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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-12 - Orange Coast Pilot$140~000 Fines Paid • 7 RunawaY Car Kills ' ., 3 • Ill Youngstown~ Ohio; 12 Injured FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 12, 1971.· VOL. '4, NO. 211, 4 SECTION!• 44 l'AOIS Senate 01\.s. Conth1ui11 g , Her Troubles Mushrooming • no • Group Says Generator r----.• obless Pay SAN plEGO (AP l-The strange, mushroo m-like planls growin&-out of the carpet of her apartm~nt forced Toni Trisby to move out. They were whit!!, black and green _and growing several inches a day. , Out of cUriosjty Miss nisby ~ a -24-year-0ld secretary, notified the counly heallh office and a sanila- tilJIJ inspector took irt samples Thursday to· an alyze. ' 'Un safe' WASHINGTON I UPI) -Over ad· ministration objections. the Senate voted to d a y to pa~ weeks of additionaJ unemploymeitt nef1t.s to job 1 es s workers in sb es with chronically high unemploy ment. The vote was 46 to 31. · Immediately afler that vote, Sen. \'ance Hartke (0-Ind.), asked the Senate to defeat the administration on another tax issue. He called up his amendment that would fix the income tax personal exempt ion for 1972 income at $800. The House-passed bill tha1 Nixon Proposed raises the exemplion to $750. ll is now $650. T~ 41:roposal would extend benefits in states where unemployment had avera~­ ed at least 6 percent for at least 13 weeks. About.IS slates would be effected. Defeated was a more liberal amendment that would have paid extended benefits in states where unemp!oyment averaged over 4.5 percent for 13 weeks. About 32 states would have been affected. Democra ts opposed the tibcralizlng Bmendment. authored by Sen. Jack Miller (R-lowa l. on grounds that it v.·ould cost so much to the federa l government tha t the House would refuse to go along. ''The House would tell us to go fly a kite ,'' Sen. Rtlssell B. Long (Q..La .l, !See BENEFITS, Page %) Ora:A~oast Wen Ille r Winter's drt'.zles \'All most like- ly disap~ar tonight with mostly sunny skies forecast for the week- end. High will range from 55 on the coast to 65 inlan d. Lows v.•i\I range from 45 to 55 respectively. INSI DE TODA Y A funriy f11 ing happened to Orange Counq(s Cart Lind- strQDJ...Dn his wny to a._pro-foot-_ ball career. There is a story on"if pict11res abo11t 1t on Pa gt. 23 of today's lVeeke11der. • ... 11111 II c.n1 .... 11 t C11Kk1"11 u, 1 Ct•ttl11-4 J&-44 1 C9'"kl J! CNH""1il :U l>ffffl Nt!ICll I Dlftn:n I ldlttl'1•1 ,..,. • lllt1rt1l111T11nl H·2• l'l~lllCI •·11 Hor•M-14 Ann Lftf41't 1, t,\ulult l'undl II N1l1on1I NIWl •s or ... •• c .... ~"· 1 1:111 .... r1n11 u.n Sylv11 "•rttr If l110rll 1•19 llOCM M1ri.M1 1•11 T1te¥lllon 1' tnt1•ert 1 .. 2' , W41!1!... I i'lem"''' NIWJ 1.).1J W1<MI Ntwt ·~ 1¥ff111!111.,. 2.).H MOv1tt "'" The plants really are mushrooms, ·caused by. dampn ess in Jhe con- crete foundation or flooring, re· port~ Dr. J." B. ASkew, county health director. Toni may move· back. he said, and the mushrooms in her rooms will disa ppear when the rug dries out. Ecuador Seizes 5 More American Fisliing Boats SAN DIEGO (UP I) -The Ecuadorian government seized five more tuna clip- pers today, only hours after levying $140.000 in fines and releasing five others. The Ceryl Marie, Mary S .. Endeavo r, Eastern Pacifii: and Royal Pacific were being tak.en to the port of Salinas at last report, August Felando, generBI manager of the American -TUnaboat AssOciBtiOI) here, said. About 65 crewmen plus five skippers were aboard the tuna clippers, all of which were from here. he said. The skippers radioed they were being taken by the LC61. the Quito, which seiz- ed four American and one Canadian tuna seiner Wednesday. Felando said. The Denise Marie of San Diego was seized in the fir st group and was released without pa ying a fine after" showing it had acqu ired a license. Its skipper was quoted by Felando today as saying he heard the LC61 skippct say he planned "to ~o out there and get anoth er batch." Ttie latest seizures occurred SO to 60 miles off the coast of Ecuador . In ad- dition. the Trinidad, one of the boats seiz- ed earlier, was intercepted. boarded and released after its skipper told the Ecuadorians it alre'ady paid a fine . Also released without pBying a fin~ after -sl'KiWinC lt" lfad a 1l~nse was lhe, Canadian vessel Atlantic Patton . T,he $140,IXKI in fines was paid by the Trinidad, The Venturou! and t:ht Blue Meridian. Chill Wills' Wife Di es ENCINO (UPfl -Betty Wills. wife of gravel-\'Oiced actor Chill Wills for 43 vears. died or a h~art attack Thursday at the age of 64. She married Wills In 1928 In Kansas City, ~to., .. , By JOUN VAL TERZA. r... DI ffll ~llY Pilot Slllf Another "aftershock" of I a s t February's earthquakes touche"d the San Onofre Nuclear Gen,erating station this week -stningly worded allegations by the ~.000-member People's Lobby that the reactor's cooling systeni is "unsafe ." And coupled with the charges came 811 official legal document asking that the State Public Utilities Comm ission shut down the plant and conduct heari'ngs within 30 days to determine the safety of the system which keeps the reactor cool. Such a request is unprecedented. a top· level official of the PUC told the DAILY PILOT late Thursday. "I don 't remember ever having lo decide on such a request, said the PUC's Southern C a I i f o r n; a Representative Leonard Patterson. He said the first step at the PUC level would be to determine if the agency, in- deed, has jurisdiction over the "nuclear as peels of the plant operation." He hinted . that the issue· might be relayed, instead, to the Atomic Energy Commission, which already has asked the two utilities operating th.e plant (Southern . California Edison and S.,n Diego Gas-and Electric) to file detailed reports on the · cooling. system. The 1~l!egati.ons by the Peoples' ;Lobby were aired Wednesday In a Los Angeles press conference. Late Thursday, the group 's eKecutive director, Edwin Koupal .Ir. told the-DAI- LY PILOT that Ertl son officials should be "eager" to defend -und«:r oath -their plant's safety ln an open PUC hearing. One basis 'for the Lo by's dem ands, Koupal said , is.the failur: of the moc.kup of the system during ests earlier this year at a testing labor tory in Utah. "But we're not ju talking about the test and lhe failure. · "What we'i-e say· g here is, look, gang, if the plant is so ood and operating in the area of th Bnd cor~rate responsf61 y, n you (llieUIIUtles) ~'On't mind at a appearing under oath and proving you case." Koupal said.· He added that he utilities "can't stand the area of trut because they have ex- isted on half sta ement.s and innuendo." The group K pal represents has It of- fices and repre lion in 28 counties, he said. "We Specialize not in letter·writlng campaigns, but in pressing issues we feel strongly Bbout through the cou rta and the (S.e NUCLEAR, P•c• Z) Air For~e Plane ~ • Crashes~ Burns; 10 of 11 Killed re .. , I Fit'e111en Burn \. - em an an e U"I y...,..,.: ' ' . walking through foam when flames burst up around him. He and another fireman who dragged Ross· to safety are in satisfactory mndition today in a hospi· tal. Both suffered Durns. Flames enguU Fire Cpt. Harold Foss. 43, Thursday evenin~ in Houston, Tex. and partially surround an· other f1rem~n. Foam had been u.sed to subdue ga·so- jine· fire in downtown Houston apartment gara ge. It started when a car hit ? gasoline pump. Ross was Runaway Car Kills Three In Ohio City ' ' YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio (UPI) -'A n1naway auto plowed 500 fett throuith a nooo-hour crowd tOOay al -.-bw riowntown intersection and police said at least thr.ee. persons were killed and 12 in- jured. two critically. • ~ Police anti an investi gator for the ri..1ahonlng County Coroner's Office first · reoortcd that fi ve persons were killed. but _only lhree bodies were taken hospltDls. About 12 ambulances were sent to the sce ne, Where j>ollce said the careening aulo "mowed people down like grass." (See WlW CAR, Page 2) 10 Die as Air Force- Plane Crashes, Bur,~. • LI'!TLE ROCK AIR FORCE BASE, !med by Col. Richard J. Gibney. com· Arie (AP) -An .. Air-Force-€1SOE-cargo mander of the 3l4th-Tactieal-1';1rlift _Wing - plane crashed itnd burst Into names at the base. shortly after takeorf from Little Rock Alt They were Capt. Laurance F. Mher, Force Base about17 a.m. tod8y, killing-IO inspector navigator ll Fort Washlngtoo, of the 11 crewmen ab0an1. N.Y.; M. Sgt. Orville D. Gearheart, in- fl.taj. William R. Worth. base in-structor fligh\ engl~r from Aberdeen, formation officer, said one crewman S.D:: Capt. Jan 8. Raycraft. tnstructor - survived, but was in critical · condition pilot of L-Os Angeles; 2nd Lt Michael W, and was being flown to an Army hospital Hodge of Salem, lit., who wa! a trainee in Sa n Antonio, Tex.. for treatment of on temJ>Orary duty fro.m the 3645lh Stu· burns. , . dent Squadron at Laughlin AFB, Tex.: ·~ Five of the 10 kill~ In the flaming and 1st Lt. David C .• Moule of Stockton, crash of the (our-engine plane w~e iden-, · (Set PLANE, Paa:• JJ • ' • ·' • I , • \ ! OAJt:'f-PJLOT--S • -; . .. • Berserk-Youth Slain at Church SPOKANE. Wuh. tUP11 -~ Harmon became con\'inced that Christ years ai:;o Larry Harmoh pop~ LSD was the devil "v.·ho. ~ame to earth _ 10 · · ·' 1 k · .. , h II 3 d back'' destroy the true religion of the Jev.•1,h pdli; ahu oo a o e n . faith.~' hallucinogenic lr!p ln _v.•hlch he said he Harinon \\·alked int o St. Aloysius encountered Jesus Christ. Roman Catholic t;:.:hurch on the Gonzaga Sinctt then. his father said t.oday, lini\'ersity campus Thursday. Janitor Nix-011 Planning .To Tell Na tion Of Viet Poli cy \VASHii\GTOt\ \ lfPI i -President Nixon soon \\ill explain his plans on Indochina lo the nation . He must coi1sider th~ overwhelming sentiment or Congress for an early and total withdra wal of µ.s. Hilary Kunz Was on a ladder cleaning s1.atues depicting the statiOJ'IS ol the cross. Harmon sbot-him in the back with a .22 caliber rifle. Kuni toppled to the floor. dead. Wielding a sledgehammer. a pick a:< and his rifle, police said . Harmon ran amok .in the church, v.'1'eck1ng religious slalueS and pe'A'll. shattering windo"•S, smaslJing the ornate communion railing. Then ·.he ran outside and starting '.'fir· ing at anything that mo\'ed .'' Police !aid he \\·ounded four bystanders before he fell dead in a hail ·of pnlice bullets. "He "·as acutally killed by LSD." said E. Glenn Harmon; his fa ther. a Spokane atto rney. · forces. "Worse than that. the same 'LSD pills 1'he \Vhite House has not sai d \then which did irreversible damage In his Nixon "'ill make his announcement on his brain more than three years a~o cau~d troop Withdrav.·a\ policy for the _ period. him to kill another along \\•ith himself." follov.•ing Dee. 15 in Vietnam. but it could The elder Harmon said his son twice come v.'ilhin the next few days. took LSD and told him that on his first Coming to the end of anOther year or triP he .. went to hell and back, literally" struggle v.•ith the President ?~er th~ _war. The father quoted his son as saying. '"I Congress sent Nixon a $21 b1\hon military knov.• \"OU don"t believe me but there is d procurement bill "l'bursday nighl d~clar· he!J. f ~O! t~" 1 ·talked _10 1tie-:<fe"'" ing..il '"the poticyoUtu:.JJnited Stal.es" to . himstH.'1l7--..... ~ -. . ·-, completely vdthllraw:subject lo only orie · ·tiarmon s.1d 'his SOD became coavtac, conditio11': the release of American ed Jesus Christ was the devil.· prisoners or v.·ar by North Vietnam and "I kooW-RQ\V "'Ith as much cel'tainty as the Viet Cong one .can nave in such a tangled maiier The bill . "'hi le serving not\ce to the that. he .went to St. Aloysius Church todat President that Congres.,.ional support for:· tci comffiit suicide,'' his rather said. · the war and its costs in lives is ending. "R~ cc>uld ·not -5tand it. but" no one still lea \'es the President with a free hand \\'OU!d listen to the 'distorted' 1ruth' he on the liming and conditions of the found in ha:Jocinations from !wo LSD American exit,. . pills." But many members Constder the slote-_ A "'"'ilness said that pol ice. before firing ment the last wami~ shot 'Congress will the fatal :shots at Harmon: shouted at fire tie:forr membe rs use .tb'eir u~li1"!13le '' least three Wneti ror him to <lrop-his tine. authori ty lo end the w;ir by cutting off, '·When tfirJl1on's gu n was firi,11}-silen t. fund~. . . · • -Pq!icero!UJ 'ti.obert Schrader !lllid. "it"11 Neith~r bouse has been w1l11ng to us~ . been a "wbile-Vietnam -since..J've had the appropiiations ~wer to end_ the war. to point a gun at anyqne. ,, . .Tha1.--relw:tance .emerg~ again .in-tlle . The Be\•. Tony Janer. a prjcst in the Senate. Thursday 1n a_ser1~s of_ close, roll; .. , rectory next door to the church. said call votes_ on the fore1&11.aid b1IL • H;:.rmon "just came. around and 5tarted . ~~-bi!I ~lns what many •War shooting people. , lff was firing at cr11t~ beh~\/e to be lh~ iteds of. furure anything !hat moved." · Am~r1ean involvement in Indoc~ina -E~·en after police had hiln surrOlirided. an 1~volv~ent that ~ould Co~hnue the Harmon stiH \\'as ch8sing on"e passerby ~'ar 11}Qef1n1t~ly not w.1th American ma~-before th; police ,bullets cut him dow n pov.·er.,bul .with American _money and ~1r and the man escawd. ~wef ,m,s~pport of U .S.~1rected armies.: ,.The~~ .were Mirhael ,J. Ctart in ~t!bdi~·~i..os and. Vietnam. -17, 1'onaSkfi,":·IM1~1 Robert Schroedef. Sen. J. Wilham F'ul~rrg~t ~ D-~~k. !. and 17. Spokane.; Robert A. Fees. 63. "'ho other opponen~ or Nixon ~ ~hc1es v.-e~e li..-es near tht-shooting scene: and ~nable t? conv111ce a majority that t~l!I Thomas C. Brass, 24, Spokane . . 1nvol ~I should be stop~d along v.•1th • Clark un~erwent eiurgery and was tn the involvement of American ground ~ serious conditio n. while Schroeder's con:' combat troops. dition was satisfactory. Both were H01'C By a vote or 46. t~ 42. the Sen;lt~ added . t d ts at Gonzag a and were in un iform soother $StU m1lhon for m i f 1t ar y s.u en assistance. swelling the mili tary aid bill v.;hen they w~re sh?!. .. ·lo Sl.5 million. This was $480 milllon less Fee~ was. 1n ~er1ous condi!wn. Br~ss than the ad ministration wanted, but it "'.as nic ked in the ~rm as he dived behind l'.'ill enable it to continue its growing pro· his car for protection. gram ··or-assistanCe to the Can1bodian army withouf majbr change. Fulbright said. • ' • 1 • ·-.... , - Ple nty of Wa1·ui1ig \IP'1 T1lt•l>t!t 1'he owner of this gas station and cafe in Nashua, N.H. may not be braggi ng about his. food ., b~t . his :-.ign certai nl y brings the custpmers rn. And 1f the patrons ' do have any complaints about his food. they can't say they failed to get lots of advance \varning. Ctties Leag·ue Restates A irport· Panel Support The Orange County League of Cities j!mphatically reaffirmed its support of the Airport Land L"se Comrnission Thurs· da}' night in a 1:; to 6 vote. The question \va s before the city represe.nlatives because the Board of Supervisors had do"·ngrad.ed the ef- fectiveness or the commission by ap- propriatng only 5500 for expense s/during lhe. current fiscal year. The ·con11nission asked for SSIS.000. The land use group v.·as Jn !he spotlight carlil'r thi s \veek \\'hen !he super\·isors split 3 lo 2 in favO"r of a rezone lo com- 1nercial use or :;o al'res crr !and near:the Or:inge 'eoU:nt~· Airport. ' · The comn1ission had pre \' i o u s I y adopted a:land use pt:in surrounding Ure airport Which determines that the proPf'r use for the 50 acres owned by 1\1cDonnell Douglas Corpnr<ilion 1vas light industry. Under the state law go\'eming the 13nd use co mmission. a four-fifths vote of the superviSt'lrs is nC"l'essary Ur overrule 11 <"Ommi~sion decision on ...zoning arourKI airports. . T~ l<!nd ,use gro~p will1meel Dec. 2 ~ \'Ote on the zoning of tne property 1n que stion iocated at the northeast corner or ~lacArthur Boulevard and Campus Drive. Oppotiing v.·ere Costa 1\fesa. Laguna Beach. Fountain Valley . Brea. Buena Park and Stanton. Cypress and San Clemente abstained and Anaheim and Los Alamitos were not represented al the n1eeting. • I Airport Opposed For Cl1i110 Hills The proposed $200 million Chino liills regional airport has suffered the fate cf its predecessors -oppoSitlon fron1 residents . Although th~ pr·ojectetl jet age facility would be located n1iles from the nearest city on the Orange-San Bernardino Coun- ty, line. a group of Olinda Village residents in the area-fast of Brea told Orange County Airport comm~ssioners !his v.•eek !hat the jetport's ruriways would be only about 'f nlile fron1 their homes. • • Brea City Councilman .Jolm Uaddox spoke for the residents Tuesday. The airport agency look no ac.tion. BENEFITS ... chairman of !he Senate Finance Com· mlttee. said in fighting ~liller·s proposal. The administration objected to 'both pro1>0sa ls on ground s they would resu lt in higher taxes for businesses at a lime the administration is seeking to stimulate an economic re<:fl\'ery through Io v.• er business taxes. The upemployment co1npensa fion pro- . gram i~ partially financed b,v taxes paid by businesses based on a percentage of their total payroll. Sen. \Varren G. ~1agnuson 11).Was h. l. originally proposed that the extended benefits be put inlo effect when une mployment averaged 7 .5 percent for 13 "·eeks. But the Senate then a1>pro\·ed an amendment by Sen. John \I. Tunney t !).Calif.). to lower the triggering 1nechanism to chronic unemployment at 6 _ percent . l\J;>out J .9 mitliorfAmerlcan workers have been unemplo~·ed lot so long that they ha\·e exhausted all benefits. In all, about five million workers are unemployed. The national unemployment rate in October \vas 5 8 percent. :\lost industrial slate~ no"' pax jobless benefits for 39 weeks. The Senate amend- ment W<lUld extend Ibis ,period in high unemployment states tn ·65 \\·eeks. It 11·ould cost the federal go\'ernment about $1.5 billion for the first year. e amendment w&'i the fir st to be of· d· to Presiden~ ,flixpn 's <bill cutting ness and ind iYid ua l taxes by $15.5 billion du ring !he next three years. County supervisors have not supporte<f the land use commission because th ey believe the long est.abl~e~ airport co_m· 1nission is the only advisory cornmiss1on necess ary .011 the aviation subj~t. SHERRILL Ediso11 Co. Denies All Allegation s Top-level officials of the Sou.the'.rn California Edison Corn,pan~· ~ere quick te> 11ns1\'er the "da!'e" of the People's Lobby th is \\'eek. steadfa~tl\' stressi ng th at the San Onofre Nuclear Genera11ng Station is a safe f:icility. In a stalen1ent usually reserved for lesser orticials nt the util ity. Edi£on Board Chairroan and Chief Executi\'e Of· ficer Jack Horton said "if rhere \rere any question~ about the San Onofre Unit's i;afety it would not be al10111•ed to operate.·· Alluding to the tests or the reactor cool· ing sysll'm in Idaho six month5 ago. Horton stressed tha1 the tesls v•ere "by no ntean..<; an acrur·<1te rcpresen1at1on of the San Onofre system ·'The model used for the tests 1\'3S so sniall -the size of a teapot -that it ..:ould not Qt. pl"esu111ed to reprodu ce the performancr of an~· lull-s1·~!e s_vstl'1n," hr said. lie added thHt !he tests 11•ere called for to determine if anythinA could be added to make existing failsafr systems even be tter. He said tha l on the bash~ of all the in· \'es1igations through !he year ""'e do_ not think any ntodLfications v.·1 11 be required at San Onofre." A report on the subject including chapters specifically reteat.ed lo the coo:l- ing system. v.·ill be filed \\'1th the Atomic Energy Con1mission on Jan. J, 1972, he !>aid. t: i.: From Page I NU CLEAR. • • rest of the legal system," he sai'd. l'he issue over the cooling system is not a new one. Nor is the question of the plant's vulnerability to ·earthquake danger. The PUC itsel! granted approval of the utilities' plans for two new reactors al San Onofre contingent on proof that the tv.·in reactors and the existlng one are capable of "·ithstanding major quakes "'ilhout damage. Soon afterv.•ards the AEC asked for delai!ed reports by the ulil iliei on' the enclosed system ~'hiC'h uses v.ater to keep the reactor temperature at a safe level. Explaining the reque st 1\EC spoke.~n1en \1 ere ca utious in dis('Uss1n~ a~pects of danger at the fa cility al San Onofre, st ressing !hat the federal .agency's restrictions are already ext rem e I y se1·ere. They add<'d Iha! the 1\EC request 1~;:111; nut intended to label the San Onofre sJ stem unsafe. ln5tead. said AEC spokesmen , lhe agency v.•ants to know if the system could he impro\'l!d. . Birth C.ontrol Pill 'Nlista.ke' The super\•lsors .. and mayo rs of the cities will meet SatUrday at Los Pinos Forestry Camp OPL Ortega..}!ighw~y and the land use commission 'Subj~t is cer- tain to be discussed. ·MAKES A HOUSE A HOME From Page 1 ·WILD CAR ... The accident occurred as hundreds of oersons. including workers on lunch a·nd shoppers. gathered in the downtov.·n area . Polic~ said the car ran up on the sidewalks and bounced off buildings as it ~a retmed wildly through the crowd. "There was blood all over the. •ide"walks." said Bill Clark. a newsman odt h station ·WHQT and one of the first :>erson"s on the scene. "'There were several_pairs of empty sh<;ies that people had been knocked out of. There was also a ,y,•ig on the wldewalk. OlAHCJI COAST DAllY PllOT Jrtlewpm leeclri Let• ........ CMtl Me.1 H11eri11ttee ._. fe1111t1le v .. 1.., s .. c1_..,.,, Oii.ANGE COAST "Ul l.ISHINO COM,.Ml'f "olt•rt N. Wttd ,.rQ!OWU .... ,.11Dhl~~ Jtcl.: I!. C11•l•v Viet f'n1"'""' •,.j GtMr1I H.t nlttf Thuit • K11~a Ed/IOr l ho"''' J... M111pl.ine ,...tn1el"f Edlte~ Cht •l11 H. loo1 Ric~1rd P. Natl AH111Jnf "'.1n91ln1 £4•!0n 0 ffic•• Cult .... 111: 3l0 Wftl II•~ S!rt•• ,;1•~!1 8 H l ll" 3.lU NMl"ltt llo,,·ov1~ ..,.9u~• 111 ..:~. :n Fo•MT ,\v1·~t 1-'ll"' ~'O" l~1<r.· 111111 llld'I h v...,t'll :.1~ '1t"'"1!1: JGS N~rtll El C..,,,lllO Rltll bAllY f'll.OT, w.llli wtl<c:tl i. e5rnbt.I" 1'• "''-"'°"'• 11 p..oj·.1-dtlly t•Cttll '""'" tltt llt lflll,..lt' tflf'°"" kr l..,111'1, IM<'lo Nt ..... l -dl, (Mii N>MI, """'""'°" aetdl. "-111ft V.-UW, S.11 Cltlt'otf<i9/ 1---l_;>i•-•• $tifoltNC!t, •IOl'ltl w!lft 4!le. ,...,,,.... ..mlM. "11!W.l .. t ''"'""' •• w .. 111 Ul Wei It)' ,,. .. :,. CMTt MIU, I , .. .,._ 17141 64J.-4JJ1 Cl..tti.4 .,,....,t11l•t 641°1671 51• ci.-11t1 All 0.,1rt111HK: r,i.,11-4fJ·44JO C.vr'tflt, l•l'T, Orin$• Ctut "'9111~·~1 (Of!>H~Y. Nt l'lf'" •Nl•f\• lll~l!rt1oor\t.­Mo10~1 lf\l!ler er ttVtrf•\fl'\9'"11 ~"fl" .... , lie (epf911utfill .. ,!~! IJMClt l ptr• 11\IUllrl .. COjlfflp!\I .... .,fl', $~ Cll" Pttl•tt ••14 t i N•Wjl(lr! 8ttel'I .... (M1' ...... ,, C:111ttll4 MK••IJtitfl w-""1'"!W 12.1J ~ n 1111ir-., ,,. l'!IOllftll'\'I 11\Lil!t'V lfn n"ttl-. n.U lf'll!lllllt . • Cost ,$12,000 DJ::TR'OJT t UPI 1 -A v.·oma n y,•ho became pregnanl with her eighth child ~Cause the birth control pills she v.·as taking tumed out to be. tranquilizers, has v.·on a Sl2.000 set tlement in her suit against the druggist who made the tn<SJ~ke. Dorothy Troppi and her husband. John, \\'ho also have one grandch!ld,' reached the out-0(-court settlement v.·!th lawyers for Dearborn ·druggist Frank Scarf \\'ednesday. but did not reveal the o\tt· come until Thurs<!ay. "\Ve've fought this thing for six years and l\'e're very happy with the set· tlement,"' Troppi said. "Our point was that we were given the wrong drug - druggists . just pick anything off I.he shelves and tbroY.' lt at the customers." The TroppiS. from Plymouth. filed the suit in September, 1965. a month after the birth of their son. t.1arty. nov.' 6. They asked $250,000 in damages t1;1 CO\'e r medical expenses. the tnst of rais ing the child, the salary ~lrs. Troppi lost v.·hen she had to quit he,· job and lhe anxiety in\'olved in the. nti~up. The couple:S attorney. Donald l\1. cutler. said ~trs. Troppi decided to begin taking birth control pills in August. 191H. on advice from her doctor and her pastor after suffering a 1niscarnage. F t'fuu·' 1'<11fe J . ) PLANE ... Supporting the commission in the vote v.·ere Nev.·port Beach. Huntington Beach. San Juan C3pist raoo. Seal Beach, \\'estminster, Fullerton. Garden Grove, La Habra , La Palma. Oran!tf. Placentia . Santa Ana .. Tustin. Villa Park . and Yorba Linda . Irvine Group Endorses Four For Cotmcil !lour candidales seeking election to the Irvine City Council in the Dec. 21 cityhood ballot receh·ed the endorsement of Jrvine Tomorrov.• follo"·ing a four-hour session Thursday night at UC Irvine. . Between 45 .and 50 of the community group"s 70 members ~'ere on"hand to nar· row the field or 20 pre-selected city coun- cil hopefuls. • ViCf: Chairman Nina West said today tht" group endor~ ~y f~ candidates '"tn order to allo"' mem.bers to v.·ork for the election of a fifth. candidate of their choosing.·• The four g~tling the trvine Toi,norrow J)()d are Willlsm~Fischb&ch. an attorney. 1nAS Oak Tree Lane.· lr .. •ine : Robert Dean Pott er, a student and teachlng assistant at ucr. 215 Verano Place. Irvine: ~1rs. G3.brlel\e Pryor. a house\\'ift". 17726 Acacia Tree Lane, Uni\'erslt v Park. and Ht>nry Quigley. an i1nc~tn1ei1t counselor. 5132 Ch,iteau Ave., Sllnla Ani:L . 1\\n nf ihe endorse.d candidates ~re n1emiwr~ of lr\·ine Ton1orrov.·. :-O·lrs. Pryor ;..1)(1 Quit!le\'. Calif., a lrainee fron1 the s:a·th i'IW!ary Thrl'C 0( the 20 city roill1c1l hopefuls 1\lrlif1 Squadron at Robbins AFB. Ga re<.·ei\ed lr\·ine Ton1orrow endorsement The survivor v.'as identified as s· Sgt. on lhe first \vritten ballot count. They are l.ouls• F. ll rtbar of LRAFB. lie "·as Qui~!ey, l\lrs. P_ryor and Fischbach. tl'lro"'" clear of !he v.'rec ka ge. Four counts v.-ere required ~fore Pol· Gibney said no 4'ause for lhe crash h.is !er "'as selected from a field including _ ~ere:rmble.d.. ~ut .said.-..1'1aj. Gen. ' Ir\rtne Tomorrow director "''a~ Ct ark ~---II David I. Liebman. vict commander of :ind Skip \\'irge!. 1 ~lcDoMell Douglas the 12th A.it For-;", "ould head :in ac· emplo}·e. cident in\•esligatlon bo.!.rd lhal "'\ti con- duct an in\'esttgatlon. • ~ \\'orth $Sid the plant v.'as lea \·tng on a routin<' training flight and that It had gained some altitude before i1 era. ht:d to the left of the runway and burst into flar{les. lie said !ht pllne carried 40.&oo gallons of fuel Reel s Settle Clain1 \\"ESTPORT . ~lass. !APJ -The Prelude Corp . an American lobstering firm, Agreed today to accept a payment of $89,000 in.full settle1nent of Its damnge Here e re the ma~ings of a room you'll Jove to Ii"'~ in!, Sofas and. chairs ~o fashionably CO ¥ered, so handsomely des~ne d ! A joy to see~ An exceptionally large selecti on of fine fabrics and styles to choose from •t very reasonab le prices. Sherrill is Uniurpassed in quali ty and design . Stop iti today and view this fdlbulous collection of fine upho lstered furni ture. DEALER S FOR: HENREDbN-DREXEL-HERITA GE NEWPORT $1011 OP'IN FltlDA,Y 'TIL' NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHtdlff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Proft11ion1I Interior Ot si9n1r1 Av1il1ble-AIO LAGUNA BEACH 34S Ne>rth Coas t Hig hw•y Pho no: 494-6SS 1 · _ \V~tth saul he did lltlt know _ \1'hill altitude the plant reached ··but lt 111t1sl have ht.Ii 1 lihlt,.. · clai m aa.!llnst lhe. Soviet fishin£ nee! '·--_:~~~!'!!!~ \\ h1ch damaged its lobster gear last ;o;:prlni 'Off the !\tassachusells Ma:t. P'lton. r,11 ,,.. M"' '' o,."" C1111tv-140·116! 'I . . 1 ; • I • ., • I / I , ~I ---· --- Huntington Bea~h Fountain Valley • • .,. ,¥"·'P ........ ... •. · Today's FlnaJ N.Y. Stocks VOL 64, NO. 27f, 4 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NGVEMIER '12, ·1971 TEN ..CENTS r Full-time Mayor Issue Pared to 2 Proposals HUntington Beach's full-Ume mayor issue wa s narrowed down to two pro-· posals Thursday night bf .the city co~ncil· appointed Charter Rev1s1on Committee. The meeting alsp resulted in the elimination of one of the committee's nine members. Robert E. Dingwall , over excessive absence from the study ses- sions. Qimmittee· Chairman Tom Livengood said the two proposa ls include a mayor Senate 0 l{s Continuing Jobless Pay · . WASHINGTON (UPI! -Ovt.t-ad· ministra!ion objections, Hie Senate voted · t o d a y to pay 26 weeks of additiona1 unemployment benefits to j o b I e s s workers in states with chronically high unemployment. The vote was 46 to 31. Immediately after that vote. Sen. Vance Hartke (D-Jnd. ), asked the Senate to defeat the administratio n on another ta1 issue. He called up his amendment that would fix~ihe income tax personal exemption for 1972 income at $800. The House-p~d bill that Nixon proposed raises the exemption to $750. It is now $650. The proposal would extend benefits in 1tates "''here unemployment had' averag- ; ed. at least 6 percent for at hwst 13" weeks. AboUt 15 states would be affected. ~ Defeated was a more liberal ameiidment that would have paid extended benefits in st&tes where Unemployment averaged over 4.5 percent for 13 weeks. Abollf 12 states would have been affected. Democrats opposed the liberalizing amendment. authored by Sen. Jack Miller (R-lowa l, on grounds that it would cost so much 'to the federal government that the Hoose would refuse to go along . "The House would tell us to go fly a kite.'' ·Sen. Russell B. Long (D-La. ). chairman of the Senate Finance Com-. mittee, said in fighting Miller's proposal. who would be paid an annual salary of $9,&00 and another with an annual sala ry of $18,000. At the same meeting the committee re- jected a third proposal which v•ould have paid an annual salary of $30,IXMI to the mayor. Livengood said the study group will make its final decision on the two pro- posals Nov. 30. Sparks flew between committeemen and Dingwall, president of the Huntington Beach HOJ\{E Council, right at the out.set of Thursday hight's meeting. .. Members of the committee approved · minutes of an ea.flier meeting which con- tained a ruling stating . that any com- mitteeman who bad missed five con- secutive meetings would· lose his voling privilege. When Dingwall was informed that he had missed too many meetings and was Puttitig on tlie Dog without "¥~ po~ers, he prompt1y aatd he was withdrawing the HOME Council's delegation · to the committee. At the time of his appointment, Dingwall told city councilmen he would not be able to auact each of the met:tlngs because of other conimitment.s. He said he had won the approval of HOME Coun- cil member Brian Pmlnson to sit in as bis_ alternate. "I maintain lhat J haven't ~ any meetings of any importance," Dingwall said this morning, alleging that lhe ground rules ~ the committee were changed. Uvengaod, on the other hand, aald that Dingwall c.ould part1Cipate as a non- voting member and that his knowledge ol. ·civic affairs was still bP.ing desired by the commiUee. The charter revision committee was Ecuador on formed by the city COWlCil last May. It is charged with developing a full-time mayor proposal to be placed on the city ballot next April. ·Huntington · Beach'• mayon; current1y are geJeeted on an an- nual basis from the seven cit)' COW)o ·cilmen. The full-time mayor issue was brought before the city's voters last April aqd defeated by 163 votes. Tear 5 1 .. .tore Boats Seized; 5 Ransomed -SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The Ecuadorian government seized five more tuna clip- pers today, only hours after levying $140,000 in fines and releasing five others. The Ceryl Marie, Mar}' S., Endeavor, Eastern Pacific and Royal Pacific. werA • being taken to the port of Sali11as at last report, August Felando, general manager <lf the America11 Tunaboat Association here, said. About 65 . crewmen plus five skippers were aboard the tuna clippers, all of which were from here, he said. The skippers radioed they were being taken by the LC61, the Quito, which seiz- ed four America n and oOe..canedlan tuna seiner Wednesday, Fetando said. The Denise Marie of · San Diego wis seized in the first group and was released without paying a firie after !bowing it had acquired a license. Its skipper was quoted by Felando today as saying he heard the LC61 skipper say he planned "to go out there and get another batch." The latest seizures occurred 50 to ISO miles off lhe coast of E dor. In ad- dition, the Trinidad, one of the boats seiz. ed earlier, was intercepted, boarded and released after its skipper told tbe EcuadOrians italready paidTfi • Also released without paying a fme after showing it had a license was the Canadian vessel Atlantic Patton. The Sl40,000 in fines was paid by the Trinidad, The Venturous and the Blue Meridian. Meadowlark Solon Seeks Advice Controversy To Continue Carpenter See,ks Help On School .Fund Ide~ :Furlh<(;,.~versy ·RY~, i.h ' .• ,..., .• , Miii!Owtiik AitpOrt runway, d!tns!On Is . expected during Monday night's sessio~ l y JOANNE REYNOLDS of the Huntington Beach City Council. ct .-. 0111r , ... '''" , . . . . Orange County s"°°1 admuµ.s.traton Counc1lmen will consider revo~g ·a have betn asked for theilr "1ueff.t0ns on zoning variance under which lif'POrl school finances by 1tlte ~atot DtMls lease-holder John. Turner has been. E. carpenter CR-Newport Beach). • operating the strip exte.nalo!! for one Carpenter, a member of the Senate year· . . . Education Commltte, and the Senate A city Planning Comm1ss1on report Select Committee on School Finance, ~sks that the variance be. cancelled on. characterized school' flna nCe 11 "the grounds that Tum~r has failed. to r~n:tove most im~tant and pressing problem in two tem~rary trailers fron:i his fac,1l1ty. education today." during a dinner Th~ trailers, used for. office space and meeting Thursday In Huntington Beach . an aircraft sales operation, were to have H k t m ting of the Orange been taken off the property by October. e spo e a a 1 ee Ill nJ As ia In granting the variance a year ago, ~unty Chapter n t~ Ca or a soc • planning contmissioners allowed Turner t1on of ~hool Administrators. to operate the strip provided he . un-R~ferr1ng. to the state Supreme Court : dertook several safety improvements, decision which says the p_resent p~OP'.'J'lY The administration objeCted to both proposals on gr_ounds they would r.esult in tiigher taxes for businesses ~t _a time the administration is seeking to stimulate a ... n ' · -e&>nomic rttovery · through I 0 W-6-1"- The weather has gone to the dogs \1.ii th the season's first rainfall in some parts of the state, but "Queen," 14-year-<>'ld German shephe~, doesn't mind as long as it has Its 0\061 rainboots. The pet's ~. Leab L;a.ndrus of Salinas, figures dogs get cold feet, too. among them removal of the trailer! and tax .fon:n of school f1na,nce 1s un- installation ol P. blast fence and obstruc· co111.l1~uttonal, Carpenter ~td the select tion lights on nearby power poles. co~J~ .is Reki!Jg ~ different means I ., business taxes. The · unemployment compensation pr!>" gram is partially financed by taxes·paid by businesses based on a . percentage of their total payroll. Sen. Warren G. l\1agnuson (0-Wash.), originally proposed that the extendeP, benefits be put Into effect when une mployment averaged 7.5 percent for l~ weeks. Bul the Senate then approved an amendment by Sen. John V. Tunney (D-Callf.). to lower the triggering mechanism to chronic une mployment at 6 percent. About 1.9 million American workers have been unemployed for so long that they have exhausted all . benefits. In all. about fi ve million workers a,r e unemployed. The national 1Jnemployment rate in October was 5.8 percent. ' ·Most industrial states now pay jobless benefits for 39 week s. The Senate amend- ment would extend thi:; period in high unemployment. states to 65 weeks. lt would cost the federal government about $1.5 billion for the Jirst year. The amendment was the first to be of- fered to President · Nixon's bill cutting business end individual taxes by StS.5 billion during the next tlu:ee years. Orange Coast Weather Winter's drinles· will most like- ly disappear tonight with mostly sunny skies forecast for the week- end. High will range lrom ~ oh the coast to 65 inland . L<>ws will range from 45 to 55' respectively. INSIDE TODAY A funny th-i110 hnpptntd to Orange County's Carl Lind- .str.om on hi$ IOOJI to a pro-foot· bait career. There i.s a story af\d pictures about 1t on Page 23 of today's \Veekendtr. ... ,1,,. n Ctllltl'f!I• I Clltcklllt Ut I Cl111!lltt M-et4 Ct111k1 S1 cre11.,,.,. n 0.1111 loltllt11 • 01\0f(Cl1 I ,,a.,111 '''' ' fllltP'lalnllMlll H·H ,,_,, f•ll Mol'IK-14 """ l.lfttlil" u MtriM "'" "IV!Vlf ,UNll 11 N•tl-1 Ntwt 4« Oftnt• c...lfttr J .... ,.11,11111 tJ.tl 11'1'111 ,_,..r II SHl'r-1'·1' l lldl IMr'llll 1 .. 11 '''" .. "" J1 fl!Hllr.-t .. tt Wt1111tr I #t!Mll'I Ntn 11-11 Wlflf MtWI • l'I .,, .... 111. J).Jt Terrorists Stril{e ill Chile Before Arrival of Castro ANTOFAGASTA, Chile (AP) -Ter- rorists blew up a government transmission line near this northern city tiXlay, just before the arrival of Prime Minister Fidel Castro of Cuba. A spokesman for Entel. the com· munications firm , seid the powerful dynamite blast destroyed a pole that car· Witness ID, ~rjlei~se Reset Dec. 9 ' The re-instatement hearing for fired Huntington Beach policeman Gilbert Coerper was delayed Thursday nigl:lt over the unexpected Illness or a key witness. Coerper's attorney,. . Cecil Ricks of Fullerton. infonntd the city personnel commission that Nancy Dean would not be i:ble to testify this week. '-1embers of the five-man commission set a new hearing date for Dec. 9. P.liss Dean. a former secu rity guard at Pt1ontgomery Ward, is expected to oner testimony which. could clear the 37-year- old motorcycle patrolman of mi~p­ propriation Charges. accord ing to Ricks. Coerper was dismissed from his job 15 months ago over alleged mi~andling of merchandise from Monl.gomery Wards whefe he was aJso employed as part·time security guard. Alth6ugtt the commission earlier urihtld Police Chief E{lrle Robltaille's dism lss.'I notice. Cderper has steadfastly main· taincd that he is innocent. The hearing was ordered reopened by a Superior Court mand11le tn Include the te.stlmony of f\i11ss Dean which Ricks claims to have uncovertd arter the com- mission upheld the dlsmlssal. ried transmission lines and power cables. No one was reported injured. There was no indicatioTf whether the bombing had any connection with Castro's visit. Castro arri ved in Antofagasta from Santiago aboard a Russian-made Cuban Airlines plane for several days of touring Chile's northern desert region. He plan- ned to meet workers in nitrate fields end copper mines and also talk' with univen:i· ty students, politicians and' townspeople. Wearing green fatigues and black com· hat boots, the 45-year-old Cuban leader accepted a copper key to the .city from Mayor German Miric, who labeled Castro "a champion of anti-imperialism.'" "l'U· .try to be a worthy son of Antofagasta," the prime minister replied. "Thank you for your solidarity with our country." Antofagasta, with a .. populatioo of about 120,000, is an important port exporting copper produced at the huge Chi· quicamata mine, high In \he Atacama Desert to the east. Castro ·planned to visit the mine, in which multimillion aonar interests of lhe' Anaconda CO. of-the United-State! were· nationalized by Chile earlier this year. ~spite the sUgar-coated wel~e. Castro had won the city key by only one vote Wednesday, -$-4 -ln a stormy Ci- ty Council session. Leftwing supporters of Chile's President Allende voled for the. proposal. Others opposed to Castro,' voted no. Local leftist groups in Antofagasta urg- ed the• townspeople to give Castro an enthusiastic welcome. and plasttred '1Welcome _Fidel" ligns everywhere. A welcome In electric lights was mounted on the top of the AnttlfU,asta Hotel, where Castro Is staying. The enthusiasm o{ lhe bot.el.'s regular guests may have been damnened, however, when they wtre all ousted before Castro'& arriva~ for securt~y reatons. i • • . -· The controversial 500-foo( extension, of.!1nancin. education 1n the state. ,. built by Turner without first obtaining . W~ don .t have the answers yet, he necessary city permits, has been scorned sa.1d in .as~1ng the ~dmfnlstrators to sub- by homeowners and praised by pilots. m'.! their ideas to him .. . Turner, backtci by several local pilots, I may ~t always .!1ke the sugg~1slion! has maintained that the extended runway or. agree with them. he added, hut I made landing safer. especially for some will ~ to It they are a.nalyzed by ?Ur of the larger airplanes flying into the professional star~ and,, given a hearing field. before the committee. Homeowners within the landing pattern The Newport Beach atto_rney also asked 111lege that ::1e extension has forced the for comments on educational programs planes to make steeper approaches. They that have been mandat~ by the state. claim the planes have snagge d , The senator opened his. speeCh by as~- powerlines and buzzed the root of th ·r 1ng. If the states educational system 1s homes s ei tryu~g to do too much. "You have to let • w:; know if my question Is a valid one," he Valley. Bandsmen Win First Place Honors said. ASKS SCHOOLMEN FOR HELP .State Senator Carpenter Copters Brush, 2 Officers Hurt The mem~;3 of the Fountain Valley High-School band and drill team swept flr.st place in their divisions at the Bellflower Liberty Day parade Nov. 6. , Carpenter explained that the analyses of state school flnanclng programs will be done by computer. The computer will he programmed"· to develop and simulate school financing plans with the hope that a combinat~Uon of plans can be un· GLENDALE (UPI) A police coyerel:I which will solve some of. the helicopter burst into flames early today The 119-member band and 62-fnember drl!L..team also took the Sweepstakes in the Artesia Parade Oct. 23. - 1J'he band is di;ected by Frank Bame& and the drill team is advised by Carol Stresberg. school financing problems. • L when · nick tbe_.blade or another "We have e golden opportunity tO shed helicopter after making a landlng. a financing system that Is not working Police officials said two ()fficers were very. well and that at best has more ex• burned in the incident, which occurred at cept1<lns than rules. a Lo5 Angeles Police Department landing "With your help-we can find~a-1yste -pad,........_ T that is talloi-made for the problems ()f to-Both aircraft were on the ground at the day," he said. time of the accident. • Chicanos Seeking · Seats • Mexican-Americans Push for Co1igressional Posts · SACRAMENTO (AP) -Mexkan- Americal'\S, fresh from a victory in state Senate rodistrlctinl. began pushing today rormore atlt.t1n cauromla's eipanded- 43-se.at coogreuional delegation. ·.Herman Sillu, a Los Angeles attorney. said the legi&lature iio far has ignored the co~ oLa_Mexka~AmericAn -diltrlct emong the five new Mata in the U.S. House •which CalHornta..;·gets under-the 1970 cem°"s. The state now has 38 M:ats. • "I think the legislature is mOre vulnerable here than in any olb\lr place bec11ust you gain five teats," saMS S!Uas, s~kesman for an ad hoc grdtid calledi • CoalltlOn for Fair Reapportionment." ·~Tblj .la cltar evidence or their ' .t • callousness toward the whole problem," he.Hid. The Senate reapportionment b 111 cleattd ill key test, 1.beJie111leJueU, on o· 33·2 vote Thursday. It Ls expected to pa5' the Assembly bastcall}} Intact and probably get algntd by uov. Ronald Reagan. Approval came following a negotiated compromllle between Democrat.le and Republican leaders In the upper hoUH despite allegations by a dissident Democrat that the hill waa Illegal beca~e of the new Mexican-American district. "This blll Is unc:ooslllutlon1l, biased and dlJCrlmlMtory,• &aid Sen. Lawrence Walsh (0-HunUnalon P1rk). •hole • district was squeezed eastward Into ~ heavily l!epubli<:an Orqe Coonty to help make room for the new district· - • the 201.b Senate.distrld._ Both parties had pledged to back a Pttexkan-Amerlcan seat. Chicano groups had pressed for as maQy u three seats in the Senate but Sillas oaid. "politically, \l'J probably the besf we couJd antiQpate." • More than t'i!h>thlrda of ' the 111arly ~.000 residenta or the district are Mex· lcan-Americtan and it will have a Democrttl1c voter realstraUon of aome 70 i><rctnt. It-Would be dilfk:uU, poliUcal observers say. ror anyone but a Mexcian- American Democrat to win a seat wbtn It <See ClllCANO, P ... I) I z l>ll\.Yl'ILOT --H Meworit.e Hps Diamonds CAMBRIDGE, ~111-<UPI) -A tnpo'!Dd qi•l"l'it• -.hlch slam· med thiough a thick cement-tile roof of a Finrtish farm in August has been found to con I a in diamonds, only the sixth such meteorite to be found . it was an- nounced today by t~e Smithsonian Ceqt~ for short-lived .Phe_nomena. nie center said sc1enhsts have confinned the meteorite is.-:1 rare type known as ureilite and contains Uny. almost microscopic diamonds. The amount of diamond material, however. was m small it was essentially worthless from a com- mercial. point-Of view, the center" saiil. .. Nixon Planning To Tell Nation Of Viet Policy . . WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President -Nixon soon will explain his; plans on Indochina to the nalion. He must consider the overwhelminll sentiment of Conjress for an early and total withdrawaJ of U.S. forces. ' The White Houu bas not said ?.'hen Ni:.:on will make his announcement on his troop withdrawal policy for the . period rol1091·ing Dec. 15 in Vietnam, but at could come within the next few days. Coming to the end of another year of struggle with the President ~~er th~ _war. Congress sent Nixon a $21 b1lhon m1htary "rocurement bill Thursday night declar- ing it ''the policy of the United St.ates" to ~mpletely withdraw subject to only .one :olldition: the reJeue of American prisoner1 or. war by North Vietnam and che Viet Cong. The bill , while serving notice to the President that Congressional support for :he war and its costs in lives is ending. 1till Ieave.' the President with a tree hand 1n the timing and conditions of the ~merican exit. Bu t many members consider the sto.t~ rnent the last warning shot Congress will · !ire before members use their ultimate 1uthority to end the war by cutting off :unds. · Neither house haa been willing to u~ :be appropriations power to end the war. rhat reluctance emerged again in the Sena te Thursday in a series of close. roll- tall votes on the foreign aid bill. That bill contains what many war eritics believe to be the seeds of future \merican involvement in Indochina - an involvement that would continue the war indefinitely not with American man-/ power,-but with American money and air xiwer in 1upport or U.S.-directed annJel • C&mbodla, Laos and Vietnam. Sen. J. William Fulbright (0-Ark.), and dher opponents of Nl1.on's policies were 101ble to convince a majority that this involvement should be stop~ along with . he invol'vement of American ground ~ombat troops. By i vote of 46 to 42, the Senate .added •nother $381 million for m i I i t a r y 1ssistance, ·swelling the military aid bi ll ll $1.5 million. This was $480 million less than the administration wanted, but it will enable it to continue its arowing pro- iram or assistance to the Cambodian army without major change, Fulbrtght uiid. Dr. Mead Visits Samoan Isles PAGO PAGO , Ame rican Samoa (AP) -Dr. Mar caret M~ad has returned lo the South Pacific isll~where nearly a lialf century ago she alhered material for her "Coming of A in Samoa ·• -a otudy of youth in a pri ltive society. This is the anthropolog ist's first \'isit to Amtrican Samoa since she completed her 1tudies in 1925. DAILY PILOT 01W1111! O».ft PlllUIHnlO CCMPAn 11.Mtt N. W•ff ...... .,.,.....,....., JK\ I , C•tltY ' .............. ~··Ml,..... ~-,.._" K..,o ..... 1\••· A. ""l.tft. MMllllll lf•ltw "''•~ c;.~; .. WMI Or1090 C0<.-11 f~I,._,. ... ..r ...... klldl omc. 17175 ... , ...... ltT•l'tl Manrl'I .tMrten r.o. ._ 110. t2•4• --u.ur. hkh: tn , ...... ,,......_ C-ttll "-1 -"'"';:m ·-· ......,_, ._., :on H loylwm '-C.... •...... I Clmlll9·a.1 OAIL't PILOT Sl1lf ,holt l ' . Bus ··service ·Set; Transit System Free to Students By PATRJCK BOYLE 01 tti1 Diiiy ,not $t1t1 Officials at UC Irv ine. whereo.almost 80 percen t of the 7,000 students commute to campus, have de<:ided to implenlent a free bus service to communities i;ur- rou nding th e school. The p!an calls for a single bus. to be le:.i.sed from the Pink Bus Line or Buena Park . driving a 15-minute route eac,h hour during the \\"eek laking students to and frotn the campus. The bus, under the proposed route. would travel down ~1acArthur Boulevard lo Coast tlighway: westerly on Coast Highway to Jamboree Ro~d and. then to Balbo<l Island : along Bayside Dn\'e back onto Coast Highway and alopg Do\·er 'Dri ve to Santa Ana A\·enuc: .along Sant.a Ana to ri.1esa Drive: then return to the ·campus by way o1 Palisades Road. Robert Lawrance. assislant v ice· chancellor for s.tudent arrairs. said today the universit_y hopes to begin oper~ling the line at the beginning of the winter quarter in Ja11u3ry. _ However. he noted that one maJOr obstacle -rundlng -may put a damper on I.he entire proposal. part in the runding, he added. UC! officials hope to convince the various merthant associations that more students would patronize their men1ber.!I if transportation were made available. The st udent governrilent at UCI has not vet allbca!ed 11ny money for the line. 3Jthough La"'rc nce said the studenl Senate is considering h'elping with the funding. Ht said he \lo"as skeptical about ob- taining money by charging students to ride the bus. Other universities which had implemented bus lines .charging a fare, he noted, had abandoned them "'hen students would not use the sen•ice. He also noted that if a fare is charged, lhe line 1vould be subject to th e regula-. lion -and the red tape -ot the Pubhc · Utilities Co1ninis.5ion. If the line proves a success, Lt.811•rence added , the student government may seek. an increase in the. prestnt $7-per-quarter :;1t1dent activity fee lo support the hne. Student officials point out that t'ven If lhe increa se in fee "·ere only SI per quarter, commuting students could stiU save by· riding the bus and 11ol parki ng on campus. Parking pernUts l.'ost $9 prr quarter. Stude~1ts Help G~W Coed Evade l(id11ap Suspect Huntington ·Beach police arrested a kid- nap and assaull suspect .,.hursd.ay night after a Go lden \Vest College coed lOld them she was abducted from her car while it "'as P.arked at the campus. Police lde.ntified the suspect as Henry A. Burns. 11. or Lon,e Bec;,rh. He is being held in city jail on chorges of kidnaping and assault with a deadly weapon . The victim. a 25-year old secretar.v, told investigating ofricers that she 11·as :studying in her car 1vhen a man ap-· 1>roached and "·;irned her about leal'ing the lights on and run ning down the biit- tery. She said he return~ later and pull· ed her from the vehicle despite her el· forts to hang onto !he steering wheel. . Zo1111ds, 011 A11tiq1ae · As planned. the university would lease 3 53-pessenger bus from the Buena Pa~k firm for about $1.800 per month. This fi~ure would include insurance and a driver. with the bus company paying maintenance costs. according to Joanne Simon, student affairs official in charge of studying the plan. The total cost could be pared down. t lrs. Simon noted. by selling ad vertising space inside and outside the veh!cle !o local merchants. This "'ould bring Ill about $400 to $500 per month. she said. 2.5 nercent of 11•hich would go to Pink Bus Line owners. Jury Suggests Codes of Etltlcs For Committees She tried to get free again on a ruse or re1umin~ to her auto for her purse, but her efforts to lock herself in the car fail· ed. John Petrie, a junior at h1arina fligh School. uses 47-~e.ar-old \1=ood planking machine in his woodshop class. Sc~c:ioI of!1c1~s s.ay the machine is an antique which was part o! the or1g1nal shop equ1pme.nt installed al the Huntington Beach High campus in 1924. It was s~1p­ . ped tcr Marina when that school opened a few years .ago. _Ol d mach1n.e- will be retired soon because spare parts are no .longer available. School officials figure they've gotten good use out of 1t. · To raise the estimated $8.400 needed to operate Uie line for lhe remainder of the school year. Lawr'ence said the university \Viii sponsor a bus ride and reception Nov. 22 for city and Chamber of Com· merce officials fro1n communities sur· rounding the campus. S,tudent and faculty organizations will also \ be asked to take ~1ost or Orange County's boards. com· missions and committe.es are operating Without a written ocde of ethics and the Grand Jury thinks this is wrong. In a report issued today sig~d by Foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach. the jui:y asks that "the county counsel be instructed to draft a code defining ethical standards of conduct ~or members of regulato ry or adl'isory boards mandated by law, or appointed. She screamed and ran from her ab- ductor two other times, she told police. On the final effort, she ran into a crowd of student s "'bo chased off the abductor . Burns was arrested about an hour and s half later at hi s Long Beach apartment'. Police allege they found· one knife with a six-inch blade and another handleless knife in Burns' car. Fighting Like Ca_ts, and Dogs Il'S siJl:lply a questio n of who struck the first blow -the cat or the dog. . From Page J CHICANO .... stating responsibilities and penalties ror Beacli Ma11 Dies, the misuse of office .. , first comes up for election in 1974. D l Off• • l The jury report states that there are A ff" W II No congressiona l reapportionment plan oug as icia some 57 existing boards, commissions lltO Its a has emerged from committee yet. but and committees. that were created to - Sillas sa id the proposals under con· Named tO Pan nl render adl'ice to county agencies and A 57-year.ald man whose car rammed a~ sideration in the Senate and Assembly ig-•i.e. departments. brick 9.'ali in Huntington Beacb·died of a. · nore the question of a r.texican-American "By law . only 16 of these entities are heart attack or stroke before the ac-d. I · I I d ~-c1"d•nl. a coron•r"s d•pul) sa id today. • 15 ric so ar. Robert Polly. a deputy controller with mandc;,ted.'' the report rea s. "• ui:: jury " "' " None or the five new seats would"be in be · d h.as· found that of these bodies. the The driver"Of the car. Jake f\.1utz, 141'-f\;lcOonnell Douglas. has en appo1nte • hea vily J\1exican-American areas but one to Ule board of the Huntington Beach members of 12 rective a stipend per Pecan A\'e.. Huntington Beach, was, Laguna Beach police know the rest of the tale, an incident which left two Griffith Way residents with sore jr.ws and one of them Ylilh a dog bite on the 11rm. Police said Timothy Anderson. of 603 Griffith Way, saw a large German shepherd chasing his cat. He went to the aid of his pet and threw a claw hammer at the at· tacking dog. He missed. undE:.r considerat ion in the Assembly is Public Facilities Corporation. meeting "'ilh a specified limited number declared dead on arrival at ffuntington heavily blac~. The new seats primarily The corporat ion Is the group set up by of meetings per month. lntercommunity 1-lospital about 1 p.ni..:,, "·ould go tO the growing suburban areas. the city council to finance the building of Concern is expressed by the jury J\1onday. The dog's owner, for whom authorities are still looking, struck Anderson with . tiis fist , knocking him to the ground. \\'illiam Cooper • Anderson's step-father, went to his son's aid. He was · knoc ked to the ground by the dog 011'fler"s com- panion. ; The dog then bit Cooper and fled 11•ith his two human friends. Red Negotiator .Back , ~ -. -. ,.... PARIS (AP) -Xuan Thuy. Hanoi"s chie f negotiator at the Vietnam peace 1.1lks, returned to paris today after an absence of nearly a mont h. Thuy flew in from East Germany, where he went on Oct. 14 on what was described as a -private trip. The delega- lion chief, a minister of state in the North Vietnamese regime, has not atttinded a session of the peace talks since Sept. 16. llis spokesmen said he was ill with flu . The on I Y ?.1exican-American con-lhe $8.5 million civic center and $3.4 because many of the groups "wield great _ Police said, J\1utz sufftred the fatal ~ressman in California is Democrat million library through the sale of bon~s. po"•er and d'al in fiel~s of, con841nt seizure while driving on Bo\sa Chica Edward Royba l of Los Angeles. The facilities will be lea.sed to the city pqbl~c i~le'test. Thelr d~i;~~~t' r,~~!Jtrn-Street at J)ovewood Drive. The car hit Sillas said Roybal h'as been "as ef· \l'hichwill redeem the bonds. mendations can greai(!Yri, -~r¥:e .. t.~c.11 the f'.Oad barricades. th en crossed the fective as his district allows him to be." Polly will fill the vacancy caused by direction that Orange CO uni . ~ltes tn ~ center dh•ifter, coming to rest agai nst the Jt includes some black areas and white lh nt -s·ignali·on or William Ritter near future." . :." · · wall. • liberal regions as well as part of East I...'.'.'.''..'.:'""~::.:--:::~:=::.:::.::.:::=:..:::::.::.:.· _..:::=...:::::..:.:_ ___ _c_,.,__ ________________ _ Los Angeles. An estimated three million Californians are ri.Jexican-American. Sillas said. Pass enger Sees Wife Run Over BURLINGA~tE 10Pl l -\Vhen a SoUt.hern Paciffc commuter train cami to a sudden halt . Bemetfi Layer. an elec- trical equipment salesman. "'as among the passengers "'ho got off to see what \1•as \\'rDng . Police said a woman had stretched herself across the tracks and was killed 11·hen the train engineer saw· her too late lo slDp. The \'ictim 11•as Layer"s wife. ~l ary l<;bel Layer. 53. She was killed about 200 feet north of where her husband got off the train. • SHERRILL MAKES A HOUSE A HOME .o • • Band on Strike OCC Musicians Won't Be at Game By GEORG E LEIDAL Of lfll 0.llY 'Ii.I S"tt Blaring trumpets, crashing cymbals and drum rolls are a th ing of the past at community college football games. Coast Community College District trustees hal'e learned. At Orange Coast Collei;e the c.hallenge. •·strike Up the Barn!.'' has been ans"'ered by bandsmen \\'ho say. "\Ve're on Strike." Dean of Instruction Jarnes Fitzgerald told trustees \Vtdnesday. "The Orange Coast College band is aol interested in playing at footba ll games.'' Fitzgerald said. "This ha!' led lo somewhat of a ci\lil 11•ar ht:tween the band and student government which has r~ired that the band st11y away from this weekend Homecoming g a m e • Further. the band budget has been cut entirely from the student body rund s.'' As a result. OCC1s student government asked the board for an SSS district con· tribution to ''share'' the cosl of impor1ing the 1'tWion Viejo High School Pi-tarcblng marginal to tromp around the grass and play the simpler music,'' the dean ex- plained. "I'm beginning to think ,that marching band ls in the wrong department. It should be in physical -education," Fitzberald suggested. The college has abandoned the pallcy of granting physical education credit for marching band . Describing the band stri.kt has~le as a •·civil war."' f"it zger2Jd cotnmented 1t is one of !hose campus silualions "'that Is 1un to "'alch but miserable to live u'i!h. "'\Ve've had the college choir singing al holf-Ume, ·· he said. Even the choir is not pleased about "singing their lungs out" to entertain "'ith the traditional-rah-rah fart . "I think we're being asked to be a tool in a civil war \Ve didn't create." Rodda commenled. "I move "'e decline the S8J request ln order not lD participate in the lnterneclne warfare." ' Here are the ma~in9s of • roort, you'll love to li.ve in! Sofas and chairs so fashionably covered, so handsomely designed ! A joy to see! An e1ceptionally large seleetion of fine fabrics end styles to c~oose from at ve ry reosonoble prices. Sherrill is unsurpass ed in quality and design. Stop in today and view this fabulous collection of fine upholitered fur niture. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-OREXEL-HERITAGE HIWPOlT ITOU onN PllDAY 'TfL' - • -Band for Saturday"s Home~. Coast Communily College District Chancellor Norrn11n Watson said. "ri.fy :,e.luctance_ about the-request is ba~_on the fa ct that the college has said they don't "'ant a ba.nd. \\'hy then ask the district to pay to bring in a band~" ,,~ _J.' . The board , on .. moUon of member Ceorge Rodda Jr., declined the request, noting it is "imPro'Ptr for !he district lo pay for tbe educational benefits o( students from oul5ide th e college d ls~lct." ~1lsslon Viejo lie& within the Saddltback College District. F'iligerald told the board the 27- member iocc band does no1 vlew football hAlftime shows :ln an "educational ex· perienee." They have reached the aae. !'le suggested. Where they prefer to play more cha\lenglnQ: music. '·They think It il c d uca Ii on ally Golden West Oil\ege spakesman noted that their band is active. even though pl1)'3ical educflion credit is not granted to bandsmen. A student ortered to ar· r:lnge for the Golden \Vest band to play <1t OCC's hon1eeoming "for 80 percent of lhe gross." Fitigerald noted that there are only '.17 Junior collcaes that continue to field 1nral't'hlng bends. He predicted that tn five yea rs there wlll be no two-year college 1nnrching bands. ll!ll 11111. NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wtstcliff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Proftsslon1I lntartor De1l9ntr1 A¥tlleblt-AID rt1•11e T•ll FrM M .. t •I Or•ltfl' C•111tr-140·126) lAGUNA BEACH 345 No rth Co1s-t Hi9hw1y Phone: 494-11551 •.... l!!!!!lliiiillll!I! ........ !1!!111'!!!!!!! ...................... ~ ... '!!!!!.,~lllll!i -~. ' • • • ., J • • , F'r1dJy, NovtmbtP 12, 1971 H. DAIL V PILOT :J > Gasoline Tax Wind£ all for Transit By JACK BROBACK ot IM 0.Uy Plllt Slaff Orange County's newly<reated transit district. operating on a seff.tmposed shoestring budget, now finds itseJf in the posltiqn of a potentially rich heir. The new law levying a sales tax on gasoline will possibJy mean t9 million a year to the district. The five percent tax is expected to generate $129' million statewide and officiaJs gave the $9 million est.imate on the county's share. Under the law the county supervisors • have. a choice. They may eiLhu place the money in a sped.al public transportatton fW1d or lowU the overall sales tax on all items sold 1n the county from s perctnt to 4.75 percent. Transit district directors are hoping the supervisors decide to make the money available for transit. They believe this will happen because of the almost total lack of public transportation in the coun- ty. The transit district, •which started operating in January after approval of Its creation by the voters lllst November. has levied a 2..cent tax of an allowed S cents. It ls estimated that this will raise about $800,000, most or which will be spent on consultant studies an~ a skeleton staff. Orange County Road C:Ommlssioner Ted McC:Onvllle, who ls acting general manager for th~ district believes the directors will deClde to spend most of the $9 mlllion creating a needed bus service in the central and northwestern portions of the county. lie pol:?ts out that the direetors have placed a bus system in a position or highest prior11y and are preparlt!.g to •. spend up to $35.,000 on a special bus needs study. There are currerilly two priv~te bus companies operatirig in the county and two subsldil.00 city bus systems. The city systems Are ln Laguna Beach and Santa Ana. The South C:Oast Transit Corp. operates lines from Santa An.a to Newport Beach and).quna but has served notice that It will quit soon. The only other bus service ln the coun- ty is provided by the Soulhem Clllfornfa Rapid TranS"lt. District, out or Los An{leles. This service Is very limited. ~1onday the directors ot the Orange County Transit District wUI hear a report on a meeting this week in Los Angeles concerning the federal Urban Mass Transit Act and the plans of the Soulhem California Association or Governments District • <SCAG) to obt•ln some of the money from Washington, D.C. Directors will also hear a recom- mendation.on the top three consultants o( L 15 who bi(l on the speeiarbuS needs sluCly. The local taxing abWty, the state sales tax on gasoline and possible fect,eral funds adds up to a viable transit district for Orange County. The directors have betn under pressure from. the poverty fighting groups and the Crand Jury to provide-a bus service as soon as possible. .Plane Crashes on Talieoff; 1.0 ~ Die Huge' Storni Eyed . Mariner Cameras Scan Red Planet. VPI Ttl ...... lt 011tlh1es Lhnlls C. Jackso n Grayson, chairman of the U.S. Price Commission, tells a news conference in Washington Thursday that the commission will (I) limit Phase 11 price increases to an econ· omywide 2'h: percent a year and (2) permit no hikes unless they are justified by higher business costs. Board Approves County Survey ('-._ Of Economy County superviso rs have a d o p t e d Supervisor Ralph Clark's proposal that a study be nlade of the feasibility or a com- prehens ive . survey or the county's weakened economy. An ad hoc committee of supervisorial aides. coLmty planners and the ad- ministrative office were instructed Tues· day to develop a formula for the economic probe. Clark said the study is necessary to at- tempt "lo restore the normal level of e1nDloyment and business.·• "\Vithout definite economic goals, the county will lag behind the rest of the na· Uon in recovering from the present recesslons." Clark said. "because we are so dependen t upon the aerospace in- dust ry." The supervisor added that the study should incl ude the projected number of jobs required and pinpoint strengths and weaknesses in the various economic sec· tors. PASADENA, Calif. <UPI) -With htars looming larger and larger ahead, Mariner 9 aimed it:i: cameras at the planet's south.polar cap of dry ice today to observe the one area on the Martian surface not clouded by a great dust storm. The biggest polar cap was the only Mars feature clearly visible in most of 30 pictures radioed back to earth Thursday night. The spacecraft was taking a se.. cond 24-hour sequence today as it zeroed in on Mars' southern hemisphere. Mariner 9. working flawlessly on the last leg of it! 248-m lllion mile journey from Cape Kennedy, is .scheduled to !ire ·a small rocket motor at 7: 17 p.m. PST Saturday for 15 minutes to become the first spacecraft to orbit another planet Mars will be 160,000 miles away at 10 p.m. EST wheR today's picture takin~ will end. A third and final session or ap; proach photography is stt for Saturday morning. In addition to showing Mars as it ap- peared from between 535,000 and 355,000 miles out Thursday. Mariner's cameras photographed one or Mars' mini-moons. Deimos, for the first time from a &p3oo:raft. Deimos is only five miles thick and ap- peared a~ a bright spec of light in the dark sky to one side or Mars. The planet itself looks 11 k e earth's mqon as it ,f.tliht appear to the naked eye t.htbugh an,8.tmospberic haze. The immense dust storm that started on Mars In September masked all but a few hints of lhe reatu res on the Marti a.n ~ce tha;t normally would be seen that distance. "The faq that the features of Mars are obscured ~ the dust Cloud· is, of course, a disappointment if you want to view the early features, but it also has its scien· tific interest," said Dr. Albert R. Hibbs, ~tall _scientist at · the Jef. Propulsion :taboratory control center here. . "The du.st cloud is itself a curiosity of ~1ars and it would be a very good idea if we can get close lo it while it's still there," Hibbs said.! · l.!_,,~;,8~ in the planet'• southern ~J1~e and the carbon dk>xide snow maiing"llp the Polar cap Is evaporating. The eUects of 'this seasonal change could be seen in the pictures. &;!enlists SJiid the dust storm ap- parem'ly 1s the result of strong winds swirling over desert·like regions on Mars. Dust particles are being blown up several miles high where they remain until set- tling back· to the .surface. Mariner 9 is designed to operate for at leas1 three months In orbit, mapping 70 percent of Mars' surface. Reds Settle Claim WESTPORT, Mass. (AP) -The Prelude Corp., an American lobstering firm. agreed today to acttpt a payment of $89,000 in fuU settlement or its damage claim agafnst the Soviet fishing fleet which damaged its lobster gear last spring off the Muaachusett.s coasl • • Vl'I Ttlt""I' Fire111en Btarn .Flames engulf Fire Cpt. Jiarold Foss. 43, Thursday evening in Houston, Tex. and partially surround an· oth'er fireman. Foan1 had \)een used to subdtJe gaso- line fire in downto\vn Houston apartment garage. It started when a car hit a gasol!ne pump. Ross was 'valking through foam when flames burst up a'round him. He and another fireman \1.'hO dragged Ross to safety are in satisfactory condition today in a hospi· ta!. Both suffered burns. League of Cities ) Restates Back,ing Of Airport V nit 'People's Lobby' Assails Onofre Cooler as Unsafe The Orange Counly League of Ctties Bv JOHN VALTERZA emphatically reaffinned its support o( 01 lh• 0111, ''"'' 5,,,. the Airport Land Use Commission Thurs· Another "aftershock" of 1 a s t day night in a 15 to 6 \'Ole. Februarv·s earthquakes touched the San The ques.tion was before the city Onofre Nuclear Geiierating station this week -strongly worded allegalions by representatives because the Board of the 2,000·membcr Peopl e's Lobby that the Supervisors had dOV.'ngraded the ef-reactor's cooling system is "unsare." fe.ctiveness of the commission by ap-'""And coupled ·~:ith the charges came an proprlatng only $500 for expense s during official legal document asking that the the current fiscal year. The commission state Public Utilities Commission shut asked for $66,000. down the plant and · conduct hearings The land use -group was in the spotlight within 30 da}'S to determine the safety of earlier this week when the supervisors the system which keeps the reactor cool . split 3 to 2 in favor of a rezone to com · Such a request is unprecedented. a top- mercial use of 50 acres of land near the level offici~l of the PUC told the DAILY Orange County Airport. ) h The commission had previou s I y PILOT . ate T ursday. adopted a land use plan surrounding the "I don't remember ever having to airport which determines that the proper decide on such a request, said the PUC's use for the 50 acres owned tdr h1 cDonnell Southern Ca I i lorn i a Representati ve Douglas Corporation "'as light industry. , Leonard Patterson. Under the state law governing the land He said the first step al the PUC level use commission. a four·fifths vote of the \vould be to determine if the agency, in- supervisors is necessary to overrule a deed, ha s jurisdiction over the "nuclear commissio'n decision on zoning around aspects of the plant operation." airports. lie hinted that the issue might be The land use group will meet Dec. 2 to relayed. instead. to the Atomic Energy vote on the zoning of the property in Commission, which already has asked the questk>n located at the northeast corner two utilities operating the plant (Southern of MacArthur Boulevard and Campus California Edison and San Diego Gas and Drive. , . ---Electric ) to file detailed reports on the ' cooling system. The allegations by the Peoples' Lobby were aired Wednesday In a Los Angeles press conference. Late -Thursday. the group 's execulive director. Edwin Koupal Jr. told the DAI· LY PILOT that Edison officialr should be "eager" to defend -under oath -their plant's safety in an open PUC hearing. One basis for the Lobby's demands , Koupal said, is the fa ilure of the mockup of the system during tests earlier this year at a testing laboratory in Utah. "But we 're not just talking about the test and the fallure . "What we're saying here is, look, gang, if the plant is so good and operating in the area of truth and corporate responsibility, then you tthe utilities) "·on't mind at all appearing under oath and proving your casl." Koupal said. lie added that the utilities "can't stand the area of truth because they have ex· isled on half statements and innuendo.'' * * fl Edison An swers All board members approved the pr<r posal except Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach. He called. the prop6sed study, "another example of tinkering with the free market process. "It happens in Washington. I saw it everywhere when 1 was back there last "'eek," Caspers added. "But for the coun· t.y to get lpvolved irt 'telling people what jobs to set up is wrong.'' Harbor. Hassle Ended 'Dare'; Onofre Reported Safe Toirlevel officials of the.. Southern California Edison Company were quick to answer the "dare" of the People's Lobby th is week. sleadlastly stressing that the San Onofre Nuclear Generatif)j Station Is a safe fa cility. "Some peop!C halled it as great when Autonetics and North American moved to Orange County, but it did not v.·ork out so 'veil tn the long run ," Caspers continued. "\lie have adequate economic reports from the banks and our own county pro- gress report. Businessmen know how to read.these and react to them:: · C1ark replied that Cispers did not understand . "I am not asking that a study be made right now. onlY. that_ a eotfunlttee be named to look into the feasibility. We owe it to the people to recognize this problem.'' Chill Wills' Wife Dies ENCINO (UPI) -Betty Wills , wife of grave1·voiced actor Ch.ill Wills for ~ years. died of a heart attack Thursday at the age o( 64. She married Wills In 1928 iii Kansas City, Mo., ' Legislature Solves Long-time Co11troversy After years of turmoil and bitter bat- tles between the County League of Cities aild the Board or Supervi!IOTS tht Harbor District problem bu been resolved. Legally, the district now has jurisdic- tion over inJaOO pm;,ka and recreation areas through passlge'of the Cory bill In the present iession of the State Legislature. Actually, County Director ot Harbors, Beaches and Parks Kenneth Sampson ex· plains, the <Ustrlct bu been handlln& the park program for IOITle time. More than two years ago the supervisors made Sampson director or all barbota. beaches and parks. Even before that ht was dir~ing the development or the county's regional parkJ pros:ram. It followed that the ortice whert Sampson presided would handle the parks prop-om. II clld. The Cory bill was a compromise work· ed out after the Leaeue of Cities, led by lluntington Beach, finally gave up in Its effort.s to gain passage of a bill authored by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R· FuJlerton) which would have abolished the Harbor District ·as a sepirate taxing aaency and made it an ordinary counly department supported out of the general- fund. - Supervisors pushing for the Cory bill pointed out that recreational and park projects have less chance of being £inane· ed if the monty comes from the general fund which is an open target for all departments. Proponents of the bill by Assemblyman Ken Cory 10.Garden Grove) fine.Uy con· vinced the inland cities that they had more chance of park developme~ in UW!:lt areas under a separate disttlct with Jt.s own t.axlng pov.•er, The new ·law provides that 7$ percent of the distrlct"Ptax funds shall be spent.on inland pa.Qi d~\'clopment until such time as the amount spent for this purpose shall equal the amount spent by the district on harbors and beaches in pmttou!-yea.rs. .- Thereafter. the amount.s expended on the coast or inland shall be equal. A top tax rate limit of 20 cents is prt> vided and the district board, now fi\le members, may be increased to seven. The Har)>or District's current tax rate Is 12.4 ctnts, with more than 7 cents going toward 1he $2.56 million purchase or Salt Creek Beach and parking lot prt> perty in ·the Monr.~ch Bay.Dana Point area. In a ~tatement usually reserved for lesser officials or the utility. Edison Board Chairman and Chief Executive Of. fleer Jack Horton said "if there were any questions about the San Onofre Unit's safety it would not be allowed to operate." Alluding to the tests of tbe reactor cool· Ing system In Idaho six months 11~0. Horton stressed that the tests were "by no means an accurate representation of lhe San Ono!!'! system. "The model used-for the tem was so small -the size of a teapot -tfiat it could not be presumed to reproduce the perform a net of any full-scale system," be said. He added tha·t the tests were called for to determine if •nythlng could be added to make existing tail.safe systems even better. I-le said th11t on the basis of all the ln- vestigalinns. through the year "we do not think any modirlcatlons will be required at San Onofre." NCO Only Survivor; Probe Set LITTLE ROCK AIR FORCE BASE, Ark. lAP) -An Air Force Cl30E cargo plane crashed and burst Into flames 6hortly after takeoff Crom Little Rock Air Force &ase about 7 a.m. today, killing 10 of the II crewmen aboard. f.faj. William R. Worth, base in- formation officer. said one crewman survived, but was · in critical condiUon and was being flown to an Army hospital . in San Antonio, Tex ., for treatment of ..... burns. Five of the 10 killed, in the naming crash of the four-engine plane were Iden- tified by Col. Richard J. Gibney. com- mander of the 314th Tactical Airlift Wing at the base. They "'ere Capt. Laurance F. Asher, inspec(or navigator o( Fort \Vashington, N.Y.; f\.t Sgt. Orville D. Gearheart, in·.' structor flight engineer from Aberdeen, S.D.; Capt Jan B. Raycraft. instructor . pilot o( Los Angeles ; 2nd Lt. Michael W. Hodge of Salem, Ill., who was a trainee on temporary duty from the 364Sth Stu· dent Squadron ,at {..aughlln AFB, Tex.; and 1st Lt. David C. Moule of Stockton. Cali! .. a trainee from Lhe S8th Military Airlift Squadron at Robbins AFB, Ca. The survivor was Identified as S. Sgt. Louis F. Hribar of ~RAFB. He was ,· thrown clear of the wreckage. Gibney said no cause for the crash has been determined, but said Maj . -Gen. .. Dilvid I. Liebman, vice commander or the 12th Air Force, would head an ac- cident investigation board that will con- duct an investigation. Worth said the plane was leaving on a routine training fli ght and that it had gained some altitude before it crashed to the left of the runWay and burst into flames. He said the plane carried 40,000 gallons of fuel. Worth said he did not know what altitude the plane reached "but it must have had a little." ' Col. William Davis, base fire marshal, said the plane, assigned to the 62nd Tac-'· tical Airlift Squadron, was enguUed in names by the time firemen arrived. Fire scorched an area of ground about 100 yards by 200 feet. He said the plane skewered about after impact and was headed at a slight angle toward the direction from whi ch It had taken off. The only recognizable remains of the plane was the tail section. l s1·aeli Sec urity Forces Kill Arab TEL Aytv (AP) -Israeli seeurity forces patrolling against Arab guerrillas, shot and killed an Arab man in a. Gai.a refugte camp today after he attempted to nee, lhe military command reported. The soldiers first fired warnings shot&, a spokesman said. The Israelis also ·reported lhe arrest of three Israeli-Arabs for belonging to the El Falah guerrilla organization. One of the Arabs was 1 stu· dent at the Technion, the Israeli institute of technology. Her Troubles Mushrooming SAN DIEGO (AP)-The strange mushroom-like plants growing out or the carpet of her apartment forced Toni Trisby to movt ouL They Yr-ere white. black and green and growing several inches a day. Out of curiosity MW Trisby, a 24-year-old secretary, notified the county --health offlee and a sanita- tion Inspector took ln wnplts Thursday to analyie. ftle plants really are mushrooms. caused by dampness Jn the C(ll). crete foundation or flooring, re- ported Or. J. 8. AskeW, counly health director. Toni may move back, he said, and the mushrooms In htr rooms will disappear when the rug dries out. - • Egypt Chief In Touch ;\Vith Nixon By United Prtss• IatuaatJoaal Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has been In Uiuch with President Nito n and hll.left..the door OPf.h 1or furthe~ • ltiatives in the Atiddle East, political sources said today in Cairo, SaCla·t. in a speech Thursday night , treatened to halt all diplomatic contacts for a Mideast settlement unless Israel plMged -1.G withdraw completely rr&-n occupied Arab land. · Diplomatic sources in Cairo said Sadat was still willing to talk peace, however. And in Jerusalem·the Israeli press called t)le speech a part of Egypt's plan for a major diplomatic offensive a g a i n s t Israel. uPI Correspondent i..taurice Guindi reported from Cairo that Sadat held two meetings in Octcber with Donald Bergus. the chief U.S. diplomatic representative in Cairo, and received at least one com· munication from Nixon. The diploma tic sources did not disclose the content of the m~age but said Sadat made it clear he remained willing to con· tinue a Middle East dialogue with Washington. In this COMection. they said minister of state Murad Ghaleb would be available for contact with the Americans when he goes to-New YorK late in November 1-0 lead his delegation to the United Nations. Some Egyptian officials have suggested recently that American political efforts were bankrupt and that the-·U.N. should once more take over the role as chief mediator in the area. The Cairo political sources dlscounted --the-possibility of Egypt waging a fullscale war against Israel this year 11hould political efforts co!lapse. They said it was possible C<iiro would mount limited military operations just btforl!: or during the U.N. debate to heat up the situation and .impress on the world diplomatic community the urgency .of fin· ding a settlement. There was no official reaction in Isrsel to Sa~at's Thursday speech but some Jsraeh newspapers and Israeli officials took at face value Sadat'11 threats to ruume shooting. Not Interested In OAS Bid, Castro S~ys • SANTIAGO IUPO -Fidel Castro "Y' Cuba .would not re]Oin the Organization of American States because "it doesn't in· terest" his government. The Cuban premier, here nn a wide- ranging tour Of Chile, soid Thursday hit country would not consider auch a rnove- •·neither by invitation nor by unanimous agreement of all the OAS members" -in spite of diplomatic overtures in that direction around the contintnt. All OAS nations ei:cept Mexico broke off relations with Castro'g regime in 1964 two years after -the country wa5 suspend: ed ~cause of "if!comRatibility" between . communism and the inter·Amerlcan system. Chile re-establi shed diplomatic rela· lions with Cuba last November afler the election of President Salvador Allende Peru also ha s· been quietly exploring Cuba's possible return to the hemispheric body. Ca1tro headed today for the northern city of Antofagasta on the third day of his Chilean trip. He plans to travel almost the length of this 2.600-mil,e-long nation before returning to Sanliago next week for a massive farewell demonstration. The bE'arded revolutionary was in good humor Thursda y as he \YOund up protocol chores that included tv.·o wreath-laying ceremonies .. being host at a party· for diplomats 11t the Cuban ambassador's residence and attending a reception in his honor at the presidential pala ce. At one point , a newsmen told Castro that he had been "kidnaped by protocol ," "No. no, no. I have not been kldnaped," Castro snapped. "I prefer to ssy that protocol has domesticated me." U.S. l(ills · 8 S. Viets . In Mistake SAIGON (AP) -U.S. helie<>pltr· gunships fired into a South Vielna.mese column with rockets and machine guns by mistake: _ kij!ina eight South Viet- flamese and wounding 21, the U.S. Com- mand reported today.., A U.S. communique. blamed the South Vietnamese. saying the gunships were sUpporting Vietnamese troops in contact ... with the enemy arid ''placed ordnance on targets as directed" by the ground force. j . UPI Ttlttllelt ONE WHO ESCAPEO -Eliza- beth McConnell of Belfast mal'r1ed Bfitish soldier Walter Edwards Thursday in England. She left Ireland shorUy before girls dating Brilish troops be- gan to be tarred and shorn. Gunmen Rescue Girl From Gang Of Irish W ome11 LoNDONDERRY, Northern Ireland <UPI) -Gunmen today burst into the ''trial" or a Roman Catholic teen-age girl accused by Londonderry women or fraternizing with British soldiers and freed her, a provisional Irish Republic .'\rmy (lliA) spokesman said. The-girl, the fourth seized by the mili· tant women this. w~ek in the Bogside area, was unharmed , the IRA spokesman said in a statement telephoned to newsmen at a Londonderry hotel. The oflicial IRA had warned in a state- ment issued in Dublin Thursday nlght it would not tolerate any more of the in· cidents in which the women shaved the girls' heads and tarred them br poured ink on them. "Anyone who used the name of the of- ficial Republican Army to carry out this sort of dastardly act wil l be dealt witb ' irnmedialely,---Ute statement said. A pro- visional statement also condemned th e attacks but said some form of punish· men~ was necessary. Both 1 RA wings had been angered by the won;ien's actions because they had caused the gi;o~psiioss of support .among· Northern Irefaod:I minority Roman Catholic;s, an IRA source said. The girl Sl!:ized In · the early morning · hours· today was taken to a houst in the B.o~side by ·a group or women, the pro- v1s1onal spokesman said . The IRA Jeamtd of it after a woman telephoned the city hole! a.lerting news photographers to be on hand to sff----:-the girl tarred and feaUtered. IRA gun men v.•ere sent to the house and ordered the 'vomen to release the girl, the spokesman said. Jn Belfast, police said R naked girl was fQUAd badly beaten on 1-&gh Street in the .. · down.town area. A police spokesma n said he did not know if the girl, who was hospitaliJ:fd, may have been another vict.im of militant ~-omen seeking to purush teen-agers for seeing soldiers. Sergeant Convicted Of Russian Contacts AGANA, Guam {UPJ ) -Air Force M. Sgt. Raymond G. Dechamplain, a descent of the founder of Quebec, was found ~uilty toda y of three charges stemming from contact wlth Russians in violation of 1\merican security and sentenced to 15 years at hard labor. A 10.man military board at Andersen Air Force Base. Guam, also ruled to demote the 40.ycar'(l!d se rviceman fmm L1shon. Con n .. lo the Jov<est Air Force r.:1n k. lo strip him of all pay and allO\\•ances and to giv e him a dis honorable discharge. The Incident occurred on the central coast Thursday about 280 miles northea st of Saigon. The Command" said it was being investigated . Field reports said the gunsfiips made four or five firing-passe~ before they were warned off by ground troops in radio contact with them. The u:s. Com· mand said there were .no American ad· visers with the South Vietnamese bat. talion.1 . ..\. It was the ·fourth firing accident reported in Six weeks. During a South Vietnamese operation along the Cam· bodian border northwest or Saigon last month, U.S. bombers hit South Vietna. me5e troops three time!, killing 19 and wounding 26. Some U.S. officers indicate that South Vietnamese field commandei-s are not Nways aware of the exact µMi· tlons of all of their troops. Also on the central coast about 100 miles south of the firing a-ccidl!:nt, Com- munist forces ambushed a five-truck U.S. convOy, killed one AmeriCJJt <ind wounded two. The U.S. Command said one truck was badly damaged, but It had no report of enemy losses in the »minute engage· ment. U.S. planes struck inside North Viet· nam for the fourth time in six days and the 75th time this year. An F!OS fighter-bomber escorting 852s bombing the Ho Chi Minh trail in eastern Laos crossed the border and new 29 miles eastward into North Vietn8m to at- tl'lck a radar that a spokesman for the U.S. Command &aid began tracking the u.~. flight. · Asked how the radar &ite constituted a threat 29 miles away, the spokesman, ~1aj. Richard Gardner said it could have relayed firing information to other an· tiaircraft batteries closer lo the border. The FI05 fired one Shrike missile, but Gardner fiaid the pilot didn't know what he hit. A U.S. Army OH6 light observation helicopter was shot do"11 by enem y growid fire deep in the f\:lekoog -·Delta iOUth of Saigon, but the crewmen escaped unhurt. · fndo-Pakistan Border Clasl1 Increase Told NEW DELHI (UPI) -Government spokesmen today reported 11ix clashes along the Indo-Pa kista n borders, and there were new reports of fighting and strafing by Pakistani jets near the Indian town of Bc\on ia. The spokesmen reported"'fhree viola· lions of lndia.n airspace by P<ikistani jets along the border with West Pakistan and one intrusion by a Pakistani aircraft near Belonia on the East Pakistan border. The border clashes -three along the western frontier and threl!: on the bordt!r with East Pakistan -Were reported on the eve of the return of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi from a three-week toUr of Wl'!stern couptri~: They also came as reports from Washington said that three ships with about 5,000 tons of military supplies were en route to 1ndia from the Soviet Union as the apparent re sult of recent high -level consultations between the two countries. ~1rs. Gandhi was scheduled to go into a fu!l review with her advisrers o[ the tense military QOnfrontation along the borders with Pakistan following her ar· rival today. Alter weekend discussions with her cabinet, the prime minister is expected to addre51 parliament shortly alter the o~g of lta !all seulon on Mondsy. Rain Mars Pleasant Skies Sun, /ffoon. Tide• ""104'1" IKef'lll 111111 , . """'"" '1ftl """' , ..... ...., ~l'llfll ,Oii .... ,0 11 5' •·"'' I.I SATUllDA'I' •:"•"'· ~1 1115' '""' '0 t;.41 ...... ~ 11111: ~II"':"""'' MotlK Ill-l iU •·'"• .\ti>."""' Wtl l:Jtp,m, • 59; Vacuum Cleaner Bags r.i~t 3F97-at1nd1rd 0 \'1cuum R. c!11n1r1. 47; Havoline Motor Oil ~·.~··~ 3s$1 w3 ·2~ht. ~w1 R .-v•~ ~ lady Remington Shaver Attrod;ve Prl"' $733 cua Sh1v1r in • strl~lng blue ~ end sllvef CC""' binat!on. _ _t M11D,. T,.1111rt_ Cheat ti 01m11 • l.aknldt A1tr•v1tlen • Y ehtrtt Cootie • Cendylln.tl Rogulorly $1.77 to $2.49 YOUR CHOICE $133 New, dlfftreiit, •xcltlng ;1ma1 for hours of hippy pltyt!mt. Suri to th rl!I boy1 end glrlJ. ./ PRICES GOOD THRU TUESDAY '98¢ Mennen Pushbutton Deodorant $f67 Vi!lue! Anacin :&&-4 oz. $108 SIZE BOTTLE OF 100 $JOO Value! China Mugs · 2 ~$100 ·~· R _ ~ Select from Tumbo pede· IMI i nd 1fock type mv;• , •• 1ttr1i:tlv• color& i nd pttterns. lde1 l 11 9lft1, •• for hom• or off1c1. $495 Scripto Vutana lighter SAVE I( $288 t $2.07 SM 1hru pl&&tfe In 11sort· 'f ed colora. Allows you to 1 se• re m1inin9 supply of fuel. · ' $]295 Value! iiiffi:L1' Cool Spray Humidifier ti 11!1 ·•7• • Fvll Gillon Siz• • 10·12 Hr. Op11r1t!on without Refilling • Fully Gv1r&nt11d • U.L. Approved • Automatic S1fety Shu I off Delegar Gift Soaps • Httd•th• • Ant• In tht Ptnts • kere ,.\It • Dtn't lu1 Mt ftewH l Pruit Sh1pt1 I Mer9 Dtli;htful 1ssortmtnt of exquisi te 101ps 10 right for g ift giving. Choo1e Gve1t So1p, Hostess Seep, F!or1l Gue1t So1p, Guest So•p irt Di1h, Fruit $o1p In Dish end as- 1orted totp puffs. ::::-:-=--~~ -. . 96' • l rtdlty O,treflo • lr1dl1y l11tl11hip • lrellllley lucy Ttt Party • lr1dlty Ttwtr Climb bgularly $2.96 " $3 .49 • • l rtdley Str1tt90 Regularly $3.96 to $4.99 YOUR CHOICE $233 Sl'lop now for Chrl1ttn11 glhing - stvt In pr•holidey 11le. f1vorltt1 with growriup1, kld1. cii~~E $333 Suy now for 111 tht klddlt• on YOYr ;!ft 1!111 Utt our conwl\o< lent l1vaw1y Plen i nd 11vt . 7 • U,I Tti.,i.11 . - •, •• ' Economic 1·mpact Hits 1 6ig Firms WASHING TON (UPI) -The comer grocer can do something Sunday that General A.1otors, General Fopds and other corporate giants cannot -raise his prices. And \\'ithin that anomaJy lies-a central fact in the administration's post-freeie economic 'J)lanning : the big companies not only have more eoonol'()iit impact. they 1nay be the only ones on which any practical control can be exerted. The only pr ice increase guldelin\ the . government laid down Thursday was a general .;,;ie: lt •ants to bold averqe price increases acioss the economy to a rate of no more than 2.5 percent per year. How this will show up in the price-of ahoe polish or furniture rtmalmi to be seen. since the whole economy is Jumped 'together in the standard. DESPONDENT TAX A GENT SUR VIVED PLUNGE FROM GOLDEN GATE Henry H1rrin9ton B1c1m1 Sixth Survi vor Out of 435 Jumper• The comer store vs. giant corporation situation arises from the latest decisions pulling together the machinery which 'M'ill attempt to control the economy when the wage-price.rent freeze ends at mid- ni~ht Saturday. And it said tha"t cost increases -not hopes for increased profits -must be the motive for price hikes. The profit limit be~·ond ""hi ch sellers 'M'ill not be allowed to go will be ~sed on the two best profit years during the three yea.r period im - mediate!}' preceding the st r. r t of the freeze f.ug. 15. Golden Gate Leaper Lives The price commission 'Thursday an- nounced that firms doing' more than $100 million in sales every year will have. to notify the govemment 30 days in advance if they want to raise prices, and then put them into effect only if the prlce panel does not object. · 'But more .significant perhaps than the price standard or the cost-proof jusUflca· lions for price rises Is the fact that the biggest firms are the prime target of the new control s. The $100 million plus sales companies incl ude the 1.300 biggest finns \vhich together have about 45 percent of the American sales market Ellis" "SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A :JO.year" old Internal · Revenue Service employe, \vhose wife sald he was depressed over his job. surv ived a jump fron1 the Golden Gate Bridge Thursday. The ma n. Henry Harr ington of Pacifi ca. "'as pulled from a shallow inoat · around the south tower of the bridg e. He was still con.scious after the 27(}.foot leap .. He "·as s"·imming around trying to find a "'ay out of the moat," said California High1vay Patrolman Steve ··1 talked to him. He gave me his name, his age. his home address and telephone number. Not only that, he told me wbere his car was parked and its license num- ber. He said he had left a note for his 'M'ife.'' Coast guardsme11 c.nd ambulance at- 1endants found Harrington flounde ring in the moat under the bridge, from which at least 435 persons have leaped since its completion in 1936. Firms with less than $100 million in an- nual sales -all the way from sizeable manufacturerS to local merchants -ran hike their prices as of Sunday, prcrvided they post a list of prices that prevailed nuring the freeze. Those \\'ilh sales between $50 million and $100 milli on, as previously announced, will have to sub- mit price change reports every three months but the others will be subject only to random spot ch&-ks. Because their price increase requests . must be submitted 30 days in ad\•ance it apj)('arecl likely that they \\'ould undergo more scrutiny than s1naller businesses. The.,.2.s percent standard "'it! be appliNI \\"ilh more exactness in the sense that it 'M'ill have a larger immediate impact than if it "·ere apolied indivi dually to scores of smaller businesses. Envoy at U.N. Peking Issues Greetings UNITED NATIONS (UPI\ -Peking's smiling chief en- voy gave the United Nations the regards of 800 million mainland Chinese today in a short and snappy courtesy call . and his delegation got word their tt'a\•el in America would be restricted in the same treatment given Soviet Russia. Deputy Foreign Minister Chiao Kuan-hua, leader of the Communist Chinese delega- tion. paid the half.hour pro- tocol visit to Adam t-.1alik of Indonesia, president of rhe U.N. General Assembly. The full delegation lakes over the U.N. China seal in it diplo- mc.tic debut );lond ay. The United Nations an - nounced that the State'·0epart- ment had d&-ided -although Washington and Peking do not have diplomatic relations - "lo extend travel restrictions to members of the mission of Purdue University Prof- Gets Agricultw~e Post WASHINGTON (UPl 1 Earl L. Butz, a Purdue University dean who served in the Eisenhower Administra- tion, has joined President Nix- on's cabinet as Agriculture Secretary, a post made a po- litic&) arena by record grain yields that have driven down farm prices. Nixon announced Thursday the appointment of Bute:. 62. Butz succeeded Clifford t-.1. Hardin, who will join Ralston Purina Co. of SL Louis as vice chairman in charge of· the company's research a n d development. Nixon sa id Hard in had decided to leave because he had had an "exceptionally at- tractive offer" in private business. Ronald L. Ziegler, the White House pre s s secretary, said t he ap- • pointment did not signify any change in adm inistration farm policy. But Butz, "'ho served as an s ssistant agriculture secret ary under Ezra Taft Benson dur- ing the Eisenhower years, im· med iately came under fir e from Democrat ic Nationa l Chairman l,a wre ne e F. O'Brien. O'Brien said Butz was an archileet of Benson's policies and would bring them back. O'Brien described Butz as a "prominent consultant and board member--of -•• cor- porations ~that· '!'m · the farmers.' rt Rep. 'Villiam Scherle (R· Iowa ). a critic of Hardin's policies. said when told of Butz' appointmenl, "Oh, hell, not another professor ." l·( was hoping w~'d have a man of the soil, but I don't kno1\' about the man and am going to reserve judgment." Scherle said. The chairman of the House Agriculture Committee Rep, ..,, \V. R. Poage (D-Tex . 1, remembered "·orking \•:ith Butz "'hen Butz served under Benson in the 1950s. "Obviously. ~·e had many differe nces, but I respect-him as an honorable and sincere man "'orking for what he thinks to be best I o { agriculture," Poage said. · Bu!z. introduced by Nixon at a ne\\'S conference, promi sed to seek help for hard-pressed farmers. Nixon predicted ButT. would be a "vigorous advocate or the interests -0r farmers, just as Secretary Hardin "'as." After serving in Benson's departmenr. Bufz r1eturned to Purdue ""here he was dean of agri culture for 10 years. He has been Purdue's dean of continuing education s i n c e 1968. One Man Battle War Wci ged-()n Prostitute FIUGGI. Italy (UPI ) -Nestore Evangelist! lined his ''hetlcopter gunship" on t.llrge t, squeezed the trigger and •.. splat! It "'as a black day for the ladies of pleasure of Fiugg i. Evangelisti peppered the prostitutes with 25 gallons of blaek marking ink loaded in lanks aboard his private helicopter. The ink raid, follo\.\·ed by a heavy rainfall, drove a score of the mlniskirted girls from their habitual haunt along the Asole-Fiuggi Highwa y. "Jf they come back," Evangelisti warned today, "I have something worse in star~ for them." The wealthy construction magnate said he has ordered sevual boxes of ear-shattering cherry bombs from a 1Je.11rby nre~·oru t:Ompany;- Profit. as well as prudery, was the motive for Evange- listl's one-man war on the streetwalken. He said they are giving a bad name to a luxury apart- ment complex that he has built nearby. Evangelist! said the girls congregated around the en- trance of the access road to his development and used the surrounding forest of cbestnut trees for their trysts". the People's Republic of China comparable to those applied to the Soviet mission.·~ It said a diplomatic note co,·ering the restrictions had been deli vered lo the Chinese mi ssion. The regulations re- quire 48-hour notification of travel outside a 25-mile radius of New York City and. as is the case 1vith the So\iiet Union and some other countries. various areas in the country are closed to travel. The note said the regula- tions apply to the delegates and to "others who may apply to enter this country u1 con- nedion with United Nations affairs." Chiao made a half-hour pro· tocol call on ~falik in the lat- ter 's 38th floor suite in the gleaming secretariat building overlooking the East River in midtown Manhattan . He was accompanied to th e meeting by Huang H u a . China 's permanent represen- tative to the U.N .. and Hsiung Hsiang-hui, a representati \'e in the U.N. complex to talk to Constantin Stavroupli s . secretary-general for U.N. af. fairs. ll.ehnquist' s · Attnckers Get Blll sted WASHINGTON rUPfl - Sen. James 0 . Eastland fD- J\1is!. ), said today that two witnesses opposed to the supreme court nomination of \\lilliam H. Rehnquist were guilly of character assassina- tion. Easlland. chairman of the judiciary committee. leveled the charge at Joseph Rauh, spokes man for th e leadership conference on civil rights, and Clarence Mitchell, represen- tative of the NAACP. The two qu oted rumors of possible connections between Rehnquist and the John Birch Society It Rehnquisl's con- firmation hearing earlier this week. "When presented with the personal affidavit of Rehn- quist, categorically denying that he was ever a membef.of the John Birch Society, Rauh and foifltchell insinuated that Rehnquist should not b e believed and that his une· quivocal denial could suggest that he had rome connection wilh the group," Eastland said in a lengthy rebuttal of several statenlenls the two made in opposing Rehnquist. "It seems clear that the testimony of Rauh a n d M I t c h e 11 conctrning Rehn- quist's auociation with the John Birch Society was purely hypolhelical and not intended to enli&.h~n lhe CQmmittee, bufTn!tead was an uerci~ or the crassest type ·ot character assassination." Eastlarv:t said. • -" Popular Mech~nics tilagazine took a survey of AS American cars since Maverick's introduclion. The resulls1-,lf.Aaverick had the highest percentage ol owners reporting no mechanical trouble! In addilion, our own 10.J..~ warranty claims rate shows th at Maver ick's reliable design is working. In other words, Maverick spends most of its lime on !he road instead of up on the lilt, -So you can expect to spend less on repairs. Now that's a pretty good record for a car at any price. Bui yoU can own a good·iooking, family-sized Ma verick for as Iowas $2175•, Standard Sor optional V-8.2-door,.(-doororsportV ' Grabber. Test drive a Maver ick at your Ford Dealer's. • M;inula<:ture(s suoo•1t1d r11111 11r1ca. 1112 M•~•tlck :t·dOOt Sld1n ahown wfl'- op11on11wh1t11od1w1ll tuu (5291. 0011 l'IOl 1ncl11d1 dllhnalionCllll'g• (lllO), cltil!tf prt p11111011 ch1ro11(ii1ny), 111111f'ld 1oc111u11. • • rrtd11. Noveinbtr 12, l9n Da yton Schools . . Fa cing Closure DAYTON. Ohio (UPI) -Voters decide DAILY PILOT 5 Welfare Rolls Show Decline For 3rd Time WASHINGTON CAP) -The nation's wel!are rolls shrank in July for the' third straight month as states continued to fight skyrocketing costs, the government 1ald today. • The Department of Health, Educitlon and WeUare said most of the deeline came-~ Aid-to Fam.llles with Otpendent Children -AFDC -which represents about 7G perctnl of the annua l $18.3-- billion welfare bUl. "Several factors appear to be con· tribut~ to the apparent leveling off of the welfare caseloads. the mo st notable being the recent eUorts of states to cut back on payme.nts and recipients becluse toda y v.·hethe r thls city's S7,24.0 publle of the extraordinary cost rise in the past school students atlend classes the rest of yearr'' said John D. Twiname, M· this year. minlstrator of HEW's Social and The 69 schools in the slate's sixth Re~bilitalioPI Serviee. !\fost of the July decrease can be explained by the 108.000 largest city closed last Friday when the AFDC ~ecipients dropped in New Jersey, district ran out of ope:rating funds despite he sald. a fa1·orable 1'ote No1·. 2 on a 13.6 mil Twenty &tates and jurisdictions have school Je1'\'. cut back on AFDC in recent months while Tod.i.v·s ·showdown will be for an-•d· ...-.3'-otb.er:s..bave.:reporttct-ln~e$f; _ ditional 10.5 mils. If it fails. the schools Another 11.000 old-age recipients were "'ill shut do"'J\ at least -until Dec. 14 or dropped In 39 states ln July to re{lect perhaos for the rtst of the year. higher Social Security payments flrst · Failure v.'ou\d bring up another vote on pavable in June. Twiname said . lhe 10.J m\Js 011 Dec. 14 and, if H a~ai11 is The July relief i-olls totaled 14.2 million rejPcted. the district "'ould have to "'ait persons. about 84 ,000· fewer than the until January. 1972. for state funds to be previous month. distributed. The number of AFDC recipients. which C'..ov. John J. Gilligan came here Thurs· had been rising at a rate of about 2 pe:r- da~· to lend his support for the levy's cent a month. went up only six-tenths of 1 passage. percent in April . • • _MAVERICK ~. .. -. , ' He sald several serious lralfic accidents "'ere caused from motorists stopped or slowed do'M11 to ogle the girls. "J went to speak to the-women lo try to persuade them to find another place,'' Evangelisti saKI. '1TheY. re- fused to move. Well, they wanted mr and they got ·rt." The Senator also said Raub and Mltctttll made unsub.stan· tiated charges that Rehnquist Improperly Interfered w I t h voting In bh1ck precincts In Phoenix, Ariz., and that be us- ed abusive language t o Negro e s w ho were d'mQnslrauna for a clvll rl&h!s bill lheiT Jl<nding In the Arliona 1,glslature. For Better Ideas in value see your Ford Dealer now.!· " ' ' ' I ' ' .. .. . .. ' .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. " -uOLY PILOT EDITORIAL P A.GE Perennial In the recent history of Huntington Beach, few men have cegerated 59 much recurring controversy as John Turner and his Meadowlark Airport. Wbeh Turner extended the runway for the port by about 500 feet a little over a year ago. violent disputes between 'pilots and homeowners heated up numerous city council and planning commiSsion meetings. The home.owners told tales of horror. They claim· ed airplaries w.ere_ u_filog a s.te_epeLJppro,Ach..to the strip, buzzing their homes and nearby power lines, occasional· £y sending vafious pieces of electrical equipment crash· iog into their yards. Turner and a squadron of pilots ar~ed the 500· foot extension made flying safer, especially for twin engine planes. They had a considerable amount of evi· dence to support their position. . It's a sbame that tb'e comf>rOmise worked out be· . tween Turner and the city appears to be in jeopardy now. It might just rekindle the controversy. Although Turner has complied with a long list of Wety requirements by the planning commission, he has 'failed to remove two temporary trailers used for offi~ gpace. Planners have therefore recommended nullification of the variance. Turner, however, is not planning to give up ·without another' fight. . A-,Question of Fairness The proposed unification plan. of the school systems now within · the Huntington Beach Union High School District has become one of those involved legal tangles which will require at least the power of a Superior Court judge lo undo . Al th~ center of a vast legal tangle is the 11-man County Committee on School District Organization which · recently submitted the controversial four-district plan to the st.Ate Boa.id of Education for ratification. Through its 6 to 5 vote to approve the controversial plan, the .committee has placed itself in a precarious position. Next Monday it wµI be required to defend the ·Controversy plan In court but it is somewhat unclear who will pay Its attorney~ Traditionally the committee has received lts legal advice from the office of courity counsel. But \vhe n the Fountain Valley School district decided to fight the . committee and its rlan. the county counsel was obligated to· serve the schoo di.strict. Threatened with additional litigation from the high schooL~lrict.. and the Ocean-View and Westminster school districts. the 'county committee then asked for legal help· from the U.S. Attorney's Office. But "the plea was turne~ down over a jurisdictional problem. ,Now the committee has hired a private law firm to represent._ it in Monday's "show cause" hearing. But "'"hat appeafed to be a simple solution to the dilemma has been further complicated. · To authorize payment of the fees would require the county counsel to instruct the county aud itor to \vrite the check. To date, the county counsel has been un,vill· ing to do so, since the legality is clouded. Meanwhile, emergency legislation is being pushed ~n Sacramento by Assemblym~n Robert Burke (R·Hunt· 1hgton Beach) and other Orange County legislators. If the effort is successful , rayrnent will then be authorized to the Santa Ana firm o Schlegel, Friedemann, Inadomi . and Menke. · One of the main legal challenges against the com· mittee is alleged "incompatibility of office" al.feeling several members. The charge is that their current membership on school boards of some of the affected districts biased them in favor of the plans favored by their O\vn district, and precluded fair and objective consideration of unifi· cation plans favored by other districts: This iS such a fundamental question of fairness that it hardly can be glossed over or disregarded without challenge. And it is such an obvious one that it \vou!d seem the committee woul~ have acted to avoid it, by re· placing the affected members or asking appointment of a new committee free from any question of this possi ble in· compatibility. ·· Paying for Public Education Some Want State -Should Take Over Priso11s Like ' I To the Editor : New veteran fa cilities are built, freeways constructed, e a r t h q u a k e • damaged hospitals repaired and replaced. Where does the money for these badly needed projects come from? It i! funded by the st.ate Legislature which studie! the various requests and funds those it feels are valid. animals could outsmart killer man , and disgust on the staged filming! And at in- termission , daddy's girl wanted the customers to buy daddy's book. Country Clubs Does the gener,a.I public get to vote on these projects? Yes, lndirecUy by elec- ting legislators who they feel will best represent t h e l r thinking regarding ef· ficiency and economy. The reason for giving lawmakers, once elected, freedom to act without each time going back to the electorate is to permit government to function smoothly and eiliciently . Mailbox , Letters from readers ore welcome. NormaU11 writers should convey their mes1ages ill 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space . or eliminate libel il f'eserved. AU lt:t-~ tef's must includt signature and mail· ing address, but name.s may be with- held on f'equt"st if su jficient rea.son is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. It ·was hardly any wonder that many people left the theate r early. Some children wept at the slaughter of the proud, beautiful animals. . WHY SHOULD WE pay to see a man deliberately set out to kill? I am angry and. disgusted and sick at heart at the misuse of American wilderness. They should call the film : "Slaughter in ihe Wilderness" Advertising doesn't fit the movie. EVELYN F. GRUSSING ( Guest Re port By JAfl.IES E. WHEntORE Senator, 351b District t ,. On the heels of the recent violent murders of nine correctional officers within our state prisons comes the opin- ion of an independent penologist in a 650-page report lo the Board of Cor- rections ""'hich would make our penal in· stilutions veritable "country c I u b prisons." :; _ ROW JS rt THEN THAT education ls •• de"lendent upon • two-thirds vote of "he college J tudenls are hippies but I don't iee the 95 percent of the so-called Americin students marching alongside of the hippies, ca,rrying the nag when the hlppiea: are proteSting. Recycle Our Waste To the Editor : The report, \vhich is also being studied by each of us in the Legislature, caUs for these actions : .. pu'Jlic to ward off d Is as tr 011 s ove-crowdinll or to repair dangerously ru -1own .facilities? ~lh1t sort of stupid logic would hold t~r t a new freeway sh~uld be more easily br' · Pnd financed than a new school? A ···:a: "the people" to continually bond ; th .. -.~:'.!Jves or raise their taxes is ~!" unr;'.!:illstlc. People have a natural rtluc· : ta .... ? to inflict pain 'Upon themselves no ma'ler how worthwhile the cause Is. Most ; • pr~rierty owners are resentful of the tax· es they ~ now paying and ~ da:nned If they'll Increase those taxes. • ' • • • . • WHAT MUST HAPPEN is that the state must asswne' the full responsibility for the funding of public education. The most equitable way to raise money is through an incre:ased income tax. For in· stance, an increase of one percent would raise more than $600 million for educa- tion. Los Angeles schools were deemed unsafe because of earthquake damage, the state could have stepped in and cor- rect ed tile inadequacies or rebuilt the gchools that were closed down. The point Is that the power lo decide the fate of public education should be left to the sta te Legistlature rather than the overburdened focal taxpayer Vtho has neither the ability nor the inclinaUon to do the job. STU RUBINE The Prole•ler1 To the Editor : t would like to see the enclosed print put on the front page of your newspaper. I am aware we have our problems but living in this country sure beats working In a rice paddy, ond t!aling fishheads and rice. Of coune. if your paper has tht backbone ()f a jellyfish and is .willing to stand by and have this type of person run · OW' country down without doing anything about il, forget the whole Idea. I AM AWARE that only five percent of O•ANGK COAIT DAILY PILOT Roberl N. Weed, Publi.!:her ~ Thomes KttvU, Ed itor Albert W. BaU!1 Editorial Page Editor The tdltot1al pai:c-of the Dttlly PiJot aeekl lO lnlorm ltld •tim'tl· late reaikrs by preicnUng thls nf'lt'IPl-W• or!nk>n1 a.nd com· rncnt.ary on topics ot h:it.emt and algnlflcnce, by provid.ln1 a forum far the cXJ1tt1tlon of our re&d~n' oprnM>rw, and by jJresmtlnl( the diVUIC' vloewpotnt1 of Informed ob- acrvers •ncl •J;J\ktsmen on lOplcs or P'e ell>'-, Frida)'\ November 12, 197l Yoa might tncttase your, .&ales. Some parents wUI buy ,Ute paper just to &how their teenage children. , WARREN REEKER The unreP,od~lblt '-(too tit m) CQP1I of a car!oqn enclo.sed ihowed a typically hippie.garbed couple, the man saying to 1he girl, "While l ge~ my unemployment check, you split to pick up our welfare money and food. stomps. Al.so, apply .for increa.s· ed h.ousi'ng allowance since we got Ourselvei a pad. "I'll stop at school to .see how our federal scholar.ship grants are coming. You go to th e county fret medicot clinic to get your .sores checked and pick up my glMses if they're ready. 1'1eet back at the pad at J :30 and we'll hitch a ride to the federal building in time for the prote.st march again.st thi.s rotten capitalistic society and the E.stablishment that's responsible for it!" Animal ll1uttlng To the Editor: Editor America n \Vildemess! A misnomer! Rather it's one man's tale of how he set out to kill Jhe prize animals. I. was first delighted when 1 saw the movie . ad, American \Vildemess, ex· peeling an elaborate and spectacular panorama of some <0f our proud and beautifUI l&.nd with its creatur~. Instead 1 found myself sickened with the pictorial diary of a man fulfilling his "dream" of kill ing off the largest and the best of the wild species. WITH SO ~tANV of our wild animals fa cing extinction, t could hardly believe my eyes when the film was shown. I found myself hoping that somehow the The Uninvolve<f ( Press Comments .. , ' - Hebron, lid., Porter COanty Herald: "In seannlng a little magazine the other day as I went through my mall. l came. acrou-the following it'm that J would like to pass on lo 'acli of )'OU ••• 'The trouble with politics Is not the thousands who are in it. but the millions who ere out.' There is 60 much truth In that state-- ment. lt is a ghame that so many 'good' people refuse to get lnvol~ ln politics. They either take the 'let George doll' al· tilude or else they cove.r up by saying those 'dlrty' politicians . . . when, bufeally, they art 10 blamt. Remember ••. 'bed' public officJ11ls are. elected by good people who refuse lo vote 41r 'get in-- volvtd'." Our "environment ": To preserve it, profit motives must not precede it. Of what good are profits, goods and riches 1f we must pay dearly for them in foul air, polluted land a'nd water? To improve it, we must not thoughtlessly continue to pour sewage aad garbage into the rivers, la kes and oceans. For cleaner waters and preserva- Uon of m·arine life (and our own ), we can develop alternate systems of ctry.Jand filtering and purificalion. Our wastes can be used to,enrich the land. Sewage: water can be recycled for reuse. HIKING AND pedaling will lessen air pollution as will developing alternate methods of mass transportation &.nd the use of new types of engines. To prolong our natural resources. we can recycle our waste . l\1ineral.s can be put back into the soil by use of the com- post. We cannot be a st rong nation if "A't have to deJ)end on foreign countries for food and fuel. INDIVIDUALS AND conglomerates who exploit the environment for profits and refuse. to recognize the eoormity of the ecological crisis are guilty of dark sins against the land. They would drag the whole nation into a dying society plagued with pollution. Abolition of pollution must be ac- companied by sacrifice. This must not be considered a detriment to the economy, For what could be of more value or im· portance than improvement of the en· vironment. the quality of life, thro~gh the restoration ~nd preservation of ou r gret.t American heritage. God's great gifts to man: land, air and water? G. IV. LOWE Quotes Kenn eth J. Korord, Venict -"\Ve com· milted ourselves to defen d ... South Vietnam from her aggressive totalitarian neighbor because a free South Vietnam Is in our national interest. But if we try we can still lose -by pulling out lm· mediately." Dear _Gloomy ~us ltt'1 one more feather in the cap of Foµvtaln V1Uey that so 'many par· en!'.s-bnt lo get their children out of the Garden Grove schools and Into Valley's superior educational system. -0. B. S. 1'111 ... ,.,. ,.'*', ""*"" "'""" ,.. '"'" .. ru, ·I\-• ~ _..,."r· ,_,,. ,_ • _.,. tt •'""'' ~ DeilY ,lltl, -Closure of California's Folsom and San Quentin priSQns; -Future penal institutions should be small and located within the communities th~ serve; NO J\fINifl.tUl\t prison terms , giving the proposed new parole board authority to release the prisoner v.·henever he is con· sidered not a danger to society: -Elimination of the present Adult Authority which gives the prisoner no right to c9unsel in dett:trmining the length of his term or deciding when he is to be paroled. and -Placing the burden of proof on !av.·· enforcement authorities as to why a con· vict should not be released, rather than the present system requiring the convict lo show \vhy he should be released. DOES THIS SO UN D like a country· club environment for felons? Indeed, can Californians afford to pay more to make lawbreakers more comfortable'? As one nc"•spaper editor .... no studied the report said: "Those who drum up sympathy for hardcore murderers. ra pists. kidnapers Md other pe rpetrators of violent crimes, undoub tedly are behind !he fallacious rea soning that criminals are no t lawbreakers but 'political prisoners'." CERTAINLY, unde r this nation's law, a person "'ho breaks the law must be punished. \Vhen a person rommits a crime against society and is convicted and sentenced after due process of law. he surrender~ his rights and privileges as a law.abiding citizen. This does not mean. of course. that he then should be cruelly treated or unduly persecuted. He should be provided ample opportunity to rehabllilate himself inside· prison:-- Nonelhcless. while he is in prison. he must abide by r u I es and regulations governing prisoners. tf he willfully and persistently breaks such rules and regulallons, he must pay fol' his in· fractions . TllESI'.: ADVOCATES of per· miS11iveness s h 0 u rd certainly not be permitted to close down lo~olsom and San Quentin. even though these facilities are old in terms of age and no doubt need considerable moder11lzatlon and ex- pansion. And it is absolutely ridiculous to advocate a vast network of mlnJ.prlsoris located thl'QUghout the stale. We have too long been victimiied by the criminal element which looks to a growing pe:rmlssTve juaicial system ·ror mercy when a la,,.,·breaker is ap. prchend~. convicted and sentenced, THE APOLOGISJ'S for "country club prbions" never shed a tear for the nine victims of the recent prison murders, their loved one:s. fr iends, or the proptrty t.h~y destroyed If we are to ha ve constructive prison reform, it should be. purposeful reform, ho1vever. and lnlUate a sy1tem th 3 t v.·ould not lessen the punishment for crjmts 11gainst 10Clety. -' Bridge Is Better Game Than Poker A friend asked me at dinner recently v.