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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-15 - Orange Coast Pilota • MONDAY. AFTERNOON, NOVE!;fBER n S, :197 1 '(OL. '4. fltO. tn. a Sll(f90NS..M_,AMS ____ __Beiinery .Tank 7 In Long Bea~h • . . DAILY l'!LOT staff ..... Pigeons huddle together during chilly weekend winds atop the old clock that adorns the San Clemente Boat Club on the municipal pier. The pigeons, who formed a picturesqu~ addition lo. the clock, seemed to outnumber the fishermen. Perhaps it was the crisp weather. Employes' Unit.1 Angered, To Fight Salary Veto SA~l) -Accusing m~ger of lhe. association, & a I d Gov. Ronald Reag:m of a ''blanmruse-of--Jua:gan's~''ignores-wishes oL-tbe Poftl' ," the Ca!lfornla Stale: Em~loy~' legislature, the public, recommendations Anociation plans to seek 1 J~islahve of all salary setting authorities and needs override of his veto of salary wcreases . . . , . for University of California and state col-of California s system of higher educa- lege racUlty members. -tion. The un GQO.member organization .was "Twice this ear, two-thirds cc the angered bf the governor'• veto Frida)' of state ltgislalure apprt>Ved· pay increases JegialaUOn that would have given ~e for faculty members,'' Bailey said. faculty members • '1~ per«nt pay raise "Tw1ce the power o! -0ne man -the at a COit of f17 .9 million. · governor -has overruled the wishes of Jt was Reagan'a teCOnd rejection of more than •IKI elected representatives of pay hikes for faculty members. He vot~ both political parties. It is-a blatant a 10 percent. salary Increase for them m abuse of power in the hands of one man." the at:ate budget in July. ~ In. his veto message, Reagan said. "[ John N. B~lley, deputy. general am convinced that the kind of fuqdiog this legislation would mandate could only Refi 1iery Hit By E!pw sio1i - LONG BEACH (AP I -A storage t.anl of nammable Uqbkl blew up, touching off a fire al the Atlas Fabricators refinery tn an in- duslrial area ol northeast LQng Beach abOul 9:!0 a.m. lod.Y, of- flcllls ukl. No lnjurle.s were reported. The fire and explosion was con- finOO to the storage tank. Its exact contents w e r en ' t immediately known, firemen sald. ' • be provided by asking lht already QYerburdened wa~· earnen or California to dig even deeper into their pockets and , urume an even greater tu burden tha:n they now share." 'l'6e 8!!0Ciation'1 criticism was joined by !he 3,000.membu Unlted Pn>fesson of CalifoMila, wlieh &aid the veto "i1 Jllil1iCU!arly offensive because h • (Reagan) bases it on a c1aim that, speat. Ing forthrlghUy, b simply r,J•." Presklent Art Blernwt of the pro- ,_,. 'groolp refemd to Ille governor's content.ion I.bat his veto was required because caufornia taxpaye11 already are ovtrburdened. Bierman said California actually rank!I last amon& the 00 states in the amount it rpemls per· 1tudent ar !ta: four.year col· ...... ' • \ -• oac es • Ne~port Burglar Nets -' Big Firms Will Face ---- 4% Ceiling WASHINGTON (UPI) -The goverll< ~nt announced today that the Phase II .4 .percent limit on dividend increases will apply to appr.oximately 10,000 of the na- tk>n's largest businesses which account for all but a small portion of the annual dividends paid stockholders. The estimate was made public by the Committee on Interest and DivMiends headed by Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns. The announcement came as the most intensive price-wage controls i n peacetime history went into effect •Ith a few immediate signs of how business would respond to Phase 11 of President Nixon's economic policies. The dividend limitation announced previously would be based on a com· pany's highest payments in the three past fiscal years. / " The committee said the controls would apply kl: -Companies with more than $1 million in tota l assets and a class of equity securities held by 500 or more persons. -Thole subject to the reporting re- quirements of lhe Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or insurance companies with capita] stock. "These guidelines will therefore. apply to about 10,000 of the largest corporations which account.for all but a small portion• r-Utedividends paid each year by-U.S. COfJ>Oralions," the announcement said. Exempted under the guidelines were regulated investment~ companies, real eatate investmtnt 'trusts, and personal holding companies. • ~e conirrilltee also said "moderate dividends" could be paid by companies that paid no dividends, or dividends that amounted to a very small ;>ercentage_ of earnings during the pasf three fiscal years. Div1'dends still to be paid in 1971 re.main subject to President Nixon's request they · (See PHASE ll, Page %) Di:ugs Burgled f.rom Physician O:co~~r ~ m: ~~cest:t: J: Clemente physician over the weekend and ttOie 9COres of amphetamine. capsules. Police sakl the theft wa! discovered Sunday morning at the offices of Or. Alex Ferka1 at 212 Avenida VaquerO. · • Entry ial<> lhe\IShoredllfs:,area iofflce , was tQade by prying oUf seVeraJ giass louvres in a window. Police said the thief rifled a cabinet ln lhe pbyslclan~1 offices a n d ignored all other medicatfons except !or doses of v1t.llum and amphet.amines. - ' 'I • ••• . . CS~ in Mourning 3 Football Coaches Die i1i Crash Students and players today mourned three Cal State, FullerUn. football coac!ies ldlled over the-weekend-when their rented plane slammed into rugged brush-choked San Marcos Pass terrain above Santa Barbara. The victims were being flown to scout a game at Cal Poly, San Ltiis .Obispo by a charter pilot who also died in the crash 400 yards off· Camino Cielo Road in the Santa Ynez Mountains. Ironically, the team (be CSF Titans are to play next wee'.kend for the CCAA 1971 football championship was virtually wlped out 11 years and three weeks ago in a Toledo, Ohio plane. crash. Dead ·as a result of the tragic weekend crash are Joe O'Hara 39 sophomore offensive coach ; Bill Hannah, 37, offensive line coach and D~ll~ J\loon. 30, defensive coach. ' n. The pilot was identified as Ernie Mariette, 40, of San Gabriel, a veteran 1er. O'Hara, or Tustin, Hannah, of Buena Park, and Moon of La Palma were flying from San Diega where the Titans whipped U.S. Inteinauonal Uni~ersity 40 to 30 Saturday. Heavy cloud cover ,and air turbulence, plus rain, was widespread in the central coast area during the time their single engine Piper aircraft vanished Saturday night. The Titans· play the Cal Poly Mustangs next weekend for the CCAA cham· plonship but the tragedy will not lead to cancellation of the grid contest. Cal Poly lost 16 killed and 22 others injured, including coaches, players and rans. Oct. 22, 1960, when their chartered airliner crashed on takeoff from ·Toledo, Ohio. · Cal State, Fullerton President L. ponald Shields said the game with Cal Poly wll tnot be canceled, despite the tragedy, worst in the CSF campus 12.. year hlstvry. For complete details, see stories in today's Sports section, Page 21. . ' $49,000 in Rare Tiffany· La1nps Taken it1 .Newport A collection of Wllque, antique Tiffany lamps worth ·$49,000 -three among the missing dozen worth $7,000 each alone - have been burglarized from an Inglewood dentist's Newport Beach weekend home. The, huge. Joss was discovered Friday afternoon by Or. Vem Phalen when he arriv.ed at 4ot Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle. Investtgators today were continuing their probe of the break·in reported in· itlally to Ofllcer Lawrence Dyle. The 12 colored·glats tamps, assembled by metal secUons, could have been taken either by someone with s p e c i f I c \nowledge of their value, or a burglar who just took a fa."ICy to them. Imitation Till~ lamps are cui'J'ently ·ravor!d J>y decorators. Detective Ken Smith said Dr. Phalen told police the 12--genuine Ti«afiYifems are from the finn's New York head· quarters· aod are a boot two feet t.alJ, · A total of fiye are valued at $1,000 each, three of them taken from the do'YJ!stalrs livi~ room and two more (tom the secOnd-«tory mA'Sttt bedrikim. Detectl\·es said it appeared there was no other Joss, leading to !peculation the burglar or burglars knew preciscly what what the lamps were wt.rth. OfO ctr Mike McEveny, who conducted - the crime scene investigation, said entry was made through a kitchen window of Or. Phalen's plush home . Since he uses it only on weekends, in- vestigators could only place tbe tline of the burglary at some time during the prior several days. Santa Anan Wins Air Race Crown MOJAV~ (UPI) -Santa Ana pilot Frank· Sanders finished fir!lt in the second aorwal Caillomla 1,000 air race Sunday. Sanders arrived 1t Kem County airport followink 41 laps In his Sea Fury with a best time CJ( 3,41.79, Howle Keese of Los Angele! pildled'his Milslang to a second place finish In 3:28.21. Bill Jackson of Modesto wa!I third · irt A MurtancWftlir. '1:~14-.. • + ; , A Canadian team . of o. A. Heyden·- Balllle and Bill Ayers flying a Sea Fury gained fourth at 3:13.34. ' Officials said prize money would bo awarded following tlbulatioo Of the gate. • -- LA's Bropliy Neatly Hit By Assassin LOS AJ'IGELES (AP) -Al least eight shots were fired into the home of Republican Assembly candidate Bill Brophy early today, narrowly rni$ini him, authorities said. ' The gunman escaped, apparenUy in 11 vehicle that drew up in front of the house just as the shots rang out. detectives said. Brophy's campaign manager. William King, was in the house, too, but was not Injured, police said. . Brophy is the Republican candidate in Tuesday's 48th Assembly District elec· lion . Northeast Division detectives s a l d Brophy, 36, told them he was standing in the living room behind a plate glas,, win· dow about 12 : 15 a.m., shortly after he had arrived home following a late night dinner. He said he saw two headlighl!I pull up in front of the house and then a shot fired, shattering a portion of the window, police said. He said he got, down on the floor as other shots were fired. He was not hit. Following the gunshots, detective! said, Brophy heard a car screech away but couldn't see it well enough to identily it. Officers later said they believed the front plate window was it by two bullets and the window screen by six. They recovered six bullets. They said they believed the gunman us-- ed a .~aliber rifle. '1 <lon1 think the shola were Intended -(Sffl!ROPBr,Plp t) 0r .. ,. We•iller , Swiny skies are on the agenda again Tuesday, with more chilly winds from the northeast Hl&hs along the coast 65 rising to 75 in· land. Lows tonight a teeth-chatter- ing J;.50, INSJDE TODA. Y More potential heart attack victims are bf!ing given a. 11ew lm.se ort life bu the "cardiac Cadillac" which speed! aid to th.em rather than vice verso, Page 12. . 11-=M , ..... -Dia•, ... _, 'o!Wri .. ••lltritl ,_ -~lll!Mflt PIMl!Ct ··-............. .. .... ,..,. " " 1: • " , .. ,, " " • l \ • \ I DAIL y PILOT s M011d.iy, Novembtf lS, 1971 • ~.J ews _____ ReY.e.a.l , ..... Blunder i. -• A.bor ~ive V.S~ E1nbass y Raid Details Puhl;-· r • . . . _ TEL AVIV <UPll -The Israeli serJOUsly Ill in a hospilal -resigned ,... Ing about 'l>avid S.n-G"'ion's r.esign•· Supe1·viso1·s Mayors go11unment !lnally has permitted nying !hat he ever ,,ga'(e the order for .the lion as rrime minister and a spil t ID the ' __ Scans Dus~­ Planet' Mars 1:newspapers to print details of lts worst , operation against lh'e 1::1.S: office!. ra~ks o his Mapai Party. • .. _ .,... .., < ~b'itelligence blunder, an abortive' 1954 at· An inquiry exonerated him. But ·the The .new disclosur~ ana Mid Nlno's ~ • -. -' • tempt to sabotage u.S.·Egyptlan ftla· Lavbn Affair contlrrued to haunt lhe cbun-wedding, political idurtes seld, m11y .. H Id c £.1 ~ f ' '·liO!lJ by blowing up ffte U.S. Embassy in try (O'r the ne1t seven years, finally :brinj-revive "the controversy. . 0 amp \AID erence .Cairo. ., Tbe apparent reason for lilting the 17-· ' ' ' \ •• - year-old censorship on the case is !he v I t D • s ht ' wedding of one of the participants. Vic· 0 un e· er. . ',· rivers oug By JA<;K BROBAC~ ."torine Marcelle Nino. She is gelling ma,... " °' * Dlli. ""' ...,. . ried Nov. 23 and Prime Mi nister Gold• WREN !J Orange County mayors aftd four cOurily su,ervlsort, or their Meir will be on hand personally to give ' repreaentaU./ea: get together, one thing is certain -they win disae:rtt. the bride away. T H I o t w · The group held their fourth Supervj90rs and ~fayol'! The plot became known as the ''Lavon 0 e p emen e Ofila]1 Conferenc tSAMCO) Saturday at Los Pinos Forestry Affair," :after the ihen-Dtff'nse Minister Camp. The .. most critical debates involved a proposed Pinhas LaYtJn. ~· county housing authority and the A.lrport.lLand Use. Com- According tb the newspaper accounts mission (!LlJCt Sunday Egypt arrested 14 Israeli spies in Urgent appeals were Issued today for San Clemente to i;entral Orange County The housing authority, a pet project of Supervisor 19$4 and charged them with plotting to volunteers with time and a car to could provide transport with little extra Robert Battin, ilirred up the greatest argument. 1---'blow...up ~ U.S. Embassy in___Cairo and lraMport Mra. George Di Martino Ot San effort. t: Battin, although he had himself solicited opinions the U.S. Consulate in Alexandria in order Clemente tO'the Orange COOnty Medical The DiMartinos art ''detipera e,!' she ·-and support -from-the varioos cities. accused 50mfl-feli-Ow to dissuade Washington from getting in-Center twice a week:. • said. · board members -of trying to _scuUfe the authority by ,OiiciF volved In Egypt following the British If Mrs. DiMartino ls unsuccessful In Anyone Wishing to help can Ing city opinions. · withdrawal. finding voluriteel'! she would not be able DiJ.1artino at 492-6515, or Mrs. McDonald SUPERVISOR DAVID Baker: and ·~om Fuentes, executive aid to Super- What led to the ring's-downfall, the to. undergo the ll(esaving dialysis treat· at 642-0936. visor Ronald Caspers, admitted they do not favor the housing authority. newspapers said, was the capture of ment that iiubstitutes for her failed 1 -Baker sald there ar.e enough low cost housing programs to take care of Phili.P Nathanson when a detonating kidneys. . the need and that a county authority wou1d be uselw Without active partici- . ~vice went off in his hands near a Cairo LOis McDonald, director of t be Lay JnslrnCtorS pation of most cities. movllf theater. · Volunteer. Bureau of Southern Orange Fuentes said Caspers believes blighted areas in the cities should be r.e- ·_-..Nathanson changed his name to Ben c;<>unty, stressed that because the Argcn-developed as an alternative lo new low cost housing ,P~ojecls In th~ remaining ~athan and is now a news photographer tine woman's husband must work. it is St ik S open space in the county. . •. ii:a Tel Aviv. . . impossible for him to keep a job and· f e even San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony Fqrster charged lhlt Batttl:i Is using -·According to the newspapers, two of spent two .entire days a week in central the housing author.ity issue as a "cheap gimmick to get votes." He lidded that t~e ringleaders escaped, one committed Orange .county. Pn'vale Schools his c;ity council had endorsed the program for county territory, but does not ::suicide, one person was torturtd to death, "lt'.s really .a matter of life and death " want to participate. two were e1ecuted, two were acquitied, she said. ' On the Airport Land Use Commission issue, the county League of Cities and six, including a woman, served all or l\1rs. Di?\{arfino must spend thrtt days SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Lay last Thursday voted 15 to 6 to support the new agency. ~part -of their sentences before beii1g a week .on lhe blood·filtering apparatus or teachers went on strike again!lt seven However, Costa Mesa Mayor Rebert Wilson , whose council voted against released lo Israel in a 1968 prisoner ex· she will die of kidney poiso~. Roman Catholic high schools in the San the land use group. charged !hat-the law ·authorizing· the commis.sioo took :Change. ttMr. DiMartino ta.kes her each Satur· Francisco Archdiocese toaay Over a control away from th~ board-of supervisors ancrpefTnita an appointed commls- All were recogniud by th: government day, but can't take two full days off dur· salary dispute. sion to overrule elected officials. 'IS Israeli emissaries Upon the ir return, ing the week to take htr," !.1rs. The superintendent of the schools, the HE REFJ;RRED to the current land rezone dispute centering on 50 acres according to the ne\\'.spapers. receiving McDonald said._· Rev. Bernard Cummins, said classes owned by the McDcmnell Douglas Corp. near Orange County Airport. County an equivalent of an army officer's pay The woman , who speaks no English, is were being conducted as normal. with 70 supervisors voted 3-2 last Wednesday to approve the rezone for commercial : with combat allowance for all their time scheduJed for dialysis on TuesdaYs, religious teachers and 40 non· strikers use rather than industrial. · jn Egyptian jails. Thursdays and Saturdays, and must ar-doing teachin g chores. The )and use commission will vote on the issue Dec. 2. If they oppose the Besides Miss Nino. an En g I is h ri ve before 9 a.m. on those day$ to spend rezone it vdll take a four-fifths vote of county supervisors to overrule the Uterature and arts student at Tel Aviv the entire day on the machine. The president of the independent Secon-deci sion . . university, and Ben Nalhan, the other The treatment ends each day at 4 p.'m. dary Teachers Association said hi! Cities are badly split on the housing authority issue. Sil favor It and seven members of the ring living ,in Israel were Mrs. McDoriald urged that an y 0 n e members voled 105 to 25 to reject a oppose. T~o city councils have refused to take a stand. identified as a buslnesaman, an engineer, with a regular commuting schedule from salary offer. Gerald. Killian said Favoring an authority' are Huntington Beach, Lagfula Beach, San Juan a doctoral ca!Jdldate in agriculture and a members. then took a strike vote which Capistrano, Sant.a Ana, Stanton and Fullerton. . st~~~n~~~:~1!1es!:~~i~t~d!~s.the Israel S , . . , S pa~:~~t~:~~:n:ve;a~e.;:~;~~~ly broken La Pi?!'r~~~ ~sf~~! Beach. Los.Alamitos,.Orange, Anaheim, Garden Grove, lntelli ence rin I Lavon -ndw 67 and ' cie11.tist lLY..__S down" following the · rejection of the ON. TH£" FENCE are Newport Beach and Buena Park. Newport Mayo.r 3 Teens Seized ; In W ~tminster ~~arket Robbery Abdut 10 m.iliutes a(ter'the robbery Of a ·Westminster market, three Long Beach teenagers were arrested by pplice Satur- ·day ~Shi a~ cha~ w!Qi the hold111>. · -Pol~ said t~ey are still • seeking lhe ·2t1speet from II' second ,robbery that oc· curred severs.I hours after t h e market _!'·hoJd.up. Detective Sgt. Frank Fisher said the -&top 'N Go Market, 13757 Goldenwest St. ' was held up for $41 by two yo uths. Fisher siiif one of the two was armed !With a .22-caliber rifle. Witnesses to the robbery told officer! lh~y saw the two get into a car driven by ·a third person. Using the description sup- . plied by lhe·witnesses, police stopped the ·suspect.!' car about 10 minutes later. -Fisher alleges a rifle and $41 was foond •fn the·car. : In custOdy today are Albert C. Peralta .and Gary D. Ortiviz, both 18, and a 17- year-old boy, all from Long Beach. · ln the second holdup , $35 was laken at gunpoint from the Do Nut Shop at 9329 Bolsa Ave. early Sunday morning. Fisher said the suspect, a male Caucasian in his early 20s, bought some donut& from clerk Opal Webb. The man returned 15 or 211 minutes later and gave · Mrs. Webb a note demanding the money Crom the cash register. He brandished a chrome revolver. Fisher said. The clerk gave the suspect the money and he fled on foot. according to the police account. OlANGl COAST ....., --.,.rchdioc(lse!s--Of.fer-.-Killian-said. The of--Ed-Jiirlh...said-iLwa.s ''a serious.Issue~· and "we.did-not.have aufficlent infonna· Cal :f0· rri:a Gulf fer called ror no pay raises trus year and t.i.on to take a stand." 11 " four percent hikes in the next two years. . .... _..., ____ ._. _____________ -..., ____ ..{ Killian said the union wanted six per· - Being . Destroyed ENSENADA, Mexico (U PI ) -The Gulf of California is being turned into an ecological disaster because of dumpings 1by Am'rican and ,J\1uican .farmers, ac- cordi.ag to Katsuo Nishikawa. director of the Institute of Oceanology here. He and five other scientists }lave been , surieyink '.ee<i.loglcal damage in the gulf, which is ~tween the teast coast of Baja California and the western shorr11ine o! the Mexican mainland. cenl increases this year and next as well as class size limilations aiid gu.,,rantees of paid substitutes to take over when regu lar instructors were ill. "We are prepared to picket and stay out of the classroom until a settlement is reached,'' Killian s.aid. · The seven affected high schools include three In San Francisco, two in San Jose, one in San Mateo and one in Marin Coun- 1 ty. !h~Y have a 'total e~ollmenL, or '5'.046 pupils. · Fl'OHI Page 1 'iAlthough our preliminary results· will .. « not· be available for some time," he said, BROPJIY ..• ''our early findings have be;en frighten- ing." • ~ · One conClusion wa8 that Ame rican and Mexican farmers have been dumping emormous amourrts of pesticides and salt into the gulr. "The salinity problem is reaching the point of no return," he said. "Something _ must ~ done by both the United States and Mexico to control it or it will become both an ecological and e c o n o m i c disaster." · He said the farmers flu sh sall and pesticides from the soil in the Colorado River Delta and empty the waste into the ri ver. More salt and pest icides are added by farmers in the lmperi.!11 Valley. So me goes to the P.texicali Valley but the major amount nows into the gulf. ·ueroes' to scare me," Brophy said later, "They obvioUsly meant to hit me." · He said he moved just as the first shot as fired, probably saving him from bei,ig hit.. ' . Brophy told ciI!icers that in the last two weeks he has received "name-calltrlg" phone calls. · Brophy got 12,2.36 votes to lead the field Oct. 19 When 10 candidates for the Assembly seats were reduced to four. Also in the race Tuesday are Democrat Richard Alatorre; Peace and Freedom candidate John W. Blaine and in· dependent Raul Ruiz:. The seat was_ vacated by Democrat David Roberti, now a state senator. Hailed Scliool Crossing Guard .Hit Twice By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 llM Di ii'!' P'lltl 51111 China Watchers ·Cite .Lin Piao Death Plot,s NEW . YpRK (AP) .,... Time magazine says Western experts believe Lin Piao, ~fao Tse·tung's designated suc~sor as chairman of China's Communist ·Party, tried to; assassinate Mao three times and was betrayed by his own daughter as he tried to escape. Crediting the account to "China- watchers fron1 Hong Kong to Washington," Time said Lin, the defense minister, is "politically finished and very 'possibly dead as well." ' The magazine said "an epic struggle for power" came to a climax in Sep- tember. It said six of the 21' members of the politburo have since "dropped com· plete l)f from view." According to this explanation for the vague reports of tun'noil coming out of China, Lin somehow was exposed in September. He reportedly tried three times in 18 months to kill the man who made. him his beir·apparent 21h years ago. '.Deciding to nee China, Lin. his wife and son: Chen Po.ta, Mao's chief idealegue. personal secretary and ghostwriter ; and Wu Fa-hsien, chief of the air force, reportedly went to a military airfield near Peking. Chen was purged from his fourth-rank- ing spol in the Politburo last tall. He and Wu were described as coconspirators with Un. 'l'hl grOup;tOOk Off tn' a llrltlsh·m~de Trident equipped with special radar to fly at very low altitude,, the magazine ~aid. "Wherever they were headed, they never made it," Time said. "Lin's own daughter, Lin ToO·tou, betrayed the escape attempt and I.he Tri- dent was somehow shoi down." . The magazine said a Trident ·w\ich ''mysteriously crashed deep in Mongolia '' was believed to be the plane carrying Lln. It added that the Soviet Union knows the identities of the nine bodies found at the .crash site, ''but they will say only that !he victims were in uniform, that.one was a wol"(lan @<I that there were signs of an armed struggle in the aircraft, sug- gesting a hijack attempt." Time sa.id one . of. the. "unmistakable signs" of Lin's downfall was the recall from bookstores and libraries of Mao's Lillie Red Book'"'"'because Lin wrott !he introduction." Related Story Page 4. Ecli son Aide Di es NASHUA, N.H. (UPI ) -Sam G. Langley, 94, of Amherst. chief engineer for Thomas A. Edison from 1911 until Edison's death In 1931, died Sunday in a Nashua hospital after a short illness. , PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) -Marhllr 9 swept .around the du'skloaked _world of Mars today, tan£alizlna: scientists ,with hints of revelations to -come whe/1 the planet'• raging dust storm " subtides and ·the surface l~ '111JVeiled lo the satell!!''• cameras. . Scientists complained that "• .. 1Moud has been drawn about this planet't by a phenomenal du~t ~~rm, affording t~m only peek-a·boO ghmpsts of Martian features through the what they called "monotonous" mass o! d1.13t. But1bey ad· ded hopi?li!!!>'-there are signs the du6t storm is tapering off. The spacecraft was operating flawless- ly in its second day as the first arilficlal moon of ·another planet. Engiflttrs were_. confident it would work for rnonlhs, Tuna: after they expect the dust cloud to clear. But to make the most of the dl~ap­ pointlng early Photography, project of· ficlals were revising Jong-planned picture- laking programs to aim Mariner'~ _twin television eyes toward areas most h~~IY, to show features through the dusty ha~. Mariner 9, looping ~iars every 12\i hours in a path 863 to 11 ,135 miles high, is expected ~ radio back thousands of close-up pictures. It will map 70 pe~cent of the planet's surface and Joo~ for l~k~IY landing areas for life-searctung Viking robots scheduled to land there in 1976. Mariner began taking a third series of photographs at 3:45 a.t:n. IPST) today, to be relayed· back to earth late IOOl~ht. , To improve the relay of ~1ar1ner 9 S data back to earth, controllers pro- grammed the probe to shi ft into a slight.I)' lower orbil with a six·minute rocket ·fir· ing at 3:45 p.m. (PST). This will time t~e orbit so that Marine r will be able to radio two sets of photographs daily to the big tracking slation in California's Moj ave Desert. The spacecraft's first two series of orbital photographs. beamed back Sunday and early today. were almost all disap- pointing, featureless views of the tops of clouds of dust that some scientists guess· ed may have been whipped up by. 200 mile per hour desert winds scburing the surface of-Ma1s. - "This is becomi11g a bit monotonous," said Dr. Albert HiPbs, spokesman at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory control center. ''There is nothing_ to be seen. A shroud has certainly been drawn about this planet," he said. Two shots. however, showed intriguing ridge-like features covered with carbon dioxii:l.e snow, near the sou th pole. Dr. James Cults, a Mariner project scientist, said they were "the most exciting we 've seen yet." The objects correspond with 90me photographed by Mariner 7 during Its brief fiigbt past Mars in 1969. Fl'ttnl Page 1 PHASE II ... nOt be increased over the amount paid in the quarter immediately preceding th a wage-price freeze wh ich began Aug. 15, ihe committee said, Many people \\'ho went to work today \\'ere earning more money for the first lime since Aug. 15, even though it won't show up ~n their paycheck until n.ext pay. day or whenever bookkeeping ad· justments are made. 1'tilitary men and women shared in an immediate $2.4 billion pay hike. But movements on the price front-were slower. at least partly because of the more complicated rules governing post· freeze price changes. Stores nO\V are re· quired to post a list of freeze-level prices before any of those prices may be in· creased, and getting that done \\'as time· consuming. The Phase II control grou ps still were making decisions on many unsettled aspects of the situation. The Pay Board meets again on Tuesday to consider some aspects of the retroactive pay dispute, probably as it applies to teachers. DAILY PILOT year. He noted that the department has a high conviction rate of drivers cited Enoch T. ''Blackie'' Autrey Is 73 years under section 2815. old and spends hi s time help.ing children Autrey says drivers running his stop ~''·e',./' We Buy Direct From til•.,eff IHcli Mttatl .. t•• ... .. a...-..... , ••• ,.. .... ..., C••• M•• S.. C~ O!flANGa (04ST P'UILtlHINO COMf-'"'I' k•t·,,1 H. w,,4 "'"""" •• P'utllahlr J ,,1r. k. Cuti ,., Vin P'r111111111 1t111 G.ntt1I Mll\aftl' lh111111 Ktt~ll . ••11"'" Th•M•• A. /rtlur1~i~• Mtflltllr!I 1.•,ior Cll•rl tt H. l •o1 Ri,h111I P. Nill At1llltM M.,,tOl"" IE-Uori Offlci1 (flltl Mttt t JJ! Wftl ••Y lrrul f<I-' 1-'!t .uJ! Nf*PD•I lou~ ..... ,.. 1.tt~ •Md!: m '"'"' A,,.n.,. tlllfl!l!loltlt ... di, Hiil INC~ l ou1..,1rll a.,. tl"'*I-au Horm El G.omlM •111 DAtlV "IL.OT, Wl!ll ..,ldl h °""'"·" ""-fol--"r'WI• • lllUll!itlltll iltl!J 1•c"" 1-•rt Ill .... ,.. •fltllN tot Laf ......... ,.,,. fol"""'1 •.-di. Cllt. ""''· _........, 1 '9dl. ir.wiMM Vttlf\', 1111 C"-U/ " ... -.... s.tll5'Nd, ... 1rllfl -'"*"' ••llllft.. ,..1'M:tPll .,~ ''-" It 9t • W.1 l t i 11,...1, QUI M"._ , ........ 171 4} 641-4Jl1 C'-"'M M,...1talllt '41·1171 Iii. Cl111 U1°I All Dtp.,..Mtt: T••11••• 4fM 421 CW'(rleht; 1m, Otlf'ltf Cant M lllll!.w ~' "'-.,._ ,.,i.t, 1n1111r1r11111. t11111'91'11( • IN!llt ... .."""".,..."" ~tttW. rM'f' M ,._..i.,elll ""'"""' .,...:llt ,_. ,.,._ .... ~Jrilllll -· "'" cltM •flt• (llW •I N.....,..t IMCtl ..,,. c11i. "'"'· c.ni.r~t•. 1\111111Cl'r.i11t1 IW Uttltf . u.n -lll!j'I w l'f!lll u 71 ........ 11'1 fl'lltll1ry •utirlt!iltlt, iJ.U "'°"!Illy, 1 cross busy streets. SiFtn make his job tough sometimes. Blackie has been a crossing guard for "No doubt about it. I don 't have much sl1 years in Fountain Valley. He, along trouble with the kids -they're a pretty ~·ith his 12 counterparts who work: at the good. bunch. But sometimes the drivers same job, are considered unsung heroes can be real trouble," he says. by local police. In Fountain Valley a crosslng that has "Oh sure . .J've been hit twice," says repeated problems with drivers will be Autrey, "but I didn't get hurt very bad." staked out by a police unit. Once 1 got hi~ trying to save a liltle boy. 1 Otherwise, it's up to the crossing guard guess it came· out okay. The little boy to point out the problem drtvers. Beddow didn't get hit and 1 didn't get hurt." says the guards are often able to get Sgt. John Beddow who is in charRe of down a driver's license plate number and ff gi ve the number to police. the tra ic detail for lhe Fountain Valley "We write these people a letter and police department. says Autrey's case is have them in to the station to discuss the typical of all the Fountain \'Talley cross· situation," Beddow said. Bot . he ing guards. "They really are unsung heroes," Bed-acknowledged the only way to cite a driver is when a patrolman sees hlm dow says. "They are expected to be out, blow the stop. . regardless of the weather. They have to Aside from troublesome drivers and put up with motorists who nin through in-bad weather, crossi ng ~ards ire faced tersecUons and people who get irrite with working hours which average live because they think the crossing guard ill hours spread o~r an eight·hour period. holding ·them up.". . For Uutanee, the guard who works one Th,e o.nly pro~ect1on a cr.oss1ng gu:ird of the intersections ftear Nleblas School has 1s.h1s stop s.1.gn and sectio.n 2815 of ~ht . works from a to 8:35 1.m.; from 9:10 to 6l1t~ Motor Vel\icle ~e which i;ay-It's 9:4$ a.m.; from 11 :30 8 .m. to 1:20 a.m.: a misdemeanor to. dtsrtgard the dlrec·. from t:-45 to 2:15 p.m. and from 2:;45 to t'ons of •ny duly coosUtuted crossing 3:45 p.m.. guard. "The city pays guards $2.12 per hour," A a:uard Is Instruct~ to "alt for a Beddow said. "And we have quite a break: in traffic If possible. then walk to variety. There's Blackie and his wife and &he r]\lddle (If the .strett with his paddle. then we have a 19-year-old girl who goes raised. Once the guard has reached the to· college at night." He said the bulk or middle, the children •re motioned across. his crossJng guard forct consists of The guard does not drop the 5top sign un-hOuscwlves and older people. til the last child Is oot of the intersection lf Autrye is t7pical, they all like the and as long as that ,1gn ls held up, work In spite o the hou rs, tht driver& drivers are expected to wait. and the weather. "It's a full lime job on &ddow aays no acclde:nl.s Involving short lime pay, but t like It," Autrey crosslng 1uards have been reporttd this said . "It's aood work for an old man." 1· ' , ·- .QO" The General Public ' Ami Pass The Savings, HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES: On To You! 't.di.t 11 .. Ht LMi.t '-"Y J:05 C•nit Lodi.,, M.11tll11I, 1.IJ C1t0t l•NI W•lt•t l.JO C•r• T•htl W•)tht T•t.t Weith! f llM 911•llty DIAMOND DIAMOND DIAMOND CLUSTER CLUSTER CLUSTER COCICTAIL COCICTAIL COCKTAIL RING RING RING GOOD 9UAl/T'f' c •• ,., 01 .... w $895 SAYI OH THIS .I S Cer.r $995, $595 w.-.._"'"' _,...,cMtir.il rflt• ho MMct,,..... 'WI .......... _ ............. trr.111 V4 ...... ,; ..... , rkff, ,., ... ,... ........... ,. Di-.MI tr.. Sl,00 • ,.111t. • ' cos1:·iiisitjltiil:av·& LOAN I' Opm Dafl11 9 to 6 Comt fn and Brouse Around I 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lotw-H-1. ITH;WOJ ' . I DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE WM. ,... "" • 11e111... '""' -.. •• Wiii t lilereittee ttwt di .. --,. .,l'NfM .. 40'9 MORI rt... y•• ,_14 l•t It ., ,,,, 111..., Mtll. c .. .,.. •• n W.U .U.~1 COM,All. ' l lCPllT WATC H l lf'All DONI OH ;klMISIS 7 I I· • I 7 I t • I Dunti:Dgto~ .Bea~h FouQfiUD -Valley . ' VOL 64, NO. 273, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES -. '-·' ORANGE cour:m. CALIFORNIA ' ~ N.Y. Ste ek • MONDAY, NOVEMIER '15, ·197f W. CENTS . ' Huntington Schedules.Oil Fee Debate Tonight A $tt,OOO increase in annµaJ fees Jor oil well operators will be debated by the Huntington Beach City Council this even· ing. ltJ s the !ates\ and expeQted1 to tie the last step in a controversY tha"t began nearly two years ago when moves began lo create a tougher~ new oil code. · After being ~delayed five times at couir . CiJ level, nt.w code prov.ilions aimed at speeding rtrnoval of idle_ wells were ap.- proved a month ago, but the· most C(ln· tested que.stion -what fees should lie -c;harged oil operators -was left_out of the Code for more researcli. · Last month lhe council rejected recom· mendations.to increase the .annual fees from the present tolal Of "4.000-a year~li> about pio,ooo aMually. Tonight cting City Administrator· Brander Castle will sugg~ a cqmproniise fee structwe that would ralse $108;000 a year. "Thls ls a figure that would cover the clty':s costs of enforcing the code and pro- vide a cushion for an accelerated cleanup U the council wants to do that," Castle ,~a~ this morning., The last timt the fees were discussed, spokesmen for the oil companif.!l and a majority of councilmen argued that the annuaJ. fees should come Cl0se to match· ingi:be cost of code enforcement. At that meeting, Oil Field, Superin- tendent Herb Day presented rreport to councilmen lndicatlng that the city's cost totllod -only $52.0llO a year -·loss than the present revenue of $64,000 -and the recommendation for an increase wu defeated. Tonight CasUe will pre.ent reviled · figures placing the city's ~Ls at $8t,800 a year. · "The dlfference between '99,ISOO and Sl~,000 wouJd provide room for •n.Y un- 10..-0 legal-~," tho actlog ad- mlniltrator aald. • Tho lncreue ...uld be ~ about by ralaing the annual ~ flle oo the 1,740 wells In the city fr o·m UMt present $Z5 • year ~ '50, Tb1s would brq In an extra '44,GOO. AD other fees, such as charps for aewtr conect1ons, wute water pennjt1 and drilling permits would remain !be same. Candidate Target Shots RUld"le Hopeful's LA Home --LOS ANGELES (AP) -At least oigirt shots_ were fired into the home of Republican Assembly candidate Bill Brophy early today, narrowly missing him, authorities said. The gunman escaped, apparently in a vehicl~ that drew up in front of the house just as the shots rang out, detectives said. Brophy's campaign manager, William King, was in the house, too, but was not injured, police said. Brophy is the Republican candidate in Tuesday's 4Sth Assembly District elec- tiOfl. - School Aid - Bill Awaits Signature • _ .OAIL.V l"l~OT S-.tt ..... FOU NTAIN VALLEY'S BLACKIE AUTREY SEES YOUNG CHARGES SAPRY' ACROSS ELLI S AV ENUE A,.lnlt the Eloments ond Cnnky Drlvort, o Hon6-hold Slap Sii", Fonitude end So,cllon ·2a1s An emer1ency "bill which woald allOw bacli!rrwlbo Huntlngtae·JlUcb;Uailxl 111gb.8clioot District'• unlllcatlon ptu to hire legal uliStance for an imPmlinc court battle is awaiting Gov. Reagan's. signature toc1ay. F ountain Valley ~uncil to Mull 2 Resolutions · Two resolutions, directed at Lhe Orange County Board of Supervisors will be taken up by members of the Fountain Valley City Council at their meeting ·rues1fay night. The meeting will be held al 8 p.m. at city hall , 10200 Slater Ave. The first reolution asks the supervisors Lo return to the itemized tax bill and the s~d is an expression of dlssati~factlon 1vilh the . redistric!ing of the county supervisorial districts. ·The redistricting resolution was pro-' posed by Mayor Ed Just, an a'cknowledged foe of First District Supervisor Robert Battin, Just lives in the section of Fountain Va'lley which was transferred into Ronald Caspers' Fifth District duriilg reapportionment. A sinilJar fate befell other potential candidates who might have opposed Bat· tin's retlecUon bid next spring. Two of these. pott11tial candidates, John W. "BW" Jill and W'illiam·Wenke, have an-- nounced tbatthey will move back into the First District in order to oppose Battin. Just's resol.ution slates "that placing the residents of Fountain Valley into two districts was cklne solely for purposes1of polftlcal gerrymandering aod .not for reasons of necessity or to improve the welfare or Jts residents." . Actording to the proposed reMJlution on the ta1: bills the change to an ltemiud Forni is based on the fact that this year's bllll haVe only one enb'y for education - an entry which totals taxes for elemen· tary,·high school and COJ?lmunlty college districts. ·~~~~~~~~~~~~.., Giv.e Kid. 'A' For l 11genuity The first is.<;ue ot Spring View SChool's AfeWltr · Rev iew,· named ~ ror Kathy t1.fe1ster, a sixth grade le11cher at the Huntington Beach school, ~tained the ·following eJ"' ample of creative wrlUng : "I saw a glanl temple all crumb!· ed up and torn apart. On one of the !tones it. said there once lived 1 king. the ,..at King Ozymand~s. "He was a six foot, ten Inch, 5 pound running back for Kansas Ci- ty. lie came to.the desert area \'ery rich and built a temJie which is now 2.000 years old .... ~· ' •eeroes' Hailed A spokesman for Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R·Huntington Beach ) said the bill had passed In the Ciilifomia legislature on Frlday. Sch ool C,ro ssing Gua rd Hit Twice If signed, the bill would allow the Ctlun-. ty Comrrrlttee on School D i ·1 t r i c l Organiz.ation to legally pay the. private Jaw f1rtn it has retained for a court test on the controversial plan. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of fltt D1l1Y f'IMll Stiff Enoch T. "Blackie" Autrey is 73 years old and spends his time helping cluldren cross busy streets. Blackie has been a crossing guard for six years in Fountain Valley. He, along with .hill 12"counterparts who work at the same jQb, are cons idered unsung heroes by Joc31 police. "Oh sure, I've b:cen hit twice,'' says Autrey. ''bnt I didn 't get hurt very bad. Once I got hit trying to save a little boy. 1~ gu~ss it came out okay. The little boy didn 't get hit and I didn't get hurt." Sgt. John Beddow who is in charge of. the traffic detail for the Fountain Valle y police department says Autrey's case is typical of all the Fountain Valley cross· · ing guar~s. "They really are unsung heroes ," Bed- dow says. ''They are expecfed to be out., regardless of the weather. They have to put up with motorists who run through in· tersectlons and 'peOple who gel irate because they think the crossing guard is holding them up." The only protection a crossing guard ha's is his stop sign and Section 281S of the state· Motor Vehicle Code which says it's a misdemeanor lo disregard the direc· tiorfs of any duly constituted crossing · guard. A ·guard is instructed to ,wait lor a break in traffic if-PQ'&lbleJ then walk le> the nliddle of the street with his paddle raised. Once the guard has reached the middle, the chUdren are motioned across. The guard does not drop the stop sign°un- lil the last Child ts out of the intersection and as long as that sign is held up, drivers are expected to wall, Beddow, says no accidents involving crossing guards have been reported this year. He noted that th e department has a high convicfjon rate of drivers cited under section 281S. • Autrey says drivers running his .stop sign make his job tough ldmetimes. "No doubt about it. I don't have much trouble With the k.lds -they're a pretty. good bunch. But 90melimes the' dri\l'eri can ~ real trouble ,'' he says: Jn Fountain Valley a crossing that has repeated problems with drivers will be staked out by a police unit. Olherw..lse, il'1 up t.o the crossing guard to point out the problem drivers. Beddow says the guards are often able to get down a driver's Ucenae plate number and give the number to poUce. 11We write theae people a letter and have them ln to the statk>n to' discuss the situation," Beddow aaid. Dul h e ~acknOwledged lhe oniy way to cite • driver ts 'fhen a patrolman seu him ' • bJow ihe stop. Aside from troub,esome drivers and bad weather, crossing guards i.re faced with working hours which average five hours spread over an eight-hour period. For instance, the guard who works one of the intersections near Nieblas School works from 8 to 8:35 a.m.; from 9:10 to 9:45 a.m.; from 11 :30 a.11). to 1:20 a.m.; from 1:45 to 2:15 p.m. and from 2:45 to 3:45 p.m. "!The.city pays guards $2.12 perbour,'' Beddow said. "And we have quite a variety. There's Blackie and his wife and then we ha9"e a 19--year-old girl who .goes to college at night.'' He said t~ bulk f:tf his crossing guard force consists of housewives and older people. If Autrye is typical, they all likf: the work in spite of the hours. the drivers and the weather. "It's a full time job on !hort time pay, but I like it," Autrey said. "It's good work for an old man." The committee, which Md approved • the plan earlier this month, has been ask· ed. to appear in Superior Court Nov. 23· to "show cause" why the plan was adopted. Jts adversary is the Fountain Valley School District which claims that the plan violates the equal wealth reqolrement of the California Education Code. A1though it has already hired the Santa Ana firm of SchJegel , Friedemann, Inadomi and Mente, Lhere is no legal way of paying it for its services until the bill is signed. The offiC1! of the County Counsel. a traditional legal adviser to the com· mittee, declared earlier this month that it had no responsibility to defend the com- mittee in court. In addition, the County Counsel rerused to authorize the payment CS.. UNIFY, Pa(o Z) CSF in Mourning 3 Football Coac hes Die i11. Craslt Student.I and players today mourned three Cal State1 Fullerton football coaches killed over the weekend wbtn thelfl'ented plane slammed into rugged brush-choked San Marcos P~ terrain a6ove Santa Barbara. The victim! were being flown to scout a game at Cal Poly, san Luis Obispo by a.charter pilot who alao died in -the crash 400 yardt off Camino Clelo Road in the-Santa Ynez Mountains. Iroµicall y, the team the CS!i' Titans are to play next weekend for the CCAA 1971 football championship was virtually wiped out 11 years and three weeks ago in a Toledo, Ohio plane crash. -, Dead as a , result of the tragic weekend crash are Joe O'Hara, 39, sophomore offensive coach; Bill HaMah. :rr, offenalve line coach, and Dallas Mooa. 30, defensive coach. The pilot was identified as Ernie Mariette, 40, or San Gabri!I, a veteran Oier. 01Hara, of Tustin, Hannah, of Buena Park, and Moon, of La P1lma, were Dying from San Diego where the Titans whipped U.S. InternaUor.a( University 40 Ii> 30 Saturday. Heavy cloud cover and air turbulence, plus .rain, was widespread in Ute central coast area during Lhe time their single engine Piper ail'Cl·alt Yanlshed Saturday night. The Titans play the Cal Poly Mdstanaa next weekend for the CCAA cham· pionshlp but the tragedy will not lead to cancellaUon of the grid contest. Cal Poly lost 16 ,.killed and 22 others In~, Including coaches, players and lam, Od. 22, JllO, whell UJOlr cllartored 1lrllnor mi!hod' oo tateolf Imm Toledo, Ohio. Cal Stale. Tullor1on Pmidont L. Doneld Shrelds sald the game wilh·Car Poly will not bt wnceled. desPite the tragedy, worst in the CSF campus. l~ year history. For compleie details, '" llorleS In todaf a Sporta aectk>o, Pap 21. ' -' ' • • Northeast DlVislon. detectlvet 1a1 d Brophy, ;16, told them be wu atandlng In the living room be.hind a plate glass win· dow about 12 :15 a.m., ahorUy aft« be had arrived home following ' late night dinner. He said he saw ·two headlights pull up in front of the house and then a shot fired, shattering a Portion of the window, politt. said. He Said he got down on· the floor as other shots were fired. He· wu not blL Following the-gunshl;>ts, detectives aakl, Brophy beard a car acrftch away but couldn't see it well enough to ldenWy it. Officers later·said they•btlleved the front Charger ~en Connie ·Krimian: is 'Edison High• Schpol's 1911 Homecoming .Qlllllln: ~ 17-)'Ul'il!lt. ~~r .iJI ., lhe-dliughttl' . Of. ,Geiald Kilmian, 10211.J!e .. rli Di'ive, . Huntington .Buch. · ·She. ·was crowned dliri\tg-·Ftid1y-nigbt football game. Edisoll' lost to Magnolia 7-0. Valley Man Held In Savage Attack On Mesa Officei:, A Fountain Valley man who allegec'1 beat a Costa Mesa policeman bloody dur- ing 1 lraflle stop early• Siind1y, beforo the officer drew hi!! gun, wOUncl up Jn jaQ after reinforcements. 1rrlved. Mlchae(E. Klaes; 28, of 9195 El·Vmle Circle, was booked oo suspicion of amult on a police officer. Patrolman Ron Veach 11uffered • sprained ankle, cut Up, bloody nose and chin laceration durj.ng the fistflght and wrestling match a£-Newport Boule•ard a-nd Fair Drive. Police claim his account was cor- roborated by Donald Jackson, a witness who llW part Of the thrff.miDute brittle before Officer Veach could draw bis revolver on Klaes. Officer Vtach ukt . he spotted Kltes traveling on Fair Drh'e at a hJ&h nte ~f J •l(Oed about 2 a.m .. pWlod him O¥U ml wia immedlately•cballenged about CWH for detaining the mot«llL 'MM! patrolman sa)d Klae• e1me at him swinging and-he'wu· llnally knocked to the pavement< aft.et beckiog· up..Mvtral , iftt to 1wid ~ing hlt. ' 'Taxpayers' to Meet h'<l<angt CoUnty Tn!>l1en Alaocla- Uon wiU meet to -Ibo U.S. Const!UJUOll at 7:311 ,p.m •. '111andly In Ibo Westmlnst.er High School caftteril, ~ cordlog to an associa~ lnDOUDCtD'ltllL I f • plate winclow~wu tt by two bullets-ml-· - the window screen by aix. They recovere:I six bullttl, Th<i said !bey boljevod the gunman """ od a .22-caliber rifle. .. I don't think the shots were intended 1 to scatt me." Brophy said later. ''TbeJ. obvk>usly meanl to hit me." 1 He said he moved just as the firat lhot 1 u fin:d, probably saving him from beiq hit. Brophy told officers that in the Jet twe weeks he has received ''name-calling"· phone calls. . . TTnif• • \:J . --1eat1on Factions OK 8-day Delay~. lh th Iida In Ibo Fountain Valloy School Diltrk:t wnlflcldlgn «iib¥9bl) to- day ·acned lo .. el&lil-day -..., .... ~ c-tJ SUpeitor Cocirl ~ Griglnally -for Ibis '"""'"" la Judae·J.E.T. "Ned" Rutter's ewrhoom. A prollminary hoortng bis "°" been aet for Nov. ZS. Both sides will be ukod ID return Dec. 14 If that hearing does oot resolve the issues raised by the school dlstrict. At issue In the controversy is the Oran(e County Commiltee on Schoo! Dlstricl Orpnbatlon's approval ~ • unification plan that wouJd split tbe Bun· ttngtoo Beach Union High S c boo I District's tenitory into four new unified achoo! systems. That plan must be sent to the atale Board of F.c:lucation for ratification and actloo laien by the Fountain Valloy district in a lawsuit, wbk:h named the commltleo as do!ondants bu l<mpororily halted tho propooal pending a coorl hearing. The Fountain • Valley district opposes the new· divilion .., the grounds that ii would \'lolata-atata education coda by creating a disparity o1 ... a1th ._ the participating districts. Stokes Lectures Set CLEVELAND (UPI) -Cart B. Slol<es, former Cleveland mayor, 1111 be wlD lecture nen year 1Cr01s the naUon. Detween appear~ before' college au- diences and fraternal organluUoos, for which he Ls upected to command 12,000 per loctutt, stotos will help bla<ts and other minorlUes orgllllze polillcal coali- tions, such as the one that helped elect him JJllYor~bere twice. 'lfMdll!I ' Sunny WOI m on, the qenda again Tuesday, with more chilly winds from tho nortbeasl. Hlgba along tho cout 15 rising to 75 In· land. Low• ton~ • letll><hatter· ing 35-50_.__ ••• • INSm B TODA l' • Mort potntacl hnrt oitack vk:ti!'nl are bring given a mw lto.Te on life b~ &he .,cordiac Cadillac" which lf>t•d.o aid. to tMm rather than vice vtrscz. Page 12. -~ =·· --=-•••twmut ·----- ' .. .... -.. " • " • " , .. ,. " 11 --" ~-.... --.. ......... ll _,, ft• Sllcl ........, .. " T...... 11 -" -. ,._.... ..... , ... --.. • ' • • flr OAIL V I'll Of " - ,...:.::::::~~~ct~ ;:\...._ -si1perviso-rs-, M'.ayo rs ·Hold Ca1np Co11f erence By JACK 'BROBACK Of tu O.lly 1'1191 S11U _ Wllf:N ti Orange County-mayors and four "'county supervisors,. or thelr rtpireJenlaUver a:et together, one thing is certain -they will dfsagree. The group held their fourth Supervisors and Mayors Can(erence (SAP.1C0) Saturday al Los Pinos F'orestry Camp. The most critical debates inv9lved a proposed county. housing authority and the Airport· Land USe Com· mission (ALUC J. The housing autho rity, a pet proj«t of Supervisor Robert Battin, stirred up· thfo greatest-.rgument. • Battin, although he had himself solicited opinions and support from the various cities. accused some fellow board members of trying to scuttle the authority by 90licit.. lng city opinions. SUPERVISOR DAVID Baker and Tom Fuentes, executive aid to Super· visOr Ronald Ccispers, admitted they do not favor the housing authority. Baker said there Jre enough low cost housing programs to take care of the need and .that a county authority would be useless without active·partici- paUon of most cities. . Fuentes said Caspers believes blighted areas in the cities should be re- .. developed as an altemative to new low cost housin~ projects In the rtmalnlng open space In the county. . . 1 San Juan Caplstr¥no Mayor 'Tony Forster charged that Battin 111 using the housing authority Issue as a "cheap gimmick tog.et vot~s.'" He added that his city council had endorsed the program for e<1unty terrltory, but does not want to participate. On the Airport Land Use Commission issue, the fQUnty League o( Cities last Thu rsday voted 15 to II to support the new agency. However, Costa Mesa ~1ayor Robert Wilson, whose council voted against the land use group. charged that the law authorizing the commission took control away from the board of supervisors and permits an appointed commis.. • lion to overrule elected officials. 8.t._ llUERRED to the Current land rezone dispute centering on SO acres owned by the McDonnell Douglls Corp. near Oran ge County Airport. County · Supervisors voted 3-2 last Wednesday to approve the ru.one for corilinercial use. rather than industrial. _ The land use commission will vote on the issu e Dec. 2. If they oppose the rezone it will take a four-fifths vote of county supervisors to overrule the decision. Cities are badly !plit on the housing authority issue. Six favor it and seven oppose. Two city councila·ha ve refused to take a st.and. i · Favoring an authority are HunlinglOn Beach, Laguna. Beech . San Juan . Capirtr.aho, Santa Ana , Stanton and Fullerton. Opposing are Seal Beach, U>s Alamitos, Orange, Anaheim, Garden Grove,· La Palma, and Tustin. . ON THE FENCE are Newport Beach and Buena Park. Newport Mayor _ . Ed Hirth said it was "a serious issue" and "we did not have sufficient informa· _ lion lo ta~e a stand." :· $49,000 in Rar e Tiffany La1np~ Taken iI1 _Newport A colleclton of unique, antique Tiffany lamps worth '49,000 -three among the mi11lng doien worth $7 ,000 each alone --: ))ave been burglarized from an Inglewood dentist'a Newport Beach weekend home. The huge loss was <Jiscovered Friday afternoon . by Dr. Vern Phalen when he ~Kiss of Death' Play Will Open Student actors from Huntington Beach High School will present "Kiss of Death" ~is Thursday through Sunday In the achoo! auditorium. Curtain time for all performances is a p.m. Tickets are available al the door for 11 .50 adults and SO cents for elementary achoo! children. The play ls about an eastern gentleman wbo comes west during the late 1800s. As he ateps off the train in the town of Red Butte; he Is unknowingly given the kiss of death by the banker's daughter. Cast in the leading roles of Walter Halliday and Peg Tyson are students Gary Putnam and Debbie Nolan . Others in lhe cast are Jamie Knight, Kimberly Colt and April Jackson. DAILY PILOT ~ COAST ,Ull.ISHIMO C'OM,AMY l•~•l'f N. Wtt4 .. ,..111 ....... "'*l•htr' J,,1r; It Cvrl1v ~ ,,.\Nrlt eftllll C0-.1 ,,.,.,...., n..,.. •• t: •• ~1 ""' T\1,..•t A. Mlll'1t.i~1 M ..... ins .t:IO"f Al•11 Dir\;11 wwt °"'"" Cwnly ["(ltar t4 ... ,. ........... OHie:• 11111 •••c.k .... 1,.,,,. M1!Ti1t1 >Mmn P.O."l• 7TO, '21•1 ~oMt .. 1._. •-.ct11 m ''""' •-0.• ,._.: 2)11 W•I a11' Str"I "......,., l•di: »» "''"""" 1ov1 ... 1rit 1111 ~ al H ..... ll Cln\IM A•I Ml'L,. Pit.OT, "°"" •ldi h ........ "'-.,_.,,,.... It ""91~ 4t llt' •H•IM S- .. 1' .......... """' .... ~ '"'"" ".-.. a.di, Clt!t ......... ~...-a.tell. .._....., v11i.r. .a... ,.._,., C..al W ... ~. t lt<)f .,, ... -rtllt!W( ......_ ~I "'111,..,. ._ • ...... .., ..... C.llM- Tsl'9t1• r7l 4J f41-4J11 a 111 I Alo• ... I 642·1•71 ~ 1"1. °"""' <,all ~ .... ~, .... ..., ...... hlrt ..... ellwttt _.,.. ...... 8"i••1 •" ..... -t .. . • .._.... .-lelWI ~ ,,.. .......... -.rt'*" ..... 1-.4 diet __.. fllf tt H .... 1-"i .... c:.,. 111... et•lf'r!I"· ~1-'1" ""' urriw u .K _..111_111 llW -11 11.n "*""'ltl lftll""Pf ••tll\flitfll, U.21 -l'fllt• I ··- arrived al 404 Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle. Iovestip~r• today, .f::er, _continuing theii:1 probe o( th"e break-In r!ported in- itially to Office{·~w.reace Dyle .. The 12 co!Ored-glass lamps, assembled by metal $ectio.n.s, .could have beJ!n taken either by someone with spec t·f I c knowledge of their value, or a burgliir who just took a fancy to them . Imitation Tiffany lamps are currently favored by decorators. l>etective· Ken Smith said Dr. Phalen told police the 12 genuine Tiffany items art from lhe firm 's New York head- quarlerS and-a'r"e about two feet tau·: .... A total of five are va lued 1t S?:OOO each. 'three 9{ · theni taken fi-om th~ downstairs living room and two more from the second-story master bedroom. Detectives said it appeared there wa s no other loss, leading to speculation the burglar or burglars ·kfliw preci&ely what what the lamps were worth. Officer Mike MeEveny. who conducted the crime scene· investigation, said entry "'as made through a kitchen window of Dr. Phalen 's plush tioine. · ~ Since he uses it only on weekends. in· vestii;::ators could only place the time of the burglary ·at some lime during the prior several days. Suspect in Fatal Crash Gives Up A Huntington Beach man ha1 been ar· rested and released on his own recogniiance in connection with a fatal traffic crash last week in Fountain Valley. Frederick £. Smith, ~. of 9351 Leilani Drive, surrendered himself at the f'oun- 1arn Valley Police Department Sunday. He was booked on charges of manslaughter .atemming from an ac- cident Nov. Ii in which motorcyclist Ger- , row R. Sharlow. 22. of Santa Ana wa:s killed. The crash occurred at Brookhurat Street and La Hacienda Avenue •~ Smith, driv- ing 1 truck. made a ltft turn. pol!ce said. Celebrity Addresses Beach Exchange Club • "People. Places .and Things" will be lhe !41>ject of .!I talk 11Jven by singer and radio entertainer Jack Smith at a meeting of the Huntington Beach Ex- change Club in the Hunlington·Seacliff al noon Thur~day. Smith, a community relationJ reprt.ttn· lative with Glendale Ftderal Sa\•lng5 and Loan Association-, uatd to sin g wlth the Phil Harris Blnd on the Prudtntl1l Family Hour 'll'low. ., • B. ··-F ... : . : ig mns . •. ' . , ' Will Face . ' ·Beaeh People Recover . - ·Car Crashes. Hurt Pair -..,....._ ··~="-"" • ---. r-; . ~%\:eiU~g-,-+'_~Two-,vtr!ltl'-~-'-lou-,~'-'.Y_;;._~:_11e"',-oc'"',-~:1si:,~ .. ~~·~·~._1s._rro ... ~--~-~-~-'°"-.-~-d-~-":-1~-;c-~-~1-er-0r-.-fl:°-ce-':.-e~~=ge:--w-~-,~-,-,s-~00-us_,•w_"_:·-~ar:.in_~..:1:~1d:Ae<1:":::~-~~-.• -• ..:.~u:10 __ .:, -• they found a molotov cocktail Jn the driven by James F. SUpulver, 22, of 16261 ' injurlu suffered ln se.par8:te ·traffic ac-wrecked auto. Kim Lane, Huntington Beach. WASHrNGTON (UPO -Tlie govern- ment announced today thaJ, the Phase ll f percent limit on dividend .ncreases will apply to approximately 10;000 of the na· tion's largest businesses which account for all but a small portion of the annual d,lvidends paid stockholders. ' T.he estimate was made ·public by the Committee on lnte~st and Dividend~ headed by Federil· Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns. The announcement came as the most intensive price-wage controls in peacetime history went into ef.fect with a few immedJate signs of how business would respond to Pha~ JI of President NJ,a,n•s economic policies. TIJe . dividend limit.tilln anoounced l>reviously would . be based on a com· pany's highest payments ·in the three past fiscal years. The committee said the controls would apply to : -Companies with more than $1 million ln total assets and a class of· equity securities btltl by 500 or. mort perSON. -Those subject to the repor!lng re· quirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or insurance companies with capital stock. · ·"These. guidelines will therefore apply to about 10,000 of the largest corporation• which. account for all but a.small portion of the divideiids paid each year by U.S. corporatiOns,".the annclurlcement said. - Exempted under the guidtllne'a were regulated investment companies, real estate Investment trusts, and personal holding companies. The committee also said "moderate dividends'; Coilld be paid by companlts that paid no dividends, or dividends that amounted to a very-sthall percentage. of earnings during the past tbree fiscal years. Dividends still to be paid in 1971 remain subject to President Nixon's request they not be increased over the amount paid in the quarter immediately preceding the wage-pr ice freeze which began Aug. 15, the committee sald. Many people who went to work today were earning more money for the first llme since Aug. 15, even thougll it won't show up in their paycheck until next pay- da y or whenever bookkeeping ad· justmenls are made. Military men and women shared in an Immediate $2.t billion pay hike. But movements on the price front were slowe r. at least partly because of the more Complicated rules governing pcst- freeze price changes. Stpres now_ are Te- qu ired to post s list of freeze-level prices before any o of those prices may bt In- creased, ·and getting that done was tim• consuming. The Phase JI ~ntrol groups still were making .decisions on many .unsettled aspec ts or·'the situation. The Pay Board meets again on Tuesday lo consider some aspects of the retroactive pay dispute, probably as lt applies to teachers. Broker Selling Shopping Center After Shootout · -Arthur A. Turner is a man with a aenst •- of whimsy. He has lo be. He is the real estate broker for the Golden Triangle Shopping Center in Fountain Valley -the scene of last weekend's shootout which ended with lhe death or robbery suspect Timolhy Dodson. In seeking buyers for the property, Turner is running a newspaper ad wh ich socs: "One Shot-up Shopping Center . Available for sale. Oidn"t lose any ten- nants in the shootout so Is still 100 per- cent leased. $90,000 down and we guarante, all holes will be repaired.'' Turner said the center had been up for sale pr!Dr to the shootout. Aprosimately 4,000 lo 5.000 squa re feet cif office and commercial units were damaged by gunfire -scores of shot.. ~'ere fired -out of the Center 's total of 30,000 .square "reet. he sa,id. Turner expl4ined thlt no dollar estimate on the damages has been set yr!. "l\•e received a few call! on the 1d already," he s8id. "1 finall y am teeing some humo r in the situation." Legal .Fee Ol{'d By SB Co~cil The Seal Beach City Council has voted to pay its share of an 111.500 legal fee in- currtd when tht members of lht Orange County League of Cities' City Selection Commlttet LOOk tht oounty superviaor1 to court over membersh ip on the Local Agtney Formatton Commission. TM city's share ls $761. The fct Is the ume for eacli of the 19 cities that in- dltated they would fin1ncially support the eourt battle when it aot under ~•y In August. The county ls brJng billed '3,394 for the four mt'!mbtrs ot the LAFC who took part In the 1ulta on the cities' behalf. r cJdent,s over tht weekend. Rou was taken to Pacifica Hospital Supulver reported no Injuries to police, Police &aid Dana 8. Rosa, 20, of 71lU with a fractured nose and a concussion. and Mrs. Sh~gar's p.a~ngers -Robbie Glencoe Ave. Was Injured sl\orUy after He .ls In satisfactory condition today, ac-Shugar:. 3, Debbie Carlson, IS, Santa Ana, midnight Sunday when his car struck t.'Ording to a hospital spokesrna n. and Elalne·&egmiller. 44, ol 16722 Bart· another car parked on Pacific Coast Suzanne R. Shugar, 24, of 7801 Slater Jett Lane, Hunting ton Beach1 -were all Highway west of Golden West Street. Ave. ls in satisfactory condition at Hun-treated for minor injuries and released The owner or tile parked car. Terry tlngton llltercommunlty Hospital follow-from Hun ling ton lntercommun!ty Isumigawa , 32, Monterey Park1 was ar-in& a traffic accident Sundly night at Hospital. Valley School Seeks Dialogue In Comm11nity Aquari~ Breezes Home First in La Paz Race • Students, administrators and teachers from Fountain Valley High ~! ~ve begun-a series of visits with members_ ol the.cominunity. :J:,'hey ar.e aim,ed ~t telling them what Is going on .in the high. scboola. Held in priva te homes, the meetlrigs are planned to inlorm adults on cur· riculum, the administration and g"eneral ca mpus activities, according to Principal Paul Berger . During the first ef the three meetings last week , Dr . .B!rger said a mi1 or all age groups engaged In lively discussiona about school affairs. "I think we were able to clear up ques- tions which had been in the minds of peo- ple for some time," observed social studies teacher Dave Hagen_. "One mother complained that teachers toda y just aren't dedicated .lt;I their work," said Hage!'J. "Her son told her that when he asked to ta lk privately to his teacher, the man told him that 'I ju.rt don't have ·the time today.' "During the evening, she got to un- derstand the tremendous problems we have with educating more than 4,000 students In a school built for 3,000. This caused he[ to have a 180 degree .change in her attitude toward the teachers." The evening meetings ' ari being sponsored by Edison 's Parent-Teacher· Student Association~ Another series of visits la planned for January and a third for March. Cl1ild Molesting Srispect to Get New Trial Date- A new trial was ordered today for a Fountain Valley man accused of the sex- ual moleSl'allon of two ·chiltl:ten after .an Orange County Superior Court Jury f.ailed to reach an overall verdict during weekend 'deliberations. Presidio~ Judge William C Speirs nrdcred Michael Garcia. 29, of .18332 Brookhurst St.,.to return to court Friday for the setting of a new trial on multiple counts of sexual perversion and molesta- tion. The jury. In Judge William Murray's courtroom. remained deadlocked ·after 12 hours or deliberation. It wa s ·learned to- day that they voted not guilty on four counts but could not agree on . six .other cha rges aired during tho? five-day !rial. · Garcia was arrested April 2a ar1d charged with acts or sexual perversion Involving alleged molestation of t~o eight-year-old girls durin Jl the months of October and November 1970. Both chndren teslified ag&insi Garcia during the Fountain Valley man 's tria~. Edison Aide Dies NASHUA. N.H. (U PI ) -Sam G. Langley, 94. of Amherst, chief engineer for Thomas A. Edison frOlJll 1911 until Edlson·s death In 193 1, died Sunday in a Nashua hospital after a $hort illness. By ALMON LOCKABEY 041L Y ,ILOT .. llillol •lflftf' LA PAZ. -Johri Hpliday'$ Erickson.JS sloop_ Aquarius from the host Ulng Beach Yacht Club was tht overall corrected time winner I>( the 97~mile U>ng Beach to La Par. yachf race. · Aquarius brtezed across the finish line at l:U: p.m. (PST) Sundr.y with 28 min- utes to spare on her alloted time. All of the 33 yachts that &tarted in the r.a~e have finished today, the last of !}le 3 Teens Seized In Westminster Market Robbery About 10 minutes after the robbery of a Westminster market, th~e Long Beach teenagers were arrested by police Satur- day night and charged with the holdup .. Polil!e said they are still seeking the suspect Crom a second robbery that oc- curred severz,I hours after .t h a market holdup. Detective Sgt. Frank Fisher said the Stop 'N Go Market, 13757 Goldenwest 'st. was held up for. $41 by two youths. Fisher said one of the two was armed with a .22-callber rtne. Witnesae~ tp the _robbery lol~ ~fficers they saw the. tvto get into a car driven by a third person. Using the description sup- plied by the witnesses, police stopped the suspects' car about IO mlnutes later. F~lleges a rifle and $41 was found in the car. . In custody today are Albert C. Peralta and Gary D. Ortiviz, both 11, and a 17· y_ear-old boy, all from Long Beach. . In the seaind holdup, $l5 was taken at gunpoint from· the Do Nut Shop at 9329 Bolsa Ave. early Sunday morning. Fisher said tlle · suspect~ a tnale Caucasian In his early 20s, bought some donuts from clerk Opal Webb. The man returned 15 or 20 minutes later and gave Mrs. Webb a hate demanding the money from the cash register. · He brandlsHtll · a chrome revotver, Fi'sher said. The clerk gave the suspect .the money and he ned on foot, according ~ri the police account. t 'rom 1•a9e 1 UNIFY · ... of fees to the · private firm through the County Auditor. -· The commiUet'11 legal dilemma was created through the County Counsel's decisiop to press. Fountain Valleys claim agansl the committee. At the root of the dispute is the unifica- tion plan, which Fountai n Valley scllool officials claiitl wou'ld create impoverished --educational oppo rhlnilles Jn some areas of West Orange County. Further legal action against the com· mittee and its plan is expeeted from the high schoo l district and the Ocean Vlew and Westminster school districts. group finishing In the rain. Only one boat gave predominantly light weathlr finished under power. She Bonbelle. , up th e race and was the" First yacht to finish was Ragtime, a 62- !oot New Zealand built sloop sailed by • six man syndicate from the-Long Beach Yacht Club. She crossed the finish line at 1: 15 p.m. Saturday for an elapsed time of severi days, one hour, 51 minutes and 31 second s. With her high · handicap rating she was unable to salvage better than a fourth place in ctass A. · Close competition developed primarily among _Class B entries. Dick B~aver's Cal-33 sloop Counterpoint from Balboa Yacht 'Club, whicli had been leading In handicaP. for i:n.ost or the race, finished in a tight downwind tacking duel with Harry Smith's Ranger·l3 Bush w h ackt: r. Bushwhack~ won the duel and wound up with second place honors I o s i n g to Aquarius by one hour. (Earlier story Page 26 ). As Aqu8rius breeud across the line un- der full spinnaker, one or her crew was tossed overboard by a jubilant crew. Offical standings are: Overall: I, Aquarius,· 2. Buahwha~ker, 3. Star, 4. Counterpoint, 5. Quicksilver. Class A: I. Sandpiper, 2. Concerto, 3 • Warrier, 4. Min Sette, 5. Ragtlmt!. Class 8: I. Q ua s r.· r. 2. Dorothy 0 {Columbia 43) 3. Alice, 4. Celebrity, S. Bohemia. Class C: 1. Star. I. Quicksilver, 3. Chi- quita, 4. Pericus, S. SanderlinJt. Cla11 D: 1. Aquarius, 2. Bushwhacker, 3. Counterpoint, 4. L'Allegro, S. Free· style. County Pushes Sunset Beach Parking Project The long delayed beach parking project in Sunset Beach has moved forward with the· ·adoption by the county Board ot Supervisors or a· 674-cai-concept for th t former Pacific Electric right-of-way pro- perty. The Orange County .engineering firm of VTN was selected lo prepare con- struction plans for the parking art:a which will include· extensive landscaping. A sum of'IS7,000 is allocated for the plan- ning:· The county purchased the f!frmer railroad Brea. from the Southern Pacific Co. last year for $1.4 million. County Harbor, Beaches and ParkJ Dire ctor Kenneth Sampson said the plan was a s.tart on a much needed project to provide parking for the mile long county beach. He said the design allows for additional parking spaces later if needed without disturbing the pla nned wa lkways and landscaping. Support ot. the · Sunset Beach com- munity for the project was voiced by Mrs. Virginia Bradley, a director of tha chamber of commerce. - HERE ARE' A FEW ·EXAMPLES: We Buy Direct From The General Publlc And Pass The Savil!fS On To You! Letli.. ,,., ... L.41w '-cf J.01 c., .. L..tl .. , i....tlf1i1I, l .U Cer• T•ttil W.!tlit J .)0 c ... T etel "-'tlrll Tttef Wel9ll1 ""-OMlttf DIAMOND DIAMOND DIAMOND CLUSTER CLUSTER CLUSTER COC!tTAIL COCKTAIL COCKTAIL RING RING RING •ooo ouALiTT C.11t•OIMIH6 $895 UYI ON THIS .IS C••st $995 $595 W••ii-e ... ., ~·'.., ... 11tet1 rt.ft ,, ....., ,.,.... . . .. . . . .. 'We .... '-•11 .. •llfH ...... fl'M V• •-& 111'1 s..!Wy ,,tcM. ht ,._ , .......... _..,.,, ,__.tr.• 11.H •,.&at. Diamond Center 1or Orcn11e Co11nt11 · COSTA MESA JEWELRY 6 LOAN Open Dally O to 4 Come in trnd Brouse .Around 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE -'46-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -1-H• H-6 Fto4wy • DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTE! w.... .,.. llwy • 419111•"4 ,,,..,. ..... "1h ,.., ........ 111 .. •Mii te .,,,.... • 40 ~· MOii tM1 ,., 11'•14 f., It ., , ••. ' .... ...., 11«11. c •• , •• 4• • ..e1 .......... 1 COMPA•I. IXPll, WATCH llPAll DONI ON PllMlllS I .I \ President May 'Lose' --'I Schmitz By DOUG WILLIS A-M~ '"'"* Writ.,. President Nixon wlll have a new con· gressman representing him at his San Clemente voting address if current reap- portionment plans become law. It will probably be . a pleasant switch for the President. Nixon now ls represented in Congress by C<>nservative . Republican J o h n Schmitz, a John Birch SocietY fuember who periodic.Uy condemns the President for liberal leanings, and as the President's C<>ngressman Sch m It z regularly gains national publicity for his disputes with Nixon. But the Western White House at San Clemente -Ni1on's legal address for voting -is in the heart of California's fa stest-growing area. The Schmitz district must be divided in two, and the latest plan before the state -legislature puts San Clemente in one 'of California's five congressional districts. It would be the on ly one of the new districts being dra wn-by the Democrats in charge of the California legislature which would be a sure GOP seat, and members of both parties concede the lines are being drawn to favor state Sen. Clair W. Burgener of San Diego. ff the plan is successful, Nixon would get a congressman cut from his own political mold -and with a little gl amour. Burgener - a itorman bom 49 years ago in Utah -is a· political moderate and a ''eteran of two wars. He was a navigator on one of the pl anes in the squadron Which dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima during World War II. and he served as a navigator again in Korea. He traces his church ties to his great gran'dfat her, who Burgener says ,came to the Salt Lake Valley in 1847 with Brigham Young's original company. u,,,..,.... They'll Baise ·Roof I Owner of this vehicle, parkei:l In Cheyenne, Wyo., doesn!t have to worry about anyone breaking into his automobile. A~ a matter of fact, it would take a brave ·policeman to issue a parking ticket with these dogs sitting on the roof, waiting for their master's return. Early Warning for Heart Attack Victims Endorsed Doctors .now know that many of the people who die from heart attack.! ac- tua11y began to e1perienct: the attack aa much as a wee.It before the final spasm that ended their lives. But what they don't know, they ad- mitted at an American Heart Association session in Anaheim, is wby the vast ma- jority of those victims weren't aware or their condition·in the hours and days that preceded. the final cardiac onslaught. A team of researchers in Albany, N.Y., carried out autopsies on 183 heart attack victims over a five-year perioc! and discovered that very few of th~ "licUms -they all died outside a hospital -had any premonition of death. Burgener, a realtor by profession, is al so an amateur actor of some note in his borne C<>mmunity. Active in local and state politics for 18 * 'il 1:f Only six of the victims had seen a doc- tor within three weeks of their death. And of 101 men who died, 34 were at work. 18 were at the wheel of a car, 35 died at home and one die( at a Christmas party. Very few of the 183 victims had any previous medical history of coronary disease-yet-all-of t.hem died from cardiac causes, the research team C<>ncluded. And, they found that 62 or the victims had old or healing myocardial infarcts (scars fro m former heart attacks) in add ition to the fatal attack. years, Burgener has built a conservative ~ . record in liscal. matlers;Durti.• Ha . .-liee•~nuctors Report a leader 1n uinovative leg1slat1on tn welfare and education, particularly for handicapped children . Burgener stOps short of announcing his candidacy for the proposed new con· gressional seat -but just barely. The soft-spoken lawmaker does say he ls "very interested" in going to Congress and adds that he is "quite pleased' with the proposed district lines now before the legislature for adoption. But Burgener says he will make oo an· nouncement. until the Congreuional plan is signed into law -probably this week or Oext week. However, he appears to have little lo wdrry about in pos.slble changes in the new dis trict's boundaries. · 'l'he reapporUonmenl plan drafted by Assembl y Democratic leaders. and back· eel ·by mos t of the state's congressional deleg,atlon. includes virtually all of Burgener's present Senate district - where he won by a 5-2 margin last year -in the new C<>ngressional district. Senate Democrats have a somewhat different statewide plan for congressional reapportonment, but it does not change the proposed district lines in Orange and San Di.ego counties. Heart Dangers From Aerosols Next time you spray your hair, lady. it might be just as well tG do it out on the front lawn and not in the confined spa.Ce of your bathroom or bedroom. Aerosols -of any kind -are suspect. Al the very least, they can inflict devastating heart damage and doctors haven 't even begun to investigate what they believe the propellants do to other areas of the body. Specialists discussing aerosols at the American Heart Association convention here worked on the basis of aludies made of the deaths or 140 teenagers in the last two years. All the youngsters died seeking "kicks" frcm common or garden household aerosols, ingested via plastic bags or toilet tissues. The causes of death may have been multiple but 11pecialists con· ctrned only with the cardiac impact of the suffocatio n agreed that massive heart damage was an invariable result. Dr. R. Foster Scott, professor of pathology at Albany Medical College. says the baffl ing study adds up to ju~l ~ one thing :.._ the vital need for further studies to determine the apparent abseoce of warning 1igns and public education on heart irregularities that may be going ignored by the potential victim. He believes the villain of the piece to be arrhythmia -the wild, ineffectual fluttering of the heart that was found t.o be the cause of death in most of the 183 cases surveyed. Did those victims dismiss those signs as just a bout of palpitation? Did they ~g· . nore the wild skipping of beats for days and possibly weeks before the llnal crushing pain told them -too late - that tht heart had had enough?. We do know that two thirds of the male victims and one hall of the dead women were overweight, said Dr. Scott. The average age of the 101 men wu 55, that of the women, 59. ---_,_ ,._-_,., . ~ .... ---·~-·--~· . . • Moncllf, PfOYflnbtf 1,, 197! H OAJL'r '1LOf • New Sto~ni Boiling UP MIAMI, Fl1, (AP) -Lalbl>loomlng Tropical Storm Laura sweDed toward hut· rlcant str.ngth loday and threat.n<d frt.1hly planted tobacco cropa in westun Cyba., Spokesmen at the Nltional Hurricane , ~~~r ~~~~8;1~ ~!:r~.!':'te~ro~~! day. Resl'1ents of we.stem Cuba and southern Florida were told to be mt the alert. At mid-morning, Laura's top winds were 71t m.p.h., just below hWTicane strength. The stonn center wu located at laUtude 20.2 North and Longitude 14.1 West, or some 115 miles aouth of CUba's western tip. Du8t Storm Clouds Shots From Mars- • PASADENA (UPI) -Mariner t swept around the dust-cloaked world of Man today, tantalizing scient!stl with hint! of revelations to come when the planet's raging dust stonn 1ubslde11 and the surface is unveiled to the satellite'1 cameras. Scientists coiµplained that "a ghroud hag been drawn about this planet" by a phenomenal dust storm, affording them only peek·a·boo gllmpses of Martian reatures through the what they called "monotonous" mass of dusL But they ad· ded honefully there are 1lgns the dust &tonn is tapering off. The spacecraft was operating Oawles&· ly in its second day as the first artificial moon of another planet. Engineers were confident it would work for months, long after they expect the dust cloud to clear. But to make the most of the disap- pointing early photography, project of· ficials were revising long-planned picture- ta1dng-programs to aim Mariner's twin television eyes toword areas most likely to show features through the dusty haze. Nude European S·wimniers Vie RO'ITERDAM, Holland (UPI). Clocking! were well off the world records, but the capacity crowd enjoyed Sundny's swimming meet at a city~ned pool. The event was the third European nudist. swimming championships,· with 400 C<>mpetitors of both sexe.s from tight European nations taking part. City Alderman Henk Van Der Pol s, in charge of Rotterdam's sports affairs, opened the meet by saying ''you are striving for more openness and honesty in ter-human relations and towards the human being appearing to us ·in bis natural figure ." However, he declined to join the "nude swim-In" in the pool a!ttr the even~, in which the 1,000 specattori were Invited to take part. He said he had another engagement. in-Cuba--Thr:eate -. Forecuter1 at the Hurricane Center aald Laun" was moving oa a nothtrJy C<>urse at 10 miles an hour with gales eJ:· tending 125 miles to tbe east and 100 miles to the west. If It continues on the prtsent course through the day, Laura will enter the Gulf of Mexico early Tuesday. Locally heavy rains and wlndJ of gale force in squalls y.rere predicted over w~tent Cµba today, spreading into the extreme IOUtheast Gulf of Mexico tOnight. "lt'a too early to say what part of the United states coast will mo.st likely be af. fected ," said Joe Pelissier, a hurricane center forecaster. Oversem Mail . Deadli11e Near WASllINGTON (AP) -The deadline ia Friday for malling. parcels at the cheapest rate lo servicemen overseas . SAM (Space Available Mail) parcels weighing up to five pounds and 60 inches in combined length and width may be sent for only the domestic parcel post charge. The Postal Service said Sunday that the deadHne ia Nov. 26 for PAL (Parcel Airlift) mail, which C0$1s slightly more and can be larger. It five-pound SAM parcel from Chicago costs only $1.90 postage to San Francisco, with airlift to Viet- nam free of postage. Senate Approves Tax Deduction For Child Care WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate voted today to give mlddle<lass couples a lax deduction C<>verlng up to $4,800 of the C<>St of hiring BOmeooe to look after their chlldren under 14 while both hus- band and wife are working. The vote was 59 to 2.4. Approved over administration op- position was an amendment to Preskl.ent Nixon's tait bill allowing the full deduc· tion for couples who have a joint income of up to $11,000. A smaller dedudlon wou1d be available to those with jolnt tn. comts of up to $27,600. The proposal, offered by Sen. John V. Tunney (0-Callf.), was favored by women'1 liberation groups. They argue it b: unfair t.o allow businessmen t.o deduct the cost of wining and dining customers while working wives cannot deduct the cost of bJring someone t.o babysit while they are at work. Treasury Department opposition was based on t.be estimate that tbs new tax deduction would cost the government $250 million a year fn reduced tu revenues. . ".But once a storm Itta Into the Gu14 It's go ing to hil llOl!le place. They jll(I don't go away." • "There's probably a good chaiu it Will produce hurricane winds of 15 mu,. ... hour," Pelissier said. The hurricane center said Laura wat expected to hold a course toward the western-Up of Cuba at a tG JO mites d ' hour and probably turn toward the north tonight. .., "Small craft around western Cubf. should remain in safe harbor and those around northeastern Yucatan ai:ld IOl.ltll Florida should not venture into o p • It. waters," the bunicane centtr uld. Employe Umt lllasts·ll~aI1 Salary Veto ·. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Accuslnt Gov. Ronald Reagan of a "blatant uH j power," the California State Employea._ Association plans to seek a 1egl.slativ• override of his veto of salary increut( for University of California and state cot;: lege faculty members. • The 115,000-member organization wU angered by the governor's veto Friday of. legislation that would have given tht faculty members a 71k percent pay r~ at a cost of $17.9 million. it was Reagan 's second rejectioQ of pay hikes for faculty members. He voted' a 10 percent salary Increase for them iIJ. the state budget In July. John N. Bailey, deputy eeneraJ. manager of the association, 1 a i d Reagan's veto "ignores wishes of, the" legislature, the public, recommtndatlon1 of all salary setting authorities and· need&' o.f California's system of higher 'educa: lion. • "Twice this year, two-thirds of tht. state legislature approved pay increas~ . for raculty members," Bailey nick "TwJce the power of one man -the· governor -has overruled the wishes oi more than 80 elected representatives .of both political parties. It is a blatant abuse of power in.the hands Of one man." In his veto message, Reagan aald, "l am C<>nvinced that the kind of funding this legislation would mandate. could only be provided by asking the already overburdened wage earners of Califorriia to dig even deeper into their pockets.~ . . Refinery Hit By Explosion - LONG BEACH (AP) -A storage tank of flammable liquid blew up,· touching off a fire at the Atlas Fabricators refinery in an in- dustrial area of northeast Long Beach about 9:30 a.m. today, of· ficials said. No injuries were reported. The fire and explosion was con- fined to the storage tank. Its· eiact contents we r e n ' t immediately knO\\'n, firemen said. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! B e e I 1·b 59c ra1s1ng, ·1 s.......... lb Lots of beef~y goodnesli in these! Serve with noodles for main c.ouraer London Broil ............ $1~? U.S.D.A. Choice beef ••• so eaay to prepare .,. and so eay I<> enjoy! I Prime Rib Bones ................................ , . . . 59~ There's more goodness than meetz the eye, htre ••• let us show you J Fresh Beef Tongue ....... '. .. , .......... , .. , .. . . . .. 69~ When you're looking for-the difference, look for freshness at El Rancho ! Tex&&' Finest! Thih akfnned to give you more of what you're looking for underneath!, •• sweet juicy meat to offer you more flavor, Add to these, El Rancho'& Price and the sum total ia if'Uter value ••• and isn't that what you're really lookinr fol? ••. If it ia, you'll be glad l Onion Soup Mix ...... 10c Makes a rreat soup •• makea a delicious dip, too I Wyler'• •• 2 oz. package I Brownie Mix .......... 4 t Bake a batch of fud1e brownies,. and watch 'em go! Betty Crocker •• 23 oz. Downyflake Waffles .. .. .. . . . . . . .. .. .. .. . .. . . . . . 4 .Jl Pack&gQ of 12 • , • rudy to beat and oerve for a sillsfylng breakfaatl . Pricu in t.//t.tt Mon..,.Tuea., lVed.., Nov.1S, 16, 11. No 1alu to dt.alera. ~ ..., Chocolate Chip Cookies ............................ 45• Pillsbuiy's ••• 1lice and bake convenience! 9~ oz .••• in our delle&teasen f ARCADIA: l11n'PI ,,,,,, H111'1'11>'1"' D1 :'\',11, PASADENA : :':1111f· SOUTH PASADENA : :':i'11f· HUNTINGTON BEACH : :1:,1llf' NEWPORT BEACH : 7717 New1JOrt Blvd and fi Rincho Ct•nt~:r ' 3.:0 Wt'>! Cnlor,H!o R1v1\ · Fte1no11l .u111 Hun 11nr,t,<11 01 ,'.'' WJrner and AIKonq111n 1RoardwJlk rPnll'r 1 ·,• 2555 fastblutt Dr (Easlbluff V1llJ~e Center\ -· • ( j -• ,, f DAf';Y PIL01'~ • • Th.eir Reward In Hereafter? By THOMAS, MURPIUNE OI M Otlh' l'IW Steff DJ\AFI' REBUTTAL DEPT. -Coma DOW' £. Grayson Swalles of Fullerton who luuests that this space wu recently un- fillr io· the Selective Service Syatem and the S..ta AM drafting ollico In particular. , He llJigestl that my commentary on ' nporl& that the Santa AM dralt people are olten ·1ess than gentle and un- derstandtna:J.n dealing with drafteu wu an "astonlahlng tirade." "The charges are not 'l()rthy of detail- ed comment but this e<1rrespondent would feel 'mn!P In falling to rebut the ildlallous and obvloua etrort to further appeue tbo1e who are protuUnc the VJ~~. War," litr. Swa1le1 wril.ea. HE ADDS, "I have been 11soc:iated with Select.Ive Service problenu over 1 period of tome ti yean. M one at~ temptlnc to obtain delermentl for two dillerent employen -90me would eon- IJder the role a that of an opponent Ac:tually, I came to acoff and remained to applaud Ge-al Lewla B. Herahey and bis people. "Did you actually visit Santa Ana or "bother local J>Oard? Did you ever Usten to 1buae dlrecled toward those behind the counter? 'lbouundl of draft boa rd memben have ltn'td for many year• without compensation. Their reward? Undue and thoughtless ctiticlam for a job thlt bad to be done. Female 1upervlsor1 and clerb during the put years wert: poorly paid -but remained Joyal to General . Hershey and 1tale dlrecton .. ... Red Cliina May Release -v m1KS py' HONG KONG (UP!) -An American eervin1 a We term In a cotnmunbt Chinese prlaon 11 a rpy may be rtle1sed 100n, hia mother 111d today. Mra. Muy Downey, 70, a former school teacher hon), New Britain, CoM., made the 1111.ement after a wiet of vb:lta: with her ton, John, 1n bb: Peking prison. Downey and another A m e r I c • n , J\lcbard c. 'P'ocleau on,ynn, MUI., both civilian employes of the Anny, ·cllslp.. peared oo a "r<gularly ochedulod filght from Koru to Japan on Nov. 29, 1952," according to the U.S. state Department. Both men were captured by the Chinese tnd aentenctd u spies by a milit.ary tribunal ill lJIM. Downey WU 1enterad to Ufe In pr!Jon and Fecteau WU 1entenced to 20 ·yW"I, Mr1. Downey, who flnl vlalted her ... a dozen years ago, was accompanied olf the recent trip b7 another 10n W · iM hiJ-wlfe:- Dwinl their two week stay, lhe aaid, they vllited Downey el&ht Umes and were allowed to stay two houri each Ume. "At the end of our vlalt Jack told u1 that be bad been lnlonned by tbe priljln authorities bis cue wu beln& reviewed to detmnine whit their policy of Jenleney m(lbt be -ho mlght be rdeuod rather than aerve out hill te:ntence. '"!he prllon-offlclala told Jock that an important !actor In clecldlnl to apply le- niency •u lhe prilooer'a behavior whUe In prtaen and that Ibey· c:Onlldor that hit bthlvlor bad been ,...S," abt ukl. "I am hoping ..tth all my heart that my prayers for Jack's rtleut will soon be anawered," abe aald. Mrs. Downey aald 1be ah:o saw Fecteau bot did not know if hll case also might be up for revieW'. Downty and Fecteau were accused of being agent. for th• Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) ml mernben of a team supplying spits in China'• Kirin Province near the Korean Border. They wtre captured when their C47 aircraft wu allegedly 1hot d~wn while the two were plckln& up a Chine• •aent. Downey'I brother Aid Doviney and Fecteau aee each other occuionally 11but not regularly." • V'I Ttlw!Mtt BR ITISH SOLOI ER STANDS GUARD IN LOYALIST BELFAST AREA In Action Today, Armortd Car Ram1 IRA St,...t Blrri cade British Ar1no7ed Car Rams Ireland Barrier 1 BELFAST, Northern lrelind (UPI) - British aoldie.ra drove an armored car over 1 barricade erected by a crowd of mostly women in the ~ty'a Roman Catholic New· Lodge Road /l_ea today and dispersed them with rubber bullets. In Londonderry, troops arrested one man and seized four guns and some am· munition when the army made a rare foray into lhe 'Roman Catholic Bogside area during the night. Three other men escaped, an army spoktsfl\ln said. ttopped when' It saw an army roadblock. "They were most surprised to see us,'' be said. He aaid three men ran from the vehi- cle. One was felled by a rubber bullet but managed to get up and escape with the other,. The driver wat arrerted in the car where soldiers found one machine gun, a sten gun and two 1111 carbinu, ammunition. fuse wire and detonators, the spokesman said. • '1 Lo•e Livea 3 U.S. Copters • . • Crash Ill Viet SAIGON (UPI) -Th r ee U.S. bellcopttrs crashed near Saigon today, klllln& uven mtn and injuring live. Four of the dead and all of the injW"ed were American. Two UH1 Huey "1llck1 11 collided near the Cambodian bordtt about 60 miles northwest of Saigon alter they bad teken some South Vietnamese troops into tht fl~d. Four Gl.t In ..,. of the choppeu were killed and four aboud the other one and~ 1 U.S. crewman was injured. Another UJ\1 Huey crashed because or mechanical probltms In Hau Nghia pro- vinct 21 miles west of Saigon. Three South Vietnamese passengers were killed and a U.S. crewman was injured. Military spokesman reported renewed heavy fighting in the central highlands and the northern provinces of South Viet- nam today and in Cambodia Communist gunners shut Phnom Penh's airport for JI hours. In the central high11nds, SOuth Vlet· namese troops backed by American helicopter gunships reported killing 183 ~errlllas in rtlated battles a mile apart Saturday as they rfpelled the first bat· talion-sized assault in the area since last spring. The fighting started 28 miles west- southwest of Plelku City and ia the vtcini· tv of the old Due Co special forces camp. The guerrillas first hit a small outpost but were driven back "'ith los.ses of 20 men killed. An hour later they launched i.- masslve barrage of mortar and recoilless rifle fire followed by a battalion.sized ground assault against a Soviet Viet· namese basecamp a mile away: American gunships called ln to support the South Vietnamese troops helped drive back the attacke rs with a loss of 163 dead. The attack on the base 225 miles north of Saigon was the heaviest of 19 Com- munist assaults ln the 24 hours ending Sunday morning, spokesmen said. It was the heaviest one-day total of "enemy·in- it.iated incidents" in three weeks, they said. Sou!h Vietnamese defenders suffered 29 dead and 32 wounded in the attack, the most government losses in a single battle in at least sll: weeks, spokesmen said . They said the Communists started the battle with a barrage of mortar and recoilless rifle shells, then launched a ground attack. U.S. helicopters were on the scene within a:n hour, bitting the Communists with rockets and machine guns. In S&igoo, President Nguyen Van Thie11 1ald today the South Vietname1e economy faces disaster. Speaking to a joint session of the Senate and House of Delegates. Thieu proposed a series of major economic refonns, including). free market for t h e. Vietnamese piastre, sweeping tu and t.arllf reforms and a major pay increase for soldiers and civil servanls. In neighboring Cambodia . four rockets fell on and near Phnom Penh Airport eight mlles from the t.1ty center Sunday and today. All flights iJI and out ol the oirport v.•ere stoppect for nearly 18 hours. Two of the shells landed on the runway area while the other two fell nearby, wounding tv.