf AND _AW'!iY GraC'IOtl!i immacufa!r anrl to antastic \11e1v of Ba y, Boats & clo;w ·1~ co~1 Mt. ~ Rr'll· Ocean. 2 elevators lake yo u tone\\'· l'oom~. tam•I~· room 11nd d11i. ly decorated 2 Br. 2 bath ·all ele<'· 1ng J'OOJll. A hon1" 1ha1 can lrit kitc:hen . Sharp c:ondo · type. l1a11~llf' voor {'ro\\d 11·i1h liot poo l. Underground parkin_g. <'11-"" 11nd. fun. Call 6T:...6000. Roat sli'ps availabl('. Opr n Su11rl11y 1·5 p.m. :-1121 \V . Coast H\vy .. fit\. 1951 Port Bri stol, 1921 Port Bristol and 2047 Por1 Provenc.e. Ne\\')mrl Beach. PIER & FLOAT UNHJUI'. tl()Ml'S Fie•! £11A11, 1175-600I) 76'.l (.. c""'' 11wy. Co<ONI o.l M1r,Cellf. On quiet Newport Island . 2 BR, T CT den , unus ual kitchen . LR overlooks TIRED OF RA cov('red paiio faring Balboa Coves. .. HOMES? A decorator's home on corner lot. Thf>n consider thi:'I'. -4 bed- Just reduced. • call Gloden Fay room l>f'auty. Lush 11h11g car· ~ 35. peling, illdirec1 lighting. dra - NE IVAN WELLS CUSTOM malic t'ntty ii·irh iron ~alf'~. · . front l'l'.IUl'!y11rrl. and rural ~• OME 11tnu~11hi'1r . R1-,.1 of ~11 it~ .r~u nd oken for 9 n!\V IVAN onl.1 S3l.tri0 111th :n1 a..;,;un1· _VF~Ll ... I) cu tom homes l!J Dover ahh· I011n. C11ll ~ll6-t:l13 IO Shores'. Ch sc vour <'Olors & tailor sef'. lo your desires! ·ror details visit the 1nodel ·at 2006 Calaxy Drive, New· port Beach . , MULTIPLE UNITS oTHEREAL ......... ESTAT ERS . . 12 unit complex· freshly painted in & .out. $120.000. ALSO. a 'freshly OCEANYIEW p~unted 18 un it co1nplex on 1.4 . acre.-:. $187,500. Call 644-6200 for lllld also fhe ti("'_' i\l~r1na can detail~. 1,.. st'f'n from tht.s ~1ant 3 BR hon1l'. C:UJifom budr and ""· PICTURESQUE PINE SETTING 11uts.11ely drsignr<.t fur n1oil· 4 BR's \V/all the t·On venient·e of f'm l 1v1nJ(. 2 sior:v br11ury your ou'n priv ate resort ~ pool. ja· seui11~ 011 a hlJJ1op. All 1hi11 t·uzzi. Great enterlainment area. for s.i9.:JOO. ' Roal & camper acre5'. $47.950. 6 UNITS Open Sat. 1·5 p.m. 369 Vista Baya. and roon1 for IO l'TlQrt~ Ex. Ne"·port Beach. 1't'llt·n1 lncorne on Eas1,11i<' • C0111 a !\ll'sa Pn•srn1lv four NEWPORT ·HEIGHTS 1-tx'Clroom!i 0 1111d two ·~·IW'~l- lnterior decorator/01vner 1nust sell J'!JOl11J1. 1)·cn1C'ndoui: buy ,., fast. 3 Bli. fortnal Dlt. FR (or Ii· $69.~~. brary1. cha rm ing vie11• on 2 lots OCEANFRONT for only $56,950. \Val.J or glass in Balbue beautv on 1hi> l io;11·d· :JfJx lfi I.It ~lus t see to apprecialc . v.'alk. Jt1s1 ~t('p;i hon1 1hr Ca ll La1'zlo SParkan x 644~6200~ ot1•an. 2 briiroon1!<. ·1);11h.~. ENJOY BLUE PACIFI C in bui11.in.~. anrl d1shwn:<hrr. CYPRESS SHORES An t':<t'<'llPnr huy lor r1·n1al h or a ,;lj1nn1t•r ho1nf'. nuil(I yo ur beautiful drea1n hon1el.--;;;:7:':::--:;";''.:':'---on choire Joi ov('rlooking lovely 3 acre park. Onl y 11 hlock lo priv:ile beach \Vilh u·hile brC'akl.'rs. S('cur· tty force offers conlinuous pro1ec· lion. Call \\la/t Kin g at 644-6200, COLORADO RIVER FRONTAGE 60 level ac res \\'/lagoon. ripe for develop1nen l & zoned for trailer & 1, ,, park sites in city or Needles. Priced Assumable Loan under market for fast sale . Fantas· A,,,-sun1~ " $.15.700 VA loan ti c ter1ns. Oall ~I. Perry or L. h1il ler \1·i1h to!a1 µaymf'nt~ of S:\.ta for info. 642·8235. 1l('r n10111h nu -" '"-"11' I~· OWNER AJ'!.X IOUS t:u~la hoinf'. Do'\\•nslii1t"5 theJ't''.s 3 big bedroo111s, lam· GeMrel **:* * * . * , TAYLOR CO. ·. . LINDA ISLE -$145,000 * * Abundant \Varmth & charm in this beautiful 5""BR. ho1ne. F amily rn1. With allracti\ie-V.1et bar plus a formal dining area. Decorator wall paper, choice wood paneling, pri va te dock & slip. Plum~ for pool. E;>.STSIOE COSTA MESA (Juiet street. no traffic but close to \\'estcli!f shops & school s. Sharp 3 BR. ho1ne \V /forma l dining room. Proless ional landscaping & fruit trees. Hurry! $39,500. 2015 ALJso· OPEN SAT SL'N 1·5 BACK BAY -$64,500 Ne\vport Be~ch custom buiJt 3 BR, hon1e, Spacious rooms. Formal dining rm. & huge recreation rm . (copvert it to Zbedrooms). DOVER SHORES -BAY & MT. VIEW E scape lo a secluded bluff hig h above the bay. Professionall y decorated \vith ne\\' drap- eries & lu x cptn g. Private 1valled courtyard. rm . to store a boat o.ut of view. 3 BR .. FR . & v. arrn fi replace. $&5 .000 2042 GALAXY OPEN SAT/ SUN 1·5 LINDA ISLE -$143,500 Drai;tic reduction!~ Architect owner reduced price for quick sale on NE\V 4 BR. home. Beautiful vaulted ceilings and many ne\V features. Fain. rm ., formaJ Oil. & study. 8 LINDA ISLE ' OPEN SAT/SUN ~·5 LINDA ISLE -$143,500 Just reduced! Price belo\v replacement cost. Architect owner says sell ! NE\V 4 BR .• FR. formal DR. & study, Light French Regency styling. I-luge sundeck. Buy no\v & be the lucky·one. See !Jroker at 8 Linda Isle. DOVER SHORES See your dream home in this prestige .area. Brand NE\\I 2 story \1'/4 bdrn1s .. study. sun rooin & dinin g r1n . Island kitchen & 3 car garage. A real bu)' at only SJ05.000. 410 MORNI NG STAR OP.EN SAT/SUN 1·5 5 BEDROOMS -PLUS POOL Preferred area of \Vestcliff. All large rms. Family room \Vith fireplace, 4 baths + 20'x 40' pool 1vilh se parate .Jacuzzi pool. Move in for the ~lolidays. By appt. $79.900. THE BLUFFS :__ $48,500 1.ike ne~\' 3 bedr()f>n1 condo1niniun1 u1ith 3 baths. Tri na model. Van Lu it \11allpaper & lux . carpeti11g &: drapes. Cc.t !J to see. CORONA OEL MAR INCOME -$63,000 Brand ne\V 3 bdrm .. 2 bath rear unit and old · er 2 bdrm., l bath front unit. ('lose to shops. \Valk to beach. Great location . HOME FOR LEASE-NEWPORT HEIGHTS Ou1ner \\'ill lease this split-level home 'vith vie\\' of bay, ocean & bright lights. 3 Bed- roorns or 2 & rumpus rm , Fum. $425 1\1o. CHOICE WATERFRONT .LOTS Oo\/er Shores -S49.500 Linda Isle -$43.IJOO.S69.500-S75 ,IJ00.$85.000 BROKERS & SALESMEN \Ve ha ve an opening for a rnan or lady knou•l- edgeab!e in commercial, incon1e ~Ind res1· den!iaJ properties. Our prin1e requirements a~·e integrity and enth11siasn1. If you are gen- tunely interested in a professional N!al estate career. even though you may haYe ·Jimited experience. u1e are interested in meeting • you. lntervie\v by 1.1ppoint1nent.. "Our 26th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 GEORGIAN COLONIAL ESTATE 2.~ spacious acres, panoramic Bay \fiew. ridfni? ring & stables, all in Newport Beach. A 5~0 ·sq. ft . 6 BR 111ansion crO\\•ns this ·eleg~'nt property. A1any am1nenities lnctuae - a 20'x40' pool & fruit orchard. In· speclion by appl. $345,000. · \\'ill sell or exchange equity in lovely 3 BR, 2 bath condominiun1 .~or Afobile l1ome in local area . ,Beautilul ly maintained greenbelt, 2 pools and putting green. Only 35.750. * *· * * * ily room \\'ith fil'f'place. pluli * ~ <hnir~ room. Upsruir:e for fan11l.1• h\·1ng l htore'li l:iOO squa1\• /••«I ur f1n1sht>d liv.l'.G:Ce_ne_r_e,-l -------G-.-n-.-,-,-l ------ 1ng iop,1L"<'. Totnl i;11ua1"' f!'f'! I-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 111 hu111c i~ :...00:1. LT~radroJ ' __ 4_B_E_D_R_OO_M_S __ (:11q~·1~. r.1n1as11r drapes. OLD SPANISH SPANISH STYLE MACNAB· IRYINE Realty Company 642·8235 p!'l1f1~.;10n:1 l 1audscap1ng. 111 1~.. [l.•11••. 1•Kll',1". (.'af1 ,,,!(;.!~!.~. n1,1n.1. 1111111.• f<lr ,._\)'\\\ 11!~ Nllirl adohe blr. 3 bt-dni.:orn ho111e cl()S(> 10 ro"11 I:. prtrk. Ir'~ onc·of·a·kind and ~r~11. l1J~6. c .. 11 tor detnib. 644-6200 llARBOR VIEW CENTER 1644 MicARTHUR BOULEVARD 901 DOVER DRIVE 1-oTHEREAL \7'_ ESTATERS \. '', ., .,,, . '.· $24,950 , NEWPORT BEACH GOVERNMENT ....-mn-n----•••• EASTBLUFF G --1 --_za.xazv Na7ll.~ REPO. enera Gener1I Gener•I Just ttl~~Pd ; 1'h:i1•p :1 BH, Large Lu .. k h1111t :t t-.'t'.11'fltl111, A RARE HAPPENING ,-\ 'llllllty 4 bt>droom eJCC"i!ln,e hotnf' !Ike Th~ el'/!'T1f't along rAf'l'l) · P8noramlr b a y I lf!'ll · ~P!lra 1e kirnu1I 1h11- ioij{ 1•ntn, ~ loklh" • IJ'!1<f']y Oa!rhr11 • 1·:1,•c•l ru bl11nJ • \\rt 1, 1r . ru~11u11 hr.1t"'1 p•.-.1. c1111,1a111l111': luuoh1·an lrt~ 'rn1l,1 t i.:r,•.11 ]Hlllll' a1 SJl!J.000 . biJ.~'(] : ' D THE REAL ""'-EST'ATLRS RENT WHILE YOU BUY 30 V•ctn1 HOnll!1 t\o Do\\"" IO Gl'a ROBERTS & CO. 9'2·5511 , !! B:i + 1>1.101. Rl'aly quaJil)' IOl't'I)' ho1nr "llh 2 fir'f'· • 10 SECOND "'UIZ \l'\th ha,..-t11ood floon, plllli· plaet'r., kin~ lil~(' bNtroorn~. T' t"r 11a115, hii;-, db! r:.~r. din. forn1aJ rl1nJ11£ room, family * PETER VAIL * 306 So. 8ayfrokt Balboa Island '"nu II,{' Ille 11 )nnrr <ii :! li«krt• to 1l1f' • Or•nge County International Auto Show 1:11 111.· ANAHEIM CONVENTION CE NTER ;\O\¥>fTltJo:'r 17th 1h1'tl !!st Pll'a_. ('.f&U (.12.~~ill. "Kl n 4 bel\l~n 9 and 5 Pin 10-dn1m your 1h'kt'lto, f/\'unh Counry toll·lrf't numbt>r • .MO.l:t~·'(H * • * NEAT & NICE·ll~OO Hur~ R·? loi 1r11h hon"' h~1 .. 1ni: ~ tie•dml!r. I': rnirh<1, ro1'frtd petlo, .. , I,\, \'A. Rnom ror more" 111111~. PETE BARRETT REALTY 647.4351 I• Do )OU m:t"l'I a danet fl oor? i!'ljit r1n•:a :ind ~lJ n<•\\' bui!1· 1'IX>n1, rlrctr.1c ).!'arai:?f" door 21 flro ,\\.IU IX'Cd room for II Ill~. Pri<'1'o l t1nl,Y $27.!lt.o. 11· Oflf'llt'I'. P1·lr~'(t rJJ:hl lit . biu•'.' 11.t1l.v $!1;(!. l\Jllll tkt1111_ l>)'UH. $51 950 ~1 0..1 )'Qu 111"('(1 roon1 r11r I\ \ru· .. nt f.. t't'l1dy !1J1· 1m.JX'I·· ' dom11tur1" -t1t1n. -~" f1"1 ~"II ~~"·d :t i,:ori;:o·uu~ Coll .,IG·j.~) •(\111'11 E1'l'l!.I CORO.NA DEL MAR n,,,,,, ... ,~,,, ",,,, ,,,,,,,. I . ·• 111 hHrhrq11,,• Q'tj .. H(RITAGE ; 6• llo'i ~"11 111'\~l fl f,111 n1,11n · ~ 11'..ltl Blan >°(•Ur L.'flr<~•111 lfl·lrl't'I hon11\ u·n•trlt.'I' 1.1r1ln pill~ I hr1\roor11 rv-nlal uni t if llo ,\u1l .fl!'•~l ll i..11:11'11.JU~ 6 )'l'At M id Unh11 In tori l~n111•011 ~11 1•!1 111a111•"lln"I $32,500 1'01111 11\,\n. ll111k !fl hca«h • "1"'.,.1" COLLEGE eARK .11nd ~hofip1n,g. 10·"' duw11, 'a 0\1 1"11n havr a.h rln~ r n r Kln -ittd 1...,. 2 .. ,, xlnt ftntrl'l('\na. '"'·"" 1""'""10' ,,,. ""1 • ~ -·"'°"''· ... <53 500 \'A 11•rnL..i. PIC":t5r' 1 11 11 wd1> lltl"l'r bulltln kltchrn, f 1 :,16.2Jll. 1111<hw11"'llt'r. F.l~ant fin!· ' P E l=ll=ION pL'H~'I! In ram Uy room. Pa· ho. PicfUrt: book land:stap. inl!. ~prlnklt'nr:. Qu1cf eul· dr-1t."l1· :<:ln:r!. l\'ttlk to au &Ch()Qlt Ii eoll(").:r ' 540-1720 ~~'.?,,,~~;~;~?,~,,, TARBELL 641'1"1 Any~::__ Jn b)• f'hmtma~. :'2 ll(l)11l ~~.iS H11rbor. f'txti1 ~INa NO DOWN ._,, . .: .... -, .. St, Gf'OI ~,. Rd .. "~f':<t to mo-Tht fastest draw In tM \\lest Vets hom~ • 1'p81 C~t di!-!~ 91,!i(Xl ~M·~~ /')lvnr . • • , .11 ~dy Pi.lo! Oi..nifif'd Clll J, Pw-k, Bkr. SISM6l QAILV PILOT lot .. ctlon! Ad. M:z...:JG7' Ca.II SU...,.i;s78 • S.vP! ·' TI1i,. 1." 1h,. on"~ 201;. d.:i\\n •111[ llli\\1• .\••II ll!lh lh1~ n1:i!:'rllf1t'<'nt S1111n1 ... h Sl~I·· I bo'.'d rnnn1, ~1 ~ Im.th. 2SOO l'\j, fl .. t•:\•'l.·Ull\r l'l'!Hlk'll<'''· ~·in1~lwd In 11111 ~nlt'Nt 1+n~t ~1>;111i~h 111!• il':oi locarf'l:I tn one or 1hr n;ns, ~oughJ41.flf'r areas in ~u1hern Cal1torn 111. Proff'ss1ona.J landscaplnJ:. •Jf (~:niri:f•. !11tlJ(/ 11'.•\\ n 0 a k hritrn C'all\l•dral C'rihni.::s. 11111urall.1·. Fulf'st qu11lity \\n]I In 11111! ra~ti ng and dr11J)t'rif"11 thl'()Ugl:loul, nb. \•tou~ly. A m8'11er suitr wll1ch llQ1 r,ni.V fca.turt"~ ill! l)\\'l\ !l'J)!H'iOUI! d~ing n1,·11. b111 n \'l'f)' prl\·111r and pr:H"' h~·-J l'l'll't'OI. lllli 1rt•U! 1'111~ ht'l'Ull.!111 tr~irlrnri• It nn! for lht• 111An \\'ho 1~ \In h1~ 1111.1 op Jr '( /,1r lh•• tn.111 I• I"' h;, ... ;ol I IVPd. ! . .t I] \\ ,\J,1' .. :1: & t.F.-: f11r 11 no. •.lbh11,alion ut"()M'Hon 11t ~~0-U\.l. ------WHY NOT? Live • litUe -enjoy ne1Jrby community C"lubbot1~ tM· turini: ~imm illg pools Ptid t~hl t"Wrts: only rhl"f'r bloC'"ks 10 !he blu<' P1Jrlfic O<.'eAn And a~ lht IHl'N't tro1n the Cyl;i;I. ~ 1hhJ ihl'l'e Wlroon1, tv.·o bath, •· \" frlln1t-br;iufJ'. , ""'' ju,.t •Ir)" to Jl;l'-.S II b) 111 S::l.!M, &tGlilil '· ' O THE REAL ~ ESTATER.;5 GeMral IF ONLY TliE BESf' IS GOOD ENOUG/i A p,rice tag of ~.~· ?nay Jive some Indication of jui;t laow uncompromising, bo1h In design and decorating, hu bttn lhe cw.-ner ot this immaculate Spanish glyll" J'('j!Ld9™~ Rlended in10---a l'>'ry pr'1\•tHt> <'Omt.'r which It: 11111• \Jr th•• 1~1 addreAAes sourh 1,f f'alO!!I \'e~. it ff'a • . tun~· block u.all fencing surr111111dlng seVl."raJ beauli· IU! lounta1ns. 1\10 shacll'd 11<tllus. 11/us rrulr lir('alh· 1akir~ lanrt.~<·.1pin¥. An in1· µosh1g {'nfT}'" ay oprns ro1110 a · t'atllN!raJ c"Pihnfol: l1\1ini;: rnoni frarurini;: an tinported spiral sllll rca.<:t' and,.sh1n1- m<'ring eh!\ndl'li(·rs. Th •· J1uge kitch~n <"Ontau1S t.•vt•ry blul1·1n apphant.'f', The car- p1.•uni.: und c:lraf)Pries arr a.~ ~upPrb as ~ou would f''l:J)l'l'I tht:n1 ltl l:w, to •"On1pl11nent ~uc·fi a 1l1·cor . All of thr si:-. hedroon1.'I lt'a!ure \1alk·in 1'l0St'ts and intett<lm. Every· 1h1ng i,._he.n> for yOu lo rn- J''Y hit• I<! !ht-fu llt>!>1. Ti1f'N''...: r1t·n ';1n r:..dusive l :rilf Cl11li nln•u~t n!•x1 do .. r, and thr h1>,1(•11 not ni u r h rurllwr! ()1111r•r 11ilJ t'.Jll) a i.<'1· .. rid rr u~I d~·f'fl or r1ay e~h !•1 lu;11\ fur uu1nrhl~ J>l',I 111''111.~ uf ju.~t ~.l7S. Tfl arrangt-;111 ir1spec11011 at your · conveni1•rw·I". please ca][ your \V ..µJ>."ER & LEr: Salrs Officr '' 5'15-9491. G.I. REPO $950 DOWN FEATURING • ;; l::lf'drounl~ • llard\1<i0d floors • 2 b.<1.1hs e V51•d brick t'ntry ll·ay • Bu iH·in k1lt-hr11 e DL~hwashcr • lft.K:"e healt'd pool e Coll('t'1"1{' dr1\'e • No 2nd lrust dt':>eds $239 mo tota l payments CALL NOW, IT'S HOT ! Newport •• Fairview 646·8811 (anytime) SHOP AND FLY Roth l'lfl• <.'Olll't'lllC•nt. 1''.1bu- l11U.~ SOUTH COA~~r Pl...AZA ~fALL i>1 only a fe11· hlocks <f\\'!ly. )'(>! QU i('t!y l0t·af('d 10 ORANGE CO U:\'TY AJR. PUP.T is this l11tr:1 rll'an 4 \>¢rp1 ., fa 111. r1n •. Jw1,1e. wj~h :: b;llhs. Jo(a.~ B ! kq. ;u1d lat .11:1• 12' X 12' l'rl'1 '1'!11'd 1n l'Ol't'l'l'l'l pario 1';111 l)f' ~uu1·~ for only SJ6,!QO. C..•"t f1n- WK'i1u: 111-;ulabJr. I.•'! u.s s!IOll.' you t lus sl!'(•rrr· ! ?(}range Vista PROPERTIES 'J."ormt>l'lv I.a.Borde.-H. ~:. 220 E. l7th St., C.M. CALL 646·0555 ~'rn1ng:o; ~2-743f! Charm, Warmth & Comfort One·Stqry 2250 Sq .~ This hotn(' t!I 11·rn dr~rrillf'<l 111' th<' 1ht..,.. 11•0Ms above. 1';PalUT t'01' '1 h1.•1lt\JOlll!'! and il•·n ur ::; l)('{ll'IM11n!< PLUS f11n 11I)' n.um !,, fnnnal rh n· UIC M 'tl . ~parkl1n;.; t'lt'fln ,',r: ,..1i11rp tlin•u)!h•MJI. H••:td)' to 11111\'t• in HIWI •·11~>,1 ' EXl!HPnl Ii\'. \'.\ lo1.111 111,1~· 1.1(' 11~· .. uu1t·J •. \lust hr• "''t'n to bf' aµp["l'('ialf'll• Prt(.'t', S:\9,:-00. /'hot11· ~lft.~t.1 f11r n1on• 111· formal ion. -!~-ASSUME This lo\\ .. IO\\' 1rll('ff'St 10011 k 1'<11\'I" 1ur11 ~ SSSS~ AnXiQ\.19 1111111•r 11ill1nl!,'. Ul a..;s1i;1 In ad,h1~1u.1 1 finAnc111r:. NPl'I! 3 ho ~JJiM>ltl, f tlllll.1 !'•itlt /~1!11~'. \1.-.1 .. rn. :<l•"l• ~,1\ 1111Z l.11eh1•n, j;,.,,,,i'l'lus 1.·111,;1~1 ~ .. ~r 11·i1h ,.,,,,,.N'l! p.11 10. r11~u1rn1s .Ii'~~ !IL1n r"n1 nl only S."lO,OCiO. • ~'co.I ... , tuC11 ..... UJ•tUI EASTSIDE ~­ TRIPLEX· Oldl't. aulhf'ntlc Spt1n~sh u11i11 With xlnt /oc11tion near 1hn1>Pl1Ji. lllfh !noomf'/lciw tll.fl!ll[t'IUlnet', Pr~ tor rut 51111· JI ! $-ID.~. C11I/ ~.;.:·so (Oprn E\~ ~ l [~~:~l Gffleriil General I I I l ' . C~LL FOR OUR PICTURE· BROCHURE OF CURRENT LISTINGS OFFICE OPEN SAT. & SUN. FOR A HAPPY FAMILY Cozv Lu sk :1 bdrm . home u·ith family rm. ~·lq,\1e·1n cond. Located on quiet street in 1-tal'bor Vie1\' ~fills. Quick occupancy. S59.950. Ca thryn Tennille · CITY ESTATE Enjoy counJry \ivi11g. here in this ne\V 4 BR. 3 bath Lu sk ho1ne. i1nµ.orlant entry. Beaut1· ful decor '. Plus wal!ed privacy with Harbor view. $71 ,950. J1arriett Davies TWO "MUST SELL" OPPORTUNITIES OPEN HOUSES 1 TO 5 P.M. SATURDAY -1018 SANDCASTLE DR. I BR .. :l Ba., fam. rm .. great vie\\'. $56,500 sL;NDAY -1528 KEEL DR. 4 BR., 3 ba., tam. rn1 . -real beauty -Si.3,500. Bell e Partch OPEN SUNDAY I TO 5 1307 PORT B:\.Ri\10UTH . Harbor View 11on1es. 3 BR .• 2 ba .. cozy frpt. Karastan carpet, custom drapes. Sep . dining room, garden kitchen & terrace. $47,900. LaVera Burns BAYSHORES-SUNOAY OPEN HOUSES 2600 BA YSHORE DR., on the bayfront. Great 6 bdrm .. f3mil y home. $149,500 2501 CRESTVIEW. Shows like a model. Im· mediate occupancy, $49,500. Mary J·larvcy · GREAT BAY VIEW OPEN SUN. 1·5. 1005 BONNIE DOONE. Ir- vine Terrace. 4 Bdrms .. den. 3 baths. Dis- tinguished 5 yr. old home . 3 Car garage. Atrium 1v1elec. gate, ter race. $92,500, Carol 'fatun1 OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 4 Corona del l\1ar. CORNER L..o\RKSPUR & 4TH ST. 2 Units $79,500. Larger home has 4 bdrms., family rm. & pool. Smaller home 3 Bdrm. -great investment! 1\-tary Lou Marion OPEN SAT. & SUN . 12-4 504 FERNJ.EAP. CORONA DEL MAR. So. of Pac. Coast lli\\·ay. Ne\vly remodeled & redecorated. 3 BR .. 2 baths. den, cozy patio. 2nd Unit ma y be added . S49.500. ~1 . C. Buie TOWNHOUSE -ONE LEVEL 3 BR .. 2 Baths. Sep. dining rm .~ step-doll'R Ii\'. rn1 .: spotless cond . Ca re-free mainten- ance. Good Joe. in reso rt-like University Park. It's yours lo enjoy at S34,900. "Chuck" Le\vis NEWLY DECORATED 4 Bdrn1. hon1e in Dover Shores. Enormous fan1ily room . Jfnpre ssive entry. Room for pool & extra parking beh ind off.street gar· age. t :ileen I-Judson EMERALD BAY EXCLUSIVE :l BR .1 den . new ho1ne: beamed cathedral ceil's., vie\\•; private area. Max. sec4rity. Great beach. pools, tenn is club: in one of So. ('alif. prestige communities. $88,500. Bob 'forke WANT A KEEN VIEW?? Then con1e to see thi s ONE OF A KIND 3 Bdnn. & fam . rtn. ho1ne. PRIME LOCA· TION at end of cul de sac overlooking a GORG EOUS CORONA DEL MAR CANYON & the BLUE PACIFIC. Only 868.500. Bud Austiri FOURPLEX -DANA POINT Opportunity! Top location -great potential appreciation & return on investment. One :J .BR . O\vner's apt. & 3 2-BR . apts. Attrac· live de sign. Brand ne\v! $78,200. Charlene \Vhyle DOVER SHORE S -$69,500 N.eed \l'C say more about thiJ< ne1v C.B. & Co. excl usive? \·ou should see it! Gated entry. 4 BR's .. fan1 . rn1 .. fGrm aJ dining; \vorkshop. lo\v 1nainte nance yard $_, I b!k. to beaches. Ca ll Bill Con1stoCk NEAR NEW -iN HARBOR VIEW O\vner lransferred -great hon1e for small family. 3 Bdrms .. family room jusl oU kit~ chen & separate living room. $54.000. I-t arry Frederick DOVER SHORES EXECUTIVE HOME On the \Yater. Drastic price reducl ion on this S BR .. 5 bath plus sauna bath. Custom pool. Beautiful entry, cathedral ceilings. Now $185.000. Al Fink IN PRIVATE IRVINE COVE Bca ullful custo1n vie"· honit-. 4 BR .. 31r,; bath s, fo rnllll dining roon1 . flerfect 2 gen· erntlon noor plan. Onl.v :.tep~ to beach. $198.500. reorg€ Cirupe OPEN HOUSE SUN . 12 TO 5 P.M . 1472 G.'\l.1\X'' Dlt .. Dover Shores. 3 Bdrms. forni ul dining & large, pool table size den \\vi th fireplace & wet bar .. Expansive \•iew o( Back Bay from deck & pool. $135,000. Katlfryn Raulslon 833-0700 _._ Coldwell, Banker ~ 644-2430 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. ' . I " ,_-.. • ' -PUt YOUR MOTHER-IN-LAW in Corona del Mar frftJay, No~tnlbtr S, 1971 IT'S· NEW & DIFFERENT • ~ l:fecl roo 1n. 2 bath ea ch. :c;(eps to oc~anfront, carpe ting , builtins, fireplaces in each unit. 125 · 45th St., N.B. Open Sat & Sun ·1-S NEW R-2 UNITS -bcl\veen Bay & Ore.an \\'ith excellent depre- ciation potential for first O\vner. BAiboa . 1217 West Bay Ave. Open Sat & Sun 2-5 DAILY PILOT :J7 General ' RANCH~ MESA HOME Thv; I l11:dn1oni ho111r 1vith ra1111ry 1'!'1oui. is one of oor NE\VJ.:Sil' LJSTINCS, I !'~ <inly 21~ years yoting and convl'nieo1ly loca\E'd riear frt-e\\'ll;.' acCt'ss 8: South Coasr Plaw. on a shoN cuJ. dl'·Sli<' s\r<'(.>I Al.L TERr>IS 0F'f'ER£D u1clud1ng c'l_ist- lnJ: VJ\ lo11n 11'h1ch can I~ 11,SSUJl\('(f ll'i!h TO'fAL p,\Y- ;\l F:NTE or $111 pt•r nionth, Appral~lll priced at $32,;l()(l~ Newport • Corona del Mar . Costa Mesa Corona d_el f\1ar duplcx.-upper level front. unit """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~! n as 2 bedroo1ns. forn1al di ning roo1n, fire- General ~ General place. buillin s. IN-L.A.\V-QUAR1'ERS, Pf~l- POOL-BEACH· YACHT ALL THESE FEATURES rlus spacious living roo1n, den, luxurious • co:Ts . WALLACE REALTORS --S-46--4141~ lOpen E_venings) General HOME & INVESTMENT REALTY 3535 E. Coast Hwy. Corona def Mar 675-7225 General · BAYSIDE DRIVE WATERFR_Of'ITS 0 0CEA!j f BAY VIEW - Frein 122· ft lot. j s the settine: Cot this beau- tiful 4 bdrm . 4 bath hon1e \Vi th its O\vn pier & slip. $250,000. LINDA & HARBOR ISLAND VIEW Fron1 this lovely 4 bdr1n., 4 bath home. On a .50' lot. \Vith pjer & float. Custom drap· eries & paneling. $139,500. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Islanders Bldg. at Linda Isle 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 Daily Pilot Classified General General l 11p thl1 handy directory wlttl ya11 this -•k•11d m. yo11 go tla11M•h11111l11g. All th• l!KalioM li1t1d below or• d.scrlb"' 111 9recittt detail by odvenbing elMwHN lit todo.,·1 DAILY PILOT WANT A.OS. Patrons showh1g oia-11 ho11s.s far ial• or to rent are 11rff'd to list s11c:h lnfol't'll atlon In this c:al11111n each Frldo, and Sal11rdov. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom & Family Room or Den) 1951 Port Bristol (H,V. Homes) N.B. 644-6200 (Sunday) (3 Bedroom) 552 Glorietla 1The Bluffs) Nwpt. Bc h. 644-2825 $43.000 1Sun 2·51 81 1 Cliff Dr. tCliffhaven) N.B. 642-5200 (Sun 1-5\ 190 1 'fustin. Costa .ri1esa 642·5200 (Sal & Sun 1·5\ 2501 Crestvie\v (Bayshores) N.B. 833-0700 : 644-2430 !Sunday) 180!7 Port Barmouth (H.V. Homes) N.B. 833·0700; 644-2430 (Sunday 1-51 2024 Galaxy~ Newpor t Beach 644-4910 $85.000 (Sa l & Sun 1·5\ 2015 Aliso. Costa f\'1esa , 644-4910 $39,500 1Sat & Sun l ·51 41~ Pirate Rd . (Ne\vport 1-lg hts) N.B. 646-7171 1Sunday 1·5) (3 Bedroom & Family Room or Oen) 1937 Port Cl aridge Pl. (Harbor Viev.1 Home) N.B. 644-6160 $53,500 ISaL & Sun I *4607 Dorchester 1Cameo J-llds. l Cdf\.1 673·6510 1Sun 1·51 2034 Mirantar. Balboa Penin Pt. 675-4600 $59 ,500 !Sal I Su n l ·4 301 500 f\1or ningstar Lane. (Dover Shores) NB 879-5055 $110,000 !Sal & Stm 1 to dusk) 1100 Cambridge IWestcliff) N.B. 642-8235 !Sa t & Sun) 1921 Port Bristol Circle IH.V. Hon1es) N.B. 642-8235 <Sunday) *1472 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) N.B. 833-0700 : 644-2430 !Su n 12·5\ 504 Fernleaf. Corona de! J\lar 833·0700 : 644-2430 (Sat & Sun 12·41 1018 Sandcastle, Corona del f\1ar 833-0700; 644-2430 1SaL 1·51 431 Len\vood Drive, Ne\\·port Heights 646·7171 !Su n 1·51 400 Cabrillo Dr .. Costa Mesa . 646-7171 (off Tustin Ave.\ (Sal 1·5) 962 Sandcastle. Harbor View Hills 673·8550 .$66 ,000 !Sun 1·51 312 f\1o rning Canyon Dr .. Shorecliffs . 673'·8550 $198.500 !Sun 1·5) 312 ~1orning Canyon Dr .. Shorecliff 673-8550 $98.500 IS~I 1·5) (4 BedroOml 2029 ~·tlran1ar l)r. 1Peninsul~ Pt.) Balboa 642·1403 $59,000 !Sat & Sun 1·51 (4 Bedrooms & Family Room or Oen) 1948 Santiago Dr. tDover Shores) N.B. 646-5533 1SaL & Sun !2·61 **507 Bayside Or .. Newport Beach 642·5200 1SaL & Sun 1·51 1521 E. Ocean Blvd ., Balboa Peninsula 042-5200 !Sun 1·5\ 1601 Trade\l''inds (Baycrest) N.B. 642·5200 {Sun 1-4:30) *1609 Antigua Way 1Baycresl) N.B. 642·8235 (Sat & Sun) 2047 Port J>rovence fl·t.V. Homesl N.B. 642-8235 fSunday) ·2826 Calalpa 1Eastb1u!~\ N.B. 644·8745 $48.900 · !Sunda y) *369 Vista Baya !Back Bay) N.B. 642-8235 $47.950 (Saturday) 32712 Seven Seas Dr., Laguna Niguel 496·2456 $65,000 · IS•\ & l>un 1-4) 1005 Bonnie Doone flrvine 1'err.) Cdf\1 833·07p0; 644-2430 (Sun 1·5l 1528 Keel Dr .. Co rona dcl ~1ar _ _!!33·0700; 644·2430 !Sun 1·51 41 0 Mor ning Star. Ne\vport Beach 644-4910 $105 ,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) **8 Linda Isl e Drive, (Linda Isle). N.B. 644-4910 $155.000 <Sal & Sun 1·51 *2033 Le1nnos. Mesa Verde 646-7 171 (Sat & Sun 1·51 263 E. 22nd., Costa ri.1esa 646-717 1 !S un 1-4:30) 1423 .<\nt igua. Ne\vporl Beach 646-7171 ISun 1-!"i\ 171 5 Port Stirling, llarbor Vie\\' l·lon1es 673-8550 $57.900 !Sun l ·Sl (5 Bearoom) **415 North Stir Ln !Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 !Sat & Sun) **309 Evening Star iDover Shores) N.B. 642-8235 (Sal & Su n) (5 Bedroom & Family Room or Den) Corner Herrnitage Lane & Royal St. . George Dr . 644-1140 (Big Canyonl N.B. fDa ily) ** f{-58 Linda Isle. Ne,~·port Beach · 642-5200 !Sat & Sun 1·51" *2006 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) N.B. 646·1550 1Daily) 2507 \Vindover ~Broad1noor) CdflI 644-7662 !S unday 12·41 938 Bellis IEastbluffl N.B. 644-7662 'Fri/Sat/Su n 12-4 (6 Bedrooms) **2600 Bayshore D'r .. Ne1vport Beach 833·0700; 644·2430 !S unday) DUPLEXES F'OR SALE (2 Bedroom• & l Bedroom) 71 5 · 7151'2 Maguerite. Corona del tllar 673-8550 $57.500 1Sunday 1·51 (3 Bedroom & 1 Bedroom) 1217 \V. Bay Ave., Balboa 642·5200 , 1Sat & Sun J.51 (3 Bedroo{" each Unit) 300 Apalena, BaJboa lsland 675·3331 (Sat & Sun 1-4) 125 · 45th St., Nev.1port Beach ~ 642·5200 1SaL &; Sun 1·51 2 UNITS (4 Bedroom. & Fam. Rm. & 3 Bedroom) *Corner Larkspu r & 4th.:-Cororla del f\1ar 833-0700: 646-2430 !Sun 12·41 · HOME & INCOME (3 Bedroom & 2 Bedr'oom) **20 1 N. Bayfront. Balbo~ Isl and 675·3331 !Sun 1·51 **3 12 Grand Canal, Balboa Island 675·3331 !Sat & Sun 1-4 1 INVESTMENT PROPERTY (2 Bedroom) ;- **3121 W. CoasL Hwy (Apl. 5·A) 1'1.B. · 642·8235 1Sunday 1 WATERFRONT LOTS FOR SALE **1641 Bays ide Dr. IYachlsman's Cove) N.B. 642·8235 (Daily1 •Pool • ...... P •• 1 ... 11 w ...... , •• , • VATE EN'l'RANCE lower level. fireplace, large bath. Back unit is adorable. one large bedroo1n ... you can't beat thls ·at $61.500. SPLIT LEVEL BEAUTY 3 Blocks from Beach Atriun1 t.vpe entry, huge Jiyin g roon1 , 4 love- ly bedroon1 s, 2112 baths. ne\v shag and paint. N E \VP 0 R 1' BE.A.C l-I. that is only . .. . . . !38,500. HOW ABOUT "A STONE'S THROW" TO THE BAY Deluxe Duplex With View Q\\'ner's plush 4 bedroon1, 3 bath. 2 fire- pl aces. "(:lass \val!ed open staircase," built- ins including a builtin freezer-refr igerator, "Toe \Viggling'' shag. \:ery deluxe 1 bed- roorn rental unit-Don't n1iss seeing this one S9H.500. SUPER-DUPER 8 Units O\vner's unil-3 bedroo n1 , 21':i bath : 4-:.! bed- room. 11/z bath : 3-1 bedroon1, I 1 ~ bath. \'uu haven't secM ~1nything: like these unil s. /\ pleasure to.sho1v at . S198.450. NOW IS THE TIME TO "SLIP" Into Linda Isle A private "slip" I Takes a 50 ft. boat) de· scends from lhis fabulous Linda ls!e "'\1ie1v Ho1ne." 3 Lovely bedrooms. fo r1nal dining roon1. 4 delu.'<e baths. fireplace. An exciting home to entertain in. /\ n1ust to see. $225.000 . ~i ....... .,0(14?•• REALTORS 644-7270 (Formerly Delancy Real Estate) 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. General General 9 CARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APTS. 4 separate buildings. Shake roofs. Privall: patios. No stairs. All I story bnn~alo\\·s. 2 & 3 bedrO'Jms. Son1e have fireplaces. '!'he tvpe of buildings that attract and hold eootl tenants. lncon1e $16.740 vr. $145.000. Excel- lent financin g. · "Our 26th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. Realtors 2111 San Joaquin NEWPORJ: CENTER ' -- Hill' /General .... I General Road 644·49\0 ABSENTEE OWNER ANXIOUS WELL PLANNED HOME n1aster suil e \Vit h fireplace , ,, 507 Bayside Drive, N. B. Open Sat & s,un 1·5 BEST VALUE IN CLIFFHAVEN . WALK THRU this 3 bedrootn 21fi.! ,bath honle \\'ilh an eve to decorating \vith your O\VTI individlialiry. J,Ovely lar~e trees surround this cottage near sc hools. shopping and more expensi ve hon1es. · $33,500 811 Cliff Drive. N.B. Open Sun l·S LOVELY LINDA NORD ELEGANT S BEDROOM HOME Available for in1n1ed iate possession, lease or lease option · furnl!ihcd !::'58 Linda l5le, N.B. Open Sat & Sun 1-S DOUBLE LOT-PENINSULA THIS RAMBLING HOME in need of '!'LC is grC'al for the famil·y \l'ho 11·:int:-; C'lbo11 r oo1n and lOi'alion at a price 1·losc to land valur 1521 East Ocean Blvd., Balboa Open Sun 1-S SEE TO APPRECIATE BAYCREST IMMACULATE 4 bcdroon1,.dlning roon1 and breakfast area. Newly painted ancl carpeted. lovely ho1ne in ni ce neighborhood . . . . . . . . . . 