•hy I gave up playing poker, some yea rs ago, and began concentrating ()n bridge. The obvious reason was th& I couldn't aff()rd to keep losing money at the poker table. As I thought about it further, however, I discovered that my enjoyment al bridge is :·greater than it ever was at poker- because bridge Is essentially a partnership game. ~ , . ~-, ~~·· ... Victory that is gafned 15.pan,ol a·ttam ls. ~weeter a~d more nourishing thah:ln· d1v1~~al conquest. There are more baWY families tha~ there are happy individual,, because whtle grief is solituy, joy mU$t be shared. A NEIGHBOR OF mine who was a talented concert pianist gave up recitals and became a member of a chamber orchestra group, beca use, as she put it; "playing together with other musicians gave me a feeling of communion that I almost never !tchieved while plal'Jllg alone." In bridge. two average players who are harmonious can usually beat two eq>ert players "A'ho are vain and cantentious. And defending dextrously w i t h a partner to defeat the opponents' contract gives a pleasure that cannot be found at the poker table , where competitiveness is everything, and C(}()peration means nothing. 1 HAVE TAPERED off my chess playing for much the same reason I gave up poker -that chess makes inte~ demands on ooe's aggressive drives, and dr~~ the ego in tts strain for victory. This rs why chess champions are so often t~i:tured personalities who find it dif-ficult to relate to other people . Bridge is the most ex~llent ca rd game In the world because of Its partnership fa<\<ir. While nonpartnership games call for courage or cunning, bridge in addition c'.111s for tact and understanding and a kind ~f modesty which pennits the par:t~ership to do its best regardless of 1nd1v1dual glory. I .KNOW BRIDGE playe rs who would be Jn the top rank if they could handle their partners half as well as they handle t~~r ca,rds. Bu~ they are basically in· d1v1duahsts play1_!'lg a C<Hlperative game, and would rather las!'.! than admit a mistake or trim their bidding saila-.to the needs of the team as a whole. It is generally agreed that the Italians have beaten the U.S. bridge team for the \Vorld Championship three years running, not because they are better players but because the Italian partners have played together longer and have an abnormal sensitivity to each other's bidding. The emotional component in games, as in life, is ultimately more decisive than the mental skill. Dozing Driver Linbility Too little sleep. like too much liquor, l~w in Action ' can turn even the mildest motorist into a deadly menace. If a driver do:r.es off and has an accident, is he legally liable for the consequences? The law st arts with the proposition that ..._ I no one should be blamed for what he does knocking his ha nds off the steering wheel. while unconscious. Blame rests on free In the crash that lollowed, the driver was will misused -and the sleeping person is injured. not using free will at all. Could he collect damages from the But one court after another has woman on the theory that h r f 1r ~onet~less lmpo~ lla~ility on. the doz. aSleep was an act or negligencee? A aco~~ 1ng driver. They hl]d .him ne~g~n!_ not _said. no_.because _a passcngor could f~r what . he. does. whtlf: asleep but_ f~r scarce1y be expected to anticipate such a d1i>regar~1ng, while still a""·a~e. tRe freakish accident just from falling al telltale signs thf!l sleep was coming. "(Shel was required to exe:~~ "IT IS TRUE," said one court, "that <the driv~r) can not ordinarily fix the pre cise moment when he lapses into un- conscio usness. But it is not true that ordi narily sleep comes unheralded. It lies '"ithin his own conlrol to keep awake or cease driving." Background factors, contributing to tbe danger, are also taken Into 1ccounl . One drjver had been at the wheel conlinuoU!ly for 18 hours; another was exhausted from overwork ; a third had kept going alter t-.-•ice almost "fading out." In each case, ""h~ the driver dozed off, he wu held liable for the result.s. Suppose it f! lt'w: passenger, not --lht driver, who f11l1 asleep. Does the l1w frown on that too? Occasionally the pawnger does hive a duty to stay 1wake -w~ he hl3 some speci«l reason to th ink that the drlve.r needs wa tching. But as 1 rule he m1y nap at will, putting his trust In the driver to take. care . IN ONE CASE tt woman in th·e back seat dozed off and slumped against the d:rlvtt'1 seat, pushing It lorward and • ., for~sight .'' said the court, · ·no t clairvoyance.'' . An A~erica1t Bar As.sociation p11b· he strvtce feature: btrWill Bernard. By George ---. Dear Georie : I keep having the feeling that 50:mebody is following me, and my wife says I should seek professional help. Do you think 1 $hould seek profeSliional help? And, if not, "'hat should I do about this constant feel- ing of"being_ followed? CONCERNED Dear Concerned: ~wen, possibly )'OU should seek professional hele. Actually, what t do Is stay home -that certainly frustrates all those people following me. when I don 't go anywhere . (Problems sent lo George and oot solved wlWn 90 days will be-auc-- tioned to cover storage cNts. So send easy problems.) ' I - Newport Beae~ ' EDITION • .VOL. 6'4, NO. 271, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1971 TEN· CENTs" I High --Rise Foes Seel{ Referendum on Ballot By L. P~"TER KRIEG 01 1111 DeJIY l'llel 11111 ' Newport Beach high rise foes will go Mfore the city council Nov. 22 to ask that body to place an anti·high rise referen· dum on the April ballot. Newport Residents U11ited (NRU l Thursday filed a_ formal request to be on the agenda of the afternodil studv session to discuss the referen~um thejr' \Vant to apply to both building height and popula· tion dens'ity. Although the group some time ago pr~ posed a ban on tall buildings iP1 all but t.hre:e. ar~s of ·the c~ .. NRU Chainnan Allan Beek said this morning they will oo~ carry an,y formal proposal to the meeting. "Everybody has different ideas," Beek sa id, "we want the council to get in- -·,tved . "Perb~ps they c1n temper the en· husiasm of some of us , 1' he said. Beek said NRU is asking for the referendum· becau!e "w'e don't want an initiative if we can avoid it. -"The way to avoid It is to have the issue put on the ballot in I.he form of a referendum." he said. Beek declined to say what NRU would do if the council turned down the pro- posal. "I do not wish to make a threat," Beek said. 'As with the high rise lintils, Beek said NRU'h8.s no formal recommendation for delisity control. · .;There are so many possibilities." he said, "we want to find out what is ac- ceptable to the council - a compromise is possible.'' -·., .. Beek said he expects .about 20 NRU members to be: p~sent and added , "We'll be: coming before them r.s many different individuals. with many different ideas." He said he expects a ''loose, ·informal discussion" with councilmen. SpecifiCally, NRU wants·the COW'ICil to schedule a vote on a charter amendment that would Um.it building heights in the areas to be detennined. He said NRU has determined it would be legal to have such a provision in the citv charter. Beek says NRU wants a charter amendment rather ~an a city ordinance because It would require another vote of the people to change it. '"We make no secret of the fact. we want to put it beyond lhe reach of futun city councils," Beek said. City ordinances may be amended by a majority vote of councilmen. NRU in the past has called for a ban on high rise in all areas of the city with the exception of Newport Center, the Emkay property near Orange County Airport and the Irvine ·Company's No'rth·Ford ~- dtistr!al tract near the Philco-Ford Aeronutronic plant. Newport Beach ha.S a o~e.yeaf high rise freeze along its entire' shoreline noW as t)\e result of an ordinance'.adopted last month. c®ncilmen enacted the zoning mfJ. l).~ce be<;ause a moratorium on high rise along the Lower Bay was about to expire and they felt it would be a:lmost one year befor'e work on a new general plan would have pfoceeded to the point where it could give them guidelines for permanent Jang, USf: ·lh the city. Ecuador on Tear 5 More Boats Seized; 5 Ransomed r l ---OAIL Y' l"ILOT Siii! Pitt .. Sea Queens One of these Coroda del 1'1ar High School coeds will reign over home· c~ing ac~ivities tonight \vhen Sea Kings-tan.gle....with Costa Mes'a High Mustangs 1n a football gan1e scheduled for 8 p.m. at Davidson Field. Corona de! Mar homecoming court includes (front row from Jef!) Jane . A1orrison, Cathy Purmort. Jennifer Suchomel; and (back row from left) Laurie Bayless, Cheryl Smiley and Ping Ho. · Irvine Council Hopeful . Blasts Fellow Candidate Critici!lm Thursday of a group of Irvine cif'.>' council candidates ac!ive in the Cou n· c~ of the Communities of the Irvine lo· d3y drew a response from one of them wbo claims the charges were made by a miin whose "contribution" lo the cityhood mOVe .. has bcen'zero." CCI member Jerry Choyke let fly with the rebuttAl this morni ng following the l'it!lte'ment by Dr. Arnold Binder who at· cused Choyke and others of being ''leaders of a campaign of vilification and abuse'' of another citizens' group. Irvine Tomorrow, the San Joaquin School District and "cit v council candidates who do not follow the.ir party line." Choyke said he ·'doesn't even know Arnold Binder and he does not ~ow me. "If he did," Choyke said, "he would know that none of us is part of any wick· ed conspiracy.· "I do know Arnold Binder participated in none of the studies that have taken us this far. "His contribution to the best or my knowledge has been z.e.ro and he now viciously attacks those who made con-. tributions and gave him an opj,ortunity to speak out as a candidate on the needs of the city oC Irvine," Choyke said , "But he does not address himself to those needs. p~fe.rring instead to ust his candidacy as an opportunity to vilify and a~ people he. does .not know." SAN DIEGO (UPil -The Ecuadorian government seized five more tuna cllp- Jl:ers today. only hours after levying $140,000 in fines and re.leasing five others, 'The Ceryl Marie, Pi.fary S., EnOeavor, Eastern Pacific and Royal Pacific were being taken to the port of Salinas at last report, August Felando, general manager of the American Tunaboat Association here, said . About 65 crewmen plus five skippers were aboard the tuna clippers, all of Terrorists Beat Castro To Village ANTOFAGASTA~ Clitte I A Pl -Te,.. rorisls blew up a governrrient transmission line near this riorthem city today, fust belOre the arrival of Prime Minister Fidel ·castro of Cuba. A spokesman for Entel, the com· muni cations Cirm, said the powerful dynamite blast destroyed a pole that car· ried transmission lines and power cables. No ohe was reported injured. There was no indication whether the bombing .had any cqnnection with C.Bstro's visit. Castro arrived in Anl ofag&.,sta from Santiago aboard a Russian-made Cuban Airlines plane for several da ys of touring • Chile's northern desert region. He plan· ned lo meet workers in nitrate fields and . copper mines ;ind also talk with univer~_ ty students, politicians and t.:1wnspeople. Wearing green fatigues and black com· bat boots, the 45-year-old Cuban leader accepted a copper key to the city lrom l\1ayor Gennan Miric, who labeled Castro "a champion of anti-imperialism." "I'll try to be a worthy .son of Antofagasta," the prime minister replied. ''Thank you for your solidarity with our country." Antofagasta, with a population of about 120.000, is an important port exporting copper produced at the huge Chi· quicamata mine, high in the Atacama Desert to the east. Castro planned to visit the mine, in which multimillion dollar interests of the Anaconda Co. of the United States were natlol'l'liliied by ·Chile earlier this year. Harbor Schools Plan Weekend -Of Homecoming -Oraage Co•st Banker to Head UF Divisio~ Nost.&.lgia will ruD. rampant iii the Har· bor Area-this -weekend as two h i g h _6Cbools _and Orang! Coast Colleg~ v•elcome ah,µnni to homecoming. Weather Winter's drizzles will most like. ly disappear tonight "'ith mostly sunn y skies forecast for the \\•eek- end . High will range from' 55 on the coast to 65 inland. Lows win range from 4i to 55 respccLively. INSIDE TOl)A Y A funny thing liappened to Orange County 's Carl Lind· strom on his way to o pro-foo t· -bmr carett. Tlrert. ls a sto"'ty ap.id picturea about it on Page 23 of tod.ar/• ~Veekender. • ""MIMI. 1'\rlldt 11 NJ!..,..I NtWI '-1 Oru._. C-fY I •'111111rlR!t 21-,, h•!\111 P'Klt, It s_.11 u.11 llKll Mt!'kOI 1•11 , ...... 1,1t11 ,, Tiltl!ll' , .. ,, WHll'IW f Nornfft'I Ntw1 1•11 Wlr!tl Ntwt •·S N .. ktlld«. tl·" • Jack Grundhofer, vice president of. the. .. Union Bank in Corona de! Mar, ls heading the business division of the Harbor Area United Fund. His division will make a door to door canviiss of lalJ t.200 businesses located \\'ilhin Newport Beach. The division goal is S4,054, a 15 percent increase over last year. The Harl!or Area United Fund gives financial SUP.POrt to 32 dUferent agencies including' the Bofs and Girls Clubs, the nfGA American Red Cros.s, -Sa!Vlillo Army. ArtifiCial Kidney , Foundation, Orange County Childtens Hosplt.!11 and the Retarded Cbild~os A1socl10on of Orange County. ~ Grundhofer's area assistants are: Ed H"bel. Balboa ; Le.Ro)' Kroe.sch, Balbo·a Island; Bob She t wo o d Lido; Fred Goodwin. Mariners MJle: 8111 Phegley, Newport-~fesa and north Newport Road; Bruce Fay. • We&lcliff; Ren Brown, Eastblulf and Newp;1rt Center, and Joan WUl\ams,-Corona del Mar. - Corona del Pi.1ar High School launches the sentim.ental wave as they encounter Gqs.t~~ .. M~s.a.J:Ua.b:s..te~m .al 8 p.m. Friday: at Davidson Field . Returning Sea King fans will be glad to know this year 's ieam is one of five teams tied for first place in the Irvint League. . Newport Harbor High School pla-ys Marina High al 8 p.m. Saturday llt Davkl.son Field where a p p r o p r i a t e halftime restivities will include cor· onation of this year's Sailor Queen. The Sailors ~ ti~ for third jn tht. Sunset Le.ague.- Orange Coast College grads with Ilium· nl memberships will be treated free to the LeBard Stadium contest with Mount San Antonio College at 7:30 p.m. 5.atur· day. The Pirates enjoy a 7-0-1 record this year. A dance in the Orange Coast stu· dent center follows the .game. Pre·hofnecoming festivities I n c I u d e ~1om and Dad's night with a campus tour at 5 p.m. followed by dinner and the game. y,·hich were from here~ he said. . The &kippers radioed they were being taken by the LC6t, the Quito, which selz.. ed four American and one Canadian tUna seiner Wednesday, Felando said. The Denise Marie of San Diego was seited in the first group and was released without paying a fine after showing it had acquired a license. Its skipper was quoted by Felando today as saying he heard the. LC61 skipper say he planned "to go out there and get another batch." Hourly Route Tbe latest seizures occurred 50 to 60 miles off the coast of EcuadOr. In ad- dition, the Trinidad, one of the boats seiz.. ed e.arlier, was intercepted, boarded and re1eased after its skipper told the Ecuadorians it already paid a fine. Also released without paying a fine 3fte.r showing it had a license was the Canadian vessel Atlantic Patton. The $140,000 in fines was paid by the Trinidad, The Venturous and the Blue l\teridian. Free Bus Service Set By PATRICK BOYLE 01 111• Dllll'I' Pllel Sllff Officials at UC Irvine, where almost~ percent of the 7,000 students commute to campus, have decid°td to im-Plement a free bus service to communities sor· rounding ~e s~hool. The plari'Cal\s fo r a slngle. bus. to be leased froi=n the Pink Bus Line of Buena Park , driving a 45-minute · route each hour during the week taking students A.o and from the campus. The bus, under the proposed route, would travel down l\.tacArlhur Boulevard ·to Coa~t Highway: v.·esterly on Coast Highway to Jamboree Road and then to Balboa Island ; along Bayside Drive back onto Coast Highw.iiy and along Dover Drive to Santa Ana Avenue: along Santa Ana to Mesa Drive ; then re tum to the campus by way of Palisades Road. Robert Lawrence.. assistant vice· chancellor for student affairs. said today the university hopes to begin OBfrating the line at the beginning of the winter quarte~ in January. However, he noted that one major obstacle -fund ing -may put a damper on the' entire proposal. As planned. the university would lease a SJ-passenger bus from the Buena Park firm for aOOut $1.800 per month. This fili!Ure would includ~ insura nce and a driver, with the bus co mpany paying maintenance costs. according to Joa.Me Simon. student affairs official in charge of study ing the plan. The total cost could be pared down, Pi.trs . Simon noted, by selling advertising space inside artd outside the vehicle to local merchants. This . would bring In about $400 to $500 per month, she said, 25 percent of wbich would go .to Pink Bus Line owners. To raise the estimated SS.400 needed to operate the line for ~ remainder of the 1<:hopl y .. r. ~wrend 11111 lhl'~y will 1ponsor a b~ ride i nd recepaon Nov. 22 for city and Chamber of .. C.Om- merce offlclal1 from communitie1 aur- rounding the campus. Student and faculty organizations will also be· a$ked to Uke part in the ft1nding, he •dded. UCI officia!11 hope to convince the various merchant associations that more ~ # a students would patronize their members il transportation were made avaiJable . The student government at UCI has not SallOr Girl, , . yet allocated any money ror the line, although Lawrence said the student Senate is considering helping with the .e.. ruMing. One of these r toedS will be queen for a night Saturday when 1971 homei;oming queen is crowned at Newport Harbor High School. ~iris (from top) are Linda Dawson, Julie Dunn, , Michele Venclik, Gayl'e Nunn- ley, Kathy Kawamura and Les-- lie Reordan. He said he was skeptical about oJ>. taining money by charging students to ride the bus. Other universities which had implemented bus lines charging a fare, he noted, had abandoned them when students would not use the service. He also noted that if a fare is charged, the line would be subject to the regula· tion -and the red tape -of the Public Utilities Commission. If the line proves a success, La.wrence added, the student government may seek an increase in the present $7-per.quarter student activity fee to support the line. Student officials point out that even if the increase in fee were only $1 per quarter, commuting stude"nts could still save by riding the bus and not parking on campus. Parking permits cost $9 per quarter. 'Hot' Wire Sizzles. Naught but some sizzlb1g electric wires were found neath the smoke aa the 8'31· boa Bay Club at 11 a.m. today. Newport Beach fire.men said only minor damage resulted from the ~lectricaJ short cir· cu it. County Defers New Bay Study Appoi ntment of a third group to study Upper Newport Bay problems has been deferrtd until next year by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Supervisor Ronald Caspers pointed ou t that there are two bodies -now concerned with the Upper Bay and a third at this time "would only serve to contuse the issue." Caspers referred ·to the Ocean and Shoreline Planning Steering Conlll)ittee and the Upper Newport Bay Cooperative Planning Project. The supervisor said the latter grouti plans to report on Jts studies next"' January. Mexican-American~ Push for {;ongre!sioniil Posts 'SACRAMENTO IAPl -Mexican- Americans, fresh from a victory in st.ate Senate redistricting, began pushing today for more seat.s In California's expanded U-se.at congressiOMI delegation. Hennan Siiias·, a Los ·Angeles attorney, a.aid the legislature so far ha1 Ignored the concept of a Mexican-American district limong the fi ve new seats in the U.S. House which C«lifornia gets under the 1970 cen!ll". The st!Jte now has 38 seats. "? think the legislature is more vulnerable here than in any other place because you gain flve seals." said-:Sillas. s~kesman for an ad hoc-group called •Coalition for Falr Reapportionment.'' "Thi! 11 cleer evidence of thelr I - callousness towa.Ttt the whole problem," he said. The Senate reapportkiNnent b 111 cleared its key test, the Senate it.self, oo ri. JJ.2 vota-Tbur8day. It li· expected to pass the ,Au'l"bly bulcally intact and probably aet •"1>ed by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Approval came following a negoUated compromise between Democratic and .Republican leaders In the upper house despite allegations by a dissident Democrat that the bill was Illegal because of th01ew Mexican-American district. ' "Thia bill Is unconstitutional, blaseCJ and discriminatory." aald Seri. Lawrence Wala!> (0.HunUnaton. Park ), whole district was squeezed eastward tnto heavily R<publlcan Orange Qiunty to help make room for the new district -the 20th Senate d~trlct. Both ' partiel-bad pledged to bock • mmcan-Afneriean !11!!8c'" -' -,- Chicano groups had presed f9r ,as many as Uiree seals In the Senite'buS sm ... said, "politlcaUy. It's probobly the best We could anticipate." !\.fore than two-thirds or the near\y 500~000 resident.I of the district llre Mex- ican-American and lt will have a Democratic voter rtglstraUon of some 70 percenL n would be dlllicult, polltlcal obwv~, for anyone but • Muell.,.. Amer! Democrat to win a seat when.It CHICANO, Pqe II • • ' • • f DAILY PILOT N Frlday, NMmbet 12. 1'9n ' .R~~g,IQ_~ Drop s Noted 40-acre Parcel .. ,, Mesa ·ta Annex In Te sting Newport Land? SACRAJ\fE~'TO (AP \ -Sta~wide school test 1cores unveiled Thursday show a i:lrop 'in the JQ, reading ability and grammar of upper grade itudents. A .W.acre parce l of Ne.,..•por1 Beach thal sticks up inlo Costa l\tesa like a shorf. ~quet finger. may soon change hand!. ;\'e'.l·port Beach officials "''ill go before the Cost a :\tesa Ci l y Council l\·londay night to setk design resl rictions for a · mobile home park on the land. a fonn er land fil l. A report from Newport Be a c h City ~1anager Robert L. Wynn. indicated that the city should tell any prospechve Duyer that the land may go over to Costa Mesa. A1ei: Law. evalualion chief for the State Department or Education, said there ~·as '"1w ready explanation" for the drop in sc:ores for 6th and 12th graders. But Law said the tindings are parl of trends noted pre\iously. At the same time . Law said. the 1970-71 scores for students in itades one through thret show "conshitent. though modest. improvement.·· The bulky two-volume report wa£ presented to the State Board of Educa· tion. It cavers all of California's 1.135 school diStric~. ' La~· noted that for' the second straight year. grammar skills for sixth and 12th graders remained below the level whicb the test publisher said is the nationwide average. He said reading ability dipped for both grades from the previous year. \vhile sirlb grade__math~m~tics sco...res dropped "substanUally.t' He said the IQ le vel in both grades dropped slightly from the year before. Grades covered in lhe report were I,%, 3. &, and 12. The scores come from a bat· tery of test! on math, readin& ability, grammar:. and reasoning ability. A hi&hlight Of the scores, said Law. 'llas that California's over.all average for first graders was 7 percentage points above the national average in reading achievt.ment. He credited increased emphasis on reading and earlier training on reading in the early grades as tht reason for the hie:h 5(.'(lrt. 'Law said a aistrict·by-district analysis o! the te3t resuJt.s showed larger school _districts had generally higher le.isl scores. better teacher pay, higher tu rates and J~wer levels of family poverty. Route Certain, Ra~p Patterns Said Unsettled · Tbe Newport Freeway is coming through town as sched.Wed. but Costa ~1esa residents can still influence how many on and off.ramps it, will have. Nonn Brinkmeyer, a tta~ ,.hi.&tJway engineer. explained the freeway situation Wednesday at a luncheon of Costa Mesa Tomorrow', a group of downtown property twnera. ., , Subbina: for district engineer BUI Hashimoto, Brinkmeyer tal ked abo~t the frteway from , Bay Street to Placentia A\'enue and the type of access to it the state mtght build. Five dUJerent access plans were shown for that portion of tbe freeway scheduJed for constructiOn -in 1976-77. The st.ate spokes man made it clear the freeway is still scheduJed, no matter what happens to the Pacific Coast Freeway in Newport Beacb. Skelwn Files For Div,orce • li\1'10 (AP ) -Comedian Red Skelton has filed for divorce from his .,.t'ife of 26 \'ears. Riverside County Superior Court cifficials here said . The petition for dissolution of marriage filed Thursday by the 53--year-old en· tcrtainer says Skelton and his \,·ife . ('~eorgia, 50. separated Aug . 4. Under C11iforni1 laY:, ti.trs. Skelton has W days in which to contest the action if i!ihe wishes. DAILY PILOT OAAMGI eot4T PV•LI»llMQ ~Mff l,Mrt N. w .... ~ Mil P\IM.,. J aclr: a. Curt., Vkll ~ ... co-.i Mlntt• 'TMn r...ni ,_ l:dltot ,,....,, A. ,..,,t.ttt ........ ,"" L. ,.,., kl\•1 "'°""" BaKll en, Elltw w • ..,.,. '"" om. )JJJ N.,,,,,, t.11ln1P4 McTTl11 AIU..-: P.O .... 1175, tl••> ............ eo.t1 IMM: D Wnl e1r tll'wtt L6fUM ••di: 71'! '"""" ·-"""'''...,.. a.di: 11'7S --~ IOUl-'9 tiMI Cl9Ml1f1 as ..... 5.1 c.inn ~' I Ol1LT l'tl.OT, ....... 1dl .. __.., "-~-...... -..,.. ........ ..., ~ ._. ' . ' ' O.t.ILY P'ILOT S111f P'IMlt Pirate Royalty Newport officials. ho11·e\'er. ha\·e indi· ca1ed th ey might consider a de-annexa· lion of !he land. allowing Costa :\lesa 10 anne:r it. \\'ynn said the Cost a ~lesa Sanitary Dls1ric1 and Costa Mesa County \Vat.er District could easily service the area. Newport Beach cannot service the pro?' erty easily. he sa id. ... Costa ~tesa boumis the propeny on three sides. A queen and a king will reign bver homecoming activities at Orange Coast College Sat urday. Queen candidates (from left) include Jeri Top ping. Debbie Grimmond, Lori Bekas, Dianne Ryan and Faye Afarie LaBelle. King cand1dales are !from left) J ohn ~le· ~1enamin, Jim Richards. Steye Koppes and Jim Car· son. Pirate football team takes on ~IL San • .\ntonio A-1ounties ai Le Bard Stadium. The finger is a rectangle on the north side of 19th Street. \\'est of \\'hitUer Av~ J1Ue. It's connected to the rest of New· P')rt Beach by a th in st rip of land with· in. the beach ci ty. Newport Beach bough1 the 40-c.cre site In 19.53, and trom'tha! dale to 1965 or>er· ated it jointly with the Sully-~filler Con- tractine; Company as a sanitary land fill. City officials are recommending rhat Costa :\lesa Councilmen pass the prob- lem on to the planning staff for further study and a futu re recommen,dation. • Ne,v Standards On Sanitation Get Opposition Carpenter Seeks Help On School Fund Ideas Irvine Group Endorses Four For Gty Council A 1966 engineeri ng su r\'ey showed that the lc.nd fill operation was deprecialing the value of !he land, so 1he city be,ga n using the county dump in Coyote Cany-0n. Now. say Nevq>ort planners. the best use for !he land is a mobile home park. Its market value was estimated at $400.· 000 to $485.000. based on a 25-year lease . Newport Beach has de\'eloped mobile home pa rk standards for the site and now waitts Costa Mesa to do the same. By JOANNE REYNOLDS 1'he 32 directors or Orange County'• joint sanitation districts are opposing. at least for now. new standards for sewage By JOANNE REYNOLDS • Of t1M Otl/J" P'U1t 51•0 Orange County school administrators ha,·e beer\ asked for their suggestions on school finances by state Senator Dennis E. ~arpenter t ft-Newport Beach 1. Carpenter. a member of the Senate Education Committee and the Senate Select Commiltee on School Finance, characterized school~ finance as •;the most l.~P,?rta11_t a_nd pressing problem in education today," during a dinner meeting Thursday in Huntington Beach. He spoke at a meeting of the Orange County Chapter of the Ca lifornia Associa· lion of School Administrators. Referring to the state Supreme Court decision which says the present property tax form ol school finance is un· constitutional. Carpenter said the select committee is seeking a different means of financing education in the state. ··we don't have the answers yet." he said in asking the adn1infstrators to sub- mit their ideas to him. "I may not alwa ys lik e the suggestions or agree with them." he added, "but I wi!I see to it they are analyzed by our professional staff and given a hearing before the committee:." The Newport Beach attorney also asked for commenll on e:d ucationa l programs that have been mandated by the state. The senator opened bis speech by ask· ing if the state's educa tional system is trying to do too much. "You ha ve to Jet u:. know if my question is a valid one," he said .• Carpenter expla ined that the analyses of state ~hool financing programs will be done by computer. The computer will be programmed to develop and simulate school financing plans with the hope thal a combinatination of plans can be un- covered which will solve some of the O.t.ll Y l'ILOT Sti tt P'IMll ASKS SCHOOLMEN FOR HELP St1te Senator Carpenter Four candidates seeking tlection to the discharge into the ocean. Irv ine City Council in the [)e(o, 21 A resolution, asking JX>Stponement of a cityhood ballot received the endorsement L kin decision on the proposed standards was of Irvine To.morrow following a four-hour Quot•um 3C • iz•, approved at a joint directors meetint o }Vednesday night. session Thursday night at UC Irvine. The resolution was a response to Be1\1•een 45 and 50 of the community UCJ Ft•aternity statements from officials of the slate. group"s 70 members were on hand to nar· \\'ater Resources Control Board in- row the field of 20 pre-selected city coun. dicating much higher standards will be . en hopefuls. Iss ue Rostponed r;et on the quality of sewage pumped int9 the oce.an along Cali£ornia"s coastline. Vice Chairman Nina \Vest said today The seven districts which are members lhe group endorsed only four candidates f'or lack of ;; quorum durin1 the wan. of the joint board have treatment plant.. ''in order to allow mem bers to v.•ork for ing minutes of ThlJ!sday'! UC 1 r vi ne in Fountain Valley ·and Huntington Academic Senate meeting , resolution of ed rn · ped · the election of a fifth candidate of their the fraterniiy and sorority lottery issue Beach. The treat e uent is pum tn- choosing." must wait until next week for action. lo the ocean two miles off Huntington Th r ti. th l · T Cha1·rman A. A. Maradudin recessed Beach. e our ge 1ng e rv1ne omorro1v Sanitation officials earlier voiced o~ nod are William Fischbach, an attorney. the senate meeting to 4 p.m. Thursday in position to the proposed changes on the social sciences hall. 17745 Oak Tree Lane. Irvine; Robert grounds that they ~·ill cost 81 to 167 per, The fraterni'y question, listed last on a -r h d. · · Dean Pott er. a student and teaching ~ cent more 1n taxes or t e 1str1cts to 1~ lengthy agenda. ~·ould recommend that be , h · d assistant at lJCI. 215 Verano Place. the UCI administration allow the soc ial plement and ca use • t ere IS not a ~ lr\•ine: ~1rs. Gabrielle Pri•or·, a quate scientific information existing to institutions on campus for the first time. 11 r he d. h · housewife . 17726 Ar-"cia Tree La oe, If substantiale a o t rsc arge restr1<> ...,.. The senate's universit" we are C-Om· ~ Universit.v Park, and Henry Q,;gley. an / lions." mi ttee suggests the senate reverse its .... investment counselor. 5132 Chateau Ave., The resolution adopted Wednesday sa1• Santa Ana . 1968 stand against fraternities by that Orange County directors are in favof Tv.·o of the endorsed candidates are stipulating that members in such of the state board's intent to establish 1 org anizations be selected by lottery. · ·r 1· r 1~ members of Irvine Tomorrow . ~1rs. Pryor comprehensive, uni orm po icy or u'C' and Quigley. state, but asks that any standards be Three of the 20 city c.-ouncil hopeful! dn H • ] "based in (act on some measureable un. received lr\'ine Tomorrow endorsement Goo tan in osp1ta . provement to the marine environment." on the first written ballot count. They are Robert Battin. chairman of the county Quigley, Mrs. Pryor and Fischbach. NEW YORK IAP) -Bandleader Befls Board of Supervisors. told sanitaLloft~ Four counts were required before Pot-ny Goodman is in University Hospital directors he \\'iii atteQd the state board fer was selected from a field including suffe ring from what the hospital descrfu. hearings on the standards Dec. 2 il San " 1 Irvine !J'omorrow director Wayne Clark ed as an acute inte3tinal virus. Goodman. Diego. Ed Just, chairman of the joint school hnancing prob ems. and Skip \\'irges, a r-.lcDonneU Douglas 62. was admitted to the hospital Thursday sanitation boards, said he will attend a "\Ve have a golden opportunity to shed employe. • night. similar hearing Nov. 18 in San Rafael. a financing system that is not \l.'orking 1---'--'-------------''--.:._---------------~-------­ very v.·ell and that at best has more ex· ceptions tha n rules. "\Vlth your help we can find a syste: that is ta ilor-made for the problems oft~· day," he said. SHERRILL ) College Board Approves 'Record of Sabbaticals MAKES A HOUSE A HOME ' • A record number of sabbatical leave requests that may require spending S250,000 for replacements during the 1972· 73 school year has bee n approved by Coast Community College trustees. Chancellor Norman Watson s a id \\.ednesday the 32 Jea\'e requests from facu ilty were ''by fa r the largest number \\·e 've ever ti ad in this district." -- The approval leaves will allow IS Golden West College faculty in Hun. tington Beach and 17 from Orange Coast in Costa ~tesa to take lime off for study and travel during the 1972.73 school year. \Vatson cited two reasons for the in- creased numbe rs of faculty lea ve · re· quests : -A reduction in lht' state Education Code eligiblily requirement to six years. Code eligibility requirement to six years. period of optrations al Golden \Vest Colltge in Huntington Beach, meaning faculty there are beComing eligible for the first time. By semester. the lea\'e requests break dov;n to six leaving each carripus durtrig lhe Fall-19i2 lerm : five: each during Spring um : six from Orange Coast and three from Golden \Vest are taking the full" ytar off. and one Golden \Vest In· structor ha!. asked for summ~r . .l.~•v~ .. ··from· June to 5eplember in both 1973 and 19it The \ea\'es. the school txiard "'as told, were screened by ~ faculty committee and represent one sabbatical per in· From Page 1 CHICANO ... structionaJ division. The only exception to the board policy is in the area of counsel. 1ng \\'here fi\'e leaves have been sought and appro ved. Ex-city Manager Wins Disability Battle in Mesa Fonner Costa ti.1esa City ti.tanager Arthur t\;1cKenzie won his b a t t l e against his former employefs with an Orange County Superior Court judge's ruling that he is entitled to a total disability payment or $2,001 .01 a month. Judge H. \Valier Steiner ended a 32-day deliberation of arguments \Vednesday by agreeing-v.•ith fl.1cKemie that he is en· titled to draw Sl.109 a month in disability benefits from an ordinan ce -passed in 1964. The city unsuccessfully argued before Judge Steiner that l\tcKenzie is only en- U!led to the be " e f i ls pro\'ided by_a ~n.sio~ .. P.1.~ .. ~ .. ~~l!t .. Ui,~,fRtTT\er Qfficial .. sfioulcJ be lim ited to that payment plu~ his w-0rkmen 's compensation . !\lcl\eniie retired in June 1970. just three n1onths after he su ffered a stroke that lea ves him today \\'it h .... ·a\king canes and a speech tmpedimenl7 Here are th e makin9s of a room you'n love to live in! Sofas. •nd cha irs so f•shionably co"ered, so handsomely desi9ned! A joy to see! An e•eoptionaUy lar9e selection of fine fabr ics and styles to choose from at very reasonable prices. Sherr11/ is unsur passed in quality and design. Stop in today and "iew th is fab ulous collection of fine upholstered furniture. DEALERS FOR : HENREDON-OREXEL-HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOU OPIH fllDAY i1L t *Y IR ....,._ tlM ... flllr &.llWI• ·~ ............ a..._._.. ......... ~ ..._..Ill \llllff', $fit ~ ~ firs l comes ~ for election lrr 191f . No cong~ional reapportionmel'tt plan has emerged from committee yet, but SUlas 11aid the proposals under con· r;ideralk>n In the Sen11te and Assembly lg'· nore the question of a l\1exican-American district so far . Cily officials said at the lime of the fil· ing of the act ion agalnst ti.fci\enzie that 1t ~·as a "friendly lawsuit" designed lo dettrmine the validity of tht 1964 ordinance w h I c h provided death and disability benefits for city personnel .. • < ? ... 91111 ... fllNic\;, ..... ...... -.................... 1 ............. . • -... .., ... ca. "'-- ....... I I ;' rr (7141 '41-4m Cl .... Mcall I I '41-M71 CillJtllMo 1m,. .,,..... <»Mt ........ Irie ~ ......................... .. ...... _,,.. • ~-II .._,"' ·-r .. , ........ wi,... lfilCMI ,_.. ...... ft~ .... . .,,_.., dlM --.... •t ""'-' '*" ... c.t. ~ Ql"'""lt· hltMIO,,.... _., Ol'f'W ., ... '"'flflll'f'I '1 Mtll a .TS ...,,, ~ •1NNM. u.u '*lll'tr· None or lhe fl\'e nt:n' seats tr.·ould be In heavily f\tex lca.n·American areas but one under con.c;lderation in the Assembly Le; heavily black. The ne\\' seats primarily ~·outa go to the growing ~-uburban areas. The on 1 y l\fe1ican·Amt:rican c-0n· arWman in Callfornia Is Democrat Ed\\'ard Roybaf of Los Angeles. • Speed Limit Changed Ou Jatuboree Road A SS.mile-per hour speed limit has betn plactd on J a m b o r e e Road between ti.tacArthur Boule~·ard and !\tain Street. east of the Orange Counly Airport. The speed limit was suggested to lhe coun ty Board of Supervtsors by the CQUD· ly Traffic. Committee. The new limit was endorsed by the City of Newport Beach. , • • NEWPORT BEACH 1727 w .. 1ct lff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 c-· INl'Ell·fORS Prof11slo.1I Interior Da1i9ner1 Av1il1bl._AID 'll1t111 T•ll ,,.. M11t •f o,....., C•11My-S40·1l'J LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast Highway Phon" 494-655 I • . '1 t I " I '1 f I ., I I • -. • UPIT ....... t• Economic Impact . Hits Big Firms WASHINGTON tUPI ) -The corner grocer can do something Swlday thal General Motors, General Foods and other rorporate . giants cannot ·-raise bi.s pric~s. . And within that anonialy lies a central fa ct in the administratkrl's post-freeze economic planning: the big companies not only have more -economic impact. they may be the on1y ones on which any practical control can be exerted. The only price Increase guideline the governmen t l1ld down Thursday was a generaJ one: it wants to bold averaa:e price Increases across the economy to a' rate of no more than 2.5 percent per year. How lhls will sbow up in the price of shoe polish or furniture remains to be seen, since the whole economy is lumped t.Ogether in the standard. DESPONDENT TAX AGENT SURVIVED PLUNGE FROM GOLDEN GATE Henry Herrington Bec1me Sixth Survivor Out of 435 Jumpers The corner store vs. giant corporation situation arises from the latest decisions putting together the machinery w h 1 c h "'ill attempt to control the economy when the wage-price-rent £reeze ·ends at mid· night Saturday. And it said that cetst increases -not hopes for increased profits -must be the n1oti\'e for price hikes. The profit limit beyond "'hich sellers ll'ill not be allo'A'!d to go will be based on the two best.profit years during the three year period im- mediately prec!ding the st• rt of the ireeze Aug. 15. Golden Gate Leaper Lives The price commission Thursday an· nounced that firms doing more than $100 million in sales every year will have to notify the government 30 days in advance if they v.·ant to raise prices. and then put them into effect only if the price panel does not object. But more significant perhaps than the price 5tandard or the cost-proof justifica- lions for price rises is the fa ct that the biggest firms are !he prime target or the new controls. The $100 million plus sales Ellis. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI I -A 3&-year- old Internal Revenue Service employe, whose wife said he was depressed over his job, survived a jump from the Golden Gale Bridge Thursday. The man, Henry Harringto n o r Pacifica, was pulled from a shallow moat around the south tower of the bridge. He was still conscious after the 270..foot leap "He was swimming around trying to find a "'ay out of the moat," 5aid California Highway Patrolman Steve '·[talked to him. He gave me his name, his age, his home a:!dre.!s and telephone number. Not only that, be told me where ·his car wa s parked and its license num- ber. He said he had left a note for hi.! wife." Coast guardsmea :.nd ambulance at- tendant.! found Harrington fiOWldering in the moat under the bridge, from which at least 435 persons have leaped since itJ completion in 1936. Finns with less than $100 million in an- nual sales -all the way from sizeable manufacturers to local merchants -can hike tbeir 'prices as of Sunday, provided they post a list or prices that prevailed riuring the freeze. Those with sales between $50 million and $100 million . a.! previously announced, will have to· sub- mit price change reports every three months but the others will be subject only to random spot checks. · con1panies in clude the 1,300 biggest firms \Yhich together have about 45 percent of the American sales market. B~ause theH-price increase requfsts must be submit\ed 30 days in advance it appeared likely that they would undergo 1nore scrutiny lhan smaller businesses. The 2.5 percent standard will be applied with more exactness in the sense that il "'ill have a larger immediate impact than if it \\"ere applied individually to scores of smaller businesses. Envoy at U.N. Peking Issues Greetings UNITED NATIONS (U PI) -Peking's smiling chief en- voy gave the United Nations the regards of 800 million mainland Chinese today in a sh<lrt and snappy courtesy call. and his delegation got word their travel in America "'-'Ou!d be restricted in the same. treatment given Soviet Russia. Deputy Foreign t.1inister Chiao Kuan-hua, leader ol the Communist Chinese delega· lion. paid the half-hour pro- tocol visit to Adam ~falik of Indonesia, president of the U.N. General Assembly. The full delegatio11 takes over the U.N. China seat in it diplo- matic debut Monday. The United Nations an· nounced that the State Depart- ment had decided -although Washington and Peking do oot have diplomatic relations - "to extend tra\'el restrictions to members of the mission of Purdue University Prof Gets Agriculture Post WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ea-rl L. Butz, a Purdue University dean who served in the Eisenhower Adminlstra· tiOn, has joined President Nix. on's cabinet as Agriculture Secretary, a post made a po- litical arena by record grain yields that have driven down farm prices. Nixon aMounced Thursday the appointment of Butz, 62. Butz .!ucceeded Clifford r-1. Hardin, who will join Ral ston Purina Co. of St. Louis as vice chairman ih charge of the company's research a n d de velopment . Nixon said Hardin had de<!ided to leave because he had had an "exceptionally at- tractive offer" in private business. Ronald L. Ziegler, the White House p r e s s secretary. said the ap- pointment did not signi fy any change in administration farm policy. But Butz, who served as an assistant agriculture secretary under Ezra Taft Benson dur- ing the Eisenhower years, im- mediately can1e under fire fro m Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien. O'Brien said Butz was an architect of Benson's policies and would bring them back. O'Brien described Butz as· a "prominent consultant and board member of _ . . cor- porations that 'farm the farmers.'" Rep. William Scherle {R· Iowa l. a critic of Hardin 's polioies, said when told of Bu tz' appointment, "Oh, hell , not another professor." "I was hoping v.·e'd have a man of the soil, but I don't know about the man and am going to reserve judgment," Scherle said. The chairman of the House Agriculture Committee Rep. W. R. Poage ( D ·Te 1 . I , remembered \\'Ork.ing "'ith Butz "·hen Butz served under Benson in the 1950s. "Obviously. we had many differences, but I respect him as an honorable and sincere man working for what be thinks to be best f o r agriculture." Poage said. Butz. introduced by Nixon at a news conference, promised to seek help for hard -pressed farmers. Nixon predicted Butz "'ou\d be a "vigorous advocate of the interests of farmers, · just as Secretary Hard in \VaS." After serving in Benson's department, Butz returned to Purdue "'here be was dean of agriculture for 10 years. He has been Purdue's dean of ccntinuing education s i n c e 1968. One Man Battle War Waged on Prostitute FJUGGJ, Ital y (UPI) -Nestore Evangelisti lined hl.!I 1:1w11icopter .. gunship" on t.arget.. squeezed .the. trigger. and .. _ , . splat! It was a black day for the ladies of pleasure of Fiuggl. Evangelisti peppered the prosUtutes with 25 gallons of black marking ink loaded in tanks aboard his private helicopter. The ink raid, follo"·ed by a heavy rainfall. dl'Qfe a score of the miniskirted lj:irls from their habitual haunt along the Asole-Fiuggi H!ghway. "Jf they come back," Evang~~I warned today. "l have something worse in storeJor. m.'' The wealthy construction magnate l!ti.id he has ordered several bo:res of eaMbattering chtrry bombs from • nearby fire\\1>rka company. -Profit, as well aS prudery, was the moUve1"0?'-Evang@- lisU'1 one-man war on UJe streetwalkers. He said they are giving a bad name to a lu:rury apart- ment comple1 lhat be has built nearby, Evangel!stl said UJe girll congregated around the en. ltance of the access road to hla deve)Qpment and used the surrounding forest of Chestn ut trees for their trysts. the Peo ple's Republic of China comparable to those applied to the Soviet mi.!.!ion." It said a diplomatic note covering the restrictions hAd been delivered to the Ch inese mission. The regulalions re- quire 48-hour notification of travel outside a 25-mile radiu.! Qf New York Citv and , a!I. is the case with the -Soviet Union and some olher countries. various areas in the ccuntry are closed to travel. The note said. the regula- tions apply to the delegates and to .. others wh<I may apply to enter this country in con· nection with United Nations affairs." Chiao made a half·h<lur pro- IOC<ll call on Malik in the Jal· ter's 38th floor suite In the gleaming secretariat building overlooking the -East River in mldtown Manhattan. He was accompanied to the meeting by Huang H u a , China's permanent represen- tative to the U.N., aod Hsiung Hsiang-hui, a representative in the U.N. comple:r to talk to Constantin Stavroupli!I , secretary-general for U.N. af. fairs. Reh~quist' s Attackers Get Blmted WASHINGTON (UPll - Sen, James O. Eastland (0.. Miss.), said today that two witnesses opposed to the supreme court nomination of \Villiam 1-1. Rehnquist were guilty of character assassina- tion. Eastland, chairman or the judiciary co mmittee, leveled the charge at Joseph Rauh, spokesman for the leadership canference on civil rights, and Clarence f.1itchell , represen· tative of the NAACP. The two quoted rumors of po.!sible conne<!tlons between Rehnquist and the John Birch Society at Rehnquist's con- firmation hearing earlier this week. "\1lhen presented with the personal affidavit of Rehn- quist. categorically denying that he was ever a member of the John Birch Society, Rauh and Mitchell insinuated that Rehnquist should not b e believed and that his unc. quivocal ·denial could !luggest that .he had some connection with the group," Eastland said in a lengthy rebuttal of several statements the two made in opposing Rehnquist. "It seems clear that tht testimony of Rauh a n d M i t c h e 11 concerning Rehn· quist'!I a.!SOClt1tion with the John Birch Society was purel)' hypothetical and not intended to enlighten the commlltee. but Instead was an exercise of the craSSesf fYPe of charact"tr assassination," Eastland said. Popular Mechanic s Magazine took a survey of 3_? American cars since Maverick's introduction. The results-Maverick had the.hlghesl percentage of owners reporting no mechanical trouble! In addition, our own tow warranlY. claims rate shows thal Maverick's r~liab1e:design is working. In other Words, Maverick spends most ol it~ tim9on the road 11~stead of upon the lilt. So you can expect to spend less on repairs. Now that'sa prelty good reco rd fora car at any price. Bui you can own a good-looking, fam ily·sized Maverick tor as low as$2175" Standard &or optional V-S. 2-door, 4-doororsporty ' Grabber. Test drive a Maverick at your Ford Dealer's. . . __ , •---t..... 'Muiufacture1'11o11gge111d rt tal1 price 1172 M1ve,ick 2-door sedan thown wilfrl cptiona1 wt1111 a1dewall tne1 (S211 Dou not l11Clud1 d11un11ion cfrlargn (lllO), 0ta!e1 preparation charges (1l 1ny). 11111 end local \1xn . Friday, Novtmber 12, 1971 Dayton Schools Facing Closure DAYTO~. Ohio (UPI ) -Voters decide today whether this city's ~7.240 public school students attend classes the rest of this year. the 69 schools in !hf! .!tale's sixth larcest city closed last FTidl!-Y v.·hen the district ran out o( ~perating (unds despite a favorable vote Nov. 2 on a 13.6 mil school le\'\'. Todav 's • 6howdown will be for an ad· ditiona l 10.S mils. If it fails. the schools "·ill shut do\vn at least until Dec. 14 or pcrhaos for the rest of the year. Failure v.·ou!d bring up another vote an the 10.5 mils oo Der. 14 and. if ii a~ain is reiected. the district "'ould have to wait until January, 1912, for state funds lo be distributed.- Gov. John J . Gllligan came here Thurs· da~· to lend his support for the leV)'S passage. DAILY PILOT $ Welfare Rolls WASmNGTON (AP) -The naUon'I welrare rolls shrank in Jttly for the third straight month as atates continued to ·fight skyrocketing cost.I, the government said today. Tbe ~P.~ent of Health. Education Md WeHare said most or the decllna came in Aid to Families with Dependent Children -AFDC -which represents about 70 percent of lhe annual $16.3- billion welfare bill. ''Several factors appear to be con· tributing to the appattnt leveling off of the welfare caseloads, the most notable being the recent efforts or slates to cut back on payments and recipients because of the extraordinary\COS't rise in the past year." said John · 0. Twiname, ad· mlnlstrator of HEW 's Social an d Relu.bUitatio11 Strvice. Most of the July decrease can be explained by the 108,000 AFOC recip ients dropped in New Jersey, he said. · Twenty states and jurisdictions have~ cut back on AFDC ln recent months Wblle 34 others have reported incrf!a ses . Another 11,000 old-age recipients were dropped in 39 states in July to reflect higher Social Security payments nrst pavable in June, Twiname said. The July relief rolls totaled 14.2 million persons, about M,000 fewer than the previous month. The number of AFDC recipients. whicl'i had been rising at a rate of about 2 per- cent a month, went up only six-tenths of 1 percent in April MAVERICK GD . He said seve ral serious traffi c accidents were caused from motorists .!topped or slowed down to ogle the girls. "l~ went to 1peak to the womtn to try to pcr1Uade' lhem to llnd another place," Evangelist! said. "They n-- tused to move. \Vell, they wanted war and they got Jt." The Senator also said Rauh and Mitchell made unsLibstan- tlated charges that Rehnqul.!t improperly interfered w I t h voting In ,black preclJlctJ In Phoenix, Ariz,, and lhllt he ui- ed abusive language t o Negroe s who \Yere demonstrating for a civil rl1ht1 bOI then pending In ill• AJ:'lzona leglllature. For Better Ideas in value s.ee your Ford Dealer now! • • .. • • I... . ~· ' . ' . ' . " • . • I• {' . ' . • • . • I 1 • i l • l • l ' l • • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE . ' Who -wl.11 Pay the Bill? Choked by seaweed and sludge, Balboa Island's Gtand Canal ls beeomtng a source of grief for the resi- dents who live along it and who are starting to raise as big a stench· about the problem as the canal creates at low .tide. lm~ssable for all but the smallest skill when the · · tide 'is -out, the canal is ~bvlously in need oi dred~ng, - · Some say the once-scenic wa erway should be to- tally rebuilt, an expensive proposition that isn't the most pOpUiar proposal -among residents or the government a·s11ncy that would have to pay for it. . And that brings up another problem. Nobody is sure what government agency is responsible. Various Newport Beach officials feel that the Or· ~ge County Harbor District, charged with maintenance of, the harbor, should foot the bill for anything and every· ·thing that must.Pe done. Some property owners are quick to point out, how· ever, that th~ canal is, in fact. a dedicated city street and therefore it's up to the city to take care of it. · Once City Attorney Dennis O'Neil has determined just who must bear the burden there should be no fur· ther delay. If O'Neil filld~ th~ city_ c~'t .. ~xpec! some cash from the county, the· city 1s going 00 have to start socking away enough-of its-own to aL least-get-the dredging done in the next fiscal year. Parking Lot P ermits It's tough '«? :'!i~ajr~e wit~ Councilman Lindsley Parsons on 1 tlie wue of the city parking lot permits some businesses are allowed to buy instead of provid· lng th~ir own re~:ed parking spaces. · · ~nder ,esµb: ed procedures, if city ordinances requ~e. that a busmess needs, say a dozen parking spaces, and 1t 1s located reasol)ably c 1 o s e to one of the city's ocean front parking lots, the business is allowed to buy 12 annual parkin~ perinits -!or only $15 each -to 15atlsfy legal requirements for offstreet parking for e1n· ployes and/or·customers. Parsons argues this is taxpayer subsidization ot suc h business.es, since it would cost the buslness about $3,500 per ~tall to put in its own parking. He figures th.e city should-charge. a -substantially higher tee -perhaps an am ount equal to the interest on $3,500, about $300 an· nually -for those· commercial permits. Th~ present practice is unfair, for example, to the restaurateur in other parts of the city who must limit his seating capacity for lack of parking, or to the cloth· ing store that must obtain additional property to pro· vide legally adequate parking. Parsons calls it "a misuse of taxpayers' dollars." If it's not that, at least it is an inequitable policy that places an unfair burden on some businesses while at the same fime ignoring a justifiable potential increase in re\'.enue the city c.ould well use to meet the ever-in· ·creasing needs for parking and traffic handling. Honors Well Earned Four outstanding Newport Beach police officers were ~eservedl):'. honored by the Newport Harbor Cham· her or Commerce Wednesday. , A newly·created award, the medal of valor, was pre- sented to two or them: Sgt. Don Burdsall for pulling an unconscious man from his flaming apartment and Of· ficer John Ellingham f6r subduing a man who had shot both himself and his partner. Awards of merit were given to Detective Al Ep- stein, for leading a narcotics raid that.netted 34 suspects and to Officer Michael McEveoy, for winning a series of gold medals in the state and national Police Olympics swimming events. For their individuil efforts, all have the commun· ity's appreciation. Paying for P11blic Education Some Want ) Q~ ~I~' Bridge Is Better . ' ' State Should Take Over To the Editor : needed. Ford Road, Jamboree Road , and • Palisades Road, for instance. County plans for recreational paths cormecting parks and such are all very .well and good, but the need is for lransportational Prisons Like Country Clubs Game Than Poker New veteran facilities are built, freeway1 constructed, e a r th q u a k e • damaged hospitals repaired and replaced. Where does the mone~ for these _badly needed projects come from? It is funded by the stale Legislature which studies the various miuests and funds those it feels are valid. Qoes tht general public gel to vote on these protects? Yes, indirectly by elec- ting legislators who they feel will best represent t h e i r thinking regarding ef- ficiency and economy. The reason for giving lawmakers, onct elected, freedom to act without each time going back to Mailbox r -- Lettns trorti. readers are welcome. Normallt1 writers should coRvey tMir messages i'Jt 300 wOrds or less: The right to condense letUr1 to fit space or eliminate libel ii n1erved. AU let- ters fflUit include ,ngi114ture and mail- ing address, but nanu1 nUitJ be with- held -on request if suffident retUon is apparent. Paetry will not be pub- lished. paths-. -~ WHEN CONSTRUCTED, bicycle paths may givi: people the incentive needed to get out of their cars, enjoy the pleasures of bike rkiing, and work for cleaner air. The paths wil! also get the bicycle riders out of the motorists' way and possibly we bicycle riders wlll no longer be an en- dangered species. ( I Gues t Report By JAMES E. WHETMORE Senator, lSlh District ) A friei;id asked me at dinner recently why I gave up playing poker. some years ago, and began concentrating on bridge. The obvious reason was th& I couldn't afford to keep !Ming money at the poker table. ;' ' ~ ' ie;;. ,~,.­l Sydney J. Harris ~-'*"""'~-_,_"' I . ' _, :::......,.,. . i the electorate b to permit government to f ~tunctloe..moothl¥ and efficlenlly. HOW IS lT THEN TIIAT educatiop.is dependent upon a two-thirds vote ortbe public to ward off dlsastr o-us overcrowding · or to repair dangerouslf rundown faclllties? college students are hippies but I don't s~ the. 95 percent of the .s<rcalled Ameilcin st¢.ents marching alongside of 'the ·hiPtJes, Carrying the flag when the hljpl~ <Jre protesting. LIZ FAULKNER C.Orona de! Mar High School Bicycle Club Recycle Our Wa•te To the Editor: On the heels of the recent violent mufders of nine correctional officers wilhin our state prisons comes the opin- ion of an independent penologist in a 660-page ,report to the Board of Cor· rections which would make our penal in· stitutlons veritable "country c I u b prisons." The report. which is also being studied by each of us in the Legislature, calls for these action~: As I thought about it further, however, I discovered that my enjoyment at bridge is greater than it ever was at poker-~' ' ~. because bridge · Is essentially a partnership game . playing for much the same reason I-gave up poker -that chess makes intense demands on one's aggressive drives ,' and d~in~ the ego in its· strain for victory. This 1s v.·hy chess champions are so often. t~rt114ed personalities who find It dif- ficult to relate to other people. . Bridge is the most excellent card game In the world because of its Qartnership • • l • I I , : . •• ;; t ~· .. •' -. ' • l · . •·. • ) ' ' • ' • • • • ' • l ! • ' • • • • . • . • • ' • • . l • I • ' What sort or stupid logic would hOJd that a new freeway should be more easlly built and financed than a new school? . Asking "the-people!L.to continually bond the111sclve1 or raise their taxes ii unrealistic. People have a natural reluc- tance to inflict paJn upon themselves no matter how worthwhlle the cause is. Most property owners are resentful of the tax- es they art MW paying a,nd are damned if they11 increase those taxes. " WHAT MUST HAPP~ .. Is that the state must assume the fuU responsibility for the funding of public education. The most equitable way to raise money is through an increased income tax. For in- si!'lnce, an increase of one perce.nt would raise more than $600 million for educa- tion. Los Angeles schools were deemed unsafe because of earthquake damage, the state could have stepped in and cor- rect~ the inadequacies or rebuilt the achools that were closed down. The point is that the power to decide the fate of public education should be left to the state Legisllature rather than the overburdened local taxpayer who has neither the ability nor the inclination to 1 do the job . STU RUB1NE The Prote•ter• To the Editor: I would like to see the enclosed print put on the front page of your newspaper. I am aware we have our problems but Jiving in this country sure beats working In a___rke; paddy,Jnd eating fisbheads and rice. Of course', if your piper has tbe backbone of a jellyfish and is willing to 1tand by and have this type of person run our country down without doing anything .•bQ1.1t .~ for4et ~ whole idea. ... J AM AWARE that only live percent of oaANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wt«I, PublC.h<r Thomas K~evil, Editor Albtrt W,. Botti EdUorlcl Pagie Editor ,,.. edlhJrW pl.le (If the DIJly • PDot aeeb to lnf'mn and sUmu• late ftllldm 'b)' pr~lin' thll: ~· tiplnlons and com· mentar)' Oil topics ot 1n~t and •tsn!flc:antt, by provldlnr a forum fM' the upttalon t1f our rradf:n' df!niona, and by fl"t*M1tln1t ttnt Vtn1e vf~polnu ot Jnrormt'd 01>- attVtn and JPOkn:mtn on toi:'ct ot\Mdq. Friday, November 12, 1971 • .You ~ight increa.se your s4les. Some parents 1lrlll.buy •the paper just' to show lhelr·teenage children: ' WARREN REEKEI\ . The unreproducible (too d t m.) copy of a cartoon enclosed showed a typicaUy hippie-garbed couple, the man saying to the girl, "While-. I get my unemployment check, you split to pick up our welfare money ond food'stamps. Also, appltt for increas· ed ~g allo~nce sirlte ,.we giot ourselves o pad. "l'U stop at school to see how our federal scholarship gront! ore coming. You go to the county free medical clinic to get your sores checked ond pick up my ghlJ:ses if they're readu. Meet back at the pad at 1:30 and we~U hitch a ride to the federal building in time for the protest march against this rotten capitalistic sodety and the Establishment that's responsible for it!" Ed itor Endangered Spec ie• To the Editor: • I am an endangered species. I am a bicycle rider. t, like many other endangered species, mean no harm, yet t am abused. I am not only endangered by the pollution hanging heavy in the air, but also by the cars producing this pollution. fl.1any a time I have been crowded off my fool· wide path by passing cars. ll"S A TOUGH THING for a bicycM. and a car to share a lane. As more people· recognize the bicycle as an essential in- strument for cleaner air. the roads will fill up with these delicate vehicles. Danger will increase. Bike paths must be constructed NOW. Tbey must be constructed where they are The Uninvolved Press Comments U.bno, Ind., Porter Conl7 Herald• "In ~& 1 little maguint the other .. day as l went through my mail, 1 came IC1"08J the following item that I would like to pass on to each of you •.. 'The -l<ollble with poUUcs b nol the thoosaods who are in it, bul the millions who are _QUL' 'I'hereJs so much truth iii that Ill~ ment. Jt Is a ahame that ao many 'good' people refuse to get involved in pollUcs. They either take the 'lel George do it' al· titude Or else theft cover up by saying those 'dirty' pol tlclans . . . when , blslcall)'t tOOy are to blame. Remembtr • : . 'bad' public officials are elected by good people who refuse to ;vote or '&et in· volvcd'." Our "environment'': To preserve it, profit motives must not precede it. Of what good are profits, goods and riches if we must pay dearly for them in foul Bir, polluted land and water? To improve it, we must not thoughtle!sly continue to pour sewage aod garbage into the rivers, lakes and OCt!'ans. For cleaner waters and preserva- tion of marine life (and our own), we can develop alternate systems of c1ry.Jand filtering and purification. Our wastes can be used to enrich the land. Sewage water can be recycled for reuse. JUKING AND pedaling will lessen air pollution as will developing alternate methods of mass transportation and the use of new types of engines. To prolong our natural resources, we can recycle our waste. Minerals can be put back into the soil by use of the com- post. We canl'!ot be a strong nation if we have to depend on foreign countries for food and fuel. INDIVIDUALS AND conglomerates who exploit the environment for profits and refuse to recognize the enormity of the ecological crtsis are guilty of dark sins against the land. They would drag the whole nation into a dying society pl agued with pollution. Abolition of pollution must be ac- companied by sacrifice. This must not be considered a detriment to the economy. For what could be of more value or im- portance than improvement of the en- vironment, the quality 'of life. through the restoratkln and preservation of our greot American heritage, God's great gifts to man: land, air and water? G. W. LOWE Quotes Kenneth J. Koford, Venice -"We com- mitted ouraelves to defend .. , South Vietnam from her aggressive totalitarian neighbor because a free South Vietnam is in our naUanal interest. But if we try we can still lose -by pulling out Im· medio\ely," Dear Gl oomy Gns '. r feel "'111' for the tlflh r•d• East6lufl puplls !Ublect e Illogic ol thal !f!,cher who pre> ceeded without p I or reason to make a mountain or trash out of a miu lng aarba&e can. -D, O'B. Tllll hll'9N ttllfm . ......,... ...... •I flfttt .. r11J' lllN .. fllt ""''""'· '*"" rtvr "' ,....,. " •IMfllr lhlt. o.itr 'ilitt. -Closure of California's Folsom and San Quentin prisom; -Future penal institutions should be small and located within the communities they serve; NO MINIJ\.1UAf priso n terms, giving the proposed new parole board authority to release the prisoner whenever he is con- sidered not a danger to society: -Elimination of the present Adult Authority which gives · the prisoner nO right to counsel jn determining the length of his tenn or decidi.nJI when he is to be paroled, and · -Placing the burden of proof on law- enforcement autho rities as to ""hY a con- vict should not be released , rather than the present system requiring the convict to show why he should be released. DOES TllIS SOUND like a country- c\ub environment for felons ? Indeed, can Californians afford to pay more to make lawbreakers more comfortable? . Victory that Is aalned as part of a ·team JS sweeter and more nourishing than in· divi~~al coriquest There are more happy fam1hes than there are happyAndivlduals. because while grief is soli tzcy, joy must be shared. A NEIGHBOR OF mine who was a talented concert pianist gave up recitals and became a member of a chamber orchestra group, because. as she put it "playing toge.thee with other musician~ gave me a feeli ng of communion that I almost ne~er achieved while playing alone." ~ .... In bridge, two average players who are harmonious can usually beat two expert players who are vain and contentious. And defending dextrously w i t h a partner to defeat the opponents' contract gives a pleasure that cannot be round at the poker table, where competitiveness is everything, and co-operation means nothing. I HAVE TAPERED off my chess factor. · While nonpartnership games 'call for courage or cUMing, bridge ih addition c~lls for tact and understanding and a kind of mode~ty which permits the partnership to do its best regardless of individual glory. I KNOW BRIDGE players who would be in the top rank if th ey cou!d handle the~ partners half as well as they handle their cards. But they are basically in· di vidualists playing a co-operative game. and would rather lose than admit a mistake or trim their bidding sails to the needs of the tea..m as a whole. It is generally agreed that the Italians have beaten the U.S. bridge team for the World Championship three years running, not because they are better players but because the Italian partners have played together longer and have an abnormal sensitivity to each other's bidding. The emotioilal component in games. as In life. is ultimately more decisive than the mental skill. As one newspaper editor who studied the report sa id : "Those who drum up sympathy for hardcore murderers, rapists, kidnapers 211d other perpetrators of violent crimes, undoubtedly are behind the falla cious reasoning that criminals are n o t lawbreakers but 'political prisoners'." Dozing Driver Liability Too little sleep, like too much liquor, , can tum even the mildest motorist lnt.o a E Al deadly menact. If a driver dozes off and C RT NLY, under this nation's law, has an accident, is he legally liable for a person who breaks the law must be punished. When a person commits a the con;iequences? crime against society and is convicted The law starts with the propo!itlon that and sentenced after due process of law, no one should be blamed for what he does he surrenders his rights and privileges as while unconscious. Blame rests on free a law-abiding cit izen. This does not mean, will misused -and the sleeping person is of course, that he then should be cruelly not using free will at all. treated or unduly persecuted. He should But one court after another has be provideli ample opportunity to . ~onetheless lmpo~ lia~ility on. the dor.- rehsbllitate himself inside prison. 1ng driver. They find .him nt:ghgent not Nonetheless. whne he is ln prison, he / for what he does wtule asleep but for must abide by r u I e s and regulations disregarding, wli.ile still awake, the governing prisoners. tf he willfully and telltale signs that 'sleep was coming. persistently breaks such rules and regulations, he must pay for his in· fractions . THESE A D V 0 C ,uJ: S of per- missiveness s h o u I d ·cmainly not be pennltted to close down Folsom and San Quentin, even though these facllltles are old in terms of age and no doubt need considerable modernir.ation and ex· pan!lon. And It is absolutely ridiculous to advocate a vast netwo rk of mini·prlsons located throughout the state. We have too long been victimized by the criminal element which look$ to a 51rowing permiYlve judicial system for meray when a lawbreaker hi ~~ prehend ed, convicted and sentenced. THE APOLOCISTS for "countrt__club prisorii" never shed a tear ror the nlie victims of the rtttnl-prison murders, their loved ones, friends, or the praperty they destroyed. If we are to have conslrucJ.lve prison reform, it should be purposeful reform, howevtr, and initiate a sysle.m t b ll t would not lessen the punishment Wr crimes against 50Ciety, "IT IS TRUE," said one court. "that (~h~ driver) can not ordinarily fix the precise mom,ent when he lapses into un- co nsciousness. But it ts not true th~t · ordinarily sleep comes unhor4',ldid . It li~ within his own control. to keep awake or cease driving." Background factors, contributing to the danger, are also taken into account. One driver had been at the wheel continuously for 18 hours; another was exhausted from overwork: a third had kept going aft.er twice almost. "fading ouL " ln ea(:h -case, when the driver doted off, he was held liable for the results. Suppose Jt Is the passenger, not the driver, who falls asleep. Does the law frown on that too? Occasiof&llY the .passenger does have a uty 10 s(iy awake -wberf he haa some specl1l reaaon to think that lhll drlvtr needS watching. But a~ a rule he may nap at w111, putting llls lrust In the driver to take tare. IN ONE CASE a woman in the back 11t:at doied dff and slumped 1g1lnllt the driver's seat.i pushing it forward end • Law in Ac tion ) knocking his hands oU the steering wheel. In the crash that rollowed, the driver was · ·injured. Cottru he collect damages from the woman on the theory that her falling asJeep~was an act of negligence? A et1urt said no, because a., passenger could scarcely be expected to antiiltPale such a freakish accid~nt Just from falling alseep. "(She) was required to • exercise foresight." said the cour t, · 'no t clairvoyance." An A mericon Bar Association pub-- tit service feature by Will Bernnrd. ~--By Georg Dear GeOrge : I keep having the f ing that somebody is foll~'in e, and my wite says I should professional help. Do you think 1 should seek professional help? And, if not, what should t do about this c:onstant feel· i.1g of being followed? CONCERNED ,-Dear Concerned: Well, pos.!ibly you should see k prof.w ional htlp. Actually. what t do ts stJy home -that certainly frustrates all those people folklwlng mt, whtn J don't go anywhere. (Problems sent to George and not solred within 90 days will be ai.lc· Uofted lo cover storage costs. So send easy problems.) • • • l ! t r . . . •• • . l;osta· Mesa EDITION • .. • • -1 ... • ' Today'li Fla.al N. Y ., Stoeks TEN CENTS Ecuador on -Tear 5 More Boats Sei zed; 5 Ransomed DAILY f'ILOT Sit ff t.IMlo Piru.te Royalty SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The Ecuadorian government seized five more tuna clip- pers today, only .hoW's after levying $140,000 in fines and releasing five others. The Ceryl Marie, Mary S., Endeavtlr • Ea~tern Pacific and RoyaJ Pacific were being taken to the port of Salinas at last report, August Felando, general manager of the American Tunaboat Association here, said. About 65 crewmen plus five skippers were aboard the tuna clippers, all of which were from here, he said. The skippers radioed they v."ere being taken by the LC61, the Quito, which seiz. ed. four American and one Canadian tuna seiner Wednesday. Felando said. A queen and a king will reign over bomecoIJling activities at Orange Coast College Saturday. Queen candidates (from feft) include Jeri Topping, Debbie Grimmond, Lori Bekas, Dianne Ryan' and Faye Marie LaBelle. King candidates are (from left) John Mc· Menamin, Jim Richards. Steve Koppes and Jim Car· son. Pirate football team takes on 1'1t. San Antonio Mounties at Le Bard Stadium. The Denise Marie of San Diego was seized In the first group and was released without paying a fine after showing it had acquired a li~nse. Its skipper was quoted by Felando today as .saying he heard the LC61 skipper say he planned "to i:o out there and get another batch." r Birth Control . . Pills Only . Tranquilizer D~TROIT (UPI) -A Yi!Oman who &ecame pregnant with her eighth child because the bir-.th ~trot pills she was "taking· turned out to be tranquilizers, has won a $.12,000 settlement in her suit 1gai111t the druggist who made lhe mistake. 'Dorothy Troppi and her husband, John. who ajso have ~r~dchild, reached ~. oqt..ol.arurt settlement with lawyers for Qearborn druggist Frank Scarf Wednesday, but did not reveal the out- coma until Thursday. ''W~vt lOUjht lftis 'lh1nt f0t'~lit1'll0 111d we're very happy with the ·..i. tlement," Troppi said. "bur point WA.! th at we were given the wrong drug - druggists just pick anything off the ah elves and throw it at the customers." The Troppis, from Plymouth, filed the 1uit in September, 1965, a month after the 'birth of their son, Marty, now 6. They asked $250.000 in . .d~m~e{I to cover ~edical expenses, the cost of raising the miild, the salary Mrs. Troppi lost when she had to quit he,· job and the anxiety lilvolved in the mixup. The couple 's attorney, Donald M. CuUer, said ~1rs. Troppi decided to begin taking birth control pills in August, 1964. on .advice from her doctor· and her pastor after suffering a miscarriage. Durante Elected Again as Mesa Water Cha i1wan Directors of the Costa Mesa County Water District re-elected the sa me man as chairman of the board Thursday night for the first time In the board's history. Mario t>uranti was picked by his fellow directors to succeed himself as ho.a.rd chainnan for 1972. Carl Stevens was Damed vice chairman. • • The board also rehired Rodger Howell cl Rutan and Tucker as the boarrl's legal counsel, rehired Duane Lidke as the ~strict's consulting engineer. rehired M'rge Robinson as St":(retary, and rehir- ed the auditing firm' ot Cringle and Swi(t of Costa Mesa. .. ' ,. While the water'·boarrl was busy hand· --ln&:-out_jobs.J.L also nameA._ljate Reach chalrmr.n of the district's Man and Woman of the Year committee and set Stevens as c h a i r m a n or scholastic aChlevement committee. Slaying Suspect Faces Hearing - A young man accused of ttie ffee"ffaY- alaying of a Garden Grove motorist has been ordered to face a preliminary .hear· ing Thunday in CentraJ Orange County .Judicial Districl Court. • Judge Robert Rickles Set that date for William Dennlr Ounhe, 18, Stamford, Conn.. one of two hitchhikers arrested Oct. 18 by California Highway Patrolmen who alle!{edly found them examlnlng the body of Franc!! John Puchal ski, 26. . tt b: alleged that bc.lh men !(:it a Ji(t from PuChalski and that Norman Vinc~nt •urchell, 17, alM of St11mforri, shnt lhe driver In the back o[ the ht11d sfter erderlng him to halt his car at the Sand tanyon turnoff of the Santa Ana r reeway. "t Burcheft faces 1 murder hearing In Cran:a:e County Juvenile Court. Y ablonskis' Sla yer Guilty WASHINGTON, Pa. (UPI) - A jury todc.y found Aubran W. "Buddy" Martin g u i If y of the murder of Joseph A. "Jock" Yablon~ki and his wife and daughter. The jury of seven women ar1d five men deliberated for one hour ind 23 minutes before the foreman. FT a n k Gostello announced the verdict of guilty on first degree murder charges. Martin paled as the verdict was read. He showed no other emotion but he moved a pen he was holding from one hand to the other. The jury began it.s deliberations at 2~17 p.m. Em",,tn lbe ninth day of the trial. · 'two · Dlilckouts Hit Northwest Areas of Mesa _Two power blackouts hit northwe£t Costa Mesa at separate times this morn· ing. The first one affected 1,900 homes, of· fices and commercial establishments west of Harbor Boulevard between Talbert and Giller Avenues. Southern California Edi50n officials said the .po~er was out froin 5:33 a.m. to 5:58 a.m. The second blackout began . at 11 : 19 a.m. and affec~ homes and business along both sides of Adams Avenue west of Harbor BOuievard . At noon power had been partially restored. Edison officials said the first power outage was caused by dirt and dust on a main circuit at the Talbert A venue plant. Tbe light raip had dampened the dirt causing a short. An ~ison spokesman said the cause of the second blackout had not been determined. Annex of Industria l Complex Wins Ok~y Annexation of 60 acres of the Irvine Industrial \Complex north of Palisades Road to the Costa Mesa Sanitary District has been approved by the Local Agency Formation Commission ILAFC). -The merger was . initiateq_ by the district and there was no opposition. Senate Okay s · More Jobless Pay Benefit s WASHINGTON (UPI) -Over ad· ministration objections. the Senate voted The latest seizures occUrred 50 to 60 miles off the coast of Ecuador. In ad- dition, the Trinidad, one or the boats seiz.. ed earlier, was intercepted, boarded and released after its skipper told the Ecuadorians it already paid a fine. Also released without paying a fine after showing lt had a license was the Canadian ves sel Atlantic Patton. The $140,000 in fines was paid by lhe Trinidad, The Venturous and the Blue Meridian. to d a y to pay 26 weeks of additional R V h, le unemptoyment-.enefitSJl)fOifl e' j -. unaway e lC . workers in slates with chronically high · unemployment. K 'lls' 3 p The vote was 46 to 31. i erSOnS lmmediately after '""that vote. Sen. \'ance Hartke (Q.Ind.). asked the Senate to. defeat the administration on another '\!tax is.sue. He call~ up bis amendment tliat wOuld fix thi tnCOme tax 'pmbnal exemption for 1972 income at $800. The Hotise·pa!lsed bill that Nixon propoSed raises the exemption to $750. It is now $650. The propOs"al-would extel)d benefits In slates where unemployment had averag- ed at least 6 percent for at least 13 weeks. About 15 states would be affected. Defeated was a more liberal amendment that would have paid extended benefits in stotes where unemployment averaged over 4.5 percent for 13 weeks. About 32 states would have been affected. Democrats opposed the liberalizing amendment. authored by Sen. Jack Miller (R·lowa,, on grounds that it.would cost so much to the federal government that the House would refuse to go along . "The House would tell us to go fly a kite," ·Sen. Russell B. Long (Q.La.). chairman of the · Senate Finance 'Com· mittee, said in fighting Miller's proposal. The administration objected to both proposals on grounds they would result in higher taxes lor businesses at a ti1i1e ihe administration is seeking to stimulate an economic recovery through I o w e r business taxes. The unemployment compensation pro· gram is partially financed by taxes paid by businesses based on a percenl.:ige of th eir tota l payroll. Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (O!Wash.), originally proposed that the extended benefits be put into effect wtien unemployment averaged 7 .5 percent for 1? weeks. But the Senate then approved an amendment by Sen. John V. Tunney ([).Cafif. ), to lower the triggering mechanism to chronic unemployment at. 6 percent. About 1.9 million American workers ha ve been unemployed for M> long. that they have exhausted all benefits. Jn all , about five million workers a r e unemployed. The national unemployment fate.in October was 5.8 percenL Most industrial states now pay ]obleu benefits for 39 weeks. The Senate amend·. ment would extend this period in high (See BENEFITS, Page !J In Y oungsto!«Jn .Vt>U!l!llTOWll, Ohio (Ul'lt ..,,·A . runaway auto 11towed 500 feet thrnu~h a Mon hour CrOVid today at a busy tlo\vntown intersection and police 11aid at least three persons were killed and 12 in- jured, two crltlc.ally.._. __ Police and an ·Investigator for the Mahoning CountY Coroner's-Office first reoorfed that five persons were killed, hut only three bodies were taken hospitals. About 12 ambulances w~re stnt to the scene. where police said the careening 1111to "mowed people down like grass." The ac;cideot ' occurred as hundreds of persons, including worker11 on lunch and shoppers, gathered in Jhe downtllwn area. Police said the car ran up on the sidewalks and bounced off buildings as It careened wildly through the crowd. "There was blood all over the ~itlewalks." said Bill Clarln a newsman with station \VHOT and one flf the first persons on the scene. ''There were several pairs or empty shoes that pe<>ple had been knocked out of. There was also a WiJ:l on the widewalk. · "Shopping bags had tom apart sending merchandise a!l over the sidewalk and in the gutter," said Clark. The driver of the car was not injured and was immediately taken into custody. He was identifi ed only as 30·year-flld male. Pla ne Parts Found PADANG. Indonesia (AP) -Parts of an airliner missing for lhree days with 69 persons aboard were found today floating in the Indian Ocean about 75 miles off the Indonesian island of Sumalra. Fishermen discovered parts or the Indonesian aircraft's seats f Io a ting between the islands of Katang·Katang and Berlngin. a spokesman for rescue operations said. The debris was the first tiign of the Vickers Viscount eVPJ' since it took off from Jakarala on Wednesday morning bound for Padang with 62 passengers and a crew of 7. ~hicanos Seeking S·eats Mexican-A1ne rica1~$. Push for Co~igressional Posts SACRAMENTO {AP) -~fexican­ Americahs, ·rresh fn:im a victory In state . Senale .r:tdj:;trict~, began pushing tQday for_~~ts in-California's expanded 43-:seat congressional delegation. Herman Sillas, I Lo& Angeles attorney, said Ult legislature so fai haa ignored the r.oncept of a Mexican-American dJstrlct among the five new seats In the U.S. H"ltlse which California gets under the 1970 cenrus. The stale now has 311 scats. "I think the legislature is more vulnerable here than in any other place bf!<:ause you gain five seats.'' sal~ Sllla11. IP,:Okeaman for an ad hoc group called 'Coalition for Fair Reapportionment.". "Thl.s ll clear evidence of tl'lelr callooi:ne~ toward the whole problem," he said. The Senate reapportionment b 11 I cleared its key test, the Senate Itself, on o 3.1·2 vote Thursday_ 11 is expected to pass the Assembly basically intact and probably get signed by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Approval came following a negotiated compromise between Democratic and Republican leaders in the upper house despi te allegations by a dis.'lldent Democrat that the bill was illegal because of the new Mexlcan-Amerle11n district. "This bill Is uhCOnstltutlonBI, biased 1nd discriminatory." said Sen. Lawrenc• Waloh ([).lfunUngton !'Ilk), who<t I dislri~t was squeezed eastward into· heav ily Republican Orange COUnty to help make room for the new district,_· the 20th Senale dislricl. --~ Both parties had p1ajged to baclt a Mexlcan·Arnerlcan seat. Chicano groups had pressed for as many as three seats In the Senate but Siiias said, "politically, it's Probably the best we could anticipate." More than tWJ>-Ullrds of the ~arly 500,000 re.!lldents of the district are Mex· ican-American and it wW have a Democratic voter registration " aomt W percent. It would be dUOcutt. _ pollUctl observers say, for anyone but a Mexcla~ American Democrat to win a aeat when tt IS.. CIICAllO, Pa .. I) , f f UPI Ttlopfttlt Putting· on the Dog The weather has gone to the dogs with the season's first rainfall In some pafts of the state, but "Queen," 14·year·old Germ.in shepherd, doesn't mind as long as it bas its own rainboots. The 'pet's owner, Leah Landr~s of Salinas, figures dogs get cold feet, too. Newport Beach May Give -Co sta · Mes a 'tl1e Finger' A 40-acre parcel of Newport Beach that sticks up into Costa Mesa like a short, · sQUi!t finger. may soon chanse hands. Newport Beach officials will go before the Costa Mesa Ci t y Counclt Monday night to seek· design restriclions for a mobile home park on the land, a tornier land fill. Newport officlals, however. have indi· cated they might consider ;,. de·annexa- tion of the land , allowing Costa Mesa to annex it. The finger is a rectangle on the north side of 19th Street, west of Whltlier Ave- nue. lt's connected to the rest of New- port Beach by a thin strip of land with· in the bearh city. Newport Beach bought the -40-ocre site in 1953, '•nd from that date to 1965 ope'r· ated It jointly with the Sully-~1iller Con· iracting Company as a sanitary land fill. A 1966 englheering survey showed that the Jr.nd fill operaUon ·was depreciating the value of the land, 10 the city began · Of ficjal W a111s Of 'VD Crisis' -NEW YORK _(Ul'l)~_Amerlca!L SOCial Health A"""latloh sald today •tho ~eport.~ cas,es of syphilis in the dscal year 1971 fn<:reased by 15.6 JM::rtent and r.eport:ed case.s of gonorrhea inCreased 8.9 percent. Dr. Bruce Weblltu, the as&ociaLion's president, 118id there were 23,336 cases of syphilis reported in 1971 and 624:.371 cases of gonorrhea. Webster stressed these were only reported figures . "Our association, which campaigns cOOtti\UOusty against VD , htlmalld that . there wera,more than 2.5 mllllon cases or CW!Orrbea and perhaps 95,000 case11 of In· fettlol'll 1YJ>hlll1 tn the. nation In nsca1 1971." tie aald. 111bere 11 Indeed a VD crlsls. Thi awnbtt could well be much ...... using the county dump in Coyote Canyon: Now, say Newport planners, the best use for the land is a mo!:>ile home park. Its market value was estimated &t $400,- 000 to $485,000, based on a 25-year lease. Newport Beach has developed mobile home park standards for the site and no1v wants Costa Mesa to do lhe same. A report from Newport Be a ch· City Manager Robert L. Wynn, indicated that the city should tell any prospective buyer that the land may go over to Costa Mesa . Wynn said lhe Costa Mesa Sanitary District and C06ta Mesa County Water District c.ould easily service the area. NeWport Beach cannot service the prop- erty easily, he said. Costa Mesa bounds the property on three sides. City officials are recommending that Costa Mesa Councihntn· pass the pr~ !em on to the · plannihg slafr for further study c.nd a future recomrttendation. Orange «:out Weather Wint#!r's drizzles will most llke. ly disappe~r tonight with mostly sunny skies forecast for the week· enit High will range from S5 on lhe lcoast to 65 in!!.nd . Lows will --range""lrom-4:6 to~SS'-respectively. INSIDE-TODAY A funny thing happened to Orange COunt11's Carl Linc£. s&rom• on his way to a. pro-foot.- OOU career; There ia a storv and pJcture,s about it on Paoe 23 of today's Weekender. INllllf 1J C11lf0fl'lfl 1 c~'"' u. ' CltHillt4 tM4 c1m1<1 n ·C--' )I llfi:l'l "•llw • OIWl'ttl I r•11or111 ..... 1 lirttff11""""' ""' ll'lllafltl f.11 H-tttH U •1111 "'""'" ,, ....... •tt ' J ' • % DAILY PILOT C F'rldu. NOYCll'!btr 12, 1971 Wild LSD Trip · Berserk -Youth \ Slain at Church SPOKANE. Wash. ( UP11 -Thr'e _years ago Larry Harmon popped LSD pills and took a •·to hell and back '' hall~iooienic trip in which he said he encoUntered Jesus Christ . Since then, his father said today, Harmon became convinced that Christ \\"I S-lhe devil "who came to earth to destroy llle true religion of the Jewish fa ith.'' 'Buy at Ho111e' •~Campaign Set -> By Mesa-€ofC C61ta Mesa's Chamber of Commerce is lciW'lching 1 "buy at home" campaign for lt72-usine redeemable ticket booklets. Chamber offlclal1 plan lo sell booklets featuring free certificates for gifts from $1 to $5 in value -or more if a merchant desires -on a buy one, get one free basis. . "'The object is to get people to buy merchandise locally," explains Nick Ziener, chamber manager. . Here's how it works:. The consumer buyS 1 certlficate coupon booklet for $7. The booklet will be stuffed with coupom from local merchants which can be used for a free gift when the consumer buya liOmething from that store. Each coupon will list the items for which It can be exchanged. Zlener said the chamber will print 3,000 booklets and more lf needed . He expect! the $7 coupon book.let to have a redeemable value of more than $500~ The coupona will be sold by various civic organliaU.ons which will keep $2 of each $7 sale. Z!ener said the Orange co-.1t College racing crew has volun· teered to sell 1,000 coupon booklets to earn $2,000 for a new racing hulL uThls whofe project, including pro- motlon, will cost the chamber about $2,000," Zlener said. The cost, however. is expected to be covered by the. sale of coupons and the $10 fee each merchant pays for bectlminl a part of the program. Certilicates will bt valid through Nov. 30. 1m. . Cb.amber officials are ttlll rounding up merchant& who wUI offer the exchange bar1ain. Ziener expect• to have the coupom on sale by the flr1t of the year. The ''buy at home" campaign ls managed by the chamber's community affairs and retail committee. The co- ch airmen are Kerm Rima and Chisholm Brown. Steam Pre$ser Soaks Suits In Men 's Store -A Xev.·port Beach menswear shop m~y be planning a y.·ater sale. t.fter sustain- ing S3.tXIO in damaJii:es Tuesday. actord"- to f1~men's eslimates. Ttucks which rolled up to Atk111son's. 3430 Via Lido. about 9:40 a.m. found a .soggy inventory of suits. sport toal5, casual wear and accessories. Manager William Bents st.id an u~ stairs sttam preaser used by the Pasa- den•·b•sed chain developed a leak in i!s reservoir, six inches from the bottom. \Valer spewin£: from the pencil-si2M hole trickled d~·n through tht. mezzanine floor overnight. soaking the stock below, investigators said . Plaslic covers were draped °''tr racks DAllY PILOT OAAKGI COAJT ..U1Ltltt1119 CQMrMT a.Mrt N. w •• ~ • ..,..... ... PlllllllW Jtck L con.., Vici f'rltN• ~ ........ lrl\tPMfw' 1\0ftltl' ICerril l:•ltw n.11111 A. "'"'~~'~· "'··--l!l11Qf Chtrl11 H. Loe. lict....,, P. Ntll AlllH•~l ""'""'" l[fil'Wlo Cow M-Offlc• )JD Woll 1.., St!tt'f ~1\liftt Alldro111 P.O. lox 15•0. 'tJ426 ' Othr-Offlcft ~ l tKPt: m> N"""'1 .......,.. Lo•-._h: 1tt '"-t A-tl""""'O• 9-1;:1\: 17'1$ ....,_ a.ti.Yt ... -...~-..... ~-· Harmon walked Into St. AloyslU5 Roman Catholic Church on the Gonzaga University campus Thursday. Janitor Hilary Kunz was on a ladder cleaning st.atues depicting the stjtlons of the cross. Harmon shot him In the back with a .22 caliber rifle _ Kunz toppled to the flOQr, dead. \\'it lding 1 sledgehammer, a pick ax and his nne. polict said. Harmon ran amok in the church. wrecklng rtllgious statues and ptY.'S, shattering v.•indows, smashing the ornate communion railing . Then he ran outside and starling ''fir· ing at anything that moved." Polict sa id he y.·9unded four bystanders before he feH dead in a hail of police bulleli . "He was acutally killed by LSD," sa.id E. Glenn Harmon1 his father:.. a Spokane attomty. "Worst than that, the same LSD pllls which did lrrevtrsible dama1e to his brain more than three years ago caused him t<t kill another along with hlmAelf.'' The elder Harmon 1ald his son twice •. took LSD and told him \bat on h1I: fltst trip he "went to hell ind back. literally." The father quoted his son as saying, "l know you don1t believe me but there is a hell. 1 went there, I ta lked to the de\"il ttimseU." Harmon s&"id his son became convinc· td Jesus Christ \VIS the devil. "I know now with as much certainty as one can have in auch a tangled matter that be went to St. Aloysius Church today to commit suJclde," bls rather aald. "He could not stand it, but no one would lisltn to the 'distorted truth' be found in hallucinations from two LSD pills." ---A wit.en sa.id that police, before firin1 the fatal shots at Harmon, shouted at least three times for him to drop his rifle. Newport Files ' Answer to Vote N ullitication Bid A Newport-Beach man's bid to have the city's freeway election and related city charter amei;ment declared illegal has been cbalrin&ed with the filing by the city attorney of a three-page anawer in Ora.nae Oounty "Superior Court. · City Attorney Dennis O'Neil! states in his response to the action initiated by E. 0 . Rodeffer that tM electlon·ol last Ml rch 1 "was ·a declaration of policy properly put to the vote of the j)eople." O'Neill ·llso insists that lhe cha rter amendment is valid and neither action is in conflict with the ll!IWS of the State of California or the conititution. Q'Neill also poinUi out in his three-page reply th2.t the election Wa! scheduled by the city council on his advice and that the councilmen exercised "their own in- dependent judgment" in ordering the vote on lhe controversial freey..·ay issue. Rodtffer. htad of a Santa Ana in- \'estment company, argued in a lav.'!u.it that is awaiting trial tbat the city acted illegally l\'hin it drafted • measure that prohibits the city from concluding aoy .agreement with th! state Ullless !hat agreement has the backing of a majority of !he city's ''oters. He recognizes as legal the agreement of Ocl. 28. 1968. in \\'hich the citv agreed to action that y..·ould have paved· the wa y for the freev.•ay east of upper Newport Bay. Rodeffer is asking tJie court t.4' reject the 6-1 ma rgin by which Newport voters threw out the freeway agreement as iJ. legal since. he claims. the city did not ha ve the authority to call the electlon demanded by residents in a petition campaign. Relocation Aid New Philosophy With Freeways The problem of movlna: out of the path of the Newport Fretway was touched on by state highway spokesmen durin& -Wednesday's Costi Aftll Tomomw luncheon. Relocation assistance is 1 n e w philosophy y..·Jth the state, started less than t"·o years ago. explain~ Robert Fischer. a highv.·ay rtpresent.ative. The assistanct plans a\"Jiilable for persons living ?.'ithln the Nt1o11pt>rt Free\loay right-of·~·ay ·~:ere explained by Fist'her thusly : -The state. will pay a homeoy.•ner the market value or his house and lot and up to $1$,000 above market valut to htlp with movlna eo1ta. highet interest payments •nd othtr relocation detail&. -An apartment dweller can galn up to 14 .ClOO from the state In supplement.JI paymtnts to help 1 In moving and p1yme-n1s ror possibly higher rent. A fou,...ye&r Um.it Is placed on thl• aid . -In the ca~ of mobUe home ~stdtnts "''hn own a trailer not now ~lable ln rttw trailer l>'rks, t?le fttate my buy a COl'lilparable trailer for the reilldtnf which can bt moved into a nev.' park • -~o 8peclal rtlief ha~ been sel up for the reloc11t1on or commercl1l ln1ert11s. fi.1Cher taid the state will probably bea:1n buyi ng righl-of·way property for the fretway bt1wetn B1 y Street and Pl1centia .Avtriue tn late 197!. Some purchases. Jot hardihip c11se5 (ltn bt made before tbat time. he addtd. I ASKS SCHOOLMEN FOR HELP -State Senator Carpentar Carpenter Asks School Finwice Recon1111endation By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of rl'lt 01ilJ '!l•f Still Orange County school administrators have been asked for their suggestion1 on school financ es by state Senator Dennis E. Carpenter IR-Ney.•port Beach l. Carpenttr, a ""Tnember of the Senate Education Committee and the Senate Select Committee on School Finance, characterized school finance as "the most important and pressing problem in education today." during a dinner meeting .Thursday iD HuntiDgton...Beach. He spoke at a meeting of the Orange County Chapter of the California Associa- tion of Schoo l Administrators. Referring to the state Supreme Court decision which says the present property tax form of school finance is un· constitutional, Carpenter said tht select committee is seeking a different means of financing education in tht state. "We don't have the answers yet," he said in asking the -administrators to sub- mit their ideas to him. "T may not always like the suggestions or agree with them." he added, "but I will see to it they are analyzed by our professlonal slaff and given a hearing before th! committee." The Newport Beach attorney also asked for comments on educational programs th;it haye been mandated by the state. The senator opened his speech by ask- ing ir the slate's educational system is trying to do too much. "You have to let u .. know if m.y question is a valid one,1• he said. Carpenltr explained that the ana lyses of state.achoo! financing programs will be done by tomputer.' The computer will be programmed to develop and simulate school finaQcing plans with the hope that. a combinatination of plans can be un- covered which will solve some of the school financing problems. "We have a golden opportunity to shed a financing system that is not working very well and that at best has more ex- ceptlons than rules. "With your help we can find a syste that is tailor-made for the problems of to- day," ht: said. Ne'\v . Standards On Sanitation Get Opposition By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 rl'lt D1llr Pll1t SllM The 32 directors of Orange County's join t sanitation districts are opposing. at least £or now. new standards for se\vage discharge into the ocean. A resolution . asking postponement or a decision on the proposed standards was approved at a joint directors m~tin1 Wednesday night . The resolution "'·as a response lo alltements from officials of the state Water Resource! ContrOI Board in- dicatina much higher standards will be set on the quality of sewq:e pumped iDto the ocean along California's coastline. The seven districts which are members of the joint.board have trtatment plants in Fountain Vall ey and Huntington Beach . The treated effluent is pumped in- to the ocean two-miles o1f Hunttnaton Beach. Sanitation officials earlier \'Oiced op- position to the proposed chtinges on the grounds that they will cost. 81 to 167 per- cent more in taxes for the dislricls to 1111· plement and bec11u~e •·there is not ade- quate scientil'ic inforn1ation existing .to substantiate alt or lhe.discharge restr1c- llons.'' The resoluti(ln adopttd Wednesday II)'! that Orange County directors are in fa\•or of the state board's intent to establish a comprehensive. uniform policy . for the it.ate. but 1sks that any standards be ''based in r1ct on some measurea blt Im- provement to the marine tnvlronmenl." Robert BaUln. chairman of the: county Board of Supervisors, lold sanitation directors he will attend the: sllte board htarlnas on the $tandards Dec. 2 tn 5'n. Dle10. Ed Jll!I . chairman of !he jolnt s1nlt1tlon boards, 11id he will attend a similar hearing KO\« 11 In San Rafael . Language Aid Se t LOS ANGELES t ~Pl) -Sp.1nl1h· s?@akinl offlcer1 now wiU be on duly 24 hours a dty~at police headquart6rJ lo handle calls lrtm ~tt:lican·Americaru. UCI Bus Service, Set ~ • • Transit Systeni Free to Students B)' PATRICK BOYl..E campus by y.·ay of Palisades Raid. ot tti• 0.1" '1i.1 s11n Robert Lawrence, assistpnt v Ic e. Officials at UC Irvine. \\'here 3Jmost 80 C'hant'ellor for :student affair~. said today percent of the 7.000 students commute lhe unit'ersity hopts to begin operating 10 can1pus. ha\'e det'ided to Implement a the line at the beginning of the ·wint.e.r free bus service to communities sur-quarter in January. rounding the school. However. he noted that one nlajor The plan calls tor a single bus. to be obstacle -funding -may put a damper leased from the Pink Bus Line of Buena on the entire proposal. Park, driving a 45-mlnute route each As planned , the wliversi,ty would lease hour during ttie Wffk taking students to a 53-passenger bus from the Buena Park and from the campus. firm for about $1,800 per month. This The bus. under the proposed route, fi!i!ure would include insurance and a ,~·ould travel down MacArthur Boulevard driver. "with the bus ooi:npany paying to Coast Highway : v.·esterly on Coast maintenance o:>sts.' accordlna: to Joanne Hiahv.·ay to Jamboree Ro~d an~-!_he~ _to _ Simon. ~tudtnl affairs official ~ charge Balboa Island: along Bayside pr1ve t>ack of~studymg the plan. onto Coast Hlghway and along Dover The total cost could be pared do'4·n. Drive to Senta Ana Avenue: along Santa Mrs. SimOI) noted, by selling advertising Ana to Mesa Dri ve; then return to the space inside and outside the vehicle to 'Terrorists Strike in Chile Before Arrival of Castro • ANJ:Of.AGASTA, Chil• (AP) -Ttr- rorists blew up a government transmission line near this northern city today. just berore the arri\'al of Pi:ime r..1inister Fidel Castro of Cuba. A spokesman for Entel. the com- munications firm . said the powerful dynamite blast destroyed a pole that car· ried transmission lines and power cables. No one v.·as reported injured . There v.·as no indication whether the bombing had any connection with Castro's visit. Castro arrived in Antofagasta from Santiago aboard a Russian-made Cuban Airlines plane for seveial d~.of tourins Cfiile's northem <Jtsert region. He plan- ned to meet v.·orkers in nitrate lields and copper mines and also talk with universi· ty students, politicians and tV'4'nspeop!e. Wearing green faligues and black com· bat hoots, the 45--year-old Cuban leader arcepted a copper key to the city from ~l ayor German Miric, who labeled Castro "a champion of anti-imperialism." "I'll try to be a worthy son or An tofagasta," the prime minister feplied. "Thank you for your solidarity with our country." Antofagasta, "'ilh a population of about 120.000, is an important port exporting copper produced at the huge Chi- quicamata mine, high in the Atacama Desert to the east. Castro planned to visit the mint, in which multimillion dollar interests of the Anaconda Co. of the United States were nationalized by Chile earlier this year. Despite the sugar-coated welcome . Castro had l\"On tht city key by only one vote Wednesday -5--4 -in a stormy Ci- ty Council session. Leftwing supporteNl of Chile's President Allende voted (or the proposaL Others opposed to Castro. voted no. Local leftist groups in Antofagasta urg- ed the toy.·nspeople lo gil·e Castro an . enthusiastic v.·elcome. and plastered ··~'elcome Fidtl" signs every\l:here: A v.·elcon1e in electric lights v.'as mounted on the top of the Antofagasta Hotel, \1·here Castro is staying. The enthusiasm or the hoters regular guests may have been dampened. hov.·ever, v.·htn they were all ousted betor,! Castro's arri\'al. for s~urity reasons. Optimist Cl1th F etes 7 Youths l\1embers of the Costa ~l esa Optimist Club honored seven youths Thursday as part of the club's act~vity during-Youth Appreciation Week. ~1ayor Robert Wilson.presented awa rds to -the youths al the club's luncheon meeting. Honored were: Randy Gordon. Sea Ex- plorer Ship 306 : Gary Williamson. Costa f\1esa High School Future Farmers of America : John Dunlap, Harbor Are a , Bovs Club; Jenna Peterson. Harbor Arta Gifls Club; Sig Fidyke. Estancia High School. and Scott Endsley, Costa 1i1esa High School : Also honored v.•as Chris Blackv.•ell. a patient at Fairview ·Stalt Hospital, who -was credited with qu ick reactf6rls in si\'- ing the Ifft of a fellow patient. SHERRILL loral mert·hants. This y.·ould bring ln about $400 to $500 per mo11tli. she said. 25 De.rcent of v. hi ch \routd go to Pink Bu5 Line o\vners, To raise the estin1ated $8.400 needed to operate the llne for the rc111ainder of the i;chool year. La11•rence said the university will sponsor a bus ride and reception Nov. 22 for city and Chamber of Com- merce officials from communities sur- rounding the campus. Student and faculty organizations will also be asked to take part in the funding , he added. UC! officials hope. to convince the various merchant associations that more students W()uld patronize their mtmbers if transportation ""'ere 111ade available. The student go,'ernment at UCJ has not yet allocated any money for the line. allho1.fgh La~·renc.e said the student Senate is considering helping with the runding. He said he was skeptical about ob=" taining rr.oney by charging studenl5 to ride .the bus. Other universities which had implemented bus lines charging a fa ri. he noted . had abandoned them "'hen students would not use the service. He also noted that if a fare is charged. the line would be subject to th.e regula- tion -and the red tape -of the Publlc Utilities Commission. If the line proves a success. Lawrence added, the student government may seek an increase in the present $7-per-quarter student activit y fee to support the line. Student officials point out that even if the increase in fet \\'ere only SI per quarter. commuting students could still save. by riding the bus and not parking on campus. Parking permits cost $9 per quarter. From Page .1 CHICANO .•. first comes up ror-e:l"e'ttiffif1rn974':- No congressional reapportionment plan has emerged from committee yet, but Sillas· said the proposals under con- sideration in the Senate and Assembly ig. nore the question of a ~texican-American district so far. None of the fi ve n'ew seats v.:ould be in heavily J'.lexican-A1nerican areas but one under consideration in the Assembly is heavlry black. The ne\\' seats P.rimarily woU!d go to the growing suburban areas.· The o n I y r..texican-American co~ gressman in California is Dtmocral Edv.·ard Roybal of Los Angeles. From Page 1 BENEFIJ'S ..• unemployment states to 65 weeks. n would cost the federal government about. Sl.5 billion For the first year. .. The amendn1ent was the first to be-ilf- fered to Prtsident Nixon's bill cuftlng business and individual taxes by $1S.S billion during the next three years. --- -' MAKES A HOUSE A HOME If- -' Here are the makings of • room you'll love to live in! Sofas and chairs so fashionably covered, so h.,ndsomely desi9n·ed! A joy to see! An exceptionally large selection of fine fabrics and styles to chdose from at very reasonable prices. Sherrill is unsurpas5ed in quality and design. Stop in todoy and view. thi~ fabulous collection of fine upholstered furniturt. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1721 W11ttilff Or., 642-lOSO OPEN ,R.IOAY 'TIL 9 , MIWPOlt SfOll OPIN •llDAT 'TIL' INTERIORS Prof1s1lonal lnttrlor 01slgners Av1ll1bl.-AID Pilo111 T•ll Fr" M•tt of Oro111• C•1111ty-1.40·11&2 LAGUNA BEACH 345 No rth Coast Highway Phon" 494-6551 I . > • > • I I ,, I I • I ' .1 • Uf'I T•l ..... i. • • Econo·mic Impact Hits B~ig Firms \VASHINGTON CUPI) -The comer crocer can do somethinc Sunday that General ?i.iotors, General Ff<ld• and other corporate 1iant.! cannot -raire his, prices. And \11ithin that anomaly lies a central ract in the administration's post-treeu economic planning: the big companies not only have more economic impact, they may be. !he only ones on which any practical contl'ol can be exerted. The only price increase autdellne the government laid down Thursday was 1 itneral oM: it wants to hold 1verq1 price lneruses acrost the economy to 1' rate ol no more than 2.5 percent per year. How this wlll ·show up in the Price of shoe polish or furniture remains to be aetn, since the whole economy ls lumped Ulgelher in the standard. DESPONDENT TAX AGENT SURVIVED PLUNGE FROM GOLDEN GATE Henry Harrington 8ec1me Sixth Survivor Out of 435 Jumper• The corner store vs. giant corporation situation arises from the latest decisions putting together the machinery w h i c h will attempt to control the economy when the wage-price-rent freti:e ends at mid· niRhl Saturday. And il said that cost increues -not hopes for increased profits -must be the moti\'e for price hikes. The profit limit beyond which sellers Ydll not be allowed lo go 'A'ill be based on the two best profit yea rs during the three year period im- mediately preceding: the st• rt of the ·freete Aug. 15. i' Golden Gate Leaper Lives The ·pr.ice commission Thursday an- nounced tbat firms .doing mqre than Slqrl million in &ales every year will have to notify the government 30 days ln advance if they want to raise prices, and then put them· Into effect only If the price panel But more sig_iYflcant perhaiQs than the price standard or the COl!it·proof justifica· !Ions for price rises is the fact that the biggest flrtns are the prime target of.the new controls. The $100 million plus sales companies inc lude the 1,300 biggest firms . which together have about 45 percent or the American sales market. ~llis. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A 36-year- old Internal Revenue Service em.ploye, whose wife said he was depressed over his job, survived a jump {rom the Golden Cate Bridge Thursday. The man, Henry Harrington of Pacific a. was pulled from a shallow moat around the south tower or the bridge. He Yr'as still conscious after the 270.foot leap "I talked to him. He eave me hi! name, bis age, his home 1ddrts.s and telephone number. Not only th.It., he told me where his car was parked and its lletllie num- ber. He said he had left a note for his Wife." does not object. · Firms with less than $100 million in an~ nual sales -all the way from sii:eable riianufacturers to local merchants -can hike their prices as of Sunday, provided they post a list of prices that prevailed ituring the freeze. Those with sales between $50 million and $100 million. as previou sly announced. will have to sub- mit price change reports every three months but the others will be subject only Ul random spot checks. Because their price Increase requests must be submitted 30 days in advance it appeared likely !hat lhty would undergo , more scrutiny than smaller businesses. Tht 2.5 percent standard will be applied with more exactness in the sense that it y.•iil ha"e a larger immediate impact than if ii were apolied individually to scores of smaller businesses . "He ~·as swimming around trying to find a way out or the moat," said California Highway Patrolman Steve Envoy at tr.N. Coast guardsmea •nd ambulance at· tenda!lts found Harrington noundering in the moat under the bridge, from which at least 435 persons have leaped since its completion in 1936. Pekin Issues ; Greetin~ _, __ __,..;: UNITED NATIONS (UPI\ -~Peking's smiling chief r:n- voy gave the United Nations the regards of 800 million mainland Chinese today in a ehort and snappy courtesy call. and his delegation got word their travel in America would be restricted in the same treatment 1iven Soviet Russia. Deputy Foreign Minister Chlao Kuan-bua, leader ol the Communist Chinese delega· tion, paid the half-hour pro- tocol visit to Adam Malik of Indonesia, president of ·the U.N. General Assembly. The full delegatiori takes over the U.N. China · seat in it diplo- mo.tic debut !\1onday. . The United Nations an· nounced that the State Depart- ment had decided ·-although Washington and Peking do not have diplomatic relations - "Ul extend travel restrictions to members of the mission of Pm•due University Prof 'Gets Agricultw-·~. f ost WASHINGTON (UPll Earl L. Butt, a Purdue University dean who served in the Eisenhower Admlnlstra· tion, has joined President Nix- on 's cabinet-as Agriculture Secretary, • post made a ~ liticol arena by record grain yields that have driven down fann prket. Nixon announced 'Ibursday the appointment of Buti:, 62. Butz ~ucce~d Clifford M. Hardin, who ill join Ralston Purina Co. ·St. Louis as vice chairman in charge of !he company's • research a n d development. Nixon said Hardin had decided to leave because he had had an "exceptionally at· tractive offer" in private business. Ronald L. Ziegler, the White House p r e s s secretary, said the ap- pointment did not signify any change in administration farm policy. But Butz, who served as an assistant agriculture secretary under Ezra Taft Benson dur- ing the Eisenhower years, im· mediately came und er fire from Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien. O'Brien said Butz was an architect of Benson's policies and would bring them back. O'Brien described Butz as a "prominent consultant and board member of ... cor- porations that 'farm the farmers.'~ Rep. Wijliam Scherle (R· Iowal. a ctiUc_ oJ__HJ...rd..in's policies. aaid when told of Butz' appointment . "Oh, hell, not another professor." "I was boping we'd have a man of the soil, but I don't know about the man and am going to reserve judgment," Scherle said. The chairman of the House1 Agriculture Committee Rep . W. R. Poage { D -Tex . I , remen1bered 'A·orking wilh Butt v.·hen Butz served under Benson in the 1950s. "Obviously, we had many differences, but I respect him as an honorable and sincere man working for what he thinks to be best r 0 r agriculture," Poa1e said. Butz. introduced by Nixon 1t a news conference, promised to seek help for hard·pressed farmers. Nixon predicted Butz would be a "vigorous advocate of the interests of fanners. just as Secretary Hardin "'aS." Alter serving in Benson's department , Butz returned to Purdue where he was dean of agriculture for 10 years. He has been Purdue's dean of continuing education 1 I n c e 1968. . One Man Battle ' . War Waged on Prostitute. FIUGGI. Italy <UPI) -Nestore Evangelist! lined his ,;helicopter gunship" on target, squeezed the trigger and ... splat! It was a black day for the ladles of pleasure of Fluggi . Evangelisti peppered the prostitutes with 25 gallons of black marking: ink loaded in tanks aboard bis private ht.licopter. The ink raid, follov.·ed by 1 heavy r.Wall, ~rove 1 score or the miniskirted 1irls from their babttuaJ haunt along the Aaole-Flugl Highway. "lI they come back," Evangelisti wamed today, "I hive something worse in More for them." The wealthy coostrudJon m1pte said be hu ordel'fJd several boxes of ear-shattering cherry bombs from 1 nearby fireworkJ company. Profit, as well as prudery, was the moUve for Evange- listi's one·man war on the 1b"fftwalker1. He said they art giving a bid name to a luxury apart- ment complex thllt he has built nearby. Evangellstl said the girls congregated around the en-1 trance of the accus road to his development and used the surrounding forest or chutnut trees for their trysts. the People's Republic of China comparable to those applled to the Soviet rni!sion ." It said a diplon1atic note covering the restrictions had been delivered to the Chinese mission. The regulations re- quire 48·hour notification of travel outside a ~mile radius of New York City and.· as iS the case with the ·Soviet Union and some other countries, various areas in the country are closed to travel. The note said the regula- tions apply to the delegat~ and to "others who may apply to enter this country in con- nection with United Nations affairs." Chiao made a half.hour pro- tocol call on Malik in the lat· ter's 38th floor su ite in the 11eaming secreta riat building overlooking the East River in midtown Manhattan. He was accompanied to the meeting by Huang H u a , China's wmanent represen- tative to the U .N., and Hslung Hsiang-hul, a reprtsenlative in the U.N. complex to talk to ConstanUn St a vrouplis . secretary-general for U.N. af- fairs. Relinquist' s Attackers Get Blasted WASHINGTON (UPll - Sen. James O. Eastland {0· Miss.), said today that two witnesses opposed to the supreme court nomination or William H. Rehnquist were guilty or character assassina· tlon. Eastland, chairman or the judiciary commillee. leveled the charge at Joseph Rauh, spokesman for the leadership conference on civil rights. and Clarence Mitchell, represen- tative of the NAACP. The two quoted rumors of possible connections between Rehnquist and the John Bircb Society at Rehnquist's con- flrmallon hearing earlier thla week. "\\1len presented with the personal affidavit of Rehn- quist, categorically denying that he was ever a member of the John Birch Society, Rauh and Mitchell insinuated that Rehnquist should not be believed and that. his une- quivocal denial could suggesl that he had some connection with the group." Eastland said In a lengthy rebuttal of 1everal statements the two made In opposing Rehnquist. "It seems clear that the testimony of Rauh a n d M I t c h e I J concerning Rehn- quist'• association with the John Birch Society WIS purely hypothetical and not Intended to enlighten the commltttt, b.lt Instead was an exercise of the crassest type or ch1racter assassination," Eastland said. t nie Senator 1lso said R1Uh • P'opular Mechanics Magazine took a survey of 35 Ame~ican cars since Maverick's introduction. The results-Maverick had the h ighest percenlage of owners reporting no mechanical trouble! In addition, our own low warranty claims rate shows I hat Maverick's reliable design is working. In olhe~words, Maverick spends mosl ol its time on the road instead ol up on the lilt. So you can expect 10 spend less on repairs. Now that's e pretty good record for a car at any price. But yoU can own a good· looking, fam lly·slted M1verickfor as Iowas $2175• Stand1rd6or opt1on11 V.S.2-door,4-doororaporty ' Grabber.1est drive• Maverick at your Ford Dealer·1. 'Mllluf.t(.hjJt1'1 suogetlecl •fl.II pr1tl 1972 Mivllic~ 2·dOOt Sed1n lhown wiU't opJ1on1I wllltt 1ldtw1ll hits (129 1 Dots not \ncludt clt1t/n1tlcl~ Ctlll"O" (S160), Otlltr p11ptllhOn Chtrglt (11 tn~J. ltlll IJld IOC tl llJ;ll. ' Dayton Schools Fa cing Closure DAYTON. Ohio fUPll -Voters decide today '~·hether this city's 57.240 public school students attend classes the rest of this year. T_he 69 schoojs In the state's itxtJ1r ·largest city closed last Friday 'A'hen the district ran out of operating fund s despite a favorable \'Ole No1•. 2 on a 13.S mil school le-vy .. Toda.v·s showdown will be for an ad· ditional 10.5 mils. If it fall s. the school!! y.•ill shut down at least until Dec. 14 or perhaps for the rei;t of the year. Failure would bring up another vole on the 10.5 mils on Dee. 14 and, If it a~ain is rl'jected. the distMct would have to wait until January. 1972. for state funds to be di stributed. Go'·· John J. Gilligan came here Thurs· da y to lend his l!iupport for the levy's passage. OAILY-1ll.9T S Welfare Rolls Show Decline For 3rd Time WASIDNGTON (AP) -The nation's welfare rolls shrank in July for the third strai1h.t month as states continued to fight 1kyrocketlrig costs, t.he government 1aid today. The Department-of Health. Education and Welfare 1ai<l most of the decline came in Aid to Famllie1 with Dependent Children -AFOC -Which represents about 70 percent of the annual $14.3- billion welfare bill. "~veral fact.ors apphir to be con· tributing to the apparent ltveling off of ~~;e~r~~!,~:':~~~sthoi ~~~!s n~a~~ back on payments and recipients because or the extraordinary cost rise in the past year," said John D. Tv.•iname, ad- ministrator of._ HEW 'J Social · and ReJu.bilitation Service. MoSt , of the July decrease can be ezplained by the 108,000 AFDC recipients" dropped in New'Jersey, he said. Twenty states . and jurisdictio.ns ha\•e rut back on AFOC ln recent months while 3.f others have reported Increases. Another 11,000 old-age rec ipients were dropped in 39 states in July to renect higher Social Security payments first payable in June, Twiname said. The July relief rolls tot&led 14.2 million persons, about 84,000 fewer than the previou s month. The number of AFDC recipients, Y.'hicti had been rising at a rate of about 2 per· cent a month. went up only iii-tenths of 1 percent in April • • MAVERICK~ •le s1ld several serious traffic acc::idents were caused from motorist$ stopped or slowed down to ogle the girls. "I went to speak to the W.pJJ>en to try to ~rsuade tb~m to find another pltce/' EvyaeJisU said. "They ~ tused ta move. Well, they v.·antt<Lwar and they cotJ " Ind Mitchell m11de unsubstan- tiated charses that Rehnquist Jmproperly interftred w I t h voting In black precincts in Phoenix, Ariz., and that he us· ed abusive language to Negroes who were demonstrating ror a civil rl1ht1 blll then pendln1 in the -.