·o pe.rsons. The Cambodian high ccmmand. eJso reported fightinc about fi ve miles from the airport. They said It centered around two pagodas and a small railway staUon. Weekend field rePOrts said that IS Cam- bodians -including two officers -were killed in the same are.a, * * * Planes Sight Red Buildups At 3 Spots SAIGON !UPI) -North Vietnam bas been spotted massing enormous amounts of supplies near three mountain passes at the head of the Ho Chi htinh Trail for shipment to the southern war fronta in South Vietnam and Cambodia, U.S. sources said today. The sources said that for this tlme of year the stockpiles, seen by recon- naissance planes. amount to a record ton- nage of materials -including weapons, ammunition, gasoline and food -to sup- port war operations on the southern front . They said the trail shipping season ha1 not v.11lly opened yet, and a major bomb- ing campaign accompanied by So u t h Vietnamese conunando strikes are plan· ned to combat the movement. . ' Well, to wwer Mr. Swaitea qUeltlona1 ye.t, I have vliited the S..ta AM draft board and I plan to re-vlalt tt. And Mrondly, no, I haven 't ..ttneaed abuat to lboae behind the 00\lllter but I'm eun tt ,,.. oc:cumc1: And finally, u to the nwatd to the loyal aupporten of General Herabey, I "''" l'U Juli leave lbat to beaven. '* UPTOWN1 Lot: An1eles Mayor Sam Yorty hal JUJI lllllOW1<ed that be1l bold a press conference tomorrow to announce whether or not he 'l1 run for Prtsident of the United states. Anyone Willi to lay any beta:? The ClllneH aleo are believed to be boldlnl 1t leut two other Americans. One is Air F-C.pt. Philip Smith, who was captured 1n ltu whtn hla plan w1s shot down over Halnan J1land. The other b Navy Lt. Robert J. Flynn, who Wll wu coptured In !Iltll when hlJ plane wu down om SOUth China's KWlllJai Pro- Inc:<. Rogers Reveals U.S.-Israeli Basic Conflicts The Defense Ministry in London ordered a top security alert at basts through Britain because of lhe danger the outlawed Irish Republican Army (IRA ) may attempt to infiltrate them to steal weapons for its dimlniahing arsenal. Some soldiers' leaves were canceled. Security also was tightened in Belfast today where former British Prime Minister Harold Wllson was arriving for lalkl with Premier Brian Faulkner and opposltlon leader1. Pel{ing Faction Reported Seeking Russian Rapport In addition, there was speculation the United States might launch one or more massive airstrikes against the stockpiles under the guise of "protective reacUon'' against No rth Vietnamese antiaircn.ft positions shooting at American reeon· naissance planes. Such strikes have been undertaken frequentl y in lbe three yean since the Nov. 1, 1968 bombing halt. The sources said one reason for the siie of the stocks accumulated may be that the trail has beeJt blocked two weeks to a month longer this year than It was last year by the worst rains ever to fall la Laos since the war begin. * Vice President Spiro Agnew wW be the maa on the 1 po t in LA t.omorrow - __ maybe 1bout the Ume . Yorty ii an· nounclng. Agnew wU! be dil<:uu!nr Nixon Admlnlstritlon wage-price pollclei before the International Foood Servict Manufac- turers AaoclaUoa 1t the Century Plua Hole!. * J\EP. JOHN G. SCRMITZ IR·N~rt Beach) has been reported 1s saying th1t the proposed new federal buildinc for downtown Santa Ana looks like a cinch. ly Ull!tad i"'t" !Jltarutloul tsrael'1 ambasndor to the United Statea uid today Secretary of State WU!Iam P. Ro1en brouaht dllference1 between the two natlona Into the open by denying that the Ar1b1 now bold a military advantq;1 over the lsraell1. Rogen, in a copyrighted Interview wlth U.S. New1 and World Report, aaid the re- cent Soviet·Egyptie armt aireement has not altered the military balanct. 1n the Middle East tO favar tbe Arabi. The army said a crowd of about 150, most of them women, gathered in darkened north Queen Street in the New · Lodge Road area to protest an army aearch early Sunday which resulted in a number of arrests. They threw stones, shouted "British murderers!" and other 1loga111 and banged garbage can lids. The crowd broke into a n e a r b y warehouae and &athered boxes and wood for their barricade. lifoments later an armored car flattened it. From slits In the vehicle 's rear, troopers fired rubber bullets at the crowd, dispersing them. The spokesman said a car with four men aped around a corner at the edge of Londonderry'• Bo(akle area and suddenly LONDON (UPI) -A small but determined group with a foothold in the Communist Party and army of Mainland China la seeking reconciliation between Peking and Mosc;ow, diplomaUc sources reported today. Secrecy surrounds the key penonalittu involved, but the sources said some were entrenched in high places in Peking. The ruling regime la perturbed about th• activities and pressures conaidered to be outright opposition to _the line ud- role of ~1ao Tse-tung, the rtporb said. The Kremlin on the other haJtd was said to be intrigued by I at e s t developments which have boosted hopes for a pollcy switch of Ma1nland China toward the Soviet Ull!oo. · In fact, Santa Ana city officials are preparing to help 14 families "10\'e off o( the sil.e where the 112.5 million. nine- &tory edifice will rise upon the County Seat's skyline. They reportedly want the folk$ out or there in 90 day_s so that the dirt can start nying, even though no firm date has been set for the shovel-turning uercise:s. "Up to now, the mtJltary baltnco bat not shifted," said Roaen, In the flnt on the record top admi.n11traUon ....a:mtni of the '-fiddle East balance of power. "We do not accept thl1 evaluation - not from the military or political stand- point,'' Ambassador Yltzhak Rabin told newsmen today before boarding a plane 1n Tel Aviv for the United States. "There ii no need talking about a crisis between ltratl and the United States because, by makfnl tht American evsluatloo public, the dlf1111net1 of opinion become clear." Fires ht 6 Cities Claim Corona del Mar archilttt Bill BIW'oc k h workina; up the plans which are ••· pect.ed to be ready to go in about two weeks. 24; Many of Them Youth s I'm rure Bill wlll do 1 a:ood job. Then, folks, we 'll have another monument to federal urban renewal In downtown Santa ...... There couJdn't bt 1 bettu 1pol for IL ln EOPt, mtanwhile, Prime Mlnlrttr Mahmoud Fn11 oaid the MJddle l!ut 11 boded for a new war. By United Preti Jnt.ern1tlottal Fire• struck homes ind apartment bllUdlna:• In alJ: cltle1 Simaay, claiming the llve1 of at least U pertOl'll, many of U.S. Rains F~zzling Out ·Icy Col.d Grips Emt; Midwes t Mild; Rain Pushed Away . Ca lifornia MM!tY t\ll'lftY W1!1fl'I•• ~-. .. 11'" 11111•., In $0o./ltttr11 C•ll!Of'lllt •lld' t~llJ' w!IN!1 •-t tilt l o1 "'"'"" 811ln ''"' ct •mot '"" tt lll tlOoHh. 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""llf4t1Dl'll• """'""'· Or•. 11:11110' (fht •MO ltl(""'" !tc•t..,rnll SI. lou!t S•lt '-••• C/IY ..... °''" S~ll l'llMh<t -·M Vt t1(9\I"' W4tll1Mltll HltR Low ,0 • • • 1• .ot • • . " .... 54 •1 ·°' n " . " ... . " .. .. " .. ., 17 ., " .... . " • • • • " " . .. • • . .. ... " . . " t• 41 .. . . " . " ~ ... " , .. u • " . . " " . •J • .4a u .. u '' ... " . • • them children. Flamu ravaged a air-room frame house in Guntown, ~tla1., killing a mother and sfJ of her children. The bodies of Mn. Martha Lee Ward1ow, 31, and her chtldttn, 4-monllH>ld Robert, Johnny, a, !Ua May, t, Ollie, e, Sara May, 4 and Sara Let 3, were found In the rubble of lbe home. Mrs. WardJow'a husband, Willie, 42, was not at home wben the lire broke ouJ. In Hampton, Va., four persons died when flames engulfed their split-level home. The dead were identified as Paul R. f\1oore Sr .. his wife, Amm\1Bell,17. a son, Carolton, 26, and a dauahter, Joy Let, 11. Loa Angeles Fire Department lD> vesU1aton were invesU&atlng t h 1 poalblllty of arson in a f~ that gutted a home for the handicapped SUnday, killing two men and a.woman. Story Page 11. At laast thrtt pertont were killed In Portland. Maine, when flames ripped throut:h a three-story brick apartment buUdlnl. El&ht other persons who' lived in the bulldini, Including one man wbo jumped from a third floor window, were treated for bu.ml and smoke Inhalation. Eu,-ene E. CUshing, 54. Poli~ said tht 1tarch for Kermelh Tuttle, 24, reporled mWing in the rubble, W'OLIJd resume to- day. Three children per.abed In 1 fire at the.l.r home In St. Paul . Minn. Firemen found Loran Underwood. S, and his brothers, Robert, 4, and Dean, 2, in a se- cond noor bedroom. The victims were the children of ?ilrt. Sl>Jrley_ Underwood. These activities have rai.!ed hopes among Russians that once Mao is dead a more conciliatory !Irie toward Russia gradually will emerge from the suc- ceeding regime, the sources said. The reports said the niost recent troubles In Chlna, which have not been officlally erplained, have been partly caused by dlfferences over policy toward Rua!ia as well as toward1 the United States. Unconfirmed reports mentioned in this context htao's successor designate, hfarshaJ Lin Piao, now said to be disgrac- ed or even dead. Ousted Presldent Liu Shao-ehi w a s • known supporter of a more conciliatory line toward Moscow, favoring cloSer political t i es, but above all c Io s er economic cooperation for the sake of faster development or China's Industry wi~ Russian h e I p and of supplies ol Soviet weapons to the army, starved of modern arms. None apparenlly favors and. Ideological realignment with Moscow on which divisions seem too deep to allow for a settlement ln the foreseeable future. But the reported pressure group wanll 1 change of atUtude toward Ruula on the poUUcal level, the rporta aatd. • Royal JtJateht1p? Ki dney Failu re Kills Reci pient Of Heart Device DETROIT (AP) -Haskell Shanks, the world's longest living recipient of a partial mechanica1 heart, has rlied of a kidney failure. Doctors said his artificial heart was functioning normally at hi! death. The Warren, Mlch., man lived with the mechanlcal device three months and three days. Death came Sunday at Detroit's Sinai Hospital, where he waa admitted Oct. 4 for • chest infection which doctors believ- ed wu brought on by hia weak condition at the Ume of the heart opera tion Aug. II. Wblle the chest infection was curtd with antJ.blotl.cs, docton .said, his kidneya weakened. 1.1,ITtl ..... A granddaughltr of Generatwlmo Francl11;co Franco is to marry a descendant of Spain's last ruling king, according to newspaper report.s. The paper says the engagement between Prince Alt'onro-Jaime Bour- bon Y Damplerre and· Marla Del Carmen MarUnet·Bordlu, 20 was announced In Pull. ' I 7 I • • Ne r1 Beaeh· Today's Final EDITION. • N. Y. Stoek,8 .vor. M, NO. 273, 3 SECTIONS; ;1-4 PAGES ORAN~E cOONTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER '1 S, '1971 TEN CENTS County Seeking ~ Alternate Courthouse Br TERRY COVILLE 6f .... O.tl'f' P\191 Sit" Orange County Is looking for an alter-1 nate site for its coorthouse annex •OW planned at Newport Center._ An official or Emka y Re..t Estate De- \'elopm ent C.Ompany. iqewport Beach. cqnfirmed tOd.ay that county officials have asked if there is available land near the CO;Unty airport. County officials have reportedly ap-. proached rE:mkay a11d Co:lins Rodio Com- pany about properties the two Orms own near the airport at Palisades Road and MacArthur Bouk:v&rd. No one was avail- Actio11 Seen For Funding 'Brol~e' Unit By L. PE:l'ER KRIEG 01 lh• D1ll'f' Piii! I~ A legislative counsel 's, opinion expected this week may p u s h Orange County Supervisors .lovtard budgeting adequate rUnds to per,mit continued operation of the dollar-dry Airport Land Use C.Om· mission. Newport Beach councilman Carl Kymla said today he has asked Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach) to obtain the opinion. In a letter to Badham. Kymla charged supervisors ha\'e "eroded, if not totally frustrated " the ability of the commission to accomplish its objectives because they gave the panel onl)' $500 for operationat expenses this year, That· money has alread.)' run ~t and supef\'.isors so far have refused to f P- propriate any mort. State legislation Jut year directed counties with airports to crt1• Land u.e "agencies with authority to act on ltnd uses surrounding airfields. Orange County Supervison fll'St in· dicated their disdain for the pi.oe1 by dragging their heels in appointing their two representatives to it. They did· ao on- ly art er pressure Jrom the. Orange County League of Cities. then county supervisors budgeted only $500 for commission operations. K)'mla said he is confident the COU";Stl wiU order the money appropriated, noting precedent set with the statewide local agency formation co111Dtlssions. "The government code specifically im- JX>Se5 on the board of supervison the obligation to provide adequate funds for the LAFC." Kymla ssid. He said an amendment to the act creaUng the LAFC imposed the obligation to provide funds for it. Kymla said a check late last week· pro- mised delivery of the legislative counsel's opinion by lat~ this week. rf the ruling says the supervisors are not required to fund the agency, Kymla said. he has asked Badham to introduce legislation that will. Kymla said he asked for the opinion because the airport land use commission Is im porliint to the environmental pro- tection of Newport Beach and sur· rtiunding areas. · Vicar General Dies CHICAGO (UPI) -The most Rev. Raymond P. Hillinger, former auxiliary bishop of Chicago and vicar· General of the Archdiocese, died dllrlng the weekend after a long illness. He was 67. Coan . . ab.le at ColliM Radio th.is morning to canfinn the report . T)le apparent search for a site near the cmter of the Hai:t>or Area Judicial Dis- trict seems to rule out the chance of B · relocation in Costa A-1esa. Veteran ·Costa .Mesa Couocilman Alvin Pi{ltley saJd he felt 111e only possible court sitt in his city would· be at the Or- ange County fairgrounds , acrosS . from city h&:ll on Fair Drive.:..James Porter- field, general manager of the fair, said county officials have nQt contacted him about-a court site. / 'Wllllt'the·q\Uet Search:ror an alternate· to Newport .Center has ~· conducted, ed to break the contract if it wants, but Newpc:tt Beach officials have kept silent the city bu taken no offiCI.~ action to request the CORtract canctllatton. on !heir own plans. The county has not '1lllOUnC<d Iii in- Since the Oct. $ bond election defeat tention to seek another coUrt site and for Newport 's proposed civic center, city Tom Fuentes, an administrative aide to officials have not said one official word Supervisor Ronald Caspers, said his o(. ,· on the future of the court complex. lice knew of JtO search unaer way for The city hc.;s a contract with the county another site. to build a jail and some parkiq:, amount· F.dwsrd Ruwaldt, vice president of ing to slightly Ul}d~r $700,000 in co.~· Ernkay, said his col'hpany was contacted for the county cow:t. The court and c1v1c last week by county officials concerning center were to have been built together. ·-possible use Of a parcel of Emkay's 200 County officials h • v e indicated that acres near the airport. Newport Beach would probably be fl'llow-·'It w.s.s not a negotiation, but county officials did say they were looking at four or five pieces of laJld. They cu:ktd U we would make land avaUable ror a cow1 and we said y.es. We didii't tolk about how much land," Ruwaldt said. The county now owns 5.26 acfl!s at New~ port Center which it bought for $Ql,729. An eight-chamber courthouse · coniplei was to be built with completion dlte. Of June, 1973. Some county authorities have said th:&t the likelihood of Irvine becoming a mijor city within the judicial district • ma'de Costa Mesa a less likely caRd.idate f« the court site. The mdve by C<IWl!y olficlalJ to look for o·ltemate sites indjcates the cbances of a Newport Center courthouse are grow- ing slimmer. &th the Collins Radio I an d (leased from the Irvine Company). and the Em· by property (owned by Emkay) art within the city of Newport Beach. Fuontei, speaking for Caspers, dJd ••Y that ~In )Crause, dir<ctor ol real prop- erty ' management for the county, will give a full report on the court situation to county SUJ)efVlsors Wtdnesday morn~ . ing, Candidate Target DAILY .. ILOT Sl•ff l"llett SANTA'S HELPfR SLATER HAS GARAGE FULL OF WORK Recycling of Bkycles Is His G1me; He Could Use More Help Santa Gets Aid Mesa Family Fi xes Up Old Bikes Many not-~fortunate boys and girls will , wake up O>ristmas morning to find just what they ei:pected -very tittle. But one Costa Mesa family of three hopes to alter the situatiol1' in as many cases as possible and will place at" least 75 rebuilt bicycles in homes of needy children this Christmas. Working as chairman ·of the Newport Harbor Elks Lodge "Re-cycle Bicycle" program, Norman Slater has found two energetic helpers, his wife, May, and his son, Barry. In the process he has turned his garage IDd backyard into_a bityclt factory. He conajders the goal worth the effort. "We're j~t working away merrily," he said. "And if 'We can· get .others to help, th.it's fine." Slater said he ·plans:·to have at least 75 donaled old biC)'<'les robullt·and ready for di$ributlon by Christmas, but be hopes increased community support will pr~ vide more. Needy children are chosen with lhe help of the Assistance League, the Orange County Department of WeUare and the Salvation Army. Both bicycles and tricycles are needed. Slater asks only that they be fixable and said donors can contact him through the Elks Lodge at 673-6110. or at home, 548- 4648. Slater said he is receiving added sup· port this year from John Sipple, owner of John's Bicycle Shop in Costa Mesa. Sipple, who said he gave away 23 bicycles last year on his own, this year has agreed to provide the Elks with ·an the used bicycles in his shop unsold by Dec. 23. F'airview State Hospital has also donated bicycle parts in. the past. Slater said, and will receive six specially-made bicycles in return. Shots Riddle Hopefurs LA Home LOS ANGELES (AP) -At least eight shots were fired into the home of Republican Assembly candidate Bill Brophy early today, narrowly missing him. authorities said. The gunman escaped. apparently in a \1ehiclc,.that drew up in front of the house just ~ the shots rang out, detectives said. Brophy 's. campaign manager, William King, was in the house, too , but was not injured. police said. Brophy is the Republican candidate in Tuesday's 48th Assembly District elec- tioa. Lamp s Valued At-$49,000 ,.~ -- Burglari7.ed -A collection of unique, antique Tiffany lamps worth $49,000 -three among the missing dozen worth $7,000 each alone - have been burglarized from an Inglewood dentist's Newport Beach weekend home. The huge loss was discovered Friday afternoon by Or. Vern Phalen when he arrived at 404 Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle. Investigators today were continuing their probe of the break-in reported in- itially to Officer Lawrence Dyle. The 12 colored.glass lamps, assembled by metal sections. could have betn taken either by someone with s p e c i f i c knowledge of their value, or a burglar who just took a fancy to them. Imitation Tiffany lamps are currently favored by decorators. • Detective Ken Smith said Dr. Phalen told police the 12 genuine Tiffan)' items are from the firm's New York head- quarters and are about two feet tall. A total of five are valued at $7 ,000 each, three of them taken from the downstairs living room and two more from the second-story master bedroom. Detective s said it appeared there was no other loss, leading to speculation the burglar or burglars knew precisely what what the lamps were worth. Officer Mike McEveny, who conducted the crime scene investigation, said entry was made through a kitchen window of Or. Phalen'& plush home. Since he uses it only on Weekends, in- vestigators could only place the time of the burglary at &Orne time during the prior several days. Northeast Division detectives s a i d Brophy. 36, told'ttiem he was standing in the Jiving room behind a plate glass win- dow about 12:15 a.m .. shorUy after he had arrived home folloWing a late night dinner. He said he saw two headlights pull up in front or the house and then a shot fired, shattering a portion of the window, police said. He said he got down on the floor as other shots were fired. He was not hit. Following the gunshots, detectives said, Brophy heard a car screech .away but couldn't see it well enough to identify it. Officers Jate.r said they belleved"tbe front DAILY PILOT stiff """" Sailor Que.eit Senior Michele Venclik, 17, is · Newport Harbor High School's 1971 Homecoming Queen. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Venclik was crowned Satur· day night during Newport Har· bor·Marina football game. Sail- ors won 27-0. plate window was it by two bulleb and the window 1creen by six. They recovered six bullets. Thty said they believed the gunman us- ed a .%2-caliber rifle. "I don't think the lhot.s were intended to scare me," Brophy said later. "They obviously meant to hit me.'' He said be moved just as the first shot as fired, probably saving him from beinrl' hil -~ Brophy told officers that in the Jut two weeks he has received "name-calling" phone calls. La Paz Win 'Tucked Away By Aquarius By AIMON 1.0CKABEV C.IL Y PILOT tMti• ....... LA PAZ -J ohn Holiday'a Erlckson-3:1 sloop Aquarius from the host Long Beach Yacht Club was the overall corrected time winner of the 970-mile Long Beach to La Paz yacht race. Aquarius bre~ across lhe finish line at 1:48 p.m.~{PST) Sund.&y with 28 mm. utes to spare on her alloted time. · All of the 33 yachts-that started in the race have fmished today, the last of the group finishing In the rain. Only one boat gave predominanUy U,ht weather finished under power. She Bon belle. up the race and was the First yacht to finJsh was Ragtime, a 62-f~t New 7.eal.and built sloop sailed ~Y 1 su: man syndicate from the Long Beach Yacht Club. She crossed the finish line at I : 15 p.m. Saturday for an elapsed time or seven days, one hour, 51 minutes and 31 seconds. With her high handicap rating she was unable to salvag6 better than a fourth place in .Class A. Close competition developed primarily among Class B entries. Dick Beaver's Cal-33 sloop Counterpoint from Balboa Yacht Cluh, which had been leading in handicap for most of the race, finished in a tight downwind tacking duel with Harry Smith's Ranger-33 Bu 1 b w h a c k er , Bushwhacker won the duel and wound up with ·second place honors I o s i n g to Aquarius by one hour. (Earlier Story Page 26). As Aquarius breezed across the line un- der full spianaker, one of her crew was tossed overboard by a jubilant crew. Offlcal standings are: Overall : 1, Aquarius, 2. Bushwhacker, State IJ;igh Court to Hear I-- La Mesa's GOP Women Assail President Nixo11 3. Star, 4. C.Ounterp:>lnt. 5. Quicksilver. tiais A: 1. Sandpiper, 2. Concerto, I. Warrier, 4. Min Sette, 5. Ragtime. Sunny -skies are on the agenda a·galn Tuesday, with more chilly \\'inds froin the northeast. Highs along the coast 65 rising to 75 in· land. lows tOnlght a teeth-chatter· ing 35-50. INSIDE TODi\l' More potential heart attack vic:timJ a.re being given a neto lease on life bM the "co:rdiac Cadilloc" which tpetds .aid to them radlt T than vice veria.' Page 12. Sl""' It llM!'lllf "»ll Ciattiflft JtoU Ctn1k1 11 (ffflwt,.,. 16 Dt&I~ J<ttlk•1 1t Dlwrt•\ lt l•lltt"l•t ,.... ' 1"t•rl•l-t 1r f'lflllfltt 11.n MlfOK.,. U -1111 u•" 11 f Jet, Noise Case Appeal s • In 1a case that may set prectdent for the $29 million in clalms by ,Newpol'ti Beach residents a1ainst Orange County Airport, the Califorr\ia Supreme Court hu agreed to hear lhe 1ppeals or slmllar jet noile ·claims against Santa Monica . ~ Newport Beach Unit • Exceeds UF Quot~s • Empkiye. of the General Services __Department or Newport &.ach have ex- ceeded their "fair share" United Fund quota ~y l6G percenl. City Manager Robert L. Wynn announced toda)'. The-department set its own quola of · $1,040 Ind dortstiona, made 'by 92 percent or the dipartment's employes, amounted to 1%,872, accordl'llf to Jacob F. Myn· der,e. ltMfll services director. • Tbls llUl'Jilloed last )'ear's tolal by $400. ' ' f\-funicipal Airport.. At least 50 Sanla Monica homeowners have filed claims averaging $15,000 each and are asking for a future ban on jets. More than . 900 Newport B e a c h homeowners have ftled action in Orange • County superior Court that ls still pen-. ding. The state's highest court agreed to hear the Santa Monica appeals ot · 10 ''typical " plaintiffs, of more than 230 persons who have tiled claims, altar the District Court of Appeals reYersed two of four-sectioOli of a Superior Court verdi ct and assigned the suit back to the lower court for retrial. The city of Santa Monica and atl<lmeys for tiomeowners filed petitions for a rehearing, but were denied.: .. Newport Beach city officials right now are mulling the possibllit.y of joining homeowners beneath the Orange County Airporr night pa lb In the local action. -· LA MESA (AP )-A resolution scathing-· Jy critlct.·I of President Nixon has been passed by the La Mesa Republican Wom- ea's Club and sent to the 41 other clubs Jn San Diego County. . The action waa described as shocking by retired Roar Adm. wlie E. Gehres, the party's county chairman. The re90Jution begins with Ii statement declaring lhat Nixon °has-4'iolated the dlepdbltcan principles upon'w!tich be was elected to office ud bas betrayed the trust of millions of Americans who be- lievtd his promises to return our nation to ·respooalble foreign policy, military strength, fiscal stability and constitu. Uonal government.'' It ends with a stalement detlarh1g the club "has no choice but to seek a presi· denUal candidate .•• who can be trust- ed to make an honest &ttempt lo stop the leftwing betrayal and restore our D&'· t}on to a tonstlttitional republic ." Mrs. Warren Vb1ton, president or lhe club In this San Diego suburb, said the rcsolutloti was adopted unaminously. • DAiLY PILOT lflif ..... Se• Q11eex Senior Ping Ho, 17, Is Corona dei Mar High School's 1971 Homecoming Queen. Daughter or Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Ho was crowned Friday night during Corona del tr1ar·Costa Mesa football game. Sea Kings won 15-14. ! . ' Class 8: I. Qua s r.: r, 2. Dorothy O (Columbia 43) 3. Alice. 4. Celebrit y, 5. Bohemia. Q11s C: L Star. t. Quicksilver, 3. Chl- quila, 4. Pericus, 5, Sanderling . Class D: 1. Aquarius, 2. Bushwhacllcr, 3. C.Ounterpoint, 4. I/Allegro, 5. Free- .tyle. Surfer Injured By Loose Board A Costa Mesa.aurler who staggered oul ol lhe ... 1n Newport Beach .after being slaslled In the bead by anolher youth's board SUnday and collapsed re.mains bospllallzed In .. nous c:ondllion today. Brad Ander&OO, lf, of 2726 Drake. Ave: .• Suffered a head lacerallon and 1Ulll damage due to near-drowning In the mishap, physicians said. He ,remaiM in the Hoag Memorial Hospital inttnajve cart unit. showing no improvement since admission. The accident occurred 1t the l2nd Streel beach' In West Newport. • : 2! OAILY PILOT'!:__ __ !!_N ___ _IM~-~~· _!!flo!?""~·~-~l.!~,~l!!!ffi . .. • Supervisors~ ·Mayors . . Hold Camp Conference By JACK BIWBAClt Of .. 0.11'1' "1111 lltlt \ WHEN Zl Orange County mayors and foUr county supervisors. or their representatives get together, one thing is ct:rtain -they will disagree. The group held their fourth Supervisors and Afayors Conference (SAMCO) Saturday at Los Pinos Forestry Camp. The 'most critical debates involved a proposed county housing authcrity and the Airport Land Use Ccm- mission (ALUC ). . The housing authority, a pel project of SUperv1scr Robert Battin stirred up the greatest argument. Battin, '.ttthough he had himself aolicited _opinions and support from the variou.1 cities. acwsed . some fell~w board members of trying to 11CUtUe the authority by .solicit- ing city opinions. SlJPERVJSOR DAVID "Ba~.and Tom Fuentes, e.IC?JtiVe aid to Super- visor Rooald Caspers, admitted they do not favor the housmg authority. Baker said there are enough low cost housing programs to ~ke care. ~f the need arid that a county authority )'lould be useless without active partict· pation of most cities. . .. • Fuentes said Caspers believes blighted areas 1n t~e c1t1.es should b~ .re- developed as an alternative to new low cost housing projects 1n the rema1n1ng open space in the county. , , . San Juan Cap istrano Mayor Tony ~orst.er charged that.,Batt1n 1s us1n( the housing authority issue as a "cheap g1mm1ck to get votes. He added that hi• city council had endorsed the program for county territory, but does not want to participate. . On the Airport Land Use Commission issue. the county League of Cities last Thursday voted 15 to 6 lo support the new agency. . Pirate Royalty DAILY PILOT Sllff 'lltlls Faye AtarieiBeile, 21, Costa Mesa, and Jim Ri~~ar~s. ~O. Fountain Valley, are ange Coast College's 1971 Homecoming Queen . an.d King. Bpth ar sophomores. Both are music majors. Faye Mari~ 1s daughter of arles LaBelle, Jim is son ot Mr. and Mrs. John R. Ric~­ ards. They ere tapp~d Saturday night during O~C-Mt, San Ant!)nio footba11 game. Pirates· won 30-10. Volunieer Qrivers Sought ' I• -Co11tple:r ·Pfanaed Fair Land Lease • ·okayed by .State By TERRY COVILLE 01 fh.t 0.U'I' ,llet 11•0 ·State authorities have cleared the: way for dire(tors of the Orange County Fair tp lease 34 acres of its Costa"' M.esa fairgrounds for a proposed $20 million in- door recreJ1.tlonal complex, 1nctudlng a riiajcr hotel. five restaurants, and recrea· tiona l acth·ities. "The state has appraised the land and ~ to the concept or a long-term lease," James Porterfield, g e n e r a I manager pf the fair, told the DAILY PILOT this morning. Fair directors will act on the state report at their monthly meeting Wed· nesday night. Porterfield said the acreage, located at the northeast corner of. Fair Drive and Fairview Road,,,, was appraised by the slate at a value of $47,000 to $S3,000 per .. acre. One pri\'ate firm, Four Seasons, Inc., (If Newport Beach. made a proposal in August to lease 34 acres of fair land to build a unique $20 million recreational romplex. • • The fair site was to be the initial plant In a series of some 21 nation-wide recrea- tion centers planned by Four Seasons. switch In their philoaophy1" Porterfield, who flew to Sacramento Friday for tslkl with state olficia'ls, said ·today. Fout ·Seasons' proposed a minlmunl: le'ase paYinent of$11S,OllO to S115.000 a~ nually. P.lumer~.howe·ver, said that based on a seven percent lease agreement, preliminary eetimates show I e a s e payments ranging from $185,000 to· more than $200,000. "The money would put us on a self-sus• taining basis, eliminating the need tor ou'r current state subsidy,'' Porterfield said. The tairgrounds owns a total of 165 acres in COsh1r Mesa. Porterfield estimates tht !air's maximum need at 120 acres over the next 40 years. · "We have plenty ot room for expansion without the 34 acres Four Seasolll!I wants," he said. • Plumer said the fair site was dropped as primary site because o! the delay in the state report. "We had to begin negotiations with someone. but we are still looking at it as an alternate or as our second development." If fair directors and Four Seasons agree. here's the type of recreational complex proposed : . -Nine sporting activities Including However, Costa Pt1esa A1ayor Robert Wilson. whose council voled against the land use group , charged that the law authorizing the commission took control away trom the board of superVisors and perm,its an appointed commis- 1ioo to overrole. elected officials. To Help Clemente Woman Fred Plumer, vice president of Four Seascns, said today the fair site is no longer the prime site for lhe recreational complex but could still be used. minature golf, bowling, archery-' a rifl"'e __ _ range, a ·ski slope, -~illi~ds, ice skating, HE REFERRED to the currenl land rezone ·dispute centering on SO acre.a owned by the McDonnell Douglas Ccrp. near Orange County Airport Cc~ly . supervisors voted 3-2 last Wednesday to approve the rezone for commercial use rather than industrial. --The land use commission will--vote-on"ihei ssue-Dec:-2. lf1.hey-oppose the 1--+--I rezone it will take a four-fifths vote or county superviaors to overrule the ·' decision. -_ Cities are badly split on the housing authority ismie. Six favor it and seven oppose. Two city rouncils have refused to take a stand. Favoring an authorlty are Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Sant.a Ana, Stanton and Fullerton . Opposing are Seal Beach, Lo.s Alamitos , Orange, Anaheim, Garden Grove, La Palma, and Tustin. ON THE FENCE are Newport Beach and Buena Park. l\'ewport Mayor Ed Hirth sald it was "a serious issue" and "we did not have sufficient infonna-tion to take a stand." ,Largest Firms to Feel . ~ ·'Dividend Limit Pineh · WASHINGTON (UPI) -The 1overn- , ment annolll>Ctd today that the P~ II 4 {Percent limit on dividend .ncrt:ases will 1 apply to approximately 10,000 of the na- . tion's largest businesses which account ·for all but a small portion of the annual dividends paid stockholders. The estimate was made public by the Hot Wax Burns Newport Ma11 -: Grabb-i.og a pot of .blazing candle wax that ignited on a kitchen stove, a Newport Beach man suffered first and gecond degree burns Saturday 'A'hen be tripped and fell with it, splashing himself. Mathew Sprague, of 216 29th St., was treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital and released following the I :45 p.m. accident. The victim was spattered on the head and arm by the molten wax which h.ad caught fire w h i I e being melted, in- vestigators said. Damage to the countertop .area . sur- rounding the stove, and carpeting hit by the melted wax, was about $100 according to firemen . DAILY PILOT 0UJtN COAIT ~IUIHIMO Cf:J#lltlff l•~ N. w ••• f'l'DllllMI .. hllll ..... I.. J ee\ a. C..l..-411· VIOi ~ ... 0.-al ~ l .!:.. n-•• k11'il ..... .. ~i~. on ~nt~rest and Pivfdends ~td by · 'Federal ·Reurve Board Ouolnnlin Arthur JlUrh.\. . The anl\ouncement came as the most Intensive prJce-wage controls I n peacetime history went into effect with a few immediate aigns ot how business would respond to Phase II cl President Nil:or,'s economic policies. The dividend limitation announced previously would be based on a com- pany's highest payment.! in the three past fiscal years. · The commitlee said the controls wculd apply to: ......;companies with more than $1 million in total £\eta and a class of equity securities held by 500 or more perscns. -:--Those aubject to the reporting re- quirements ot the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or insurance companies with capital stock. "These guidelines will th,refor' apply to about 10,000 of the largt!st corporations which account tor all but a small portion of the divid,nds paid each year by U.S. corporations," the announcement said. Exempted under the guidelines were regulated inv,stment compani,s. real estate investment trusts. and personal holding companies. The committee also said "moderate di vidends" could be paid by companies that paid no dividends, or dividends that amounted to a very small percentage of earnings during the pa.st three fiscal years. pividends still to be paid in 1971 remain subject to President Nixon's request they not be increased over the amount paid In the quarter Immediately preceding the wage-price freeze which began Aug. 15, the committee said. Urgent appeals were issued today for volunteers wilh time and a car to transport Mrs. George Di Martino of San Clemente to ihe .Orange Ccunty Medical Center twice a week. If Mrs. DiMartino is unsuccessful in finding volu'lteers she would net be able to undergo the lifesaving dialysis treat· ment th.at substitutes for her failed kidneys. Lois ~1:cDonald, director of t h ·e Volunteer Bureau of Southern Orange Ccunty. stressed that because the Argen· tine woman's husbancl must work. it is impossible for him to keep a job and spent two entire days a week in central Orange C:Ounty. "It's really a matter ot life and death," she said. Airs. DiMartino must' spend three daya a week on the blood-filtering apparatus or 11he will die of kidney poisoning. "Mr. DiMartlno takes her.,.each Satur· Gal Drinkers· Liberated Too People come in all shapes. sizes and attitudes. the latter which may markedly chlnge when imbibing alcohol. Men may ~ome meek, mild and subject tb easy persuasion, such as one questioned by Newport Beach police Saturday "about what he had been drinking and where. · "Everything and everywhere." he responded, going along jovially to jail. Police also detained a liberated woman temporarily over the weekend. She was five feet , four inches tall. weighed 145 pounds and was a two-fisted drinker. Officers said she had a beer can in each haild when stopped. She was also smoking a cigar, ac- cording to police reports. Addict's Needle l\iay Carry Fatal Heart Bacteria It's long been known that heroin ad· diets often cont ract hepatitis from the dirt y hypodermic needles Lhey frequently use bul recent research has proved that thev are also highly vulnerable to heart di~ease from the sa me source. n'"''' A. M...,11111 MeMo".,., '-'*'° L r.1~ kritf """""" l•dl Cfly 1.lnllr G Plim Dr. Taxv.·ell Banks told an American eorge pton . Hearl Association meeting in Anaheim Fridav that he and fello.w researchers at W• . the District of Columbia Hospital in the ill Give Talk nation 's capital ~potted SI c.ases 'or ,.,..,_. '"'' Oflfke )lll Ntwptrl 1,111,.,,rl M1TI1tt ~irt11: r.o. I•• 1111, 9l6•J --ee.fl Mtu: 331 w .. t •rt ~ ._.,_ •DM+i: !12 ,_, ·-M11n11,."'" ,_,,1 t111J affd'I ""'""'"'I . ..,. °"'*'* .. N"1rl l!I '-1111111 lea At Orange Coast Author wd professional a m ate u r George Plimpton will discuss "An Amateur in a Professional 's World" at noon Thursday in the auditorium of Orange Ccast College, 2701 Fairvie w Road, Costa Mesa. The Plimpton talk, part of OCC's ~istinguished speakers series, ls free and open to the public. PlimP1on authored "Out or r.1 y IAague,' 11Bogey Man'' and "Paper Lion ." The lalter was based on his short.- 1 lived career with lhe Detroil Uonf pro- fessional football team. Among other sports feats !he writer has accolnplishcd are pitching In a n'i1jor league baseball game and boxing with Joe Fr a tier. Plimpton was scripted lo deliver a on!'· lln'r in John \Vayne's movie ''Jlio 1..obo" 11nd played the tympani In a ~tW York Philharmontc conc~rt with Leonard Bernstein conducting. ( bacterial endocard1t1s -a heart infection v.'ith a high mortality ~ate -in a recent sur\'ey or 1.070 addicts in the area . ~ Eleven of them died , he said. And the heart specia list predicled a rising rate of death among the nation's heroin addicts from t(ie aame causes If steps are not taken ifnmediately to reverse the trend. Dr, Banks raised a few eyebrows at his medical conferenct by dropping Into his talk the statistic that there are: 20.000 heroin addicts In the Washington, D.C. area alone. Banb said the patients surveyed all ccntracted bacterial endocarditis, an ln- fe(tion of the inner llninl of the heart, b e c a u s e unsterlliud, contaminated nttdles v.·ere used In their injections. Such germs often cause hepatitis but they also welcome the chance to nest In the heart valves, he said. Immediate treatment , he said , involved the massive uae qf antibiotics to combat 1h, infection. But tour of the St patients extmlned later had to undergo open hea rl surgery for replacement of valves that had been damaged beyond repair by the ravages or the lnfectloD. ' day, but can't take two (ull days ort dur- ing the week to take h.er," Mrs. A1cDonald aaid. · The woman, who speaks oo English, is scfleduled for dialysis' on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, and must ar- rive before 9 a.m. on those days. to spend the entire day on the machine. The treatment ends each day at 4 p.m. Mrs. McDonald urged that any on e with a regular commuting schedule from San Clemente lo central Orange C:Ounty could provide transport with little extr.a !'ffort. The DiMartioos are "desperate," she said. Anyone wishing to help can contact DiMartino at 492-6515, or Mrs. McDonald at 642-0936. Mesa Fire Unit On Rescue Run ' ' I l ~ Hits Vehicl~ A fir~ tru ck en rout€ t; i n\eafcal M°d call and a car that entered a Ccsta Mesa intersection simultaneously c o 1 J i d e d Saturday morning, but none ·-1)£ the drivers nr passengers were injured. Only minor damage was susl8ined by the 1961 fire unil driven· by Engineer Arnold Yeager. 34, according to Fire Department Battalion Chlet Ron Coleman. Traffic investigators said Yeager was northbound on Newport Bou\eyard at 22nd Street at 10.a.m .. when the collision involving motorist Irwin D. Hoffman , 25, of 210fil.Jlagerstown Circle. Huntington Beach. OCC"urred . Investigation continued t~ax. but police officers said it did not appear the fire truck . en roule to a rescue case on Monte Vista Avenue, was at fault. The vehicle was rolling "'ilh red lights and siren on a Code Three basis -when Hoffman's car, eastbound on 22nd Street,· collided with it. Edison Aid e Dies NASHUA, N.H. (U PI ) -Sam G. Langley , 94, of Amherst. chief englne!'r for Thomas A. Edison from 1911 until Edison 's death in 1931. died Sunday in a Nashua hospita! after a short illness. "We are now making an offer for another site." Phlmer explained. "But iI our new site doesn 't materialize, the fair site could still be consklered . We might also use the fair site-to· open our second or third complex. instead of lhe ·first. ·~ · Plumer said if it beeame ·the second or third complex built, -the tair project would be about a year away. . , · Fair directors have not indicated their attitude on the proposal, but Porterfield . said the state decisiOn makes the. project "look encou raging." Four Seasons wants a SS-year lease on the land. In the past the sta~e division of fa irs and expositions which s e t s guidelines for county fa ir operations has opposed anything over a five-year lease. "Their report~to .us represent! a majcr tennis .couru and swlDlmlng pools. -Two theaters. -A majcr hotel with about 800 room~ .. -Five internalional re.st.aurants .. wtth Polynesian, ·French, SAAnish .and other types of ·food , , · -Some convention facilities. Fred Regan_,_presidept of Four S!:a~ns, said it1 Aug~st tha.t oqe of the ma1or P~­ vantages of the fair site was the possible use of fair buildings for convention ac· tivities. - The Four Seasons concept is similar to a regional shopping center -putting !t all together unde r one. roo~...=-excep~ 1t c o m b i n e s recreational oppor~un1tles, Regan fxplaitled. . . He expects the roncept to-spread na- tionwide, _but plans to start in Orange Ccunty. CSF in Mourning . . ' ' ·3 . Footbiill ·Goaches Dw , in Crasli -.•. • • . ...... ~Jl'!t •• . ~ ,, ... r; . ·;udent; ~:~11r ;l;Y.e~· ~ay· m'~umed ·lh{ee' 1~t S~le, • Fulle~on' 't~1t~1 . coaches kUlediWer the W~kend when their rented plane slammed mto rugged brush-<:hoked San Marcos Pus tt'rrain above Sant.a Barbara. The victidia ·were being flown to ·scoiit a iame at Cal Pol)., San Luis Obispo by a charter pilot who alsc died in the craah 400 yards off Camino Cielo Road in ~the ,Sant.a. Ynez Moun~ins. . Ironically,. the team the CSF Titans are to play ne~ w'ekend for the CCA.A 1971 fOQtball championship was virtually wiped out 11 years and three weeks ago in a Toledo, Ohio plane crash. · · • :Dead as a result of the tragic weekend cra~h are Joe ·01w.ira. 39, sophomore offen sive coacti; Bill ·Hannah, 37, offensive line coach, and Dallas Moon. 30, defensive coach. · The pilot was ·identifled as Ernie Mariette, 40, ot San Gabriel , a veteran rtier. O'Hara, of Tusfin, Hannah, of Buena Park, and MoPn, of La Palma, were fl ying from San Diego where the.Titans whipped U.S. International Univers.ity 40 to JO Saturday. · Heavy cloud cover and air turbulence, plus rain, was widespread in the central coast area during the time their single engine Piper aircraft vanished Saturday night. The Tif.p.ns play the Cal Poly Mustangs next weekend for the CCAA cham- pionship but the tragedy will nol lead to cancellation of the' grid contest. Ca! Poly lost 16 killed and 22 others injured. including coaches. players and fans. oCt. 22, 1960, when their chartered airliiler crashed on takeoff from Toledo. Ohio. . Cal State, Fullerton President L. Donald Sttj_elds ~id the gai:ne with Ca l Poly \1•i!l not be canceled, despite the tragedy, worllt in the CSF campus 12-year history. · For con1plete details, see storle1 in today's Sportll seCtion, Page 21. .. ' We Buy Dlr~tfrom HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES: Th~ General Public And Pass The Savi111s On To You! Ledi.t E119a•t J.05 Carat Tetel W•l9ht DIAMOND CLUSTER .. COCKTAIL RING GOOD QUALITY SAVI ON THIS S995 LedlH, *•tiful, J.lO Carat Tot•I W•ltht DIAMOND CLOSTER COCKTAIL RING Ce11 tor DI--" .IS Cerat $595 l .IJ Ceref T•'91 Wel .. t Ft .. ~ DIAMOND CiUSTER •COCltTAIL RING .... Wo •lrM h..,. ••111•......i "9111• .. fr•• V4 ,_.., & 1p; hMU1ly 'rketl, ,._, th reel ....,.._ ......... D+--•• 1"11111.00 e ,.111t. ' Diamond Center for Ora11g.,. Count1t" COSTA MESA JEWELRY ti LOAN Optn Dait11 9 to 6 Coma in and. Bro~c ".'~~~ 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. , PHONE ,646-1741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -ltlwtft H-Ii ..... ., ' ·I DOM RACITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE ~ ... ..., • 419Mlt4 ...... .... m, ....... ~.,, .. MM ,. .,,.._. 11t 40~· MO•I tti .. y111 poW fDf If ., ., • ., -My Mck. c •• ., ..... ........... ..,...1 COMrAlr. tx_PllT WATCH llrAI• DOHI OH PllMISU , , Cos&a ·Mesa ~DITION VOL 6-4, NO. 273, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·MONDAY, NOVEMBEI( TS: 197r Today's Final N.Y. Steeks JEN CENTS County Seeking Alternate Co·urthouse ·Sites By TERRY COVILLE Of tlM Delly Plttl Staff Orange County ls looking for an alter- nate site for its courthouse anot.1 now planned at Newport Center. An Official of Emkay Ru.'I Estite De-vtl~ent Company, Newport Beach, conf1nn~ today that county officials have asked if there is available land Deir the county airport. . County o£flcl~s have reportedl)r l!>- proached Emkay and Collins Rlidio Com- pany about properties the two firms own near the airport at Palisades Road and MacArthur Boulev;;.rd. No one was avail- able at Collins Radlo this morning to to NeWport Center has beea conducted. confirm the report. Newport Beach olficiah I.ave kept sllen1 The apparent. Search for a site near the .a ... center of the Harbor Aria Judicial Di$. oa uicir own pfans. trict.-seems to rule out,tbe chanee of ~ • •Since the· Oct.• $ bond election defeat relocation ·in Costa Mesa. for NewPort's .propost(l civic center, city Vetef4a Costa Mesa Councilman Alvin officials have not said one ."official word Pinkley sai~ he felt the ooly-po,.;ble-·oo the futui.-ol tht court c:omplex, _ court 3ite in his city would he at the Or-The city tu.:s.a cbntract with.the county . .ange (Joonty fairgrounds , acrpss from to build a jail and some parkblg, amount· city. hr41 oo Fair Drive. James Porter. ing to slightly under. $700,000 •in C06ta:, fl:!ld, g~neral miniger o( the {air, said for the.cognty,cou~. The COUFt and civic count.r. officials have not contac'ted him center w.ere ·to have been built together. ed to break the contract if it wants, but the city has taken no official action to request the COIU'act cancellation. 1be coonty has not &nnOUllCed it! I~ tcntiou to seek another court site and Tom Fuentes, an administraUve aide to Sl!pervisor Ronald <:aspers, said his of- fice knew ot ao search under way for another site. " Edw.i.Td Ruwaldt, vice president ol Emtay; said his company was ~tacted -last week by county officials concerning possible use of a parcel of Emkay's 200 acres near the airport. about~a courl· site.• County--officlals h a v t indicated that \\'hi!~ qie _quie~ search.for an ~llern&te . Ntwporl'Beach would probably be 1o•lJow. -''It w•s not a negotiation, but county officials did say they we.re looking at four or five pieces of laad. They asked it we would make land available for a cotat and \Ve said yes. We didn't t41k about how much land,'' Ruwaldt said. The county now owns 5.26 acres at New- port Center which It bouaht for $439,729. An eight-<hamber courtJiou,. complex was to be· built wJth completion date of June, 1973, Some county authorities have said thit.t the likelihood of Irvine becominf a major city wlthlri the judicial district made Costa "1esa a less likely candidate for the court site. The move by county officlals to J90k for r.ltemate sites indicates the chances of a Newport Center courthouse afe grow- . ing slimmer. Both the Collin.! ftadJO l I D d (leased from the Irvine Company) .and tht Em· kay propeW (own"'L by Eml<ay) arw wittiin lhe city·or Newport Beach. Fuente!!, speaking for Caspel'I', ~ sr.y that Sta11. Krause. director o( real ·prop- erty management for the county. will give a full report on the court situation to county supervisors Wednesday mom· ing. Fairground ____,,Facility Wins Okay Candidate Target Shots Riddle Bopeful's-LA Home I '- By TERRY COvn.LE ot !tie DellY f>llot Shff .... -State authorities have cleared the way for directors or the Orange County Fair to lease 34 acres of its Costa Mesa fairgrounds for a proposed '20 million in- door recreiitlonal complex, including a major hotel, five restaurants, and reerea· tional activities. "The state hos appraised the land and agreed to the concept of a long-tenn lease," James Porterfield, g enera I manager ot the fair, told the DAILY PlL<YI"tbis morning. Fair directors 1vlll act on tht state report at their monthly meeting Wed· nesday night. Port~rfield said the acreage, located at the northeast comer of Fair Drive and F;tirview Road, iriJs appra~. by the state. al a val~ 9' $47ilXM> to $5.1,000 per acre. \ · · WS ANGELES (AP) -At least eight shots were fired into the home of Republican Assembly candidate Bill Brophy early today, narrowly missing him, authorities said. The gunman escaped, apparently in a vehicle that drew up in front of the house just as the shots rang out, detectives said. Brophy's campaign manager, William King, was in lhe house, too, but was not injured , police said. Brophy is the Republican candidate in Tuesday's '48th Assembly-District elec. ti09t . Costa Mesa One privite fll'nf, """FOlit Stasoos, Inc., - of. Newport Beach, made a . proposal in August to lea.se S4 acres.of fatr lad to build a unique $20 million recreational cotnpleit. ~ay :R$ses __ _ , · G~t Backing · ·The fair site was to be the irUtial plant In ·a series of some 21 naUon-wide recret- tion cen~rs planned by Four Sea&ons. 'F.red Plumer. vice president of Fou,r Seasons. said today the fair site is no longer the prime site for the recreational complex but could still be used. "We are now making an offer for another site.'' Plumer explained. "But if our new slte doesn't materialize, the fair site could still be cons~ed. "We might ;dso use the fair site to open our second or third complex, instead of the first." Plumer said if it became the secood or third comple:1: built, :the fair project would be about a year away. Fair directors have not indicated their attitude on the proposal, but Porterfield said the state decision makes the project •·took encouraging." Four Seasons \\'ants a 55-year lease on the land. In the past the Slate Division or F;iirs and Expositions w h i c h sets guidelines ror county rair operations has opposed anything over a rive-year leas~. "Their report to us represents a maJor switch In their philosophy." Porterfield, who flew to Sacramento Friday for talks with state ofrlcials, said today. Four Seasons proposed a minimum lease payment of $115,000 to $12S,ln> an-- llually. Plumer, howtvtr, said that based on a seven percent lease agreement. prtliminary estimates shoW 1 e • 1 e payments ranging from $185,000 to more than $200,000. '"Ibe money would put us on a seU-sus- taining basis, eliminating the need for our current state subsidy," Porterfield said. The fairgrounds owns a total of 165 (Seo FAIR, P"le %) Oraage We•t•er Sunny skies ar1f Ob the agenda again Tuesday, with more chilly winds from the northeast. Jlighl along the coast GS rising to 75 in• land. Lows lonigbt a teeth-chatter· Ing 35--50, INsmE TODAY flfore potelttiol~t allack t:ictirns are bein · n o. new lea.se ort life bv he "ca_r~c Cadillac" which ipeedl aid to the m rath.tr tliart vice veraa. Pog< 12. I , . , ' DAILY PILOT Stiff"-'• SAN'l'A'S HELPER SLATER HAS GARAGE FULL OF WORK Recycling of Bicycles Is His Game; He Could ·UM Mon Help Santa Gets Aid ' ~ . ' ~~sa· Family Fixes Ve OW Bikes 'Many not~~fortunate boys and girls will Wike up Christmas morning to lind jiut, what, they ei:pected .-"'.ery lltUe. Qul. orie Costa Mesa family of three hopes to alter ,the situation in as many cases as possible and will place at least 75 rebuilt bicycles in homes of needy children this Christma s. \Vorking as chairman of the Newport Hitbor'"Elks. Lodge ··Re-cycle Bicycle'' progfam, ,Norman Slater has found two eriergetic helpers, his wife. May, and his son, 1 Barry. . In the process he has turned his garage and backyard into· a bicycle factory, He considers, the goal worth the effort. ':We're.just working away merrily," he sai(i.. "Anet ~ we can get others to help, that's fme." Sia~~ be plan.s·to have at least 75 donated elcfbieycles i.bullt Ind ready !or distrib\ltion b~ qir;.taw, b\lt be hopes ina:.~ cpmmynjty aupport will pro- vide more. Needy •childrerr ·are chosen with the help of the A.s!istance League. the Orange County Department of \Velfare arid the Salv1tAen Army. Both bicycles arKI tricycles are needed. Shi~er asks only that they he fixable and said donors~can contact him through tile Elks .Lodge at 673-61l0, or at home, 548- 4643, Slater said he is recei\•ing added ·sup- port' this year from J'onn Sipple·. owner of J~hn's Bicycle Shop· in Costa Mesa . ,Sipple, who said he ga ve away 2.1 bicycles last year on his own. thi s year has agreed to provide the Elks with all the used bicycles in his shop unsold by Dec. 23. Fairview State Hospital has also donated bicycle parts in the past, Slater said, and will receive six speeially·made bicycles in return. 2 Women -Ordained WNDON (UPI) -. The Church of ..EnglanCI wUf ordain its first twO women priests in tile near future, a spokesm<pt said today. · · Jane,.Hwing Hslen Yuen, a Chinese na- tiooal and LondoD-bOrn · Joyce 'Bennett will ))e ordained in Hong Kong, he said. No e"iact date was announced. The two women· will b:e the first female priests in the four centuries since the church's fouhding by the English King Henry VIII. Pay raises totaling $10,500 for 14 of Costa Mesa's 18 department heads-will be recommended to the city council at tonight's meeting. The wage increases, ranging fr0m 2.5 percent to 10 percent, are recommended by City Manager Fred Sorsabal based on a salary survey or 10 cities comparable in. size to Cosla Mesa. Sorsabal, who is currenUy -Gn vacation In the Virgin Islands, recommends no raise for three department head posts and has made no recommendation at a11 on his own salary. Four of the proposed increases -two at 7.5 percent, two at 10 percent -ex- ceed the naUonal Pay Board's 5.5 percent limit on wage increases announced Nov. 8. Sorsabal's recommendations were developed before the IS-member Pa y Board announced its new limit. The absolute wage freeze. adopted Aug. 15, was lifted at midnight, Saturday. The city rouncil granted city salary :::hanges ranging from no raise to 7 .5 per· cent last July 19. Two groups of city workers, the firemen and communication workers, however have still not reached agreement on salaries. At the time, communication workers were asking 10 percent raises while the: council offered no raises. Firemen wanted 10 percent increases. They were offered 2.5 percent and five percent raises. When city workers' salaries were discussed, recommendations were not made for department heads. The Pre.rident's wage freeze was set before the council could ronsider the matter. Councilmen received Sorsabal's pro- posals in their agenda--packets this weekend. The department heads themselves were informed of the wage proposals by Assis- (Sce PAY, Page 2) ~~y~1=1tTied to 10,000 Firms U.S. Says Move Covers Most Dividends . ' . WASHINGTON (UPI) -The govem-The dividend limitation lllllOUllCed -•lions," the announ«ment sald. meat annoudced today that the Phase 11 c previomly would be baaed on a com· Enmpted under tht guidelines were percent limit oo d!vtd<nd ;nci.ue1 will pany's blahesl P¥!1l<Dta In the tjlreo p,a reguloled Investment companies, no! apply to •pproximatejy 11,llOI ol the ... r....i }'UlSe ' eollle Investment !nl!ts, ml perrooal tloo'• Waat buainuoes which account The committee ,.id the conlroll -111-~ companies. Tor an but a smau portion or the annual apply to: ' ~c!Ommtttee al!O said "moderate d!videnda paid stockholcl..-• --Oompanies with mcn_lhlll II mliion d " could be paid by ~ The estimate was made public by lhe. 111 total assets and -• ClaJS or equity th pa no dividends, or diri!;lencll that Committee on Interest and Divldtnds securities held by 500 or more persons. amounted to a very small percentage or headed by Federal Reserve Boilrd -Tho6e subjed to the reporting re-earnings during the past three ft.seal Chairman Arthur Bums. , quirements of the Securities Elchan&e ~years. TM announcttnent came as the most Act of 19$.1 or insurance companies with DlYldends stlll to be paid In 1971 remain intensive price-wage controls I n capilal atock. . subjtc:t to President Nixon's request they peacellme hlatory wenl l11to e!rect with • "These guidelines will therefore apply not be increased over the amount paid in rew immediate signs of ho1v business to aboUt 10,000 or the largnt corponittons the quarter Immediately precedi~ the would ·respond to Phase It o( Pmident which account for 111 but a small por.tlon wqeoprice lreeze which began Alig. l5, Nixoo'1 ecooomk policies. . of the di vklendl p1id each )'tlr bx.. V.S. the committee s1id. ' - Northeast Division detectives 1 a I d Brophy, 36, told them be wu 1tanding in the living room behind a plate glass win- dow about 12 : IS a.m., shortly alter he had arrived home follQwing a late night dinner. He said Ji~ saw two headlights pull up in front of the house and then a shot fired, shattering a portion of the wlndow, pollce said. He said he got down on the floor as other shots were fired. He was not hit. Fo11owing the gunshots. detectives said, Brophy heard a car screech away but couldo't see it well enough.to ideoU!y it. Officers later said they believed the fro nt plate window was it by two bullets and the window screen by 1ix. They recovered six bullets. 'They said they believed the gunman w~ ed. a .22-caliber rifle. "I don't think the shots were intended to scare me," Brophy said later. "They obviously meant to hit me." He said he moved just as the first 1hot as fired , probably saving him from being hit. Brophy told officers that in the last two we.eks be has received "name-calling'' phone calls. CSF in Mourning _3 _Football Coaches Die i1i Cras1i Sludonta llld ~ lldlJ moum'ed ~ Cal State, Fullerton football coaches trued OYel' the weebnd when their rented plane slammed into rugged brush-choked San Marcos Pia terrain above Santa Barbara. Tbe vii=:tims were befn&.flown to scout a game at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo by i charter pilot who also died in the crasli 400 yards off Camino Cielo Road in the Santa Ynez Mountains. Ironically, the team ·the CSF Titans are to play next weekend for the CCAA 1971 foot ball champion.ship was virtually wiped out ll years and three weeks ago in a Tole;<fo, Ohio plane crash. Dead as a result ol. tbe tragic weekend crash are Joe O'Hara 39 SQPhomore offensive coach; Bill Hannah, YT, offensive line coach and Dana; Moon, 30, defensive coach. · ' The pilot was Jdentifiec:has Ernie Mariette, 40, of San Gabriel a veteran flier. · · ' - O'Hara, of ~. Hannah, of Buena Park. and Moon, of La Palma were flying from San Diego where the Titans whipped U.S. International Uni~erslty IO to 30 Saturday, Heavy cloud cover and air turbulence, plus rain, Wll! widespread Jn the central coast area during the ·time their single engine 'Piper aircraft vanished Saturday nighL The Titans play the Cal Poly Mustangs next weekend for the CCAA cham- pionship but the tragedy will not lead to cancellation of the grid contest. Cal POiy lost 16 killed and 22 othersjnjured,. including coaches, players and fans. Oct. 22, 1900, when their .chartered airliner crashed on takeoff from Toledo, Qhio. Cal State, Fullerton President L. Donald Shields said the game with Cal Poly will not be canceled, despite the tragedy, worst in the CSF campus 12~ year history. For complete details, see stories in today's Sports section, Page 21. Ch.ina Watchers Cite Lin Piao. Death Plots NEW YORK (A Pl -Time -azine says Western eiperts believe Lin Piao, Mao Tse-tung'~ designated successor as chainnan oC Chh1a's Communist Party, tried to assassinate Mao three lime& and was betrayed by his own daughter as he tried to escape. The group took off in a British-made Trident equipped with special radar to fly at very low altitudes, the magazine said. CrediUng the account to "China- watchers lrom Hong Kong to Washington," Time said Lin, the defenM minister, Is "polltlcally finished and very possibly dead as well." The .magazine said "an epic struqle for power" came to a clima% In Se~ tember. Jt uid aix of the 21 members of the politbtn'o have since "dropped com· pletely from view." Accordlnl to this esplaoatlon !or lhe vague reporll of turmoil coming out o! ChJ"" Un eomehow was npofed • m "Wherever they were headed, the1 never made it," Time said. ''Lin's own daughter, Lin Tou-tou, betrayed the escape attempt and the Tri· dent was somehow shot down." The magazine said a Trident which , "mysteriously crashed deep ln Mongolia" was believed to be the plane carrying Lin. Surfer Injured By Loose Board Septeinher. lie "'PO<ledlY tried ~ A Costa Mesa surfer who staggered oul tim01 In 11.--tb klD the moo w11o · o! lhe:..a lriNtwj1or!J!each lltar beJnc made him his hilt-apparent 2~ years 1lubed in the held by another youth1s ago. board SUnday and collapsed remains Decldiq to Oee China, Un, his .;He -hospitalized In serious condition today. . an• sou; Chen Po.ta, Mao'• chkf , Brad Anderson. 18, of 2726 Drake Ave.., lde1logue, penonal secretary 8nd suffered a head laceration and lun& ghostwriter: ind Wu Fa·IWen , chief 9f dQUlage due to near-drowning In the the air forct. reportedly went to 1 mishap, physicians said, military a1rficld near Peking. He remains in the Hoag Me.mortal Chen was purged rrom. his fourtbo~k· llospital intensive care unit. showing no Ing spot Jn 01e Politburo laat fall. fie end improve.meat slnce admlaslon, Wu were de:teribed 111 coconsplrators The accident occurrKI at the S2ad with Lin. 1 ' Street beach ln West Newport. ,. ' OAILY PILOT t . Mond.IJ, NM~M< 15, 1171 Supervisors, Mayors Hold Camp Conf ere nee By JACK BROBACK 01 ""' Dllli' ,., .. , •ta11 WREN 11 Orange County mayors and four county supervisors. or their representatives get together, one thing is certain -they will disagree. The group held their fourth Supervisors and ~1ayors Conference tSAMCO) Saturday at Los Pinos Forestry Camp. The most crilical debates lovolved a proposed county housing authority and the Airport Land Use Com· mWion IALUC). The housing authority, a pet project of Supervisor Robert Battin, stirred up the greatest argument. Battin althoug h he had hlmselr solicited opinions and support' from the varlous cities, accuseji some fellPw board members or trying to acuttle the authority by solicit- ing city opinions. SUPERVISOR DAVID Baker and Tom Fuentes, exe<:utive aid to Super· vllor Ronald Caspers admitted they do not favor the housing authority. Baker said the;e are enough low coiit housing programs to take-care ~f the need and that a county authority would be useless without active partlc1· pation of most cities. . .. Fuentes said Caspers. believes blighted are~s in t~e citi.cs should b~ ,re- developed as an alternative to new low cost housing projects 1n the rema1n1ng open space in the county. . . . San Juan Capistrano h-1ayor Tony Forster charged thal,,Battln is using · the housing authority issue as a "cheap gimmick to get votes. ,He added tha t his city council had endorsed the program for county territory, but does not "·ant to participate. On the Airport Land Use Commission issue. the county League of Cities last Thursday voled 15 to 6 to support the new agency. However Costa ~1esa ri.fayor Robert Wilson, whose council voted against the land use 'group, charged that the Jallt' authorizing the commission took 1 control away from the board of supervisors and permi~ an appointed commis- sion to overrule elected officials. ~ ' HE REFERRED to the currtnt land rezone dispute centering on 50 acres owned by the "'fcDonnell Douglas Corp. near Orange County Airport. Cou~ty supervisors vot ed 3-2 last Wednesday to approve the rezone for commercial Ult rather than industrial. . The land use commissio..11 will vote on the issue Dec. 2. lf they oppose the rezone it will take a four·flfths vote of county supervisors to overrule the decision . • · Cities are badly split on the housing authority ls!Ue. SiI favor it and seven oppose. Two city council!! have refused to take a stand. Favoring an authority are Huntington Beat::h. Laguna Beach , San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, Stanton" and Fullerton. Opposing are Seal Beach, Los Alamitos, Orange, Anaheim, Garden Grove, La Palma , and Tustin. ON THE FENCE are Newport Beach and Buena Park. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth said it was "a serious issue" and "we did not have aufficlent informa· tlon to take a stand." y olunteer Drivers Sought r To Help Clemen!e Woman . -• • Uraent appeals were Issued today fo.r oluntetn with lime and a car to transport Mrs. G~rge Di Martino of .San Clemente to the Orana:e County Medical Center twice a week. : If Mrs. DIMartino is unsuccessful In {inding volu'lteers she would not be able to undergo the lifesaving dialysis treat· inent lh1t substitutes for her failed ' ~kiney1 .. Lois McDonald, director or t h e Volunt~ Bureau of Southern Orange Coun~~i'essed that because "the ArgeA- line woman's husband must work, It is linpossible for him to keep a job and spc:nt two entire days a week in ctntral Orange COunty. "It'1 really a matter o! life and death," 1he said. Mn. DiMartino must spend three days 1 week on the blood-filtering apparatus or 1be will die of kidney poisoning. "Mr. DlMartino takes her each Satur· l1y, but can't take two full days off dur· na: the week to take her.'' Mrs. McDonald said. The woman. who speaks no English. Is icbeduled for dialysis on Tuesdays, DAILY PILOT ,_ ..... _,.._ a,Mft H. W•N ,,....,. ........ ilW J1otlt L c.,1 • ., Vk9 ........, .............. ,_., ... n ... , "••Yll ..... 111..-i•• A. M_,.,\111, #.t!lotllrlf l'ilW \ Cii1rl11 H. t .. , ai1\•toi P. ~•11 ' ,,_lltt!ll MaMtlfll l'Utrl ~ c.-. .... Offk• Jl)O W•1t l1y ~tr••t M1ttl11 A.Ur1n1 P.O. In 11 ~0. •1•2• \ --" ........ ia.ttt: 2m ,...,..,, l lN'I...,. • t.11-••cfl1 m •-1 •-~ lllotdl• l,.1S ·~ ·~,. , ... a.int; -..... ., '--..... I;- r '11\ursda_)'.s anO ~t\trolys, ind must ar- rive before 9 1.m. on-those diy11 to spend the entire da y on the machine: Tht treatment ends ea ch day at 4 p.m. Mrs . McDonald urged that a n yon e with a regular commuling sched ule from San Clemente to central Orange Count y could provide transport with little extra effort. The DiM~rtlnos are "desperate," she said. Anyone wishing to help can CQnlact DiMartino at 492-6515, or Mr!!. McDonald at 642-0938. Addict's Needle l\fay Carry Fatal Heart Bacteria It 's long been known that heroin ad· diets nften contract hepal!tis from the dirty hypodermic needles they frequently use but recent research has proved that they are also highly vu lnerable to heart disease from !he same source. Dr. Taxwe!l Banks told an American Heart Association meeting in Anaheim Friday that he and fel low researchers at the District of Columbia Hospital in the nation's capital spotted SL cases of bacterial endocardllis -1 heart Infection with a high mortality rate - in a recent surve;• of 1.070 addicts in the area. Eleven or them died, he l5aid. And the heart specialist predlcted a rising rate of death among the nation's heroin add lcls from the same causes if steps are not taken immediately to reverse lhe trend. Dr. Banks raised a few eyebrows at his medlcal conference by dropping Info hls talk the statistic that there are 20.000 heroin addicts in the Washington, D.C. area alone. Banks said tht patient! surveyed all contracted bacterial endoca rctltis, an in· fecfion of the inner lining o( the heart, be ca u s e unsterilized . contaminated needles were used Jn their · injections. Such germs often cause hepatitis but they also welcome the chance to neiit in the heart valves, he said . Immediate treatment, he said, Involved !he massive use of antibiotics to comblt the infection . but four of tht 51 patient! eiaml~ liter had to undergo OPen heart surgery for replacement of valves th1t had been damaged beyond repair by · lhe rav1gts of the Infection. Sa tellite Launched "-1ALT1''DI, Xtnya (AP! -ltallan 11nd American scientist.a launched 1 11clenllfic satellite off the coast or Keny1 loday 10 probe the earth's m11ilneto1phere. The 11 4-pound sa1elllte and Its U.S. Scout rocket we.re sent up frmn the ltalil\n government's launch platform In Formosa B1y, off ri.ta\lndl. The sa~lllte went lnto an .-qu11torl1l orbit about 300 miles 1bove the earth to radio b11ck In· formstlon on mafinellc and radiation t1henomeoa. 1. • I DAILY PILOT lllH ""'"' Pirate .Royalty • ' ' .. $49,000 Lo••· Police Prohi_ng Big .. La~p Theft A collection of unique, antfque Tirtany tam~s worth $4.9,000 ..... three among the missing dozen worth $7,000 each alone - have been burglarized from an Inglewood dentist's Newport Beach weekend home. The huge loss wai discovered Frlday afternoon by Dr. Vern Phalen when he arrived at 404 Via Lido Nord, Lldo Isle. Investigators today were continuing their probe of the break-In reported in- itially lo OfHcer Lawrence Dyle. .. Dr. Ph'1len's pluth home. Since he u1e1 it only on weekenda, ll\o vestlg~tors could only place the thpe of~ • the · bl,lrglary at some time durlnl tht prior itlveral days. w • • La Pa z Win Tucked Away By Aquariits Faye 1'1arie LaBelle, 21, Costa Mesa, and Jim Richards, 20, Fountain Valley, are Orang~ Coast Colle·ge's 1971 Homecoming QueeD and King. Both are sophomores. Both are music ma jors. Fay.;: Marie is daughter of Charles LaBelle, Jim is so n of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Rich· a~s. They were tapped Saturday night during OCC·Mt. San Ahtonio '106\ball game. Pirates wo n 30·10. The lZ colored-glass lamps, assembled by metal sections, could hive been taken . either by someone with s p e c i f l c knowledge of their value, or a bur1lar who just took a fancy to them. Imitation Tiffany lamps are currently favored by decorators. Detective Ken Smith said Dr. Phalen told police the 12 genuine Tjffany items are lrom the firm 's New York head· quarters and are about two feet tall. By AIMON LOCKABEV DAILY ,.ILOT IMllllf •~Hlfl' LA PAZ -John Hollday'1 Erickson-35 sloop Aquarius from the host Long Beach Yach! Club wu the ovefall corrected time winner of the 970-mile Long Beach to La Paz yacht race. f'rom Page 1 FAIR ... acres in Costa Mesa. P ort erf i eld estimates the lair's maximum need at 120 acres over the next 40 years. ··we have pleiity ol room for expansion without the 34. acres Four Seasons wants," he said . Plumer said the fair site was dropped as primary site because of the delay in the state report. "Wt haa to begin negotiations. with someone, but we are still looking at it as an alternate or 8.! our second development." If fair directors and .Fou_r Seasons agree, here 's the type of recreational complex proposed: -Nine sporting activities includlng minature golf, bowl ing, archery, a rifl e range, a ski slope. billiards, ice skE.tlng, tennis courts and swimming pools. -Two theaters. -A major hotel with alxiut ~00 rooms. -F'l ve International restaurants with Polynesian, French, Spanish and other types of food . -Some convention facilities. Fred Regan, president of Four Seasons, said in August that one of the major ~­ vantages of the fair site was the possible use of fair buildiogs for conv.ention ac· tivitie s. • The Four Seasons concept ii similar to I!. regional shoppirig center -putting it all together un~er one foof~ --eicepl-~ Com q f n.e ~, recr_eltional "pppo'rtun1Ue'$, Regan explained. 1 He expects the concept to spread na· 11onwide , but plans l.o start in Ora Rge County. Mesa Fire Unit On Rescue Run Hits Vehicle A fire tru ck en route to a medical aid call and a car that entered a Costa Meaa intersection slmultaneously c o 111 d e d Saturday morning, but none of the drivers or passengers were Injured. Only minor damage was sustained by the ·1961 fire unit driven by Engineer Arnold Yeager, 34, according to Fire Department Battalion Chief Ron Coleman. Traffic investigators snid Yeager was northbound on Newport Boulevard at 22nd Slreet at 10 a.m., when the collision involving motorist Irwin D. Hoffm an. 25, of 21001 llagerstown Circle, Huntington Beach, occurred. Investigation continued today, but police officers said it did not appear the fire truck. en route to a rescue case on ri.-tonte Vista Avenue, was at fault. The vehicle was rolling with red lights 11nd siren on 1 Code Three basis when Hoffman's car, eastbound on 22nd Street, collided with it. Valley Man Held In Sa vag e Attack On Mesa Officer A Fountain Valley man who allegedly beat a Costa J\1esa policeman bloody dur- ing a traUic stop early Sunday, before the ofllcer drew his gun . wound up In jail 11fter reinforcements 11rrived. 1-iichael E. Klaes, 28, of 9195 El Verde Circle, was booked on suspicion of assault on a police officer. Patrolman Ron Veach suffered • .sprained ankle, cut llp1 bloody nose and chin laceration during the flatflJht and wrestling match at Newport Boulevard and F1lr Drive. · Police claim his account was cor- roborated by Donald Jack&on, a witness who 51w part of the lhrtt-mlnute blttle btfore Officer Veach could draw his revolver on Klaes. Officer Veach said he 1potltd Klaea traveling nn Fair Drlvt at a high rate or ~peed about 2 1.m,, pulled him over and was lmmt<Oaltly challenged about c1use for detalfUng the motorist. The p1trolm1n said Kl1e1 c1me at him swinging and he was fln1lly knocked to lhe pavement 1r er backln&: up atveral ftet to avoid being hit. " Black Panther Skirmish Erupts At Court Case LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A trial stem· ming from 1 1969 shootout between Black Panthers 11•d poli.ce erupted into. violence today when five of the accused litfac!Ced two Othtr · defendants. I~ was the latest -development in· what apparently Is a feud be.tween two factions of .the n:iilltant party -:-one supporting the exiled Eldridge Cleave·r and the othei' su DpOrtlng founder Huey.Newton. . Rollce we~ in\!estlgatliig the j>ossibilUv \hat the rf!Urder Nov. 5 of Sand.ra Pratt, one of the 13 o~lglnal. defendants, .w.as lin k~ to the feud. Sherill's deputies Said the me1ee ioo8y ocCurred shortly before 10:30 a.m. when five defendants being held wit hout ball leaped across the counsel table and be~an pummeling two defendants who are free on bond. Superior Court Judge George M. DeU ordered the courtroom cleared and said the defendants involved in the fracas would not be present when the case resumed. Mrs. Pratt. wife of 1 local leader of the perty, Elmer Pritt. wu·shot f:lve·times In what polk:e said was an apparent ex:- tcution. II. George Plinlpton Will Giv e Talk At Orang e Coast Ao thor ?nd Professional 11 m a t e u r George· Plimpton will discuss "An Amateur ln a Profe_ssional's World" at noon Thur~~ay in the auditorium f)f Orange Coast College, %701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. A tot al of fi ve are valued at f],{)(I() <'ach, three of them tak en from the down!tairs living room and two more from the second-story master bedroom . Detectives said It appeared there was no other le1s , leading to speculafion the burglar or burglars knew preciiiely what what the lamps were worth. officer Mike McEveny_, who conducted the ttlffiiScene lnvesUgiUon, illd eiitry was m1de through a kitchen window of From Page 1 · PAY •.• tant City Manarer Robert Duggan during their weekly meeting this morning at city hall. Duggan will carry Sorsabal's proposals to the council 1t its 6:30 p.m, meeting. Here are the recommen,datlon' as they were made by.Sorsabal: -No lncrea1e was recommended for the director of engineering 1ervlces, director of public services (annu•·I salary range for both is $1,3fil to $1,~). or the communications director (sal1ry r1nge $1,119 to $1,3fil). The directors o( engineering aervices and public services are two new post! created recenUy to replace the single position o( publle works director. -The city manager'• own 1alary range of $1,115 td $2,329 was not mentioned. All J>eree'hlage Increases re: fer to an ·lncreue in the whole ranie. --jhe ... I<i pere~n\ lncr.eue4.,were ·IUI· gest.ed )or. the data processing m1n11er (new range $1 ,147 to $1 ,391.) and lhf! assistant personnel officer (new ran1e 11,0IO to lt .28~). -Sorsabal recommend• 7.5. percent in· creases for the directo r of recreation and the goU cour.se superintendent (new range for both Is $1 ,147 to $1.394). Both the 10 ·percent and 7 .5 percent pr:oposals may be subject to the Pay Board's 5.5 percent limit. -rncreases of five percent (new range in parentheses) are recommended for: director of planning ($1.429 to $1,737), director of parks (,1 ,175 to $1,429), and facilities and equipment superintendent ($1,119 to $1 ,361 ). Aquarius breezed across the finish line at 1:48 p.m. (PST ) Sundoy wilh 28 mi~ utes to spare on her alloted time. All or the 33 yachts that started in the race have finished today. the last or the group finishing in the rain. Only one boat gave up the predominantly light weather race and finished~under power. She was the Bon belle. First yacht to finish w.as Ragtime, a 62- foot New Zealand· built sloop sailed by a six man tyndicate from .the Long Beach Yacht Club. She crossed the finish lii,e at l : 15 p.lJ'I. Saturday for an elapsed time of seven days, one hour, 51 minutes and 31 seconds. With her high handicap rating she wa.s .una!Jlt to salvage better: than a fourth .pl.ice in Class A. Close· competition developed primarily among Class B entries. Dick Beaver'I Cal -33 sloop CQunterpolnt from Balboa Yacht Club, which had. been leading in handicap (or most of the race, finished in a tleht downwind tacking duel with Harry Smith's Ranger-33 Bushwhacker. Bushwhacker won the duel and wound up with !eeond place honors I o s I n ·I to Aquarius by one hour. (Earlier story Page 21 ). As Aquarius breezed·across the line un· der full 1ph1naker, one or her crew was tossed overboard by a jubll1nl crew, Ofti~J standings are : · Ov~tall : I, Aquarius, 2. Bushwhacker, 3. Star, 4, •• Counterpoint, 5. Qulcksllvtr. aa11 A: 1. Sandp iper. 2. ·coric'efto, f . -Waffler; 4.--Min -Sette, 5: Ragtime:-• .. ~, Class B: I. Qua s .-r, 2. Doroltfy -0 (Columbia 43) 3.· Alice; 4. Celebrity; 6. Bohemia. , C1111 C: 1. Star. l. Quicksilver, 3. Chi· qulta, 4. Pericus, 5. Sanderlin.:. C11s1 D: 1. Aquarius. 2. Bushwhacker, 3. Counterpoint, 4. L'AJ\egro, 5. Free- style. Burglar Leaves Bulle of Goods A burglar who 1athered up more than $5,300 in valuables at a Newport Beach home . Friday night m1y have been frightened off~ the return ot one family The PHmpton talk, part of OCC's distinguished speakers series, is free and open to the public. -The 2.5 percent increases are .aug. gested for: police chief ($1 ,S3t to '1,370), assistant city manager ($1,538 to $1 ,170~, finance director $1,464 to $1,780), fire chief ($1,464 to $1,780 ), dlreclor of building safety l$1.328 to $1.614 ), 1treet superintendent ($1,119 to $1 ,361), and the city clerk ($1,040 to $1,265 !. . member. -.r Plimpton authored "Out of My League." "Bogey Man" and "Paper.. Lion." The latter was based on his s.hort· lived career with the Detroit l.ions pro- fes!lional football team . Among ot her sports feats the writ er has acco mplished ere pitching !n a major league baseball game and boxing with Joe Frazier. Plimpton was scri pted to deliver a one· liner in John \\'a.vne 's movie "Rio Lo.bo'' and played the .tympani in a New York Philharmonic concert with Leonard Bernstein conducting. Ed ison Aide Dies NASHUA. N.H. (U PI ) -Sam G. Lani;tley. 94, of Amherst, chief engineer for Thomas A. Edison from 1911 until 1-~di son·s desth in 1931, died Sunday in a Nashua hospital after a short illness. Delmer D. Mccommon, of 1107 Estelle Lane, told police his son went to 1 neighbor's home immtdlately upon fin-- ding a sliding &lass door open and called to report the Incident. Investigators said fht Intruder had le-- cumulated an assortn\ent of Jewel ry, furs, clothing, television and stereo equi~ ment but took only a handful of items. The bulk of the belongings were aban· doned beside the house, with only a fe\f items of jewelry, a aet of cooking pans and other 1mall 1oods still unfound. HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES: We Buy Direct Fram The General-Public And Pass The Savi111s On To You! J .OS C•r•t L•41111 h•11ttf11I, • J.lO Cercrt T1t1I W1l;ht DIAMOND T1tel· W•lt ll't DIAMOND CLUSTER CLUSTER COCKTAIL COC KTAI L RING RING GOOD 9UALITT C.11* DS...-4 SAVI ON THfS >11c ...... $995 $595 LHl11 ••My 1.aJ C•r"" T1t.t Wtlt llt f h•• 9 1111llry DIAMON D CLUSTER COCKTAIL RING $895 w ..... -...-y •""' .... ..u - t• "'"' ft.- DOM U.CITI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE w.... '" 1111,.. • •1etH114 ,,. ... n we wlll ,,.,.. .. ttlet .ii .. W1 11th .... •J1"'91Jlf9tl •lem\Jt• frel!I \'4 ...... t & 11p; Sf..Mlllly ,rft.114. h t tile ,... ~ • .....,., IM'll4 ,. .,,...kt 9t 4014 01 ....... ff'llM S1 .00 •,_a..., MOii ,._, Yll• 1"14 fir It •t COIT A10MESA1:li0wliii\:"6 LOAN I _:·_:.... -_ .... _:::_:,_c;_~:-_.A_:.~ OptPI Dail!J 9 lo 6 Comt fn and BrotUt .A.round l 1838 NEWPORT. lloVD. PHONE 646°7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA -lotwoH H-& ,._, ! I llPll T WATCH llPAll DONI OH l'llMISl1 7 ' .. .. • •• Saddlehaek . -. EDITION VO[ ~ •. NO. 273, 3 SECTION~. 3• PAGES l • l f ' I ' ' ' ' I , ' • • I 1rme .. " ~· SF · Catholic . Schools. Hit By Walkout SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Lay teachers· went on strike against seven Roman Catholic bigb11Cboola in the Sih Francisco Arcbdioctse today . over a ·saJary"di!pute. 1 • '• . . ~ MONDAY, NO~EMBER ' 15, '19f1: · ' ~. 1 ee ToUy'a 'Fbud ~· N.Y. Stoeks ' JEt4 CENTS • I 4.% Ceiling Of Phase 2 Will Appl~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -The govern- ment announced today lhlt the Phase II 4 .percent Umit on divldend increases will apply to approximately 10,000 of the na4 tlon's largest busl.nesse3 which account !0< all hut a amaD portion of Ille jUUlllal dlvidenqs pald stockholders. The estimate-was made public bY. the Committee on Interest and Dl:vld'ends headed by Federal Reserve Boart· Chairman Arthur Burns. The announcement came as the molt intensive price-wage controls i n peacetime history went into effed: with a few immediate signs of bow buslneu would respond to Phase II of Presidenl Nixon's economic poUctes. The divideiid llmitatlon arinouhced The sµperintendent of the: schools, the Jtev. Bernard Cummins, said classes Were being conducted !lS normal, with 70 religious teachers and 40 non-strikers dOing teaching chores. · ·The president of the Independent Secon- dary Teaebers Association 18.kl bit memtiers voted 105 to '25 to reject a salary offer. Gerald Kllllan s al d memben then took a strike vote which passed 7f.5f over the weekend. NegoUations bad 1.'completely broken down" following the njection of the archdiocese's offer, Killian sQ.ld. The of- rer called for no pay raises this year and four percent hikes in the next two years. · previously would be based on a com· pany's highest payments in the three past fiscal years. -, · Killian said the union wanted sir: per· -ctnt-lncrtues-thls-year and-next-as weu~-1.-.• as class size limitations and guuantees of paid substitutes to take over when reguI&r liiltiu<:tors were ill. • • t I '- IJonlab-itt '.The.-.Clock? : PigeoDs' huddle· together· during chilly, weekend ·~irids~ at~I? the .ol.d Clock.that· adorns, th~ San Clemente Boat Club on the mUl\lcipal pier. The pigeons,.. who.. formed a picturesq\ie additidn to: the tlock; seemed to, outnumber.the !Wtermen. Perhaps.it was the crisp weather. - New ·Ambulance Service · . . ' ' Doing Well _i.t1 . Clemente ' . ' ·-GperaUng a new, City-owned am· bu18nce., ha! , been a busy but effici~t tafk for San 'Clemente's police ~ fire departments, Fiie Chief Merton ' Hackett said today. . . :d,e chlef said that since the c~ty took ovir the emergency tasks wit~. the pYicbase of a used van, more than two daien runs. have been made · to South Cout Community Hospital. ()ctober proved a brisk month• with. 23 c~ logged by the emergency service ~ •byi patrolmen as drivers and fitemtn al attendants. , \•it's worked beautifully," Hackett said, ~ we haven't bad any p~oblep1s al ~ws· u.se a ptolessk>nally converted \'aft ,_mbulance purchased used for about ~ from the Schaefer Ambulance sw;i:e which originally loaned . the vetik:le to the city when the last private fimi,pulled, up stakes. . - Since the purchase city councilmen have· authotize.d a charge of '25 per cuMomer for the ambUlance serivce. llaketl'aaid 11111 the city already bas ~ Inhalation equipment In the amtidanct. replacing QblOlete resusc1la· ":. lle·OildOd. II the ~ area lo~==, Oooll Co m Iii u n i t Y Hl!lj)llal 11 11everaL ·mllel uay, an vOrite of 4S mtnutes II ,.tred from ~ ttme 8 call Is received and Ufe "crash · ln a matter of a few months -wit" ro!Ums to the clly. vi , the • opening of San C~emente Get'ril Hospital -the tlme ffiIUJred for ea,cb.' call will plummet 10 aboul 12 to 15 mlaUles. Hll<kett· said. ~ ambtJlanct' thus far ha s serftd are..41 far from lhe city limits. ;•:We now ' answtr Calls in SM'l JU8n caPt.trano, Dana , PQiOl, Cap~trano Beach and south of the city m the Perldletoh area if ·we're asked· to by -the hJlhWIY patrol or 81,.th!r li~e depart" ment:" HjlCltelt said. ' A1tiiauah' the city 1l openllng· the ~ • City Manager Ken Carr haS ~ Iba! ll a privete firm were to .-. Into town the city would "gladly" ~ the business and use il,I men Ind ~nt oo an emergency. starid·by )>a•IJ paly. . • . But itnce Hospital Ambul ance ,Service ahl044 Its beadqUarten to the Sld-dle~c~ Valley and declined to operate "'U'. fonger In S.n Clel)lente; there '1a ve ' been.no takers in the1Jrivate sector. Hackett observed that the, rate of am· bulance calls along the South Coast is es:· tremely sporadic. . "October was really busy with 23 call1 ," he pointed out, "but here. we are alinost hallway through November and we've only had thret calls. That i1hows you why ilt's bard for a . private am- bulance business to make aDything in San Clemente." San Clemente Fire Chief's Car In Traffic Crash A city station Wagon being driven·bac.k. from a false fire atann by San Clemente Fire , Chief· Merton Hackett collided with anolher auto-on a;freeway offramp Satur· day evenipg .. No injuries were reported in the dinner-- hour collision, but major damage · oc:. curred to both veblcles, officials said. The incident occUrred on the llOOth- . bo\ffid Palizada offramp of the San Diego Freeway u the chief was riturning from the false alarm at Grant's Plaza shoppi!)g center. Rei>orts said !hat Douglas Drt&eoll, %7, of . 220 Roel, San Cleniente, noticed flashing red lighta behind him and pulled over ,to the shoulder of the ramp. The collision occurred immediately afterwards. 1 The red city station wagon received front-end and fender damage in the craSh. Highway patrolmen will 'handle the In-- . vestigitlon of Ute crash l:iecause of the- -emergency vehicle involved, local of· (leers said. But detans of the patrol's reports were not available through the htadquarters ,office tbl!. morning .in Orange. ·. The cruh followed lhe false i.larm placed through an alann bo1 at the new shopping center. Vicar · General Dies CIDCAGO (UPII -The most Rev. Raymond P. Hillinger, former auxillazy · bialiop of Chicaao and Vicar General bf the Archdiocese, died during the weeket\d after a Iona illness. He was 67. • "We are prepand to picket arid atay o~ of the classroom until a settlement ii reached," Killian said. Urg<nt appeall ...,.. llaJed tod"1 !or volunteers wltb time and a car to transport Mrs. George Di Martino ol San Clemente to Ille ~ County Meiftil . Center twice a week. U Airs. DiMartiDo is unsuccessful in- ffnding volu'lfeen she would not be able to undergo. the lifesaving dialysis treat- ment that substitute! for her failed kidneys. 'Lois McDonald, director of th t . Volunteer Bureau of Southern Or&nge county' stressed that because the Argen- tine woman's husband must work, it is impossible for him to keep a job and spent two entire days a week in central Orange County. "It's really• matter of life and death," she said. Mrs. DiMartino must apend three days a week on the blood-filtering apparatus or she will die of kidney poisonfug. "Mr. DiMartino takes her each Satur· day, but can't take two fUU ,days off dur· ing the week to take her," Mrs. Mcllonlld said. The ....,.., who ll])eab m Englilh, is sc~uled for dialysis on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays,. and mu.st ar· rlve before 9 a.m. on those days to•1pend the entire day on the machine. . 'nJe"treatment ends each·day at• p.m. Mrs. McDonald urged that a n yo n e with a regular commuting schedule from San Clemente to central Orange County a>uld prvvide transport· wttb Utile utra effort. . 1be DiMartinos are "desperate,'' sbe uld. · AilYoae wllbing fjJ help can coatact DiMarUno at "12-6515, or :P.1n. P-fcDonald at 'MU931. • Tax Lery Foes to Attend · Saddleback Trustee Meet A delegaUon from a citi.zer¥1' com· mlttee ,opposing a, 34-cent tax levy ls tx· pected to ·be ·on ' hand when the Sad· diebick COiiege board of trustees coh· venes its regular meeting at 1 p.m. to.. day . The group, he1ded by Dana Point resl· dent'Paul Sayre, threatened to launch a recall campai&n against all five of the college trustees>aner · the t.u: ·proposal was armounced. Howevei, at . a meeting Wednesday, they agreed to.postpone the recall and in· stead ask the tru!leel. to drop the tax Jevy. . · The trustees voted Oct. 18 to levy a 34- cent perm.Lssive tax 1n the.1972-73 fiscal year in order to secure matching state fund! to finance consfructiOO of a· new Jclence.mathematlcs building. The one. year tax Jevy wouJd raise $2.2 million to match $2.3 million in available 1tate fundi. Tbe citizens'. commiUee.maintairul thdt the 'tax 'levy would constitute defiance of ~e expressed wishes of tlMr-v9~1 who defeated ai$24 millloo coMtruction bond ls.rue In September. · Spokesmen for the citizens' group also are ~to,volce·apposi:tJ90. to, a.plan tO incre11e ,the. college: ·d.lltrtct's. trost.e areas from five to. seven, "but , with 1fUs1ees-elected, at -large, .rather, than from individual districts. Sayre said 'the gfoop has advocated a4~ dlUon of two1 trustees, but opposes 'the · voUJlg at large because enab~s:tbe' more . populous infand areu to ·control the make-up or the board. rru..tees Hans Vogel and John Land, who were named a commiltee of two to di!CU5S the trustee area revision, wllI present their report a n d recom· mendations at the Monday meeting. Also .on the agenda i.! a proposal.that the district apply for, $350,000 .in Federal fwtd!l to help with .construction of the sclence-mathemaUc.s .building, and '15,000 ' for equJpmtntfor the facility. The. ~Saddieback · trustees have COD· sisteotly tefused to·seefc:'Federa.I fonds on grounds. it could invQlve gove~t in· terfertnce in the school's programs,. but' apparently are willing to consider an •P" pllcatio11. for.capital Improvement" money in view of the defeat of the construction bonds. · 3 San, Cwme11te . . ' . ' Coeds Back From ' BQys Club Director ·Urges Support for United .. Fund . ·Meet in C,hicago · Three San Clemente .'high school coeds returned home Ull5 weekend alter a thr~ day ecology conference 1n Chicago which was · SPonsored by the nations' investor- owned pow~ firms. The local -delegates, chosen after in-i tensive sC:reenint and compeUUbn, were Leslie Ann Jordan, 18, a senior represen- ting the Kience department:· Patty Nell, 18, a Jwllor from the hwnanitles.depart· ment, and Katie Slal!lPt 17, a•se.nior from the arts departme.nt. The encutive dittctor ol the South Coast Area Boys Club thls week urged Capistrano Bay area residents to donate to Ille new United F'und campaign to hel.P ease the gr01.tp'1 financial pinch. Ron Michelson, strtued that throuah the United Fund the active club located ln San Clemtnte can plan Its doum of activitiel wltll the <eflllnty 11111 lundl wil ieiilt to help the projects u... 'lllroug)iout the year the club sponsors flag football leagues, 1 traveling IOCCtr ~am, arts ~ mlll ICl!vltle1, tutoring, COWl&tllng, drop-in recreatk>n and sum- mer day camps. "To do all_ this we need mone:y ," be \ . . said, "and with a Unlted'Fund now In the South Cout tt means we can·spend less time trying to find 1unds and more time with the boys." The c1ub, 1long with many other youth or1anlutlon1, plus con;imunlty service groupo; will benefit 'trom the fund launch- ed for the flr1t.--time ever earlier tb1I month. _ Volunletn !or all phases o1 the United pay campaign stlll are needed, aakl chatrman Bob Gannon. • Penoo1 willing to donate ,time. for the1 month·long campaign can contact the: fund's o!flces at 305·N. El Camino Real in San Clemerite, 492-9661 . The girls1were a~mpanied 1by Scie~ce Department Chairman Phil Grignon ~d Arthur Ellis, community rel~Uon1 dir~ tor !or San Diego Gas .and Electric Com- pany. The,utlllty-ed the trip. The Chicago event is an annual c.on-- lerence attendid by hundreds of youtlllul deltgatea who .become , ic:qualfl,ted with the new ways science tnd techn61ogy Jre1 put to use to improve the environment. The delegates stayed at.