556.500 1601 Tradewind5, N.B. Open Sun l ·S NEW LISTING JUST AVAILABLE TWO YEARS NEW and in 1novc in C'ondilion. :l Bedroon1s, builtin k-itehen. wall lo \\'0111 carpeting .. Plan.led patios_ • & s1H·inklers on a convenient corner. 1901 Tustin, C.M. Open Sat & Sun 1.5 Offi.::e Open Saturdays & s·unday• PETE BARRETI, REALTY 1605 Westc.liff Dr., N.B. 642-5200 General General JJnJa JJ/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 3 Linda Isle Drive -Open Sunday J,oveJ\'. ne\V 5 BR .. 41/z ba. home \\'/water· front 'riv. rn1 . l'<:. d in. rn1 . Oak paneled family ,rn1. \\'/frplr. Ma ster J~n . \V/s itting area & flreplace-:-Ray lt.. l\·Jt. v ie\rs ... , ... '(. $179.500 12 Linda-Isle Drive.~-~ J·:legant ne1v 5 l~I~. 41,:.! bH. honle \~ [or1nal din . rn1 .. farn . rn1 .. 1vet bar. ln1press1ve en· try court'' 116 ft. 1nahog. doors... $17!l,500. JUST COMPLETED ~ BR. f h:ith hon1 e \vith 50 ft. dock. l:leauti- fully decorated. 1vilh 1na rbl e 111s tr. bath, cryStal chandeliers. fine ca rp~ts & \\'all paper . f'uil!-in vacuun1. ret:i rculat1n g hot water, durnb\vaiter (~ n1any other extras. $285.000. 92 Linda li le Drive Be:iul. ~ Bit 4 ba. bo rne \l'/formal din. rm7 l'<:. larnily r rn. 3 r~rpl cs. Outside stair\\1ay. Built·in gun c:abinet & bookshelves. $155,000. Wa t@rfront Lots No. 7ti : :l c:ar ga rage. l';-ices Soulh . $80,000 . No.~(): North Lagoon exposure . , $80,000. For Complete Informa tion On All Homes & Lots, Pleas• Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR And has jusl rulut~·d this l•f'nutlful 1 y<'ar old hon1<' SlOOO .. 1 l>c•dronrns. 2 hallo.-., PriV<ll<' n111~1rr IJNlt·0<i111 sultr. l.usu1·1ous shac: (·:u-. )lei.<:. l'll~l11!11 (ltHfH'S, hUgt• paflo an"1 \\'llh hi11J1 111 gus B-B-Q. Jn1n11'1l1111l• 01.TU· panc"_v ava1l11bl1'. 1\ssume ('SISllnr.: J'l\/\ lo'U1 , $2.'l,roQ, ~JAUA.\I C1\.\l YO U c·oo1..;·; '/ h'·tr St•I• 11)1.; Jlll.~h h11illlll k11!'111·11 lloj,lh i.:Ja,;s lop ra"y t'h';111 (',,n1tni.: \\'at'<' /"llllJ!i' And 111 ri:<• I; E nv1•n. I nl· !ll!l('lllllh' 1 lr<lt'(ll . tllflllllt 1~1111 . I·'• halhs. "haK 1·ar f}l"'I ~. dl'HIH'S ;1ud n1;111,V nlht•1· 1~-.111•.11 1111ru·ov1•n1••n1 f;. !.11rr.:" .va11I, n1n1ur1•d sh1uhs 1u1d 675-6161 1·hild1'<'ns 111,,y 1 11111.~('. E:-.-341 Bay5ide Or., Suite l , N.B_. 1•1·1J,,111 .\tt:SA \'~~1tn~~ lo·l•--------------•_!!!!_ • .._~,._,.._,,,,. JC-.. COATS ~ WAL~ACE REALTORS Open Evenln95 • 962-4454 • PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP EASTSIDE G.I. TERMS Sparkling clC'an 4 tx>dr0<11n, 2 h;11h hon1t' 11·/firPplru·1·. 1•lf'I·. ll'IC bu1l1 In ... DI~'. ('!l\'1'11-'fl J)l\1 111, <ill "" dN!p 101 h1•111.1· rifull,1' ltirlo.ll'l•fl!)t.•d , Don'I \Vfll! 1o Sf'(' lhi~ 0111'. ()nJ~ $3:1.iil!J. Di;rl GfG.7111 •·ti11011. l l;it·l~ir fH1tl . h11s1-General General • rH·~.~ rliSlrwl 111'J1'h,\, fll'H I ----,- BEST HUY · AT ONLY ;;N p 1 H ·------;; -cAN"r .. i:INo IT? :s.~:t.~1;~1. eat oo ome ~11 \/. t Mesa Verde · ~range VIS a f.}i's1g11<'d 1nr t)(l1 11 i·a.~unl t: IVrr"nnl l1v1nie--l h1.~ i\ll•:i1t PROPERTIES * \VILL BUILD your d1·ra1 . homf'. Ha\'f! stafr for c'Om• plf'I<" home pac_kagc . Put your conUdcncc in our 49 years of quality cuscon1 hon1e building. $27,750 NO DOWN TO VETS !ihiu·11 3 lx;cJn)(Jlll in b<'aull· hll i\'l~':!'A VE'RDE. Ov('r· i<IZC'd ~111'11~f'. l<JVt'ly (:<l\'t'r· <·d pa1lo. dL'luxr l11nilscrip1ni:. i'"11s1 1nOV(' in ()K. • ' Cn ll .5-10-1 t1_1 /Qp<-11 <'Ves1 I OWNER- ANXl.OUS \i·UJ. l.'Onsider all 1?ff~rs I.or / 1his · 2300+ sq fl hon1e 1n- rlurlin;{ 3 br, :.! ha. <lrn, bo11- us fan1 rn1 & screr rK"<l patio rn1. OPEN SUN. 1-3. t \6S Boise, Cosla i\les;1. ,DOVER SHORES cus101n huih 2 slory. 4 bt'd- rooni'l l)a1h hofn<" 1,1·i1h Vi<"W fron\ eve>ry rnon1. Vaeenl. Quick possession . Asking SS:l,000. 0\l'lll'r will li!l!en. J9oo Santiago Dr .. N.B. Open S.-i1. & Sun. 1-5. , ROY J. WARD Co. REALTORS Hilj! \\'f.-"1'CLIF'~· DP.. Nr11por! Br:11'h &16-022JJ OWNER BAILING OUT · $49,950 Rf•rtuc·l'<I $1000 Un/Wr Awrai~­ f!l. Pr11n" l'('llfl'l<'ntn11 ar,,.a. ?.100 Sq ft or living arril. --.• ~·ornn1l dining, 3 halh:<:. llui,:e rt'1·11·111lon:il 111<"a. This 1~ a-gorg....-""s-i 1lCd1'0!:11U t.r1o. l•'\'•'I \\'IO\\"llf'I' fol'('{'(l !o S('\I. CnU :.r •. s 12 1 \'1!l('!l PV<'S.l \outh ,,. {~ oast WESTCLI I 1:Hl Sussl'x Ln. D· dy 1.s ' {hVIWr acceptl"<I nrw , 11ion in &al llt'. &><' th·~ sharp. l'lcan. 3 !.)('droon1 2 balh honir ri.l!"hl a\\•ay. Se pa!'alr livin.I( roo1n plus fan1Jly room. 011T1C'r uddf'd rooni · for his orfict•. Builr1n:1. fifY'. : plac<'. uril rn1. \Vnlk !O , Sl'hOOJ .~· shops. Need fa;;I ; sale. S-19.'.iOO. lachenmyer Realtor ~\\'UOIJ Bl\·d. C.1\f. ; c,.11 616-.'l'J~ Eve~. 1H2.m -; ----, WANTED: : tiAPPY FAMILY Tn f'njoy !lus lov°;iy 4 hf!d. roon1 hr1111(' c.'f'nlr::ill.v local· <'rl for rnark<'1s, shoppin,i:-, l'rhool..;; £& c•h111·1•h<_<l<. Love>ly sha~ ~·.<r.rr<'ls. fireplao~. h:ilr·h•'tl \\'ilh rlrct rie bu ill- ins has g001l slor:n?;f'. i r fan1il,1• rovn1 rsp.1n<l!l thi.~ 1l1)n1l' for o;ar{'frC'<" f'llJOY· rnt'n1. On!y S~2.9j(), Ca ll &Ui-7171 for appl. 1 5 BEDROOMS· MESA VERDE 1 ' . Lurgp .~· ~p .. r1<•11s 2 l'l1nry • honu• wi!h FOH:i1AL DIN· INC 'l!CHJ:-01 a II (I :• hucr 1~·ur •\1_1rd. Thi• 1lo1\n ... 111irl'l . . hedt'NlJll S('r vrs i;:-rr.:rl :1~ (I drn or s111(1y. L11n.:i· 1~1\'C'1'<'d pari(• and !iJll'lnk!rr~ 100. l'rlrl'tl 111 S 1."1.~l'."il. COATS & WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pen Evenings) Open Sat 1 to 5:00 312 MorninCJ Canyon Sl1111~·i·l1ffs . \\'hit(' \\' 11 Ir r VICI\~ Sp111.:t0u11-3 bcdrqou1, l11n11I!" rnon1 hont(' w11h lllS· or11111~ n1a"h'r ... ulh' • Ol'tl'ln \'11•1\ (;1';1:-ioy !-(1'~-t'n ylln l 1x111vj•r11111i;: into 11uodl'<l can. ynn, $\l$;,:100. li7'.!.S5:")() \R THEREAL '( f:R'.l'AJE~S IRVINE TERR-ACE- 4 Bdr1n. 1>lt1~· 01t1id'11 or hob. hy rn1. ~I'., uniquC' ht'11rl· \111r111rni:: 11i.1rl(' f1'pll". :i1•p, u1ili1y rrn, Spar1oull kltt·h, lllth brkist, t!l1, ,(· t'UUO!lf'S:S f'Hh1n•'!.~. Hnotn fllr Pol<ll, ,\ BAYFRONT APTS. ~h11rp hl)tnl' s, .i l't'til hur 1,11 Vil'ti"ffi:.J Lido. PiC'r ,f.t 11li11 I S."f.1.:100. 0Pl'n Sd\ .• ~ Sun. l\\ltllttlblt. ~~rum $.'H,j()(). St'Jl }.j; 21JJj KC'\\'(Hlll't" Dr. tlt lea,.e, THE IRWIN CO. George William son Realtor• . REAL TOR 1110 Nc~·port CP.rllrr Or. 67J..43SO "4S-1564 I Nr\\ pon H1•ach tH~-61 IJ I 1 , .. , c ' • '-31! DAJ LY PILOT frld.\J, NMmbtr 5, 1971 G ener1I ---- CORONA DEL MAR CANYON SIDE Just like being in 1he n1ount a in~ lt.. ye t. only 3 block~ frO!n the 5 l·ro\\nS • uniqu e home. rusUt & secluded, on large fee lot , \\ ith 3 bedrooms & large r111npu~ rt101n do\\·nsta1rs. Lots of \Vooct & stone. $53 .iOO • • HARBOR VIEW HILLS t ·nobstructed ocean \'ie\\' from ttii~ elegant, ron1pletely custon111cd horn(', \1'ilh 3 hed- roo1ns & lar~c li\l{I~ ronn1. 11 ith rar\ed ,,·hJte Bliirble flrcplarc .• \l!'(I, l'OZY book·l1ned den '' ith 2nd f1replare. 2 Yoirds. S96 ,700 IRVINE TERRA Ct · VI EW free & ea sy livir1g frun1 lh i ~ ~pacio11.c. 4 bed- roo m hon1e 1\·ith cnclo~cd pool,, larr r· Jiving roo111 & rlining area. Bcauti(ul. but 1011 r11ain· tenance Jandscaµing . S92,600 HARBOR Gen1ral • Builder& Cloi.-out ()niy 6 rl"maJn. 3 and 4 bdrm ~11nnl8h SI~ 1._ homff 11•1 tb 2 iullh~. Nn dOl\'O G 1. buy· <'f~ 11Pld n11n. tkl.,., n f'liA . Pril'f'fl fn1m $:10.6.iO. Pri~·I' lnclud1•ic landi;ca~. i;prink- lrr~ anrl buyer (']JOOSM rol- 11r nn 1·11rpe1s. OOSe 10 So. COil~I Plaza and n f \\' ~<'hnol~. Mod!'I& open. ·cili Walker & Lee Rt"alton ~ ll11rbor Bh<d. at Adami t--'.'i-!W!ll Open 'Ill 9 P~I VACANT 4 BEDROOM VETS; Short on Cuh7 Try thi• for si10 -$400. lot el cost. Big fem ily tm., 3 BR., 2 BA ., $27,000. Call today!! 045-0'45 8 893-8533 \'11rant ancl 11•aittng. Ownrn; n101·"d 11/ld \\'anl qyick i;a!e. l.('l\'cly condirklned homr. f'unc1ion;1J floor pl11,n. Sf.p.1--------,-------.:..-\ __ _ ar111, family room, .,."1 lmr Corona del Mar Dana Point Quality wail to wau rarprtll WAL L TO WALL NEW builders ('Ullom, 3 Br, and draPf"S. Park·like )•a rd. 2 Ba, pt"'I'marient whilt :-;.prlnklt'n;. • .ONLY S57.900 Spa.ciotis~M;. Mrs. Ru.'ih ,say~ "'atef vl~YI' . .,..•alk 10 htach & EZ 'rERI'tlS Call 673-8560 rtish. • tn .l607 DorchHt!'r, '· ' · · C11mcvr llighh1nds, Sunday muina. $34,9:l.I. 962-4681. altr rnonn. You'll lo•'!' hf'r El Toro very Jl(!Sh l BR .. 3 hath ----------\'1e1,1· horn!'. Rtali1rically OPEN SAT·SUN. P.M~ pri1·l'd at Sj9,500. 1Inrluding INVESTMENT l;K't~A.T~~ 1' BY O\VNER • G•neral COMPANY REALTORS "SI NCE 1944" 673-4400 G e n e r al BIG CANYON Fiv e bcdroon1 . 3 baths. fan1il~· roon1 . laundry rooin. 3-oer garage. Beautiful corner lot at Her mitage Lanrl and Royal St. George Drive. This hon1e is being firJ1!'hed· no1v and should be available for n1oving in b~forl' c·hri!'tmas. Dri\'e bv and !'Ce it. then call 0'"'ner at 644-U40. Prir~92.500. pool I. • CAMEO SHORES Unive r s ity Rea lty 4539 O ~Rl~G1:0N . j:1l01 ~· c~t 1111y. ,6i3-651rt llrst buy in !h is f'xclusn·e Und•r Construction area. $7'6,':100, Th ill will he a good one'. A. 675 .. 3000 nr11· 1 tw1rn1. & dl'n, 2 M1h~ 4 BR. f•uJly C&rp!'l!'d, All bll-in.~. f·mn! & rellJ ya.rrt n1C'f'ly lanrtsca.pert. Cnvl'rl'd pario. Close !O school~, !!hoppin.1: k frf'l'V.'ll Y~­ $29,:iOO. 830--5057 aher 5:30. Fountain Valley CAii for picture ca1al~ 11IU!I an l'llillling, ~harp 2 . wuh ,pr1<-'t'S & dl'ts11s bdrm. home. ~rfr-ct lfJca-1--C-U_T_E_A_S_A_B_U_G_!_! 11011 ~-1dl MOY(IO'nil'nC'f'! It. shorl "''alk to hf'ach. MORG AN R~AL T Y BAY•BEACU REALTY ,. 673-6642 675-6459 3 Bdrm, 2 h.11h townhou!t In r .v . L1k,. ~w Mnri. lhQ>Ughoul. 0111~r 11'11.n.<;- ROOM TO ROAM-BY 0 \1·npr: Lusk. 1111.rlr.ir ff"iTM Ii 'l\.l'nPr h11.~ 1n .<;f'll , \'1cw Hill.<;, 4 BR, 71, BA. q11 lck. Suhm11 nn Jerr~.-; nr A !tlale l'.'nlry \rads you lnln itrn pool, prof lndirp. 11.&ium' tliA lo11n, Priced 1h1s complPtt'I)' r<'drcoratf'rl fill~~:..ii. rirht 111 $23,950. · honlP, boasting 5 brlrms .t-1-""-=-'-------O)LLJNS & WATTS f11n1U,\ 1111,; all blt-1n k1;1·h· Costa Mes• • REA LTORS ""· loi;: burn1n~ frpl..:. plus 962.5523-(Open Eves,) nf"W .-;hag r 11rp : lge. fel1C!"ri 527 500 Jot for 1hf' kids fo pla\: ' ASSUME 6 .. ,..n loAnonnt .... ·!i \a~·3nt & r't'ady. Lo11·, I~"' Y'?l1 \\'on·~ EW.lil've I.1 l'nlt.u BR; 2\1 b11. ZIOO IQ. It. dn11·n 10 11 IJ 'Oll &or ''·· f antasllc l hed· housf'. o .... -ner l r 11 n s . MORGAN REAL ,-:y rnnm hon1e "' all kind!! cif 968-0781. 673-6642 675-6459 u~crt hnck, rnun!cy stylt; -,-,,-,-do_w_H_o_rn-,-.-.,-B-R_&_d-<0, kitchen, hardwoort floo~ "'-2 6 UNITS EASTSIOE I 1, BA, 3 c11.r gar .. boat • 1•11 r]Jf'!s, 1u.l(I' rumpu!I room -~--------I AlJ 2 bdrn1. lh h1:11h, patiO!'i. ,(, larJ.:!' plu1:b green yard. lll11.b. C"Q\'. pinio, $.~.000. 10 UN ITS Just 11111ntPrl, Sho11·s good :"'O do11·n t., \'P!s a11.~uml' 1 -"-,__,.~5_2· ______ _ TRI H ARDER ro fuld n1ore !or ~our mrHlC')' then our -haj)p~ ~ hcl rrn hon1P hack-to-bark 11 t t h Ba.\c.rl'Sr. :\'cw c11rf"'1 1n.i::. d1~hll!1Sht·r. d lSfl'lSa l. \'Pl\• port School dlSll'll'I. \\'e!:C· C'IJff !'hop111ng. So much 101· so H111e. S~,;.(K). T R I HARBOR R EAL TORS . 11·~ EAST 1rn1, C.:'11. Eas1su!" Co~la :0.1~. crr111 l"!'turn llf Slt.ltOO gros~ in-ln11' inl<'f('~t -ln11n. C 11 11 Huntington Be ach rr 11111J .1 rl'a. ~1rn J.hf-rt <"'JJll' Great lora11nn w11h SQUTJI COAST REALTORS, 1.,,1111~ 1111rl rb1Pr '.!·bl'rtruom!I. <'fnly 3"~ 1ac._ far!or Call :.i: .. 11i21 10pen Errs.! l--B-l_T_S_O_f_S_P_A_N_l_S_H_ ,\ll .•rpatalr uruts \\'Ith Int~ w I k & L or •p11c·f". ~11011s a ta11111~11r1 3 er ee -,O-L LEG E-PAR K-- rr1urn 1''1!h 111•..-.rllrt>! $1.lfl(l , ;\n 1l11l'n! \',\' and FHA 4 BR FAM RM prr n10 !;1thm11 un rto"n or J.eallors 1·r rlh~. \!JOO sq. ft. \\!lh 5 "1 ' • ll'll!\" in • 2790 !la1·hor Rh·d. 111 .\cl;i1 n.~ h "·d . h 3 "-th -r 016" 0 , . I 9 Pi\1 · ugr ,,,_. ronn1s \\It ,..., s. $29 500 W I k & L ' _:>_: '_)' c'-"---'--O" "" .~" .oil '"' I « 1 a er ee CORONA DE L MAR hl1)'f'1-.~ mo.vr in roday. r nr ' - l~I I~ [ _,_,. I~ [ _,. .. I~ ' _.,. .. Irvine Ir v ine Lagun a leach Newport Be•ch ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-13 B~. 2 BA iAfuna'Hilhl~< Slf,fSO IS THI PRICE A UN)VERSITY PARK llliST llUY born._ .-..!wood • 11.tu lot th~ IOYtly 3 bedmltn1, 2 Lowesi priced individual home in the area. ocean \itwt from ev•ry bath homf'. ~ loan it ftitti 3 8drms., dining rm .• bltn. wet bar, au elec. room.. $36,:500. 497•lli6. f'J10Ulh that you can -.:iume kltch." Dbl. oven s. Walk to shoppln1 & re-EXEC Own )'()ut own apt, 2 with Pt.Ymtnts of 11.,.,, per ti Lo I ••t •50 BR. J BA, Llruna Rcyale. month, which Include• &11. ere a on area. w, ow .., ,• . )1od'm built-in&, cJtt• pil• lea1e option. F/P $47,'°°. ,.. c-l li1l1"f 11'!lil . ''SJNCE 194&" ,l •l 'Vestern Bank IUd1. ---.-, : 1·1d i1ir Unlveralty Park 213/M!)..5225, TI4J499-3005. carpetl, a I a o ma1ehln.c drape1. Double &&rllt ~ BIG vallf'y vif:w! 4 BDRM, 3 boot! Call - ... '•m rm. "°°' " ''" Walker & Lee $41,500. Owner. 494-'1'651. D•ys ~IOI Nltht• La1una N lgyel " ~a1torr l "'""""""""""""""'!!l!!!!!!!!!!.;;,,!!!!!!!!'""""''""~I PRICED RIGHT 27!tO Harbor Bl\'d. a t Adam& H I• t B ~ • • •-h ~ O~n 'ril 9 PM un 1n g on eaai -euna DlrliC /..n outstandlni 4 bdrm. 2 -~~=""'""===-I --------... h horn• w;th family nn.. Ol'EN HOUSE BARGAIN HllHTERS!! 4 BR. -$19,500- All modern convt;ni.,.nc:e1. Latest built-in kite~n with bar. Hug:p dln. rm. 4 qll4!tn BR 's. 2 \11.vi~h balh. ['>t;eor- a hvl! Wall paPf"r. LoaM ol rich paneUing. F'resh painr in /,, 0¥1. Room for boat. Bt;ach Jnca.tion. Numerous exrras. Low dn. A must to see. Just listed k .,..'<ln•t last. Call !oday t7141 962·5585. FORl:\l l OLSO\ ... REAtrOll S 1!11.'l BroolqlurS! Ave. • Hunringlon BiaC'~ POOL + RUMPUS ROOM Plu~ • bedrooms. 2 ba tM, bt11h-1n kitchl!n, new ... bag carpeting, 2 firepl11ce1. Qv(l'r 600 ~C\· fr. rumpus room ln- rludps we1 har. No qualify. in~. nn klan ftt11 -jus1 1ake Ol'!'r, 1ubjec1 lo t;xii;ting GI Loan. o .... ·ner will consider $1.rO> riown. lMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. Walker & Lee RealtOl'IJ 2700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 54~9491 Open •ti! 9 PM "HOUSE TOO SMALL??" Just look a.1 1hi~ .• -~ huge hl-droom~. PLUS 8 fam-ily ronm. ThP barky11rrt is rnnrmoui;; anrl thfo school ... 11r,. ju.~t block$ a'A.·11y. Com· J>llt'r 1hi11 price ol $.16,500 .,..,l!h other home!, then call U~-•. 8•12-2:'l.t5. LUXURY LIVING HVinr rm. Parqoett !looril11' 500 Mernlng1tar Lane Alma1t MW • bi&' vlf:W~ 3500 & •"• '"try', ten-.. y•nl, • u .. ..., 3 Bn, 2"' B~. family rm. !\<l. 11. of luxurious livi~. beauUtully Jnd&epd, Garden on btaut cornf r lot, close Overlooking ~fonarch Ba.v patM>. 1$33,500. · 10 beach In Dov~r Shores. It Bf'ach. Ownert ha.ve usl'Ct L••una N i11uel Realty Jo, "' • 3CXXI Sq. Jt. ot luxuriou1 llv-i. of tilt ii: natutal woodt, 930-5050 4tf• l.J44 lo gjvf' a very warm Ii in· Inf. Price reduced lo vitlna: f«lina-: a1ep~wn !iv· OP EN HOUSE SA'l" A: SUN t llO,!Xkl. Su It to a ppredale \nt rm. w/vauhtd beam OCEAN VIEW lt! OPf!n Slit It Sun I to duidc. Cf'il.: If.'· jile ~c. Formal NEW 2 Br, den, 3 Ba R-v Geringer, Realter ' dining rm. w/beam cell. Ir 32311 Caribbean 879-5055 china aloraae cabinets. Pan-\ViU Cbnsidf'r Trade Spacleus WestclJff elt:d den hu beautiful cl.us· 492-97M or (2131 OL 5-tl652 On exceUHit avf'nu' near td wet bar W/sJidinc t lass OWNER: 3 br, 2 bl.. Jrt kit, \Vf'alcHft ahOpp·r centf:r. 4 wall to patio. Lre kitcb. w/ frplc, flewiy painted. nu BR. 2~' BA, w/trplc ~ hrkfsl. area: loads ot cab-ahaf crpt, nr bch. $34,900, charming patio. F i n f' a 1 ine!a Ir walk-in pantry. 3 642-'lJ55. 24215 La. Hermou. 5chool1 in area. TbiJ i1 a Large bdrms., 3 bt.tfla: m1tr. lovely family homt in im- 11uitf:. has His &: Hers ba1h!. L ido Isle mac_ulatt condition. $43,000. Thi! be&1 or quality m1.1~r-* * * f'inanclnr ~avall. SH af 1436 iaJ1 havf: been uaed ttmJout JACK R . HOWELL Marinera Dr. Call 66-5740. this Hom~. 8'!autitully Ind· S DUPLEX, t blc:k to beach. scpd. wlltt:. view patio!I 11. 23962 utton big OCf'an vitw fmm a1mOit El/Toro W. Ntwport, 3 BR, 2 BA every room in dlf! houM. You an~ winner of e a ch u n.i t. frplc 1 . This horTlf! is wf'll p}anntd & 2 llek'ts to W wallf'd patio, ftt s Imp I f: vt;ry tunctionaJ • t~rythinr Orange Cou~ty ll nd. Good incol1\f'. S62.500. I I I CN.•ner &4;)...4245. in & about this pero i1 ntern1t on• in xlnt cond . 1tive's Auto Show OPEN HOUSE 1-5 SUN widow 11ay1. "sf'll w", • , lt the 19&8 San Bruno !The Blulli) ·11sklng $150,000. . ANAHEIM: A!lrac split lt vt l twnhsl!' 2 ~~ CONVENTION BR .~ BA . 128,5Jlll. 644-<52!. CENTER N•wpert Heights -m.....cr-llWI': Nov,mber 11th thnl 2'llt --~·-... ., .. " "'" ... 2-0611-'"' "' RARE APPEAL * 499·2*0 * betwttn 9 and 5 prTI. to claim FAMIL"Y HOME Nicely deeon.ted W"f'll kept home, over 2,000 tq. ft, En· cloffd entry court bu wrouctlt iron 1att;11, Spac- ialts family room wif.h wet bllf· Paq thru ~dow lrom buUl·ln kitchen 10 patio. Brick 1iree!aee. 3 Bdrms., 2\i barhs. Only '43:500;-Ca.U- ~ /an,- REAL ESTATE 1190 Glf'nne~ SL 49'1-9473 54S.()3lfi SOUTH LAGUNA OCEANFRONT your tickets. {North County toil-fN!e number iJ ~lnft) * .. * Nord Wa .. rfront Brand new 5 BR.., 41,t b&t!U, deck & dock, on Udo Nord. $197,5Jlll_ 40 Foot Lot Attr. l!Xposed beam. 3 Jiit, 3 b.\ hOmf' w /South ptt'io. ~OnJr'65oOOO. Bill Gruncly, Rllr. 341 Ba)'lidf:. NB 61s.Glrt 4 Br, .l 811. fiOX90 f77.500 4 Br, l Ba 70X88 $125,000 4 Br. 4 Ba 00"811 S1l5.llOO LIDO REAL TY INC. 3377 Via Lido 67:1-7300 Mint condition. charminr modem hoine Mlithrtull.Y dtcora ted. 3 BR.. 2 BA. Ntw ahia: C~tlllf, frple. Kitch- en built-ins, COVf'ttd pa!io &: other tine futures. Ask· inf $37,900. You'll be pleu- ed to .ee: thlt. CA.LL (!) ''1·2•1• Atd~ TJ;EA LTY N1•r Nr•p•rl P1t1t OFflre CHAR.MING 3 BR. hOmf'. beam otnr w/us~ brlck frp!C'!, lam rm. xrn. ltP kit, bf:aut. kepr yd. imrria·c col1d. $33,950. 64~.l.122. -t .. :'\!TE OR DAY l\hi-'.12.15 R°''n' lnr IHlillh"r un11 on ~air ai 1111(Jra1~al of $31.~. SP . .\N ISH \\'11ll('rt iron ga1r Hf'al lor~ !hi~ \l'\'rl H.'.l lnl :-;.,. of Only 111 • rour1y11.rd '"fly, 4 KJ NG 1--""====~=;=:= zno l!;irhor R!vd. at M11ms Jh1 y, 11·11 h II lfl\'l'ly 3 Rrd-w lk & L SIZF: h<ll'm!. 21.! hi!. \VAlk- Be11.u1. 4 BR., 3 ba. splil ],v~J 3 B•drooms-$19,950. tum. home w/priv. stairway Frrshl~ painted l BR plug 2 10 Secret Cove Beach: form. BA aN!a home. Cose tn f'r home ol Charlie Cbaplln. ocean. Features NE\V vinyl 31699 Sea O iH Dr., by apt. tile in bright & cheery EMERALD BAY LOT .. ••• CHAAMING. oldtr, SPANISH 1tucco, 2 BR, '!"',..,..._ .... ~'."""""'"..,~I ~le, redtc in Ir out, Jt.-2. BIG HOUSE. • • $21,000. By Owner M>-1446. S2800 DOWN ~love you righl Into 1 h1.o: 4 bedroom. 21S balhs. ,.\.hu111- in rang!', O\'en & <l1sh~1ai;h· rr. F'in'pi&l'e_ family room. Bllilt in patlO. l yrs. Ill'\\' .11- ~h<l.,.,.!1 hl'llrr Thitn A modrl hon1e• :,141.1720 TARBELL OP.P0RTl'NITY F6R e SALESMAN O R BROKER e ~j.fiU:r1 01,..n '1/l 9 Pl\! morn !1, bath i ll front. 011·11. a er ee in ciO!lll'IS, v11ulttd C'!'1Jing!I', S22'900 er ll'ill ca,~42 .. ~s.t TD. Realtors M11Miv' t'AMILY ROOM JIJ\J 11•irh cr11.dding fi~plaN'. 5 11 o1 SI 429 llrliotrope. 21!lO ll11rbor Bh·d. Al Adam.• Lerii:, gourm'I kircbf'n. 14 0 at 30 MONT H Lach•nmyer Realtor .ll:J.-9'l9t Of)f'n 'ril 9 PM LAuridry cf'nter. Paun~ 3- l..r-~ clu1n rr 11t p;1yn1cn1s &l&-3928 Eve. 616·1007 f.ARGE R-2 LOT -CH OICE CAR GARAGE. On1f J yn. "h1•11 .v"u 11 ~~urnc th(> f'HA --LOCATION. 2 ht: d r o o m nld. !Aw down. Mus! see for 1,1,1n 11p1· now on prop•'rty. DOVER SHQRES borne: Opt>n Must: evtry yflursel! ·at 'th\~ low lnw ·I IX'dl•••111< 2 hllT hs. hu 1Jr -\'1c•w 1101111' GHl11xy Ur. ;iflrrnoon, JS.l Cost11 Ml'~• $29,500. Hurry&: ea/I \7141 1 11~. · 1\11·ard'". Y<';:i r round ~naclous ,t, l1!cal for l'nlrr-SI., c .r.1. Dial 548--7122 or 962-~5. fun, e11J••r lhl' ('l\ihlinu~·'· 1;i11u11i,:, 11 1ndOol' 110<1l ,r,. 61G-0Citi6. 1••11111<; 1'(1:1n s, JJllOls. 0 11nr1· .i;u·u11.1. $1l'l.OOl.J. J.ea.~e or fOSTA 1\!~~~A -!\'E\\'PORT lll1:\h1u.~. :.10 li~O $1 l:i.f"llYI . Frr.•H.\I app'L REALTY & JNVF:STMF.NT TARBELL Bill G run d y, R ealtor CO. ~ ~11 B"'Y"'""· :>tn -111.1~62 COL L EGE'-P-A~R~K==l- ~1.l, ll:1 rl~1r. C"·l~la \lr~a Rl.l'FF1'. l IX!n11~ .. 2 haths, l Rr. J·\ h;i, llf"\\'ly pa1n!M. JUST-LIS-T£0--•Tirl unit, 011 onr lP\'l'I. 2 11rw rtr;ipr~. ~hai; ('rr l. ra!10~. qu1rr ll'IC11T1nn, nrar llu..i:~ k11ch£'n \1 hltn break- pool, n111rkrt I: Trnni~ C'luh. fn~1 hari Ln: yiln!. Cl~ If' IORl\T f Ol'O\ ~'l "•'[I".> L'l131 Brookhursl Avl'. Huntington Beach • •• SMALL PRICE $an Clemtnte 4 BR. J ba .. din. rm. 8Cnus 1-,,,,-..,,..-------·1 rm. tp. lor. $61.500. BY Own,r. 3 BR. 2 Ba., o. kirc~n complete with Bit-largest V l•w Lot hot1X1A& toweon jll. vt,w. 403 £.Ave. San Ju.an. -'to-$41,900. Tf'rmt. M4--094. in R/O, <lishw11sher! Nice.ly 1127 Emerald Bay, •. $911,000 landscaped 11·irk sprinkh!rs For Toti & kornt;! eall: 34~tc-•=V~"'-7.L'-''-c·~~c-"67'°5-4"°5'""2 San Juan C4pl1tr•M MUST A!'ll this \.\"ttk! $55,000 or bl'~t olf,r. 3 Br. 2 b&. (I)' lmnr &. rear .. Full prict; Bill Grundy, R•altor $19.9:.0. -LO\V · LO W 341 Bay.oiidP, N'pt Beach DO\\' N!· Call ~Mi-1'.?2\. 675--6161 SEYl\10UR RJo:ALTY. 171411 ----"-'"'-'-'---- lot 673-718~. B"'h Bhd., H1<0. Boh. EMERALD BAY M•sa Verde --SHARP FIXER -UPPER ' A!'!lll-;;;-"xiSil~ -~!Mn. 11nrl p11y juict Sl&~lmo. Sep. 11ra1, mastl'r bMrrn SUl!I', hrl'pl, blt1n RIO & lariP !'O\'/"l'f'rl pa ,'io. PriCl'd for fiist SAi" at $24,;-_,oo, S'pPCfA('U)AJ' oceAn vir•· Imm BEA.UTTF"UL R f: p ub I i c 111 1p.aeiouA hillTop h0111f'. l homP. 4 Br., l ba . fam rm . 4;!'V--hdrnu..-conv.J'rt....J:ll'n ~'°~""~-~-~o~-~~'·~546-8:::::::"':::.· _ ~p. dining rm.: playroom M ission V ie jo w1rh hlilc., view df'ck -• ...---:----- $911.500. J BR. l Ba. La. Pai-homf: on Turn er Associ1te1 cul-dt-u.c. S30.900. ~r otter. llC6 N. Coa!t H1,1·y., Ll.g\Jna \\'tll fTadf'. ~172. WORKING COUP LE?. Thia~ ideil for you! Chann- lnt Spanish townhOuse. WttJ decorated. Pri\·att p&tio ·& balcony. Convtnif'nt ki tctlf:n "'!Th 1.ll • biltin1. 2 Car 1ar•tt .,..i th .elt ctrit' door }l kitchen rntrancf'. Easy for the t•·o ot you 10 1toitip thru lh' work &: apend your ltilurt hour1 to1erhtr, ~ b@drool'l'\JI, ]I) bath!, 2·1tol')' a nd .. 1:1 1!!1abilshrrt offu:c .• e C,\LL ED RiDDLl-: e Rf.ALTOP. &;6-:.t~l l IAll ... ppltC'alions t·o11f1den1 1aJ 1 :'\(•;1r l\"pt · ll1'11~h1 s. 4 BIL. 2 S·l:l.000. (lpcn S11nd11y 2 in ~1. si·hoo!s Si_ shops. Assum11bll' 1•:1 ~: J.:1teh<·n bl1-1n~. f' A. :1.;2 GlnriPlla, N.B. 011ne1·, ;,1,·, 101111. s:u 7fi0. hr111 111i:. :'\ru• C3rpP 1 h1~. 6·1\-21!25. '.t:\9:, Collrgoe Dr.' 5<1{}-~~ ~ Brl cht & !'hi·rry. l.ot<:I'. ft•nr·· o~--:--;R ---- 0 •·rt ~11.rd . 2 11oor~ 11-... l·l!y \\\'~. translrrrrd, -I 5°/0 On, Or Mak• Offer • 00\'EP. SH RF.~ • "''"' hl'rir no hu t! I 1 ()(\ ~ I h 2 'SHERWeeO REALTY \\!HAT A LOCATION. , . I J89&1 'Brookhurst f .V. Prime 1<f"Su1enlial t1.rra 11d-''LOOK 529,995,. iiacl'nl !Cl lhf' nf'W ctntrRI ~rk. 4 bf>rlmom~ 31ld a hU.2f' Z1 x 1~1 open beam f11mily ff)()Jll. ~·u11~· c 11 r p !' t' d 1hrou1lhoul. A lo1 of livin· for (lnly 114, 100. Call 1nday "TWO-STORY BEAUTY" 494-1)77 Anytim• N•wport Beach *Woods Cove $36,500* -------:: lltory lixtr upper, nttds BLUEGRASS Co u n Ir y . df"C'Orator !ouch. Harbo1· Vi'w Ho m t; 1 • ONLY $26 .500 CAPISTRANO VALLEY ltEALTY 31:.()1 Camina Capistr&m 493--1124 ELEGA:'\T thruot11. \'n1hin2 l•ll rk. Onl,1 $.10,:.00. . 111• 2 >1 mi )' r 1~1 · • r11r y 11rw. s arp J Br, Bil ' •J.L 0 ,,,_ '·' 14 l1rE'plaC'f'. l'<VY rt_rn, hu1Jt-1n hurnr. Pi 1n1e J0<., nE'ar Frv.·y mmparahlf' n thlll ~ & rtrn, " • 1'>1111!1' & ov"n in sp11r1nus s, ."tV)ppinit-Prirr $.1J.:i00. ht>;ou1. hflrli"· Si!l.: · '.\'O kir,•h1>n, Br\.:. ~2 4,950. O\\ner11 lea1·1ng, Quick Pos- LEASEllfllJl 11 1' PX-:JlD-li20. l'Plil!lnn. qu 1~11" 0 ()1'11 11 .. r. dail~ • DOYLE CO R I Br!--11n1 \\'11·~· r.ti r fi~:..:l~:Z.\ :\,ar ''"port Pfl•I Offic r Balboa Isl a nd I · ea t ors i;.1;;_:~·,1~ r11r\\_~'~r ~.\'E. -OCEANFRONT-a1~.11AA ~~ve!l. a.;1--fi2~·1 --BEST B UY DUPLEX PRIME INCOME HF.AR Yf; ' ' -~2-25.'\5. lo · THE REAL \"'-ESTATERS ' 1, ' ',••,• AT Si.5,000 2 OPEN HOUSES for th" tr1'na2er who "'11,nts Tht~ j, thr mC'l'!lt'")'OU.ll ftnil 1."1 .,1our irnarirs niakc your 300 APOL ENA an a rtic bdnn. Jo"or the ra m· liiiiiiii;jiiiiiiiiiii;;;iiiiiiiii& tn Costa \ll'~a. Con1 plPl<'I}' 1'·1~n11 ~ 1 11 •111 1~ pf"l nlr> locll-R1•1.u11 if11l11 rlr,:1i:11f'rl nr11 ily 1,1 hfl11•11n1A.JRRl.11 ,pOOl-$26,000 r~rJW1ed throughnut 1h1.,, '.: ;~·11~ .! H•<d 171;: :)llJ>lr~. i1urlrx. 'sat. f,;, Su~. l-1. lhi.~ lll !hr hou~t. S7\,.il'(l. tw>d~m . 2 h;itl\ hon1 .. t~ in '" un11~ 11rr u } urn1~ . $!l~.;~ f!TZ:'llORP.IS REALTY CO. 'f(ll1r rio'-l'n will h11nd! ... 11.ll· modi'! rorw1rfl<1n . Thill ,,1,. rd i<nd 111 r111n1 f"~ni1u1nn 312 GRANO CA NAL Jl.\'l Y.:. Cfllll~I Hii?hV.'ll~' ,..ump Plli~tinr F1iA loan. No •• , II r 1~ T ' P1 u·1•d :1t only S.113.~JI} !'ub-" . ... .>, ., t ,,,_,, qu11l 1fy1nr. I ~ BR, 2 BA , 11 ._, " . ·":• L'rn's ;ii ''''' ,,,,, ••ft~ · .~cw.home Ir: 11pt. plus "irr. •.oron11 nt" •• 11 ·""'' I' 1 .-r ,. \\' 'W l'pt~. d rn11, la!it(I' m11.11· \"f'rV nr,\bl" ~ Cll ' 11'1\• Ill SHE .Rw••o REA LTY .~1. k Sun ,.,-,, !129.:lln " . --S VE '"' 11uilP "''hh v.·11lk-111 clnJ<- ""-.., 1•' Fa""'11· P.t111!~. 1 ~ Ht"""khllr~i , •. V .. 201 N. BAY FRO NT . M E A R OE rill , ki!chl'n, ft1mily f'fl(Jm ;,is..'f;-10 ---}.\•'•'f'1 1n1111l 1Tl<'l)n1r f'f><""rrl. ·I Rn, 2 ~tr. fnrm11.J riin1nr ('flmbo. Ric.in R/0. tli;hw.oihr. ASSUME COSTA M E SA R•'Jl1ll lUJ i!K'Hllnn. ~un . J.j, 11rr11. f11.n11ly rm, rrp111, rlrp!, fnrm11.l livinio:: room, f'/A S WEETHEART Sl4.'>.{l0(} i<prinklrrs: !1'1•11.leri nn n•·t'r hc111 . 01'l'nn..:rri dbl g11.rajl'~. -VA LOAN!!-S23,500 W IL L IAM WINTON 1 3 ar rr in r.\clu~ive ~ll"sa \\'11lk to thf' hrllch. :O:haf"!)"-3 bi'flr()c}111 (In l11 1·cr Th i~ l11t ll' J!'lll'J 1j 11 ~p;i1·1nus_ Real E s tat• Vrrrte a n•n . S l!'l.~::.O. ., 1111 ·rou1l ra.vment~ Sl ~li. !l"r I t>C'rh1•1111 hn111 p eon\••1111•11!· :l'.l>J :'liarill(>, B11Jhrlot l11!11nrt ;).l!'l-09:A_~=~ • m"n1k l.1'!1\ O.iu n f'rll"'d h 111111\cri 111 11. !fUlrl res1-' 675-3331 . COLLEGE PARK t62 111 Sli.!Ol . Call no11 lor dt·· 1!rn<1111 11r1i::hl•~rh.,orl 11 1111 _ 4 en. ram rni. ~hag crp111. , ~71 (:=JM~llOJ 1a1I-'. 2 r1 ••n1y ba1 h.~. h1~ 11111k)lDrPLF.X-f'OR-sA1~f.-~ 1111 this on xtra ls:e corl)f'r I •-... !!!!!!!!""'!I!!!!!!~~ FULL E R REALTY 1.,.-,11111lr1•·ly <~11·rn·11. 11 r1rt Ch\nf"r. Slfl'ps tn hay !·lot. 10,..,. r>o11·n or VA nr -LUXURY LIVING W...OSl l -.