- Ar!Jona 1e11s11turo. For Better Ideas in value see your Ford Dealer now! • I \ • ' • • ' I I I I • I ' I '' • • • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE The Correct Decision A 16-member citizens commJttee has strongly rec- ommended that Costa Mesa remain a &t!neral~law city, passing U.P anr chance lo adopt a city cbarte The committee's recommendation was ac epted by the city council Nov. 1 with , considerable praise and thanks -and apparent agreement on the part of the council. It doesn't appear that anyone, other than a very few vocal residents, wants a charter for Costa Mesa at this lime. • · Mrs. Helene Hollingsworth, chairman of the charter study committee and a past president of Orange Coast League of Women Voters, gave a four·page letter to the council from the committee reporting its begative find· ing on charters. In essence the committee said charters ofien are a problem because once ado:t:ited they have proved very difficult to change. Committee members also felt that the fin ancial advantages under a charter -principally more taxin~ freedom -are not really needed by Costa Mesa at this stage in its deyelopment because the city can handle its financial goals under current methods. The wider range of taxes and the ability of the city tQ deterrnine-foritself-the city c6uncil's salary were the only real advantages to a charter mentioned by the com· mittee. . While the conclusion that Costa Mesa doesn't need .J charter at this time seems correct, the· committee migh.t have given better service by presenting a more detailed examination of the plusses and minuses of the two forms of cit.v government. The four·page letter to the council was rather vague in its proposals. It recommended that the city push f ot "greater freedom" for general law cities, for ex~ ample, but did not specify what freedoms it meant. Mrs. Hollingsworth explained the lack of detail as the result of the committee mem bers1 unanimous sentl· ment again~t a charter. The city council praised the charter committee's work as 'some of the bes~ ever accomt>lished in the city. We af'ee with the committee's decision -Costa· Mesa doesn t need an entangling charter as lon g as it can function as well as it has under general laws. If a chart· er becomes desirable later on, it can be written then to reflect the. up-to.dale needs of the city. Bike Thefts and Safety Costa Mesa's crime prevention committee and bl· cycle trails committee have joined hands in a logical maneuver to find joint solutions to the growing·concern of bicyclists -safe ri~g areas and prevention of thefts. In a report to tile city council, the committee rec· ommended.study on such ittms as: · • .' -Mandatory city bike licensing, with fees and pro- visions to cite. violators. -Simplifying a free bike registratiein program to assist in tracing stolen bikes. -Clinics for instruction in safe bicycling; for adults as well as children. -Enlisting the aid of private enterprise . to cut costs of bicycle locks, thereby encouraging theft reduc· · tions. •· ~· -How to organize, finance and establish a bicycle trails net~-ork, stressing scenery as well as safety. The joint effort is a good, logical approach to v.'hat has become a very serious concern in c;osta Mesa. While some ideas -the mandatory license program, for in· stance -may turn out to be unworkable, the whole area deserves a thorough study. , c • • • . • : • • Paying tor Public Education State Should Take Over . To the Editor: ( animals couJd outsmart killer man, and disguSt on the staged film ing! And at in- "l.ermission, daddy 's girl wanted the customers to buy daddy's book. ~lt..-was_bardly any_wondeL1hat many people left th~ theater early. Some children wept at the slaughter of the proud, beautiful animals. Some Want Prisons Like ' Country Clubs Bridge Is Bet-ter Game Than Poker . • ' . • • . New veteran facil ities are built, freeways constructed, e a r t h q u a k e • Mailbox damaged hospitals fepaired and replaced. L Where dOes the ·money~for these baaiy -''---_-~+-~,.----­ : .. ' • • l l ! ( ·: I needed projects come from? It is funded by the st.ate Legislature which studies the various requests and funds those it feels are ..Ud. Does the general public get to vote on these projects? Yes, Indirectly by elec- ting legislators who they feel will best represent t h e i r thinking regarding ef· ficiency and economy. The reason for giving lawmakers, once elected, freedom to act without each time going back to the electorate. is to permit government to !unction mioot.hly and efficiently. HOW IS IT TIIEN THAT education is dependent upon a two.thirds vote of the publlq to ward on disast rous overcrowding or to repair dangerously run~own facilities? What sort of stupid logic wouJd hold that a new freeway should be more easily built and financed than a new school? ~ .. Askin!( "the people" to continually bond ' • themselves or raise their taxes is unrealistic. People have a natural reluc. lance to inflict pain upon themselves no , • matte]'. how worthwhile Ute cause is. Most l . property owners are reS:enUul of the .tax- es they are now paying and are .d8lJlned if they'll increase those taxes. ' . . ' • • . . • . . • • . • . ' • . • • . L • • l • WHAT MUST HAPPEN is Iha t the it.ate must assume the full responsibility for the funding of public education. The most equitable way to raise money is through an increased income tax . For in- stance, an increase of one percent would raise more than $600 million for educa- tion. Los Angeles schools were deemed unsafe because of earthquake damage, the st.ate could have stepped in and cor- rected the inadequacies or rebuilt the schools that were cl osed dow n. The point is that the power to decide the fate of public education should be left to the state Legistlature ralhe r than the overburdened local taxpayer who has neither the ability nor the inclination to do the job. STU RUB!NE The Protes ter• To the Ed itor: t would like lo gee the enclosed print put on the front page of your newspaper. 1 am aware we have our problems but living i~ this coontry sure beats working In a nee paddy, •nd eating fishheads and rice . Of course, If your paper has the backbone of a jellyfish and is willing to atand by and have this type of person run our country down without doing anything about It, forget _the whole Idea. JAM AWARE that only five percent of OIAHOI COAST DAILY PILOT '"''>ere N. \Veed, Publi$htr Thomas Kttvi~ Editor . ' AZbtrt W. Bok1 I Editorial Pagt Editor 'TM edllt.dal page Qf the D&I1y Pilot 1ttk:& to lnrorm •nd atimu· late rnadtts by ~ntJn; thla MMptptr'a opinlon1 and cnm· mentuy on topics of lntcmt •nd 1tsnlflet.nee. by Pf0\•1dlni;: a forum for the exprcul9n of our readers' tnlol'll, and by p!"l!5entJng the vene vlrwpolnta of lnfonnl!d ob-aerwn and spokesmen on topks of U...d.ly. Friday, November 12, 1971 .,, 1 Letters fT01J' readers are welcome . Normally wrfters should convey their messages m 300 words or less. Tht: right to condenst: lt:tter1 to fit spa.ca or <!liminate libe l is reserved. All lt:~ te?"s must include signature and mail- ing address, but namt:s may be with- held on request if sufficient reason is--apparent. Poetry wilt not bt: puO. lisht:d. college students are hippies bul I don't $ee t.be 95 percent of the. so.called American students marching alongside of the hippies, carrying the flag when the · hipp ies are protesting. You might increase your sales. Some parents will buy t~· paper just to show their teenage children. , WAR REN REEKER The unrt:producible (too dim) copy of a cartoon enclosed showed a typically hippie-garbed couple, the man SClying to the girl, "'While I get ·my unemploymt:nt check, you split to pick up our welfare mont:y and food stamps. Al.so, apply for increas· ed houstng allowance since we got ourselves a pad. "I'll stop at school to see how our federal scholarship grants are coming. You go ta the county free medical clinic to get your sores checked and pick up my glasses if they're ready. Meet back at the pad at I :30 and we'll hitch a ride to the fede ral building in time for the protest march against this rotten capitalistic society and the Est.ablishment tliat's responsible for it!" Animal B11ntlt1g To the Editor: Editor American Wilderness! A misnomer! Rather it's one man's tale of how he set out to kill the prize animals. l was first delighted when I saw the movie ad, American Wilderness, ex- pecting an elaborate and spectacular panorama of some of our proud and beautiful Jo.nd with its creatures. Instead I found myself sickened with th\,pictorlat diary of a man fulfilling his "dream'' of killing off the largest and the best of the }Vild species. WJTB SO MANY of our wild racing extindion, I could hard believe my eyes when the film was bown. I found mysell hoping that 1ame w the The Uninvolved --_ .. • Press Comments Hebron, lad., Porter ContJ' Jltraldi ''In acannlng a little mq:ulne the other day as I went through my mall, I came · across the following Item that I wou1d like to pass on to each .of you ... 'The trouble wilh polities ls not the thousands who art in it, but the millions who are out.' Thtre Is so much truth In that state.. ment. It is a shame that so many 'good' people refuse to get tnvolved In polttlcs. They eilher take the 'ltt G«irge do 1t' •l- litude or else they covtr up by sating those 'dirty' poliliclans . , • w en, basically, tbt.y are to bla me. Re.me.mhlir •.. 'bad' public officials are eltcted by Cood P'OJle who refuse to vote or ·a:et In· V filved': - I WHY SHOULD WE pay. to see a man deliberately set out to kill? I am angry and dlsgusted and sick at heart at the misuse of American wilderness. They shou ld call the film: "Slaughter in the Wilderness" Advertising doesR't fit the movie. EVELYN F. GRUSSING Recycle Our Waste To the Editor : Our "environment": To preserve il, profit motives must not precede it. Of what good are profits, goods and riches if ·we must pay dearly-for them in foul air• polluted land and water? -r= ~ --.... uestReport By JAA-fES E. WHETMORE Senator, 3Stb District \ ' ' , On the heels of. the recent violent murders or nine correctional officers within our state prisons comes the opin- ion of an independent penologist in a 650-page report to the Board of Cor- rections which would make our penal in· stitutions veritable "country c J u b prl90ns." The report, which is also being studied by each or us In the Legislature, calls for these actions: -Closure of Ca!Uornia's Folsom and San Quentin prisons; -Future penal institutions should be small and located within the et1mmunities they serve; A friend asked me at dinner recently why I gave up playing poker, some years ago, and began concentrating on bridge. The obvious reason was thzl I couldn't afford to keep losing money at the poker table. As I thought about it further , however. I discovered that my enjoyment at bridge is greater than it ever was at poker- because bridge is essentially a partners.hip game. Victo ry that is gained as part .of a team ls sweeter and more nourishing than iit- divi~~al conquest. There are more happy fam1hes than there are happy indjviduafs, because while grief is solit2.ry, joy must be shared. , 1 • • 'To improve it, we must no t thoughtlessly continue lo pour sewage NO ~fINIMUM prison terms, giving the A NEIGHBOR OF mine who was· a and garbage into the rivers, lakes and proposed new parole board authority to talented concert pianist gaVe up recitals oceans. For cleaner waters and' preserva-release the prisoner y,·henever he is con· and became a member of. a cha~~r tiOn of marine life (and our own), we ca n Sidered not a danger to society; en:h~~tra group, ~use, a~.she pu~ ll, d_evelop . alternate systems .:oJ dry-land _ -Elimination of the present_ Adult pla} ing togeth~r with other ~uslc1ans c filtering and purification. Our wastes C'3 n ~Authority which...gives the priSolilr no ·!'"gave me a feehng ~f co~~on that r be used to enric~ the land. Sewage water right to counsel in determining the length almos~. never achieved while playing can be recycled for reuse. of his term or deciding when he is to be alone. . . · -paroled and In bridge, two averaqe players who are H1~lNG AND. pedaling ~ill lessen air -Pla~ing the burden of proof on law-harmonious can usually beat two expert pollution as will develop!~ alternate enforcement authorities as to why a con· players who are vain and contentious. methods of mass transportation o.nd the vict should not be released, rather than And defending dextrously w i th a use of new types of engines. the present system requiring the convict partner to defeat the opponents' contract To prolong our natural . resOUfctS, we to show why he should be released. gives a pleasure that ca Mot be round at can recyc.le our w~te. Minerals can be the poker table. where competitiveness is put back into the soil by use of ~he .com-DOF.S TllIS SOUND like a country· everythipg, and co-operation means post. We can11ot be a strong nation If we club environment for felons'.' Indeed, can nothing have to depend on foreign countries for Californian~ afford to pay more to make , food and fuel. l@wbreakers more comfortable? I HAVE T~PERED off my chess lNDIVJDUAlS AND conglomerates As one neWspaper editor who studied r ·'·''"'"'. .., -.-. ~ t Sjd~ey J:'Hi.rr~, w.:.c...~ • b- playing for much the same reason I gave up-'poker -that chess makes intense demands on one's aggressive drives, and dr~in~ the ego in its strain for victory. This 1s why chess champions are so often t?rtured personalities who f i n d it dif. f1cult to relate to other people. , Bridge is the most excellent card game in the world because of its partnership factor. While nonpartnership games call for • courage or cunning, bridge in addition c~lls for tact and understanding and a kind or modesty which permits the partnership to do its best rega rdless of individual glory. 1 KNOW BRIDGE players who would be in the top rank if they Could handle the!r partners .half as well as they handle t~e~r ca.rds. Bu~ th ey are basically in· d1v1duallsts playing a ~perative game, an.d wculd ~.al.per lose than admit a mistake or lr1m their bidding sails to the · needs of the team as a whole. It is generally agreed that the Italians have beaten the U.S. bridge team for the W!1rld Championship three years running, not because they are better players but because the Italian parlners have played together longer and have an abnormal sensitivity to each other's bidding. . ~e e~otio~al component in games. as 1n bfe, is ulllmately more decisive t~an the mental skill. who exploit the en vironment for profits the reJXlrl said: and refuse to recognize the enormity of "Those who drum up sympathy for the ecological crisis are guilty of dark hardcore murderers, rapists, kidnapers sins against the land, They would drag Md other perpetrators of violent crimes, the whole nation into a dying society undoubtedly are behind the fallacious Dozing Driver Liability "' plagued with pollution. reasoning that criminals are not Abolition of pollution must be ac-lawb reakers but 'JXllitical prisoners'.'' companied by sacrifice. This must not be considered a detriment to the economy. For what could be of more value or im· portance than improvement of the en- vironment, the quality of life, through the restoration and preservation of our gre&t American heritage, God'S great gifts to man: land, air and water? G. W. LOWE Quotes Kenneth J. Koford, Venice -"We com- mitted ourselves to defend . . . South Vietnam-from her iiggressive totalitarian neighbor because a free South VleUJam is ln our national interest. But if we try we can still lose -by pulling out im- mediately." Dear Gloomy Gus tn this comer. 4J Pinkley. tn that one. Bill St. Clair, I'm getting my bet down on ol' Pini right now. -B. D. D. TI!k ... IM m'lttfl ,....,.,.. ~.... Mt lltft'Mrl.., ,,...._., tM ..........,.,, t11Jf ,_. Ml ,...... " 01M1111 0.... CHll't Plltl. CERTAINLY, under this nation's Jaw, a person who .breaks the law must be punished. \Vhen a pirson commits-a crime against society and is convicted and sentenced after due process of Jaw, he surrenders his rights and ·privileges as a law.abiding citizen. This does not mean, of course, that he then should be cruelly trealed or unduly persecuted. He should be provided ample opportunity to rehabilitate himself inside prison. Nonetheless, while he is in prison, be must (!bide by r u I e s and regulations governing prisoners. If he willfully and persistently breaks such rules and regulations, he must pay for his in-, fra ctions. • THESE ADVOCATJ::S of per· mlM lveness s h o u I d certainly not be permitted to close down Folsom and San Quentin, even though these facjlities-are old in terms of age and no doubl need considerable modernization and ex· panslon. And it ls absolutely ridiculous to advocate • vast net~-ork of mini·prisons located throughout the state. We have too long been victimized by the criminal element which looks to a growing pennlssive judicial system for mercy when a lawbrtaker is a~ prehended, convicted and stntcnctd. THE APOLOGISTS for "country club prisons" never shed a tear for the nine victims of the recent prison murders, thei r loved ones, friends, or the property they destroyed. If we are to have constructive prlson reform, it ahould be purposeful reform, howevtr, aod initiate a sy~tem t hat would not les!:_en the punlshmeot for crTmes asalnsl 1ocTcV. Too little sleep, like tOO much liquor, can turn even the mildest motorist into a deadly menace. If a driver dozes off and has an accident, is he legally liable for the consequences'.' The law starts with the proposition that no one should be blamed for what he does while unconscious . Blame rests on free .will misused -and the sleeping person is not using free will at all. But one court after another has nonetheless imposed liability on the doz- in'g driver. They find him negllgent not for what he docs while asleep but for disregarding, while still awake, the telltale signs that sl~p was coming. "IT IS TRUE,'' said one court. "that (the driver ) can not ortllnarily nx the precise moment when he. lapses into Un· consciousness. But it is not true that ordinar ily sleep comes unheralded. It Jic11 within his own control to keep awake or cease drivina:." Background factors. contributing to the danger, are also taken Into account. One driver had been at the wheel continuously for 18 hours; another was exhausted from oVU\fOl'k; a third had kept going 1fter - twice almost "fading out.' In each ca!ie, when the driver dozed off, be was held llible for the results. Suppoae it Is tha . passeng'r, not the driver, who rans asleep. Does the law Crown on that too! Occasionally lht pauenger does have a duty to stay awake -when ht hu some special reason to think lbat the. driver needs watching But as a rule he may ~ nap at will, putli.111 his trust In the driver to take care . IN ONE CASE a woman in the back seat dozed off and slumped agalMt tM Grlm01 aeaf, pushing It ~Orward alfd Law '-· in Action ) knocking his hands off the steering wheel. In the crash that followed, the driver was injured. Could he collect damages from the woman on the theory that her falling asleep was an act of negligence? A court said no. because a passenger could scarcely be expected to anticipate such a £r~.akish accident just !tom falling alseep. (She) was required to exercise fot~slghl, ., said the court, ' ·no t cla1rvoyallt"e." , A 11 A-mcrica1i Bar Association pvb· lie service feature by \Vill Bern!l.rd ,----By George ---. Dear George : I keep having the feeling that s~mcbody is following me. and my wde says I should seek professional help. Do you think I ~hould Sttlc profess ional help7 And . If not. what should J do ebout this constant feel· ing or being folloy,·ed~ • CONCERNED Dear Concerned: Well, possibly you 5hould seek professional help. Act11ally, what I do is !l:tay horn~ -that certainly frustrates all umc people followlne me, when I don 't go anywhere, (Probl,ms sent to George and Ml sol\o'ed within 90 days will be au~ tioned 10 cover storage cosu. So __.send easy proble1ru1J 1 r r I: r r. ' 1 I i _, • ' lebaek voi:. 64, NO. 271, 4 SE1CTJONS, '44 PAGES . --. ~ ' • ORAN~E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBl:lt ·12, ·1971 Today's Fin~) N.Y. Stocks ---- \ \ TEN C s < • ' -om eactor • a1 nsa e Peoples' l.:obby Demands Shutdow~ By JOHN VALTERZA Of "'9 O.llr .. llot Sllfl· Another ''aftershock" of I a s t February's earthquakes touched the San Onofre Nuclear Generating station thi s week -:: strongly worde_g. allegations by the 2,000-member People's Lobby thaj t~e reactor's cooling system is "unsafe." · And coupled with the·charges came an official legal document asking that the State Public Utilities Commission shut down the plant and con<!uct hearings within 3G days to determ1iie the safety or the system which keeps the reactor cool. Such a request is unprecedented, a top- level official of the PUC told the DAILY · PILOT late Thursday. "I don't remember ever having to decide un such a request, said the PUC's Southern C a I i ( o r ·n i a Represe ntative Leonard Patterson. lie said the first step at the PUC level would be to .dete,rmine if the agency, in· deed, flaS jurisdiction over the "nuclear aspects of the plant operalion." He hinted that the issue might be relayed, instead. to the At omic Energy Commission, which already has asked the -tWo utillties operating the pf ant (Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas and Electric) to file detailed reports on the cooling system. The alleg.ations by the Peoples' Lobby were aired Wednesday in a i.os AngeJe3 press conference. Late Thursday, the group's eicecutive director, Edwin Koupal J r. told the DAI· LY PILOT that Edison officials 11.bould be "eager" to defend -under oath - their plant's sa fety in an open PUC hearing. One basis for the Lobby's demands, Koupal said, is the failure of'the mockup · of the sys tem during tests earlier this year at a testing)abora:tory in Utah. "But we're not j1¢ talking about the test and the failure. "\Vhat we're saying here is, look. gang, if the plant is so good and operating in the area of truth and corporate responsibi lity, then you {the utilities) • • • won 't mi.nd at all ap~aring under (!atb EdlSO 'H rompan#:}enies · andprovmgyourcase .. _Koupalsaid. _ _ . _ __1 11...._LJ " _ ~ , _ . __ He added that the utili : ~ fitand_ _ · • , ltie area of truth because they have ex- Generating Plant Peril ' Top-level officials of the Southern -cau~ornla Edison Company were quick to answer the "dare" of the People's Lobby this-week, steadfastly sLressing that the . San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station is a safe facility. UPI Tt!tPllGtO Fi:t•enie:ti Bui:n Flames engulf Fire Cpt. Harold Foss, 43, Thursday evenihg in Houston, Tex. and partially surround an· other fireman. Foam had ~eli used to ·subdue-gaso- line fire in downtown Houston apartmi!'nt' garage. - It started when a car hit a gasoline pump. Ross was \Valking through foam when flames burst up around him. He and another fireman who draggid Ross. to safety a_re in satisfactory condition today iii a hosp·[. tat-Both-suffered· burns. ~ --- Big ' Cargo,_ Plane Crashes Air, Force Aircraft Bursts Into Flames, 10 Perish L!TI'LE ROCK AJR FORCE BASE, Ark. (AP) -An Air Force C130E cargo plane srashed . and burst into flames shortly after•t.akeoff from Little Rock Air ForCELBase about 7 a.m. today. killing 10 of the 11 crewmen aboard. Maj. William R. \Vorth, base in· formation officer, said one crewman survived. but was in critical condition and w~s being flo,vn to an Army hospital O'Neill Stude1its Begin Moncthan Memorial Drive Students at O'Neill Elementary School have begun a memorial fund for Mrs. Elit.abeth ?-1onahan, a teacher at the school who died after a Jong n1ness late last month. The funds, say school spokesmen, will be saved to buy a large tree surrounded by benches on the campus as a permanent memorial to the young teacher who had taught at Viejo School for the past four years. Former O'Nei ll students and current ones can donate funds through the Mis· sion Viejo Branch of United California Bank. - A spokeswon1an for the youngsrers' ef· fort s said that memorial contributions already have been n1ade to the An1erican Cancer Society. in San Antonio, Tex., for treatment of tical Airlift Squ~dron , was engulfed in burns.' flames by the time firemen arrived. Fire Five of the 10 killed in the naming scorcheP an area of ground about 100 crash of the four-engine plane were iaen:--., yards by 200 feet. tified by Col. Richard ~· Gib~e~. c~m-. H~ said the plane skewered about after mander of the 314th Tactical Airlift Wing impac t and was headed at a slight angle at the base. towa,rd the direction from which it had They were Capt. Laurance F. Asher, ta ken off. inspector navigator of Fort Washington, N.Y.; M. Sgt. Orville D. Gearheart. in· structor flight engineer from Aberdeen, S.D.; Capt. Jan 8. Raycraft, instructor pilot of Los An geles; 2nd Lt. Michael \V. Hodge of Salem, Ill., who was a trainee on temporary duty from the 3645th Stu- dent Squadron at Laughlin AFB , Tex.; and 1st Lt. David C. Moule of Stoc kton, Calif., a trainee from the 58th Military Airlift Squadron at Robbins AFB , Ga. The survivor was identified as S. Sgt. Louis F. Hribar of LRAFB. He was thrown clear of the wreckage. Gibney said no cause for the crash has been determined, but said Maj. Gen. David I. Liebman, vice commander or the 12th Air Force, w.ould head an ac- cident investigation board that will con- duct an investigation. Worth said the plane was leaving on a routine training flight and that it had gained some altitude before it crashed to the· left of the runway and burst into flames. He said the plane carried 40,000 gallons of f"uel. Worth said he did not know what altitude the plane reached "l;>ut it must havt-had a little." Col. Will iam Davis, base fire mar~hal, said the pla ne, assigned to the 62nd Tac· The only recognizable re1nains of the plane was the tail section. Ai1nex Study Set For Disc ussion By Capo Council The Jong-awaited annexation study ex· amining the possible annexation or Capistrano Beach and Dana Point to San Juan Capistrano will be discussed Mon- day by members of the Capistrano City Council. The meeting will take place at 6 p.m~ in the council chambers. Final drafts of the study have not been made available to the public but members of Jhe council. \\'.bO have studied the r~pt;irt this _week. will be ask- ed.to comment and recommend revisions. The report; which has taken several months t-0 com pile, will attempt to oro· vide answers to any questions citizens or the three areas might have regard ing the proposed annexation. In a statement usually reserved for lesser officials of the utility, Edison Board Chai rman and Chief-Executive Of· ficer Jack Horton said "if there were any questions about fhe San Onofre Unifs safety it would not be allowed to operate." _ "'Alluding to.tbe tests of the rfiactor ·coo1- ing system in Idaho six month11 ' a~o. Horton stres!ed thait the tests were "by no means an accurate reprftsentaiif>n 'of the San Onofre system. . · "The model used for the tests was so small -the · size of 11 teapot -that it could not be presumed to reproduce the performance of any full-scale system," he said. He added that the tests were called for lQ determine if anything could be added to make existing failsafe systems even better. He said that on the basis of all the in- vestigations through the year "we do not think any modifications will be required at San Onofre." <"' A report olr the _ subject including cha pters specifically releated tocthe cool· ing system, will be filed with the Atomi c Energy Commission on Jan. I. 1972, he sairl. Horton expla ined that emergency systems at Sen Onofre are "overlapping, and it is inconceivable that all the systems could break down at the same time ." Casting further doubt on .the system's asserted failure in the tests, the ex· ecutive officer said that the Idaho ex- periments assumed a sudden and com- plete rupture within the cooling system. "In actual operation even the sli.ehtest leak would trigger a warning and im- mediate remedial meas ures." As a point of clarification, th e coolin~ system involved in the tests is divorced from the segment of the generating operation using sea water . Seawater is pum ped from the open Municipal Problems Set for Disc ussion San Clemente City Manager Ken Carr will discuss municipal issues and pro- blems with members of San Clemente's Square and Compass Clu b at a regular meeting Nov. 22 at Omar's Restaurant. The luncheon event will start at 12:30 p.m. Reservaiions are available by con· tacting 492-6985. The tree and bench-:s will be dedicated in the teacher's memory at one or the youngs (ers' Friday morning r I a g ceremonies. County to· Study Economy Joaquin Board Okays Bo11d Sale Trustees of the Sa Joaquin Elementary School Dis trlct have authorized the sale of '2· 7 million in bnnrls. The funds will be u~d lo build an elementary school on Preciadi>s Drive, one block from Marguerite Parkway in "-lissio Viejo. and an elementary school on Rivendell Road Jn Lake Forest. Any .money left over will be applied l() the school built in the California Home5 section of Irvine. The sale of bonds is scheduled before February and will maintain the district's _quallfic:.a.tlQ!l Cot .state school building aid, Strengtlis, Weaknesses To Be Exa1nin'ed · County supervisors have a d () p t e d Supervisor Ralph Clark's proposal that a study be made of the feasibility of a com- prehensive survey of the county's weakened economy. An ad hoc committee of sU'pervisorial aides. county planners a:nd the ad- ministrative orOce were instructed Tues- day to develop a form ula "ror the economic probe. · Clark said the 11tudy is necessary to at· tempt "to restore the normal level of e.mnlol:'Jllent and business." "Without definite economic goars: [he county will lag behind the rest of the na· tion in recovering Irom the present '• • I recessions," Clark said. "because we :are so dependent upon the aerospace in· dustry.'' The supervisor added that the :;tudy should include the projected number (Jr jobs req_uired and pinpoint strengths and weaknesses in the various economic sec· tor .. All l:f03ni mem~s approved the pro- posal except.Bon&ld Caspers of N~wport, Beach. He called the proposed study, "another example of tinkering with the free matket process. "It happens ln \Vashington. 1 saw it everywhtr.-e.-when I was back there last week," Caspers ad4ed, "But f6r th.e coun· ty lo get involved In telling people what jobs to set up is w;rong." "Some people hailed it as g'l'eat when Autonetics and North American moved to Orange County, but It did nOt work out so Well in tile fong run," Caspets contin'ued. "We have· adequate economic , reports from the banks and our own co unty pro- gress rePort. Businessmen know how to read Uitse and i:eact to t!ie~.'' Clark replied that Caspers did not understand. "T am not askinR that -8 study be made right now, only that a committ.ee be named to look ' into the feasibility . We owc..Jt t.o_t.hc people to recognize this problem." • ' ocean to ~I conventional steam generators, then dumped back through an outfall. .A sealed wate r supply separate from the ocean operation is that which is used to keep the reactor cool. That water is radioactive. · Horton, in an official statement, reiterated the company's declaration that the nuclear generating industry has a "perfect safety record.'' "No one has ever-been killed or even injured in a nuclear 1Ceidetp. at'.any copi .. merciaI power statiof1," b'e said. ~cuador Seizes_ 5 More American Fishing Boats SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The Ecuadoria n gove rnment seized five more tuna clip. pers today, only hours after levying $140,000 in fines and releasing five others. The Ceryl Marie, Mary S., Endeavor, Eastern Pacific and Royal Pacific were being taken to lhe port of Salinas at last " r~rt, August Felando, general manager ~of the American Tuna~at Association here, said. About 65 crewmen plus five skippers were aboard the tuna clippers, all of which were from here, he said. The skippers radioed they were being ta ken by the LC61, the Qui to, which seiz- ed four American and one Canadian tuna seiner Wednesday, Felando said. The Denise Marie of San Diego was seized.in the first group and was release d without paying a fine afte r showing it had acquired a license. Its skipper was quoted by Felando today as saying he heard the LC6t skipper say he planned •·10 go ou t there and get another batch.'' The latest seizures occurred 50 to 60 miles off the coast of Ecuador. In ad- dition, f.he Trinidad, one of the boats seiz- ed earlier, was intercepted, boarded end released after its skipper told the Ecuadorians it already paid a fine. Also released without pa'ying a fine after showing it had a license was the Canadian vessel Atlantic Patton. The $140,000 in fines .was pa id by the Trinidad, The Venturous and the Blue MeriWan. Circus Coming T.o El Toro Area The DeWoyne Brothers Circus, which just completed a successful run in San Clemtnte, will be opening Sunday in El Toro. Sponsored by the Saddleback Valley J aycees, lhe circus will give two performances-one at 2 and the other at 4:30 p.m. on the corner of El Toro Road and Rockfield Boulevard. • Advance tickets are on sale for $2 for adults and $1 for children by calling 83U- 9656. Tickets also will be available at the door. Featured at the performances will be Bimbo the-Elephant, clowns, ponies, and aerialists in an oJd.fashioned tent. Chill Wills' Wife Dies ENCCNO <UPI) -Belly Wills, wife of gr.avet-vniced 11ctor Chill Will s for 43 years, died of a heart attack Thursday at the age of 64. She married Willa Jn 1928 in K_an)a~ City, ~10., iSted on half statements and innue ndo.'' The group Koupal represents has Ll of. fices and representation in 28 counties he said. ' "We . specialize not in letter-writing campaigns, but in pressing issues we feel strongly about through the courts and the rest of the legal system," he said. The issue over the cooling system iii: not a new one. Nor is the . question of the plant·~ vulnerability to earthquake dan.ger. The PUC itself granted approval of the utilities' plans for two new reactors at Sa~ Onofre contingent on proof that the twin reactors and the existing one are c~pable of wit hstanding majOr quakes wit hout damage. Soon afterwards .the AEC asked for detailed , reports by the utilities on .the enclosed system which uses water to keep the reactor temperature.:at a safe level. EKplaining the request AEC spokesmen were cautious in discusslng. aspects o( danger at the ·raC/lity at -San oliofre- stressi ng that the federal agency·~ restrictions are already e x t r e m e I y severe. They added that the AEC request Was not intended. to label the San Onofre system unsafe. Instead, said AEC spokesmen, the agency wants to know if tlie system could be improved. Capistrano CofC Installation' Set At Big Banquet Fif~h Distri.ct Supervisor Ron Caspers will install directors and officers of the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce Dec. 8 at the group's annual installation banquet. The event, starting with a social hour at 6:30 p.m., will be held-in the Patio Room of the El Adobe in S:!in Juan Capistrano. Kenny Lawrence, a chamber member will be master of ceremonies. ' Directors were already chosen by the chamber merpbership eariler this week Those new directors and others re: maining on the board will choose the sit.le of offi cers at a special meeting ear- ly next week. Other events at the annual dinner'will include the results of the Dec. 6 judging of business distri ct Christmas decora- tions. A sing-along of Chris·tmas carols also is scheduled at the dinner. • Tickets will be m3iled to all cham5er members. Others may reserve tickets by" calling 496-9352. .. ' Orange Coast l\'eat,her Winter's drizzles will most Uk&. ly disappear tonight with mostly sunny skies forecast for the week4 end. High will range from 5S on the coast to 65 inland. Lows will range from 45 to 55 respectively. INSIDE TODAY A . .funny th'ing happened to Orange County's Carl Lind- stroni on hi.$ woy to· o. pro-foot- ball career. There is a: story and piety.re$ about fe on Page 23 of today's Wttkendtr. · ' . l t ltlllf u C1lllorn11 ' Clltc-lnt VI' 1 Clilllfltolll )0.44 Cemtc1 n trouwtN' n De1lll Holk•1 t Olvert•• I Edlltl'ltl ,... 6 lnttrl1l-I Jt.tt fln1nc1 "" "'1'flC-1( Ann 1,1n111n If Ml'fl.. "'" , Mututl 11~1141 le ftttlOMI """ +.I Or1nr1 C911nty I ••U•wrtnll tl-1' Jy1wi. ll1t11r II '"°"' 1 .. 1, llC<lt M1rktlt 1 .. 11 Ttltvllltn Jf fllt1t1n 1•Jt Wtlllltr· t Wem911'1 H"" t).lf WtrM H.wt +.J W"Mk•llfti !).Jf I I \ .. "2 OAILY ~ILOT SC OldLagu11a Fo1· Fiesta By FREDERICK SCHOE:'\IERL Of .... ~·/Ii' ,. .... lt-4't JI will be one hundred years ago Sun· day thal the Thurston family settled in Aliso Canyon - giving birth lo Laguna Beach and the surrounding communities. And just y,·hat Laguna was like back in those early days will be presented Sunday by the Laguna Beach Con~munity l-listorical Society rrom 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at Ben Brown 's Restauranl -just a f~'' hundred vards from the old Thi.trston homesleitd. · J~luded ·in lhe cenlennial celebration program is lunch, talks on e:arly Laguna • by old Umers and relatives of the Thurstons and walking tours to the site of the ThursWn home. Cost of the lunch is $3.30 and seating v.i.11 be on a first come, first served basis. Bea Whittlesey, who first came to Laguna Beach in 1906. remembered Joe Thurston as something of a vegetable ma:n. philospher, historian and babysitter all rolled into one. •'J\.fost of the people came down to Laguna only for the summer and Joe would make his rounds with his vegetables. During the winter, he would have to sell his goods In Santa Ana or San Diego," she recalled. ··At the age of eight," she said, "Joe's ranch In Aliso Canyon seemed very large to me and produced things I had never heard of. His lemon cucumbers were my fa vorite and we ate them like apples. The com and watermelon were plentiful in . the summer and always tasted sweeter than products bought in Los Angeles ." e--A.1W Whittlesey spent quite a bit of time on Thurston's ranch when her mother had to go to Los AngeJes. ··He wouJd pick me up when his daily route was finished and take me to the ranch. Mrs. Green, his houskeeeper, -who had two children my age1 took care of me. ··He had a number of different animals on the ranch and we spent much of our. time riding horses. He taught us a lot about raWeanakes and !Jow to take care . 'J) ' ........... "'" ..,..rt •. . ·. \.. • • ,,t, ~' ~ r:· ·c'-~.,.. ~ . ./ft\·-~"' ~J' . «;J,.,~ ~ .tilt?-:' •• CIRCLE MARKS THE SPOT WHERE JOE THURSTON LIVED Hi•toric•I Society Will Hold Centennial Celebration of oursel ves when hiking around," she said. _ThigsYJ..n, Miss \\'hillle5'y remen1· bered, wa s something of a phil ospher and v.·ould spend hours lalking "'ilh her n1other about religion and the slate of the world . l-le "'as also the man ··who told us all there "'as to know about Laguna , its history. social life. future and drav.·backs. '' Laguna: she said, back during lhe first decade of the century wasn't much more than a feW cottages along the Main ~each. with a couple of other houses near Slei!py Hollow and Victoria Beach. "From Victoria on south to Thurston's there wasn'I a tfiing·eXcept hills and a·tot of rattle snakes," i\1iss \V hit t Ie s e y· remarked. "Most of Aliso Canyon 11'as a swamp near the ocean. There was a Jot of swamp gra ss and we alwa ys enjoyed chewing it. Pacific Coast High1vay was not mu ch more than a dirt trail and there 1vas an old wooden bridge acro6s Allso Creek," she said. Coast Waste . Talks Slated I Regional Vnit to Discuss Crisis Measures A complete ceneral discussion on the sanitation crisis along the South Orange c.out will take place Monday afternoon among members and staff of Ule San Diego Area Regional Waler Quality Con- lrol Board. Tn a regular meeting which also in· eludes specific · new requirements on waste treatment and discharge in Laguna Beach, the boa.rd will evaluate the pro- blem of heavy burdens on all waste treat· ment in the south county. DiSCU5Sions on the local matters are ex- pected at 2 p. m. after the noon recesS, sav board aides. Specifically. the board '"'ill delve into measures being taken here to ease the crisis in wa.sJI!: treatment -a problem 9.'liich the '-regulatotf egeRCy ha!! bet'n "'atching closely for months. Recently board executives hal'e hinted that unless JocaTagencies can impro"e the problem. then the board might im- pose a freeze on new sewage connections -thus effecting a freeze on new develop- ment. Relief , say spokesmen for four area agencies. is on the way. Th& Dana Poinl Sanitary District - among the most overburdened -has plans to lease unused capacity in the v;aste treatment p I a n t in San Juan Capistrano. That pne-year lease would give the Dana Paint oper~tion a reprieve and ease the burden on its small plant. After that year, Dana Point. San Juan. OIAffl COAST DAILY PILOT ~I! COAST PUBLISKINCJ aw.J"AHV l•Htt N. W•el ,,..iUrd end hl>ll.riet Jacli: II:. C11rl•Y \'U PtuiMlll end G_.tl Mlnilw n.,.,., k .. .,;1 Edllw Tb011u11 A. Jt,111,pJ.in• 111-tillll E4110f Cl•1M H. L .. 1 a;~l.1..i '· N•ll ,_..11111 MlMM «•non l .. 11 .. IHdl Office 2lZ Forwt "-••nu• M11i1i1g •ddr•H: P.O. l o•'''· t2l51 5•• a.-... Offk.• 205 Nottk E ~"'!"• R•tl, '2l72 """"'"-cntl Mew· lJll WWI hf S!rtotl ....,,....," SMd'I• »U HtWpo/1 ..... levl/'d to1ntifsllon •111~; 11111 llllOI _,...,,,.. . , • I l\.1oulton Niguel and Santa l\.larguerita districts w1}I :)lave completed vast im- prOvements m the same San Juan plant. And when-that erpansiow is complete. all four districts would share the opera· lion of the facility. Dana Poinl's crisis was made more graphic recently when board members and aides noticed dark. clolldy efRuent being dumped into the. sea at the Dana Point outfall.• Immediate f o 11 ow u p investigation revealed that the Dana Point plant was working on an overloaded basis. Runaway Cai· l\ills Tlu·ee; 12 ~tirt ht Ohio T1·agedy .5' " YOUNGSTO\VN ... Ohio IUP!l A1 ' runav;ay auto plowed 500 feet throu~h a noon hour cro"'d today at a busy •'O\\'nto v;n int ersection and police said at least thr~ persons '"·ere ki lled and 12 in· jured. ''"'0 critically. Police and an investigator for the ~lahoning County Coro11er ·s Office fir sl reported that five persons '"'ere killed . but only three bodies were taken hospitals. About 12 ambulances were sent to the scene. \\'here police said the careening auto "mowed people dov.·n like grass." The accident occurred as hundr!di or persons, including worke rs on lunch and 1'eachers Stav J For Trai1ring Students in the Laguna Beach Unified &;l:!ool District "'ill be home early ~1on· dav. but teachers wi ll have to stay at school tor an in-ser\"1ce trai ning program . Provisions for m 1 n i m u m · ta y in· struction :\londay 1-vill find Thurston lntermediate School sending student ~ home at noon: thf high school al 12· 15 p.1n.: Affso school at 12:45 p.m.: and Top of iitie \Vorld and El ~•lorro School s, J ::ttl p.nl Bus schedules 11:111 be rcvi.sed to take students home at the earlie r hours shoppers. gathe'fed in the downto"'Tl. area. Police said the car ran up on the sidewalks and bounced off buildings as it careened "'ildly through the croll'd, "There was blood all over the sldev.·alks. ·• said Bill Clark. a ne.,..·i;man l\'ith station \VHOT and one of the first persons on the scene. "There: were se1·eral pairs of Pmpt y shoes lhat people had been knocked out of. There was also a "'ig on the "'idewalk . "Shopping bags had tom aparl sending merchandise all over the sidewalk and in the gutter." said Clark. The drivf'r of the car 1vas not injured !l'ld waS' immediately taken -into custody. He. Y.•as identified only as 30..year-old male Israeli Security Forces Kill Arab •• TEL AVIV ~APl -Israeli securi ty forces patrolling against Arab auerrillas. shot and killed an Arab man in a Ga za refugee ca1np today after he attempted lo flee, the military command reported. The SC1ldiers first fired 1varnings shots. a spokesman said. The Israelis also reported the arrest of three Israeli-Arabs for belonging to the El Falah guerrilla organization. One of the Arabs · was a stu- dent at the Technion. the Israeli institute of le<:hnology. Njtroglycei·me T1·ucl{ Flips Load on Higl1way CORNING 1 UP fl -A INC'k·ltailer rig loaded with nitro51ly('trine gtl Rnd land 1nines overturned earl\ ioda\ o n lnlf'rstAle S forcin~ clOsure Of 1 h~ highway about Sl!:\'eo mile5 BOulh o( tbiJ . Tehama County to'"'" The hiJ:thway patrol ':tld nll lr11ffic 111 the area v:as bein& diverted to n~arby Hii;:hy,•ay 99\V un!ll the veh1t ll' ca n be ren1oved fro1n lhe ro11d. A na\y ex·. ~oslvt-.s team was calltd to the acc1denl "™ A patrolman said there apptartd tn ~ httlc dan.iter or tin ''ICJllt)t.\on but the high.,..•ay was closed at 11bout 6 am. as • precaulionary measure. Tht trailtr portion of tbe \'ehicle:. o~n· ed b)' Ringsby Truck Lines of Oakland, roll ed over on the rain·sllck h.ighway t>ttv.'een coming and Orland. tht patrol ~!lid Authorities flrsl reporttd t.h e n1trog\ycrr1ne had been dumped on the hlih\11ay but later said the subst1nc,, 111hl<'h was In W form. remained in!!lde the trallC'r. The dnvcr o( the truck:, Louis Leim· bach. $4, Anlioch. suftcrtd minor in- 1urles . UCI Bus Service Set Transit System Free to Students By PATRICK BOYL.Ii: Of !!It Otllf ~1111 11111 Officials at UC lr\'ine. where almost 80 percent of I.he 7,000 stud'!nts· commute lO can1pu s, have decided to implement a free bus servi ce 10 t1lmmunities sur· rounding the school. The plan calls for a single bus. to be leased from the Pink Bus Line of Buena Park. driving a 4f>-nunule route each hoor during the ""'eek taking students to and from the campue. The bu s. under the proposed route . would tra\'el down ~1acArthur Boulevard to Coast High way: westerly on Coas~ Highway lo Jamboree Road and then to Balboa ·Island : along Bayside Drive back onto Coast Highway and al ong Dover Dri11e to Santa Ana Avenue : along Santa Ana to Mesa Drive : then return to the campus by "'ay of Palisades Road_ Robert Lawrence, assistant v·1 c e • chancellor for student affairS, said ~ay the unive rsity hopes to begin oper~tmg the lin e at the beginning of the ·winter quarter in January. . ifowiver. he noted that one maJor obstacle -funding -may put.a damper on the entire proposal. As planned, the university wou1d lease a 53-passenger bus Crom the Buena Pa~k firm for about $1.800 per month. This n~ure would include insurance and. a driver. with the bus company paymg maintenance costs. according to Joanne Simon. student affairs official in charge of studying the plan. The total cost could be pared down. \!rs. Simon noted. by selling advertising space mside and outside the vehicle to local merchants. This v.•ould bring in about $400 to $500 per month. she said. 25 petCent of which would go to Pmk Bus Line ov.•ners. To raise the estimated $8,400 needed to operate the line for the remainder of the school year. Lawrence said the univers_ity will sponsorl a bus ride and recepbon Nov. 22 for city and Chamber of Com· merce officjals from communities sur· rounding the campus. Student and faculty organizations will also be asked to take part in the funding, he added: . UCI officials hope to tonv1DCe the various merchant associations that more studenl.5 v.oold patronize their members if transportation 11·ere made available. The student government at UCI has not yet allocated an y money for the line . although Lav.irence said . the ~tudenl Senate is considering helping 1v1th the funding. He said he was skeptical about ob- taining money by charging students to ride the bus. 'Other universities which had implemented bus lines charging a fare. he noted. had abandoned them · when studenl!i would not use the service . He also noted that if a [are is Charged. the line would be subjfct to the regula- tion -and the red tape -of the Public Utilities Cominission. If the line proves a suct.-ess, Lawrence added , the stud ent go \'ernment may seek ~n increase in the present $7·per-quarter student acti vity fee to support the line. Student officials point oot that even 1t the wcrease in fee were only $1 pet quarter, comm titing students could still Have by riding the bus and not parking oo: campus. Parking permits ctsl $9 per quarter. 1t'i11 State l'icto1·y Chicanos Push for Mo1·e Seats hi 011gress .Camp £6CRAJ\!Etl.'TO .J.Af P.lexican- Americlns, frt3h trolTr ry in ·state Senate redistricting:, began pushing today for more seats in Calilomla's expanded 43-seat con_gresslonal delegation. Herman Sillas, a Los Angeles attorney . said tbe legislature so fai-has ignored the concept of a Mexican-American districl among the five new seats in the U.S. House which California gets under the 1970 census. The state now ha s 38 seats. ··1 think the legislature is more vulnerable here than in any other place because you gain five seals," said Sillas. spokesman for an ad hoc riP cal!M "Coalition for Fair Reapportionment.,. "'This is clear evidence of their callousness lo.,..·ard the whole problem," he said. • The Senate reapportionment b 111 cleared its key test, the Senate itself, on •· 33-2 vote Thursday. It is expected to pass the Assembly basically lnlact and Meteorite H LIS Dia1nonds CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) -A three-pound meteorite which slam· med through a thick ament-tile roof of a Finnish farm in August has been round to conta i n diamonds. only the sixth such meteorite to be found. ii \\'as an- nounced tad.av bi;i lhe Smithsonian Cl'nter for shOrt-'lived phenomena. The cente r! said scientists have confinned the meteorite is a rare type· knov.·n as ureilite and contains tiny, almost microscopic diamonds. The amount of diamond material. ho"'evPr. v.•as ito small it "'as essentially 1~·orthless from a com· mercial point or vie""'• the center .. said. probably get signed by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Approval came following a negotiated compromise between Democratic and Republican leaders in the upper house despite allegations by a dissident Democrat that the bill ""'as illegal • because of the new ll.1exican.American district. f\ "This tAIJ is unconstitutional, biased and discriminatory," said Sen. Lawrence \Valsh (D-Huntington Park). whose district was squeezed eastward into heavily Republican Orange County to help make room for the new district - the 20th Senate district. • &th parties had pledged to back a Mexican-American seat. Chicano groups had pressed for as many as three seats in the Senate but Sillas said, "politically, it's probably the best we could anticipate.'' i\fore than tv.,o-thirds of the nearly 500,000 residents of the disti-iCf are Mex· ican·Artlerlcan anel lt will have a Democratic voter registration of some 70 percent. It would be difficqlt. political observers say. for anyone but a ll.1exclan- American Democrat to win a seat ""'hen it first comes up for election in 1974. No congressional reapportionment plan has emerged from committee yet, but SiJJas said the proposals under con· sideration in the Senate and Assembly lg· nore the question of a Mexican·American district so far. None f1f the fil'e new seats would be in hea vily :\lexican·American at'eas but one under consideration in the Assembly is heavily black . The new seats primarily "·ould go to the gro\\'ing su burban areas. The on I y ~1exican·Amerlcan con- gre.ssman in California ls Democrat Ed"·ard Roybal of Los Angeles. Sillas said Roybal has been ''as ef· fective as his district allows him to be " It includes some black areas and white liberal regions as well as part of East Los Angeles. 1 An estimated three million Californians arP Mexican·Amerlcan . Slllas said. SHERRILL MAKES A HOUSE A HOME Here ore the mo~ings of 1 room you 'll love to live in! Sof11s and chairs so f1 shion1bly covered, so htndsomely d1 si9ned! A joy to see! An eiceptionalty lar9e selection of fine fabrics ind styles to clioose from at very rea~onable prices. Sherrill is unsurpass~d in qual ity and design. St op in todoy and view th is feb ulous collection of fine upholstered furniture. . DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HERITAGE NlWPOlt STOU 0'1N fllDA't ,.IL f NEWPORT BEACH . 1727 W•1tcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prof"sional Interior Oe1igner• '\v•ilable-AID Pll•ll• fill ft11Mitt1f Or111fC Ce•11ty-.J41·12lJ • -- LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hlghwty Phone: 494-<lll 1 • • I I • .. " I • • • La.guna Beaeh ' EDIT I ON . Today'• F,!!aal N.Y. Stoeb ' . VOL M, NO. 271, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGE$ ORANGE COUNTY, ·CA LIFORNIA FRI • AY, NOVEM B ·12, '1971' \ TEN CENTS . Group Demands . San On~f re Plant Shu down By JORN VAL TERZA Of tlte Diiiy Pit.I ll1H Another .. aftershock" of fast February's earthquakes touched the San Onofre Nuclear Generating station this week -strongly worded allegations by the 2,000.member People's Lobby that the reactor's cooling system is "unsafe." And coupled with the charges came an afficial ·Jegal document asking that the State Public Utilities Commission shut down the plant and conduct hearings within 30 days to determine the safetr_fil_ the system which keeps the reactor cool. Such a fequest is unprecedented, a top- * * * Edi son Co. Denie s All 4.Jlegatio fis Top-level officials of the Southern California Edison Company were quick to answer the "dare" of the People's Lobby this week, steadfastly stressing that the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station is a safe facility. · In a statement usually reserved for lesser officials of the ulility, Edison Board Chairman and Chief Executive Of· ficer Jack Horton said "if there were any quesUons about the San Onofre Unit's safety it would not be allowed to operate." Alluding to the tests of the reactor cool·. Ing system in Idaho six months a•o. Horton stre.s&td that the tests were "by n3 means an accurate representation of the San Onofre system. "The model used for the tests was so small -lhe size of a teapat -that it could not be presumed kl reproduce the performani;e of any, full«ale syatem," he said. He added that the tests were called for to determine if anything could be added to make existing failsafe systems -even better. He said that on the basis of all the in· vestigations through the year "we do not think any modifications will be required at San Onofre."· A report on the subject including chapters specifically releated to the cool· ing system. will be filed with the Atomic Energy Commission on Jan. 1, 1972, he .,;.. "'" "' Horton explained ~lhal emergency i;ystems at San Onofre are "overlapping, and it is inconceivable that au the 15ystems could break down at the same time." Casting further doubt on the system's asserted failure in the tests, the ex· ecutive officer said that the Idaho ex· periments assumed a sudden and com· plete rupture within the cooling system. "In ;ictua\ operation even the siiJrhtest leak would trigger a warning and im· mediate remedial measures." As a point of clarification. the coolini;t i;ystem involved in the tests is divorced from · the segment of the generating operation using sea water. Seawater is pumped from the open ncean to cool conventional steam generators, then dumped back through an outfall . ,,. A gea\ed water supply separate from the ocean operation is that which is used to keep the reactor cool. That water is radioactive. Horton , in an official statement, reiterated the company's declaration that the nuclear generating industry has a "perfect safety record." "No one has ever been killed er even injured in a nuclear accident at any com· merclal power station." he said. Orange Coast "'eatlae r Winter's drizzles will most like- ly disappear tonight with mostly sunny sk.Jes forecast for the week· end. High will range from 55 on the coast to 65 inland. Lcws will range from 45 to 55 respeclively, INSIDE TODA V A funny thing happened to Ora nge Counly'i Carl Lind- strom 0 11 hi11 wa y to a pro-foot- ball career. There i& a 11tory and picture! about 1t 011 Page 23 of toda1(s \Vee kender. IMlllll u Muf\111 l"u1"1111 •• C•Ufonll. I H•lttn-1 Ht'A 11-l CHc~lllf Ull I Ofqe• c..,_,. I Cl1111111.-»•U •11l.ur1~l1 tf.tJ C•'"kl n IJ!Yll l"lrttr ,. Crl,1'"'4 Jt IHl'tl 16-lt ONilll H1!1tt1 t lltct M..-tllfl 1 .. 11 D!Wn:" I ftttvllllll 21 l.ilttrllf 1"111 6 .,... fhNllrl tl•:lf •111t"1lfl"'t11I tt-H Wtllltfr 4 fl!t11•11ct "" #l'"tll't Mtttl It.It --It W.,1111 HNI ,,J AM 1..,,,.n Ii #tt11111dtr l)olt Mlvltl .. ,, level official af the PUC told the DAILY PILOT late Thursday. "l don't remember ever having to decide on such a reques~. said the PUC's Southern Ca Ii f o r.n i a Representative Leorfard Ptit{erson. He siid tlfe ·nrst-step at U?e· PUC level would ·be to determine if the agency, in· deed,· has jurisdiction over the "nuclear aspects of the plant operation." He hinted that tbe issue might be relay«!.Jnstead, Jo .... Jb.e A.Wm~ Ed!era Commission, which already has asked the two utilities operating·the plant (Southern Fi g hting Like ' Cats and Dogs It's simply a question of who struck the first blow -the cat or the dog. Laguna Beach police know the rest cf .the tale, an incident which left two Griffith Way residents with sore jo.ws and one of them with a dog bite on-uie arm. Police said Timothy Anderson, o( 603 Griffith Way, saw a large German shepherd chasing his cat. He went to the aid of his pet and threw a claw hammer at the at· tacking dog. He missed . The dog's owner, for whom authorities are still looki ng, struck Anderson with his fist, knocking him to the ground. William Cooper, Anderson's step-father, went to his son's aid. He was knocked to the ground by the dog awner's com· panion. The dog then bit Cooper and fled with his two human friends. Ecuador Seizes 5 More American Fishing Boats SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The Ecuadorian government seized five more tuna clip- pers' today. only hours after levying $140,000 in fines and releasing five athers. The Ceryl Marie, l\.1ary S .. Endeavor, Eastern Pjij:.ific and Royal Pacific were california Edison and San Diego Gas and Electric) to file detailed reports on lhe cooling system. The allegations by the Peoples' Lebby were aired Wednesday Ut a l,.os Angeles press qinference. Late Thursday, the gmup's executive director, Edwin Koup~J Jr. to1d 1he DAI· LY PlLOT that Edison official~ should be "eager" to defend -under ·oath -lhelr plant's safety in an open PUC hearing. One basis for the Lobby's demands, KoupaJ said. is the f.tilure of the mockup of the syslem during tests earlier this year at a testing laboratory in Utah. "But we're not just talking about the test and the failure . "What we're saying here is, Jpok, gang, :if the plant IJ5 so good and oper'aling in the area or· truth and corporal• responsibility, then · you (the utilities) won't mind at all appearlng.-under oath and proving your case." Koupal said. He added that the utilities "can't stand the area of truth because they have ex· isled on half statements and innuendo." The group Koupa\ represents haS 11 of· fices and representation in 28 counties, he said. ''We specialize not in letter-writing campaigns, but in pressing iMues we fetl strongly about through the courts and the rest of the legal systerfl," he said. The issue ovei the cooling system is not a new one. Nor is the question of the plant's vulnerability ta earthquake danger. The PUC itself granted approval of the utilities' plans for two new reactors at San Onofre contingent on proof that the twin reactors and the existing one are capable of withstanding 1 major quakes without damase. Soon afterwards the AEC asked for Air Force • P lane l(ills 10 • Ill Lit_tle being taken to the port of Salinas at last report, August Felando, general manager ,· of the American Tuhaboat Association · 1 here, said. ..-... .. ( About 65 crewmen plus five l!ikippers were aboard the tuna cllpi)ers, all of which were from here, he said. The skippers radioed they were being taken by the LC61, the Quito, which seiz. ed four American apd one Canadian tuna seiner Wednesday, Felando said. The Denise Marie of San Diego was -seized in the first group and was released without paying a fini after showing it had acquired a license. Its skipper was quoted by Felando today as saying he heard the LC6l skipper say he planned "to go out there and get another batch." The lat.est seizures occurred 50 to 60 miles off the coast of Ecuador. In ad· dition, the Trinidad, one of the boats seiz.. ed earlier, was intercepted, boarded and released after its i;kipper told the Ecuadorian! It already paid a fine. Also released without paylng "a finl aft.er showing it had a lk:ense was the Canadian vessel Atlantic Patton. The $140,000 in fine& was paid by the Trinidad, The Venturaua and tbe Blue Meridi1a. Hospita l Gets ' $25,009 Gift; 'Saved Life' A patient whose life was saved during a recent stay in the intensive care .uplt at Soutb Coast community Hospital has ex· pressed his gratitude by donating $25,000 toward e'xpansion of the hospita.1'1 in- tens,l~e care facilities. The gift wu •nnouneed by John Weld, chairman-Of-the bospitalLcurrenLu· panslon fund drive, which now l.! one- foorth of 'the way toward Its •t mlllk>n goal. Since the kick-off date in October, the fund has received '250,000 in cash and' pledges. Weld uid. :I'l1t donor of the 125,000 g~t wishes to remain anonymoua, Weld added, but er-edits On. Peter Bremwt11 and J•Y Young with saving his life during his re. cent seriou.' lllne~. A new, 21-bed Intensive care unit Is planned under the expansion program, along with a total Increase in bed capaci· ty from 18.'I to 268, 1 new emergency suite, a IO.bed coronarY care uni~, more operating rooms and enlJrged laboratory facilities, amona: other improvements. . " ..... , \ . ... ... .. • •• .. DAILY l"ILOT St11f l"hol1 A tito Pltittattte ts Paul Valenzuela climbs steep Laguna Beach hillside Thursday after attaching tow cable to car operated by Edith Adele Knapp , 43 of 2301\ Dolphin Way. It plunged down the south embankment to Summit Way. She suffered a cut forehead and swollen ankle. The car had stalled on the descent. It went out of control as she attempted to restart it and plunged about 30 feet. She refused medical aid. Height Code Ac_tion Due Laguna Planners Set Hearing 0 1i Hig h R ise P~n By BARBARA KREJBJCH 0 1 11M 0.11'1 l"tlot Sl1ff Amendments that will add the new as. foot building height .limit to appropriate gections or the Laguna Beach zoning ardinance will be the subject of a public hearing be£ore the Planning Commisi1\on at 7:30 p.m. Monday. The hearing is the first formal step in placing the height limit. adopted in the initiative election of Aug. 3, into the city code. Following a second hearing, the amendments will move to \he city council for further hearings and adoption. This series o! official actions, when completed, will · serve as respanse to charges tluit adoption of a height limit initiative w<13 illegaJ under Calltornia :r.on. ing laws requiring public hearings. Fol.JO'i¥ing-a continued-public-hearing Monday night on the land use element of the General Plan, commissioners are ex· pected to adopt moditk:atlom In der\!ity provis"lons, discussed in recent meetings. These would include .zoning controls lo reduce the 19llO popolatlon goal from the proposed 28,000 to 20,000, rejection of pro- posed high density zoning in the Third Street, Canyon Acres Drive, Top or the World and Blutbird Canyon areas and deferral of proposed village center plans for Boat canyon and Bluebird Canyon. tn other a c t I o n ~1onday, the com. mis.,,lon Will continue Its dtfe:rred hearing en a request Crom Loren Haneline, owner or Vacation Village, 847 S. Coast Highway, to reduce by two 1mlts a pro- • posed addition for which a variance was granted earlier, while encroaching into side yards. The eight-unit addition approved in the original variance, wotJld ccnflicl with the new height limit, Haneline told the com· mission, so a plan revision was necessary. A second continued matter will be Ernest L. Schroeder's recurrin~ariance application for permission lo build a 12· unit apartlhent complex al 259 Lower Cliff Orive, on split zoned property, without regard to the zone boundary line. Bea~h Gets Aide He'll B e a Community Designer When Laguna Beach city councilmen u1hoi'ized a new position for the Depart· mcnt of Planning and Deve opmenl, its definition -"urban designer" -cau~d . the councilman to quip, "Couldn't we call It aomelhfng else? That hardly seems flt· ting for a community that's trying lo malnlaln its vJ\lage atmosphere , .. " . Planning Director Wayne -Moody ex· plained, "Unfortunatl!ly, that 's what col· Jegcs call them . . but we ~an try to do something about it when we !ind one and bring him here." True to hi!1 word, ?ttOOdy announced this week t.httt "the position or Com~ munlty Designer (formorly called Urban Designer) has been filled ." The 1uccessfu.I applicant is ThOmas C. • - Howard of Jtunllngton Beach, 2S-year.old graduate of the University a f Pennsylvania, withe1 degree fn arch1tec· turt, who has· completed three years o! active 15UVlte with lhe U.S. Navy Reserve. According to Moody, the new position will "fill a need for more detailed pre. planning of i;peclfic areM, better vlsu11l communication for staff and community alike, and development of sound Im· plemt!ntatlon ,pmgrams. '' . There sel!:ms tlttle doubt that Howard wtll have a ctrtaln Visual lmpect on City Hall. He Is 6 reel 4 incl}es tall and weighs 210 .poilld•. r.8_<fore beglMlng hl•<luU" Dtc. I, he v.:111 Journey to Se8tlkl to getfnarried and take a brier honeimoon, Moocb' said. • detailed reP9f'!s ~Y. the utilities on the encl06ed syst~m which uses water to keep the reactor temperature at a safe. level. · Explaining the request AEC spokesmen were cautious in discussing aspects of danger at the facility at San Onofre. stressing that the federal agency's restrictions are already ex t r em e Ir. severe. They .added that the AEC request was not ·intended lo label the San Onofre system unsafe. Instead, • said AEC spokesmen, tho agency_w_ants to know lf the system could! be improved. Crash Roel{_ 1 Survives As Flames Sweep ' Craft LITTLE ROCK AU\ FOl\CI: BASE, Ark. (AP) -An Air Force C130E cargo plane crashed and burst Into flames ihortly after lakeoff from Llttle 'Rock Air Force Base about 7 fl .m. today,~ 10 of the 11 crewmen aboard. Maj. William R. Worth, base ·~in· formation officer, said one crewman gurvived, but was Jn critical condition and was being flown to an Army. hospital in San Antonio, Tex., for treatment of bums. Five of the 10 killed in the flaming crash of-the four-engine plane were Iden- tified by Col. Richard J . Gibney, com- mander of the 3141h Tactical Airlift Wing at the base. They were Capl Laurance 'F. Asher, inspector navigator of Fort Wasbin'gton, N.Y.; M. Sgt. 'Orville D. Gearheart, m. atructor ·flight engineer from . 4berdeen, S.D.; Capt. Jan B. Raycraft, instructor pilot of Los Angeles; 2nd ~t. Michael W. Hodge of Salem, Ill., who ~as a trainee on temporary duly from the 3645th Stu· dent Squadron at Laughlin AFB, Tei.; and 1st Lt. David C. Moule of Stockton. Cali(., a trainee from the 58t.h Military Airlift Squadron at"Robbins AFB, Ga. The survivor was identified as S. Sgl. Louis F. Hribar of LR AFB. He wa1 thrown clear of the wreckage. Gibney said na cause for the crash has been determmed, but said Msj. Gen. Davld I. Liebman, vice commander of the 12th Air Force, would head an ac. cident investigation board that will con- duct an investigation. WOrth said the plane was leaving on a routine training flight ·and that it had gained some altitude before It crashed to • the left of the runway and burst into flames. He said lbe plane carried 40,000 gaUons cf fuel. r Worth said he did not know what altitude the plane reached "but it must have had a little," Col. William Davis, base fire marshid, said the plane, assigned to the 112nd Tac-- ti.cal Airlift Squadron, was engulfed in flames by the time fll'emen arrived. Fire scorched an area of ground about 100 yards by 200 feet. He said tbe plane Skewered about after impact and was headed at a slight angle taward the dlrectioa from whlcb lt bad taken off. The only recogniuble remains of the plane .was the tail section. A.W: P ahnberg, Dies, Rites Set Saturday Services Will be held •l 2 p.m. Saturday In McCormick Laguna Beach Ch•pel for Andrew W. Palmber&, of Laguna Hills, who died Wednesday it the age or 85. Mr. Palmberg. who made hfs home at 281E Avenlda Majorca, Is survived by a son. Arnie W. Palmbera of Houston, Tex., two grandchildren, four 1 r a.at. grindchlldren and a daughttr·ln-law, Elizabeth Stephens.of Lo111 Beach. Burial will be at FairbaV'tn Memorial Park. • % DAILY PILOT SC Friday, Novtmbtr 12. 1'171 Old :-Lagu11a Fo1· Fiesta By FREDERICK SCHOEf\IERL 01 1M 0.HY Piiot Sl•H It \viii be one hundr~ years ago Sun· . day that the Thurston famil y settled in Aliso Canyon -giving birth to Laguna Bueti and the surrounding communities. And just what Laguna was like back in those early days will be pr~sented Sunday by thl!: Laguna Beach Community Historieal Society Crom 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at Ben Brawn's Restaurant -just a few hundred yards from the old Thurston homestead. lncludtd in the cenleMial celebration prograM ts'lunch .. talks on early Laguna by old timers and relatives of the Thurstons and walking tours to the site of the Thurston home. Cost of the lunch is $3.:lO and seating v.·ill bf: on a first come, first served basis. Bea Whittlesey, who first came to Laguna Beach in 1906, remembered Joe Thurston as somelhiiig of a vegetable maa. phllospher. historian· and babysitter alh rolled into one. "fo.-fost of the people came down to Laguna only for the summer and Joe y,.ould make his rounds with his vegetables. During the winter. he \vould have to sell his goods in Santa Ana or San Diego." she recalled. --·- ' • "At the age of e.ight." she said. "Joe's ranch in Aliso Canyon seemed very large to me and produced things I had ne\'et heard of. His lemon cucumbers Y.'ere my fa\'orite and we ale them like apples. The CIRCLE MARKS THE SPOT WHERE JOE THURSTON LIVED Historical Society Will Hold Centennial Celebration corn and watermelon were plentiful in the summer and always tasted sweeter of ourselves when hilting atound.'' she than products bought in.Los Angel~:"-said. • . fo.1iss Whittlesey spent quite a bit or Thurston. l\11ss. Whittles~y remem· time on Thurston 's ranch when her · bered. -was something of a phtlos~her and mother had to go to Los Angeles. "He would spend h?u.rs talking with her would pick me up when his daily route mother about religion and the slate of the was finished and take me to the ranch. world. He was also the man "1vho told .us l\1rs. Green , his houskeeeper, who had a!l there was .to kno_w about Lag una. its two children my age, took care of me. history, social life. future a _n d "IIe had a number of different animals drawbacks." . . . on the ranCh and we spenl much or our Laguna. she said. back during the first time ridifli horses. He taught us a lot decade of .the cenlury wasn't much mo~e about rattlesnakes and how to take care than a few cottag~s along the ~la1a ·Beach, ·\\'ith a couple or other houses near Sleepy Hollow and . Victoria Beach. "From Victoria on south to Thurston's there wasn't a thing except hills and a lot of rattlesna kes." i\liss \\' hi t t Ie se y remarked. "Most of Ahso Canyon \\·as a swamp near the ocean. There was a lot of SY>'amp gra ss and we always enjoyed che \\'ing ii. Pacific Coast Highway was not much more than a dirt trail Bnd there was an old "·ooden bridge .across Aliso Creek," she said. Coast Waste Talks Slated Regional Unit u;·:Dii'cuss 'Cri~is Memures ... - UCI Bu.s Service Set Transit System Free to Students By PATRICK 80\'LE 01 l~t OlllY' Pilot $1111 Officials at UC Irvine.-\\'here almost 80 percent of the 7,000 students commule to ca111pus, have decided to implement a free bus se rvice to co1nn1unities sur* rounding the school. The plan calls for a single bus, to be leased from the Pink BU$ Linc or Buena Park. ·driving a 45-minute route each hour during the week takin g students to tmd from the ca mpus. If the li ne prove! a success, Ui\\'rence added , the student government may seek an increase in' the present $7-per*Quarter student activity fee to support the line. Student offltjt>Js point out that even i( the increase in fee 1vere only $1 per quarter. comm uting stud ents could st1U saye by ridlng the bus and not pa rking'on campus. Parliing permits cost $9 per quarter . Wi•• State Victory Chicanos Push £01· More Seats. i11 Co11g1·ess Ca1np The bus. under the proposed route. \vould travel down ~1acArtbur Boulevard to Coast High\\•ay: westerly on Coast High\\•av lo Ja1nboree Road and then to Balboa 'island : along Bayside Drive back: onto Coast Highway and along Dover Drive to Sanla Ana Avenue: along Santa S.4CRA.~EN1'0 <AP l -1t1exican-probably get signed by Gov. Ronald Ana to f\1esa Drive : then return to the Americans. fresh from .a vic[i)ry in state Reagan. campus by way of Palisa~e3 Road.. ~ Senate redistricting. began pushing today Approval came following • negotiated Robert Lawrence. assistant v 1 c e • chancellor for student affairs. said today for more seats in Califrn;nia!s-expanded compro1nise between Democratic and. the university hopes lG begin operating 43-seal congrej,sional deJega(ion. Republican leaders in the upper house rhe line al the beginning of the.-winter Herman s1frls. a Los Angeles allorney. de~pite allegations by a dissident Quarter in January. _ said the legisl8tufe 50 far -has ignored the Dem~rat that thr bill 11•as illegal However. he oote<I fha{ one rua1or because of the ne\\' il1exlcan-Amerlcan obstacle_ funding _ may put a damper concept of a Mexican-American district district. on the entire proposal. · among 1he five new seats in !ht-U.S. "This bill is unconstitutiona l. bia.sed As planned. the university v.·ould lease House which California .gets under the and discrlminalorv:· said sen. Lawrence a 53-passengcr bus from the Buena Pa~k 1970 census. The slate now has 38 seats. \\'alsh ID-Huntii1gton Park), whose firn1 for about SI.BOO per month. This 1 district \.\'as -ueezed eastward into d •·1 think ihe legis ature ls more "'l fi11.ure would include insurance an . a hea\·i]y Re publica n Orange County to dri\'er. \\'ilh the bus company paying ,·ulnerable here than in an y other place help make room for the new district - rnaintenance rosts. acco rdi ng lo Joanne because you gain five seat~." said Sillas. the 20th Senate district. Simon. student aHairs official in charge spokesman for an ad hoc group called Both parties had pledged to back 8 .. Coalition for Fair Reapportionment." of studying the plan . "'l'his is clear evidence of their ~lexican-American Seat. The total cos t could be pared doii•n. d th hot bl ·• Ch••ano g•o .. ~ had p••s--• fo• as II . d .... ina callousness IO\\'llt' e. w e pro em. '-• U t'J " ~ , :\lrs. Si mon noled, by se ing a ve, •lSu-eo he said. many as three seats in the Senate but space Inside and out~ide the ve~cle ~ The Senate reapportionment b 111 Sillas said. "politically. it's probably the local merchants. This would brmg in · 1 t t"· Se t ·15 If besl v.·e could anticipate." about S400 to S500 per month, she sai d. 2.l cleared its key es • ue na e 1 e . on uld ' P. k Bus t 3.1*2 vole Thursday. It is expected to ~lore than two-thirds of the . nearly oercent ol which ivo go 0 in pass the Assembl y basically intact-and 500.000 reside·nts of" the district arc ~lex-Line owners. · To raise the esti niated $8.400 needed to ican-American and it will ha\'e a · d r th Democratic voter regist ration or some 70 operate the hne for the remain er 0 e percent. It would be difficult. political school year. La1vrence .said lhe univers_ity Me• ~or; f n observers sa y. fcr anyone but a Mexcian· 11'i!1 sponsor a bus ride and reception 1.-t::: l>U:::: American Democrat to 1vin a seat when it l\ov. 22 for cit,· and Chainber or Com- merce officials· from communities sur* d lirst comes up for election in 1974. rounding the campus. Student and facult y ff US Dia.11l011 S ~o congressional reapportionment plan organizations will also be asked to take has emerged fron1 committee yet, but part in the fund ing. he add~d. . , CAillBRIDGE, )lass. t t:PT) _ A Sillas said the proposals under COO* UCI offici als-hope to convince the three-pound meteorite which slam* sideration in the Senate and Assembly ig· various merchant associations that more med through 8 thick cement-tile nore the queslion or a ri.-texlcarr-American St,,dents ,,.oold nofronize their members districl so far. ' .. .. .,.. roof of a Finnish farm in August if transportation were made available. has been fou nd lo en n ta in None of the five ne\.\' seats 1vould be in The student goverrunent al UCI has not dianlonds, only the sixth such heavil~ \lexicijn-American areas but one yet allocated any money for the line . meteorile lo be found, it was an-under consideration in the Assembly is although Lawrence said lhf' student nouncf'd tod av bv the Smithsonian hea\·ily black. The new seats primarily Senate is considering helping with the CC'nler for shOrt-"liy!'cl phenom!'na. would go to !he grov.•ing suburban areas. funding . The center said scieotists hal'e The on I Y ~fe)dcan·An1erican co~ He said he was steptica~ about ob-confinne d the meteorite is a rare gressman in California is Democrat A· ~in~,te-.&eneral discussion on the sanit«iDn' ~ along the South Or~~_ CoasfN;iIJ i,.~ place Monday af~~· among 'n'itmbers and staff or the Sin Diego Area Regional Water Quality Con- d • mpleted vat:l!J1$- ~I~-1_, and: Santa Margue~~ talning m~ey by charging students to t)'J>C knoy,·n as ureilite and contain) Ed\\·ard Roybal of Los Angeles. ride the bus. Other universities which had . · d. d "JJ-• sa<·d Roybal has' """n ··as ef· r tiny .talmost m1croscop1c Jamon s .,. ..,,. . UC<: graphie recently v.·hen board members implemented bus linet charginJ a are. The a1nount of diamond material, fective as his 9istrict allo\vs him to be." and aideS noticed dark, clmld)'. effluent he noted , had .11ban4onedt JMITi twhen ho\.\·ever. \.\·as so small it was It includes some black areas and white Pto . · e San Juan j>?ant. Arid ~ n--~erp.anslo1t is complete. being dumped into the sea at the Dana students would not use the se(vice. essentiallyJ \\'Orthless from a com-liberal regions as \\'ell as part oL East P01·nt o"lfall. He alw noted that if a fare is charged. ~-1 all four districts would share th'-opera- tion of the facility. " h I mercial point or \'1ew . !1..:: center Los Ange es. Immediate r o 11 o w u p investigation the line would be subject lo t e regu a- h --• ta of '"-p bl ' said . An estimated three millio n Cal ifornian!f •evealed that the Dana Point plant wa! tion -and t e n :u pe -uK" u 1c ' · are f\Iexican:-American. Si!las said. * \\'Oi'king on·an overloaded basis. 1_u'.'.'.'ti~lit~ie'.'''...'.:°'~mm~~i~ss:•oo::· ________ .':::==============--':::..:-':::..:-----'-'-'----'-trol Board. Dana Point 's crisis was made more Jn a regular meeting which also in- cludes specific new requirements on waste treatment and discharge in Laguna Beach. the board will evaluate the pr~ R · c JZ • 11 Th ~~:::~~~:v;:,~~~~~~~1~auwastetccat-unaway ar '-I S ree; Discm:slons on the loco ! matters an! ex- pected at 2 p.m. after the noon recess. say board aides. 12 H. t · oh· T d Specifically. the bo3'd will delve into _ ur JD 10 rage y measures being taken here to ease the ...., crisis in ~·aste treatment -a problem t I) v.·hich. the regulatory agency has been YOUNGSTO\\'N Oho <UP!l -A watching closely for months\/ . 1 • • 1 Recently bo8rd executives have hinted runaway auto plo\\ed 500 feet throu11h a thal unless local agencies can improve noon hou~ cro1vd. today a~ a ~usy the problem. then the board might im* rlowntown 1ntersect1on and. police satd .at pose a freeze on new se\\"age connections least three pe.r~ons were killed and 12 1n* _thus effecting a freeze on new develop-JUrecl. two crtflcal!y. menl. • Police and an investigator for the Relief. say spokesn1en fnr four area ~lahonillg County Coroner 's Office first agencies. is on the y,•a~. reoorted 1har five persons v•e re killed . The Dana Pnint" Sanita ry District -but only thret' bodies \1·ere taken among the most O\'erburdened -has hospital s. plans to lease unused cap.acity in the About 12 an1bulances \1·cre sent lo the \\'8.Ste trealml'nt p I a n f. 111 San Juan scene. where police said the careening Capistrano. t1u1 0 "mo\\•ed people do\1·n like grass ." That OAe-year least \\'0111d give the The accident oc curred as hundreds or Dana Point operation a reprieve and ease persons including \VOrkcrs on lunch and the burden on its small plan\. ' After that. year. Dana Point. San Juan . OIAN•t COAST DAILY PILOT .OJINIGI CO.Uf Pl.lllUHlNG C:OMPAH\" Ro\.eri N. W1•• Teachers Stay ~For T1·aining Students in the Laguna Beach Unified shoppers. gathered in the downtown area. Police said the car ran up on the sidewalks and bounced off buildings as it careened "'lldly through the crowd. "There was blood all over the sidewalks." said B~l Clark. a newsman with station \VHOT a d one or the first llt'rsons on the see . "Thert: "''ere l'C\'era! pairs of e1npty lshoes that•people 1i.1rl been knocked out of. There was also ;i \\·ig on the \1•ide\valk. "Shopping bags had tom apart .sending merchandise all over the side\valk and In the gutter.'' said Clark. The driver of the ca r wa s not injured <lnd 1vas immediately taken into cust ody. }le wa s identified on!y as 31l-year-old male. Israeli Forces Security f(ill Arab Pr•loftllt and Plll>Llll'lff' J1c.\: R. Curlrt School District \\'ill be home early illon-TEL AVIV (APl - Israeli security day. but teachers '"ill ha ve to stay al forces patrolling agaffist Arab i\)errillas. VU P!Dldtllt _,,. GtMt•I Mwter 111011111 K11•il Etilllr TJi0,,.•i A. Murphi110 ~nig ng Ed,~r Oat!ts H. lee1 Ric:h1rd P. Nill I Anr1i.111 M1111t1,.. 1:a1111r1 a..,9'1• lffclt Office ii? fo111t A¥111u• M 1i1i119 •drlr1u: r.0.1, .. ••&. '26St 5•• Cl1111n,. OHie• iQS North El C1111i111 R•1I, '2612 Ottief OHSut C:ntll ,,. ..... :IJ& Wnt arr S~t ~ 6Ht11: »" "''""'°'' aowi.v1rd '1111'11,,.IOll ••Kii: 1111.5 ... ell aw11<11Ud sc hool for an in-scrl'ice training program. shot and killed an Arab man in a Gaza Provisions for m i n i m u m. d ay in· refugee camp today after he attempted struction iltonday "·ill find Thurslon to flt:e. the military command reported. Intermediate School sending students The soldiers first fired warnings shots. home at noon : the hi,1!.h school at 12·1s.,... a spokesman said. The Israelis also p.m.; Aliso sc hool at 12:45 p.m.: and Top reported the arrest of three Israeli-Arab! of lhe World ancl El i\·lorro Schools. 1:30 for belonging to the El Falah gut:rrilla p.m. organization. One of the Arabs was a stu· Bus .S(·h~dules will be revised 10 take dent al the Technio n. the Israeli institu te -.1 udenL~ hon1e :it the carhcr hours. of technology. Nitroglyce1·iI1e T1·uck Flips Load on Highway COR:'\ING !UPll -A truck·lrailer rtg loadt:d l\'lth nitrogl)cerine gol and land mines overtumed early loday o n Interstate 5 f-0r<'1n~ clo!iure of ll'te hlgh"·ay about SC\'rn m1le!i "°uth of this Tehama County tuwn". Tht> highway palrol s111d all tr:1Ulc in lht 11rf:ta \\'a~ being di\trled to neArby l-l!gh\\•ay 99\\' Lmli•• thc \'<'hlclr c•n be removtd from· th<' road A n!.tvy ex· ph'JSi\'tS ltflm wa~ called lo tht &ccldent scene. A patrolman said thi!rr ;:ippeared to ~ little dan&er of :in ~plosion bul the highv.•ay was closed at About 6 J1 .m. as 11 precautionary measure. The traUcr l)Ortion of the vehicle. OY.TI* rd by Ringsby Truck Lines o( Oakland, rolled ove r ~\.rain-slick highway bc:t~'t:en cefr.nin& and'\Orland~ the patrol said. Aulhoritlts fir st reported the nilro~lyel"rlnt h11d bern dumped on the highwa y but later $Bid the sub!ilance, y,·hich was in gel form. remained inside the traller. The drh·er of the truck. 1A1.1is Ltlm· bach. $~, Antioch, suffered minor in· juries. . ----~-· --.-..-- Here are the mtikings of a room yo u'll love to live in! Sofas and chairs so fashionably eovered , so handsomely designed! A joy to see! An exceptionally ltirge ~lec.tion of fine fabrics end styles to choose from et very retisonable prices. Sherrill is unsurpassed in ~uelity and desi9n. Stop in today and view this fabulous collection of fine upholstered furniture. DEALERS FOR: HENREOON-OREXEL-HERITAG~ HrwPOlT STOii OPIN PllDAT 'TIL' NEWPORT BEACH 1727 WHtcli ff Dr., 642·20S0 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prof111ion1I Interior Designers Av1llabl._AID P'h•11• T•ll ''" lil••t •f Or_,. C•1111ty-S40·116) LAGUNA BEACH 34S North Co•st Highw1y Phone: 494-6551 r • San Clemente Capistrano VOL ~4, NO. 271, 4 SECTIONS, ~~AGES I EDITIO N PRANGE COUNTY,-CALIF?RNIA \I 't om eac or • Today'• Flnal I FRIDAY, NOVEMBER -~2. '197 1 J . • a1 Peoples' Lobby Demands Shutdown . ' . . By JoHN VALTERZA •·t don'l remembir ever havtni ~o °' ... °"111 Pu.t '"" decide on sut:;:h a request, uid the PUC'a Another .. "aftei,bock" of I a 1 t February's earthquakes touched the San Southern C a 11 f or n i a Representative Onofre Nuclear· Generating station this Leonard Patterson. week -strongly ·worded allegations by He said t~ first step at the P.tic level the ~.000-member People's Lobby that the wpuld be to determine jf the agency, tn- re,ctor's cooling systero is "u~e." deed. has jurisdiction over the "nuclear And coupled wllh·tbe charges came an aspects of·tbe plant ·operation." official legal document asking that the He hinted thi:it the issue might be Slate Public Utilities Commission shut relayed, instead, to the Atomic Energy down the plant and conduct hearings Commission, which already has asked the within 30 days to determi ne the safety of iwo utilities operating the plant {Southern the system which keeps the reactor cool. California Edison and Son Diego Gas and Such a request is unprecedented. a top. Electric) to file deta iled reports on the level official of the PUC told the DAILY cooling system. PILOT late Thursday. ·__'l'he_aUegatlons by the Peoples' Lobby * * * * * * Edison Company\De·nws ·~~ . Generating Plant Peril Fi1•eui en 8111·11 Flames engulf Fire Cpt. Harold Foss, 43, Thursday evenln~ in Houston, Tex. and partially surround a·n· other fireman . Foam had been used to subdue gas~ J i.rte_fire in downto\vn Houston apartment garage. It starteCI when a car tiit a gasoliffepump. Ross was walking_thrciugh foam when flames burst up around him . He and another fireman who dtagged Ross to .!iafety are in satisfactory condition toC.ay in a bospi· tal Both suffered bums .. Bi g Cargo Plane Crashes Air Force Aircraft Bur sts Into Fla1n es, 10 Perish LITILE ROCK AIR FORCE BASE, Ark. (AP) -An Air Force Cl30E cargo plane crashed and burst into names shortly aft er takeoff from Little Rock Ai r For.ce Base about 7 a.m. today, killing 10 pf the 11 creY.•mcn aboard. ti1aj. \\1il\iam R. \Vorth, base in- formation officer, ·said one crewman survived, bul \vas ·in critical condition and was being flown to an Army hospital O'Neill Students Begin Monahan Me niorial ·Drive Sludent.s al O'Neill Elementary School have begun a memorial fund for ti1rs. Elitahe lh ~1onahan. a !cache r at the school who died after a long illness la te Jast month . The funds, say school spokesmen. y.·ill be saved to buy a large tree surrounded by benches on lhe ca1npus as a perma nenl memo rial to the young teacher "'ho had laught et Viejo School for the past fou r years. Former . O:Nei ll students and ..current lines can donate funds through the Mis· sio" Viejo Branch of L""nited Cali fornia Bank. A spokeSY.'oman (nr the youngsrers' er- forts said that me1n nr1al con1ributions already have been made to the America n Cancer Society. in San Antonio, Tex., for treatment of burns. Five of the 10 killed in lhe flaming crash of the four-engine plane were iden· tified by CAI. Richard J. Gibney, com- mander of the 314th Tactical Airlift Wing at the~· They were Capt. Laurance ·r . Asher, inspector na vigatcir or Fort Washington, N.Y.; M. Sgt. Orville D. Gearheart. in- structor flight engineer from Aberdeen, S.D.: Capt. Jan B. Raycraft, instructor pilot of Los Angeles: 2nd Lt. Michael .w. Hodge of Salem. Ill .. who was a trainee on temporary duty from the 3645lh Stu- dent Squadron at Laughlin AFB, Telt.; and 1st Lt. Dav id C. Moule of Stockton, Calif., a trainee from the 58th Military Airlift Squadron at Robbins AFB , Ga. The survivor was identified as S. Sgt. Louis F. Hribar of LRAFB. He was thrown clear of the wreckage. Gibn ey said no cause for the crash has been determined, but said Maj. Gen. David I. Liebman , vice commander of the 12th Air Force, would head an ac· cident investigation board that will con· duct an in\'estigation .. Ylorth said the plane was leaving on a i;outi ne training fl ight and that it had gained some altitude berore it crashed to the left of the runway and burst lntll flames. He said the plane carried 40,000 gallons of fuel. Worth said he did not know what altitude the plane reached "but it must have had a little." Co!. Will iam Davis, base fire mar i:;hal. sa id the plane, assigned to the 62nd Tac- tical Airlift Squadron, was engulfed in flames by the time firemen arrived. Fire scorched an area of ground about 100 yards by 200 feet. He said the plane skewered about after impact and was headed at a &light angle toward the direction from which it had taken off. The only recogniuble remains of the plane was the tail section. Annex Study Set For Discussion By Capo COuncil The long-awaited annexation study ex- amining the possible annexation of Capistrano Beach and Dana Point to San Juan Capistrano will be discu!Sed Mon· day by members of the Capistrano City Counclr. The meeting will lake place at 6 p.m. in the council chambers. Final drafts of the Study have not been made available to the public but members of • tilt council, who have studied the report thiS week, wilr be aSk· eel tll comment and recommend revisions. The report, which· has taken several months to compile, will attempt to pro- vide answers to any questions citize~ of the three areas might ha ve regarding the proposed annexation. To~level officials of the Southern Callfornle Edison Company were quick to answer the "dare" of the People"'s Lobby this week, steadfa stly stressing that the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station is a safe facility. In a statement usually nserved for lesser officials of the utility, Edison Board Chairman and Chief Executive Of. fieer Jack Horton said "if there were any questions about the San Onofre Unit's safety It would 'not be allowed tlo ~te." . 1 ~-~ Alluding to tho t..U of.Uit reactcr coo~ Ing syst~m tn Idaho six rrionttis ago, Horton lll'Noed lhtt tho .tests """ "by no means ah accura!C! repi'Uentation~of th• San OnOlre II)'.,._. . · "The model usea for . the -tests was so 1mall -the size o[: a tea Pol -that it could not be presumed to reproduce tht performance ol any full-scale system," he said. He added that the tests were called for to determine it' anything could be added lb make existing failsafe systems even better. He said that on the basis of all the in- vestigations through the yea r "we do not think any modifications will be required at San Onofre:" A report on the subject including chapters specifically reteated to the cool·. Ing system .. will be filed with the Atomic Energy . Commission on Jan. t, 1972, he said. Borton explained that emergency systems at San Onofre are "overlapping. and it is inconceivable that all the system• could break down at the same time." Casting further doubt on the system's asserted failure in the tests, the ex- ecutive officer said that the Idaho ex- periments assumed a sudden and com- plete rupture within the cooling system . "ln actual operation even the sli~htest leak would trigger a warning and im· mediate remedial measures." As a point of cla rification. the coolin.it system involved 1n the tests is di vorced from the segment or the generating operation using sea water. Seawater is pumped from the open Municipa l P roblems Set for Discussion San Clemente City Manager Ken ·carr will d"ISCUSS municipal issues and pro- blems with members of San Clemente'• Square and Compass Club at a regular meeting Nov. ~ at On1ar's Restaurant. The luncheon event will start at 12 :'30 p.m. Reservatipns are available by con- tacting 492-6985. The tree Rnfl benches \Viii be dedicated in the 1.eacher'i:; memory at ofle of the youngsters' Fr iday n1oming f I a g ceremonies. Co-µnty to Study Economy Joaquin Board Okays Bond Sale. Trustees of the Sa Joaquin Elementary School District ha\Pe euthorized the sale cf S2. 7 mill Ion in bonds. The funds will be used to build an elementary school on Prcciados Drive. one block from tiTarguerite Pi:irkway ill 1-fisslo Viejo, and an elementa ry school, lln Rivendell Road In Lake Forest. Any money lert over will be applied to the school built in the Caliromia Hon1es section of Irv ine. The sale of bonds Is $Cheduled be.fore Februa ry ond wlll maint11in lhe district's qu"alificellon for state school buildi ng aid. •• ' ·Strengths, Wea knesses To Be Exami.ned C.Ounty supervisors have • d o•p t e d Supervisor Ralph Clark's proposal that a stud ade of the fe11slbillty of a com· survey or the county'• eeonomy. An ad committee of supervlsorlal aides, county planners and the ad· ministraUve office were Instructed Tues· ·day to de-velop a formula for the economic probe. Clark sqid the $ludy Is neces sary to at- tempt "tll restore the normal level of employment and businets." "Without defin ite economic goals. the county will Jag behind the reM of the na· tion in recovering from the present recessions," Clark said, "because w, are so dependent upon the aerospace• in· dustry. ·• The supervisor added that the study should include the projected number llf jobs required and pinpaint strengths and weaknesses in the varioos economic sec- tors. All bOard members approved the p~ posal except Ronald Caspers of Newport &each. He called the ,.proposed 1tudy, "another example of tmkering with the free market process. "It happens in Was~tngton. t saw it everywhere when t wa1 b3c.k there last week ," Caspers added. "But !or UM! coun~ ·.· -. - ty to get involved in telling people what jobs to set up i1 wrong." "Some ~le.hailed it as· great When· Autonetlcs and North Americ"an moved to Orange County. tM.it It did not wofk oUf sO· well In ·the Joni run," C.spers· contlnned. ·•we have adequate economic. reports from the banks and our own county pro- gress report. Businesiiri\ii'lknow how to read these and react to them ." Clark replied that Caspers did not understand. ''I am not asking that a study bt made right now , onfy that a Committee bf: named to look into Che reaslbllity. We owe It' to tht people to recoanlze this problem." • ocean to cool conventional steam generators, then dumped back through an outfall. A sealed water supply separate from the ocean operation is that which is used to keep the reactor cool. That ·water is radioactive. Horton, in an official statement, reiterated t_he company's declaration that the nuclear generating industry has a "perfect safety record." ''NO one hu ever been killed or even tnJure<!·Jn a 111c1,., n~o'L'l'Y ~"" merclal powtii atau.p, '1 i,, 'U)d. : Ecuador Sewe1 ' 5 More American Fishing Boats SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The Ecuadorian government seized five· more tuna clip.. pers today. only hours arter levying $140,000 Jn fines and releasing five others. The Ceryl Marie, Mary S., Endeavor, Eastern Pacific and Royal Pac.i!lc were being· taken to the port ti Salinas at last• report, August Felando; general manager cf the American Tunaboat Msociation here, said. .,.\H.it 45, crewmen plus five skippers were aboafd) the tuna clippers, all of which were from here, he said. The skippers radioed they were being taken by the LC61, the Quito, which selz. ed four American and line Canadian tuna seiner Wednesday, Felando said. The Denise Marie of San Diego was seized In the first group ind was relea!ed without paying a fine after showing it had acquired a license. Its sk1pptt was quoted by Felando today as saying be heard the LC61 skipper 5ay he planned "to go out there and get another batch." The latest seizures occurred 50 to 60 miles off the coast of Ecuador. In ad- dition, the Trinidad, cne·of the boalt seiz. ed earlier, was intercepted, boarded and released af_ter 113 skipper told the Ecuadorians it alreatly paid a tine. · Also released without pl)'lng 1 fine after showing It .had a license was the Canadian vessel AUantic Patton. The $140,000 in fines wis paid by the Trinidad, The Veiittuous and tbe 'Blue Meridian .. Circu~ Coming To El Toro Area The DeWayne Brothtrs Circus. which just completed a successful run in San Clemente~ will be opening Sunday In El Toro. Sponsored by the Saddleback Valley Jaycees, . the circus will gl\ie two performances-one at 2 and the other at 4:30 •p.m. on the comer of El Tbro Rllad and Roclctltld Boulevard. Ad\lanoe ticket& are en sait for S2 for adults 'nd $1 for chtldren by e.ailing 8.10- 96.W. ~Tidc:ets l18o wW bt 1vailabJe at the . door. " !'ea\Ured at 'the performance, wm be Bimbo the Elephylt, clowii1, pon"lcs, and aeriall!tl In an old·fashioned tent. Chill Wills' WUe Dies ENCINO (UPI) -Belty Wilis, wile of gravel-voiced ·actor Chill Wills· for 4.1 years, died of a beart •t"ck Thurs~ay at the age of 64. She married Willa in 1928 ln Kansai City, Mo., · .. Were aired Wtdntsday in a Los Angeles presS cOnference .. : Late ·ThursdaY.. the group's neeutive director, Edwin Koupaj Jr. told lht~DAI· LY PILOT that Edison oUiclals should be "eager" to defena --finder olth -their piaiii's safety in an open PUC he&ring. One b;1sis for the Lobby's demands, Koupal said, is the failure of the moclrup of the system during tests earlier this year at a testing l&bo~atory in Utah. "But we're not .just talking about the test and the failure . · "What we're aiying here is, IOOk; gang, if the plant is io good and operat~ ln the area of truth and corpOrate responSibility, then you (the utilities) won't mind at all appearing under oath and proving your case." Koupal said. - He added that the utilities "can't stand the area of truth because they have ex· isled on hall statements and innuendo." ~The groUPKoupal representilia111 of· - fices and representation in 28 countieS, he said. "We specialiu not in Jetter-writing campaigns, but in pressing issues we feel strongly about through the courts and the rest of the legal system,'' he said. The issue over the cooling 5}'Stem is not a new one. Nor is the question of the plant's vulnerability to earthquake danger. The PUC itself granted approval of the utilities' plans for two new reactors at San Onofre Contingent on proof that the twin reactors and the existing one are capaete of withstanding major quakes without damage:. Soon afterwardfi the AEC ask~ for dttailed repOrfi by the utilities on~·the enclocsed system which uses water to keep the reaetor temperature at a safe level. Explaining the request AEC tpokesmtJ> were-:cautious in discussin1~ upecl! of ~nger at the facllity at San Onofre, 1tressln& that the federal 1gedcy'1 mtrictions are already e x j re m e J y severe. "" · They added thal the AEC request was not intended to label the San Ouofre system unsafe. Instead, said · AEC spokesmen, the agency wants to know if the system could be Improved. Capistrano Cof C Installation Set At Big Banquet Fifth District Supervisor Ron Caspers will install directors and officers of the Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce Dec. 8 at the group's annual installation banquet. . The event, starting with a 110Cial hour at 6:30 p.m., will be held in the Patio Room of the El Adobe in S3n Juan Capistrano. Kenny Lawrence, a chamber member, will be master of ceremonies. Directors were already chosen by the chamber membership earlier this. week. Those new ·directors and others re- maining on thJ! board Will choose t h e sl&te o_f officers at a special meetinf ear- ly next week. Other tvents at the: annual ainner will include the resul13 of the Dec. 6 judging of business district Olristma1 decora· lions. A sing-along, or Christmas carols also is scheduftd at the dinner. , Tickets will be mailed lo all chamber members. Others may reserve ticketa by calling 496-93.52. - Orange Weather Winter's drizzles will most like. ly disappear tooight with mostly sunny skies forecast for the week- end. High will range from 55 on the coast tll 65 inland. Uiws will range from 45 to 5S mpectively. INSIDE TODAY ' A funnu thing happened to Orange Count11'1 Cari Linet. · 1trom on hi&. way to G pro-foot- baU carter. There I.a a s.iort1 and picture1 about it on Page 23 of todav'1 W eektnckr. ... " .... ~· it -~--'~ "' C.llflnll• ., • .......... ....... ~ Clttdtl• V11. -1 or... c.wr I Cltulll• _,..... ltU•-llfl 1$.tt Ctmk1 n 1'1"11• hrftf lf i: ... 1l-4 u ,...,.,., 1"1' 0..tll Nt!ICff I l !Kk MtfMhl l•il °""'""" • '"""... f1 l•lttrlal ..... ' 111M!tn .. ,. l iiltftt l-tllt 11,tf WN!flw l "lfltll(l ... 11 ftlt-'1 NtWt 1J.I "-te• 14 ~ ,._ .., •~ .......,, 11 w ... """° »a -..... • • • • ... , • 2 DAILY PILOT SC Frld1y, Novtmbtr 12, 1971 Old iLagunp Resi119rected Fo19 Fiesta By FllEDER~ K SCHOE~IERL 01 WM o!f 1"11ef SI'" It will be one hundred rears ago Sun· day that the Thurston fanlily settled in Aliso Canyon -giving birth to Laguna Beach and the wrrounding communities. Aod ju.st whal Laguna was like back ill those early days will be preM:nted Sundaf by the Laguna Beach Communi,!1 Hislllrical Society from 1 p.tn. to 4 p.m. at Ben Broy.·n·s Restaurant -just a fe\9 hundred yards from the old Thurston homestead. Included in the centennial celebralion program is tunch, talb on early Laguna by old timers and relatives or lhe Thurstons and u·alking tours ID the site of lhe Thurston home: Cost of th e lunch is S3.:«:I and seaUng will be on a firsl come, first served basis. &a Whittlesey. who firsl ca me; to Laguna Buch In 1906, remembered Joe Thunton as something of a vegetable · man. phUospber,"historian and babysitter all rolled into one. .... ~ ·;Most of" the people came down to Laguna only for the summer and Joe v."'Ou1d make his rounds with his vegetables. During the winter, he would h!llve to !ell his ·goods in Santa Ana or San Diego," she recalled. "'At the-age of eight," she said, "Joe"s ranch in Aliso Canyon seemed very large to me and' produced. things I had never heard of. His l~mon cucumbers wtte my ta'vorlte and we ·ate them like apples. The com and watermelon were plentiful in the summer and a1ways tasted sweeter than products bought in Los Angeles." Miss Whittlesey spent quite a bit of Ul'D6-on Thurston~s ranch when ..her mother had to go to Los Angeles. "'He would pick me up _when hia daily route was finished and take me to the ranch. Mrs. Green. his houskeeeper, who had. two children my age, took care of me. "He had a number of different animats- on the ranch and we spent.much of our time riding ,horses. He taught us a lot about raWesna.kes and how. to take care -• CIRCLE MARKS THE SPOT WHERE JOE THURSTON LIVED Historical Society Will Hold Centennial Celebration of ourselves v.·hen hiking around." she said. Thurston, Miss Whittlesey remem- __berml., as !!Q!Jlelhing of uhll2.spher and v.·ould spend hours talking with her mother about religion and the state of the wortd . He was also the man "who told us aJI there wa s to know about Laguna. its history;' social life. future a n d drawbacks.'' ./ . Laguna, ·she said, back during the first decade of the century \\'asn't much more than a few cottages along the l\1ain Beach. \Vilh a couple of other houses near Sleepy Hollow and Victoria Beach. "from Victoria on south to Thurston 's there \vasn't a thing except hills and a lot of rattlesnakes.,, ?ifiss \V"h rt f l e s e y remarked. "?i-1ost of Aliso Canyon "'as a swamp near the ocean. There was a Jot of swamp grass and ~·e always enjoyed chewing it. Pacific Coast High"•ay was not much more than a dirt trail and there "'<Ui an old wooden bridge across Aliso Creek," she said . UCI Bus Service S.et Transit System Free to Students By PA'l'll!CK BOYt.E Of .... Dalli' Pl!_. S"ll Officials· at UC Irvine, \1'here almost 80 percent ot the 7 .000 students commute io cin1pus. ha ve decided to implement · a free bus serviC'e to comrnunities :sur - rounding the school. The plan calls for a single bus. to be leased from the Pink Bus Line of Buena Park. driving a 45-minute route each hour during the week taking students to and from the campus. 'Y'he bus . under the proposed route. would lnn·lfl down i\facA rth ur Bou1evard to Coast Highway : "'esterly on Coast Highway to Jamboree Ro~d and. then to Balboa Island: along Bayside Or1\·e back onto Coast Highway and along Dover If the line proveli a success, La11,•rence the Increase in fee were only SI per added, the student government may seek quarter. conunuting student~ could still an increase Jn the pre~nt $7·per-quarter sa1:e b,v riding the bus and not parking on student a,ctivity fee to s pport th~ line. , canipus. Parking pernlits cost $9 J>q' Student officlaJs poin out !hat even if , quarter. lt'ita State Victory ' Chicanos Pusl1 f 01· More Drive to Santa Ana A·venue: along Santa S .. \CRAi\1ENTO (AP) ?ilexican-, probabl y get signed by Gov. Ronald Ana to ~fesa Drive : 1hen return to the Americans. fresh fram a victory in state Reagan. ~ campus by way of Palisa~es Road.. Se , •. t I 1· be h' tod Appro,•al m /lo low1·ng • n•got1·ated Robert La"'reoce. assistant v 1 c;. e . nate_roi:u1s r c 1ng, gan pus 1ng ay e1ol .. chancellor for student affairs. said today for more seats in . California's expanded co1npromise between Dtmocratic and the university hopes to begin operating 43-seat congressional delegation. Republican leaders in li)e upper house the line ·at the beginning of the winter Herman Sillas, a Los Angeles attorney, despite allegations by a disside nt quarter in January. . . sai~ the.legislature 50 far has ignored the Democrat !hat the bill \vas illegal However. h~ noted that one major -because or the new l'l-1exicen·American obstacle _ funding_ may put a damper concept of a Mexican-Americ.an district '-district. oti the entire proposal. among the five new seats in the U.S. "This bill is unconstitutional. biased As planned , the university would lease House which California gel.1 under the and discriminatory." said Sen. Lawrence a 53-passenger bus from the Buena Pa~k 1970 census. The state now has 38 seats. \Valsh (0-Huntington Park). whose finn for about $1,800 pe r month . ThlS "I think the legislature is more disttiC't ~·as squeezed eastward int('I fi~ure wou ld include insurance and. a he11,•ily Republican Orange County to driver. with the bus company paymg vulnerable here than in any other place help make room for the new district - maintenance ·costs. according to J~nne because you gain £ive st ats," said Sillas. the 20th Senate di strict. Simon. student affairs official in charge spokesman for an ad hoc group called Bolh parties had pledged to back a pl "Oialition for Fair Reapportionment." of studying the-an. -"Tfiis ii; clear eviCieiice of tlllfir J\1exiean--American seal. The total cost could be11. parded ~~~'n, callousness toward the whole problem ," Chicano groups had pre~ for as r.1 rs. Simon noted. by se 1ng a ve. ismg he said. -many as three seats in the Senate but space inside and outside the veh!cle ~o The Senate reapportionment bi 11 Sillas said, "politically, it's probably the local merchants. This would bring in cl ed · k 1.~ th Se 1 'ts If best we could anticipate." about $400 to $500 per month, she said. 25 ear its ey ~~. e na e 1 e . on d to p· k a ,.. 33-! vote Thursday. It is expected to !\lore than tw<rthirds of the nearly percent of which woul go 111 us pass the Assembly basically intact and 500,000 residents of the district are J\1ex- Line owners. ican-American and it will have a To-raise-the-estimated $8.400-needed 10:-r-=----~==-=-~-,-oeffiocratic voter regisGifton Of sOme 70 operate the line for the remainde~ of t:tie .l school year, Lawrence said the un1vers_1ty M . percent. It would be difficult. political wi ll :sponsor a bus ride and recephon eteOTf,f,e observers say, for anyone ~ut a Mexcian· Nov. 22 for city and Chamber of Com· American Democrat to win a seat when it merce officials from communities sur· d first co1nes up for election in 1974. round ing the campus. Student and faculty Has Dia1non s No congressional reapportionment plan organizations will also be asked to take has emerged from committee yet, but part in the funding, he added. . CAMBRIDGE, l\tass. !UPI )_ A Sillas said the proposals under con- UCt officials hope to convince the three-po und meteorite which slam-sideration In the Senate and Assembly ig- '•ar1·ous merchant associations that more h k 11 nore the question of a T\lexlcan-American med through a t ic ce1nent-t e Coast Waste Talks Slated Stud-ts u·ould patronize their members district so far. "'" .. roof of a Finnillh farm in Augu st if transportation were made available. has been found to contain None of !he fh·e new sfats would be in The student government al UCI has not diamonds. only the sixth such hea vily ?itexican-American areas but one yet allocated any money for the line. meteorite to be found , it \vas an-under consideration in the Assembly ire although Lawrence said the student nounced today by lhe Smithsonian hea vily black. The new seal s primarily Senate is considering helping with the Center for short -lived phenomena. "·ou ld go to the growing suburban areas. funding -' The center-said scientists ha\'e The on I y 1'1exican.American con- R • al LJ • ?rfl • C • • M He said he "'as skeptica l about ob-conrinned the meteorite is a rare gressman in California is Democrat egw. n '.i.i. t In.,. . .is,, ._.c. US$ risis .. easures rlaldi~i~e ~uos~6th'Z ucn~~~~~e:~~f~sh~~ type Pl<>"'U as 1Jreili1e and c~tains Edward Roybal of Los Angeles . tiny. almost mi~roscopic diamonds.' Sillas said Roybal has been "as ef-1'-loulton Nrguel and Santa l\1arguerita graphic recentl y when board members implemented bus lineii: charging a fare. The amount or diamond material, fectlve as his district allows him to be." . ' . ' A comJ,lete aeneral discussion on the sanitation crisis along the South Ora nge CoaSt 'will tilt place Monday, afWO\lOn, arhong members and stafr of tfit! Sift Diego Area Regional Water Quality Con· trol Board. Jn a regular meeting which also in· eludes specific new requirements on waste treatment and discharge in Laguna Beach, the '.board will evaluate the pro- blem of heavy burdens on all waste treat- ment in the south county. Discussions on the local matters are ex- pected at 2 p.m. after the noon reces_s, say board aides. Specifically , the board will delve into measures being taken here to ease the crisis in waste tre!lment -a problem i;i,·hich the regulatory agency has been watching closely for months. Recently board . executives hav~ hinted that unless local agencies can llllprove the problem. then the bo_ard might .im- pose a freeze on new se"'age connections -thus effecting a freeze on ne1\• de1·elop- ment. Relief. say spokesmen for four area agencies. is on the way. The Dana Point Sanitary District - among the most overburdened -has plans to lea se unused capacity in the waste treatment p I ant in San Juan Ca pistrano. Thal. orie-year lease would give the Dana Point oper•tion a reprieve and ease the burden on its small plant. After that year, Dana Point. San Juan. OlAN•I COAST DAllY PllOT ·OAAHGI COAST PUILISHtNO COMf'AHt ' tl:oliort N. W11• Ptt1iHal end l"llWl&llu J1,\ R. O.rl•v \ljg ,,..._.. 11w1o1 Glneral Mln1tw' lll••• Kwn1 ..... n~"' •• A. ,...,,,i.i" Mln'llrtt t:d!IOC' Qlfl• H. L•os kid11r.I '· N•U Aa&INnr ~ t:•n .. l .. UHIMdiOffke 22? ht•lt i.'1'1"11• M•it.119 •ddr•u: r.o. l o•'''· '2•s2 5-er • ....,. OHie• lG5 No1tli El c .,,.r". R••I, ,l.72 Othr Offfcs Cntll N.ei,1· UI W"l a1y $Jtt'I ~ •OK!o• 3ln NIWllO't Boltl..,lld ttvnliN,_ a .. c11: 1111~ .. Cfl 9ollln 1/'f < distrkl!I will have completed \last in1. · and aides noticed dar:k. cloudy effluent he noted, had abandoned them -when ho~·ever, was so sma ll il was It includes some black areas and "'hite provemen~90 the same San Juan plant. being dumped into the sea ai the Dana students "'ould not use-the service. essentially "·orthle ss from <!I com-liberal regions as well as parlJlf East An<l"~'tttat exp•llSio• is complete. Point ouUall. ' He also noted that if a fare is charged, mercial point of \'ie"'· the center L6s Angeles . • II four district• would sho re the 0 ..... ra-Immediate f o JI ow up tnvesti"alion the line would be subject to the regula· ,.. ~ nd h ed t f ••· p bl'c said. • An estimated three million Californians 1·1on of the facility. revealed that the Dana Point plant was tion -a t e r ape -o u11: u 1 · Co · · are ~Iexican-American. Sillas said. Dana Point's crisis was made more wor king on an overloaded basis. 1_u~1i~lit~"'.'.:''...':~m'.'.'."m~•~ss~1on"":. ________ -'::==============-.:::.:::..::::::::::::..:.:::::::..:.:::::::..::=:===-- Runaway Car l(ills Th1·ee; 12 Htirt in Ohio Tragedy YOUNGSTO\\'N. Ohio il'.Ptl -A runaway aulo plowed 500 feet throui:-h a noon hour crowd today at. a busy rio"'ntown interset;tion and pohce said at least three persons \\'ere killed and 12 in· jured. two criticall~·. __ Police and an in,·esligator for lhC' ~lahoning County Coroner's Offic~ first reoorted thllt fll'e persons "·ere killed . but only three bodies ~·ere taken hospitals. About 12 ambulances "'ere sent to the scene, where police said the careening auto "mowed people down like grass.'' The accident occurred as hundreds of persons. incl uding wo[kers on lunch and Teacl1ers Stav For 1'raini11 g Students in the Laguna Beach Unified School District 1vill be home early l\lon- day, but teachers will ha\•e to stay at school for an in-service training progran1. Provisions for m111 i mum -day in- struction 1'1onday will find Thurston Intermediate School sending student s home at noon: the high school at 12 .15 p.m.: Ahso school at 12:~S p.m.: and Top of the \Vorld and El 1-lorro Schools, 1:30 p.m. Bus schedules 11111 be revised lo take students home al the rarhrr hours. shoppers. gathered in the dol'•ntov.,.n area. Police said the car ran up on the sidewalks and bounced off building~ as it ca reened 11'ildly through the crot,~· ''There "'as blood all over !he ... ide"'alks."' said Bill Clark. a newsman with station \\'HOT and · one ·of the first persons on the scene. "There were sel'eraJ pa irs of emp!y shoes that people had been knocked out of. There "'as also a wig on the \l'ldewalk. "Shopping bags had tom 'apart sending merchandise all over the sidewalk and in the gutter."' said Clark. The driver of the car was not inju~ ;ind n·as immediately taken into custody. He was identified onl y as 30-year-old male. Israe li Securitv Forces Kill Arab TEL A \'J V 1AP1 -Israeli• security torces patrolling against Ara b iuerrillas, shot and killed an Arab man in a Gaza refugee camp today after he attempted to nee, the military command reported. The soldiers first fired warnings shots, a spokesman said, The Israelis also reported the arrest of three Israeli-Arabs tor belonging to the El Fatah guerrilla organization. One of the Arabs was a slu- dent at the Technion. the Israeli institute of tcclwiology. Nit1·oglyce1·it1e T19 t1cl{ Flips Load 011 Higl1way CORNING (UPI) -A truck-trailer Mi loadt'd uilh n1troglycertne gel and land ntlnn Ol'ertumtd rarly today o n lnter~t•te ~ forcing ClllsUrf' of the h.ighwa,y about 5e\'tTI mile~ soulh of this Tehama County to"n Tht high"a~ p:nrol ;-a1d <ill tn1!11c 1n the artta u as tx>ing ri11 erl.ed lo nearb~ llu1h,,.,;iy 99\\' until !hf' \t'hitlr can ht: removed Crom the roait . A naly ex- plos.ives ttam n•as CHlled to the accident scene. A patrolman said thtre apptart'd to be little dangtr of lln ~xplos1on but the highway was closed at about 6 11.m. 1s a precautionary measure. The I.railer portion of the vehicle. own· td by Ringsby Truck Lines or Oakl1nd. mlltd over on tht r8in-Slic k highway bef\\'een Corning and Or1!1 nd. the patrol .. aid Authorities f1r~t reported I he n1trog lyct>rioe had been dumped on the high\\•ay but later .said the substance. 11hlch "'as in get form. remained inside the lr:ililer. · The driver of the truck. Lou!! Ltlh\- bach, 5". Antloch, suffered n1inor in· juries. - --·-·-·-' ----- • SHERRILL MAKES A HOUSE A HOME • Here are the mak in gs of • room you 'll love to live in! Sofas an d chairs so fashionably covered, so handsomely dtsigned! A joy to iee! An exceptionally large selection of fine fabrics- and styles to choose from at very reasonable pric es. Sherrill is unsurpassed in quality and design. Stop in today and view this fabulous collection of fine upholstered furn iture. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOii Of'IN •llDAY 1'1L t NEWPORT 81ACH I 727 WHtcllff Dr., 642·2050 0,&N FRIDAY 'TI L 9 INTERIORS Profe11lon1I lnttrlor Designers Avall1bl...__AIO Plt•11• T•ll Pr• Most•' Or ..... C•11flrr-540·12'1 ---~--• ' • LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Cc11t Hlghw1y Phoo., 494-655 I • I I l • I I . "" . .. Price, Wage Classificatio11 The Cost of Living Council announce d it would require advan ce approval for price increases by U.S. corporations \Vith sales of $100 millio n or more a year and for wage boosts covering 5,000 or more workers. Donald Rum sfcld. the Council's executive director. said that Phase II of Nixon's economic stabiliza· lion program would include procedures to guard against price increases out· stripping acceptance pay rai~s. The chart ill ustrates price and \vage categories. .. Automak .. ers Endorsing New Nixon Economic Policies DETROIT (AP I -General Lynn Townsend. Chrysler i,1•ill be "an excellent year" 1'1oUJrs and Chrysler ex-board chairman . said his com-with "substantial stregthening ecutives say the wage.price pany's profit so far this year in the economy." freeze caused their third· has been unsatisfactory, e ven He said Chrysler had plan· quarter profil& to be lower lhough-Chr.yslec.....rcported neL.Ilcd on price increases of 4 to 5 thin expected. but at the same earnings of $48.4 million for percent .on !972 m?<fels. but time the automakers endorsed the first three quarters af the had retained !971 prices und~r President Ni x o n 's new year compared to a net Joss of the wage.price f~eeze. He said economic policies. $15.2 million in the same the company will go . to t_he GM reported recent period of 1970. The company's Pay Boa~d fo~ unspec_ifed in- r-:cord sales of $5.6 billion in third-quarter proift was $6.2 creases in p rices of its new the quarter ended Se pt. 30, but million, almost three times the models. gald the $217 million profit $2 1 m illion profit for the same In a Jetter to stockholders. d uring the period was con· qu.arter a year ago. r.M Chairman James H. siderably less than a record. TO\\'nsend forecast that 1972 ~oche and. Presiden.t Ed\\·a~d -------------------------N. Cole said, "Net 1nrome 1n I I ' I I she likes ....... , ••• INlthl, ..J--1:-wtth Jef1 ef ltltlter ' ' he likes I I I ,, 1 .... , .. .. _ .. .... I ' I ' I '. I I ' S eers Autom1tic W1t1r Soften1r1 priced from 1229.95 CAll your neor~I Sean Store for FREE water on~is W1t1r Soft1n1r1 •I mo1t S11rt 1tor1t •nd in tll1 c1t1I~ You are invited to al/end a timely 1 and provocative seminar on ••• 1971 Tax Planning for Your Securities Portfolio An important meeting designed to evalaate your securities portfolio a nd dtterm ine how ta take advantage of tax·saviog opportunities is planned for Laguna Beach. Presoittd by: Robert I. Wallace, Resident Manager Mitchum, Jones k Templeton Wednesday, November 17, 197J 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Community Room Laguna Federal Savings & Loan 2()() Ocean Avenue • Laguna Beach Subjects wi11 include: • Ho"'' ~apital gcdn.r and losses will be toxtd • Adrantages of laki'ng losses 10 reduce taxts • Taking gains to upgrade • Postponing long Jtrm gain.r until n~t ytar • Olfstt1ing long and shorl ttrm capital gain.I Question a.na Amwtr Period !ollam EtaJOllO 1tt"1Cliog will rcccive "Guide for 1971 Capital Gains and Lossea". Au.adan<:e is by reservation. Call 494-9781. Thero is no chll)o, MITCHUM JO NE S& TEM PLETON £tt•lllillltllf10 1!'(C<l aP0 1. A TZD 295 FOtHl AW~ul . Laaun• lluich,, 92651 Tt:lc:pbonc: (714) ~94·9781 Mtmbtrs ,...,., YOf"k s~lt £.xclmtr, ltte. 0114 otlwr Pf/f!dlol 1:ttltatrrf:t -. the third quarter of 1971 \\'as adversely arfected as a result af the price freeze which necessitated rescinding the p rice increases on 1972 model ·cars and trucks." Al the same time, Roche and Cale ,.said that a 11 segments of society stand to benerit from the new eomomic programs. "The administration has done a n excellent job of iden- t ifying the problems of Phase 2 t1nd working out methods to r esolve them," they said. ''While no clement of society likes controls of any kind. and we would all prefer to have a completely fr~ economy. the program is a clear necess!ty if we are to reduce inflation. in- crease employment and return to a free n1arket environment a s soon as possible:' Roche and Cole a 1 s o predicted that new economic policies will strengthen con· sumer confidence . leading to genera~ ccanomic recovery a nd continued stre'ilgth in auto sales. For the first nine rnonths of t he ye:ir. G~I".