· the Sheraton Hotel in the Midwest city. , ' · • The committee aaid the controls would apply to: - -Companies with more than $1 mDlion In tow_ IS!<ta aiid a cla¥ of !ql!ity iiCiirlfles fiefd lly 500 or more persons-:- -'lbose subject to the reporting r&o quiremeots of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or insurance comparues with capllal stocl:. "These guidelines will therefore apply to about 10,000 of the largest corporations which account-for all-but a·sinall·porUon of Ille dividends paid each year by U.S. corporations,'' the anoouncement said. Eiempted under the guidelines were regulatld-invesl.mtnt -companiu, .. -,rul- estate investment· trusts, and. perlOnal· holding companies. The committee . alao said "illoderato divideoda" could he paid by companleo tllal plid no dividends, or dividends lhlt amounted to a very small percentage or earnin&• during the put . three-&cal years. Dividends still to he p8id hi 1971 remain 111bjed to Pre.Iden! Nlxon's request they not be increased over the amount paid in the quarter Immediately precedlng_lhe wage--prJce freeze whlch began Aug.· ts, the commlttee said. Many people who went to work today w~e earning more money for the fJrst time since Aug. 15, even though it won't show up in their paycheck unUI next pay· day or whenever bookkeeping ad· jusbnenl!: are made. Milltary men and women shared in an immediate $%.4 billlon pay hike. District Calls Special Meeting A special meeting of the Tustin Union High School rnstrict Board of Education has been called for 7:30 o'clock .tonight. Truateu will discuss nominations to the Orange COunty Committee on School District Organization during a public ~ tioll ol the meeting. The County Com- mittee rulea on territory transfers between school districts and regulitea unification plaM. The board· will adjoufn to &·private, ex· ecuUve session to dJstuss personnel mat- ters, following the public part of the meetin . Weatlier Sumy sides are on the agenda again Tuesday, with more chilly winds from the northeast. Highs along the Cfillst 65 ri.slng to 75 "Jn.. land. Lows tonight a teetb-chatt~ ing 3$-IO. .. INSIDE TODA.Y Mort pottntiol heort attack victlrru OTf being QIVen 0 nfllO leO!e on life by the Hcardiac CadiUac" which 1petds oid to them rathtr than vice verso.~ Pope lZ. •111M II ...... ..... CIMlltltlll 1WI CW!llcl 1' Cl'ttl..,... 1, '*"' N9ttcw tt OJ--11 S:ll+Mti-1 ''" ' .. ,.,,,..ee:UJ 1, ,...... ,..,, ,..,.._ 14 ...... l.•"""" u ' - • ' I ~ I ... • -z· OAJlV •llOT SC M.-.,1 ~..,.... IJ, ltJI Candidate Ducks ·Shot 8 -8 ,BJfllets Rip Bill ijrtJphy s 11_4 Harne I , LOS ANGELES (AP) -Al least tight lhotJ were fired into the home of Rep.abllcan Aasembly candidate Bill Brophy early today, narrowly missing JWn, authorltie1 said. 'l\e aunman ei:caped, apparently in a vehk:11 that drew up 1n front of the house just u tbl 1botl rang out, detectives Nld. BteflhY's camP.1fln managu, William Kin(, wu In ll>t bOiat, too, but wu not injurod, pollot uld. Brophy ii the Republican candidate in Tuetday'1 W Al&embly District elec· lion. • Northeut DivUlon deteclives s a i d Brophy, 31, told them he was slanding in the living room behind a plate glass wj.n. dow about U: 15 a .m., ahortly aft.tr he had arrived home >following a late nikhL dinner. He sak! he saw two headlights pull up in front or the house and then a abot ftred, shattering • portion or the window, pollot .. Id. . He llW ht 1ot down on the floor as other shots were fired. He was not hit. Following the gunshots, d~lectiv.es said, Brophy heard a car screech away but Couldn't ... it well enough to lik!ntlfy il. Officers later 14id they believed the front plate window was it by two bullets and the window screen by .si.L Tbey recovered ail. bullets. • Thoy said lh•Y believed !ht gunman u.s- td a .2kalJbtr rifle. Chamber W ome1i Plan Lu.ncheo n Meet Thursday The women 's division of the chamber of conuyi,rce has invited San Clemente area women interested in joining t~ rroup to a Jpeeting Thursday where plans for Oirlltmaa season activities will be dilcuutd. The noon IWlcheoo will be held at Howard JohpSOJl's Restaurant. During the season the group plans c~ing o,i Dec. 10, 17 and the 20th lllrot!ih 23rd' •---~N~w_dlv.ilion officers elected at • re- cent meeting are Cecilia Fiantanco, pr'41idtnt ; Fem Dlck&0n, vice president; Evelyn Wolenty, recording secretary, Jeanne MorriSOll, corresponding secretary and Kay Skaron treasurer. I I Reservations for Thursday's luncheon are awallable by calling 492-2621, or 492· 4717. Drugs -Bur gled _ From Physician A thief with an obvious tasle for narco~lc1 Foke into the o£1lces of a San Clemente phy,ician over the weekend and 1t.ole scores of amphetamine capsules. ·Pollet: said the theft was discovered Sundiy morning at the oflices of Dr. Alei: Farkl.I at 212 Avenida Vaquero. ·Entry into the Shorecllffs area office W.N made by· prying out several glass louvru in a window. Police aald the thlef rifled ? cabinel in U. pb=a:,·s offices 1 n d ignored all . other lions e1cept Lor doses or v•tium lld_1I11Rhetamines. MerchanJs Discu~s Yule Trash P ickup Downlown merchants will discuss com- mercial trash pickup and parking during the Olristmas 1hopplng season at the Tuesday morning meeting of t h e Downtown Business Association . ~ 1e11ion ia scheduled for 7:45 a.m. at the Hote l Laguna. OIAl•I COAlT DAILV PILOT 9M181 fOAJf P'Ull ll,UJM Cl*l.,,11'1' lt•ii•rt N. w,,, ,,..._..,, .. II .... J•c~ a., Cwrt•Y Virl ....... Mlll G_ .. .._.. 1••• lt'••hl ·-n~llllH >.. M.,,.11;,. ~lf<l119f' 0.... H. L .. 1 • lrclri•rl '· Ht lt ............... ..,!Mita ---211 f•t•if ,. ..... w. .. 1iJi11t -44t•u: P.O. l oc .,,, f2,51. S.. C' rest• Offkt JN H•tfti fl Cs.,.1•• l tsl, 92•72 I ~ 0Hk9&•. ~ ,,._ ... w ..... , '""' ........ , I H Cll; »JJ II-I .... lt"f"' ..,._ tt.<1: '"'' a.ca ... ~1'9'' • "I doll~ 0thlnk ui.-,hola wen lnitildtd to lll'tre Pl•.'' lkooliY said ·141tr. "Tl>t1, obvlous1y meant to" bit me." ' He aald he moved just a~ the first shot as fired, probably saving hlm from being bit. Brophy told officers that in the last twn ·weeks he has r~eived "name-calling '' phone calls. • jlropliy lo\ 11,~ vola tolead Ille flold Ocl. II whtJI. 11-~ for the Assembly aeatl were rtdUCed' tO fO)ll'. Alao irrthe race Tuesday are Democrat Richard AlaloITe; Peace a Freedom candlda~e John. ... W. Blaine and in- dependent Raul Ruiz. The 1eat was vacated by Derpocrat David Roberti, now a state senator. Supervisors, Ma yors Hold Camp Conference By JACK BROBACK J iH !flt DtllY ,Jlt l Sl~ff WHEN Zl Orange C.ounty mayors and four county oiupervisort, or their repre.sentaUyes act to1elh.er1 one thing is certain -they will disagree. The group held their fourth Supervisors and Mayara Conferenc (SAMCO) Saturday at Los Pinos Forestry Camp. The most critical debatea involved a prppoHd county housing authority and the Airport Land Use COm- mlssioo (ALUC). The hoqsing .authority,. a pet project of Supervisor Robert B.attin, stirred up the greatest argum~t. - Battin, although ht had himself iOllclted opinions and support from the various cities. accused some fellow board members of trying to scutUe the authority by 10licit- ing city opinions. SUPER.VISOR DAVID Baker and Tom Fuentes, executive aid to Super- visor Ronald Caspers, admitted lhey do not favor the housing authority. · Baker said there are enough low cost housing proBrams to take care of the need and that a l.'OUnty authority would be useless without active partici· patioo of most cities. Fuentes said Caspers believes blighted areas-in the cities should be re. developed as an alternative to new Low cost housing projects in the remaining open space in the rounty. San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony Forster charged that Battin is u1ing the housing authority issue as a "cheap gimmick to get votes." He a.dded that hi.I city coµncil had endorsed the program for coWlty terrilory, but does not want to participate. On the Airport Land Use Commission issue, the county League of Cities laal Tlwriday voted 15 to 6 to support the new agency. . However, cpsta--yesrMayor Robert-Wil80ll;-Whose-council voted against the land use group. charged that the Jaw authorizing Ute commission Look control away from the board of supervisors and permits an appointed commis.. ·i'ioo to overrule elected officials. ·-HE REFERRED to the current land rezone dispute centering on 50 acres owned by the McDonnell Douglas Corp. near Orange CoUnty Airport. Co4nlY supervisors voted 3-2 last Wednesday Jo approve the rezone for commercial use rather than industrial. The land use commission will vote on the issue Im!. 2. If they oppose the rezone it will take a four-fifths vote or coonty supervisors to overrule the decision. ~-~-Citle&..are-badly splilon.the.housing a.Ltilliltilyj~e...SiJ.JayprJt llli1 se~n.. oppose. Two city councils have refused to lake a stand . Favoring an authority are Huntington ·Beach. Laguna .Beac~ San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, Stanton and Full~rton. . Opposing are Seal Beach, Los Alam1lml, Orange, Anaheim, Garden Grove, La Palma . and Tustin . ON THE FENCE are Newport. Beach and Buena Park. Newport Ma yor Ed Hirth ·said it wa s "a seriou1 issue" and "we did not have sufficient informa. lion to take a stand." Antique La1np s Stolen A rollection of unique. antique Tiffany lamps worth $49,0llO -three among the mi111ing dozen worth S7 ,000 each alone - have been burglarized from an Inglewood dentist's Newport Beach weekend home. The huge loss was discovered Friday afternoon by Dr. Vern Phalen when he arrived at 404 Via Lido No rd, Lido Jsle. Jnvestigators today were l:ontinuini;: lheir probe of the break·ln reported in· itially to Officer Lawrence Dyle. The 12 colored·glass lamps. assembll'd by metal sections, could ha11e been taken either by someone with s p c c I f i c knowledge of their value, or a burglar who just took a fan cy lo them. · Imitation Tiffany lamps are currently favored by decorators. Detecli11e Ken Smith said Dr. Phalen told police !he It genuine Tiffany item.~ are from the fim)'s New York head- quarters and are about two feet tall. A total of five are valued at $7,000 eatb, three of them taken from lhe downstairs living room and two more from the second·Slory master bedroom . Detectives said it appeared there was no other loss. leading to speculation the burglar or burglars knew precisely what what the lamps were worth. Officer A1ike AfcEveny, who conducted the crime scene investigation, said entry was 1nade through a kitchen window of Dr. Pha len 's plush home. Since he uses il only on weekends, In· 11e11lisators could only place the time ol lhe burgla ry at some time during the prior several days. CSF in Mou .. ning ~~ Football Coaches Die. in Crash Student. and players today mourned three Cal State, Fullerton football coachel tiUed wer the weekend when their rented plane slammed into ruaed bruslkhoked San Mal'((ls Pass terrain above Sant.a Barbara. The victims were being flown to scout a game at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo by a charter pilot 'who also died in the crash 400 yards off Camino Cieto Road in the 1anta Ynez Mountains. - Jronlcally, the team the CSF 'ri1 ans are to play next weekend !or the CCAA 1971 football championship ""as virtually wiped out 11 years and thret weeks ago in • Toledo, Ohio plane crash . Dead as 1 result ol the tragic weekend crash are Joe O'Hara, 39, sophomore offena:iv~ coach ; Bill Hannah. 37, offensive line coach, and Dallas Moon, 30, defensive-coa<..il. · ... .,..The pilot w11 identified 1s Ernie Marielle, 40, of San Gabriel. • veteran flier. ~ O'Hara, or Tustin, Hannah, of Buena Pa rk, and .Pt1oon, oI La Palme, were nying from San Diego where the Titans whipped U.S. lntemaUoaal University to to 30 Saturday. Heavy cloud cover and air turbulence. plus rain, was widespread in the central coast area during the time their single enatne Piper aircraft vanished Sawnlay nlsht. The TJtans play lhe Cal Poly Muslangs next .weekend for the CCAA cham· pion$hlp but tlle traaedy will not lead lo cancellatton or the grk:I contesl Cal Poly lost t6 killed and 22 others injured, in cluding coaches, pl1yer1 and fans, Oct. 22, 1960, whtn their c:h1rlertd airliner crashed on takeoff from 1olrdo, Ohio. Cal Staie, Fullenon President t.. Donald Shields said the game wi th Cal Poly wall not be canceled, despite lhe tra1r.dy, worst in lhe CSF ca.mpu1 12- )'car history. ft'or complete dctai11, aec stories in today's Sportt aectlon, Page 21. I ., , ' (J vir•efU Mail PeiulU fie Near Jl'ASHINCf!!N .. (AP) -Tiit =al·r~~~ -~·· ........ ui4 .~&pil;o AvaU.blt • Mall) · ~ -.t!lllll\I 111> to five pounds arid • lnchel 'to combined length and wldlh mar ht ... t for only th• domatic' per«I post ell'\'&•· 'l1le Postal Service' sald SUnd1y that the deadline is Nov. 2' for PAL (Parcel Airlift) mail, wh1ch costs •llfrtlY more and can be lara:er. A fivt-pound SAM parcel fro111 Chlc•So costs Oply ll.90 pootag• lo San Francisco, with airlift to VJet· oam free ol pmtage. Israeli Spy Figure Weds ; Error Bared TEL AVIV (UPI) -The lsradi go.vernment finally has p e rm i t t e d newspapers to print details ~f its worst intelligence blunder, an abortive 1964 at· tempt to sabotage U.S.·Egyptian rel~­ tions by blowing up lbe U.S. Embissy lD l,;airo. The apparent reaoon for lifting the 17- year-old ceruonihip on the case is the wedding of one of the partk:lpants, Vic- torine Marcelle Nino. She ii getting mar- ried Nov. tl and Prime Minister Golda Meir will be.JlD hand penonaU;1 ... tll &i'!J_ the bride away_,,_ .____ __ _ The plot became known as the "Lavon Affair," after the then·Defense Mini:rter Pinha! Lavon. According to the newspaper accounts Sunday Egypt arrested 14 Israeli spies in 1954 and charged them with plotting to blow up the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and the U.S. Consulate in Alexandria in order to dissuade Washington from getting in- volved in Egypt following the B!'ilish withdrawa l. What led to the ring 's downfall, the newspapers said, was the capture of Philip Nathanson when a detonating . device went off in his hands near a Cairo movie theater. Nathanson changed his name to Ben Nathan and Is Pow a _!!ew1 phqtogra2_her in Tel Aviv. According to the newspapers. two of the ringleaders escaped, one committed suicide, one person was tortufkl to death, two were executed, two w·!re acquitted, and six. including a Noman, served all or part of their sentences before being released to Israel in a 1968 prisoflCJ' e1· change. All were recognited by th~ government as Israeli emissaries upon their return, accordin& to the newspapers._ receiving an equivalent or an army officer's pay with l.'Omba.l allowance for 111 their time jn Egyptian jails. Besides Miss Nino. an Engl I sh li terature and arts student at Tel Aviv llniveraity, and Ben Natha n, tpe other members of the ring living in Israel were identified as a businessman, an engineer. a doctoral candidate in agriculture and a student in Middle East studies. Follow ing the smashing of the ,Israel Intelligence ring, L.avon -now 67 and. se'riously ill in a hospital :... resigned, de·. nylng that he ever gave the order for the operation against the U.S. offices. An inquiry exonera ted him . But the l~avon Affair continued lo haunt the couo· try for the ne1t seven yea rs, fillallv bring- ing about Dc.vid Ben-Gution'S resigna- tion as prime minister and a split in the ranks of bis Mapa! Party. The new disclosures and Mis~ Nino's wedding. political sources said, may re vive the rontroversy. Edisou Aide Dies ~ASH UA . N.lf. {U PI ) -Sam G. Langley , 94, of Amherst. chief engineer ..frr ·rhomas A. Edison from 1911 until Kdison'! death io 1931. died Sunday in a N as~ua hospital after a short Illness. 'Bargain Price' ' Laguna Mulljng . Two· Vehicles With four new cltr, buaes due to roll through the streets of the Art UllO:ny In coming weeks, the Laguna Beach city council will be asked Wedneldly to con- sider buying two more pubjtc tran.a:wrta· tion vehicles, at a bargain price. • The two Lak·e Forest traffis leued dur- ing the summer Fntival 'aeason, are up for sale or lease and, according: to Public Works Director Joseph Sweany, ·the cps! of buying the trams, pro-rated over a four-year period, would be substantially less than leasing them just for the sum- mer · season. Asking price for the trams, which sold new in 1969 for $11 ,000 each, is M,000 each &nd ·their estimated value on tht Jl'tWit U>td bus marko\ would \le ('1,000 to $8,000, Swer.ney says. They are in ei- cellent condition, he adds, and mlleaae on each is just under 13,000. The couqcil will be asked to consider • proposal whereby the . Bank of ~~rica would purchase the two trams and Je~se them to lhe city for a four-'yea'r perloa, with lease payment! .applyina to the purc~ase. Annual payment~ tor the lease- Scientist Says Calif or1iia Gulf Beirig Destroyed purchue arrangement would be between 12,:100 and 12;500 p<r y.,r whUt com- rnerclal bus rental for two biaes for th• summer only would be $2,800 Sweao1 notes. In addillon to tht llnaneial 11v10,, the vehicles would be available lo aupport the bus lint and provld• 1fil1Upqftallqll to special eveni• about'the conuq~ty year- around, he adds. 3 Mao Plots Attributed To Lin · Piao • l'jEW YORK (.\P) -Tbpe 1111g1zint s~y1 Weatern ex~rts believe Un P~ao, Mio T~&'• dfslgnated l~eNOr 41 chaimilJI o! CtiJI•'• Commµnlsl P•rty1 trl<~ to al.SW!ol!f M•• \hrte ~ ano wa• betrayed ~Y his own daughter aihe tried to escape. Crtditlng the account to "Ch.ina- watchers Crom llong Kong to Washington," Tiple aaid Un, the defense minister, Is 11pol1Ucally flnlshed and very po11lbly dtad JS Wti!." 'Ib.e magazine said "an e~c .t.ruggle for power" came to a cllniax in Sep- tember. lt said six of the 21 members of the politburo-have si nce "dropped com· pletely frdm view." According to. this explanation for the ENSENADA, Mexico (UPI) -The vague reports of turmoil coming out of (;ulf of California i! being turned into an China, Lin somehow was ei:posed in ecological disaster because of dumpings September. He reportedly tried three by American and Mexican tanners, ac-times in 18 months to 'klll the man who <:Ording to Katsuo Nishikawa, director of made him his heir-apparent 2lil years 'the lnstitute or Oceanology here. ago. ' . He and five other scientists have been Deciding to flee China, Lin, his wilt surveying ecological damage in the gulf, and son; Chen Po-ta, Mao's· chief which is between the east coast or Baja idealogue, perscnal secretary and Californja and the western shoreline of ghqstwrit.er; and Wu Fa·hsien, chief of the Mexican mainland. the air force, reportedly went to a. ''Although our preliminary results will military airfield near Peking. not be available for some lime," he sai<f, Chen was purged from his fourlh·rank· "our early findings have been' frig)\ten-Ing spot in the PoUtburo last fall. He and ing.'' Wu were described as cocoospirators one conclusion ·was that American and with Un. Me1ican !armers have been dumping The group took off in a British-made emormous amounts pf pesticides and salt Trident eg,ulppcd with special radar to fly into the gulf. at very 101! altitudes , the ipagailne said. '·The salinity problem is reaching the "Wherever they were headed, they point of no return," he said. "Something never made it,"-Time said. must be done by both the United states "Lin's own daughter, Un Tou·tou, and Mexico to control it or it will become betrayed the escape attempt and the Tri· both an ecological and e c onomic. dent was somehow shot down." disaster " The rnagatine said a Trlcient which He said !he farmers flush salt and "mysterlOusly crashed deep In Mongolia'' ~ticidesJrQm lh_e _soilin tht.J:f:>J.Q[!do . -~~s_t!eli~ed t~ t_be__planc...i::myi.ng_ River Delli and empty the wa ste into the Lin. river. More salt and pesticides Are added lt added that the Soviet Union knows by farmers in the Jmperial Valley. Some the identities or the nine bodies found at goes to the Mexicali Valley but the major the crash site, ''Cut they wlll say only th1.t amount flows into the gulf. the victims were in uniform, that one wa.t Crash Injures 2 In LlJ g una Bea cl1 A San Clemente man and his femal~ C<1mpanion sustained minor injuries in a Laguna Beach traffic accident early Saturday when an oncoming auto turned Jnto their path. _ Polic e are stitftsearching for the driver- of the secDnd car. who witnesses said ran from the scene of the 2 a.m. accident and disappeared Into darkness. Officers !&id Stephen Charles Clark, 27, or 124 Esplanade . and Janel Roger, 25. of Chula Vista, sustained minor cuts and bruises in the mi!hap, which occurred on South Coast Highway at A1cAulay Place. They were both treated and released at South Coast Community Hos pital. In vestigators said Clark was south· bound on the highway when the other auto attempted lo turn left onto McAulay Place. a ·woman and that there were signs of an armed .1truggle in the aircraft, aug- gesting_ a hijack attempt." · Time said one of lhe "unmistakable signs" of Lin's downfall was th~ recall from bookstores and libraries or Mao't J,ittle Red Book "because Lin-wrote the introduction." Related Story Page 4. Police Studyin g Apartment H eist Lat?una Beach police are investigating the theft of $4©' Jn miscellaneous Hems from an oceanfront apartment. Officers said Reginald Allen. or 193~ Ocean Way, reported the ransacking and burglary of bis residence Friday. Thieves entered the home by prying open a slid ing glass door , investigators said. Missing items include a c o J o r television, two pair of binoculars, a gold candle holder and four bottles of im\ ported beer. HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES: We Buy Direct From The General Public And Pass The Savings On .To You! ....... _ J .OJ C:.,19t ' T•t•I W•ltltt 01.AMDND CtUSTER · COCKTAIL RING G>OOO qUALIJl IAWI ON THIS $995 &..;Ne, ..._llf•I, J.JO c,,_. T•l'M W-'t ftt DIAMOND CLUSTER COCkTAll RING C:•~.,. Dllft'l•H .IS(.,,, $595 ........... 1.tl c ..... 1.t.t W.i,M ''"' q nttty DIAMl!llP CLUSTER COCKTAIL RING $895 w ...... _ .... , ,, ...... CMkt9il rt1111 t• "'"' ,,.. W• "'• •-••-••fffl .'1.-.•ft fr•• 'I• c9'11t & ,,; s..!Wy 'tk-4, hf •• '"' ~ ........... Dl-••4t ff•M 11.0t • ,.ltrt, Dian1ond Cen ter for Ora119e Cou11t11 COSTA MISA JEWE LRY & LOA N Optn Doilv Q to f Co~nt in a1id Brous~ Around ' 1838 NEWl'ORT BLVD. l'HONE 646-7741 DOM IACITl OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMOND GUARANTEE WM. ., •• ky ........ '"' ..... .. -"Ml , ........ ttt9t ,, ... ..., ,. .,,,.. -., ... MOll " .. Y•• ,..ti f•r It tt ""' _..., ••. c .. , •• ~ ~ w.it th•"Wtlef11 COMP.All. DOWNTOWN COSTA MlSA -......... H-& Ft-.y llPllT WATC H ll1All DONI ON Pl lM1511 \ ' -· l I I i f I I j j ' ' , . ~ _. ... --·---.... ' t ag • vol. 64, 'j( . ~ ... -' -. ,.; NO. 273, 3 SECTIONS, 34' P ... GES . ' (. •• --.. . .. ' , . ' ORA'NGE COUNTY, CAllFORNIA I ', -. . '• TOhY'• ~ • IW.Y. Steeks I MONDAY, NOVEMBER '15, ·1971· JEfil CENTS Pioneer · IiecallS Earl y Da ys • Ill Laguna Area By FREDERICK -SCBOEMEllL Of tht' hllr PW.t Stiff ) lt v.•as back in the· days when PacitiC Coast Highway was nothing more than. a footpath that ended at 4puia CinYOO. and local water supplies Were to•brackish that people had to travel miles to find some fit to drink. · The nearest town o1 any. size was 33. miles away and because crops didn't grow well, many ramilies had to. Jive on cOnibreadt beans an·d bean sOup -mo1n- irig, a.nd mid-day. · . ~t~s-lhe. .... 1\:ay...Jt was" commented Mrs. Augusta Morton, a niece o! Josep ' ' Smith· 'Tb_uraton, the :sen of .George· W1~n ·Thurston aDd his wife Sarah WbO seftted ln Aliso canyon 100 years ago_ ...: Jie<X>ming . the Jjrst perm~O.ni, Ans]o settlers :tn the Laguna area. ~Mrs. Morio'.n Sunday teacf' de!ICriptl~ of tbO eorli! daya IJl ·Laguna: from'•!;:!#-· page__ unpnblished· manuscript. 'entiUed ".Qdldrell cit Aliso.". "lt was:,. written~ bY. my mother, H&n'iet •Tfilfrston Bue· ~m;" e:c.Pliihed Mrs .• 100rton.. , 'l'6e1i-e'8dillg-f.oolr: place before'some 200 pe!iioils_ gathered at . Bel! Brown's Restaurant ·'in Aliso Canyon' for the 'J'H!ifitoii : centenruil-ce11r.trr-a-t1·0· Sponsored by tbe Laguna Beach Com· on Nov . 26, 1871, the land was cluttered In the Cirst f~w years, the Thurston After hearing the remarks frOD\· munity·Historlcal Society. with dead bodies of animals that had ,fa~lyMhad poor luck with crops and had .. Children of Aliso'' president of the ·'Seven of the 15Jchildr'en'of Geor~ and become victims of drought. The first soup. "We had cornbread, beans aod historical· society Harry Jeffrey · an· Sarah '.[hurSton wer~ born Jn, Aliso Can-thing that George did was to clear the nounced that he has contacted two firms yon -between ,1813 and·l8&4. The QnJ_y one dead bodie~ away ." bean soup for breakfast and cornbread, about publishing ,the ni:anuscript. One still living, said Mrs. ·Morton, is 92-year The second thing done, she added, Was beans and bean.-&.0up (pr dinner ~there publisher, he said, was "entbroUed with old Mrs.JCharlotti J~gs .of Sant a to fix up an old sheepherder's cabin was no supper ," she remernt)ered. ' thebOOk.'1----• Ana, who was · uriable to attend _ the where the Thurston family put down their (In·tater years, Joe Thurston took over FolloWiiig the luncheon, M:r:ortcaJ1buffs · centennial celebration. ~.roots. As the family grew in numbers, the homestead and developed the land and descendants of the Thurs~ori~:spli~in- "Wat.er w~ a problem right awa);." . George added on to the house and later and became the vegetable man for · the to two groUP.S and took1.w8Udng tours of comtnented~ Mrs. MOrton. "We finally r.eplaced it with a two story hon*, Mrs. ~gtJna area.) . Alison Canyon., One group sJtirted'the golf folirvl'a spring three miles away in Wood Morton said. The greatest fear, Mrs. Morton said, course to the site Q[ the Girl ScouLcamp, Canyon. There was water in Aliso Creek. The old Thurston home, badly van-was the rattlesnake. "There were rat-While a hardier group led by Bea Whit• but. it Was too br.ackish to drink." 1 , dalized, was torn down when -the golf tlesnakes.of uiibelievable-slze," she said, tlesey, a Laguna resident> since U!06. ven· ·She recalled that when George a·nd course was put in in Aliso Canyon in the ''and we waged an endless, indefatigable lured up•an old trail on 'the south side•.of Sarab-Tlwrston-arrived-at-AJiso-Canyon-Jate-l~-----------war-against-the-sc-al)"-ffoeo""----,--tbe-canyoni,.----------- iargest Firm·s • Ill U.S .. -; I • -- T·o Feel Divi.dend Ta x Le ry roe ~ _to Attend Saddle-h-ack-'Frnstee-Meet A delegation -from a citizeil.s' _com-The trustees voted OCt. 1& to. levy a 34- mittei opposiiig a 34-ant tax levy is ex--cent pennl!tsive tax .in . the 1972-7.3 fJScal peeled to be on hand 1when the Sad-year ·in•ont,r lo aec~-matcbing st.ate dleback Co'lege board of trustees con· fonds to . fi~nce .cqnstruc~ion of , a• .. aew v~u its .regulat meeti~g at 7 p.ip. to--~maUca . building. ~-· ~ day. . . _ . ~r!'S--1&~"""14-rall!&.!n. nullioli;lo. ,The group,'lieaded'-by Dana 'J,-oinl res~ mate~ fU· millloa Ill ·ovilllab(O j1ate Wit ram, Sayre, threatened to ·launct1 ! fWld&. . r~I cam~. agai~t all fiv~~ of, lJie . 1~ cit.izeur .,coqµDiUee maiD~I ~1 cO!Iege truSiee• aner the llJ< _.1 • tl)e tu.-leVJ ....,ld eonsti!~ defiance o was announced. the apr'esaed wishes of the voten: who However, at ~a meeting Wednesday, defeated •,a $24 million construction bond they agreed to postpone the rec~ and in-issue ,fu.·.se~mber. stao astf·ure·-trustee~ ·to-aro·p-·the tax --gpo~ror the citizem' group-~ 18vy. are erpecttd to voice opPbsition to a plan . Girl, 8, Killed In Bed; Police Hunt 3 Gunmen oAKLAND <AP~ ~ Poli~ ·w!rt" hun- ting today tor three men, one .appareatly wounded, who broke fnto a housing pro- ject apartment Sunday night an<l'lolled a man and girl. The victims ·were identified" b·y the cor- oner"• office as Kiinberly Mapp, af and Ronnie. F1enaugh, 2l The .girl.was shot in the-head when she raised up from a bed on which she had been sleeplne: In a,hallway, police said. Flenaugh, who also used the Black Muslim name of Ali Rashid, was found on a patio just outside the apartment, a bullet wound In his chest, police said. 'Homicide sergeants Jack Knight. and Harold Sellick said three gunmen forced their way into the apartment about.10:15 p.m. Sunday llnd demanded '"•'Wbere'1 Bi11y?" -Apparently referring to Billy Mapp, rather of U¥,; slain girl. . Ji!lenaugh grabbed a· gun from ·• table and exchanged shots: with the three gunmen, while the ·girl's mother, Karen Mapp, dropped to the floor to escape the crossfire, Knight said. She was treated later for ~k. · · to increase the -college district's trustee areas from1 five to seve1, but with . trusiees_eJt<:_kd' at largf, rather tban from individual districts. · Sayre said,tbe ·groqp h~ advocated ad·. dili9n or, two trus ..... but .·~ -the vbting at laf&e ·because ena~ ~ more 1)9pu)oue. inla~d. ~reas to control tbe make-tJP·of ithe· board. ;ro..~· Hall.'! :Vogel .and Jobn Land, who-were nmned 1 cOnµntttee-of two-to dfscqis''the:trustee area revision, wµJ pr,eiient . ttieir report a n d recom- mendat.ion!·•t the Monday rneeting. Also .on the agenda is a·proposal that the district aj>ply f-or $350,000 in Federal funds to, help with construction or the seie-malllemaUcs· building and f!S;(Jllo for iequipmeOt for 'the ra_cllit)'-~ The Saddleback trustees have oon- sistently ref~ to seek Federal fund!l on grotmds It cOuld involve··government in- terterenc~ in the school's programs, but apparenUy· are willing to consider an ap.. plication for capital improvement money in view of the defeat of the construction bonds. · Theo intent to proceed with construction of'the tcieitee-math·center i!l further in- dicated in a agenda item tte0mmendlng eµq>Joymeat of a firm to investigate 10i1 OOnajUOns · in· conjunction with the builtling fomtdation, tiUt a fee not to eF ietd''$4,550: . Trustees also will be faced with a biR for.I8;113Uf fn>m · the county. Reglstru of Voten fQr eij>enses-incurred in con- nectioo with the unsuccessful bond elec· tiOn. "' " '-• • DAK. . IL Steff '9Jltte ~· JCe,t••• ' . .•'!<' ... ' ~· . , !"t:pt~"MeJ.issa, Almon was cbos-. ~n ~ Home~irling Queen and .. cfowiled .. durinf halftime. cere· . ~ Dlpiiie&\,.at-baguna.c Beach-High . -~oo.1 Friday-night. She is the · . daughter of Dr. and Mrs. David ··AJmOn. Ch ambe'l' Staff ' . Set · for P rogram The £our top members of the Laguna Beach city staff wilt appear before members of the Chamber of Cominerce Wednesday .morning at 7:45 a.m. at the H51tel Laguna, to answer quesliol)S about the current ·status•of the commuriity. City M~nager Larry Rose will be join~ b)' JosepltR: Sweany; public works direc-. tor; Wayne Moody, director of planning and development: and Joseph J. Kelly, chief or police. Reservations for those wishing to at- tend the breakfast meeting may be made by.contacting the Chamber, •94-10!8. Oru~ C.a~' . .. ' . ~· .. Zoi.tnig ·Record· Ordinance Weailter s~ skies are-, on the agenda again-Tuesday, with more chilly winds-from the northeast. Highs along the coast 65 "risirig to 75 Jn. land. Lows tonight a teeth-cha~ter· ing 3$-50. • IN!iIDE TODA'\' ~lore-pottn"tial heart attack victim.s are being given a new tease on. lift : by the "ca~ioc Cadill " whiclt speeds aid to the~t .. ratliet than. vice versa. Page 12. " " 2~17 .... .. " " " • ,, H•lt ,. " ' Sttrdied'by Lagun~ Council ,, --An ordinabce that would require aellett or'reililtnlial property in taguna Beach to provide lhe buyer With a report o[ r.on- ing and bulkllng records pertaining to the property, will be considered for adoption by the city eoancil Wednesojay night. ~·or the ·ordlnance la to proV!dt buyers· with · offkial info-rm a ti on retanlina the authorized use. oe<UPancy anll zonliic duslflcaUon of property and "lo protoct the llDWat)' b\l}:er ol resid"" tial property against undlsdoaecl rtstric:; Uons on tht Ute of the property." A•controversial provision for inspection or tile-,...~ prtot--to IMuence or the riiioH •Jrieoii t!UJ>ipalod from lhe linaf ordinance, and a sectloo relitving the city of llibllity for-errors or omissions in the ._report bu been added. AJ ~ ;for adoptlOn, the onll' nanoe mlkll"tt mandatory for any seller aCi'll-.I properly to oblain the r.. ( port !rom the city, for a-fee to be estab- lithed by the city council, and deliver il to. the 'buyer before the sale is concluded. The report is to contaln: -Address or. o_ther description of the prOperl~. -Parcel ~wing of tbe property. --statement o( Its zoning classificltion apd a summary~of Ufe! permitted }n..the zone. . 4ta~ent of variances and use pennfia, If any .. granted to the properfy, together with thelr restrictions and con- dilions. • -Sta~t..u..to -then! II> ~ to lie, in non<onformlty or II· Jeiallly In structures e1tstiJig·on the pro-perly, or Ultir' uses. ..:.&atement es tt l'J~ther any con· lltl'Udion, electrical, pbomblng or heeling permits have bein iasued for work not yet comple\ed: • Chill . 4% Ceiling Of Phase 2 ~ill App_ly W·ASHINGTON {UPI) -The govern· ment announced 'today that the Phase II 4 i J!lfC).!11! iiJj!Jt Qll 4ivi 'lJl<\ ~ WI ,_ ·apptVrto appro~tely 10,oOO or fbe na· Uon's larg.est businesses which account 0for all but a small portion of the annual dividends~paid stockholders. ' The estimate was made public by the CommiUee on Interest and Dividends headed by Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns. The announcement came as the Most Intensive price-wage controls i n peacetime history went into effect~with a few immediate signs or how busines9 would respond to Phase II of President Nixon's econom,lc policies. The dividend limitation announced previously would be based on a com-• pany's highest payments in the three past fiscaLyears . The committee said the controls would apply to: -Companies with more than $1 million in total asstfs and a class of equity Securities held by 500 or more persons. -Those subject ~ the reporting re- quirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or insurance companies with capital stock. "These guidelines will therefore apply to about 10,000 of the largest corporations which account for all but a small portion of the dividends paid each year by U.S. corporations," the announcement said. Exempted under the guidelines were regulated investment companies, real estate investment trusts, and personal holding companies. Greeter Larsen Weak,~But Dons Coat, Strolls Nattily attired.Jn his favorite.red coat, Laguna Beach Greeter Eiler Larsen spent his first weekend "at home" in five months, and enjoy every minute or it. His track record for an 81-year..old, just out or hospital after months of Illness, was impressive. Alter C'heeltlii"f'iiilO Oie Laguna Beacli Nursing Home, where owner Dean Ren· fro is providing accommodation for him "because he's part of Utls community and be!Ongs here," Eiler rose at 5 a.m. Satur· day a_nd was ready to be up and out. He visited the Jolly Roger _Restaurant, piclted-up his mail at the Hotel Lag~na and did, a little practice sidew:alk waving for a starter. Sunday he went to church and this morning. accompanied by Ren-rro. he was downtown taking care or some errands. His longtime friend 0. W. Price, who· brought him home Friday afternoon when doctors at the Long Beach VA HOSP.ital authorized. his release, said Eiler still is rather wea~ but luis ~rmission to get ouf and about {or ·some "limited ex- ercise," Their only stlpulatton, Price said, was that Laraen must no longer live alone, but must be where there is someone to look after his needs and see thfll he takes hLs meals and medlclne on time . • 1921 PICTURE 'SHOWS PIONEER JOE THURSTON FAMILY Wife Marii And Ctilldre;n~Virginla, Doris ·By Previous Marriage . DAIL.'I' Pl\.OT.•llaff Plltl9 MISS BEA WHITTLESEY LEADS TOUR" IN SOUTH LAGUNA A Laguna Retident Since , 1906, Sha Knew T~urston Family F acuity Str!kes 7 School s SAN FRANCISCO (UPI! -Lay teachers went on strike against !even Roman Catholic high scRools in the San FraQcisco1 .Archdiocese today.. over._ a salary dis'pute. , - The superintendent of the schools, the Rev. Bernard CUmmins, said c\~s were being conducted ,as ,normal, with 70 rellgtous -teachers a:lid 40 non-strikers. doing teachlng·chores. · -The president of the independent Secon· dary Teachers Association said .bis men1ber1 voted 105 to '25 to rejecl a salary orrer, Gerald Killian · s a I d members then took a strike vote which , • • passed 74-54 over the weekend. Negotiations had •:completely broken down" following the rejection or the archdiocese's offer, Killian said , The oJ-. fer called for no pay ra'tses tbls year and four percent hikes in the next two years. Killian said the union wal'lted six puoo cent increases Uiis year and next as weU as class size HmitaUons and guirantee.s of paid subsUtutes to lake over when regular instructor! were ill. •;we are prepared to picket and stay out ot the classroom until a settlement \I reached," Killian said. f I I • ~ DAILY PILOT SC • .... •• • .. 8 Bull.eU;-R-iyB_ill _!Jrop~y's ~~Home LOS ANGELES (AP) -Al least eight abbts were fired into the home of ltepublican Assembly candidate Bill Jl(ophy tarlyt today, narrowly missing him, authorit 11 said. The gunma escaptd. apparently tn a vehicle that drew up In front of lhe house jilst as the shots rang out, detectives said. Brophy's oampaign manager, William KJnc, wu in the ho\.IM, too, but was not injured, polfce said. Brophy is the Republican candidate in Tuesday's 43th Assembly District elec- tion. Northeut Division detectives s a id Brophy, 3', told them he was standing in the Uvtoa: room behind a plate glass wln- dow about 12:15 a.n •. , shortly after he had arrived home !ollowlng a late night dinner. He said he saw two headlights pull up in front of the house and I.hen a abot fired , s~tttring • portion of t.he window, police said. He aaid· t-.: i ot down on the floor as other ahots were fired. He was not hit. · Following the gunshots, detectives said, Brophy heard a car 1ereech •way but a)Ufdn't see it well enough to identify It. Officers later said they befieved the frorlt pl1le window was it by two bullets and the window scree:n by 1ix. They recovered 1lx bullets. ,...'They llid they believed the 5unman US· ed. 1 .22-caliber rtne. Chamber W ome1i Plan Luncheon Meet Thursday The women 's division of the chamber of commerce haa Invited San Clemente 1ru women interested in joining the group to a meeting Thursday where plans for Qristmas season activities will be discuased. The noon luncheon will be held at Howard Johnson'1 Restaurant. Dw'inc the aeason the group pl~.s caroUng on Dec. 10, 17 and the 20th lhtough 23rd. New division o(licers elected at a re- cent meeting are Cecilia Flal')tanco, president; Fem Dickson, vict president; tvf:lyn Wolenly, recording secretary, J~ Morrison, corresponding searetary and Kay Skaron treasurer. -. ·11e1uvat1ons for Thursday's luncheon are 1vai1able by calling 411:1-2621, or 492- 4''7. Drugs Burgled Fro1n Physician A thleJ with an obvious taste for narcotics broke Into the of(ices of a San Clemente physician over the weekend and 1tole scores or amphetamine capsules .. ·Police said the theft was discovered Sunday morning at the offices of Dr. A1ex Y•rt.as at 21% Avenida Vaquero. .Entry into the Shortcliffs area orfice was made by prying out several glass JOuvres in a window. 'J>oUct said the thief rined P cabinet in Lnt phyaJcian's offices and· ig11ored all olber medications e.icept for doses or velfum 111d amphetamines. Merchants Discuss Yule Trash Pickup Downtown merchants will discuss com· mercial trash pickup aod parking during the Christmas shopping season at the Tuesday morning meeting of t h e Downtown Business Association. The Usslon Is scheduled for 7:45 a.m. at the Hotel Laguna. "l .don'l thinlt the ibols wm lnl•nded to scare me," Brophy iakf later. "They obviously meant to bit lfle." He said he moved just as the first shot as fired, probably saving him from being hit. Brophy told ofricers that In the last two wreks he has received "ruime-cplling" phone calls. . Bn>phy 10111,231 vol" lo I~ ~ field ' Ocl. ti when 10 c'n<!ld•ti! tor the Assembly seats were reduced to four. . Also in the race Tuesday are Democrat Richard Alatorre; Peace and Freedom candidate John W. Blaine and in- dependent Ralil Ruiz. The . seal was vacated by Demdcrat David Roberti, now ti state senator. Supe~visors, Mayors Hold Camp Conf ere nee . . . By JACK BROBACK 01 lllt 01lty ~1111 Siii! WHEN %1 Oran(e County mayo~s and four county supef'\'.isors"' or their representatives get Ulgether, one thing i~ _cei:tain -the'y will disagree: .. The group held their four\h Supervisors an4 Mayors Confer-enc (SAMCO) Saturday at Los Pillot Forestry Camp. The most crltical debatts involved a proposed · county housing authority and the Airport Land Use Com- mission (.AL.UC). The housing authority, a pet project of Supervisor Robert Battin, stirred up the greatest argument. Battin, although he tuid himself IO!icited oj:iinions and support from the various cities. accused some fellow board members of trying to scuttle lhe authority by solicit- ing city opinions. SUPERVISOR DAVlD Baker and Tom Fuentes, e.1ecutive aid to Super· visor Ronald Caspers, admitted they do not favor the housing authority. Baker said there are enough low cost housing programs to take care of the need and that a county authority would be useless without active p.arlicl- pation of most cities. • Fuentes said Caspers believes blighted areas. In the cities should be re-. developed as an alternative Ul new low cost housing projects in the rerr:iaining open space in the county. · San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony. Forster charged that Batt,in Is using the ho~Jng authority issue as a ·"cheap gimmick to gtt votes." He added that his citY council had endorsed the program for county territory, but doe! not want to partlcipdte. . On the Airport Land Use Commission issue, the county League o! Cities last Thursday voted 15 to 6 to support the new agency. However, Costa Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson, who5e council voted against the land use group, charged that the law authorizing the commission took control away from the board of supervisors and permits an appointed comrnl&- sion to overruft·elected officials. HE REFERRED Ul the current land rezone dispute centering on 50 acres owned by the McDonnell Douglas Corp. near Orange. County Airport. ~ty superVisors voted 3-2 last Wednesday to approve fhe rewne for commercial -ute rather than tndwtrlal. . . Tbe land use <.'Ommission will vote Ori the Issue Dec. 2. If they oppose the rezone it will take a four.fifths vote of county supervisors to overrule the d~lslon. • · ·ciUes are badly· Split on the housing authority lssue. Six favor it and seven oppOse·. TwO city COlpJCils ,ha Ve tefused to take ~ stand. ' FavOring an authority are Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, Stanton and Fullrrton. · Opposing are Seal Beach. Los Alamitos, Or.arge, Anaheim, Garden Grove, La Palma, and Tustin. ON THE FENCE are Newport Beach and BuenA Park. Newport Mayor Ed Hirth said· it was "a serious issue" and "we did not haye sufficient informa· Uon to take a stand." Antique La1nps Stolen • A collecl_iQ,n or unique . antique Tiffany lamps worth $49,000 -thret'f among t~e _mi5sing dozen worth $7,000 each alone - have been burglarized from an Inglewood dentist's Newport Beach weekend home. The huge loss was discovered Friday afternoon by Dr. Vern Phalen when he arrived at 404 Via Lido Nord, Lido Isle. Investigators today were continuing their probe of the break-in reported in· Jtially to Officer Lawrence Dyle. The 12 colored -glass lamps, assemblr.d by metal sections, could have been taken either by someone with s p e c I f I c knowledge of their 'value. or a burglar who just took a fancy to them . to ld police the 12 genuine Tiffajfy items are· from the firm 's New York head· quarters and are about two feet tall . A total of five are valued at $7,000 each, three of them tallen from the downstairs living r.oom and two more from the secondJStory master bedroom. Detectives said it appeared the.re was no other loss, leading to speculation the burglar or burglars knew precisely what what the lamps were worth. Officer Mike McEveny, who conducted 1he crime scene investigation, said entry was made through a kitchen window of Dr. Phalen·s plush home. • Oversea.s Mail Deadline Neai • : I If W~HlNGTON (AP) -. The ,' ' deadline II Friday,. filr n\llllnc pu<:Oll 111 tho chpipOll .rai. lo ierticemen overlfJlls. I , SAM , (Sfll<e . Available MaU) parcels wt:lghing up to fi ve pounds and 60 Inches in combined length ~rl(l width may ·be sent for only the domestlC parcel pQSt charge. 'Mle Postal Servlct said Sunday that the deadline is Nov. 26 for PAL (Parcel Airlift ) mall, which costs. slightly niore and can be larger. A five-pound SAM 'parcel from Chicago cost! only $1.90 postage to San Francisco, with airlift to Viet· nam free of postage. ""' ·Israeli Spy Figure · Weds; Err~r 'Bared TEL AVIV (UPI) -The Jsraelt government finally has p e r m i t t e d newspapers to print details of its worst intelligence blunder, an abortive 1954 at· tempt to sabotage U.S.·Egyptian rel~­ tions by blowing up the U.S. Embassy 1n Cairo. The apparent reason for liftin1 the 17- yeaHJld censorship on the case is the wedding of one of the par\lcipant.s, Vic· lor lne Marcelle Nino. She is getting mar· ried Nov. 23 and Prime Min ister Gold~ Meir will be on hand personally to give the bride away. The plot became known aslthe "L.avon Affair," after the then-Defense Minister Pinhas Lavon. Accordlng to the newspaper accounts Sunday Egypt arrested 14 Jsraeli spies in 19fl4 and charged them with plotting to blow up the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and the U.S. Consulate il'l Alexandria in order to dissuade Washington from getting in· volved in Egypt following the British withdrawal. t , . What led to the .rlne'i. ,downfall, he new1paptts said, was the captu~ ~f PhUfp N&thanson when i de'tonatlng device went·off in his hands near a Cairo movie ttreattr. · · ., · Nalhanion changed his name· '.to Ben Nathan lu)d is now a news photograpbier in Tel Aviv. Accofiung to the newspapers, two of the rlngltaders escaped, one committed su icide, one perton was tortured to death, two were exl!<:Uted, two were acquitted, and si.1, including a woman, served all or part of their sentences before being released to Israel in a 1968_ prisoner ex- change . All Jtere recognized by th ! government as Israeli emissaries upon their return, according to the newspapers, receiVi11g an equivalent of an army· offie«'s pay with combat allowance for all l.belrt.time in .Egyptian jails. '· ~ Besides Miss Nino, an E ,f\ g I I s h literature and arts student at . Tel .Aviv university, and Ben --N'aQlan, tile-. •ther members of the ring living In Jsr,!il 1;,v,~re identUied as a businessmah , an qli!eU, a doc.tor.al .candidate In agriculture -and a student In Middle .East studles. Following the smashing of the Israel intelligence ring, Lavon -now 67 and seriously ill. in a hospital -resigned, de- nying that he ever gave the ordef for the ·operation against the U.S. offic@s. An inquiry exoilerat@d 'him. But the La von Affair continued to haunt the ~rr try for the next sevrn years. finally bring. ing about D&vid Ben-Gurion's reS igna. lion as primt minister and a split in the rank! or his Mapai Party. The new disclosures and Miss Nino 's wedding, political sources said, may revive the rontroversy. Edison Aide Dies NASHUA, N.H. (UPI) -Sam G. Langley, 94. of Amherst. chief engineer for Thoma s A. Ed ison from 1911 until Edison's death In 1931, died Sunday in a Nashua hospital after a short Illness. 'Bargaita Price' Lagllna Mulling I ,. -. •. Two· Vehicles With four new city buses due to roll through the streets othe Art Colony In· <:onllng weeks, the guna Beach city council will be asked ednesday to con- sider buying two more public transport&· tlon ~ehicles, at a bargain price. The two Lake Forest tra~ leased dur· mg the summer Festival season, are up for sale or lease and, according to Public Works Director Joseph Sweany. the cost of buying the trams, p~rated over a four.year period, would be substantially less than leasing them just for the sUm-· mer season. Asking price for the trams, which sold new in J969 for Sll,000 each. Is S4.000 each and their estimated value on the present used bus market would be S7 ,000 to $8,000, Sweoney says. They ar~ in ex· cellent condition, he adds, and mileage on each Is just under 13,000. The coW'ICil will be asked to consider a propos~l whereby the Bank of America would purchase the two trams and lease them to the city for a four-year period, with lease payments applying to the purchase. Annual payments for the lease- Scientist Says California Gulf Bei ng Destroyed ENSENADA, t1exico (UPI) -The Gulf of California is being turned into an ecological disaster because of dumpings by American and tfexican farmers, ac- cording to Katsuo Nishikawa, director of the Institute of Oceanology here. He and fi ve other scienUsts have been surveying ecological damage in the gulf, which ls between the east coast of Baja California and the western shoreline of the Mexican mainland. "Although Our preliminary results will not be available for some time," he said, "ou r early finding s have been frighten- ing," One conclusion was that American and ~1exican farmers have been dumping emormous amounts of pesticides and salt into the gulf. "The salinity problem is reaching the point of no return." he said. "Something must be done by both lhe United States and Mexico to control it or It will become both an ecological and e c o n o m i c disaster." 1 ife said the farmers flush salt and pesticides from the soil Jn the Colorado River Delta and empty the waste fnto the river. More salt and pesticides are added by farmers in the Imperial Valley. Some goes to the Mexicali Valley but the major amount flows Into the l!Ulf. Crash Injures 2 In Laguna Beacl1 A San Clernente man and his female c.ompanion sustained minor injuries in a Laguna Beach traffic accldeot early Saturday when an oncoming auto turned into their path. Police are still searching for the driver of the second car, who witnesses said ran from the scene of the 2 a.m. accident and disappeared into darkness. Officers s8id Stephen Charles Clark, 27, of•124 Esplan·ade , and Janet Roger, 25, of Chula Vis ta, sustained minor cut.!i and bruises in the mishap, which occurred on South Coast Highway at McAulay Place . Thty were both triated and released at South Coast Community Hospital. Investigators said Clark was souih- bound on the highway \ when the other auto attempted to turn left onto McAulay Place. purchase arrangement would be between $2.200 and $2..500 per year, while com- mercial bus rental for two buses for tht summer only would be $2,800 S\ftlany notes. In addition to the financial savlJli, the vehicles would be available to support the bus line and provide transportation to special events about the community year- around, he adds. 3 Mao Plots Attributed To Lin .Piao NEW YORK (AP) -Time magazine says Western experts be1ieve Lin ?.lao, Mao--Tse•tung's designated ~ucceuor 11 chairman of Chi11a's Communist Party tried to assassinate Mao three times anJ was betrayed by his own daughter as he tried to escape. Crediting the account to "Cl\lna· watchers from Hong Kong to Washington,'' Time said Un, the defense minister, is "politically finished and very p<>Mibly dea<t as well." The magatine said "an epic struggle for power" came to a climax in Sep- tember. It said six of the 21 members of the politburo have si nce "dropped com• pletely from view." According to this explanation for the vague reports of turmoil coming out of China, Lin somehow was exposed in September. He reporledly tried three times in 18 months to kill the man who made him his heir-apparent 2~ yea rs ago. Deciding to flee Chin a, Lin, his wife and son; Chen Po-ta, Mao's chief idealogue, personal secretary and ghostwriter; and Wu Fa·hsien; chief of the air force, reportedly went to a military airfield near Peking. Chen was purged from bis fourth·rank· ing spot in the Politburo last fall . He and Wu were described as coconspirators wilh Un. The group took off in a Britis h-made Trident equipped with special r_!dar to fly at very low altitudes, tbe magazine said. "Wherever they were headed, they never made it," Time said. "Lin 's own daughter, Lin Tou-too. betrayed the escape attempt and the Tri· denL was somehow shot down." The magazine said a Trident which ''mysteriously crashed ·deep in Mongolia" was believed to be the plane curylna Lin. lt added that the Soviet Union knows thr identities of the nine bodies found at the eras~ site, "but they will say only th&t the victims were in uniform, that one was a woman and that there were signs of an armed struggle in the aircraft, sug· gesting a hijack altempt." Time said one of the "unmistakable signs" of Lin's downfall was lhe recall from bookstores and libraries or Mao's Little Red .Bbok "because Lin wrote the introduction." Related Story Page 4. Police Studying Apartment Heist l.a~una Beach pollce are investigating the theft of $407 in miscellaneous items from an oceanfront apartme,nt. Officers said Reginald Allen. of 1935 Ocean Way, reported the ransacking and burglary of his residence Friday. Thieves entered the home by prying open a sliding glass door, invesUgalors said . Missing items Include a c o I o r television, two pair of binoculars, a gold candle holder and four bottles of im· ported beer. ' OIAN•I COAST Imitation Tiffany lamps are currently favored by decorators. Since he uses it only on weekends, in· vesligators could only place the time of !he burglary· at some time auring the 1---~-----,-----,..,--===============----~---------­ DAILY PILOT \ fM,AM9I COAR' PUILUHIH• COM'A.MY ~ llt1Mtt N. Wee4 ,, ...... llflll f'llllltMr J•clt llt, Cltl'lty V151 ,,_..., _, ~11 MwtW n ... ,, tc •• ~a l•ltw T1i~11111t A. M•,.,lrti~• Malltiil'lf l.fi#rr ChM H. L11t •ttlritt4 P. H•ll ~ AM•• #Mllllloo.t l•ltin ...,__,_' 212 ,,,.,. A"t"M• · M1ttl•1 •'''•n: r.0.1 •• '''· '265 2 ,-S.. c1_., Offk1 .l •o• H11t•11 c,,..1111 A •• 1, tl672 ; ...... o ..... , Oii .. Mttt• l>ll Wnt 111 1Hft1 ti-rt S"cfl1 :UH H,...,,.., lle~ltv1rd ~ )iijiftf ... aMUI: 11111 IMUI l t11lt v1r• Detective Ken Smith said Dr. Phalen prior several days. CSF in :tlourning 3 Football Coaclies Die in Crash Students and players today mourned three Cal State, Fullerton football coaches killed .over the weekend wtten their rented plane slammed into rugged brus!H:hoked San Marc;os Pass terrain above Santa Barbara. The victims were being flown to scout a game at Cal Poly, San Lula Obispo by a charter pilot who al!lo died in the crash 400 yards off Camino Cielo Road in the Santa Ynez Mountains. Ironi cally, the team the CSF Titans are to play ntxt weekend for the CCAA 1971 footb~ll championship \\'as virtually wiped out 11 years i nd three weeks ago in.a Toledo, Ohio ph1 ne crash. Dead as 11 result of the tragic weekend1 crash art Joe O'Har!I , 39, sophomore offensive coach; BUJ Hannah, 37, offensive line coach, and Dallas Moon, 30, defensive roach. ~ ·The pUot was ldcntifftd 11s Emle ~1arlette, 40, or San Gabriel, a veteran flier. • O'Hara , of Tustin, Hanna h. or Buena Park, and Moon, of La P1lma, were flying from San Diego where the Titans \\'hip~ U.S. lntemaUonal University fO to 30 Saturday. Heavy cloud cover and air turbu lence. plus rain, was wldespread in the ctntral coam area during the lime their .single engine Piper aJrcrall vaniahed Saturday night. The Titans pl1y tht C!ll Poly f..fus~ng1 next weekend for the CCAA cham- pionship but the tr11aedy will not lead w ci.ncellallon of the grid contesl « Cal l'oly lost 16 killed and 22 others fnjured, Including coaches, playcrt snct fms, Oct. 22, JHO, when Ulelr chartered alrllne.r crashed on ilkooff from Toledo. Ohio. ca1 State. ~Ullerlon President L. Donald Shields said lhe game with Cal Poly will not be canceled, despite the tragedy, worst Jn the CSF campus 12- ytar hlslory. · For complete details, liet stories in tod11y's Sport, section, Page 21. HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES: L..._I ..... ' 1.05 C•rllt Ledlft, MRtlf11l1 T1hll ,W1ltflt J.JD C•r.t Teto! Welthl DIAMOND DIAMOND CLUSTER CLUSTER COCKTAIL COCKTAIL RING RING GOOD 9UALJTT C..lef ., ....... lAYI 0.. THll .II C•rllt $995 $595 We Buy Direct From The General Public And Pass The Sayings On To You! L•M '-Y 1.IJ c .. T•t•I Wilthl Fh11 9111llty DIAMOND CLUSTER COCKTAIL RING $895 w ..... '-...., •rMr ..... NM rf'l!tl hl ... t .... W• •hi lirr. .. _ ..... -~ .. fr-V• C•41f I •P: s..IW., ,,1&e4. ,_ .... ,.... ...... -...,.. DI-..."-• 11 .00 • ,.._, Dla111onllil Center for Oran!Je Co11nt11 COSTA •ESA JEWELRY &LOAN Open Dai/11 9 to ti · Come in and Brou.1« · A.ro~fld 1838 NEWP.ORT ILYD. l'HONE 646-7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA 1111$4 -letw•H H-I ,,._ DOii! llAClTI OUR MOST UNUSUAL DIAMON D GUARANTEE WMti.,.. ~, ...... ~ .. -w1" ,..,...... ttiet 111 .. _... ,. .,,,.... • •o~· MORI "'-Y•• !MU fi r It " y.w .._.,MU. C•• Y•• II• •rftl •wit..•1 COMrA•r. • IXPIRT WATC H llll'All OOHI ON PllMl!ill \ l ' l ' . San (;lemenie ·capi~irano VQt: .. 64, NO. 273, l SECTION S, 34 f AGES .. • . . ' • • EQ17 10N . ' ORANGE COUNTY, CAt lFORNIA. MONDAY, NOVEMBER: 'IS, ~I \ I \ • I 1rms I ee • • >; r' •. COiafafJ . At Tiie Clock"/ • • •l'l'g881it WilN• tllgtlber darll!( cniny W'Wtktnd wihds atop the old clock .tlJtt ado= the San Clemente Boat Club on the municipal pier. The pig9pn1, who formed. a picturesque addition to· the clock, seemed to outnumber the fIShervien. Perhaps it was the ·crisp weather. ... New Ambulance Service Doing Well h1 Clen1ente Operating 1 new. city-owned am- bula.nce. hes been a busy but efficient task for, San Clemente's police and fire departments, Fire Chief 1.1ertoo Hackett said today. _ The ctUef said that since the city took ovtr the emer1ency tasks with the purcha.Se of a U&ed van, more than two doi:en runs have been made to South Goist Conunun!ty Hospital. Qctobe·r proved a brisk month with . 23 calls logged by the emergency service manned by patrolmen as drivers and firemen •• attendants. . "It's worked beautifully," Hackett satd, 11and we ·haven't had any ~roblems at oil" Crewa use a professionally converted van ambulance purchased used for about 14 ~ from the Schaefer Ambulance Service which originally loaned the vehicle to the -city when the last private firm puli<d up· •lakes. Since the purchase city <X'.lUllCilmen have au!b!!i::tud 1 charge or_. $25 pet, customer for the. 1mbulan~ ~r1vce. " Hackett. said that tbt city already has upgraded. inhalation equipment in ~h.e ambula:nce, repl1cing obsolete resusc1ta· tion 1ear: . Distance, he added, ls the prime area for lmfl'°'emenl -Sooth Coast Co m munity HOIPltal is• several miles away, an average of 45 tn!nUt.es is required from the time 1 call is received f\nd. the "crash wagon" returns to the city. But tn a matter of a few months with the opening of . San Cl.e~ente General Hos_pll4l.,:-the tune required for each ca11 will JiftWnmet to .about,12 to 15 minutes, Hackett said. The ambu1p.nce thus far has served areas tar from the city limits. "We now answer tails in San J\lan Capi!trano. Dana Point. .eap~strano Beach and south of the city m the plllCfleton 1ru ll we're asked to by the ~hway patrol or anolher rlrt depart; mtnt." Hackett s1id. AlthoUlh tho city Is operating the ttrvlce. City Manager Ken Carr has sti:es~ that if 1 private flrm were to move \nto town the city would "gladly" 1n'f1te the bualnei1 ahd use itS men and equipment on 1n emergency, stand-by basis only. • But' since Hospital Amt)ulance SUYke ahlfled lb headquarters lo the Sid- d1eback Valley ind declined to operate 1ny Jonpr M San Clemente, there have been no takers in the private sector. Hackeft ®served that the rate of am· bu1ance calls along the South Coast is ·ex· tremely sporadic. "October \VSS really busy with 23 ca.Us," he pointed out. "but here we are aJmost halfway through Nov.ember ind "''e've only' had three.calls. That.shows you why it's hard •for-·a private, am- bulance business to make anything in San Clemente." San Clemente Fire Chief's Car In Traf fie Crash A city station wagon being driven back from a false fire alarm by San Clemente . Fire Chief r.ferton Hackett collided with anoUltr auto on a freeway-offramp Satur· day eveliing .. No injuries were reported In the dinner· hour collision. but major damage OC• curred to both vehicles, officials said. The Incident occurred on the south- bound Paliz.ada offramp of the San Diego Freeway as the cbiel was returning lrom the false alarm at Grant's Plaza shopping center. 'Reports said that Douglas Driscoll, 27. of 220 Rosa , San Clemente, noticed flashing red lights behind him and pulled over to the shoulder of the ramp. The collision occurred Immediately aJ~~ro•. · Tbe}ted city station wagon received lront..end' and fender damage in the <;ash. Highway patrolmen will handle the in.- vestigation of . the crash beca~ of the emergency vehicle iovolved, loCa1 of. ficers said. But details o£ Ule patrol's reports Wert ,,.i available through U.,. heldquaritrs office this morning in Orange. The auh followed the false ·alarm placed through an alann box at the new shopping center. Vicar General .Oies CHICAGO (UPI ) -The most Rev. Raymond P. Killinger, former auxiliary biShop or Chicago and Vicar General of ' the Arthdloce!e/'dled during lhe weekend atte:r a Jona Ulness. He was 17. ' SF Uitholic . • Schools Hit' By Walkout SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Lay teachers went on strike against seven 'Roman Catholic high schools in the San Franclscq Archdiocese-today over a 1alary dispute. The superintendent of the schools, the Re\•. Bernard CUmmins, said classes "''ere being conducted as normal, with 70 religious teachers an<l 40 non-strikers doing teaching chores. The president of the independent Secon· dary Teachers Association said his me1nbers voted 105 to 25 to reject a salary offer. Gerald Killian s a Id members-then took a-strike vote wllich passed 74-54 over the weekend. Negotiations had "completely broken down" lollowlng the. rejection of the archdiocese's offer, Killian sald. The of. fer called for no pay raises this year and four percent hikes in tilt next two years. Killian said the union wanted six per· «.nt increases this year and next as well as class: size limitations and guorantee.s of paid substitutes to take over when regular instructors were ill. "We are prepared to pickel and stay out of the claisroom until a settlement Is reached," Killian said. Volunteer Pool N~ded to Drive Kidney Patient · Urgent apPeals were issued today ror volunteers with time and a car ta lransport Mrs. George Di MartJno or &a Clemente to the Orange County Medical Center twice a week. ' If ~lrs. DiMartino ls unsuccessful In finding volu11teers she would not be: able to undergo the lifesaving dialysis treat· ment that substitutes for ber failed kidneys. LQiS McDonald~ ciirtttor ·or t h e Volunteer Bureau of Southern Orange Courity, stressed that because the Argen- tine won:ian's husband must work, it is impossible for him to keep a job and spent two entire days a week in central Orange County. "It's really a matter or Hie and death,'' she said. ~fts. DiMartino must spend three days a week on the blood·filtering apparatus or she will die of kidney poisoning. "Mr. DiMartino takes her each Satur· day, but can't take two full days off dur· Ing the week to take her. '1 Mrs. l.~cDonald said. " The woman. who sptaks no English, is !cheduled for dialysis on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, and must at· rive before 9 a.m. on those days to spend the entire day on the machine. The treatment ends each day at 4 p.m. Mrs. McDonald urged that an y o ii t with a regular c:ommutiJll schedule. from San Clemente to central Orange County could provide transport with little extra tHort. The DiMartiooa are "desperate," she said. Anyone Wishing to help can contact DiMartino at 492-6515, or Mrs. McDonald ··t &f2..0936. It's .,..lffagk Yiifte . . A clown and magic sllOW will be held at San Clemente branch library NOY. 20 heralding National Cili!dren's Book Week. There will be a &bow al 11 a.m. and another at 2 p.m. R<>bln Surrirl, 7, obviously plans to attend. She is shown with Lois Wellmah, children's librarian.· Tax Levy Foes to Attend Saddlehack Trustee Meet A delegation from_ .. a_ citizens' com· mittee opposing a 34-cent tax levy is ex- pected to be on hand when the Sad· dleback College board of trustees con· venes its regular meeting at 1 p.m. to- day. The group, headed by Dana Point resi- dent Paul Sayre, Utre~Vened to launch a recall campaign aga:in·st all five · of the college trustees after the tax proposal was announced. However, at a meeting Wednesday, they agreed to pastpone the recall and in~ stead ask the trustees to drop the tax levy. , The trustees voted Oct. 18 to levy a 34· cent pennissive tax in the 1972-73 fiscal year in order to secure matching state funds to finance construction of a new science-mathematics building. The one-- year tax levy would raise $2.2 million to match $2.3 million in available state funds, The citizens' committee maintains that the tax levy would constitute deCiance. ot the expressed wishes of the , voters who deft4ted ·a Ff million const.ruCtion bond issue.·tn September. Spokesmen for the cilizml' group also are expected to voice opposition to a plan to Increase the college district's trustee areas from five to seven, but with trustees elected at large, rather than • from individual districts. Sayre said the group has advocated ad- dition of two trustees, but opposes the voting at large becawe enables tht m'ore populous inland areas to control the make-up of the board. Trustees Hans·. Vogel and John. Land, who were named a committee of two to discuss the trustee area revision; will present their report a n d recom· mendations at.the Monday meeting. Also on the · agenda is a proposal that the district apply for $350,000 tn Federal fuilds to help with construction of the science-mathematics building ancf$151000 for equipment for the facility. The Saddleback trustees have con- sistently ·reFuSed to seek Federal funds on grounds It could involve govenunent m. terference in the school's programs, but apparently are willing to coosider an ap- plication fGI' capital improvmle!lt mmey in view or the defeat of the comtiul;tion bonds. Boys Club Director Urges Support for. Unite~ Fund 3 Sa1i Clemente Coeds Back From Meet iii Chicago Three San Clemente· high school coeds returned borne this weekend after a three. day ecology conrerence in Chk!ago which was sponsored by the nations' investor· owned power finns. The Iocal...delegate!, chosen after tn .. tensive screening and compeUUon, were Leslie Ann Jortlan, 16, a senior repreaen· ting the science department: P1tty Neff, 16, a junJor rrOm ~ ~anities depart.. ment, and Katie SlipJp, 17, a senior from the arts department. The executive direct.or of tM South Coast Area Boys Club thiJ week urged Capistrano Bay area residents to donate to the new United FW1d campaign to help ease the group 's financial pinch. Ron Michelson, strened that through the United Fund the active club located tn San Clemente can plan Its dozens ot acUvlUes willf' tho certainty that fuods wit lexl8l lo htlp the projecu •loog. Throufhout the year the club sponsors flag football leagues,. 1 traveling soccer team. arts and craft.11ctivitje1, tutoring, ~nsellng, drol>'in recreation ana sum· mer day camps. "To do ID Urls n ·need mQPtY," he said, "and with a United Fund now in the South Coast It means we can spend less time trying to find funds and more time with the boys." The club, along with many other youth org:anbations, plus oommunity service groups, will benefit from the ftmd launch- ed for the first tlme ever earlier this month. . Volunteers rot alt phases.of the United • pay campllgn stlll are needed, said chairman Bob Gannon. Persons wlllin& 1o st.onate time for the month-long campaign can contact the fund's olllces al 906 N. El Camino Real In San Clemente, -492-9661. -# • J • The girls were accompanied by Science Oepartmenl Chairman PhU Grignon and Arthur Ellis, community relations dlfteoo lor for San Diego Gas and Electric Com· pany. The u~llity~.sponsored the trip. The Chicago event Is an annu.al con· re'.rence attended by hundreds of youthful delegates who become acqualhted with the new ways science and technology are put to u8' t.o Improve the environment. The delegates stayed it the Sheraton Ho~l ln 1he Midwest city. • ' Teday'sFlnl . • N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS 4%.Ceiling Of Phase 2 ' . WASHINGTON (UPI) -· 'Fbe govern- ment announced today that the Phase II 4 percent Um.it on dividend increases will apply to approximately lD,000 of the na-- tion's largest businesses which account for all but a small pxiion of the amual dividends pald-1toclcholden. The estimate wu made public by thl Committee on Interest and Dividends headed by Federal Reserve Board Oiairman Arthur Burns. The announcement came as the most intensive price-wage controls l n peacetime history went into tffect with a few immediate. ai~ of how business would respond to Phase n · of President ~lxon's economic policies. The dividend-limitation announced previously would be based on a com· pany's highest payments in the three past fiscal years. The committee said the controls would apply to: -Companies with more than $1 million In total assets and a class of equity aecurities held by 500 or more persons. -Those subject to the reporting re- quirements oC the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or j.nsurance companies wllb capital stock. ''These guidelines wlll therefore apply to about 10,000 of the. largest corporations whicbTaocount for allTt:P.lt a·small portion of the dividends paid <acb year by U.S. corporations,'' the announcement aaid. Exempted und<r the gulddlnes ,..,. ngu1med. •• qt -tci•...... nil elt.ate irmltment trmb, and perlODll holding companies. The committee also 11id "tnoderate dividends"· could be paid by companies that paid no dividends, or dividends that amounted to a very small percentage of earnings during the past three fi<cal years. Dividends still to be: paid in 1971 remain 1ubject to President Nixon's request they not be incre&sed over the. amount pajd in the quarter immediately preceding th• wage-price freeze which began Aug. 15, the committee sald. · Many people who went to work today were earning more money for the flr:st time since Aug. 15, even though It won '& show up in-their peycbeck until next pay• day or whenever bookkeeping ad· justments are made. Military men and women shar_ed in an immediate '2.4 billion pay hike. District Calls Special Meeting A special meeting of lhe Tustin Union High School District Board oI EducaUoo has been called for 7:30 o'clock tonight. Trustees will discuss nominations to the Orange County Committee on School District Organization during a1public por- tiOll. of the meeting. The County Com- rniUee rules on tenitory transfers be:tween school districts and regulates anlCication plans. The board will adjourn to a private, el· ecutive session to discuss personnel mat· ters, following the public par; ol the meeting. . 0r .... W••Hter ' SUMy skies are on the JIS:enda again Tuesday, with rmre chilly winds from the northeast. Hl&hs along the cout 15 rtsing to 75 in· land. Lows tonight a tee!Jl'cha,tter· iog 3$-50. INSmE TODA\.' Afore potential heart attack victim1 ar1 being given 11 new lease on U/e bJI &he "'cordioc Cadilloc" which. speeds oid to t.he m rather than vice versa. Page 12. • • ---=.........._ -# ----- • • • ' . ' J • I - :f DAILY PILOT SC 'BargalnMee' 8 Bullets Rip Bill 8rophy~s LA Home Overs eas "--Mail- Deadlilie Ne ar WASHINGTON (AP) -~I~= deldllne ls FrJdly for !m - parcels at the cheapest raff ·to wvlcemen overseas. Laguna Mulling c Two V ehicle.s ... . '• -. LOS ANGE~ES (APl -Al least eight "lhols were fired lnto the home of Republican Assembly candidate Bill .Brophy early today, narrowly missing bim, authorities said . • The gunman esc aped . apparently in a "<ehlcle that drew up ~n fron t of the hou se tjust as the shots rang out. detectives said, -Brcphy's campaign mariager, Wllllam King, was in the _house, too,'but wa s not injured. police satd . Brophy is u;)\epublican -candidaler i Tuesday's Uth Assembly District elec- tion . Northeast Division detectives s a id Brophy, 36, told them he was standing in the living room behind a plate glass win· dow about 12: 15 a.m., shortly after he had arrived home rollowing a late night dinner. He satd he saw two headligh~ pull up in front or the house and then a shot fired , shattering a portion of the window. police s8id. He said he got down on the noor as other shots were fired. 11e was not hlt. Following th·e gunshots , deteclives said, Brophy he.ard a car screech away but couldn't see it well enough to identify it. Olficers later said they believed the front plate window was it by ·two bullets and the window screen by six. They recovered six bullets. They said they believed the gunman us· ed • .22-callbe.r rifle. Chamber Women Plan Luncheon Meet Thur slla y The women 's division or the chamber ot commerce has invited San Clemente area women interested in joining the group to a meeting Thursday where plans for Chri Stmas season activi ties will be discussed. The noon luncheon will be held at Howard Johnson's Restaurant. During the season the group plans caroling on Dec. 10, 17 and the 2oth Uirougb .23rd , . 'New division officers elected at a re-~t meetfng are Cecilia Fiantanco, president ; Fem Dickson, vice president; E:velyn Wqlenty , recording secretary, JeaMe Morrison, corre s ponding secretary and Kay Skaron treasurer. lle:servaUons for Thursday's luncheon are available by calling 492-2621, or 492· J1J7, Drugs Burgled From Physician :A thief with an obvious taste for n8rcotics broke inlo the offices of a San Clemente physician over the weekend and ·.cole scores of amphetamine capsules. 'Police said the theft was discovered Sunday morning at the ofHces of Dr. Alex Farka.5 at 112 Avenida Vaquero. '.Entry into the Shorecliffs area office was made by prying out several glass lou vres in a window. Police sakl the thief rined P cabinet in ~e p))yslclan's offices a n d ignored ail other medications except for doses or valium and amphetamines. Me r chants Di scuss Yule T r ash Pi c~up Downtown merchants will disc uss com- mercial trash pickup and parking during the Christmas shopping season at the Tuesday morn ing meeting of t h e Downtown Business Associatlon . The session is scheduled !or 7:45 a.m. at the Hotel Laguna. OIANll COAST DAILY PILOT OAAXGt CCIAIT PUIL ISHIHt COM'AH't 1to\•rt N. w ••• Ptw~-•11111 PllbHslllt' J•c\ I, Cllfl•y VU p,.JM.t Ind ~•I Mi,,., 1ho19111 K,.,iJ l"•ltw n.0"''' A. Mwrplroi111 Mft11Jln9 f.lll9f Clin l•t H. l••• ~Kli1rd P. Ntll A>llillllf Mtrllf\11111 El!lotl a... ....... OHke 22 2 ftrt1f A'<'t llut M•Tlr111 1Jdron : P.O. 101 666, 92&52 S• Ci..nt• OHk:1 IOI N1rth fl C om1no ~ttl, 92672 ' o...,.Offlc" ~tt Mitt• SM W"I ••Y l!•Pft tl ..... 1'1 IM~ll1 »JJ Nt Wl"'rl l°"'t~l'tl tflillltlflll• ... c.111 1111J ... '11 toYltYlftl .. I d.9n't think the abots were Intended to scare me1 11 Bro~qid lattt. "They obviously meant to hit me.." He said he moved just aa the first shot as fired, probably ·Saving·hlm from being hit. I Brophy told officers that In the las! tw1> weeks he has received "name-calling '' phone calls. Brophy got 12,134 vol" to lead the field Ocl l9 , when If candlilatu for the AssemhlY seat! were redu'ced to four. Also in the race Tuesday are Democrat Richard Alatorre ; -Peace and Freedom candidate John W. Blaine and in· deperKtent Raul Ruiz. ~The seat was vacated by Democrat David Roberti, no w a st ate senator. '• Superyisors, Mayors . --. Hold Camp Conference · By JACK BROBACK Of t111 D•llY P'll1! l lllf WHEN 2~ Orange County mayors and four county supervisors, or their representatives get together, one thing is certain -they will disagree. The group held their fourth Supervisors and -Mayors Conferenc (SA.MCO) Saturday at Los Pinos · Forestry Camp. The most critical debates involved a proposed county hous.ing authority and lhe Airport Land Use Com- mission (ALUC). Tbe housing authority, a pet project of Supervisor Robert Battin, sUrred up the greatest argument Battin , although he had himseU solicited opinions and support from the various cities, accused some fellow board members of trying to scuttle the authority by solicit. ing city opinions. SUPERVISOR DAVCD Baker and Tom Fuentes, exfC\ltiVe aid to Super· visor Ronald Caspers, admitted they do not favor the housing authority. Baker said the.re are enough low cost housing programs to take care cf the need and that a county authority would be useless without active partici· pation of most cilies. Fuentes said Caspers believes blighted areas in the cities should be re- developed as an a.llernative to new low ·cost housing projects in the remaining open space in the county. San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony Forster ch_ar_ged that Battin is using the housing authority issue as a "cheap gimmick to get votes.". He adde~ that his city council !\ad ·endorsed the program for co~ty territory, 'but doe.!I not want to participate. , On the Airport Land Use CommissJon Issue, the county Lea_gue of Cities last Thursday Voted 15 to 6 to support the ne.w agency. . However Cos ta Mesa Mayor Robert Wilson; whose council voted against the land use 'group, charged that the law authorizing the commission took control away from the board of supervisors and pe'rmi!-' an appointed commi~ sion to overrule elected official.!!. HE REFERRED to the current land rezone dj.spute centering on 50 acres owned by the McDonnell Douglas Corp .. near Orari~e County Airport . Cou~ty supervisors voted 3-2 last Wednesday to approve the rezone for commercial use rather than industrial. The land use commission will vote on the issue Dec. 2. If they oppose the rezone it will take a four-fifths vote of county supervisors to overrule the decision. Cities are badly split on the housing al.!thority issue. Six favor it and sevl!n. oppose. Two city COU}lCils have refu$ed to ta~e a stand. . Favortng an .authority .a~e Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, Sah Ju'an Capistrano, Santa Ana, Stanton and Fullerton . Opposing are Seal Beach, Los ~Alamitos, Orange, Anaheim. Garden Grove, 4 Palma, and Tu stin. · · · 1 ON THE FENCE are Newport Beach .:ind Buena Park . Newport Mayol' Ed Hirth said it was ''a serious issue" and "we did no t have sufficient lnfornfa-- lion to take a stand." · Antique La1np~ Stolen SAM (Space Available Mail) Parceta weiahh11 up to five pOunds and 60 Inches in combined length a:nd width may be sent for only the domest(c parcel post charge. The Postal Service said Sunday that the deadline is Nov. 26 Col" PAL (Parcel Airlift> mail , which cosl.!I slightly more and can be l•reer. A five-pound SAM parcel from Chicago costs only $1.90 postage to San Francisco, with airlift to Viel· nam~rree or postage. Israeli Spy Figure Weds; Error Bared TEL · AVIV (UPI) -'The Israeli government finally has p e r m i t t e d newspapers to print details of its worst intelligence blunder, an abortive 1954 at- tempt to sabotage U.S.·Egyptian rel~· tions by blowing up the U.S. Embassy m Cairo. The apparent reason for lifting the 17· year-old censorship on the. ~ase 'is t.he wedding of one of the par.hc1pants, Vic- tor ine Marcelle Nino. She is getting mar· ried Nov. 23 and Prime Minister Golda Meir will be on hand personally to give the bride away. The plot became known as the "Lavon Affair," after the then·Defense Minister Pinhas Lavon. According to the newspaper accounts Sunday Egypt arrested 14 lsraeli spies in 1954 and charged them with plotting to blow up •the U.S. Embassy in Cairo and the U.S. Consulate in Alexandria in order lo dissuade Washington from getting in- volved in Egypt following the British · withd rawal. What led to the riflg's -downfall , the newspapers said, was the capture of Philip Natha nson when a detonating device went off in his hands near a Cai ro movie theater. Nat hanson changed his name to Ben Nathan and is now a news photographer in Tel Aviv. · According to the newspapers, two of !he ringleaders escaped, one committed suicide, one person was tortured to death, two were executed, two W'!re acquitted, and six. including a \voman, served all or part of their sentences before being released to Israel in a 1968 prisoner ex- change. All were recognir.ed by th! government as Israeli emissaries upon their return . according to the newspapers. receiving an equivalent of an army o!fictr's pay wilh combat allowance for a\l ·their time .... in Egyptian jails. Besides Miss Nino. an E n g I i s h literature and arts student at Tel Aviv university, and Ben Nathan, the other members of the ring living in 'Israel were Identified as a businessman, an engineer, a doctoral candidate in agricu lture and a student in Middle East studies. Following the smashing of the Israel inte lligence ring, Lavon -now 67 and uriously ill in a hospital -resigned, de- I • With !our new city bu_sn due lo roll through the streets or the Art Colony In coming weeks, the Laguna Beach city council will be asked Wedneaday lo con- sider buying two more public traruporta· tlon veh icles, ,at a bargain price. The two Lake Forest trams leased dur· ing the summer Festival season, are up _ _l.!l! .Jiale or lease and_, aceording to Pub~c Works Director Joseph Sweany, the cost of bu ying the trams, pro-rated over a four-year period, would be substantially less than leasing them just for the sum· mer season. Asking price for the trams, which sold new in 1969 for $11 ,000 each, is $4,000 each and their estimated valu.t on the present used bus market would be f7 ,000 to $8,000, Sweaney uys. They ar~ in ei:- cellent condition, he adds, and mileage on each is just under 13,000. The council wlll be asked to consider a proposal whereby the Bank of America would purchase the two trams and lease them to the city for a four-year period, with lease payments applying to the purchase. Annual paymenl.!I !or the lease-- Scientist Sa ys California Gulf Being Destroyed ENSENADA, Mexico (UPI) -The Gulf of California is being turned Into an ecological disaster because of dui:npings . by American and rviexican f11rmers, ac· cording to Ka tsuo Nlshi kii.Wa, director of the Institute of Oceanology here. He and five other scientists have been surveying ecological damage in the gulf, which is betw een the east coast of Baja Californ ia and the western shoreline of the Mexican mainland. "Although our preliminary results will not be available for some time," he said, "our early findings have been frighten· ing." One conclusion was that American and Mexican farmers have been dumping emormous amounts or pesticides and salt into the gulf. ''The salinity problem is reactlt!rg the point of no return," he said. "'Something must be done by both the United States and Mexico to control It or it will become both an ecological and e c o n o m I c disaster." He said the farmers flus~ salt and pesticides from the soil in the Colorado River Della and· empty the waste into the river. More s81t and pesticides are added by farmers in the Irr.perial Valley. Some goes to the Mexicali Valley but the major amount flows into the gulf. Crash Injures 2 In Laguna Beacl1 nying that he ever gave the order for the A San Clemente man and his female ~ ' purcbase arrangement woUld b@ b'etween $2,200 and $2,500 per year, while com. mercial bus rental !er two buses for th t summer only would be $2,(IOO Sweany notes. In addition to the financial saving, the vehlcles would be available to support the bus line add provide transportatfon to special event,, about the community year· around, he add.!!. 3 Mao Plots Attributed To Lin Piao • NEW YORK (AP) -Time magazine sa,ys Western experl.!I believe J,jn Piao. Mao T~tung's designated successor as chairman of. China's Communist Party1 tried to assassinate Mao three times ana was betrayed by his own daughter as he tried to escape. Crediting the account to "China· watchers from Hong Kong to Washington," Time said Lin , the defense minisler, is "politically finished and very possibly dead as well." The magazine said "an epic struggle for power" came to a climax in Sep- tember. It said six of the 21 members of the politburo have since "dropped com· pletely from view." According lo this explanation for the vague reports of turmoil coming out of China, Lin somehow was exposed in September. He reportedly tried three times in 18 months to kill the man who made him. his helr·apparent 2Y.i years ago. Deciding to flee China, Lin, his wife and son; Chen Po-ta, Mao's chief idealogue, personal secretary and ghostwriter; .,and Wu Fa-hsien, chief of the air force, reportedly went to a military airfield near Peking. Chen was purged from his fourlh·rank· ing spot in the Politburo last !all. He and Wu were described as coconspirators with Un. The group took off in a British-made Trident equipped with special radar to ny at very low altitudes, the magazine said. "Wherever they were beaded, they never made it," Time said. "'Lin's own daughter, Lrh Tou-tou, betrayed the ·escape attempt and the Tri· dent was somehow shot down." The magazine said a Trident which "mysteriously crashed deep in Mongolia" was believed to be the plane carrying Lin. It added that the Soviet Union knows the identities cf the nine bodies found at the crash site, "but they will say only th.r.t the. victims were in uniform, that one was a woman and that there were signs cf an armed struggle in the .<iircrart , 3Ug· gesting a bijack atl~mpt." Time said one or the "unmistakable signs" of Lin's downfa ll was the recall from bookstores and libraries of Mao's Little Red Book "because Lin wrote the introduction." Re lated Story Page 4. A collection of un'ique. antique Tiffany la mps worth $49,000 -three among the missing dolftl worth $7,000 each·alone- have been burglarized from an Inglewood dentist's Newport Beach weekend.home. operation against the U.S. offices. companion sustained minor injuries in a I Id I. th 12 , T·rr 'I An inquiry exonerated him. But the Laguna Beach traffic accident early o po ice e genuiRe 1 any 1 ems Lavon Affair continued to haun· t the coun· Police Stud ying Apartment Heist f th f, ' N y k h d Saturday when an oncoming auto turned are rom e 1rm s ew or ea • try for the next seven years, finall.v br,1'.ng. .,, into their path. _ • . qua rters and· are about two feel tall . -· ing about Df.vid Ben-Gurion's resigna· Police are still searching fof the driver A total of five are valued at $7,000 lion as prime minister and a spilt in the of the second car, who witnesses said ran The huge Joss was discovered Friday afternoon by Dr. Vem Phalen when he arrived al 404 Via Lido Nord , Lido Isle. !'ach. three of them taken from the ranks of his Mapai Party. from the scene or the 2 a.m. accident and The new disclosures and Miss Nino's d' ed · d k La B h 1· , · downstairs Jiving room and two more 1S8ppear into ar ness. ~una eac po ice are 1nvesti gat1ng ftom the second.story master bedroom. wedding. political sources said, may Officers said Stephen Charles Clark, 27, the theft of $407 in miscellaneous Hems Investigators today were continuing their probe of the break-in reported in- itiall y to Officer Lawrence Dyle. Detectives said it appeared there was revive the controversy. of 124 Esplanade, and Janet Roger. 25. of from an oceanfront apartment. no other loss, leading to speculation the Chula Vista,. sustained minor cuts and Officers said Reginald Allen, of 1935 burglar or burglars knew precisely what bruises in the mishap, which occurred on Ocean Way, reported the ransacking and wha t t~e lan1ps were worth. Ed ison Aid e Di es South Coast Highway al McAulay Place. burglary of his residence Friday. Thieves The 12 colored -glass lamps. as'semblcd bv metal sections. could have been taken either by someone with s p c c I f i c knowledge of their value. or a b11rgla r who just took J fancy to them. Orticer Mike McEveny, who conducted They were both treated and released at entered the home by prying open a the crime scene investigation , said entry NASHUA, N.H. {UP I) -Sam G. South Coast Coinmunlty Hospital. sliding glass door, Investigators sa id. was made through a kitchen window of Langley, 94, or Amherst, chief engineer In vestigators said Clark was south-Missing items include a co 1 or Dr. Phalen's plush home. for Thomas A. Edison from 1911 until bound on the highway when the other television , two pair of binocular s, a gold Since he uses it only on weekend s, in-Edison's death In 1931, died Sunday in a auto attempted to turn left onto McAulay candle holder and four bottles of im· Imitation Tirtany lamps are currenlly favored by decorators. vesligators could only place the time or Nashua hospital after a short illness. Place. ported beer. the burglary at some ti91e during the 1-~---'...--------------------------'------------­ Detective Ken Smith said Dr. Phalen prior several days. CSF in Mourning 3 Football Coac lies Die in Crash Students and playe rs today mourned three Cal State, Ful\erton !ootball coaches killed over the weekend ~·hen their rented plane slammed into rugged brush.choked San Marcos Pass le rrain above Santa Barbara. The \'ictims were being flown to i;cout a game at Cal Poly. San Luls Obispo by a charter pilot who also died in the crash 400 yards o!f Camino Cielo Road in the Sanla Ynez Mountain!'.. t . ' Ironically, the team the CS F' 1'il ans are to play next weekend for the CCAA 1971 football championship was 1•irtual\y wiped.-out Jl years and three weeks ago in a Toledo, Ohio plane crash. Dead as a result or the tra gic 1~·cckcnd crash are Joe O'Hara. 39. :;ophomore offensi ve coach: Bill Hannah, 37, offensive line coach, and Dallas Moon, 30, defensive coach. The pilot wa s identl!ied a1 Emfe ·~1a'rTettf. 40, of San Gabriel. ~veteran flier. O'Hara , of Tustin, Hannah. or Buena Park. and Moon, of La Palma , were nying from San Diego where !he Titan s whipped U.S. International Unlverslty 40 lO 30 SAturda y. 11cavy cloud covt r and 11ir turbulenC1?, plus rain, was widespread in the cenlral coast area during the time thei r single engine Piper aircraft vaniMed S<lturda y night. The Titans pla)' the Cal Poly Mustan gs next weekend for the CCAA cham. pionshlp but the tragtdy will not lead to c11ncellation of the grid contesL Cal Poly lost 16 kill«! and 22 ethers Injured. including coaches. players and f1ms, Oct. 22, 1900, when tht.lr chartered airliner crashed on takeoff from Toltdo, Oh id. · • • Cal State. J.'ullerton President L. Donald Shlrlds said tht game: wilh Cal Poly will not be canceled, despite lhe treeedy, worst 1n the CSF cJmpus lZ. year history, · For complele details, Bee rtorics in today·• Sports section. Page 21. • HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES: l1lllM ........ J .GI C•ttf L-.:11 .. , Mtitlful, Ttfol W•lt ht J.JG Certt Tait! W.itllt DIA MONO DIAMOND CLUSTER CLUSTER COCICTAIL COCKTAIL RING RING GOOD 9U4l.rtY '"'"01-... 1SAVE ON THIS .11 c .... $995 $595 W~ Buy Direct From The General Public And Pass The Savings On To You! 1.IJ C:•rwt l•'•I W•ltttf Fl11e 9w•llty DIAMOND CLUSTER COCKTAIL RING '$895 w ........... ,...., ........... , ""-' ...... ,,..... We •lt1 Hft '''""""' "-••• fr•• V4 ,.,... Ii ••: s-lllly prk:M . kt tfrlt rM1 ~111 ..... rs, Dl••U. tr.111 $1 ,00 • ,.i.t. Dlamonol Cnle r for Ora11ge Count11 COSTA MESA. JEWEL RY & LOAN Open Dalrv 9 to s 1838 N~WPORf ILYD. Ccme in and Browe Atotind PHONE 646·7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -ltl#ttl H-& ,,__., DOM IACITI OUR MOST UNUSUA~ DIAMOND GUAR~NTCE wi... , •• """ • "·-·· .,. .. .. " wlll ,,.,_,,.. tti.t 111 .. ...... ,.. .,,, .... 40% MOll ..._ yt• ,.tll f•t It er , • ., ~ Md. c .. , ..... • wdl .... ....,., COMPA.11. IXf'l lT WATCH ~IPA.II " DONf OH PllMlllS • I r • J 8 DAIL V PILOT SC : Mond•y, NtWtmbtt 15, lq71 • Who's Really Boss? •• . -Arnerica1i Consumer Stiff ens Resistance . ·'--.. •' , .. • • .. ... :.: -. - • · .. By JOHN CVNNIFF Al' h'1Mu AMtr.r NEW YORK (AP) -It Is customary to picture the American consumer as a maligned a~ helpless creature buff ed about by the powers or t e commercial world -used, abused , stimulated, manipulated by sellers wanting his dollar. That picture, if it ever were true, may need rwxamina- tion. • _ Evidence .seems • .to_ be-ac.~~ cumulating that the ordinary American buyer has stiffened his resistance, that he is grow- ing wiser and more selr- r~liant, that he is trying and maybe succeeding in doing his, rather than the seller's "thing." . That tie is dictating as wCn- as accepting orders is shown In the savings rate, automobile sales, do-it-yourself "projects. federal regulation, housing sales, the stock market, vaca· tions, fashions and in a number of other developing • customs and patterns. The savings rate is ptrhaps the most obvious indication thaf ordinary AJTiericans use their heads and that they aren't to be tempted when bargains aren't offered. Almost simultaneous with the rise in inflation, m a n y Americans decided to save rather than spend. Wall Street Chatter e Dongla• Bid ... ST. LOUIS -~cDonnell Douglas Corp. has won a 16.1 million addition to a Navy Contract to modify the wings for F4E fighter planes. e Eeonon1ie Plan country's trend tow a rd '' e e o oomic isolationism." Franklin A. Cole. president of Walter E. Heller International Corp., called for an end to the U.S. import surcharge, broadened trade wilh eastern Europe and new international monetary "parity bands' ' allowing the world's cur· rencies to float within a five percent range of current levels. ' - ' -.