\n}!1~r ).,.au11fuli1 lnn<t~r11prrt. Q1,1 n. heRch. ;\fake oiler, Ph ar1 6 tn11tf" 239 Pnnccon. !t23-4al5 4 BR or 3 t. df'n luxlll')' fyJ'I' 4 BE O ROOM , 2• BATH o·r f111\'1•r1~. A<·r ,'\(!\\' vn pn1. ~IG-:.ifil6. 011rn Ho\J!lf' ~r -Sun l If'! 6. rondo IOl'.'a!f'd In H.8 ."1. tl!f'· Cul-rtr·~af" lol, J bt>droom! ft nri 1astpfully tlecoratrd in l'\Cf'an blur~ And J:rf'f"nl!. \Vhal 11 bu.1•'. Don't 1!'1 1his '(lrtf' ~('1 ll[Wfty •.• i!-12-2J,,}.j. • SELL!NG YOUR HOME? Frrf: appr11 isa.J • \\'e bu~ f'qul!1es. Penona.l attenllon. ~ yr!, p;.;pPri,nl'f' . COLLINS & WATTS * $25,000 * Carm!!l.-3 Bedroom + fiuni- For th.is channint 2 S R. hide· ly, Profe.ssioM.lly land· 'B~E~A~lJT=l~F~U~L-1_p_'"~;~,h-,-.,.-,",I 11.11•ay. Opt;n beamf'd. ttil's. scaped w/lo!a of brick. All htlmt, by 01,1•ner (btina ' ·-·na c ......... A • ~... tXlrlS includf' w a I ' r ---.u "-'v" .. ll'ln1fe.rredJ, J mo old. 3 ~REALTY 4!W-97M softentr, f'itc tnc ta r a r e BR, l BA. fam rm. formal S C H L 8 opell(l'.r, mirTors, 111· I w · oa11 wy., · · liv rm. eonve:r11.1ion pit EME••LD BAY-Charm1··g carpf'!. $.~.:.00 includins; 1-1 • ...,. " land. 644-eJ60. 1937 J>.3rt w .. ., .::. + rumpu1 nn, t'Ontcmp fi Br or 3 1ui1'~ c pt1/drp1, bltins, v.· tr Gora;tou~ vle0 w. · $14a.ooo: Cla.ridt t Pl . Principals 10ftentr, 2 car a-ar. lt t ft ne. LOVELY view lot-$.W.000. only. t d in yd, ~ min to heh. TEO HUBERT ASSOC. *DOVER SHORES* 137,9"1, 19~977. 3471 v· L'tlo •109 N B Panoramic View ~~~~------1 ia ti~:t-3980 , . . Sp11cioog 3300 IQ ft 4 Br, 3 Mobile Homes For Sile 125 * SELL OR LEASE • ba. fam. rm, din. rm. A -..,--------2200 + &'!-r t., .l BR. 2\i M . huge ru-btamtd ceil1n1 !iv. Nl!W ADULT PARK !162·5."''-~'-----''~"~-lM:.:::_27 lg. fam. rm., din. rm., trpl rm. POOL Huntin11on Arbor Mobllf' BY ~~'""r, lr;:i"'ina !ltate. :; Carp. I: drapl's, bltn~ . .,...,, Homf: Ptlrk. FacUitil'1 in-,,, bAr. Ptc., Im~11c. $47.~ Y OU OWN THE LANO cluM: J &C'!Ulli, card nn, BR, 2 ~1~, iTrr cltan. cll)Se f'ulJ Prict. A bu y a1 $98,000 ~fAT\', outdoor BBQ. pool. tn Sl'r111dr srhl.oi. !\larin11 J • ·"·· ~·-· !\1ISSION REALTY 494-0731 · ...,,...,--vwuo:r billiard nn. shutt:ltboud, in· Hiio::h. Go!df'n \Vest Colle)::f'. 1. .. 1.5533 'd p TOP 0 ,-wo•• ~ CHAR'!· -ii-dlv1 uaJ me:ttrinf . t r uc· nPI\' p1rk. :;1• "'~ f'HA. \VIU ~ . fl'U. consi<!rr 2nd. $ 3 s, so o. ER · 3 BR. fam rm, 2 BIG Canyon, ModlI-2, 4 S R. uon. 1......., Ward Si ., Hn1a-n ~.$6--liil'. baths, w I 20 x :'J5' deck 3 BA. Opt;n Houst: 1-5 Reach. 968-44~j. ·:_c_______ 1.-Gre111 Vitw! '37.500. St;ll Sal/Sun tS H e r m i I a g f: Jt'I a brttte •• af:ll your S QUICK $ or 1,1,e: v.·/ option. Owntr. LAnr , N.B. m.ooo. 644-7744.1 item1 \1.i th eue. ulM! Daily W E BUY HOMES -4!M-l33t. or 4g&...1260. Chl•ner. Pilot cta..lfied. MZ-~71. MR KASABJ'°"V 847·9ro4 I ~========::.'..;;;:===:=:===:=::..:::=:::;:;:;;:;;;;:::::;;;;;::;:;;;.I KASABIAN s22,900 1 h1~ •11 11"': F;u·ro'>\· R(·11l1y. B Ibo p . I l RR, 2 Bil. l1v 1. din, bhW '·'' 111-e11. No bnthersnm,. $150 TOTA L DOWN :1 lti-'6-IO. -a a e n1ns u a ilry rm, crp1~. C!rJ>t;, Oct11n )'11rrt malitt'._ lo\'']~· 11· '' REAL EST~,TE ~10 LIKDO A\'" B1>111crn vie11 no 1r11.ff1c '$li 500 rrp1!1 ~ drp,., 111! hl!i~. rri-l tv'1nt $©R4ll~-"t-tfS" Tho Pvzzl• wifh the Bvi /f./n Chuckle Thi' !"111\!1<1u•r i11 mw \'11· * BACK BA Y * ' ' ' tl ' .,2 ·-· '!OJ ' ," 1·111" pa11n fnr <'~lrlffn ... -;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;; r11nt 11.nd 1hf' 011nfr is 1111,. , ., , , , H11y .~ nr('titl. ()pen ~111 . ''""~· -.i.-.. ... , 4 \\. ,. 1 ,,11~ Fr•ll!IH~'• & ~l',.1.1,,11•1 3 R1,, -h1\, f11 n11I~ 1 rn , f1r1 pl, su11, t.:'IO 10 :\;.lll. ChsrnllOJ: 1 ~111 ( :'11 i<l\f<'t)', IAl'ltb nf ~tnr11Q"", ,,, ,,_,,, k11rhl'l1 l~r .. r•I JI;!' hl111u, l1ui:~ \\lll\.:•I!\ r1(1~1'1F. t1lt1f'r hc\(lJI'. Cho!f'r lot'. :\er O\\''.'\ER: 2 l'lnr1 , llhRkf H11.' pool &o-trnni.~ /'(\Uri~ All lMl() er fl '.'\e11 (' 1 drnpe5 · t)"f)P t!n11ncing 11 nrl "n I y til'at w-wl} pa1n1t'd lrn1nrd· $irt ~ ' ' rp .o: . Bil. 2 Bath5. Br:ck .h·plt-. 1~1nf. 4 Br 21, 8 11.. ~11.1n1>, $7!'.l,MO. llnrry llrw! r<"lll tor Ill.I P l"l'.'''"~~,.,n iin ('1'f'rtl1 1111 R M' C d i R I 1,1·flf1.rl floor1;. Jo urntshrd. r 1111. ('fll 'r1'1'1i ""tiO. &1111 ,.,,2 --.... t-""'2 ,~1 I Il l.,,,,,.. ,. ' oy c 11r • .,,, tor $.111 iOO r· • 11pp1. "".,,.,..,,.~.\'I'"· "" ....... pM\'ll · ·-· l ll'l:I" I 1810 ~ . Bl d :O.t • • i::;it(" ~1nr11i.:r fllt"'lt Xllnr COLLINS k \\"ATTS IN('. Re11,l1~. SIG-lf>.10 '«'"!>flrt \' .•.•. OAVI~ P.E,\l.l \" f;..l:!-";"ro:J l..,,tti thru-out Yto.ti 11: , UP F OR G RABS 1 ------~8-7729 --- 1/1 Block to Be,,,cti 31' BR. r,h·n,.,, ',.,,h~;,,, lrp!r. 241KN OX-P l ACE 3 AR .. 2 hA plua 500 ,.q, ft, 2 Rrrtrmm furn1~hf'd ·~~ ... 3 BEDROOM 2 BAT H c tn in~u a · .. ~ """' hob~· I -• A • ll"PI ~· 2 R ,, ,.,,., ~.IV'I 3 Rrlrm~-. f111'111ly-rm .. lrpl. u1 • Amu)' room, 1• 111•1lh b11.cht'leir apr. 6 Y E A RS O L D " .r.,, r · *""··""' Lii. lo 11 ~llmf' rHA lnan. $194. Pf'I' Onl)• $39.!iOO \\:1rich111i Hf'11 l1y 67!>-4fi00 ri:e I. 11 ry llCN"~~. S21,9SO OPF.'N S.\T ~UN 1 ·~ nin. $11.MO. LJ:iw Do"A.-n. CAJJ; 673·3663 &42•2'2."il E\.,.,. JTiurl (l'I 1)('\l('i t'~ \rl'U hrrt JD_;R~_; II 1~ nn th•• ·pn\n1 ~ D1\\1IS REALTY 642·i000 * CAU. R~?-8507 * LI !~. {'lr;in ""Of'\\'. '{Oll 1.-.1 ~ fir. :i b+i . lltll,\' s~.noo VACANT $12,950. ~ associated DAOKER$-REAlTORS J:02S W toiboo •1l·J66) -REPOSSESSIONS Sp!lrkllnit r lctin 001n,,., . ..Ol1lf' """'IY palntrd & c.11111"1t"fl 2. 3, l &_ 5 hdrn15, Sinn,.\, Hh pool11. f11A ·\.A1 (~ll1V. 1rr111~. from S2rl.(((I 10 S:W.!m COl.LIN.r; & \\ATTS l'\'.r. ~13 A«11ma ~"'C!· !l62.5,;;i1 ~ti l~e told ltUll 8~)' tM 11\w 1t\IU I ronirnirnt hu ll!•lll k1trl1rn rt R<ll:l'rl<, Rhr. 't~l·l~Ol l l'R , I I I · -..... . ~ , " t11r .i:ar. r..: 01, m· l1t1"1,:t' ~1oi.1hl(' ,t"arei,:f', 1rtt1n.1 Corona d •I M i r filed J)!'}ll;lf. No dn GI/Lo dn 110 $1ATtS fJ1 1Ano-' shioly 111·1"~ 11111! 111 ~ii J11n· >"llA. R 11~·m11r ~·llil. \.. _, .. ., .. ( 1 3~IK' llt'l~bb~Jf"hon<l. !'it'(' lhli GRANDIOSE \IF.!'\A DF.L ~IAR. 'R ~ !o r :<fll M'. Jo11rrov" Re111T), · ~ ·.' ""f:>· r, '•l6 ~.10. ~n1&1\ ~ll lf' In C'l'lron11. rlrl 3 n11. "'"P dln1na mi, hlrn \!11r. '"'<"II, 11/mO!!'.ll, hut 11.t kucilrn. !'>4~7M3. -BAYSHOR ES V IEW & POOL lr~~I 11'-. 4.l rt. lfll 11 11h1RY 01\Mr Es.~1 :ll)th Sll'flel. l a \'f'ry nlt"'I' 2 M t m. p!u~ Hn htlnu• tin I a-ln1 \\"111rrfrnn1 ruc-1 , hMlr , ~ nr f(IT'!n11I dln1n2 r m. hon1r S!I ;.<)!) HI' rlO 111;;~300 · ~, l>rtrrn•. \'ic\1' Imm 1110~1 Fn11' tl'N'~. 1IM c,:11r. I.· bt-!rt _ -·• · ~ "~-'-· rmn11, xi 1-l. l·i•. ~11r1ous c1! 11 t!, if • t.t>•JN! n 2, ~ hu1lrf t1 Y '' •• c I f: fl n tout ttll' y.1rd( Rt'(!· m S~.r."IO. ~"'l.ll""tlf 1J "~11nt11t1~11" lll'Jt. ,1111r111l'f: .. ~tr trlllh \1 r'ASH 8 111 Grund y , R•altor f'n lhP f'Pllr Only $17.'0n, \\•!Iii fl OAJL\' PILOT Sit Ba.,va1dr, 1\'B 67j..fi161 ,Ci,...n1c Pmpert1f'~ 6f.)-~~ Ch11tflt'tf 3d. ' WHY .R ENT??? \\'0\\1! ONL \' $16,j(Jf)': 4 A r.DJ'IOO~IS, 2 BATI-IS' VA ~11A rrrm.': nr As~uMf ~W ~nff'f'f'!IT ktAn! 'HAFF DA L REAL TY ~42·4~ "' tws1 .~1·2446 A iood \\'Alli Ad II a rl'IOd '"''t!tmf'.nt BONUS RQOM PLUS 3 hrirm_ 21.r h11 , ,i::pa·rious ffl.,..nhou~ .. wit'-A ft1r ffYIWln~ f11m1I~, Loc11 trd nn .creen· 1'>1'11 nl'11r !lhl'lpplnA, ~chonl1 11rwt ~JI rt'C'rf'~tinn. ()11·ner h"• 1ncll1<1M m111ny p;o;tra•. Prict'rt a.t $40.501 V11r11·n1. can n.. M'l'n anytJmf'. i)redhill REALTY Un1\I. Park Ctntf"r, Tn.'ine Call Any!Jmt , 833~20 \rOUl~O YOU BELIEVE? 2 BR hOm• on ~J(l'XlOO M·l ln1 in r11p1d dt\' att.11 Sli lOO. DEAXf; REALTY • ~16-7J27 • UNIVERSITY PK • 4 Br. 21, Bft, frpl. rpt, r1rp~. fam rm. $.il ,000. 011•n"r. ~33--0313 Call 6(:wfi(g &. Sa.\~! 0 l!eorrorige let•e1s of tit• ,--. lour :sctombled words b•· law 10 form four l•mpl• wo•ds ISNE P I I' I I I' I KA N C S J I' I' I I i ------~ ~ I TU DAN ' J· j J J' ? Edison's rivol: The greatest • . _ . . inventor rhe world hos e ve r ~--------known wo1 on lrlshmon. His ·1 H E YGI T lnomewos -.-. 11 ·S I JS J" 1 1 J O Comol•t• ft\1 chuc~I• euo111!11 b1 f,ffin; i<'I 1ht "'~~no w&rdt YPU d..,.~ from lltP No. 3 balcwt. ;~~::;·1 r r ii' r r r r ,r r-1 --=5-=C.:::R.A..::M-=·-=Ln::.:.:..s _::_A_::_N:.::_SW_;_:_:,ER;;.:S;..;,;..IN;_C.;:.LA=.;.;;S.=Sl;_Fl:.::.C;...;.A.;..;Tl-=0 -=N..;l;.:.O.;;..O -'' • • • • • lttal l•tJt' Ge111r1I R••I Est1te Wanted 114 Mobil• Homt\ For Si1l1 125 \VAN'r1-:r1: 2 Rt!rm ho1"' MO_R_f_r,_>:_t_"_"_'"_·'1·,-,-,-,-, -n" l·:11!<ls1dr Co~til ;..11<t.11 fir Br;it h. !ll'f'Rll I lrw, prlrn(' Ne..-:porl fk11;h11 r•1r rr11rf'l1 ffic ·h!I0!1. At!11I! p 111' k. coupfl", Up-.ln $~.CQ'l Vogt'! it~ '!!"IX! Co. Rf'aho1·~. J\'o. 10, 20.;2 __..:. ::..: Nr,...•.porl Blvd., C, :\t. JO-.;;.rJ, Flll!N, 1111 n l n i:. ~8-9,.U6. llOl'as;:,1" s:1soo ~-11~h . ~1/1-.17011 R 0 .cs~-- 11fl ·I 11111 ,(• 11 knrl"-. EAL T R Cash for your r.l1rnts • 11ttd Ja.nd or oldflr home '4'lih R.2 or R-3 • zoni~. \\I,. hin·e builder.!! "-'aitir\i • quirk f'll· rt'Q'4's, C&U 642-400!) ask for George 11faschmC'yrr: ~ Acr•agl for 1el.: 150 \\"ANTED 1o bUY-:t-plrx, !---~-------princlplrs onlv. Nrw or near SIZZLING. . . . nrw. 644.:1869. Oripnr1un11~. lo l..t'vl'I ~·4 111•rri;: f•w 1r;.ill1•r r 11rk or lt111 ('o~r ll011"..1ni: City nf Pf'rrt"-011nt'r 1nust sell. 011lv S\."1,f'(IO. HOPE GERRIE RLTY. N Business 11.\1 D1l\'f'r Dr., .B. Opportuno"ty l?\.J.4400 f>.1:'1-3320 200 80 acrrs TAKI': OVER all or * • .part, nir,ur11111n A!'f'll. lrrrs. rnll1rn: hill~. !"00 00\\'N, $58 n1n. 96!1..{»17. Commerc;a1 -P~_:1!~~_2!! SHOPPING CENTER * 100% LEASED * Grn11 lh IH'l'fl -•X!nt lrrm~. $90.!'lllO rlo11•n. 10.9 siw>nl\ahle. * ;, R:t~,..4172 * * ' Four Star Realty \\";\if!.. rnmm 1 BR <'prs arp~, Jlflnlld . ..,iar. Sl8.700. $3:iQO rln. bal 7'1o Cl\! 646-.ifi32 * Comn1A·cial i:.lnre \\"1th tar;?r 11pt 1100VP . $t7,:JOO. PLACE REAL TY 494-9104 Condominiums f r sale 160 "' NTICELLO Cniirlo, Split leve rl. RC'r\urrrl $2000 "1y lo~s. ynur s;:a 111. $19.ROO. By n1>.·nrr, .'t\fl-1181. __ ~ COUN·rnY Club Villa 11rl· j11e('11! tn L>lrs;.i Vrrch> Cf)lm· in' Clnh. 2 BR. Arllis: pool. B~· n\1·nrr. 7llll-:i1AA. 2 BR CONOO, lly 01l'ner. low do\\ n p;:iy1nen!. ~,;,7-!l+iO (,Ir 968-lfi29 Duplexes/ Units sale · 162 BALAOA JS!.ANO Duplex for siile Ry Qy,nrr. s1rp11 10 h11y .t hr11eh. :\h1kf" offer. Ph . ;:ill 6 pm. :t\0-:lli'iti. Income p(op;;:ty--166 BEATS THE STOCKSI 18 cxrr ~hnpp1ni.: ('r1uer. 100'~ lf'asf'fi. ~UJllR In brr a k up partnrt~· s"IX'nrl~til(' ('If J0.9"; nn $90 .000 rlov.n ra.\tnl. Pl"l<'t'd at !rs~ !h.l!l rrplacrmcnt cost · $-!7j,()()I). JG E;i...IRA 'lllt1l11y rrs1rl•·nt- 1a\ 111111~ in !np N!'11·rnrl fll'Pil . !'.!'' C;ip. ralf'. Xln! dr- p(1>r1at1nn . f.:irTnr. $1.-1,()(\ll [)oll"n nr try ('lr<1r l1nme in eXC'hl'lll::!I'. THE IRWIN CO. ReJ1ltor1 ·611} ~PY.Jl'lrt Cl:'.ntcr nr. :\f'11 ror1 .Ar<1('h .. 61-l·fil l 1 S U~IT~~urn. on lh~ hf';ieh, N11 p! Ri·h. $ \:iO,ll(lO. Goo<! f!ni·. Prine. only 611-4!00 Rllr. Industrial Property 168 M-1 BLDG. $30,000 1.2.ll f<IJ. 11. ~·nuns;: 1nrl. hlr!s;:. ,t· nlr1 hn\1,,.. nn 100' x 120' ('hOlf'i' ("~Iii .\Jr~a SIJP Rnnn1 1n tiu1l1I 1n"I'"· Wesley N. Taylor Co. Realtors ~llt S~n .Jn11']u1n Hill~ Rrl. :-;f'llf"'\1'1 Cr1111'1" 611-1!110 Lot s fo r Sale 170 JIM STOLL 17332 San Luis St. •4 Fountain Vall•y You art-!he winnrr ol 2 liekr1s 10 the Orang• County lnte"rnationa l Allto ShoW 111 lb<> ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ~·ovrml'lf'r 171h rhru 21s1 Plra!<e''f'l'lll 642-:-tfi78. PXI :'114 ~IY•f'Pn 9 11nd 5 pm to clatm your t1ckrt:.i. <Nt1rth Cnun1y 1011-frre nun1hrr is 5!0-1221)1. • • • CENTER e. ~EEO e SALESPEOPLE $!.000, OR ur TO $3.t'.m s10.ooo AND 1.IORE ~THR lr<T 305 • F,lday November 5, 1971 ~~~ _....... I~ I -... ~ I~ I _...... I~ I "'"~oa ... -Jltl HouMs Unfurn, Rcnl fk;iutiful f urn1!lll'e for 11.~ litrlr iu1 • ONE MONTH complete with your 100°/. Purchase Option lnrl. 11rn1 !«'lrrtinn, 24 Hour Delv. CUSTOM Furniture Rental ~17 \\'. l!lrh, c.~1. ~l111 •. 1\lll 1\nahrin1 77•1-2Mn J RDR \1, ulil p;iirl. $1 7.l. 1 quirt lr'l1anL 675-4611 S<t.rur- rl;iy only . ~-~---Ba lboa Island 1 H1· $1~ • 2 Rr $1:JQ. Lri,:. lr\ral tor Barhl'\Qr. Pool. Arlll s only. 1993 Church ~.1~-!lb.13. -----(Ll':AN 1 hr. l:a!I & \\'alrr llilll1. C1111/rtrps, bltns. Nr. O<'t:. Arlulti: only, 110 pefs. $1J.·,. j.\G-972.c'~· ____ _ $l~.0-1n<"I dlx ;I.lob horn", 1.;t"ln1pl furn, ht<I pool. 11.r\ulls, 1111 J>l'I~. 4 Season 's Mnb Esl. 2."hi!I !\'r\l{por t. 548-6..l32 e Rach. ~·or unf. $110 up e I Br. ~·Ul'/1 or u11f $125 up. Adul L~. Pool. &12-21~1 1 RI!, POOi., utiJ pd~~ no f*ls. $11~1-$l!"i(), -:183 W. l\'il.~nn Ap'!. 12. C.!\f. • • ii' • RACll~LOR pis hy !hr day- \1r'l'k or n >nlh. Uh!. ,t Hnf'ns furn. :I 2:i \~-. t~r. ~A. (near J111rhfll"I a:\l--0-129 Apt. Unfurn. 365 General VEN DOME l~f~'lACUl.ATE APTS! ADULT anr1 F'A:\·TJ/.Y Sl'rf1on Close to shopping, Perk. l !':pi:cious J Bfl's, 2 ba * Swim rool, puf l£Tef'fl * Frpl, l ndiv/Lndry fae'J1 , 1845 Anaheim Ave. COSTA .\!!·:SA . 642·282'1 q. c;:::., '; ~ ON TEN AC'RES l &. :I BR, Furn. & Unh1m. 1'"1.replaces / tiriv. patios, Pools Tennis Conrnt'! Bkfst. 90u Sea. Lane, CdM ~1'1·26U tritaeArchur nr C().1151 H .... ·yJ " R1\ YFROJ\.'T • AAYVIF.\V Aflrltluncini.-: chr quiet Ol)f'nrng of Rityporr Aptf< , • • tor Adult.5: Anr1 tlu~ ~hghUy l~s1 QU!f'l O(lf'nin2 of Bayview Apt~. fnr lam1!1r~. C11JI 171 11 &M~;Q;).'i -.. • , .I l . \ ' . . 4.0 CAIL V PIL OT Frld1y, Novtmbfr .5, 1971 Apt. Unturn. l6S Apt. Unfurn. 3'5 Apt. Unturn. 365 Apt. \Jnturn. c·-•• -t-.-M-e-.. ------,i Cost• M ... ;--·----·;;;;~-.. -8-e_•_c_h___ Newport Stach HARBOR VILLA Apa rtm•nt1 DELUXE APARTMENTS ' Air Cond • Ji'rpfc:1 -3 S\\•1 m- mlnfl Pools . He•hh Sp,. - TPMl!I Cr•l' • G~me " BtJ- liard Ri1'!'1m, • l BEDROO~I ~·noM st:io MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE $120 to $ISO The•• ·a rt tops if you preftr quie t living & privacy. l. & 2 BORM w/ patio, con:i:pl ~Rt· decorated. New shag crpt'g, bit-int & drap- e 5. Lrg Pool & lndry rm. Conveni•nt to • 2400 H11rhor Bl vd., C.M. • 17141 557-AA'}.() s hop'g . Adj. to Fair· RENTAL OFJo'!C"F: v iew Ho1pit.;I in back OPE:-l' 10 A."'1" TO 6 p~ of Fer row R lty at 2621 l•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio l Herbor Blvd . Ph. Days) • • • • 557.9049, E v 15 &· Sun1 El Pu1rto M11a Apts 546-9081 . J • • • • NOW YOU CAN AFFORD NEWPORT BEACH Enjoy $750,000 health club & spa; 7 pools, 7 tennis courts . BacheJor; l or 2 Br's. Al so i. story townhouses wl 2 Or 3 BR's. Elec. kitch- ·ens. private balcony or patio. From $170. 'subterranean parking, elev , maid service. Full-line food market, dry cleaner, beauty salon within complex. 7 beaut. model apts. Y am to. 6 pm daily, other times by apnt. .Jamboree & San JoAquin Hills Rds, N. of Fash ion Isl and . 714 : 644-1900 for lea si ng info. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS --------1 1 81droom Apts. Ew * Apt. Unturn. ' 365 Apt. Unfurn, * BRAND N SlJO & up. incl. tUilitir~. AIM I--'--------36S. . ' La Co5ta ·Apt1. 1tlrn. -f'nol & RP<'l'l"11t1nn Costa Mesa Huntington Bf:1ch ---~--- ff'Nic1:: 2 BR, POOL. GIU'. b:tns. rp1. <!rp~. Adults, no J)f'tS. Still. 642-8001 . S•nt• Ana CAN'T BE BEAT SINGLE STORY South Se11 Almosphf're 2 BR. - 2 BATH CA.rpers & d~ Air Cond itioned 1 !· 2 BR._ bltn~. '\\tn1min~ "'°rP11. Q111f't Jo:n1·11•r:nmf'~I. $200 MO. l mmar.. J 'BR, 2''1 pool, Jan;11, hllrcb...qup &· ~11r-Off sll"l"f':t p;irk1ng. No Chtl· BA·., crpls, drps. Avail. BEACHBLUFF APTS Privatf! Pati08 agf'. AU uril pri, $150 to SI70. dren, no Pf'I.\. no11" C11J! 5.17-776.11. Adults. nn Jlf'I~. ,t.IMI G11r.11,a;e11 >'or Rrnt 3M A1'oC11do, CM. 642·9irnt 19:i9-1961 ~Aplr Av~. *Delux~ Br, 2 Ba*· • • WESTBAY ELDEN ~£'\' 1 anri 2 Brdrm. ganitn 11,partmrn1i; w rpooL FR0i\f $JM AnULTS 2311 F:lrlPn /\\'I!., C.:'-f. 64~·:'17SO • • Co~111 r>1f'~ll ~uh.~. no pe111~_0l4S.41~ FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. 2 & 3 BR'• e \\111-.;;oN f;ARDENS e 2 RR. 11 ri RA. Cp1/rlrps, rnrl. pArio,' $141). 64:.l~Rl 1. • --1-B.EDJfOO ,\f APT-- OCEAN VI~:\\'. $150/nio. fi1 .'l-4'1.ll.l 1-.A-R=c~;=E~,-~R . 2 RA. hlrn.~, ~riVlte-patio pool • lndiv. frplr, dshw.~hr, nr ~hopping. 3 Bdrm * 2 Bath laundry Jae.' Jo:nrl. garagf'. ~i7-111~~. . Ne.\r PrMge Co. AU,,Ort .L __ M_h_F_ -R· -Ll~~g room \\'l!h c11.thedr.U ucr. Adults only. 1 ont r••. ent ceillng k f.rplc. ~p11r~te 20122 Sanra Ana Avej .l B~. 2 R11. Sm .. l4R-1.109 laundry are11. Eni::l p11 t10. ~gr 1'.frs Jt1ar.him Apt 3-A LARGE 2 Br. $14.i. Rlt-1n S\\•\mmin~ po~ & chHdren's · · · 54~215 ' r11n~f'. rp1 ~. drp~. pri. p11110. pl11yground. $200. No pPI ... 1\7.1--71 711 HARBOR GREFNS ~16-4.i."13 VILLA CORDO.VA e SUPER 2 AR e East Bluff NEWPORT BEACH Villa Granada Apts. Four bPrlrooi:n!I \\'ilh t:i11tr.on- --------i 1\10'.t; F"REJo; RENT e NEW DELUXE e NASS AU PALMS l BR, 2 BA Apt fnr lf"a se. 177 E. 22nd St. 642-364,i fru•l sp11r. m11~lf"r suitP. rl in ShAdy .111.µaifr~t' Eln1~ -Pool 1==========:1 l RR. $13.i. UN¥'URN CHILDREN , 2.BR. $14' VNrLIBN rm & rlh! ii:11r112,., 111110. door npto11rr av111I. Pool & Rerrr:o.11nn fl!'('ll . • $27."i • Rn11t-C11 mJlf"r Storas:,. • • • NEW • • • $-l-iO. NEW-l-BR-: l\111naii:rrl hy \\'lLLIAM \\'Al.TF:RS CO . • !UST F'!NISllED! POOL SIDE llli~ Ami,a;o~ \V~y. NB SupPr·Comlnr!11hlP-Quirt APARTMENT (101 2 BR, 2 Full BA 151 E. list. St. Huntington 8•1ch Must••• to apprecia t• * 6'46-8666 * 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;-= Gas hra 1. g11s ('O(lking anrl , --I' \\'Af!'r, 11ll p11 iri. l\tQ/,\.10. LOVF:L\ 2 BR \\'/11.· rpt. ON BEACH I from $185. 2324 EJdrn _ ~,. 14nnrl llr~. drp~. g11r. m111urr • or t'alJ ,\lana .ii:l'r: Barhar;o. llrlulr.•, .00 Pf'!~. R"al!. 22tip 1 BR Unfurn fr !230 /mo. 0, . &I' 11,2 Pl11r:-F'rll111 . 646-,11 60. ·. 11s. ,J· ----Furn1h11",. Ava ll11blr I~..,..,..,..,~..__..__..,_..~-~-"' 11\1,WAC. quitt-I hr. pRl'fly Ca.rpetl!.flr11pe.,-dishw11shf'r Pi1rk0 Like Surrounding furn. G11re'ir-s rnr112r, p11 tio. hrlltPrl poo1.811una~·1f'nnis QLIJE:T • OELUXE nn pto!~. Adult~ O\'r·'r 1l. rr l.~. rtr J'f'/Om-nN':>.n \'IE'WS 1-2 & 3 BR APTS 21.ll Or11ni;:t Al'P., C.1\1. pll !i<ht-/l n1plP p11rkinii: Sflllt. 2 Rr 2 Ba. Pool, Pa· HEA_TE D POOL tio. D/\\1, ll23J Elli~. 1142-7!;4~ PTuOty ol lawn ------Carport & Srorar~ 2 Bn. Ap1. CioSf'd i;t~r. cpts, oq 111, i·hildrl"n/"n,.11 Pct ok. liJDDEN VILLAGE 2.~ South Sahll $140/.~i-Z940. S&nt.11. Ana e 546-1525 CLosE 10 B-Pach! 2 HR. Cpt~. ri rp.•, ,\, slOl'f', TlO pt'TS, \~O/tnn. Ph. 5?.&-1l!l42. Sl;.(l. ,. 1p 11''\\' 1 hr, in· i;uli11r1t ('hilrl Of\. 17:.4'2 .li>f. fl'r'">n.·Ln 1'42-4>447 i\42-2.11.14 L.a9 ur1'18each e OCEAN V 1rl\\' -2.'111' !n h<'h, 1 Ir 2 Rr. $17.i Up. P ML 217.i !'. ' Csr. H"'}" 61 j-.'ltl9. :~~-iii~.t CHAR·c,,~l~N°C.c-;l--;:-h,~.-:c,.~,~"~' 1·Pfri(:'. 2 blk.-rn bC'h l.· ~hop~. ~1arurP pt>r!IOn. 4!M-.j1Hi 3 He11red Pools U rge Cluhhou!lt! elc. BBQ Child C11re Ctntrr Great nPw 1 2 & 3 Bdrm& t"mm $149 SOUTH COAST VILLAS lJOt MacArthur B!vd. 5-16-AA2.~ NEAR ~1. C.o.t. Plaz11. lovf'ly nu 4-pJPx. 2 Br .. 2 b~. lrg f>"l ill. l hr \\'/ ha]{'(ln,\', All bll-in~. freP lnrlry. ,l.f(}-487.1. Lido Isle -We1tcliff • L'~O~V~F~.L7YC72~R~c-. ~,.~;~R~.-.~,~,-,-r 2HDR.\f. 1 BA , lllllk 1 hlk ti) ~Ar, b!!ns, rrfri~. rrpl, cpl, \l',..!ltcliff shops. l\P\\' r pts & rltp, $;.9.i nn _lsp. :"ihown by rlrp!I, frplr. pa.tio. Adults. I' 11ppt .. >14-w.4~. #i7;·.-:19fi7. $17.i. &12--0239 Mesa Verde --~~=.,,...-* NICE VIEW * Upptor 2 Ar. Cpt11, drp~, Pnfl ~11r. Harhnr & A11kpr !lhoP'I?. t\rlutt.~. no ~l!l.--$141Jfmn. 645-l'">Li or FM4·1408 or 644-IJ7.l:I lor 11 pp!. DEJ,UXT. 2 & 3 RR, 2 811.. t>nel .:ar. Sl:,O k up. Rrn1,o.J Ofr.: 3095 f.face A v e , ~6-lO:W. N1wport Beach !'EACL!fl-' Milnor Apts. 1 Rr $140. 2 Brlrni. $160. Crpts, rll'I»', hl10.-.. c11rrl rli!IJ>01'11.L .17>'.r.i Pl11.l'rnti11, Av,., A !I k .iihout nur rl isecu111!. ~IR·2682. e -NOW OPEN e BRAND NF~\\' 1 Br, '$1 55, 2 Ar $190. ALL UTILJTJE.C: PArn. Priv p11rio. hilliarrl QUICK CASH THlfdUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT. AD 642-5678 rm; hPfttPrl pnnl 11·/ j11ruzzi.1 p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. hUl?P closPt.•. rlPrp pilp r11r-: I peting. lush l11nd!lrapin.11:. AduJ1s. ''nu Moi.1.-1 ,c.,.,,_ This Onr' 20102 Birr.h SI., NB. fi.~7-421F.. CLASSIFIED HOURS .. • Are You Letting · Cash S_lip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! 51. Electric Tr1ln f'rv p111los .._I-ltd Pools Cl.F:AN 2 Br. J~t nonr. $12.i. Src:udly g1111rcls. 1----l ~r !oho ~ * Adults only _i.; pd dultL...O\'er. ,3;1_ _ HUN:flNG-T.() · artin1q11e pts. "'-"'°'· PACIFIC ~BAVV IEW * l lfl!'l1\ ir~-<l-Mi:r11 . .-l.-ba1 rarpf'tPrf, rlrllPf'd, h1l1-in!I. $,;;,o i\lnnth, yf'lll'l,V !Pll~P. Ars1 VJI'\\' in Ne"·por1 Bea.ch. Ava.il11hlP 12 1. ~:00 a.m. to 5 p .m. 1. Stove 29. Bicycl• J\·londay thru Friday 2. Guitar ·30, Typewrlt1r 9--ta-noo.n..S.alurdar. 58. Kitt1n lm f'.an!a Ana A\;tl, C~i $290. :t Br. 2 h11, dil"hw11.•hrr, , ~tgr.. Apt ll:t 64S.5Y.2 fo·pl<· 2 •""I , •• p·r·,. ,-,~ 711 OCEAN AVE .. H.B. \' . <"" c;,"'• ","· ... ,, (71~1 536-14~7 Hacienda Hari;o,:--\·or>(i11u1rl Pl, C.~. iNr.1 20 0 1 10 ' n .1 T . 1,,_-112 r OPf'n an1-rm 111 y 0 241 Al'fM:•arln Strf'Pl ,•,,_,-,.-.~.tin I 6 . J 0 r \r!LIJAl\1 \\'ALTERS <XI. ,,s.,050 Delu.\'1> 1 $..• 2 RR. PM!. 1;:0.r. '"~' 'C . Dshv.hr. P"'1d Ur1J, YROM 1 -~1N~'0=1v~1~D~U~A71."""PRIVA'CY LRG-NE\\,-IBR. y,•floa·d~~f -M&IUllMIT Cl.,& _Sl.iO. fi.l~1'2rll Olx 2 Rr \\•/gar f.-s!or. 111 l'itOragP.. DrPs.<i'g-rn1, ba, V 8-RANO NEW V SPACE 2 !;, .1 Br ::ipl $\<10 up. R11, 11dull~. rrpts, rlrp!I. rl~h\\rhr, blrn~ .. ~h112 crp!'g, 204.12 Sall!a AnR AvP. tArrm;~ Htd pool, play yrl, (·pt/drp~. hltn.~. lnr·rl ~'r<l Y.'/p11 tio. priv p11t in. I hlk to ~hop'.': It from S.A. Cnunlry Cluh) bl1ns. p11110. l\1rls ok. \\'1r pcl. fiarrlPnPr mRi nt. 1•losr 1n hr11ch. 8262 A!lanla. Spac1nu~ 2 BR unit,., :·":1. 1994 l\li!.plr :"\n, 3 fi12-:'>:1.1 \:>.II hrt11·n I f.· :i. 6.'\f.-4120. !"1:t6-77llO. t"fRi;;PLACF:.<:;. rnv ra.tin~. '220li Collf'l?P Nn. :1 fr1:.1-71J:1:1. :lfiHI ,r;ian111 An11 Al'f" No t; Sl a.'i /\'R ('t('f'll-'o~f~m~o71-c0~,~,,--:,~,,=,.n lnttrlll nf closPi s. Helllt>rl N~-AR~2-RA\1/frpk. •-QUJF:T-2-81\1•,-R3 \'ir 11· l"Undrrk,· nP11r 0 r rllx 2 !'nnl. Ad . 1 1 ~. l\·1anflgt>r r ~·cl. ,\fPil l\r. S. C.<t Sl1tdl"! Ap t. HP111<'rl POOL. Ar. hlln•. r·p!!I, <lrps. lndl)', !17~.i~,, ... -n,,,,,.-n,-,, P a . Ch1lrlrrn & ~1nl Jlf'! Cpt.•, rll'p,(, i;:"11r. Acl11$, nn gar. nr ~hnp It pirr. $1fi:'i. SPACIOUS ·' RR. 2\1 BA, dh\ rk. 2 lr2 yrls. $21.i. 5j7-208(), pt'I~. F.·12-!l{l41. Yrly. Arllt!. Bahy o k. garai::P, pool , frp!r, nf"w 5Ji-811l-il. ~2-B~ll hhn~. ,.,hag :i:IB-11 .'.L e11rpet. Nr11r Hn11i;: Ho.~p1111 I. $130, L"p tn, Rrrlrr 2 BR. rr.1. drr. l'rfr11?. g11r, .4t LARGEcl;--;;B~P.-. ~,~B''A~.---,~.~"-,---,., $29;'1. nln. on l~. 645-234fi or \\'/\\', Nu rlrp~, Rltn~. 1>11nn.~ or S. Csl Pl117.A. ~rcturlrd port·h, qu ir!, df"1l<l· :'W6--142fi. D1~r.. l lllr., Nr .<ilnp~ .~· ;.,1:,.-2.~:.ll. Pn<l ·"'!. Ch1klrrn. pPt~ ron-EASTB~L~U~f~'f~.-,-1"-'-"'Y._~,~R_.c. OCC. PPrn1 Adl1 ~ onl~. Jll) J:r.F._.1_A~AA. n<'w ~hai;: sidPrtrl. ,\17.'i. 2 RR al.~ 2'• Ba-. hltn~. lrplC', 2 r11r Jl('!s.::i.\iµ)l},i~. 1·p1, $17~/nin, [r,.ihl v $1:.0. 7AA1 FJlL\, Apl. A. 2111'. pool, re<' 11.r ea. L.R~.\todt'rn--1-An--;;:;i . p111¥i1f'rl. Nr OCC. Carpori. ll47-7M7 or ll47--0!l:~:.I. 644-6405. Crpl~. <irp~. hl!ns, rl~h11hr, 1 ;.;;O-F.1.il, $140.-----\\'F..t;TCLlfV 2 AR rhtld ok. $150/n\(I, 1\ll uni 2R!f1.f,1. Crpl'i;: 1111 rooin.•, 2 Ar .. llnlurn, l'PI~ .. rlrp~. $1 8.'J/mo. Ad ult.~ nnly -Nn prl: .'Yl7 Avor11rln :-.·o, 9. t;trp.~. hl1n~. r,.frir;:, 1•11rpnr1. httn~. -.ht n \1 r lt'offie. $j() prr~. 1j2S Rtdford l.n. 64;'}-ft9i;4. lndrv 1·rn. $1.'i:l rnn to nio. n101·r 1n 111lnll'a.111·r. • •:YIR-i:>3~. DELUXF:2Rr.-2-R11-:-.c11r~ 64Mi!'l6t nr 6~6-1246 7.i.~ llrir11 . ~•:\6--4.~9 w-A,-r c-·n-r Ro0N=T-. -,-,-w~,-, 2 ' 11 ~I' r1 hr 1 r. ft 1 r pl<' . ZAR. ~·nh~r:--h11n~. nt'Y.' DELUX°El-R-R-11·1lh pool, RR. 11pt~. YP" ... rly. Artul!!o -!'pt/drp~/bltn~. Adult~ rpl~. nPi1· p11 in1, 112 Ba.. Sl.l.i'J.BR.$1.ii: 2BR plus chilrtr1>1101\,$400l\-lonth nnl). nn pPI~. $111,; mo. C'hilrl nk, no prrs. $\j(I, 2 h11, $Hill. !AA.1 \\'11Jnu1. ~,. v. 1/(1rvAlh Ri>11.l!nr 67:l-1~72 Yl!'ilrl). 642-11.'120. 714.'l-lllll:.I. ,\Jgr. 2:?0-\2th Sr .. II.A. PRIVAC\'-XLNT . tOC. l 'IDELl.;XE nP\\-2-Rr~Sllln. LGr.-:-'IRR ll'I 4 plf'x on 2 RR. Lr.a: Pril' p11.rlo-.-.=,~1o-~. BR, 2 81\, rrdPI', ~h:o..e:, Sha1; cpt. drp. hltn, b:o.lr, r11!--dr-~~r. Cpl~. clt'P"'· ii:ar. Cl'P'"-· rlrps. $1.'lO/mj). No blr ns. frplr.. p11fio. S250/mn pnv 211t. l child/l"f'\ ok. RlllCflny. N>lt w11tr r. $1fi0 Nr Jlf'I~. 15()3 Al 11 b11 m A. &12-1276. , ~::..4;6. .'-'n. C.oa~i Pl11111. ~~-2432 c'~..,..=="='=· ~,..,.---,---"r~A;;R~K,..-;N·,c,~.~.po~,~,--=,~8~,~.c,;--;b~•I 2 BR. l B11 . G11rr!Pn l111l1 .o. BEAUTJF1JI. OP\\' ri,.lux,. 2 NE'\V '.2 BR. Cpl~. rfrp~. r11n~. !or Suh-LPJl.<f'. H11 rhor "' I ~ha11: crpl ',1:, rirapP ~. Rr. :1 Ra 11 p1. ~'(Ir in· g~r. Onll\n HA . S16:i inn. Ray\'if'll'. Cln!W 10 pool & rlshwhr~ p11rlo. hr:o.n1 ('r1l-fnniiA11on, cflll ;,.i!l-111~ nr Ariul1~. Child 2 )T~ or undf':r . ~1111. 641-4:i24. inr;: ... frplr, i;:11r111:"r. :lii.ill 6t'>--:.l.'l:-.O. ' i'J;"17-61.,4, :\'\7-.)7Wl. ••Nl':\\ljf11..' -1~.,,-,-,-1~,~;,71,-,--,. 2 I Elrtf'n !l.ii-~12.\ Slli."1/\HJ. ,-RR "••rl•· I *IAH1~;-:\s=n-=2~BcA I -- -,, .... \\ anrA,R:P. • ' . . ' Rr, 2 R11, s.1:i0. 2lJ \!Ith -"1. fl: ~F,\\' In;: 2 Rr ~pl Lo!~ nf Adul•~ onl\. \\'atrr ,, ~1url1n. 1.argf" re nt·rd y11nl. 67a-02'16. I MJPl'willr"!t ,(,, ·1·Jn~Flj1., ~ J::lll'!i('nt-T iurn. $110/llln. F:nt•lo~rrl a.:ar. $1.~.i/n10, 1'n rJ<:ARI ~· hrllt h 1'f'l11lll, Jl('\\• rhilrlrrn nk. X°<'J fl"I~. $160 ! :.is~9:..i. ,. jl.Jll>!I• ... Ph. 1142-1.~!I, I ! Jv <1f'l'O r1111'd 2 Rll. Jn1mrrl ~~-J91i:l. TO\\'~l!OUs~·---2 A -. CllEZ alto 1\r'l'S, .-f~f'C'Ulllllll'~" ll.~2--l~t:, --" ., '· 1 srACIOL'-" 2 Kr . 1 q111rhr~ ~•h11 hr, OldPr .-'f111pl,. . t°7l-Kl4~. prtf rL $11\ --.-TRlrLEX 11 -- 1 ... ' Bit '" RA Sturlln Shag crpl'j 1hru~1u1 Priv patio. Gtir. $l!i.-\. 963--79:17 ... QUIET 1 BR. m1tul'f" 11.riult~. Pnv. patio, blu11, \.\/v.', Nr. E . 171h SL Shop'g. 645-41~. 2 BR T\.\"OhsP, blm~. dsh"'hr. rl"'lrtr 11 1·a11. , c&rpnrt,. $19.t 67H417, ;,.;1-11111 --1.J?o'f"\1tN 2 DR . nr br~C'h I.· ~PP C". SIRl JJ('r mo. ... ;;s .... 'itl:'I ,. DF.:T.UXi: nupl"x-2-~ 81 .• fJrt~m""'ffii' f261T, 61:1.-ff~2 SliO l Br ~!udio, ~itj ~hl"IT!f;. tlrf ltrpt, rt,.n, csir. M3..Wt et"'6, 21,3: !i.'l2-.5227 ooll. Sh~i.: '!'pl~. ~rlr .•·lr11n 0\f'll .~undP{'k. 377 ~'. s-i:H .\111111111 . J.2.3 1~n·~. (1.Jo:AN.i ·nn. 2,~ HA, ~nidf~ \\ a~h••rlrlr~·rr. ."t.'.t>-0:'\36 11p1. 1 hlk ln ncr1111, ~·1rf' \\'1li;ci11 :\.l~-3fi(l~ ------QUIET l'OOmy l BR 1n l'l"llr. P11rll.1• l\!i'n, ('In"'' lo Pnol. r rh·11.1f': 1.:ln~f"rl 1>::>.r. I ----lH'f'A, S'.100. ~ r)·I~·· fii~-24,i.'1 2 BR. 1n old H.R., nr p11rk . ;-OCF.AN F'RONT I RR, $1·10/nH). f'PI•, rlrp,, C'ln~Pd Sl:lC) I 11'1n. \'t1rl)'• Ct'PI!, J:At . .c plex 1.'(lrTil'r \tit. Nn d rrs. f>.l,l-3.il'l7, 'hnpp'2. 1 Sm child OK Jfi6~ T\utin A\'f'.. pr1~. Arlvll11. ll-1fi..220$t. STUNNTNG Gard,.n Apt' pool, ' BR·~. ' "" p11n' rll'n. SI~ lnf11n! t'lr •ml do I-& 2 RR Apr~. h11ns. p11tin~. i ~rporl!, crp•~. drps, .a•~ Ji 1 w111Pr pd . $12!