~ profits were $1.4 million. or $4.84 per share on sales of $21 billion. During the carresponding period last year. G~t prorits "'ere $744 million. or $2.57 per share. on sales of $15.8 billion. GM built na cars in the latter part of September last year because of a United Auto Workers strike and r eported a third· quarter Joss of $77 million in 1970. Gil·T earnings in the third quarter were less than 4 per- cent of sales. compared ll'ith 1 percent for 1969 and 8.1 per· cent in 1967. Gilt reported fa~lory sales of cars and trucks in, the United States during tht third quarter of this year totaled 1.1 million. up from 620,000 a year ago Wo rldwide sales were 1.5 m ill.ion, campared li·ith 937.101 a )'ear ago. lly Commocltrt -- KI DS LGlVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT frld1;y, Novtrnbtr 12, 1~71 DAILY PILOT 0 Despite Layoff 1 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAi. NOTICE LEGAL NonCE itOTIC• O' TIUITll'I •All l'UILIC MIAllNOI WILL II MILD 11" Mt. l'C/4'&1 I' NOT l(I 0" 5All 0" II.SAL TMI COSTA MllA I' l.'..f. N NI N • (In Ptceml>t< I, 1tJ1, 11 ll.00 AM • ,llOl"llTY At l'lt.IVAfl S.t.Li COMMllSION AT THI CITY HA LL, 11 COlONIAL M0111GAGI!' 'EllVICE CO N .. M4tl l"Alll CHlll\11, COSTA MISA. CA.Lt· OF (AL"OllNIA •• o~r, •POOlllllCI '" 1~ '""'!or COIJrt OI ll'lf !ti••• or l'OllNIA. AT r:>t l".M. 01 .II SQ9N T",lllff Y"4<ft •114 ouriu1nt t• OHO ol C•t!ler11l1 In •llCI lOC:. "" (oulllY ol AS '011l 1LI THllll.lf'Tll ON Tr1;1I O•llMl oUrtl ll!, 1 t J"O, IA<Dftlf 11r Jll"'-tftlff. -. • MONOAY, NO'llMUll 11, U'1. Atvlft A. L..elt•• 1116 Dof'llf C. La<~11. In 1'ht mttltr or...., "tilt Of JAMEi lllOAllDINO THI ,OLLOWINCI ........... 1nd .,.l!t l lWI rK .. llt<I M,fv S, MfLIOUINE l'ltl~WOlD IOl"'f1!1T11l A"l"llCATIONS- RCA to Repair Own Computers lf"lt. II !"'Ir, No. 21111. •11 IHloli: '1111, •••• k-n •• JAMEi M. FA l&~o. • ... ,... ,,,u; ... H•, 11•11•11, foot J-• tu, or 0111(111 11-c .... d• In "" ottlr• .i OKlllHI. o. • • ., •nd Cl•I• Hiii, ... l!IJI 11tft "" County 1111( ....... ol Of• .... (*llllY. NOiiet lt "''""' 11w.. fh.tt "'' liltMt. Cos!• Mn1. C•lll«nl• ,.,,. (1lllot1'l1, WILL Sl!ll AT ,Ulll( u n. I r 1 It nt. Loh .IMY H•nMn. Hrmlulon to .. ,_ ,,_,,.. ll AUCTION TO HIGHlll llDOEll FO• AOMlnl11t1lrl• ... 111 Mii ., ""'''t 1111, 1' l:llUrllltd In Int Pff(lloro •1111 *''*" ., CA$H !H YIOlt ., ""'"' OI 111t In 1 ....... .,1 111• llltnHI blilllff fltt f$ 1111 ., .. ,~. -1Hlllo1110 Vt lleY lto-d Cot.ti M••·· money ot lltt u11hN $1.inl 11 Sou111 ln.t """' •'Ill cllftdllierlt h•r1lnJ11" Ctlltotnlt. l•on'I Ml lo Ill. ••tnl *"'••-to tll• Or•rt•• Cou11!y oi• m1111IC11tld •M wblecl 10 (Ollllro•••llon b• •ti-'tlllltn N._ 11·11·U, !Gr Sf. )ohn SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) '°"'111CM11•. CllY OI S•nlA Ana. Si.It ol 111• 11ld Su11trlor COi.ir!, Oii W tl\1r ~ 01.1,,. C:llut(ll, lOf3 Or•"'• ttllUt , Co.re -C•lllor11i1. •II rlthl, llllt t lld ln1trtll 21111 dfy OI No•'"'"'' ""· 11 "" Olli<:• Mtfli, C•lfr ... ,,. llODrrl I', olwllcln, l!~• The president of RCA'1 data Cort••Yeo 10 ..... now ll~lf •• II.,..,., ••Id ot COLLINS ANO 'NYOEA •• ,, Ill• dt i. l(,1rry L1n1. Ctlll "M•••· 1!1tor11l1 ,,, · di · · h I Id It Oted ot Tru•I 111 tllt P•O..-•lr illulltc:I 111 Pu, P•,l•lc Ptlh.ot1. Celftorn!t , tGJn Pl'•mlulon I• rt:o"' _,,., ,, processing VlSLOn as 0 s tnt cu., 01 co111 M'''· 111 11ld Ct1<Jntv CUY or Loi """•••e1. CouMY ot Lot d•K•IDl-d 1n tti. ,..uuon •"" ioc111<:1 ,, c ustomers they ~Ill not be • 11111 sr1tt dtKr!bff 11~ A111•101, ''•'• o1 c11uorn11, 111 111, •!1111. 1111 Jourll•••tertv '11'"'' o• ••r s1r1t1 LOI J~. l•t(! 14'2, 111 lllt City of Coo!a tl!lt 811(! l11lfrl1I ol _.Id dKltl..:I 11 1111 t!ld Fulltrton AYtflllt, Cot.ti MIH, abandoned When the firm goes M111, Counly of ,Pr111 ... 11 "'' nllt tlm1 olodt1tll tnd •ll Int rl9M, !Ult lllCI (,i!!orl'A. l•Om Ill 1112·CP. out of the general purpose record•d In 11-11. .... 1. lnltrHt 1n11 rne 1111tt 01 ••id dKt••'"" 1111-PllfllM Ht. .n.u. tor Oftro{lt Mltc1ll1MOU1 MfPI. In tit.I otflc1 ot lltt htl ICOlllt..:1 bY ODlrl!lon ol lllW or H. ~~llo1m, not E .. Corti Avtflll•, computer business. '~~·~~':.ii~ ~~~ow.~:·~~ ,11~ ~~~i';/~~10 ~!~~:t:;n,1 o;n.1~1m',~1,'1r.,1~~ ~.~";,~,,.. C•~'Q."11 90~1nc1970 Hu~~ ... ,~: "'\Ve fully intend · lo provide Pl•c•, co1t1 Mto•, ct111,... .. 1,. or1no-111 11111 10 111 t~•' c .. t.111 •••I P•-•!v c111ror1111• •o• 1>1rmlu!on 10 ,,,_ t he ser vices necessary for our , Ct1<Jnl¥. Nrt1<:.,11r1y a•si:•IDld ., ~11-1. To·wlt: •r-1, •• <1tocrll)ed 111 "'• 1>1t1tlon •llll , I Still 11lt will MJY11Gf". blit ... unowl P""RCEL NO. 1: l~•t portion ol 1.01 loc•ltd IOU"' ot sunllower, ...... ,. customers. to conllnue e • ,cw,,..,.,« wtrr•ntv. •~•·•u"' lmpllld. 21, lr1ct Na. •U, 11 .,., m111 tn.r.01 ~m•llf"I' 11oaa 11111 •~•r SlrHt, COil• f"cienUy usm' g the'-R CA com •t•••aln11 1111.. • o 11 •••!on . or •«0tllld In l ook 11 P111t •. ~t. c11110r111,, ••om Al io 111, I u • •ncumb••nct1. to ••v 11\t , ..... 111lnt Mloc;1111..-.1 M1P11, rt<eord1 of O••n1e ••tt,,. Ptllllttl N._ 11.n .11. lot 1111 puter equipment as long as prlnc1 .. ~1um ot th1,not1 •K~,..., ~v ••kl C01H111. C1llt0t11l1, 61..:•I-•• f111kr<rt1: McMkn••• ComN ny. inc .... ,.A w. they conSiOer it economic ally o• o1 l•u11. 10-w11: 121,slJ.u , ... uh &ttl,...1111 .•I • P01n1 111 tht V•l•nc!• Otl••· F.,ti.•toro, c11U«11r1. , ... lnltrpl !tom N .... , ..... , 1. ltlO ••• ln •• 1. Norl1'flllel'IV w ... ol 11ld Loi 11. Hid ..ermiU1Df1 10 fll-....-rtr •• £easible to do so," said J oseph f 111111 •rov1aH.1av1nc11. 11 1nv, '"""" "'1 POI"' btlnt "·'° lMt lrom tn. ....,., i:llK•I-In IM 1>1tlllon ,..,. IOC-11-d "' W Roo IH"ll ol ula 0-ol Tr.,11, ••••• di••-NDrl,,.,.ly cotnff ,, Hid lot ll; '"-"'' Ille .IQU111 11111 of .... 1 .. -II ot """''"' . ney. • ........... Ml of tnt T'""" Ind OI Ille S.OUI~ 1"' .... 1$0 Wiii P••t lltl W"llll lit• Pttct, Cot1• Mt ll, C1u1 .... n1 •• trom Cl .. He addressed the opening 1r11111 cr•••rd by wia Dff<I 01 l•u11 Hot1nwe1tHJv une of ••Id Lot 21, • .,. • Tll• -.Cl•'' unlllr Mid OIHd ot al1tt11CI ot tl4.11 f11t to • l'Olnt In 1n1 z-f.acNllM ''""II N•. :Zl·11·\M, session recently or tt!e RCA Trull, bor ,,._of. b•Ncn tr et11ult Ill Soulllwn1HIY !Int ot 11111 Loi !I. SllG lot RWdY A. l ulrlUt, m Vi• Elle~. computer UstrS a SSOCi8tiOn o tht ol>li•t!lonl qcurl-d I ~ •' t b Y • Pollll beln• M.00 t..i !tom !tit <TIG'll Ntwporl lltecll, C•lllornl1 tor patmlulon llH•lotore t•ecuttd '"" d•llvrrect lo t~• Wt1tt•lv corl\ff of u la LOI 111 llleACt to con1trucl .. u11!t1 on Tl,616 1q. It, or meeting, attended by 270 . . • ulllltt$lt...a • written D•d•••11on ot Soutn Jill• •~ U'" !'1s1 1!on1 s1ld llfld ••fol o unh ..,... uu ,,.: tJ.) wllll 1 J delegates representing firms 70 percent of its \\'Ill be. In-011~1111 •"4 °'"'•na for 5•1•. •"' wrott•n sou1nw111trlv line ot.. Lt t 21; • di•••n•e 11 •ncr .. r.11monl lftto.,"" ,,..,;,I'd JO 11 stalled de 5 pit e RCA 's noUc1 ot l"t•cti 1na ol e1-c11on 10 <1us• <11 1.n.00 lfflr '"'"'' Nor•~ :t• 4 ' .U " lron1 v•rd .,.,!lack from centtrllnt "' from throughout the nation. 111e ""°'"1'11P<1 to 1111 11ld pr-r1y 1e E•st ••••1111 10 Hld N«1n1ttt1111, 1;,.. '""' 1na 1 1~ 11 '"''"'n"''"' 1n1o ""' h h withdra\\·al from the business. 11ll1h 111d ot111111ron.o. 1na 1111,.•fl••· on o1 11111 Lot 21 • a1111n.c1 ct ll•.n 1eet '"'u!rHI 21 11. ret • v••d '''"''~· on After Rooney's s peec , t e R 'd 't .11 be Ju1v n, 1n1,. r~, und1t1l111rd t111111e 111d to • POi111 in 11ia N .... 1i..111er1y 11 ... o• P•-••v 1oc11..a 11 .,..119 w. ll•Y StrHI. a ssociation's board wenl into ooney sai 1 WI no11c1 of "''''" •"" of •ltt•·°" " bl lot 11: 1n•n.ct No•t~ so· 1r 4.5" w111 z-E••••tll• ''"'"'11 N1. zr1.n .111. . Th de livered a s close a s possible •tcoro.a In IN)fl4r; 91,., P•t• Ht, ot 11111 •""'o 111e No•lh•••lt•lY 11,.. of 1.0111 • 1 .... "" M.:Mlc~11 com,.ny, 1..c .. "'·A exe<:utive session. e group i th . . II _,, d led <11f1c111 •ecoro1. a,11111c1 or uo.oo teer 10 1~e paint o1 we,i V•tenc11 orivt. F 11 11 .,,, ", h d ht t 0 e Orlg Lna Y .,.,;.iie U 011-= Oclobfr 7'. "" btolnnlnt . Ct lllornl•, lor rl-duclkHI in 1111 minimum a soug sronger com-date COi.ON i AL MO ll TG .t.GE """•CEL NO, 1; flit Sou1llwt1tul1 IOl••~•l•om 60001<1.lt.to5'1D ... IT.lot mitmcnts from RCA or new~ . SERVICE co. (IF CAl.IFOllNIA ,,,_ .. IHt or lht IOlk>wln1 de1erlbed lo ll JS 1nroullll 11 of T1nt11Jv1 TrtCI No. Of more ·pro•cess toward ac· lie said pre v ious I y •• ..,111 1ruslf"1, P<OM<tv. 10 IO'lt: '"" p11<t1on of Lo• 11. 1s1t. 1oc11to on int 111u1n 1ldt of lltktr e , • . B1 t<.fthY Fllzttrtld, Tr1cl Nt. 45', •• plr MtD tntreol Wt1I ol Ct ntury l"lec1. Ctt11 Ma .. qUiSi tio.a....n.l the division by Unordered addJ{JOnl!J eQUlp-""ulltOflf..., 1lont1urt <K.Ordt<I , Ill Booil _ \1 PIOf t, (1lllornl1, In 1 pf-t.t<I R2 ro .... • -lbcr re putable c ompany. ment will be provided on an 11'1 11111 MIK•lltneou1 M1oi, 1tecor<1• 01 o''"'" z,,.. '••••"•" ,..,...11 H•. 11.11 .111. _•.!Y. Publls~<'d Ortn•1 Co11t OlllY l"llot, COll~IY, C1Uforn!1, dttcrlllt<I 11 lol!Ctwi: ror Grt11vlllt W1ll, HOJ Slttrl 11011, Rooney denied an Oct. 22 "as a vailable" basis, but the Nov""'ber s. 11, 1t, n11 ,,.,.,1 Bn1nn1n1 et !h• mott Nor1n1ri., co"''' 1rvln1, c1utor1111, for • 11 .. m1111on •• · d ' ted 01 11111 Lot"' !lllnce s.i..1n so• 11• •s .. con11ruc1 one ou111,. wllll • 11dt report that Xerox Corp. had customer survey tn 1ca LEGAL NOTJCE E•11 ... Oii iett 1 10..1 lite No11n .. 111r1y ....,,_,""'"'' ,. 0 fl. 1., "''"' •net bought the business. •·we will be able to meet most 11~. 01 •• 111 Lot 11 ; 11t~"'1 St1<J1~ :If' d · c•rPD•I ori1,; •"" 111 .... 1 .. ion 10 '""'""ct ,. •S" Weit 111r1ll1t wllll In• 1 1ln111 •tsldtne1 wllll 1 5 II. Rooney said RCA has not of your needs. NOTICE TO <••01To111 Nor•""'"'''" lln• of s1id Lot 11. • •nc•o.cnm•nt into 1ne ,,..u1,..., n 11. "~' b · · 'd RCA h ped t Ne. A·7t111 ctlot1nce of tW.11 Itel to • Point In !ht Yl•d 1ttl>lck. °" oroHr!Y loct19d •I «17 w ithdrawn from the us1ness tt.ooney sai o o su,1!1110• cou•T ol' Tl4E southwe11 •• 1. 11..., of w1a Loi 11 , 1•111 tt1m111.,., s1rei1. Cotti Me••· c1111or1111 1., of maintaining and supporting avoid manufacturing previous· STATE D' CAL1,0tN1A 11011. DOint 11e1 .. , N.oa feat. t•om '"• mou •n Ri 1.,.,1. tHE CDUiiTY 01' Olt ... NGE Wt>lfrl, co•n" ol tl•ll Loi 71 ' !Ilene:• z-E•t..,lllll ''"""II H•. tB-TI·112, the computer equipment used ly announced new products on E:11••• ot PEAllL ONEtA ccK. 1110 Norin SO" 11· d " w11t H.oa ft11 """' •or s.r,11, Prole.:t911 Ao'itrlltlnt '""'°" b ' ·ts customers •"d wi'll meet wh"•ch p. 0 d u c t 1· 0 n a"d ~,,_ .. •• PE...,RL.O. CDIC. Dte••Hd •••II Sou1hwe•ltdY 11n1 of Loi 11 10 1ne c"••t•• T S••v•I• 1140 SuPorlOI' A~tnut. Y " , • ' " Nohe• II h,rebv 1lvtn to u..a11or1 ol mo11 Wt1t••lv cor,,,.. ol u td Loi 11 C01tt M•~•. c~11..:r1111, fat 1>1rml11lon 111 its cantractual obligations to deltveries ha\'e not started. He •h• •bo•• 111mt<1 aec..a•nt 1ht1 111 •11e11e1 Nor111 Jt' o · U'" £111 1111<11 s11a u,.. in ,.,111n1 1r1n 11ructure to ••olrcl "d h I · ih fftJOnl ll•V•llO cl1lm1 •o•ln1t litt •1111 N .... 1nw111u ly lint of u i!I Lot !1, • ldvir1.i!no tor Cotti MfH .,,,,,1,..1tt1 •nd them. sa1 I a in most cases ere arceo111t .,, '"'u"911 10 int 1nern. ,..,,h ai1ttnc1 of i l-0.11 ••et lo "'' ooint of 10 prolec• P1Jbll• ..,...,1,1 ,..., communlly The di\'ision executive told are 1"\'iable a lternatives " but Ill• nKnu ry vout111ro, In '"' ctlk• o1 1Wvlnn111•· i11lorn11Hon 111oe1 wl1n111 int bound••IH , . . . ' . h tM Ctert ot Ille tbaYe entall-d cout!, ot EXCliPf: 11\tl PIH"litn fll Lot )1, et IM CITY ot CO(U Meu wtlll tne users he would meet with that 1nd1v1dual rev1e""S wlt 10 "''""' ttt•m w11n tn1 Mctu.,y Tr•ct No. ~u •• 1n"""" on • m111 .. ,1,0•1...,. K•ff'" 10 be 1«•;911 11 11.., them individually during the, t:ach customer would be made. ,........,,,..,, 10 tnt undefl;•n911 11 "" 0111ce •«orn.a in e ... k 11. P•M '· SY"'"" Av....,., co111 Meu, c11uorn11. ol ltrrttt. S1e1rn1 i. (ollln1, II» Union MIK1ll1neou1 M•Pt. record1 ot Or 1n9e TMH 1i.a11 10 Do .nown trtrtt lo •-ncJt two days to discuss their In a new posture. R CA an-11r.11 T-.1•· 001 Amo ~1n1n.clt1 Cen••r. Ct1<Jnno. c11ao•nl1. wtrlUt 11~ .,.11111n • """" ••<II ,,..,n1114 i..rn..tne ,1 ~••k. P•obtems a "d "eeds. · 00 " ed 1·1 ould pe .. mit lorr1t1C.•, c11110<ni1 tOSOJ, wnlcn 11 1PW 1tr1• 01 ltl\4 50.oo !Ht In wldrn, 1111 Du•ln• '"' b•l•nc:• ot 11'1• ,~ "'°"'' ine ' " " u .. c w ' llllCt ot bU•lnt .. OI !~I """''"'"I'd : .. •II Soullle•lv 1ln1 of Hid 1tr lp "'"" •C•ffn w!tl ...... 1n .... 11, rollld •I llr• Rooney sa id that despite the cancellation of equipment m•H•ri P<rt11111111 10 '"" t11111 of .,.,G ae•crlbtd 11 1011ow1: . 1:10t1om ot 1111 ocrHn, 111 , cz rorw. t f-~ th -t I b I Th" JIK~t!!.~n~ou~ ,,_.rns t lrtr 1111 ~IMlnv 1t 1111 l'l!!!.~n 01 ..fhCOtlll!Vl'.lll•JlOl\_lo I~ C..I• Miw ay6 1 61 1ii<rre~ an JJ percen eases Y curren us eTs. ts 11ttt PUbllc•tion 01 1n., no1lia . f~1 ttniirl1~T1111in A"""""''" council ., 10 wtiiiner • of the division's personnel in primarily relaled to c ustomers Dt1td 0c:1o11er l'D. "11 •• dncrlbed 111 • aete1 recora.a ''""""e1oi>men1 101ncv tho.lid 11e •ctl~llld • . I EUGENE S. COX. In 11-litr. Pitt IU, Officl•l llecora1 lor 1n1 o-n10w11 1rt1. Thi I the past m onth, the firm stll: thal renl camputers dtrect Y E•ecutor 01 1n. w111 of ••Id Ct1<Jn1y. w11n 1111 center tint 01 rKomm1rt1111ion will be b•H'd on 11re had J.600 employes in field from the corporation °1 ••Id dt•Hl•111· Mt11 Ori•• 11 lllow~ on• mt• o• T•1c1 ovtt111 conctPt •"° •PPrOfCh 01 tn. • ''"'"· Sltfr"' & Ctlll"' No. l'6 rrcord~ In ll>Olt 15, II~•• 7', Down!"'"" II• d • v t I op mt n I """' engineer i 'n g, 1,300 in ----------,.,,.----11111 U"l•n ••n• Tower Ml1c1ll•nt01.11 Mt1>1, RecOfdt of ••1<1 corwt1><loa br w11ny t nd H1m, nor on k · d 500 · t L EGAL NOTICE 0•1 A"'I 'l111nd11 C1nttr Countv. 111!1 ln10r11ecllon 8110 b•lno dtt1U1 pf Ill• Pltn. mar et1ng an ln SYS em s lMrthCI, C11Uotnlt •OSOi 1119"'n In Or1nOt County 5.,rvtvor·1 FOii FUlfTl<ER INFOllMATION ON programming in the United , 14111 .ll!lf"nt r• for l!•t <WllM' Allt nmenl llook AISW·IR V, Oft Pitt lHE ABOVE .... pp LI c AT t 0 N s . . l'ICT1TIDUI IUllNl!ll .. ,,,, 11•: lll1 nc• N. ,)90 ... 5S" E .• t loriv lht TELEPHONE 11'·S14.I 011 CALL AT THE States, Canada and Mexico. NA.Ml! SfATl!'MINT Pub1l111..., Or1no• Coul Ot IY l'l!ol. Nor•lle1sterlv oro!o11181l0<1 or 181!1 OFFICE 01' THE p l AN NIN G HO\\'eVer, he s aid "further Th1 followlnt 11er10111 ••e ~Int Oc:1etl>fr 11, 2t 1nd Novtmbtr S, 1', Ctnl1t lint of lu1!111 Avtnvt 110.00 tttl OEPAllTMENT , ROOM 100. /1 FAIR bi.!lintU fJ! lt 71 11'7·11 lo Ill• ffo!n11l1111 ol 1 l~llltnl cu•vt ORl\IE. COSTA MESA. C""l.IFO RN!A. adjustments in manpower" lilEMO'S Oll lGIN AL SOU •OOUGI< conc1v1 Sou!llerly ..... lltvin•. •1Glu• CO~lA MESA PLANNING COM-be ted PIZl"' JOH El Camino· Or, Co.it LEGAL NOTICE ot \DOG.DD te••: llltnce Norlll•1<1 .. i-, MISSION can expec • M•u, c~1Uornit '16U. 110119 11id curv• 1nrow1n 1 cen1r11 inti• CtiARLEli llECI(. CHAIRMAN He said the divis ion remains Omtr M••lon Yo•k. Ut4 1 .... 1 5trf'll . NOTICE 0, DllSDLU TIDN ol JI" :n· OJ'" In Ire <lt111nct o• .. D.00 WtlL!""M \..DUNN, 5ECll ETA11Y ' b] b · · ti S Co•ll M•11. (11Uornl1 Puoutnl lo In• provhlono ol i•ctlon Itel to Point "(", Alto • 1l<ip OI 1•nd ANO OlllECTOll OF PLANNING a l'!a e us1ness In ope M1rt1rtt Hot~" York, 16'4 1.,... s1., 1503~.s 01 111, C0<por e!10rt• Coctt of 1n1 ~s.oo 1tt1 In w1<1111 1rw. s.,...11t~r1v n,,. o! Publltllt<i o., .... C•••I 0111y P11o1. RCA can sell it to another Cost& Me11. Ct lllornlt Sti lt ot C1lilD1"nl1, llOllCt 11 "''"'' ,1.... Wld •l•I• be!nt dtlCrillf<I I S tollow•: Nov"""'' n. 1'/1 :ion.71 11111 bu1 l1>111 1, bllnt cordYcll-d bY lit••: lletlrtninv et tne t lor"""oc•lllfod Polnt,1--------------firm. "Negotiations and nu1D•rwt •rwl wllt. 1,.,. Nrtntt•llip ll•••to!or• t•llllni be· "'("'; llltnc1 conllnulnt •I-wold curvo d iscussions with a number or o. M. vo1tic ... ....., Al.AN STANIFORTH •NI JAMES 111'""'11 • <e111••1 ens~ 01 $~ ~J· 4''" •n LEGAL NOTICE . T~l1 tU!•m•nt hlf'd will\ Int Cll'Jn!Y MICHAEL EU,JOTI under tne flclltlou l ••< dl1llnct ol 100,00 IO'll, ,l--c-c~---------- partieS are still going on Cltrk .,, o ...... Count• an: Nov. 10. 1911 n ..... ot AlCO ELECTRIC tor .... rlY {on· Loc11fd In tn. '°"""' .i Or•ntt. Sitt• NOTICI ·OI' TltUSTEl""1 SALi towards: that end," Rooney ~ .. :.e.HIY J. Mlddo~. °""''' ,counly CfU{tfd •t no Wtot 1t1n S1rHI. Cotti Ols~~~";;1~;.EllTY SHALL IE SOLO IN T. s. Mt. 71·HJI Sa\.d. Publ\-d Ort"'l!t Co11I O•;lv Piiot, ...... , •• C•liforn!I , •1141 orft*<\Uy ~-AN "AS 15'" CO•on•oN On OKtmbl'r I. 1911. I t 1t;IO AM .• l HI ., 13'1 L-n A•*<IUt. Unll l. tool• FEDERAL NAtlONAl M 0 . T G "GI "But, il the busln~ is not N,::i•"'be' n. lt , J6 •"" OK""'ber ' ,,,..,,, C1Uk>lnl1, II no# dluolvl-d bY Ill T"':i' of St l•: , • .,, In .11wtut moftt'Y ol ASSOCIA710N II dl!IJ •PPOlnled l'"''" JOSl.n mulu1I ..,..,mt. • U 1911 51•1•1 .., Canhrm1Hon of ••It , under •Ill! PUr1u1111 to Olld of Trull sold, RCA is still d etermined l--------------, JAMES MICH...,EL ELLIOTT ~•s or "''' <•II\ tlld btl111Ce ,,..;aenc.a llv Dlctmbfr 11. !Ht. record<lll O«ember I ' I · · 1· LEGAL NCYI'1CE w!tlw:l<own lrom. •rwl 1101 ft•..-cl lo bl' llOtt •ecut..., by "'"''9•o• or l•u•I 0.f"CI JI. ""· 11 lnll. No. lffll. In tMok tll"t. 0 main a1n an organ1za ion 1110ci11911 1., "" ccnctucn"' ol 1•ld on r~e "'-'"' ... oo1a. T•n ..,., c1n1 ot p~9, 357, 01 p tnclt• •t<o•d• in "" ortlce Jarge e nough to fullf!IJ its COn· 'UUt ltu1lntH, 1nd ALAN STANtFORTI< .,.IH l'1IOl/nl llld 10 be de-oot ll,.0 W!"' llld. 0! 1111 Countv RKOtllff ol Ort n .. C911ft!Y, i bl. I' I d l'ICTITIOIJS aUUNlll h•••t!ttt ccnctu<t 11ld ltulfMH 1ild h tll· llld1 er offers to bf In wr!tJ119 1nd ""Ill Sl•te ol Ci!.tornli W!LL SE~L AT tractua 0 1ga ions 0 you a n NAME iTATIMENT lill•d"' •ti of !lit 1Ht11 of ••Id bull ... 11, be tfctlvl-d •I rh1 •rort•~ld ofnce •' AllV PUfltlC AUCTION TO H. G HE s T to assure that YOU can Still Tiit /oUowl ... ptnont 1r1 dofrtO bllll!'CSt t nd h11 ~Humfd 1M wl" -·~ 111 11<Jht1n· lime llttr lllt llrit oubll(t1oon n•ttO! •..0 lllOOER FOR CASH (•IYtblt el Umt r1' 11: dint ortli111lont of 11 Id 1tu1l11t11 belo11 a1t1 of 1111. Adm1n1,1rt1•1• ''"' 111 l•w•ul money al tnt Unltld Slltttl operate your equipment ef· •e:TtO-RAY. 1116 <1r1n11 AYeflllt ne.,tolo•• o• ne•••IT~• ln,urrecr. S•ld ·~•ttve1 th• rl9'11 lo r1lect 111y '"° 111 •t the Not'th Fr°"r t nlrt nce lo rne O••n•• ficicnlly for as long as you Sul!• E1 CM11 M~u. c1111. n•n oar1...,rih111 11 dltsolvld ~· of Oc.lobtr 31, bld0•· 0 CouMv cou•lllo1111 11K11.a ,, 100 c1 .. ;c Clltller L. B .. rv. H!J C111l1 SlrHI. 1f11. tlf"CI <loller 1'!1\, 1t11. Ctnter Orlve Wtt! tfOl'fflttlY W. 11n desire to do SO." NfWIMttt !leach, Call!. f16tll ALA N STANIFD~Tlt Lois Mt Y H1n1t~. S!r<•I) In 1111 cl!Y o1 51n11 ,1.n• R CA intends to r etain the J1mt1 F. fl...ckl1v. 11 161 fllfllllllmlon JAMES MICHAEL ELllOT1 Aamlnl1•r•l•1• o• E,, ... Cl C•llf0<11it ~II •lllht. ll!lt •nd l11lert1i Clrtlt. Hun!ln1to11 8•1cn. C~lll. •U~6 Pub!khll<I Or"'''' C1>11t Otllr ,.llor. C LI J""MES M. F~!SWOLO convev•d to •nll now lltfd llY u unO.r 111s greater part Of its £ield Galtn L. Bu<klty, 9111 l(ah ulull Orlvt. Novfml>er 11. Ull ""'·11 OL NI ANO JNYOlll. Oee.:I ol Trull Jn t~I P•-rlY 111.,11911 !fl Hun!ln1to11 ll•1cn. Cfl11. 97646 Allor"''' Al Lt• a.Id County 1114 Stal~ dt!Crlbed ti' engineering group a s a T11i1 btJ1l11111 11 11tl111 ccnaucled by A llJ v11 do I• "'' Lot 15 of T•ec:t No tttl •• ~wn on separate entity specifically Gtntr11 P••'"'""'"· LEGAL NOTICE fl'1c111c '•llt•t••· C411nor~11, t0i" 1 Mep rtcord9ll in iioo1t ~'· P~•• 11 d t . . t Jt mf\ F. Buckl•V J J4J 11\fu "° !llCIUt!Vt ol Ml•Ctll•nteul devote o servicing compu er 11111 1t1l•m•nt l!lt<i with "'' C011nly Pub!llh 911 or1n11 CN1t 0111y 1'1101, M4Pi. 1~ 1~, onic~· 01 ine counry 11 .. customers and nol as part of Cltrlt pf 0•1"1• '°"~1Y on: Oclobfr 21• NDTICI •:: ~:i':o1To111 Novemt., J, •· 12• 1911 1'H·1l coraer o• 1110 O••nt• Countr. ih RCA d. . . h d 1971. llY BtYtrlY J, Mad<IO•, Oepury JU,!ltlOtt COUltT 0, THI lht 11r~tt 911dr•H ftlld clhtt c°""moll ano er JVISIOn, e 8 • CounlY Clerk. •O dHlt n1!1on, II 111,, '' ''' ,_, ,,-~ p brt 0 c 1 0 11 Pll , STATE o, c""L1,o•N1A • LEGAL NOTICE -"' ded u '1>•G ""'' 0•• • y 0 ' THI! COUHtY 01' DllAHG• deKrlbt<I •DO•• 11 PUfPOl'lf"CI lo be: m r ' , . ()(lobar :It, t rwl Nll'ltmbtr S. 11, 1', Nt. A·l1l>4 Fl1rldt Cltcle. Coll• Mlt•. «;tll!ornl1. Rooney said the firm Is 1•11 1tlJ.n Ell•I• of JM:t{ J. lll..LEY, 0Ktl19d. NOTICE 0, INTINtlON TO f.NGAGI! Tne unclf'rtlgntd T•uttH al&c i.lm1 en .. Prepared to enter into new ex-LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE 1s HEREeY 01vEN 10 "" IN THI" SAi.i OI' ,A.LCDHOLIC tt•ltilltv '"' 1ny lncorrectneu 01 the "'"' ' crl-dltoro of 11'11 ibOvt ..,m911 dlC911tnl aE\llllAGES •dd•U1 •"" otl\er common llttl111111on, II tended ma In t en II n Ce 111,1 ,11 ,,,.,10,,. n1vin9 c111,.., 11111111 1nr NC111t m1>tr 4, un inr, ll">Own h•rtln. a greements• in~ladi~g l'ICTIT!c'U~41:'uuNEIS ~i,~ ~::•:;:~ .. ·::1 'v·i:,~1~:~ •• 'in •:~~ ~~~; T~u~I':';' 1~1 1~~·."~~~,~~ 11,,.,,1 •o· co~·:. .... ~1'; ;;!1,.~.,. ";;!:; .. ~.,! 1";.~r;;::, sort ware SUppor\S, With JtS NAME 17AllMENT of Int tier-or Ille 1t1ev1 tlllotltd 'out!. Of l llHI tor, no!ltt ii htttbY t lY*<I 11111 1111 rt1111ratno llllf , P 0 I '4: I ' 0 11 , 9' i Se.-5 Tiit lollowi111 PtrlO<I 11 aoln1 ltu1lne11 \o -Dltwnl tnetrt wllll !ht nttn ... rv Uncltflltt•l<I prooo•e1 lo 1•U 1lc011olic HIC"mb••nc~•· to 01y ._ Nmtlnlne compu er u ' • '" voucnt" 10 tM ~t•tltntd at" tne olll<• l>lvtrt>IH 11 lite "'""'1111, at..:rlbta 11 Ptlnct1I ... m o1 •n• no111 1rcv•t11 by u ld He said a check y.•ith WA•EHOUSE VILLI.GE. "° W11I OI 111•1• ~ltarllf•'= t<.AltNi i. l(AltAl1AN, tollow1: ~·to ol l ru1I. to·wll 111,/70.SJ. wll" h h h d 11th Sltttt, (0$1t Mew , C•lllor11r1 tori Wllih lto Blva $ul1e 1114 LOI l'DU Pl1ctntl1 Ave.. Cost1 Me11, •Mt>rul lhrtton. t i prov/-In 11ld cus1omers w o 31'e ar 111~re Mt r5111ll 0un111d. No .. l~ Lina• 111,, Anpelei, ,,11101n!• "ffo11, wnic~ '11 111, c 1n1orn11 ""111, •llv•ncn. 11 •nv . .,...,., 1ne 1 •• ,.., ""'Uipment on Order ShO\\'~ that N~wDO•! Roach, C•lll0<n1~ plaCi of butlnot1 of t~e u..Otfllontd In •II Pu.,111nl to WU\ lnt~nllon, 111• ~n· ol u ld ~l"d of T•u1I, lf11, tll1rrt1 end ~'1 lrth b!J1lneu h betno conduc!l-d by an m•lltro prrltln!no 19 Tiit Pllt l• al 10ra de.1l1ne<1 11 •PPlvlno lo I~• Oto1rtme111 '"""'""' 01 t~t l •ulltt •nd ol 11111 tru1tt 1"'11v1au1I. dtcrdenr wltllin tt1<Jr "'""'~' t lttr int ol ""lcOllolk BoMt•t9t Cont•OI lor II· crfll•d b~ Ifill OH"d ol Trull. MAR SHAl.l OUFFIELO 11.,1 Wb.locatlon ol !~\I no!l<t. l~lllCf bv tre~tfet of 111 t ltohollc br•t•· Tiit bent!1tlery under IAid 0.ed of Th;• 1t•Temt n1 IB•!I wl!ll lk• (ou11!• Olltd Stali mlli!t "· 1'11 101 llctnu lor ttt..11 P•....,!ttl •1 Tru11 h•rt1otoro ,•KutM t nd lll!lvtrtd Cltr~ ol O•all'I• Coun!y on: No•. 10, 1'71, WILLIAM H. TILLEY erwl foll-i: to lht Vl"lcler.,tlltld • wt1He11 Dtcltr••lon U . E BY 9t•tr1Y J. Mldda•, Otpu!Y '°""" JU ... NH"" F. llLLEY ON SALE BEEi!: of O•f1ult llld O•m•..0 lot s.1 •• l rlel • mvac ves (lt•k . (o.E1rcu10'1 pf tit• Wiii Anvonl dt1lr.n1 lo PrO!Oil 1111 lttUAllCI wrlllen Nollet OI Ot!1ult t ftd Elf'Cllon to Pullll\111-d O••ntP Co11t O~llY Pllol, ot 1111 ello'<t nimtd dtcl-dint ol tuch lltt~lt "'•v lilt 1 verlllrd PrOle tl S•ll. Tht u"4~t1l111HI c1u1ed 11111 No!ltt ., Novomlltr 12, 19, U •"" O.ctmber l. l(AllNS & l(""llAllAN t i •nY o!llc1 of lht 0t"Per!mtnt of ol Oelaun •nd Eltctlon lo Stll to be 1'71 JOil).rl "'~!I"""' l l•d .• Sorflt lU( A!(Qkolk lltVtrl lf (011lrOI, Cf bv m•il lo rteordf"CI In Int '"""'Y WllUI ,~. , ••• Aquisition . Of Business 1---------,.-,ccc=c---lt.ft """'""' C•llf. ttt17 lht Oeperlm•"' ot Alcoholic Btvt1111 P•o.ot•lv I• lctflld LEGAL NOTICE Tllo Ulll "'"''" Conlrol, t?U 0 Slre.t. St cr1men· C.11: Novoml>fr 5, 1'1t l--------------IAl!or11ey1 for Ct·l~K11lort to, Cl1 11otnl• 9$114, IO •1 lo be rKtlVl<d FEOEllAl NATION""l ,.Jl)DI Publlihtd O•l nlt (NII 0•111 Piiot. wl!~ln JO d~~' ot 111" da•r the PfOPo\f"CI MOll.TGAGE ""SSOCIATION F1CTITIOUI IUllNlll Oclol'Ofr 72, 2t fild No•tmber 5, U, pttml1•t were flt1! P<>lltd. 1!1tlno t • ttld TrultH, NAMI" tTATl!MENT 191) 71191 ·11 DrOUrwll lot atn!•I IS P•avlatd by l•w, B, Bott lllU ' ' ' ' • ' • ' 11 lht 11rtmi111 ••t now llctnlt<I fir t~• tl747 t s:"' to low nt PtrJ.On 1 0 "1 "'"" LEGAL NOTICE u!o of 1!coho1lc ·Mvtr•t••· Tiit form ot N P~blltnfd Or11111 Cnt•I OtllY 1111111. MA Cl(IE & COMPANY, )3ll N1w1Mtrl vHllk1!lo11 mfy be obtt lntd lrorro fllV ol· OVtmlltr 11. lt, ''· ltll lOU-1! NEW \'ORK fUPl l -The •1v11 .. N•wlMtrl 811c~. C1Ut11<..t• , IJttl !let pf•~• Deaor!melll "d I f s Ra"d Wm. R. Mtcklt. "' E. Gr•nGYlew, ,ICTtTIOUI aUllNllS 6tvtrly A. St lflltl 0•''' '''''· LEG AL NOTICE preSJ en 0 perry 11 I~"' M•dre, (tU!orn!•. NAM&" ITATIMINt Publlllttll Or1nt1 Coul 1 -----~~~"-'-""'---- Corp.'S UNIVAC Division said r~1, Do.11+11e11 Ii 1Htln1 conduc1ed b' •" Tl>f to11ow1111 "''IO!I I• dolfll bl.l•lntu Nowmbu n. nn >OY·l1 J.M h d th • • lndl•ldUt l, t>t SUl'ElllO• COUllT 0' THI T urs ay e company IS WM .•. MACl(!E CHARlEll FINANCIAL SE•VICES. SfATI 0, CAltl'OllHIA 'Oii discussing the possible ae· Thi\ 11.1 .... en1 f\11'<1 wirn "'' c-•• l§.IO E. Eot111,,. sunt 1, sa1111 An• LEGAL NOTICE THE couNTv Of' ORANG• C111~ ol 0r•"9e Couhl .. on Nov, 111. 1111. '110S Ne. A-11119 quisition of part of RCA's I Y ...... .,IY J. M•ddo•, Otouty Covnt' M!Chltl J tmt1 C1nt111. 1I1. 1 IAll:·JHI NOTICE 0, Hf ... lllNG °"' PITITION computer business. Cltrk, l.1ru1-.or •• s ... 11 An• t27t5 SUPEll.1011 COU•T OF THE ,011 '•O•AT• 0, HD\.OOllA,NIC Id i P11ttl11nM Or•111t (1>11! O•ily l'lfOI , 11111 buil,,.H It 1191111 fOflctUC!ftl by i n STATI 0, C""lt,O•Nl.t FOii. ,Will AND '011. L l t T a 11 S Gerald G . P robst. pres en NoY ..... lltf n. "· ,. .,... 'CIK ..... bef }. llldl•lllutl. THi COUNTY OF o•ANGE. TESTAMf.NTA•Y of UNIVAC. said no negotia· "71 """1·11 Mk.Pl••• J. Ct ntln Nt. A·11•'1 Ell••• of. HENRY BENTON JAMEi, b lk Tllll tllltmtnl lllfll .,.Jfh n.. (owl'l_f_'( NOTICI 0' HEARING 01' 'ET1110N Dtce111"11. • tions were underway ut ta s LEGAL NOTICE! ,11,~ of °''"" cwntir .,,, 0c.1 21, 1t11 'o• '1101AT1 OI' WILL ANO FOR NOllCE ,, HEllEllY 01v~N lh11 M1..,. were ooing on with RCA "as Bv 9tYtllY J. f<WddOI!, Otlll!IY ,_,., LlfllltS TISTAMINTAllY CNO Elltn J 1me1, ., flltd htlt!n • ~•il!on ,, ,.)4Jll Ci~k. aOHOI fro P•obt!• el l'iolcttr1,,.lc Wiit •Ml for are other computer manufac-l'ICllTIOUS aUllNESS Pub11 ... M o ...... '°''' .0111'1' ,n ... t, E1t11t of E\IERElT L. l(N OX. l lSO h•Ul llCI OI Ltt11r1 lUt•,,...,,llrv to tnt t urers.'' NAM• 1tATIMl"NT Odoblr :It, •nd No•trnber .. 11, "· k-n •• Ev .... 11 LOlll ll l(no•, 11M *111l-. rtltrlllCt Ill wlllcll 11 ..... , IM RCA •"llOU"C•d ea•l'•er this ,,',h• lollOwlntr ptr.ton It doln1 bll'l""n ltll 1'11-71 k,_n •1 E. L. t<.....r, Oete1st11. fuf"lhlt lltrlkult r1, •"!I "'-1 11!111"" '"" " " • ttOflCE IS HEllEIY GIVEN flllt P!ttt OI n .. 1rlf¥t trw ttme hit bNn 111 Year it was gettln" out of the Prime Trill\ H1irll"9 tnd (OllC•tl• LEGAL NOTICE Anclrrw l. "-"'' Iliff hertln • ottl IOI' No ... ..,,.IHt, 14, 1'11, •t ,1)0 ....... Jn lht • ., , '"' "'' "' N 4 t tin II°" flf" ""'•II o1' wUt ,..., IOI'" l11u.,,.1 1<1 ourtr00<n ol Ot,plrlmerill Ne, l of 11ro computer 'field Jllthough it ci'::1~~11." < t ' o. ' UI ' ' ,-, Lttltrl Tt1l•"""tery lo P•tllloMr tNo cou1 I, •t 100 CIYIC Ctlltlt Orlvt Wt1I, In · t · •~ v 1 nd J p r "" londl r1fl"f'Ht<I To wnlch 11 m•d• tor the cnv of ~1n11 An•. C1Ulol11lt . would continue o service o ..... Ltnl• 611 • ot • • ,tCTIT1ous aus1N aJ1 1ur111tr ... ,11(u!i r1. 1,,.. 11111 '"' timt 11111 011t<1 Nov ..... tttr 1. itn Companies th t h d it S Swtnll, 1111 Ml!,ntll No. 4 ' lullln. NAMI ITATIMl"NT ol11t1 01 hetrlno 1111 some h•\ bf>tn H! W. E. SI JOHN, a a Cillt0<nl~ Tht followlnt ~trlMI 1r1 llol111 tor Ot'<tmber !. 1911. tl't ::Jll 1.m .. In tht Countv Cl•r-equipment. Tl.~• b<;,IMU 11 btlne cond~cttd bY 111 butlnes1 11: C1>111t1oetn1 ol Ot•lftmenl No. l 01 lffd OllAHAM & JAMIS "We are definitely not \n-lndlv!GuJ~·E SWAN N THE GEOolllttf. 0C<IMl'AN"f, Oov1r COUr!, ti 700 CIMI( (ffllH Or!vt W11t, 'Ill Ml Wiii O<tln llv•. ' crested in the w h 0 I e Thi• llllflTltlll llled wl!rt '"' '"""'Y 11!<11 . ~13 Y•• '·· "''"'"'' fl••cn. 1111 City of s~n!A Ant, (flllor"I•, l o1111 , •• ,~. (t!llornlt "'" (llfk of Or111ot County on: NOU. 10. 1911. c ••.•• ,... .................. , CJ.. Qt1NI NOliftmbt• •. 1•11 fll: U!ll UJ·llJI Pa ckage " Probst Said o O M -' C Iv .,. W. E. SI JOHN Atttrntyl ftri '•tlllo1>1r ' • cr .. M t Vtrly J. ldllO•, ....,pu y l)ljn Ntwl>C11 lh~cn, (t , Cm.nfy (l~rk P11bll1rtod Ott~lt Cotti OtlN 'llol. The announcemerlt c ame at 11 bllinl-d 0 • ,, Cotti 0,,1, Pl1oi. iiottt G1rr11 11;1111or. IJ:3 Dovtr Ori••· w1TTM""N ""No SCHMIOT Nov1mtttr J. •· u. 19/1 lGCM-11 a news Conf,.,...n<Y> introducing u be ' n " nd o Mr l N•wPO•I &tit~. C•. llY r Wm. v, Schml~I .... ~ "'""' Novem r \1, It, • 1 tcim 1; TMt 1tu11,..11 11 btl~t tondu<tftl 111 1n Ut If" M!tutl Drl'tt LEGAL NOTJCE Univac's new disc-based, com· 1911 lO.d· llldl•ld\l.IL 111111 N11m11t• ,.. · · · j d I'-.. LEGAL NCYI'ICE Wm, S. G•rrlt N-tt l••c~, t;:1Ui..."l1 ... C ' C H 0 ' • 1 0 musician · or l en e ......,,,.. Tnl• ,111,,..,.,1 111,..; ,..1111 ""' '°""'¥ Tth 1114, "' '''' Nod E OI' u1L1 H h U . 9700 11110111 THI 'L-'NHINIJ COMMISSIOM puter system. t e. n1vac . "UNI C:IHk .. Or•-,..,n,~ "'~0Ct. J1. ltll. "'""''Y"'-" f'lll~ OF THI" C:IT"f o,·l'OUNT ... IN \IALLIY ~-new compuler j., three ,ICT!t!OUI •USINEIS er, eevtttir J. MMllo•, Dto.utir Ctunl1 '"bl!tlltd <lr•iUi• CO&tl Of llY 1"11111, NOTICE IS HERE ..... GIVfH tt\tt 0119 I IK' MAM• STAflMINT c .,~. ttonmblr !I, n, 11, "" *IS,·71 $111'r• hfl Htltlontd .... ,i.n11I"• time! more pov.•e rful than tJ\t Tiit follttWlfll """"" It "'°'"' bullPllH Pl>b!hhed Or•ntt C1•1I O•llY" 'llel. Cornmlnlon .. ,....,,,1 Liit 1, 1, S. 1, t. 11 11: 0c:1obtl" "· .,... Nev1mw s. n . n . LEGAL None• Univac 9400, previously the &ON.ii1n1 ,.11bl1.ii1ne corn11111, 1111 19n "1).1! 11o o1 Rlod '· lnict 1• lo IUff9I l"ll•Wtnt . •1.-. _.. LlllCt l)rlvt. ,.,,nn, C•UI. IO "" 910\'ltllnl el City c ... Ind In largest in 1.1nc: series, ••1\1 can ""· MHt"d ,._., uu L•l'I(• or1,,., " 1Jt61 l(Cerd•nc• wh11 ""' 1H"DC:111 1u111nM 111 ha•'f f" • ~ tntJy ,IC'TITIOl.JI IUllNllS $Ille Sulldlvblwl Mio AC!, Tiii• IH"-rlY 111,,1 e 1ve JOin concurr • Tutlln, c:1111. LEGAL NOTICE N••• •••••••NT 11 ,1,1tttH1 11 "" 1911""''' e,.,..,... of F. 1 d 1· · r the 9700 Tiii• buoJntH .. "'1"' COfldll(ltd 1w all 1rs e 1vtr1es o 1..,,1_16u•I. 1------.,-,:::::------1 Tll• 101-1n1 ,.,..., h o..ne bu1111tH T1tt1tr1 '"" Th ird '"" c111"1P•l1t1 ·" are --'eduJ-' for August 1972 A. to1111ot11 ,_ " ltKI ••~ •<•n. A ••In• et !ht ,,_.,. ·• '!°t' "Ii ~ ( f $ti 000 ( Tllk itttrmtnl 1119d lfrilh t11t C_.., FICTITIOUS IUllNlll NltW'O•T HOMES, Utl! l~v-k rewWIYlliett 91 l1M It 111 lilt In Me ~hl\l I WI ren or ' 0 Cltrk pf°''"" Cltllf'l4'¥ !lfl: ()(I, !1. 11n. NAMI ITAt•MINT Cini•, lultl E, P.O .... C.IC, NIWPOl'"I "111wrllll DlfftlOl'"I otlk• .,.. .... , .,. ,. 000 t h d t ti t c nt T1tt lotlo'Wlnt "''°" It fOlftt bli111•tn ,,,Ut, C1llf u1t111ll\ld -., •~• lnttrt1tn "'-· Sw, per mon an re a a ·~ ,,.,.,.i., J. MtOt1o:1 DfPll'ty °"' ' ••: o. c ... ...,ubull1. lfl1I senctvne l•n•. '"""' 611l•t"' 10 ttt11"' 111 ,,.,.... Ill' In $508,000 to $1 ,5 million. c ,~lllllHI °''"'' Cot!! Otll'I" ,,Ip!, ' A 0 0 I. E II Ac t( II u • L 0 I N 0 C.Otort• ••I Me•. C•tl10t111•. ~llitn IO 1tll1 '"""' wlll ... ··- EarUt!r In Tokyo, Univac 11n· O(tetlo.r " 11111 NOl/lll't11t1 1t 1~:; ~t!.Nl.~~t~~~:; ~~1i~ POl'lf1r0t• suut 1.J,~:.,.,:•1"'1" 11 IOl'IMll"d by An ;';:~': .... OO::-:.':'i:,•111n'~1111·~ :! M~i:- nounced it l!i joininR Oki Ell!!(· 1171 w,notn w. Wltton. '"61 vi. ••~ o c. ICMUbl.IM w~neia~1. Niw1n1111r u . 1111 11 '!'° I n. t . f t -Ctbrltl, l.111111• lflll1. Ct l!I. ~JJ, T~lt 1tftt1"tnl "/Ill• lllod Wiii\ I"~ ~.., I~ IOI• COUMll C ... rftbtfl. .C!ty Hell, tr c \Al, o manu acture llrge T~l~ 1NtrMu 1t "''"' c1111111K1..a BY '" covnh' cie•k o1 O••"'' cov~ty on 1ou• s1•1 ... Avt""'. P:ount•ln 111H1v. computers in Japan under the THE BEST 1n111v<J11w"· 1 w 0<~ttt1 ''· i.n c1n1ert101~·, .... , .. 0 , ..... ,, ..... , , , elldtl . Wiison Jlllltt f , (11 .. 11 '" '"' " ....., .. '" Univac n11me. Oki Will own ~1 l!t 11.dcnohlp po I l 1 rirove l lll• 11,1tmH11 111td ... 111r tllt ceunty ""'"'""" " L•w 011 THI! et1Y of' perctnt o ( 'the venture Oki ''Pf'.11nul1" la one. oL the Cllrt pf O••~•• <own ry oni 01:1. 11. 1911 1111 owl'<Hlt orl¥t. suu1 t l'<IUNlAIN VAIJLIY h d'·tr"bul-' A • 1 "'"rid'• fnost popular comte '" ••~ J. l'-l•dllOa', DIPll'iY Coun•,. fllrw"'rt •••di, c111mR11 nwi Cl.INlON Sl;l!ttltOD 8 S Ui I ru mer Ciln· t di Cllr-Tt rtol\tnt 0 141 IUol'tt 5ttr•1ary lo lit• mJ ade Univ1c computers In D~JLy ~itl,i. all.)' In the tx'~lfl~ ~;j''Lov~a,:,:;., o~•v ,,;'~;: at'.:!':"'; ~;:,~o~~~ o;;IT ''1"1r.: 'ubt1~"n~1~:C::!!r'' o111,. Pill!. apan. 1•11 "22.r1 1•n 1 u.11 Ne¥tmo.r s, u, 1•11 m 1-n -•• -. I I ' Je DAILY PILOT SC Fr1d.11 Hovtmbtr 12 1971 Your Jtloney ' OVER THE COVN1 1ER Complete-New ·York Stock List Ne,v ¥i)1·k's-Hea1·t «_,t..tllt'11 111 ...... ..-.allll•M at • ..,.,Mt...., t A.M. ,,.,. M.U"i. PP;c• " Ml llKlllft ""'It w -rt.11'-!"''ll".,. ., c1mmlt11tA. il\Ko0 1 ffl ·~co-." _A Cot NASO Listings for Thurtday, N;;.em~r 11;-1971 Slowly Deca)fh1g 3' ~ • Al'u!I 1~ L .::7~==>....,..,._ll\'•IY!""!i_,...,..., ____ _,_,11::::~1~'"~ ' 1.,. "'g'i n Nl!W VOJlll. [AP Ainn $v 1'-Ho Coml 511 111\ lfl'll Dltllr$1 !'lo S 1F1t Gtt1JI )\I '•NW P..Sv H jl"' :JP, °1'0 -Tiie loUow[no Ult .C.C lot '1 1 d (om (i,H 1 II' 11 ~ Diie I~ ,.. 2lo F1IP M1t U 'f\1 ffo11I (jl l! •'~ Arl~l'll 1,, $: ' I .. IKIMI AUG .. Lt 1• ~ lt~ Comw ,., 21i. u~ Dlkll Cru 11W 11 ,,,.,.., "" 2' XI ~llvy M , .... tltft .. r"'l' " I 1 •-10•·-OCC 1-,.. 1141 (111pt Cm 6 , •1 Docu!tl lt lt\11 FrPM WI 1\0 11'11 lo Arl ~ Arm« SU 0:, :",! i''~u'0v';; Bi rd 'A'1 J, 1 ~ Crr.11 11111 11'1 s Oon11 LJ iv. 1-. F11Wt1F ,1\1' 1" lo ftrt Ulla 16 • "'""'" ''•" By SYLVIA PORTER HOY.ard C Jlardcr board ctuurman of CPC lnterna llonat was expla1n1ng a fey. "eeks ago Y.hy the SI 4 b1lhon a year food company he heads has moved from a £asluonable Fifth Avenue high rise to a sprawling headquarters acroSll the Hudson River 1n New Jersev Said Harder I o Nev;$wcek We !coked at Chicago "e have our largest plant there We looked at the West Coast we re growing fast there \\ e gave them some thought but not rquch I value very highl y the concentrat1on of talent Jn Ne" York City theres no ehance. of any place being even a close second Then Harder volunteered I go into the city three to five times a week Actually 1t s easier to gel to Wall Street And he emphasrted thr.t the fundamental reason for CPC s _move was not New York s <:rime or filth or pollution or traffic ll Y.as overwhelmingly teh expense \Vhen the nature of our business d1dn t require us to pay that price to be in thAl location You don t move unless you can save a lot of money Does Harder f u 11 y ap- prec1at~ the 1mphcat1ons of his statements:') "onder1 Do you1 This companv hke a disturbing a n d sl1ll r1s1ng numoeror-glants--=--has le New York City not for other areas across the U S but for the suburbs hugging Manha! tan Tbest runaways are still drawing on New York City s great and unique assets 11) An enormous tremen dously d1vers1hed h 1 g h l y talented -and most s1gn1f1 cant -exceechnglv mobile labor force New York has four m1lhon workers dwarfing 1n 111.f! and d1vers1ty the labor force of any other melropolttan area And vital point this labor force can move easlly and quickly to wherever the Jobs are \ 1a an unparaJle)ed n e I w o r k or subY.ays buses and trams As an 11lustrallon every weekdav t 10 000 people use JUSI one of 1he subway systems serving Jtockefeller Center e v e r y day 100 000 \vorkers reverse co1nm11te out of the cit) t2 l A money market which )s the und1sp11ted leader of the entlre y.orld \\all Street needs no elaboration \V1thou1 doubt New'\ ork C1 ty Is now 1n terrible trouble perhaps the "orst ever The much pubhc1ied defeat of the transportation bond issue this month represents a ch11J1ng setback lo desperately needed improvement of mass transit and the 30-cenl subway bus fare IS doomed The housing s1tuat1on has drifted froin crisis to c2.tastrophe and for the first lime in lhe city s history we re actually ex per1enc1ng an annual nel loss of housing units Our crime drug problem pollution lraf he snarls filth strikes etc etc make da1l y headlines around the globe \V h 1 I e Manhattan 1s still the cor porate headquarters loca lion of lhe world the erosion of its lead 1n recent years has been obi 1ous But my 101\n is fight ing back at 1as1 -and ~hat 1s Ille <OUlllef a .... k 811 Pn1C • ' I (1!'1111 T~ ~ ... Clow JQN ' v. 41 PICk"I• ,,.. 17 0 I S.htll l ,.,. Arm\! c 11 ha ~ g b• b b I • Ind 11 H 1611 1' 'Con'lff!, 111 I .. C.O~lt 08 20"" ~Flt T"el nv. ttti. °'' 5ctn • \ 1 Armo 01'" p,,.._n1n re pr 0 a y ,n•u••i"11. .. UI 11:"" R11 !111 11 Con PIP 101 *•Dunk" 0 tn~ 11'1.,,. WttU , .. J\~ Opt c Ttc Ji.,, ,,, A"" Ru .tO l I h b t II h ',',.! ~.-.. '••1 a.'~n R ,~. J . Con llDCl JS 26\11 01111h1P 111~ 11~ fOOd FtP liO 6 8""' MU I 2 Aro (QtO I' e egrap :S w 8 \Id appen in 11 S';ncr>f\G Biuer. F 31 !II 1 conir•n 1•• 1" 01/rlron n:io 1J i Fore1t o 11~1 11 o rmoot ~o tlo ~~~B1p.d 1 "' va rying degrees in c1t1es the 111 BK 1~ 31 l"• B•umr 1 JI. .. JT\lo C:111l'f\Co >lit ""' Ez P•lnr 1 P~ Frrn ,u '"' 'h g •er TP 21 v 21\l Au" r.w 1 6~P 5 lllo 16 llJll Ml J01o 7ll 11 Coro S 2 ' !lo Eb<>rln I" ~11 )~ Fo1t Gtnl J)U, 20'A Ytr NA J • 3 ... AUii G 1.10 03tiOn Q\ er 11ir" NC 7"6 N ~ 8" IM fl 1 0 I (otm Yfl J 1 6 ~ Econ ltll JI\.) 11 Fotom11 :Pi j" P1b1! Br 61 ~ ..... AM:! IP_ l 2011 'J O mt n t Um for Im "oh'•'•'•"•'• 100., ,•, "o'lo'o cMo1o -~ ti C 1w Co I' o U fduct 51 1\• J~~ Ftniol (' J ·~ l'K G Mt 2Jlo 201 A•~ Tr•n"• " , 1 1 f Ct011 Co 23 '> 1• ISIP11 El Ill. 11\0 F•nklt1 El l•o ..... Ptl;.cO J\• J"' Alf'll~ .. U V Bits ll\ !7'. 8 d Son 74 IS 't C YI lh1 6 • 6\1 E N S1ll I lb Frno Ct '4 ~~'I l't~ I 0 J J ~ AiKI I ll'i provernent or m11ssv.:en1o '' 2~1..ei'1uo ''' urlrFeO .,,, J ~E~ll• •• l~oGIUCmP ll.. J ,, Or ll't17oAll '"I II l• JJ (JO COIT! 7' I 0 EIK N..cl lJlo U Glib ~t 7''1 7f ' Per 1 H J~ Jh Al Ri!!.. If S transport3110n IS b 11 I l ding Fkl u~"tyt·~t 3J~ 3~1u,H1!!1' \' 11• o ..... tll ~· SI~ EIKh•tn I. J .... G1rrMI 1H •• )I'll P.,. ... Ge O>o Ill~ ::1RUi""'li.8:~ '8p1dlya-••e •IUmaybtnt •••ht1lrl•1 80<>1Al1 lJ !i.>,D1nlJM ,,,.,, El~MDCI 1• 2hGIJ Gbn ,, j P1rtwH \0\l l'~A.ti.1Cot1 ll\I "" (p '"' ... 11 -.. I I 01w c. 1V. 3 I ElfCI Ch ,b ~ c;.n Aire J 1 si.. Ptl F111> !'o s.. A.10 ';:.;"' the lurn1ng point Up\\Brd "FA Fr1 I• 15 ~ Bf[nll 7ll.\ n 1 01 I °'" ] 'f ] 0 Em1S 011 11 1111) Gen RIEi ·~} ti. P1u" p • .. ... Autom II AID •n< • i 1 ~ II kl 5<11 lt ~ "~ 0.1• Gtfl 4 • It\~ Entf'llJ c 10 • n1; G ""' ) • ,.. P1vel. th 1' Au omtl'I ,,., There Is clear recogn11lon that a rs inc ,, , 8 ,_, "' 11 11 0.11 Pkt ·~ 1,., ,•-,,.~,,,a 21. '"' G1.i•t11 11v; i1"' P•1 L nw l011t 111.'t Av<o cw11 AVM c n n v, 8 h w II 11 11\; 0.11 n p ... --., •hi '. l • G1e1 ... w ,..~. 1! P1trl Ml 11\J 11 AvnoC• wt the 101\er middle lrlCOme hous-A~o I~ I : 1\• ll~kb /,. ll)l 1 \• 01vl1 F~ 11 I 't EPICO n Po 1 Gold (J(I ]\I l.i ... Pfttlt1 T lS U Av<o pfl10 be A n I 'l 'l\;, e k 1? ljll Otyln I fl f'• 101'; E<IYIJ 0 I t~1 9 t Goukl 'l llo:.. 1\1< P1t1n P1c 1\10 ?tit A.,.,,, P~ 2' mg pattern m us t CUI " IK tY.. •" .... 0.L~• c s S7\.'t Etlt ltc • .. .... Gov EF n 21"1 n P• Gt.W 2J .. ll\o AVMt J Adma 7.\o Tl~ 8Unf)llln .. -· Ot th lei. FPA Co ') 1~ Gr•oh en 11"' ll PN1I ew 1'14 ...... ""°" p JO drashcally changed and ~1R0~ 1 ~"' 1J:! ~~'.Zs~lm ;:11 ;;~ 0~ 1;, :i.1 • •,,. ',,•, ',",'' ,'. ,~ Ggroll Sc: ~~\' l \\ Prr 101 r ""' 50 1 Art cOll l lOf without go1nu 1nlo detail ma Ar,, s ~ t , ... C•mOt N • ~ s Oelh cw " 'ek • •• 'A Mrm ... 34\lt P•U bo" ni. u~. " '<Ir 1~11 11'1 ,,, C•nn M II f1\1 000/l Dtl ca~T 610 ' ) F•rdY~ E • • s r••n M 3" !4" Pl> I" L ,v, 91 ll•OCkW 50 JOr po\Jcy movrs It~ ~ssure this !1=1:-0 l~ 0 ,ii'<~:= ~ j~ l!: ~.~i~~~~ J:! ~~ f:~~~·· 2i: ,i.. g~ff·1:f.~ 1:~ 1J ~:EFr~ A ,t\~ J~" 3:~ 'N~ In are tncreasingy I ey :~~cE1 ~ •• f!!~:: ~~:~ •\• ,,,.0 g1•1 "'° 1 l""'F" 11011 1s 161.!tGv""" s !V,Pit 1,, 12 11~11111 1>IB1~ An Association for a Belter "ko lf'MI 11"11 13 • c1o1n A, 11. J 111 oa R 11~ 11 • Pert ttK ,, '° e,1"''ff F,•,"' >,,. ','."C' •""'"'"'~ __ ..,_..,..--,. ~ .. He1 !Ill •\~ S Poull M 6~ f , In~ o Ne" York has been formed by :::, rr.,~ 1 ~ J,. ~:", T~ ... 1 -~· · -~-=---H•n ttr F 11 u P oc: ,, 1•~ 1 8-PIC• M 5 1 Horii JOI! rJ\lo 1J\lo Pro Golf ,._ J 81olk of NV l 100 of tht city s most pro-~:~ .. ES:~ ~ • 9 ~:~e Ge,,' 1: "-1,1~ Ht 11 co 1 • No PtlHI Min ' , iu, ll"tnk Tr 114 1 G > MUTUAL Hts A.p 5 1 s ... Put>S NM 1t"' lt" llart>rll 1 111 mhinenl b~:1nes0s1mLeen '~sndReudr 11hne ~1~.-f-.•·,, l : ;~ c::.~~ c J~ J ; ~~..!" ~ ~ ~~ =~Citi,Nc 1 ~ 1 ~ ~ 3,:~",c c~ ~ c airman:.uip 1., • 6 • -..er lfl. so,. Pur~ in. 1 , •• c 111 SCI "ne 0 1 New Y"rk s t"p real :•,, 8~,·: 1~~ l c,:~u,' l:~ 1t.: 1~ : Hor r RH n • n P lfflMI 36 3' • 8 0 1 t• Mlg u " u u Howo G 6\ l~PlflO Ct• •\'J f •lfsMI Pll estate men -with the clear ::; ~': 1 ~, 1~, i~:'f'o1f '{'~ 2~ ~ FUNDS Howmd n • l't\, Qu11 CM 7 11oo 1h111 "° 10 I k b d It Fl11 lS 11 9 Chm ltl 11 1? H~ck M!f S 540 RT 5111 :J?o ''• liusc;l\Lb IO aim o eeping us1ness in an Am Fu" 1, 2•• c11,.1 11 H.,a, P111 21 • '' ~ R•t•n Pr u 1, 11 1••1 Lab 11 G u 9 Hursl P s~ 61" Rehall c ltlo 9 11.tvk C' .JO allracting new companies to :m., 0 :: '6j ~ i~•·: ~~ Hren '" '' 24 , 1 R1nb11r E 1 ,,, lie• nv• so h ---.. ...:I Hvatt "' 10•. lfo RIYCh c.. t? • 9• BealFl!s J 16 the city As a result l e OY.n :::;: J;,~v ;~ 1!-}" ~~ ~0s':, mate SJ 10 , 1n Rivmnd H"1 ,..,, 8ecli.m1n so ' CS Of 2 000 COmmerc1aJ and Anaa ~ ?11 ?•1 Clt1nU A, 301, l \ NEW YORI( (AP ) Johnlln ?1 ! 11 5 !mil~ Co ~. ... RK09 EQ IU 9 1 II.,;! O ck JO "nlle<ls 8 l l'-Jn-. ti rnUI I '8 a n\i -Ille lol ow 119 OllD-Kev1lont Fulldl Ina NIK r 21 o 1•••1 Reoce 2i\4 '1 8etchA.r llOb residential buildings h a v e Anlltn 111 , 1 c 1 k .Mf '1 1 21 '""°"' -MiPf~ «1 br Apo+,. o 61 1 10 lnror Int ' • t • Rts1 en¥ 7"-7h Be cr>Pet 500 ~ ht NallOlll A.1'°'1· CUI e 1' •110 lO 11110 0 SP of_ ·~Rold Ex lll.., U Be den 1 :Ill taken O\ er the JOb of sweepln" :~~ M'!°! 9"' ;t ~:r:~"'o 1 ~ '"' • 1°" or s..:u1 'es Cu• 111 '° il n .. 1n1t1 1na-1·~ n•nRobln M 11' 1t1.1o Br onvH .oo " • ?>;, 0.• t s Inc; ••• Cui e1 1 •1 t 16 If>! mk q , 2 Roblrh J 9>.; 10 , !fell liOW-eo the s1deY. al ks and gaiters at ~~~~tG n f,: 1~ • ~=r co ~. 1l ' ;;;:,:rkn :.Cuwn ~~ cu1 ic 1 1 " 1 ~1 1n1 m1 c; ll im ROlf!on 1 1•0 :=:, •. c,0 60'° I.as( "nee a day A crackdown Arrow H 7S' ?! , Ce 1" Fd 1 1 coo d hi•• tieen Cu• KJ s J! s 11 l~Bk W•ll !'-61.io Ro..lf :i•," 1,s ! 8, .... 1~ '" ., ArYldi 10 a.>. c..,., c, , >., •)., 0 \!tkl) or Ooutht Cui 51 119120 71 lnl tls CP 13~ 1n Row111 In .... • ~,..:lie:;. Cp 1 60 I' Underway "0 smut peddler• ---------------1'1' • I Tllu sow Cul $1 lOOl 10" IM Sv11m 60' 6lh Rus Slow ,,. -• " ti tG aid Alk (111 Sl I 16 I 62 ln1rw1y I 11.o J1dlltr 2 , l"" Se...,! pU )0 1n midtown Owners o f A.GE: Ff'MI , 93 s oJ Cui s• ~ ll s t lank1 1111: 11;,, l'h Sein 011 11, t 3:".!u.~0' 1 lO b Id th ,t.119 dn 111 2 14 PQ11r • D • ll llSou Ut 21 • 211• Sc1ntn Et ," >,., ll•"9ll4'I lt1 UL 1ngs are on Cir OY. n Adm 11 v undi icn <kl' • s1 1 '° J1co11 FL l , ' , Scllon In S • p I Grwtll 10t111KnlCAGI 16'19•6JtQullC 111 111ikle CPTr ?n 1•1B•keJPllo r1nanCJtlg the lightening Up Of \VJ.Ill 00 fl(om • I? It) L""°• FO 6 00 6 S6 Jim Wfl ) J \ Ser i>DI H 1'0 , 1 ~~ Bo ~ S! I lO security measures 1n their ... ~~·:rs : ~~ ; ~ t;: i.~n : ~ 1~ H ~11/..1"1.,, ; 0 ; ' ~~,1~ Po 2~: 21~ ~ :,t;,;k, sl buildings lo Slash th' Crime Aoln1 F 9 95 10 11 L b y Fd • ! 6 " Joslvn M 11 I ' S•• If DI 7] ... , •• B • Jolin " Allll111<1 6J4 l l6 L. ~1< J U 611KMS no •• 71S•nfCI F s ~ s1o'" L1uv rate The creation of a ne~ 'Barometei·' ,1,u1ur• F 1093 091 Lt,. • •o• 111.:a 1 s s 111 st• com 11•1o u1. '""1< HR •• ,t, Am Fii /1 84 ll~c Nil O 41 ll ·~ K1l1S pl ' 9 1 Stnll n 1, ~, B Uf It 60 convention center 1s being ag Al • • • 10 1111 64 Lln11 • 5, K• v1r 11 " ~ sp..-~n u ' , 11 , '•~•'••' ,•,r1t~~ AIPlll /ISl'3loom 1 S1vt1 Kii'""" l il<Slloo Rt f 9 -"" gress1vely pushed Ame~" 03 • 59 C•n•d 1• ll l• 11 K• e G • l , J smeu1 11 s 1 , Bo sC•i '5b L ks (d>od Am Su• l 10 j ~ C11> I l 1111 11 Kersem j l•1 St11P T ~ l•"'t I e°"'" nc:I And the city IS becoming 00 Am Ovtr 036ll ll MUI 141111 40.IC•• T 'o 10 i C•lWll eook~tn ,,. Ame., v s11 s eo Lorl! Abt 1011 IC'..,,., CP 7 l•SoNE lei ~~:i..U Borden 170 ffiOre COmpelllJVe and \'/llJ "'E!~ 1E~P is~ I U lull\ 8" 11 o l? 03 Ke fl J> 1 1 sw GI Co JS JS" =~~"':~r 110-:,S become more so with suburbia 1nc;me a" 9 u M19n1 ht 111 ' 11 i.:;, lwd 2s , 16 sw El sv l1 1 1 eo1Ed 1 1 36 NE\" YORK un "'1.~ lnvtU I 61 t .. M1nnr.. • .. 111 IC•I ' Svc ,. ' JO • Sov n (p lttl. 1(1 eos Ed p!I .. s-rarasofftcerentsarecon .,, ( 1·11-11ic sl>fct '°'~""•1-.Gtto i;.o .f,.i.:;euuE.,-n ,...,~ , ... ,,e~-tnc Sl<>el IM 9 OJ M8Hlcl>Ultll Co ICev~ F b I' o U I 5 lnl!Jn 11'1o 29 Br•" I Alrw cerned Forahageamountof sw1mm1ngpool 1ndu!l lry AmG1n '" 1.111 Frm 1 t.11 10icercu~F 1 t1sd Rs1 !•'41•oB e11s11¥1 II I bl Am Inv 506 SCll lndll' 'lt '"KtV• PC 11 l 'Sl1n HPd •S '6 , Brl1IMy 1:111 new ofhce space 1s coming on usua y a re 1a e economic Am Muri 1 Ja • lS M1>1 i1 01 u 1 K1,,... 1n1 l • i , s tr19 sir 11~ 3 , e 1s1Mv 011 th' market Just When Vacan baron''('' Seems lo be po n AmN Gin l DI J l1 MIU F nenc;I IC 11¥1 El ], Jl.o 5 JW!t (I JJ lf Brit Per ltll I A"clto Gouo Ml 12 "H70K rll Co S o S SuOsc Ty 7, 7,Br Pflln39Q hlch ti ng t d b C1ol 110 1U MIG 11 "7ttKt11pV09 , •• ,,sued•" o,o .. l!dwvH1lt c1es are increasing -W owar a u s I n e s s Grwtn io as n " MIO i. &? s,. L•nc• 1n 18 , .. Super et 11~~ 11 ,, B11wv11~ .,11 must and will force down recovery this year Sales or F71'~w ~ ~ : tt ~~ ,? !: 11 !: t:~nR•~ ~~· !"~~~~a~ ~l'l~ 3k~;~,vuGG', ~~ rents Meanwhile office space pools of all types which drop-.-.1v•;1 •, ~ •: ~; M1111e s u ,3 2 •l l•1dv CD 10 10 , 1~,....., 1,:_ 11 ~w°n~ir~o 711 beco d 82500 r A H M MF Fd 11 ll,ltll Coal • Wl1vlor ! .. 1n the suburbs IS ming pc to tn 1970 rom x:n~ 1ug f~1 511 Mood• s 11 Oii 1 01 L• s G " 1 . 1, t•J w1 ,, 15 ewnsnoe 1 ~ n1ore expensive both 1n direct 91 000 1n 1969 reportL'Cily are ~~le ~ ~! :r, ~1i ~M" ! ~ ~ t t"n"'1~c:it ,g i: ~ l~~mPib 15~i..u! 1!~~·~1 1 ~ and uxhrect "'ays That pen heading for 9~ 000 in ore this scien • J& •it M O<TiaG s 11 6 11 ll<Nln c l ~ 1 • Tt .,om • • ""• e!>dvF 01 60 eab>On 19' t ,. M Omell 10 U 1 JS loll aw &~ I TY Com I 9 1 Bu01ltt lnll dulum still swing s vear B•v • Fd • 1 • 11 Mut Sh • u '1 11 91 lD9 E 11 '" 1 • T ,.nn~n1 XI 11 11u11For• , 70 l•v•k Gr S 20 5.61 Mui l st ti 1 fl lJnc;!> C l '• 2 &o Tt~ AmO 1 l!ulov1W 6(1 A final point t. all those The figures cotne fro1n the ee1cn H 1 10 n 10 1i NEA Mut • u 9 6l l\o\111 •n G l• • u1.1o Th~m " ~ •• ,,. 6\lf!k R•""' e11cn tn 1191 1tl N•I Ind 10 S1 IO !1 .Yll Poot ? • l l-T l~y Co I , I 0 BunkR oil ~ millions \\'ho think they can pabhshers of the industry s ae" K~ •n •it N•• secu St• M•I Rn• 1 "'T nnr 1.. t 1 , 11u "", 60 escape to 2.ny s11b11rb and le ading trade papers Swim l~.G:n ~lI !:~ ::.!t" ~1:1~Z:t::r!:1 c s~ 't.~~e;orGr! ': ~~=~~\~:;~11fs ~osper '' hile ••e1r centr-' ming Pool Weekly a-• p I SDI Fon lO ... 11 ., 0 v d • 11 I SI M 8•owr 2•1 2i 1 T ncn l G 11 "· Burlldv '~ ,~ UI ~ Ill.I 00 e Wl'I ,, ] II ] 95 Grw!n 11 t I!) Mtu LP • , t l)tR,t,NSO 0 2? Bu qll< 6(1 •-·Th t !beN Bul<>ekCa ..-11'1 PSk10J768McC~r 7•ll"T j Homl >9 SU1hU11 • Cil)' ~avs e Cly IS ews Rulck J 4'1<74 lncom SJ7 SI McQu1• 15 &"Trco Pd J• lS heart and the heart IS life The bfggesl gn1ns reported b~~~n I~ n 1; ~ S oc1t 1 •O I 09 M~ c H '"° 5 T Ga l l, Naws 100110•1 NeGth tlttl ~tOlc M 1t 3041•tnOG •• s c,abOIColO There 1s no e5C8pe not e\ en are 1n the in ground v1nvl hned NV vni a 15 .3J Ntl Sldr 1so•16 "° Mrd " 11 u Tv1on F 1 , aoence nd I h h t I I b I I eunllFO 101 l02 NfUWCtl 6Llol 66!Mtrl!ln 1'')! U"!ec l o l 'f111FnaMo life 1 the eart 1nlecenra poos utconcretepoo saesBusM• 6 551 eN•uwFO 10., :i.Ma1~w 11 l• unCHos , ,,::.,•0~L~n!s city dies There never can be are doing well today as are €~a:~nd ~~ 1~fi ~::,;:1d H~~ l: ~ i::13:~~ C• lb1 6 • 8~ M':C'1 7J • '~: [3::1~ :! 1 J Freyer Gets New Post At Crocker Jer1y E Freyer of Hun hngton Beach has been named operations officer of Crocker Bank s San1a Ana office 1t wa s announced by Harold C' Kipp senior vice president and regional manag~r F'rev~r formerly loan or fleer at lhal office 101ned Crocker Bank in 1966 ln the adrn1n1stral1ve training pro- gram S1nre then he served tn various capacities at Crocker Bank s off1te in the Palo Alto :irea unlll his transfer to Southern Cahforn1a and subsc quenl appointment as ass1s tant 1nanager of the South Coast Plaza office tn Costa T\-1esa Frever also served as assistant manager of the North Orange Villa Park ofhce 1n Orange A nalive of Ilhno1s F'reyer attended Bradlev Un1\ ers1!y 1n Peoria Tlhno1s He Sl'r.ed t~o vears 1n the Anny the panhke above ground \ inyl Cto t G 11 3 • 3 so N <" s1 • 11 o• 111.1 Mlaw GI l! ' • us 8nknt ''• 1 a11 Pa(ll CIPll SI! 617 6-26 Noo11I IS~ SS9Mll!Pt }t 6(1 US Envp IS\ J\ anaR 1 0 lined fVVl]S There probably C10 1 " 11 91 1l.Ol Oce•nvr 1 M 7 a.. MUI Mus Jlv. 1' >us 1 kLn :io 301 10 c eoc1a r-v (.,. vSll lll6 1•6'1 Drn.i11 •OI 6MIM,,.r" 9 ''-Unv Ar S'I µ.,Clo Hold •f are a boat l\\O and a half limes c111nn1,.. Funai 100 F .. 1111 13., 11 a1 Mas Gs 35 35 ~ uo p.., P ,,.._ 22"" C•r1><vn , 5" 8tlln 11 •l 11 •' 101 Fuf'MI t n 10 lt M .. RT 15 5"°f U!ll Ina 7ll~ ,,\, 1••1l<;lt .0 as many of these children s c""' St 1 61 111 a... wms ,, 9l 14 tl Miu v1 o HI\ is' u111r For 1'19 1 0 a,',,",',~, t lh 0 ...... 11 S•l Stl oNe!! llJ!1!lt MoR1n11 1""1Vtlltv0stlo L-sp as ers installed as 1n ~"'"'" 1 '5 • l• °"111nh 1 I' 190 MOii! co1 1 ~ 1 v11ue LO 1 • Sit ! ~ t'K' \ ~ ground pools but it ta kes ten c1>1°':'1Gr 11'cJ1 1" Oat> AIM 111117 10 Meo e P 11• , .. vano Air 1 t 1 riercr> 611 C~a 1 1 MJ I 09 OTC 5« 10 lf 11 Moore 5 11 t 11 a...:t S lt\~ 61~ ar Gen O!> oflhemtorepresentlhesame f'u"" ,571oo10P1am1A 1111 •1Morrsn l( u ll'V•tco 11 ,u1, ar wa .o. Front ll :JD P1ul Rvr 1 41 f 1 Mtg G I Ill 1' ~ Vl!!'!I on I\ 'P 6 Ct,!lfCke ~ 111\ eslment as au In ground Sh ha 11 11 n 71 Pi nn SQ 116 1 16 M1or wt 1 ? 1~ w~d< Pu 11 } n ca er Tr ICI Sae.: 9 16 Pe Mui 169 lffMottl! M •> 5 Will 8d I > t CCI (!IHI pool Chem d 171' 19 J9 Ph 1 ll 111J Qt Mot Cutt l• • 1'•o w Rtft!le l ? ~Ct P 9op Th (o on ti Pllg !m 9 t IC 11 MXUELtER 1 w1n Nf1 ts J>o •tO Corp 90 e reCO\ ery Ill swim1n1ng eout1 Jn •JS Pint st 10 11 o IJ Mu r>n P 1"\ 1 1 w~bb R~ 6 11,, r ·~ecr> 1 pool sales 1n the fa ce of spolly ~u:;._<1,, 'g Jl 1 l ~I :1: ~~~ ~ f, 1' i: ~~~11 nia 1~ , 1~ , ~: :r1 w 1 :~ 1~ ., f~~~H~'\ H business cond1t1ons lS due to lnccwn 10 'lll06 P1n Inv 1os1 s N1tcer R 6 61 ve "• M 'o~; Ctn! Lt 56 Vtnl '11 S21 Polll 171•l 91Ne!Gll.0 lO 'J l WelsFM 711•1) (nil olliO several cumulative fa ctors ~01u Gr 11 1J6J IJ 61 Prlc.e Funds N Hos.a we r c;~, U' 16 cen! PS 1 2<1 cw n AB 1 l6 1 lA Gt'Wlh 2St7 ?5 t7 Na! l 1> ~ ",, Wsln N,1, • ' ' C•t1!L•lol , peop[e In the Industry Say c;:,: i_1 ~ ri l n N E I t 77 9 11 N P•lnnl 7~'-11 ... Wun Mia I 1 6 1 !enMPw 1 10 Th Comp Co 6 Oil 6 SI N Hor I 30 56 JO~ N SrcR11> I > I • Wstn P 4) 20'> i rntSWst 1 ev are Com• Id 9 13 9 97 P o Fut1d • 15 • 1s Nat Show 1 ~ w>1 s ca 1 r111 Sov• 1 _ ConllnuatlOn 0£ the trend Como Fd I JI t SJ Pro Pert! I ii I It N1 5 lvr S • 6'o Wttl~ll 91, 1'"' f'llTtl~t : Concord tll tlJP ovkl •11 S2 N EMGE'. lt1 lloW•1lm!I ?•o:n \ :r~ ... g IO towards recrealton at home to con1 "v 10 11 1112 Pru MP • 1110 1t NJ Nar G 16 • 16\.o w M w111 '" , .. !'"""", eo Con•l~G Sll 5611'~tn•m Fu""• Nctlsn F 16\\il"'W•c PL 7P•2. F• SI IOI avoid Jammed highway trafhc Con Mut 1 n t 11 G"°'" ,. ,. 1s S6 N ''" A 3' :to \ WdW 11 l J' 11 """°'" nc COllt G111 t 58 t " Grwln t' o ll N • •n II 3' ;i,l'l wr111.. E 1'• 1 11...io pl )So and the r1s1ng cost of \ acat1on co o Ldr IS n ,, n rncom 1 '' • ' NoC• G• 11 'i l ~ wr qM w ' 1 >.1 r.amos 1 ro (I Y C1p IJ1Jl•H ln•esl I l llf NE ur 0 l JY,VOfl• f •1 J -. Ill le NVl JrlpS C n WOlv S 11 1 l! RfYf t t JI 0 t Nl N• G. 1 I? ZIOl'IUI 8 f/So 11 Cll1seM11 II 1 I [lk (~WO•l6691J1R .,!f 1•111!6 CtuMT 1'2<1 -A growing ear O a e dfVHll 64 11 41 61 ~., r~ , l 1' J it C1>ecl!'l'r Mel d II l bel I De ~WA t G OUP ScllUJI J5 t 6 6) she IP8 1• an stream po II ion -IC Rtt•I 1 ,. 1' 77 Scudd~r F ~a· c~eme n '° that JtS Safer to SWlm at I)~~: l~lJ 1 $~ i~..:lnv 1iii:,;~ NEW RORK fAFl l'rl!8•1 COtnr>teh~:v,N~JiH hon1e 0 r C•t. 'l5 '.. Bl •11 lS 13 15 l Nt .. .,.,,~ St<>ek E~tftlllOt or (tS !"t• 011 0. ' h b II b k th rr:: •. o• 1: 1: ,: Jt Com SI F 9:: t 69 Siieo Ntl ~el sr.,~I 1/f' -pas y le an s IS 0 t~I Fd I 19 n '' 5oCU t, U" ~ 11 Chits) HI•~ Low Cltst en~ h M SPP )ear to finance sales of swim Orevt Lv J 11 u11 fn~v,1:. ~:1 1 1~ A ~!P~~:P1a I E'Br.fr.How~:.1osa UI ft Ill I MI - -Ch RI ti NW mi ng pools These are G wt11 1161 !l 1' S• KIM Funl!s All.JcusF 1.., 11 11 • IS'• lS , CNKFu • l'Od I I I h h I I /flC'Om '.() 6" $ti ""' t 1• a 6S A!tb Lb 1 to 111 l"• 51 I st. c~ 1· c Ill rea1\ey 1g rae cans Jllt(I 1 90 ,,, se-1a.. .. 1.11u uACF no1., }I ,9 "o ..,,_.._c1>rsc1 cva1 1nuch easier lo write than stoc-12.11 11 01 st1 soi is 05 • o '<ctrl<!!Cltv IO 11 1 , 1 11 -\o en om11 60 Ett'lll! 12 11 J ti Stnl Gth I 1S I t1 Acme Mll 7b 3,j .oJ o 12 1 l:l ... --l I Cl>rvslr 611 mortgages for example \\'hen E01E SPI un1v1 1 ~,n v F i. • s :>1 ~0,•.",,~ ~ n1. •' •,,1 -~~'M~:." 1 w•', IP f GI 1l 0! 1J 10 Shltn Fd 10 OS 10 0! 1 ·~ lt 10 thevtnvl lJnerpoolsflrst came tut1 T 11N11'6S~&PMOdtrt {;p !::!.~~s/ l}Q l lf.', n,• 1~,,:C,',~~~8le 11~ mer$« S7'1 J11 Ft1 P 't 677,1,1 L IO l9 CnGE '' out bank loan off1c1a~ tended E"' •Y 10 n 10" cmst-, 01 ~ 'J ..,: ~:Li° .,,1 2DI ~ ~ }6io ~ ; +n~ c r>Mlia~ 1 '° to look askance al lhem bul ~:~ :v Gtn : !~ ; !: ~1Z" F~ ~ ~ ; ~1 :"~ln t ~0 1~ 211 j >'! ,~-14 -'! i:l :,~"so~ they h I\ e held up so well 1n ~~u ~.~ro ~If 5 fr H•ror ,• ~ '• 11i " • P "" 10b •l .,,,. •• •9 .. 'ttS•c 1.10 F I 97'1lD 1S bP•(f ..., I" (O"C llGO 5J !I lib 6• t Iv Inv'° u~e that the banks now are F!rm 0ey , lS , 35 ~XHEA.11 A11 :lo!' AJ 1no...11 It' 4 l ' 3 .. N3,'! ~. ~11~,~~v Df81 F llel 1 G oup Sl\f!fr ny 10 ll 1 11 Ak1one 11 .. 33!! lJV.. ., ~-• S 111l11ng to finance their sales soorl 9 5110 ,1 ~hf!rm o 111J 11 u ! • ... G•• ' o • 1,,. 11 .. .., -• ~\!." • '~~ 1 "° d d Cao ! 11131l77~1dP Fd '" tJl •-• •n•s i~ 11 • n. 16' + 'Ci•rk 011 «! ilCcor rng lo C a s C a e Contfd 1 &O , MJ s am• F~nc:I\ :1g:r1oe l l u fl'• 21 • 111 ~ -'' c '" Ct 1 1 90 1--•·•-t ( h h Ollnv 6 lJ Clo I 136 t sns JI I' ',,1 -,,. '· CitvE:H 7 ?• 1iu...,.r1es nc w IC Ene• ll061J 1 nve•t 101111 11:J~~g,:,,:;ml~ 1;; 16 ~ l\I<+ ~ciev ,11, originated them ~";/' 1j~ litt .,;:.,11~"11 1~ ~ 1: ~ :1~~~!0 X:. ~ ~n: ll: ~ -~: ~~0~110 ..,, -The prices of sv;1mm1ng Pur In e 10 060 \w nv1 1 U tal A 1Amu ,.., '"' N,01 J;; lJ ~ + 1111enPt1 '° S61tm • 90 5 36 \wll'I GI 1 0 7 U A. f<I CD 1Qo 17 jJ 10'' 11 _ ~ lllellP ol I pools have not gone up nearly r •nc:I 21'61' 1S !'t<!vf• Inv 11 s1 111a A.1..,Lud i .ci 63 11 , ,, 11 • NA FTni .Sii -1000 F """CI Proo SDtt: a Ill I .. •Ui!Olud t>!) 10 ll'< JS"] >jl.. ... loo NA. cl A 1 10 so much as the 1nflat1on of Dv1 _,,., ,•,•, •,•"•st~ f e"""G " el!Pw 1.'6 7f 12 )1 • 1i1 _ g,C:'' s'.S1''. I nuul Com F •t5 '•I A •t1EE 811 • 16 M !5 ~Gs"' ORDER YOURS TODAY! Penonalized • \ Stylish Beautiful Stick·on LABELS • Efficient mnne} so man\ prop e con ,;-com s •• 1 '' 01~ Fo J ,, '1 • .-.ii.ea c11 1 10 61 ') 2, • oc.teo H ood vent 406 ••5 p F i6 SliAd M1ln IS ?1 j ' "! 3'•+ ,coc:1 81ig '6 sidertht!mag bu} F0~1FoV1ll.0~11ots1F::GI ,11 ,31 ..,!ldMI • 7! 6 I~ 11 Coldw enk r Th I I t I 111Vtll0$ s '' ••59 1•1•A Pd Pd.ii: l o 111• 6 1 l•1 +•!Ca ~on Olb e \ ltl~ 1ner poo 0 \{0 • 1J I Jll sl~ ~ F ndl ,t,!jltt;IPd of l ,5 •S I IS -"' CC119 Pt 1 .io wh1ch Is al least $2000 ~,;k~ ::~1~~~ ~~mm:r 1u1J f~!l1~5~uJ.•e ~ 32,.., 301 12i! +-~.~~.n~:·:..,56 cheaper than the concrete ~~1~~11 :~ j~ :·:c 1.0 •.0:11~~rAyfO'l60 lif ~l1 " ,,: ~1'' ... +.!'~:l::'i1si1°:0 I I led b bl t11s~r 5 lll 590Sl•n ROl' Fds ,1,111111PC lOo t l , )o l)•-\Cottlna .60 poo 1as crea a 1g ue Fna G 11 ~ " 4 11 B•••n • 11 lt 11 A (""' 1 ao ltJ 31 , l1 • '.li'lt +-, cctt 1n pf•" ti h k t F11u,,.,,ers Grouc C~P 0 '111 t M AMO" ->o >• O >'" > 1011 Ill'" -coar omMwner mare Gw1h 1se:i11ot S111Ck 111slJ 6SAmt<'E1f20 •:111 1,::111""'-11s 110b-The pool can be rehned £or h'<om 17 t4 1t.u SVPfl vl ld 11w AmHts• 110 m llll) JS lil~ _,. 1, es P11 Miit•• '" I n Grwlh I" 1 '5 ArntH "'150 '" 11 11 1 IOI.. ... "' olu G•• ... " $300 after 11 has been used for iotc:r 10 .s 1!"' sum r 10 so 11 1 AAlrl"J,,. ao •1 n 11 n -1 , COl\IP c1 1 FDtff... 'n l 11 lK~ I u 7" Afl'l AlrJ "°" 3•1 ]SI 10· l5 • ... I to!SOOlt , IO If something goe s~ran~lnUr-SYncGll> Ill t"9 ,1,e1-irr :IGcl I ll 't ,, 11 •-•,CmbEnl..«! )ears. wronl:l -\\ ldespread belle[ that a sw1mrnlng pool adds at least 10 µer cent mo1 e thnn 1t costs ONT( •• , '" TMR A.OP 1 s U SI! .. ernd1 ,,., 171 JI. ]I JI -~.cams.in.,. ~~' ~ •1 J! •,•,, l••cht• • tS o 1 :::::e,:'2~1 1~ 2fO ..,, "'1• .oJl'l -~ Com1s.i1 ,. to tncom l 'SJ '71 TKll~•d , I , JI Am 011 1 )0 lf I ~ J~o l~ 0 -h ~:::::~: l '° us Gov lO ,l l ,., lf'Mf GI •Ii' 1 ... Ctn ol115 I"'" 11 · )6 'f-.com! .... FnF DN 9 91 9 11 Towr C10 I l1 S 16 "m Ctm ]lf SI 11'-'J 6 Com I'll to Funo nc Go T n~ (OP 110 Ill A Chan l.O 6 1f 1• 2•, <-Com pll •l I no~c 11 I •l Tullf H~ ll l1 3' A (van I )5 lH :IOI~ 29 • lO Como f ll 17 Comm t6I001 1T1vE1t oa..11M,.crvSUQl .O ''° t 111<1 +-.Comw Oll60 to the valuc of a house ~11 T d u 11 u ;a.a Twn CG • 1 •• l 14 .-.0111rt1 ..:io. loo o11 ...... ", +111 !°"'1111' se I be' I Pio 1l0 JHTwnC Inc lJS 4 fAm Out Vt• U I t I • t• ""''''Soll \Yhcther or noJ I 1ese IC s F~d "'" IOI '1S USAA GI 10 Jl 10 l) A,()u~VI o4 ,. lt l'I • l) ' 11 I • om51I 50 Or der Fbr Yourself or a Friend May be used on envalope1 a' return aclclress labels Also 'Yery h•ndy ., rd•nhf1cat1or'I lafiels fo r m11r~1n9 person•! items such 411 books, re~ords, photo1 etc Labals lf1c k on igl.11ss ind may b1 us1d fQr m1rk1ng home c t1n n1d foc;d items. All labels •r• pr1nlad wit h stylish Vo9uo type on f1ne qut1lrty white gummtd p•por. t d t I I inltW\o tJ110""''0Gr>vSe o•J Oll •meow 1 10 -0 '''• >• >• • c-0 Mii•> are corre( 1es1 en 1a Sil es Es & s 1a11 .. U"1' Mut 10011ot1Am exo 11111 ~ .. '1 s • 1.] • i;;.,.....1 1 1 ' are lh' fastest grol'i Ing part O( °i!'.,sr 1, •, 0 ,:io V~ fund 10 I ll 11 •m E•P fl l'llO 1• • /l , i' 4 I °"'"" 60 "' )I 6 0 Un Of\ Svc G P Am Fl11 110 I t71.. I o H•o • \o on E0!1 1 llO the pool business The best G•.:=~ 5"C 1 • '" a°"' l • 1• u 11 ,1,m1<1" 1>11,. rt» ,.,., it lt, ..-1 °" eo , o• ' li N•I nv I 01 t n AG~Sd 1 11e tt jl\• 11\o 11 , on E:Olj • I S\:ltlSLiC!I tlVRliable lnchcate r~nSI 1~~1J;., 1>un•o 10101\ltA. (lenru SO lt th I" lt .. -r onE D(•U 8 h I C.l!>FO A 11! Ill bwf\1111 q t ll ll '<G11l11lll 1111 6 ]I, Jlo J !OflF01 110 I Mt 1n l!H l ere were on } G '" Ind II IS II q V~l'CI bl~l'KIS, A,1'.!!:''' 'II '.)Cl lO•t !l't 1oi. -• Oii FO '" j(I 2 500 pools 1n prl\ ate homes ~1~,: 2a 1l 211s ~m Gr '11 := ,; ~'" Ho~•' ~ ~~~ r, ;';~ ~ ., , ,, ~ t~:';'r<i 1 out of a total of 10800 By the t'w~· t~ ;c f~rit h~l,ll~~':i'ih1~ ?H ,;; ~r.: n~ =1 :~s!~J~~ end or 1970 rCSldenllal poo\S Hltt°td IJ;3 f~ e~: ::1 :~~ :1*:k:1PM! ti , ... 75'4 16 -t ~onPW Pf•(! had spurtedto777700-more H•Ct•• lOlllO!~U FO (•ll 170 117 AMll(r<:pl l 17 ·~loo ID"' ·~ .... +l'l!OO"t'"''Ln •• l I th HM!b or Iv I JI Vt~ Llllt I'd Am Motor• 1~~ )ll't ,: : ,. • -rtfn'"',,,1 tt 1han u1rec.quar ers 0 e ~:'°1!, ~fl 1t!; 111~10.!;1 ~ :l t rs ::::~• 1.: ,,. •l 'I •11' •7h -•0 c::::llce:. 'lf! }065()()(]1nU!ie H&>M!Ht 1 ~11 1f~) 'p1$1 •61 Jl)Am SHI l1 U'o II~ ffi"°-\li CICapfM\O lil~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~j!CM l'lftt 1 t1 I 1a v~~· k llMft ..,,,, SPllob 60 121 l$ ~1' I. ll '11 C l"R 1 -tsr Group 1101111 1 '( 1 '1 ASm,llR~l JO :ttl 11 .. u 1 ' .1. "Cort ~ .. -------------------, G!'W1n J,1 ~01 BOlCf!I Jj 171,t,f1'1$0,l,lf 1(1 ., r.· ~: ,,i..14c~l;"r, .. r ~-I" 'l' S1111tt I ,, t 16 •MSA!f '" 1(1 ! . ,,,. Cori1 Olt I IO FUI lll "'" (t"9t'f di• •n-""'II WilM 11.» !ti I +'u' •h l ., 11 J V&'>l! 111 'JS •• , Am s111111 "° I J . !lo l'; ... , Col'll Sii "° I •llM jll.iifttlfit l'IKI O!• .. ,. 0 •~J UH I ru~ un J 11 Vflltd • J1 • IJ A 5~ l>I• IJ l $1'-4 Sl\.I I'> -I\ Con! 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' llUL S I O~ -Sun 011 Co "' 'iRld TU<'Sda) II n1ay havt ! fuund 01) or ga!I 111 a new area ! of the Culf of !l.fex1co off tht ' l,11111s1:'lna coast Sun I r u1xralor fu1 a ft\e-Companv , gro p 1n the conO!ss1011 for " ~hich the fet.lcral government \\as prud $64 mllhon Sun said .t a mul ti well dril ling program : will be launched n the arta shortl \ 1 • • ' ' • f I l . l ~· • • • J2 DAILV PlLDT Frld;y, .Novtmber 12, 1971 .--~------ \ • • I -~·. CRUISING IN COMFORT -The new Columbfa-45 motorsaiJer is built along the Jin(IS of I.he Columbia-43 racing boat, giving it high performance under sail with all the comforts of cruising. La Paz Fleet Colu1nbia 33 Y aclits Poised Trots Out For Race to Wire New Boat By AL:i.ION LOCKABEY Bo.iint Edllor r-.1osl of the 33 y;ichts in the 'Long Beach to La Paz race to- day were struggling to break out of the lee at Cape San _Lucas and start the final 100. mi le beal lo the fin ish. Late Thursday afternoon the fleet v.·as still being move d by a 15-knot nor\~·ester that \\'as e).l)ected Ill be temporarily 90 Wo1nen Particinate I. In Regatta blanketed out as I hey hit bluffs between Cabo Falso One or the highlights of the recent Sailboat Show 111as the (false Capet and Cabo San new Co!umh ia-45 motorsailer Lucas Bay. from the design board of the There "'ere indication as ln late Bill Tripe. what the yachts could expect It is .. Coiumbia's first ven- on the· final beat up the gulf. turc in a straight cruising Front runners at Thursday's sailboat. .. roll call were the Long Beach Columbia·s president. Dick gyndicate owned RRgtime and \'aldez. readily admitted that Irving Loube's Coluinbia-57 the motorsailer is a cruising Concerto fro m Ri~h mond. version of ·the Col umbia-43 They were sailing within sigh t racing boat. This [act ~ives it of each other about 20 miles an outstanding performance south of the entrance to characteristic not found in r-.1agdalena Bay. .........__ ·_straight cruising boats. Handicap leader was the-_ The -COTUmb1a-45-1s a big. Class D entry Counterpoint, comfortable boat with Jux· co·skippered by Dick Deaver u r j 0 u s accommodations and Bil! Headden of Balboa throughout. The owner's cabin Yacht Club. Counterpoint is a art features at king-size be.rth sister-ship to the yacht that (6 fl. 8 in by 9 ft. 4 in.) a won the recent 7 9 0-m i I e pri\'ate head compartment Nine!y, v.•omen s a i Io rs Nev.•port to Cape San Lucas ;:.nd separate s\:il\ shower. and deserted the bridge tables in race. a sli din g-door v•ardrobe seven favor of breezy Nev.·port Handi cap standings: feet in width. Harbor \\'cdnesday to compete OVE:R ALL _ ! 11 Counter-The m<istcr stateroom ex- in the first Little Old Ladies point: 12i Quicksilver : 131 tends a full 13 feet fore-and-aft Regalta sponsored by yacht Bushwaeker: ( 41 Perirus: ( 5) and measures up in many clubs in Nc"·por\. Concerto: (6l Stpr: 171 Chi-details to those in custom-huilt The distaff sail(lrs came quita: (8\ .Qebinda IV: 191 motor sai lors of 50 and 60 feet. from San Diego. Alamitos Bay Dorothy o (Col-43): (10) Qua-The entertainment center is and Marina del Rry. Com-sc.r . the rnain sa loo n, located ad- pction was i'ti Lido·14s \\l in'ard CLASS A _ (ll Concerto: midships. It is Jlght and airy Sabots and Naples S0 bots and features huge picture \\'in· ' ' " · 121 Sandpiper: tl) \Varrior; T Ophy W'.nners ,,.,,. dows. Here the ov.•ner may in· r .. : 14) Aries: \5J Dorothy 0 (Col-1,.IDQ.\4 -1 !) i\1ary Jane 57 1_ dulge his decorator instincts to Tvler. BYC 1hc fullest, v.·ith rovrn for a .\l.'IN'ARD SABOT A -Ill CLASS B -(l ~ Dorothy 0: sof<1, end table, la1np and Sally J\1atthev.•s. KHYC : 12l 12.1 Quasar: !31 Alice: (41 chairs. Fran Bolt. KHYC; ( 3 1 Rohon Ill : !5) Alpha. There is <llso plenty of shelf Barbara Bishop, Pt. Dume CLASS C - ( 1 l Quicksilver : and locker space. The area is YC. l2l Pericus: (31 Star: (4) Chi· con1pletely c<irpetcd. There is \VJ N'AR D SABOT "R -( 1) qui ta: 1 ~l Dcbinda IV. "'a\king and s t a n d in g Jane F:!lenv.·ood. PVYC. CLASS D -( ! 1 Coun-hcarlroon throu~hout the boat. NA PLES SABOT A -(I I tcrpninl : 12) Bu~hv.•acker: (31 Thegalleyis"U"shapcdfnr • Betsy Ogilvy, ARYC : (2l Su~ Nitcfighter: (41 L'Allegro: (5) convenience ;ind is equipped · Kcn~edy, ABYC : \31 Fa~'e Centurion. with a four-burner range wi~h H umphre~·. ABYC: ~I ;i r . cvc·level oven ;ind features a 1'-laser SDYC: B arb a r a siife butane svsten1.-.lil'he on-off Si d BYC y h status of the i·cmote controlled ~~a;L~~· ~\BciT B _ 11\ aC tSDlell sh11t-0ff so!ennid is located in a Barbara Barr. SDY.C : 121 vapor-tight bu t an c com- Jane Becker. SDYC !31 r-.1ar ie w·11 F' c parl!nent ;ift. A red warning PhitchetL SDYC: \41 Anne I 3 •e li ght near the range indicates Kober, ABYC: 15) Gaye Horn-that the butane is on. An elec· in g. SI BYC. D 1, tric range is optional. NAPLt-:S SABOT C -111 ope CS t S The galley <ilso has a 24· Phyllis Koners. PVYC: ~2 l cubic foot electric refrigerator .. Lois Hammer. LB.YC'. 131 Kai· A 01 · hi' l lh<1t operates fr on1 either 11!}-re~ yn1p1c yae 1ng ypcs 1 C z I DC r · 'Pennell. SOYC; (4l Dott ie a bun'Ch of po1heads?' \'o t A. or I -vo t win t Ayale, SI BYC. sinks are of stainless steel. \Vest German organizers of Dish storage and drawers arc Offshore , Rule Group 'Establishecl !he ya chting seclion of the ample. Olympic games.· apparently Opposite the galley in a tl11nk so. accord ing to an dinette area is a large table Associatl'd Press dispatch out \vhich IO\\'ers to form a double of London. berth. The AP story said that in· The private for\vard cabin is ternational ~·acht racing, o[tcn equipped with its O\\'n head, a the sport of royalty, v.•ill be spacious hanging locker and subject to dope testing for the l\\'O "V berths v.·hich convert for the first time next yea r into a double. at the yachting Oly1npies in The ~·acbl has pressurized At a recenl meeting or the Keil. Gcrmonv. hot and cold waler lhroughout.. ·• Sa iling Auxiliary Committee Plans for Stringrnt checks The cockiiit is cquipperl with · <>f the American Sailing Coun-on dope taking by Oly1n pic pede~tal steering v.·ith fl 28- cil, a technical con1mittce competitors v.·ere disclosed inch dest"royer type "'heel. It con1posed or U.S. sailboat Thursrlay at the week long is situated <ll deck level and . builders and designers was ml'cting of the Yacht Hacing provides ea ~y access to both • r0rmed to represent the in· Union . deck arid interior. An optional terests oT {tie council ton-TYRU members. including steering station is <H'ailable in '"~cerning proposed changes to King Constantin of Greece and the inain cabin. the International 0 f rs ho re King Olac and Princc'-Harald The undcrhodv of the . Rule. of Norwn y. v.•ere divided into Columbia:45 resc1i1Dles that of •~While technical committee 15 C<lmmittee~ meeting mainly the "43". Jt has a long i fa vored the ch<lnges proposed behind closed doors. v.·alerlinc. s"·ept.fin keel and 1 by the Offshore Rating Council 1'hev v.'ere \old by the \I.rest decp skr.g-mountC!CI rudder. of the IOR at its n1ecting in Germiln organi1.ers Iha t : Const ruction is of molded J-San Francisco, it asked that "There will definitely be dope halsa+eore fibc.rgla lls to pro- .fl.M~ deadline be extended to control in line \\1it h dircc11vcs vidc n1axin1u1n $1.re.nglh·to- allow for C<>nsideration or ad-from the lnterna!iona\ Olym-v.·cigh1 ratio. Both th e unitized dilional factors whleh the pie C-0rnmiftee." '-· interior and the deck and ( ~ N • ~merican Sailing Council feels;===========:; trunk calii'fl re lW(l!d'~-air -. vare impor{anl. · , KIDS LOVE single units. • , annua-1 holiday • sale. ·. I ' \ ' .. '·•. \ '. • romantic longdresses 519.99 At dream-come-true savings •.. o be111utifu l collection of dramatic evening looks in exotic prints and solid colors. Shown, o u·neck be It e d sheath with flowering sheer sleeves, in fluid blac k polyes- ter. Mony one of kind, not oil sizes in oil stores -Hurry ! Wind sor Misses' Dresses. _at the broadw~y . • ' _'The extenslon woold give the · The bol'lt carries almost 700 · t~hnical committee lime to UNCLE LEN fC!tt nt sail ln a 1nodern sail ANAHEIM prepare and analp.e its pro-SATURDAYS IN plan, gh•ing plenty of power to 44 ~ N. E~tlii:I ! 71 41 515.1121 • NEWPORT '1-iUNTINGTON IEACH CERR ITOS 500 l o1 C•rri h11 Mill r11J ). 160.0411 THE IROADWAY 011AN61! .M•ll of Or•n9• 2JOO'NC: Turtln St. !114! •t1.i 11 1 . posed 'changes as they v.1ould dri\·e lhe .vacht without power '..rela(e to the linal e<mten~ or THE DAILY PltOT under '""i' wlnd and sea the lOR. condition. • .. SHOP 9:30 A.M. to 9:JO P.M. MONDAY THROU6M S~TURDA.Y-SUNOAY 11 A.M. to 6 P.M·. • , . '-" .\ ' , .. - • • • • Gasoline Tax By JACK BROBACK Of !flt D.1111'1' l"llel Siii! Orange County's newly-created transit district. operating on a self-imposed shoestring budget, now firids itself in the position of a potentially rich heir. The new law levying a sales tax on gasoline wiJJ possibly mean $9 million a year to the district. The five percent tax is expected to generate $129 million statewide and officials gave the $9·m1Uion estimate on the county's share. Under the law the county supervisors have a cholct. 'Mley may elthe:r place the money in a special public transportation fund or lower 1the overaU salei lax on all items sold ln the county Crom 5 percent to 4.75 percent. Transit district directors are hoping the supervisors decide to make the money available for transit. They believe thla • will happen because of the almost total lack of public transportation in the coun- ty. Tbe transit district, which started ., s DAILY PILOT 3 Windfall for Transit District • operating in January after approval of Its crtation by the vote~ lest November, has levied a 2-cent tax of an allowed 5 cents. It is estimated lhat this will raise about $800,000, most of which will be spent on consultant studies and a sktleton staff. Orange County Road Commissioner Ted' MeConville. who is acting' general manager for the district, beUeves the directors will decide to spend most of the $9 million creating a needed bus service ln the central and northwestern portlons of the COW'lly. He poin~ oul that the directors have placed a DUS system in a position of highest priority and are preparing to spend up to $35,000 on • apecitl bus needs $ludy. There are currently two private bus companies operating in the county and two subsidized city bus systems. The city systems 4ft in Laguna Beach and Santa Ana. The South Coast Transit Corp. operates lines from Santa !-na to Newport Beach and Lagwta but has r;erved nolict that It wUI quit soon. 'I1le onlxiother bus servlct in the coun- ty ii provided by the Southern callfomla Rapid Tranalt District, out. of Los Angelu. This service Is very limited. rifonday the dJrectors of the Orange Co~nty Transit District -.:UI hear,a report on a meeting this week ln L<>s Angeles concemlng the federal Urban Mass Transit Act and U>e plans of the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) to obtain JOme of the montt from Washington, D.C. Ofrectors wW also hear a recom- m.eodation on the top three consultants or 15 who bid on tht special bus needs 1tudy, The local taxing ability, the state sales tax on gasoline and possible federal funds adds up to a viable transit district lot Or11nge County. The directors have been under pressure from I.he poverty fighting groups and·the Grand Jury t!l provide a bus service as soon as pcssible. Harbor Hassle Ended Legislature Solves Long-time ControversY. After years of turmoil and bitter bat- tles between the County League of Cities and the Board or Supervisors the Harbor District problem has been r~olved. Legally,· the district now has jurisdic- tion over Inland parks and recreation areas through passage of the Cory bill in the ,present session of the State Legislature. Actually, County Di.rector of Harbors, Beaches and Parks Kenneth Sampson ex- plains, the dlstrict has been handling the park program for some time. 1'-1ore than two years ago the supervisors made Sampson director of all harbors, beaches and parks. E~n before that he was directing the development of the county's regional parks program. Il followed that the office where Sampson presided would handle the parks program. It did. . The Cory bilt \\·as a compromise work· ed out after the League of Cities. led by Huntington Bell'ch, finally gave up in its efforts to ga.in..passage. of a_bilJ authored by Asserpblyman John V. Briggs (R· Fullerton) which would ha ve abolished the Harbor Dislrict as a separate taxing agency and made it an ordinary rounty department supported out of the general fund. Supervisors Pushing for the Cory bill pointed out that recreational and park projects have less ctiance of being financ- ed if the money comes from the general fund which Is an open target for all departments. Proponents of the bill by Asselnblyman Ken Cory (D-Garden Grove) finally con· vinced the inland cities that they had · more chanct of park development in their areas under a separate district with its own taxing power. ,The new 1aw provides that 75 ·percent of the district's tax funds shall be spent .on inland park development until such time as the amount spent for this purpose shaU equal the amount spe;nt -by the district on harbors and beachet Ln previous years. Thereafter. the amounts expended on the-coast or inland shalt be equal. A top tax rate limit of 20 cents is pro- vided and the district board, now five members, may be increased to seven. The Harbor District's current tax rate ls 12.4 cents, with mo~ th an 7 cents going toward the $2.56 million purchih of Salt Creek Beach and parking lot pro- perty in the Monarch Bay-Dana Point area . REGIONAL OCCUPATIONAL PROGRAM STUDENTS WORK ON ALISO SCHOOL REMODELING Mike Pearch of San Clemente, Robbie Wolff of Laguna S.ach, Henry Helm1 of San Clemente This Guy's Got A Ne,v '51 Olds -Only _8 Miles Students. Learn 'Hardl1at' Trade in Unique Class A cla ss of South Coast high school students are gelin$ some real "on the job training" in CORstruction technology class. Th'e ten students have recently com- pleted their first project at Aliso Elemen- tary School in Laguna Beach and have UNICEF Yule Cards on Sale At Post Office The 2.nnual sale of UNICEF Christmas Cards began along the South Coast this week by members of the sponsoring group and wi!! shift to the lobby of San Clemente's post offi ce on Tuesday. The cards, note stat ionery and calen- dars featuring art work from throughout lhe world reap funds for the United Na- tions program offering food , health care and education to children throughout the \\o'Orld. Volunteers selling the cards from their homes through this week and the \veekend include: l\frs. John Erickson 492-6061. h'lrs. Joseph Hall , 492-4600. Mrs. Steven Spelman, 496-2850. 1'-trs. Genevieve J-Jelstrom. 496--t213. Any of the volunteers can accept orders for any of the Unicef greeting items. Barber to. Give Close Shaves To Girls' Legs ST. LOUJS, ~lo . (UPI! -If you're female, between the ages of 15 and 19 and want your legs shaved free call Guy A. ~tudd. a barber and former haircut. ling endurance champion who is seeking ne"' barbering records. ri.tudd, 34. wil l try his hand al shaving 1he legs of :wKI women today -if 500 women are willing to cooperate. "I'll shave 1.000 women if they come," the suburban Klrkl'l)Od barber-said. '"1~11 shave 2.000 or JtrlOO if that many show up. But, even if only 100 show up, I'll ha ve my record." t.tudd, who says his onl y motive Is to set "a new and different kind of record," will use an electric shaver. lie said he will 1have .women from the knee to the ankle. "1'hey C'1n wear anything," be said. "'I'll havt a cloth to throw over them." riludd Is 11 form<!r 11-1arine and a ba chelor. All an Inducement he's offering 1 free palr of pantyhose for any partici· panl moved out to the school district warehouse in Laguna Canyon for another job. The youngsters and adults are taking the class through the Regional Oc- cupation Program, the vocation training arm of the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified School District~. 1 • ··They were all pretty green when we started," says instructor Dean Whitaker. owner of a Laguna Beach con'Struction company. "But we started the year with lectures on tool safety and they have already gone through the operations. of framing a building." he adds. The students -one o[ whom is a mid· dle--aged woman who "jusl wanl.!1 to learn about construction'' -worked on remodeling the teachers' lounge at the elementary school. They did the rough ronstruction work of erecting two walls and a roof and paneling one of the rooms. The fina l touches will be added by school district maintenance personnel. according to of!icials. The class meets every day from 1 :30 p.m. to 4 p.m., Whitaker notes, and \viii continue for the entire school year. At the end of the course, the students will be: trained in all aspects of construction and will be prepared to take a job in that field. he adds. Although he has had no formal teaching experience. Whitaker noted that be often hire.!! young high schoo l students for con- struction work during the summer. He says the final exams for the class won't be necessary. "l v.·ork so closely with the stude"'nts every day that it is easy to tell which ones are learning and which ones aren't," be says. District B u s i n e s s supetintendent Charles Hess said that the district will probably not save a lot of money by hav- ing the class perform small COQstruction projects. The jobs they undertake would eventually have been done by district maintenance. personnel. be note!, but by having the student do some o( the work, the regular employes are freed to do other projects. · Official's Wife Seeks Divorce CIDCAGO (l/PI) -Joan Kroc has fUtd suit for dlvortt from Ray· A. Kroc, multimillionaire chairman of t h e McDonald 's hamburger ftanchlse chain, on grounds or extreme mental cruelty. In the suit filed In circuit court Thurs- da y. ~1rs. Kroc, 43, asked for alimony. court and lawyer costs: and the couple's cooperative apartment · on Lake Shore Drive, plus tis furnishings and paintings. Kroc. 69, has been divorttd twlct before and Mn. ~ once. They :_were married in Santa Ynez:, Calif .. on March •• 19$9. Man, Clianges Mind, Lives SAN DIEGO (AP) - A man who left his gas stove on all night ln a suicide effort awoke, decided be "'ould just as soon live and lit a match to make coffee. police said. \\!hat lit up Thursday morning \\'as .William Buhse's apartment. Two walls were blown out by the gas explosion and Buhse came flying after them. officers said. Buhse, 33, suffered burns but was reported in stable condition at University Hospital. Police said there apparently \\'f!:re enough apertures in the apartment walls to allow air to mix with the gas fumes during the night Buses Rerouted By Complaints Complaints of noise and fumes from inter-city buses traveling through the residential ara of Laguna 's Cliff Drive on their way in and out of the Art Coloriy have brought prompt response from City Manager Lawrence Rose. ln a letter to residents of the ajea, Rose announces that GreYhound and Con- tinental Bus Lines have agreed to stay off Cliff Drive and use the Coast Highway- Broadway route to and from the bus depot when entering and leaving Lagun a. The only buses using Cliff Drive in future, says Rose, will be the city's new mini·bu~, which he says are small and quiet and "will ... constitute no annoyance to peace and tranquility." CHARLOTl'E. N.C. (UPI) -A bl-and new 195t Oldsmobile? That's what the ad said. "Brand new St olds 98, stored 20 yn., I ml. '2750. 399- 375.1." And Boyce Goolsby. who placed the ad ullder "o.nUque cars," said the car had not even been driven by a little old maid school teacher. Goolsby said he bought the car "on speculation'' rrom a friend. The friend had trailered the car to his home In Marion. N.C .• from Arkansas. Where the Olds had been stored for 20 years. The first owner of the car died the nip:ht he bought it, Goolsby said. "The wife decided she would never tfrive the car, and she rented a space for it in a heated garage," Goolsby said. "She instructed that once every 30 days the car be started up so it wou1d stay in running condition." Goolsby.said the woman kept the car in H1at manner until her death 19 years later. Then Goolsby's friend bought the Olds and brought it home. The car in 1951 sold for about $4.600. Goolsby said a comparable model today would cost up to $7 .000. 'Mus\c Man' Star Returns to Laguna Lagunans who enjoyed the Lyric Opera Association's summer production of "The Music Man'' will have another op- portunity to hear the star. soprano 1'-1arilyn Savage, when she returns to the Festival of Arts grounds for a program in the F'orum Theater Sunday. 1'-1lss Sa;'sge is coming back to Laguna Beach to entertain members of the opera group at their annual meeting and the public is invited tO attend the 3 p.m. pro- gram, .ftte of charge. Gable's lst Wile Dies Mrs. Josephine Dillon, the first o! the five wives of the late movie actor Clark Gable, died Thursday in a Glendale sanitarium after an extended illness. She was 87. He was an extra and she was a drama coach when they were married in 1920. They were divorced 10 years later. Freeway Opponent Cites Legal, Attitude Oianges By BARBARA KREIBICB 01 "'' t,.111' l'li.t llllf An outspoken opponent of further freeway conslruction in the South Coast area said today that changes In public and governmental attitudes, along with new ·Federal laws. bave created a totally . different freeway picture in the ye a rs since the inland route behind Laguna's hill.!1 was adopted In 1967. ln a letter addressed to the Laguna · Beach city council. resident Wllliam Leak denies claims that tbe newly emerging freeway opponents are basing their argu- ments on emotion, rather than fact. "The autocratic attitude of the Division of Highways has been a formidable tradi- tion. but limes have changed," says Leak. "In July of this year, a new state policy was announced by Gov. Reagan. who said 'An absolute condition of freeway construction will be: that the community agrees to It .•• Calilornia is taking a new direction in plaMing Its en- tire transportation system. The Depart.. ment of Public Works wnl not only con· sider future freeway routes, but whether freeways are needed at all in a particular location, or whether an alternate transportation system may be more desirable.' " Leak goes on lo cite Bamford Frankland, asslst'ant director . or the Department Of Public Works, who has stated, "Traditionally, we have evaluated freeways from the traffic demand stand- point, now our first conside ration will be the preservation of the coastal en- vironment, while attempting to balance traffic demand with conserving coastal resources . . . The plan will be lo en- courage traffic to use inland highways and consideration will be given to the construction o! only those r o a d • necessary !or recreational and business travel." . LSD 'Benefits' Studied Frankland, says Leak, also points out the ultimate density of land use ts a ma- jor consideration sira "the lower the density the fewer highways you have to build, and vice 'Oersa." To atatements that the new freeway must be built to a'ccommodate Impending development of Irvine and other land. Leak suggests, "In many areas, Including Laguna Beach, a developer is required to provide his own roads and dedicate them Researcher Says Drug Produces Calm for Patients TOPEKA. Kan. (AP ) -The ad· minL"itration of LSD to per!IOnS dying of <:ancer can produce more tolerance to paia and a calm acceptance of inevitable ,death, a psychiatric researcher reports. Dr. St.anislav Grof, chief of the ~1aryland Psycbiatrk Research Center, said IS of 36 terminal caacer patients who_hal't participated In.an e:cperlmental LSD program, showed "dramatic 'im- provement," 13 showed moderate •tm· provement, seVen were unimproved and three were worse. He said of the three rated worse, the diffemlet was negligible in two or them and considtrable tn the third. LSD has Jong been under medical In- vestigation for possible benenclal uta, .as in treatlng alcoholism and some emo- Uonal problems. COncluslons from l\ICh experiments vary. -t;egally, LSD ts: clasttfted l!S • d1111uous dni&. ln.Dl<l!t stales, personal possession is a misdemeanor, or a more serious charge. Some users suffer from dangerous hallucinations. The scientific experiment!! a r e performed with more carefully controlled d0&age,,, and stricter medical supervision to asse.!I! effeet.s. ''As thE patient approaches death , he uaually uperl.tnces., Jn a<fditlon._to physical pain associated with his illntS.1, also various degrees of depression, ans- iety and psychological isolation,'' Grof said. Gror told or the program while In Topeka for a talk at a meeting or the Academy of Psychomatic Medicine at Topeka Veterans Adminl1tration Horpllll. Grof said many dying cancer'patlenla are on a high dosage of paln-kUUng drugs, yet high dosages don 't always con· trol pain. ~ But be a id there hU been a dramatic reduction of pain in many patients in the LSD program. The researcher said it ls not known whether LSD has some inherent pain-kill- ing-property or whether it b a 1 psychological effects that influence the tolerance of pain. "The terminal patient will focus on hlr pain -it ts his way of life, "~Grof aaid. "He cannot pay attention to anything ti!<. "What you can see after an LSD session Is that all of a sudden he ls ln- teruted in all kinds of thinp -watching TV programs, listening to music, asking questM>ns about things at home. "There was a very sensible ttduction In the nartotlcs that tJtt patients' required after 1ucct1Sful LAD«Ulons. They were leas bothered by Insomnia:-" • Grof alao said patients generelly show· e;cl improvement in depressed 1ttltude1. to the people. , "Mr. Andrews (Victor C. Andrews. supporter of the inland route) seems to prefer to have the citizens 6£ the slate pay the Irvine Company many millions of dollars ror right~f-w&y and then proceed to spend several bundr~! ol millions more.lo build a rreewey that would serve litUe other fUnctlon than to open up ttltir land"rfor"lleve.lopment. A glance aloni the sides o( the S&n Diego Freeway forttells the inevitable, A coastal freeway would merely hasten the date of total satura· tion. The Irvine Company should be ablt to do as it pleases with its land, within reason , but they should do It with their own money and not be financed by public funds .'' The fear that further dJscussion of the freeway route mijilht result In an attempt to put it back on the coast Is "baseless," Leak says. In the light ot neW Federal laws. including the 1969 N a t t o n ~ Environmenlal Policy Act. 4 OAJLV PILOT Egypt Chief In !ouch ~ithNixon By Ulllttd Prt&I latero.1tJou~ Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has been in touch with President Ni:ton and has.left the door open for further U.S. in~ Jtialives in the 1i'l1ddle East, political sources said today in Cairo. Sadat. in a speech Thursday ni ght, lreatened to halt all diplomatic contacts for a Mideast settlement unless Israel plf'Jged to withdraw completely from occupied Arab land. DiplOmatic sources in Cairo said Sadat was still willing to talk peace, however. And in Jerusale1n the Israeli press called the speech a part of Egypt's plan for a ma~ diplomatic offensive a g a i n s t Israel. ' UPI Correspondent Maurice Guindi reported from Cairo that Sadat held two meetings in October with Donald Bergus, the chief U.S. diplomatic representative in Cairo, and received at least one com· munication from Nixon. The diplomatic sources did not disclose the content of the message bul said Sadat made it clear he remained willing to C1'ln- tUtue a Middle East dialogue with Washington. In this connection. they said minister of st•te blurad Ghaleb would be available tor contact wilh the Americans when he goes to New York late in November to lead his delegation to the United Nations. Some Egyptian officials have suggested reantly that American political efforts WJie bankrupt and that the U.N. should Dnce mDre Lake over the role as chief mediator in the area. The Cairo political sources discoun ted the possibility llf Egypt waging a ___ luJ]M:ale_war_ against Israel this year should political efforts collapse. · They said it was possible Cairo would mount limited military ope.rations just before or during the U.N. debate to heat up the situation and impress on the world d!plomatic community the urgency of fin- ding a settlement. There was no official reaction in Israel to Sadat's Thursday speech but some lsraeli newspapers and Israeli officials took al face value Sadat's threats to reaume &hooting. Not Interested In OAS Bid, Castro Says SANTIAGO (UPI) -Fidel Castro says Cuba .. would not rejoin !he Organiz.ation of American States because "it doesn't in- terest" his government. The Cuban premier. here on a wide- r;inging t.our of Chlle, sa id Thursday his country would noi consider such a move- "neither by Invitation nor by unanimous agreement of all lhe OAS me.mbers'' -Jn spite of diplomRtic overtures in that direction around the continent. All OAS nations except blexico broke off relations with Castro's regime in 1964, t~·o years after !he country was suspend- ed because of "incompatibility" bel \veen communism and the inter·American ,,system. " Chile re-established diplomalic rela· lions with Cuba last November after the elec tion of President Salvador Allende. Peru also has been quietly elt'ploring Cuba's possible return to the hemispheric body. Castro headed today for the northern city of Antofagasta on the third day of his Chilean trip. He plans to travel almost the length of thi s 2.600-mile·long nation before returning to Santiago next week !or a massive farewell demonstration. The bearded re vol utiona ry was in gond humor Thursday as he wound up protocol chores that included t\\'.o wreath·laying ceremonies, being host at a , party for diplomats at the Cuban ambassador's residence and attending a reception in his honor at the presidenlial palace. At Dne point. a newsmen told Castro that he had been ,.,kidnapcd by protocol." "No, no, no. I have nol been kidnaped." Castro snapped. "I prefer to say that protocol has domesticated me." Ul'I T11tt>/Mlt ONE WHO ESCAPED -Eliza- beth A1cConnell of Belfast married British sold ier \Va ller Ed\\'ards Thursday in England. She left Jreland shortly before girls dating British troops be· g~n to be tarred and shorn. Gun1nen-Rescue Girl From Gang Of Irish W 01nen LOl'\DONDERR\', Northern Ireland (UPI) -Gunmen today burst into the "trial" of a Roman Catholic teen·age girl accused by Londonderry women of fraternizing with British soldiers and freed her, a provisional Irish Republic Anny (IRA) spokesman said. The girl, the fourth seized by the mili· tan women tills week· iilthe Bogside area, was unharmed, the IRA spokesman said in a statement telephoned to newsmen at a Londonderry hotel. The official IRA had wa rned ln a state- ment issued in Dublin Thursday night it would not tolerate any more of the in- cidents in wh ich the women shaved the girls' heads and t.arred them or poured ink on them. "Anyone who used the name of lhe of. ficial Republican Army to carry out this sort of dastardly act will be dealt with immediately, the statement said. A pro- visional statement also condemned the attacks but said some form of punish· ment was necessary. Both IRA wings had been angered by the \vomen's actions because they had c.iused the groups loss of support among ,.Northern Ireland's minority Roman catholics, an IRA source said. The girl seized in the early morning hours todav was ta ken to a house in the Bogside b,Y a group of ~men, the Pro- visional spo kesman said. The IRA learned of it after a \voman telephoned the city hotel P.lert ing news pholographers to be (ln hand to see the girl tarred and feathered. IRA gunmen wei-e sent to the house and ordered the ~·omen to release the girl, the spokesman said. In Belfast, police said a naked girl w1111 found badly beaten on High Street in the doy,·ntown area. A 1>9lice spokesman said he did not know-..t!",the girl. \\'ho w11s hospitalized, 1naY '-lla~·e been anot her vict.im of militanl woml!'n seeking to punish teen.agers for seeing soldiers. Sergeant <;:onvicted Of Russ ian Contacts AGANA , Guam IUPl l -Air Force J\1. Sgt. Ra y1nond G. Dechamplain. a descent of the founder of Quebec. was found i::uilty toda y or three charges stemming from contact '~ith Russians in violation or American security and sentenced to 1~ ye2rs at hard labor. A JO.man military board al Andersen Air Force Base. Guam, a!sG ruled to demote lhe 40-year.old se rviceman from Lisbo n. Conn., to the lowest Air Force rank. lo strip him or all pay and atlo~·ances and to give him a dishono rable discharge. U.S. Iiills -8-S:--Viets In Mistake SAIGON (AP ) -U.S. helicopter gunships fired into a South Vietnamese column with rockets and machine guns hy mistake, killing eight South Viel· namese and w0llfl9;ing 21. the U.S. Com· mand reported today. A U.S. communiqUe blamed the South Vietnamese. saying the ·gunships were supporting Vietnamese troops in contact with the enemy and "placed ordnance on targets as directed" by the ground force. The incident occurred on the central ('(last Thursday about 280 miles northea st or Saigon. Tile Coolmand said it was being investigated. Field reports said the gunships made four or five firing passes before the y \Yere warn.ed o£f by ground troops in radio contact with them. The U.S. Cllm· mand said there were no American ad· vise rs with the South Vietnamese bat· talio n. Jt was the fourt h. firing acc ident reported in six weeks. During a Soulh Vietnamese operation along the Cam· bodian border northwest of Saigon Jast- month. U.S. bombers hlt South -Vielna · mese troops three limes, killing 19 and woundiRg 26. Some U.S. officers indica te that South Vietnamese field commanders are not alv•ays aware of the exact poisi· lions of all of their troops. Also on the central coast about 100 miles south of the firing accident, Com· mun ist forces ambushed a fi ve-truck U.S. convoy, killed Dne Ameri can and wounded two. The U.S. Command said one truck was badly damaged. but it had no report of enemy losses in the 3G-minule engage- ment. U.S. planes struck inside North Viet· nam for the fourth time in six days and I.® 7~th t!mJ this year. · An FIOS fig hter-bomber escorting B52s bombing the Ho Chi Minh trail in eastern Laos crossed the border and fl ew 29 miles eastward into Nort h Vietnam to at· t:ick a radar that a spokesman for the U.S. Command said began tracking the U.S. fli ght. Asked how the radar site constituted a threat 29 miles awa y, the spokesman. Maj. Richard Gardner said it COtJld tlave relayed fi ring information to other an· • tiaircraft batteries closer io the border. The F105 fired one Shrike missile, but Gardner said the pilo t didn't know wh at he hit. A U.S. Army OH6 light observation helicopter was shot down by enem y ground .fire deep in the Mekong Delta snuth of Saigon, but the crewmen escaped unhurt. lndo-Pakistan Border Clash Increase Told NEW DELHI (UPI J -Government spokesmen today reported six clashes .along the Indo-Pakistan borders, and there were new reports of fighting and strafing by Pakistani jets near the Indian town of Belonia. The spokesmen reported three viola- tions of lndio.n airspace by Pakistani jets alon~the border with West Pakistan and one intrusion by a Pakistani aircraft near Belonia on the East Pakistan border. The border clashes -three along the western frontier and three on the border \\•Ith East Pakistan -were reported on the eve of the return of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi from a three-week tour of "'estern countries. They also came as reports from \\lashington said that three ships with about 5,000 tons of milita ry supplies were en route to India from the Soviet Union as the apparent result of recent high· level consultations between the two countries. f\.lrs. Gandhi was scheduled to go into a full review with her advisrers of the tense military confrontation along the borders \vith Pakistan following her ar- rival tCKlay. After weekend discussions ·with her cabinet. the prime minister is expected to address parllament shortly after the opening of its faJI session on Monday. Rain Mars Pleasant Skies Mostl y Sunny; Sliowers Dot Land; Mercur y .Hits Records 11t1a.. tollrf, ... 1ri1b!f W!'ldl .,It'll •1111 _.111 ... !'lours '*-'"" ......... . 11 te is -Ml• In 1n...-fM•• ,,.. a.flmll'I'. Miit! tedf• •l CN1l1I 1-.111 .... ••-lrorr• SI ti '°· IP'>l.,111 l-r1tu•1t ••-lr'e'l"I JI ta '8. Wt'!' ""'"''tu .. M, Sun, itlnon. Tide• ,llllDAY •• keill'ld lt!tll ' ' - -OM IATUlllllAY •Ml"' ia !1Sl1.m lJ ,."' "~"' •• tt. "I J' 'Int ...., n s~·"'· 10 ~ '""' ' ........ M : It!""'"'"' S••1•!P11,.., "MOll1 .7"'"'·"'· ""1·J11 ..... • V.S. Sun1mal"y " :!l 30222 CROWN VALLEY PARKWAY AND HILLHURST IN LAGUNA NIGUEL -59-Vacuum Cleaner Bags ~:.::.-::~ a~gz-v.cuum R -cle1ner1. -· 47-Havoline Qt, C1n1 ~o or 30 Weight. Buy 3,Save-41c lady Remington Shaver All'8d;vo Prin-$733 ces• Shavtr In • strik ing blue ·and silver com· blnatlon. • Hail,. Treuu,. .(hetf of 01"'" • LlkMlllle A11r1v1tlon • Y1lihee CMti• ··ea~ Regularly $1.n to $2.49 YOUR CHOICE $133 N•w, different, eiccifir.o g•m•i for houri of happy pl1y11me. S\tl'e 10 thrill boy& •nd. glrl1. ._ __ PRICES GOOD THRU TUESDAY 98-.Mennen Pushbutton Deodorant $)67 Value! 40%.. &&-SIZ& Anacin $108 BOTTLE OF 100 $495 Scripto •. Vutane ighter SAVE .. $288 I $2.07 . See 1hn.t ~l&stie In •ssort-~· ed color1. Allows yl)IJ to , .. re m1ining supply of fuel. • $1295 Value! '].ffi:l' Cool Spray Humidifier Ii 41 •7•• .. ~--- • Full Gallon Size • 10·12 Hr. Ope rat ion without Refilling • Fully Guaranteed • U.l. Approved • Automatic Si1f1ly Shutoff Delegar Giff Soaps • He1d1cM • Arit1 I" tM Pa111t • See,. ""'' • Deni lu1 Me Delightful 111sortment of exquisil• opfo_&,,.11sh.,.1&Mo,. 96' 1oap1 so right lor gift g iving. Choose GI.list Soap, liostes1 Soep, Flori \ Guest So1p, Guest Soap in Dish, Frult So1p in Di1h and 1s- 1otted IO&p puffs, • lraclle.y Oper1tio • 8r1dl1y l 1ttl11hip • lr1dJ1y Lucy T•• P•rty • lradt•y T°"'•r t lll'nb «ogularly $2.96 to $3.49 • lr1dl1y Str1te10 Regularly $3.96 to $4.99 YOUR CHOICE $233 Shop now for Chrlatm11 glf'lln; ,,..,. In pre·holld1v 11le. f1 vorltt1 wllh orownupt, k!d1. • YOU~ CHOICr $333 Buy now for 11l 1he kldd/1i on your oth 1!11! U11 our convtn· lent L1y1way Plt n 1ml 1tv•. 1 ' • " Economic Impact Hits Big Firms \VASHINGTON IUPl) -The corner grocer can do S'lmt:thing SUnday that General Motors, General Foods and other corporate giants cannot -raise his prices. And within that anomaly lies a central fact in the administration's JX!st-freeze economic planning: the big companies not only ha\'e more eeonomic impact. I hey may be the only ones on which any practical ('()Jllrol can be exerted. · U"I Ttlt~lt DESPQtlDENT TAX AGENT SURVIVED PLUNGE FROM GOLDEN GATE Henry Harrington Became Sixth Survivor Out of 435 Jumpers The comer store vs. giant corporation situation arises from the latest decision s putting together the machinery w h i c h v"ill attempt to control the economy when the wage-price-rent freeze ends at mid- ni~ht Saturday. SAN FRAN (UPI) A 36-year-Ellis. old Internal Re enue Service employe, whose wife said he \\'BS depressed over hls job, survived a jump from the Golden Gate Bridge Thursday. The man, Henry Harrington of Pacifica, was pulled from a shallow moat around lhe south tower of the bridge. He was still conscious afler the 270-foot leap '·I talked to him. He gave me his name, his age, his hon1e address and telephone number. Not only that, he told me where his car wa s parked and its license num- ber. He said he had left a note for his wife." The price commission Thursday an· nounced that £inns doing more than $Hl0 million in sales every year v>'ill have to notify the government 30 days in advance if they want to raise pri~s. and then put them into effect only if the price panel does not object. Firm.~ \\'ith less than $100 million in an - nual sales -all the way from sizeable manufacturers to local merchants -can hike their prices as of Sunday, provided they post a list of prices that prevailed riuring the freeze. Those with sales betlveen $50 million and S!OO million. as previously announced: will ha,·e to sub- mit price change reports every three months but the others will be subject only lo random spot checks. "He \\'as swin1ming around trying to find a \\'ay out of the moat," said California High,vay . Patrolman Steve Coast guardsmen and ambulance at· tendants foun d Harrington floundering in the moat under the bridge. from 1vhich at least 435 persons have leaped since its completion in 1936. Envoy at U.N. Peking Issues Greetings "UNITED NATI01'S IUPl l -Peking's smiling chief en- voy gave the United Nations the regards of 800 million· mainland Chinese today in a short and snappy courtesy call. and his delegation got worrl their travel in America would be reslricted in the same treatment gi\'en So\·iet Russia. Deputy Foreign Minister Chiao Kuan·hua. leader of the Communist Chinese delcga· tion, paid the half-hour pro- tocol visit to Adam ~1alik of Indonesia. president of the U.N. General Assembly. The full delegation takes over the U.N. China scat in it dip!O. 111<.tic debut ~1onday. The United Na!ions an- nounced that the State Depart- ment had decided -although \Vashington and Peking do not have diplomatic relations - "to extend tra1·el reslrictions to members of the mission of Purdue University Prof Gets Agricultur~ Po_st \VASHINGTON fUPl l board member of ... cor- Earl L. Butz~ a Purdue porations that 'farm the University dean who served in farmers.'" the Eisenhowe r Administra- tion, has jQined President Nix-· ·Rep. \Villiam Scherle {R- on's cabinet as Agriculture lon·a I, a critic of Hardin's Secretary, a post made a !»" policies. said \\'hen told of litici.I arena by record grain Butz• appointmcn1 , "Oh, hell, yields that have driven down not a?tl!l'ther professor." farm prices. "T was hoping we'd have a Nixon announced Thursda~' 1nan of the soil. but I don't the appointment of Butz. 62. knO\\' about the man and am Butz succeeded Clifford 1\1. going lo rt'.'serve judgn1enL " Hardin. who will join Ralston Scherle said. Purina Co. of St. Louis as \'ice The <'ha1rn1a n of lhe House chairman in charge of the Ai;:ri cuHure Commil!ee Rep. con1pany's research and \V . R. Poage I D-Tex . t , development. l remen1hered \\Ork1ng \\'ith Nixon said Hardin had 1BU.tz 11·hen Butz ser\'ed under decided to leave because he Benson in the 1950s. had had an ''exceptionally at::--.V. "Obl'iously. \.l'e had many tractive offer·• in private differences. but I respect him business. Ronald L. Ziegler. as an honorable and sincere the White House pres s man \\'Orking for what he secretary, said the ap-lhinks to be best for pointment did not signify any agriculture," Poage said. ch~nge in adn11n1stration farn1 Bufz. introduced by Nixon at policy. a ne\\'S conference, promised But Butz. who serl'cd as an tn seek help for hard-pressed assistant agriculture secretary fanncrs. Nixon predicted Butz under Ezra Taft Benson d11r· \\'OUld be a "vigorous advocate ing the Eisenho\\1er ~·ears. im-of !he interests of farmers, 1nediately came under fire jus1 as Secretary llard1n from Democratic T\ational \\'JS ... Chairman I~ aw re n c e r . After serving in Benson's O'Brien. O'Brien said Butz deparlrr1ent. Butz returned to "'as nn architect of Benson·s Purdue \\'here he was dean of policies and l'.'OUld bring thenl agriculture for 10 years. He back. has been Purdue's dean of O'Brien described Butz-as a continuing education since "prominent consullant and 1968. One Man Battle . the People's Republic of China cornparable to those applied to the Soviet mission." It said a diplon1atic note covering the restrictions had been delivered to the Chinese mission. The .regulations re· quire 48·hour nolffication of tra ve l outside a 25·mite radius or Ne\v York Citv and. as is the case with the 'Soviet Union and some other countries. various areas in the country are closed to tra\•el. The note said the regula- tions apply to the delegates and to "others who may apply to enter this country in con· nection with United Nations · affairs." Chiao made a half-hour pro- tocol call on Malik in the lat- ter's 38th floor __ suite in the gleaming secretariat building overlooking the East River in midtown Manhattan. He was accomphnied to the meeting by Huang Hu a, China's permanent represen- tative to the U.N., and Hsiung J-lsiang-hui, a representalive in t.he U.N. complex to talk to Constantin St a vrou p Ii s. secretary-general for t;.N. af- fairs. Rehnquist' s Atta ckers Get Blasted WASHINGTON !UPI\ Sen. James 0 . Eastland ID- l\Iiss. ), said today that t1•10 witnesses opposed to the su preme court nomination of \\lilliam IL Rehnquist 'vere guilty of cha racter assassina- tion. Eastland. chairman of the judiciary committee. leveled lhe charge al Joseph Rauh. spokesman for the leadership conference on civil rights, and Clarence ri.lilchelt. represen· Lative of the NAACP. The two qu oted rumors of possible connections between Rehnquist and lhe.-John Birch Society at Rehnqu isfs con· firmation hearing earlier this ~·eek. ·' The only price increase guideline the government laid down Thursday was a general one: it wants to hold average price Increases across the econoiny to a rate of no more than 2.5 percent per year. How this \viii sho\v up in the price of shoe polish or furniture remains to be seen. since the whole economy is lumped together in the standard. And it said tha t cost iiicreases -not hopes for increased prof11 s -n1ust be the n1otive for pl'ice hike s The profit li1nit beyond \1•blch sellrrs "'Lil not be atlov.·ed lo go will be based on the two best profit years during the three year period im· incdiatc!y preceding lhe s I'& rt of the freeze Aug. IS. Rut more. signiricl!"t J>('r'haps than thr 11ricc standard or the cost-prllOf justifica- tions for price rises is the fact that the biggest firn1s ;\re lhe prime tar,e.et of the new controls. The SiOO million plus sales co1npanics. i11clude the 1.300 biggest firms \1'hich together have about 45 percent of the Aml'rican sales n1arke!. Because their price increase requests must ~ sub1ni!ted 30 doys in lld\'ance it apPfarcd likely that !hey '~'ould undergo more scrulinv than ~n1aller businesses. The 2.5 percent standard \vi!l be applied \\'ilh more exilctness in the sense that it \1'ill h<n·c a larger immodiate impact than if it l'.'ere ;1polied individually to scores of ~mailer bl.lsi nesses. War Waged on Prostitute. "When presented with the personal affidavit of Rehn- quist. categorically denying that he was ever a member of the John Birch Society. Rauh and Mitchell insinuated that Rehnquist should not b e FIUGGT. Italy IUP I) -Ne.store Evangelisti lined his believed and that his une· Popular Mechanics Magaz ine took a survey ol 35 American cars since Maverick's introduction. The resul1s-Maverick had the highest percentage of owners reporting no mechanical I rouble! In addilion. our own low ''helicopter gunship'' on target, squeezed the trigger and quivocal denial coUld suggest . splat! It was a black day for the ladies of pleasure that he had some connection of Fiuggi. with the group," Eastland said Evangclis1i peppered the prostitutes \\i!h 25 gallons of in a lengthy rebuttal of black marking ink loaded in tanks aboard his private several st.elements thP '"'O helicopter nu1de in opposing Rehnqui st. The ink raid. follo,~·cd by a heavy rainfall. drove a "ll seems clear that the score of lhe niiniskirted girls from their habitual haunt testimony of Rauh a n d along the A.sole-Fiuggi High~·ay. M 11che11 concerning Rehn· "If they come back,'' Evangelisti'"v.·amed today, "I quist's association "'ith the have something "'Orse in ~ore for them." John Birch Society was purely The wealthy construchon ryiagnate said he has ordered hypothetical and not intended several ~res of eaMhatter1ng.-cherry bombs from a---~a-enlighten the-rommlttee, nearby ~1reworks company. . but instead was an exercise of . :rof1t. as \.\·ell as prudery, was the mouve for Evange-the crassest type of character hsti s one: man war on. l'.1e streetwalkers. assassination," Eastland said. He said they are g1v1ng a. bad name to a luxury apart-The. Senator also said Rauh ment compt~x .lha~ he has built nearby. and J\1ilchell made unrubsta"n- Evangehsll said the girls .congregated around !he en-tiated .charges that RehnQuist trance or lhe access rood to his development. and u!ltd the Improperly inltrfered with surrounding forest of c!Jcstnut l~s fo! their trysts. voting tn black precincts in warranty claims rale shows that Maverick's reliable design is working. In 01herwords, Maverick spends mos1 of its 11me on the road instead al up on the lilt. So you can expect to s pend less on repairs. ~ow that's a pretly good record for a car al any price. But you can own a good-looking, family-sized Maverick for as low as $2175" Standard 6or optional V-8. 2-door,4-dooror spor1y ' Grabber. Test drive a Maverick at you r Ford Dealer's. ·Ma,,uri c1ur1r 1 sugQe~1rd ret11.1 P••tll 1ii' Ma~11iek 2·doo1 S"dan shown whtl op1tona1 .. rute 11dtw•ll 111e1 'S'9) Ooes no11nelud• dest11a1io11 cll•rges ($160), e1ealer preP••a11on tll••oes 111 •riy\ state •nd loc•l t1..:es-. F•~ld-'•Y.:.' _._,._•m_bo_•_l_2_. _19_7_1 _______ DA11.. V PILOT $ Dayton Schools Facing Closure DAYTON. Ohio IUPI! -Voters decide loday· \\·hether thi s cil)'·s 57.240 public school students attend classes the rest of tliis year. The 69 schools )n the state·s sixth larges! city closed last Friday \Vhen lhe district ran out of operating funds despite a fa1•orable \'Ole No\'. 2 on a 13.6 mil SC'hUOI leV\' Toda,l''s • ~howdo\vn will be for an ad· dit ional 10.5 1nils. If it fails. the schools 11·ill shut down at least until Dec. 14 or pcrhans for the rest or the year . l~ailure v.·ould bring up another vote on the 10.fl mils 011 Dee. !~ anrt. if it ai;ain is rt>iccted, the di strict would ha\'e to wait until JanuarY.. 1972. for state funds to be distributed. Gov. John J . Gilligan came here Thurs· da y to-lend his support for the levy's passttge. • Welfare Rolls Show D ecline For 3rd Ti1ne . WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's welfare rolls shrank in July for the third straight month as states continued to fight skyrocketing costs, the government said today. The Department..,of Heallh. Education and Welfare said most of the decline came in Aid ta Families with Dependent Children -AFDC -which represents about ?O percent of the annual $16.3'- billion welfare bill. "Several facton1 appear to be con- tributing to the apparent leveling off of the welfare caseloads. the n1oi>t notable being the recent efforts of states to cut back on payments and recipients because of the extraordinary cost rise in the past year," said John D. Twiname, ad· minlslraklr of HE\V's Social an d Retu..bilitation Service. li.1ost or the July decrease can be explained b\• the 108.000 AFDC recipients dropped in New Jersey, _he said. Twenty states and jurisdictions ha\'e cut back on AFOC in recent months \vhile 34 others hav e reJXlr!ed ine,reases. Another 11.000 old-age recipients were dropped in .39 slates in Jul y lo renect higher Social Security payments first pavable in June. Twiname said. · The July relief rolls totaled 14.2 1nil\ion persons, about 84,000 fewer than the previous month. The number of AFDC recipients. which had been rising at a' rate of about 2 per· cent a month. went up only six-tenths of 1 percent in April MAVERICK WA He Sllld several serious lr'aft1c net1dents \.l'el'e c.aused Phoenix, Arlt., and that he us- from motorlsls slopped or sloy,•ed do\l.n to ogle the girl~. ed abusive language t 0 ·r1 wenl to speak to th.': v;omen .to. try. to 1 pcrsuade Neg r 0 es "' h 0 were them to find another place, E:vangehst1 said: ·They re· demonstrating for a civil For Better Ideas iii value see your Ford Dealer now! fused to move. \Vell, they \\'anted war and they got it." right. bill then pendlng in the Arizona legislature. - I • • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE I . ---.---Monnlllenta~I~lttnder , I The saga of Laguna's Nves Place deserves a spot in ·the planning textbooks as i classic example, In m1nia- ture, of the batards of careless hillside development. Years ago, \\'hen it first was decided to extend little Nyes Place from Coast Highway up the hill to open a ne\v residential area, the oldtimers living at the bottom of the hill predicted just about everything that subse· quently has happened: -Inconvenience from construction equipment be· ing hauled up and down the hill (still g9ing on). -Damage from soil and debris washing do\\.11 dur- ing rains /they v .. ere repeatedly doused with torrents of lnud). • , -Extreme hazird of increased traffic on the steep, narrov.1• curving road\\·ay and danger from runa'''ay cars (no\\• they refer to their cars parked outside their houses as ''buffers" against the latter). -Danger to children going to and from school from the De"' hillside homes (the school district finally has had to agree to ruD a bus, against the advice of safety and maintenance experts). But the new tract \Vas approved and the road was duly extended. Now the battle of Nyes Place is back in 1;1e city council" arena, this time featuring the uphill ver· • • ~us the do'''nhill residents. • The latest go-around was sparked by a request for school bus service for some 50 youngsters v.·ho have been \\'al.k.ing up and dov.'n the hill to a highway bus st.op, or''\ being driven in private cars. {There had been hope the county V.'ould provide a hilltop road connection, Out this has been deferred for financial reasons}. To accommodate the ne\v school bus, the city agreed to ban parking at the.lower end of.the street. This brought an outcry from the downhill folk. who feared increased traffic speed, loss of their "buffer'' and of space that was promised them by an earlier council, since some of the older homes were built v.•ithout drive· \\"ays. The city in its Solomon role now has i;;everal starJ members ~athering facts that, hopefully, \Vil! produce some solution to the mess. As of this moment. this little piece o[ back\vards planning (or non-planning) In the so-called name of progress has managed to make just about everyone un- happy. The whole scene should encourage planners and councilmen to look long and hard the next time some- one comes along with a great idea for a hillside develop· ment. A Ne '\v Business 'Marriage' The idea had been bre,ving for years, but the emer- gen(:e of the new business association concerned \vith San Clemente's South El Camino Real came suddenly. About a month ago the ne\V gr9up kno\vn as SES .. \ (So uth El Camino Business Association) surf~ed, then quickly tangled with proposed business license fee hikes at city ball, then it looked toward the Chamber of Com·· merce. A tense "marriage" was accomplished at the Cham· ber bbard level Tuesday afternoon. SEBA no"'' is an "affiliate" of the chamber, but \vhether that affiliation will be a fond one remains to be seen. SEBA ideas about involvemerit \vith municipal elections, and stressing interests of South El Ca.mino businesses ruffled feathers among chamber directors. And no strong move came at that meeting to iron out the rough spots in the alliance. Despite the possible differeei:e. ho\.\o·ever, one not· able achievement already has been logged. The groups have come together. If both groups go into the arrangement expecting to go moi:e tha:n t]alfway in cooperating, at least part of the lime, the-new union should be fruitful and reas· onably harmonious. • s Paying for P1cblie Edueatio1i §tate Should Take Over To the Editor : assembled members of Village Laguna, thanked them for helping to finance the Top of the World school for his children to attend, thanked them for Laguna's present sewer outfall t sic!) and for city hall Itself. He fervently ad vocated ad· ditional population to help provide mOre of the same. So1ne Wa11t Prisons Li e Couritry Clubs Bridge, Is Better, Game Than Poker New \'eteran facilities are built, free'.l·ays constructed, ea rt h q u a k e • damaged hospitals repaired and replaced. '''here does the money for these badly ne:.'ded projects come from? It is funded by 1he state Legislatu·re "'h ich studies the \'arious requests aad funds lhose it feels are \'aiid. Does the general public get to vote on these projects? 'Yes , indirectly by elec- ting legislators "'ho lhey feel "'ill best re;>resent the i r thinking regarding ef· f1ciency and economy. 'the reason for giving la\\makers. once elected, freedom lo act without each time going back to the electorate is to permit government to func1lon smoothly and .efficiently.·· -· HOW JS IT TltEN TllAT education Is de11endent upon a t1,1·0-thirds vote of the public to 'l''ard off disas t rous O\'C~cro11·ding or to repair dangerously ru"".!01rn facilities? \Vhat sort of stupid logic would hold that a ne1,11 freeway should be more easily bu ilt and financed than a ne11.· school? A.skin£ "the people" to continually bond themselves or raise their taxt! -i! unrealistic. People have a natural reluc· t an~ to inflict pain upon themselves no ma :er how worthwhile the cause js. Most prollerty owners are resentful of the tax· es they are now ~ying and are damned if they'll increase those taxes. \\'llAT ~tUST llAPP~ is l ha t the slate must assume th:? full responsibility fo~ the funding of public education. The mo~t equit:Jble 1,1·ay to raise money is through an increased irlcome tax. For in- st ince. an int'rease of one. percent 1,1·ould r::i ise more than $600 million for educa- tion. Los An~e!es schools \vere deemed unsafe because o( e.'U'thquake damage, the Elate could have stepped in and cor- rected the inadequacies or rebuilt the schools that \\'ere closed do1,1•n. The po!nt is !hat the pcl\\.'er to decide the fate of public educalion should be left lo the state Le~is11ature ralher than the 01·e;-burdened !,t'al taxpayer who has nt'!ther the abilitv nor the inclination to ~ do the job. • STU RUBINE The Pro:esfer !f. To the Edi tor: 1 11.·ould like to set the enclosed print put on the front page of your newspaper. t am a"'are we ha\·e our problems but Ji\ing in this country sure beats wc:king In a rice paddy, :.nd eating fishheads and rice. Of course, if your paper has the backbone of a jellyfish and Is willing to stand by and have this type of person run our country do"'" without doing anything aboul it, forget lhe whole idea. .. I A~I A"'ARE that only five percent of ORA.NOi COAST DAILY PILOT Robl!'rt N. \V ttd, Publisher Thomcu Kt:l!'Vil, Editor Albert \V'. Bater • EditoriclL Page Editor "'J'h,. t'd.florh1l pAge of 1hc o.iny Pilot seek• to lnronn and stimu· Jatti Tt'tdcra by prCKJ1t1nc thls nc~"JDft[JC!''• ()pinions and com· mcnl.Ary (Jn topics of fntt'tttl 11.nd 1ii;nif1Canct', by provldlni;-a fnrum for the c:xprcufon ol our rc.1dtrs' epfnlona. 