-• NEW YORK -The head of a major finance company has called for devaluation of the dollar by revaluing the price of gold as one way to halt the ,.~§ ~~~~1~00~0~~1 ORDER i1. ••autiful ; " .. -• -• • ' • • . . _. " YOURS " ~ L~~~~;, v .f"oNLY~ $125 TODAY! ~J<IHC~ Personalized • Stylish • Effiqent Order For Yourself or a Friend· May be used on •nvelopes .s' return address lebels, Also very handy as identification labels for marking personal' items such •s books, records, photos, etc. Labels •tick en glass and rn1y be used for marking ham• canned foe;d items. All labels are printed With stylish Vogue type on fin e quality white· 9umm•d paper. r ----------------------, Fiii In this ce11,en, C!lt.•~d m.11il wlfh \l.ll IO: I t p 1i.1 ,.,1~1iftfl L1H1 or ..... r.o. •~• 1ua I I c•~•• Mui, c.1111. nm I I I I I I I I I I I I l PILOT PRINTING 1 L-----------------------~ -~-................ ~,_ .................... .. •• • 1 -· !'. You are invited to attend a timely [. a1rd provocative seminar on ••• •' ' ·, •". 1971 Tax Planning for Your Securities Portfolio ,. An important meeting designed to evaluate-your securities "''·portfolio and determine how to take advantage of t&X•llviDI' ·opportunities is planned for Laguna Beach. ·-· ·-· ... . . •" ~ ' . ' ' • . ' • ~ Prtsenttd by: Robert I. Wallace, Resident Manager Mitchum, Jones & Templeton Wednesday, November 17.1971 7:30 to8:30 p.m. Comm unity Room Laguna Federal Savings & 1oM 260 Ocean A vcnuo • Laguna. Beach SubjO::ts will include: • • How capital gains and lossu will ht taud • Ad1·an1a;e1 of laking IOSJtlJ IO reduce taxts • Toking gains to upgrade • POJtponillf-IOng lam gains untit next~ • Offstlting long ond short term topita/ glliiu Qutstioa ••cl AMwtt Ptriod follows ~ ·Everyone attending will receive '"GuidcfO( 1971 Capltat Oairu: 'Snd Losses.,. , • At1tndADcc i1byrcscnation.CaD494-9781. There i! no chor10. - • -.. . .. . .. ' • . • ' • • - MITCHUM JONES& TEMPLETON EJlll>lilltffJJJO IJ'COAPOlATID 2" Forat A¥tnUe • 1..afUaa.Beach, 926.'il Tdeptioae: (11<1} <194·9781 Mmthtft N•"' YMk Slo<k Exd!a"lf, 1«. •ltd tJtltfr prflft:Oro/ ~ Countian To Branch Huntington Beach resident BUI R. Z1egler ha!I been nam· ed assistant manager for loans of Bank cf America's 10th and Pacific branch in San Pedm, announced regional vice· presl· dent H. H. Jackson. Zie11ler, wilh lhe bank since 1967. Connerly was a lending offietr al lhe Inglewood Main Office. He succeC<ls Pete Melanson, named manager at t~ East View branch in San Pedro. A native of tlonolulu, Ziegler graduated from Rogen High School In Newport, Rhode Island. He received a bachelor of 1cicnct degree in busineu administration at San Diego St.ate College in 1967 and also has completed professiona l courses at the American Institute of Banking. Ile 'resides on Bond Circle with hl1 wile, Mary Kay, Jlnd three children : Scott. rrve; Steven , four; and Kerry, two . •' ..... I -------1 ' ... Monday Evening NOYEMl!:9' 1!5 . .. ortul MW music dlrtctor of th• Ntw York Ph11h•rmonlt, wllo Is "'" toll• ductln1 Albtn Bef&'• ''lhtN Ord!• 111 Pieces." UIYIMflll Cl!) Hl111 l :lO 9 MOW11: (C) i:count Tllrtt .... "'f' 1:45 (!) Tll• """"'"' ~·OO 8 (JJ H1re'1 lucy CJ) Movl1: (C) "f1owtr OruM SOit,. (muslt1!) '62-Ni ncY Kw1n, J1mu Shl1et1. D Ann-Margret 1tar1 on * Bell System F1mlly Theatre a ®1 m 11p1cw; 11.n SJtt•• f1ml1J Thulrt "D•mli II Se•" Alln·M1r11nt stars ln • mu1lc1I &:)O 8 *"" Afl11 Show Gunts 1rt spoof of tlle Busby Ber~tley films of Vlctorte Burton, Rleh1rd Prlct, LOii· tbt 1930'1, In "'hlch I sm•!l·IOWll Isl Moritz, 111(1 Jtck Ctrttr. 1irl finds riim111C1 111d CW1rnl111t D TlnWtilltJr:,>'Tlll Y111tut1" (llor· st1rdom In New York. Sptcia1 1u1st ror) '17 -Robtrt Hutton, Altlm stir Is Ann Miiier. 1nd eo.lt•ri 1r1 .. T1rnlroff, ' Al\111 Meir., Dick Sh•wn, Fred Cl) 91,..... Gwynne 1nd H1rvey E111ni. . -· m AlldJ lrtfllth s• Ci) Wiid Wiid Wtst DAIL y ,It.OT 11•!1 , ..... 111'1--OELVIS!"ITHAPPENED THE BAO GUYS -Hank Sorkin (left) threatens ID "'711t• !ht lultlr * AT THE WORLD'S John Phillips over a ma~ter of murder in this scene ·e 1111t11t twc11 FAIR" -IN COLOR! from "Arsenic and Old Lace" at the Huntington 8""" Actu fJ Mond11 Movie: (C) 12hrl Beach Playhouse. • El Pftf. ll&tblfl "It H1pPlffd 11 tlll World'I fefr" -----'-----------------7:00, II IZI Nnt (muslc1t) '63-Elvfs Prt:SllJ, Jo111 Cll Dntllll O'Brien. GWlttt'• Mr U11tf m DAVI D's guests: JIM 111-11 *NABORS, MIKE CONNORS m 1 lon lucy m DtYtd Frett Sllow Guesll 1r1 • 1 D,... of JHmtll J1mes Gtrner, Ml~• Connors, N1nc1 t11J 'lltallll Wt C.rt · Wiison ind Jim N1bof1. • HbterJ ti Mea1cit fJ) L1 Ct.ti 8) ll ll1tru11 a!) Ro111 pert YM'Olllel II J111 ""1!nl•• 9:30 fJ (()Doris Dly Doris coes lo , Lii TllltllocM EnJ11nd ta try to pe11utd1 111 IU• 7:30 8 •1111 Up lfld Cllw Tonlahfi thor to !111 th• 11rlaliz11Jon r11hta IPld•l ,utrt b £d Amu, · tO his book to TodtY's Wortd mica· • Dr. IMOn Lteb A t11n1p alrf ?ine. b brut1lty bett111 1nd fllu11s to 0 Intl! W1rd Ntw1 ldJintl{)' htr 1wll111t. Susptets In· Cl) It T1k• •Thiel cl~d• 1h• boy 1h1 lovtt 1114 1 rn1n (]) hok 1111 "Rabbit Red Ill" slil'f1rin1from1dls11se1111\ e1uw ED 1 lflCIACI M1riNr '71 A first ~Cw! to bltck out ptril'.Hllcalty, loot 1t picturts f1f M1rs b1111J (]) 1 DnaM of h1nnl1 be1med b1ck to 11rth from th• e SINATRA/MARTIN M1rlner 9 sptce probe, * 1lROBIN & THE 7 HOODS" t:45 m M1n1r1p II Miff"' I _, <C) (2h~ °'lllM11 lfld the SMll Kotds" (CGm· 10:00 I) ((I Mr Tllrtt Soni tjtr} '64-Fr1nk Slt11lr1, De1n Mir. 0 Qi f.m i ipiCJA' I F11tlv1I 11 tlir, S1mmy 01\lls Jr. Two rivtl Clil· fonl'1 Bo!> Hop• Is host 1nd R1y· Clf> 11np ftc11t to< 1upttmaq, mond Burr b n1rr1tor for 1 specl•I g Ltf1Miki1 Diii Nlutln1 Amtrlctn entert11nm1nt • Htll"'• ""-which or1aln1tn •t Ford'1 Tht1tr1 m Dni(lltt . ln,W1shlniton, D.C. Tht sttr ro1ttr 0 Th Oddi Aplnd ' lncludtt: Tht Pat Boon• F1ml!y, i ct\'nlthtn Clrot Ch1nnln1. Henry M1nclnl, Mtl· 0.-ltt-MI bl Moor1, Ch1rlt7 Prldt Ind Joni· Llale thin Winlen. G!J Ml ..... Y1Ntr !how @ T• Tell tht Trvtfl (iJThe Annpra l:Oll iD (I) llm•.. "My 0 Brolhtr'1 1 .• KHIM(' Setkln1 refu1e from t ' i!Orm, Festus stumblel lnlo • CM m NIWI Putil1m, Fbhm1n l1ll Flrtn1 Un• fmSoull (ll IA Crlld1 lltn Crlld• Gm 0 TomlHo Mltrt tl'I old lndi111 lies lfyin1, 1nd brlnp him btek to Ooda:• City tft« tfl'1 storm 1b1tts. (Rtsthtduled) • D R!pHARD HARRIS sl1r1 lll:ts ID""'' .,,. * In Poul G1lllco'1 lO:!OfJCIJ Aml• • .,..,. Snow Goose" (I) MOvle: "If• AIW' (scl·fl) '6'- Simon Strikes Again With 'Prisoner' Comedy By JACK GAVER NEW YORK (UPI\ -The knack playwright Neil Simon has for creating laughter out or ordinary human mishaps and unhappiness has been demonslra(ed again at the Eugene O'Neill Theater with the presentation of "The Prisoner of Second Avenue." Laughter out of misery is, of course the most basic form or humor, as witness the banana peel slip, the antics of circus clowns, almost anything short of real tragedy that affects the human condition. Simon is a past master at using such material to till theaters with laughter because of his insight into character, his way of making the com- monplace remark seem funny and his skill at topping a com - ical. line or situation with something even funnier. other, fight with u n seen neighbors on the same floor and on the floor above. And the opening scene of the se- cond act, in which the family sits in conference about what to do to help Mel ; is hilarious.- ly human. This scene, and it's about the only one for the other cast members. is played deliciously by Vincent Gardenia. Florence Stanley, Tresa Hughes and Dena Dietrich. • Yes, Falk and Miss Grant really carry the play, and the y are perfect foils for each other. He is blustery with a low boiling point, and she is conciliatory and accommodat- ing most of the time. But when things finally get too much for her, and she also begins to climb the wall, Miss Grant brings an extra dimension of fun to the production. The setting by Richsird Sylbert is a wonderful replica of a high rise apartment neighborhood with its view of other buildings through pQnel· ed windows. ... • I • Monday, .Mowmber 1.5, 1971 Huntington Comeil11 ' • 'Arsenic'· Hilarious "A•llNIC AND OLD LACI" 8 TOM TITUS A (01"KIV llv Jt.-1111 K1111lrlno, Y dl•tc:IM llv lton Alt11r•11n, IJfl>OuCH. bv riot. as the burly cop determin· ed to enact hls play for a bound and gagged MortlRlf'r: 0 1 lllt D•ltY f'lltl ll•tf Htncv Wtll•, 1t101 mtntttf Mttllvn \ ~IMrlstn. set dttlon bv l.t rr'll Th.re Is • good d.al Of O(ldt1d, llollJ1 1/ICI wund t>v Bot> oodtrd ·~ Lff PtVM. Drtttnlld Ken Clifford strikes what may be the play's only serious note as the cl~rgyman; Colin Culver brings hilariou s Engllsb understatement to a dual role as both a thwarted poison victim and the stuffy Sanitarium superln ten· dent, while DM Kaiser end Dewey Knighten round out the cast as a pair of officers with limited mental re sources. •·· . f lh ( l'ldt v1 tMI 1turdev1 lllfOUQll Otc, ll cr~crossu1g o pa s n com-~:/ 1111 Hu~1 t>Qton "'''f" P11vnou11, munlty theater, and _ since Jl 10 M•ln 1:.; ununoton e11cn. UttVtHDfll 'fH,.~AST most of Ora.nge County's . -'tMiv &•IW'•., ......... e~1 Murnlly drama Critics also are active M1nh1 &[fw,ier •..••.. K11 •rvn 011111 Marlll::'' &11w,t•r ,.,,.. onv f.•~lt in the acting · and directing i~r..:.. ·~.~~:,w1.1~.'.:.: · o.~:.;"'H•?e11~ Phases of the business -there b .. e1n•l•!n ............ John Ph 11101 Ttdch' 11.._111H° ........ Jotin H..,111v will crop up from time to time 0111cer O'H•r• ........ s1m v .. decl• I'· lt:onntv ,,, .......... LtHV Wood•rd some interesting and poten-'"· H,,.,., ............. K•n c11f1\"' Ofllcor Broohv ........ "' O.n Kl ,er ' Glt>tt1{Whhtr1POOn ., .... Ctlln Gulvtr tl'aliy 1tchy si·tuaUons t'lffl<tr sm.1111 ••... D•-~ Kn10111en One uch example is the----------- critic reviewing a '"play Jess than five months a f t e r performing In another version at another theater. No matter how hard he strains tor total objectivity, the fact remains that the second production , must be -ot 'highly superior caliber to sufficiently erase memories of his own effort. The Huntington B e a c h Playhouse's rendition o f "Arsenic and Old Lace'' is such a production -markedly different in style and approach from the r-ecent Irvine Com-' munity Theater version, but superbly effective within its own established boundaries. The minor weakne sses it possesses would, in all pro· bability, be discernible even to one no t overly familiar with the script. Director Ron Albertsen has succeeded in adapting the flexible humor of Joseph Kesselring·s 1940's maniacal farce to the special talents of his cast. making the most of the situation and the staging area. "Arsenic" is a very fun- ny play taken at face value, and the humorous em- bellishments introduced by Albertsen -particularly a rotating gag involving the shoe of a cadaver -reap their just rewards in sustained laughter. The show is considerably well cast, with no performers fitting their assignments more comfortably than B o b b i Murphy and Katheryn OfJill as the loony old 12.dies w h o s e main joy in life is sending lonely old men off to their eternal reward. Individually and, especially, as a team, these vete ran aCtresses make the most of their juicy roles. Miss Murphy is sugar to Miss Offill's salt and spice to her partner's vinegar. While Miss Murph y delivers her dialogu e melodically with a strong sense of s e I f • righteousness. Miss 0ffi11 One of the most noteworthy counters with the stinging portrayals, however, is turned phrase, carefully fashioned in by Larry Woodward as the and splendidly enunciated. blustering I i e u t e n a n t - In ' this reviewer's personal particularly since it is his fir st pride and joy, the role, of the stage role. Woodard adopts drama critic Mortimer, Tony the thickest lrish brogue this Castle is excellent. H e side of Killarney and a, employs the brashness of rooster's strut to carry otf one youth togther with a strong of the fine st bits of the even- characterization and an ing. energetic approach to concoct \Voodard also doubles as set a totally believable portrayal designer, and this task Is car. in an atmosphere o( in-ried out equally well, with a credibility. properly Victorian atmosphere Hank Sorkin as the 1nenac-prevailing, enhanced by low ing Jonatha 11 l&cks lhe physi. key lighting and attractively cal resemblance to Boris appointed. Occasionally it Karloff, but balances this with becomes a little tight for fluid a hollowed out voice that con-movement, but overall, the veys complete authority. setting is impressive. Movement and manneri'sms "Arsenic and Old Lace" has are well plotted in Sorkin's in· the makings of a big winner terprelation . for the Huntington ·Beach Closer aligned with his Playhouse, which will orfer the character's popular image is comedy for fo ur more John Phillips 1a member of weekends, Frid a y s and the Irvine "Arsenic" cast) Saturdays, at the Barn, 2110 who strikes an accurate Peter Main St., Hunti~gton Beach, Lorre portrayal as the mad. ------------1 Doctor Einstein. His opening/r-----------,1 line, spoken in near-total darkness, was enough to generate applause on opening night. Deborah Hackett, who packs a lot of girl into a little dress, is impressive as Elaine, the romantic interest. She possesses a strong voice and sturdy bearing, and is well up to the peculiarities which befall her from the Brewster brothers. Another example of im· aginative interpretation com- pensating for p h y s i c a I shortcomings is evidenced by John Hensley, a latecomer in the role of Teddy Brewster. Hensley is hardly Roosevelt!an in appearance, but hi s characterization is s o u n d , partcular l y the comic petulance he brings to the role, a refreshing approach. Sam Verdecia is a minor , . DAJLY PILllT )1J : • (0.011 ••• ., .. ,_ "' • "'-.. "¢ ....... ,_ HELD OYER · 41H 816 WEEK 1 CA.NOICE 6ERGfN. PETflt 80Y~t I· T.R.BASKIN ,.. ovn1 lllDlll$ ATIIACTIOM FUNNY HOW LOVERS START AS ••• ~· ; . 'fi7fri d II en s :: l'R1 • TECHNICOLOR" I ARDS C•IOf 2ND OUTSTANOING COMIOY •· • •••c:" ••v<>. •• •lu• • '" .n. COAOY -• • ''"" a•••• --M 7-94IOIJ * MUHT!NOfON ··-1 ST TIME SHOWN TOGETHER James Garner Skin Game ·HILD PYER· Hallmark Hall of Fame Tommy Kirk, Slllrley Boon1. • a ID I IPIC!U 1 H1Ht11rl "'" CD""' 8111 JohM Peter Falk and Lee Grant, who carry the brunt of the f\lo'o-act play, work beautifully under the comedy-wise direc- Uon of Mike Nichols, and there Is no doubt t h a. t pnxlucer Saint.Subber has another in a long line or Simon hits on his hands. Mel and Edna Edison, with two daughters away a t College, are a Manhattan· cou· pie living In one of those ex- pensive new apartment buildings with a terrace and a view -of another such building. Mel is 47, a well-paid account executive in an advertising agency. Comes an economic pinch in the business world, and Mel is one of a number of men let go . UC Irvine Concert Vontua Redgrave•OliVtt Retd " iff,., ''Th• SIM!W Goose" Rlch1rd @II E Rttrtta de Dorian fl'l'J HJrrls stirs tt 111 tmbltttred, lonely Cit Movlt: ''Bl Htnltr Thfr ftD'" tltlst wllost lit. II eh•nrtd w11111 ' bl Cira$ for I WOUlldfd $110W fl)MI 10:45 fil) """ ~ thl 4elp of I illy OfPhin 11:00 fj ((J tm New1 (~ by British .ctrm Jenny B @) m """ Afvtttr), Thi pro1r1m wlll bt Prt· g a· Cl) 9) Nm ' N:fttld wfthout oomrnerel1I lnterrup. G MDVI•: (C) "fortJ EJa!rt Kout tftn. . Miii" (dr1m1) '70 -01rr1n Mc-D MM: (C) (lhr) .,.MJI •lld Givln W!1!11m Windom ~ (mL1Slc1f) '55 -Jt1n Sim· mT~ Tell thl TruUI ' llfbtlt. Frtnk Stn1tr1, M1r1on Bt1ndo, Qli Mintr1p CIJ llcnt Actnt fm Cltywttth1q • lt9rt!MI ''The Wit of Erie ~urtt' . · ID lM CONCERT: Creedenct ll:ll ID M°"' 8'"' * CJ11rwater Revival · ll:JOIJ CJ) M1rv Crtffln . m11HC11Lll1c.nmt:CrlldtlCI (])Mmt: (CJ "Tiii Mtm.,.10- CI•,..., lttlhtl HlrtiliJhll of l1Jt Round" (cornedJ) '61-SUun HtJ· 1M11th'1 conctrt 11 th• Forum. Rt· ... 1rd, Jamts M1son. 11t1m11. Jim smlons tnd com· CJ l]j m Johnn1 C.l'IOll mtnts of JtcUP m1mber1 1t1 1ltr1 0 l rul111 In ActlOft t11tured. Cuutl111 on the show ire fJ Mo-wit:· (C) '1bt Lo'll·lna" toonr T 1nd tilt MG's cn1tort ol (comedy) '67 -J1mes MtcMhur, tttt Mtmphls IOUnd. m Ma'lk: NMldon111 of th• """ iD Th Vlrrfn .. 1 • .Moonl" (d~1m1) '4~1twlrt Gren· ID O lp1el1I 11 th• W••• aer, }h)'flJs C1Jv..,.., - "louler. A Portrait in Tht11 MO'YI-l!J MOYlt: "M•tf'J M• .\a:i1n" (com· mtnta" Profllt f1f Plem BOll!IZ, tol· edy) '53 -M1rf1 Wiison, Tuesday . bMIME MOVIES 1:00. "'lurpdll he:-1p" (CD~ '60 -Mltrl Gaynor, Yul 817nn1r. l :JO 8 °'CblpH11 C.V11cad1" Charllt Ch1plln t!lm1 ... R11pld1" (dram•) ·~s-oon B•rlJ, Shtllt Ry1n. D (C) "'LM hi • toldrllh ....... (torn.d'J) '61 -lommy S1nds, l:GO l}l (C) "l.M ... -· (""'"" ·~ "'"°"· Jltk Ktlly. T 1:00 O (Cl "E1111h1nt Wilk• (dr1m1) '54 -Elltabtth T1Y!or, 01111 NI· drm. m "lntrl(UI" (mystery) '47 - Geor;e R1fl, June H1voc. t:OO m ''Tht .,., •nd the Hour" Con· cluslon (dr1m1) '63-Slmont Sl1· n0<1t, S!Ulrt Whltm1n, . 3:00 ()) (C) '1h1 CrNlest Show Oft Earth" P1rt I (dr1m1) '53-Cll1rlton Hilton, Btlty Hi.rttort. (1).'11'11 Oullldet" (dr1m1) '17- Darnin McGe'iln, Shirley Knlcht. I See by Today's Want Ads e roR THE PEROON \\IHO HAS EVERY1'HING, Here t1 t1 little token or your Affection, lt's • 214 ton U&\IC ni.1ek. Good tor driving overland, It', in aooc1 condition. e HERE lS A WINN'lNC COMBINATION. HWlcy, Labrador pupa Jot ult, GrtA! tor tamlly pets! His idleness, his wife's return to a secretarial job, the complete frustration of a 47· year-old tryin,g to find another job result, after sever a I weeks, in Mel having a breakdown. His family of three older sisters and an older brother, who have money. move to ~lve financial help to one "1\o was the p~mpered youngest. but pride and various other items get in the way. There is actually no resolution to the Edisons' pro- blems. Now, this sounds rather dreary, to say the least. but along the way there are laughs galore as the two argue with each other. try to help each 1 SO. COAST 1 CosLJ Meu 546·211 • Cl!EDOME 10 Oranoe 531·3318 .._._ .. oavs ·•2e•t:tt,f'\I "''·•· ,., ... r.u ·•<Jt·l•M·•~• --··•·11 · '"'" ''"' , ..• ~ ' KENRUSSEU'SFILM • . THE DEVll.S Munich. Quartet Splendid ALSO llUllllEY Al.AN ·-W#'na' lri:aA Ki.ME)' I.Nm: S-i<"t suitably concluded tremendous ovation with a from an IN THE GREAT TRADITION! OF AMERICAN THRILLERS. HEPBURN ARKIN -Miss Von Ramm could be -11116 RICHARD said, on the vocal score alone, IJl'I CRE.NllA to be taking the role of an in-WAIT Ulll'IL DARK' ALSO 1ST RUN ® "DEEP END" strument -and it was a level ~, • • that was ma i n fain e dll~=~~~~~~~~~;il ~O liiti:b A?m)nPr!n throughout the evening. i:]=~~~~~=fl Early music, so I on g I neglected, is rapidly coming into ils own and it is a wonderful thin g to see and to know that our younger genera- tions. so solidly represented at this concert, are taking such an interest in the likes of John Dowland, Luzasco Luzzaschi and Antoine de Bertrand. Its cause is in good hands as this magnificent Early Music Quartet so clearl y demonstrated . ALSO PLAYIN• diary otamad hou-wlf• e frank Ptff'Yfllrn 2ACADEMY AWARDSI IOlERT MJai.M "~s Da••ghter" Mo11, tllr11 Fri. l•e. Show ot I p.m. Co11t. Sat. a11d 51111 . From 2 p.111. Winntr of• Atfdtmy -'w•1'41• Held Ovtr • AlSOSHOWUl'GAT • IDWAIDS CINlMAVllJO MISSION VllJO • 130.,9'0 'ii52 W1Ut1l,.lllt' lllM Ot" 111JI' "t uo ..... t .. '"""'" ... ~ .. '"~ ,,,~~ ••• , Jomtt Gomer • 1011 Oou•1t Skill Game ' P111~1tllo1I Yo11t 111 "ZIPPILIN" (GP) " i ' • ' ' " ' ., ., ' ., :• ~ .. ' ' ' . .. " , . , " • • • . . . .. .. . . • Monday's Closing Priees Coinplete New York Stock Exchange List ..,. . ... t!Mh.I Nltll Lft <'-CJll, . ~ ,. . . . DAILY Pilaf JS ......... !tt _, +" _,. Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List .. ,.. ,... lhfl.J Niii! 1.N CIWI CM. Finance Briefs I e SBC fAlll•tdt BOSTON -The Securities and E1chan1e Commlasi6n hu IUed Marrocco Ir Co. and Its president, Ronald Mar· rocco, seekln& an order en- jolnln1 !he company 6'0hi violating federal securitlt!I tra.dln1 laws. The suit charges tht dtftDdanta with IOliciUilg orders when they were in no po1lflon to uecute them because of a Uquidity problem. , ' .. I I ff OAIL Y PILOT Soviets Relaxed On Jews By PHIL NEWSOM lll"I l"N•ltn Ntwl a.n1l~11 lJ\ the first 10 months of· 1971, the ~viel Union permit· ted some 7,SOO Jews to emigrate to Israel, nearly three quarters as many as were allowed to leave in the entire preceding 10 years. That total came to 10,330. The question then is what happened to reverse a policy under which the S o v i e t government frowned on the department of any me!ul citizen? And what compelling force led so many Jews to apply for exit visas . and thus risk &ove rnment anger? ! The answer to the first ques· J tion may lie in the fa ct the 1 Soviet Union is in the midst of a campaign in which it seeks to project to the Western wor!d .a policy of moderation and that it is a question that has been put to Soviet leaders as they bamslorme<'. world capitols. · Outside t h e government level other pressures also have been applied. One has come from the noisy Jewish Defense League as led in the United States by rabbi 1t1air Kahane. Probably more effective than t h e league's harassment of Soviet representatives in the United States was the Brus11el& meeting of some 750 delegates from 27 countries that in- cluded mosl of the prominent national a n d international · organizations in Jewry. This meeting concentrated upon . the Soviet Union pro- bably the heaviest In· lernational criticism of Soviet internal ~Ucy_ iL has ex· perierlceo ~ince the purge trials carried out by Stalin in the 1930s. As to what happened to lead Soviet Jews to risk Kremlin wrath not merely by applying for exit visas but b y demonstrations to insure in-1 ternational publicity for their actions, observers i n s i d e Russia trace it to the 1967 Ara~Israeli War. I The war. these observers' u y, gave Soviet Jews a new l sense of religion and ethnic 1 origin. \ It led to increased at- tendance at synagogues among all levels and even to increased interest in the study of Hebrew despite governi'nent 1 opposition. i The .Soviet Union denies all l charges o f anti-Semitism. although anti-Semitism has a I long history in Russia. It further declares that assimila-' tion is reducing the nmber of Jews in the Soviet Union. The total is uncertain but is believ- ed to be about 2.7 million. Of these, It is said perhaps 3Q0,000 would like to emigrate. A unique bond links Soviet Jewry and Israel. Set.tiers from Russia and neighboring states in Eastern Europe played a huge early role ln the early building of the !it.ate of Israel. Approximately half of the Lop officials in today's Israeli government have l he I rl cultural origins In Russla.1 Until the Soviet Union broke relations with Israel in 1967 • 1 , Russian ambassadors serving in Israel had no difficulty being understood In their na.Uve toJliue. The lowering of Soviet bars1 lo emJgration to Israel ha.sl been carried out over the ob- jecUons of the Arabs who see in it an addition to l&rael's economic: and m 11 t t·a r y •lrenilh· 'Ibis alone has led to the fwtl:wr speculation lhal Soviet pJIMUI are looking ahead to .etUement of the MJdeast con· fUct and to a renewal of rtla- tlonl "Ith Istul. STARS MOlldiJ, NMl'llb« 15, 1971 r . . . . If you're a low tar cigarette smoker, you'll lik~ new Marlboro Lights. • Lighter in taste, low in tar. C I == • • • i .. ~ .. -l • Marlboro Lights, for those smokers who prefer the lighter lute of a low tar and nlcoUn~ cigarette. Made with the same famous quality as lull-Oavored Marlboro Bed, Amerlca'.s fastest-arow11a brand. . ' .MarlbOJo lights: 14 mg: ·111:· u mg. nicotine av. par cigareua by flC mathod " . . i< -• Sydney Omarr Is one of the \votld'• great utrolo-cers. J{ll column 11 one of tM DAILY PILOT'S sreat fet.ltlt'l'!S. , ,~============i!'...~~~~~--------------------------... ·-. .............................................................................. __ I l • . ' •• ' DAILY PILOT Sltff l"hole Dowta Park Avenue The cast of Laguna Beach High School's fall produc· tion of Midsummer Night's Dream added a theatri- cal touch Friday to the school homecoming parade. Later, despite a determined effort. the Artists were on the short end of a 32·12 score in the football game against the Los Amigos I.obos. Schmitz to· 'Leave' Nixon PresUlent Gets New Congressman, With Redistrict By DOUG WILLlS AHMlatt4 l"rft.S Wtllff President Nixon will· haYe a new con- • gressman representing him at his San Clemente voting address if current reap- portionment plans become law. It will probably be a pleasant switch for. the President. Nixon now is represented in Congress by conservative Re~ublican J o h n Schmitz, a John Birch Society member who periodically .condemns the President for liberal leanings, and as the President's congressman Schmitz regµlarly gains national publicity for bis f-f+---•disputes-with-Nixon". ---- But the Western White House at San Clemente -Nixon's legal address for voting -is in the heart of California's fa stest-growing area. The Schmitz district must be di vided in two . and the latest plan before the state legislature puts San Clemente in one of California's five congressional districts. It would be the only one of the new district& being drawn by the Democrats Jn charge of the California legislature which would be a sure GOP seat, and members of both parties concede the lines are being drawn to favof State Sen. Clair W. Burgener of San Diego. If the plan is successful, Nixon would get a congressman cut from his own political mold -and with a litUe glamour._ Burgener -a Morman born 49 years ;:i ~-,., Tlt:>h -ic; a n'llilica\ moderate and 11 veteran of two wars. He was a navigator on one of the planes in the squadron which dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima during World War ll, and he served as a navigator again in Korea. He traces his church ties to bis-great grandfather, who Burgener says came to the Salt -Lake Valley in 1847 with Brigham Young's original company. Burgener, a realtor by profession, Is also an amateur actor of some note in his home community. Active in local and state politics for 18 AtJorney Heads Scout Campaign South Lag'una attorney Milo Marchetti has been named chairman of a fund drive for the south county Boy Scout council. Officials say the El Camino Real ~District of the Or<!nge Empire Council hopes.to raise $13,0IXl by urging residents to berome council members. Although the bu!~ of the scouting program's fun- ding comes from United Fund proceeds, Marchetti noted that the funds have been unable to match the growth scouting has experienced in rectnt years. He said that some 1,200 boys are members of scout troops in the south county district. years. Burgener has built a conservative record in fiscal matters, but he has been a leader in innovative legislatiol\ in welfare and education, particularly for handicapped children. Burgener stops short of announcing bis candidacy for the proposed new con· gressional seat -but just barely. The soft-spoken lawmaker does say he is "very interested" in going to Congress and adds that he is "quite pleased' with the proposed district llnes now before the legislature for adoption. But Burgener says he wil~make no an- notlncement until the ctlngr.slional "Plan is signed into law -probably this week or next week •. However, he appean: to have little to worry about in possible changes in the new district's boundaries. The reapportionment plan drafted by Assembly Democratic leaders, and back· ed by most of the :s:t.ate's congressional delegation, includes virtually all of Burgener's present Senate district - where he won by a 5-2 margin last year -in the new congressional district. . Senate Democrats have a somewhat different statewide plan for congressional reapportonme.nt, but it does not change the proposed district lines in Orange and San Diego counties. The oilty other congressional plan around -one drafted by Republicans - is also custom tailored to Burgener'• desires. • ' Monday, N0ytmbtf 15, 1971 s D.lll Y PILOT lf Heart Warning ·Sought ' . Most Attacks Start Early, l)octor S~ys Doctors now know that many ol the people who die from.' heart attacks ac- tually began to experience the attack as much is a week before the final spasm that ended their lives. But what they don't kr)ow, they a\s.. milted at an American Heart Assoclalion- session in Anaheim, is why the vast ma- jority 'Of those victims weren't aware of their condition in the hours and days that preceded the final cardiac oruilaught. A team of researchers in Albany, N.Y., carried out autopsies on 183 heart attack vlcUms over a five-year period Md discovfred that very few of the victims -they all died outside a hospital -had any Pt"emonition of death. Only six of the victims bad seen 1 doc~ tor within three weeks of ·their death. And of 101 men who died~ 34 were at work. 18'' were at the wheel 'of a car, 35 died at home and one diet. at a Christmas party. Very few of the 183 vicf.iIM had any previous medical history-of coronary disease yet all of them died from cardiac causes, the research team concluded. And they found that 62 of the Victims had old or healing myocardial infarcts (scars from fonner heart attacks) in addition to ·the fatal attack. Dr. R. Foster Scott, professor of pathology at Albany Medical College, says the baffling study adds up to just one thing -the vital need for further studies to determine the apparent absence of warning signs and public educatiOn on tieart irregularities that * * * Addict's Needle l\lay Carry Fatal Heart Bacteria It's long been known that heroin ad· diets often contract hepatitis from the dirty hypodermic needles they frequently use but recent research has proved that they are also highly vulnerable: to heart disease from the same 10urce. Dr. Taxwell Banks told an American Heart Association meeting in1 Anaheim Friday that he and fellow researchers at the pistrict of Columbia Hospital in the nation's capital spotted 51 cases of bacterial endocarditis - a heart infection with a high mortality rate -in a recent survey of 1.070 addicts in the area. Eleven of them died, he said. And the heart specialist predicted a ri!ing rate of death among the nation's heroin addicts ~rom the same~eause.s if steps are not ~ken immediately to reverse the ,trend. Dr. Banks raised a few eyebrows at his medical con!erence by dropping Into his talk the statistic that there are 20,000 heroin addicts in the Washington, D.C. area alone. Banks said Ure patients surveyed all contracted bacterial endocarditi1, an in- fection of the inner lining of the heart, b e c a u s e unsterilized, contaminated nee~es were used in their injections. Suell germs often cause hepatitis but they also wtlcome the chance to nest in the heart valves, he said. Immediate treatment, he said, involved the massive use: ()f antibiotics to combat the .infection. But four of the 51 patients examined later had to undergo open heart surgery for replacement of valves that had been damaged beyond repair by the ravages "' the: infection, may be going Ignored by the potenUal victim. He believes the yillain of the piece to be a;rt'l-:f:i• -the wild, ineffectual fluttering of the heart th8t was found tO be I.he cause of death in most of the 183 cases surveyed. Did those· victims dismiss those signs as just a bout of palpitation? Did they ig· nore the wild skipping or beats. for days and possibly weeks before the flna1 crushing pain tpld them -too late - that the heart had had enough?. We do .know that two th1rda of the m.lle vicUms and one half of the-dead women were overweight, said Dr. Scott. Thi average age of the 101 men wu 55, tbat af the women, 59. But that isn't enough, he a&id. Th• body, in the cases mrveyed, ju.st wasn't flashing its traditional red light to th• brain and. if lt was the meqage wasn't strong and clear enough. Why? "Let's find out," Dr. SCOtt uJd. * * * * * * Hea~t Specialists Study Effects of Ae1·osol Sprari Next time you spray your hair, lady, it might be just as·well to do it out on the front lawn and not in the confined space of your bathroom or bedroom. Aerosols -of any kind -are suspect. At the very least, they can inflict devastating heart damage and doctors haven't even begun to investigate what they believe the propellants do to other areas of the body. Specialists discussing aerosols at the American Heart Association convention here worked on the basis of studies made of the deaths of 140 teenagers in the last two years.· All the youngsters died seeklng "kicks" from common or garden household 11e.rosols, ingested via plastic bags or toilet tissues. The causes of death may have been multiple but specialists con. cerned only wjth the cardiac impact of the suffocation agreed that massive heart damage was an invariable result. All the youngsters, said Dr. Willard H'arris of the University of Illinois College of Medicine -one of six specialists discussing aerosols -were of middle class or affluent background and some were the children of physicians. Their deaths have led doctors to look at an indUSiry that sells two and one half billion ca:ns of aerosols of all kinds every year in the United States. And the sis who discussed the impact of those fatalities agreed that an in depth survey could do a lot of harm to a flourishing in- dustry. Aerosols may have made hairdressing a high risk occupation, Dr. Harris said. "But until we know more about the full effects of these propellant gases anyone using sprays -particularly women who use them for their hair and In the home -should take es:treme care," be said. "We've always believed them to be harmless," he said. "But when we aaw what they did to those 140 youngsters we had some second thoughts that should 1 become third thoughts as quickly as possible." * * * Facial Defect.s Result of Rare Heart Ailment? Facial deformities in children can often mean the presence of heart disease, two Canadian scientists revealed Friday at a special session o( the American Heart County Rejects Three Arch Bay 'b Association. A resident of the exclusive Three Arch !ay area In South Laguna lost an appeal which would have allowed him to add a second story to his home. Arrayed 11gainSt, Irwin Kee:, .21 N. Encino, Wedneaday were hit neighbor& and a decision of County Zoning Com· missioner Ray Reed. K~ argued that his home was below street level and addition of the sec<ind story would not obstruct the view of any of his neighbors. Representing the Th re e Arch Bay Association was attorney James Ralston Smjth, backed by 25 residents ()f the area. He stated that Kee bad not shown hardship as he stated. - James O'Connor of 31 S, Encino, a member of the architectutal committee of the ti1ss0eiation, said Kee's variance would allow him to build 11 feet bJgher than the limjt prescribed by the asscicia· tion. Supervisors voted 4-1 to deny Kee'• appeal. Drs. Nigen K. Roberts and C,A,F, Moes of the Hospital :.>r Sick Children in Toronto told fellow scientist's that 13 pa· tienta in which facial defects were ap. pai:_ent .. were found on examination "to have a rare form of inborn heart defect. All 13 patients ranged in age from two weeks to eight years at the time that Mc;ies and Roberts carried .out their U• aminations. , Defects noled by the scientists included elongated upper lips, low set ears, an 111>- nonnally wide spece: between the eyes (hypertelorism), a smalr, receding jaw and a flattened nasal bridge. Three of the children were found to be mentally retarded. Nine were physically . underdevtloped. ~ At the root of the deformities, botb scientists said, was a rare form of heart disease-known to the profession as supravalvular pulmonary stenosis. The name deCines a narrowing of the pulmonary artery Just above the valve that regulates the flow of blood from the right side of the heart to the lungs:. El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Braising Ribs .......... 59fb Lots of beef-y goodness in these! Serve with noodle& for main cOUrS:e! London . Broil~ ........... $1~? U.S.D.A. Choice beef •• •'° easy•to prepare ••• _and so easy to enjoy I Prime Rib Bones , ......... , .......... ., ...... , .. . . .. 59~ There's more goodness than meets the eye, here ••• let us gbow you I Fresh Beef Tongue ...................... ., .. .. .. .. 69~ When you're looking for the difference, look for freshness at El Rancho I ... I' ~ Texas' Finest! Thin skinned to give you more of, what you're looking for underneath! ••• 11weet juicy meat to offer you more flavor. Add to these, El Rancho'• price and the sum total i• greater value ••• and isn't that what you're reallY. looking !or? •.• If it iJ, ~ou'll be glad ! Onion Soup Mix ...... 10' Makes a great soup •. make11 a delicious dfp, tool WyJer'11 •• 2 oz. package I Brownie Mix .......... 4 9' Bake & batch off~dge brownie• •• and watch 'em gol Betty Crocker •• 28 oz. Downyflake Waffles . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. 4 ~1 ' Packages ot 12 . , • ready to heaf and serve for a satisfying breakfutl Chocolate Chip Cookie$ .. ., ..................... , .. 45• Pillsbury's ••• 11lice and bake convenience! 9"4 oz •••• in our delicattssen_,,r Prices in effect JIJ011., Tuea., Wed., Nov.1$1 16,11. No salea to dealera. ARCADIA: s,.,,"1 an11 H11n1.,,,:" :1. ~'11,1,,1 PASADENA : :::1 1,'r. SOUTH PASADENA: nii~· HUNTINGTON BEACH : :w1r. NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Newport Bt•d an~ El Rancho Centeri .. .,JO We ,t fqlo1ado Blvd .. frernont ~nil Hunt111gtou 01 W,1rner anil Algo11~111n Rnardwalk Crntrr, ·· 2))5 Eastbl11fl Dr (fasthluff Village Center' ' ' • ' , J f DAILY PILO' MondV. Ntw111blt lS. 1971 \ \ I ps • Then· Reward In Hereafter? By THOMAS MURPBINE Of .. OellJ' f'll.t Sttlf DRAFT REBUTrAL DEPT. -Comes now E. Grayson Sw1iles of FuUerton who suggests that this space waa recently un- fair to the Selective Serv~ System and the Santa Ana di1!ting office in particular. He suggests that my commentary on reporil that the Santa Ana draft people are ofteo Jess than gentle and un- dentind:J.ng ln dealing with draftees wu an "astonishing tirade." "1be charges are not worthy of detail- ed oomment but tlµs correspondent would fftl remiss in failing to rebut the ridiculous and obvklus effort to further appeue thou who are proltsling the Vietnam War," Mr. Swailes writes. HE ADDS. "I have been associated with Selective Service problema over a period of some 21 ytan. A:J one at- tempting to oblaln ddermenta for two different employers -some would con- sider the role as that of 1n oWonent. Actually, I came to scoff and remained to applaud General Lewis B. Hershey and bis people. "Did you actually visit Santa Ana or another local board? Did you ever listen to abuse directed toward those bthind the counter? 'Ibousands of draft b o a r d members have served for many years without compensaUon. lbeir reward? Undue and tbougbtleu criticism for a }ob that had to be done. Female aupervisors and clerks during the past yean were poorly paid -but remained loyal to General Hershey and state directors .. . " Red Cliina -'May Release 'Yank Spy' I HONG KONG (UPI) -An American serving a Ufe tenn in a Communist Chintse prison u a spy may be rtltased soon, his ipother said today. Mrs. Mary Downey, 70, a former school teacher from New Britain, Conn., made the statement after a series of visits wilb her aon. John, ln his Peking prison. Dchmey and 1mlher Amer le an, Richard C. Fecteau of Lynn, Mass., both civilian employes of the Army. disap- peared on a "regularly scheduled flight from Korea to Japan on Nov. 29, 1952," according to tbe U.S. State Department. Both men were captured by the Chinese and sentenced as . spies by a military tribunal in 1954. Downey was sentenced to We ln prison and Fecteau was sentenced to..20 yeara. Mrs. Downey, who first visited her son a dozen years ago, was accompanied on the recent trip by another son, William, and hia wife. During their two week stay, ahe: said, they visited Downey eight times and were allowed to atay two hours each Ume. "At the: end of our vl!lt Jack told us that he hid been Wonned by the pr'ison authorities hla case wu being reviewed to dtterm.ine what their policy of leniency . might be -he might be rt.leased rather than serve out his 1entence. "'Mle prilon officla.ts told Jack that an Important factor in deciding lo apply '"" Diency was the prisoner's behavior while in prison and that they consider that bis behavior had been good," she said. .. J am bopina: with all my heart that my prayers for Jack'• release will soon be answered,'' abe said. Mn. Downey said she also saw Fecteau but did not know U bis caae al!o might be up for ?'!View. Downey and Fecteau were accused of being agents for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and members of a team supplying spies in Chtna'1 Kirin Province DW' the Korean Border. They were captured when their C47 aircraft wu allegedly ahot down while the two v.·ere picking up a Chinese agent. Downey's brother uld Downey and Fecteau see each other eccasionally "bill not regularly." The Chi.ne5e also are believed to be holding al least two other Americans. One is Air Force Capt. Philip Smith, who Ul'IT ......... BRITISH SOLDIER STANDS GUARD IN LOYALIST BELFAST AREA In Action Today, Armored Car Rims IRA Str11t Barric1d1 British Ar1nored Car Rams Ireland Barrier BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - British soldiers drove an armored ear over a barricade erected by a crowd of mostly women in the city's Roman Catholic New Lodge Road area today and dispersed them with rubber bullet!. In Londonderry, troops arrested one man and seized four guns and some am· munition when the army made a rare foray into the Roman Catholic Bogside area during the night. Three other men escaped, an army spokesman said. stopped when it saw an army roadblock. .. They were most surprised to see us," he said. He said three men ran from the vehi· cle. One was felled by a rubber bullet but managed to get up and escape with the others. The driver was arrerled in the car where soldiers found one machine · gun, a sten gun and two ~11 carbines, ammunition, fuse wire and detonators, the spokesman said. ------ 7 Lq1e Uvei .3\u.s. Co·pters • -c~ash Ill Viet SAIGON (tlPI) -Th ~ee U.S. bellalptm crashod near Saiaon today, killing seven men '1KI lnJurlnl five. Four of the dead and aD ar the injured were American. Two UHI Huey "1llck1 " oolllded near the Cambodian bor'fk:r about eo mUes northwe!il of S&Jion aft.er they had taken some South Vietnamtse troops into the ileld. Foor Gu 1(1 one of the choppers were killed and four aboard the Cltber one and a U.S. crewman wu injured. Another UH! Huey crashed because or mechankal problems in Hau Nghia p~ vince 21 miles west of Saigon. Three SQutb Vietnamese passengers were killed and a U.S. crewman was injured. Military' spokesman reported renewed hea vy fighting in the Central highlands and the northern provlnces of. South Viet· nam today and in cambodla Communist gunners shut Phnom Penh's airport for ti hours. In "the central highlands, South Viet· namese troops backed by American helicopter gunships reported killing 18.1 ~errillas in related battles a mile apart Saturday as they repelled the first bat· tallon·sized assault in the area sin~ last spring. The fighting started 28 mil es west· southwest of Pleiku City and iR the vicini· ty of the old Due Co special forces camp. 'The guerrillas first hit a small outpost but were driven ba ck with losses of 20 men killed. An hour later they launched i' massive barrage of mortar and recoilles!I rifle fire foll o.,,·ed by a battalion-sized ground assault against a Soviet Viet· namese basecamp a mile away . American gunships called in lo support the South Vietnamese troops helped dri\'e back the attackers with a loss of 163 dead. ThE: attack on the base 225 miles north of Saigon was the heaviest of 19 C:Om· munist assaults in the 24 hours ending Sunday morning. spokesmen said. It was the heaviest on~ay total of "enemy-in· itiated incidents'' in three weeks, they said. South Vietnamese defenders suffered 29 dead and 32 wowlded in the attack, the most government losses in a single battle in at least six weeks, spokesmen said . They said the Communists started the battle with a barrage of mQ.rtar and rec1lilless riOe shells, then latmehed a ground attack. U.S. helicopters were on the scene within an hour, hitting tbe communists with rockets 1anc1 machine guns. ln 5algon, President Nguyen Van Thieu said today the South Vietn•mese economy face~ disaster. Speaking Ul a joint session of the Se.oate and House of Delegates, Thieu proposed a series or major economic reforms, including a free market for t h e Vietnamese piastre. sweeping tax and tariff reforms and a major pay increase for soldiers and clvi.1 servants. In neighboring Cambodia, four rocket!! fell on and near Phnom Pe.nh Airport eight miles from the city center Sunday and today. All flights l• and out ol the iirport were stopped for nearly 18 hours. ' Two of the shells landed on the runway area while the other two fell nearby, wounding two persons. The Cambodian high command also reported fighting about five miles from the airport. They said it centered around two pagodas and a small rallway station. Weekend field reports said that 16 Cam· bod~s -including two officers -were killed in the same area. * * * Planes Sight Red Buildups At 3 Spots SAIGON (UPI ) -North Vietnam has been spotted massing enormous amounts of supplies nea r three mountain passes at the head of the Ho Chi Minh ·rrail for shipment to the southern war fronts in 'south Vietnam and Cambodia, U.S. sources said toda y. The sources said that for this time of year the stockpiles, seen by _feC9n· na.issance planes:-amount to a record ton· nage of materials -including weapons, ammunition, gasoline and food -to sup- port war operations on the southern front. They said the trail shipping season has not wully ope~ yet, and a major bomb- ing campaign acrompanied by So u th Vietnamese commando strikes are plan- ned to combat the movement. Well, to answer Mr. Swall~ quesUons, yes, l have visited the Santa Ana draft board and I plan to re-visit it. And aecoodly, no, l haven't wttneaecl abuse to those behind the countu but I'm """' It bas OC<llll'ed. And fmally, .. to the ..wml to the loyal aupporl<n of General Hershey, l guesa J'll just leave that to heaven. * UPTOWN: Los Angeles Mayor 5am Yorty has ju!! announced that be11 bold a press conference tomorrow to announce whether or not he'll run for President of the United Stata. Anyone want to lay any bets? · was captured in 1965 when bis plan was shot down over Hainan Island. The other is Navy Ll Robert J. Flynn, who was wu captured in 1965 when bit plane was down over SOutb. Chlna'1 Kwangsi Pro. Ince. Rogers Reveals U.S.-lsraeli Basic Conflicts The Defense Ministry .in London ordered a top sectiM.ty alert at bases through Britain because of the danger the outlawed Irish Republican Army (IRA) may attempt to infiltrate them 19 steal weapons for its diminishing arsenal. Some soldiers' leaves were canceled. Security also was lightened in Belfast today where former British Prime Minister Harold Wilson was arriving for talks with Premier Brian Faulkner and opposition leaders. Peking Faction Repo11ed Seeking Russian Rapport . In addition, there was speculation the United States might launch one or more massive airstrike..s against the stockpiles_ under the guise of "protective reaction'' against N o rt h Vietna mese antiaircrc.ft positions shooting at American reeon· naissance planes. Such strikes have been undertaken frequently in the three years since the Nov. t , 1968 bombing halt. The sources said one reason for the size of the stocks accumulated may be that the trail has beel'I blocked two weeks to a month longer this year than it was last year by the worst rains ever to !aU iD Laos since the war begin. * ·Vice Pnsident Spiro Agnew will be th• mu on the s p o t ln LA tomorrow - maybe about the time Yorty is an- nouncing. Agnew will be discussing Nixon Admlnlstration wage-price policies before the International FooocfService ?.1anufac· turen Asaoclation at the Century Plua Hotel. * REP. JORN G. SCllMITZ (R-Newporl Beach) has been ?'!ported u saying that the proposed new federal building for downtown Santa Ana looks like a cinch. By Unlt.ed Pren laternatlonal Iarael'a amba1111dor to the United States said today Secretary of State Wllllam P. Rogers brought difference!! between the two nations into the open by denyin1 that the Arabs now hold a military advantage over the lsraelia. · Rogers, in a copyrighted interview with U.S. News and World Report, said the re- cent Soviet-Egyptian anns agrttment has not altered the military balance. in the Middle East to favor the Arabs. The army said a crowd or aoout 150, most of them women, gathered in darkened north Qt.ieen Street in the New Lodge Road area to protest an army search early llunday which resulted in a number of arrests. They threw stones, shouted "British murderers!" and other slogans and banged garbage can lids. The crowd broke into a n e a r b y warehouse and gathered boxes and wood for their barricade. Moments later an armored car flattened it. From slits in the vehicle 's rear, itroopers fired rubber bullets at the cro\1ld, dispersing them. The spokesman said a car with four men sped around a corner at the edge or Londonderry's Bogslde area and suddenly LONDON (UPll -A small but determined group with a foothold in the C:Ommunist l>arty and army of f\fainland China is seeking reconciliation betv;een Peking and Moscow, diplomatic sources reported today. Secrecy surrounds the key persooalitf'85 involved. but the sources said some were entrenched in high places in Peking. The ruling regime is perturbed about th~ activities and pressures considered to be rutright opposition to the line 6Dd rule of Mao Tse-tung, the reports said. The Kremlin on the other ha.Jtd was said to be intrigued by I a t e s t developments which' have boosted hopes for a policy switch of Maialaod China toward tbe Soviet Union. In fact, Santa Ana city officials are preparing to help 14 famil ies move aff of the site where the $12.5 million, nine-- story edifice will rise upon the County Seat's skyline. They reportedly want the folks out of there in 90 days so that the dirt can start flying, even though no fum date has been set for the shovel-turning e:w:ereises. "Up to now , the m.illtary balance has not shifted," said Rogers, in the: first on the record top administration assessment of the Pi-fiddle East balance of power. Fires ht 6 Cities Oaim Corona del Mar architect Bill Blurock h working up the: plans which are u- pected to be ready to 10 ln about two "·ee.lu. "\Ve do not accept this evaluation - not from the milltary or political stand- po int," Ambassador Yitl.hak Rabin told newsmen today before boarding a plane in Tel Aviv for the United States. '·There la no need talking aboul a crisis between J&rael and the United States because, by maklnc the American evaluation public, the differenct.s af opinion become clear." 24; Many of Tl1em Youths rm sure Bill will do a good job. Thtn, folks, we'll have another monument to federa1 urban renewal in downtown Santa An•. The.rt couldn't be a better 1pot for it. In Egypt, mea nwhile, Prime Minister P.fahmwd Fawzi said the Middle E11t it: beaded for a new war. By United Press International Fires struck homes and apartment buildings 1n ~si.J: cities Suocay, claiming the lives of at Jeast 24 persons, many of U.S. Rains Fizzling Out Icy Col.d Grips East; Midwest Mil.d; Rain fushed Aivay C'allfomla ~u, t \ll!l!Y ••ttl\tr llrlYllltd faftY In :SOUl'll«ll Ct!l~1t 11'1111 911tlY Wll'ldl 1wftll fllt Liii .t.11"111 8t1•n c!t1r of ""°" tnd rt/11 cloud•, A wtrmlllf trtl'lll, -1111., I~ "'- eotll. -• l'IOW lor lflol Ht!IOllll Wttll'>tr 5-rYkt . ~11t WI'* iv!t1tM ... bffltl ....... lflol Cl ......... 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Tht -1"111"11 ltw Wit lt '" "'""°"'' II N--1 t lld St. J 9h11.aurv, wl'lllt lf\f ~Ill'! II/Mir Wit " t i COl9vt c~. Iii t.rthir1111 w11 ina.11y _,.., toot• wift'I •11t1., w111o11 1w~l1'1' ltlll '~ " "'* ""' fl 111 c.lwft. • Temperatures T.,,,,,.,ll~re' tnd l)rK!pltttloit fror '"' 74-lw:M" "'IOd tlld!ll9 ,, ' • .,,,. Albu""''""·"" And'lor1 .. llktrtlltkt ... •-v1111 lklrl•IO OtlttM Cl11Cl11Nfl Clf'Yf'llnll 011111 ..,_ 0t1 Mf!MI Dttrelt Ft .. ,_ .... M -'"*--''" ll.f'ilu1 (!ty' L11 V"tt -· ·-Ml"*'M" Ml-... lt Nt w Otle- Nrw Yllf'll 0t.11f'lotr\1 C1'y o ... •l>f Pti.o llotllt't Pl-!l1CletPl'llfl P0t111nd, Or•. lh p>ll City ··~ Ritl'lmOl'ld !l(t11¥'1MIO II. Loult Stlt Lt~f Cl!¥' 1111 °"'° S111 '•11'1Clteo SIOok1,. Vt -Vltf WttrlllltlOll ffltll L ... Ir'# • • .. .. • • " • • u " " " " .. • " • " .. • .. " • " " .. .. • » .. " ~ " .. .. " .. " • .. , . ., " ~ " " " " • ,. " " " " .. " a " " .. .. • .. " • ... " .. " • .. " ., " " .. .. .. .. .. .., lhem clllldren. ' Flames ravagea a six-room frame house in Guntown, ~IW., killing a mother and six of her children. The bodies of Mrs. Martha Lee Wardlow, 31, and her children, I-month-old Robert, Johnny, I, Ella 1.1af, B, Ollie, 6, Sara May, 4 and Sara Lee 3, were found in the rubble of the house. Mrs. Wardlow'.r husband, Willie, U, was not at home when lbe fin broke out. In Hampton, Va., four persons died v:hen flames engulfed their 1ptit·level home. The dead \\-'ere identified as Paul R. :r.foore Sr., bis wife, Ammie Bell, 47, a son, Carolton, 26, and a daughter, Joy Lee, 16. Los Angeles Fire Dtpartment ln- vestigalor1 v•ere investigating t b e- posslbllity of arson in a firt that gutted a home for the handicapped Sunday, killing two men and a woman. Story Page 11. Al least thret per10ns wtre killed In Portland, Maine, when names ripped throu,gh a three-story brick apartment building. Eight other peraons who Jived in the bulldlng, Including one man who jumped lrom a third floor window, were treated for burns and 5moke inhalation. Eugene E. CUshi ng , 54. Police said the search for Kenneth TutUe. 24, f epOrted missing in the rubble, would resume to- day. Three ehlldrt:n perished In a flrt: at thelr home In St. Paul, 1'1inn, Firemen found Loran Underwood, 5, and his brothers, Robert, 4, and Otan, 2, ln a Ur cond floor bedroom. The victims were: the chl1drf:n of Mr1 . Shlrle1 Underwood. These activities have raised hopes among Russians that once Mao i.s dead a more conciliatory line toward Russia gradually will emerge from the suc· ceeding 1'egime, the sources said. The reports said the most recent troubles ln China, ·which have not been officially explained, have been partly caused by differences over policy to.ward Russia as well as toward! the United states. Unconfirmed reports mentioned in this context Pl-1ao's successor designate, Marshal Lin Piao, now said to be di.sgrac· ed or even dead. Ousted President Llu Shao-ehi w a s a known supporter of a more conciliatory line toward Moscow. fa\•oring clo5er political t I es, but above all clo s er economic cooperation for the sake of faster development of China's industry with Russian h e I p and of supplies of Soviet weapons to the army, starved of modern arms. None apparently favors and ideological realignment \lo'ith Moscow on which divisKiM seem too deep to allow for a aetUement in the foreseeable future. But the reported pr:essure 6f'OUP want.a a change af attitude toward Russia on the political level, the rports 3'id. Royal Matchup? Kidney Failure Kills Reci1Jient Of Heart Device DETROIT (AP) -Haskell Shanks. the world's longest living recipient of a Jt!rtial mechanical heart, has died of a kidney failure. Doctors said his artific ial heart was functioning normally at his death. The Warren, Mich., man Jived \Yit h the mechanical device three months and three days. Death came Sunday at Dctroi t"s Sinai Hospital, where he was admitted Oct. 4 for a ehe. ·t infection wh.ich doctors believ- ed was brought on by his weak condition at the time of the heart operation Aug. 11. While the chest infection v.•as cured with antibiotics, doctors said, his kidneys weakened. -... - A ~randdaughter of Generalissimo Francisoo Franco is to marry a descendant or Spain's last ruling king, accord!ng to newspaper reports. 'the paper Slf• the engagement between Prince Alfonso-Jaime Bour-- bnn Y Damp1erre and Marla Del Carmen Mlll'tinel·Borcliu 20 waa announced in Pari.s. ' 1 I Twisted Wreck Norfolk ;nd Western rill crews labored all day Sunday .~ an. ef!ort to remove 34 iron ore-laden 1rain cars which derailed in the middle of Obetz, Ohio. The wreck stacked the cars more than 30 !eel high and tore up 500 !eel of tr~ck. • Malleu -Fights Hughes, Yet Frets About Howard J oins Sup erpowers I Mai 4land China . I • • Tak' s . U.N ~ S e ~t .. • DAILY PILOT 6 Supersecret . Paper €ite d In Shakeup NEW YORK IUPll -N<WF'1k Magallne •a y 1 th;;t President Nixon'• shakeup of the intelligence communitJ UNITED NATIONS ,(U i) -Com· and the Netherlands for Western Europe, w at bot a "mild beaucratic rtbuke .. munist China clai:med · I~ 1 stat tn the which included the United States. and the true measure of his displeasure United Nations today, for~y taking its was contained in a aupersecret "decision 1 I . h Costa Rica was speaking for Latin p ace alongside the ~viet ion and t e memorandum." U ·1ed St t d p' t t · America and Upper Volta for Africa. n1 a es as o m a 1 c "His major co. mplaints are fauJty iJ!. superpower ' Individual nations which asked to ad· T NC c· • . e ise t telligence, rua-away bud g. ts and a The lirst item on the Ge · al Assembly dress the assembly included Albania, I . t y agenda . after China's e tr.an<:e was France, Chile, Burundi and Zambia. i di!parity between a .glut of facts and debateonaproposal by SoViets,Pe-Chinawould havethelastspottothank Gets 20 Troopers · •poverty of ano..tysi.s,'' the weekly king's ·ideological enemy.I or a world · the assembly. 1 magazine reported Sunday. disarmament conference. scussions on Chiao and Huang Hua, ·/Communist The President recently gave CIA Direc- the issue were lo begin toda . China's forfner ambassadoru to eanada, \VJLMINGTON, N.C. (UPll -More tor Richard Helms authority over all in- The seating of the Chinel came three met. for 50 miniites Sunday with than 20 state troopers moved into this telligence agencies and Henry Kissinger weeks to the day after legates ap-Secretary General Thant in Thant's 11th racially-t roubled city today to help police power lo evaluate intelligence reports. proved an Albanian resolu ' n admitting Door room at Le Roy Hospital in Manhat-Newsweek said "outwardly, these the People's Republic aQCl ti, ing out the tan. Thant is recuperaHng from a enforce a state of emergency. -m8J)euvers might appear to be a mild Taiwan-based Nationalist Ct.lnese. blee<ling pepti!! ulcer and may leave the The force was dispatched by Gov. Bob bureaucratic rebuke to the intelligence China's seat was claime(if.by Deputy hospital today or Tuesday. Scott Sunday nJght after sheriff's community.'' However, "their real punch Foreign Minister C,hiao K~~u , a tall, Huang will be the permanent delegate deputies broke up 8 Rights of White ,Peo-was delivered in a aupersecret preside& imposing figure with an lm essive list of at the United Nations and will represent ' tial 'decision memorandum.•" d I ed ls H L.·11 pie rally held just outside the city limits _ ip orrtatic er entia . e !"1 occupy China on the vital Security Council . According to the article, Nixon singled the same chair held by Nati~alist China, Meanwhile. about 500 demonstrators in defiance of a ban on public gatherings. out intelligence failures in the memoran- between Chile and Colombia.\ galhered outside the delegation's tern-The rally by the militant white group , cum including: The delegation led by Ch~~ was being porary headquarters at the Hotel its second in as many nights, resulted in -Failure to predict the extent oJ North rormally greeted by General Assembly Roosevelt Sunday, protesting ,tHe ex-misdemeanor charges against S3 whites Vietnamese resistance in ·the! LaoUan President Adam Malik of Indonesia. pu\sion o( Taiwan and the admission of and lwo charges of resisting arrest. campaign early this year. Malik then was opening the1,ession to a Peking. All those charged were white adult -Misinformation leading to the com- series or welcoming speechei. One young Chinese - a student at Pace males, although a newsman at the mando raid on the Son Tay prisoner of Tze dele~ate from Kuwa~ welcomed College on the edge nf New York's gathering attended by more than 100 war camp lhat turned out to be mipty. the group on behalf of the Asian con-Chinatown -was arrested on a charge of persons of all ages said officers also Incorrect estimates of Viet Cong sup- LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - One year ago this week, Robert A. Maheu was the $500,000-a-year boss of a $300- million Nevada empire owned by Howard Hughes. tingent; Czechoslovakia was the burning a srriall Communist Ohinese flag removed at least one woman and 1everai plies flowing through the Cambodian port the Los Angeles Times Wd io- 1 _______ ..;•;:;po.;.k::es::m;;;:•::n..:fo::rc..::th::e..:E::a::s::t.:E::•:::'l>~pe::a::n.:..:;b::lo::c•~.:d::u:;ri::•S~th:::e;.:3:;%.:..:;ho::;u::r~p::ro:::l::;e::st::.. _____ _:<;:hi:::.l:.dr:;en::::.· ___________ _:::of;_Sihanoukvlll:::·:::::::'.~:!:e::.· _______ _ day. Robert Maheu today is a picture of contrasts. A goui'met on a diet, and in- fluential businessman looking for a business. and, above all, a bitter en,liiny or the Hughes Tool Co. while a proclaimed concerned friend of Howard Hughes. Maheu lost his job with Hughes one yea r ago in a manner he describes a s "som~th.ing out of a western movie script." He countered with a $50 million lawsuit that is pending in court here. · Living in a more modest house than the man sion Hughes built for h.im, Maheu today says he is more con- vinced than ever that Hughes' departure from Las Vegas, reportedly for the Bahamas, _may not have .been entirely on hls own accord. "I am more concem·ed about his mode of departure." Maheu said. "I don't know where he Is now. I do know that the Bahamas· are not the logical place for him, to be. There is a lot of unrest there, there could be a revolution while we talk. "Physically he is a very sick man ," Maheu said. A (ederal grand jury in Miami has been told that Hughes, bearded and with grotesquely long fingernails, was the object of a plot to free him from a Nassau hotel if he was being held against his will, The jury was told of the alleged plot by Peter Maheu, father <if Robert A. Maheu, the Times said. The newspaper said many of the allegations made b y Maheu were denied by a Hughes spokesman. The newspaper said Maheu told the jury: -At the time of the plot last December, Hughes was a &. foot tall man weighing only 94 pounds, with a beard to his chest, hair to the middle of his back and fingernails and toenails from six to eight in- ches long. -The plans to spirit Hughes away from the Britannia Beach Hotel in Nassau never came off because Maheu's in- vestigators fpund no evidence that Hughes was ever at the hotel, to which he reportedly moved from Las Vegas, ~ev., last Thanksgiving. k""slr-foot:IDn~ - high mahogany box leaking 1 liquid was seen by Maheu's in- vestigators in a hallway of the Hughes penthouse. James Whitten. an attorney for the criminal division of the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., a 1 k e d Maheu if he felt the box could have contained a body plactd on ice, the Times reported . It said Maheu replied : "It could have been anything." The grand jury is probing whether the M a h e u in- v estigators illegally transported listening devices from Miami to t.he Bahamas. New Contract Signed; Miners R emain Out CHARLESTON. W. Va . crease provisions were out of (AP) -Thousands of miners line with the federal Pay refused to enter the pits today Board's guideline! of pay despite union and manage-boosts of 5.5 percent, but said ment agreement on a three-he is optimistic , the miners year contract designed to end will get what the contract the longest coal strike since calls for. 1949. Moore said he personally Spot checks at major mines will seek approval by the Pay tn West Virginia and the soft Board . coal district of western Joseph E. Moody, president Pennsylvania showed no mines of the industry association, operating. said the pact would increase Reports on how man y operators' labor costs by 39 miners, if any. were returning percent. to work in the 18 other states UMW President W. A. affected by the long walkout 4'Tony" Boyle pegged the in- were not immediately crease at 30 percent. He available. described the pay increase •'S -Miners wflo remained off the noninflationary and s a id job said they would not miners are "entitled to these resume work 'until they hear catch-up provisions." details of tbe pact signed by The pay provision, Moore negotiators (or the United said, calls for an increase of Mine Workel'.S and the $13 8 day, to SSO, for Bituminous Coal Operators mechanics. electricians and Association in New York early heavy equipment operators Sunday. over the life of ' the contract. The industry says the pact Other miners would go to $46 will boost production costs $1.2 a day, a $9 daily increase. billion a year. He said the pact calls for "One mOre day ain't going immediate raise& fan fl n I to kill us now that we've been -='='°=m=l3=to='5=•=d=a='y=. ===.I off 44 days," Bill Marlin, ,. president of UMW Local 6149 at Amigo, W, Va., said Sunday night: Gov. Arch A. Moore Jr., who helped negotiate the new con- tract, ·acknowledged its pay in- THE BEST Readership po 11 s prove "Peanuts'' is one of the world's mO!lt popular comic strips. Read It dally tn the DAILY PILOT. Denture Invention Fer People with ronns l d.utic mtmbrane-that ••uppers'' 1nd ''Lowtn'' htlpa abflorb the atlotb or bitinr The t1tarett tllin1 to h1vln1 your and chetrinr. Own t.eelh it poeaible now •ith a With F1xoogNT manJ dl!:nhttw .,iutiC cream ditc0Ytt'f that actU· wearert ml'f eat. tpe3.k_ tauch, with allf hold• both "upptcr1'' ind 1ittlewonyofdeflture1ccmi:n1tooee. .. l~en" u never btfort poM.iblt. One application may la•t fot 'It' a a diKOvuycalled F1xoo«MT• h~r1. Denlurd \l!&l fit ate ell!!"-• ror daily home use (U.S. Pat. t11I to healtb. Sie rour dent11t .13,003,988) and it h•• ftVOIU• Rplarly.Gf:tt~J'-lo-uteFl:lODt~ · ·rmited'drftture weatitlf. FllOOllft' DetltUN Ad!luive Qu:rti. .'· .. .. - GRAND OPENING HARBOR VIEW OFFICE, WED. NOV. 10 ' I , ' tick-tock . ' . . . . ·NEW Pei~Nt: m-e~~J~u~cc~Nt or for SECURING AN INSTALLMENT LOAN Either way, here is your opportunity to check the right time, the easy, courteous way. Receive your·cholce of a beautlful decorator clock ••• Free of C~arge ••• for openlrrg yaur new personal checking account for $100 or more or for starting a new in8tallm&nt loan of $1 ,000 or more. Qualifying Installment loans aie: Home Improvement, Automobile, Mobile Home, Boat, Airplane, or Personal Loans. Add to the decor of your living room, den, kitchen, bedroom or office with. these specially designed electric Decorator Clocks. There Is a slight additional charge for clocks B and C. PRESENT DEPOSli'ORS may buy these fabtJ. Jaus clocks at a cost that's hard to believe I If s our.way of saying "thank yo u" for being a depositor at Southern callfomia Fll$t Nalional Ban k. One per family. FmST NATIONAL BANg .. .. , .................. .a.a.c. ' MRIOR VIEW HIUS Off1CE MACARTHUR BLVD. (New) and PACIFlCVIEW DRIVE (offS.n.._., Hll1'Rd.ol--~­ Newport Beoch/Phone (714) 644 8511 - - I ' • I . ~---- " • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE " ' • One Win a n d One Loss Orange Coast communities under tho flllht patterns of Orange County,Airport won olie and IOlf one In tho ~port controversy last week. The new lease on. aln>ort faclllUu srantod to Alr California by the Board ol Sujlervlaors shapoa up as a ''win."' To be sure, neither propoM!tll of greail1 Increased • a.Ir service nor opponents of all jets at the arrport were wholly satisfied by tile Air Cal·lease result. But over·all the decision by the supervisors wU a 3ood one. Most observers believe beth the airline and its neighboring communities can live with it. , Conditions attscbed to the Jive-year lease should add up to a gain for the thousands of. cltiDms plagued by Increasing noise and air pollution ftom· tho airport. The yearly . review and 30-d•Y cancellation clauses prod both Air Cal and the concerped citizens to be coo· stanUy vigilant. But· only a grave violation of the other lease c:Onditions by the airline would likely trigger can- cellation by the county. · · Those condition1 -the 24.7 average daily flights limit. restrictions on oper1tion1·hQUrs (7 Lm. to 10 p.m. for takeoffs and 11 p.m..Cor landin!lll and the Urruts on 1ile of aircraft and noise.-all add up to significant pro- tections for the citizena·within two or three miles of the airport. ' The requirement that all A:ir Cal engines be smoke- less should be at least a readily visible improvement.. Some experts have cautioned,-.however, that engine at- tachments removing· smote merely. makes the pollution less visible without reducing ·lt'mucb, if any. That re- mains to be determined here. · Alr California bu hid a good recorif of voluntary cooperation ·on airport problems, bu earned fair con- sideration and received. it. So far so e:ood. But, less than 24 hours later. the aame board re- versed it& philosophy by votin·g .1 to 2 to approve a major change In UJe of 60 a.,,... of land directly across f m the terminal entrance. This can only put more pressure on the airpo to expand facilities and traffic. That pregsure alru is very strong as a result of the previously approved ex· g and plllll)ed development& by the Irvine Company., kay and others. , Tho McDonnell Douglas plana for a large hotel, V· eral commercial office buildings and a convention D· ter On th'e former industrial site have to mean that e aerospace firm is betting some millions that the · rt wW ·get a lot busier and bigger. The Airport Land Use Commission has previo ly disapproved thia major change in. land we. On the basis of the available evidence and argument,,, it appear~· to be in the public interest to reaffirm that disappr ovaL Beyond all this, there is a very real danger that )ho • setUing of the Air Cal lease controversy and the gr~.nt· ing of the McDonnell . Douglas development will ~g to another grinding halt any meaningful efforts by the county to push for a new and better answer to the coun· ty's m service needs. Voluntary vs. f'.ompuls.ocy __ I-' Increasing demandJ for services by government compulsion lend pertinence to this thought, plucked from an editor's mail: "The progress of civilization depends upon the co- operation of human beings and it is essential to under· &land the necessity that the cooperation be voluntary and not compulsory. , · "Voluntary cooperation, based upon the free will of individuals, represents permanent gains for society. Compulsory ,cooperation, regardless of the pressure that enforces it, inevitably creates individual dissatisf~tion and will be dissipated when the pre..,ure is lifteq." • ' -. W.llace I s Gaini ng i n St rength Our Distorted Priori ties in Public V '1.lua Dear Gloomy Gos New Factor of Political ' Confusion The faomlhlp JUI! north or my summer boult Illa need ta raise more than a mU. Jloo di>llara .. In.tall .-badly '1!IOded -system. Wb<n the bid> .,.,... In. It wu found Ulat the IOwnshlp WU tall>.- CIOO lhorl, and 00 Wi'Y lo oba!ie out ,uie dlilent for ID()l'f.. . • , • FraaUc meetings ...,. held, 1ppel11 made lo state and fedeial fundin& ...... dOI, but al i..,t ,. por\ It l<>olted bleak. How • long lhe septic -Clll hold out Is aoyl)ocly's gum. N~ I"""'<' vory lr-.. At the some time, just a few milet d·Wll !be maJo ffiilh- way' a Joca1 'Slii>ort W"l.I 0 modemJied" and expanded1 .witll '!"(t,000 of federal money. Perhaps a half-dor.en prlvpte planes a week lahd there, on the average. throughout • tbe 1'11"· ) ). . I don't mind II memben o1 Ille building trader make a deceot·liv. tng but I now believe they want to build one house and then retire. -H.B. M. WASlllljGTON -Accordina to lhe latest Gallup Poll, George C. Wallace js gaining in strength and cuts as deeply In· to Edmund s. Muskie'a support as Richard M. Nixon's. Wallace baa: risen to the occasion by in- Limaling tilat he may run In both Republi· can and Democratic pnoldential prUna· ries.-nezL)'.ell, thwl introducing a n e w had beea ._iated to Ille Hlgbw1y foci« ol political Division, ,aiid by . Qod Ille Hf&h~ay ....illlion not here- Divtaleo -...... to ........ ii, wbelher . .• ..... ·:encooatered. .. -or~~~ ~ed..No ...-llfi<o Wallace will -. lo my knowledgo bu ever hoard d nOt reeciv• either a Htchway C«nmiunt turninc beck ua-the Republican or the Democratic ipent fund&. pre1idential nomination, it ii evident that 'lbere ia be __ ... _ in ..i.--be drtams of being a third party spoiler money to n-•-beyond any previous dimensions with the ventureo, by contraclorl and sul> tractor """-·-• hi -• 1 . purpose of creating an electoral deadJock ·con 1• ·' ~ groupa ve .,.,...en throwing the presidential elect.ion into the lobbyists in the-state capit.al1 and county House ol Representatives. courthou&ea, and' its tbe11 job to see tblt Ille big wheel1 ·k"'P rollfol -right over THERE IS A FATAL FLAW in this Ille proteltltlolll of Ille dtliena. rellOl!ing. U Ga!Wp'1 fi&l!!u are right, Walloce would be more ii&!y lo e"""' WE ·IJAVE NO SEWAGE sygtem, no I.be reelection of Prealdent Nixon II Ibo garbqe collect.lob, and eztremely race were close. This wbuld be rather ab!tcl)y pubUt ltirvices' in our 'illlC•· lroNc conskjering Wallace's open disp!t But, Lord, do we, Mve tbe .roads. Miles :.1.. Nix I ... ,.. loo f aJl'I mll" of '(be flnelt, stretching &om "•~ oo or -• '° t oo nOwbere to D6'1fhere.· some or them·°"" · - c-_.,-r-.,..... ~ t:~rd WihoD \ . •• "'--l.-\ •. • -•. .J... ... desegre .. tion and flirting with the Com· munists: What the Gallup figures illiistrate is that tbete is no rhyme or reason on why voters lupport third-party-candidates. Some w)o supported Eugeoe McCarthy in the celtlrated New Hampshire primary of l~Gid so because they did DQ~ tlPnk Preo· fot John.wn was prooeeutili1 :~~. Vie war with aufficient vigor. The Gallup organizaUon is probably right, however, that the fact of DemoCratic support for W a 11 a c e • partiailarly outside the South, is of prlm&ry political importance. These sup. porters are evidently among the blue col- lar ·rliinorities who would ordinarily be De.mpcrats but think they would come out on tl}e short end of the deal with a can- dida-like Senator MU!kie, do not like Nia~. deipite Agnew, and think Wallace tella r the way they like to hear it. AS GALLUP TEW JT, Nixon would now ' receive 43 percent of the vote, Muskie 35 percent, Wallace 13 percent and 9 percent undecided. For most of the time since the: 1968 election Wallace has been running ahead of ~e 10 percent of the vote he received.in 1968. Muakie has lost his steam In the poll aitd Nixon has recovered somewhat from his low point at mid·year. With Wallace out of it Nixon and Muskie would split his vote about evenly -in the South ,.. Muskie......would..get_mo.re oJ the Wallace vote tha.n Nixon in the North, and on balance it would average oyt about·~.~N.ixon would ll)en be elected. None Of this argaea th3t lOO'e -11 the strong ifts:sure of necessity on Nixon to get_rid of Vice President Agnew, but that on the contrary Agnew's remaining on the ticket might provide some conn· terbalance to Wallace. At least, there is no reliable evidence that in these circumstances il is politically necessa ry that Agnew be replaced by a Democrat, Secretary af the Treasury John Connall y. IF NIXON CAN maintain a point spread of 8 over the Democratic front- NDner up tc the date of the Republican National Convention, he does not need tc worry too much over arguments that he could strengthen the Ucket With CDbnally. Another facto't ~ ·)tfuskie'1 weakening posture as a presidential candidate. It has done him Utile good to swlng to the left, and no good at all to speak disap- provingly, if for practical reasons. of a black man for vice president. That. is not the way leftward swings are conducted. Muskie's weakening poses the question .of what the Democrats can do in finding an alternative. In spite of a certain logic ...in..bis:c.&n;dld~y_. Sen. Henry M. Jackson does .not yet appear much stronger than Se~. George McGovern, Senatacs ijughes and &ayh • 'have already co lf n t e d themselves out, and Rep. Wilbur Milla has not yet aroused popular enthusiasm. THE OUTSTANDING alternatives would thµs be Senatars Xenrledy and Humphrey, which has probably been the case all along. Before the ~ventions there will be many more polls and if they should consistently show that KeMedy and /or Humphrey would · have a good chance of beating Nixon, the Democratic National Convention will undoubtedly bt strongly influenced that way. Wallace, however, remains ·in the pic- ture whatever happens among the Democrats, as a political specter who will not go away. THiii RAS~ our general· priority of public values throughout the nation: sublldiiaUon of the few at tbe ~penleiof the many. Millions for .pa\iing new roads and altport.s; just a trickle for e11e11tlal community services. Uoc mllilons', ol dollan lo· .&Ive 1mooth egreaSto four fam'I families. I( U!e --Clll blithol1 ~ .. .ui ·100 :::.i lo "1-" Ill lirwft·~t Is mooUy &'local, oonctH, bow mud!: men urgmt a few hundred GI more' to keep the township from wallow- ing tn lta own filth. But thla Isn't tbt way ft works; .ft aeema that the fewer the~ pie -need it, the more easily Ibey cet IL Rehahili~ation System Doesn't Work About a dozen yea.rs . ago, a ~mile ctntdl d rood winding outside my -WU paved by the county. I didn't find • a1ng1e resident who was in favor of it; we oil "1ew It would just bring more louriats and traffic, as it has increasingly. BVT NOBODY ASKED us. 'lbe mcriey Maybe tlley're pllJllling lo fly out lhe sewage by private cargo planes. It wouldn't 1urprise me to learn there's a lobby -1<irlc at iL Tb• !rfgbUul hypocrisy in tile words "oorrectional facility" newr aases to ~ irk me. It is not merely that the words are pompous, Latinate, and a turning away from the truth. It has been my ex· perlence that when people use long and An Ex ercise in Hilarity u1u1lly Latinate words ·u substitutes r or short· usually Suon wonl6, !hey are trying t.o avoid a problem by renam· Ing It. They thuo re- flect a muddiness of purpooe. Wanda !Dckey'• N'oght of Golden Memoriea &: Other Disasters ia an a• erdM bl hllarity . that one can overdl>, Just like band.ball or tennis. ~ morning after I read the fint two among eight wild tales of humorist Jean Shepherd's youth I had a charleyhorse on botb sides of the face. Shepherd's view here Is somewhat 1lmDar to seeing a vacant lot ln a New Jeruy !eclory town through 1 Capt. Mid- nipt Mq:ic Spyglass. Take anything dull and drab and you can turn lt into eomelhing wonderful U you look at It r1gbt. P'11!'17'1011TS, BLOODY NOl!l!:S m lumblfna, flnt,timo -will> pllln, plump, pwl<y 1irls emers• from ~···boot tht same wa,y: IJ'lnd. aJ-ond--tbeyun. Obi)' bis eopl. Mldniibl MocJc: Spyala" llt4rll7 tselllilque 1lv" esch 1 nostaJalc ... at_ Imm_ lo !be pullnc d-. Ht eel th 1'• tbe basic ahtltatiml ..i _. deleali of anyone'• youth Iii *': p " 11 wtth pt.11 Flick, Schwarts Ind --. esplorinrj I.be Shepherdlan world ti ,,_ G. Hardbla~School. '!'bey en- Quotes c.t--.-•ad -•J1&11'1:COI· _.. -"There aren't any em- .,., 1'1 quutk>nl -Jus t en\· ..,,,,I wwen." _, ... Bu Wr -"Tl>at ....n.. -· IM -per. Is our 1111Jona1 ....,.,.,,., "'"' . ..,....._. ~<'I>" I 'J \ .' I am among those l who believe that the root cause of troohle tn our prisons is ~~i..,.,.._...,,._ _ _,__.__} based on the unresolved conflicts of those . c!liinter borbaric belata like Delbert, 9Clcxl of !be ahUUeaa. bwnptioua Bwnpus clan" a hillbilly trfbe ·that move1 in nnt door. THEY YEARN FOR lhe m•J<atic Daphne Blplow1 d ·tlle world and 10 un- noticed. 'Ib8y aettle.for a Wanda Hickey, never knowing I.bet through tho ,..... thlt mfwahle sprlng·lormaJ will for her be I nl&ht·d (Olden --= "If then 11 lll1thlnc more romantic than a con- ver1iblt With tho.top down In June goinl lo a,,..., t'd Uh lo hoar about tt ••. " 'nie, dash wltll IUCll sca_,.. of !be tplrlt II Scul Farba. Who bll I steel· epllted lpinnlQa top --Martsb. llCIJT_ FAll!tAS LOVE!! to ~ter othir boys' loyg until In '"")Tl<Jn«•ble moment be learnt !be Bod Guys can't win fomer. Sbej)hmf, l.,...Ume wlnntr ol Uio Playboy M•a.ulne humor wrillnl 1ward, add• lo hl1 tall st&blre with this new col· lection. Ha alJo dtmonab'alea humor tn Iii !Int•~ moot pnulno form , And thlt ii simply this: lo hold 1 mlr· ror up to 1U"e and humanity, unUl we. laugh Ind cry with tun of J'<COlnlUon. (Wanda Hickey's Nf&ht of Gokleo Meimrlea " Otber Di111ten. By Jun Shepherd. Doubleday " Cmnj>Oll)' 3$0 pp. $11.11.) within the gate who favor mere custody of prisoners -incaroeratlon, if you will -and those who favor a murky ideal called rehabilitation. The rehabilitation notion became popular in our penal system early in this century. There were thole then, and they still exist. who say the ide11 of lnc&rctratkm and rehabilita· tion (both lofty Litinisms) cancel each other. OUR PRISON SYSTEM will be bedevil· ed until we r.i.ther abandon it, or decide on whether we want platn jails or fancy jails; jails which merely punish you for your offense., and those which also try to make a new man of you. There Is a lot lo he said for plain custody, plain and mean and severe cu11ody. II you l11teo lo Ille French, you will conclude that mere custody may just be Ibo finest form ol rehabilitation. The Fmich tend to take • severe View of .---B• George ---. Dur George: , It seems to me that the custom ot beauty contestants wearing bathing suits is 1b1olutely ridiculous. Can't this custom he abandoned1 W.W. O!ar W.W.: """""' There are no riots. The L.A. Times .reported recently: "Businesslike iuards hold a tight lid on prisons. Police let two escapers kill a nurse and a guard in Clairvaux la st week rather than negotiate demands; the men were recaptured. theif fellow Frtnchmen. Their system of criminal justice, worked up by the Emperor Napoleon himself, reflects th.is h1rsh realism. It also gets results. HPrisons,., aa:onling to the F r e n c h criminal aide, "are places of in· carceration, not rehabilitation.'' THERE RA VE BEEN no refonns ln French jails this century, nor since the days of Napoleon for that matter. The nearest thing to a prison ttfonn wu closing down Devil 's Island in 19$3. '' .... Provincial prisons are often one Ume monasteries or convents. Plwnbing is a pot made available twice a day: prisoners must learn precise control of bodily functions. Exercise yards are pie-- slice nlches big enough for only a score of prisoners. There is no work to do." WHAT ARE THE results d this Draco- nian system of prisoning? Among otht.r things, one or the world's lowest rate& Of recidivism (more Latin), or rate of criminal return to jails. Y our Right to Parade ' . Fed u~ with public commotion, the city fathers h\, a certain community decldett to strike • decisive blow for peace and quiet. H~eforth. they decreed. there would be parades of any kind on the dty •tree Within d~1 a group of dissentera went marching .nanoe of the new ordinance. uled into court. they claim- ed that the bin wu unccnstitutional. "Not so," replied the city. "Under our charter, we talve the authority to keep the public peite ·11 we aee fit." BUT 111E touftT decided thot lhe ordinance wu' indeed unconstitutional, and that the paraden could not be punished. The court sa.ld: "It has been customary fr<m time lm· • Law in Action -~- In one city, the mayor had unlimited discretion as to who could hav~ a permit and who could not. This arrangement, tested in court, was thrown out as un· constitutional. The court said the •rlght to march Was too precious to be subject to the whim of any official But under lhe ruitll in another• cltf., the mayor could· not ~ pmnlt 1.mlea the marchers would be te.rfering W)duly with the rights of o citiz.en& la the use of the streets. memorial, in all tree countries, for.people . THIS TIME, WHEN a religjoua sect put to parade tcgeth•. These processions aM -on a parade without a permit, a court among the incidental cmditions of cJty upheld lhi law and fined the paraders for life, and are u much to be expected u di,\Obeylng it. The court uld the tight to any other public meetinp." march, like all othtt rights. e<:1u1d be con· Of cour&e, tn ootright ban on all fln~ within reasonable limits. parades ls not common. Very common, "Clvll libertJes,11 added the court, however. Is a r~ulremenl that paradcr1 "Imply the existence of an organized must fir1t gel a permit. Is this ltsSIJ' aociety maintaining public order without rtslriclion constltullonal? which liberty Itself would be Jost." There are no uncertainties ln thla system. The terms. are brutal, but relatively abort. The. average is from three to four years. Absolute disCJpline is maintained. As. noted. the rate ot prisoner return is low. These are the twe> main criteria in judging the effectivenest of jails. There is no attempt to better the cor.- vict's moral outlook, to examine hia neuroses, to listen to his political com· plaints. The con is treated as 11n animaJ for the duration of his term. That Is the whole. brutal -and seemlnaJy effective -idea. . · DO THE FRENCH know 1omeUtlng wti don't know? It's oot that "humane" ~ lions of imprisonment are unknown to the French. They are well-known. They are simply rejected. It may ,be -that tbis ptimlU .. e eye-for. eye form of justice wOQld ·bt &lien to the American character. We shall probably never ha ve a chance to know. Our system or rehabilitation doesn't work, but we are hopelessly saddled wlth iL We ~ to mix up good intentions wjth bru.f-1 punish- ment and the comhinition Is notmlscible. A lone time ago we thought 1 jail waa just a jail. We b.a.d few problem& with them. Then we got humane and enlightened. Looi at us now! ' OltANOI COAST DAILY PILOT l!O!>ert N. Weed, Pl<blilhtr Thomas lrHoil, Editor Albert W, Bates · EdUori4l Page Editor ,,,. edlt«W .... of the llollr Pilot •«ks to inform. and 1tlmu .. late rrade~ by insentln.1 th1' ne\\"Spa~• opitdons •nd cmn• ment&ry on toplcs cf lntettat and 1lgnl6cance, by providlnc a forum for the u,prrstioft or·fl!Jl" rndcra' o[)ink>ns. and by )X"'tamUq the dlvt>rse vlewpolntl of lnfatmtd ob- attVen and spokesmen on toplcl ct \be day. Monday, November 15, 1971 •:--'1·" I A.R.V, No -you·,. thinking of nudist colonif!s. I mean. after all , lots of the be1uty contestants '° oa TV, you lecherous do&, yau ! MAINLY, IT depends on the ground An A.mt-rican Bar A..s.sociatio" pub-- rules"'*' which the permfli an lsSued. lie ~rvict fta)ure b~ Will Bernard. • ., • • • . • I ' ·+-• • • .. ' • -- ·' • • ' J • • • ' ' ,· . • . ' t: - t ' . ,. " " ' .,.1 ~ • "· , I'."' I • ':' • -" • • • ' -. Monda,, November \~; lCJn DAI LY PILOT f ' ... •' ' •• ' I I .. , -.. • 'Y' \ ,.... . . -.. -~ ' • . ' ~ . . . ti,lne~ Mere lire . a few . Of ·our va1ues . ' " • ,, t ' , . ~ ' . .•. . " ' ! • • '' • . .., If you llke to save money, save Sunday; too.• . . . . ··. ) ' : . ' ' . . ' ~ .-. . '· -. .! • ;_ . -~-•· ' ,. ~ ···-: .. .'.::~ ... Sp~ecial 2 . s5 for ' : ... ·1 as sp:eri.i:a:1 · ' .· Room brightening lier Ol!J'lalns of.natwal color sJub Boys' PQl~es~ .... r/cottoo.Jli'ans.· Penn.. preste go they need no Ironing. Popular, rotind flare leg and...westem styling. · weave rayon With embroidered band;ot·Orlqn acrylic on rayon. Aceen! band hi yanow; red or.green; 60 x 11" vatanee. 1.ll;, " . . . • . . I • . ' 4, 399 . Rib knit neck, raglan shoulder. bulky calita krill cardigan of acrylic. In while, rib knit bOttom and cuffs, button downfronl 7-16. 3.to6X 2.99 Speci~I . . 499 Plus supplemental duty 11c Striped mock turtleneck pullovers. of easy care polyester knit. Full fashioned with raglan shoulder, backzlppar. Basic and fashion colors. Misses~ 5-M-l.. Navy, l)iiss, avOCadO. Sizes &.18 regular, 6-16 sllm. · Special 299 100°.4 Orlon• acrylic sweater is _hand.some V-neck ~u11ovef In assorted colors. S·~·L·XL . :, ; .· .. .., . · ·3·99 $pecial ... .. . t . . · . Men's polyesier/combed ciittori · · ·.pajamas with notch collar styitri9: Penn prest with long sleeve top · and: tong leg bottoms. Assorted · solids and prirrts;Slzes 5-M•L-XL ' ' ,,. ! . " ·" , . ' .. ·' · ·JCPenney . · .. . .. . . The values are here every day . ·, • •• *Shop Sunday rioon to 5 p.m. at ~he following stores: 1- " . NEWPORT BEACH, l'a1hion l~~d 'HUNTINGTON 8£.4.CH, Huntingt~n Center ..._ COSTA MESA ,Harbor C~t• Charge it. • . . ... " Boys' sport shirt specials. Penn-Prest11 polyester/cotton In colorful stripes. Short sleeves, long point cOllar. Slzes6to 18. \ • DAILY PILOT Bookies Proving Good Bet LONDON IAPI -The pro- fits of Britain's big time bookmakers are going up and up. Betting shops were legalized 10 years ago. About 15.000 ha\'e opened. and n1ore and more are passing into the hands of the big firms. The bookie v•ith one betting shop is slowly disappearing. like !he one-shop grocer. Some of the leadini: fir ms like Ladbrokes a11d \\1illiam Hill run nation11 1de chains. The Hill organization shou·ed a profit before !ax of S2.7 million for the first half of this year. \\'ithin 500 \'ards ·of St. Paul's Cathcdfal a dozen shops operate du?ing the day. Each has a radio sef. Bet· ters gather to listen to last· minute odds be.fore-each race starts. They place their bets and s1av on to hear the radio commeiitary on the race. It 's mostly a man's pastime . Virtually al! bettors pay in cash as they make bets. That's one big change. Before the da ys of belling shops. most regular bettors ran a credit account with a bookie. · ''ou can still do that. Anybody can phone his bookie fi\'e minutes before a race and say, •·one pound on ?ilill Reef -put it on my account." But there's not much point when there's a betting shop just around the corner, giving out the latest odds minute by minute. Bettin g shops have mvshroomed so fast that licensing committees ha ve restricted ljcenses for new operators. Thal is one reason " the big firms are cornering the business more and more. They stand more chance of opening a new shop and get- ting a license. Ladbrokes has built up a chain of 'iOO betting shops 5ince 1965. • WJonoay, NOV!mbtr 15, ic,n 'WASHOE' SHOWS HOW SHE WON TALKlllG 'CHIMPIONSHIP' Ch imp Le1rn1 How to S1y 'Drink' From Dr. Be1trice Girdner T~is Chimp No Chump 'Talks' to Humans in Sign Lang·uage WASHINGTON (AP) "Washoe." a female chim- pa.nz.ee who already holds the chimp championship for talk- ing to humans using sign language, has been credited \\•ith additional powers; she talks to herself with sign language. \Vashoe, aged 6, is the most advanced of 23 dtimpanzee f>upils be ing progressively taught the sign language by t"u psychologists al the Uni· versity ol Oklahoma in Nor- man. Washoe h's a "vocabulary" of about 200 words, and an ability to Construct simple sen tences. using sign-language taught by Drs. R. Allen Gardner and Beat r i ce Gardner. comparative psychologists at the Uni versity of Nevada, Reno. They started teaching Washoe the sign language Moul four years ago-using the stereotyped gestures of the American Sign L a n g u a g e employed by the dear in the United States. "?iiany scientists," he said; "are wiconvinced that what Washoe has achieved is really l anguage in som e seientifically-accepted sense, but • • . others, ,~:ho began skeptically, have been con- vinced." Summarizing Washoe's pr&- gress under t h e Gardners' tutelage-up to U!e time tbey apparently sent her off to OkJahoma f o r "graduate" work toward her chimp PhD-- the National Science Foun- dation says she ultimately "even talked to herself when sbethoughtnoonewas TRA'll•EL watching, much as young ... W child,.n talk to themselves TRAILER '"'hen they think no one is listening. SPACES " 'Washoe climb tree!' she as OO d would sign to herself-then up • • a Q the tree she '"'OUld go," Dr. Next door to Polm Sprln91' Gardner observes. finest 18 hole public The NSF, one of the govern· ex.cullve golf coun-. ment and private organiza. Pal S rl ... uons thal ha s supported 0ie m 11 n.-~ardners' work. also said in Oasill its report : . "Th "-rd , k . tiU IKN01t-I V ... kle r-t e V'CI ners wor 1$ s 36100 Do te Palm Dt. controversial. points out Dr. Cottiedrol City, California 92134 Henry S. Odbert, director of £7141321-4113 NSF's Psychobiology Program AllAc!MtfflfhU.S.~ .... Custom draperies at uncustomary prices. Save up to 1 /3. " :1 •I ' ' .. ~ ·! 1. ·t f' ·, I l I l '. ~ I I 1 ;, :I Choose from open weave casements, antique satins, homespuns: shetfs · and many more. All et tremendous savings. Regular loW Penney prices on expert fabrication. Call collect (714) 523-6511 for our shop-at-home service, free. JC Penney at·home decorating • Decorate now. Use Penney& time payment pl1n. • ' ' /. • I h • • \ • • Sought Publicity . : "''"\'~ .. How's Ab~u~~r Wins, Lo~~ Your /·. . MANILA (UPI) -Silvestre poli-en. and government ..;.i l~earlng I crumpled Hean' ng? Abodb, Mate 's obsession_ for ·soldiers deployed outside the marOQ?\shlrt, dark grey pants • pu hcltr touched off ~hat -pro-hou During the 1 e n s e an<! rubber sandals, bably 1s the ye~~ s . crime, qegotiations, hie asked and go\ "There's no use , denying Chiearo, m.-A fr11 offw of thriller in the PhthP.p1nes. It a newsman go-between a bot-· anything anymore," he told lf>9clal inter.t to thole who also led to his downfall1• ile of whi skey canned pork newsmen and criminal . in-hear but do not under1t1nd. "I have ~e drea'?? in .life to and beans and' cigarettes. At vestigators after he wu words baa been anno~ced ht create a big story, said the ·intervals he strummed on a brought back to Manila by Belt.one. A non~peratin~model husky, muscular 31-year-old · g\litar o~ned by Suzie's elder helicopter. of the emalleat ~eltone atd ever Filipino who masterminded a sister. Still displaying a cool and mad•. will be 11ven a~u~ spine-tingling IG-bour dra~a Mate enjoyed his lreedom cocky attitude, be grinned llJKI free ~ anyone amwenni Nov. 1 Inside the ~prawhng for less than 24 hours ·n th said in a mixture or Filipino adverti8ement. ranch house of bu!lnessman . 1 . e "'--it to how it ill won Charles R. Butler in Forbes foothills or Zmab!es, 75 miles and fairly fluent English "At ~•3 Ne Park nd 1 . bd' . northwest of P.tan1la, where he least I had a big story. Now I ln. t he privacy of :your o:wn . ~ a e~c usive . su IVI· was dropped off by the don 't care if I die on the elec-bom.e witboateottoro~Uptioa sion JUst outside Manila. helicopter Monday night. tric chair. I want to set just of any kin~. It'• youn to keep. Mate held the Butlers' • who it would be and bow long free. It weiihl 1-than• third youngest daughter, Susan. 14, He was. captured Tuesday t can last." -of an .ounce. and it'1 -!1 •t •r hostage from .sunrise to sun -after sending a woman to buy Mate 11aid his plan was to level, moneunit.No'WU'9 1eacl down with a sawed-off shotgun clothes a~d newspapers 50 he. burg tar 1 z e ttle Butler from: body to hesd. before escaping in a helii:opter could reaa the account of what residence and hold Suzie as Tbeee mod.ell ~ tree, '° ft offered by the Manila Times had happened the day before. hostage for $16,000. tn the end, au11eat ~ou write for yo~• newspaper. He never got to read the he received . $2,~ a 5 now. A.pin, we repea. t.. ~ ia . newspapers because the """' __. d ...... : .. 1 ... noob1:--, Mate fired the shotgun once woman took g 0 v er nm en t "getaway" money, nearly all n;o ..... ., ~ ,__...., ·~ when he shot and wounded troops lo his hideollt. ohf which was recovered when ~0r!!; :~~:'~!;,~1 ~: Mrs.·Carolyn Agnoldy Butler, " .. • e was ~ptured. Victoria, Qalcaio. Ill. 60646. <18, in the back, He said be· , I ~:'°w . now that t have 1 ---,----'--'-------_:~=~--===::..=::_::::::._ held a screaming Filipino failed , said Mate, unshaven housemaid while a con-· lea.rate, whom hel~entified 1---L-OC AL cnly as "Ben," atabbed her to death with a screw driver. Ben and two oth" lookouts in EDITORIALS a car parked outside the residence escaped during the b1itic.l commotfonal leaving Mate behind with his hostage Suzie. Mate Jocked himself in one of the bedrooms with Suzie while a force of more than 200 The DAILY PILOT Quite• Often Fights City Hall Power tool sale. . - ff you Rke to save money, save Sund•y, too.• Sale 29 99 Savess Reg. 34.99. Penneraft• %"' Yatiable epHCI, reversible drill. Features "Spieed·loc" for pre-setting <;lesinld speed. Powetful bum-oot protected molor. Pennanenlly lubricaled baa ihrust "'bem-'~-igs.- Savess Reg. 34.99, Pennerafte variable speed ubre NW. Heavy duty sabre saw is double insulated for added protection against shock. Tilt base, speeds up to 3500 SPM. Sale 3499 Savess Reg. 39.99, Penncraft 3" x 21" bait sander. For fast sanding of wood, compasitions and metals. Rugged 7/10 HP super burnout protected motor 3 belt; speeds up to 1150 ft per minute. •• JC Penney . • ... '• ..... ., . 'I I I • I • I I • • ... ···········"" I I I I I • I • I I I ...... , • I• 1 '• I • I • ••• ' Saves10 Reg. 4t.99, ~M't• 11'• cJrcul•-. Double insulation for more shock protection, 2 HP burnout protected mottor, permanently lubricated bell bearings, adjustable rip guide. The values are here every day. • Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M et the following 1torea: NEWPORT BEACH, F .. hion ls l1nd. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington C.nt1r ,. Use Ptnneys tirno fYrn•nt pltn 1 t QUEENIE• ••?.tore an~ more· I 'get the feeling we're very lost and no longer 10 Colorado." NixQn's China Trip Sparks Speculation By STEWART HENSLEY world, but will not move into the field of nuclear arms and WASffiNGTON (UPI ) -Pre..sident Nixon has defined repeat its attempt at ter· the objectives of his China ritorial acquisition of the 1930s policy In very sim ple terms. and'I'hel~~-=-:~atio· n'• _ but others see hi.3 moves wllllwu-·~ ... toward Peking all part of 8 China policy involves the broader plan, which also in-aban.donment of the th~ry, volves the Soviet Union and chlr~ed ~y the Repubhcan Japan Administration of the 1950s · . which Nh:on was v i c e .The ~resident J:tas sal~ that ' president, that China was ir- h1_s w~1.ng of Peking, which ~e revocably committed to dom- w1ll visit early next ~ear, is in ate all Asia by military p<O't of an effort to improve force. NEWS ANALYSIS relations with China in the fn.. terest of achieving greater stability in Asia. However, many foreig n diplomats, as well a.s a number of Am·erican authorities,beDeve NU:on's ap- proaches toward China are part of a master ,plan to achieve greater a t a b i 11 t y throughout the Far East by A corollary of that theory Jed to the assumption by President Johnson that the defense of South Vietnam was vital to prevent Hanoi, acting in collaboration with China, <>verrunning all So u t h e a s t Asia. ?i.1any authorit ies with tong time influence in that area disputed these assumptions at the time, but it is only recently that t b i s ad- ministration has come to believe that China want. no more territory and that Hanoi -" \' . - ' Mond11. NowmHt 15, 19n DAILY l'ILOT f -• I . Island's One•room S~hool . Wins .Praise , OCRAOOKE, N.C. (AP) - Resldenta of bol.ated Ocracoke Island aee their new one-room school as a step into modem educaUon, not 1 s t e p backward.I 1n Ume. • A.II of .the 1'l1Ul!!'.L U school- age· youngatera attend grades one through 12 in the new $100,000 juniper wood struc- ture. The bullcling has a cen· tral , common-use room and alcoves on four sides. The faculty of five, including principal John R. Tucker, thinks its' ungraded C1'.lncept is an Indication of progress. Visitors, Tucker "sa~s. s e e confusion, "but there u a pal· tr:m of formality. It's taken the first few weeQ to cet ac-The MO pereona who Uve on are the clusrooms. JStudenta elementary grades: adJuitmenll necessary t t cw:tomed to tt." the four· mile-Ion.I> bland can are free to move rrom the A pupil aelecta the coursa comply with atilt ruhs, thta Until last sprU,, Ocraeoke reacl1 the mainland only by general room to lh~ others to he 1s lntemted in, then aelecta llst objedjvta to be rwblll t nt to fl study, use audiovisual aids material to be used tram the within an .,reed time limit. youngs era we a ve-ferry. and the like," Tucker said. school's collections. Tucker sakJ there la mucb room, frame school. Thel'fl was one teacher for each three Scott Coble, Hyde County He gave this explanation of The pupil and his teacher go more guidanct In the elemeo- grades. acbool1 superintendent, said study for pupils above the over the progr m, make any tary frades. Now the rr pupils In the first one parent told him hll ... year·1===~~~~~~;ii;ii~~~~~~~~iiiiiiii~~~~iiii~~~= seven grades are in one area old aon had to be almost with two teacl:lers,. while the driven to school before the ~~~~t::: ~~~~~two new building wu ertded, but 86 STORES BRIM-FULL Ocracoke's Isolation h a s · this year he can't keep him always limited the education away. Of Christmas Goodies of island youngsters. The aan-·"In this slluation It's the on- dy strip of land lies 75 miles ly way to go. Ocracoke is oil the North Carolina coast, being brought up to date, across Pamlko Sound from really,'' Coble said. the Hyde p:.unty seat of Swan ·"One large room ln the Quarter. center ii the library. Around it 'Soatb toast?laza r Some nleelhings for your place , are on sale at The . Christmas Place.1 At some very nice savings. Salt prices elftctift thru Saturday, Rog. 7.99 oq. fd. 'Whisper' aplush· look pile of Kodel• polyester. A real loot-cuddlar. Nol u ahaggy as ahag, noteolormalaapluall.1'decor1tor - ~bringing-about a balance of in- nuences among the four major powers in the area. ' Those holding this theory believe thlit Nixon and his top advisers f~J that a Peking government more friendly tQ the United States would in- fluence the Soviet Union to moderate its polici~s. both. in Asia and Europe. is interested -onJy in~-South - Vietnam. and considers opera· lions in Laos and Cambodia worth while only as they relate to South Vietnam. Sale 7S:~. The ass umption is that Japan, the major Industrial power in Asia will continue to build up its military forces and r r ovide ;,: stabalit· ing nf l_u.ence on the northeastern flank of the big ·powers. American officials contend that Japan will be contenl to limit her military buildup tQ the level necessary to main- tain her position as the third major trading power in the The administration's moves in Asia naturally have made some of the smaller non-Com- munist nations u n e a s y Thailand has already sug- gested to Japan that the non- Communist countries or the area, including lhe Philippines and Indon~ia, begin reassess- ing lheir attitudes toward the Peking government. Critics <>f the admtnlstratlon contend t'hat Nixon's master plan for Asia may not achieve a lasting power balance but simply a new arrangement of tensions which might easily break out in a new and greater war. The 'Springtime' perm. Just $10 buys it. At JCPenney. Every day. Our 'Spring ti me' perm gets· you set for the holidays. Shampoo, cut, end set included. •10 Shampoo, instant conditioner, and style set. Special, 3.88 No 1ppolntmont ._ry, CNlrQ• It! JCPenney beauty salon HUNTINGTON IUCH Huntington Ctnt1r 211d Floor 192-1771 N!WPOlT RACH F11h:o" hl1111• 211d Floor 644·211) Av•il•ble •I: Aog. a.so 1q. yd. "Majesty" of Kadel® polyeS:terpile lspractlcal, yet beautiful enough for every modem room. Interesting textu ral effect of high and low loop plle8 decorator solid colotL Padding and-' lilolaliatlon 8Ylilablo at 19gullr !ow Penney.,_ 4'"6' 'TaJ t,lahal' rvg for""' rich orfentitl-lty!o look at non-rich prices. Kennen~pen fleld WI red or dark blue. Velvet finished WOl'lled wool pile. Savesro R111. •en. Sale •Ht • ...,,_ ~porary"llJledlnlllg-I g-consistsof42'd0'0Vllfll>ll, I 411decllalrs,~ljgllled­ cabtnet wlth glasS ehetW& WaJnut veneers and pot/CJ••• molded trim over solid hardwood. Saves70 · Aeg.17111, -1719. 71'C- Ea0y -rte .. """' dining ..... group conalata ot 58"x.f2" oval table. .f Windsor atyle aide chains, buffet and hutch. Attractive apron on buffet 1nd tlb4e. Table allO hll twit 12' -Solid bllci>-lon. " ----P1n11..,.ftlmftunlprlenlnelvdedt1Mry--ldlllll11•- JCPenney Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: NEWPORt BEACH, F•shion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center Use P1nney1 tim1 poyment p!.11 1 .. • • 1 ft DAILY~-- For The Record Births Nt-Wr 1. 1'11 Mr. ~ ....,,, "-Id L, ICl hltr, 1f05 UNI Clr!vt. Ntw-1 lffdt. twin tlrlt • M•. 11'1d Mrt. Cr11t J. Mc'Crt(l{ltfl, 1~1 Ev1rtrttn Ck'CM l+q, 0, Hllfl. r1!'111t0ft BeKn. bov Mr. 111d MrJ. Jahn M. ICr()fl. 205) "A" W1ll<'lct #lvf., COl!I Mew, l:IO'f'• Mr. l lld Mrt. Eric D. Welton, •7' 1-4e111u-. (or0!\1 del Mi r, t lrl Mr. 1"4 M•l. J1Urtv A. sm11n, 1311 Miiie• St,. ,t,n1Mlm, bcV Mr. tnd Mrl. Thomlt M. T.tl'l1r1, 11)33 Port CMIHI PliCe, Ntwllllf1 Betd\. 1lrt Mr. 1tld Mrt. JM C:. Pfrtl, tltl P10- d«-Clrcle, Hunll,.,,IO!I Beach, boY Mt. 111d M ... Rlcll1rd C. Fy•1, lW Port ... .,.le<,t PIKf, NewllO'f Be1(;h, girl Mr. 1nd M". ROOMY l . Culwell, 161' G1tnnevrt, Latu,,. B11cn, bov Mr, tnd Mfi. Peter L. l*nktlS, :JO'lll Vllltllf Drlvt , Huntlntton 8e1ch, t lrl Mr. 1nd Mrt. WUll1m '!-Int, 1111 Sl'l• !Int Sun Drlvt, CorOl\ll dll Mar, t lrl NOVMIMI' '-lt71 Mr. 11nd Mrs. M1rv!n Bua lon, 1352 Arnet! Orlv!, Hunl~nvton 8e11c11. bov Mr. '"" Mfi. Jamft Ltw!1, IJ$5 E. li!O;St, No. 1111, Or•noe. 11r1 Mr. •nd Mra. Robe" ll~ntol, 7202 lltllel, Wtt1mlnl!fr, bOV Mr. trKI Mrs. Timotnv Rtldln1er. nu Holl11fl' lid., NtWl>Ql"I lltfd). 9lrl Mt. tnd Mr•. Erwin 0. ROllllen!Wkt, .U:t w. Br>rUltra. c.lrtlc. Stnlt Atll,_ '" NoYtmbtr 5, 1t71 Mt. t>'d Mrs. Ptul Gtr!tnd, ll1J2 Ill· !y, Ao!, No. 0, GtrGen Grovf. 11lrl Mr. tnd Mr1. O..v!d Adeholm, ~l .t.lli.o, NtWl>Ol'I llft tn. 11lrl Nov1ml>tf' 1, 1'71 Mr. tnd Mrs. L11rry LNH, 126 Otrre!I, Costa Mest. 111r1 Mr. t nd Mrs. Dontkl Newell, '991 l1bll Sl,, (OS!t Mel.I, bov Mr. tnd Mr1. Rlcr11ro O!Sffl, W Tn1ll1 Str"t, LtllU"" l ttdl, l lrl Mr. llnd Mr1, Ellllo Jut n, 2149-C Cvoren, Stnll An.a, boY Mt. Ind Mrs. Lt•rv Pt1rSOfl, 16102 Telllm Lane, Hunllftllfgn ktUI, 11lrl Mr. tflcl Mro. AnOtlo R. Are ... , 619 VII Lido Soud. NewPOrl 61&eh, 11r1 NOVt m¥' 7, 1,11 Mr. end Mfl. Albf11 E. Wlllt;ul, ~ .. Stntt Ant JI.Ye., Cos!t MHt, elrl Mr. •"" Mrl. Ltrrv well'(, 2.!U Stnll .t.n1 .t.ve .• too. e, Costa Mew, boy Mr. t l\CI Mfl. Jo.~n L. Rtvll0id1, 30f lr l1 SI,, Corona aef Mar, 1lrl Or. tnd Mfl. S!tYt AIBhll\CI, i)2J .t.Sl>!ord Lane, NtwPOrl llttdi, boy Death Notlees Monday, Novtmbei'._ 15, 1971 Vasectomies: Painless Cure By TOM BARLEY Of !he Dally 1"1111 Sltff YOU ARE a fortyish family nian who want! to end the population explosion right in your own home. It bas been some yeart since diapers wended their little way around the family dryer and you want to keep it that way. Then, my man, you may want to visit the Planned Parenthood Asso- cintioo office in Orange to inquire about a vasectomy. Sanitatio~n Unit Pay · System Eyed By JOANNE REYNOLDS The pniblerp •bu becau,. -A-problem other lllln direc-into one """"'lldaled district made uniform . This· would Of "" n.ttir 1>11t1 ,,.,, • a min maY. 'aition the board of tors who represent multiple with operations and mafn· mean ta:t increases· f or When the 1970 Orange eoun. more than oil. district. Thus, distri~ inyolvea: the cue. of te'*'nce costs shared evenly residerits of Newport Beach, ty Grand Jury issued its if ·he repr.eaenfa two districts Robert Battin, chairman of throughout the new district. Costa Mesa and the Tustjn.. report on special districts.last he gets Pilid SUKI for attending the 'county Board of -To c 0 n80 11d 1 t e the Irvine area. January, (Ille of the criticisms pl •~ I Su -and Ed Just, •··t ··-·-ol s ta An the joint meeting us ...., or petVllOn districta into oot com-... of V'-1 res1""'"i..:s an a, listed in the study was the pay ' JNl1QO system for directors of these any additional t·n d iv 1dua1 chalrmaR of the joint aanita· 1even mna. Fountain Valley, Westm inster districts. district meetings that are lion di.strict boards. The problems of maintaining and central and northern The 32 directors of the seven held. BatUn, as chairman of the the preatnt systerri 11 seen by Orange County would pay'less. district& which consUtUte the State haw seis a maximum board of supervisor11 la con· . the study committee already The commiUee did not rec- joint Orange County Sanitation of $100 per director per sidered a member of aU seven have been pointed oUt. .__ ommend Uiis alternative · on District are trying to solve district per month. Jr • man districts and so receives '350 Al far 11 ame...1• .... •"-fee the basi sof the unequa1 dis. this problen1 before a serves on two districts, he. "''"'6 wic governmental agency decides could receive a maximum of for each joinf meeting he at· schedule IO that a director tribution or costs. to solve it for them. $200. Nine of the 32 directors tends. would only be paid for One · The last proposal, which has At their meeting · J as t currently represent two · Just is likewise considered a c\lstriet, the committee notes the romm1ttee's backing would Wednesday director• were boards. mem~r of each of the seven that ·its counsel bas ruled that provide a means of balancing given a committee· study of Membershiyon these boards districtso but gets an ad~ the districts do not have the the pay without changing the the pay problem which listed Is also established by state ditional $50 for b e i n g tax rate. four alternate solutions. law which says that the major chairman of the joint boards. authority to discriminate in Under Lhis proposal, there No action was · taken at ·the or bis altern~te from each city The recommendations under their fees. The only way to would be only 23 directors, time. Directors will study the served by the district plus a study are: achieve this plan would be by each representing one district. propcsals. They are scheduled representative from the local -To maintain the present act of the state Legislature and, as the report notes, "this to vote on the matter at their sanitary district will constitute system. and "the chances of securing altemative would also have Hundreds of Orange County males already have. Their male sterili-za· lion procedures will be perform~ within the next few weeks. Dec. 8 meeting. the board of directors. -To amend the fee schedule paSSB;ge of such legislation are the effect of substantially re- .~. As mandated by state law, a Santa Ana, for example, lies so that a director would .be tlim," the report says. ducing the number of special .. -director receives $50 per In three different districts and paid for representing only one The major obstacle to the districts, an objective form· AND MANY of those males, depending upon their fJ.. meeting. Most district& only others, such as Huntington district, regardless of how third alternative, accbrding ally endorsed by the board of nancial situation, will spend-far.,.Jess_lhan.Jhe.y_nJ!«ied meet once-a month-and-that Beaclt,-Fountain ~valley and many boards he ts a member to the report, is that the tax supervisors. the county Leagus for the operation. meeting is held concumintJy Newport Beach, tie in two of. rates, which are different for of Cities and the county Grand A counselor at PPA offices, 704 N. Glassell St., dis-with f.he joint meeting. district!. -To Incorporate all seven each ~Jct, wohl"d h,_v~ to.~ J1ey." cusses with the married coliple tha reason s for the va.s-f ;----'----.:...-------------------,_;----------'--.:...--=--"-'--'-'---'---------- ectomy, receives the assurance from thti ~fe t~at s~e concurs with the procedure and then goes into fmanctaI details and the date and place of the surgery. Drs. Joshua Alpern and Herbert Schwarz are the sur. geons who will perform the half-hour sterilization incision. They will begin work on the PPA program Dec. 3 and their appointment books, says PPA administrator Ileen Ready, are fast filling up. The question asked by more than 99 percent of the males who go through counseling: "Will this operation interfere with my sex life? Will it affect my virility?" • "NO," SAYS Miss Ready. "Actually, it works the other way -freed from the fear of producing unwanted chi!. dren, you may find your sex life and the enjoyment of sex· ual relations greatly improved." The next question is equally predictable: "Will it hurt ?" "No," said a surgeon. "You'll be a little sore for a while but, based on your own particular case, your doc- tor probably will tell you to rest for a little while. "A patient of mine," the doctor chuckled, " came in here one morning for his vasectomy and I told him to take it easy for a day or so. He went out dancing that night. He bad to do it, be said, for the sheer joy of being free." THE VAST MAJORITY of vasectomies are performed under !Deal anesthetics. But the PPA surgeons .will gladly perfonn the operation under a general anesthetic. "All that happens," the surgeon exp lained, "is that we have cut the. cords that produtt the spenn. The sexual act is unimpaired and can be performed wit hout the nag- ging fear that it can produce an unwanted pregnancy." Rock, rhythm and lues, folk, estem and show unes. At Penneys. Special Price on these 8.-track.tapes now! This apeclal group ol tapes Includes: major labels and major a.-at fontaotic lllVings. Build your tape lll>rlllY Jll unbeliav- ilili aamgs---mu11c fCil' evsyane: vocals, lnstlumentats, country, allow -. rock, blues. · _. Mrs. Reddy's PPA offices expect to handle some 1,000 vasectomies in 1972, and she predicts th ey will process 3.560 PatfenlS a year by 1973:--- _ "The risks are infintesimal, the possiDility of failure is less than one-half of one perttnt and the discom· , fort experienced is only passlng and extremely minimal,'1 ADAMS the surgeon said. "I think that vasectomies will very soon HYoll "'lams. na J· s11bM Blvd.. far outnumber abortions and other birth control methods Nt-•I e1tel!. Otlt dttlh," November 11. Ttn. urvlved bv ... 1h!. v1c1or11: :ion. as the solution to our population explosion." Ktllt!, of Phoenl•; dauohltrs, S1ndr1 be Ad•m•. N•w Yori!: Mrs. Hqther Hefner. PPA'S BUSY counseling rooms would appear to Newl'Oft BeJtlli live GtBl'ldctllldrtn, Set• ed · vices ,,.,,. Me1c1 '°"'~· ~v. Ptclfk: ample justification for that pr iebon. View CMaoel. Entombmtnf, Paclllc Vltw 0l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 OltKIOfS-l(ANN Hllrrv Kahn. lOIMl Cr1llel Drive, Hu.,. llnalon 6~1ch. O..te of dfllh. November l~. 1911. ~utVIVtd bv ""lff. S1r1 !Sally); SOI'>. MtlYln Kalin; dtuoMer, Dorctnv Dlclr1leln; •l'eDdauahleo-. Mr1. -~li>rla Baits: li•tfr .. Nat!lt Felber: s~verel 1r1ncklllldr1111 tnd ert11!-11r1n«.h!klrt<'I. Strvl~es, Tut..i1vH '':Kl """ Peek F1mllv ColOfl ti Funeral LA~~N Adt Ltrffl'!. Aoe 88, of 30 Stni. An1 AYt .• Nl\llOOrt Beech. Date DI detlh. NOYember U, lJJl. Survived bY three dauoh!ers, Mrs. Luclllt Artlle•, N-rl BHdl; Mrs. Tlletmt HoP;in. Cmt1 M•M: Mfl. Paul Roberts. ANl\elm; 1l•ter, M<3. JI.let Melthew, Seattle: two ortnd\or11,J.Or. William Pllr!Clr Murotiv. C<nl• Mil1..1; ll:oberl C. A.~v Hunl!no!on Stach: thrn ore11.o,r~h)ldr,n. $t!rvltt s wtrt ~tld !od&V, M V. Enlombm"1!1, Harbor R:t•! Memorlal i rk. Btll1 Co1!1 Mesa Morlv1rv, Dlr~('KHAllT FIDrt ntt (lllfttrlnt loc~htrl. 'elavtcl wl•e of Robert W, loc~h••t : Sl•ltr (II 'tw:: fn""1n~o.~:.:,,s•,~t,;r·. 1~::.~··t!;.~ Cvoren, Forts! Lawn Mor1Yarv. MILNE ~ Htlt<'la C. Milne. Aot 11. o1 !17 Oglf St., Co<11 Mn• .Diie or dtt!h. November 11 . ~'1~1.x. su'B"J~~ bP,r{'."'11C1,1r':{1on.v"~n llrw<tway Chtoal, untll •:XI PM tgi,loht. A...,uitm Man. Tuesdav. ' ~M. St. J1>1chlms Calhol\e Ch<Jrch. Interment. Good Sheollerd Cttne!trv, lltll 8rGldwlV Morluerv, Olrec'<p,'liicE AMI II. Prkl. jl91·10 Vl t Merloose Wei , Laount H 111. oaie of death, ~~~ll'R:~P~l~t:1'~!;,,~UtV~~!'M~rtbk~":f Bell. Servltn, Tue..i'lv, 11 AM. P1cUlc View ChtDel. En!nmbn'lenl. P1clllc View Mtrnerltl "''"· Pacific Vltw Mor1111rv, OlrKIOrl. SUTTON AltM J. Sult0f1. Aoe 6?. of 1'1 Ce<;ll P!ete , Cm.It Mesa. Otlt ol death. NOYember u , 1971. ~u,..,1vet1 bv lwsballd. Earle Sutton. o! tftt "°"'~' wris, Kennelft A. Jd'lnwri, Coste Mesa: Bruce "· JohMOfl, S•cra.,..nto; li dauah!ers, •rol G C!arll, Anelle!m· 5 rrl• Ellan . ~e•as; bro!~r. J01tn11 Car , M&rv!1~1 1~ 1ir1ndchlldrtn. Services wlll bo held l"u~v. J:XI PM, Ne""'°rt Her!IO!' l Ulh'1•n Church, Sell B re I d WI v Mortuerv. DlrK!or1. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY U'7 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR S.MSO Costa Mesa Ml 1-tUf • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY llt Broadway, Costa Mesa LI l-311J • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Llpna Canyon Rd. OMUI • PACIFIC VIEW MEMOlUAl. PARX _, Mortuary •P~Drlvt Newplri -· llallloralo l!Ulll • PEEKPAMILY COLONLU. F'lJN!tllAL ROME 'lltl l!Gbl A ... Wet1111bo1ter 113-UU • SMITHS' MORTUARY The loved ones. Give Christmas portraits of you and your children. ~fi::x·,. r:2w~­r~}:: f i· '• <: 7tor5ss • ONE LARGE lx10 FOR THE FAMILY • SIX WALLET·SIZE FOR GIFT·GIVING A gilt to be cherished this year, and for years to come. At a marvelous price for such professional quality. o_ur photographers rank among the most skillflld in their profession end can achieve.the lnlormal, natural look you want. Thls offer applies to any family grovpfng vp to, and inc:lui:llng fo:Jr. Artd rf'member, you csn charQ• It at Penneys. JCPenney .The values are here r.Jer1 day. NEWPORT BEACH ~ltlo•d ...-......... 2311 I HUNTINGTOM BEACH ·---_. 'Tupelo Honey' Van Morrison. 2.98 A&M- 'A Song For You' BIN Medley, UI AHonftcR- ' Allin The Family' The Bunkers, :S.88 ColumblaR- 'AlphabetAlbum' Muppets, 3.11 DunhlJI --'Harmony' ThreeDog Night, 3.88 United Ar11a1a. 'Fiddler On The Roof' ·soundtracl<. s.1111 Coluntllill Roconlo 'How Great Thou M Jim Nabors, 2.11 199Neh 8-track and cassette tapes at Penneys. Ma2w1Mt~ 'SU..., Tongued DIVfl & r l<iia-~"" Tltnollold R- DunhllROCOfdo 'Harmony• Throe Dog Nigh~ 4.88 Unlled Arlills Records 'Fiddler On The Roor Soundtrack, &.88 . --'Up To Data' Partridge Family, 4.11 ~F;very Good Boy 0111M11 Fwour' MoodYBluee,UI JCPenney The values are here every day. -- Racord• and tape cartrid911 av1i11bl1 at th110 sfor11: • NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion l•lond HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center J • t - err Mahl 111. llptl.,__ ... Chorgt • f I • I I .. - / E'itral StrPtch - ' 'LOgjam Loomillg = ----·----.... Fo.-Redistricting . . -• a •' I ' ' . SACRAMENTO (UPIJ-The record-set.. said to contain the PJ)tenU&l'for an upper ting 1971 legislature began its exPflCted .house h!adershlp-fight because of the cold next·t~flnal week loday with assembly regar.d -two senators have for it. reapportion1nenl and a budget-balancing Sen. Lawrence ,Walsh ()).Huntington tax program providing the major Park), is angry ~ause .hls diltrict Is Mondu, NO"rtmbtr 15, 1971 DAILY PILOT JI Fires_.l{-ill Seven • Ill State From the Wire Services thltd-degree burns, the cor· lnvestigi.tors said t h e r e Flames bolled from •ll the. UVERMORE CAP) ~· J>ntr), Qffl~P-i!L ... :-···--we.re. grounds. !or .suspicl<llll.. windows ol lhe building when remen are l nvdtlgatfng 8-P1>1ictmen who arrived first that the blaze at the Polk . , f blaze that killed four persons on the scene reported hearing . Family Care home had been firemen arrived be ore dawa ln their • home and left a screaming of .. help, help," set. Sunday. month-old Infan t crltically 1 from within, and rushed into:--==================== burned. the house to save the infant. Fire Capt. Charles Davis Davis said investlgator.s said that Ohly Charles Pr8tt. suspected a faulty heater in who had minor Injuries, and the family room might have His baby son Joseph remained touched off the blaze. But. he alive after flames swept said, "it m&y be a while through their three-bedroom before we know exactly how .it home early Sunday in this city started, because the rather is 30 miles soulheast of Oakland. not in any C1)ndiUon to talk to WESTERN STATE ~NIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW . • in ANAHE IM AND SAN DIEGO obstacles to adjournment. . being pus!Jed ,il)to the Republican Although the l}attle over Senate reap-stronghold of Orange County. Informed . He said Platt was t o o anyone." now accepting men •nd women who are •lth•rt portionment appeared to be over, a k>g!. sdurces ~ he rhay Change party jam may have· developed in the lower • registration for · politlcal survival. But house over a DemocraUc-sponsored · Walsh · denied he was considerl.Dg • redistricting. bill. switch. · Republicans scoffed at the Democratic The same source. said that sen. 'Ji mes proposal when it was unveiled and re,.Oiq-Q. YfedWQrth (D·Hawtbome), fears that ded the majority party that Gov. Ronald, 40 percent black constituency his new Reagan was ready to veto any plan that district includes may produce · a Negro was ··unfalrt' to the GOP 1awmU.ers. candidate wbo could defeat him in the With strong bipartisan support, a reap-. primary election next year-.. portionmcnt bill Co~ the 1:.1pper house sail· W.,edworth, sources•said, Is considering ed through the Senate last week on a 33-2 voting .for a Republican to unseat Senate vote and was sent t.o the assembly where leader James R. Mills ()).$an Diego ), as its approval was expected to be a retaliation .. He denies It. but no: move- formality . against Mills probably would be made un· In the area ·of · taxation, the Senate Lil the 1972 session, the so11rces said: finance committee planned hearings Sinee:Democrats control the Senate 21. Thursday on two bills designed to ra.ise 19,. if· Walsh switches registration· and enough new revenue to erase ·a $330 Wedwerth -votes .... with · the · GOP', a million state budget deficit. ·Republican could topple Mills in January. Sen . Randol ph Collier (D·Yreka), com-When the lawmakers returned to the mittee chairman, said probably only one capitol today, the.y already had surpassed bill would survive his commlttee's !he old record ror the length of delibera· ~~~!:i1 distraught to speak with of· Meanwhile, in . Los Angeles, • ficial.s. fire department investigators Belly-La1u1~1ig N ot New to Him Joseph was In critical con-attempted to determine today ditlon at Children's Hospital in whether a fire that destroyed Oakland with burns covering a home for the handicapped, 60 percent or his body. killing two men and a woman, Dead f r o m asphyxiation was set by an arsonist. were the mother, Linda Platt. The fin8.nci81 loss in the -23; a son Ralph, 5, and an destruction of the t,,.,•o-story OAKLAND (UPJ} _ For the second au~ Ann Brodahl, 89. Another frame building was placed at time In sit weeks pilot Lulber Manuel ofi ;;;'°-"·-G;;;re;;;g;;;oryOiii, ;;;I;;;, ;;;d;;ii~--!ro;;;m;;;'Oiii$200iii,iOOOOiO.'"!'OiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiii'""il San Mal<O belly·landed his disabled pn>J>' 11 jet on a foa~vered runway at Oakland International Airport. "I'm getting used to it,v Manuel, 42, said when he walked Into the alrport's guest center after the landing Sunday. Manuel, a pilot with Golden Pacific Airlines, was taking a routine six-month night test when landing gear problems developed. Aboard with him in the twin-engine you ASKED fo1·. it! Now Open Until 9 P .M. Mon . thru Fri. Until 6 P.M. Sat. The Bo okstall • ..... , 11 ....... :l .,,.,. ,, t <Ctpl1lil• uu ... "e<lll1 t•O!J ., • '""' ll ..,,.! h.V• t"11fted '" lp'I"'"' 111< Nllt<tv1I 1bll!ty Ill• *'!YIValtnl tf .i.IMY• IN ' ltt tlt!ffMil\td ~y Int) lht JJ). er tl:I. dtgr•• <•n be e1med In A y1t11 of p1rt.1ime 'lu1e11 3 d1sM1 ptr we.-li 3 ho"u pee day. Apply Now for February 7th Day or Evening Class~s WllQ Ol PHONI fOl IHfOlMATION Ol CATALOGUE 800 South Brookhurst Anaheinr92804 (7141 635-3453 The de'Jrtt cf J.O. or U.8. wit! be conferred upon gr•dv1tiol\ from !ht 4 Y••r prc!J"m cf Th• (clleg• cf low, opefl!ing Ynd1r C~•rltt cl !he Sr1t1 cf C1l,fcrni1. , Gr1dY1!tJ 1r• 1Ugibl1 le 11k• th• C.lifcml1 St1t1 Bir b1mln1tlon. scrutiny. Both impose withholding of tlons in a year. Today marked the 318lh state income taxes as of Jan. I. calendar day of the 1971 session. The Beechcraft were Dan Collins, 56. Palo I 333 E. 17th St.. Costa Mesa Alto, the airline's chief pilot and Federal 548-4611 ,., ·•-------------....,.--• AviaUon ,~A~d~mlnc::i=<tr~•=ti=on~r~e=pres:.:::•=·="="='·~~~~~~·~E~R~!N;D~T~H~E~P~A~N~·c~A~K~E~H~O~U~S~E~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Senate reapporliOnment bill was previous record was 312 days in UHO. Jerry HoP-kirus. Billionaire H unt .. Predicts · Co111munist Takeover 'Soon' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -..... cess oil and gas reserves and the government for only a few White-haired H. L. Hunt, one · products !or export to the hours, 11 he said. 0 Producers of the world 's richest men, United State·s, saying it' would would be banki'upt and the "entertained" newsmen in his impair-the U.S. trade balance. government would have to hotel suite Sunday with a "Should the Soviets find drill the well• and.produce the discourse on..waild affairs, oil Statrograph ic tr~ps inching oil required for n ation a I industry pfoblems and his out along the North Pole area.s_ t ·e..e !.\ r it y, .w Ith the family's history. such as the north slope of government's notorious ex· 'fhe -3 2 _ye 8 r. 0 Id· oil -~ka, their .pri_maey motive _ ~ssive «;Q$t of operation." bill ionaire pt ace d personal 1n the ~perabon of t~e At1 .. m1u_, calls invi ting the news media reserves will not be. for profit, to his 23rd floor suitEi in the but ·for the damage they can Now ••• Give Yout Fairmont Hotel wllere he innict on the free world," he r'ALS£ TEETH warned tha t the United States said. r1 may last only three years Hunt also ur~ed . oil P.ro-More Biting Powef before the Communi.sts take du~rs to use his r1ght-wmg A denture adbe1IY• e•• btlp. over. Tad10. ~road~ for · coro-:h1:)~J;r• !t;:-d":Dd.i:a:! "I'll say TnOOestly th'~t ou~ merc.1als OP'POSl,IJI aJJY-redJic:· er. k>DJll', ~'· 1tt1C:. r1 Hokll country will be gdne very tk>n· in-the ·27 \oi pereent oil ~.moni.;e.>mfortt.b~ll HtlJll!I shortly," said the tall. blue-depletion-albJwaoceon:.federal ~~~~tw.:LJ~ eyed Texan . taxes. Powder. Deatur• t••t flt i re "I don 't want to be shy, 1 "This allowance -if the -t1111 to bu.Ith. S.. 7°"' dent.ii' want to be consistent -and govefnment · received it -rqWarly. ---· • ... we in this coun try may be .Yf~uld be sufficient to operate good for only two or threel jimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii years before the Communists take Over."" ... -· · · • Hunt was in San Francisco· for the American Petroleum Jnstitute meeting which opens today. · Asked about President Nix. on's planned trip to M,i.·inland China . Hunt replied : "You can't carry out successful negotiations with t h e Com- munists." He said the U.S. should have learned its lesson from the events which follow~ ed the reco gnition of t.h~ Soviet Union during the 1930s. The billionaire, known for his support of ultra con- serva tive causes, insisted oh attention during the session with newsmen and rambled through a lot of family history. •·r11 tell you what 1 called you for \vhen I get around to it." h<' said at one point."So far . I've only been en· tcrtaining .'' Hunl -then· warned aga;nst encoura ging foreign countries to discover. produce and pro- , HERBERT l. MILLER l IRE CO. INC. STARS Sydney Omarr 11 one of lhf' \\'Or\d's great astrolo- JZ:cri;. lli11 column 11 one 01 the DAILY PILOT'S lft't'll ft'aturcs. oo··SCIENC1 -AND THE BIBLE . AGREE? LECtURES ON J . -~--.~~--:1 .. ''THE -BllLE, SCIEN~Ci ~· AND EVOLUTION'' SPEAKER . -- ARNOLD o: ·seHNABEL . . . --. . Gradua te Enginee r -Po rtl and, Oregon NOV . 15..,.... 21 7:3Cl'·P.M. EACH EVENING CHURCH OF CHRIST 16481 MAIN STREET TUSTIN, CALIF. 92680 Special. Su~tl'f.:'A~r-Lectvr• .. · -:' ... -~ . NOV,' 21'-l:lO. P.M. ·''Science ·:vs·= -Evolution'' 11 th•r• Bibl1-Science harmony? Hai ,.,olution bffn proved? Would you honestly study th e11 qu11tlon17 Followin9 each l1cture • question and t nsw1r ptrlod will be conduct1d. Mr. Schnabel's book "Hai &od Spok1n" will ba 9iv1n to ••ch family in attendance. !<!)ME HEAi A $CllNTIU .PIF.IND THI lllU FllOM -. -'TIU'VllWl'OlNf-0,.-SCllNCI ., "H Y°" ~"· AS~. Ml. ·sc:HNAllL YOUI Cj)UISTION5-HE 'WILJ; ANSWlll" TRUTH HA·s -,Nt>TH•NG· To FEAR BY AN HONEST INVESTIGATION "'COME NOW AND ·fR ·us: R2'.SOff TOGETHER" I • PIERRE! 6EAll ! TH ERE ARE THREE OF US LEFT- ANO OUT THERE ••• 5,000 OF THEM I VIVE LA FRANCE! IOIOTS ! THIS IS NO liME 1t> SING! ' ' r BUT. SERGEAr\IT, THAT TASTE IN A LOW "'O\R" ANO NICOTINE CIGARETTE? IS OOAAL-·TH£ LOW •TAR "ANO NICOTINE CIGARE11£! --- -· ---- GREAT TASTE", VOAAL! NOW ... HOWAREYOU AT SMOKE .SIGNALS? ~TASTE ., ME ~ YOU JEST, BEAU ! The filler system you'd need a scienlis t 10 explain ... but Doral says ii in lwo words. "Tasle me" £,hJ JJ'V I TASTE ME TASTE ME 1HERE IS NO OISHONOR IN TRYING ONE, SERGEANT! filter Fil TER 14 mq ~l:ti'°, 0.9 mg n•co1m1. M£NTH0l 14 iii; 1ai"~LD mg. M:a1m1. av ~er t1garetta. f IC Re~on AUG.71. ) . I l ' • DAILY PILOT Friends Aeross Border -S'!-maritans Give Girl Leg • t >-t .... t.-.... • ' ' I J I -co RONA (APJ -Whln·1oe ··or···1:11senada.· ·1f•r ··tmsban<t·· --Consuela -wlll·fO -homo'71!. ·- Nugent flew to Baja cluromta makes $7S a month working on day, then return to Corona in on a business trip he saw • fishing boat and on a ranch. about three weeks when the I '1. _ Nugent and U,,, strvice clubs new leg Is ttady. Doctors say Consue a Nunez de :;erventei esllmate the Cost of their pro-she may remain 1 month on walking on a crutch. Her left ject wtll be about ,l,000. the second trip for ther11py. leg was amputated just above,==================== • the knee at the age of a after a ratUesnake bite cou1dnrt be treated immediately. Nuaent said he told himself : ''l can put tha~ girl on two legs if anyone can." Jn . two months, he had enlisted the help of the Corona and Norco Rotary Clubs, the Corona Soroptomist Club and tbe Community Hospital to do Ibo job. . • He and his wife provided the transportation and r a V'f: Consuela, 17, a home. She arrived thls week for an examination and fitting lot the ~ artirictaf leg. NEW YORK'S 'CARDIAC CADILLAC' NEARLY ALWAYS ARRIVES IN TIME ·Mobile Coronary Care Unit Cutting rlnto Heart Attack Death Rate "I want to wear slacks a :-J shoes," said Consuela, who is Beart:..--Aiil Q11irkly DEATH CHEATED AGAIN BY DOCTORS ON WHEELS 76 Out of 225 He1 rt Patients' Life Extended married and has plans for a . family. Her p8rents and 15 brotben aQd tisters live in two small adobe houses at San Quintin, about SO mJles ~uth Mobile Coronary Unit Big Success OCC Club Does More ~ban-Help Shrlnk Swelling Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Due To Infection By TO~t BARLEY Of Ille C.Uy ~ilel S!alf Jlarry Broderick \\'<ls hun- ting deer in upper New York slate when he suddenly drop- ped his rifle. collapsed in the brush and clapped both hands to his chest. A companion knew what the crushing chest pains and Har· ry's pain-racked attempts to draw breath meant. He rushed to the lodge. made a n emergency call and wailed (or the ambulance that might well have. been too late. Harry didn·t get an am· bulance. He got a New York hospital's mobile coronary care unit and he's alive today to tell the story of the deer hunt that didn't prove to be his last. Dr. ri1orti1ner L. Schwartz told that story last week at the American Heart Association meeting in Anaheim. Coronary care service on wheels, he predicts. will make dramatic inroads into the 60 to Pact Given For Special School Unit 75 percent death rate among unit. Americans v.·ho suffer heart The "cardiac Cadillac" con- attacks outside· hospitals. tains all the equipment There are now 50 early cor-normally used to rev ive the onary care operations in ac-coronary vict im. ranging from lion across the nation. Dr. oxygen to the devices used lo Schwartz saijl. and t he electrtcally shoe!\ life back in- response amol'ig hospitals and to a heart impaired by ir- communities advised. of the regularity. results obtained in less than Physicians often travel in two years has been such that the. vehicles to begio ad· the figure may be doubled by ministering . aid the moment this lime next year. the brakes are applied at the He cited the case of the point of destination. But. SeatUe coronary care team often. equal success is enjoyed which sucressfulJy revived 76 by units s t a f f e d by of 225 patients o u t s I d e paramedical personnel. hospitals, 31 or whom were Dr. Schwartz urged more later discharged. The Seattle than 250 cardiologists who at- group. he said. undoubled.ly tended his talk to \ h e saved at least 40 lives by the Ameri can Heart As.sociation'S mobile coronary care unit. NationaJ Committee on Earl)ll Schwartz said the most sue-Coronary Care to become cessfuJ operation of a pro-"medical missionaries" and gram that was pioneered in implement !he mobile cor· Britain has been in Ne\v York onary care progrr.ni in their where a six percent mortality rommunities. rate -"A staggeringly low He has made a film. "Life figure" -was reported on the Line". available to any among pat\ent.s brought to the Orange Count}' physicians of hospital in the mobile unit. hospital trustees "'ho might be To Sponsor UF Events Also Gives Prompt, Temporary Relier in Many ~ses: from Pain, Itching in Such Tis.sues. i The Orange Coast College Docton have found a rern•rk· and itchinr in these 'liuuee. . . ably succeaaful medication that Tests by doctorfl pro•ed thit . lnter-C1ub Council will sponsor actually helPll shrink awelling true in many.cases. a United Fund Day on th~ OCC of hcmorrhoidll tislmel ...-hen ThemedK:alioumed .. Prep. infected ·~ int!amed. And i t arar H. •-• · · campus \Vednesday. does mor~. In ra.ny ales it u . ~ ,:;'° ~ Twenty-one clubs will take givea relie f lot hours from~ OiSJtntent• 9DJ>llOlilor1-. part in the program,, which · • will last from~ a.m. to 3 p.m.l~jiii~--~iiii---~iii-iiiii ___ wl Each club will set up a b!?olhl~ in the quad area and .pledged DENTAL .. to present at least 125 to the ' • United Fund campaign. Booth exhibits wilt include a PLA~ES ski movie to be s~own by the Ski Club, a bingo game sponsored by the Associated Women's Students, a fish bowl toss by the Law Club, a peanut sale by the Vets, Club and a "country store" run by the Home Economics Club. • Bridgework • FiUlngs • X.Ray • Extractions ALL ON · . INSTANT CREDIT TERMS The "cardiac Cadillac'' isn't interested in providing a the only asped-of lhe-.life-_ mobile_coronary care ser ice Money given to the United saving operation. Dr. Sch\vartz for this area. --:--Fui'i'd campaign 1s·presented1o said. ';The magnitude of the heart 32 community agencies. They · Communications networks attack problem and the Jn-include the YMCA, YWCA. centered at the hospital go on vestigative results to date are Boys Club, Artificial Kidney the alert al the moment "that---such that-community forces--Foundation, Cerebral _Palsy, an external heart attack is across the nation should be American Red Cross, Orange reported and trained reception mobilized to provide early County Children's Hospital personnel wait at the hospital care for the heart· attack vie-and the Retarded Children's for the arrival of the mobile tims." Dr. Schy,•artz said. Association of Orange County. All Credit H•ndled By My Of!lcol No Bank or Finance S:o. To. De11I With 1~~~111 . ·o\h PENTOTHAL UNION MEMBERS & SENIOR CITIZENS WELCOME A Ne\l·port Beach firm has been awarded a $1,022,050 con· DR. OAKES tract to build a school to serve MORE PARKING NOW crippled children from Orange 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA , Coast communities from Seal than after thanksnivinn PHONE 646-1882 I Beach to Costa Pt1esa. ":II "' LAST DAYS! tree-mendous Christmas off er! 9 professional portraits of you and your children 995 "'--Tlt•-9ift t~at's-•s~per1onel •• youl' •utogr1ph: I lar9• 8xl0; 2 lovely 5x7's; end ~wallets of as meny •S three people. Our fihotogreph•rs1 N~n• better! Keep some--sprinkle the rest all over your Christmes list. Merry Christmes! it's at the hroadway ll1111tl1tfM1 Mcie• , ..... lf2·JlJI, •rtftlle• Jll porhtjt 1tudio .•. I 1t floor Hanvick and Son ol Ne"•port IOI. !: (oast.1Jua· No Af'Pointment Necessary Beach was selected by Foun· --=Ill Quick Plate Repajr1 While YOtl Wait lain Valley School Districtl---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:_ _ _'.~~~~~~~·~·~··~"~'·~'°'~ot.~»~"~·~~~~~~~~=================== trustees to build the school, beginning this December. The school, to be named for Fountain Valley pioneer Ur· bain Plavan. \.\'ill ser\•e crip- pled children from Fountain \ Valley. Huntington Be a ch , \Vestminster. Seal B e a c h . Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Under pro visions of a Senate bill providing state funds for schools for handicapped children, 90 percent of the con· struction cost will be paid by the state. Mike Brick, Fountain Vallev school super.intendent, said the school is the only one of its kind in the country which \\'iii combine normal students in classes with crippled children. "The Plavan School is designed to integrate the o r thopedically handicapped Child into his society at a very early age," he said. Comes From ;a1"iia's cuDs -OlttTS -CANOLIS -COIT\IMI JEWEL•Y ,.., Ala.111i. -KMlll """""""' tnc•-lanllA-klnl -M .. 1...-C~•rtf Phone 6424321 For Weekender Advertising The ana~ of the West's largest mutual life insurance compall)\ Our handsome new home offic~ naw going up in Newport Center, is an uncommon building. Its largest floor is near the top. The smallest floor is on the bottom. And its garden is in the middle. This is partly because we have a lat of glass all the way around (la keep the vif!W'S in view) and it prevents the sun shining in our eyes. Partly because we grouped together the people who work together. There are five main floors because we have five.main activities. Investing our premiums (on the 5th floor). Efficient service for our clients and agents (on the 4th floor). Paying insurance claims (3rd floor). 6TH ROOtt: lwl ......_ ino 1dc1,..if daa.,_ wil bot "'°" '-ra; and-!owyan will briaf U& hara • ..4nt ROOI: lndi'ficluol pollda. will M ~ ""9; -og..m Mf'OJICI; and~ rhkt flgurad. 3M> ROOft: ,.....,,_will b. Melda to ~OWIMI and bltllflclcn-S. hara; - computlr1 ond plonning and~ lltpoiliiMill wfl b. °'" itlk "-"· 2ND ROOft; '-.lofl p&o,. .....i 9'0Uft 1if. -i ' heal!h '"-ani;a ""1 b. hondlad ......_ l 51' ROOft: Staff dining;~; Mbr-ory: '-ming _,..,.; dlnk: ,.._.,.,.i ..,., ,....mo.;,. ofRcft; on.I "- ~ ~ l"ldi;~ IASIMEHT: Wt'I do.MOlfof-J1rin11nt Mr..,· .. .., ~ _. "'81! • 1*11250 ~ . rAR1C.1NG-LEVll: it1 ,..... Olln"'" ,..t 1iar.. ' , Serving our group insurance clients (2nd Roar). And looking after our employees and.individual clients (!st floor). ' The Newport Center Peck Agerq ' will also be located on the fir;t floor. Thefre ·hiring life insurance representatives right now. If youre interested in a sa les career, call Ralph Peck at (714) 675-0344. _ When our new home office opens we11 need to fill hundreds of other job openings. To discuss a career with us, call (213) 625-121L Or write to Personnel Department, P. O· Box 54040, Las Angeles, CA, 90054. The drawing shows in more detail what we'll be doing in our neN home. Its the anatomy of the Wests largest mutual life insurance company. Over a hl{ndred year; old. But changing with the times. Pacific Mutual I . ' , • • " { I I • ·- • -- All0Wed .. O.r:i ly Cand x Canes • • BE A ANDERSON, ditor ~"d'~' frlovtm~r u., 1t11 1'111 lJ Ann Landers Musty Bites ust DEAR READERS : Recently I printed a letter signed "Musty Reader." He com- plained that today's youth has been pampered, petted, plied with toys, bikes. transistors, cars, boutique fashions and spending money. He described today's teenagers ' 21i overschooled a n d un- derworked -wallowing in sugar and spice and everything thrice. "When the fun of youth fades and the years pile up, when indulgent. parents are gone what resources wilt be thei'rs?" he asks ' "What in"ner strength to draw on in time' of crisis? Whal gifts to give the ~·orld ? 'Vhat legacy to leave to those un- born?" His final thrust: "Has any generation ever had so much, for so lit- tle, in a world Jived in by so many?" I invited responses tu those provocative questions and they came by the thou sands. Here's a sampling: FROrtt SPOKANE~ "'Musty' bas been rubbi ng sboulden wi"' ~be upper half o( one-half -percent. Toys; B I~ es? Transistors? Cars? Bout\que fashlons? My parents didn't ba~ tbe mOM:Y to·bqy me glassts last year. I am 15 and~T~e never had a pair of oew shoes. Where 'a'ld '1\1usty' do bis research? At the Scarsdale Country Club?" FRCV\1 HARVEY, ILL.: "II th• youth of today i1 spoiled rotten, t'd lik! to know who spo iled 'em. Jt's not their fault that their pll:renta are pushovers." PWNF~LD, N.J.! '''(bat le&•CY of ~pt will the young genuatioa leave lbt world? What dkl )'OI leave, 'Musty'? Nuclear warfare and mercary poisoning. It won't be bani to Improve on your record." ''Wh at happened to you IJ:COple who crew up dirt-poor and «:lawed your way to the tOp? From where 1 sit 1 see golf, poker, boozing, wilt-swapping, divorce, face.llfls. tranquilizers. a two-car garage and a sta- tion wagon in th e driveway." ABILENE, KANS.: "I get fu rious wben I hear teenagers criticized because they are lazy. Do you know how many kids tried all summer to get a job -any kind of a job -and the answer was, 'So rry, • . . . nothing.' I agree that Idleness is bad for kiJs, but in most cases it's not their fault-." MINNEAPOLJ!~i: "· '1\1usty' didn 't have the problems that · ' b e t t e r ' com· munications have brought us - such as 'Is God dead?' Or 'Are drugs the answer?' And 'Is pre-marital sex right or wrong?' t_l.'s a different world today and a lot tougher to grew up straight and strong." BOSTON : ''If being 'spoiled' means getting loaded down with · thlhgs, things and more things instead of attentinn end love from our parents, so be It. Somehow l 'd rather have had the attention and 1ove." FROM Rl C HM ciNo , VA.: 11Underw9rked? This morning before 1 walked lwo ud a balf miles to achoo! I • slopped the begs, gatbered eggs, fed the dllckeus and mUked two cows. I had to gel up at 5 a.m. AI~r school I'll be help. tn1: mom ~Hli l~t, iroahi g and ca nning. 1~m nil~ eomplalnln11 'Jolt setting t.he record straight." E'J\OM SALT LAKE CITY: " '!\fusty,' old. dear, you don't know how lucky you were to have grown p In the good old days when all .a kid had to worry about was money. We've got the bomb, poUu· tion, race riots and drugs. Thanks for all the gooiUes. I hope t}\ere'1 a world left to hand down lo our children." Drinking ntllY be "in" to the kids you run with -but it can pot you "out" for keeps. You can cool it aiid slly popular. Read 11Boo2e and You -FOr Tcenager1 • MERRY!.M.ISFITS -Can~)' canes aren't the .correct shape fo~ mailing -.but .the Mmes. J ames M. Peters Jr., John Stockwell and Clrnton M. Hoose, chairman (left to right) did post invitations to the Candy Cane Ball. The black-tie gala in Balboa Bay Club on Friday, 'Dec. 3, \Vill fund philanthropies of the Assistance League of Newport Beach Junior Auxiliary. By CA ROL MOORE oi 1111 IMJIJ ,1191 Siii! The sweet tooth-tempting Candy Cane Ball seems an unlikely benefit for a den- tal health clinic. · But the Assistance League of Newport Beach has been making a success o(1b0th projects for many years. · League members and juniors naturally discredit candy in dental health lectures they give to Newport-Mesa school children, who otherwise could not afford private dental care, that come to the cen- tal center behind the league's thrift shop. ''Many of the children don't speak English and their nutrition is poor ·because family menus ·~ave plenty o( rict, beans, even can~y, ·~ explains Mrs. Kae Ewing, junior chairman. "We stress proper brushing, diet and - milk consumption as present cures and future preventallvtti. The youngsters are v.ert grateful for the treatment.'' She added that the name of Candy Cane Ball Is the only reference to · sweetness allowed in the Leaf;!ue's cam- paign for children's dental health . League volunteers act as d e n t c. 1 _asfilstants wben_the-children, from 4--to 18 years of aJ(e. come on f.1ondays and · Thursdays for their appointments with one of four dentists who staff two wcll- equipped offices with the new horizontal chairs. Last year there were 1700 appointments for 300 children from 210 families. Six- teen received financial assistance for cor- rective orthodontia .. And there's a waiting list of patients. The children show liUle apprehension as they arrive in the gaily colored waiting room with fell applique animals on bulletin boards and a knee-high sheif of favorite books. Dental cases are referred by school nurses and each child pays 50 cents per visitm The lcagu~ provides e v e r y visit. The league provides e v e r y youngster with two toothbrushes: one that's. kept in the office and one for home use. "· 1 Before seeing-a dentist each visit. R child must brush and pa ss inspection. But this is actually /a fun procedure involving a pink fluid that temporarily stains the teeth to show where the brushin g missed. ''Although we stress dental hygiene. the center provides more than in-and-out care," Mrs. Ewing said. "Sometimes 11•e work for two months in a row to get a mouth in shape and we try to make an- nual checkups." Drs. David Dudley , John \\laSsenmiUer. Gregory Ucmatsu and William Pivaroff use a full complement or drills. va cuum s, rinsers and X-ray machines in treating the youngsters. League volunteers are resJXlnsible for injections, X-ra y develop- ment and instrument sterilization. 1.irs. Orrin Wright is chapter chainnan or the center which was started in 1951 but has renovated staff and equipment this year. Dentists who work. for the league generally are new to the area and phase out when their practices expand. A former school nurse, Mrs. Edith Di!- ly, is repl2.cing Helen Durkee who rt· signed alter 14 years as secretary-recep- tionist-"everybody's favorite grandma••· at the center. Mrs. Dilly also Is considered the reat. dent expert on ctwd psychology. "There's no pussy-footing. She knows how to lec- ture the children, get the health message· across and achieve better attitude toward continuing dental care," said Mrs. Ew· Ing. Besides the healthy smiles that leave the dental center, there's another reward for league volunteers who 'work there. Tbanb to their extensive \faining pro- gram in dental office procedures, many or, the wOmen have qualified for jobs in private pracUces. Dance --Sweetens Holid ay Shimmering candlelight will beckon guests to the Balboa Bay Club on Friday, Dec. 3, for the 23rd aMuat Candy Cane· Ball, sponsored by the Assistance i..eague of Newport Beach Junior Auxiliary. Crystallized fruit wreaths in muted tones of wine and green will decorate the candelabra centering tables for the I p.m. seated gourmet dinner to be follow- ed by an evening of danci ng. The traditional black·tie event provides the funds for such League p.rojects as the Children's Dental Health Center, Social Service office. self.perpetuating loan grants for senior USC dental and UCI medical students, and assistance to Hoag Memorial Hospital. Mardan School and American Field Service. Mrs . Castendyck Fay and Mrs . Clinton M. Hoose Jr. are chairmen for this year's ball which has a Nov. 22 reservations deadline. Also handling preparations are the l\Imes. George F. Bethel. Kae A. Ewing, Robert Gairdner. Castle Newell . Richard Newell , Paul J. Nicoletti, James f.f. Peters. Albert G. Pizzo, Thomas S. Raf· J~tto .. Donald F. Stoughton and Kenneth Young. Junior Auxiliary provisionals involved in the committ.eework i n c I u d e the Mmes. Craig Combs, Paul Hegener, Thomas Malcolm, f..1ichael Nicholas, Dean Patton, Thomas D. Peckenpaugh, Douglas Simpson, John F. Stockwell and James Thompson. Another · Tu: rn for Re .cycling - ' Aluminum will turn to "gold" du ri ng the • Aluminum Drive On Some metals have to be unearthed but aluminum is easier to find -foil , TV din· ner and pie containers, tubular fram tt lawn chairs, screen doors and, of course, curved bottom cans. The San Clemente Junior \Voman'I Club conservation committee is urging community residents to collect such discarded aluminum items for a recycl· lng project that will climax on Saturday, Dec. 11. Mrs. Barret Reeve, chainnan, urged families to save and store the used 1 aluminum products in their homes and take them l-0 the Safeway parking lot on the final day when Coors Corp. wlll SUJl:' ply a collection van from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Or she may be contacted for pick up o{ the cans and paraphernalia. Three conservation goals will be served by this community service. fund-raising project. Refunds from the recycling will be used to bus school children to all ecological study area. supply ecology reading material to the public library and help establish and beautify Linda Lane Park. • • Strategically placed posters will remind residents of the coming project deadline. If not enough is collected by that date to deem the errOrt successrut, the date wm be extended. · FRO~f WACO,, TEX.': "So today's J6uth Is J)IJ'.JlPCred and pelted, 19 i.f.? Try ttlling tttti.t to the boys who went fo Viet~ flam ~ or better yet, tell it to a wife whose husbaJld never made lt back." Only." Send 35 cents 1p·coin aod a long, / _.- self-addressed, stamped envelope with '-- L San Cle ment e Junio rs' recycl ing drive. Mrs. Alfred ·Nicolai I left ) a nd Mrs. -Kenneth-Bird 1e ll look ove r early retu rns . The Juniors. headed by Mrs. Raymono Lynch, president, emph36ize the pre-holi· ,day timing o( the ecology project. They ask residents to be on the lookout for aluminum castoffs while cleaning hou• and decoratlna !or fesUve days ahead. F R 0 M GROSSE POINTE, '\f1Cll·: Y.OUr request ln care of the QAIL Y PILOT. \ • < -l • I ! l -• • • • ' ,_ 14 OAJLV P"OT Monday, No~tJ'l!btr 15, 1971 ~ .. • .. . :• Horoscope: Taurus S.ees Potential • .. ~I ··I ,. TUESDAY GEMINI (May 21·June 20): challenges and chan.:;es are you as example. jects. \Vhat you do now 'will l "'"'VE B~l'lto Accent on how you express featured. Circumstances-turn SAGITI'ARIUS {Nov. 22· pay dividends In not-too-dis----·'" '"" · M = .. 16 .... · 1.euhgs.: w you ·ho!~' back': .. in· your mor: 'Yl!Ur 1udgtnen1-'D<l:'.·211~;;ome bl!~enti'whicn-·unr·rurure: 'Aet"accoroi!illjl."'' • . .. . . " • .. .. .. • ' • ' . N ... ., ,. ' ~ } Rounpiog Up Holiday Items ·:. Prairie dress, a \Vestern setting, hearty chuckwagon dinner and a country store ~ filled with boutique Christmas decorations and ~ifts are anticipated by the .:, Mmes. Robert Burns and Charles Webb Oeft to right) admiring Sesame Street ; pupj>e,ts and. fancy Chri~tmas wrea.th: The ev~nt is planned ~or Thursday. N~v. , 18, ·by the Women's S9c1ety of Chr1st1an Service, South Laguna Methodist Church, beginning at 2:30 p.m. . Changing Tempo Fan Drums Out Football By ERMA DOMBECK It annoys me nC> end that half.time ceremonies are in· terrupted by four quarters of football. The other Saturday in a half time "Salute to Pizza" no sooner had I figured out which members of the band were an- chovies and which were pep- peroni than these 22 grizzly men trotted out on , the field and started playing ball. Football teams are-=-Josing out to hair-time entertainment by sheer numbers alone. In a pro e-0ntest last ~eek I counted a 96-member marching band , a squad of ~ pompon girls, a 40-voice glee club, six majorettes, four acrobats and a full grown mountain lion. Their dominance of the game is becoming so evident that it will only be a matter of time until you will switch on your television sets and hear Ho\vard Cosen a n n o u n c e • 11Good afternoon, band fanir.- "Today, before we see the Michigan marching band bat- tle the Notre Dame ag- gregation, we have band rans in the grandstand interviews. \Vith us this afternoon is the musical director of the great AT WIT 'S END Ohio Slate group, Herb Tinears. · Herb, your band meets Michigan in just a few weeks. What do you think of today 's-t."Ompeti ti on?''- "Well,'' says Herb, 1'despite Michigan's two lip injuries in the trumpet Section, J think their first draft cholce of their lead glockenspiel, Marvin Tinkle, will make the dif- ference. "Of course, Notre Dome's tubas are fast. \Vatch them when they go around those ends. But moslly, I'm looking forward to seeing Michigan's drill teatn. You've never seen such backfields in motion until you've seen that squad." "Thank you, Herb." says Howard, "Now on to the battle of the bands." From then on, it will be a melee of actio n with the ~1ichigan band forming a jar of mustard with a screw lid while playing the Saber Dance and marching in double time. Then the Notre Dame band will counter with a profile of Heiiry Clay while the drill team kicks to that all-time fa vorite, "Getting to Know You ." Jn the few mad frenzied seconds before half-time, the Michigan band will execute a series of precision drills and release 50,000 pigeons over the playing field, "followed by an impromptu melody by · the Notre Dame bugle section, "Raindrops Are Falling on My Head." This will send the crowd into chaos. As the bands lea ve the field et half time. lloward C.Osell will announce, "And ·now for your entertainment at half time, we present the Michigan \Volveri nes battling the Fighting Irish of Notre Dan1e in a game of football. Let's gi ve these men a rousing welcome.'' But no one notices. Everyone is going out for hot dogs, listening to the Army- Purdue bands on t h e i r transistors and speculating as to whether Notre Dame will warm up The Flyi ng Nun playing a harp for the second hall. 8~~~ LANE, ,BR.YANT EXTRA SIZES EXTRA FASHIONS EXTRA VALUES 19.90 New-Seasoned Canvas Pantscoats . N•1t 110 !'fl1H1r wlitrt or "'hetli• tr 01 <11111 tl1t y'11 w1!1r r•• p1U~nt, ptrrl'\1n1nt P"1,U polv· 1t1r/11yon c1nv1t f Etch will ttlto,td i nd tfitch d1!1il1d, 111 lll•y, y1Uow, btit1 or rtcl, Tht b1lttd tr111cli for t1111 14'/i to 26 1/t. SOUTH COAST PLAZA -UPPIR LIYIL ~ Pl-I.A.It ttND '°R YOUR Pltll CH•ISTMAI llOCHUll SATUlDAY 10·6 AND SUNDA1'112·1 for f Ollf lhoppl*t Clllt'Hli.t!Cft, • I By SYDNEY OM ARR defeat and frustration enter. If is vindicated. accrue may be along~ &qbtle There is room for you blgher ARJES (Mareh 21-April 19): you give, satis(action and ac-LfBRA (Sep. 23-0ct. 22): vein. Key Is to discern poten· on ladder . Concern wJlh the occult or hid-com p Ii s h men t present A-foney position Is more tial. Avoid rushing, accusing , ·PISCES (Feb. l~March 20): den Is emphasi1.ed. Get new themselves. It is up to you. secure. Longstanding debt or jumping to conclusions. Ideas which have been held viewpoint. See ~yond the ob-LEO.. (July 23-Aug, 22): could be repaid. Oil pro-Aries associate could be im-back now come forward; your vious. Refuse to be brainwash· Practical forms of achieving position may be in picture. Do patient. theories are put to work. Sueo · ec1. Your own concepts, ideas are emphasized. You have to some doublMhecking. Separ-CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. cess is indicated. Know this - should be aired. ask, write, call, sen d ate fact from fancy. 19): Accent on fulfillment of act like you ~ow it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): messages. Nothing will be SCORPIO (Oct.13-Nov. 21): specific des.ires. Plans m~de;:;;:;==========; Ab.pity to learn, 'absorb handed you on proverbial Study Virgo message. in recent pa st come close 1 to knowledge is accented. AvOid silver platter. Take initiative Welcome change, new op-fruition. A new persoi:i e-0uld b~ing. See p otent i a I . in removing obstacle. portunities. Be aggressive enter your life and play Im- Welcome one who offers-to VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): without being arrogant. Don't ;portant role. teach. Concern with language Cycle high; ·take initiative. wait or follow crowd. Instead, ' AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. should be encouraged . New forms, contacts , take leS:d. Others now look to 18): Cooperate in civic pro-. . I. I Vitamins: A Dose of , Hope NOVEMBER'S ~IRTHSTONE 1ht·1of~J By ALLISON DEERR that in each 1case of this con. addition ' of magnesium, a ot ,,.. °'''"' ruit s••« dition the child had a high uric natural tranquilizer. Some children have ·en in-acid level in the blood. ·NEED MINERALS ability to utilize ce rtain The .affectionate persopality Dr. Rimland noted that need v.i~~~~·same children suf fer of the Mongoloid child, he ex-for art!Ucial tranquilizers may from severe mental disorders. plained , is a biochemical be caused by the use of phenomenon. a.rtific~al . fertili;ers _in growing Mega-vi tamin th e r a PY-ff . f crops. We are not getting a large doses Of ,,·iam,·ns taken Patients su er1ng rom anx-f . f h · on a regular basis -seems to ie Y neurosis were oun ° once were, he said. form of therapy can be ef- feetive agai n st many . biochemically based mental disorders. · "We want to make sure that the machinery is working, no matter what the individual ex~ periences," he said. . 1 . f d 1 ~action o t e magnesium we r;::==========.I bn.,g marked behavorial im-have an ·intolerance to lactic T 1. f RUDOLPH THE acid. es 1ng or resistance was The quest for a supreme golden I provement. , w h be t d t done by feeding large doses to RED-FACED atone ended in the Middle Apa Dr. Bern.rd R ·om!and , ' e ave en e o be!. .. D R' I d 'd patients. The body does not PARTY GOER when men !C71lnd the Topaz,·· 1 research psychonog,·51 a n d 1eve, r. 1m an sa1 , , d" store excess vitamins . whose naine means "to lffk." director or the Institute for "that if you eat ~proper iet, Vitamins retained were ones ii.Oil,•.':! !':'~t -;11~'!-"'~11,;:1,1 1'!~ Itl!I golde·n tone• have niade it Ch'.td Behavori·at Rese'rch 1·n you have enough vitamins. I d d h . 1 .,., '--, d nee e most by t e patient. .. 11. •11d hl1 w111 w11 11111 1nt1h1r a wi!e choice or .-~ovemuc:r a , San D'·ego, · do·scussed this doubt that this is true. Some E .1 • PLAIN·JANIE w11h h•r 11or•1>&uqh1 b' th to E bl 1 _, > I t II f th xcess vi am1ns were ex-ffl11mb11. Yo11 c111 111 th• 11ra11dut ir s ne. m em o a~ .. or an11 method of therapy in one of peop e may ge 8 0 e creted. R1H1011111 •' •II ~r. l••m•llv 1111r-long lasting !riendahip•, the Topas series of lectures on the new ;~~rmy~~~?~~ey need, but does Administration of the large !~:ltl;:~~.,..w::. i.1111:N~~~~';",;~11~~~ alsoen1ure1 longlite,intelligenc. therapies offered by UCI 's Ex-He listed cases whe re doses of vitamins is sare, Dr. twch "'' 1u11111111 w11t1111 minutes. and.beauty to ita wearers. · tension program. h'ld · ed h Riml&nd said. The only poten-W••" ,, •• ,, .• ,, ••• ,, t-. o· ~·. Dr. Rimland authored a c I ren requ1r anyw ere . II Th , , , , .. ..., '" . f ·1 from 20 to 1,000 times the ha y toxic vitamins are A and 8 /ruhio1' c;M good fortune . : priie-winning lx>ok "In anti e normal requirement for cer-D which were not used in the Autism" and is recognized as study. The study used Vitam1'n N T WIT tain vi tamins. K I a leader in research on the Dr. Rimland and h is C and the Vita min B Complex. childhood psychoses. d 1 d d Mega-vitamin thera_py has "Many ko·,ds of thcrapo'es associates con uc e a stu Y t be d f I 300 ch·td · t h a so en use success u ly to kulh COit! are based on the assumption among 1 ren wt treat chronic alcoholics, whose that mental disorders fre-serious m e n t a 1 disorders. symptoms are close to those quently, if riot commonly, are Children took a special s~lec-of schizophrenics. caused by the psycho-social lion or vii.a! m.insdand minerals Dr. Rimland feels that this enviro nment.Iamskepfical. in very arge oses over a l=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii Plllt LOWEii MALL Colli Mt .. JU-Ull' Seulh Ce•1t Pl111 Cetlt M111 S,0.9066 l ridel 1t tht St11 Oi190 fwy. period of time. r DISCOUNTS IDEAS They were taken off th e "[ am dubious about the vitamins for a "no treatment" idea that mental disorders are period of 30 days and at other caused by the way parents times the children took pills treat a child, toilet-training that contained no vitamins. and whether he was breast-fed CHILD IMPROVED or bottle-fed," tlre psychologist Pal'ents of the children said. "There seems to be no noted marked imp rovement. evidence of a cultural or 8 Autistic children. who stared social factor that is a blankly into space, began to predisposing factor ii'! meptal we I co me companionship. illness. becme alert ai:id friendly, he There arewt..any," he added. said. . Dr. Rimland discounts the -Young .patients . bega~ to efficacy of ••in s i g ht • • show an interest in . pro1e~t.s psychotherapy. '" ig~o;ed for ~onths 1nclu~1 ~g "l am also dUbiOUll (if the wr1t1ng, drawing, p 1 a y Ing idea that insight into one's basketball. They became more problems will have a aware of the world . ~round beneficial effect 00 solving them and became w1lhng to these problems," he said. coope~ate, he ?,dded . t" "People not in psychotherapy During the no _treatmen recover as often as those in period whC'n th~ chil_dren "'ere therapy," he said, "and those taken . off v1tam1n~ic thel not in psychotherapy are a· Jot regression wa~ drama . better off financially." ~arents \Vi ole that . the , . . . children t.ecame progressively 1 . He cited 35 studies which Jess socia l. had far-off and discovered . that_ the r~overy dreamy expressions, wer e ra.te wa_s ~dent1cal with and agitated, ate poorly. became \Vllhout 1ns1ght therapy. confused and Jost interest in "Most of the serious mental their surroundings. disorders are of the biological Side effects of the vitamin order," he said. doses -bed wetting. sound The researcher cited the ex· sensitivity and irritability - ample of self-destructive were. easily corrected . Nutri- children. Researchers found t ioni~t Ade.lie Davis suggested CrownTng Glory beauty salons onH mMutGSMD SUllDA'I'$. .. ~ ... ' ..... ,,°''·>.,_ ., FREE CONDITIONING TREATMENT! Revitalize your hair with our famous protein formula . Gives new life and lustre. Usually $2.50. WITH $I 5.00 PERM $9.75 WITH CUT AND SET $4.45 · BUDGET PERM (Normal Hair) •595 MtftT1nW1I LltttWttt SHAMPOO ·SET 2•• 345 CUT 1•0 200 Stylis! prices slightly higher iouTH COAST PLAZA -Phon• 546-7116 __... Llwtr Lt¥11 -NIXI It IMrt Ollf!I S:v111l119l 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA-Phon• 541-ttlf OIM!I IYtftl~t .... 111,,.l"t' Wt Ci'RI 1'"111 VIII! LMk v•ur ff.Ill favorites DECORATIVE BURLAP Choo$e from ten great decorative shades. Ideal fo·r draperies, tapestry, needle point and wall covering s. ' " 100'/o Jute Regular 69c Yd. ~yds.TI®® 37 " /38" wide u ilted fabrics QUILTED NYLON SHEER PRINTS TI®ZZ 44/45" Wide, l;99. $2.29 Yd. yd. .A.cetclle 44" wide QUILTED SATIN SOLIDS 24~ ... 100°/. autate 41 " wide 9UILTED JERSEY PRINTS All camffd cotton 45" wide 9UIL TED SCREE1N PRINTS 3~ ... HIGH PILE VELVET The exquisite fabric for all your holiday fashions. Stunni ng selection of luxurious colo rs for all formal wear, Rayon f1ce Rayon b•ck 39" wide ~®ill Yd , FIRST QUALITY FULL BOLTS Fantastic choice of colors for dresses, skirts, pant suits, every - th ing! Compare at $5.98 yd. Machine w11h Never iron 56"/58" wide -·--DECORATOR YARDAGE UNCj)UILTED CHALLIS PRINTS B••utiful for curtains, c1nopi11, •veryth in g d•cor1tivel 100'!. ..,.. 129 41" wide w .. 11.111. ,.,, UNCj)UILTED SOLIDS All tho shades to coordin1t1 •ny d•co r. 100% HIYO• 4$'' wlcle W"hoble 98~ ... • UPHOLSTERY . Heavy quality upholstery. Fab· ' rics in a wide ran9e of solid col- ors and novelty weaves. V1lue1 from $3.91 to 5.98 ~4" wide TI ®® Yd. II HOUSE OF FllBRICS IUINA PARK CINTIR GARDIN GROWi Lt Ptlrnt tt Stt11lo11 lroo~hurtl t t Chtptl'l•ll l u1111 P•rk-121·6lll G1,d111 Grov1-5l 0·1542 HONll rLAZA 17th ot l1lllel S111t1 >,11t-$4l·SSS I 01.ANGlfAIR. MALL SOUTH COAST PLAZA 0 111ui1the•po It Ht,bor l •li.tel t i S111 Oi1go Fwy, F1o11!1rton--526·2}34 C1Hl1 M11t-S4S·l 5t6 HUNTINGTON CINTll Edl1191t •I lttch l lvd, H11"ti11gto11 l••~h-lt7~10tl • " - Mtnd&Y, N0vtmbtr 15, 19n . Turkey Time Tempt~M~mbers FOR SWIFT PEST CONTROL · --·Arti;t;·-i;ct~r;;:~ud;y -· ~rldi~Mt;·m-;kedto bri~g ... ·;m· Sti;w. ·-trwuru.ncrday:·NoV.ta 1n ero-wnv· ey bazaars and turkey luncheons old family recipes and cure· 1'lfs. Roy Cook, trustee. Elerritntary School, La&Una ~-·-·-·-···--·~- : . for Orange Coast c I u Ch ildren of the Confederacy • Co-op Nurse ry r he painti ng he completes will fill the busy days ahea~alls. OrganizaUon or a new Niguel. . meJ'!1bers. chapter also.ls on the agenda. Clpt. ~UkeJitnnessey of the will be donated to~ associ•· Tea Time · 'for Thank-yo us · · .. . .. Queen of .~earts;Guild of Childr~n's ;Hos'pital of Orange Col;nly will say thank you to aff1llate members for service in card sales, luau brunch and fashion sho\v plan~ Wednesdaf, 1'.J?v. 17, in the Monarch Bay home of Mrs. Francis Fabian. Pouring tea for affiliate member Mrs. !\-1ario Tartaglia is ?i-1rs. L. Hunter Piper. Bargain Bonanza Bon Marche Sells Best If fine furniture, antiques, paintings, clothes, t o y s , kitchen utemils, plants, sports equipment, hand-made gifts or ornaments are on y o u r Christmas list, head for the new Newport Harbor Art Mu· seum on Thursday , Nov. 18. From 10 a.m. lo 7 p.m. the Best of Everything will be on ·sale at the Bon Marche fund· rai sing gala prepared by the J\fuseum Council. Afrs. Johnsl-On Ballard and \Vinslow S. Lincoln Jr., co- chairmen, . supervised the myriad merchand ise donated for sale. A yearlong workshop. directed by Mrs. Donald Anderson, produced a wide variety of original designs in clothing, home decorations, needlework objects, designs and kits. Also, local artist Juanita 1-Iislop vt'ill be at her easel to do character sketches. Programs to Ensure Merry Entertaining Mrs. Nora Graves, project coordinator, is being assisted with financial matters by the A1mes. Rich2.rd McClure, John J. Swigart and J e an·ne Groszkruger and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Aubert. Those in .charge of other details are the Mme s . Halliburton Swedlow, press: Jane Todd. food and' bar; J. Herbert Brownel l ; in, forn1ation; Robert Perkins. security; William Bemis and A Merrie Holiday program will be presented by the Southern California Edison Co. beginning Thursday, Nov. 18, and fea turing ideas for holiday entertaining. Recipe booklets will be given to those attending the programs in Newport Center, Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and El Toro. Newport presentations, in the Island House, Fashio n Island, will be at 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 18, and 10:30 a.m. Friday, Nov. 19. In Fountain Valley Com· munity Center. the programs Peter Hill . tickets, and John will be flionday, Nov. 22, at 0_H~u=rn:d~al~l.~s~u~pp~li~es;.~:---·1 7:30 p.m. and Tuesday, Nov.,! 23. at 10 :30 a.m. ~ In Seal Beach, the programs will take pl.ee ;n the Great FRAN CJS-Westem Savings and Loan '\ · community . room Monday, \g Q RR J Nov. 29, at 7:30 p.m .• Tuesday, Nov. 30, at 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m .. and \Vednesday, Dec. 1, :at 10:30 a.m. · The El Toro sessions in the Edison business office will be at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday , Dec. I, and 10:3o a.m. Thursday, Dec. 2. FINE STATIONERY PERSONALIZED CHR ISTMAS CARDS DISTINCT IVI" CHR IST_MAS GIFTS llU I CI AIT Ml'•'ur lli-111t CIH IA Ill »Al ·tGIV\11(11 ,Jlltll 1 A BURNING DESIRE TO BE AT THE FR IZZIES? Our Beauty Salon has o wa y. SI NGE ING ! SINGEI NG SIZZLES THOSE UNS IGHTLY LI TTLE SPLITS INTO OBL IVION BY CLOSING T HE END S wHILE: fT S-PARKS OFF' THE DEAD ENDS , ALL WITHOUT T HE L OSS OF A PREC IOUS INCH OF PAINSTAKINGLY GROWN LONG LOCKS, THE RES ULT ?' A HEAD or HEALTHY, Luxu R1ous LONG HAJRi 1T's THE HOTTEST '{ALUE ON T HE HAIR SCENE TODAY: ORGANI C SHAMPOO, SINGE ING ANO RESTORE TREATMENT, 15.QQ! SEE SINGEING DEMONS TRATED TH IS WE EK. IN OUR YOUNG CAL IFORN IAN SPORTSWEAR, ON MON ., NOV . 15 AND SAT., NOV. 201 10:30 AM""""4!30PM, THEN MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT I N OUR BEAUTY SALON., I ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644·2800 'Al CJ b Huntington · Beach F t r e tion and dlsplayOd In Mpnarch trusa u Westminste r Art Department·will demonstrate Bay .Pla ut through Ja.n. 21. The sixth.annu al Vocational Violet Parkhurst, who 11 e basic first a,ld procedures at Henr1e, represented by.;the Ventures Day for gi rls at marine paintings are owned the Thursday, Nov. 18 evening Grand Central Art Gallery in Laguna Beach lligh School by Presidenl Nixon, Hilton meeUng of the Sou th Hun-.New York City. has paintings will be sponsored by the Hotels and Howard Johnsons, tlngton Beach Co-op Nursery in .many celebrities' ,col· Allrusa Club on Thursday, will be the guest artist at the School p!tents. lechons. Nov . 18, and followed by a lun· Thursday, Nov. 18, meeling of Mrs. Fran Thompson, school cheon. the Westminster Art Associa· director, said the program wlll Senior Lunch The Mmes. Bea Cr Is t , lion In the Westminster Civic have applications both for Harbor Area senior citizens .·LLOYD PEST CONTROL Call 64Z·59ZZ 111ild,red, Pittillo, Geraldine Center at 7:30 p.m. parents al home and mothers will gather for a luncheon It WUson and Miss Z e I m a who supe rvise in the nursery ooon Thursday, Nov., 1!. at l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ McKjbben will 'discuss career Mesa Rebek•h classrooms. Christ United Meth odist pfeparaJioM and opportunities ""' C hurc b-by-the-Sea, Newport in catering, finance, law and Mesa Rebekah Lodge 402 Niguel Art Beach. A program will follow · Sally Sananas Really 11 ••• hnanas, That Is ntirsing.. . will host a turkey buffet Niguel Art As.wciation will the 'lkent luncheon. Mi's. NB Jr. Eb ells luncheon and card party at host a demonstration by Paul Kathryne Oxford, &K-0887, hu noon Thursday, Nov. 18, in the Blaine Henrie at·s p.m."Thurs-Curthe:r" ll'\formation. Odd Fellows Temple.......Costa 11-1esa. A bazaar of handm&del gift items will feature small Ebell Club · members of Newport Beach.will be guests of the JuniOr Ebell Club at the 10 a.m. general meeting and luncheon on Thursday, Nov,· 18. in the clubhouse. Various chairmen will tell the results of Le Boutique Uni· que, discuss plans for the Christma s tea and report on other club..:projects. oll painti ngs. The recently elected slate of 19n officers includes 'Mrs. llenry Weclesweiler, N o b Le Graiid : llfrs . Ma I co Im Over.ton, Vice Grand; Mrs. Alfred Leberg and Mrs. Albert Dixon, secretaries: Mrs. Em- DTERY ..... • led1ltrfflh: • l•1vry LI""' • C.rl.-l.-p 1/l •- · Emma San som I flirs. H. H. r :dtt wijl open her Tustin home for the Thursday. Nov. 18, meeting of · the Emma Sansom Chapter. . United Daughters of t h e Confederacy. AIR STEP -BERNAROO • • -KIMEL EDWARDS -GEllBERICH -BED & BATH FASHION SHOP PF l'LYERS -U.S. ICEDS 0.nc:• w ... by 0.ntkln C1perlD D•nc• Shoes c~~hrCllllll,... 225 l.17tfl St. OUTLET STORE Recipes and Remedies of the South is the theme of the program to "'hich members c .......... '41·2771 Eleelrlc/ly /s rllal lo your way at Ille. So /s a heallhy environment. We're working to bring you bolh. You can make , lifomia • It depends on what you know about nuclear power plants. Jn Southern California, the need for electricity has more than doubled in the last ten years. As the ropulation increases, ~need for electricity will continue to grow. To meet this growing publi.c need, Edison must build additional generating plants now. Otherwise a power shortage could occur by 1976. received by moving from a wood to a stone or concrete home or apartment house. Another concern may be the warm water released by nuclear power plants. At San Onofre, sea water is used to cool the plant condensers, and then the warm ed water is returned to the sea. before and after the plant 'IVll8 built. Monitoring be~ in mid-l96a' -four-and.a-half years before the plant commenced commercial operation-and has continued . ever since. Result: twenty.:one reports reveal no significant cluµ!ges in the marine environment. And that includes three years· of plant operation. One of the ways we plan to supply more power is by constructing additional nuclear power units at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station near San Clemente. But some people oppose constructiqn of these units. One of their concerns is ra.diation. Actually, natural background radiation is everywhere and always has been. It comes from the food you eat, the air you breathe, the materials used to build your home. To determine whether this harms the marine environment, Edison commissioned an oceanographic company of national stature to monitor the offshore waters both •• In addition, the California State Department of Fish and Game made ' it.s own stucli otthe same marine ar~ in 1969; The Department concluded $it the nuclear unit's operation ~not appear to have had an adverse ect on the near-6bore marine en onment. The San Onofre nuclear plant is a soun:e of some radiation, too. The question is, hqw much? The answer : so little that an elaborate monitoring program of the land, air and offshore waterS near San'Onofre has established that the amount is insignificant compared with natural background radiation. Far less, for example, than the additional amount ' ' Based on these and other facts, we believe nuclear plants are a sate and sensibleway to. generate electrieity. Clean, too. Since there's no combustion in a nuclear reactor, no by-products of coinbustion are released into the atmosphere. At Edison, we plan to rely more and more on nuclear power to meet the growing need for electricity in the 14~ty'area we serve. •• • . ' l -.. J,.f'"--'oll_L v_P_ill_O_T _____ Mondlr;"ll ... -1,, lm DICK TUCY TUMBLEWEEDS 1.5.W. UH ... l.S.W.? Mun AND JEFF FIGMENTS l 'MRUNNING AWAY FROM HOME! MAMA PACKED MY n\INGS AND '\'OLD METO GO! PLAIN JANE • • • I DAI~ CROSSWORD ••• by. A. POWER I ACROSS=; 1 45 Previous to 1' SatL11'd,Y1 Puu re Solved: 46 Social l Waltrln; positions places "8 Ont who 5 GoddHS of makes tht hearth ticchangts 10 Rtslllt ol a 50 Rom1n gad KO punch 51 Fiii 1• Actress -52 Rlvtr of Wa lts Mlnntlll 55 Ctrtaln horsts 15 Fr ighttl'I 59 Town near IF.. In thr midst of Oak land, 17 Kind of Call!. rtprtsenlat lon 61 Muslcal group 18 Optrltt by 62 Seth's brother ~ 6 Excite 30 Part of Ireland 1111sn1 tile: hands 63 -Canal: fttlings of • )1 ZNlous 20 Pigeons' home Ontario optimism. 34 Actoss . Prefix 22 Ma~rs used to w1trrcOU'st 7 Of sound mind 37 Certain din· · somtlh lng: ... '4 Sht lttred 8 Having Ovte nrrs: 2 words Var. p omenadr parts: Prefix )9 Those erroll td Zl Mule, IM one of 1nelent 9 Eletlrlc1I unit lor 1 2:4 UmltnU119 Grttct 10 lndl1n ~let competition ZS Att1cll by 6S Mariners: Pll>tS 42 Prevar icators blows lnformil 11 First n1me of 44 Dull gray ii Pitte of 66 F1clllt1lts 1 Pers ian poet 47 Lavish British m1k~ fl7 Show 12 Coln of Vtrf 49 Surrounded by bflltvt busln1ss small v1hst Sl Hag lZ -party 1w1rd 13 Summer drinks SZ Gaiter Jl Popul• llcrne 19 ~le QUnltles SJ N1po teon 's 1qu1th111 llsh DOWN Zl TV perscnallty pl1tt of txll t »Long R01111n -Hunt lty S4 Shift gatmert l Coasll'd 24 Ct"1ttrry plot SS Swre tsop 3' Upright: 2 Pio-: Isl ZS Hyoodttm lc S6 S1rne: Prefl11 Prefix C1 llfcrn l1 ln/ettlons 57 Gas ustd In 38 Herd rl c11tle go~iKnor 26" Excellenc e displ1y t(ft)es 40 For men only l St• ot thr 27 lns lile of: ·sa-Endure 41 Region In USSR Prefix 60 National wtst!rn 4 Most r1t1on1I 28 Colle-g t formal Ririe Austt11: Vil'. 5 Left h11rltdly: dances Association; 4J A.tiff • Slang 2ti Noteworthy A.bbr . • " .. ,, .. ly Cliester Gould - IT BRO~ Tl-IAT 9UCl<LE! ME NEVER QUITE FORGAVE_ M.E." By Tom K. Ryan 1<,1tJ)! +lOW CORN1!A,.!-.k1 CAN 'ltlU ""' • PEANUTS !???f? MV HANDS AREN'T SHAKING ??!!?? JUDGE PARKER JllST" "'5 'SOON AS YOU Ger TO MONTlaL, CA.Lt THE WUM&ER: IVE Wl!Tml Otil TMAT ENVELOPE! MISS PEACH I j l ! PERKINS • • • PS)CklATllttSTS 1.5.W. ·~ By Al Smith_ By Dale Hale TRl5TS 0 !' l !I ~ Ll'L: ~INa I SALLY IANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ttKE TJIAT $0lJIJCJ1 .JUST 7'//Eif:lt OF WIC1<2R U/JOER. .STRJ!.SS/ ONMY WO!>DOF HoNOf". ~NIMAL CRACKERS "THIS 9.IPER Hl6HWlt-~ WllJ. 60 !1:16t!T' A40SS 'lffe l/l)(}fe; "TO OVJZ. · W1"1'~ feeDl!l@ ~ By Charles M. Schulz ! ~ rT"THRll!JQl THE W<EKEND WITHOUT Ml{ 8LANK£Tl I DIDIT!IDIDIT! WAS VOUJt. ~ATMElt Flf0%!N, :Ill.A? 0 ANDI DID IT MY WAI/!! By Harold Le Doux I'P LIKE TMA.T,SAM. •• A.WP WE WISTN'T ~R6ET TO PICK UP A. PA.PEii?! NERE SJ.lOOl.tl' BE A. PICTURE OF ERIC. IN ii.IE MORNING EDITIOW! . By Mel YRS. -'!IE 601NIP TO TMAW MIM OUT TONtwHT, AND SI! IF HI'S Al.I. Ri,HT .. , By John Miles - '· • ly Al Copp By Gus Arriola__ .,.,, ___ , ... ---By Ferd Johnson HAR! I [)f[)IJ1TTIU'1K YOU WOlJ~D··illERE1S IJOTHIN1 GOIN10N IN "THERI: !! By Roger BoDen ~O l>Oll1T' GIVE US 1H,l.T, I).()():: 80Til l!).!llS BE~ Ml6fi!AT11¥:>: ~/>.zz ( \'/"f--t.-A (~ THE GIRLS "Now, Henry, these 1ren't my f1ult.-..t lunch, Mrs. Schulte 11id, .'Just once try vodk1.'" DENNIS THE MENACE \ " • • " ! I I I I I ! ' -- • Mondoy Evening NOVEMBER 1.5 1:00 e 11t: Nin Jerry l>unphr II MIC Nm Tom S1t1dt~ II 1'141111 Dtn't tit !111 D11.a. (IJ .... : "'l•••W, Up There m .. Mt" (drtml) '6&-11ul Ntw> min, Pl1r A111tH. a rn -m Wiid WIW w.t m""-........ , ....... t!IJ --. _ ..... ···-Ill_ ... Ol1ul MW mulk dlrectOt" of tht Ntw Yo1k PlllJharmonk, wilo 11 lltn OOll• ductrnc Alban l1r1'1 "Th111 Orch., tt1 Pieces.'' 91 Y11t11ll GI Hl111 I l:JO IS Movlt: (C) "Coufll Three • ,,,,. P·OO IJ CIJ Ktn't liq (]) MoM: (C) ..,,._, Drl• ...,.. (musical) '62-N•rv::f Kwtn, Jamt1 Shl11t1, 0 Ann· Margret stirs on * Bell System Family Theatre o a m• '"®'a.a SJstM F••llr TNltll ''DllNS at S.1" Ann·M•r11ret stirs In • musfcll t:JO II...,. .W.11 lbftf Gunts 1r1 sPoot of th1 Busby Berklley films of Vlct1rl1 Burton, Rlchtrd Price, lau· lh t 1930's, In which I •m•ll·IOWft lu Morltr, t nd Jact C1rt1r. i!rl nnds rom1net trtd 0¥tmi1ht 0 Ttr~: lfTlle Vulflln" (hor· 1t1rdom In New Voll. Specltl runt ior) '67 -Robtrt Hutton, Alim stir 11 Ann Mllltr, tnd co.stirs 1r1 T1mlroff. Annt M11r1. Dick Shtwn, Frtd ()] 111 ""' Gwynne and H1Ney Evins. ' m Alld! Crlfflth Show (]) Wiid Wild Wnt •. OAIL V PILOT 11111 Pho rt m 1111 ""7 Sh\• 0 ELVIS! "IT HAPPENED THE BAD GUYS -Hank Sorkin (left) threatens &D Pl'Yf•1 Ult Culttr * AT THE WORLD!S John Phillips over a matter of n1urder in this scene ll' l11t Utt O.Wt FAIR"· IN COLOR! from "A rse nic and Old Lace" at the Huntington IJ ClrMll Am• 0 MOlldtJ Movlt: (C) (2hr) Beach Playh ouse. . II!) El Prtf. S.sfttrio "It H1ppt111d 1l tilt Wtrid'• fall'' ----------------------- 7 •• am ..... (musical) '63-EIY!s Prtsley, Join 00 Drlp tl O'Brien. I wtt1l'1 MJ Une1 m DAVI O's guests: JIM Ad••·!! *NABORS, MIKE CONNORS 11..1vt1..ucy mom• ,,... .,. Guiesb •r• I D11• If Jni111lil Jemn G1m1r, Miki Connors, N1ney llcl1111 W1 C.11 Wilson •M Jim N1bors, """""""..,.. !Jiu""' Ill Le l1trvu ~ ltosu pm Vnnka a The VlrtlnlM 9:30 II Cll Dori• .,., Doris roes lo ~ Lii Tintllocot Enll•nd to try to pers111d1 1n 1u· 7:30 ii StlM Up 11'11 a-Tonl(ht's ttior to sell th• 11rlt!lzatlon rl1hb ~rar tuut 1s Ed.Am • to hb book to Tod11'1 World m1p· Simon Strilies Again With 'Prisoner' Comedy By JACK GAVER ' • • • ' . 1' • i j Huntington Co1ned11 'Arsenic' :llilarious . . . "A•srNtC AN~ oLo L~C•" riot as the burly cop determin· By TbM TITUS ... 1,_:1:;t°,." -.::: AtN~f.:~ • .,. •u•11'':; ed to enact his , play for a 01 tltf Diii~ Pli.t st•lf ~•ncv Wfu,, •l~• "'"11ou"'ll.~1vn bound and gagged Mortimer·, Alblt11fll, HI d.:Jlan J" ltrrv There I• a good deal of ~=~· ~1101111le: 1 P•~~h>j~~~n,:: Ken Clifford strikes what may crisscrossing of paths 1·0 -m· F•ld•Y• • 1111rNv• th• l>ft(. n be the play's only serious note .. v t: ,~. Hunt fWllllt'I ll••ch p IYNIUU. munity th~ater, and _ since 1t'10 M'I" l~Hunut111•0t1 •••ch. as the clergyman; Colin most of Orange County's tw-vit ont "fftl'"~AIT Culver brings hi I a.f i o us Abtlv 1rgwstfl' ..... ··'· llobbl Murol!v Engll h nd I ( t drama critics also are active M•rlll• ••ws1tr ., ... K1ih...vn 011111 s u ers a emen to a Mor11rnet ll"ws!fr ,... Ton.'t' C1sll• d I I bo h h in the acting and directing t:r.r~™'~.~~"'".'.'.~:.;·o.o;·~H~~1,i . ua roe as t a t wartec:I phases of the business-there Or. ~n•ttln ......... ::· /fn ll'nfuro, Po Ison victlrn and the will crop up from time to time 6= ~.::,~ ..:::::::: s1~".!t:;!~~: stuffy Sanitarium superinten· · t 11 d Lt. R_.. ............ L1rrv w~••d dent while OM Kaiser end some 1n eres ng an poten-Rw. H••ooir ............ IC.n t 1oro:1 ' l. 11 t····• ·t ti 81'~'' r:nao~ ........... · ~ •1i.,. Dewey Knighten round oot the ia Y uw .. :uy 11 ua ons. c1~1~.n-n .. :: .. ~?:un 'G~~:~ cast as a pair ol officers with One such example is the limited mental re sources . critic reviewing a play less righteousness, 1'.1is.s 0 fr i 11 One of the most noteworthy than five months after counters with the stinging portrayals, however, is turned performing In another version phrase, carefully .. fas.hioned in by Larry Woodward as the at another theater. No matter and splendidly enunciated. blustering J i e u t e n a n t _ _how hard he strains for total In this reviewer's personal particularly since it is bis first objectivity, the fact remains pride and joy, the role or the stage role, Woodard adopts that the second · production drama critic Mort,im,r, Tony the thfckest lrish brogue Utis must be of highly superior Castle is excellent. • H e side of Killarnty and a caliber to suffleiently erase employs the brashness of rooster 's strut to carry off one memories of his own effort. youth togther w.ith a strong of the finest bits of lhe even- The Huntington B e a c h characterization a n d an ing. Playhouse's rendition of energetic approach to concoct Woodard also doubles as set "Arsenic and Old Lace'' is a totally believable portrayal designer, and this task is car· such a production --markedly in an atmosphere of in· ried out equally weil, with a different in style and approach credibility. properly Victorian atmosphere from the recent Irvine Com· Hank Sorkin as the menac· prevailing, enhanced by low munity Theate r version, but ing JonathaR J;.cks the physi. key lighting and attractively superbly effective within its cal resemblance to Boris appointed. Occasionally it own established boundaries. Karloff, but balances this with becomes a little tight for fluid The minor weaknesses it a hollowed out voice that e<>rr movement, but overall, the possesses would, in all pro-veys complete a u t h o r i t y , setting is impressive. bability, be discernible even to Movement and manner~ms "Arsenic and Old Lace" has one not overly familiar with are well plotted in Sorkin's in-the mi.tkings of a big winner the script. terpretation. for the Huntington Beach Director Ron Albertsen has Closer aligned with his Playhouse, which will offer the ~· •• EDWARDS_ NEMAS T. R. B,A.SKJ N W OtnT.t-ATTU CflOI FUNNY HOW LOVEllSSTART AS .• , succeeded in adapting the character's popular image is comedy for four m o r e flexible humor of Joseph John Phillips (a member o( weekends, Frid a y s and Kesselring 's l!MO's mani acal the Irvine "Arsenic" cast) Saturdays. at tbe Barn 2110 "* 1 ' ~ . i l l • • . l 'I CJ Dr. Smon loct1 A teen11e 1lfl zine. b bnrt1lty beaten 1nd rtfu1n to 0 l uttr W11d Nm NEW YORK I UPI I -The knack playwright Neil Simon has ior _cre.alingJaugbjer .out of ordinary human mishaps and unhappiness has been demonstrated again at the Eugene O'Neill~ Theater with the presentation of ''The Prisoner of Second Avenue." olher, fight with u n s e e n neighbors on the same floor and on the floor abo ve. And lhe opening scene of the se- cond act, in which the family sits in conference about what to do to help Mel, is hilarious- ly human. farce to the special talents or who strikes an accurate Peter Main st., Huntington Be3ctl. 2ND OUTSTANDING COMEDY his cast, making the most of Lorre portrayal _as_ tbe__,mad.::;::=:=:=:=:=:::=::::;=::::;=I~ M-lliiili~iiimms-1-.0....----I the situation ,and the staging Doctor Einstein. His openinglr IB .. Slllf J Identity htr 1uall1nt. !Suspects In· ID It T1k• 1 Thiel clud1 the bOJ 11!1 low1 ind 1 man @ loot But "R1bbil Redu1" ~wlj1r!n1 lfom 1 dlse1s1 that e1uw.s ED 1 lfiCp;L I M1rfn1r 71 A first ltiin to black out perlodlc1lly. look •t picturts or M1rs b1ln1 (I) I D111111 ot J11nnle beamed btck to 11rth from tht C!J SINATRA/MARTIN M1riner 9 spact prob1. * 0 Roe1N & THE 1 Hooos" 9:45 m M•"'"' D Mllll111 $ Movlt: (C) (1:hr) •Robin ind Ult Stw11 HoMI" (com· 10:00 IJ (I) MJ ThfH Sons ldr) '&C-l'rtnk Stn1tr1, Dun Mir. D ~ m I lflCijL!'F11 tl v1I 1t tiil, S1mmy Divis Jr. Two rlvll Chi· Ford'• Bob Hofwi la host t nd R1y· CllO 11np fl&M for 111pt1m1CJ. rmind Burr Is Mrrator fOf 1 specltl a§ Lit'• M1b 1 Diii salutin1 American 1nt1l't,llnm1nt GI Hop1'1 Hlt'lll which or!aiflttts at Ford'• The1t11 CB D,.,,..t In Washlnaton, D.C, The stir rMler (]))Tliii Odele Aclflllt lnchrd1s; The Pt! Boone Ftmlly, m cttrntchtrs C.trol Ch1nnin1, Htnry M1nclnJ, Mel· el Do.Rt.Ml b1 Moore, Ch1rley Pride and .Ion•· m Ltult thtn Winters. E!) Ml .... V11dtz Show @ Tt Till tllt Tnrtll O lhl Anni"' l;(IO 8 ([} CunNlllb "MJ !lnrihtr'I m News Putntm, FiYlnun Laughter out of misery is, of course the most basic form of humor, as witness the banana peel slip, the antics of circus clowns, almost anything short of real tragedy that affects the huma n condition. Simon is a past master at using such material to fill theaters with laughter because of his insight into character, his way of making the com· monplace remark seem funny and his skill at topping a com- ical Hne or situation with something even funnier . This scene, and it's about the only one for the other cast members. is played deliciously by Vincent Gardenia, Flo rence Stanley, Tresa Hughes and Dena Dietrich. Yes, Falk and Miss Grant really carry the play: and they are perfect foils for each other. He is blustery with a low boiling point, and she is conciliatory and aceornmodat- ing most of the time. But when things finall y ge~ too much for her, and she "also begins to climb the wall , Miss Grant brings an extra dimension or fun to the production. area. "Arsenic" Is a very fun· line, spoken in near-total ny play taken at face value, darkness, was enough to 1:1>1 11111UJ..--TDWU d th h ~ -.. -·-oo:--an e um or o us em· generate applause on opening bcllishments introduced by night. Albertsen -particularly a Deborah liackett, who packs rotating gag involving the shoe 1 a lot of girl inlG a little dress, of a cada.ver -r.eap their just is impressive as Elaine, the rewards 1n sustained laughter. romantic i nterest. She The show. is considerably possesses a strong voice and ~el.I cast,. with ·"° performers sturdy bearing. and U well up f1tt1ng their assignments more to the peculiarities which comfortably than Bobbi befall her from the.Brewster Murphy and Katheryn Orfill as brothers. the . l~y ~Id l~rli~ who .s e Another example oC lm- ma1n JOY in life is send1n.g aginative interpretation e<>m· lonely old men off to their pensating for p h y s I c a I eternal reward . Individually shortcomings is evidenced by and, especially, as a team, John Hensley. a latecomer in these veteran actresses make the role of Teddy Brewster. the most ol their juicy roles. Hensley is hardly ROl:>seveltian • • .. ac,. ~ .. o. •T •~L1• MT, C-•T _..,, ..... ---· M 7-eeol • HU .. Tl .. e~ .._.. 1 ST JlME SHOWN TOGfTH R James Garner Skin Gmne Plus-Rommy Berggren In "Joe Hill" ~111111" Seekinr rtfup lrom • l1Jl flrtq u111 ltoflll, Futus 1tumblu Into t crn fIJ Soul! Peter Falk and Lee Grant, who carry the brunt of the tw~acl p13y, w<lrk beautifully under the comedy-wise direc· lion of Mike Nichols, and there is no doubt t ha. t producer Sainl.Subber has another in a Jong line of Simon hits on his hands. The setting by Richard Sylbert is a wonderful replica of a high rise apartment neighborhood with its view of other buildings through panel- ed windows. Miss .Murphy is sugar to in appearance, but his Miss Offill's salt and spice to characterization Is sou nd , her partner's vinegar. While partcular l y the eomic Miss Murphy delivers her petulance he brings to the dialogue melodically with a role, a refreshing approach. strong aense of a e I ( · Sam Verdecia ts 1 minor ~-111-l--:::;.:;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::::I .. whttt 1n old lnd!tn llH dyfnr, i nd fl) Lt Crltdt 1$en Crftd1 brlnp hlm btck to Oodp CitJ tftlf m El Tomlll1 th• storm •baits. (11.chedujtd) D RICHARD HARRIS stars 1°'15 !!I""" •- *In PaulG1lllco'1 l0:30lfJ CIJ """ ''The Snow Goose" (I) ... : .. lf'e MW' (tcl·fi) '64-HJ1llmark Hall of Fame Tommy Kirk. ShlrllJ 8oo111. 0 di ID i IPIC!gL I HtnM1rt Hill fD N1trs BUI Johns er f11111 "Tht Snow Goose" RlehaNI €DO lflrltt 4t Dori111 CrtJ Harris stars 11·111 1mbltt1red, lon1ly 9 Movlt: "'f1ll Hlnltr Thlf ft11" 1rt!st whos1 1111 Is ch1n1ed when ht ctru !or 1 wounded 1now IVOI• 10:4~ 9> News with the help of I shy Ol']lhtn 11:00I)([!1[1 MIWli (pltytd by !lrlllsh tctrns Jinny . O @) m News A;utt11). The pro111m wi11 bt Pll· II O (1) m News s.•nted whhout commercltl lntemsp. O t,I DYlt: (C) "F•rtJ El.Pt Hour iJ·Ml'llt: (C) (3hr) "'"" tlld Mil•" (dr1m1) '?0 -D1rr1n Mc- .. •·• ( . I) 'SS _ ,__ .,, _ G1vfo, WHll1m W1n6Gm. UC Irvine Concert Munich Quartet Splendid By TOM BARLEY suitably concluded with a 0 1 "'' 0111f "1191 11111 tremendous ovation from an -Miss Von Ramm could be said, on the vocal score alone, to be taking the role of a,n in· strument -and it was a level ALSO llUDllFf AUN HIPllUllN AlllCIN ~== WAIT UlllTIL ..... --· "' lllUSICI .... n ... m m T1 Tell 1111 TMll mons, Frink Sl111tr1, M1rlon Brtnclo. m Mtlrtl1p 00 Slcllt Apnt m CltrnkhlfS G Stlftl111 ''The W1r of Eric Kurtz" m IN CONCERT: Creedence tl:IS m Mowll '11• Mel and Edna Edison, with two daughters away a t College, ere a Manhattan cou· pie living in one of those ex- pensive new a pa rt men t buildings with a terrace and a view -o( another such building.,Mel is 47. a well·paid account eiecutive in a n advertising agency. Comes an economic pinch in the business world, and Mel is one of a number of men let go. His idleness, his, wife's return lo s secretarial job, the e<>mplete frustration of a 47- year-old tryinp: to find another job result, after sever a I weeks. in Mel having a breakdown. His family of three older sisters and an older brother, who ha v e money. mo ve to ~ive financial help to one '110 was the pampered youngest, but pride and various other items gel in the way . There is actually no resolution to the Edisons' pro- blems. Our early music is being enthralled audience. revived today at a rate and in a manner which clearly in-The lynch pin of this superb dicates the passionate interest presentation, to our mind, was of our young people in the mezzo-soprano Andrea Von birth and rude beginnings of Ramm, a gifted soloist who our present day musical time find again fau!Uessly Jed form s. the Quartet into airs and · But the most heartening rhythms that pose nolhing but thing about this very welcome e<>nUnuous problems for musi- renaissance is the insistence cians de voted to reproducing of those who revive these them on instruments of the scores from earlier centuries period. that was ma int a in e dll~~~~~~~~~~~'i/ throughout the evening. Early music, so I o n g neglected, is rapidly e<>ming into its own and it Is a wonderful thing to see and to know that our younger genera- tions , so solidly represented at this e<>ncert, are taking such an interest in the likes of John Dowland, Luzasco Luzzaschi and Antoine de Bertrand. * Clearwater Revival 11:30 I) (I) Mtrv Crtfftn m I IPIC!AL Jin Conmt: CrltcllllCt (I) Movi•: CCJ "TN N1nt1,.. .. 'CIMtwttlr Revfv1I Hl1hHlf!IS ol 1tlf Ro und" (comedy) '61-SUslfl H11· monttl'1 OOflctrt 1t the FMtm. Rt· w11d, J1mu Mason. he1rs1ls, Jam seulons 1nd com· 0 @! m Jl)hnny Carson m1nt1 ol troup m1mbtrs 111 1110 0 l ruln1 In Action faatured. Gull!lln1 on tht show 1t1 O Movie: (C) ''l'ht l ove-Int" Booker T ind the MG'1 cre1tors ol (comedy) '&7 -Jam•• MacArthur, tilt M1mphls sound. m Movll: ~tdonnt If th• Smn 11J Tiii Vlrlln1111 M111n1" (dram•) '46-Stewtrt Grin· fJll (]I Sp1cl1I ol th• Wt •• 1er, Phytlls Calvert. "Bouler. A Poftf'llt In Thr" MM· tD Movlt: •Mtny M1 Aatln." (com· flltntl" Profll1 fll Plem Boulez, col· 1dy) '53 -Merit Wilson, Tuesday .@IME MOVIES 9:00 II "'Sclrprill PtcU11" (comedy) '.60 -Mltil G11nor, Yul 81)'nner. 1:30 9 'Qfplln Cn11c.td1" Ch1rtl Cllaplin fiJms. "1lnpkl1" (dr1m1) '.fS--Don l1rry, Sh1il1 RJ•n. D (t) "l.0¥1 111 I COWfttll (tamed)') '61 -Tommy Sindt, 0:00 Ct) (C) "'I.on .... Kl••" (torntd'J) '65--Rldc Nebon. Jtcll Kelly. 1:00 D (C) "Dlph1nl W•"" (dr1m1) '54 -EUzabeth TayiOI, D1n1 An· ., ..... m "lnlrlp1• (mystery) '47 - G1or1e Rift. Sunt. Havoc:. 1::00 fD "Thi '>IJ Ind the MMll" Con- clusion (d11ma) 'U-Slmone Sit· no1et, Stu1r1 Whitrnln, 3:00(j)(C} "Thi SrNllll: Shtw 111 Etrth"l'art~I (dr1m1) 'Sl-Clllffton Hesto", 81 ttJ Hutton. 11) °'Tiii OUltidll" (dr11111) '67- Dtmn McGIVin, Stllrle, Knlafit, I See by Today's Want Ads e FOR T'HE PER!l>N \VHO HAS EVERrntlNG. Hue is • litOe token ot your affection, ·ti's • 2\t fon USMC truck. Good for driving overland. It's in good condition. Now, this 'sounds rather dreary, to say the least, but along the way there are laughs galore as the two argue with each other, try to help each o SO. COIST I Cos tr Mw 54~271 I • CIHEOOME 20 Orme 531-3318 on mai ntaining a standard of Her t-iming was superb and excellen ce that may n o t her delivery abs 0 I u t e] y always have prevailed when flawless throughout a pro- the composer was alive. 1 h t d tr d Add to that the determina-gre.m 8 ma e emen ous demands on a group devoted tion of many groups who con-to the spanning of four cen- centrate on medieval music turies of early music. and its simple forebears to Countertenor Richard Levitt produce that music from was her admirable partner authentic instruments of the throughout the vocal chores period and you become aware and both singers demonstrated of a uniform approach that is from time to time their other one of the most rewarding and qualifications by taking up the encouraging facets of today's quaint instrument of the world of music. period lo join instrumentalists A case in point is the Early Sterling Jones and Thomas Music Quartet of 1'.tunlch aad Binkley. they most aptly demonstrated This kind of work calls for a Wednesday night in U C "' e r y high leve l of liaison Irvine's concert hall the between voice and Instrument superlative manner in which j~:'.~~=::'==:::'.~llll present day groups ,a r e reproducing the music of 800 rx~ ~ -rn· years ago. ~ l-1 DIOJ .They traced our steps from ~ the "Carmina Burana" col-""''°'T ICACH • ott.s.aJsb' Jections of the 12th and 13th centuries (the monastic scores from which Carl Orff so superbly compiled his scenic cantata OC the same name ) through the polyphonic Parls cult of the following century, the more complex airs and rhythms of the 14th cent~ry and on to the Renais.sance musicians and the e a r I y EnilliSh. forms of e<>mposition. They used the lnslrumcnt.s IN THE 6/!EAT Tl!ADITIDN\ OF AMERICAN THRILLERS. "1 .. oan ·•~•·r•·...,. of the periods lnvolved to do It .... ,.,.n•·t1'·""''•·•1• ln a fa scinating and highly in· • 00 YOU WALK TO ""-Jr:o -·'·1•11·•!t•·r•·•~• structive even Ing' s en· !~~~~~=i~i BEAT OF A oCFTI:RE'N; •l;:===========::;te::;rt::;a::;ln::;m::;en=t=tba=t =w::;as=mo=='t. DRUMMER? M11ke )'OU!' II own music wtu. as pl""' NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES drum. set, complete with II~~;~;!!;;!!;;!!! -cymbals. II ' e lfERE IS A. WINNING Its cause is in good hands as thi s magnificent Early 11usic Quartet so c l ear l y demonstrated. TH• LOYS 9T091~ dlar~ otamad hou-wlfe a frank perry film ·--COMBINATION, Hutky, Labrador pups for MJr. Creal for family pctat Pecific YRwoliOiV I co..OA .. -· ... ·---........ 11 • 21CADEMY AWARDS! KOlERr WllOi.M "~s Daughter" Mo11. thr11 frl. l 'te. Sho"' at I '·'"· Ca11t. Sat. a11d Su11. from 2 '·'"· Wlnntr ff f •cH•mr AWt nh Htlll 0¥tr "OR ZHIVAGO'' I P.M. D•Hy-f'rL & Sii. l :lil ·HILDOVIR· Vo.-Redgrovt • Olivtr R"d " KEN RUSSEU.'S HIM THEDEVIIS --.. -....--,...,_11.aN.Ki...yLNarr ~ ALSO lST RUN ® "D&PEND" Plus-Clint Eastwood In "'THI llGUlllO" (R) • AUG SMOWIMG AT • IDWAIDS CIMIMA VlllD ISSIOM YlllO • l lM ttO '?i.52 WUl•ll>Slll i '91.or• W'lll "J.tUI OI "•It~ '1Ullt• '11"'1 • I•~ .. IH l••t Jom•Gorntr • lDu GauMt Skin· Game P/ut-Mkho1! 'fork In "'ZIPPRIN" (GP) -, .. ' ·1 · • • ,· i. -. ,: ! ... .. ~: '.~ ,, .. ' ii ., '.! ·' ; ' ... ' ' ' • • ' I ._. .. ~ _,. • .. j --.. ---·-. . j , -. -· JI OAILV PILOT s MOndaf, Novtmbtr 15, 1~71 Who's Really_ Bo~~~ ·\ American Consu1ner ~iiffe.ns ResisUinq:l By JOHN ~VNNIFF Al' •u1lllfU All•IW$1 . NEW YORK iAP I -It Is customary to picture the America n consumer as · a maligned and helpless creature buffeted about by the powers of the commercial world -used. abused. stimulated . manipulated ,by sellers wanting his dollar. That picture. if it ever "·ere true, may need re-examina- -.. tion. . Evidence seems to be ac- " cumulating that tht ordinary ; • : Americen buyer has stiffened hiS resistance, that he is ,grow- ing wiser and more seU· reliant, that he is trying and maybe succeeding in doing -,, ; • his, rather than the seller's .~1 : "thing." " • l:t. That he is dictating as well ~. • as accepting orders is shown i in the savings rate, automobile · i.-sales, do-it-yourself projects. ,,.. • federal regulation. housing sales. the stock market, vaca- tions. fashions and in a number of other developing customs and patterns .. The sa,vlngs rate is perhaps the most obvious indication that ordinary Americans use lheir heads ·and that they aren't to be tempted · when bargains aren't o f f e r e d . Almost simultaneous with ·the rise in inflation, man y· Americans decided to save rather than spend. Wall Street Chatter l l:" • Douglas Bid ' • ST. LOUIS -McDonnell ~ l Douglas Corp. has "'0!1 a $6.1 million addition to a Navy Contract to modify the wings -r for F4E fighter planes. :$' e Eco110111ic Plan :"'; NEW YORK -The head of "!-a major finance company has !: called for devaluation of the dollar by revaluing t!Je price 1• of gold as one way to halt the country's trend toward ' ' e c o nomic isolationism." Franklin A. Cole. president of Walter E. Heller International Corp., called for an end to the. U.~. import surcharge, broadened trade with eastern Europe and new international monetary "parity bands 1 ' allowing the world's cur- rencies to float within a five percent range of current levels. ORDER ~. 1000 ~eautiful Stick-on . -YOURS t:;· \ LABELS With billionS of do1lafs literally withdrawn from, 'the marketplact, thf n a ti on ' s automobile de.8i1e'rs,· ', restaurateurs. and clot~iflg manufacturer-. to· name only · a ,few, were forced to '.adjust their sigh\r dow11war:d. 1 Auto safes have · now re_. bounded. llut ·a large .percen-'. tage of those sales tire being made to buyers seeking to. avoid higher prices next year. The current boom may be at the expense or next year's sa les. Mpr~ver. the tendency .to" "buy down" to smaller, less e."pensive and more easily maintained cars continues. Detroit has been forceCI to re- spotid or else continue to give. away much of the market-to. imports. · Th~ .do·it-Yourself patte'fn, · which )"ou may remember was , once 'called a fad, suggesting · 'N .R "d t ·0.t.IL Y· PILOT=s1111 Pllola ' that it, Was just a little color .• , etv est en. that would fade with the wash. ·A · ·d. I b' ild' · · · is now woven into the fabric or-' n1~e·story me 1ca u ing, u.nder construction at life Newport .center, has a cof!!pletion date of January, · 1972. The SS million proJect was developed by Is this because, as \Ye are c d Rh d f N often told, Americans had to · ausey. an ° es O ewport Beach. find some use for their grow-· " ing leisure time? Maybe. But. just as likely it was a re·, jection of the poor but ex- pensive services offered to them .. Growing federal regulation of the marketplace quite clearly has its origins in the Outlooli Very Sunpy For .Food Economi~ng discontent of ordinary buyers By SYLVIA PORTER pers and tomatoes. who feel that the balance of The September Consumer power had tilted too much in Now that we're into Phase · Price lndex 1showed the coSts favor 0( the seller and that it II ,. with all its uncertainties · or ·rood at home dowh ·a full 1 must be reclaimed. and befuddlements, what's the · percent below August, twice As)c any salesinan if he , outlook for food prices -the the usual seasonal pr i c e hasn't met with a more day-to-day expense which you · decline and September prices knowledgeable, more. in-notice more than any other? were 2.4 percent below a year dependent. thiqking buyer in Fairly sunny. ago. the past two years. People are '"Because of a bumper • If you're an average U.S. fal-Jess inclined to let oth~s harvest this year in ferd factory worker, you can today make decisions for them, grains as well as other . earn 14.3 pounds or bread with especially in the stock market. agricultural products, the pros-. a single ho.ur's work as cor.n· RE: fleeting this, mutual fund pect is for stable prices in pared with !10.1 pounds in 1950. redemptions are high in rela· beef, pork, turkeys and You can earn nearly 7 pounds lion to sales. Small transac· broilers and it could be that .cif chi.ckeh in an II.our versus tions in stocks .have been heavy supp\ies wili'even push · 2.4 poun<is two decades ago. predominantly sales rather prices down a bit. -You can earn 10.6 quarts of than purchases irl the past ·15 ~The overall rise in food :-inilk as against 7 q~arts in months. Meanwhile, U.S. Sav-prices in 1971 is likely to be in 1950. . " . ., • e Net<J•pf lnt " , MONTREAL /-Consolldat· ed-Balhl'\181, •Ltd, has deferred and '8 a ton price incnaae for ne\YSPf'lnt that was sched- uled tO go in" effect next week •iror competitive reasons .. , The company said it was deferring the increase even though it does not believe the U.S. price freeze is binding on its operations. Abitibi Paper Co. of Toronto an- ·nounced a similar defenne'nt. e Nrt" , Subsidlarv ATLANTA -Citizens & Southern National Bank said Monday it-has won permission of the Federal Reserve Board to establish an intefnational subsldiai-Y,in New Orleans. e SEC· Lnw•ult BOSTON,. -The Securities ·and · Ex'cliange Commission has sued Marrocco & Co. and its president, Ronald Mar- rocco, seeking an order en- joining the company from violating federal securities trading laws. The suit charges the defendants with soliciting orders when they were in no positton to execute them because of a liquidity problem. e Drillhrg · l111lt -DALLAS -Sedco, Inc. has ordered a third type 700 semisubmersible drilling unit from Avondale Shipyards. Inc. at a cost ·of $24 million. To be delivered in 1973, the vessel will be put to work in the North Sea under contract to · Continental Oil Co. e Mortgage l'u11ds CLEVELAND -U n i o n Commerce Bank has an- nounced ·it will make available $30 million in additional home · mortgage funds in t h e Cleveland market "at full y competitive interest rates." TODAY! ings Bonds, which sm~ll jn-the modest .3 percent range, Sure, your receipt at the e Oil D·rillitag -vestors ignored _a couple of the..smallest __yearly _rise since_:__r~ m_~'.ket chei:_k~ut counter years ago , are gaining in J967, and an increase we -cq.n may-now seem a. ~uple of NEW YORK -While Shield popularity, but only after the tolerate because ~ can avoid . ~e~t .long and the last [1gure on Greece Oil Corp. and a government was forc.ed to it just by common-sense shop-, it. Is a_lmost certainly the ·subsidiary of Colorado Oil & .. ' , ' . \, Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself ol" a Friend· May be used on envelopes •s refurn address l•bels. Also very handy •s identification labels for marking personal items such •s books, records, photos, etc. Libels stick'on glass and may be \lsed for marking home c•nned fo1;;d items. All labels are printed with stylish Vogue type on fjn e qua lity white· gummed paper. r ------------------, ,.111 In tlrli t•UPO", t li• •nlf '1'11111 wlllr Sl.» 111 I I Piiot Prl"llng L•kl Div., r.o. ·~J: lut I J Cail• Mtsl, C:atll. "'2.6 I I I I I I I I l I I L----~~L-~!-~!~.!'!~~~--J t = · You are invited to attend a timely • and provocative seminar on,,. I ,.,.. • _, -~ ~ :• 1971 Tax Planning for Your ,~ Securities Portfolio ~ i An im~rtant mecti?g designed to cval.uate your securities ~,portfolio and detemune how lo take advantage oftax·sa.ving J ... opportunities is planned for Laguna Beach. • Presented by: Robert I . Wallace, Resident Manage: , Mitchum, Jones & Templeton Wednesday, N•\'mber 17, 1971 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Community Room Laguna Federal Savings & Loan . ' ; u. . 260 Ocean A venue • Laguna Beach • ; Subjects WJ'll ioclude: ; • How capital gains and lossl's K•ill he taxed • Ad~vmlages of taking !MSt..r lo reduct taxes • Taking gaiM to upgrade , • Postponing font Jenn gain.r until nc:rt )'tar : ~ • Ojfseltiltt long and short term capital gains , j! QuestJon •nd A.Dsfl'tt l'triod follows ' Evezyooe attcadiog will receive "Guide for 197LCapital GainJ _... and Los5u''• .Au.ndaooois by ,,_,,.ti"'I· <?all 494-97SI. There is no charge. @ 'MITCHUM JONES& TEMPLETON £Jt.tl~111f lfllCOR,~01.1TIO 295 Fortst Avmuo • ta;un1 Jbcb, 92651 Teftphooc: (71") 494·9711 MtfnlHn Ntw York S1ock beMvt, I«. mtd othtr pri/fd/lat u ·cltoltlft · "' · Id • t 1 ·1n 1 • highest ever. But the Gas Corp. have begun drilling raise w•e yie or in eres • P g. . _ _ · . likelih~ ii that you -~ave in the Aegean Sea southeast of Remember a· couple of years -THERE ARE and will be : been ldadihg up at the food · Kavalla, Greece in 248 feet of ago when housing was in a 1 1. t f ba ·· " l k t 'th food · g d d d ·it t reces9ion? Much of the ex-a ong 1s o rga1n pen-• mar e wt non· s rang1n water. It is inten e to rl 0 tifuls" in this pericid on whiCh from paperback books to 9.000 feet. Fundamental Oil .planation lay in the inability of you should try to stock up -disposatile diapers. The odds Corp., Fluour Drilling Services borrowers to get mortgages, including chickens, turkeys, are you've been buyin·g ever and Oceanic Exploratlon Co. but some of the slump was most types of pork, eggs, more etcpensive convenience also have interests in the ven· t;nnsumer resistance to high potatoes, cranberry products, foods. The chances are you're . ·ture. interest rates. Rates are.down apples and applesauce, prunes spending more than ever now _!~~are booming. _ and prune juice, pears, both before on a wide variety and -Yacabon 'patterns als:o ii-Jresh and canned. more costly ' gourmet foods e Lt111d Option lustrate .the strong-mindedness ,..Eggs. an extraordinary and snacks. And your overall of ordinary peppl.e. Sure, bargain right now, should rise bill for food has be e n tho~sa~1ds of . Americans are season2.ny during the fall , but significantly inflated by the taking expensive trips abroad, the price level is not expected number of meals you have but have you wondered why to reach even last December's eaten away from home. L"&S ANGELES McCulloch Oil Corp. has oQ- tained a nine-month option to buy 120,000 acres northeast of Reno, Nev., from North American Rockwell C o r p . Neither the price of the option nor the proposed price of the land was disclosed. the .airlines haven't been .able modest average of S8c a But unless there's an un- to fill all those seats on nights dozen There also will be im-foreseeable disaster ahead of to e~otk,, c o m m e r c i a I pressi.ve bargains in bananas, · us, nature will be on h~ side or paradises . • cabbages, celery, winter , th~ c~nsumer for a while. And One .explanation is that squash, turnips, potatoes, thi.s is ~ood new~. for food e Navy Order more .and more families are cauliflower. -p.r1ces will help hold do~~ the d~sigriing their own ~acatio~. ,..At the same time, higher-rise in our total cost of hv1ng. City d~e!lers are ~uy1ng their than-average prices are an- own piece of land in the coun-ticipated for fish and shellfish: try side and, if nec(!S;S3ry. ten· cod haddock f I o u n d e r ting ?n it. Sales of m~bile sh~ i mp, s~allops. lobsters'. vacation .homes and trailers Higher-than-average prices are .soaring. T~ous~nds of also are anticipated for Amer~cans vacation 1n each tomatoes, frozen orange juice, others· homes through sv"ap flour and sugar. arrangements. Ask the fashion designers if THE ABOVE FOOD pattern lhey are able to dictate as is good news for you . For if they did 10 yeers ago. you simply follow the tradi- Designers may still try. but in tional rules -shop . the recent vears thev have receiv· seasonals and the specials. ed cost.l.v setbacks from resis-substitute and switch to catch tant customers. food bargains. use your head Once it w.>.'> rather easy to in choosing between the raw size up the marketplace and and processed foods .--: you the powers tflat moved it. Now can w.ithout much difficult y you have to wonder who in in wipe out the impact on your charge. food budget of -the entire overall price rise in the BofA Names Countian To Branch. months ahead. Food pi'ices are at an all- time high. If yours is an average U.S. household , la st year you spent $1 ,311.50 in supermarkets and food stores. according to · a just released round·up by Supermarketing magazine -or a little more than $25 a week. Your yearly Huntington 'B~ach resident per-capita food bill rose to Bill R. Ziegler has been nam-$383.85, or $7.38 a week. Our ed assistant manager for loans total grocery store ti i 11 of Bank of America 's 10th and amounted to a record $79 Pacific branch in San Pedro, billion in 1970 alone, a full 7~ announced regional ,vice prl?si· percent over 1969. dent H. H. Jackson. Yet, in the race of all these Sony Sets New Plant In State TOKYO (AP ) -So n·y Corporation, a I e a d i n g Japanese appliance maker, announced today it will build a 140,000 square.foot factory to asse1nble color television sets near San Diego. A Cflmpany spokesman said the plant would be built "in . the suburbs of San Diego," but declined to disclose the exact location. "Operations will begin in May, 1972," the company said. "Initial production target will be 5,000 trinitron c o 1 o r television sets a m o n t h • Production gradually will-in· crease to 20,000 sets. · "The plant will be · abOut 140.000 square-feet in area, but will be constructed to allow for future expansion. "It , will be o\11necl and operated by • ~ny's wholly owned subsidiary, Sony ·eorporation of America__," Ziegler, with the bank since facts, fOOd remains -as It 1967. formerly was a tending has tor years·-about the big· F" S I officer at the Inglewood Main gest bargain you. an American ' 1r111 ugges S Office. He succeeds Pete family, ·can find In the BETHPAGE , N. Y. Grumman Corp. has won a $17 million Navy order for EA6B carrier based reconnaissance planes. e N11cleur React.or PITTSBURGH -\Yesting- house Electric Corp. has won a contract to supply a nuclear reactor and fuel for 900,000 kw a nuclear power · plant in Sweden and that a Swedish firm has taken an op- tion on a second unit of the same size. The Swedish Monilor Co. will supply much of the other electrical equip- ment. The value of the con- tract was not disclosed. e Ca11ada Firms MONTREAL -Corporate- profits of 107 leading Canad~n companies rose ' 11 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier to $278.238 million, a Dow.Jones survey showed;- Eighty-two of the 107 in· dlvldual firms ha~ improved profits. e Atttlsub System WEST COV INA Honeywe1\, Inc. said . Lt s marine systems center here has obtained a contract with a potential value or ~ million from Litton Industries, Inc. for antisubmarine weapons systems to be carried aboard naval destroyers. ?wfelanson, named manager at mar!Cefplace tooay: Rall y C'?llling ~~:st View branch in San ON AVERAGE you are . Sindllnger and! Co. says a , e itJutait~OllS A t. f ll ' I z· I spending a recor~ low of 16.2 nt1JI i·t conducted i·n early . WAS1JINGTON -Rem· na 1ve o ono1u u, 1eg er percent oC your takcbome pay "" Co h graduated Crom Rogers High fbr food. compared to Jaat October indicated t.7 percent 1ngton Arms · as won a School in Newport, Rhode year's 16,7 percent and l960'S,: of those polled planned to buy • $9.6 million .addition to an Jsland. ije rec:eiYed a .bachelor 20 t stock for nonstoc~ oWners, a Army .. cootract for te~.inal of science degree in business ~~i~i~ past summer, r~ i 12-year record low. In the'last oper~tion of a-small mumt1ons administration at San Diego price declines far out.. few weeks this pcrhentage has plant at Independence Mo. State College in 1967 and also numbered the inc rt as es ~ jumped lo 4 percent and at the e Anny Contt"aet .J1as completed professioniil Although pr\ce.s--rose for steak, same Ume as stock owner's courses al the AmerlCan pork sausage, canned ham, ice, plans to buy 1norc stock have Institute of Bankins. cream and Ora nges , offM!tting declined. The. Cirm suggcstc He resides on Bond Circle declines were registertd for this may indicate a rally com· \Ylth his wife, Mary Kay, and pork chops. 11pples, celery, Ing In which fo rmer non· thrtt chUdrtJ\:' Scott, five; cucumbc:rs. eggs, gr e p es . owners of st.ock will be fr----=F========::::==::=======::!.-4!1~tv~e~n,~l~ou~':'..; ~an~d~K~e~r~I')'~, ~tw~\-po~ta~t~~·:._:ca~r~ro~ts~, ~g~re~e~o~pe~P-;_. ~par~tlcularl* active. WASHINGTON -Federal etirtridgt. Co. has received an $18J mlllion addition to an Army contract for operation of an ammunition factory al Prlghton, MiM. l · • I ..... "'•-V·· I ... . .. HELENJ. SHAFFER .. ' ' \ ' ·~~· . '(~·~: ~~/ .;,_ I RALPH C.DEAfiS Think .. You Don't . Know. Them? / .. - You probaby don't recognize a single -name or face in this group and yet, if you're one of th1 DAILY PILOT'S very well informed editor ial page readers, it is th'is talented team of wrjters which helps you keep informed. They write tho Editori- al Research Reports. Though their o~n names don't appear-on the articles which are published under the Editorial Research Reports heading, these ar1 the real pros -diggers who go after all the baokrou~d facts which put today's top issues . into perspective -without thought, of seeking the fame that goes with the name when you're a national columnist. They're .. Your -INli!ORMERS 'Yes,~they could be your ''informers ." It's features ·like• Editorial Research Reports which •make the DAILY ·PILOT · much more than just the .mod important honietown hewspaper available to rasidents along tho Orange Coad. The DAILY PILOT is the total package. It makts whatever happens in the world "local news" and delivers it daily right to your home. let this team of dedi· cated '·'inforniers" help yo u, keep informed. Read Editorial .Research Reports on tho editorial page -and ·.11 the other in1ormative special IHture s in other parts of the DAILY PILOT · • ' - ! ' ' \ ' • i ' ' ' ' • , . •' . , ··-. ' • I .. " ; ., . . . . .. 1. • • • • • • • • Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts! Here'• her.'• . h•,.'• CHARLIE !ROWN ••• and LUCV ••• and UNUS ••• &nd h.,. .• SCHROEflER, •• and lalt but not i...,, here'• $NOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally. • • ' --" . . . ' . • • -{ --·---.... ~ • DAILY PILOT Monday, November 15, 1971 c. • . ' ---..... I . ... --· --. -·······-·····-·-·-· ..........• •········ ·-·....-··-• . ........ . ,, ,.,. '· • . '" .,, "' ... , ~· Soviets :· Relaxed ' '" ., ' ' ,, "'. ,, .. ! ,,, b<· .,. ., • On Jews By PHIL NEWSOM 111"1 ,.,tllft Hewt .ll'ltlJll tn the first 10 months of 1971, the Soviet Union permit· ted some 7 ,WO Jews to -emigrate to Israel, near!>' three quarters as many as Were allowed to leave ln lhe1 entire preceding 10 years. That total came to 10,330. I 'The question then is what happened to reverse a policy under which the So v i e t government frowned on tbe department of any useful citizen? And what compelling force led so many Jews to apply for exit visas and thus risk 1~vernment anger? The answer to the first ques- 1 tion may lie in the fact the Soviet Union ls ln the midst of a campaign in which it seeks to project to the Western world a policy of moderation and that it is a question that has been put to Soviet leaders as they barnstorme<: world capit&ls. Outside t h e government level other pressures al.so have been applied. One has come from the noisy Jewish Defense League as led in the United States by ' • • \ rabbi Mair Kahane.,Pro;,;.:.ba=t:iJbl~yt------------­-----''~· -more--dfeetlve-tm ' . • • ., ,, ..... ••• ., . - ; -. ' • • ' •• • I!.' ... • "' •I, l ,, Jl:ague's harassment of Soviet representatives in the Un1ted States was the Brussel& meeting of some 750 delegates from 27 countri" that In· eluded most of the prominent national a n d intemationaJ organizations in Jewry. This meeting concentrated upon the Soviet Union pro- bably the heaviest in· ternational criticism of Soviet internal policy it has ex· ptrienced sillCf: the purge trials carried.out by Stalin in the 1930s. Ar. to what happened to lead Soviet .lews to risk KremJin wrath not merely by applying for exit visas but b y demonstrations to insure in·j ttrnational publicity for their actions, observers i n s i d e Russia trace It to the 1967 Arab-Israeli War. I The war, these observers1 1 say, gave Soviet Jews a new sense of religion and ethnlcl or1gin. \ It led to increased at· tendance at synagogues among all levels and even to increased ir'lterest In the study of Hebrew despite government. opposition. \ The Soviet Union denies all charges o r anti-Semitism, I although anti-Semitism has al Jong history in Russia. It further declares that assimila- tion is reducing the nmber of Jews in the Soviet Union. The total is uncertain but is believ- ed to be about 2.7 million. or these, It is said perhaps 300,000 would like to emigrate. A unique bond links Soviet J ewry and Israel. Settlers from Russia alld neighboring stales in Eastern Europe played a huge early role in the early building of the state o( Israel. Approximately hair of the top officials in today 's Israeli government have the I r1 cultural origins tn Russ ia. I Until the Soviet Union broke relations. with Israel In 1967, Russian ambassadors serving ln Jsrael had no difficulty being understood In their native tongue. The lowering of Soviet bars to emigration to Israel has been carried out over the ob- jectkms of the Arabs who see lD it an addition to Israel's economic and military lllnnllh· '11111 alone has Jed lo th• furtbt.r speculatlon tbat Soviet plaDnm an looking ahead lo llttJeme:nl of tht Mldeaat con- nk:t and to a renewal .of rtla- Uonl with !Jrlel. ·1'' STARS •J, .. of • S)'dne)', Omarr one 1 ~ lhe w«ld'• Cl'd-t uti6J1>- prs. HI• column ii OM of the DAILY PILOT'S areat feature&. . •· ' • If you're a low tar cigarette smoker, you'll like new Marlboro Lights. Lighter in taste, low in tar. • Marlboro Lights; for those smokers who prefer the lighter taste • ol a low tar and nlcoUne cigarette. M~e with the same famous quality as full-Uavored Marlboro-Bed, America's fastest.growing brand. Marlboro lights: 14 mg: 'Jar:' 1.1 mg. nicotine av. pBI cigara111 by FTC melhod • • I • • • . -···· ...... . ·-.. -. ·.· ~· I • 1 Mon~oy, N"'mb<r 15, 1971 DAILY "LOT IJ; Mou·ntain, Turbulence~-· hree bie A Plane, a By ROGER CARLSON 01 .. o.llJ ...... SMff ··--·Members oHhe cat'State '"(Merton) football team began drifting out of the sleek physical education building on the Titans' campus Sunday afternoon. . For some, tears were nowlng down hght·lipped faces. Others, with hands jammed in lhelr trousers, simply stared at the shining pavement. There wasn't any conversation as the squad wan~ered toward the parking Jot. The players had just learned the tragic news or the deaths or as.sistant grid coaches Joe O'Hara, 39, Dallas Moon, 30, and, Bill Hannah, 37. Those three, along with pilot Ernest M1rietla, 40, of sa.n Gabrlel, were found dead Sunday afternoon at 1:30 aroong the wrecbi• o! their rente41'1J!or"Chetok .. 180 •iiwle engine plane In the Bania Ynez mountains near Santa Barbara. • Funeral arrangements are pending. The three aides of head coach Dick Coury had begun their ill-fated trip to view the Cal Poly {San Luis Obispo) loot- ball team one last time before this week's CCAA chafupionshlp decider with that adversary. They lert San Diego following the Titans• hair-raising 40-30 victory over USIU (Cat Western) and made a stopover ip Santa Barbara for refueling at 7: 10 Saturday night. No flight plan was filed * * * * Plane Was Too Small Lue.ky Twist of Fortune· Saved .One Coach's Life Painfully devastating In magnitude and lmplicaUon, agonizingly slow in develop- ment, news of a missing airplane touched Orange County Sunday. It touched those associated with Cal State (Fullerton). It touched the wives or CSF assistant football coaches Joe O'Hara, Bill Hannah and Dallas 1t1oon. plane only had room for t hr e e passengers. So he stayed behind, "I'm so thankful he didn't go,·• Becky told this column. "I'm terribly afraid of plane!. In fact, when Ed had to fiy to Fresno earlier this year for scouting l was scared out of my pants. with the FAA. up, he was crushed. Coury called hls But 15 miles west of Santa Barbara, team's season, ''insignificant," but added • •t.hr'ff ttiues ·11as1·or~aavtota W'ao miles -~-that the caml'atgn'WOUtd·be-compleled. short of their de.'Uinatlon, their lives were O'Hara had been with Coury since hii snuffed out aJJ the cralt slammed into a days at Mater Oei High School and Moon mountain 400 yarda from the 4,000.fool and Hannah were also key figures in the summit in heavy turbulence and cloud CSF program. • covet. "When ·you start a brand new football C:OUry reflected his players' plight. lle program you endure a 1-0t-of .adversity. was emotionally. drained as he addressed And with adversity you become a very the press ln·a cop.ference room late Sun· close knit group/' said a shaken Coury. day afternoon, "We've all losl three outstanding ~is t~am..bad pulled off a miracle come-· friends. I've told mY wife and lheirs Ulal back &,turday, ,overcoming a 24-point in the buslrless of coaching football YO\I deficit in beating its foe. · ' sometimes become · 'closer to your Now, with his sixth viCf,ory in eight coaches than your own family. stafts in hand and the title ga,me coming "l wouldn't have traded any of them I • JOE O'HARA BILL HANNAH ••• and I hope you11 remember tbelt leavei wile Lenore and eight ehlldttn, famllles in ,>"OUr prayers.." he added. aged 2·13. ~1roruc1lly 1he-1rip-to 'riew--the Clal·Poly --Moon ·leaves wife O or o thy incl \ team wasn't an absolute necwity. • two sons; David (IS) and Darren (11). "They wanted to take another l~k at Harutah leaves wife Molly and three· Ca,LPoly. We had already seen them once year-old .son Mark. and bad game films. But they just Federal o!flclals said the cauae of thl wanted to have another first hand look.'' crash was under Investigation. ' said Coury. ' _They said the mountaloous aru tht Titan president 1 Dr. L. Donald Shields plane had to cross before reaching 5aJt said, "lt's quite obvious that this is 'the Luis Obispo had heavy clouds up to. l~,000 worst tragedj In our 12-year existence. feet-Saturday night. ' It's not Just the great relationship among It was one year ago this weekend that the coaches, it was the rapport these the twfarshall University football team tllrtf: had with Lhe kids. It was a very was virtually wiped out in an airplane penonal. type thing." crash. ThiU'ty·four football play,ersl>erish· O'Hara, originally from Atlantic City, ed. DA~LAS MOON * * * " Another Air Disasteli A Yea1· Ago HUNTINGTON, W. Va, IAP) -Oii the surface, thing9 are much the same ht Huntington as they were the middle or last November when sudden shock en· veloped the 80,000 residents of this pleasant Ohio River city, It touched the 1 I children who called those men their daddy. And it had a shattering impact on Ed and Becky Bain. First came the report that the single· "Ed was shaking in hls boots when be found out what happened and thought about how close he came to being on that plane. "He just kept asldng me how I felt - J'm expecting a baby·next month. "It sure makes you wake up and think v.·hen you come t h a t close to losing someone." Offensive Consistency Key Now, as then , the weather is turning colder, local stores are displaying their Christmas wares while mosl\Colks. prefer to plan for the Thanksgiving holiday and students at Marshall University are following closely the eii:ploits of the school's football team. • ---------WHITE WASH Indeed it does . This comer had occasion to become closely acquainted v.•ith Joe O'Hara when he served at Mater Dei High in Santa Ana. first as an assistant coach then as athletic director. To Rams' Win Over Lions There are no visible tears. Huntington and Marshall have learned to cope with the tragedy of one year ago. ----He was the kind or guy you enjoyed DETROIT (AP) -A cons.istent Los being around, whether in a business Angeles Ram offense and a defense capacity or socially. He always was good which was ready when it had to be have OLIHH WHIT• natured, always wore a warm smile. enr•ne Piper Cherokee 180 v.•hich was He loved his work, he loved people and put a crimp into the Detroit Lions· plans ce .. ying O'Hara , Hannah and 1'toon from he loved his family. He had a way of or making the National Football Leaiue San Diego to San Luis Obispo was miss· making you feel you were his long lost playoffs. ing Saturday night. best friend whenever he saw you. Tiie Lions couldn't cope with Roman The aircraft was last seen when it Joe had time and kindness for Gabriel's passing, nor Lance Renlzel 's refueled in Santa Barbara early in the everyone. receiving. evening. The next time it was spotted As Ed's brother Marv reealls, "Joe was Rentzel caught Gabriel touchdo\vn was early Sunday when search planes in love with football yet he also really lik· passes of 14 and 32 yards in the second fou nd its wreckage. ed the administrative work when he was and fourth quarters. · Families of the trio were told that a involved with th~t. · Les Josephson added the other Ram downed airplane had been sighted, then "He taught me how to ~et along with touchdown with a one-yard plunge in the for hours those people clung to the hope people. He was a demandmg coach and second period three plays after team· ---lthere..WO survivon. Or maybe even _got_ the most out of his players." mate Coy BaC:,o recovered Detroit's Altie that they might have e across an.o a-Jitlarv' Joe ametoMitert>etat;'the-Taflor':s~fumble Oft the Lions-1,~- wreck. same time -1959 -when Bain was a Mianwhile, Gabriel completed 17 of 22 But \Vhen rescuers arrived at the freshman gridder and O'Hara was a passes for 179 yards, including · 11 in ti scene, they found it was the missing yearling on the coaching staff. row at one stretch through the first three plane and that its four occupants had Marv later sucei!eded Joe as Mater Dei periods to lie an LA team record held by been killed . atJileUc director when O'Hara moved on For Lenore O'Hara and her eight to Cal State to work under his close children, for the wife and two youngsters friend Dick Coury. of Dallas Moon, for the widow and litUe Asked why O'Hara made the move, boy of Bill l-Iannah the wait was over. Bain surmises: "I guess be figured It was And for the Bains it was an all too hor· a step up and you don't know what you rifying brush with personal tragedy. can do until you try it. I know he was You see, Ed Bain was supposed to be happy there, working for coach Coury. with the flight party, which was heading Now, in one tenibl~ instant the smiling north to scout Cal Poly (SLO). Ed went Irishman and his companions are gone. to the airport with the group but the ll makes you wonder why. World Cop to U.S. Nicklaus Gets Award, Says It Sliouldn't Exist PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) -Jack Nick laus hugged the solid sliver international cup presented to the low scorer in the 19th World Cup golf cham· pionships and said he wished "it didn't exist." Lee Trevino, one time ~a-week driv· ing range attendant, was being served beer and having cigarettes lit by a billionaire. The United Stales'· two premier golfers fq.ished mutilating teams from 45 other nations Sunday, shooting a 21-under·par total of SSS at PGA National Club. Nicklaus rollicked home with a 1 __personal 17-under-par 271. plan to enter the Heritage CJassjc at Hilton Head, S. C., and the .Disney World Open at Orlando, Fla., during the coming weeks. Nicklaus won the PGA championship on the same 7,096-yard course in February with a seven·under·par 281 aggregate. In the World Ciip, he was 10 shots better. "The little British ball we were allowed to play. made inost of the difference," he said, "but I have played awfully well the past three weeks." Jack won two tournaments in Australia before the World Cup, but the three vie· tories combined -although worth moun- tains of prtstlge -Udded only $11,000 to the Nicklaus war chest. Zeke Bralkowski and Norm V a n Brocklin. The outcome put both team 'S' record s at 5-3·1 and left the Rams alone in second in the West Division behind San F'ran· cisro. .L.A's solution to beating Detroit was a simple one. Rentze l made some good in· side fakes on his pass patterns and once Lions defenders comn1ilted themselves he went for the sides. \Vide receiver Rentzel said both TD catches were on comer palterns. ··1n films we had seen other people work it so succesfully against the Lions that we thought we'd try it." he said. "We hadn 't run it much this year." "\Ve.-felt if Detroil-gave....us ..single. coverage we could fake them to the in· side and go lo the outside," Gabri~! ·ex· plained. "·When we-needed good protection we ' ' got it," he added. With 3:41 left in the half Rentzel scored his rirsl touchdown, beating Dick LeBeau to the comer of the end zone. It climaxed an 82-yard drive that took just seven plr.ys and included first down passes of 22 yards from Gabriel to Jack Snow, 15 yards to Renlzel. and 12 yards to tight end Bob Klein. LcBeau intercepted Gabriel"s altempt On a cold and rainy Saturday night, Nov. 14, 1970, a chartered jetliner crasfl.. ed short of nearby Tri-State Airport, ldl14 ing all 75 persons aboard -including 3.fi members of the Marshall's football team, most of the squad's coaching staff and university and community leaders. The 9,000-student school and the cit}' found themselves victims of the worst air disaster in sports history. for his 12\h consecutive completion and TOTALLY INVOLVED Detroit drove fr om the LA 32 to the six. before settling for Errol t.lann's 13-yard ··This town has always been possessive field goal. of Marshall." the Rev. Robert Scott t.x· Rcnt1.el was all alone on lus 32-yard TD plained. "So, it was tota11y involved in tbe reception, which climaxed an 8G-yard tragedy ., drive that took only eight plays. · . _wjth jus.t Z:a.& f in the £fil!le, Greg _ Father ~tt . campus priest and Landry sneaked over fromthe one for the chaplain or t..1arshail's football teams was final TD arter it appeared Detroit was to have made last year's trip to the East headed for its first game without a Carolina State game but stayed behind to touchdown since Thanksgiving Day 1969. deliver a weekend ma'ss. "l heard about it while eating supper," he recalled. "I went out to the sile but it was obvious [ couldn't administer last rites. None of the victims were recognizable. "But that's history now," he said, "and we must emphasize the present. Yet ·there are always undercurrents or the crash ... ·• While the death of community doctors, dentists, lawyers and even a state legislator created a void Huntington will not fill for years, -school and city officials decided, after the shock had JJUbsided somewhat, 1t1arshall would rebuild It& football program. A program on the road to recovery from a recruiting scandal, league suspension and six consecutive losing seasons had to be started from scratch. A new head coach was hired, along with a new athletic director and SPortS information director to take over for vie· tims or the crash. NEW ERA BEGINS Marshall received permission Crom the NCAA to use freshmen in varsity com- petition and, together with sophomores who had never known varsity action, the Thundering Herd began a new era in its school's football history. As expected the team is experiencing a losing season against veteran major col· lege competition. Before the season's first game, Huntington residents discuss· ed the possibility of having to wait two or three years before celebrating the [ir&t post-crash victory. They didn't have to. Under t h e tutelage or coach J a· c k Lengyel, a patieni but demanding man, the Young Herd won its first home game in a last-second triumph over Xavier and added a homecoming victory-over heavily-favored Bowling Green five weeks later. "The individual award should be eliminr.ted from the World Cui>i" s a id Nicklaus, who blazed through ro~ of 68-69-63-71. "It's a team tournament and 01Jne person should be allowed to steal the show." Trevino said his main goal in life is to aceoinplish 110mething Nicklaus has oone twice, win golf's "Big Four" eveaU. He already has two U.S. Open titles and one BriUsh Open and now wants the ?i.fasters and PGA. TRAVIS WILLIAMS 125) RETURNS A PUNT FOR THE RAMS IN 21·13 TRIUMPH OVER DETROIT. "I'm pleased with the overall progress of our team," Lengyel said. "We'll have a lot of frustrations until we mature, but we have received good support and ( think Marshall will be able to overcome th e events that have marred its athletic history.·• South Africa was the ru!Ulerup, limping home L2 shots behind the Nicklaus· Trevino powerhouse al nine-under-par 567. New Zealand was two strokes farther back In third. Gary Player had led the South African challenge for two days with 69-'7, but the Golde11 Bears' incredible 63 on Saturday made ll a meaningless Sunday as the Americans coasted to victory. John D. MacArthur, tournament host and one of the world's 10 richest men, climbed to the podjwn and delivered Trevino's requested beer. Lee then bad l\facArthur light him a cigarette. Player and Sooth Afrlcan partner Harold Henning packed quickly for a return to Johannesburg and e.1tended rest.s. "I haven't seen my kids for but four days 1n e month," said Gary. "I played fairly well here. Jack was fan· tastlc and I'm glad ll1s over." Nicklaue trails Trevlno by more than ~.ooo in the U.S. tour dollar derby. Bolb Wilt's in· Rare Form--So Are Lakers LOS ANGELES (AP) -The only man ever to score 100 points in a professional basketball garhe, Wilt Chamberlain, scOrea just -three Poffits in his most re· cent outirlJ. It was about three more than he needed to dominate the game. The 7·foot·l center was as awesome as he ever has been Sunday night, dominating both backboards and starting a lightning fast break as the Los Angeles Lakets tripped the Boston Celtics, 128- . 115 before a 17,505 sellout throng. ·Wllt garnered 31 rebounds, hls second highest lotal of the year, and blocked 13 Celtic shots · besides passing off tor 10 Jssl~ts in the display o( alt-round basket· ball skill. His defensive rebounds most olten turned into bullekllke passes down coort to fast-breaking twnplates. Gail Goodrich, the littlest Laker at 6-0, scored 30 Points in a big first half, ln- cludlng a 7-for-10 shooting performance in the first period. Almost everybody, however , had a hand in' the Lakers' 14th victory In 17 games this year, and their tlghth ln a row. -Jerry West .scored 26 points and the team continued unbeaten in the 12 games in which he's played, -Jim 1t1cMillian grabbed th!! key re- bounds which \Vilt didn't get and was a leader qf the f,ast break. · · -Reserve guard Flynn Robinson hit five foul shots in five aUemplS to run his consecutive ~treak to 32 from the line. The team record is 35 in a row, by West and Elgin Baylor. -Goodrich wound up topping scorers with 36 PoinLS, although Celtic Jo.Jo White equalled that figure. "The last eight games we have been running as well as ever and we're im· proving In atl departments,•· said winning 1coach Bill Shannan. "lf we stay healthy, we should be an able challenger for any team in the league." I The Laker record for victories is 11 in a row. Los Angeles takes tonight off before a Tuesday night game here with Cleveland and then a Friday ni&ht game ~·Ith Houston. .. ,,.,. ....._ H1~llc~ Ku"°"'! c.-Wllllt ClllM' Fftlkel Ntbon $tndltn Wlllt11111 .. , ... 101111 OS~ • • ' • " ' ' ' ' ' ' • LOI Anoe!et ' T ... , II H1trun I·! 11 McMllln 1·1 l'O Clwnbln .... :16 Gwdrldl l·l J WMI ... 2 fltll M I lloblMlt 1-1 1 Rllff 0.1 • Tr•PP 11 4 Clf!frll!lii1 lJ•11 111 Tor111 37 M tt » " " t<ovle<I °"'' -llOllt 0 ' T , ... 22 4 •1 I • ,., J u ... ,. 10 .... ,. ' 2·t • ' l4 lJ 2 0-f 4 l ,., • .... .. »J1 l?t u-ns ..... ,. Totll lovll 1101~ 14 LOI Ar1t11n 111 Ttcllll{gl foul• -LOI ""''"'' Halnttn MEMORIAL SERVICES Saturday, before Marshall hosled the University of Toledo's Rockets at its Fairfield Stadiunt, a dedlcaUon ceremony was held. Nate Ruffin, Felix Jordan and Ed Carter, surviving members of lhe 197 varsity squad, and earl Kokor, Red Dawson and Mickey Jackson.. surviving members of the coaching staff, presented a wreath i.n memory of those who died. A Sunday mass was scheduled. "People have said the funeral must end !>Ometlme, '' Father Scott said, "and that's true, though it seems like a callous thing to say. "But no on~. anywhere,'' he said, "w\11 ever be able to talk about Marshall loot. ball or lluntlngton and not think about last Nov. 14."' • I I I OAllY PILOT Mond1y, NOVtmbtt 15, 1971 ·O_C.C -Wraps Up Title, .. -.. Stays Unbeaten, 30-10 By ROW ARD L. BANDY _ line down here or they would have beta 01 tflt OallY Plitt ll•ff fn front, I Ora•ge Coast Collea:e has achieved Us "Mt. San Antonio has a big, physical No. 1 goal for the 1971 football season -team and lta backs are real quick. And a South Coast Con!erence championship. San Diego Mesa is aimilar to tbem.11 With the championship go e s an in-vitation to participate in the California ~ Does the OCC mentor expect a letdown state junior college playoffs even though now that the Pirates have wrapped up the Pirates have· one circuit game left the conference crown and a playoff Friday night with San Diego Mesa. berth? Saturday night. coach Dick Tucker'• "No, I really don'l We had our three unbeaten (7-0-1) OCC squad overcame a big games in a row (Fullerton, Santa Ana pesky ML San Antonio College team with and Cerritos) and if we were going to a 16-polnt fourth quart.er scoring binge to have a letdown, th.is wu the night. \ grab a ~10 victory before a homecoming "They made a lot of yardage against us crowd at the OC:C campus stadium. but our defense played a tremendous Ul"I Tflt!IMM "'PHILADELPHIA'S HAROLD CARMICHAEL (17) FUMBLES AFTER BEING HIT BY DALlAS' CLIFF HARRIS, Indians' Path To Rose Bowl Turns Foggy By THE ASSOClA TEO Pa= Stanford University's clear path to the Rose Bowl has turned slightly foggy. and even In dian coach John Ralston explores the possibility (If a bigger·than-usual Big Game v;ith California Saturday. "J~m not going to v.·orry about this one." Ralston said, referring to the In- dians' upset 13-12 loss to San Jose State in a non«>nference battle Saturday. "We're just going to get ready for Cal DOW." Cal rolled to 17-10 comeback victory Saturday over Oregoo. leaving the Golden Bears 4-2 against Pacific-8 teams this fie a son. If the Bears should upset the Indians. both teams would finish 5-2 and tie for first place. Cheeking Out Pros . Butkus Offensive Hero As Bears Trirri 'Skins "t never scored (In a screwier play." Chicago's Dick Butkus exulted. It was but one play in a slightly screwy day that did all S()rtS (If strange things the the Na- tional Football League standings . The Bears' big linebacker, usually the recipient of plaudits for his defensive brilliance, found himself the offensive hero of Sundy's 16-15 .vlctory over visiting Washington when he grabbed a despera- tion Bobby Douglass pass on a broken point·after-touchdown play. "\Vhen T saw Douglass scrambling around I went down looking for a pass." said Butkus, eligible since he was a backfield blocker on the conversion play. but 'vas unable to penetrate the Vikings' scoring territory. AT OAKLAND -The Raiders main· tained their half-game AFC West margin (Iver Kansas City o:s Daryle Lamonica threw 63 and 26-yard touchdown passes to Drew Buie and Pete Banazak en route to a 41-21 rout over Houston. AT DENVER -The Cincinnati Bengals broke a seven-game losing streak as Virgil Carter unleashed touchdown bombs of 72 yards to Bruce Coslet and 67 to Essex Johnson in polishing off the Denver Broncos, 24-10. The score stood at 14-10 in favor of the game as they have Week·in and week-out. Pirates going into the fourth quarter and And remember, they were outweighed Tucker was asked if he was wonied. tonight." "Hell yes, I was worried. We actually Doug Young moved into a class all ty got a break on that fumble at the goal himself as a touchdown pus receiver at Rustlers FaD, 19-14 Breaks Conth1ue to Go The Other Way for. GWC By CRAIG SHEFF OI tti. O•llY l"Uet SMH LOS ANGELES -It's been one of those years for Golden West College's football team. And Rustler coach Ray Shackleford i!I the first to admit that the breaks just haven't gone to Golden \Vest in the '71 campaign. "I've never been with a team that's played so good and then lost. We played hard and consistent tonight· but we just cou ldn't beat them.'' Shackleford's comments came just after the Rustler!! had dropped a · 19-14 decisio n to host East LA in· a Southern California Conference tilt. The setback ran Golden West's season mark to 3--4·1 with only this Saturday night's g a m'e against Rio Hondo re- maining on the '71 slate. That's set for Orange Coast. Saturday night at East LA it was the same old story for the Rustlers. After getting behind by a couple (If touchdowns. Shackleford's crew was forc- ed to play catch-up. They not only caught up but went ahead just 3.S seconds before the halftime break -and it appeared that Golden West was well on its way to upsetting the Huskies. Although the Rustlers couldn't get their passing game going consistently In the second half. the defense was repei.tedly stopping Eilst LA drives and it appeared that Golden West might ,pull it out. But then the Huskies got a big break just after the start of the fourth quarter, to its second TD with. Wolf going the final yard in a six·play drive. When F.d Parker kicked his second PAT, it appeared that the Rustlers were on their way to win No. •• Cornelius finished with 17 completions in 33 attempts for 180 yards. That gives him 1,627 for the season, 131 short of set- ting a single seaS()n record. Flnt downs rvshlno First clown$ PllHlnt First clowtli Pffl•l!ln TOl•I 11'11 dOWM Y•rd1 ru1hl119 owe ELA . " . ' ' ' 1S 17 112 211 Y•1"<11 P<IHll\ll Y•rcb IOU 1111 UJ Ntl Y•rd1 OtlnMI Punl't/AYe!'"fOI dl1t•nc• P-IJIMIY•rd1 pen.1!11..t F11mblts/F11mbln k>lt "' a m "' 1/Jl '':IO 1115 J/15 0/0 l /1 Sc.re by OW•rlllfi Goldftl W•I D 1• D 0 -,, E•1t LA 7 6 0 ' -lt Com1!1111o St hneblidc Hunt..- To••LI Com1U111o P•rktr Woll ,_ ••• TOl•b Smllh P..-rv ,_ Schntblck $Mpei lt«1rlqut1 Tol•l1 l"ASUNG Oeldtn W1d .. " " " flfll " jlCI • l llD .JU 1111 LA ~ . ' ' 21 10 2 f l .~ • 22 1.000 ! lll ·''' llUSHINO GlklM WHI tc• YI . I II 1111 u. ' " " . ' ' . " 3' 112 rl •vt. 2t ·2.l a 1.1 I 2.4 • 1.1 0 7.S lO 2.1 2' 15' I J.I Sl6S2.! •n o 3.o ,, :u 1J ,_, llJD s.o llfOU.O J.1 271 21 "' Riverside Falls Orange CoasL with a pair of scores on passes thrown by Alvin White. He now has 11 in two.aeasons, an all·tlme h.igh for an Orange Ceast player. The feat was accomplished on the 25th. homecoming date o! the college. making the record that much more Impressive. He scored the first OCC touchdown with 3:27 left in the first quarter on a 43- yard play, taking the ball at· the five. BeMy Ricardo kicked the first of four conversions to make it 7-0. Prior to the touchdown, Ricardo had attempted a 46-yard fie.Id goal. The ball sailed true toward its mark, hit the crossbar a"nd bounded high in the air only to fall in the end zone instead of over the bar. The Jtth TD pass taken by Y.oung came In the fourth ·stanta on a 58-yard scoring play. Young gathered in the .ball at the Mountie 27 and raced into the end ione for the touchdown that gave oCc a bit ol breathing room, 21-10, with 11:57 left. Rick Hartsfield scored on a 16-yard run through right lack.le for the only rushing score of the night to make it 23-10 with 8:20 remaining. The Orange Coast defense put the final layer of Icing atop the victory when Mike Ge.let and Lee Walters tackled Gus Rubio ln the end zone for a safety with 4:47 left. The second Orange Coast Wuchdown came on a pass of 49 yards to Steve Monahan on the final play (If the fir.it half. While White's passing statistics were impressive (13 of 26 for 332 yards), the OCC defense averted a sure Mountie score when Lee Walters knocked the ball loose at the one and Ken Shibata recovered for a touchback. Another potential Mountie score was called back (In a penally. GAME STATISTICS Flrll d~1 flllM"' Finl down1 P•••f"ll Flr1I down1 !Hnlllltl To!•! flrsl dowrw V11"<11 ru.r'!l"9 Y•r<ll PIU!lll! Y•rd1 loll NII Y•rds 11•lntd Pun~/Ave••Q• d l1tenc1 Pfn1lll11/Y1rd1 ptM1)Jtd FumDln/Fvmllle-t IOlt Scert ttr Ou1rt1r1 O<C • " ' » '" "' " ... "" U/11l ,,, M< • ' ' " m '" " "" t /2' 115, '" Ortno• CC111t 1 7 o Mt. SMI Antenlo 0 1 I ,, -10 0 -10 RUSHING Or•ne• Co••I " '" " tve. H•tUlltfd " ·~ 0 '·' LtM~lllttlr • " ' " MollulU;f ' " ' .. Mo•I~ • " " '" Whlle ' ' ' .1 .0 ,_, ' • ' "' TOl•fl u "' " .. Ml. 1111 A11te!11t Wi~ " '" " " -" " ' ,. Miller ' • • ••• p.,,.,.,Ol'I ' " 0 ... P•nlcl ' • 0 u Sl'!lcunf ' ' • ... Tol1l1 " m " "' ,.ASSINQ or.,... c111r .. " "''" "'· Whl1• " " ' "' ·"' ·~~ ' ' ' 0 .... Tot•l1 " " ' "' ••• Ml. S•n Anlenlo Miiiet' " • • "' ... The catch is that Cal is on academic probation for NCAA eligibility ru!_es violations and their games don 't count in the standings. However, with a federal court suit by two Cal athletes pending. there is a chance a court ruling could reinstate Cal's Rose Bowl eligibility. "They still think they can go to the Rose Bowl.".said Ralston sadly. The coach was equally unhappy that his Indians outgained San Jose 430 ()ffensi\·e yards to 80 and still lost. His wild waving caught Douglass' eye, then Butkus caught the wobbling pass that won the game. It followed Cyril Pind.er's 40-yard TD run, the (Inly touchdown of the game. Eight field goals accounted for the rest of the points in the game. AT NEW YORK -The Ballimore Colts edged the New York Jets. 14-13, and the margin was provided by the right forearm of Jerry Logan. AT FOXBORO, MASS. -Quarterback Jim Plunkett led the New England Patriots to a 38-33 victory over Buffalo with four touchdown passes. His longest was an ~yarder to Carl Garrett, during a three-touchdown third quarter. AT KANSAS CITY -The Oeveland Browns receipted for their fourth straight loss, a club record, as the Kansas City Chiefs posted a 13--7 victory. On a fourth·and-one situation at the Golden West 49. East LA punter Ray Rodriquez received a high snap from center and decided to run with It. That caught the Rustlers off guard and before they could ail Rodriquez he had galloped 35 yards to the Rustler 14. Three plays later the Huskies were back eight yards at the 22 with fourth down and 18 to go. But"East LA then pulled one out of the hat when wide receiver Carl Hunt.er -on a reverse -passed lD teammate Reg Pilcher in the end zone for the winning six-pointer. Gauchos Battle Chaffey After 24-23 Triumph •·\Vhen you do that you normally win." he said. "I never thought for one second we would lose that game -until those last 17 seconds." In those last seconds. Stanford's soccer-style kicker Rod Garcia, who has a conference record 14 field goals this season missed from the IO-yard line, his fourth miss of the day. Stanford advanced to v.•ithin one point of the Spartans in the final period on a 38- yard touchdown sprint by Jackie Bro\vn, but quarterback Don Bunce·s run for a two-point conversion failed. California's Steve Kemnitzer. a 195- pound junior. carried the ball seven straight times to help the Bears p:o 28 yards to the wiM ing touchdown after a pass interception. . Reserve Dick Jones pushed in with the score less than a minute from game·s end. Earlier in the fourth qua rte r. quarterback Jay Crute led the Bears 59 yards in 10 plays and pa ssed eight yards to former Servite star Geoff DeLapp for the score. ln ()ther Pac-8 action. Southern California's a4ert defense set up a field goal and a touchdown to help the Trojans to a lJ.12 triumph over \Vashi11gton. Mike Rae kicked the 28-yard winning field goal, after Alonzo ThOmas in· tercepted a Sonny Sixiller pass. The Baltimore safety brok~e through to block a Jets field goal attempt v.·ith bare- ly four minutes remaining to preserve the victory. Another block by Ted Hendricks was just as vital, as he burst through to kill a Jets PAT attempt. AT SAN FRANCISCO -New Orleans quarterback Edd Hargett threw his third touchdown pass of the game, a lG-yarder to running back Virgil Robinson, with 57 seconds left to give the Saints an upset 26-20 victory over San Francisco. The loss dropped the latter's West Division lead over to Los Angeles by one half game. AT 1\1INNEAPOLIS -The Minnesota Vikings used the toe of Fred Cox with 4:0'l remaining to defeat the Green Bay Packers, 3-0, in a defensive gem. Green Bay won the battle of statistics TV Blackout SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Diego Chargers and Sh Louis Cardinals, tv;o teams lhat have sputtered through the first eight weeks of t~e National Footb:lll League season, try lo square their records tonight. Orange and LA counties are blacked out of the t.clecast.. Quarterback Len Dawson was the chief culprit for the wiMers, completing 15 of 24 passes for 234 yards. He tossed a ~ yard swing pass to Wendell Hayes for the Chiefs' (Inly touchdown and his deadly heaves set up field goals of 14 and 27 yards by Jan Stenerud. AT MIA!\fl -The Miami Dolphins rode the right arm of Bob Griese to a come- from-behind 24-21 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers. Griese fired three touchdown passes lo Paul Warfield and the win preserved Miami's half game margin over the Baltimore Colts in the AFC East. AT DALLAS -The Dallas Cowboys moved to within a h a I f game of the Washington Redskins with a 2().7 victory over Philadelphia. The win sets up Sunday's clash at Wa shington In a battle for the division lead. Duane Thomas scored on runs of one and 13 ya rds and soccer·slyle kicker Toni Fritsch of Austria booted field goals of 23 and 46 yards for the Cowboys. AT ATLANTA -Fran Tarkenton, the New Y()rk Giants' master scrambler, crossed up the defense and ran two yard!! for the -winning touchdown with 31 seconds remaining. Tarkenton's dash give the Giants an uphill 21·17 victory over the Falcons. Atlanta blew a I7·7 lead. In the early going the Huskies ap- peared as though they would !'la.ke It a rout, rolling to a 13-0 IeE.d betund the running of tailback George Smith. But the Rustlers fought back, scoring a tou chdown midway through the second quarter on a five-yard pass from quarterback BUI Cornelius to tailback Kim Wolf, culminating a ~yard drive in 10 plays. A Kurt Dedrick punt that was downed at the four-yard line set up the second Rustler score late in the quarter. Unable lD move the ball, East LA booted it back to their own 37. Cornelius then engineered Gclden West TIT AN RUNNERS NAB NCAA TITLE WHEATON, Ill. -Cal St ate (Fullerton) easily captured the NCAA College Division cross country cham· pionship Saturday, placing four runners in the top 10. The Titans collected 47 points, 34 less than runnerup North Dakota St.ate which had 81. Eastern h-fictligan. the defending champion, placed third with 109. Late in the third quarter, ArtimUs Parker Intercepted a Sixkiller pass and 1printed 5l yards dov.·n the lell sideline to the Southern Cal nine--yan:I line. Jimmy J ones ran in from the seven to set a school record of 42 touchdowns over his three years at USC. Lo·ng 1:Jeach Awaits Bowl Bid Meanwhile, Oregon State's fullback By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Roger Smith battered the Wa shington Cal State (Long Beach) has wrapped si.te Q>ugars for 210 yards in 45 carrie1t up the Pacific Coast Athletic Association and scored the winning touchdown in a . football title but, by virtue of a con- 21·14 victory Saturday. • ... ~fcrencc rule, may not return to . the Smllh scored his second lDuthdown Pasadena Bo\\·l. with 3:50 nmalning and wiped out a 14·13 The rule Isn't, ho\\·cvtr, a non·rtp<!at WSU Je1d. OSU Is now 2-! In Pac-8 play nire as the Big Ten o~ had. and WSU ls 3-3. Conference rcpresenU1li\'CS vole on the The UCLA Bruins, 1·3 In the Pac·8, PCAA's "most representative" tea m and were_jdle. each squad has a «rlain number or Ttfd black Cal players -receiver claims 10th<' berth: Isaac Curlis and tight end Larry -Loni'? Beach Is 5-1 In the PCAA with Brumsey -have filed a federal cou~ impressive viclorics 0~1er t'resno State suit contending that Cal was declared In-and San Diego Sl:ttc. Last Saturday tllgtble under NCAA rules which are hfghl. the 49crs bct1l former power San 4~rtmlnltor)' qalast blacks. Diego State, 12-7, on a Jast·mlnute drive • f which had all types or spine-tingling plays. -San Jose, ~-t, on the other hand , holds a 30-28 victory over Cal State (Long Beach). anct. last Saturday scored the upset of the college season by stuMing SlAnford. 13-12. In other PCAA actlon Saturday night, Cal Poly (San l.uls Obispo) dropped UC Santa Barbara 9-3 and \Ve stem Michigan stopped Univeri;ity of Pacific 25·21. Long 8.(!ach had a hero, Terry Metcalf. the super-halfbac k from Seattle, gained 130 yards In 25 carries but no yardage was bigger than the nve he gained without the ball , ' t'acing a fourth·and·l4 situation on the 49 late In the game, Metcalf went back in punt formation but the pas3 from center was high. In came San Diego defenders and P.fetcaJ( began f1!Mlng for kis life. }le was still four yards short or the first down when he was tackled. AJ he hit the turf. ths ball popped loose from h.is arms and bounced forward -five yards whcrt teammate Oluck D a v I d I a n recovered. Having artfully gained the needed yardage to keep possession, Long Beach proceeded to score. Ten plays later. Met- calf swept left end for eight yards and l..ong Beach had its sccond"blnsecuUve ti· tie. By Pl!IL ROSS 01 rtoe DlllY l"llel Sl•tf RIVERSIDE -With a two game lead and only one Mission Conference contest remaining on the schedule, it's obvious that the Citrus Owls have claimed the conference championship. But perhaps a special s o rt of award should be doled out to Saddleback's Gauchos, the circuit's scourge in the se· cond half of its recent tiffs. The Gauchos of coach George Hartman (4-2) can sew up sole possession (If the runnerup spot with a win over the in· vading Chaffey Panthers (3-2·1) thi!I Saturday night at Mission Viejo High. However. last Saturday night at Rlverslde's Wheelock S t a d i um , Hartman's gridders proved their second hall capabilities by escaping with a 24-23 triumph over Riverside's Tigers. It marked the second straight week that Saddleback has turned in a strong second half showing since the Gauchos had frightened Citrus: in the latter stanza only a week earlier, before succumbing, 24-14. Hartman told the DAILY PILOT af· terwards, "our kids (down 14·10 at the haJf) fought well again in the second half, espedally the way the odds were being stacked against them 1n the first half. The "odds" referred to by Hartman were a trio of bizarre calls which were Instrumental in either leading to a Riverside score or squelching a Gaucho drive. Riverside had come from a tD-e deficit with 4:37 left in the first half to move in· , to a 12-10 edge on ll one-foot plunge by tailback Ron Bradford. The Tigers had gotten into scoring posi· tlon, however, principally as a result of a pair of pass Interference calls against Saddleback which appeared t& 'be borderline cases, to say the least. AIJO. 1lmost four minutes after the Bengals were successful on a two-point conversion to up their advantage to 14·12, S.1."ddleblck was drivi11g in Tige r ter· ritory, Rt the RJversldt 31·yard line. Gaucho freshman quarterback Bob Dulich hit tight end Tom Simmons in the right Oat at the Tiger 20 but the latter appeared not to have possession before he turned and the ball fell from his hJnds. It was ruled, though, that Tiger safety Ron Phelps had made a legal fumble recovery after pouncing on lhc ball and, thus, a Saddleback drive was th"•arted. The biggest clutch plays turned In by the winners, however, both occurred in the waning seconds of the game. First, the hosts used a 63-yard, 14-play drive to close a 24-17 Gaucho gap to 24·23 but they were denied any more points o" a two-point conversion try which was halted by the entire left side of the Sad· dleback defensive line. Then. after the Bengals had recovered a Gaucho fumble a\ the visitors' 45, slick Saddleback secondary ace Larry Hernandez snuffed out Riverside's final hopes by pick ing off a Bud Kane pass at his own 35 and returning it l l yards. "That interception was the closest thing we had to a turning point" Hartman claimed. "We came throuih when we had to but our defense has to tighten up in order to beat Chaffey. And T think our offense has been moving the ball well." Saddleback's touchd()wns were chalked up by Dulich, tailback Steve Divel and fullback Bob McNamara on 9, 6 and 3- yard run!! while kicked Doua: Rothrock added three PATs and the 27-yE.Td first quarter field goal which proved to be the difference. OAMa ITATllTICS • • Ftril do-l"\tlhl.,g • • Finl dO\lmt P&SllllO • • Flrit do-P'ntlU• 1 ' Toll! 11'11 "°"''" " " Y1rd1 ruth!ng »• ,. Y•rCl1 p.111,lnl "' ,. Y•rd1 IOI! " " Nit y1rd' o-lnMI '" n• l"un!•/Av.,•o• dl1l•11C1 "" "n P-tllft/Y1tdi _.tflud •I H "" Fumtiln /FUmllln IOI! kw• ., Olllrtt'1 •II "' S.dd!tlwlck RIY$'"SICl1 Dlytf M(Ntmar• M1rouerdt """' TOltll .. ~ Brtdttird GI ID In ··-OK• Hewt!'ll Tlllb. " 0 • • ll:USHINO llUltMctt ,,. " " ' " • ltlottrilde • " " ' • ' # 1".ASSINQ SHllltN<k .... " . 1tlv1r1/ft " " ' 1 -,4 ' . -" ,.. ~ ..... • • '-' " • ., • • " " 10 "' ~· " '" " " ... • • ti " • " ' .., " • ... 0 " .,,,, •• » ••• ""' ,.. jlCf. I ltJ .Q 1 1'9 .J.(' • • DAILY PILOT Pllolt In' P1lrltk O'Oo~nell • Monday, Novt mbtr 15, 1q71 DAILV •ILOT ft Tars Face Colo·nists After Blitzing Vikes By GENE LURK 01 "'' O•tlw l'H1t Sl•ll A coach is oot always happy just because his team is win- ning and he's watching a bud- ding sup,ersta r perform . At least these lv10 things don't shake the cool uf coach Don Lent of Newport •larbor. His Sailors went out Satur- day night and demolished the visiting Marina Vikings, 27--0 , y.•ith an awesome defensive dispJay before a homecoming crowd. But Lent wafi lookin~ ahead to Friday night's game at Newport y.·ith the l\nahehn C:Olonists, and he also did nol wish to t:onlmcnt on the <1uarterb<lcking of sophomore Steve Rukich. son or former pro Rudy !Jukich. v.•ho tossed a touchdown pass and looked great in !he third and fourth quarters in a backup role. Lent said. "Bukich is getting enough ink, bu!. more im- portantly I would like to sec the team play belier than they did tonight." In the locker roo1n at h3lftimc with lhe Sailors ahead, 13-0. Lent bawled then1 out : "You're not going to bear Anahei1n. if you let down likl' this." P.1arina, 1-5 in loop at:tion. roncludes its season r~rid;1y night against rival Huntington Beach al \Veslminstcr High. 10 the Vikings' seven in the first quarter and in theif TO drive marched 80 yards in 14 plays, making live first downs and consuming eight minutes with Dan Seals scoring from the three and Mike 'Byers booling the PAT for a 7-0 lead. But in the second quarter ritarina slipped only once. The Vikes gave up one TD to Tar quarterback Kevin Ree~ on a two-yard run, yet ran off %0 plays to the Sailors' 12, recovered one fumble , in· tcrcepted a pass and blocked Byers' PAT attempt. The Vikings also got some great punting out of Mike Lacy v.·ho boomed out seven for a 37-yard average and blasted one in the fourth quarter good rol-62 yards. I towever, the second half was a miserable one ror Marina. The Vikings netted minus 18 yards on the ground and nothing in the air and were stopped cold by the Sailors' reserves who ran out the clock in !he final minutes. Insult v.·as added to injury v.·hen Lent pulled back Bukich and senl in diminutive quarterback Randy Coon. a se nior who stands 5-0 and v.•eights 102 pounds soaking v.•el. third and then \came BuJdch'11 seven-yard connection to Ter· ry Albritton for the fina l 27-0 score. Reeser is still the No, 1 signal caller in Lent's bOol: and indicated why with .b.b great rollout rambles. lte rushed for a total of J 1.1 yards in JS carries for a 1.2 average, completlnc runs o! 12, 11, 23, 20 and 19. SC•it ,, OVlrlH~ " . " ' • ,\, '" " ~· 1131 ,. ,. ,. " 41511 l/11 111 '" Nt,.l'O!'I H•rllCH' 1 ' I ' -11 Mltln• I f It -I •UIHIMO l'ltW••I K#- '" .. " ... ll:K'fr " "' " • Blllr.ltn ' " " i; Sfflt ' " • Swltk ' " • ••• Tllorr111"'" • " • " ,_ ' • • .,, Amie• ' " • " Tol•I• " "' .. <1 MtrlRI Fot!er " " • .2.• Weni " ~. • " Hlrl!I • ' ,., lm1~1n11li. I • • • •• .... ,,, • ' ·1_t Toltl> " " " ·.1: ll:HW!r B•illt~ ,_ AmlH Tot1t-i PASSt!'!G ........... ,"~ •• ll'ot ,.,1 . , . • • • ' . . ' ' . 15 , • Tl ~I 31 .YO 5: ~ 151-,~ .... MARINA'S GREG FOSTER !LEFT) FINDS NO RUNNING ROOM AS TARS MIKE BROWN (70 ), RUSS TUCKER (43 ) COME UP TO MAKE STOP. 1'he Tars clicked off 20 plays Reese r clicked to Grif Amies with a 24-yard TD pass in the Mtrllll "°'"' 10 I 1 U I• Eagles Remain i11 Conte11tion Witl1 Victo1·y Ove1· G1·if fin s By ROGER CARLSON Of l~t 01ilr P1lol Slllf Mercifully in five days it will be all over in the in- credible Irvine League loor..all race. Six v.•eeks of upsets have produced a half dozen can- didates for the league cham- pionship with one final Frida~' night on tap for Corona del Mar. Fountain Va 11 e v, i\1agnolia. Ed ison, EstanCia and Los Alamitos . Estancia 11'as the latest to join the ranks of hopefuls for a piece of the prized circuit crown when coach Phi t Brown 's Eagles stopped th e Los Alamitos Griffins cold , 14- 7. before 4.500 at \\leslern 1-ligh Saturday night. Thus the Eagles (3-3) and Corona de! Mar !4·21 1vill col- lide Friday at Newport at one of three crucials invoh•ing the six candidates. · In other te sts 1hat nigh! r,ounlain Valley i4-2f meets Edison (J-3) at Huntington Beach and l\1agnolia !4·21 clashes with Los Ala mitos !3· 3) at \Yeslern. And as Brown says. ''\\'c're going for all of the coins Fn· day and v.·ho would ha\'c believed it four weeks ago." Saturday's victory r 0 r Estancia \Vas Lriggered by its remarkable running back Dan Princeotto -with ap assist from fuljback J ohn Dixon on one crucial romp. It was 7 -all 1n the fourth period and a lie "'ould eliminale--lhe Eagles fl'om title co nsideration. Brown 's landlocked crew began 62 yards from the Los Alamitos goal line a n d Princeotto took o v t' r \I ith slashing drives through the loser's interior. flis runs were for 20. 7. 7 and 6 to put the ball on the Griffins' 22. Then Dix on car- ried over tackle. broke two tackles and rambled to the two-yard line. Two plays later quarterback Chuck Boegel pushed it over with 5:56 to go. Scott Gayner toed his second PAT and 11 v.•as 14-i. Estancia had broken the ice 111 the third period when Lee Joyce ( v.•ho was every11·herl' and doing everything) scooped up a Los Al fumble on the Griffin 24. Princeotto darted 19 yards lo the fi ve and followed 1vilh a Irvine League Scramble Co11ld End i11 6-way Tie Jn the Clf clireclory it's called the Irvine League but around the Orange Coast area it's betlcr known as lhc lncredible League. Tri-leaders in the race lor the loop foolball crown are Corona del '-1ar. Founta in Valley and '-1agnotia tall 4-~~ and thev cla sh 'o1'ilh Estancia. F~dison "and Los Alamitos (all 3-3l frida y nig ht in the fin<1l round. Should the lal\cr three emerge victorious the circuit would end in a six-v.·ay tie. l·fere·s each team 's predica- ment. Corona Del f\.1ar -A Corona v.·in coupled l''ith losses to Fountain Valley and ri1agnolia 1vould give the Sea Kings thr o1'trighl cham- pionshi p. i\ loss lo ('i!her or the laUer pair 1vould rnak(' ii a r.o-champiClnship and should all three 1\'in it would be <1 tri· chan1pionshir>. A defrat. al lx'sL \1ould pro- du~ 1he six-"':l'' lie if Foun- tain Valley and ·~lagnolia also lost. Fountain Ville}' -Should Fountain Valley win and rivals Corona del Mar and '-fagnolia lose It would give the BaroM the ouVight clnim to the tille, A loss by either Corona or Magnolia would produce a ro- r.hampionshlp and should nll three win ii would be a tri- championshlp. Estancia. Edison aod L.os Alamitos -Each of these three teams' hopes rely on th e combination of all three win- ning Friday. Such a rom- hination would produce the six-way snarl. Tie games are a 1 s o possibilities. Should either Coron<1 del i\1ar. Fountain \lallev or 1\lagnotia lie and the othfr two leaders lose it would pro<luce a sin~le ch.impion . \\'ILD~ You haven't heard anythin,g yet . The CIF will select entries into lhe AAAA playof fs Sun - day. It's a strong possibility that should the league fini sh in 11 co-championship both teams \vould be invited. If it's a six· v.·a~' finish only one \\'OUld be invited . If it finishes in " three·"'a:V lock for !he Ulle il's possible !hat onlv 111·0 or All lhree would qualify There are four openings for co-champs. tri-champs and st>- ('Ond place teams 1n the 16· leant eliminations. Under the I r v i n e con- stitution CIF berths a re a\varded on the basis of com- petition between the teams in· \'olved in the ties . Under that guideline should it end in a six-way tie it would 11ppear Coron11 dcl Mar (with then a 3-2 mark against !he contenders along "'ith Los Ala1nitos af14 i\fagnolia I \vould have the UPP61' hand . five-yard spur t for t h c lou•hdown with 56 seconds spent in the third period. The 145-pound junior sped for 176 yards in 26 carries and 161 y<1rds came in the decisive second ha lf. Los Al h3d tied the count 1vhen il drove 65 yards in seven ploys behind the passing Qr Jim tlamilton . Mike Schwerdtfeger hurdled the lin:i l th ree feet 1\·ith 2·41 to go and Hamilton added the PAT. Brown credited most of the Eagles· success ll'ith a defensive change or 111.·o. He mo\'ed Joyce lo linebacker. <lcleted a corner and added a defensive back. But he was unable to single out any of his defensive heroes. ''Both of these last two weeks have been great team efforst." said Brown. For the record the trenches were manned by Bob Conklyn. Craig Den nis, Doug Brant and Kim Shores. Supporting that q u a rt e I 1vere Joyce t 135 pounds). G<.yner. Dixon, Dennis Snyder and Scott DcVries. It v.•as the seventh lim e the Eagles scored 111 twin digits. Ironica ll y the n1ost points scored in that span is 14 . Gi.ME STATISTIC~ • " ror~! d~' •u1Mna " • f l"t down• p&uln9 • F l"t down1 pen~lllM ' ' Iota! tir~T down~ " ' v~r<ls ru1hln11 .. " V~rds IMUln9 " ·~ v~ro' '""' " ,. Net ~8rd1 11AIN'd m 000 l'unh A•~•d~e do1!~nt• •llD "~ Pen~ltitVV~rd~ pen~1 11e<! "' Jill fuMble1/Fumble• 10,1 • l Store by Q~1rter1 " C1!1n<•~ • • ' ' " ,,. ..,1amil11 • • ' • ' RUSHING Ell•nCil "' " " u 8ge9~I " " " '·' Sd'lull1 • " • " Pr.nceo!la " "' • .. Pl•1111 • " • " To!li, " "' " ••• Lfl Ai.mil•• ~t~W1!rt1tte9er » .. • ' ;; flol)!~tl• ' ' • " ·-· ' • • " 1v1~!tk • " .10.0 ~,, .... 11,0tl ' • " . .. ~:.tr: ' " • '" ' • • •• Tot•I' ~ " " ... ~ ... S~ING E.1l1n<•• •• "' •• •• '" !IO"!lt'• • ' LOI ... lamll•• • ' '" 11•"'11111<! " " ' ·~ .•JS UCI Na bs Polo Cro'vn UC lrvine ·s \Valer polo forct!S a1va1l the N'CAA chan1- plonships at Bel mont Plaza this v.·cekend follo1\·1ng their l:rte.~I rf111<111csl al UC Santa Barh11ra. Coach ~:d Ne "•l an d's Antenlers blil1.ed four (()('5 in the Sanla Barbara lnvilational "'ith a 2B-10 drov.'ning or cal Poly Pomona in lhc finals. Sctr• " 01111rten UC l>VI...., •JlJ -IS C~•m1n O e 1 e -1 UC h'""" 1 ' 6 6 -11 c.itoo1•"-"' 1 o 1 1-' UC trvl.,. s.c:ar!"9! Jim ft•Hll>urn • Jlm .Y.tOorl.old l, JI>' 8fO\OHf' 7 Jotelr Dlcll,'"""" I, T•rrv Slit 1, B•uel' Blee~ 1, w-Alfftt 1, 1om 80\/<W'lf'• 1. lllcll McClell.ln 1 VC trYlne ~,,,, VC S1nt1 Bt rblr1 a , 1 o • UC lrYln• •CMlng· Btu<• 81;><::~ J J8e~ Olc~m•"" 7, Jim Mc0or>11<1 1 !l(hYI"" ••66 -10 -~I ,.Div Pcmcn• I • ' -IC uc; 1,,.,.,. 1earln1 l'l•vc• B11c• • J•c~ 01c•m•n11 '• Jim MtOon1kl J T••r'/ S•I• l, W"d~ ll•enl 1, ftol.• This week only. Save 20% on our best selling polyester cord tire. The values are here everyday. 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Corona has beaten Loi'i Al And i\1 a~nnli11 In head-on ron1- baL And in that lnstanct L-Os (Set' IRVINE, Pagt t4) S•1•l1• ,, Jim 8••1111u•~ 1. ---------------------------------------------------------- \· I I • I' • '· "• r• • . --:--~ ;-". ••-; ",,1>-' •• I --·--·-· -.... ~ - ass Interceptions Th·~!!'::."'•'hod It's Official-Orange Coast )' fague .. tJ-iil ~-· 2s~·1·3··· .. ·-~L~:"~;:::w~~A~~INU , ..... ~·Faces · Bearca&s·-i n .. P·layoffs 1 !,. I \ \ ',!Pli ~i uetptlon of the Latp klloalJ Joaquin Delta, 8-1).· 'y ARMAND 'HANSON CH IM O.llV Plltll Sl1ll 1t1lukln Viejo High for a Tf'o. jan Dad's Night 0 range Ltague encounter and Daven· port and Jones helped spoil University's opportunity to upset the Hawk! from Plactn· tia, 28-13. Mike Adami gave t'he / \ i{ ~tO~.lt~o~11!1C.. ', T.;lr1cttt SoUth Cote (Or1n1e Cout, Hawks a 7.0 lead midway ·fmact, ~ ··~· Iha 1i,ta•1 MIU!on (Cltnll, · 7-l) al 7.(1.1) at San Roll (~11. ~ ach Jury Redman o( versity High, his Trojan ball team and t h e i r- ers. would have been a lot ier-Saturday night If Glen ings would havt left Chris s · and Mark Davenport through the first quarter on a ~ ~· football c~· · Mtbvpollllll (El CamlnO, 7·1). Sllllll SchMI•• · ' three-yard TD plqe to cap a / J \ •biv91'alrildy beta dec:Wed ..:.. · Soutlaern Cllllornla (LACC, Top BrfctM:' ~ seve n-play, ~yard drive the 1 / ... \ ,-: ~ ·1 "With ltlll 1 wtek, to co In Utt ' '$.3 or ¥LArl-2 or RJo Hon-Central (Hancock, .9<-1 ·or first time the Hawks got the , J I .. '. •\ ftlUjar aeuorut ~ , '· iio. '°")at West.-n State {San· Reedley, 7-1·1) at Deatrt Cq.it- ball. Davenport then 1kicked .,.. ,.,L_, ~ •t-": ,.., Orin&• fl»ut, 11 rollinl: to •. la larbara, 1-1). · yons, 7~m Btactet, .,. University, now U for the season, concludes the '71 cam· pa ign Friday night, hosting Brea at Mission Viejo. the fint of four perfect The di rectioa YO\I dub ir'1JXi1tJ afl""yo-.'"(t lf(fit lb 'aeventb~'Vldary Saturday·. •, Bt«oa Bract~ Golden Valley (M)~t'.Q,gt pl~':e~i·~ns then drove deep behind the ball a!!~ the dll<ctloa la .l'ihidi~>t(will j\jpt -a .30-lt.w~ver Ml. Gol4eo>G1le (San Mateo, 1-1 (Har!J1e)I, 7·1·1 °' Mooterey Hastings brought his El Dorado High Golden Ha'll·lu to move Jt aw•v from tbe hall. '· ., ' ~ r, ~ ·, ,{ ~~ "-'--'· ,_ • a ar O..:bot1 7·2) at VaUey (San p:....:1--·1• "ti) · I into El Dorado territo ry ..., ..,. -•·ea, ~ .... ..--i'" -~~~~~~g~~-~~~g=~-~~·~..,.~~· ~~~·~·~, ~ before surrendlng the ball on lf your dubrace is lookiaJ~to-~' 0_r ,th• l(rpt Jar(• ~ pJaiyoff tierth dO'll'f\S . They held the Hawks line (illustration II) you will't•d1o .OW it 1t&Jk .Ut• qatnst Slhta Rou, lbe for DO gain. foreed them to side that line. This cu Cl.Ult ~1diffor~,r·awia1 ~ ~~~ pi.yed p •· 1 ot ~·· 9. s.k 1• n .'") punt. then resumed thtir of· errors. '., ~. . · •• Saturday, tftw: fi at Sutl tensive drive. If your Clubface looks nlb\ ot t~ t •.-t Hae (lli:. v-.. ....,. • But Davenport, the right 1 · 12 ' • ..,~e.... • '~ '' linebac.ker, cul it ,ahort by ustr~tion ) you will he lecUacd ~Ye ~ :iesidc · ~Roal'• ~bl~ .. • GW C Wrestlers Plan Fan Night picking off a "deflected pass the l1oeobruptly.. ,,,, . ··\,. ' . • ' ad,4l>erth,la U...~r~-Pi~~'IJ~IOO and zooming 43 yards for Prcrerably )'OU wilt face Y,ovt Cl ab dirq:.tly do,m th't • ~. ~· U;S ")cUrJ# Coll,, of •· another TD .to give tht Hawks 1 ~dne 1(illukslration ~3). This _•ljp nimti1rt-iU live )'OU the.,.1 '· ~= ~ T~~~! . . Golden West Colltge launches it,, wre stling season In quite a differen t manntr Friday night. Coach Dale Deffner and hi s '71 Rustler team will host the first aMual Green and Gold Fan Night in the GWC gym· nasium ·at 7. "If s kind of an orientation session." says Deffner. "We 'II Prep Loops: How They Shape Up introduce the wrestlers. go over ru le changes and answer questions about junior college wrestling." There is no admission charge. Deffner is building his 1971 squad arou nd four sophomores -Tom Foss, Mike Walzcyk , John Noble and Doug Hilliard. Walzcyk, a fonner Marina High star. sat out last season after attending Orange Coast. He and Foss will wrestle in the 126 and 134 -po und dh•isions. Noble is a 167-pounder and Hilliard will compete in the in-pound division. He 's cur· rent!y playing football . Foss. Noble and Hilliard all represented Golden West in the state championships last year. but none or .the three \Vith one round of action left placed in the state affair. in the CIF AAAA football ac-Other prospects i"nclude Pat tion here 's how the leagues' Buono (142 L ~1ike Mast (lSO f, shape up : Dave Lopez (158 1, John Brown ANGELUS LEAGUE (190) and Mike Orte f118) Bishop Amat · 14--0i and St. from Huntington Beach, Kent Paul (+ol collide Thursday Gallo"•ay ! 158) and John Sule t . (he avyweight ) from night at Veterans S adium in v.:estminster and Brad Borden Long Beach with the cham-t heavywtighl) from C ost a pionshi p on the line. r-.iesa. BA\' LEAGUE -Korth Sophomore Dave Edwards Torrance l+-01 beat Centennial rl90i and freshman Ken (3-1 1. 7~. Friday and appears Tre\·ino (1671 are expected to to have the league sewn up. ·report after the conclusion of CHA~'NEL LEAGUE the football season. Trevino is Buena 14-0 I locked it up wi th a from Bolsa Grande . 14-13 win over Santa Barbara Deffner, in his second year Friday. as the Rustler "'r e st 1 i n g CITRUS BELT LEAGUE -C<iach. figures Golden West Redland s ls.<l l is a sh®.in. will be strongest in the lighter COAST L E A G U E ';\'eights. Lyn'll·ood, Domingue?: an d l"r1<1av. Nov 1t -Gr.en 1nd Gold Sallte Fe are tied with 3-1 F1.."0:1a"l,'"~'lG•~""""' 1...t ''" marks. Dominguez is at 8~~~11"!. ·~1~~:. 1i.~m"e~~10 L ood and Santa Fe hosts °"'· l-4 -" Sau1""""'-'" '9\lrnt~ ynw • Oec. I -CYts•• a~a Ml, $1n An!anlo Do\\'ney (1·31 Frida y. ''c:'.~~,.:. al c11 s111e fFull1rto<1l UEL REY LEAGUE -St. !au•new F · 1• •\ t h Dec. IS -Soutnwutt<n 1nd 51n ranc1s .,.... appears 0 ave 01~ 'tr.!. ','t wr'C'=:.::"1:~ it clinched "'ith only Alemany Jin. 1-1 -"' c11 Potv !5•" Lul1 (!>--31 remaining Friday. 0~:~111~7 «t lo HOl'ldo' FOOTHILL LEAGUE -Jin ,,.u -At ~ • .,,, AN 1ou,..,.., Jin . :n -11 CYPrnr Blair fS--0) and Crescenta Ji n. 22 -ll•ktr11i.1c1 11111 Clf'rllGI \'allev 15-0 \ decide the cham-111r::.".\:.. ""11'''"" !"-'tl . ·h. S t d · ht t Ftb. l -E11! LA" t~l p1ons Ip a ur ay n1g a FtD. ..1 -" NTC 1ournev rs111 Glendale Hi gh. 0~~ 1 _., ~1n11 A"' A100RE LEAGUE -El "·~ 111 -111v•·•1c1o ,_,. l :JO Fttl. 17 -LACC• C-l Rancho tJ-0.1 1 has the upper Ffb. 11 -s..u'"'"' c111i.ir1111 c""'"""'e IW•"'v !-1 band wit h Compton remaining FtD. 15 -s"""-" c11t11r11 s1111 I .. ~ a.~~1 ll&"'ltl Friday. A Compton win. a ong 'O.M•n Saulllern c1n1on1i1 con1..-. a 14-0 lead wllh just tiJht 1 ea ta t a.way WJth the ~lub_!tcad mo.vi\ll stnflht'Mcl•''i 1 ~, t'be"Bmtubl flnllMid minutes gone in the game. frorn the ball for .a few inc~• w9rc Oqally ftinaiaf~ / ·w~ !1ft ~t tec:iQrd. • The Trojans, !till full of pep, to· the.inside. . . 1 ". ·~· ~ (7~1) .etUI mounted another drive follow· '---'-------'----...::•::.::•~':r;",:.' "':"::;"-~-:=:.:""'::.:-:::.i:11~1 'haYit -.. ~ Wme' remaining FJi· ing the kickoff, Only to hav~ .. 'day nll:ht··wwr vl.lllln& San Jonell. from his defensive •• DleP. Mell. '-• . secondary spot pick o f f · " • ' ibf i;0:~~:;:~~ti~a:~~i~ Pro FootbaH ·~Stiindi•1ttb~·~~ ~t ~el~~~ -making the score 21.0 with · "'> r " , ~o, ' ~~t""',. !~the~'!":.: 5:44 to go in the first hall. AMl •ICAN"nw ..... NC• ' : SI, ;~t.~::=-·o~ t •• t, • o...,.-..~u ().il~~ But this timt the Trojans 1a11w11 DI....._ "' '"" -~ • a&n;~ bi~~• I d ' were a ll!Ue m•-car"eful . w L r ~. , .... o,. ,.,.....,., ._. . 1,11,1•11 me~• u r a '1 uo"' ~llml 7 I ' 1 :S7S 2:11 IOl 2!!.l_~I II W1Jfll11t1!etl ft l!Jht. ' -They took tht kickoU and •t11Uinort1 1 t • .m 101 u · !>:l'rii1f :T 81~~ Cltv 'A.n East LA 'do 1-.1 marched 6S yards in 11.plays N-1,...1.nc1 J ' • ...u u1> mi ll~..!r. •' c1rn;111nt111 VJ ry, coup cu t h :im1S:~ Jets l ' 0 .lll 1jl 1" . "'rn"l~N':'or1,ana . wifJt a J'.Uo: Hondo (S.1) w In o get on t e scoreboard c .. 1,,1 L..,r...i-1 * N.w1•Gi. t11 cr""Jl"""' over Golden West (Saturday) before ha ff time. f_lwt11an<11 4 j i ·"' l8 in =:: or ~.r.~.1·~ .. tt~,.,. ......... ,d thtoW th. nf In-With 1: 33 ltft, Ray Hale hit c/'~'ar l .u.. f! 1 l'ttt1 •Ill• ·~ i\'i.~11 "'""" • co trence Ed Call "th . ht d ~I:" w 1 • 1Dtwl :m lTi l1 I:~ ~::1::1 :, L• Anto•lts to • three-way tie. RJo Hondo w1 an tig -yar 01k11nd '1'T 1 ,'~w 24 us ~w. ,,....,, 'I dtfeated Eut LA two weeks scoring pass. Bob Giii kicked ic:~MJ,!tv j J ~ :~ft ltt lU: 11;,~rr.i:,:i.:' Attan11. •·'"" ... ago. lhe extra point and it was 21·7 li:nver 2 ' 1 ?SO 1tJ 1U Th st r th t b I at intermission . NATIONAL CONl'•iENCE ere 0 ~ arge SC 00 E111er• Ol\11i..o C<lnftrence1 tre juct about get. The Trojans were hopefully w L 1 1'<1. "'' f" p } C • } Ued · trying to get rid of the bad 'S':11:~ ..... ,.., : 12 A :~!if ~~ ill 0 0 ruc1a The ita~·;. No. 1 rank.eel breaks that plagued them dur· N.v . G1a11i. ' o .•.u 1n 'IS s1. L111JI• , s u J1s 1u u• team -College of San Mateo ing the first half, but it wasn't ' "1111•<11tph11c.111,!1 irwi~~so " 101 Fountain Vallty H i I h • s -was rocked by Si.n Jose ct- their night. The Hawks took ~?c":'' l j : :Il' lll 1U crucial Irvin! League water ty Coll!&.e Saturday, 32·10,. but the second half kickoff and c.e1 n till I •· Gold G marched 64 yards in nine Gre~°n B•v i l L :1Ji n: u: polo confrontation with corona 8 . . can w n tuc en ate I I tr t h th · s.~ ,,,,...,l::'T p1v0 1~7 'f' '•" d 1 M Tu d h be Conference with a' victory over. P ays o s e c e1r lead to ~a• Ano1!fl s 2 1 .,15 1 3 44 e ar es ay as e.n Merritt College tl\il Saturd1y ••7 Adams scor·• h1"s d 111n" · ' ~ 1 ,,.. 1 1 1rs Itch-• to Or _.. · cu secon tw ori11M , , 2 :4tt 162 '" 1w cu ange Coast afternoon. TD on a 11>-yard run . He also B•nlmar•'r~~~ ~ewr.k"],11 11 College with action beginning Citrus has tocked up the was responsible for most of ~1~~1!.:;:J•;t ~~~ 111: u at 6 p.m. 1,iiJsion circuit and EJ Catnino the yardagt on tht drive to the ~·i~·,1:~1~1l, c::·~'i'"" 1 The Barons of coach TOm · ia the Metropolitan winner. goal. M ""'"°t' l. ,~ •1v o Landis trail Cliff Hoo .... r's And San.ti !arbara 1'111 won T·-G w·1 . LD$ A<>e1el•• 2 trait I.I '"'·-d I ,. uc:n ary I son was In-Ntw Orleans ''· ft Fr1ncl1ea • . ....... ona t Mar contin•ent by ....... Wuttm 11'·1* crown. led th U · j ba k •••,, 'i'i>rk Gl111t1 !1. All1n11 11 a ,..-~ ser as e n1 quar er c . o. •• 10. Pt1111~1Dt.11 1 one game in the league ltan· H-'1 bo-tht •••~·gs H h • CllJ~1ao 11. W11lllf'<l!&fl 1S d -• " ,..... "' ~ran t e Trojans from the_.,:'"'""!'.""'~"!:.·!!""'~'""~''..' ____ _:::in'.'.!g~•:_· --------~·~ha~pe~'.'!UP~'-------Hawk 20. to the goal line . scor·r ing the final TD himself on a six-yard run. F l'll 11C1wn• <w1Nn1 S 10 F "" Qown1 .,.11,n1 2 6 Flrtr 11-n1 1>1ntl!ih 5 O T11111 flril 11<1Wn1 11 16 Y1r111 r!IMJ"' 1:M nl Yitra,·p1uln1 ll1 1001 V1ra• 1o1;t t n NII ~1rd1 lllM<I 22' 321 Pwnll/Av ... 111e dl1!1nat l lll 1121 P-t11n 1Y1rd1 111t1n1Un d 1/S n111 1 uo FwmblnfFwmblfl l,,il 111 l~ '' 0\11f11n ' f l OO•IGI U l I I -11 Unl.,..riilv I I O 6 -U Ad1m1 '~· l '"''"•I ~-+itVfl M-• Ml!hlttl n Totll1 It ldtlll Ht!1 O•o Chl MPll/I Wll1111 Gfll Cell ,_ Tot111 ..... ,_, Mtc11w Tot1l1 "'' W1!1111'1 •UlHINO El DHffo "' " ' • ' ' ' ' u U•lvw.i1v " ' ' ' ' I ' ' " PASSINO I I DHlill .. K ' ' • I ' • " . U!Nw.nl'f " ' ' ,, yl 116 0 "I •• " l .. 11 ... ' • ... » l ll.t • '·' 1 • • •• '" " ••• d ' ... 11 ' l~ " ' • ' ••• • • ••• • • ~:• • ' .s.e ' • '·' '" • u .. , I: K• ' .61J ' " . .. • ' .... I •• "' 1 " ... • .. "' If you've got car troub~es, ·come to Penn~ys S~cientifi·c Testing Center for an electronic· examination of .your car. Only988 with a Lake"·ood victory over ~".!,'~ :,~:,~ •• ~in at l :•. unless Wilson "·ould gi\·e all three 1.-;;';;'~ii;~iii';;";i'~~"'ii'~ii:.i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;i;;;;i;;iii;;iiiil teams a J..1 -1 mark. r PACIFIC LEA GUE -REMEMBER Pasadena (5-0-1 l I ea d s Ta!llt " " I '" .~IS We can point.out weak apots in iever1l.vltt l areas ef your car. In le11 ,h1n one hour we pUt.your car through 11erie1 ~f acientific t11t1 (21 2 of them, to be· exac t). Steering, engiftt, brakes, t.~nsmission, electrical .and cooling systems. You w•tch-th• "r&su11$ come ou t on an ·1J1ettonic typewri ter. Arcadia (H·ll wi th only Muir fG--6 1 left Friday. Keppel's loss to Monrovia dropped the Aztecs to 4-2. SUNSET LEAGUE - Westminster t6-0J has a one- ~e bulge over Western "'ith LOara on tap Thursday al La Palma Stadium 1 ~HJTr.tOl\I LEAGUE - Jfbsenw!ad appears to ha\'e it I ~ed up with a •·O mark and Winless El r-.t onte remaining I Friday. In summation. it appears the Coast League is the only l league favortd to end up in a I ro-cbampionship. All others appear headed ror undisputed I titles. leaving three openings to other co-cliampions. tri- champions and strong second 1 place teams. / )RVI NE ••• ICoett1111td from P•1t U) Al would have the upper hand over Magnolia . Should it end in a lhree-wty tie between Fountain Valley, Corona del Mar and Map:nolla It's a case or each having • 1 ft•in and a loss against the other two. League officials 'll'ill meet 1 this ""'ttk to determine tht league's CIF playoff reprtsen- t.ative(s) but it's anyone 's guess what l'la~ls wlll be used. c.-"' Mlt ,,.,, 11 !5'"m'"' 'I 'f 0U::r11 Vlllt'I' 1t • It -t l•fl-11·11 'l~11nci.*' ,.., 'f os:!zi11e1 lolj11Ci. f1JI fli!J=ll'I V• llv !I -ll• ~J:..'7R v1l1n 0·11 ··•~le:~ Al•in!ltl ••111111 ·-•t .II" • 1..-.. "'"" fl·ll 1, f-:r$1.:i:..r.:; ,. ,.,:'11..r:l1t M.-.,..ri. Ct.II I' flW!'ll1I" Vt lltlY 'I 11.11~1· ,., .... NI Ml t ii ,! 11 ' with ,Bob Paley And Associates SAFECO INSURANCE ' 474 E. 17TH STREET COSTA MESA 642-6500 -546-3205 _/ldlJa. ric_ed J'iy! eJ' fir /9'23 ,.,.,... __ ...... ..-.... .............. '1"1-· • ..-...-_,,__ .......... -r. .. -~--.. :.a~..=:: .... -; _ ....... , ... _...__ . ~.-.......... ..__ .. ~,... ___ .... __ M.. -............... ,_ -· :: .. "::'-": 1oo":':."' .... -"'"-"" ...... ..,._ ~ --... --.;·~ ,.... ......... __ , .... _ ......... --w..._ .. _ ... -....,... ,....._ ... _~ .. .,. --CooO--"IA"U IA. -... ~-O M .. • The written repo f1, 1.~·ow1 the reaulta of the tests. It ind ica1es what'tested part1 of you r cir ire we1k and what parts a re ttrong. A train~ di1gn01tician will go over the report with you. If you wish, he'll give you an esti mate of any necessary repairt. You'll be able to take care of many small problems before they turn in to big problems costing big money. There's no Obligation to have any of the work done. YOu decide what to fix and whete to fix It. Only9.88. Not b•d for 1 cht ck-11p these days. • . ,~, Avttltble et NEWPORT BEACH-F11h ion lsl111• HUNTINGTON BEACH-Huntin 9ten Centet Dl09no11lc Iona OplO M oo4oy lflroo9h htw4oy • . .,, . Co-Spo!ll0'94· by ' -1· i loath Coast ?l•u ' ,. And 11ie DAILY PILOT BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT $1 0 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Merchandise Certificate • For Each Winner 5 Winners Every W ••k · of Contest BONUS·· PRIZE Each Wffk's First Place Winner · · GETS TWO FREE PASSES to the Pasadena Bowl from the DAILY PILOT J I• • piti~in prophet. Pl1y the Pilot Pick•roo g•m• f~r wl•ldy pri1e1 . Winner• e1ch w•ek rtc•ive • $1 0 gift ctrfifieet e good 11 mon•Y et 1ny Snuth Coast Plaza ator• or J>u1in•1s. Eich week's to p winn •r will b• in- vited, 1lon9 wi th 1 gu•st, to be hon ored e t t h1 tnnuel South Coe1t Plaz1 Foo tball Pie ye rs nf the Y ••r 81n- qu~t. Witch for t his pl1yer'1 form e1ch wt•k in the DAILY PILOT Sport1 ·Section. Circle the teem you t hink will win in ••ch pe iring in th• list of 25 91me1 e nd ••nd in the pl1ytr'1 form entry blt nk or • re11onable f1c1irnile. Then witch the DA ILY PILOT sports p•gls for each w•ek's list of five winners. ~ RULES 1. 1•111" 1111 .. tty "'-•• NltW w 1 ,... ..... ,11 ftt1l111llt tf " N Mttf tM -•t .• L ..... If '91 l'ILOT l'ltfl(IN l'ICKE•OO CONTCIT, J'9rt OtNf"llllMI "··· I•• !Mt, C..11 M ... , U . tt&H. ' L Oely M tl M try Nf"·,..,_ M dl WMl". 4. •11trllt -I "' <ll1llv1 .... ('1 llWll ar 111 "!'Ifft) t. OAIL't' ,ILD'J .ttkl '' I 1.111. Tl!.lltt1111y. L l tllfl CM1tjl'lllt 11111 OAILY PILOT 1m,ltlyq 11111 t~itr l'"rnNllll l•l'tlll• 111111 11111111 11 fflltr. '· Tl• •ltlAICI!• I LANIC MUST I I lllLLID IN O• INT•Y II VDt D, ••••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BLANK • • Clrtlt tHIM ye1 tlll1d1 will wl11 thl• •Mli'1 t•11t11-• • , Ill• .. tffM 11 IM•lld ... llstffl •• • San Francisco vs Rams • • UCLA vs USC • • • • Cal vs Stanford • • Washington State vs Washington • • Oreqon State vs Oregon • • Ohio State vs Michigan-• • Notre Dame vs LSU • • ti • North Carolina vs Duke • • Dartmouth vs Princeton • • t:larvard vs Yale • • Wisconsin vs Minnesota • • West Virginia vs Syracuse • • • • San Diego Mesa vs OCC • • Rio Hondo vs Golden West • • Chaffey vs Saddleback • • Laguna vs El Dorado • • • • Minion Viejo 'vs Orange • • Huntington Beach vs Marina • • Costa Mesa vs SA Valley • • Edison vs Fountain Valley" •• • • • Corona del Mar vs Estancia • • Servite vs Mater Dei • • San Clemente vs Villa Park • • Newport vs Anaheim • • Westminster vs Loaro • • • • Tit .llAICI • -Mf ...... 1'11 "'If ,......, If ....... _,. • .. •II U 9'Mll tllt.-....... II ....... • " ' ............. " • • . "-• • • ....... • • Citr • • 11, • ··-• • ... • •••••••••••••••••••• • ' • ' -' ' Fiv e Ringnecks Bagged' Huntington Beach residents Mr. and Mrs. Allan Artz had some great shooting at Linc Raahauge"'s-Pheas- ant Club near Corona last week. \Vhile Mrs. Artz ' . + .... J •• ' worked the dog Charlie, her husband bagged five ripgnecks. Pheasant season opened statewide Satur· day. Pro Cage, Hockey Standings Mustangs, Edison, i,~ons Down Water PoloRivals ... 1•1111'11 Ctllllrw!U Alll"llc Ol\ll11fn . ' ... ,. ·~ l ' . • • Ctnlrtl Olvlrit-R ' ' ' . . " . " f'ldlk LO< '"IOtlH ~n'~~ ~1111 ,.ortt.rld Houllon Dl\ll1IH " " " • ' l " " 1li ... .•U j!' u ' S1tur111v'1 ll:tsul" N•w Y11rk t?I, Dttrel! 1n' Ctnc:lnn•H 110. Gol,.•n $1~te JOI MHwtuk.,. 171, flull1lo ll)fi Clllc11ao 111. Hnu•lll!'I 1n7 f11!ll<n0r~ Ill. Pllll11d•lalll1 IOI ~t•lll• 114. B<"<IOfl 111 .,. .-.nae!e1 ll'l. Pnr!ltnd lOI ntv 11m•• K~ull!'d Su11:l.t1"1 ll:tt.Ulh Miowwkte. OS. PMltc!fl~n11 lU Cl>oor"I• \lt, Cl~plln<I 1°' o~v "o':'J:!: ~'7.J.i'f~on i 15 THIV'• G1mu N" "IMel ICMd\lltd T"IMllV'I 0.,MI HOU!.!Ofl 11 8Alt!....,..e Goldtn S!1t• 11 ~!raft S•1!1~ 11 Cl'llcl<IO Clev•IAntl ti l~ .-,,,,>tlH Clt><lnnlll 11 l!!ull1'0 Mllw/lt.oto:H 1 1 l'o<"llAnd O!llv "OllTWI Kl'ledulH ... llU Olvlllell 11 W ML 1: I ~ ,1 ' . '"· ... ·"' -~ .. ., ·"' . m 1l :m ~ : :~ ' ' ,.)Oii Sll11rd1Y'1 111•01!1 N~w York Ill. ~l<>rln11n~ ll) C•rolln& 17t. Vlrolnl1 lot ~:::,~101.1t?J~'U~~u11ck1~,1 1 0.1!11 t1. DenYH t? OnlY 01met 1cl!ed11l1d Ntw vor-1r;r.•i;~"i:,~~~11u Onlv ti"""' •t"edUled ,.,.,.,., 0 1mt1 "lo 01m., •cl'l•nuitd T111•d1J'I C11"11tl 1~n1•~• 1• !'•~¥•· M....,,l'lls II Floril!IA ... Onlv 01mt1 KllJ6111fll ""' ••st "'"''"'" •• ' ,~ • l '" l " " •• " ~ ••• •. ' • W L Tl't1 0,.GA "'~"" York ""°"''''' A,.."'~ Tf'i-Clf!ICI v1 .... t)VYe• llutl•fo b;itrolr 11 1'j'"lll 1~~~ ~ritt 4 A1 l j•> 5 11 J I .YI ~7 • • ,s l) 50 ,, 510 r1 •1M S1lvr,1r'1 Jtq.uU1 Ntw YDI"-$, 81111110 1 O.troll '· 1'l'lll1oelol'llt l MOntrelH $ll~i11111 ' 't. Lou I 5. ,lll!orillA 1 eronto 2, 111Couv1r !, !l<t ,.ltt1burol! '· LOI A""tt11 I Onlr 01m11 1cl!ed\lled 5.,., ... ., •• 111111111 8 oskPrl H. los Ano111!1 1 1w York . 1nc011Ver 1 ~oron111 l . 11Xllde101111 1, t~ MM lrcMI !. 11111110 ?. !It Cl!lctto I , Ct llfon'll• 1 0"1" 01m11 Kl\eduled Tctt11Y'1 Gt'"cn He Olmtl Kl!ldll!td Tut ... Y'I 0.'"'I hillPOritl~ !' 'ii'''' troll ti !. l nM""'I I I 111/<"olt 0..1., ltmft K"fd<llctd. Jerry Brehaney's 12.roottr wilh 1 :55 left in regulation provided the winning margin for the Costa Mesa Mustangs Saturday over the Garden Gro ve Argon'auts to highlight non-league waler polo action this past .weekend. Brehaney's marker gave the Mesans a 6-5 triumph aftt.r the l\-1esans flad trailed by two al the hall. And Edison Higb's Pat Moorhouie shunmed . ~ o nie nine goals Friday to, bighligh·t the Chargers' lS:l.3 ylctory ove.r visiting Los Amigos as the winners prepped for their final outing 1'uesiiay 'against invading Servile. Westminster had an easy time of it with first.year . University, dropping 1;1e Tro- jans, 17·3. in the winner 's pool. Frank Haselton sco r:ed five go<ils to pace Westminster. ~ Mission Viejo High's Diablos f?Ol two goals from Bob Stur~eon and Gary Piper but visiting \Varren's three-goal splurge in the first quarter proved too much and the hosts dropped a 7-6 duel . La SernR decked host Estan- ci a in another non·loop tussle, 6-4, w h e rt the" Winners eK- ploded for a pair of markers in the third period tO snap a on e-·a 11 situa tion . M 11 r k McCartin led the hosts with a pair or goal s . Corona del Mar's Se;i Kin'!"~ were unatile t'l protect a 7.fl lead with less thAn a minute to go in.regula tion and eventual!.v lost a tn.8 decision to host Sunny Hills. Collegiate Football For JCs, Pre.ps F oothall Standings . ' L05 A<>1elt' CC ' 0 E11! LA ] I IUo Hondo l 1 Golden WHt r ] L.-, H1rbor l J CtPl'I H D • S1turd1.,11 St..,11 Eesl LA U. Go!drn W,51 u ~l°c~~oc~'.:li~ ~··• 1J Stturdtl''I G.,,,11 " " " " ~ " .. r, n I! '" lllo Hondo v1, GOidi n Wt1t" 11 OrtnM Co11t E111 LA 1! LACC ' CtPl'lll 11 LA H1rbor , MISSION CONl'llllllNCll • C!lntt S"klttbKk Chtflt'I' Sou111-.1..-n Jt lversklt l'alom1r Groumon1 W L T I'll' l'A ~;g,lfl 1l: ] 2 JI M l ,~ 1 1n 1,tt 1 1 111 ,, 1 40 97!01 060 "1." s.,. llen11rd!M • Clll'ICl!td tlllt 5.t1,..,'1 I<••• Stddltl>tc~ 1•, lllver1iff H Cllr1r1 "' C"-ff•v O SCllll,,_llern 17, G..,.,,,_, I P1t-r l'' St" lun1rllinci H ., ... ..., •• 0 .... 11 Cl!t fflV v1. SHdltl>ttk 11 Mlulooo 'lll1lo H!th ,.,.,.,...,., •t lllverJltlt sro1~w11tern ar cnr111 O'ro\""""'' 11 51n l•rn••dlnci 4AllDIN Gll0\111 LllAOUI Fulltrlon Klflnld'I !""""' Hlllt ..... _ Uf'<ll 1'11'11 t::·~· Lll'nH JC Football ' ••tw•·.,·· kW• lklt111 l'trk JJ, 51v1nflt 2' "''"'''' 01mts Kffll'ledl' 11 IW1"1 1'1rk \owtll 11 Fuller!"" rov •t L1 Ht brl SUnnl' Hllll v1 S1v1nn1 t i Lt l"tlmt MD Seeks .. u ~~ " .. '" "' ·~ League Title Coach Jim Frost's Mater Dei High cross country team ~ill be trying to nab the Angelus League championship Frida y when it treks to Hartwell Park In Long Beach for the circuit lino.ls. . •The Monarchs lu~ed up for the nn·a1s with a 19-49 romp over PiUs X Friday at ltvine Piuk in the Angelus loop dual meet, Senior Tom Meagher (10:32 ) beat out r res h ma n Joe Dowling {10:37) 'for the honors. Dowling, Mater bel's No. 1 ruMer, was hampered by an injury. ...... Mt ltl' Dt'I Cit } C4tl "'" X Tom Mt1111tr IMO) lt;ll1 J. JM Oowtl"" CM0)1 J. Cllrl1 l orit IMO I/ '· 011'111! l"ll S, Mlrll ferl'f' IMOll t. oa.r (l')I 1, khmlttlt fl'll 1. Tom Htrekl IMOl1 '· M1rtl" ll'li It. l'tl F•-r IMfJI. • " , ...... Vin.tty , Mll!tf Del (II) CM) l'ln X 1. Jot Alulrrt IM Ol 1e:u 1 ,, Vl..i:t l1ll!rlmt !M0)1 J. Mliit l irrN'! tMOJi 4. Jtt,., l(ttlln• IM0!1 S 01v1ll llol! fM0)1 I. Jttrf MtJ.1 111 CMOb I, Ctlt•l!M 41'11 1, lledrifll.ltl ll'l; I. !ttH fl'll t. lob Okk11111 (MOii 10. Ornr ll'l ,.,etfl.1 ... Ne. froth Miii! r tc;I, • Monda)', N0vtmbtr 1.5, 11)71 OAJLV .iLOT %5 ----·---------------=· Sears 1 -.. : ·~ •'' • Seara Battery Guarantee Free replacement withi n 90 days of purchase if banery proves defcc1ivc, Af1er 90 days, we replace' the battery, if defec1ive and charge you onlf for the period of ownership, bued on rhc current price Je11 1rade.in :LI: t~ time of return, pro.ra1ed over the oumber of months guaranu:e. ' "' ,, "" "' .q: ' ! .. ,1 J ' .• ,t .q iT ,, . <I 48-Month Battery "' II ·+l Regular 127.99 • The "extra power" battery for cars equipped with large engines, air con· ditioning and/or power accessories. • ·Equivalent to many other brand premium batteries ... an ideal ex- cellent replacement battery for masc cus on the road. With Trade-In Nos. 4390-4312-4314 4366-4353.-4303 .-n ' 1 " Size9 lO flt 90% of all American-made 12.volt can. Prices Effective thru Tues., Nov. 16th .... .41kAbou.c Sear• Con11enienl Credle Pla111 s~513 1 s12.99 F{r~ xtinguieher if VE 15 Now! AM nderdasb Radio s.t. Pri"d! 9. 99 Rqul1r 124.99 19.99 2J,~.Jb. dry cbemic.ils. CUip type mo11111 in1 br•ckrt. Compac1 for wr tion,ie. 16'59 AM radio. Manw.l tuning ud •ol· WM controls. Bui]r.in pcrmancot llll&MI l~.Jc:tr. #62641 Se.nM11mu Gunn.tee If ..m.. Nih ""'"' ,..,. .... _ .. , ........ ui...,1..u -·. --•ol• .... lf .... ..tfler -iiolalW by Sun, ., IOiU. i1111aU IM .... ~ ...... a.a...,, ... -.. ..... SAJIE 12 on S6.99 Bumper Stand A Value! 4.99 \llell<orutNettd bumper stand. RJJF,gtd ... 1N1dy. Buy now and NVC $2 duri111 this i,lle. 11224 Cu•r•ntee If H~..,. !'>Ii., Sltoc~ At.. ~. flOI> oho "' f.,lrr ...,., ...... _.. .... ~., ........... -wloill! ....... . ul ...... ~ .. , _., che nr.;, .. 11 he ,..1 • ...i .,.._ .. ..... ftff "' .i ....... "' tlw ...... l'ri«" .. 11 boo '"°~'*"-If !hot .i.fr<b .. olNlc~ ~ •• i~ o<olleol by Sun, wt •oil ;,.. ... u -11tocli .i.-btt •11• --~'°'~· --1---== .. --... -;:: ... .-. '. ': ..... ... . ~ ~ ., ,. ... I . , •• r-w1 50110-qrl' OWO M~torOil':;i Repla.rl6.49 4.9i, Mttcs or euttd1 fle1' car mant:i!J facturcr"1 wvranry atrd rrquifeV means. "• ln1t•ll•tioa~ ' Av•ilable ·, "1' , ·' ., •21 1952 to 1957 Chevrolei Heavy Duty Mufflers 20% OFF S<1n Regular Low Prici•r W..a.. C•1rs11.tee For AA Lo111 Al YMOwaYMrC. Fits most American cars and VW's. Large full-lcagtb runing chamber (or better sound,silencing. 22-gauge puter shell. Installation 1vailablc. - Heavy Duty Shocks Regular S7. 9'J 5 99 Gu1r1r11eed For lu Lon& AJ Yo11 0... YourC•r lluatd iron piston U1d chrome rod. Heavy duty for long and smoother ri de. Fits most foreign and Am.eri· can cars. Installation available. ' ... 235 Cubic Inch Short Block Engine .. , 8159 ., Exchange Plus Freight ,, Pia o 26 Other 6 •nd 8 Cyllnd Short Block Remanu(a~lured En. 1ine11 1179to129f;, With Trade.Jn Plus Freishfl ' r Mlll\IMA~ ~HOPPING HOUl!S MONDAY IHl!U ~A1UllOAT 9 JO .. M fO v p M 1UNDAT I' AM ro 0 p,., 1•11 PIUtKl"IC, -·-· ......... _ .... ..,_,,,_ .. _,_ --................ --· -..... ·--· ......... .., .. _._., ._ ... _ ........ --- _ ..... ........ -··-'" "" ··-·--.... ··-........ .. ,._ ................ ;:_ .. ..... _. . ....... _ _, ........ . ........ =u:~.·1 ... ... -·~ '""" -·· "''"' ·-· _ ....... "' ··-........ •• I .. ' • •• ' DAILY PILOT ·Aquarius J' ins ,Race --.. ·r:.,.,......, ....... ,..:i3;, ·"V'"·' .... ::~ 'Fo La Pa z !' ,.. ~ PAZ, Mexico (AP) -Aquarius, a 35-AOt Ericson sloop, \\'on the Long Bdeh-to-La Pat yacht race Sunday by eroas.ing the finish line far in lront of the nonhandlcap boats. Skippered by John Holiday of the Long Beach Yacht Club, the Aquarius bad an elapsed time of eight days, one hour, 49 minutes. 14 seconds. Holiday's craft had no handicap and \\'on the o\·era ll title and the class D title. Ragtime was first to finish. getting into La Paz early Saturday. But her large handicap put her out of lhe money in Class A. The Class A winner was the ~foot sl()OJ> Sandpiper of Dean Brown of the Santa Barbara Yacht Club. The Class B winner was Dorothy 0. O\'-'ned and skip- pered by Frank Aries and Allen Orsbome of the Cabrillo Beach YC. A later entrant, Star. was the Class C "'inner. Second in handicap standings was the Ranger 33 sloop, Bushwacker, piloted by Harry Smith of the Pacific Mariners YC in Marina de! Rey. The 970-mile race is held biennially. Danish Builder Handed Censure By Racing Union LONDON (AP ) -Paul Elvestrom, Danish yacht builder and one of the world's leading helmsmen, v.·as severely censured by the, International Yacht Rae· ing Union IYRU Friday for defying the rules in his construction of Soling class boats. Elvestrom was warned that iI he repeats the offense he will have his licence suspended. The rap was administered at the end o( a week-long series of comm i ttee meetings. ~fembers at the conference in- cluded King Constantine of Greece and Crown Prince Harald of Norway. ' Elvestrom put in a requesl to t h e IYRU last January to amend the backbo1te of the Soling. The 1YRU decided then that the change coul d not be approved immediately but would be con- sidered with a view to a decision later. A working party set up by the IYRU's technical committee reported: "It has now been found that. in spite of the IYRU's ruling, Elvest rom has built approximately 60 boats using his own baekbone arrangement." Elvest.rom himself according lo the report, admitted his bOats w e r e fiagrantly in breach of the rules. But it added there was no evidence that Elvestrom's Solings were fast.e r as a result of the new-type backbone. IT'S THE AGE OF AQUARIUS AT LA PAZ Erickson Sloop Fir Outdistances Nonh1ftdic1p Bolts .. Copter Saves 5 on Boat LOXG BEACH (UPI) -A fuel leak developed aboard a 26-foot cabin cruiser over the weekend and five persons were rescued by a Coast Gua rd helicopter Lord Snowdon 'Fine' LONDON (AP) -Lord Snowdon, the society-photographer and husband of Princess Margaret, has undergone an operation for what was described as a "minor o.'ilment." Doctors said Sunday. before names swept over the craft. The Long Beach-based copter landed on the wa ter three miles from Point Vicente off the Palos Verdes peninsula Saturday and airlilted two Los Angeles men and three children to safety. Rescued from the Esther-Lubu were Herbert J. Wr ight and James Engeseth and three children ages 1 10-12. The pleasure craft sank after the helicopter ferried the five to land. - • • • • ' ' • • • • I • 18ousehoats Target Bill ·w oul.d, Prohibit Living on V essel.s DIYelopnmt of • -- •ootd pro1111111 pq1e -u~ .- their booll In all ~ COunty - bu -• ..-by tho <loull)' Hlillon, -Ud Pub c.m. mhllort Bui _.._ did -= tbe1 -be· -of.-... .. u .. for -porlodo ... """'* ... not -orllldllll ,.... of blbll&• UOn -with «rilln piowlilaaL .They, lllo -_,. - lllljlll -lo ... -,.._of ~ boldlnc ......... -ud·-............ 11·111awtnu. No _., -Umll !Gr ~ 0¥em!PI-"' -•• lf'm. e--llld ___ bu a n--,-11m11 ... ,.....,_ II lo -..... -If lbl baa! 1111 a boldllll tonk. . Qe11D11IL•m1 Win dileulllDc tbl ordlnMOI ..... lbl Ila Diop Wale!' Quality Caatnll loan!, wbk:b bal_ I . Pacific Cleanap!o!slalp• ,_, but wlll Ila•• delayed el!ocll of two ud five 1Ull. Any county r .. ,' quir<m.,11 could be of 1n lnlerilll nature. Commla_. C. C. Woolley _...,i tho -Patrol c:oold lbea 111r<h booll to cbect lor tub, but -uid lbfJ would be lUepl wtlbout a wurant. Usab WI 11111 eve tt boldlq tanU .... nqulnd .. all boall, "tt'• unnalllllc: lo npecl all m"' would be tblt boaorable" to -lbtm ud the pum(MIUI ladllllea. --Gllldll LlnJ 1Mnwi aid lbl .-.tlJ·lnllalled pum(Hllll lacillty at lbl -olllco, 1101 Bayaldo Drtvt, bad 1111-...S -Ill dtdlc• tion. ceremaalel two weeb .;o. Usab ud Harbor, Beacboa and Put. -Ke!metb Sampocn blamed tile boater" •-of Ille ladUty on Ill -" pabllclty, alfboach Ibero ..... ---Ud pllotoanlphl of tho -im ln -()rap County ... _., lncludln& 1b1 DA I LY PILOI'. Major Ne·w Race Scheduled Florida'• Soutllorn 0... ~aela1 Conference (SORC), hdd e-my wlnlor, bu be<ome one cl the moot popular and well attended · evenb in the world for offshore ncing ylCbll. It was dubbed Ille world's larpsl test tank because it 1ttracts the newest designs of the world's foremo.t naval archli.cts, aloal wilh the old tried Ud lrue packell. • Comes now Soutbera Calllomll with a series that, hopetul]y, will rival the SORC. Spo.-..1 by tho Yldll llacfns Unlm of Soutborn Cllllomll, the -Plclllc Ocean Racing ChampioMh!p (PORC) will be launched In the spring of 1973 wJth a eeries ct offshore races originating and/ or finl!hing at evtry mi'jor yacbiinl cen-. ter Ip Southern CIUIGnlJ. YRU Is I tpoup of 14 "fll'CllUIY....,,_ Ing" yacht dube nperollnJ wllhln the lram!w!ri: of the Soulhem Calllornla Yacllllng A-'•llon 'Ibo lint PORC n .. II ICbeduled to llart two weeb allel' tho Newport to E....,.da race ln 1113. It wlD start at Son Diego, ao miund Ca11Uu blucl Ud fJnilb II Looi Beach. The oecmd nee, I Wftk later, II pr1> poold to 11or1 from Morini de! Rey and cirCWM1Ylpte Anaeapo bland, C1tallna bland and llnllh al Avlkin. There would then be a two-weet layoff before a race around averal offshore islands starting from Los Allples Harbor. 'Ibe fln1J race, tentlltlvtly 1tt for ·J111t II, 1171, woald tnd al Newport and be loDOftd by I &all benqU<I. nae series is expected to dmr • 11t1e field of foreign entries which would be in Southlud ••ten In pnpantloa for Ille 1173 Trwpac. ' -YllU elube ""' llu rir..;, MiUlon Bly, Coroudo, Newport Harbor, Baltw., Bah1I Corinthian, Liod Ille, long !leach, Alamitos B • y, Loo ~!es, Cobrillo Beach, King Harbor, Dll Rey, Calllomia and S..ta BorberL Fast.est Fie'ld Looming For Lake Havasu Race Proapects loom ' Nov. 27·28 for the futelt field ever entered in tbt M0,000 outboard World Chlmplonlblp 11 Like Havuu aty, Ariz. Tbll " lnd!Clted wilh the clollnt al ... bits 11 12 driven llgntd for tho eichl- bour du1lc on Thlnb&lvtni wetkend. By peyln( a penalty al 1100 for Ille <11- try, U II po11Ible 1evenl mn piloll nay be In the •tarllni ~ ~ .. Robert P. McCulloch Jr., nee alredi>r. Lut year Bill Sirois of Ft. Lluderdale, FIL raised the average lpeed mart to 11.a miles per hour. Tbe mart w1s ex- pected to lland for 1 few years. "Bot this year, driven art nying they are 1oing much taster than they did a year ago and tt won't be surprising to aee the record raised again," McCulloch said. Refinements In hulls and more PoWer In the moton are the reasons given b1, drivers for the faster 1pted1 • Emphasis in th.la yur'1 race will be on single ell(lnes.Of Ille field ol 112 bollll, '7 wlll bl•• single qinel, 11 twin tnllnt1 and ICM' wtll sport tllree engines. R«e obwven givt the ed&• to the twins even though they are oubtumbered, polntillf out 11111 Sirois finlsbed M miles ahead of the first single engine craft -en by Bob Hering of Sbeboy1an, Mich. "Single qine drivers, however, u1 they are moving much faster than last year," McCulloch said "And in marathon racing many things can happen before the final gun. Jn the Oulboard O!am- pionship, boats must be runnlng at t.be finish to courit." ~ · Dress Yourself in Profits Maybe yru think you haven't got a thing to wear. But DAILY PILOT advertising repre- sentatives have ideas in all sizes, shapes and colors. We'll tailor a program to fit your needs. And we'U make it fit your budge~ too. Corne in today and browse around the shop that produces the best-dressed newspaper in town. It's a fashion show in pictures and print. And your product, goods or services will be displayed in the most respected showcase you can find. Buy yourself a Christmas gift, some stylish holiday profits. Call 642-4321-W e'll send a Fitter* •AcLRep,.stnlaliv• ' Mercury Boaters . . Eye Title Eleven drivers comprise a powerrul KJekhaefer Mercury le.am that is priming itself to captw-e the $60,000 Outboard WOrld Champloiishlp Nov. 17- 2&.at Lake Ha vasu City, Ariz. The team of top drivers on the 1971 outboard racing circuit will be aboard seven si{lgle engine craft and four twin engine boats. The group will be led by BiU Sirois. Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., the defen<fing championn at Havasu, who last y e a r esJ,ablJsbed a distance mark of 640 mlles for the eight hour race and a new average speed record of 79.62 miles per hour. All drivers for the Mercury team will· be employing the new Twister engine capable of generating 200 hOrsepower. With the exception of Duane Berghauer of Elm Grove, Wis., all will be driving Molinari tunnel h u 11 s . Bergtlauer will be aboard a new Twistercrlft design built · Mercury. Here's the lineup : Tu·in engines -Bill Sirois, Carlo Milan, Italy; D o n Pruett, Florida; Bill Petty; Ohio. Single eitglnes Renato Motinari, Italy; Bob Hering, Wisconsin; Mike Dowhard, Wisconsin; Bill Se e b o Id , Missouri : Tom Sic k I e, Wisconsin: Dick Sherrer, Seal Beach, Calif. and Berghauer. "The temt is coming" UI' Havasu to try and repeat our performance of last year," Gary Garbrecht, racink direc-. tor ror Mercury, advised lh~ race committee. · Last year Mercu ry took the firs~ four pliices, including the first single engine to finish . ·Sales Hise-' FRAMINGHAM, Mass. - Zayre Corp.1 a major discount department store c A a i n operator; reported sales up 17.13 percent at is42,140,000 for the rune mon ths ended Oct: 30. For.the month of October ules rose 15.1 • percent to '59,331,000, Zayre said. Sears for your •lwpping • eon,,enwnce SEARS NOW OPEN ISfJNBAYS ·JJ "·'''· t;o . . ~ .. \ . .. • • " . ~·· .. ·-... . . . . . ... • .Sears Tire and Auto Center Price• Effective tbru Tuesday, Novemberl6 For Panels, Pickups ••• Express SAVE 25 %! . Nylon Cord Truck Tire Super Wide "70" Tire Tube-Type 6-Ply l.\ating 6.0lhl6 Pl'lll $2.38 F.E.T. ' SIZE 6.70xl5 7.00x!5 . 6.00x16 6.50xl6 "' a.u., "6 6 . 6 6 .. Price J'.E.T. 19.95 "2.42 19.95 2.87' . 15.95. 2.38 21.95 2.61 NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED AUIAMMA J7Ml21 IUIM• •Atl( , lil·4400,•21-4JH CANOGA •AtlC , ...... , - ' COM..,ON •a ... 1s11, "'"'''' (0'11NA •••·0.11 ll MOWll U~tll- ' I MINOAll 24.1·1004,M4-4tll HOU.TWOO. ........ , -,, .. ,,, .• , 28~ • f..&.t.e.4111~N Built with two fiber glass belts for superior traction and long mileage. 2-ply polyeste r cord body provideS strength and a smooth ride. T•....._ !h1•i1t.!:::.Ut. ww..s-..•· E7fl.14or7.35xl4 F1fl.16or7.75xl4 G7fl.140T&2Sx16 G7G-ISOT&l5x!S H7G-15or&45x!S l~tlAQI ,,, .. ,,, OIANOf 4l1•SIOO ·-37.95 39.9S "2.95 44.9S 47.95 WOllNtlltOC llS•1l12 ' CH.1M"( t. IOJO ~·,, .. AtAtlNA 41l·ll11, ll1-4SI 1 ••<o .. ....... .!Al.I: t.&.T.oN f'lllCIC ... ,,.. 2lU6 2.St 29.96 2.64 32.21 2.8' 33.71 2.86 35.96 3.11 _! MondQ, Novt mbfr lS, 1971 DAIL y PILOT K ...... . ..... •• ... ,,. • •• . ~ ' ·' "·"' ~:.:-· p J"'f• .Ctr.ti -).l.Y• 11 ... Guardsillan:.r.~ ''78'' Tires~ ' Regular '19.95 Trade-In Price " 96•lJ !t'\f.£1 ~11c:i -' '1n.).: Only • • • C7S.13 Plu• $1.92 F.E.T. Blackwall1 • j ~J ~<if~n .Js,)11 lil "1" .,,,, 1T Built with four full plies of smooth-riding rayon cord. The. "78"' width puts more rubber on the road for better traetion and greater · stopping power. Long-wearing Dynaruf tread rubber. . ' "lY.• ..b••i"'. '"" ' f.l •~••W l!Al.1'! R*P•• SALE SIZE T.-..1-1• T .......... F.E.T, SIZE T .. -.1. TPode.t. F.E.T. , ..... ..... . .... ··~ Tubeless Blackwall• Tubeless Whitewalls C78-13 19.95 15.96 1.92 E7S.14 26.95· 21.56 2.21 E7S.14 23.95 19.16 2.21 F7S.14 . 28.95 23.16 2.38 F78-14 25.95 20.76 2.38 G78-14 31.95 25.56 2.55 G7S.14 28.95 23.16 2.55 H7S.14 34.95 27.% 2.74 560-15 21.95 17.56 1.74 560-15 24.95. 19.% 1.74 F78-15 25.95 20.76 2.42 G78-15 32.95 26.36 2.64 G78-15 29.95 23.96 ·2.64. H7S.15 35.95 28.76 2,80 H78-15 32.95 26.36 2.80 A•kAbout Seara Contienient Credit Plan• 4-0,000 Mile Steel Belted Radial Tire Sports Car 'fires 4 Ply Nylon Cord ' AllWbi-U. 2Stee!Belu With Smooth Riding Rayon Cord _So\Ht .... l l IPllNOt •••·•011 t o\HfA ANA MJ..JUI TUBELESS 'WHITEWALL SIZE ,.,,.... .. F.E.T. ...... 185-14 Ul 195-14 $44 215-14 $54 195-15 $47 205-15 S53 215-15 S.18 lo\NTl-.OtrnCA >••·•111 JOIHW co.ur ""IA l404 Jl2 NOVl•ND Of.Wt 2.29 2.49 2.93 2.66 2.95 3.1)9 10,1AN<t J41·1111 Ul'LAN• •IS•lit'f ...... Any Sise Li1ted 1495 :'.!'!:':.. Pt.or.LT, At One {.,,. Price ~n":' Fill Most: Awtio Hilltru.n Acutin. Hcs17 PoN<he Dauwt 'R.enau.h f i111 Sub Eq:lisb Ford T orou Locua Triumph Opel Volb1nBm Si~ Vol to Vaus.ball Alf .. Raa2t0 Audi Corriu l(o(pa Sunbtt.m Lancia And Man,7 MGA More MGB "ltMONt' ~St•1 111 . ... SIZE 1• •·•·•· I rrfff 1: ..... BLACKWALL 5.20xl ' 14.9: 1.36 S.60xJ: 14.95 1.48 6.00x 13 14.95 1.48 5,20x1 14.95 1.49 5.60"1 14.9 1.54 5.2(b:l5 14.9 L!'"t6 5.60s:l 5 14.95 1.7' Whi11w•ll• Anlllhle t'! M11o1t Sl1• Al J2 •• , ......... u.1111 f.w.&61. tl4·~1l0 Sotisfattion Guaf.anttecf Or Your Money lo<k ' • ' 1nv1 {)£ii l(_)~~ '1'1(1 I "1 ! -11".r.t ·~ .. .... ~t(Q A' • ll!lf!.,j !:i ''"' '!Jii!l ·us 1VI3 ·!uc..•' I ! I • . r • DllLY PILOT fltonda:t. N0vtmbet lS, ~,; l LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NUl'ICE LEGAL NOTICE JliOTl(I tw T•Ut:Tl•'S U.LI MOtlCI Of! ·TaUITll'S U.L.e il:=::-=:::-:::::::::::-;:::;=::,-,,;;;:;::;-j---:-;::;;:;--;;;;;;;;------1 UNOI• DlllD., 'fltnT ~ JM. HM. _..TOffNllUIL W•Tl:a DllTllCT l.ll9AL MOTK9' • Tf' Jomt Otl ....,_bft n, lf71, •I lh• A.,M., f 'iificl 'IJiVITIN• llAUIO llDS NIWl"OIT-MUA UNll'llO ~ '--... UMJ -Oii.ANGE. COAST f'IN,,NCtAL <011, .. • f'OI TMI CONSTlt.ICTIM O"' DtlTllllCT NOl!tt I•._._. eWtll IMI WESTSIDE cw•.tlorl at -.,,1v ~ Tf\ltl .. CONTIACT JfO, 1·1• Nortel INVITI•• ••OJ. TITLE CCMl'AHY, 4 \,.1(11..,,. Hr''**"'' .,... .,.. --"' -~., 'ft\W M..0 , ... ,ALISO Cllll( •••••VOtll NOTICE II HEREIY GIVfN ltltt .... tr\I""· ... we;,,,__ lfutt .. , ... Mlr\:JI JS. '1n1 ••""""" .., "'"""' .... ~ hll'd fl/ Oll"K'ltl'f of tllt &Nrd ti IEctuutlon of ... ,._,.....,, Wbiltlt~ tt11ttw """11111111 16 Ille .., « M•dl• ..,.. ,_...., "'rll t. ttn, '' ai.llon-Nltutl W•ff<' Ol.Jtrlrt ., or-Unlrltd SthOOI Oltlfkt of Or• ... CGli!llY, lrutl utclll• r."· OlOJtClf • ' llltlf ..... '""'· Ill ... ttM. .... •t. ot "''" C•lltomt.. l'Wftlllt'fl., 111 -C•lllor11\1, w\H rKehtt ,..1114 loidl yp 90 JtEM1NG1'0N AroO C A Jt 0 L A, Ofl'lc.I• a..• 111 ....... id ti tN -""''"to ff "Oltrflct," .. 11 100 A.M. Ol'l Vie 23rd cl.y ol ~ jllf:MINGtON hv~ •fld ,wllt lfld (911nl'f flee.,... ..... °''"" Ceulllv. ll!Yl'9 -'" WI fflr ,,,. followlflt ''" " ..,.. llfli« of .. w Sci*! Ohttltr rt<Ot99d ~ ~. '"" '" booli ... ,_ c·auwlllt. wu.L SELL AT .. UILK rlbtd ~le WOl'll.: T!lot COllt!t\ldloll kKI'" 11 11$1 Pl1cenll1 A_, Cttla 1'7 ot Oflklll R-dt 111 tN Ofllu el !Plot AUCTION TO Hl6HIEIT llOOEJt l'OJt trl(f NG. 1·10. IE11t AllM ,,... Meu, C1111ort111, 1t Vjjll(:tl ti""' Mid _~ (911nly Jt~ ~-" Of"-C.,,,ty, -'~( .. I'..., 11 fl,_, .. ••lt,111 le~I olr, .,..lbw wltll •II llP\1'1ff\flll wlU bt ~·y -*Mid, .... fell'! CtlllOl'tll•· Ind -"'"' to tilt Noll« °' "'*""'ft ... U~I .. lt1i.1 ,, ..,.. ,,.... "''"'°' II """'" ht CltttU 111111 ) or ...... .v. T11!1 .. ldlut l'n;cll:•·· "" o.l'lhllt .... -Elltl""' •· S.11 ""'"'""" ....... ncr .. Wfttmltlfl.,. CltV ttttl, -Md Ill ttw-tlfrlt1 Pf1!fll"' dltwlll!U, Alt bids -to tliJ Ill ~·Wllll rKll'cltd Jvl>f 2t, llll.,j11 bDlllt 113' ..... WMtmlMMr Allfw WI II m I 11 t ti I , -tf\111 U>Kl!l(ftl-.. 11111 111 the Condlrlons. 1111 'r u ( 11. n.. •NI 116 of 111d orocl•I -tc:ordl, wlH Ml~ M C•llftf"11. Ill rl9"'1, tlH• '"" 1n .. tl1.I et I O'l'lt E11tl-tl111, 411 S0oJm SN<llk1tlorl9. ...tlidl trt ,_ Oii Jlk 411 l'fov~ )11.._Jtll et 11:00 ,11,111., 11 tllt _....,..lo 11111 -lllld •Y M lt<'ldllf atld 'lf,..I, ltnlt Mt. CtMfOl'fl\11 v.flldl !Plot oflkt ot ll>f Pur(Ntlnt AHflt Of Mid flOffll trOlll 1llh'111tt to lfll Ot1 .... -'CW11t'I D1111 01 Tru1l 111 lf\I pt~'Y tlfilltld 111 nit ••• b't' tr1l1 ~ ... tflet S<.llool Obtr!l't, 1"1 -f't•et11U1 • .....,,,,., (OU~ )O(lltfd ti 1'tl Civic: ""'tt tt1e Cll,f 01 Cot It Ml••• 111 , Mltl Cll.H'lh' ... lllrllll. V.or I u t I II• t Cotti Ma1, C1lllor11l1. • Oti\OI Wltl tor.-~ Wtsl tit! llrwl, n Sl1te 4f5(f"illtd 1r. 1r1, r1fHw1 It fie(~ m.ae 10 Et<ll blddt<" mlitt 11lbri\ll 1 bid 6'ffosll S1n11 ,.,,., C1ll1or11I• II "'1bllt 111ct)on, lo • Lii 11• Ol l'ract Ho. int. •• tl'loW" 111 ''"· orof!I.-. dr1wl11t$. ~Ions ln "" 1.,.m of • tft'lllled w CIWllt•s fl>ll t\1911111 blddw fof tlsll ll••v•llle •I 1 II"•• !hit""" recorded In . bool JO, Jl'Kllltll!Olll lot me 1bovio ffv.rlDed CllKk or • bid bOlld .. ull to !1Y~ ptt«~I lfll ti~ ot "''' 11'1 l1wfvl ll\Olll!Y of mt -'"" :l2 mru ;u If Mltc.111•-• M111, emffll 111Ulled • ' C on I r I t I IN) 01 t11t !"'"OUflf of ltlt bid, 11'11.0t Un)ttcl Sltlet) 111 ,191it, 111141,'INI lfli.t't;sf• t.ICOl'di 1f ttlilt40rlntt (1\11\t?. ~umtnh •ild c 0 fl It r u ( 11" n NYll:llt " ll'le ordtr of ..... lffwPOff.fMM (OllYtVed 10 11\111 now htlel lly It undtr .. Id Ht«• aimrnonl' ~-11: ,..., UMl411 ilk.•11-incl C-on1ln1ctlon Pl1n1 tor Unllfld ~ Ol11fltl, A '"••lom:i1~ dttd ill ttMo prllPlrlY 11tutl1 111 ttld <P'it<f, Co1t1 Mitt, C11i1«11l1. -••ruellon of Contrttl Ho. 1-10, E••I &ond "'''lie '""'lrad II tlle flltcrllloll of eoi.mtv •nd Siii• dHCr'lbtcl 1t follOWt: 'S.ld "141 Wiii bl' mac11,. w wl!NIUI c,etlt ll111rvolr. $11d pl1nt Ind l!M Ol11f11:1. 111 '"' _. .. fl!lut• to L.ol Jl, DI Tract No. ..... ,,. .... Clf\I ~Ill 0flf WlrflfllY, tl!Prttl -lfll1lltd, aD1C:lflc-1t!0111 m1y lie. ti.lrmtWd •• me .,.,.,. '""' ~ COl'lftld. "" proeffdl d ,d Cm11 """' c-1v ot Orin .. , $l•lf r*CdW. t11111, • • • i • • 111 11., or fifflct of--.01'11 E11th-·i11S tQr Sl0.00 .., Ille dlldl wm llt ,.,......._or t.11 <111 II 1 of C1111orn1t , "· tl\oWft on 1 '"'' encvmilr11Met. io -lllt rtlfl•l11lnt jtt, Cne<k mutt be ...-. NY•blt to thl boll4. the f\IU sum ltltnot wm bt llllfeal re<ordld 111 llo.ii Hl p•e•• 10 WIMllll"fllm ti lllt llOI• ucur• b, u ld ~Uon-Nlt\111 w ...... Ohlrltl. IOl'lllltd , ... 1c1 S(haol Dhlfk:t of°''"" ...... 31. m1Kt11•-· "'"" rtc:orlllt., Olllll " Tru$1, t-ll: Q,.5(111.111), Wiii\ • l'urw1111 to"" Lllbor COdof of tlle 511!1 Cou111Y. s•ld °''"" County, A.IC.A. )(IN rntft"etl from April lS. 1971 11 In 11ld llltt f!i1lllot11f1, IM MOUll~l-t Wiit• No bidder ll'llV Withdf ... hit bld tor I Aq.1..-1 Lnv Cotti Miit, Ctllf, p,..ldtd, .Ov•n«s. II' lfW, vllllH IM" • kt lllt 1Klrfl1Md )tll Pf..,.llth'lll period of forl'l'·llVt (6) dtiy• lfftr lhl S1ld Mlt wlll be ll'IHt, .,... without """"' al 11ld DNd If Trvtl, ...... chat- ..._.,, "" diem w111es of me loull!Y !11 d11t Jt! ,.,, lhl -lnt lherltOI. cov1111111., w1rtMt?, •~w11.1 llit lmptltd, 1nct u_... of !hi Trut!H •nd II Ille ,...,ld'I 11111 wort; Is lo llt 11rformld to tliJ The &o.rd of Educ.tllOll or lllt H-rt· r101r11lnt lll!t, 11 o' • 11·11 o n or lfdlh crelltd by Mid Ottd of Trutt. t-11~11flect 111 lht 5oulhtr11 Clllfor11l1 Mes• Uo!tltil Sc:hoOI OJtt(}ci; rnttvtt 11>1 ~br1nctt. to 11lltfY' rp. lncte.blftrltt1 1 _The . btfltfltl1ry ul'IAr uld, OelCI ot i.Ulf 1..11111' Aflr .. rMM Ill.ct 1" tlle rteht to rt!Kf lfW 91 111· bldt, llld ""' •t(\irtd trr wkl Ot.O, lnt.ludl11t the fff Tn.o•I, b¥ tlllOll of 1 llrt1cll ll'"dtltvtl 111 c, of ~ MHt.llltd GI n 1 r • I MC•n••ll' IC:ctl'I "" lowtll llld, Ind to Incl lll ...... U of ..... ITullw •nd ., tlM 11)1 dtlll1111101n 1K11red I h I r. by ' 1r1dori of Am1rlc,i, s o u 111 • r f'I -1 ... -llllom11Uty or lfrffvl1rltv 11'1 '""'" crultd llY t1ld dlfd, "VlllCH l!Wltafor• uecul..:t ind dtlhitrH 11 me lfornlt Chlo!.,.. Ill)' llld rtutvtd. rMr111nd1r, Wllh l<rtlfttl M r•ovlll9cl lfl'(dfrllll\ld I wrlll"'h , DM:llftfitll If 1 c•r" ot '119 .. ,....,. ~v1mnt r1t1 of OttH Nov t, 19n , 1hett111, •"" !ht ljllll!lkl .,-1nc:1,. of tti-Def"..itt 11111 o.m1nc1 tor s111, 1nd -ttteti .... d iem ··-., dl!ltrmll'ltd bY ""' NEWPORT,MESA ·UNll'IEO "°'' SICUfld' .by u llll ' dltd; to-wlt notlCI of ••t•dl 11\d of llKflon to ~UH b~1t!ct.1rt Oii Ill• " II• p.rfnc:l1>1I PIM:• SCHOOi.. OISTAICT t2".'91 32 wllil l11i.r"l 11W!l'Mft fr-Atrll the vlldtnltl'lld 10 Hll uld •ri1111rtv '° ., buJ!MU, II w!I 3 Mon1r«h a., Pllll, o/ °''"" C~!)IY. C•tffJi!11!1 • ' JO, lt71 •• lltOVldtd 111 Mid llO!•· ' . •lltstv uld ob!IH!lori1, •!'Id th1t•1tl•r. Ill ~111 101. Lllllfll! Nlouel, c1111«11l1. M 8V Oo<'olh' H1rvn-Fl.Mr ·Oiled: Nov. I. 1t11 ' Ju,,. 21, lt11, the undtttltMid"r....,llllf .. Id "9ull'IMI' bY SKl!on 1111 of IM Ltbor Purcll11l11t Atflll WESTSIDE TITLE CDMPAN'I' notl~i o1 lltHch· •rid of 11K1}111~ tt· be (odl, 1111 COl'!lrKklf to whom tilt Ml-1100 • • ' u iludl lrullH rtwded 111 bllM; ,.,, "" t21l, If n l' <onlrK1 r.tretor 11 IWll'Otd 111111 llOSI I Pub!lll\ld Or•not Cotll 01!1y Pi!O'I, ' 8 Y W 'E $ T E R N C IE I 0 Ofl'ldtl ttecotdt. -' • ., trwrlof 11 ff<fl lol:I tltl. Novem!W t, IS. lt71 30U-7l C0RPORA7tDN Dllr. October Mo 1m .. rovldlflt lll1t -ll'ICI 0~111 times Bv W1~111 H. M11htW1 OttAHGE COAST th! Slkl P"'Ylfllllt ,., •• of W•~ WH be A~!l\Or!zld Olllter FINA~CIAL CORP Nici tor 111v wotidnt llm1 mor1 ""'-n LEGAL NOTICE Sl"S •nt 11 u ld Trvttee, ••lh! """"' durln• '"" -ellll'Olr dtv Publltl!H Or•nt• Cots! 0111v Piiot, B' w 11111m Jt, Golld,...~11 ~ wcti WDf'k Is tlQ<.llrlld In cases of "' Hovemw I, 1.i(22, 1t11 2""-n Pre1lde111 Ml•...,-dlMty ""lfflft<I .. etUll\d D' fir1, SUl'EllOR COURT 01'-TMa -ll'S *5J lfiioof, or dlnftt lo 1111 or PtOPertY •lid STATE OF CALIFORNIA l'OR LEGAL NOTICE Publltll.cl or1nN Cotlf O.Hv "llof, !61blt lhM on Svlld•Y Incl !ht llVlll ntl COV!ff'Y °'" OttAlffll .. ~~ \, •• u, 1'71 2"6-71 letifl holld•Y•· to ... 11: New v ..... 0.Y. I Ht A-Jl14.1 • SUl"aRIOR COURT Of' THI ~111 CMy, Juty .•th. L•bor O~'· NOTICI o,.. HEAJUNJL...or l'l.T,ITJON STATE 011.CALll'ORNIA l'OJt LEGAL NO'ftCE tnf-· °c;';~; T~~~~1'1u~7. -:.:: ~~~=:~A~E ... O .. A'::!-1 ... 1:::...~,g: TIE c~:.'1.~rlloltANOE - _,.. p1Y tor torem111 for Ndl elgtll-haur WITM·TMl·WILL Alli.MQIO NO'flCE OF HEARIN!). OP .. ITITION NOTICE 1'0 Cl.IOITOl.S, ;.ttr. t111U i. not less lflll'I l'wa Doll1r1 Est1l1 ol JULIA TH EA ES A •OR l'ROIATI Of/ WILL ANO l'OR IU .. IRIOI. COURT 01' ,. ... L~.001 mort lllln iour111vm~ riff for lh• HIGHTOWER, Otcti9'd. 1 SS U A N c E o I' LIE 't TI Its f.l'ATI 01' CALIJIORNIA l'Ott tu•ll or -km1n, l11volvld. , NOTICE IS' HEREBY-GIVEN !hit Jolvl TESTAMINTARY (I ... Wll¥9'I .TNI COUNTY 01" ORA ... I , I It! llltt1 be "'ll'llll!Ot'f U-lllY Tholm1t Mllhlowet. hit l!ltcl ""•lo:i I Etlllt of MATTIE J. LIHO; OIC:•Md-Ml. A·mlt ~lrtc:tar 11 MlOll'I I eoritttd II -:W~r..0 lllfltlOf'I fOI' -protmf ot will 11111 for HOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN lllll Et11t1 er CLAAENC'-....,WHITMAN UPllll '"' 111bc:onlr1t lor under 111"'! le htuinc:I al 1.tt1.,1 of .t.dmlllltlrillon Klllllflfl Mvrwiti II•• flied l1triln 1 HULCE, ai.. k-••. WHtTMA.N not lt$1 tl!ln 11141 said tpl(JUtd rl'lll wlm-thi!~lll AMe•ICI tt Ille ptlltlOntr pttlll!lll for prob&lt ol will ind for HULCE, 11111 k_,. 11 W, HULCf, •o..•11 Jibereri, workmell ll\lll me<1lllllet r1lortnc1 to wl\lcfl 1, m1C11 lor turtr.tr lts,.u><t of Letltrt Te1!1mtn!lrv ta D«tlfld. -'-· -- llim11ioyed b~ llltm 111 l"9 ·~~UllOl'I of !!It pirllculirt, •ncl lhet the t1mt 1nd 11lat1 Pttl!l-r, rtlirifnct 10 Wflldl. It .midi. for NOTICE IS H~JtEllY GlVll!N 11 l"9 ~re.ct. The Hn1tty ffl• t1!1vre to of ·Mirlrlt lllt .. .,.... , l!lt bMn uil tor turthi!r ••rllCUllrl, •1'111 tllll 1111 time ind erMllor• of t1>1 lbovt 11;1mt;el 1111:•nt 111, lllrtwllh I• IS IPtCiflld 111 StcllOft Hovtmber u, 1971, ti t :lO 1.m .• 1" ll'le plac• Of ~Hri"' IM .. .,.... hi• bflll 111 !Nit 111 per~ 111vl111 cl1lm1.1111nll tt1tt I . of Ill• L•bor Code. (DUrlroom of DiNrlhltnl No, 3 of H id lot" December J. lf71, ., t :JO •. m., 111 IM ••Id die~_ .... lrl tlllUlrad le Ill• *'""' ~ COllf!'ICIClt" sh1U p•V trivet Ind «>Uri, 1i 100 Civic' Ceftier Drlw Wttl. 111 courtroom of, Dep1rtme..t No. ] of tlld wllh 1M l'llf;tlUtY VOii'!'«•· .Ip"" Ofl!C'.I 1tlfs11nce "'vments to etch war~mall !ht C[ty of S111!1 A111, Ctlllarnlt. coul1 al 700 Civic Ctn\l;r OrlVe wut In of Ille dtr-ot tht lboYe tnlllltd tourl, fl<" ~ ~~ P~~l~I•= ~o::~:, ~ Oiied November L Un. !lie (11r ot S1nl1 Afll, C1tllornl1. ' :.:::s..:"io ::;:m•,..;:,~tr..11 =·=~ . . I bl JllCll W. E. St JOtlN, Oiled No..,.,..,ber 12, 1t11 • u , • . i...d 1.. .flll IPlll Cl I co .,. ·Count~ Cle•k w· E $l '.JOHN of Ills A"Oflll'fS. lltMOll ..... r<:IXDn, •• · :iJ1.ai11lng •oretomotnis lllell with Ille JC»IN T HIG~~I• C ' 1· Cl k C1rnpu1 Orlvt, $uil1 Num.Hr 66(1, ~rlmtlll of llldUS!•i•I Ael11!1ont~ Ill ''D c~ clitui Ol'IYI. HUAWIT;i:n:u .. .:rTI AND ••MIJt NIWPD'l B11cri. C•llforl'll• ~. wlllth 11 1'orllanct .will! *'""' 1m,1 of mt Hvatlnt,.11 ltidl. Clllfll'flll ,,. n..4 StrHi 1111 ,.ild DI Mlne11., 1111 vlld.,1ltlll!d, l11 •!Sor-Codi. "'""-.... ,........ NllWll'OM •••di C.Uforlll• ~ Ill mttlltl ,..r1.1111119 It "" ....... ol AMtnllon !1 dlrtetecl lo !Flt 11rovlsl11111 In hbfhl!td OranH Cotti Oillv Pliot Ttl· ('14! ,,.,O,. ttltl llllcedlnl, wlllllf'I ,foyr f!IOllflll '"" ledtOfl• tm.J ind Im.• of "" L~ Nov.robe<'•· t 1s, 1tzf Xl22·n ,.11;,_, tw l'irtltltMr -lllt flrirt Pllblk•llon of 11'11• llOtkt. ~Q,te coric1rn!M tt'll em11lay<Mnt of _, •. -Pvb!lllMd ~r1n01 Cot1t 01lly Pi1of • O•IM H1¥.mlttr I. 1tn, 111flt" bY 1111 Conlt1ctor or 111' -.. " ,. '' '° >•n ..,,.._n • 1.0Mld C Hvlct onlrl(lor vnd..-tllm.. LEGAL NOTICE .. ovem r ·.., ' ' ' A<1ml11l1ti11or of'll'lt Ell•I• !·Ckt1ori 1n1.s. ·,, 1mtndtd. r-lrH tt.e LEG., NOTICE of 1111 1bov1 Mmtd mldtllt J;Qntraclor or :1t1bcofltr1d0!' et!'llllO'f'I~ IU .. l•IQR COUll:T 01' THI! ,...._, ............ lrllt!lo {IJ..:llllTI"" 111 Ill' t 1101 I ft t IC I I It I I STAT!' Of' CALll'ORfll/A l'OR • ... C.-1 DrlWI, SlllM Nellllliw-"I, jac:CUN tlori to IPl>IV ' lo the lolnl THI COUNTY O,_ OltiAHO• 1'·1JIP New,_. -...0.. Clllflrllll tMiM ~ppre..lkeslllo camm/llM ""'!'" lllt 1111 Ne. A·71111 l'ICTITIOUS SUSINllS T.i1 fn41 .... 2111 ~ it.. 11/bOc -rt<t "pro~tl llld wflld'I NOTICI 01' HEARING OV. l'lTITION NAME STATIMl!HT A.,.,_t tw MmlllltltUtr , ~nltlert tirll -tntlctlillP ... oerlm 111 1'011: .. ROtATI! OF WILL ANO l'OR Th• followl11t "'llOlll 1r1 11111"' , •llbll ....... Ori"''· Ci:Mld .O.lly ;ll'llof, ~et """' for I t;t.rlUlc1ft of 11>arov1r. LEnERS OF AOMINISTRATION DR btotlnfl• '" Nw'""lllr L' IS, tt, Jt, 19" lOl,_71 • cerllfltlll wm lllO lhl ""!'''°DI IN THE ALTERNATIVI PETITION TO THE GIFT HORSE, 21J 5«rt!I CIUt ' .. 1pprtnlke$ to lou r111,me11 11111 wllt M SET ASIOI l!STATI TO SUllVIYINO Hl ... w1v, L1gv111 fle1ct1, C1llfar11r1 LEGAL NOTICE ..-.i. In tnl oerform11nt.t of 1111 aintr1ct. S,.OUS& ! '26Jl. 1The·r11;c ol 1111rffil(Cet lo lou.-1>eYmen in Ei!att of MAztE GERTRUDE BEAT· _ Wltlltm LtrO'I' flowe11, 1'21 Tmi111 llldi Clllt lhlll tlOI lie lttt than ont to TY DKelstd Hiiis PrlYe, Lt1t111"' B•1di, C1lltor1'111 NOTICI' T:'::RIOl'TORI ',t ile e1cept: N:0TICE IS. ttEAEBY GIVEN thll tMSI . -., ,w-A. Wh111 vntmoltmnent 111 IM lttl er Gt<1r111 W-llelllv 1111 llltd 1Mir1ln 1 fllll· Rlcll1rd I. C11rk, :tn71 Vl•!I Ill Sv .. IRIOJt COUJtT 01" TN• ;,~tflOI bY !fie loln! aoore11ticflh!p 11on !Or .,:abate M WIM lfld for Lrth!<I of (•lil!ni, Soulh Ll9lll'll. Cil/lor1111 f.1617. 'STATI 01" CALlf/ORNtA ll'Ott cam1T11ti.· tl1t uetldl'd an IVlfllll OI AdmlnlJlflHon or !n 11)1 AJttrllll(ve Pfll· Chirttl J"'1n Hol1I, 510 Well Stwnlh ~ TNI COUNTY 01' OllAN•I 15% In lllt to d•V• prior 10 1111 rec111t1t tion to wt 1ild1 Eit111 to Sun>lvine Sltetof, LOI A,.tltt, C1Hforn!1 90014, ftt•I• of JOH~"o~~S. 'o.c..n0. ,...,,,, C1rtlfk1tr, or SPllllll rlffrtfl(I IO' wftkll 11 midi IOI Rov E. Herrin, n111 dt c111Un1, NOTICE IS HEIUfllY.·GIVEN to ... • II. Wiim mt 11111mbtr of 1apre11ll«1 111 furlhtt p1rtfw11r1, 111d Ille tlmt 11\d Soult! L111un1, C1lllllrnl1 Y'KT7. l .~~6lt11"9 ln !lit ••M txeetdl • .'''io of pl•c• ot llflllllt 11!1 111m1 "'' blt!ll HI Tll l1 bu_11nk1 II belnt tol\lllUC:IH W • ::f~~.s.,::.:.•h,'v':"ni'cr:r~ •• ~ -la llvt. or tor Novtmtlir 14, H11. at 9:JD 1.m., In IM p1rlMrsh10. ld dlClll r I td to Diii lflfm 1 C. WM11 n.. tr1dl c111 Ill""' 111~1 11 11 courtroom of Oepaf1m1tnl No J o! tellf Wllllem L. 8owtll 1• • rn ltl reqv t . ' -J'.'llldnt l'f le1tl 1/)1) of 111 tOUl1 •f 700 Clvk Cenlit 0,J.,. WUI 1~ Akhird I. CJtr-wlll! ttlto· nKeHlrY vouchers, '" 111t offlct I '+ti...,btr1h)JI lhrou11> •llllf•ntl~eshlP n.. c'11~ of Stnll """-c;::i)ltorll;I, ' c111r1t1 Jotln Haiti of.lht cltrk ,of thl •llov• 11'111f!.M co.it!,"' o;.tf1i111"f Of! t11 ""'lul l b1set 11111wide or Dittd N-lwrmber $, 1m AOv E, Herrin lo-f'l'tMlll" 1Nm. wl'f' tt1t 1 ""-,.. N 10c1nv. or w E $!"JOHN • Th11 ll~llfntlll llted wllll-tt.. Countv ~· •• 1°""' !lndolfllntd I ll'lt ICI D. Wlltll the" ContraclOI' arovldts c0unt1 Cltrk · Cllr'k of Orinet CDUl'lt? Oii Od. 21, of his lffar~1. HEJt8EAT GAlL. a. ""1fl'ldll'ltl 11111 hi .,..plo\les ttt!lltrtd SIONEY MAl.iC:tc tt11 . by e .... erlY J. Mtd<:!o~, OtpUty ;IOHN U. GALL. Suite.II» OYlalt l11l1dl111, I PP•tnUc.1 on Ill of hi• C011lr1d1 on •n lfll ""'111. Mii """' CounlV C1trk." . 111 SOlllll Ollv1 $ltftl, LOI Aflllllls, -MlllUll IVt tlVf of nol IH$ ·1h111 -S111f1 A111,' Ctll.lff'llll .. Uttllsl!td 0••119• Co11I OtllY Piiat, C•lllC!'nl• 1'001" wlllc:lt ll "! P\K• ol iPOt"'li'~ 10 •19111 lourntYmfn. Ttl· (JIO au:;u1,. OClobtl' u 11111 Novemlllr 1, t, IS. btolllll!H of Ill• under1ftlltd 111 111 mllttlN Tiie' Conll'te!Ol Is required to m1k1 A";.,"'¥ 1., f'ttlll-r 1t11 · HtS-71 Ptrt•lnll'llll '9 !ti. ~111 of nltl lllCldlflt, ..... tr!l>ulkx>t ,,, !11nd1 tt!lbllllll!d tor !M PObl!st.id °"'"°' COISI D•IJY .. llof. wllfllll our ll'IOl'llht eftar ltlt llrd 9!lO'd"l•lr•lt011 of 111prent11;111!!11 "'°'''"'' l'f be 9 It IS. 1971 · 3039.71 LEGAL N011CE ~bllc:lllon al lhlii 11etlc1. JW he ,....;1oy, tflrl•lerell IDl>flnllClf or o~•m t ' •· ' 01lld H.ovlmbet "-lt11 Jliri'ntVl'lllll 111 1n' tp«t'lllkttltl1 trlde ·• i.,,G •' "OTJCE p.\.,. CH.fiALES, E. SOPER ., such conlrttll 1/ld II olt!tr .Olntr•c•on J..t!. 1\1.1 "' EltKV\or Of "" Will '!'! tlli pullllc ·-"• tllt ttt 'm1kl11111 sud\ FICTITtOUi IUSlttl!H-Of tt11 ,....,.. ftlfTlti dec-nt &iillrlb<J:t•· . . . su~ERIOR COUJtT OF Tl41 NAME STA'fl!MIMT H•JtllJt.T GA\.l. .. JO .. ,. u. OALL ......... < rK!Or and l fW tubcontr1ctor STATE 01' CALIFORNIA l'O• , l'ht lollawllll -l)lrlOllt '111 doll'l9 ,1, Sllltlt Olfri S ...... 1 kllt - UllOer hi • tllalf . camplY '.WUh 'lht . THI COUNTT 01" ORANGI b<J1lntt1 It: Lit A,...._, C1Uftn11 Hl14 tM11itl!TlllllS"' Sedlons 1177.J Ind 1777.6 ' Ml. A•7t1H LAGUNA HILLS A$MK1.11ES, ,..,,, Tel: (till Ul-1»9 Iii 'tf1e emlit011men1 ti! 1ap-rent!e,s. • NOTICE OF HEARING Of' .. ITITION P1H<1 dt V1l1ncl1. L1~vn1 Hiiis. .lllttlln 1w IUCllflr Jliiform1!1on ••l1tlve '" IPf!•IP•llct,11111 ' FOR .. ROIATE" OF WILL ANO ll'OR C•lllOtllll mn_ ,.ub.flllltd Or•noe CO.If' Dalt' .. 11o1, iJ•tid•rdi, WIOI Khfilvltl, •nd other . Ll!T,f~RS, 'JliSl'AMliNTAll:Y ·" ERNEST W. MAMN, It.IC., I C1H/tlr· Novtmber L \S, 22, Jt, 1971 J02>.71 r'iibulremenlt mt, t1iJ oblalMd from 11)1 -Etl•" ol' W. OARL 8 A RN .EI , 11!1 corPOrallon. 2311 W•1I El s.trulldcl\----:-;:.,.,,,--,,..,.,==---·I 01rector al tl'ldu11t!1l Rtlallom, e~ otllclo Deceit~. ' larvo., H1wth0r11t. "c i11rorl'll1 l'll'JjO, LEGAL ~OT(CI .. ..Allmllllllr1tor ol 41>11ren1lce\l!l1>, Sen NOTICE Ii HEREBY GtVEN 1t11t AOSSMOOR LANO CO. I C1lfl, corp"'\.--------'------·I jFfl MIKP. Ctlfforn!e, or Jrom 1111 Arlhur A!tl hll flltil 11.rt111 1 Ptllllon h>r 2m1 Pastti d1 V1l1nc:l1, Lt•vnl Miiis, • I' 1,1• • Qtvlslflrf of A1111 .. nticesh11' 511nd1rd1 11·111 prob11e of will 1nd lor i1111a11t1 ol Lel!ert ,c::~ro.'..~,1rn:!5J~ <4-~llcltd ..... 1 ••t11•ll l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIU •Jti li'tench of1lte1. Tttl1mfllt1tY to PtlilloMr relerrnc1 111 "" "'"' "• NAMI! ITA'flMINT -~OTICE 15 HElUOllV GIVEN 11111 llM whlo;l\ It midi lor f\lr1her 111rtltul1r1, 1nd 11•rlntr1lllP. Tiit fallow!nt Pft'IOllt 1,1 ilolllll Molllton-Hl•WI Wlltt Dlttrld wlll rtc:elvt 111" thl lime incl 111..;1 al' 1111rl111 1he EJtNEST W. MAHN, INC. tlU r t 'H·fltcl bldt 11 IM offlc. of Brwlt ume h11 be.., HI fir Nevember 2•. 1t71, By: ErMll W. MIPlll '.'.':'sc~tLl'E NURS°E:S REGISTRY. •rt:f!tfMerlnt, •12·Saull'I LVDll $1rf'I!. Stttll 11 f:)) 1.m., In me co.irtroom of ~p1rt· Pr11ldtnl J51 Ht11Pllll Rd., N-..orf ltldl, Cl. •Ant. Cilllorrofl llP to 1h• hour al 10:00 men! No. 3 al _.ald courl, 11 100 Civic Th11 Sllltmtnl .w11 fllld w!th I"-fl!MO. . . , IA.M on Oectmbfr 1, 1t71, 11 wtikh time Center Pr1~1·wuf, kl "'' Cltv ol $e1111 Cou11t1 Cl1rk of Ol:lllM County Oii 11:...., E. Limbert, ll03 A 'Sllllll"ler, ~ "plKl thef wl1Lbt IUOlltlY ~Ind Ane, C11lfornl1. . Odobtr 21, 1tn. Niwplrt Bitch, c •. lrud. Seid ui11fd "bld1 111111 be tar m~ 01IHN~'tt_)'1l IAAREl'T, ST•A"Jt:NS AND COLLINS, SYlvli L. ,Ltmb<lrt, l.W A Su~ariol', .11M1111 ot tht 'Pllblk WOl'lt 11 ... ~n0tlor1 W, f.. SI .lOl:IN · Att't N-1 &tlldl, Ci. lcl11t.rlbell •"!ii ordered In "'' ••Id Count' .c;:wx, llJI Ulllf.ft ...... ,._ Thi• bu•lllltt 11 1111111 COndlldl'd llV II 'uM!tvtlon MARTIN J. SCHNITfEll: ·• 0.J Amt l'l11111t11I Ctnlet rllllfthl ' e.e~ bid or Pf'OIOlll 111111 be"''°" WI ,.., WHthlr.",lllUlly.rf ~ l•l'tlll(I,'" C1Uftrnl1 tHoa • "' .MM.rt E. L1mbl!tl \1.~ sut:wnltttd °" 1 lorm lo &e ob!&lntd 11 Lii A~llltt •. C1l!f«11J1.ttft' ,.tM>C T~lt t11ltm1nt flied wilh !hi cou"ty fl\"e offlct of flO'l'le Entlnterlnt, lU So\1111 Ttl• \2111 tn•tlM • l'ubllllltct 0..111111 Co1st 0.111" Piiot, .Cllrk er o,,,,.. Counl' Oii: Nov, '· 1ttl. 'Lylft $tr"f, Senti""'' C•llfort1l1. fl(:~ Att.,llfY Ill' l"llilr-t OCtoll« U tl'ld NO"tmMr I, I, IJ, IV Willer T. Klno OfPlllv Counlv Clerk. 'bill If ~I mvt!" M;(om11t1nlell by I Publl$l'li:it" Or•Jllll .COllll O&llY Pllol, 1'11 m1.n ,.ublllhld O•lfltl COit! O•llY Pilot, u U11.,•i cillCk or check ctrtlflld bV a NDfff'l'lber f, 10, 1$, ltn JOll.7! HovemNr f, is, n. ,., 1f71 301._71 • fllllonlibl• bent or & blllder'• bond fpr •n LEGA4 NOTICE '"'°""' "°' ""' IN" JO'lio o1 1111 1mou11t LEGAL N~ICE ¥. l~t bid ar er 1111· to111 1mount lot ~ 1 1"·1)tt:I / W!ldl 11\tv wlll tccept • cortlrtcl 11'111 PICTITIOUI IUSINISS -m..:re Di'Vtbll ta fhl order or In the,,..,,. SUPERfOR COURT 01' THE NAME ITATll!MINT of1·1111 Moullor1·Hi.vti W1ltr Ol11tkl. STATE 0' CALll"ORNIA 'O• Thi tollowl11t PtrM>llt '" dOI"' tr/di wd'I bid or ll'gpot.11 -"l•IJ be HlllMI' TME COUNTY 01' ORANGE" tlUllntH I I: 1nd rllld 111111otflc1er1l'le Olt1rk l al ot ' Nt, A·71lia P.J. Pr«ull. 1253 Lotlll Avt. No. E. befot• lilt 11m1 111 1~11 ritllt1 oro~ldtd. No,T0>0<•,,•0•,,•,·"'• •01;0.,~~ ,'~o"'•'•"•N Cotll Ml••• c 11110,nl•. -- Th"t lllovt mlfltlar>t!d dllCk or bond ..... " Aurtllo S.ll11r, 1101 V11!111 C1rcll. .ttl•ll tie tl.,.n It 1v1rtllltt Illa! 1ht I S "S•U A H C It . 0 1' LI T T I Jt S Cotti Miii, Ci!lfarrtl•, . 'llddlr w!tl en!., Into I COll!fld lf TESTAMINTAJtY. Lirry J.. Mortin, 1101 v1iw, Clrclt, ·-dt!d 1111 _.k1nd will be elllm~ Is E1l11t of VIRGINIA F. RECIO, lkl Cosli Meil, Ctlllornlt . l 1111Jrtr1ltd dtmHfl 1f !hi wcc:ntflll VIAGl!'llA F. RES$10. ak1 .YIRGIN1A fl, Ctrt LockWtlOd, llOl Viii' C!rdt, !e.ildder refvtu 10 otnler Into Ille CGf!lrttl. GRZEBIEN. lkl VIRGINIA F. GAZE· Cosll MtM, .till!. 11/lht •~H~~-bl~ w,"', ", -'.':",1'ect 1~0•,·,,"", ",,,.;_.",,,,. 0 ,ve·· _, J1mes Rlc.t\11\irt. 114\lt·Ulh st .. 'ff, 111&1'1 I 11...,. ''"'ma er• """" "•n " ., ' " "'' Ntw!IOl'"I & .. di, Callforni1. 1 IQllll to 1°""' of IM" tolllrtd ~111ttf"ln1 C. NtllOll h'a1 tiled lltrl\11 • TMs buslntH II belno conduc!fd b' 1 11'111 E flllhf\11 perlorm1nc:e bond In pelJllOll ·tor. Pfoblle ol .wJH and· for Plrtn1rslllp · ll!l:'ltnOUl'll tctull to 100% of IM tonl•ICI lst ullKil of Lellerl "T"llmtnllr¥ to Ca•i LockWtlod "1'!?• 11ld bonllt lo be ltcurtd f'om • "Pt111!bller, rfl~rfllCt to Wl\!c:fl 11 midt for T"1t llltfmtlll llltd with tht CDUl'lty ~rv tam11ny uitllltclorY to 1111 h><tller Nl'llc"lar1, •nd. lhfll tht !!me Ind Clerk of Otilltl c 1111.,1v on Oct. 11. 1t11. ~oull(lll·Nl-1 Wiler 0111tkl. PIKt af l'IHrlnt lht ll<M fll t been •fl lly Beverly J, Mid<:!o~, Dt'Plltv Count¥ _..,L "'"'' '"" condH1om cont1l""d In !fir 09<tmbet 1, lt1l. ~•.t:lO 1.m .. 11'1 !Flt C!lff'li: 1111! lnlormellori tor ~11ci.ri, 1111c;l!td to courJ"""' ot Dtp1rtme11I' No. l of 11!d '"ulllltl!ed orinve Coett 0.11.,. '"llot 't nd 1 Nrl OI lhl bid torm Wll tDVtfll.11 cawt,.oll 700,Clvk. C111t1,.0rlve Wftl, In O<lobllr JJ, •lid Novimbtr 1, t, u : )"tiQUth fllll¥ dnc:tlbta hlrtln •ncl .i.1H Ille CllY of $1nt1 ""'' C•lltor1111. ltll .. 2817.71 ~ 111cam1 • Hrf of lllt contract. 01lld Novitlr'lber 11, 1J11 , Thi MOU ll011·Nl11llll Wetu Dl1Jrlct rot--W, £, SI JOHN· 'HfvB llMI l'llhl to r1lec1 '"' 11111 ell bllllt C.OUnlY Cltrk . r;;: POl'llolll I)! 1nv 11111 111 blft er 111 w1lv1 COHEN, STOKKE ANO OWEN ,.11y lntorm•l!IY 111 • bid !IOI 1fltcttd bV nn N•rtll lrNdwtt, Ne. J11 •l~w. S1nl1 ... ,,., C1Nlll'fli1 t11'1 ,·• -MOULTON.NIGUEL Ttl: 01•1 US.lffJ -· LEGAL NafICE P·Ultt •ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAM• STATEMENT • ,, · WATEll: 015TRICT .t.llllnll't'I fer "irlllltlltf : ~· •• 11, Ale.tndtr Bow!1, PubUShi!d . Orin11 Co111 Delly Pitel. ''~ht tf"_., SIUtllr' NOV."'blt ·ll. 15. )0. l'1l 30ff·71 PACIFIC MAll:!NE $ C If NC ES IOllOWlnt iierlOn 11 dolnt bvtlntll t~b11thH Or-C.,.11 Oe11Y Pl lat,\------~-------1 ' 'iNDVWnbll' 1, u , 1tn mr.11 LE.GAL N~ICE , LAllDAATOAY. lti5 l!rdl St,, N•wtort VJ llt1c~. C1ll!orn!1, Eric o . WH•on, l111 111v1~ Or,, •·llff1 Coront d"I Mir, CtlllOrnf1, l"ICTITIOUS IUStNllll 11111 ltullntu h btlnt cONlu(lld 1tv tn LEGAL NITTICE NAME STATIMllNT ll\llllvldv1I, Tflt fo11owl111 11r1<>11t ••t dQlng Erk o . w1i.ori t-1t 141>4 blltl11eu 11: ' Tfl!1 ti.temenl 11!111 wll!I th• <;oun1y I • ~ICTITIOUS •US!NESS Tiie Slaw·Aw"•1 floel St~r11•, 3910 Cit ... o1 Or1n'1 Couf\IV Of'I Clctobtr 11 , r_; H.t.Ma ITJ.l'IMINT fllhmtrl, COiii Meu, CaUlor11l1. 1971, bv lltvtrly J. MffdOJI, ot,yr, """9 IOlllO'wlnl ,.e<toll ii dol!ISI lwtlllttl C•ty G. Perrn and Kirt" L. Ptttrs, Coull!'I' Cltl'lf, .... ~ Jt10•E1Jtll'ntrt, COtl1 Mtt1, Cllll ... nl1. Put11i111H Or•nff Co&ll 01lly Piiot, ·1 !l..UROM CH~JtL£1 "0RMAL WEAR. l!r'ftltl OullCltt!lb\1111\ lJ10 So, Oc!ONr 25 tnd Nonmbtr I, I, lS. • ,_r' LEGAL NOTICE '·1'1tS l'ICTITIOUS •USINIU NAME ITATfMl!NT Tiit foll°"'lng "'-lt"dltl119 111111-••; RECORO WOJtLO, 2D11 Htrbll' 8ou!e\11rd, Cult Mest, C1lll01'nl1 MU'SIC BAlllH, INC.: 11''1 D11"'"' Slfffl, S•11t• Ant. C1Hfomlt ~ 1'1111 b<Jtlllt!tl II ul\lllVdwill llY 1 CCll'l'Ol'lllon. MUSIC IARN, INC. Bv: tttrbert N. S1nd1I, Prt1ldt11I •. Thlt •111.,...nl "''' flltd wllh !flt Count~ Cltrk ol Or1"t1 Coullt'I. MAROLD EAtTON, Alt)', 011 WMllll•1 l111l1w1N, klllt •• L.11 A11tt1t1, C1Uternll ttlllt """' l"'ublfsht!d Ortntt C61•1 Diii'/' l'!let Nov..,.,tier I, U, 22, 19, 1971 JOll-n LEGAL N011CE " 141M l'IC'f!TIOUI IUllNlll NAMI STA'flM.INT Th• followlllt ...,,_ 1r1 dor..t ltf.lt111m 11: THl ANCHOR INN, 111~ Nerfh II Cimino Rt1I, S1n Cl"""''-• Cllll. Hllwlfd A, Moll/II IM l"IPICI S. MH11t, Ul~ Hollfl'lthtm tl:Mf, N-' ltt<:ll, C1Uf. lltYln Moffm111. u.t S•nl1 A~I Av9flllt', NtWpatl llKfl, (IMI. Tllll 1>u1l111u It be!"' ctlldll(tlli .... I G-11 P1rt111r-"1IJo. II"'" tteffm111 ' Thia thtf!mfnl lllfd w!lll tllt Coulltv Cltr¥ 4'I 011n" Cot1n!'f' M: llt1111. 4, lt11 . ll' WtHlr T, Kint Or1111Y Qull!V Cit .... Pul)ll1flld Or1n1t Cots! D1Ur Pl1cit, Hov.rf!blr •· 1s. D. tt. ltn l(llJ.7! I! U'27 H1.,,.. ll1Vd .. Cost• Miii, C1Ut. M•vllowlf, A((ffl•· Cll lorn11. lt71 JtM.11 I ,1),'Clllt11t MOlllll Jlrd111, ltt7 H•rbor 11111 l:lllllllt!U II 11111'11 tondlleltd trf tl--------------1--------------1 ..,,91\'d .. COii• ,,.,.,., C.•111. Ptrtll{l'lhlP. LEGAL NOTICE 1 J"Tlllt IM,itllllll It 0.11'1t (Ondvtlfd llY 111 , • ~" G. "PtlW• , .-~ IMlvJd:\.ltl. Tldt ll1t....,,enl-'"fllllf "'tm iM Counlr NOTICf TO CRIOtTOll • ' -~ CllMI• M. JOt'd•n Cltl'll of Or•• Cou~r, ... 'Ocl. ti, 1'71 IUl"ERIOR COUIT °" THI f 11\lt 1t1t"""'111 fllld wllll 11\t COVlllV B~ ..... ,rv J, MICICIOK, °'""" Cou111v StATf o• CA• •l'ORN!A 'OR ~II l'I OrtnN CIUfllV on: ~-bet 4 Cltrtc. • ,... J'sy Wetter T. Kl .... OIWIY Ceuntll P(rblllh¥d Ot•nH :c"'' .011.., I'll"' l't+I COU-"TY 0, ORANOl • • ,.,_ A"'111t • .,.., :or--'"'' Oinv .. not; ?.11~ u illd• NG~embtr 1• ~'ri· E1t1t• of HELEN OETl'.RMANfr---------.;..--..,1 ~:?~'.'.C·~·~·~.tt.~!"~·~·~·:"==--~·:·~·:':1 1---tiiJAL'Niiiltc~---1°::~;~r( IS HEREBY GIVEN 10-ttw r , .;, ., NOTICE LEQ:AL: NOJlCK utc1llor• o1 tht 1be'I• 11M1M llktc!:trrl ., ., ~ 1-----"--'--'-----l lh•t 11' l'!'IOl'll 11•~1M cl1!mt 1e11n11 1111 l~--.C..;-;;,;;:;--;;;;;;;;'----F·UIU u 1d dtetd•nt ••t rfqvlrl'd to 11t1 tllem, ll$AL JllOTICl° FICTITIOUS IUllNllS whh Int nec.,tut'/ VO<!dlt rs, 111 11\t ottk:e NOTICf IS H(lllEl'I' GtVrH fill! "" NAM.I STAT.f.'!\fNT of .... (lf:fk of m1 lbo\11 tnlllltd court, or fllll'#1"9 Mint tlf fOlllld or ....... pr-ty Tiii folltrwJtlf ..,_ •ti doi(lt IO Pftsenl mfm, will!-Ille nteblltY -· """folld'" ~ P'ollc.e. o.itrtmtnl "'1111\f.H .,, • YOllCl!trs. IO !hf vncttrl!Mtd •• 41f Ettl .;;;. Cl~ of Cltff MISI for" I Plf'°'* Ill Wfff AU«l1ltl. U72 C.11'!'1'111 AYtllllt, 17111 Strttf, COoll• Mt11, C•nl ... nle, wflldl of !'lliwtv I") dty•: lrvll'lt, C1lltor1111. It mt 1J1c1 of b<Jtll\fo of 1111 vl\llltrlltnld -~,,_ ....... ...._ ..... •t.cll llfkf, """ Jtelllrt J. Wt•!, J51t Ctmitl A.,,_,., 111 1n ll'll!lfn llf!'llllllnt t1 tt1t .. lllt of 1''1.v, Ct lltornl•, 11iil dtctd..,I, w1111111 tour monlh1 111tt Hb~1~ •ultTl'IE• GIVIN llltl 11 w1rrt11 £, Wttf,J11 111111m1r ~. ,,,. 11r11 Nbllalt10fl ot ltllt llofl(t. ...,, · .,....,... g .......... hit Cotti Mtfil, C1lliot11l1, 01i.d Nol'tn'lbtr ... "'' ;,;:..,~of flMI ..,..,,, w!#lln "~ "'0-1.s. tt. Witt!, nu $, Nur111 Pr.. JOHN THOMAS CMllllSTENIEH n , ,_........., ""' ,......llcl"°" o1 mi. s.1111 A111, C10for11!• ~ E~KVter e1 111t e:111te o1 ~Y' !ti. tlHe ll'llnJi. 111111 VtSI In fl'I• Tfl!I ~I-11 1111111 conductl'd lw 1 me tbov~ n1nild llKIClelll 2_._' If IM!'I tie Ofllt or 111 tM CtlY ol l't,._tllft, l'AUL A. HANNA U""'ll'• I """IOt UH 1f1t ll'OPlf'I~ Wltrtfl I . Wul Alltrll•Y 11 L1w :::r :e;.c, :i ,_..le et.1<tl•11 It I tfmt T"I• •llltm@fll ll)fd will! lM COUr.tY "••lllr LAIW lli!lflfit r~ • ti " • llfll!llU"<-'· , ... of Or•nH ""'"'.,. °" Ocl. ,1, 1t11. f lt ltll 17'h ., .... , "" I ''" •v ltvlflt ,, MMMoo. Dt""'1 Count~ (IJ!t "l•M· tel1101'111• .,.,, ,J>ATEOI N""""'"' IS. Cltr.. let• t11t ) M•INI -•U ... 14' KIDS LOVE . UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN ' THE DAILY .PILOT . "1t~IJllll Ore.... c.oeet D41U' ,llof, Octllllif' • .... "'tvfll'lblr I, I, IJ, W, "llbUtl'llll O"f'ltt C...11 Dll!IV l"l!lf1 ¥. ~H~il'N:~H IJOLl(I .. ~b1JWf °"''* Cfftl D•!I' '!fief, Allt•t111, ,,.. l1et11tw ' 1., itn *''? ;_rn • m+71 ov•? t. tJ. ~. Jt, 1tn »11·11 t----,,,~-------· I 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 .. D A I L y p 'I L 0 T c L A s· s I F I E D 6 4 2 -5 6 7 ·a • ·yp CLASSIFI.ED General Newport "eights Older 3 Bdrm home in "BET. TER 'J1IAN NEW" condition , , .new plumbing, electri4 cal, kitch & bath remodel· ed, new ~ting, draper· let Ir: llpt Jixtutts. Vaeant 6 ready to .ee anytime, Drive by' 5.19 ~ !lernal" Clino loll 15th St.) Nowpol't at Fairview 64&-8111 (1nytlme) El.1blide Costa Mesa, gf'eat rental area. Seven 3·bed· roo1n1 and three . 2-bed· rooms. Alt AeP8-f8te units ------ --------~ -- LET JERRY SELL YOUR HOME With so manr fl,eal Estat.e Companies competing lor listings today, it .is a difficult task for the homeowner to select a profes· sional representative. The successful mar~ keting of a home depends siJ(nificantly upon the ability, knowledge and enthusiasm of the Real Estate representative you appoint as your agent. Are you considering selling your home? U so, aren't you really looking for represen· talion th•t~ You can place your confidence and trus~ iii? ·For professional representation,· person· al service and treative marketing, contact JERRY. Allow him to ti.Ye yqu his ideas as to wh·at he can do for you. no oblh~ation of course. In tOdays competitive market • second effort makes the difference. ~t.,,l~:;;oo1 ... ;:,"";.,~:": KASABIAN .REAL · ESTA TE CO. "°""of Sl.400 per mo. Sub-Ctll JERRY GILLESPIE, U7·9604/EvM: 968·2974 mil' on down Or trade to - Wa,ker & Lee G ..... 1 c;. • .,,1 Realoo" 1::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::/I 7190 Hamor.Blvd. at Adams * .* * * * 545-048& ()pen 'ti! 9 PM * CORONA Del MAR DUPLEX-LoeH/Opt. TAYLOR (0.· L&rge, Spanish. 4 Bt'drm.,13 Ba tri-Jevel home + l BR apt. $385./mo lease. S1500 option, or 10% drL lmmed occ. n1 JASMINE AVE. $63,500 PERRON REALTY 642-lTIJ BEACH DUPLEX . LINDA ISLE -$143,500 Drastic reduction! ! Architect oWner reduced price for quick sale on NEW-4 BR. home. Beautiful vaulted ceilings and many new features. Fam. rm., formB.l DR. & study. $23,950 "Our 26th Year" Maybe· your ·•••• <hone• to WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., ·Realton :r,~~~.~i~~: ; 2111 Sin Joaquin Hlll1 Road . blocks to beach, near shop-l='-N"'E"W"'P_O"-R_T_C"-E"--N-T..;E_R~~-~--6-44_4_9_10_·_11 ping. 10% down. owner will General General he]p finance and rents makel ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;ll payments. Fix it up a n d MAKE MONEY. Better let it. Catt Walker & Lee Realtors 968·33TI INVESTORS DREAM Eaatakit hoim + duplex. Xlnt location and condition. High income, very Jow mainC Priced for fut Ml~. CaiJ 546-5880 .{Open; Eves.) OWNER must sell. 4 bedroom• with 2 baths, BAYSIDE DRIVE · WATERfRONTS OCEAN & BAY VIEW From 122 ft. Jot. is the settin2 for this beau· tiful 4 bdrm .. 4 bath home with its own pier & slip. $250,000. LINDA & HARBOR ISLAND VIEW From this lovely 4 bdrm., 4 ·bath home. On a 59' lot, ~ith pier & float. Custom drap- eries & paneling. $139,500. For complete info..,.,,.tion _ On All Homes & Lots, Please Call : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR lsl1nden Bldg. at Lind• lslt 341 .B•yside Dr .. Suitt 1, N.8. 67S-6161 family room with invitingll:!""""~""""""""""""""~:t"'"'""l"'"""'""""""""' Jr. estate grounds. Work Gener•I General bench, extra storagf! ---·-------- '"""'"· No down G.I .• Low Builden Close-out WALK TO THE down f1iA or a.uume 5-%" BEACH Joan! Brk. $28,650. Ph. Only 4 rtmain. 3 and 4 bdrm Beautiful Spanish hacienda 540-1720. Spanish Style homes with 2 only 2 ""an old, 'Ai mile , baths. No down Gr buye.rs ,,~ PENlNSULA ·POINT and min. down FHA. Priced ~ fmm the beach. Large pa. I'Ar Story; 2 bdrms. down, from $30,650. Price includes tio 11rea plus room for pool. one· 18X22 mstr. dite up. landscape, sprinklers and Creatively decorated, this Dining nn., frplc.; bJt.lns. buyer ch~ color on car· sharp home has builf.in Owners ,Jeaving area. Call petll. Oose 10 So. Coast kitchen, big Spanish fire. tor apP't. $54,500. Plaza and new school!. Mo-pla~. and oversi~ double Call : 613-:3663 64.2·2253 Eves dels'. open can gange. Only $26,500 and on Walker & Lee ~',';;'You ow•. w.,, ,.,, . associated 81<.0KERS-R EAL TORS 2025 W Bolbt111 673-166) .R••"°" . Walker & Lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545-9491 Open 'til 9 PM Realtors Z790 Hai'bor Blvd. at Adams 2~ Httrbor, c.r.1. SAYE$$$ OUTSTANDING . VALUES AT . POPULAR PRICES l IEDROOM, 2 IATH $19,500 This 7 year old home has it all. ,Built-in kitch· en, double garage, lorced air heat, dining area, large lot and fots · ct big trees. Il'• priced to sell fut so a.ct NOW and move in for Xmas? 54£-8640. $100 TOTAL DOWN PAYMENT PLUS NORMAL CLOSINC5 COSTS and this 3 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse can be yoUrs for Xmas. How about a built-in kitCh· en? Forced air heat? Big brick fi replace! Dining area? This ·one has it all! Full price $21,500? ! ? Hurry. 546- 864~ EASTSIDI COSTA MESA $23,950 A i::ood 4 bedroom, 2 bath home at this price is hard to find, but here it is and it's a beauty. It has a conveniently laid out kitchen, good size bedrooms, 11nd in excellent condition in· Side and out with large lot and beautiful cov· ered patio. All lor full prire of $23,9S<l -8640. 4 IEDROOM FIXER U"ll $25,950 You'd better hurry this home is located in a $27,000 • $28,000 neigh4 borhood. All it needs is paint and clean up. This one has it all, 2 baths, built-in kitchen, forced air heat, brick fireplace. doubl~ garage, hard~·ood floors, new carpets, and w8.ter heat- er. You can't miss .at $25,950. Fu 11 pri~! Hurcy. 54£-8640. EXCEPTIONAL EASTSIDI HOME $26,750 54a.949l Open 'til 9 P:\f I! you ~·ant Eutside .. iiiiiiiiiiiiO.iiiiiiiiiiiiiill Costa Mesa, see this 3 5 WINNERS I 1111 LUXURY LOVERS Your guests will gasp aii they step into this dramatic 1.-2 B!t deluxe condo, nr. BAYCR.ESI' entry. 3 Big Westchff · $31,500. . BR'• with sophistic1ttM mstr 2.-Best buy · Ha""°! High· suite. Sparkling, 1tep.Mver land~ • 4 B~ • 1 S36.500. kit. Picturesque Jndsc:pg. 3.-Vi~ • View. 4 BR +, See what $69,950 will buy. Dover Shores, Gorgeous. -GEM .~s:. Bay • < BR + d'" 1610 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. + pool • $49.500. REALTORS 64Z..4623 5.-Chalet Type nr. Newpt. BARGAIN lll H ... S37.500. ••• TRI HARBOR 10 A~· R-4. Near Fr.1'Y REAL TORS ~. City of Perris. Price 400 EAST 11TH.-C.M. ~uced $15,0Ck:I to $40,000 64~3255 Ews: 642·2225 full price. O\t'tler de!per11te! · HOPE GERRIE RL TY. $If,950 IS THE PRICE 833 Dovtt Dr., N.B. for this very lovely 3 bed· 6(;.4400 &4~3320 room, 2 ha.th he.me! The OWNER ANXIOUS loan is high e"?ugh that you . . can assume ~'Ith payments \Viii consider all offers, or $160 pir month whlch in· 2300+ sq ft home. 3 BR,; dudes all. M~ built-ins, Ba, den, _bonus fam rm dttp pile carpel'S. also ,;rt ~tlO.SEE ANYTIME ma~hlng drares. Double ROY J. WARD RLTRS. garage lo boot. Call . HOME: UNITS Walker & Lee 2 Bdnn. phu $250 income. Realtors Eutelde Cor;r., Mesa 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams DUPLEX .,.,_ Opeo 'tit 9 PM Fix up .t save on these unl11. Top location. -1!1]• -Fortin Co. Realtors L J ·642•5000 EXCELLENT e OLD SPANISH e Mesa Vetd4l ranch style' Solid adObt bh:-3 BR, nr. home. 3 bedroom$ and.cov. town Ii pk. Ont-of·a·~i~. ered patio, Priced tot ~U 1pollnr. Ph. for detaib:. at only $.'l0,9,';0. I..aw intf'r· $2-4.950. PERRON REALTY mt assumable loan. Better CO. 642--ttn. CAii no1V! £75-4930 MODEL HOME Open E\'ea Tit ! P.M. 3 Bdrmt1. 4 2 BathJ ~&CO.I Steps to OCfan. $29,900 AEAL.TOAS A·FRAME ._ ""''"'''"' 3 BR. Famlly rm .. 2 ts.Iha * SPECIALS * Walle to be11Ch. $36,900 DUPLEX, Coron.a de! ~far. Caywood Realty &0-1290 l·lBR., 1·2 BR.: convenient loc. Not the btst • but not the womr Only S42,500. LUSK bedroom, 2 bath charm- HARBOR V Ew er. large corner Jot. I floor to ceiling brick Lovely one • story 4 BR. fireplace, ranch style Sandpiper m<>del. 3 Ba., kitchen, 2 car garage, great fam. rm., gat~ ~ntry, f orced !llr heating. picturesque gardens. Ideal Owner anxious. \Viii family home. A ~al oppor· carry 2nd "trust deed . tuni~y al $73,500. Try 10% down! 546- ~ Coldwell.Banker ~ 133-0700. 644-2430 OWNER iAILING • OUT $49,950 Redu~ $4000 Under Apprais· a1. Prime reiddentia.I area. 3100 Sq lt of living area. Formal dining, 3 baths. Huge recreational area. This 19 a gorgeous 4 bedroom tr\. lever w/owner forced !l) sell. Call 545-8424 (open evc-s.) 8640. INCOME-DUPLEX $300 TOTAL DOWN Pay norm&. I closing costs and you can own this Costa Mesa duplex. Each unit has 2 big bedrooms. separate ga- rage, good loca,tion and value priced e.t S29.950. call for appointmenl 546-8640. RlllFIC LOCATION Popul!lr 3 bedroom 'T' plan, neaT schools. in r..YesA. del ~far for only i30,9SO. Just cleaned a n d repainted Inside. FHA/VA financln& oka.y. 546-8640. EXCIPTIOllAL LANDSCAPING , "l====z=z:/I Greet Mesa Verde 3 ii tx-droom home Jn excel-ANXIOUS OWNER M~t tte rhia SUPER SHARP 3 bedroom hOme on a quiet cul~ct·sac: featuring all builtln garden kitchen, for- mal dining &: fam ily room. F1lA femi11, or assume ex· ttrlng 1otn $32.950. can now. 540-1151 (Open eves) lent ~haPt. Comfortable family room. Just $29,4 950. AU terms, 546~0. 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT SHARP 3 BR., •ncl. "'"'"' I sa.a.., m ~rr.A,,G.!J JOOd Col!fa. MeY. loc, 2 ~ _ ,. Baths. f'rI!lc., F:A. he11: ,,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[ INVESTORS DllAM Beautlrully remodeled 2 Bedroom h om e wJth larg~ living room tnd c:orntr rlrPplact. NC!'ll'ly 15,000 Ml• (L El!l1t1ide R42 property. Priced to sell. 546-8640. blt·ln1. Lou of 11or1.ire. Ask· WANT AD 642.'5671 t1t1 m.r.,o. 1 '--------· 1 .. M07._;;.i .:;6~:.;G~A ... N_R_E_A_L_T_Y--" _ .. o_'_'·"-"~"-·m~u..,nd ... "_S50_,1 ...... -.......... • .. ' .. bot ..... c ... ~ .. ' .. · ..., .,.. _ 675-6459 try the Penny Plncner ·- , • DAii. V rlLOT ----·~ r----·-· ' Everyone Has Somethin g Tha't Someone Else Wants DAILY Pl.LOT CLASSIFIED ADS You C:.n. Se)I It, Find It, TN1de It With a Went Ad • • • -·-. ·r~ Bi~gest Mark~tpface on· tlte 01'.'~nge ·Coast-Diaf ~42-5678 for· Fast Results 1,;;r;;-_ ... jjjjjs•~I~;: .:;! ;;-;;· ;;"';;:;;; .. ;;. ~1~~·1~1.·· -.:·-.: iW.: ... "·~1~~f :.-... -~.~--··~;~~1;1 ;;;:~~~;;;~;;;;; ''* z ..... ~~~~~-~ ... ~ .. ~]~~~:~! ~-~ ... ~-~l~tt&3 .. High on a hill overlooking Newport Harbor. Quarler- sawed Cedar construction, beama:I ceil's .• 4 bdrms. - tropical pool' & 2 car gar. age plus 4 carports. Lot •I>' prox. 2/3 acre. $175,000. Terms very Uexib!e. 675-3000 BAY• BEACJ.I REALTY" EX9UISITE BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM Located on the main green- belt, dttp carpets, luxurious drapes plus many oil".:. ex- tra! makes 1hls 3 bedroom. living room aM dining room home an excellent buy af S48,j()(), PETE BARRETT REALTY ,. 1605 WlSTCLlff D •• "1wro•T ~EA.CH h 642·5200 ~ .... Near Harbor Hil;ih Js this exetllent well de\ig~ ed 3 bedroom, family room home, !or the growing tamily. 2 fireplaces. Bttaklast bar. All ~eclric bltin kitchen. Spacious liiUn- ny livirig room, w/w cpl! &: drape&. 2 baths on choice quiet ·street, only $34,l;il. HUJ1'Y. Call 673-3,;50. ,o ·THEREAL ''."\. ESTATERS '-0• lit J'JTj .. ~ r•.'I CORONA DEL MAR Price alasned • Low, Low dawn payment. Owner "'-ill carry 1st. TD. Ch\'her anx- xioos. Ocean side of h\\'Y, 3 BR, 1;, BA '.11, large Jiving room w/firepl , nice size kitch with eating area. Pa· tio. alley ac~ss for boat. Walk to shops & bch. Lochenmyer Reaitor 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. Call 646-3928 Eves. 646-2137 Macnab-Irvine Realty Company MEDITERRANEAN ATMOSPHERE View -Pool -Sep. guest quar!ers w/fireplace, bath,_ \\'el-bar. l\laln home has 4 BR's, 3 baths, FR \\'/...,·et bar, breakfast room, and ·office. For sale at owner's cost. Call &12.S23j, Macnab-Irvine 642°8235 644-6200 Gen.ral A must see • 3 bedroom, 2 bath &: lamily room close lo eveeything. Immaculate thruout. Good VA loan thru- oul. GOLF COURSE BEAUTY Only 6 mo. old with all the buill·in conveniences • beau· tifully accented with a 1ar- den and privat~ patios &ii· uated near the Santa Ana C. C. A "MUSf SEE". 6 UNITS and room for 10 more! Ex· cellent income on Eastgide Costa Mesa. Presently four !·bedrooms and two 2·bed· rooms. Ttt'mendou.s .buy at $69.500. New and slightly used horn· es. \Vinter close outs, every. thing must go. See our rom- plt'te stock. Fresh off the shelf ig a charmingly decor· ated 4 bedroom, 2 bath home near Newport Ht.11. with new carpeting and a large yard to~ your.own Christmas trees. ju.st $30,500. Or a prime area Newport Hts. modem home with 3 BR & 2 Ba for $37,000. \Vould you like a Cliff Drive address for Just $33,500, Or a Cos!a l\1esa older home f6r just $18,500. Come in and browse. Let us show you many others to choose from. CALL Ci>· 646·1414 IJ1.•ld-. REALTY ' Nt•r Newport P111 Offlte CORONA DEL MAR CANYON SIDE Like being in the Mti. yet only 3 Blocks to 5 Crowns Unique home, f'U6tiC & ~Jude'(! On large fee lot 3 ·BR., large rumpus room Lots of wood &: stone $53,700 REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 REDUCED $2000 VACANT Desperate owner in St. l..oois must sell this modem rancho near Huntington Harbor. Needs a little dee· orating but bring your paint brush & ideas and pocket the savings. 3 queen ·. sized BR's, 1% baths. large rum- pus room, fplc, even a dish- washer for Mom. 10% down. New price $24,500. l==~~=I Walker & Lee FOUR U.NITS All 2 bedroom studio. apart- men!s ,,·ifh carpeting, drapes, bu.iltim, only 7 years new. Pri~ below replacement cost. OUt ot to\.\TI O\.\'ner \\'lll ucrilice at $56.500. • co:Ts WALLACE REALTORS _..,,.u .. 1 .. 4141- <op~n Ev1nln9s) BROAOMOOR WITH VIEWI New llsl.irlg • scarce 5 BR .. Smith built home. Lge. liv· ina; nn., dining rm .. OC1!an & harbor view. Realistically priced at 512.00J. CORBIN· MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7662 SHAKE ROOF KOLL HOME Popular model wllh. warmth &. charm! rircplacts ln bolh Uvina; room le family room of this 3 lillJ'lll') bedroom. 2 bath homt In qu i et ne1chbornood. Patio I dellghUul waterfall. \Valk. Ing disfance to schools & ~hewing. Priced -$34,750. ca11 6~&-nTt ror aprt. i-O' THE REAL ·."\.. ESTATERS " ' Realtors 546-lTa<I SHORE CLIFFS WATER VIEW From your balcony. This outgtanding 3 BR home is vacant and waiting for )'OU. 3 large bedrooms, 2~ baths . Ne"1Y redecorated. Plus· high quality new \V I \V carpets. Separate family room • ~t bar. Professlon- al!y landscaped sptinklt't. Only $98,500, EZ tenn1. 673-s;;;o. 10 THEREAL \'."\. ESTATERS ' ' ' 2600 s9. FT. of luxury in this 5 Bedroom 3 bath home • v.·a\k to ~f~ Vttde Country Qub; fea - tures formal dining • All buil tin kitchen. family room overlooking. pool; on over· &ized lot + hobby room In a;ara.ge. $58,950. ror ~tails Call .540-ll5l !Open evts.) l~=l OCEANFRONT DUPLEX Let your tenants make your p&ymts in this prime IOCl· lion. 3 BMn:iom Duplex. Both unit$ are fully furnish. td and In mint condlUoo. Priced at only $83,9"'.:JO. Sub. mil Yo\Jr offtr. MO~.»l SHERWeeD REAL TY 13964 Brookhunt r .v. HOUSE Hunting? W•teb tha OPEN llOUSE '°'WM ' I Generil . ' \ .. NICE THINjiS HAPPEN IN CORONA DEL MAR \IPPER front level unit has 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining room, fireplace and builtins. IN-LAW QUARTERS, PRNATE ENTRANCE' lower level, fireplace. Back unit is adorable, one large bedroOm. Nice? """'"" "" "" .. · .. " " """ $61,500. . JOIN THE .HORSE SET in Cherry Valley, ·4.57 acres of "BREATHING SPACE.'' Fabu· lous, "PLUSH HORSE RANCH." 4 Large bedrooms, 31h baths, fantastic landscaping and a ''VIEW'' you can't believe. Caretaker's cottage. 3200 degree elevation. Automatic sprinklers, 120 cheriy trees. Will trade for beach proP.erty .. . .. .............. $85,000. JUST. RIGHT-DON'T FIGHT over this SPLIT LEVEL BEAUTY with atrium type entry, huge living room, 4 lovely bedrooms, 21> baths. New SHAG AND PAINT, 3 BLOCKS FROM BEACH, Newport Beach that is .. .. .. . .. ..................... $38,500. . SEE IT· TR)' IT -BUY IT Split Level Tri-Plex Built in range and oven, dishwasher and dis· posal, carpets and drapes. 2 Units 1 have · 2 bedrooms, 1 bath ; 1 Unit has 2 bedrooms, llh bath w/fireplace. Each unit has 2 car- ports, maintenance free yard and pooJ.privi· leges, and from UPSTAIRS BALCONIES, A VIEW ............................ $79,750. "SLIP" INTO LINDA . ISll -A,,grivate "slip"· (Takes a 50 ft. boat) de- licends from· this fabulous Linda Isle ·~View Hom·e." 3 Lovely bedrooMs, ·formal dining room, 4· deluxe baths, fireplace. An ·e~citing home to entertain in. A mu§t to see. $225,000. OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1.5 605 Popp,y, Corona del Mar REALTORS I 644-7270 (Formerly O.L•ncy Rnl Estate) 2828 EAS'F, COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL /11AR, CALIF. General KIDS & PETS 3 Bedrooms, 2 bath home plus A-1 zoned lot. Just 5 minutes 10 Laguna beaches & 1hopping. Plenty of room i..:ir your own garden, rab· bits &: chickens. Boarrl your horse next door. Ceiling high flreplace, w/w carpeting OV• er hardwood floors, forced air heat, huilt·ln rana-e & oven. •129. $C9.950. ~all 675-72'15. . ff " /I .R ----- *KING* OF THE HILLS on the golf course With fan· tastic panoramic ~EW for miles and mlles. 5 Bedrm& J baths; formal dining, .11unk· en family w/Spanish fire- place and deep, plush, pile carpeting. Absolutely. im· maculate condition. Pri~ for immediate &ale at $79,500. Call 545-8424 {Open ev~. l Geno;ol, CMto MoM Hunt ...... ii!Ndl Hunt! ...... llMdl· Lide I .... • · * aACK UY* 3 BR, l BA, !amlly rm, lin!pl, bltina, huee walk·tn cioMtl. 1MIO., It. Now,c:rp!1/-•. $30,000, . Roy McCoJ dlo Rooltor ll10 N_..,,... 81 ..... C.M. ' 541-7729 . COLLEGE PARK OPEN· HOUSE .Fii eve °tll Mon AM. Vacant 4 BR. lam rm. bltns, dble trplc, shai CIJlf.s, Oll xtra lee eor »t, lo down or VA. 239 Prince- toll, CM. m..t205. W i 11 trade for Pf'O,Perty_ trailer, motor bome, TD's etc. BIO HOUS• ••• ••• SMALL PRIC 418Jt.' bL, din. nn. Bo · nn. tp. lot. tst.soo. ~ • -laweon J• ..o&C. Vla LJdo ""•"'."'oo'""vm""'•SllOllES""'""''"'"•"·• 2 BR, 1arre aar. tenet<! yd. -~"ANT •·-·-" N ... "1-close ' ta school& &: shop-A d h the • th• PARK YOUR BOAT • ' ~ ~~~ --• ,... U6 ooo m •··ta n cam~r aro, n •n1oy " OOmJt&nble Ip th\1 a 4 du, p ' ' ' ....w; l"'- boaut. home. I""""" ·NO ~M~aa=S~•·~--91.16_. =~ 2 story 4 Bedroom & 21/z bath. C.n L!lASEHOLQ, 11" U· VACANT ' $22,UD . .-.. op..,..,,.. .. daily -3 BR, 2 car..,, 1,. lot. Im· h.ndle a largo family, nr. park & • ..,.. •• Wl..t .1111>'. 61S-'3T1l; mod -· No dn GI/Lo dn schools. on•·.$35,900. All terms. W>-5531 eady AM er EVE. FHA. ~ymac 89C-1351. 1 y; BAYFRDNT APTS 3 DORMS on largo viow lot. 893·8533 545.()458 Vista Del Ilido. Pier & d1~ 1013 Arbor St, Costa Mesa. ~=-~~":! ::!:~ available. tram $31;50!1. Sell Ul.SOO. lO% down. 64&-&360 i BJt. ""BA. trplc, ~ or le1.5e:, BY owner, 3 BR + lrg den, tnr Pf.tict. Near &hopping Georgt ,Wllll1m·son,. 2~ BA; Nr SG. Coast Plaia. ~Lovely family :. REAL TOR Lo down. 595 Grand Haven. Huntlr\gton i)each Hunfi"lton BHch in imm~te mndltlaru 541l4570 64.S.1564 BY OwnE:t' $25.500. 3 Ire BR, $43,000. Can usume ~ WANlf to buy 4 BR home. 2 BA. plaster, H/W Doors,· VET SPECIAL BY owner, leaving 1tafA, 5 .lou, owner win carry ~ Any condition or behind $10M for eqty. 645-1622. If you'~ lhort ol cash. try B~ 2 .11ty, Yel'Y clean, cloae Prtnd,.i, only. Call 64S-57 ;.n · !,,-=-===,,.--;=:;;;. this J Bedrm, l" Bath beau-to in.de schl.11, Marina WALK TO OCEAN p nts. Priv. party. JUSf REDUCED.· $29,950. ty for only m.900. i total High, Golden West~. Newer mode I Br 2 ~ 894-4094. Sharp J BR on IA ac. Bkr. costs of $400. to move in. new park. 51.4 ~ FHA. will Not ~ en.ck: box ·a , . Back Bay 546-7739, 545-3412. 5j().8S55 consider 2nd. $31,500. family home. Only,$29.~ EHt Bluft SHERW••D REAL TY M&-tm. • T, J . HORVATH REALT)t'. NEAR UCI, 3 BR. fam rm.-, 1 'Ai BA. 18x20 !iv nn. huge bride. frpl~. maulve book cases, sep 'util. Hrdwd ·an, crptd, drps,. Cov patio. Det. 1., Cl&l' ear: eor lot/fried. s:!t .. fi>. smker, 545-3&33. Balboa l11and DUPLEX .,-OR SALE By Owner. Steps to bity &: beach. M11ke oiler. Ph att 6 P·~· 540;zr?6. Bayshore• OIARMING 2 'BR, complt ne~ kltchfn, naw crpts. ShQrt ~·alk to 2 Pvt beaches. 2.Jf5 Crestvh!W Dt. By Owner: 645--1039 Baacon Bay For Sale By Owner Beautiful n e w waterfront borne, Cape Ced thru«lt. 3 Br, den, 3 ba. ·A~. 2 hr t'Ai ba apt. J Car car. Boat 1Up avail. -Prine. Only, 675-0419- or ¥.M.·8197, . · , Collogo Pirie ' ' -· -LOOKS Hkll new · model. 3 BR, 2 BA. ftew cpta, dnpes, pa int. Lg~ yd, Owner, -· Costa Met• ... PRIJ>E OF OWNERSHIP . EASTSIDE FHA/VA TERMS 4 Bedroom on 15o' lot, beaiititully kept! Fireplace, dtpet thruout. B/J ap- pliance&, co.-ered · pa t Io . Brfus tht! family " , inspect thil lovely ti?i:n.e tpda.y. Price. 133.500. Call 646-ltn for .appt. ,-Q THE REl\L "\.. ESTATERS ' ' Tl!EES ii. PRIVACY 451 ESTHER ST. ·OPEN SUNDAY l·S" Be11o;tlfuI 3 Bdlom. rtsidence ::~e:a~· ~!~la:: w/magnif!cent wall ftple.; prl~ $53,500. WILLIAM WINTON Real Eatate 213 Marine. Balboa I&l&nd 675-3331 -:-;:;:::-:;:;;;::;;::-::--1~18961~.'!B~rookh~~un'!~~-~F~.V. * A REAL BUY * Cask !or Dav.l ao.id s,.. • THE BLUFFS • "RamblirMJ Ranc:h" ' BR ' BA 132,500! eim 675-1 Home&' Inve&tments eulate 4 l!ledroom Lo':"' int loan! Ownlerw/help BIG -CANYON • ,,;>., --with dn payrnt• ffurry1 !(~ ratJCh-.at)'l~ ho~ aportina;: a HAFFDAL REAL TY· Tanta.Jtjc model J..A, 4-5 &. ~• -§1£ veey iarze family room With MZ-44Q5 Evn· 541•2446 3 JA, View of aolt -:Sf tt1.f: beamed . ce l lln1 and · · · $1'J,500. JJ HmnH.age t.a;· ~j· fireplace. Country sized Huntington Harbour N!B. Open ·Sat 1-S. ~ tt '\ rea ty , kitchen with had& or , tiff.T1f4, MU325. . ' y cabinets. AND.• .take a YOU LL be ~e tor A'VA:IL now Wt 'f."' look at thi1 .•. a. 3 car Chri&tmu in this spa.cloua 3 , • Multiple Listina: Service gar~~-You'll be surprised BR be.aut)'. A. pool table ·devi!.""11o"' 4Al18R , 2414 Vista DeJ Oro, NB at ~-low price tag on this room Mrtl off thiJ corner lot ~..-, me. xtru. ptia· =-614-_l1_3J~An~ytimo~· ~~"' beaut)'. Call us at Ml-2535, "Buy of '.!le Wttk". Nelson clpW cnly. ~2649. B:V owner 3 BR, 2 BA, 1 847.-6010. Real Estate, 846--13()5 NO QOWN ?~ level, all elec. kit. Comer lrvlne Veta; bome, • NpB/CM" '_ Joe. pool oU patio, 2 patios. Call J . ~k. l!kr, 545-046$. walk to storts & schla. SUPER LOCATION BY owner, a BR, a BA ~ $32,950. l.5t Listing. 6«-5793. do, Nr Haq Hospl Fount•ln VoRtv DELUXE '~.=,ro.=c r= 132.500. MS-3522, -~ .. ~-·ONT 3 BR 2 ft~ -· 2 ba, on one •oor' with U""' US"l'BLUFF area, ' br.''2 CUTE AS A-BUG!! ;;Q."&.nus room, ,';,;.;, """"' cupo0ng .,,,.-..,.p. ba, don. 2 patto.. By°"""'· 3 Bdrm, 2 bath· townhouse drapes, gep. laundry nn, es. Owrlooks large puic "$42,CllO. ~U50. 644-0066., in F.V. Like new cond. oversized lot with block atta and rwimming pcd. LUSK Condo. 3 4-2. Priine throl,tghout. Owner trana-fence and large cow red pa-i37 ,500, location. Owner. $46,500. fermt k owner has to lell tio. Seil FHA or VA. A real i eel h II Call M4-«IS. qukk. Submit on ''""' °' .. ..i. r •• BY Owner Sontlar,o 0.. 4 ill', a .. um. FHA loan. Prlcod LEADERSHIP R.E. OR •· nt, encl pool, •ie right .. $23,950.· 962-5523 142-4466 ' ' land, ~ COL!Jl!I~ ·~ WATI'S __ ...:,,=,..cc---REALTY . -REALTORS _ * CASH * Univ. Park Contor, trvine NOWllOff Holahfl • 4 BR. 2 BA. Jge. lot, naisll>ne ~r will pay ca1h for ci.u Anytime, 833.M20 JUST REDUCED ' patio, w/BBQ nr Mile dl\llt)' &: assume FHA or . Room for boat or camper: 'f Sq"'~.,.3679."""· 129,500, 114, VLEA AtoeDnE. AnyRSH""'1p'· R.E. Logvno Boocll BR. 2 ~. '"'· famlly rqi'~ OCEAN VIEW ~ ~m~.-~ lfuntlntton Bo•ch 142-4466 N...., homo wtth good_. DAVIS REALTY w.TrX/11 '.'WALK TO THE .. .,..,.., ...... 2 Bdnn1. CHARMING 3 BR 11o .. JUST TAKE OYER NO.QUALIFYING BEAOt MODERN .• Low' dn. buys equity. Still like new. 1 yr. old. 4 BR. 2 BA. Built- lns. Dishwa.sher. Beautiful interior. $40,IXXI atta near the beach for only $27,500. For details call (U4) 962-5585 IOlll\I [ 01\0\ " f/£,l(l '0"'' BEACH" plua den. Built . in kitchen bo&m c1ni w/.....t bl'f<ji ~ d~uher. Bea'med frplc, tam nn., xfra 'Jge~lot, ttihng. Declu .l fenced, low beaut. ttpt )'d. I~ Here is & lovely, &paciOUJ tv.'O story home with 3 bedroom&, 3 baths:, veey large family room with a palo& verdeo stone fireplace. Excellent . condition and location, AU. TE Jt MS AVAILABLE. It's priced tD .!lei!, call us loday .•. 842-2\15 M'l-6010. O THE REAL "\. ESTl\TERS maintenance yard. 0 n 1 y cond. $33,950. &15-5322. eo l>l. 500 · r;,,_ 0 · I ,,y -S.n Clomonto •} '-""'TOew,,,~ 3 sa. w , on aolt muni!: REAL ESTATE = ~. ~;..? 1190 Glennem St. 84~ ar 541-1163. ,.., 494-9473 549-0316 BY o.mtr, 3 BR, 2' Ba, o:i * SELL OR LEASE * view. 403 ":. Aw. San J ' 1 2XlO Sq. Ft. 3 BR. 2\-ii Ba. $41,!m. Tmna. 5"-f2!M. · •. tc. tam. nn. din.· nn., frpl. S.nt• AM Heights Carp I: drapes, bl tins, wtt -· ---~ w, '"· llnmao. 1<1,950 OWNER SAYS ,, 19131 Brnokhunl Avo. $1B,950 Full•""· "SELL"!!! '' MlSSION REALTY 494-0731 \1 Huntington Beach 3 BR, 2 BA, liOxlOOft tncd EMERALD BA y • Ch&rmlng Sbl.rp ! bedroom on Ja · ~ POOL + RUMPUS· lot. Elect hltln R/0-w/w contemp. 6 Br., or 3 suite&. Jot. Aasume "ra% VA Joa.11, ROOM crpts, ' drps, din rm, lrg Gor&mua view. $145,00J. Total ~tt $186. month Pl~ 4 ~roomg_, 2 baths, be~rr:~~A h~~nize,4 dbl LOVELY view lot • $40,000. Prfce ftd~ to $25 ~ buill-1n kitchen, new shag ga • . pa TED HUBERT , .l ASSOC. Call now fr'lf' det•ll8. •1 Carpeting, 2 fireplace.11. ~r If 3m Via Lido: 675-8980. FULLER REAL~' 600 sq. ft. rumpug room . m-U6-IJJ14 /. ,.... ri;\ _ eludes ~ bar. No qualify-962-4471 ( :J MM10J LAG ROYALE, ocn.fmt, 2 ----- tng, no k>an fees . Just take BR. 2 ba. Fab w apt. Lse over 1ubject to existing GJ $ 9 UICK $ opt, $47,500. 2131849-5225, I ._.Est• Loan. Owner w:ill consider ~3005. . ,,._II U,000 down. L\!MEDIATE WE BUY· HOMES OCE~:ANFR~~O~N~T:. 1°""'5;';'.?.-~11~;;;;;;;;~~~ OCCUPANCY. MR. KASABIAN 8'7·9604 -~wn apartment. $39,000, sf~~~fi~. Walker & Lee KASABIAN :::'~.Not~ R"110 '· 1.c;;:;v';L:~RE; .. REDUCED TO 123,9.lO. "-lltors REAL ·ESTATE 4 Br, 3 b&, ff.m rm, POOi u $150 AN ACRE • Huge 1ot &etluded by many 2190 Harbor Blvd. at Adam• ''l:fOME OF lot. Biz valJey view! $39,500 LASSEN COUNTY ' ~~ --~S~H~H~H~H~!l~--1 towering trttt:. Otl'<le-uc '545-9491 ()plen 'til 9 PM Owntt, «K-7ml. Qow11 $50 A Month... '"'· , • location wilh oountry •"""" Tl BURON THE MONTH" Logune Nlauol BOGGS REALTY • Homt & Investment Roolty , 3535 E. Coast Hwy., Cdl\.f MESA VERDE BARGAIN Tty a lease . option or 10% down payment on this 6harp 3 bedroom, 2 bath l\fesa Verde home. Convenient to &hopping, .11chools and library, il'&.a home that will pll!ue Your eye ss well a1 fit )'Ollt budgtl, only $27,500, 673-8550. o THEREAL \"\, ESTATERS ' n RANCHO Nearly 112 Ac:re Guest House + Corel +Don+ Dino Brea1htakh11! ! Everythinl for complete tamUy living. Only 7 ye&r1 old. Guest house ha1 3 Bedrooma. We JUST USTED JT. So Hurry, Dlal roKI.' I [ OI \O Y .. P 1· 4 , • ,1 .,, I ''Don't Lat It Out'' Dandy Duplex -VA -'FHA -22r.D2 -ONLY ,$29,tSG - BE FIRST DIAL 645-0303 I O~I \ 1.J. 01,0\ 'l",lf.•,.c $25,950 NO DOWN low down FllA or a.ssume apr s~e;6 G.I. JoaJl..mw on propertJ' A your monthly pe.yme.ntl wiU tie_ like rent. Lowiy home in "Mint" con· dltlon inside ..l oitt. 3 bed· rooms. &II l!lecttlc buUt·ln kl tchen. Catpetg, drapes Ir pretty abutters. Oen, Wye J)lltio. Owner ~!in& area! 540-1720 • TARBELL phere. 3 Big bedrooms plus TOWN HOME Nestled high in the hills of -968-3505 • ~•in !:str~=~ OutsWXling 3 bedroom 21A Huntington Beach, ill a aora· CHILDREN WANTEDI 80 acres TAKE OVER all ~~ t sell' Si.lb 1 bath, decorated impecably. eous quad·lewl ex-ecudvt Ra.rt! opportunity to pJl'Cbue pan, mOUfttaln area tJffl mu& · mt ,vcur Cent air, -.wt bar, super pa-home. 4 ta-e bedrooms, 4 Bdrm., 2 bath home, walk· -111-hW1, NO ooWN, n• tenns. Call Sf&~ ... Hl!ri-Ho · h. ~B Q Try 13 000 ·• •-dl"·-•-1 _,,,.. .. ........ ,. f!olO tage Realtors (open eves.) wtt • • • formal diQlng room, and a. ... "& ....... _ llO ICnyu • "''"' mo. t&!-0047. ~";;--::==~:7.,--'-I dn. Dnperate!, ~ rumpus room. No view. Low down. ~31.9ttl. l'SAN=-=ru=AN="'CAP==STRAN==~ 3 BEQROOM ' * CAU. Ml~ * finor mn•tructlon 'available "•1une Niguel RHlty } o. HOME ZONED •tlhispn"•f'oraprovlow 130-SGSD 499-1144 1'. l 1< 2 aaa utal<llou. ..---......_A of executive livtna;, 'call H~s OK. Broker. 493--47.74 FOR BUSINESS ~SJ'mAlf~..... 842-2535 Ml-<!010. ' Lido ,lalo Commorclol on hlih traffic aliftt. Oornor \,. =-·...,,~( * EXCLUSIVES * p.._rty 151 80' ii: 150' lot ,$31,950. $\l~mif ~ 4 Bd:rmt. • 3 Baths MAJOR CM ''"ttnet ..... _, on trade ot lO!iti down on 60 X 90 Lot $TT 500 .,, • ...,. .. pun:huo. C.U 64 .. nn · !oi DIRTY DANDY . . ........... ' Cor """' boa. Plen'1 pril'r. app0lntmonL ' 3 Bod""'" 121,000. $27,950-MAKE OFR 3 Bdrmt • 2 B&lha T..,.rnc buy. Mllat MIL Illa» O THE REAL "\. ESTA TERS Thu 3 bodroom 'h-Mods . 4 BEDROOMS 42 n on NoOl ...... 119.100 16-!111. 64S.21'1. ., tender IOVUl.I care. but what N """'· .... ·-.Condemlnlum1 1 a buy! Jt'1 Joc~ted clo&t to e~ ..,.,,...._, 1900 Sq ft. ltx 4 BR. P1ut Yatttay, 2'Ai Ba. fr Nie 1'8 -~~~. Rio~p1~ !at~~=~~~~~; 50.X 88"Lot •••••••• S89,SOOl=::::':"'.:=::'.':'::::"~.,.··l FIIA/V A CONDO 8PECfALISTS • b& 3 BR, 2 full baU.. Recently of &toNIII cabineta. overaiz. a,._ Rl • ,..0 _ .J Bdnn& • 3 Bathl -n+ w tt id lot. J.Z..·• '---&...... --.-w;a, ty _.........., one tr) 9Af• • cu do .. painted Wide and out. -"'.OU"' IUE' .wJ. Corntt lot on Sood •• $99,S» w.m. b"7 °""" . W•"Le W!W cpt"• drpo, Largo DI """'· Call Ml-1111 BULLHEAD '°' ,..,, $11,!IOO and "P, yard, room lot boat. Comtr SEYMOUR REALTY. lnil HANG 10 5 BR. 3 Baths • Pool ueat Jot ck>se to tchcxlll in welt-Beach Blvd., Hu.nt. Bch. Carry board io •urf. 4,..BR. To Ft. strada o:irner $125,000 larWt.t rulty, Inc. ·~, 1;<1< <;M. R.du...i to si>,000, SELLING 2 BA, slni an!a, quiet 11. 23562 Bn>Okhu..i, Hntp,n lly olvn.r. li<-9. YOUR HO Va"'nt. $32,950. Di;AN 4 Bdnn1, • 4 Ba!N 546-5411 onytlme l,r\!? REALTY 5J6.•s:rT 90 X 18 Lot ....... , 1135,000 ----BY OWNER: 2 atory, •hake Free •PPr•i&aJ _ we buy • "J DupJexn/Unlta ~ root, 4 Br 21i Ba, Blt-W, equities. PetlOnal attention. MUST SEU.. Beaut. new 'I + L(t. Fam. 3\i + ~ Bltht ule 16 Frpl, covered patio, Boat 25 yn, experience. Br., 3 Ba. Exec. home. \.ii Patio. lOO' On Nord $149,$00 ,,.,,~~~~,,,-.,,.....,.ii'/ rate, 1tora1• 41~t, ~ut., COWNS &. WATl'S ml. ocean. $42,950. Bkr. BALBOA ISLAND thlpl -· lhn1<mt. li4M2<:. -REALTORS -M .. T73'l. M5-MU, * WATERFRONT * tor &&l• By Ownor. St'V( l\10VE in now! N t w I y 962-~23 &t2-0427 2 BR CONDO, by owner, low 5 Bdrma .. I Ba'!\~ bQ' A beach. Make 2955 Harbor, Coata ~tna. decorated hoine. l BR.. der1, TOWNHOUSES down payment. Pier t: Slip .•.• $2•<:950 Ph. tit I p.m. MG-Xlt. ... ~ 2 BA, b1"n" encl patk>, dbl f1'91!11)6,ooo to .124,000. Low, 55'1,914o or 968-16'! LIDO REAL TY INC. ANY 1'Y 11.,. llrn 411 to l A JOOd want ad 11 • IOOd trplc. ~Uece ~-ark. 0~~: low down payment. P&AN Tun) llftUMd lt~fl\I tn1o qu,lck aart VIA UDO run d lllfl Oe 1 •.t We'il ~P )'Ol.l~Jdtl Mt$71 ;;;In.eve.="""==------' ~ JtECt.TY 536-1527. cuh, call 842a?I •7).7300 de!Q •• call ......,, ta ,. • • • ' ....... ~ .. . . . \• ...... '· . .-"-.~. ., ,.., .......... ..-.. ., -:--·. • '. u DllLV PILOT Monday, NMmbtr lS, 1'71 Real E1ta11, Gt11er1I [j]~·i.-_i!::_:''~ [jJ I ..._,,,_ I ~ [ _, .. _ I~, .o;t ..... .,.~ lltl, .. ort .. ,uk<•w J[~J 1--...... ., ... , I ~ 1-~· .. l • ~l:nc:o:m:.::P:r:ope::rty:::::IU::l:nc:o:m::.:p:,:.:pe:rty:::::l:U::. ~outesrtf:~j~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii30iii5 Howes Unfurn.. 305 A.pis. Furn. 1 * Apt1.. Furn. MO Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. ,,,ewpo '"'1 C11 Corona del Mar Irvine O.n.ra1 1,,:....--~------Costa Mt•• 9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APJS. 3 BR, 21> BA. 'I blck lo BRAND NEW HARB O R /,;;;;;;;~====-;;;:;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·J~Ne~w~po~r~t ~Be~e~ch~-1-....;...._,,;,:.;;,,.,,C'."."'"-Costa Men btaeh, unfurn If desired. VIEW HOME, l Stdroom, 3 SR.\2 ba .• atrium •••• 1325 ~~t f~ti~ttt!":1tut' AT THE BEACli • Furn. • DELUXE BAY MEADOW APTS. 4 !;eparate bu ilding5. Shake roof5. Private patios. No st2irs. All l story bungalows. 2 & S bedrooms. Some have firepJaces. The type of buildings that attract and hold good ten- anls. Income $16.740 yr. $145,000. Excellent financi ng. "Our 26th Ye•r'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 S.n J01quin H ills Rud NEWPORT CENTER ~910 lmm@d pou. $125. Alto 2 Br faml!y room. 2 bathl. Com· 3 Bit, ~ ha., tam •••• $325 ON BR, 2 BA . Winter or ytarl,y APARTMENTS Beam ceillnp, paneHna, home avail. McNuh Realty ,munity PQOI. couru, etc. 3 RR.. :H' b«, fam •••••• $3!!0 E MONTH rates. n4: 6Th-7~7·or 213: Air Cond • Frplc'11. J SWlm~ priv patios, rttereation :fA, , 642-4400. $395. per month Broker 4 BR, 2~ bl, fam •••• $350 431·2406. mtns: Pnots • Health Spa • dlities. All adulta, no pelt. •• l BR. WATE"~o ...... 644-7270. • . ' 4 BR. 2\t baths, fJ.mily room, compiete with Tennis Crts. Game • Bil-e 2 BR'1 FROM AS LOW ~ n •• • Tu u R k 13"" 2 BR Duplex. Fl'plc, bl"'"1, 'Ai ,, _ __. "'-m " s•••; COTI'AGE. J1at Redecorat. NICE,·l(le, 3 BR. 2 ba. lower :,~ ~VE.OTffEiL<i '" your 100-.k blk to beach. Nict. s:z601mo uaiu J8EoROOM "'1 _.......mo. ~ 3404 r.t arc us NB. duplex. Ocean ai4e or hwY. PurchaM Option _ Yrly. 644--7214. FROM: $l5.5 387 ~ %~73C.M. 673-1593. S300 month. lnd24• Hltem •D1•1et)On. 2 BR $185 Winter, $235 yrly MEDITERRANEAN :z Bdrm. 2 Ba. partially furn, DELIGHTFUL 2 BR. home. our • v. · cl .1 1019 w a.... HACIENDA CUSTOM in uti · • --J Ave, VILLAGE HARBOR Un11t June 30th. $1B51mo. Large patio & yard, Near 6~1674 Adlts only, no pets. .,Phone Bayside Dr. $275 mo. Furnltl{.J'e Rental 7304 Dee f'nlnt S I l 2400 Harbor Blvd .• C.r.1. Z.Alld AIVOCAOO STREET collttf: 714:?8l-0009. ALSO -Ba.lboa Iidand 517 W, l9lh, C.M. 548-3481 an · pac ous (714) 557.3020 u t llvlnr -No pet& rentals ivailable "S""CE 1946,. Anaheim 774-2800 br. Winter. rels, no pets. RENTAL OFFICE Deluxe 1 & 2 BR. Pool Income Property 166 FIXER lo"PPER 'our o!'lf' Wroom unity. on t"'O lots. Tl'f'e lined stt'ttl. F\!lly rt'nted. Good pro~r· ty TO upgrnc!e, both propt'r· iy & lncomr:. NICE 1 BR house for quiet Salisbury Realty 67J...6900 ... , (2J3} 626-9101. OPEN 10 M t TO 6 Pill Garage. Dil"hwshr. Pald uliJ. " ~ -u.ttkin,g couple on 33rd St. 1st 'Yestern Bank ~. S.lbN ltl•ncl l Blk To Bch. Oan l br. rnor.t $150. 646-121).t f'1nanci.al I • i -'-"-"~''-'-'"'-· ,_,,_..-_75_13_.~= * 2 Br, Dr p s /Cr pt s . Uniw nilty Park FAIRWAY -. Houses Unfurn. lOS Garbage Disp. Avail. Nov. D•ys 133-0101 Nights WINTER l'tlltal. 3 Br. 2 bL Winter $165 mo. 646-4071 or $AN MO. Jmmac. 3 BR. 21,, ••••••••lfilil ·--.,-------15th. 67>2698. Step to the Bay. $300. fn..1_64_>-_995> __ ._,_____ BA., crptJ, drp1. Avail. A..."h1:'\'G SJ9.500 c.AP!.STR.A.-\0 \'ALLE\' REAL TI. l1S01 Camino Capistrano 493-1124 **DANA POINT Ntw Deluxe Duplex $49,950. . Webb RHlly 642-4905 EASTSIDE TRIPLEX Lg 2 BR uruts. Garages, p;t- ti<I!, trplc's. Xlnt cond s.170 mo income, ye1 only s.U,soo. BROKER. &JG..8116 l.'\'VESTORS SPECIAL Oi\'()l"Ct'! )lust sE"tl 00\\'! Duplex a t r\e1>.'J)OM Beach C.all aJt 4 pm. 5-19-0SH FOR SI.le-By Q,..-ner. 4 un111. Con,·. ]CM:". Xlnt bnanciaJ r~rurii. Call aft .5 pm. 5JJ ..Q3.)(I. Industrial Property l&t M·I BLDG. $30,000 1.260 sq. ft. young ind. bldg. I: oJ.d hou!.e on 100' :x 120· choice Cos1a !lies.a site. Room to build more, Wesley N. Taylor Co. Realtors 2'111 San JoequJJ1 Hllls Rd. N'ewpon Cen;er 6144910 Lots for S•I• 170 BUILDER'S BONANZA I Approx. 6 a~s. all ar part. mn~ R-3 and C on Hwy. 71 near fr¥.)'. :\Ja y subor· dJnate. Xlnt size for apart· tt:ents or restaurant .. U clusi,·e Agents larwin realty, inc. 21562 Brookhurst, Hnta;n Sch 546-5411 anytime Mountain, Desert, Resort 174 Business Ooportunity toO DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED Lirnit!'d number of DlSTRI- Bl i'ORSHIPS now a\"ali- ablf' 1n your area. Ne -u.• ?oltdti · ~Ill.hon Dollar· ad· \i:>rtised Pudding A: Fruit Cups. sold through Aumm11· t>e ?.Jel"('handi~rs. If qual· ilied, you '1.'\lt be pro\'ided v.·nh a ll equipment 11nd lo- caoons, and tie. traine-d in all phases of this b.lghJ)" !UC· ratJ\'e business lno selling). You must be rehable, ha\'e a rood car and 4 hours a ~-k 5JMlrf' time. a M be ablt 10 make an immediate in\-ntmf'nt of $1100.00 (~ C"UJ?dL Send name. address and phoM number to: Npv.·. pon Inlf'rnanona\ Distribut- in2 Company, 3700 Ne1',,ort Bl\"d., !'!"\\-port Beach. C&ill.:""926fio. Dep:. •30A. E.'<crll~nt Opporruniues 8f'ach pharmacy ~ s t. 20 yrs. 100~ 1oc.a.1lon. Reliring o .... -ner will sell for 29% do1'"n. $25.000 p l u s in- ,·entory. Large r e ta i I bookstore est. 8 yean. )la· jor ghopping center location, Good Jelle s:l.\.000 includes largE" in\·enlory. VOGEL COl\1PANY. RLTRS. No. 10 2052 Ne.,..-port Blvd., 0..1 • 54~934.6 • * New Listing * -LIQUOR SlURE- "Priced Right" TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS HOLLAND BUS. SALES "The Broker with EmpalftY" i n s Orange A\'e., C.M. 615-4170 54Q-OOll eve. * New List1ng * BUSINESS ~iAN'S e BAR e -;;; BIG BEAR LAKE TO BUY OR Put your 'SKIS .. in this SELL A BUSINESS large A-frame cabin on a HOLLAND BUS. view lot. Only $17,700. E-Z SALES term~. Call Ross ( 714 ) "The Broker '1.ith Empathy" fl36-1738 or V.Tite: Spr!neer 1716 Orange Ave., C.r.I. Real Estate, P.O. Box 28211, &15-4170 540-0608 eve. Big &ar Lake, Calif. l\10 NEY :\1AKIKG BRAND new !urn. 2 BR Con· OPPORTU~ITY IN do, Pal m Springs atl!a, * BJG BEAR LAKE * heated pro!, mountain view. 0 1>.11 your own Co Ione I 645-3746. ~an<IE'n' Country F r i e d Chic ken -land, h I d g , 40 Acres Corning, Ca.Ill. Nr. equl p'mt. Illness Io r c e 1 Mt. Shasta. X'ln't pro fit P~ pttsent 01''ller to sell. Call tentia.I. Nr. Frwy. 6-15-0478. Ro!;s cn41 536.-1738 or Real Estate Wanted 184 \\rnte~ Spencer Real Estate, CASH ONL y P.O. Box 2828, Big &ar Lake. calif. For )'Our lot in Ne1'-port or ~----~~~,.,.­ Costa ritesa, must be zoned Newspaper De•lership for duplex or triplex · also For L.A. Herald Examiner older homes that can be in Orange Co. area. ~-c:ur· torn do\vn for new construe-1ty depos. req'd. '\'n1e R.P., tlon. 2662 \V. Lincoln. Anaheim. \\'ill lease back unlil you can Mone y to Loan 240 f.ind new home. Stare loca· ---tion, lot size, priee &. J!hone SA TILER number. A~ fast as our cash budget MTG. CO. i$ limi'<?d to 10 p~hases :i~ E. lTm STREF.'T only. CASH FOR TD'S \\'rite P.O. Box 1515, New-* 90°1• LOANS 1( port Beach. \\'A~TED: Oldl"r house or lST T .D. LOAN properly needing work , 71.,70 I'.'.'TEREST CASH . ~3-l69c\. LJ'rwe~t ra!es in Oran'e Co. REALTORS 642·2171 545-0611 Cash for your clieni.v--need Serving Harbor area 21 )TS. land or older homelWlth R·2 Mortgages, or R·3 zoning. We ha\'t' Trust Deeds 260 builders 1.1·aittng -quick t'S· cro\vs. Call st.2-4000 ask for fOR sale 2nd T.D. $11.000. ~rge ~taschmeyr:r. \Vil! ditcount. Jnte~sr at 9". 1-~,.~.,7.x=T"1-0 7h-,y-o-ho-m~.~.,~1,-,,.-I &l due & pa)'ablt 5 )'n .. option. Ha\'e $650 cash. SllO. Pf!?' mo. incl. prin. & int. 837~9 Tolal Valur: on home nol to --~------ e:xcttrl S:Zl OOO. ~IR·112'.l. TRUST DEEDS \\'ANTED 4 BR exec home in N.B.. Cash for 2nd TD F .V., llr Hunlngtn. \\'an1ed • • 673--0140 • • now or all Chr1Slma1. Pvl, . ,645-1457. Ba lboa Island Generill 1 ~,~BR~. ~,~.~.-.-,-.. -m.-.-H-.,.-bO!'-c~udina: ulilities. 1 BLOCK to beach, 2 BR. VILLA APTS, oow. Call 557·77&8. v •'>Cl! * UNIVERSITY PARK * Winton Real Eatat~ ..61>33Jl new 1hq c:rpt, $22S mo incl * TOWNHOUSE * FREEll L•ndlords-Owners ' ie~\ ..,,,.,/mo. Comm. pool 2 BR + den N'pt Bch •. S31'5 tit Y• I ~ "731 2 & • BR' & park. ~3894. 3 BR. 2 ha t'nhou~ •••• $325 WINTER rental, 1 Br, turn. u · ar Y· •;u.rw • o11 s l 6 2 BR. Shar cpl, D/W, Co t. u. 1 BR. , d•n, 1 •· .••••• -.... Elec. bl.tns. $XIO Inc. util Qceanview, 2 BR. ] BA. Private patio, pool • lncJ.iv. self clean oven, patio. "'• "'" -f•· -•••• -·-· 1 __ ,_~ __ .. _____ "" ... __... """'-· •--an \V w11.,., • .,.3605 ·~ ' ''"' '" ,_, 4 BR., 2"Ai b&ths ..••••.. $3511 Win!on Real Estate 675-3331 Winter $225, Yearly $175. Ia .... ,,,.., .....,. · ""' ...,.,. . FREE of charge.· , ~lany BEAUT Meaa Verde home. 3 3 BR. 2 ba. home-s •• $260/l25 WATERFRONT·l Br. Frplc * 642-3639 ; Nea.r Orange Co, Airport I: DELUXE new 2 Br $1SO. dt'Sirable tenants on 0 u r Br, 2 Ba, new ,......tl & paint, 2 BR 1,, •-ho •"""' 1_ ' UCJ. AduJta: only. Shag cpl, drps, bltn, bale, \\'aitinii: lisi. . ~-,. . .,.. ..... mt •••••. ,,.... prlv patio, 400 S. Bayfront l Blk To Bch, Oean 1 pr. 20122 S&nta AM ~ ALA Rentals • 645-3900 cov patio &: porch, prof (i. d h•11 Apt 1. 673-6640. Child/pet ok. \Vinter .$165 M Mr J hi ... ve. p\lt gar, 1 child/pet ok. landscaped, n1in of l yr ' ": re I BA YFRONT 3 BR., 2 BA. mo. 646--1UJ1 or &12-9955. er. L ,,_2,8; .... ,m. Apt 3-A -".,,"-,"--c7.-6.=-:---.c,,--==-ol • OCEA:'\l'ROl\'T • Furn lease. $275. Refs exchanged. ~1 3 BR. , 2 B_A + d<n. •~. 2 "'"I'~ be $250. Winter * $135 • tITIL. paid. On ,,...,.,. B.''•lo,, aU ,,,-, >'n•l'd $0•. .,...,.. "~~ ~·lf8 A 4:30 Mon BR 2 BA II" Blln• CID " ~ ~ th r · 6T~3331 Winton R.E. Peninaula, nr. ferry. * * * * · rv· • ' ALA Rt"nt11ls e 64~3900 rn rt. REALTY W/D hkup, Patio, gar. 181· v·"A°"CANT==-,~=~~--uruv. Park Cent1!r, Irvine Belboa Peninsula Adults, no pets. 673-9749· El Puerto Mes• Apt1 H Del M''· uo8278 ' • STEPS to \V11rer-F'uro 1 BEDROOM 3 .. ,.,... BArn 10 .... ·nhouse with •-C•al•l •A•n"y"tlm-",."'-""-20-Newport Heights * * * * BR. Child/sml pet, uliJ pd. caf'Jl"ls, drapes, and use of • $25 WK A Up .• On Ocean 1 Bedroom Apts. LOVELY 2 BR w/w cpt, $130. 1. hall L•gun• Niguel lnve1 .. Bach • 1 BR _ Rooms CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adl!J, no \Wad fin, drps, 1ar, mature ALA Ren!als • 6'5-3900 recrea ion & pool. -.o..---'-----~ adultJ, no pets. Reas. 2260 Lease it for $225. Call Agent NIGUEL Snotts-Spac. New. Maid Servlct. Pool. Util Pd. petll, Ia: kit. $125-$150. 2421 $130 & up incl. utilities. Also • HEAR This·2 BR. Fncd 546-41.fl Priv. beach. Ocean View. 4 • Call 67>8740 e E. 16th St NB 646-1801. furn. Pool & Recreation Placentia. 646-3l60. '" t'' ,-,==~~=~--BR 13~1 A il 365 area. Quiet Environment. * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR.. yd, C'Jtt. iuds & fiml pet, S ,,.,_ LARGE 3 BR., 1 BA., oldtr . ;>\I mo. va approx. • 2 BR $150 util pad. On Apt. Unfurn. OU street parking. No Chll· Contemporary Garden Apts. ALA Rental!! • 645-3900 home. C"'ts, stove &: Nov 20. Ph. 835--4889 or 1et Peninsula. nr Feny. AdultJ, , ________ _ .... key from Mr. Bates at 671-9749 dren, no pets. Patios, frplc, pool. $151).$165. • SPARKLTNG C\ean·2 BR. relrig., lge. patio, children no pets. · Ganer•I Also Garages F-R•nt Call 54~163. Broadmoor Home1, Lag. u• Stove. refrig, cpts. Kids/ &. pets welrome. Water &: Coron• dal M•r 195S-l961 Maple Ave. pets. St40. gas j,d. $220 mo. lfiO E. 23rd cNc.c1:.'":.:'::;'-_______ ·---------HELLO RENTERS! Costa Mesa 2 BR. \4'/gar. $130. Wtr pd. ALA ~tals • &45·3900 St. Mei• Verde 2 BR, tully erptd, pool, So. ot Why are you payinr rent? 1 ~=:=:=:=:=:=:=::=; l 5n "A" Orange Ave. Call ATTENTION OWNERS! ! BR. 2 •-. l°'Ol mo. ,_1 & Hwy. Close to shpg. Adu1tJ. ~·1 wake up to whal 's btwn 1 & 5, 63&-4UI. • LIVE in Lquna·l BR. PO " u 1115 • -· ,,.,... ....... '--· od \V h CHILDREN SPACIOUS 2 8d I \\'e have rental customers . ......,. "'~· uappen1ng t ay. e ave . nn, crp s, Cpl&. stove, re1ng, kids/ !or HO;\IES. APTS & CON· la.at mo'1 + $100 clean dtp. hundM:l.s of homes ready e • • drps. Older couple preld. pel SI50 Close to 1chls & shop'g, Costa Mesa t · · VA d NEW • • • 11°'1 Ph ,~ ~'° Ai.A R;nh\ls e 645-3!m DOS. Cal~ DEA N REALTY, 54.5-6084. ---------I or your 1ns~tion. an ,,., mo. . ,,,.... • ...,, Rental Div. ~7527. bol ' bl •-'I I FHA Terms, llOme with not $170 2 Br studio, adj '"°''· Un 1eva y ~aut1 u a red ~nt down. ut us VILLA PEDRO A t • :'!!ORE Room-3 BR. 2 BA. 3 BR house, cpts, drps, * lmmacul•tel 3 BR VAL D' ISERE Garden Apts. tlnd that dream house P S drp/crpl, patio, gar. 5'!3•8301 Cpts, dTP1, gar, kids/pels. aft 5, 213: 592-5227 coll. SliO. garage, patio, lawn, stove. 2 Bath. 2 Frplc's. Blt·ins. Adults -no pets. Flowers you 've been warrting f.or JUST FINISHED ALA Renial~ • &45-l!KX) retrig, utiJ. room, central $240/mo. '* 54G-6094 everywhere. Stream & yuur very own Call Su 2 BR. apt. Crpt'g all rooms, Joe. J225. Jse. 646-696! or \Vaterfall, 45' pool Rtt. Rm, w lk '& L (IO)pa2r-CoBmRfortable-Quiet drps, bltns, refrig, carport, e OLD Country Sty\e-3 BR. 646-1246. Newport le•ch Sauna, Sgis-1·2 Bdrm, Furn. a er ee • 2 Full BA. lndry rm. $155 mo to mo. Frplc, dbl. '1:ar, kids/pets, I "'=='~-~--~ Unfurn. from $135. SEE IT: Must 1ee to appreciate 646-6961 or 646-1246 LEASE 3 Br., 2 Ba., apac liv BEACON Bay, 2 Bdrm., ] 2000 Parsons, '4>-8670. Realtors Near Newport Back Bay, $200. nn. w/frplc, din nn., fam 1 2790 H * DELUXE 2 Br, l'it Ba, ALA Refltals • 645-3!m rm., pool·lable sz. playrm., ~·· Jrplc, yearly ease. $300 SPAC 1 Br, pool, n r 545-~lvd;~t sAcJ.:[:;' ~~s, f:rks, YMCA, Boy's cpt, drps, itv/D/W, rar. brick sen. 12 5 0-1 3 00 . o. hops Adlt no ts $155 ........ n u' s ppg, trwys. etc. Children ok.1150. fi.12·7958 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 '"I J\fr. Robinson 11 • • 11• ~ • Gas heat gas cooking and 1999 H•rbor Blvd., CM 548-3446 or 4!»-6364 . DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 ~~:· 1884 r.tonrovia. VEN DOME water. au paid. MO/MO LARGE 3 BR. 2 BA, bltns, 2 Br, garage. patio, crp!s, HARBOR View 2 BR. &r. • from $185. 2332 Elden stt ar frplc, dshwshr, nr shoppln&" . drps, stove & refrig, Quiel Convt. den, 2 Ba, w / w $245. NEW llIMACULATE APTS! call 1".1anager Barbara Dav. Encl. garage. 557-8188. lropil"al Eetting for adulll!i crpl, drps, bllns, patio, DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA. ADULT and is 645-1182. 2 BED RO O ill , newly RENTAL FINDERS 411W.1ttlo, COSTA Mf.SA Houses * Apts. * 645-0111 * fJnly. l blk 10 shops, $169 frplc, comm. pool. $350 mo. GARDEN APAR'ntEN'l' Cl FAMI~Y Se_ctlon P k /!!!!!!!!~~~!'l!""'"""" redecorated, f i re p 1 a c e , 646-1765 or 646-d.tJO. i:;v~!. & \Vknds. 644-0173_ lSl E . -2.1st--St., C.M. oy to s opp1ng, •r AJ. ~NI TS ~arage. Sl!IO. 548-5003. TO\\INHOUSE 3 Br. ' Ba. * .. , 8666 * ">-Spacious 3 BR's, 2 ba LECT'RIC BEAUT. l\lodem To1''?1hou11t. -'* S · pool V UPSTAIRS tl50. 2 BR l RA, new shag crpt.s. Pool. Kids · pel ok. A\·ail wun • pu ilftn d bl · OCC immed. $215/mo. Ph. 3 BR, 21 , BA, Frplc, patio, $30 Wk', Up Apts. * Frpl, Indiv/Lndry fac'll 00\VNSTAJRS $165. t11:~fo.ti~7~~1 ' aar ;!,,.,~rm.Free t11 Lllt1d/onU -FURNISHED - $IOO-trr!L PO. Laguna~ Lrg Bach w/ loft & patio. 2 blks 5.lr-i&lS. pool, 2 car rar. all bltinl, $11-$25 Wk. Motel Rms 1845 An•helm Ave. CALL ?-.tanager aft 6 Prof. crpts, drapes. U!ase $295. $6 Night & Up COSTA MESA &12-2SU 642-1131 LGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, new 1hag DLX iH'""' 3 Br, 2 Ba . irplc, 8-i6-5991. SUNNY ACRES l""""""""""""""""""I ... ..,..,iii; ....... .., ..... I cpf_ $169./mo, frtshly pajn- drps, bltns, 2 car rar. LEASE or lse option, 4 BR. MOTEL Ball~oa lsl•nd *BRAND NEW -* ledNr.OCC.Carport557-615I Wes!cliff. S275. 67~1849. Harbor View home, Avail Th' •• -th 15 1 ---La Coste Apt LGE 2 BR. $125. Crpts, """'"OTI'AGE by•'-· Sea' SINGLE ho 1 11 ...., wu. on ren · YEARLY 1-··. G •and 1• .,.~....... '""' · use on kif. 2 BR. 110\.\', Principals on y. "'-" • 1 &. 2 BR bl range, retrig. Upstairs, no Nice 1 BR w/ gar. dbl car gu ., No pat•. 110•0. ·:.:•:..-::~:.:·~-----~ 2376 Npt Blvd .• 0 1 548·97"'.:» Canal, Little t.s. Beaut. 2 '. tns, swimming -t• uo 1330 67'1178 °" _on ~IJ'I 1 BR Furn 2 I cl " B 2 B . Uo ·~~ pool, lana.1, bar-b-que & gar· .,.. . .roo-.or ~ . -UNnJRNTSHED -mo. 642-8766. WESTCLlFF Exec. home, .C ' . • ~ ose ' r ., a., pn. pa . ,,.,.,.., age. All util pd. $150 to $170. e WILSON GARDENS e ~-tITIL PD. N••l & cl••• 3 B• 1175 ~ti' -f d B 211 BA I I I queen sit.e bed. pnv. dress-+ utlls. Adults no .-1 2 BR Ill BA C lid """ .... •• • '-'I' u.5 ence r, · ge corner 0 on ing room, xtra lrg rooms. Winton Real Estale 67>3l31 354 A 0cad (~1 &42-• • P rps, 1 BR. Conv. to shops. yd on Victoria., CM. Call qu iet st. $500. 646-0806 Adulls only, no pets, $1.50/ Balboa Peninsula v o, 1 • 9708 encl. patio, $140. 642-6811. $ll5 _ r.1.A11JRE c 0 up I e 1 v.·ee k days {213) 446-0673. RE MODELED oceanfro nt mo p k BAOIELOk. :sharp, dose fo dream! 1 Br hse, stv/refrig, 2 BR house in rourt. cpts. home, 4 BR, 2~~ BA. dln rm __ 20_· 3_S_F _u_ll_u_t_o_n,c_C_M_ NE\V 2 BR, crpts, drp~. arQU~~·-~g~~'tu:~ling OCC &. UC!. $130. Incl util's cPts, drp:s. Plenty 0r room drps, no pe!J, onE" small $450 mo. 64fr8402. 673-0083. Attract •• Clean 2 BR. lrplc, garagt. Yearly. Call 1•2 &. 3 BR API'S & refrig. 557-7768. for chickens & gartlen. child. $145 mo. 646-2719. Newport Heights Hid pool. Furn-Unfurn from Ov.·ner 675-4644 aft 6. f'n• patios * Htd Pools 2 BR Unfurn apt. Ut!I paid. 113.5-2 BR HOUSE-all red~ 3 BR, crp!J, drps, partially ;.;_;;;;.:;.;....;,..;.;,..;.:.,___ $140. Adulls. 642·~ BEAUTlf"UL new 3 BR. 2 Nr 1hop'g * AduJt,, only $145 mo. fum, Kids & pets OK, $225 Slro-Qulet AduJts, no pets. 2 BA I Cl I be h l M • • * * 54s-.69S4 ** wl stove/refrig, cpi., drps BR N .,. bl! L . FURN 2 Br. apt util pd. $170 ap · ose 0 ac e~. art1n1que Apts mo, --'IH'" i--•, o::•o .c.n;7 . ew .,. ... g, ns, ,,,,am I 67'"'~ 67' 0143 • & gar ,. .... u • •11,:1 ...,.,....,.,... .C per mo. 22Tl-B Maple Ave. yr. ease. ,,.....,.,.,, ,...., · lm f&n ta •·-, CM 1 BR Apt. unfurn., water ' . 2 BR I d d I ceiling, H/poo). 642.-251 . o::Ao5913 ...,,. A~. , g y , b gar SZl'.X) .,...,.. · * NEAR Bay &. Beach. Mgr. Apt 113 .. ~r "'"'" paid. Adulls, no pell or $175-LARGE 3 BR. l1Ai Ba, 3 BR I d Newport Shores ~u • g Y • ggl-ga~sa:io · · · 1 Br $125 & $130. Lra;, ideal Brand new 1 Bedroom !tudio e e chi:dren. 543-6954. ~t~Pe;:s~~rps, ear. Child· r.tANAGER. 646-8226 JBr ram rm, 2 Ba. cpb:, for Bachelor. Pool. Adlts apt. $250/mo * 673-6450. WESTBAY ELDEN Dan• Point 3 BR. 2 BA witb heated pool. bltnS. wa1kin1 rlist to beach. only. 1993 Chun::h. 548-9633 Beacon Bay NE\V 1 and 2 Bedrm. ganl•n --------- \VALK 10 Beach! Beaul 4 + $23,; month. S16-6697 or Comm. pool .I: ten n I 1. FURN 2 Br Child k N LARGE 2 br. 1 ba, duplex. fam nn w/ frpl c, comp! re· (2131 694-2983. 548.9637 · • no.n ° · 0 FOR Lease new bayview apl. apartments w/poo!, Newly painted, cpt, dps, lge Qec. ®· ""'J°'B~R~~,,,,~fa-il~. --~,_-S•n Clemente ~tl.l26H~: ~· i:;.,.ndry in private beach rom· FR~~· A ADULTS patio, encl pr. Children BEACON RENTAL P m Y rm. . ' ' munity. 2 BR. 21,t BA , all en ve,, C.ilf. OK. 496-325.:i. BA, Colleae Park. S2ti0 2 BA d ht 0-. * AVL 001''·1 & 2 BR. Furn. bltns. garage. $400 mo. 645-5780 2 Br. 2 ha, next to ocean, FINDERS * 645-0111 Ptr mo. 557-4:263. 3 BR. · 1 sh''...;: V1tw. Pool. Rec Rm. Gd. loc. No 494-8197 or 67~19. • • I d " bl! 1175 adults o n y. $...,.,. mo. hildre poo. ps, ep . ns. . ATTENTION VETS D•na Point Avail Dl!c. 1. 544-4294. c nor¢!!. 646-5&24. Corona dal Mar EL CORDOVA 499-20.55 or 496-9145. lf you are ttnting, H's time $250 r.10: 4 BR, 2 Ba, liv r.m .. South Laguna • Bach. For unr. WO up E•st Bluff to buy. \\'e gpecialiie in VA din nn .. kil , 2 car gar, new· ----"-----• 1 Br. Furn or unr $125 up. Apts. & niA Wes. ~'e can give ly painted interior. Dana LEASE lge, clean, older 1 __ A_d_w_i._._Poo_l_._64_>-_2_18_1_ ~-New l & 2 BR Luxury Apts, NEWPORT BEACH you extactly what you '1.·anl Point Knolls, 496-3434 or home. 2 Br. 2 Ba, den, cpts/ • * TRAILER for rent, util ~ Dshwhrs, xtra closets & cup-Villa Granada Apls. for just $47.50 total invf!st· 494-2982. drp1. Priv. heh, ocean vu, pd. Adults, no peta. $10 mo. boards, luxury ihag crpt'g., Four bedrooms wiih ba.lcon· ment and monthly payments ~-~~~~----1 ;$3c25'i.,i::495-4::=;=:;:'";:·::-----I . .'.'.64~5--08~7'."8c,. =-~--~ beaui. rec faci! & POOL il's above & below. Gracious less than rent. Call Fountain V•lley Condominiums . ON TEN ACRES Adults e No pets. · li ving & quiei surrounding Walker & Lee Unfurn. 320 FURNISHE~ l BR. apt, nice 1 I: 2 BR. Furn • Untum. 2077 Olarle Sf. 642-4470 for fam ily with children . . LUXURY 3 Br twnhse, plush yard, $130 1ntl util. 648 \V. Fireplaces I Priv pa.tloa...I '!~~~~~~~;;,;.~ J Nel\J' Corona del Mar High R •alto,.. cpt, drps, patio, dbl gar, nr Gener•I 18th St., CM, 645-1367 Pools Tennis Contnf•i Bkfst.I VILLA CORDOVA School. Firrpl11ce. "'et bar & ~ pool. S~. 962-2326. Nice 1 Br. Duplex 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-26ll bu ilt-in kitchen appl!ancf's. 2'mO Harbor Blvd. al Adams Huntington Be•ch L U X U R 1 0 U S twnhsr , $115. 549--0833 IMilcArtbut nr .CN.at Hwyl e SUPER 2 BR e 835 Ai\of!GOS \VAY 644·2!J91 545·9-191 Open 'Iii 9 PM Nr"'porl Upper Bay, Lea~e. ?.1onth to Month. $170 Cold.,.."tll. Stinker & Co. ~ fl LOVELY LGE 1 BR. quiet. HOME FOR RENT FOR LEASE 3 BR, J BA, I&:.U sq. ., Adults. No pe1s. Garage. • BAYFRONT Gas fleat.Gas Cooking. r-.Janaging Agent ~J .5221 2-car ga r .. Pool, Clubhse, 2452 Elden, 64g...Z768. e BAYVIEW Gas Hot \Vtr, ALL INCL. Huntlnqton Beach N!Cf' 3 llf'd home fre!hly OPTION TO BUY Only $29.i. 557-3097. Announcing the quiet openins;: 2323 Elden Ave., 0.1. pain1ed. '.l blocks kl Ha.Jr-3 BR, 2 BA, drps. shag crptg, Huntincton Be•ch Dan• Point or Bayport Apts ... for 646.0032 crMt Club and recttation 11e\V patnt inside&. ou t. Out· I---::..------NEWL y D C for <"hlldren. S240/mo. Agent 11ide patio w/lots of storage. TO\VNHSE lor rent 2 BR. ** SINGLE, TV, pool. pets Adulta; A~ the slightly 1.ess . E ORATED ~~SZl~00-11. Clt'l!iP 10 schools. SJ6.267T, Wi1:r;her/dryer, bltns. pool ok. Dana. Marina IM Mlll qu iet opening ol Ba yview Charm~ng 1 BR. duplex, nf!w H R h 8.ffi.-7368 66-0466 f11cil. $165 mo. Ill 892·78111. Coast Hwy ' Apls. for famllle~. t:arp, l'l'IPf!I & paint. Lo\•ely ors• anc es I · · · eall cn41 644-5j5.'j garden surroundings. r.1a1ure PROUDLY offered . 3 BR .. 2 2 BED R 0 0 r,1 CON· Huntington 8each * BRAND NE\V, Deluxe l adults only. $130. s.18-ti'!lal SlO:i · ·3 Bedroomi , 2 baths. BA.. '-le. blt-in1. Near TINENTAL TO\VNHOUSE "THE VICTORIA'"'' 11<"l'f'age. ...11 ' FRF:E utilities, t BR bedroom 2 bath, fireplact'. -" Al.SO ... 2 Bedroom on 2 ~~i1.~;~~o~ho~:1~g: Sl80/l\fo. AR<'nl 546-081~. SlJOIS luri io SS.ii Block to bulltin~. OCEAN VIE\\', Lrg. 2 Br w/gar SI55. Adults. ac,....... Sl5CI. Brookhurst & Adams . Newport Beach ~ach. :lll·lOth SI. S36-3m , pool, jacuzzi. Avail. Dec. I cp ts , drp s, b ltns. 7i6-i .l.'Vl A~enl S.l&-72B2 or 536-l3fi6. $325. Ask for .terry or Peg. soo~proofed, fnd yrd w/ 523-3567 aft. 6 pm. •All Facing Pool* _ 644·7270 or eves; 644·7722. paf!o, wtr pd. 636-4120. FREE RENTAL 3 BR Condo, l ~ BA, pools, 3 BR, 2'i ba., 2 car aarage $135. LGE mod 1 Br. Cpts., BEAUT U . 3 B 2, b 667 Viclor ia •·C" C.r.t. SERVICE clubhouse. patio. garage J BR .. 2 ba., 3 car garage drps. reclec, nr ocean. 2111 · nique r, ~ 11., .--;c;;;-;;-:'-;;-"'"--"_:_::::::.__ 1 Shp 3 Bd. 2 Ba, shag cpl. .,...1110rage, IV the beach. REALTOR &48-6966 l-'C:Ch:cic=•::.go:._:5.1$.=.;;;1506;:.::l.:.84:.c7-S..:.:.169::.. frpl, beam cell, bltns. Blk to SPAC 2 &r. 3 Br apt $140 up. hit in!!. f~nced yd, pets & 9&2--0986 art 5 Jim. beach. $285. 673-5548. Hid pool, play yd, cpt/drps, chtldN'n OK. Bargain 1225 -~-------·I Duplexet. Unfurn. 350 L•guna Be•ch 2 BR PENTHOUSE hlt n bltns, patio. Kids ok. 1 \Valke A: Le RI 3 BR. 2 BA, big cul-dt-sac ' s, 2206 College No. 5 642-7035 P m. r e, tn home, all hltns. dlx lltta. General $12.1 r.10. UP: $40 Wk .. Bach. dsh.,..·hr, !pie &. iundecks. 1994 Maple No. 3 ... ,, ""'13. Sli-4-t'i.'l ' ---------Ulil pd. Color TV. ~cent 675-2291. vu-.» $265. Vacant. 536-9111dys;1• '"'''"' :::_:_::::_:: ______ LARGE 2 BR 536-l222 eves. 2 Br unfurn dupl~x for ttnt. Say Beh. 494-2508, 675-4367. LRG 2 story, 2 BR 2 BA dtn, d bltn ·ch'.1',''oKv.•/cJ!ts, 4 BEDROOr-..t wi th nn. addi-Childrtn ok. $160. s.49-<1218 d &. 2 rp~. s. 1 Sl45 ., .. "'"-' ----- ON BEACH! tion, cove~ p11.tio, dbl. 8 1-$165. Mo. 2 BR. 2 BA, "·kdays 11tt 6 p.m. OIOICE Joe. 2 Br, 2 Ba. pvt crp!s, rpa car ri:ar. 158 Tulip, Call 54~2100. · Business •\\' ' ,. I R I 11.ched <Ar. l\foy -•1 or Tov:nhouse, washer, dl')'Et, J)fltio, gar. $200 mo. 1st & $2.85/mo. &14-312.( 644-1040 . Opportunity 200 1nt1'r · '"r 'i ,.nt.ii 5* '" Corona d I M 1 1 538 -fl 5 P"I I & 2 BR apts $125 &. R I h I' I •-0-1 rofrlg. Vacant. ~ ... "'"'~ dy•·, e er as · -~ a " UNF'tm.N 2 BR nr beach & 11~ .. ~ . · · FOR Lease ln Hunlin1ton Harbour: Condo 2 Br, 2\.ii Ba. C.Omple!e bltns. refr lj:, w ag h r/dr;.T. crp1/drp~. frplc, pvt gar & pa tto, pnnl, Sllp a ... All. $320 mo. 675-llM 846-3l'l6. • a p ~u~rr Rc.tlty ea~e 1"' l'.lpf...,n -mo. "'"" .. ,..,,.,.., I---------hop 1 SIAS .,.,JV, SJN1c1ouF. I a r g e , RESTAURANT. Laguna's :--;;---*~6,.7_;.<n~, _>7•--~ Agent ~-9".>2VM0-663l. 53&-l2l2 t \•es. OPEN daily/\'ACant &. r!'ldy NeWPort h1ch 1 p n2,.548.;;003~r mo. bltru;, cpt&.. drps. 548-4014. most popular, u ni q ue Balboa Peninsula 3 BR, 2 BA \\1/encl patio. rOr occupa ncy this 4 BR . .3 2 B ,._ d bl DELUXE 2 BR. Bltns restaurant. Co mp I 11 t e1 y ---------~ck B•y Comp!. crp!'lf. Nr. schools&: BA home. Cozy frple, rrraf * * LGE. I BR f URN. R .... .,ts. rps, lnR, 1ar., RE'fr ia Drp I p . · __ 1 )Q 1 S268 ooo HO~fEY & Charmlnz 2 t, ~ shopping, S230. 84~7694. patto, no ....,11, Annual lse. w/gar. Sl50. 2202 JN. Ckfo&n· gundeC'k. No pets. $210/mo ba le · G••' wLwndrycp!. riv. "'l:i"'PL nt oe. . ' Br h'"· "'ailed In pa t-. nr LOVELY. It:~. 4 Br. 3 Ba. .... I I ti! _, "737 · · ... r m ! ........ -... •M 000 dov.'TI "" -TWO STORY S3TS. 644-0504 or •H• ....... front. lr:N: Ap:.t ___ c &fl 5 _ nc · u · _.,,.,..,, . .,...., _.1.,_ · O'O'S '"""""'• ......,, · w a I e r . U n l 11 61 I 5 , home, to r1'~1JOn1iblt Plt'tY .......--..., ...... Realonomla Bkr ~TOO ""'kdys or anytime Wknds. 2 BR. bltns, trplc, 2 carporl&, • .:.:;"""=..,,--.-~---. · · 213.213-~16. "•/rrr's . $400 mo. Incl. 5 Bedroom, 2'ii ba ths, beaut. Cost• Mesa 6~7520. pool.sized, nr. OCH.n. SlS5. l BR. "'alk-1n closet. ShSJ: NOWS THE TIME FOR Cj)UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5671 • Corona dtl Mar ~1.Nlent'r &: ..,ater. Prtn. ldscpd. Ca.rp@IJ, drapes, nf'w 2 BR. Drp.s. crpt•. prqt. • BRAND NEW • 67]...44.(7. crpt thruout, attrac f'!sidntl c1p.11J~ only. Owner s-10-3862. piilnt. Va('ant. $350. mon1h. ,..,,,. environment, nr So. Cst $71~/mo. Oril fld. 2 BR. Nr. Balboa Paninsule LEADERSHIP R. E . "'"1et, no dogs. eats or 2 SR., 2 BA apt, •:I di.shwr, ** GREAT VIE\\!! 2 BR. Plua. Mr. Wake-fleld AlbM1aon·~ l\Uct . Adult~ n.1 -----..;.;;;.,;.___ 842-4466 motorcycles. M&-7720. huge dO!lt!J, priv flAtlo, frpl, bllnt, sundl!'tks. pool. 968-.\3.t'i ly. 673-8!136 morn• "r ~ves. • NEAR Bay &: Btach.N c~O~F~E~E-. ;;3~B;;R:., -lrpl-,-.-al-l 1 Month Free Rent heated pool, billlArd rm. j11.. $XIO up. 67>3535. fi7>!iXM. LGE mod~m 1 Br. apt, cpl&, H t , t B ...a.. Brs.nd nev.· 3 Br .. 2 Ba. '-'ins, 11 t-~ yd. 1195 mo. 3 BR. 2 Ba. $11'S. ~1309 e11zrl A bbq's. ALL UTJL-Costa Mes• d'""s. bllIIS, dsh~·sbr. 1 child un 1ng on ta"11 S~501mn. • .,.... "A°' "' •n•u !TIES PAIO •·-I -102 '" <1•.r"VOJU 1,t Month only. $50. Steurit)' L•siun1 Beach . · ~ • "' ok. $150/mo. All ulU. pd. 1 Bedroom. baby OK. si&ii Carone del Mar d A I 96" "'11 Bite~ St. (nr. Oranee Coun· 3 Bdrm * 2 Bath .. n7 A·-•do No. 9. r•" N>06 mon1h. 2 Blocks rrom oce11 n, -...... ------'fl. I . ~.... . UPPER DUPLEX. 3 br, 2 ty A1rpon, J1111t W. of Pal· "" • .,.,. vo.....,...,.. &S-1800 ar ?IJ6..l6~4 RUsrrc 3 bedroom It (!en. 2 '* 4 OR. Crp1'1, drps, 2 b1., cpl, dp11, view, ~ blk! IMr'lt• Rd ). M~ s,;T-42'6. Llv!ns l"Ot'IM with eithedtll $145. 2 BR. l'Ai ba. tncl yard, b lh hit ! f I 1 Baths. fe.nced ~·ard. 2 CU' '--h. lff. ~ mo. 4••1949 ----'--''-'"--'-"-ceilln,c I frplc. Separale J rn ma e u I• I e, Adullll, Llclo I.I. 11. • -n~. rep llC f'. ' ui:-,,...,., ""'" VA"'"~"'""<r''-"'··t mo-yl !au"•·· art E-1 0•1'· 1.1•.ii!k to town. Aft. 61$-4930. 1ua1t . S250fmo. 19012 49'$..34511 \on4 .. ._...., .....,.. '"' • .._ .. , •· ""' ,.,. 5-16-8866 s nn-ay Ln. 673-6ST8. Rt11! YoUr house. apt .. store Swinunlne pool .ti children's ::.:::;::.;::..-~8~..,2~~~ B4YTROr.'T w/pler Ii. &lip. l * • 2 BR. Home. Below --'·~·-------i Tht lute1t dnw In Ult ~·e~I p•·---·nd. •-*Deluxe 2 r, B•* blda •• etc. thni a O&Uy Pilot ...,....... .,...,.,. BR. 3 Ba. 'TJI J une. SitV! hufh"·11y. Call I 3 3~ 9 41 0 ; Tum unuHd lt.tnu lnto quick •.. a 0.lly Pilot Oa&ailied Classified ad. HARBOR. GREENS Adults, M ~tJ. All 546--4141. f\I:· Walk-er R~a.Uy fi'75.S200. 11\tr 5 c1U 6~~. cash, clll 6CJ..6G'7I Ad. Sf~ r We'll help )-OU tt:U ! &J2..5671 L. LARGE 3 BR.. 2 BA., gat11.ge. St'Cludl!d riorrh, quiet, deadcnd .st. Chlldttn, ptls ~ns1dforrd. $175. 2 BR. also $150. 7{ill f;IJ\s, Apl. A. Mi-7547 or sl7~'l2. SINGLE STO~ Olwc 21BR. 2 BA, P..·1 pe t & r.ncl gu., $175. 817 Gene\•a 536-86,;9. ' • CHEZ ORO APTS. e 8234 A!lani.. 1·2·3 BR'1, \Vasherfdryl':r, !)36....0"6 Pool. Private clo™ i;Ar. 2 BR. Lni1: Prlv pallo. Bltn~. crpta, rlrPfl. $1.'lO/mn. No pets. 1503 A l 1.bama . ~715- DAILY PILOT lnr acHon• • • • ' I • • • 2 k 3 BR'1. $145 UP. Patio, pool, children. MOR,4. KAI Apts, 18881 Mora Kai Ln., ~~ blk E.oet Beach. 9S-8994. WALK TO BEACH! Lovely 1, 2 &. 3 BR's, Cpls, drps, blt11$, d\11hr. 847-3%7. - $©\\~lA-LGt.trss The Punle with tho Built-In Chuckle O Reatronge ltl!ers of tht-i lour acrombltd word1 b• low to form four simple words. 11 I u I~ I At I I , WARLB ·f"· I j 1' t I k °j' I f .__ I l ' I VANIE I ~'e~~=--- 1 11 j I lover-boy · ,~k11 ;,, won't . . . . soy how I ki11, but our Wsst en the ranch they use my lips I BIG H 0 B lforo -iron:• II-IS I I If I I I' 0 C:ol!'IOltt• the c!wc~J, QltOted by lrlU11g 111 tk1 fflin 1ng woid -you 3t~lop fro'" sttp No. 3 btlow. · 8 '"" NUMl!l!o I' I~ I' I' I' I' I' I' I lETTtRS IN SQUARES . _. . • ~-. • • . • , SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 4~ ·----~--~·~ Announctment& I~ Leg•I Notices 510 °' GER.\ AN Woman will do expe houMlc:leanlna. 4 bn. min. 3 &n hr. 19:2-36<1 or ,,,_., ,3. Accountants, Attractive S300 f.1L\/VA Loan Pkgr $100 Put¢h. Agt-HydraW.lc $630 &cretarlcs to $375 Asst. Bookket>pc!'r $5" PIT Sec'y.Laguna $3 hr ScrHnlng for L.A. Insurance Firm Moving To Newport Soon. , • Secretary -.. .. , Accounting Oerk Rating Clerk Keytape Operator lo S590 • to 152> to S475 •• to $41' to $lOO , {Swin'g Shl11) NEWPORT Personnel Agency 133 Dovor Dr., N.8. ~ A Better Temporary Position URGENTLY NEEDED Receptionist Typists Secretaries Repro Typists Hostesses Jntervlewing Houn 9am·llam & lpm-4pm \\'ork "'1\en & where you want! Interim Personnel Service 778 W. 20th , C.M. 642-7523 546-2592 ACT NOW Fu!J or Ptrtime ·, Casting all types for tndepen. dent films & commerela11. Also, des~alcly need ex· I-• ecuti11e type men & beauty contest type girls. Call Slln- ford Enterpri5es, (2131 46-1-3171. A~'T STOCK CLERK New local co. will train a n1a1ure gal for this spoc Room to move up to $2.35 hr Call ?-.lelody ..•... 540-9010 ,; Cal.Pacific Agency 2750 Harbor Blvd., C.~t. ATTRACTIVE ycung girls 1.8 yrs to 80 for direct selling. Fantastic mon~. sell an idea, earn tangibll! n1oney. 645-3997 betwn 9 & llam & be~·n 3 & Spm Fri. thru • Fri. ALAR.i\[ and/or intercom • sel'lliCe & installation. 642-3330 Payroll Clork to $600 Book .... inJI Backrn>wld, PayroU On Compu ter. I ' j I ' ' • ,. ... . ' . . .. • J ' Monday, NMmbtf 15, 1971 :_~ILOT 1: 1· [ ........ . :· -][IIJ[ .___ _ ...... _, .... __,J[Il)[ L-_ ...... _, ..... __,J[Il) I II It ~I _ ....... _ .... ~1[fi)~1t1 I 1: • ..., ' 1 l[IJJ,l.__r _ ...... _,···__,1[11] I • • . • . : : ·~ • ' ; . . . ,, - Christmas At Robinson's Newport • , J, EARN EXTRA MONEY FOR CHRISTMAS IN HAPPY EXCITING SURROUNDINGS Use Your Immediate Discount For Christmas Shopping Fun & P /Time Day Or Evening Schedules SALES ANO GIFTWRAP No Sunday Sales Applications Now Being Taken App~ In Person 10 AM·5 PM 2 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH ,lquol Oppor. Empl..,., l t, Y, FM P•kl to $600 Applicant Pey1 Fae Receptionist $433 Acctng Clerk IA/Rl to $500 Jr. Sec,...t1ry to $475 Modica! Recept. to $450 Gen'I Office io $425 Inventory Contr ol $450 Free/Fee PosllK RUTH RYAN AGENCY 1'193 · Ne11.'J)On. c;-.t i~ 17'931 BeaC'h, HB !Hi-9671 BOOKKEEPER: For a small growltlg service co . In the local are.a. Interesting i\\'<lrk. Computer handles !he routine. Handle the bosses personal work from your 011.•n private office. 01Uerent benefits. $600. Call Heier. Hayes, ~ Coastal Agency 1190 11arbor Bl at Adams BOYS 10.14 to deliver papers in lhe San Oemente, San Juan Cap!s. trano and Capl!ltruo Beach 11.rea. DAILY PILOT 492-4420 BEELINE Fashions needs women, full or p/time work. \\'e train, car fK"C. $5().$80 v.it. 636-08-42 , j39-f>.13.3. BEAUTY OPERATOR assis- tant, fully licensed. Comact Ken T~plelon's Ha.Jr Styles., 1701 \Vestclill Dr. N. B. 612.Qkif BEAUTY operator. Follow· ing, Guaranteed or com· mission. Also l manager. 830-1010. CAFETERIA v.'arkers fUlJ & pan time Ne\\'POrt Beach J\fajor Company benefits 833-1611 Ex 1197 Behl'een S. ·11 am or 1-5 pm. Holp W•ntocl, M & F 710 ESCROW SECRETARY Beaut local otti¢e needs tharp gal "'ho can really handle th~ pom:too. Lota ol public oontact. Great tn._ JIO.)'& fee •••••• to $7SO. Other free & fee: jobs ava.11. Call Carol . • • • • • • • 540-9010 Cal·Paclfic Agency 21"';:(1 Harbor Blvd,_ C.llt ESCROW OFFICER Betll'r hWTY on thi• one! Pn:stige position, plush of· !ice. terrific opportunity for the expetienc-ed gal v.'ho wants this great PR spot. Fee paid •••••• start kl $900. Other tree It fee jobs avail. Call Carol • . . • . . • • M0-9010 Cal-Pacific Agency 2750 Hatb()r Blvd., C.?.t. EXP ER. Sales/Alteration Lady, N.B. Call 54S-:?253 ·- IRVINE PERSONNEL SER.YlCES•AC.ENCY Free &. rec POll:ttlons Holp Wontod, M & F 710 NURSES. .U •hltts. Private Duly. RN, LVN, Pn.ctical. flet·a neceu. Le 1eoul le Nune1 Regl1try, :t:il llotpltal Rd, N.B. Can 642--99S5 any. hr. Inttrw' 9A·5P, ?.1/F. Hol' WintM; lifl, 710 >iolp W•nloel, M & F 710 RETAIL SALES LADY F°' °'!•llty llokory Apply Jn Person To: Mr. Anderson UNIQUE btaury s.aJon In Cd.\f t'am mart by rurtnc 1pt.ce. 644-7321; IJa..t.>75 BaldWln ACl'OIOftlc ~· 19'12 Garrud, has Spinet. run keytmrd. I ereo Changer, air $375 e st).-0906 t \11 pen1 ton rpeakert, evea. .ut/nt stttto rad i o CANTEU.0 AC(:Ofd!Ort, lJJ WOMAN 10 catt for poUo w/FET + tape deck. atlll bau, xlnt oond. SlOO. lady. No &rnokinc, life brand tie\\', l'.'U I e I t • MS-3843 • h&kpng • .Pilon. thru Fri. 1 ww:l.aimcd on layaway. Sold BARGAIN Pfetchntr violin, &m·3:30 pm. $280 mo, HB for $3.20, pay. oU balance o( a1anda.rd slu, xlt'll bo'A·~ am.. 96l-499'? aft 10 am. $115 <>r lake over 11ma1l Xlnt cone!. 614-1082 644-2522 SNACK SHOI! WIVES. permanent part lime payments. Collection Dept. GUITAR, electric, holknv BAK.ERV po,sltkm at O.C. Ract'Way U4/~1. body. Xlnt cone!. Amp lnel. Secret•ry to $475 CONVA1.ESCENJ' 3444 E . Coast Hwy. food conce!Sion. 838-1103 Beauty Shop Equipment $50. 6'1>0058 lifter 6 pnl. 1 Girt OUict>-SH lIOS'PITAL ~..;C;o~•-;;,;;;.;do;,,I ~Mo;•;... .. Jib<iiifoit"eiiinooiiini. iiiiiiiiiiiiii (l) T\VO ~tlon Florentine Offic• furnitut•I OFFICE MANAGER Girl Frid•y to $60I ~ dreulng bar w/2 lge mlr-Equip. 124 SH, Lite Bookkeepl~ To beoomr pert ot the l1f'\V Sec:retery $3 Hr. rors 38x48 w Im at chin & _..;....;... _____ ""' Gen'I Ofc Anaheim nianagement team at HY· Ptnme. HCIUtll 1-SPM. ?\lust I -II"-J desk. 2 Rnd based hydraulic 6 P.1ETAL desks $80 ea. 6 to $600 LOND CONVAt,.ESCE'NT Type 75 + w,p.m. SH ~ , • . V chalrs, 2 a1r condiUone<.1 Swivel chairs· $41ca.5 :side Type 60, Bookkeeping Helpful HOSPrfAL tn \Vestminster. quired. Fee Reimbursed. dryers & chairs, one chairs $21 ea., conferenct Surety Bond (Irk Ptfusl know Ptledl.cat & ?ifed· Free/Fee Positions Be:le~ere shanipoo bowl lable .$67. • oonlerencc $400+ care, Some b:lokkeeplng, NIGUEL PERSONNEL Antiques · IOO with ferrlng .t: chair, 2 chain1 $<11 ca, CA LL Math Aptitude-Type typtng, &:.general offi~ •c· AGENCY zeparaten. $480. Beauty :.i5-8427. File Clerk $3l5 tivilles. Considerable public 27635 Forbes Rd RARE ¥ark Twaln books. supplies extra. CM 919--0726.1 c970=~18=,cf,-E=-.-.rc-.~,.,,-.. -w,..ri"tu-. Typist $400 contact. both by. phone &: in Laguna Niguel American Artist't editions. FIREPLAC Diotaplio,,., T,,,. 60+ ti.. 0~ 1, ,..,.,., 8>1 ·14n °' 49>G417 ~~ms, pictureo. [ WOOD Used ' "t::.:"· 826 F I c BookkHpe• Heavy Pavroll NIGUEL PERSONNEL AGENCY • ~ E. l7th (at Iivine) 0 1 642-1470 1a1on, betwn 11am &. 5pm Salesman P l•nos/Organs To The:· AN OHJO OIL co. <>Hen: op. Beautiful Leaded Grand Opening ponunity for high income Gl•ss H•nging L•mp Special lOO/e OFF ORGAN SALE PLUS regular ca.sh &. vaca· $200. * 675-7973 Regular Price Conn Organ Annual Fall ... Clearance, Save up to S10b0 1763.l Forbes Rd Laguna Nicwel 131.14n o• 495-0417 "NSU""'CE HY-LOND ,... ,......,~ Agency Girl. CONY ALEsCEN'J' Comm~.rcial l ine:l'i. HOSPITAL Underwriting Ir: Rating ex-;t.1(1 Hospital Cr., \Vestmilllit~r pe:r. nt.'C. Salary open Health & retirement plan. FEi\lALE Piano p I a y ~ r : Peacock 1nsurance Inc. Calli~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! f'tl/Sat nites only. Call J\trs. Bradley, 54 9-30 51, OPENING for F/tlme Con- nltes, bartender, &16-1428. 4M-1087. fldent retail clerk •1/exper FOOD Service Mgr: Sala11' l need a profess iona l in grocery, froien food or + pereentage. Call 838-1103 mechanic. '-fust have ref s, dell purchasing. See Harold be.fore noon. Xlnt pay. Tom Sharp Unlc;in in person, Hi-Time Gourmet FRY Cook, exper. Full or Oil. 673-33al, 2201 E. Cst r~ood!I &: Spirits. 495 E. 17th I · A Hv.y, Cd'.\f. SI., Costa ~fl?!!&. p n me. ppty in person, I ~.:c::.:....::.:.c::.. _____ , 1 •----,---,--- 512 \\'. l!'>th St., Costa '.\lesa. INVEST IN Parts Dept. Man Gel Coater YouR FUTURE E.'"'tl1~u~L ..... PERSONNEL AGENCY Exp'd only !or fiberglass po\\'et boat manufactunr, permanent I benefits. Apply in penion. Skipjack Boats, 1763 Placentia. Co!;ta Mesa. GENERAL 0FF1CE: This great co. f urnishe s transportation to & from their ollice. C4n you im- agine eating lunch all m<>nlh for $5. If you have good <>f· fice skills hurry in. From $-112. BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Men or Women Lease A Yellow Taxi Cab ean for Appt 546-1311 Ask for Herman 27635 Forbe$ Rd Lagu:.. Niguel 131.14n ... 49>G417 P-GEE INDUSTRIES Needs Trainees $508-~50 Po• Mo. lion bonuses, abwlclanl ANTIQUE sewing machine Mention this ad! fringe benefits to mature circa l8'15. Make offer'. N. OF ADA~ ON BEACJ-1 ma.n in beach area. Regard-6424818, 534-0302. Jfl.Jl\'TINGTON BEAOf lq s of e'!teper., air mail A.F. ANTIQUE sewing machine, CALL 545-8075 Read.. PreJ., Ameri can circa 1875. Make <>tier. ;;;c.;;;,,-~AJ~"~r;,•:,!;pm:!!.....,,= Lubncants Co.. 'Box 696 642-4818 ~ PAINT BRUSHES -PURE Dayt<>n, Ohio 45401. ' ' ' BRJSTI.E ANO AL S 0 SALESCONSTRUCTION Appliences 802 NYLON -RANGING JN SIZES FROM 2" to 6" \\.ell knov.:11 nati<>nal co. hu USED Appliance• & TV'a. DROP CL 0 T H S , LAD· loca1 te~tory open for &ales \Ve guar & de I i v e r, DERs. ETC .. BRAND NEW I~ \\'Ith some rerord Of Dunlap'!!, 1815 Ne\\'POrt Bl., ***BARGAIN*** success. Co. car & expense C.M. 548-7780. Call Anytime _ 542-3120 acrount + comm Salary[~===~::_ ___ _ $8500. • KENMORE Gas stove, cop. *AUCTION* Call Bob Wilson, 54(Mi(l55 pertone. Clean $60. Coastal Ag....,.., ~7 rine Furniturt> "''"'.r & Applian~ 2790 lfarbor BJ at Adams • MAYTAG man·wuhen/ Auctions Friday, 7:00 p.ni. SALES Oerks for Christmas dry.en/mlch S@'ts. Del·90 day Windy's Auction Barn season. Ideal for guar. 531-8637; 839-1778. housewives. Hlckory Fann:s GAS s~. stain1eu steel ~ NC'\\lJOl't, CM 646-8686 ot Ohio, We&tclill Plaza, top, grill Ir: deep we.II, 4 Behind Tony's Bldg r.tat'I N.B. burners. 135. 675-8374. CARPET SALESMAN-PAlNT DEPI'. C•meres & f'ACT'ORY Ot.m..ET Salary dr-pendent on e)(Jl. Equipment IOI SAVE $ $ $ Xln 't benclils &: working Attention Apt Owners con d . Ker m R i rn a KODAK inlilamatic movie Nyion Shags l l.00 R<t yd & up Hardware, 2666 Harbor camera zoom icl'll!e, like Free esr. Ph 8JS-02jl Blvd, C.M. ne\v ~·~ price 673--0448, C 5027.C fWEd. F<ll inger, ES.A.,., 61>1723. orner o nger & uc 1 SANTA Claus ~d in COME to our yarn.age paJ1y on selected console Iloor demos. Huge discounts on au models. COAST MUSIC NF.\VPORT & HARBOR Co6ta Mesa * 642·2851 WOULD YOU BELIEVE FREE ORGAN LESSONS as long at )"OU like! No tte- lsirati<ln. No obllgation. Just Come. ;.1ondays 7:jo pm COAST MUSIC &i2-28jl LO\VREY Pianos & Organs; Yan1aha Piano & Organs; It Siein\\'ay Pianos. Best buys in ne11,• & used. Schmid! l\'Iusic Co., Est. 1914, 1907 N. ?.fain, San!a. Ana. \\'ANTED * SHOPSi\tlnl \Vith Amplifier S.i99 • • • 496-5880 Sporting Good1 130 'l.REER Coll Joa" Brow,. SJ0.60'5 Cctastal Agency JR. SEC'Y Ptrime. Good typing, 11 t e SH, dictapnone. 3 Days per Y.'ffk. $2.fiO per hr. Young men. mechanical ex- per, helpfUJ but not req'd. !<.fust be 19 or over. Able kl start work immed iately, if accepted. For info on job placemen!!, call Tuesday 9am·lpm only. Harbor Shopping Center, 121) BUSHNELL 21mm ~wide at Coral Reef motel, Exe!C. hn of work. 546-2439 betv.·n angle' F4.5 au~~ lens fo\" Nlk rm. 2645 lfarbor Rlvd. Q.t. SCHWINN Continental 10 s~. bicycl<', I mo. old $85. Colt clubs Spaulding Golden Ram, 2 thru 9 irons. 1, 3 & 4 1\'00ds, bag incl. S 9 O • &15-0058 aft 6 pm. ~NING 21!lo n.-Bl. •t Adam, for GENERAL SALEC:MAN LIABILITY RATER • • If you are looking for tho SLAVICKS right co. we have the <>pen- JEWELERS ings. Great h!am fur the gal # 18 Fashion Island v.•ith exp ..•••.•• start $450. Nt'WJ)Ort Beach Call Anita . . . . • • . • 540.-9010 Our cmpl<>yee benefits in· Cal·Pacific Agency elude: profit sharing, stock 1750 Harbor Blvd., C.i\t. <>ption, medical hospitaJiza. rion instrra1K't', and oth<>rs. GENERAL OFFICE: We FOR APPOINTMENT neai one more Calif. Golden CALL Girl. Could be you! LocaJ Mr. i\1unsen-&14-l380 co., nice hos!;, lite typing. ~~!!"""':~!!!!!!!!~~!! I Public contact. AU that 0..ERK Typist, EI e c . jazz! Start $32-4. · = A Call Helen Hoyes, 5-W-6055 typcwnter, ..., v.•.p.m. C· curate figure typing, JO key Coo.slal Agency adding ma.ch. Good phone 2790 Harbor .Bl. at Adams pe~na1ity. Apply 174 1 GIRL Friday, alert, lite typ- Placentia A\.'e., C.l'tl, ing, stock room exp hetpful COCKTAIL WAITRESSES but not~. Interview by appt. 645-4370. GIRL Friday Utime needed for expanding design firm. Gd math background necess. Call &1~1210. Fdr' Appt. Contact , Carol Smith Personnet Dept. AVCO FINANCIAL SERVICES 620 NeY.'J)On Center Dr. Newport Beach 6#-5800 Equal Oppor. EmplO)'C!r KATHY ALL'S Creations Offer Exciting work for attractive intelligent people at all lev- els, Mr. Joyce 494-7184 776-8551 PLEASANT part time posl- tion. Secynite bkkpg. CaD 645--0621 beht;een 9 .t: 12 kw appt. PRESSMAN Immediate <ipeni ng for can· didatf! "'ith at least 1 }"nn experience: y,·ifh 1250 l>1ulli· lith. Starting salary . $500. For Appl. Contacl Carol Smith Personnel Department AVCO FINANCIAL SERVICES 620 Ne\'\'POfi Center Dr. N.B. 644-5800 EquaJ Oppor. Employer 3 & 5. • on t70. LI · Thurs. ll/18. 10am-5pm, Search Light Operaklr Furniture 810 7pm-9pm. Bargains ga.k>re! v.·anted at the Firehouse, Crissy & Velvet doll clothes. 111 E. 17th St., C.h-t. 8' HERCULON sofa & B <>I A card, l\faster Charge Appear in penon. love.seat, round game set. acccptM. Seamstress $520 tufted crushed velvet living "1280"".""'B"UY=·s"'J'""°"P'"o.-,,W'"°«1°'d"i-,g Able to cut & sew tumlture ~~;~:i~ ~~ coUre r ing. set, (in!e'!'lockingJ, upholstery. Must be eicper. · "' h 1te/g<>ld,. Engagement Cal-Fair Employment Agen-SCOTCHGUARD 8' sofa & ' ring is tiffany s1yle with 1~ cy, 90.1 No. Euclid, Suite A, matching loveseat. Velvet carat diamond. Call S46-5710 Anaheim. living rm 11et incl. tablt"S, alt 6 p.n1. \\'kdays/all day (714) 956-1000 lamps, e-tc. \Viii separate, ~1kends. Private Party. SECRETARY-Gen'! 0 ff ice like ncv.•. &l:>-l70l. CARPE:T'ING, good cond. 40 v.wk, typing, S/H. 1.1fg. Co. KfNG &i~ mattress & spring yds, \\•hile shag. JOO 'i'ds ln \Vestmlnslt."'1". Ca 11 m. Upright Kimba.11 Pian rust hi-lo Sl.50 per yd or 893-8529 for an appt. $150. Cali af{ 6 pm 8-174176 best offer. Pad also avail. SECRETARY PLUSJ1 Velvet Sofa & 50c per yd. 833--0367 alt 4 Long standing Orange Co. Love!lCal, also blk naug. set. v.·kdys, anytime Sat/Sun. ~loprnent firm w/offices Both le!ls than 2 mo's old. POOL TABLES Warehouse in Newport Bea.ch desires Ews. 557--0215. Sa.le. Freight damaged $49 highly (lualified secn!tary. * 5 PIECE WALNUT * tu $19!1, New slate factory Thts permanent position tt-Dining Room Set crated, S195 to $ 3 9 5 • LLOYDS J\'URSERY PRO~ONAL p h o n e quires the higbegt \ddlls & SlOO 968-3991 639-8623, 5~· JOB 0 I'~ D Po proficiency "''/a c:ornmensu-TEAC T ~-k " l'l Legal Secretary Call Lorraine \VESTCLIFF PERSONNEL AGENCY 2043 \Vestcliff Dr., N.B. &1~mo P~'INGS so owl'Or -an.a int, San rat Wary lnwranee other MOVING, house full ol ape U<:\; • ,,a Nursery ck!llvery man Cle~nte, Capistrano atta. fri~ ~fits & fu~ ad· furniture & household items. P a n o so n I c stett!O w/ Nursery Saleosman v.•ith at \Vork in your own home. vallC'l!'ment. Please send full All in xlnt cona. 546-i527. :'lpeakers Ir: 6 band radio, least 1 Year exp. Best deal in area. Phone Nlkkomal 1.4: camer a . 8~1~-•~· 9 00 quatitlcaOons. history & ref· ••WILL m<>ve anything you 6-,-3=. 2 H \ND\"1AN f odd job Land!!Ca""" ins1~•1-wilh at ~ ...,.. ""''"·een : a.m. .,.. ·"' 1 1 1• or s. ,..... .., ... and erences. All our people att buy in this ('()lumn &. more. ~7"~"'""-cc-,---.~~~ least 1 year exp o.~"°'~noo~"~·==-=~-~DIA'lONO · 1) • K Over 30. Appear in perM'.ln 1; aware o[ !his ad. Plea!;(' 536-1648. " rings 4 ~ · Apply In Pe~n 2: 3<l·5P:\t, ?.fon thni Fri. JOLLY OX RESTAURANT 25192 Cabot Rd. Laguna Hills at Flt-ehouse, 177 E. 17111 Sprinkler ;\fan with at ltast l PROGRA.\1.MER fBuslne11s ,\Tile top, o . Box 2218. Ana·•,~,~,D~E~--·~~~,~,.k---,-,,-tine qua!; l.l) .03 K ('a, R1'9,'. ST C ta M year exp in residential Appl ications). 2 yrs. college ... _1 "~'if' .....,...1 ,..a .... , ... s, 1 e new. a -;ippr $Ai5(1, sell s 3 o o . · .. os es.a. '"' m, V<U • "~ • •oo;,. D'-'-'''d maple c"d sprinklers. or C!qulv. s pec iali ied ~., ... u.: 836-6936. HARBOR MASTER Call tor appt. 64&-7441 training, 3 to 5 yrs. related SERVICE Sta. Sa 1 es man tables. $15 ea, 64~1TI. 730 Boat Slips experience strong in mfg w/lube exper. Time + lime . Fi-fring, ... _ _..~._/·-•a~ f.1AOIII"o,Sf • 4 yrs job shop & liJ:, Clean k neat, group BABY trtb & mattttos, baby '"" ut:n"'""' ,.... . ., 1 ~ A I systems; COBOL, RPG, "''OOd cradle S50 Hun-open. So. California major or pro~,,,Y" exper. PPY BAL . Se nd r~sumt! il'll!l, pd vac. Apply Boyd's ' · marina. Send complete re· In pE'neln. lnca Plastics, Arco, 490 E. 17th, cl'CMll!l rd. tingkln Harbour, 841)..J173.. 32972 Calle Perfecto. San w/salary his 1 <> r Y 10 I · A CM TWIN ~ •~ 8"-"' 1~• SERVISOIT auto \Va!cr con· ditioner, xlnt cond. $190. ~. YAOfr CLUB ~fEMBER­ SHIP $1150. Cincld's transfer SKI Clothing, Ladies size 12 panrs, parkas .t: etc. La~ Flo boots size 9, all priced to 11cll. 6T:>-2692 atfer 6 Pi\! Store, Restaurant, Ba. NCR Ca.sh P..egi">ter, to1als, Good cooo SJj(), * • 962-5959 * • TV, Redio, HiFi, Stereo 11 836 GARRARD (_'() n1 po n e n I system. uncl aimed Jayav.'8ys 100 v•alt$, am/lm !Herro, 8 track, 4·\Vay air suspension .,pkr. systl'lll, comp! Garrard turntable i;old SC!parately for $309.gj pay <>If small bal. t:Jf $159.97 or pymts <>I $3.41. U.S.A. Stereo Equip. \\"arelKH.L!e, 179 E. 17th Sf., C.~l s.1;;..i1~2. JO to 10 daily. Af~L 1972 ZENITHS on sale now at Orange County's largest ?.enilh Oeler. 19" Chroma('()lor i\!odct C·J030. ~39:i .. Free rnlor antenna in. stalled \1'/n!J cons o I c purchases. r-.'o clo\vn re. quired O.A.C. Ask about cash &: carry prices. ABC C<>lor TV, 9021 Allanla, Hunting1on Beach, 968-3329. fLa Paz iurnoff S.D. F'N'Y' CONSTRUCTION Firm v.•ants sharp gal to handle Interesting V..'<lrk in plea."lalll, local office. Type 60 v.'J)m , prev. clerical exp. Age 21-30. Salary $4Z'l. mo. Cail P.1r. Timmons, 64;)-1125. .!!Ume to Oassified ad no. Classified Ad No. 287, Daily rvine ve., ·' · .,.,... ..-. JU.I. ·~uton 266, Dally Pilot. P. O. Box Ju.an Cap!rtrano. No phone Pilot, P.O. Box tSGO, Costa SERVICE Station Sales, full "!g, $15. Crib, no mattress l:i60. Costa '.\1esa., Calif. -'-''-"~·_,P~''~'~"-·~=~---1 ~fcsa, Calif. 9a:l26. Equal time. ~IW!I ~ neat Ir: de· $5. 644-8905 Sun on. !!2626. MANAGER Opportunity Employt>r. pendable. Apply XJ90 New-Garage Sale 812 !~e';. $3SO savtngs, 614~40 !~-'-"' __ ''-~-'"--~''' HOTPOJNT refrig, very good -. COOK/Housekeeper. 2 adults, 51~ day v•eek. Top !i.1.lary. Reis. 67B-78i7 DISTRIBUTE Health & Ecology line', pt/hill time!. Bob Gr Bill 646-i'O:Ai EXECUTIVE Personnel Agency Call Betty Bruce Secretary i\larketing exp.?r. For nat'I 511]rs manager. E."<JX't. 9.'/ comumer produt1s. Top skills. Secretary l Girt Office fc:rr Architect SH .I: Typing, Architectural ex.per. not nectt.$. Junior Secretary P/time, 3 fUII day, a 11."t"Ck. SH .t: typing. Accounting Clerk Famill11r v.1th <'11 phnsc~ <>f bookkttp!ng, Job ordPr rot! accout'll.ing, Manufacturlng cxperient'('' I G irl Friday Ute Bookketpin;1t. ~ntOMI acc'y, SH gd but not ~. e Also Prof ... ssional & Technical Positions Available • , • 410 W. Coast H wy., NB Sult• H 645-2716 EXPER, m.aturt OOu.M':kt!'l!p- cr, xlnt fringe bl-nfts. Bev· Olly Manor c.nv11io.o, c.p- hrtr&no Bch, '96.S!!6. • • HELP? I have a new for thr San Juan Capisll'ano Psychiatric Technician port Blvd., C. 1.f. ----· husinr.ss in !O\\'ll & r need Chamber .of Commcrt"e. P1'ot Shift &: Wknd~ fltime SERVICE Sta. AUendR.111, :l Family Garag" Sale your help. If a ground floor Good zralmng ground for ' . ' exper prefd. Top pay. Full l!Z22 Sunshir1e Drivl'!', lfun- (lpportunity offered by e young exec or a retired nro-adult retarded. Call for 1""' & p/time avail. Apply, Ungton Beach. Sat/Sun. loll I .d . 1.,,.,0 __ , man. • To~. '·'I teJView. {213) 4$1721. .11 11C\V co. \\' ne1v l C'a!I, possl· ~· """ N'oN \..<LI Shell. 17th Ir: ln ine, N.B. l\.fngnolla/Vt age). hi• ,,m,·-g · I 831·1477, After 6 P?i1 Call REIJEF Cook. l'X""'r. ttq"d. " " 5 tn exce5s o "~ SERVICE Stali<ln Attendant SI'EREO Tape rec $40. TV 130 000 Or mo ... ~ ~ 1·.,_ 830·~. Baptist Convalescent lfosp, • ,..... ~· •r CdM area. Full time-top Ste:reo Cons. $40. Baby IC'resrs -·L_,, ,.,,,_,, m•• '• f 'N wa"t~ fo• fl 0 0 r f.61 Center St, C.M. 548-5585. · .,-...-,,-·~ "-· n" "'-' pay-Profit sharing. Phone: c l ot he s, furn, J.tore. And I v.wld likt> to meet maintenance & <>!her duties. RN or LVN for 3 to 11 shift. for appt. 673-123.\. _!l.J&.8_~"'-·------­ you? For peM;Onal intl't\'iew Apply in person. Huntington Glen !laven <>f Newport, call 83.1-9130. Beach Convalescent llosp, 64&-77&1. Equal Opportunity SERVICE estab. Fu 11 er ITEr.'fS from 6 familH!t1· HOME J881 I Fiorida. H.B. Employer. Brush Custotnf'ra. C.M. Up Reas. ~. Start. Wed. REGISTRARS IG $160 wkly to l'ilnl. lO am. 8402 Friesland Dr., J101J!l!!'\1.;ve:-& college stu· lofANICURIST for busy sbop, RN'S 962--0-116. HB, den1s. Pll'."a.'!<lnt niornlng ConteASa Jfair Fa!hions. \\'Ork. starling salary $2.00 t * Gi:"-,..33.)8 • * SERVICE Sia . Salesman, QUEEN Ann buf.fe!I, DIR hr. plus bonu.c:. Rapit'I arl. p/time, eve!'l k '~lmd!!, ex· drop 1,ear. 6 chrs, king ~· vanccnient. t:xp unneces· MARRIED MEN per. Nl'at in appttar. Apply 490 \\alnut Pl. off lrv1nc, sary, ,1·JJJ n·ain. Coll 10 A:'>f Tl Yf"5 & up l'O seiviee our S TS 2.100. Nf'1.,..ort Blvd, C.)t. =C='='·~-~~~--- 10 J2 Noon . 5 11.33z.». f'qu lpmrnt & learn othe'r ALL HIF SE\\'lNG "* * Young girl or SHAG ca.rpl't Clearout, All HOSTESSES & v.·a~ v.'<lrk. Could mean doubling (\\"Oman} "'' kno\vledge of 5izc!I & oolon. lnsl a.vail. Previm.J:'I Income. Earn\.... Founta1"n Valley F b . A 11 SU "" -101 li\'E: entertainment p,, dan-·-o itev."ing. a n c e y, n <1r eves, .,..........; · opportunity $170 \~'k. Call clng for l8 and O\'l'r. Call 646-4573. FOUR Families, Clolhes, lor personal inlervi ~w .. ._,,., or ap0ly a I _, 8 • 10 AM ..... 238.1 Community Hospital SHEET METAL f""'· •m. •PP"l. bool<!, etc. Ptlpc'ye's, 19th & Placentia , Division of c.onsolldat~ MECH. 223 E. 16th St. C.?11. 0.1. Foods. 17100 EucUd et Werner C1au A ~leclJ'Onic G!U'agt Sale twin bike, etc. llOUSEKEEPER-Cook. wtn 1,=1~0..-R-". ,.-1.,-. -,.,-,----.-. ~eo-.·~---m'="'=·l:.::2C.11'-=~~ chas.<ris experience. 3117 Yukon Ave .. Costa Meu consider couple \\'fhu3band training, bonUM"s nex h0\11'1.'" Space-Tele Industries off Paula.rlno. SAt/Sunft.fon ~mployed <>isewhcre. CaN' &1&-0!W!J Ltt. *sAL~'ElA.NSAL,VEO~..,! 1922 Place"ntia.. Costa MeM Miscellaneous 111 for 7 yr old boy. Top livint: r..<>-' • ... ~,~ STENOGRAPifER . Dlwr-ronds. illus! be legal rf!!ll· NCR OPR .,75 Nterlcd for re~raJ ttal N · 11~ o c ,,_r_C ___ D ____ S_I _ rit:nt k be &l't'll. """nd:'I. t~ ~ late brokel'llgr, t~ comple!f 18 ""' exper, · · '1""' u1tm rapery • e Vrry ~qnt s.mall N.tr.co ...... , -1,11 .... stalf •,..Hunt· att'a. Salary ~l)"n. St':nd Drapery \\'Ork.room c!Oi'llng Rf'f '11 ......,.d. St.ate gkill11 & "" "'"' .. ,. ,. _,, ....... ro Cl•••of'··• Ad No ~' , f I '"• \\'/good benctus. fnf{ton lk>ach. Guarani~ ·~·<'"""' . ,.,.., "°" ' · out~ Yu.~ o n1att>rlll!! ~I :-:11lar,.· l'XJX'Clf'ld. P.O. Ro'l NEWPORT trlllnlnri:. formal l"lait:'lroom '·IR, Dally Pilot, P. O. Bo:c, '~ pril'.'t. Fabrit'~ fro1n 7:X: 39.l Corona drl '.\1nr, Ca. PERSONNEL and on-the·job traini~. 1561), COB! i\ftl'ia, Ca m26. yd. Bring mta~urenien1s &: gm;. AGENCY TITLE EXAMINE-R ~"'· 38:>.1 mreh St .. N.R. J1SKPRS Emplyr pays tao . 3!H8 Campus Dr., N.B. \Ve att 'll'llllng lo spjlnrl 1'1e ToP firm has immed openhlg11 ~16--1431. Adj to O.C. A1rp. I. C~P Allen Byland A~n-Non1t V..',. }JoUman M().0635 money, time and effort to for the rigllt per"'!'on. Plush BALBOA Bay Club ~ Full cy 1(16..8 E. 161h, S.A. m,.ke proft!Qonali of our ortict. Tc>rrific boM will fam ily m"mbership lncld11 !>IT--0395. NCR BOOKKEEPER tl'tafl end tttllln them by J>&Y lfe •••••••• irtU1 $7l\O. lrvlne Tennis, g.ve ;G.'iO. HOUSEKEf;PING & Maid We hove the spot with top high QQmmb&k:lns., I to JO Other frtt I f~ jobs avail. \Vrile, Cl8!15ilied ad No. 261 iit'rvlce. F'ull &: P11rt time local co. for the pl wtJO MW offices, 11nd ma~ Can Carol •••••••••• 540-9010 Dally Pilot, P.O. Bo~ 1560 1 For intervif!ll.'. 774-0321. can "'-.Jk ln and tAkt <Mr. ment that is intettsted in Cal-P•clflc A...,cy Costa M~sa. Calif. 92626. lnsurnl\N' Nice office-.... atart $450+ you, and W11Jin1 to 'll'ork 2750 Harbor B!Vd., C.M. BICYCLES FILE CLERKS Call Anha ........ 540-91110 wirh yoo. THE Wonderful \\"orld Of GUNS. SKI EQUIP. E1c. Poshk>M OJ>('n 111 oor ltunt. Cel·P•cific Agency Movfn Could Bf' Your. , • Etc. \\'t Buy Diamonds. Beach olhee . f'\111 & rt time 7750 Harbor Blvtt .. C.l\f. A~~ie ~·;~n~~youri= BRIGHT PROMISE Buy, Sell Or Tradt. l\leu. In. Xln'1 brll('llts &-c.ppor. Need M>meoonc to u11l~t mt In~ pf!f"iod. N.ew FattJ No1v Nttdcd for Pa.wn Shop, 176.1 Nc\\-port for isch•iulccim~nt. In my ful gro11;in; bw;lneu: rem C'Ol\'F'TOENTIAL lfaJor •. · ~ Bl CMI~ l\lf'~. 6'1;).S.~7>. CAll P1'>f50nncl 2 hr• • rltl)', $250 tno. Far 1NTERVJE\V, CALL TALENT HUNT fi,IOVING: Admiral rafrlg, 842-n51 Interview appt. Call llfrs. P.fR. llATGllT. (213) 461·30:JI tro11t ~fr ee, 2-rlr. 8' Equal Oppor, £mplt))'tt OL~n 5.l.>-27il betvoeen 2 & !l62-s.5%J TRAINEES. male for cook t l!Ofa, Dlnttte s r 1. Spnnish ras1 re1ul1A aN\ Jtl!lt 1 pbOne .f p.m. · COLLfNS & WATTS oUW:r restaurant v.'Otk. The chest. \VOol l'Ug, 6Xl0, cell away -642-."i671 t"or tx>st results? 6u-ris'1I -RE.AL TORS -7...oo, C.1 Hwy at MacAr1hur. ~ ·---------~ $60 O'Keefe &: l\lerrltt slove, late model, Xlnt ss:>. Bf\V TV, fiool' n\odel $ 6 O CrafL<>man la\\·n mo11-er. very good $60. 548-020.l FULL length dark ranch mink coal. Sc-e to ap- prttiate. Sacrifice S 4 O O. 962-m'l. SKIS; Hart Comp. 4',. Harl metal 1;td. !l'll". ;\fims' Molitor boo~ 11~1. 673-527&. F1l.EE! \Va!rr bed (5 YT· guar.) w I puf'('hase of any fTaJT'le Ir: liner. 646-2296. 3 Linn, 2 Times, $2.00 • *•Fri:-e cat food "'i!h C!at'h kitten! To goo(! hom<'s <>nly. H ELP?~ :ij7-8l!ll 2 YOUNG cats lo very 61J01I homes. 1 blk & \vht; I v.·ht v.·/blk ears & tail. 962-l'>fl.>. CUTE mixal puppie.c:, long ~ shortha\r, 1vill bf-small dogs. To good homes, ~.).()246. BLACJ\ & \\lhi!r BoRrdl'r Collir. 2 YI':>. Shots. \\latch rlog. Lovt'~ kirls. ~4S-6600. COPP1'.."'RTON bit -in!'i Rcr ti~M'rie, char-broils. grills 1 S50. 5t8-·U8'. ~-----'ll ~l Pet1 #Id 5uAifie1 TALKING f\·l\'NAl-1 BIRD "'ith cage $50 ·~· Exercycle $285 • 675-5525 • Ml1c•lleneou1 Wanted 810 CASH PAID FOR fttll' f\Jm lture, appll11nce.c. a ntlques, Onr piece or hOUS('fU!, Call day Ot night. 5'19·224:1 or 547.7733. \"l.ANTEO: Used Dolly Madieon crib an<t v.·ooden .::hang l nr table wilh dra"-en. 536-4545. Mu1lc•l Instruments 122 FENDER Jquar, dl"rp bl~. X ln t. w/case $250. Ai\!P • bettt'd • up ~nd· n1astcr · r f' v C! r b head, 80 \\'!Ills R:\IS. custtlm trncl. w/4 Allee Lan!llng 1f' 417 musical lntr. spkrs. $S.10. Tnm 546-7888. -! ORUi\f &'!, $125. or bt'll of. fer. ~ Pc's '-cymbals. 34Q.<180< • 852 PART Pct!!lan Kitten~. SJ lo .good hon1cs. Nso 1 h'f'c k'lt· ten. 642-4818. Dogs 854 OLD Engli~h Shrrp Do~. AKC. lcmalr. :! )r•>. Kind, gcntlr. TIC\'tr brt'{f, rhritll• pion i;turk ~ :'>TOnULn .. "ih"f'· 1on1, $IOO. Snn Di t i;:(I 469-QOO.I afll'l" 4 pin MINIATURE s ·;;·0,,-,-,-,-,.-,-, n1alc~. 10 1\ki;, Al\C. lop qua!. Li\•l1y, l<!\·111).!, 11hn1 ~. 5."17-J7li0 evc11. * 2 SIAME!\Jo; SEAi.POiNT Kl1TENS. C'.ood rii~posttion, hox lr~ined, s1a "4 ' "'8-2038. \\i'El?IL\RANER Pup~. Al\C reg1~. Ovrr 100 rharnp pfdl~re:rd . Xln '1 \\'tl!Clldo;p. :~llN!'J6 1. -llOVli\G ~ ~l u$t ~<11 -ehrin'i11. ~h'f'd COii i,. pup.;-,• ~hnl~, \\'(lrn11'd, Jm/lf'n•. ~iH" $'.11. Pymnt!l. ~\'flil11lilr. fi~2 ... 112.t Sell lhe old ''\If! Buy the n('~ Jitult I • I l f ' ·- Monday, Novtmber 15, l 9n DAILY Pl~OT :t .. I P.uand_.. ][BI T~t"° J[i] L Autoof~S.le I§]~' ;;;'"'"•'""';;• ;;]§];;;; ~!!!iAutotif!! .. !!!Ue~ Auloofo<5'1e ]§] I ''"''"'"' ]~ ._I ~""'-'"'_,..~I§] .__I --~ior_u._,J§j !~~~~~~~~~~' Autos, lf'l)pOrt"' uto1, mport :;;;;;;~~~'/~;;;;;;~;.;~/,;;;;;;;;;:;~~11~;;;;;;;;;~1 D09t 154j: Tru<kt 942 --------1---------IAutot, Imported 970 Autoo, Used • 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Uted 990 1··_,.., • ...,._. ______ Cy<lt,, BlkH, -:-:c-.-..---.;.;, DATSUN TRIUMPH ---------1-~~~u!:" C.:!; :, -:::s..o.,,.,.10""'*......,. __ 925.;:;; '64 FORD ~ TON '68 YW CAMPER -- CADILLAC • MUST.ANG ' FORD 646-4680 CYCLE TRAILER '10 DATSUN 510 Sedan, ti . I loo'=Xl~E~p-·u-pp~l.-•• -s-wka-, .-rod~.' Al--· haUI 6 blk ... ,, Pickup, 1$i,isi· (16018J) ~:fu,, ·:::i,,_:i.s~ Call TRIUMPH Pop .. , ... ' ...,, dlr. Fully 1970 S.d. de Ville '71 Torino 500 Cpe 'I» MU!lang, 6 cyL AulO & AKC, mlnlature, shoti. Stud ft. lone 8 ft wide, phone H _ . camper <IJtlipped. (WJB086) f'Act, air cond., padded lop, Air Condition~. Radio, PIS. Orlii: owner, GOQd service. ~7338. ~.at"tk_ ~pmBlll, llan>ld IG21H~~~DboMBOl~ORS FERRARI CLEARANCE SAL£ T;.Ke older Jorelg:n cu or Mt y.or., all teather inter .. Hta~. Vinyl Roof, Auto· ci>nd, $650. 5"S-44t4 l<X»::LJE'Ci<ii'tnu;";?U;;;;;i,l-'-~~~~·~·~~~=-·I .,., nU' r v..,, ·amall down, Can tlnance. cru-control, tletto, light 1Trans, '66 MUstan;: 2+Z ,tastbac~. ~~::a::IO~,p!~~ ·1970-HONDA 350 CL Costa Mesa 645-5404 FERRARI NOWI. 54.6-8736 (Ir '494-6811. eent1ne1,_ tJit & telescopic $2790 289 erig,, '4 barrel, auto, I Xlnt Cond. $475. '70 F250 % Ton Pickup. AllnlORIZED 'S.1 VW 1500 Notcbbnck scd. steer., most every deluxe P/S, RIH. $895. 675-~78 & wht. 536-2195· CALL 646-4629 }leavy duty camper equip. SAtiES It SERVICE HURRY & BEAT TIIE 10% · Erooomical, good cond. exZll1re8.~1 exceptionally nice. Newport Nation•I ,69 MAO! f, 390, .c sp, pl•. PET hea1th food, 100% fresh ** .70 HONDA 150 cc ~8;.. AS/2;::radio, heater. No. ( PRICE INCREASE!! Roomier thari • ~· $600. l v.e l • .,,, e Leasing Co. p/b. Sl,900. Pvl. pt y . meat, 3)e per Jb. Delivered Take over payments -.Q. "' 11· FRITZ WARREN'S 83T·S700. ~ Dlvi11ion of So. Cal~!. 4M-9912. to'"" hom•. 557-0!3. ** 54Hl88 i** DUNTON FORD SPORT CAI! CENTER '63 vw Campcr, slow, NABERS, Cadillac 2022 ~,;;';~0'!';" Irvine M,.:A;_CH.,.:;:;-1.-1911=.~,~ik_e_ne_w-,-.'"frl IRI~· l~tt~~C fem~e. $8510 TWO '69 KAWASAKI 90 dirt 546-7070 ~ ~ ~ Si~~~ refrig, water. $900. call AUTHORlzµ> DEALER 833-8620 ' l cond.,\ tape deck. Many ex. mos a • ~· regis., · bii..~ .......1 oond ... ~each 2240 So. Main at Waroor n , ; c 1Y Larry Morgan, 673--0391 or !3()0 HARBOR BL., 9 9 d Ira•, sacrifice. $ 3 3 9 S. 642-8129 aft 7:30pm. ~~~ \° -' Santa Ana 3l00 \V, Coasl Hwy. * '61 TRIUMPH GTG * 644-4031 bef 5. COS!A tfESA l 6 For LTD 67~7~. SA.t'dOYED pupa, 9 wJcs. SEARS Spyder ro inch girls 4 NEAR new big wide trac-__ '_N_•_wpo=-"n'=Bea=ch:;.... __ Xlnt (!On<f. Custom features. '68 V\Y Bus, Lo mi's, Clean, 540..9100 Open Sunday Coupe -=="M~U""'S"T"A"N"G"'S.--1 champ line. males. StinaraY Aqua marine, lion type tires & tints, FIAT $1750. 494-7136 or 497 .. 1923, 1 owner, $1895 or oiler. CADILLAC ·n CdV, maize, Style .I.ead~r. Sh.arp. 1971 Reasonable. 551-2504 11peedomtl:er $20. 644-1475. 12x16.5, 8 ply. $95, each'--·-·---·-··-· .. -·-·-·-··--TOYOTA 968--1107. saddle lthr int. Priv prty, c;,1 .. ~n1ct1~ w~~tel ndw1th droofark HERTZ CORP. · s•..,.. ,A .. 1 • __ _:,;.:;;,:::, __ .1 ·--\j;;\l\j;n~--1 $.5785. GTJ.-4698 aft pm. ..... 1 erior • ~ au • 2Z1 \Y. Katella, Anahelm P~:c9 :~s~AT D:~ ·~u~i~u:O·~~t ~~,:~·: ~~i :~;ce ~. ~r ·~· taut#16 ... TOYOTA VOLVO CAMARO ~:~~~:·oo:~.ioPo!e:~: (714) 77MOSO HorsH m 846-0146 ... DODGE, Camper li Ton CLEARANCE SALE pow brks, pow windo•" & OLDSMOBILE Pickup witll camper. V-8 NEW 1971'5 HERE NOW! '69 CAMARO SS, am/fm, much mott. XSI.180. Oear----------250 BULTACO, best ofter, as Part qUarter-horse needs ex-i!. Contact after 6-pm perience rider $150. or bst. 646-6268. otter 545-8005. l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii HONDA 45P CB xi.flt cond. 11 See to appl'eciate. $450. I~.,~ .. I ..::~;tnent t,l 1968 150 A7SS Kawasaki $400 I'·-~-----' or best offer. Xlnt cond. • 642-fil.08. 900 YAMAHA 115 Enduro, Perl. oond. Xtras. 800 mi's. Marine Consultant 548-7988 or 64G-8289. INDEPENDENT ·n Yamaha 175 Enduro. Gd • Pureh•sing-d Gd M' · b'k oon , warr. , 1ru 1 e Caunseling on purchas-$35. 64.2-1961. ing boats & equ.ipmeot. "M~o"'b"'l~l.~H,..o-m-,-.--~935= e Marine Survey ===646-.,;;-0029_n,_,.-,--24' wide Gtliden West 2 BR. BRISTON 24 Cruising sloop. 2BA. Cu s to m -b I t • Nr Only 3 mo. old. Equipped to Disneyland. Will (!Onsider $8200 new, must sell $7200. oiler. 530-1655 or Fred at Len Hutton 548-7765 or 615-2101. 64.2-0243• Auto Service, Parts 949 A~.' ~~riD1~sZ· $fg~7 PB, LARGE SELECTION, SEE t!J"•M Lnu.:. p~/p ~isci r/winoo,w. auto, ~~~ p~~d r:I:~~n:;~d& 'i>uNTON . FORD SPORTSCaA. RJ . CENTER ...,. ..... ALL NEW ~~~~L,:'."~:~t,~~'." cosia "'"' 54(1.5630. ·• 546-7070 TOYOTA CHEVROLET 1970 Ford Galaxie 2240 So. Main at Warne r .,,..._~• '72 500 2 D. H. T .• 2833 Harbot:, C.M. Sj0-4491 <n<1 ;i.,.,,., I J S Jy A Santa Ana l !M6 Harbor, Costa Mesa * '71 CHEVY's * mmacu ate· por . ttrao- JAGUAR I?vrPALAS e ~EVELLES tive 1igllt lvy yellow. with Auto Leasln• 964 SANTA ANA ~· bro • CAMARO'S gold interior, dark wn OUR volume ie.,. depart-BThcAUHER•"boBr AU!C.,K TOYOTA VOLVO HERTZ CORP. ~~~a~,~~.A;:'::.!~m~;,::.: ment often all popular • .., Service dept. oj)en 'l:30 am m W. Katl'lia, Anaheim fac!ory air cond . Hurry on American & Import makes Only Authorized 'ti!•9 pm Monday thru Fri· Featuring (714) 778-4050 this one. 395AUH. Clearance at competitive rates. Let oar . JAGUAR DEALER da)o. Fuel Injected ~ CHEVY IMPALA , 19 6 9, priced $26'15. Johnson&. Son, lease experts tailor YOUR Always has an excellent se· PHONE 540-2512 BURGUNDY, AIR COND.. 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa Iease to YOUR needs. "!l's ~·I •••56'" lection of both New" Used 417 \V, Warner, Santa Ana fleait·~ew· AUTO, FULL POWER, LO "esa. ;,mr .,,,. the serviee that makes the J ditference." , aguars. '68 TOYOTA Crown Wagon, f.ll'S. MANY XTRA S. * '71 FORDS* THEODORE auto., R/H. $1551) or besJ ~ • VOLVO XLNT CDND. 12115. PVl. GALAXlES e MUSTANGS "Speciallz!ng in Qualify" ROBINS FORD offer. Call aft 6. 644-5018. , P'\'Y. 675-l:tW. TOr..INOS 2ll60 HARBOR BLVD. BAUER '11 TOYOTA eoroua Wagon, 646-9.103 -i51 BFJ, A~ coupo, V~. HERTZ CORP. COSTA MESA 642-0010 Buiek-Opel-Jagu•r 5,000 miles, radio, auto 19'16 Harbor, Costa Mesa Auto, trans. Also '64 ~mpa!a Auto. W.nl_.. ft.la 234 E. 17th Jit., trans. & tape deck. T.O.P.1 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! SS coupe w/a~. Both good 22l '1"1·1Ka4)tenlla.; ~"nah50•1m .., ,._ Costa J\fesa 548-7765 893-3169. I ~ cond. 1777 Santa Ana Ave., - WE PAY TOP '66 Jag. 4.2 sed, 4. dr all xtras "°'=~==~~=~·I Autos, Used 990 No. 113, C.M '69 LTD Wagon. lD pass., 429 '69 Olds Daito 81 ROYAL. Full power, YCR985 $2499 ' Harbor American 646-0161 19(..9 HAR1JOR CO~TA M(SA TWO 1968 Olds Cutlass, 2 Dr. hrdtp. p/s, auto tran5 •• r/h, air cone!. $1650. Ask for Mr. Marks, 673-3130, 9 am-4 pm. wkdays. LEAVING C'Ountry! '64 Olds Wagon. Xlnt cond, l)U tires. Major tuneup. 543-6001. '60 OLDS 98, A/C, loade~. Needs hd gask(>I, $50 . 548-2588. 1968 CUTLASS. a1l p'll.T, auto, R/H, air. lJ,600. • 499-2009 PLYMOUTH LYMAN 16', 55 h.p. Evinrude, elec start, fun covers. Super c I e a n ! CASH w/reelining seats & Jthr VOLKSWAGEN ---------'70 8 PASS. Sta. \Vag, Fact. H.P. Po":·er, AM/FJ\I stereo, COST + 108/a uphol. LQ mi. $2100 546-:0467. M. 8. TRADES air, auto, p J s. Nu 111~· mint. rond. $2600. '65 BARRACUDA, rebuilt JENSEN '68VWSquarebk '70 Cadillac Sedan de Ville, tires/brks. Jmmac cond. Lo _6_75-61 __ 61_· ___ =~-i 213, auto, nu paint, wide APPLJAN~ SALE!! ,... ENTIRE STOCKI I sunroof fully equlp'd, landau, air, mi's, Must sell, Make offer. Sacrifice equity! 1970 Ford tires, mags must sacilice. Refrigerators, Washers, Dry-for UMd can A trucks, 1UJt JENSEN 4. Speed, Good engine, body st~reo, etc. • Also '69 Jm. (TI4l 842-3044. Wagon, Cntry sed.,1 p~:b, 968-6564 646-31124 Boats/Marine Equip. ~rs. TV'~. Convenient call Us for free Htimatea. A ORIZED & interior. pa a 4-dr hrcitp, bargain at * '55 CHEVY 2 Dr r o 11 air, lug. rack. Eves \V s. '67 PLYMOUTH Sports Tenns. GROTH CHEVROLET SAL~: SERVICE $1285 ~:$~%"IO uda, auto, bar, bucket 'seals:· sway S92-0l43. Fury, A~. Xlnt cond, Mtat , Firest ........ s1-415 E • . · bars. Call 531-4805 alt 6 '66 COUNTRY SQUIRE .... 11, 18511. 557-0166 INTERCEPTOR marine "'""" "•"• • or best offer \llill consider Authonzed MBZ Dealer "" •ngine 2lO HP v.8/Fresll i _..;1"1,;:th:,St::;:!"-'C::·:,:M"-, .:&J6.=2H4;:.::'--Ask lot' Sales Manager d 111 523 '7"1<:n p.m. Full power, Xlnt condition PONTIAC water cooled. New $750. 1 -c.orvair parts, engine l821l Beach Blvd. tra ~2698 or5574540 BUIC ... K~ '63 CHEVY Impala SS Cpe, 675-3331 Ask for Phil 644-8211. and misc. parts, 847~untington Be~ 9-3331 ,69 VW Squareback. sunroof, P/S, P/B, xtras, orig. 11wn. 1969. LTD Wagoo, UI pass. ,68 F1REBffiD 400 • Lots at · SCUBA compressor & Wts., • S45--0IXIS • AN A y SO auto, am/l.m, S 18 00 , :.6:'.9:'.":". '.":::'."'.-'7:'."--1~$350~.:,,-~:'.19=:7'!:3·:_ __ ~ ~~ ~!r,. t5mmac. $Z395 pov.·er -Big auto. trans., all anchors, Nyl. & Dae. rope, Dune Buggies 956' NI VE RS R # · 646-2238. By.Lek Riviera, fu}! power, '66 Chevelle ?<.falibu, V-8, .,........,...,..L "'"'er pm. po1o,-er disc brakes. air, Misc. Marine e q u j p . ---------·I AUTOS WANTED fac air, am-tm radio, strato auto, pis, r/h, bkt seats, MAVERICK ral!t'Y wheels, belted red 644-8866. DUNE Buggy, many extras, Top dollar for dean used 1964 V\V Bus, 1 owner, ?l,000 bench, landau vinyl top . white-blue inter, $ 7 50. 1.1.•all wide ova.ls, like new make oft"er. • ~--And B miles, Ma!~ ~mrrer. $2615 ar best offer. 54S-1578 54°5435, __ J_O_MA __ V_E_R_IC_K __ MUST sell 1970 E;vif!rude 60 can. "= Y rown. ..........., """ vinyl top, very deluxe in- HP, a1most neW $150. 16' l,~~~~&l&-~3'55~~~~~ THEODORE LOTUS \ all 5 pm . '62 IMPALA Conv. $125. or tcrior, tilt \vhccl. You name ROBINS FORD '57 VW Van, gd mechan. '65 Le SABRE 4 dr HT, •·•l oUc,. It, Jt's got II. car has had boat & trailer $275. 646-9256. AUTIIORIZED nd 1450 Bel 5 ,.-PM = 2 Doo dJ ~" -U eo ' ' ore :,,., · . ps/pb, air, new tires. Lo 645-4537 r. r . ..,.,.. coupe. n· loving care -Original Boats; Power 906 1· AlllDIWlele II '4J} CO~ =OR BL~~-OJ10 SALES & SERVICE .;s..:: GOOD condition ~~5~~g o\\·11er. Best olr. CMRYSLER ~l:r ~icirx:ia~i~r~;.:~ ~~~~\j ~~~26. $1695. Phone 28' Unifiite' 1960, $6500 or ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~I WE PAY TOP DOLLAR ....,.. 11 1900 ff I-------------'..:... , _____ 1 down or finance. (32SBEN) MU.,, se ! or o er. <194-Gnl aft 11 am 546·8736. '70 LE r.tANS conv, V-8. trade for trailer boat + FOR TOP USED CARS 645-1349 days. CADILLAC 1967 CHRYSLER 9 passenger cash. Owner, 846-1430. Trucks 962 U Your car U extra clean, V\V '68 Bug .i s~ft..i station wagon Air condition· '70 MAVERICK $1800 auto, air, pwr top, steering ~ .,,... & windows, AJ.1/FM stereo SELL or partner '70 Fonnula 9ef: us f..rst. Very good condition, $U95. LARGEST ing, etc. A'TG OO"t.~S1595 675-5502 radio & tape d•ck. Xlol '59 Stude, good eng &: trans., BAUER BUICK 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Pri .., ~3 Chi'· I•-n 1~o ,~,1----~----23', xln't cond. Mr. Joyce . party .,...~;} 0 ..:11. "'""" ;io illuu MERCURY ~ 2415 new seats, body perfect, 2M E 17th s Newport Beach ' ' SELECTION F Blvd. Costa Mesa cond. $2800. ,,.J. 4M-TIS4. must sell this week! Costa Mesa· t5'&.T16S -:-:==-:O:==~==c 1'64 vw Bus, reblt eng, new CADILLACS IN '63 PONTIAC Boats, Soil 909 646-04it 1---:f<ii~iOi:UUf--l.:.:~:.:E::R::C:::E::D:,:E::S:_.:B:::E::N:::Z:I """· "dio, ;mmac. ll20ll. ORANGE COUNTY COMET 1969 Mercury Marquis Good coooHm. 1n1erior '64 Ford Ca.hover 750. 11· 1 TOP DOLLAR _833--035_~'~·~=~---SALES.LEASING ·-..... • • • ·=·· Brougham 4 D. sharp! Ncw brakes & hat· 2~~rgt;/:~~ro!slp~u i!~ at..ake.lo Whl, lift gate, nu IN CASH NOW ON DISPLAY ]96,g V\V Bu.c:: AUTHORIZED ** '63 COMET, ps/pb, SUper Clean tery. Xlnt ti~. PS. PB. head, 6 hp 08, new cockpit tires $2600. 646-1278 aft Paid for your clean used car 1972 350-SL Sharp. Lie VHB 729 Only -SERVICE~ good condition. $ 300 · Sparkling· royal maroon with Only needs paint. $225. cush. & sail cov. SJ[®. 5PM. pa.id far_ ar not. • & all the elegant Mercedes $1:!15 Chick Ivensan 1910 Har· Nabers CadiOac 675-7985 after 6 PM matching interior & black $18-8778 64Z-4594. ~56 FORD P.U. 'Ai ton. 8 SANT.I: ANA DODGE Benz motor cars for '72. bor Blvd, Costa Mesa 2600 HARBOR BL., CONTINENTAL landau roof. Auto trans, ta· 1··-1o_F_U._b~i"rd""S-p•~·i-J.-Loo~-..,..,d, 1 ~~==-~-~c---·I cylinder. Runs """""'· Call 1401 N. Tustin Xlnt lease plan & fjne ser-1 1·~,.,=vw=~ea~m·--,~H~,-,~P~o---.h COSJ'A MESA dio, heater. factory air xlnt, cust vinyl, p\vr 30' CRUS sip, inbrd. eng. &VVU ,,... ..... nd ......_ b k 646-7622. 835-3691 vice featured at engi~. Stock 5154 .y Onl rA".9JOJJ O-n SUnday '71 MARK Ill co ·· pwr "'"-.:r, pw, rs, evETYlhing, wire whla. Great liveaboard. Yng cple HOVSE OF 11-tPORTS H •-Bl d .... ft... ;;r'l\I .,.. pow windows, twin comfort .,.., 4314 + bay moor'g. $8500. Avco, 2~ TON USMC"rruck. Great IMPORTS WANTED Santa Ana Fwy at Beach arUUl-v · ......,..,a Mesa 1968 Seel d Viii This beautiful luxury car Is lounge seats and more. See 1 "°.""',.""'..,'"vc;cs'°'.""°===~I 644-M07. Jor overland, hunting, Xlnt Orange Caunties Blvd, Buena Park.. (l) $1795 Chick IversonO 197 • e I e fully equipped with all the and drive tbls attractive car '68 Le J\1ans 2 Dr. hrdtp. Xlnt cond $l'r.i0 firm 847-8403 TOP $ BUYER S23-12S51l. · '68 VW automatic Like new Fact. air cond., padded top, luxury features yoU would today. 501741. Clearance cond. Must sell this week .• LIDO 14 · . . . BILL MAXEY TOYO'!'' 281111 · Pvi Pi. · 1 fuU 1-1~ lnt~or, all pow. ex ........ Jr, n"0 ~ new condi· W-kdays aft,.,. ~u d .. v Sat Xlnt cond. with trailer. !500. FOR sale or trade 1900 Fant 4 ' mi, • Y. nu pain "" "~..-"'0 , ...... , """" priced $2675. John90tl & Son, = "• lll1 ...., • 644-22?9 Pick Ui> truck & camper 18881 Beach mvd. best offer 647-1447 C"r, door locks. AM·FM, tilt tion will be appreciated 26ai Harbor B1vd., Costa &. Sun. 54S-0801. shell. 962-8l25 H. Beach. P~ 847-SSSS •67 SEDAN 315 vw "like fast & telescopic str., etc., etc. when you test drive this Mesa. 540-5630. RAMBLER 34' ISLANDER 34, Absent,_~=~=--=~-WE DESPERATELY back" Xlnt eond. $UOO fXVF160) cla56ic. ~A --";:1~9"69""'M'Oe'"r-c_u_r_y __ owner w•n1' "tfon. A·l '72 GMC % TON NEED 613-4899 615-Zl40 e $2555 e !8171 ------- cond. Avery & Co. 530-9129. Cl•an u...r can '&I vw Bu. 161111 reblt, crpld, NABERS Codillac DUNTON FORD Mo;•uder XIOO '66 Rambler Boats, Slips/Docks 910 CAMPER special, 350 V-8, FANTASTIC PRICES panelled, stereo, gd tires~ AU'tlIORIZEn DEALER 546-7070 ThcO,Spo~~~t Classic NEARLY new cement deck automatic, rad'io, heater, Paid for your car, paid f6r Going in· service! $1000. 2600 HARBOR BL., 7240 So. Main at Warner Light ivy yellow wi!h dack sli p floa! 2lx3J. 13 , gatJges, power disc. brakes, or not. 846-9093. COSTA MESA Santa Ana ivy bucket seats & conrole. Clearwater. Call Croft & auxiliary rear springs, wide DEAN LEWIS 1'0966~vw=-Sq--uo-re~Ba""ck~l1~51l-.1 540.9ioo Open Sunday_ 170 Cont Mark Ill Tilt srr. whl., auto trans., base tires, buy now before M•·-Cond Ex II nt M-h '10 COUPE d V'll J P•T Ir -brks •tact Neville, 675-8222. the pn·,, •--.. ,·, tak•n of1. TOYOTA e VOLVO "' · ce e '''· Good trans ca.r. Call after 5 . e 1 e on Y Leather, Full Power Equip· 11 •• ,_.. • • .... .,..,<.'<' Cone!, (3868SG) $1295 Full 536-4606 15 ooo mi. & IMMAC cond air. Like 11C\V appC'arance PRIVATE OOat mooring. Stock No. fil'2684. ,..__.1946MHARBOR BL,,~?·9303 Price. pm , · E.v.cry -ncc,·vablc ·""Ira· mentA .. SpColilnd&:~t-.Both Pow· lhroughout, See & drive. 209- Front tie $1.75 ft. Minimum The truck people from .....,,.,a esa U"W· '66 V.W. BUS "" ....... · er, ir 11ion1ng, AUi. CC'larance priced W 5. 21)·, maximum 25'. 673-7506. General Motors I SURFSIDE MOTORS EXCELLENT CONDITION Yellow w/blk. landau top & $5890 Autos, Imported 970 847~3842 (714) 833-9359 blk. lthr. inter. Asking Johnron & Son. 2626 Harbor 38' BOAT Slip, Villa Marina, $3395 P S C * .64•190, Nt-w valve i·o b, $.5195. 833-0101 or 833-0144 Newport National Blvd., Costa Mesa. 540·5630. •. . il restig• ports ars '67 vw 161111 B k L I c Ba1boa. fUl services ava· · MIKE MCARTHY AM/Fi\1, auto, i mmac. eng. ro en eves. eas ng o, 1971 MERCURY $85/mo. 547-9277. C 'TI 280-SL, 4000 mi's e '68 crankshaft, as is $495 or Division of So. Calil. STATION WAGONS Lamborghini 2+2 e '70 240-cond. $1200. 64~740 eves. $695. 542-5.116. 1969 CAD Coupe de Ville, Io BOAT slips avail. 25'-05' Z (2) • '68 & '69 Porsche miles, good cond. $4,200. 1st National Banlc HERTZ CORP• XI t nd t. · GMC MG '62 VW Bug Not p-tly but 2022 Busines~ Center, Irvine n accomm a ions 111 912's, air. · '"' • _• 494-0076 811 8620 221 \V, Katella, Anaheim new Marina 673-6li06. Authorized 1\1BZ Dealer ---------I runs good $250. C 8 I I .-.. (714) 778-4050 194-1336/531-2450 ni 523.7250 MG 67>-81'6. 1971 Cpe. de Ville 1910 MARK m. hk• oow, Boats, Speed & Ski 911 Corner Beach & McFadden, AUTHORIZED J"7966~~vw="BC'u"g"'L~;-,.~svw=4~05~.1 Fact. air eond., padded top. fully equlp'd, low mileage, 1970 J\IONTEGO MX, 2 ~r. 15' TIIUNDERBIRD 100 hp We stminster AUSTIN HEALEY SALES &: SERVICE New Paint. Only $895. Oiick ru·u· pwr .. all IC"ather in!cr· flexi ble on price and terms. Hrd.tp. 351, V-8. fac. air, V -8, Auto Trans, Steering, See today. 193) $695 Powl'!r (RVY· WardS.LeE! American MolDls ,. 547-5826 1234 So. Main St. Santa Ana T·BIRD e '62 T BIRD e Very Clean. $375. •• 192-7480 •• Johnson, elec motor tilt, ,69 FORD Custom 50(), V-8, Iverson 1970 Harbor Blvd. ior, stereo, door locks, tilt Phone 54&1600 before 5 p.m. p/disc brks, bucket seats, elec bilge pump, full covers, Auto. Trans., Factory Air 'SS AUSTIN Healy, runs Costa Mesa & telescopic steer. Loaded CORVETTE autod s'mran5•··96:1•688dlo, Xlnt IT'S Beacn house time. Big· -vvi cone!. 714:846-.,1492. c nd good, $250. 1910 with most all deluxe extras. con · · <>-• aest se!ecttoh ever! See the """"' o ., Power S teer i n g , Call 645-5839 VW Karmann Ghia, '57 Harvey l4', fiberglass, 60 Sharp: (UID92'l), $877. , ,56 AH ·~, C 1 . auto, stick shift, radio. Xlnt. See 10 aepprec<$6·3,31o3. (S..r, S676J '67 CORVETTE convertible THE Fastest draw in the 1!~y PILOT A",~halfl~ Hp M ··~ "" DUNTON FORD · · ......,... Y ·• WIJ'e o.-... ~ Co 1 ct c v · West. •• a Daily P 1lot Oil.Uy Pilot Want .... ,,,. . ercury, ...-.. ~ whls., O.D. Runs & looks 3100 W. Coast Hwy. n=i. uuer. n a . , NABERS C d"ll 37!, black/black, new Olll!sitied Ad. 642-5678 bugalns galare. 'I Congress St., C.J.l. 546-CaU Newport Bead Zenarosa. 83 3 .. 2 5 0 0 or a I aC M1chcllns, orlg owner, vety l -'-""-"'~C"-=-"--'-~ 2240 So. MJ~7:t Warner good. $47S. ~. PORSCHE 646-9152. A'tmfORTZED DEALER clean, $1695. TI4: 494-2810 Autos; UMd 990Aut.os, Used 990 l'-----··~·_,J. Santa Ana BMW 1968 VW camper, rebuilt eng. 2000 HARBOR BL., '65 CORVETIE HT Convert. \\'/warranty, new t l r e s, -OOSfA MESA Body Xlnt shape, eng. lm-~!t-. Au~nwUve ii• NEW OPEN ROAD 111 RECREATION CENTER .., ROY CARVER, Inc. ROY CARVER, Inc. Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Camper. (33614), Stove, re-2925 Harbor Blvd. 2925 Harbor Bl vd frl~atar, side dinette, in Costa Mesa 546-4444 Costa Mesa 546..f444 beautiful ol~ green to 'iO ECONO Van Long whcf!I '69 1600 SUNROOF, White, match a 1969 Ford F-250 base, VS, automa t ic Private Party. $1,900. Camper Special (755341. transmission, 24.&MH. $2577, 673-6934. Aulomadc, a~. radfo, b<at· DUNTON FORD 1---=:-::==,---er, heavy duty equipment, A DATSUN rea1 steal at 546-7070 ____ .. _.,,_. __ _ $3995 2240 So. Main al Warn<r '70 240 'Z' Santa Ana Tht truck people from General Motorsl '50 CHEVY Local c11 r fully equipped. MIKE MCCARTHY Like new! Under 11,00D IL TON ' p U mil ... dlr. Will tako Jrade or ll , , finance pvt ply, (42'BLO) GMC Call 494-6811 alt l pm Eltc<>ll•nt nmning oond ""' 546-8136. 194-1336/531·2450 can't turn Ii down at ms. 1--:N"'EW""°"'•12~P~I"CKU=P~- Co Be 646-269S or 5574540 • 11pd. dlr, dlx. Bumper. Ra· mer w!s~o~~~den. '70 Ford Pickup. No. 1058, dio. Mlrron, PL12ll20. Take 8;;:\0;-;;FT;;-. "~=,-Roa="';""c"'a"m_pe_r·, I VS, Factory equipped, a small dOWn or trade. 4M·6811 65-C w/Sun roof. R ed w/black int. Incl. tonneau cover. 2nd. owner. 52,000 mi. Top cond. $3200. 548-5508 clutch. hrakes & battery. 540-9100 Open Sunday Needs work. Sacrifice. $850. 1'l'nt .~ luggage rack, Best '68 S.D.V. U!aded. Good or be!';t oUcr. 644-7928. offer. 494-7632 nd 1~ 12 61111 Pr! Pty ~A 0·61111°'d· '61' 5_1134· '67 .CORVE'ITE Convert., •• '66 V\Y Sqbck. Best ailer .,...,..,, ays, w/a1r rond. & new tires. over low book. Eves. Llk 20llll '10 911 T, 5 Spd , Jmn1ac. Call 6 51) 6 e new, S . 83Z-9358. Yellow /B ic k m ag•, 75-1 1967 Cpe'. de Ville DODGE am/fm, ma1nt re c ol'ds, 1971 SUPER .Bealle, cash or Fact. air cond., full pwr.,1 ________ _ 38,000 mi, $300 + Take ovt'r 1..T.O.P. Col)s1der trade. Call padded top AM/FM beau-'68 Dodg Van V8 aut~ 15'!. e~8. &W-8442. ~1 aft 6 pm wk days, tiful lea~ lnterlor: tilt &: new Ure!. new· pam°t. ' '63 PORSCHE S, EIC'ctrit any.time wkends. telescopic steer., etc. An ex-962-6761 sunroof, chrome wheels, '71 KOMBI, ~.000 ml, Like ceptionll.l value! (389AGC) '67 DODGE DART 2-DR 6- new pa int, tires. Blaupunkt new. $2595. Radio and Ex· • $2111 • • cyt, A-T, R/H, vinyt fop, radfo. $231111. 52'-3132. """· 220 San Romo, N.B. NABERS Cadillac 71.llllO mi. aslring 161111. '60 CPE, nu trans. clutch, 673-l'784. Atfl'HORTZµ> DEALER 6"/'S-5338 C'VCS, palnt, int, chnn eng. $1895. '69 VW Sqbck. air cond., 2600 HARBOR BL., '65 DODGE Dart, V-B, air or lrade tor van. SS'l-7268 auto, AM/FM, Michelin C05TA MESA cond. New eng. Xlnt cond. befont 2 pn1. radials. Xlnt cont.I. $2000. 540·91 00 Open Sunday $550. 6~2176. WE Need Your Porsche and 646-2566 aft 4• '6'9COUP~ de Vllle, leather, '65 DART, air cond., auro. will pay lop dallar. Call Bill '64 'K, GHIA. like new f\tll power, air cond. 1 trAn."1TI. Nl'w titts, 1 awner. or Chuck Jl0..()812. througOOut. l meticulous owner, div, force!! sale Best Gd. cond. $575. 644-5998. '68 Porsche 91l, in1ma.culate conaiUon. 67S....~244 SPRITE owner. Pvt. ply. $975 •I .2o~ff!!0<~61J.~;11~5l)~a~ft~6~p~m~-l---""j:f())jiii1 --- 963-4793 wkdy eves. '67 CAOILLAC VW Camp<.>r Ven '63, Ex· CPE DEVILLE e STEERING WHEEL-l961 cellent cond. $1275. Private Full Powtt, F11.etory At r Ford Ga1rudc attached. Fae. Party. 531-7294. Cond, Exr.cllent Cond. (T.VL ... ~ steal at 11677. ·•tr 10 ~ ~· ,,,.,. 4. Srove & oven, sink, DUNTON FORD ~ ~·~· SPRITE '&I, Cl•an, Run• Ice box, h1.fl(e c I 0 I f t. '66 DATSUN Pickup, nu 6 ply wr:ll, New tor Rlullo, Carpet. Boot and othtr t'X· 546-7070 w/w'.11, &'OOd cond. Sll7S. Michelin tires, L S 5 7 5. '61 V\V New engine &: trans. Brakes and batter)'. MS-1452. 996) $1195 . SURFSIDE MOTORS • 847·3842 tory air, automatic trans, 390 ena:ine .. recently tuned. Very good condition. $789. 644--1201 eves. ll'as. Like new! &M N. 2240 So. ~fain at Warner Call 'llfter 4 pm. 646-27'66. 714/646-3017. '&I vw Bui 1600 rcblt, .crpld, Harbor. Sl'lnt• Ana $795. SA.nl& A'fla 'GS DATSON Wagon 510 air, --S~U=N~B~E~A~M~-panfttled, 1tereo. gd Ures. l.-,,53_1_--0_380_. ---~--ICLEAN 19':12 ChtV)' pickup. 4 ~peed, .CIK-29S5 Going In atrviet:! $900. l's. a breeze •. sell YoUt Good tnaine. r • d t • to r, L~lk'"e~IO-Jrad~e·1·0ur~-Tra~~dc-r-'• ~.63-S_U_N_B_E_A_M-Al_p_lne-~ I -114&-~9119=3~· =~~--- ttfmt with e•st, u11e DI.Uy brake4, tire• k battery. Paradise a,1um11 ts for you! N.,w clutch I tires. $350. 1963 VW Camper PUot Classified. &12·5618, $213. 539-7188. 5 lines, 5 d&,ys for 5 bucks. 673-7369 or &t2.-7119Q $995. 673-4888 Tum ome WIUt~ ~epMnt& 'Tl Ford Torloo CT, 9,00D mJ. Into cath thru a Dall¥ Pilot A/C. Lt gm,, pert cond. Dlme-3.-llne &di 1 S2950. 6U-6440 dys, MS-Jfi66 For best results? 64i.5678 eves. For that ltem under $&!, F"or""°'1ha~t-1"1em,.....-u.lld<'=r-c$5llo..:-, try the Penny Pincht'r try the Penny Pincher • I OVERSTOCK SALE '67YW ~"M ....... c.,.1. """'"' $1295 '70 EL CAMINO ~~:;,::1· i · $2695 '70 IMPALA i.':." '"" "'· $2995 '70 LTD 4 DOOR ~:~· "'· $2695 '70 LTD '.~!.~'"'"'· "' " ,.._ $2495 '70 MERO. WAG. ~."::."r •. ""' $2695 '70 FORD WAG. ~'.''' " """ $3495 '70 BUICK RIVIERA .~-.:=. $2995 '70 DODGE YAN ::~:..:"'•.':~ $3295 '70 MARK Ill ~:::, ~~-;,:•• $6295 lutMI', . OR Corner 1st & Harbor Sant• Ana 531-06Cll .. •' I ,, \ . ' i • ------ 14 WLY PILOT Monday, Nowmber lS, 1971 • For Cellfomlans Cl>nly: Announcing Our Lowest. Rates Everl Enrollment Period Ends Midnight ~r 10, 1911 ' • I N lhesc days or high prices. what a. relief it is tu see the price of something as important u life insurance actually coming down! Choose The Plan That Suits You Best For now-if you're a Californian -you can get $10,000 life insurance at low group rotts, 10 low you'll want to add $5,000 on your wife and $1,000 on each of your children. And you can qualify on the .. honor system" right from this page without the usual red tape -without-seeing a salesman. Enroll now and take advantage of this introductory low rate: only$/ for your first 111onth •.• and you'll get a fu ll $10,000 protection. How.-Blg Is Your Life· 1n1uranc1 Protection Gap? Higher prices. hi&hcr incomes and higher stand- ards of living have created a fast-widening life insur- ance prorrcrion gap. So much so that if you haven°1 increased your life in~rance in lhe past year your family is probably under-protttfrd today, Back in 1950, financial experts m:ommended that a family man should carry life insurance equal to 211.t limes his yearly income. In 1960 1hcy recommended movir'lg up to 3 times income. Today, lhe experts say your family should now be protected with "'life insur· ancc amounting to' ti1nrs your annual inro1nr as an absolute rimiiiiiiiiiiiijii1 111ini1nun1 ... FAMILYPlAN S10,000 lor you SS,OOOtor yuur wife $1,000 for each child If you have ·a young growing family, we recommend lhe Fa1nify Pla11. You and your wife and all your eligible children -including fulure addi· tions-are included under one low monthly group rate. Example: At age 35 your rale is $3.20 + $1.40 for your wife (50% of lhe $2.80 rate shown for your wife·s age of 32) + 32c for your «::hildren (10% of your rate) = $4.92 basic monthly rate for your entire family, INDIVIDUAL ADULT @- PlAN $10,000loryou A If you're a bachelor. ca-· rcer woman, college stu· denl, veteran just out of service, or if you're a family man or woman and j1,1.st wish to insure your.self -choose the lndi· vidual Adult Plan. You can cover yourself for very lillle money. Example: Al age 35 your basic monthly rale is $3.20. HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN $10,000 for you S 5,000 for your wife Jr you haven't started your family yet, or if your children arc grown -you'll want the Husband-Wife Plan . You and your wife will be covered under ont IOW' group rate. Example: At age JS your rate i~ $3.20 + $1 .40 for yOur wife (50% of the $2.80 rate 5hown for your w ife's age of 32} =$4.60 basic monthly rate for you and your wife. DNE •PARENT PlAN 110,000 for JQU $1,000for •ac:h chlld If you arc Che only parent l ivi~g with your children, we suggest the Onr--Parent Plan. You and all your eligible children will be covered undcronr low monthly group rate. Example: Al age 35 your rate is $3.20 + 32c for your children (10% of your rate) = $_3.52 basic n1onthly rate for you and all your eligible children. Regardless of your plan, you may pay any way you choose -monthly, quanerly. semi.annually or annually. A modest JOc Krvicc charge is added 10 payments other than annual. ·"'-... Sil.500 Income 1970 f"igure ir out for )'Ollrl'£'/f: Add up all your life suran~c; then figure your large debts (mortgage, 1r, etc.}. You'll probably be: shocked to learn that <'en ""5 times" won't leave your family very much ir necessities of life and your children's educa1ion. ou'll surely see the need for al Jeasl SI0,000 more ottclion. Now Everyone Can Afford $10,000 Extra Protection At These low Group Rates If yo1lre tin e111p/oyee -Chances arc you don't arry enough personal life insurance. This plan gives ·ou your own personal policy that )'OU can kttp no 11attrr liow oftrn you chnnRe jobs -an extra i l0,000 life iMurancc over and above any of your ompany or union benefits -at low group ralcs. If you're an exrr111il•e -Because your family is .1scd 10 a high standard of living, lhe insurance 1hat Jnay have been adcqua1e only a few years ago just isn'tenough today. (IRS rei;ulations lin1it the amount qf tax free insurance your company can provide for you.) But now you can easily add an extra $10,000 f>rOltction at these low group rates. If you're st>lf~r11ployed-You have to provide your own .. company benefits" at your own expense. As a business proprietor or a professional practi· lioner. here, for the first time, is your opportunity to get 1he same kind of"rate·break" you would get as an employee. Give yourself an extra $10,000 prolcclion 11 lhcse low group rates. Y"' Can Change To Another Kind 01 Poik:y Later -.:-children Get A Specl1I Conversion Privilege If you wish. you can convert to any kind of «::aSh value policy-ordinary. 20-pay. endowment. etc. ....... any time within S y~rs. (This conversion privilege reduces one year for each year you are over age .50 at issue date.) Regardless of your age or health you can convert your full $I 0.00<1, Your wife her full $5.000, without any qualifications whatsoever. Special SJ0,000 Convrnion Privilrgt> Fo, Your Children: Each of your children at age 18 can a11to. niatically convert 10 a $10,000 cash value policy. without any qualifications ~t all. This is truly a wonderful fu!ure advan1age for your children. t>e.. cause it gives the highest value and lowest cost at lhe earlies! adult age! Full Prorrction: Your Group-Rate Life lniurance Plan covers death from t1r1y cause-sickness. accident, natural causes. (Suicide is nor covered in the first two years.) E.itra St't:urity: No matter how often you change je;bs or how poor your health may become -we . guarantee, right up to age 65, that we cannot refuse to renew your policy unless we refuse renewal on all policies of this form ITPC·39) in California. And, no change can be made in year-to-year rates unless rates are revised on this fonn throughout Cali· fornia. You, of course, may drop your policy any time, for any reason. Our lower Costs Make Group Rates Possible By enrolling thou~ndsof pcople al one time. with- out using salesmen, we've cut "sales costs" onrof tht' /argl'Jt .s·ingll' i1e11u of l'XpenJl' in life insurance. Secondly. by using the .. honor system" and eliminal- ing expensive examinations. we·ve «::Ut "'issui:: cosls." And finally. because we only insure people in nonnal. everyday good health, we've been able 10 CUI our rates dawn to "'group .. rates. These rates are based on the pfficial Nl'W York St111111ory 1"11bl<'Of Mini11111111 Gro11p LJft' Re11t'wahlr 1"t!r111 Gross Prt"1ni11111s, the basis for most of the group life insurance in the United States. For you it all adds up to maximum benefit$ at minimum rates. Direct Personal SNYICI Everywhere· Phone "Collect" Atry rnno Our biggest .. plus" is ••• DIRECT PERSONAL SERVICE! From our Direct Personal Suvicc Center in Santa Monica we serve our many thOl.J-o Pnds of policyowners throughout CaJi£ornia quickly and equally. -Friendly personal service counsellors-expertly 1rained 10 help you on t1ny question about your policy-can be called any lime from anywhere in lhe U.S. \Vith your policy You'll receive a special .. collect call"' number. \Vhenever you call you'll be greeted by your personal service counsellor who will be ready to give you all the informatiOl!JOU need. $1 No·Rlsk Introductory Offer Money.Back Guarantee No Red Tepe-Enroll Now! h's c:uy 10 enroll. Just send in lhe form at the right with $1. Qualificatiom: are fcW ••• adult ages I 8·5S ••• children 30 days-18 years ••. non.hazardous OCCU· pations · •• , nonnal. everyday good hcallh. If you n1cet these few· requirements. you can qualify on lhe : ~honor system"' without the usual fuss and bolher. There·s no red tape and no one will call on you. /\nd lhere·s no risk at all! SI fully covers you for S 10.000 protection during the special one-month introductory period. You «::an even get your dollar back. Just rclurn your policy within 10 days if you decide you don't wish to keep it. You begin paying your regular low monthly rate after lhe one·month in1roduc1ory period. which also puts your famtly"s coverage in full force. So you see. nothing is gained by wailing un1il the deadline to enroll. >'011r rare will lll'Vrr be lower than ir i.f rlRlit now and the sooner we receive your enroll· ment, the sooner you'll be covered. To take advanlage of all your bcncfils under the Group·Ra1e Life In- surance Plan mail your enrollment wi1h only $1 loday. 1"/rank ynu.' A Quick Review of the Group-Ra~e Life Insurance Plan 14 IMPORTANT QUESTIONS ANSWERED t. ""1 do I .td more life._.... DCn'1 &eeaU5C everythlna Is higher .today. The u:pcrU u y you need insuranct! equal to ".5 tirnt1 your anrrual income u an absolute minimum." Add up your life pOlicies, ycu'U quidr:ly discover that )'OU don't have ".5 times", and will nted al leut $10,000 men. Z. 8o"colatfordSt01GOOmoref Enroll tar SI0,000 duriq this 1pecial elU'Onment at low monthly group rates you can easily aft'ord. (Enmple: age 3S, $3.20 is your basic: monthly rate -tee chart abo\"C,) By enrollina ;oow, you'll cct your l5nt month for onl1 SI IXJI 3. c..1..w ss,ooe ror m,. .V•t MJ" chlMrm for Sl,toltKhf Yea. Three c:0G1binatlons art available. F11mllJ, IAcludel vou ror SI0,000, your wira for S.5,000, -your children for St,000 each. HN11H,,td·Wl/1, in• c::Jcda you for SI0,000, )">Ur wife for SS 000. Ont· 't¥Vll, includes )'OU for SI0,000, )'Our chi1drt.n for SI 000 c:ac:b. The rate chart abovt 1bows bow~ u~ prot«t )'Our 'IVholc family for vc:ry hulc: moocy. . 4. .,.a9J•otr•~~nklf By cnrolllna thou1tnds or people •tone llme, with. out u1fn1 plbmc:n, we·ve cut "gain cosb"-one of the laraut linsle ltem1 of expense. Secondly, by ... QJ"""t!M '"honor l)'llcl'!( and eliminJlinl U:• psns1vc uunin•tioM, we've cut "inut cosu.. And finally, by Jr11urin1 only people In normal, tVtl')'· la)' aood ))cal th, n 'vc 1c1ually cut our rat a down , '"paphta"I • 5. W1D I pt ltl'ftct wttm I Deed M1 Absolutely. Policyowners throughout Catiromia are served quickly and equally. With your policy, you1l get a "special 11umbcr" to call "collect" from anywhere in the U.S. and talk with a Kn'· i<:c c:oumc:l.lor on any question )'OU bave. '· Cu I map my polkJ' liter oaf Yes. You can c:onwrt to·any kind of $10.000 cash 'l'aluc lire polk:y wi1bout qualifications. You 'UllY convert any time within five yean if you are under 'O it iS51.lCI datt-<loc year less for acb Jt.ar aw:r 50. 7. c .. ..,wlftJllld"1Wml-teot Your. Wife ctn convert to a S.5,000 cash valOC! policy and each of your children at aae 18 aut&o ma:ica1'1 qualities for a Sl0,000 casb value policy. 1. How~ ... badldmletplYt lmmrdla11l1. The full amouut 11 ,,.id u aoon as a claim 11 tteeived and \'trifled by \lll, If )'out wife or childrtn are elao insured, you arc their bent· ficiary, You may chanie your btoefic:iary at .1ny time. t. Cnldropm7polk:yfC..J01dtop1Mf You can drop your Polley at any Umc. We ruar- antre rlaht up to age. 6S, that we canltOt dec:llno rcnew1!1 or eb1nge.r1tt1 unless we do so on all pollc:lcs (Policy TPC39) throuabout Califomi&. ti. b1'1'WhdDcUf• ...... ~ • ., Yc:s. Trans Pacific Life lnsunnce Comp11ny b I . i fully lic:eimd and rerulated by the Jasun.nee: Department of california and ii a tnll lepl rc- terve cocnpany. JJ, BoW"iln--PKlfkLlfenWt Dunne'• Insurance. Reports, a national authority en Insurance companies. h11 awarded Trans Paci8c Life its hi!hest possaDlo policybo1der'1 ratinz, •A+ (Excel ent)." 12. Howealnroll•8it1I0110rspttm-i' lust flll in the abort form at the riJ.hL Select" the pl.an. that 1uits your needs: Family, HUlband-\vif~ One-Pa.rent, Individual Adult. Enrollcneat age Junits: 18 • .5.5 for you ind your wife; 30 daya to 18 years for your children. U You're in oOnnil. ..... l')'day aood health and in. • ~ oc:cupaUOn. 'YoU 1hoold quaJifr. Simply mail your enrollmen1 form with only SI for}'OUrftnt month. On the. "'honor system," tbcrc:'t no rtd tapt an<' DO ODC will call on you. 13.Cut_..,_ Of ~ Return )'OUJ' palicy within JO days afttt iuuc~ale and )"OUr ~lar will be refunded. 1f you dori't·'lualiry, your dollar will be mumrd immediately. 14. WhJ lboold I t.•roD now? Bcfaute your rate will never be knret thtn it 11 ri~t now. Abo, 1incc conditions of bcaJth chanp Without wamina and could aftcct your quaJib· 1iont. you should mail rour enrollmeot todot - • • •• a ' • • ltll'flm ..... a..-~ Find your monthly group rate .for each pollcy year right here 11•1• "" 11•1• ... .... •. $5.30 $0 $10.60 •• $21.40 5.IO 51 11 .60 •• 23.20 6.30 ~ 12.60 •'4' 25.10 6.IO 63 13.90 .... 27.20 7.40 114 15.10 '112 29.60 f.1 • 11.10 55 16.50 •13 32.10 4.50 41 8.90 •se 18.00 •114 34.80 4.90 ~-9.70 •57 19.70 F•'lltfe. ... "" oftbl rate shoft for btr ·~·Soc Family •nd Husband· Wife Plan 1t leru lmdude al ..... mlNra fw 11'51 o( your nitt. See Family and Ont·Paunt Plafls Jt kf'L P1y anJ way yov cbcae-monthly, quanerly, 5emi-ann1P.lly, 1nnually. A domi&J-1 30¢ MTVic:c dlart1 adcW to piymcnts other tbaa annua l. "Ratel lor a;et S&-&4 for rantwal only. Pollclel not lnutd cM!lr SS. Annual R...,, ... Conv.rtlbf9 Tenn 'to Age 15 Polley TPC-31 with One Month lnHJll Tenn lnaurance Rider TPR-311 -"· cine LIFE INS ~ ~ 0.-0. U.. l"*'f'lllCt: Colnelany Llee .. ed Bfl Tiie State·OI Calllornla A Legel ReHrve Compony • Roted "A Plu1 (Excellent)" liJ Dunno'• Trans Paci1lc Life Imunncc Company national autboritr1on insurance companica. has won tbia well-deae"ed reputation: in ill .yeport to po1icybolden, hu apia Clearly opmdfng In lhe ltighut public inter-given Trans Pacific Life its highest rat.in& of '.r'~ providillg quality lervi«, lnformaJion, "A Plu.r (Ezctlknt) ... ''llabUity a1'd rupaM1bUi1y-and trenundoiu As a legal reserve company Jicemed-b)" price advantogt~erylhing the COIWllnU the S1atc of California, Trans Pacific Lile 11-·ant.r and nttth. Jnsurance Company is wor1h1 of your tnat Dunne's Insurance Repons, a well-known and confidence. Group-Rate Life Insurance Plan Direct Personal Stnict Ctnler • 3130 Wil.rhiTt Boulevard • Santa Monica, CA. 90406 ~~---~cW,~~roRM----~~ .. Enrollment Ho. 301'3 Ende Mfdnltflt, Dacembfl 19, 1971 3 Simple Enrollment Step• 1.114ect ptan dHited: fMH,, HillbenlJ.Wlfe, OM-PM.nf, lndiwiikiml Adull, 2. AnlWW all .-Ilona on IN ""tlonof S)'ltlM". 1. fOI' e.t PfOCHlktt. NI ltit t0M •ilfl $1 to CMIT 24-1\ouf P01l1I bOJI:: o,.._ ..... PIM, •01. 1IOO, lenta Mof!Ca, CA to401 '.'t:<!' nwoMANT: a.eek l'IM D•lred OfllllllJ [J~WBa Q'OM-l'8"lfll O lndh1clua1Adult ..L••t• ... , .. ., "'-L ·--·Tl-•<LOW '""" ---------SIATE.----Z1P----- BIRTH Pl.ACE AGE-DA.TE .. a: t~Y """OF BIRTH-------- Do you or any fmily rncmbn 10 be COftted enaqc in private nyi n_.1. pi1r11..:hutin1, io.:uba divins. mo1orcyc\e or auto racing. « any other dan1croos (lil~timt'! [JY~ONq Or .. y~ ... aive name of person and acth•ily,) ________________ _ In the put 5 ycan. have you or illl)' family rnnnbtr to be taw~d rtcrivtd ~ical alltnlton f« any di1ea1c:. irUury. ph)'lic:fl « mm1ll c:onditi.Jn~CYrsONo 1 lr"Yeo.0 ". describe in bo~ Attach plain lhfft o( p11per if~ore spllCC is needed.) Per feMltf or tt.r1lleod wtt. Pima lnl:fUde the llowfnt I about JOUr wff•: WIFE"S BIRTH NAME----~----,~ •• ~,~ •• ~. ---AGE-DATE._,~~~~I •• a .. + ~ HFJOKT -NOW 'dN!'' ••. OF BIRTH WEIGHT __ PREGNANTI QYq ~o. .. for fantl.IY or O...Pimnt "9M ""*'" lM tonowlnt lnfonMHDft lbOU'l rour ehlldrtt1: . Child"tfWnltfirsland lf'lilill) st:A "G[ DAT(Of'llln" MONTH n.t.Y YlAl BENEFlCIARV: Unku othenwi~ iliattd, the :ipplkant shall be the bentliciary of the Wif• and any lntured child: the 11 klflf~ bene~c1~1')' .f:hall be lhe Wirt a1 th~ d~tt or 1hi1 application. if U.ina. athtrwlte survmna c:h1ldt.m 1n f(luMI 5hares. oc.hcr•i!lt 1ht lflplicanfa atilt. ltfld"'id•tY lteqlMK (irdhcrthan aboWt)