> • Silj. nk. l BR. $16.". fi4.i·5.\lb. R42-366~ ------~--TRf:AUTtt"tJl. I ,, 2. BR. L.GF: 2 AR. S\25 up. Clr:11in. BRAND 2 BAth nev.' df'hJXe 2 Br. JHl llO ~'t&rl y. 67~380(} 'TRAILEP. for rrn1. J hr. S.~ mo. 1~1 I.· l11sr. Aftf'r :i. 30, 67l-.l74!1. ('nntrnipntAI')' G11rcl,.n Aflll'i r11.11n,, frplr. (l(IOI . s1;,o.$Hi:1 • Bltn•. SIOI "· liflm• \I I . rr f1•1g. 2 hlk$ bt11ch . 'R~R~A~,~·n;---,::,.\1 4 .Rr, 1 R11. Call :vt~516:\, 6~2-R?j6, ~·urii~. 7 dmr~ •o <X't>ll.f\, • IJELV~E <'ftl . rirp!I. ' "'· 1•, ''\'/r'I/\\', B• '" 2 & l nn·. $1~'1 l'f'. r11 Ho. :1 J'l!lfll. 1•hilrlrrn, \!ORI\ KAI Chllllf'f'l'i nk . SrJO. ~H7·*;,Ji _I Apt~'. IAARI \lr,r11 K111 l.n .. l1 4'-ilk f,. n( Rr11t'h, 91\2'"'R!¥.U , ---./I l,RG 'unny I AR UPJ'W'" ~l'\I rrpt,, h)1n~. r,.lt'1R Sl}\/m11. 116-• Mi t tlon ~4~'1271). . :1-WALK TO BEA CH I- , l.t1\,.l,v l. 2 Ao l RR '~. r'pt•, tlr~. l'l]!nt, ~1 hr ~lj ... 1~.,: s:1011n10 rr.iirl~. r.J6~Hi.~1. l Bil-('i)!'\tt(l ln Rluff' 11IC"11r111C'" .t rnn1 1..r~,...1 $.lift. 6~-1 1.1'()7 nr R.12-:'lli:'\ 1. 2-R°R . ;.m1~r r,.11t11J.. -Wth ~' $1lj mnnll'!. Qll Ru11y Al ~.l'-AA~l , Advertisers may place 1 1.-----J.lisy-crl1r-----·3 r:-nr Stoots ·~ their ads by telephone I S 4. E 1ctric aw 32. Encyclopedi1 COSTA 1-'lESA OffICE. S. Camiri 33. V1cuum Cleaner 330 \V. Bay 642-5678 6. Washer 34. Tropical Fish NE\l/POf\T .REACtl 7. Outbo1rd Motor 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 3333 J\'pv.·porl Blvd. 8. Ster•o Set 36. Fil• Cabinet 642-5678 9. Couch 37. Golf Clubs 'JiffilJTINr.TON 'REACH 10. Clorinet 38. Sterling Silv1r 17875 Bc11rh Blvd. 540-1220 11 . R9 frig•r•tor 39. V ictorian Mirror LAGUNA REACH 12. P ickup Truck 40. Bedroom Sit 222 Fnrr~t Ave. 13: Sewing Machine 41. Slide Proiector 494·9466 l '4. Surfbo1rd 42. L1wn Mower SAN'CLEMf:NTE: 305 N. F.! C11mino Real 15. M1tchln1 Tools 43. Pool T•ble 492-4420 t 6. Dlshw 15h1r 44. T ires NORTH COUN1Y 17. Puppy 45. P iano dial .free 540-1220 18 c b' c I '6 F C t • 1 1rt ru ser .. • ur 01 19. Golf C1rt 47. Crapes 20. B1rometer 48. L inens 21 . Stamp Collectlon 49. Hor•• 22. Oin1tte Set 50. A irpltnt 23. Play fllen 51 . Organ 24. Bowling Ball 52. Exercycle CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Dl-11dline for c·nrv &. kills i!I 5;30 p.m. t he day b1:- 1'1)1·e p11hlic11tion, <'Xr"Pl fo r Ll!onday Edition 1\·hen dradli ne is Satur-day, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED 25. W1ter Skis 53. R•r• Books REGULATIONS ERRl)RS: Advrrtisers ~tinuld cht>ck their adl! dally & t'l'por~ rrrnr~ lmn1cdiatrly. THE DA.ILY .rrLOT ~~su mes Jiabili1y for thP first ih· col'rcct insertion only, CANCELLAT101\S: W'heh killin~ a n 11.d ht !lure to make a '!'('<'Ord of the I<ILL I\'U:\1BER ~h·rll' you hy your ~d I Aker ns l'l'CCipl nf yllur r1u a·rllati11n. This kill n\1n1llf'r n111st hr pre· !<Cnlrd by lh(' nd1·1·ttiser tn c·ll.~1;' o( :t dispute>. r AN('f:LLAT!ll:"l' () H Cf)J:Hl~rTlll,\' ()~' NF.\V AO Bt:r<111r·: HU!\'Nl~f;: 26. Freezer 54. Ski B.oots 27'. Suite••• 55. High Chtir 28. Clock 56. Coins so Don't Just Sit 59. Cli15sic Auto 60. Coff•• Table 61 . Mot~rcycle 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64 . TV Set 65. Workbench 66. Diamond Witch 67. Go·K1rt 68 . Ironer ' 69 • .C1mpin9 Triller 70 . Antique ·Furniture 71. T1pe R•corder 72 . SiTibo1t 73. Spor ts Cir 7 4. Mattress Box Spg1 1s . lnboaed Spffdboet 76. Shotgun 77. Siddle 78. Dirt G1m1 79. Punching· 819 80. Biby C1rri19• 81 . Drums 12. Rifle 83. D11k 14. SCUBA Geae There! F".1r1·y t'ffort is n111d c 1n ldJJ. 01' {'•)tt'('Cl 1\ llf'\\' l"rl tl?.lt h11s h(",.n Qrrlrrrd, hut \1(• t'11nn,,t tuflr11.n • tl'C t n do l"O 11ntil the 11.d h11.~ a ppcarl'd In the pa-per, DIAL DIRECT Dtr.IE-A-1.I ~f; Af>S: Thest> 11d~ "'fc 5trlctlv cas h in adv11.n ce by m1il or 11.t Anv onc-ot our of- fice11. NO phone-ordrr1. THf: DAIL\• PltOT 1·t· 'l'r\"es the-rii:ht tn cl.11s· 9lfy, ('di\, CV'ns()r or rr-fu~l' ~n)• 11d\·rr1l~tmrnt, 11nd lo rlll\112!' it!I rA!f'~ & 1'l'<:ullllions Without pnor no tice. CLAS SI F IE D MAI L ING ADDR E SS f . O. Brix 1560, 642-5678 These ar any ~th1r extra thin9s araund the house . can be turned lnta cash with . a • DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Co.ct.11 ~frsa 1 .. _ .. , .... 92.s.:1< ........ 1,, .......... .,~., .. .,., .. .,.,~.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,111 ...... ~ ........ ., .... ·- : ( , ... - £1ld'Q, Nowmbtr '· 1m CAil Y l'ILCT ~-=--=-=-=----------------- A,urlmenti for Rtl!C I~ ~[ _ .... _ ... ~~I :..1 _ ........ ~. ~I Offlc• lent•I Apts.; Furn. or Unfurn. 3:70 Apia., Aph., ON f' Pl·N.CH I-----Fu ... orUnfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfum 370 "IRVINE" Widow"'" yi. Cost• Mes• ---1-----------------~·-·--1 old Kirt wishe• to rent 2 Br --iiERiiiii,i;fc:-''·l~N~t:w;;po:;r;;t::B;•;•:ch;:::;;;;;;N;:•:w:po::rt;;B;•;•;<~h;.;:;;;;"iJ turn, or unfurn. to ~·ork\ng MERRIMAC \\·omen or stud en I 1. \\'a 11.lerldryer/kit privil. Q lndustrl•f Rent•I 1 450 Auto tr•nsport•tlon 525 -------• • • JOE GUARMACC COSTA ME.SA 10,000 tq •. fl. I <'lear ~pan + yard spflct-. 33"3'12 Ameythat 110, 220 po\\·er & com. Balboa lsl•nd preS!ed air prov i di'd. COMMUTE ride to 81h A FloWf'r, L.A. 11:~5. Paid covered psrklfli. S36-87.W an 6 &. \\'kend1. YOURSELF • (You're Not Dreamin~~ • But You Can PINCH YOUR PENNIES • with a ·~ .PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIMES • • Any Item Priced $50. or Less (If more thin one ltem, the combined total cannot ex~nd $50.) 642-5678 ·WOODS Refs. 832-87& eves. P'SST! ~ .... You are the \l'lnnrr of Sprinkleq, fiberelassed &. 2 tiekets 10 the cabinet makers \l'eloqme. A Nice Ptace to Ba Together .•• , ADULT LIVING From $140 to $275 1 & 2 BR . Aph. with Terrac:as KEEP IT UNDER Shag cpt, drps. l0<tds of 1 close! !Jlil.~. pool . , 425 Merrimac Way YOUR HAT VISTA DEL MESA OFFERS FREE ••• REFRIGERATORS DISHWASHERS CARPETS & DRAPES OLYMPIC SIZE POOL BILLIARDS GYMNASIUM Costa Mesa THE 1-:.xcrrJNG PALM M1'SA APTS. i\UNUTES TO NWPT. SCH. F1JRN. OR U'.ll"F"UllX. Unbelievably Jitrgr ap1s, huge pool, J acu1.zi, C'l~l bhins. sl\ag crpls, drps. ~auna, E'IC, Adul1ii. no jX'I~. SrNGLES ........ t'ron1 Sl l"i I BEDR~I ...... fo'ro111 $110 2 BF.DRi\1 ...... Fron1 $160 \'ou'rr righ!. 1hl':,.'rr undc1·· pricrd• Jj61 l'\1esa 01'. (j b!k:s fl'oni N<'11•1)0n Hl1•d"l WeSliBllU -ELDEN - .Sparklin& NE\V 2 BEDROO:\I garden a~tment. Luxur· ious pool, lush landscaping. $180. Ado.Its· -J10 pets. 2311 Elden Ave., Costa !lft>sa. ~5-5780 or G46-86&:i A:'>iAZrNt.; 1\dult L i v 1 n i: Beaut. 1 ,i; 2 BR furn ot· un r Apl,;;. Sc-If rlean. o\·rns. D/\V lin 2 Br• displ~, sha.I:" cp1s. dr~. jaruzzi ,t, sauna baths. ltugC> pool. Merrimac Woods 42:1 i'ilerrin1ac \\'ay, Ci\f, NF.\\'LY R{'dc'." .. Cr \)IS. Drps. Bltins, Refrlg, sonte !urn. 2 BR upprr. Arlults on- ly. $155 incl. 'lltil . 64&-:Kl39. 371 Joann ~r.- PRIVATE PATIOS CARPORTS P1rty Room With Fl~EPLACE, T.V .. STEREO That's right, when you rent one of our super a"f;artments all these extra featu,res plus much, much more is included at no extra cost. Come see our roomy one and 2 bedroom apaff· ments a nd you'll agree it's the best deal in . towrt. Bu.I hu rry as sUpply is limited and they're g.oing fast. We're located in the Bock 1 Boy area near U.C.I., O .. C. Airport, Fash ion ISiand, South Coast Plaza, Newport & S.D. Freeways and jU!J. a couple minutes from the bl ue Pacific. BEAUTllUL LIVING THAT BABIES . THE BUDGET! from 5155 ~•rioll• - 11uHnf1 welcome Vista D.•I Mesa Apartments ' odult li•lnt 1molt pet• elr Ph . 545-4855 I ::::;:· LARGE room, linen rurn., \\'ashing fa cilities a\·ail., employed adulL $75. 536-1742 £1742 L BOA JSLAl'l°D \V'onirn T.V. Rm. Kitchen, SL'l J)f'r v.·k·Up. 127 Agate 67:,..3613 ~1CYrEL Room-Slj \l'k UP w/kil. e S30 v.·k UP ApUi. 23i6 Nt-\\'J)OM Blvd. 5-iS-97j,j. ' LADY. 1leeping l'OON v.irh ' kitchen privg1. Cosla ~lesa 1 area .. 546-9182. i FURN. roon11 private homr-. Nr. OCC ~&. Shopping. C:-01 area. 549-1061. , LRG. Comfortable room, TV, kitchen privil: Conv. llrta. S20 \\"if.. 642-1758. Guest Ho"l• 415 PRIV Rm r or ambula1ory lady in lie guest hm. good food st11·ved f;un style. &16-:t"l.lll v GUEST l\lon1e for n1en. Xln't loc. Handy to shop~. park & bch. Hon1e living. 64&-7513. Vacation Rentals 425 CONDO on Alaui, oceanfront. ht Floor; 2 BR., private cove. FUr ~ picture It rate shel-t call 645-4443 Rentals to Sh•r• REAL Estale~Sall"Sman. JO \\'ant..'l 10 share his 4 .BR & den home \\"/gent. SlOO/n10. ~·12-4405. !J6S.9006 "Bob" BEAUT. Townhouse a p ! sharr' \1·/prorr~~ional n1a'h or 11·oman. Pref. l"i-4:>. $100 1no. ~IS-2806. Orang• County 19th k Placenti a. lntern•tional Reasonably priced. Call or Auto Show co1ne. 548-3486. at lhc ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER .-11111).1440 SQ. FT. Ready now.;• neat Ne\l·port· San Di.-go F'rn'Y. Bldg fW.ly sprinkled. Cabinet makers. fiberglass v.-elcome. 2!MO Grace Lil. !So. of Baker, E. ol F'ai!"\liew i,, mi I Rep~ sentati\'e!I the~ from 9-12 -daily. 5,57-5.')8.) or 879-4711 ' ·,mbtr 17th lhru 21st se call &12·5618 ex1 314 -een 9 and :; pm' to claim your tieke11. !North County Joli-free number is 540-l22Qi • • • Ne1v \Vaterfront OUices From.$JIO ,,tonth Prim' l.oc4tion :Wt Bayside Dr., N'pt. Beach Bill Grundy Rltr. 6Th-6161 Store fg:int building, l-1-1 zone. 2000 Sq. ft. 2072 Placentia, C.1\1. 5-iS-7698 Stor•1• 455 RECREATION ve h I cl es , n1otor homes, trail,rs, cam- pers, boals. Holding tank ~~ ... ~~ ... ..,..,..,~I dump llation, 1 i g ht' d, ffiSTAMesa 5 delux pvt. of. ff'ocrt:i , "·ash rack, cent.ral fit'<'S or de!k !pace \1·/draf. Hun1. Bch area. 968-4788, tin~ rm. f"utn, crpt, air 962-2384. · rond. Avail all or in--1---------- dividuaJJy 11·/ans11·ering ,t,; Rentals Wanted · 460 S<'crrtarial 11erv. 1'~ro1n $100 TilO. ;)·18-3486. PRl.'llE LOCATION. ~P­ tion It 4 execuiiv~ offices. Plush, ml!ll i -sto,rY & air-cond. Lease $3XI. un- Jurn, S390. Fum'd. CAlJ.. ~S.&42.f SOUTH COAST REAL TY DESK space 11.vallable $50 mo. Will provide turnlture al $5 mo. Answering sefVice 11.va.ilable. 305 No. EI Camino Real. San Clemente. 492-4420 COUPLE nl"l'd$ 3BR lurn./unfurn. house or 11pl. for 6 mos. Sold honle, fast escrow. l't1ust move by Nov. 30. \Viii pay $300 mo . .No pets, no children. Prefer bfa<'h ~a. 213-i00.-3755 PVf!'S. BUILDER \\'ants lo rent 2 or 3 Br. hou.se in need of ~pair, exchange for part renl. 00-7377. Dl-.:SK ~pace a\·a.i..lable $50 mo. \Vilt provide furnilure at $.i mo. AnRwering R "flce available. 222 ForeAt Ave. 01\"E Bedroom in house $75 a . Laguna Beach. 4M-!W66 month. l\1EDICA1. SIJlTE OR 01-~FICE YOUNG'-Chrislian Couplf' ,1•/l child •ESPERATELY need 2 br houM" to ttn!. $150 md or J(.~S. Call 646-57i4. * &73-7194 * I FE:\1ALE teacher needs Air-cond., 10 rooms. 425 N. roommate m share 2 BR NPl\'J>Clrt Blvd. SJOO month. Costa Ml"Sll. house. Pool, DAVIS REAL'rY 642-1000 -'-'-"'~~~d~)~·d_. ~1_11.0_. ~"~'&-08=~"~·~-:-DESK space -available $50 R('Spons\ble \l'orking g i r I mo. WW provide furniture Person1l1 Announcements 500 Daily Pilot \\'alll Ads have sh11re 2 BR furn apt on 11.t SS mo. AnAwerfng service * bargains galore. Prof111ion1lly M1n•g•d by South•r" Countl11 M9mt. Ce. oceanfront \\·/s11me. $100 available. 11875 Beach Blvd. • • Develooed by Va,;,,~ ln ... ••1menh In<. & M.G.l.C. Equlli•1 C0<p. efl. 673-6821 67~3127. liuntinglon Beach. 642-4321 ~ntington Btach-l ~""""""""""""~""""""""""""""""""""""""~~~"""~"""~~2ii<jY~'~o~td'::'.m~a'11~•~•;·~i11.~h•~·~10 BAY VJ EW OFFICES e OCEAN VIE\'lI>ro1n Sll.'i. A Apts ., !'hare 2 br apt \\'/same. Deluxe, Alr.CondiUoned I BR. Furn. or tfifum . Dis-~:·;n, or Unfurn. 370 furn. or Unfurn. 370 S1raigbt. plenn aft 6:30 pm, Lido Area count for i;1udents. CASA l---------------------I 8-16-5378. Reelonomic~ Bkr. 6~ ~};A,,'36'~· 14th&. l.'ill~ut. HB. Huntington Beiidl Huntington Beach 2 ·r~ACHERS need 1 fenmle PLUSH 1 room 300' offlCf'. ~'':"'~~~·~· ~=-'h~=-l---;;...-----------------1 roommate, 3 BR ()n \l·ater. Parr or f'xec. Rulle. use ol KIDS WELCOME! 613--4624. rt>cepr. art""u. 518-78.14 :'l-1ovf" In Today! ~Br S139 & ,. OUR MOVE 3 BR, 2 BA, v.·/w cpt'g. Business R•ntel S156. Pool. Pi'1slok. All f'lC· dfps, blt111<, no pet 1 .1---.---------tras• 17362 "A" k,e\son Ln. $l 7j/mo. Call 962-42Z1. SPACE for beauty parlor or 968-i510nr 842-6ZTi. iiimilar operation, ground Garages for Rent 435 flr. Lit'lo Bldg. llJ5 Via Newport Beach Lido, NB. See Jones Realty •STORAGE GARAGES, $2:i. Servi('(' on i)n?m flies· or call PER A10NTif. RESORT LIVING FROM" $125 Tt"s Oak\vood t: a rd en A · 11n1en1s .•• and i L"s TO PRESTIGE LIVlNG CASA l\'IONTERREY 642--0391 be!ore 6 pm ~'~7~="~'~"-,;==--'7.~ • "G dbl G Ba St 01',FICE STORE. nrar N•pt ...,., • arage on Y , P t o r'r· ,~ It ~--~ C:'>!. $2.'i/mo. · OS • JCe, .,.., sq, , uuuu Call 5_1~731il. parking. $120 mo. Graham Realty 64&-2414 GARAGE ' tor RENT· STORAGE ONLY. CalL540-438l INTELLIGENT, maturl! girl 22-27 lo share house in r\e\l'J)OrL 646-8789 Office Rent•I STORE, Office, Desk SpacP. 400 !o 600 sq, ft. 11142 Nt•wpor! Blvd:, C. M . ~S--0588. FOR LE:ASE: 900 -"11. fl. l\f·l bl!n bldg. Jl0-2Xl power. f\.111.chine !!hop, garair.-, or .<;n1all bu.<;ines!I. !"J-iS-8797. 5.110\VH.OOM mfg. & off1N> .<;pal'f'. Close in Laguna loc, MR. JIM GWYN 317 Pescador san c1emente You are tne \\inner or · 2 tickets to !he Orang• Caunty International Auto Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER November 17th thru 21st Ple11Se call 642-5678, ext 314 bet"ween 9 and 5 pm to dain1 your tickers. I North County 1011-free number is 5*-.12'lOJ • • • WE MAKE SKINNY DEAlS! Sunset Ford tun, fine 11c1ghlors and prestii:e livin::: in me luxur- iOU!I package. Til'rr"s $l million in r{'('r<'HllOn ... s1\"immin~. t<'nnis, ~11J1arcls, health cluhs, ~Luna!'. pro- shop. indoor golf dri\"in~ ranitr, clubhous<'. rt~. 1 OH. 2 nice .suile-11 still left in Lido Bldg t abo\·,. Blue Dolphin Rest.l. f"irH." ror prof. or gen't ofc me. DroJ> 111 or call Jo~ Realty Servicl'. 675-3771, Suite C, on premii.e!. $!fl. to $1 5.""">. mo. 494-46.').1 5440 GARDEN GROVE I LVD. Industrial Rental 450 WHERE THE FREEWAYS MEET JN WESTMINSTER Cuslom Uccora1ed ~inglrs. l & 2 BR. f'i.n•nishrd & lin- ft1rnishcd. No lease r/.'p.11 red. i\1odc ls Open Daily 10 lo 8. O~,ffCB space for rent near Hoag lfoi;pi1al. $75. per. mo. Phone 642-31."10. 800 sq; ft. ,95/m~. CASTING F lf..i\1; l\'Q pay. All COSTA AitSA. * i ·l6-2130. tyves l\f'eded, inclur!lng Dr. A good want ad la a eooct· ....l)'pc. SUnday 12·2 254~ San invei;tment Joaquin, Laguna. Personals 530 Honey! Would You Take ' The ~ar Over To Sunset Ford Today For Service? THANKS! Sunset Ford WHERE THE FREEWAYS MEET IN WESTMINSTER WOMEN· WOMEN Your n1Rn'J1 hair-determines l101v he loo.ks. He coulrl be much n1n rc clashing. rugged- ly handsome \\'l!h longer hair, lotlf:t'r gldeburns, ma)': bP a mustarhe or g01.tee. You have to' utilize your hair to i1s fullest }!Otential tor hes! results. Sir \Valte:rs r.tusr be the pl11ee! 2052 Newport Blvd., Costa l\fes.a. SPffiITUAL READI.NC.S A<h'lce on all m11.i~ra Daily lOA.:\1-lOPl\1 312 N. El Camino Real San Clemrnte 49'2-9136, 492.9034 Palm & Card Read Pa.~t. Present. ~·uture, Ad· vice, ~ve, ~1arriage, Busi- ne5S, Pt'C. 893-9.1154. 7421 IVeslmill!>ter Ave, \\'Psb'nlns- ter. Daily 9AM·IOPM. ALCOHOLIC~ Anonymous. Phone ~2-7217 .or write P .O. Box 1223, Costa Meaa. GOING In Minn..?--TEl"ke a n1otorcycle to Mpls. and r.arn $7:'t. ~305 alter S ·p.m. COUNSELING & info for abortion, vascetomy & adop. 1ion. ApCare. 642-4436, Found (frH eds) 550 \\'HITE !en1alc huntina do&. bro\l·n markings. F o u n d vicinity Lucrrne Va I I e y ~·hiJe hunUnr. 89Z-4J66 or 847-8501. BLACK fu z;o:y male puppy '• 11 /2/71,. vie, Santa Ana flcighli; arE-'a. !).)7-9913 or 548-3794. LARGF. black & btl)\\'n dog, trained 1emale. Brown no!e &. !eel & !lea collar. 59· H1,•y., Cdi\1 675-6400. FOUND; f4?male Jrir;h Setter, appe8111 to be youfii. Nr. American & V!clorla, C.J\.1 . 548-6137 or 847-5636. J\.IANX cat, beautiful, af· fcclionate. fe~ale vie Los Alaml'IK , South S an Cll"n1ente 492-5490. TI.RED of that old runuture!' lt'a really not that hard to replace. Just watch the fumiture • misceU~ co.1wnns ln lht o ... w.ct - OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS Presr1ge living awaits you in ou r mai'!tenance-~ree luxury apart ments. Whether you are an executiv e, young ma rrieds or young relirees, you'll find livin g at Casa Monter rey a pleasant, relaxing way of life. For in -door comfort our l and 2 bedroom apartrpenls are air<onditioned and feature wa rm, tozy firep!ates, p!ush shag carpets and cus tom drapes, decorator kitchens with dishwashers, king size bedrooms and private palios and balconies with large storaqe closet. Year ·'round recrealio n fa ciliti es are jus t steps away from your front door. Whatever your pleasur~, .be ii swimming. a work-out in the gym, a game of b1lhirds, pracr ici ng your putting and driving, a sauna bith or reta xing " few minutes in the lherapeutic pool, it is all here for your enjoyment. Make the right move, lo Casa Mon te rrey . and start en joying all that preslige living has lo offer. USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! (Resott Lil'Uli: for !'111gle &. i\'laJTied Adults 1. NE\\'PORT BEACH 16th 'at lr..-ine &l.).ffi()() nr 642-SliO --Westcliff RiVfe-ra-· Spacious 2 Bdrn1. Bltn1, e11r- pet~. drllJ'<'S. hefltM pool Nr sno1i"g tuY.a, Adulls. Ask Abou r J.°l't'e Renl 1800 \\"rstcl1ff Dr, NB 642·5.'IBS The DAILY PILOT ORANGE . COAST'S leading • ALL UTILITIES PAID 1\1lull l~i'ving-Furni ~he1I & UnfurniAhed .. .. , 6551 Warner, Huntington Beach 714/847-8526 Prolt11ie"1lly M,n,ged ltr Southern Colltttlt1 Mgml. (1. ' If you've foun d wh•t you're looking for ;,i.MLE1ET A FRIEND P1ople who use PILOT Ct11sifitd Ads to . sell items they no longer need •round their homes •re nice people ••• ihty mey even ba your neighbors. Ju1t pick up the phone •nd give theln • ctll. This is just tnother ol lht grttt thln91 tbout DAILY PILOT Cltssifitd Ads ••• thet'r• so etsy +o Ult. S SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN J LINES J • ' " TIMI' TIMU TIMIS llMIS ---- $<1.50 $7.40 $11 .70 $17.70 ---' $5.80 $9.01 $14.50 $22.50 . $6.10 $10.76 $17.30 $27.30 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 py\ili1li fir •••••••••• J1y11 lu1i1111i119 • ••••••••• • •••• •• •• •• •• •• •• • Cl1uifl t1ti111 •,. ••.,,, ,, •• ,, , , • , , • , • , , • ••• •• \.• •• •, • • •, • ••• • •,,, • • N•m• ••·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·••••••••·•·••••••••• A44rtl• ••••• •••• ,, •• •••••••• oo\• •••• •••••••• • ••••• • ••••• ••• • •• • Clly • , , •• ,, , , •• , •• , , , , , • , ••••••••• ,he11e • ,, , ••• , • ,, ,, •• ,, ,, , • , , , lO F/G-Ulll COST ,ul onl'I' 011• word i11 e1d'lo •P•ce 1bn •• l"clude .,.our 1ddr•u o• pho"• nu,.,li11. Th"e eo1I of .,.our 1d it 11 lhe ind of th1 lin• o" whlch l~e 110! wo•<I ,.r "our 1d i1 wril· lt.,. Add $J,0!1 pl~1 J' li1111 .,~!ro If 'l'OU d•>ife Ule e, DAILY· ,llOT Bar ••rvice with ,.,1i11d 1tpli11. ------------· CUT Hiii-PAJTI OH YOUll IHftLOPI ------------ • IUSIHES~ RE~LY MAIL ftn1 Clt11 '"""" Me 111.c...e w-_ c.ur...,. Oron91 Cout DAILY PILOT r. o. lox 1560 C-M111, Calif. 92626 Clnoiflttl Dept. , .. I - • ft DAil Y ~ILOT • Friday, Namnbtr ~. 1971 FREE . PASSES You Could Be On'e of Today's Winnen 1 O Poln of $2 Tickets Given Dai,ly FOR THE YEAR'S BIGGEST AUTO .SHOW Find Your Name • If y_our name la llsttd In• special ad -It could «Ppt:•r under 1ny cl111lfication, 10 look •t them all -phone 642·~xtt~sfon 314, betwHn 9 1."1. and S p.m. to mlkl 1rr1n91m1nt1 fo pill GJS your tickets at any convenient DAILY ~ILOT office. Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT . ' &Mt and found , ....... '""' ][9] [ -..... .-]~ .__ ..... _,.....~l[Il] l.._-_ ..... __,J[Il]I .____ ·_-_ ...... ,~J[Il] Found (frH ads l 550 Lost 555 Babysitting GREY/Black long hair lrml LOST h!tle J1ngf'r ring wide _.C ' LI 'D Day Care, 7 am-5:30 cal, lelt front &. hmd pa" gold, chipped diam 9 n d. pm. Hot meals. Xlnt care. \\'hite, bad f')'e. f'rlf'ndly. famlly rlni:. sentimental "' I B d . liarhor/uaker area. Blulfs, El Rancho area. \'ll ue. ma y,·ay store 1n 5-:Hi-IS.39. 644-0139. fashion Is.I.and or parking MED . .lllZf' black male doi;. area back of SilverYlood.s, ... COSTA MES. Loo b ti-1. rve. Rey,·ard. Call PRE-SCHOOC' 1 •. H•lp Wanted, M & F 1lo Help Wanted, M & F 710 -· ·-Help W•nted, M & F 710 CHEF, male, able to cook I~~;;;~:;;;;;:;-;::~:::-::::::: l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J Indonesian food . A I 1 o , ~1ANAGEMENT people earn aupt>n•lse in kilchen. Some S800 & up. Company \Vill exp. in Orlnese cooking train,· invest req'd. Nttd prefE!l"Bble. Applx_ln person, aharp people now. 646-0949. MACHINISTS ~staurant Indonesia, Corona <tel Mar. First dass Traub screw ma- chine sel·up operators. Ex- per in. alt types of attach- ments, tooling & materials. ks part La , approx. ii S CIDLD care. 3 hra after mo's old. No rollar. 8Z72 ~8-879:'>. tale Licensed FRY Cook, t'Xper. Fut. Ap- ply in person, Colony Kitchen, l2ll Harbor B( CM. ..ii 18th & !\1onrovla, \.'1 &ry + .&Choo!, in m)" home. Santa r.1a.loy Dr., 11.B. 536-1?:17. ORANGE Stripped Cat. 6 f II d . Pl d A•a • H'• •• ,,, Alt 5.· . 1 ,. b u ay s~ions. anne " "' .., FRY cook &.oounter man. BLACK -le "UPP.Y, \'1i·y mos ma e, 1g ro\\·n eyes. [5l 557 ·~ ,. Su 1 · d 1 Lo t program, hot lunches. Ages [ I lllll" -oo.<u. exp'd or will train young ExceUent working condition&, fringe benefits, 40 hour, 4 day ""-eek, 44 hours pay. young Jn lront ol 'l.~"~ J)('r rt en y. s 2' 6 6 p S.. .., .. ~ 11 1,_ ~··i C 1 ,1 ...,, hrs :30 AM · 1'1. l'YICH •nu e1111rir Serv"icH andRe111ir1 Employment I CHILD care my home 3 ambitious man. 540-9022. Colgate Dr., CriSLa !\le:sa, a "'"''ecn ''1 e, os al• esa $2.0 y,•k.a:lMPARE~ 642-4050 . T 5.'.J?-4S91. .• · SI & Orange A\•e. C.!lf. ~------" children Brook.hUl'li/ & GOVERNESS for 2 yr old 641-4.12 c b' t k" ·--------·I Adams h:iurs 7:15-R:l5 2:(1(). bo L' . rt h ..... KITTY, femalr, a.JI black, · ' · __ •_m_e_m_•_•_n~g----' Furniture Y· ive-in, 1 e s .. ~ng LOST G r I poodl Painting & Job Wanted, Female 702 5:30 alter 5:30 962-2827. N.B. area. Must drive. $350 founcl Costa Mt'Sa vie. Vic· : ray cnia e e, HUSBAND too busy? Local ----------toria & )'.le)'er. Ca 11 "'rarini:: rert collar w/stick cabinet maker. Paneling, SPECIAL! . Avg, chair or Pap•rhanging CHRISTMAS mo. Call 61::>--2692 for appt. 11 hed v· 0 & " * HOUSEKEEPER ·• COM· HOUSEKEEPER 642-3180. a <IC . ic; range bookcases. shelving, ad· rocker stripped $5. Gluing, CUSTOl\f Poi"''"• "A1 R•••· PANION * ORANGE striped rna.le ca ! Walnut, c .r.I. &t2~241 all dit1ons .. patios. 842-264 7 brass Jl!l?lis.hed. 64:Hl866. ,HELP Live-in. Care lor ~children ""'/blue rollar. Vic.· Dana c5~'30::...,· ~~-----~I c"'~'"="'="~·=------I G~a:rd~e~n~l~n~g~-----ns~ECIALIZING IN ~~:~~~;~ly E:cti~~ g~~~e:~ 4 &: 7. 5 Days. Houseclean· Point. 496-3879. FEMALE short hllirccl i;n1all .. lady .. Can relocate. P.O. ing, laundry. Exp'd & ti-==~~------I µray kitten, 4 y,.•ht paws & Carpent•r AL'S GARDENING BEACH PROP.ERTIES .sponsible w/ref's. English Bl::ACK &. \\·hile cat. whitr vr~L Vic. Arco Station, LARGE OR SMALL !or gardening & 1 m a I l \Vf' kill the mildew & funl-!US Box 232;,, .Laguna Hills, Part Time Eves 6·t0pm .speaking. Prefer drive, Own fiea collar, vie 44th & Harbor & Gisler, CM. A landscaping aervlces, call tha1 is a known probiem w/ 9iG;-iJ. 837-6979. NO EXP. NECESS. rm & ha. color TV. Paid Balbcta, 675-'3810. 673-4733. 11 lypes \\'Orie_: Cut d_o?rs, 54B-5198. Serving Newport, beach proper!ies. \Ve do not Help Wanted,.M & F 710 $98 A WEEK~ vacation. $70. per ""'k. Raise A~y Mon th.ru Thurs STA-FASf, INC. 926 Lyon St. Santa Ana MAINTENANCE COUPLE Thoroughly experienced for large apt. COltlplex. 1-'urnish. ed apt. + m Imo to start. Adults only, no pets, Phone ~j(}2,'). >~'O~U~N=o-~,...~t~.,~-=-.~.,~,,~,..-1 ... ~D~E-L~l=A~"--lo-st--f-,-m-,-,-e ~a n c J, c~b1nets, 96~nl1:;i CdM, Cbsta Mesa, Dover paint ov~ tile mi!de\.\'. \Ve in . ~os. Ne\\·port Area. tool .. VI". Bea,.h on Bilbo• ~e. rrpa1rs, etc. . Shores, Westcli.U. use a provl'n method not APARTMENT 842 ""7 &!~.··. " .... .... Siamei;e, dccla\\'l'l:i Iron! 0 -·-• b .. _ "'-· ·11UV " M t H t ~ Pen. 67l-51il. A DIT. & Renair. cab. PROFESSIONAL G d u . .;..,, Y or,.._·rs. nt.·sl p..11nt I -~==~~==~-a ure OS ll~Sva ----------I paws. S20Te11;, Vic Adams & lo . r'. fl fl ar cner, avail. uSt'd on all surfaces CLEANING CONSTR. SUP'T 11SKPRS Empl)T pays lee. TO INTERVIEW FOUND: rRTSH SETTER. Arookllurst HB. 10131 eve. rnu,~I\, mar.lie, r: 1"· IITe work, Pru nin•g, SUPERVISOR Ap< .• _ --•· •x-r. George Allen Byland hgen· NE\V RESIDENTS pant'. Jn£, A~llq. Furn. sprinklers, clean up jobs. ·so y,·e can s;uaranlee a Jong. v • ... ,,rruu ,... 6 ,~1;;,ldentify af1rr 4:00. ~"'~g.:...::11~9~1 c"c'~'~'·-----I repa ir & reftn. S4l-T"911 1 ands cap i ng. George, er life paint job_ Lic·d. lnr large apartment complex. . Call Ml'!!. Schmidt cy 100.B E. l th, S.A. -Part Time -i'=·=~~~~===· ILOST: Contact Lens in wht ALL tyJ>('s ()( Carpt'tllry By 646-:>893. c615~>~81J08=~--------I l\lust be thoroughl y expcri-\VE~i'CLIF'I-' 5-17--0395. CAR & riPE\VRrJER NEC. FO~ND I R l SH Sl::."TI'ER. casc. Vie: Costa Mesa, 17th local man. ==~~----~-I * PAINTING, free f'SI. enc<"d in inventory control, PERSONNEL AGEN"CY HOUSECLEANING {3). 1 ~ Call ~7.;JC9J DOG. male. brown, small, St or Npt Blvd. 833-1835 536_1648 EXP ER. Japanl'se Gardener Homes in!er I exter. Ofli~s \\'Ork schedule & supervis· :Z0.13 Westch!f Dr., N.B. days a \\'ttk, own I miiiiiiiiiiiiiii ...... iiiiiiiiiii; I c HI U AH U A )'.1 J X? eves. l~=,-,.,,-.:::c;:c::__~-Tree trimming. Clean-up, on weekends. Accous. ceil· ion. Good salary. Phone · &15-1770 transportation. Npt Beach. ~54~~~';:"-;;:;;;;;;--;;;;i::::; I ~~~~~~~~~~~ 1·EXP.J Remodellng, cabinets, Lay,·n Ma1nlenanct' ings, 24 hour s e r v Jc e. ~>~16-~""5;·======~1 -iiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiOi I 67H248. repairs, maint. Ne job too 646--0619 or 5-18-79;)8 841-4l28. COOK ..:...:..:.:..:===~=--ORANGE " white ,,,,.,, I~ R &16-<224 --~-INVeST IN killen, 1mal1\. Vic Ney,~port Instruction ~ sm. eas. . · AL'S Lands('aping. Tr e c -P-A-IN-T-IN-G-.-.-1"-i'i-,.-,,-,-,-1.-A-ll 1 APARTMENT Riviera TownhQu&es C.~1.. ~;;;;;;~::m-~LCARPENTER. ··r.1an Jor all removal. Yard remodeling. \11o rk guarn. Color CLEANING YOUR "FUTURE on 10/31. Call 64:&-7796. reason~." Work gua ran . Trash hauling. lot ('lf'anup. spec i alist. 962~143, \Vomen !or apt cleaning In Exper. P /tlmt ----------1 Realtislic price11. 673-1166. Repa ir sprinklers. 673-1166. "Al 1'4I 1 1 M BE YOUR OWN B. OSSI CUTE ff'm ale brown '& while Schools & .,., -., · arge comp ex. ust be ex· 3 mQS old. fo~ound Hallowf'C'Jl instructions 575 Carpet Service LA\VN maint. & clean-up, No Wasting perlcncrd. Good salary. 40 APPLY i:N PERSON Men or Women night et Coast H"''Y & J..e· I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J . ' Li c' d I Ins: Larry * WALlPAPER * hr 11•ork y,·cek. Phone gion. 494--2070. Al.RDNlf -JQ!:(N S-Ca~_t k U~lstery )'.