11nd bf pn'!K'nflni: 11-tl! dJYerJM! vJc~·p()lrUJ of infarmcd l'lb-•crvcn: 1.nd •poknmcn en topics ot the da,y. Friday, November 12, 1971 Mailbox ' Letttrs 1rom readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages m 300 word.t or ll!'ss. The right to condense letters to fit space or ~liminate libel is reserved. All let- ters must include .signature and mail· ing address, but mimes may be with· held on request if sufficient reason i~ apP;Qrent. Poetry will not be pub· hshed. college students are hippies but t don't see _ the _95 percent of the so-called American stud~ts marching aloMgslde of the hippies, carryln~ the flag when the hippies are pro1esting. You migh t bfcrease your sales. Some. parents will bii t~ paper just to &how their teenage · dryi. ,,.. i i. WARREN iµ;EKER The unreproducible (too dim.) C-Opy Of (i cartoon enclosed showed a typically hippie-garbed couple, the ma1t saying to the girl, "While I get my u11emploJ1men t check, you split t.o pick up our welfare money and food stamps. Ai.so, apply fo r increas· ed houstng al/oitia11ce sinct wt gdt ourselves a pad. "I'll stop at school to see how our federal scholarship grant.tare coming. You go to the co11nty free med.icat clinic to get your sores checked a11d pick up my glasses if thEy're ready. J\feet back at the pad ot 1 :30 and we"tl hitch a ride to the federal building in time for the protest march against t.l!is rotten capitalistic society and the Establishment that's responsible for it.'" Editor Public Sl1011ld Kuo"' To the Editor: Certainly el'eryone has a right to !lipeak his mind at public hearings. But when an individual speaks to his own self-serving interests in the guise of the public in- terest, the public should know. Wt week Village Laguna presented the planning commissior1 with o report on land use and density, suggesting ways in "'hich our population could be kept lo a maximum of some 19,000 rather lhan the 28.000 contemplateli, In the D:O.tJ:O.t General Plan for Laguna . One resident rose to defend more congestion for Laguna. His sentiments are under$landable: Ac· cording to our information the genlleman in question, ~1r. John Eldon, owns 7.61 acres above Third Street, including the bluff behind ciry hall which happens to be one of the prime are.as specifically recommended by the planners for high density apartments. ~m.. ELDON ''TllANKED" t be Quotes Kttttth J. Xoford, Vtnlce -"We com· milted ourselves to dtfend , • • South Vietnam from her aggressive tollllltarlan neighbor because a free. South Vietnam Is in our national interest. But if we try we can still lost -by pulllng oul im· mediately." Sea. Hubert lfumpbrr:y. 1ddre-slng Commonwealth Club of Calif. at S.F. - ''We are at a point where "'' must reevaluate and rea!sess our rnle In lhe world •.. with th1.1 full recognition that }Xl\\'er and wealth art no 1ubstltutcs for power and wlSdom. '• \Vhat Mr. Eldon states is true. Through increased taxes 1,1·e all paid for the population which came in the wake or the Top of the World tract developments and are -still paying. \Ve paid for the-new school, for the storm drains to ac· commodate the runoff occasioned when developers sliced off the ridges above to provide more buildable acreage., and 'A'e paid more. for city government. \VE NOW KNO\V that ·a higher tax rate per capita is an inevitable concomitant of population. growth. For more on this see Kenneth E. F. Watrs monograph, ob- tainable from Laguna Greenbelt. In ef- fect. the-entire population is put in the position or having to subsidize such growlh. More than increased taxes, we also pay 1or growlh in overcrowding. In silch area's as Arch Beach Heights with its 25- foot lot width, and portions of North Laguna: much or the quality of life that is Laguna's prime attraction has been destroyed. For these residents. Laguna is hardly the peacefu1 and tranquil \'il\age extolled by residents in other less ex- ploited areas. YES. \\'ERE D~IJ!\-t's Third Street pro· ject adopted. 1o1.·e \\'OUid all be called upon to subsidize ~ir. Eldon's 7.61 acres of cliff.d1,1·el\ings. \\'e wou1d pay for 1his people-packing in more pollution, more congestion and more degradation of the environment. And be taxed for it besides. ~t!LDRED B. HANNt;r-.t Cl1rlst111as Tree• To the Editor: For a number of years the Junior \\'oman·s Club of Laguna Beach has 11.•orked to make Bluebird Park an at· tractive and 11.·e\l-«fUipped playground. During these years it h<.s become an in- creasingly popular idea to. have a li\"ing Christmas tree that can be planted after Christmas is over. and the Junior \Vomen endorse this ecologically sound Idea. ~1.4. Y \\'E SUGGEST to your readers that they consider having a li\·ing Christnias tree this year and donating it to Bluebird Park? The city parks depart- ment has agreed to plant any suitable trees that are contributed . Anyone \\'ith a tree to give should con- tact any member of the Junior \\'oman's Club or se nd a card or letter to us at 1he \Voman's Club House at 286 St. 1\nn 's Drive. All horticultural or monetary con· tributions \\'ould be greatly appreciated. IRMA ANDRE\VS President Junior Woman's Club of Laguna Beach Dear Gloomy Gus How long do Lagunaticks have lo wait before Arnold Hano decides how many people he wl111et Into the city? \Ve're waiting to be im· printed 1i1:ith his figuffllJ. -W.D.M, Tiils tl•llll't ,..llKl'I ,..adtn' VltWt, 'hiot flf(tn•r11Y lllew tf fflt ., ... .,."'· SllMI nllf' "' ,..,,. i. OIMll'IY Ou .. Otll\' !'Htl, ( ' • .__ Cuest Report B}' JAl\IES E. 'VHET~IORE Senator, 35th District ,. On the heels of the recent l'iolent murders of nine correctlonal officers within our state prisons comes the opin- ion of an independent penologist in a 650-page report to the Board of Cor· rections 1,1•hich would make our penal in- stitutions veritable •·country c 1 u b prisons." The report , 1,1·hich is also being studied by each of us in the Leg islature, calls for these actions : -Closure of Cplifornia's Polson1 and San Qucn1in pris1Jns; -Future penal institutions should be small and located 1\'ilhin the communities they serve; A friend askecf' me at dinner recently why I gave. up pla ying poker. some years ag?i· and began concentrating on bridge . The obvious reason 1\.'as th2J. I couldn't afford to keep losing money at the poker table . As I ttiought about it further, ho1\.'e.ve.r. I discovered that my enjoyment at bridge is greater than it ever was at poker- because bridge is essentially a partnership game. Victory that is gained as part of a team is sweeter and more nourishing than in· div idual conquest. There are more happy families than there are happy individuals, because while grief Is solitary. joy must be sha red. A NE IGHBOR OF mine who was a l'\O ~tlNl~l ml prison terms, giving the talented concert pianist gave up recitals proposed ne"'' parole board authority to and became a member of a chamber release the prisoner \\·henel'er he is con-orchestra group, because. as she put it, sidered not a dangt'r to society: "playing together with other musicians -Elimination of the present Adult f 1· Authority "'hich gi1·es !he prisoner no gave me a ee ing of communion that I right to counsel in determining the length a:mos~. never achieved while playing P of hi 1 sdtermdor deciding 1\·hen he ls to be a ~~ebridge. t1,1·o average players who are. aro e . an h · 11 be 1 1 -w -Placing !he burden of proof on law-armon1ous can u~ua y a w~ ex~. enforcement authorities as to irhy a con· ,. players who are vain and contentious. 11ict should not be released, rather than And defending dextrously w i th a the present system rcquinng the convict p~rtncr to defeat the opponents' contract to shO\\.' 1\·hy he should be released. gives a pleasure. that cannot be found at DOES TlllS SOUND like a country· club envir9flment for felons'.' Indeed, ca n Californians afford to pay more to make la"·breakers more c1Jmfortablc? the poker table. \~·here competitiveness is everything, and CO-Operation means nothing. I 1-IAVE TAPERED off my chess r ·· l Sydney J. Harri,,;, ! --,/ .. playing for much the samC reason I gave up poker -that chess makes intense demands on one's aggressive drives, and drains the ego in its strain for victory. This is "'hy chess champions are so often tortured personalities who l i nd it dif- ficult to r:e.!ate to other people. . Bridge is the most excellent card .game .at In the world because of its pbrtnership factor. \Vhile nonpartnership games call for courage or cunning. bridge in addition c~lls for tact and understanding and a kind of modesty wh ich permits the partnership to do its best regardless or individual glory. I KNO\V BRIDGE players \\'ho would be in the top rank if they e-0uld handle their partners half as 1,1·ell as they handle t~e~r ca_rds. But_ they are ba'sically in- d1v1duahsts playing a co-operalil'e game; and l\.'OUld rather lose than admit a mistake or trim their bidding sails to the needs-of the team as a 1,1•hole. It is generally agreed !hat the !talians ha1·e beaten the U.S. bridge team for the \Vl'rld Championship thrie years running, not because they are better players but because the Italian partners ha1·e played together longer and ha1•e an abnormal sensitivity to each other's bidding. The emotional component in games. as in life, is ultimately more. decisive than the mental skill. · As one nr1,1•spaper editor "·ho studied the report said: "Those 11.•ho drum up sympathy for hardcore murderers. rapi~ts, k.idnapers c.ricl other perpetrators of l'ic.lent crimes. undoubtedly are behind the fallacious reasoning that criminals are not lawbreakers but 'political prisoners'.'' Dozing Driver Liab ilit y CERTAISLY, under this nation's law, a person ~·ho breaks the Jaw must be punished . \\'hen a pcr~on commits a crime against society and is convicted and sentenced arter due process of la"" he surrendl'rs his rights and privileges as a \a"•-abiding citizen. This does not mean. of course, that he then should be cruelly treated or unduly persecuted. He should be provided ample opportunity to rehabilitate himself inside prison. Nonetheless. while he is in prison. he mu st abide by r u I e s and regulations governing prisoners. If he l\.'illfully and persistently breaks stl'.:h rules and regulations, he must pay for hts in· fractions. TUESE ADVOCATE S of pt>r· mlssiveness sh o u Id certainlv not be permitted to close down t'o!soni and San Quentin. even though th e!\C facilities are old in term s of age end no doubt need considerable modernization and e.x· pansion. And it is absolute!~· ridiculous to advocate a vast nct1o1.·ork of m\ni-P.risons located throughout the state. \Ve have too long been victimized by the cr1minAI element "hich looks to a growing permis.'iil·e Judicial system for mere~· 11•hen a \a1,1·breakcr Is ap- prehended, convicted and sentenced. TllE APOLOGISTS for "countrl club prison!i" nel'er shed a tear for tb"e nine victims of the rtccn prison murders, the ir lo\'ed ones, friends, or the property lhty destroyed. Jf \\'e are to have con~tn1clh'e P"l~on reform. it ~hould be purpoM-ful rcfo.rm, hnu'ever. and initiate a s1 ~t('nl I h l! t "'ould not lessen the puOisltmcnt for crimes agnlnst society. Too little sleep, like too much liquor . can turn even the mildest motorist into a deadly menace. If a driver dozes off and has an accident, is he legally liable for !he consequenCf:s? The la"' starts 1,1•ith lhe proposition that no one should be blamed for 11.•hat he does \\·hile unconscious. Blame rests on free \\'iii misused -and the sleeping person is not using free will at all . But one court after another has nonetheless imposed liability on the doz· ing driver. They.find him negligent not for what he does while asleep but for disregarding, while still awake, the telltale. signs that sleep >A'aS coming. "IT rs TRUE," said one court. "that lthe driver) can not ordinarily fix the pre<:ise monient "'hen he lapses Into un- consclousness. But It Is not true that ordinarily sleep comes unheralded. It lies within his o\\.'n control to kctp a1,1·akc or cease driving.'' Background fa ctors. contributing to lhe danger. are. also taken into account. One driver had been at the wheel conUn uously for 18 hours; anolher was exhausted from overworlt ; a third had kept golng after twice almost "fading out." tn each case. when t.ht driver doted off, he was he.Id liable for the results. Suppt»e It Is the passenger, not the driver, who falls asletp. Does the law fro1,1·n on that too? Occasionally the passenger doe.s have a duty to stay awake -when he b.u AOme special rtason to think that the driver needs \Yatchlng. But as a rule he may nap at will, putting his trust in the driver 10 t:ike care. Jj\j" O!\"E CASE a woman In the back scat dozed off and slumped agai111t the dti\•er's seat, pushin& it forwri and Law in Action J ' knocking his hands off the steering 't'heel. Jn the crash that follo"·ed, the dril'e r was injured. 1 Cou ld he collect damages from the woman on the theory that her falling asleep was an act of. negligence? A court said no, becausi a passenger could scarcely be expected to anticipate ~, h a fr:.akish accident just '.rom falling a, eep. (She) was req111red to exc cise foresight." said the court, ··''not clairvoyance ." I An Ar11cr1ca1i Bar 11.ssotfrtlion 1Jllb· lie service feature by \Viii Ber11rrd. By Geor9e --+-. . I Dear George: I keep h~11ing lhe feeling that somebody is follo"·ing me. and my 11.·ife says I.should littk profe~s1onal help. Do you think I should seek professional help~ And . If nol. 1o1.hat should I do aboul this constant reel· ing of being followed~ CONCER'NE:D I)(?ar Conce.rntd: I \Veil .. possibl you should se,tk professional help, Actua.lly, "'hi~ 1 do ls stay home -that ctrtatrlly frustratt:s all thost: people followihg me. when I don't go any\\ht'rf!. f Prnblems sent to George and not !Olved within 90 days will be auc· lloned to cover storage costs. So send easy prob le.Ill$.) \ l t ' \. ---· • DAILY PILOT 7 CHECKING •UP• Working Woman -Last s Two Years AU10ST TWICE as many boys are named for their' fathers as for their grandfathers. Howe Yer, far more girls are named for their grandmothers than for their mothers. Sur- veys show that. They also sho w one out of every seven young ladies dislikes her name. Such a girl, wh en she leaves home, is apt to rename herself. To Leslie. Or possibly to Laura. Or to Sara . T hose are said to be three of the most common femini ne pseudonyms now. QUEENIE THE STATJSTICIANS tell us the average working woman only stays on the sa me job .for two years, two months ..• TO OPEN a charge account in the Soviet Union, a gentle- man must show a letter from his employer, stating the ap- plicant's salary ... A Floridian tells me you don't need any dirt , none V.'hatsoever. lo grow coconut palms. They sprout on coral, even ... Pollsters report three out or five women nationwide won't smoke, don 't smoke, never smoked .. A million years ago I would have hit you over the . be~d._ dragged you in, and made you look. at my painungs,'' ... AND A~10NG JU\IENll.E delinquents, average senterice for first offenders is 34 months, average time served 18 months. A~1 ASKf:D IF the Black Death of the Middle Ages still kllls peo ple anywhere. It does. Cases of bubonic plague con- tinue to crop up in Asia . although rarely. In fact , about about on e new case a year is reported in the United States. The med ical boys blame fleas on squirrels. VANCOUVER , \Vash. (UPI) WHEN SPEA.KJNG, a politician ought to make sure his -Mayor Joseph Alioto of San remarks fu lfill three requirements. They should be pleasant, Francisco sa id Thursday his necessary ·and truthful. In an emergency, maybe he could major concern in sharing fees forego one of the three. but never two. Such was the pub-with John J. O'Connell in the lished contention of the late Dean Acheson. 1960s was whether the at- ONE BRITISH Admiral Nagle greatly admired a cream, torney general of Washington antitrust ct.'5es. Sanctuary Not Safe U.S. Won't Respect Berkele y Action aboard the Coral Sea by 8 a.m. If men are missing the - facilities In Berkeley will be searched, he said. consequences." City Manager W i 11 i a m Hanley said he would refuse to carry out the resolution, Mayor Warren Widener said Berkeley "was not en- couraging anyone to take shelter -sancluary cannot provide protection from the saying ••tt would be improper ; • ·.••NI- for us to spend one dime on ~ ....... any of this -we1cannot and,,.!!=::!!::..:!!Ol""----J, will not provide this type of space." Death for Tex Watson liN ITED STATES NAT IO NAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW 0'lN SATURDAYS ' te 1 , .... MON.·THUIS. 10·5 ,.M. FRIDAYS 10·6 P.M. 17141 540·$211. LoccMtl 111: So. Coast ,lea•, Cnt• M ... colored horse owned by King George IV. And said so. Next could practice law privately. day, the king sent Nagle such a horse. Unfortunately the Al ioto com pleted a socond -----------------------------------------------------. weather turned beastly that afternoon, and the gift horse day of testimony in trial of a ...... CALIFORNIA strea ked blac k in the rain. Ho ho. cried the court., or some $2.3 million civil I a w s u it such. The king, that humorist, then sent Admiral NaJ!le. against him over the fees who was a brick through the whole thing, another cre~·---'sha« red with O'Connell, then nLQfiJD ''.ran" w.ith...a.graup. colore<I hOrse, h~t-tnl"Jokntrculamt:-And" e ,._.._ ~anguage experts seriously say it accounts of our use today of Portland , Ore., high school students. of thal expression. "A horse of a different color." Alioto testified Thursday he Your questions and comments are welcomed and discussed several times v.'ith wili be 11sed iJt. CHECKING UP wherever possible. O'Connell, who was then at- Please address your le tters to. L. M. Boyd , P.O. Box torney general. and George K. 1875, Newport Beach 92660. Faler, an assistant to O'Con- 18 Adult Bill Fails. In Se nate . SACRA~IEN1'0 (AP ) -A bill giving 18-year-olds all rights of adulthood except drinking privileges died in the Senate after a debate In which fQ('S argued the new r i g h t s \\Ould onlv hurt youths. The me3s ure died Thursday evening on a 19-9 vote, tv.'o short of a major ity in the 40- man Senate. The bill by Assemblyman Paul Priolo ( R ·Pac if I c Palisades), ·would a 11 ow persons between 18 and 21 to sign contracts as adu lts, sue and be sued and serve on juries. The right of 18-year-old girls to marry without paren- tal consent \\'Ould be extended to males. ':J can't think of a worse bill than this,·· s a i d Sen. Cla~k Bradley (R·San Jose ) who /11.~.~ ~- _::,.:...,..,~"ni'ii~ fRoM"'ROUNO THe .. wow e GIFT P.t.CK.t.GINW e COFfl! IU.NS. l 7 YQtilrf e DlllD FIUIT • CANDIES riew Cro11 :0:11eri~I SHELLED WALNUTS Ope n 7 Cla y s predi cted young men would be 3;3 Soutl1 <:oa~1 Jlwy. . ·,' NU Vil.IE ll ~.S."-~ 497-1350 "hooked , induced, enticed or La,una B~aCh seduced or what have you" in·I :====================~ to en tering into unstable mar- riages and ultimately trigger .,....-~--...~,.,~--.... .,,..---..,..--,,.-.-- an increase in the '¥1-'elfare rolls. Fil'st Gable Wife Dead GLENDALE · (UP.I t J osephine Diiion, who coached Clark Gable in acting When he was an unknown and then became the rirst of his fi ve wive s. is dead at the age of 87. Miss 1',illon died in a sanitarium following a long ill- ness. Funeral services v.•ill be held Saturday in Pasa dena. . . ...... LIVE LIKE ,\MILLIONAIRE! ! . . . • C....Von l1k1 •.. vou• own ~,; ... 111 "''"'I comrnunilyl .t..n 1111""" ti,.,.. : • P•0'"'11Q 901! ~llUIM, I lio~t"""' .-... • l~• W<lon\o!"t. -1>ol!!na. Mil"'I ; 1 1"'11.o.1\11111.J<Bt lor~""'I • Vot, Iola In Iii• P!tlll91 ........ • nw~1 111<1 ., Olllw $15,400 lor 1111.• 1!(1oOlau-• ,~ ... ·, ... oitvont ladgo ... 111 ' ·• -~ •nt.o.1rin1 9"11 ioo.111911. ttor-• • ""'=~ .............. , ....... Cl¥_...,. • : ..... -..... POol end i.nt>• ~-ca. '°"• • • C-....ltli•ll~-pr·• : llddt .. ftJt ,,_,of d""""'""'''"" ttU•. ....-. ¥°" CM1 !Ht .id pily : .,.., -mai.-rw. 1.-., ......... _ . : , ... -... "'-: : ·~ '-'"'*"ltt•'-• : : "~ fl 171 41614·2113 : ~ \\~i c .... 1 • llffft. 11 """'' ,• ... ,~ ...................... . ....... ~ .. " ........................ . : Ji• 0 I i..oot""' , __ , °! 0 • ,_ .. , __ .,.'I.._..., .• "'."-• ! '0 l*'llO~c:.t~ J UlO : : I'••'( ·: It's Unbelievable. . . the selection of dre5s sh irts th at Jack Bidwell has in 1tock right now ••• absOlutely terrific! He'1 got the best selection of long- 5leved dress shirts in town I really I a nd in every imaginable print, stripe and color! And here'1 some4 thing else ••• if you like the shirt, but you don't like the long sleeves, Mike (the tailor I will meke it into • short-sleeved 1hirt •• _ FREE. All you have to do j, ask. It's another great 5trvice from • , •• 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-45 10 COMMUNITY EVENTS SUPPORT YOUR HARBOR AREA UNITED FUND · • ARTIST OF THE MONTH Now in Process • GIVE THE UNITEDWAY "If you don 't do it , It won 't get don•." M1n::1ll1. -11 kllllWft CMll Mtu 1rtl1t llMll IH<lltr, ••hllllll -Soulfl $11 llllMI l"IAI• llltl l lld .ichl"'I DI Tlhlll. Gradl'lt9 DI Pr1n ln1HIW!t. New Ytrk, ,_ <!It< t lMll tin! · prMillttrl el Ille (Mii ~· Art l•lglH. ll1elpl1nt 9f ''""Y IWfAI Ml~ IK•llY ........ ,iMlllly, "'' II '"'"' , •• uc!Mf Ill It!• 1111 ., acryHa •n.i•ytd tlllt mtn!ll. 6 QLo•nnua1 7CJ rate Certificate Accounts• SS,000 minimum deposit. 2·year minimum term. Dai!y compounding. Earn from date of depos it. 90 Day Certificate Accounts• No minimum deposit. Daily compounding. Eam from date of deposit. EARN HIGHER INTEREST AT CALIFORNIA FEDERAL! 5. 75%~;I~ual Certificate Ai;:counts • $1,000 minimum deposit. 1-year minimum term. Daily compound ing. Earn from date"tlf deposit. 5 QLO ~~~~;11 7CJ rale Passbook Accounts No minimum deposi t. Daily compound ing. lnlerest day-in to day-o ut. 'Wilhdrawals before maturily permitted but subject to some lo::;s of lnlereI.I. ' Cal!f.~!!!!!!~.!.~.4..~!!!!.hlr§.~!!ngs NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL , • J . l COSTA MESA OFFICE: I 2700 Harbor Blvd. near.Adams• 546-2300 CLIFFORD M. WESOOAF, vti;E PRESIDENT & MANAGER FEDERAL _SAV:lN.GS... •---I ................ .... •••••••• •f'O"l.M • i~-~!::~~~ ... ;:..~~..;;:__~~~:!:!t. __ ~1 i ~,,. ''"''1-. ; ConVenlent Ofllce1 throughqut Le~ Angeles, Orange tnd Ventura Coonlies ..... ';: .. ~~."::.~.~~·.~.~.~: .. } I "------~---'.".'.".''.""'-'.'.'.'°.'.".·"'-'.''.".""_,'..,''.""'-".""-'.".'"_.,_._ •• _,_ .. _._,_9_._,_ .. _"."·'°·C•o•""-'".""-',;,""""_'_"'_'_"..;'_'~_,..,,_._._•_Uoj.;.f_ .. _._ •• _ •• _._.,_ .. _M_•_'_°' ______ .;, • ' . • I ' f DAILY PILOT F'rida)', MOvtmbtr 12, 1971 For the Record Blacks 'Prone' to Cardiac Ailments Mexico cruises;.. one week from 5250! By TOM BARLEY 01 tilt Dall' ~.laf 11111 DJssoluti«.tn• Of Marriage "11141 N ..... 111Wr I Hltl911br•llllt, E$1tllf L. Ind Eowln ~11ttri. &tf l'll'I' •nd Wt Mr Jt ... lond, Mllllnd I nd Wtllff W., Jt, ScflMbl.I, Jt>W HIVlll1 Incl Otvld JOiin And'rtlllo, Erwin l. tnd Vlr1lnl1 snltld1, w1u1,,.. A. 1116 Lind• G. Mortin, E11111Jnt Ell110.rn 1P!CI Jmto~ Rtvnoldll. Get1t E, ''"' "•l•lclt J. c i.r1, lilototrt I',,,.. Mor1tc1 L.. AuMl, llr...,I C0.'4 I nd Ml(l\HI Grtto<y ~ Daily Dose Of Booze ANAllEL\1 -This nation's black people can count heart dl!ease among-the f~ and-- conditions acti\1ely practicing racial discrimination today, a panel of six heart specia lists Health Research Foundation said 1n industrial survey of both black and white workers in hls area revealtd that hypertension was s I i g h t I y more prevalent among blacks than whites "but nothing on the lines of what we have seen recorded in the Southern states." It \!!'Isn't qu..it.e as bad for women workers in the same age bracket but :m of every 1,000 black women smoked as compared to 448 out of every 1,000 white women. he said. All six apecialbts agreed that the provision of a hi&her standard of medical care, public education concentrating on the causes and prompt trealment of cardiac con- ditions and ailments leading to them and the provi!ion of bet- ter housing were vital factors in any program aimed at cut- ting down cardiac Incidence among America's black peo- ple. l1tis winter, you can enjoy the physical and mental refreshment of a seven-day warm water ~e with the line that invented the whole ¥!ea. You'll live it up amid 3 swimming pol>ls, S open decks and with people who speak your language-for as little as $36 a da y. "·~· ....... two of them black - concludtd here Thursday. kllltl. Sl.c.11 Lynne t l'ld E"rrtfl The rate of death from cardiac causes a m o n g America's black males in the 25-44 age group is 15,S times higher lhan that of their white neighbors. Or. · John B. Johnson of Howard University College of Medicine stated. Edwtrd Wt!ttNll, .ll!t~tr>Cllr tnd Ellten H TIWr!klll, Tricm11 II.tr 1..a Andret Deadly? llltYI V.orf1, LrOlt t nd Otnlt Demer, 0.,.,.11 ""l•ln 11'1d U1n•1 Merit c......, ... ,r. V1urn11 LOii tllCI Gtrr ANAHEIM -Take another H's e\'en "'orse in com· Wiiii""' LHlltr 11..,.., Nttl tno Jo "'"" Bt•1ot,., "'"'' Tn1rto1 .,.., cn .. 111 ,,_ look at that P r e • d i n n e r paring black and "·hitr women martini. Jt may give you a lift in the same age bracket. the but ·it could be part of an Washington, D.C. physician alcohot pattern destined to said. "The black woman of drop you in your tracks. that age group is 17 times H11k.,.n•. Aoblr! Cntrlft tnd Ctroli,. Ell•f!I WDOld"dloe. 0.Yill A. lllO l!lttl>irt E1h1 ,.,..,y E. •no Snl'rmtn E. Mtt<>tl, Ctrmt'ft tnd M!kt 5. tltn"*11. DfOo<"' Jlnn.11 t"<I I n.ct Alltn Nl'llO, 11/\0flell I(, I nd Frt nll J. "'"'Dfl· sn'""" '"" Lt<rY l Ctrpenltf, Mt ry (. tncr Ofllnl1 E. Gt ltNW, Jl,llllln lltY tnd Rott• lovls Mtllon, Jt....,l"Ellktr tnd Wt~ Mtt INT!llLOCUTOllY Dl!CllEl!S H1Mm1n, llrlln G. Incl Sn1ron A H1n•11n, J1mt1 Euotnt 1nc1 Ruth • l""•ll• JonH, J1ne K1v •rid Frf<lttlck Tnom11 N111m1n. JO.f'P/l 1nd M1ro1<P! !.nuon $-!ruck, M1rt1rtt E. 1ncl Arnold F. KntPP, ll•••rly1nn 1nd wllll1m Edwin P1rr, E1r1 W. Incl Shi•lt y Scnlol'n,.,1nn. Mtrv M1rih1 ttld T~11 Jol!n Rivtrt , Rcflln Frtncn Ind Htc!ar Porllrlc Ald111. Wtrntr Incl Ann ll1cc1rc, AmfltDM An1ncnv •rid Mlrv Francei l1bccc-. (~•Ill J. i ncl D1•ld C llrcwn. S111v Wlllh .,..,, ll:cMrt Mc!lt!r L11htr, W1n<11 Jttn a.n<1 Ronald Ht•Cl<I llrtdb\lry, ICtlMHn L°"•:lt 1ncl Ctln Orvlllt Durham, 01¥ d J. •I'd E•!Hn En1 Tl'>OITl11. Re11ht Mld tnnt lllCI Mich.el w111i.m Y/lt1t, llonnlt II. lrlCI Oon1IO E. (;l!t llD. P1c_oyellrw A/In lrlCI Jtmff C.,,noJ Httdln, Shl Yt Arnold '"" Sttv•~ Douo!11 #ll~rl. !onnv J. Ind W•lh1m C. C~. Jtrrv P. 1N1 C1rl1 E. GtYtl, ICutn S. 1na R-r! E. R~ct, Rulfl •"4 Dtan (h1•lt1 HllPft", S.l'lc:trl Lf'f 1nd (l'l1rln F. llrool<owtr, StllY J . ll'lc:t Phllop A. !.1mvel1. Marvt J. Incl Tnom11 L. Smllfl, Jt,,. lrvlnt l l'ICI Frfd Ernnl Scolts, Oouol11 G. and S1nclrt Ji n• O'DIY, Dtklr1 Jon tl'ICI Dln<W Dl•Oll Slr1u1, Datlllhy l ,,#l'ICI Loul1 JG!ln O.bam, Jmin w-arid Lynn R. SltPl'ltnlOn, 111 Louin 1nc1 80flbv Dt111 P1!1nc. Marv Ann •"" 0.1rlt1 F. Caln, Ne1ml E. tnd Jcr.11 C. C1vin, Rl/111 £. llld C111!d L. Peet, 8rl!y 1111!1'1 tnd Anotlo SeD11!l8" Sr1dr, R~lll lllondf"U ~nd Rol>en J1mt1 A~rson. Dade J. •"" R1lph W. JOl't•, Barfl••• E 11e11 1<1<1 JOOn Thcm11 Owrn1, Judlll'I C1•t1I end W1v,,. A. C••ke-. An1olnttlt J1nt1 Ind Rcbtrl Ylctcrv Coov1n, ~Y!ln 111<1 C1wld FIN#ll DECREES E•t•rtd N•••mMr l lloy1!1, Kim and C"'6•1ts C1•tv, S1Hv Ann Ind Gtore. #lllrt'd Fu.,ow, llon11l1 Mat •ncl FICrd Ell111 FIOl"e1. Jmnl• 1na RDOCrl S1lcld0. ICllP>erl"' tl'ICI Arm1ncl Fou11, Miry IC.1ll'lf"lnt ll'ICI ll:htt [,, ''· StUlbl, Edward IC.. end Marv J IM M;Her, Marv J1nt Incl Jolln JootPft 0..111, Jtlf\nt M1rlt I ncl Kt nntlll Fr Ider le~ Ooihtr. l1nnv RIV 1ric:t l l,..,1 Lrt M•N 9 Uddt, Bonn~ J. and R-rl 11:. Mlrr1. Dtflrt JHn S(h~UI Incl Robtrt E. Ltt lllHWtr, Robin L. •l'ICI Rill Gri11111. o,.,,,,;, Ltt 1no P1~11 R1e Mll'l-Y. C1roly11 Ann '"" C.trv Jf-1 Marlin. Lrr01 S. Ind M1r111rt1 J. 19orrnon, Allct 1no lllldwln J1mt1 OormtYtf, Miry K. and Rob!•! R. NorcrC111. YlcTari1 0 . l l'ICI RoMrt #1. R111tr, llt•trlv and JOll n Wllflur Aden, Ctrolvn M1rlt 1nd Gerald Rly T1vlor. Dunc1n H. I nd W•llCIV H. Ft111\erJ!on, Lindt 1nd Drrw 8aro1rd~•-Jr1n Y, tlld Mt rlt P. Moro1n, C.tll M. '"° Mlch1tl T. Llnd1ey, P1trlcot Ann lllCI ICtnntlh R!1I Neil, GW<lndolyn 1Ctll1r 1rd Jenn Pr1l11 DYi•, Et11,,. Ptntl®t 1r>d Wl'lllon Owlllllt Slrldlwr, >uncv K. ,,..i W1~,,. l. Rios, l lllt H. lrlCI Juan F. Pr11I011, M1rlwl9 #1. Ind W11!tr L. C1rtll.I. JOit"" A. •net Marie L. Ramey, H111I P, lllCI L-.1rd l . Wlncl'I. Florflltt Mar, Ind Frt'drrl<k ..,,_ Sml!l'I, Marv llOHlo Ind Tnom11 Clln· ·~ BY!ltr, D!IM E. Incl J1tntl Don{!I. 0on110 H. 1ric:t oi.1~ #Inn An9d1l'll, l ll'lc:tl Sut 1N:I WllU1m Llovd (MYIY, Mlc"'6tl P. lllCI ICilfllltn (. W1ldtn, (11rd1 Jrtn Ind llJU Marvin WllU1ms, Anni 11'1c:t"°b1Yld A. Docuon, J1mn H., Jr. Ind Sut Ptlli9\0, C"'6•1fl F. Ind Carla E. (rtl1. RIC111rd D. 1N:I Am1ll1 M. ICll'llo, Marll,n F•1nct1 ttld Frank Riv Death Notices ARBUCKLE & SO~ WESTCLJFF 1\10RTUA.RY il7 £. 17lh St., Costa l\ltsa 11&-<888 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del 1\1ar OR 3-9450 Costa l\fesa !\II 6-24!~ • BELL BROADW '· Y l\10RTUARV 110 Broadway, Costa flfesa LI S..343:? • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH 1\fORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. f.94-1415 • PACIFIC VIEW MDIORJAL PARK Ct.met.try ltfortuary Chapel SHI Pacific Vie" Drive Newport Beach. Callfornla • "'"""' • PEEK F MDLV COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1801 Bolsa Ave. Wtstmlnsler 893-3SU • SMITHS• MORTUAftY ct7 !\fain SL Duottoitoa Bcacb SIM.I.II Dr. Timothy Reagan o(fered more likely to die of a heart the eyebrow-raising warning problem than her w b i t e at the convention of the sistei-." he sa id. American Heart Association All six specialists pointed to here in a paper that prtd.icted. pover~. overCrowding, lack of the likelihood of beart damage sufficii:_nt medical attention to anyon~ enjoying a daily in· and a particularly tragic take of alcohol. -shortage o f anti-infection The amount can vary by in-treatrpent for c h i I d h o o d dividuals, the New Jersey ailments Jinked lo h e a r t physician said. But there is no disease as the prime causes of doubt, he added, that alcohol high cardiac incidence in causes fat to collect in the America's black people. heart and disturbs the And !hey all quick I y m e t ab o Ii s m or fatty dismissed the frequently aired .substances normally held in theory th2.t physiological and check by the heart tissues. mental differences between He got backing from Dr. the two races left the black S.S. Ahed who noted, In a man on the debit side in terms separate discussion. • t bat of individuals most prone 10 depreised function and ir-heart disease and coronary at· ritability of the heart is clear-tacks. ly detectable to the physician Card iac failure and st rokes in cases where healthy men in later lire can often be 8t· and "·omen consume alcohol lributed to the presence of in non-intoxicating quantities. hypertension and there is no Anqther New Jersey physi-doubt lhat black people are · D •1 u J · ·d much more prone to that con-c1an. r. 1•. . esr<>IU, sai the villain of the piece may be dition. Dr. Jesse Barber of acetaldehyde - a chemical How~~d Un i~·ersity College of contained in alcohol and in 1fed1c1ne said. . _ Cigarettes.--· --"\Ve've fouiid-~hat DlacKS ll"s possible, he said. that hav~ far. more ser1~.us stro~es the drug is directly respon si-than white people, he said. hie for lhe depressant action ··\Ve've also found Iha! th~y that follows intake of alcohol get them younger than their and thus directly for the heart while neighbors, but this does damage that could result after not_ mean that they are a period of years. rac1allr ,,prone to suc h And that period, Reagan maladies. . . . said could be as little as two Barbe~ said an upg~ading of ' the med1cnl care available for years. •t · · ., most black people will do a 1~ arhni, anyone · great deal to level off the dif- Rattwsnake Not Such, A Bad Gu y ANAHEIM - A discovery by two Los Angeles researchers may lead a Jot or Americans to look on the detested ratUesnake in a new light. His venom, they say, may have taken its toll of human life but the signs are that the ratle will more than make up for that by involuntarily contributing his main line of de!ense to a serum that will save the lives of bea.rt attack victims. Ors. Francis S. Markland and Paul S. Damus discuS!ed their discovery at lhe con- vention of the American Heart Association here and said the enzyme which features rat- tlesnake venom prevents blood clotting - a prime cause of coronary failurr. MWCH IMITATED NEVER DUPLICATED Patents n.n out Copies are inevitable. Others have attempted to copy the Roi ex pressure- proof Oyster case, the self-winding mechariism. the date feafla'e, the day and date indicator. an innovations of Rolex. But ferential between the two races. "It isn't surprising that hypertension is a major cause of cardiac ailments in blacks," he said, "since the conditions 1nany blacks have lo live in provide an ideal breeding ground for it." Environment. in ll'rms of job opportunities, living con· ditions, medical care and socio-economic factors dictate the levels of the black man's cardiac vulneratiility, all six specialists agreed. "Diffe rences between whites · and blacks in the old Con- federate states, for example, are much greater than in the urbanized north where Ute Doctor Na1ued ORANGE -Richa rd W. Opfell, M.D., an internist and hemotologist with offices in Santa Ana, has been elected president of the St. Joseph Hospital medical staff. Dr. Opfell has been a member of the St. Joseph'staff for 15 years and ser\'ed as vice president for 1970 and 1971. the Rolex skill, crcittsmanship and dedication could never be duplicated. The pride of knowing you wear the real thing is the pride of wearing a Rolex. Above, the Rolex Submarine r Date, a 30-jewel self-winding chronometer with date indicator that c_hanges automatically at midnight. Guaranteed pressure-proof by its stainless steel Oyster case to a depth of 660 feet•. With revolving time elapsed bezel. With matching Slainless sleet bracelet $285. ·~CftMrl tndoystatere intact. i' ·· RO LEX HIDE.A-WAY FOR CHRISTMAS C~l~t A(Clllltlt ln~ff­ A1111rk.111 1!1,r111. SLAVICK 'S Jt\\'t'll"ri; Sin~ 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT 8EACH-6H· I 380 Optn Mon.·~ Fr i., 10 •.m. ~o 9:3'b p.m. black man's cardiac statistics are stjll higher than his white neighbor, but mucb closer tha.n the comparison reflected in . the Deep South, Dr. Jeremiah Stamler said. The director of the Chicago W-1-D-E General · -caricratea ® Jumbo780 • ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT on new 1971 c11s a GLASS-BEL TEO for long mileage • POL YE STER CORO body lor s1rength • CALJBRATED8.,. computer -processed tor 11 smoolh 11de BUICK CHRYSLER FORD MERCURY SIZES: H71xtS 2895 Plu1 $l.O I F.E.T. B u t socio-economic con- ditions among black people may hsve produced a new menace from an old source, Stemler said cigarette smoking. One tlcket buys everything. P&O's S.S. Oriana leaveoLos Angeles Nov. 29 on her la Fiesta Cruise and Decem- ber 11 on her El Cortez Cruise for Mazatlan, Puerto Vallarta and Acapulco. For informa- tion or resei'vations,contact us. All P&O ships are of British registry. Dubbing smoki ng as "today's poor man's disease", Stamler said the same in- dustrial survey showed that 637 of every 1,000 black workers interviewed smoked. "In that same zs-44 age group .~ of every 1,000 white workers confessed to the habit ," be said. And all stressed that the im- mediate treatrTient of rheumatic fever in black in· fants. and children will do a great de8:1 to stamp out the Cardiac deficiencies that are sure to emerge in later years. NEWPORT CENTER TRAVEL 644-1412 Lola Robinett Fili l!U ICK SPECIAL. CHARGER, TEMPEST, F-IS, --'TORINO," IMPAb\,-BEL-..AIR-- •nd mainy ~ '18!~ Slit Fll·U & Fll-1$ blaekwall plu1 $1.SS ftncl 12.61 Fed. Ex. T "( per tire Only $3.00 more per tire fN" Twin-Stripe Whltrw.alls! Fll:t MUSTANG, COUGAR, CAM AAO, FIAEBIAD. CHEVY II and -many others _$18!~ 111• E7t-U bl1ckw111 pl111 11.lS Fld. Ex. Tex 11er Tlrt. Only $3.00 111ot1 per Utt fw t•i..Slripe Wltltewalls! Flis MONTE CARLO, BISCAYNE, CA PRICE, CATALINA, FURY, MONTEREY •nd m.mny ottMrs '23!~ Slzt G71-15, bl1ckW1ll pith U.77 Ftd. El. T •• per llrt. Dalt $3.00 111or1 Jtr Ure hr Twi11-Strip1 Wllltenll1! Fits FALCON, VALIANT, DART, CORVAIR GREMLIN, VEGA, PINTO , $ 95 ONLY $3.00 MORE PER TIRE FOR WHITEWALLS! CADILLAC.LINCOLN CHR YSLER IMPERIAL Slies L-71·15 32" F.E.T. l .!7 CAMPER TIRES 3995'·"· l .H I Pit -1J·1M SUPER WIDE! 60 SERIES Belted-Raised White Letters' 15 F60-14 or $35.95 F.l .T. 2.ll·l.00 -G60--14-or-15 $39.95 F.E.T. 2.72·2.95 BRAKE REL IN E ~··~~ 1 l1l~· ~!!:~!~;~:i~ 24 95 HERE'$ WH.11' WE DO: Our 'PKllll1t1 rtll•t ill four whffll wit~ W11ntr br1k1 llnl•gs ••• l~IP«I .. 111 lour drvm1 , •• ChKk whffl cyllrldt~ Ind rt- hirn 1prl~91 ••• Cl11n •l>d l11brlc11t btck· Ing pl1l1 ••• R•ptck front wh11I f111rfnt1 , , • A.d l111t br1kn, r1stor1 fl11ld , •• ROlll ltll your c•r. Wt u11 only ntw l1ctory tnglnttrtd plrtt . .• Ml rebuilt, SNOW CHAINS All P'ASSENGEll TRUC!C & CAMPER SI ZES 700·1 5 to 12·1615 Crooked wh.«1 rot. yo•r cor of "'••h1n1m performo11ee, ride, ,,_.lllf and th·• wear. We <•tree' ccnr.r, cember, tH•hl, f'a .. eu' 'e y•ut c•r -••'-'11ret'1 1,.cl· flcatlo111, end safety check ai d edju1t yeur ttMrlllf. 59 95'·"· •.U Duplex Wheels . . 29.9.S ea. -3-PIECE ~; WIND 'N RAIN SUIT,,.,,,..,,..__, o HOOD o JACKET I Wond and ra1rtprool 11 High v1s1b1Uty /"le1vy duly plastic Special Th is Week Only lANICAMHICARD Take Your Pickl USED TIRES lots of 11011•1ldd ttto.i each p lu1 1t1l1 111d loc1I 111111 MASTIR CHARGE Don !wetlluntl I COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Da ily PHONE : • . • ~·· 111..,,r..,.,.. fflllr,.. ,.., -·~,, .. ""' ....... u~~' U~i~ ' . .. 1.U) ... ..,., .. -\!q>cn .... ~··""' .,,,. ""' \1'W.. "''- P1•ice, 1t'uge. c1.assifieatio11 The Cost of Living Counc il announced it \\'ould require advan ce approval for pri ce in cre.ascs by U.S. corporations '' Hh sales of $100 _1nillion or more a year and for ,,·age boos ts covering 5.000 or more \Vorkers. Donald Rum sfeld. the Council's executive director. said that Phase II of Nixon 's economic slabiliza- tio n program \VOuld inclu de procedures to guard against pr ice increases out· stri pping acceptance pay rais~s. 'fh~ chert illustrates price and \vage categories. • Auto1nakers Endorsing New Nixon Econo.mic Policies DETROIT {A P• -General Lynn To\\·nsend, Chrysler ~lotors and Chrysler ex· board chairman. said his com· ecutives say the \1•age-price pany"s profit so far this year f reeze caused their thlrd-has. been unsatisfactory, even q uarter profits lo be lo1vcr though Chrysler reported nel -1han..ex.pec.1cd. buLaLI.he...same_ea.rllinj:: .!B ... 4 .... mi.llion -10 time the auton1akers endorsed the first three quarters of lhe P resident N i x on 's ne11· .1·ear compared to a net Joss of economic policies. $15.2 m illion in the same GJ\1 r eport e d recent pe.riod of 1970. T h.e company's record sales of $5.6 billion in 1h1rd·qua1·ter pro1ft 1~·as $6.2 the quarter e nded Sept. 30. but n1illin~. ~lmost t.hree times the said the S217 1nillion profit ~2.1 m1\11on profit for the same d uring the periQd 1ras con-quarter a year agn. s iderably less t han a record. To1rnscnd forecast that 1972 I' •I I I ' I ' she likes nicer, 1ofter laundry shampoos, both1, wlth lots of lath., I ·I ' he likes economicaf to buy, op¥ote Seers Automatic Weter Softe"ers priced from S229.95 CAlt y01Jr neorMI Sears S1ore for FREE waler OMolysit Weter Sofie"•,.. et most Se~rs s1ore1 end in 1he cetelO!J )'ou are in vited to a/lend a timely and provocative se1ninar on •.• 1971 Tax Planning for Your Securities Portfolio An important meeting designed to evaluate your securities portfolip and dctcrn1inc how to 1aJ..c advantage of tax-saving cpportunitics is planned for Laguqa Beach. Presen ted b): Robert J. \\'allacc, Resident Manager 1'.1itchu m, Jones & Templeton \\iedncsd:i.y, N ovember 17, 1971 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. C o mmur\ity Room Laguna Federal Savings & l oan 260 Ocean A venue • Laguna Beach Subjects 'Mll include : • Hov.· C(lpitnl gain.rand /ossts }4·i// be taxed • Ad1·antages (If taki11g losses to reduce taxes • Taking gai1u to upgrade • Postponi11,r: long terrn gains 1mtil next yrar • Ojfsc:tling long and short 1erm capitdl gains Question •nd An!'l'cr Period follows E:vttyonc altcodiog Y.ill receive "Guide for 1971 Capital Gains and Losses". Atttnd.>nce is by rcS<rvation . can 494-9781. 'jliercis no charge. @ MITCHUM JO NES& .TEMPLETON (.Jr•bluhrtfl9.'0 J i'i'COlrO A,.T.ED 195 f ort't Avcnuo: • La1una Jk.icb, 92651 Tcitphonc; (714} ~94-9781 }.{tm!:trs l\'rw }'or.I( S11Hlc Uc1to111t, Int. al'!d otMr prinripal «X~ "'ill be "an excel\enl year" y,·ith ··substantial stregthening in the economy." He said Chrysler had plan- ned on price increases of 4 to 5 percenl 011 1972 models. but Mdl'Cliiiliif1'97J'Pf1ces under the l\'agc·price freeze. He said the compa n y v.•il l go to the Pay Board for unspe<:ifed in- creases in prices of its new models. In a letter lo stockholders, G~t Chairn1an Jan1es H. Roche and President Edward N. Cole said , "Net income in the third ,quarter of 1971 was arl\'erse.Jy affected as a result of the price freeze ·which necessitated rescil~ding the price increases on 1972 model t:<:1rs and trucks.'1 At !lie same time. Roche and C.ole said that a 11 segments of socieiy stand to benefit from the new economic programs. ''The administration has d one an excellent job of iden- tifying the problems of P ht1se 2 and \\'Orking out methods to resolve them,·• they said. ''\\lhile no elernent of society likes conlrols of any kind. An_d \l'C 1\·nuld all prefer to have ·a rompletcly frrc e conomy, the progra m is a c!et1r necessity if "'e ~e to reduce inflation, in- crease employment. and return to a free n1arket environment as soon a s possible.'' Hoche and Cole a I s o pre dicted that ne1v economic poflcies "•ill streni;:thcn con- sumer confidence leadini;i to general economic recovery a nd continued s trength in auto sales. F or the first nine months of !he yrar. G~fs profits 11·tre $1.4 million, or $4.84 per share on sales or $21 billion. During the curresponding prriod last year. G~1 profits we re $744 million. nr $2 57 per share, nn sales o f $15.11 b illion. G~1 built n o c ars in 1he Jat1er part of September last year beeause of a Uni!ed Auto Workers strike and reported a third· q uarter loss of $77 million in 1970. l;r.f ca rnin,1ts in lhe third quarter \\'ere less than 4 per- cent of sales, compared 11•ith 1 percent for 1969 and 8.l per· c ent in 1967. G :'l.1 rep<irted factory sales nf cA rs And trucks in the t;nited StAtes d uring the third quarter Of this }'CAr totaled 1.l 1nillion, up from 620,000 a year ago. Y.'orldwide sales Were 1.5 m illion. compared with 937-101 a year ago. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDA YS IN 1THE DA ILY PILOT • Fr!~. Nov•l'!b•r 12, t~n oitLV ·OI LOT 9 Despite Layoff• LEGAL NOTICE LEGAi. NO'l'ICE LEGAL NOTICE RCA to Repair Ow11 Computers NOTl(l'0' T•USTll•S lllLl 'U8LIC Hl!llllNOS WILL t• Hl"LO l'f H1 .• ,C/"*1 ,. HDTl(I Oji' lllLI DI" lllill. tNlf C°'Til Mll\il 'L .. HM IM I) 011 Of<:ttrlbtt 1, It/I, 11 ll'DO ,.M , ,.D,lllTY AT 'lllV•TI 111'"9 COMMISUON AT Tiii CITY MALL,,, COLO"llAL MOllTGilGf 5£11.V ICE CO lilt, »"J ,111111 Dtl'••I!, CO\TA jllll511, C•LI• 011' (ALtf'OllNtA 11 CIUI-tH6ifl11d In 1M l_,11111' t .... 11 ~ 111•-11•11 9' 101tNIA, •T J:M ,,M, Dlt Al MIOJt Tru11 .. ufldtr MCI 11~rw1111 le Dfff ti Ct llle•fllt 111 tnd lo< '"' ("'1fllp of .. , l>OSSllLI TH«ltl•,TE• OJt Trut• ,,,,.., AP"I 30. 1'10, •~KU1'U •• •l•f'r•lcl• MONDAY, JtCV•Mll• n. I"'· ot.111011 ot., L.c:\11 1..-~111 C l.4~\11, In tlll l"ttHr ot. IN '''''' et Jot.Mli5 llfGAllDINO THI , O LL OW I HO ll11lt.11iiJ •<Wl,..-•nit 1M:llldld ~,.--J, ELM>UA"'*-l<-111'1N()L.0---Aflf't;ltllll'f!ON 1110. 11 ln1u. "lo, 1021, 111 _., tML ''" •-fl 11 Jll.ME~ M.. FRISWOlO. ltt11111 l'tlHl111 Ht. lt·ll•ll, for J .. r-.1 fl-, 111 O!llcl1I A.e<Ofdt Ill ~ ell.ct ol 0Kt•llCI. 0 . ll:lf _,,., Ci.1• 14111, 111 El•! 1'Tll 1ht Cou..tv llKOfdH .. °''"" CO<lfll'< Noflct 1, ht•tliV 1l•tfl lhll th• $tr~!. C11tt Mts1. C.Hl9f11 l1 IOI' (1U10tnl•, WILL SELL •T PU•LtC u 11 d t f 1II11 •Cl Ltl1 MIY H111J,f11, "rml•,lan te •U-\ "'""°''" "' AUCTION TO HIGHElf l100Elt FOil Aoml11lltr1"!• will .. 11 •I !N'!Ytl• 1111, to descd bt(I Ill 11\f ~1111011 tNt l<H;•!td •I CASH (lll Vlfllt It !lmt t<I 11i. 111 l1wr~1 tnt hlthtll Dlclcltr flt! !o lht flttlf, UOOfl JI00.7111 VtlltV ltOtd (011' MtH, mC>lltV at 11\f Unl!l'd 5t1t11) 1t S.OU!h ,... tt•<tll tnCI cond•t!Ot11 lltrtlnt l!t• C1ll!l)!'11l1. !(am Ml to ltl_ lronl 1ntrtMCI lo 1111 0•11111 C"'111lv olCI m•ntlllflf<I 1fld Mlfllttt to co11!11m1!1on b• ltu-l'tt!tlln 1<11, R·11·2J, tor 51. Jo!lfl SAN yn • NCISCO (UPI) Cw•ll10'"'· CllY OI S•nl1 AN, 51,11 11 111.1 ••Id l>1Pt•lo• COll•I. °" or ot1" 1111 Dlv\11t Cllll•(ll, 200 O•t'llt AtWTut. co111 • IV',. -Ct lllot11l•. •II rlt!\I, 1111. •l'ld lllffllll 1'1h lllV O! Nl>l'tmbtr. !t11, ,, l!lf ofhc• Mc••· t.1111., ti• Robert i;. Jlll'flion, Jl'I The president of RCA ·a dala conveytd IO tnd -htlll bV It Undtf Sl id .. COLLI NS ANO 5NYOL!:lt, 111 VI• de It 1(1rrv L111t, Cot!• Mt••· CtlUot"I• lot · d " · • h Id I Dt.O ot T•u•t In !ht P•Ollt<IY 1ltu1tt'd I" ,.,, Ptcl!Jc Ptll1111t1. C1U!or"i1, ~n llt'tmluJ011 '' •U-010""" ·~ p rocessing 1v1s1on as to ts '"' ((ly ol Coll• MPlf, 111 •tld '""'"IY Cito ct Lo• "'"••It•, (OUMtY 01 Let lllKrlbed !11 '"' PllfllOfl tnd 1oc11td •• cus tomers they will not ~ '"° st11• o~•c•lbto 11: AM•I••, s11•• ot Ct1!!tot1111, ~11 ,,.. r1on1. lh• $ou11>P•1t"1• <o•ner .,, 111v ,,,,_t Loi 21, Ttttl 1147, In !ht (II\' fl! COl!t tl!lt tnll l~!t•tll ot tt!d dt<:ttltd ti !hi Ind Fullt<!Ofl AVtMut , CO.It MtU. abandoned when the firm lj:Ce! Mt••· C01111!f 01 oru101. 11 Pt• rn11 11"'' 01 o»1rn ••Id 111 '"' ,1, .... !Ill• 100 c1u10•11!1, !•om 111 10 111-c". t f th I po • rt<etlll'd 111 B"~ 41, "" •, lflttr11t 11111 11,. t1t11t ot 11IC1 Clti'tt"ll 1t1io,.. Prlltlon Ne. lt·1l·Jl. tor ou1,tlt OU 0 e genera pur s MllCt lltMOU• M1p1. I" ,,,. O!!ICt ol 11>1 hll tcoulrtd b• OPtft!IOfl of llW or H, .... 1-.i.tm, not E. Co••I Av111u•, computer business. coun•Y '"'""" 01 ,110 <ounh . olhuwl••. 0111t• llltn or lfl 1<1<11t1on 10 ort1>11t. ce•ilO•fll• t MCI HU!le•l H. 'd Mo<t comnienlv k,_n 11: 2ll '"II ti>.i of ''Id dt<t11..i ti !ht lime ol ltt•lll, W•O.tlltm, p o. lo~ "· Cltm•fl!•, "We fully intend lo prov1 e Pltct. Co111 MeH, C111t0fnl1, Or1n11 I" '"" te •II 1htt t•'11l11 ffol oroeorl• Ct llfOfnle, tor ,..,minion ta rt1a"' the services necessary for our Coun•v. P••ttcul••!v MK•+o.o •• to11-,. 10-wi1 : arooe•!Y •• 111K•l0t0 111 1 .... pellllon and $1111 •tit will bt mtdt. bul wlll'IO«! PA~CEL NO. I: 1hl! 110<1I011 O! Loi !oci /ed south o1 Sunfll!Wlf, l)elWl•fl customers lo continue ef-co•t...,nr or w1rt1n1v. •~P''" or 1m111111. 21. tr•cl 1<10. H4. ,, .,., "''" tti.rt<>f smal!t~ Ila•" 1.,., •••• sue1t, co.11 f. . ily us1'ng the1'r RCA com rtttrdlflt tlllt, "11 .' •• I" II' or rKOfdl<I 111 llGOk II Pit• '· Miii· Ctlllorfll•. lrom Al 10 ti. IClen • t <1Cumbr111<:••· lo i>a• lllt •tmt!flln1 M!Mtll1-1 Mt.,., tecore1 al Or1noe Rttt,.. -Hien Ht. lt·71·14, lor tht pUler equipment aS long aS pri11<lp1I oum ol lloe ""It IKUftd Gp Hid (ounly, C111tor11l1, dtKrobfod 11 lollow1: M(}.liUOttl Comotnv, Inc,, 16t•A W, they COnsl.der ii .......,nomlcally DllCI ol Tr""' 10-Wll: tll.Sll 54. wll~ llt0l11nl111 1t 1 POlnl 1~ I h 1 11•1•""" Dtive, Ful"'''°"' C•llforn·•· ,0, .. ,... lnlt rt•I from No•""""'' 1. 1•~. II In MIO No<lnttllHlY lo ... ol uld Lo! 21, ••Id ........ Hlon lo ··-Pf-•h II feasible lo do so," said Joseph ...,,, ,.,..,.io..,, '"'"'"'''· 11 1n•, ""'°" lh1 POlnt bl!ne ti.Oii teet t•om "'' mo•t dtscdt;11e1 111 Ho• 1>1llrJon 11111 1oe11t<t on t•rm• cl ••lo Ottd of Tru•t. tin. Ut1•..e1 "IDrlhtrlv Cl)!'ner ol 11!d Lor 21: tllen<" 1ne $QUlh fillt ol 9.io;.,. wtil of Ctnturt W. Rooney. 1nc1 ''"""' al 1111 Truu" ""' el th• So..111 1'0 ... •Y Wttl p1r111e1 with"'' Pltcf, C01!1 Mt11. C1liternJ1, lrorn Ct 11 H dd e sed the Opening 1.-...11' cr••l..O l>V 11111 OHd of Trusr. N"''""''"'''• 11 ... el 11ld LOI 11. 1 111 e a r S ,. TM l>flltficltrf under ll•CI Det'd cl Cl.l!fn<:t ol 43111 !Ht lo 1 -nl i11 !ht 2-Elc .. 11.,. Ph"'rt Ne 1E·11·1ft, session recently of the RCA Tru11, ........... of . b• .. cll" dfltul! !" Soull\ ... Ul••!Y 1.,.. .. llo<I Lot 11, stio ior ............ But:lch, 22'0 '111. EDl!U. com~.• ter u sers a ssociation 111t 01111111;...,, MCu•ed 1 "•••a •. POl111 btln1 "·OG ref'! l•orn the mott NeWPO•I l•tcl>. Ctllh>rni• '"' 11trm1H,.,. t'."' ~eteiort •~ecu!N . '"" dtllu•u•j •o lllt Wtilttl• cor111r ol 11111 Lot 11; '"""" lo con11ruc1 '' u111t1 an n ,11• 1o. "· of meeting, a ttended by 270 ,. . . be . und1rl11ne11 ~ '""'t'" DKll•••lon or SDll•ll 50• 11· tJ" E11t 11.,.., ••kl ttnll i''" o unit .,., 1nJ 10. 11 1 w!l11 1 l · f' 10 percent of !IS \\'Iii In· Od1u11 1n<1 Df-m•nct •or 511•. •flO w•lt!•n Sout11 .. 1111r1v 11,.. of Lot 11. • di1tu•<e o encro,11c11"""' Into '"' rtoulrN 50 11 delegates rtpresent1ng irms 1 ll·" d i 1 DCA's ..olic• et"'""' •net o1 elKli°" 10 c1uu et 1tooo l••t; tn'""' Nor111 .~· ... ,5·· tron1 ,1,11 •Plt>td from ctn1tr(!r1t o1 from throughout the nation. 5 ~ cu e S P e ~ tn• unoe•1lt flf'd •o ,,u 1•IO "'Ol>t"• to E1J! P•r•!.lt1 to 11ld 1<1ort11~1t~1v lint •t•eet Mid 1 10 u tncroichmtflT 1nro 1111 \\•1thdrawal from the business . u1111v u lo o11111111o111, 1nd tti••••ner, on of 1110 Lat 21 1 olii.nct o• •l•.11 ttd , ..... 1 • ..0 15 11. •N• •••" 1~111<~. on as:~~ti~~n~;:r:~~~~· i~~~ Rooney sa id it 11·iil be /.::111~,,.~,1·~~~;'; u=~~":;'~~~,:',.~a''i:! :.Oar1 1~"1~:~,:·~0,~,:"':.1~'1~":s.~1"~e:: ''1o:;1•E ::~i!n'' ,'::;:/,' :1. ~~.~~~\'::; de livered as close a s iX>ssible r''"'""' 1" tJooll tilt, '''' n•, ct •••II ol<>n• ••la N"'tht•••••IY 11ne ot Lot 11 , 1or 1i.e McMlr111tl Comt>anr. 1<1C .. 1$'·" executive session. The group • . I d 0111c111 Rectt<1•. <10111ncP 01 1«1 oo 1111 to 11>t POl111 er wtu va1•,,.,11 or1vt. Fu 111r 1 on, "had soughl stronrrer com· lo the ong1nally schedu e Ottt: Orlobtr "· n11 ~1"nln1. C•h!ornl•, l1>r rt<luctoon Jn tht monfm11"' e date c 0 L 0 NI AL M 0" T GAG E PARCr L tlO ,, Tht Sout"we11 .. 1v IOI ••el tram 6000 10. I!. IC YlQ .... It. !of mitments from RCA .or news · SERVICE co. OF CilLIF011NIA l jt •I 1111 01 Tht !onowlnt ae1c•11>e<1 1ci. 15 tnrouvn 11 or Tin1ot!•• T•ict No. d He said p revio us I y •• .. 1<1 ,,..,,~,. "'"""'"·to wit:""'' P"'"""' 01 Lat 11. ts,., 1or1•M1 011 tn1 10u1n o!dt m 11~-·· of more progress lo"·ar a c-ev Kttnv F1t19.,1111. T••tt No. ~. 11 ptr M•o intrt<>I w11t 0, Ctllturv Pltci. cos11 Mia•, quisition of the division by unordered additional equip-Au1nor1nd ,1vn11u•• •«ordf'll In eoo1t n Paoe 9, c11ofa•n11. In • o•ooa...o 111 •one. t ·11 be ·d d u•s 21111 Ml1e111ane0\l1 M101. lltcafd1 or Or1nvt ''"' E1r1ollen Ptrmll Ht. za.n .101, another reputatU,e_ compart.v. men \\'l provi e on Rn F'ubli•nod or1n•t co11t 011tv r 11a1. Coun1., c1111arn11, d•1trlbf'<1 01 ro11o .. ,, to• G•tnv111e w111. no1 s1trr1 11101•, Rooney denied an Oct. 22 ''as available" basis, but the Novembers. n. n, 1911 7'6i·l1 llttlnnlno., 1111 m011 1<10•11>••1'!' rorne• 1r~111e. c11t1crnl1. IOI" e••,.,.llslan., 10 t · d ' 1_.. o• u ld La! 11; ll>t""t .SO...tn ~· 11' •5" con1tru(I one euple• wlth ~ \ldt report that Xerox Corp. had CUS omer sur11ey in 1c a eu LEGAL NOTICE E••t n .oo tttt 11ot1v lhe ,..,..mt1ntrlv encro•ct>menr 1o o u. ,0, ••••••• and bou•ht lhe busi·ness. ''we will be ahle to meet most hnt of 1110 Lot 211 l~tnc• So•Jt" ::it' ... <•"'"'' on1r:-100 p1rmis\ton 10 corutrue1 " d '' Wtll earollel wlln I I> e a si11tlt re,ldtnct wilh 1 S n. Rooney said R CA has not of your needs." NOTICE TO c11.rorto11s Jto•1hw111 .. 111 ll11t ot .1111 Lei 11. d •ncroocnm•~! Into It>• •-<1utie<1 21 n rt•• h b · C h ped l Ne. A·lllll d•ll•nc:e ol t lol 11 !ttt lo • pol~t In !he •••II 1tlbtc~. on 11,..111,iv loci lt'd 1r 1()1 Vl'ithdrawn. from l e U!tneS!I Rooney said R A 0 0 SU~ElllOll COURT 0, THa ~ou!nwtJ!t•IY llflt of ••Ill lot 11, lo•d ,.,..,111on S!retl, Costt Mest, C11/torno1 1n of maintaining and supporting a\·oid manufac turing previous-s.!,",'-00~,cT1t..VL10',",','.•,',',"' "l>olnr beln9 t1 oo '"1 lrom tnt m'"' •n 111 •lit'•. 0 ,_ v '' WtlleflY (Dt'flf• ot 11ld Lor 11; lhPllC• zo .... E•ctplion , ...... 11 M•. Zl·TI·!ll, the computer equipment used ly announced ne¥.' products on e-11111 of PEAllL ONE TA COK, 1110 Na•th )C' 11· 11" w111 91 00 ''" 11...,, tor ~,~611 P•oltcl.O Adwtr11s1119 •llllJ or · d 'II ' h ' h d l · d ~nown •• PE"llL O. COX. Otc•••tcl ••kl Sou!nwt.itrl• h,.. Ill Lal 11 10 ltl• cni•lts f_ St•••I•. 170C 5uMrlor Avtr111•, by tis customer! an WI mee~ ~· JC Pr O U r IO n an ,.01,,. ,, n•'"b' vo••n lo cr.ol!ori 01 mo1t Wtltt•IY corner ot u !d Lm 11 c°''~ ......,, •. c,11111,fl,., 10, permint°" ,0 its contractual obligations to deliveries have n ot started. He "'' •t>o•• named decro•nt 111•1 a11 1nenc:• ,...,tn 11· ,,. •S" E••t •IMO '"'" u,.. •n , • .,1.nv ,;9., •••ucturt to ,.,01.-.:1 h ""'"""' ht••nt cltlm1 19~!nst lfot 1110 Nor111w11ttrly l!ftt ol 11io Loi JI, • l<l•erlioifll '"'Cool• Mt ll bullflt•t.H 1nd !hem. said that in most cases I ere decf'<Wnl ••e •taulr..i 10 1111 lhtfl•, ,.,,n Ol•t1Mct 01 •li 1! l•tt •10 the POln1 o1 10 P•oittt pubi« ••nt lrc •nd communloy The division executive told ;ire ''viable alternatives," but rn1 """""'• voucn,,., In. th• "'"'" of btll1""1"°· 1111orm•liM 1ll<lfs wirn111 tht aounct1r1e1 • , . , 1111 Cit•-cl the obo•e tnl•lle<I COU•I, or EXCEPT: Th1t or>rll"" of Lot 11, ot rht Clly al (Piii M•i.t, wltti th& Users he WOUid meet With lhat JndlVldUal revle\\'S \Yllh to ore,.nl lhtm w•lh 1n1 n«t•••rv Trarl No. Ht 11 Sh.,,." on 1 mao •l•!oo·itY oc•~n lo be !OC:llt<I II 11-0 them individually during the each customer would he made. •ouch•" to '"' ""°'"1,...., •I 1n1 o•tlct rocwd.o 111 8""~ 11. Pa9• •· Su""'"' A•Pnvt. co111 M111. c1Hlorfli1. Qf B1Httl, Sltt•n• & Colllnt. 1150 Un lOfl Moutll•,..ou• M•oS, reco<ds ot Or•nRt Thea •l;oeo to lie "'°""" tflret lo tour next two days lo ~iscuss their In ;:i new pos ture, RCA an· "''"*' Tower. 011 Amo F o"1~<1•1 C••"e" coun1~. c1i.1o•fll•. Which 1;r1 wi1h111 • h°"" •l<fl e•Mlnv bt<1.n"o"' ,1 11.,~. d d d 'l Id 't l e<t•nc•. c1m ..... 1. IO~J. -lrh 11 lh• '"OP of !Ind 50.00 let! In Width, lht Ou~ ... th• bill""' .. r ""' 11 "°"'" lftl problems an nee s. nounce I w ou perm1 Pl•ce m 1>U11neu "' 1n, un0er1lqntd .n 111 sour11.,1v 11111 "' ••id •1"P beong '""'n w011 ,,...,1n ,....,11~ ,011«1 11 in• Rooney said that despite the cancellation of e q u t pm e n t miner• Df.rUinln; lo tll• ~•Ut• ot u ta O.K•llle<t •• tollow1: bouom ar 1he sc•ee11• In , c2 ,_. .. I I <IK..itnl wllhon lour "'""th• •Her !ne s ... nlloflQ It Int lntent<lion at RP<ammendetlon to the coitt Mt'' layoff of m ore than 35 percent leases by current users. This 11 .. 1 P<Jbllc•llen or thl! notlc:r tt>r c•nttr line o1 Tu51ir1 A•Pnue ,,, ; ill•=~""i".f=~----1 o ttre"'divtslon1l~nel-in-primarily-relaled-to·ct1!!\omers D11u,"',,'"",,',~'. c"o',, r-ir~~Tif " Oi>t<!' reco• • P11PoP<Y1en 8Qtnc• '""" •<'~•t"it 'II d ' I ~ In II~ IS91, P19e !2J, OHlc:ltl Record• 1or !ht Oown!own 1•e1. Th I 1 the past m o nth, the firm st1 !hat rent computers 1rect Y E•Kulo• of 1h• w.11 ot 11111 c1nmtl'l"'wnn lh• c•ni.r 11111 "' recortimeoo11to11 wu1 be "'•~d ofl 1ne h d 600 I . f Id f th r ol ••Id <tecl'd•nl. Me11 !>flllt II lhOWll on. m1p of 1ract aver•ll COllCl <tl l'HI 8PD•O•<h .. lht a 1. emp oyes in le rom e corpora ion. 11irr1tt. "'''"' a co111n1 No, JI& •ocordf'tl 111 eoo1t. is. Pa•t :19, Oowntown 111ed,v 1 1oom 1 n1 11u<11 e n g j 0 e e f i n g , l,300 in IUO Unlt>n lltnk TfWtr Ml•Ctlltneou1 M•P" llKOrd1 of 5110 <ondUCIPd by Wlh•Y 8!1<1 Htm, <IOI on · LEGAL NOTICE Dtl Ame Fl111n<111 C1"t1• C6ufl!Y. 1•l<t '""""<lien alio btlnt Of!•ll• cl the Pion. marketing and 50(l ln System s Tt,,t nct, C1lllornl1 fllfJ 111ow11 In Or•not Counly Sur•evc•·• FOii: f URTHEll INFORM ATION ON programming in the United I" u 111 •llo•n•~~00l~r •••cuter Allt nmf'nt 11-Dllll AISW·•Rll, on F'•Q• fHE AllOVE A Pp L 1 c A 1 1 o N 5. d d M . l'ICTIT!OUS llUSIJtESI .... " 1:19; !l>tnce .... lfO '8· 'l'' E: •• llO""' ti>~ lELEPHONE Ill nis OR CALL AT THE States, Cana a all CXICO. NAME ITA fl'MEHf Pu~ll•hO<I 0•1n11t Co•1i Da•ly "lln!. N0>tflp•1!•rlv orol...,o&ilon ol ,.10 OFl'ICE OF THE P l ANN I NG HO¥.•ever, he said "furl.hF>r lhr 1onowln1 111rion1 "' Min• Or•nt>tr ll, 1' •nd No~rmbft J, 1?. <tn!or lint of Tu•!I" Awe""' 110.00 '"'' OEP,.,RTMENT , llOOM 100, " FAIR bv1l""u •i: lt71 llt1 71 to !lit b•tlnnlng of a t•neont cu'•< 011111/E, COST A MESA, CALIFOR!<llA. adjust1nents in manpower" ReMO'S OllltGl"IAL 50URDOUGHC·---------------L '°"''"' s .... 1,, .. 1, ~nd 1>1vln1. tA<!IU} COSl• MESA PLANNING COM- be ' _.. PIZZA, 1015 El Cimino Or,, (Diii LEGAL JSQT1£~ o! 1000.00 tff'I; 1ntnc• Northt••l"'lf MISSION can eXpeC i;u. Mt1t. Ctlllarn\t t16ll . t i°"' 11\0 ''""' !hrouol> o cent•1I 1nol• CHARLE"5 BECK, CHAIRM"N He said the division remains Omtr Mt•lon v ... -. l•ti low• Stre~, ---,c0c,-"c,-.c0c,-c0c,c.,c,c,cu=ncoc•,.---1 01 Jt' n· OJ" •n arc <1<1ta11<e at 6tOllll WILLIAM L-ouN1<1, SECltElARY a \'iable business in hopes Cotl1 M•11, c111tor1111 Punu~nl to th• o•ovhlon• ,ol •"<:lien IHI lo Pol11! ··c··. •ho • 1ttlp Of 11"" ANO Otll!ECTOR OF PLANNING Mtrt•rll Hothll York, 16t4 1-a SI .. 150lSS a! tn• (O'l>O'l tlon' CD<it ol th• dOO fl"('! !n Wiotlh !ht so .. tl>P?IY line Ol Publl1h·~ 0••~·· (011! 0111• P•lot, RCA can sell it to ..another co111 MP11. c 1m ... 1111 st•t• ct c.111.,,1111, notoc1 11 htr.ov 91,...., 11ld 11.io btlnv ""~•llle<t •1 1011ow1· Navem""'' n, lt11 :ICl71·71 Thi• i....1ineH 11 btln1 cllOClucttd by In~•: ft•t onn.no fl tht 1t.,,N1e""""" Poort,1 ---------------- firm. "'Negotiations and hu•b•Nt 100 wott. r .... """""'•'"o .,..,.101or1 •~1,1 0110 w "C"; "'""' contlflul110 11.,..41 ..,td <1<n1e d iscussions with a number of o. M. Yo•uc twten ALAN ~r ... 1ouFORTH '"" JAMES 1~'°"''" • t entr•I •n~!e "1 s• •J· "'"an LEGAL NOTICE Thl1 lltlfm•nt toll'<! W11h !11• Coun!f MICH .. EL ELLIOll under lilt hCl•I""'• I f< Oll!l llC• ol 100.00 I .. !, ,]----------------parties are StiJI going On Cltr~ of Ott ntt County on ; Nev "· 1911 111,.,." ol ALCO ELECTRIC lormefl• ton· Locttl'd lfl tlle Cou11ty ol 0•1n9e, Stal" NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S 5•LE towards that end," ·R ooney",• ~fwtrl, J, M•-·· Dtlhl!V COUii!~ llu<11'11 II 1Jr:t WtU lttn Stttt!, Cotl• "s;~~10;~1~Pe1tTY SHALL'' ••to IN T. s. Jto. 11·LIM 1" . MHI, c.111 ... nlt. t nd Ptlltr!!IV CDll<lur•· On Otttmbef •. ltll, •' lO•llQ A.M. said 'u1>ll111nt Ott ntt Co.o•I OthY Pilot, I'd 11 1>66 l"'1tll -'•tnut, UM it 1. Cos" AN "AS IS'' CDNOITIO"I FEDERAL NAT IO"IAL MO R TGAC.E ~ l ·r th b . . t "lovtmlltr 12. lt, " ""' Otctmbtr ], M c l;Jo 1111 11 -d1Ho1Vt<I llY lffm$ Of Stir. Ct'1! Ill !tw!ul mOlllY ot ... ~SOCIAT ION I I otuly •"l>Oin!"' Tt>1llel ••..,u , I e USlneSS IS 00 ltll 3051·11 m~~I ~.:nl,' the Ufllt('d Sllltl on COtltormtl~ 111 ~lit. un<ler 1..,, lhlfWlnl lo OH!I o! T•ull sold, R CA is ~till determ\nc d JAMES MICHAEL ELLIOTT h11 °• 1>1•t c~Sh ~""' t>tl•n<e t Y>de""4"l b• Otc.tmaev-11, lftt, •«Drdtd Dtt. .... btr lo m aintain an organitation1 ____ L_E_G_AL..,,-,,NcOT,.--I-C_E_" ____ 1 wuhd••wn '"''"· 1nd 'Ila• <••~ to .,.. "°'' •ecurHt bv "'""'•Pt e< Tru11 Deed 21. ll'M'. 81 In•• 1<1e. 1,.,1• 1,.. booli tiio, iuocla!P<I \n '"* c""duc:tl"'I o! 1•1.t "" lh• t>•Ollfrl• '°.sold Trn "'' CtMt ol 01oe JSl. ol Onlclt! RKwd• !fl '"" oUlce large enough lo fullfill its con-, l>tH i....1111t11. '"" ilU.Jt STo1.1<1IFORTH w.11 amoun1 t>ld tft bt d8'01l1.a whh Gld, Cl rnt couni. R«ora1, o1 Or•n•• couni. I bl• · l d l'ICTITIOUS •USIMEil ~r•all•• «>•lchlCI 111d llu•ineH •ncl 11 rn 81c!1 ft• oil••• to be In Wr\tl!'<a •Ill! w;I! St11p ol C1hlotnlt WILL SELL .. T lractua 0 1gat1ons 0 you an H•ME 5T•TEMENT 1111.a lo 111 cl IM IHth ol ••Id llu1ln11s. be ftCtlV.O al the tlo•~•l<I Ofhce •! .,., PUBLIC AUC llON TO HI GH I!! 5 T to assure that you can still The lollowlr19 ... , .. ,u .,. dOln• bvlf/\IH Incl ~ •• 1num•d fncl WOI PIY Ill tllfl!•fl· 11"'" Ml•• !hr !irll Pvbli<al.~11 nt r•of "';d l!IOOER FOil CASH {11>\Vtblp •I 1/m~ 0, ( 11: dl!'<t Clll~a!iOfl• ot 1 t Id bu1!11t11 btlort dit1 of ••If. A!lm!nl•lt•!ri• ••~ fn 11w!u! mon.y Qf tht Ufll!td Sttt~I operale your equipmenl e • RETlllO-R•Y. 1111 0•11101 Avenw ~••tlcfo•• o• hrrt~!ltr 111cu"'""· SAld ••5"r11t1 Iha •ltM 10 rrltel 1ny 100 •II 11 '"" 1<1et11> Front tnlrinc:• ,, tht Or•nve ficientJ,u for as Jong as you Sult" E, co111 Mrw. C•ll!. tlul '"""''"'!' 11 olu al'<e<I •1 o1 OctODtr 21 , ble i.1 c°""'v cwrlhoui.t loc•ted 11 100 c1 ... c ·' Chtll.r L. llerrY, 21\J Coult 51rttl, 1t1!. Ot I'd OC!Wr 11tM, ltll, (tnltr Orlvr Wn! Uormtr(1 W. l!n desire to d o so." N•wpor1 Bttct>, C•lll. t?UO ALol.N $TANIFORT ll L111• M•t ll1n1e11. Slrtell In !ht C•IY Of 51111• Anl RCA intends to rel;:iin the J1m11 F. Buc•11v, 11t61 RTn1111m1..., Jot.MES MtCH•EL ELLIOTT Admlnhl•t!fl• 01 E'1•1t of C•llforMI~ •11 .i .. nr 1111~ •nd 1"1.,,,; Cl•clP, >iunHnolon llracn, Coli! 9?6•6 Pul>ll1hed O•tnRt C0t1l 0111v Pllol. COLLl"l~"'t!'i ~~v"o"~~WOLO co"v•~~d ro 1...i now' ht!O av '' u.ndt• •••II greater part Of Jts field G•itn ~. luckl•y, t l71 lo'.111"/ull DflVt. No•,mbtt 17. 1911 305t·ll AtllH'ntYI .. , Lt W Ott<! of lru1t IM tht Prooerh 1'1u•1ed In · H~111ln9!on ll••cto, Ct lll. tU40 , ]·---------------1l7J Vlt dt lt Pu lt ld Covntp Incl "''" de1c•llle<I •1 : engineering group a s ii Th·• bllslnn• 11 blln1 cond~rtf'll by A A N~flCE Loi u cl Trac• Na. 11693, ,, .nnwn Ofl separate entity specifically GtMlf•1 P••t11t••n!p, LEG L v P•<Hlc ''1111"11• ~:11~ornl•, l'Otl2 , N•P •tcnrdtd r., Bnok 7~1. "•oti l1 J~rnn F lluckl•• 0 U rhru «I, 1,,.,1u1lvt, ol Ml1<ell•rot>Ou• d evoted to servicing computer 11111 ll•ttm•n! hr•ot wlt~ tn• CounlY Publ "''d Or1n1• Cot1! Otily Pilo1. MoP•, 'fl In• olht• 01 '"" countv Re· customers and not as part of Clerk o1 O••n•' countv on: 0c1ot>tr 11. '"'R lSK . 1<10•1m1r" s, '· 11. 101 ~·11 cord•r 01 ••id 0 ,,n9• ,.,..M~. another RCA div ision, he ad-~~~tv1~1 .. t'"'"Y J. Mi ado,, 0"""'' su"',o;~~~R Tgo~:;oJ~o;~. d~'?:n.'i~':.' 1:"~;,'.",,'~.",",",', ,'-.,::,~,•, I 0 c I 0 ·1 P'I ' SfATE 0' CALIPORNI .. PO lt I EGAL NOTICE • -dcd Publ Shtd ••n9• OA\ "'. '0 ' THE COU NT Y DF Olt .. NGE ,, I •tKrlflt<I ~bove 11 Pu•portfl! •o l>f• ll1' · d h" f' . Ocloflt• 7', l flll NoYtmDtr J, 1l, 19. Ne. A-1tJ)I Florl01 Clrc1e, CO'lt• Mtl•. Ctll!orMlt. R ooney sai l _e 1rm IS ltll 7'Tl·1l E"slolt ... JACK J. TILLEY, oe~111td "IOTICE Oji' IJtTEHTION ro ENGilGE The UndPfilgne<I lrutl•t di1Cltom1 •n~ P"pared to enter into new ex-NOTIC E IS HEllE8~ GIVE N to '"" IN THE 5-'LI OF •l.COlofOLU:; l!abllUv t"' ... , O""IH'•«tne11 o• "'' ltreet LEGAL NOTIC~: ett<lllon or tl>t •De•t ...,,...., Cltct<IPnl IEVE A•GES tcldrP" -o!her common O••lvnttiOtl, II te nde d m a j n t I!! n Rn {'(' ---------------· !hll Oil PP'IOl\J l>tYln9 ~l•I"" 10tln1I !hP "IOVtmller ~' 191! l<W, >hown l>ttt•n. m en f ~ incJUding '·1'1~ 11ICI d•<t<ltll! t•e f~l•t<I to lilt tnt m, To WhOnl II MtY Conrtrn S..iO 'ltl• Wiii be mrHlt , bu! without a g re e . • ,ICTITIOUS 8Ull"IEl l will\ ti\~ nectnory """'"'''' Ill Int a!!ICt Subln:1 lo l!lu1nct ot t~I 1:cen1e I P• to~tn•nt ot w•rr•nty, t>l"tn Of lm pllt<!. soflwAre supports , \\'illl il.s 1<1AME sT•TEMENT 01 "'' cl.-k 01 tn• tbo•• enr.111<1 court. 0, 11lled 10•. llO!lc• !1 l'lfttbY olv.,, th•! th• '"°''dino tillt. o o 11t11 1 on. or Tht lollowlflt PtriDll 11 dofnt bu1ln111 10 "'"'pnt !him. with II>• nectUlfY u11<11'1IO,..., o•ooo•u to 1111 •l,Gl\DI« •<1CumGr1nrr1, lo Pt• !flt rnm1i11l~Q computer USerS. 11, Yo.Khttl. To tne unde"lqntJ ~I ll>e oltl<t bellttliltl ti !ht pttmllfl, dtocr!Dt<I 11 or1nco1! lum Of !he l'IOl•I IKUtt<I II'/ lf,d He said a check with WARE>iOUSE VILLAGE, -W•••allhtl••Horflf~•:KAltNS l.l(J.ll_ABIAN.•olktw\: Off<! ol lr111• rowlt ,,,,,.,n, wofn h h h rd 11°1'o Slret!, Co.rt Meo•. Ct ll!Orflll l'OO Wil•l'olre lllvd.. Suitt 1114, La• 1014 PltCIMllt ........ Cool• Mt••· lfll••esl !l'ot•t<>", •S P•OY;otf(f I" ,.Id cus tomers w o a ve a ware M1•111011 011n1.1<1, Nt>. l• LI""• 1111. Anv•lt•, c11,40,,.1_. tooH. Wt>l<" 11 •n• c111ro•1111 no1e1. •<t••nct1. 11 •n• ... no,, r11t "'"'' q . ment On order 5h0 WS that N•WPO•I 8••Cl'o, (~ll!ornit p!<Ke of bu•l11111 of l~t 11nd•r1lo<>Pd In 110 Pu?l"fnt to IUCh !111f'n!I011. lh• Ufl of l"d 0-of l•u1t. lffl. Chfrot' Ind e Ulp • Thi• l>ll•l111u !1 Dtl111 coOOuc!td bv 111 "''""" ~fr!tlnlno 10 !ht _11111 cl 1~id der11Q~e<f h •PPIYir>t 10 lllt Dt!>tr!l]'ltnt t•oenll!> ot !h• l ruttM •nd ol lht ttulll -tr * -tr Univac Eves • Aquisitio11 Of Business IOO•vtdu11 dtceclent, wolhin tour mon11>• i liu tl'ot cl Alctinot!~ llove•11t (Qftlt'i)I lo• ••· ttt •1Pd b• •aod De,.., ol tr~•' MAll 5>iALL OUF~IELD 11<1! P<Jblic•hltll of lhll UCll(f. 1u1nct by "'"""' of ... •l<Ghollt btYe•· Tl'ot bene•lrl•rv undor ••Id DM<I "' Tt>I• """'"''M' 1°1'"" wi!h '"" Cou11ty Ol!te ~opltmber 11. ltH 101 l•C1n11 k>r tht•• 11rtm•H• •• l•u•I he•ttolort ~•eculM! •nd dellv~rtd Cl1tk ol O•onot County o": Nov Ill, 1911-W!LLl"M H. TILLEY •nd tollrwn: lo lht Unclt••·~ntll a w"lftn ~tl•••hon I V ll•tr!V J. MldOe~, °'""'' Counfy JUANITA F TH LEV ON SALE llEEll o! Otltul• 1n11 Of'm•nd '"'~Al•,'""• Cltt~ Co·E•Ku1at• o! lht W<ll Anyone IN!•u int lo 0•01eu lh• iswanrt "'"nen Nntlcr o! D•l1111! erod El eC!oon to l'ubll\htd O••ntf' C••<! O•<I• n1101. 01 tno •f><i•• n~m•d CltCl'lllnt ot well lortn1r rn•Y Iii• 1 .,.,;11,.., "'0!t1t SPll, Tn• und•r1lontd t~us..,, 111e "lolltt N-,1•embf>• 11. It, 1• 1nd Dtctmber J, lf•llNS £ kARAllot.N ti env ol!•tr ol !he Dei:>lflm-.n! ot ot Oe••vll Ind Election '' St ll to be 1111 Jt»l).11 100 YJU•l>I'" l l•d., 'ul!t 1124 AttOhnll< R•••r10• ConTrol, O• by m111 To reco•ded '" lhe <OUn!y whtrt rh1 rotl la• •n••ltl, Ctll!. totll tho Oet>t t!mefl! ot Altollollc lla•trioo orooer•y 1, loc•ltd. LEGAL NOTICE Ttl: UUl IH·t!Jl (onltal. T71l 0 S!r f'fl, ~•tt•mrn Dt11; No•em.,.., .s. 1111 ·-------::-::::::,..-------1Attern1y1 lor Ct·E••cularl ro. (t lllornl• 9!1U,"' •I to bt rrctTYe<I FED[RllL NATIONAL 1 '·14l01 Publlihed O•~ntt (oe>T D•llj PUii, wi!hln :Ill ll•Y• Of th• det• th• ~rono,~a MOllTGAGE AS~O(IATION l'ICflTIDlJS I USl"IESI O<;!~r ,,, 19 •00 No•tmbtr '· \l, pumh•• WP•• ,,,.1 t>Ol!e<I, 11alint II •• ,d Ttulltt. "IAME SfJ.Tl!Ml"IT "'1 1111·11 Q•ound1 tor Of'nl•I u ntovldl"<I bv 18., By 8ob l1 la1 Tht lol!ew!nt ottlOft !1 dolno bu1Jneu Tht t>•rml1n ~tt now llc.tn1t<I to• lht fJ10 ••· LEG!. L NOTICE ••I• ol ~l~Qtoollt l"v-·~•·• Tht form o• Puflll lh-d O••n~• Coe•! Oell1 Plltlf. Mot.(KIE & COMF'Ali'I', llll "l.wPOrl ' Vftltlcl!lcn M~y l>t obtain.a lrDfTI Any of· Nnv•mller !1. It, 1•. ltll :MMJ.IT NEW YORK (UP!l -Thi!! ll lve, N•WPO•! !le1cf\, C1lll01 ni• l-------,;-:::;-;------·11°c• ol 1nt D•1>artme..t, d wm. R. M1c~1,, '1• E. G•1ne1111w, "inu llherly "'· 511•c1t• LEGAL NOTIC~ president Of Sperry Ran 51,.,,. Modff, Ci!ll~'"la FICTITIOUS I USl"llll P1ihll\htO Ort nte Co11t Oallp Pilot,, ______ '---~--'-··---. .• Hot.Ml STAfEMENl Novtmlltr 11. !t11 JCJt-71 ,. Corp .'s UNIVAC Division sa1 .~~i.:,,,,~~lfl"' 1• bt1n• '""'""1'" 11• •n 11>1 10110 .. 111• WMll'I 11 dolr11 bu1lnfu SUP!lllOll. C~lllT OF THE Thursday the company is WM, R, MACKIE II: (HARTEi! FINA"I Cl ilL SEltlll(l!S. llATlf Ot' CALIFOll"ll A l'Olt discussing the . possible a c-rh11 1101tm•nt oieo w0"' '"' C01J"t• 1~0 E. ECllMt••· 511111 1, 511111 Alt• LEGAL NOTICE THI cou,",." •. ',,',,,011•NGE Cltr-el Ort Mtf Count~ Oii "1011 JO, 1tl1 tllC~ quisition of part of R CA's ·~ l tvu lv J. M•dclo•, Otliutf (OIJll!f Moth•tf J•m•• Ctnllfl, 1. 111 IAR·Uff NOTIC E 01" Hl•lllNG OF l'ETlTI0'4 comn11ter business. Cllfk. Lttkll-or .• 5011!1 ... ,.. """ IUl'l!'lllClt COUllt OF THE FOii PllOIAtr DP HDLOOllAl'H IC ,,-Publl111fd 01•nt.c Coa•! Otlty Polcl, l'h•t ""llflfft k -Mlfll conctucltd tw ~n STillE OF CALIPOlllJlllA FOlt WILL AtlD l"OR LETT I Ill S Gerald (;. Probst. presidenl "lovemlrer 11. It. " 100 Otcembtt' l. lnc1i~1du1t THE COU"ITV 0, DR .. NGI TEST•MEtlT•RY of UNIVAC. s aid no negotia-1•11 Jt»1-11 MlUt•el J. ci n1111 N•. A·11tn E11Att ,of HENRY BENTON JAME S. T~•I t!Jlltmt"I 11111! with lllt (OIJ"IY NCT ICE D, HEAltlNG OF PETIT101+ Oecttll'll l lions were under\\·ay but talks LEGAL NOTICE C!t•• .,, O••n•• '°"""' 11n: °''· 21, 1n1. ,a. 'lllOl•TE OI' WILL AND Fo11 rioT1cr is HeAEllV G1ve11 "'" M•" ~·ere going on wTth RCA "as II¥ 81111r 1y J. M1ooo.i, Otouty Couo•• LETTllll TlfSTAMENTAltY CJtO E11e" J~me1. I>•• 1iieot ne•f•n ~ .,..1°11(111 f '·14111 (luk •ONDI l•o orab•le or Hcloer~ohfc Wtll 1nd !or are other compult'r manu aC· PICTITIOU\ I UllNESS F'11bll'11od Ot•lltf! Co.it 01lly ,llol. E1111t of EVERETT L. ICNOJC, AIM IUu•""t ot Lft!ff• lfl!l'nt"'"'" •o lht turers." NAMlf IT•TIMINT Oclober ,,, • ..., HoutmDtr '· n. II, k ...... 11 ,, Evt ... 11 L1111t tl KflOt, 91111 •••iloonH', •eW••ll(I "' .... Id! 1 .... ~.,. ..... T~t lel_!,.. ,_1'°" 11 ifolno 11u,1111n lt11 ° ?f21.1J known •• E L. I("""• Dect••f<I. fvlthtr P1rllCUltr1. ""' 11111 t~t 11m, '"" RCA announced earlier this 11: NOTICE 1$ 11EltE8V G1veN l~•t el~c~ of h••r!f'lll ,,,. 11me l\fl be•n •ti )'ear it was gelling out or the ,,Imo T••IJI H1111\,.. .... Co11ut1t LEGAL NOI'ICE Arldf-L. Know ..... 111..0 l>t•tin • llffi> !Of liovtmboor 11, 1'11, ••• '.IO ..... ' on ,,.. St•vli;t , l711 Mltcnt!I, "lo • .a, l uitln. Hon for Proto•!• el wll! ""' rw lnutfl(Ct of couri.oorn ot °"""'"'""! tie. l of ••111 :~)~Ute~n!l~~~ a(]!ho~::V;C~ Ci~~:'~lt\.tnlt Veottl tM J°T r•I ,ICTITl:U~~SIHlll ~~: ·i~:~~:~:t~7~~r~~:~:~~~;: :~! ~~:~·~·~~:s!:~:A;::~l~h~;:~~l.Wllt, 111 • t hat had Its Sw11111. 1111 Ml!Uttll No. ••• U\ 111. NAM E ITATIMENT Pl•ce ol ne1rfnt '"' ...... h~\ lit!!" ,,, W, E SI JOtl"I, companies C•llmtnli n,, 1a11ow1110 """""' ••• dolno tor December 1, itn, 11 •~111 • ..... tfl '"" c ... 1111v Cler~ equipment. TMI bu,lntH I• WIM tOfldutll'd by '" bu1illt!~ 11: tourlrocm ol OPO•t!mfnl N~ ) nl Jl !d 0111 .. HAM .. JAMii "We are d e(L'no'(e]y no( 1"n· lndlYIClu•I. THE GEllftlE COM"AN'I', 00'.IVtf (°O\lrl, al 100 Clvlt CWT!•• Drlvt Wtl!, IM •U Wiii Oc11n Blv•. JOE IWANN ' ol> " "" Ne I 11 ~ 0 0 ..... -• h h J T~!t i!•t~m•nl llltd with t~• (ounrv ,"'v,7 .. ft "°"~' "''" Wl>ll• tit · !lot (Uy ol S~n!~ iln•. Colllo•nl9, Lon' 111<~. C1l ltlfn I teresh:u in I e w 0 e (l.r• "' O!t~a• C1111n1~ Ofl . Ne•. 10. ltll. ~ ... '""'s Gtt•l• Do••< 01ll'd ~Vtmbt• t, lt11 tth CJll) f)J.Ull Pa ckage ." Probst said . 111 lltytrlv J, M1dd0•, Dtpurv Coun!Y ,, ·,, Oo ··• ,,· m Or.. W, E. ~I JOHJt Allor,..,, for : '•11110,..r (lttlo .... w"" .-n, · C.,,ntv Ct•t~ F'ub!l<i>"" O•tnff Goe1I D1>IY P.iot1 The announcement camt: at , bii n 11 0 c 1 0•11 Pilot .. .,,,, Gttrl• R1111or, ui oov1r 011•e. w1nMA1<1 ANo SCHMIDT Nov•o.,ber s. •· 12. 1t11 lll0'·7 ( · ( od ' u 1 1 r•n•e Oii y , l• N•wot"I ll•tc~. (•, IY: Wm, II, Sth,..Jllt a ne"'S con erenc e 1n r uc1ng No•1m11tr n. n, 1•. u><r Ot(tfl\l>t · Tn;1 b~sln•u 11 1>e1Mt ,_11C1N bv 111 JN s1fl Ml•~•I or1v1 Univac's new disc·based, con s-nii :10ll·71 1t1t11 .. 1e1u11. s.,111 N11mN• '°° • ·an 0 r i en I e d Com LEGAL NOTICE Wm S, Ct r>I• N1w•trl let<~. C1Hftrnl1 l<IOT•CE OF ,UI L!C N. A Ill I JI I) mUSlCI • • T~i' s!Memtnl llltd wllf\ lht C!lllMY Ttl1 Oljj ... 1tt• 11!,0RI TH& ,L .. NJtlND COMMISSIDfol puter system, the Univa c 9700. , "'" c1u1t. 01 Or111t1 Co1'"'' en· oc.1. 11. 1'71 •tto•nry• •Ill° P11n1er11r 0 , Tl<f E ciTv c111 l'DUNT"t" 11•1.L•Y The new C(lmnuter ls lhree PICTITICUI I USINEIS IV lltYt•l1 J. M•ddo~. DtPU!Y (OUnlV l'"Dll•~td O•t,..t (Ot>I 0111v PolM, "IOTICE IS HE~EIV OIVEH ll\JI Otll I"" ""'"'' lfATl!M•NT C';ltt•. NO•l""flt• 11, n. II, ,.,, )OJ1.n ltu1rd hlJ pe!IHOllld tl>t """nlfle limes more p0werful t.hah the Tiit tel!ow1111 111••ot1 11 !lllnt bu1JMu PuGlh1&P<1 0•1nge '°''' 01\!Y 1'1•0•.l·----:c::::-c:--:-:::::::::::--'--lc""'"'iu1on to'""'" Loi. 1. 2, 5, 1, t, 11 . I h 1,; Octoflt1 1', Incl Nawttnllet J, 11. lt, LEGAL NOTICE ol I Jl(JI 1, Tr.tel !SO 1, tt•l•K P<ir-lll Univac HOO, pre111ou11 y t e SON.i<lnt Publ!.i<l111 C0111111nY. ii11 1t 1t m1.11 1., 1'1• Pro•l•I-o1 ,11, c oo• ,..., ,11 large:st in the series and can l•"'C• 0•1••· Tu•tllo. ''111• , uw Kcord•nc• wtlll 1111 1roc:111 01Jt11-s 110 f. . ... • tl .... MlllOtCI ,..,., n11 l.tnt;t Ot!Ut, ,ICTITtOUS IUSINESS 5talf 5ul>Cl1wl1I011 Mii Act Thi, "'-'"' handle 1ve JO~ ooncurren y. Tu1t111. c1111. LEGAL NOTICE NA"1E stATIM«NT 11 111 .. 11..i ,, "'' -"••••' ~""" ot f'irst deliveries n[ the 9700 1~~~~1~1M" 11 blf11• conlfll(itc1"' •n T"-1o110.,,,111 ""°" 11 d0it11 flllsiJ!tu T11t1er1 trod ll'IJ1C1 1flCI cornor11o11 ·" hed led I A t ' ...... , lntJ U : Kff', A lllfll of Ill.I tH-ld are sc u or ugus ~'' A. Mlilor4 "°"' ,,-,,-,, '"''"''' ~ '"'"'••··-.. ''"' ,, _ '" '" "" • will ( f ll' f100 •-Tl'll'-lltltnttl'll llJtt! wlf?I f!ot (OUl'll'f '-' "' "IEWPOlfT H0Mfl, 11'lS 5~YPI•• .,,.., "' -· -and It'° -ren or ... "' Clt•k Pl °''"" CeuMY Olll Oct 11. 1m: N•M• ITATIMI Ctrut, S\ll!t 'II. , tt-110, Cl(, ,.,_, Ot.....twlt olflr• .... 11\rl'-M h od t il t C TM lollowlflf--Kofl II ,..;flt lluliM" llrtcll. (1111. t~tmlMCI bf,..., l"ffi'11tl'd "'''°" $48 000 ptr mont I re 8 I 1¥ •tYtffV J, MICIOO• l>rP\IH OW!• II ' O. ( K'*'llulil, Jiii 58.,.,uM lint. Tl'IOll Onlf!"'I lo tulolv In l•Y11f Of 11'! '503.ooo lo $1.5 million. c't!,ltMCI o. ..... Cot•• 0•11Y l'lle!. 'ADDLE II A. c K I u IL DI "G '"""" 111'1 M~·· Ctlltornl~ OOllCllllOll lo 1111J r!'«ltll w!ll lit 11 ..... k 0 I lt 1t /M.!NTEJtilNCI, l.!tl1 Pondt•os• k llf Tnl1 11\0llntH II (OflO...C!ed bv ... ,, t mPI• -•1t11 IY to Oo to ,, lhll Eoredlier. in, T)o 'nlyo. o"k'l'Eclan-?::r-r " .... NOYl'mbtr J. .;.,..,; ··c· .. 511111 All.I. (Jiii. l!Wl•IClu•I, ,.i.. .... 1 ... (Ofl'lmll\11•11 mM'lllll •o &f_ ""Id nounc 1t s o1 ng ec wtn11.i• w wu'°". 13Ji1 v11 s111 D c K""u~~• w"no"'''· N,.., ... 11o. 11. 1t11 11 1.)11 • -Glflrlot. L~O\IM H!H1, Ct!ll ••UJ. TJ1!1 1t.ll•me11r w•\ !1l('d Wtlll !hf "·"' lrt !ht (Oltfltll 0.0l'I ....... Clt\I +<111, Irie Co. to m11nufRcture large THE BEST T~I• 11u,1 .... , 11 btl"• co<!Clu<!W 11, ~n Couftw c1 .. -el o •• ,.,, cou1111 °" 1C'ml s.,,.,-Avtnur. Fwr111tr1 v11t•1· compulen; in Japan under th,. IMlv""111. oue1"" 11. 1t11 Ctllro•11 • . Univ.' n.m •. Oki• w1·11 own., W•flll•ll w W1l,.,.i Jtrnn T, Ct •<•ll ",',",~e"',,.~oMo•,1•SIDN ii ktAdcrthirt J'I o 111 orove t1>11 -111trntn1 '''" w1•h '~• cou~tv A11''"'Y ,, ~~ ... · ,.., T percent of the venture. Oki "Pt!RntJl.A" Is Onf' of the Cltrl !If O•tfltt Cwnr~ on· Ot•. 11. 1f11 . '11t 011l'tftl D""' $wilt 1 F-O!JN1AIN V~lLIY ed I ..... , •. , m-t ""f.1/llr t:"'mic I• &1wt1ly J, Mtddllil, Df/l'llff County 111 ... 111.i •••tft, Ct!!lltftlt tltM CLI NTON JHlltltOO has d istribut Amflr can-""' "~ ·~ c1<1n t•'•"'•~• uul '" lUt 5ttr111ty to"'' d U I In •• ' strips. Rtlld It ally Jn thl! ,.U~l,l'IN 01t nt1 <:ot1! Otllf Pl!&t, ,Ulllltl'tH O••'ltt (11•\I O•ily f>l!ot, Pl111n1~, C0'!11111U!!!f\. ma e n VIC 00 pu~r• n DAILY PILOT. Ottobtr It ·~ Nov1mt1tr .. n. 11, Oc!e~r 1' •nd N~t-J. u, It. llutitl'"" O••Mtt COi\! 011IY 'Jiff. Japan. ·~------------' 1t71 2'D•tl 1t11 JtU-11 HOYIFT!Wr J, ll. 1'11 m1.n LE GAL NOTICE I • I ·' - • JO DAILY PILOT S Your ~lonef/, New Y 01·k 's Heart • Slowly Decayit1g 1000 -ORDER ;~ '-• Beautiful YOURS \ Stick-on LABELS ~ TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Ordtr For Your5elf OI' a f riend May be used on envelope' •s retu rn .addre11 libels. Also "'''/ ii-andy as denhf c4t on label1 for ma rk ing personal items su ch •~ books, retord1 photos etc: labels stic k on 9lass and may be used for mark1n9 home t;anned foc.d items fi:l l 11belt are-printe-d with 1tyl1sh Vogue t)'pt on fine quality whit .. gummed p•per. § OVER THE COVN-1 1ER ••P-l•llwt lftltl'4fflt• •.itlllltftt ti IH,.•l"'-'ltlr r AM frtrn NASD. ,.. en '• "'' ncluo. t•l•U '' f!lfr111UP. ''"l'llG•Wl! tt ('"'"' n •• NASO l11t1ngs for Thursday, November 11, 1971 \ 11~ i • " • " '" ' " • ' " ' • JO," ,., '" .. 13 , '• ' " 10• 16 " ' . " ~· 1 '> " . 12 18 • " ' 1)) & • !1 ·~· 19 •7 'XI 70 • " ' lO l!J.o 49 I ~ ' l" . " ' . •• ?i ?1 •• , ' . ' " rs 3r" '~ ' . " ' " 1or l' ' .. 19) ,, 19 u n u 111 31 • " " '38 ,, ' ... 1 JI o 201 3ll ;1 1&• " . )I ?4 I ' . 1•1 301 1 I &1 l!l I • 15 ,,, 301 ,, . ' ti~O 1• . " l\~ ~;.1 ,~ •'. ' " 111 Bil • )5 ~\, " ' lO ?~ > ~ 11. ·~ ?~ • ' " Ua 1 1 • lf•• JS t.1 . " " " $10 11 ~ . " .. " . .. " " .. ". '" " ' " • " '" , '" " ' . .. '" ' '" 'I , .. '" " ", .. ' + •• " Complet~New York .Stock List SllH Mtl (b•t.l N/"' ltw CIOM C/11 e JO'l'o ,,,,. 102 :l9 lH• S JO JC 3l a a l 2 '• ' •• ' ,, 11 ~ 1~ i~"; 5 •0 .cl 3 6 ~6·• 21 ) • '1 uo 3 l I 0 10~ SJ u., lo'lt <l •i\1 ..... 1 J ''"' ., •• 238 ll JHt f?J ll.... ;,, • 81 lil • • w l~ • :lO 16~ Y.l ?9 ... ... ' " .. ~. " ' " • " • ' . -C-• " " ' " • ' ~ " "' , ' "' "' " " " ' " " '" " .i " • " • " " • " " " .. " '" ' .. '" ~ "' .. • " " .. ' " • • '" • "" ,. • lJlf • " ... " ' • " '" • '" '" '" l ~~. ... .. '" '" ' '" " '" ,,, .. '" '" .. . ' '" '" " .. 1?•• ' '"' ·-" ,. " '" '" " 29•· .. '" • , " l1 • • " " ' " .. ". ". 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' ., ' . , .. _ •• " ' ' • .. ·1 To New Yea1· Low 'Fii sank \ORK 1 UPll -The stock market Thu is to HS Jo\vcst level of 1971 as 1nvcsto1 s tontinuert to \\{)ffV about the 1n1pact or Phase on cur poi :lie pi of1 t"'l :ind the econon1y 1n gen l u 1111J\l t \1 •~ n11Jrleralt I \10 er al l hc DO\\ Jont~ Jndu~111al 1\\ctaj'!e tu111 bl ed 10 29 to-815 86 nca rlh£' final gong Other leading 1nd1cators also fell sharpl) Declines led advar1lcs b\ n101e than a three-to one n1arg111 and Staudard & Poor s 500 stock index sho\\ C'd a loo;;t of J 2lJ al 92 12 near the close I he p1 I<'( (01nn11 s~1on said it will 11m1t Phase I\\ o p1 tee Ill( 1 ea~cs to an cco non1y \v1de 21h percent a 'car and pcrn11t no hikes that arc not Just1r1ed bv h1ghe1 l>Hsllll'S~ costs \n1ong the da\ s 111ost active issues \\ere United Airlrafl \\l11th traued an ea rl y block or 199 000 ~hares it 24 :i 1 do\'. n I ''" AnH.1r1c an Tl'lephone Com n1on \1calth Otl Re f111 1ng Eaton Corp Atnerada !less l\1 a1cor and Occ1dcntal Petrolcun1 Elec.tron1cs \\Cfe among the .;;oftest .;;pots rnost chemicals and :ur\J ne s also pointed lo\\Cl Steels rail s and oils generally l1 aded nar101,Jy ~~ ·~ . ~ 10 , 1n 18 11 • I ' 1--- S~ <I !hct> J N th lowCOH c~:l ' " ' ' ' ' ' ,. ' J J .>I J.I • • 1~ r. . ~~ ' " " ' '9 • 711 '" ' u s 11 ~-r ' ' I ' ' " • ' " ' " " I ].6 ' ... )~ ) , .l • J 6 11 I • 1 '~"·'··· 11 ........ • • • ' ' 10 l S • 1 ~ , 9 1!, B "11 ••• • • ... ' l • I • ~ ~ 13 \, ; l? 15 • • 9 • t ., ' .... 1 1, n n 11 ~ ' 1• ,.! . . ' . ' ' . "' " II Iii. I~ (! .,, ' • ' 1' 1) 1\ 9 • 20 W•• 11-" ,. ,. •• 1~ • ~ 1~ " • ' S It I~ • " ii -• 1 n 11 ~ ll • 7•10o l0o " "' ' ~ ',~! 1 ~:- 11 1 • ,, • 9 ,. ,, ,. , " ' ' ' ,; ' " •' " ' " • " " ' • .. ~ ' '" n " " • • • ' I " ' ,, . ' 11 • h ~ r- • " . • '. •• •• " " " • ,1 .. ' • .. •• " . " " . • " Fa«" .,..~ 'G " oc~na• • ft f CI \ FD<~\ll b ut ~ .~~M 0 ~ ~nl>,.I> ilu F A<l~.\Nu W fA/f/!~ rr+<>'O<I r n!I F <>\! Si ti llllh .. ) ,, ' .. "'" '. .. " .. . ' . " I 17 • i ~ . " • ~ " . ' 31 • } • ' . ' , ' . ' . " • ' " ' " • ,», '" " ' 5 1? ~ •U~/9~/lo l I I "- 1 5 • ' ~ . ' ' I o o " & ~ 1, ~ ' ' ' , ' ' • " ' • • .. \ • .~ .. • • " ll ' .. • • • " • • ' " ,) . " 'I ~ • ~~ 1 ' " " ' ' .. 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" " " . • • " " • " • " "' '" ' , .. .. ~ ... " . ". • " . " ' "' " '" , ' ' '" • .. .. .. • • .. " " " ' " .. ! 11'• "· '" " ... ' 1':: " " .. ,! ' • " ., " ,,. •,. • .. " • ' .. , .. '" ' DAILY PILOT THE BEST • • .. ... •• ' } R£8dt1 shh polls p10\f! Pl'n n it.s Is onr or th~ \\Or\d s mnst po11ul nr rom1c strip~ Rt>arl 1t daily In thf! DAILY PIWf .. " " '~ .. I~' " ' .~ .. l~\o J ' LJ' ' • J • I • I • ' ' 'O XI I ,f" t: ' ' . " . 1 • ' • ' 4 • • • , i" ...,;,_--" B • ~f 11 o II .. • " .. ''" ' • • • ' . 1~·· "• • • • • • • • '• ' . -~ Phone 642-1 .321 For \Veekendcr Advertising • • • • • ~. ' -~ " • , • .. • • .. ' ' • • • • ' ' • J! DAILY PILDT Friday, NOYtmbtr 12, 1971 • s .. . ' CRUISING IN COMFORT -The ne\v Columbia-45 motorsaiJer is built alo~g t.he Jines of the Colu n1bia-43 rac ing boat , giving it high performance under sail v.·1th aH the co tnforts of cruising . La Paz Fleet 33 Yachts Poised .Ear Race_to JJZir-e By AL~10~ LOCKABEY llo•Hn1 Edilor f.1ost of the 33 y<ichts in the Long Beach 10 La Paz ra ce to- day \vere slrugghng to break out of the lee at Caj:ie San Lucas and start the final 100. mile beat lo the finish. Late Thursday afternoon lhe fleet v.·as sli ll being moved by a IS-knot nor'wester that V.'aS expected lo be temporarily 90 Wo111en Particiuate I . In Regatta Ninclv v.·omen s a i I ors deserted the bridge tables in favor or breezy Nc,vport Hflrbor \\lcdncsday to compete in the first Lil!le Old Ladic.~ Regatta sponsored by yacht clubs in Ne\\'port. blar.keted out as t hey hit bluffs between Cabo Falso tfa\se ·CapcJ and Caho San Lucas Bay. There v.·ere indication as to 11'hat the vachts could expect on the fin.a! beat up the gulf. Front runners at Thursday's roll call were the Long Beach svndicate O\.\'D<:.d Ragtime and Ji-ving Loube's _CQlw.nbia-57 Concerto from Richmond. Trey v.·ere sailing within si$ht of each other about 20 miles south of the entrance to f\tagdalena Bay. Handicap leader was the Class D entry Counterpoint, co-skippered by Dick Deaver and Bill Headden of Balboa Yacht Club. Counterpoint is a sister-ship to the yacht that v.•on the recent 790 -m ile Nc\vport to Cape San Lucas race. Handicap standings: Colu1nbia Trots Out New-Boat- One of the highlii;hts of the recent Sailboat Sl;ow was the new Colu mbin-45 motorsailer frorn the design board of the !ale Bill Tripe. It is Colun1bia's fir~t ve n- tu re in a straight cruising sailboat. . Columbia's presidC'nl. Dick Valdez. readily admitted that the motorsailcr is a cruisin~ \'ersion of the Columbia-43 racing boat. This fact gives ii an outstanding perrormance characteristic not found in straight cruising boats. The Columbia-<15 is a big. comfortable boat \\'ith Jux- u r i o u s accommodations throughout. The owner·s cabin aft features at kin g-size berth (6 ft. 8 in' by 9 fl. 4 in .) a private head compartment c.nd separate stall shower. and a sliding-door wardrobe seven feet in width. The rnastt'r stateroom ex- tends a full !3 feet fore-a nd-A rt ;ind measures up in many details to those in cu.~l om·huilt rnn!or ssii lors of 50 and 60 feet. The distaff sailors came from San Diego. Al;~1111\os Bay and Marina dcl Re~. Com- petion 1\•as in Lido-1 4s \Vin"ard Sabots and Naples S<1bot s. The cnlcrlllinrnenl center is the ma in saloon. located ad-s;.~.LASS A _ '11 Concerto: midships. It is light and airy and fcaturrs huge picture w\n- 12 1 ~ndpiper ; 13 1 \Varrior: dows. Here the nwilcr may in-~;1 Aries: !5! Dorothy 0 (Col-du\Qe"his decorator instinrts to 51 1· the fu llest v.·ith room fo r a OVERALL -1 !l Coun!er- point: 12) Quicksilver: ~31 Bush\.\'acker: \ 4 \ Pericus; f 5 l Concerto: {61 Star; (1\ Chi- quita: 18) Debinda IV : (9J Dorothy 0 (Col-43 1: (10) Qua- Trophy v.·inners 1rcrc: LID0-14 -· 1 I ! J\l-ary Jane Tyler. 'BYC 0\\"IN 'AR D SABOT A -(l l Sally f\latlhc1 ... s. KHYC : 121 Fran Bolt. l\liVC; ~ 3 1 Barbara Bishop, Pl. Dume YC. CLASS B -fl l Do~othy 0 : ,.. sofa. ~end' table. lan1p and r2+ Q~s.ar: j.1 1 Ahce; (4l chairs. llobon 111 : (5) Alpha. There is also plenty ol shelf CLASS C -! I ' Quicksilver: and !ocker space. The a rea is \VI N'AR D SABOT R -{11 J anl' Ellen11ood. PV't'C. (2l Pericus: !3l Star: !41 Chi-con1uletely carpeted. There is qui!a: !5l Dcbinda !V. "'alking sind sta ndin g NAPLES SABOT A -(I) Betsy Ogil\"~'. ARYC : 12 1 Sue Kennedy, ABYC: !3J Fa~·e ~ Humphrev, ABYC : i\1 a r y f\la ser SDYC: Barbara Shepardson, BYC. CLASS I) _ r 11 t:oun-hcadroon lhrou~houl the bosit. {('rpn1nr: 121 Bushw:icker : r:n The ~alley is "Li'.' sha~d for Nitcfip:hter : (41 L"AHegro: \5) convenience and ts equipped Centurion. \\"ith a four-burner range with NAPLES S1\BOT B - ( ! l Barbara Barr. SDVC ; (2f Jane Becker. SDVC L11 f\farie Philchett. SDYC: 141 Anne Kober. ABYC; 151 Gayeliorn- in~. SI BYC. NAPLES SABOT (' -(l 1 Phvllis l\oners. P\'YC; 121 Lois Ha mmer. LBYC: tJ 1 l\;iy Pennell. SDYC; (4l Dollie Ayale , SI B't'C. Offshore Rule Group Estl1blished Yachtsn1en Will Face Dope Tests Are Olvmpic yachting types a bunch Or potheads? \\'est German organiiers of lhe yachting section of the Olympic games. apparently think so, according to an · Associated Press dispatch out of London. The AP story said that in- ternational yacht racing. often the sport of royally, will be i;ubjet'I to dope testing for the for !he first time next year at !he yachting Olympics in A\ a recent n1eeling of the Keil. Germ<ony. Sailing Auxiliar~· Con1mil1e e Plans for stringent checks of tilt American Sailing Coun-on dope taking by Olympic cil , a technical committee co1npcl itors were discloS<!d composed of U.S. sailboat Thursday al the 1veek lon,1t bUildcrs and designers v.1as Jnceting ol the YsiC'ht llncing formed to re.present the in-Union. · teres!s or the t.'(llmcil con-!''RU members, including cerning proposed changes 10 King Constantin of Greece sind the International Off s hore l\inf.'.l Olac and Prince Harald Rule. of Nor"'ay. were divided into "1hrle technical committee 15 commiitees meeting mainly favored the changes proposed be.hind closed doors. br tbe OffShore Raling Council Tht>v \.\'ere told by the \Yest ~ the TOR at its mPCt1ng in Germ3n organi7.ers t h a t : _. Sin Tri"'"nCisCO, 1l asked fhat "'J'here will (lffinitely be do Pe_ the deadline be extended to control in hne with directives 111Jow for consideration of ad· from the International Otym- ditional factors \.\'h\ch the gic Con1mittee." Amerk:an Sailing Council feels .==========:::; are Important. T'1e extension would give the t~hnlcal Cilmml1lee iim6 to prepare and an:ilyze lts pro· pot.Cd changes as they ""ould relate to the final content or lh• !OR. KI DS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT cvc·le\'c\ oven and features a s~fe but,1ne systcni. The on-off status ol 1hc ren1ote controlled shut-off solenoid is located in a \'tlf)Or·tight bu I a n e com- part1ncnt aft. A red warning light near the range indicates that the butane is on. An elcc· Irie rani;e is optional. The galley also has i\ 24· cubic fool electric rcfrigcr<11or that operates fron1 either 110- volt AC or 12-vo\I OC Tv.,in sinks are or slainless steel. Dish slorage and dra\vers are an1pte. Opposite the galley in a dinette area is a large table v.'hich lowers to form a double berth. The privsi\e for\vard cabin is equipped \.\"ilh its o"·n head. a sp;icious hanging locker and 111·0 .. V berths v.·hich convert intn a double. The yacht has pressurized hot 11nd. cold \1•ntcr throughout. The coc kpit is equi pped with pedestal stcerin~ with a 23- inch deslroycr type wheel. It is si tuated at deck level 11nd provides easy access to both deck and ln1erior. An optional s!ecring station is available in the main cabin. 'fhe underbody of the Columbii:t-45 reseffib\es that of the "43"'. It has a long \.\'a\crlinc. S\.\"Cpt-fin keel and deep skeg-n1ount ed rudder. Construct•~ is or melded balsa-core fiberglass to pro- \'lde maximum strength-to- v.·eight ratio. Both the unitized interior nnd the deck and trunk e:ibin are molded as sini:le units. The boat carries a lmost 700 fret of 11ail in a modern sail plan. J?"l vlna plr.nt.v of power to drive the yi:tcht without power under Rverage wind and sea condition. annual ' holiday sale ' ' \ • ' • \ romantic long dresses $19.99· At dream-come-true savings ... a beautiful collection of dramatic evening looks in exotic. prints e nd solid colors. Shov1n , e u-neck b e I t e d sheath with flowering sheer sleeves. in fluid black po lyes· ter. Ma ny one of kind. not oll sizes in all stores -Hurry! W indsor M.isses' Dresses. .,, I S at th.e broadway ANAHE IM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON BEACH CERRITOS 444 N. Euclicl 11 14) 5)5 -f l ZI SOQ Lo i C•rri lo1 Mt!I !llll &60-0411 THE BROADWAY ORANGI M•lt of Ort~g• 2300 No. Tustin St. (71 41 '91-ll lt SHOP t r)O A.M. to 9:10 P.M. MONDA Y THllQU&H SATURDAY-SUNDAY t I A.M. to 6 P.M. \ • • • Christmas Magic Rubs Off • By ALLISON DEERR Ot 1111 O.llf 1"1101 11•11 "With ~terry Christmas in your heart. the spirit of Christmas never departs." Each year these word s invite residents of Huntington Beach to he a part of Operation ti.1 e r r y Christmas, a program providing needy families with gifts and food for the holiday season. It began 18 years ago under the 11uspices of the Huntington Beach Recreation Dept. About 1955, the Assistance Leagu e of Huntington Beach stepped in and has been helping to coordinate the project since. The entire city is involved. Children from 38 schools con- tribute canned goods. Churches a n d philanthropic organliations "lake'' a 'amity from the Assistance League lists. CUy Hall adopts families for Christmas. SCOUTS HELP . Girl Scouts make stockings to hold donated toys. BOy Scouts. firemen and off-duty policemen make deliveries. A local finn donates the use or a vacant building as .a clearinghouse for donated items and boxes. Utility rompanies provide elec- tricity, water and gas. The Assistance League, this year under the guidance of ~1rs. Melvin Penhall, district social service chairman, and the recreation department. through r.1rs. Robert Borns, coordinate the \\'hole opera· tion. The operation is launched late in October when letters are sent to large businesses. schools, organlia· lions and individuals asking for support. Mrs. Penhall and Mrs. Borns coordinate rontribullons so l:.c:1t no duplications are made. AID FAf\11UES Last year 200 families received ba skets or holiday food and 2ifls. A $15 donation, Mrs. Penhall said, will provide Christmas for an en· tire family. Groceries and toys are purchased with donated money. Names of needy families come from schopls. from the Orange County ~fedical Center, fror:: ne ighbors, from families themselves. from school nurses and concerned individuals. Each family suggested is in· terviewed by a team of two Assistance League members to determine the need of each family, special problems and names and aj!es of the children. If the interviewers find an Im· medi ate need, they don't wait for Christmas to help. In the past they've gotten the utilities turned ba ck on for a family who had no fund s l<l keep their home heated. EMERGENCY NEEDS They provided a crib for a child whose bed was a dresser drawer . 'fhey found a layette for an ex· pectant mother. They brought food to a home where there was none, They .obtained emergency medical care. These are only a fl'W examples . ~1rs. Penhall indicates th11t there is a special ncro for items for teenagers and small children . For -~~"--teens-combs;--brushes , wallets and rosmetics are needed. For the small children tov trucks and cars and dolls are favoi-ites. In ca'nned goods, pop'ular gifts seem to be beans. peaches and soups. There is never enough pumpkin filling or cranberry sauce . The league rommittee sugp:ests canned products containing meat and Mexican specialties are good items l<l rontribute. Assistttnce League also refers the names of needy families to o!her community organizations. If there are more famliies than donations can handle. the Assistance League and Salvation Army share the costs-:- SHARrNG WORK At their December meeting each league member brings a. wrapped ~ift labelled with boy or girl and the age for Which it is appropriate. These are added to other donations. I Ass istance Leaguers Mrs. Wil- liam Coskran I left) and Mrs. Paul Sullivan sort conned goods for Op eration Me rry Christmas. Each family aided receives a turkey order from an area market, __ whic_h ca'!.._._~}.lsed for other meat~. ancf a supply of canned goods. Each ---.--- child receives a gift. D.ftyl lwakoshi ri cleans display win- dow. for donated toys. City Says' Merry Christmas to All' Christmas isn't a joyous holiday ror everyone. For some it could be just another cold . winter day. Operation !\:terry Christmas. sponsored by the Assistance League of Huntington Beach and the Huntington Beach Recrea· lion Department. brings a little cheer to neecly families with baskets of holiday food and gifts. \\'hat kinds of needs \\'ere there? There wa s a young man ·with a small son and pregnant wife. He Wbrked as a dish\vasher for $40 a week, paid $130 a month rent and scraped by on the rest. There v;as a fatherless famil y of seven ildren, ages 5 to 17. The mother \vas hospitalized with cancer. The worked as a nurses' aide. There was an elderly woman 'in her 9 ed alone and had no friends, no family. MORE NEEDS There was a young boy in a foster home. His mother \Vas dead. The request for his Christmas came from his father via the warden at San Quentin. There \Vere emergency situations. One year a family home was razed by a fire just before Christmas. destroying all of the family's possessions, including what litUe Christmas presents the family couJd afford. There \\'ere large families operating on little incomes. They mana2~d Ute re.st o( the y_ear but couldn't afford extras at Christmas. There was a longterm illness in a hometdraining the fam ily ---finances. When Thr1s{mas came tliere were Only bUls iffifihore bills. There were senior citizens on fixed incomes that didn't allow for luxuries like a tiny Christmas tree or something frivolous like a canned ham (or the holiday or a fruitcake. There were calls on Christmas Eve about families .who had just been left stranded-with no money, no food and no hopes lor a happy holi<jay. The holiday baskets are packed Dec. 21 and delivered Dec. 22 or 2.1. But deliveries are made each year nn Christmas "'Eve on· a last-minute basis by league families and firemen when families are left stranded for Christmas .. Huntington Beach wants everyone to have a bright Christmas. Individuals, businesses a n d organizatidns interested in adopting a family or making donations of cash or goods may contact J\.frs. Penhall at the Assista.nce League, 8'2-8548, or Mrs. Borns, 536-5486. I • Dail y Pilot Photos By Rlch1rd Koehler ,. . .... There were proud low-income families, often not speaking English, sometimes sharing a home \vilh other reh1tivcs. Last year there were aerospace workers who had nice homes but no income. HB Fireman Jim Erickson drills for delivery of gift boxes with Operation Merry Christmas helped aJJ of them . Mrs. George Delillo. I . • on Community < ' ··.t -~ ·.·~ ··' \.' ·1 ' ' -l ' . . • ; . " \' '· -·i, • " ·• ' . '';" • ' -. ' . ., -. ' ' 6men BEA ANDERSON, Editor "'" 11 Ann Landers Lulla bye Los es T u n ~; DEAR ANN LANDERS' Our young daughter had a miscarriage a few days ago and she is in a deep depression. This was her first pregnancy and she lost the baby in the fifth month. A friend told her If she had held the baby another week it rould have lived. Now she blames herself for not being more careful. She is sure she killed the child because she and her husband went danclng the night before. I'm no doctor, Ann, hut f don't believe a fetus of five months can survive. Please find out and !et us know. - MARYLAND MOM DEAR M .~1.: A fet us ca nnot &urvive at fivt m!lnlhs. Anyone whO says ntberwtse does nol have an honest e11unt. t The ''friend" who gave your daughter that ch«ry bll of information sounds like a pain In the neck -and t moved the location up a few Jut In the Interest of prlntabllity. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You have discussed in your rolumn Screaming Mothers. What about a Screaming Daughter? I am one and I hate myself for it. F'or years I have been aware of my problem and fell guilty. F'or years I have talked to myself before I walked Into the house: "Tonight you are going to be kind and genlle and keep your voice down - no matter what.'' For years I have failed. I have some clues as to why I am like th is, but it doesn 't help. My parents l!lcream al each other constantly, and they have always screamed at me. I am 24 years old and a college graduate. Either all my psychology courses were sclenCe fiction or my parents should take a good~iool\at thtmselves. Granted, my grandpa.rents _J> rob ab 1 r_ screamed at• THEM, but the 5Jame Iles somewhere be· tween environment and self control. Parenta ah o u Id examine the U · periences they are giving their children in day-t<Htay living. Those experiencts will shape the.it children's lives. How can parents expect. children to be kind and gentle when they have experlenced nothing but hostility? Please answer. 1 need to know your _ylews on this. -MY MOTHER'S DAUGHTER DEAR M.D.: Children learn what they live, A child wbo lfOWI up wlLb hostility will be bosllle. But bosWlty cu be dissipated. The ability to admit tbat yeu have undesirable traits and negative feel .. lngs Is the first step toward coilquerlng lbtm. Your lelttr Indicates that you have unusually good Insight and a genulile desire to lick the problem. Now I hope ynu'll get some counseling and win &b8 battlt:. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I'll bet this question has come up in other families but no one thinks about asking an authority. Will you please settle it for a great many people? Wilen friends· or relatives cOme to yoor city and stay in the home of .another:-_..,, friend or relative, who should make tSe first telephone call? Is it OUR plate· fu call up the guests and Say, "We heard you iire in town and we would like to see you?" Or, Should the visitors call us and aay, "We are• in town and would like to aet together?" My husband and I were up half the night arguing over this. Please put your answer in the paper. OUr mailman has a big mouth and if he saw a letter from Ann Landers it would be aU ..,ver the neighborhood. -ABERDEEN READER DEAR AB: The out-of-ton vl1lton are sUpPosed to call and uy, "We are·-. iliiif'WOiila1l e see you. 'tt 11 poUte .. --- assume tba\ wbea out-of-towoers do wet cill, their time Is alre:1dy taken ap IO~ leave them alolf:. P .$. SOrry aboqt yoar ml.Ui:nan. I! you have trouble 1ett1ng a1ong with your parent.s .•• tr you can't get them to let you live yo~ own Ille. send for AM Landers' bo9klet, "Bugged by Parenta? HC'lw to Get More Freedom." Send 00 cents In coin with your request and , long, stamped, sell·addressed envelope in we ol, the DAIL y PILOT . . -.. 't-. J 4 DAILY PIOT Season·' s Greetings Readied by Area Groups Tlpe on bollday docoratinc. gifts ideas and v1rled toph:a will attract members o f coastal clubs to mettina:s neit wtek. Candlemakin g Saddleb.ack ~fothers o f Twins Will learn. techniques of making und candles and m1erame from Mrs. Karl Woodson at 7:30 p.m. Wed· n6day. Nov. 17, in her Mission Viejo home. Member Drive WOmen's Division of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce will close its an· nual membership drive with a champagne reception honorin& new members at II a.m. Wednesday. Nov. 17. preceding the general member shi p meeting in the Irvine Coast Country Club. Members' businesses o r services will be represented in table centerpieces and civic leaders and past presidents will welcome new members. Young guests have been in- vited to observe Youth Day at the 18Sion. Garden Club Harbor View Hills Garden Club members will gather Wed.nuday. Nov, 17, in the Corona de! Mar home or Mrs. But D. Reedy for a·i2 :30 p.in. meeting and· demonstration of holiday decorating.,and floral centerpieces by Morr!. floral desifner from Newport Beach and Costa ~1esa. Ha rbor Vie w Harbor View Homes Garden Club will bear Jack Newton of a laodse1ping firm talk on $tructural and Architectural Information at 10 a . m . Wednesdoy. Nov. 17, in clubhou.&e II. Girl Scout 4dette Troop 573 has formed an Intermediate Garden Club under t he sponsorship of the group. to meet Wednesday evenings at 7 p.m. Drug Topic The Women's Auxiliary to the Orang e County P harmaceutical Association Thoughts Center on Holidays will dlscll3.!l Reach Out for someone -Not SOmethinJ, a proaram on drug a b u s e , Wednesday, Nov. 17, in the Corona del Mar home of Mrs. G. H. Peiraol. Lunch w\11 follow an 11 :30 a.m. social hour. Mrs. Linda 1'1c0iarmld will speak on CommunicaU.On Through Let. ters and members will bring examples of their hobbies and special interests. Morning Club The "tartin ~1arionettes ~ill entertain the members of the Wednesday Morning Club of Costa Mesa at 10:45 a.m., \Vednesday, Nov. 17, in tbe Balboa Bay Club. A white elephant exchange is planned . Trips to the Music Ceoter, Tijuana. Las Vegas and the races have been planned by various sections. Democrats Officers for 1972 will be nominated and e I e ct e d Wednesday, Nov. 17, at an 8 p.m. gathering a! the Hun- tington Beach-Fountain Valley Democratic Club in the Hun- tington Stach home of the H. C. Sullivans. Republicans Officers will be installed and reports from the Southern Division Convention in Hollywood will be g i v e n Wednesday, Nov. 17, 'at an 11 :30 a.m. luncheon meeting of the Huntington Beach Republicin Women Federated in the J\.1ercury Savings and Loan building. AAUW The arts will be the focal point for the Wednesday. Nov. 17, meeting of the American Association of University Women, Newport-Costa Mesa Branch. at 8 p.m. in the· Avco Center. Featured will be a viev,.ing of art works in the center 3t 7 p.m. aild a rap sessio!' of the legislative roundtable at 7:30 p.m. on Quality TV. What Is It? Dr. Maurice Allard. con- ductor of the Irvine Master Chorale. Thomas H. Garver, director of the Newport Har- Art Museum , and David Em· mes, artistic director of the South Coast Repertory Com· pany. will present a panel discussion. Retir ed Persons Huntington Beach Chapter 857 of the American Associa· tion of Retired Persons will elect new officers at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 17, in ,_.1urdy Park clubhouse. Hun- tington Beach. The group \viii host an open house in the clubhouse from t to 4 p.m. Sund;ay, Dec. S, featuring a silent auction of white elephants. DAR Dessert J\.1rs. John Knife Chief and ~!rs. Richard Routiedeaux, two founders of the Orange County India n Center. will ad· dress the Col. Willia m Cobell • Chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution. \Vednes· day. Nov. 17, at a 12:30 p.m. dessert meeting in t he Newport Beach home of Mrs. Ross Heflin. The center has issued an appeal f!lr cash. can- ned good s. dry staples and soup. warm clothing f o r children, baby items. blankets and toys for Christmas. The center gives assistance to needy Indian families from reservations attempting a new way of life. ' Alpha Omicron Pi D e corations, handcrafted gift items and season a l delicacies will be offe~ by Southern Orange County Alumnae of Alpha Omicron Pi during a boutique Wednesday. Nov. 17. from 7:30 to 10 p.m. in the ,_.1ission Viejo home of Mrs. Maril yn Elliott. Jun ior Confa b The Big, Wide, Wonderful World of Juniors will theme the Wednesday, Nov. 17, general meeting of Orange District. California Federation of Women's Clubs, Junior ft!embership at 8 p.m. in the Fullerton Ebell Clubhouse., Dinner will precede the business session. Mr s . Rudolph Hollis, Junior state president. will speak o n Challenge and Change of the '70 Junior. Papa's Lament, Cypress College choral group, will entertain. The district membership has voted as a project the purchase ~ several hematocrits to be used in ~·ell baby clinics sponsored ,by the Ppbllc Health Department of Orange County. Women Voters A general meeting of the League of Women Voters of Huntington Beach is slated for Wednesday, Nov. 17, ,in the Topper's Restaurant, Hun- tington Beach starting at 9:30 a.m. After .a session the group will car pool to the Orange County Board of supervisors·s meeting. At noon they will return to Huntington Beat;h for lunch , a program presentation a n d discussion of the Orange Coun- ty government and Santa Ana ruver project study. Rights of vote rs and voting procedure will be studied for December. The Human Resources Committee h a s designed a training course to help the unemployed present themselve~ at their best for jo~ inte rviews. Panhellenic V e t e r a n newspaperman 0. H. P. King will address members of the Newport Harb or Panhellenlc \Ved· nesday. Nov. 17, at 10 :30 a.m. in the Costa f\1esa home of Mrs. George E. Hoedinghaus. His topic will be Behind the Headlines. Silton Home Albert Sitton Children's Home is seeki ng volunteers to sponsor \\'eekly parties in the facility in Orange. Friday night parties are given for toddlers and teen! from 6:30 to a p.m. Birthday parties are given for older children and teens t w o Fridays per month from 7 to 9 p.m. f\.ionthl y carnivals com- plete with skill games. w&er ballons and sno-cones also are sponsored. Party supplies. toys, games and food also are in den1and. Templ e Sharon Dr. Charles A. Barne!. clinical psychologist affiliated with Fairview State Hospital, will tell Temple Sh a r on Sisterhood about latest ill- , novations in mental health at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov . 17, in the Costa Mesa temple. The public ls invited. Horoscope: Gemini Creative SATURDAY NOVEMBER 13 By SYDNEY OMARR Astrology is booming In Japan, bas alwa ys b e t n 'pGpular-iD-Gmnany;--is-at- tractlng 1clentlflc I n t e r t s t behind tbe Iron Curtain, con- tinues to enjoy a healthy renaissance In the United Slates and around the wo rld. I am very pleased about this stale of affalr1. But some astronomers I know are down- ln-the-moutb. ARIES (J\.1arch 21-Apri! 191: \Vhal seems Lo be tremendous pressure is but temporary. Play waiti ng game : ride "'ith tide. Older person's bark is worse than bi\,''. TAURUS (Ap~20-May 20 ): Obtain hint from A r I e s message. Take it stov.·-and· easy. Emphasis is on health , \\'Ork . ~1aintain steady pace. A,·oid extremes. GE~tll\'l (f\iay 21-June 20): Accent on ho1\• -you relate to youn~ persons -=-an<t-td~-a . Stress creativity. \Velcome op- portunity form ea n i ng fu I changes. Finish pro j e ct s. Strive for greater personal ap- peal -and po pularization of product. CANCER (June 2l ·July 22 1: Stress the practical. Be thorough, aware of details. Family matters dominate at· tenlion. Check values as they relate to prt1 perty, home. LEO jJUly 23-Aug. 22 l: Study Cancer message. Check cor re spondence, calls. Relative could hold key to pro- blem. Ask questions. Give full play to intellectual curiosity. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): featured. Greater domestic writing. Submit manuscripts. Accent on ability to move wit h harmony is disti nct possibility. format. Evaluate advertising the times. Be versatile. Get CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. program. Pla y ahead for rid of outmoded ideas. Money 19): Make room for yourself travel, education. available_ if you change ap-at top. Perceive oppOrtunity, PISCES {Feb. 19-r.1arch 20 ): pqtenlial. Improve relations De.lye beoe.a,th surface jn· roa·ctr.-Pay-anttollecrdtlltv.-~w"""h =p~rol~ess=io~n~2J,._~,u~pe~ri~or~.-d"'i~ca~t~io-ns-.""rind out the why ol Study potential. Avoid self-deception. events. Examine motives. LIBRA tSept. 2.1-0ct. 22): AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. Money is in picture, affecting Lunar cycle coincides with 18): Emphasis on publishing, mate or business partner. time for new starts, added in-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;; .. dependence. Make contacts, Pac·11·1c Goldf·1sh Farm welco me challenges. Y o u break through red tape. • SCORPfO (Oct. 23-Nov . 21 ): _. What was obscured receives ----1'~ $9995 benefit of greater light. You ,... recei\'e communication which clarifies position. Work behind scenes. You are not without all ies. Avoid brooding. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ! · Accent on friends and desires. Gifts are Star Hearst Reporter "ARI.A.KE" i1 d11i9n1d for f;I. tiring ""•'•• in 1m1ll pond1, ti• p1ci11!y on11 with 1l1ndin9 w1· !er th1t lend lo 1t19n1!1. "ARI· AKE" 1utom1lic1Uy cl11n1 ind nouri1he1, 9i•in9 1bund1nt o•ygen for und1rw1ter lift. If lift 1!1 ndin9, pond w1!1r b1· com•• foul, 1m1l11 bid 111d t •en becom11 biochemic1lly· d11d, in which nothing will liwe <1•cept b1cl1ri1, But bv filt1r· ing 1uch w1t1r, with "ARIAKE1' yo u c1n ktep cl11n i nd fr11h w.tt1r without conlinuou1 1up· pli11 of 111w w1ttr. •. Takes took at Women By JO OLSON woman's g'o If tournament, nearly-SO-year-old reporter - 01 11\t Ot il' Plitt 11111 J\lrs. St. Johns said. J\..1ary the mother of Jesus. If Adela Rogers St. Johns is -~!rs. Patton. she added, was Joan of Arc and Queen right in her convictions. "a wonderful woman" who Eliiabeth I of England. IMPORTED Fiootlnt Type KOi FOOD Now 011 Sale Smoller Model Avollable! $69.95 LAYAWAYS I KOi -Fiiters Tonks·S 901. to 120 Gol.- Accftllorln HOLIDAY KOi Htw $1\lpmlfll JVi" It 11" $Z.50 to SS.GO American women hold the "had integrity ." She related "\Vhen you see all the girls destiny of the v•orld in their that a mil itary driver had said in hot pants who are ad· OPEN OAILT 10.5 17141 893 7105 of fl.trs. Patton. "He (Patton) Clo1ed Tunday Phone • hands. may be the blood but she's the vertising so blatantly. you The form er H ~'!.rsdl guts ." might say to them lhat alt 14842 EDWARDS ST .. WESTMINSTER ne~'spaper reporter a,n Three other women were three of these ~·ere vi rg ins," OFF TH E SAN OIEG-0 FWY. AT GOLDEN WEST 011d IOLSA author of three best·sellin1;: _ _:m~en~t..,io~ned:'.'__:b~y'.._'.t:".he:_pe~p'!'pe~ry:!'.:_· _:s".'.he:..'.:co~n~c:"tu,.;d":ed".:. ______ /'-~"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""!!' books told a packed aud ience at the Pi Beta Phi Celebrity Series Book Review t h e Dr. Hilda McCartney (left). chairman of the holiday table decorating contest sponsored by the v.•omen's divisi'ons, Newport Harbor and Costa l\1esa chambers of commerce, assisted by ~1rs. George P. Zebal, admires an early entry. The con· tesl open the the public and all com munity organizations, will take place Wed· nesday. Dec. 8, during the ~roup's Christmas luncheon in the Balboa Ba y Cl ub. Reservations for the competition (no entry fee) must be made by !\1onday. Nov. 15, \vith Mrs. P. Warren Smith or the chambers' offices. "American woman is going to ha\·e to stand at the gap." She declined to discuss her ne~·est book. "Honeycomb," which is her autobiography, and said instead she was going to talk about inf I u en ti a I American women she has California's Largest Display of Dinin g & Game Sets THANKSGIVING DI SCOUNT SPECIAL FOUR DAYS ONLY Safety First known. She said "American women have given up their superiority and have come down to equali· ty with men ." Children Say 'Nay, nay' Stating t h a t 92 percent or America's jU\'enile corruption. drug addiction and crime come from broken homes. she suggested that unless women By CAROL 1'.tOORE OI Ille Cltll' '1191 lltff The kindergarten trs th rough third graders chanting "Nay. nay" in Fountain Valley are not starting student revolts at such a young age. Thty are reciting one of the sloeans devised by South Coast Junior Women for their Sale T ime Correction (our safety ca m p a i g n s regarding c h i I d molesting, traffic regulations, d r I v e r education and emergency medical sen·ices. Patch-the Pony stars in the filmstrip and puppet show that club volunteers use to point out to primary grade students the dangerous schemes of child molesters. The heroic porse comes to the rescue as a schoolyard loiterer orfers an innocent child a ride and candy. The message is "Nay, nay; from strangers stay away ." The Best of Ever}'thing may -The safety education pro- be gooe by the 7 p.m. time ject. supervlsed by Mrs. liated 'I\Jesday in the Paily Frank fleck, president, and PUot for the Bon ?o.tarcht sale 1-trs. Robert 1'.1 a r t e n • .aponsored by the Friends of chairman. inspires o I d e r l-~--£,e~ Harbor Art M~seum._ children ·to prev.e.ntJ.ta!!ic.. ac· The pla fund-raiser in tht cidents so their school may new-muaeum bulldln1 will run display a ·g?'f!n l)eMant. -from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on tountatn Valley policemen Thurtday, Nov. ti. Th Is auist club members in lee· daylong sale cllmaxe., a year turlng to students on the vit11l of craft work1hops ind col· need for safe walking. bicycl· JecUon of fillfl furniture. an· Ing and drivini: habits. tlquu, pilnlln11, clothes, toys. If a sthool rtc0rd1 a 1poN e q u Ip m • n t ind st.udent·ret11ted 1ccidtnl, the bind.made &lftt. ereen penn11int riiuil b t Mrr. JohnJton Billard and lowered and displayed inside Mrs. Wlntlow S. Uncoln Jr., the bullding to dramatize the co<halrmtni .. Id further tn· need for 11sftt}'. Thirty con· formation m1y bt obtained by . secutive accidcnl·frte days c:alllng tht mu1eum, 67$-3868 must bt compltted be!ore the or ,M803. pc:Mant e1n be raised. return to their "spiritual A school that has a perfect superiority" this condition will safety record. nying the creen not be corrected. flag embossed with the Image of a safety patrol boy for a "I fought for women's suf· whole year. will receive a frage and 1 v>'ish I hadn't." certificate from an automobile she stormed. "WhN. do you do company. with the ~·omen's vote?" The club also is an associate Mrs. St. Johns. wearing 8 member of the Ca lifornia blue pantsuit decorated (Inly Driver Education Association by her Medal of Freedom. so another committee Is said she feel! women ha ve evaluating this subject in the always been liberated. Huntington Beach Union High · "I always wear this medal School Dislrict and supporting when I speak to women ," she legislation to fund a n d stated. "l got it from Pres\· upgrade behind-the-wheel dent Nixon for close to -SO training. years of work. In my 60 years \Yell prepared and effective of 'vork I never !I aw teachers. sound curricula and discritnination an y where adequate facilities are some of against women." the facto~s on the checklist us· The women she described ed b}' the r.fme:s. Dan Gordon, were Elsie Parrish .. A.melia David Kellner and Truett E a r h a r t. Babe D1drikson, .Karstetter for asseuing quali--Gtneral__pau.on·s wife-and ty programs. Clrrie Nati~n. . . S 11' et y mmmHteewomtn r.Pamsh; a tiny, m1ddle- al10 have surveyed emercency aged, u n e d u c a t e d chAm· medical services of the Foun· bennaid in Washington. won taln Valley-Huntington Beach her minimum wage case in 1re11 to determine 1vai11blllty the U_nlted States Supreme of 1mbulence1. X-ray equip-Court. .,What do you "'ant of"' ment. extra physici1n1 and country 'if ~woman can do nurses and mutual assistance that ? ' ~frs. St. JOhM asktd. betwttn communities. Amelia Earhart. "'ho went Polle• and fire dtpartmenll, Into avlaUon as • m~hanlc. 1mpulance services. ho1plt11ls. .h11d eight men trying to go_on tht htalth depart1nent and her most dangerous mission ''llrlous doctors conlributecf wiih her llS-. n co.pil ot. and an~wt:rl lowarrl b eo t t er Rfhe Didriksen got up nfter coordln•llon of their strvices. cancer !'JJrgcry and v.·on a I • FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY & MONDAY DI NING -GAlliE PLEASURE ' F~ush BolUlflf"x, 1uf1ed l:hair1 mount~1I on -rought iron bate• that Stock on hand e~(& roll. Tab!~ i1 42" Of"fajlon or 42" round, openinllj to 60" "ith one r::;::;::T-<i:::='::Or.::-l--1~caI-i.~o mar lop ln "'ood coloro.----------- 1mlle • op ear y s2199-or Wllil 3 week..----5 p· G · il- !nr delh·ery. c. ro up '--------' 18085 EUCLID ST. FOUNTAIN VALLEY ~ SAN OIECO 'REFWAY ANO 13 ~ EUCLID ST. TURNOFF 962·3325 or 546· 1681 Prices geed Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon. Viet Waifs Run, Steal; -l'otal-Rises- By JAMES A. BOURDIER SAIGON (AP) -0 n e orphan is too many. But in Vietnam there are many as 266,000 of them, !iv· ing victims of a war most are too you ng to sca rcely un· derstand, only old enough to know they are alone. Only a small fractio n are i n orpha liages, and less than half are official wards of the state that can'l keep up with the unending army of Innocents abandoned by war. Almost everywhere I turned in Vietnam. from the Saigon s.treets to the smooth white sand beaches near Oa Nang, I saw thousands of orphans and waifs. torn from their families ·and homes Or dumped alone into the world by unwanting parents. Their look is always the same. The big, sad, dark eyes peering up. Were they afraid of me, or was I to be their friend? I rather think the lat- ter. \ S-ATURDAY--.SUNDAY SHOP EARLY, SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED SAVE 1.84 ON PADDED BRA SAVE 58' ON LACE PANTY -· • 112 OFF LACE TIGHTS Friday, Novtmbtr 12, iq71 -"' V PI LOT 1$ SA V.ORY iEEF AND VEGETABLE STEW . 99¢' S"CI~ • Tossed green Sdlad • Choice. of dressing • fresh roll and butter • SAVE 21' ON . CABLE STITot . KNEE HI REG.99~ • • They were shy, on first meeting, these waifs of Viet- nam. Slowly they warmed. First a little hand came out to gr ab mine and hold it tightly. Other.s followed an soon I was surrounded by the· child r<:!n. Other little hands fingered the cabin baggage tags on my camera case piled up over the years of assignments. When I tore them off and. offered them as toys, the sad eyes acknowledgement but only for • Stretch nylon spo ndex a fleeting moment. Then the • Dacron® polyester gleam 'A'as gone and once ----again-the.y.....wer.e...the__w"'"'. '-"+-·!-'-" _,,N.,,a'<to,uccrall.!cl "sh"'a""'!i'"n,,._ ___ .,, Vietnz.m. • A, 8, C 32-38 66 • Soft, cci mforlo ble • Nylon .tricot • Feminine lac trims ·• :_-~--l-~·~S:_lr~et~ch~ny~lo~n:c.:.:::__9-~.1-~~~~~-U ·if;~·~S~o~ft~O~rl~onT.®~aT.cr~yl~ic1-j -'-~-I • Machine wash • Streich nylon i • •Girl's S, M, l, XL • Marvelous colors •fit 1,1 One size fils all • In misses, S, M, l , X The warm hands still held mine. Braver now, they toyed with my dangling camer8s. I wiped off more fingerprints in several months with the waifs tha n in the past 20 years Of assignments. But I didn't mind. Buddhist monks operate a large .complex for t h e homeless near Saigon . I recall a particular day when J had been v isitin g and photographing in the area. one of "the monks excitedly called me to anothe r DuifdiTig,-to dis play the latest addition to their "family" of more than 1,000 children. There stand ing before me and looking up with the same sad, dark eyes I h a d photographed many ti mes before was one of the most beautiful children I · had Y. seen. She· tried to smile for me through the bruises and· cuts that covered her tiny angelic face and her body. She wore blue. blood-stained pajamas. The monk explained that the girl's mother, a Saigon bar girl, had borne her by an American GI, and had recehtly married a Viet- namese man. Since the child had some of her father's features, neither the new hus- band nor the mothe~ _ \vanted her. So they simply beat her up to show their distaste and dui:nped her at the entrance to the orphanage. It was the first time in long. long years that I felt like crying. Waifs in an orphanage fare better than the street urchins. At least they get some medical attention and usually enough rice and other foods to &ustain them . The homeless children who roam the larger cities live and sleep in the street. They rise with the dawn nnd begin scratching out their day- to-day existence. M a n y be come thiev e s and pickpockets. Within six months { will be lea ving Vietnam for good. Many things and events 1·11 probably forgP.t. But the sad eyes and the soft ·warm hands of all my Ht· tle friends will forever remain with me. ANIMAlogic ~- ~'(OU 1116f~IJA1't ! l'M lrl6f GOING Tb 11\lfs AMOTtlfR fooT8AU. ~EASOJ.L." TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Do re You ... · Every-Soturdoy _, REG.4.50 llNGERIE OEPf. S.11 OFF C.P~O. JACKETS 3ss • fresh pla ids • Acr ylic pile lining • Wool ond other fibers • Boys' sizes 8-20 REG .13.99 80Y'~ WfAR COSCO MEAT TENDERIZER • Completely electric • Cuts, dices, slices, chops meat/vegelables • White, Gold, Avocado 9'' SPECIAL IUY 2.55 OFF LATEX PAINT • Interior dripless 344 • Dries in 30 min. to -.;a~bable.JlaLfinish__ _ ·--_- • Covers 450 sq . ~. REG. 5,99 'AINt OEPT. REG.1.25 liNGEilE DEPf. 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' ' , Lakers Bid For 7th Win Ex-cager, Now Blind, Starts N~w Life Ina Row lNGLSWOOD The 14 Al!loles Laken bid for their si1th straight victory tonight •t the Forum, facina the Settile ~Sonics. The Liken are fresh off their best eame of tfle season. a -1~103 triumph over tJie 76ers in Phi.ladllphia Wednesday nii~• • That r&isf:d t.htir season record to 11-3 good eneuih to le•d the N1tional Baeket- baU Aaloci1tion 's Pacific Division. Seat· tie is ln third plau in the dlvWon. ,,. ,,. ,,. Australian Vic Wilson set a world drag record Ti1ursday at Ora.nee COunty International Raceway. Tbe 27-year-old Aussie. driving the "Courage of Australia." was clocked at · 311 miles per hour ~'hich unofficially shatters Art Arfons' quarter mile record in a rocket-powered car. The record was 293.. It took him just 5.11 seconds. The "Courage of Australia'' is a 27\lz: foot three-wheeled land vehicle, propelled by a 64.pound rocket engine. ,,. ,,. ,,. BOLOGNA, Italy -Eigntn·utded Bob Lutz of Los Angeles cutgunned John Alexander of Australia 7..S, 7.5 Thursday to advance to a quarterfinal match with topseeded Rod Laver of Corona del ~1ar in the ltalian International tennis open tournament. In the last match of the day , Tom Ok'· ker of the Netherlands ousted OWen Davidson, 7-5, 6-3. In an earlier match, sixth-seeded Mar- ty Rie$sen of Evanston, JU., defeated Roger Taylor 6-3, 6-7, 6-4. Fourth-<eeded Cliff Drysdale edied Z<J. jko Franulovic, 3-6, 6-3, 6-0. ---Rl11'P'AJ;-O.....-'J'he-!=-Allgelerl!ings snapped a · seven-game losing streak Thursday night with a f.2 victcry over Buffalo. In other NHL tilts, Bo!ton edged California, s.i. and Philadelphia tripped Vancouver, 4.J. ,,. ,,. ,,. ST. LOUIS -Third baseman Brooks Robinson of the Baltimore Orioles has won an unprecedent.ed 12th straight term on The Sporting News American League All·S lar fielding team. -RobiMOn WiSOne of four Oriole players receiving berths on the team annoWlctd -ThUrsili y froin a poll of Americaii League managers and coaches. Other Ori.oles honored were second baseman Dave Johnson, shortstcp Mark Belanger and outfielder Paul Blair. Rounding out the AL fielding team were first baseman George Scott and ou~ fielder Carl Yastrnmski of Baston, Cleveland catcher Ray Fosse, Kansas Ci· ty outfield~r Amos Otis and pitcher Jim Kast of lttinnesota. . ,,. ,,. ,,. M!NNEAPOLl~T. PAUL -Veteran slugcer Harmon Killebrew of the Min- nesota Twins has been named winner of the 1970 Lou Gehrig Memorial award. The award is given by Phi Delta Theta, nationaJ collegiate fraternity in memory of the great Yankee first baseman. Hall of Famer Gehrig was a member of the fraternity at ColumbJ.a University. Killebrew is the 17th Winner of the award, following Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves, who was the 1970 Winner. . ,,. ,,. ,,. ATLANTA -The 1971 winner Of the Heism.an Tro~hy will be _ anriounced Thanksgiving night in a special telecast from New York by the American Broad- casting C-0. during haUtime of the na- tionally f.tlevised GeorJia.(;eorcia Tech football game, it has been teamed. The award is presented annually by the Downtown Athletic Club of New York to the 111Uon's out.standing college football player. The network declined to comment on the report Thursday night. John Heisman. for whom the trophy was nanwd, coached at Georgia Tech from 1904 to 1919. ,,. ,,. ,,. PHOENIX -NaUonal Basketball Association commissioner Walter Ken- nedy ruled Thursday that Phoenix does not have to glve up r.· player to Detroit for OUo Moore until the disputed trade is cleared up in aiurt. The Suns and Pistons acried to submit the matter to Kennedy for settlement as the NBA board of governors opened two days of meetings Thursday. Detroit or:iginally wanted the matter placed on the agenda for arbitration but withdrew that request when Phoenix agreed to leave the decision to Kennedy. The commissioner ruled that three con- ditions st.aw in the contract that brought Moore to Phoenix last r.pring had not been fully implemented. He noted t)'le third was Involved in court litigation in Tucson Md ordered tbat no further movement of players be made until the court ruled. DES MOI NES, Iowa (AP) -The e.levalor door at the Iowa Commission for the Blind slid open and out step~ S.foot- 7 Speed. Tapping a white and creen cane, he made a left tum, then two right maneuvers, enleli'ed through a door and sat down in a chair. Jt has, taken 11 months, but Jim Speed is a changed person. Speed was recruited to play ba1ketball for the University or Iowa . He never did because he lost his: sight before the • Hawkeyes' first game last season. A coiiibination of sinus trouble and spinal meningitis cut off the blood 8"pply to his optic nerve, leaving him blind. He is re1Uf11ing to the university in February -Jiot as a player, but as a atu· ~ent. He will be beginning his junior year and plans to earn a. bachelor \:if arts degree in political science. Speed will walk out of the Commission for the Blind early next month, although he will never <:lose the doon behind him. "I Jove this place and l will always GOLOEN STATE'S JEFF MULLINS DRIVES THROUGH DICK BARNETT. Mullins Helped Warriors to 112-103 Victory Over New York. Vnhappy With Debt1t Monroe Cheered in NY -Then Scores 9 -Points NEW YORK (AP) -Earl Monroe's magical name was barked over the loud speaker system, signaling an avalanche of ear-splitting cheers at Madison Square Garden. About a half hour later, the flashy guard scored his first points in a New York Knicks' unifonn. "It sure was strange playing with the Knicks after playing against them all th ese years," said J\1onroe, who was ac- quired only before Thursday night's N11- lional Basketball Association game with the Golden State \Varriors. Pla ying in an unaccustomed reserve role, th e newest or the Knicks scored only nine points in a 112·103 losing effort lo the Warriors. t.1onroe didn't think he played to his capacity -more precisely. that of a $100.~a·year ballplayer. "rm not very happy with the way I played," said Monroe. \Yllo wa s acquired Thursday morning from the Baltimore Bullets . fot Dave Stallworth, Mike Riordan and an undisclosed amount of cash. l\ionroe, who had been having contract troubles with the Baltimore management. ' last played a game Oct. 19 before being suspended by the Bullets. The inactivity -and a sore left ankle -...clamped I.he Pearl under his lifetime scoring average of 25 points a game. But he promises things will gft better. "'Ifs going to be good," he said after the gamf. "!l.1an for man. the Knicks havf the best starting five in the NBA. And just being an addition 1nakes me feel good." t.1onroe, who confessed that hf almost signed with Indiana of the American Basketball Association, appreciated his welcome by 19,588 New York fans, most of whom stood and applauded for almost three minutes when his name was an· nounced . "I was elated." said the soft.spoken, unemotional 11.fonroe, "l never got an ovation like that in Baltimore -or anywhere else -for that matter.'' t.fonroe, considered one of the NBA 's most explosive scorers, got into the game \\•ith two minutes left in the first quarter. He touched the ball for the first time a minute later and it took another quarter of play before he drilled in a layup for his first basket. ll brought the house down. "'I wasn 't nervous. really." said 11.tonroe. who missed his first two shots. hitting four or 10 from the field over·all, committed four fouls in 20 minutfs and made a few tactical blunde rs. It wasn 't the.real Monroe. he insisted. "I know I can help this team." he said, C'Choing the sentiments of the Knick faithful who laid out the red carpet. Sullivan Tough Under Fire ~...__J_~~L~•· !Af -A•b.lllll guart.erback Pat Sullivan, nearini the.. NCAA record for touchdown rupon•lbUUy, Is "imptrturable under ftra,•• RY• vdf.ran coach Ralph ''Shu&" Jordan. ~Y....Ml.M._Auburn__Jaus another un- beateq, No. 1 Georgia, in a Southeastern Conference sl'lowdbwn at XI.hens, Ga. Auburn.career. leading tbe..Tlgtr.s to a..24-- 4 rtrord. He.. has accounted-fot-. 67- touchdowns. including 49 in ·the air. to climb into the No. 3 spoPUn the NCAA"s all-time li!t. Ste~e Ramgey of North Tex- as State holds the ~rd at 71. followed by Virgil Carter of Brigham Youn1 with come back to viait," the Shreveport, La .• native said Wednesday. "These people here have changed my thinking. I never imagined blind people lived as they do here. "I.know I'm going out in the world with two strikes against me .. , J'm black and I'm blind. My aim is to contribute somethin~ to both. "I've got a few ideas how I can help the blacks and the blind. I'm going to have to work like hell to do something beneficial." This is a different Jim Speed than the one who entered the Commission last January, not wanting to meet or talk with anyone. "I have learned a lot from t.he people here at the commission and I did a Jot of ~aveling last summer to realize I can go anyplace," explained Speed. Jim changed his ouUook after a visit home this year. Speed was an outstanding high school basketball player in Louisiana three years ago and Olle of his biggest rivals was Robert Lee Brown. They fought it out for rebounds and points. ''Robert Lee went blind about two months after I did," Jim s aid. "Unfortunately, he hasn't been as lucky as I have. They don't have the facilities for the blind in Louisiana like t.hey do in Iowa an d my buddy was forced to go to 1 Arkansas. "They still don't treat Uie black man like they should in the South, so Robert Lee lefl and went back home. I think he's just sitting there now. "It's people like this that I want to help." Unitas Says World Cup Golf He Doesn't Like Bacl{up Role ~cklaus' Birdie BALTIMORE (AP) -John Unitat. voted the greatest quarterback in the history of professional football, doesn't like his role as Baltimore·s backup signal caller. l(eeJis U.S. Close Unitas wants to play. He's ready to PALM BEACH GARDENS , Fla. (AP) play. But he refuses to criticize coach -Jack Nicldaus, with the vision of a Don McCafferty's decision to stick with blond·headed owl, plunked a five-foot Earl Morrall as the Celts' starter. birdie putt in near darkness to keep the fa vored United States team close while "I'll go along with what they wa nt to the guest hackers· lrom Romania and do. even though I don't like it," Unit.a s . Libya simply faded into the Florida said today. "I'm not going to cause any ·sunset. trouble. It's hard enough to play the game without creating problems. Nlcklaus was topping off a four-under· par 68 Thursday to capture the individual "Earl is doing a fine job. I don't see lead in the J9lh World Cup golf cham. how Mac can change quarterbacks in pionships while he and partner Lee midstream . The only thing that matters Trevino clung within three shots of the is that we continue to win." front.running South Africans. Unitas denied published reports that Trevino struggled to a 75 on the there was friction between himself and treacherous 7 ,096-yard East Course, giv· McCafferty, contending the press had ing the Yanks an aggregate of one-under-misinter.pre~men1$. __ -nart48'1md-a-seComtplace-knot-wittrNe "When someone asks me if I want to Zealand's Bob Charles, 71, and John play, of course I'm going to say I do," Lister, 72. South Africa's Gary Player Unitas said. "If they ask me why I don 't, battled a virus to carve out a 69. Johan- J tell them to ask the coach. I just mean nesburg pal Harold Henning had 71 for a it's his decision. four-under-par total of 140. "I've never told Mac I wanted to play. or course, the poor Romanians and Li· He knows that. Anyway, if there were a byans didn"t have a full shot at the open- problem between us, it would be up to ing·day glory. Darkness stopped them him to come t-0 me. not for me to go to after 17 holes as the snail's pace play him." caused each fou rsome to spe nd more McCafferty supported Unit.as' con· than six hours on the course . tention that they have had no problems It was just as well. Dumitru Muneanu and added : "The reporters are trying to had just ta ken 10 on the par five 17th hole read something into everything John and already had 95 · strokes for the says. If they kept asking me the same agonizing day. His countryman, Pavel questions every week, I'd get pretty Tomita·, had 85 with one hole to play. upset ." That put the Romanians at 44 over par, going through a tunnel in the rush hour." Player, who won the 1965 World Cup with Henning, said, "Most of the players think they should use a best·ball format rather than having both golfers putt out on each hole even if they have a IO." Henning just returned to tournament golf last month in Australia after a five- month layoff due to an injured wrist ·and a broken hand. "I broke the hand by bumping into a car crossing the street in Johannesburg," he explained, ''andJ hurt the wrist fa lling into the swimming pool while playing with my kids." Most of the field was using the smalle r British golf ball, said to perform better on longe r courses and with windy con· ~ ditions. Man ~lilOJY1'•Jld.1Jth,.e,,.· ,_. ----"f.. tie ball out of self defense. ;'I much prefer the performance of the big American ball," said Charl es, a Jefthander from Christchurch, "but you can't give away all that distance to everybody.'' Mesan Fires 67 In Gardena Golf Tourney "t haven't been saying too mu ch late· some 48 shots behind South Africa's ty," Unitas said. "No matter what I say, leaders-and they weren't even through."' GARDENA -Ronnie· Reif of Costa Mesa fired a first round 67 in the Gardena Valley open golf tournament Thursday. two strokes off tQe pace of the leaders -Steve Cook of Long Beach, Roger Rubendall of La Canada and Rafe Botts of Los Angeles . I come out as the loser." Their playing p .&: rt n er s from Unitas made a remarkable recovery Libya, Hosain Abdu Elmola and Muftah from surgery to repair a torn right Salem, \\'ere 26 over par at the time. Achilles tendon suffered while playing a They were forced to sleep. with their game of paddle ball last April. foursome aggregate of 80 over par and Many thought the injury would end the 1 finish with the testy 421·yard 13th hole career of the 38-year-old quarterback . If before forging ahead with round No. 2 he came back at all, the most optimistic Friday. figured . it would be several weeks into England's Tony Jacklin and Peter the 1971 season. Oosterhuis had even par 144 to stand But Unitas, whose dogged determina-fourth among 46 teams. Argentina and lion and dedication is from fhe same era China stood at 145 and Canada had 146. as his· high-top playing shoes, fooled even Defending individual champion Roberto the medical fxperts. After \Yorking de Vicenzo of Argentina snuggled close to endless hou rs in the solitude and Nicklaus with a three-under 69 alGng with drudgery of therapy, he was ready to Player and Oosterhuis. plav the final two preseason games. The crawHng pace of the 23 four somes "But they apparently were in a situa-"'as explained by the strapping 2J.year- lion \Yhere they thought It was more im· old Oostel'huis. who said, "when you are portant to work with a yoWlg quarterback playing for yourself and playing for yout in those games," Unitas said . "I did n't country. j~ will be slow." see a minute of action. Jn fact, I \Yasn't Tournament director Jack Tuthill even on the roster until the season open-blamed it more on the foursome format ed." -the U.S. tour uses threesomes -along The failure to play in the exhibitions with the generally weak field and the helped decide McCafferty's course of ac-rugged third hole. tion for the rer;ular season. "The third hole, a par three, is so rough "\Vhew the season starts," Unitas said. on some of thfse fellows.'' said TuUull. "all games are crucial. You just don't "They usually miss the green and spend send a plo.yer in and tell him to get in . several minutes hunting their ball in the condition at that point." high gr.11.ss. Groups back up .•. it's like ...... -. .... ,,,..... . I I All three collected their six-under-par scores on the \Ve stern Avenue course. The best 16 scores were all recorded at \Vestern, a 6,500-yard. par 71 course with a 68 the best round played at par 72 Vic· toria which stretches 6,800 yards . Willie Jefferson of Los Angeles record- ed the 68 and the next best score at Vic- toria \Vas a 69 by A! Chandler. a club pro from Colorado. Four players we~e bunched one stroke off the pace iri the 72-hole tournament. Jn at 66 were Bud A!lin of Santa Barbara. h1ac Hunter of Los Angeles. Francisco L-Opez of Hayward and Greg McHatton of \Vhittler. The players swap courses for today's second round \\'ith the low 70 pros and 20 amateurs playing the final two rounds at Western. First prize in the event is $1,800. .~. • J _ ••.rn 41 years of colleae foot.ball I have never aeen Pat Sullivan 's equal aJ a com· jiJeti" quarterback," 1ay1 Jordan, whose •lrtJi-ranked Tigers are undefeated in el~nl games. "He Is at his btst when the 1olna getJ the-1®,ClITTt:" Georgia, a defensive giant, can clinch el lea st a share of the SEC title with a victory and the Bulldogs are seven·point favorites. An Aubum triumph would set the stage for a confertnce title match in Binniniha.m Nov. 27 betwee11 the Tigers 11nd No. 4 Alabama. w!Mer or ninl' 111 A row this year. 68. ::-::---._ With t"''O ,l!:llmes remaininp:, Sull ivan ranks fifth all·timr, in total offense with 6,48S yards, ei~hlh in p11ssing yardage \\'i!h 5.915 and eighth in pass completions ~ubivan, a ~foot, 100.JtQUnd senior from B1nnlqhom, steps i nto the taugbest ullpmellloj h!J colleil•te.career Satiit- r.eorgia hes yielded only 5.9 points )lf'r gam l'. ilUrd !!iesI~in the nation, and rank!i seventh in tot•! defense, giving up only 212 yards per game. - Sullivan has started every game in his with 424 . lie has been respOn&ible for -402 point!, 34 less than f.he record held by Ran1sey. KINGS GOALIE GARY EDWARDS MIGHT HAVE BEEN TEMPTED TO SWAT LINESMAN LEON ST ICKLf. But Edwards Ktpt His Cool and Made 31 Stv•• 11 LA Broke L~slng Streak With 4·2 Win Over Buffalo. • Mater Del Rolls Clough 's Passes Bury Foe , 36-6 " ... ' " ' " • " ' .. ' .. " " • '·' " .. " "' • " " u ... .. "' • '" . .. • .. '" • '" .S19 ' " .... ' " "' ' • .)16 Key Game for Diablos As They '. Face · Foothill When the Cr es t view League's lop offensive unit faces one of the loop's better d efensive teams something's got to give~ That's about the situation tonight as l\Ussion Viejo High hosts Foothill in an important loop football tilt. Il starts at 8. It's Important for a lot of reasons. For coach Bob Hivner's . Mission Viejo Oiablos It means a crack at a winning season -something never -Pheasant Kill Opens Saturday Prospects for Californi.a's in11 pheasant season opening Saturday are J!ood in the Sacramento \'alley, rair !n most or the San .Joaquin Va\ley and fair to good in the Tulc Lake and Honey Lake areas. Production Jn most of the Sacramento Valley is up :111 to 40 percent. whereas in l ~e Sa.n .Joaquin Valley production is down from 1970 figures exrept in Stanislaus County \\·here It is romparable to that for last year. srate~ide the take should be 8 t least equal to last year's "·hen 253.800 pheasant hunters bagged an estimated 750.200 bir~. The \970 harvei;t in the month-long season "'·as about 5 percent greater than th;it for 1969. Pheasant season this year '"ii continue thr011gh Der. !'!, statey,·ide . Some 19.000 will be planted in lhe Southland. The bag limlt in the northern area is two males per da y this wee kend and four per day for the balance of lhl'! season. but no more than 10 per season. J'he southern area has a limit of two birds per day before accomplished by a . varsity football team. The Dia b!os have a 3-4 mark going into this one. But ii could be a little more important for Foo I hi 11 's Kn ights. Coach Bill Snyder's club is cu rrently in the thick of the league title chase with a 4-l record, a half game behind Katella (+-0-1). El Modena is also 4·1. Thus it's a win-0r-else sit ua· lion for the defense-m inded Knigh!s. Foothill 's defense . ....·hich had only allowed three TDs in four league tilts prior to last '''eek, is Jed by a quartet of top linemen. They include tackles l\1ike Mccrae and John Spurzem, guards R ich a rd Jacobs and Jimmy l\1 cKinnon. Foothill, although winning last week over Orange \30-271, found itself vulnerable through the air. And that's what \VOr- ries Snyder the most . "Mission Vil'jo has the bl'st offensive team in the league and they have a very fine passer in Gary \Vood. \Ve did n't defense the pass against Orange so we've got to shut 1l off against l\1ission Yiejo. "And they have a great one in Aundre Holmes," says Snyder. Holmes. l\1ission Viejo's top running back, has been nurs- ing an ankle Injury and may not be able to go full tilt tonight. But he reall)' wasn't missed in the Diablos' 21·16 victory over San Clemente last y,•eek as Joe Jones picked up 130 ya rds on the ground. Wood's favorite targets are wide receive rs Todd Layport and Ra y Gri jalva. Layport has 14 receptions for 257 yards while Grijalva has caught 19 for 254. Foothill's offense is geared around running back Sam Peek, one of the better ones in the league. throuM.....1t 11\e "8'nt1n;-alsu--,1.1i.1itn-Vle1o u-•m• J \' '\ 0,.,.M y,•ilh1 10.blrd st1sona 1m1 . '"· ,11.,., Only males rnay be taken in ;e: ~~.,. t.~:t the north. but s 0 u the r n 2 J!W rn~~P!itl California has e 11 her · s e J: ~ S~'L.~~~"otit shooling. ~1 ~:" ... "=-' Birds of e.itht r M!X r:18Y ~ ~ l.~/t:1~ .... 11 taken in St'!uthern .cahfo~nta. "L ¥0Ch'I u v°11:1tt1 .. including San Lui~ Obispo. I Jon McG11 ... Santfl Barb1Tt1, Ventura. Los MG q~oc~11';~"1 0 DI l f'oii !•M•I• Angt:lt:s, Orange .• -,an ego, , lfl•f!O• ec~~o1111 Imperial, Rl\'ersldc. S II n DLI jXTu~*. Bern.11rdfno, Inyo and ~fono B r:, 1err,,f:.•!I \• I Tedd l ,¥11'11•1 coun 1es. s J1111 cu11er• w•. lll !H ~ l~ •• Prep 1."ootbalJ Standin"s " !I " •• "' "' ••• ra m •• Mustangs Menace Sea Kings Friday, Novtmbtr U, 1971 DAILY pi)lOT At WestJnlnster Lions , Anaheini In Sunset Clash The Anaheim defense hasn't been consistent this year. It '"'as leading Western, 14-0, before finally losing, 19-11 . "Our de(ense surely hasn't done ~·hot was expected of It this ye a r , ' ' VanHoorebeke agrees. Westminster quarterback Jeff Siemens did yeoman duty on defense in addition to dire~ ting the Lion offense a wee k .1go in a k.o squeaker w it h Newport lie made a touchdo"'" saving tackle at the one-yard line and intercepted \\\'O passes in a defensive sec-0ndary role . Bui Sie1nens is the offC'nsive leader of the Lions and will not start defensively tonight •although he may be in there \'er.v early ,l!Oing both ways. · Churk \Vink Jes is t h e n1a1nstay of the Lion running game, along '"'ith reserve Tonv Accomando. \V inklel!I has g11iried :106 yards running in 84 attempts \Vhllc sophomore Ac· co1nanrlo has 287 in r>S. Siemens' passing statistics sho y,· 87 com pletions in 149 tries \\'ilh only four In· tercep!ions ill seven .game~. Hts passing yardage figure ts 1.232 and in addition he :ias gained 142 running givi ng him an o\·eraH mark or J.374. Wt11mlnst•r LIMUPi Po•. Plover TE Ch~•I•• C•tlli<ltl T C,1ry J•...,•n•s G J•m l'i•~•e<cMn C M1rt•n Sthrefller G 01.lct 1.ovo 1 MA< IV T rul•!lo SF C.1•v N.dtloocks Qli Jpf! S•emPn• w•. "' !" ~; ·~ •• .. '· -· :l' ·-· - ·' ..... ··. -.. ". · .. ... . -· ,._ F9 ~l•~~~~~if-~~~~1 W8 .:;;,~ t<err" O•ltnte Pel. P l.oYer E !11 Thero• T Gary J~'1•ngs G Tim Milt~ G Ch11 I ••nkhou•t T Jim Holl•nd ~Lii t°~,~01-~i~Y1l10 C!l W•lt S1nnf• Cl! (,o"e l.Ancl~1' ~ J..., ICtAlhl~v S Terry Vouhg w• . •• !~ l" " !7~ •• '" ••• '" ·~ One Will Fall Fro111 1st: Edison Faces Mag11olia Olt1n11 1-larrnon's alter ego on lht r.1agnolia side is 6-l. 190-pound junior John Kindred, Buth have able runninf n1 i.!cs to pilrh out or hand of. Jo. 'fhe Chargers possess one o' the Orange Coast arca's i o ground gainers in juni9r tailback I" r c d Hernan '''ho 's piled up 680 yards ln I ~· carries. Jn addition to Harmon a™.' llcrnandcz. Asaro is also blessed by lho presence or b<lr:kup tai lba ck Jack Hayne"' and fullbacks Hocky \\'han ant: Joe 1Jen1etrakos. l\indred's favorite ball car· rying partners are halfback !\;lark J\1illcr and fullbaci: !lank Brtul'r. the latter rateti' as· a good blocker. lncenli\'e could be a majo~ factor should !be Sentinel con1e out oo top si nce Edisoi: romped, 39-14, in last year': contest. en route to the cut AAA chan1pionship. EOll°" Ll"•~JI Ollt"H Po1. P l~~tr SE M~r• We~tl>etOfe T Sl•ve Tlmm,rm1n G J!f! (ftrler C 5ttve ~oh~•h G Ari B!g,1ow T B~I! GrAVe> TE G~'Y 9,1,n OS MMlo. H1rmon TB Fttd He•n~ndtl F ~ 110.:~Y '1/1>8" FL Te">' O:l1>1>er 01re•s• w• '" " " ... u : 1i1 ". '" " .. w•. ,. 11~ •• 'I' l,J i~ l~ lt! What you can expect from a little American car priced $228 * less than Toyota Corolla 1600. You can expect an engine proven by 50 million miles in Ford-built European cars: A body that's welded solid and painted six times. Rack·and·p!nion steering like a sports car. Exceptionally good haodJing. In short, a car every bit as good and maybe ~tte't than the little foreign cars. As a matter of fact, we built Pinto to sell for about the same price as theseilittle foreign cars. And if we're """priced below them ($228• Jess than that Corolla, $335' less than WI 113, $300• Jess than Datsun 510), iJ's not because we've taken anything away from our car. It's because their price$ have gone up. See )'O\Jr Ford Dealer OON. l 912 ,.,1110 2·Door S•tl•n 1hown with opt1on1I .... h!t1 1lo1w1n 1111s £1.42) '"" 1cc1n1 l/'OllP: S7l:) • •A. tcmo1r1~011 of mtnYf•t hire1•' 11JUttl1d rtt•il 01tt•"-•JUI 1nphttbJ1 lml>Ol't lurch1•1•• for 11'11 flt•• 2·tlcor moot lt. Oe•I•• p1tPfflt•on th1r111 (If 1ny), &lilt t nd Ioct l t1111 '"Cl a11tu'ltt1on ch•r&•• ($105 tor P1P!lO) •tt 111r1. • " -•:. .,. ·, ·' . -. .... ·' •• ~·· -. ·~ ..... - l l • ~ : ' OAJLV PILOT ' Friday, No~tmbtr 12, 1~71 Start Yow· Engines! f>y-Deke Hou/gate ... .., .... ::Xl:::::>i:::iic:~"""'::z:>~"""°""'""":=2ICIZ t .Sir months ago Bill F'redcrlck was a butcher who owned tour meat markel3 and a packing house. uring a slrlke he sold pie business. With proceeds ht ls bulldtng a 1,000 mph ~ket car. ~ Jf that iOWlds a llttle hard to believe. read on. Frederick didn 't kno11.· anything about rockets a year ago, ~hen he visited Bonneville, Utah. and got a close look at the JJ:lue Flame "'hich Gary Gabelich drove lo a Land Speed Record of 622 mph. The car so fascinated him that Frederick stayed on the salt for 10 "·eeks. 1 When he returned home lo Chatsv•orth. Calif. Frederick Erted visiting the USC library nightly. He read ev.ery book on ketry he could find, and when he though! he had mastered e ~ubject he built a rocket motor. It worked. Blated, Frederick built a car around lhe motor. 3t is a scale model of the vehicle to be called Courage of AUS· •rali.a. which F'rederick hopes will bi! finished in time lo chal- 3enge Gabelich's reoord next Mart'h at Lake Eyre, Australia . , Nol sa tisfied that he had correctly .solved .the enormous de- liikn problems of building a rocla!f engine f.rom scratch, he be- gan scouting around for an expert to review his work. A friend Jlnd an old Bonneville hand. George Calloway, tells the stor}': ' . . . Non-loop Grid Tilt For Laguna 1 Vlke Star Shines Tars Nab L~op Dual Meet Title Lent Tries To Avert Letdown Laguna Beach High's Artists Coach. Don Lent and his and the Los Amigos Lobos col· Bob Phillips of Marina won ftlk~~~1J~iC:W1';'• 1511 staff have a major task on lide bl a non·league football the individual battle but 11 M1111t111 11, s.n c1e1111t~t• •t their hands Utis week In skJrmlsh a.t Laguna Beach Newport Harbor's Sailors won l~f1~:~?1i~>~,1,:;f;1{1!· clTi1;~,~ preparation for Sunset League hi the war and the Sun~t·~ague or•i•wrie/r\:,1 1b. J~:, Vs\~ 1s: football confrontation with ln-tonig I. dual meet championship in Corcor•n I >• •· w.wn•n tll. Kickoff Is scheduled for 8 cross country Thursday af· ••vu•v~r!i~AOUE vading Marina Saturday. o'clock and the invading Lobos ternoon with a 27·28 win over co111 M•u u. c..-,.1 M1r 41 And that's how to get his I. tom OliWllJ4 ICM\, 19:2•1 2. J. are favored by six points to the Vikings on the winner's 011w1"' 1CM1 1 ).' .1.11cL11" ccM>1 4. Newport Harbor High Sailors COtJ H&ClidlY f(M)J 'j, PrlfJt ((Mll It. handle the Artists. rse. Kn111P 1c1 1 '· Gallnltk ICMJ; 1. CHl•n: in the proper frame of mind '"'ch Bob J 0 h n 5 0 n, 5 Phillips finished in 9:49.2 lo c• c); t . s111t1m1n cCMI; 10. MtM!fY by game "me'. ~ 9 •t f J h H 1 b ( [C!1 11. t-Oldellbr~r.cl IC)• If. 0...11tr w :,, or o n o com o (C>i ll. A11111in1 1ci: u. Alford 1c1. Garden Grove Le ague Newport. Jn other Sunset ac· J11..ier v1r11tv Lent's Tars are coming off a representatives are favored tion, Huntington Beach tripped 1.'oiri!v~""s.!,~;,, c.,1~~'~-~~1n 2, ti,ighly emotional strilggle with •···use of the pre-""e ol all· Western, 2 3 • 3 2 and Cir'*'"' «CMH i. oe. ex.I ccii ., Westminster - a S.01oss that ........., ,,.....,.. Lfllct /CMI; J. OtUlll"'' !CM); '· round linebacker Mau Kalatl, West m inst er defeated e .. rv cc>1 '· G<nlt' (CMll •· A.11511n vi rt u a 11 y eliminates the Anaheim. 1~50. /(}/ ,, H1l""t ICMl1 19, Croollt• tCl ; quarterback Ken Sdlroot, split HS ct1:os5 couHrJtv 11. M••• CCMI: u. H•••" IC>; 13· Sailors from title and CIF Mllltr 1CJI U. GoldSfl'\1111 tCJ. end Jim Uncilln and running ORANGE Ll!AGUl! ,.,.,,11.~ playoff Contention. (Olll Mn1 11. C•-''' Mir JI back Ken Rouse. v1n1" 1. v1re11-ccM1. 1t:l51 1. L•v ccM1i Third plact Newport trails I cd f El Ow11to u. U"lvtr'll"f oM l. ~'"'111 ICM\; '· C•••ne!;Jli (CM\; West . t b t gam Ka a\i is consider one o 5. smlrh !Ch •· Hu11tt1e ccJ: 1. HuHlt mms er Y wo es 1. Woad rEl. 1o:u 1 2. Soro 1E11 J. CCMI; 1. Guile~ rc11 •. Ron !Cl1 lD. W>'th two week• left of th the best linebackers in Orange UllOl>ll~ cei; '· MeM <El: 1. Rou It(-cc1111. -·~"''' <c11 11.-Le•1&e IU)! 6, Jat\ou fE)I I. St1dlord (Ul: I. ICMl. W Cot.tnty. He was an all-county 1ronri1.w IEJ; •· L1cy ru1; 10. M1r11n season and este.rn holds a !El. 0Jhert: 11. Mond.c:1 CU); ll. V••tltv choice as a junior and is also llqlon ll.l)j.,,..11r V1nl!Y I. ~:':eM~h~:;m~': C~ll~";'.t:,•, r Eric. one·gam' ii.dvantage. adept at offensive blocking Forieu '0 E~r~C'lt.n OliOOi <E>i l. Ow•y111 w1nmlr• 1e1; '· Too. Marin a' s deceptive f h, ! kl .1. El Oar•dO u, Unlvtnltr, 41 Rlttd"f Jlolfln1 C£b 5. Wiii W11tmlrt l th ii rom IS ac e pos1 ion. 1. or1eli! IEJ 11 ,311 2. eeutvn rei 1 .J rEf; '· 11rown CL!: 1 JIQ<~ fLf; 1. crew en ers as e ce ar ' . FV Seeks Soccermen • ' Fountain Valley High soccer 1 coac:h Bob Rathman is cur- rently scanning the Baron campus these days in search or athletea with runnlng ability and coordination. Rathman, a rormer fullback for Northern Illinois University's soccer team, will lead the -~arons in their initiaJ CIF comPetition this year. The Barons have three scrimma ges set up before non- league combat with Webb at Pasadena Dec. 7, Currently a handful of can- didates stand out at Fountain Valley. "We'll be trying to build around freshmen and sophomores this year and lln hopeful we'll get a half doztn or so freshman football players after· their season.I' says Rathtnan. 1 Tops at the moment are sophomores Richard Gonza1~, Mark Wennekamp and Ken force along with freshmen Bob Aco~a and Scott Young, junior Hatry Yovng and senior Eddie Ruil. The Young bothers are from Scotland and have had playing experience in soccer as have the other top candidates. Three aspirants for goalie are seniors Greg Giron and Mark Lawless along with Bruce Mooring. WANT TO SELL YOUR HOME? •dverti1e to get you qu•lified buyer1. our action oriented sales 1taff NOW I HOPE GERRIE REALTY phone 645-4400 "If you want to know something about rockets, where do you go? The best place is North American Rocketdyne, right in •his backyard. The problem was that Frederick was using hydro- gen peroxide for fuel, and to ask one of these scientists about hydrogen peroxide is like talking to an Indianapolis racing mechanic about a f\.1odel T. They stopped -using that stuff so ~ong ago most of the engineers today don't know anything about Ho" '') • ' _,,, ,,,., ... ,,,, <•-"''' <'>• I. 011e SIMOP fE)J 10. I S I Lincoln was a second team ~me~o,1v~~ ·1ur:·011>er1:' t." HO'rton 11.1;:'"R11C1d ... CEI. dwel er in the unset oop. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;, All·Garden Grove Le a gue · Alluner 1011 11• s.coi• !U!; 11• Ju"1°" V•rtltv "It's kind of tough to come.I, u~itESTVIEW LEAGUE l!lll"CI• 20, L•• Al1m1 ... ,, selection last year and he 's v1,..11, 1. aeioer !LI, 10:1l1 2. Gu1tl•rrtr back. The kids are down 8 be th . ' d f lulen Vlelo 10 Ftoth1N 41 IE); l. Sm1llwood (Eli J. Connor CEf; en on e receiving en o 1. Liorr Gerich <Fi. •:Jt \Courw s. M1111>1n CEii •· Jtom1n '£1; 1. Heu bit," says Lent, "we put lt. . One Nnme Kepi Ca111in9 llp "The nnes "·hn slill rtmember hydrogen pernxlde are so Jligb up in mana gement lhal you can'L e.Yen-get to tbem. But Frtderick kept asking around. One name kepi coming up." 1Tbe name belongs tn a high co mpany official who is in tharte of f\'orth America n Roc k\!o·elrs space shuttle design. I "Finally Frederick got lo talk to him , but the man was very f'.001 and discouraging. Sn one night Frederick went to his house and Convinced lhe man he should come out and look at the car. ··tte camt ovtr, expecling to see some ·57 Olds with a bucket tied lo it and water pipe lor a roll bar, but instead he saw thi s Jncredible machin e. Since then he bas called Frederick at least 1-----f'.,._a..day-and-ofler-ed-a-lo&-QJ....bdp.-He!M'.eally-turned-&nMtl· ~II art." • The prolotype rockel car is 27 .5 feet lon g, compared with the f4 feet "Courage of Australia" will stretch. Its first test runs, with Australian geologist Vic Wiison at the wheel , were on a litreet back of Frederick's shop often used by street racers. With kide streets barricaded, \\'ilson bas hit 200 mph Inside of four ~ity blocks. new adidtt shipment most of SchroUt'S aerials thiS rt(On;:J); 1. Ed R..:lerm1cher IM 't:52: (LI. 01 .... rl: 10. llltnll !EJ1 11. 3. Mtrl{ Hower (M); '· Mir-C-l•no • ' <•> yth' h d I t th Year. \M): s. Chuck Oldaen• /M)1 • .. ~Mlk• .. iwr UM • ever Lng we a no e ~ 1>ome1 !M); I. lOCld 1 11 I . ....,rdOn Vl'li!Y The No. 1 runner for the R09t" (Ml: t. JOI Buono (M!1 ro. 51nt1 An• v1111, u, '""n111n v1111y •s \Vestminster game but it's , ·•·· R Millie CFI I. G1r\ol1 CS ), 10:11 ; 1. G. Aoull•• ~ is tailback o use. 'J11ni.... v1r1rtv ISi ; 1. T. "ou111r CS)i '· Blelltev 1511 just one of those things our R h . cd 718 d . Mlnlln Vltll n, FMllllU 41 s. Sil•-•" /Fii '· "dem! (51: '· Jt•1d ouse as gam yar s 1n 1, tte11 How•• ~Ml. 1a:1s; l . Ed ki.ds are go•·ng to have to d M'' " 'M' ' •• '-•••• <•>·, "'· o'"''" lo. Jen11lno• "'' ll. Seven games On .the !and an ert ' ; . ·• • · Mee-le O'OoNltll fMJ; S, Stm VlflC• Moorl (F)i 11. H•outn !Fl. d h • th ('fth lead' -·-1. · !Ml: '· Jae°"' IF); 1. F1rr11 ll'J. Junl•• v1r111Y understan . e. S e I 1ng 1w1uer in 011>et1: •· w11111 Ml• 19. L•tro !Ml, s.t. vilt•Y lO, """'""l• v.11,, lt the county. F-..n.s••h 1. L•v•~uot> 151. 1o:)(I ; 1. Gural!~ "Frankly, we feel r-.1arina Coach-Hal-Akins' Artists 1_ J=r~1::.,:\:i:•J~~1.1'v!',mell• k51:,1·1 ~1,'/":.";0\~ ~s1~•;.'~1,c1~1 ~5t will be after us. They spoiled! will be trying to upset this. ~~ •• ~iJi.'~'8.~~)i'Mt r·u ... r,;1; •• }; Oll>tr1~ I. M1r11 (F); 10. lttl• (F/; 13. Santa Ana·s homecoming and combination with t heir o"''""' 11 FM • !Ml; n v1n Horn Ltt IFJ. V•r~u, ( I !M>1 u. a11h rM1. they may well do the same ami iar straight I-formation v1n1tf l!diMI~ 11, M1tllfll1 ,. El Moden• U, Sift Cl•mtnlt ., . I. Mike •1varel !El. t :JI !(oor1t thing With US." \!o'ith a change here and there 1. Mcttelvev <El. 10,u: 1. "c•u•o •ttoro\: 1. CHnnl• w;1M>n iE\: J. C•n· . rE1: J. B~'"' !El:•· Tim sm11n cs1: , ''' , M, Le l -pa es Mar•·na w>'lh in personnel. 5 Pl-e !E!; 6• Le11n•rd <El; 1. N1•h "~ Ml: •. Vire•• : . tM!ne n co,., r . • " ,,,, '' , •• e, IM); '· A,41,,,. fM): 1. LYc•1 IMl1 I. Spearheading the Artisls is \~l;ir~~r,.0..(~7:'12.i1nnOttl !Sl. J11mire1 <Ml••. J1nnln;1 tEl: 10. hisown teamin regardstothe l b k G F. ti Junllr v1r1lty SOder~rg CE ), rt b k ·t t' quar er ac ary 1se e, a El Mod .... 11, s.n cteme11•• so Junior V•ttllY qua er ac SI ua ion. two-yea ta rte , He~-eom'~· --, '"',.~fir,16<f''T.rf~~E~~: ---•111•011-1 . Miltni:innr-.--!.-,,,,T"h"e"y~h"a-v"e-,a~so=p'fi"o=mco~re Pletcd.23 of 67 attempts for '06 Btc1<e-nh1ver (El. 0111e.,, 1. H1,11;e11 1. 5ch1ll• CMJ, 10:4'1 1. McQucwn I th " IE>. 1o:J1 ; 3. M1Jhlm1 Ml: •· Weston (Greg Foster) going or em yards and two touchdowns. ce11 .s. Llnllercth /Elf'· e1111• (El;'· but he has good size and they And the Artists have had R•m lrei {Ml. or~er1: '· H1hn (EJ. Sk • v • su H1ET Ll!AOUE have a pair of fi ne receivers in good yardage from skip l ista V•riHy Mike Lacy and Rod Brown." WI h. W' h' h Htw111rl J1, M1rln1 11 ns 1p. ins 1p as ac· 1. P1111u11s !MJ, ,,,,,1, 2. 1-1a1c.,.,.,b The Newport mentor is counted for 297 yards in 66 !NI. ,,s1: J. c11r• <N>: '· M•rlln (Ml: undecided as to whom will · ( 5 5. Crou INI; 6, Bl~me !M l; 1 Oa!s•m carries or a 4. average. Is Drab r"li; 1. "°'"• <Mt; '· Reed tMi .. 10. start al quarterback. Either But fumbles and mental R>Xlv f"I J: 11. PoThou <Nl; u. Cline-· · K · R ser ~ easy-eare 1etiva-weoi1r if b1n•1m1ritfrd e m11t•r c.h1r9• 7 l11h io" i1l1n~, ntwporl c1nl1t 644-5070 t A few nights ago he tested It on the quarter·mile drag 5trlp at l<'ontana and ii ran 264.09 mph in 4.8 seconds. : "CGura.e;e of Australia Is a real all-A merican hnt rod project. In the tradition of somelhin.e; by Mickey Thompson or Cra i.e; ~reedlove. It's a shame it ha s In be run in Australia, but the 1tu1sies were the only ones offering to help wilb expenses for ucb an ambitious und trtaki ng. m'.stakes have •eilroycd lhe r"l1; u. c1ar1 !Ml; u. Mec1n1~" 1un1or ev1n ee or a 4M). sophomore Steve Dukich will Artists on the whole. N,..,-::;;:0;5~:,:::~11~, ,., get the nod. At any rate, both !:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And Akins say!-hls tum·~ -Po11r-weather conditions has 1. Htrdbrfnk /Nl. 10:•'; i. 1,u..,1n ~·ill see plenty of action. chances "for victory hinge on caused all of the Southland's ~M~1;;,~;:b~~~,1~_1 's~:.~'7~1'.N~.. Other than the quarterback those two items -fumbles ski resorts to close down tern· M.,.,ne..i !Ml: 1. Neil•"" !M!; •· tossup created by the absence ;I _____ _ d 1 ·1 Co11,n1 4Nl1 10. Munlo1 M!; II l'rlc.n Good Thr• Wed., N••· 17 Greatest Speecl Drntt1n i•• History , News that a land speed record vehicle will once again flash f.ross the treacherous salt bed at Lake Eyre. as Aussie Vic ilson plans to do in the Courage of Australia rocket car early 11,ext year, recalls the story of the greatest speed drama in 11istory. :· Donald Campbell was determined to conquer the feat that :Consumed him as he tried again and again to work his s!rcam- ~incr. Blue Bird. up to 400 mph on lhe dry Jake 400 miles north :(if Adelaide. ~ He had already crashed al more than 300 miles an hou r at ~nnevil\e and was SQ spooked by the possibility of ::inother crash that he searched the world for a better site and decided 'to go for the record on Australia's g~logical oddity. t Ironically, according to Aborigine legend. the lake is cursed ~Y evil spirits. Their legend of the lake tells of a son who mur- [ ered his mother and father. \\lherevcr their blood ~flo\ved, red Jowers grew, and in their eternal remorse. they shed salty ears that flooded the Eyre plain. \Vhatever creature ventured there. the legend goes, was wallowed up and never seen ai,::ain. That nearly happened to Campbell. figuratively and litcr-~lly. He was feted throughout the country like a national hero ~t first. but when his project bogged down he was ridiculed as \ national disgrace. . ~ S11persl.llion l'lngued Cnmpbell t In April, 1963, he sat and started at the salt by day and lirooded by nlgbl. His routine was puncluatcd by lrips to Ade· )aide for night clubbing with his pretty wife Tonia. Crewmen, tovernment officials \\'ho \\'ere assigned to help him , manufac. urer's representatives and ne\!o'Smen gre\\' restless and cynlca l. , He finally drove the car I barely O\'er 200 mph I the last few '8ay~ nl the month, but then the rains tamt. As Campbell stood in the middle of a downpour, watching rainwattr inch its way 0Dp the tires of Blue Bird . a policeman approached him. ~ "If J "'ere you. Mr. Ca mpMll," he said. "f°d get that car nf )·our~ off the lake." · There \\'BS no time to load JI on lhe transporter. Sn Camp-)>en climbed In tbe cockpit and drove it tlP tht cause\\'3Y nut. al llanft"er. : The next year he went back to Lake Eyre. practically "·ilh. iut !ponsors, al mosl fri endles s and still so superstitiou~ he re· lused to drive tbe car nn Frida)" . fHls father, Sir l\1alcolm Campbell. had gone to &lee p nn Friday, Dtt. 31. 19.\3, and ne\•tr a\!o·akened. I an menta errors. porar1 y. Jc•a•n !NI; n. Hoorlq•n tNJ: n. of ailing senior Duane DeKalb, "We can stay with Los Snow Summit was the only "\ner10101 cH>: 1'. Rico !M!. the Newport personnel picture A . . t. I St Fre>ll·Soph m1gos if we stop fumbling." resort in opera ion a M•rln• 1J, 1o1 _ _., o remains stable. says Akins. weekend and it shut down this 1. $tool•• tMI , ll :ot: 1· wnne IM l; J. Lent expects to have a new "''XI~ lMI; '· Wllllam1 (M); 5, Several changes are in order week. 111ne111r1 \Ml/ '· Mln1er !Hl; '· item or two ready for Marina. for Akins' thin c re w. Ricc1 Chair lifts are operaling at 1euP1e•m1" INl: 1· Cnivel CMI; '· "We gave the ball to the first . lt!nt ("!): la. McCu..e ("!); II. JfftiP" Prock takes over for Pat lioliday Hill !or sight seeing !M i: 11 weu1 !Ml: 1J. c.1 .. i.,, !Ml: man (Dan Seals) through on Fl h. If · d Sat d d Sunday 14. ,.u'tn CMJ. a ive at o ens1ve an on ur ay an · virtill' the .inside stuff a g a in st defensive guard with the latter Skiiers are invited to take the 1>1u11Unt101t n, w•1terft n Westminster and it broke for I ( h k h r 'l't" 1. llot> Angel (H ), t:Sl; 1. Mltchfll ost or t e season ( nee ride to see t e new aci 1 ies (H); J. Boehme rwi; •. Empflekl Oil; several good gainers. Ugaments). and improvements !or the s. FelrchHd cw1: •. Ko11e1 cw\: '· "Perha"s we'\! pass a bit McN1lr i1-111 r. H1rrelt {Wl1 f , t' Pete Cottam is again sla· com ing eason. wneele• !HI; 10. ov•• cwi . 011>er1 : 11. more against Marina ." he tioned at counterback, a posi-At f\.1ammoth there is snO\\'. t h.,.,.,P•on !1-1): u. Fron~ !Hl. add!. Junior V1r1!1Y lion vilal lo the blocking pat· but it's not skiable. Hunt1n11an 2•. w1:t•rn l1 terns of the Laguna offense. A storm front was expected 1 w;i,on lHl. 1o:s1 1 t. L1ovd.CH l: l. Lakowsl<I (Wlr '· Mtt!I IH)'1 S OYC Defensive switches include to move in .today from Oregon. cw1; ~-Buri~"· cw11 7-OiL•ure~zio A J f He) ~1 ark Diercks moving to mid-but it's been held up. But it's ~~~·~:i.%~~.:l.(Hl; ,, ""fuc-u lHJ; IO. J_>pea or p dlclinebacker and Bob Gill expected in the next couple of l'"ra111.se11h t t. For1rn 10 1-1un11"""" Bt•c~. The reorganized 0 r a n g e taking Diercks' spot at tackle. days, reports a represen a 1ve v.111ry from Trans·Sierra Airlines ln W•11mlft111r u. 1.n•h•lm " County Youth Soccer Associa· L11~n1 l11ch Llntw•1 Ofllftll "''· "''''' ... " Ml'r Moormln I!' ' llnb Giii '" G ltltcl Prock "' ' llOY Still "' G M1rk O•ttekl "' ' Glrf' A~•fM '" " Tom Wftllt "' o• G1rv F lsfl!~ '" " l1rn' P1nn1!1 ·~ " Skl11 Win VI IP "" " Pflt (O!l1m ,,, Dtl•nn ' lom WMtt "' ' lob G!n '" G '" St1t1 '" G Ricci Prock '" ' G1rv .t.nc11t1nri '" ' 8111 81•11 ... "" MM~ Oltrckl '" " !>\II ll:obtrt..,n "' " (IAV10ft 8t"Yhlll "' ' Mlt• M"'°""lft '" ' ~~Ip w1n1~111 '" l\1 esa Boxing Telecast J(O'cl i . tom sn1r1ev 1w1, 1e:11: 1. Jt!f lion is in the market for boys Los Angeles. ..,.ll<Jn• 1w11 l. oa1e OY1n 1• 1w1 1 ~. between the ages of nine and Trans-Sierra operates three J!"' Pon cw i: 5. Mer~ Peters <Wl; '· Hu"" Mein-. (WJ; 1. Joi." "1v1•e1 19 and is also looking for peo-Oights daily to Mammoth. 1wi. I I · t h Meanwhile. there's a new in-Junior V•'"'" p e vo unteer1ng o coac W••lllll"•ltr 15, '"1Ml111 It tbem. novation for skiers in Reno. 1· aott 01111 rw), 10'50' l. ..,.,.,., Further •'nformat•·on may be · "1t R S!acY IWI; l. Sot> Mendez• (W); .._ For the first time 1• · ose "'''-Jone• 1w1, 5. Mt1ch 0~1 rwi: •· oblained by contacting Ben and Slide titountain ski areas, cn1r1t1 cunitkv tWh J. O•" s1d!u Temmens at 637_1065. lying back to back with only a 1_,._,~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~II mountain peak t!Etween them . are offering skiers a combined package. For the price of skiing either ~·lt . Rose or Slide. which are only 20 miles from Reno. skiers can buy a single low ticket and ride the nine lifts of both areas. And there is ample powder SllO\I'. * HALLI DAY'S * ri.tt. Rose and Slide offer dry powder and corn snow from the lodl?e tn lhe 9.7()(}.foot sum· mit at the top of the lifts. A propooed cl06ed circuit Skier.; ha v e a choice of telecast of the Nov. 17 three lifts rising 1.900 feel In he a \'}'Weight championship lhe 9.700 foot peak where they bout bcl\vcen Muhammad Ali will find many va ried runs - and Joe Fraz~r; scheduled for .:::ome "'ide open and some ' !he Orange County through trees. At1otl1~r Co11rse Und lfJ He B1ailf FairJtrounds in Costa Mesa . For more information eon· has been cancelled U\is week tact the Reno Chamber n! • On •h1ay I. 1964, \\'hen the lriacl runsbewl~~e to be1g•1·n1, ii rainedd. by the promoters due to la ck Commerce. P.O. Box 2109. }\'hen I e sun came out aga in amp s care u Y prepare of interest. Re 39505 '1>Urse was submerged. He had to have another course built. )iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiino. · I ' When he ran over this new track on r-.1ay She left a set o{ 4-I lnchruts four miles Jong. His 18-mile run was useless. ! Next bis crew built him a l~mi!e run. which unfortunately crossed the ruUed COUW'e at precisely the point where he would !>e traveling fastest. • LEASE or BUY ••• 1972 MONTEGO Tl\• ........ PfOOl'lll t!1• (tr Wllll -b!tpir rift. Find OV1 •II !IHI ..iv&.illQ6 DI lte•lno r~r....,11 11 •~<!Of'Y ll•KI GMltf" c•ll -IMlt-.'!la-r .... Mr. lud lowen .... St.i. ohnson&son 1~==1 As.lo,1bilul 'llcCllllodi's NEW loll price chain. MASTER SERVICE-OEAl:ERS GAIOIN CilO'fl SANTA ANA HASTT SALIJ & SllVICI CUii< DYi HAlDWAll 10371 G'9rtl" Griff ll•d. 210 S, M•l11 537.5700 547.1,JJ HUNTIHClTQN llACH RON 'S MINl·CTCLI CITY 17\16 '""" • .,,, 142 •. 2111 S .. NTA ANA L. W. llMIS TR. l IMl"L. CO, I 62f I. 111,,,1 St. $47·0171 SANTA 4JriA t!NOJ INDUSTRIAL SUl'l'LY 1020 S, Gto11d A••· ORANG I 147·0171 l(LllN'S RENTAL A GDN . CTR . 11• N. on .. 6))0 6111 THE CLASSIC SLIP .ON :ra.vlor or J.101ne makes this cobble stitchtd moc ln t11·0 grf'at colors. Black and chl'slnut bro1.1•n, $21 . 1111. I IRVINE ..t..Vf -WESTCLIFF PLAZA N~WPORT IE.A.CH PH. 645·07tl Houn: !O . ._.Mo11. I T~un. 10.t '• FANTASTIC SKI PACKAGE Regularly Sells For $81 .89 • os.200 l'LASTIWRAI' 51(1 M11lll·la111l11irtlo11 of Sc-J~tecf l11ro,.ct11 Ash Mod• 111 A1o11trla e ALUMINUM !'OLES e MARKER STANDARD TOE e MARKER TILIMAT HEEL -BINDING SPECTACULAR MARKER TOI l'IECE Reo. S\4,95 TllLMAT HIEL PIECE R ... 519.95 HOW THUNDER STEl"-IN llNDINGS INSTALLATION 56.00 EXTRA Reo. Sl f.99 NOW BOOT SPECTACULAR 5 IUCJ(LI LEATHER SIU IOOTS WAS S45.00 S IUCICLE LIATHElt SKI IOOTS WAS SJS .00 YOUTH IUCICLI SIU IOOT I•'!· SJJ.00 MIN S0IUCICLI SYNT~IC Siii IOOT WAS 545.00 HOW • NOW NOW NOW $25.88 ... $9.99 ••• $24.88 $19.88 $18.88 ' $23.99 YOUTH l IUCKLI llUllll Ski IOOT WAS SI0.99 Now' $7.99 $14.88 $9.99 MIN'S AND WOMEN 'S HIGH AFTER Ski IOOTS R•a. Sit.II MJ"'S. AfTIR SKI IOOTS Re<!. SIS.99 MIN'S PARKAS FASHION NOW NOW ha. SJS .00 NOW WOMIN'S l'ARKA's RIH!. SJl,00 NOW MIN°WOMIN conoN TURTL[Nl!Cl(S WAS SS.SO NOW ALUMINUM SIU !'OLIS WAS Sf.ft NOW TRUNK DICK SIU RA.Cit w/LOClt WAS 129.tt WAS $19.88 $19.88 $3.00 $5.99 $19.99 COMPLETE RENTAL PROGRAM lnclud•s Adult ind Junior Sizes SKIS, BOOTS. POLES ... .'.~~'.,,. s1 O , 10% DISCOUNT TO SKICLUB MEMBERS! Full Rent1I may be applied to Ski Purch•s• m1dt within 15 day•ll South Coast Plan 3333 Bristol Strctt Cosla Mesa 510-33.13 Just 5a)' Ch1r1• II At Star• • . ·' m i n 11 ·1· .. leh en g, or m g " ie d lh Friday, November 12, ltJ7l DAJL Y PILOf J 9 WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? By JIM NIEMU!:C Eagles Can Still Grab ' Loop Title ' I Off the. Greens Turkey Shoots . At Area Courses -O;C.C. JAZZ ENSEMBLE Here Sat., Nov. 13 • 10 to Noon See t,41ss Smile, former Miu U.S.A. South Coast ?Iaza Ducks 'A'ho are currently .:..vacationing In Southern -California on their migration to sunny Mexico will recei''- an added rest come sundown an e~cellent batch o I rtngnec ks this past 1Wason and hunter success sbou1d· run \'ery high. Most of the scat· tt.riunners l''ill be mixing .. a waterfowl and pheasint bu nt this ll'eekend . The last time Los Alamitoa High quarterback Jlm Hamilton faced the Estancia Better than 50 percent of the Country Club of Huntington Or:.nge Coast area golf course Beach. ~agles he had & bad night in · and country club members The v.·omen's r.fub staged : the 1970 season ancl, as a con· will be taking birds home low net tournament recent! · . Sunday. The first half of the Southland waterfowl season closes Sunday evening and second half, will not open until No\·. 21. \ sequerice, tbe Eagles stormed before Thanksglvin;? as con-\\•Ith Jane DuRee the A Oi~I· to a 21-a triumph. rentratlon is on the annual victor v.1ilh a 69. Hamilton has been hot as of turkey shoot competition at Doris O'Neil won 8 con-mo.~t courses. petilon with 72 while Pi Hunting some 60 miles late. though since recovering south of the Arctic Circle, Neal from early season back pains Included in the list of Henlphill was the C flight win lfe co1·d Bison Duck hunting is listed as on- ly f3ir at most shooting areas as a. large number o f waterfowl have moved out. Jim Olson, local duck club manager, _Jeported that al least 50 percent of the ducks have left the ponds and they ha ve not as yet been re:placed by new flights of northern birds. Davison of Balboa was .and his next target is the courses offering birds for ner v.•it h 69. golf.rs On a bas'. f belt Golfer or the 1nonth fol fortunate enougl'J to shoot a i;ame Estancia e!eve.n thls Sat. s o er record book bison . The season turday night at Ylestern High than 50 percent are Fountain October was Ro~ e m a r ~ on range bison had been c\os-in Anaheim. Valley ~1He Square. Mission Erickson who carded a 68. ed for 10 years and \\'as not Los Al is 3-2 and tied for Viejo, Big Canyon and ln•ine Ra11cl10 SJ opened until this season. first place \l'ilh four nther CoRst. In a better nine tournament D . h 1. l f teams in the Irvine League At Irvine Coast Country al "ancho San Joaqw·n, Fern av1son 1vas un 1ng ou o · · Cl b bo ~ k ·i1 b " the Forst Smith area in the standings \Yhile E.-;tr.~c1a is u , a ut :rO tur eys WL e Sproul v.·on the A flight with a Northy.·est, le r r i lo r y of h f E I h d h · · be ' " · -•. julit a notch back at 2-J. offered lo a field of 140 soo•e ol .•a. ~- C d E h I . lh T ere ore. age ea coac partic1panfs on a partner t-T•udy Bone ... ,, lhe 8 ni·ghl ana a. very un er 1n e II f h t b ti b · N · h ' " P . 1 It . , . Phil Brbwn sti osiers opes er a alitS on ov. 17 v.•1t a ,,,·cin• Wt.lb 401,_ ... ,.1, Flo' •ence J rior o le mass migration, Bison Big Game Outfitters f 1 ·i " • BOB HEUSSER AND HIS ALL STAR TEAM AT SUNSET FO~D 'PRESENT Plson sa_id that \here ivere lots camp run by f'r;inkie Lailet-th;it his squad can sneak in or shotgun start Rt 11 :45. \\lillcts <1nd Jean O'Skea tr~1. ff big fat sprig on the ponds. tei. bagged their bison. a pie~e of th~ Irvine ti_tle, J\1ile Square v.•ill have 68 ing for second al 39\"?. FOOTBALL FORE c A ST The Salton Sea has beer1 \\hlch 11 Jost by Jll.5l tv.·o points tu~kP;ys f?r . 118 ~ol.fers \rith The C flight winner was Be\' D:iviwn's trophy 1veighcd last fall. . . . ,..,._" MlSSlon-V1e104.and B1"1 Qinyon~eorn"•elt-t::l:t\1-r--witti-Dee-'I-~==~~===~==~===~~~~~~~-~ ood {or private club shooters, more than 2.000 pounds and B_r~wn _note~: with. o'pt1mistic promising a large percentage Poindexter second ·.,..,.ith ,a 40. HIGHLIGHTS FOR NOVEMBER 13th by OB~EUS'SE .but scaltergunners on the measured 7'h feet high at the anltc1pat1on .. Hamilton he'd a of v.•lnners a bird. Jo the D flight competition. _public shooting areas have had shoulders. The trophy will pro-bad night aga1nsl us last }tar ~1 l SI . kl d lh Tll.re'• Iv•' 110 do11bt obout It. The twin Tlto11 1 of the l i9 £1'"' Conferen,e, top 0ronkod Jri!ebreslt• to settle for less than a t~·o bab!y place number JO in the and ""e're hoping he doesn't !flesti l'e1•de -.ax ne . nc an was e 011d 2nd·ronked OJ!lellomo win be wndtf•oted for 1he1' Tltonk19lwl119 Doy ,1osh. A11d tt.11 could be, l bird per gun average. Boone and Crockett record have 8 good night this time win~er with 34 ~ollov.•ed by oH of the ,,ellt colltte 'o''"' of on time. Dol119 o Utt!• oo,ly cry\tol-9orln9, Nebrcnko would b4; , The outlook for this weekend hooks with its 17J 4 inch cure! either." Mesa Verde Country Club Gloria Talmage with 36. o S·poh•t fovorlt• t•doy. tut thot CD!I cllo119•. Thi1 Soturdiry I~ fi11ol worm-up doy for beth N111M.' · f Co I •1 _, · h The group also staged ll low The Cor11h111ken wlll cuf the toll1 011d whi1~,,.. from lh• Wlldc'll1 of IC011101 Stlft•, Wl1111!"9 lty""li' does not seem to indicate any and 28 1·nch spread. Da,1·son E'en if the Griffin flinger o s a "esa stag= its lit . , ' · k net e da du ng the past pol11h. Tiie Soo11ert. w!U chew up th• Joyllowk t of ll.0111e11 by JS. · better shooting . The possibility also bagg-' a moose and a does have a subir,r effort, annua two Jae s and a jill ac . Y .r1 • • = h k \Veek with Maxine Str1ckland Loohl119 111 th• u11t,ro1111tlln9 b11l119 don• In th.e SDu1 hwo11 Confertncr, 'th·ro11k1d TDrllfi 11 110W Of a weather fronl moving in cart.bu on hi·s way home Brown claims his agles will tournament over I e wee end. . . . th th 74 odd1°on fnorlN to will the che1111plon1hlp •nd ho!I the Cotto11 Bowl. Tied ~th T.C.U. for tho LMt11• is slim according to the thrcugh British Columbia. still have to stay with their A team composed of Dirk e ace winner WI a · 1 .. d. tll• Lo119horn1 wUI be oble to redu'' rht number of /1<:1d•r• to /u1t o1' Th• H0111M Fret• oN forecast. Unless v.•e ,Q:et some regular defensive game plan. Liildley. John'Petit and Bar~ Fern. Sproul .won h~ seconrt l 1f point wnd••doq1. • wind the fog will really han-S1t·o1•1lfish l~tt11tled "\Ve can't merely go from ara l\lurtaugh v.:on the event event in A, flight. with a 75 1 O• th• w"' Coost, ltth·ranktd Southeri• CC.I meet1 Wodll11gto11, :! 12. Tllo Troj11111 •t•rtff • dicap the · hunters in most our basic deftnsive ali11:nment \vith a sccire of 120 for the two followed b~ Mat Ion Keeler 11ew 1eo1011 three wffln 090 with their big win oY•r Notre Dome, 011d they Just 111lght co11rl1111e "°" areas except the deserts. Ted Naftzger boated his 12th to a g 0 ;i ! line 'defense ju.c;t diiys. (81 ), 1011 1:'2 with o bllJ yJ,tory oyer the Hu1•1D1. So11ther11 Ce1I 11 fo•o rod by ~ 1111,..10 poh1t. broadbil! of the season late · ff•• h · d •· I There are a few geese being because their passing is o , A I ree-team lie resulted ill U11defoottd N11mber Sir me•t1 undofeott Number -Hwo11 In foa1boll'1 (e11ttr r 119! l11f1rprtotlo111 bagged but the niain flights la st \\'eek. Even though it w;is Hroy.•n admits. "Th;it'i; simp!,v 122 for ~cco11d place. On one GD0,910 ho1ri Aubur11 111 Athens. Th• Southeosf Co11fer«n'• 'homplo11t~lp co uld wel l be decided llY. ' small fish Naft,gcr has art-h lh h 't d d d B d C El Dot•ado '''outcome of thl1 911me dtp•11dh19 on o ftw "lh." U Gor9io win• 011d Auburn beats Alobomo 011 ha\'(' not mo1·cd out of the · ' · · ' ' rca use ey ;iven rnppe squa Y.'ere . ll ossnar, docl another score lo his in ff ti · I l · I n · h d h Noy0111ber 27111, tll• lullda91 would wl11 the tltlo. If Auburn wi111 011d 0110 b1or1 th• Tide, "'• Pacific Northv.•est. Most of the · -0 :it ;i 111111 tie runntng 0 n lC ar Murtaug and Gerry Tt91,1 would wl11 1he conferen'' ''awn. If Auburn wl111 011d then lostt fo Ale1boma, Atoh111110 wn.r : gee'' are Soo •• ,5 ,,.,.1h. a lew rlividual ca1ch record. Peg-h1 ike Sch1verdtfeg' er. Goehle. A second t.eam y.•;is -J (" h k h B Ibo bo th• choinplo11. Geor9io'1 moil l111prrulvo wins hoYe bte11 over Ml11i11lppi ond South Corotlno whl/11 1. ~pees also hcing shot. Fred gy tic t'0C at t e a a "So. lhev have an outstan-compcised or Paul Zang,Q:rr, lnqm A11b11r11 ,1ob"rod Georqlo Tiell 011d beet Te1111e1w-e. So -witll 1011911, In chffk -G•ar9lo wlll Borders of Huntington Beach Angling. Club also rcJlOr'.ed ding lhro\fer, good receivers Don Gough and Ruth .Cohen. · ess.e 11lp Auburn by •••ell pol11h. $, -oaggea a tliCeC a n a Cl ian--th;il-(,corg :nn41-!1sh1ns-t1nd--tttt-flut.5tt1nding unne o-~:i1 lhir ound-P~!t"'u-1-..,__,f.-trrf!ifal~fll"11-.~et.-r.....,..cetl11q-A11bunnw.--w"ekrtrcr11rS"trtiffd•r,-po,l!llrAto1rom~4-ttrl...--wnlrrf -----ll honker last \\'eek .,.., hi 1 e aboard the boat Adequate out give them good balance." Rob inson, Jim Reed and Belly D11t•rtol111 rli• Miami H11rrl''""· Th• Ctl1111a11 lid• wlll re1ck up wi11 "'10, m1111lfl9 Mp Mlo111I by Jf, · • shooting al the Coto de Caz.a of.Newport caught a 189-pound By the same token. Brown Stephens competing together. u • B pol11ts. huntin" club . bil!fish some !hree. miles says, "it's obvious that we In fifth place all alone at 111 fi} OSS 111 e f•w ofher 011e·dded co11t•1t1, J,d.roted Ml,hl,011 w!ll b~111 PMrdM• by JO point~. ''"" Stoto "' south\1•est of the 14 mile bank hope to be able lo lhrow r s , wlU whip North Caroh1a Stott by 44. Not•a Pome, ::'8, will ,11p Tul11111 by 24, 1111d Stonferd, rot .. Borders said that "n geese -. was a team composed of Tom .)\} on a fiver gh t k th d f ad 10fh, will by.po• Son Jot• St~• by 21 polnh. winged their v•ay onto the · · enou 0 e~p etr e ense Miller, Bob \\'igmore and club's ponds. Sippers rerorl thal thick honest and give us room for Helen Moller. University High Sc hool won : Deer Se11so11 E11ds This '1'111 be the l a s t "7weekend for nimrod!i to hag "their buck In So uth e rn Cal ifornia this 11eason. ~1ost of th e open land in Los Angeles, Ora n ge .R i v erside. San Bern11rdi no and San Dit'go counties should be good for a closing season's hunt. l I Al White, veteran Ora nge Count y hunler. say11 that most of the deer are now out of rut and that the bucks Will be r;un· nlng together. The deer are in excellent shape and big trophy heads stould be easy to spot If bunters are willing tn work bard. H1011.h1g Slom Hunters walking the foothills In search of valley quail are finding very'1ew-bircl~. Most of the coveys are ~·idel.v-scat- ttred anrl the l'lirds are flushing y.·el! out of shotgun range. Chukar hunters are not doing 1rell either as a poor hatch in !he dese rt areas has made -game difficult to locate and small CO\"eys :ire not of· fer1ng too many largcts. Phe11.sa11t Se11so11. \\'ith the help of the Depart· ment of Fish and Game, upland g11me hunters ~hnuld find plent~· of birds in the fields came 8 a.m. Saturday. The department has slt'H'ked the ringnecks on farm lands in lh Imperia l, Brad 11nd Ov.·c n.\ Yalleys. A large turnout of bunters is expectt'd In most areas, bul there shauld be plenty of bircls lo allow evrry bunter ll chance 11t bagging his two bird litnit. Tbe San Joaquin Valley had fog and rough seas ha \·e held our running game." The annual high, medium 'its first Orange League foot- angling down during the past The Eagles v.·ere en~anced and lov.· tournament has been ball game last Friday and ha!i \i·eek. but a break in l he by the return to act.ion of scheduled for DE'c . 5_7 ;it Mesa been having a lot more fun \l·eaU1er is expected. quarteback Ch~ck 'Roeget _in Verde y.•ith pairings of tfams pract-icing this w~k. Harbor landin~s are con· t'.entraling-the ir efforts on reef fishing and ex'ccllent dee p 'A'atcr ii.nglini:: is on hand for sal t water fishermen. Sack fulls or J:od eati ng l'i.JW and rock cod arc seen coming off the boats daily. So1ne good surface actitt..n is also on hand as bonita, bass aod mackerel are highlightin g the ac linn. Both Davey's Locker and Art's La uding are running boats out lo tbe fi shing ground s dail~. Fis/1h1g Good Fishing in general ls listed as good at most Southland lakes: Catfish. bas.-;. bluegill. crappie and trout are all being strung up in li?OOd numrlers by h:irdy anglers. A \'ery good stocking pro· gran1 by pri \';i te enterprise and !he Dcpartrnent or Fii;h and c:amc has iinprorf'd fishing al all lakes. The s1nck- ing program ls in full SY.'ing now and fishermen should be ahle to score on limit<; u~ing cheese, salmon eggs ancl TNT floating bait. This writer fishrd Vail L:ike last week and enjoyed son1e very good pan fishing in the company Jake. Large hluegil crappie and catrish to six pounds \\'ere caught, but hass action wns slov.'. according to manager Dave Broy.·nell. ~1ore than 5,000 po11nds of trout have been stocked in Vall Lake and trout action should be f!ood throughout the winter months. last.-Saturda.v night s 14-9 v.·1n t;iking place on Fliday and ac-But a sobering mishap oc- OV('r Santa An:i V:illey. lu;il competition on Saturday curred Tuesday aflernoon in Jn !hat contest. Boegel came and Sunda\'. pra ctice \vhen starting guard back fron1 shoulder woes to · Dtln Tague suffered a frnr- con1plctc tv.'n of six 'flasscs for {,'t1sl11 !fles11 tured leg and is out for the Jfi yards \vlth one being a 10- yarder for a score on a tackle- c!igible hookup \l'ith Doug Brant. !-lis corncback f;icilitat.cd the n1ovc of 5-4, l35·pound Lee Joyce back to flanker, a more normal position for the kid known as Super Gnat. .. Perhaps the most consistent defeiisive pl;iy lately for !he E.:igles has come from veteran dov.•nlineman Bob Conklyn, who according to . his coach. ''did an outstanding jo b against Santa Ana Valley.'' ·\Vi:h \\'ins in their last tv.·o gAmc~. !he Eagles ( 3-4 ovl'rall 1 stand a chance of salvaging a _winning cr.rn- paign and -yes -a possible portion of the Irvine crown. Trout Plant The fnllov.•1ng S o u l h e r n California trout waters, listed b:-r county, are scheduled for restnrkin)! this week LOS ANC.ELES -Crystal Lake, Puddingstcine Reservoir, San G;ihriel Ri\'er East and \.\lest Forks. SAN BERNARDINO -Bi~ Bc;ir Lake, Colorado Rivrr al Needles. Gregory Lake, Lytle Creek h'iiddle and North forks. SAN DIEGO -San Vicente Lake . SANTA BARBARA -Lake Cachuma. VENTURA -Casitas Lake, Piru Lake. ~~~~~~~~- G•1LY l'ILOT Slllt 1>11611 The \YOnlen's i::\ub of Costa ~1esa Golf and Country Club staged an odd holes tourna- ment recentlv \vith Vi Hoskins the A night 'vict.or with a 35. Hazel Webster was second at 36. In the B flight compelition. Vooda Adams and Merrilee Dungan tiert for top honors wi!h JJ1h each. Nina Danielson Y.'On !he c crown wilh a 3J1h Wit.h Ruth Schilling in second place at 36. El Toro The El Toro \''nn1en's golf assoclatinn staged a besl nine with half handicap tournament recently. Nadine ~1aze v.·on the A flight with a score or 34'~. Se- cond place v.'enl lo Marlha Ciampi! (35) anrl a tie resulted for -third between Jackie Abrahams, Rae Stoneman and Lee Veltnn, all with :1511. In B (light action, Mary Gay <1nd Celia l\1axfield tied at :l:'! for top honors. M a r i e Lav.•rence Y.'a~ next with :'131'2 foll ny.•ed b.v Peg Nelson (3 41 and Glee Queen (;'\5 1,1. The C flight title v.•enl to Sue Roberts (:131 with Ru I h Murtha and Mary Brownfield liecl fo r second at 33~1. Doris Miller and Jo;in Lear tied for fourth with 341h. Carol Mellen of the El Torn v.•omen's golf organization got a hole-in-one Monday. firing the ace on the 115-yard 13th hole. She v.•as usi ng a fi ve Vt'ood. /Headom/ar/< Semifinal round matches in the annual men'i; club cham· pionship compelition ll re scheduled for completion be· fore Sunday at ~feadowlark season. 1 Tague wa s taking part in the lea in drill when the rare mishap occurred and he joins tean1mate Mark Olson on the sidc>lines for the final two garnes. Coach Jerry Redman is hopeful the Win n in g en- thusi asm will rub off on his squad for the second week agRinst El Dorado Saturday night al the Mission Viejo High field . "It really helps the spirit of !He kids in practice after ym1 win one. n showed them they are capable of winnin_g and 1his is a very important in- gredient. "I realize we were forlun:ite In win against Laguna . But lhen. I think LaJ:una woulri have been forlunate if It harl won ;igainst us. Il was thal type of ~ame." \Vhat ?. bout the El Doradll team his 1'rcijans Will face Saturday? "They will run the ball uni.ii you stop that . then lhey will throw. They have two quarl.etbackll and one of them iChris .Jonesl is a better run- ner thi:in the other. I "Basically, we feel our defense hall been the hri,1tht spot thil! season :ind we hope to contain them on the Inside where the y like to run." Ray flale has taken over flt quarterb;ick for the Troj;in !lquad with Ed Call mov ing lo a (lanker back post. Redman fcelli he has increased the of- fensive thre11t with this move and also with D11ve Ong at fullback. Another switch the Universi- ty coach has made recently was bringing Bill Ridrtle into the bs·cldield from a split end post. Riddle has responded with 128 yards in 34 c;irries. ~agUJla BeaGh GlBFY ~td. Strike's Over Bikes Are Here 100 Ttn Speeds In Stock From $94.SO Up BUY NOW FOR· CHRISTMAS • BEFORE STOCK DEPLETES S SPEEDS, 3 SPEEDS, CHILDRENS BIKES A TRIKES Expert Service & Repair CHRISTMAS LAV·AWAYS LIMIT OF SP RI G -Hobie Smith or Newport Beach recently visited the Sprig Club on-Salton Sea and bagged this limlLol pintails • 240 THALIA e LAGUNA BEACH e 494· 1522 • I • The Bob Heusser Football Forecast 1-NEBRASKA 6-GEORGIA 2-0KLAHOMA }-AUBURN l--MICHICAN-I-NOTRE DAME 4-ALABAMA 9-TEXAS 5-PENN STATE 111-STANFORD Saturday, Nov. 13-Major Colleges Ali for ce 24 Tu1s.ir 7 Al•b1m• 31 M11ml, ~II, 1 Au.ion• Slit• 38 Wyomma ll ArlclnSIS 33 S.M.U. 14 Army 14 P1lt~t1ur1h 10 eo11on Collt&t 21. NOrthtrl'I lllinol1 r; Bowling GfHn 29 Xavoer 1 8rlgh1m Youn1 26 Auzon• 2• Ci"c'"n1ti 22 Oh+o U 21 C•ttOtl 2~ Furm•n 14 C!e,,uan 10 Maryl1"d 15 Cola•te 21 La11yett11 r; Colo11aD 27 O~lahom1 Sl1\1 14 Color1do Stt t• 20 West T"''' 19 Cotumbi• 24 Ptnn1~ly1ni1 15" 0.rtmouth 23 Corntlf 22 Ouk• 22 W1ka Forest It F1011d1 Sii i• 20 G1org!1 T1ch 11 Geo•1l1 24 Aubu•n J1 H1rv1rd 21 81own 13 Ho!y Cro11 2t Rutgers 21 Houston 27 V.P,1. 7o 1a1ho 30 Mcmt.tn1 St.UI lllin0•1 il Wisconsin ro lndl1n" 2• row11 ro IOWI Sta11 23 Mi$joU rl lt kentuch)I 23 Florida 21 lan,IJ. 8e1ch 27 San Ooe10 Stitt 2S l.S.U. J J MisslS'i•PPi Stitt JO U>uo~vlllt 2~ Sou1hero llt.no!1 I Memph•s S1ll1 22 North Te•a1 O M11rni jQhio] lt Kll!-"I Stl11 ,IJ. M•ch;1t1n 37 Purdue 7 Mlchi11n S1111 30 Mon11eso!1 14 Missi!slpol •z cnett1nocg11 7 NetHISkl 1.5 k81'1$1$ Sl1t1 7 New Me•lco 30 El P•so 2J New Me•ico St111 31 Wiehi11 22 Nortn C1roli n1 21 Vir1t!"i• 7 Nol•• 01rn1 Jl Tulane 1 Ohio s1111 23 Northw1st1r11 IS Ok11hom1 •• K1n11• IJ OltllO" 17 C11ilor"11 10 -pe"n Slllt !it North C•rolil'll Stitt 1 Prll'loetal'I 21 '1'1111 14 Rice 2J Te•1t A""'-' 22 Ricnmancl 21 Davidson f; Sautll••" C1Uforril1 21 W<1shiogton 27 South••" Ml1sl11ipol 27 loul1l1n1 rech 21 St1nford 211 Slll'I Jose Stitt 7 Syr1eus1 21 Navy 16 Tamo<1 35 E1'1 C1•0!1111 12 Tem1110 2.5 Wi1Jl<1m & Miry 20 TtXll M T.C.U. 1 T•••' Teen 16 81y1or 7 Tole!lo 3~ M1rsh1!1 0 u11n s"i. 2~ u1111 10 v1111nov1 :>9 01ytc" 10 Wasl!ln"o" Stilt 1• O•egcn Sl<1!1 ~l Wet! Vlr1!nla 34 V.M.I. 0 Wesle•11 Mlcf11r1 n 7t P•~illc It Other Games-South and Southwest Angelu Apo.i1,nr1n A1k1ns11 St11• A•k1,,1•s Ttell C1t1wb1 Ca•ll G111rd Elon G1•0"1"W•bb HlltSdllt How•rd P1yr11 J1ck10,,villt LIYi,,a1ton Mtr1ln M•ryvolto Mcl4te1il Middil Tt11n11111 Mill1101 Northtrn Mlc1tl1•n Ou1chi!• P11Sby11rl1n S81Bm • , Si m Hou1to11 S1mtord SW Loul1llnl SW Tex11 Sllll cooe,. Ark. Tinnes .. • Ttc.h Te•1• Lut11tr1n Trinity ,~, Wtsnlnl!I"~ ti Woff•· " 2l " .. " •1 " "' " '1 " ., "' " " " " " 1• 11 " " " " " " ,. " " " " " [15! Te•~s E1sttr" Kentucky Arlm,IJ.10n . " " " H11d•na CuiUord W11n1n1ton a. Let Ltnalr·Rhyn1 Geo11etow11 flirmO"l le•11 A&t Oelll S!al t M1ssossipoi Coll•I• floren'e Soutnwesle•n, T•nn. SE Lou1sl•"• C1st Ten,,e11e1 R1nd(llph·Mllcon QuanlicD M1rl11e1 Southern Sl1to C1•1on·Newm1n WMt VI. Stttt MeMuny Newberry NW t.oui1l1n1 Sul 110$5 Henderson Au111n Pe•y A1k. 1t MQntleello Abilene Cll•i1!11n NE to11t111n1 Sewe~ee West1rn Ct rollllt l 10 ' ' " " 1' 0 ' • 14 ' 10 " " " 12 • " 10 • 1' ' IS " " 7 " 11--SOUlHERN CAL 12-WASHINGTON l~OLORADO 14-0HIO STATE 15-L.S.U. 16-ARIZONA STATE 17-MI CH IGA N STATE 18-HOUSTON' 19-TENNESSEE 20-ARKANSAS Other Games-East 8ridKepofl 22 51?11nglield 13 c w J>ost JO K•ng's Point J.! Ceoltal Connecticut 21 Co1tl1n<I 1,7 Connect;cut 2• RhDd ll!-lsl1ncl 20 Delaw1re 42 ao~ton U 7 Edinboro J6 C31i!o1r1>• St1to I Haml)(l111-Sycln•y 21 Drexel Teen 7 Ho1>11t 20 R.1'.1. )5 llenyon 21 w .. ~n·tan & Jeff'IDn U Lel1igh 30 Buc knell ii Mo,,tctalr 2q Gla~~horo M~hlcn1>e111 17 franklin & Mlrshlll New H1mp1hlre 21 MJ~SllCl'IUSttu Notthust1rn _2.J V~monl Rochesler 24 HiHs S!ippery Rock 24 Claroo11 Southern Connaet!cut 22 Ameroc•n lnltrn'tl Trln;ty 20 Wesley•n Union JO Hamol1on Ups1l1 14 AIL>rlghl We~t cn1,te, 43 Towse" Slttt W1stern · M1ryt1nd 14 Su~11ueh1nn1 We~1rnln1ter 29 G~"eva Wllll1m1 26 Amhe•~I Other Games-Midwest • 13 .. ~ .... " 2l 1' ' ' • ' " " Alo,rnn 24 l"d11n1 U., P•. 16 Andetso" l~ ·r~~!or U "" AUJjU~!•n•, Ill. JQ Notth Cenlrll 0 8~,ow•n•WllllC• Jd fcrr15 0 aa11 St1t• 21 we11ern 111;nol1 17 C•tthtae JJ Nonn Park O Ceotr11 Mtthodost 14 T1r~lo 13 C1ntr1! MiGn111.1n 24 Hol1tr1 1 Cent11I OkllhO!Tll 23 NE. Oklahoma 2Z Centr1I St1te, Oh•O J~ Waynt, Mlcfl. lJ Centre 21 lianove• 1 Coe 2l Grinnell i• Corntll, Jowl 29 Carleton .o OefolnCt 16 Ol•Ve\ U 011ko 24 lnd11"• St1t1, Jr\!I, 1A OUIUlh 2J MilwBukee 1 E1ste1n fltinoir 2L Central Mlt110uti 20 £1ste•n M!chllfll J8 Soulh Olkott Stlte & Elmht111! 4:1 Mlll+kl11 1J Gu1i.vu1 Aao1onu1 2S You,,attown 20 Heide11>e1a: 20 M1,.et11 7 Hor am 20 K1l•m1100 11 ll hno•! Coll•it l5 Princ111l1 14 '' M1ok1to 2t St. Tnom11 6 M•ssoul! V1tlty 46 Emp<u•1 Collep 1 Morene1d 28 lll!no•s ,s1111 14 ML Un•on 21 John ~•rnU 10 Mu•11y 29 Ev111s~lllt1 lJ NW 1.111sour! 21 SW Mitsouti 2J NW Ckl1hom1 21 E. Cenl•ll Okl1hom1 14 Or110 wes1ey1n ~4 OttmsDn 20 Om1h1 17 W15ht1um 16 OlllWI 22 Bake/ • Panh1ndle 20 SE Ok11nom1 17 St. Jo5epn•1 2l F•~"kll11 f SE Mi1nourl 26 110111 1A SW 01<11nom1 16 C1111<'.!•on 1 Valp••~oso 3S Wheaton 0 W11)1sn 10 OeP1uw 11 We1!e<11 l(tM!ucky t2 Bu!le1 0 Witl•em JIW'!ll 22 Gr1ctl•"d 14 W•ttenbl•l :U A$hl1na n Other Ga mes-Far West Ad~rns State 2S ••c11 Lutner1n 21 Cal PDIY (S.L.O.J 2J en.co Stll• JI C!1re111on\ 14 01vl1 24 C11!11n New Me•ico 21 fr•sno ~itltt 38 ful!e•ton 2l H~yw1•d 31 Humboldt 29 LaVerne 20 Mo11t1n• 2li New Mexico Hi'l1mh 11 Nor11'111n Ariron1 u Nort1te1n COlot1do 31 Ortso11 coueg• ro f'1clflc Luth1r1n 21 Porno111 15 Puaet Sound 21 A1venilde 17 S1n!1 C!1rt JO W1slt•n New Mtrleo 24 We1tar11 W11hlnt1011 39 Colo•eclo Mlne1 Lot ""!eles S1nle lrb~rl Sin f1111Cf,eo U wnlttier S1cr1m1nto Eastern Mcnt1n1 San F1rn1ndo U.S.1.U. .S~n Franc11ea Stilt So no mt Red11,,as H1w1li Colorado We11er11 Souther" Oreaon fort H1y1 Ceotrll W1t hlniton Llnfltlcl Sin Olero u Simon Fr1Hr OC:cldent1! C.1 Poly f Pl)mon1J weum!..,ster Wl'll!WOrf" • 11 •1 0 13 u ' • '" ' • It " " 0 u 1• " • 1 ·--1' • 10 ... 7 PROFESSIONAL FORECASTS Arle11to -, • • • • 27 leltl,..•r• • • • • 21 Ch1cl1111etf • • . • 17 Dell• ... " .•. 20 ICDt11n Cl'1 17 Lot' A.11,.1.. , • Jl Sunday, November 14th · New YeTk Glo11ts 20 , Mkml • , , • , , , • JO New York Jett • , 6 Ml11n"oto , . , ., 20 Don'fO, 16 N•w l119t111d , , 21 'hlladolphlo • • 10 Ooltlo11d , • , , , , 26 Clovoland , • , -. , 1 Sn11 Frencbc• • • l l Dt trolt ..• , , ..• 21 W•1hl119,11t , . , • 21 Monday, November 15th SI, Lowl1 -••••• 26 So11 DW.o .•.. 20 . PlttlbM r'h • , • • 17 .G .. e" 1.., •••• 1:1 lwffo le 1) Ho11tto11 .: .••• 10 N •w~or1..... • • t Clilc•t• . -• , , , 10 -.. TAKE VAHEY VIEW OFF RAMP FROM FREEWAY! DI MONSTIATOIS NOW ON SALE OVll 26 TO CHO.OSI flOM AT TllMINDOUS SAVINGS • • 20 DAILY PILOT DICK TRACY • IT BELONGED · TO A CURRENCV. EXCMA.NGE. NA.MES ON THE OOOll ! TUMBLEWEEDS Friday, Novtmbfr 12, 1971 SO TMA.T's WMAT HAPPENED TO AGENT WA!.JO'l • By Chester Gould By 'l'om K. Ryan \ Ll'L ABNER SlolEAAOP. PAZZU>ITS !! 'iOt.JR-14'\'HA.'!· / "'= &ELD'll'ED KINK GUNGSPIK ...... ' 1 PROCLAIM NOVEM&EA I 9 SADIE HAWKINS QA~_ .. _,. 'iq.J'LL LOVE. IT, M'i P\PPLE.- SALLY\ BANANAS GROVER, MEET SOPP'( SOPWEt.l •..• SOPPY, MEET ;.,,=t GROVER GAl.l.EY, TIIE kLc--rl 1'PITOR ! ·•"' GROVER:-SOPPY ... Jtlh ESTATE:-5th ESTATE FIGMENTS PLAIN JANE .tCROS:i. 4~ Ho1isr!l1fS, • g. 1 Ali----47 Outtast 5 Cook In an 4'1 Ro111an tutti- "'" ary deity 110 Living brings 50 L1gllt "14 '#'# It fighting bedsit ad 91rup: Abbr. 52 A b(}ll~S l S --but 54 "Nnl'I 15 --- goodir --": i words l& Tool SB Tw in brol l1l'r 17 Caucasi~·1 nt Rof!'ulus languaQe 5'1 Evil spell 18 Clifford ·-·-: t.O Means of Author of pub lit "Golden Boy" tr an s[)Or!al io11 1 ~ Inert gaseous !>2 Teni\111 r len1ent bS ~ull 20 "l/Jsle b1 Mov rs -,,ith 22 Man In the wild ~bJ11do11- Bible ment 24 Ui>ward : t.~ --· d1~p . Pref it LP\ 1! br 25 Grnrt•: dispensed matena I ou1c~ly 27 One Stt1bbl1 '~ :O ··•· llUlSe!llt . idly Kind of 11"9.11 29 P1easa111 Pnt•y lra'llr ot 111111d· 71 ·-·Rios· 2 words Prov1n:r ol j2 Nrll deJe J"'-Argentina "1t'fll 72 Coirodrs Pref!( 7J --· actio11 33 Posse~s1v<-74 Large salmon ·~· of Bf!!1sri J• Seaport of Colurnb1~ -lo.d..tl-75 '1.'ea~er 's ired Jfi Fa ll into r111n •!I B~: Pir!1x DOWN 42 Follower o~ Genglns Khan l F astri•er 44 Watery fluids 2 Skin d•seasr l J • 6 7 ,. " 17 " lO " Jl I " 26 • " JO ll ll " .. " " THEY CLAIMED THIS CAR WOULD USE FIFTY PER CENT LESS THEN I BOUGHT A CARBURETOR WHICH SAVES THIRTY PERCENT, SPECIAL SPARK PlUGS WHICH SAVE TWENTY PER CENT AND A NEW BRAND OF GAS WHICH SAVED TEN PER CENT! •1 ~ I h (, I 1 ~"j l< O~C lA :1 ~[ C L •' l"t.•i. ll 12 11 3 Poer loser~. j5 S. Amer1t an ?. words ~ Away from tiome- QUadrt1ped 37 01v1ne 33 Isles in 5 Unearths G~lway B,1y 2 words 311 Unit of length t. In e~istenct 41 lrnprtss for many years cle~rly 7 C1t111s drinks ~3 Transposes 8 Locatfd 4t. F•ne d1sper- ~ fot~•er silver s1011 of cJ1brn1 com of Fr ance llilllitltS 10 lnlerd1t\ 48 Hoarfrost 11 Per!ett 51 Srl\ill! lO't.~I 12 GJS 53 Stupid people I) S,p;in1sh !1:te 5~ E~111e5, ot resf('cl dpprec1at 1on 21 tAalt ~~"P 55 W.utm9 b11d 23 Did certau1 50 Banish 9.uden work 57 Atiounding in ?b Vntuous 111ec1p1tatnm 26 Female t.I Part1clr ol a111mals ·dust 29 lll-;nanntitd t.3 Feminure peisoo: Sl3ng sufl •~ 30 Rivt'l"o! t.4 Opt1mi~llt Ergta11d fib John---- 31 Wen! oot "''1\h &8 Tt-ttl'. •n RD!la ' ' IO " " " " " l) " 27 l8 ...... " " 36 J7 JI " " .. :rALte /IA!.£ PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH PERKINS I '! By Al Smith " NOWWHEN I DRIVE,THE GAS m.;~•\"TANK OVERFLOWS' By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski GORDO 1.'M:--' .51AK".\/ltJ01 ie=.1-\ll A.NA. MAMA! Wl-IATIS "°"' 6!.IPPl?I'?? MOON MULLINS ® ,, ·: ANIMAL CRACKERS - !1'1 ~ 1'11 "41\. -,,.. ··.· By Charles M. Schulz 00 l{OV KNOW Wt1AT I J1.t5T READ IT SAID THAT A PER50N WHO l5 IN A /,\fDICAL J O\JRNAL? IJEPl11VED Of H~ IW«ET ~I A 'THAT !IV5T BE AN IW°ERE5TIN6 A~D~Al JOORNAt. ~;=;:;:;;-7..(-::---i . 5TI!MDliOO.E li.OIOAASITol\AIJE l/l1i) I A 5f'ORT CMT CANfl(IT 5IJl;?\'1VE FCF:: 0 0 • ' il'ORE THAN rom~E.i6h'T l40lJR5! ·c:S NOT EX.l.C.TLV .. &UT I MUST LE-'VE THE THEATER' IMMf:· 01 "TELV! I WOWDER' WMETHEI? YOO (,t,i./ DELll/ER " t.'-ES· SAGE TO l.'.155 CAR'50N Wl40 - W"S SEA.TEP WITH ME ? II-I! By Harold Le Doux ~y Mell MARCIA MASON NEEDS MONEY. 0 "TMI> 1">1EREFo~E', SHE INVITES 'IOLJI! KltJD OFFER CON1"Rll!>UT10NS i'o HEl2 FUND. i'o •S 1"HE Pell.SON M"KING. THE 1-All&ES°T' w'Ct~lrE C0NiRl°BU'1'iON, SHE MAl'E> TH~ l i Pl!DHIBITEP fot.-t.-OWING O!<FER : He Wit.I. BEA LOWE!> sv 'f"o SNEA~ It-I TO ANY lvlOVIE IHE°AT'llE IN t.-AW · 'fowiJ, Ffl.~E Of CHAltGE!( r\•11. 0 By John Miles . .. .. ., -.. • • u Jl ••'ii,.;:;.~~ .. J.CW'l--'- so " "-" ') .. " " " " . . ' ' -' l ' • ' .. " .. .. ,. 71 L • 11 I · .... ,. " . - J By Al Capp Ft.ULES ARE TZIMPb.1;._, AN'/ SINKLE.GORL T~AT CATCHE.S At-N SINKLE eoY [XJR.INK RACE. GOT THE. RIGHT TO MAPJ('( H IM ...... _ i ' l ' l ' B,Y Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson o;r;> <i • -. 0 ., -,.. > "0 By Roger BoDen I IHl~K SOME. \!O\(ER UPAHeAD WAS Ti;sr11J,;; HIS BRAKES ! .. THE GIRLS •: ~ ~ 'FOIP Mi'V @/11 W// ,'./// l,Jl.iJl:f.vi ~~V ll·IZ ··ob dear, n~it"s for my husband and husbands arP under ten dollar~." DENNIS THE MENACE '• ' I li~i-1 I PUBUC ~ ~:3R\.<l" I ' I II ll:i •1· 01'(>\0.~ . ' I I I • ~ ' Now OON'r LOOI< AT ANYTlllNG FUNNY OR 'Jll~y°LL HAVe US OUT/I HERE IN FIV~ MINUTE$!• • ' • • R esearch May Help S trick en Boy. • Ftiday, Nov1mber 12, 1971 DAILY PILOt 2 1 Peace and Prosperity Nixon Re-election Thelll By NOR.l\1AN KE~fPSTER-time the Democrats controlled war that· had no end in sight, hopeless feeling about ending-ending lt" in an honorable WASHINTON (UPI) the White House. with 300 casualties a Wttk; that war in an honorable way, way." President Nixon's 1972 cam-Nixon already has given 550,000 Americans were in and a hopeless feeling about Tbe state of the economy paign for re-election will be developing a policy that would had been expected' to be the built on a Iheme of peace ·and several previews of his basic Vietnam," Nixon said in a re-avoid other wars. key Democratic issue next -if·the economy responds as campaign speech featuring the cent speech to the National "Because chani;es occur so year. Nixon's new economic he hopes it will -prosperity. slogans "a full generation of Federation or Republica n gradually, some of us fall to policy is intended to slow the The President. who Is ex-peace" and ' · Pr 0 8 Peri t Y Women that likely was a pro-realize how much the world pace of inflation and 10 peeled to announce his can-without war and ~ithout in· tolype of his 1972 campaign has changed in those three reduce unemployment. If it didacy for a second term in nation." rhetoric. years, \and ch9nged for the works, the econpmic issue can January. plans to counter ''\Vhen we look back to the "There was no peace plan better, because it is not be neutralized or even made Den1ocratic criticism with an year 1968 ifld early 1969 when on the table," he said. "There Mpeless now . We are ending to help the President's re-t'lec- argument that things are bet· this administration came Into was a rather hopeless feeling the longest and most difficult lion ca1npaign. ter than they were the last office, we see that we had a about foreign policy, a w~r in America's histor}'. and But the old el'onomic "gan1e ----=-------------------'--'-~--------'----~ Prlc•• eff.ctlY• thru ·November 17.1971. ltbi ' , plan" also wa$ Intended to slow inflation "o11ithQUl a disastrous I n c r e a s e in unen1ployment -and it fa.Bed badly. The unemployment rate almost doubled and there was little relief from innatlon before the administration's abrupt switc h of Aug. 15. lfowe l'er, even bcrore the result$ are in on the new po!iey, Nixon ha s added an <'conomic section to his pro- .. totype campaign speech. ~ "A strong economy me4t1s employment for Aml!ric!fis and jobs for Americans," he said. "But it means erpplo)'~ ment and jobs without war. Do you realize that you hav e to go clear back l.O Ille Eise11° howcr ?.:iministration. 1955 a~d 1956, to find full employment in America without war? We can get it again and that is what we are working tO<Nard at 1he pre~nt time." ·•----' AGRAMENTe -(-APT-= -- Until six weeks ago, Scotty ·:\Vhitmire was like most other '~ lO·year-olds -rough and •tumble with th~ ambition of beinR "the world's fastest run· ner." Now his tiny body is racked by convulsions from a rare disease and the only hope for survival is 2,800 miles away. ~ Scotty's mother, Y..1rs. Gary • Burke. says doctors have ron· • ducted a series of tests on the youngster and reported he has only about a year to li ve unless he can be taken to the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Md . That is where a governmenl- funded research project is -underway on Dawson's en- cephalitis. a rare degenerative disease in which the victim loses his ability to walk, becomes spastic and dies eventually of pneumonia. Dr. Jerome Mednick, a specialist in p e di at r i c neuroloiiy. sa\d Scotty's is "only the fourth case I've seen. If you look in medical -literature. you'll rlrid only five :or six cases." • He said that while the disease has been known for 35 vears. it \\'as only three years ago that researchers learned it is related to measles. Researchers at the Bethesda Institute are studying the "im- m u n o I o g i c a I defects" associated with the disease - exploring the possibility it may be caused ·by a Jack of antibodies or i defect in the victim's natural defense mechanism. -·under normal circum- stances, t h e government would pay Scol!y's transporta- tion, but iverything's been cut back and there's no mone-.o.'' The doctor said that. while there is no assurance the Bethesda Institute could help. it is the boy's only chance for survival. Scott's slep-father earns about $911 per week in a box factory and his mother had lo gi ve up her job as a waitres to care full-timt for her brown-haired , blue-eyed son at !heir residence across the Sacramento ri ver in Broderic k. Dr. Jerome Mednick said Scotty has shown some im- provement when treated with Tegretol. a conv"ulsion-control drug rarely used in the United States. But. he said, "when the tegretol wears out, there's nothing left." 1-fe said treatment at the National Institute of Health would require about $3.000 in transportation for sever a I visits. The family doesn't have the money. Scotty suffered his rirst seizure Sept. 26. \Vhile they cause him no pain. he has scratches and bruises on his arms and bar k despite precau- tions of being placed on a pad- ded rug "'hen they strike e\'ery 5 to 19 minutes. .-(),) -'!.~ \.:-, ~': ········-:~ "'"'"": ! . . . ==-- IVAT ERSKI LIK E A MILLI ON AIRE! Wtttn~I on~°"' OW" privl lt !1~tl Jit C...vllrl L-'it, ..,fl! 1 l-wol"· . •-• «iurM-iull !or vou! Ooc:~!"I tone! • , lounc:M"t '"""'" for your -I !he , • ~ ... "'''f'd· W11orlu11u loll !tom ""ly $1,,•00. T.,,..., • d'>_.,,.., l l·hole • • toll COUIM, -·And""' 1\tttf'! l°"llJ, """' .......... 1 """lou• 11<11•thKll : 11di .... T ...,.;, COUfU N ., °""""'°jo. • ""' ...... "''"""°·'°°· ' -• : c..rvo.. Ll'l<1,7l""'"_,..._...,.. : LOI AA9flM •, • U>o MW "'"'"' .:I· • ! dr-.... -....... ...i ..... ir.e "''" : --'/'OU un Ifft 111t1 pity l1k1 fie : , 111<llloN<r•I : . l•_,,_......_ . : . ,,...,..._,, : : _ ...... ~... . : ~r It (714) 674 21113 : ~ t.loot .. """1 ........ "~ ... ( ....................... . ..... "' ........................ . !0 ~·· 0 I ,.........,,_.,., : : ·-~l ··-"'"''"-"'·'"'-·•"ot •0.100 110c-.o,C"".t1110 . . 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TRASH CAN Th is i1 a 32 gallon trash can, which means it holds 32 gallons of liquid trash or 256 pounds of aolid trash. (Don't try it). 247 SPARK PLUGS AC OR AUTO LITE '';.:':.:'::'.:."(, 1~'!!. _!!_"'!_ • ~ Use tt und toas It out. Like ·.t Shorty 1ay1. Nothing lo r•flll. ' 'Good prlc•. good 1tuU, and easy to use. Tim• for a lune up? Why not do it your1•lf and save money, Two bra nd• to choose from, HEW 1971 CHRISTMAS CARDS 50% OFF REG. 500 REG. 2" And IO on and to on. HOW 2" NOW I" 49c-EA. BIG JOHN TOOL RACK Holds many tools. keeps work benc h cl ean and in order. Has drill index. 147 . . • . • . • . . ~· .................... ~ .,.)'., . .............................. 1····· I----'~-----------.,--------------------------,------------.,-------------~.,------:----- ' -f u omv PILOT Friday, November 12, 1971 TAKE YOUR PICK FALL THE TOP BRANDS Of. MOTOR HOMES, MIN/- HOMES OR CAMPERS ••• PACE-ARROW. CHINOOK. TRAVEL QUEEN. GYPSY. ,__ ENTERPRISE . HOLIDAY. SUNDIAL ETC. 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Presented by The Music Center Opera Association, the engagement contains 10 operas in 21 performances, w!th openin.g night designated as a special benefit performance of Handel's "Giulio Cesare" in Italian, as a benefit for the Associa· tion. ••• Where to go • •• Career Is Gloriosus By GEORGE LEIDAL Cl !~1 Diiiy Pllel 11111 A !UMy thing happened to Carl Lindstrom on his way to a pro-football career. The s j x • r 0 0 t. twir-inch. 200-pound graduate of Garden Grove High School came down with mononucleosis, suffered a separated slloulder and a series of pull· ed muscles while playb1g for Orange Coast College. in 1958. So, he turned his attention to theater, playing one of the three kings in Coast College's production oC "Amahl and the Night Visitors." OA ILY PllOT D What to do • •• The principals for "Giulio Cesare" on Nov. 17 (7:30 p.m.), and repeating Nov. 19 (8 p.m.) with the same cast, are Beverly Sills, Frances Bible, Kay Creed; Norman Treigle and Dominic Cossa with Rude.L£Q!1ducting. Bizet's "Garmen'' in French Will--ot~ heard on the evenings of Nov. 18 and Dec. After a stint in another OCC musical, "Call ~1e Madam". Lindstrom, now 32, launched a professionaLstage ·cauer With _ a summer at Sacramento's Music Circus. 4. and at the matinee of Nov. 21 with Joy Davidson. Carol Neblett-Bianca Sauler; Harry Theyard·Mi~hele Molese: Ro~rt Hale-Michael Devhn, Rudel conducting all performances. Verdi's "La Traviata" in Italian will be heard on the evening of Nov. 20 and the matinee of Nov . 28, with Patricia Brooks, Mary Cross L ~ e d ~.rs : Leo ~ke­ Perry Price, Louis Qu1hco-Cossa, Giusep- pe Morelli conducting. Donizetti's ''Roberto Devereux" will be heard in ltalian on the evenings of Nov, 21 and Tl with Miss Sills, Susanne Marsee; Enrico DiGiuseppe, Richard Fredricks-Quilico, conducted by Rudel- Charles \Vilson. Verdi 's "Un Dalio In Maschera'' will be heard in Italian on the evenings of Nov. 22 and ~ with Gllda ' Cruz.Romo, Lill Chookasian-Muriel Greenspon. Patrlcr1 Wise: Carlos Montane, Quilico-Fredricks, Rudel conducting. Charpentier's "Louise" will be heard in French on the evenings of Nov. 23 and - Dec. 3 with Misses Neblett, Greenspan, Lueders, Sauler; John Alexapder-Harry Theyard, Devljn·Hale, conducted by Wilson , Rimsky-Korsakov's "Le Coq Q'Or" will be heard in English on the evening of Nov . 24 and at the matinee of Nov. 27 with Misses Sills-Neblett. Greenspon, Ruth Welting; Treigle, DiGiuseppe-Ken· neth Reigel, Walter Sussklnd conducting. Puccini's "Tosca" will ,be heard in Italian on the evenings of Nov. 28 and Dec. 2 with Mara\in Niska ; Carlos 1'1on-' tane-Molese, Fredricks: Morelli con· ducting. Janacek's ';The Markopoulos Affair'' will be h!!ard in English on the evenings of Nov. 30 and Dec. 5 with Miss Niska; Theyard. David Clatworthy·Ryan Edwards: Edward Pierson, Christopher Keene cnnducting. Rossini 's ;,II Barbiere di Siviglia" will be heard in Italian on the evening of Dec. 1 and the matinee of Dec. 5 with Misses Wise and Ev a n s: Price. Cossa, Hale and Pierson. Morelli conducting. All evening performances begin at 8 p.m. with the exception of opening night. which begins at 7:30 p.m. A!l matinees begin at 2 p.m. Latecomers will not be seated until there Is a suitable break in the performance. All pro,11:rams and casts are subject to change without notice. Box office for all performances are open at The Music Center, the Auto Club of Southern California, all Mutual Agen- cies and Walli chs Music Stores. Quick ttcket information is always available at (213) 626-7211. Edward Binns Signed for Role In 'Caine Mutiny' NORMAN TREIGLE, BEVERLY SILLS IN 'GIULIO .CESARE' DEVLIN, NEBLETT'$ ·"LOUISE' PAT WISE SINGS ROSINA ROLE Intermission Bobbi Lured From Lobb y l'o Stage for 'A rsenic' By T0\1 TITUS Of ""-CMll'f Pll&t S11!1 Once upon a time, many more yl!ars ago tfiin-She cares-to recall, a young ac- tress from Pennsylvania tucked her &peech degree under one arm , her sum- mer stock credil.s under the other and headed for Hollyv.•ood in search of a career. Like most such aspirants. however, she never made the ';big lime," but stayed on the . West Coast anyway, laking a th ings to keep up with acting," she says. "But I couldn't resist. this role." The road from that early experience meandered a !¥ to Lindstrom's current appearance in the Center Theater Group Ahmanson Theater Production of "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum." Along the way, Lindstrom trimmed down to 190 pounds, starred in the Lido stage shows at Las Vegas and in Paris and met in t h o s ' shows his French- speaking wife. As Miles Glor'iosus In ''Funny Thing" Lindstrom believes his musical comedy career is just beginning. Most critics revie wing the Los Angeles reprise of the Broadway hit agree. Several added special words of praise for Lindstrom's performance. A Funny Thing's top ba11ana, Phil Sil- vers, loudly praises Lindstrom's perform- ance, too, "He's the only one who r.dds any musical class to the show," Silvers said. That "class" comes fnun Carl 's dedi· cation to a career in opera. Recently returned from living In Europe for two years, Lindstrom has opted for a career In American musical theater as Opposed to one in ope ra. He 1dngs in five la111guages and speaks fluent French and German. After knocking about opera houses Jn Europe he says he leamed to apprecio1:e the economic ad- vantages of life In the U.S. . '"I'd r i.· the r be a truck driver in the U.S. than a starving opera star in Europe," he said. The development of his strong baritone voice is lt!e result of his own, study plan, attributable to no particular voice coach. He keeps in good physical condition by doing dally rounds of pushups and squat thrusts, the former done to keep his foot· ball-injured &boulder from aching. In "Funny Thing" earl's good looks and superpreS£nce are an asset, lending a definite air of authority tG the role of the e11ocentric superhero. It's the, kind of part Robert Goulet or Gordon MacRae in his prlmt, would fit well. And, Lindstrom has his eye on roles those twG have perfonned, should he move on In musical dramas to such roles as Lancelot in "Camelot" or Curly in "Oklahoma !" One reason he gave up pursuit of an opera cartt.r, he notes, is the seeming shortage of juicy baritone roles in opera compared to the emphasis in musical comedy on baritone leads. His role as Miles Gloriosus came about after a summer in the chorus of the "Knickerbocker Holiday" revival with Burt Lancaster. He understudied the Washington Jrvlng- Bram dual role without ever having to sub In it. But, he so impressed .mus ic director Jack Lee that 'Lee encourated him to audition for the Gloriosus parL He faced stiff competition in an open call audition returned three times and finally got the part. · Lindstrom ha1 no d!!/usions about the CARL tlNDSTROM IN ROLE OF WARRIOR MILES GLORIOSUS importance of a "Funny Thing.'' "It has no urgent message," he said, "but it is pure comedy. We have a lot of fun doing it and know we're there to make people laugh." The light touch is a musi cal use of Lindstrom's talents that co n t r a s ts markedly to hfs'frequent appe'"'arances on Sunday mornings In the-' choirloft of St. Mark 's Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach. He is often guest soloist at St. Mark's for two reasons, he says. "I like to sing and the min ister is a longtime friend . J knew him wheq my family lived in Oregon and when I was singing ln the Army in Heidelberg." Carl and his wife expect to keep their apartment in Tustin for awhile, since the location is ideal for commuting to the six evening arid two matinee performances each week at the Ahmanso n Theater in the Los Angeles Music Center. If time permits, the solid. baritone would enjoy appearing in area musical productions. He looks forward to building a home on a lot in Laguna Beach he has owned for 1everal years. Thal lot in Arch Beach Heights over· looks the Pacific and a prime surfing beach . Although he grew up along the Orange Coast, Carl has yet to master the surlbor.Td. An avid body surfl!r since his youth, he looks forward to surfing op.. portuP1lties. Wate r and snaw skiing are his favor ite ouldoor sports and while Lindstrmn per· f(l"ll'led with the Lido at Tahoe, hi:s schussing technique improved consider- ably, he recalls. "I could ski for free every day," While in athletics Carl might be coiled a downhill racer, in musical theater, it appears, the only way is up. I DAU;.Y PILOT ttetf f'i.tll COUNTY'S CARL LINDSTROM WEEKENDER . INSIDE FEATURES Edward Binns. the versatile actor who :secretartal job at the University or Southern >California. protrayed Gen . Bedell Smith in the film Twelve years ago "Patton,". has been signed to play Lt. she and her husband Chalice. the judge advocate. in the Center became managers 'fhcatre Group's production of "The of a new motel in Caine Mutiny Court-Martial'' at the Huntington Beach. hamanson Theatre. Henry F o n d a But the theater re-- irects the production. For the Herman Wouk drama which mained in her blood, Bot>bi, · along with Helen and Bill Susman, were the nucleus of the Hun- tington Beach Playhouse when it was in· ltially organized and have been among its &launchest supporters, behind the scents, during its first eight years. Aside from "Desk Set," her only thespic activity in that period was playing Aunt Sally in the one-act play. "Child of the Frontier," which the playhouse toured for service clubs as a fund-raising activity. However, her background in lheater is deep and varied -from the title role in "Peg of ¥Y Heart" in stock to Shake!)pearean drama in repertory. "I've had lots of experience and loLs of fun," she recalls. "l FEEL TUE PLA VHOUSE reflecl.! community interest," she points out, and 'Two a P~nny' Starring Britain's Cliff Richard LUCY BELL, Editor Friday, November 1%, 1171 The first lady of British theater, Dame Edith Evans, will play role of gambling Grandma Jn Master· piece ThCater on Channel 28 thll Sunday. See story in today't \Veekender, Page 29. pens a six-week run on Nov. 30, Binns and in 19:64 she help- Ins-a cast-headed ey-Hume·eronyn·and-t:d-orpnueJbe_ · hn Forsythe, with Andrew Prine. His tington Beach Play~ ,,._",_,,__.oa.t~IL.thaLU...~odU<~·lllLI;c11edul<Lha1-~~~- grown from three performances to 10 or The world television premiere of the more over the first elg~ years tends to . motion picture "Two a PeMy". starring le pits him opposite Forsythe:, who 1~· However, ~ir so111 MUll:PHY unt1on was prun-ays defense attorney Lt. Barney arily administrative -she was elected reenwald. Cronyn portrays Capt. Queeg !e'Crelary of I.he group and has held down Prine the inte.llectual "Prodder" LL that job ever since. Only once did she Be.fer., d' ,. 1 hed b k round 1 venture onstage, for a small role in '1Tbe IMS 1s 1ngu s ac g n· Desk Set.. .. des the Broadway plays "Detective ry '' and "Command Decision" and the tlon pictures "Fall Safe." "Jud.lment Nuremberg '' ·11nd "North By rthwest." Among his many television e d Its are "Studio One," "Philco yhouse." ''Wagon Traln," "12 O'Clock h," "The Defenders," and aThe Vlrgf· .... TONIGHT, AFTER WHAT many in the playhouse consider far too long an absence,, Bobbi Murphy returns to the stage -and not just In a walk..()n ell.tier. She's playing Aunt Abby, one of Uie two 'lethal old ladies. in-the rcvfval or that classic comedy "Arsenic and Old Lace." "I've always been too busy With other ' bear her out. Standing room only houses Britain's rock,n roll star Cliff Richard at what the players affectionally call "lhe w111 be seen on Channel 5 Sunday, Nor. Barn'' have become commonplace in re-21 , at a p.m. with an encore presentation cent seasons. on Thanksgiving Day at 4 p.m.There will Bobbi Murphy herself has been highly be no commercial Interruption. instrumental in heightening that interest, In 1m, this unusual feature drew and last season, at the playhouse'• larger audiences than all other movies awards dinner, members or the lheall!;r'1 during Ill regular theater showing in Los board of directors showed her their ip-Angeles. preciatlon. They named their annual Starring Englnnd's most durable Pop awards the_"&bbis." personality. Clift Richard, as Jamie And Come next spring. the g&1 ~ho Hopkins, a mod lay-about who exploits started It all may be a prime candidate everyone he meets. the film provides in· for one of her namesakes. 1l1bl. 1110 today'• "cool generatJon'' that I Stan Delaplane Page U ~----11-~ln the Galleries Page !4 admill: they are sWthing fOr answ!!r!I ~ttbta"CGafrl P•Je-1• about lite, but are not satisfied with tbe . OC Dance Theater Pai• %4 ones they are gelling from most adults Tennis Finals Pa1e 14 Steve AJle1 Spec.la.I L P-a• u they know. Dora Byran, portrays Cliff's Ou\ 'N' About · P•rt• u . t7 mother. The film also stars Avril Angers Gulde to Fun Paa:e t7 and Introduces young Ann Holloway. Planetarium Shnw1 Pap 2'f Jnvolvlng Ule problems that have Children's Ti.eattr Pap %7 frul!lrated young people everywhere, the Gulde tn l\1ovlet P1,. 2& story .deals with contemporary attitudes Bon Marche P11e !I abotlt love In regard to Individual rela-OCC Ari Show P•ae 18 lion.ships and soc~ty In general . Movie Stars In Newport P11e %1 The film w1s m1tde on location In Lon· Live Theater Pa,. %1 don covertng the sights and sounds from ••Gamblers" on KC~"'T P .. e %1 Plcadilly Circus to the Thames and back CataJlna o.n Televllioa Pa1e It aaaln. ,\ I ' ff DAILY PILOT Frld.tf, N0vtrnbtr 12, ltf71 Travel Educational .. . Tourists Jamming 'Athens -Steve Allen Sets ay STAN DILAPi.ANE GLYFADA, Grte<e -Like al l Europe's capi· tals, Athens is jammed with American conventions: Accountants. Optometrists. Lions Club and Spiro Agnew. Spent a day fighting for rooms, cabs, cro\\1ded restaurant tables. Then \\'e rented a car fro1n 11erlz and drive out to the beaches. An hour from do'''nto\\'n Athens. fl de1nanded a discount. \Vaved a press card. At home these days they only bu y yo u a rap on the noggin from the riot police -but Zorba·b~hind-the­ counter was' impressed. Gave me 20 percent.) The plush Astir Hotel was solid with an Ameri- can tour. Desk clerk offered a one-bedroom bunga- low at $50-a-day. (\Vhere do they get these haughty clerks? f\1ust be a Haughty Clci.ss at hotel school.) But -at this time of year, Athenians ·are no longer at the beaches at Glyfada. Dozens and doz- ens of GOOD hotels with PLENTY of rooms. Got toom !or $6 a day. Includes breakfast. The Del!in i. Pleasant location. Lobby full of caged birds. Siamese cat going neurotic watching birds out or reach. Few guests, so all hands anxious to be ol service. * \Veather splendid October-November. \Varm days. Outdoor dining at night. Little Glyfada hil.s 1ilreet ot "steak houses." Best buy: Drove fifty miles down to the tip of peninsula. Magnificent Te mple of Poseidon ruins on hilJtop en ding in the sunlit blue Aegean Sea. One.- hundred yards alA•ay. the Belvedere. Cottage !or two: $1 5 a day with meals. Swimming pool. Shaded by olive trees. Locker bar -your own bottles. Take it with T\VO meals. Eat lunches at two good taverns on the beach and the Hotel Aegean. ' * • "We hear '° much about the rush and crush flying overseas, we wonder if it can be avoided?" The bi g terminals ARE murder. Even if you've been there, next time you find it's all been c}lang- ed.-Kenned at New-YOfkls-aXiller. Avoid it b us- ing o er c1 1es: u o ~cago -ots of ines go- ing abroad. Out of ?.1oritreal. (Air Canada and Irtsh International, probably others.) London lnternation· al can by avoided on BOAC's international flights to Birmingham. Connecting with local planes. * Big improvement: European Customs not hold· ine: inspection lines. In Greece, Spain and France, In the Galleries Watercolors Set In ,Challis Show CHALLIS GALLERlES -1390 S. C'.oast Highway, Laguna Beach. Hours; ll a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Watercolors and oils by Phil Dike on exhib it throug h Dec. 3. ~GUNA BEACH ART ASSOCl~TION -307. Clilf DiiVt.'La· guna Beach. Hours: noon to 5 p.m. daily. Mem~rs all media show, Nov. 6 • 30. FACULTY ART EX HIBIT -Calif. State College, Fullerton, 800 N. State College Blvd., Fullerton . Hours: I -4:30 p.m. Mon. to Fri.; Sun., I • 4 p.m. Closed Sat. A special show of 18 Cal-State faculty members art work through Oe<'. 2. ~1ARINERS LIBRARY -2004 'Dover Drive. Newport Beach. Works by Lucia Anderson on exhibit through , r..'ov. during . regu lar library hours. SHERMAN FOUNDATION GALLERY -!625 E. Coast High· way, Corona del'lf\1er. (Formerly Coffee GarOen Gallery.) Hour&: 10 :30 a.m. lo 3:3ll p.rn. A1on:.saL The Junior b:a:gue ol · Newport Harbor current exhibit features paintings. by Irm a Cava!. • BOWERS J\.fUSEUM -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours : 10 a.m. lo 4:30 p.m. Tues.-Sat.: I to ~ p.m. Sun., and 7 to 9 p.m. Wed .. and Thurs. No charge. ~acific Coast Archa~ log ical Society 10th anniversary exhibit and artifacts from·· Rancho San Joaquin, th rough N-Ov. 28. f\.1ESA YERUE LIBRAR'i:: -2969 f\1esa Verde Drive East, Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours are oils by Jackie Lowry through Nov. NEWPORT JIARBOR ART 1\-fUSEUl\1 -2211 \V. Balboa Blvd . Newport Beach, New gallery opened with showing or Contemporary Art from Orange County Collections. Hours, noon to 4 p.m. Tues. -Sun. through Nov. 14. Resin paintings by Dennis Ashbaugh shown in entrance gallery through Nov. 7. CORONA DEL l\1AR LIBRARY -C> f\-1arigold SL, Corona del f\1a r. Vi'orks by Linda Algui and sculpture by \'irginla Yeomans on exhibiL during regular library hours through through Nov. COSTA fi.IESA LIBRAR\' --:513 Center· St., Costa l\tesa. Paintings by Levene Charron on exhibit during reg\llar U- brary hours through No1·. t"IRST NATIONAL BANK OF' 0C -1650 Adams St., Costa f\1esa. Paintings by Fred Olds through Nov .. during regular business hours. TRANSAJ\.1ERICA TITLE CO. -170 E. 17th SI., Costa r-.1esa . Oils by Shirley Ley her through f\ov .. during regular bus- iness hours. OCC GALLERY -2701 Fairview Road , Costa r-.lcsa Hour~: 1o1on. -Fri. 9 a.m. -2 p.m.; \Ved .. 7 - 9 p.m. On exhibit in the Art Center Gallery through Nov. 12. >A'orks of Tom f'ris- cano DOWNEY SA \'INGS-360 E. 11th St . Costa :\1esa. On exhih1t during regular business hours, oil paintirygs by Clovels Bink- ley, Pi.1arian Heizer. Francis Pi.1orri11 and Diane Ne.her . through Nov. CROCKER BANK -2400 Harbor Blvd .. COsta i\lcsa. On exhibit during regular business hours, on paintings by Phyl· lb MCCarthy. during Nov. ----SECURITY PACIFIC -196 E. 17th St.. Costa ilesa: On Clt:· bJbit during regular business hours. oil palntlngs by Alm11. Phillips, lhrou.ii:h Nov. GU:NOALE ~A VlNGS -500 Newport Centtr Orlvt. F3sh- lon Island, Newport Beach. Landscape And flort11l oil paint- ing& by Faye Curtis on exhibit durina: regular business hours, through !'ov. AVCO SAVISGS ANO LOAN -3310 Bristol St., Cos1.11 1.le5a. P•lntingt by Eliiabeth Crissell duting bus.intss hours throug h Nov. - O. CALI F. FIRST NAT'L. DA.NI\ -lQOO Bayside Drive. NeWJ!Qrt Re.th, 1 Formerly Newport Nation&! Bank .\ On uhlbl{ during regulAr business house through Dre. water- .. colors by Bud Hilemin, no Customs inspection. England simply asks if )'OU have anything like e~tra liquor, cig arettes, present.$. But co ming home, ~.S. Customs looks into nearly everything. Younger yoJ are. the 1deeper they dip. Ne,v TV Concept * ". , . vlsting the Virgin Islands ln October. But 11 this hurric1ne se1son?" One o! the hu rricane hunter pilots sends me this way of ·remembering: "July, stand by . ".<\ugusl , it's on us. "September. remember. '·Octo~r. all over." * Newest !orom a jet-lagger: In crowded summer (and even now) long Hnes wait at mail desks of American Express. May take an hour for you r turn. Try this: Have mail sent ··hold for arrival" to BIG- GEST hotel in toY.•n. The.concierge keeps it. (If yo u get a letter, you might tip him a quarter. Local money.) * Don't forget to carry your passport when cash- ing travelers checks. 1i-1ust have it. (American Ex- press in Madrid charged me half a percent to cash mine -the ones I paid them ONE percent to buy. What goes on with Big Mama?) * Restaurants: Dionysos, with the -view of the Acropolis, still good, but so crowded service 'vas disappointing ... 1-leadwaiter is on my wait-till·l·get you list ... Pepsi-cola and Coca Co la now in Greece, after many a year. The FIX beer people kept them out ... Young backpackers and bearded coke drink- ers are ecstatic ... Old to Madrid (but new lo me) Valentin's, fine and colorful restaurant. Tell the taxi driver the one downtown. Another opened in the suburbs, but th at's not where the owner eats ... Chi cote's bar on Madrid's Gran Via is Old Establish- '!j, ~ t .. JOYCE VANDERVEEN AND DAVID PANAIEFF Perform In OTOC Program This S1turday, Sunday County Dance Teacher Scheduled in Anaheim It has taken nearly twelve yea rs, a heated battle wlth network officialdom a n 'd tedious hours of thought and research, but an idea that germinated in the serious side of Steve Allen's head will at last get its day in the court of public opinion. Television viewers themselves can make up their own minds as to whether Steve Allen's "Meeting Of The Minds" co'ilcept, which NBC blocked him from airing in 1960, has any merit. The idea was born when Allen, a wtll-rtad man. began wondering what would happen If he could have some of the great thinkers of the pa st sit- } tin& around a table, talking about a subject or subjects of common interest. Since physical resurrection was lmposslble, he decided to employ the best character ac· tors he could find and ha ve them mouth carefull y rtsearched actual q u o t e s within a debate and dialogue format. "The day I rirst got this Idea,}. I got that certain in- stinctive chill. the. hair on the back of my neck almost stood up -I thought the idea was good," recalls Allen . Research was done, the script written, actors hired STEVE ALLEN Meeting of Minds and the show ready for airlng. "·hen NBC -for whom he >A·as then doing a weekly com· edy show -moved to legally prevent him from inserting the segment into his regular!/ scheduled progrzm. ''ft was at a time. such as today, when everyone ~·as complaining about the quality of television programming. When they refused to allow me to air the "Meeting Of Th11 f\.1inds·· seg ment I felt as Edison might have felt if they had turned down the electric ment where starchy businessmen watch willowy The fall program of the girls (also business-people1-op.m: to 9 p.rtt {That''s·-~oance Theater Of Orange the ehildren'!""hou.r-in-Spain. €cuntyta-third-se11!0n-bows-a * 8 p.m. Saturday in Anaheim High School Auditorium, 811 Los Angeles and dances on H ·•h televiSiOn-and in films. a y WOf-a. · She-wi11-appe1rwnh-M11il'e- in "Le.s Dryades" and with G fs p rt· David Panaieff in the "Don e 8 -light whila..t.hey were $itting in the d a rkne ss.'.' Allen remembers. American pressure has moved Spanish rest.au· W. Lincoln Ave., Anaheim. rant hours from 11 p.m. up to 9 p.m. But the diners The ballet program will repeat are all foreigners. While you're paying your bill , the at 2 p.m. Sunday, Spanish arrive at the later hour.~ Michael Panaieff C:irects the * resident Orange County com- pany in the program of four "What do you recommend for driving ln Mex-balle ts featuring J oyc e ic o?" Vanderveen. former prlma Get a ne\v book ''The Best of Mex ico by ballerina of the Roy a l Car" by D3vid Dodge. This \Viii carry you all over Netherlands Ball~t ; David tourist Mexico. Very sage advice and he says it so Panaieff, danseur of Los you can understand it. You aJso want the Mexi co Angeles City Ballet. and traveJ packet yo u get free by writing Sanborn's Michelle Hamilton. Cathy Travel Service. l\fcA llen, Texas. Road and hotel in-Decker, Juliana Mathewson formation updated regularly. and Darlene Hustead of Orange County. * William McDermott w i 11 De1ert buffs think Baja California is the great· co nduct the ballet orchestra est. A terrible road runs below Ensenada down to made up of professioila( musi- La Paz. Friends of mine have done in with four· ciaos from Ora'nge County. wheel drive. Guest artists include Cecile A lh · th l So d l · N lh Kazmi,er and Paµl Maure. no er is e grea nora eser 1n or ern Miss Kasmier is a soloist 1'.1exico. Now there is a dirt road that parallels pav-with the Pacific Ba I Je t . ed Mexico High\vay 15. It is the old Cam ino Real Theater and Western. Ballet of -the Royal Highway that ran from Mexico City to California. It follows small back towns and a chain of 11issions,. Carry spare gasoline. -~~~~~~~-Televised Tennis Set For Nov. 26 Quixote" pas de deux. Maure is principal artist of Ballet des Arts and formerly danced with the Paris Opera. "Les Dr yad es'' was specially choreographed for the DTOC program by Mlchael Panaiefl "It is an enchanting legent of the love, beauty and mystery surrounding wood nymphs, whose lives are in- tertwined with the trees," be 11aid. The ballet is set to Dohnany's "Suite in F Sharp , minor." The "Don Qu ixote" pas de deux is set to music by t.1inkus and is a dramatic divertise- ment . in tone. Another Panaieff work , "i!a Vie Est Belle" is featured on !he Nov. 13 and 14 pro- gram. It is set to music by Of· fenbach and includes a can- can finale. Completing the program is "Songs Without Words" which was first presented by DTOC in May.' Appearing in the Pas de Quatre are Cathy Decker of Orange, Darlene Hustead of Buena Park, Michelle Hamilton. Buena Park and Juliana Mathewson of VU!a Park. Zuhin Mehta Signs Ne,v Contract Tickels are $4 and may be In a refreshing departure reserved by calling 637-4449. from a steady diet of turke'y Elementary and senio r citizen and football over the long tickets at $1.SO will be On the e\'e or the opening of Thanksgiving weekend. Chan-available at the-matinee has tenth season as music nel 9 Will present r'The W6rld performance, Sunday. director of the Los Angeles Championship Tennis Finals ." Dance Theater is a non-pro- Philharmonic, Zubin t.1 ehta Friday, Nov. 26· at 1 p.m. and fit company offering dancers h . d th on Saturday. Nov. 27 at 5 p.m. of the county. regardless of as s1gne a new ree-year "The Lange Cup" will be contract Y:ith an option for an show n. ballet school affiliation. an op- add itional three years. Tennis Finals" will be portunity to participate in 11he contract provides lhat broadcast live from Dallas, workshop and theatrica l ex- In 'Wrath' Rita Hayworth is the latest star to be signed for "The Wrath of God.·· which pro- d.ucer-director Ralph Nelson begins f i I m i n g throughout f\.1exico soon. Robert Mitchum has already been anoounced for a starring role: • Miss Hayworth 11d\I portray a woman caught up in a revolutionary conflict in a Latin Ameri can country, while Mitchu m's role is that of a fallen priest lit lbe screenplay adapted 'from :James Graha!Jl'S novel, "TOO Wrath of God." Paula Pritchett also stars in the Ra inbow PrOduc-· tions film set during the turbulence of the l920's. The new drama marks Miss Hayworth's first motion pic- ture for MGM since her 1966 starring role with Glenn Ford in "The Mortey Trap." The ac· tress rose to major stardom in such films as "Cover Girl" "Gilda." "The Strav.•berry Blonde," "The Lady From Shanghai," ''Af fa ir in Trinidad ," "Miss S adie Thompson," "Pal Joey" and "Separate Tables,·· Milland Role HOLLYWOOD (UPll -Ray Pi.iilland, v.·ho won the Oscar for ''Lost Weekend." viii! join Oscar-winner Gloria Grahame, in the 90-minute television movie, "Black Noon." His plan then wa5 (and still Is) to take advantage of the current climate of opinion in television by "painlessl y" mixing some culture into the viewers entertainment diet. ''Television can literally save Mankind centuries of ig· nor2.nce. folly and stupidit:t It may be a lazy wa y of getting educated, but nonetheless it can be effecth·e. It i s enlightenment th tough ex· posure, and I think viewers "·ant this kind o f pro- gr.11mming." Allen says. Despite the initial set-back he did not give up on the idea: ftnd 80 a full 90-minute version of his ~perimental "~Ieetii\g Of The.Minds" will air the day after Thanksgiving. Friday, Nov. 26, at 6:30 p.m. on Chan- nel 5. ,. If the public r e acts favorably. to hear i n g Cleopatra. SL Thom as Aquinas. Thomas Paine aiid Theodore Roosevell use their wisdom to heatedly discuss the relevant issues of today, Steve Allen will be a most thankful man -and a man \\·ho will have had his faith tn the intellectual capacity and desire of the American public confirmed . During his current syn. dicated ~rnedy program's 10- wee.k Fall taping hiatus. Allen has made atrangements to go 1o New York for discussion with net~·ork executive s regarding their in!erest in a dea l which calls for the possibility of spinning-off a regular series from h is "Meeting Of The Minds" special. he will conduct a n1inimum of Texas. Competing for SI00.000 periences. sixty concerts be l ween in prize money will be topli,'i~<:· Ciiiiiiiii::m iiii&:;;;;.;:;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;::;tiiis:iiiiinr.•-:Ti'•;;:.;;;r:;•;;;.,..;t;:. ;;;c'ir:-;;:,:----c;_===:-:; ~~~~:h~dl~~;~~o~::~ohn~ear ~~;i::i~~~h f~~~e~r~~~~w~~~ 1 SOMEONE IACK EAST IS WAITING FOR ONE OF THESE j1 John Cbnnell, president of Ron Laver and Tom Okker. ~ FOR THANKSGIVING! WHY DON'T YOU BE THE SENDER7 the Southern Ca l i for n i a ZUBIN MEHTA "The Lange Cup" is the r JUST CALL US THE DETAILS, Symphony-Hollywood Bow I Signs New Contract fin11l meet of the IO-event pro W! DO THE REST! Association. the organization circuit skiina championshi""· IANKAMER.ICARD MASTER CHARGE CHECK, OR EVEN CASH h. h h L " "" SHIP' A CARTON OF MIXID FltlSH FllUITI ~· LC sponsors t e I) s Pitting some 40 v et e r a n SHIP' A CAii.TON OF AYACADOSl Angeles Philharmonic, said. one of the great conductor· skliers against exact i n g 1 SHIP' A CA.llTOH OF HA.VIL ORAN"IS! ''\\'e are probabl y the most orchestra relationships o( our slalom and giant s I a Io m I ""Olt YOU NAMI THI MIXTUJll! fortunate nrchestra in the time." courses 11 t Breckenridge, Wllll A llAUTIFUL PLANT! United SI-ates to ha\'e the Colorado. the com~tition ~·ill Wiii.i A DOllN ltOSIS! service!'. of so inspirinit and 1ttehta expressing h is challenge names 'like Bill WIJll -AN ARRANGEMENT ! d' r . h d I d pleasure at the Board's con-. USE OUR FLOIUST WIRE SlRYICll IS 1ngu1s e a c11 er as tinued faith in him said, .. 1 Kidd. Teje Overland. Adrien Zubin fi.lchta to insure con-Duvillard and Hugo Nindl. The SAY! WITH THESE SPECIALS! · r h · · ha\'e said this time and again: • • 1 • 1 1 1 1 \ 1 1 tinuat1on o I e c x c 1 t 1 n g outcome of the doll'llhill duel 1' I • • • • • I • • I • • • • • • I I I grG"'th a n d development 1 am one of the most fortunate will make the master of the l cooductors in the Uni ted I lUIY RID I FLOWERS BY • FRESH MUMS which the Los A'n g e e s slope $25.000 richer. BABY POM 0 • Ph;lharmon;c h" eh j 0 y • d States. No,. only do I have the 1 GRAPE-UIT • D E B R A I P MS 1 d r h most elite orchestral musi-~ "' un er his direction or t e . k 'J\"anni'x' T eam 1 1 • I • past nine years. cians lo °"·or with but also 11 l 'nturlnt Pr a:e .J "1 hl d I lh friendly re)ationship with the 6 49• • Wlnnln1 Arrangement1 · .. ea con uc s e HOLLY\VOOD IUPll _ for • • Ph.lh · t I r Board Lhat makes it possible. • • Complete Weddlnp 1 armnn1c no on y or our · h y1·, '1orrow (of ••· defunct I bs 1 ... · d andam11nagemen tlbat as as " 1.ne lll!llt -12 I 'uMral Pl•cet at • Llmit-2 bunch•• I 59Cbunch I \\' nler su er puon series an high an ideal of the quality of "Com bat") and Elizabeth 1 With T'lllt C••P•tt • S•ntlbl• Prlcff • With thl1 coupon Celebrity. Pops at the ro.iusilc music-mak1'1g as t have. T Allen will be seen next season I • C('nter. but he also trave s therefore look forward a great as guest stars In a segment of ~ • • • 1 • • • • •1• 1 1 1 • 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 '! 1 1 • a •1 I • with the orchestra all over de-' th .. "Manni·x." I I NIW CROP s 111 The ... 1 I c llf Southern Cali forn ia. conducts ·-N-tjo-ej w-mii;ijng .. yijeajjjnij.MiiiiiiiiiiiiMii .. iiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiMiilf 1 ' ' •Y 11 1 ' • UST Oii THI VALINCIA rnany concerts outside th el 1 r1rr1N Oil JONATHAN ,RISH S9UllllD I regulor sea.ton and has helped • APPLES •1 OranlJ• Juice •1 ORANGES "• us immeasurably with our ef· THf WEST'~ ~INEST IOOkSTORIS 1 20 l 1 " forts out s;de lhc ba s• or oor I 10"' L• 1 29" I L ... opcraHons. Und<r Ms d~"' H u N T E R I s B 0 0 Ks R " ..,.. " Q""' lion. the orchestra h a s • • • Ll'"lt -lO Lk. • I LIMlt ' LM. I Ll1111t \'1 G•1l•11 I Wltll Tllh c.11,,. I developed into an Ol'J{<'lnization WI 1 c hi h d • Wltlri Tlllt C•11,.. • tfrl T'll • ... ,.. • • "' c provide!! 11 wi e range I (I f services to the Soultlt.rn FOR 12Q YUPS-SINCE 1151 I • • • • I • I I I I I I I •-• I I •...I I I • • • I I I .... Cfllifon)jfl communlt . from -l • COUPONS OPlltE NO ... V. 17 elemenltif1' school chlldrtn to Locattd At Th•i• r•sfaurant1 d•mand the fine•t for their custom•r1. That'1 why th•y f•atur• S('nior cllizen11. The tours and FASHION SQUARE Newport PrHucel P1troni1e them! Swiss Chalet, N1wport : Collentlnos, Costa recordlng acUvilits under his • Mesa ; T ... lonl, Costa M•1a; a"d OY•r l-75 oth•r1. How about your call ing ui? leadership have made the rest IN SANTA ANA of lhe nation, ond In fact lhe N 0 WI Natlon1lly Accl1lmld World'1 Flntst Produce. Hous1 whol• world owore lh•I Zubin Phone (714) 543.9343 J ,-----, NEWPORT PRODUCE ,-------, ~~1;::,~~~ildh\,1:',' ~~! H .SOO ~'.o!:~:=~rHt!nt Cordi ~ Opeo 7 Dey> • Wool! 7 o.m: to I p.m. :~E11: r1"9I N..C7 . . • URGAINS G•LORll ~ Conversational 2616 Nowpott loulnord .. tit• Ptftln1ulcr S OPEN El'ENll\'GS 'Tll. 9 P.lff. •33 Y1ari ot Produce "Wlltro qtu1Uly u the panish . K, "°"' H0t0" Ord<r of th1 Hou,.• l 0 I 'I l1•11lv Hlll1 e L• Jell1 e Phot11h1 e S t~ k t,,..1,co •t'll Ii Cr V • IONllJO ,llUtT fMll•,I• ,0. • Yl.lllS. ,ho11t •46·2•D1 -•42·129t I " e y g ly ' s y e • ' y ic n 11 • n .. e y It g it ' k n g y ' g s d Ir ' n d c n 0 n ' a • a ' .. 1 ... F'rid.iy, Novtmbtr 12, 1 .. 71 D41L V PILOT 25 WEEKENDER 0 -U T .. 'N I ABOUT •11 NORJtJ STANl.EY ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE Les A111is Du Vin Friends of \Vine hereabouts \\'ill be getting it together from nO\\' on in a lot of social bo nhomle. The organization stirring all this good fello"•ship will be the recently-formed Costa 1'1esa-Ne,vporl Beach chapter of U s Amis du Vin. ~ Founded just seven years ago. Les Amis du Vin now has chapters in O\'er 60 cities throughout the country. wtth a nlembership of more 'Lhan 10.000 f~od and ~·ine Jover~. The local chapter, headed by dLrector Ri chard J. Cros by. is the very latest added to the ·roster that embraces cities from Anchorage. Alaska to lifiami. Fla. AMES OF LES AMIS According to Cros by, Les Amis is "dedicated to man's greater enjoyment and appreciation of food and 'vine, cultivated and sharpened through a pro- gram of active and continuous education." By at- tendin g the organization's various events. members learn to enjoy foods and \\'ines from the principal regions of the \\'Orld. The Costa ~lesa·Ne\\'port Beach chapter \\'as formed to enable ION1.I bon vivants to enjoy the edu· cationa l aspects. economy of scale and the leverage available only to groups of dedicated food and '\'ine enthusiasts .. ;\JI seminars and other events are held at cost and pro\'idc a forum for the nation's food and '\'ine experts to meet South Coast members and their friends. Each activity\ of Les Amis du Vin is planned to provide the social enjoyment of a traditional \Vine seminar by se rving the !irst wine as an aperitif. coupled with the educational and social enjoyment of a sitdov.•n seminar at tables with bread and cheeses. Each wine will be discussed by the ~uest ex- pert of the evening and members and their guests are encouraged to ask questions. 4'· KICK.OFF Kick-off program for the ne\v Orange Coast chapler "ill be a special semina r on sparkling ,,·ines of the world. This event is scheduled for next Fri· day. Nov. 19, at the Costa t.1esa Country Club. 1701 Golf Cour'se Drive, Costa r..tesa. Guest ex pert for the evening's ·seminar. 'vho \Vill fly out from Ne\v York especially fo r the oc· casion, is Robert Gourdin. In ad dition to being a renowned expert on the night's featured wines, Gourdin is the national director of Les Amis du Vin . SAMPLING Semina r participants "·ill be sampl ing "·ines from France, the U.S.A .. Germany, It aly and Spain. They are \Veibe l Cra ckling Rose, Piper Cuvee des Am bassa Deurs-Brut N.\'., ~loet and Cha ndon Im- perial N.V .. Gran Codor nill-Non Plus Ultra de ,;\nara N.V., l\1artin i Riserva ~1ontelera Brut Nature. VaJkenbe rg-Gold falk Extra Cuvee, Schramsberg • Blanc de Blan c-1967, Cuvee Dom Perignon-1962, Bollinger R.D.·1955. The aperitif ~·iU be served at 7:30 p.m. and the --;.;, --------"'°"·llrarwtll tart promptly at s-p:mc-The f>lfT $111 LOCAL EVENTS . The local chapter will be sponsoring both large '1•1ne seminars and dinn ers at convenient locations in Orange Coun ty. There aJ so will be limited con- noisseurs' semi nars. luncheons and din ners tvhere either the location. th e cuisine. or the limi ted amou nt of rare or old \\'Ines require limited atten- dance to members on a first received-first accepted basis. 496-5773 499-2626 OPEN THANKSGIVING DAY OPEN EVERY. 0-AY OYSTER BAR • GOURMET DINING COCKTAI LS • ENTERTAINMENT Thursday Fashion Show-12:15 LUNCH DINNER SUNDAY BRUNCH 11 A.M. 4 P.M . 9:30 A.M. • 4 P.M. 32802 COAST HWY., LAGUNA NIGUEL DINE IN OUR ROMANTIC ·CELLAR LA CA VE RESTAURANT STEA K e LOB STER • PR IME RI B COCKTAILS • WINE TWILIGHT SPECIALS 5 to 6 :45 p.m.-Sun. thru Fri. Jto11t Prim• Rib of le1f, Au Jui .................................. $3.fS T1rlyaki lrO(h1tt1 ...... ·-····-.. ·· .. $4.95 Top Slrlo in Lunch1on Steak . . ............ ._ ......... _.,, ... $3.25 S1t•ed with lou•d 9•e1n 11l~d. C ha1(.I elf drt11in9, 1nowfl 1 ~1 pol1lo11,. G1rd1n •191t1bl1i i nd 911ti, b•11d flt •tr191 1ddition•I Lw11cM011 I Mo11. tlir11 f,I,) , , • , , , , ••• , •• , •• , , 11 :JO '-2:11 D111111t WHkd1ys , , , ... , , . , ..... , ••• , • • . . . • 5:00 ti 11 :01 Fridoy e11d Set11rdoy , ••••••••••••••••• , . , • 5:00 t1 1 J:OO l6f51/J Irvine A•e. (Comer of 1,7tti St.) COSTA MESA 646-7944 EL MORO Proudly Announces It's 2ND ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Mon., Nov. lS thr11 Th11r., Now. 11 6 to 11 p.m. 2 DINNERS FOi THE PRICE OF ONE Ch1mp19~1, Wl111 ind h+.t+1lnm1nt Ni9tr.1I,. PLAN TO ATTEND I 5011, No t.111r•1lio111 I 16655 PACIFIC COAST HWY. SUNSET IEACH 146·l177 No. 1 on tl1e Coast Your Hometown News paper 11 The DAILY PILOT I per person . Participants are adv ised to have a light . meal before the event. w Crosby repotts that "'hiJe complementary to. rather than competitive \\"ilh other food and '\'ine societies. Les Amis du \'in has more activities than most u•ine and gourn1et groups, and is relative ly inexpensive to join. THANKSGIVING DINNER Served from 1 to 10 p.m. COCIHAILS e DANCING e ENTERTAINMENT l1106 COAST HICiHWAY SOUTH LACiUNA 4"·26U Special FRESH LOCAL LOBSTER! S4.9S NIGHTLY PLENTY OF PARKING • ( 11<c~i~ I 01\NI\ J?f)INT HJ.