-latsuv.•aki's-G 111' de nTn-g --\\'hen you c&if "1.fac" -546--7!025. FOUND Black rabbi!, vie. Cleant.'N;. 1-~xlra Drl·Sham-&iv. 642-097f) 548·1#1 646-lnl ~~""""""""""""'"'"' -SCHOOLS poo .free Sco1chgul'!rd (Soil . , . · __ A f' T r.IANAGER-Re!iable Santa Ana Heighrs. 54G-2679. PACIFIC RPlarclantsf. J)('grt'Asrrs & SI RINKLERS. new lawn.~ PROF. painting-in!er/exter. couple, good .saleswoman&: NO. 16 FASHION ISLAND Lost SSS Day & Ni1<hl ClasS<'s all color hrighleners & JO treer-&. shruhs rt;noved. Honest \\"Ork. 'Li c /Ing. j1ariQyman. NE\VPORT BEACH a.JJ.6596 muillle hleach for y,·hite Hauling & c ! e a n -u P · 518-tfj9, :;.io....t·t44. ~\'rile Classified ad No. 189 --, ' ' SPAYED ~'em. dog, ~~Collie lilO E. 17th SL. Santa Ana carpets. Sa\•e your money &l:>-~6· PAlNTING/Papering. 18 yrs Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1500 DANCE _ teaet1er, must ha.ve & Shep. 9 mos, Bolsa hy saving nu:-extra trips. EXP ER. l-l 11 '"a ii an in Jlarhor area. Lie & bond· Costa i\1esa, Calif. ~ profe~ional b al I el_ Jn. Chic a / Edi n1 er• HB. V 0 ICE ~ns--techniqut?': Will clean living rm, dining Ga ·rd en e r . Comp I e I e cd. Ref's furn. 642-23.:..G. structor ~/strong la "Z"Z Rey,·anl. ~1262· Pop & cla.Ssieal. Susanne rm & hall $15. Any rm $7.50 Gardening Ser\' ice A(ist. Bkkpr $450 background. Also need LOST Parak~~blue & grey, Aultz. .,JJ.11-1. )'.~. @4.-7269. couch $10~ chair $5. 15 yr:;; Kamalani, 646-4676. EMPIRE PAINTING F1-IA VA Loan -clerk 15700 beginning lap reacher for vie Orchid/& Poinsettia, , · h · 1 Serving Org. Co. since ·55 .se.c·v. !Bookkee""r .,,,.,,_., 11.8. arra. Call 9.noon 1 exp is y,· 111 rounts, no EXP. Japanese· Gardener. 53-J.3749 or 96.S-033.5 .. ~ .-N 541 _3325. Cd~1. Call Deane 673-ti073 ' method. I do \\'ork myself. Know how, up-keep, plant Purch. Agt-Hydraulic S6j() ====~~~~-~ Re"'·arn. 1· SenW and Rtpait'c jf:Ll Good rl'f. 531--0101. pest, trimming, clean-up. Pla~ter, Patch, Re;>air Sl>crclary $500 DISTRIBlITE Health & BI.ACK & while male cat . ~ AL'S RUG CLEANING 968-3486. · PBX·GerK'J'8l OUice $460 . Ecology line. pt/lull time. I----------I * PATCH PLASTERING Al'P·Typist $oti0 Bob or Bill 646-7056 \\'/mustache, vie Dover & We \\'ash rugs 11.t our local EXPERIENCED GaNlenet 8 AU types. Free estimates. prr· "·- WeslcHll Dr.. Sun. Rew. plan!. 1rs the "Only ""·ay to 10 10 hl'li month I<'. Call S.1G-6825 Prr~mc ~~rk•ktary ~ hr DONUT Shtp work-Female. THE RIGGER Lease A -Yellow Taxi Cabl Call for ApPt 546-1311 .Mk for Herman ... ... We are now accepting applications for - NITE DISHWASH~R Part Time Please Apply Between 3 & 5 P .M. Or Befora 10 A.M . 184:'>2 MacArthur Blvd. {Across from 0.C. Airport) Newpon Beach 548-1778. Accounting lhot'oughly clean r ugs. 645-3?59 u ime DI .. , eeper $Z.50 h: Night shifl No e-xp'd nee. JRVlNE PERSONN EL . .. Plaster Patching Interior Sr. Ace!. CPA exper, $14K 2;,....i5, ApolY 135 E. 17th St. LOST in vie or Joann St., BOOKKEEPING & taXes. 20 ~:,~v Carpel Cleaning. Free Exper Japanese _Gardener Stur1.'0 Repair Extrrior NEWPORT Cl\1. SERYJCES A!'AGENCY 1 ~~~ ..................... 1 O f.; Female calico wear'g yrs. ("').:perience, rlrpendable. . Coniplete yd service Neat Sn1al1 Johs. Lie. 847-3'171 Personnel Agen<y ' --~=~' ===---NURSES AidE'S. al! shills. 0011.-w/"-11. 6 mo'• old. ..oo \V ""·y CM "'8--, 833 D D ,. DRAPERY Free & fee Positions k"L·d 64;H'sG.t vc rrasonable. 67:1·9393, 644-1R•l2 ·»" •. °" , t ,,.. w .<v & R('lia. Free es!. !'>12-4389. Plumbing over r., N.B. . Sec'y (Fe.e Pd) $450 Par Io Conv. Hosp .. 466 Baby•itting DUPONT nylon ca.rpel Ql!S Exp. J apanese Gardener 642-3870 WORK ROOM • At1ractive Personah!e. Gdod Flagship Rd.,·N.B. 642-8044. LOST: female Shortha.ired _..;_ __ ;;... _____ I shag. Rr-Jay lrom $:1.!19 sq. La"'·n Ma int. Clcan·up Pl,.,UMBJNG REPAIR ~"'::'~~~""l!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!! Sewing & pressing. Exper & SI{. dic1apho0ne. Laguna. NURSES Aide, Exp. Over 25. Pointer spotted brn & \\'ht. LOVING cart'. Pre·school al· yd-. Guar. 642-7101 eves. Trimming 546-l89-l No job too sniall AS S !STANT ~1'A.NAGER: trainers. Reach Draper.v. 900 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) c~I Retirement Hotel. Child's pet, sentimental. Vic 1nosphere. By Hr .. Day, \Vk. C , e 642-3f28 • Man fo learn drug business W. 17th 91., C0!'1a r.lesa. 642·1470 962·5531 968-5R35 50c hr. Babies y,•clrome. J-fot emenf, Concre.e ·LANDSCAPE and Gardening EA F.V. & H.B.. . . Cl ll 1 · COLE PLUMBING .wflocal lirm. Son1e retail DR M JOB l =~=:::;:==:~~=[oF.z~l.CE <>irl. lull ,;mo lo . meals. ~. home. Fned • • -. ean-.ups.,· au ini;:, exper. hcilptul. No Sundays. . . . • -~ » " 1f;~-;y~e~~~! \V~t~t, b~~ yrd. Day/nJ1e. (i..16...3348, GORDON THORN Sprinklers, C~menl. &12-6.132 24 hr. 5e.rvice. 645-1161 Grciit chance 10 advance to Prestige retl<lnl\l firm Tlf'eil~ J. C. PENNEY CO.-·· an5"'er .~-o~~e & rlo some ~ ' SP«NCER'S La •-Remodel & Repai"r m,·,ag-. Stort 1550, 1D \\'om_en .10 learn & tra_<h F h ' I I d Typing. ~a-.... 33. 8:30 to 5. Lilgu11a. 6J2·Z596. EX'PERIENCED 'thild care 1215 Pembroke Lane "'1 wn ""'·rv1ce, " "' a s 19f' s an ""·eekdayS for l'hi!dren 2.;, Newport Beach lrce f'st. Lawn care, Call <>JPan Bl'O\vn, '540-6055 profcs~I01lal ~akeup.E High !las Opening For OPENING for ~ime Con. 4 !\10NTIIS Old kitten. male. "'''"""P' '''' "''~ -?JJ CUST0.\1 Rrmo<l('I \\'ork. c,a,tol Ag•"cy po_ tenua __ earnings. _X('CU· fident re·1ail clerk y,·/1':\""r yrs. F('nCf'd yard. Lunchrs You ar" 1hc ""·inner of .... " u ::__· ..,...,...;:i_ ·• · j '"' i;:rey & y,•hi1f'. Lillie Balboa allera!ions, adr\i!ious, n1ill0r 1790 llarbor Bl at Adam• 11\'f' pos1 ion a.lso a~ailable. 1lt BEAUTY In ~cry. frozl'n food & 1,1,-•. Coll 67,,003. included. Just off San Dito~ 2 11cke1s 11) th<-General Services ~n,._,-,,, p,·,,,, 0• -"gh r I t II "" """""' •<..-•• , •vu ==-~~-~-~-1 or pcoona in ervl('W, c11 d('li purchasing. See llarold LOST h. C k A p F"''Y ·ne-or Bristol. J.19-4038 Orange County C.llrnont .... •. David" Ste"art, AUTO Polisher & l\totor lhesc nun1bers eollN'1: 1213) SALON '" -•-•. II ,· -T ,. "' • sm "" 11c .oc.: • -oo. ln te,na tt'ona l THINGS by J\.loose, Lt. •-•3 Ex 'd _, r -. 1 . A , C 1 11 BABYSl1TING 2.1 hrs. all 1 1 b &l&-1\0S . painter. P Oiuy. Apply 782-2314or (2~31 782-260J. OPERATORS Gourm('I Foods ,t,_ Soirils, vtc r1~ ve. "" oas y,·y.. b k Auto Show e C<'I., p um . fence, tile, 18621 Beach Blvd., H.B. or·liiiiiiiiii;;;;i;;;;; ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Cd~!. Rwd. 67~...0331. agex. Big & fen cf'd ac jnstlni;. carpentry, paint etc. Roofin.9______ •oil 841-~~·1. EXECUTIVE 495 E. 17th S\, Costa '.\iesa. yard. 642-1592. 111 1he 5'l:HIS20. .... .wi \ SIAMESE ~1al" Cllt. ahrrl. l 1.a 1 '~i=vo::c.uw:.:::..cc.10~,-,-l-0-,.-,.-1~0-r ANAHEIM ~ LEE Rool1ng Co. Roofing AVON PRODUCTS iJi the Personnel Agency Xln 't \\'Orking cands. ORP.THOtDO~TICC Ass~an&l· yr.splitear.VieEldcnAve.. CONVENTION CARPENTRY, painting, all t"P<S. Recover, repal..,, 1• I S t t $650 Outstand1nc Bencii•~ ect>pionist. ongenial ClM . S &I> ,1_ ,_•our ('hildren in my horn•. El Bo ,, y,·or us argest & nwst ecre ary o • ...,. ,-,,,11\g•"' Es-· 1 . SI~ un. ..... 1 ~. Novemhc>r 17th lhru Zlst crn1en1. ec. b, 646-6446, thermo rool coatirigs, \\'hire respected cosmetic com-For national sale~ manager. · · •-· · no nee. House Hun ting? Watch the 543.s275. Jlr. day or wk. Pleasr call 642·5678, ext 31 4 549--4398 Sm. job$ 1'lk. ·& color. Lie/bonded, since pany. AVON n'presentatives Expcr. w/oonsumer pro· Apply In Person ess. Typing. 846-923:'>. OPEN HOUSF. rolumn. Sell idle Items now! betwttn 9 and 5 pm to ('laim Hauling '47. 642-7 2'l2. can take advantage ot this ducts .. Top skills. ,,.. 21 Fashion Island, l\'B PART-Time MJn. !Ito ck * * * * * * Trader's Paradise TRADE Hom~s Korui Coast 1-fawaii for N~\\l>Orl lln'll Dr~. 15 10 J.11n 5. Arluhs inly. P.O. Box 1031 KC'alake- kua, lla\\·aii. 967::.0 TRADE Toi1 or \\lorld 3 Ar, fam rm, 2 Ba homr v.1/ great viC'\\'; FOR D:lna Point or Capn Ik11rh Prop. Q\1•ner. 49~·3.'U!l or 400.1760. Small camp. trlr "'f11ropflne stove, iN'boX, 11lnk & run~ nfn~ watrr. Also 1inr!. 1111~h· l"r n<'W. Jo-t>r rj('rr 11fle 11 ' srope or ~ml boat. 5.il-21•1! Jun~%opplnR <'rn1rr. Parking ;).II ra~. $17:1.000 c4(o11n, coruiider ]flt or 1u'rn11 u dov.·n paymmt. Arn1i;on t!}.i-7260. LAguna Octantn:m1 ""'""'· Trad.., rtown for condomln· 1um.ar Newport-O:lrona d~I M11r hOmf'. ~11ch Rf't.lty, 494.9575 H11w i;mall commerc'l bldg. Frtt &. rlear. for exchAnltl? on btytmnt or oc.oanfront houM' or lol. 6-14-6111 ni;,. 1~1n QI., Rt'Altl'1r~ lines times dollars ~ BDRl\I rental htln1e In Q('('an~tdf'. $1·1.00o f''JI,\ tsi TO \\'ant paprr or ?~ fflr $.~. lf'lll rquily • .\l1h Han!l<ln. ~1·11l_, .. _,,_4~~---­ Jl('S('t'l; Victorville Art"!!. nr E! .\lir11i::r. airport. 2" (2V,> ~err part1'ls. Trade for hrn!.t, Jll'Opt'rly or ? 673-1023 llfl\'e \'try dl'Sirt'al>te Nl'\\·· f!Q11 rnoor\ni::. ('l~ lo j('ll)' • ~· fl hrnut :n· Crul~ln: s:iit· hNlr 11/in hJY! 1no1or. y,:int 4 Bil hOlllt', Call ~~-1m1. p,\l.~I :->l'f~l:\'GS \\1:inl 3 P.drn1, ponl. S30 'W t.-. $.\.i.000. 111'\'e 4 Bdrn1, J'IO'"ll 1n Nl'\.\ pl Brh. $19,~. '.arnt 6~3X1.S/Evf': &t24&11 ,-60 Corvette 327 4 Spct'd. Trade for Pick Up or Car. 837.2547 your rickets. !North County --...:.-------• T. Guy Roo!ing, Deal Di· line reputation in succes!ful 41.0 w. Coast Hwy., NB 1 .,.,.,,,,,"~'1.,.o~p~]>O~r~. ~E~m~p~lo~y~'~',.. \\'Ork. Preferably over £'. 10!1-free numbc-t is S.1()..11201 HAULING. clean-up. local rcct. 1 do my own work. profitable businesses 0 f Suite H 645-2716 r-;-Hours 10-1. Big Fella :O.ten's * * * moves, exp·d college s!U· G4.l-?7M. r~IS·!'a90. rheir o"•n, Call , n 0 w ·I"""""""""""""~"""" I JANITOR. Expcr10Q.ced \Vear. 1912 Harbor Blvd. BI::AT Thr Rain! Concn1r rlrnt. Lrg. truck n eas. 5-10-]041. " Experienced -~==64"-'2_·9_99.:c0_____ C.:'11. J34 11\46 Sewing/ Alteraiiona IIOOl."S, patios, d r 1 \·es, ··"--~· ~-~----_......_,... • •• BA B y S 1 TT ER, maiure E xecutive Secretary * LIVE-IN Cook & hskpr * PART time help "'antl'!d, ~idewalk~. Don 642-fC•14. -;,Tes.~y Y11rds & Garagr~ European Drr'Ssnillking reli(XHlSthle woman. 5 nit es Pre\1ous exf)('rience in ad· Practical nurslfg e x per . arch1tecl 's office. various I QUALITY Crnirnl \\'nrk. J,('! \\1antrd: tight ,\loving & Al! cu.~roni fith•U. rrrl>Onal \\l'<'k, bllby. my honie. Oy,·n mirris!ralion off1Cf' prrfrrrcd deslrabh.• but not neces.s job!'-maklni:: mod~!s, color I G('Orgl' do \1. Llc'd. Boncl('d. Hauling. '.J"NT l.all"n Main!. rast11on lldvicr. 673-11119. ('Hr. tilZ-t.\!6 bl'forP :JP!\1. Typinl:" 70. sh. 110. Rrsporl. &12-9862 or $40-2562 aft 6 prt>sen1111ions, etc. Ca JI I 61;}..16!15. e $48-a86.'.I e DESIGNER B BYS!T'rER _, ;v. .... ~1tie, full tin1e position. R:ood I '"'P~"~'·~~-~~---$46-5441 k:lr appt. -' A . · . want= · ·-·· frlll,... l::N>~lits. Srnd resun1e LIDO I I Co I d · PRESSER IV 1-• PATIOS, \VHlks. drive, in~1all ·ARD, i;arage, cl('anup~. DrPssmakl""" _ Allrrations ~. 11 d t o .. -t , -.. ~ s e up e csire an""· f'Xper . '"" ov 'f' ni es, _,, rans . ....,. lo Classili-" A" •281 c/o · P "d V I nC'\v Jai\·n~. Sft\V, break, RE'l~o\'e 1rees. dirt. 1\·y, ~~11.st, Ac('ura!e, 979-0980 Q . D )'.! V 830-082S ft ''" " cxp'rl cleaning \.\1lman t1\'0 a1 11c11tion. Ask for TI'niovr. !J.IS-866R for e5t. s k 1 pl 'O ad er , backhoe. uinta r. · ' a tlY' Daily Pijo1. P.O. Box rnornlngs 11. \\'eek, 5 h ~k. 1.'>8o Illonrovia, NB. ,,1 .,,,,,,, • Dressmaking. A.JtCl'ations 6. lliO, Costa !\fcs.a. h R f ' O CEa!EN'T \\'OttK, -~b too•c_-~'-.:__·~-----~ eac · e s. wn PROFESSIONAL phone _ .. ., ,,, .1, Designed to 8Uit you. BE A UT I C 1 AN w/some EXPERIENCED transportation. 67J...3330. -''ell ~ Polo •--i;mall. rl'll~onablr. r r"' f' TRASH & Garage clean-up, 7 CAii Jo * 64&-&WG lolloy,•in£. Ni!"1.1>0rt 1 0 c. COOK """ or -udna t. ...... , Eslim. 11. &unlf'k. 5411-8615 day~. Free est. Anytime. 1-------'-'--ho Call 1 WVE clothf's? Conduct Clemente, Capistrano area. Alt•rations -642-5845 NC\\'l)' dr<:0r 5 P· a 1 642-8044 · w k in 548-5031. NPat, aC(urnte. 20 ;real"!i exp. 6, 675-8281. Bt'ehne _ luhioCon showaf in· n~~ d 1"'1 ur own hop me. Housecleaning FRONT Ofc. Girt for physl· spare time. n1m. ree i;>Qt ea n area. hone C •----·------Tile BOOKKEEPER/SECY .cian {internist) Plca..qnt clothe~. car ner. 892--5497, 835-1465 between 9:00 a .m. Child Ca re Lf . Chilrl Care. NuNf'ryr h · · · •-"--] aim-pl-·•. h. 1 l!OUSE OF CLEAN Builck-r as cart"er position personality & some Jrnt ofc a:IG-&107. and noon, '""" v~ ... , ~· CERA:0.11C tile ne1v & f }" C bookkee lh lunchr~ .. ~narks, \nrli\•ldual Con1m'I .~ Resid. Cleaning rrmodcl. f'ret' est Small ;~ L· · . d r:r 1 ni expt>r. Important. Ca 11 i\IAN \\·an!{'(:! for I Io.or REAL Estate sales people -•-. -. " .. ,1,2_ Free est. * 642-6824 * · · lie sc-cy. u ies a so. 64-1--0228 all 7pm. · maintenance & other duties. "·ant-'. Huntin-·" Ho,·bo•·, , ... "",.... . job~ \1·elcom£'. 536-2·126. Co "-I ["' '1" t ""-'"'"' ""' ' EDICATED CL nst. exp. "'' P ...... " .. s ""' 0 ,. A I · n H"ntl••lon "-h B Contractor D EANING LlNOLEUM & Tile sold 1n organ1zrd, hard worker. {GENERAL HOUSE\\' Ro, PP y in per~o ' H.... ,,.,ac prop. H. · rtn.s * \\'e Do Everythini:; * Good •.• 1 .. _, "·-" -m•l•I• 3 days, 9 to 2 pm. Newp:irt B<'ach Convales«nt osp, Oceana Really, crn. ol 6th the priv11cy (If your home. '""''"'~ ""'"" .. " ,., 1"'11 •·1 "d HB QUALITY i;m11ll gen'I eon· 2-1 hr. Call 673--Ml12 k 962 96 '""'l'llmo w/pasr t.· ex-Ml Beach. i73..014S, ""' r or1 a. · · PC.. l-l"''Y Sunset Beach l-H;;;;;;;;i.;;;;;;;;;'Ji;;'ii;;;:-·1 ~•~s~~fu~r~Bo"""h~.~~··~"~·--.... ~" '92 stn1ctio11. carpcn!ry, n111s-I Jlou5Celean1ng.By Day. s11lary to: 011.a ified Ad #)W:'~·~n;h:o~lp~>'l~U;:"::":':"~'~-56~7:'::":1::1:1d~l::•:•:":m:•:"'::w:'=====~=~"~-5S~Z1::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;1 011ry. 1'0J1Crt'le f'lt. Des!~ns, Own Transportntion Tree Service m Daily Pilol, P.O. Box plnn.~. ttl's. Nile~. K('n Call RJG--0648 Gt::NERAL 'frer.> Scrv. Yl\rd ];,00, Costa J',fesa, Calir. ,,,ir ... w.-12. 1-~-~-~~---·1 ~ srn "'R G ,..rw_E ..... "1<.ic ~!esa C1eanin1t Servic."e clf'an-up, hauling, sprinkler ""'""'"· . ..LJ:>.. ~~ .a.'"" ''i' :i\IY \\'ay. q111lity horn(' Cnrpcts, \\'indO\\'S, Floor etc. repairs. Rea~. &IG-51M8. BOYS 10.-14 ByCL\Y J.l'OJ..t.U't . remod . \Valls. celllng. nonr.; R.esid. & Con1n1c'l. s.ig.....1u1 [~~~~~~~~~~I to deJiver paper1 in the San -1_?. Aatu · )/-YourDoilfAdmtyGuicl. M rlr. No joh too ~m111l. • d Clt!m<"nte, San Juan Capis. MA~J: d ' St Y' 5-li-O(P.", "I Ii• '"'·. ,_ ""'• Housecleaning La y '------~'[ 1, •• J ~ · ' 1, .Accor in ti lo I • 111"1" • ''" " • ,., • E-' trano and Caplstr1lll0 Beach -Af,, To develop messoge for Soturdoy, .... Sl~·j29'J or 646-~I~? "'t"oym111t ~·. A-72·33-A' ,--•wo,ds<~rrt!s--1i,..,..tolll.A'nbets 1\n1111111n~ ... RC'm odrlina IU'C1' ¢:~.Ill). C'UU " '""" ..... .,, r."""i"k ,t. &in. I.Ir. Ironing DAI LY P ILOT cfyourZoc!iocbir1t..1ign. , ---------0,_~r;.uaus 1 T,,... Ji w.11 ~;:i-.ron • :i.Hl-2170 ---. mONING • 4~2~·1ZO ~. ,..,.,.10 :2Whfn J2e ..... 115n; Job Wanted, ~•ma le 702 1 r,., J Dool'! JJ l•t-e,,_. Driv•ways Rear.nni1blr'ra1rs ---t: • "* 's.~l~· A Y-J4Money 54&-0730 DAVID KINKAID )l.63-41· :.cm. :iss.,,. 11.A\\'l,EY'f' Or1ve\\ay &n.I p I I & NEF;O HELP AT HOl\IET 18291 Ch'cory """°ivu ~f<i....t Cooling & 1m11.ll J>11.rk1ng a nt ng , for Temporary Sf'rvlet: ' i lt:~ ~ ~i lQU.. 51:i...~t9."i ah. 5 pm. PJperhang1n;. re \\!e Ha"e Convalescent Irvine, Calif. t s. 3'll'lal. .Aides • Nunes • House-You arn the winMT of jOR.t6miD AOR...U Electrical PA I N T I N G : ll one 1 t ';! tickets 10 the 1 fWbld "'I.Ma keepers. , 12 DrOll' .u Mo1<i9 ftl&rantttd \\-Ork, Lic'd Any llO~IE~lAKERS/UPJOlL'J O rang• County 1>0.; s ., AlYcvr ELECTRICAL lnstal111tions ~ile job. Call 675-.'i740. lnternatlonil 14'T• MEmicdll' • &. Tf'plllrs. No job 100 Arnall. . Sh 1S,,.,..._ .tllt R('11.h ... rir prl('('!C. rrre e&t. YOU MlPJll 'hf' pa1n1 .. Rooms ror Pennantnt &-rvlct: Auto ow ~~~.., ~~ Llr'rf/ln~. :~16--0211. paln1fi1 10 f'a, Al~ ex· • \\'e llave Co~nlons Al the 11Teio.•, AITo --ttl'J"ior. CiJll ao!0-1046. e OoullCkttPf'ri • Pmcti-ANAHEIM 19.v.o-•9•t F: I. E :'I'RTCIAN. llrrnmi, -.--.-------I N 1 'I I CONVENTl'tJN 20r._.:1 ~v-honrlM. SnuilJ Joh!I., main!. r.:\11-.R!Oll-lntcnor. Qua.H· C'll. U.t'llCS etc.• I .. onlh)' CENTER LIO '''"°'" 51 WOtlfwohll• II' k • I I Rates ~JUt'f:1) ''°"" 52A ·,, ii.i"lffir!I.. S<l~.~l I}' or . Gu11ranrrn !a as!. · ' :;o3 u.. 53 ~ -E '-. +1i::J-l2:.,n h.·forl' 7ASI. JIF:Al .Tl l A N1Jvf'n\btr 11th lhr\I Zl&t ..-ua.11 24 ~~-!1<1. Vw ngrav1ng mR-;;lrtri .< •~at-"''"'tng, F'i\:\11LY C;\Rf; AC:l"NCY l'lct~e c111l &l:l·;i6~8, e.-..t :t\4 ~10.21·.f.1+43 1s11u .. 1r.. 5SCottMly rv '' " " tM.l No. Brondwny. IM't\\'t'en 9 nnd 5 pm 10 cl11im 64-7j llll'>n•1""'' · 5&A ... o f:XPt-:RT 111\ntl Eni:rnvlng 1nttTlror .t-t''C.lt'rlor, Call St\n!a. Ana ~7-66Sl )titlt t1clw1~. 1North Coonty v11GO ~';'''"'°" ~~~,:i Tn'lptt1r11, pJaque°'I, cup~. t'tc. l>i<"k. !lGR...ofili. 1o11~rrrf' nunib!>r Is S40.1220l 'l'f/l 'ul&.JJ 29""" ,!tc;,,.n ....... lm.2'rh oci-.21~~@ 6-55-66.73" +76-77 • 2 BR, I Bii, 4 hl1'k1 t<I h('h. AMOm11bl~ 7•.4 kttin. Trittff' lf!Ult for largrr LAJrunn Mthtt c"-' !tJ brach. $38,000 cn•nfr. · 494-:151 2. nu1u1f'!I. !~lS.27!H, d11y1, Vll~YL P-11.-,-,-,-h-.-,-,-l-,-R \Yll.L hab)'!lt .sm11ll ch!ldrcn, * 'II * /J;/.;,;;_stff.11 30).;' t!J...5rtH<4 {)00~~,'}6 * * * ' * &t2·515.1 t'Vf's, ,;peciAllst, work g11sr;1n!t'f'd. lil y home. 548-S9ZO Pomona The fASt~I draw 111 the West ·--~~=!,.='·:~:~::"'::":':\$/=Goo4===181::A:d:n:~: , ::::":":tn=l ::::::::::~---.i lila ........... i:·---·*---·*··11 DAILY rfLOT tor aetlonl J';st. ~l-584fi or S.Vr2182. SchocH 11.l't'll.• . I Call 642--5671 A Savel ' - TRADE Tu't"lvt.> fnot Ski lxlat, X; H.P .• John'IQp OUl· lnArd 11™'.I irailcr for pickup 1r11rk, eamptn.c trallf'r. 1'11 r, "t hnu~ p.1mT!n¢. ~-17·0i00 Prlrfr.....,r-lt\\·nc>r1thiP"l'MP!r..;. C'. \f. lnrom" $730. l'mo. EX· c-lv1n~r $17,;ro, ('(fully f11r n1ulrJplt 1"n10J: buUrf!"tl-- Porron Rr:alty, 6.12-1771. • • .. ' . ' f'rlday, Novtmber 5, l97lr DAIL V PllOT ':S l'--·---'-·""'~·t llIIJ I ~If JLDJ I -l~I -![§] ~I ;;;-;;;-;;;:;·I~~~ I . ··-I~ I -I~ I "".,. _ l[B !;;;-...... ~ ..... ~· l~~.c1 Help Wanted, M & F 710 REAL .ESTATE SALES Independent broker with nC\v oUice In norlhwest Hun- tington Beach has opening! for full tlnte s.alcsme.n. Call Carl Nelson, 8'16-6181. RENTAL AGENT Attractive. dynamic Prrson- al!ry, must have adequa!e kno1•.'Jedge of Jeases & renl- al agreemenis. Salary $400 10 start. Phone ;,.,1&.5025. Help Wantoll, MI. F 710 WANTED ~·ten-Women & Children tor representation in motion picture V.'Ct'k, TV commer. cial wor~ &: fashion mod'e:l- tne. Ne experience· neces· aary. Earn from S25 to $135 per day. Fcn-·personaJ inter- view in Hollywood Ca.II (ZI.3) '161·3461. \VO.l\tAN tG work in donut sl;op. No phone calls please. \\lincheU's Donut Shop, 2947 1-ta.rbor Blvd, C.M. 11~ Furniture 110 Mlscella,.us Ill ~l1Ctll1neau• TV, Radio, HIFI; Dogs 154 Boatt/Marlnt VRcENt! Lea~;.;: KING Md, C01'1'1P. f7S Stereo • wanted 120 ..... s_1e_._ .. _____ l36_11,:SCH!l:::::~."u"z"E"R_p_U_P1_.-.-.. -P-, Equip. 9041 Rlling 10' couch, antique radio coruole $175. 6f&..:xl16. SAVE "-•• .3 Pc. Wedding • l'JSHER KX-90 atuo amp AKC. Private party. 10'. cu-.. i.. ..... ~ ...... _1• gold, Beaut Spanish coUee 232 Cecil Pl, B, CM. ril1i' aet, very beauutuJ & CASH · •vv _...l """" ... .. table Id l r t ~.. d!Uertnt, white crnld with PAID FOR 40 watts,, phono, tape, aux. 837...st60 llnlahcd, • fits In b:i('k ot • go ea op u,,,.er CONTOUR cba!fs a e~ •y inputs Monit loudne PERFE . norma.J. atatlonwaeon $90. 1 glaaa, malchlng squ are machine, ,ufrigerator, 1gu yeUow gold rlnc lMert flM funtlture, appliane6,' • or, 11 CT Hol.ida,y gift, used mall kiU commode. 2 Blue & avocado tor. serving table, saddle. (inter.locking engagement & aridque9, Ono piece or cootour, tilter, coocenric pedigree Cockap00 puppies, fibt.;;laS!H!d s ns. ~i..~its.""' chatrs, 2 beds, 45l '£. 18th 673-1432• • wedding ring) and man's bouseM. Call day or nf&bt. volume. Wa1nut ase. Coat 6 wka old $15. 968-7918. St. (rear thru a:ate) Costa G 5 I wedding band. The ~ngB.i:'e-, 549-2241 or 547-7733, $125 mu11t sell $70 or offer. SAMOYED pups, 8 wkl, Boats, Power. 906 Mesa. · ! l arage a • 112 tmmt· rlne hu a ,,.,, Carat ~~miiiili;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 89.1-7791 aft. 5, champ, line. Reuonable. WAREHOUSE SALE * * diamond (n a Tiffany set-~ 557_2504 10' GLASf'AR, Johnaon s~. * , ting:. Very 'clear & beautiful KILN sm.aU dee, cenll'isugal ~nlrOls. deck, wlndahield Aiy.~x tape recorder, Rug J 1 M BEVILL Stone,. Al.L TIIREE RINGS .cu ting machine. Elee. V.·ax I II s lcc-0-:ol;;od c;E-c""="lb;,h..;:.Slc:",c'P:..:.Do~••~ davit ring's. Top shape, tm shampooer, 1''urnl!ure Ap-931 W. '19th St. fl for the loW price of $285. carver. 839--2438. . ,,.. lo You quality puppjes, AKC. f\tINI·KYDRO 8' Glen-L phances. Glassware &·mi~ Costa Mesa, Callf. Can all>w 11.les receipts tO Musical lns;truments822 '---------' ** 968-fil74 ** "Tiny Titan", new hull, 10 Furniture ~hold Hems, Fri, Sal You are the winner or verify orl&fpa1 cbi\. Wed· 3 Llne5, ~TfrMs, $2.00 • BEAUT Dalmatian, AKC, HP Johnson, Race-ready. REP. -need t"·o peoflle "'ho k n. l0-5. 2 tkkets.to the ding bands never worn and CONN S.O French Horn, 1 yr. good with children, $250. 675-4595. \\·ant in on the "'"""und !loo· I ll~l PRICE-PER.KINS t.fOVING Orange County i\tlrtt COl'ld Cost $825. new _£ .... ... ~ • Merchlndi"' " 991 w J9th ~ c •t the jeweler says eng• .. e-· . • • 7 WEEK old lemolo, ,, =·~,,,.' room to r om P. 38' CHRIS. Tr I·. ab In of a dynami .. tun pook~ , · ""'• ·" · lntarnallonal .... asJtin .. t l!WI or best offer .,. .. .. =1 * * .,.._...,.,,.. ment ring shows no wear or ''"' '"""" · "--k s Constellation, 1~·. • --"~ sates o...,anlzalion. E'•. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~ "" ~· * *' Auto Show 54}-7010 aft 7 p """"' er paniel. To rood.I'."~-~·~------~ ~~ ·• • SILVER scratche. Call own e r , .m. borne. "* * AKC -I• pup , , & top cond. $22,500. Day•·. tremely hl&h earnings • .,m.1 I TONE Stereo 48'' at t•· . "'"'no BANJO " S · h G . ~ · . · "'" ..........., a1~r 6 pm & panlS ull&r + "'" ~21 + adorable, loving. t:11 ... t i:o:: 21 3 I 6 3 6 -0 7 5 7, Evos.· tra\·el Lt desired, Call t1que1 800 provrncial cab. SI OO· ANAHEIM """""" ifJV"'..,.,. Z I /Zag . weekends. \V/c.ases. Very reasonable, APRICOT l ~· 8 Terms available. 962--6913. n4/557-2350. 496--3311!. . . g se\\'lng mac h · CONVENTION Like new 557-3083 • ma e l""""e, . :.--~~-----1 R E_C·E PT r 0 .N 1 ST Start AM··LETS Maple cabinet SfiO. Botft CENTER ·•AUCTION• mo. old. Clipped once SCHNAUZERS avail. now or 23' partially finished huU Xlnt Pr It blue vi.>lvet N' Drumset; '22" bass drum shots. noods p•m~'"ng.' hold til Christmas. Groom-marine pJyw,/fibgb., ·~· S,37:). .Ans ... oer phone~. Type , · ·• ovember l'ltb. thru 21st· Lud I ·• 1200 ,.... • ..-• _,,,, 55 .ANSWERS c~ir11, beautltul $85. ea er Please call &12-5678 t 314 HOUSE \\. g cym. . or 968-9271.~ Ing, stud service. 846--0839. 250 HP Interceptor .v~ wt l:~~na J~;J;."1~~:;-~tt!l.y, It . S!50· pr, rold upol. chai between 9 and 5 pm' :claim . Bst offer ~7-1557 5 YEAR female Alaskan i'IVE % Dex.le Puppies, all velvet drive, S350 Dr t¥>th ~ $50. your tickets. (North County Office Furniture/ • lifalamute &/or 5 mo. male. black. ·vel')' small, ·6 wks for $800. 544--6831. RETAIL SALES P~psin -Snack -Daunt -• • • • • • • • • toll.free number is 540.12'20) Auctions e~ry Fri, 7 pm Equip. 124 Call after 5:30 543-W70. old. S6 ea, 545-5978. '66 TOLLYCRAFT M E1gh!y -PAT PENDING * * * Furn. Appli. Antiques ...-grs & Ass't Mgrs Edisbn's rival: 'fhe. great-DECORATOR. Modet Home GAR G 3015 \V. Warner. S.A. "EXTRA lrg Exec Desk h1TIENS free to good homt' MALTESE Terrier male, 32' T.S., F.B., imm.'.l.e, By Large k s!ill gro\\'ing rel a.ii est inventor the \\•orld has furniture. Cal!· 493--4565 for A. E Sale. Sa~-S u n· (follo\v aearch light) \\'/glass top & swivel chair, 6 wks. ' champion stock. owner. A steal at $10,500. rerord & tape store chain ever kno1vn \\'as an Irishman. appt. to see in San Juan Furn15ure • Appliances .. ~s-n11 e 547-TIJ3 $125. Days 548--2592, Eves ** 9fiS...fi927 ** ~31TI aft 6 J\!ust see. MS-5098 ne>eds managers & trai11C'es. His name was PAT. PEND-Cop'-trano. ' Sporting Coodst'· Clothes • 4M-2671 • • ""' I noiv. \Ve are looking for ser-INO. _ .., 1 Boat _ T 00111 _ Camp. STEREO, 1972 ~. has • TO good homes, (2) beautiful Haraes 856 ~.:i MP 1969, 210 V8 eng., · & 1-full .stereo chanrer. ~1r NEAR nf:!'lv desk w/exec ~ Golden, i,, Lab Ret. 901 tandem trlr, Xlnt cond rous career minded people JUST ....... • • • • • • • • • 1 1ng 1shing gear. Many HORSES BOARDED ' 11 1ho wan! more oul of a job returned from mid\\'est other items. 20276 Lantana s us pen a Io n spea e , chair, 2 .side chain w/table Chestnut Pl, Npt Beach must sacri!lce. Lo ad e d ! rhan just a pay check. i\lus! \\'ith more fine country fum-8' He r e u Ion sofa & Dr, eff Magnolia 2 blk::s, s. A~I/F:O.t stereo r a I 0 $400. 675-Sll6. DARLING Puppies need Ride the Foothills & Beaches -"'"-,;;-9"6;-;;.-,,,~===~-I \\'Ork ·well with people. ?ttust iture. Interesting gift items. loveseat, round game . ~t, of Adams, HB. w/FET + tape dl?ck, still IB?.t Seleclric 'Typewriter !IOme en to Jo\·e. Part o! ~rvine. Ov.er 675 acres _of 21' CABIN CRUISER ha\'e esperiencc in retail Authentiques, 2-128 Newport tufted crushed velvet hving1~~---------I brand•· ··-new, 1v11.s I e ft Topaz Bronze. 11 .. carriage, Porn. 7 wks old. 5.36-$282. r1dmg area incl beach nd-75 hp: Ob. on trailer $850. selling and be able to han-Blvd. Costa ~lesa. (Closed rm. set, hand carved cofiee SCAT &l SUdN 11/6 & 1111. unclaimed on layaway. Sold ==..:...:;:;_c;:::::..:=.:;:=-~1 lng. LimJted amount of pad-546-6760 di ~1ondays.) & end tables. 675-3343. omp ete 1ning room set, for $3~. pay off balance of S2i5. 644-130(). TO good home, female dock &: corral apace avaiJ.... ;;;;--;,=·=-,c=-=~-1 e some dt'tall "'Ork. ff you 0 bdrm It dbl custom made corner den Piano5/0rnans 826 German Shepherd l 'ifi yn;. able. 28' Unlfiite I960, $6500 or arc hard ...,-cirking & respon· EACON'S Bench, 12~· Nengel su e, set 10, •. _.. ilt·" h" $115 or take over small ___ ;_...;:•:...----·I trod I bl & long, pine & oak. \Valnut bookcase' headboard, tri le , cuncu qu .,., v.• lie payments. Collection Dept. Has shots. 64&-1956 Pipe Paddocks 7-UU v.'ith e or trailer boat + " 'pl want lo gro\v wlth 1 .... •in ·slei h bed & . I P sofa. I amps, elec. ap. 714/89J.-0501 ORGAN SALE 4 KITIENS, 6 puppies need 12' shade roof. $60/mo. Cor-cash. Owner, 846-1430. us. ease send resume. g armoire. chest, 2 end tab es S75. pllan~s Sr misc 2012 N I~=""'"""'-·-----Coan Organ Annual Fall I 6 8 ho d * 21 \\/rite, Classified Ad #283, 645-1446. 548--3123. Ca-lla,' "·sta .. 'I•' a ·. REM.-Rand model 99, prin-CJearan-. Sav, up to $1000 good home'!. ra s/ lo rse capa tY * ' TROJAN lnbd .. D ·1 p ·1 0 ,,.. ....., " .... * 962-8125 * S40 mi.l. Corrals 25 horse Tandem trlr, 10\~' G!a511 ai Y 1 o!, P .. Bos 1560 \\'ANTED used orient a 1 SMAlJ.. Bungalow piano. M~923 ling calculator cost $600. on selected console noor · $35/ Corrals 35 Cos!a l\lesa, Calif. 9"1626. ' Kennin rug, appro• S•S', o. ~ o now SL)I). exCE-1 con d . d H d" 3 Fluffy trained kittens ed eapacity . mo. ro .... ·boat, s7oo. 968-3925. ... ... .... una. ~frig. s~.:i. inettc * * * Garage Sale. l\lovini;! emos. uge 1scounts on ne horse capaCJty $30/mo SALESMEN Call 492-337I, s. Clem. ~le. & '4 c:tirs·. Lrg. dcsk stereo equip, skis clothing, !\lonroe tlect ccmplometer, a1J models. lo\ing homes 1 blk, 2 ~allco. All facilities incl feed twice 22' ~.; $1500. Fully equip. ANTIQUE English Petliooat n :>, other misc. Jtems. 2013 appl· t " good S45. Rt'm-Rand elect COAST MUSIC 644-1612. daily &: cleaning. R&cho/tel, new canvass. table. xtn't cond. S. Ritchey Santa Ana. ian~. urn., cam· 1y~·riter, office model $50. NE\VPORT & HARBOR \\'ELL trained male Collie Prolesslonal riding instruc· Good cond. Inbrd. &16.-54i6. ARE .You tired or unkepl promises about your ad- vancement? Are you now able to handle a $15,000 a· year salcs job'.' ff so, ' eras, r-elry, dtmrator 962-2256 Sat, 6 42-70 7 0 Costa M-a + "'2-2851 16' C bl eru· 893-3439 FORCED to sell near new Items, tools, everything, wknds. "" "" Shepherd, 1 yr. 8 ~-Likes tion & rental horses avail, .8 n iser, sleeps 2. Appliances 802 Furn 8' avocado velvet so-Sat/Sun Nov 6 & 7, 10 am 1 -~-,""~==~~-* SALE SALE * children. Moving. &tS-0113 Free horse transportation 35 HP Evlnrude. $400. Call fa Tabl~ et!=. Abo Hecculon to 5 pm, 3nl Seashore Dr., * AUCTION * 8 \Veeks. old small nlixed \\'ithin a 10 mile radius. .Paul 52"":>-.0~. , COST + 10°1....-sofa w/matching loveseat. NB. PIANOS •• ORGANS breed poppy'. For turltler inf?"Tiation, drop SKI -FISH . ENTERTAIN APPLIANCE SA-f'.E!'. Will ,. 1 ll ••s 17011-=~-~~----Fine Fumltur. Steinway, Kawai, Hammond, •• ~--..... Jn at the lrvine Equestrian 20• Gl••tron 160. l!P .·l/O para e ca ..,.. • r.1usr Sacrifice M"'"navox & Appliances All Bald · F ""~ '""" .. ..., ENTIRE OCK!! -en, \Vin, etc, rom Center, conveniently located w/lrall_er $4500. 644-2693 DO YOURSELF A FAVOR AND EXPLORE THIS Relriger OPPORTUNITY . ~~~s. s 1/ashers;-IlfY· Convenient r.10VING to smaller apt. col1:1r TV stereo console, Auctions Friday. <:00. p.m. $295 · Free kitten • ~ mos. old l mile 60Uth of Corona de! Hideabed sofa. Refrigerator. dining table & 6 chrs, tools, Windy's Auction Barn ?.ion & Fri eve~ ·w 9 ?.1ale. ~·/shot5, needs bon1e. Mar at 7385 E. Paclfic Coast BR furn. Misc. 265-l6th Pl, elcc. saw w/stand & other .,.,,,1L N Sunday 12-5 968--2056. Hlghw•y, or oalf 644-l877. SELL or partner '70 Formula 23', xln't cond. l\tr. Joyce 494-TI84. • c 201::i111 ewporl, CM 646-8686 ... Work directly \Yilh nalional Firestone S!ore, 47:> E. Apl .... M. n1isc. items. 2Q.10 President Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'J FIELD'S Pl"NO CO. COCK-A-POO pupple11 need ARABfAN Dispersal sale: COMPLETE Houseful ol Pl. C.l\I. Sat/Sun. 11!33 Nev.-port Blvd. ~·~-~~ho~m~•~· 8~4&-~00~l~5~. ~!I Serafix, Sotep, Regis & Real Bo.aft, Rent/Chart'r 908 Cai25 + c;t·iina· 21'"' salt's .rnanag!'r, 17th St., C~I. 646-2444 furniture. 7S Emerald Bay, GUNS, blmctllars,-some-an-CARPET Cesta liiesa 714/645-3250 MCC.Oy mares, Fillies, & Lead sysfe!Jl !Itel guarantees BUILDING a cabin? Bltrt thrce calls a night. ovcn & broiler, counter Pay .... ·eekly Wl!h month end burners, $75. Counter tdp to honus. Ii!, Sl per ft. Rain guttl:"'rs, Chance lo manage yourself _0~'~"~"~"-".:c."'·-"'..:c;.s.::.:.74=9~· __ \11th a contract !hat \1•111 ANTIQUE organ. 98 yrs old, supply you \\'itb unlimitl'd $1.500. ~ ~xcellen1 co n,d. ' ·-· Bo h 494 62l0 · ' FA"CTORY OUTLET ~ .. na ac • • . fl(Jllt's ~ks, old music SAVE $ $'$ WOULD YOU-~> lrB coltA'.. Te.rmsr (213) 3.52-3624. USED Furniture-?.fust seU sheets, cfothing. furniture, BELIEVE Ind•·· ~ AUention An+ OwneN • .-pplles 10 yr. R.tg. Q!r horse. Fast Priva1e party. Beds, stoves, music instruments. 21651 '" FREE ORGAN~' ESSON · 1425 or '·st ofl•r . -•1745, K k Nylon Shags Sl.90 sq yd & up · · ""' ~ retrig, couch e 1, etc. ana aa Ln. H.B. Open F as long as you like! reg-' Aru'lreo. aft 12. ,-- 673-8088. eves tif9 (except Sat). ree est. Ph 839-02Sl istratio N obllg Just 5017.C W. Edinger, S.A. n. 0 on.. Pett General 850 HORSES BOARDED 9',,' Channel &ck couch. 6' SAT lG-5. SUN 9-3. Clothing, Corner of F.<linger & Euclid ComCe.O>AfoSndTayM, u 's30ICpm --·--------120062 Acacla, Santa Ana Couch. Trundle bed unit. je\\°t-1ry, misc. household p LA y Hou s E·ideal for PERUVIAN Guinea p I g Heights. Ask for Liz. 5 w~ekdays for Silo. Fully equipped, Location Newport Harbor. 714/96r 4840 for Info Boats, Sail 909 FAMOUS 26' Swe dish "Folkboat" recent comp! o~ul incl. engine, good sails. J\1ust sacrl!ice! $3100. 6'15-1446. 1nccn1e. . 4!!<1-8983 after 4 pm. ?.lake offers. items &. tools. 359 A Christmas, ~·ell constructed. • 642-2S51 $1.50. Baby rabbit $1. Part quarter·horse needJ e.x· perience rider $150. or bst. erter 545-SmS. Jntervie\Y by appointmcnl -HOTPOJNT Refrigerator in 10 A.:\!. 10 4 P.;\'f. 558-7071 good condition. $35. a.sk for l\lr. l\lcGuy. * ;,.;g.ggio * * 962--8595 .+ Woo:lland Pl, C.J\I. (oil 6'x3', salety glass stidiJlg LO\VREY Pianos & Organs: ** 5'16-9965 ** \\'ILL move anything you Tustin I . v.·indq,11.•s, #liters, curtains, Yamaba Piano & Organs; & CHINCHILLA. male $10 -SAL ESLADY Pirime_Fpr Christmas Rush. Apply in person. KIRK JEWELERS 2300 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa SALES \VITH ~IANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITY Looking for a. Jo ca I s_ales~an for career w/\rg f1nanc1al institution . Substantial salary + com· missions for a 3 yt. period. i\1arried, college gi-ad or 011·ner of a business piTf'd. Call 6~&-8972 be!\\'e"Cn 5:30 & 7 pm. :'11/F. SALES DECORATOR :\lust be cxper. in sales for cstab. furniture co. Send resu1nc to Classified ad # 26.J Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box 1560, Costa l\1esa, Ca 9262'6. SALES Gir l, 8 hrs Monrrues, p/lime on wknds. for Bottle Boutique Shop as a demons!rator. Ap. ply in person, 301 i\larine Avr. No. 6, Balb()ll Island. SALES -Luzier Cosn1elics, sister company of Clairol, m 1err1tory, no inventory. 8-16--{)9.14. SHARP girl f Dr escluslve clirntcle. nlUSI know some hookkC'Cping & havC" a Uair for decoraung. 642-S•IOO. ** SECRETARY parl time, 3 days \\"t'ek. Salary S2.50 hr. ;).16-:'>441. SECRETAR\", espe.r. Ac- curate typing requ i red. Laguna Hill!!. Call 837-2020 ext 235 for appt. SERVICF. station, f/tirne dnys. Also. p/1 ln1e 1\•knds. Arco 19th & ~e .... 1>0rt Blvd .. c.~1. SERVICE estah. Fu l ler Brush Customers, C.i\1. Up to $160 v.·kly to 5larL 962--0416. THE \\'onderful \\'orld Of Movi,.s Could g,.. Your .•• BRIGHT PROMISE Nev.• F11<ces No1v Needcd For' i\111jor ... • TALENT HUNT !:Z\31 •161-Wtil * THELMA MACDONALD * 17961 Spicewood Way Irvine You are lhe wtnnl't of 2 tlekels to I.he Orange County lntern1tlonal Auto Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER NO\•cmbcr ITlh thMJ Zl•t Please call 612-S678, ext 31~ ~t\\·ttn 9 and S pm t9' claim your tickc!.s. (Norm'""County mll-froe number I• MO·l220.) • • • Turn ut1usM lte:m1 lnto qufck O,sh., call 642-.5671 buy \n this column & more NO junk! Photo Libr; like buill·in furniture. S7j, 1599 A Steinway Pianos. Best buys Pair Ring-neck Doves $5 KEN J\1 0 RE dishwastler, ~164S. new clothes: furo..: new Coriander Dr, C.M. 546--8177 In new & usc.tl. Schmidt * 5'16-9965 * FOR...,Sale or lease, 8 yr. old CAL 20, S2650 6 Hp Evlnrude, Bow Pulpit, head, Anod Spars. Hunl Harbour. (213) 592 -155 7 CTI4) ·wood cutting hoard top. Ex. NE\V Mlfo '°ld 1325. Take itl"ms for X-mas gifts. Sat H 0 USEFUL of good Mllllic Co .• Est 1914, 1907 N. Bay Gelding. Very gentle ccnd. \Vh!Te S7j. 962-7689. & s ~ A do Cd'! J\1ain, ~·n•-Ana. Catt 852 .. ~u. .... "'l791. 1129: Never used loevseat 67"r.:t....,. voca • 1' • f11rniture. clothes & mi~. ~ "' ~ .,...,... FRJGIDAIRE refrig. 2 door, avail. 639-6023; 968-5806. Rel{il;. stereo con 5 0 I e . PLAYER piano for sale, exc. CAT OWNERS BLK/WHT Pinto gelding. 15 avocado. Good oond. ~.=_:c:;..:::::::...:.:.:..:c...:c._ 1,GARAGE Sale: Games for ReaY 3()M l\'loloka! Pl, cor-cond. comp!. rclin. "''fac. No board in .... , no ex,..,....,, .... ID hands, Good for show, 846-2208. ' L-36 Sloop. Beautiful con. dJtion. New masr, winches. Completely ref.inJshed. Ex- cellent racing r e c 0 rd • 673-8148. 833 3111 Early America couch. is. ,...,., ... ,,. ·· · Orange tweed, Like new! Christmas. Antiques. Rock nt-T of GlbraJrar & l\1olokia, cept any reas ofr. 837·5525 infection. Keep pell! happy gentle. $250. 642-0634. • ,\IA YTAG n1an·washers/ s;,o. S42-8~ polishei;. Furniture. Trunks, Mesa Verde. 557---0-196. anyUme: a t home, haVe me feed them. WINTER your horse Jn a dryers/mt('h sets. Oi>J.90 day etc. 3302 W. Oceanfront, •K=l~T~c=H~E=N~-A~-~,d~-po-rt BABY Grande B re o ks 962--0250. clean, dry, well lighted box guar. 531-8637: 839-1778. , OrBfR'.e Na~:;,ahyde Sola N.B. Sa.t k Sun. dishw~hr. perf SIOO. N11.ugh Evans. beaut. tone. $475. DARLING PART PERSIAN stall. 962-8679. ~QUA Frigidaire elec. * 642_2869 + COUCHES-tables • beds • recliner S25. Bro.lded rugs 54~2673. KITI'ENS. $3 to good • \1;1.sher & dryer. $125 or be'st washt-l" & dryer . nnt belly 9xl2 & 6x9 + 2 i;m rugs, S 828 homes. 642-4818. Livestock 858 P-28 S11-edlsh Sliiop, head ----room, encl head, inbrd, xln't ONS · ld h "" ewing Machines offer. 968-7366. Srl\tM cc1n go couc . stove & misc. This \\'knd g. nice oond. $l5 total. (2) !hl;l2 ---"_...,._...;.; __ _ 1/2 Peraian Kltten5 CHRISfJ\1AS-Goose, Duck.~. cond. For sale or !rad& up. BRONZE Frigidairf" dble dr. $25. Like new. 5. 644-83J.Y. 14 Hermitage cl"pts S15 ea. 962-8&17 ' fros! free relrig. $22;). * Call S.16-1~73 Ln. Big Canyon lro=R==T-. -J~,-"-,,,,~~Wh=ir~l-.,,.-1 REPAIRS $15 ** 642-7578 Bantams f75c to S2.) 2612 548-3685. Oogt 854 Mesa Drl~e. Back Bay. if!;Az~L~BO=A=T-,-1-,-t ,-,-lf 642-6i16 673-6908 2 TURQUOISE occasional GARAGE sale SAT & SUN 9 bath, u~ l'Y.·iei?, cost $350. Any & all makes, Special this "·eek. Clean. oil & check, $1.9!J. All \\'<Irk littnsed & $1 OFF WITH w~yd. <folly. Xlnt cond. I l[tL ] &1;2ro5. r-.IAYTAG por!able dryer, chairs; S25. c11. to 5, iOO Poinsettia, Corona asking S150. 4 l!i,:in ,.Russlan cop)X'rtone, like new. See to ~i·6349 del t.tar. Furniture. skis, sable neck Pieces, perl!'ct THIS AO -BolJ!.~ , guaranteed. Sewing Center, p 1 __........ 26' ARIEL F/G .sip, Comp] apprf"Ciatc $60. 833-1973 CHINA cabinet, oak. antique, boots, guitar, 'Ir o 11 er, cone!. Cos! S2500. asking ~·hite. good conchtion S50. surfboard, t'lc. $1000. 642-8559. 5"5--B238. ro es.~ional Groorning &, ..,. · 'd A 1 Bathing • All breeds of dogs. ~-.uip · · cone!'. Slip Large dogs accepted. avail. Ofle·r, 644--0107. \VESTI~G~tOUSE EI e ct. Dryer, used one month. 320:; Dako!a. CM. 54~1695 N~RT ll arbor Hii,:h t.lust move .. SlOO. 968-66IW For best results! 642-5678 Gymnastics Booster Club. BROWN tweed sofa bed $25 2 wicker hampers. Misc. size 12 clothing. Plus Misc. household & children items. 3206 Dakota, CM. Sat. only, fi.1.24SIS or 534-0302 General 900 8' SABOT + TRAILER Sl.'iO. 1969's to 197l's. Zig-ugs & or .... , .op t l "·" SINGERS Satu r d ay & Sunday Furnitur• 110 Furniture 810 9A.l\1-5Pl\I al Harbor High SAMOYED pups, AKC reg., * * * .,.,.. ,:::1_ ara e y. l.4IJ automatics, $9.95 up. Sewing ....,.,...~ ~ter's "Wholesale to the Champ stock, Show quality, P. E. CORY Public", 545-8238. Shots, Ped I gr e • Inc. 524 Bluebird Canyon D r 20' VrKING. Xlnt full oovetfi'.. l\fUST SELL this wt'l!k? Call 645-5150. 546-f.649. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PRE-OWNED FURNITURE SALE All items must be sold regardless of cast. We are faced with a large inventory overstock. . Complete Stock Sale! U-Haul •• U-Save ITEM 5 pc. Woln11t leilroom Gro11p , 1' Sofa & Chair ht J Drawer Wah111t CIMt.11 .. LAMP SHADIS CY011r Chol&•) F11ll s1 .. Heod loorcla l11d Tabin Full Sia lo• s.,,, .. ,, I. M11ttfeu Sttl IVIRY DAY ,RICI 1129.00 5250.00 SSl.00 14.00 To SIS.OD To St0.00 SJ SO.DO SIS0.00 S90.00 5 pc. 01...,,_ • S9t1. $,0.00 tt SI 00.00 10•'0 btc¥thoe .... 'Drcrwer ~ Wltll Minor So'* IH l c..rr Mb lhtot ..... ..... ,.. $110 SID.DO S151.0I ...... V•l•,. Ill.ti ~' SJS0.00 SALE PRICE '49",., 1119"sn 119" IACH 25c IACH '1" ' IACH '3" IACH '99" IACH '49"sn '29"sn '29" ., '79" '3500 s29t1 SIT 1400 U.CH ., '109'" Used Furniture Outlet 1885 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA-54S.9457 Monday-Friday 9 a .m . to S:)Q p .m . • Saturday f e .m . to 4 p.m.1 !!!!!!!!!!!!! ' on Irvine. GARAGE Sale; Sat, 9-1, * 3 SIAMESE SEALPOINT Clothes, Furn., Baby Items, KlTIENS. good dil!Xlsition, Sporting Goods 830 213/96&-0877. Laguna Beach -'----==------_;~ INEWPORT Dcx:i CROOJ\1· • Ycu are the winner ot ERY, 2903 "C'' Newport 2 tlckela to the Blvd., on the peninsula. Orange C.ounty 673-n66. International Toys, etc. Bargain prices. box trained, SI5 e a , S U RF B 0 ARD , 6 ' 8 • • 7130 Sanla~a Ave, C.M. &IS-2538. roundtail,G iffend erf er EVERYTHING from scraps DELUXE wheelchair, cos! OU!llne, no dings $ 4 5 • 549-2152 ro yard furn. & clothes. $250, s~ll $175. Safety --~=~~=~--1GERMAN 1ho r t-ha i red Auto Show RHODES 33 SLOOP-- Strong Racing Class S65() •• 714.54-1.3200 Boa ts, Slips/Docks 910 17638 Locust St. F.V. Sat & \\1alker $10. Like new! SKI SALEI ....Po11iler at slud. Champ at the Sun tl-1. 54!}.-1075. l~ead, K·2 & Whitestar, siretl, Moesgaard I 1 n c. C·OANNAHNEIMIO S~lP bo Avail., Ne w Port REF RIG BE AU TY SH 0 P 673-9339 * 675-5835 9611-1390. VE T N ar r, up to 40', SIOO. mo. · , vacuum, CENTER or le11 forminller.962-l267. lawnmo\\·er, many other EQUIPMENT Mauser 7 mm rifle $30. GOLDEN RETR I EVER ~ovember l7th thrU 11.st N S . - items. 1793 Crestmont Pl., tor sale. perfect rond. •· 516-5140 * PUPS FM, AKC, Champ Please call 642.5678, ext 314 ewport lips $2.50 ft. C.M. 548--2486. (475. Call 979--0726 TV R d ' H 'F I line. .._ 9 Days 548·2592, Eves 494-2671 -, , a 10, i , ,,.,tween and 5 pm to dalm - Machinery ~ 816 BUSINESS sign, 4·x6' v.·iUi Stereo 836 e 675--6915 e yoor tickets. (North Co!Jnty ./ SLIPS AVAILABLE ·-wrought iron trim on high ,.,,,...,.,._,-.,.-..---,..;.;_; OLD English sheepdog 3 loll-~ number Is 540-1220} Slips & side tles from 20' to AIR COMPR SSOR pole.Misc.lron fencing.SSO ALl..1972 ZENITHS on sale months, show qu ality,* * * 74'. Avail at H atteras & Misc wood work i n g s. Coast Hv.'Y, L.B. 499-3955. now at Orange County's cocoa brown female Poodle. CAPT Al N Marina, 3408 Via Oporto, machinery 536-7140. largest Zenith Oeler. 19" 646--tfi65. Unllmli•" Li"""·-_ '""Y ..._. next to Imperial Savln&s "M"lsc.c"a:;l;::l•:..nao..:=U:.I.::.::::_~= 121" Advance -Floor bu!ler, Chromacolor 1'.fodet C4030, .,., ...... ._. ..,, .. ~ Newport Beach * 64S.ZT20' 818 aufo spray attachmnt, xlnt $395. Free color antenna in· BLACK giant Schna u z er tens, 30 Years eXperience -nd Prl""" QU•··k ••• , N •p• -~·-2 w'-. r .. -1, aail & ~ .. -,, Pror-,..· nal NEARLY new cement d""'k PUBLIC Notice -Dock Strike .. v ' "'"" .. _. • stalled w/a!l cons o 1 e ,.-'""~ l\lj ,.-"'" "" u ., '"• Sale • C•r Lo•d of· uncl•'m• ." -~<-='="'~·=~~~~~ d o c k e d , Lovable-healthy .sport fishing gulde; Me.xican 5 P uoat 21x33. 13 • .... "":: purchases, r.io riown re-838-l4SJ, &: Central America a: Pac1f.. · Oearwater. Call Croft It ed sterros. Consoles & com. FIREWOOD FOR SALE quired O.A.C. Ask about N ill ·-- Or & E l P ic Coast wat~ • Inatruc-ev e, r~~~. ponents ... at tremendous sa\'-angc uca yptua cash & carry pl'lces. ABC UPPIES AKC. Adorable · ings whUe they last: for ex· 544-i653 Color TV, 9021 Atlanta, t-cup & toy f.()Odles all tion In boat handling, sea· BOAT slips avail. 25'-65' ample f\I edit err,", an APPROX ...,, Huntington Beach, ~0 3329, colors. 1 tiny temo.le Yorkie manship, DR &: ce~stlal Xlnt accorumodatlons in " • . ,;, yds. used gold --~----'-----'--89.m9 navigation. PICK UP A new t.1arlna 67~ Console -A'/blrn bar $U4 . Or carpel from Med. oUi~. $1 le STEREO SALE: Buy 100 .:i-• DELIVERY ANYWHERE: . am/fm componenl syst£:-'m yd. 646-0545 v.'att. Al\l/F~1 sterec 8, PUREBRED Chlhuahuls captain available for d· lT SIDE tie, SJ.I mo. 633 w/speakers $68. EZ Terms. EXERCYCLE $285. Water track deck & comp! Garrard $15. 3 Males, 3 Females. tended crulslnr. Extensive Lido .Park Dr, No. lS. JO am·9 pm. f!Qftener $190. Both tn xlnt turntbl $149.95 & for le Ca.II 962-f792. adminlstrativa expe:rience.1 ,,6~1'-=9358=-·--~---- 421 So. Btookhurst cond. 67S--5525 receive 2-4 way a l.r AKC red female Doberman, 646-2977, • NEWPT mooring for renl Anaheim SJ3..0790 CARPET • 55 yds. Firth suspension reflex spkrs, reg.. temperament bre d, ex· 17' FISHING boat, motor & 26-30' sailboat. May trade CE~tENT Mixer, Monl&Qm-Woolturf, champagne, S9S. 4 $59.95. Pre-Christmas spec: CE-ptlonal, S25, 830-9633. trlr. CompaSll, run. 'Lites, for boat use. 645-20Hf. el')' Ward's, 4.1,i cu. ft. clecl. pc drum set $65. &IG-l51J Sterro head iJ>hones $9.95, ** KEESHOUND puPs bait tank, 1op windshield. ONE 15'8'x30' U-slip S95. nr new iu>. 675-~18, reg $19.95 U.S.A. Stereo c•·-p on both '"''' .~ •• ,· Sa.crUice. Best o 1f a r, Ont' aide tie, accommodate 673-0194 GOLD & v.·hlte S' cotlch, $100. v-· W h · ,....,., · ..:JO.HS ""'~°""·~~----·I ""'!'Ur> are ouse:, 179 E. dog. AKC reg. $150. 642--48?S 968--5946. 3ll' boat, $75. 673-6880. ANTIQUE twin beds $80, Remington typewriter, $30. 17th Ci\1 ~2447. ;,:'!~~~!:..:~'.:.,:'.~~IM'iiS'"';;'.~;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;-;<. ti 548-2545 aflt'r 5 pm. 1 -~~--------DOXIE puppies, 7 wks, n!d, ~1USf See to Apprtciale, 16' BOAT dock for po .... ·er boat, An qut dresser &: vani tY CO~IPLETE stereo eom-AKC miniature Stud Glass aport hardtop, 60 hp up tG 28'. On chtinnt>I, \feat S50 each. Na]}iahyde llOfa & ** Pttusl !iell handW()Ve,n ponent system-Pioneer & Service. 83().'1338. · Mere. & trolling motor., Newpor1, $45. Mo. 673--8507. chair $7$. Upright frttier orltntal carpet. Xlnl con-Garrard equip, 9 mo old, AFGHAN A"" 3 trailer S89S. 540-2779 an 5 sis. 546-9621. ,;d,;'";;.°".::·c;";::_".::".::8l:;,·-~..,,,,,,. I S750. inves1ment. $;;i00. or pups • ..._.. moa PM. loats, Speed & Ski 911 J.B.L. Str.n!O cabinel.!i, metal SKIS: Harts J~velln >..'XL, be.st oUer. 675--7004. Ch pedigreed ihota mal• &.lG;LEN~~L~~~-=-~ l 1~s::'· -;THU;;;;;:N;;D::ERB;:::;;,lRD';::-:'..AA::":'-'bp u N ada • l !male. 846--4355. . design, 24' hull, .wJ ll,.;11 (210), rn•ple dining ev uee & toe, usa1 SONY rec t' iv tr, KUJ , . Manne pl)'WOOd, safe ~ John&on, ~lee motor Wt, table, patio chairs, mat-twtoe. 5'8-r730. lapcdeck, & 1 p e a ke rs , AKC rt!i s Mini Poodle pup. trade. 642-4610. elec bilgcr purTil!. lull nwe:rs. tren, call li'i>-2926 after S. ·N.B. Tennll'Oub ~75. TEAC Tapedeck, &r4--035T. Plet 4 mo. old. 2/mo, lJt.. Bo ''M good cond. 714:~1-192. HIDE-A-BED $35, Wuhing Tra.ns1et xtra. MUsr tell Tre:ack Nikko Reasona/bl!~~.· :~~Ip. 1rlne 904 ~1•"· °'F",-n~,..,.-~b\~bootoo.rd-'--'-=..,"'-.. -.-1 machine S75. Dryer $125., 548:s306 amp &: Pioneer turntable. ~1:.ol.ol~"'"' boerd .k.,.mr. ~._.n amount 1'Wtn bt1't UJ. Corner .tablfl VENDING MAatll'iES ?wf11st se~ to apprr-c. Contact AKC, RADAR Apeloo ADR.71\, in & T.0.P. of $28. (15 mo: bal) $40. 846-4292. Cand,y, Ctgs, Coffee after 6pm, 646.-6268. -• Sable A wht. 557-7869 1CJ011 cond. 13 VDC ~So In f·3613 dll.)'S. 557.9753 aft 4. DIAMOND enP.gemen.t_ring, ** 673--9686 ** f\1ACNAVOX ample console, BEAtrrlnJL purebred operatton at .fr1 N .NctWJl0&1. -~~k~'~or~T~om~. ~~~~~I Must sell s6 po Int,, NEW low-heat eookwsre. solid stale ~t/n.t, Phono miniature doxlct, 8 wkl old. Blvd, N.B. $JJ85 + tnstall. 1 111!lll'aJK:t: appraisal $545. atalnlM:a 11teel, aold $425, k tape reeorde.r. Xlnt corn:!. ** 5'18--4496 ** AJ90-new Bendix MR-I 32 [i) 837--3370. take $87. 639-6023; !l6&-SSOG. $325. Call 673-7192 eves. * ST. BERNARD P"PI· mUe comm. rlldnrs, $l500. I TrtnfPOrtttlon J -+ Install. New KAAR . _ .. AREA rugs -6'x9' blut & LOVELY whl!e I err A z z o PIONEER. SX 1000 TA, 120 AKC, $50 & UP. Tenns. Voy~e.r 16 milt radars, green. wool. Xlnt eond. $100, marble 1t11tue "dancn", 6', W811 ~Iver. 2 CS 6e 12131 352-3624 · $199$ +. llUl!llll. All gutU'. 644-1238. ltke nctN $75. ~ 16 ~peak en:, $200. 53&--2928. AKC Ml.n. D a c h 11 u n d , Newport htarine Engl.neer- WHEELCHAIR M td I um SEARS f'XUCiacr blkt, xlnt 21" RCA conlOle color TV. 83.WS83. Ing, MS-2835. • tize. chrom,., collt.pglble cond, $45. SIM ouh IT" A•-N 17 N~ ''P d"! P,.... ad ••• ~.11 ·~ -· " , !16"lTG9 =11' -u ""• o. · '-"'"a 11 ..,~-an l HOUSE Huntln;? Watch lhll ..,,,_ ....., i>R"'>-... r A, aJttt gpm only, Call &42·~ · OPEN HOUSE column. -, • Cemper1, Sale/R1nt 920 '",69 "FQaD Van, 'V-s. auto new pA.lnt, low mUtt * 673-009 .. .~ ' • - I • .· ' .. ...... -.,, ····~ ----------~ -·-' • Frld.tJ', Novtmber 5, 1971 T-•"" llil I T""''""10" llil I _.... 1§) I ·--.. -l§J I ........... l§J I ·~-.. I~ I --SM l§J I ''1"1""1• ·j §] I '""'"'"1' l§J 970 ~uto1, lmparted1.-. 970 Autos,. lmportK • 970 Autos, Imported Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Cycles, Bikes, .Antiques/Cl1~slu 953 Truck1 962 Autos, Imported Scooters 925; 1---------1 ----·----RAT JAGUAR MG AUSTIN 970 Autos, Imported 970 TOYOTA 'il FORD f-~ Ranger ------'-·--.. P~UGOT Cab.r i olet ,c:on. '71 Int1 Tra~ldl, v.3 Air, XLT. Canlper Special, air. e THE BIKE SHACK• course cond. \\'h!te \\'/black FuU Pv.T, Xlnt Cond. plb, p/1, r/h & ('71) 11' NEW BICYCLES intPrio r, Tonneau <;0ver, 716-5.".()T. Evts 494-M08. l·.-64-A_U_STI_N_H_e_al_•_y_S-pe-ite \\'~·N·D;r, ~~!f . c o nkt, PARTS e ACCE~"'ORI ES 'Kt!chetln-X tiN!s, 31,!XXI orii '!i6 FORD P.U. ;J ton. 8 (".oodcondltlon.$800.or,Pest FINAL '71 DEMO SALE BAUER BUICK-----1===----=.1 ,u~~Ef~~7{~t~~~ fm i' SAN'r A ANA n:frig, toilet. hu.idmg tan, EXPERT REPAIRS mi 's. Take trade. ALSO '6T cylindtr. Rum aood. Call offer. Ca.11646-2&30. w .... ,.r. (,ike nev.·. $6500. ON ALL MAKES zro.s l\IB convertible in xlnt &46-'iS22. , 54(),.-0665 eves. Tl-& Tu"--· All 5,·,-, cood. 1----------I BMW $1995 '~.. V<."l) " • d BZ ~ai 1968 Diitsun PU, xlnt cohd. g· \VEST\\'AYS l year ol d 1093 C BAKER, CM Authorize M ...., er ,i-------,.....-(1) 523-7250 Pvt Pty. Lo mi'•. Cill Au"mo"·• •-.,.ue•-Dynapac l~der, bounN"-Near Fairview • 5-16-4130 1--~------67:>-3()45. · .... .... ~ ""'"' wa.ys., inter-com !.: porta-l<A\\'ASAh.1 90, sL &. trail, Dune Buggies 956 & '71 124 SEDAN' Rai:tto, .. Heater. Aut<>matic. LARGE SELECTIQN B. J: \•~;,:;.".'both N•w & Used 1'fRlfDLANDfR" TOYOTA . IJ'Ht 11.lCM OCWT, Jf) po rt)' \\.,·room. Sleeps S. Ilk~ brand new, 291 artual Auto Leesfng 964 . $1300. ~-1017 af!er 5. mi'~. \\'HI sf'll \\'l'J. ne\\' FOR Sale: 'iO Dune Buggy ORO hi dr. ll' · --' cl••-. SUOO.· Bai·a B"g OUR volume lease d~rt-'66 f' 4 v.· ive_, 1 he.ln1ets, $310. Also, '70 Hon-·~""' " " Be I l f I" . Sl~ or hsl olr. Call ment offers All popular R Y R 2833 Harbor C ~l 54!)-4491 Buick-Opel-J aguar ~=-s 0 r. 1:0k~OO·b;:·,0t ~eai:~.' 1~01~111·~{ 897-Ll~ or ~;?160. An1erlcan &: Import makts 0 CA VER1 Inc. '-"'-'-"'-""'C..::'"-'"'-':.::.=1 23~ E, J7tl;l St .. F-IBERGLS V\\' ba·-~. 0 "•• at competitive rates. L.t our 2925 Harbor Blvd. $1195 • Costa l\Jesa 54g.77s.; ****For Sale~ Catnper xlras. )Ju~t see to apprec. .cu " lease ex:-1 .tallor YOURc-ta M.,. .,A,. AAAA •A-• 124 St W B 1600 'I ..,..., v• ..,..~ go a. agon 3.8 l\IARK II Ja"'1ar SE>dan. shell \\'1th refrig. $30. $300. 536-4879. uggy. eng. ,; o,ny !ease to, \'OUR nt'eds. "It.'• BOltGWARI)· "' 11600 ""~ ~o"" Air Cond., 4 li(>eed, Radio, Very sh&'"". "62 \\' i 1 h ·CALL 536-6034 ** 1970 YAMAHA "90" xtras. · .,.,.,.......,~v eves. the &er'vl"-that makt1 !lie ·• """ Heater, (YBR44lj chromt" \1·ires, 11 i r. c on d • SPORTSCAR CENTER "Specializing In Quality" ' BAUER 89J..7566 • 537-6824 MG AtrrHORJZED SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IM_PORTS Camper Shell $150 $250. Trucka •62 dillerenl"f!." l.-61-Bo-,..-.-anl--I,-ab<-ll-,,-Good~. B. J. Si11·er 11•/t't'd inte r. Live lt Good rood. * 536-t0S3 Tw'", Xl"I. Cood. Going '"'" 6 EIGHTLINER-THEODOR!! "'""· "''"' wale• P"mp. SPORJSCAR CENTER "" '''" & '"joy th• 3100 W. Coost Hwy. C I B.k Service. )lust sell Jmmed. 1 8 fR . ROBINS FORD ll classic bea'uty. $1,650. \\'an! · Nev.•port Beact. • ye es, 1 es, 531 _5607 2060 HARBOR BLVD. 1'tusl se , 1st $50 take• it! I ~""c7,~;;:::..:...::::::::::_,,= Scooters 925 --1-9-6~3 -H-O~N~D~A-9_0_ TRAC·TOR COSTA 1'1ESA • M:Z.0010 Ask for Andy, 54.5-3315. 2833 Harbor, C.!\f, MG-4491 ~~7st~~~20. IH2-71XX1 1969 MGB ....... $1895 l'--J-9_7_J_T_R_IU_M_P_H __ $90. Call 96:?-ltS4 ~lITC 770 Cummins Diesel Autos Wanted 968 _ COR'riNA ie;°ieoi;;;;m;';;pf,;1,i;te';Stock~i'-;;ofr =c:::1~~~.'.'_J~E-N_S_E_N_..!:=:~ \\'ire :~~~~.Rn°:a_~1~et~xtras ~& . Motor Homes 940 RliOreay.xle,Z!"tiresand $995 • AUK1, San!a Ana Tovoia en'g1 ne. RT0913 D'ansmission , __ W_E __ P_A_Y_T_O_P__ aa· mfli--..._______ exceptionally c!ran. ro37- CLEARANCE SALE '7l ~ACC. A~row ZO', Roo l "O"I" 2 a.<le "' "P to pWJ CASH '68 CORTINA GT CPE .ti,~g;:ED m \\'. \\"uooc, 51025l". ' doubles. Serial No. 030823. Rad H n1M 5'ie H f air. O:\A~. :"11any .x1Tas, The truck people from lo, (\~;;r~74 Speed. ufRIEDLANDER'' SALES .•. SERVICE '68 f.'IG :\lidgl"r, n1a11y ,\tras. 0U5e 0 $7800. 96H7SS. G I M I · J l Xln! tt)ruout. Pvl. Pt.1. enera otors for used ears le trucks, 'Ju.It 8. J , S13.l0. &1:!-28i6. NEWPORT IMPORTS 1~1~t~~:~. ~.~. Tc.Hers, Tcav_•_• -945 MIKE McCARTHY call va '"' .,,. .. t1mafe.. SPORTSCAR CENTER 11750 llACH ILYD. 8' TEAR Drop C•mp Tntl" GROTH CHEVROLET (Hwy. 3'l 531·8~n o~!t3~;8S41 .• 4~~~98 * GMC ~.Harbor, c.~I. 50-4491 __ m-_,_,..~-=·---53:.:7..:""='-1 Aak !or Salea Manaaer DATSUN $1895 THllll · ·HON.PA .. ''FRIEIUNDER" Trailers, Utility 947 FOR sale 6.x4' utility trailer. '.\lake oUer. ~l-i468 Auto Service, Parts 949 - 894-1336/531-2450 Comer B~ach & McFadden, \\'estminster !W !loath 81..t --------'69 124 SPORT CPE Huntiqton Beach '70 240 'Z' Radio, Heater, 4 Speed. 847-6087 lQ 9-3lll CXRH2'.17J WE DESPERATELY Local c" folly eq"iP11od. SPQRTSCBA. HJ.CENTER NEED Like ne\\•! Under 17.000 Clean used CIU'I ·1 di \\"'II ak d FANTASTIC P . CES n:i• es. r. l t e tra e or MORRIS ':J7 )10RRIS )Jl:'\OR . 3100 W, Coast H,wy. . $300 Ne\\'JlOrt Beach ': ~2-4337 * KARMANN GHIA 1 --P~O'-'R~S-C_H_E_ 1967 KARM·ANN Ghia. xlnt --------- cond. Orig oWncr. $99:>. 545-511:.l 1965 Porsche SC Sun roof. !aPe deck, nf'W paint, lie YCC:-125. niechanic s 417 W. Warner 100% WARRANTY on n1ost used cars \VF. BELIEVE OUR USED CARS ARE THE CLEANEST IN ORANGE COUNTY r.tany n1nrc 10 r.huose from TOYOTAS (7) 1969 Corona 's lo choose from 2·dl~.. 4-drs. Some \vith air condition· ing, auto. trllnl., etc. (YXU741 J Lo"' as $1295 (3) 1970 Toyote's Some \l'ith air condition· ing, auto. tt·ans .. 4-drs. &: .. MAal """· #) C.Uh for your Honda 537 -6824 • 893· 7556 CYCLE TRAILER Almost ne\v, haul 6 bike!, 2Q tt. long 8 lt · v.·ide, phone :>4()..5630 ask for Bill Harold 532-#13 alter 5 pm. Satisfaction International Harverter RECREATION CENTER ROY CARVER, Inc. RI -f1nanc~ pvt ply. (42-IBLO) Pa.id-for your car, pa.id for Call 494-6811 aft 1 pm ar not. 546-8736. ·• DEAN LEWI$ . --$-1-2-95-- 2833 Harhot, c.r.t 540-1491 1970 GREF.:ol Karmann Ghia, :::;:=,,::=::::_,,.:.:::_::___::::c::::::·1 auto stick shift, xlri! cond. '10 Fiat 124 Spyder. 5 spd, lo $1850. 646-9152. miles, Pirelti's. good cond. ;o.1ust selS.522 34-43. o s:os1 LOTUS speci11l $2295 e\·en a station, 4 :speed trans., etc. (BZU748), lo l!li!I KA\'' A SAKI 3 5 O c c Ao,•enger. New ign ition 5)'51.em. Xlnt rond. $400/ot- ler 64Z-993·1. 'TI HO, A 350 CB \\"ind Sc en Helmet $550 * 6T;r2785 250 BULT AO), best offer , as i.!I. Contact alter 6 pm 6'&-6268. (2) SC'H'\\'INN -girl¥ bikes 1'J &: 24", $25 each. :)49-4257 1971 KA \VASAKI 90, less lhan 1000 m iles, l mo old. !'wlust sell $300. Immac. &;~5741. $29j • DIRT Bike 350 CC M11t c hless: 'I'Op end overhauled. Very clean. caII 893--0135. CHS .125 CC MX, 'iO, xlnt 'CC>nd. Never raced. $41'5. 495-4144 . S1vel '71 Suzuki 125 Call 675--4687 Yamaha 2"';i(I DT Dirt Bike ••• Extras $.100 • 962--0367 * * '70 HO:olQA TJO ·cc Ex- cellent cond. S99:J. l>lor nings J.10-8531, eves· ::AS-6088. 'iO SUZUKI 90, 8 ~pd. xlnt conrl. $295 * 830-1901 * 1966 HONDA Scrambler 30;} Run~ great $27:J. 5~8-3115 '67 HONDA 305 Scrambler. Xlnt cond. $299; 962-9124 : J ohn, 5'16-8020 ext 2.14. I '70 YAI\1AHA 12'5 Enduro, Xlnt cond, $325. Aft 4 pm: 5;?7-3996 SD-1\Vl!\'N Sports silver. $175. 53&-2029 Autos, Imported . Tourer . 970 IN AUTO SERVICE IS SPELLED 2925 Harbor Blvd, Costa 1o!esa 546-4444 '68 Chev. Pickup $2050 A i r conditioning,' po,\·er liltti-ing, auton1atic trans., etc., e tc. (V94898). ·Sa.nta Ana Toyota, 417 W. Warner, 540-~12. TOYOTA e VOLVO ,64 SlO WAGON IMS HARBOR BLVD. Costa Mesa 646-9303 Radio, Heater, -1 Speed. (\VPB190) !\lust sell! S2?.00 54&-3532. 1--------- $1495 1969 BSD SPIDER Radio, Heater, 4 Speed, Sharp, (7JOCJD} LOTUS AUTHORIZED SALES &. SERVICE c l\J),, . " $1495 ~,~so~ SANTA ANA B. J. Sunset Ford TRY IT ••• ANO YOU 'LL SEE WHY! '64 CHEV 1,) Ton Plckup. V- 8, auto, -....·ide chrm r ims, new Staggerbloc I i r es , mech. Very good. $!KIO. ANNIVERSARY •SO AUTOS WANTED Top dollar for clean used C<!t.S. See Andy Brown. THEODORE SPORTSCAR CENTER 2833 Harbor, C.M. '540-4491 ROBINS FORD . '67 DATSUN PICKUP B. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. =~ii'iH~"'oii"°'~·;;;c;;:·';;':_· -:;;'>W-::"•::"::'1---N!'.:'''.'""_po_"_B_•_oc_h __ . ., FIAT Spyd.,, "'".lop, MERCEDES BENZ AM/F~1 radio, chrOme "~"""t '° o," TOYOTA Sunset ford 494-8698. . '66 CHEVY "'-Pick Up. Sleeper/camper, heavy tires, to .... ·ing hitch, trlr brk, 4 spd trans, spare tanks, 54'40 GAR.DEN GROVE !LVO. $1350. Owner 545-.Q9j3 eve~. In Westminster '57 CH1:."'VY. ~ Ton. Campt>r T.tke the Valley View off. spec. P.S., P.B .. turbo- ramp from G .G . o r hydro. 9' 1970 Pilgrlm. San Diego Freeway' SIC'eps 6, porta-poti, $299;?. 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 642-0010 Strona heart! 4 tpd. dlr. Lo- WE PAY TOP DOLLAR cal pickup (TYTJ40). Take FOR TOP USED CARS small do\\'n. Call aft 10 am U your car Ls extra dean, ~146-8736 or 494.sal I. aei-u5 1int. NE\V '72 PICKUP BAUER BUICK 4 ~pd. dlr. dlx. Bumper. Ra· 23'1 E. 17th St. d io. l\li1TOrs. Pl..721.120. Take Co8ta l\.1esa 548.77£5 small dO\\'n or trade. 494-6811 TOP DOLLAR a!Q' . .JO 546-8136· IN CASH DATSUN Road.!lter 1967 Good . clean car in A-1 1hapt. :~;4&1~1400· 830-9l80 or AND MANY MORE ---~~~---1 '60 ms • '&t 220..s, air • $1995 '67 2j().S, au1o, air • '67 '69 124 SPIDER 230-S. auto, air e '67 & '68 Radio, Heater, 4 Speed. di<>:;els • 'fill 23018 • '70 (Y0il1920J 280-SE e1 'i O 250-C 8. J . Shop at HOUSE: Of J)oJ. SPORTSCAR CENT PORTS, Orange Cnunry·.~ ER """""' '""'°''"' \IB Deall.'r, 1970 .HARBOR BLVD. COSTA i\lESA ·:,s P ORSCHE .1600. Burnt nrange, blk int. chron1e rims, ski rack, A:\1/fl\f. Brst ,offcr. Aftrr 6. 6i;)...8.'lo.J '68 Porsche 911. in1n1atlllate condi tion, 67~7i2-1,I ·:,s 1600 Super. n 'lilt cni;., runs pcrJccl, looks great, goin~ cheap!~ 673-7085. '68 PORSCHE: 912. 4 spd,· 417 W. Warner Santa Ana . ·540~25l2 Ser'1ice Dept. oper:i Dail_y 7 :30 to 9 p.m. C0.\!l'LETJ:: ~ODY SHOP FACILITIES AVAIL. V\V 40 hp eng., All chrm.1 ~p~"°-"~'~'~33-8=_'83_.~~-­ p\ece!I for 36 hp eng1n!" Ear-'66 DODGE Van Camper. ly ·moc1 transaxle, '67 Sqbck 511'\'e, .~ink & icebox. Au10 .• car body & int. Generators 6 pop!op. Sips 4. 2 ntw tires. Paid for your clean used car O\\•ner leaving and must-sell. paid for or not. $89j Firm 545-2083. SANTA ANA DODGE 1971 DATSUN , 2 D;, Sedan. 2833 Harbor, C.i\1. 540-4491 =~..,,c":.:l..:5:::23:..--.:.":::"':__ __ buri;, ne111 Sen1pril s. · nr'lv I "~:!"!''!'!'~!!!!!~~!!!!!•I cluteh, every xtra. 673-6'103. SANTA ANA 1401 N. Tustin Excellent co n d • Low 835-3691 mileage. 536-7907 111t 4. HILLMAN Oran!Je Count y's Largest Selection Ne w & Used Mercedes Benz '69 911 f.. 5 spd, lnimar.. TOYOTA ·naha nia yellol\'/1,·ht lrather volts. Compl &et of 4 Con-64H038. ** '59 HILLMAN $7;, or tinental V\V !Ires etc. CHEV ~ ton P U, V/8. auto. IMPORTS WAm'ED 2~.,-o~z~·1-o.~1,-u-y~J-,.~,~<d-.-.~,-r,I bt'st offer. G()()(/ l?'ansporta-Jo mi, all r xtras 6iJ.-3968. Service dept. open 7:30 am 'ti'. 9 pm l\londay thru Fri- day . ~114. r/h, nu !ires '[1,•/2 bunk Orange Counties me.gs, Xlnt cond., priv lion car. ;..t~7. .,...,. Overstocked!! camper s hell & c11rgo dr. BILL~fJ::i71'~~0TA party. &12--6772 645-36.1.1. JAGUAR • USED TIRES e "4&-m s. 18881 Boaoh Bl•d. FERRARI R-10 4-DOOR • · '61 CHEV\' 1 -· • ku 6 '67 XKE ROADSTER Runs '& looks real good. f ul -Yow-Choiceo $4 • S6 . $8. "~" Pto p, HH:._T. B~•~ao"',h. _ __l'Pll:h,~8'~7-!8555~1·--;::-;:-:;;::;;;---1 HUGE SELECT10:-.I cyl., stick shift "'/mini ~ FERRARI 1961 Mercedes 220 SE Jy facto1y eqpt. tXCU7~7J Autos, Imported · 970 •1 · c d h ho 11~-0 -111-\0 -T0 1·01• '17 \V F irestone Sinre. 475 E . camper. One_ owner, lo AtrI'HORIZED 4 pd d! w· ·h I . I "int on I roug ut, ~,,.,· ~ " ''"' "· , " . 7 S C I 'l~~ 4"' 8698 s '.. r. IN! v. et' s, mi_n Full Pric<> TQrlis 10 ~ult. \Var ner, 5-10-2512. 1 1h t., .M. &16-2444 m i cg . ., u..iu. ,,.,. · LAMBORGHINI Super ,Leg. SALES & SERVICE <:°nd1hon, . ~VI/Fl\!. radial SURFSID E MOTORS ·="'°'~"'=""'=-~- l: S E D 1 9 6 9 T 0 Yo I a '70 FORD Bronco, 302 VS. 4 ger 400 GT 2+2 in beautiful tires .. Sacnf1ce! Take-small 847 3842 '68 ,FRO;'T \\"hi rl r ~ed La ndcruistr parts. 548-3595 \\"hl drive, all heavy duty olf '('ggshell \l'hite v.·/black ia-dOV.'n. (UJC50;i) 546-8136 or -wagon. 30 i\IPG, rcblt eng. bet.11.·cen 5:3().7 :30 P .:\f. road op!ions .. Lo m i .. l\ke terior, Vl2, ~spd, s!erl'O, 494~11. "67 :\lercerlcs 6 Sedan 2:1() S. _18:.:::00c.·..:':='·'-"1"'6"91".=:--:--- ~\\/, $2800. 833-1558. pv.•r v.•indov.·s. Must see this '68 2+2. Air, au!o, \ov.· Nl'111 en~ine, au1o trans, TOYOTA ·71 GMC BLAZF;R 4 \rD. V-real item, mile~. spare never on ground fu lly equipped. $400 & tak,.,. --------- ' _____ _,.J[ ~. J R PIS h r 1 ·i AuthorizE'rl !llB Dealer 3100 W, Cooot Hwy. Sacrifice $3250. 5'19--07!18 O\'f'r paymenls. 896-:::813 '68 ·royota Corona in xln't Autos far Salt . . . uge ires, o nu es. 111 •, i.•ii~ d ~2 g-27 •o-· S ,, .~ ~ N B h , , nys or .,., -r eves. rond. $9j() cash. C a ll $.,,,,,.,. Dick, ~8-61 :J. ~ ewport eac 62 Jaguar XKE, ne1v paint, 1 -'.-.-.,~-,-c~h-,.-,.,~1-,.-,,-,-T~on AUSTIN AMERICA FIAT tires. Needs valvl"' job, top. 1960 ntER~EDES 220S, xlut c':.,'~'""'~o;,o="'~"~'-'''-"-1.~~~ Jim Slemons . Imps. RENAULT RHONE S40-2ST2 41'. ~\'. \Varner, Santa' Am TOYOTA CLEARANCE SALE NEW 1971'5 . ·\ ..Deoit LewiA W TOYOTA 616-9303 19~6 llarbo r, Costa .\Tesa. 1968 TO\'OTA Corona 2 dr, a ir, stick. ".rcry good cond . $895. 6i:Hl.~·12 General 950 '60 Hillman Husky SiJ. 4:2-1 fJahliR, Cd1\·! Pickup. Good c on d 1 t i on , $7::.0. Aft 5:30 £73-5749. rond. Pn vatt' parly. $~. l!liO TOYOTA I.and Cruiser S1 iJ. &1&-9Sr.6. 1969 Aust in ...... $895 .f ,69 Bi\1\V 1600 R/H Ra·' -6'°1.'-J~.-'-,'-c3."-8'-,'-'1-'-.,"k-'-ll" . .:.,-;i,,ire ~~1-8-102 ' . _ sta. 1\·i;:. Call Chuck aftcr 6 1 "n~o"U'°:;E""°'H,-,"111"1o"g°"?°"'W"•'°'l°"ch~thc-•' • 'iO FORD £300 .. ·\'an, auto, DL.X.-Ai\IERJCA..~, • dial ures, 26,oOO' mi's.' v.·hls, air, \\'hite> \\'/ b!k int. \\·h!lf' Elephant D1n1e·A-L1ne pnl. 5-lS-8087. · OPEN HOUSE column. radil'J. aux scat, HD. 52400 . .f speed trans .. etc. <':r:PN· 497·1698 nPw paint & eng. 8.18-7222. Autos, Imported 970-Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 5(1:,i. San\EI Ana Toyota, 417 .............. ~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiij Corl Fox Leasing, &1~3661. \\'. \l,'arner, M<>-25l2. Jfuuse J-lunt1ng'? \Vatch the Sell idlt. items l\O\V! '.'iJ :\IARK 7 Jaguar SPd!!n, '64 CHEVY El Camino, ne\\· 1969 AUSTIN Aml'tica, good OPEN HOUSE column. For best results! 642-56711 Antiques/Classics 953 n01 runi1 ing. Go<>'J !Nrly. V·8, stirk. radio. Blk. tuck'n cond., auto, AM 1'8.dio, 2:J Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmPort9<1 970 RC'arly to N!store. Sli5. _ro_11_1"_1_· _,,.__,_.129_. ---L\fPC . Pvt. pty. $900. Eves: 6-15-:17!1·1. Dln1r-A-Line &12-5678 642-7469. =--''-,.-----~II Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 ------------------- Al/New .. '12 1 VOL VOS ,' . FUEL INJECTION ON ALL MODELS RADIAL PLY TIRES AS STANDARD EQUIPMENT' NEW COLORS NEW INT ERIORS ~ . ONE OF THE TWO SAFEST CARS IN THE WORLD TO DRIVE~ FREE REFRESHMENTS During Th!s Sptci1I Showing CHECK THE$E VALUES '63 ~~,~~.~. -'"'" ''"''h -$699 1un1 fine. FNW05 9 '66 ~~' ~~~•ioh ''"' 5899 lik• n•w, RYCSl O '69 VW CNV. $1499 Auto. lr•n•. -11u,. II~. lop. 'r11n1 9ood. YWZ65l '68 ~,':E~••· '""'" ""''h -$999 1, 1 I lk. interio" WEY7Sl ~ '65 ~~-s!~.~:. "·•·h -5899 6 t.yl .. l 1pd. ll/9CEY ~ -----------~ '68 CHE V. $1199 1 .t Or. ll'l'!p. -Auto. ir1n1., 1ir cond ., •le. VAF7ll '70 FORD .. $2499 1 Or. G•I. 100 -P•tf•ct - Auto. tr•~• .. ,;,, full pow•t. 119AGf. HARBOUR VW HARBOR AREAS ONLY EXCLUSIVE AUTHQRll&D VOLKSWAGEN DEALER 11711 Botch Blvd., Huntington Botch 842-4435 5 50 S Year or 50,000 ft\ile WARRANTY BRAND NEW 1200 COUPE INCLUDES: 4 •P••d 1vnc.h1om•1h fr•n1., ltt homeler, ••dio, f•ont d;1c br1k11, h11l•r, Hnl•cl 9l•u, whit• ,,..,n !011, 1111! wh11I c.o~•••, reclining buc.k1t ••th, fu ll nyl o'I c.1rp1I, lrip odom1i1r, loc~ing fu•I fill11 door, c.i91r11!1 li9hte1, wood 9r1i" ir>1lr1,1m •nl p1n1l, Wood 9r1in 1!•trin9 whet!. ""00d 9r•in 1hift ltv•r \~ob. (!:1 481 141 . ·-· ' . -. . ~· .. --' -• • . ' 'r1day, Novem~r '· 1911 . DAIL V Plll!T /6$ l'-1 _Au!D<_, .. _ .. ~___,J§J I 1§1 .___I ~_ ..... _ .. ~~1§11 Autos for 5111 I~ .__I ._,. ... _, •. ,.__,l~,~I _ ...... _ ...... ~1§11 Autos lor Sari ]§:[ ~ -~'\QS-fw-S.1•_,l§j ['-'-:;;Aut,.-f;,So-lt ~1§1~1 Autos, lmport•d '910 Autos, Imported 970 Avtos, lmPortld_ .970 Autos, Imported 970 I tA•u,•.•,,•u•,•.•d•••,,•ol•A•u•t•o,•,•u• .. •d•••m• luiot, tJlJ 990 ~ Autos, Used 990 Autos, Uuo ., TOYOTA $1195 '68 Toyota HT Cpi Radio, H~lltRr~ 4·Sritt'd. !\I A,\4721 B. J. 'SPORTSCAR CENTER Zs.33 Harbor, C i\I. :~10·4..\91 '67 TOYOTA-- 4 Dr Sedan, Autn Trans, Ra·1 dio. He~1€r. GMr1 Tran~pnr. ta unn car. 1UDG41Y.l1 $79.1. Surfside Motors 847-3842 TRIUMPH $877 '63 Triumph Roo!dster Radio, HPatt>r. 4 Spred. I l72DDY I • B. J . SPORTSCAR CENTER 2233 Harbor, c \!. ~J lfl-419_1 TR·4 Compaet. Pmnon11 c;iJ ,\· lun · hesidl'~. All the hi'!<! ftlllllt"r'~. 66.000 m1. S6:iQ. 847-!l~Z1: Autos, Used BEST USED CAR 990 TRIUMPH I TRIUMPH I CLEARANCE SALE NOW! HUR:RY & BEAT THE 10~ PRICF. !~CT.EASE~! FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 7lO E. l~t St., S.A. ~7-076 1 Open daily 9-9; C!051'd Sunrlay $1595 1967 TRIUMPH GT6 Rilrl10, HP;itrr, 4 SfJf't'd, nice 11J1 P 11hrels. \\'\\'\".)981 B. J. SPORTSCAR CENTER :.'S.ll ,Harbor. C.:'I!. :'>4{1-4.J.91 VOLKSWAGEN lflfil) KAR\IAN"N" {;htJ!, runs "1i~11. :'l!AKF: OFrF:R~ • C.<i!I S16-?il!I: • 1968 VW C.imper '.'\r11· rni;:. ~:!,f\:.O. 4!1,l·ifi;\2 Autos, uSed 990 '69 Chrysler 1 __ ·c_AMARO D~DGE FORD -------Town. & Country '69 CA~IARO, like neW. '~~ DAllT .-"-"'-,d-.-•• -1. ,.,-------- '65 VW Van Camper \\'E ha\'!'! an rxel'!IJl'!nt ll'!IPr· Station WJ.gon Lotd,.rl! $2500 or trlde fl'lr tr11n.,, aood rond. $600. 1968 Ford Gal. , $12.50 fu!I campP r int.. rnmpl p11.n·' tion ot new and prt-O\\•nl"rl w Vin or Caniper. P.ri. pry 644-.lfl98 ";illl" OF.LUXE .2 M . HT l"lled lnsida nrw a.1r i:roop~ \lolksw11gl'!ns. Com, 1n 11 nrl 9 p111gf!~ifl'r, full J:M'IWPr. Jug. 67'21•1 1\1r con<hllon1n,::-, p"stl!rnng, .. ,,.. · · '69 DODGE Dart 2 dr, tae. & fiair~d (rf"\rlrrs & brand if'st drive ~me of these finr gage rAck. 1~.000 mlles, Afr i\Ulo 11·11n:< .. loaded \\ >.tras nPw pain1 jnh. ;-.'Pw cur· <"1tr5 conditionin~. hkr "'"" ZSA· CHEVELLE •1r. v.~. MH, PIS , S1700. 011 lrii~ S.';00 IP:-.~ than 11oy. l~' \' lk C 3'' ·~-~ -=:c,-::--,:-"'.'l;i"'i.--3-:;.;;l30::_7~~~~~~~ ' ' 1 11X0 1., ' I 1au1s, F~I slrrro radto & '""1 o s.wa ii:rn am])f'r .... ,. .-. vn.-r st. 1 , 1;1. J. 1 .;Jfl a. !\ rrAck ~tl'rrn tapr w,4 LiN>nq• GF'1\lil.2 Only Sl 095. $3095 196.'I f\IALm u Supf'r Sl)nrt, '69 Suptr Bee, 383, VS, A~T, Anil Tnyo1a, -117 \\'. \rarnPr, ~pkrs, \\"idt-rim.• k li tts ln 191'.'i \"n!ks11·11g1>n Bug . Runs <11r. 1ad10,, clock, nP"' 11re1, P IS. A;\f/F'M , Vinyl '0'9· 540-2312. rrar, new pxrrarinr p)(h&u.~t Coot!. L1cen.~e REH188. Onlv ~ .)7,000 mi., $791>., 493-4962. New radials, S169S. 84~2390. * '71 FORDS * ;vs.I . Lo\.\' n11 nn ri>tl"nt eng S7!1.J. 1 CHEVROLET '89 OODGE RT, 441) cu in. 4 GALA.XI ES e :'11USTANGS n'haul, $t.10·nAA 1%6 Volkswagrn" BWI· NP 11: o~ ~ •prl, )C]n't mndilion. $17Zit. 0 L SV\\'4'" o 1 T ;"!NOS $2095 ~:~;.1. icense ""· n )· sO 1!P ·11 CHEVY's * 64.'H6t4 r.1t 6P~t HERTZ CORP. '6' KOMBI BUS 1966 \'olks"'""Pn Squa1?back ' ~ • ALAS • CHE\IELLES 4 ,.. FIREllRD ' -fl CA'1ARO'S 221 \\'. l<\11tPlla, Anaheim Ra dio, Hl',,.tt>r:4 Speed. Thi' color 'is ·red. License tt' ' 1 1Z\\'\\'l;61 ZAC!lJS. Onl,\• Slfl9S. ..,.lfl HERTZ CORP. '67 f'irebird, 6, XLNT CONO, <7l 4 ) 778•405o B. J. 19~7 Volk!\\'11.grn B 1J 2 "\ Y 2'21 \\'. r;:,ir llll, Anaheim t.fUST SELL~ 196& f l'lrd Station \\'agon. ~qo SPORTSCAR "ENTER Chron1 t> rim~. A~l lF"~-1 ra· 5-19-3031 !::xi. 66 or 67 (714 ) 778-4050 Call jJ6-99.)8. en~. p/,<:, a1f' rond, 40 ,0(l{) b d10. LI('. L'f;\"790. Only ~10~;, J9i0 HARBOR BLVD. mi. Ne11· t1rr~ .t. nr11 pa 1n1. 1%7 Volkswagen Sun Dial ·53 CHEV Tmpllia, 2 rlr HT, FORD S149:i. f<ir quick s a I e . C11m r!'r. PParork t.Ju,. !.: =~-C-.O~S~T_A~'l~E~S~A~~ or1r O\\'ner, nu b11t!erl~ k ~".!S--07~6. h L "OG~ 0'l) "69 Suprr 8Pe, 3SJ, VS, A-T. tires. rf'l bt ena:. S 3 7 ~ .1 •96-7 ~,--G---------·-=-,=cc-c----11· llf'. icl'nse u ,.,...,. " . PIS, A:'ll/r ?.f V1n\"J ltlp, :i.1g..1111. or_d a!11xu•, vf!ry &:ontl '61 for~ t:conohne SJ!l!I.~. N rf 1 11·69-ilis-z-~ eond. i;acior;· .\1r, AU11'1. 3!!0 S.'i75 0 1· best otfl"r VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN 2$3~ Ha rbor, c .;..J, 540··1·191 '70 vw ........... $1995 FORD ~UNSET No matter how yo u look at it Suosel Pord is the place to Service YoUr Car! ~440 GA~OfN G l!OVl BLVD . WHERE THE FREEWAYS MEET IN WESTMINSTER '6i LTD 4 door, P/S, P/B, air, radio. '.\!Ake otll!'r. Phont' 642-9172 11ftPr 6 pm. '61 FORD GALAXIE s1i:1 * * 64>3456 MALIBU '69 MALIBU · lmmacul11te l69J ADX 1 San!;i Ana Toynt11 , t17 \\". 1rarnrr, !l~0-2J12. "Gfi V\\', Pt>rf, ronrli11nn. ;\1>11 r111n1. :'11u!<1 &'IL ~lakl" or. frr, %2-17);'..', 1971} \'olk,<:Will!PO Rur;:. R11rt111l """ .r;i 111 5' :i. · ·1· · 'ill CHEV fmp11J11. rustom, 2 '°"f 1nt l'P'C~nrl,v ni nt-<l * * Call 646-3.\45 ti res. mag \\'ht-1"4,Jruv milt'· BUICK Dr._ \'tnyl roof. 11.ir. 11.m Everyth1n.1; \1•orks. $800. v.s. Auio tran~. like. ne11.-. '6J F'ORD P.U. w/ca.m~r. $1795 F'ull Price. •• agr, Lie, BXE. Only $1fi!l5. ......-.....-rA dio, clran 52350. Corl f ox ~4·7Xll l'l\'t'!~. In mi's . .1'12 v.i;, 11.tirci tNtn! SURFSIDE MOTORS -,6-8 VW "Hot Rod" T;irh, dual car b. elect ful'!.! pump. \'rry sprc111J $1000. l VRK767 ! Surfside Motors 847-3842 '!;1 \"\\' 11· sunroof. r;1d1n. n,.11 gpnr ratn r. Still <11· hl'~t offer. :\lust sell no11. 496-31)9.'.I 49&-.'\09.1. ... * '6L V\\', l•l" ll'ood Slt>er- i.n,e \\'h., 14" df'f"p ~t back nm~. No mnlor. S 1 2 5. Ki,,· l 2S~. . '&I V'.V Srn11·r~n1pi>r. 'F;S 1600 P11g. Nf'I\' llr<'~. llrakr~. k paint. $S7.;. ()/frr. £7;-r:'i!HS. '69 V\V. EXTRAS. You 'll i O °BU.!::£)' O\'rr this 'fi!l Ru1rk Rlvirra, rull poll l'll", Ll'a sin·~. 64~.'1661. "64 F'ORD GillL\lf' :ioo HT. nnr. f11r 11\r, ;in1-rm r;iirltn, st1·1110 '64 li\!J"ALA SS Cnnv,.r!ihlr ;i u1n, r/h, p:;. :-.Jn1 rond ~ 19il'l \'olkF"·agrn Campi>1• Im· h h 1 " 1 • fine-, <H1ullti \in) lnp. :-..1.NT CO ND. $.'>5(). S.'>75. '4'11 Corvrttr con\'erl nu n1;icul11.tr lv !'IP;in thrnugh· •:zf;·· b ff · ~i!-J '78 :I nur Onl~; S.119:1. S1ock II ~-•·1 nr l'.;~! 0 rr. J J -Mi-1007 l<1ri. Si.ii. ::..1~-186.i. j163. ;!fl ~-. pni. '67 ;\JAJ.IRU·11·,1.;::on. 1 ""'nf'r, "6-1. FALCON c'Q111·,, ;iiu rn '6,ll BUIC!\ C'ni..1 Sk)lark, 11 ir. Xlnt ror1rl . 47,f':OO m1·~. Ratk tra n~. pn1y11la~ !irrs, f :'ll, r/h, \'ln,vl lnp, con~lr :-h1f1, h1tC"h. S119:i. 962-;,.t.1!1. i:on<t huy. $600/ofrrr, Pnv rnany .xtras, l'l'r~· rlioan ,-~9 CHEV V v .,s:---pl"t~. 540-592,ll. :-.4:i.:.;ol1 Ext. 66 or li7 19iO HA RBOR BLVD. COSTA :'llESA. "6fl V\\'. 2•1.000 m1. :'11~1\i'. of. r~r. i\~·ll:!i-1-1.'.ll ·111 ,i. ~>k !or Jrrr,1· .Jonr.~. 714; !*i2.-l :'i76. Afl ii -1g....--01 -' • _11.ll • AU!n., -;c;;-=~·~~--~=~~ • 1 • 11 · RIH. ·~1rrrn, r I c h 11" o u ~'AA ~'ORD f;aJa.x !I" j()O_ 4 r!r 'f;!l LF: SA RR~; rnn1 I P/S, ronrl. SJ!¥.lj. 642-6441. hrdtp, 11u10. rarl 1n, fa.cl air, Pl_B. RI ~. On i: .. own~r .. 6.'i CHEV. Impala, 6 pi s8 \'1 nyl tap, 36.000 mi"s. $129j. SS.)(). t;4~-.il:t.1. v.·11g . P /:->. 'P/B, 11 ir, rlh. 673-4!188. CADILLAC .xtr~ clP.11n $700. ;).Jµi~9. -1 '·1~1~,~.,-nl~T~o-,-.,-,~G~T-.-,.-IJOO-m~I. '69 CHEVY LONG VA.~. AIC. 1t arn. l)'rf cond. BEST OF'F'F:R! %.lt....Afl23 $2!1'1ll. 644-644? dys, &t:-r1666 AS]{ fO{l .JOE .~'~"'~·,g~·~~,---~--~ '6.1 Cht>vy II. 2-dr. 11uto. cnn<i '61\ Ford \\11.G;on, Air rnnri, ninn1n~ mnrl. $200 firni. Vrry cl ,.a n. GMd mnd. fi-12-6.J.lt7 a r1 .i nr 1iknrl~. Jtusl ~io!l .r.-i ~r . Call Lynn, , .>IR..-.S:520 .. i·18-6491 EXrELLENT CONDITION 1963 vw Camper %S-3:i4:l or 64fi.-26J:. LARGEST SELECTION OF CADILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY SALES-LEASING AUTilORIZED -SERVICE . Nabers Cadillac ',,,; Chrv. V-.': ~!II ll'llt:, ~ood ~~=~-----­ f'nt1rl.. nrw P.llt'l l, s~ nr '62 fORO Van, mAgs, nu 11•ill h·11rle for mn1orryclio pnly~l11.~ tirtog, ~ter,.o, e!r. OLDIE bu1 goorl1r, ',Vi V\V. xlnr running cond. $300. or ' ties1 offer. 542-0292. * V\V KOMBI BUS 1971 $9i"5. . 873-48fi8 VOLVO 2600 HA.RBOR BL., '."1.11'-366~. g()(ld rns:., lrAn~. p111nt COSfA MESA &16--9267. 540:9100 O ,;w,,.. ·.; • 'Y. rrhl! tr11ng, SW0.1 ~~~-=~-~-~~ ~-"'----'"="~SI_"~··• c::~_ 01' hp5( nffr r. '63 ford 1"11JC'<ln Con\'!. 6 ryl. '6.) Cad f J t' e 1 11 n n rt • ~.\2-4 1 ~1 + .-iu!n, r /h. xln"!• rond. 1!1 :'.! ll' i • Can1rPr, ~lrs t sl(lvP k --~--'84~7~·~3~84~2=-----I rr fn c:. $Jf:.j;J romplet r , MERCURY :';'.lfi-!l&I:;. "Si fORn F.l1rl~nl' j()(l sta. 11·2n. Gnarl Conrl. RIH. Au1n. SS!l:1. :\.\!i--0~~1. 'it :'llARQUI~ 2 dr loaded, 2 mn ·~ old. 2000 mi's, cost S6.100, nl'iod $4600. ~;>..2815. Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 '6·5 '68 '67 SKYLARK · VI , •Y•c .. •" c;cr<L PIS, r•dio, h••t•r. !l!Pf.18071 OPEL WAGON 4 1peed, r1dio, ~t1f91, !XSSl bO l TO RONA DO F .. 11 pewe•, ,;., AM FM , lo•e'1d. :121 lB • 81"11 utiful condition,_ IO" 9i1 miles, folrl ou1 biod. 64~111 7. 4 Door. !iadio, He11-ter, Sta,nd· '63 VOLVO 122S Brough11m, 50,000 mi'~. 1·1n. 'fi!i \HF.VY NnvA ~t;i \VA;: nr 111kndg &16--7>-li~. 1np', full pv.T. i:~lh4'r int.,r. Co!'lrl rnnrl. Nfl'.1' hrkg, nP iv 'S?J F'ORn 4 Dr. Cu~t. Au tn :\'l n I rond. $2150. P11I pi;.. llrP .. S400 ~~237~ tra n.~. fffJ.....-p/b. a ir rl'lnd. '70 * '65 V\\', nl"w brAkrs, new ard. \J Yl\t34.i1 d Si50. 67l -6.if:6. HIGHLAND MOTORS Aul o,.,~li t, 118, pc w~r 1!eer;n9 & ·br•kt" ·~ io, -~ _,,,..,.~,. Good <oodit~"" $495 he•hr. wh;;• w,111, f~tlcry ~ir c.,no'ilicni~9 . 14 00· '6fj VV.1 BL:~ 21..!:'i H11rhnr Bh·rl DNWI (IU~ $3197 J::XCELLE\'T eo:-.rDJTIO'.'J Cosl;t :\IP~ll &\.i-... 40.1 Blue Boek $36~'1 Pl:ICE 1i1 11 .':.1.~-!1:{;!9 THINK '68 Le Mans M f , (~~ VI, A~IO , P '\, P~. ••clor~ •Ir. i\JMA I'll l lUt lDOk 111ff OUR Pll:ICE $1599 169 Pont. Catalina 1 D• MT VI. •;rn, "~· Pl l<~f<. l•c1 ~"· IYUF !~JI l lue I O'ok ~l?tS OUR PR IC E $1988 168 Chrysler '<l~w~o r 1Cu~lo..., !< T., Au'O. l'.S, "·', llSM fie! 1lr. (\ITD IJS ) l lut ll>Clk t!HG OUll PRICE $1696 '69 Ford f,(Jt!l'•Ml•C, pQWpr >'e'.ron~. l)~I BELi 11111 BoOll tlUO OUI! l'RICf: '69 Old• Cutt"ss Sv~r.mt i< T Crt Au•o, •r5 . "8 , II ~>!. f 1 cl. ~". IZVO 1•7) l lut loo~ n100 OUR r11 1cE $2199 '69 ~Grand Prix l.outn, I'S. Pl , ~,!,M, IAct . t•r, W5W (l!~E ilO) l lUI l ,!'Ok IJOOO OUR l'RICf: $2599 '69 Fi re bird MT. C~f , ol.u•n , P ~. r~n·o, ~~~lu. IYPI' ~OJ 81111 I DOk ll!U ·OUR Pill:ICE $1999 '61 Cadillac SM•~ O•V1fl• Full ~~'"~" l•c•O'Y "'' co~tl. IZWO 50 1 l lue loo~ IHIO OUll Pl:ICIE $2298 '69 Chevy·r,. Nova 2 Orior Eco~omY t tY"~11~r. lZLJ 611,1 11111 1ook 1i.oo OUR PRICE. $1199 CLEANERS '6~ \/\\' ll'ilh man,11 P~lra~. xinl conrl. 0nl' n11·nPr. \ola kf!' offl'r. 962-221.1:. "II) VIV CA :'l1PER pn[Jtop, elrr rr fr1;: S?.100 • 6i~-.i0l 1 * + '69 V\I.' Camprr, rtt'w tirr~. Pn~inr . ('I u t c h , S2400/Tradr. ~2-9424. * '64 V\\' Bus, rl'bl1 1600, stertn. crptd, p;i ntd, goorl ~YO~o· "FRIEDlANDER" 1'lJG IEA(lt !HWY.,,, 893-7566 • 537..6824 ·:;9 Volvo. nel"rl~ some \\·nrk. S.12.'I ur br~1 nffr r. Mus1 sell . 101 11 r.la 1n St. Apt 2, HB Autos, N•w 980 ·ti!'e~. :-..'lnt cond. 846:-~!l:l CAPRI '69 \T',\' BUI?. SunJYJO!. :'11Fl2:ll. -,,,,-.,--c""c---o--c p .. rr"{"I rond1t1on. S127.). Call l!lil L1nrnln :'llPrcur;.· C;tpn 1 ~-!l'-1!'2!;. o11·n,,,., A\f/f\1 r11rl10 l!'.liO ,.,r Bui;, 111•1~1 ~ .. u. 11 6-11-().1.i l • ;'ll~n~· c-.xtr~~ Sl.i!'I~. nr hPS! nffrr f;7J-fi.14~. ·~:i V\\I Pori Tnp Camp"r Clriin thruout.-·$2500:--€;i!I :"136-~.66.i. "61 ·votk~"'ll~Pn, runs i::oorl. S2:"L + c~u 6~fi.-5S64. • ·~n V\\'. Vr.1;1 .l?'d. c:ond. [.() 1111, ,\1r conrl . Grl!rn \\/ hlk 1n1. Sl 195, 1ii :,...1on.t '71 \!'i\1 Aus. Air, rarl10, hra1 r'r, still on 11·arr. L'nder 17.MO mi. .\29;=,n. 646-910S. J!lfi.i \!'iV, $77.i. R.&H, J6.:ioo mi. 1 rlri1•pr, . >14-2Mi 'AA \l\V C11.m pPr 'Tl ~und1 al hit. .10.000 1n1lr ~. Xlnt cnnd. A:\1 /f :\1, new t i re1 . ~327. '60 V\\' RUG Gr.orl C1'1nrlitinn. Engine lljhl 642.-2!113 'fi.i V\V BAJA RUG. Rrhu1lt r n~1Til", Xl nt cnnd. c~u ~fi.-21~~. Cal: &t2-S678 & &ve! FORD SISTER SUSIE. SELECTED SUNSrA-1. TO SERVICE HER STUDEBAKER! WHY! BECAUSE . 5,.40 GARDEN G~OVE BLVO. In Westminster OVER 150 NlW I-USID VW's TO CHOOSE OM -ALL IODY STYLIS I-COLORS OPEN SATURDAY &:SUNDAY ;64~2-;'.1~168~. ~=-=-~~J--:·~· '"'"'. ,.· y.'Cjf:C·D',---Gnori C\'lnd. $4 7~. E 11 e lMMACULATF. 1'10 Co< CHRY5t£R · "4-7'72. Courw d€ Vill i>. r.:Pw hri>~ TON . r k • ... h...... 1969 LTD \Vaaon, 10 pas~. 2-1.000 m1. S.i.300. Pr1. Pl\,' I fl\\ nr rr ......... r ... tp, . s~~. .S:?$-472.». I 1l A\l/FM t -po"'Pr, 111r. 1mn1 Br . ~""'' u pnwPr. 1 ~ iorro 644--0.91 fl ~ rapr , l11 1hr'r uphols., V 1n~'l ~ . .A r r · pm . 'iO CAD Cj)P rl,. \"1llr. ri"11r. 1nn. Dri\'f'n 2 yr~ hy s l.· J.. \967 F'air\11 nt Convrfti hlfl. ~io111~. 1\rl. rlr Jk, trunk l'f'I . r>:l'r, ~1 111 unrlrr "\\"llrrllnlv . .111lvior "'I h!k top. :i:-i..ooo n1 1. SI" t•onl. llhr, 11m/fn1 $IP'l"f'n, r.~<"C"l"l ionlllly clf'11.n, $249.i. $7:i0. C~ll :i.1P:-3;)()7. lllll() ;i.1r. v1n rl. 1rnm11.c. 644-037/;. !IB9 '"() D G 1 1 0 $5.YIO. Corl rn.x L1"a$1n1;. \. · f R a 11:>:1r ;i00 r. &1:i.-3tiEil CHRYS fifi. Nr"V.pnrt Hd. Tp H.T. •11r, 2nod tir~. f\1a kP ~ ---.11Prl . F"11cr ~1r. p~/phh. nu nrrrr :l4~4l~1~. "iO CAD Sl'tV. immac., :.10.000 ltrt~. Xlnl cond. j.1&;;211.l . ·10 f ord G11l11xt.e :;!XI mi. Lthr in1 ... •l rrt>() Fr.1 f..· 4 rlr HT. Air conrl. tll pP, Joa<ltd. \\lh1le & na vy COMET S21.j(I * 673-:1130 111.nrli'IU top. s;,.ioo. Pr/ply, ..................... l.c-~~=~~~-,-- &l&-;227. '64 COMET CALIENTE " GALAX!E ·""'· ' .'.'' .11r1rk, 1t&H. a-Md eonrl . s ... iO. "69 , CAD S.-d!l.n. Cl(-';ln, !~\\' ·' 962-1844 m ilrs, pr11'a!e p11rf~'. $.'l,j(}. 2 Door H11rritop. V.S:, .\Ufflma-1~-~~~-----.~i-fl!""IJ ttr. ':lir cond. nn~WSJ Call 642-~78 Now! '71 ESTATE WAGON l111dad F1ttory .;ir. I 024CXV J 1964 c ,\DJLLAC. full po11Pr. $495' Autos, New Sll.'il. SC:'lf P n 1 1 ' " r r 1 rl '" r · HIGH LAN 0 MOTORS l ;.;.~~~iii~~iiiiiiiiii~~~~i~iiiiiiii~~i\l;jjijf"' I typf''.1Ti1Pr. S:il. &lh--70i.~ 21 4.·, H11rhor Blvrl. I DUE TO THE TREMENDOUS PUBLIC ACCEPTANCE OF THE ·5~ CAD. CONV. By nrigin11I C(IJ;ta i\·IPs~ &15-:14~ 011•nl"r. 445 E. 17th SL Co.11111 ·1962 CnmPI. N,flri~ clutrh .t· ~1,.~A . ~111r1rr, $'100. CaU ;iftioi' 4::ID ·CAMARO ,. 8 CAMARO OvPrh11uled Enc1nr· Perrtti rnrrh11 n1ral ;-ond. ·E xt r 11 Sh11rp. $11¥.ti f ull Pr1c ... SURFSIDE MOTORS 847-3842 !°i4)!....2AAL CONTINENTAL J9i0 MARK rrr. like new. fully equip'rl, lnw mile11ge-, fll'x 1ble ('In priC'I'! 11nd 1erm1, Phonr 54fi'.t600 bc'fnrl'! !l r .m. • CORVAIR • JUDY BOYER 501 1/2 Poinsettia Corona del Mer You 111 1> th1> w1nn,.r ol 2 nrkr 1 .~ tn ih~ Orange County International Auto Show •I lhr , ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER * Automa!lr, Rilrllo Hf'arer . . ! tJKH2!1~ i $595 HIGHLAND MOTORS 2145 Harbor Bl11rl. Co1ta Ml'!Sil 645-~'404 "6J CORVAIR, Mew p11.1nt , t·Pt rleck, rebuilt rnc. t.. ~ ~pd. tr11.n~. $199, 894-4008, Sat. It Sun. A-2. TWO Corv11,1r~ $1 7.i. Bnth 'fi2 iioott f'n11nfl '/;3 i nM l>orly. 9.l~ Arbor. C.\l. '1\1 CHEV '' Cnrv;ilr, R.tl rlio. 1v/~/w, Run.~. Clr~n. $1 27l nr mak(' nflrr. 1146-57~1 . -CORVEtfE- --·~o-----'67 WHJTF: ((lrv,.,te ('(In· v'rl , \\'/~tr-cnnrl, It 4 n,.w t1rr~. Like nrw, $2000. 54~95&1. '6~ Corvette 39li Hdtp Conv. R.l'd-Clea~New tires. SU95 or Bflst olfer. 6#-7923, 673-i738, '65 CORVE'ITE, 2 tops. 40.000 orii . milt!. ( spi:f, S1700. MS;-2330 tir 53S-1MQ. COR.V. "67 Rdst. ~14 spd. !':upt>r C11.r. S2;,!!.l. Tnm, !llft...3730 \\1k. f!.7~3~9 Hm .. •(;•' DODG~~C~-:j ~yl. Stir.k. Sht rp! Nioed.s tf\I. \\'8,Tk SljQ1 9M-J946. • ' I 1972 CADILLACS We have one of the Finest Selections of Quality Codillac Trade-Ins to Choose From 1f71 n1nwooo 1t11 tt OOlADO lt71 C,I, DI Vlilt llOUOHH,l.M '•"· •Ir <•"4., .. oded •••• '" l le<trl• ou .. roel, le<! •• i, •••'·• '*"·"I',,,,,,, '!00 '"""" too'~od ... , . •" loo••·· ;""''" ....... ,,..1.1 .. t~oli<O ••If ... 11i. 1014 IOO. •'I lo•"" ' ""'!" tO!O!iO', _, 101>•. ''" • ........ 1, ...... ~·d••• .•• ' oolo 1 .. 1~., 1 ••••.. full ""' ooul""'"~· ~""" ~dio, lotoll• '"'"~ • ••'d ..... ' ,., . lull •... ....... .. I•<••. .... 1 ol»olut0l1 1lot..,OO"' f•o•• !•u6o I 10<~. •o•i• •uol ,. .... ~ ,.11• "'' ., ... b• "' J ,. , ....... 1 ... ,., '" .. ... ;., ...... 1 '""''""· ...... "°' ou•. ""' llO ,... I ""'"" " !ullv ···~· .... ""'· i.11, •ouloo-d. 1,., (0~ill01 """· ""I'° '"""•I, ..... ,1 ... '"• "''""""" •oluo, .. • .r, ... 1>ooutlt1. (0Sl0Wi. ... tl•tl ... ... 1001• • '""" • lk " ;;U7ll -· ' ....... u •• :'.Ill •I l•"' •• f7334 • $7777 • • $6666 • • • . . lf70 CPI, Dt V1U1 1f10 llD. DI Vl~Lr ,,,, ('I. OI VIUI .,.,. lull ''"· "' <t•d., HOdO<I JtO. 1,11 fe<!. •'· .... , .. •••d•d . ... 1,11 '""· ... .... 4., "'· '"'·· 1111 a ,.,,,..,r, ""'·· ,,., .. , ,.,., , •ii loo''°' l•to•., ""I'" <t•• """.oil 1 ••• , .. "''' . ldt ' ••'•· lo<ln, 111•• ,..,:,ol. "•'Yo•••• 1'<11. ....... Iii" ..... ,.1, ''" • ,. •• r. . .... ' . ....... .,., lot ... .. folu ........ "" • ,,, ...... , ... 1,1 .... ,1 ..................... 1o1, .. ,., •• , ....... ,, ..... ,.,1 O•o of !ull1 ,,_1,,.. lt•IAJI I ... ,. • U<tr>'\"oHy "'"· {IHI· '"' ,.,,,.,, .... ,.1,, !XSSlll) . JUl $3888 • • , .... • • $•666 • • . , ••• (,L or VILLI Your choh:e of 1f61 tt DORADO • !1 Dora dos ,, ... ,,.11 • ., Iott. "' • ••••• '•"· "' ···'·· ....r•·• '""· ''di ••• , ... ,1 1 ..... 1,. ''"''~ ...... , .. ~ 1 ••••• , '"'' ' •" ... , ....... . ,,, • Broughams I•••· • 1,11 ,.._ • ., <I•'' • 1 •• ., .. "oi ••• , •. ..... ..... "'""· ~·--• s.d . D•Vllle1 • ,...,,1. Jl .. ol• ,1.,,., .. ,, .. • 11 •• •«••!••··· •• 1,. '"" ........ • Cp•. DeV IUes ... l&r.ollv ....... !Sor. ;;OJ&!) , .. o 1.,;v ""''"· llVD1••1 Conv•rtlbles • • $2777 • • Sedans IALI Pft!UD '· --, ... C,f. Ol VIU.l , ... Ito. OI VIUI 1f67 C,l, OI V]UI ..... .. 11.,, ''"· •'• ,.,,, .. '""· • •• ... , ........ ... , lull '•"· •Ir "'"'" full .... ' ""'"'"' HHtt' 101. '""'I••• <lo!~ I ltOI~· ,, ..... , ........ "' ... ..... ••• ••••.... 11~. lloou•l!•I ""'''' ,,_ .. '""" . full ...... . ...... "" 1.,0,, ''" l tolouoolt ,, .. , , '" . !O<.,, 11.i ·'" '•" . ""'""'' ..... to<ltt. ••I' 1 +olt<(•O't •'••'. •'<. ... "" ,,. • .... 1 .... " "" .... ,,., ... , ..... 1 !l!,,i.G(l f'(f\Jl11 ot<., •II. (XVFllOI . '" IALI PllCID • $2111 ' • $2111 • • SELECT TRADE·INS • lt•P &UICIC ,,,, ~fRCU•T , ... CHlVROllT ''l.ele~" , " ···~···· '"" ... c.r~ .. r ,.,i.., 10 ...... ,., •••· "C•••!fe" , ''· H.f. II•· 0.1, l&1oefl ••••I •II••, f•O, ,;, !••~. ,., .. ,., ... , . 1,11 ~-"· ... 1 ... tl,000 .. 1140, '•"· .1 • . ~ .. .: • .i ,.o1··~ ............... ,.. .. ... ,1 loo, •,II •••YI I•'"' ' 1 .. <1<~ ........... ~ .... 11·0••" ... ,r '••. ~··to .. ••'• ..... ' '"'"· ~ ...... ,,.ltl othO• f. lo.,., It" lettl P ill• .. ....... ••••• I'"'\· •et••, ..... .,,., • '""ly ... , ..... ..,It" • ,.. k o i. ••~·oc1o•o, jt~Vl 111 ~-..... "''" I•"• ' •"II ••tw<OO'" fTYYltl I ,, .. ~ l!IW1'JI . , ... CHRTSllR. 19•t OLDSMO&tll 1971 (lilVllOllT , (ut1e111 New,...., Id•., ...... It,, i.,, • ....t.~· .... ,, • '·~·~· 111~, ..... ~ ·-· delw•e • fe<1. 91• ••"'" i.11 '"' , '""' "''· ,., .. "' -.. f•'I ~ .. ""' , ......... "" 11,1)0 111llet. ••••<IO\lo lo"'"" l•!t• , .... , fl· 1•1!, lilt ' ttlt<~•I• ..... , .,.,1 l••••l•v< j ,, ' , •••• ,, .. 11, "'' 1 ••• oilfl • •• 1 .... "'"N!lr '"'· ••to, i'•••·· u~. "''"' '""'· •1 .. "'"" r .... ,;, ""'. 1.11 ,,.., '''""' .,11.,, UD1J4l) 1 ... 1 low fOl!M, ........... , ltST· !•<I .... .. ,., . .. !j,4\•, ...... t)J) ... 111,1 .. , r .. u •1•11 ••i.r. t1J00:1t Sole-Leoslng-Aufhorized Service . NABE.RS CADILLAC Authorized Factory Coaler 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Nlesa Call 54_0·9100 Open Evening~! Sunday • • . .. • I I I l -. ' • • ·. • • • fl DAIL V PILOT F'rlday, Nowmbtf 5, 1971 [ _.... l§J ( ''"'t«S.I• I§] [ -... ,,f«S.I• l§J [ A'10lf«W. 1§) -I .,, .. ~ ..... l§J .,......... I§] I '""1""~ l§J [ A'10lf«SM !§J I ............ 980.Autos, New 9IOAutos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO Alltos, New ffO ·Autos, New . . • • • ThrQugh special arrangement with Buick Motor Division, General Motors Corporation, _ we have purchased 4 TRUCK LOADS of .1971 pre-driven · Buick Rivieras. These will be on a first come, first served basis • sold at fantastic • savings • ~· BA~ER -BU!CK -·P.S. All are fully equipped including air conditioning._ Never licensed. All have TAX REFUND when , Congress approves; Be first, they won't last long. 7°/o EXCISE Example Savings • 1971 RIVIERA Absol utely loaded with air conditioning, AM-FM stereo rad io with dual front & rear 1 speakers, power seat (6 way), power windows, speed alert, t in.ted glass, door edge guards, willow mist green with tus'm vinyl interior. (494871H9I076 lj. SALE PRICE $ 11 -• \ • , .._[§aauERz ___ Pl_us_7_%_o _Ex_ci_se_T_ax_R_e_fu_n_d_·w_h_en_C_o_ng_re_ss_a_pp_ro_ve_s.... _ _. IC s • Specializing in QUALITY JAGUAR .,, 234 E.-17'h Street cos -y A ''' MESA Phone: 548-7765 Autos, Used 990Autos, Used 990 Autos, Use.d 990 Autos, Used 990 .A:utos, Used CONTINENT _AL SALE ' • . 1969 l\1ARK III • • • • • • • • • $4875 lmm11c11lalP. Br11u11 ful S1h·er ;\l!nk finish 1<1\h black ]Palht>r 1ntf'llf)r k matrhlnO! landau roof. Equipped \\"llh full po11rr 1nclud1n~ 6·11ay U:fll. Climatl! Control Air Cond .. Tilt i;tr;:. 11 hcP/. Autnn1at1c Cruise Control. etc. Th15 fin~ • Aulomnh1lr nh11nui;ly h11s had thP besl of car ... • \\'X F7>.14 1 1970 Coupe EJo.qu1sJ1.P. SAt1n Bl11ck J1n1sh 111th ."'hlle lrath,.r I.· "h1lr . Uindau roof Luxury rqu1pPf'(I thrnughour, f1 1ll po"·r>r. Til t i;tri;:. 11·hrr\, Ai\1.f\l s1r>rr>o rari10, Chm11le Cnntrol Air Cond., 4 Brand n<>1,· t JrP~ &,. murh niorr SPr &: drt\P th 1~ beautiful rar to Appre~TI" O:IJ7>AGB 1 $4575 1969 4-Dr. Sedan Lo11• 1nilcs-Clr11n1 Altral'lh·r n1('t11- 11m JZold 1\•11h n1a tch1ns; Lna thrr 111· !Prior & bro11·n landau roof. Luxury rf)ui pfl"d of l'nllr!ll". full 1')1111 er, 6·11·11.v ~rat, Til l .111rc. \\hl.. Ttfn1p. Conlrn! Air (('Ind., f'I<'. Refl,.r1 ~ hr~\ of care. Clrarance rr!rrd. f YB:\'{171'). $3475 1970 4-Dr. Sedan Bi>aullful glan1nr gold metallil' fin· 1sh 11•\lh leather interior and match· .1ng landAM roof. Luxury rqulppt'd nf l'nurse:. Full po11•f'r & E'·\l'l'IY po\\·Pr se11ts. cl.imal<' cnntrnl !lir l'nnri11inn- ln_.::, 1111 slrrrint: 11·hrrl. ~1rrrn 1111.,,, !i)~tem~. <'II'. ln1m11cu l111r throui:h· nut. tSJ8A<1A 1 $4575 e .lttANY MORE TO CllOOSE FROM e ,_ 1967 Coupe E>t:cellf!nt cnnd. -Clt'an. Popular lli::h Y"'JIO.,.,, '>I ith black l&ndau r o o f k Je,athtr interior. }"'ull pol\'. er eqllfpped. 6·\1 ay_st:a1 . Factory ' Air Cond.. t>lc. Tb1I beautiful car sho'>'·s v."ODderful care . St:P &: drive today. fTYF7&4 l. Cl~aran(:e Priced. $2075 . Orange County'• 'Family of Fine Cari ohnson & son 1 INCOUJ 1\11 f~( l!HY COUGAR CAPHI ' 2629 HARBOR BLVD;, COSTA MESA • &40·5630 ' 1963 4-Dr. Sedan Drive to 11ppre:ciate:. CJa.s- s1c sAtln b!Ack liniih "'llh Black WI.her A: Black 1Andau 1·oor, f ull r:ower equipped Plus Tilt 1tr2. • 11•ht:el. Climat~ Control Air Cnnd., RadiAl ply llrt:s, Ar.i -fl\.f Pl:ad , elc, See & lrst drlvr . 1711 · CCXL $2375 m~~ mA-~ m~~ m~u~ ~ MERCURY MUSTANG PONTIAC RAMBLER 1971 MERCURY STATION WAGONS HERTZ CORP . --------............. ______ --..... . 196.~ :0.11..iSTANG 2 rir It.I. 6 '63 PONTIAC CONV. '39 RA:O.IBLF.R, i::l".'YI tran11 <:YI ., i:;oOO t1rrs clr11n car. Au to Trans, F.xCPlleni Conri. car. n dn1.r. nu haTtrr;.. S.100. 6-l&-9277. . $39:1 Jo'uJJ Price, trQTis to Jo?oorl tin:-s. $ IO O Io r f • r . 221 \\'. Katrll.:i, Anaheim OLDSMOBILE 1714 ) 7711-4050 . '69 Olds Delta 88 66 :0.!Prr Colony ~.:irk _Si a. ROYAL. }\ill pnii·er, 't'CR98:i 11·ag., f\111 p1vr, 111r. 4.1.000 $2499 1ni. G()()rf rond. S 110 0 I 644-K~~ Harbor American 646·0261 1969 HARBOR, COSTA MESA MUSTANG ,<,Ui\. 96R-9.'£..0. ' SURFSIDE MOTORS ·n3 RA,\IBLf.R s 1a1, o J 847-3842 \\'aeon. Gnnd rn11 , fir"~. 'frli Pontiac Cat11l ina, 2-dr, H!, VI!, Auto. P/S, P /B. lo m i'~. Ori.II: O'>''~r. Pvt pty, ;141'}-4~07. hrakE'S . :'>lusl srp' S300. 968-3S4'L '66 A1nha ~~11dnr \r11.:. VPry Cll"".in. New 11rrs. ~95. Ca.ll 644-j:i65. . . '68 -MUSTANG 2 OR . HARDTOP '71 PONTTAC Grnnvil!P, all po11·er accPi;. $4.100. '61 OLDS Con1·. SuPf'r Sharp. 1147·11046 Clran! N'r lo 11pprrcu1te =~~-c=--~c....~~7 T-BIRD l "..10 f"inn 64.»-:?ifi.ll . '66 GRAND Prix, loarlf'tl. v:i::. autnma11c-tran~ .• pllll'f'r _ -=---0-""' __ 7 Xln't <.'flnrl. Orii;:-. n"·ner. Lo '6:l T-R1rrl, Full f10"'Pr, a ir, 111pr. Nl."11 !Ir<'!'. Orig 011·n,r. $i9.'i. S39-2l!"i0. I ~r,,rrini::. \\'F1':21;2. A real lflfii nto.c;; 412.1 ~Pf"rrl. mi's. s1o:i0. 546--031lt l)Jrc car for rin!v R('hu1!1. Rr11l c.J e An . ----~~-~-1 '11 T·BlRD. 1111 fl(l11"r, l,..r\. $1399 "'"'"" ";'""--~--RAMBLER .. ~ ~~o !11111. air. A:O.llt':'-1 • Mirhrhn.11. f>.11-262 1. 7 1 PINTO: Brown. \\'hnr 'ftl.., d vinyl lop. Xlnt ronfl. i\fust ~.,,e is0" "" ;~~~~·~!~ L. ~~-1968 VaUant _ .. 110~ "\' ECONO:-OIY CAR 5~9--3031 Ex!. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA i\fESA 1971 MUSTANGS HERTZ CORP. 221 \\', l\;itrll11, Al)llhc lm Dix. 4-ftr .. ~I'd. tVOPf'l721 S11n11l An,11 Toyota, <117 VI'. \\'arnrr. '."lll·2,i12. · 'fill Plyn1nu1h Fuc-y"'1"11~2C"no-,_ hrltp. Oi;;.71~1 brfore llAi\l. 11ft fiPi\I. \\'AGON. A-1 ronrl, PnwttT, 1714 1 778-4030 ~~-11 1r, Trarlr ur nr tl\1'>1·n - "!i,'1 i\IU:"TA'.'IG. 6 ryl., nu l\"rc1t r u·kur. &i2-<lti10. pain! 1~rlln111, auio !r;in~ .• RI!!, coon Mnrl . $11."J. PONTIAC I R·l7-0:17:1. -----.~ _..............._ =~~--=-----1'f;6 L;TO. 1 .~pr!. nu pa inl , '6fl BO:"S :wl2. NP11• (·"7la1ne. i;hocks. t lu!ch, .~lrrro t11.pe, Xtnt cond. -must ~II? m11ny xtra.11. $1:2.'iO/hsl offer. $2.400. M8-7S40 4 to 9 pm !162-7~6'1 or 642-92AA, ' ·~ 5'1us1ang 2+2 fai;rback. ·ro LE :'11ANS con1". v~ :ml t~. " h11.rrel, AU1(1. II.If, P .... T lop • .site.ring k PIS. $8!).l; fi/j...40711. rad10 & tapt> deck. Xlnt '6.'i :-Ohl\tang. 2 dr, hardklp, cond. S2800. 673-241~. aulo trans, flS, nu tires. '67 FIREBIRD V-8 PIS. S600. '*' S-42-4029 PIB. R&·!f Cr11gar ' ma.g11, '71 Must11ni:: Mach I. r/h, good cond. $1300, 67~. 11u10 trans, '>l•ide Q\·af~. 9400 ·70 Ponti11 to1o-All'I wl'lgon. xtnl mi. $2900 1>1·r'!. R33--0GAA. cond . Call l:lf>ll\n ~ A:'>f & ~ "6~ MUSTANG. 1ru1to, 111r, Pi\i :l40-99.i~ i\lr. Ct'ru!ron. BOOy ln 'lnori rnnrl . NPt>ds '62 PONTIAC ""~'"" \\·l"rk. S22i S:l0-44llO'. Gl'll)fl "'Ork "~r $1RS. C\'L, MU\(l, P/S, orig. e ~\\j7 e 011·nl!r. S67:l. '61! BONN. All extr11~. ""'~' l!"IG-1 RA;\.-IBLER Cl.AS.Sir 1200. 842-5978 For best result.11! &12-'.Jfiill Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used . 990 -OVERSTOCK SALE '70 MARK Ill ~;::;;_ ~:;:-;.:"'' $6295 LtJlf11r. '70 RIVIERA """· '"··· Wl!ttll, At•, $3695 ----~-:-o~=----=----' 70 LTD 4 DOOR i:~_ '" $2695 '71 LTD 4 DOOR ·~::'.·~~;.;_ $3695 '70 MERC. WAG. ~::'.-r,"' $2695 '70 FORD WAG. ~::.·· " "" $3495 '70 E200 VAN ~-;::; ~'..'.'· $2795 '70 EL CAMINO ;;:;,;;~-"'· $2695 '70 IMPALA ~::.' '"· '" $2996 $1295 Mac Howa·r<o OR 531·0608 Corner 1st & H1rbor ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~=~="~4=1_1~·' -....,,...,1 rtrc&. Xlnt cond. Btst o.!te.r. DAILY PIIm tot action! ~i7-A6S!l. I Sente Aoe L l ( -----: • ~ ---!-.-. •• • j _.__ _,_ -• . • I'!!" BEFORE YOU BUY; CHECK OUT OUR -,. ·' .. ALL REMAINING 1,971 GMC ~ ••• . . • • • -' ~ .. l ·-· LOADED!! Turbohydramatic trans., powe.r · steering, AM ra.dio, white wall tire s, tinted windshield, and more. PICKUPS * SPRINTS *·CAMPERS . •' • I • 55 AT ACTUAL ' FACTORY INVOl(E • • • POSITIVELY ~O ADDED DEALER CHARGES!!! TOWN SEOAN =!11 24 1 ~1' , TEST DRIVE THE NEW The SASSY LITILE CAR, IS SASSIER THAN EVER! Ready for immediate deliv~ry in 11 bi9 selec:tion of ne.w c:olors. · . ' . - ~;!: Honda Car. Only . s1295 · LEASING? We Offer "Personalized" Leases on Oldsmobiles, GMC Trucks, Rec- · reational Vehicles! '\ TRY US 'EFORE YOU LEASE.ANY DOMESTIC OR IMPORT CAR. -. •• BRAND NEW 1972 OLDSMOBILE 98 ·COUPE . -I • -BILL JACOBS· , GENERAL MGR. '66 .PLYMOUTH HAS POWER STEERING •• POWER DISC BRAKES·· POWER WINDOWS·· POWER 6-WAY SEAT·· AIR CONDI- TIONING·· TILT AWAY WHEEL AND · MUCH, MUCH MORE. (JUJ7T2M,JI 24 13 8) .$ '68 CADILLAC · '66 · OLDS 98 '67 DELTA 88 4 Or. Sed.ii ri. V.8 , Auto . i' rans., Radio, Hatter. ,! RYD598 l Full power, factory air, vin yl roof. j XRK098) 4 door sedan. Full power equipment plus factory •ir 4 dr. ":!· T. VS , •u+om•tlc, power steerin g-brekes•win. conditionin g. iTFF845 ) . dows-seets, eir cond . Loeded. (VDS378J $895 ' . $599 1 . '2895 ·_ ~ s995 _ '70 AMX ., '71 FIREB IRD '70 GRAND PRIX '66 FORD _4 ~peed, radio and_ he"+er. !P90A I VS, 4 speed, power stee ring & bra ke1, R&H, air cond. Auto matic, power windows, air cond ., vinyl roof, radio,' 4 Door. Automatic transmission, power stearing, redio1 I 142CPL J heater. !ZMV262 1 • heater, .(RPLSl'/41 '1795 53295 .$3495 -5495 __ ~-'70 GMC 2 TON '67 . OLDS CUT LA SS '68 TORONADO --'69 SIMCA . Tilt ctb truck 5500 series. S speed transmission, (4582 ) Rad io, Heaf11r, Auto. Tran s., Vinyl Top. { 179ASN ) Full po':"'er equipment plus factory •ir condition ing, vinyl roof, (WEN244 ) Red io, heater, 4 sp11ed trahsmission. l786C9S ) - '3295 56 95 ·52095 ... 5875 -. '68 DATSUN '62 FORD RANCHE RO '68 CHEV. IMPALA CPE. '66 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLE · • -4 Or., 4 Speed, Redio, H••+•r. IVH B3 14 l • R•d io, heat er, auto., air, power 1t11erin9 & bra kes. Full power equipment plus factory air conditioning. IXIV559 I I KSJ 805 I . . I RHN 255/ . $695 $3 49 '1395 . 51795 I .' . --. . • . ' . • , \ . . ' • DAl LY PILOT " /'of I I I I .- -1 ' frtaa7, lllovetnDtr"3, J/lf J. ' --- Bos LONGPRE PRICES GOOD ONLY FRIDAY, SATURDAY '70 '70 '69 '68 '67 , . & SUNDAY. BUICKS BUICK RIVIERA oir conditioni9g, tilt wheel, VB, automotic, AM/FM stereo rodlo, power steering, power windows, power brakes. s3995 IZZC033) · BUICK ELECTRA 225 .4 dr. H.T., tinted gloss, cord top, air cond., VB, auto., AM/FM stereo, radio, pwr. steer., pwr, wind., pwr. brks., notch $3995 back seats. (431ADM) . IUICK RIVIERA VS, automatic, power steering, po~er windows, power brakes, cordova top, tinted glass, oir. IYQC705J BUICK. RIVIERA VS, outomotic, power steering, power brakes, tinted gloss, air ·conditioning, radio, $2795 chrome whts. (UZJ3541 BUICK SPECIAL. 2 door hardtop, VS, outomotic, radio, tinted gloss1 air con· ditioning. $1695 1#435177E108194) CHEY,IJOLET '71 - VEGA 2300 holch bock coupe, 4..spe~d, radio, factory air cond., $2495 mags. 1712CPM) I 70 CHEVROLET NOYA 6 cylinder, 3 spd., radio. $1995 i997ASPJ . 9 CAMARO V.8, 3 on the floor, ra- '6 dio, P.S., tinted glass, chrome whls., 1).~z~~t;;;... $2195 -------------·---·----- '68 MALIBU 4 door sedan, VB, outomotic, rodio, power steerin§, tinted glots, foe· tory oir conditioning. $1395 fXCf295) FORD • GALAXJE 500 '4 fOr. V-8, auto. '68tr.a ns, radio, P.S., tinted glass, fac. '" <0nd. $1195 IVSU6531 -~~~~~~~~~-- '67 FALCON COUPE 6 cylinder, 3 speed, "d;o. $995 (VTV563) F 70 MUSTANG M"h .I. 35 1 V-8 , .. d., h"to" J on !ho $23""5 floor. !7b2ASP). Y FORD Country Squire Wag. 10 '70 pass., V-8 , auto. trans., R&H , P.S., tint. gl11ss , I owner, C2""95 lei lo mi. I 148BXDI ., 7 '71 '71 '71 '71 '71 '71 '71 '71 ''71 '71 PONTIACS PONTIAC 2 door, VB, ou!omotic, radio.. power steering, power d isc brakes, tinted gloss, deluxe hub cops. 1••60Jo1 , $A VE VENTURA 11 coupe, culomotic, tinted gloss, carpets, (098DLT) ' . 6 cyhnder, $AVE VENTURA II 2 door, center con. sole, VB, automatic, radio, power-steer· ing, tinted gfoss, cus. tom sport. {633DLR) $AVE ·PONTIAC T37 coupe,. 6 cylinder, automatic, tinted gloss, custom steering wheel. · 1445oJoJ "$AVE GRAND PRIX Rally II whls., VS,. outo- moJic, radio, power steering, power windows, cordovo lop, tinted gloss, air conditioning, $AVE 1054CEMl ·flREBIRD Formula 400, VS, outomotic, radio, power steering, $AVE tinted gloss. (4S5DSV) VENTURA II coupe, VS, custom steering wheel, carpets. 10970LT) tinted gloss: $AVE LEMANS 4 door, hardtop, VS, ra- dio, power steering, power disc brakes, tinted gloss, a ir conditioning, remote control mirrors. $AVE I #23591Z1 077 __ 7.::6:,,1 ~~_,--'~~~ LEMANS 4 d•. H.T., Va, R., P,S .. P. d;isc 8., tint. glass, a ir cond., re- mote cont. mirrors. $AVE !No. 2359tZl07077)-. SAFARI Wagon. I 0 Pass., .auto. trans., V-8, R&H, P.S .. P. disc B., f.,c. air cond., P. +-gate, Lug. car., Super lift shocks. $A VE ---·. _:3-c'_:'::.":.:'c.'-------=----l 71 PONTIAC F37 coupe, 6 cylinder, automolic, alt tinted gloss, white side wall tires, fiberglass, $AVE vinyl11'Mr. f755CPtj '71 -) '7 -, .. '71 '71 '71 PONTJAC 2 door hardiop, 6 cylin- der, tinted glo11, white side wait tires, automatic turbo. $AVE 17 SOCPLI CATALINA ~upe, ya, outomotic, rodio, power steering, oir conditioning, tinted glass. $AVE 1884CTPI PONTfAC T37.t hardtop coupe, 6 cylinder, automatic, vinyl trim, carpets added. $AVE (754CPL) , VENTURA II coupe, 6 cylinder, automatic, radio, power steering, tinted gloss, vinyl interior. 1653DBA) $AVE CATALINA 4 door, hardtop, VS, outomolic, radio, power steering, tinted gloss, air conditioning. $AVE (l 93COU) '71 '71 '71 '71 '71 '70 PONTIACS PONTIAC T37 coupe,' 6 cylinder, auto- matic, tinted glass, carpels, custom steering wheel. $AVE 1756CPLJ CATALINA 4. door hardtop, vinyl trim, remote control mirror, VS, automatic, air cond., tinted gloss, $AVE I #252391 CJOl.9741 VENTURA II 6 cylinder, oulomotic, tint ed gloss. !024DBAJ $AVE CATALINA 4 door, hardtop, vinyl trim, VB, automatic, radio, power s!eering, power disc brokes, factory a ir con- ~~,;~~~~·\(3031311 • $AVE CATALINA: 4 door hardtop, vinyl trim, remote mirror, VB, automatic, radio, power steering, power disc brakes, factory oir cond. $AVE 1#252391C302296) LEMANS SPORT VS, automatic, radio, power steering & windows, cordava top, tinted gloss, factory ciir conditioning, 1;11 wheel, $2995 [S76AEBJ I 7 0 FIREBIRD 350 RALLEY II VS, outoma- ' tic, rodio, pwr. steer., cordova lop, tint- ed glass, factory air $3395 rtinrlitinn. 1605AZ01 , BONNEVILLE 2 D" Hudtop, V-8, '6' 7 auto. _trans., R&H, tape de~k. 1 P.S., P. wind., EZI glass, factory air oond. $13.""5' . ITYW851 I Y '70 '68 '66 '69 '69 •ONNEYIW AGON roof rock, VS,: automatic ower steer., pwr. · brakes, tint e1' a1t, factory oir conditioning, ;~~:;~P-$3695 VENTURA 2 Or. Hardtop, V-8, a u-. to. trans., R&H, P.S., EZI glass, f•dory •ir cond. $17.,.5 IXVAJ991 ~ PONTIAC GRAND PRIX Rolley ll, VB, outomatiC> AM/FM stereo, power steer- ing, pwr. winds., cordova toJ?, tinted glass, air conditioning, leather trim •. 1018AEBJ . $.3~95 EXECUTIVE Hardtop, V-8, auto. trans., Radio, P.S., EZI glass, fac. ,;, •ond. $11 ""5 I YXX59 I I Y VENTURA 2 Dr. Hardtop. V-8, auto. trans, R&H, P.S:, P. brfl., EZl glass, factory air cond,, low low m;J.,90. $24""5 I ZDH085 I Y PONTIAC GTO VS, automatic, radio, wr. steer., cordovo top, tinted gloss, fa · ndition-$2395 ;ng. IZDW7~J PRICES GOOD ONLY FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY •. '69 '68 ,'69 '68 '68 ~68 PONTIACS PONTIAC IONN~YILLE VS, outoma· lie, radio, power steering, factory air conditioning, tinted $24. 95. gloss. iX NJS 14) CATALINA Coupe, VS, automatic, ra- d io, power lleering, cordovo top, tinted gloss, factory air con. $ d;ti.,;ng. (ZWA3811 ·1795 LEMANS b cyl., auto. trans., radio EZI glass, bucket seats, console I *6075561 $159 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 door hard· top, VS, automatic, radio, power, steer- ing, cordovo top, factor)' air condition- ;nq. IVHH8061 .s 1795 CATALINA 2 door hardtop, tjlt wheel, VB, outomotic, rodio, power st.eering, cord lop, tinted glass factory air con- d;1;on;ng. $1 595 15S5AVHI PONTIAC GTO VS, automatic, radio, power steering, tinted glosi, foctory air conditioning. $19.,.5 1s4ao'ox1 .,, BONNEVILLE coupe, VS, outomotic, radio, power steering. _$1195 IRVJ45Sl - T.RUCKS '69 CHEVY v,n. b <yL, 1•38795t;I ' ) spd. $1795 --------, 71 FORP J/,. TON PICKUP VS, 3 speed, radio, custom cob, heavy duty camper equipment, · 171004ll $3495 '69 '69 CHEYROLEt PICKUP '/2 ton VS, oula· molic, power steering, custom cob. 143727CJ ' $2695 CHEVROLET VAN '/2 ton heavy duty front & rear springs, 6 cylinder, 250 cu., 3 speed, radio, reor door glass, - auxiliary seot. !71456E) , MISCELLANEOUS ,70 PLYM. ROADRUNNER VS, A.T., R., P.S., tint. gla ss, less than 4000 speedometer $24.,.5 m;1.,. l266DLS I Y '68 '67 CAD Cpe OeVille~ V-8, A.T., P.S., P. wind., P.8., land; top, EZI glass, fac. air cond., tilt & tele sir. whl. lt. blue w/ma tch int. {WUK484 I $2995 COUGAR XR7, VS, automatic, power steering, cordovo top, factory oir con· di.tioning, tilt wheel, IUDR457) CHARMING C -~APIES * Starchi~f '65 Ponti•• 4 Or ., V.8, auto. tr11ns., radio, heater, power str- ing, pwr. wind., tint. gh., \'Eto~o2 1 $~95 '69~ ' 4 c.yl., auto. trans., radio, heater. $995 500 '65 Galaxie 2 Dr. Hardtop, V-8, auto. yens., rad io, heater, p. steering. INHDlOJ J $795 7 68 Firebird b cyl., 3 spd., radio, heater, air cond. IWAK928) $995 -. '66 ·~ 4 · >pood, .,d;o, h .. t ... IRIL4781 . $795 '69 POfttla< . . Grand Prix ,V8, auto., AM radio, F!w;, i.trng., cordova top, "E.Z eye glass, tilt whL, fac. air cond. ZWA6H $2495 I '68 Buick Special V.8, auto. trans., radio, heater, power s 0 teering, .tinted glass. IWUV76 61 •CHARMING CHEAPIES ar• cars to be sold as is-without w~rronty, if not sold this weekend these cars will be sold to other dealers Monday morning. ''Service First'' • GARDEN FRWY. ' ' I ' • } " ~ WE EXPERTLY DO PONTIAC$ AND AMERICAN MOTORS WARRANTY WORK REGARDLESS OF WHERE YOU ORIGINALtY PURCHASED YOUR CAR • • • • • •SHOWROOM HOURS • Monday thru Saturday, 9 •.M. to 10 P.M. Sunday 10· A.M. to 7 P:M.· ONO PRE, >. ' . . . -. • \ .. -r i , . . -- ·WE APPRECIATE ·. YOUR BUSINESS -~--·--• CALLNOWll Phone 557 ·9220 . 1.NSTAN.T CREDIT 'YOU MllD AND SnLLSAYllTOV MOIUT . 1. If you ore new in California 3~ If you.are new on your job 2. If yau owe money on yaur 1· lfyouhovelittleornocr~t cor LET ME TRY TO AR RA NGE THE CREDIT AND TEIMS YOU · NEED SO THAT YOU MAY Drive Home Today in the car of your choice!! r·oTAL ~DISCOONTS . FIRST COME · FIRST SERVED · · . BRAND NEW PURCHASE FORDS· CHEVYS • PL YMOUTHS $AVE NOW '7lCOLT . 2 DI. H.T. IM tJll•l'l ''': t•lt! I p~~~~~~E $2 7soo PRICE . . FULL PR1CE SAME PRICE-· SAME PAYMENTS! '70 LTD FORD SQUIRE WAGON 10 ,.~, ovto t'11dio & heaer, power steering & brakes, V/8 elec•r. windo-.ts, focta1r, wsw, roofnck272AEF '70 CHEVY MONTE CARLO 2 dr. H.T., V/8, auto, radio & heater, power steering; fact air,tanda1 top, WSW, nylon i .. t. 1.23AEB . '70 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 d r. H. T. V /8, auto, rad io & heater, power $feerin9~ air cond, full vinyl int ~~ . . . .. . '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 - H.T., V/8, wsw auto, ra di o & heat.er, power steering, fatt. air. 176ALQ .. · '70 CHEVY. IMPALA H.T. V/8, auto, racSio, & heater, wsw, power steering, fact air nylon int. ~~L . '70 DODGE CHARGER this 2 door H.T. has full vinyl int., auto, Radio & fltoter, ,ower steering, 'landau top, V/8, XH2960612Sl97 '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 tlT. v.1, au to. radio, & htottr, foct air, wsw wheel coven, powtr br~kes. UlAVO '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 , I IMMEDIATE DISCOUNTS -ON'72!S -· BRAND NEW '7·2DODGE . TRUCK · IMMEDIATE · DELIVERY '$2469~ ~""",,. ........... . ..,,..._ ..... n.. ...... ,.. .. .,K.•i,.n & •i..I· .w.w _.,,,.,_ ..musw ' i;,.... . '68 CHARGER · '69 VW BUG -.'67 CHEVY ~~~:; $888 ,_112557 FULL PlllCE '69 FORD TORINO ·• I· , -.. ' ' I r . • • • - • ' . , • , • . - ' 1 ' l • • .TIME c:J THIODOll IOllNS SI.. TJ .......... --A..nl ... 1t71 THIODOll IOllNS .IL WHILE THEY LAST . UN BEATABLE DISCOUNTS ON NEW '71's AND IMMACULATE '71 · DEMO AND EXEC CARS ' ~ STILL A BIG • SELECTION TO CHOOSE .FROM! , Our Volume Lease o..,.rtrnent offers all popular American ind Import M1k11 at corn- "[Wf•o'il~'·LEASE EXPERTS TAILOR YOU R LEASE TO YOUR . NEEDS. · "It's tht.S.rvlce Th1t Mikes the Difference" . ' • . - BEAT ~TH ·Factory schedules call for substantial increases on all new · 1972 models within less than 30 days. Right now, however, ev~ry new '72 in our t!emendous inventory Is stil! .frozen at . '71 prJce levels, and stitl sub1ect to Theodore Robins year-round v o I u m e discounts. BUY· NOW .-SMILE LATER! . -· '." FORD .FOR . '72 •• THE NEWEST CARS YOU'LL SEE THIS YEAR! ------.. ---------,......_------------ 1972 ,.J TORINO 1972 MUSTANG • ·One Of So. California's -Biggest Pinto Displa-y.s! e 1600 CC ENGINES e 3 DOOR RUNABOUTS e 2000 CC ENGINES e AIR COND. MOD!LS e 4 SPEED STICKS e CUSTOMIZED . e 2 DOOR SEDANS MODELS . ~ . We have more of next yea.r's models read y for immediate deliv ery . th.an ·we have ever had during the month of Ot· ' tober. A FIFTY YEAR R·ECORD! ... ........................... .. FORD TRUCKS FOR 1972! ----Our Truck Experts Can Serve Y !JU Best! f ·100's TO HEAVY DUTY CUSTOMS CAMPER SALE MANY MODELS NOW . Pf{ICE SLASHED TO DEALER .· CO ST. MUSTANG SAL E TRADES ACCEPTED PAlD FOR OR .NOT! FORD-LTD-GALAXIE-T·BIRD TORINO_;WAGON SALE .. Many to choase from. '65 thru '71 maclels. Coupes, ha~d, taps, convertible and 2 + 2 fastbacks. Same with 4 speeds, als0 air canditianin9 and automatic models. E~PLE : ·•71 MUSTANG H.T. Radio, heater, eutomatic, pwr. 1fN r. It brakes, fe et. e ir, good mile1 ·1019CQRJ, 11.UI' IOOK PRICI $3315 OUR PRICE $2896. ----------.-..... -rRANSPORTATiONSPECIAiS · . ---------r-5~9_6_ I SIMCA'. 1 ODO 67 4 door. Low miles. Original thru-out. (VTl\1868) '65 OPEL Kadotte GoOO mlles. Good -. Many ta c.hoase from. '65 thru '71 Madels< Sport roafs, farmals, 2 doar & 4 door hardtaps & ·sedans. Full power, 1 air conditionin9. Warranties available. EXAMPLE: '71 T·BIRD H.T. ---· -'\":.~. ·,;.· Auto.; P.S., P.8., P-winclow1, P-bucket 1e1f1 AM -FM Stereo redio, eir cond., tilt wheel, w1w, bocly sicle mlcl9s.,.remof• mirror, 9ood miles. I 694BZJ I ILUE IOOK PllCI $4785 OUR PRICE $4396 · '70 CH ARGER RT '70 GALAXll 2 Dr. Hardtop. V-8, Auto. Trans., RAdlo, Heater1 Viny1 · Roof. Air·Cond. 1943AKG). transportation. C908ASG) $896 '71 FIAT Spyd" $1 896 .Radio. Heater, Au to. Trans., Po"'rer Steering. Air Cond., Vinyl Roof, Good mil es. Cl lSAGEl. '69 FORD Cobra . Fa.irlane 2 dr. H.T., R&Ji.. 4 speed. special wheels &. tires. {135311) '70 F1SD ¥• TON Pickup. Powered by Ford V-8. Low miles, factory Equipped. {78914E). ~9 FORD Wagoo Cntry. Sed. R&H, auto., P.S., good r11iles. (UCZ306l. '71 VEGA l Door Hatchback Cpe. 4 speed, radio. heater, Low miles. t935BZT ). '71 PINTO '65 MUSTANG V-8, Hardtop. Radio. Heater, Factory Equi pped, Good l\1iles. CPAN7471 '66 FALCON Sedon Radio, Heater, Auto., Good 1'.1iles. <TEJO J8 1 '6-5 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill 2 dr. H.T. R.lll, auto., power 11tel'rlng, air cond., good miles. PIT484) '65 OLDS f.85 W09°" R&:H. automatic, pov.·er steering, good miles. CNYP4l2J • · $896 '70 MAVERICK Fully fact. ~uipped . Radio, h'at,r. (688BEPI '68 v.w. Fastlleck Ful!Y equipped, good miles. CVWTl181 '66 VOLVO 1225 Station Wagon. 4 speed low mileti. CZXV249 t '67 MERC. Comet Sed. Radio, heater. fac- tory equipped. Good miles. IXSP037) Grabber green/racing stripes, 4 epet'd, good mil~. (337CAXJ. S11le Prlcea GoM for 72 )ieur1. C1t1 lutllltct t• Prier S.le. •• ' SALES DEPJ-=. AM_TQ_t , ... MON.FIL -1-PAR"'S-.SERVICE · • I AM TO 6 PM SAT • l HOURS 10..IM TO', .. SUN HOURS . . ~ . . ' l ' I 7-AM la 9-PM MON ' 7 AM To 6 PM TUE·FRI ' • --- L > Rdstr. Appx. 8500 milt'!s. Blue Book Prict'! $2215, '67 FIRHIRD Hardtop. V-8, Auto. Ti-11n~ .. · Powt'r Steering, RAdio, Heat- er, Racinp; Green, Good mUes. IUTX849 J. '6' RAMILfl American:6 cyl .. eu10., gOod miles. { TGE552 I '61 GALAXIE H.T, VB, Auto., R&.H, P.S., GOod f.clill'!S. IYCY6321 -PARTS DEPT. ONCY-a AM ta I PM SATURDAYS ••• ' •