\RBf) ~ Succulent Beef front Captain Cook s broiler. JJ.licacies from the Se ven Seas. · Magnif(un1 Harbor View. COCKTAILS ,LUNCHEON ai1d DINNER DAILY 25001 DANA D .. IYf. DANA POINT HARIOR 496-6195 Oft l'.i:lf"-C... Hlgtiwty -T\lftlrt ~ Ni,,...l 11111 Slit CletNllfl '• • OPEN FOR MEMBERSHIP The Costa t.1esa-Ne,vport Beach ch apter. t\1hich desires ne\v members, provides opportun it ies for v.·ine se min ars and gourmet di nner!' \\'ith \\'ine tat various prices), a subscription to lrine 1nagazi ne. purchasi ng \Vines at selected retail outlets at spec· ia1 prices and receipt of a bl·111onthly ne\\'Sletter. First event follo\\ring a holiday season respite will be a •·mystery" seminar on Cabernet Sauvig- nons. This seminar, to be conducted in early Jan· uary, will feature a blind tasting of several \vines to test appreciation of quality 'vithou t benefit of a label for zuidan ce. ~ SUNDAY BRUNCH The ne:<t scheduled event, to be sta ged in Co· operation \Vith the Los Angeles chapter of Les Amis, u.•ill be Sunday brunch on the Queen ~1ary in Long Beach. It '"ill combine a sen1i na r and com· parison c~ sherries. ports, oportos and madeiras \\'ilh a fou r-course lunc heon in the Queen's salon. Information regarding membership or atten- dance at the groups events can be obtained by dir· ecting mq uiry to: Les Ami du Vin, Costa ~lesa Newport Chapter, P. 0 . Box 1771 , Ne\\'port Beach. Calif. 92663. 1\10111 'N' Apple Pie hli.'\.'. so1nething old '"ith son1ething ne u.· and the results are bound to be interesting. The combination of the tv.·o '"' encountered one nig ht last \\'eek prov- ed especially rewarding. ~~~- \Vhile sc arcely ancient. the restaurant that af. forded our pleasant evening is a se asoned Oran~e Cou nty est ... blishment. It 'vas Reuben 's on Tu stin Ave. in Santa Ana , one of the oldest in this now far- reach"ing chai n of popu lar spots. Tht: so mething ne\v com mand ing our attention tvas the group currently entertaining in the lounge. They are a talent-laden quartet going under th e all- American moniker of h1om 'N' Apple Pie. The Newest In Entertainm ent .••. , • • ••. Accompanied Sy The Finest In Food PRIME RIB e ST EAK e LOBSTER ITALIAN SPECIALTIES Now App••ring ROMAN AND THE JIM MURPHY TRIO DAILY DOUBLE IN THE LOUNGE 3 to 7 p.m, Mon. thru Fri .-Hors d'o•uvres DANCING N IGHTLY 1262 PALISADES ROAD IN"' Or ... e C•11"'Y Alrpertl COSTA MESA 54'·8390 DON JOSE' No.w Appearin9 The Noted J .t11 Pianist CHARLOnE POLITE Nationa lly Acclaimed "'one of th1 Country's Five Top J a11 Pioni sts Enchilada and Taco .......•.•...... , $1 .35 Chili Relleno-Enchil1d1 .•••...••.••• $1 .50 s.AH wl'tll llc1, hou, T"te4it•1 •114 5el11 FINEST MEXICAN FOOD AT ltlASONAILI PRICES e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adoms (At Mognolio I Huntington Beoch 962-7911 j SOFT ROCK Certainly \Ve became dedicated fans of Mom 'N' Apple Pie on first contact. Be prepared to !ol~ IO\\' suit once you've been exposed to the distinctive soft-rock idiom that stamps the group as fresh and original. Before settling into the agreeable task of tak· ing ~1om's measure, \\'e renewed old acquaintance \Vith the restaurant itseU. This posed no difficulty even though three or four-years had passed since our last visit. Return outings tc. any of th e Reuben's restaur- ants. after all, produce no surprises in the quality of the atmosphere. food or service. There's a built· in guarantee of satisfac tion in all regardl_.ess of location -thanks to the efficie nt management prac-- lices of the opera~ing company, Far \Vest Services, Inc. ELEVEN ENTREES From the 11 ent rees offered on Reuben's Santa Ana menu , the four men1bers of our party each chose a different selection . All u.·ere served \vith a choice of tossed green salad or soup and a board of hot fresh bread. . Leading off the entrees tabbed \\'ere a dandy Ne\\' \'ork steak, $5.50, and the delicious fried chick· en. a la Re uben, $3.35. Next came th e savory scampi Itali ano style tgiant gulf shrimp sauteed in a; rich sauce of lemon butter, garlic, chopped parsely an d French capersl. $4.25, and a very succulent broiled lobster ta il (served v.iith rice pilaf), $4.95. A LA CARTE ITEMS A la cart e ite ms included baked Idah o potato, 60 cents; fre sh mushrooms1 a la sk illet, $1 .10; art i· choke. 95 cents. Two dessert orders 'v ere placed for Reuben's gian t schooner sundae. 65 cents. Continued on Page 26 I i.c~~ STEAKS e SEAFOOD CONTINENTAL AND POLYNESIAN ENTRIES NICiHTL Y DINNER SPECIALS ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCING NIGHTLY AT 9 P.M. IN THE LOUNGE 2645 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA 545.9471 Redtaurant w. 'oor~ood and AMiRICAN CUISINE TROPICAL COCKTAILS ENTERTAINMENT , POL YNE~IAN SHOWS Thur. thru Sun. Nl9ht1 NOW APPEARING Thurs. thru Sun. Nite1 8:30 to I :30 The S1ru•tional Samoan Vocalist/.Guit•rist TIM FULOA 1961 ADAMS AVE. lat Magnolia) 968 5050 HUNTINGTON BEACH " 1.11w. r,,r Choic• of Conwmnn~ Trianon Ton.d G1Hn !tlt.d w1tdorf S..l•d R~n Apple: V•tlty Turit~-Giblel c ,.,.r, S1ge or Chtfln ut Drttsin~ •.9.i liked Sug.n•CuTed Ham-S.uce Cumbetl,nd 4.75 lont)ff1 Roder Mounl,in Trou1-Saute Al"10ndint •.7S lto.111 Prime RibJ of leef-Au 1111 ~ lroli.d New Yorlc Ste*-Maitre D'Hoit.I ft.,s WM •-S..U.tth C11!died y,,.,., Cotil O'lrltfl WhippM "°'•'°" -Hat Mlitc. "-• lf.ifldy Swee Pvmpkil! Pi4I fmtl ,.......,,.,. S4md1e Sptcl.111 Childttn'1 Dinner $011p flf S.IM . o~nm & tnttqf' ctlekt e4: APfli. v,n., T11rlty hk.0~ l l.91 Re.servilions 64._.1 700 ~~~of~ -· NlwPOtl tEACH, (AUfOINt.t. • " .. r I I ._ . , j -. I 26 DAILY PILOT Friday. Navernbfr 12, 1971 r .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. ,-,..., ... i:E:'""'"'!!"""!:"'""""""""'""'"""""'"""""""'" ............ """"'""',..., ... ""'""'!!!l!l""'""""""""'""'""'""' .... ""' ................................ ~ .... ""'! ............ '!l!! .... .,.,"'1 : Th• N.w M'"~~::·~;,T~i~ioc~P~;~ : 1 \VEEKEMJER 0 u T \ N A B • 0 u T I FRI., SAT. & SUN.. I I All ~y~~~~~~( !;;~l~~m. I ---·---... --~----·~· .... ...,..i .. ~·-·--...,..~·-·· COCKTAIL HOUR-JUMBO DRINKS \ DAILY I : ~~·~~;~OS ·:~:H·E~:·y IRUNCH$ ......... 1~ I 2. STEAK " EGGS I I 3. EGGS IENEDICT (Ab•lon• lflth or C•n1dl1n l•<•n) I I T')' Our '"DAILY DOUBLE"' S pm•7 pm I I Two Dlnnor1 fo r th• ,rice of On• 2601 West Co<111t Hwy., Newport Be•ch. · 548.1166 I , .... -................ .. JD C'.C:=j) D E<-·~>D"i<-·-iii -IT L ti NT TA1NM N -CoCK All CONT INENTAL CUISI NE e SEA FOODS CHARCOAL BROI LED ST EAKS E 11 f erf ;1 i111ne 11 t t eatunn:; NORM PANTO DUO LUNCH e DINNER e COCKTAILS Op~n Dall ~ l\lon. thru Sat -11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Closf>d Sunday And O ur NIGHTLY DINNER SPECIALS Tu esday thru Saturday Complete-$2.95 ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY TUE. THRU SAT. BY THE • -r ...._ MARK DAVIDSON TRIO SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH 11 to 3 Continued from P•g• 25 ' TOP ENTERTAINMENT I . Dh•missing guilt for overindulgence wt the din· ner table. we moved to the lounge just as Mom 'N' Apple Pie \\'as getting into their second act. From that moment on we were virtuaJly held captive by these engaging entertainers. Be:vond the obvious competence and profession- alism o"r their musical abilities, the group radiates a youthful vitality that's contagious. Bright and smi_l- ing faces contribute. to be sure, but m~1ch of this infectious charm stems from the fanta stic harmony that f\O\\'S from the union of their four superb voices. ORIGINALITY f\l on1 'N' .J\pple Pie1s singing and three guitars. at various times. blend into sounds remini~cent of Pet.er. Paul and !\1ary; the \Ve r~ive; and the Mama's and the Papa's. But this is not to say they're lack· ing qualities that bespeak clear-cut originality. @~ -to NOW APPEARING-WED. THRU SAT. THREE FOR THE ROAD SUN., MON. •nd TUES . JAN DENEAU TRIO Mond1y i1 L1d le'1 Night -9 p.m. on D1ncing 1 Night1 1 WHk -COCKTAILS-Ol"EN 31!VEH Olt VS LAGUNA FLEUR DE LIS 1460 S. COAST BLVD. LAGUNA BEACH FREE P'.l.RKIMG-IN RE.I.II positions -including a novelt y se1ection from mem- ber Darrell Baker's unfinished comedy rock opera, "1 Love \:"ou So Much I Could ••. !" GOLDEN WEST STUDENTS Darrell, \vho organized Mom 'N ' Apple Pie with fellow students at Golden \Vest College 1n late 1970, plays rhythm guitar and miscellaneous precussion and sings bass and baritone. Bonn ie Evans. in addi· lion to her talents as an organist and precussionist, demonstrates her \varm alto voice in solo numbers ranging from "Sum mertime" to Darrell's "Dear God, \\lhere Am I?" .. 't1 Roy Young, who plays lead guitar, bass. drums and organ, is also a dynamic bari tone-tenor giving a real emotional charge to suc h numbers as "They Call the \Vind 1t1aria" and .. Sunshine -Superman." He also arranges many of the group's songs. PRIME RIB e SEAFOOD STEAKS e COCKTAILS OPEN 7 DAYS LUNCH 11 to l olO DINNER 5 to 12 SUN DAY BRU NCH FROM 10 AM. Enfttrfa inment Wedn1sd1y thro Sunday 103 N. BAYSIDE DR., NEWPORT BEACH In The Marina Dun es · 644°4031 ?>lake Hcservstions Now LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS e DANCING CUtlll'L~;rE TRAfJ!TIONAL TllAN l\SGl\'ING DIN/\'ER $2.95 \}~. ,llBAMBOD ~ TElUll.CE Cmnplet• Ch ioe>• Slrl• ALLll l ·, WIST NEWPORT BEACH 642·4298 THERE SHOULD IE IUT THERE'S NEVER .I. COVER CHARGE! ------ PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLDbAYS Get the Pizza with Pizza0~~ 6blGn·adJ '~JHANKSCilVINCi DINNER ~· Served l<1 an1iJy Style Ca rve Your o,m Turkey Or Ham TAKE YO UJl LEFTOVER S H0~1E WITH YOU Roast Younq Tom Turkl!y Giblet Gtow-y , Cornbread DrM,lnq laked Vlrqlnlo Ham, Champoqnt Sauce Roast Lon9 Island Ducklin9 Roott Prime Rib of lctf au jus Chfld ren's DiDners I 12 and Uftdtt ) Chait• of: G.1 rd." F11th l1ot1";111li o• /lfC,.. Corn with llm1 '''"' Choic1 1111 Whlp"•li Pet1 +et 1, C•"''' y,,..,, 01 111-•il 'ol1to D•11t tl: Cho•t• of, .. ..,"~; ... o• 1-11111 Mi~t• '''• 1,, Crt•m ,, Sh•''"''· C11 f111 Tt• M11• Ml~h 395 3's 4 50 5 75 2so ALL TIME TRIMMINGS "COMPLETE TURKEY DINNER TO GO '1500 Plu1 T•• ' I 170!,~ -l l . ~ PHONE •••• 645·5550 ..• -. 153 EA ST 17TH _ •••• COSTA MES A_ Flue J111/i1111 Cuisine Cockt11ils 232S E. COAST HIGHWAY 673·1267 R1 .. n<etlo111 o,e11 Dally -I ,.m. to 2 o.m. CLOSED MONDAY PRESENTS GINO LANZI Mo11ioy thru W1t1.,.1~•J- TONY FLORl?S Thu1'ld11y thru S1111doy .1.p,1•rl119 t te 11 p.111. 111 The wi ... Ctllar-11 ta Z Up1telr1 IUSIMESSMAN"S LUNCH lloOO TO 5 SATURDAY-11 to S LUNCH OR BRUNCH Llq11or 1111tt Feoli Ceterirtt F111r 1'1rtl11 SUNDAY-BRUNCH OP'EN EYEIT DAT OJrl THE OCEAN ltOJACt:NT TO NEWPOll:T I EACH 1"11llt IEVERY SATURDAY I 2 STEAK DINNERS FOR • French Fries • French Fried Onion Rings • Toned Salad • Roll a nd Butter " Bring• frien d! T•ke •dv 1nf•ge of thi1 d 1liciou1 d in- n•r for 2, •t 1 just ri9ht price. 1/1 lb. tender choic• 1te•k, cut to Br1dford Hous e 1pecific 1tioni. 81 good to 1 fti t nd1 or m1ybt the f•mily? This mt1I, i1 • f1 vorlt 1 with t ll , , , you 'll b1 • winntrl ... O!Mft Delly Mon. thru Sat. t :H •.m. tot p.m. Surtt11(' r/lO,llfJj KNOWN FOR VALUES 10 '·"'· te ' It·"'· GRANT PLAZA -BROOKHURST a ADAMS -HUNTINGTON IEACH ' .J ·-• • I Bass player Bob Dalrymple has interesting rhythm patterns and runs that "'eave a fine thread of continuity through each tune. He also switche s occasionall y to guitar' or drums, and his mellow voice often blends in to bal an ce nicely on many ot the group's arrangements. . PURE HARMONY .\Ye \Vere partic..·ularly impressed \\'ith 1'1om1s renditions of well-know n songs like "House of the RisinK Sun" and the Beatles' "'Lel it Be " and "Hey J~de. An d. there were many shining moments in hit compositions by Carole King, Leonard Cohen and George Harrison . Plan s are under \\'ay for li1om· 'N' Appl e Pie to record their first album . Don 't. ho\\•ever. \vait for the record's release before catching the group's \'.ery modern soun ds. t!SLI&BT C•ckteil L•11111• GINO T&SCA PRi5EllTS MIJSIC.ltl COMIO'I" TUE5. THllU SAT. -Ol"EH EVEll:Y OAY Pll:OM f P.M. l'W. r71tl 191-7007 2 The 1 2•3S --~""' C. Gr. JunlOff Hom Beoch J 0 K ER S ~ Grwt c-'l~ll"at1ksgiving-Dinner l~n11~t Tnni Turkf'y nr Viro;:1nia I (1(1n Soup or t'ruit Cup. S11l1d. Pr1tsto,..~. Dessert (pumpkin or mine,.. pie! beveraae Comp1ttt Din~,;·, $3.50 Children Sl.00 Plus Our R"RUlar t.l,.nu or fi~h. Prim11 Rib and Slf'aks Sf'n•l'd fr.,m 12 Nr)On tn 10 11.m. 317 PACl,-IC COAST HWY. HUNTINGTON BEACH R11tr~1fion1 Ac,t pltd 536-lSSS • NOW APPEARING THURS.·FRl.·SAT. NITES RON & MARTY ''The Versatiles of Orunge County'' Wed & Sun. Nites PEPE VILLA . The /11 t11rnaliouaJ Guitarist DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS-99c CORNER OF PARK & MARINi BALBOA ISLAND -673·4S30 THE BERLINER German Faniily R es taurant Famous For SAUERBRATEN w;+h POTATO DUMPLINGS CELEIR.1.TE THE ST.I.RT Of FASCHING CARNIVAL SEASON SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 9oqi"";"9 Al 1:00 P.M. V1lutblt p,;,, Fo• Th~ 8111 Co1ty"'' Muilc F•f Dl11l119 011tt Doncl119 l y The TRIO OF AUSTRIA OP'EN TH.l.NICSGIVING-D.1.Y-J te t ,,M. 0,..11 Doily F111 r Di11Rtf Fro111 S ,,M. CLOSED MOND.1.T BANQUET FACILITIES 18S82 BEACH BLVD. Tow" & Country C1"ter HUNTINGTON IEACH ~ C 1ow" • •" COU•l'llf 968°5800 C•~•no TIADITIONAL -THANKSGIVING DINNER '"'' ro11" ''"' hlrtl•v • ,,,_ rlht •f ~f l"'t Leet hle11il Duckll11t Ce'"pl•I• with ,u th• Tr!m,,.lng1 St r¥•4 lro1n I ,p.m. 11.ESEll.VATIONS SUGGESTED . I ' 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER htwet11 luf'fumt & ll"lt•w• "'"• .. ~'"""' "'"""'•ll•rt• •144-2oao • ., w I ., e y n 0 r " r · • . ' I .... - VISIT OLD JAPAN Yotir Guide to Fun ~~-:-7 ® . . ,' ;, ffilYflKO Youth M~gic Theater Set "~(/~ '·"'"h'"n Ulouo•• C0<U•H• I/ 1 -l'.\';.\Jll.:\A13~S.J.u~l1u\ilt'S •79:i·7005 I tJr-. .-.:-.la.: aa ·ru\\·n & Country . 54 l·J:IOJ TtJRiA~CE :!~Of [ ,'\1110 Fa~li!on Sq.• 54:?·81i7V 1!.." FLING .___.. ENTERTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK DANCING MON.-TUES.-WfD.~ * HAP HALL DUO * Lucy L•k• w.11~ °'' "''~ .., l•u Sini::l"r n.11, ... 1 GuitArist , mrl •11, ____...._...... For E•rly Risers and La te Pl•yers Open Daily From 6 A.M. to 2 A.M. Rear-Mes~ Theater 5~uE1:E Costa Mna 141 I. I ttti St. Jvst •ff N•wport 11Yd. OPEN FOR LUNCH lnt im •I• and De lightful FRENCH R~STAURANT l l ;J0--2 • Tu•11:l•v thu Frid•v DINNER 5,30. 10 P.M. TYtid•v th;Y Su111l•v CLOSED MONDAY Cor111r of Ra11dolph end lrittol Coit• Mt1• 54D·l641 TEMPLE GARDENS NOV. 12 UC! FIL.\I -''Buckminster Fuller Aboard Spacestup Earlh,'' a film by Robert Snyder, "'UI be shOl'i'I\ in the Science Lee· lur; Hall on lhe UCI campus at 7 and 9 p.m. Nov . 13. Tick- ets, $2.50.al Fine Arts box office. Phone 833-6617. NOV.i12 -13 FAJ\'TASIA fl.l t:X.ICA 1~A -Padua The a I c r fall presen- t11tion tells ancient Aztec IO\'e story, 8:30 p.m. \\'ed.-Sat. and 2:30 p.rn. \Ved. and Sat. 1'heater and restaurant located on Padua Ave., three n1iles north of Foothill Blvd .. in Clare- mont. Re.!ervations, 626·1288 . l\'OV. lZ -19 PLANETA RI U!\I SHO\\' -Concepts of maf1cr, 111ntion time and space "'Ill be delved into every \Ved. and Fri. night al 7: 15 p.m. in the Tcssmann Planetarium on the Santa Ana College campus, 1530 \V. 17th St., Santa Ana. "'1th Ein- stein's Crazy Cosn1os." Adm ission is free but reservations are necessary. Phone 547-9561.exl. 317. NOV. 12 . 28 ART FESTl\'AL -E\'ents featuring the "·urk of artist 1\lar- cel Duchamp (including film s). are beinJ? spons(lrf'd hv the Fine Aris Dept. of UCJ in the Fine Arts Village Art Gai· lery on Campus, through Nov. 2.8. . r\OV. 13. 1-t llANCt: CONCERT -The Dance Thea1er or Orans'-' County is prt'st>nting two pro~rams 0£ dance Nov. 1.1·!4 in the Ana- heim High School Aud. 811 \\'. Lincoln. Anahelnt. al II p.111. Nov. 13 and 2 p.m. Nov. 14. Tick~ts, $4 for adults, $2 for stu· dents, or phone 637-4449 ofter 6 p.m. J'\OV. 1:1 CHILDHEN'S THl'~ATl::lt -Learnin,g Unlin1iled is prrsrnl- 1.v a children's \l'hen# South Coast Rt'pcrtnr~' s!ages ··~1agic Theater," for 1'1·0 pcrformancl'!s, at I and 3 p.m. Nov. 13. Ticket prices are $1 .2:,· for youths : S2 fnr adults and may be obtained by calling 833-2305. 1r.roup rates avaHahle.) University Park Elementary School, Sandburg at !o.1ichelson, Jr,•ine. J'\OV. 14 PRINT SALi:: -The Nl'"'porl Harbor Art ~lu~eum·~ S:i!es and Rental Council is sponsorinii: a one-d::iv ~ale of fine prints, etchini:;s, engravin.[?s, lithographs. l'i'oodcuts And ~itk­ srreens on Nov. 14 fron1 noon to 4 p.m. al lhe ~lu~eum 22J I CH,· ft~J::SERestnuroirt ~· f~~l~~fe B~;d~;e~.e"•porl Beach. Prints by old maslers will 1'0\'. 14 MICHAEL W. FL01'ES Yoc•ll1t/Gultarllt CLASSICAL CONCE RT - Gotdrn \\lcsl College is prrsenl- Appea1h1t 111 o 11r ini; a fcee concert by Pi::ino Coterie of Oranii:e County and NOV.II -30 \ PRE.SCHOOL STORJES -Tht Newport Beach Public Lib- rary has scheduled pre-school programs which "'ill take place al 10 a.m. in the following location~: ~lariners Lib- rary, 2005 Dover Drivt, Tuesdays : C.Oroha del "-1ar Libr<11ry .i;m 1\1~ri~old .st., Corona de! Mar, \Vednesdaya; H arbo~ \ 1ew Clubhouse, 1871 Port Charles, Ne"'port Beach, Thurs- days. and the Balboa Library, 100 E. Balboa Blvd., Nel'i'J)Orl Beach, 'l\Je.sdays. NOV. 17 LIBRARY FJL,\I -A special film for adults lo help cele- bra te Children·~ Book \\'eek "'ill be presented at th e Costa ~lesa Library, 566 Center St .. Cosla fllesa . Nnv , 17 at 7:30 p.m. Title; Ernesl Hemming\\'a)'.!, "frly Old r..1an.'' r\'OV. 17 • 21 AL:Ttl SHO\\' -The 8th annu;il Oran(:e County Autn Show \\'ill be held in the Anaheim Ctinvenlion Center. 800 \\I , Ka- 11.olla . Anaheim Nov . 17 • 19 from 5 to ll p.m.: Nov. 20. 21 noon lo 1 l p.m. Admission prices art $2 for adults; 12 -18 year~. ~1.50; Children under 11 free if with adult!. r\'OV. 18 BON r..IAR<.:H ~ -'Friends of the t\'e"·port Harbor Art r..1u- SPun1 \l'ill provide the "best or everything'' for tht annual J.p Bon ~larche sale nn Nov. 18 from 10 a.m. lo 7 p.m. al the r..1useum. 2311 \V. Ralhoa .Bl vd .. Ne"'port Beach. Open to the public , funds raised go lo the Museum. NO V.1 1 ·25 STORY HOUR -Costa r..1csa library. 51i6 Center SL. Cnsta fllesa. offers a chilCren·s story each Thurs .. at 10:30 a.m. "Children's Book \\•etk," is bring celebrated Nov. 14. 20 "'it h many special events and a contest. l'iO\'. 19 SU RFING. rrL~I -"Sea Dreams" screens at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 19, in Porum II of Golden We.st Collegr., 15744 Goldtn \\'est SL, Huntington Beach. Tickets $1.50. NOV. 20 LIL\' TO~ILJN -UC! Assoc1att'd Students \\'Lii prrsent Lily Tomlin in Cra\1·fnrd Hall on !ht' UC! campus. at 8:30 p.m. Nov. 20. Blracher scats, $2.:'tfl; main floor chair seals, $J. Tickets al ASUCI office or phone Sl.1-5519. OAILY PILOT 11 ~TV D~ILY ~OQ Friday Evening NOVEMBER 12 S:OO f) 111 Hm Jerry Dunphy 0 11.NIC News Tom Sn)'dlf 9 Pl11so Don't lit tht DolliN 0 frllWI •Btnll, Schubeck (J Ci) Wiid Wiid Wttt Ii) Mtwlt: "Cattlt ol Evll'" (sd·nJ '66--Scott 1r1dy, V11s!nl1 Mtyo. Gl ... klo1t L l:OO ilJ OO CIJ®i •"' D Mnlt: "Mu11ehilt~ tf s.11e• (mysttry) '57 -Gunthtf StolL Saturday Morning NOVfMlflt 131 (@ .wl1n111111t m lht Flintstonn 6~ CJ) TY I CllUl'Mfll lEJ I D1t1n1 ol J11n111t 6:30 6 ()) Suni1• s....e.r OJ) The fr1nell Chef 0 l l1ek ~tr4e11Cf ffi Hod1ePDd1• Loda:• 7:00 8 Ntw Words. New W•11 mm m N•., O @l m or. o.tttt1t 01. M1rbtrr, RFD 0 (I) Jtrry t.e.11 Sbd 6:30 0 Sltvt Allin Sllow Chri!tlnt (J) TY I CltWIMI Joratnstn. tou R1wls and "ur In· m Thulldtlbln!t ~en1011 iuest. Q) Spidtn11lfl 0 Mnwi1: (90) "lird111111 et Alu· 7:30 Q Durty'1 Tr9thouso lr•l" Concl usion (dr1m1) '62-8ur1 0 tn Woody Wll..tl*bt L1nc1stt1, K11I Malden. Se1 Ch•~· D Arthur Snllth nel 7, Thu11d1y 1t ':30 11.111, 0 (}) Cil RNd Ru111111 (J1 ®} N1WJ fl Touch• Tultlo m AndJ Grllfilh Sho'll' @) Unel1 Ruu m Bill Cosbr Show m lr1llt1t l uu: {j]) Chit•ai Sounds m 9Htlt 1111., ED Tht Frtnth Clttl 1:00 If) 11111 lu1111J m W1Jld1t1ust 0 @?I) D111uty Dftf :if. Green At1i s fJ Kltty Wfllts fiB Dutln en P1tiflt1 0 (}) (JJ Funky l'll1nto111 7:00 fJ (}) 0 m Newi ()) Cutoon C.mlv1I @ Truth or Consequ111cu 0 M0¥1e: (C) "Th1 full tf the (1) Dr11n1t S.b111" (1dv1nturt) '64 -Ls O Whit's my Lind B1rker, M1ri1 Vtrs!nl. ®)ti T1kts a Thief m C.ltoons m I love lllCJ (Et Snutty Smith m I Drtlftl of J11nnlt l:lD E Sceoby·Oeo EE HlrtOIJ of Muico C:J@) m l'tRk hlntlllt €[!LI lnlru M 0 C.111pu1 P'rofllt Q.'J, Sid 1illl111111 0 CIJ (I) Tiit hcklo" F1vl $ M1nlr1p m Ml'llts: "Abbitt alMI Coltallt 7:30 1J Clrt111! Birt Park! Is hmt to the Mttt tht Mu'"",. fcomtdy)'SS. Wonderful One Rln1 CirtUI "C,clolfldt r' (9Cl·fl) '~1rlt1 O Hollywood Squ1r1s Q11l1le1. (1) To Ttll lh1 Truth m Stl!IMR (J) I Or11111 or Jtannlt 9:00 1J (}) H1rit11 Glebotnltt1n 0 MIH!oR $ Movit: (CJ (2hr) Q @I m l1n11r lllotf ''D1)'1on's Dewil's (drama) '63 -0 Mt'lit: "l it lrown [Ju" (mr> Rory C1lhoun, tune Ni1s1n, la!nft ltr'I ) 'Jft--C1ry Gr1nt, Jo.in lennttL Kazan. @ Tij111n1: WlndO'll' to ttie ~ RICKSHA Lunc:h eon & Dinner D•ily the Long Beat h City Cnllcgt' S.1•mphnny Oreht'stra. Nov. 14 ,__,,, ____ _,_C°"'C·,,.,-.,~--F===========i-J~~"~'~'N,·m~.cei~ogith,e Communit~· Theater on campus. 15744 Golden ""' r\IAI BUFFET LUNCH 11 :30-1 :30 'CS unfington Beach. NOV. 21 t:UPER-&T-A-R~ANfl-600SP-Br,l,..----T-hH7--member-ca5'-ol' the CanadiAn Rock Theater "'ill present, in concert. seicc· lions from "Jesus Christ Superstar'' And "Godspe!J'' in the P;:ivil1nn at Golrlen \Vest College. 15i44 Golden Wtst St., Hun1ing1nn Reach. Nov. 21 al 1 and 9 p.m. This is cnmpletl'J \'ersion direct from Aquarius Theater in Hollywood. Tlck!!t.s, $t a\'ailAhle in the bookstore. ($3 with college or any high school ASB card.) ID Ho11n'1 Htroe1 0 rJ) lt'll'ltchtd --m.(.s).D1q 11 GJ ,A.a1rtm1JlUt! .. ,!1•.Wi!O!~-----I ED ilj) Civill11tlon @I) Cini ff! Su tau ~~~~~?E Mond1y thru f'rhl1y l'o'OV. 14 JAZZ CO:\'CEHT -.Jazz Jncorporated will hnlrl its regular €[! l.11 Com1clru a!) P1nor11111 L1tln11 €D Untamld World 9:301J (fl Thi H1lr lttl l1111ch rt:::::_ ' Fri. & S11t. I'• 1 Featurini Exnlic Tropical Drinks 1500 AC'AMS (1t H1rbar) COSTA MESA 540-1937 540-1 923 ~~(')~;;;:-+--;. .... ___ ..._. 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. (El Camino Reoll SAN CLEMENTE 492:6571 Coming Nov. 13 . , ...... Ml~,,.,~- i.. 1. ... M ii .... 1~ ... , ......... " .. '' I l••M ( '"~ I\""'•~ , 1,,.,.""!"I-·~ I(,,,..., l ti,,.,,... Your Child Needs to Know Yllu Are Listening ' Many parents "turn off" their children when ;hey try to discuss thei r problems, air their feel ings or express their frustrations.. One expe rt suggests , "If we talked to our offspring as we ta lk to our neigh· bor's children , they would be more likely to seek us ·out •s confidantes." An exclusive FAMILY WEEKLY report offers psychologists' tips to help make for a happier homelife now-and avoid heartache later. e COMPLETE HOLIDAY COOKB OO K -Pullout serth1 n take" novice or accnn1plished cook look- i11i;: fnr 'l'hank~~1v111,i:: idras step by ~tep through preparation nf the lraditinnsil bird to concoc· tlon nf a "'hole collcrt~on of spectacular hoJiday dessert);. • BARBIE 'S 'MOTHER' -S!orv or the birlh antl rise. to spectacular ~\!CC<'!l:~ or the best known doll ln hun11n hi~tory. BArbie even has a fan club llhe nlllllnn members it second in ,:l>:e only to tt).e· Girl Scouu a1nong girls' organiza- tion•). ' All Coining a turclay in the I DAILY _PILOT I Suridriy j;izz session, Nov. 14 at 2 p.n1. in !he Elks Lodge. 21 1 E. Ch::ipm;.in Ave., Orange. Feafurcd arti~t will be trnm- boni sl Henry Coker. First setters \\'Ill be Tommy K. Quartel and a speciR I my stery guest. Public 1s invited. Tickets, $2 by donation al the door. RIVIERA tu:5T.AUAANT Continent•! Cuisine Cockt1i11 Serving Luncheon and Dinner 1'fonda 11 through Saturday. Closed Sundays SA Gollege Sets Cosn10 Space 'falk ls the uni\'erse cur\·ed? ls it expandini:.? \\'herein spac:t" and time is man? These and other questions \\'ill he ans"·ered in ,!!real detail but in siinple terms in the con1ing planetarium ~how series ::it Santa Ana Collc.[?e , "Einstein's Crazy Cosmos." NO\'. 21 AUDJTIOr\S -The Todits Las Ciudadeis Comm ittee nf the Orantie-~ifnfy -Philfiarmon1c itty "lll bole! auditions t\ov . 21 at I p.m. in the Lyceum of Cosla fl1e~a Hi~h Schoo l for college and high school studt'nls for qualification to per· fnrm in the !hire! annual r-.1usic Fesli\'al "'hich will be htld Feb. 6. Interested students should call 1\1rs. Lfs Van Dyke, 549-3932. DANCE CONCl':RT -A program of dance will be presented 1n the Fine Arts Village Concert Hall on lhe UCI campu5, f\ov, '23 and 24 al 8:30 p.m. Dancers will bf. Ja.mes Penrl'ld and Janice Plastino, assistant profeuors of dance and their students. Admission $1. @: C1E NFL Gtme ol lht Wet-Q @) m T1k1 t Gli nt Slit 1:00 0 ()) Chlc110 Teddy le111 @ Mobil Hornt ShO'll' CJ llQl m Tiii D.A. 0 I]) LldMllt O Movl1: C) (lh1) ''Wom1n TI11111 O Movi1: (CJ "Ftltllt Cultlr Allft• Stvtn" {comedy) '67-Shlrley Mtt· (wastern) '67 -Roy Orbison, Laine. Alan Ar~ln. Ross1no 8r1nl. JlD;OD E (I) P'tbbt11 tnd 11111111 11111• 0 m@ GJ Thi l r1d1 l unth 0 I]) Cl) Curlulty Sh°' ffi Truth ar Con.Hq11e11tu 10:306 (() Arthlt'I TY Funnl11 W Tiit \'11tfnl1n 0~ m Th1 luplooa_ €1) EJcl111lv11 O Movi1; "Hu•nl" (comedy) '41 ~ n1111: (C) "The C1ln Mutiny,. -M&edont ld Ctrey, al) Hint @ lluy-Un t * Movie of the Weekend 11:00 II 00 S.brin1, tht Tt1n111 Wltdl "DUEL" Starring 0 0 m Mr. Wll1nl Dennis Weaver @ 11111 Lmtl lltntalt T n rn ltn nr Quast omor~ow ABC 8:30 0 Movie: (C} ~N...Un•" (wut1m) 1:30 6 (j) 0 Htrt U.S. Tr111urr ·~0-Errol flynn Alull S111lth 0 WORLD PREMtERE MOVIE Ill •HJ Woll•' • * LORNE GREENE IN ii) L11th1 Llbrt "THE HARNESS" fiBYtritdad A John Steinbeck Story CE •111·Lln1 0 @l En NIC Prtmltrt Mtvit: (C} 11:30 iJ ([) Jolit tnd tho l'lnlJelll (lhr) "Tht H1r11111' (dr1m1) '71-0 0 fD Tht Jt1*1 Lorne Gretn1, Julie Somm111, Loul.s~ 0 CIJ L1nc1lot Unt L1th1m, Mu111y Htmlllon, Lee Har-III MIWI•: fC} "Dru1111 l1 ttlt DMt court Montgomuy. South" f1dventurt) '51 - 0 Cf.)@ aJ Tht P'altridtt Fornltr m DAVID ROCKS WITH Afternoon * BLOOD, SWEAT & TEARS . m Dtvid Frost Show Guests 1re112:00 1J ()) Tiit M1111kt11 We •re loc:•ted next to the M•y Co. in South Co•st Pl11a . "Crazy Cosn1os'' -which 11·ill delve inln the concepts or matter, motion, time ;ind space -ll'ill be shov.·n every \\'ednesd;iy and . F r id a y through Nov. 19 in the f;imt'd Tessmann PJ;ine!;inum on the SAC campus, 1530 \V. 17th St, Santa Ana. Learning Unlimited Ha s Second Program of Fall Blood S)'l'i1t & Tei~ ind lht Sub· 0 Movi1: "U11ttrt1ln Clo,,.. (drt> Lrarning Unlimitrd. a non- profit communily s er v ic e association devoted to cultural enrichment for Area children, has announced its st'cond pro- Struct'urt ' m•) '44-Paul tuk1s, Errol Flynn. gram in their (all l1nrup nf (ll)Miitef]!le<t Thirtii @ M~vlt: "No ROid ltd:" (m)'to "Lively Arts" events involvinR ED I ltltiel i l lll Cosby en ,.,.. lery) S7 -S11n Connery. l33J S. lrl1tol Cost11 MMe • 540-3140 ADULTS $2 .00 JUNIORS $1.00 I Chitdr•n vndorl2 fRff with l'arenll) S([! THE NCW DOMESTIC & FOREIGN CA.IS.~FACTOlY DISPLA YS .. PIOJO. TYPES SPlC!Al SHOW CAIS...MOTOI H0Ml5 I VACAT10fl"YEHICLE5 All UNDll ONl BIG IOOFI 5P'lCIAl DISCOUNT TICICITS AT YOUI JAVOl,ITE OllANGE COU~TY NEW C~l DtA.lll. YOUl Nt.All5T AlPHA Ill A MARICIT THllfTY DRUG STOil A IUlNA. P'All( CfNTll. ' • the arls and theater. ludk:e All races, creed5 111d colors 0 t:Il !ID Mlt~R lindsltnd On Nov. 13, Sou1h C'oa~l 1r1 considered In this uniqut Im· ®J KllO'll' Your l lbl• Reperlory \\'ill preseol "Manic provi51!ion1l 1ttirt br !ht celtbrtted I m D1vW rron s~ Guuts: Don&-,., comedian v1n, Bonnie frinkhn. Tony R1nd1 ll, The11.ter.'' a nf"w eonccpt in · 0o Id s lh 1 d em W'lh children's theater \\'tlh twn t:oo o rnoo mRoom 212 na u eren · 1 u1• fli) I IJIC1i\ I C.lifomlt Tomorrow fD Sportscopt pl'rformances sehedult'd ;it 1 Plan A close·up 100~ 11 California "9 Uncle W11d1 and 3 p.m .. at Univers1tv Park 'Tomorrow's plan !or tht futute of fiB 'll•lo Elementary School, Sandbur,t: C~lilornia. 12:30 I)([) CBS Chlldrtn'I f'UM FlllJ. al r..1ichelson, Irvine. a> La Gita Yll "Test1dlr111a" Ticket prices are $1 2S fnr ml 110111 ptrl Ytt0nlc1 0 Mo\111 : "Ont Nlrht Ill lhblll• Youth, $2.00 '1>r Adults and 9:3D (forn1l'ltll) '41 -Frfll M1tMurr17, may be obtained hy mailin,e: 0 Get-rich-quick scheme 0 Su1ptn11 Tlltetre req1,1esl.'! to Le A r n i n g * goes wrong when a 0 Sheria;ck H11!111•• Tllut11 Unlimiled, r . 0. Box 4499 , or computer turns killer! llO.l 11.0GO 1 Con111 by callin" Mr~. Job• g,,.,_ "PAPER MAN " €1)Cor1111n Sal'l'll• "' " el' NtVJ P'rola1ut lingham, 8.13·2.10~. ( G r 0 up fJ (l'J CBS frld1y Mov!1: (Cl (!O) 1 9 Roclry i nd Fritndi rates are availablt.) Ticke!s "Paper Min" (dr1m1} '71-D11n Ci) To 11 An110unc.d ' 'It ·t ht Stockwell, St!ra~l• Powers J1m1s are s 1 ;iv11:1 a e fQr all Sla~y. Tina Chin, [lliott' Street. t:OO (I)Sketchboo' performances in the "Lively O rJ)@ a> Tht Odd Couplt @J lnslaht Art~" series. 0 Birhr Ward News OJ News Nick Cu1u future programs Include: (D rt T1k11 1 Tllltf Er;'.! Con1111111n' Woltd December 4, UC! Symphony (JJJ Hollywood Ttlnblon ThMtro ! htty lklkt ..... Orcht'stra with Peter s . 10:00 1J News ~Dram• dtl 51.,..., Odegard conductin~ "Svm· 0 [3) ~ m Lavt A1111rk.tn Strl• · aJ Spo1t1 Dl1ll1n11 phony r 8 n t 11 ~1 iq 11 e. ·, h 0 Caunc11 l>tb•t• Jae~ llourk1 1:30 0 (})(I) aJ NW FottMn WI!• Berlio~ arrang.cd · 11Y EID Special ol th1 W11k Card G1mt--T11m1to bt 1n110Unc:td :· ei;pccia Y @E TY Mullcal 011111 ®) MO\'lt: "lll11dort" (west1rn J '14 for children. Perfnrmanre In Gll) LllChl Llbtt m Unt11111d WOl'ld be. held al th~ UC! Fine Aris 10:15 91 Fillll: (Cl "llood Alltf" m Movie: "ltWo 1 Vloltrrt M11t• Theatre. (parking lot No. 9J at 10:30 0 Clow·Up (¥1"11t11n) '57 -Jotln Actr, 2 Pm. 0 W1rurn H11nu1 lltdna Tht €1) EJ:Ha111ttrt January 8, Bob 8 a k er $100.000 Al!lenctn R1dn1 Cl1sslc m The lit l'ltturt A-fl1rioneftes, pre.!! e n l i n I'.! ls shown, QJ Tht Add11111 Fo111!" "Puppets Jn The Rounrl .. ~Tht Colddigt11 V1W C1rt Z:DOfJDustJ'i Treeftou• two perform11:nce.1 al t and ' :i gu!sts. 0 l'ln C11111 of tho Woet m N"'1 Bill Johns ({)TY I loob ft IMnlllif p.m. (jj) Amtritln D1•111 Ntchl111 0 Roller DerbJ . r .ebruary 5, Laguna Beach Ell El Rrtrtla de Dorio ft Qr1r m Soul Trt ln C1v1c Ballet Cnmpany in A m Or. Slmff! lockt €1)Cl111 [11 11 T11'111 ballet for children, tw o 11:001J CJ) ail N1ws m T111• AdVlnturt perfnrmsinces 8t I 8nd .i p.m. 0 ~ ~ ~.•"' . QJJ Tho Mun1t1n The .Jan. 8 And Feb. 5 0 Mo"1: Rulers of lht S.1" GI:) V1ro11k:t (R) (4hr1 performancts will be h11ld Al (dr•m•l '39-0ou1l1s f1lrb1nkl Jc. 2:30 ID Sttp• lo lMrnlni University Park Elementary 000 ~~r~I Diiion O SUtlofl II StltlM School SAndb urg a't w N•'ll't; OMu1klo1 Mlchelso , i . 0 Movf1: (C} ~1n [111rnr CountlJ" (I) lnttmrtlon•l HDUr _ n, rv1ne. (dramt) 'st-Tony Fr1~tios1, m Spotllrht OI Youtfl m To TtU !ht Truth lli8I Rat P'1trol 'p"1"c""1"w"'·'1'c""1' ~~· 11·•• ~ ~:" "' ""' ''00 0 "' '""' •• .... ' w ,..,..,., J4 0 Arrlcultvrt USA BOOKSHOPS !r 11'306-'''1""'1'1"""'m"b' 9"'''""'' Y: (dr1m1) 'St-John W11n1. O Mowlt: (C) •Apedlt ltftll"! ~!.,~~'~ C7l 'l •Jt.7Jlll) • D IDJ1h111r C11101 From (westttft) '65 -Autio Nurphf1 SOUTH (0,t,$1 "AIA 0-l urb1n' C.Lil. ((ISdtllCt f'1ctloll TIINtlt C••>e M••• • f11'l .!.0·11fl 1 .. -,. 0 (Ji Q) Diel Cftttt m Mh'lt: "htMa" (dr11111) 'U- SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH 0'"'9 Co1tMy'1 ftrtnt MIHtle11 of Tr9plc .. 'ltfl •Ml lef'11tfl e AQUAltlUMS • MAINTINANCI lllYICI e LIVI FOODS e llfl l'LANTI 111 W. WILIOH, COITl Mltl !.ti 'l!l"llrw ••• ) 111•,NI MtJ l tl•""' HUNTHfOTOM llACH (Mt)(I le New Luck•'I) f.WIU • (1) Ntd'IJM11• m s.111011 m MM: °'J'll't Flip Wut" (west· m M1'1'11: """ Nu If 11111 JIMIW' 1n1) '50-.lcluph Cott1111 Qt The WllttrMfl For Advertising Out 'N' About ' • In Phone Norm Stanley 642-4321 , \ ) • 28 DAIL.¥ PILOT l'our Gt1ide t o 1'lovies 'French Connection:__ Suspense£ ul1 • SHOWING NOW! • Tire master of tfle grotesque Edito r's Not<>: Th rs movie g1ude is prepar1•d by tl1r f1/n1s comni itrrc of Harbor Co11ncrl PTA .. !i1 rs. ll<>t>e" M llC11!17' "R'l'.t.N '$ O.t.UGNTeR" p;~ O••"tV $1\0'I ".t.LASK.t.N ESKIMO" SPK••I l(to1 M•I S.t. -1 1>.m .. 11 .......... . -"(; . "Slll• CAMI" 1GPJ "·"•' ·•0..901•fv l ...,..•• '1i1•111 ••• l d,1of1•1 W1rld" IGP! /Jor ry /llellor is rn1d i\l rs. Br11.ce I president !•lordlaud 1$ cornmift(l e tl:a1rn1an. Jc 1.~ inlended as u reference i1• dcter»l/lliilfl su1tuble f 1 I ms for rerta1n (/ge 9roup$ Qi.d IJi'ill appear u.:rek·l!I Yoio· v1ews orr sol1clfed. 1\1a1l them to .~lo­ t•ie G1ude, cu re of lite DAILY PILOT. * ADliLTS Oiar)' of a )J11d Jlousewife IRI: Stor\' Of the disin- tegration of ;. !\ev.· York at- torney's marriag~ Richard Benjamin por1rays the pom- pous hu sband. Ca r r i e Snodgress pl ays the bored ~·i!e \vho finds an affair a tem- porary antidote. The Devils tXI : Vanessa Redgrave is h y s t er i ca I hunchbacked nun used politically to incite a "'ilch hunt. Oliver Reed portrays \1·ord\y priest burned at stake in story or torture and debauchery in I 7th C€ntury France. Film adaption of Aldous Huxley novel. French Connec1io.11 I R ) : Suspense mystery starring Jean Hockman and Fernando Rey. "Kot ch" !G PJ: \Valier lifat· lhau is talkative, opinonated. lovable widov•er retired from hard"'are store an"d livJng with son's family. Fa1nily tries to move hi1n to rest home. Jack Lemmo n directs this drama- comedy dealing \\'ilh three generations under one roof. Ryan·s Daughter ( G P l : Robert Mitchum. Sarah l\1iles and John rifills star in a love story set in scenic Lreland of 1916. Restless. beautiful wife of middle-aged school teacher has affair "'ilh British mzjor. Summer of 'U I R I : I doctor and poet caught up in his country's revolutionary upheaval. Geraldine Chaplin is his wire and Julie Christie portrays the mistress he met du ring Ar111y duty. J\.tur ders at Rue J\lorgue iGPI: Filn1 version of the Edgar Allen Poe tale o[ terror sta1Ting Jason R o b a r d s , · Herbcort Lon1 and Christine Kaufman. Returu or Couat \'orga (GP J: Rober t Quarry and A1ariette Jlarlley star in the return of the de\·astating \•am. ptre who terrorizes the coun- tryside. EDGAR ALLAN POE tells his most terrifying tale Mu~etu11 Sale Reflects Nostalgic return to early war years dep~ting three teenage boy:> a11•akening to romance and sex:. They \•:hlle a11·ay summer at an Eastern shore resort p I a n n in g conquests. Sensitive llern1ie falls ~ love ~·ith beautiful 1\rmy \\·lfe. J en- The Skin Game ICP1: Quin· cy and Jason are pre-Civil~ \\'ar con men "hose game is al phony slave trade. Jason E~'!'J;\!~"tl<J v;eeps \\·hen his rnaster sell sl h11n , Qu1nrv thrn res.rues him and thev m'o\ eon to fleece thel next lO\\'fl. Then one duy .Jason can't escape. Sfars James Garner and Lou Gosse!!. . . New Looi{ This Yea r The Bon ~larche "Best of art1sL Juanita J·lislop will be at nifer O'!\eill and Gary Grimes Everything Sale'' ha! a new her easel to do her paste! a1'd star. · look this vear as it comes to crayon character sketches. 'f.R. Baskin IGP~: Candice roost in ihe ne\1' building of Tickets for adtnittance to Bergen and Peter Boyle star the f'e1••por! Harbor Art the event are $1. and may be in the story of those who go to l\luseum, 2211 \\'. Balboa purchased in advance at the seek fame and fortune in the Blvd., !\'e\vporl Beach. l\luseum or on Bon li1arche big city. There they disco\'er r-!ajor areas of the l\luseum da\·. Adn1i!lance is free to the depersonalizi ng aspects of \Vi!\ be used for the gala tund-mfmbers of the l\luseum. znetropolitan life. . \\'<iit Until Oark 1G r 1: Thriller in v•hich twu thugs lry to force blind girl to reveal 11·hereabouts of a doll stuffed with heroin. I! had been thrust upon her husband by a stranger. Audr~y H epb ur n stars. r.:iising ~:ile. '.\01•. 18 from Ill further information n1ay be ~1ATURE Tf::E~S l-~A ~l!i.\' a.m. to 7 p nl. It is an annual obtained from the Ne"'port Ai\'"O ADULTS American \\'ilderness 1G 1: el'ent v.·h1ch brings out the Harbo r Art ~luseum 675-3866 Dr. Zhi\'ago tGP I: Omar Study of the animal life from Ct)()perath·e effoi:t of the entire or 673-BGOJ. Sharif portrays young Russian Alaska to Baja Calliornia. t.lu~um Council membership Goodbye, !\Ir. Chips ~G): \1·hich spends all ~ear col· Screen version of Jarnes lecting. sorting ond pr;oing Grapl"l.CS on Exl"i.bi·t Hilton no'fl about a stuffy myriad arlicles donated for " II school headmaster at English the sate. boys school 11•ho marries a ~~ COlO R bJ Mooiolt~ e ~. ~,AMERICAN llHE~HAfJOH~t ~1ct~rt . ·-' ,. ...... J"DN ROBARDS .-,,·~-"""'·-llJ fine furniture. antiques. changes outlook on life. Stars ~~.'59~ pa intings. clolhes. to ys. At College Lib1·ci1· Peter O'Toole and Petula fi,iiiff 4_9_" kitchen utensils. plants. sport Clark . ... '";:i'.41Jr• .. r.11111 ' equipment. hand-made )g~;1~1~'-----,----_j~---------'L-----i•:fcln·~-v,,~ra=o~o~,-rc , ..\..,.;,~.~. ~ .. ~.~""*''~~.~N~,~.&, ='1:1+-'1ill'brrmtmaS ornaments are An exhibition of con-ranging from realistic and Surfing film 1Yith rock ,., "Murders in the Rue Mn~ue" RISTINE KAUfMAl/N HERBERT LDM IIll' MICHAEL DUllN iiiff iii.'ijii] . ~-CC:--OO'C ., .. ___ ...... "~?f™1.t.i.i''1UNCN~ii among the objects offered. -temporary graphics \\'ill begin traditional to abstract and ex-background. P 1 •• A year-long \\'orkshop pro-a three·\Veek run in the Ze ppelin tG ): In \Vorld \Var "MOOHUGHTJllG MISTIBS" (I) d 'd r1'etv of pressionist forms. uces a 11'1 e va Orange Coast College Library 1 Br itish soldier is sent to spy ... o.., ..... . .. _,., ... , M 1 l<ll .11,-.,., "~'"' ••••• , ... .,! ....;..11....,,.,._.._.,.ro•"' "llfN(N COllNICTIO•"' (II ... , "VANISNlfrtG POJ•T'' fGP ..... --1 ....... _ 'u 1111 >o-.. c:.o~- "SllH G.lMI" IGPI .......... D<vl····" t....-. '1itt•t•l l~t ldt• tf the Worllf"' fGP ...... _ ... --~ ....... '" •1•1 4'1•-·od ..... , ........• ~ ••• 1 ""Dls1iiA Ti"CM'illi:fiii:. Ill "" "flllJtOJ" \I ) ;==:::~ ,_, ... "----,..,toll .. "" ...... _. u-11-.. w--.~.., ""DO<fOH' WlVll" 11) "WOMtN 1• lOVl"ll'l 'U f JUMMll"' I l{IDS LOV E UNCLE LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT ••• I original desi qns in clothing. gallery on Nov. 22 to run Among the 62 a r l i 5 t s on Germ an diri gible con·· home decorations. needlev.·ork through Dec. 10 in the second represented in the exhib ition struction. !Je gets involved objects. desi&ns and klls. floor exhibit area. No ad-are Lud1\·ig Sanders and Carol 11·i th inventor's 1vife and Also. by popular demand mission charge. Gallery hours Summers, Kare! App e 1. becomes a participant in thc 1 from last years' debut. local are !\londay through Thursday Leonard Baskin. Corneille, Zepplin's mi ssion against his "'"""'' ol • .t.caao"1y AWilrG1 ' l!tlG Ov•r "DI! ZHIVAGO" I P.M O•o1¥-l"l'l. I $11, 1:10 7:.3jl a.m. lo 10 p..m... Fridays -P-tero---0-o-ra-z-t-fl . 11\deo own England. 7:30 a.m . lo S p.m. and Sun· Hagil\·ara. Seong \lo\·. Kl'oshi * days 1-5 p.m. iclosed Satur-!'aito. Angelo Sa1•elli. Rikio day!. Takahashi. Ansei Uchima and Tiie letter 11nmcdiatelµ The exhibit . a cross-section Qs!';ip Zadkine. after llie l1tle i11dicates tlie of contemporary grahics by The show is sponsored by rating given tile picture by American. European and the International Graphic Art s tile illolion Prcr11re Code. J apanese artists. is composed Society and circulated through Tlie Code A·nd Rating pro· or 70 prints in the media of galleries in the United Stales gram 171ay be found Oil one lithography, aqualinl. etching, and Canada under \he -;;o;/;l;fl;e;';";o;U;o;"~P;';";";r;c~po;;;;g;e;s.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I It reflects various current Institution Tr ave Ii n g Ex-JRD & FINAL WEEK! mezzoli nt and woodcut. auspices of the Smithsonian/' trends in the graphic arts hihition Service. DON'T MISS IT MON. THRU FRI, ONE SHOWING AT 8 P.M, CONTINUOUS SHOW SAT. ANO ~U N . . FROM 2 P.M • WINNEN 01' 2 A<..1<.uf.MY AWA, .J~! "D•"ati'S s~~·· 0 ""~ '' ...... ' ' ' " ... ,, .. ,. .. ""~"' .... ,,,, NOW SHOWING F~m ALASKA .. BAJA! Clnedome 20 Or.111ng1 532-3321 I So, Co111t Pl1111 1 Cost.ii Mts• 546-2112 1100 WEEKOAYS-4,JC!.7 Ol).9:tS ADULT• UHOER U SA T.-1 liOO.?: t S·<l:J0. 7 :00.9 :1 S U.IJ su r-..-:1s ... ·.10.1,oo.9:1s ' . 7,30 & 9,30 EACH N!TE -·-· • ..:: WOOUST OCK ONA WAVE' _,., .... _ ... _. NOW SHOWING • CALL TH EATRES FOR SECONO FEATURE I SHOW TIMES STADIUM :4 ORAHGE -•H·U'IO l'-•1~!11 rr. Sltd•urn FOX CINEMALAND .t.H.t.HEIM -'lS·l'°l !•I• l<trtior 8 1va. LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 011 l-lllO ~I I~~ E"! !<>L~o hie FOUN TAIN VALLEY DRI VE.fN FOUNT.I.IN V.t.Ll[I' ·~1·2•11 S•~ O•f<IO r• ... v. •! B•OO~ftyrl! SIGHT 6 SOUND PRODUCTIONS, IRVING GR.ANZ AND KAI.A PRESENTS ~~~~ ~0 1' "f JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR The or iginal concert version by !he authorlled touring company In ll$SOCHllion wlltJ Robert Stig,.ood .,a MCA, IM:,. bf arrangement with O~d Lillld WED., NOV. 24 ''"" 10 "'om SANTA '-10NICA CIVIC AUDITORIUM THU RS., NOV. 25 s:io,. LONC BEACH ARENA FRI.,& SAT., NOV. 26 & 27 "" ""'" PASADENA CIVIC AUDITORIUM R e~crved Tickels : $7.50. 6.50, 5.SO, 4.50 ON SALE AT o\llllllO!hllf! ••• Ollie••· M11tu~I A•rftCltt, Slt~I I So11nt1 ''°'''· l lt••INft Ovl!tli. lot•~. 11 ..... d••I' 1114 l ullkki S!ore1, ''-Cliil, M~t•( Ct .. """"''" Uld Llbf1'!) ... , ... c1e1. Meir! Ordt tl to Al.t«lltut~lfl IOA Of!lcr• •• ' . , • EDWARDS CINEMAS • FU Y LOVERS START AS ... JACK LEMMON, Oirtctor Ali AllC •ltl~UJ (ll'J. dJA S.mldlatt., tllt Prest11bllott · Ame1icJ11 llNOaJtiftc A "llcll:l" COfllPl•t CO!ftll.IAllS. l11C- r rod11Cl1-• ~ior rc;pl- Oi•trlllllttd bf CIM"~ Rt ltlll•C CorPOtltloft • Oiteet1~ ~y JIC\ ltllll!IOJo ~ -~~l!DWA"DS • 2ND o~.!H..~~,~·,ttG .. coMEDY. JICUfMQ SHDYDEm KENNETH MARS SW TUllPSlll J.Oal IDMACI --... -.... -...... ...._ ·---·-... GERALD O'LOU&HUN ~AA~PIUlA Ill PIUL lW ..... I. lllAIY J:Rf-_-::;:;;..+· m•.,frt ··~ l'!Cf\Mt 2•11 AT MARBOI • 2 (l111t fo1t ... ooc1 In "TNE BEGUllEOH (R) IN HARBOR SHOP!>ING CENTER 2114 •l OllNGt I 1 "FRIENDS" (R) .-.:::= James Garner Skin Game Lou Gossett . Susan Clark r,.~,,.. i.-~[G~~ 2nd AT Hll•fl•GTOH THE Devils is not a film for everyone VANESSA REDGRAVE..,.OLIVER REED IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM OF THE DEVILS ® IN HARBOR SHOPf>ING CENTER EDWARDS HARBOR c~; ... 1 •2nd BIG ATTlACTION • "A WORK OF GENIUS.'' -Andrew S.Jtros, v111.1r;e Voic1 "DEEP END ' ~~ ~--111o,....1rt.,, EOWARO$ CINEMA VIEJO ~.\N [l•IGCI ,._,, •1 ,. P.l/ !!J•1t1111 · _ ii Ir\ ~<><10 . I J ".,.,, _,, .. ~ ~:..~ JACK LEMON AND WALTER MATTHAU VISIT NEWPORTER Promote "Kotch" ind Sign Autographs for Media Fans Stars Promote Film • Live Theater •'Our Towo" Americana cliwic on star• at South Coast Repertory. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Nov. 12-14: 19-20. at 8 p.m. Reservations -646-1363. ''Plaza Suite" Neil Simon comedy done by the Ana-~1odjeska Playen In Loara School Auditorivm, 213 S. Loara St.. Anahtim, 8: 15 p.m. Nov, 12-13. R.Mtrva tions -~5814. "StaJ11 17'' War-time C"Omedy-drama on stage at the Santa Ana Com· munity Players, 500 W. 6th St., Santa Ana, Fri .• SHi. at 8:30 p.m. through Nov . 20. Reser.·a· tions -531-9738. ' "Tommy" A rock opera on stage at South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mes&, Nov. 16-18 at 8 p.m. Res- ervations -646-1363, "Arsenic and Old Lace'' Comedy-mystery on stage at the Hun tington Beach Play- house, 2110 f.1ain St., Hunting- ton Beach, Fri.-Sat. at 8:30 p.m .. Nov. 12·Dec. 11. Reser- vations -536-81161. "Nobody Lo\'tS an Albatross'' Fullerton Footlighters' pro- duction on stage al 119 Buena Vista Drive. Fullerton. Fri· Sat. through Nov. 13. Reserva· Lenimon, Matthau Visit Harbor Area tion•-'21•44~~1 .. c1 .. 1----1------J~a=c~k::_:L<~m~m~o~n~•~n~d::z.W_a~lt~e:r ~d~i~roc~to~r~ia~I ~.~ss-ig_nm_e_n~t~,-,~w-e-11-. -d-r-i•_in_g _s~k~il~l -s_a_y~in_g_, ~.:,I_m_a_y---;S~a~n;'.dy:'.'::W~i~ls~on's 1920!1 music1 l h I d I drive erratically, but I'm produced by the Laguna Moul-Matt au, direc or an s ar Lemmon's co-star in "The good ." ton Coinmuniiv Theater, La· respectively or the f i Im Odd Couple" and the "F.ortune guna Canyon ·Road. L&;guna "Kotch" visited the Harbor Cookie" movie hits, f\.1atthau, Matthau also took issue with B h 8 30 T s t Area recently promoting the plays a 72-year-old widower four critics who said they theac ·h 'N p.m.2o u~. -8 • movie which despite favorable who gets on his son and didn't like his treatment of the roug ov. · eserva- rcviews is not setting box of-daughter·in-Jaw's nerves. cld man role. tlons -494.0743. fice records. \\'hen they try to put Kotch "I happen to know that all "ft1other Courage" "Never before have I taken in a surgically sterile retire-four of them are homosexual," Brecht drama on stage at part in a publicity push for a ment home, he leaves and sets ~1atthau bellowed . They just the Village Theater on the UCI failing flick." Lemmon said, up housekeeping with an un-don 't like to see a handsome campus at 8:30 p.m. Nov. 16- "But I really believe in this married pregnant teenager. young man remove himself 20: 24-27. Reservallons one so I don't mind the trip to Lemrnoo during the Ne"llOr-from the marketplace." he 833-6517. Orange County one bit." ter Inn L u n c h e o n for said. The film . the fir st produced the press. that J\1atthau's ren-J\tatthau lauded Lemmon's by Lemmon·s Ion gt i me dition of the doddering old directorial skill and confirm!d publici{U' agent R i ch a rd man "'as so accurate that Ltmmon's comment that the Carter. is Lemmon's first from a distance "he spooked "incredibly real old man·s MOVIE MTINGS mR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPI.£ 1"-~,~,, .. "',,.. "'"'9' '' ro .,,,_ "''"'• •bou! ,,,. •<l'llt!l•lr DI _,. t-I°' ... ..,.., Or I-dt!ldlM. -------------------- me . He look.<; just like my walk" used in the picture was father did ," Lemmon said. patterned after that of a 72· Noting that People are get-year-old judge in Brooklyn. ting tired of being "hit O\•er Both men agreed that one the head" by .movies that try. critic's obSer\·alion th ;it to make social comments, •·Kotch" v.·as indeed an old- Lemmon contends the film fashioned film. Both suggested succeeds in being subtle. the end V.'8!! near for the trend "Flashy camera techniques in producing films that sell are fine for some films. but themselves on the basis of sex we tried to keep them out of and violence. the v.•ay in 'Kotch' to let the On the issue nf nudity, Met- story tell itself." thau took the strongel'it stand. Nevertheless. the f i Im \\'hen asked when he might be makes a subtle point about the expected to c()..star w l t h driving capabilities of senior Shelley Winters in a nudey citizens. film, ~tatthau said : "You know the part when "\Vhen the world abolishes "Play It Arlin Sam" \Voody Allen comedy on stage at the Lido Isle Pla yers. 701 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach . at 8:30 p.m .. Nov. 16- 18 • 19 -20. Reservations - 675-0635. "Trial of Catonville 1''ine" Contemporary drama on stage at the Orange Coast Col- lege auditorium, Co~ta ~tesa. \Ved . .Sat., Nov . 17-20. No charge. "The Glass Men1gerle " Tennessee Williams drRm& on stage at San Clemente Community Theater, 202 Ave. nida Cabrillo, Sa n Clemenle, Thurs.-Sat., Nov. 18-Dec. 4 at 8:30 p.m. Reservations - 492.0465. Friday, Novtmbtr 12, iqn Gamblers Explored \ Editli Evans Stars in KCET Theater TV to-Ai·l"---1 Catalina Treasures ~ Ameri can Buffalo. an Ara- bian horse ranch and Catalina Island history, are the ··treasures" to be discovered on Serendipity, w h i c h airs Sunday. Nov. 14 at 8:30 a.m. on Channel 4. The half-hour children's pro- gram departs from its usual dual-trip format. and features a solo field trip to the interior of Catallna Island. Under the guidance of 'Doug Propst. superintendent o { ranches. teacher-host Rudi Medina and his clau see herds of buffalo. and learn about ef- fort.!i to preserve the animals · DAIL V PILOT 29 Chinese Found- America? from extinction. They also learn about the habits and lifestyle of the buffalo. The activities at El Rancho Eacondlto, famous Arabian RUDI MEDINA, HOST·TEACHER ON SERENDIPITY, Wll'H CLASS A Learning Experience on C1t1I Ina Island With Arabian Horses horse ranch. are explained to roping of a wUd goat by orie of the group as they watch a the cowboys. horse show featuring an Continuing the tour. local obstacle course for horses; a history Is provided at 'an evidence Indicates an Indian trjbe nnce lived on this part of the island. The tour concludes with • scenes of the children enjoying. a new experience -feeding· the friendly farm animals at Middle Ranch. Walter grinds the gears of the war f.orever with ironclad con- car." Lemmon notes, "It V.'a.s tracts, y.·hen unemployment is for real. He really stripped the solved by giving everyone gears. And don't for one jobs. when gasoline and oil minute believe that he dotsn 't products are re moved from drive that way all the time," the marketplace and people Lemmon said. use steam and bicycles to get demonstration of training us-archeological digging located1----------------------- ing a mechanical cow, and the several miles away where "Under the Yum Yum Tree'''1-.C..:'-------'---------------I ............................ .... g ll:!l!i-i1J ...... _ ......... o .. .... __ ........................... - Comedy on stage at the Cost.a. i\:1esa Civic Playhouse, "'·est gate of Orange County Fairgrounds. CMta ~fe61. at 8:30 p.m. Fri...s.&t., Nov . 19- flec. 4. i\1atthau disagreed w i th around, all vulgar behaviour is Lemmon 's apprai sa l llf his outlav.1ed a n d interviewers ;=.==========;;;! stop 11 sking dumb questions." Andy 's Fun ·················••.! Mallha" '3id. "I h3'eoneol Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" Is • LATIONS A the best bodies in the y.·orld fun . See it Saturdays in the • CONGRATU w and I peeler to show ii only to DAILY PILOT. ~ • SKI MART :1.::m~y;"';·1··=·· ===~===========ji e on your new location e VIiiage West Invites • and • JRllND5 OF THl • thank you for helping beautify 1 e Quorum Gallery Artists •. our c"ity with your re mode li ng • To Yltlt Them cit Their New Ha'"o • 791 LAGUNA CANYON llD. -494·tl90 •"Purple Haze" •1"=============1 • JJl6 Yia Ilda • e boutique """'°" '"'' e NEW YORK CITY OPERA Los Mgtlei Dr.ml Oltia Circlt Award W1n~ 10Superb0~ 21 Superb Performances Nov. 17-Dec. 5 Opening Night! Wed.. Nov. 17, T:JO pm• SPtci•I l!flnriit PuformallU Giulio Cesare ~ 111111111..i Also, fti.,""" 19, 8 ptll C.rmen l lNI n1 f-Thun., N<N. 18. 8 pm Sun..NCfl21,2pm Sat. Dec. 4, 8 pm Un Balla in Maschtra V.di ~ Plll<...i Mon .. Nov. 22, 8 Piii Fri.. b . 26, 8 pm Roberto Devereux DMilll'li ~· ft1l1 .. 1 Sun.,N<N.21,8pm Sat.,Not 27,8pm Tosca .,.,,,. ii. iaa.i Sun., Nm. 28, 8 pm lhurs., Ole. 2, 8 Piii Lo'uise ~.,...,.,. "",_, llltS, Now. 23, I pm Fri, Oec. l, 8 pm LI Traviala .... llllWlit Sal, Nov. 20, 8 pm '··················· . =I II lll I I I I I I I I I I I I II I I I II I I I Ill I I Ill I I I lllll I II Ill§ Sun.. '*"· 28, 2 pbl L• Coq d'O< :· ·~ ~i~~~~.~~~:::· ~·~(~ _, .. ~ ~ := A slol)'ofk:Ml ·,., := -'I -Filmed "'· : --------- -------- ii;aas-r~ Daughter~ -RCiE:\Tl."~I TPE\{;RHCWA.RO - CHR"S'tOf'!o"!:R .JO':ES J:lHN \AUS -lEO,._~ ·~So'RN-lt.ttES = ~'~-= {Q!J : o= -= --=I.ill() .......... t .. l'ff ... _VJ• '°'""' ............. --°""""'"--= § WINNER OF 2 ACADEMY AWARDS§ --STADIUM I 3 HJl'ff.tM.~J\\".~r : OIA.NG[-639·7160 !1«hl!ool,S,e!GG.f = ~~Plit!'11 ltld•"" -FOX fULLiRTDN CINEMA WIST # : R)lll.r"u . SZS-4747 WCSTM,IMSllll-192·4493 -""' W~1~11rl.Gl'!dtn.Wt1! -}Qf'f""'lltl< = MIU CINEMA VIEJO - COST .. M[SA -S•l·I ssi MISSION VlllO • 130.6990 ~ f'f• °'' TICKETS ON SALE AT BOXOFFICE OR BY MAIL '""""' ...... ft~bfllllll Wtd., Nov. 2~ I pr11 Sat,Nov.27,2pm The Makropoulos Affair JMfCll; (IA !Af:!Wll Tuts... Nl:w. JO, 8 pm Sun.. Dec. 5, 8 P'" II Barblett di Slvi11ia lteuilll !It itMll~I Wed., Dec. I, 8 pm Sun.. Dec. S, 2 pm , 'I b I I 11 lhe M"'N: C.nlt•, 4~t11C.l\lbol SO. Tl Ckets Aval a e. C1hl~ ,11 M ~IUll T1c~1t Ol11Ce1, ' W.Wltlo'I 1na liberty Slllffl1 •nd S.. C.~I. .... Co., 6.11 SO. Hill St. r111 rlck1l '"'-lion ctll 626-7111. •Op11l11 Pll1llt Pt1c1s Onlr Clnc111Clin1 IAJ deductitlle contribution) $25.00/1 s.001~.l.IMJ.HO' " Tlc-tl prictS for 111 Ptf'formanus, oetpl 0P11'in111itht. Sll.001195/7.95/5.95/3.95 ~~ ror 1f19Cla1 ertup Rates. C1tl 849·1428 0 PAVILION For Reservations call: Zenith 9-9924 CALL fHIAfRES fOlll SECOND flAfUllll S & SHOW TIMIS = ~1111111111 111111111 1 111 111111111111111111111u1111: 1 _ __. __ ~---~--l-----l--------------'-----...._ • 1- I .. , .. . . • " ;j. DAil Y PILOT F'rlday, Nowmbtr 12, 1971 I r~ATLAS ,- CHRYSLER l'L'YMOVTH! IMPERIAL ~ CostaMesa 197.2 .. ii· c,ANNOU!{CI:t{G CHRYSLEAS & Pl.~UTHS AT nu A 11 llDllll. . LDW PRl'CES .ALREADY . .. ATLAS CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH ..A .A _A R'AS l"OWERED PRICES ON ALL 1.9·72 MODELS BRAND NEW '72 DUS!.~! To Keep In Step With Its Policy Of Volume Sales To SAVE YOU MORE ONLY WE St\\.\. HA"E A . GOOO SE\.ECt\ON Al ·ES \.Efl Of 1971 s:~:\.L~~OSE out lEAR· SA"\NGS J • Str. • lH2l·CIE.J05674 • • BRAND NEW J 971 SATELLITE $. D At/as :Serv/c ' epartment W e And H elcomes Chryst onors All " . er Corpo . ••hie/es R !~t1on Service And •quir1n 9 Work R Worronty Wh ' e9ord/ess Of /> ere Cor W Urchased W os A.foster· Che Honor BonkA . or9e, C men cord Orte Bio • American E nche, D• llPress A LESS EXCISE TAX R'EBATE UPON APPROVAL •ners Ct b ""nd . u . . ~00~ MONACO 2 DR., H.T. GALAXIE ,. TON PICKUP LE SABRE Automtlie, rtdio, ht1t1r, pow. 'l Vt •utomif if h 1 DART tr li11rin9 • br1kt1 • window1 VI, 1utom1tic, r1d io, h11itr, . ' . ic, '' '11· •• ~·· . . . 11 'I 1 d 1 . , .1 II 1. Ere11!1nt for cdd 1eb1. (LIO· power 1l11r1n9 & br1li11, wh1t1 VI , 111fom1!1t, t1cl1e, h•1!1r • 1•1f, It wn., 1n 1u top pow•r 1 ••ring,""'" •w• ir11, lll l JI · d" · IREB t • · d" ' IVST l I · · d't' · JSLL7741 "'' 1, •ir 'on it1on1ng. • pow1r 1 11ring, '" ,on •lion · $1395 "i49 5 $49·5 "$595 ii29'S '69 CHEVROLET '68 CHRYSLER '70 TOYOTA '71 FORD IMPALA· 300 PINTO VI, 1ufom1tic, r1clio, h•..+tr, 4 1p11cl tr1n1rt1 i11ion, AM-FM pow1r 1ti•ring & br•li•i, 1;, VI, 111tom1tic, r1clio, h11t1r, riclio, whiliwill lirii. (146· R1cl io in~ h11f1r, whi11 1icl1 ,0nclitionlng, .,inyl top. !ZMX· pow1r 1t .. ri119 I br1k11, wh il1 ASll ""Ill tir11, low, low mil•1. 126]. $1795 $f0975 $1595 i1795 ,, '69 VOLKSWAGEN SUNDIAL CAMPER B1111tif11I con .. 1r1io11 1q11ipp1d wit+. ic1 bor; cl i111+t1, 1i11lt, bun•s, b11bb l1 lop. 1l,. (l\IZ. 1201 SAVE I ----------~ • . ,,. Frlday, .. NovemPfr 12, 1971 DAILY P!LDT SI • ' BR AND NEW 1971 ELD ORADO BRAND NI W CAMPIR· COMMANCHE $ CABOVER CAMPER Eq•lJ,ttl witlt stove, al•k. le.~ .lto x, tl ra,es, plenty et closet sp•ce, elec. outlets, wootl pa11- tlin1. · (#011osn IMMEDIATE DELIVERY FULL PRICE DNEW , Kl•e O' THI ROAD C4,0YIR ·1oii"1'"'1rt.t'i·3~~ "i~i.'Plcttui '68 Eqpt, With c"mple,.. camper package, radio, heater (185628) COMPLITI CAMPIR PACKAGE IMMIDIATI DILIYIRY .- i---.9Zll0Rllf_J_QQ_ "" WINTER CAMPER VAN ECONOLINE . RECRIA"TIO > DN-A'ONE"TON-CHASSI~~--- FTOARM84464 HEADQUARTERS FOR · ~ loadH with V•I, auto., trans., ,ower -st u ring, fully Cllftper equlppH, 1· slu pr foor, (134GHL0337n · FULL-1-PRICE . IMMIDIA TE DILIYIRY BRAND NEW TEN T CAMPER TRAILER Sleeps 4 ( #9437) FULL PRIC:E • CAMPERS ·'·· x, · ... 0 R '5:~~:;4:·'~1?~"''-"' ...i...~ • M TO HOMES ····--!'!f~-c:-.(;,.,/,· 1~ r $ • TRAILERS . f -IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • TRUCKS BRAND NEW .ELDORADO CABOVEl C1'MPER ·Equ ipped with stove sink. Icebox, tlrapes, plenty et closet space, elec. outlets, wood paneling. (#119017) $ FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVIRY BRAND NEW ,1972 FORD F-250 ' ' 3 4 TON PICKUP (F25BRM~l 1) FULL PRICE FULLll!tRICE ' BRAND NEW ELDORADO 71 SHAWNEE 11 ' CABOYIR CAMPER Equ ipped wftla stove, ti•k, Icebox, tlrapes, plenty ef1 closet sp1c.e, eltc. ostlets, woOtl p•n•li11. #116227 ~· $ SAVE FROM FACTORY LIST · PRICE IMMEDIATE DILIYERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ______________ .._..., __________________ ..... ________________ ....., __ _ ·BRAND NEW 1972 BRAND NEW 1972 ( 2Rl0Wl16465> It.VHEDIATE DELIVERY 1919 LTD RAND NEW SQUIRE WAG ON $2. o·aa . ,$AVE $1 450 1971 (1J76Kl81365)-. . .. · . FULL PRICE IMME DIATE DELIVERY FR't.'::::1~0.RY FULL PRICE C2 K91U l 0718 3J Ford :~~ .. ~~.~~~.?.~ ........... $388 CHEV ;~i:~:~.r.~l~::~:::;:; $8 88' Ford ~?.r.~.i.~'-~.~.e ..... . 11eeriflf. (f',J.Sl4) (1646971111951) (tll37l111194J F d ~70 Custom 500 $218 8' f O d '69 Econo Or y.~1 fACTOIYAll,e1!•.lre•1.. , r Cl•ll W1•. lll Wlo1tl ••111, ptwtr 111tt"i111, ,,41.-, l111t1r, 1111 tr111, I •••lk 11nr 11w c11411111l214CAT) , lllAMOJJOH $2488 Pont :.~.? .. ~~~?.~~!!!.e • ,,,,,,., .... ,1 ....... , ..... tr 1•1•11. {lSJCIT), $388 . . '69 ' '63 Colon Park ---· · •• •••w -~· Me re "·"""'··~.l. ...... w ' Javelin :::::;·,•:;;;~,·:; 11..,.1111,.(0SY-JHJ , , flOV-ff-4) FORD '611 .. Custoni 500 $588 Cort·1na '69 Deluxe ' $788, vw· ,'66 Camper Van . $, p , ••tt ,,.. .... •••et •t.•rl.,. •It 4 D••t Sdtt , rt 41t , ' ••~it, Mtflr, CIM,lelt ttMP« tRll ~• ..... 1¥1t.2tS) klit.r.IMSAIPI ~ , _ • ISSJ.1461 ' • ... .. . ' - Ev•ryon•· Hes -Something Th1t Som·eone Else Wants DAI LY_ -9tLOT _ CLASSIFl.ED _ ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trad. It ' The Biggest MarkEltplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results With a Went Ad • I~ l.__-_ .. _ .. __,I~ I -tor .. HouMlforW. l~I _tor .. G.n9r1I * * * * * * . TAYlOR CO. EASTSIOE COST A MESA * * Quiet street, no traffic, but close to Westcli!f shops & schools. Sharp 3. bedroom home "'/ formal dining room. Professional landscap- ing & fruit trees. Owner e.nxious. $39,500 2015 'ALISO OPEN &AT-SUN l.S EXCLUSIVE Lll!IDA ISL~ ,.\ Great Opp9rtunity! Atthitect owneni of"· these 2 brand NE \V "'atei:frc>nt ho n1es \viii consider in exchange: your smaller .h(Hne. land. apartment bldg!i., or Trust deeds!; Or ""ill lease/option. Each one has 4 BR., FR., for ma l DA: & Study. High ceil ings. spacious rms & luxury carpeting. You will love the open plan . f-Tuge price reduction $143.500 eac. 6 & 8 LINDA ISLE OPEN SAT-SUN 1·5 WESTCLIFF-5 BEDROOMS See this exclusive today! Wonderful family home "'ith lge rooms. Faru,rm., 4 ~tbs. 20'x 40' Pool w/separate Jacuzzi pool. $79,900 1615 HIGHLAND OPEN SUN -1-5 LUXURIOUS WATERFRONT-$165,000 lmffiacu lale condition. Lge Jiving rm for gra- cious entertaining. CJ:ieerful '·mor ning roo1n ". 3 Fine BR plus wat~Iiront master BR ~·/fire­ place. Pool & pat!o. Slip for large boat. Im- media te possession. 507 BAYSIDE DR. OPEN SAT·SUN I ·5 General 6 UNITS and roorn Jor 10 more! Ex· ceUenl inCOlne on Eastside Costa l'l1t'M.. Presently four I-bedrooms and 1\\'0 z.bed. rooms. Tremendous buy at $69.500. NEW LUXURY \Vlth a Bay Vl'E\V offued by bolJ1 of tllE'St! C\ISIOTII 'built trl..fev~I honlt'!'I, 4 or 5 I)('(!· rnon1s. formal DR & rn. gulnt i1ving'Q;1001s wi'tb baek My ' \'iell'. OlOQSf' ("3,rJ>elS ancl ollM'r f•!.:11'31". Opi'n hoo~r Sl11 ,t. Sun rrorn 12-5 P;\I al :ll:l.1 ,(., 211\1 l!"'>lne A\o'e., Nf.'"\vµort St>uC"h. UDO ISLE 3 bdrm, 2 bath hon1e •)n 40 ft. LIDO lo1. O\\•ner desper- ate -\\if\ accep! any l'f'a· 50n11ble offer. t59.fi00 asking. :G::;';-"-;;~r:";a::;l;:::;-:-;;~;;::;:-:G:;ono:-:;::;ra:l-;:--l::--l~G;;;1;;"";;;";;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; IG1neral MA TT LA BORDE, Realtor l•-------------------1 EASTSIDE COSTA MESA F.H.A. OR V.A. -ONLY $25,600. 3 bedroom H/\V floors, big 60x130 parcel, paved alley, calm street. These properties are scarce, call now. NEWPORT HEIGHTS ('lean sharp t\\·o bdrm. on secluded cul-de· sac street. Large pie shaped Jot. Choice sta.rt· er hon1e or perfect retirement location. Close UNIClUI' t1Cl~l'S RMI E•1'1e, 67s.&IOO MACNAB • IRVINE The staff of Macnab-Irvine is happy to announce the opening of their new office in the exciting HARBOR VIEW SHOPPING CENTER. This wonderful location will help us to better serve·our many fr;1ends and ctients from Cameo Shores· to University Park. and from Easl· bluff to Harbor View I-fills. 'Vhen yo u are shopping at one of the many fine stores, \\'e invite you to drop in & say hello. John hlacnab. FINER HOMES to all grades of ~!'hoo ls and 17!h St. Shoppi11g VIEW VIEW! ORT HEIGHTS EASTBLUFF GORGEOUS C l ONL'I S21 500 S• ... c·t11culat" l'I"\\' ui TllF: NEWP en er. 1 . " · .. ~ · Better than ne\\' Lusk I-Jome on IRVJ:--:E TERR.\CI::. E\c-11-0\11ner n1ust sell fa st!! A unique . WELL PLANNED HOME ' ing firPpl11c·1,.:. 1 bedroon1,;, older hon1e on T\VO LOTS for large secluded lot. J\'lany beauti· I · 0 ra1111l.1· 1·00111 nnd a sheltet't'd $56.950. Partial vie\V of ocean. ful trees. Soph isticated use or color Del ightful l\VO story near fabulous S UTH 1 2 & ii•allp•, per. 4 BR's, large FR, 2Vi C'OAST PLAZA Ul t I 4 bd Sp c· poo · $I 5,ooo. 30x1G LR with lots of glass. l\!Just " . ra c ean rm. a ious baths. Quality heavy shag carpet. family room home '''it h 3 baths, gas B/l 5 BEDROOM see to a~ciate. Call Laszlo Call 644-6200 for appt. Open Sat. & kit!'hen and large 12'x22' screened in cov· e EASTBLUFF e Sharkany 20!J. Sun. 1-5. 706 Aleppo, Eastbluff. ered patio. Only $36,950 -¥lith good finan· Gr11ciou1<. iminaculat<', and cing available. Let us show you this steeper. C"lose 10 Cd~t Hi. 5 Bed-BAYFRONT 1 HARBOR VIEW HOMES. roon1s, fam ily roon1 a11rl din· Ne\V listing. Delightful garden at~ GREAT BUY· COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE 1ng room. A homo""'"" mosphere. 5 large BR's. converti-Exceedingly comfortable 2 BR. APPROXlf\1ATELY 1/3 acre at end of quiet handle)outcrowd 11 ith ease ble den. spacious FR. Gas BBQ. plu s convertible den on beauti· cul-de-sac St. Popular A1ESA VERDE T-PLAN and fun. Separate master suite upstairs. 4 ful Port Bristol. Expensive carpet.- with large living room. master bdrm. and baths. Sunken terrace. Private ing. Spanish lile entry. Fee land ! bath off to itself a\vay from rhildrens 2 rear U~IClUf: tl()MH pier & float. A lot of ba yfront home $46,950. Cal l 644-6200 for appt. bdrms. Lari:::e family eating area. huge table Real Es1.11,,,61s-5000 for ~155.000. Call 642·8235. Open EAN height breakfast bar \\•ith 5 chairs. B/I elec. 7-ui E. c~1 H .. v. Sunday 1-5. 419 North Star Lane, MEOITERRAN · kitchen overlooking patio. Dbl. garage, you r CoroNI 0ei Mar.c..ijr. Dover Shores. ATMOSPHERE . 1 ."ALL yoµ NEED" r d ' I I PRI CED View -Pool -Sep. gues quar-childrens O\\'n ence 1n Pay ya rc . ters '''/fireplace. bath ,vet·bar. This i;part0t1S 1\l;iC('O huirt RIGllT $27 ,950 -Vacant. immediate posses· * HIGH DESERT * BEAUTY BY THE BEACH l\iain home has 4 BR's. 3 baths, home ha!' one-hugt· all-pur-sion. * PROPERTIES * Design your drean1 home on FR v.1/wet bar. breakfast room, 1-----t-,,--.,.-~-MDA ISLE-$JJ5, Charmine: and beautiful! Best waterfront buy! 5 BR fam rm & formal dinine. All electric kitchen, wet bar in FR. Italian tile entry . Firepl ace in "?ltstr RR. P ier & Slip. J)05t' 1"ocnn la> x ~30~•:'.'.·~·h~w~h+--;;-:~-::'!A~~!'~~c;;P'!-~~~~~~S~~==-IHJ"~'~'~'~~'""~·';,. 1~··~·'1,";;i"wc"~'f!"luM"~flchoice lot close to Western \Vhite and office. For sale at O\vner'S· ·u:w.w he102 11§Cd • • p!11 acrea e. Xln1 retN'al for .._,1-r, roo"'· ''•o ,~, ~1room•, c W'Ch -c .. b. .~. ouse-in-San--elemente:-Bui1d-i1r ost-Calt-642-8255~. ------t·-+-1 .. ..,,. ......., Does your RHEUMATJZ say it's time to move "' " """ s I k. b l' ' DOVER SHORES See your dream home in this· prestige area. Brand NEW 2 story w/4 bdrms, study, sun r~m--& dininl 'I'll: lsland ,kite.hen &. ~ car garage. A real buy'at only 1105,000. 410 MORNING STAjl OPEN SA,T·SuN 1.0 '· SPACIOllS 3 BEDROOM BEAUTY Cwtom built "'ilh beauti fuf wood exterior. \Vood paneling. Entry tiles from Mexico. Lge bonus rooin for hobby rm on conversibn to t~o _additional ~s. By appt. $64,500 ' I . THE' Bl UFFS-$41.SOO 1..ike ne\\'! 3 Bedroom condominium '\\1ith 3 baths. Trina model. Van Luit wallpaper & lux. carpeting & drapes. By appl '~ DOVER SHORES-$85,oOo Bay & 1'1ountaio vie\v! "I turned and looked the other. way. and saw three isl;uids in a bay." This home is sheer poetry. 3 BR. FR & studv Rm fo r boat. 'Prof. dee. Nr. ne'"'· 2042 GALAXY OPEN SAT-SUN 1-5 CORONA DEL MAR INCOME-$63,000 Our exclusive 2 BR 1 bath frt u nit. Brand NEW 3 bdrn1. 2 bath rear unit. Close to shops. \Valk to beaC'h. Excellent income. NEWPORT BEACH-$42,500 Custom feature.~ in this 2 storv 4 BR & fam· ily rm home. Great kitchen. Rm for pool. Lovely cptn_g & drapes. By appt. CHOl<:_E WATERFRONT LOTS Dover Shor,U -On Polaris . . . . . . $49.500 Linda Isle -#108 .. .. .. . .. .. .. . 43.000 Linda Isle -Jt99 . .. .. .. . .. .. . . 69 .500 Linda Isle -~56 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 ,000 Linda Isle -#70 . . . . .. .. .. . . .. 85,000 "Our 26th Y eer" l\\'o bath~.~ ~l\g'StQtte patio inland? Live near f\Iajor Shopping. Anaheim Cypress hores ov&er 00. ing \Vheau.1i-INCREDIBLE -BAY FRONT end built·in harbequ,._ 220 Home & Business -2 hdrm. ful 3-acre park private 1 e t • ... power and croar d 06E"t il1 Stadium and DlSNEYL.AND. 4 bdrn1., 2 bath, home on Z\I acres. S20.000 \Valer Beach. Call \Valter King Ne\\'port Island -Pier & F'\oa. 4jl B/l gas kit. 'v/ceramic tile breakfast bar. A 00 BR 2 bath tiny den fabulous /.:'.Hrti.~e. huih-ins end eating · 54>t-62 . ·• • ~ ' I har in family roo111 Hll si:o to Firepl ace. carpets. extensive and assorted fnoome. library hldg., leas-kitchen. Nice LR overlooking Ba · niake this a 1errific family fruit tree!'. 15x24 covered patio, fenced dog ed by county. S17.500 boa Coves -corner Jot -reduced home. All 1hi.~ is available run. ASSUA-tE SIA F.l-f.A. LOAN -Full price ANXIOUS TO SELL to $79,750. Call Mrs. Fay 642-8235. for $27.000 includlng .l'lfA & only ·$29,950. F'urnishf'd • 3 Bdrm. home. See this very fine ''P ortofino" HARBOR VIEW HILLS . T VA"'"'"· C•ll OIG-2313 CORONA HIGHLANDS $39,950 xi"''""'";"°"· $23.:>00 model in ~arbor View Hills for lhe wine Connoisseur -20 rt: \'t.a· THF. R!.AL \""-ESTATl:RS . ·.· CdM DREAM BOAT A v.·orlr:I of lilar1n in a l · lxl- r111. hon1•• plus a 2 bdrm. apL IJ5r.cJ brick frp!c.: l14•amP1I l"i:'il. &. sunny patio. Open Sun. 1-S 616 Iris A BLUFFS Sharp as lillffihine • • shiny 4 '&!rm., 3 balh C.rmelita modfl, on a delij:"htfl.ll green. bclC Open Set/Sun. 1-5 2128 Vista Laredo Comfortable custom bnilt home '"ith mini· 11 Acrt>5 -good road: xlnt 2· S57.500. Call 2-8235. underground c e 11 a r . Cascading· n1um yard ca re, cozy patio & seclO<led pool. st)!. home, plenty ot wa l<'r. \Vaterfalls dropping into spectacU· F · di 1· · 't h ·r· I =~ i $32.500 9 NEW IVAN WELLS lar sunken pool. Forever COa$t· r1en y 1v1ng room \\'I 1re p a ... c. ""'targe lin e & Ocean \'ie\V, $?9,500, Call kitchen. oversized bedrooms lmaster \\"ilh \\'p Jiave ~r financ·inc 011 CUSTOM HOMES! 00 I · 1 b ti 1'h. ·1 1 6 """ Lois Egan 644-62 . < ress1ng roo1n, l\l.'O a 1s. is '"on ast a.Ji of the above profX'rll<'s . Ground broken for 9 ne'v !\."AN long -Hurry! 437 SEAWARD RD., CDh'l . or 1rad(' possibili1it>!I. \YE LLS custom homes in Dover SPRING VALLEY Open Daily 1:00 to 5:00 . .:6: · ~ Shores! Choose your colors & tail-LAKEFRONT LOT :~ . ~'7>.--Tkkw Beautiful residential lot. Country ~. ~ ..... ~ or to your desire! For detail s visit Club _ Go!!_ Swinuning _ Boat 'Vi t. ~ ~ C1ro11. the model at 2006 Galaxy Drive, - F ish. Marina & Stables. $20,0001 rang.e is a "C~;;::N" Newport Beach. MACNAB ~el;;j~~u 642-82-35. Formerly LaBorde Real Estate Ne11i'Jl0n Heights 3 bedroom Realty Company 220 E. SevenlHnth St., COSTA MESA 644-6200 642-123S 646-0555--549-1910 IAr•r.n 11 Evenina• Call 646-4579 or 645-4483 18flQAiitnJlil1d . Gener•I_ General 2 bath home ""hh beautiful pa1io~ ll'OVf'l'<'d & unrover- <.'<I' Mome reinodeled 2 yrs. agQ • Beautiful dra~. fire- place. forC('d air, new cpls & vinyl noor coverings. FHA loan is aSllumabte (!/; 51' '/.,, Pri ced $39,9:-il. 646-1171 HARBOR VIEW CENTER 1644 MacARTHUR BOULEVARD 901 DOVER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH '' 36:?1J 1-:. Coast '"\'Y·. Cdl'll * 675-5930 * -a-DUPLEX • I.RI your-1Cnants buy you a Juxury duplt>x at the bra.ch, tJO!h 11nit.ot have hugl' livin~ n"">On1s. Upp<'r ha11 4 h!>d- 1w111.~. 2 hath~. IO\\'f'r has 2 hcdroon1.~ ,t. b:1th. One ronl· plctt"ly furnis~I. Only strp:"I tron1 bf'-arh and <tVail11ble --- VACANT O\vner will help finance or lease/option. Im- mediate poss ession. 2 Bedroo1n , 2V2 bath home wi th some water \'i e\\·. Open beam ceiJ- ing in living room & den. Built-i n range. oven & refrigerator. Forced air heat. Double ga- rage + carport. -#128. $45,500. HOME & INCOME lo · THE REAL \""-E~TATERS OWNtR BAILING ' OUT $49,950 SHARP! SHARP! SHARP! Bi~ bedroom beauty \\ith .., spacious fan1ily rooin. Lovf"- Gener el JlnJ~ J11fe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES ~ SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 S•n Jo•quln Hills Road "Overlooking Bi' Canyon Country Club" NEWPORT CEN ER • 644-4910 tor only $.:J,000 do1vn. Call 61~9.'lO. Open E\·~ 'Iii 9 •~'co.I 2 Bdrm. home with fireplace in carpeted liv· ing room. Covered patio & fenced yard. F'un1· ished l ·bdrm. apt. over 2 car garage. #100. $49,950. 4 BEDROOMS· VIEW ·POOL One of the finest vie\VS in Cameo Shores. l r11 111aculate 3,000 sq. ft., shows like a n1odel ho1ne. Warmth expressed thru-out \vith the generous use of lovely paneling & \\'all· coverings. Fireplace in living & family rooms. 3 .Baths. W/w carpeted & draped. Safety fenced pool. 3 car garage. # 121. $95,500 RPduret1 $-1000 Under Apprais· 11L Prime residf'nrial arr11. .'\100 Sq fl of living arr11. t'om1al dining, J baths-. 1111~(' t't'l'N"lltional area. This is fl j!;Ur~rou~ 4 bfflroom tri- lrl'l'l 1v/011'n<'r forced to sell. Cnll !""1-15-8.f2.f (open e1•e11.) ly l11ntlS<.'apine. and A quiPt tree lined street, combine to givl' you true quality a t a pri<'e or only $30.930. No dOl\'n payment lo VPts, 11nd ~lfA buyer~ gt:>! in 1\'ith only $1600. SEE THIS O~E FAST! COATS' & WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0p~n Ev1nlng1) -' 3 Linde Isle Drive -Open Sunday Lovely. ne\v 5 BR., 4\12 ba. home \\'/\\·ater- front !iv. rm. & din. rm. Oak paneled family rm. \\'/frp!c. J\·Iaster BR. \\'/Sitting area & fireplace. Bay & Mt. vie\\"S ......... S179,500 JUST COMPLETED 5 BR .. 4 bath home 'vith 50 ft. dock . Beauti- full y decorated, with marble mstr. bath, crystal chandeliers. fine carpets & wallpaper. Built-in vacuum, recirculating hot u•ater, dumbwaiter & many other extras. $285,000. _, ......... t ll·•tM * ** ** * Near Harbor Hi9h -----------------lf!f 1hi<r f'Xctllrnt "'t'il de!i!gn· <'d 3 Ik>flroon1 -family room homf' -For the ~l'O\\•in_i:: fam- ily. 2 fireplllet'S. Breakfnsl bar. All <'lC'<.'!ric bhin kitrl1- "n -!'p,1<'K)lt1 sunny llvinJ[ roon1 · \\''\I ep!s + drap- r11 . 2 B111h. On <'ho1N' quif'I strf!'C'I. • Onl,\ $'.'H,7:io. llUT· ry -Cull 1.1'13-IG.'.(I. Pete Barrett Rea/t'J p•·e~t>nlJ COUNTRY FEELING IN THE CITY -"armth and privacy. 5 bedrooms. family room and dining room. Back yard entertaining in tovel.v co\•ered ra· mada surrounded bv trees. l\1other in·la\v area or ma id's quarte.r5-. . . . _ 845.500. 2424 Hol iday, N.B. Open Fri., Sat. & Sun. 1.5 JUST TWO YEARS OLD CONVENIENT CORNER. 3 bedrooms builtins. carpeting, \\"ell cared for. Vacant'. Visit and see. 1901 Tustin, C.M. •VAILABLE NOW Open Sat. & Sun. 1 ·5 LEASE/LEASE OPTION -Bayfronl, pier and slip. Roomy. luxurious furnishings. Oa U Cor further de1aUs. . ENGLISH conAGE ON OUIET STREET -3 bedrooms. din· ing roo m and huge family room '"ith fireplace Jn Newport Hf:iahb:-area. New oUering at ' ......... ' ...... ''.' .. '' .. $39.950 433-16th Pl•ce, Newpt. Ht1. Open Sun. 1-4:.30. A Office Open S•turd•Y• & Sund1y1 . PETE BARR En REAL TY 1605 WHlcllff Or., N.I . t.. 642-5200 ·------· ------- ANXIOUS OWNER l'>lu.!! M>t' 1hi11 SUPER SHARP 3 bed1oon1 hon1e on a quiel cul-<le-§ac; featurinJt: all bullrln gardrn kltc~n. Jor- 1nn1 dimng & family room., JolfA ft'nn11. or a!l!IU!T\f> ~x- i~tiTIJ:" loan $32,9.iO. Call~·· .'.HG-11.it tOP"n rves) 1 y ~~:.:1 l S:TORY STEAL O\·pr 1700 i.Q. f1, ttl lamily l1\"1n11; v.'i1h 4 d•'t.vrator ~· room,, p I 11 • h carpeta, bi•1tif''it ld1ctten and you own r\f'rylhlni;:. NO Gl~11't1CKS • SZi.500. Walker & Lee Rt'tllllr.!t Sl:z...M:>j 4-PLEX, GI TERMS ~·f.a~e 2 Bt'ftrn1. Jl 1 &th unlt11 11 lih bu1lllns, ~n 11 primp loca rion for sro.ooo. run price . ~ SHERw••o REALTY 92 Lindi Isle Drive " ' STEPS TO BIG CORONA S\\1eeping ocean vie\V from 4 bdr1n. ho111e on 3 levels. 34' Livi ng/di ning area. One of the fe\v homes available close to the \\-"aler on fee simple land. : 126. S98.250. WHY NOT? J:-=-=-=~=z===== Li\'c 1t 1it11f' -enjoy nearby Beaut. 5 BR. 4 ba. home "\\'/formal din . rm. & family rm. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway. Built-in gu n cabinet & bookshelves. $155,000. •• 1-------- HOME & INVESTMENT REALTY 3535 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar 675-7225 -VETS- s1 00 Down 111oves rou in Srllrr P11rs ail ~-nur !"0$1.~. Hug" .f bf'droon1 COLl.EGF. p,\RK hoill\' 11·irh ,l!'Olr! ~hag i'R!'P''l!I and ro\""r'l'd Plllio u1·prl()..1king a sparkliru: HJ., 36 fr pool. V,\ 11111 lo.1n )OU S.1.1.;m & SJ.00 d-01vn torl!J v.'11) n10\'(' y<>U in. Jfurr:-•. Cnll )IG-1151 t()pen EvesJ COLLEGE PARK 4-BEDROOM l..;;;;;====;;;I PLUS CAN'T FIND IT? Newport Heinhts F•mlly room ""'"'' 10 '";' * WILL BUILD your dreiu.. '21 )o\•tiy clei111 !!lll'lrp hon1e. .hom ti 1 fl,_ Ol11t>r3B<lr•>' I''""~'•" "B-•• e, 111·e s a •w com-"'"" " r. • Cold 1ihag carpets. 21xl<I 11\"- pt hO k 1"ER TIIAN i'1E\\"'" 1-ond ltion ete n1e pac :tge. Ing room \\'/firepll'lr(', din- , • .lk'I\ plumbi~. el¥elli-Ing room. Builtin appiianc .. <'al. k11t·h It l>alh rf'model· f'!I, \ViJkin,; dl!llSIK"t 10 ' Put )"OUr conlid<'net In ()llr 49 years of quality rostom hOmc building, ~ eQmple o( pnxluct ti 3!06 Galaxy, D.>-.ir Shores. Ivan Wells & Sons •SEE th~ choice. aolf C'OUrlC vtcrw lot. El Nlgutl Golf Cal!ht. 01\ n~r 67~ Olrne-A·Llrll' &l:Z..:i6i8 f'<I, l'lt"\\' rarpelin~. drapt'r-1"1! 4 h~hl fixl~. Va.Cftnl l'lhoppillJI: ll{)d !o all ~<'hooli. Only S32.~. Call 1101\' • &· ready 10 Jl;('fl a.nytirt1'. 646-7'1n. Drl\'t' hy !,.,~ San Bemar· d1no foff ll1h S1.1 Nowport •• IO THt.REAL ""-ESTATERS DON'T MISS TIUS! Fairvl1w Four bt<lroon11, N·o bat~ . 6'46-lll l t~~rory. Like otl\'~ Easy 1emu. (1nytlme) O~LY $29.000 CAPlSTR.-\;'\"O VALLEY \VAl"1T 10 buy 4, BR honw. REAL-TY Any C'.'OOOlrlon or bl!hlnd 3.l!JOI Camino Capistrano pymnltt. Priv. pa r t y , i~~--49l-~"tl"2·1=-=,..- S94-4094. for ht1'1 l"f'!Ull~! 642-.l678 rommunity chtbho11!il! · fe11- 1urln11: !'v."imming pool and t('nn1!l courl~; only Ihm blocks fron1 the Blue P11cific Oct•an -~· Ch111 three bed- roon1 111·0 ba1h fl\"O story '"A.' frnmf" beauty in NP\\.· pon Bra<'h. . .11nrl just 1ry 10 pass ii hy for $,\.l,9j(). 6·$6-717'1 \0 T HE RF::AL \"-ESTATERS . ' 106 Linda Isle Drive Custo111 Single story 3 Bdrn1 .. 3 bath water· front 1\·ith pier and slip. Large master bdrm. \rith sauna. Dining_ kitchen & living room have \vater vie\\". 52' lol . . . . . . . ... $135.000. Waterfront Lot s No. 76 : 3 Car garage. Faces South .. $80.000. No. 56: North Lagoon exposure .... , . $80,000. 403 Bayside, 70 ft. sandy beach $43,950. For Complete Information ·: . .. " . On All Homes & Lots, Ple111 C11I: • 5 WINNERs11111 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ~ l .-2 RR d@luxc condo, nr. 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 1 :, \Vestcliff • $31..500. ''"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""''"'""I ~.-13<-st buy • ilarbor High· I"" ': land1< -4 BR -SJ6.500. Gen1r•I Gener11 .; 3.-Vlrw -View! 4 BR -+ • J ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;f J:)cn·er Shores, Gorgeous. s.'t9.500. 4.-Bark Bay • 1 BR + den .. poo1 -w . .:m. 5.-Ch:llrt TyJ>f> nr. 1"°C"'\'PI. lits, S37,500. TRI HARBOR REALTORS ~ .. ~AST 1mr, C.M. 6·1~ £\-es: &12·2225 NEWLYWED DREAM COTTAGE CU1"" '" a bug's e11r and squeaky <'lt'11n. Gold ~h.q cArPf"I, cu.•101n kll'c!W"n, lltl\"f'rlnll tI't'f' -1hadt'd fol ron1pltttly £t>nctd, 0 n I y $1f:i PAY• All, lt>Sll than rent. $22,000 Total. Walker & Lee BROADMOOR ·WITH VIEW New listing · scarce 5 lxtrm. Smith built hom e. Lge. li\'ing r1n ., dining r1n .• ocean & harbor view. Realisticall y priced at $72,000. 10 ACRE HORSE RANCH 3,000 Sq. fl. cuS!om bit. home. done In nal- uraJ \\'OOds & brick. s"·eeping view of the surroundine-area. ·stables v.llth automatic \Vatering trougb; owner anxious to sell, be-- cause of health, al $150,000. 644-7662 CORB·IN-MARTIN Newport • Coron1 def Mar • Coit• Mew • ' ., • • ... ·' ~ • ti ,. •• J ~ •• ~ •• ,. Time For QUICK CASH 1"'~8Zi'.""'~"-'-~";=:""'"~""" .,,---' .. ~,.....;.:, !-~~~~~~~~~~~-· Daily Pilot Classified ----"=-------------~' I . ' ,. ' ' ' ,. •: . .. ~ -:i ' ' "' " ' ., ~ 3 ' . Frld,.y, HCWtfllber 12, 1971 DAIL V PILOT J3 -..... I~ 1._-_ .... _ .... ;;;;;;,;1~;;;;;~11 Ueneral G~ral Gener•I -........ l~ I l~I _ ... _ -.... l~I ---l~I I~ I _,__ OWNER ANXIOUS \VU! oonsider all often, -BAYF.RO.tri:'AiU:-1=;:.:E;;..l _RA_N_Cff_O_ lii!iiiiil!i~~ Viata Del Udo. P:l~r & sllp available. From $31,500. Sell Gonor•I TWO ON A LOT He.re b eood ttntal property, or use u a mother-in-la\\' QUArtfrrf. Ont> .l bedroon1 and.one l bedroon1 . both for the price of ONE, only $22,iOO! JI ~ net spendable. on do\\•n payn1<'nr af!tir mon!hly paymen16 includ. ing 111~<'!1. Better chl"ck this: out. Call · General General IRVINt TERRACE-VIEW SHHHH!!. 1; 2300+ liQ ft home. 3 BR, 2 Ba. den, bonus fam rm t. scmd patlo, or 1..... Nearly 1/z Acre George Willlam1on Gu11t Hou11 + Corel Immaculate 4 bedroom home in terrific loca· lion-OPEN HOUSE this weekend at 2001 TAHUNA TERRACE-heated swimmin g pool -lar~e vie\V living room & dinin2 area. $92,600 ''Don't Let It Out" Dandy Duplex -VA CALL -SEE ANYffilE ROY' J. \YARD RLTRS. ....,,,,,. REAL TOR + Oen + Oino 548.6570 645-1564 Bttathtaking!! Everything Fo~ best results! M2-5678 tor complete family Jivlog . Only 7 >'tars old. CuHI -FHA -211.D2 G1n1r.1I Gtneral house bu 3 Bedrooms. \Ve 1----------....;.....;. ______ I JUST LISTED IT. So HUIT)', BA YRtONT HOME On \Vide, sandy beach, \vith sensational vie\v of main chafln el & jetty. 3 Large bedrooms -bayside formal dining room-paneled den \1.'ith brick fireplace & wet bar-enclosed yard , bi g enough for a pool. $164,000 • -ONL V $29,9lD BE FIRST DIAL 645·0303 CALL FOR OUR PICTURE BROCHURE OF CURRENT LISTINGS OFFICE OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1l28 KEEL ORIVE OPEN SUNOAY 1 TO l P.M. LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS -lovely one story 4 BR. Sandpiper model. 3 Ba. Great fam. rm., galed entry. picturesque gardens. Ideal fan1ily home. A real opportunity at $73,500. Belle P a rtch SELDOM t Seldom can \ve offer such value !in Lu sk Harbor View I-fill s. 3 ,aR .. with vfew. Va- cant. owner wa nts to sc!U now. OPEN SAT. & SUN. AFTERNOON. 1018 SANDCASTLE DR. Jim Muller BREATHTAKING VIEW Of bay & ocean. 4 Bedroom, 3 baths; huge family roo1n, large kitchen w /eating area. OPEN SUN. 12-5; 403 KIN.GS RD ., N.B. ~Iary Lou l\ilarion OPEN SUNDAY 1 TO l 617 IRIS, CdM. Duplex -live in one. rent the other. 4 BR .. 3 bath studio apts. Cozy fireplace. 2 Car garage. Carp., drapes, elec. kitch. $77.500. Lavera Burns OPEN SAT. & SUN. 12-4 504 FERNLEAF. CORONA DEL MAR. So. of Pac. Coast Hiway. NeYlly remodeled & redecorated. 3 BR. 2 ba's. den· atio. 2nd n1 may e a e . . C. Buie DISTINCT ADVANTAGES Rustic Spanish on the best street! Gated & tiled courtyard with trees! Splendid Sloan's interiors. Beamed fainily room & \Val k-in bar. Gourmet kitchen! Great shel tered pool in the backyard & vie\\' -vie\v -vie\v . OPEN SUN. at 1472 GALAXY DR .. N.B. Kathryn Raulston OWNER TRANSFERRED f\:Tu st sell nearly new Lusk home in HAR- BOR VI E \V. Tasteful decor. 3 Bdrms. & 2 baths; all in squeaky clean condition. 3 Car gar. ~54.000. Harry Freder ick 4-PLEX DANA POI NT $78,200. Opportunity! Top location. Great potential appreciation &· return on invest- ment. Quality & attractive design. 3 Bdrm. studio apts. & 3-2 bdrm. units. Charlene \Vhyte HARBOR VIEW HILLS If you are looking for a 3 bedroom home \Vith family roo1n. on a quiet street in a lovely neighborhood. be sure to see this Lu sk bea uty. $59,950 Incl ude s the land. Cathryn Tennille WHAT'S AN OCEAN VIEW WORTH?? YOU can decide by seeing this ONE OF A KIND -3 BR. + fain. rm. home. overlook· ing a gorgeous CORONA DEL l\1AR Canyon & the BLUE PACIFIC. Owner says SUB- MIT-they are moving. Bud Austin BAY VIEW -IRVINE TERRACE Tile roof & bean1ed ceilings -3J.i. bdrms .. large den & 3 beautiful baths. Formal din· ing area & breakfast room. Atrium \vith electric gate. Covered patio on vie\v side. ~92,500. Carol Tatum CAMEO HIGHLANDS Charmin g, custom-built home -3 bed- rooms. 21h baths. Spacious enclosed lanai. Beautiful pool & landscaping. $75 .000. Eileen lludson OCEAN VIEW UNITS Prime Laguna location -lge. 2 BR .. 2 Ba. owner's apt. + 4 rentals: fireplaces & many charming extras. Real pride of ow n- ership bldg. OWNER IV /HELP FINANCE. $105,000. ''Chuck'' Lewis TERRACE BARBECUE Cozy. 'varm 3 BR .. 2 bath home that you can see has had a lot of care. Formal din- in g rooni - spacious garden & kitchen. You O\vn the land. $47.900. Al Fink SHORECLIFFS l BORM. Cha r mi ng famil y home in t his desirable area \r /priv. steps to 2 ocean beaches. Gourmet kitchen divides adult & children's wings. $110,000. l\lary l~arvey so· BOAT AT YOUR PROFIT DOOR Private & secluded Balboa Coves. 2 Yrs. old. 4 Or 5 Bdrms .. 31h baths. pier & fl ?at. Vie'v of bay & ocean. Seller '"ants action. Sub1nit offer. S149,500. George Grupe SWEEPING VIEW OF COASTLINE Co1nplete pr ivacy in this spacious 4 Bdrm., :J bath c ustom designed home. located on fee land . Iinmediate occupancy \v ith ex· cellent fin ancing. $105.000 . I-Jarriett Davies 1-ACRE SPANISH ESTATE Luxury built 3500 ft.. authenti.c Hacie~da. overlooking golr co u rs e 1n Huntmgton Beach. 20x40 Pool. O\vner 'vill finance or trade for Reno property. $130,000. Bill Comstock OPEN SUN. l·5 SHOULD SEE~ 4824 SURREY CAMEO HIGHLANDS, CdM. VfE\V -3 BR:. F/R. im1naculate condition. One of our finer communities. $59,900. 2 BR .. conv. den. near J-farbor Island. ri1ove in i1mnedialely, !69,750. Bob Yorke --Coldwell.Banker 644·2430 ~ 833.0700 550 NEWPO RT CENTER OR., N.B. Dial 645-0303 IORISr E Ill.SO~ '" 11£.,,. l ro11s • • • BOB WORTON 312 N. El Camino Real San Clemente You are !he 1\inner ol 2 lickc11 10 lhr Orange County International Auto Show al rhc ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER VACANT 4 BEDROOM \lacanr and ~·ai!Ull{. 011·ners mo\'ed and 11·anr quick sale. Lovely condifiorK'rl hon1e. Funcuonal (loor plan. Sc>p- arale fan1ily roon1. 11·e1 bar. Quality 11·au to 11·a11 carper:' Md drapes. Park·like yard. Sprinkl<'r~ ... 01\L \' S:l7,900 ... EZ TER:'t1S. Call 673-85.XI HAVE THE "SCj)UEEZITS"? try this Sweetie and stay forever. 3 Bedroom hon1e "'ith love· Jy 12'x30' SOLARIUM. 3 balhs, quality car· peting and drapes, nicely decorated. Has COMMUNITY POOL. REC HALL & PUITING GREEN . Years of happiness for .... J59,500. BE HAPPY "GO LUCKY" with 8 Units IN EASTBLUFF -SPLIT·LEVEL VIEW APART1i1ENTS. O\vners unit 3 Bedrooms, t 1h baths. 4·2 Bedro01n, 1 ¥.! baths. 3·1 Bed· room, l Yi baths. SO Gt:. T LUCK,I'. Only. 1198.450. "IS Cj)UALITY IMPORTANT"? t_hls is the place "BEAUTIFUL LINDA JSl ,E." formal dining room, den with "\vet bar". 5 bedrooms, 4 ~.l baths. 3·FIREPLACES, 2 PATIOS with buil t· In j!as -grill. fine quality drape s & carpets PLUS yo ur O\VIl 50' dock . All this for $167.000. A REAL BEAUTY for beautiful people STEP INTO ANTIQUE MIRRORED livin~ room \vith fireplace, custom drapes & deep, deep shag carpeting in this 4 bedroom·. 2 l/.! bath. kitchen \Vith all b11iltins and FORfll.i\.L DINING R00~1 . 'You \l'ill be "RIGl-11' ON" the canal and have .\'our o\vn DINGY plus WROIJGHT IRON FURNITURE Iha! goes \Vith the nice price .............. $64,950. Walker & Lee Rl'altor1 M.J..9491 TOWNHOU SE LIVING Abou1 thnt" to leave lht- n1aint. to !!Omeone l'lse. See this ln\'l"ly 4 bedroon1 2 balh To1vnhou;w. lia.~ all huihins in Qlk"en'g kilch. l.nads or s101"Hge 1hniOu1. fo:xCPptional huy at $24.%0. Submil on ll'l'mS. For furth· f'r info, CAi i ~/ .E\ rs .i:lli-~;~·l-1. COLLINS & \VA'ITS -RE1\LTORS -----*SPECIALS* DUPLEX, Corona <lei :\Tar. 1-lBR .. 1·2 BR.: ronvl'nien1 Joe. Nol !ht' besr -bur no1 1hc "'orst! Only ~~2.;;.oo. LIDO ISLE Single story J\lediterranean home on large, corner lot \11ith view of the bay-2 bedrooms & paneled den-nicely landscaped, enclosed yard-3 ca r garage. S1141600 HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS "SINCE 1944" SHARP 3 BR •nd. l•nai: 673•4400 good Cos1a ~1esa Joe. 2 """"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~!!!!!! 'Barhs. Frplc., F'.A. heat: blt·in.~. Lo1s of storagt'. Ask· General General ing S29.2;ilf. --------1--------- MORGAN REAL TY Location Makes OCEANFRONT 673.6642 675·6459 The Price DUPLEX LUXURY LOVER S Twice As Nice! I.1•1 your tenanis niake your Your gu!'S!s will gasp as rhey paynll~ in lhis prin1e Joca. ;;ll'p in10 this draoiaric Thf' Hl·l·Airr of Or.inge (Qun. , ion. J Bt>droom Duplr'\'. K1\YC'llE:ST entry•. :I R ig: 1".Y'· Nt'ar 111" h'Oll C•>urse. Both units arr fu lly furnish. BR, · h I· I 1 " 1 noor 1n crilinx f1rrpl111'f'. s wu sop 11s1 ca ruins r ('d and in ni1n1 rnndition. IORISI [ OL\O\ '" llE AL TOPI 4 Bedrm. + Pool + . Quality $31 ,500 . \"ery spacious fan1ily livinf:.. designed for entl"l'1ainillf. 2 bath}l', Uunil.v room \.\'Ith ni.assk·t" firepla<'f' for Indoor action. Cloud soft CIH"()('ling. cus1on1 drapes. Pric" in· •elude regula1ion pool table. Patio. loads of df'Cking, lush landscaping ee,circltis the hear('(j pool. Brk, 5.I0.17al. TARBELL 29lj Harbor, Costa ~ff'!la Pool + Rumpus Room Plus 4 bedroon1s, 2 balhs, huilt·in kitchen, nc11• shag carpeting. 2 fireplaces. Over 600 l'!q. fl. n1n1pus room in· eludes 11·et bar. No Qualify. in~. no loan fees -just lake over. subject 10 existing GI Loan. o~·ner \.\'ill C<lnsider $1 ,000 riown. l.!lfi\1EDIATE OCCUPAi'OCY. Walker & Lee suile. Sparkling . .slf'p-.<.il\'f'r CounrTr k1lchrn 11i1h buJJr. Priel"d at onlv S:\l.!r.-0. Sub- k1L Pk·iurPsque Jndscpg ins. Thn'<' ht·d.ioonis. Fully init )OUr offCr ~IO-R.l.-,;1 Realtors Si'e \\'hat $69,!i()() 11111 buy, gl'o~·n ln>r~ ~ult prier • · SHERWeeD REALTY 2790 Harbor Bl\'d. al Adams YOU WILL FLIP YOUR WIG ~11=9.~9l:;:O:;:Js===TH~E~P~R:;:IC~E;:"+-----i'n-Turtle-Rock for this very lovely 3 oon. over this 3 bedroom. family roon1, 2 baths, -GEM-$31,500 Call .,~6·2:113. 18964 Brookhurst F V 54;).9.J.91 Open 'Iii 9 P~t l 0! W Hw ' --~ WNE!Ur"• 4 ""'-~Dom "C!>rlsnn" ' • " REALTORS 642.4623 •i-;jilQ, ·bath~. entry hall. huge to cutgrown Levi• -you can rooin, 2 bath home. The loan atrium. builtins \\'ith self cleanine' oven. SEU.ING Your boat'! "List" --• --•--fireplace built·ins patio, turn "trash to ca1h" in a with us .• ~ll It fa.st. Daily Daily Pilot Want Ads have Rprlnkler' system.' Br k . DAILY PILOT classified ad is high enough 1hAt you can SHAG CA RPETING and CUSTOM DRA PES. Pilot Classified: 642-5678 bargains galore. $24,8.iO. Ph. 962-1166. -ca.lt 642-5618 assuine 11•ith payments of Covered patio and super la ndscaping. Only $160 per inonth. 11·hich in-.••• , ...... , , .. , .••• , • , •• , . , , , $47,900. eludes all. i\1odern built·ins, deep pile carpets. also matching drapes. Double garage to boo1! Call • Walker & Lee Rea!1ors 2i90 I-tarbor Blvd. at Adanis !>l.>-0.16} Open 'Iii 9 P:'lf Provincial Charm ~ ~ Alf•&l~1ATll REALTORS 644-7270 (Formerly Delancy Real Est1te) 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALIF. 2 Bdrms., l bt11h. SleJ)s to OC('an on Peninsula Pl. Huge lrpl., open beam ceil.: comp. furnished. Ne\.\·Jy deco r ated & carJ>(!led. $55,000. Immed. possession! Call; 673·3663 642·22:>3 E\•cs. ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ill General General associated BROKERS-REALTORS 1015 W Bolboa 673·366) $24,950 4 Bdrm. + Family Rm. Beautiful family home. Entry hall dining roon1. cozy den. 2 bilih~. fireplace, bu\lr.\n ran,gc & oven, park I i k e yard. brk, !H!J.1720 TARBELL 29.i.i llar5, CO!lta i\1esa INVESTORS PARADIS" Easlside horn<' + duplex. ."1nt location and condition. High income, Vt:'ry low main. lenanc-e. Priced for fas! sale. -- Call r>46-5880 fOpen Eves. I y HERITAGE : .. MAI. ISTAn THE EASY LIFE No 'vork, just t t'lax! This Dolores 1nodel rt'pN!senti'I one of the bem values in !he Bluffs. "'alk to 11chool.~. stOl'l's. lennis. & pools. 3 Bedrooms.. 21) baths. Entire HARBOR HIGHLANDS. Neal 3 Bdrm. 2 bath home, hdwd. firs., frplc. $34.900. CUTE HIDEAWAY. One door lo Ocean Blvd. 30 Ft. lot. Rear ~uest apt., build on front. $4 5,000 THE BLUFFS. Trouble·free 2 Bdrm. 2 bath plus conv. den. Top lac. 833 ,500 HARBOR VIEW HILLS. Pool -view · 3 BR. & fam. rm. Profess. decorated. $89,500 GO TOPSIDE. Exquisite home in all respects. 4 BR .. fam. rm., dining r1n ., tropical pool. $76,500 CALL 675-3000 ANYTIME KH" tflh 1Mt1ctr dlrecl'9ry wlttl Y•• tlll• ..... H • y1111 1• tio ... .a.nt1.,. All tH loc•tloll ll•tff IMl•w _. deterlHd I• ,, .. ,., fft•ll-ltr odMtthl11t ., ...... ,.. I• t•diry"• DAILY PILOT WANT ADS.,.,, ........ 1 ... ,.. heulff for '°'• or to ront -•rted t• lbt 1uclll htf•r11111tl11 111 tllls c•l1nt11 IKh Friday 0114 Scrt11ulor. HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedroom) 327 67th Street. Newport Shores 49!).1397. $34,950 1Sun 1·41 1018 Sandcastle JH .V. Hills ) CdM S.33-0700; 644-2430 tSat & Sun afternoon ) 2042 Galaxy, Ne"'port Beach 644-4910. S85.000 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 2015 Aliso. Costa Me sa &44-4910. S39.500 (Sal & Sun 1·5) **507 Bayside Drive, Newport ijeach 644-4910. SIG:>,000 (Sal & Sun 1·51 415 Pirate Rd .. Cliffhaven 640.7171 ISun 1·51 (3 Br & Family Rm or Den ) 3111 Coolidge Ave . INorthgalel CM 540.6174 , $34.950 (Sun 1-51 504 Fernleaf. Corona del Mar 833·0700 : 644·2430 I Sal & Sun 12·4 ) *1472 Gala.-.:y Dr .. Newport Beach 833·0700 ; 644·2430 (Sunday \ 4824 Surrey (Cameo 1-Jlds) CdM 833-0700 ; 644-2430 . (Su n 1·5) 18786 Theodore. Fou ntain Valley 962·1373. $34.500 !Sal & Sun 1·51 32S7 Dakota t J\1 esa Verdel CM 540·1720. $30.950 (Sal & Sun 1·51 2512 Lighthouse Ln., Corona deI Mar 833·0700; 644-2430 (Sun l ·5 l 1528 Keel Dr. (H.V. Hills) CdM 833-0700 : 644-2430 (Sun 1·51 40~ Kings Rd ., Ne,vport Beach 833-0700 ; 644-2430 (Sun 12·5) *1609 Antigua (Baycrest) NB 642·8235 (Sunday) 706 Aleppo IEaslbluffl NB 644-6200 !Sal & Sun) 2826 'Catalpa SL i£aslblull) NB 644-8i45. $48.900 JSunday) "*2007 Shipway (Baycresl) NB 642-8235 (Sunday) 2814 Bluewater, Corona del Mar 673-2222 (Sun 1·5 ) 15101 LaFayette. \Vestminster 879-22.12. $48,500 (Sal & Sun 1-5 ) 239 Princeton (College Park ) CM 17 14)· 823-4205 (Fri. eve 'lil Mon. AM ) 410 J\·lorning Star. Newport Beach 644-49 10. SI05.000 (Sal & Sun 1·5) **8 J_,i nda Isle Drive (Linda Isle) NB 644-4910. $143.500 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 850 Sonora, (Mesa de! Ma r ) CM 546-2313 (Su n 1·51 2033 Lemnos Dr. (l\'lesa Verde) CM 6411-7171 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 1712 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB *l:l63 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 8125.000 (Sal & Sun\ price $?.6.900. This is cer· 1 '"~""'"l'""'""'""'""'""'""l'""'""'i""""'""'""'""''"'lll lainly a fagt srller. so call General General 646-7171 (Sun 1·5 1 236 Wake Forest (College Park) CM now. 5:JG.ZU3. ABSEr-.-IEE 01\•ner mUAt sell Bellehurst Ho1ne. New pain! &: rlecor. POol wfhydrolic cover, auto sprink.lers, irn· med posses1ion, fle;'l(ible terrns to re sponsib l• puttha.SC'r. Jn~pecllon It of . fers ln1•itcd. 8~!11 f ox Hllls A\·e. 8UC'na Park . DOVER SHORES View Homr C11taxy Dr. Spacious & ltlf"lll lor enler. 1alning, 11•/indoo1· pool 8r j::iruz7.1. $1 22.000 -1...easc or $1 r1.000 -ret'. By app·t. Bill Grundy, Rea ltor 8~\ Bayside, NB 6i:>-6161 MODEL HOME- 3 Bdrms. -2 811.1hs Steps 10 OCf'Rn, S29,900 A·~RAME- 3 BR. Fam!ly rm., 2 baths Walk 10 beach. 136.900 CaY"'OOd Rt'alty 5-18-1290 • OLD SPANISH • Solid 11dobt> bit. J BR, nr. f(m·n k pk. 0nl"-Of·11.·klnd, ~polll'Sa. Ph. for de!l\111. $24,9:il. PERRON REALTY CO. IH2-ln1. fl'()1n 'Chri!'lltmu l'>iccktit-'5" to onti:m111n Ltvi11 -)'Oil cen turn "trash lo r.rt11h" in 11 DAILY Pil.DT cla1sl.tled ad -cA.11 642.-..;&iS BAYSIDE DRIVE WATERFRONTS OCEAN & BAY VIEW From 122 ft. lot. is the settin~ for thi s beau· liful 4 bdrm .. 4 bath home \vith its o"'" pier & slip. $250.000. LINDA & HARBOR ISLAND VIEW From this lovely 4 bdr1n .. 4 bath home. On a 50' lot. \vith pier & float. Custom drap· eries & paneHng. $139,5 00. For complete informetion On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Islanders Bldg. at Lindi Isl• 341 Bayside Or .. Suite 1, N.t'. 67S-616l General .... General 1100 Cambridge l\Veslclifr) NB 642·8235. $64.500 (Sal & Sun) 400 Cabrillo, Costa l\lesa 646-7171 !Sal 1·51 *1901 Kings Road. Ne\vport Beach 640.7171 !Sun 1·51 312 Morn ing Canyon Dr. (Shorecliffs) NB 673-8550 !Sal 1·5:301 19191 Biddle (Turtle Rock ) Irvine 540.2313, $35,300 (Sun 1·5) 900 MacKenzie Pl., Cos ta Me sa 546-5880. $32.950 (Sat & Sun 1-5) (4 Bedroom ) **729 Via Lido Soud I Lido Isle) NB 670.0123, $169.000 ISa l 2·51 2128 Vista Laredo (The Bluffs) NB 675-5930 (Sat & Sun 1·5! 1001 li ampshire Ln . j\Vestcliff) NB 642-8235 (Sal & Sun) *2001 Tahl1na Terr. (Irvine Terr.) OdM 673-4400 (Sal & Sun l COMPAN'I' HERE'S A WINNER 14 Br & Family Rm or Don ) TRANSFERRED Jn fashlonabl" Bay1hore!1, 1-fett it is all in onti Sharp Q11h privare"'lieach. Spaaoo.-*3253 COlora<IODi. {lfesa Verde) Cl\1 3 ~. 2 bath Eastsidc 4 BR., fan111y rm.·&: •P· 546-0164, $36,900 (Sat & Sun 1·5) h~. cul-de-sac Jocatiol'I dini.ng rm. C."u.al A: comfy. 3234'Nebraska Pl. (Mesa Verde) CAf wilh kt\v ma.lnlt'nan~. l\o Living rm. "'1th Invi ting 546-3742 (Sat & Sun 10-5) down VA, or lo1\• down FRA. -frpl . SecludPd outdoor p.,. *2031 Phalarope Ct. (~1esa Verde I Cfl1 Vacant and ready for your tio, blenrl~ beautifully \Ytlh 54fi-5990, $45.950 (Sat 1·5) insprcilon, lnilrlt'. PrieffitoM'll, '5-l.'iOO. *1948 Santiago Dr., (Dover Shores) N B 646-7171 (Sun 1-5) 1423 Antigua \Vay (Dover Shores) ·NB 646-7171 (Sat-1·51 (5 Bedroom) * 1615 Highland. Newport Beach 644-4910. $79,900 (Su n 1·5) (5 Br. & Family Rm. or Oen) 3001 Capri Ln . (Mesa Verde) CM· 540.5900 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2424 11oliday, Ne,vport Beach 642-5200. $45,500 (Fri.. Sat., Sun.) 2507 \Yindover (Broadmoor) CdM 644-7662 (Sun 12-41 938 Bellis (Easlblu[f) NB 644-7662 IFri.. 5at., Sun. 12·4) *2006 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 640.1550 (Dail y) **309 Evening Star 1Dover Shores) NB 642-8235, $169.000 !Sal & Sun I **419 North Star Ln . !Dover ~hores) NB 642-8235. $155.000 (Sunday) HOME & INCOME 12 Br. & 2 Br. Apt,) 616 lris, Corona de! Mar 675-5930 (Sun 1·5) DUPLEXES. FOR SALE 14 Br. each) 617 Iris. Corona del ti-tar 1133-0iOO ; 644-2430 (Sun 1-51 WATERFRONT LOTS FOR SALE **1641 Bayside Dr., Newport Beach C•li M&.lAAQ IOP'n £""1 HOPE GERRIE I 646-5533 (Sal & Sun 12·61 I ~ I REAL TY 2822 Ellesmere rMesa Verde) C~1 ¥ ~~~ 645:"00 &:;-33'1! 27~~~:p~:r~esa Verdel C~~un l· 5 l ••••' 642·8235 (Daily) VJcancic• cos1 1noneyl Renl 833DovcrDr .. NB 546-5990 (Sun 1-5) ••Wimrffe11t }\)\Ir houM, apl~. glore • 3061 Capri l.n. (Mesa Verdel CM ••• , ..... 11 w ... rfN. hlda,, l'IC, thnl a Daily Pilot l.T~u~rn~u~n~,_,~~ll~•m~•~ln=lo~qu=lck]l!:::54:6-:5:9!l0=·=$96=·=500====(S:•:l:&:S:un=l=·5=)==================~ Clas.Uied Ad. CA~h. call 642-5678 • ' .-. I • • 3.1 DAll Y Pll-OT JrrldQ;NOWmbH 12. 1971 Gent rat Corona del Ma{ CORONA Dj!L MAR Pn~ sla~hcd • L o "-: 1.,o,.,. do.,.,·n PRY•f~~t. 011i·ner \\'ill carry l$l. TQ, Pdccd i;lasb· Pd, Owner A11xinu~. Ocean Side of hYt)', 3 BR, JI' BA 's, laf1:1' li\'ing roon1 w/firepl, nice size_ kt!ch 1rith <'ating area. Patio, 11llcy access for boa.I. \\'Allc 10 shops a 11 d bc'1u:h. * OPEN SUN. l·S * 2814 BLUEWATER La11.oe 4 UR., family rm.: sundeek. Ocean vicu.·, Quick possC!!Sion! Only f74.500. DON V. FRANKLIN BARGAIA OF THE WEEK LfOO Send1 Uaitehold, 4 BR. beach house. $32.500. See \\'eekends only. 5512llivu Ave., 642-1178 Owner. 9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APTS. REALTOR * 673-2222 * Costa Mesa · 10 UNITS How Aooul This Owner transferred & wants to sell NOW! Lowest priced 3 bdrm .. 2 bath family rm., Broadmoor, Turtle Rock. Nicely done home In a 'Choice." JocatiOn: Don't miss seeing this bargain' at just $84,~00. NICE l BR house rur quiet working COtlple on 33rd St. Yearly $180. 675-7513. NO l)OWN "SINCE 1946" Vets homes · NpB/CM 4 separate buildings. Shake roofs. Private patios. No stalrs. All I story bungalows. 2 & 3 bedrooms. Some have fireplaces. Th~ type o! buildings that attract and bold good ten· ants. Income $16,740 yr. $145,000. Excellent . financing. "JI I ·11 'I! I I 1'//d Call J. Peck, B}Qo, MS--0465· 110ur 26th Year" ' WESTCLIFF DON'T BE TOO LATE! 1311 Sussex Ln. Dail)' 1-5 Ch~·ner aC'ceplcd OE'\\' position tn Seat.tle. See this sharp. elean, l bedroom 2 balh home. St'paratc living room plus fan1ily room. Owner added room for his offirt. Builtin1, l irep!a("(>, u!il rm. \Va'lk 111 i>rhoc.'1 & shops, li:llstside CQsta 11.le.sa, grut nont11/ tirea. &ven 3·Dt-d· l'OC>n1s and thr{'c a-bedrooms. ,\)J scpar11te un i:s ~·ith lots of spact'. Sho1vs a fantasic rt'lum with inrome of Sl,400 per mo. Submit on down or frade 10 - Walker & Lee Realtors Vets $45.00 total costs to move info a super 3 bedroom, vacant and just beggin g for a new owner. $32,000. 893-8533 545-0458 Fountain Valley Huntington Beach ---'I l"11ll11r ,1st We-stttn Bank Bid&:. WE BY ow•or, 3 BR. 3 HBA ~al•· SLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realto1'5 . Univeri"ity Park do Nr Ho•g o•p•t ' · 2111 Sin Juquin Hills Road rt Divs· 833-0101 Nights ~l.1~2~·500~· ~64~5-~35~22~·~64~5-J4=;38;·; liN~E~W;;;.PO~RT~C;E~N;T~E:!RTii~~~~~~6!4~4 ~49!1~01 Newport Heights 166 ::-:~,,-...,...-,.;:"--___ llncome PrOJMrtv li'nda Isle CHAru.!ING 3 BR home.i-:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;;;;. ' J~ beam clng w/used brickl' fNnci.I * EXCLUSIVES * frplc, fam rm, xtra lge lot, 4 Bdrrns .• 3 Baths beaut. kept yd, immac cond. ro x 90 Lot ..•....•.• s11,500 $33,950. 645-5322. L•auna S.ach Lower Temple Hills fixer· UPPer. Hu~e lot, outstanding Real ty company Business \\'hlle \Yater vi~·1 Beamed Newport Shores MULTIPLE UNITS Oppcrtunity carhedral Ct'il. in living rm., ~ Bdrms .• 2 Baths frplc.: 3 bdrms. f'lus den & -12 Ft, on Nord ...... $79,500 OPEN House _ Sunday, 1-4 1~ Loh~ ms.i~tenancy units. ---------- NEW LISTING Macnab-Irvine istudlo. Hurry· i!'s on,ly 327 67nd St Newport res Y painted. aeancy Excellent Opportunftie!ll BUILDERS $47.500. 4 BR. Plus Family, 21h Ba . Shore!': Be a~ ti fu J 1 yap. 5faetor $1°1 6 1 850 13 of l% for past Beacti pharmacy e 5 t. ~ CLOSE.OUT RUSTIC HOME ' x 88 ~"" · " •· .. yn;. • Gross Income. yrs. 100% location. Retirin'z 00 Lot ........ ....,,,,500 po' ,1ntf:'d. A frame home, 1$ Units on 1.43 beautiful "' 2790 Harbor Blvd . at Adanu 1 _____ ..,. ____ I---------- 545-9491 Open 'ti! 9 Pri.f BY OWNER CUTE AS A BUG!! 1860 NC'11'por1 --nlvd .. C.~f Ca!I &16-392.1\ E'vcs. 646-~7 $25,500 3 BR., 2 full ba!hs, attractive \l.'e!Lkt'pt interior. carpeting-, \l'a!I to 1\'all, drapes. Large !r11ced yard \Vith room for hmt!. Co1·ner Joi cl~e to ele- menlary ,r,,_ hi schools in \ves1 side Costa l\.tesa. Phone ownC'r for appointment to !et:.~. 3 Bdnn, 2 balh townhouse in •F.V. f.ike new cond. throughout. Own~r • trans- ferred & owner has to sell qui ck. Submit on terms or assume J.t!A loan. Priced right at $23.950. 962·5523 Only 4 rt;-main. 3 and 4 bdrm \\'alking di'stance to Sr. High 1 a .blks to beach, ~I & a.cres. VacapCy factor al· ownf'!' ~·ill sell for 29% Spanish Style hon1es with 2 &hod!. Different floor plan 3 Bdrrn!I, 4 3 Baths t~nn1s ets, 3 br, blt4 in gas mos t nil. Room for expan-Cio"·n. $25,000 P lus In· b?,ths. No down GI buyers with an abundance of pan· Corner lot on ·Soud •• $!19.500 kitchen, frple, breakfast sion. Exc~Jlent tax shelter. ventory. Large re t a·t I ABSENTEE OWNER ANXIOUS and min. down FrlA. Priced eling & beamed ceil's. 3 bar, At tr a e 1 iv el y SZ6.460 Gross income. Please bookstott est. 8 years. Ml- !rom SJ0,6.;o, Prire includ· Bdrms., family ,r~1 · b!'i-in 5 BR. :l Baths • Pool landscaped, I 0 w main-cali '6'14-620(). ' jor shopping center location. es landscapc, sprinklers and kitch.: askin~ S44.~. 70 Fr. srrada cor11er Sl:?j,000 teniinC:e yard. Priced to sell Good lease $55.000 ineludf!s buycr·chooses color on car-TRADE FOR LOT quickly. $34,950. Lingo Real large inventory. And ha.~ j11s! redUf'C'd lhls bf'<tU!Jlul l year old horne $1000. 3 bt>di·ooms, 2 balhs, Pr1vaic master bedroom sul1e, Luxurious i>hag car- pets, rus!on1 drapes, huge pauo area \\'i!h built-in gas B-B-Q. In11nediate OL'CU· pant·y available. Assume e.'\IStinJt f11A loan. $'28,900. COLLINS & \VATI'S -REALTORS - pets. Clnse 10 So. Coasl \VOOf! & glass house in foot· 4 Bdrms. --4 Baths Estate 499-1397 VOGEL COMPANY, RLTR~. Plaza and new schools. !\1o-hill:; of l.a,c:"una ~ one of a 90 X 88 Lot ........ $135,000 J<~~:;::;:::;;i;-----j•~~~~~'!!~~~!" jNo. 10 2052 Newport Blwt', JO-.. COATS ~WA~LACE REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • $27,500 You \\'on't Believe It Unless You See it. Fantastic 3 bed· room honie \\'/all kinds of ur;ed brick, country style kitchen, ha.nhrood floors & CflrPf'ts:, hugE> rumpus roon1 ,I; lar~e p!ush ,c:"rce~ yard. No do1\'n to Vets assume lo\\' intere~I loan. C ii 11 SOUTH COAsr REAL TORS, 545'842-4 !Open Eves.) ASSUM E 6~ % loan on new 5 BR, 2~~ ba, 2700 sq JI house; owner transf'd. 968-(1781 Huntington &Hach JUST TAKE OVER . NO.QUALIFYING dcls open. Call kind. 3 Bdrms., 2 ~baths. 1,>_•_n_c_1e_m_1_n_l•----I EASTSIDE TRIPLEX c~r ' Walker & Lee $38,900. \Vi!J 1.."0nsider Jot in 3 + Lge. Fam. 31) + 1 ~ Ba ths ** OUTSTANDING ** Lg 2 BR units. Garages, pa-e 54S-!1346 e ~ Lagu11a for exchange. Patio. 100' On Nord ;149,500 Lovely 3 BR, new epts/drps, tios., trplc's. Xlnt cond. ~70 MONEY !\tAKING Realtors REAL EX * WATERFRONT * many xtras, atrium, ocean mo income. Y't't only $42,500. OPPORTUNITY JN 2790 !{arbor Blvd. al Adam~ Real Estate view, asking $39,800. BROKER, 64&-8226 * BIG BEAR LAKE +,..1 • 917 GI ' .. 5 Bdrms. · 6 Balhs ~5-9491 Open 'Iii 9 P!\1 enneyre, ..... guna P il!'r & Slir> ........ s245,gj() Sou th Coast Realty INVESTORS SPECIAL 0\\'Jl your own Colo n t1 "BARGAIN 494.8S61 LIDO REALTY INC. <714) 493--4346 Divorce~ sanders count?)' Frid CUSTOM HOME 3 BR t' !\1ust seU no\v! Chicken • land, bld ir , ING??. · 3377 VJ' I.too . vu. on go coUMe, , ~ HUNT ' " 13 t 50-Duplex at Newport Beach equ1p'mt. Illness force s • Buill of cedar around a cen-673:7300 l.500. !'o!ay ease. .l Look I th 'fh 1 -~~~c"--~-~-A•·d;lt· ''"'· Own•r Call 11.ft 4 pm, 54~844 present owner to sell. CaJI no ur er. e owncri; tral srairc.:ise \\'i!h lari;?"e N d W t f I " ...,_,, ... · h k or a er r on S<.' 07•-: or '·l0 116S,. * TAX SHELTER •·Pl"" Ross <TI4J 536-173!1 cJr are mov1nJ;: ac cast and skyli<>h!, entry atrium & ,..,, "u J' ~ ~ " Br11nd new 5 BR., 41ii bath~. aJ C !\I 8 \Vrite: Spencer Real Estate, must sell this hcauty. Shag Spanish lile, Excrllcnt white deck & dock, on Lido Nord. BY Owner, 3 BR. 2 Ba, o. cenlr os!a · esa · Y p 0 B 211211 B' Beat carpers 1h1uughout and dou-~·atcr vic\v. CC'ntral hrick vieiv, 403 r:;, Ave. San Juan. 0 ...,. :1 er. . G~ss S6,600. ~k~. C~~if, • tg b!e draping on ('lleh \\'indow. 1ireplace. 3 Bdrms .. fr1nlily-$l97·~0 Foot Lot $4l,900. Terms. 544-4.294. !~~,71.'4'16.7, Pr1ne1pals on I Y • 1 There is a huge covC'red room, 2 full haths PLUS ct<· .,.,_~ PARTNER patio and it is \1•alking p11nsion possibil1tir s. Decks Attr. exposed beam 3 BR .. 3 ~ta Ana Height!__ FOR Sale' By Owner. 4 units. Active w/ SJ0.000 CASH Spanish Hacienda Total old \\'orlrl ~harm is *COLLEGE PARK *' -tounrttn--rntnttcm~ ·va-r:am-3 Btt + ramny BEACH i\tODERN .. Low d11. buys equlty. Still like ne\v, l yr. old. 4 BR. 2 BA. BuiH· ins. Dishwasher. Bcau1Hul in!erlor. $40,000 area near lhe beach for only S27,:'>00. For details ca1! 1714) 962-5&85 dlsrafl{'e "to the bear.hes. AI,L & p•t•·o. Onty $44.500. r-tr • ba home w/South patio. FOR LT MANUFACTUR~·~ " '-<l Only $65.000. OWNER SAYS Conv. !or.. Xlnt tinaocia! · u~ TE RMS AVAILABLE. , 1 ~-•• -..1. or.. re>turn. Call aft 5 pm. General business background 1-";l::linmir.iiiiiml·~-~~1·----1--"'JJJ~JJJo1.Y.,._OJJ.Lo,~--+---•'sEttt'!!!--ssr..(IJ•~='-'=....:..-"=+..-"em!ct.-f'trs-narn·~· -1----1 ~t~•·-n-----IORISI E 01,0\ sq foot ho1ne -4 large 00'!· 2 Ba's. No do\\•n G.f., low rooms · Spftclous ch11rming do11'n anyone. Chvner will liv room . Firplc. f'unctio n· pay all closing costs & help al living rl1•s1gn._Ierra~ Ji.uan~28.950. '" Rf"Al roRS REAL ESTATE .BIG HOUSE. • • srarpA 3 bed~~ ~°" ~arge BY Owner. 3 triplexes. 2 BR, For interview \Vrite Class!· I • • .SMALL PRICE Toot.ta! ssumet $1086 oatnh bhl~s. frpst1'5· ooopool. Yohur fied Ad #280, Daily Pil0[ 1190.Glerincyre St. paym s · mon · c oice. , e: a c · P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesi. fJoors. AH clt'Cll'IC bl! in kit l!URRY! HURRY! JflJRRY! 191.11 Brookburst Ave. 49~·9473 549·0316 4 BR, 3 ba .. din. rm. Bonus Price reduced to S25,5(XJ. 675-3335. rm. Lge. lot. 561,500. Call now for delilil!i:. 1~~-~~~-~-= .c~·~·-""'"...c"'-· --~---1 -Located in choice Bllyctt'SI Call Pat \Vood 545-2300 1 __ H="'='~;"="=t'="~"~·~•~c~h __ Ne11·port · Price sgg,500, AGENT 675-5726 "BE\VITCHJNG" WESTMONT 3 BR 2 BA 20' * OPEN 1·5 PM * x20' bonus room, earPcts, For Your lnspegticn drapes, sep. laundry rm. Sat/Sun. Nov. 1"3 & 14 overi>ized Jo! ~·I th block One of 1he finc~t propcr1ics fence and large coverC'd pa-in Top 01 The \Vorld area • tio. Sell FHA or VA. A real 3 Bdnn11., 2 halhs; living & steal. dining rms. w/douhlc fr plc. LEADERSHIP R.E. Lge. fencrd yard, beautilul- G73-85:'l(I. COLLEGE PARK A custom built home with 2600 S9. FT. of luxury in thi!! 5 Bedroom 3 ha.th home. ~·alk to .Mesa Verde Country Club; fea- tures formal di ning -all buih in kitchen -fa mily room ·overlooking pool, on over· 117.ed lot + hobby roon1 in garag{'. Sj.ll",9.)1) •. For d{'tails Call 540-11';)1 \Open ('VVS.J OPE:N HOUSE Fri eve 'Ill ;\lon AM. Vacant 4 BR, tam r n1, bltns, di.lie frplc, shag crpts, on x1ra 1£e cor lot, lo down or VA. 239 Prince· ton, O f. 823--1205, W i 11 trade for property. trailer, n101or home, ·ro·s clc. Leaving Country! By owner, all ol the luxury fea tures, such as: 2 fir,eplaces, a ~·et bat· and the plushest of car- pels. A very exclusive area of Huntington Beach. Call today, •.. &42-25.15. 1-o·THEREAL \" ESTATERS ' " I • " 842-4466 \y lndscpd., rOQm for pool. 4 BR, 2 BA, on )ge lot, j..,iiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 55'xl55', alley, covered patio on quiet st. Nfce ly landscaped. $25,'500. Try $2.001 down, we'll carry 2nd. 548-4354, aft 5 or Stop by: l116 Alla Llguna * CASH * Blvd. (Up Park Ave ., to Alla Buyer will pay cash for l..a~una . watch tor signs). ei)uity & assume }'HA or mlt); ~ FHA APPRAISAL VA 100"· Aoy '"'" ~ ~1:\"w weekends. LEADERSHIP R.E. =.,~w. $29,:ioG. Vacant, VA no dn. Oversized lrg single story ·--.. jj84;i2j·;;4466ii~;--J-=;-~-;';'-~~-,;;~-* 499·2800 * 3 BR 2 BA home. Giant 1..'0r-''BUYERS • JJ('r lot. All upgraded crpts SOUTH LAGUNA & drps, appl's, xlnt nbrhood. WELCOME!!1' OCEANFRONT I' 1llage Real Estate CHEERFUL home, 2 BR, 1 ba lndry room, gar.. lge back yd. $21.500. S1500 do11·n. Consider trade un i!s. 6 UNITS-EASTSIDE McNASH REALTY alJ 2 bdrm, 11i hath, pa-, 642-8400 '62-4471 ( ::1546·810J Super ~hllrp 3 berlrooms and Beaut. 4 Bit, 3 b~. i;plit. level q family room. 'Valk to the furn. borne 1v/pr1v. stairway new central park. A great to Secret Cove Boach: form- 1amily home. Priced a1 C'r hon1e of Charlie Chaplin. $29,9JO it \\'Oil'! las!. 842-2535 :~16M Sea Clill Dr., hy 11nl. tios. Just paintrd. Sho"·s ==-...,,:c;..='=-~­ good re1urn of $11.800 groi;s BEsr in College Pk .• 4 lrg. inron1e. Great locallon with BR. 3 , tile BA. 18.">0' Ol'JIY 3'(,, vacancy fac1nr. Call inodernizer! enlrg'd, frplc, Walker & Lee d•'g 24' Hv .. crpld thnm,1. Klni; .. ~z mslr, BR, boat sp. 5-I0-83i6. NIFTY & THRIFTY 3 Bed rm + sf'p. 15' x 18' \1nrkshop or ru111 pus rm, form! din area, newly paint- C'd insi de, ni cely ldscpd lot. Jo~t reduced to Sl!,900. All 1e.rn1s. Call 1147-1221. SE\'MOUR REALTY, 17141 Be~ch R!vr!., Jlunt. Bch. ' EMERALD BAY LOT Largest View Lot U27 Eme'raJd Bay. , .$90,000 For lots & homf's r;:ill: Realtni·s 11'90 1-larhor Blvd. al Adams S.l.l-0-16~' Open 'ttl 9 Pi\t *BACK BAY* 3 BR. 2 BA, family rn1. firepl. hl1ins. huge 11•alk-in closets. J800 s.:i ft . New c;-pts/drapcs. SJIJ,000. Rey Mccardle Realtoi- 1810 Ne11·port Blvd., C.!\1. 548-7729 BAYSHORES VIEW & POOL Y.'att>rfron! cust. honic, 4 nr 5 bdrms. Vie\v from mns\ rooms. 87 Ft. Jot . i-;pacious yarrl. Rf'd, to S2SO,Qoo. Bill Grundy, Rea ltor Mt Bayside, l\'B 6T:i-61Gl * DOVER SHORES * ELEGANT thrur>ur, :-..·olhing comparnblc in th\~ 2 & dt?n. be aul. ho1ne. $7!1.~()(). NO LF.ASEl!OLD. I t 's ex- qu1~1!c. 01X!!1-list. <l11il~· ~ Brv;uit \\'il'~1 l'Ul r, 6j,l-2i23; &IG-5~)3S C'arly A:.I or EVE. Back Bay BY OWNER FURNrSJ-tED or un1urn. R-2 lot w/2 BR, din rm 1 1~ SELLING BA, nr1v crpts, drpg, ·E ast Y..,,OUR HOME? sir!C'. ·$25,000. 'ti'nfurn. Ph: ·Free Hpprais€11 · \Ve huy 642-Z':1.)2 rquitil'S. Per!lol)a] attcn11on. COLLt~GE PARK. 3 BR. 2 z:, yr~. ":>.:perienc-e. BA., Fam. rni. i\lany ~x-COLl,JNS & \VATI'S tras. 01\;ner, 2112 Prince ton -REAL TORS - Dr. $~.900. Opt'll Sat. & 962..''1523 ~12-0427 ~1111. 9.:;. . BUYER WILL B't' O\\'NER: 2 i;tory, shake t'"l<•f. 4 Br :.!lj BA, Bit-in~. Frpl, covtred patio, Boat i,:ri!C', s1ora}te area. Xlnt. eonrL 1hn1 .. 1tlf. 540-7244. ~TF:SA VERDE 3 Br., 2 Bil., F'.R. & FP. Lrg ~·rd. ~Ian,\' f"Xt rils, priced for 11uick sale, $28,000. Bkr. ~' l ~-O!l!IR ·--- PAY CASH FOR equity, and a~surne F1~A ror VA loan. 3 or 4 BR houses. An,v condition, any area. Rkr. IM7-8407 $ 9UICK $ WE BUY HOMES r.rR. KASABIAN • 847-9604 Bill Grundy, Re~ltor BY O\VNER • California 341 Bayside N 'nl Beach Classics. lmmae. ll-1ust sell. 67S-6161 """""· 1 -E=M~E=RAc..::...cL,-,D,_,B_A_Y_ Irvin• Attractive 4 BR. ho1ne on .;;;;;;;=:;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j nnf'·l{'Vf'l. Sep, dininQ' rn1:, OVERSIZED LOT lge. family rrn .. 21;, ba's.: goes 1\·1th this 'furtle Rock 4 yrs. old -s97.~. hnnie \1·hich fraturC's 4 hd-!u,rner A ssociates rni. 2 ba. family l'OOtn. a!· 1105 N. Cri;1,q !-h1y ... J..ai:;una rium rlus ~<>parillf' (lining · 494.1177 Anytime roon1, \\lalk to sC'hnols, a!i:sn. • Er<IERALD BAV * pools anr! !C'nnis murts. rahulous \'IP11', Q u i e I \\'hat more (.'(lllld you 11'ant? rul-<l<"-sac. 6 Br, 4 811, good Priced Rl S·13,500 anrl you fr1milv 11nmr·o xlnt for rn· own lhe land. trr1il(ninJ::. \i'norl & gl;.i~.~ i d h·11 <''\t. n1any dtck! ,f, tall .. -· . · ... re I .~ ·"~" .. •m~""'''~d rn=·· m~'·"" 1 2!_ 01vner. 49l-96!H. eE~TERALD BAY REALTY Univ. Park Centf!r. Irvine Call Anylin1c, 833-0820 \Valk to priv beach, tennis rourts. 3 hr, i1.; ba, livi ng r m. <linin2 rm "'/heam I ~'"''"''"'""'"''"''"''"''"'"I rrilin2~ & oi:r11.n ''iC'wS. 2 3 Bil. 2 Ba, liv & din, bltins REAL ESTATF: Laguna Beech tile t'ntry, ('t<fra Jge patio. 1'1unrlr~· rn1, crpts, drps. VET SPECIAL il1onareh Bay 3 & 0 & Pool .Xln1 ("onr!. $:\.i,000 o~·ner. KASABIAN 01•f'1u1 vie~·, no lraffi<'. ?llOO !<f. fl. charming, rus!om._<_M-_294_0 ______ _ ' •r '""" Q "2 "'" 1014 11 >·ou're short of cash. l'Y " •.• , . ..,,, 11ncr, v-t •.>\JQ\I, OCEAN VIE\V homC'. 2 *~SELL OR LEASf; * 11· tot C't '1his 3 Bcdrn1, I~ Bath beau-. ·I 1 ·•· · frrlcs, 4 balhs, walk-in 2200 + SIT. Ft., :l BR. 2\~ bll., t.Y for only S26.900. & to1al :'ilf:S1\ DEL ~-!AR 2 sty, 5 CQS!ll of S400. 10 move In, cloS<'ts, bcarntd eeihngs. 11:. lan1. r1n. din. rn1., frr>I. Br .. :l Ba, ~CJI. dining rm., ~,,10.g555 Der.kin~ for ouldoor en. Carp. & r!r::iprs. hltn~. w1•! l1!1n kitchl.'n. Conv. or ·no SHERWeeO REAL TY joyn1en1 rn:im ea('h rooin, h;1r, f>IC. ln1mac. $47,950 (lo11·n !o G.l.'s 545-7805. F.V. Hugt" Rarage for hobby!~!. Fu!] Pri1-r. NEAR UCL 3 BR. fain nn., ,,~~~---~-~ I =1896.C,.._4 ~B~roo-"-k_h~"~"~I·~__,-,.-, Fir~! ofJeriru: SlOO.OOO Ml~SION REAL TY 4!U..{)i.11 Jl.J BA, 1.~20 !iv rnl. hug<' -BR, !;1rgf' Rar. 1enced yd, BY ownrr, leaving stale, 5 O\\·ncr e e 499-2974 Laguna Niguel brick trpl(', n1ass1vc hook el,,~e to ~chools & shop· B'R, 2 sty, wry clean, close ::c,,;;_:....,,,_.:....:_:...,..,,,,:7::c. casf', ~··p ur 11. Hrd11r! n~. ping. SHi,000. 272 Gos ta 10 grade schls, Marina O~n House 1-4 PM Sun 1-----~········ Cl'fltd, rirps. Cov ratio. O<-r . :Olt>:-;a St. 646--9136.. lllgh, Golden West Coll<'gt', 625 Oak SI. Laguna. Beach S0!\1ETHfNG PE CI AL: 2 cR-r i;;ar. C-0r lot/f•1cd. VACANT $22,950. new p11.rk. ;,~~% FHA. "•ill Fresh & <'lean, largt yard 1..aQ'una Niguel TPrrace. ·1 $29.~~ Broker. 5~:~~61l:t ;i BIL 2 car gar, lrs: lot. Im· con~idrr 2nd. s 3 8, 500. i;en1!lne li11h !.· plas1rr, br. l h11, f11m rn1. hi)!h b('am Balboa lslend mrd poss. No dn GT /Lo dn 846-ini. hrd1\·rl l!orirs, frr1lc, quality cril\no:~. li;tt lndsep lot. *\V1n 1cr & Ye11rl)t H•'•1talr.• , Ttalph HUit;:l't, H."1>lty • 67Mii;1 * Balboa P eninsula 310 l1L~OO A\'e., b<'h\ccn bey & ()Cr•11n, Open Sal., Sun. 1:30 to 5:31J. Charn11ng oldC'r l)omc. Cho1rt lo<' .. ~ BR. 2 ~lHs. Ur1~·k Jl'ple. \\ood llOors. t 'urnished. $.18,:100. DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 College Park . fl!,\. lla)niac ~9-1-1351. tliruout. 3 BR, Jl1i RA sprinkll'r~. 011ts1de liizhl~. * A REAL BUY * "'/~f'J> f(lrm dinlnJ.:: rm, \\'11.lk 10 heh. '.\-!u~1 gre. Open :'11 E!':I\ VF:RDF. honie, galr 5 BR 3 RA $32,;"10! brktsl arra & lndry rm. 1·'1 liaily. SGS.000. '196-24:i6 h>· 0•\11r1', 4 BR, 2 B1\. dln • ~ t J 1 '""" / hetp ..__...,\\' 111 oan . v .. ner w, $17,~JO(I. 4!).J-W93 Pr1nc1 pah onl y. 1·n1, Igo panl'd 111rn rm. 3 t h d "•t' H1•Lf ''' 1 n poy .. · ' E'1ERALD BAY· Chormina CHILDREN w•NT-EDI frrlcll, l11nr!sc11.p('d for r1111y HAFFDAL REAL Y 1' -.. "' 1n11.lnl. 5'1f~374i 8_12_4405 F,:vt'~: :~ll-Zl·lll con1t'rnp. 6 Br., or 3 su1tt>s. Rsirr oriportunlty tf• purc-h11~e Q\\'NF:R : J'.lcs/I \ti"Nlf' 4 BR. R Gori;tm1s \'IC-1v. Sl~:i.000. ·1 Rdrm .. 2 hath Imm~. \\'11lk· * $21,SOO • OWNE * LOVELY view lot -$40,000. in~ di~111nrl' tfl ~l'hool. wi!h 2 BA, farn rm. Exei1p1mn11I 3 BR, J~ BA, bltns, nC'W TI:D llURF:Ri' ,r,, ASSOC. ,,1e"". Lo\\' dtl'\\'n. $J1.9<l0. punl. mint {'()iHl. S:l0,900. \\' \\' erpll!, dbl~ i.:it,r. f11ed. 3471 Vl11. Lido. 67~80. Laguna Niguel Raalty ~6--016'1 liy app!. fll\l}'. \' O t 10' d • acant. n y 0r". 071"1·.:. LA G--RO¥ALE. ocnfrnl 2 8JO..• SOSO 499-1344 Sl:iOO. REt.ffi\' appraisal. 3 S.172 Munster Bit, 2 BA. Nr cnllr~C'. :tt_..3278. BR, 2 ba. Fab vu apt. Lse Lido Isle S34.fl'i0. o .... 1il'r. 54~t74 BULLHEAD ~~~~17'riJQ. 213184!)..j22s.l -~--0-P_E_N_H_O_U-SE_S_ 2 ~HARP ltt-:ros. 3 & 5 HANG 10 B . 2 .BA , , Hilt .d 729 Via Lido Soud BR's, In xlnt Arca $34 !IT. C.'lrry board lo iiu-[. 4·81l, 3 R, ...,jzuna lil ~ 4 BR bAyfrnt buy $169.000 Akr. :>:IS-77;!!1~ 54.\.3412. 2 AA, "Int ill'('a, quirt t:f. hnmt. ~ .... ·oon, & Q:ill~& Open Sft1 2 to 5 rim V11cant, $32,950. DEAN ocean vtel\'S rnrn every howcm~ tawspn jiz. FULLER REAL TY te:idustrial Property 168 * New Listing * Real(QR 5'16-0814 Anytime -LIQUOR STORE- 3,[15 Via Lido 675-4562 Tustin M·1 BLDG. $30,000 "Priced Right" N I B h -----.,----11.2.10 ~q. ft. young ind. bldg. TO BUY OR ~ ewpor eac ~' 1 ~ SELL A BUSINESS NEAR things, but private. & olr! house on 00' x l,v' BLUFFS LINDA Premium \oca!inn, populilr 1- lr\'el "ex-pilndrd style", beamc>d ceiling~: .1 bdrms., 2 ba1hs, fil.mi\y kitchen. Bet· 1er ihan new. Tasterul!y ilfl- pointed, adull home, barPly used • a pleasure tn see. Truly a value at $49,900 (January delivery). ..-r:,.._ :"(. &st (S1 J...~ // ..... really ~::.· J\.1ull1ple Listing Service 2414 Vistfl Del Oro. NB 6+4·1133 Anytime NEWPORT B!'ACH G.I. NO DOWN B"autiful 2-story home with 1hick shag carpeting, elec- tric built.in kitchen. large family room. and THREE CAR GARAG~ The klds can \\'alk to the beach. ~IJ. f'r h11~ ag-rrcd 10 pay poinrs: ~ you ·can u~e your GI ~nefit.~ \l'ith NO do"•n pay. men!. Belter check this out torlay. Call Walker & Lee Realtors a1.1-04115 MINT CONDITION Brt'.'('~e. nol damp. Calh, choice Costa t-.1esa site. HOLLAND BUS. C(ihniz, hit-ins, v\e1v. Pool. ROQm to buil<i more. SALES : S,14,000. 011•nr 5-14-9165 Wesley N. Taylor Co. "The Broker with Empa thy'I Realtors 1716 Orange Ave., C.r<t. University Park zut San ,Joaquin Hills Rd . 645-1470 M0.0608 l'Ve. AWARD WINNING ••• Ne\vport Center 644-4910 Newspaper Dealership-j ••. Kf1'ClofEN. This 3 Bdrm. Lots for Sale 170 For L.A. Herald Examiner plus dining r m. hnme has a. f~--o'.'"'."."°c="O".'""-:-:-:::-~n Orange Co. area. f~~ ) spotless, come-hit))('r kitch· BAYFRONT LOT 1ty depos. req_'d. Write R.P., \ en. completely modern & By 0 1vner, W. Bay A~. on 2662 W. Lilicoln Anaheim. l invitin~. with cozy brkfst. pen. Newport Beh. 673~!1105 Money to Lo~n 240: i area. Bright & eheery. Spac. M t . D I ious L.R .. high beam ceU., oun arn, eser , arched brick frplc. Delight· Resort 174 ----- fuJ dining rm. enclosed with -;;; BIG BEAR LAKE iron .fence. ~luded, Span· Put your 'SKIS" in this 3.36 E. lmf STREET SAnLER MTG. CO. ~ l ' I !sh tiled patio. ~$34.500. large A-frame cabin on a CASH FOR TD'S CALL 67.r5726 view lot. Only St7,700. E·Z * 90% LOANS * l 4 terms. Call Ro5s { 7 1 4 ) '1 ~ ...... jl.......... 53&-173.ll or write: Spencer JST T.0. LOAN ', 1i1Js;;;i~ PiOPtttits Rell.I Estate, P.O. Box 2828, 7J..i%--INTEREST ' , d-';:;;=:;:;=:=:=::::=:=:! B~·~·g':Be"-''~'~""=''~·~Cal::.,~if.="°"'..,. I I.J:nvest rates in Oranl!'e C'o. l Mobile Homes BRAND new furn. 2 BR Con· 642-2171 545-0611. : For Sale . 125 .do. Palm Springs area, Serving Harbor area Z1 yrs~ I NEW ADULT PARK he!'ttd pool, mountain view. Mortgages, ; Hun tington Arbor r.tobile S4a-3746' -Trust Deeds 264 l Home Pllrk. F __ iJities in-Real Estate Wanted 184 FOR sale 2nd T.D. Sll.OOO. eludt: Jacuzzi, ea.rd rm , CASH ONL y Will discount. Intel'l'!st at 9?}. J\TATV, outdoor BBQ, pool, , Bal due & payable 5 yrs., billiard rm. shuffleboa rd, in-For your lot in Newport or S110. per mo. incl. prin. & dividuaJ metering, Pet s£'C· Cost& !ltesa, mu~t be zoned int. 837-0289 . tion. 1933() Ward SL, Hntgn for duplex or triplex • also Beach. 968-4445. CJlder homes that can be TRUST DEEDS \VANTED' 1\-IOBILE H 20. .., torn down for new construe· Cash for 2iid TD o1ne x ~ tion • • 673--0140 • • Roadli~er. 3 Br. 2 Ba skirts Will iease back until you can ' '!iiiiilii "iiiiiliiiiil/ -awnings -porch -shed, find new hom Sta! loca. I' !" ' etc. SU.500. 968-3160. tion, lot size, :~ice &ephone t<ousesforRent 1/fe'} 1 number . Act fast 'as our ca~h budget j RG:ln~:!~1.. is limi•ed to 10 purchases Houses Furnish·" 300 ~------J only. -I Ch11rm1n.i:: modern hQn1e in \Vri!e P .O. Box 1515, Ne\v-General , I Nell'porl Hts. Dcligh!.fully t B h l <lerorated. 3 BR., 2Ba. New Acraage for sale 150 1 -""°~'cc.~'~'='~·~==~--REALTORS * YEARLY RENTALS * .sha.i:: carpeting, frplc. Kitch-Finer Homes in Beach Are~ en bltlns. covered ...,tio & SO acres TAKE OVER all or Cash for your clients_ need r · ~ t ' -l d td h · R 2 Bill Grundy Rltr. 675-6161 other fine features. Asking pa." moun ain area, "=S. an or o er ome with _ $l7JlllO. , rollins:: hills, NO DOWN, $58 or R·3 zoning. \Ve have Balboa Ptninsula ·j CALL '-"-• ,46 •2414 mo. 968--0047. builders wailing _ quick ff· / ~ ~ SAN JUAN CAPISTRA..'10. C\QWS, Cal! 642-4000 ask for 2 BR, 1 BA, lge fenced patio, .,... 1~. 1 & 2 acre Estate Jots. Gf>orge :.Jaschrneyer. garage, on Balbo11 Pen. ; REA{~ Horses OK. Broker. 493-4774. \VANT to buy home on Jea~e Houses from bay SJ75. mo. : Nc1r Newport Po1t Otflrt Condominiums bplion. Have S650 cash. Inq a t 322 Alvilrado Pl or 1436 Mariners Drive for sale 160 Total Value on home not tu phone o"·ner 213: 881-7788 ; By O"•ner. sp11c1ous \Ve~tc!HJ, exrerd S2.tOOO. !)48-7223. (i\lr. White). Pets 11.'elcome, .: 4 BR, 2\i BA. frplc, charm· EAsr side Cosra !lfesa all \VA NTED: Old('r house or HO:'l'lEY & Charming 2 & 4 •: in.': patio. Near ghopping & elec. 2 BR house. With propIT!y nl'eding w 0 r k, Br hsl!', ·walled in patio, nr : t;cl100ls. Lovely family home dishwasher, di!posal, srove: CASI-I. 5.19-1694. water. Un ti I 6115 .. z in immac-uta!e conditjon. & ttfrig, cp!s & drps. Nicej~~~~~~~~~~ 213:243-5316. $43:000. ca11 assume '51i % pa!io & enclo~d 2 earl; Huntington Beach loan, owl'ic'r \l'ili carry 2nrl. gara11:e. $25.500. 2044 Tustin. I 11 • l Princ.!pflls 011ly, Call &IS..5740 642-7lhl0 . F'1111nch1I . HEAR THE SURF ~,=s=R~c=o~N=oo•~. b~,-....,,...,,.,.,.,..,.,,..,ow~I~;;;;;;;;;;~:;~ Nr1\'t'I'. n10tit>rn :i htlrn\, 2 down pr.yment. 'II bt1.th. \Valk to evrryth111g, S57-!W40 CJr 968·1629 Bu1lness Opportunity 200 ™"aeh. ran!'l('ry, Lid('l Shops. Duplexes/Units e1 e. Va cant & rearly 10 sale 162 * * • move into. Onl.v $41.~IOO. GENE BRO•DHEAD F. J. llORVATlt R8.1LTOR ~ b b h \ ~ DUPLc..X, l lk to "llC' • v. 16759 Mulba rry fii.i-1972 AN\'1'IME Ne,1·port. 3 BR., 2 BA. each Fountain Valley WALK TO OCEAN unit. Frplcs. willed patio, You are 1he \\'Inner of l Btdmom, b11.by OK, slsO month. 2 Blocks from <Jeean. i'l36-7860 or 53&-1674 Newport Be~ch -OiOICE LOCATtON. 2 Bedroom. ~unporch. n1~ ri11.1io, 2 car garag~. clos~ ta J ,1do &hops, bay & oce&n, ?rtll'r couple, no pets. 837.'.7543. Ne~'t?r, rnndC'rn :l Br. 2 ha. fee simpl~ land. Good \n. 2 tickets to I.ht Nol 11 cr11ck<'r hox, "" true con1P. $65,000. 0 w n er Oranga County 3 BR , 211 BA. ti hick to fllm1ly home, Only $29.000. &1~243. International beach. unfurn if desired. '. J ltORVAT!I n~•LTI' In1n1ed ""si. S~". Also 2 Br · • ~ Income Proptrty 166 Auto Show ·-' f11sk for Davel Closed Sun. homt avail. ~I Nasti Real 675.1972 675-7-497 .tNC03.fE TAX' OEDUCl'OA: ANA~~IM -fi..12=&1 • I BAYFRONT Up to tlfi.000 CONVENTION 2 Bdrm, 2 Ba. partla.lly fnrn. ! B" 0,.,,._ • "--·er Sbo-s. Our "w~r \\•ill a:ive a 31) yr u It J .,.'"'' .....,., '" J('ue a.t $2400 yrly \v/opt!on CENTER n! Jun1r 30th. SIS5/mo. i SP1Jcious 5 BR., conv. den., N bf! 1• h thru 14 Ad!ts only, no J"ts. Phone 111:. fam. rm., stp. din!ni to deed later. \'our lax Ple:ve.mallr ... ;' ..... 78 Xt 3'1• collect 714:183-0609. rm, 4 b:oi. all e.lee. kitchen. J118Vln1 lf'111;e f!dV&nC'tl! art sec ,,.. • .,,,, • e '1 -------'---·I Nr!\\ly rlt>t'l?ratM, Pri. bta.ch crtdlt on $35.000 •quity.' bet\\-ee~ 9 and 5 pm IO cl11.im San Clemtnte WOJ<..."S !Ike new mock•I: 3 BR. 2 BA, nu"' ('p!1, drapes, palJJ !. Lte yd. Owner, Sj0.9.\ll3. Corona del Mar 0\V~ER 1 BR. Cpts, ri'""'~. 136 ~ 197 11~ '" REA'":rY ""15~. room. ··!UV· '"' "'°'' 119 V ' Me I Rll.r. t'ni·d y1u·d. $18,:)00. "" ~ "' •• n one Sl .lOO r!n-C :ii. &1~5632. TOWNHOUSES 4 Br, 3 hll, l11m rm, J)O(ll lilt Supe.rh 4 BR 11{'Pmf' $91.500 lot. S it Vllllry v1t\\'I S39.!JOO Oflf'n Sun 2 to fo r»n fmn1 $16,flOO 10 S24,000. Lew. \01\' rlo1\'n Pf\Yment. DEAN )ll!ST !'\<'!! ln1med. 9e-au1 j REALTY a.16-7527. $96.000 Pr. R bl.J's on l\il-1 your t1ckt!s. !Norlh County '..:..'.:..;:;;:;:~.;;;;:;:. ____ I & dock. &16-&-IOO. Jot wfth $1(),000 nnn ~nt fll(, toJJ.free number ls 540-1220), VERY iir1\•, beaut. turn 3 STANDOUT v11.Jue! 3 Br, lge J,YTI,E REALTY 583 \V, t9!h • * * BR, 2 811, nr ~hops, $275., tiv rm. f11m rm, 21! ~. 54S-S.t9.1 51~.r.l'l2 RESTAURANT. Laguna's 492-Sil35 or 492-4308. -l!-AR_DO_n_V_l_E_\1_' -11-0-,.,-.:-5-1 Fountain Va~ltv • Pop 2 • mnv drn, PrTII. IM.cp.1. B~ cany<in w , S41.:m incl 1.tnd. Onr. &<l-lBU - BR, 2 HA l'Mue'f'd $2000 ~llA..'1rSll Garden Homf', l hi-lo"· 11piirai1;al. S3tl.950, BR, 2 8A, fam rm ,& 968-63i0. ll!r~um, xlnl cond. 968-41.W. • Owner, -1!'1-1-'ro.lL KEN BRITTINGHAM 0CE1\NFRON'T'. Own your REALTOR O"-'tl &partm,.nt. s 3 9, o o o ·i~~~;,6:,;75:,,·0:.;l.;;2'-3 --­ \\'all11.CP. ?\'lit, RI! a ·l r or. DAILY PJL01 !or 11.clion! 4!»-9318. CtJJ M2 ... 'i678 & Sive! hl!ns, fncd . $31.500 lO~ dn. ttDANA POINT ! most popular, unique ''While Elephants" over- 64G-2.16fi. restaurant. Com p 1 e I e I y runnlrii Your house? Turn BY o"'nl"r S.nh3-l0 Dr. 4 Br, New Otluxt Duplex equJ-pt, Xlnt . toe. $268,000. thtm Into "CASH" • sell DR & FR~ encl pool, fee $49,950. ll'Mlll Income, $~.000 down. then thru Daily p 11 o t land. 646-8705 Webb Raalty 642.4905 R.ealonomles, Bkr. 67U700. Oauln~. 642-5673. • • frli.11, No'ltmbtr l t 1971 OAILV PllOT HouM1 Unfurn. 305 HoUMI Unfum. ~-~~~~~~.;;.1 30S Houses Unfurn. 305 Apb. Furn. :NI Apt.. Fum. :NI 'i>t· Unlvm. :M5Apt. Unfum. Gener1l FREEll L•ndlord1·0wner1 \Ve \l'lll N'fer tetiants tn .)'(')\J, FREE of chal'(e , - , r-.laey d~sirable 1enant1 on o u r v.·aitin~ list. ALA Ront1ls e 64.1-3900 e OCEANFRONT • r u r n Bachelor, aU uti t incl'd SllO. -AL.A RentaJs • 64~3900 • STEPS to Wa ter-Furn 1 rBR. Chlld/sml pe1, ulil pd. 130. ALA Rentala • &lj..39()() ·e HEAR Thi:s-l BR. Filed I yd, CPI. kids & smJ pe1, $135. .._A.LA Rentals e ~j..3900 e SPARKLING Clean.2 BR. 6tov~. re!rig, cpls. Kids/ jlt'B. $140. ALA Retilals • 645-3900 J LIVE in Laguna-I BR . :Cpts. stove, relrig, kids/ pr!. S150. ALA Rl'ntals • G.1:i-J90o e J.fORE Roon1-3 BR. 2 BA. Cpts, d1·ps, gar. kids/pe ts. 1fl 70. A.LA Rentals • &lj-3900 Coron. dtl Mir Coste Me11 Co1t1 Mes• NICt:. 11;: .3_B_R-.-,-b-.. -.. -,-.,-r LARGE 3 BR .• l BA., older 3 BR, 2 ba., atrium •••• S325 IRJ I :i duplex. ~an sldt of h"'Y· hOrnr. Crin. tlO\'f: Ir. l BR, 2% be.., tam ...• $325 $300 mon!h. relrlg., l.gf'. patio, chUdren .S BR, 2~ ha fam ,,,,,, $350 DELIGHTFUL 2 BR. home. & pees \\-elcome. Water & f BR, 2~ b&, tam •••• S350 Large patio &. yard. Near gas pd. $220 mo. ltiO E. 23rd <I BR, 2~ b.athl, family room, Bayside Or. $275 n)(), St. Tlll'!lt> Rock ••••······ $375 ALSO "·'~· I I _, ---------.. BR, 2 bath, family room. • Dd.I.,,.,. 5 auu Dana Paint •-·• Hlll' ••"" renUl.ls. available Turtle swu. s • • • • .-0\N ,, 11 ,, u.J lu THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. , WE HAVE OTHERS SAiisbury ft(lalty 673-6900 #JO MO. 4 BR, 2 Ba. llv nn., Ml N B h RUSTIC 3 bedroom Ii den, 2 dln m1 ., kit, 2 car rar. new. nuttS to ewport eac FUN IN THE SUN! bath, bit-ins, t ir e p I a ce, ly painted Interior. DMa Unbelievably large 1pts. Decorator furnish· walk to to"-n. Azt. 67>-1930. Point Knolls, 496-3434 or ed. Huge Pool, jacuui, electric built-ins, shag 494-2982. ·~ d LEASE, unturn 2 BR , carpel,;), rapes. sauna &: more! spacious living, dining area, FoUntaln V•ll1y ADU.LTS-NO Pm \\'alled patio &: yard. 2-car -----.....:;....--"SINCE 1946" garag•. C.U wk n d 1, LUXURY 3 Brtwnhu, ''""' i.t WHt<m &nk BldJ. SINGLES • .. • • • . . $145 67J...082j cpt, drp1, palio , dbl au, nr u · · Puir BDRMS • poo1 "'° 96>-2'26 D ~~~'::1"'01 N'-ht 1 • • • • • • • · · $155 ATTRACTIVE 2 br, bltnl, . . . IYI -'W I crpt1'""· 1rp10• patio. 100 Huntington lle•ch 2 BDRMS ••...•••. $175 Goldonrod, Cd" . .....-. '°Pn°'o"u'°o°'L'°Y-o°"u,-r«1...,.._-,-B-R-.. -.1 ~L-°'-."-""-H_l_ll_•___ YOU'RE RIGHT,.-** 2 BR. Hom<. B<low BA ,, trpk, bit-I"'. N"r NEW WDRLD-3BR,28A, THEY'RE UNDERPRICEOI h;ghway. C.U 83 3-9 410; boa ch, lrW••ay1, llhopp;,,., pr;o, patio, pool privU, • Newport Beech 2 BR. 2 BA t.Pll w/ d!lhwr, hUge ciolt-ts, prlv patio, heated pool, billiard rm. ja. cuul & bbq'1, ALL l!I'lf,. ITIES PAID. See Ill ~102 Blrch St. (nr. Orange Coun- ty Airport. Just W, of P1l- isades Rd), Mgr 557-4246. \\'INTER Rental -2 BR. Furn apl. clean, modern sundeck, GAr. Nr. bfaeh & llfarkets. l'amily p~t $110 incl. "t r Ir li&'hll. For appt. Ph. 213: 251J..-I827 or after Fri 4 p.rn . 714--675-&208. OCEANFRONT comer ol 23rd SI., 3 BR. 2 Ba. $315. Very lge, beau! furn. Kids & Pfls ok. ~1 or ~111. 3 BR. 2 BA, trplc, patio, no pe1s, I blk to Bch, S?iOlmo. on yr'1 I 1 e _ 67H7S.~. afler5call615-S5&1. &chools. $255/mo. V i c . Volleyball ttt1. Bltn1 , 1561 MESA DR., Cost• Meu * 2 Br, Dr p s / c r pt 1 , • Broo~hurst &: Ad a ni s. l't'lrig, & w/W t p I . 5 blks So: of Newpqrt Blvd. 1 BDRi\l, priv. p at i o . c;;; ... .,.Mna~-----c ::-.. -t.""'."Ma'"-,.-----I li!J In 11 11 :1 THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. FUN · IN THE SUN! Minutes to Newport Beach · Un!)j!Jlevably large apts. Huge Pool, jacuul, electric built-ins, shag carpets, drapes, !Auna & more! ADULTS-NO PETS SINGLES ..•..... $135 I BDRMS .••••..•. $140 2 BD~MS •••...... $I bO YOU'RE RIGHT- THEY'RE UNDERPRICED! IS61 MESA DR., C°'t• Mau S blks Sa. of Newport Blvd. GarbagP Dis p. Avail. Nov. 528-3567 aft. 6 pm. ~2!9~~.06. 962-9521 or 546 9860 carport. Adul!JI, no )X'1s. lj !h. 67~2G98. 3 BR, 2 BA, elttl blt-!n R/O, I ~ro-~--~-...,...---I • S 11 0 Imo· 26~ Avon FA h1, crpta, llOxlOO ft. lenc-Laguna Niguel l!'ii'~l~·-~-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'°"~1!~67~3-6066~~, ~~~~== ~!li~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I 546-9860 3 BR, 2 BA, din rm. Harbor Vie\\·, $350/mo. Comm. J>OOI & park. 833-lSM. l'l:i lot. dbl gar, lndacpd.1 --"'--....:;-----~. :s: 11 ;; r:s I ~ N•wport Heights {!JI s: :: 11 :: :: 11 :; i: IE Vacanl-mo\'e In today/$225 NIGUEL Shore~-Spac. NeY.'. per mo. Ask tor rental Agt. Priv. beach. Ocean Vie\\'. 4 Apts. Furn. 360 CLE~~ 1 or 2 Br. Adlts, no Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn_. ____ 365_1 962--4471 BR. $390/mo. Avail approx., _,.,_ ".:"--,.,.------pets, lg kit. $~$150. 2421 C-oronl del Mir Nov 20. Ph. 83$-4889 or gt't . Cost• Mesa E. 16th St NB 646-1801 . $165 ~10BILE ijome, 2 Bft , kt>y from Mr. Bates at;I'--------' i '"" "• • ---e OLD Counrry Style-3 BR. IC-os_t_•_M_•_••----- , Frplc, dbl gar, kids /pets, Cost• Mesa 1DELUXE $200. _ALA Rentals • 6.15-3900 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 1999 Harbor Blvd., CM RENTAL FINDERS 41~ W. ltt•. COSTA MU4 Houies * Apts. * 645-0111 * l'..J~~1"rf'fl lit Lr11ullurol1 -FUHNISHED - -UTIL PD. Nice Bach. Steps. ro ocean. N.B. 11·/gar. * • * KENNETH LESER 21621 Kan1 Ko• Huntington Beach You Ari! tht winner of 2 tick~ to the Orange County lnternation1I Auto Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER partly furn ., patio, fncd Broadmoor Homes, Lag.I •••-.. ---~ BR. furn . apt., senior Apt. Unfurn. 36.5 2 BR. 1 Ba., frplc, I~. yaaj., kidsl~ts OK. util. N•'m••t. Duplexes Unfurn. 350 t ltizens, ground level, ln-tG::":":-:--;-1------mvered patio, S. o( Hwy. pd. Lease. 5J6.-8360 or •-aula ted pantl heat, priv.1.;;;;;'n~e;;';,;;";;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;==• I $225/mo. lmmed. o cc up, 968-5914. Mes• Verde Laguna Hills encl. turn. patio, ttvolving1• 644-5859. shelf ttlrig., new stove, VENDOMEc --"--=:;... .. ____ -----I 3 BR Condo, l~ BA, pools, 3 BR. 2 Ba, $240/rno. h t & YOUR choice ol 2 "New prk'&· No pets. Extra qu iet. 01t1 ...- clubhousl", patio. garag' last mo·s + f100 cl'an dep. .~orld'' du pll'xes, brAnd new SUO. 173 INlmar, CM. lJa.1MACULA.TE API'S! \\·/storage. nr the beach. Close to 5Chls It shop'g. 3 BR, 2 BA, Crpt & drps, 642-7696. ADULT and 962--0986 a.II 5 pm. 5-15-6084. Bltn appliances. 2-car encl FA~"LY 0 -etJo $JO Wk. Up Apts. '" ~ n 3 BR, 2 BA, bijt cul-.d~uc N•wport B•ach garage. P\'I. pario & yard, $IS.$°' Wk. Motel Rms Clo•• to shopping, P1rk hom ,, all bltn.'I, dL"C a~a. ---------Panoramic \'icw ol entire ~ '). ~p&cious 3 BR's, 2 h. S~. Vacant. 536-9lj3 dys: BF.ACO~ Ba), 2 Bdrm .. 1 Sncldleback Vallr~. E\'f'n in-$6 Night & Up + S\\im pool, pullgrffn :l.:l6-tm t•Vf'S. Ba., lrplc, yearly lease. S300 cludf'!I all f'KlC'rior n1ain-SUNNY ACRES + F'rpl, Indiv/Lndry fac'ls CHILDREN •••NEW••• VILLA PEDRO Apts ~lo. lrnanN', pool & rec facil. MOTEL 1845 Anaheim Ave. No\'ember lilh 1hru 21st $1~. :\lo. 2 BR. 2 BA. >I-. Rob<'nson ...,_. d rth 1 1 Jusr F'INlSHED APARTMENTS Air Cond -Frplc'a • 3 SWim· ming Pool1 • Health Spa • Ttnnis Cris • Game & Bil- liard Room. 1 BEDROO~ FROM S155 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 lfarbor Blvd .• C.M. 171 ~} 557-8020 RE~"l'AL OFFICE OPEN 10 Mt1 TO 6 P~f T bo h d • Onlv S26j ~mo on year 1n1~ a "'0 5 on ren. COSTA 1'1ESA "''·2874 -~· Ple;!.se call 642-5678, ext 314 O\.\'n USI", \\'as er, ry('\", OAVlS REALTY 6l2·-<000 · _ ~per-Comfortabl~uit"t betv.·een 9 and 5 pm to claim refrig. Vacant. ~9153 dys: 1,..1'-'-"'-·-'-''-=··,--·,.."-"-'·--2376 J\'pt Blvd., Dt ~8-9755 • (10) 2 BR, 2 Full BA. * , * * * 00-tmL pd , Laguna! Lrg [ l---ll--+,,.,rn-w1·1orr-&:-~tt . 2 bfks your ticke1s. {North Coun!y 536-1222 eves. HARBOR Vievi 2 BR. & L•gun• Beach $245. NEW Balbo• Island Must tee to appreciate El Puerto Mes• Apti f 11 free be · 540-12201 Convt. den, 2 Ba, \\' I "'I,..=--......,===....,= -·-'"'"'."".:::~-:--:"O <' o -num r !J .cLOSE-to-beach..-3-BR. din crp ' rps, 1rns;--p&rn>.UPPER DUPm~ Dr, :r El*l*E-2-.BR:-2"BJ\. $400;mo;--\V"a"f erlron·r -3 Near--Ne~l-Back-Bay.--1-_.~_,. * * * * rm, fam rm. $26Cl/mo. 1 •350 d · 2 bllu CARDEN APARTirD.'1' B«lnn. 2 bath. ,..,.__,_ _ 1chools, parks, YMCA, Boy's 1 Bedroom Apts. ~: l EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN 847-96M : Eve• 962-6889 frplc, comm. pro .~ mo. ba, cpl, ps, vli'\.V, 151 E 21 s CM ....... l""'• Club, 11hoppg, lrwys, e tc. 3 BR 2 C II P k F.ves. & Wknlh: 644--0173. bch, lse, S300 mo. 494--l!M9 • st t., . • drapes -Ref -stove lndud- . -UNF'URNISHED --, Ba, o ege ar Agent. 494--34;,g * 646-1666 * ed. Ali electric • w i 11 Gas heat, gu cooking and $130 & up ind: utilities. Alao 5-~lATURE cplll dream! ] home -Large family rtn.,3 ~~B~R~.~,-B~A~W~/,-nc~l-pa~H~o. BEAtrr. J\.fodern Townhouse.Ji~~~~~~~~~ decorate. 909"' N. Bayfront waler, aU paid. MO/MO tum. Pool & RecreaUon 'BR hse. i;tv/refrig, cpts, big double garage, nice Comp!. crpt'd. Nr. schooli Ir 3 BR, 2'h BA, Frplc, patio, 1 BR. Furn, 2 lrg closets, (ll 213-654--6336. from $185. 2l32 Elden tte or area. Quiet Environment. 'd.-.. Plenty of room !or y•rd• 12~" ""r mo ""-U pool, 2 car gar, all bl!ins, [OJ queen size bed priv. dress-,;;;o.;,,-;:;->-:-::--:;:-::--:-::-~au l\1anager Barbara Dav-OU ,-·t -·"'·-.No-". ~i,i;kens ,t-garden. 546-:iiso, ~ie;i;a.i;e R ;-: 1 ='"ho"p"p~lo°'g~. ~S,.,230".""~'".,76"94"°.°""" crpl~. drapes. Lease $295. Apar1men11 lor Rent ...,.. Ing room, xtrR. lrg rooms.1YEARLY leoase. Grand ls &15-ll82. dren, ... ;; ~~16 uui E$tale. (Open t::ves. l PACIFIC SANDS ~ BR, la~ 846-:i991. '-------Adul ts only, no pets. $150/ Canal, Ll!Ue Is. Beau!. 2 -===:::::z::::=:=::i== Also Garagea For Rent $1~2 BR HSE all n'd('(! \\'/ BA $ISO ~~, 0 bl crAi'iOli$.;;;;;;r;;;;;;li;;;;;;;: I·--------· mo. Br., 2 Ba., prl. patio. $350 • • ...... 961 s!ovr, refrig, cpts, drps & BEAUT fttesa Vo:de_h_o,-,,,-,-3 · ' · nlo. ~vJ<J u in !'PAC'IOUS oceanrront homt', 2035 Fullerton, CM + utUs. · HARBOR VILLA ="7 1 ftlilple Ave. B.-, 2 B•, nr\1' crp!s & p:i.tnr. _La~"'~·~:.36--6~_1;,i~, -~--4 BP.. 2~~ BA, din rm S~j(). Apts. Furn. 360 Costa. l\1tsa gocc, ------: Attract •• Clean 2 BR. \\'inion Real Esto le 67S-33.11 APARTMENTS -cov patio It porch, prof 3 BR, 2 Ba hoint, Crp!ni::. -~mo~·:..""""°'~:11:"1>,._<6:'.73-~098f'!3",--llG.;;;;;;.;;------l~·ClllLDREN 1\'"l""<n•'· I ,,. · I l d-• Bii f•plc p •I;" General Htd pool. Furn-Unfurn from BalboA Peninsula $120-to $150 ' .. v an....s..:apNI, min o yr .,. • · • • "'' Newport Heights Clean 2 BR ho111e 11·1 gar. lra!K'. $275. Ref~ exchanged. fncd rd. l'\r. school$ & ;::;!!'.::;.::::~;;__,.,.-, j'R,;;;";;;.;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;° Sl·IO. Adults. S.12·9.i20 NEW 2 BR l! drp THESE ARE TOPS .•• FAIRWAY VILLA APTS. . "'"!'~ '· 8 • 4 30 M •hpo,_ \\'alk 1\l Douglas or 2 BR. Nice, clean f/)'J'd-. Rent ,Bea.ulifl,ltltll'urniture 1 Br $12~ 11-n 30 Lr 11 I ' crp •. s, If You Prefer Quiet $17j..LRC. 3 BR, 11;, BA. ~ ~" ._.....twn "' .: on or a a~ ;i "' · • g. c ra frpl c, garage. \'early. Call Blins, CJ>I!!, drpS, gar. Child-=',,h=m=r'="~~-=--,,..,..,,.. llf':irh. $235/nlO, v.·tr. pd. cpt/drps, st 0 v r. l"n ONE M' o' NTH for Bttchelor. Pool. AdHs 0\\-ncr 67~&W aft 6. Living and Privacy. l'e n/pet!O; ok. EASTSIDE --I Brs .. 2 balh, ~968--0-~·~,,f_S_,____ ch.ll~~~ts. l !een o k , >~UoRlyN. 179938 ChCh"'"'ldh. 5-IS-k963.1N BEAtrrll•lJL new 3 BR, 2 I 1 & 2 BEDR00:\1 d fireplace fenced yd., 111., 3 BDR:\1, fan1 rn1, 217 Ba, 64:l-•.J9.i. r. 1 reno . o BA apt. Oose to beachei. 1 y,· patio, comp! n'.'dec'orate . :SINGLES or 2 lan1ilil"!! \\'l"I-scltool~. Available N 0 \'. homl' i;hakt roof on cul-de-$16.~et Adulti;, no pelll. 2 complet• with pets. lleated pool, Lndry . 1 67_ 2306 6_~ "l-IS Nl"W 11hag crpt'g, bit-ins, and 2 & 3 BR's Private patio, pooj • 1nd1v. laundry tac. ~·me! SJJO ~ BR's. Bl1nll, 201h, Yrs. lease req. S215 sac. S23:> or olfer. 968-6076. BR. New•sbag, b\1n~. beam your 100•/. r1n. 126 l\tontr Vista. C.\I. )r. <'llSt'. :i--' r..-o · drps. 4!:e POOi & lndry rm. , cpts , drps, frplc. gar. fncd 1110• OpriQn 10 buy. For ---ceiling, H/pool. 642-2..'!1 4. Purchase Option * AVL ._1 & 2 BR .~ * NF.A ll. Bay & Bach. Convenient to shop'g. Adj . Near Orange Co. A1rpcrt 6 UCI. Adults only. 'yrd, prts/ktds ok. app1. Call 5.18-l8S2.' TWO STORY Ind, Item selrc!ion. p 1 Rnoo,i; Rm d j urn, Brand new l Bedroom Mudlo to Faitvie\\· Hospital in back ' BEACON RENTAL 5 Bl"drooni, 21~ ba lhl!, beau!. Newport Sl'iores 24 Hour Delv. 00 • ec · G · oc. No apt. $250/mo * 673.6450 of Farrow Rhy at 2611 Har-20122 Santa Ana A.,.._ Mar. Mrs. Joachim, Apt S-A 5'6-QlS inders * 645-0111 VACANT 4 BEDR00:\1 l Id! ........ Ca.....,.rs. dra""", MW 7 B CUSTOM -'cc"o-''d:-:':c'"-,,°'~""...,'·:-616-=:c"-7_,1·_18 B · bor Blvd, Ph. days 557-9049 BAlll 10,1·nhouse 11· it h .. .,... .... ~ ,...., 3 Br. lllm rm, a. cp!A, • Bach. For unf. SUO up •aeon 1Y qr eveg & Sun 540-9081. FIXER UPPER '"•-I•. d•--•. a-' ,,,01 pa int. Vaean1 . $350. mo11th. bltn~.\\·a !king dist.tobeach. Furniture Rental e lB r 11,~ f'OR .... ,,~ ""~ "" LEADERSHIP R E • -I t · r. urn or Un u" up. Lease nt'W bayvirw apl. . h II & I • • Comm. poo & en n 1 s. 517 \V. Hhh, C.M, ~>18-3481 A 6 UNITS P ld 2 story home \\'/atrlc. recreation a poo · ., • ., ••= dulls. Pool. 642-2181 in private bt>ach com-EL CORDOVA '$ '" ' • , I 122· Call '" t ~ 548-"'17 Aoah<;m 7l.f.2800 ALL ELECTRIC \ l'tl.I. 3 BR + forml din rn1. .....::ase ll or J. noen "'====--,,,,--.., 1 BR. Comp!. furn, new shag munity, 2 BR, 1 1~ BA, all •NC'eds some \\'Ork. Kiel, & 1 ____ ,.....:.H_t<_l ~-c~ EXCEPTIONAL value, 3 S•n Clemente-Balba1 Island t d bl~· N-bltns gor•g• s•~ mo UPSTAIRS $150. Apts. l BR, 2 BA, lam nn, nr --------CJl ~. new rps '""· o • · 'tl.l\I' • pets ok. 776·71".Q Agt. 3 BR house, cpts, drps, Brookhurst & Adams. $2j5 LEASE or Lease/Option \VINTER ·rental. l Br, 2 bL chldrn, no pet;, $140/mo. 494--8197 or 675-0419. 00\VNSTAIRS $165. N~ 1 &: 2 BR Luxury AptJ, ATTENTION O'"NERS' ,. I I 54• 1887 CALL Manager aft 6 PM. Dahwhn, x-cloo-· & -·p. r. 1 ... · garage, pa 10, awn, s ove, mo. :>28--J.;67 11 rt 6 PM. ocean lront, priv beach, S1ep to the Bay. SJOO. in-:>-· Corona def M•r L~2 1131 "• ·~ '" :e havr r<.>ntal customers refrig, ut!L room, central 1 bo nr west~rn miiiiiiiiiiii_iiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim I bo8rd1, luxury shag crpt'a., NO FEF.. 3 BR, r-Tc, all cu~ om mr eluding utilities. **TRAILER for N'n!, ufil ...... ,t. _ facil & POOL. for !-[0:\tES, APTS & CON· loc. $225. lse. &16-6961 or .,. \l'h'I H "r 496-4618 pd ~ '°' bltn!', lg locd yd. $195 mo. 1 e !';e, 011· .. • · Winfon Real Estat~ 6~3331 . Adults, no pe!s. $70 mo. * BRAND NEW * Ad I e N l'DOS. CRIJ DEAN REALTY, &16·1216. 64"' no~g u ts o r>eU. 1nenta 1\'. <N<r" .J '· 2 Br. garagf'. patio, <"rplJ;, d 1 1 1265 1, --. L• Cost• Apts. w I O' ~00 7-7• I o'~~~--"7--..,-ls! ~1onth only. $j(). Security 3 BR, 2 BA, dshwhr, 0-vle"'. \VINTER rentnl, 1 Hr. fum., ;;-;,~=;;' -,' =-,...-:--=-c-:c ~-2077 Oiarle St. 642-4470 -llf'P. A11;t . 96l-5511. a u is on y. · mo. Elee. bl!ns. S200 Inc. util BACHELOR Apt, Pull balh. ~Free Rental Service r!rps, stove & refrig. Quiel A\·ail DP.c. 1. 544-4294. \V inton Real Estate 67.i-3331 $9j/mn. Adult only, no pet. ' ..... l &: 2 BR, bltns, &\\'Imming INDJV10UAL PRIVACY t, .. p 3 Bel, 2 Ba, i;hag cpt, bit tropicRI setting for adult~ * <t BR. Ctpt'g. drps, 2 C '"" pool , lanai, bar-b-que .l gar-~~~. fl"ncC'd )'d, J)ell! Jr child-only. 1 blk to ~hops. $169 Baths, fencltl yard. 2 car South L•gun• 2 Br $150 Util's Pa id._ On =-·-"-"~'""-,·~"-"·-----ON TEN ACRES Ii!?"· All utU pd. $150 to $170. Dix 2 Br \\'/&ar &: 1tor, 1~' /ttn OK. Bargnin S22:J p m. S.'6-liG:; or &tG-4430. garage. $250/mo. 190 7 2 LEASE lge, clean, older Peninsula6_;_r9!;~ITY· Adults, Dana Point 1 A 2 BR. J'urn, ·• Untum. Adulr8, oo pels. :1~~. ad:~· .;:u,w/!7:'. \Valkt>r & Ltt, Rl1rs 842-145:i TO\\'NHOUSE 3 Br, 2 Ba. I ~'7Hn,Cgo,'-,'Yc.,.Ln-. :c6",.•3-<5:c-c"7_8-;. =,. home. 2 Bl'. 2 Ba, den, cp~/ no pels. ' •• . ** SINGLE, TV, pool, pets Fireplaces I prtv. palJoc. 354 Avocado, Cl\1. &t2-.970!! Wtr pd. Gardt'nrr maint ~OME FOR RENT Pool. Kids -pet ok. Avail \rALK to beach! 2 Gty homt , rlrp,c;, Priv. bc-h. octan vu , \\'ATERFRONT·l Br. F'rp\c, ok. bana Marina Inn. J41ll Pools Tenn11 C.Ontnt'] Bld'st. Park·Lfke Surrouncllnn Call betwn 1 & 5, 636-412>. imnll'd. $Zl5/mo. p h. lfam ilton &. Bushard. Nll\l'IY S.125., 495-4i64. priv perio, 400 s. Bayfront CORst Hwy, ~ Sea Lane, CdM 6"-21511 --• 26Ig Santa Ana Ave No E Sl55 ice 3 bed home fn-shly 5Sl-i&l8. painted. bltm, cpta, drps, Condominiums Apl t. 67l--G640. <MacArthur nr c.oi..st Hwyl QUIET • DELUXE fpainted. 3 bl()('ks lo Jiale---------frpl c. rncd yrd. Ready 10 U I 320 BA Y1'"RONT 3 BR., 2 BA. Fountain Valley 1-2 & 3 BR API'S VILLA CORDOVA 1crest Clu b aod recrea1ion $125/l\tO. 2 Bedrm duplex, move In! SZ"J.5/mo. 968-5&44. n urn, * BAYFRONT l'r\• patiol * Htd Pools <forchildren.S2~0/mo.Agent singll' garage. Kids OK. $250. \\'i ntPr BACl-fELOR . apt, pvt l'll-*BAYVIEW Nr abop'f * A.dlllt.obly e SUPER 2BR e :546-9;)ZI /S40-66Jl. &12-2221 anytimf", 64&-9666. \\'ALK to beach, 4 BR, 2 BA, Costa Me•• 67:J-3.131 \V ini on R.E. trancp ur1l pd, po 0 J, Announcing the q 1 t . M f • A llfonrh lo ?>.fonth. $170 fam rm, 2 yrs new, just 2 B Iba p . I SHlO/ . 54~3997 t12...s1 ·1 u e oprning art n1que pts. Ga.a Heal-Gas Cookln&-4 BR v.·ith rm. addn., DL.'C n~w 3 Br, 2 Ba, frplc, derorated, bltns. patio. Sl2S. NE\VLY Decorated 3 BR. • • en1nsu • mo. · 1 · of Bayport Apt• .. _ for trn &nla Alla Ave., CM Gas Hl'l1 Wtr, ALL INCL. 'covered patio. dbl. attached drps, bltns. 2 car &ar. Call Sun. 11_5. 962-4&13 BA. bltn rang•, o;ie n , BAYVJE\\'-2 Br $2.'iO utll pd. Huntington IStiach Adults; And the sllght!y le11 Mir. Apt U3 646-55-'.2 2323 Elden Ave., Of. a ar. .\fay r1>nt or lf'R~e \VC'stclilf. $275. 675-1849. d&h\\·hr; lully cl"fll d &: B h , k' Adi FRf.E UI 1 BR qu it't opening of Bayview e e 646-0032 2600 SQ rt Cl -4 "' lg• d-'d. Pool & R•c -. All •ac , pier. pr 11;. Is. . ul t es. A 1 1 1 ,1, w/option. s22:1fmo. Agent SINGLE house on lot, 2 BR. · · ea.. · . ,. "" 303 " E d Ii°'/" d' ~'/ Bl k P ~. or am1 ll"S. dinrm&fam rm,$350ptt exl. mainttnancr & wtr r.. gewaler , .,,,.,tu io"""" oc lo Call (TI4) 644-5.555 WESTBAYELDEN LUXURY 2 BR. Uppt!r M&-95211:J.I0-6631. dbl car g3'., No pets, $18Zi 1 "71 28"" '-a"h ~1 JOl h St ""3777 ~Pl•x. O·'y 1130. W/W, nio. 1213) 943--4943. paid. $210/mo. Call eve&, __,, -""· "" • · 4A1 -• "'"" • ,-,=="°"=""°-=c:--:: NE\Y 1 and 2 Bedrm. garden "' iu Back Bay _"_'o_._,_.,_.,,_1_6'_, ____ ~ C-----------53(;-7282 or 536-1366. * BRAND NE\Y, Deluxe 3 apartmf'nts w/pool. Gar., Bil. Nr. O.C.C. & -LG 2 cd .~ 11·-" ~0-9365. $100 1\10. YC'arly, a.II u!il., bedroom 2 halh, lirpp!aCf', S sho :\1 I Ad"' toVE.LY, lge. ~Br. 3 Ba. * E. BR, fn J''"· ,N. Irvine Huntington B•ach rear apt., priv patio, one rm $111. LCE mod 1 Br. Cpts., builtlns, OCEAN VIE\\/, FRO~f $180. ADULT ps. 1 11 u~ wfs, no t.n mt', 10 rPsponslble P"'Y mo. Inquire 335 University ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;; ---=------+ kif &. ba. Appl only drps, redec, nr oel"an. 218 1 J 1 A ,1 ~ 1 23ll Elden Avf'., C.l'il. Pf'!,, :l48-00Zi9. !'v No A or 642-8029 • .,,. 673-1980 Ct I 53&-1 ~/847 "169 poo • acuzz · vat ...... c. 645-5780 NEWLY DECORATE 'W/ttf'$., $100 n1n. incl. . ' ' * UN JVF.RSrrY PARK * 3 BR. 2 Ba, \\'/\11 cpt'g, drpa, · 1 CilgO JJ.IQ -:> S.125. Ask for Jerry or Pe&. D ~ardener & "·atrr. Prin· 3 Br. SlT:i. Crpt/Lrg fenced 2 RR + dl"n N'pt Bch-.$375 l1llns. no pet,;. Sl75/mo. LARGE t BR rum., Ptnin L•guna Beach 644-7270 or eVi!t: 644-7722. • • Charming I BR. duplex. ntw CJpal, only. 011·iier J.10-3862. y1l on Victoria, C~1. Call 3 BR. 2 ba t'nhoo•-... $325 Pool & Rf'c. lac. 962-4221. Pl. Pvt. pa!io, \\'/w crpt, --· 2 BR. 2 Ba U C 'd 3 Bdrm * 2 Bath carp, dra~ &. paint. Lovel y ""E 1 B• cp" drp• bit~-,,·erk da)"; (213) 44&-0673. 1 BR. & <len, 1 be ...... fl"A T nhause Unlurri 335 ndul\$ only J,.c:r 'ril June or SlLJ 1'110. UP: $40 \\'k., Bach. *d 'd d h ·h pper. P1 1 ' Living -m •'th calbed-1 garden surroundings. l'ifature ~ ' ''" ' "'" ow ' · · -Util pd. Color TV. Cr<"ScP n! rp • s "'°' r, no pe $, •"" .. , ~ adults only. $130. 548-693'.> 2 pa!ios. gar, Sljj. fl.57-8888 1 BDRM houSE'. S to v •, 4 RR .• 212 bath.~.·~ .. ·• ,$Jj() -------.,.--!'Ppt. Sl.80. 644-6016. Bay Bch. 494-2.iOB, 675--4367. $21:1/mo. 310 lril. 67:>-M59 ceillna & trplc, Separate eve~f\\'knrls only. refrig .. yarrl. SI~ mo. Util 3 BR. 2 ba. homew •• $2601325 Huntlnrton 8e•ch • s25 \\'K &. Up .• On Ocean ;;;,==,.--::-=-..,.-,:c--c or 49&-2355. laundry area. Encl patio. DELUXE 2 BR. Bltns. pa id. 673-7737. 2 BR. 1 ~~ be.. home ••.••• $Z75 n·n: n CllOICE Joe. 2 Br. :2 Ba, pvt =-~=~-=-~~--S Rt'frig. Drp1 y,•J.w ept. Prlv. Balboa P1ninsul• (ij ed h.11 T0\\'l\1I~E for rent 2 BR. UwPly B.!!ch • 1 • · ooms patio, gar. S~ mo. lst & S185 2 BR-J Ba., frplc, li'ar. wimming pool Ir children's bale. Gar. Lndry rm . 2 BR house in court, cplg, '· .. r ' I \VA~ht'r/rlr)'f'r. bltn!'!, pool !\laid &rvice. Pool. Util Pd. lnst. 538-2095 aft a P~f Garden Hlting. Gu " \\'tr. playgt'?Und , sroo. 962-4180. * NEAR Bay & Beach. drp~. no prts, o~ small racil. $165 mo. 11) 892-7818. • Call 6i5-87·IO • N .,._ ,h prl. l yng. child. 6#-256'1 HARBOR GREFNS Brand nt'"' 3 Br .. 2 Ba. ehild. Sl-15 mo. 64&-2719. 2 8 ED R 0 0 :\f C 0 N· Corona d•I Mar ewport ue•c eves. 5-16-4353 * TOWNHOUSE * S~50/mo .• 673-&lj() yd dbl ,....... REALTY ;SP"•"c;:-;;,-;,:-;,-;B;-:c::-.IJ.lll 1 & 2 BR, Sha« cpt, D/W, 2 BR, I.II , gar ...,.. Univ. Park Ctntt>r, trvtne TIN ENT AL T0 \\1\'HOUSE, 2 BR. fully crpld. pool. So. ot * * LGE. l BR FUR!". LARGE 4 BR, 2% BA apt, « r apt ..., up. Aelt cltBn ovf"n, patio. >. good "·ant ad i.5 a good 3 BR. lg yd, sgl gar S~ $180/Mo. Agent ~1-1. Hi'"'· Close 10 i;;hpg. Adults. w/gar. Sl5Q, 2202 W. Ocean· frplc, epts, drp1, all elrc Htd pool, play yd, cpt/drps, 377 w. Wilson * 548-3&05 investment ~IANAGER. &16--8226 Call Anyt ime, 83.'\-M20 J fronr . Jnq: Apt c alt s kil. AMual be. S370 . bltns, patio, Kida ok. - S©~lA-L&"BtrS9 Tire Puzzle with tire Buiff.fn Clruckle ' .. Newport Beach Sli5. Wt>. 6i3--8213. ...,..,.. Coll•g• No. 5 "'"703.I. 3 BR 2 BA + d•• s~ 2 "'kdy1 or anytime wkn<ls. ~~3262. .-.... U'U-• "• MN. *All Facing Pool* l;C;;o;;s;;l;;•;;M;;;;es;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;; 675-T~. liB'"E'°'A°'UT=.•u:::o"lqu°"•,-::-l-::Bt:::,-o2:c11eobcca, 1994 Maple No. 3 642-3813 BR. 2 BA $165. mtns, CJD, I BR W /D hlrup, Patio, &l.r. w. 3 'BR., 21~ ba .. 2 car garage: 2 BR Duplex. Frplc, bltns, % frpl, beam crll, bltna. Blk to • v.•alk-in closet, st\q H Del Mar. 548.-mB l BR., 2 ba., 3 car garagf LIVE LIKE A KING blk lo beach. Nice. $260/mo beach. $285. 673--5548. crpt thn.iout, attn.c ttsidnll 1-,,.,-==---0-=~--1 REAL1'0R 548-6966 \'I 64 214 environment, nr So. Cit ././ LRG aunny 1 BR uppt_r, Duplexes Furn. 345 At Budget Prices! r y. 4-7 . 2 BR PENTIIOUSE, bltns, Plaza. Mr. \Yakrll•ld Ntw crpts, bltns, rrtrl1, Y.'URNISJfEI>-2 BR $18S Winlt.r, $235 yrly r!shv.•hr, fplc le 1undecks. !16&-5335 $135/mo. 969 M i s a I 0 n, N.wport B •• <h u•,• ,~ .. "'XISllED incl ut lt. 1019 W. Bay Avr, 67:>-2291. 54.1-5170. '"~ un. 67:1.-1674 "°";-;-;=-;,=:::--:;-=-; QUIET 1 BR. malUtt adult!. I~=="'~~~---, DELUXE DopleJI 2 BR, 2 Prlv patio, bllns, w/w. Nr LOVELY 2 BR w/w cpl, ~~~rv~~. 2y~~iyl ~ * POOLS $1.2a--mo. 'a'f!arly. Bnrhelor Ba. 323 Ja.•n1inr . $260. E. 17th St. Shop'g, &64120 v.'OOd nr1, drps. pr, mature * ENCLOSED apl. b1wn Ray & Ocean. No 67J...Ei642 adults, no Pflll. Reas. 2260 ~~-*-64'-.,.,2-3639~-*--==-1 GARAGES _Pl'15· Utll pd. 673-2256. LRC 2 1ton·, 2 BR 2 BA <len, BEAUTIFUL 2 BR, frplc, Plactn!la. &16-3160. Duplexes Unfum l50 * CONVENIENT ~· n -1 S , 1 d · 2 pn1io, rar11geo, xlnt C.1\.1. • ,,...,. ...,,,.,nn ront. 'pac1ou$ crpts. rps I car gar. loc. $185. Adults. 546-4016 2 BR. w/gar. $130. Wtr pd. C d I M 1'0 Al..L BF.ACHES br. \\'inter, ttla, no J>C'ls. $2'&.l/mo. 5#-3114 644-ltMO 15TI "A" Orange Ave, Call oroni • •r FROM $135 MONTH f21l J 626-9101-3 BR, 2 BA, cpll, drp1, bl tn1, Sl45. 2 BR. 1 ~ ba, encl >'llid, btwn 1 & 5, 6~lJ>. - 0 EN d il I 1 A d Irnmaculat~. Adulu,1 ________ _ P a Y ''acan rtl'I Y ADULTS PLEASE 1 Blk To Bch. Clr.<tn 1 br. gar. 6091,t Po l n1ettta. M&-3866 SPACIOUS 2 Bdnn, crpta, tor occupal'IC'y tbla 4 BR, 3 \\'int~r $165 mo. 64&-40'71 or $273/mo. 6'f5...63.54. s~ MO. I---· , BR, 211 rlrps. Older couple prdd.. BA born<. Cozy lrplc, gmit • VILLA POMONA &42-9955. ~ ·--~ • ' •-• al..... 1 BR Partially turn. Ne11<•ly nA,_ crp•·, ,__ A-~" $1Jj/rm. Ph. 67W145. patio, no pe-nnu U!le PHONE 642·2015 PA· .. ....... -A,, .... $315. ~or 644-4430 1 BLOCK to beach, 2 BR. ,de_oorated. Nr. Sho p' 1 now. Call 537-1'168. 3 BR Rtdtoe. Yard. Patio. ll?r.OPomonaA\lf.) ntwshagcrpt,$225moinclcenler.Adults.499-14f0 D F t i I 2 BR Qui1t, mature adulta.1"!'.!~~~~~...,~~ *Deluxe :l Br, 2 Ba* 1 P1 · • m Y 0 n Y • I': -util, Ytarly. rra.-.m31. A.\l/PM. ... .. __ , ..__. ,....., •!IL $1Thlmo. 64&-5370. No pell. No chlldrtn. $210. Unbell•vably Beautiful I -::--;-=-::=~=...-:c=I:-:::--=-.--....,,-= nuu.iUt no pets_,..,..,,...... 6T>-OU4 aft 6PM. VAL D' JSERE G&n:lfln Apia. * 1 BR. modttn apt btwn 2 BR. Cpts. dl'J>', bltnt, flJ'., -:e:-:;W!LSOO,' ,-:,;,N~c=""'·"~"~=•s:c-.:e-$170 2 Br itudlo, adj •hops. OCf!ln & bay. $150/mo. aundec:k. No pet1. $210/mo <UWJ~• d 1-11o r.-...,,, C t u-sa ""I•• no P<IJ '10•'tl'l ""'I • 2 AR. 111 BA. Cp tld•p1, rp ,.,,.,,,PA 'pr. ""'7'0.:N os • n-te "" ~ • • ' YtarJy, uu 67S-837... ln"I. util. 6~737. ¥ It ' 213 •-·-II -------.,....--,I #-'/f'T'YWl\trt. Slr@l'lm A: ncl tlo 2-68 a . ' : n•-.-u•• co . 1 BDR~t newly df:conted. \\/Aterfall , 45• pool Rtt. Rm, 1 BR. fum apt. No childr•n fl~Ulll pd. l BR-Garage fl ' P* • $1t0. 64 .::._ LGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, nrw sh•I cpla, drps. tttrl1. ran••· SAuna, Sg\.!I J-2 Bdrm. >~um-or pets. 2405% 161h St, NB. apt, Stv/retrl1. 41 .5 'it BACHELOk, 1f1Arp, close lo CPI, $169./mo, ~hly Ptln- ptUo & fenced yd. 242 Unlurn. trom $135. SEE IT: Call 64&-4fht Oahli&, 675--4092 11U ~ prn, 0CC Ir UCI. $130. Incl utit'• ltd Nr. OCC. Carport 557-6151 F'lov.·er. ~ Part0n8, 6'12·R670. I BR. Oce•nfronl, y"arly 2 Bft, hltn8, frplc, 2 carports, 1 rll'l'rfr. ~7-7768· 7 BEAUTIJ11L 1 A 2 BR- J BR FrpJ, belma pitkt, SPAC J Br, pool, n r $1~ Mo. incl, utll'1. pool-sb.ed, nr. ocean. $19.'>. 2 BR Untum &pt. Utll paid. Contemporary Citrden Apts. •wJv.• util Incl. SlU. 1 Adult, alvlps. Adlt1, no Ptla. $153 673-1642 Agent 673--4•147. $14S mo. Paliof, frplc, pool. $150-$165. no pets. 64~. utll pd. 1$81 Monrovia. t BR r um., util pd., with ** GREAT VTE\\'! 2 BR. --*-*_5'_0-69!W_._*_*__ Call 546-616..l. 1 Month FrH Rent ="~8--0~336~·~--~--aar .• 'nctan view, Balbot. ftpl, bltns, aundl!tk&, pool. Tum W'Nlld item• into qulclc J:fooM HunW.-T Walch the' l BR, 2 Ba. S2'T5. S.S.1Xl9 Sell kilt It.ma now! Ptninsula. 968-1793. $200 up. 67s..3SU. 6i':Nt>4. cub, ~I 642--66'i8 OPEN HOU~ column . ' l I! ' : •• . l : 11 i1 1:· ·-• I, i> ". " " " ' . I. ,, 'I ,, ' Apt. Unlum. J65Apt. Unfllm. Nowpori lo•ch- NOW YOU CAN ·AFFORD NEWPORT BEACH Enjoy $750,000 health club & spa ; 7 pools, 1 ' tennis courb. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Br's. Also Z. story townhouses w/ 2 or l BR's, Elec. kitch· ens, private baleony or patio. Ft]m $170. Subterranean parking, elev, ·maid service. Full-lint: t?CKf market, dry cleaner, beautf salon w1thm complex. 7 beaut. model apts. V am to 6 pm daily, other times by appti'., Jamboree & San Joaquin Hills Rds. N. o Fashion,lsland. 714: 644-1900 for leasing info. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS • , "' . . Ii] 4&? I .... l!l J6S Apt. Unfum. • OCEAN View • 250' 10 bch. 1 6: 2 Br. $175 Up. Pool. !175 S. Cst. Hwy. &&>5429, 523-6743. VIEW deck, 1 br • $150. Loll studio • '100. Incl uttl . tin t .l 1ut· due. 1 blk to bch. 494-8lTI. Lido Isle S•nl• Ano CAN1-BE BUT ' SINGLE m'ORY South Sea Atrnosphen 2 BR, • 2 BJ.TH Carpets. -, Air Conditioned, . Private Patto. HEATED FOOL Plenty of lawn CarJ>orz ........ 2 BR + Oe'n, 1% Baths, f[,pL RIDDEN YIU.AGE Adults only. $290 Yrly. 2500 Soutb S&!ta " ASSOCIATED Bft.OKERS Santa Ana e 5t6-WS 673-3663 644-~ Evea. 'WVELY 2'iir, 1% Ba, 2 car ear, bltna, refrl&:, frpl, cpl, 3 Heated fqobi drp, $295 on be. Shown by Large Oubhouse etc. BBQ l!l!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l~!!!!!!!!!!li!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ appl. 544-2M5, 6'1&-?967. Child Care Center l'Apt. Unfurn. l-'-'----'------1 Great new 1 2 & 3 Bdnru; ________ 36_5 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Mesa Verde From Sl49 Cos?• Mo,. H ti p •---• SOUTH COAST, un ng on ._..... ** 2 BR, apt al ttduc~ VILLAS -;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;; rent Jot couple to manage 8 1101 MacArthur Blvd. * 3 BR. 2 BA, bltns, cpls & • apts. Harbor l Baker Joe. 546-8823 .drps, encl patio, ls! mo. ON BEACH' . 3515 fr~. Paint & • save. • Ma-· , 2 BR, encl gar, ntw crpts, $169/mo. 1016 El Camino. . DELUXE 2 &: 3 BR, 2 Ba., deror. Sm1 child OK.Cul-de· 2 ,lfR U~t~ f.i: •. $230/mo, ..encl ear $150. up. Rental Sac. nz mo. 8J9..2458. · * 3 BR, 2 BA, bltns, cpts A: • Furniture Available . Ofc. 3095 Mace Ave.l"=-=::.;::::;..:::.,:c;::;;_ d 7 · II Carpe~-drape~-dilhwasher · 54&-1034'. Apt1., rps, enc patio. 69/mo. be,ated pool-saunas-tennis ' • Furn. or Unfum. "70 1010 El Camino. Open Frl. • •; "-1 & s 1; m ~ 4 rec room-ocean viewa , Nowport'811ch or • ""' • on · · ..........,,4 · patios·amPle parkinJ: Costa Mt.I._ BAY MEADOW APTS. • Security guards. e st85-WESTCLIFF 1 Br.1---.:;.."'---- Beom oellings, -· , HUNTINGTON •Ad"I~ obly, "' .. ~, 1128 1100-MOVE IN A?low""'' prlv patios, teeftatlon fa-Bedford Ln. 548-7533 J>tt.Schl children welco~ ciUO.., AJJ adw~. no pet>, PACIFIC NASSAU PALMS e 2 BR'• FROM AS LOW 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B. YEARLY nt ocean, spacious 177 E. 2Znd St. 642-364$ J,.; $159/mo. <n~> 5.16-1487 upr. 3 Br, 2 Ba, Frplc. $225. SHADY ELMS.POOL 387 w. Bay St., C.M. O(c open 10 am-fi pm Daily ttera. Ayail now 499-2!28. Fitm. Ii Unturn. 1 Ir Call 646-0173 urJLLlAM WALTERS CO. e NOW OPEN e 2 BR's from $135 UP VACANT. Redec. 2 BR. 1 B,RAND NEW l Br, $155. 2 1 BR furn. $140. l BR unl. BA. Cpts. drps, refrig, FOR Lease in Huntington Br $190. ALL UTILITIES $135 util pd. AdultJ, no pets. bllns. Lndry rm. 2 children Harbour: O>ndo 2 Br, 2~ PAID. Priv palio. billiard 820 Center. MZ.3848. c ok, no pets. Walk to Harbor Ba. Complete bftns, refrig, rm, heated pool w/ jacuzzi, · Shop'g. SlJS/mo. 590 Joann wash r/dryr, crp!/drps, huge closetJ. de ep pile car- St. Apply Apt. D or ph. frpl.c, pvt gar & patio, pool. peting, luah landscaping. 645--0700. IS{ln 642-1461). Slip avail. $33:1 mo. 675-3108, Adults. You l\fJJst See This HACIENDA 84fi-3336. One! ~02 Birch St., NB. ~ LARGE l BR, 2 BA, garaa:e, _557-,--<_,>l<=,.,,,,=_,,,=,--, l----_,,,,,--1--~~l'!M!IJA";JRU:BICO~Rllll:E'rc_j_;secl;;;;_:uded porch, quiet, dead-V" BRAND NE.W ,; at.-ehildren;-pe11-con; aM.:n·Santa-An ..... AYe..(-Aerot111•l---- Adtllt living • No pets sidered. $175. 2 BR alao from S.A. Country Club) . ' . ' I ,, DeluXe 1 & 2 BR. Pool Garage. Dishwshr. Paid util. SJ20. 7681 Ellis, Apt. A. ·spacious 2 BR units. ~::3. FROM $150. 646-120.f 847-754? or 847-0032. FffiEPLACES. Pr iv patloa, l01Ld1 of closets. Heated LRG. Modern 1 . BR apt. * $1 4S. * ·Pool. Ad •. J ts. Manaa:er Crpts, drps, bltns, dshwhr, 1 979·18. child ok. $150/mo. Ali util LARGE 2 bedroom apart· l BR, 2 Ba., blt·in1, cpts, pd ~1 A·-odo No 9 ment with built.•~·, N••• • .,., nn. • • "lli drpi;. Newmrt Sh o re s . ~s.-0984 shopping & schools. CHILI). ,.... ., "'e"R:--CC'.'.1:-0~""",--an""" __ , I REN O.K. Yearly. $250. Days 1213) . apt; ..... yt'g rooms, * S3'-l73f *' 53z..5660, Eve1. (213) drps, blips, te!ri.a:, carport, +49--4320, Mr. Danford. lndry nn. $155 mo to mo. TOWNHOUSE 2 Bdrm., l~ SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 1 Br 646-6961 or ~1246 Ba d $140, 2 Bdnn, 11~, ~·-. .. cpts, f"P.!, refria:.. "" ..... ., ..... UNruRN 1 BR Apt. Cpts, wshr I df')T, dshwsht. B/I. drpa, bltns, gard disposal. drps. Nr. Westcli11. ·SI.al. Pti patio, pool, clubhouse. 1525 Placentia Ave. A 1 k mo. lease. 642-8429 or $175(mo .• Lease. Stret!on, about our discount. sta.2682. 6T:>-On7. day 6J2.S464, nite 962·2124. ADULTS. 2 BR, nr ocean, DUPLEX, l BR, garage, nr LRG-NEW l BR. W/loads ol $175 yrly. shopping, Quiet. No dogs, slorage. Dres,fg·nn, ba, ** 644---0695 ** cats or m o·t or cycle 1 , dshwhr, bltns, shag crpt'g, i,s BLK to beach, nearly new :.48-7ral. priv patio, l blk to shoP'r A: 2 BR 2 BA ;24S yrly. E/SIDE. 3 Br., 2 Ba .. bltn1, close 10 beadl. 8262 Atlanta. 67~l12'6 aft 6pm. Children ok. $190. 646-4UM. ---=-"="',,',,,-,=,-,-=~-3 BR, 2 BA CrpVdrps, bllna, C I D, gar.W t ·D. I l)'rd. e CHl,:Z ORO AP'I'S. e 1 blk to bch. Nr. shp'g * DELUXE 2 Br, 1% Ba, 8234 Atlanta. 1·2-l Blt'1, center. Yrly. 673-8223 all 4. · t d tv/D/W Washer/dryer. 536-0336 cp • J'J>I~ 1 • gar. LARGE 3 Br, 2 81. Duplex. Chlldren· OK, '150. 642-7958 Pool. Private closed gar. • frplc &. bltns, % blk to bch. BEAUTI1'1,.JL. new deluxe 2 2 BR. LJ'g Ptiv patio. Bltn~. $300 mo yrly. 644-7214. BR., 2 BA apt. $200/mo. crpts, drps. $l30/mo. No LARGE 2 BR nr ocean & Info Ph. 54S-1886, 645-2550. pets. l503 Alaba ma. 536-6785_ bay. Avail Dec 5th. $199.50. LARGE 3 BR, 2 BA, bltns, ;c~====~=~-1 Yearly. 673-1909, trplc, dshwshr, nr shopping. BEACHWOOD APTS. "'='--'"-""'~-~ Encl. garage. 557-8188. Brand new 1·2·3 BR.. % bik * OCEANFRONT l BR, t BEACH ,..... $15(11 mo. Yearly. Ctp!Ji, 2 BED R 0 0 l\I' newly o . ! .... yts, drps, bltns, d 644-5301 redecorated, f i re p 1 a c e , irplc. 125 lSth St., JIB. rps. · 3-17.3957 CHARM xlnl area, upper 2 garage. $190. 548-5003. 2 & 3 BR'1. $16 UP. Patio, Br. 2 Ba, CID, D/W, ter· 1 BR Beam ceil., frplc, w/w pool, children. MORA JO.r nee. $135. ~2-1176. relrig/stove, gar. $15.5. l Apls, 18881 Mori Kai Ln., %G "_A_R_D_E_N ____ • grnd--,,-.-,-e-,' adult. 642-8520. blk·E: ol Beacll. 8Q.-.8994. triplex. Cpl, 1tv, drp, enc NEW 3 BR. 2 Ba., 2 car pri. D~LUXE 1 BR with pool, gar. ll60. 548-9695. garage. Single 1tory. Im· 'Sl35/2 BR, .Sl55; 2 BR plus2 '=-=e=R~2-=s7A-, -"'-,,,,,-,,-, • .,,-., mt'd.' occup. 546-2932. 2 ba, $160 .. 1303 \Valnut, see bltins, dshwshr, Nr Hoag Z BR 1 BA. new shag crpts. Mgr. m12lb SI:, H.B. Hosp. $170/mo. Adlts, no dl"J)S, bltins, nr OCC. gar LGE 1 be apt, encl gar, mar· pets. 642-4JS? Agent. S139~fo. 557-6151 ried couple or l 1irtgleW "-A-TE=R-FR~O-NT~-",-.-,-.~," adult. Sl2'5. 842-454,9. BR. $350 to $400: also 3 BR, Dani Point WALK TO BEACH I block to be1ch $325. LA RGE 2 br. l ba, duplex. Lovely ]. 2 &. 3 BR 's. Cpts, F. 11orvath Realtor 675-1972 Ne wly painled, cpt. dps. I~ drps, bltns, dwhr, 847·3~7. EASTBLUFT luxury 2 Br .. pa!io, rrK"I gar. Children LGE 3 .Br. 2 Ba studio, lie 2~lc Ba., bltns, frp!c , 2 car OK. 496--325.i. I lncd yd, encl gar. $185. No gar, poo, rec are a . East Bluff sngls. 842-4549. 644-6405. STUDIO 2 Br., 1»: Ba., pr! LGE 2 Br, 2 Ba. Yn l!t. NEWPORT BEACH yrd., encl gar. Nr park, $185/mo. 215 Prospttt Ave , Villa G ran1da Apt1. grade & hi schls. 546--0469. Newport Shores 494-9502 Four bedrooms wi th b11.lcon-BEACHBLUFF APTS ie-s above & below. Gracious Spac. 2 Br 2 Ba . Pool . Pa· llvini:: & quif"t surrounding for family ·wilh children. , _no_· _' _n_IW_, 82:!1 __ ,,._i._,_84_2_,,.._, Newport Height• ·--·I ** Nict 2 Br. POOL. Gar. Near Corona del Mar H.igh School, F ireplace-, v.·et bar & built·in kilchen appllances. 83J AMIGOS WAY 644·2991 Cold\W'll, Banker Ir Co. l\fanaging Age-nt !>41-5271 The faB1CSI draw 1n the \Vegt ... a Daily Pilot Clusified Ad . 642-5678 , 2 BR. Apt. Closed gar, cpts, Bltns. Ci>t. drps. Adults , no drps, childttn/small pet ok. _.,_,,_, _1_150_,_..,,,.., ___ ,, ___ 1 $140/l\10. 847-2!Ma. ' ' W h I t • Elephants" over· CLOSE lo Beach! 2 BR. runn.ine-yoor houee? Tum Cpt1, drps, &: atovr, no petr: .. _ C SHO/mo. Ph. 536-9942. tuo::m Into " ASH" -1ell thttn thru Diily P 11 o t ltOUSE Hunttna:?' Walch the Clauitied. 642-5673. OPEN HOUSE column. J - A 5 5 I F I E 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 < ,l • .. Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers ' See If You Have _ Any_ Of These Things A -DAICY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stove 29, Blcyclo 57. Eloctrlc Train 2. Gult1r 30. Typewriter 58. Kitten 3. Baby Crib 31. Bar Stools 59. Classic Auto 4. Electric Saw 32. Encyclopedl1 60. CoffH Tablo 5. Camera 33. Vacuum Cleaner 61. Motorcycle 6. Wisher ~ 34. Tropic1I F ish 62. Accordion 7. Outboard Motor ... 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 63. Skis I . Storoo Sot 36. File Cabinet 6-4. TV Sot 9. 'Couch 37. Golf Clubs 65. Workbench 10. Cl1rfnet 38. Sterling Sliver 66. Diamond Watch 11 . Refrigerator 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-K•rl 12. Pickup TT'.llck 40. Bedroom Set 68. ~ironer 13. Sowing Machine 41 . Slide Projector 69. Camping Triller 14. ,Surfboord 42. L1wn Mower 70. Antique Furniture 15. Machine Tools 43. Pool Tablo 71. T1po Recorder 16. Di1hw11hor 44, Tires 72. Sailboat 17. Puppy 45. Pi1no 73. Sports C.r 18. Cabin Cruiser 46, Fur Coit 74. Mattro11 Box Spg1 19. Goll C~rt 47, Dr1pos 75. lnbo•rd Spoodboal 20. B•romoter 48, Linens 76. Shotgun 21. St1mp Collection 49. Horio 77. S•ddlo 22. Cinotto Sot 50. Airpl1n1 71. D•rl Gome 23. Play Pon 51. Org•n 79. Punching B .. 24. Bowling B•ll 52. Exercyclo 10. B•by C•rrl1go 25. W•tor Skis 53. R1ro Books 11. Drums 26. FrH1,r 54. Ski Boots 12. Riflo 27. 'Suitcaso SS. High Ch•lr 13. 'Dosi< 21. Clock 56. Coins 14. SCUBA GMr so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 Tliese ~or any other extra things around th• house can be turned Into cash with a DAJLY PILOT WANT-AD ' ' • - , " ,• " t I ~ .~ . ~ .. !it ,\j~ ·~~ ; s ' ~ : ' ., ~ " ~ ~. ~ " ~ " ,. I~ ' " ' '' ' ' Apta., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 -Costa Mesa wesltiBJIU -ELDEN - Huntington S.ach Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. Costa Me·sa .......... MERRIMAC WOODS ... . " YOUR MOVE ALL UT ILITIES PAID Adu lt Living-Furnished & UnTun1i1h ed 6551 ,., . I Warner, Huntington Beach 714/847'8526 ' 370 - RESORT LIVING FROM $125 Westcliff Riviera Spacious 2 Srtrm. Blrns, car· pets, drapes, hl'alecl pool. Nr shop'g are11 . Adul111. Ask A'bout }'l"f't' Renl 1800 'Vl'.~tdi fr Dr, NB 642·5388 Rentals Rooms 400 \V~NTED !)as! n1iddle-agerl ~"Oman 1(1 rent mom & share ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I lovely Corona de! Mar home, Apts., A pts., ht companion with i1aml'. S6.l Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfur:n. 370 prr mo. P.O. Box 724. CdM, Prof111ion11lr M1na9td br Southefll. Cou11tit, Mvmt. Co. ·.·. 92625. Newport Beach Newport Beach LRG room, linen furn., YOURHA1' ' . . . VISTA DEl MESA OFFERS FREE ••• REFRIGERATORS DISHWASHERS CARPETS & DRAPES OLYMPIC Sll'E ·POOl BllUARDS GYMNASIUM p.fUVATE PATIOS CARPORTS Party Room With FIREPLACE, T.V., STEREO. That's right, when you re n,t .one of our super apartments oil these extra features ·plus much, much more is incl uded at no extra cost. Come see our roomy one and 2 bedroom apart- ments and you'll agree it's th e best deal in town . But hurry as supply is limited and they're going fast. We're located in th e Bock Bay tJreo near U'.C.I ., O.C. Airport, Fa shio n Isl and, South COost Plaza, Newport & S.D. Freewa ys and just a couple minutes from the blu e Pacific. BEAUTIFUL LIVl~G THAT BABIES THE BUDGETI from 5155 Mr4•t1t 1!v4entt .. ,,,,_ ViJta Del Mesa Apartments T1.11tin L Mtio Drive 01hdl llvh1• ·-11 ,.,. '" Ph. 545-4.855 'r•l11.t1"1lly M•"•t•lll lly Sovthtfa (ovfltlt1 M1 mt. Ct. 0 .... 1.,, ... Illy Va1l11~ l~···t"'•Mh IM. & M.O.l.C. r~~ltltl '"'' "'ashin~ Iaciliries avail., Pmployed a d u I t • $75. 5.%-1742. LGE I .Br hsc, p11rt· furn, frplc $165. S\c('ping rms, $60 n10. f'urn Bach ap1, S80 mo sep en!r. 5411-69AA. SLEF.PJNG Room Pv1. B11th, 1 Cdi\1. Close kl bea c h , 675-2698. SLEEPING room in priva te home . • • 5-18--695.i ... SLEEPING room. priv. en- 1r11nCf', priv !oileL S65 per mo. Costa Mesa. &l!'t-08711. UPSTAIRS Room ror Fe- male Student or v .. orking girl 83.1-oo!ll! FEMALE, Share b a 1,h &_ kitch(>n Mf'sa Verde nr Q.(.(, $19, Wl'rk. ~9-lf)J4, Guest Home 415 WILL 11hare full !aciltlifll of large, v.1ell-11.ppoin1ed home 1v/refinrd, ma1ure woman. Pvt. dressing rm &t balh. Spacious, a t l r a e t i v e ac- commQda li(ins f <i r '""" !r rt a i n i n g . Vic.>w Jot. G11r11gr, 83-0-10.11. 2.; YR old dlvnr~O man \\'Oulrl likt' r e 11 p ons ible, straight m11n to M\11~ PX· pen~es on 4 BR hou se. C.M. ~7995 - ROOMMATE needf'd, S min from OCC, nlcl!" loc. Pref 11tudent.-Only ~ mo. Call M6-9'l91 F'EMALE 'A'/8 yr old a:Irl &. IJ!'e epl lo l hllN! w/Mmt. 557..()196/MG-9142 \\'OMAN, w/chlld OK, sh•~ home \\'/woman ch!ldN'n, 540-5665. 2 Tt"ll<'h"~ nrfl<I 1 fflm11I~ rnom m11te, 3 Br 11pl on \\'Alrr. 67?,..4624. Ukfl tti tradt? Our 'I'nlMr's P11.r11..dlse column Is rnr )OU! 5 litw!s, 5 d11ys ff'JI' 5 bUcJcs. NrCELY crpt'd (lfc neii.r FOUND black&. wh ite Jri11rn watcrfronr, Sl26.50 per mo w/wh:;e collar. B 11 Ibo a ]~ Tustin, NB. 645-5888. lsland. 673--9262. For ease osta tsa 1440 SQ. FT. lf11v" free. & cle11r ON!~I\ JO<iu~trial i!PllCf' nr Nl'w porl· acrea~(' plU1I -. D<>$irf: o_ o F"-•H• ......,,. ,.. ,... hou~i! or duplexc11 w/~mfll -n K!go . , ... ,., "'I.JU •• ra .. ,-I I • cl G ·Ln {So. of IiAk"r E . of ~or rce i:ar .• !flC ' • • • 1• • • R Tri bole1 Rc11l1or Rl3·!1.)!1.;,. airvie w, :.... m1.) CPl"f'·I=""~-_,~-,---< !W!ntatlve ike~ from 9 lo 12 TRADE : waslW!r, dryPr, re.., daily. 5:i7·5585 or 879-4711 . frig., mi!IC housentJld FOR FOR Lee.ae, tooO sq. ft. Ml automobile c°:L~kc. New Bldg, Arnpl~ parking, * 5.19-1694 * 54M'130, 613-6169. eun.otR;;~ls ro """' 2 ar lflYe oce11nfn:in1 duplt:f; 3 Sr. hou~c Jn nc?ed <If Nt'wpor1 Be11ch; want f.11. n'lpair, exch11nge for part cAbln or 'l',.D. '11. rent , 6'12-7371. 111 F; IR\\1JN co. SlNG LE to.-otldna: l(irl rle~re' REAl.'IDRS 6'M-6tlt 1 BR Apt, )'CIU'i)' on Bilbo& * * * J1lend. 613-0703 1 * :..-~ -·-* ELECTRICAL l n&tallation• PROF. Painting ext/int, Ac· 4' rtp&irs. No job too &m11ll . cous. ~il\ng!I, a l•r I e 1 ' Realistic prlce'S. t"rec e1t. spraying. Reis. 84T~tl.)8. ' Lle'd/lns. 546--021L E L E CTRlClAN, licensed, bonded. Small jobs, maint. .t n<paln. ·su..s:m. t\<1 Wa.sr1 ng * WALLPAPER * \Vhen }'OU calJ "Afae" 548·1~44 646-lnJ $1;,() 1700 to S575 $550 ..... i;20 "'Uli..K CA"H P/IJNTr·~ r ~ I Alt Full or P/Tthne ... '-;> "u• Pf" "' "" ' Ca"IO: •II '""'' '°' ,.,.,, .... THR,OUGH A w o rk 11:u arn . C olar •P• l•ll ll . 9'2-'l<J. <1<0t llln" k e<>m~n:W,. , D •1'LY ' PILOT·-~,,_,f., ""'• '""""""' .. .., "'" 1"' ' er.u11ve 'type mtn • ~uty WANT AD ~'OR clean A "'At patnting, con1es1 t.)'rte gir11. Call S.n· 6~._,5678 tntt!rlor &. ~xterlot, Call ford £1111:rpri~s. Cnl> _ __;~~~~~~...:...~~Dl<l!~~·~~;;._;;.;::.;_'~~~1~ol&I~·~"~~~·-·~~~~~· ' ,• .. • Friday, Novtmbtr 12, 1971 FREE ~ASSES You •Could Be One of Today'• Winners 10 Pairs of $2 Tldlets Given Dally FOR THE YEAR'S BIGGEST it.UTO SHOW ___ • ....,_ ..... __,J[IIJ[ '-_ ..... _-·__,![II]~[ _ ....... _-·~![II] ----------ICUS'TODIAN, semi retired ASSEl\IBL~RS • SJuthcrn n1an to work p/tirfil! la bldg Orangr Co. Relay l\tanufac-n1ain1enance, C.M, area. lurer llt""'f.'ds asl'f'mhl!.'rs for Rf'~p., dependabl e, ~nc1 ~lulr. \\'11! !rain, Xl111 oon...firinkrr. 54&-2820. bf>nrf11~. POTTER ,t· BRUl\tf'JF.:LD 011 . Al\11-' fncorporattrl 26181 A\'t'. Arenpuer10 Soln Juan Capi~trarlfl An Equal O p ppr I un 1 I y ~mployer ATTRACTJV£ ~<ouni:: girl s 18 ~rs lo 80 fur direct srl11ni::. r11ntaslir mon!')'. srll an idr11., rarn t11n~1blr n1011ry. 54: ... 3997 bel11n 9 & llam ,(: hl>twn J & 5rim Fri. thru Fri. ,\TTRACTIVE younJ: s:irl~ 18 yrs lo 80 for direct gelling. f11.nt11st1 c monr~. 51.'JI 11n ldC"!I, <'am t11ng1ble T111Jney. fH: .... 1'197 hPT11f'f'n 9 & 11 am ,r., bf'twPPn 3 & 5 pm Tuts thru f'r!. Delivery Sales Part Time Evet No E :rper: Necess_. Earn Up To $98 A WEEK (714) 842·0667 DIS'fRIBUTE Health & Ecology line, pt/full time. Bob or Bill 64&-70-56 DR A p ERIES l'XPf'rienced help nf'f'dc>d. Paid holidays, bonus program. plenty of 11·nrk. 5.58-8131 and/r>r lnterrom I•-·•••-------ELECTRONIC srn•1re & in~1at11111on. &t2-l~?.n 1 -~~-c __ _ APPLY no11 ror prrmanf'nl pllff lime S<'CUr1fy Sl'rvicf!. Pn.~111on 111 O.C .. Rat"r\\·11y. ~JK-3;193 bl'fore. noon. ~---AUTO/SALESMAN NEW & USED COMBINATION Ex~ilrnua Ian. Onl a - s:rrssil•e man wirh desirP 10 be in high income br11cke! nrrd 11pply. Call Lonnit' Van DAVE ROSS PONTIAC ENGINEER I B.S.F..F.. + ~i inimum 5 Yrs Digi!al De!;ign Exper. Req'd. In Addition Som!' f'ield Ser- \'IC{' Exper. Pref"d. Employ. Pr Pay.11 t'tt, Salary Open. Also Fee Posilions l™NE 1'£R.SONNEL SERYlCES "AGENG:Y .JR!! E. 17ih J111 /1vinl'l 642-1470 CM S lfi-~Oli 1~~-,c --1 ._~=-~i::::-=== AUTO Bo Q k k e e per . Ex· I• Jlf'fincP. only in aulo. nfflCt'. lm me-di11 lcpo!!i r i1>11 a1·ail11hlt'. Plrase a op l ,\' . Unl1'ersily Old!!nKlhile, 28j() Harhnr Blvd. Costa i\ll'sa or call Business ~1gr. 540...!l&IO. --------- EXECUTIVE Personnel Agency Acctng Clerk $550 Familiar "·11h all phases of bkkpng. Joh ordf'r Cf)MI al'counring. ~1anufacturing f'Xper. lnsurant'(' FILE CLERKS Positions opt-n in our llt1nt. Beach office. Full & p/tin1e hr11. Xln'! l:M>ncriis &. oppor. for 11.dvanc:l·ment. Call Pt!rsonrK"l 842·77ll MACHINIST · 4 )Ts job shop or prolo-typc exper. Apply \n pf'rSOn. Inca Pia.sties, 32972 Calle Perfecto, San .Juan Capislrano. No phoz\c calls, please .. MALE & fe1na)(', ovrr 18 • Equal Oppor. En1plnyrr full or pr/tinie. Dirt'cl scll- INSURANCE Agenry Girl. ing nf'IY Olristma~ gilt Commercial l i nr1<. item 30% l'Ommlssion-l'arn Underwriting li Ra!ini;: ex-$:1.50 + hr!y • refundable per. net. Salary open. $73.00 stock deposi! rt.>- HeaUh &. reli~m<'nt plan. quired. Loral territories Peacock lnsur11nce Inc. Call 1n·ai1. 8~7..()7~1. Mr!!. Bradlf'y, 54 9-30 5 R, :'11AN wanlt'd for f Io or 4!'.M-1087. main1Pnanc' .t-othl'r durirs. INSURANCE--Apply in person, Huntin;-:100 GIRL Beach Con\'ales<'fnt 1-fosp, J8Sll Florida, H.B. Exp'd personal lillt'~ & rating. Jmmed oprning. Best Oflice Temporaries 1648 Ne'o!.•pnrt Blvd. ~O&ll -litj,..'JG! MAN ICUR!Sl' for busy shop, Conles.~a llair Fashions. * * 675-33.':18 • * 25 yrs & up 10 service our equipmen! & !earn othC'r \!.'Ork. Could mea.n doubllng previous income. Earnir1g opportunily $170 \\"k. Call for pPrwnal interv l e11· hriwN>n 8 & 10 A~l . 496-2:vu Di,·ision or Consolid11ted !-~oods. !R\llNE PERSONNEL -.. M .. EC .. H .. A .. N .. l ... Ciiiii I SERYlCES •AGEJ\CY . . . N<"edl'd for g('11er:1J rt>11 I Ps· t111e broker11.1:;:r , rn ron1rilcte our exi.<;1ln~ staff for llun1- ing1on Bl'acl1. Guarantet>d frainln.i:, forn1al classroom and on-1hr -joh tra1ni~. .... . . . .. ._ " . ·.;:.;~ . . . .... " Find Your Name If your name 11 list.d In a special ad -It could appear under any cla11lflc1tlon, 11 look at-ttiem all -phone "2.;Sf71, Extension 314, bttwnn t 1.m. and S p.m. to make 1rr1ng1m1nt1 to pick up your tickets at any conv1ni1nt DAILY Pl LOT office. Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT Antiques IOO SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS -I~ .__I -____,!~ 112 Furnltur• 110 G1r1ge Sale ===;;;;I FINAL 3 DAYS Wed., Thurs. & Fri. Nov. 10th, 11th, 12th USED FURNITURE OUTLET 1185 Harbor Blvd., CM s49.9457 I Beaulifui 5 pc. Spani~h g11me fable aets, $79.95 each. I 1· Sofas. niee condition, $49.95 each I R1111an bookcases, $24.95 e11ch I 5 pc. \\'alnUt ·Bedroom ~<'l.!1, $49.95 ·1et ,/ Crushed velvet chain, $19.95 each ,/ Overstufled occasional chaln-, $4.9.·i Pach I Lamp Shade$ · while they ]11.!rt, Ilk each WATCH THIS SPACE FOR GRAND OPENING SOON of USED FURNITURE ._OUTLET on Fashion Lane (for· merly Angelus Forni· tore Co. Adjacent to Fashion Square. S.1nta Ana Frwy. & N. Main St., Santa An.1 ). Everything Must Gol OLD HOME BEING DEMOLISHED!! f'URNtrURE * ANTIQUES »:8 Vicforian mi1Tor, day back 110\'r. maple fumilul'f", piano, rehig, s!ovt, light fixh1l'f'. Bargain Prlct8! ! 7201 Sta!hOrr Dr., Newport Bearh \Vrd lhru Sun JO ro 6. DISHES, Pola,. & pan~. Mix: muler blender'". Misc book~. Ch r i 1Im.1.1 decor&tions, Lamps. PictuI"f'.~. S I a n t dtsk. 6-pc bdrm set, kinr & full mattress~'.!!. Thoma~vi.llP. window chest. Chest of dra1;<ers, l maple bunk beds. Clothes, Bird ca1e. 9-17 Presidio, C.1\1. [.JOO ISLE PATIO SALE Dresses, coats, . 1 u i I 1 . je'ol.•elry. Skis, ~ki boots, pants. Grundlit short "'ave. Jazz gui111r. Racquet. Meat slicer. KUchen wares. An- riQ!Jf"!, Gift.!!. 673-1945 No\'. 13-14 210 Via Koron, N.B. NEW & Used t'urn. Riding lawn mower SM. Dinette $12. Pic1urf! framn. Many othrr choice i I e m 1 ! ! Methodist Youth Group. Baktr Ir Me111. Vtrde, CM. Sal. 9-<IP M. MOVING SalP.: Nov. 13-1.f, s:::4:30P~f. 422 Emerson St., nff Tustin bt!!"'ten 20th & 21at, Cl\1. 5411-7338. Lawn It h~hld furn. J962 Ford HT, TV, r11dio, record player, housewares, books. misc. GARA GE SALE: Clothes, women·~ 8·12, men If children'&. Couche~. 1kis, golf club~. many misc ilf'm~. Nov. 13 & 14, 11 lo 4. IOI :"~~~'""""''"""":'~"' 5316 River, Ntwporl ~&ch. \V NO \ I e-d 6' \I/H ITE couch, French GJGANTOR Gar11ge Sale: AVON PRODUCTS is the worlds largrst & most respected cosmetic rom- 410 W . Coast Hwy., NB Suite H 64S-2716 ll.11nimum 2 years c>xrier: Top Pay-Exet'llenr Benefits. . ', r:;PtJ you ... ' '1 \ '1? 0 1 1m -CANON f'aclory demo Sal., Prol'. bd rm set, while chair 1a e ,,.;aceme .. , op oca com-Nov. lllh ,11 d• , S . d" · Ski, fishing, boa!lng f'quip. \\'r arc "''ill ing lo SJ)('n<f !hr pany. Some kn\\'ldg inven-• >·. pec1als. ll'lf'ltf" SCI, mi5C. hot.rsehold !-'umilll.rt"-baby, childrt>n k n1011ey, time anrl effort 10 10 C'Ofltrol rrrt-$30 elrctron1c fla~h goods. 64~390. miM:. Clothes & household. pany, AVON rrpre~entatil·e.'! -- clln take Rdv11n1a~e of thi!1 EXP ER-. -Sales/Alteration tine repulation 1n sucN!ssful Lady, N.B. profitable busintsses of Call 548-2253 their own. Call nO'ol.', F'E~1AJ~J.: Piano Playe-r : :\pply Girl Friday to $500 l Girl olfit't', 60 + typing. dictaphone. h1P hookkeeping. Pers:ma.ble & Attractive. HUNTINGTON BEACH 488 E. 17th lat l rvineJ O.l 642·1470 UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT 1902 l7!h S!., 11.H. B}' 4:30PM Nov. 17, 1971 540-i041. Fri/Sat nilf'll only. Call BABYSITTER wanted-C~1. l ~"~;~"~"~b•~c~lo~nd~<'O'~,~&~l~S.~1~42~8.: 1 ~~=;;~:~~~~~1 7:30 Rm tn 1:30 pm ~Ion. ISLANDER '''ed, Fri; 7:30 am 10 9 am Fiberglass Chopper YACHTS Turs &. Thurs. C11.r n{lt. Gun Oper ator .. Sl Hr. 548-6fi72. Upholsterers .... $4 Hr. ~fGR. Sail's, earn $900 +, Co, training, bonuses flex hours. 64&-0049 Lei'. BEAUTY OPERATOR llll!!IS· tan!, f\llly Jicrn:icd. Contac! Call Dorothy Krn Trmpl f'ton'11 H111r ~tyles, 1101 \\'e~l<'lifl Dr. MUSTANG ~-R. &12-SR:i7 EMPLOYMENT BUS DRIVERS City AGENCY 1856 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa 642-5812 • Age :b-j(I, $.il6-$fil9 mo FRY-Cook, t'Xper. Fast. Ap- AppJy Puhl1r \\"ork.~ Df'pl, ply in person, Co Ion y Cily flail , ~ FoN'.'!11 A1•P.. h 1lchcn, 3211 Harbor Bl, Lagun11 8P<1ch Bf-fore /'>01·. 01. 171h. l ,;c.n"'""'"c"oo~k~.-.~,-.. ,,.-,.--,f'Ulo-cl-oc BOAT LAMINATOR F.XP'D HA'.l<D LAY-UP JEL O)ATER. 1 l\:! I :\2J-~12ll!J p/tuTie. ApJ)ly in prrson. 512 Ir. 19th Sr.. Co.sta ~1e~a. Now Interviewing For PRODUCTION LINE 1 SUPERVISOR , With min. of 2 yrs. re- cent exper. in the field of fiberglass boat •s- sembly. Please submit resume w /cover letter in person to: ISLANDER YACHTS 777 W. 17th·St. Costa M esa • • ERIC SHAYNE .117 E. Bay Ave., Balboa You arc the 1\'inll{'r or 2 1ickets to !he Orange County International Auto Show Bf the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER. • need a prl'lfess i onal r..•overnfx'r lith rhru Zlst mechanic. ~1ust ha\·e fl'f's, Please call 6~2-5678. cxr :114 ::\1nt pay. Tom Sharp Union IX't\\'t"l'n 9 and 5.pn1 to claim Oil, 673-3.120, 2201 F.. C.sl your llckets. !North County H"'Y Cd~f toll-frt.'e number is 541)..12201 ' ' . * * * BOYS 10.14 ~RALOJ:·rrcr: Brains ,(· l'harm "'llb top ~kill.~ 11·in.'! !h is cn-'am puff po~ilion "'1th AA co. $4.10. INVEST IN Ne<.>rl son1rone to assi.~t n1c ta deliver papers in !he San Call !!rlrn lla.vrs, ~.,, ~"=~ · Clemen1P, San JuAn Capi~-· ""'>-OIJJJ YOUR FUTURE in my fA~I Wo"'ini;: bu.<;inr.~s Coa .<lal Ai.:l'ncy 2 hr.~ a d11~', S27i0 JTIO. For rrano and Caplstr11no Beach i-,-. 11,,•--, 81 ,1 •"•m.• · · '"' .,.., "" ., 1n tcn·1e1r appt. call :\!rs. uea0All Y PILOT GF:NF:R AL MACHfNEST BE ~~~:r o:o'!:~SSI Ol.'iOn 51!>-2277 brt"'l'en 2 & 492·4·120 riir s1ahll' con1ml'rcial firm. 4 p.01. • ..,..,..,..,.., ......... ;I ·12 Yr.~. in businf'.<;.'!: Christlt L A y I NURSE-cs~.-.,~11~,,~,,~lt-,,~p~ri~,.-,,, ease el ow CAREER F:lectric Corp., 2100 Plact'n· Taxi C•b Du ly. RN, T.VN. Prarlir;il. !in, Co~!a i\1esa. Ref's nccr.<;s. Le sco u I I e OPENING CIRL Frid e)•. alrrt. li!e typ-Call for Appt Nur~rs R r I!. is tr)', 3,)1 for i ii~. stock roorn exp hE'lpful 5461311 llospit11I Rrl, N.R. CRH hu t no! nf'l'<'!!saiv. lnten·iew • &12-!l!l.i.i Rny hr. lnt('n ·11· SALESMAN · "·"'· " r h_v appl. 64~170. A k J ____ -~~-~ SLAVIC KS GIRi •. Friday f/tune nN'drd ... ..,,.',..'°" .. ,.',.',.nn,.•,.• ...... OPENING for F /time Con- JEWELERS for i')'panding design firm. fidrnt r<iail rlrrk 11/r-.:prr •18 Fashion !~land Gd m:tth back1?round JR. SEC'Y in itl'OC'PfY, fm1rn IOl'fi or Xr111)f)rr Jk>;1l'h llf'C'f'~s. Call £H.)-l2lO. P T1n1e. G.xid t)'r11nii:. I i 1 e deli pun·ha.~lnl!.. Sre H:1rold Our rmplo~·tt hrnrl1r~ in· -Sii. rlictar1hont•. 3 Deya per in prrson, Hi-Time Gourinr! elude: prof1! .~h11r1ni::. ~1ock HARBOR MASTER-"''eek. S2.6() per hr. 1-·000~ &· Sp1 ril~. 49j E \7r h option, merl1ca1 l"llllip11111i111-T.o() Boa1 ~Hp.<; for Appt. Con1acl SL , (o,1~ l\lrsa. fW'tn ln!'tuNlnno, 11nrl .,r hrf": r ine fr111gt' bt'nrlil8 I icatary (",,mt ~ilh =co-- FOR APPOINTMENT o[l('n, ~-Cillifornia major Pcri•onrtf'I Oro!. PERSONNEL CALL rn11r1na. ~nd complete ~-AVCO FINANCIAL SECRETARY f\!r. :'11uns»ll--6 ll·l1~ ~1nnr lo Cla!'lsilird Rd no. SERVICES Ne'o!.'Jl(lrt Stach 21".6, D11Uy Pilot. P. 0 . Rox 6~ Nen·por1 C1·n1t'r Dr. CHIU> cart' tW'rrl<'ff-. 2 kl~ 1~"6Cl. Costa 1'fl'!!A, C11i1Jt. Nt>1l'por1 Br1.ch 6-1~..SSOO l\fajr,ir T..and d('Yl•lorin,f'nl J·' !t"'2t1. ~ k I 11.lff'S 4 &. 5 in Ea•lbluff Sc-hi .,. • ..," .. .., .... ..,..,.... !-,qu111 Oppor. F.n1plo\lf'r ro1np11ny SCf' s prrsnnnr DI • I £ 2~ I ~::':'~""'"'"""";.,.·;.,.,. j .'!t'('l"f'fary lo as~is1 JlPr~or1-sl ..• (a.I'~ ·11~ 1.,2. HEAVY DUTY I.ADIE.~. 1f you kni1, hrini:: OP! nianagrr in 11.11 ~rf'.~.<; or COCKTAIL WAITRESSES Apply lo f't>n<in 2:30·3P~!. Z..fon 1hn1 ~·r1. JOLLY OX RESTAURANT ~"Ill' gnmll'nfS 10 ll/I, \\"I' (';U\ f'01plnyn1l'n!. f'O!o;fti(ln 1"1•-MECHANIC ,t>IJ thern for you. Bulky 11ulres 2 yt-11.rs (l<'r)l(lnnrl ,..._. ·'"l'Rtt·~ :n'l' xlnr h(lliday f)('r., li1c !!h & 60 ~-.p m. t.1 P· ~li1Hnn1111 ~ Y"ll fll .Jo11rnr.v- IT11111 <'~(l<'r, ll't!h hf"ll\'V tnrck nr !i<'hl"IOI bu~. Tofi IHI.\· 1-~X!'t'lleot hf>nrfi!s. Apply ilf'111•. lii~-1000 In«, ~1abl(' con1pa11,I' w/ -ll"ln '! hcnC'lit~. Legal Secretary Call L.1rrau1l" Call 644-3251 \Vr.::mL1~-~· ---- PERSONNEi~ 1\G~NCY PRESSMAN :10-!3 \\lt>11~~:~~~-· .~.8. Jmmf'd iate-opening for can- 1nake profrssionals of our G~t pote~lial start $2.25. ~/i;.:;cha.sep;:! Canonel 28. '0"1NITT'E:~r•1 E0.-S~E~:T"'w~/~6-J~-.~w~•l""'ed 2011 Nautilu.!r Ln (811.ycrtsfl st111f Bllfl rt>1a1n thrm h_v call ror appt. 540-9010 67~6;0 lo, Cd M · ba!.'k chaiN, beautiful con-N.B. 642-2471. hiJi:h mmmission.'!, S 10 10 Cal-Pacific Agency ';;;'tr;;;:;-·-c:==:c--- 7 dition. $225. 67~8. -===~-----1 11E'"' offil't's. and m11n11gt'· 'Ir~ u,~., Bi"" .. c .,\1. 'KODAK in11am11 tic movir I •G•a7r~.-g-o~S-a~I.---~~ * HOUSEHOLD items, pie-m·••t ch I · · t 1-"" · .JU '1.x.J •" · 112 turea, dl11ira, dolls, punles, ,. a l~ 1n l'n'.~ ~...., in ..,. .. .., .. ..,..,.., ...... ! camera, J.OOm Jemie, like l e::'.'°"'°'"'"_' ____ _ )1(1\1 a d w·1r t k -wiga, wasbf!r/dryer, odds "-, n 1 ing 0 \!.'Or Tl'<'hnlcians "'""'' 11' price 673--0443 FURNITURE, bah.· furn., nd "7 M i· CM \l.'ith you. 67~2723. ' "J e s. ...., agno 1a, , . fardtning f"quip., pictures. Sat. & Sun. 10:~:30. Al!<!). _t:1u1r:in1rN! income 11•hile you an:-in your Jeam- lng f)l'riod . FOR CONf'IDF.:NTIAL rNTERVIE\V. CALL i\1R. HAJGJ/'f, 962·[1.JZ:l COLLINS & WATTS -REALTORS - RETAIL SALES LADY For Quality Bakery 1\pril_v In P<'rson To: Mr. Anderson SNACK SHOP BAKERY 3444 E . Coast Hwy. Corona de l M ar SALt.:-s I N-;-t 1onall~ vr1·tisrd sporl.~wcar ro1TI- pany & l1•adcr in ils f1rld has Ol)l"'nings in this arrH. .o\ge 18 to 60. F=an1 $20 lo SIO per c1·rning. Ft1ll or part ti111e. Call iltr. Pnrson.'!, 77l-40SO: 5.1~54.'l.i. SAL~:SMAN-PAINT DEPT. Salary drf)('nden! on 1''1'.p. Xln'I lx'n"fi1s & \\\irkth~ eo nd. l\ern1 R l1n11 !larrl11·11rr. 2666 lfar bo r Hh·rt. (':'II. SECR ~:TA 1"<'°1·-,~. ~"~"~"-.,.-,,,-,,-", par! l1n1r for .~n1al! n1ai l orrlrr hou~I' ,(. ad1·rr1i~tt1.1! llJ::i"nc')'. Grn1'r11l o Ir ic e 11·ork. i:nn1e 1y111ng, phonl' rxp hC'!prul. Varied roul ine. Fu!! Hn1e aftrr 1st of yr. Andf'rson A~~ia!('.'!, 1370 !~an. C;\f 5'\0-1:\08. SECRETARY Bookkrrpini: rxpt>r. nrN'.~- 1<ary. ~fui;t be sblr fo nu•et 1he 1111blic·. NOLAN REAL ESTATE 1100 l:lt•ru11·)Tf' Sr. l.AGU/\',\ Ht:ACll S ~:CY· Re t (,-i1toni11r, 11l- trart1\'r offc. typ1n,1:. J\:lu~t bf. A11rAt'!lvr 11· / n I c t' 11•·rsonoh1y. 1\~k for ~Tr. Jfunter. for 11ppt. e 11. I I S.'\3-1177. S~~CRf.TAR\'-Recpt. nerdl"d immru. by N'pl. Bch CPA PRODUCTION TECHNICIANS 8 MM Movie Camera w/cau. zoom lens, auro, pls!l'll a-rip, many xtras. $45. 548-8147. . . BUSJ-INEU , 21mm w Id, l.og1c .t.. Analog l'Xl)t'!nencP anglp f< S t I t 0 • ... auoen.Bor nl'~f'8!1i'il°J'.". ay "' !\\'lng Niko $70. LT Pr8034 . sh1f! ava1lahle · Furniture 810 COLLINS RADIO 19700 JAl\IBOREF. BLVD, QUALITY King 6 p<: BIR set NF.1\'PORT BEACH lsrmolre chest) 111.!IO 6 pc. Equal opportunHy ('mployf'r Qurrn BIR St'I. 8 ff. 80fa, ~~~~~~~~~~! klve seat ( s cu Ip 1 u red THF. l\londl'rful World Of v~lvf"l I e.1..o 7' neug. sofa ~lo1·ies Could BP 'tour. . • and 2 matching chairs. BRIGHT PROMISE Large-m irror. Beaut lampll Nrw f'a('('s Now NH'ded For l\Ia,ior ... TALENT HUNT 11131 461-.'\();)l 11nd coNce &. commodt' tables. La.rge matching lamp. AH mu.~r bf' -'Old. r.1ust see for valu~ Anaheim 772-4210. TRAINEES, male for rook & .~.-:-~N;:::,-,--,---,~ othe.r re~taur'"' v.·ork Th• * or1e ga11 drytr, olive, "' . $65 Tw· ... 7.oo, C~t Hwy at MacArthur. · rn sluu10 couchH w/ bo\sfers & oovP.rs, $2!i ea. 4 maple-C11p1. chn:, S2o f'a. An!ique-"'hi dbl pDS!f'r bed w/ maft &. box, f'"JO. 2 gold provincial chrs, S35 ea. UNIQUE beauty salon !n Cd~1 Parn morr by T"l'ntiOJ: ~paN". 644-7321; 838-4,';7.i l'l'rS. \VAITRESS v.·11.ntf'd. over 21,l;;;£~73~-oo°",-,2~·c;--,,..,-.--,,--- p:ir! time. HOUSE~"UL ol rurnituft'. an- 968-0165 or 962-7212 tique armoire, bed, <:hina & misc. Sat/Sun. 9201 Car- rollr.>wn Dr., Hnllfn Sch 968-1477. J Family Ga.rage Se.le W222 Sun.!rhine Drive-, Hun- Hngton Beach. Sat/Sun. toff Magnoli11/V illage I. PROJECTOR .11el"t'!n, bike, Danish chrs, antiqut' chr, niisr. 240 Heliotrope, CdM, g,. I, SAT, Sun. 9-5; typewrilf!'r, TV k earl, misc. clothes, PIU.!1! 216 36th St. N.B. M1chlnery "' * • * DR. PHILIP WINSOR 2321 22nd Street Newport Beach You II.re the winl'M':r of 2 tickets to the Orange County lnternetlonal Auto Show Ill lhf' ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ARTIST Garage Sa.le It a a 1 f'.11 ma n's samplrs. Sat/SUn 9 lo 5. 26861 La Sirrra Dr., Mis!ion Viejo. !-'umiture, clothing, (office desk, piano !, misc. Sat I Sun, 963 Junipern Dr. C.M. ~2611. Novem!H'r 17th thru 21st GARAGE Salft. B 'd s. Please call M2·5678, ext 314 couches, dressers, n it e hrtwren 9 and 5 pm n, daim &lands & lamps. Sal/SUn your tlcket1. (North County only. 830 Center St, C.M. !oil-free numbrr i1 540-1220) 548-4014. * * * MOVING~~,,----,f~'~tu-1 AIR COMPRESSOR 11a e, urn1 ff', clothes & hou~ehold ilem~. 9 & MiRC "'00 d wo r k i n I Ail1 to 4 PM Sat/Sun, NO\' machinery 5.16-7 140. 13 It. 14, 1833 Highland Dr . Miscellaneous N.B. Ill Waitresses Exper, <'ahinel, 2 110fa.~. f'·l, chairs, SAT 10 -5, Hand braided NB. ,;.tg.·333 dt,~ks, rug~ Ir GARAGE rug, f'arly Amer. lamp, l''inr rurniture *AUCTION* --~~==~--"-·1 S!llP. Ca ll 644-5968 N.B. buniprr pool IAblr, misc. &-Appliancr~ WANTED PLUS!£ y 1 t Sof &. 2164 Rur1I Pl. C~1. Auctio~ Jo'riday, l:OO p.m. 1\frn -\\'onirn .t. ChildI"f'n for . e Vt' a w· d . rrpre~niation in mniicln piC'-IA\"t'Sl'al, also blk 11au.r . Sf'!. GIGANTIC Neighborhood rn y 5 Auction Barn lure \\'Ork, TV rommcrcial Both le~! than 2 mos old. Gari1ge Salt. Fri thru Sun. 3)751.~ Ne\\'por!, Cl\f 64&S686 ll"Ork, /,; fa."hion nlodf'ling-, E\'es. 5J 1--0Z15. 2663.l AvPn ida De It 0 ,. Arhind Tony's Bldir .\1!1 1"1 l"o t'XprrierlCf' nrtt'ssRry. R' llERCULON 90l'a &. Misllion ViPjo. TORONADO Sailboat 16' F.am from f15 lo $135 Pf"r lo\'eseat, round gamf' If'!. GARAGE Sale: Al-'O maple S8'10. 8' Gas or buta~ day. for pr~nal inrer\'i'"' tuftf'd cn1l!he-d vPlvet living hf"rlnn '''· makt offer. 882 heater. R, 11 mororcyclt in llolly'o!.'ood. Call t1l31 rm. ~el, hand c11rved coffee LaRoca, 1-·.v. 847-3072. Se.I helmel, Oothca, childn!n " 461-3461. & t'nd tablf"S. 6i>J..\4l. " Sun. adulr1, all sz. 64l-2471. iJ12 ctiw SCOTCHGUARO 8' 110f11 A-RUMMAGE SALE Nautilu1 Ln. N.8 . Granny. Your , S.'JO matching loveMal. Velvet Jlarbor AN"a Girl'1 Cl ub BRADF'ORD f1ee oraan, dhl \\'l'f"i( 10 Ott. 61h. 5 2546. living rm aet incl. 11blf"l1, Nov. 12-13, 9-5, l 81 S kryboard, $13>. 2 11.dd'g \\'Dr.tAN to cart for polio l11mPl'I. e-lc. Will M"pt1r1 te-, Anaheim, Ci\T. mach, I elec $15 li $.S. lady, l\'o l!moking. lllf' like ne"'· 645-1701. SAT/SUN 642-5748 ~fTig .. ;;"""'...,;;';;'-.'·~=--,,~~~ h~kpng. ~fon. thru Fri. i 2 T\VTN bookcalle head-s love, IOfe , din rm DIAMOND ring1 (J) ~ K. an1-3:JO pm S2SO mo. llB bo<1nl.!r, eo r tah!f'/de.!lk, 1ablf'/ctin. de1ks, drellsets, fine qual; (51 l K ,.1. Rf'J. arr'!l . 962-4997 arl 10 am. 'o!.'hile gold trim pla~tic lop bed fr1me1. appr $6:.0, sell S 3 o o, \\'O~I AN "·an!l'CI r o r .!!IOCk $40. 64:.._3125. f-N--A-l.L'"E~Y,.---b<=h~;nd~-;,160;;,;3 I 8:IB-6936. control & shipp ing <'lt>rk. OAK Bn ~f'l -Chest & mir-Ct.A\' s r . N.B . S.11 9 llm-3 MAPt.Jo; dlnPl!e sl!I $15., i\·lu11t t}'f:e ·" br ablt• t~ rlrive ror drt>s~er, 2 bedfrllmt~. pm. ODDS & ENDS. Mini hlkr 3'l h.p. $75. illen's C'~r. Apply lo Bo:< J.~ .. s. LA-nHf' slnnd, gd cond. $250. ~G~A~R~A~G~E'""S..-1~,-. ~.~,~,,~;,-,--~,-or~ S1:hwinn S ~pd bikr $70. All ((U!lll Ut•11rh. f(lr 11pp I. !"'S-1•1~. . ·r I I t nd "" '"' F'urn, Misc. Items. 405 n x n C'O • 5:i7-Ji6.1. \\'ANTF.D"""ffi:iturt.' li\•t--in PRIVATE PARTY MOVING AlKham:i, HB SRI. only, PAINT $t1pplit>1, Ii: a ;;f;n ~usck;t"Pf'_f· Spanish ~pr11.k-RF:AUTlf'UL t'URNM'URF: \VUR Lll.lER spinpr p!Ano, equip, bahy l'lorh~, mi~c tng Oh:. -19;>--~1'· CALL 839--1 427 A!-,-ER 5 $1 2:1. Crib mallr, \\\•In .!rprg h<.1uMehold. 64~-1493, U!i() \VtVES, pt>rm11nen! part li me P.M. le m11.1tr, srn anHqut desk, F.lrlt>n, Costa l\-1,1a. nnsltlon at O.C. Rat't'l'o'AY .;;;°"-:;.:;:--;::,,.--.,-:-=::::I -... ! ,..-KING 117.f' hf>d romp! $!""-lr\lnk 61 ...... ,,.,1 . FRANK Hamil!•• W , 1,. lood Cl'lrK'HSion, 83!-1103 . "" ;;,-=fc-oc---.,--,;:---, •" • ' Plll.)Tr piano, Kindall $200 Combination washPr/dryer, Color. Ap17r1tlf"d 11 SIM). bt'fl'lre noon, Call atl 6 PM: 847-4711 ""' ott•r -·•r $600. hidf'-a-be-d. m il!! ltJmltun!, " v• 25192 C•bot Rd. [•gun• Hills ' ffA Pu: turnol'f s.o. f'N')'' HUNTINGTON BEAOH UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT didate wi1h at if'RSI 1 _vr aNt LfVE-IN houl!f"kt't'prr, Cart rXJ)t'rierlCt.' whh 1250 i\fnlti- of lOddlcr, Jlte hc:>usckt-ep· lith. S1artintt salary -1500. Ing. N.B. lll"'l. fi7a-2'2911 !-'or Appt. Ca.ntac.1 l!m 17rh SI., It B. U..OYDS NURSER\' Carol ~mith !Jy ~ lOP~l Nm·. 17, 1971 JOB OPENINGS PMi;rnioeJ ~r1mrn1 firm. AUr11ctive-yng . k i1~1 '11.0n)lln. Typing &: i!lll>rlhand Mtrdllnlhl V nrc. 61~4-I. ""' ~------- RANCll 1t:yle, OAk dlnln.r room .!rel w/6 cha.In " a butch. SW . &46-4786. * ~ PTECE WALNUT * S.t/Sun 12-6. S32 S.ntiago 644-2649. Rd .. Cmta Mesa ~&4. l3 !!Quare-yards u s e d ·MAKE olff!r-Toya : f'arpetin11:. aqu11.-blUf', ex. kn!ck-knacka; M a c b i n e 1 ""'=""~·~$3)-c.. ·~'-'-'--""...,.~· ---toob, ,tc. 490 Co1ta Mesa FREB! \V11rer ~ (S yr. l\!!!'!'!'~~"'l'-"'! ... "" I ~~~""'"'"""'""'""""'"'' Num-1")' Mll\'er)' min AVCO FINANCIAL. COLI.ATIN"G &-P • c 11 1 n r · HELPlflrc1mper factory. Nunl'ry s-i11'5man ,1-ich at SERVICES ll-1lml!n I~ work In ahipplnit: \\'~" ) k. I ,,..._,11• r ltlll: equ pnit-n1 t x• le11't I Yr ar l"Xp. fi2(l Ne"·Pl'.lrt Crntcr Pr df!pt . Min "'11#<!. Owl! rnn,., fK'r. Apply ;\laj0f'\111y 869 "1• l.etwbTii j)f' 1n.~111Jler 11irh 111 ~·.n. &J•l·~'tOl'l Call l\.tri Keana M&-7300 JS!h Sr, C.~!. :.i•o pbunf' e1U.~ lr11!:t 1 yr8r f'):P Equal Oppor, Emplo.r••r Ext M. 11l .. r1.~f'. ~1innk)r r 1\T11n "'ith 11t l('ll~f t i •.-.~_,,_..~_,....,..,,.. __ "' COOK, n ;MALt; + fiOSTF.S.<:-ES &--;:AJttts~r.\ >•'!Ir r~p ~n T"C'iidl'n!llll rHO}'ESSJONAL p h u n 1• RET1RD1F.NT HOTEL IJ\'f' f'flV'rlllinm~nt ,{: dlln-~11r111kler, J!"llll'i !Or -0111111 Point, ~il ll 962-Mll cln1t f~r 18 and ri\'Pr. Cll1l l'11ll tor 11ppl. Mfi....7·141 r~rn1l"nte, ('11p1~!rnno 11r1'' --_ \\ork In V<')ltr O\\n l1'ln1• COOK I Hou I rkffpt"r, 2 ~8-92113 or apply "t Tht f11,.r1>1t 1lr11w In lhe \\1t'JI Af-st dPal · In Rrt'll. Phl'lnr adul!J, ~'It day !''fr-k, Top I '1fK'Y,..l!, J!tth & Placen111, . . 11 Ll11 lly Piiot Cl11&.!rll1Pti 1133-lifij bt.IY>ttn 9:00 •.m. I a&tary. Rt.f.a. ftTl-7877 Ott Ad. 6·12--5873 llnd 119Qfl-_,,_ ~~~~--- Sf.CRETAR\'-Gen'I Of l l re 11ork, lyplnl(. ~/II . ~11it-Co. In \\·csrn1tnslcT. C 11 I I k'l!l}-S.i2!1 for nr1 llflP'- Sl-:RVlCE 8t11!lon Salr!. fulf 111nr. :-.1us1 hf' nra.1 It dr- /ll'r1diih1,,_ Apply 2.\90 N'"" iwirt Dll·rl., C. :-.t. -----"hHVICF. S!11 . Attcnd11nt. f'i..pl'r prtll!. Top Pll)-F111l &. p/timt ll\'ltll. Apply, Shell. 17th & trv1nt, N.B. St. C;\t 548-9832. a:uar.J w I purcl\llP' of any GA RAGE SAU: fn1me .\ liner. 6-tfr.2296. 1&3 f.111.rnori11, CoJ1111 Me•11 3 Tool boxe1 for pl<:kup, t Sfllurday 9AM ha.!!• port. ell'C ora1n /, FOR s11.lr 11.ntique: Ens:li•h APT. furnltur;-& "'"' bahy ** DISHES. toys, boolu, 1n1p. S4.'l-RllS: Ml &-2J7.2. C:r11f)(Hn!hrr Cloc:k. n1nnlng, -furniture. C11ll ~7 ... 144' or mltr. 1621 Baker SI., Hl-f"l 1fll'lllier.!r, 2 Jton.wn trl- 260 Victoria, Cos!l!. 1\lto,.:11.. &lG-.3491. Cos111 Meo.1 Fri .tr &t 10-.1 eue. 9' 10la, Offtt, Nf!:\V Orlc11.n& A" t i q u t'"1 °~o"v"<"N'°G-. -;,.,,,=,..,.--;,,~,,~I-.,,, 1 'si'°'tA~Go-,~.~,~""'-=-·o~-~.-.,,-u~t.-A~ll --;~-'f>l~·~;,.:;351~·~· =~--I Rr1T11'll'f', Jri:, Pill11lll rond. turnllurt',, ~•~ho1<1 Hema. aize:t k l'Olor~. llUI. •YA.II. Exercycle $21S S.\'iO. &l.w968 N,B. All In xlnt eond. Ml-1l2'1 . Sun nr '"''· &42-7101 . e 67~ e Dinina Room Se1 Antiques IOO $100 968-3"91 -...-...-----·1 ANTlQU!-: oraan, 98 yn old, DINING IRbll!, Ivory & irold, $1.500. Elcccl.ll'nt con d. 11/6 Vlrtvr ch11.ir1, lik~ nt'ol.'. 49-1·l(!l:U artcr 4 p111. S7S. 540-.\723. : .. f -., . ' , . " . OAILV PILOT 39 • l.___-. _ __,J[§J '--I _"""'-___,J~ [..___,,..,,_Y'"__,J[il ~~ J~' -_r"'"-'""-"'"~J[ij I ''"'"'"'' J§} I AutotfotS.• J§JI Auto•lots.r. J§J .__I .__ ... _ .... _,!§) 3 LlnH, ,Tl.,... $2.00 '·------.. ~~~~~~~~11.;;~;;;;;j·~;.,:;;;~;;;;~~~;;-~--~;;~~~~~~~~~l --M1ac•llineoui 111 M_utic1l ln1trvm1nt_1 m_ IGentral toO ~am,..o, S.Je/"ti:tt-920 Autot, Imported 970 Autot, 'Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autot, Imported f70 D-A-N-ISl_l_T_••_k_,_l_ug_e_p_I_"_•_'; sp?~~."·~uuA:'Y~!~. ~~;; k~en; !~~:f:d101~1~~ CAPTAIN NEW OPEN ROAOlf - -Dt'llk $100, --Cock1aU--lbLSlOO, -SSTT9 545=0908 atfriil:iolt. "Bilx t r a f n e d . Unlimited_ lice~ any argsa fX ' Rttlining chatr S~. 2 end --~~-----MZ..9006 ton1. 30 Years experience CamJ)f!r. (:r:.6141, Stove, ~ nnounc1ns !able $35. each, or all tor CANTELLO A~rdion, 120 · sail & power. Professional trigerator, side dinettt, ln $250. Odd chair, 2 cu5.hiorui baa1, xlnt cond. SlOO. CUTE short hlllrt'd puppy. sport fishing guide; Mexican beautiful olive gr~n to $5. 2 Holly1~:ood b t>. d' 1 ~~=~·~"'~ .. ~™~'~*~-~ MalP, 3 mo'• old. \•iUJ be a & Central. America & Paci!· match a 1969 Ford f.2,j() _ w/frames, good L'Ond. $40. ~1ARTIN ~18 Guitar Nrw in small dog. Good y.•/klds. ic CoaJ:t waters • Jnstruc-Campt" Special (7~l. each. 3 chest o! drawers 'hard caR, S275. Firm &f.l}..()1)18. tion in boat ha.iidllnr, Mil· Automatic. a.ir, radio, heat· · $7.SO to s;.o. Noritake china 5-15-5-112 aft • P:.01. Lo v A BL E 1 o m 0 s. n1a.ns.hip, DR Ir: celestial Pr, heavy duty equipml"nt. A --• $1~. 8 crystal champagne F_E ___ N_D_E_R_J-,-1-.-.,.-.-.-..,-,-,~10-,·.1 orangt/Y.•hife mall' kitty. navigation. PIO\ UP A: real steal .st ' ' sr;taiies $10. IBM model B XI n t, w I case $ 2 ~ 0. 11ltered , shot&, box trained. DELIVERY ANYWHERE: $3996 typewrlttr $150. &i~76SO. AMP • beefed -up Band-&i4'-0139. captl_in avall&ble far o.!X· Tht truck fMOple from m •• ,,, -r r verb head, 80 CUTE . _, I I & tended cruilln1. Extefl$.lve G I ... , I BANKRUPTCY "" muco:u pupp es, on; U administrativ• experience. enera -w ors 1972 IT!OJYIQIT!AI 11>·atts Rll.1S. cu11om t."ricl. lihorthair, 11>•ill be sma &IS..2977. MIJ(E McCARTHY LIQUIDATION SALE v.·/~ Allee. Lansing 12" 41T dog11, lO good home1 .1~=~-~-~---1 U S DI I musical in~r. spkrs. $530. ~5---0246. USED noat Show & Swap By order of .• . •1r ct f\.IH't, boatin& accessories, GMC Crurt; Equipment, Stack, Tom at.&-7888. FREE 2 M•I• "·rm•o =~---~-~~-I .. : ....., recreational ~uip v.·elcome. Machinery & fixtutta of Col· COPY ol a Str.1.di\•11rius shorlhAlr pointers. No Dec. 3, •. 5 • Across c.oast lrge Office Equipment & Violin, 175 o, ~st oiler. a•• 1336/531 2450 papers. H¥>'Y from Reube'l'l E. ~e. .,,.... • Supply. Call 833-3907. • 645--0654 • Cor~r Beach & McFadden, All Items Discounted N.B. For ipace reservation. \Vntminster November ll, 12_ 13 & 14 Office Furniture/ e LET'S avoid the pound '. 714: 645-5757. Opens at 9,m __ E_q~u-;p~·------•-24_ 1 Healthy KITTENS frt'e ro B~R-IS'l'O=-N~24-c-,.-,,-m-g_d_oo-p. NEW 1971 8 FT. THEY'RE HERE!! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON ALL 2300 Harbor Bll'd C::i.1. '71 ADLER Port. Elec. you. 968--9037 O!JlY 3 mo. old .• Equipped lo typewriter. Brand new. FOUR cute killens, l female , S8nl nf'\\', must srll $7200. Perfect Student Christmas n1ixed colors, 1i Siamese. Len llullon 5-18-7765 or Cab O\IPr campl'r !or Chevy or Ford 1ruck, Heavy Duty Construction, $750 or bes! offer. Will consider tr11de. 6-46-2698 or 5.17-4:)40 '67 V\V Camper, mechanic owned, superb cond. $20j(I, firm! 641'-4519. 1972 TOYOTAS!! SOAT YARD INVENTORY gift. Paid .J2.40. Asking S210. 644-2662 642--0248. •ALL MODELS •·ALL COLORS AND TOOL SALE ! ? Fasteners. Jiltings, brass, cnpper, stainless, hose, elec- trical etc. 1626 Placenua, Costa. li-lesa, t9 th r u 4i Sarurday, Noven1ber 13th. Pri. Pty. 637-8.)45. 1970 IBM Exee. Typev.·ritcr, Used 3 n1o's. S550. 17' HVY Ur ility Boat, 6 C)'I l[B Chrysler. Needs work. No [ Ptti •nd Suppliet ""' 1rlr. SJj(I. 645-U.20 alt 7 pm. CLEARANCE PRICES &14·8066 904 :0.1ETAL file, 4 dra11>·er, rnll ou1, 26x15xa2"', $50. IWr-1945. Pianos/Organs 826 l-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 Boats/Merfne I Equip. 1501.-===== Pets, General '67 VW Camper, r'blt eng. Tf'n1, il!'ren !!!pt, pop top, DUTCJ{ BUNN IES. black & BOAT YARD INVENTORY extn. 642-n42. STEREO. 1972 Garrard, has · II h .. o =•2 k 915 full stereo changer, air * SALE SALE * whilt*, eac · .....,.......,,, as AND TOOL SALE ! ! Cycles, Bi)fes. for Jean. F'Astenera, fillings, br11s1, Scootors su a p' nslon speaker!, PIANOS"" ORGANS M · · .f\.1ATCHED pair of Durch copper. stainJe11;s. hose, rlcc· 1----------A1 /.F.l\f sterf() rad Io Steinway, Ka1l'ai, Hammond, rahbil~ 11nd hutch ~7.50 for lrical e!c, 1626 Placentia, -..-w/FET + tape deck, still Allen, Baldwin, etc. From • '"'"" brand ney.·, y.•as If' ft S29.i All! 642-4764 · ~ts~~a~.es~~v!~~ ~3~h.4 l HONDA uneb1imed on layaway. Sold MOn &: Fri eve~ 'til 9 Cats 852 for $320, pay l"llf balance (l[ !'unday 12-5 -(;;;J;c:E()U5\;;;;;;-:'"'-1~~:!"'~"'!'~~!!!!!!!!""! • ON ALL REMAINING 1971 TOYOTAS / Sll5 or 1ake over sn1all FIELD'S PIANO CO. GORGEOUS Whir" MUST sell 1970 Evinrude 60 ''fRla\I AHO ..... Payments. Collection Dept. 1833 Ney,•porl Blvrl. Hln1alayan kitten, $2j, . 'VLll U\ HP, aillll')SI nf'w $750. 16' 714/S93-mltl. Costa i\1esa 714/645-32j() • • 546-7308 • * ,_ NAal ....,., ., 00..t & !rail er S275. &16-9256. Beeuty Shop Equipment ORGAN SALE DARLING PART PERSIAN c. ~~-~-'---'--~-Cash for your Honda 111 T\VO Stalion florentine Conn Organ Annual }"all KITIENS. SJ to &o od 67·100 hp Johnson. 6 hr~ on 537-6824 e 893-7556 COSTA MESA 540.9468 FIAT e Compl•te stock ot §BSD · n1• s.. "FRIEDLANDER" Cl o. 000 home5• 642-4818_ 1·eb!t f'ng .. 2 gas ~lanks & dressing bar w/2 lge nii r-!'arance . .-ve up to Sl contrnls ss.;o. 540-3763. eTHE BIKE SHACKe rors 38x48 w /matching on selected console !loor 4 ~--~----~~ llJ.SPD BICYCLES d H d. Dogs 85 Boats, Power 906 desk. 2 Rnd based hydraulic em~. uge isrounts on ----------PARTS e ACCESSORIES chAirs, 2 a ir condi!ionPd all models. OLD English Shee p Dog,1 --:0"W'.".".'Nc:E°'R,,--A-B~O-,A°'R"D~ EXPERT REPAIRS dryers & chairs. one COAST MUSIC AKC. female, 2 yrs. Kind, .A.t...&..SUN-10-4--ON-ALL-MAKES ·i :~~~~~~~~~i!~~'.:::====~~~~~§~~~=~~~~~~~~=:!~l----;1 l-----1JleJevl'.ide:fLlbArnpQo_bawL Cos : r.t m..T...&.-HARBO>R.--t-..ntle:-nev~~ha1"n-at Dana Point Marina slip Tires & Tubes _ All Sizes Trucks 962 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 with ferring It chAir, 2 ta esa * 642·2851 pion stock. 11'.lomarr. _Shep-A-13, to show ynu !hi; fine 1093 C &AKER, CM J!m] --:-::-:-c=-:.,,,--==-Prestige Sports C•rs Rparaters. S4SO. Beauty WOULD YOU tonl , S·100. San Diego 27' Concord 1'·/B, TIS Nl!'ar rauvie1v • 546-4130 "Tramportation . '72 GMC % TON "68 Lamborghini 2+2 • '70 !Upplies extr.a. 9m--0726. BELi EVE 469--00!M aftl'r 4 pm . fbrgls Sportfisher. I ou·nt>r: ir~R~l~U>rP~Hl~650r~·~r~, :::11~9~6~6~.J ~mmm;;;;;;;;;;; 240-Z !2) e '68 & '69 Porsche .AUCTION • FREE ORGAN LESSONS ~ABRA DOR RETRIEVERS ,;hows pride of 0Y.·ner~h1p. •IM:'autifut cond . Extended CAi\1PER ~special, 350 V-8, 912, air e Peugeot 404 class· as long as you like! 'No reg. AKC champion bloodlines, Every conceivable x!ra ro furkl!:, eng perfl!'c!, no leaks. Auto Service, Parts 949 automatic, radio, heater, ic convertible. istration. No obligation. Just 10 \\'ka old. Blacks & please the fisherman, Phone gaui::e!I. po11>'er disc. brakes, Authonzed :i.raz Dealer HOUSE Conw. hlonda.ys 7:30 pm yPIJOY.'S, sbot.s, 4~-)132 alt 6 e\'Ps, &:m.-0107. 011>'ned &. lo_vingly cared f~r GUARANTEED auxiliary rear springs, wide jl! 523-7250 COAST MUSIC pn1. 28' Uniflite 1960, S6500 or ~;4--0";~6r.han1c. Asking $67.>. V USED TIRES V h11se tires, buy no1v before 1--------- lhC' pnrr freczp is taken otf. ALFA ROMEO Auctions every Fri, 7 pm 642-2851 "°'Eli\.1ARANER Pups, AKC trade for trailer boat + CYCLE TRAILER YOUR CHOICE $4-$6·$8 Stock No 5026M. '67 Alfa Romeo, Spyder, 1J7JO IUCH ILYD. &autJlul gray metaU1c with tHwy. 39) ' F'urn. Appl i. Antiques LO\\'REY Pianos & Organ.11; n',l!is. Over 100 champ. ca~h. <M•rirr, 8·16-1430. Almost ne\\', haul 6 bikes 20 • * • Largf' ~r!ecrion to The tr uck people from ~~~1!· ;~::~ri~~;~,-Yamaha Piano & Oriran~: & p e rl i ~re e ff . XI n ' t SKI -FISH -ENTERTAIN It. long 8 ft \\tide phone choose from!!~ General Motors! ~19_2241 • 547_n11 Steiny.·ay Pi11noi1. Bf'sl buys Y.a.!rhdogs. 5'W}-~. 20' Glastron 160 HP t/O 540.5630 ask for Bill Harold 1'~rt'StOnf' S1ore, 47j E. $3395 in nl!'Y.' & u~E'd. Schmidt ~10VING! Must"~f~l ch11n1p. 11'/lrailer $~500. 644-2693 5.12-44'1.l af!er S pni. ldh St .. C.M. 646-24•1"1 S2RO. BUYS 3 ,Pr. ,w"'k dini.; f\.fusic Co., Est. 1914, 1907 N. sired collie pups. Sbots. 22' Skiff, $1500. Fully equip. 1970 HONDA •.~. CL Corvair p11rts, engine MIKE MCCARTHY ring s e I , { ntl'I" oc ing l, .f\.1ain, San la Ana . <'n s•· -~· d · w h ite/golcl. Engagf'ment """'=~===~~-~ 11•ormed, papers . ..,..c! .,,), Radio/tel. new can v a 5 . Xlnr Cond. $4"15. an mtM:. parts. ring is lifrany itylr y.·ii h 1t BABY GRANDE Brooks Pyn1nts. available. 642-4424. Good cond. Inbrd. 646-.'>4i6. CALL 646-4629 • 545--0906 • GMC c11ral diamcnd. Call 546-5710 ~~;;73~autitul !nne. S475. BASSET PUPS, AKC Reg 1 . SELL or partnrr "70 Formula 'iO YAMAHA LOOK! 5 Brand new 560 13' 1.11 g p.m, \\'kday11/all day T"'o m11les onr femae. 23', xtn't cond. Mr. J oyce XLNT CONDITION lire• for Datsun and 894-1336/531 -2450 "'kt-nds . Priv11IP Party, Sporting Goods 830 \\'ill hold 'Iii Christmas v.ith 494-7184. • "'°ZIS2 e Toyota's $50. • 64;;...J7j7 C 0 • 1----------.H..-orner D<'ach &. t.:lcfadden, 2 BLUE Silver Fox !ails, 1' SKI Clothing, Lad ies s12e 12, Bd;:~~-t:yTh-::.· Poodles, 8 Boats, Sail 909 '71 HONDA 350 CB \Vesrminster long, CCMo;t $500. Sac. S200. or pants, parkas & elc. Lang Wind Screen Helmet CLEAN 1952 Chevy r icku p. make oller. 2 eve. goy.•ns Flo boois size 9, 11.lJ pr!ced ~·kit old. Exc~p! inteJligent SIOOO takes 23' M 11 ya $550 * 67~27~5 Auta5 forSN Good l?ngine, rad i a 1 0 r, cos! over SlOO.' 1 wht to sell. 6/:i-269'2 arrcr 6 PM & lovable S50. 96i..2527. M.0.R.C . .sip. Sails, 5\1 HP brakes. tires & batte'"". cusro1n made removable 893-7566 e 537-6324 hardtop & 11. soft top. drives ----------1 ab!IOlutrly great \\'UT 933. JAGUAR S\895 Santa A n a Toyota ----------1 >t0-r;12. m w"' warne" BAUER BUICK Santa Ana. The Harbor Areas AUSTIN AMERICA 1969 AUSTIN America. good cond., auto. AM radio, 25 f\.1PG. Pvt. pty. S900. Eves: 641-7469. Only Authorized JAGUAR DEALER Always has an excellent se- l~tion of both New &: !Jsed Jaguars. ''Specializing in Quality'' BAUER J h A ho G ll SCH\\'!NN boy's Stin&ray, S •,J \\"/beadi;, 1 orange. (only SELL or lradr 21_, lb. rloy.·n MINI Schnauzer, 1 male &: 1 ° nson, nc Mi, A ey, d $40 XI nd I•••••••••• $2i:i. ~~71ti8. BMW worn once) sz. 12 S25 f'a . female, 7 Y.·k~ old. Salt 'n Head &. compass. Nf'etl& s~ ' · nt co · 950 I==-~-~~~~~ Trailways Mummy bag fo r · k 1 644-{;495 Genera) FOR salr or trade 19j() rord 1 _,---..,-co-....,,--- 968-729G. lull we1i1uit ol comparable _P~•~P~"'~'~·~""='-P_1Y_._,_,,_._54_60_~·1 ~._'""28r"~'Or ·Moored ocally.1 -~.-.~.,~0-H~o=N=D~A~T=~~-1----------· I Pick Up truck & camper AutomoUv• E.xcelle11ce GIRi 'S S · b"k A n 1·1 83"187 ---' ""' '~' cc VW Cam-,, --"'· ,,,;,, • . t1ngray 1 e. n-""u111 Y ,.. 3. 2 POODLES, 11pr1co1, m&C , , . T k .. ~ ..... ~ sht:'t!. 962~l2j liqut-oak M?cretary dPsk. II' ,,,h. 6 ll.1onths old . 2li T-81rd, prnf bu i It 11 e over pa ymrnts wnrk; Honda dirt bike; 1950 L. C. Smith dbl harrf!I 12 •• " lb * * "'° 0000 * * Head ""shor!ski~." Child'~ shotgun. Good oond. SI.is. Purebred no AKC 962-738.l rgls/pl)'\\'oocl, sips 4 , """"""""""' Chevy P /U. 545-4414. Plf'r!ric org11n. 494-1237 968-796.1. FAV.'N ~xer puppiE':';. AKC ,h.'.,'hd . .6.hp,o,,.s,. ~~ cocSJklOOflit ~ uh,.dl "",speed bicycles, 26 Antiques/Classics 953 Pvf's. " .. .,y, inc . a ies k men. Ca J 11 ~:-:--.,--,-:--.,--:7"C' POOL TABLES \Varehouse Store, Restaurant, Champ Sired .f\.1/1'. 557-492j 642-4.i9.1. . 646-7R!IO. 1937 Ford 60 2-dr sedan. Orii;: SlllP. Freight damai;ier1 S49 Bar 832 or ~6-2695· FAi110US 26' Swe..di~h T\VO "69 KAWASAKf 90 dirt mlnl cnnd., Be.111 ofr over. M S199. Ne11>" sla.te rarlory NCR Cash Re~islf'r, 11 * PUG PUP * "Folkboat" rec-en! comp! hikes. Rood cond. $150 each. $1700. 540-4472 af1 Spm. , 119· 1 13 9 S BlaC"k Miile overhaul io•I. ,,,; •• , ,---' 548-JS.12 cr11!ru. · .> 0 • totals. Good rond $.350. ""o ~""-... '"" "'~' · Dune Buggies 956 63" 002, ;-!<6' $75 * * """"""~".) s11ils. 1\lust ''"'ifice! $3100. ,,.....,,, · · · ~,,.... · * • 962-$959 * * '" '70 Honda .150, like new, 1'EAC Tape Deck, Na1'1 TV, Radio, Hifi, GOLDEN RETR IEVERS. f'. 64.'t-1446. 1800 mi. S500. '68 i11eyers ti.fal\/I, 1600 en,i .. P · I AKC. Top show & F1rl. INTERNATIONAL 14 "' 67.'.l-3618 * chrome "'heel~. r~ovable 11 n o s o n i c 11!f'rt'(I w Stereo 136 spf'akf'rit & 6 hllnd radio, l:o=::o--o---·----;,;. champ line. $125. 675-6915. Fast & Brauli[ul. Just rom-SEARS S d lJ . h . top "Camp :O.lorlu!e" ln- 14 STER 0 PEKE · A PO 0 puppies, pi"l•ly -fro. ~1-. $6.~. •PY er inc g_trls eluded, S995. 968-31H9 N1kkon1al . camera. E; G11rrard system, -·-·~ •• • .,.., Stingray Aqu.a m11rine,1---------,,.,, C6~7'-:..::."~''-'=~--~-7 I lrfl on lay-11-"·ay, 100 "'all~. perfrr1 family pf't~, 5 wks. ti?S-3334. spcrdomnf'r S2fl. 644-1475. Trucks 962 15' TERRY Trailf'r, s!rcps 5, Ai\.'l/FM stereo. II tr11ck, -'r;~·=·~'~3&--00'M~~·~·----,,-7'·11969 Hobie Cat. Trailer & •n Yamaha 17.S Enduro. Gd•---------- $400 v.·/ay.•ning. \\lurlill!rr phono, sold for $47S.2:i. Pay HUSKY /LAB pup s, 6 "·ks, space 'ti! January. $850. or cond. wa rr. gd. ,\1ini mike • Spinet piano SJ:,0. Big olf sm balanrP of $197 ·or 5m l!'.reat family pels. SS. offE'T. 67.'.l-7882. $3.'>. 642-l9Gl. IH. Gibson flmp s;;o. 54µ;,j~. pymnts ol S6.28. U.S.A. 642-9799. RHODES 11 SLOOP '69 0 I Srrreo Equ ip \Vflrehousf', ss11 250, X nt cond, 21"' MOVING out of stall!', must 179 E 17 S DOXIE puppies, 8 Y.'ks, red. Stroni< Racing Class aluminum fronf whee I , International Harvester · .. !h r. C.M. AKC, minialurP, shots. Stud $6 ~ 714 • -5€'11. stereo. hahy Llf'mS,, 64~2442. . .... ,..,. .;,.i.,...,'""" 846--0146 RECRE;ATION CENTER houM"hold 11:ood~. 962-4110. LL n ·"'=N~'"~· "&10-=',.'111=· -;;== LIDO 14 No. 398 Yl'/trlr, 2 ·n o .• , .. ,,. "'°'"' n,., 600 m•. 21 " ROY CARVER, Inc. SERVISOFT •.. ,, •. ,,,, -K A 19 ZENITHS on· SRle ~ ,,.. " ~ '-'--" ,,.,... COLLIE Chri~lmas Puppies, sets of Aails, racing eqprl . front end. UnG~r WAIT •• $700 2925 llarbor Blvd. 111:!W 11t Orange County's ho T · I bl SI ·1 " rlirinner. xlnt cond, $190. IArgest Zenith Oeler. 19., AKC. s ts. r1-co or, sa e · orage 11v111 . $850 ...... 8-4170. cash or bf'st olfrr. 548-006l Costa Mesa 546-4444 Auto Leasing 964 OUR volunie lea~e dC'part· ment offeri1 all popular American k Import makes at competitive rares. ~r our le11u experts tailor YOUR lease lo YOUR nce<ls. "It's the service that makes the dillerrnre." THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD, COSTA ~1ESA 642-0010 Autos Wanted 961 WE PAY TOP CASH for wed can & truclca, jUJt call u1 fur free estimstes. GROTH CHEVROLU li75-~25. Chromacolor Model C4030, & wht. 536-2lSj . 14' Hobie Cat y.•/tniler, 2i0 BULTACO, bes! offer, M '50 CHEVY Custm Drapery Sale S195. Free color antenna. in-DACHSHUND PUPPIES good rondition, SSOO. Cllll is. Contact af1er 6 pm Alk for Sales Mana&er Drapery "·orkroom l'losing i;tallrd \\'/all cons o 1 e AKC :0.11NJ~11JRE 644-0ZIO. 646-6268. ti. TON p U 13211 Beach Blvd. our 5000 yds or matf'rials 11! pt1r1·hasf's. No doy.•n re-R9.'.l-71~2 · c=A7L~34~Fu~,-,-,-,-,.~.-,-ru-,,-,_ ,H~o=N=D~A~,~;o~ca=-,~1,-1-,-00~d. Y.2 , , Hunt1na-ton Beach 'i prief'. Fahric!I from 7X quir"d O.A.C. Ask al>out COCKER SPANIELS Private P11rty. U7.fi087 KJ 9-3331 Ser to appreciate. $4j(J, yd. Bring mra~u~m,nts & t'Ash & carry prices. ABC Puppies. Al\"C cha.(llpion 645-35R4 675-322.t. Excellent running cond. you WE DESPERATELY MVP . .'.!8-'l.1 Birrh St.. N.8. Co!or TV, 9021 Arlanta. sirrd, black femalrit. 5'16-137~ 1970. 21. I~lander. xlnr cond. can't turn H do11>'Jl 111 S38-i. NEED 54&-1431. Adj ioD.C. Airf)(lrf. llunlin~1on Brach, 968·3l29. 1968 .'.l.'j() A7SS K&\\'858ki S400 646-2698 l)r 5.'17-4:)40 ./ SHELTIES, il1any extr11 s. S\lp 11t Dana or best offer. Xlnt cond. Clean used CAN ENLARGF.R $25 .. B<'llyl;lni1rcl BEAUTJ~'UL ~f11gna\'OX c;on. AKC, Pt. 496-9330: 548-1489 642-6lOS. '64 FORD YJ JON FANTASTIC PRICES S.10 .• no din1o:s. 492·7127 After llflle, AM /f'M s!crffi. p!l(lno Sable & ~·ht. s:i7-7$69 B SI' D I Paid for your car, paid for 4. 11.~k for Gcralcl. k rape l"ttfln:ler. Origin;illy * .~. BERNARD P"-, oats, 1ps/ ocks 9 0 '68 Honda, xlnl cond. 4«XI _ DOI . • ho ·~• .. ,.~ mi. v.'/new carbs I· ~11tte ...... Pickup. Long bed. 176018.J) ,,. VER\' clean m111!rf'!s x $700. "'ill srll lor S27j. Xlnt AKC. $~ & UP. Terms. NEARLY new cemPnl deck 'J $695 DEAN LEWIS springs in good cond. Dbl Cond. 673-7.192. 12131 352-3624 •lin float 21 .. 33, I,.,, ~31 5. 96i-7o~2 11sk for Tim_._ -HIGHLAND MOTORS I SJ• 0'6 ~'° ,. " TOYOTA e VOLVO alz' w/ ram. ·•· ""' ·-·· .f\.1UST sell TrcArk Nikko PET health lood. lOO'ir fN?sh ~f'~rwarer. Call Crnlt &: "11 BONNEVn..tE Triumph 2145 Harbor Blvd 1946 l{ARBOR BLVD. GIRL'S bikl? $35, Singh~ hed 11mp &: Pionttr turntable. nieal, 20c per lb. Delivered Nev11Je, 675-8222. 650 CC. mint condilion, Costa ~fe!ill 64"s.Mo4 C.OSt& Mesa 64£.931)3 $20 .. Bre11klasl ~et, 6 chrs .fl.lust~" lo apprec. Contact lo your home. s.;7-62.-il. PRIVATE ~l mooring. $1300., 492-4894. '96 CHEVY ~ Pick Up. S35. 64>-2317. aftl!'r 6pm. 646-6268. r 1 . 11 75 1 M. 1• M b'I H 935 ANNIVERSARY •50 AKC Afghan Hound puppies, ':°" t1e. . :> ~", 1n mum o 1 • omes Slet"'per/cAmf)f'r, • he 11. v y AUTOS WANTED HATCH Cover wile.gs, GRUNDIG Console'. AM-FM Show qualily, Males & 20, maximum 2:>. 673-7506. 24, y.•ide Goldel'I Wrsl 2 BR, tires, rowing hitch. tr!r brk, Top dollar for clean used blasted SlS. record-playe.r. S. W. B<!aut. Females. Call 557--0585. 311' BOAT SJip, Villa Marina, 2BA. cu 5 1 0 m _ b I r , Nr 4 ~pd trans, spa'! tank!. cen. See Andy Brown. & ROY CARVER, Inc. 2925 Harbor Blvd. Cl)sta Mesa 546-«« CORTINA ---,-:-::-----'68 Cortina GT, See and lest drive this gem today. l\VQ5.'.l09J $695 WardS.Lee American Moroni n 547°5826 1234 S. 1Vlain St. s.&nra Ana DATSUN 'io 240-=,=z,- Local c11r fully equipped. Like new! Under 17,000 miles. dlr. Will take lt'ade or finance pvt pty. C424Bl.O) Call 119+-6811 aft 1 pm 546-8736 . '67 DATSUN PICKUP Strong heart! 4 gpd, dlr. Lo- cal pickup (TYT140). Take small down. Call aft 10 Am 546-8736 or 494·6811. NEW "1'2 PICKUP 4 "spd. dlr. dlx. Bumpeor. Ra· d10. Mirrors. PL721120.-,.akc small dl>'vn or trade. 494·6811 aftr JO 546-87.'.!6. Buick-Opel~Jaguar 234 E. 1 Tth St.. Costa. ~1esa 548-n6.5 '67 XKE ROADSTER 4 spd. d/r. \\.'ire wheels. mint condition, AJ\f/F~f radial tires. Sacriliee? Take small doY.'n. (UJC505l 546-8736 or 494-681.1. 4.2 JAGUAR Sedan. 1966, Y.ith air-cond .• white w/tan lthr. inter. I-Owner. A Beauty! Blue Book S2.S&S. 642-8235. 1970 JAG. 13,00'.> ml V'rt Clean! Air J cond., Am -Fm, wire wttla. 714 : ~195 or 524-8221. '61 Jaauar 3.8 f\.1ar II Very Clean. $1095 5J6.®3 "66 Jag . .-i.2 sed, • dr all xtras w/reclinlng seats &. ltht uphol. Lo ml. $2100 ~7. JENSEN JENSEf'I .A.U'IRORIZED SALES t. SERVICE KARMANN GHIA 1970 VW Karmann Ghia. auto, stick shlft. radio. Xlnt best ofrer. ContAct C.V. Zenarosa. 8 33 -2 500 or 646-9152. * 5-4S-8l 47 * cabinet $'75. 549--0886. tRISlf Seller. female, 10 &!boa. All services ava.il. Dis neyland. Will consider Sl350. Owner S45.-00j3 eves. THEODORE Miscellaneous • * Sony N'C'f'1vrr , KLH mo·~ old, AKC rt'gis., $Sa. $85/mo. 547.92n. offl'r. 5."I0-1655 or Fred ar 'j3 F'ORD PU w/camper ROBINS FORD Wanted 820 lipl"eken: & 111Pf' deck & 642-8129 aft 7:30rm. SLI PS for power bo11t5 13' to 67>-2101. shell I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;; I TEAC hipe dPck. 644--0.l:i7. 38'. Bayi1ide Village 300 E. 'M~0-1-0-,~H~o-m-,-5---~9= .. ,. sl"IJ or !r<irle 2060 ltARBOR BLVD. '66 DATSUN Pickup, nu 6 ply '69 KARMANN G h 1 a. \\'/W's, good cond. $&75. auto/convt. Jtims, y,1ood Call after 4 pm. 646.-2566. inter, m1t1. Sac. $1600. •97-lll6. 3 LlnH, 2 T lmo1, $2.00 WANTED * SHOPSMTTl! I! SA/1.10\'ED pups, 9 wks, -* ;.,.10-6761 * COSTA i\IESA 642-0010 RCA TV I S1rrT'O ron."<>le . ~ ("hamp line. mal~. Co11st l{"'Y· N.B. ;;;:;:;;:;:::;:;;;;;-:::;:7".';:~ic;,.,,=::_:::::::;::::._'..,;-==c CASH PAID FOR i1praken:. Ma11Jr. \Vorit. hul ReAfl:lnllble. 5:>7-2504 BOAT slips avail. 25.~5, RECREATION 11 eh i c l e'. ".i!l Stude, Rood en11: & tr11ns., \\'E PAY TOP DOLLAR needs ""''Ork. Gf.~Jl~-AKC GREAT DANE x_ Int ,.coommodatklns in mo!or hOmes, tr11ller11. cam-nf'\\' sf'al~. hotly pc:·fecr. FOR TOP USED CARS tlne furniture, •ppliance~. M 1 73--6606 prr~, OOa1s. J.lotd!ng la nk mui;! sell this wf"ek ~ ff your car ls exfl"a cl«an, anliques. Ona piece or PUJ>!I, 9 wk!I. 96Fl-534R new ar nA 6 • • dump sratft"ln, l I g "l t e d , 64fi...-0181. se< ui1 t:n1. houseful. Call day or nlght, l'-------Jll I Ii i ~-·-·~~~------~ SA IL Soar slip~ a.v11.il. up !o frn~ w11sh ra.ck central .71 ~-1 000 1 BAUER BUICK c•n 2::141 547 'n3l. 3.')' Newport Be a ch, ' '968 '768 ........,.;e pl.FM'' IO, m " 231 E 17''" S ~ « -r~ I• Yau 518_5383 llunr. Sch. area. -. . Lona: V.'hl M~. V-8, p\i·r . "' t. ARABIAN DlspPl'QJ 1t1ale: " 1P£2-2.~4. brk~. radio. pa.y oil $2600. C.OS!A ri,1,sa 548-7765 Ser&flx. Sotep, fka-ia A: Real ONE l5'8'x30' U-slip S95. Trailers, Travel MS $300 for m~ equity. 646--0803 TOP DOLLAR FERRARI FERRARI AU'nlORIZED SALES A SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS w(!ools &. ac e e 11n r te •· 11••••••••••1 Good cond. 644--0498 all 6 3 JtEAL 'l'llY, aOOrsble k\t. pm. tf'TIS W/1 1hnt. 10 Wklt old. McCoy marti1, F lllltt, Ii. One side tie, accommodate alt 5. IN CASH ool1s. Terms. (713) 152--362 ... 30' boat. S75. 67J....6880. NICE tiled travel trallttr, u1,,,,..-,,-~o-7--c=--.,.,, 3.100 W. Coa.s1 Hwy. I!. oven, glovr, Ice bo.x. "st Ford C..bovr.r 1:10. 17 Paid for )'Ollr clean used car Newport Beach Musical Instruments 822 OrAnge " wht. 5"8-7469· ran: Cats It Ki!IC'n1, Cllll GIBSON Les Paul-SG Work M&-t56.l. Home Sl50. 5'16·96.12 548-4147 or 833-8243. FRONTALINI scoordlon l ::I PURE wht lnvrly kittens, 3 t'll ~~-Adult 117.«. Ptrfecl. n10. Banty roosters le hl'.n1. S\50. Phonf' 6'12-1006 Af1rr 5. !,4.)..50S7. ,,C--~~--,.-o­TO good hnnl4', fl'mall', ORU~f ~t. S11'i. or bt"ll of- fer. ~ Pc"~ Ir. C)'!Tlhals, 540--4804 Whitt Eltph&nt Dime-A·Line "· • helltJ liful I~ cnJf!tn, 1,1 Lab Rer. 901 Che~tnut Pl, NJ~. We'll help }'OU sall! 6'2-5678 PArt quarter-hol'M: nt!tda t.x-Bo.ts, SPHd & Ski 911 perience ridCT $150. or bst. ntfer !i4s.oo?S. 15' TiruNDER81RD 100 hp ;;-o,,,-,.,-~---..,.-,--1 Johni.on, l!li!'C motor tilt. 2 Hon<>s, Ont quarter horse. ell"<: bilgf' pump, full ~\/ti'$, One StandArd Bred. Reu. Rl"()d C'Ond. 71•:8f6..t•92. Call 962-f7tt '57 Harvey 14', fiberglass, 60 HORSF~ BOARDED UP ~1e1'ttJry. $325. M4 20062 /l t'acu1., Sant• Ana Con.rtreM St .. C.M. Hi:r;ts. A3k lot Liz. 5'1~~1 \Yhy •tort 11 ln the att1c PONY, Good for child. Hu •·hen )'fll.l l"ln turn It Into "'fin r1hbnn. C•ll !or details. money throuah a DAlt.Y "Joni'', £46..al29, P.U.Ot....W&nt A& Sleeps 4. $000 • .-.?-4l90. stake, 10 wh!, lift gate, l\U pild for or not, ---..;F~'l"A"T=---­ tire1 S.2600. 846-1278 it.ti SANTA ANA DODGE 23' Sal•woy, $550 5PM . 1401 N, Tustin 1----------low down. 642·l'"651 ;.,.,.;;:---.ro"RD=-P"."u-. "1""1-:,:::,.-:-_-,3 83>3691 Auto Service, Parts M9 "cylinder. Runs iOO(i, Ca.II -'1""M"'ro=R°'rs'"w"ANT="Eo;;-- 36 HP VW Eni. Velve1~""-&-=>=6n~. ==~~-=--Oranae Counues around SlOO. Alt0 Mi.&c. V\V 71~ TON USMC l'ruck. Great TOP : BUYER parts. tor O\"trl11nd, hunting. Xlnl BILL ti.fAXEY TOYOTA • %S-JCM9 "" eond. $1150 !inn. M7-MOJ. 1ilS1 Bt.acb Blvd. The ra11e1t draw tn the 197-0 EL CAMTNO H. ~ach. ~. M7·155S Wl!lt. •. a t>aUy Pi l ot Xlnt cond , $2400. OA!LY PILOT tor action! Caulfled Ad. 64J..:i671. • IJ&.4S7J • Call 642.-.5611· &-Save! /IBSD l.ARGE SELECTIO•, SEE • B. J, · SPORTSCAR CENTER 2833 Harbor. c.~1. LOTUS LOTUS AUTHORIZED SA.I.ES .ti SER.VICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. C:O.St Hwy. NIWJIOl'"t Beach MERCEDES BENZ ·n ~ f\Jlly equlpd, 4000 m\'1. ractory Wl"'11ty • 1g9 280-SL coupe mad1ler, au~ air • '68 280-SL roupe roadst~. auto • '67 251)..S 121 e '70 m.5E e' 70 23<\.C • Hurly, the&e won't la11! Authorized J\tBZ Dealer Ill m.mo I I . -.. • '• It . ,., I • I • :~ i ' ... OAJ~Y PILOT FridaJ, NMmbfr 12, 1971 . ........ 1§1 [ .,. .. ~~· J~ I -~---i~ [ Auto• lor 511• 1§1 [ 970 ~ utoo;:hp'!"""' TOYOTA s;.c wfSu11 rool. R r d_ "'/blacri -int. Incl. fonnt'au ('()\<tr. 7nd. 011·nt'r 52,000 ml. Top cond. S320 0 . f);Hh5.i08 'iO 911 T, 5 Spd. 1mmac. Yello"/B l ck mag s , am/fm. ma.int records, 3S,OOO mi. SJOO + Take O\'er IS('. e'·"· 641:41-«2. ~llnt Co.od. E...:se!SJl••,.1; )'r'u1''1 ·6.1 PORSCl-!E s. El~tric Conti, (3&JBSG1 ., Price ' sunroof. chrome wheejs, SUR,FSIDE MOTORS ne~· paint. 1tn"s. Blau~Unkt 847.JS4l rad19, S2300. ~~732. MG '60 PORSCHE. w_ith '68, 9t2 cng, (h•fl'r S4000 ln car. ----M-G----· I Cornpl. l'E'!;tored. S l 8 O o . S.l3-9~:>J. ALl'MiORIZED SALES &t SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 'fiO CPE. nu lrans. cluich •. paint. int chrm e.ng. Sl895 . or u'8de for van. 557-7268 bl'fort" 2 pm. TRIUMPH 3100 \\'. Coast Hwy. Ne"1>0rt Bead. .am THINK m ''~G'' "FRIEDLANDER"' U1JO BEACH (HWY. :nJ 893-i;mG • 537-6824 OPEL '66 OPEL WAGON 4 spt'Cd, !\~di~. hearrr, !ug- gagt> ra rk. fS'\'Pl9j 1 1971 PORSCHE 914 4 Cyt, sd\'er. am/fm sterM, tintPd i;-!s. -:; spc'I. $3593. Pvt pty. 644-iOOJ ~B. 196S PORSCHE !lllS PRICED. TO SELL! • ~l0-9j(IJ • ·r.s Porsche 911, imnu1culare condiuon. 675-52~4 ·:,s 1600 SuJ)('r. reblt en~ .. runs perfect, looks gtea!, g<>ing cliea__p!_! 673-70,ll5. SPRITE SPRITE '64. Clean, Runs \\'f'll. :"\e"· lop, Radio, )tichelin ures. S a 7 j . 714/6-1&-301';. $495 Put a little "loot" in your HIGHLAND MOTORS 1-kvi~ -i;ell those baubles for 214.i Harbor Bh«i . "bucks". Call Classified Co.sra :\le~a &l:l-.»0-1 &12--5678. ~~~~~~~~~~ CLEARANCE" SALE NOW!' .HURRY & BEAT TI1E 10% PRICE fNCREASE! ! FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E. 1st St., S.A. "547--0764 Oi>en <b1ily 9-9! Closed Suiids,y '68 TRIUM PH GT-6, Radial iircs, wire ";hls, O.D. ·r;t\. Xlnt cond. 1 o"'ner. Pl)iJip, 64i'>-0053 ·'69 TR-6. GOOd con d . Red/blk inter., Musi sec Xlras, $2-400 or ofr. 67>7873. '67 Triun1ph .Mk JU Spi!f1re, mags, blu<'. One o"·ner. $!1.00./offcr. ~18-4:)14 * '67 TRIUr.tPH GT6 * Xlnt cond. Cui;tom feature$. Sl7.)(). !194-7136 or 497-1928. \Ve·n help you sell ! 642-Si678 _Autos, lmpG rted 970 I Autos, 1-;;,ported 970 1 Autos, lmpori'ed ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii iiiiiii 970 You should see our Service Department. No one else his had the pleasure. Our Service Manager is just a step aw1y from unemployment. He choppers in from his barricaded, dog guarded chateau for ·the early 1.m. jousts with the fierce fumming Detroit fugitives. He must be the only service man- ager in the world with a listed phone number. He has gone from 160 lbs. to 220 lbs, and why not? -ANYWAY NOTHING HAPPENS- This is a ca rryover from several months ago, when we were divo rced from a well known domestic attitude tester. (The Battles You Wouldn't Believe!) "Where is the 1/2!?lf2 V1 owner?" "My brakes squeek" "My tires were not ba lanced!" "Is 9 miles to the· gallon 111 I'm going to get?" "$135 for a t une·up" "Who sold m1_ thi1 V2 V2 ?!!1/2 car?" "Who is your attorney?" Now, In Beautiful Peaceful Orange County, Please Quietly Zoom Around In The New-- SUPER MAZDA ROTARY CAR ~ RX2 !The C11r1 f11 Problemil '--.__. Standard lq11lpm111t front dl1c brokn w •pwr ciuit, e!Ktrlt clotk, reor wh1dciw defrcister, 4·1pcied 1y11chromnh monl. tron1., rodlol blcic•woll tlru, f11ll wheel co.-1r1, tCKhomoter, hip odoW11t1r, recllnint front b .. cket Mots. th1t1d 9ICQi, hrll 11wlo11 cor0 p1tl11g, clqor•lte JighNr, lockln9 910.-1 coirijJort. ment, fr•11t & reor b11mp~ 1111ord, lockln9 f11el flller door, wood 9ro/11 ltffring wheel, wood 9raiR •hlfl lever ll11ob. - "MOTOR TREND" In Th e October Issue Quotes ·- 11 Ma1da-Ge'ft (n g ;\ 25 Miles Per Gollon" TOYOTAS '69 CORONA -4 speed, radlo, vi nyl top SKY44X $1495 '70-COROLLA WAGON 4 spd & radio. B:l4798 -$1495- '70 MARK 11 Cl>e. automatic trlln!., radio, 4l5AK\\' $1995 THE '72 MODELS ARE HERE! • . '· ' • OYER 150 NlW & US!D YW-s TO CHOOSE FIOM -ALL IODY STYLES & COLORS OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY I • THIHI ~YO!_VO' "FRIEDLANDER"' lllJO llACk !HWY. Jt, 893-7566 • 5.17.SS24 Autos, Used 990 11m-fm. ma~s. 11<.'W tin's. Best offr·n1us1 se!ll. 54&-2173. BUICK '70 BlJlCK Eleetra -2 ~ ;; custom. 11.000 actual mi. Full po'O\·cr. A~i/F"l\t s1erro + Air. Showfoom cond. 642-1081. '69 Buick R1v\f'ra; full power, fac 11lr, an1-fm radio, straro b<'nch, landau l'inyl fop. $2675 or best oHer. 548-1;;78 11f! 5 pm. '671 BUICK Le Sabre, 4 Or HT. psfpb, 11 ir, ne"' tirr~. Lo mi. orig ownt'r $895. 6·1·1-j79-_1,. ___ ~~- -CADILLAC '68 S.D.V. Lnadcd. Good cond: lST. 52.iiOO. Pri Pty. &14~ day11, 67 5-1134 Ew•. ·s1 CADILLAC S.D.V: $300. firm. Full po~·er. 545-5412 11fler 4 P.l\t. ·s.; Cadillac Cl>upe ldf: Ville Convt. 58.000. miles. St.:250. 54~1839. 1969 CAD Coupe de Ville. lo miles, good cond. ,~,200 . • -494--0076 ......... ]§] [ ' - 1971 110 DI VIUI 1971 IL DORADO 1971 C,E, DE VIUI f"Ct....,.., •••"11111.., ..... [,0.;1110 . 01, ... 1 • ...... .... ~ ... ¥ •••• ' '""'·.;, ••• .i., 7100 .. , •••• Poddod ... , ..... ·-·· JN>~ftd •••• '"" ~, .. ,. r.11 !oolh•r ..... 1 ... '•ti too. oll )oothor & ••PM'"' Into.lo•, ""'·• oil .... ~ .. 1 •••• 1 ••• . ...... ,._,, 4vel '""''•" '"""· lilt ' loll "'"'-o0.;0,.ool, J.IA/PM ,.,..;., "°"' le<l1, ••It 1 lllou oolc ''"'· lofo1<oolc uoot!•r. "-t.,j.,, liok! •"'•'•'•'' ,,,. .. ,.,.,. ••-<•ildo & lMldo~ ••I~"'°'' oll dolu oo ••••oo. .............. , .... , .... ' ....... '"" lr.1h. ... .. 11 ...... , ... _ .............. -· • ~.; ..... 1.11. $H to 000<0(•010 . 1$" J67aJ '"'' ........ ,. ·~·· '" ......... ...... SALi PRICID IS..•. J::437ll • $6333 • • $7777 • 1970 Cl'I. DI Villi 1970 StD. DI Villi 1969 ll DO~A OO ..... .,, ........ •i••I , ... '•II 1•<1. •Ir '""Ill., ll<ldded toe, '•'I . ..... , ... •••tlllt!•"'"•· 1.11 pwr .• !ill i N IU<OPj< <>001., ''"''"• ""'·· oll ... ,,..., I"'"'. ""'" •~•· """'"· oo•~•• '""• oll l•o•••• lo. "'-i. •••. ll1ht .... 1 •• 1. '"""' ··~·· t<ol, ....... l·ot.• ""!Tnol, toh & ....... ....... "" • tol"<•?I< dolun •••01. S.. & dtlYo IOdor !O lolHfOOi~ OIOO!,. '""" O<O .. ~o ... •'•••·"•· doO' l•<I•, •'<, ol<. 1.11, ••••••••••· i••u.111 "'"" i u <101lonollr n•<•. (ZHI [V~W,.l'I ,,,. ' • $4666 • • $4666 • • . $4222 • lf61 C'L DI VIUI Your choir• of 1969 SID. Dl VILLI ,.<! ............. ~ ...... 1.11 •ti Dorodos 24.000 ... 11 ... ,.,1.,. .;, , •••. !001hor lot. .. , oil,...,,••'-••· A/I./ • Broughams •ull ""'"''· ••••' !Oo, duo!'""''"'' '"""· !u •u•iou1 <lo•h & loo!""' lo. •M rffi~ •••Y oth u "'""'· Horo • S•d. DeVllles ,., .•.. . ...... "'' • ..1.,, •• ;, lo •• ••••o•l••ol ••'•• !••• ... 11101 • Cpe. DeVlll es ......... ~·· 1 ..... •••• 1 ... 1, i. • 1.,., .-. •. uvo,••1 • Convertibles bt••••fwl i•1•"" • ••I flVNllt) • $2777 • • Sedans SALi PRICID 1t•I SID. 01 VIUI 1967 Cl"l. Dl VIUl l96S SID, DI Villi ''""· ... ••""·• ......,..., Htp, loll '•<!. olr , ... 111., "'ll •-., 0<>doltd , .. , ............ 1,1..,i.., ......... 1 ....... 1,.,.,;.,, •" ... -.. '"' '"· A,._/f/A., bo••"'•I ln rhor 1 •. l•I '"'"°"' •Mto ,.;,~ ~'••I I ..~J•o <HI'" I loo+~•• l•<••l••. h ll 1 .. ~ •• AM·'"'· till ' .. i. .... 1 ...... .. .i ... tfh ' •• 1 ..... 1, ........... pow~•. ..,. , .. •o<llo. "" ""'' otc •• ott. !X\1,1 loOI "" •• , ... ; ....... 1 •• 1 lllOA(iC} 51.ClOO "'"'•lip o.i .. , to•lu , (l!JOHll • $2111 • • $2111 • • $1777• • SELECT TRADE·INS • 1967 IUICIC 1967 Mi:ll:CiJll:Y 1969 CHIVll:O Ln "leSoltff" l ~ •. Mr~l••· .. ""°• Col""f Porlt, 10 ,._,., w ... "C••tlte•• l •. H.T. ,,,. 0 .. 1, JI.DOG 1 .. 01 to llOI. 1_,1. ol• •••d., '•"· elr '""·· 1.11 '""·· 4.1.,, 21,000 Mlloo, ·-· .. ........ •\•ti "4do4 10•• • ..,.. '""''·· owt. •l•l'I •oe, lvll •l•rl I•~• • looded ........... , ..... ~·•Ito, •i•rl loo, b••I.,, ov•o. ''""'·• •edlo. ~"'"'· wllti ••lrO• & lo•, !e,.. '°""' .. 110. " ••11••. . ..•. ....... • • .r1 •• ...... 11 .... ,, •• 1, ......... ,.,.,,.. •••· s.. .. ~ .... .i.•o. rr~vne1 ~ ............... , ' L!/11 .~ ........ rrr,2•11 ''"'"· 1111<19J) I 1,96t Cltll:YSllll: 1910 OlOSMOalll lt10 IUICI( c ... ,_ llM,..,_, 4 •·· ....,.,~, l ...... , ... ~ .. :·~ •l••I "·· ...... 1 .. 11.1-c, ......... •Ir ,._,, .i.. NOMI,. htll ,,....,,, •l•of ,.,, .. ... ,,,., 1 ........ 10<'0"' ~It, l•ll to•~, lvl! Hw•. •l<oof "'-· •I~"' l••Wflffo lo ... llr'\' '"'"' .......... ,._c, .... 1 ........ 1 • ....,. 1 .. 11. ...... ...... till •hffJ, AM IM """" ·-' low lootl .... 1 .. 11, 1111 • Hti.....i. , ... ,,.,, , •• ,., ... ...... .;.1 ............. -1 •. lllOOI ·-•lln, (t01?41) 1 ... or.. ....,. I •~Ir 1 5,000 •ilo< .... ,., .... ,,4 ..... _,_ '" l11tUTI ... 1 .... tlWltlUI Sales--Leasin!J-Aulhori:red Service NABERS CADILLAC ' ·~ '• _, 'r .. . . • ~ .. Frldly, Nowmbtr 12, 1971 DAILY PILOT 41 { ............ I§] I· ......... 1§1 I .......... '~~~·· ~~~ l§J I ~........ J[ijl I , ______ .. -.... )§] I .......... ]~ l~~_ ..... _ .. _,J§J I.iii _~_ ..... _ .... ~l§Jiiiiiiii'.. [. ..... .... l~ Autot. u... . 990 Av19t, UHCI 9'0 Autos, u .... COMET """~ ..:....:..D_O_D_G_E_.....; 990 Autos, u... 990 Autos, UHCI 9'0 Autos, U .... 990 Autos, Used ,,. Autos, U..., 990 Autos, Used .. __ _ ,,. ----FORD MERCURY -OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC PONTIAC RAMBLER RA MILER ** '63 COM~. ps/pb, eood condition. ; 3 O O , 675--7985 after 6 PM ''6 CAUENTE • Sharp, v.a. auto. R&H, PIS, air. $650. Low Blue Book. 645-3.159. CONTINENTAL CORVAIR 1965 CORVAffi, ttblt eng. Auto trans, $325. Good cond. 962-<347 CORVETTE 990 Autos, UMcf 990 Autos, Used --·. CONTINENTAL SALE ' • 1969 MARK ill • • • • • • • • • $4875 Jmmaculatf!. Beautiful Silver Mink finish with black leather Interior & ma.tchlng landau root. Equipped with full po\\'C:t including 6-way seat, Climate Control Air Cond., Tilt stra. wheel, Automatic Cruise Control, etc. Thll fine Automobile obviously has had the best of care. (WXF534 ). 1970 Coupe Exquisite. Satin Black finish with white leather &: white Landau roof. Luxury equipped throdsrhout, Full power, Tilt strg. wh~l. AM-FM stereo radio, Climate Control Air Cond., 4 Brand new tires & much more. See & drive this beautiful car to appreciate. (815AGBJ $4575 1969 4-Dr. Sedan Low miles-Clean. Attractive med.1- um gold with matching Leather in- terior le. brown landau root. Luxury equipped of courae. Full power, 6-way seat, Tilt strg. whl., Temp, Control Air Cond., etc. Reflect& best of care, Clearance Prlcc;d. · CYBN076J. $3375 1970 4-Dr. Sedan Beautiful glamor gold metallic fin- ish with leather Interior and match· ing landau roof. Luxury equipped of course. run power & 6-way power seats, climate control alr condition· Ing, Ult steering whtel, stereo tape: systems, etc. Immaculate through· out. C838AGA) $4575 • 1900 Cou1.1e • MANY MORE TO. CHOOSE FROM Orange County• 'Famil.y of Fine Carl 1970 Mark Ill Beautiflll 1t1ld milt me- tallic finish with m&tch- ln& tnterlor a: landau _ roof, tall po we r equlp- pe4. cl.Jmate control air condltlonlnc. 1tett0 tape .Y.tem etc. CSJ°'C~IO!~) ~·-~~ $1775 ~HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA Attractivl!: lleht yellow gold with black leather interior a: rr.atchlng Lan· 1 dau root. Fully )UXW'J' • , t ?quipped includlnc climate control &lr cond.. tllt "' steering whttl, AM/FM 1tereo radio. Michelin ra· dial ply u..... •tc. Thi. beauUful car ttOecU I.he brst of"-cm't. fOIKIACK) $6675 OVERSTOCK SALE '67 YW ~ ..... -cvst. l'W.n. $1296 '70 EL CAMINO ~::;,:~:· .... $2696 '70 IMPALA ,:;· ........ . $2996 '70 L TO 4 DOOR ~:~: ... $2696 '70 LTD '.;:~~--· "' .. -$2496 '70 MERO. WAG. :;:"r...""" $269& '70 FORD WAG.~~ .. " .... $349& '70 BUICK RIVIERA :. $2996 '70 DODGE YAll :::::.:, .. ;..:: $3296 ,701llRK11r= ~::.7;:"',629 ....... OR Corner l 1t & Harbor Santa An• These Prices Will Knock You Off Your Rocker! ,,. Here are sa¥1ngs the li~es of which you'¥e never seen before! We couldn't get' these prices any lower if we pounded them into the ground with a sledge .hammer! Come on in and grab the car of your choice because at these prices, they won't last long! EXAMPLES: KRLY BLUE IOOK SALE PRICE CHEVY. MtUllu. 1 Df', Ht~ Vt, Alff•. Tr•n1 .. r .s .. ll&H, WtSfW, I T. OIHI. wi-1 c ......... ' v .. r Wll'l'lllty. (UJO UGI MERCURY '•1111-. 4 Dt'. H.T., vt, Avie., Pact. Air, l'vll P'ltWIN', ll&H, I Vinyl "°"· T. 0 1119, 1 Yr. W1rr111ty, (VH A 'nJ LlllCOLN ,..,, 1 Y•r W1rt111ty, "~· .t.lr, 1"1n ,.._, a&H, T. I OIUI,. LNtfllor l11Mri.r. tlt•N II•) FORD G•lf;Xll ..... 2 Df'. H1rili.,, VI, ......... ,,,~ ... ,.s .. lt&H, •(llW· I T. O.,_, WllHI Cl"'1. CWW'f II" MERCURY Mllltdilt'. t Dr. H.T., VL Avi. .. l'ect. Afr, p,1., P,1, ll:&M, I W/l/W, T. OllN, I Yr. Wll'l'lllfY, llCDC :nll) FALCON Si.tit!! W•""· VI, Aulo, Trll!S., P'.I., P'.I·., lllK, W/11'#, I T. Ollu, WllMI Cntn, I Yr. Wtrrlntr, (HI 1101 TOYOTA CMtM Mt111: II. s1i111n w..-., Awt., Tr11t11., fl.IN, Tlnled I 011, .. 1 OWIMt-Lltlt Htwl U'J All"I MERCURY M9lll199 MJC, t Or. H.T., VI. Aul9., l'Kt. Air, r.s., fl&H, / vtnyl 11..,, T, •1n1, l'Kf. Wln'ltlfy', (111 All') LINCOLll ,.....,., 1 YMr W•ntnty, l'KI. Air, ll'uU l"aw.r, lt&H, V1ll}'I I fl..,, T. Olau, ll'QS \tSJ MERCURY ~' ... H.T. "'· ..... ,k ... , .. ,., ·-· ·-I , Vl9yl lllOI, T. Gl1J1, ll'Kt. W1n111ty, {YllH 1141 FORD LTD, I Dr. H•,.....,. \'I, AVM, TrlM., l'lct, Air, P.S., P.1., fl:&H, I W/S/W, \'lllyl fl:Mf, T ...... ll'kt, W1rr111fr. (SU AOGI COUGAR I Dr, Hi,_,, \#9, A1'9. T/'9119., ll'ld, Air, l".I., l",I ., lllH, , W/l/W, \'lnyl y.,,_ T. Olan, IJll COTI LIN.COLN c.... -'·Yr. w'"""'· ,let. Air. ''" ,.....,, "'"· v.irt J ...,, T. Olttt, lMl'ller r11t. llfll "'J - MERCURY M1'4Ult 11'9¥fl\tm. 4 Dr. H.T .. VII, Aui.., l'HI, A!r, r111 1 "-• ... ,..., Vtnrl ""'• T, a .. 11, .,._lit torntert IMta. t Yr. W1n111ty. 1041 AO&) MERCURY C•""'I' Plrll. 11 r411..,...r w1..,., VI, Alltt. l"Ht. Air, 1"1111 I '"'""'• 111rM, Drlvt11 Oftlr llAOI Mllfl. r1ct w1rr111ty, INT AO)() • '70 Lll(COLJI '""· r1e;1. W1n1nty, ''" ,.._,, r1c1. Atr, 11--. T. Otfflrr / TltT WllMt, l!IMd Ce!llNI, l.elffttr fltlrllt', (llJ COOi '69 MARK 111_1 OWlltr, 1 Yr. W1rn11r,, l'act, Air, l'otT ,..,,.,, '""" I v111.,1 ••• T. OllU. L ...... r 111t. '"""' C•trtt. Tiit ....... (41' AINt) I ' $1325! $1 t4:B $13 $1173 $1505 I $1299 $1505 / $1299 $1690 I $1428 $1nO/ $1499 $2400/ $2125 $2640 / $2293 $2855 I $2865 / $2516 $3215 / $2954 $3635 I $3219. $4010 f $3552 $3860 J $3559 $4500 I $3999 $5082 / $4558 $5805 I $4995 $7350 I $6990 - • .. ' . •, . . ... . . . . . ·~·· . ~-• • :-. -BEFORE-YOU BUYl. CHECK~OUT-OUR · · . . . . ALL REMAINING TEST DRIVE THE NEW HONDA · The SASSY LlnLE CAR, 15 SASSIER THAti EYER! Ready for immediate delivery in a big selection of new colors. 1971 GMC ' PICKUPS * SPRINTS *·CAMPERS AT ACTUAL tACJ01 -y INVOICE POSITIVELY NO ADDED DEALER CHARGES LEASING? We Offer ''Personalized" Leases on Oldsmobiles, GMC Trucks, Rec- reational Vehicles! TRY US BEFORE YOU LEASE ANY DOMESTIC OR IMPORT CAR. '66 PLYMOUTH '68 CADILLAC 4 Or. Sed•n. V.8, Auto. Trans., Radio, Heater. tRYD598) Full power, factory air, vinyl roof. IXRK098} s599 $2895 '70 AMX '68 OLDS DELTA 88 4 spe•d, rad io a nd he•ter. I P90AI Cour•· Radio, heat1r, automatic, air cond., white walh, viny roof. IWPB661 l s1795 s1495 -'70 GMC 2 TON '66 TORONADO Tilt c1b truck 5500 seriet. S speed tra~sm ission. (4582) Full power equipment plus factory air conditioning. ISHE4101 s3295 s1395 . '68 DATSUN '70 MUSTANG MACH. I 4 Or., 4 Speed, Rad io, Heater. !VHB314l Automatic tr1nsmii1ion, radio, heater, air conditioning. IACHb08 1 s545 s2395 -I \ '69 VOLKSWAGEN Bug. Radio end heater. IZQC7171 $1195 '70 GRAND PRIX Autom•tic, power windows, air cond., vinyl roof, radio, heater. IZMV262J s3495 ' '69 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Full power, factory air conditioning, AM·FM racl;o. IXXZ4b4 I s3995 - . ' '68 CHEV. IMPALA CPE • R1dio, heifer, auto., air, power steering" br1kes. IXIVSS91 s13.95 COSTA MESA .. . .. • • - i· BILL JACOBS GENERAL MGR. '69 DODGE VAN Sport van with automatic transmission, radio, heater. IZAE74l I s2395 '69 TOYOTA Automatic transmiss ion, radio and heater. IZYL935) ·$1355 '69 SIMCA Rad io, heater, 4 speed transmissio n. 1786CQSl .s775 '66 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLE Full power equipment plus factory air conditioning; I KSJSOS I s1595 . WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS OPEN TILL ) Fnday, -..i... 12, l9n DAil. V I'll.OT Q ,. ' ' \ • lOP.M.-------- r---U·lJRE FORDS • CHEVYS • Pl YMOUTHS I t1 tJ fl1llJ '": t1l t! I P~:~~~~E 521 ·8 ·89u~ PRICE. PRICE ~.~!~!~!!~-~ $7:360 :-~~·;:.=r.::r~.~ MONTH lir.-hil , .. '"'• UIOUI llll .. & lit.a _._ .... .,.,., FOR 3& MONTHS '70 CHEVY MONTE CARLO 2 dr. H.T .. Y/I, ••to, radio & llffter, P:•••r 11..n.., flct air, landou '°" w1w, 1111011 Int. 1_23AEB Sunshine Yell~w '70 PLYMOUTH COUPE auto. trans., foctort air conclitio11i"I• power stttrlng, radio, heater, whi- tewall tlra1, winy! i111t1rior mffium tan Nttollc 073ANF '70 f ORD GALAX IE 500 ·- H.T .. V/I, w1w auto, radio' htottr, powtr 1tttri111, fact. air. 176ALQ. Meadow Green '70 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 dr. H.T. V/I, ••to, rodio & Hater, power 1t1eri119, 1ir co1ul, full vinyl iRt. 342.AIY. Jade Green t '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 HT, Y-1, 1wt1. ralllio, & h11t1r, fact air, w1w whffl conn. pewtr Ntk11. 12lAVOHarvest Yellow · '70 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER H.T., radio & heat•r, fully fotlory e11vippecl. 633-ADV ltd '70 CHEVY IMPALA Tnii r•d beauty has "a.to. tra111. foctory air co11ditlonh11, ndio, hNttr, whitewall tires, vinyl interior Tilt wheel. 116AGI. '70 f ORD H.T. VJI auto r1ifi• & •Httr, power stterin9, foctory oirvlnyl int. llOAVO . M~NY MORE AT COMPARAB LE PRICES 1N t~111111 ;I!: t1J t! I SPECIAL PURCHASE PRICE 88 00 $21 FULL . PRICE s1 9SDOWN $7360 · MO NTH FOR 3& MONTHS CALLNOWll Phone 557 ·9220 INSTANT CREDIT f--.,, .... _ a •D STILl;" .. AW-Y ... MO•t 1. If you are new in California 3. If I""'.,.,,.;. an your jab 2. If you owe money on your . 4. If you have little or no credit cor LET ME TI Y TO ARRANGE THE CI EDIY AND TEIMS YOU NEED SO THAT YOU· MAY Drive Home Today in the car of your choice!! ABSOLUTE MO '71 COLT 2 DI. H.T. BRAND NEW '72DODGE TRUCK IM MEDI ATE DELIVERY $2469~ SM ii -.._ ,,... IJtil --,,_1o11 ... a lic-& II ....,.. .................... _~-~ S»IJ llld.lu &llt-..WU.Ul'9UllTMMUl110. .. 'I. ~ .................. o; .........,,hHHt • noetll. t i••· tit•. •l,••I I •I•'-................. tll14'1W - ll291211176SI IMMEDIA"rE $219900 $74 DELIVERY ~~ffE DOWN ' .. ...,.. ...................... -.~,.,.... ' .. . ,,.,,.,.. ... ,,.._,,......,.._,,.._..._.,...._, $74 FOR v ~.~•u• iod. .. 1 U.MlllM '9:C8ff.WUll MONTH MOMTHS '68 CHAR GER '66 FORD MUSTA NG 'DR .• H.T. v.a. '""· $ 7 8 8 powtr site ring, rodiG, htoler, lot!. Gir kmdau top. wsw. WQ0572. ~::::;, ':::::. ;~:.:' $488 !ROW76S) ~~:.:~~"~~~~:$237;8 heollf, power steering & brakes. V/8 elK'I, wir.dows. fact oif, wsw, roof rack 272AEF GG!d- FU LL PR ICE ~"""" FULL PRICE . F LL PR ICE '69 CHEVY MALI BU '7 1 PINTO '69 FORD TORINO $988 ~l~~~~o.h~t-$1599 ~;;~T V.a $988 Molibu2dr.H T. 't'·t . rodio, htoter, whittwoll titll. .......... er, •llt'fl in!erlOI" lkx~tl dio, htoltr, _. s~ls. Gol d 11111alit · wall lirffo myt • 2000cc eng . + much i.iar, rood wM«i. 111.d! mart. 6S&C£G Uc. za65 I F LL PRICE FULL PRICE FULL PRICE '6 8 OLDS CUTLASS '6tVW BUG '68 PONTIAC Le Man CUllASS 5 2 dr. H.T. auto. Irons. hlctoi:y ciir condi- tioning, radio. h.attr. wliil•wo!I 1irt1, vin1I roof, VVV626 $988 :1~~::~~"":;::: $788 ~£t·;~ $688 ' J J .. • • • • • • • ~ ' • • • . • • . . • • ·= -. . ~ . • • . • -• • • • ' • • • • • ' • ' ·: J i • l • • • • • . • . . . . . • . -. . . . • . • . . ' • ~ -• • • • • • • --• . • ' -. • • --' , .. ' -., -. -. . ~ A • -'" ' • r ' :-• • • • ·. I -· ~ • '114 OAILV PILOT --DEADllNE-: November · . tlth!· ---THIODO•I 9H1Jty hller TH~tollll IOllNS ll. · -·-,,. "··.-i·,_ lt71 IOllNS J .. FACTORY SCHEDULES CALL ·FOR PR·ICE RAISES WHEN THE PRICE FREEZE GOES OFF~ DY TO.bAY AND SAVE! FORD FOR '72 .. The newed Car• you'll see this year. COM.. PA RE. Wifh i.mp0it prices rising, here 's how Pinto compares: • Plnt.o "ow prlc:ec! $335• len than VW 113 • PI N T 0 I • ~~,:l:~6:tc:ecl $228• less than· Toyota 1 • . • ~~ now prlc:ecl $300• less than Datsun. • A d"'N•'-tf ~Klvf9n' ............. II Wleelr, ........ Mftll"'ft, ftf 11141 NM MMf' mlllNil. DM~ llll'•r•ltl!I RI ..... (If _,J, ..., ....... W ..... · ii~ ...... 1 M•• Ir. utr1, HUG ·USED CAR ''OVE.R~STO.CK'' CLEARANCE MUSTANG SALE Many ro c:hoose from. '65 thru '71 models. Coupes, hard· tops, c:onvertible and 2 + 2 fastbacks, Some with 4 SP,ffdS, also air c:onditioning and automatic: models. EX AMPLE: '71 .M USTANG H.T. Red io, heater, 1utom1tic, pwr. steer. & bra kes, fact. eir, 9ood miles I 0 I 9CQR I . BLUE BOOK PRICE $3385 ALL OFFERS-CONSIDERED TRADES ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOT! '. TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS . L.T .D.--GALAXIE-· T -BIRD-· TORINO SALE ·Many to c:hoose from. '65 thru '71 Models, Sport roofs, formals, 2 door & 4 door hardtops & sedans. Full power, air conditioning. ,Warranties available. · . . . EXAMPLE: '71 T·BIRD H.T. Auto., P.S., P.B., P-windows, P-bueket seat, AM-FM Stereo radio, •ir eond., tilt wheel, wsw, body side mid gs., remote mirror, good miles. f b94BZ.J ) . ILUE IOOK PRICE $4785 OUR PRICE $2796 1:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::::=::;=.:;::;;~;;;:;;::::::==; '67 ~1.::;\!!o~""'" ":71 DATSUN P.U. w /Camper '66 MAUaU S.S. ?~~\~"':""" $596 :=::::::::;:O:::U::::R :::::P:::R:::IC:::E :;::$::::42:::9:::::6 :::::::::::::! '69 MUSTA_NG 2+2 '69 V.W. STATION BUS Htrdtop. 4 1pttd, rtdio, httltr, good milt1. R&H, 4 1pt'td, t ir cond., crtwl thru '71 Perri1 Vtlley ctll'lptt .quipped. Low, low milt1. !6!6· -f-CT•Ql $28 '71 VEGA 3 DOOR Coll~· 4 1p1.cl, radio, httl1r, low milts. 1915· BZTl '70 COOGAR HARDTOP Vi, 11110., R&H, powtr during, 1ir cond., viltVI roof, 9ood .111il t1. la61ADEJ BLUE BOOK PRICE $2895 '70 TOYOTA LAND CRUISER Stttion wtgon. 4 whit! dri'lt, l to11e , ·i ood 111il11. Excell. _c.ond •. ( 1J91QEl. N1w. ti!!'· ·- HARD TO FIND! MAKI OFFER -= '69 TOYOTA CORONA MKll BLUE BOOK PRICE $1870 OUR $14 PRICE '67 RIVIERA Air eond., powtr 1ittrin9 • brtkt1 • ""'!ndow1 • tttfl, ntw ptint, low 1T1ilt1. !flD.024) $1996 '70 ~USTANG HARDTOP RtdiO, htt ler, tulomttic, P.S., low 111ilt1, •inyl roof. I 066AGll - BLUE BOOK PRICE $2555 '67 MERCURY. COMn Sed. R&H, factory . equipped. Good miles. {XSP037). '65 FORD WAGON Cntry. Sedan._ R&H, auto., air. P.S., good miles. (WW1<769). '65 PLYMOUTH FURY 111 2 Or. H.T. R&H. auto .. P.S .. air cond. Good mile1. (PIT484) OUR $2296 '65 OLDS F·85 WAGON $796 PRICE R&H. automatic, power ,.,.,;ng .• .oo mu ... --=-:--=-:-:-'.::-=:-=--=c--1 <NYP412J. '70 CHARGER RT --------~--- '•"•· '"'"· '"''·• P.S., .;, ••od., ''"'' ""'· '66 PLYMOUTH VALIANT $896 good 111ilt1. t I llAGEI R&.H,a uto.,P.S., air conditlonin&. Good miles. BLl,JE BOOK PRICE $2860 !SVZ8621. P~~~E $2496 '69 FORD COBRA F•irlt n• 2 Dr. H.T. Rtdio, htt!tr, 4 1pt1d, ip"icitl Whh. I lire1. ! I l5l 11 l BLUE BOOK PRICE $1740 '67 SUNBEAM ALPINE -· H.T. 4 speed, low miles. &ood condition. (VGX5991. '63 THUNDERBIRD Immaci..ilate thru·out. New paint. Full power, air cond. (UEZ879l . $996 '67 COUGAR HARDTOP V8, automatic, R&H, powtr 1lttrin9, tir cond., ltpt 4tck. Good mile1. !UJUtl 11 '70 GALAXIE 2DR. H.T. Vt,. t ulomelic, redio, heeler, vinyl roof, eir cortd. !94lAKCl f • BLUE BOOK PRICE $2705 P~~~E $2196 '70 ELECTRA 225 CUSTOM 2 Dr. H.T., R&H , auto .. l".S .. P.t., t ir, vinyl roof, tlt whls, AM ·FM, (0228SWI BLUE BOOK PRICE $4085 P~~~E · 53496 '71 LTD BROU~HAM Auto., R&H, P.S .. P.8., P-window1, vinyl roof, AM -FM, low mi!e1. ! 7458MQI BLUE BOOK PRICE $4220 '67 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI , eutometic, rtdio, heeler, power 1tetring, good mile1. IUKDl25) . ' '71 FIAT SPYDER Rotd1ter. Appx. 1500 milt1. BLUE BOOK PRICE $2215 OUR PRICE '68 GALAXIE HARDTOP BLUE ·BOOK PRICE $1620 OUR PRICE '70 IMPALA ZDR. H.T. . . . . Auto., P.S .. R&H, Yinyl roof, 1ir cond., vi nyl roof, lt97ASQI BLUE BOOK PRICE $3135 1970 & 1971 's. 4 speeds, 3 speeds, also air cond. & automatic models. Many to choose from . Chevy., Datsun, Ranchero, 'h ton and 3/.i tons, Flat bed. '67 thru '71 models. 15 TO CHOOSE FROM . Imports & Domestics. Coun seds., squires, torino, V.W., Volvo , Datsun, Olds., Mere., Toyota, pel. '65 thru '71 mo~els , Some with full power & air cond. • . . EXAMPLES: '10 MAVERICK Fully factory equip ped. Red ic, heat. or .. 168BBEP J, OUR PRICE s 96 !Ill . SALES DEPT. HOURS • -' . ' : I • 1 '71 PINTO Grabber green/racing stripe,, ot speed, good miles . (331CAXJ . BLUE BOOK PRICE $2130 OUR PRICE $1 796 .. AM TO f PM MON·Pll t AM TO 6 PM SAT 10 AM TO 6 PM SUH I EXAMPLE: '69 FORO 1'·250 PICKUP .Good miles. Camper 1peci1I, VS, 4 apeed, r•dio, heater. ( 14'14BEI : BLUE BOOK PRICE $2580 OUR PRICE EXAMPLE$: '68 OPEL WAGON Rad io, ..heater, 4' 1peed, good mile1. IXJE5561. OUR PRICE s995 '70 FORD 10 PA SS. Squire. VS, R&H, auto., •ir, P.S., P.B .. good miles. !306BEJ J . BLUE BOOK PRICE $3340 OUR PRICE $2996 PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE~FRI I PARTS DEPT. ONCY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • • ••