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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-19 - Orange Coast PilotI • • • Hunt;ng(on~t3ente -'~~~~~~-.:.-~,~-~1111!11 ....... !!!ll!I.•,· ....... 1. I 7 L FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER :19, :1971· \IOL-64,. NO. m. 4 SICTIOHI, • '"els • -1 Paper PliillJ_Jton Writer Speaks to OCC Students By ARmUR R. VINSEL Of HM D1/1Y f'li.t 51•ff Men throughout . the world indulge in ~ cheap ar:id genera~ly hafmleU habit Jf daydreaming. Writer George "P~per Tiger" Plimpton make& the old America n dream of fame and fortune come true for him!lelf. He tries the real thing, f8i)s miserably trut comically and cries all the way to the i>ank· after doing a book about his ad· 1entures. "The American male spends about 90 .>ercent of his day dreaming on sports," Plimpton told his Orange Coast College )istinguished Speakers Series audie.nce rhursday. Plimpton has quarterbacked the Detroit Lions. raced boxer Archie Moore n the ring and played in "Rio Lobo" with 1Jew2!>rt Beach's own movie institution, lohn -Wayne. ' One OCC listener asked·about that (eat. "Oh, Mr. Wayne, I forgot I was in )range County," quipped Plimpton, lrawing a roar. Slender and shaggy-haired, Plimpton is !d1tor of the Paris Re view literary iTlagazine as "'ell as a wr iter who tries to >e part of the actio n as well as being .vhere it is. "I'm from the easl and ~1r. Wayne !onsldered me 'a dude' and 'a liber2J,' " 1aid Plimpton. "There is nothing worse in Mr. Wayne'a lexicon than 'a dude' and 'a iberal.' '' Ae and twh other film desperadoes .,ere teamed lo go gunning for The Duke. "'T'here was inc. a midget and an albino with purple eyes," Plimpton said. "I :bought we were terrific." AP '""'' HE'LL TRY ANYTHING Sports Fan Plimpton Dayliglit Bandits Get $25,000 H rui.tingtoit 1-1 aul He said they rode into town slowly and menacingly. as do all bad guys in good westerns. destined (or violent doom in the By RUDI NJEDZlELSKI :tust of Main Street. Dt 111e 0111, P1i.1 111t1 Plimpton blew the scene and $S,OOO in A team of daring daylighl gunmen held production costs to re-do it. up a Huntington· Genter je\\·clry sfure this Screaming directors ran out to tell him morning in lluntington Beach and hired killers do not hit town holding the escaped with more than $25,000 worth of 1orse reins in both fists, because they gems and cash. need ·at least one free gun hand. The bra1.en rnbbery took• place at Plimpton did have kind words for John Lawson's Jewelry around 9:22 a.m. as Wayne. store.. manager Buck Roberts returned f-~ ·nns-~a~g-rc~at rifconte•u"r""an;;;r-::3-:g;:r"ea:r---fro-m111ornlng-coffe . tnnuence/' the best·selling au th 0 r A heart palicnt, Roberts was believed .teclared, to have surrcred a seizure during the "Everybody on the set was walking holdup. trountl and spilling tobacco juice Another employe, lloward Pollack, was betwetn their toes." . slugged in the bnCk of the head, possibly IUu·~trating his pro football and fight with a · gun. Neither re q u ired ring escapades with film s I ides. hospital11.ation. . Plimpton said' 'his light-heavyweight bout Hoberts told Investigating orricers . he with Arqiie ~1oore was perilous. was· met by the gunmen at the store's A prankster-author friend , Peler ~faas, rear entrance when he was returning OOld the curious Moore Uu1 t Plhnplon from a corree break at a cnfe in the llun- was actually~ naliOAal collegiate box.ing-~ tlngton Center. champion. Arn1ed with a short barreled reyolver, "He wants 1(1 become world champ and pcmiblY a '.:Mkfi1iber, 'tbe two 1uspfict.s 1'qt bother "·ilh all the preliminary led Ro()frts to .t~e Y~llll e1l4 IQrc,ed him Ottits;'' Plimpton·s 'friend ' told !he stun-to open it. ned Moore. "He's l[oing lo have the gym An inventory of the gems and jewelry packed with press." ~ stolen by the two gunmen has not yet "If he lays a hand on me, I'll declt been completed, but Roberts estimated him," 1'-foo.re snarled, clenching his Ii.sis. that the cash value was "in excess of ·Plimpton concedes he didn't lay a hand $25,000.'' on ftfoore. Officer Ken Jenien said Roberts, Nol all of Pllmpl.Gn's esc.apaides are. so Pollack, employe Fred Lopez and a rough·and·tumble. fourth employe were bound wllh tape He playtd pef't!1asion in an orchestra following the succt!!!Cu\ heist. conducted by the renowned Leonard Jensen said further that llnbcrts was Bernstei n in Winnipeg, Canada. able to alert police momr.nts After the Bernstein reaCled to Plimpton's Jack of robbery by tripping An alarm button. talent almoat 11 violently as Archie Offleert were unsuccessful ln aetUng a (SH PLIMPTON, PIJt II . (S.. JEWEL, P11e I) I I Kidney Taken Out e Capistrano ·City Aide lmpe:riled? By JOHN VALTERZA Of HI• DlilJ P'llel 11111 Char'les ••ChiJCk'l -A1len, tor:mer San. Juan Ca pistrano planning commlssi!Jner ~ said today that he resigned fro m the municipal planning post early last month because or threats or harm to himself and his family.' A spokesman for the District At· · torney's office said today they are "interested" in the case. They were con- tacted by Allen and his attorney . Allen, a savings and loan executive, said on Oct. II he received "a mesS11ge relayed to me that a personal threat had IJcen issued against me by certain con· cerns that shall remain unnamed ." lfe resigned several hours later al a regular meeting of the commission. The commission had been in the midst or controversy surrounding several pro- posed de velopments. There w e r e disagreem ents over esthetics and land use in the fast groWing communitY.. The threats assertedly involved Allen's op- posilion to aspects of p r o p o s e d developments. All en said after the threat he im· medi ately n1adc provisions for the securi· ly of his family and se lf. He did not elaborate. Allen had .mentioned the threats to a reporter of the DAILY PILOT the mom· ing following his resignation. He asked at the lime tJiat the information be con· fidenlial, ~aying he feared the conse- quences. "My wife and I ha ve attempttd to keep this reason to ourselves, however we find that we no longer are will ing t•kce p ::;uch a disgusting happening secret," Allen said. "We have worked too hard and in- volved ourselves too much lo si1nply abandon those things that we bel ieve. "The decision to issue the.,o;tatement to- day also has been prompted by the fa ith of some ot our friend s who ha ve not pushed us too hard tor an explanation o( my resignation, and. re(!;rctfully. by a few persons who have invented fnlse altcga- ton ltrnrratt:crrrpHo-discover-the rcnso n." Allen's disclosure \Vas mnde In 11 prepared statement issued to members of the news media . But copie!I of the state- ment also nJalerialized \Yedhesday night at a joint meeting ot the Snn Juan Cily Council and planning commission. lie has declined to enlarge on the statement. Allen said he had "no doubl " that !he threat involv ed potential harm lo his larn ily and himself. "1 wouldn't ha ve quit otherwise," he said. Allen joined the commi ssion in the sp ring of 1970 on the nomination of Coon· cilma n James Thorpe . He Is president of the San Juan Little League. has scrve<j on the ricsta Association and was chosen "Outstanding Young Man of the Year for 1970,'' SaiJor Rescu.ed LONDON (AP) - A 26-year .. ld Brillsh yachtsman was rescued today after R "Ttine-day ordeal aboard 11 rubber dinghy 'In the wintry AtlanUc. Radio Arcachon, a French maritime stalion, said he wss picked up in the Bay of Blsay by tht NorwesWW.nJreLI>olmdi._ ., " - ? • Nar~s in Dut~h • • A .•' ',-"-............. ; , " -. ~ .. ' "I ·am -guilty 0£ ·nothing;'·'·says· Ed,vard Eg-an, (left), the New York nar· colics detective who turned actor for the movie, "The French Connec· tion." (See today \Veekender.). EJ?an faces departmental charJ?es for allegedly withholding confiscated drugs. He says he merely feU be- hind on ~is paperwotk. Meanwhile, John Cusack (right), chief U.S. narcotics agent for Europe, was notified Thursday he is being trans- -· ferred. Cusack an12:erc·d French officials by charging French police are not arreslin g known drug traffickers. Nixo.11 Discards Speech, Issues Challenge to Labor ~!IAri.lt BEACll, Fla . (UPI) -Presl· dent Nixon threw away the speech he prepared for the AFL-CIO convention to- day and told lhe labor leaders he was giving it lo them "straight from the shoulder" -that he was going lo make his eainomic program work with or without labor's help. "It is my obligation to make this (progrom) succeed and to the extent of my powers I shall do that.'~ the chief ex- ecutive told the nation's· Tabor chiertains in R bold and emotional J.alk. Ni xon told a quiet audience. which ap- pl 3uded only lightly when he entered the hotel ballroom, that despite political dif· fcrences he knew '·''I'he majority of wo1·kcr!! are for America and for a strong nationa l defense." lie said at the oulM>l that he stood by hi~ remarks which had been handed out lo the pres.~ in advance or his speech. often asked "What Is wrong with the old prOsperity," and said : "I'll tell you what is wrong -war and inflation." Nixon said that he was as~ed why he had decided to come speak before the coovention which has blasted his policies. lie said his rep ly was that he knew when the chips were down he could count on labor's supporl for1ffs policies. • ' The President spoke about his winding down the War. the drop Jn casualties, and how .150,000 h.ad marched on Wall.,Stfeet in ravorOJ his Cambodia n incursion even though editorial writers and the . in· (See NIXON, Page 1) Actress Loses Kidney; Recovers In those rcn1nrks tlK! President told the labor lend cfll his wage and price conlrols SANTA MONICA (UPI) -Actress would produce a "pctiod of sust:iined Barbnrn Stanwyck underwent surgery to- prospcrily that will repay many limes day for removal of her left kidney and over any immediate sac rifices that any was resting well . a spokesman at· St. segment of lhc Amer)can work force is John's lfDspital said. called uporr to make.''' The screen star was hospitatfzed Ni:.:on spoke wit h Intensity, and somewhat excitedly. But he managed a 111ursday toi-what was described as "a slight smile when he entered the lion's severe cold and exhaustion.'' She was den of his severest critics. · (lperated on when examination disclosed lfe was welcon1cd at the door by AFL-the ruptured kidney, 010 President George Meany, who had .. . . . attacked Nixon sharply Thursday and ac· She will be in the hospital several cused him of resorting to "totalitarian"~, weeks,"• friend said. method~. Misa Stanwyck's Illness forced the pro- "l'm here toda y to a~k your support for ductiofi or "FlttgerAld and Pride'' l,P shut the building of a lasUng peaet'. and the down. A repre.sentative of the motion pic- bu!ldlng of a new \lropserity /' Nixon told ture·for·televlslon aald the actres& wW be the bl& llll>or audieoce,Jje 11id be _ ii replaced by another performer. U,I T....,_ MISSED BIG VOTE St1t• S.n1tor Wedw.orth Coast Bill Hopes Dead For Revival From ·Wire Services SACRA~ENTO -Hopes forrevivtng-a major coastline prnteetlon bill havt been dashed ·by Sen. James Wedworth, COD!, i;idered by supporters as the la11t hope IOI f.iaving the measure this year. The Hawthorne Democrat said thur&o day that while he supported the bm originally, it had been "emasculated ••• gutted". by amendments and he opposu the: measure now. Wedworth wa1 absent Monday when. a critical vote wu laken on Ammblymaa Alan Sieroty's bill to rejulate coasW development. Sieroty told newsmen the Hawthorne Democrat was the nrinc vote to enable tbe mea~re to clear the ctm• mittee. It died one vote short. . ~4!roly's bilJ was viewed as the last re- maining major environment bill ln thti legislative hopper. It wpu ld ha ve banned 811 new development along the 1,100 miles of California coastline unless approved by a regional state commission. OopponentS. ai'giied it Wot.ild undifrhint local control and stifle all development. At a news conference called by Wedworth, the lawmaker said he would not vote to revive the · measure, COD> tending it had been debated enough. He said he was ab.sent attend!ng tb ''personal business" which had to be taken care of while the coastline bill lac· ed its committee test. Asked if his business jnvolved buyinl race horses, Wedworth replied: "Yes, I ha ve some thoroughbreds." When another reporter asked, why he chose to attend to hi3 personaLIUalrs ahead of legislative business. WedWOflb re~ponded : "I have to pay rent. and feed some children." Wedworlh earns $19,200 a year as a legislator in addition to $30 a day living expenses. He is a retired bicycle dealer, who recently bought a scenic ranch in the Sierra Nevada Foothills east of Sacramento. When the news conference began, Wedworth said, "T don't know what I .would have done if I were here Monday.'1 But when pressed on the point later, he said he actually made up his mind to vote against the bill Sunday. "I would ~ave voted 'no,' if I had been here," he said. "I made my deeislon &m. day. "I'm not ashamed or my record," he added, when newsmen inquired whether he 'feared a ~conservation organlza.Uon'1 pledge to try Jo defeat him n~ year, when he's up for re-election. l\'eatller Those pesky winds 1bould, 111clr. off tonight, paving the way for a nice, sunny Saturday with tem~ eratures ranging from 60 to 70 - and overnight lows from 35 to U. INSIDE TODAY Been thinking about a trip to Death Valle~? Reiid Fredo erick Schoemehl'1 stor11 ill to- day'1 Weekender on Pape 25. He calls Che · beaut.-of thil deserC ···indes~ribablt. 1•111~' • M•IUll ,._.. • C•nferllfa • N1tl9111I N"'" .. (ftKkiftf ,, " .._._ " ' ""' .... lfnllMlr911h ..,. (-k l " ,, .. i. ·-• trtu-• " ·-1 .. ,. D1vtn:H " Sit<-Mlt"tlelt ft•7' E•1t1r1•I 111'1" • TtllYllilll • lnt1rt1ln1111n1 ••• "'""" '"" l'lfllftCI tl·tl Wtl llltr • ~fKI,. .. Whlt1 Wftfl " A~ft l."'"°'1 " w-·• "-1•1' MIUMK • WtrN ·-.. ....... ll·tt Wtel!Mltr .... • ~ .. • f I > tAllV PllOT Tax Boost Hits Floor Of Senate SACRAMEN'Jll (UPI) -A hall·bWlon dollar tax increase that woula establish litllt income tu withholding on Jan. l has reached the Senate floor with Gov. Ronald Reagan's blessings. Legislators say the package is in near final form for enactment. The bill woold raise taxtl high enough to plqg a $3l0 million revenue gap in the $6.I billion slate budget. finance $20D million In construction and provide $23 million in business inventory tax relier. Most of the money -$470 million - Would be raised from withholding. The package's remaining $8.1 million would come from Increased taxes on banks, corporations, the oil industry and wealthy individual.! enjoying "prefere~ tial income" loopholes. The bill, by Assemblyman William .T. Bagley_(R~-Rafae.I), is the only rnaJor Ul package still active in the Legislature, which wrest!~ behind the scenes for months attempting t o negotiate a massive property laI relief plan. "We sa t downstairs (in the Gov~nor's oC!iceJ all year1.alking and the time for talking's over," admonished veteran Senate Finance Committee Chairman Randolph Collier CD-Yreka). Collier's committee approved the 13agley bill on a voice vote Thursday and sent it to the full Senate. which is ex· peeled to pass the measure -perhaps next week -and i:iave the way tor final negotiations in a two-house conference committee. The Finance Committee, on a narrow \'Oice vote, rejected a proposed amend- ment by Sen. Albert S. Rodda (0- Sacramento J, to raise another $9,5 million and provide 5 percent lla lary in- creases for University of California and &late college faculty. Under the bill, payroll withholding of the stale income tax would begin Jan. l. A citizen would pay Laxes on hill cur- rent 1972 income through withholding, as under the federal system . ' But in April he still would be required to send the state a lump sum tax pay- ment on his 1971 inccme. To Jessen this initial double burden, a person would be allowed to reduce his tax on 1971 irlCQme by 15 percent. , Thus, a citizen who ordinarily would pay $100 in state income taxes next year would be billed for $13:; if withholding wete enacted -SSS in April on 1971 in-- come and and $100 spaced throughout the )'ear on 1972 wages. In 1973, his tax would revert to $100. The initial double tax would net the state inore ltian $200 million. And the government would use this windfall under the Bagley propo5!1l to fi nance a crash capital outlay program . Frona Page l JEWEL ... complete description of the two caucasian gunmen other than that one was short and one of medium height . Since they are believed to have been wearing gloves. no fingerprints were left behind. It is believed that the tv.·o robbers made their getaway in a van parked somev.·here near the store's rear en- trance. The jewel robbery v.·as the second to occur at tbe shopping center in three months. On Aug. 31, Kirk Jewelers was hit by two armed men around tbe same time in the morning. The gunmen escaped with ll0,000 in jewelry. None of the jewelry from the Kirk robbery has been recovered to date and the suspecls re· main at large. DAILY PILOT H.-.,.-.._. ,,_. .. ..,. s. ,,_,, O~G• COAST l'UILllHlH• COMl'IJfr l•~•rt H. w,,4 "''"'""' ""' l'Wlltfltf J i 1li: R. Cy1!•'!' Viol ,, ....... 111111 G-11 MIMl<W '"''""'' K ..... a • E<lllor· l~•m•1 A. /ilytp!.i~• M_n .. lfts E'11fr Gh1rl11 H. L•., Rick11J P'. Nill "ultl•ftf Mfllftlnf l!llllrl o'"'" Cott• MtH: »11 wnt 111y ""''' N""'"'' I~: lift H-1 1eoln91'11 u, ....... 1..-dl: ttt ..... " ........ I.It Hll'lliflt!M IMC~i 1)11! I N cfl IO~ll~IAI "" Cl-!ti »S ,H<lrlll II Ct l'lllM A•I -·- Big Hash Haul All But Drinking Legislature OKs Adult at 18 · Bill SACRAMENTO (UPI) The legislature toda y voted final approval to a landmark bill n1aklng California young people adults at age 18 for virtually everything except drinking. The bill went to Gov. Ronald Reagan on a 47-6 vote when the Assembly concurred . In Senate amen(Jments to the proposal. Five Republicans voted against it as did one Democrat. The proposal by Assemblyman Paul Priolo tR-Pacillc Palisades), lowers the legal age of adulthood In Ca1ifomia from 21 to 18 and gives the 11-, IS-and 20-year- old crowd l'fl95l of the right.s currently enjoyed by the over-21 set. Among other things, IS.year-olds could be hired as policemen, serve on juries, be tried in adult courts, boys could marry without parental consent, and they cou1d sign legal contracts. Exempted would be the purchase: and drinking or alcoholic beve:rages. That ls specifically prohibited by the eonstitttlion. Priolo said the bill does not arfect ex- Jsting court orders dealing with child sup- port which set the age of majority at 21. But be said future child support cases would recognize the maximum age for child support at 18. But Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach), argued that under the bill it created two classes of 18-year-olds -those whose parents are divorced and those whose parents are married. "Under this bill you could hive 1 mar- ried IS.year-old living at home with his mother, yet his father would still be re- quired to pay child-support," he said. He urged the bill be a~ended In a con- ference committee but the assembly disagreed and sent it to Reagan. ~'~i ·Reial<. Mr. Meany. . , The freeze is over/ f 'r o•n Page 1 NIXON ... tellectuals were against him. He said he strongly favors repeal of the auto exci&e tax and tht job credit tax:, which will increase American workers' competitive position with worker I abroad. But then he laid it flatl y on the line. Customs Inspector James McEwen looks over 'packages o.r ~ashish which were smuggled into the country from ~mste~dam 111s1de the paneling of this foreign minibus. The ~an l''ranc1sco s~tzure came after agents gave the van a cursory inspection and l?assed 1t through. Then a dog went into a frenzy and darted to both sides of the van. Agents waited until the van was picked up and subsequently arrested three people in Daly City. Cost of Living Takes Minimal Rise in October The opposition votes were cast by Republicans Robert Burke, Huntington Beach; W. Don MacGJIJivray, Santa Barbara; Ray; Seeley, Blythe;_ Floyd Wakefield, South Gate; .Badham; and Democrat Alister McAUster, San Jose. He said he wants labor's participation to make his new economic policy succeed "but whether we get that or nol, '1 he warned,-"it is my obligation to make this sucCeed and to the extent of my powers I , shall do that." M He said that he believes it is time to T·wo V.alley e•-i understand that ther• ." points o1 disagreement and agreement. "I want a 'Scoop' Jackson Enters 1972 Democrat Derby F • CJ program that is fair. WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The govern-UClftg tar ges ';But as President of all the people t ment announced today the cost of iivl(tg think it is my duty to do what is best for Of Tl f F d America.'' rose 0.t percent In October, the second te t, TUU Nixon said he understood th at full month or the wage-price freeze. The unemployment was, because he bad rise \\•as even le55 -0.1 percent, Two Fountain Valley men are among grown up in it in the depression. smallest in 4\h: years -when adjusted. four defendants scheduled for ar-Nixon 's fighting stance came as no for seasonal variations. raignment today in Orange C.Ounty surprise to observers who have watched Superior Court on charges filed following him make bold moves in the past several President Nixon's 90-day freeze, now the cracking ti an alleged plan to defraud months. He said our goal is "to win a WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Jlenry M. "Scoop" Jackson or Washington formally declared his candidacy for I h e Democratic presidential nomination to- day and said he would enter the New Hampshire, Florida, Jlllnols and Wisconsi n primaries. Jackson, runn ing far behind In public opinion polls and an admilled underdog, conceded the rirst·in-the-nation New Hampshire primary to front-running Sen .. Edmund S. Muskie of neighboring Maine. . The New Hampshire test is March 7. "! don't expect to win in Ne\!, Hampshire," J ackson said, "but l am confident I have a chance lo make: a reasonable showing ." Jackson made bis long-expected an- nouncement at a packed news conference in the marble columned, red draped Senate caucus room. "I'm goiog to take off my coat, roll up my slee\les ala Harry 1'ruman and tell it . like it is," he sAid to .t>plause from sup- porters crammed intO the huge roorn behind chairs set out for reporters. Asked about his finances, Jackson said he estimated it would take about $1 million to get up to the fourth of his plan- ned races, Wisconsin. "We've raised part or it, and we're raising it all over the country," he said. "We're doing a1i right." In response to questions, Jackson said he also was seriously consider ing en- tering the primary in Alabama in a direct challenge to Gov. George C. Wallace, Who may provide Jackson's majo r com· petition in Florida. Asked if he would consider the No. 2 spot on the ticket if he failed in his bid for tbe presidential nomination, Jackson said, "I'm not getting into iffy questions .now =-Lam runolngltir the No. l spot ." Tbe 59-year-old son of Norwegian im· J. 1 replaced by more flex ible Phase ll con-the state by planting squatters in the peace that will end wars." migrants, born in Everett, Wash., was trols, affected about so percent or the path of proposed rreeway development. Nixon said with some heat that he accompanied by his wife, Helen, and his items measured in the monthly labor Matthew Bronberger, 19, and Stephen knows that "frightening statements have two children -Anna Marie, 8, and Peter, A. Pugner, 22, bolh o( 17675 Santa Deen made from this podium" about his 5 -as he went before television cameras de~~:t;ee;:r:;re:{'~aid higher prices for ~~~t~R:~¢:~e g~~~~g~e~i~~ ~~n~i~~~~ fo~7~~~~ge 1~~~~~~:~~\~g1:;: ~~s::~ to make the announcement. new cars and clothing accounted for County Grand Jury indictment that tabs referred to as "political junkets" design- Jackson, who never has lost an election Oc be · right of way agent Robert Aden Nichols ed for him to win re-election. since he became prosecuting attorney of al most all of the to r increase. Jr .. 44, of Anaheim as the princi pal "These trips are not for the next elec- Washington'.s Snohomish County in 1938. The adjusted cost of living ncrease last defendant. lion," he said vehemently. "These trips thus became the third de c I are d month of only 0.1 percent was the Nichols is accused of receiving and are about the next generation." Democratic candidate. The others are smallest tor a month .since April , 1967. soliciting bribes, attempted grand theft He said that he was not going to China Sen. George S. McGovern of Southern The l'llnadjusted increase of o.2 percent and conspiracy to commit grand theft. or the Soviet Union "with my eyes Dakota and Mayor Sam Yorty of Los was the same as in September, the only His son, Robert Aden Nichols IU, 18, is closed" and said that no one knew better Angeles. Before the year is out, there other full month of the freeze, imposed charged with conspiracy and attempted than he the differences betwei!n the na-may be two or three others. nd 3 grand theft. . tions. Jackson said President Nixon has "lost between Aug. 15 a Nov. 1 · Investigators claim the elder Nichols Nixon told the gathering: "Never let the trust of millions of Americans.'' The 0.2 rate, lf continued for a full 12 conceived a scheme whereby the group the President of the United States, chie ny because or unemployment aod months, would come out to an annual bribed unidentified residents to occupy whoever he is, go to the negotiating table, ecooomic troubles. rate o! 2.4 percent. falling within Nixon's homes in tile path of areas. eannarked by representing the second most powerful "I think wt can bonesUy aod flaUy say: goal of holding inflation to 2 percent to 3 thf: state for freeway constructJon. ~ n2lion in the world." it's a mess," be 'said. "So tht No. t ' ?>percent a year. Investigators told the grand jury that a He stressed, as he has often before, the priority in this country must be to put Based on a 1967 average of 100, tbe Costa Mesa resident pla yed a major part need for the U.S. to remain No 1 in the our people back to work." coniumer index stood at 122.6 for in the unraveling of another aspect of tM world and insisted that a stronl defense Jackson said the need is for 1 Presi-October, meanini: It cost $12.26 to pay ~qr allfged fraud 'f"hen he told !~" was ne<:essary. dent wbo 'Would blve U. trust' o~botb the a1me· amount of goodl ancf \erv1Ceis 'Dennis Carpenter of Nlchol1' . [. 1-fe described Phase I -the 9tklay business and labor -and thal Nixon' did that cost $10 four years ago. fer to write a hardship lette:r to '11 te freeze on wages, prices and rents which not have that trust. Elsewhere on the economic front, the in return for $1,000 and a set of tires for ended last Monday -as a "remarkable ''I believe that more than any potential go11ernment's Pay Boafd gave further his wife's car. success." candid1te, I have 'the trust of both labor study to the new three-year contract Donald Swedlund',s tire buslness at 585 Nixon, drawing some laughter and for and businetis," he said. "That -is one reached by the United Mine Workers w. 19th St. Is said by investl~ators to be the first time during the speech, noted reason I am running." Union and the soft coal industry. The directly in the path of freeway develop-lhat Meany had something to say about While he made no mention of his poor contrac;I. which needs board approval, menf. Phase JI. standing in public opinion polls, Jacbon calls for a boost of about IO percent a They said Swedlund contacted Then he added , with a wry grin, "All a said people "tell me I'm an underdog in year in wages and benefits. Carpenter and Costa Mesa police after matter of fact. it's hard not to note what this race." At the same time, C. Jack.son Grayson. Nichols, a Jong time state employe, he has had lo say." referring to Meany's "That's all right," he continued. "My chairman of the companion government allegedly visited his premises and pro-bitter attack. The room erupted ln party, the.Democratic party, has always Price Commission, said ·his panel would rr.ised that he: could elpedite relocation of laughter and applause at that time. been the party of the underdog." examine the wage te:rms of the coal con-the busim:ss in return for the asserted .. \Vhat we must try to do." he said, "is In advance of the announcement. his tract to "determine whether companies bribe. try to find a way -working within the office sent ou\ thousands of post cards to will be allowed to increue prtce.s pro-All four defendants are frti! on $10,000 system. to temper the rise of cost of !i v· potential volunteers alerting them to the IJ>Of"'.'.r~ti~on~a~t~el~Y~·" ___________ :b:•i:I :•:•c:h:. _____________ i~ng:_'°_th_a_t_a_ll7Am __ er_i_c_a_ns_w_il_l _be_n_e_fi_t._"_ development, and his campaign staff _ purchased 30 minutes of time for a na· lional te\evisjon sl}ow tonight (on NBC) to kick off the bid. .-- Douglas Zone Sl1owdown YOUR TURKEY DESERVES THE FINEST Heari11g Set f 01· Dec. 2 A showdown meeting on the con· troversial zoning or the P.1cDonnell Douglas Corp. property near Orange County Airport has been scheduled for Dec, 2 by the county Airport Land Use Commission. The group voted Thursday night to schedule the public hearing. The Board of Supervisors and county pl anning commissioners have previously voted to allow a zone cha nge from light industrial to commercial use for the pro- perty. Each vote y,•as split 3 to 2 arter lengthy and sometimes heated sessions. If tbe land use group should vote agains t the rezone Dec. 2, it will require a (our-flflhs vote by the Board of Supervisors to overrule the commission'!f decision. The" rezone violates a comprehensive land use plan adopted las! Sept. 2 by the commission for the county airport area.· Jn the plan. the SO-acre h:fcOonnell Douglas parcel at lhe northeast corner of MacArthu r Boulevard and C~mpus Drive opposite tht airport terminal bullding is resiricted to "research and liglil ·in- dustry." The property is the site of tht former Douglas Ajrcraft Company subsidiary, Astropower, wh ich is no longer in ope:ra· tion. McDonnell Douglas olrlcills apJ>(':ared be.fore the land use comm ission la st month but failed lo sw11y Uie previous decision of the commissioner~ on the pro- per use of the va luable property. The giant aerospace corporation plans lo make the SO acre:s lhe kc}'ston~ ol their ntw land development program. Re- cording to tC3timony by Vic~ Prcstdtnl Don11/d Douglas. Jr, The firm plans a 250- 600·room hotel, 500,000 square fctt Of Of· • fice space and a convention center for the strategically located site. Vigorously opposing the rezone has been the Irvine .Company .,.,,hose officials argue lhal !he c1iange violates lhi!! in- tegrity of the seven year old adopted land t1!{C plan for the airport-industrial com- plex area . Just north of the l\1cDonnell Douglas property are about 60 acres of Irvin<" !and "·hich is zoned and developed to com· 1nercial use such as hotels, oflice buildings and restaurants. The land use comn1issfon's public hear- ing on the issue is set for 7:30 p.m. in the Orange County Planning Comm}ssion hearing room , 400 Civic Center Drive \Vest. Sanh1 Ana. Frona 1•a9e 1 PLIMPTO N. • • l\toore did to hi~ rumored boxing finesse, Pli mpton said. l\1usic takes timi ng and a light touch . Jfe "'as assigned to ring -on cue -a huge gong at the crescendo ol a Tchaikovsky Symphony. "I hll that gong harder than any gong has tvtr been hit." Plirnpton ~Jd the concussion llf1ed the v"hole row of music:it1ns In fronl o( him o!f their SeA IS Rnd '1>11! i l'lorr\fled f X• presslon on lh(' disniayed Berstein '! foe(', .. "But if ~1r. Tchaikovsky rould lwlvc heard ff, ?'m sure he would be very pleased," Plimpton said. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HERIT AGE NIWPOIT STOii O,.N ,llDAT 'TIL t NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wtstcllff Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TI L 9 INTERIORS Profe11lon1I lnttrlor D11l9ntr1 Avall1bl1-AID l'lt•M fell,,.. MMf •f Or .... C•Mll,.,_140·12,J LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co1st Highway Phono: 494-6551 l • 7 Duntin1to ~aeh­ Foont.ain ValJey • -.. vot:. M, NO. 277, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ERIDAY, NOVEllA8Erl 19, ]971: ,. . ' an ~.t-•.. ; ' " . . ' , .. I ....... l)AIL'r PILOT 11111 P119M , ROGER DESAUTELS WATCHES BULLDOZERS GRIND AWAY IN HUNTINGTON BEACH He Says Construction Work on New City Yard is Destroying Site of Old Indian Village Three Officers Talk Suspect Out of Rifle A man armed with a rifle held three Huntington Beach officers at bay Thurs- day alte~noon before they'talked him into surrendering. Police booked Phillip Daniel Graham, 31, of Huntington Beach on charges ()f assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer and burglary. Detectives said Grah2.m apparently had broken_ up with his girl friend about a month ago. He was spotted allegedl y breaking intD her empty apartment at 17362 Kcelson Lane at about 4 p.m. by another resident of the apartment complex, The three officers called to the scene - Jerry Crusinberry, Jim Autin and John Hauser, said they entered the apartment and confronted Graham in the living room. \Vhen they told him he was under ar- rest. the officers said he ran into the bedroom and slammed th e door. \Vhen they got the door open, the pa trolmen allege Graham was holding a .22-caliber rifle on them. Arter a few tense minutes of con· versa.Hon, Graham reportedly agreed to 1urrender and put the gun down. . ' Stabbing Victim Recovers; Police Holding Suspect A Seal Beach man whose lhroat was 1Ut with a butcher Knife during a fight Thursday night is reported in satisfactory condition today at L<ing Ilcach Com- munity Hospital . A hospital spokesman said Ronald F. Case. 33, of 104 Ocean Ave .. is Jn in- tensive care follow ing surgery on the three-inch throat wound. His alleged assallonl Kenneth W. Frallch, 24, of 118 loth St., Seal Beach, is in custody in Orange County Jail on at- tempted murder. charges. Seal Beach police said the two men got lnto a fight during.. a small party at Case's home. During the right they claim Fralich picked up the knife and wounded Case. Fralich then repOrtedly ncd the scene. He was arrested A short time litter near his home . Police said he offl!red no resistanct. Detectives were unable to confirm reparts this morning !hat Case's 'molher 1u!fered cut.s on her hands when she at- tempted to separate the two men. Officers cred1ted a physk:lan who is a neighbo r ol Case With r;aving the victim'& llfe by administerin g first aid. Detectives 11lcl the fight apparently started over the treatment of one cl the women at the party. Doze rs Move In Fir1n Mourns Loss of. Antiquities By CANDACE PEARSON Of 1M O.llJ' Pl .. I Sl•ll To the untrained eye, the bulldozers moving earth Wednesday near the corner of Gothard Street and Slater Avenue in Huntington Beach were of no con- sequence. · But to Costa ?\1esa archeologist Roger Desautels who watched lhe preparations !or a city equipment yard, it meant the loss of what he believes was an entire In- dian Village 1,000 yea rs ago. "Why couldn't the city have told us they were going to do this," he said in frustrat ion. "We could have done some preliminary excavation and sa~ed some of the artifacts, the history.'' Desautels. president of the non-prolit Archeological Research Inc. (ARI ), was especially upset because his firm had written the Hun1ington-Beach-Planning Department. among others, ln Sep- tember. advising them that such sites ex- ist in their area. "\Ve gol no response," he said, despite ARrs offer of free advice. Huntington Beach Planning Director Ken Reynolds said he was not aware the site had any archeological importance, although he did remember receiving a letter from ARI. "Why doesn't this agency identify specific sites for us?" he asked, adding. "Just a general letter doesn't accomplish v'ry much." Desautels said the Huntington Beach site was surveyed on the surfa ce in 1966. Archeologists found soapstone carvings, mortars and pestles, pleces of bowls and carving tools. There would have been much more of value under the surface, he said. ARI tried to explain to municipal plan: ning departments that to alter land without first investigating its archeologiccl and paleontological im- portance was "shirking_ r~QOnsibility to Orange County," he said. "This is unfortunately an example ol what is happening all over the county where such sites are being destroyed e\•ery day. "It's hard to gel people to care," he conl inued. "But even if they don·t believe archeology is imporlant, lhey have no right lo destroy these things.'' In its own invesligation of the county, ARI ha s pinpointed about 3 5 O archeological sites. The firm estimates that about 60 per- cent of these have been or are being (See VILLAGE, Page ZJ Valley Pair Arrested In State Defraud Case Two Fountain Valley men are among four defendants scheduled fo r ar- raignment today in Orange County Superior Court on charges filed following the cracking ol an alleged plan to defraud lhe state by planting squatters in the path or proposed freeway development. Matthew Bronbcrgcr, 19, and Stephen A .. Pugner, 22,. both of 17675 Santa CriJtobal, were chnr,~cd with con spiracy and attempted grand theft in an Orange Actress Loses Kidney; Recovers County Grand Jury indictment that tabs right of way agent Robe rt Ad en Nichols Jr., 44, of Anaheim as the principal · defe ndant. Nichols Is accused of receiving and soliciting bribes. attempted grand theft and conspiracy to commit grand theft. His son, Robert Aden Nichols Ill, 18, is ch::i.r~ed with conspiracy and attempted grand the ft. Investigators claim the elder Nichols conceived a scheme whereby the group bribed unidentified residents to occupy homes In the path of areas earmarked by the state for freewa y construction. Investigators told tOOi.grand jury that a Costa Mesa resident •played·a major part Jn the unraveling or another aspect of the alleged fraud when he told slate Sen. SANTA MONICA (UPI) - Actress Deqn~ Carpenter of NichClls' alleged of- Barbara Stanwyck underwent surgery to-fer lo write a hardship Jetter to the state day for removal of her left kidney and Jn return for $1 ,000 and a set of tires Cor was resting well, a spokesman at St. his wife's car. John 's llospital said. Donald Swedlund's lire business at 585 The screen star was hospitalized W. l~h St. Is said by Investigators to be Thursday for what was described as "a directly In th~ path of frcewey develop- severe cold and exhaustion." She was ment. operated on when examination disclosed They said Swedlund co ntacted the ruptured kidney. Ca.rpcnter ·and C.Osta Mesa police after "She will be in the hospital several _ Nichols, a long tlrne state employe, weeks,'' a friend said. allegedly vtsited his premises and pro- Miss Stanwyck's tllncss fotccd lhe pro-rrJscd lhat he could expedite relocallon of duction of "Fitzgerald and Pride'' to shui the business in return (or Lhl asserted down. A repre1entatlve of the motion pie. bribe. tutc.f,or·televlslon 111ld the actress will bt All four defendants •re free on flO,!XM> replaced by anot.ber performer. ' ball each. . . . ' ' _e Nixon Hits Labor Hard On Money MIAMI BEACH, Fla, (UPI) -Presi· den{ Nixon threw away the speech ht prepared for the AFL-CJO convention to- day and told the labor leaders he was giving it to them "straight from the shoulder" -that he was going to make his economic program work with or wilhout labor's help. "It is my obligation lo make this (program ) succeed and lo the extent of my powers I shall do that," the chief ex· ecutive told the nation 's labor chieftains in a bold and emotional talk. Nixon told a quiet audience, which ap- plauded only lightly when he entered the hotel ballroom , that despite political dif- ferences he knew "The majority of workers are for America and for a strong national defense." l{e said at the outset that he stood by his remarks which had been handed out to the press In advance of his speech. In those remarks·the President told the labor leaders his wage and price controls would produce a "period of sustained prosperity that will repay many times over any immediate st1crifi«s that any segment of the American work fqrce ls called upon lo makf' Ul'I Tllffotlttl MISSED ·BIG VOTE St1te S.n1tor Wedworth Nixon !j)Oke with. ln~111lty, and Coastline. Bill' -....... hat •'l'ilt!liy. Bat ho .,.....d, a slight smile\ :when he entered the llon'a den·of his severest critics. Term' ed Dead He was welcomed .at the door by AFL- CIO President George Meany, who had attacked Nixon sharply Thursday and ao-B w d h cused him or resorting to "totalJtarian" y e wort methods. , "I'm here today to ask your su:::p::po7r"t"lo"r~---'"'-'r~rom Wire Services the building of. a lasting peace and the building of a new propserity," Nixon told SACRAMENTO -HOpes for ·M.!viving a the big labor audience. He !aid he is major e-0astline protection bill have been otten asked "What is wrong with the old dashed by Sen. ~ames Wedworth, con. prosperity," and said: "I'll tell you what sidered by supporters as the last hope for is ~Tong -war and infiation." saving the measure this year. Nixon said that he was asked why he 'the Jiawthorne Democrat said Thurs· had decided lo come speak before the day that while he supported the bill convention which has blasted his pqlicies. originally, It had been "emasculated ..• He said his reply was that he knew· when gutted'' by amendments and 'he opposes the chips were down he could count on the measure now.- labor's support tor his policies. 'Wedworth was absent Monda y when a The President spoke about his winding critical vote was taken on Assemblyman down the war, the drop in cuualties, and Alan Sieroty's bill to reguf~te coastal how 150,000 had marched on Wall Street development. Sieroty t-Ord -newsmen the in favor or his Cambodian incursion even llawthorne Democrat was the swing vote though editorial writers and the in· to enable the measure to clear the com· tell ectuals were against him. mittee. It died one vote short. lfe said he strongly fa vors repeal of the Sieroly's bill wa& viewed as the last re- auto excise tax and the job credit tax. malning major env ironment bill in the \vhich will increase American workers' legislative hopper. It would have banned competitive position with worker 6 all new development along the I.JOO miles abroad . of California coastline Unless approved by But then he laid it flatly on the line. a regional state commission. He said he wants labor's participation Oopponents argued it would undermine to make his new economic policy succeed local control and stifle all de velopment. "but whether we get that or not," he At a news conference called by warned, "it is my obligation to make this Wedworth, the lawmaker said' he would succeed and to the extent of my powers I not vote to revive the meas ure, con· shall do that." tending it had been debated enough. He said that he believes it is time to J-Ie said he was absenL attending to understand that there are points of "personal business" which had to be disagreement and agreement. "l want 1 taken care of while the coastline bill tac. program that Js fair. ed its committee test. "But as Presid,nt of all the people 1 Miked if his business Involved buying think It is my duty to do what is best for race horses, Wedworth replied: "Yes, J America." have some thoroughbreds ." Nixon said he understood tha t When another reporter asked why he unemployment was, because he had chose to attend to his personal affairs grown up in it Jn lhe depression. ahead of legislative business, Wedworlh responded : "I have to pay rent and feed Nixon's fighting stance came as no some children." surprise to observers who ha ve watched Wedworth earns $l9,200 a year as a him make bold moves in the past several legisla tor .in addition to $30 a day living months. He said our goal is "to win a expenses. lie is a retired bicycle dealer, peace that will end wars." who recently bought a scenic ranch in the Nixon said with some heat that he Sierra Nevada 1''oothills enst 0 £ knows that "frightening statements have S.icramento. been made from this podium" .about his When the news conference began - forthcoming trips to Peking and Moscow. Wedworth said, "I don't know what i would have done if I were here Monday." "f<k< '.Rtilax. Mr. Merrt. ' The tr.z• is (IVlll'./• ' ' But when pressed on the point later, he u id he acttially made up his mind to vote against the l>ill Sunday. "l would have voted 'no,'1il I had been here/' be Said. 111 made tpy ·decision Sun· day. L"l'm not 1.shamet::l.of,'my recot.d," .he addtd; when »e'lf'Jlneh inquired whelher he feared a conservation' organization's pledge to try..tb 'defeat him next year, when he's up for re-elecUon. Sailor Rescued LONDON (AP) - A 2&-year-old British yAChtsl]'lan wa11 rescued today after a nlne.d1y ord,al aboard a rubber dinghy In the wintry AU1ntic .. RadlO Arcachon, a French ma'l'1Ume station, said he was pick«! up In th< Bay of. Bjscay by lht Nonre1l111 tonker Polarvlk. • N.Y. Stoeks I , :TEN CENTS H~tington . Store Loses Gems, Cash By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 IM D•llY "1191 Staff A team of daring daylight gunmen held up a Huntington Center jewelry 1tore this morning in Huntington Beach and escaped with more than '25,000 worth of gems and cash. The brazen robbery took place ae Lawson's Jewelry around 9:22 a.m. u store manager Buck Roberta returned from morning coffee. A heart patient, Roberts was believed to have suffered a seizure during the holdup. Another employe, Howard Polla ck, waJ slugged In the back of the head, possibly with a gun. Neither required hospitalization. Roberts told investigating officers he was met by the gunmen at the store's rear entrance when he was returning from a coffee break at a cafe in theJiu,n. tington Center. Armed with a short barreled revolver, possibly a .38-callbcr, the two suspects Jed Roberts to the vault Ind forced him to open It. _ \ • An inventory of the gems and jewe.Iztf stolen by the two gunmen has not yet been completed, but Roberts estimated. that the cash value was "in u:c1u ol $25,000." Officer Ken Jensen said Robirts, Pollack, employe Fred Lopez and a fourth employe were bound with tape following the successful heist. Jensen said further that Roberts was able to alert police moments altet th• robbery by tripping an alarm button. Officers were unsuccessful in g_etting 1 complete description of the two caucasian gunmen other than that cne was short and one of medium height. Since they are believed to have been wearing gloves, no fingerprints were left behind. It is believed that the two robbers made their getaway in a van parked somewhere near the store's rear en· trance. The jewel robbery wa.s the second to occur at the shopping center in three months. On Aug. 31, Kirk Jewelers was hit by two armed men around the same time in the morning. The gunmen escaped with '10,000 in jewelry. None of the jewelry from the Kirk robbery has been recovered to date and the suspecta re- main at large. Signal Oil Gets Okay to Redrill The state Lands Commission ha.I &uthoriied Signal Oil and Gas Company to redrill three existing land-based oil wells in its Huntington Beach field . The commission's staff reported Thurfo day that in each case Signal's propOEia{I" were found to reflect "good engin~r praclices." 1bere was no opposition. One well was abandoned in 1966 when no oil was produced. But the staff said redrilling and extending the well deeper into state-owned tide and submerged lands could produce an estimated 10 million .!)arrels ol on. Oruge Weailler Those pesky wind! should stack off tonlght, paving the: waf for a nice, sunny Saturday with temp- eratures ranging from 60 to 70 - and overnight lows from 3S to '5. INSIDE TODAY Been thinking ab out a trlp to Death Valle11? Rtad Free£. erick Schoemelll'r atory in t°'" day's Weekend1r on Page 25. He calls the beautu of thll desert "indt$crlbable. ...lift'I "' (111 .... 111• • Cl'ltt•lllt U• U C:t•Hlflt<ll ,... C-lc:• It ,,.....,... " Oi¥'1PC9l 11 •1111..m• ,... • lftltrtllll!Mlll J1·'2 Pl11t"<• 11'U w.r.tc-,. A11t1 L61M1trt U M1H111lt ' ~ II.JI ' -bD!ILY PILOT Action Set Paper · Plj.mp1on Cambodian On School Writer· Speaks to OCC Studerits Reds Ease Shift Bid By ARTH\IR·R. VINSEL Oi .. DollY f>llM l lttf Men throughout the world lndul .. Jn tht cbup and generally harmlw habit of daydreaming. Writer George "Paper '(ig~r" Pllmpton A hearing on a' proposed transfer of 4.5 makes the nld American dr.eam of fame tr· ·t and Iortune come true for himself. acres of the Gar~en Grove school dis Ii.: He triea the real thing, fails miserably to the Fountain Valley Elementarr .-but-comically and cries all the way to the District was set Thursday by the Orange bank arter doing a book about his ad· County School Board for Dec. 16. ventures. Tr tee R ger Anderson a member of "The Am~lcan male spends about 90 us 0 • percent ol his daydreammg on sporllr," the county school board and the ~an.ge Plimpton told his Orange Coast College County Committee on School District Distinguished Speakers Serles audience Organiiation. briefed fellow trustees on Thu~sday. the difficult ies the transfer might create. Phmpt~n has quarterback~ t be A , t bef lhe voters next Detroil Lions, faced boxer Archie ~ioore p.an o go . ore . . in the ring and played in "Rio Lobo" with J une would establish four un1fitd. school Newport Beach's own movie institution, districts in the area now served by the John Wayne. Huntington Beach Union High Scbool ~ne. OCC ~istener asked about that fe~t. district and its component elementary Oh, Mr. Wayne, I .forgot I .was In . . . Orange County," quipped Plimpton, d1Str1cl3. Fountain Vall~y elemen~~ry drawing a roar. district lies within the proposed unified Slender and shaggy-haired, Plimpton is district territory. editor of the Paris Review literary Should the board allow the territory magazine as well a~ a writer who tries to transfer, there would be considerable be par~ ~f the action as well as being question raised about the va.li.dity ~f t.he w?,e~e it JS. unification-vote since the un1f1ed dLStr1ct I.~ from t?e east, and ,Mr: Way,n~ boundaries have already been approved co~1i:l~red me .. a dude. and ~ liberal, by the County Committee, Anderson said. satd Elimpt,on. :'here 1s n?thmg ~orse !n Garden Grove officials have opposed ~r. W~y~e s lexicon than a dude and a the t~"!nsfer sought by residents of the liberal. . Fountain Valley district. He and two other ~1lm desperadoes The only option open to the board that w~~e teamed to go gun~1n& for The Du~e. would not upset the unification election . There was me, a m1d~et and an .albino pniposals would appear to be rejection of v.•1th purple eyes," Plimpton said. ··1 the transfer request, the county trustees thought. we were terrific." were advised by county counsel. He ~1d they rode Into town slowly and Santa Ana Man Facing Court In Fatal G1mfire A former postal employe acc used of the 1laying of the Westminster Postmaster Paul Burtner and the attempted mu.rder of that office's mails superintendent will be arraigned later today in Orange C.Oun- ty Superior Court. Philip Bert Alleman, 24, of Santa Ana, Is scheduled lo appear be!Ore Judge Byron K. McMillan to answer charges contained in an Orange Couqty Grand Jury indictment issued Thursday. menacingly. as do all bad guya In good westerns, destined for violent doom in the dust of Main Street. Plimpton blew the scene and $5,000 In production costs to re-do it. Screaming directors ran out to tell him hired killers do not hit town holding the horse reins in both fists, because they need at least one free gun hand. ' Plimpton did have kind words for John Wayne. "He is a great raconteur and a great influence," the best-selling a u t h o r declared. "Everybody on the set was walking around and spitting tobacco juice between their toes." Illustrating his pro football and. fight ring escapades with film s 11 d e a , Plimpton said his light-heavyweight bout with Archie Moore was perilous. A prankster-author friend, Peter Maas, told the curious Moore that Plimpton was actually a national collegiate boxing champion. "He ~aotl !-<> become world champ and • .. ,.lltl• HE 'L·L TRY ANYTHING Sports Fan Plimpton not bother Yl'ith all the prelim inary rights," Plimpton's 'friend' told the stun· ned Moore. "He's going to have the gym packed with press." ''If he lays a hand on me, I 'll deck him,1' Moore snarled, clenching his fists. Plimpton concedes he didn 't la y a band on Moore. Not all of Pli mpton's escapades are so rough·and·tumble. He played percussion in an orchestra conducted by the renowned Leonard Bernstein in Winnipeg, Canada. Bernstein reacted to Plimpton's lack of talent almost as violently as Archie Moore did to his rumored boxing finesse, Plimpton said. Music takes timing and a light touch. He was assig ned to ring -on cue -a huge gong at the crescendo ot a Tchaikovsky Symphony. ''I hit that gong harder than any gong has ever been hit." Plimpton said the concussion lifted the whole row of musicians in front of him off thei~ seats and put a horrified ex- pression on the dismayed Berstein's face. "But if Mr. Tchaikovsky could have heard it, I'm sure be would be \'Cry pleased,•: Plimpton sa.id. Big Squ.beze PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A major Com. munlst force surrounding Phnom Penh eased its pressure against the Cambodian capital tod<!Y in the face of 8,000 derendei:s and the probability of in- tervention by South Vietnamese troops. A spokesman for the Cambodian high command, Capt. Chang Song, described the barely discernible front lines around the outskirts of the capital today as "quiet ... a standstill." He said 10 Cam· bodians were wounded in Communist h~rassing actions on the east bank .of the Mekong River, oppOsite Phnbm Penh, but there was little action elsewhere. The Cambodian command h a 1 estimated that approximately 6,000 Com- munist troops, m.qst of them North Viet- namese army regulars, are involved in the campaign that is believed designed to isolate Phnom Penh rather than to over- run and capture it. The command has pulled together a force of 8,000 men con-- sisting of Cambodian troops and many youngsters with little training and no combat experience to defend the capital. Sources in' the Cambodian command said the South Vietnamese government has agreed to send one anny division, about 13,000 troops, inlo Cambodia to help relieve the pressure on Phonom Penh. There was evidence of prepara· lions ror such a move in South Vietnam. At Tay Ninh, 150 miles northeast of Saigon and a frequent staging area for operations across the nearby border into Cambodia, UPI correspondent Kenneth J. Braddick reported seeing unusually long convoys of ammunition trucks this morn· ing. Military sources in Saigon said the Cambodian army's deputy chief of staff, Brig. Gen. Sai Sutsakhan, arrived by plane from Phnom Penh today to consult with the South Vietnamese general staff about the operation. From Page 1 VILLAGE •.. destroyed by developments. A heavy concentration of remains of ancient Ind ian villages around Newport Beach is disappearing because of development around the bay, he said. Alleman was arrested last Nov. 4 shortly after he allegedl,; 100t an<t filled • Burtner, 51, and wounded Mall 1 Superintendent Ernest Gaulden, 48. Alleman is also charged In the in- dictment with felonious assault on William Sherman Brown, another portal employe. fint~r ·Wind~ C~~ng •·w .. llayen't beard from ~·~wport Beacn Plahning Department'etttM!r," he said, "even though there are up to 50 sites in that city." The Irvine Company has contracted wi'b ARft to survey • ita la~· for ardimiolie.J sites, he said. . ·~ ;. • Police said Alleman returned to the of· rice and opened rire on his two supervisors after receiving a reprimand in a hearing held that morning. He Is held in Orange County Jail without bail. Gaulden is reported today to be rapidly recovering from the stomach wounds allegedly inflicted by the defendant. Reinecke Slated As GOP Speaker . ' Smog, Batter.ing Boats But Desiiutels knows it is ditficu1t to convince private land-OWners to al1ow surveys of their sites. "Most of them think It will merely hold them up-:- which it wo n't necessarily," he said. Old man winter Is breathing down the Orange Coast's neck today with winds that reached gale force ln1 some locations, forcing Sigalerts and small craft warn- ings but wiping skies clean ol smog. No real damage was reported in Orange County. although one small brush fire raced out of control near Sancl Can· yofi and Barranca roads before being extinguished this morning. Blasts of wind raking offshore waters But ARI hopes cities will cooperate On lqrced the Orange County Harbor their lands and on helping ARI contact Department to hoist the small craft big deve lopers. warning nag. The company has receivetl respons.es "Nope," said a spokesman when asked from Brea, Orange, Laguna Beach, San if he knew when it might be lowered. Juan Capistrano, La Palma, Tustin, "They just tell us when to put it up and Anaheim and San Clemente. when to take it down." Desautels and another ARI archaeolo. Local police agencies were uniform in gist, Steve C.O\egrove, met last week with reporting no specific damage blamed on 4th District Supervisor Ralph Clark, to the gusty Santa Ana winds. discuss a possible Orange County Candy Kitty "Tink," the Gutierrez' family Persian cat, has a sweet tooth. The Portland, Ore., kitty fishes out a rainbow stick from a jug of candy left on the table and polished it off in two bites. 'Scoop' Jackson Enters 1972 Democrat Derby WASHINGTON (UPl) -Sen. Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson of Washington formally declared his candidacy for t h e Democratic presidential nomination to- da y and said he would enter the New Hampshire, Florida, Illinois and Wisconsin primaries. Jackson, running far behind in public opinion polls and an admitted underdog, conceded the first-in·the·nation New Hampshire primary to fron t-running Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of neighboring: Maine. The New Hampshire test is March 7. "I don't expect tO win in New Hampshire," Jackson said, "but I am confident I have a chance to make a reasonable showing." Jackson made his long.expected an· nouncement al a packed news conference in the marb!e columned, red draped Senate caucus roo m. "I'm going to take off my coat, roll up my sleeves ala Harry Truman and tell it like it is," he said to applause from sup- porters cramnied into the huge room behind chairs set out for reporters. Asked about his finances, Jackson said he estimated it would take about $1 million to get up to the fourth of his plan· ned races, \Visconsin. "\Ve've raised part of it, and we're ,raising it all over the country," he said. ''We're doing all right." In response to questions, Jackson said he also was seriously considering en- tering lhe primary in Alabama in a direct challenge to Gov. George C. Wal:ace, who may provide Jackson's major com· petition in Florida. Asked if he would consider the No. 2 spot on the ticket if he failed in his bid for the presidential nomination, Jackson said, ''I'm nol getting into iffy questions now -I am running fo r th e No. 1 spot." The SS.year-old son of Norwegian im· migrants, born in Everett. Wash., was accompanied by his wife, Helen, and his two children -Anna Marie, 8, and Peter, 5 -as he went before television cameras to make the announcement. Lt. Go\'. Ed Reinecke wi11 be the guest at a Republican Associates no--host cocktail receptio n at 5:30 p.m. Monday in the new Royal Inn, Harbor Boulevard and Convention \Vay. Anaheim. The man responsible had a permit for controlled burning-issued a week ago- and didn't realize it would be uncon- trolli:ible today, sheriff's deputies said. Fliers in some areas reported en-ordinance protecting antiquities. countering severe turbulence al 5,000 feet ,---jiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii[iiijiijijijiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii~ji;;~~;;;;~;;---moslly farther north -but the Orange County Airport Control Tower had no reports of ground damage to aircraft. Chairman Robert R. Black of the coun· ty GOP group said the Lieutenant Governor wi!I report on the status of reapportionment plans and the legislative situation in Sacramento. Advance reservations for the two.hour event may be made by calling Annette Maguire, 547-8006. OUN61 COAST DAILY PILOT ..... CllASf PUll.ISHM muM't l•Htt N. W1M ,,.... Ollllll t'lltllllMr J 1cl: a. C11rl1v Yb ""*"' ..... ~· -...ow =- n .... a: • .,.11 """ Tlit"''' A. M1111liia 1 M~Edl!Ot' Ali" D1 ll..i11 wet Or'"~ ewro'"""' H••tf°''" .._.. Offk• 17175 l11ct. l o11l1v1 r4 M1tlift9 Adirttt: P.O. In 7tlt, 92641 ..... -LMIM 9eoc.I!' m FOl'Wlt ,_._.., Coll• ""'°'' ,. \hit .. ., ""-' 111.,.,...t llO<ll: ~ H"""" ........ .. ClldWI* ..... ~ '9lllM «tel CAft.'r t'1LOT. "'"" -...,. ,_ ....,.... "°" H_,,_,, 119 ,.,,...hMll lllltl!Y MUlllt ·-_ ~ M ..,..,. ... "'-"" flllr ~ l•Cllo H.._I ·~ C..111 ,,...,, 1+1111!11""°' ·~ ,......... V1l11W, 1.tn (...._.., c.toil""°" -,...llMdl, •ll!lf will! -, ........ 91111,,_, ~I "'°'""' llitlll • •I iJ1 Wwl l•Y ~t,, C-11 M- . f .. lp.111 17141 141-4UI -Q...,.. Mtw1Ws1 IU·Snl (~ l~ °'"° c-t ""'"'~--~"'· ~ ............ ,..,...!~ • 1.,;,1 fN1'W .,. .... ..,...... --_, ... ,.,. .. m1111 w;.,... .,.,., .... ~" . .,.,,.,.. ....... " '°*" (1-. -"" .. ....,... ..... ..... c.... "'-· Clllton\la. .....,r,llfl': •r Orfltf 11.2$ """'1111)'1 .., Mill JI.JI "*"lllr1 fl'litirwty *t!NI-., a»~· Forecasters for the U.S. Weather Bureau predict continued but diminishing blasts coastward from the mountains tonight and Saturday, Scattered showers and snow at 4,500 feet in some mountain areas are an· ticipated. Chilly overnight lows in the upper 40s are expected overnight, with tem- peratures up to about 62 during the day. Sigalerts "'ere imposed on some freeways, as well as Santa Ana Canyon Road and the Ri verside Freeway through hilly, eastern Orange County. Moscow Trip Set WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pat Nixon says she definltely plans to accompany the President on his trip to Moscow next May, but she's still a stand·by so far as the presidential journey to Chinti is con· cerned. The First Lady said Thursday she is lobbying to make the trip to Peking bul "I don't get everything I lobby for." Anti-freeway Sentiments 'Hurting' County Funds jL.JACIWIROBACK-- ot !ht Ott_ltv l"!lt l Sr.If Orange County's anti.freeway Image is costing the area mlllions ·of dollars in slate highway .and fre eway money, ac· cording to County Road Commissioner Ted f.1cConvi\le . ficulty-of-solution-in-a-f ast..growing urban area. Another speaker. County Planning Director Forest Dickason. noted that, "everybody is in on the environmental kick l.oday but some of the people, <ilthough well meaning only serve to wor!len an already complex situation." McConville, one of the key speakers at "I so metimes "'onder if it is possible to th~range County Chamber of Com-do anything right when 1l comes to the merce'-first annual E n v i r o n m e n t environntent," Dickason pleaded . Conference_ Thursday said, "we have The ronsensus reached by the 150 con. taken quiteli~a\ing because of tht im· ferces seemed to be !hat environmental age of protest t._.bave created." . problems will only be solved through . The county g~.(rnment bas con· compromise. s1stently back~ h1gtrl~'l and freeway James T. Workman, chairman of the projects, he said. but W~nu~ero'!! chamber session. sun1med it up with the Pi;>test groups . ~ppear .a Caldorn1a cooclusion that a regional or inter-agency Hig~way Co:mmwH>n ~ear1ngs ~ive approach is the most practical solution to the 1mpress1on the enl!re populact the the various problems. He noted. wryly, county is a protest group. that such an approach runs head on Into The net result is a severe delay in bad· ..,_ye!lted interesu in local community. ly needed frttway And highway con· Dicka50n offerecl one bright note . struction in the county, the road .com· "Orange County is willing to tackle the mi~ioner asserted. problem ." he ·said. "Our department Is Although he dld not pinpoint op~ilion working on 1 study which will offer the groups or area!, fi.1cConville d Id people a ~hoice on where they want to go acknowledge that there ls hardly a in the coming years . ssclion or the proposed Pacific Coast "Crov.'lh has posllive and negative l"reeway I.bat has not been prot.c:ited. 11spects," the plannlng director 1t1id. Ills remarks and those of nthert 11t the "The trick is to Identify and play up lhc conference spotlighted the complexity of positive aspects and to deemphasize the environmental problems and the dlf· negative ones." , YOUR TURKEY DE SERVES THE FINEST ma~chesa ~!).fol? DEALERS FOR: HENREDON--DREXEl-HERIT AGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W11tclllf Dr., 642·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 NIWPOIT STOii ONN PllDAT 'TIL t INTERIORS Profts1ionel Interior Designer• Avellablit-AID ,.._ r.11 ,,.. .... •• o,.... c"~e.12•1 LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hithway Phone: 494-6551 -·- l I Legislature Later Primaries Carpenter Sees Voting Changes By L. PETER KRIEG 01 '" ~llJ .. 11.1 llllt l\1ajor changes in the electoral process at both the federal and state levels wel'fl both forecast and endorsed bf State Sen. Dennis E. carpenter (R·Newport Beach) in a lecture Thursday night at UC Irvine. Carpenter preWcted the state will move Its primaries .from June to early Sep-• tember while the presidential conventions will be pushed back from A1'1U5l to late September. ' California may lead the way in ac· complishing the change, the former state GOP chairman said. A bill in the State Legislature this year to change primary date died because of the fact the conventions will lake place next year and a change would have scheduled Califofnia's president i a I primary after the presidential candidates were selected, he said. Carpente r said the idea for later primaries would ll}arkedly reduce cam- paigning time -and costs. "Candidates wouldn't have to crank up Cor two campaigns," he said, noting that Gov. Ronald Reagan has ch8nged his mind and supports the change. "California might take a leadership position when it moves," he said, "and it would likely be a popular i d e a elsewhere." Carpenter also said he think! new ways to raise money for political campaigns should be found, but he said he thinks "limiting the amount or money a can- didate can spend may be un- constitutional." He said a one dollar poll tax levied at the time of registration might be ideal, but that's already been declared un- constitutional," he said. Instead, he said he thinks the plan to take one· dollar from lncome tu:es -pro- posed in Congress two years ago -might be a solution. "But there's a problem trying to figUre out bow to distribute the money," he pointed out. Carpenter's talk. before about 50 UCI students and others at the utension series lecture, rambled across a variety or other political topics. Among other lhlngs, he said he didn't think California's right-to-know law should be extended to cover committees of the legislature. "ln order to accomplish things, I feel we should be able to meet and confer with each other. "There's nothing nefarious about peo- ple getting together lo negotiate," he said. He pointed out that while committees can meet in secret, they must vote in public. Carpenter also talked about coastline legislation, discussing his previously-an- nounced pla~ to introduce a shoreline manaiement bill next year that will pro- tect private property rights as well as the coast of California. He said the Cali£omia Legislature has taken so Joog to conduct ib business this year "because we have a ;flepublican governor and a Legislature with a bare Democratic majority . "It's a perfect standoff," he sai d. He said if there had been an earlier deadline, the work would have been done earlier. Carpenter said he didn't think the 18-21 year old vote would be a major factor in most elections. saying he didn't think youth would vote in sufficient numbers to have an impact. Threat's to Harm Family Prompted Allen to Quit I By JOHN VALTERZA 01 !hi 01ily ,.llot It.ii Charles "Chuck" Allen, former San Juan Capistrano platming commissioner, said today that he resigned from the municipal planning post early last month because of threats of harm to himself and his family. A spokesman for the District At- torney's office said today they are "interested" in the case. They were con· tacted by Allen and his attorney. Allen, a savings and Joan executive, said on Oct. 11 he received "a message relayed to me that a personal threat had been issued against me by certa!n con- cerns that shall remain unnamed." He resigned several hours later at a regular meeting of the commission. The commission had been in the midst or controversy surrounding several pro- posed developments. There w e r e disagreements over esthetics and land use in the fast growing community. The threats asserledly involved Allen's op- position to aspects o{ p r o p o s e d developments. Allen said after the threat he im· mediately made provisions for the securi· ty of his family and self. He did not elab6rate. Allen had mentioned the threats to a reporter of the DAILY PI.WT the mo~ ing fol!')wing hls resignation. He aaked at the time that the information be t'Ofl. fidential , saying he feared the come- quences. "My wife and I have attempted to keep this reason to ourselves. however we find that we no longer are wl.lling to keep such a disgusting happening secret," Allen said. ··we have worked too hard and in· volved ourselves too much to simply abandon those things that we believe. "The decision to issue the statement to- day also has been prompted ' by the faith of some of our fr iends who have oot pushed us too hard for an explanation of my resignation, and, regreUully, by a few persons who have invented false allega- tion! in an attempt to discover the reason ." Allen's disclosure was made in a prepared statement issued to members o[ the news media. But copies of the state.. ment also ~terialized Wednesday night at a joint eting of the San Juan City Council and tanning commission. He bas declined to enlarge on the statement. More Court Prot;ection Urged by Grand Jurors By TOM BARLEY Of !ht DallY t!lttt,.Dlff....__ 1-1µ __ Yiole~ bas spread to the nailon's courtrooms andit iSVftarthit an emergency communications system pro- viding for the protection of defendants, witnesses and spectators be immediately installed in the county courthouse. the Orange County Grand Jury urged today. The panel's annual report on Superior Court operations notes that when the new courthouse was designed and built in 1968 "a disturbance or murder in the court.room was unheard or. (For more on courtJ, ,.. page 10. l "Un!ortunately, this Is no Jonger true,'' the report ldds. *'While Orange County has experienced only mioor problems to dste, it ls tmperatJve that a com· munlcaUons systtm be installed to pro- vide security." That system, the Grand Jury said, should be built around the means of altrttng armed officers In courtroom1 close to any major dlsturb&nce witbOOt disrupting the operation of u yet unaf- lected courtrooms. That signal should provide additional supporting personnel (rom the sheriffs .:.rid marshal's office in number1 Lb.al wW ensure the prompt quelling of any disturbance, the Grand Jury rtcom· mends. The l)anel notes In Its report that • committee of S1.1perlor Court judges ii prmnlly studying oeveral propoulo on locttuecf H<Urity Jn the bulJding wtth I view to-placlJw a recommendaUon.before th! county bo.ard of sU'Perviaon. Security meuum are already ln ef- fect. They include the a!Jocation of criminal trials to the seventh floor of the courthouse, patrol• by sheriff's officers equipped with. wallde-talkle apparatus and the deployment of a "bomb scare" squad trained to search the bulldlng within seconds after the receipt of a bomb warning. Other ..curlty luncllona hove been 1uthorized but their uocl nature and purpose have never been mealtd to the preas. At l<ast two Sup<rtor Court judgu have taken existing security measuru a personal step further by purchutng guna r6r use in any courtroom d11turb1nc1 on the lil!eJ or the Sin lllrtn County shooting that claimed the Ille or Judi• -11arotd Haley. One of lhote judges wean his weapon' beneath his blac.k robe and has made no secret of his intention to use the .gun In any situation that might fall for the use of armed force to quell a dbturblince . The Grand Jury rrport follows by just two wetks the shooting or murder suspect Gig Peters 11 the HuimUnfton Beach man allegedly 1ttempted to li&ht bil w1y to freedom In a courtboUM corridor. Frldq, Nowmb<r 19, 1971 H DAIL V PILOT 3 Drops Adulthooel DAILY PILOT PhOI•• b'f LH P•rn• TOM PAYNE, 3, AND BROTHER MIKE, 6, ABOVE, RUN THROUGH WOODS OF LAKE FOREST Below Shirley Wright, 22, Displays Shapely Limbs Near Me1dowl1rk Airport Imported Fores·ts Stand Eucalyptus Trees Too Tough fo r Railroad Ties By LEE PAYNE Of 111t ll:l•llY ,u., 11111 There really is a forest at Lake Forest (Md one ln llunlington Beach loo) Forests are not native to the Orange Coast. Yet we have two of them thanks to the railroad and an idea that almost worked. It was back at the tum of the century when tbi · rallroads were beginning to Uike an Interest In Orange County. A new rail line requires thousands o~ wooden Ues. But 1lnct few sUltable trees grow in this are1, tons of wood would have to be lies cul right on the spot. And there just happened to be a tre!', newly·imported from Australia, tha t had already been proved uniquely suitable lo lhe purpose. It thrived in semi-arid Soulhern California and, best of all, il grew amazingly fast -up to 30 feet in four years. The eucalyptus, favorite food of koala bears, was about to go into the railroad business. In 1904 the Santa Fe planted thousands of eucalyptus seedlings on the rolling hills of what is now Lake Forest. They also pl~nted a few acres of trees near the coast in llunlington Beach. The trees thrived. They grew straight, tall and fast. There was only one little problem. You couldn'l drive a spike into a eucalyptus tie. When the wood drled it was hard as iron and it bent the spike. It was useless. So Orange County's two imported Corests remain. They are, in fact, in· bet, ter shape than the rsliroads that planted them. At least the Government hasn't had to take over the trees yet. f o • Bill Covers All lAreas But Drinks SACRAMENTO (UPI) T h o Jeglslature today voted llnal approval to a landmark bill making California young people adults at age 18 for virtually; everything except drinking. The bill went to Gov. Ronald Reagan on a 47-6 vote when the Assembly concurred in Senate amendments to the proposal. Five Republicans voted against it as did one Democrat. The proposal by Assemblyman· Paul Priolo (R-Pacific Palisades),'lowers the legal age of adulthood in California from 21to18 and gives the 18-, 19-and 20-year· old crowd most of the rights currenUY, enjoyed by the over-21 set. Among other things, l8-year-<1lds could • be hired as policemen, serve on juries, be tried in adult courts, boys could marry without parental consent, and they could sign legal contracts. Exempted would be the purchase Bl!d drinking of alcoholic beverages. That JS specifically prohibited by the constitution. Priolo sa id the bill does not affect ex· isling court orders dealing with child sup- port which set the age of majority at 21, But he said future child support cases would recognize the maximum age foi:: child support at 18. · But Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Nev,port Beach). argued that under the bill it created two classes of 18-year..(Jlds -those whose parents are divorced and those whose parents are married. "Under this bill you could ha\'e a mar4 ried 18-year..(Jld living al home with his mother, yet his father would still .be re- qu1reiflO pay Child support," he s&d. He urged the Lill be amended in a COii' {ere.nee committee but the assembly; disagreed and sent it to Reagan. The opposition votes were ca~t by Republicans Robert Burke, HunUngton Bearh: \V . Don l\tacCillivray, Santa Barbara ; Ray Seeley, Blythe ; Floyd \Vakefield. South Gate: Badham; and Democrat Alister ~lcAlister, San Jose. Reading Time Brakes Action On Nader Book The Orange County School Board Thursday slowed approval of Ralph Nader's book· "Unsafe at Any Speed" to allow a trustee time to read lt. . Dr. Dale Rallison, a Santa Ana dentist and member of !he John Birch Society, asked that approval of the Nader book be withheld from a list of 17 paperbacks. The list allows purchase of the books for use In the special schools operated by the Orange County Department or Educa• lion at juvenUe institutions. "1 haven't reed It yet,'' Rallison told fellow trustees. ''I want time to read it." "You mean this board ls going to keep this book away from students for another two weeks just because one of us hasn,'t read it?" trustee Donald Jordan of Garden Grove inquired. "l just want lo read it," Rallison repeated. Earlier in the meeting, a request for more information abOut a film "Your B-Ody and Jt.s Parts" sent cowity schools staff scurrying to find a swnmary of the film in question. The board ultimately approved the $135 color film alter detennining that it ex• plored the relationship between the human nervous system and muscle tissues, presumably Ml the body parts Rallison had feared . The board also withheld approval, pen- ding Rallison's re.v iew, of a film t1Ued, "Air Pollution." In the past year, Rallison has con- vinced the board to disapprove only one title of several he has questioned. That book. "Daybreak" by Joan Baez, is a 95- cent paper back and was requested for use ln the Rio QlntiguG Sc.hoot by teachers who sought Its purchase on the ·ground it "motivates students." • freighted at cons era e ,rpense. y·------ not plant forests along the proposed route? When the line was ready to be otiation Sought: • bullt, Ill« ll'ffl could bt harvested and Clark Wants Another Look at U·Cl Medical Grant Low Bidder Told For Route Work LOS ANGELES (UPll -The Division of Highways announced an apparent low bidder Thursday for grooving the San Diego Freew11y in the Westminster area of Oranae County. The C. W. Hatcher com1>4ey of South El Monte otfered 144,40!. Appiirent low bidder for a modification ot highway lighting on lht Santa Ana Freeway from Lake""'OOCI Blvd. In Downey to Simone Underpass in Com- merce was C. T. and f. or Bell Gardens with a bid or 129,697. The C and W Fence QI. or Gardena of· fertd an apparent low bid of $23,84S ror Wtallatlon of saltly ra!Ungs on various routes in Orange and Los Angeles COWl· ties. · / Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim, who Of>POSed Tuesday the acceptance of a $1 million state grant for improvements at the Orange County ~fedlcal Center, said today that he will urge that the board attempt to renegotiate the pro- posed agreement. Clark had called the proposal "a Trcr jan horse'' saying he reared that local tax;payers would eventually~ stuck with high costs generated by the alf"cemcnt. Arter further study, the fourth distrlct supervisor said he hoped that terms could be negotiated which would make lhe ac- ceptance of the St million from the statt through the UC! Medical SChool, ac- cepUlble lo the supervllOrs and univerSi· ty. "My cooctrn Jn wo rking out this com· ptex probtem," Clark staled ''ls that we do not tnvolve ourselves In state prt>o grams or new county efforts which help everyone except 'the already rtaggerlng property taxpayer." He said he will propose the ap- pointment of a negotiating team to meet with university oCficials on the project. The $1 million medical grant was turn- ed down S-2 by the supervi60rs1 because. accordlng to Clark, the present form of the offer Is "a Trojan horse." "Why should we be-committed to spen· ding $1.8 million on a computer system lvhlch has not been studied," he ques· tloncd. The proposed grant was earmarked to provide a better outpatient clinic at the medical center, plus a cornputeriud medical JnfDrmaUon system, an lm· proved respiratory lnten,slve care unit and a remodeled buUding to house medical school faculty members. Clark said be was aware thllt the ''deplorable situaUon" at the outpaUent cllnlc must be alleviated. "But~"' he added, "1 have many tn· dlcaUons th1t no computer 1y1ll'm erl1ts for hospital operaUOns of our 1lu which have been proven to be financl&Uy self .. supporting, as contended." Clark rep<at.d lhal the county Is spending $100,000 for a compreben&lve study of health care delivery systems and, "I think It Is foolish to rush ah<ad blindly after you have hlred a guide to map the terrain." He referred to the study being carrl~ ()\.:l by Arthur D. Little, Inc., under a cerr tract with the COUl'lty. The fourth district supervtsor said be had been Wormed !hot, conlrary to reports, the $1 million grant is nel returning immediately to Sacramentq, He said bt hoped the money could bt salvag• ed to the ti.neat or both the unlverali» and the county. The tumdown of the university f\lDd ot• . fer by the supervisors brought lmmedla9 _ condtmnatlon Wednesday from the Co• ty l\tedlcal A1soclaUon. ' • •• OAllY 1tl0T F~ldaJ, Novembtr 19, 1971 \ \ •• I ~ps Brrr-Shiver Me Timbers I By THOMAS AfURPRINE Of Ille D1Jl1 1"1 .. 1 lllff WES'I'ERN WINDS DEPT. -One thllig J've always like about living along t.6.is best ot all possiible coasts has been tlie delight of fall ~·hen you gel treattd to t.OOse nice, warm desert winds blowing from the Inland reaches. . Just about the time the weather seem1 to be getting a touch frosty, the breezes tam around and start wafting wann air trom offshore. As a wron'g-thinker, I used to ·refer lo these warm ' breezes as San~ tanas. Somebody told me this meant hot \Vind in Spanish, or something like that. Anyway, V. Almon Lockabey, our esteemed boating editor, did much risean:h on the hot breeze question some tilne beack. He came to the solid .CQn~ ciusion that lhe proper term for the hot blows is Santa Anas. He has ei:plained this to me several times. I ihink it his .Omething to do with the canyon through Wbehce the breezes blow. Clearly, the wind isn't named after the town even though a lot of hot wind blows out of there from time to time. ALL THJS CROPS up because it seem· ed I noticed a breeze shift thjs week, The old eucalyptus in our front yard began 1----ahedding....stu!Llo.ward_the and I 'Bmlled. Here comes the old offshore breeze, I chorlled. Clad only in tee shirt and shorts, I leaped outside to greet the ha ppy Santa Ana winds, They've thawed me out pretty well now. My arms and leg s are moving some again. Where'd we get th is -wind, anyway? Colorado? THIS IS THE coldest wind to hit our region since Jess Unruh came down hete to talk about the Irvine Company and Up- per Newport Bay, I don't know whether or not you think It's blowing hard bu~ this morning I drove to \\'Ork sideways. · At our house, the cats and dog are sleeping in one big pile and they don't even lik! each other. Lots of things can cha nge and it doesn't really . bother me. But when the wind re.fuses to follow the script, you begin to wonaer. Maybe we.can blame it a!l o~ o~r latest nuclear testing. After all, 1t d1dn t seem te do anything else. SPEAKI NG OF BIG Bt.OWS, did you catCh the item about the Democrats Who've failed to pay their telephone tab from the presidential campaign of 1968? Well according to allegations of ~lex­aiid~r L. Stott, the bigwig of American Telephone and Telegraph, the Demos did a tot of talk ing the la~.t titne out and they piJt it on the cufr. The tab is now three years old and it amounts to $1.4 million. Now thafs a lot of gabbing, even for a bunch o( Democrats. Stott reportedly has c o n t a c t e d t.aWrence F, o·erlen, the Demos' na- tiOnal chairman, and told him that AT&T wants the lab cleared up before the Democrats start blathering again over the party lines this time around. He'd l_ikt th"e cash by July I, otherwise he's going to have to require security in advance before the phones gel hooked up. WELL, I THINK r-.1r. Stott is an 1larmist. When lhe Democrats put in :heir orders this time round, why doesn't ~~ just install pay phones? "" Better yet, why dun Mr. O'Brien? He loel!ln't ha•e the Democrat money. Jwt hand the old telephone bill to T~-ly. . ,, h • QUEEN ELIZABETH, JOHN PROFUMO SHAKE HA NOS AT OPENING OF LONOO~ ~ELF ARE CENTER l It M•rked .firs t MHting in Eight Ye ars of Monarch, Former War M1n11t t r f': A Hand for Prof11mo ~ ' Lo1ig 'Exile' Ends for Scwidal Fi gure ~ ~ I LONDON (UPJ) -The queen smiled, held out her hand and said how rUce it was to see him. John Prorumo has been working ·tor the past seven years as a volunteer social worker helping the un· derprivileged, drug add icts and Profumo, her former war minister, alcoholics, Much of the $500.000 for bowed, and with that, 1t long last, the new building was raised by came the end of Profumo's exile in Profuirio's efforts. the ~isl wil_derness. _The 1963 Th~ccasion was a fa_r_cr~ f~om Profumo-Affa1r;1'-B,rlta1n1s-scan-· -som·e de-scrtbedl n---p I a y g 1 r I dal of the century, Was lnid to rest. Christine Kee\er's n\emoirs -how It h01ppened Thursday night in she met Profumo \vhile swin1ming the heart of London's shabby Enst nude 11t Lord Astor's Cliveden End . The queen went there to ope n estate and how they. later became Attlee llouse, a residence for lovers. youngsters from broken homes, Profumo's circle of friends named after former Prime v.•idened after that meeting. There Minister Oement Attlee. was Christine's r"oommate, Mandy It adjoins Toynbee Jlall, where Rice-Davies, and Dr. Stephen Ward, later convicted by a court of li ving off the prostitution earnings of Christine and Mandy. The society osteopath eventually co mm itted suicide because of the re velations. Not only sex but a hint of es· pionnge figured in the scandal. Christine adrnitted while having an affair with the war minister she simu ltaneously was seeing capt. Eugene Ivanov, a Soviet naval at· tache. The Russian was sOOn recalled to Moscow 11nd nothing ever came of rumors that state secrets might have been revealed. l ' ' I I j j Conferees Given House Version Of F oreig1i A.id Reports Say Men· Due To Visit U.S. for Talks WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional efforts to revive fOreign aid headed into 1 House-Senate compromise conference to- day. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield predicts the going will be ''awfully tough," The l£ouse resurrected its original $3.f. billion bill Thursday, the one the Senate defeated Oct. 29, and sent it straight Into conference against the Senate's" new $2.67-bilHon bills. But confert'ts-were more worried about policy differences, including Mansfield's six·month Jndochin11: war deadline and Senate revision of basic foreign-aid C'On· cepts than the difrert'nee in money figures. "There will be a Jot of stubborn people on both sides," Mansfield said . The conferees scheduled their first meeting for late this afternoon, just before the House begins a ·Thanksgiving recess which will end Nov. 29. By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Israeli newspapers reported today that Prime Minister Golda Meir and not Defense Minister Moshe Dayan would go lo Wa shington for talk..'I nt the highest level on Israel's quest for more U.S. Phantom jets to counter what it cnlls a shift in the Middle F.nst balance of power. The reports were given credenC'e by \Vashington reports that a ne1v group of Soviet TUIG Badger bombers equipped with air-to-surf<\Ce mis..~iles suitable for use against shipping have turned up rect'nlly in Egypt. A State Dep~rllnent spokesman told a news confertonce the United Stntes is "assessing this development with rrgard to the military balance." Israel has rontended !hat a flow of Soviet erms to F:gypt has upset the balance and says the now is continuing. peace offensive In the Middle East for months, seeking an interim agreement which would permit reopening or the Suez: Canal which was closed by the 1967 Six· Day War. In recent weeks, Tsraeli sources have reported Israel b.ilking at further negotiations unless it gell!l more Phan- toms it considers essential to its own sa rety. Dayan, scheduled to visit the United State11 on a fund·rNsing trip for the United Jewish Appeal, had been expected to talk with President Nixon on the Israeli demands. Reports earlier in the week said the White House wanted lo try to convince him lo drop his demands. Teen Snes School CltANNELVIEW, Tex. (UPI) -Soni Romans, 16, has taken school officials to court because they excluded her from ex- tracurricular activities, They said because llihe was divo~ced, she n1ight •·talk sex'' with the other stu dr11ts. Tokyo .Hit - By Students; Guard Dies TOKYO (AP) -Radical students, at· tacking with fire bombs, bum~ do"wn twin restaurant! ln a central Tokyo park tonigh(, and a guard collapsed and died of 1 heart attack, police reported. .,,,. In protest against plans for a continued U.S. military presence on Olrinawa, the radicals also st.aged acattered guerrilla attack! on poliei! around Tokyo's capital. Polict! said circumstances leading up to the 57-year~ld restaurant watchman 's death were not clear. They said he was outside watching the fire after radicals set the closed restaurant afire and held off firemen wit~ rock,. J1e had nol been injured, they 'stud. -·- PlantS Open l 1i A la. Cit y BIRMlNGHA~I, Ala. (AP) - Because of improved almosphere conditions, a federal judge canceled today his order that shut down 23 major Birmingham area industries during an nir pollution crisis. U.S. District Court Judge Sam Pointer Jr. acted on a motion fror:n the U.S. attorney's ofliei!, which said a three-day di.rty-air emergen· cy apparently had ended. The attorney, Bill Mallard, told the judge that the order was not designed to be permanent, just to meet an emergency situation. "Now with improving at- mospheric conditions, our medical and pollulion experts believe the emergency has passed. We request the order be vacated a.nd. the com· plaint dismissed," Mallard u.id. • Roaring names from the wooden slruc· N• Chi lure lit Tokyo's sky, not far from a Iran· IXOD na quil founlaln in Hibiya Park -usua lly a favorite or young couple! -In front of the lmperial Palace. Police said 15 policemen and 10 civilians including demonstrators had been injured in variou! skirmishes. Other groups of students skirmished with police in the famed Ginza district nearby. setting fires on the streets and overturning cars. Police fought back with tear gas. About 500 students were ar· rested. llundreds of onlookers gathered in side streets to watch lhe fighting. lleavily reinforced riot pollce kept the student radicals from charging in largE! masses through the downtown Cinza heart or Tokyo and police loudspeaker units at major lnterst'Ctions cnllcd repeatedly for people to leave, warning there were student radical! among them and that gasoline fire bombs might be ex· ploded at anytime. Riot police. their metal shields glisten- ing ia the light of fires and flashbulbs, moved back and forth at maio in· tersections to ward off concentrated drives and to kee1l crowds moving. Police helico pters circled over head to report the movc1n<'nl or demon~lrators. lleavily reinforced ri ot police units gu<irded governn1ent hui\llings, I he Irn1lt'rial P:ilnce, the 11.S. E1nhassy and other key points in Tokyo. Nearly J,000 l'itudents skirmished with riot police in the Shibuya business district where a riot polictman was killed Sun- da y. The students hurled Molo tov cocktails at a police station, a gasoline station and some shops. British, Arniy, Irish Trade Border Fire BELFAST, Northern Irela nd (UPIJ - Gunmen firing rifles and automatic weapons from the Irish Republic ex· changed gunfire with British soldiers in Northern Ireland today, the army said. Visit S9en In April Now LO NOON (UPI) -Diplomatic s0un::es in close contact with Peking said today the visit by President Nixon is expected to take place around April and not earlier as previously repoi:ted. The sources said. Communist China re. ·quired more time to prepare the scene for Nixon's meeting with Chairman Mao Tse-tung and other leaders such as J)remier Chou En-lai. Some of these preparations were sakl lo involve some opposition in the Chinese Com munist Party to the visit and a purge of elements hostile to Mao's pOlicies. The diplomatic sources said the Nixon visit ls rated in Peking as of great im· portance for the whole future relationship of China with the United States and the rest ol the world. They said it is impossible to predict \vhat results may come from the prcsidenti:il visit hut that they d_id not rule out some significant stage-seltmg for future developments. 'fhey said this process will need a lot of time in view of the surprise jump in Its policy from a seemingly irreconcilable posture toward the United States to • readiness to negotiate. J>eking apparently has not yet made up Its mind how far and in which direction it '1"iJf •go-in its overall policy switch, th• sources said. They said there Is some OP\XISitlon In China to the policy change but how strong the opposition it was not clear. 11le change was so abrupt that Albania, for instance, is still trying to comprehend what has happened and has still not ac-- cepted it. Pakistan Boriler Shelling Kills 5 The shooting incident was the second NEW DELHI -(UPI) -Five persons this week at the Belleeck border customs \\'ere killed and 16 injured in shelling post. along the border between East Pakistan An l'lrmy spokesm:in s:iid the gunmen and India's Tripura territory, newt fire<l 25 shots at a Royal Ulster con-reports said today. stabulary station at Belleeck and British Jleporls said the casualties included troops at the station fired back. East Pakistani war refugees. Security forces suffered no casualties A patrol of the Indian Border Security in lhe border gnnbattle, lhe spokesman Force (BSF) exchanged fire with said. Pakistani troops near the northeastern In Belfast, a fire bomb planted by gun-tip of East Pakistan. No casualties were men a1nong luncheon snlnds exploded and reported. destroyed the kitchen of a popular Prime Minister lndira Gandhi, in a let· restaurant n\inutes before the noon rush ter to United Nations Secretary General hour, wi!nesses said. Thnot, said Pakistan is preparing to The Abercorn Bar and Restaurant in make war with India and she would BeHast's commercial center became the 'velcome a U.N. attempt to bring about a latest target in Northern Ireland violence political settlement of the dispute. which erupted two years ago between I-fer letter, whiclt was presented In Roman Catholic! and Protestants and Parliament during debate on the border now has turned to fighting between situation, said the Pakistani"s have mov· Rritish Arn1y troops and the outla~·ed ed troops and armor to the Indian Trish Ht>flubli cnn Army. borders. Congress restored interim funding Thursday for de'fense, foreign aid, the District of Columbia and antipoverty pro- grams whose spending authority expired last Monday as a result of ~louse-Senate maneuvering over foreign aid. Israeli Amb:issador Yit1.hak Ilabin met Thursdny in Washington with Assistant Secretary of State .Joseph ,J. Sisco and said aftrrward.s Israel has !enrned "not to lake no for an an!iWer" in its quest for more of lhe F4 Phantom fighter-bombers. ~~~~~~~·-~~~~ -~~~~--~~~~~~~~ The program s were extended through Dec. 8 on a temporary basis while their regular appropriations are passed but there were doubts Congress could ham· mer out foreign aid's revi val by then. I-le also disputed ' Secretary of Sl;He \Vill iam P. Rogers' statement ll'lst 1veek that Soviet arms shipmenl" to Egypt in the past four months had been "very moderate."· • The United Sl41tes had been pushi ng a Nation Has 'Cold Heart'· no w, asts Numb Interior Sections California ' ' Nixo••~ ••• 01• Jlarpcrs Ba1..aar fa shion maeazine will feature in its January issue male n1odel James Laroe (left) who looks re·markably like President Richard Nixon (ri.qh\). The magazino said lhat when word of lh• issue reached lhe White House a Nixon aide phoned ., to ascertain the nature of the series. The aide was relieved, the magazine said. to find out that the lay~ut \Vas not a Nixon pul·do\vn but a fashion series presented in a mock news layout. ' l • OAllY 'ILOi g ~~~riiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirii;;;-JB~ac;~k~·g;ro--u-n~d~C-i-t-ed~.,_,__~--=-~..,_.4 _.._J 'War' Averted Airlines Settle, Race Disco·unted ·as Facto·r Cut Some Fares UPTON , N.Y. IAP\ -Sociocultural factors. and not racial diffe~ences, are the cause of the typicaUy toWer IQ t~t scores by blacks compared to whites, 1 Unlversi!y of California 1 o c.I o Io g J at reports. HONOLULU I AP ) -Chief executives of 24 transatlantic airlines, which have been flirting with an all-out fare war. have reached a com- promise agreement that will reduce many rates between North America and Europe. Basic agreement on the new fare structure Y.'as announced Thursday night by H. Don Reynolds. assistant director general of the International Air Transport Associalion at the organization's a n nu a I general meeting. New rates on key McCloskey Joke Draws Silence FRENCH LICK. Ind. (UPI) -Republic.an governors finishing a two-day winter con- ference here seemed split to- day over the question of what President Nixon should do about a running-mate in 1972, but nothing resembling a dump-Agnew movement was developing. The Vice President showed up briefly Thursday for a closed-door luncheon with the .. governors. followed by a public speech in Y."h.ich he showed flashes of the Agnew rhetoric. In a joke greeted by nervous laughter and then silence. he said Rep. Paul N. McCloskey (R-Calif. ), was going so broke trying to unseat Nixon that he was forced to auction "his favorite painting: Benedict Arnold crossing the Delaware." He demanded that Wilbur ~ls ID-Ark.), chairman of the House W<!.ys and Means Committee, "get off the stick" and end his'' de pl or able blockade of President Nixon's revenue sharing bill.~' Hope to Visit Troops Again SAIGON (UPl l -Bob Hope will make his seventh Christmas tour of Vietnam next month, military spokes- men said today. The comedian will be under the usual light security regulations, and the spokesmen refused to say ho\v many shows Hope will give in Vietnam, or where they will b<. transatlantic routes w e r e described as a compromise between West Germany • s Lufthansa Airlines -which first moved to slash fares -...... .._ .... ..,..., and reluctant American car- 'nle new Statistical 1tUdy directly eon· tradicts Ideas put forth by a few scien· lists that the lower SCGres by blecks oq the average, are a result. of a genetic dl.1- fere~ between the races. riers. The lowest individual round- lrip fare between London and New York \.l'as set at $200 compared to the present $272. It is for passengers who travel in winter and stay 22 to 45 days. Reynolds said the fare package will be submitted to a Dec. 2 joint conference of Atlantic Carriers in Geneva, Switzerland. for ratification. Rates also must be ap- proved by governments of the countries involved, and will take effect either in February or April, Reynolds said. Lufthansa forced the fares issued by refusing to agree to a rate package proposed at an Au•ust meeting in Montreal. The airline linnounced that it was filing a $210 round-trip ex- cursion fare between New York and Frankfurt. Other carriers followed suit and bei:i:an trimming rates. The fare announced Thurs- day on that route was $220. compared to the $230 fare pro- posed at Montreat. Under the new fare struc- ture, first class fares will not be reduced but youth fares on some airlines will increase. Race Suit Brought By White DETROIT ( UP!l -A former city employe o f suburban Highland Park has filed a $300,000 suit aginst the city. its mayor and one of its departmenl heads, contending he was harassed, called racial names and finally f i re d because he is white. The sult, filed in U.S. District Court here Thursday, asks $100,000 eaah from the ci· ty, Mayor Robert Btackw•ll, who is black, and J\.1rs. Mil Police T Id Dr. Jane.Mercer, assoCiate professor of 0 sociology at the Univet!lty of Callforni• at Riverside, sald the statistical ap-· plication of seven selected sociocultural ·factors to differences in test scores eliminates that difference. In her study, Dr. Meteer had three groups, each c;omposed of 180 persons -'Br utaJi"ty' a black group, a Me1kan-Amencan group and a white group. The blacks and the Mexic8J1·Americens ' each averaged (UPI) _ 91 on IQ tests; the whites avtraced 106. To Cease PITI'SBURGH A federal court judge issued an jnjunction _orderiflg six Pittsburgh policemen lo end alleged brutal treatment of black residents. The preliminary injunction by U.S. District Judge Rabe F. Marsh was hailed -and damned -as a precedent. ''This is a precedent-setting decision -we have found no other case similar to this one in the United States." Law- rence Green, an attorney for Neighborhood Legal Services, a social service group, said Thursday. "This is the greatest miscarriage of justice since Pont.\us Pilate washed his hands in the case of Christ," said Det. Sgt. Francis Quinlan. president of the Fort Pitt Lodge, Fraternal Order of Police. Their attorneys argued the federal cOurt had no jurisdic- tion in t.he matter. and that the alleged brutal actions never took place. Marsh ordered the six policemen to stop "harassi ng. threatenin~. inlimidatiqg and beating" black re s ident s. Fourteen black persons com· plained of the alleged brutaU· ly. He said witnesses at a hear· ing. held Sept. 16 and 17, described "many instances of uncalled for and reprehensible police brutality, accompanied by expressions of racism by the defendants." Twenty witnesses, including three black police (lfficers. said during the hearings that the six defendants repeatedly used racial slurs to black W·l·D·E General Calibrated® Jumbo780 • ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT on new 1971 care •GLASS-BELTED lot k>ng mUaage • POLYESTER CORD body lor strerlgth 1 CALIBRATEOe, .• compuler·processed lor 1 smooth ride cent Roberts, the black dir _ residents. tqr of the city's Co ruty Services Cenler. The former e ploye, Charles W. Smi , 25, was hired on Feb . .,I, 1970, as a supervisor for the center. He was fired last March 12 and is a policeman in suburban Southfield. I Nixon to Florida KEY BISCAYNE. F I a. (UPI) -President Nixon flew to his Florida retreat Thurs- day. He was to return to Washington this afternoon. Pei;,.------ BUICK CHRYSLER FORD MERCURY SIZES ' H78x15 2895 Plut ,l .01 f .E.T. 3-PIECE ''When you have. accounted f o r sociocultural diffettnce& · tbere is no 1lgnlflcant reslduat variation tl'lat could be directly .attributable to ethnic groups alont!," 1be reported. Dr. Mercer described hCr work, •!>" parently the first of its kind, to a seminar Thursday et Brookttaven N a t i on a I Laboratory. The seminar was held 'by the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing. ' 1Q tests, she uid, were designed 1 to predict how a per&on would perform in school, but people hive tried to "tease" other information from therh. She said thal !'Ven the use of the word intelligence tends to slant the'. dlscusalon. ln fact, the sociologi1t "said, tel be able reaUy to compare two -people .taking the same test, an e.J::amlner would have to be sure they both had the 1arfie exposur_j!; to .the material, 'o\'ere equally relaxed, 14·ere equally free of emotional d_istµrbance and Flt. BUICK SPECIAL, CHARGER, TEMPEST, F-15, TORINO, IMPALA, BEL·AlR and many others '18!! - physical problems. They bolh would have to be equally motiva~J sht &aid, to be .. compared on the segments of IQ tests that involve speed. "If you control all this,'' Dr. Mercer said, "you might inf~r one's genotype is better than 'another's." One of the Jeadin( exponents of the idea thitt genetic differtnce.s underlie the differences in lQ test scores is Dr. Arthur • · Jensen, an educational psychologist the Berkeley )'}ranch of the University o Cali!ornia. Dr. Mercer accused Or. Jensen of using "absolutely fallacious logic'' in using Information derived from studies of white people to judge the ca:use of the lower test ·s.c.ores by blacks. Another proponent of the gene.lie theory, Dr. Mercer noted, is Dr. Williem Shockley, a Nobel Prize winner in phys_ics, with two other scientists, for the development of the traDSistor. flt• MUSTANO, COUGAR, CAM.I.AO, FIAEBIAO, CHEVY U and many othen 5 18!~ !>Ill EJ'l.14 blld<w1ll plui. Sl.H Ff!d. Elf. lllf per lite. Only ,3.00 11111? per tire !tr Twin.Stripe Whit1w1lls! BRAKE RELINE Dhc •r1kM IMI OIM<" tlrs 1t11h1ty higher. Hlll:l'S WHAT WE 001 Ollr ~111111'1 NllH Ill folH" wfl ... 1 wttll W•1ftlf" llr•k• /lftl1t11 ••• lllMl'ICf Ill tour drurn1 , •• ChKk wflHI c~lindtrt 1.W ,.. turn 11rlnt1 ••• Cl••ft tnd l\llltlc1l1 IWtdfo .... pltll ••• ll:tptel( !1'9111 wllHI '9111'1"" , • • AljWll ffaj( ... ,_,.,. Pfalcl • , • .... ltil yeur ur. We u .. anly new t1t1ory tl\91Htrlll Pll'tl , •. NII rtbulll. Slrt F11-14 & F7'-IS b1tdtWlll Jl\UI 11.ll e""' S) ~, I'~. Ex. l •ll Hr llr1 Only $l.OO 11or1 eer tire fer Twl11-Slrlpt Wll1tew1l\i! 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Priced at ........ ____ , ........... : $10, $12.SO, $15.00 P.S: Don't forget Thonhgiving flowers for yo urself. too! 1:~ LIDO FLOWER SHOP -3'433 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673..f.S 13 • HOOO •JACKET •SLACKS • Wind an rainproof •High vl!lblt heavy duty pl1stlc Special This Week Only IANKAMIRICARD MASRR CHARCiE leh •• 111t-Mld trffd each p lu1 ttele i nd· l11c:1I t1111 • COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 19S9 Hours : 7:30 lo 6'00 Dally PHONE: 540·5710 646-5033 ------...... ..:.= • DAJLY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • - Oil· Code -Enforcement A reasonable compromise has been struck in the setUnc of fees oil oper tors in Huntington Beach mu&t pay neat year. 1 ' The city council has agreed to impose charges 'that wlll raise $108,000 next year, $44,000 more than the $64,000 curently produced. but much less than· the $200,- 000 in charges that were suggested a month ago . The reason the whopping increases were knQcked down last month was because the total far exceeded what the city then believed would be the cost of enforcing the oil code. Now a staff report has projected the cost of code-enforcement at $89,600 next year so the new fees bear a reasonable relationship to services. [n addition. the $18,000 difference between the fees and services provides a cushion to absorb unfore- seen legal costs or to hire an additional e m p Joye to crack down further on violators. It mar, be that the estimates \\•ill prove unrealistic, that the city will find the, burden of court prosecution_s heavier than expected, but if this happens the cou!lcil would still be-able to increase the fees by an appropriate amount the following year. . By deciding to review the fees annually, to insure that the charges as nearJY as 'pOSSible match the cost of services, the council is hol~g a weapon that should encourage greater compliance with the code. would be displaced. Biologists say that some ofl these. species are rare and a.re on the verge of extinction. Other species use tht marsh as a "wa..v. station" for !lights from Siberia to South ~merica, durin-g the winter. It could mean trouble for them if they found no other place to rest and re- fuel in this area. WhUe growi.Dg opposition to the freeway has been noted in Seal Beach, Long Beach and in Navy circles, the highway department has not yet indicated a willing· ness to re·open the freeway hearings. Because we live in an age in which ecological mat· ters can become as important as other considerations the alignment of the route should be restudied. Perhaps it will not be feasible to find an alternate route, but perhaps it is. Further, it might be a good time to find out whether the Pacific Coast Freeway wilt be built alter all. Another look is in order. ' Good Citizens Take Note News this week from the offices of the West Orange County United Crusade is that 66.5 percent of the crusade'~ 1971 goal has been met. Birds or Freeway? Environmentalists have taken up the challenge to stop the Pacific Coast Freeway from slicing through one of the most populated bird preserves in Southern Cali· fornia . This means that campaign workers in the communi· .ties of Fountaln Val!e)'.,_Huntington Beach, Westminster, Midway City, Seal Beach and Garden Grove have raised $339,313 of the $510,245 th ey set as their goal in Sep· tember. But it also means that there is still $170,932 that has yet to be pledged by residents and business people in these cities. The refuge is located in one square mile of salt· marsh on Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station property owned by the U.S. Navy. Should the Department, of Highways giYe the go-~ead signal for ~n~truct1on, about 106 species ·of birds roosting and feeding there The economic situation has led some to cut back their co ntributions this year. But because of that very situation, the need is greater. Donating to the United Crusade is one of the most meaningful contributions a citizen can make to his community. H '. ... Red Chinese Delegates at V.N. Who Do They ,.,~~present? ' ·~: .>;. • ·- UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. -One over· riding and crucially momei;itous quest!on looms over the Red Chinese Delegation now holding forth ln the United Nations. Just who do these experienced and wily Peking emissaries represent? Who is setting their policies and giving the orders? Which of the deadly warrin2 cliques. fiercely feuding civ- ilian and military factions and ri~l power • seeking mo- Fools 1 ~e c~ll!ng ~he tune -~nd ~ bow . :· ··=··: ~ ,. '· ~ · · · • • ~;ubtiCiy proclaimed heu·apparent. ·~ ~· .;l> I'-'. l • · : · . .NOW' Lin apparently has fallen into " ..... .a1~~r with whoever is the ruling clique ""'""'10"' t "'I' I and.has become, in effect, a non-person ~~~il:.!~.:.li.'l~'il'•';-as 1is the practice of fallen chiefs in .! .. • , ' . .Communist countries. Not only has Lin But no outlidtr•ially knows. "China disappeared from sight and sound, but in watcbers,"1az!itysts 1t1d other authorities vario~s ~ays the contro~led ~edia are have theories ~uctions, 1peculations besmirchrng and denouncmg him. and premiata' • .Gn what is 1ranspiring That fate ~as ~fallen other once higb- behind the.>bamboo curtain but. in reality placed !unctionar1es. no more tbln thal. ' With Lin Piao have vanished rour of his: Some of these "expert.s" frankly admit tap military leaders; and some senior that. members of the Communist politburo. Whether these mysteriously affected generals and party rulers were on th'~ ONE OF THE BEST of them lllf'\e• .. further. He is convinced that 'iV!n the furiously contending and maneuverinJ: Chinese don't know. . , • mUi\6ry plane which inexplicably era.shed deep inside Mongolia Sept. 12 i1 still known only to Peking -and very likely Moscow, which i~n't talking. ' A t OCC: Good Football ' But No Band Ma ilbox To the Editor: I have been an interested supporter of . Orange Coast College athletics for a numDer' or 'Y.e~. I have been especially pie~~· this y~~ because the Pirates are htivitli one of their better football s~Soiis. ·•· · , Until I lead )/I· the Friday edition of your paper. r hid often wondered why the athletes. pep squad, students, and fans did not have the support of a school band. . ~ . ~e answer to tlii:s profoun~ enigma Is of supreme importance because t( <llll.Y well determine the -fate of the world' - v.•bether there is peace or war, and if there is peace, what kind? A peace of free and de.mocraUcally ruled peopte, or the iron.fisted totalitarianism th at prevails in Rus&ia, China and t.beir satellite subjects? In other words~ the vast subcontinent of 800 ·million people is, still in the throes of the ferocious "cultural revolution" that Mao Tse-tung unleashed some five years ago. The outward violence of the maniacal "Red Guards" and other berserk elements has subsided ..._ or been forcibly suppressed by the military in a number of areas. CLEARLY IT WAS a coilvu!Sing e'vcnt. ' The next day the Chinese air force was grounded -and . still is. That ex- IT APPEARS' that at least part of the problerp stems ·.from the absence of a firm administrative position. I am sure that many of your readers would like to kno·w why this outstanding institution is the only one in the area without a band to support athletics. OSTENSIBLY, the Chinese delegation represents the Peking government. But who and what is that government? Is it civilian, mililary or a combination of both? Is seemingly indestructible Premier Chou En.Jal the top man rul- ing in the shadow of the patently fading and innocuous Chairman Mao Tse-tung? Or is Chou the "front man" of a "com- mittee'' consisting or powerful regional military chiefs and younger technicians and party leaders? Considerable evidence points to this lat· ter likelihood. But the convuJSions of that immense upheaval are still vibrating throughout the Communist party and military power structure -with the outcome still con· jectural. Those seemingly in power today may be gone tomOrro~. A GRAPW.C illustration is Communist party Vice Chairman Lin Piao, one of China's ablest military commanders, long.time close henchman of Mao Tse-- tung, and until a few months ago his f raordinary move was soon fol1 01ved by the even more dramatic cancellation of the annual National Day Parade and of· flclal banquet -all without a word of ex· planation. While little more than the general outline of the fateful power struggJe is known, this much is certain: Chou En-lai appears firmly at the helm in foreign affairs, with the approval of the military. He may also exercise a lot of authority in other matters. Of all the top Chinese leaders he is today the most prominent in the public eye -Including Mao Tse-htng who is only occasionally referred to in the media and then merely ceremoniously. Gas: Something Is Wrong America's supplies of raw energy - coal, oil and natural gas -are not in· finite . But neither are we going to run out of them right after lunch. "Talk about an • energy crisis emerging is exaggera~ed, 0 according to Hendrick Houthakker, a former member of lhe President's Coun- cil of .Economic Advisers. II we're short of fossil fuels, the experts say. it is the delivery system that's at faulL There is ample evidence . t h a t something Is wrong. Citing shortages of natural gas. utilities in Pennsy lvania, Ohio, .New Jersey, ?1-fichigan. Illinois and Washington . D.C., now refuse to sign new ccmu•acts. -washtngton Gas co. pre·stdent Paul E. Reichardt announced on Nov. 9 lhat tlft!re would be no new sales to in- dustrial users "for an indefinite period of time ." Gas is a big element in the overall energy piclure. lt provides a third of the ORANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Pu.blishtr Thorrt41 letllil, Ed itor A.lbtrt W. Batts Edttor'fcl Page Editor TM edltor1•1 ~ ot tl'lc Dally PUot &tekt to ln torro and 1Umu· late tt1dct1 by pruenllns; thb: nt\\'lopllpet'I optnlons •rid com· mentary on topics or tnti:N'lt and 1lpltlcant'l', by providing a fnrum tor the t:xP"CUIOn of our l'Hdc~ OJJinlont, and by J!f'Ctt:n~nit the d1vt1V ''hiwpotn11 of lnfonned ob--aen•m •nd 1pok•men on topics of the dl,y. Friday, November 19, IWl Ed itorial Research U.S. energy needs and consumption bas been growing by 6.8 percent a year - compared with growth rates of 4.6 per· cent for oil and 1.1 percent for coal. The' Federal Power Commission estimates there are 275 trillion cubic feet of "proven-reserves" in the ground. That's enough for the next 13.2 years, even if no new wells are found. WHAT WORRIES 1'HE FPC i• that the ra.tio of proven reserves to current production has been fall.ihg staadlly for more than three decades. Just 10 years ago, the reserves were enough to keep the country from running out of gu for 20.2 years. "By 1974 the supply will almost certainly drop to ten years," ac- cording to Forbes magazine. That'1 the level that John N. N1ssik1s, chainnan of the FPC. has indicated would be a hire minimum. Natural gas was used ·u lllhling fuel as early as the 1820s. But since jts use as a heating fuel depended upon pipeline technology. •it was not ulfd for lh•t puryose until a century later. The event that signalled the opening of the gas era ca.me 1n 1931 when a 14-lnch plpelfne w111 lald from the Texas gas fields W Chlc11go. Since then, pjpeUne mileage In.this coun- try has lncrtased to more than 800,000. . Accordlng to the big oil companies - which coincidentally own much of the natural gas -there is a good reason why not enough cas 11 flowing through those pipes. Ga& prices are kept ao low by the FPC, lhey charge, that it Ja not feasible for them to develop the fields they own or to go looking for new ones. THE HOPE NOW is that technology will lead the country out of its natural gas short.age, Several companies are working on techniques to gasify coal and crude oil. The U.S. Bureau of Mines believes thal 317 trillion cubic feet of natural gas might be freed with the nuclear fracturing of gas formations. Work is progressing_ in several quarters to develop an Apollo-type fuel cell for commercial use. For the present. the gas industry main- tains th.at there need be no shortage if prices are inCreased. BeyOnd that. there i:: a growing consensus that the United States needs a comprehensive national energy policy. President Nixon moved in this direction last June in his Energy Statement to Congress. Hearings on the fonnulation of such a J):>licy are being held by t!le Senate Interior Committee. Whatever the National Energy Policy looks like when it is finally written, Americans are probably going to have to· pay mort for all forms of energy. As the business magazine Dun 's observed recently: "The days of extremely cheap fuel are about over for bo\tf industry and the consumer in the U.S." B11 George ----,-, Den Georg.: How did. the term d~jay, which came from the words disc jockey, get its name! 'W.R. Dear W.R.: The term ''deejay" ls a combina· lion of the words "dlS< Jo<k•y And was -WILL YOU LEAVE ME ALONE. W.R.? YOU KNOW 1 FEEL BAD IN THE MORN!NGS I JACK BARNES L1111n frtm '"°"" .,.. wtkomt. Ho""''"' wr!ltt'I lllevltl (111,..l' ll'lelr l'MU.iltft tn JOf words or lelo. T!tt rl9111 le ""'9nM !en.rt le Ill loffCt •• tllmlr1ale HNI II ,.._.,..,, AU lllltftr1 nHlll 111- (IUlt tl9MIM1"11 ..... mtlll"• add...... lllul Rl mtl mt1' ff wlrllllt .. •~ r"vnl II 1uftkltlll rtt !Mlfl ii 1111rnt. "9tl'l" will Pit! Dt ,.,~1111141. How to Address Our Lawmaker s U.S. Sf.HATOllS ~.ion Cronuon ~0), lll N. $prln1 $1 .• los .lnoeltrl fOOJI tnd J~n V. Tunney {D), Rm. !~UJ, 11.000 Wll1/\!rt lllYd .. LOI A"!leltl JOON. Outlnl C0i1~ro."lon11 1enlon1: Ntw Stnl!I Otflc• lllllg, W111lln1ton. 0 ,C. 20SOI. U. S. ltE,.RESENTATIVES (Or11191 C111nlt Onlyl 11.lc~•rd T, H1nn1 (.J.lth Dlllrlct-OJ, 169.S W. Crosct M lw, , Sullt .S., An1htlm 9'900; J~n G. $chm!tz !JS'~ Ol1trlct-R), U.D C1mp111 Drive. Sult• 214, NtwPOrt Bt•ch nwc, Cr1i1 Hmmer C:!1nd L'.ll11t"lct-IU, SKurltf" ll•nll" Bldg .• Su/Te t10 1!0 Pitle Ave,. Long 8t1ch 9C807. Outlflll Ct>n- 1rtnlon1I ltnlon: HIMI, U16 Longworth Mouw Olflco 81111.1 S<.hmltz 120I Lonewarth Houi.e Offlct 81d9.; HOJll'H!r, 2117 Rtvtlll•n Ho\111 Off"t 81d~., Wl1hlr19ton, 0 C. 10.5U. FllOM OltANOI COUNTY o.nnl1 C1rlltnltr !:Mth Ol1trlct-1tJ, 8°" CC. ltvJ.,. '166-1. Cor!'mUlen: Alilo'lculllKt , Loc:1t Govwn- mtnl, Select CommHMt Ol'1 Envl-l1t Control, kite! ComtT>fllff on S.Untly tn1ru11ort lrl A.orl<ullurlt loll, Joint c.otnml!I ... on Ed11e1tlon Evllut!lon Ind Joint Commlltff on L"l1lll1¥1 Rtflrtme.il. J1me1 E. W~tmort, ClJlll Oftlrkt--R:J, 1J1'3 Brookllun!, Gerdlft Gro" f~I. CommlttHs: 811tfneu Ind -Proftulor\L Mtlllh tnd wt'lllrt Ind TtlllSflOrllllon, Ourl1111 tr;l1l1llvt 11111on: s11i. Ctollol, SKTtl'Mnlo, C1lll. t.S.1. STATI ASSl!MILYMSN ll'llOM ORANGI COl,INTT Roberl Ii. fllMtl't""' 11111 Olstrlet-lt), lift Wfll· cl!fl Or .. N-POrt Beld'I, "*· Commlllftl! Public Emolo~mtnl •ncl R1!1rttT>trtl, W•ltr 1114 dlll•tn.n Commtttt Incl Public UIH!lltl. Jolln V.,,flrls•s . (lllltt Ot11'rlct-IU. 1.00 Nortt'! H1rll0<' 811111. Fu!11rt011 '2'31. COl!lm!llHI ~ Fln1nu Incl lfll~'· 1nc1, L1bor 1tel1Uon1 ind Rtvtnvt 1nd T1x1tlon, Sr.lfcl Commit!" on EnvlroMM11t11 QYatlrrn. ind tll1lrtT>1n. Jolnl Comml!IH Of\ Atomic ~eloa. mint Ind So1c1. Rototrt H, fl~rlef (10111 OhtrlU-R), 17131 l!le1cll l!llvd., H~n!lnt!o11 fle1ch '26"17 Com- l)llUet1; EC111C.r1on, ElttllOf\1 Ind Cons!ltutlonll ""l'Mndmtnll lnll Ylct dlllrm1n, Ttlfl""1r1111on. Ktnn1t11 CorY (ff!ll O!llrlcf-Ol, Ml N. Euctkl, P.O. flo• uu. AMhllm f?IQO. CommlltH1: Eaucatton, Ltbo<" Rtlltlon1 Ind 11......u. Ind T1..-111...,. Dtlrlnt l"lsl•llYI 1tulon1; $1111 CM>flol, SKrl tTllfllO, C1ll!. tSI01. ORANGI COUNTY IOARO 01' IU,l'RVISOllS 1'1'11 0111 .• llobffl W. l1tt1n ~ 0 111,, 01vkl lehr Tlll'lll 0111 .. Wll!11n1 Pl\1!1101 l'o<1tlll 0 111., R1lpfl I , Cl1rll Flflll 0 111 .. ROMld W. C-rl Alldteu: Oranee COVlllY Mn1lnl1tr11lorl l ldll .. II_.. 441. SU N. Svc1more, llnll A ... '21llO. Quotes Ann Lander, -"l'dost nagging wiv'ei are secretly dissatisfied with themselves. Picking away at a spouse Is easier than doing something about one's own in- adequacies. Do you have outlets that pro- vide you with self esteem? A wife who reels good about. herself doesn't nag her husband about details, Her energy is . being used constructively -not destruc- tively." • I ' ' . - ' ' ' Hyperbole vs. Advertising Truth Truth in advertising is not as rare as cynics would have us believe, but truth commingled with humor and whimsy is more precious than a bartender's guide at a temperance meeting . One of the few ex. ponents of this technique died in Lontlon not long ago -Roy Brooks, a real e state agent fGr nea r ly 4-0 years, "whose addiction to truth " as the brief AP obituary s a id . "made him a British institution." EVERYONE KNOWS what the tyPical house or apartment ad is like -making a squalid liltle cubicle sound like a replica of the Taj Mahal, and turning the dingiest of domiciles into a duca l manor. Brooks flourished for four decades by doing exactly the opposi te. His typical real estate ad offered "glum attic flat for rich midgets," and ten ants fell over themselves to rent it. Another candid prospectus ran "Rundown Victorian relic, ba ck bedroom suitable only for dtA·arf " - and drew more than two dozen ardent prospects. HIS AGENCY BECM1E LfiPe. of the largest in London, based almost solely on his superb command of the British talent for "meiosis" -a literary term which the dictionary defines as "expressive understatement.'' This technique could succeed, I am sor· ry to say, only in England, where the people have a passion for litotes -which is the ingrained habit of saying "not half bad" about something Americans would call "terrific" or "colossal." The British have an elfish1y perverse delight in calling a 'Vorld War ''the late unpleasantness," or the Atlantic Ocean a •·pond," or the most dazzling achievements "a bit or all righ t." If An· nie Oakley had been one of their fork· heroes she would be designated as "a rather decent shot.'' AMERICANS ARE used to hyperbole, and meiosis merely confuses them. A hotel accommodation has to be ad· vertised as "deluxe" in order to satisfy uS that it is even barely adequate; in England (and, indeed, in most of Europe) a deluxe hotel is a specific and accurate ranking, clearly above "first-class." Verbal distinctions still have meaning in some parts of the world. It's a pity we don 't have a public that responds as gladsomely to the sort of whimsical truth that brought BrookJ fame and fortune. Because we don 't, every advertiser has to shout louder than the last one, each adjective has to outstrip the previous, and finally ell words Jose their value in the race for the ultimate superlati ve. ''Whiter th a n white" is a shade possible only in America. Nixon and T eamsters WASHINGTON -Insiders charge the Teamsters have become so cozy with the White House that they were able to· block a presidential message on transportation. The message was scheduled to be sub- mitted to Congress on Nov. 4. But the Teamste rs raised some last-minute ob- jections. say the insiders, with Whlte House ractotum Pete · Flanigan. The transportation message was finally delivered to con. Rress on November 8 under the signa- ture. not.o!Yresident Nixon, but of Trans- portation Undersec. retary James Beggs. FLANIGAN acknowledged to us that a last-minute decision was made not to put the President's imprimatur on the message. But he denied th11t the Team sters had lnnuenced the decision. ''There w11sn't In any sense a last-minute visitation by the Teamsters," he said. ·1;~;~:~:-~rl ..; Flanigan. Thereafter. Fitzsimmons and Flanigan remained in contact usuallf. through intennediaries. · OF ALL THE labor leaders, Fit.zsim· mons has shown the most willh1gness to cooperate with President Nixon in his ef· forts to stabilize the economy. Th is has given the Teamsters a little extra clout inside the White House. But--Flanigan~insisted to us that the Teamsters had no more innuenet> upon the tr;;.nsportation proposals than did the shippers. He acknowledged that !he pro- posals have been watered down to meet some objecllons. "We want a good bill," he explained, "that won't get such opposition that Jt will just sink without a trace." For more than a :siear the Nixon Adminislration has been shaping leglsla· tion to increase competition ln the transportation industry. This should lower frei~ht rates which would reduce.- the cost of all goods shipped in inlerstat ...... t commerce. The 1avinss presumably could be passtd on W the conwmr:rs. • Dear Gloomy Gus THE RAlLROADS, truckers and barge operators, however, have been slipping around to argue with Flanigan against more compelltion. As the Amr:rlcan Trucking Association's President W.A. Bresnahan put It lo us the Nixon pro- posals would.. encourage. small, unstable tru ckers "lo move In and out of the In- dustry like 1 fiddler's r:lbow." Bresnahan. alM> brought Teamsters boss Frank Flt1lmmon1 into the White House. several monlha •ao to meet It's Sleepy Time Down South at Huntington Beach City Council late evening meetings. Looks like the m11yor will h11ve to severr:ly lim it debate just to keep councilmen alert tnough to act sensibly 1t voting lime. -B. C. L. Thll 1••1-ttllKll tel.,.., Y!t_.., ""' lltctu•rll1' '"''' .i t~t -'''"'· s111oi1 ~ Ht ....,, fl Oie0m1 ~ OlllJ ,lilt. 7 I I I I J • • ' ~New·per~Beae . • EDI TI ON 7 N.Y. Steeb VOL. M, NO. 277, 4 SECTIONS , 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Back Bay Fence Sends Barbs Through N ewpOrt Newport Beach nlay fori:e the Irvine Company to gel rid of IU! barbed wire fence around the upper Newport Bay .by declaring it a dangerous &tructure - although doing so ~·ould aclmittedly be 1tutching a point, a city official said to- day. , ''Th.iJ would certa inly be reaching out Into left.!ield for an interpretation (of the building code)" said Robert Fowler, t>uilding admin istra:tion supervisor. · Fowjer said it is up to councilmen if they want to try it . "Jf the council feel!; strongly enough we cl)Uld certainly attempt to accomplish their desires through this method;" he said. Fowler offered the suggestion as the result of a council inquiry into the fence two weeks a~o. The Irvine Company had started construction a week earlier declaring it had 'to protect its ownership of th& land. . Fowler was the only official to of!er any immediate course or ·action in the i;taff report released toda)I. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil told councilmen that barb- ed wire fencing is not prohibited by the city or state law. O'Neil did say the city could adopt an ordinance banning the use.of barbed wire fence in th·e future, although he didn 't s3y ll'hether the la w could be made to cover existing fencing . · f'owler 11aid his idea stems from the fact the building code section on unsafe Nixon Gets Tough Labor Chiefs Get Word on Freeze MIAMI BEACH, Fla . (U PI ) -Presi· dent Nixon lhre>n' away the speech he prepared for the AFl.rCIO convention to. day and told the labor leade r.1, he was 1iving it to them "straight from the shoulder" -that he 'A'as going lo make his economic program work with or without labor's hel p. "It is my obliga1ion to make thi~ (program ) succeed and to the extent of my powers I shall do that.'' the chief ex· ecutive told the nation's labor chieftains In )Ill bold and emotional t;ilk. Nixon told a quiet audience. which ;ap- pl;auded only lightl y when he entered the hotel ballroom , that despite political dif- fer enct! he knew "The m~jority of workers 11.fe ror America and for a strong national derense." He said at the outset that he stood hy his remarks which had been1 handed out to the press in advance orhis speech. In those. remark! the President told the labor leaders his wa_ge and pr ice controls Paper Plin1pto11 Writer Speaks to OCC Stu.dents By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 lftt DeilY 1"11•1 Ir.it 1r1en throughout the world indulge in the cheap and generally harmless habit of daydrea01ing. ~'riter George "Paper Lion" Plim pton makes the old American dream of fame •nd fortune come true for himself. He tries the real thing , falls. miserably but comically and cries all the way to tht hank 1.fter doing a book <fboul his ad· \'entures. "The American male spends about 90 percent or his daydre.aming')r n spo rls,'' Plimpton tnld his Orange Coast C.O\lege Disli ngujshed Speakers Serles audience Thursday. Plimpton has quarterbacked l he Detroit Lions, fa ced boxer Archie Moore in the ring and played in "Rio Lobo" wit h Newport Beach·s own mov ie institution, Joh n \Vayne. One OCC li.o:tener asked about that feat. ''Oh. Mr . Wa yne, 1 forgot I was in Orani{e County," qu ipped Plimpton, drawing a roar. Slender and shaggy·haired . Plimpton is editor of the Paris Re view literary magazine llli >n·ell as ll ~Tiler who tries to be part of the action as well as being whe re it is. "I'm from the east and Mr. Wayne considered me ·a dude' and ·a 1iberN.'" said Plin1pton . "There is nothini{ worse in Mr. \\la yne·s lexicon than 'a dude' and 'a. liberal.' " He and l\\•o olher film desperar:k!f'.s were ll~amed to go gunninb for The Duke. "Thf!if was me, a midget and an albino • • ~· -1 HE'LL TR Y ANYTHING Sporlt Fan Plimpton I I . I \\'ith purple eyes ," Plimpton said. "I thought we were terrific." He said they rode in!o town slowly and (See PLIMPTON, Page !) Anti-freeway Sentiments 'Hurting' County Fm1d s , would produce a ''period or i1ustaintd prosPerily that will rep.11y many times over any imrriediate sacrifices that any segment of the American work force i! called upon lo 'make ." Nixon spoke with inten~ity, and somewhat excitedly. But he managed a slighL smile when he entered the lion'1 den of his severest critics. He was welcomed at the door by AFt.,. ClO President Georjile Meany, who had (See NIXON, Page 2) Planners OK Newport Place Development After hearing assurances that ''another Fashion Island" wil l not be. built, • ' r!' •· h I -0 "'-'-·.L ' Ncwp;o ~ac ·p annNtl-~mm1~unerJ Thursday unanimously approved revised land use and development standards ror Emkay Development Company's Newport PlaCe project. ln a related act ion, commissioners also ap proved subd ivision of 162.6 acre project into five industrial and 17 commercial lots. The Emkay prope11y is loca ted between f.1acl\rlhur Boulevard and Birch.Slreet. Changes were nu1de in road circulation , restaurant sites and provisions ror a car storage racility. bul com missioners were more con~med with the addition or the word "retail" in descriptions of Cfl m· mercia\ uses. ' Comm issioner Jackie Heather sa id the word bothered her because she took it to mean possible development of large department stores. But James Hewicker, assistant corn· munity development director, said it wa s a problem or "sem;antics" and that stores would be oriented to service of other area businesses. But Emkay officials, represented by architect Ernest Wilson, were reluctant lo use the word "service'' because the comp;i11y might want to develop bou· tiques, or small men 's clothing stores. "This will not be another Fashion Island ,·• he said, ''1'hat is completely wrong .'' Hewicker assured Wilson lh;al gift i;hops and small clothing stores were compatible to an areR that will include a hotel. Com mi ssione r Gordon Glas.~ agreed , r;;aying most or the shops' customers "wouTd come fro mnearby businesses end would be no threat to other nearby co m· mercial areas." Wilson pointed out lhal the rive-:i;ix acre shop site was small enough lo "preclude a i;hopping cenler of any magnitude." The approval was made without any wora change. Kid11cy; Rests SANTA MONICA fUP ll -Act ress Barbara Sla nwyck underwent ~urgery to- day for removal of her left kidney and \\'as resting well. a spokesman al St. John's 1-Jospilal said. The screen star was hospilali1.ed Thursday ror 'vhat was described as "n severe cold and exhaustion." She was operated on when examinalion disclosed the ruptured kidney. "She will be in the hospital several v.·eeks," a rricnd said. Sail or Rescued l.ONDON (AP) -A 2,6;-year-<1ld British yachtsman was rescued iooay ar ter a nine-d11y ordeal aboa rd a ru\,bef <iinghy i'l lhe wintry Atlantic. RadiO Arcachon , 'a frenc;h m11rllime staUon. s~ ht w11s picked up in U\t Bay o[ 'i.C.-y by 1ht Norwegian tanker Polmtk. - huildingii fiecl11res they 11shall be ct'ln- 11it1ered 11 pubUc nuis~OX!t in which case we C?ll require their removal or rehabilitation.'' Fowler said tha l fences above three feel tall are considered "J'' occup11ncies and pointed out the. definition of a building is "any structure built for suir port, shelter or enclosu re or persons animals, chattel or pn>~rty o( any kind ". 1''owler•explainOO·tl1at by "rooehing in- to left fieJd" the city might be able to ,,. declare. the fence a dangerous structure, Commuhity Development Director Richard Hogan apparently doesn 't {hlnk Fowler's idea has an awful lot o( merit, however. ·Aithough not commenting llpecifically on the report or his aide J~ogap's own report said, "in oUr research we have round no reason for requiring of the bar~ ed wire fene~·nor do we now have any ordinances wbich·would prevent its use ln I '~4 Bl~CJ ICE 1= l y ~I ME:il - I the future." An Irvine Compan y spokesman &a.id this morning the ranch would ''probably" , comply with. a council direcU\'e top.it up a dltferent· kind of fencing -ll auch a directive should be forthcoming. "The Irv int Ranch has .u.sed this kind of fencing in .Newport Beach and beyt1nd Its borders for more than 100 years," said Jerome F. Collins. media I i a i s o n (S.. FENCE, Page !) -·~ .. DAl\.:Y ,ILOT 'Sltff P.i.t. ,SAILQR(RICH ,JENKINS WATCHES · PASSING ·PARADE OF PICKETING AIR CAL STEWS , · Girlt S'IV . Theytve" !lee~ Sc:ornec:J by Man191m1ritf> Exprtll• Wrath 1t Or1n19 County AlrRJrt -£.'ft.JCJ .-4 ~~ "-•.C ~ .. \!, I i' ''' \ ', • ' t f ., ,.. I , '• · "'~ • ·"l , · -, I "l • Air . Cal Stewardesses Striking Over Benefits Management and m i n I · ll k i rte d stewa rdesses for Air Californi11 were flyi ng disunited today on the issue' ol basic pa y and benefits. The stews, in fact, were grounded, although the planes are still fl ying. 1'hey are on stri ke , carrying pic ket signs back and forth outside lhe Or11nge County Airport Term inal in customary orange un iror ms instead or carrying refreshments to pasllengers aloft. "Fly Me. I'm Broke," declared one in a sardonic parody of a larger internationa l line's current advertisemenl. Handbill.~ issued hy 11 le w a rd es s men1bcrs of the Transport Workers Union of Amerit:a (A~'L-<.:10 1 Local 505 outlined the slews' stew. Any Air California st.atC'mcnt would have to come from Dudley Miller, ex· eclilive vice president in charge of m11rketing. representatives said. Miller was in a iitaff mttlinlit - presumably on the strike -and cou ld not immediately ofJer the company's side. The handbill issued by lhe stew11 rdes~' union said they h11ve been justified since Oct. l to strike at any time but kept WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Jlenry M. "Scoop" Jackson or Washington formally declared his candld"acy rot l he Democratic prtsidentlal nomination lo· da y and said he would enter the New 1-lampshi re. Florida, Jllinois a nd Wisconsin ·primaries. Jackson, running far behind in public Qflinion polls and an admitted underdog, e1:>0ceded the tirst·in·lhc-nalion New llampshire prhnary to frunt·runninit Sen. Edmund S. Mt1skre Of neighborini; Ma ine. The New l':impshire test ill March 7. ''I don't expect to win in New llamp.1Jhire.'' .Jackson-s11lfl, "but I \lllTI confident I h:ivt: ll chan ce to m:ike a re:isonable showin~." Jackson 1n:idc his lon~-expecled an- nouncernent at R p..1cked •~·s ronh~rtnce in the m11rble columnro, red draped Senate oaucu!J rooin . ' •. "f'i:n .goi.ng to take. orr my &al, roll up my sleeveJJ 11la Harr:)' Truroan and tel l it llkeJt. iJ1" he . ..1sa.i.d..to applauae.Jrom sup- porters crammed inr.o lbe huge room trying unsuccessfully to reach a contr:•·t setllement. "<Allleclive b;arjitaining h;a s eome to 1 halt and the company is no longer in· lerested in meeting with the negotiating commiU.ee to resolve our dHferences," the paper charges. Grievances include A charge other in· tr;aslate lines p;ay stewardesses up to $175 per month more than Air Calirornia girls receive. "The average Air C a I i r or n i R stewardess receives less than $6,-500 per yea r," ii continues, saying many support small children and also receive sub.stan- dard vacation, sick leave and insurance benefits. (;iris are also required to work l(}.hour days without lime for a meal and don 't receive time and a half pay for overti me, the paper fu rUier charges. State law requires time·and·a-half, under the'. labOr code for women. Slewardesses said they don 't wi~h to in- cnnvenience the traveling public, but feel a strike is necessary al this time. They conclude the handbill by re· questing message:. of backing be sent lo Air California President Robert Clifford. behind chairs sel out for reporters. Ask ed about his finances, Jackson said he estimated it would take about $1 milllon lo gel up to the fourth ~r his plan- ned races, Wisconsin. . ".We've rai5ed art of It, and we're raising it all over the COuntry," he said. "Wc,'re doing all right'' ln re!i!ponse to questions, Jackson s81d he tilso W:l!J seriously considering en- tering the primary in Alab11ma in a direct ·challenge-to l:ov. C<.>01'ge C. W~l ::ice, who n1ay provide Jnckson's major co m· pel iliO n in FlrOrldn. A!lk<.<d U he would con.4!lder the No. 2 ~pot on the Uclcet Ir he fill! d in his bid for lhe p1·eside11tlnl nominnlion. JackMn snld, "1'1n not getting into Iffy qutstions llOW -I a"'.runniri"g ror tht Nit. I spot." The 59-year~ld son .of Norwegia n im· migrAnts, born th ·Everett. W11sh .• was accomp11nied by 111!1 wife. llelen, and his two children -Ann11 Marie, 8, and Pettr, 5-•t..hfL!Wll befort televlSlon cameras to niake the announcement. 3 Plead Guilty In Pornography Conspiracy Case Three men who were said at. the lime of their llrrest to ~ developl.ng a highly profitable obscene movie operation in the Newport Beach area pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges Wednesday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McMillan ordered Wallace Alvin Little, 41 , and Edward 11.ard Doucette, 32. bolh of Hollywood and Richard Lewis Garringer, 2.1, of San Bernardino to retu,..-i to his courtroom Feb. 24 for sentencing. All three defendants fa~ a Po&Sibl~ stale prison lerm or up to 10 years for their part in the distribution of pornographic movies and lewd books'ln a syndicate known to potential sublcriber1 as Home Lei.~ure Systems. Witnesses lestified in lower court ac- tion against the trio that they received. . obscene movies and books after con· I acting the defenda nts th r o u g b newspaper advertisement!. It w a s testified lhat the enrollment fee wa! $10 and a further :pa yment of $10 every two weeks ensured the rental of movie! descril>ed as hard core pornography. Charges of distributing · o b s c e n e material and conspi racy to do so were fil· ed in Newport Beach at the Ume of .tr· rest last Dec. 22 after a. two·month in- vestigation of Home Leisure Sys tems. Ohscenity charges · were d r opp ed WedneSday when the three wa ived trial arid pleaded guilty to the related counts. Orange : Coat wea .. er Those pesky winds· ahould slack off tonight, paving the way for a nice, sunny Saturday with temp- eratures ranging from &o to 70 - ~nd ove might lows from 3$ to 45.. INSIDE TODAY Betti tJ1it1king iJbout a trip lo Death Volleu7 Read Frtdo erick Schotmehl's story in to- day's Week.erider on. Poge 25. lie catts tht btauiy of thil desert "indescribable." l•lllnt H C11Uet11I• I Chtcllln t u, U Cl111Ul... »HI c1 ... k• ~, t,._1WIN'f IJ Dt~etctt II llli!IN'ltl ,... ' Enllrl•l•lft ... I ll·H !'l"t~c• 'll·jl ""'"'-• 4 Aft• ~lllftrt ' U Mlillll• I Mlwltt fl·U '·' M1l~tl ''""' D H.rltitll ,,._, ' .. J Oral\•t t"""' II lttslllrMtt ... s,1 ... ltl ,.,.... n SMth 16"lt Jl8c' M1,~th ll•h '"""'""• fl '""'•"' it.a Wtttlltt I Wftltt W1t1t· 1• 1'1'9111111'1 ...... ''"" Wltl'kll Ntwt. U .......... ~ ... - .• I I DAil Y' PILOT ff Coas Bill Hope s Dead For Revival .. From Wir t Strw\ce1 SAC RAMENTO -Hopes for reviving a major eoastline proteclion bill have been dashed by Sen. James Wedworth, con- 1idered by supporters as the last hope for 11ving the measure this year. The Hawthorne Democrat said Thurs- day that while he supported the bill originally, it had been •·emasculated ... gutted " by amendments and be oppose9 lbt measure now. Wedworth was absent Monday when a critical vote was taken on Assemblyman Alan Sieroty's bill to regulate coastal development Sleroly told newsmen the Hawthome Democrat was the swing vOt!l to en.able the measure to clear the com· mittee . It died one vote short. ·Sieroty's bill was .vie'wed as the last re- maining major . environment bill in the legislatlve hopper. It would have banned all new development &long lhe l,100 miles of California coastline unless approved by a regional slate commJssion. 1--~-""ppooeot_s aa;yed jt w_Q.\!lJl unde(min1 local control &nd stirl e all development. At a news conference called by Wedworth, the lawmaker said he would not vote to revive the measure, con· tending it had been debated enough. He said he was absent altending to ••personal business" whic h had to be taken care o[ while the coastline bill fac· f ed its committee test. Asked ir his busineS! involved buying r~ee horse.s, Wed.worth replied: ''Yes, I have· SOKie thoroughbreds." When another reporter asked why he chose to attend to his personat affairs ahead or legislative business, Wedworth. responded : "I ha ve to pay rent and feed i me children." r Wedworth earns $19,200 a year as a legislator in addition to $.10 a day Jivi ng expenses. He ls a retired bicycle dealer, v.·ho recently bought a sc;nlc ranch in the Sherr.a Nevada Foofhills east o I Sacramento. When the news co nference began, Wedworth said, "l don't know what 1 would have done lf I were here Monday." But when pressed on the point Later, he said he actually made up his mind to vole against the bill Sunday. F,.0111 l'age 1 FENCE ... manager. "However. Hit is determined that this fencing now represents a hazard to the community, lhen we will. of cou~e. take the appropriate action." he said. "Because the reasons for our inslalliog the fence in the first place remai n un- changed, we would probably replace the wire with some other kind of wire," Collins said. O'Neil, in his Writlen opinion, s<1id he "failed to find anything in the California Codes or case law prohibiting. the use or barbed wire for fencing, although he agreed tha.t lt might be barred from area's bounding on public property. "The city under its general police pOwer might consider adopting an ordinance prohjbiling barbed wire fen ces ad jacent to a public thoroughfa re but it is doubtful if the prohibilion t'Ould be ex- tended to include a fence constructed wholly on private land and not contiguou!! to private property." he said. Much of the Back Bay fencing is along the roadside. bordering Irvine Avenue, Back Bay Drive and Jamboree Road in several places. He explained. howe1·er. that a property l"lwner ha!! "the comrnon·law right" to fence and protect his property from trespassers. "Of course. Ha property ov.•ner chooses to use barbed wire for fencing off his pro· perty. he P.ssumes the risk of possible in- jury to innocent victims." O'Neil said. DAILY PILOT ClaMll COAST P\llUSHIMO '1JAP>#t'f 1..,_rt N. w •• .i ,,.,....... ....... lllltr J ec:li: •· C•rlt'f Vkll ,....., ... 0--iN ...... n."r"'il ..... 1Jil.i•1 A. 'MtrJhlM ,,.,..,....,. '"'"' L P1J1' Jr:r\e9 """'°"' leMJI C1tY ElllW N .......... OHl<o JJJl N..,,.,t 1 ... 1,,1'4 M1mn, MrJ'*11r. r.o. In 117l. tll&J --~ N-: 2"' 'illnt •If Slrwt Let-... di: m ,.,.., ,.,.,.,,..,. ....,,..,.,..,,.. ._,., 111n • ..,di llw1-rt ._ C.--• ...... II Qrlillll lMl T..,.._. 17141 4414'111 CIMHW ,........,. .. 641·5•71 • ' Bearing_ Voted _ .. ___ _ • Zone Showdown· • Hits Floor On J;l~uglas Set Of Senate MISSED BIG VOTE St1t• Sen1tor W•dworth A showdown meeting on the con- troversial zoning or the McDonnell llouglas Corp. property near Orange Count y Airport has been scheduled for Dec. 2 by the county Alrport Land Use Commission. The group voted Thursday night to schedule the public hearing. The Board of Supervisors and county planning t'Ommissloners have previously voled to allow a zone change from light Industrial to commercial use for the pro- perty. Each vote was split 3 to l arter lengthy and sometimes healed sessions. 1r the land use group should vote against the rewne Dec. 2, it ·will require 1 lour-fifths vote by the Board of Supervisors to overrule the comm ission's decision . The rezone violates a comprehensive la nd use plan adopted las~ Sept. 2 by the commission for the county airport area. Jn the plan, the 56-acre McDonnell Douglas parcel at the northeast cor ner or MacArthur Boulevard and Campus Drive opposite the airport terminal building is restricted to "research and light in- dustry." The property is the site of the former Douglas Aircraft Company subsidiary, Winter Winds Chasing Smog, Battering Boat,s Old man winter is breathing down the Orange Coast's neck toch1y with wiiids that reached gale force in some locations, forcing Sigalerts and small craft warn· ings but wiping skies clean of smog. Faculty Meeting Fails to Advise On UCI Frats ' The UC Irvine facult~ failed Thursday lo "advise" Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. on the fraternity and sorority ques- tion. In the absence or a quorum. the Academic Senate never really legally convened, yel a handful of profe530rs present discussed the issue for more th.an an hour. The unofficial body voted on two substitute' n1olions and passed by a vote of 14 to 9 a motion to arnrm the official senate ban of 1968. Faculty noted that the vote against na- tional social fraternilles and sororities begin charted at Irvine was passed •·overwhe lmi ngly" in 1968. Dr. Robert Cohen, associate professor of drama, said he personally opposes the soc ial organizations. li e sugges ted that the lack of interest by faculty members in the issue could mean they continue to frown upon them. The faculty had been asked lo hrl<e an advisory stand on the matter and a senate committee had recommended ap- pro val with certain conditions. The con· ditions called for a lottery system of member selection. A university spokesman said the mat- ter rests in the hands of Chancellor Aldrieh 'il'ho is out of town attending a Regents n1eeling. He is expected, however. to be most influenced by Mon- day's student senate. vote on the matter. Jack Hoy. vice chancellor for student affairs, told the Academic Senate members present Thursday, the issue is somewhat "ironic" that UCI should be considering starting fraternities and sororities at a time when interest In then1 is waning . across the n<1tion. $11,000 Worth Of Dogs Taken; Th1·ee Jailed A Santa Ana }!eights couple and a lhird suspeet 'il'ere jailed Thur!lday in ('(In· neclion 'il'ilh theft of 13 vicious guard dogs \\'Orth $11,000. lnvestigators J2.ld I.he dogs apparently were coaxed meekly from their posts, tails wagging. One of the suspects is a former employe of the firn1 victimized 11nd is familiar with several of the trained animals, according to investigators. The dogs were ret'Overed at four loca· lions in visits by deputies fron1 the Los Angeles Coun!y Sheriff's Norv.·alk station and a trainer employed by the owners. Booked on the grand theft l·harges were Jirnn1y Reddish. 26, end his wife l\1a!'y Anne, 39, of 20072 Ac11cle Ave., end Torrey Payne, )I, Paramount Soulh ~ay Sen1ry Dogs Con1pan y O'il'ner Bernie Schwnrlt. s11id Reddish i~ a former employe, nolinR that whoever was In· \'tllved in the thefts h11d lo be knowledgeable about the training of the dogs. Dogs taken during the past month were rtco\'ered at a kenntl In (iarden Grove and ktnntls In Paramount 11nd Long Beach, investigators said. Guttrd dogs are ren!M out bv the ~uth Bay firm at $250 per month : mostly to factories and wrecklnR yards, The anim1113, vicious to stranRer11. 11re deliverrd 11nd picked each night 1tnd mornTnR by roufe m11n11gcrs who know haw to handle them. No real damage was reported In Orange County, although one small bn.ish lire raced out of control near Sand Can- yon and B2.rranca roads before being extinguished this morning. The man responsible had a permit for controlled burning-issued a week ago-- and didn't realize it would be uncon· trollable today, sher iff's deputies said. Y."orecasters for the U.S. Weather Bureau predict continued but diminishing blasts coastward from the mountains tonight and Saturday. Scattered showers and snow at 4,500 feet In some mountain areas are an- ticipated. Chilly overnight lows in the upper 40s are expected overnight, witlt tem- peraturl's up to about 62 during the day. Slgalerts were imposed on some free'tllays, as well as Santa Ana Canyon Road and the Riverside r~reeway through hill y, eastern Orange County. Blasts of wind raking olfshor e waters forced the Orange County Harbor Department to hoist *small craft warning fla g. "Nope," said a spokesm n when asked U he knew when it might ti klwered. "They just tell us when to put it up and when to take it down." Local police agencies were uniform in reporting no specific damage blamed on the gusty Santa Ana winds. Fliers in some areas reported en- countering severe tu rbulence at 5,000 fe.et -moslly farther north -but the Orange. County Airport Control Tower had no reports or ground damage to aircraft. Bu.ilding Stay See n at Beach Before Hearing Hy BARBARA KR EIBICH 0 1 th• D1!1y Ptlel Siii! An urgency ordinance in1posing a six- 1nonlh moratorium on build ingS morr: than 36 feet in height is expected to be adopted by the Laguna Beach city council al its Dec. I meeting. Jess than a wer:k before a scheduled court hearing on legality of the existing height limit ordinance. · City attorney Tully Seymour his been instructed by the council to preparr: the extraordinary measure for adoption in order to avert the poss ibility that • developer might seek a permit for 11 higher building if the initiativt ordinance should be overturned by the court Dec. 6. Amendments to the city zoning ordinance incorporating the 36-IOOl height limit nuw are in the process of formal adoption through public hearings berore the Planning Commission and City Counci l, but the procedure could not be com pleted until late January, leaving a possible lapse. during which permits might be obtained. .-The interim moratorlum would prevent .such a situation. Once the amendments 11re formally_ In- corporated into the city code. the que!l- tion of legality of the height limit ordinance. adopted following the Aug. 3 iniliati"e election becomes a dead issue, as far as Laguna Beach is concerned. When the formal bearing procedure is completed and the wning ordinance is of- ficially amended, the interim xoning measure would automatically lapse. or be repeall'd, 11ccordlng to city manager l..a'illrr:nce Rose. Jn 11 suit now -pending in Superior . Court. reallor Vern Taschner is challeng· ing tht leRality of !he lnitieJJve ordinance on grounds the Initiative ,rocedure c11n· not be used for zoning legislntlon since it dMs not provide for public hearings as rtqulred by state law. Initiative proponenl5 have maintained thal lhe'helghl ban was not a toning mat- ter. but an amendment UI the building tod•. ' Astropower , which Is no longer in opera- tion. McDonnell Douglas officials appeared before the land use commission last month but failed to sway the previous decision of the commi!lsloners on the pro-- per use of the valuable property. The giant aerospace corporation plans to 1n1tke the 50 acres the keystone of their new land de velopment progran1, aeo cording to testimony by Vice President Donald Douglas, Jr. The fir m plans a 25G- SOO.room Jiottl, 500,000 square feet ol •of· !ice space and a convention center for the strategically located site. Vigorously opposing the rezone has been the Irvine Company whose officials argue tha t the change violates the in- tegrity of the seve n year old adopted land use plan for !he airport-industrial com· 'plex area . Just north of the McDonnell Douglas properl y are about 60 acres of Jr1vine land \\'hich is zoned and deve loped to com- 1nerclal use such as hotels, office buildings and restaurants. The land use t'Ommission's public hear- ing on the issue is se t for 7:30 p.m. in the Orange County Planning Comm ission hearing roo1n, 400 Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana. PLIMPTON. • • menacingly. as do all bad guys in good westerns, destined ror violent doom in the dust of Main Street. Plimpton blew the scene and $5,000 in production costs to re-do it. Screaming directors ran out to tell him hired killers do not hit town holding the horse reins in both fists, because they 11eed at least one free gun hand . Plimpton did ha ve kind words for John Wayne. "He is a great raconteur and a great influence,'' the best-selling a ut h or declared. "Everybody on ihe set was walking around and spitting tobacco juice between their toes." Illust rating his pro football and fight ring escapades with film s l i d e s , J>Jimpton said his light-heavyweight bout with Archie !\-1oore was perilous. A prankster-author friend, Peter Maas, lold the curious Moore that Plimpton was actually a national collegiate boxing charnpion. . "He wants to bel'Ome world champ and not bother with all the preliminary fights," Ptin1plon's 'friend' told the .stun- ned Moore. "He's going to ha ve the gym packed with press." "If he lays a hand on me, I'll deck him,'' Moore snarled, clenching his fists. Plimpton t'Oncedes he didn't la y a hand on Moore. Not all of Plimplon's escapades art· so rm.igh·a nd-tumble. He played percussion in an orchestra conducted by the renowned Leonard Bernstein In Winnipeg, Canada. Bernstein reacted to Plimpton's lack of talent almost as violen tly as Archie Moore did to his rumored boxing finesse, Pl impton said. Music tal<es liming and a light touch. He was assigned to ring -on cue -a huge gong al the crc.scendo ol a Tchaikovsky Symphony. Witt> ·Relax, M r. Meany. The fmeze is over/' NIXON • • • attacked Nixon sharply Thursday and I C· cused him of resorting lo "totalitarian" methods. "I'm here today lo ask your support for the building of a lasting peace and the building of a new propserity," Ni1.on told the big labor audience. He said he is often asked "What is wrong with the old prosperity," and said: "I'll tell you what is wrong -war and inOation." · Nixon said that he was a~ked why' he had decided to come speak before the convention which has blasted his policies. He said his reply was th11t he knew when the chip! were down he could cou nt on labor"s support for his poli cies. The President spoke about his winding down the war, the drop In casualties, and how 150,000 had marched on Wall Street in favor of his Ca mbodian incursion even though editorial writers and the in- tellectuals were against him. He said he strongly favors repeal of the auto excise tax and the job cred it tax. which wilt increase American workers' competitive position with work er s abroad. But then he laid it natly on the line. He said he wants labor's participation lo make his new economic po licy succeed "but whether we gel that or not," he \\"arned, "it is my obligation lo make this succeed and to the extent of my powers [ shall do that." I-le said that he believes it is time lo understand that there are points of disagreement and agreement. "I want a program that is fa ir. "But as President of all the people I think it is my duty to do what is best for America." Nixon said he understood that unemployment wi.s. because he\. had grown up in it in the depression. Nixon's fighling stance came all no surprise to observers who have watched him make bold moves in the past several months. He said our goal is "lo win a peace that will end wars." Nixon said with some heat that he knows that "frightening statemenl!'I have been made from th is podium" about his forthcoming trips to Peking and Mo5COw. Te1·n1s Suspended For Two Panthers NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -The \a~t two Black Panthers· charged in I.he slaying of fellow Panther Alex Rackley received suspended sentences in Superior Court today. Landon Williams, 27, and Rory 11ilhe, 20. bolh of Oakland. Calif., had pleaded guilty on Oct:26 to charges of cons piracy to murder. State's Atty. Arnold Markle had &aid in court both had indicated they would return to California. SACRAMENTO (UP!l -A half-billion dollar tax increase that woula establish state income tax withholding on Jan. 1 has reached the Senate floor with Gov. Ronald Reagan's blessings. Legislators say the package ls Jn near final form for enactment. The bill would raise taxes high enough to plug a $.110 million revenue gap in the 18.8 billion state budget, finance $200 million in construction and provide m 1 million in business inventory tax relief. Most of the money -S470 million - W<>Uld be raised from wilhholding. The package·s remaining $83 mllllon ~·ould come from increased taxes on banks, corporations, the oil industry and wealthy individuals enjoying "preferen· lial income" loopholes. The bill, by Assembl yman William T. Bagley tR-San Rafael), is the only major la x package still aclive in t he Legislature, which wrestled behind the .scene_s for n1onths attempting to negotiate a massive property tax relief plan. ·:we s.at downstairs (in the Governor'!! office) all year talking and the lime for ta!king's over." admonished veteran Senate Finance Committee Chairman .Randolph Collier (D-Yreka J. Collier's co1nn1ittee approved the Bagle.y bill on a voice vote Thursday and sent it to the full Senate, which is ex· peeled lo pass the measure -perhapll next ~e~k -and .,ave the way for fina l negotiations in a two-house t'Onference t'Ommittee. '.he Finance. Committee, on a narrow voice vote , re1ected a proposed amend· ment by Sen. Albert S. Rodda (0. Sacramento i, to raise another $9.S million and provide 5 percent salary in- creases for University of California and stale college faculty. Under !he bill. payroll withholding of the state income tax would begin Jan. I. A cilizen would pay taxes on his cur· renl 1972 income through withholding, as under the federal system. But in April he still would be required to send the state a Jump sum tax pay· ment on his 1971 income. To lessen thiir inilial double burden, a person would be allowed to reduce his tax on 1971 income by 15 percent. Thus, a citizen who Ordinarily would pay $100 in state int'Ome tax es next year would be billed for $185 if withholding were enacted -$85 in April on 1971 in- come and and $100 spaced throughout the year on 1972 wages. In 1973, his tax would revert to $100. The ·initia l double tax would net the state more than $200 mi llion. And the government would use this wind fall under the Bagley proposal to finance a cra~h capilal outlay program. School Drive Seeks 2,00() <..:ans of Food Mater Dei High School students are seeking 2,000 cans of food to be distributed to needy families of Orange County for Thanksgiving. The dri ve. sponsored by the Sl. Vincent de Paul Society, runs through Wed- nesday. YOUR TURKEY DESERVES THE FINEST DEALERS FOR: HENREDON--DREXEL-HERITAGE NIWPOIT STOll OPIN •tlDAl' 'TIL t NEWPO~T BEACH 1727 W1ttcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 INTERIORS Prof111lon1I fnterior D11i9n1r1 Av1ll1bl9-AID l'lrl•ll9 T•ll ftM M"' •f o,_,. C•111ty-141°1J&l LAGUNA BEACH 345 No rth Co11t Highw1y Phone:-494-6551 .1 • ~W..ar' Averred Ah~Iine~. Settle, - Cut Some Fares • ... -... -. ... ~~ )"I' • .J··-' Back_g~ound C_j_~d • • Race.Disco·unted as· Factor UPTON, N.Y. (API -Sociocullural .. ' facton. and not racial differences, are the cause of the typically lower tQ test acores by blacks compared to whltes, a University of California soc lo Io & is t reports. 'Mle new statistical study directly con- tradicts ideas put forth by a few scien- tist! that lhe lqwer ,.scores by blacks on the average, are a result of a genetic dif- ference between the races. , 'lWben you have t,ecoWlted f o r sociocultural dlfferencea there is no significant residual vari1Uon that could be directly attributable to ethnic groups alone," she reported. ' Dr. Mercer described her work. ap- parenlly the first ol lls kind, to.a.,wninar Tbunday at Brookhaven Na t l on a I Labor•tory. The Rminar w1r'beld by the CounclJ·for the AdVancemerit of• &cience WrltiJli. physical problems. They both ·would have to be equally moUvated, she aaid, to be compared on the segments of IQ teals that Involve speed.' "If you control all Ulla." Dr. Mercer said, "you might infer one's genotype 11 better than another' a." ... .. DAILY PILOT /S " HONOLULU (AP) -Chief executivu of 2• transatlantic airline3, whlch have been flirting with an all-out fare war, have reached a· com- promise agreement that will reduce many rate.! between North America and Europe. Basic agreement on the new fare strucLure was announced Thursday night by H. Don Reynolds. assistant director general of the lnternaUonal Air Transport Association at the organitation's an nu a I general meeting. transatlantic routes were described as a compromise between West G.e rm 1 n y 's Lufthansa Airllnea -which first moved to slash 'fares - and reluctant American car- riers. The lowest individual ·round- trip fare between London and New York wa11 .set at $200 compared to the piesent $272. It is for passengers who travel in winter and stay 23 t.o ts days. T Id Dr . Jane Mercer, associate profeasor o( sociology at the University of Californla 0 at Riverl!ilde, aaid the staUstJcal ap-· Police To Cease IQ tests. ahe said, wtre desianec,t to predicl how a person would perform ln school, but people have tried t.o "tease" other information from them. She said One of the leading exponents of the idea that genetic dlfferencq Wlderlie the differences in IQ test scores is Dr. Arthur Jell5en, an educational psychologist .tt the Berkeley branch of the University of California. Dr. Mercer accuse4 Dr. Jensen of using "ab&olutely · fallacioua'. logic" in uslng information derived from studies of \\'bite people to judge the cause of the lower New rates on key 'Brutality' plication o( seven selected sociocultural factors to differences In test scores eliminates that difference. tn her study, Dr. Merctr h11d three a:roups, each composed of 180 persons - a black group, a Mexican-American group and a whiff: group. The blacks and the Mexican-Americans each averaged ~ that even the use of lhe word intelligence terlds to slant the discussion. test scores by blacks. Another proponent of the gene.Uc theory , Dr. Mercer noted, is Dr.'William Shockley, a Nobel Prize winner In physics, with two other scu!nti!ts, f,or the Reynolds said the fare ~ckage w.ill be submJtted to. a Dec. 2 joint conference or Atlantic Carriers in Geneva, Swltzerland, for ratification. Pl'M'SBURGH (UPI) _ 91 on IQ test!; the whites averaged 106. ln fact, the sociolo~ said, to be able really to compare two ' people taking the aame test, an examiner would have to be sure they both had the same etpOJure to the material, were equally relaxed, were equally· fr~e of emotional disturbance and development ~f the tr~a~n~sl~sto~r·===~;:;~~~~~;:;~~~; '. McCloskey Joke Draws . Silence FRENCH LICK, Ind. <UPI) -Republican governors finishing a two-day winter con- ference here seemed split to- day ov.er the question or what President Nixon should do about a running-mate in 1972, but nothing resembling a dump-Agnew movement was developing. The Vice President showed up briefly Thursday for a closed-door luncheon with the governors. followed • by a public speech in wtuch he showed flashes of the Agnew r~etoric, In a joke greeted by nervous laughter and then. silence, he said Rep. Paul N. McCloskey (RoCalif.), was going so broke trying t.o unseat Nb:on that he was forced to auction "his favorite painting: Benedict Arnold crossing the Delaware." He demanded that Wilbur Mills (D-Ark.), chairman o( t.he House · W&ys and Means Rates also must be ap- proved by gov~rnmenb of the countries involved, and will " take effect either in February or April. Reynolds said. Lufthansa forced the fares issued by refusing to agree to a rate package proposed at an Aui;1ust meeting ln Montreal. The airline announced that lt was filing a $210 round-trip ex- cursion fare between New Yor~ and Frankf'1rt. Other carriers followed suit and began trimming rate:s. The fare ..,announced Thurs- day on that route was $220, compared to the $230 fare pro- posed at Montreal. Under the new fare atruc- ture, first class fares will not be reductd but youth fares on some airlines will Increase. Race Suit Brought By White DETROIT (UPI ) A A federal court judge issued an injunction ordering six Pittsburgh policemen to ·end alleged brutal treatment of black residents. The preliminary ,injunction by U.S. District Judge Rabe· F. Marsh was hailed -and damned -as a precedent. "This is a precedent.setting decision -we have found no other case similar to this one in the United St.ates," Law- reiice Green, an attorney for Neighborhood Legal Services, a social service group, said Thu rsday. "This is the greatest miscarriage of justice since Pontius Pilate washed his hands in the case of Christ," said Det. Sgt. Francis Quinla,n. pi;:esident of the Fort Pitt Uidge, Fraternal Order of Police. Their attorneys 11rgued the federal court had no jurisdic- tion in the matter. and that the alleged brutal actions never took place. '· Committee, "get off the stick'' and end his'' de pl or ab I e blockade of President Nii:on 's revenue sharing bill." former city employe o f .suburban Highland Park has filed a $300,000 suit aginst the city, Its mayor and one of Its department heads, contending he was harassed, called racial names and finally f i r e d becau.!le he is white. Marsh orde red the aix policemen to stop "harassing, threatening\ intjmida1irig and beating" black r e s i d e n t s. Fourtetn black persons COf!!\ plained of the alleged brutali- ty. He said vdtnesses at a hear- ing, held Sept. 16 and 17. describe9 "many instances of uncalled for and reprehensible police brutality, accompanied by expressions of racism by the defendants." Hope to Vi sit Troops Again ·SAIGON (UPI) -Bob Hope will make his seventh Oristmas tour ol Vietnam nert month. military spokes- men said today. The comedian will be under the usual tighf security regul1tlons, and tbe spokesmen refused to say how many shows Hope will give in Vietnam, or where they will • 'be. 'lhe The suit. filed m· U.S. District Court here Thursday, asks $100,000 each from the ci- ty, Mayor Robert Blackwell, who is black, and Mrs. Milli- cent Roberts. the black di.rec· tor of the city's Commudity Services Center, ,, The former employ-e, Charle.s W. Smith. 25, was hired on Feb. 2. 1970. as a supervisor for the center. He was fired last March 12 and is a policeman in suburban Southfield. Twenty witnesses. including three black police officers, said durU,~ 'tflehe11.rings that the six defendants repeatedly used racial slurs to black residents. Nixon to Florida KEY BISCAYNE, F I a, (UPll -'Presldent Ni1on new to bis Florida retreat Tburr day. He was to return to Wa~hington this afternoon . Remember someone special with flowers this Thank sg iving. 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COMPLm·~ CAR CARE Since 19511 Hour•: 7:30 lo 6;00 Dally PHONE : 540·5710 646·5033 , now· :-pli{ilic'S Kiglit lo I -Newport Belch hu ·roun1n1Sel!Tali'ing aloOk at·ca1. Uon>la'• iight·to-know law again, this lime on the issue of closed meetings of c!ty council committees. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil, following up a re- quest by Mayor Ed Hirth, recently ruled that meetings of councflmanic committees need not be open tQ the public provided that .Darticular committee consists of fewer than four councilmen. Four councilmen constitute a quorum of 1the council and meeting together could transact oUicial city business. lnterestiniiy, O'Neil's opinion is exactly the o~ posite of a rulm~ handed down by the Los Angeles city attorney who said, in effect, any gathering of two or , more councilmen as a council committee is subject to rule_s of the law. commonly known as the Brown Act. The fact that two different attorneys arrive at dil· ferent interpretations ot the same law is hardly surpris· ing. That's what makes so many lawsuits. You hires your attorney and you takes your choice -and your chances. · O'Neil did qualify his opinion very specifically and pointedly in that he warned councilmen that c,:>mmit· tee meetings must be conducted for the sole purpose of "fact-finding." · In his words, committee meetings may be secret uas long as the committee is composed of less than a quorum of the city council apd is advisory in nature and fact-finding in purpose .. " Concluding the repQrt, O'Neil said, "In short. spec· ial council committees ·should limi( their activity to the gathering of information for the purpose of report· ing back to the full membershi}! of the council for open and public deliberation -and actiOn by -that -body." Even if O'Neil's interpretation were ultimately f6und to be correct, the conditions he outlines under which commlttees legally can meet in private include restrictions that would be very hard to live up to in practice, and very likely are not followed. The Newport Beach City Council would be unwise to take the legal risk. And even less wise to risk loss o! public confidence that closed committee sessions; would invite. It wouI<t appear most difficult for a group of coun· cilmen to get together and gather facts on an issue, with· out deliberating at the same. time the merits of that particular issue. How many times, for instance, do committees come to council meetings with formal recommendations in hand? Many times. ---=e..Brown..A<:LwJ!S .not..writteo, as.eYeo some sJn. __ _ c~re and scrupulous public officials sometimes feel, so as to gag ~ree and ope_n discussion on important answers; or tD inhibit effective government. The Brown Act was written to insure that public bodies conduct the public's business in public. The • people's right to know must take precedence in the American system of government. Carpenter's Good Try Trustees of the San Joaquin Elementai:y School Dis· trict recently attempted to cha nge a l_aw to provide more local bond money to build new schools. The board called on state Sen. Dennis Carpe'ii.ter lo sponsor ,a bill to raise the legal liJnit on the amount of bonds that can be sold each year from five to seven ~per· cent of a district's total assessed valuation. With the Legislature pushing toward adjournment, Carpenter aµthored a bill which swiftly whipped through Senate channels but died in the Assembly. Despite its death, the bill accomplished three things: -It focused attention on the five percent ceiling which the.. state Allocations Board has decided to study and -wilJ;:::copsider changing because its origin is un-. - known. -It emphasized San Joaquin's critical situation and paved the way for reintroduction of corrective legislation next term. ' -It provided leverage for Carpenter to request $250,000 in planning money for San Joaquin which the state Allocations Board granted. Senator Carpenter deserves ~ommendation for a good try, which despite the inaction of the Assembly, was by no means wasted. N • ' ' .,. ' • Red Chinese Delegates at V.N. Who Do They Represent? UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. -One over· riding and crucially momentous question' looms over the Red Chinese Delegation now holding forth in the United Nations. publicly proclaimed heir-apparent. At OCC: Good Football But No Band vs. Hyperbole Advertising Truth ' Just who do these experienced and wily Peking emissaries represent? Who is setting their policies and giving the orders! Which of the deadly warrin~ cliques, fiercely feuding eJv. Hian and military fact.i ons and riv&l power • seeking mo-• guls are calling the tune -and·ltir bow foog? The answer to this profound enigma is Df 1upr~me importance because it may . welL detennine the fate. of the -world - whether there is peace or war, ,end if there .is peace, what kind? A peace of tree and democratically ruled people, or the iron-fisted totalitarianism t h at prevails in Russia, China and their · satellite subjects? OSTENSIBLY, the Chinese delegation represents the Peking government. But who and what is that government? ls it civilian, military or a combination Df both? Is seemingly indestructible Pmnier O!ou En.Jal the top man rul- ing in the shadow Clf the patently fading and innocuous Chai'rman Mao Tse·tungt_ Dr is Chou the "front man" of a "com· mittee" cons.isling of powerful regional lllilitary chiefs and younger' technicians and party leaders? Considerable evidence points to this lat· ler likelihood. NCIW Lin apparently tia.s falle n into ' • di sfavor with whoever is lhe ruling clique 8nd has become, in effect, a non-person -'as is the practice of fallen chiefs in CCll"nmunist countri~. Not only has Lin But no outsider really knows. "China <iii1J)peared from sight and sot.ind, but ln ' Mailbox w•tchers, •1 analysts and other authorities various ways the controlled media are have theories, deductions, speculations besmirching and denouncing·him. To the Editor: and premises on what is transpiring That fate has be.fallen other onct! high.!. . A:~-~.ave;been an interested supporter of behind thei!ibamboo curtain but. in reality, placed fwictionaries. .uranp: ,Coast College ath letics for a nu.m0ir-1>i ·years. I have been especially no more an that. With Lin Piao have vanished four of-his . , . Some of these "experts" frankly admit top military leaders, ·and some senior ptea~·yel!lr bec~use the Pirates are th t members of the communist politburo. . ~1.,f.·~~ .or, their ~tter football a • "'--'-....... lb h . 1 .. :.-i JjeaSjl'rlS! • • . . • "ue er t ese myster1ousy affec~.' ,.,,, ~r.'i,' ,,, .. ONEOFTHEBES'fofth~mgoeseven genera,ls and party rulers were on tha\•,~• •11.'.Jntil 11read'1rf the Friday edition of further. He is convinced that even the military plane which inexplicably crashed your paper, I had often wondered why the furiously contending •.and maneuverin'g deep inside Mong~lia Sept. l1 is still a~letes, pep squad, studentf, and fans Chinese don't know. . ~nown only ~o f.ek~ng :--_1~~iv{.~ ~ely ~1d,~t ~ve ~~f'pport or a !chooJ band . In o~h~r words, t~e f~st.subcontinent of Afoscow. which isn ~ t~l~t· ~ .. -• , . IT ~P.?E~ µiat at least part Clf the 800 million people 1s sttll m the throes of · ( ~ problefni' stenis irom the absence -0f a the ftrocious "cultural revolut~on" that · CLEARLY IT WAS.a conv~lsirlg evenl. firm administrative position. Mao Tse-tung unleashed some f1ve'years The next day the Chinese atr force was 1 th l ( d ago. The outward 1 violence of the grounded ...-and still is. That ex· am . sure 8 many 0 . your rea ~rs maniacal "Red Guar&" apd other traordinary move was soon followed by ~ou.ld 1.ike ~o know w~y lhts. outstanding berserk element.s has subsided -or been the even more dramatic can~llation of 1n.st1tutio n is the only one in ~he area forcibly suppressed by the military in a . the annual National Day Parade and of. without a band to support athletics . number of areas. ficial banquet -all without a word of ex· JACK BARNES But the convuls ions of that immense planation. upheaval are still vibrating throughout While little more than the general the Communi~t party and military power outline of the fateful power struggle is structure -with the outcome still con· known, this mucli is certain: jectural. Chou En-lai appears firmly at the helm 'fbose seemingly in power today may in foreign affairs, with the approval of be gone tomorrow. the military, He may also exercise a Jot A GRAPHIC illustration ls Communist party Vice Chairman Lin Piao, one or China's ablest military commanders, long·Ume close henchman of Mao Tse· tung, and until a few riionlhs ago his of authority in other matters. Of all the top Chinese leaders he is today the most prominent in the public eye -including Mao Tse-tung who i!1 only occasionally referred to in the media and then merely ceremoniously. »artlcipatlon To the Editor: Just who does the city council pretend lo represent? We recently have been able lo ward off a freeway and a relocated civic center that they tried to ram down our throats, but while they divert our at- tention with these, who knows what other diabolical ploL" are being hatched? We must put up with a noisy helicopter wh ich we never voted on, and pollution or our harbor which they never do anything about. Truth in advertising is not as rare as · cynics would have us believe, but truth commingled with humor and whimsy is more precious than a bartender's guide at a temperance meeting. One of the few ex- ponents of this technique died in London not long ago -Roy Brooks, a real estate agent for nearly 40 .vears, "whose addiction to truth". as the brief AP obituary s a i d , "made him a British institution." EVERYONE KNOWS what the typica l house or apartment ad is like -making a squalid little cubicle sound like a replica of the Taj Mahal, and turning the dingiest of domiciles into a ducal manor. Brooks flourished for four decades by doing exactly the opposite. His typical real estate ad offered "glum attic flat for rich midgets." and tenants fell over themselves to rent it. Another candid prospectus ran ''Rundown Victorian relic, back bedroom suitable only for dwarf' - and drew more than two dozen ardent prospects. ms AGENCY BECAME one of the la.rgest in London, based almosr solely on his superb command of the British talent for "melosis" - a literary term which the dictionary defines as "expressive understatement." This technique could succeed, I am sor· ry to say, only in England, where the people have a passion for litotes -which is the ingraioed habit of saying "not half bad " about something Americans would call ''terrific" or "colossal." The British have an elfishly perve~1 • delight in calling a World War ''the la unpleasantness," Qr the Atlantic Ocean "pond," or the most dazzlin achiev~ments "a bit of all right." lf An· nie Oakley had been one of their folk· heroes she would be designated as "a rather decent shot." AMERICANS ARE used to hyperbole, and meiosis merely confuses them. A hOtel accommodation bas to be ad· vertised as "deluxe" in order to satisfy us that it is even barely adequate ; in England (and, indeed, in most of Europe} a deluxe hotel is a specific and accurate ranking, clearly above "first-class.'' Verbal distinctions still ha ve meaning i.!I some parts of the world. It's a pity we don't have a public that responds as gladsomely to the sort o! whimsicril truth that brought Brooks fame and fortune. Because we don't, every advertlser has to shout louder than the last one, each adjective has to outstrip the previous. and finally all words lose their value in the race for the ultimate superlative. "Whiter th a n white" is a shade possible only in America . Gas: Something Is Wrong IT'S Tff\-1E THAT the people had some say in what goes on. All of the city meetings i;cem to be late at night and these are always begun with trivia and Nixon and Teamsters America·s supplies of raw energy - ipal, oil and natural gas -are not in· finite. But neither are we going to run out ,f them right after lunch. "Talk about an mergy criSis emerging is exaggerated," •ccording to Hendrick Houthakker, a :Onner member of the President's Coun- ~ of Economic Al:lvisers. If we're short If fossil fuels, the experts say, it is the lelivery system that's at fault. There is ample evidence t h a t IOmething is wrong. Citing shortages of 1atural gas. utilities in Pennsylvania. lhlo, New Jersey, Michigan. Illinois and Washington, D.C., now refuse to sign new iont.racts. Washington-Gas Co. president ~aul E. Reichardt announced on Nov. 9 liat there would be no new sales to in- tustrial users "for an indefinite period of ime." Gas is a big element in the overall mergy picture. It provides a third of the ORANGI COAST "-...__ DAILY PILOT Rob<rt N. W•ed, Publlsh<r Thoma.s KetvU, Editor Albtrt W. Batts Editorial Pogc Editor TM edltQrtal et-P Df the Dally Piiot seoeJu to 1nlorm •nd stimu-l&t-e ~~n bf prncntlng this J\e\\'lptper'1 opin~ · and com· IM!nt.a.rY on toplci of tnte:rnt and atgnlllcan«, by prov!dlnrr & rorum tor the ~Ion or·oor readera' o;ilnlon&. Md by prtsenUn~ the dlvense v1ew~nt. or Jntormed oti.. acrven •nd •pokesmen on topics ol the .... Friday, November 19, 1971 ' ' Editoriai Re~earch for them to develop the fields they own or to go looking for new ones. • lhe more important affairs are not on the WASHI.NGTON -Insiders charge the agenda until the end. I recall having to Teamsters have become so cozy with the wait until well after IO p.m. for an im· White House that they were able to block portant freeway debate. By then most People hRd tn be home so as to get up and a presidential message on transportation. THE HOPE NOW is that technology will lead the country out of its natural work in the morning. The message was scheduled to be suJ>. gas shortage. Several companies are milted lo Congress on Nov. •: But the working on techniques to gasify coal and IT WAS SO OBVIOUS that we did not Teamsters raised some last-minute ob. crude oil. The U.S. Bureau of Mines want a freeway , but it took until after the ,i,,ctions. say the insiders, with White believes that 317 trillion cubic feet of vote before five councilmen got Oft our House factotum Pete U.S. energy needs and consumption has natural gas might be freed with the side (they were obviously thinking or Flanigan. been growing by 6.6 percent a year -nuclear fracturing of gas form ations. being re-elected). The transportation ed llb lb W k · · · 1 The city cou ncil should listen to the compar w grow rates of .f.6 per· or JS progressmg 1n severa quarters message was finally t d el A Ii f I II f people and plan their meetings so work· cent for oil and 1.1 percent for coal. The o ev op an po o-type ue ce or delivered to Con-• · 1 , id_ in .. people can attend and participate. N ~ · Federal Power Commission estimates commercia use. . . " LENARD DAVIS· .ffe5S on oveml.":r there are 275 trillion cubic feet of For the present, the gas industry a1n· 8 un'i:ler the signa- Flanigan. Thereafter, Fitzsimmons and Flanigan remained in contact usually through intermediaries. OF ALL THE labor leaders. Fitzsim· mons has shown the most willingness to cooperate with President Nixon in his ef· f~rts to stabilize the economy. This ha! given the Teamsters a little extra clout inside the White Housie. la' th t-th eed be 8bor.ta ·r ture, not of President ''proven--reserves••-m-the-ground~That•s-~ns-a . , ere~n ~ -no-. g.-e41~,,~1-ttHt-.,..,..-,..,_,-....ic-. "'"',.'""-NIXOfl.b{J a enough for the next 13.2 years, even it no pnces are. mcreased. Beyond that, t~ere ::':!. ~1o1r1:i"": ~':-:-~ 1:. ~ = portation Under~: But Flaniga n insisted to us that the --'!leamsters had"lfOlnotC1nOoence upon the tr&nsportation proposals than did the shippers. He acknowledged tha t the pro- posals have-been watered down to meet some objections. new wells are found. J': a growing consensus that the United ., 111"'1"0,. 111111 11 ,.wvtll, All i.nva 111uJt kt> retary James Beggs States needs a...comprehensive naUonal c111+t tltn•tu,.. _.,,. ll)•Jll!!t "'""" 11u1 "'""' • • WHAT WORRIF.'i THE FPC is that the ratio of proven reserves to current production has been falling steadily for more than three decades. Just IO years ago, the reserves were enough to keep the country from running out of gas for 2tl.2 years. "By 1974 the supply will almost certainly drop to ten years," ac· cording to Forbes magazine. That 's the level that John N. Nassikas, chairman of the FPC, has indicated would be a bare minimum. llll'f M •ltlllllM lft r-11 11 1ulllcllo!I l'ffMll fl energy policy. President Nixon moved in 111111rt111. ,...,.,. win Mt .. l'\IMl$11M. this direction last June in his Energy Statement to Congress. Hearings on the formulation of such a policy are being held by the Senate Jnterior Committee. FLANIGAN acknowledged to us that a last-minute decision was made not to put the President's imprimatur on the message. But he denied that. the Teamsters had Influenced the deClsion. "There wasn 't in any sense a Jast·minute vi~itation by the Teamsters." he said. Natural gas was u-sed as lighting fuel as early as the 1820s. But since its use as a heating fuel depended upon pipeline tecbnC1logy, it was not used for that purpose until a century later. The event that signalled the opening of the gas era came in 1931 when a 24·inch pipeline was latd from the Texas gas tielda to Cblcago. Since then, pipeline mileage Jn thi11 eoun. try has increased to more than 800,000. According to the blg oil eompanit-1 - which coincidentally own much of lbt natur3I gss -thtre is a good reason why not enough gaa is flowing thrnugh those pipes. Gas prices are kept ao low by the FPC, they charge, that it ls not feasible Whatever the National Energy Policy looks like when it is finally written, Americans are probably going to have t6 pay more for all fC1nns of energy. As the business magazine Dun's observed recently : "The days of extremely cheap fuel a.re about over for both industry and the consumer in the U.S." . ..---Bv George -- Dtu George: How did the tenn deejay, which came from the words disc jockey, get its name? W.R. Dear W.R.: Tile term ''deejay'' ls 1 combln1· tion of the "-'Ords "disc jockey and was -WILL YOU LEAVE ME ALONE. W.R.? YOU KNOW I FEEL BAD IN THE MORNINGS! ~ Quotes Ann Landers -"Most nagging wives are secretly dissatisfied with themsel'o'es. Picking away at a spouse is easier than doing something about one's own In· adequacies. Do you have outlets that pro- vide you with sel f esteem ? A wife who feels good about herM!lf doesn't nag her husband about details. Her energy is being used constructively -not destruc- tively." Bernard H. Goold -"Over half of all American motlteNi wilh s c ho o 1-a g e children are eclively e:t1gaged in or seek· ing work, U.S. Labor Dept. figures show. The dcparlm~nt's latest labor force survey, made in March, 1970, showed that more than 51 percent of all women with children from 6 to 17 years Clld were in the lab<lr force. th.at 1 month. Among mothers with preschool chtldren under 6, more ihan = percent were in the labor market." For more than a year t~ Nixon Administration has been shaping legisla· lion to increase competition in the transportation industry. This should lower freight rates which would reduce the cost of all goods shipped in Interstate eommerce. The savings presumably could be passed on to the consumers . THE RAILROADS, truckers and bar11:e operators. h<lwever, have been slipping around to argllt with Flanigan against more competition. As the American Trucking Association's Presldtnt W.A. Bresnahan put it to us the Nixon pro- posals would encourage small, unstable truckers "to move ln and out of the in· dustry like a rtddlet's C!lbow.'' Bresnahan also brought Teamsters bo~ Frank Fitzimmons lnto tht White House several months 1.go to meet .,, "We want a good bill," he explained, ''that won't get such opposition that il wilJ just sink without a trace." Dear Gloomy Gm What can the Board of Supervis-- ors ' "new majority" bl" thlnkinR Clf? All high-rise planning an d jet tra[fic at the airport mus_t be stopped to Insure tranquil ity clean Rir. safety tand pmptrtf values Under the night !>'lllCm, -T. H. V. n1,, ,.,, ... ,.. r•lltth •••lltf'f' ..i....,, 11t1 -•n•rlly fflttt ti flit ntwi.t~Mr. ,,,,. twr Ml _.. It Cll"'"'' 0-. OM!¥ PllJI. " 1 VOL 64, NO. 277, 4 SECTIONS , 48 PAGES ORANGE COUN'TY, CALIFORNIA -~· FRIDAY, NOVEMIElf ·19, 197 !' • -• _1_ -, • -Tiidily99 l'leaJ--;.+ ·:rEN CENTS Mesa IO-year P·lan to Receive First Airing By. TERRY COVILLE ' Of tlM DellJ 1"1191 '"" An $8 million, 10-year plan for the Rdevelopment of downtown Costa Mesa will receive its first public hearing before the plaMlng commission Mon<tay night. Planners wilf be asketi to tell the city council U it 11hould go ahead with downtown redevelopment as suggest!!d in the 47-page report by Wilsey and Ham, consultant.. from Los Angeles. William Dunn, city planning director, says his staff has recommended that the council establish itself as a redevelop- ment agency and proceed wjth the plan. Planning cominiWoners will dee.Ide ~1o)1day if they want to agree with the etaff's decision. Both the council and the commis.sion have praised the Wilsey ,and Hani. report. The commission meets at 7:30 p.m. in t council chambers. Any member of tile public may comment · on tlie plan during the hearing. Dunn said the city CQUncll might not hold a public hearing on the redevelop- ment proposal if e<>mmissioners approve it. When the council forms a redevelop- ment agency, if j t does, a hearing could be held on that, he added. The es.sence or the Wilsey and Ham plan Is a restructuring of streets in ihe downtown sector and landscaping the area in a community mall-town square Image , It depends on completion of tha Newport Freeway about 1977. A three-phase approach to redevelop- ment is outlined by the consultants. Phase One involves the widening and improvement of 17th and 19th streets, realignment of Broadway and creation of some parking plazas. Phase One construction would take. place roughly fron1 now through 1974. The second phase covers the extension of· Harbor Boulevard lo 17t h Street, cun· stn.iction or a $190.000 central plaza (town square with Gazebo), several l11rge park· Ing areas and changes in aome 1mall atreets. This phase ta scheduled from 1975-77, coinciding with completion of the freeway. The final phase, 197HO, e<>mplete:s the last two parking lots and a-$600,000, liv~ acre park. How much public money would be used· for redevelopment Is B'pparently flexible, with several dUferent financing methods outlined by Wilsey and Ham. nie council ·can handle most of the work · by eStabllshln1 a redevelopment; agency -itself or appainted member1 - to utilize various state Jaws and federal funds. Character is one of Ute kex.ingred..ie.nf.I to a successful redevelopment, accord.inC to the report. Loe.al merchant1 are urpd to remodel their stores to reflett a dean. open flavor. • Pedestrian wa_tkways, Iota of Jandlcap- (S.. DOWNTOWN, 1'1111 I ) Nixon Gets Tough Labor Chiefs Get Word on Freeze MJAMI BEACH, Fla . (UPI) -.Presi· dent Nixon threw away the speech he prei)ared ror the AFl.rCIO convention to- day and told the labor leaders he was civing it to them '1straight from the Moulder" -that he was going to make his economic program work with or witOOut labor's help. "It is . my obligation to make this (program) succeed and to the extent of my powers I shall do that," the chief ex- ecutive told the nation's labor chieftains in a bold and emotional talk. ..._. Nixon told a quiet audience, which ap- plauded only lightly when he entered the hotel ballroom, that despite .political dif- fere~ he knew "The majority of workers are for America and for a strong national defense." He said at the out'set that he stood by his remarks which had been hapded out to the press in advance of his spebeh . In those remarks the President told the labor l~aders his wage-and price controls Paper Plimpton Writer Speaks to OCC Students I· 1 I By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of !ht D1Ut 1'1111 11•11 l\ten througbout the world indulge in- Ute cheap and generally harm1ess habit of daydreaming. Writer. George "Paper Lion" Plimpton makes the old American dream of fame and fortune come true for himself. He triea the real thing, fails miserably but comically and cries all the way to the bank after doing a book aboul his ad- \·entures. ''The America n male spe nds about 90 percent or his daydreaming on sports," Plimpton trild his Orange Coast College Distinguished Speakers Series audience Thursday. Plimpton has quarterbacked th e Detroit Lions. faced boxer Archie Moore ln the .ring and played in "Rio Lobo" with Newport Beach's own movie i~litution, John Wayne. One OCC listener asked about that feat. "Oh, Mr. Wa yne, I forgot l was in Orange . County," quipped Plimpton1 dra\\·ing a roar . Sle nder and shaggy·haired. Plimpton is editor of the Paris Review literary magazine as well as a writer "'ho tries to be part or the act ion as well as being where it is. ''I'm from the east and Mr. Wayne considered me 'a dude' and 'a liberal,' " said Plimpton. "There is nothing worse In Mr. Wayne's lexicon than 'a dude' and 'a liberal.' " . He and two other film desperadoe.s were teamed to go gunning for The Duke. "There was me, a midget and an albino "" ....... HE'LL TRY ANYTHING Sports Fan Plimpton with purple eyes,'' Plimpton said. 1'I thought we were terrific." He said they rode into town slowly and {See PLIMPTON, Page %) Ai1ti-freeway Sentiments 'Hurting' County Funds By JACK BROBACK Df tht DlllJ 1'1111 l lllf Orange County's anti-freeway image is 11-t---,costlng he-areti-miilions-ol-dollars...Jn 1tate highwa y and freeway money, ac- cording to County Road Commissioner Ted ~1cConville. McConville, one of the key speakers at the Orange County Chamber of Com- merce's first annu al En v ironment Confere·nce Thursday said, "we hrive taken quite a beating because or the im- age of protest we have Cr('ated." The county goven1n1ent has con· aistently backl'd highway and freeway projects he said, but when numerous protest 'groups appear at Califor~ia Highway Commission hearings they give the impression the enlire populace of th• county is a protest group. -The net result Is a severe delay In bad· ly needed freeway and highway con- 1tn1ction. In the county, the road com- miasioner asserted. Although he did not pinpoint opposition grotJPS or areas, McC.nville d i d acknowledge that there Is hardl y a sscUon of the proposed Pacific Coast freeway that hu not been protested. H1a remarb and those of other1 at the conlerenct spotlighted the complexity o( env!rorunenlal pcobl<llll and !ht dll· ficulty of solution In a fast growing urban area. Another speaker, County Planning Uite.tlo Dickason noted that, "everybody is In. on the environmental kick today but some of the people, although well meaning only 1erve to worsen an already complex situation." "I ~metimes wonder if It ls pos~ible to do anything right when u-come.~ to the environment," O\ckuson pleaded. The conse.n~us reached by the 150 con· rerPe~ seetnf'd to be th.it environ1nenla l problems wtll only be solved throu gh compromlst . , Jan-.e.'I T. Workman, chairman of the cha1nber stssion, ~ummed It up with the conclu.<1i0n Umt a regional or inter-agency approach Is the m~t practical solution to the various problems, lte noted, wryly, that such an approach runs head on into ve.,ted lnte~s In local community. Dickason oUered one. bright note. ''Orange. County iJ willing to tackle th• problem," be 11W. ''<Xir dej>arfment b working on a study 1"hicb will orrtr the people a choice on where they want to go in !he coming years. "Growth has positive and negative aspects," the plannin, tHr~tor said. "The trirk Is to ldentUy and play up the positive 1spects ml to dee·mphaslze the negaUve ones." would produce a "period of sustained prosperity that will repay many tim.es - over any immediate sacrifices that any segment of the American work rorce i1 called upon to make." Nixon spoke with intensity. and soniewhat excitedly . But he managed a slight sm ile when he entered the Jion'1 den or his severest critics. He was welC<1med at the door by AFL- CIO President George Meany. who had {See NIXON, Page %1 Da y light Bundi.ts Get $25,000 Huntington Haul By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1-• Dl llJ ,1111 11111 ' ---·-A team of daring daylight gunmen held up a Huntlngl(ln Center jewelry lf:on tl!t! morning In . Huntl~gton Beach and escaped with, more than $25,000 worth of ' 'bll~RICH 'ii'N~~~H1f ~As~1NG .. Aiiibt °" l"10l<E'r1NG i.1R cA.t• s+'Ew'S"- Girl•· ·.s.y They'ff IMn Scorned by Marugemanti £xP,eu1'Wrath at Orange County Airport gems and cash. 'The brazen robbery took place at La'wson's Jewelry around 9:22 a.M.' as store manager Buck Roberts returned from morning coffee. A heart Patient, Roberts was believed to have ,suffered a seizure during the holdup. Another employe. floward Pollack, was slugged in the back of the head, possibly with a gun. Neither r e q u i r e d hos pitalization. Roberts told l nves~igating ofriccrs he wa1 met by the gunmen at the store's rear entrance when he was returning from a coffee break at a care in the Hun: tington Center. Armed with a short barreled revolver. possibly a .38-caliber, the two su~pects led Roberts to the \1ault and forced him lo ope,n it. An inventory or the gems and jewelry stolen by the two gunmen has not yet been completed. but J{oberts estimated th11t the cash value was "in excess of $25,000." Officer Ken Jensen .11aid Reberls, Poltack, employe Fred Lopez and a fourth employe were bound with tape following the successful hei~t. Jensen said further that Hoberts wa~ able to alert police momenls arter the robOcry by tripping an nh1rm button. Orficers were unsucce ssful in celling a complete description of the two caucasian gunme n other than that one was short and one or medium heicht. Since they are believed to have been wearing gloves, no finger prints were left behind. It is believed that the two robbers made their getaway In a van parked somewhere near the store's rear en- trance. The jewel robbery was the second to occur at the shopping center in three months. On Aug. 31, Kirk Jewelers was hit by Air Cal Stewardesses Striking Over Benefits l\fanagement and min 1·-skirte d stewardesses for Air California were flying disunited today on the issue of basic pay and benefits. The stews. in fact, were grounded, although the planes are still flying. They are on strike, carrying picket signs back :-n.:I forth outside the Orange County Airport Terminal in custon1ary orange unifor1ns Instead of carrying refreshments to passengers aloft. "F'ly Me. I'm Broke»" declared one in a sardonic parody of a larger international line's current advertisement. llandhills issued by steward es 1 members or the Tran.sport Workers Union of Anierica (AFL-CIO J Local 505 oullined the stews' stew. Any Air Ca tUomia statement would hove to come fron1 Dudley Milter, ex· ecut ive vice presiclent in charge of 1narketing, representatives said. ~1iller was in a staff meeting - presumably on the strike-and could not . immediately offer the company's side. The handbill ;:;.;ued by the stewar~ess' union said they ha ve been justified since Oct. 1 to strike at any time but kept trying unsuccessfully to reach 11 eonlr<l:t settlement. "Collective bargaining has coml! to a halt and the company i1 no longer ·in- terested in meeting with the negoliating committee lo resolve our differences," the paper charges. Grievances include a charge other ln- lrt!state lines pay stewardesses up to $175 per ntonth more than Air California girls re<:t'ive. "The average Air Ca 11 f orn i a stewardess receives less than $6.500 per year,'' lt continues, saying many support small children atid also receive substan· dard vacation, sick leave and Insurance benefits. Girls are also required to wCN'k JG.hour days wit hout time for a meal and don't receive time and a half pay for overtime, the p.aper further charges. Slate law requires time-and·a·hall, under the labor code for women. Stewardesses said they don't wish to in- convenience the traveling public, but feel a strike is necessary at th.is time. They conclu_de lhe handbill by re-- questing messages of backing be sent tG Air California President Robert Clifford, Mesa Cha1nber Silent $11,000 Worth Of Dogs Taken; Th1·ee Jailed A Santa Ana Heights couple and a third guspect were jailed Thursday in con- nection with theft of 13 vlcio115 guard dogs worth $11,000. Investigators u.id the dogs apparently were coaxed meekl.Y, from their posts, tails wagging. . ' One of the .s.uspects is a former employe of the firm victimized and ii familiar with several of the trained animals, according to investigators. The dogs were recovered at four toca.o tions in visits by deputies (rom the Loa Angeles County Sheriff's Norwalk station ahd a trainer employed by the ownera. Booked on the grand theft charget were Jimmy Reddish. 26, end his Wife Mary Anne, 39, of 20072 Acacia Ave .• and Torrey Payne, 31, Paramount. South Bay Sentry Dogs Comp@y owner Bern)e Schwartz said Reddish is a former employe, noting that whoever · was tn.- volved in the thefts had to be knowled geable about the training of the dogs. Dogs taken during the past month were recovered at a kennel in Garden Grove and kennels in Paramount and Lona Beach, investigator• said. Guard dogs are rented out by the South Bay firm at ' $250 per month, mostly to factories and wrecking yards. The animals,. vicious to strangers, are delivered and picked up each night and morning by route managert: .who know how to handle them. armed men arou nd the same time ~-n ~B t--H ' L the morning. The gunmen csc -wi -~uy-a ~ -ome n**" $10,000 in jewelry. Non e of the jewelry oll~--O'l7M:711---~------r- from the Kirk robbery. has ~en . · recovered to date and the suspects re- main at large. Actress Loses Kidney; Rests SANTA ~fONICA (UPI ) -Actress Barbara Stanwyck underwent surgery to- day for removal of her left kidney and was resting well, a spokesman al St. John's 11ospital said. The screen star was hospitalized Thutsday tor what was described as "a severe cold and exhaustion.'' She was operated oo when examination disclosed the ruptured kidney. "She will be in lhe. hospilal several weeks," a friend said. Miss Stanw)lck's illness fol'Ctd the pr~ duction ol "fit~erald an4 Pride'' lo shut down. A representative of thf. motion plc- lure·for-television said the actresa will bt replacfd by '®thtr pe.rfOrmer. The Chamber of Commerce had· lilUe comment today on a warn li"lg letler from Councilman William St. Clair urging cau- tion on the chnmber'1 new "buy at home" campaign. Joe Metcalf, pre~ident or the chamber, said 1'hursdi1y ; "We'll take his ideas Into consideration. If he has a true concern we're glad he wrote the letter." "l have no comment," Chamber Manager Nick ZieTler aaid. St. Clair warned that the small "mom and pap" store1 might suffer a tremen· dous finnnci;il Joss if Q>sla Mesa merchants aren1t c a r e l u• l hq_w many "gift'' certificates they g~ve away during the loca l buying campaign. The often controversjal councilman who 11 up for re-election next April, wrote " two-p1.ge letter to ea ch of the cham- ber 's 21 directors. Chamher director1 rtcelved and filed the Jetter •t their monthly meeting Thursday. The buy·at·home campaign wu In· ltlated by Zlener. It blngOI on 111ercbanta e f ferl n g certificate. a •· two-ror-the-prict--0f-one All 1uch certificates would be wrapped ln·one booklet and sold lo the public at $7 per booklet. Ziener estim'-tes the value of the booklet at close to $500. lie fee.ls the bookle t oppGrlunity will spur residents to buy more iten1~ at Costa Mesa stores. St. Clair warns that small merchants m11y not realize the obliiatio11 involved \\'ith the certificates. lie says if 3,000 certificates · are !!Old that means a meiehant would have to s(ock 6,000 of 11 specific Item. lle also s~s that i( the merchant loses· just 25 cents by giving away a free-item, hls ·loss on 3,000,free items will be $1,500, plus his cost of doing business. St. Clair, who is not a chamber member, wrote the letters on city sta· tionery. M&)'<lr Robert Wilson !iiAld St. Clair's letter does not ha ve the endorsement or the city council. "He writes letters to everybody, but I don't want to a;et ln- l'Olved in a controv:er11 With btm." We•tlier Those pesky winds should ll1clt off tonight, paving the way for a nice, sunny Saturday with temp- eratures ranging from 90 to 70 - and overnight lows from 35 '4><'5. INSIDE TODAY Been tl1h1kin11 about 4 trip to Death Valley1 Read Frt~ ericl6 schoemeltt'1 stor11 in to- day '• lfetkender on Pa11e 25. H·e calls the beaut"' o/ thU desert 4'indescribable." •••lilll • C1Hlfl'lll1 I CM<.11111, \I' 11 CllHlllW >44. C1111k1 » Ctlts"n JI Dl'tlrClll • 1• lfllft'lll "'" • l~ltt!llM1191 J1.J2 '""II(' 11 ·JJ Merlw.-14 A~• l •lllll•• IJ M .. 11 .. • ' Ml'ftlt ft•JI ) Mtt~I ,..,,. n NIJl'1!11 .._ W °'~" c...w ,, 11: .... """'" ' .. lrltl• ,...,. JI '"r1t , .. ,, S!ldt M1rtim tt-tt flff'lllllll .11 TIHltttn Jl·tt WHIMf 4 Wlllt. WI.. 16 w-·• '"'" l>l• "' ...... "' ....... --... ·. % DAILY PILOT Coast Bill Beanng . Tax oost -Hopes Dead For Revival , Zone Showdown ' Hits Floor ' On Douglas Set Of Senate From ·Wire Services SACRAMENTO -Hopes for reviving a major coastline protecUon bill have been dashed by Sen. James Wedworth, con- sidered by supporters as the last hope for aaving the measure this year. The Hawthorne Democrat said Thurs- day that 'lli'hile he iupported the bill originally, it had been "emasculated . , • gutted" by an1endments and be opposes t~ measure now. \\'edworth was absent Monday when a critical vote was taken on Assemblyman Alan Sieroly's bill to regUlale coastal development. Sieroly told newsmen the Hawthorne Democrat was the swing vote to enable the measure to clear the com· mittee. It died one vote short. Sieroly's bill was viewed as the last rt- Jftaining majoi: environment bill in the legislative bopper. It wtiuJd have banned all new development along the l,100 miles of California coastline unless approved by a regional state commission. Oopponents arpied it would undermine local c.ontrol and stifle all development. At a news conference called by . Wedworth, the lawmaker said he wou ld not \rote !o revive the measure, con- tending It had betn debated enough. He .iaid he wu absent attending to •·personal business" which bad to be taken care of while the coastline bW lac- ed it.s committee test. A!ted if his buJiness involved buying rac:e horSe.s, Wedwortb re~ed: "Yes, I have some thoroughbreds." When another reporter asked why he chose to attend to his personal affairs ahead of legislative bwines.s, Wedworth responded: "I have to pay rent and feed aome children." ---wedworth earns $19,200 a ye.ar as a legislator in addition to $30 a day living . expenses. He is a retired bicycle dealer, who recently bought a scenic ranch in the Sierra Nevada Foothills east o f Sacranttnto. When tbe Dews conlerence began, Wedworlh said, "I don't know what I would have done if I were here Monday." But when pressed on tbe point later, he u id be actually made up hi! mind to vote against the bill Sunday. "I would have voted 'no.' If 1 had been here," he safd. "I made my decision Sun- day. "I'm not ashamed of my record," he added, when newsmen inquired whether he feared a conservation organization'• pledge to try tO defeat Nrn next yea'r, when he's up for re-election. Fro111 Page l DOWNTOWN ... ing, covered arches and patios and • courty~rd~e part of the design . Wi'lsey and Bii'riiso say the area will have to be su more by specialty stores than ge eral stores. ' The p 'eel area covers 195 acres to be developed the foll owing manner : 30..2 acres for co mercial and office space, 6fi.8 acres f r idential use (mostly aparlmentsJ, . acres for parks and public spaces. 11.8 acres for a mini-in- dustrial park, .9 acres for public park- ing and 46.9 acres in streets. Newport Boulevard would become mostly a parking lot or rede ... ·eloped land, leaving Harbor Boulevard as the main thoroughfare. The city Is not obligated to follow all parts or any specUic part of the report. but if redevelopment is de.sired the Wilsey and Ham plan Is the only guideline the city has. OIANll COASf DAILY PILOT ...... CDMT PUC.iat• a:aNtll't MISSED BIG VOTE Sbt• Senator Wedworth .. From Pagel PLIMPTON. • • menacingly, as do all bad guys Iii good westerns, destined for violent doom In the dust of Main Street. Plimpton blew the scene ~nd $5,000 in JU'Oduction costs to re-do it . Screaming directors ran out to tell him hired killers do not hit town holding the horse reins in both fists, because they need at least one free gun hand. Plimpton did have kind words for John Wayne. "He is a great raconteur and a great influence," the best-selling a u t h o r declared. "Everybody on the set was walking aroi.;nd and spilling tobacco juice between their toes ." . Illustrating his pKl football and light ring escapades with film s 1 ides, Plimpton said his light-heavyweight bout with Archie Moore was perilous. A prankstei:~autbor friend, Peter ~faas, told the curious Moore that Plimpton was actually a national collegiate boxing champion. "He wants to become world champ and · not bother with all the prellmlnary fig'bts," Plimpton's 'friend' told the stun- ned Moore. "He'1 going to have the gym packed with pre.ss." "If ' he lays a hand on me, I 'll deck him-." Moore· snarled, clenching his fists . Plimpton concedes he didn't lay a hand on Moore. Not all of Plimpton's esca pades are so · rough-and-t umble. He played percussion in an orchestra conducted by the renowned Leonard Bernstein in Winnipeg, Canada . Bernstein reacted to Plimplon's lack of talent almost as violently as Archi e Moore did to his rumored boxing finesse Plimpton said. ' Music takes timing and a light touch. He was assigned to ring -on cue -a huge gong at the crescendo of a Tchaikovsky Symphony. "I hit that gong harder than any gong has ever been hit ." Plimpton said the concussion lifted the whole row of musicians in front of him off their seats and put a horrified ex· pression on the dismayed Berstein's !ace. ··eut if Mr. Tchaikovsky could have heard it, I'm sure he would be very pleased," Plimpton iiaid. Sa ilor Rescued LONDON (AP) -A 2&-year-old Brilish y~chlsman was rescued toda y afte r a nine-day ordeal aboard a rubber dinghy in the wintry Atlantic. Rad io Arcachon, a French maritime station, said he was picked up in the Bay of Biscay by the 1 Norwegian tanker Polarvik. A showdown meeting on the con· troversial zoning of the McDonnell Douglas Corp, property near Orange County Airport has been scheduled for Dec. 2 by the county Airport Land Use Commission. The group voted Thursday night to schedule the public hearing. The Board of Supervisors and county planning co1nmissioners have previously voted lo allow a zone cha1Jge from light industrial to commercial use for the pro- perty. Each vote was split 3 to 2 a.{ler lengthy and .sometimes heated sessions. If the land use group should vote again!t the rezone Dee. 2, It will require a four-fifths vot e by the Board or Supf:rvisors to overrule the commissiOn•s · decision. The rezone violates a comprehensive land use plan adopted la.st Sept. % by the Commission for the county airport area. Jn the plan, the SG-acre McDonnell Douglas parcel at the northeast corner of MacArthur Boulevard and Campus Dri ve opposite the -air port terminal building is restcicled to "research and light in- dustry." The property is the site of the former Chauffeur's Permit Still Must in Mesa California eliminated the chauffeur's license in 1961. Nevertheless, Costa Mesa Councilmen have refttsed to allow a lady taxi driver to operate in the city because -she doesn't have a chauffeur's license. Councilma n Jack Hammett cited a re- quirement in the-city ordinance -all taxi drivers must hold a chauffeur's license - to refuse a work permit for Ann S. llickle. 1-lis motion won 4 to 1 with only Coun- cilman William St. Clair opposed during Monday night's city council meeting. "But none of the company's drivers holds a chaufieur'1 license," protested Miss Hickle, as unaware as the council that such a license doesn't exist. A spdkesman fo r the State Department ot Motor Vehicles said the chauffeur's Jicense was drop~ Sept. 15, 1961. The spokesman also. said there is no special license for taxi driv~ The chauffeur's license was the ex- . pressed teason for denial, bill councilmen pointed out other objections. Miss Hickle, according to the police department, h0d a felony manslaughter conviction and held two driver's licenses under two different names. Neither point was listed on he r application, city of- ficials said. 'rhe felony conviction was actually a misdemeanor, and one of the two licenses, under her previous married name, had actuall y expired, Miss Hickle replied . She added that she forgot to put this information on her application. Traf fie Signals Co11tract Given Contracts for !he installation of traffic signals at three major intersections in Costa Mesa have been awarded by the ci- ty council. A $15.161 contract was' approved for C.T. and F., lnc., or Bell Gardens. to in- stall lights at \Vest 19th Street and Park Avenue. Steiny and Co., Los Angeles. won a S12,360 contract lo put in lights at Fairview Road and Paularino Avenue. The last contract, $18,9311, went to Grissom and Johnson Co., Santa Ana. for signals at Adams Avenue and Albatross Drive . _ ~;::;;_;-_ Winter Winds Chasing 1"1111 ICttril ..--.-a.1-.-:-_.. L.=~::.;::-..::.;.-H.rr_,__,S~m____, Qg Battering Boats ..... tltlt ---UIM19 C...N-OM.. JJO W•f .. , Sff..+ M..., ui.-: P.O .... 15'0, t!IU --....... 9lldl: 11111 • ....,, ...... 1...--..cti1m .__•~ Miw •••IM ._,,, m •-"'........,.. ... a...: -.... Al c:....., Old man "'inter is breathing down the Orange Coast's neck today ~·ith winds that reached gale (orce in some locations, forcing Sigalerts and small craft warn- ings but wiping skies clean of ~mog. No real damE1ge \\'as reported in Orange County, although one small brush fire raced out of control near Sand Can· yon and Be.rranca roads before being extinguished this morning. The man responsible had a permit for controlled burning-issued a week ago-- and didn't relllb.e It would be uneon· trollable today, sheriff's deputi es said. Forecasters for the U.S. \Veatht.r Bureau pre<tict continul'd but rl iniinlshlng blastr coastward from the mountlllns tonight and Saturday. Scattered showers and SOO\\' 111 4 500 feet in so me mountain art.tis are 'an- ticipated. Chilly overnight lows ln the upper 40s are expected overnlghl, with lcm. ptratures up to about 62 dur ing the day. Slgalcrts were Imposed on some fr,eways, as ~'cfl 11.~ S~nla Ana Canyon Road and the Ri\'f!r~iclr f'rrfl\\'llV through hilly, tJ!Slt rn Oran'ft Count1• • Bl1sts of \\'Ind raking ofi~hnrl' \\'a1C'rs forced the Orange County 11arbor Department to hoist the small cr11rt warning nag. "No~," said a spokesman when asked ii he knew when it might be lowered. "They just tell us when to put it up and when to take it do~·n." Local police agencies were uniform In rtporling no ·specific damage blamed on the gusty Santa Ana winds. Jt~fier! in some areas reported en- countering severe turbulence at 5,000 fet.t -mostly farther north -but the Orange County Airport. Control Tower had no repGrls of ground damage to alrcr;aJt. Winds ~·tre logged at 30 knots. tower personnel said. Planes on Incoming nights were mak· Ing northerly landing appr0aches into the wind , coming over Newport Beach and Cost.11 ~1esa to touch down at the facility. The most severe· Sigalert was in effect on northbound lfighway 10 In the San Bernardinq.fontana areas. where some blasts of wind hit 70 mlles per hour, with gusts up lo 50 routine. C;iUfnrnla l~lghway Patrol offi ctrf s11ld al least two trailers being towed by vehicles ~·e re overturned in the wind. ) Douglas Aircraft Company subsidiary, ~stropo.wer, which is no _longer in opera· llon. \ McDonnell Douglas officials appeared before the land use commission last month but failed to sway the previous decision of the commissioners on the pro- per use ol the valuable property. The giant aerospace corporation plans 'to make the 50 acres the keystone of their new land development program, ac- cording to testimooy by Vice President Donald Douglas, Jr. The firm plans a~ 500-room hotel, 500,000 square feet of of- fice space and a convention center for the strategically located site. ' Vigorously opposing the re:wne has been the Irvine Company whose officials argue that the change violates the in- tegrity of the seven year old adopted land use plan for the airport-industrial com· plex area. Just north of the McDonnell Douglas property are about 60 acres of Irvine land which is zoned and developed to com- tnerci"al use such as hotels office buildings and restaurants. .. The land use commission's public hear· Ing on the issue i~ set for 7:30 p.m. in the Orange County Planning Commission hearing room , 400 Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana . Facult y Meeting Fails to Advise On UCI Frats The UC Irvine faculty failed Thursday to "advise" Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich J.r. on the fraternity and sorority ques- tion. In the absence of a quorum, the Academic Senate never really legally con veped, yet a handful of professors present discussed thejssue for more than an hour. The uno ffi cial body vot ed on two substitute motions and passed by a vote or 14 to 9 a motion to affirm the official senate ban of 1968. . Faculty noted that the vote against na- tional !50Cial fraternities and .sororities begin charted at Irvine was passed "overwhelmingly" ln 1968. Dr. Robert Cohen, assoc late professor of drama, said he personally opposes the social organizations. He suggested that the Jack of interest by faculty members in the issue could mean they c:ontinue to frown upon them . Tb• faculty had been asked to take an advisory stand on the matter and a senate committee had recommended ap- proval with certain conditions. The con- ditions called for a lottery system of member selection. A university spokesman said the mat- ter rests in the hands of Chancellor Aldrich wlio is out of town attending a llegents meeting. I-le is expected, however, to be most inCluenced by Mon- day's studen t senate vote on the matter. Jack Hoy, vice chancellor for student affairs, told the Academic Senate members present Thursday, the issue is somewhat "'·ironic" that UCI should be considering starting . fraternities and sororities at a time when interest in them is waning, across the nation. ·w,a. '.Relax, Mr. Meany. Ths frtH1ze is over/' l<'ron1 Page 'l NIXON • • • attacked Nixo n sharply Thursday and ac- cused him of resorting lo "tota1itarian" methods. "I'm here today to ask your support for the building of a lasting peace and the build ing of a new propserity," Nixon told the big labor audience .. He said be is often asked ''.What is wrong with the old prosperity," and said: "I 'll tell you what js \\'tong -war and infiation." Nixon said that he was asked why he had decided to come speak before the cq_nvention wh ich has blasted his policies. He said his reply wa s that he knew whe n the chips were down he c;ould count on labor 's support for his policies. The President spoke about his winding down the war, the drop In casualties. and how 150,000 had marched on Wall Sfree\ in fa\·or of his Cambodian incursion even though editorial writers and the in- tellectuals were against him. He said he strongly favors repeal oflthe auto excise tax and the job credit tax, which will increase American workers' competitive position with worker r abroad. But then he laid it flatly on the line. He said he wants labor's participation lo make his new economic policy succeed "but whether we gel that or not," he warned, "it is my obligation to make this succeed and to the extent of my powers I shall do that." He said that he believes it is· time to understand that there are poinls of disagreement and agreement. "I want a program that is fai~. "But as President of all the people I think it is my duty to do what is best for America." · Nixon said he understood Iha t unemployment was. because he had grown up in it in the depression. Nixon's fighting stance came as no surprise to obser vers who have watched him make bold moves in the past several months. He said our goal Is "to win a peace that will end wars." Nixon said with some heat that he knows tb11-t "frightening statements have been made from this podium" about his forthcoming trips to Peking and Moscow. Terl)'.IS Suspended For Two Panthers NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -The last two Black Panthers charged in the slaying of f~llow Panther Alex Rackley received .suspended sentences in Superior Court toda y. Landon Williams, 27, and Rory Hithe. 20. both of Oakland, Calif., had pleaded guilty on Oct. 26 to charges of conspiracy to murder. State 's Atty . Arnold Markle had said in court both had indicated they would return to California. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A hall·bllllon · dollar tax increase that woulo establiidt state lncome tax withholding on Jan. t ., has reached the Senate floor with Gov. Ronald Reagan's blessings. Legislators say the package Js ln near final form for enactment. The bill would raise taxes high enough lo plug a $3Ul million revenue gap in the U.8 billion slate budge!, finance $200 million in construction and provide $23 million in business inventory tax relief. 1.fost of the rroney -$~70 million - would be raised from withholding. The package's remaining $83 million would come from Increased taxeS on banks:, corporatioils, the oil industry and wealthy individuals enjoying "preferen· tia1 income" loopholes. The bill, by Assemblyman Will iam T. Bagley (R-San Rafael ), is the only major tax package still active in t h e Legislature, which wrestled behind the scenes for months attempting t o negotlate a massive property tax relief plan. "We sat downstairs (in the Governor's office) all year talking and the time for talking's over," admonished veteran Senate Finance Committee Chairman Randolph Collier (D-Y reka ). Collier's committee approved the Bagley bill on a voice vote Thursday and sent it to the full Senate, which is ex· peeled to pass the measure -perhap! next week:.... and vave the way for fina l negotiations in Jt two-house cOnference committee. The Finance Comm ittee, on a narrow voice vote, rejected a proposed amend - ment by Sen. Albert S. Rodda (0.. Sacramento), to raise another $9.5 million and provide 5 percent salary in· creases ·for University of California and state college faculty. Under the bill, payroll withholding ol the state income tax would begin Jan. I. A citizen would pay taxes on his cur- rent 1972 income through withholding, as under the federal system. But in April he still wo uld be required to send the state a lum p sum tax pay- ment on his 1971 inco me. To Jessen th.is initial double burden, a person would be allowed to reduce his tax on 1971 income by 15 percent. Thus. a citizen who ordinarily would pa y $100 in st•te income taxes next year would be billed for $185 if withholding were enacted -$35 ift April on 1971 iii- come and and $100 spaced throughout the year on 1972 wages. In 1973, his tax would revert to $100. .The initial double tax would net the state more than $200 million. And the government would use this windfall undet the Bagley proposal to finance a crash capilal outlay program. School Drive Seeks 2,000 Cans of Food Mater Dei High School students are seeking 2,000 cans of food to be distributed lo needy families of Orange County for Thanksgiving. The drive, sponsored by the St. Vincent de Paul Society, runs through Wed· nesday. YOUR TURKEY DE SERVES THE FINEST ma~chesa ,[),(A R DEALERS FOR: HENREOO~REXEL-HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wostcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 NIWPOIT STOii OPIN •tlDAY "T'IL t INTERIORS Profts1ion1I Interior De1J9n1r1 Avall1bl9-AID P~ollo f oll ft .. M•t •f Or .... C.1•ty-14t·IJ6J • LAGUNA BEACH 345 North c .. ,, Hivh.w•y Phone: 494-6551 7 I 7 l Airlines Settle; Cut Some Fares . . . . . . " Race ·Disco·tinted. as Factor UPTON, N.Y. (AP ) -Sociocultural factou, and not racial differences, are the cause of the typically lower IQ test SCOtes by blacks compared to whites, a Univr.rsity of California so c i o Io g l s t reports. The new slatistlcal study directly con- tradicts idea& put forth by a few sclen· ti!itl!I that the lower scores by blicks on t~ average, lU'e a re!lult of a genetic dif. ferenCf: between the races. "When you have acooWlted f o r sociocultural difftrencu there is nG aignlricant residual vlrlation that could be directly attributable to ethnlc groups alone," she J1!ported. physical problems. They both would have to be equally moliva~. she said, to be compared on lbe segment. ot IQ tesb that involve speed. "U you control all this," Dr. Mercer said, "you· mi&ht infer one's genotype ls better than another11.'1 , .. DIJLY P!LDY • HONOLULU (AP) -Chief ei:ecutives of 24 transatlantic airlines, which have been flirting with an all--0ut fare war, have reached a com- prom ise agreement that will reduce many rates between North America and Europe. Basic agreement on the new fare structuie was announced Thursday night by H. Do n R'eynold:s, assistant director general of the International Alr Transport Association at the organization 's a n nu a I general meeting. transatlantic routes w er e described as a compromise between West Germ 4n y 's J~ufthansa Airlines -which first moved to slash fares - and reluctant American car· riers. Ttte lowest individual round- trip fare between London and New York was set at '1200 compared to the present $272. It is for passengers who lravel in winter and stay 22 to 45 days. T ld Dr. Jane Mercer, associate professor of Police OJ '50Ciology at the Unlverslly of Clllfornia at Riverside , said the statistical ap- Dr. Mer.cer described ' her work, ap.. parently the first of It.a kind, to a seminar Thursday,· at Brookhaven N a t i o fl a I Laboratory. The seminar was held by the CouncU for the Advancement of Science Writing. IQ tests, she &aid, were designed lo predict how a ,person would perform in school, but people have tried to "tease" other informaUon from them. She said that even the Use of the word intelligence tends to slant the discussion. One of the Ieading\exponents (If the Idea that geneUc dlff~ces underlie the differences in IQ test ~res ts Dr. Arthur Jensen. an educational· peychologist at the Berkeley bl'ancb Of the University of California. Dr. Meroer accused Or. Jensen of using ''absolutely fallactoo! logic" in wing information derived from studies of white people to judge the ctuse of the lower test scores by blacks. To Cease New rate s on key 'Brutality' plication of seven selected soclocultural factors to differences in test scores eliminates that difference. McCloskey .Joke Draws Silence Reynolds said the fare package will be submitted to a De<-. 2 joint conference of Atlantic Carriers in Geneva, Switzerland, for raliflcation. Rates also must be ap.. proved by governments of the countries involved. and will . take~efffcl eifher in February or April, Reynolds said. Jn her study, Dr. 1t1ercer had three groups, each composed or lllO persons - a blai::k group, a Mexican-American group and a white croup. The black& and the 1'1exican-Americans each averaged PllTSBURGH (UPI} _ 91 on IQ testsi the whites averSBed 106. In fact, the sociologist said, to be able really to compare two people taking the same ttst, an ei:aminer would have to be sure_ they both had the ume ei:posure to the material, we.re equally relued, were equally free of emotional disturbance and Another proponent of the gentt.ic theory, Dr. Mercer J¥>ted, is Dr. William Shockley, a Nobel Prize winner in physics, with two other .&Clentisli, for the development of the transistor. FRENCH LICK, lod. (UPll -Republican governors finishing a two-day winter con- ference here seemed split to- . day over the question of what President Nixon should do about a running-mat~ in 1972, but nothing resembling a dump-Agnew movement was developing. Th~ Vice President showed up 6rlefly Thursday for a closed-door luncheon with the governors. followed by a public speech in .... tiich he showed flashes of the Agnew rhetoric. In a joke greeted by ner\·ous laughter and then silence, he said Rep . Paul N. McC!oskey CR-Calif.), was going so broke trying to unseat Nixon that he .. was forced to auction "his fivorite painting: Bened ict Arnold crossing the Delaware." He demanded that Wilbur Mill!! (0-Ark.), chainnan of the House Wz.vs and Mea ns Committee, "get off the stick" and end his'' de p !or ab I e blockade of President Nixon's revenue sharing bill." Hope to Visit Troops Again SAIGON (UPI) -Bob Hope will make hls seventh Oiristmas tour ol Vietnam next month, military spokes- men sa id today. The comedian wUI be under the usual tight ·s e c u r I t y regulations, and the spokesmen refWied to say how many shows Hope will give in Vietnam, or where they will be. Lufthansa for'ced the fares issued by refusing to agree to a rate package proposed at an August meeting tn Montreal. -The airline announced that it was filing a $210 round.trip ex· cursion fare between New York and Frankfurt. Other carriers followed suit and be2an trimming rates. The fare announced Thurs- day on that roqte was $220. compared to the 1230 fare pre>- posed at 1t1ontreal. Under the new fare struc- ture. first class fares will not be redu<'ed but vooth fares on some airlines will increase. Race Suit Brought By White DETROIT !UPI) - A former city employe o f suburban Highland Park has filed a $300,000 suit aginst the city. its mayor and one of its department heads, contending he was harassed, called racial names and finally f i r e d because he is white. The suit, flied in U.S. District Court here· Thursday, asks Sl00,000 each from the ci- ty, Mayor Robert Blaqkwrll, who is black, and ~trs. Milli- . cent Roberts, the black direc- tor of the city's Community Services Center. The fcirmer employe, Charles \V. Smith. 25, was hired on Feb. 2, 1970. as a superviso r for the center. He was fired last March 12 and ls a policeman in suburban Southfield. A federal court judge has issued an Injunction ordering six Pillsburgh policemen to end alleged brutal treatment of black residents. The preliminary injunction by U.S. Distri ct Judge Rabe F . Marsh was hailed -and damned -as a precedent. "This is a precedenl·settlng decision -we have found no other case similar to this one in the United St.ates,'' Law- rence Green, an attomey ror Neighborhood Legal Servief:s, Ji social service group, said Thursday. "This is tbe greatest miscarriage of justice since Pontius Pilate washed his hands in the case of Christ," said Det. Sgt. Francis Quinlan. presiden t of the Fort Pitt Lodg~. Fraternal Order of Police. Their attorneys argued the federal court had no jurisdic- tion in the matter, and that the alleged brutal actions never tOok place. Marsh 'Ordered the six policemen to stop "harassing. threatening, Intimidating and beating'' black re sid ent s. FQurteen black persons ~m­ pla ined of the alleged brutali· ly.c He said witnesses at a hear· Ing. held Sept. 16 and 17. described "many instances of uncalled for and reprehensible police brutality, accompanied by expressions of racism by the def,ndants." Twenty witnisses. Including three black police officers, said durin~ the hearings that the six ' defendants repeatedlv used racial slurs to black residents. Nixon to Florida KEY BISCAYNE, F Ia . (UPil -President Nixon new to his Florida retreat Thurs· day. He was to return to Washington this afternoon. Remember someone .special With fl owers this Thanksg iving . The Thanksgiver. is a spec~ ial FTD arrangement with bright fall colors and an eleg ant vase. -And best of all, you c•n send the Thenksgiv er olmost eny- wf.iere in the world. Pri"Ced et -·------....... _ $10, $12.50, $15.00 P.S. 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COMPLET£ CAR CARE Since 1959 Houri: 7:30 lo 6:00-D•lly PHONE : 540-5710 646· 59:»3;1 • \ I - •• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE • Multiple Use Stadium? Footblll boosten from Estancia High School have propo .. d building a 7,000·seat city stadiuro for Costa Meaa'1 )wo high schools. They want to build It on about l5 acres 'of land involved in the 300 acres between FaJ.ro view State H06pital and the Santa Ana River, an ' area whiclt may become one huge park. • At first glance the proposai seems out of step with the r;eneral desire for a natural, open space park. It would involve a big structure and a lot of paving for parking. Supporten of the stadium say it might be ·built for about $7501000 and could serve mulUple uses. U it could be built to accommodate ouidoot band · concerts, the· atrical presentations, graduations, and other amphithe- ater activities it might come together with other suf' gestiom made for the park. There will have to be parking for people who use the park, so stadium lots could easily double-up for that purpose. Financing of the stadi_um is of course a major problem, but perhaps multiple methods can be found for raising money. The idea of a city atadium for the bigh schools and for broad public use is in1!iguing_ and d~se~ves con- sideration as plans for poss1bfe uses of Fa1rv1e~ Park are developed. It has merit if it can serve a var1~ty of purposes. . An Excellent Campaig11 City workers in Costa Mesa h-ave put their money where their hearts are. They have pledged $11,600 to the Harbor Area United Fund -A figure nearly double what city workers pted~ed in 1971.. To put the pledge m focus, the United Fund's goal. f'or door·to-door collections in all of Costa Mesa is only f3,400. Much of the credit for healthy employe donations goes to James Eldridge, director of public services for the city, who was campaign chairman this year tor the city hall charity drive. . Eldridge .used ,a unique auction system whi ch gave I credit to various departments for the money their work· ers pledged. The credits were used to buy gift items ·1 which Eldridge collected , from local merchants. Local merchants also deserve a round of thanks for their willingness ti> contribute gifts to he I p Eldridge's program. In all it was a fine campaign effort. ' City employes opened their wallets and · showed other citizens how to support charity causes. Eldridge, his workers and those who donated did a fine job. Message Loud and Clear Costa Mesa is getting tougher on weeds and trash controls and property owners had better be aware of it. The city has a new weed. abatement Jaw making it pos· sible for city officials to order the clean up of any prop- erty, not just vacant lots. The "'normal procedure is for the city to spot a lot with overgrowh weeds or Jitter. The property is then posted and the owner ordered to clean it. If he doesn't, the city has the legal right to do the job and charge the owner for the work. Those charges can present quite a shock. One Rro~ erty owner told the city council Monday that his prop· erty was cleaned by the city the year before for $15. This year he received a bill for more than $300. Despite the drastic change in price, the man is liable for the work because he didn't have it done himself. City councilmen ad~mit it's tough to give an owner such a bill , but they assert the measure must be somewhat punitive. The object is to force property owners to clean off unsightly messes and potential fire hazards. The message is now coming across loud and clear .. ) .. ... , Red Chinese Delegates at U .N. At OCC: Who Do They Represent? UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. -One over· rid.in.I and crucially momentous question ooms over the Red Chinese Delegation tow holding forth in the Unlted Nations. 1 Just who do these experienced and wily Pelting emisaarie1 represent? Who is s etting ~ policies and llvint the orders? Wbicli of the deadly •arrini clique.a, rieroely feuding ciV· Wan and military lactlons and rivd power -seekinC mGo • ~?are callini the tune -and for how ~ answer to this profound ellllin• la i supreme importance becauae it may •ell detennine the fate or the world - whether there is peace or war, and tf bere is peace, what kind ? A peace of tee and democraUcally ruled people, or :he iron-fisted totalitarianism t h at 1revaila in P,ussia, China and their iatellite subj~? OSTENSmLY, the Chin ... delegallon 'epresenll the Peking government.' But •ho and what ia that gOvernment? ls it civilian, military or a combination tf both ? ls seernlna:ly indestructible hemier Chou En-lai the U>p man rul- og in lhe shadow of the patently fading ind innocuous Chairman Mao Tse-tung? )r is Chou the "front man" of a "com· oittee" consisUng or powerful regional nilitary chiefs and younger technicians tnd party leaders? Considerable evidence points to this lat· er likelihood. But no out.sider really knows. "China watchers," analysts and other authorities have theories, deductions, speculations and premisd on what is franspiring behind the bamboo curtain but, in reality, no more lhan.that. Some of these "uperta" frank ly admit that ONE OF THE BEST of them goes even further. He is convinced tl).at even the furiously contendinj; nd ibaneuvering Chlnese don't know.- In other words, the vast subcontinent of 800 million people is sUl1 in lhe throes cf the ferocious "cultural revolu.tion" that Mao Tse-tung unleashed some five years ago. The outward ; violence of the maniacal "Red Guards" and other berSefk elements bas subsided -or been forcibly suppressed by the military in a number of areas. But the convulsions of that immense upheaval an still vibrating throughout the Communist party and military power structure -with the outcome still con· jectural. 11rl5e seemingly in power today may be gone tomorrow, A GRAPWC illmtralion is Communist party Vice Olairman Un Piao, one of China's ablest military commanders, Jong.time close henchman or Mao Tse· tung, and until a rew months ago his publicly proclaimed heir-apparent. NoW Lin apparently has fallen into dis!av'(lr with whoever is the ruling clique a!lil: hjis become, in effect. a non·pcrson ~ a&:is the practice of faUen ch!efs in Communist countries. Nol only has Lin disappeared from sight and sound. but in variotis ways the controlled media are besmirching and denouncing him. Thal fate has befallen other once high- placed functionaries . With Lin Piao have vanished four of his top military leaders, and some zenior members or tbe Communist politburo. Whether these mysteriously affected generals and party rulers were on that nllli~ry plane y.ihich inexplicably crashed ~p inside Mongolia Sept. 12 is slill known only to Peking -and very likely 1Moscow, which isn't talking. t• CLEARLY rr WAS a convulsing event. The next day the Chinese air force was grounded -and still is. That ex- tr~ordinary move was soon followed by the even more dramatic cancellation of the annual National Day Parade and of- ficial banquet -a.11 without a word of ex· planalion. While little more than the general outline of the fateful power struggle is known, this much is certain: Chou En-lai appears firmly at the helm in foreign affairs, with the approval of the military. He may also exercise a lot of authority in other matters. Of all the top Chinese leaders he is today the most prominent in the public eye -including Mao Tse-tung who is only occasionally referred to in the media and then merely ceremoniously. Gas: Something Is Wrong America1s aupplle1 of raw energy - oal, oil and natural gas -are not in· lnlte. But neither are we going to run out t them right aner Junch. "Talk about an nergy crisis emerging is uaggerated," ccording to Hendrick Houtb.akker, a ormer member of the President's Coun- il of F.conomic Advisers. 11 we're short f fossil ruets, the ~xperts say, it ls the ielivery system that's at raulL ' i ~ Editorial Re!M'.arch for them to develop the fields they own or to go looking for new ones. THE HOPE NOW is that technology will lead the country out of it.. natural gas shortage. Several companies are working on techniques to gasify coal and crude oil. The U.S. Bureau of Mines believes that 317 .trillion cubic feet of natural gas might be freed with lhe nuclear fracturing of gas formations. Work is progressing In several quarters to develop an Apollo-type fuel cell for commercial use. Good Football But No Band ,\failbox , To the Editor: I have been a,1 interested supporter of Orange Coast College athletics for a number of years. I have · been especially pleased this year because.the Pirates are having one of. their Detter football seasons.' • ~ ·• Until I read in the Friday edition of your paper. I had often wondered why the athletes, pep squad, students, and fans did not have the support of a school band. IT A·PPEARS that at least part of the proble m stems from the absence of a firm administrative position. I am sure that many of-your readers would like to know why this outstanding institution is the only one in the area without a band to support athletics. JACK BARNES L1111r1 from l'i•ftrl ,,.. w.1c111111. N1m111t1 wr/ttr1 should """" 11\tlr rnllSl9ff IR :IOI wett11 •• 1111. T'1!1. rlt~I N ttnd..,11 11t1tn .. Ill ,..K, Ir 1llmfn1i. llblt 11 l'illn'ld. AM lllton 1t1111t 111- cl"'I 1l1n1111r1 .... 1111IU"9 IMruL kl .._,,,.., m1y "' wlltlhllO IR '""'" H 1wftki.1 1"111111 ii IPPlrtnl. l"Mlry •Ill "" .. 'WIMllllMI. Ho,v to Address Our Lawmakers U.S. Sl!NAT01'S JllAn Cr~ni!Dn !0 ), lll N. Sprl .. 51.. lo1 "'"~'''' '0011 I P'>ll JDl'fn \/. Tu"nev (01, ltm. 1•22J, 11.000 W'1l1fl!r1 81\td,, Loi Jl~ltl tcm•. 0<.-lnq CDn11•1ulon11 1ts1lon1: Ntw ~n1re Offk.e lilldg .• W11lt!noron, O c. l'C.501 , U, S. lll l!',.lll'l!'Sl!NTATl'IE$ (Or1n11 C•u"I'/' Only) Richard T. H1nn1 {)Uh O!s!rlct-D), 1695 W, Crt1cen• •~• . Sul1t ill, Anehelm t211111; Joi\" G. Scnml!1 !lllh Ol1!rlt1-lt l, •J.10 CAmPUt 0•!¥t, Sui!t lU. Nt wPOrt lilttch 92N4; Cri ll Hosmer ll2nd Oh l!'ic!-IU, Security 81"k lilldt., Sui"' no no Pin• Avt.. Long 8t•cfl "*2. Dudno co ... O•tHIOMI ltnicn: Hann•. Ull lOflllWOrlh HouH Ot!lce 81Ctg ; $cflmlt1 UOI Lor>g-rlh HouH Oftlct Bldt.; lolo1mer. 1'17 R.1vburn Houst Olllce Bid~., WnMr>glon, 0 c. 70.SU. ST,i,TE SllN•TOlllS fL'ltOM 01'JINCil! COUNTY ~nnl1 C1•'lllfl•t• ~J.lth Dl1ll"ltt-IU, 801 CC. 1,....1.,. llloM. CCH"mll1"'; Jl!l'l'lculturt , lo(1I 0.0¥U ... rn.n1, Stied Comm111tt Oii Envl~ll Control, if!IKI Comm!U" on $tllftf,., tnrr111lon In Attlc11rtur1! $0!1, Join! C-11"-' Ol'I Ed11<.1!1M Ev1twllon •<Id Joint CIM'nmlttH on l "lsl11!v1 Retlrotmml. J1mt1 E Wlletmore, (J.llh Ohl•kl-RJ, lJlfl l l'tl0'<1'11.or$1, G1tMn Grct... ,,,...1. Coorimlnett: 8utln~1 trd l'rofe11lorll. Htlllfl Ind W11f1tt I nd T1'i111PO<'l•llOJ1 .. 0...')fll le<;il1!1tlvt H.ltltln: Stitt Capft9~ S~·~~ C•lll, tYOr. • ~.,..--:: ~\t+~ ..... TEXAS Tl ~l>LYWI NKS Hyperbole vs. Advertising Truth Truth in advertising is not as rare as cynics would ha ve us believe, but truth commingled with humor and whimsy is more precious than a bartender's guide at a temperance meeting. One of the few ex .. p on ent s of this technique died in London not long ago -Roy Brooks. a real estate agent for nearly 40 years, "whose addiction to truth" as the brief AP obituary s a i d , "made bim a British institution.'' people have a passion for litotes -which is the ingrained habit or saying "not half bad" about something Americans would call "terrific" or "colossal." The British have an elfishly perverse delighl in calling a World War .. the late unpleasantness," or the Atlantic Ocean a "pond,"· or the most d a z z ting achievements "a bit or all right." If An· nie Oakley had been one of their folk· heroes she would be desig nated as "a . EVERYONE KNOWS what the typical rather decent shot." house or apartment ad is like -making a squiilid little cubicle sound like a AMERICANS ARE Used ~ hyperbole, replica of the Taj Mahal , and turning the and meiosis merely confuses them. A dingiest of domiciles into a ducal manor. hotel accommodation has to be ad· Brooks flourished for foor decades by vertised as "delux e" in order to satisfy doing exactly the opposite. His typical us that it is even barely adequate; in real estate ad oUered "glum attic flat for England (and, indeed, in most of Europe) rictl midgets," and tenc.:nts fell over a deluxe hotel is a specific and accurate themselves to rent it. Another candid ranJOng, clearly above "first-class.'' prospectus ran ''Rundown Victorian relic , Verbal distinctions still have meani.rig in back bedroom suitable only for dwarf" -some parts or the world. and drew more than two dozen ardent It's a pity we don't have a public that prospects. responds as gladsomely to the sort of \vhimsical truth that brought Brooks HIS AGENCY BECM1E one of the fame and fortune. Because we don '!, la.rges t in London, based almost solely on e\·ery advertiser has to shout louder than ht.s superb command of the British talent the last one, each adjective has to for "meiosis" -a literary term which ,... outstrip the previous, and finally all the dictionary defines as "expressive words Jose their value in the race for the understatement." ultimate superlative. "Whiter t h an This technique could succeed, I am wr· white" is a shade possible only in ry to say, only In England, where the America. Nixon and Team sters WASHINGTON -Insid ers charge the Teamsters have become so cozy with the White House that they were able to block 11 presidential message.on transportation. The message was scheduled to be sub- J'T1itled to Congress on Nov . 4. But the Teamsters raised some last·mlnute ob- .i~"lions, say the insiders, with White House factotum Pete Flanigan. The transportation message was finally delivered lo Con- 2ress on November Flanigan. Thereafter. Fitzsimmons and Flanigan remained in contact usuall1 through intermediaries. 'lbere is ample evidence ·1 hat omething is wrong. Citing shortages of iatural gas, utilities in Pennsylvania, )hio, New Jersey, Michigan, Illinois and Vashingt.on. D.C., now reflise to sign new STATE ,i,ssEMILYMl!N 8 under the signa. OF ALL THE labor lec.ders. Fitzsim- mons has shown the most willingness to cooperate with President Nixon in his ef- forts to stabilize the ecooomy. This has gi ven the Teamsters a little extra clout inside tile Wh ite House. 1-c~-_oot.cacta.._ Washington Gas_Co._pr_esident •aul E. Reichardt announced on Nov. t bat the.re would be no new sales to in- klst.r1aJ usen "for an indefinite period of lme.. •• U.S. energy needs and consumptlon has been growtna: by a.a percent a year - compared with grpwth rates or 4.a per· cent for oil and l.i. percent for coal. The Fedual Power -eornrn1.ss1on estimates there are 275 trilUon cubic reel of ''PIOven r~" in the gz:ound. That's enough for the next 13.2 years, even if no new wells are found. WHAT WORIUES THE FPC Is tho t the raUo of proven reserve! to current production baa been railing 11teadlly for more than three decades. Just 10 Years ag°'4'lbt reserves were enough to keep the cotmtry from ruMing out of gas for 20.2 years. "By 1974 the supply will almost certainly drop to ten years," aca cording to Forbes magazine. That's lhe level that John N. Nasslkas, chairman of the FPC. haa lndJcated would be a bare minimum. For the present, the gas industry main· LI.ins that there need be no shortage if prices are inerta~:-Beyonct that, there i:: a growing consensus that the United States needs a coniprehensive national energy policy. President Nixon moved in 'this direction last June in his Energy Statement to Congress. Hearings on the fonnulation of such a policy are being held by the Senate Interior Committee. 1<1110.t.1 o••Noa COUMTY ture, not of President Robert E. flldhem (11'!! Oltlr~ll), l~ WtliL_ N. b dlff Dr.. NtwPOr1 flt.ch. ~timmlttMs: Public IXOO , Ut"Of TfaTIS· E1111>lovmtnl 1nd Rtllr-t, W11t1 •nd dl11r11'fl" portation Undersec-'°"'rnerc1 11111 Public Ull1lllt1. Jotltl 'I. &1rklt 1 I J B UJ111 011.,.1c1-11.>. uoo North H.,.tior 11rvd. re ary ames eggs. Fuli.rton '21Jl. Commll1t11: Fl111nc1 1nd ln•U..-· l llU, L1bor Rel•llon1 1NI A1Y1rwt l l\CI Ti•1tloll. Stied Commlnee on E nvlr~111 O~•llt!ts, 1n11 ch1lrm1n, Jotnl Comrnll!H °" Atomic OevelOP- .....il •P'>ll SNtt. ROO.rt H, 81111<t t10!h Dl"rlc!-R), uni llta<;h ftt...o.. Huntl111to" ll••ch t26U Com· m!1!H1 : Educ:t!fon, Elecllonl 11111 COnllllU!kH\11 Amtndmtf\11 •1111 vice cht!m11"., Tr•AIPGFf1llon. • Kennttfl Corv (6f1h Dlslr1ct-0), .WI N. Euclid, ,. o. llo• ._,, An111e1,., moo. Commll!ee1: Educ11i..., l•t:>or 1l;~l1!10n1 '"" Rf'lll!l.I• Ind Ttllllon. 0Url"9 ltll$1111Vt ltHlonl: llllt C1gJlol, kct1fTl1ntc1, Cllll. fSI01. FLANIGAN acknowledged to us that a last-m inute decision was made not to put the President'& imprimatur on the message. But he denied that the Teamsters had Influenced the decision. ",There wasn't in any sense a last-minute vi.~itation by the Teamsters," he said . But Flanigan Insisted to us that the -Teamsters-had no more influence upon th e lrt11sportation proposals than did the shippers. He acknowledged that the pr~ posals have been watered down to meet a;ome objections. Gu Is a blc element in the overall oero p1cture. It provides a third of the OUNGI COAIT DAILY PILOT Rob.rt N. W red, Publi.!htr TIIolllOI Jr•cvil, EdUor Albert W. Batt'1 EdMriol l'nQ< Uilor Tllo --ol tho Dall1 Pilot fflrkl to 11\fonn and 111.Jmu· late rwkt1 by prnentJnc thla ~Pit"'• opfnlon1 •nd com· annttuy on topics ot tnkrtl!L and alplt'lt&not, by provkUn~ "'forum fhr the-exrnutoa of our tnder1' &Di•k>n1, and by pretcntJng the dlvttM vlcwpolnU o( lntormM ob- ~ and tpokeamen on topics of the day. Friday, Noveml>Q 19, 1971 • Natural ga s was used as lighting fuel u early u the 1820s. But alnce Its use a1 a heating fuel depended upon pipeline leebnoloo. it was not used for that purpose until • century liter. The event that sipalled the openina: of the gas era came In 1931 whtn a 2t-inch pipe.line waa laid from the Tew gai fields to Chicago. Sin<.'e then , pipeline mllC!age in lhls coun- try hat tncrustd to more than 800,000. According to the big otl companies - which coincidentally own much of the natural g.es -there is a good reason why -f" not enough ca· ls· flowing through those pipes. GH prtcu are kept ,. low by the FPO, Ibey cl!trl•· that it IJ not lea&tbl1 Whatever the National Energy Policy looks like when it is finally written, Al]lericans are probably going to have to pay more for all forms of energy. As the business magaiint! Dun's observed recently: ''The days of extremely cheap fuel are about over for both industry and the consumer in the U.S." ·---Bt1 Geor ge -- Dear Geora:e: Ho# did the term deejay, which came from lhe words disc jockey, cet it.I name? W.R. Dear W.R.: The tenn ,;dttjay" il • combln&· lion of the "-'Ords "disc Jockey 11nd wu -WILi, YOU LEAVE ME ALONE, W.R.? YOU KNOW I FEEL BAD IN THE MORNINGS! 0111 1\NGt COUNTY IOAltD 01' SUl'l!l\'ISOJU Finl DI"" R.,..,.rt W, fl•tlln ~ o i.1., 01vld f11ktr Tll~ 0111 , Wltllllm ,.hllH•I FllUrl!I 0111 .. R•tllh II, Cl•rll: l'!ltt'I 0111 , Ron1lcl W, Ct~tl ""°""" O!•• C.OU..l'f Admlnbl~lllotl l let,. Roan'I .OS, Sil N, S~umon, 1 ... 11 Atll fVOO. Quotes Ann Lander• -"Most nagging wives are secretly dissatisfied with themselves. Picking away a\ a spouse Is easter than doing somet hing about one'• own In· adequacies. Oo you have outlet& that pro- vide you. with self esteem? A wife who feels good about-.hersclt doesn't nag htr husband About detalls. Her energy Is being used con.structivet, -not destruc· Uvely." For more than a year the Nixon Administration has been shaping legisla- tion to increase competition in the transportation industry. This shouJd lower frei~ht rates wh ich would reduce lhe cost of all goods ·shipped in Interstate commerce. The 1avtngs presumably could be passed 011 to the consumers. ntE R.AJLROADS , truckers and barge operators, however, have been sllpplng around to argue with Flanigan against more competitkm. As the Amerk.'en Trucking Association's President W.A. Bresnahan put ll lo us thl Nixon pro- posals would encourage small . unstable truckerlJ "lo move in and out or the in· dusb:y like a..lidd.lq'a elbow .'' Bresnsh11n 11lso brQught Teamsters boss Frank Fil.ximmons Into the White House several monlhs ago to meet "We want a good bill," he explained ''that won 't get such opposition that Ji will just sink withoot a trace." ) Dear Gloomy Gus Don't salute the nag or sing l}le anthem -have no tradition ; don't vote -bave 1 minority rule: don't support the pol!ct _ have no community: don·t sup- port the military -ha ve no coon. tty; don't give R hoot -have , nice day! -Diogenes ·11 Tiii' ft•llll"I .. uects "1Hln' •ltwl, ,., '°"l lPrllf I'll-l'f ,.... ~r. llM t9111' Ml ..-n .. 01"lflf 0 111, Otlly ,1111. 7 7 Saddlehaek &DITION VOL. M, NO. 277, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, eALIFOltNIA -: • •• • 0 ICia e Center Ca~r D·aring Pair Roh Store of $25,000 -- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER '19, 197 ~ r s ' . • Today's Ft.al N.Y. Stoelul •• JEN CENTS rea Capistrano City Aide imperµed?. By JOHN VALTERZA OI t111 01llr 'II•! Slllt L > •. • By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Officer Ken Jensen said Roberts, .. Charles "Chuck" Allen, [ormer San Juan Capistrano planning commissioner. said today that he resigned from the municipal planning post early last month because of threats of harm to h.imaelf and his family. OI t111 D1l1¥ l"li.t lltft A team of daring daylieht gunmen held up a Huntington Center jewelry &lore this morning in Huntington Beach and escaped with more than $25,000 worth of gems and cash. The brazen .robbery took place al i.awson's Jewelry around 9:22 a.m. as store manager Buck Roberts returned from morning coffee. A heart patient, Roberts was believed to have suffered a seizure during the holdup. Another employe . Howard Pollack, wa! 1lugged In the back of the head, possibly with a gun. Neither r e q u I r e d bospitalizaUon. Roberts told investigating officers he was niet by the gunmen at the store's rear entrance when he was returning from a coffee break at a cafe in the Hun- tington Center. Armed with a short barreled revolver, possibly a .38-ealiber, the two suspects led Roberts to the vault · and forced him to open it. An inventory or the gems and jewelry stolen by the two gunmen ha!! not yet been completed, but Roberts estlmat.ed that the cash val ue was "in excess of f2S,DOO." .. Winter Concert, Clubhouse Rites Share 'Birthday' S::i;n Clemente will celebrate its or£icial birthday and dedicate its new community clubhouse rin the same day in late February-and as an added feature the celebration will include Sadd\eback College's annual winter concert. City councilmen approved of the coin-- cidental clumping of events after hearing from City Mana~er Ken Carr. The city official told councilmen that Saddleback College had asked to use the clubhouse's new, 500-seat auditorium on Feb. 28. "That seemed to be a fitting occasion to officially open the new clubhouse. then we remembered that the city's 44th birth· day falls on the day before the scheduled concert ," he said. Councilmen then agreed to merge all the events into one program. They added that they also would waive the standard rental fee for the auditorium because the Saddlebock event featuring singtrs and instrumentalist~ will not involve admission and ls sponsored as a public service. The clubhouse now is in the final fram- ln~ phase and is expected to be ~ompleted well in advance of the celebration 1n late February. Besides the auditorium. it will contain parks and recreation department head· quarters, a kitchen, small meeting roo~s and a totally refurbished ''Founder·s Room" which is the last vesta ge of the first clubhouse· which was ruined by a fire early last year. l\'eatber Those. pesky winds should slack off tonight, paving the way (or a nice, sunny Saturday with temp- eratures ranging rrom 60 to 70 - and ovemight lows from 35 to 45. INSIDE TOUi\l' Been tlli11ldng about a !rip to Death Valley~ Read Fred· erick SchoemeJ,iL's !tory in to- day's Wetkeudcr on Page 25. He co//.! [he beau.tu of thi! de.,ert ''indeacri{)()b/.e. Mlllv•I ,111M11 !I N1ll9flal N"" t·I Or_. '""" 11 •ttlHl'"tl ... •fl• ,.,.... n 1"'"1i 1 .. n sito(lt Mlftlllh n.n T .... whlf• )I T'°"ltrl 'l·Jt w .. """ • Wl'llle Wit!!-16 W-tft._ NtWt lt-U W.,111 Nen t.I ... ...., ... Pollack, employe Fred U!pez and a fourth employe were bound with tape following the successful heist. Jensen said further that Roberts was able to alert police moments after the robbery by tripping an alarm button. New General Plan Looming In Capistrano By PATRICK BOYLE 01 1111 D•llY ,llfl Sii i! The grow.ing pains of San Juan Capistrano may soon prompt city of· ficials to otder a new general plan drawn for the city. Officials meeting for an informal di!)- ner .ses.o;ion \Vednesday-indicated that a new plan might well 'be in order, some charging that the present plan is not speciric enough. The plan was compiled in 1965. In the 10 years since the city incorporated in 1961, lhe population has leaped from 1.100 to 5,400 residents a~ new housing tracts are being built as fast .as the city ap- proves the plans. "By and large," said councilman Jim Thorpe, ''development is zipping along abou~ as fa st as it can." 11e termed as unfair a rece'nt charge by some of hi!! col· leagues that the planning commission was curt.il iling development. In the past six months. the council has overturned four planning commission decisi9ns, thus allowing ·several housing developments. Wednesday's joint session of the two bodies was held in an attempt to iron out any basic philosophical dif- ferences the members might have about future development. The wide-ranging discussion touched on several matters, including the possibility of launching a campaiRn to attract in- dustry to the area; the propriety of meeting with a developer on an individual basis lo work out differences of opinion: the promotion of the tourist industry : and the a!\Serttd failure or the present general plnn to provide direction to the city. "Our general plan is not a viable docu- ment." claimed planning commissioner Art Lavagnino, saying the goals of the community have changed sine• it was compiled. Lavagnino said he thought the plan should be more specific in its intent and should more reflect the viewpoints of the residents. And he said groups ranging from the Chamber of Commerce -who would advocate de velopmenl -to the historK:al society -who would opt for preservation - should be consulted in writing a new plan. Councilman Josh Gammell cautioned against altempting to~C_hange the exisling plan as each new situation arises. "I will tolerate any mning that follows the geoe[al plan."..Gammell ~aJd.. "b t will not tolerate the _pi.f;Ctmeal changing j)flh5fj)Ian. tr it is ch.1ngl'tl, It .should be l'hanged a! a unit ." The officials notffi thllt the cost of a new plan eou\d rnnge !rom $20,000 to $100,000, but commi.ssinn chairman Jerry Gaffney suggested as an alternative hir- ing one planner to do the entire job. Garfney said he felt a one-man ap- proach to the problems of the city would be more personal because lhe planner- would become well acquainll'd with the officials nnd residents. "You would get a· lot more for your money that way," added city planrlir Bob John.'!. noting that the man would be a "living general plan" who could appear llnd re1x1rt his findings to the council and commis.'!lon on an on-going b.1sl!. Flot Attempt? PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian. police last week foiled wh11t msy ha ve been a planned attempt on the llfe of U.S. Ambass11dor Emory C. Swank, a U.S. embaiisy spokt'!sman said 1oday;--The spokesman.said police caught a Cam· bodian stringing a wire across a road leading from tht tmblssy to the am· buodor'1 reald...,.. Cha1iges Dis Jlliud A spokesman for the District At· torney's office said today they are ''interested" in the case. They were con· tacted by Allen and his attorney. Allen, a savings and Joan executive. said on Oct. 11 he received "a message relayed to ml! that a personal thre.Bt had been issued against me by certain con- cerns that shall remain unnamed." He resigned several hours later ai a regular meeting of the commission. The commission had been in the mid!t of controversy su rrounding several pro- posed developments. There w e r 1 disagreements over esthetics and land use in the fast grov,.ing community. The threats assertedly involved Allen's op- position to aspects of p r o po 1 e d· developments. Jeremy W. Krauss, 21, ponde~ a leap from San Francisco's Golden Gate l!ridg~. The youth later jumped, but ,landed in a H(ety net •nd hqng' by his h~ds ~over the Pacific for two hours' before police finally petsuaded him not'to jump. Allen said afler the threat he im· mediate.ly made provisions for the securi· ty of his fam ily and self. He did not elaborate. Allen had mentionCll the threats to ,a reporter or the DAIL\' PILOT the morn- ing following his resignation. He asked at the time that the Information be con~ fidential, saying he feared the com;e.. quenees . ! ' ~ f . ' ' Nixon Lays It Labor '.<My wife and I have attempted to keep th is reason to ourselves, however we find that we no longer are willing lo keep such a disgusting happening secret u AUea Junks Prepared Speech to Get Tough on Economy said. ' "We have worked too hard and in. volved ourselves too much to simply lii!AMI BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -Presi- dent Nixon threw away the speech he prepared for the AFL-CIO convt;_nlion tb- day and told the labor leaders he was giving il to them "straight from the shoulder'' -thal he was going to make his economic program work with or without labor's help. "lt is my obligation to make this (program) succeed and to the extent of my powers I shall do that.'' the chief ex- ecutive toUI the nation's labor chieftains in a bold and emotional talk . Nixon told a quiet audience, which ap· p\auded only lightly when he entered the hotel ballroom, that drspite political dif- ferences he knew ''The majority of workers are for Amrrica and for a strong nalional defense." lie said at the outset that he stood by his remarks which had been handed out to the press in advance of his speech. Tn those remarks the President told the labor leaders his wage and price controls would produce a "period of sustained prosperity that will repay many times Hyze11 Appointed Clem~nte City Yard Architect -~ Sair Clemente Architect Leon Hyzcn was formally awarded a cootract this week to perform $16,000 worth of design services for the proposal new San Clemente City yards. Councilmen agreed to hire the architect and to pay him in stages.as various parts of the ·yards at the new sanitation plant are completed. Jlyzen '1·as the only :irchilcct con~ sidered for the project which has a ceil· ing price of $200.000. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe expressed concern over safeguards to the city if the project cost exceeded the ceiling, but lly1.cn slresscd that if cosls were to come in higher. he could assliil In paring the job down without extra design cosl11.•1 11te new yards will be buill as soon as the old yard compltx at Avenida l.1iramar Is sold to a private buyer. 111us far there have been 110 offers, however. Councilmen ordered the drawings to make completion of the new complex swifter In case a buyer comes along. The total cost for the relocation •Will come from profits from the sale of three pl~es of city property. • The old yard area is the last on the market. Earlier this year the city soITTli' old- , city hal.l on North El Camino Real and a small P*t of lndu.Ltl1I land alone Estrella. over an y immediate sacrifices tllat any segment of the American work force is called upon to make," Nixon spoke with intensity, and somewhat excitedly. But he managed a slight smile when he entered the lion's den of ttis severest critics. lie was welco1ned at the door by AFL- CIO President George Meany, wh'o had altarkcd Nixon sh:irply Thursday' and ac· cused him or resorting to "totalitarian'' n1ethods. "I'm here today to ask your support ror the building of a •lu sting peace and the building or a new propscrity," Nixon told the big labor audience. I-le said he is often asked "What is wrong with the old prosperity," and silid : "I'll tell you what is wrong -war and innation." Nixon said that he was asked why he had decided to come spcnk berore the convention which has blasted his policies. Jle said his reply was that he knew when the chip! were down· he could count on labor's support for hi!! policies. The President spoke about his winding down the war, the drop in casualties, and how 150,000. had mnrched on Wnll Street in favor ol his Cambodian incursion even !hough editori:il writers and the In· tellectualit were ai;:atnst him. I-le said he slrongly fa vors repeal of the auto excise. tax and the job credit tax, wh ich will increase American workers• competitive position with w o r k e r 1 abroad. But then he laid it flatly on the line._ lit. said he wants labor's participation lo make his new economic policy succeed ~!wt wbelber_w_e. ..JC.I.. that o_~." he Wal'necl, "it is my obligation tcflTUtke thts- ·succeed and to the extent o( my powers I shall do that." He said that he believes It is time to "Understand that there are pointa of IJ,<ts '.Relax, Mr, Meany. . The freeze is over r disagreement and agreement. "l want a program that is fair. "But as President of all the people . I ttunk it is my duty to do what is best for America." Nixon said he understood that une1nployment was, beca\lse he had grown up in It in the depression. abandon those things that we belleve·.-___ .. "The decision lo issue the statement to- day also has been prompted by the faith of some or our friends who have not pushed us too hard for an explanation of my resignation, and: regretfully, by a few ~rsorl!! who have invented false allega~ h<>ns 1n an attempt to discover the reason." Alleii's disclosure was made In a prepared statement issued to members of the news med ia. But C<1pies of the state.. ment also materialized Wednesday night at a j~int meeting of the San Juan City Cou~cil and planning commission. He has declined to enlarge on the stataent Allen said he had "no doubt" thai the threat involved potential harm to his family and himself. "I wouldn't have qui' otherwise," he said. A.lien joined the commission in the spring of 1970 on the nomination of Coun- cilman James Th<:trpe. He is president of the San Juan Little League, has served on the Fiesta Association and was chosen "Outstanding Young Man of the Year for 1970." Capistrano Land Annexation Set For LAFC Airing Nixon's lighting stanre came as no surprise to observer!! who have watched him make bold moves in the past several months. lie said ou r goal is "to win a peace that will end wars." Nixon said with some . heat that he .Annexation of l.1.3 acres of property lo knows that "frightening stateme.DU...bfil'L__San Clemente w~ll be before· the Local . been "JTlade from this 'pociium!Labout-his Agen~ Fonnahon-eom·mlsslon-W=iif,"·---·I forthcoming trips to Pekiflg and Mo!ICOw. nesday. With some scorn. he said th.ey had been The acreage is In the south Capiitrano referred totas "political junketa" design· Beach area, southeast. or Del .Gado Road ed for him to win re-election and northwest of Camino Capis trano .. · The.. annexation was requested by Johe Bike Plans Set C. Manes and John D. Stelnleltemer who, along with 16 others own the pro! perty. They told city officials they plan 18 . two aod three-bedroom apartment unit.a on part or the acreage. Clemente, Mayor's Idea Lauded San Clemente Mayor Walte:r Evars this week unveired an idea ror city con· struction· of a bicycle trail following the ' baSt'! .or the blurrs near the city beach . fro1n North Booch to the SDn Clemente Stnle Ji:.1rk. • Councilmen. , Wedne!day r.l!i~c_d the ldf'.a and ordered tngineering starI studies of the projecl which E~ans said could involve a bed ol deq>mpOl'ied granite the length of the cycle course. Preliminary estimates show that the <'nlire trail stretchin&, rot; mlle!< couJ.lbe installed lffiaiW of the Santa Fe tracks for about $12,000. Evans auggested lh1t the pathwa,Y could link up Willi .-~~ Pl'Qf!OSed to be ,e,speclalty 'destgncd for 1'.ychsts hlong . North :,El Camino Real from Shorecllffs to. Avenida Pico. ...Jt seems like' we could g"et a lot d~ fQr very 11.t!h? Investment,'! the major l1?ld councilmen \Vedne~day. As. nrlJposl'd,. the beachfront pathway would· be built.simliarly to a service road which fronts the beach between lifeguard beadquN'ters and the, municipal 'pier. The path there Is eight feel wide and has curbing to keep the granite In and the sand out. Such a trail would meao lhal c-yc\lsts would have a safe and scenic me.ans o( travel along the entire lenRth of the city, t.be: mayor uid. · • Opposing the annexatio n ls t be Capistrano Beach ChAmber of Com· merce. Outgoing President. Vaughn Curtiss says his organization objects to · any annexallon of any C.pistrano Beach land to San Clemente. .. Purpose of the annexation, the property owners state, is to obtain city aewet service which is not extended to propertY, outside the city limit·s. ' - SaiJor llescued l.ONOON (AP) -A ~year-old BrlUsb yachtsman was resctJed today afler a nine-day ordeal aboard a rubber dinghy in the wintry AUanUc._Radio Arcachon, a French maritime station, 11id be wa.1 picked up In the Bay of 811<1)' by tbe Norwe1Jan laJllr.er Polarvlk. f OAllY PILOT SC Greenbelt Recognition Due Spon? 1be Laguna Greenbelt will take a giant step toward official recognition if Orange County planning commissioners approve a recommendation to be presented to ~hem Monday by pl1nning director Forest Dickason. The rpmmendatlon. prepared after examinat1'a of 1 req~st made by Green- belt supports last summer, would provide for county recognition of 1he Laguna Greenbelt in concept, instruct all d~partments and agencies of the county to consider its preservation in their future operations, and permit the Laguna Greenbelt Inc. to "review and commen t on·• all proposed developments or other land use actions within the proposed l0.000.acre greenbelt area. Jf adopted by the county planning com- Jnission, the policy recommendation will .move to the Board of Supervisors for ap- proval. In Laguna Beach today. Greenbelt president James Dilley urged all sup- porting groups to send representatives. or at least letters to the commissio n meeting at 4 p.m. P.fonday in Planning Commission c h a m b e r s . Engineering Building. Civic Center, Santa Ana. The propo~ greenbelt encircling Laguna would include Moro, Laguna, Woods and Aliso Canyons. In his report to the rommission, Djckason noted that recognition o( the proposed greenbelt would be valuable during the period when the county is stu· dying ways to regulate growth. noting "greenbelts work to discourage urban sprawl and encourage CQIT11JlUnlty lden· tity by providing buffer zones." In addition, he said, they provide oir portunities for recreational development of flood hazard areas considered unsuitable !or other uses. One such por· tion of the Laguna Greenbelt, Aliso Creek, already has been set aside in this manner in the public interest, he noted. Two other areas, Moro Canyon and the Laguna Lakes area are almost sure to be included Jn the county's open space plan, Dickason 1ald. Supervisors OK Sale of Bonds For San Joaquin Approval <1( the...sale ol $2.I mllllon In San Joaquin School District construction bonds was given Wednesday by the Orange County Board oC Supervisors. The present severe shortage of Classrooms in ·the district ·will not be quickly remedied by the sale however, district officia ls said. The afflclala said today that proceeds cf the sale wlll allow the district to con- , struct three new elementary :tehools by the fall or 1973. The issue is to be sold before Jan. 3 and the bonds are part of 1 $15 mill ion issue approved by the voters last April. Dave King. director t1f facilities plan- ning far the San Joaquin district said the current sale and bonds sold previously would be used for construction of one school in Mii!ion Viejo for '1.085 million ; another school for $1.17 mill ion in the El Toro area and a third school in the California Homes area of Irvine. Two Siles for future schools will also be purchased, King said. One is In the Lake Forest area of El Toro and the other in the California •lomes area. The district has 11.000 students cur· renlly enrolled in 15 schools with 3,000 ol them on double sessions. Enrollment is expected to increase to 12,000 next fall with an addltional number of them in double sessiom, King said. OU.NII COAS? DAILY PILOT -CDAST PUl\llHIM8 aan6't 11;,"'1 H. Wni ,,.~ .,,.. Pllllliltllr JH1c llt. Cll'l'ltY ~ ................ co-.1a-.. T1tMi •• ic .. 'n, ·-" -'BtMH A. Mv,...•i1 t --~E•lflll' a.rt. H. l••1 ~icil1r.I P. HtD ' ... "*'ii M1Mt<111 ~,!..,,. i..,...a..&110MH 212. F«ttt A'tw111• ..., M4tw.: r.0.1 •• '"'-'2612 S..C.._...C>Mc. • Hwt• El c..t11• l••I. n•12 --~ ...... »t Wwt .,., ffr91t .. .....,. a..ct.1 »» """'' ...... _., ~ 11Md11 l}l)J ....0 -~ u.---~CUTIA ~~ ~....... ~~,,,....~ ORANGE COUNTY 12 1'7 YOTIRS II, 72~ VOTERS • 3 .; • • • t ~ SADPLEBACK COMMUNITY COll£GE DISTRICT s 21,~53 VOTflll DA ILY ,llOT ..... Ml' How Do You Slice It? Maps shows existing trustee areas and total of reg· istered voters in each area of the Saddleback Col· lege. The young college district covers nearly half (48 percent} of Orange Co unty. Trustees are cur· renUy discussing the possibility of dividing trus!ee area five into three ~rustee areas. This would give the board seven trustees. At issue, however, is the fact that the trustties are elected at 13.r~e rather than by just the voters in their area. Critics of the current plan want lo eliminate at-large elections, claiming that more populous areas can control who is elected elsewhere. 3 Plead Guilty In Pornography Conspiracy Case Three men who were said at the time of their arrest to be developing a highly profitable obscene movie operation In the Newport Beach are1 pleaded guilty to conspiracy charge.s Wednesdiy in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McMiiian ordered Wallace Alvin Little. 41, and Edward Izard Doucette, 32. both of Hollywood and Richard Lewis Garringer, 23, of San Bernardino to return to his courtroom Feb. 24 for sentencing. All three defendant., face a possible state prison term of up to 10 years for their pa.rt in the distribution or pornographic mo vies and lewd books in a syndicate known to potential subscribers as Home Leisure Systems. ~inter Winds Chasing Smog, Battering Boat,s Old man winter l.s breatblng down the Orange Coasl's neck today with winds that reached gale force in some locations, forcing Sigalerts and small craft warrr ings but wipiJC tkies cleeo of smog. No real damage was reported ln Orange County, although one small brush fire raced out ol control near Sand Can· yon and Becranca road.s before being extinguished this morning, The man responsible had a permit for controlled. burning-issued a week ag<>- and didn't realize it would be unron· trollable today, sheriff's deputies said. F'orecasters for the U.S. Weather Bureau predict cootinued but diminishing blasts coastward from the mountains tonight and Saturday. Scattered showers and snow at 4,fJOO feet in some mountain areas are an· iicipated. Chilly overnight lows in the upper 40s .11re expected <1vernlght, with tem- peratures up lo about 62 during the day, Sigalerls were impoud on some freewa y•, as well 13 Santa Ana Canyol\ Road and the Riverillde Fr~eway through hilly, eastern Orange County. Blasts of wind raking offshore waters forced the Orange County llarbor DepH rlment to hoist the small cra ft \Yarning flag . "'" "Nope.'' said a spokesman when asked if he knew when it might be lowered. "They just. tell us when to pul it up and when to take it down." Local police agencies were uniform in reporting no specific damage blamed on the gusty Santa Ana winds. Fliers in some areas reported en· countering severe turbulence at 5,000 feef -mostly farther north -but the Orange County Airport Control Tower had no reports of ground damage to aircraft. Admitted Vnderdog Jackson Enters Pri1111ary, JJattle ' ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Stn. Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson <1! Washington formally declared his candidacy for th e Democratic presidential nomination to- day and said he would enter the New Hampshl~. Florida, Jllinois and Wisconsin primaries. J1ckson, running far behind in public opinion p)llll and an admitted underdog, conceded the tlrst·ln·th~nation New Hampshire primary to front-running Sen. I Coastline Bill Termed Dead By Wedworth From Wire Services SACRAMENTO -Hopes for reviving a major coastline protection bill have been dashed by Sen. James Wedworth, cO{I· sidered by supporters as the last hope for iiaVing the measure this year. The Hawthorne Democrat said Thurs· day that while he supported. the bill originally, it had been "emasculated .•. gutted" by amendments and he opposes the measure now. \Vedworth was absent Monday when a critical vote was taken on Assemblyman Alan Sieroly's bill to regulate coastal development. Sieroty told newsmen the Hawthorne Democrat was the swing vote to enable the measure to clear the com· mitt~. It died one vote short. Sieroty's bill was viewed as the last re· maining major environment bill in the legislative hopper. It would have banned all new development along the 1,100 miles of Californ ia coastline unless approved by a region.al state commission. Oopponents argued it would undermine Jocal control and stifle all development. At a news conference called by \Vedworth, the lawmaker said he would not vote to re vive the mea sure, con· tending it had been debated enough. He said he was absent attending to "personal business" wh ich had to be taken care of while the coastline bill fac· ed its committee test. Asked if his business involved buying race horses. Wedworth replied: "Yes, l have some thoroughbreds." When nnother reporter asked why he chose to attend to his personal affairs ahead of legislative business, Wedworth responded : "I have to pa y rent and feed some children." Wedworth earns $19,200 a year as a Jegislator In addition to $30 a day living expenses. He is a retired bicycle dealer, who recently bought a scenic ranch in the Sierra Nevada Foothills east of Sacramento. When the news confer ence began, Wedworth said, "! don't know what I would have done if I were hqe Monday." But when pressed on the point later, he said he actually made up his mind to vote against the bill Sunday. "l would have voted 'no.' if I had ~n here," he said . "I made my de cision Sun· day. "I'm not ashamed of my record.'' he added. when newsmen inquired whether he feared a conservalion organization's pledge to try to .defeat him next year. when he's up for re-election. Edmund S. Musk.le or neighboring Maine. The New Hampshire test is March 7. "I don't expect to win in New Hampshire," Jackson said, ''but 1 am confident I have a chance to make a reasonable showing.'' Jackson made his Jong-expected an- nou nce ment at a packed news conference in ij1e . marble columned, red draped Senate caucus room , "I'm going to take off my coat. roll up my sleeves ala Harry Truman and tell it like it is," he said to applause from sup- por~ers crammed into tbe huge room behind chairs set out for reporters . Asked about his finances, Jackson said he estimated it would take about $l million to gel up to the fourth of his plan· ned races, Wisconsin. "We've raised part of It, and we're raising jt all over the country," he said. "We're doing all right." In response to questions, Jackson said he also was seriously considering ~n· tering the primary in Alabama In a direct challenge to Gov. George C. Wallace, who may provide Jackson's major com· petition in Florida. Asked if he would consider the No. 2: spot on the ticket if he failed in his bid for the presidential nomination, Jackson said, "I'm not getting into iffy questions now -I am running for the No. I spot." The 59-year-old son of Norwegian im· migrants, born in Everett, Wash., was accompanied by his wife, Helen, and his two children -Anna Marie, 8, and Peter, 5 -as he went before television cameras to make the announcement. JaCkson, who never has lost an election since he became prosecuting attorney of Washington's Snohomish County in 1938, thus became the third d e c I a r e d Democratic candidate. The others are Sen. George S. McGovern ot Southern Dakota and Mayor Sam Yorty cf Los Angeles. Before the year ia out, there may be two or three others. Jackson said President Nixon has ''lost the trust of millions of Americans," chiefly because of unemployment and economic troubles . · Pendleton Vnit Gets Citation Froni President The Isl Marine Regiment, which received a presidential unit citation In \Vorld War II, has another citation to boast about now. Defense Secretary Melvin' R. Lair4 presented the regiment with the citation during ceremonies at Camp Pendleton Thursday , citing its role in a 2o-day batlle in Vietnam three yea rs ago. "The success of the Isl 11arines in Operation Meade River helped bring oor country and our ally closer' to a sue· cessful end to a long and diHicult C1Jn· flicl," Laird told the thousands of troop• and spectators. On hand to see the regiment receive the highest av.·ard for a combat unit was Gen. Leonard F. Chapman, Commandant or the r..1arine Corps. Witnesses testified in lower court ac. tion aga lnat the trio that they received obsCene movies and book.! after con· tacting the defendants t h r o u g h newspaper advertisements. tt w as testified that the enrollment fee was $10 and 1 further payment or $10 every two weeks ensured the rental of movies described. as hard core pornography. Charges or distributing ob 1 c en e material and conspiracy to do so were fil· ed in Newport Beach at the time or ar· rest last Dec. 22 after a two-month in· vestigation of flome Leisure Systems. Actress Loses Kidney; Recovers YOUR TURKEY DE SERVES THE FINEST Obscenity charge!! were d r o p p e d Wednesday when the three wai ved trial and pleaded guilty to the related counts. Moscow Trip Set WASHINGTON fUPll -Pat NilOlJ says she definitely plans to accompany the President on his trip to Moscow next .May, but she's still a stand-by so far as the presidtnUal journey to China is ron· cerned. The First Lady said Thursday :;he ls labbying to make lhe trip to Peking but "I don 't get everything I lobby for.'' SANTA MONICA (UPI) -Actress Barbara Stanwyck underwent surgery to- day for removal of her left kidney and was resting well. a spokesman at St. John's Hospital sald. The screen star was hospitalized Thursda y for what was described as "a severe cold and exhaustion.'' She was operated on when examination disclosed the ruptured kidney. • "She will be in the hospital several weeks," a friend said. Miss Stanwyck's illness forced the pro- duction of "Fitzgerald and Pride'' to shul down. A representative of the motion pie· tur~for-televlsion said the aclrCss will be replacf!d by another performer. Ilana Point Man l11dicted On Multiple Bool{ie Raps A Dana Point man swept up last month In the smashing ()( a highly crganlzed boekmaking ring WRS indicted Thursday by !he Orange County Grand Jury on multiple betting cuunts wllh lhree of hl1 :;ii: alleged companl<ms Jn the 'nterprl.se. Soptrior Court arraignment Is being scheduled for James Collins Miller, 41. of 3462 AICa1.1r Drive, who was worklr!i as a shot .salesman in Santa Ana'• Fashion ls\and at the time t1f his 1rrest last OCt. 20. ' Indicted with him were Martin John De Piano, 41. of Garden Grove, Vito Christopher 1'.leoU, 48, of Orange and Antony Cas.santo. 38, of Anahtlm. All are aceused of 53 count! of bookmaking and conspiracy to commit bookmaking and all are free on ,2,500 ball each. vesllgatlon in which lawmen claim to have plt..ced. hundreds oC bet.s with the sophisticated helling operati~n ~·ere Gerald L. Dtll1houssaye, 38. and his 14·ifr. Dorothy , 40, both of Garden Grove and Jesus Garcia, 32, or Pico Rivera. Their namH are. not cont:ilned In tOe Indictment. All thret are awaiting Su- perior Court arraignment on the fel ony ('()UOl.IJ. lnvuligators said the uven defendanls were divided Into two betting rings with the Otlahoussaye t'OUple and Garch1 operating one "aml'' and the remaining four defendants being resp0nslble for the rest of the combine. Thry .said many m1}or bets wtrt ac· c'pted by the operation with tht larger wager.s being passed on to 1.os Angeles underworld flgur11:s. ' • DEALERS FOR: HENREDO~REXEC-HERITAGE NIWPOIT ITOU OPIN PllDAT "TlL t NIWl'ORT. BEACH 1727 Wottcllff Dr., 442·2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 INTERIORS Proftt1ion1I lnttrlor Det'9ntr• Av1llable-AID LAGUNA BE.ACH 345 North Co11t Hl9hway Phon., 494-6551 'l'he Ind icted men ttllegedly were four nf sevt!II persons w'ho look belt r11ngln~ from '5 lo SS.000 on hOr!IC! race~ arld ot htr r;portlrlj evtnll and who llad, lewmen 1late. connections wifh •n underworld ayndJ ale. All 8tven were booked •fter tn• vrsllgatlon of their activities by NewpOrt Beach Md Huntington Be11ch police. of. ficer1 from 5anta AM, Orange, Anaheim . F'ullcrlon. Butn11 P11rk and Gardtn Gro,·e and district 111ttorne.y's Investigators. n•11 T•ll Fr" MMI •f Or_,.. C•••ty-l,O.IJ:6i Also nabbed af~tr 11, ~il·14'ttk In-I 7 I 7 I .. --...... • . . - ·_Lag1111i1: Beaeh --EDITION Today Fl••I VOL 64, NO. 277, 4 SEc;TIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF.ORN!.( ERIDAY, NOVE~IEI( :1f, 197 [ :TEN CENTS • • • IXOll 1ves a or a Issues Bold Allen Cites Family Threat Economic Authorities Said 'Interested' in Capistrano Case Ultintatum By JOHN VALTERZA Of 111• D1l1Y l"lltl Siii! Charles "Chuck" Allen, former San Juan Capistrano planning commissioner, 1aid today that he resigned from the municipal planning post early last month because of threats of harm to himseU and his family. A spok~man for the District At· torney's office said today they are . ''intereiited" In the case. They were con- tact~ by Allen and his attorney. Allen , a savings and loa n executive, said on Oct. 11 he received "a message relayed to me that a personal threat had been issued against me by certain con- cerns that shall remain unnamed." He resigned several hours later at a regular meeting of the commission. The commission had been in the midst of controversy surrounding several pro- posed developments. There w e r e disagreements over esthetic~ and land use in the fast growing community. The threats assertedly involved Allen's op- position to aspects of pt o p o s e d developments. Allen said after the threat he im- mediately made provisions for the securi· ty of his family and self. He did not elaborate. Allen had mentioned the threats to a reporter ol the DAILY ,PILOT the mom· lng foll!>wing his resiiftaticn. He asktd at the time that the infonnati<m be COO· fidential, saying he feared the conse· quences. "My wife and I have attempted to keep this reason to curselves, however we find that we no klnger .are willing to keep such a disgusting happening secret," Allen said. "We have worked too hard and ;n::- volved curselves too much to si mpiy abandon those things that we believe. "The decision to issue the statement tG- day also has been prompted by the faith or some of our friend s wbO have not pushed us too hard for an explanation of my resignation, and, regretfull y, by a few persons who have invented false allega· lions in an attempt to discover the reason." Allen's disclosure was made in a prepared statement issued tQ members of the news media. But copies of the state- ment also materialized Wednesday night at a joint meeting of the San Juan City Council and planning c:ammission. He has declined to enlarge on the statement. Allen said he had "no doubt" that the Cyclist Injured In Laguna Beacl1 A Huntington Beach bicyclist sustained minor injuries in Lagun a Beach Thursday afternoon when he was struck by an auto turning into a service station. Police said John Allen Brown, 23, of 713 Owen Ave., was taken to South Coast Community Ho spital following the 3 p.m. mishap. A spokesman said he was treated for several cuts and bruises bffore being released. Investigators said Helen V i o I e t t e Adams. 72, cf 311 Emerald Bay, turned left off North Coast Highway at Viejo Street and struCk the cyclist. Police said the accident is still under investigation. Oruge Coast Weather Those pesky winds should slack off tonight, paving the way for a nice. sunny Saturday wi th temp- eratures ranging from 60 to 70 - and overnight lows from 35 to 45. INSIDE TODA. Y Bte.n thinking about o trip to Dea th Valltt1? Read Fred· trick Schoemthl's stor11 in to- day's \Vtekendtr on Page 25. He · calls the beauty of th is desert "indtscribable. Mwtv1I P'vrlfl '2 l' .. lltrltl Ntwt l•I 0r11111 c"'"" ,. .... "'"""" .. ,. IYh'll P.mr H s..m , .. ,. lltdl Mltkth b.,, '*"' ..... / " r1t1eMn •1·n w .... .,. • WIHl-t Wnlt 11 W-ft'I lhwt IJ.1 4 w .... """ ... WMllMIM' If.JI , threat involved potential harm to his family-and hlmsell. "I wouldn't have quit otherwise," he said. Allen joined the commission in the spring of 1970 on the nomination of Coun· cilmaJ1 James Thorpe. He ls president or the San Juan Little League, has served on the Fiesta Association and was chosen ''Outstanding Young Man of the Year !or 1970." Urgency Height Measure MIAMI BEACH, Fla. {UPI) -Pml- dent Nixon threw away the speech ht prepared for the AFL-CIO convention to- day and told the labor leaders he wu giving it to them "straight from the shoulder" -that he was going :o make his economic program work with at without labor'• help . On Laguna Council Docket "It is my-. obligation to make this (program) succeed and to the extent of my powers I ·shaJI do that," the chief ez:~ ecutive told the nation's labor Chieftains By BARBARA KREIBJCR Of !hi 01llr P'llol Sl11f An urgency ordinance imJXlsing a six· month moratorium an buildings more than 36 feet in height is expected to be adopted by the La guna Beach city council at its Dee. I meeting, less than a week before a scheduled court hearing on legality of the existing heig ht limit ordinance. City attorney Tully Seymour has been instructed by the council to prepare the extraordinary measure far adoption in order to avert the JXlSsibi\ity that a developer might seek a permit for a higher building if the initiative ordinance in a bold and emotional talk. should be overturned by the court Dec. s. Nixon told a quiet audience, which ap-plauded only lightly when he entered the Amendments to the city zoning hotel ballroom, that despite political dif~ ordinance incorporating the 36--foot DA ILY "1LDT st•ff Ph•rt ferences he knew "The majority of heighf-limit now are in the process of PAINTING HAS FOUND A NEW HOME AT GALLERY workers are for America and for a strong fo rmal adoption through public hearings Patron Mrs. Grier, Tom Enman Inspect Acquisition national defense." before !he Plann ing Commission and City He said aL the outset th at he stood by Council. but the procedure could not be his remarks which had been handed out completed until late January, leaving a Old A 1 ·n !' to the press in advance of his speech. possible lapse, during which permits ' r Ollle' . In those remarks the President told the might be obtained. labor leaders his wage and price controls The interim moratorium would preve"ltt would produce a "period of ~ustained such a situation. prosperity that will repay many time• Once the amendments are formally i•· 1918 p,.,;1.ttt'ltg Jot' •ts Collecti'on over any immediate sacrifices that any corporated into the city code, the ques~ u.ai "' segment of the American work force is lion of Ieg11lity of the height limit • called upon to make." ordinance ado pted following the Aug. 3 A 1918 painting by longtime Laguna in bt.lyinf the pain(ing. Mrs, Frier wai Nixon spoke with intensity, and Daylight Ba11ditS initiative election becomes a dead issue, bu-. , somewhat excitedly. But he manapd a as far as Laguna ~b p .cont'ttned. ~~t~~f!t~t!i~~l~=·f't~ Art ~~t:)t;1~ l~h:~~le~,·~~=·~ alight smile when he entered the ·uon'1 When the formal hearing procedure Is ASsociatioJ! Gallery by one of i~ patrons, plai ned. den of his severest criMcs. Get $25 000 completed and the zoning ordinance is of. Mrs. Jotin•S. Grier. The painting, he added. will be away He was welcomed al the door by AFL- ' ficially amended, the interim mning Entitled, "A Ride with a Snap," the oil !orm the gallery for about three months CIO President George Meany, who bad measure wouJd &utomatically lapse, or be depicts a number of childreo riding on .a during which•tlme 1£ will be restored and altacked Nixon sharply Thursday and ao-H 1111tingto11 Haul repealed, according to city manager 1urn-or·the-eeotury carousel on the beach reframed. cused him or resorting to ··total.Jtarian .. Lawrence Rose. near Venice. Yens, rec!llled Enman, came to Laguna methods. I ·t d. 1 s · According to Tom Enman, director of Beach in 1910 from Cambridge, Eng· land, "I'm here today to ask your support for By Rum NIEDZIELSKI n a su1 now pen ing n upericr the building of a, lasting peace and the 01 th• oiur ,.1 .. 1 11111 Court, realtor Vern Taschner is challeng-the gallery, the painting was formerly like many other artiats who were im· building cf a new propserity," Nixon tol d A tea of daring daylight gunmen held ing the lcgallty or the initieJ.ive ardinance located in the Casa Collna Hospital In pressed with the seaside atmasphere. The the big labor audience. He said he ii up a Hun 'ngton Center jewelry store this an grou nds the initiative procedure can-Pomona. "We were contacted by the gallery has two other paintings by Yens often asked "What is wrong with the old morning in Huntington Beach and not be used for zoning legislation since it hospital and asked if we were interested in its collection, he said, prosperity," and said: "I'll tell you what escaped wi more than $25,000 wOrth o[ does not provide for public hearings as is wrong -war and inflation." gems and-.c required by state law. Nixon said that he was asked why he Initiative proponents have maintained L • ht f L A k d h d d ·ded •· k ber--• tbe The brazen robbery took place at ig s or aguna s e . a ec1 .., come spea Ont thtit the height ban was not a zoning mat· t' hi h h bi sted h' [' · Lawso n's Jewelry around 9,22 a.m. as o conven 10n w c as a "po""._ ter, but an amendment lo the buildii•0 H sa·d h. I th th kn h store manager Buck Roberts returned oe e 1 is r:ep Y was a e ew " en from morning coffee. code. the chips were down he could count on E h N T M h labor's support for his policies. A heart patient, Roberts was believed t The Presiden t spoke about his winding lo have surrered • "~Ure during the Me1i's Club Se•~ n 0 ug ' O . 00 UC down the war. •he drop in casu.1u ... •nd holdup. M how 150,000 had marched on Wall Street Another employe. Howard Pollack. was in favor or his Cambodian incursion even slugged in the back of the head, possibly Offi'cer Electt'Olt 1· h though editorial writers and tbe ,_ · h N 'th i d Establishment cf a street 1g ting "Street lights are needed for safety and ....... wit a gun. ei er r e q u r e h tellectuals were against him. h ·i 1. 1· policy that would provid, e enoug ii· p-perly prolecti·on but ·r the 1 os p1 a iza ion. G •u • 1 Y are 00 He said he strongly favors repeal of "·e R be Id I t. 1· rr· h Jumination for safety without a " reat . w1 o rts to nves 1ga 1ng o 1cers e A d T l br1ght they can be offensive, especially in auto excise tax and the job credit tar, v.•as met by the gunmen at the store's Jl rave 0gue White Way" effect wa s requested by . which will '·crease Amero·can workers' h h I · Laguna Beach City Manager Lawrence . a view-oriented community.''. .., rear entrance w en e was re urning competitive position with w 0 r k er 1 rr b k t r · th H Roiw. this week . · A resident might rightfully abject to from a co ee rea a a ca e 1n e un-A travelogue on Africa ~.nd Sooth abroad. tingto n Center. America and election of new officers will The need for a general strttt lighting the ·installation of a street light right in But then he laid it flatly on the line. Armed with a short barreled revol ver, highlight the Monday evening meeting of policy came up during discussion of a front of his picture \\'indow, or one that He said he wants labor's participation possibly a .33-caliber, the two suspects the Laguna h-len 's Club. plan to install three street lights in i;hines into his bedroom, he added, to make his new economic policy succeed led lloberts to the vault and forced him A nominating committee headed by Mystic liills, two at intersections oo although the latter problem can be solved "but whether we get that or not," he to open it. Gcorce Campbell will orre r a slate of Mystic Wa y and one al the dead-end ba r4 by a shade wpii::h the Edison Com pany warned, "it ls my abligation to make this An inventory of the gems· and jewelry candidates to succeed retiring directors rier an Mystic Lane. can install. succeed and to the extent of my powers I stolen by the two gunmen has not yet George lloeft. Robert Hastings. Loyd The request for the lights was initated Councihnan Roy llolm said he felt such shall do that." been completed, but Roberts estimated Kesler. O.W. Price and president William by Mystic Way resident Irving Johnson, a policy should include consideration of He said that he believes it is time to that the cash value was "in excess o( F. Robb. who, two years ago, presented a petition the impact on the residents invc lved, as understand that there are points of $25,000." The new directors will join holdovers signed by 25 residents desiring street to impairment of their view, or ether in-disagreement and agreement. "I want • Officer Ken Jensen said Roberts, Fred Falkner. E. F. Jacobi . George lights in the area. convenience. program that Is fair. Pollack, employe Fred Lopez and a Salder and Harold Winter In electing a At that .time, John.son explained, tile Mayor Richard Goldberg asked, ''Are "But as President cf all the people I fourth employe were bound with tape presiden t and vice president to replace Edison Company came up with a pro-we doing this for the people In the area or think it is my duty lo do what is best foe followin g the successful heist. Robb and Hastings. posal to install 34 ·VaJXlr lights in the for the general public safety ?" America." ; Jensen said further that Roberts was Chairman Hoeft will report on ticket aree., but the petitioners complained ·tliis Public Works Di rector Joseph Sweany Nixon said he understood that able to alert police moments arter the sales for the Christmas gala at the would be far more than they needed or said lhe original, overall lighting plan had unemployment was, beCause he bad robbery by tripping an alarm button. Airporter Inn Dec. 14, now reaching the warned and the project was dropped. been worked out with regard to trafric grown up in It in the depression. Ofticers were unsuccessful in getting a 200 mark. lfowever, Johnson told the council, safety and poliee protection, but the cur· Nixon's fighting stance came as no, complete description of the·lwo cauc!'sian Following the business session, Dr. lights of lesser intensity are urgently rent request for three lights had come surprise to observers who have watched gunmen other than that one was short Ca rl Adams will . present A program. on needed at the two intersections and the from · JOhnson lifJ d there had been no him make bold moves in the past several and one cf medium height. Since they are his travels in Africa and South America. barrier for reasons of traffic safety, and notification of other residents. th H ·d 1 1. "'A in believed to have bcen_weari.ng_gloves, no _The 7_:30 j).m. meeting w=illCcbe~h'"e~id=in_t_h_e_~lhrnesfcrPhrnavfileicibee~nrsrecijio~mjjmije:finijdeiid'-'b,_y_::lh::e_~i~lo~lm~s~u~effist~c~d~th~a~t~th~e[r,\;ins!;;t\1a~il~al~io~n~be'!!;.._Jmllio~n~s~. ~·~e!!f!!~~~·e~nd~ou~~~ar~g~:a~ .. ""~'°'. "w"'"w""'"l====l fingerprints were.. left behind. -Woman!s €lubhOUSe. ---c1 y s 1 1c or s pa men . deferred pending sue notilication. Nixon said with some eat tha 1 City B.ends Moratorium - On Arch Beach Projects Laguna Beach city· councilmen agreed this week to bend the Arch Beach HeJghts building moratorium slightly te accept ihe proposal or a property owne r who wanb to pay for 400 feet of sewer line within the asseisment district;in order to build a house on his land. Because of failure of sepllc tanks, the area is under a building ban pending completion of sewe:r hookups. Public \Yor_ks Director J~ph Sweany advised the council It would be possible to permit the private sewer line construction under a reimbursable a g r e *me n t , whereby the property owner would be credited for his investment et such time u overall aewer aneumentl ·for th• district are made. A similar procedure was used, he said, In connection with the Rancho Laguna development some years ago, when cesspool failures made il necessary ror a developer to pay for sewer conne<:tions prior to completion of an assessment district. Sweany asked that the s a m e permission be given for a Crestview Drive property where "total failure" or a septic tank has OCCtJrred and the owner wishes to pay for a portloo of sewer line rather than bear the excessive cost o( continuous pumping. The city ettorney wu l.Mtructed to draw up epprnprlate nlmbunement .,,..... .. 11 lor-botb.l"'O[)tl'\lu. St ressing the need for some general "Safety is our N!sponsibility," he said. h .. f · ht · tat h policy on strctt lighting, Rose said, "I 1. f th' but,. 1 knows t at rig erung s ements avt .may vo e or 1s, u1e peop e in the been made from this podium" about hit' He Geu His Bid in Early At least one Laguna Beach sc~ool official reacted with flying colors to recent trustee criticism .about ap- proving an employe's attendance at a conference after it has already occurred. District transportation foreman Richard ·Jones put in a request to auend a seminar for transportation officials in Los Angeles durlng the week of Aug. 6·11 , 1972. "I think he got the message," quipped Patricia Glllette, the1 trustee who had bctn most critical of ,Jast·minute plans to attend out-- of-d istrict meetings. Trustees 1pproved -Jonea' re- que1t, • area should have a chance to represent forthcoming trips to Peking and Moteowa themselves." With some scorn he said they had beta It was decided to ask Sweany to un~ referred to as "political junketl''"destgn.. dei"take . the notification and place the ed for him to win re-election. item on the .agenda of the next council meeting. 8razilian Officials, Finch Conferring ,BRASILIA (UPJ) ,.. Robe.rt Finch, on a Latin American fact.finding mission for Flresident Nixon, today o pen e d discussions with Brazilian official~. In·. eluding President E milio Garrastazu Medici . Finch, heading .a high·level mission which has already visited Peru , Ecuador and Argentina, arrived Thursday night from Buenos Aires. He aaid he would "discuss some of the plans for President Medici's trip to Washinston next month." Medici has ac- .. pltd an ol!iciol tnvitaUon to •lilt il1I United. Stat" bea~ Dec. 1. • • W,<11 '.Rtit.1l, Mr. MNny; t , The .m-, /$ CMll'. DAILV PILOI---SC- Greenbelt Recognition Due Soon? The Laguna Greenbelt will take a giant 1tep toward official recognition if Orange County planning commissioners approve a recommendation to be presented to them Monday by planning director Forest Dickason. The reoommendatk>n, prepared afler examination of a request made by Green- belt supports last swnmcr, would provide for coun ty recognition of the Laguna Greenbelt in concept, instru.ct all departments and agencies of the county to consider its pre~ervation in their future operatibns, and pennit the Laguna Greenbelt lnc. to "review and comment on" all proposed developments or ottier land use actions within the proposed 10,(1(».acre greenbelt area. · U adopted by the county planning com- mission, the policy recommendation wiR move to the Board of Supervisors for ap- proval. In Laguna .Qeach· today, Greenbelt president James Dilley urged all sui:r porting groups to send representatives. or at least letters to the commission meeting at 4 p.m. P.ionday in Planning Commission ch a m be r s , Engineering Building, Civic Center, Santa Ana. The proposed greenbelt encircling Laguna would include Moro, Laguna, Woods aad Aliso Canyons •• In his report to the commission, Dickason noted that recognition or the proposed greenbelt would be valuable during the period when the coonty is stu- dying ways to regulate growth, noting "greenbelts work to discourage urban sprawl and encourage community iden- tity by providing burrer tones." In addition, he said , they provide op- portunities for recreational development or flood hazard areas c o n s id e r e d unsuitable for other uses. One such por- tion of th e Laguna Greenbelt, Aliso Creek, already ha~ been set aside in this manner in the public interest, he noted. Two other areas, Moro Canyon and the Laguna Lakes area are almost sure to be included in the county's open space plan, Dickason said. Supervisors OK Sale of Bonds For San Joaquin Approval of the sale of $2.5 million In San Joaquin School District construction bonds was given Wednesday by the Orange County Board ot Suj>ervisors. The present severe shortage of classrooms in the district will not be quickly remedied by the sale however, district officials· said. The officials said today that proceeds of the sale will allow the district to con- struct thret: new elementary schools by the rail of 1973. The issue is to be sold before Jan. 3 and the bonds are part of a $15 million issue approved by the voters last April. Dave King. director of facilities plan- ning for the San Joaquin district said the current sale and bonds sold previously would be used for construction of one school in Mission Viejo for $1.085 million; another school for $1.17 million in the El Toro area and a third school in the California Homes area of Irvine. Two sites for future schools will also be purchased, King sa id. One is In the Lake Forest area of El Toro and the other in the California llomes area. The district has 11.000 students cur- rently enrolled in 15 schools with 3,000 of them on double sessions. Enroll ment is expected lo increase to 12,000 next fall with an additional number of them in double sessions, King said. DAILY PILOT • \ ... COAST ~rsHIJ't9 ~. ••Mrt N. WM ~ ...... ., ~ Jee\: R. C11rltV 1 V9 ,.._. Wiii G_,al "-° n.., r •• ,n .. .., n.;..... A. "'"""lft• Mmllilw f"tlllw l)A.n, 'V Pll.OT. "11ft _..,!di ft .... t"9 ti~ .... IJ ......,.1....., R ll't ~O.C:lf'I &- ... 1' ... MPtrtte tli!iln\ for Ltg-8M<fl. .,....,_. , &MCfl. .COii• M111, t41101!1f9"" ..... ~9' v.1.... S..11 c;"""""' ~ _, l#dl~ ....... .,;111 -,...._, •ltfotil. rr.11c:;,.e1 11tlr>!llol PlW II' .. Ill w.t •• , '""'· "'*-...... , ....... (71•1' 142 ... 111 C'l-.HSH A•Ml'tl .. 141·St11 S. C.._.. AH D1,11•w11t ,,, •• ~ ... 4ft-44zt .......... All l1p .. t TU ,.,. •• .., .. ,m ~ f'7t. ~ a. l'Wlfth"-C•-r· ,., """ J..'::"' ttr•tr•1,...,.. .. llll'fll 11\el!f!I' ... 1....,i. lltr9i. ,,_, ... lllWlllWC .. W!!fle\lt aprKJti ~ ITl"flM • opyrllftt---. kW«• •"9t .. ., et H...,.,, IMdl .-o.u Mrw, C:.1J""'1'1le. --.cr1"1io1 .. C.l'fltr a.u: .....,. ... ,., .., '"'" lt.1J .... 1111~1 ffllffMrr ••1111111tnt, 11,11 _,.tt11r. frld.u'1 No111mbH 19, l9ll .. llol&llA - l'UCHT\o\ = ~""""" ,......,.,,,...Ji(' -' ORANGE COUNTY 111867 VOTIRS 11, 72S VOTERS SADDLE6ACK COMMUNITY COUfGE DISTRICT ' s r 28,353 VOTERS CAILY l'ILOT fqwt Mt' How Do You Slice It? Maps shows existing trustee areas and total of reg· istered voters in each area or the Sadd.leback Col- lege. The young college district covers nearly half (48 percent) of Orange County. Trustees are cur· renUy discussing the possibility of dividing trus~ee area five into three trustee areas. This would give the board seven trustees. At issue, however, is the fact that the trustees are elected at large rather than by just the voters in their area. Critics of the current plan want to eliminate at-large elections, claiming that more populous areas can control who is elected elsewhere. 3 Plead Guilty In Pornography Conspiracy Case Three men who were said at the time of their arrest to ht developing a highly profitable obscene movie operation in t~e Newport Beach area pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges Wednesday in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McMUlan ordered Wallace Alvin Little, 41, and Edward Izard Doucette, 32, both of Ho llywood and Richard Lewis Garringer, 23, of San Bernardino lo return W his courtroom Feb. 24 for sentencing. .4.11 three defendants face a possible state prison term of up to 10 years for thei r part in the distribution of pornographic movie~ arfd lewd books i{l a syndicate known lo potential subscribers as Home Leisure Systems. Winter Winds Chasing Smog, Battering Boat,s 01d .... ·~ 1s ~·wee down 111o Orange Coast's neck today with winds ' that reached gale forct in some locations, forciQI'-Sigalerts and small craft .,.,arn- Jng.. )!ul Wloilll ll<i .. -a\ ""* No f'Ml..'1;\f1mlge fWis ftported In Orange County, although one Small brush fire raced out ol control near Sand can- yon and Btnanca roads before being extlngui.s~ this ·morning. The man responsible had a permit for controlled burning-issued a week ago- and didn't realize it would be uncon· trolla'b!e !Oday, sheriff's deputies said. Forecasters for the U.S. Weather Bureau predict continued but climinishing blasts t'Oastward from the mountains tonight and Saturday. Scattered showers and snow at 4.500 feel in some mounta in areas are an· ticipated. Chilly ovemight lows in the upper 40s ire txpected overnight, with tem- peratures up to about 62 during the day. Sigalerts were imposed on some freeways, as well as Santa Am, Canyon ROid ahd the Riverside Free~t~ hllly, eastern Orange Courtly. : Blasts of wind rakj_ng olfshore . w,ale,rs forced the Orange Couqty Harbor Department to hoist the sn;.an craft warning flag. "Nope," said a spokesman when asked i1 he knew when it might be lowered. "They just tell us when to put it up and when to take it do\vn." L<>eal police agencies were unifonn in reporting no specific damage blamed on the gusty Santa Ana winds. Pliers in some areas reported en- countering severe turbulence at 5,000 feet -mostly farther north -but the Orabge County Airport Control Tower hal no reports of ground damage to airc.raft. Ad•itted Vndttdog Jackson Enters Primary Battle _ WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson of Washington formally declared his candidacy for · t h e Democratic presidential nomination to- day and Said he would enter the Ne w Hampshire, Florida, Illinois and Wisconsin primaries. Jackson, running far behind in pubUc opinion pol!J and an admitted underdog, conceded the first-in-the-nation New Hampshire primary to front-running Sen. Coastline Bill Termed Dead By Wedworth From Wire Services SACRAMEr\I'O-.Hopes1 for reviving a major coaslline protectio n bill have been dashed by Sen. James Wedworth, con- sidered by supporters as the last hope for liaving the measure thi!I year. The Hawthorne Democrat said Thurs- day that while he supported the bill originally, it had been ''emasculated ... gutted" by amendments and he opposes the measure_ now. Wedworth was absent Monday when a critical vote was taken on Assemblyman Alan Sieroty's bill to regulate coastal development. Sieroty told newsmen the Hawthorne Democrat was the swing vote to enable the measure to clear the com- mittee. It died one vote short. Sieroty's bill was viewed as the last re- maining major environment bill in the legislative hopper. It would have banned all new development along the 1,100 mlles of California coastline unless approved by a regional state commission. Oopponents argued it would undermine local control and stifle all development. At a . news conference called by Wedworth, the lawmaker said he would not vote to revive the measure, con· tending it had been debated enough . He said he was absent attending to "personal business" wh ich had to be taken care of while the coastline bill fac· ed its committee test. Asked if his bus.i.ne}ls involved buying race horses. Wedworth replied : "Yes, I have some thoroughbreds." When another re porter asked why he chose to attend to his personal affairs ahead or legislative busines!, Wedworth responded: "I have to pay rent and feed some children." ' Wedworth earns $19,200 a y~ar as a 1eiislator in addition to $30 a day" llving • expenses. He is a retired bicycle dealer, who recently bought a scenic ranch in the Sierra Nevada Foothills east of Sacramento. When the news conference began, Wedworth said, "I don't know what I • would have done it I were here Monday." But when pressed on the point later, he said he actually made up his mind to vot e against the bill Sunday. "I would have voted 'no,' if I had been here," he said. "I made my decision Sun- da y. ''I'm not ashamed of my record," he added, when newsmen inqu ired whether he reared a conservation organization's pledge to try to defeat him next year, when he's up for re-election. Edmund S. Muskie of. neighbor in& Maine. The New Hampshire test is March 7. ''I don't expet•t to win in New Han1pshire," Jackson said, i•bu t I am conrident I have a chance to make • reasonable showing." Jackson made hi!l long-expected an- nouncement at a packed news conference In the marble columned, red draped Senate caucus room. •·J'm going to take o£f my coat , roil up . my sleeves ala Harry Truman and tell It like_i.t is,'' he said lo ap!)lnuse from sup- porters cranuned into the huge room - behind chairs set oul"'for reporters. Asked about his finances, Jackson said he estimated it would take about $1 milliOn to get up to the fourth of his plan· ned races, Wisconsin. "We've raised .part of It, and we're raising it all ov~r the country," he said. "We'.re doing all right.'' In response to questions, Jackson said he also was seriously considering en· tering the primary In Alabama in a di rect challenge to Gov. George C. Wallace, who may provide Jackson's major com- petition in Florida. Asked if he would consider the No. 2 spot on the ticket, if he failed in his bid for the presidential nomination, Jackson said, "I'm ·not getting into iffy questions now -I am running for the No. 1 spot." The SS.year-old son or Norwegian im· migrants, bom in Everett, Wash., was accompanied by his wife, Helen, and his two children -Anna Marie, 8, and Peter, 5 -as he went before television cameras to make the announcement. Jackson, who never has lost an election since he became prosecuting attorney of Washington's Snohomish County in 1938, thus became the third d e c I a r e d Democratic candidate. The others are Sen. George S. McGovern of Southern Dakota and Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles. Before the year is out, there may be two or three others. Jackson said President Nixon has "lost the trust of millions of ·Americans," chiefly beeause of unemployment and economic troubles. Pendleton Unit Gets Cit9!Ji!!,!} Froni President The 1st Marine Regiment, which received a presidential unit citation in \Vorld \Var if, has another citation to boast abou.t now. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Lair4 presented the regiment with the citation during ceremonies at Camp Pendleton Thursday, citing its role in a 2!k:lay battle in Vietnam three years ago. "The success of the !st ?-.tarines ln Operation Meade River helped bring our country and our ally closer to a suc- cessful end to a long and difficult con· flict," Laird told the thousands of troops and spectato rs. On hand to see the regiment receive the highest award for a combat unit was Gen. Leonard F. Chapman, Commandant of the Marine Corps. Witnesses testified in lower court ac- tion against the trio that they received obscene movies and books after con- tacting the defendants t h r o u g h newspaper ad vertisements. It was testified that the enrollment fee was $10 and a further payment or $10 every two weeks ensured the rental of mov ies described as hard core pornography. Charges of distributing o b s c e n e material and conspiracy to do .!IO were fil- ed in Newport Beach at the time of ar- rest last Dec. 22 after a two-month in· vestigation of llome Leisure Systems. Actress Loses Kidney; Recovers YOUR TURKEY DE SERVES THE FINEST Obscenity charges were d r o p p e d Wednesday when the three waived trial and pleaded guilty to the related counts. Moscow Trip Se t WASHJNGTON (U PI ) -Pat Nixon says she definitely plans to accompany the President on his trip to Moscow next May, but she's still a stand-by so far as the presidential journey to China is con- cerned. The First L'ady said Thursday she is lobbying to make the trip to Peking but "1 don't get ever;:thing I lobby for." SANTA MONICA (UPI) - Actress Barbara Stanwyck underwent surgery to- day for removal of her left kidney and was resting well, a spokesman at St. John's llospital said. The screen sta r was hospitalized Thursday for what was described as "a severe cold and exhaustion." She was ope rated oo when examination disclosed the ruptured kidney. "She will be in the hospital several \\'eeks." a friend said. Miss Stanwyck's illness forced the pro- duction or "Fitzgerald and Pride" to shut down. A representative of the motion pie· lure-for-television 6aid the actress will be replaced by another performer. Dana Point Man Indicted On Multiple Bookie Raps A Dana Point man swept up last month In the smashing of a hlghly a-ganized boekmaking ring was indicted Thursday by the Orange County Grand Jury on multiple betting counts with three of his 11i1 alleged companions in the enterprise. Superior Court arraig nment Is being 1eheduled for James Collins ~1iller, 48, of 3t62 Alcaur Drive, who was working as a shoe salesman in Santa Ana's Fashion Jsfand at I.ht time of his arrest la.st Oct. 20. Indicted with him were f.fartln John De Piano. f 7, or G1rden Grove. Vito Christopher Meoli , 48. of Orange and Antony Cassanto. 38, or Anaheim . All are accused or SJ counts or bookmaking ind conspiracy to commit bookmaking nnd ill are free on $2.500 b.1\1 each. The indicted men alleg~ly wtte four of seven persons who took btls ranging from »-to '5.000 on horse races and other t1porting vents and who h1Jd. \.t1W"men lilate. conneclions with Rn underworld syndical(' . Also nabbed afler 11 slx·week In· vestigation In whi ch lawmen claim to have pll?.(.'ed hundreds of beU!: with the sophisticated betling operation wer! Gerald L, Dellahoussaye, 38, and his wife. Dorothy. 40, both or Garden Grovt and Jesus Garcia, 32, or Pico Rivera. Their names are not contained In the ind ictment. AU three are awaiting Su· perior Court amignment on the felony counts. · lnvtSllgalorJ sakl the stven defendanU!: wert dlvtded ~to two betting rings with the Delahoussaye couple and Garcia operating one "ann'' and thf' remainlng four defendants being responsible for the rest of the combine. They said many major bet! we.re 8C· c<!plt!d by lhe operation with the larger weg<!rs beln~ passed on to Lo! Ange.l<!!i underworld figure$, All seven we.re booked aller ln- V(!Jlligation of lhtir tictivities by Newport Be.Aeh Md l~untington Beach police. or- flce:rs from Santa Ana, Orange. Anaheim, Fullerton, Buena Park and Carden Grove '11nd district attorney's Investigators . . ' ~~,p ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXE~-HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1717 Wo1tcllll Dr., 642-2050 OPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 NIWPOIT nGll OPIN F•IDAY "flL f INTERIORS ProfH1ion1I Interior O.sl9n1r1 Av1llabl.-AID "'•" T•h fr.. ..... , .1-0,..,. Ce11rw 14f.11•1 LAGUNA BEACH 3.($ North Co11t Highway Phono: 49~551 San Clemente Ca pis trail• EDITIO~ VOL 64, NO. 277, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER: ;19, 1971' • • 0 ICia Center Caper Daring Pair Ro·h I -' Sto·re of $25,000 By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 , ... O.llY ,llot 5!1H A team of daring daylight guninen held up a Huntington Center jewelry store this morning in Huntington Beach and e~aped with more than $25,000 worth of gems and cash. ' The brazen robbery took place at Lawson's Jewelry around 9:22 a.m. as store manager Buck Roberts returned from morning coffee. A heart patient, Roberts was believed to have sufltred a seizure during the holdup. Another employe, Howard Pollack, was slugged in the back of the head, possibly with a gun. Neither r e q u i r e d hospitalization. Robert s told investigating officers he \\'8S met by the gunme n at the store's rear entrance when he was returning from a coffee break at a cafe in the Hun· tington Center. Officer Ken Jensen said Roberts, Poilack, employe Fred Lopez and a fourth employe were bound with tape following the successful heist. Jensen said further that Roberts was able to alert police moments afte r the robbery by tripping an alarm button. New General Plan Looming In Capistrano By PATRICK BOYLE 01 I ... O•llY Pile! $1111 The growing pains of San Juan e s • -. Armed with a short barreled revolver, possibly a .33-caliber, the two sus pects led Robert.! to the vault and forced him Capistrano may soon prompt city of- ficials to order a new general plan drawn for the city. Clia1iges Bis Mind to open it. · An inventory of the gems ·and jewelry 1tolen by the two gunmen has not yet been completed, but Roberts estimated that the cash value was "in excess of '2.5,000." Officials meeting for an informal din· ne:.r session Wednesday indicated that 1 . new plan might well be ·in onl~r, some charging _that the present plan is not Jeremy W. •Krauss, 21 , ponders a leap from San Francisco's Golden Gate bridge. The _youth later .jumped, but·land~.!n a safety net 1nd·ltung·by·hl1 hands over the Pacilic for two hours .before police linallr ~dad blm not to ium)>. . ' ' ' ' ' ' --_, Winter Concert, Clubhouse Rites Share 'Birthday' specific enough. The plan was compiled in 19'5. In the 10 years since the city incorporated . in 1981, the population has leaped from 1,100 to 5,400 residents and new housing tracts are being built as fast as the city ap-- proves·the plans. Nixon Lays ·It o·n Labor "By and larRe.'' said councilman Jim Thorpe, "development is zipping al ong about as fast as it can." l~e tei:med as Junks Prepared Speech to Get Tough on Economy unfair a recent chargiby some of his col· MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -Presi- leagues that the planning commission dent Nixon threw away the speech he San Clemente will celebrate its official was curtailing development. prepared for the AFI.rCIO convention to- birthday and dedicate its new community In the past six months, the council has day and told the labor leaders he was clubhouse on the same day in late . overturned four planning commission giving it to them "straight from the February-and as an added fea ture the decisions. thus a\lqwil)g several housing shoulder" -th at he was going to make celebration will include Saddl eback developments. Wednesday's joint session "" hi s economic program work ·with or College's annual winter concert . . or the two bodies was held in an attempt without labor's help. City r:ouncilmen approved of the coin· to iron out any basic philosophical dif7 "It is my obligation to make this . cidental clumping of events after hearing ferences the members might have about (program) succeed and to the extent o( from City Manager Ken Carr. future development. n1y powers I shall do that," the chief ex· The city official told councilmen that The wide.ranging discussion touched oft' ecutive told the nation's labor chiertains Sadd\eback College had asked to use the several matters, Including the possibility in a bold and emotional talk. clubhouse's new, 500-seat auditorium on of launching a campaii:in to atlract in--Nixon told a quiet audience, which ap- Feb. 28. dustry to the area; the propriety of pl auded only lightly whrn he entered the "That seemed to be a fitting occasion meeting with a developer on an indi vidual hotel ballroom, that despite political dif. to officially open the new clubhouse, then basis to work out differences of opinion : ferences he knew "The majority of we remembered that the city's 44lh birth· the promotion of the tourist industry: and workers are for America and for a strong day falls on the day before the scheduled the asserted failure of the present national defense." concerl," he said. general plan to provide direction to the I-le said at the oulo;ct that he stood by Councilmen then agreed to merge all city. his remarks which had been handed out the events inlo one program. "Our general pl an is not a viable docu· to the press in advance of his speech. They added that th ey also would waive men!." claimed planning commissioner Jn those rema rks the President told the the standard renlal fee for the Art Lavagnino. saying the goals of the labor leaders his wage and price controls auditoriu m because the Saddlebock event community ha ve changed since it was would produce a "period or sustained featuring singers and i.nst.rumentalis~s compi led. prosperity thal will repay many times will not involve adm1ss1on and is Lavag nino said he thought the plan over any immediate sac rifices that any segment of the American work force is called upon to make." Nixon spoke with inteosity, and somewhat excitedly. But he managed a slight smile when he entered the lion 's den of his · severest critics. lie was welcomed at the door by AFI.,.. CJO President George Meany, who had attacked Nixon sharply Thursday and ac. cused him or resorting to "totalitarian'' n1ethods. "I'm here today to ask your support for the building of a lasting peace and the building of a new propserity," Nixon told the big labor audien ce. lie said he is otten asked "\Vhnt Is wrong with the old prosperity," and said: ''I'll tell you wh at is wrong -war and inflation." Nixon said th at he was asked why he had decided 'to come spenk before the convention which bas blasted his policies. lie sa id his ~eply was · that he knew when the chips were' down· he could count on labor's support for his policies. · TI1e President spoke about his winding '"''~ '.Relax, Mr. Meany. , The freeze is overt disagreement and agreement. "I want 1 program lhat is fair. "But as President of all the people I think it is my duty to do what is best for TEN CENTS rea. Capistrano City Aide Imperiled? By JORN VAL TERZA Of tti. Dl lll' Plltt lltH Charles "Chuck" Allen, former San Juan Cap istrano planning commissioner, said today that he resigned from tht n1unicipa! planning post early last mont.6 because of threats of harm to hhmelf an~ his family. A spokesman for the District At· torney's office said today they are . "interested" in the case. They were con- tacted by Allen and his attorney. Allen, a savings and Joan e1ecutive, said on Oct. 11 he received "a meuag• relayed to me that a personal threat bad been issued against me by certain oon-- cerns lhat shall remain unnamed." lie resigned several hours later at -. regular meeti ng of the commission. _ The commission had been in the midst of controversy surrounding several prGo posed developments. There w e r 1 disagreements over esthetics and land use in the fast growing community. The threats asserledly involved Allen's op- position to aspects nt p r o p o 1 e d developments. Allen said after the threat he lmo mediately made provisions for the SttW"\.o ty of his family and self. He did oo• elaborate. Allen had mentioned the threata to a reporter of the DAILY PILOT the morn- ing following hl1 resigruiUon. He a*9!1 at the time that 'the infonnaUon be con. fidential, aaying he feared the conie-- quenoes. '.'My wife 1nd I have 1ttempted to keep this reason to ourselves, however We find that we no longer are w11ling to keep 1Ucb a .disgusting happening secret/' Allen said. "We have worked. too hard and in· volved ourseJves too much to a:impl.1: abandon those things that we believe. .- "The decision to issue the statement to- day also has been prompted by the falt.b of some ol our friencl.s who have not pushed us too hard for an explanation of my resignation, and, regretfully, by a few persons who have invented false allega- ti9ns in an attempt to discover the reason." Allen's disclosure was made in a prepared statement issued to members of the news media. But copies of the state. ment also materialized Wednesday night at a j?int meetin~ of the San Juan City Cou nci l and pla nning commission. He bas declined to enlarge on the statement. Allen said he had "no doubt" that the threat involved potential harm to bis fam ily and himself. "I wouldn't have quit otherwise," he said. A.lien joined the commi$sion in the spring of 19711 on .the nomination of Coim. c1lman James Thorpe. He is pruident •o! the San .Juan Little League, has lenfed on the Fiesta Association and was chosen "Outstanding Young Man of the Yea r for 1970." sponsored as a public service. should be more specific in its intent and The clubhouse now is in the final fram· should more reflect the viewpoints of the Ing phase and is expected to be ~om.pleted residents. And he said groups ranging \veil in adva nce of the celebration in late Crom the Chamber of Commerce -who H yzen Appoi11ted Clemente City Yard Arcl1itect • down the wrir. the drop in cas\1alties. and how 150,00!) bad l]lArched on Wall Street in favor of his Cambodian incursion even America." C • L though ec;litorial writers and the in· . Nixon said he understood that 8p1Sff8ll0 and tellectllals were against him. uricmployment was, because he had J1e sa id he strongly favors rei)eat of the A auto excise tax and the job, credit tax. grown up in it in the depression. nnexation Set which will increase American workers' Nixon's fighting stance came as no competitive position with w o r k e r s surprise to observers who have watched ahroad him make bold moves in the past several For LAFC Ai · But 1hen heJaid it aatly oo tbe Jine_, months. He said our goal is "to win a. nng San Clemente Architect Leon Hyzen lie sa id he warits labor's participation" pe'ac~.that-will end wars." A , February. . "'ould advocate development -to the Besides the auditorium. it will contain historical society -who would opt . for parks and recrealion departm~nt head· preservation - should be consulted in Quarters a kitchen, small meebng rooms writing a new plan. and a iotally refurbished "Founder's Councilman Josh Gammell cautioned Room" which is the last vestage of the against attempting to change the existing first clubhouse which was. ruined by 8 plan a!I each new situation arise5. fire early last year. "I will tolerate any zoning that rollows 1-"'ltt~,,..._-===--------,-tbe--..general-plan,!!-G_a._mmell-said~t... will not tolerate the piecemeal changing of that plan. If It is changed, it should be changed as a unit." was formally awarded a contracl this to make his new economic pe>lit:y succeed Nixon said ·With some heat that he nnexallon of IL3 acres of property to i~-''!t'~~'''-whethet...we_geLJhaLoLno~e_k_nows 'that "frjgbt.ening.s1aiemenls..bav_e_San Clemente will be before ~he wee top:lffOIDr_$l6;00tl-worttrof--design warned, "it is my obligation to make lh;s • been made from this poc1;um" aboul his' _ A'gency F.ormabon m ssion Yfed<o . I Coast \\'e nther Those pesky winds shou ld slack off tonight, paving the way for a nice. sunny Saturday with temp- eratures rang ing fro m 60 to 70 - and ovemighl lows from » to 45. INSIDE TODAY Been t11i11king about a f.rip to Deatll Valley? Read Fred· erick Scliotmehl's story it1 to- da y's Weeke11der on Page 25, Hs en//.& the beauty of tli is desert ''indescribable. MMhlll l"llfMI-n Nlljtfllt H-4•J 0r-c""" it •ttllllf'lllh ,. •• ,,.,,... ,_,.,. n ,...... , .. ,, 1i.c• 1111run n-u ttM'flll911 11 "'""" ll·h ...... 4 Wllllt WI NI II ._11'1 ..... It-It '#trlll M.W. f.J "'...,,,. .... The officials noted that the cost or a new pl11n cou ld range from $20,000 to $100,000, but commission chairn1:in Jerry Gaffney sug1:iested as an 11\ternative hir· ing one p\nnner to do the entire job. Gaffney snid he felt a one·man ap- proach to the problems of the city would be more personal because the planner would become well acquainted with the officials and residents. .J "Yqu would get a lot more for your money that way,'' added eity planner Bob Johns. noting that Lhe man would be a "living general plan" who could appear and report his findings to the council and commisstcJn on an on-going bas~. Plot Attern pt? PHNOM PENll (UPI ) -Cambodian police last week foiled what may have been a planned attempt on the lire or U.S. Ambassador Emory C. Swank, .1 U.S. embassy 1pokesman said today. The: spokesman said polic1 caught a Cam· bodlan 1trlnglng a wirt acros1 a ro11d leadin& from the emblssy to lbe am· buodor'1111idence. . se rvices for the proposed new-----Sin -till"d Clemente City yards. succeed and to the extent of my powers I forthcoming trips to Peking and ,_foscow. Tti!Y· . . th th . Councilmen agreed to hire the architect s.hatl do that" . With some 'scorn_he said they had been. a.creage is in e sou Capistrano and to pay him in stages as various parts lie said that he believes it is time to referred to as "political junkets" design· Beach area, southeast. of Del _Gado Road of the y11rds al the new sanitation plant understand' that there are points of ed for him to win re-election. and northwest .or Camino Capistrano. The annexa tion was requested by·John are compl eted. C. Manes and John D. Stelnleitemer, llyien \Vas the only architect ~con· B • k p · • s who. •along wit h 16 others own the pro- sidered for the project which hns a ceil· I e a·-. na;;i et perly. They told city officials they plin 18 Ing price or $200,000. ~ two and three-bedroom apartment units Councilman Thomas O'Keefe expressed on part of the acreage. concern over safeguards to the city if the Opposing the annexation is t b 1 project cost exceeded the ct?iling, .but CZ n tPM ' Jd Laud d Capistrano Beach Chamber of Com~ Hyzen stressed that If cOsts were-to come · ·eme.,.~ ay o.r S ea . . C merce. Outgoing President Vaughn in higher, he could assist In paring the Curtiss says his organization objects lo job down without extra de!lign costs. · any annexation o[ any Canl•lrano •--~ The new yards will be built as soon as 'San ciemente'Ptfayor Watter Evans this proposed fci be ·espeCiaJJy. designed lor land to Sa n Clemente. r-.-o.;.q the old yard complex at Avenida week . unveiled an Jdea "for city· con·· 1~clists along North El Camino Real Purpose of the annexation, the pro-~ 1\iiratnar ls sold to a private buyer. atrucUon ol 8 bicycle tran following the from Shorecli!fs to Averiida 'Pico. owners s'tate, is to obtiln city w;;~ Thus far there have been no offers, base of the bluUs near the·city beach · '1lt s_eems like we could.g_et a.lot done service which is not extended to pro-rty however. from Norlh Beach tO the San Clerriente for very little in\'estment," the mayor outside the city llmlts. '"' Councilmen ordered the drawings to Stole Park. told councilmen Wednesday. make completion of the . new complex Councilmen, Wednesday praised the As proposed. th e be:achfront pathway swifter In case a buyer comes along. Ide.a and ordered enginef!ring sta rf would be built similarly to a servict? road The tota l cost for the 1e\ocaUon will studlcs ot the projcc.t which Evans said which fronts the beach between lifeguard come from profit!i from the sale of three couJd·lnvoJve a bed of decompol$ed granite headqu2rters and the municipal pier. pieces of city property. the length of the cycle course. The path there is tight feet wide and The old yard area lJ the last on the P,reJiminary estimates show that the has curbing to keep the iranite ln and the market. entire tran stretching for miles could be sand out. Earlier this year the city sold the old installed. inland of the Santa Fe tracks for Such 1 trail woold mean that cyclists elty hill on North El Cimino Rt.al and a about S131000. would have a safe and scenic means of omaJI • pleco o! indUllrlal llJ!d llOll( Ev1n1 •~uut.d thal the ptlftw•Y tr1vel alonr the entln lellflh of tho city, Eotrella. d 'lll>l:upwilb-~ lht.ma;oor~ ' ' Sailor Rescued LONDON (AP ) -A :a.yeAN>ld Britiall yachl!man was rescued today an. a nine-day ordeal aboard 1 rubber ~ in the wintry Atlantic.• Radio Arcacboft, a. Frtnch maritime 1tation, nld hi Wll plckt<I up In , lhe BIY ol Blocay by tbl Nonrtalan tanktt Pol11Vlk. • . . • 'I -------- -·-l ..;.--·z ~Allr-P1co~-~·e~ Fffday;-N-W19, 1971 Greenbelt ~ecognition Due Soon? '!be Laguna Greenbell will lake a giant step toward official reCognition if Orange County planning con1missioners approve a reeommend atlon to be presented to them Monday by planning director Forest Di_ckason. The recommendaUon, prepared after examination of a·request made by Green. belt supports last summer, would proYlde for county recognition of the Laguna Greenbelt in roncept, instruct all departments and agencies of the county to consider its preservation in their future operatrons, and pemtit the Laguna "Greenbelt Inc. to "review and comment op" all proposed devel<>pmenls or other Jand use aclions within the proposed 10,®"acre greenbelt area. JC adopted by the coun1y planning com· mission, the policy recommendation win move._ to the Board of Supervisors for ap- proval. . In Laguna Beach today, Greenbelt president James Dilley urged all sup- porting groups to send representativ"es, or at least letters to the commission meeting at 4 p.m. Monday in Planning Commission ch a m be r s , Engineering Building, Civic Center, Santa Ana. The proposed greenbelt encircling Laguna would include Moro, Laguna, Woods and Aliso Canyons. In his report to the commission, Dickason noted that recognition af the proposed greenbelt wauld be valuable during the period when the county is stu- dying ways ta regulate growth, noting "greenbelts wark to discourage urban sprawl and encourage community iden- tity by providing buffer zones." Jn addition, he said, they provide op- portunities fo r recreational development or Oood hazard areas conside r ed unsuitable for other ilses. One such por- tion of the t:aguna Greenbell, Aliso Creek, already has been set aside in this manner in the pub\lc interest, be noted. Two other areas, Moro Canyoo and the· Laguna Lak es area are almost SUre to be included in the county's 'open spact: plan, Dickason said. Supervisors OK Sale of Bonds For San Joaquin Approval of the sale of $2.S million In San Joaquin School District construction bonda was given Wednesday by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The present severe shortage or classrooms in the district will not be quickly remedied by the sale however, district officials said. The officials .said today that proceeds of the sale will allow the district to con- struct three new elementary schools by the fall of 1973. The issue Is to be sold before Jan. 3 and the bonds are part of a $15 million issue approved by the voters last April. Oa\Pe King. director of facilities plan- ning for the San Joaquin district said the eurrent sale and bonds sold previously v•ould be used for construction of one :school in Mi ssion Viejo for $1.085 million; another school for $1.17 million in the El Toro area and a third school in the Californla Homes area of Irvine. Two sites for future schools will also be purchased . King said. One is in the Lake Forest area of El Toro and the other in the California Homes area. The district has ll.000 students cur- rently enrolled In 15 schools with 3,000 of them on double sessions. Enrollment is e1pected to Increase to 12,000 next fall with an additional number of them in double sessions, King said. OlANGI COAST DAILY PILOT OIMU~I CO.uf .PIJtllSHtH~ COMPANY Itta.rt N. W • .4 Pr•--tltlll Plllll~ J•c\ I. C111lty ... ,,......, .. CO-ti .... ,.._, l(....,n Edll9r •---~,...:· •A. M.,.W .. -lltll"' Qmt. H. '-• RkMtil P. N.0 ,...,.. ,...,. lldlMn . '-1 .. IMd Of'flce; 212 Fot•1t ""•~11• "9m111 atldto11: P'.O. I •", •• , t l ,12 S-Ct1111e1te Oflke t OI Nttth ti C.1111110 Rttl, ,2,72 Otkt' Offltel C.11 Mtu• l3ll Wnt 11y S1'Ht N...,.rl aM~h: :un #It""'°'' .... i.vwd hlftllrl!JM l•f31: 11t1J ~ llilll1'1Yllrd LllAHA - PLlCllro.l = ,._ 12,1'7 VOTIRS ·, SADDLE8ACI( COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT ... N . ' ' 1.aa " Mu..1\ ORANGE COUNTY ~'11; 5 28,355 vanu DAILY PILOT NtM ""'' How Do You Slice It? Maps shows existing trustee areas and total of reg- istered voters in each area of the Saddleback Col- lege. The young college district covers nearly f:lalf (48 percent) of Orange County. Trustees are cur- rently-discussing the possibility of dividing trustee ar~a five into three trustee areas. This would give the board seven trustees. At issue, however, is the fact that the trustees are elected at larie rather than by just the voters in their area. Critics of the current plan want to eliminate at-large elections, claiming that more populous areas can control who is elected elsewhere. 3 Plead Guilty 111 Pornog raphy Conspiracy Case Three men who were said at the time of their arrest to be developing a highly Profitable obscene movie operation in the Newport Beach area pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges Wednesday In Orange County Superior Court. Judge Byron K. McMillan ordered Wallace Alvin Little, -41 , and Edward Izard Doucette, 32. both of J-lolly~·ood and Richard Lewis Garringer. 23, of San Bernardino to return to his courtroom Feb. 24 for sentencing. . i\11 three defe ndants race a possible state prison term of up to 10 years for their part in the dislribulion of pornographic movies and lewd books in a syndicate known to potential subscribers as Home Leisure Systems. Winter Winds Chasing Smng, Battering Boats ' ' Old man wlnter ls brtafh g down tht Orange Coast's neck today with winds that reached gale force in some locations, forcina: ~plub: and ifP~ll ct~t warn- ing• li!J! wtplilf ~es ""'" <( illriG«i: No tt•l damag~ Wt reported Iii. Orange COunty, althou,'.h one small brush fire raced out of control near Sarni Can- yon and Benanca roads . before being extinguished ·this morning. · The man respansible had a permit for controlled buming-l!isued a week ago-- and didn't realize it Would be uncon- trollable today, sheriff's deputies said. Forecasters for the U.S. Weather Bureau predict continued but diminishing blasts coastward from the mountains tonight and Saturday. Scattered showers and snow at 4,500 feet in some mountain areas are an- ticipated. Chilly overnight lows in the upper 40s are 11pected overnight, with tem- peratures up to about 5% during the day. Sigalerts were imposed on some frtl;'fAYS, as well 11 Sa~la A CanyOR R~d and the Riverside FreewaY Lbrough hilly, eastern Orange Cowity. Blasts of wind raking offshore waters forced the Orange County · Harbor Department to hoist the small craft warning flag. "Nope," said a spoke~rnan when asked if he knew when it might be lowered . "They just tell us when to put i\ up and when to take It down." Local police agencies were uniform in reporting no specific damage blamed on the gwty Santa Ana winds. Fliers in some areas reported en- countering severe turbulena: at 5,000 feet -mostly farther north -but the Orange County Airport Control Tower had no reports of ground damage to aircraft. • Ad1nltted Vndercfog Jackson Enters Primary Battle WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Henry M. •iScoop" Jackson of Washington formally declared his candidacy for t h e Democratic presidential nomination to- day and said he would enter the New Hampshire, Florida, Illinois and Wi.sconsin primaries. Jackson, ruMing far behind in public opinion pol~ and an admitted underdog, conceded the first-in-the-nation New Hampshire primary to front-running Sen. Coastline Bill Termed Dead . By W edworth From Wlre Servl(e1 .. SACRAMENTO -Hopes for reviving a major coastl ine protection bill have been dashed by Sen. James Wedworth, con- sidered by supporters as the last hope for 5aving the measure this year. The }lawthorne Democrat said Thurs· day that while he supported the bill originally, it had been "emasculated ..• gutted " by amendments and he opposes the measure now. Wedworth was absent Monday when a critical vote was taken on Assembly1nan Alan Sieroty's bill to regulate coastal development. Sieroty told newsmen the Hawthorne Democrat was the swing vote to enable the measure to clear the com- mittee. It died one vote short. Sieroty's bill was vie\ved as the last re- maining major environment bill In the legislative hopper. It would have banned all new development along the 1,100 miles of California coastline unless approved by a regiona l state co mmission. Oopponents argued it would undermine local control and stifle all development. Al a news conference called by Wedworth, the IRwmaker said he would not vole to revive the measure, con- tending it had been debated enough . He said he was absent attending to "personal business" which had to be taken care of while the coa stl ine bill fa c- ed its committee lest. Asked If hi~ business involved buying race horses, Wedworth replied: "Yes, I have some thoroughbreds." When another reporter asked why he chose to attend to hi.s personal affairs ahead of legjslative business, Wedworth responded : "I have to pay rent and fept some children." ' Wt!Jfworth earn $19,200 a year" 11 a legislator in ,.ddltion to $.10 a ~a)' livlng expenses. He is a retired blcyCie de'tler, who recently bought a scenic ranch In the Sierra Nevada Foothllts east o f Sacra1nento. When the news conference began, Wedworth said, ··r don't know what, 1 would have done If I were here Monday." But when pressed on the point later, he said he actually made up his mind to vote against the bill Sunday. "I would have voted 'no.' if I had been here," he said. ''l made my decision Sun- day. "rm not ashamed of my record," he added, when newsmen inquired whether he feared a eonservalion organization's· pledge to try to defeat him 11ert yea r, when he's up for re-election. Edmund S. Muskie of neighborin11; Maine. The New Hampshire test is March 7. "I don't expect to win in New llampshire," Jackson said, "but I am confident I have a chance to make a reasonable showing." Jackson made his: Jong-expecled an- nouncement at a packed ne ws conference in the marble columned, red draped Senate caucus room. "J'm going to take off my coat, ron up my sleeves ala Harry Truman and tell it like it is," he said to 3pplause from sup- porters crammed into the huge room behind chairs set out for reporters. Asked about his finances, Jackson said he estimated it wou ld take about $1 million to get up to the fourth of his plan· ned races, Wisronsin. ''We've raised part of it, and we're raising it all over the count ry," he said. "We're doing all right." In response to questions, Jackson said he also was seriously considering en· tering the primary in Alabama in a direct challenge to Gov. George C. Wallac!, who may provide Jackson 's major com- petition in Florida. Asked if he v.·c..uld consider the No. 2 spot on the ticket H he !ailed in his bid for the presidential nomination, Jackson said, "I'm not getting into iffy questions now -I am running for the No. I spot." The 59-year-old son of Norwegia n im- migrants, born in Everett, Wash., was accompanied by his wife, Helen, and his two children -Anna Marie, 8, and Peter, 5 -as he went before television cameras to make the announcement. Jackson, who never has Jost an election since he became prosecuting attorney of Washington's Snohomish County In 1938, thus became the third d e c I a r e d Democratic candidate. The others are Sen": George S. ~tcGovern of Southern Dakota and Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles. Before the year is out; there ma y be two or three others. • Jackson said President Nixon has "lost the trust of millions of Americans," chiefly because of unemployment and economic troubles. Pendleton Unit Gets _ Citatio1i Froni Pres ident The Isl Marine Regiment, which receiVed a presidential unit citation in World War II, has another citation to boast about now. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Lai rtl presented the regiment with the citation during ceremonies at Camp Pendlbton Thursday, citing its role in a 20-day battle in Vietnam three years ago. "The success of the Ist '-tarines in Operation Meade River helped bring our count~y and, our ally closer to a suc- cessfUl ·end to a long and difficult con· f\ict," Laird told the thousands of troops and spectators. On hand to see the regiment receive the highest award for a combat wiit was Gen. Leonard F. Chapman, Commandant of the Marine Corps. Witnesses testified in lower court ac- tion against the trio that they received obscene movies and books after con- tacting the defendants t h r o u g h newspaper advertisements. Jt was testified that the enrollment fee was $10 and a further payment of $10 every two weeks ensured the rental of movies described as hard core pornography. Cha rg es of distributing o b s c e n e material and conspiracy to do so were fil- ed in Newport Beach at the time of ar- rest last Dec. 22 after a two-month in- vestigation of Home Leisure Systems. Actress Loses Kidney; Recovers YOUR TURKEY DE SERVES THE FINEST Obscenity charges were dropp e d Wednesday when the three wai ved trial and pleaded guilty to the related counts. Moscow Trip Se t WASHINGTON (U PI ) -Pat Nixon says she definitely plans to accompany the President on his trip to A1oscow next !\:lay, but she's still a stand-by so far as the presidential journey to China is con- cerned. The First Lady said Thursday she is lobbying to make the trip lo Peking but "I don't get everything I lobby for." SANTA MONICA (UPI) -Actresll Barbara Stanwyc k underwent surgery to- day ror removal of her left kidney and was resting well, a spokesman at St. John's Hospital said. The screen star was hospitalized Thursday for what was described as "a severe cold and exhaustion." She was operated on when examination disclosed the ruptured kidney. "She will be in the hospital several weeks," a friend said. Miss Stanwyck's illness forced the pro- duction of "Fitzgerald and Pride" to shut down. A representative of the motion pic- ture-for-television said the actress will be replaced by another performer. _Ilana Point Maalndicted 011 Multiple Bool{ie Raps A Oana Point man S'A'ept up last month fn the smashing of a highly organized bookmaking ring was Indicted Thursday by the Orange County Grand Jury on multlple betting counts wilh three of his six alleged companions In the enterprise. Superior Court arraignment Is being scheduled for James Collins Miller. 48, o( 3462 Alcaur Drive, who wes working as a shot salesman in Santa Ana's Fashion Island at the time of his arrest lasl Oct zo. Ind icted with him were Martin John De Piano. 47, ol 'Garden Grove, Vito Christopher ~1eoli, 48, of Orange and Antony Cassanto, S8, or Anaheim. All are .11ccused of 5.1 counts ot bookmaking and conspiracy to commit bookm11 klng and All are frte on $2,SOO b:lll each. The indicted men allegedly were lour of seven persons who took bets ranging from $5 lo $5,000 on horse races and other aportfng ·events and who had. lawmen ' state. connccuons with an underworld 1yndicate. Also nabbed after I si r··wttk In- vesligation in which lawmen claim to have plPeed hundred!! of bets with the sophisticated betting operation were Gerald L. Dellahoussaye, 38. and his wife. Dorothy. 40, both of Garden Grove and Jesus Gan::la, 32, of Pico Rivera. Their name!I are ool contained in the lndlctment...-All three are ~ailing Su- perior Court amignme:nl on the f@Jony coon ts. Investigators sakl the seven defendants were divided into two belting rings with the Delahoussaye couple and Gan:la optrating one "arm" 3nd the remaining four defendants being responsible for the rest of the combine. Thry said many major bct.s were ac· cepted by the Operation with the larger \VRgers being passtd on to I.As Angeles w1duworlU Ug\lrrs. , All seven were booked alter ln- vesUgatioo of their activities by Newport Beach tlld Huntington Beach police, of· lice.rs rrom Santa Ana, Orange, Anahe.l.m. J.""ullerton, Sutna Par~ and Garden Grove and district attorney's Investigators. DEALERS F.OR: HENREDON-DREXEL:....HERIT AGE NEWPO RT BEACH 1727 WHicllff Dr., 642·2050 OPliN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 - MIWPOU 1TOl1 OPIN •llDAY °TlL f INTERIORS Profetslonal Interior ONi9n1r1 Avalltbl....,AID "°" T•ll ""MMt •f Or-.. c • .,,,.,_140.11,J LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Coast Hi9hw1y Phono: 494-6551 • • • j .. -• • • !'01••t•1 , ... _. _______ .,:.:_. __ ~· tt • ---·~-··-~=~-' ' ' ' ,. -· • . . . " .. ' I ~ " ' • ' ' ' ~ ::~;:~~:~;:-:~~;·~~· -:.7~:-'j:f·:'·~·~:·-~~="~tll0='~":1~•rl~f7~1=·=~3~~:::;'v..~,21~\0I'=:!!~ · '.'.Tl,ir~~'ci.y : LECAL Ncmet .. " LEGAL .,..'Ol'ICI: e, · ~• ,. ,. .,. llOTIC'9 OP MAlnNAL 'I IALI • "NOTIC• Te <••OITHI a& ~ ' c • sts ' ilh ... A. Sfflty, , .. lrit,ltl nt<Gfh'd 0 .. SULK TltA"'IP'•tt •I.~~ llr • 0 · A. J.tft!\11 ~,' Iii-. Pl'f, ' • 4'99.: '1ft .. IU U.C.C.) .., l ~~ -~!Crises No·t Solved.: ; • , , S#tmMI" a. ,lf)'I n _ ... , is Qi.,tt, flt JllC11AltD C. ,lll"K OTT Miii DO«lt'tt"' ~ ' ' • ''• 'l'ltt\lt of M .. ..:mk .... t11 'Nolle:• 1rfle,_.., •frllM. IM~··~" ., 1,.,. , , ""'"'y flf °''"","''ltt!\ ~ C111fttfti., M. "'lltEKOTT Trll\lfww .. "0 , ·$400 -I f"""""'t MtttM 111-I-of.__, ' I ' -, " JI y · ' ' Ellu1IMlll 'A "$#111' 11 fHtfNft1 creditor -· -"°'"' ' tH "* Cll't "'l'"" 111 • • • · ' · ,....._.. Hu111tntton -.Kl!. C911111'1' « er..-.~ V4 .tt•1"'' °"'~ f<. h "'Y'., ......... , ... Ill Sl•le., (llllwrtl•. llltt •~II,...,_,., JI I-~. ~ • Mti..i.iow:t"1 tt.MI ... ._,, 11:1 bll ....... JAMAi. +MO- : e :short-terr~ ' Economic Solutions Enough? YI YORK !AP ). -Whl~ Nixon administration ap- to be artfUny OOll4 Ing an innoVJltive 'ex- ent in new cconotnics could pay handsome lea! and economic ends, it still must deal the old problems. the next ye'ar it ls ,not at nlikely that it could be fronted wi th soqie of the very crise• its ~an is aimed t ending over the , longer nn. ' nemploymetit, for one, a-p- rs in the thlrftdng of some economists to be a pn> that will persist al a rate than had been hoped A 5 percent rate is foreseen by many. and some say a plu s-5 rate will exist riJ:hj through 1973. The explanation lies in the rapidly growlng .labo,. supply, ratjler than in a lack of job iD.lQ1ngs. The economy will grow but. so will the labor .pwpply. There. will be more f'ff! but there also will be more job seekers. There is also that eternal problem of the federal budget defilit, a difficulty that ap- .~ars to lie deep in the nature ·ot Tnan and which defies his · -reason and threatens his sani- "1t.' ' ~ While honest, continual and 'st:fefiuous efforts are made at blidget cutting, the budget, "'Wifh the life force of a grow- ing ~redwood tree, just adds inother growth ring. Unable to ;" posfjJone spending for current pi:<>blems, the country borrows > money for the future ·and thus creates a future problem. Prospects for the deficit, as judged by a sampling of forecasters, are in the area of $27 billion for 1972 and even higher for the following ~ar. And while this deficit may be a short-run stimuh.1.s, its con· tinuation would be damaging. The import surcharge is also a short-term measure that might be currently effective but futurely destructive, for it hides a stalemate in the crea· tion of a trustworthy . in- ternational monetary system that would -permit trade ex- pansion. As viewed by respoasible economists, the longer the surcharge remains the greater is the danger that world trade might slip into a recession. But removal of the surcharge depends upon a more realistic relative value of one curreocy to another, and bringing about ' Consuiners' Caution Result of Confusion? .. NEW YORK (UPI) -Ana· llonal consumer o pi n i o n ·survey released Tuesday says Americans are not likely to in- crease the ir spend ing in the near future unless t h e tc0nomy as a whole picks up. Consumer caution may be the tesult o( general confusion and uncertainty over the meaning of the N i x o n Adm inistrations new etOnomic policies, according to ·a survey by the Conference "'BOard. "At this juncture, said board economist F a b i a n Linden, "it would seem that as the economy goes, so goes the coqsumer. Th-e nationa l su rvev of 10,000 faryilies Jaken in September al)(t :OCt&ber showed 7. 7 per- cent' of them planned to buy a car during the next six months. This figure is down fronf 8.5 percent in July- August. The survey said the i• ·. -··-.,,... Wall Street ' .. - decline was mostly in used car purchase plans. Plans to buy new homes declined to 3.2 percent from 3.5 percent in the previous survey, but plans to purchase major appliances rose to 38 percent from 34 percent, the survey said. The anticipated increased ln appliance pUl'chases included color and b I a c k and ~·hite televisions, 'refrigera- tors, washing m a ch I n e .s , clothes dryers and air condi· ti one rs. The survey, conducted by the National Family Opinion, Inc., for the conference board, showed 15.2 percent o( those interviewed felt c u r r e n t business conditions were good. This figure compared with 14.8 percent in the previous period. However in the area of employment, 43 percent of those interviewed fell job! were hard tO get, compared with 42 percent previ<>U!!lly. Chatter. aoy M>bsllntlll -~c.c.~h !,l.a,fa-l tMttfore involves y ternaUonal pcilitlca. 1 Perh1ps m0st en<oUr1&ihc ' ol the foreca1ts ii for klflaUon control. Conswntt prices are widely expected to rise about 3 percent next year, held down in part by PbW 2 policle.s. But u with many of. the other situations with which the admJnislrat.ion i1 dealing, the: short-term solution m u s t develop into a m o re permanent answer to the rather penlstent inclination of buJiness and labor to seek a bigger piece Qf the pie. . Opinions -.are mix.elf on whether t b e in0ation31')' psychology -~ self fulfilling attitude that pr1ces and wages will rise and that .tJterefore , you must plan for them -ls ·"" broken or merely: subdued. ;', While the frefze has ac.,. , ,_ comjili&hed many of its Coa.112 It· also has shown the near)~.;, -1 _ • , ,. • impossible task .qr regy.la_i~,'.'.;£..; Q . ftf-··. . .. -all prices so. loog · as bH1£~,;.'1&:..J:PQ _ y _ ~ , .. , . economic conditions suppty . ' . upward Pre'ssure. This m~el deli'lcin~tr~te~ a pillow deyefOped by. a Some retailers, for example. doctor 1n Tulsa,.,OJil&hiO.inl: Dr. 'Vayman R. Spence liter~lly ignored the freeu, reports lhe PW.Ow ~C,i!'h' ·J'~sorb shock sufficiently and others violi.ted it through• tO allow sitting on ... an tgg"Without breakiqg it ..:.... as simple disguises, such as by the model is doing her_e. ' · · lowering quality. You maY be ' · · ' ac-li'I' di.It Ill ..... 1 ........ -' n..· ..... 1111., INGlllO 00 0 ,•tQNOO.N. (Af.) -E,uropean ~ .... i.-.>.i Mid •-itil'N11en,,1 "'-"" !.i.., -.1Mt1,;:,.., A1; .,,~'~:~•·• • a"A J, .... ..-.. tn11nutiu::turera lnltlll """' ltll•tM ,..,.,, itfft! '"" Mttt.-Sol. Ofolv•. Hwii111111111 a..ui:' c_..,,, .,. ~ d·_.f;;!'.t• , ~· I.._ ... I\ of"'Ulcl lllCl1mt11t'Clt6!tt In fllt'..,........ 111 Dt-1111, Of C•lltorlllli __ .• ,, • .a,.,._•. ' es .. .0,W"> ~' .l v '!. flit (911n•• ol Ol'lllfft S1111 Of Cfllllf11ll1 ti..·,,_,., lo bl j,11111,.,,. .-..,r· ' """ bil th I '.!.:..::."'" dtsc:1-"'6 Wffllowtt • • t ~ .. ...::.1.. • .:.. • ,.~...,mq e I Cl;C) ~urvwn lot" Of Tract 141-r..torl!H 111 ·11\IQll l«•Jed •t 21" ._.._.., a.i11tv1n1. c.tl »1 •• .... 9'11 Th~ l ' vear1 • • £u,..\iuo' \•111 1'11'1 • 11 le'tef <MllUll1-1 Mtil, •<:ooH!f"f'. Clll' ' Q(tl\tt, 11111 of ll"I' M,, ~ ' ..,,\ ,, ' • •,Vrt Ml • ;.,.. -~-. CG.I I CtlllllNll• .• 4 • ' ' • • t/(Jtr '· magaune reported todav, · • -~:'"'9Wfl '••I *1t.oordt, 1.:~· s1to 111..rty r, ot1.cr1btd In ""'''' ., .. • • • • ...I' • '\j'\'.\Ud <t , I 1.6 '.. • ~ •• Alot•• C.lttoriil•· 1, ·~ ' 111 Ml 1toc~ 111 t~. f!llrurt" .. u1,.,...~~• t"I'' • Ont•.i:.W'O(>el 'DU er '11•• 'N'OllCI! 11' Hll!!•f:•Y;01~wi., 1111 •'Id_. Wiii vl"1fltl r11t1urt111 .,..,_, '· • 'ati'ea"" -·~1·ettid.'l .'ri.r.otot~ ,.;!ff,, ~"~•.··1n1, ~ 7l1s 1•d.ct ~-·•·CO,.,,. CAFE -~1111 1ec:11N1 1~ ,r )'.,J; 'f"t' .,,_ ,.,M, l'I MNot·OI COii'"'*"'' *'1W.ll lt1'1 '?1• -~ lklliloV1,,1., C..11 IM•lt' . ~ ., to eiltnslvt ·test11 ·Mid e 'St:: (hv o1 c011, ,..,..,,, C•lllOrn!e. cwnt• (:wnt•,·itt Or•nfl, s1111 ol C1U1v<n11. ·r • ' , ,magazine'·· pr.)rited In \Ji ¢ ., 0r-. 1t1l.:O otAC1ll1-1-. •· w111 .. u 1111T'; .':}:.. "~1~:'1~:-' ~""':..'!!!.'!'· IY 1 • • 11 ,..iNlc _......, It ~ 1111111-.1 .to~[' tor .,,_. • elherlands. : ,., ' I CW! lft i.wtul mCll'll'I' of IM< UllitNI.$ ., ... 1f1t, ti ll:Ot A.M ... PROFESSIOH~ •• l ·~1 • 'Ill 1111· rl9hl tit .. IN llll.,ttl of llld ES(lllOW SEll:VICES, 171tt INIM •IW.f. I' I Anr.thet 'P1'9totype Is '.'well j"'""*'' ..e.., 111.,,.. ....., • ...,,,btd 11111111. '''"'"" at Or•rwo: ''""~·"'·°' . , ,1"'1"' ~liig' ~ . " C1lllw111t.. , . • t\Ast the draw ~ra;stage p1-11y,., .. rnue11 lfl111o1 11l'Mttitf;11,, ... 11_ . ._ .... Tr.,,1 ... __ ,,, •. ,. k r-· • ~llVY" lo Mlf1f'f' Ulo! IJKUtleft.•Wllh ..,. ,,..._, ' at lhe VolQwegen factory ln 1«..-t '""-''.,.. ~... -"°"* ,,.. 1dd•ttMt u.,.,..,. • Wolfsburg, West. Germa'ny, ":.::;., 1:; ·.::~ .• ~·.:~111orn11, .,~""+::\ ~"" "'~ ~,. 1•1 "'"'1 :;, Volvo of Swederi and 'J'oyota of ~·011.LA110 o. w11.ii:ulSON, , .~,~ • .,.,,111, t. 1tn • 1t1 ' f -rWI " • ,,_I !iHIHI, t• .61.. 'l Japan are other manu ac-MUllklptl c.o..irt °'"'"" ceullly' Tr-fw•• • , •• ., • turers' working en t~e· de~i.n. H1rw JU111kit1 10111rkr -1"''111 H.OO• ,,,..,_1¥' • , u1 ~· ,.,..,.S-M. 1.., Tr1111"1r• . «"1 cf such a car.. •o-tr , • ... P11.0111e:u1a.....1. •.1<11ow 11iw1<11 ... «:' -e maga~--• u o t e d M. ~~ "'" . • uni •rvilll ,...._ S111te a ' ~ • I ~u . 41Jrc:. I"!,, -f1't E.•I"'° SI '' ,.,0 .... •1'• , .... , •. 'Anto1'110 Gottardi ol Turin,. an CM!• Mllti'·c;.i,... •• , : , . . Tu>.1111, -C.llffirfl• n• lo ".,f' l..•'· 1,. h' l'lalllllfl'1 Alltrllt~ · 1-.utw NL JlloCl'S ,. .,,, •. , .,au µet:..,..1Ye, a~ say ... ,g . 1.5 'lfllbH.nM 0r.,,.. C0tt1· tl•ltv .,1101, l"iol>UlllH .or-C0t11 D•li'I' •.Hat. -factOrY. would trtm at 1l 9.~ Nf'lomblr u, ·2• • •lld DtcMIMr 3, Now,tntwr "· 1'11 Jllf>?l"il~ mil~ lift !Qr'the'..reVoWUoniry im ·• · · ' '31*11 '~GAL No,"ICE ..... '• car. ~~said P~ .~t~Jd· be,. . , .LEGAL NOTICE ... , :~'·.' abOut $300 with a-se!hng prlce ,, 1•w -, ,, ~.-of around $.tM ' ,, 104' ' l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISI ~ ... , • ... • .,..~ ~r· • • • l'IC'PITlous IUS1Nkss ' ·-Hit.Ma ITM'•MIN1' . ....." ''''°"" .. , 1he thro\l'away car la 'H.t.MI IT.t.TIMEHT Ttio 1011aw1n1 P1~111 .,, · *'"'' "'" sphed4\ed'to be:iatrodUced -at ' :~·.'a!ltrwllif Pll'IOll II d~ ... _b!J1lne•' ~l~~~~~i OlllGlHA.L s'ou•~'0tt·~~· the New York ~ Automobile 11··,.1.·s 1tuo tLEA"llNG, :111 w: ••• PIZZA,.1m Et c .... 11'16 ar .• c..11 "'•" 'ShO'w 'rlext~SptlW--lt -pr0b36ly· s1 .. co1r1 ~ •• ,ct. m11-.-~ Mtu,-et1111orft1& tMMt ·rr, .. ~ . . . . "6• . S11f10.I' G.'' Archulttt~' UJ 211' •SI., Omll', M.rlon Yor-. 1'9( law1 11,._1 .. .,,~ will not hit tHe market until co,ui Mt••i c1. • · · CMt• Mfu, c111tor"11, • .. .,., · 1975 Europa said ' ' ' lhl1 llu1l""1 It btln• tOIMtucll'd tl'r 1n · J'i\trNrll H-n Yori!, Wt•·IGWt~ll,,."'' ' · hidlvldull ' · • • CMll Mfsl, C1!Uor11t1. ,. ,. Disposing af one or the pro-'"\1m11o1 G. Artll~lo:li Tllll ·ltulc ..... 1. Min• Ul'ldl,ld911 • ...... , ed ·11 · t t T111i 11111m1n1 111;11c1 •IV>'""' c\MJ111y hu•bflld 1nc1 wlfl. , .•• · poS C8!S •W\ '00 ·~fe!len ~ Cltrk 01 Or•llft Cwnrw 'on: NOY. 11, lt11 . O, M. Y~lll( ,:•1'"'" pollutldn problem . Goltal'd1 av kv1nr · J. MMldo.l. o.1111tw CM!l< · Tiii• 111•-r ''* with 1111 c-~~·· . ' ccwk.' · ~. · ' • · CH:rk ot °'""' c .... 111, °"' Nev. 10, im !>, • sakl. Puli1hMd' Or111" CD11I D1ltr 'Piiot, b~ Atv"'1 J, M•ddo•, Dol>u!f CWll1t . "Our dealers W\\J have Novtmbt( 111 M. •ltd ' Dftftftber '''lo. cie,... . · •1·.~· certain they rationalized their behavior as being necessary for survival rather thail being · motivated by greed. · h , " , . 1tn " ' • JllJ.n Pub!ithfd Or1n11 C1111 DI Ht lfw.t, • . ' ' ydrauUc . disposal units tci Hll"""bot .,, 1t, ,. lfld Deewnlltf ,_.....,. N'ewPay'' Boa.'.'r'.d.·F.'a· ces·:Compress . the entire 'LllGALNOTICE "" "''·":::: Moreover, there is little in- dication that the century-old battle by labor lo earn itself a bigger' share ih 1h'e rewards ol production has been foresaken. a u t o m o b i I e a into _ neat L'EGAI., NOTICE: ... b~ndlt.s",','he. -~dlltc1::.1'.'Thtse · · ,,ctl;,:u~usi ·., · ,, lits• .: ·;•, P bl W' h. L' b .,v.'1U_ be _pickH up by trucks · 'NAMt:: sTAT"tM~t _ • .. '1cT1T1Dus 1 usuuns 1 ":, ro· ems ;.t . ' a o· r' and rflurned to qur pl~h!S foj-ii~ ~U-""\lff""';rleii,_11 d:l.io 1Mlrw11 Tiil lo~Jr~:.,s::::::"!f111. butl~u·~~:.~ Ii the f'ecovery of metal.' · ·Mea11.'l!H'CW'E al,.A1tlt tHsulfANtE ••: · ' i"" .. The 'fnag;,,;,.inf! reported er. ~t:NCV, ·<Gil ' Birth. SI., SUiia 232, A:ETllO-llAY, 171' °''"'° A~~. ' -. • • N....-~ Jtacllt Ct. t2j60 • Suitt E, Cos•• Mnt, CtUI ·m11 • ,. ', • I By JOHN CUNNIFF are rooted· ht: hitndreds ·-of · perts as •estimating that air f'.'Jtitiff 1>1os1, .~~·~•rt. ..,,WPOrf, ~ O.tsl•r 1. .• .,,...., 211s c1u11 •trwt•·""'' I · tif · · · ' .. po"'·t · ''" " · -'' :b th A••, J02, NtwP<>rt a1ic11, ct. nwo ~ Nf""'Port eetdl. c.ru. ft4'0 Ai: Business ~n• ysl ears .. of Story. o-w an~ g1Yen ou. Y . e m 1 .ourw1i 1i MJ.;• co~ct\d ov •r 'J..._ "· auctriw. 11u1 alfttti~'¥ '"' NEW YORK (AP) _ The It presents them with· issues · engine ·of· the' ~lsp<?sablt· cat 1~11AM1.··· • '•' · ·, ... · ~Ire"', liu111r1191on ••Kl'I· c111t. • • ' ·' . '> 'JI f" I " lh ' f ' ' • · I'. J1mh ;!Ml ' ' ' G1!1ft t., ll ucllliy, 91'1 l(lflwhiJl Dr ,)LI•••· new economic policy Is only that have· been S:ettlea only w1 'ar ess aQ. rom ~n n r, 11.t4nion1","lkl 'W11fi·~ c911~r• Hvr.11""""'B1ac11, c•nt. t:ar.k '·it•· three mo. nths old bu' t 1·1 ·1·911·t after Jon" fights and then only engine· tll.a\ ha~ ·wocked: for; ·(t4rt; ot.0..•1'111~ Clll.llll• ... : He'(~.v. Jt11 . Th• t1i11111111 11 t1t1"' cMCI~ w '!:. · U.S. Cites Worsening Of Balance o 9 ooo' mil• • ' ~· ' lV ' 8tvt1IY J, MM:ldo~, DIPUlY \:jiunlV G1"er1J Ptrlfltrslllp. • • j. '~ too. early lo say that the" going tCmpor<lrily, ".·it' being · 'Un~ • es·,or ·more. • clf!'t. ' · · · · ' -• ·J•,,.11 "· Buckle• • . .,,, ' d bo th ' ,.~bllV.l'd ~rin.e Coall Dinv 'flilOt. '·Thl1 1111emenl !llfd with 1111 C~"·' is getting' touchier ~11 the tirile · ei:stood Py-. lh parties at Nll"tmbtr 1,, .,, 1...i D•C:,mtar .'1, io. c1er11 ot D•1n11· cwn" °": Oclobff 21, • and that the prospect "of qUlck, the .. argument .was to., be ": 1171 . ·' '. '. • • '3iw'.h ~~~1v11~1.,i:.~vwn.,. J. M•dde~. DIHlf., ··~~ clean accomplishments 1 s reopetled ·one or two . years ra~-IQs, s. 'riflle ._;.'GAL NOT! .. CE " PubU.sl!K Orlntt Co••• Dtltr 1'11111,"1" • lat ., • -. '' '&;c; " Oclobtr tt, 1nd . HGYtmbtr J, 1,, •1t,1 fading. er.. , 1,11 1t1J1n The Pay Board especially It isn't siu;prising. therefore, Expect' ne~r;lc:rtn ·softness, ri 1Jt" . "''" appears to be facing problems. to .See the• same • alignments siflce tax-loss. selling lime Is "';I~T~o::1..t~1wHa,:1 LEGAL NOTICE , • WASHlNGTO~ (UPI) The five lalior members have 'and ,3ttftildes· · (!1tisHng . a$ .here., s~ys A l.e·x i c de r t11t 1o1iow1n.1 .Plf1011,lt 001n1 . .,,.1~u HoT1c• o" MAllSM.\t.'S SAJ.• Durl'ng the th'•d quarter of bee al' ed · ·1" 'to ·before ' -•-r members of ·th• Ham·11ton lnst'1tute Man '" ~ · · -Tr•11•C1111lfC"n•11 t r.011 Sfl:•lc1. 1.;,,. .. n lgn tn oppost ion . DlllUO • y 'tHAl\T-=ll FINANCIAi. SER.ytCES. Pltlnllff YI llODetl Jt1 n McOt"lt' ,._ • 19'11 the United States suffered the majority of the IS:. member boai-d ate. • ukel.Y to' . Vol.e . ·stocks are' cheaj> in 'relation .fo ' 1uo ,E. til.l1111r, suit~ 1! ,s111I• M• 1100 J. Mtci111111, •• &o1ibl• J. r.o.:i.1."'' ... its worst balance of payments . board. And wa ge demi:i.nds,' tog~ther. 8'!Si!f'SS', deoounc~ current and· future earnings, '2lt~...i '.J,mi\ c1n11n. 1 1 1 1 1 =--··~ M. Mc:D•nl•t Delfll4in • No. ~1 i' .. and· some agreements·, far ex· profit limitations .but p«r hDwever and can therefore be Lt•11l\ant.'I:>! .• St1111 Al\I t2J'OS -ai v1r1v1 "' '" "11.ecutlon 1Ullltf ;. .... '.' .. deficits in history. I . "' ed f bo ' Thh tiu1frw11 11 btl11t tefldudW ~ 1n Nll"1m111r 10. 1m .., the Mlilll<l..ii ~ ... ceed,guid, eiine. ·s. .·' •• c aims · tue ne ' or wage ught for ijle longer .term .. \rtdtv}ttull. · court, •0r1n" .eoun1, H1111<1i Juc11i:111.: ; The Commer-Ce Oepa.rtrrient b e t ai· ts . Mki,.,1 J. ClllUn. • 0111r1e1, co11111' .,. Dr•no•. u 11• ·11 ~e, The soft coal indu!itry as r s r n · · LEGAL· NOTICE , • l,1111 •'''"""'1 illfd , ..-;1~ .. U. .cou11" c11ttor1111. """" • 1u09~111 enftrect 1~ ·oe ' Issued· the trade figui-es Mon-agrfed to· a·· 39 percent ln· . c11rk • °'"""·c-iv. Of1: <X1 •• 21,.1t 11,. ""°' 111 Tr.ii1Kont1111111•i cmh ~,,,let"'.! " d a Y , confirfri.lng' · Pre'siden• crea•• In ·"-ges and. ben'e"ts.· l ' · 'fi1cr1Tio""U.'Tus1tcEtS ai ~·~t<L' · J,. Mf09•· ~Plltr ·cw at,_ inc, ••' llllflrM111 f.rfift'tai; lflil "'1~t1,:::;-. ) "" Wd II ' • . . . -· . NAM• $TATEMEMT Cit~~ ' . ' ' ~,, J11" McDlnltl, ·~· Bob • J~., -• N. ' h · bo t R 'I · ' h · 'w 40-G · , · ·· ·1 · .~u""lllfd Ol"•nt• c°''' ,01 l'I' l'llOt, Mri>111111, Jlk• flobOle J Mco1,,,..-, 3 IXOn S appre ens10ns a U al, .s1gna1m~fl av.e . 9n a P overnmen. '.l'' ·~iv.:"~.~. 11 dOt~f bu1lnn1 Q.tlll;ltt ~·incl M1Ypmblr S. 11, If, Bt<H'l'f' M. McD•n)•! .11s lloilf"'"l t~>::::r the dollar when he chang~ his ~~rCCJlt , incr.· ease over ... 42, i··, . . . ' ., .. .,.AREHousE v1~•'E . Ad wt i m1 .,., ..... -~· m1.11 ~ i,11e1 •ti.line• °' sw.ot ac1u1iW'· •n .. th b t P Bo d · • • · • · 1 "I , -:!' ' , 1 dut Oii .. kl ludtlmlfll ~ 1M dtlt ., ~ ., economic strate·gy r'n mid-mon s, su _Je~t o ay ar .11 . , .. 11r. strltf; co.,. ~ •• c1111or"11 1 _~111,,1 'NiYPICE . 111111~ .;, ..,1d ,."'"''°"' 1 h•v. ,....,..,.,, • I S I t :B • SI , M1"'11"1· Du1t11ld, N~. ~. l-J"llt 11i., , , r-""'('>&' 'l.~I"' ••. ~-i ll th• """' j/llt ·•nil lni.rt !" .ilt. A t · approva . Jffil ar agreemen s I S>-lOW Nfwl'Or• llf1eh. t~tl!0<1111 1 IU<ltl 1 • 1n tM • ' 1 •' ugus . . . '' .. ' are forthcomm' g. . ' .· . Thll ·buslMU"'f• lllln•' 50llliu<ttd .... '" '' .... uc1 . fTltfl .c1tbror , tropert~ ".\,., ,• llldfvlcNtt! • ·. · "' · '' ' ' · JI-•' ' !hi Co.u\11 Of ,O••rlllf, Sl•ll Ill C1lltor;il1~>,,~ The .report said Uie o(f1cial Are 'hes. e .to be con";dertd \ .• -' , . _ , 'MA1tSHAt1. ~,,1,..... · ••rCTrT1ous ••us1tca:• , " """'"''o •• 1ou-1: • ~ ·,. ,1 ~ .., . '""" , HAMa STAT•MltllT 1.ol 35, Tr.c:I ZS.2, MIP •ook .1 p;i' ' reserve transacUons" balance ·impildent attempts by labor to R f · ··n , · Thk '"11"mtnr '11 ""'1!t' !ht -COii"'~ ™ •fllltaw1111 ._ • .,,.,11 001ns 111111...!n <1, conlmont-,; knawn •• m •o•• 1. ?::-3 e ' rop . Clfrk OI Or1i;>t1 C'Olif!1'( ,CH).._ Hpf. 10, 1fl1. 11:. , -• · , 1 • , COSll Mt'll!, C11Mtor11I•• . ' between July and September flaunt govcrn~ent efforts ,to ' . ·. . . '. I • .. ~r.~,~~·r J, ,ft-t:!li!OK,, "l'lltilf .(~jy • J • s JA-HITDR ·SEA:V1(£, l1'C1 w. NOTICf: "IS HEREBY GIVEN lh•f:,..~ ~~: recorded a record defl,CJ't Of keep wa ge . Increases,,, 0,n ' , PUl!llslled Orinie •,_DI;$' ",Oiltw' l'lle!, Ad1m1, ilnll Atlt, C1lltornl.t ttl71M. 1 Frlt1w,,O.C1mblr'IO, 1171, 11 2:00 I'(~,.,,; WASHINGTON '(UPI). " ! J1mt1 Robt!"! KeHl1r, Hot 'W. P.M. ti lrOlll 111 Courlhllu~•· .M7 Wtit~' I 21 b · ...,.. · 'average, to 5.5 percent a • -Novtmbtr '2. ·"' 7' ' Dtftt!Jbf'r '· Ad1m1. s1n11 An•, c1u1orrfl1 t2JO.I. s1.. Qt•" 01 _ cu11 M••· c ~~··1 I . !Ilion. 111e .blllance · vear? . Interest' r8.tes ·on nine-month,,,. .. • J060.11 Thi• bjl1rn111·lrM1ftf''<'Ollcllk'I-'.., •"II(°'"*· $1111 o1 c111f11r1111. 1 wm k1, : measure th h g d II ,.; tndlvldNI, • • . ' , · · 11 pubrrc 1vct{ .. 10 "'' r.loh11• btoci.r: Ii~; .. :•: . s e c an e tn o ar . The presi.den. t .of the Na-and one.year government bills' LEGAL NOTICE . J1mt1 iwwi,1C1111tor • • c1S111n 11w1111,,.oriei o1111t un11K s11lfliJi ""'' holdings of foreign banks t 1 As ti t JV[ f Thi• 1ta1t1nlflf' fllto:I wn11 'tM· Cout11V 111 '"'' r(obt~ nu, 1111t 11111t111 ,11 11:! .,,. .. · 1ona socia on o anu ac-dropped ~ lhf!if ·iowest level p,uui cierk .ol 0.1,. .. -cwrh..., 0c1o&1er -... h1d1mtt11 dd>tor In lh• 11tow ee.erf ,. During the quarter the ''net turers. W.P . Gullandi!r, think.! . . . ... ,ICTIT IDUS IUSUfllt lt71, .,., Btvlflt J, M~ Cl_,, pr-rtY; or "&o mudl !litrtol 11 ,mtf ... ,. • ' 1 lh H 1 1 .s1nce l11st s!)~illt th.e Treas~;' HMI• 'STATIMl!NT . cwnti c11rk~ >' · -=''""' 10 111111Y 11Jd ••wculltn. w ,', • liquidity" balance w h 1 ch ~y ar~. e orecas s an ' . TIM' to11ow1n1 1>1r1011 11 dof"' 111111nn1 l'\lll!lllllo! D•-C0trt · •Dll"f' "''°'· t«tuld 1~1 .. ,11 ~ c11111. ' ~'/ ,, ' . uprising against" ab u.s i v e Department anpounced· Tues-11: · Oclobtr • 11 •no!' Kovtmbtr i. ·u. 011te1 •t cost• Mew, c1111otW ,., measures nearly all private . . . -. · · -· · .\\ACJCIE & coto1P.-.N'I', aur tffw1al'I ttll ·• ' #47·11 Hov.,,,._ u. 1t11 --' • f .• ,. . -. labor. uruon power, of wh1c~ day.· . . , . ,aivd., Ne .. .,.,., a••t"• c111t.11••· · 011.1..t..•D o. w1L1Cu1soN. ~~·"~-··· and o f1c1al transactMJ~ with industry has been aware for sut J '. 1,. 1 w,,.. R. M.e1<w. 11t r. G••"'!vl....,., · • LEGAL NO'I1CE .M••""-' ''\:~ · f I t' ed , · . . , . In re ts Vl • "" regu ar sr,,,, M1clre, c11Uornl•. , . · • ,\\untcl1111 C911rt Dr•lll' counl'f'' •" ;: ' ore gners, ran an es 1mat more· than a generation." thl · ;, t' . t st t · Thi• 11u11ne1• 11 1111 .... ctnd\llltH i;., '" . ~OT~• I>" '"UJTl!l!'t' IALJ t-l1(bor .Juc1krt1 01111'1<1 :,, ., $9.3 billion in the red. The ! Bllt 'whe]l w.u listen tb ·1:.ibor mon , Y auc !0P• Jn ,er,e t a ~ fndlvkN•r. · ' ·,. · . • "' 111 •. l'C/4'1f ", .• _ e.,. Eu111 M. i ld••· . r.f. .,, , . • "v , , . .27 ••. t ry ·bi!b _ , WM. ll. MACKIE • Ori 0,.~ ?, lf11, it II~ AJA., ().epul1 1 .,,.a .• figures were adi'usted • for leaders yolJ' obtam an entirely on ,,.....ay reasu , Th11 i111"""'nt flll!!I w1111 tlll cauntw co1.0Nf11<t. • :t'/,'l'GAGE' }EA:VICE co M•• H••• • i~ , . . · . , e<i' 9S t ;. Cltrk ol Or1n111 C-iY 1111~ Nw'I 11. lt11 . dii ... • 111-C 1!111 c.,.,_lltl . , , seasonal variations different view. It 1sn t greed· i verag 4:4 • percen , aown a. ·aevtrtt J. MiddOlf. Cttiu!Y cwn'1 o,• CA~ifn; t.," •1 • 1,•,.•-nled FW11"1•"' CtUftn111 · !~. " · · d' t · · • • , · · · ' cltrk ru1tN "'""'J -~ llfl~lllft . of ,.l1hlliff'1 Atltrftl\' • •iv' Offl·c·ial id th 6.,11,. or antagonism or 1Srespec or from last months 5.242 per· Pubu~ Dr•nt1e cot;, 0~1 .. ,.1._1 Trutt df 1e1 _.11 » .. ''"'· ·~'°"" bt f'ublfsl).6 0,1,,.. Cettr 0,1"" ,.1llilt~ .. • s sa e 8'l"':es u· h th t . • . .• ' Alvln A. l..IO•I •lld °""I• ,C •. l.oQ.11, Nov "' It " lld "--··o;1o1 bo ed th · 1· pow~ or _se IS ne!!_s ~ .cent and the lowest since May, Novimbf• 'L n , 1' •nf .~Wllbtr l. hulll•nd •rlll,wJft •Ill rttonl.,:I ,..,.• 1, ..., r ' • _..1m11tr .),;:·•·· l!i w e impact o 11. strong motivates them., as they see 1t. · , ·, .1"' -*1·11 1t10, •• l111tr. Na. '°11, In book n11""'" im iui-.:.'fl 11· ., Drop E11dlng run on the dollar by foieign It ,. . t d po' ·,•·111·ty when the rate. was 4.688 per-LEGAL NCYrlCE "'· ef•o111c11t ll«01'd1 /n *"° lllk• of LEGAL N~IGE .,~1 11 h bee s, ins ea , res ns u 1111 cau111y Recordtr \sl ct-• County, v1 11..,, • 1 ats 1 d 0 1. damahged1. In this speculators in mid-summer. to men and ~omen who .. over cent. , ·,.1u\• . ~~~;r;~;· ~1 'wLrc~:iT" B~~DE~u.BF~~ l!IOTtcE 0,, TllUJTIE'I ,,.L1 :·!·". a es ec ine, t e lrm says, Since that ti me ad-the years, have suffered !1nlln· The bids for 366-day billS ,1cT1T1ous 1uuins1 CASH ce•Y•bli 11 .11'1)1 "'· '''' 111 11•fu1 T. 1. H1. 11-1.. ..'6 •. " ~be.J)ev:S· th~u~~e~a1fr:ch~~j :~li::l:t 0~ 1:!~i:1al ofw:; ministration officials ha, v e cial depriv11tion1 insecu~ity avcr8ged 4.490 percent, down T~• iai1o~;·~.r,::~:~ii bui!rwn ~::i,riJO:.,.!J: ;~~.~ ~~1~'.'\:;,'M~:~ 'Ff~E~~,tt;,~~lr'·M 'J ~·+~ t~;~ ~· P . tu eon the k t d t and health problems And t,;at f ·cA l 'bet 5 279 • , 11: · cau•thoo~, Cl" oe,Stnl• ""'· '1111 o1 ASSOCIATION •• dlJlt -..polnttd Tru•19f~· ... . ,,'cow' the detmera 1 . 0 ',', 1 . 10 noes 1 hnaot duration. confirmed the rapid deteriora· battle ath th',· hav'in" rom ~P em · pe z:CE1f11> .. Primo Tr11h H1ul1,.... 111111 concr••• c1111orn11. •II d.tir. 1ui-•'Id 1n11;,,, undef 11!d 111r1ut11t to o .... ot Try•T 1• n ti th p 'd t • r er n b d th I ·t . A 'I Serv!<f, 1m Mi!CflflC 'NO d,·Tu1lln ginV(ytd lo•llllnowlitl4b,ll.ulld1ruldOtt:tmb@r •l7, 1Mt, fKOnTed OectmMr '" ~ , . • N K • on .was e reason res1 en been won may have suffered an ~ 'owes. Sll}Ce pn . c1111ornli. . , , " · Dtwd 01 T,1111 111 111, P•OPlflV. •l!l.ltttt( rn lJ, 1Ht,.11 1n11. No. 1tff1, in bocill 91,., "' ·usually precedes significant ot tl01Vtng Nixon put his economic con-tb k't . fl t· · when tire rate averaged 4 422 D1v111 Ll'lll• v11111 •nd Jot "•' •h• cuv or,c.o.11,,(l'<t••·•}fl''i11ot·cou111, P&Ve JSJ, si D111c1,1 ft1Kord' rn 1111 olff~;i ., declines The f1'rm says the t Is ·int effect Aug 15 ·, a se ac rom1n a1on. ·• Swann, 1n1 Mlf<.h•ll "41. "· Tut11n,111c1·s11l.,ot•'f'1~.,1: , 01 1h1 Cou111y R1Korll1rot or11191 Cwn1~··· · No one knows the future of ro o -· n· This presents the Pay Board pe cent c1111orn1a LOI,,, T~'u.d, 111 tllt c11v of cos11 s1111 o1 c1111or"11. w11.L. SELL 1r-r.~ • picture seems to be more one wage and price controls, and stead of waiting until later this . . . . r . 1· . . • t · Thi• .bulln111 11 tit1111 colld~H b• •n Mni, c°"nt•, C1J OIJ'ilttt ·~ -"r ,n,, Puauc ,1,ucr10N To H· 1 o'H Es T~l • ~, f di f d with the nearly 1m1)1JSS1b11 1'he reasure accep ed 1rw11111du11. ' rrcorqe<1 r,,_ ·~. •· P•ff r...•• a10DE1t FOR CA1H IP•r1b1111,11m1•tt:i'la• o a near en ng o _a ~p not knowing makes prudent year. k I 1 . . kl . Ill' f h JOE SWANN ·. • . Mlsc:1h•njfoy1 MJ01, Jn.'1'1. 1111\c• flf "JC 111o r~ i.w1u1 montY ot th• u1111111 sr ..... ~ .• _th an an extended declme sti ll men cautious, sai·s Halsey, Nixon s u 1 pended con-tas o reso v1ng qu1c Y a ~enders for $500 m ion o t e This 11,1t,,.ent filed wyh 1~1 Counl'f' c1>11nlv recor~r of Mid "'"11lv'. 111h• North Front ff>"•nc• 10""' °''-"" to follow . Stuart , Co. Meanwhi'le, an rt b'l't f d II · to Id · practically the incredibly 9-month bills end $1.2 billion of c11rt a1 Or•n'" CD1int1 Oii: .N~. 1e, 1tn. Mort common!• k.,....n ••: µ4 14111 countr. Cet1rlhouto 1oc11~ 1t 111t cMD .~ .. -ai: ve a I I y 0 0 acs in go . d' . t . f . thal th l' I B• -&1v1r1, J, ....... .Dwwlt (911n/Y l'!act. C9'11 ,Mfll .. c,u111rn1., °''"'' (Inter Drive WM! (IOl'!Mrlr w • .,..,., .,., . . This move shattered uie nnst 1vergen po1nt.s o view' e -year ssue. c1n cw111i. · · . , strHI! 111 "" i:ll"f' .,. s111•1 Ac)a..,,.'"'d 1mpress1ve volu me of funds is Id . ,r· · PutlHShed O••l\tf. .c011t D•ll• l'llOI. ~•Id 1111. w1b bt · m~ 11111 w.JtfioJI r;•Utarnl• 111, r1e111, 11111 •"" 1111tr1•l>''""' building up for eventual in-Wor War JI international Nov.me.er it. 1t, ''· 1N 01c.mblr 3. ~"•otnl .,,.,.,.,(\nfi, . .x,..... M lmlll\'d'. c"'veyf111 ta •lid now htld.,., 11 undtr wW~ ~ • Th.re J's "0'" room for an vestment. , monetary syste'm Nixon also ; I.."" . . ., >04-11 •t111rc1r,,.. 11111, po,11111 l en l or Dtld.ef """•' 111 ""or-"' •flu•""'*'·•~ •· ., • . 1 0 0 0 'I ll'ICOl'llbt•ncn,. fo 11• tM .rll!Wlnl,.. 111t C-ly 11111 s11t1 ~ 11: •,'l'f'tr •· • upWard movement in the ordered a 10 percent LEG.Ai NOTICE w1ncr111,111111.o1 ~t• tfW".~ 1>1 ult , 1.1111:1 a1 Traci N1: 6'fJ. •t IMWll 111..,• ' · • lf t h f B h · ~. · el ' Ottd of T!;!ilt• Wft: P'!~· •ltfl . t M11 rtclH'dld In lloell :m. ,. ... , ~'IM•· e llpmnrd !llove -marl:et, in tune with rising a c or ear sure arge on 1mpo."" m an -~/ , . ; • " uw1 1911f'1111c0111 NII" 1 1m •• , 111 Mid '""' ·• 1rdullv. e1 111i.r:ilt_,.,,' · th ' fort to stem the drain of · o~-DER ·-.. 1 , , " •tcTITIOIJt '"'11HllSS re1, .,11~.._.tiwpnc•~\\•nr:,u~r 1'lf Ml .. , 1~ ""outcf 'Ot ""coun1y • earnings as e economy gains Look for a bear market rally d 11 " . Bta·~~,'L'r MAM• 1TATEM1MT. ,,,. ... , "'l)lt ~Ji:I r"'t'· i~. w..... carder"°' uld Dn"" 'Cowm>. .l~ '"' Strength over the next six soon and u~" that rally to 11.• o ars. 111 TII ,,TM raull'M"' ~rion 11 ~no butlfWU ~ •• ,..., ... .,, "" f"'it" 11111 of .tllt Tiit '''"' 'lddriu 1n11 Clll'llr ~ •• ~ •• -ill' h B h • Co .,.. The official reserve transac-' ·~ • 'so'•··i , .. , .. , : , ___ ,,,,· 1M11 er•••• tiv Mid Dfld'llf Tni11. dfll111ttklll, 11 111'1'1 of 111t ,~1 1,......,,f • MO S, &ayS Urn am QI • QUidale, says iameS ni~~ & , , . s11"c' ~u .,,Plf Uon..-.nl "!""""" JM<,llenoflcllrY U~ Hid o..d of dfforliMd iboW l11111!'plr!W tit bf• • ..,,,...,, 1-fo~ever, b 0 is t er 0 us en-uui= t1ons balance was $2.3 b1lhon t'· ,, ·. ,. .U11ee o.1w, Tu11111• c.i11~ Tru11, •w r111tn ot.1 brtt<h °' dtt•ulf In Fllrldt c1rt1t. c1111t MH1. c1111oml1.• ... ~·· .th' :. ... •asm i's hard to lore·-, Co. Long-term in v~e st o...r.a grtlltief in the third quarter. YOURS . . -i;;A'8·ElS ~";,,,Mi~°"~ Popo, ~~,, "~"'' Drlv!· "" • Mil••~-· 11«urtc1 'th '!.t •>•... TIM ur1111ul1fltf Tru.iee OIK1tlm1 '""'' •• wi1 .....,. should _-., 11 bl.J•"ng ~ . . . ·\ -"<>!.fu • · -l'llr:•ltll0tt '1',1Kli1td .,.._ •n"~ ~ t111. 11111111" ,.,. 1111 1-r1Cfn11:1 o1 lilt "..,_._ ... , th f. A hat .,.,., • ..,... .. e-a 3• than the $9 8 billion def1c1t for 1~1 1h•111 11 w"' OOl'llklcrNI "" '" ....,,,,,11..., , ~ D«\•cal'* "' .ocirHS 1nc1 o""' ,_ ~i!M.J• e irm. says. . somew since there will not be enough II f 1970 The. --~ rt · -• r lfldJ~igwii. Dtf1111t •hll Dll'l)lild iw S1.1h p.W·Wf1tttn •"' ~ 111 ... 111. • 1' • • conservatively oriented en-a 0 · :!C\AllN qua er v "· 111111on1 "-Niii(• .. 11r11K11 .,.-o1 flOCUOn to (i"'5• s~tt .. 11 wm "' "' .... but wltllldl • -' . time for worthwhile upside ap-flJl!re '!J'as $5 7 billion while -0 A · } Tiil• 111t"11en1 n11!11 wOh 1111 c1111111y 1111 11•11o11111 Jo '-"'••Id llH'..,..1y 10 co¥111,,,1 or w11,.,,1~ ••lff'~• °" ~.1 • viropm.ent.-bes~ su1tr:d _tn_~Tat!OO" thftlntl addsJC. ---.,;e-fin:[quarte. ,_ to'•I .,.·.,.15 5 _· ·J . D y .,... i,*••to; "' 0r1 •-, cou_"'f_ .~...2,!:. V,,:~~11,. Mll•tl' MWI .-int1iltfi:i\ 1n11.tt1trt111.,.~~¥1 '"f••lnt 11111, , ~ 1 ••,•I•" , ..... ,_ Io h g -term investment ap-' · -'-ci1••v.r v • N.14d«-v"ir " -. "'"'v ""1n1, fllt ~rtlll!H ri:-.-11114, ....:wmttr111C...,_to -1111 nma1;:< h · t l'k 1 • S'I I I billion. . 1 -, ia.,..... 0, _. ,,,., '••• ""' IOllll:I , II \r••c.h """~ ,i..c: loll ,to bl f!'lnc1111 ,...,. of 111t "°"' 1ecllflcl ~ r' P,roac IS mos I e y. I.I nau at ng The t II 'd't b I -P6ti ...,_ " ....... ,.., •• ... • fij:O(dM 111 llooll. f1U. -»111"' Mid Oltcl of Trurr. 1 ...... 11 m.75.n. ,. .. ne QUI I y a ance Octoblr 2' Ind NOV;,tmbtr $, lf, lf; Dllltl.91 llottrll&. -. . tnltr••IL ""'""' II ,,f'llcltd .... .., 1•" •. S•rtall 111 "es tor Most corporations a r e worsened by '5.7 billion in the ' • • )•71 • ·" · • m:t·71 · o.Ni Qclilblf' "· 1111 ' • note,, ..i¥t11Ct•1 11 111,, _11,.., "" "'""' ~ '·· I '"-' ---"" 04 biJ'l--I .._+;.m.,l.r,, • C' 0 I.. 0 N I ~ \., M 0 I(. T QA <; IE of 'llld Dffll of Tru1t, fift, tlllr"' ... emerging from the recwlon IC\..vuu quarter and .,..5 lwu .. LEGAL" nv" l'-'r.t · s~11v1cE.' co. or u.1.1,011-fji;. , ......... ., "" Ttb11 .. •'Id "'111t ~it ., .. The sma ll Investor is not on- ly worried and confused by the state of the economy. he's al~ Jost failh In the stoc~. market itself, ob~rerves Filor Bullard & Smyth. \\1e11-publicized pro- blems of a number o f brokerage firms , the market's vola\ility and sharp 1969-70 declile, ils "instllutionaliza,. tion .' .. a feeling (hat the market ls being structured to fav<r the large customer, and the 4rastic overhauling ol ttie ~l'J1ies industry now being di~ed in Wall Street and Wasl;itington h•ve all contrib- lllejl to discouraging him. I, 1~1ue Lac1'l11g? •:b~ reason the marktt's re- ~). l• decline has been 50 l\if~re Iii that a ,urflcltnt bsse \\'llS;n<>t built In August to 1up- ~: !Jl@ rally which followed the .. 'pj-tsldent's econ om I c ~~. si-.ys E. F. 11utliln. The fftfJ~jcal state of th• market ,. substantially more efficient' in tht first quarter. • ' Ptrsona. l"tzed e S l'sh e • "ffl" t • ••. ¥ici ·T,,11)ft. -" ' , t•••ttd tw wtd o• or Tni1l. .• '"1~· • ty I · · 5 Cleft · .._,"'* i tt..JC•I~~ fJ1t"1.,_., ,, Tl\' ~t1rr lfllder ••lot °"" f/I' >f1• than they enteted, have built • , ~ , ·.. ,, ·,. • , ,1cT1T1ous 1uuMf11 All,lhorlrtd 11ar1t111.1• '"''' 11er11ir1or1 •~ecvtl'd 11111 •11v.r.i.J" • h t hort •1• , · j , NAM•STATEMIMT '• • ,~S Mflf . 11,M V11Citr11tn.;t 1 wrltlt11 Dec!ttiffitRi•tt• up cas resources, cu s • • 1'ht 1011oW11,.., ..,...., t•·fll11S '1t1111nen 1pu111111\fd Or1nse <:O.tt 01111· Puet o1 Citf1111t itnd ot1111nc1 for si11; ........ ·1· term debt and checked costs, 2 A M Order for ,Yourself or 1 •Friend-••: · · · .,. • · · NaYt'!!!lllr J. 11, n, 1,11 ,,_.,j Wtltltn "°'''' "' orr1utt' •nd E•tet1111 •!I' •' f , VCO • en , · ,. ' SAODt.E•;t.CK •U-t l.DI HG ' $ell,T~'l/Mtrll1nHctuMdMldNOl!tofOI .. "' Spear and Sta f says. This ef. " MAINt£H,.N CE. 1111t POl'Mler"t iu)it I· 'LEGAL NO'ii(ig '. ot 0.111111 1M ll!:lldloft 11 11n It 11t " • ficiency, Ctlupled with pro-· Mitt bt used on Bnveto·pef'1s 'tw'turn addres1 "C", ••1111 A1M .. C1nf\~-• ·' ' · • .. · r11Cor'dod In fllll• c.....,., """' "" ,....._.. .... ~ P d , 'I I t. • .WefldtH W, W•IMn• t'Ult <VI• ,Sen -· 1r11Pft!Y fl ltttlH. , 1.).,\J~ • spective control over profit· romote ,.Q ••• A $0 very handy .,., identifi~1f1on O•brltr .. l.IOlllM 111111, hllf. 9'1$), • • • • o.to: ~ s: ''" ... , ••• robbl·ng wage boosts, sho\Jld I b 1 f ,. . 1 't 1• L, . •. Tt.11 'llll•t-1, "'"' <ll'lcll.IC'I• .,., 111 ,HoT1c .. o,. INTs11oe:o 1•AH1,1• Froe•AL NATIONAL , ,... •• •• s or mtrll1n9 penon• I ems. s.,cn ., ll'dlv~. .... ~· •J' • -' AHD k.,..,.ACI( ' • MOllTGll<GI! ASSOCIA.'TION .. ~.... • stimulate earnings and revive books, recotds, thotos, •fc, Lebils stict on w..,.1vw, .wu'°" • • ·Halle• 11 Mr'HIT •!v111 ~1 "''"'tt H. ''Mid Tru•'"1 ' .~ .. ,. I I A F•--··I I s.-~--f t1111 .• ,.~ r;1911 w11t1 .-.. c-" ,a,11111, o.o.s., Tf11111-. ii t11 °""" 1, ace 191., ~~ nterest n stocks, the com-vco u••u•• a r•n."A ·o gi~ss and m•y e ~sad for mirlting' hom• c11;k ., er~ Cllll!ll'f"en: oc1. "· 1m. ~Cll'f' o1 N~rt' lktcf'I, c'Utorl'll•. ar•, ;.4 • • p11ny adds. Newport Beach ha1 annou'nctd conned fo•d 1't1mr, •11 libels ••• p~1nted a, .. ...,,,. J, MMOUi °"""" <111"" '' ,. 1111• nl'.I•"' ""'6MI ..,._"" l'Wl{aNll g,,_ coett ,-oa11y ""'" : . ,... ... n Cltftt. • • • •• , · , ••: 1.1 1t·c..,..,.tloft. • C•"'· nr• .. ,...,.,,..... ,,, "· ,., 1n1 • ~-""~ two promotions in its ·Jl!ewport wf1h stylish Vo'i/ue typ• 011 -f.ine quelity whit.. lf~lt!IM or.,,.. t:M.t OOltf l'llOI. tat Trllflltmt. • tt01 wt11111.. _ n • R•Jlll Be1cb office. gumm•d piper. . . OCllW. ,,._"' .,._,...,.. L "' "· ~~llV•rL C'ry · .~ .. ..," "•-~ LEGAL NOTICE ,,~ ·~ '-: lt11 • ' •' ' O Jnt.11 i-llt'ortillt · llld ..... M OM.,..... ... ' O"••. the -·r tenn "· Leighton G Armatro•• hos ,_f.Wtt,1.11_..c1r1·or 11 11n .. 1------------< ....... '""' Wl'll • ... • • LEGAL "·Cn'IGE 1111 ..... "' 1...e-tl fro Nlf '""" N. ' , 11H1 •!JI market ts going to make been promoted to 1rea ptr'IOOi , ., . • llfT"''· 0.0.1 .. • ,, ..... ...,, fht 11111 ,1cr1t1ous •us1M111 .,. th • ntl and tr·'n!ng ·•m1'n1'atr1'·r r --------------1 llf-1 tr-11'. , . ..,..,,, WJO'.lplllll , NAMI STATt:MliNY'-._ ano et senous attempt to -.t ..., w _' ''* . o1 Miid! 11 11 '°'""" '-""': otrtt11 .,... fltllWIM f:O"ltfll '"' _,.:;"' -~. launcli 1 ""'Werful ran .. , the for the Weftem area. • ' '111 111 t•1• t6Ulilfl, •·11• •114 111111 wllll ti.u ,.. ,1ct1rio111 tu11'1.lJt 1111i..-i, .nta -'"""""' ~· l!U"""' 111 _ ,., • ~ .., H ·• -~• I I •11t1 l'rtt.llllt L•M• 01,., •.o. ••• u.. . 1-, MMll ~TAftM1Mt lllCli !lalllr•• 1nc1 IKlld " Ml °""' TH• Gtll•lt: COMPANY, """M. Oines Letter says. Trader• e.vquartii::rai n Newport I C11~• ""~' c11lf. l'H2' 1 ~ no. (tlj!o«l"' ..,..,. 1> c111111 tiuti,...-. or1". c11y " .......,_, ••.e., c1n1orrt11. • • ..,. .. m Ol'o-# or., .,._, --., .hould S••p In now to ..... Beach .._ 'pre·~u1ly u~ed ••t · 111c1 .1~11. 1011:1 1111 a/If ,i .. lftldl c •. nMt. · 1-r• "' .. -• i..r; v•v -.,. ·. I 0(11tl!t. "dvt:•t1slNO, nn D\IHnt 1,1,.Ud"" i. 11 M <-llffll"'" .,. fllt wm, I. O•rr!•, m °""" ar .. ,, _.. cumulate those ls.1;ues that as re1\onA1 supervilor for the 1 Df)~,. N..-i a1Kf'I, c,111. "~ »~ ,..,.. o1 N~. itn • .i 11 ,,/If,,•• H..-1• htCll. c1. •·-.. held up best.dur\n a the recent western area. . • ~ ·1 • MJc111111 c11..i11 Hln11~,1t2i"'Wlf1N•,.""' tHteo • 1.•1-1•.(;orPOUllCN1" ,, w--Gtr•I• '-'*~'' m °""'°'I'-...' • 11 ·"' I I l.lnt, N~ &t«r.. <1.1n1. • tlO\ w111111,.. IOll!tt••ll. en. o1.1...,.1t• N.,.._. ltffll.,C., • .'\•.v _,, decline, it suggests. Internal Also In the Newport .Center I 11111 111111,...,, 11 Ml"' co111111e1H 111 in Hu", c-11:r,1111. • · TM• ....-.t,... 11 1111111 c011111Ktof 1w .,., ttthilical deterlorati'on •nd the offices will be Gent To Rolr.n, 1 I llldMoN.i. ~ o.1Pc1th1 121t1 11•--"--HD'fll"lber. u11. ll!dlw1tu~•, .,__, I Mlcllllf C. Hlr~ • 1.u-111• cor-•'""· • wm, S. O•rtrt topping out of a good many promoted to m a n a 1 I n g I I Thlt tt•tvntnt t111'd ... 1111 "'' ceuntr , c1N1, cor.. Thh •l•t•fl'tt"' tUfd w1111 111e ·Ctuft,. ,, I d I th f I f th N t I C11111 ol D••nt• Ct11n•v 1111 Nov. 11, nn. •• lllcF!ttot G•to111>1r1 c .. ra, of Or•-Ce.inti t1111 Oct, 11, 1•11.,'" ssucs ur ng c past ew suptrv sor o • e ewpor PILOT PRINTING I 11• 111v,.r1i J, M~o-c1e., 0..111.itt cou"'' La,.11ciu1,. co•l"011AT10N •• B•••'"' J. M•ddox. 0ttui. CIUtlf'l..-1 weeks, however, might htvt Bt.acb Thrift office from h1I L .J c .. ,.,, ••• w11111n ••v1.. c1ork. ,.. ... J'-p••di···• long•r tenn ~ minagerahlp oft"· •·nti Ana -------------.--~------l'\lb!!\htd Dr•ntt Co111 0111, ,.11o1. ·~HI"'' c1ut "''' l'u1P1lt11tc1 Or•rw~ CNH o.ia. Pl..,..,. .. v ... 4.t:U r·-UI: Diii .... ~ "· K, ...... Dtctll'ltltt' ). '" ,.ublllhltl °'::!" CU.It 01ri. "I"''· Ott.,.., "' .... NO"""bot ... 12, ..... , ptcllj ij addt. branch. ..-----------------· __ ...,.........,.. 1•11 .,,,"Nov.,,,..,,,,.,, J11w1 1111 ~.::.. _......,....., __ ..._.,_......, ....... ~ ... ___.-~ I • . . . 1J DAILY PILDT SC • , " y...,. Mon~y Campaig11ing Cost Curb Aid to You? Bud Bowen ••• Ow -.._ ....._,., -,.,. ,... i. .. --... ,.. ... --1 .. ...... -, ... l Melfl_ l_ ·-· 0... ............... --rt:n: IOCXICf • <.it W '"°" *' ..• 540-5630 Oranic Countt'1 "Fotrtily oJ Tille c.,,• ohnson&son l:it==1 2626 MADDI ILYD,. COSTA MlSA ,-540-5630 f'· r • Hand carved birch.. darkened with just a touch of stai n and then Jo<:e<I with 14K gold "thread" IO 1 solid gold back. makes a disting!Jisbcd aod unusual set o[ cufflinks. ~-Ava11ablc only from B. D. Howes and Son - where quality ;terns ranp from ten doll an to the 01oat extraordinary custom made jewelry in the wodd. (M .. _.,. -..i-IUJO pollJUI.) ~1?.~tt!2~~~2.~9.~ ... ~ H(W,gflf lrACH1 )ti) Vie ll\le LOS ANQG.l8• ~!GO W1ltll(•t 80\l/•v .. 11 l"•SAOLJ.iA SJ1 S0111t1 ....... AYffllN & ~ll~l•J'IOtOft-$~..-t!o~ ~llttl S'-NTA IAMAAA 1•21 S1•t• Sllt tT f COlOWA.Tl~ S ~•I tlt<t"odtf• ' ' . ' ' . -' . ' ..... . ... • OVER THE COUN1,ER Complet~New York Stock list •....-11rH1 ................. II ........... 'A.M. ..... fllMa. ., ..... ---...ia11 ., _,._ ... ,..... Ir ...-11 .. NASO Ll1tl1191 lw Thuriday, NGvamloor 11, lt71 , "I I I I ' - • • • Frid17, NO'itmbtr 1•. nn SC DAILY •II.OT Jf •. Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List Stllt Ml (ML) Hl ... ,lw Ci.M C!lt. .... ... IMI,) HIW Ltw C .... Cllt. S11N -.t IMlt.) Hllll L.tw CltM C"'. ..... ... !Mil.I Hltll Uw Cit .. Cltt. S..ltl Ml lllf1.I Hllll lw Clue (JI .. 6424321 For W~ekeilder I Advertising -- I' • f l • ' i I • . • • • • ' ' • . ---' • -• • • • • . • 1 ' ' i .... ' .. . . . ... • • •• •1\ ~.Q\)'\\\ c_\0-r,t· . TOTAL ' MOltNLY . : pn7AI II t11o·-1 cft). prko i.I. tu 1 ·1-. $UJ6 Is tk ~ .. , · ~ ,,,.r..,,tn l.c,I. tea, lic.u & ell curyl .. c•11•• H ow.,. -1.t,_1...icniltlorooly.36_ .. ~0IDllllOW ' . ·ANMUAlHICINT~lllATIJS 1~ . ORD£R$ MOW ONLY fR £E '68 Bonneville Beac h City SE HABLA , '69 FIREBIRD OILUXI 400 MODlL uiel1ent coMilion. (XV.9DS) 7 DAY TRI AL EXCHANGE ON All ADVE RTISED USED CARS '68 IMPALA '68 YW '71 DODGE DEMON 113 IUfi $788 $1688 · OPEN DAILY 'Tll 10 PM INCLUDING SUNDAY . ' . . .. .. . .. . . . . o~ • . . 1Jlftz ~R~a . '/is_1 • AS MUCH AS . . .. OFF ~CTOIY.WINOOW PRICE _ ON YOUR NEW CAR PURCHASE ................... $ ....... ~--~--...... .. ... ___ ..... "-...... 100.,, ....... ...... ...... -. .... _ ........... Tlillll•• ._osldar.0'8DIV) NEW 72 MONACO WAGON. Sw. # OP46T2Dl43U21. SELECT FROM All THE ·FA MOUS BR ANDS .... . '67 .Chevrolet .MAllM 2 °"'·won_,, 'Y-f.·~r fNnf llU!.siel\ ,...., Sf • IC ClZUMJ •tn11g. GALAXIE 500 ~!,."~tic Tr1nsmb1ion 8rak r ;•••l r.g, Pow.;. CHINOOK. , . TRAVa 11on1.: 170f7.,i.0,All' Conc11- MUSTANI low Milts, KOM1111icol ' • (N89811) ... , 0UEEH ... PRIOE & JOY.. $888 $1988 .GYPSY. • .STAR TREK. • $588 .HOl!DlY •• .SUNDIAL . /'liir.h;;;;n;t;~==~i-.;~!:!.. ;.ENTERPRISE PACE-ARROW .. .&MANYMORE '69 Chevelle '69 OLDSMOBILE NEW 1912 PACE-ARROW MOTORHOME ··-· M••.·~~.'e!e: _ '68 CHEVY CUTLASS SU,RE .. E c•b• ""'~ ~o-S!Mririp. f«....., Air 2 DOO• .., . """"RO Cond1tiorlil!t.5Uf>ERIUYI,.,..;;~~... HARDTOP RO'din,Hta!•r r~1 .___, .,...,..,.,, This be.luty ~s V-t 1 MlASl6) •• · r ... •Klc.r •utome111: Tr•l'lsmlukln ~t, ~:§..;;g§;;~$7388 rofr4. '-'"' M1I ..... -....,.._ ..,_ ... Ito•• IMlnk<, .i • ..,, 6 & _, •"'" llu•lt•: tKJ11GIU17Ul , - IMMlDIATI DWYEIT ' NEW '72 B· 100 DODGE'VAN Mrf!El.•tDf" ........ 111_ -... ......, ..... _ .... lull ..... ... )II~-----· ..... ........... 0.....,........,. $2888 $1488 '700006£ . COI ONrr '°"'· y.,,, • .,.s,~.., -_,__,..,..... ~-~ .... ~ (21f707) ilcWrw •o.a. • r.c Sre ... 1119, Power Brik;:; Vlnr"noot.":~,f~/tlon!nt. 51688 $988 '68 FORD ......... ... '69 VALIANT -2 DOOR HARDTOP-20..,.S.U. V-t, Autom.rfc Trinunru;.,,, ~ ~ ...... ...._ F'Ow9r" S I • • r I n 11 Pow-er ..,....,.... ...,_ _, --1 8r1kRS, FKtorf Al~ Condi-(ZWS • ...,.., ~ -·--$989 $888 ~. I I p • I ' . s DAILY PILl'I f • • • Reclaimed Water lo Fill Recrea:tional Lake The last official approval came in this wtek for the Hrst use of reclaimed waler in a major county recreational project - Niguel Lake in Laguna Niguel wblch will form the nucleus of a large regional park. The Moulton-Niguel Water District won approval ol quality1 standards for the 5ewqe-effluent during tbis wetk's session of the San Diego Area Regional Waler Quality Cootrol Board. Moulton.Niguel manager Carl' Kymla said the pumps will begin whirring on Dee. l, filling the lake with water Women Eyed For Secret Service Duty ' WASlflNGTON (AP) -For the first time in its 106-year history, the· Secret Service is considering women for its chief investigative job: special agent. Seven women are under co nsideration to join the 1,111 men whose duties include protecting the President, the Vice Presi- dent and their immedlbte families, and guarding the nation's currency ag<l.iruit counterfeiters. "This has all stemmed from the President's policy directive to get more women in responsible government posi· tions," said Eugene T. Rossi des, assis-- tant secretary of the Treasury Depart· ment , which has purview over the Secret Service. The seven women are uncier 30 and col· Jege graduates. Whether they are ac· cepted will be announced within several weeks, an official said. Under consideration are Laurie Beth Anderson. 23, of \Vatchung. N.J.; Kathyrn I. Clark, 23, of Colorado: Phyllis F. Shantz, 24, of Rome, N.Y.; wd Denise M. Ferrenz, 22, of the Washington area; Sue Ann Baker, an Ohio University graduate; Holly A. HU!shmidl, a 1966 University of Wisconsin graduate; and Judith T. Michelsen, a 1967 Brigham Young University graduate. No fur ther information was provided on lhe latter three. These women, referred to in Secret Service brochures as "our girls," receiv· ed public attention a year ago when they became the fir st of their sex appointed to the Executive Protective Service. The EPA, the White Hriuse uniformed police force supervised ~y the Secret Service, protects the White House, the president and members of his immediate family when they are in residence, a.i wen as 117 foreign diplomatic missions in Washington. "In their prolec.tive role." explained John W. Warner Jr., 38, public-affair' assistant to the Secret Service directcr, ••special agents are involved in protecting persons. The EPA protef;tS property, buildings, premises." * * * Wom~n in Staff Positions Urged B y Writer Hano "Women's lib" 'found an unexpected champion in Laguna 's city council chambers this week when writer Arnold Hano stepped forward to ask \\1hy t~e council consistently overlooked women 1n making appointments to city positions .. "In eight appointments to the planning commission and three to the OOard of zoning adjustment, along \vith several ci· Ly staff positions. a total of 17 ap- pointments," said Hano. "you named on· tv men. Why ? 1£ Police Chief Kelly ca n (ind v»omen in the community to ·serve on his police screening boards, it seems to me you could have found at least one to &erve in one of these bodies by now.'' Mayor Richard Goldberg said ~e cer· tainly wouldn't want anyone to think he would be opposed to the idea. Councilman Roy Holm said he had recommended four different women for planning commission appointments but all were turned down. Holm said later the only councilman to back any of his lady nominees was Charlton Boyd. ''I would remind you," concluded Hano. "that one of the finest councilmen._-or 1hould I say councilwomen -we ever had-"'. .... Mri. (Helen) Keeley." Mo st Shoppers Not Concerned B y Shoplifters? SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -or ~ >ersons who observed a shoplifter in ac- :lon, 35 reported the thefl, results of an ~lght-monlh survey by a University of :Jtah professor showtd. Psychology Prof. Don Hartman con- lucted I.he study wilh a grant from the J.S. OepartmMt ol Justice. Using hidden cameras and students Jressed as hippies, housewives and tustnssmen, Hartman obserVed 400 stag· td cases of shoplifting in several S&Jt i..ake City stores. People who observed the shoplifting ~ere interviewed as tMy left the store. Hartman's study found -ant out of ~very 12 persons reporttd the theft : -Men rtporf theft& more frequcnUy hlln women ; ~ · -Middle-aged persqis report more fre- quently lhan young or older people. reclaJmed from his dlstrlct's plant nearby. Plans for the filling of the lake . were completed earlier this month with lhe county Department of Jfarbors, Beaches and Parks. Kymla stressed that efOuent in the lake will be safe for non-contact recreational sports and that the county plans begin· ning developa1ent of the park in the next !lsc~l year. Starting next June much cf the reclaimed water will be used for it· .._ __ rigaUon of the llnb of the El Nlpel Golf Course. Bids recently were receJved for con· strudion or a lifting basin and pipes leading from the lake to the links. The project, which will cost about $130,000, will be rtady in time for the June Ir- rigation schedule. Kymla saJ~ the district will reeoup Ill• costs for the' improvements ·through the tsUmated $11,000 aMual revenue from sale of the irrigation water. "The significant aspect of the entire project," he said today, "is that it marks the f~st time the county has recosnU«f and approved the use or recl&lmed 1'1ter for recreation." Ht added that because the trtatmant plant currently processes S00,000 gallons of w1ste a day and its capaclty ii five million gallons, ''then; I.I lots of room for more production of usable water in )'tart to come." ' Moult01>NICIJel aftacly Mila reclaimed water for Jr!lptlon IA the MilolOa Viejo area. Tilt water quality board IQ>pmtd the standards for the effiuent •fter htlrin& .. , TOM PAYNE, 3, AND BROTHER MIKE, 6, ABOVE, RUN THROUGH WOODS OF LAKE FOREST B•low Shirley Wright, 22, Displays S'hapefy Limbs N•ar Meadowlark Airport Imported F orests Stand Eucaly ptus Tre es Top Tough for Railroad Ties By LEE PAYNE Of tll• D•flY Pl11t Sl11f 'riw:ueallYJu..!9x~Eow (And one in Huntington Beach too) Forests are not native to the Orange Coast. Yet we have two of them thanks to the railroad and an idea that almost worked. It was back at the tum or the century when the railroads were beginning to 4ke an interest in Orange County. A new rall line requires thousands of wooden tics. Bu t slnce few suilable trees grow in this arlea, tons of wood would have to be freigh ted in at considerable expense. Why not plant forests along the proposed route? When the line was ready to be built, the trees could be harvested and ties cut right on the spot And there just happened to be a lrec, newly-imported from Australia, that had already been proved uniquely suillble to the purpose. Jt thrived in seml·arld Southern C.!Uomi& and, best of aU, It gtt\f amazingly fast -up to 30 feet In rour years. The t?ucalyptus. favorite food of koala bears, v.·as about to go into the railroad business. rn 1904 the Santn Fe pll'lnted thousands of eucalyptus seedlings on the rolling hills or what Is new ,L.nke Forest. They also planted a few acres of lrccs near the coast in Huntington Beae.h. The trees thri ved. They grew straight, tall and fast. There was only one little So Orange County·s two Imported --problem. You couldn't drive-a spike.into --lorests remain. They are, in (act, in bet· a eucalyptus Ue. When the wood dried it ter shape than the railroads that planted was fla rd8Slron iffi:l1rbefinhCSJ>1Xr.I hl'.!nr.-=A leasr--t he-Governmen hn:n was useless. had to take over the trees yet. San Clemente Preparing To Ser.vc, 2,000 GI Meals Volunteers at San Clemente's tnterlaith Servicemen's Center, which each year schedules Thanksgiving dinners for military men in private homes, said they expect about 2,000 strvlcemen to dine with civilians during 0 p e r a t I o n Thanksgiving. For the sixth year, the center, 154 AvenJda Vjctorla in San Clemente, will 1 aminge f<Yr the mtn to .vrive by bus •t 8 and 10 a.m. at San Clemente llJgh School, 700 Avenlda Pico {off the San Dlt!go Freeway). Pickup time is from a a.m. until noon. Departure for Camp Pendleton is 10 p.m. ~from Lhe hlgb scho()J or center; FamWes wishing to ihare Thanksgiving dinner with two or ,more servicemen may call 49CJ.2128 rrom Laguna Beach or the Newport Beach area for reservations : 492· 1814 from San Clemente: or 636-0900 fro1n nor lh Orange Counly oi; Las Angeles Ct'lunty. SPonsora can obta in name tags upon arrival at Uie school and may look for home state placards to find Marines Crom specific areas. A traditional Thanksgiving dinner wlll 11so be served to uveral hundred servicemen by volunteer works at the center where donaUona of both cash and food are ntedtd. Donors may send funds to Post Office boii: 284, San Clemente 92672. They ma.y airange for collection or rood by calling 492-1811. 1rD ropttltlllaUva ol the State l!ealtll Dopvtment. '!be otete aldts said Illa! the --would be enUrely safe ..S lMg 11 i1rp numbers of persons did not actually swim ·~ ln the body of water. Tbe board's ap-. provaJ came with stronc prallt of the reclamation plan as an alternaUve to dumping of waste water tbroqb ocean ouUalls. Kyrnla 1aid this week that btcaUJe the arta now is inaccesslble no cevtre pro- blems could be forueen. of youngst.en or others vialting the lake and creatina hultll or aafely problems. COunty offidall estimated that they will &ave about ftl,OllO by ogr<elng to the effluent plan. That aum "Would be the • amount required to buy potable water tct ! fill Ille ba!ln. Ultimately, the county will pay ~.11111 a year to the water di.strict as paymeot for Illini over tba Niguel Lake acreqo !or Iba rqtonal part project. Tl1e total ·' price was '320,000. · The district trlll!ftn<d its ownership of the faclllty to the county earlier tbll year. Oark Ask Another Look At· State Grant for UCI Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim, Y.'ho opposed 'I\teSday the acceptance of a $1 million state grant for improvements at the Orange County l\1edlca1 Center, said today that he wlll urge that the board attempt to renegotiate the pro- posed agreement. Clark had called the proposal "a Tro- jan horse.. saying he feared that local taxpayers would eventually be stuck with high costs generated by the agreement. After further study. the fourth district supervisor said he hoped that terms could be negotiated w.hich \vould make the ac- ceptance of the $1 million from the state through the ucr ~IedicaJ School. ac- ceptable to the supervisors and universi· ty. ··My conce rn in working out this rom· plex problem," Clark stated "Is that we do not involve ourselves in state pro- grams or new county efforts winch help everyone ex~pt the already slaggering property taxpayer." He said he will propose the ap- pointment of a negotiating team to meet \\'Ith university officials on the project. The $1 million medical grant was turn· ~ down :J..2 by the supervisors, because:, according to Clark. the present forn1 of the offer is "a Trojan horse.'' "Why should we be committed to spen· ding $1.8 million on a computer system which ha:t not been studied," he ques· tjoned. · The proposed grant was earmarked to provide a better outpatient clinic at . the medical center, plus a computerized medical information system, an im· proved respiratory intensive care unit and a remodeled-buUding lo house medical school faculty members. Clark said be was aware that the ''deplorable &ituation" at the outpatient clinic must be alleviated. "But," he added, "I have many. In· dications that no computer system exists for hospital operations of our si1.e which have been proven to be financially sell· .supporting, 11 contended.'' Clark repeated that the cowity ls Solon Berates Power Company Plant Reasoning • spending $100,0llO for a ccmpr<henslva study ot hea4h care delivery systems and,. "I think it ls foolish to rush ahead blindly after you have hired a guide to ' map the terrain." He referred to the study being carried .., 01.i by Arthur D. Llttle, Inc., under a con- tract with the county. The fourth district supervisor said he had be<n informed tha~ contrary to reports, the $1 million grant is not returning immediately t.o Sacramento. He said he hoped the money could be salvag .. eel to the benefit ol botll Ille lllliversltY. and the county. _ · The turndown of the university fund or .. fer by the suPervisors brought immediate condemnallon Wednesday from the Coun-,1 ty Medical Associal.ion. · ... Grand Jury Asks More Protection For Coqrtrooms By TO~f BARLEY 0 1 II" Diii~ ~1191 l l1Ff Violence bas spread to the nation's courtrooms and it is vital that aQi emergency communications system pro. vldlng for the protection of defendants, "'itnesses and spectators be immediately installed in the county courthouse, the Orange County Grand Jury urged today. The panel's annual report on Superior Court operations notes that when the new courthouse was designed and bullt in 1968 "a disturbance or murder in the courtroom was unheard of. (For more oa courts, see page 10.) "Unfortunately, this Is no longer true " the report adds. "While Orange eouni.v has experienced only minor prob}emJ to date, Jt Is imperative that 1 com-- municaUons system be inslalled to pro- vide security." That system, the Grand Jury aaJcf should be built around the mean.. oi alerting armed officers fn courtroom.1 close to any major disturbance without disrupting the operation of as yet una[ .. ~ feeted courtrooms. That signal should provide additional aupparting personnel from the aheriff't and mar.sha1'1 office in numbers that will ensure the prompt quelling of any .• SACRAMENTO (AP) -The chairman disturbance, the Grand Jury recom- of the Assembly Planning and Land Use mends. committee sa)·s he·s tired o{ hearing The panel notes in its rePort that a utilit y companies say they have to put committee of Superior Court judges is their nuclear power plants along the presently studying several proposals on ~creased .security in the building with a coast because if they didn't they'd have view to placing a recommendation before ·. to raise their rates and customers don't the county board of supervison. like that. Security measures are already in ef· Assemblyman Paul Priolo (R·Paclfic feet. They include the allocation of 1 S crintinal trials to the seventh Door of the Palisades,) told C. M. Laffoon ° an co~ouse, patrols by sheriff's officers '• Diego Gas & Electric Co., "It's hard for equipped wltb walkie-talkie apparatui us legislators to accept your statements and the deployment of a "bomb scare,. when surveys of our constituents tell us squad trained to search the building just the opposite." within seconds after the receipt of a Priolo said in a survey of his Malibu bomb warning. Other security fWJCUons have been district, a majority of his constituents authorized but their es:act nature and said they would be willing to pay higher purpose have never been revealed to the electrical rates to have power plants that press. don·t pollute the environment or spoil lhe At least two Superior C.ouit judges Jandscape. have taken existing seeurlty measure,, • Priolo made the comment Thursday personal step further by purcbasin& £WlS during a hearing on planning and land for use in any courtroom disturbance on use problems of locating nuclear power the lines of the San Marin County plants. (See separate story on page 12~. shooting that claimed the life of Judge Laffoon &aid if his company moved 11!! Harold Haley. San Onofre nuclea r power plant five One of those judges wears: his weapon miles Jnland from the coast, the cost of beneath hls 61ack robe and has made no producing power would go up 50 percent. secret o( his intention to use the gun in He said this would be caused by In· any situation that might ran for the use • creased costs of moving water to cool the or armed force to quell a disturbance. plM~ reactor---------The Grand..Jury repart_follo~'S-b Justi~-- Daniel Fogarty, vice president of two weeks the shooting of murder s~pect southern CaJUomia Edison Co., suggested Gig Peters as the Huuntington Beach a middle growid to saUsfy the utility man allegedly attempted to fight his wa)'. companies' need for a coastal location to freedom in a oourthouse conidor. · and conservat.ionl.rt.S' deJlre to preserve the beach. Sailor Arrested O~i Drug Char ges A aalJor !tatiooed ln Loog Beach was arrested in Laguna Beach Ibis morning after police claim they saw more thao toO Benttdrlne tablets In h1s auto. Officers identified the suspect as Larry Russel Stwnpner, 22, and sald he was ar· rested 8' I a.m. IA the 1600 bloclt of North Coa!t llllhway. Stumpner'1 auto was tnJUally ltopptd for makine too much noise, police ••Id, noUng that the mu!fier was dragging on the roadway. After approachlng the vehi- cle, police allegedly 1potted the pllls lying on tlle seat of the auto wrapped In plaatic bap. He was booked OD Mptcton of poms1lon ol d1111erous diug, With !•tent to KIL Only 6 Mishaps M~r Bus Record Laguna Beach 1chool bus drivers were involved in only sls: mloor tramc ao- cldenll during Ille li70-71 acbool year. According to bmlnw suporlnttndent Chuiel Hess, this Is rtlaUvely a amaU numbtr of mishap!, comldering the nar· row, winding streets of the art colony. Of the six accidtnl.!, Dr. Heu llid two were caused by an automobile driver. The four accidents caused by the bus drtve.-1, he said, were all very minor, m.. volvtng little more than scraped paint,, Three of these four accidents occurred during a turning maneuver, be noted. The most dainage done lo a bus la any Of the ml.shapj was a crushed rear pallel wbera a driver booked Into • stofpecl bus. Rtpalr cosl.1 for eacb accldtn was ltss than $50, be noted. - I j • ' l . , • . - \ \ l Brrr-Shiver Me ·Timbers By THO!'AS MORP HINE Of IM 1>•11'1 '"" ll•ff WF.STERN WINOS DEPT. -One "! thing I've always like about living along this best of 1111 possilble coasts has been :-the delight of fall when you get treated to ' oae. nict, warm. desert winds blowing from the inland reaches. . Just about the time the weather seemJ tb be getting a touch frosty, the breezes turn around anjl. st.a.rt wafting warm air · ·from offshore. As a wrong-thinker, I ustd.. to refer to these w~rm breezes as San-. ;. tarias. Somebody told me this meant hot . wind in Spanish, or something like that. t ·Anyway, V. Almo n Lockabey, our , e.steemed boating editor, did ·much ::;. research on the hot breeze aestion some :~time beack. He came to,. solid con- ~ c1'usion that the proper term for the hot :~blows is Santa Anas. He has explained !): thiJ to me several times. l think it has r:.,.: something to do with the canyon through • whence the breezes blow. Clearly, the wlhd isn't named after the town even though a lot of hot wind blows out of there from time to time. · . I 'i ALL TH IS CROPS up because it seem- .' , ed I noticed a breeze shirt this week. The :. old eucalyptus in our front yard began ~ •, ahedding stuff toward the ocean and I : smiled. Here comes the old offshore : breeze, 1 chortled. Clad only in lee shirt :.,: arid shorts, I leaped outside to greet the .f. happy Santa Ana winds. ~-t; They've thawed me out pretty well :': now . My arms and legs are moving some :.l: again. :._;; Where'd we get ltt.is wind , anyway? ~Colorado~ :!: THJS JS THE Ct)Jdest wind to hit our "':•region since Jess Unruh came down here :. to talk about the Irvine Company and U~ :;: per Newport Bay. ~·.. I don't know whether or not ¥OU think .:·it's blowing hard but this morning ldrove :l:to work 11ideways . .,;. Al our house the cats and dog are !i: 1Jeeping in one ' big pile and they don;t ... ., 1ven like each other. :;; ·Lots of things can chani::e and it doesn't ~1;re.ally bother me. But when the wind :::refuses to follow the script, you begin to :-:-jwohder. · :. ~ Maybe we can blame it a~\ o~ o~r latest -: 'nuclear testing. Alter all, 1t d1dn t see m :~·to do anything else. . : • SPEAK.ING OF BJG BLOWS, did you :f.catch the item 11.bout _the Democrats •:•who 've fa iled to pay lhe1r telephone tab ··'rrom the presidential campaign of 1968? :~~Well. aC?COrding to allegations of A:lex- :"!1ander L. Slott, the bigwig ol Amenc~n :•~te:Jephone 11.nd Telegraph, the Demos did ·:~.Joto( talking !he Jasl time out and they :,::put it on the curf, . •! The tab is now three years old and 1l ::amounts to $1.4 million. Now that's a lot .:.~0r gabbing even for a bunch of -._ W.Democrats. :~ Stott repor~ly . has c o n t a c, t e d ~awrence F. O Brien, the Demos na-~.ional chairman. and told him that AT&T C-wants the tab cleared up before the C"-Oemocrats slart blathering again over !~e party lines this time around. ~e'd l!kt l">=the cssh by July t, otherwise hes going £ito ·have to require security in advance :;belore·the phones get hooked up. ~. WELL, 1 THINK Mr. Stott is an • 'tlarmlsl. \Vhen the Dcmocratli put in r---o ------------ • ' j T~kyo Hit .. . ,. By Students; Guard Dies TOKYO (AP) -Radical students, al- tacklrig with fire bombs, burned dowil twin restaurants in a central Tokyo park tonight, and a guard collapsed and died o( a heart attack, police reported. 1n protest against plans for a continued U.S. military presence on Okinawa, the radicals also staged scattered guerrilla attacks on poliCfl around Tokyo's capital. Police said circumstances leading up .to the 57-ycar~ld restaurant watchman's death were not clear. They said he was outside watching the fire after radicals se.l the Closed restaurant afire and held off firemen with rocks. He had not been injured, they said. Jloaring flames from the wooden struc- ture lit 'l'okyo 's sky, not far ·rrom a tran· qui! fountai n In llibiya Parlr. -usually a favorite or young couples -in front of. the Imperial Palace. Jlolice said 15 policemen and 10 civilians including demonstrators __ had been injured in various skirmishes. Other groups of students slr.irmished QUEEN ELIZABETH, JOHN PROFUMO SHAKE' HA NOS AT OPENING OF LONDON ~ELFARE CENTER It Marked First MHting in Eight Years of Monarch, Former War Minister with police in the famed Ginza district nearby, setting fires on the streets and overturning cars. Police fought back with tear i;:as. About 500 students were ar· rested. A Band for Proiumo ~ lfundreds or onlookers gathered in side • , streets to watch the fighting. lleaYily reinforced riot police kept the student radicals from charging in large -~- Long 'Exile' Ends for Scandal Figzire il, masses through the downto,vn Ginia 11 heart or Tokyo and police loudspeaker units at major Intersections called repeatedly ror people to leave. warning there were student radi<'als an1ong then1 and that gasoline fire bombs 1night be ex- plode1! ftt anyti1ne. f. I LONDON (UPI) -The queen smiled. held ~nit her hand and s:i.id how nice it was to see hi1n .• John J>tofumo, her former war minister, bowed, arld with thnt, at long last, came the end of Profumq'i'I exile in the social wilderness. The 1963 ''Profu mo Affair," Brilain'i'I scun- dal of the century, was laid to rest. It happened 1'huri'lday night in the heart of London's shabby East End. The queen went there to open Attlee 11ouse, a residence for youngsters from broken homes, named 11.fl,er former Pr i me Minister Clement Attlee. It adjoins Toynbee Hall, where Profumo 'has been ·worktng tor~he past seven yearS as a volunteer social worker helping the tin· derprivileged, drug addiCL'I rind al<..'oholics. Much of the $500,000 fnr the new building was raised by l'ro!umo·s efforts. The occasion was a far cry Crom some described in ...... p I a y g i r I Christine Keeler's memoirs ·-how she met Profumo while swimming nude at Lord Aslor·s Cliveden estate and how they later became lovers. Profumo's circle of tr i ends widened after that meeting. There was Christine·s roomm ate, Mandy Rice-Davies, and -Dr. .Stephen Ward , later convicted by a court or living orf the prostitution earnings Jf Chr~o:;linc :ind Mandy. The society osteopath eventually comm-itted suicide because of the !'evelations. Not only sex but a hint of es- pionage ·figured in the scandal. Christine admitted while having an iittair with the war minister she si multaneously was seeing Capt. Eugene Ivanov, a Soviet naval at· tache. The Russian was soon recalled to rifoS<..'OW and not hing ever <..'ame of rumors that state secret£. might ha ve been revealed. 11 l~ i Conferees Given llQuse V ~rsio1i Of Foreign Aid Reports Say Meir Due ' . -To Visit U.S. for Talks WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional efforts to revive foreign aid headed into a By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL House-Senate compromise conference to-Israeli newspapers rcport~d today that day. Senate Democratic Leader Mike · Prime Minister Golda Meir and not · . . . " l:>efcnse Minister Moshe Dayan would go ~ansrield pre<~'.cts the going will be lo Washington for talks -nt the highest awfully tough.... level . on Israel's quest for more U.S. .T.he H~use resurrecled its origin11l $:1.4-Phanlon1 jets to counter what it c:ills a b1Jhon bill Thursday, the one the Senate shift in the Middle F.a~t balance of defeated Oct. 29. nnd sent it straight into power. conference against the Senate's new The reports were given credence by $2.67·billion bills. \Yash ington reports that a new group of But conferet's were more worried about Soviet TU16 Badger bombers equi pped )X"llicy differences. including Mansficld "s with air-to-surfxe missiles suitable for six-month lndochin11 war de11dline and use against shipping h:ive turn<!d up Se.nale revb;ion of ba~ic forei~n-aid l'On-recently in Egypt. ccpts than the difrt•rence in money A Stnte l)(>p:irtment spokcsm:i.n told a figures. news coufrrenee the United States is "There will ht> " lot of stubborn pe<iple "assessin11: this development with regard on both sides." Mansfield .s:iid. lo the military balance." The conferees schcdulctl their first lsrael has contended that a now or meeting for late -this afternoon, just S{lviet arms lo l~gy11t has upset lhe before the llon.se begins a 111anksgiving balance ancl say~ th~ fl ow i~ continu ing. recess which will end Nov. 29. Israeli Amba.o:;sallor Yitzhnk J{abin met Conf(ress . restored intrrim rund ing Thursday in Washington with Assistant Ttiursdny for defense, foreign !'lid, the S<'Crelary of State .Joseph .J, Sisco and District or Columbin and antipoverty pro-i::aid afterwards Israel has le:irned "not pCace ojfepsive in the Middle East for months, seeking an interim agreement which would permit reopening of the Suez Canal which was closed by the 1967 Six- Day War. In recent weeks, Israeli sources have reported Israel balking · at further negotiations unless it gets more Phan· toms it considers essential to its own safety. Dayan, scheduled lo visit the United Slates on a fund-rai sing trip for the United Jewish Appeal , had been expected to talk \•:ith President Nixon on the Israeli degiands. Reports earlig _in the week said the White llouse wanted to try to convince him to drop his demands. Teen Sues School CHANNELVIEW, Tex. (UPIJ -Soni llomans, 16, ha s taken school officials to court because they excluded her from ex· 1racurricular activities. They s a Id because she \\•<is divorced. she might "talk sex" with the oth<'r student s. Riot police, their mPlal shielcls glisten- ing in the light of fires uncl flashbulb.~. movecl back nncl rorlh at m:1in in- lersection:ii to wnrd off c.'Onccntrated <!rives and to keep crowds moving. Police helicopters circled everhead to report the movement of dt'monslralors. lleavily reinforced riot police units guar1ted government buildin~s. t It e Imperial Pnlnce, the lJ.S. F.m\.Jassy and other key points in Tokyo. Nearly 1.000 sl.t11tents skirmished wilh riot police in the Shibuya business district \\'here a riot policeman wa s killed Sun· day. "fhe students hurled hfolotov cocktails at a police 5tation, a gasoline station and some shops. Britisli Army, Irish Trade Border Fire BELFAST, Northern lreland (UPI) - Gunmen firing rifles and automatic weapons from the Irish Republic ex- changed gunfire with British soldiers in Northern Ireland toda.y, the 'rmy :said. The shooting incident was the second this week at the Bcllccck border customs )X)St. An army l'ipokesman l'!aid the gunmen [ired 25 shol~ at a Royal Ulster con· stabulary station at Bellceck and British troops al the station fired back. S<'Curity forces suffered no casualties in the border gunbaltle, the spokesman said. In Belfa st, a fire bomb planted-by gun- men among luncheon salads exploded and destroyed the kitchen or a popular restaur11.nt minutes before the noon rush hour, witnesses said. The Abercorn Bar and Restaurant in BeHast':ii commercial center became the latest target in Northern Ireland violence \vhich erupted two years ago between Roman Catholics and Protestants and no\.\: has turned to fighting between British Arn1y troop!! and the outlawed Irish Repuhli cnn Ann y, Plants Open In, Aht; Cit y BIRMINGHAM , Ala. (AP) - Because or improved atmosphere conditions, 1 feder11I judge canceled today his order that shut down .2.3 major Birmingham area Industries during an ftir pollution crlsi:ii. U.S. District Court Judge Sam Pointer Jr. ac ted on a motion from the U.S. attorney's office, which said a three-day dirty-air emergen· cy appatently had ended . 1'he attorney, Bill Mallard, told the judge that the order was not designed lo be permanent, just to meet an emergency situation. "Now with lmprovlna: at- mospheric conditions, our medical ~nd pollution experts believe the emergent')' h!s pas.lied. We reQuest the order be v11cated and the· com· plaint dismissed," Mallard said. Nixon China Visit Seen In April Now LONDON (UPI) -Diplomalic soun:es in close contact with Pekitig said todfY the visit by President Nixon is expected to take place around April and not earlier as previously reported. · The sources said Communist China re. quired more time to prepare the scene for Nixon's meeting witfi Chairman Mao Tse.tung and other leaders such as Premier Chou En·lai. ' Some of these preparations were 11ald to involve some opposition in the Chinese Co1nn1uni st l'itrly to the visit and a purge of clements hostile to Mao's policies. The diplomatic source s said the Nixon visit is rated in Pekin~ as of great im· porlnnce for the whole future relationship or China with the United States and the rest of the world. 'l'hey said it is Impossible to predict what results may come from the presidential visit but that they did nob rule out so1ne stgnlficanl stage-setting for future develn1lments, 1'hry snid this process "".ill n_eed a _lot.of tin1e in vi ew of the surprise 1ump 1n Its policy fro1n a see mingly irreconcilable JX)Slure toward the United States to a rendincss to negotiate. Pekin~ apparently ha.~ not yet made up il s mind how f<ir and in whi ch direction it "\\'ill go in Its overall policy 5witch, tbe ,1;ourccs said. They said lhcre ls rome opposition in China to the policy change but how stron& the opposition H was not , clear. Th• change. was so abrupt that Albania, for instance is still trying to comprehend whatha~ happened-and has still not ac- cepted it. Pakistan Border Sl1elling Kills 5 NEW DELI-fl (UPI) -Five persons \Vere killed and 16 injured in i;helling along the border between East Pakislarl and Jndia's Tripura territory, news reports said today. . Reporl, said the ca.sualt ies included Easl Pakistani \\'ar rerugees. A patrol of the Ind ian Bordrr Security Force (BSF) exchanged fire with Pakistani troops near the northeastern tip of East Pakistan. No casuallies were reported. Prime Minister Jndirfl Gandhi , in a let• ter to Un ited Nations Secretary General Thnnt , said Pakistan is preparing to make war v•ith India and she would welCQme a U.N. attempt to bring about a political settlement of the di~pute. l-Ter letter. which was presented in Parliament during debate on the border situation, said the Pakis tflni 's have mov· ed troops and armor to the Indian ' borders. grams whose spending authorily expired lo take no for an an swer" in its quest ror ~~~~~~~~~~~~~· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ last Mond11.y 11s a result or House-Scnale 111ore of the F4 Phantom fi~hter-bon1hers. W. ~elr orders this time round, why doesn't just install pay phones? Better yet, why dun ~1r. O"Brien? He • ·!·loesn't hsve the Democra.t money. maneuvering over foreign aid. He also disputed' Secretary of St:1 te The programs were extended throui;:h \\lill ian1 P. Rogers' statemcnl last 'A'CCk Dec. 11 on a temporary basis while their that Soviet 11.rms shipmenl:ii to Egypt in regul11r appropriations 11re passed hut the p11st four months had been •·very ' -: Just band the cld telephone bill to Ted· ; ly. there were doubts Congre.lis could ham· moderate:· mer out fcreign aid'1 revival by then. The United Stales had been pushing a )~. Nation Has 'Cold Heart' • • • t Snow, Icy Blasts Numb Interior Sections · • • • • • Votriiotoil ,,,..,., lofdaf, L. .... I v•rlollll• a """ ....,, "" ~ ,.,,., ·-.. ~ " --I lot 11 __ , If! • ,r, -e ....,. ~ J.1..,.. .. 1, HI.ii ........... ~ c...-............ ,_ ~ •• lilt ci ....,, tcow """'" rt,..• Ir"" ....... """"""...,..._,.,,, . . .... 111-. Tide• ...... ........... • .... ..,, I .I ............ ; ... ,.. .•. , .,.,.,.., .. -r...,.. ..... t •..111, ""l.t '~--··~ 2~ ~..,,,,,. , •••• J.t ~--'"'""" 4 J "' _,_,,,, .. ,,. WI' dt . ..,, ""' --···· """'I It•·"'· • ' Call(Ot'nla Nixo1a? ••• or 1-larpcrs Ba1..aar fa~hion n1 arra zine \viii feature in its Janual'y issue-male..model James Laroe Ocfl) who looks remarkably like President Richard Nixon (ri~ht). The magazine .said that 'vhen word of the Issue rea~ed the \Vhile House a Nixon aide phoned t --. to ascertain the nature of the series. The aide W&l relieved. ti)e magazine said. to find out that the • layout \\•as not a Nixo n put·dO\VO -bu t a fashion series presented in a mock ne\vs layout. • I • icl be I ., of its le a up ii • !or nd "'" ity ith m re el· al to d I in er V• • I I • • ' I • ·-Airlines Settle, Cut Some Fares ' . Backgrouncl" Ciied · . . Race · Discountetl as Facto·r UPTON, N.Y. (AP) -Sociocultural factors, ,and not racial difference•, ue the cause of the typically lower IQ test acoru by, blacks compared to whites, a University of California a o c Io log I 1 t reports. ' The new 6"lat.i.stical study directly con· tradicts ideas put forth by a few scien- tists that the lower 11COres by , blecks on the average, are a result of a genetic dif. ference between the races. • ''When you ha\re accounted ,f o r soclocultaral dlflerenor.s .tbtre' h no significant residual varlatioli that could be directly attributable to ethnic groups alone_," she repbrted;- -Dr. Mert:tr de.icrlbed' htf\•work, ap- parently the 'Qrat of Its kind, to a seminar Thursday at Brookhaven N a t I !) n a l Laboratory. The seminar waa he1d by the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing. physical problems. They both would have to be equally motivated, she said, to be compared on the tegments of IQ tests that involve speed. "li you control all thls," Dr. Mercer said, ''you mlght infer one's genotype ii better than another's." DAJl't PJL0i 1 & .. ~ HONOLULU I AP) -ebie! uecutive,s of 14 transatlantic airlines, which have been flirting with an all-out fare war, have reached a com· promise agreement that will reduce many rate!'! between North America and Europe. Basic agreement on the new fare structure was announced Thursday -night by H. Don Reynolds. assistant director general of the International Air Transport Association at the organiiation's an nu a I general meeting. transatlantic routes VI e r e described as a com promise betwttn West Germ any ' a Lufthansa Airlines -which first moved to slash farts: - and reluctant American car- riers. The lowest individual round. trip fare between London and New York was set at $200 compared to the present $272. It is (or passengers who travel in winter i:ind stay 22 to 45 da ys. Police T Id Dr. Jane Mercer, associate professor ol 0 ·sociology at the Unlveralty of California 11t Rivers.Ide', said the st.aUstical ap-o IQ testa, &be ·said, were deslgned to predict how a person would perfonn jn school, but J)eople have tritd to "tease" other informaUo~ from them. She said that even the use of the -word intelligence tends· to slant the discussion. One of the leading exponents of ·the idea that geneLic difference3 underlie the differences in IQ lelt scons is Dr. Arthur Jensen, an educational psychologist at the Berkeley brancti ol the University of California. · Dr. Mercer accused Dr. Jensen of using "absolutely falladous logic" in using Information derived from i;tudies of white people to judge the cause of the lower test scores by blacks. New rates on key To Cease 'Brutality' plication of seven selected sociocultural factors to differences in test scores eliminates that difference. ' Mc~loskey Joke Draws Silence Reynolds said the fare package will be submJtted to a Dec. 2 joint conferenet!: of Atlantic Carriers in Geneva, Switzerland , for ratiOCalion. PITI'S~URGH (UPI) In her study, Dr. Merctr had three groups. each compoged of 180 persons - a black group, a Mexican-American group and a white· group. '11le blacks and Ule Mexican-~merjcaM ,each averaged. _ ~I on JQ tests; the whites aver2€ed 106. In fact, the toeiolojist uld, to be able really to compare two people taking the same test, '11 exarhlner ~ould have to be sure they both J\ad the same exposure to th~ material, were equally relaxed, ~-ere ·equally free of emotional disturbance and Anot~r proponent o( the genetic theory, Dr. Mercer noted. is Dr. William Shockley, a Nobel ·Prize wtrmer in physics, with two other &eientists, for the development of the transistor. FRENCH LICK, Ind. IUPIJ -Republican governors finishing a two-day winter con· ference here seemed split to- day over the questio n of what President Nixon should do about a running-mate In 19n. but nothing resembling a dump-Agnew movement was developing. The Vice President showed up briefly Thursday for a closed-door luncheon with the governors. followed by a public speech in which he showed flashes of the Agnew rhetoric. Rates also must, be ap- proved by governments of the countries lnvo!ved, ~nd will take effect either in February or April , Reynolds said. Lufthansa forced the fares lssued by refusing to agree to a ra!e package proposed at an Au~ust meeting in Montreal. The airline announced that it was filing a $21() round-trip ex· cursion fare between New York and Frankfurt. Other carriers followed suit and be~an trimming rates. The fare announced Thurs- day on that route was $22(), compared to the $23() fare pro- posed at Montreal. Under the new fare struc· ture. first class fares will not be reduced but .vouth fares on some airlines will increase. Race Suit Brought By White DETROIT CUP!) A In a joke greeted b_v nervous laughter and lhen silence. he said Rep. Paul N. McCloskey <R..Calif.). was going so broke trying to unseat Nixon that he was forced to auction "his favorite painting: Benedict Arnold crossing the Delaware." He demanded that Wilbur former city employe o f Mills (D·Ark.), chainnan of suburban Highland Park has the How;e We.ys and Means -filed a $300.000 suit aginst the Committee, "get off the stick" city, its mayor and one of its and end his ' 'd e_p Io r ~b l e department heads contending blockade of President Nixon's ~ . revenue sharing bill." he was hara called racial names and lnally fired because he is white. Hope to Visit Tbe suit, !iled in u.s. District Court here Thursday, Troops Again asks 1100,000 eacb from tbe ci· ty, Mayor Robert Blackwe.j,I, SAIGON (UPI) -Bob Hope who Is black and Mrk. Milli. will make his seventh·~· ' . Christmas tour of Vietnam ·cent Roberts, the black direc· ne'>:t month , military spokes· tor of the city's Community men said today. Services Center. The comedian will be under The former e m p 1 o ye , the usual tight sec u r it y Charles \V. Smith, 25, was regulati ons , and the hired on Feb. 2. 1970. as a sJ)Okesmen refused to say how supervisor for the center. He many shows Hope will gi ve in was fired last March 12 and is Vietnam, or where they will a policeman in suburban be. Southfield . A federal court judge issued an injunction ordering six PittsbUrgh polief:men to end alleged brutal treatment of black residents. The preliminary injunction by U.S. District Judge R~be F. ?<.1ars.h was hailed -and damned -as a precedent. "This is a precedent-setting decision -we have found no other case similar to this one in the United St.ates," La\v- rence Green. an attorney for Neighborhood Legal Services, a social service group, said Thursday. "This is the greatest miscarriage of justice sinet!: Pontius Pilate washed his hands in the case of Christ," said Det. Sgt. Francis Quinlan, president of the Fort Pitt Lodge, Fraternal Order of Police. Their attorneys argued the federal court had no jurisdic- tion in the matter. and that the alleged brutal actions never took place. Marsh ordered the six policemen to stop "harassing. threatening, intimidating and beating" black r e s i d e n t s. fourteen black persons com. plained of the alleged brutali- ty. He said witnesses at a hear- 1ng:-held-Sept 16 and 17. described "many instances of uncalled for llJld reprehensible police brutality, accompanied by expressions of racism by the defendants." Twenty witnesses. inciltding three black police officers • said during the hearings that the six d•tendanta repeatedly used racial slurs to black residents. Nixon to Florida KEY BISCAYNE, FI a . (UPI) -President Nixon flew to his Florida retreat Thurs- day. 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SJ.11 WHITEWALLS e 11.adial pli1, for1 lon91r fflil1a91, 11•1atar fuel economy. a G•111ral'1 lolW]·Wttring Dt.1t•t•n® Ttt til rubber. e full 4·PV rayon cord toirc.umf1rantial b1ft. e ~o11111a111....i11al-lra.c:ti-.t-4..+,11---- COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Dilly PHONE : 540-5710 646·5P33 , . I l ' i I I I • • State Yes , Continuing to apply its occasionally contradictory philosophy, the Saddfebact College board of trustees hu /roudly refused to apply for federal funds to help bull its controversial science-mathemaUca center. The board hu always staunchly scorned the idea of actepling federal money for anything, but this particular gesture seems exceptionally ridic.IJ:lotis, since flinding Of the facility appears to be a crucial isS]I• for tile dis- trict. The voters trounced a proposed bond issue that woUld have paid for it, so the trustees decided to try levying a 3~nt permissive tax for ,One year to match available state construction funds. (State funds seem ac· ~ce~table -not federal funds) .. Tbis.move wu roundly criticized as an attempt to circumvent the will of the elecoorate and now lljere's tali of trying for a much smaller bond issue. '.-., Granted the $3~.00G . .Jn federal funds woUld have been a small Contribution, ~l even conservative tru:itee Hans Vogel,' heretofore a right, oppoQent of federal as· sistance, had the good sense l<>l!!."derstand that time& have changed and voted for the rl1l1est. Unfortunately, only board pre!llent Alyn Brannon r;bared his view, while trustees Michl'A~Collins, Patrick Backus and John Lund, still cowering iil ar of federal "encroachment" in their UWe·--edL1caUonal · iwick, cast the deciding 11nays." ., ~· Paying for Past Sins Laguna's current team of city officials is paying dearly for the sins of former city leaders. While weighty financial matter! like cultural allo- cations and how much to spend on tourist advertising were being pondered at city hall, no one seemed inclined to notice the quiet disintegration of the city's sewer plant. · · • Fed.era! No ' . indelicate aroma floating from lt should have beeD a reminder that something was amiss. So now th• new city team finds itself being roun~· ly berated b)' the Regional W1ter Quality Control le!· lows for letting things reach this unfortunate point. Actually, it's hardly the f.auJt or the new boys, who are knOcklng themselves out to get things glued back together before the WQ'CJI lowers the boom and forbids more sewer hookups. . But WQCB has hear<I all the excuses small l<>wns can offer for th'e outcome of past muddling. So about all we can do now , is wish our present officials well and .urge the strongest possible support for their: efforts to comply with the requirement.s being heaped upon them. City Can't Divorce Schools There .ls a lesson to be learned in the current plight of the San Joaquin Elementary School District -an agency trying in vain to keep up with explosive residen- tial growth. But a neighbor, the City of San Juan Capistrano, apparentty is not too concerned. · Mayor Tony Forster recently said school district affairs are not the city's responsibility. But Councilman Jim Tborpe disagreed, saying matters such as pupil housing are valid considerations in development pro- posals corning up for city approval . San Juan already seems liberal in -its approvals for new tracls1, and,apparentl)'\the burden that new housing can place· on Schools is never considered. · The city·!hould be gravely concerned about the San Joaquin problem, and at the same time try to seek in· formation from trustees and staff of the Capistrano Uni· fied School District. Joint study sessions can help greaUy in developing mutual cooperation. This bas been the case in the New- port·Mesa Ullified School Distric~ for·enmple. • \ • " I ., •• ' . .ei, .. 1-:-~~ Few might have the expertise to bemoan the fact that what started out as.a pretty .good secondary treat· ment facility had degenerated into a less·th'°~eff~ve .. primary plant. But, one woUld have thougtit ·that Iha And when a city divorces itself completely from the affairs of its &choo1 district, troubJe cah develop qU.ickly -and. ~ake many years and tons of money to undo. s TEXAS Tl ~I>LYWJNKS ·' Red · Chinese Delegates at lJ .N. At OCC: Good Football Hyperbole vs. But No Band Advertising Truth ( ; Mailbox- Truth in advertising Is not as rQre as cynics would have us believe, but truth commingled with hunyir and whimsy is more precious than a bartender's guide at a temperance meeting. people have a passion for litotes -which is the ingrained habit of saying "not haU bad" about something Americans would call "terrific" or "colossal." The British have an elfishly perverse deligh t in calling a World War "the late unpleasantness ," or the Atlantic Ocean a "pond," or the most dazzling achievements "a bft of all right." If An· One of the few ex-p onents of th is technique died in London not long ago -Roy Brooks, a re al e state agent for nearly 40 years, "whose addiction to tl'llth" as the brief AP obituary said , "made him a British institution." . " •. nie Oa~ey had been one of their folk· li'eroes she would be designated as "a rather decent shot." EVERYONE KNOWS what the typical house or apartment ad is like -making a squalid little cubicle sound like a replica of the Taj Mahal, and turning the dingiest of domiciles into a ducal manor. OSTENSIBLY, the Chinese delegation represent.s tbe Peking government. But who and what lJ that government? Is it civilian, military or a combination of both? ls seemingly indestructible Premier Chou En,Jai the top man rul· ing in the shadow of lile..patently fading and innocuous Chairman Mao Tse-tung? Or is Chou the "front man" of a "com· mittee" consisting of powerful regional rnHitary chief11 and younger technicians . and ·party leaders? Considerable evidence points to this lat· ter likelihood. A Gl\APmc illuatraUon is Communist party V'lCe Chairman Lin Piao, one ol. China'• ablest military commanden, long.Uzne close henchman of Mao Tse-- tung, and until a few months •IO hll l tllffl fNflt ,.._. .,.. w.ko!nt. l<Nrmt l,., WriNl"I ...... Ill -""1 IMlr -~ .. W _..i1 .,. '""' ni. rltltt .. c....-.. lettws .. '" ~ •~ 1U11111W1t. llMf 11 ,......,., AH 1ottt1tt _ _. Mo Cllllll NIM,.,. -IMlnlll Hfl'u.. ..,, MIMI " .. ' .. Wltllh• ... '"""" If IVffklMI .... _ .. '''""'· l"MttY wUI "'' M llU,11..,., How to Address Our Lawmakers U.S. llNATORS Al1n Cr..UIOll 10), Jlt H. Sll'l'ir9 St.. LOt A1"1!lt1 f0021 Ind J-V, Tu......, (0 ), Rm. 14223. Brooks flourished for four decades by doing exactly the opposite. His typical real estate ad offered "glum attic flat for rich midgets," and tenants fell over themselves to rent it. Another candi d prospectus ran "Rundown Victorian relic, back bedroom suitable only for dwarf" - and drew more than two dozen ardent prospects. HIS AGENCY BECAME one of the largest in London, based almost solely on hi~ superb command of the British talent for "meiosis" -a literary term which tht dictionary defines as "expressive understatement.'' This technique could succeed, I am sor- ry to say, only in England, where the .AMERICANS ARE used to hyperbole, and meiosis merely confuses them. A hotel accommodation has to be ad- vertised as "deluxe" in order io satisfy us that it is even barely adequate; in England (and, indeed, in most of Europe) a deluxe hotel is a specific and accurate ranking, clearly al>ove "first-class." Verbal distinctions still have meaning in some parts of the world. It 's a pity we don't have a public that responds as gladsomely to the sort of "'himsical truth that brought Brooks fame and fortune. Because we don't, every advertiser has to shout louder than the last one, each adjective has to outstrip the previous, and finally all words lose their value in the race for the ultimate superlative. "Whiter than white" Is a shade possible only in America. Gas: So·mething Is Wrong 11,llOll NU1lllr1 lllvd.. LCll AflV'lloll ~. Ourl ... Con11reulon11 1.Q1lono: N~ 5en1ff Oft\« 1'°11·• Wt~ll!nt1on. O.C. 2n5Cl. U. I . RIP'ltlSIHTATIVll ' (Or1 ... 1 CIVlllY OlllJ) Nixon and Teamsters lt ld•1rd T, H1nn1 !M!~ Olotrld-0), 1'tJ W. CrtK1n1 Ave . Sul!e U., Ailelltlm '29001 Jor.n G. WASHINGTON I 'd h th k llmltr 1utfl 01srr10-1t1, GIG c1,.,,..,,, Drive. 1 -ns1 ers c arge e America's supplies of raw energy -for them to develop the fields they own ~r su111 Ju, NtWJtOrt ••Kii m.o1 cr111 Hmmtr Teamsters have become so cozy with the 'j (JJlld Ol1~lc!-Fll, S«url!Y I•'*-lllclf., Surt1 tit! coal, oil and natural gas -are not in· to go looking for new ones. 110 Pin• A'ff.. Lant 111c11 toec2. our1111 co... White House thal they were able to block , ~ 1rei1Jtnal 1t11lon: H111n1, 1114 lollgWGr!l1 Ho~i.t finite . But neither are we going to run out Editorial 0t11c1 11ci..1 St11m1u ''°' Lo-111 Hou1e 0111c• a presidential message on transportation. -of them right after lunch. "Talk about an THE HOPE NOW is that technology !~:;;,..'::!~D.c.21~1:•v11urn Hou1e Ottkt 1'"·· The message was scheduled tG be sub- energy crisis emerging is exaggerated," 'Reaearch will lead the country out of its natural according to Hendrick Houthakker, a gas shortage. Several companies are ~.:!,.!:.~~" .... ~=~TT milted to <;.ongress on Nov. 4. But the former member of the President's Coun-~ working on techniques to gasify coal and oenn'1 ci.......,1er IMtti oisirio-iu. ,0,,. .cc, Teamsters raised some last-minute ol>--cil of Economic Advisers. If we're.'shorl ~-'-·".._ ....... --' crude oil. The U.S. Bureau of Mines 1 ... 1"• "*"· cemmJtlft1: •r:k.u11ur., l..oQI Gt_.,,. j~ctions, say the Insiders, with White bell th I 317 t 'Ill b' f I f men!. Stitt! Cemmll!tl 1 ErwlronlTl"ftt•I Canlrol, H f p of fossil fuels, the experts say, Jt is the U.S. ····~ needs and -·•umptlon hu eves a r1 on CU IC ee o s111c1 comm111"' on s111n11 1ntrv11on in Air1cu11U.r11 ouse actotum ete del . •te th 1· t f IL """"'cw ....... .., natural gas might be freed with the Sall, JD!nt Comm111" °"' d11e111or1 Ew•U,•••'-' '"" Flanigan. 1very sy11 m a s a au been -w'•• by I.I ~-•t 1 ye•• _ f ti Joint comm111"' on lfflll•tt~ Re".-'· J•mu Th . 1 d h 111·-.. -o ..--..... ... nuclear fracturing of gas orma ons. E. Wt!f.tmo<t; 1U111 011l'ld,,..;l!.I. u1t.t 1roo11M11. The transportation ere 1s amp e evi enct t a t ... _.. Ith th te f • 1 Work is progrtsaing in several quarters Garoen o.row . f*t. camm11tttt, 1111111U1 ..... fi something is wrong. Citing shortages of com,_.__ W lf'OW n • 0 ·~. per--P..tas1111t. HM1t11 .,..,1w1111,.. •"' Tr1-r1111on. message was 1nally cent for oil and I I -rceot for I The to develop •• Apoll~type fuel cell for °"''"" 11v1s11lf"" 1U1la9: s111e t1P1'94, $-'"""''°' delivered to Con· Flanigan. The.reafter. Fituimmons Md Flanigan remained In contact usually through intermediaries . , natural gas. utilities in Pennsylvania, · ,... coa • c ''' •-· · commercial use. • · .-.. uess on November _____ ,Qhio_New Jersey • .M~ic~b~igl"a~o~· J;<ll~in".'o"'isLa,,,nd,,,_-;F.;ed=er"al""P,_o,,w,.e;,or...;Commluion estlmaW tTATI .us•MILYMIN Washington, D.C., now refuse to sign new Oiirti are 2'15 tnn cu c ee·~o•r---1For-the'P"e!l!nf;-the-11Hndustry-main-·-----..IOM""olt.wercov'orr------j8iffi"C:'ndiiieiir"fithpe .... si~g;;••;;·-.,. OF ALL THE labor le;,ders, Fittslm- Jnons has shown the mos t williPigness to cooperate with Pre sident Nixon in his ef· f~ts to stabilize the economy. This has given the Teamsters a little extra clout inside the White House. ' contracts. Washington Gas Co. president "proven reserves'' in the _ _._ 1bal'1 tain1 tha.t there need be no shortage U llobtt't E. hdlllm in 11 o11tr1~1. IMt W••"' N",',',·n. •··t o!reTsr'an~· •• -·· pn'ces •re '""re•·~ •-yond that the-cliff or., H~ had!, .,..., C-lllMt; Publlc uu 3' Paul E. Reichardt announ~ on Nov. 9 enough for the nett 13.2 years, even if no '"'"" ~. UC" • '... 1Em•111Vf'llfllt 1nc1 •et1ritm111t. wtter •rid <N•""'" portation Undersec. that there would be no new sales to in-. new wells are found. I: • growing consensus that the United c-,,,. "'°'k U11!ttlw. Jot.ft v. 11"" re tary James Beggs. dustrlal users "for an indefinite period of States needs a comprehensive national ~3,!i:,,ta!>'*~11!~!f::'"1~°'ft.:.~ 1~ ---lJkl't-Flanigan---insi.sted toJ1S-1hat th Teamsters had no more influence upon the trr..nsportation proposals than did the shippers. He acknowledged lhal the pro- posals have been watered down to meet some objections. "me.'' WHAT WORJUF.S THE FPC 11 thit energy policy. President Ni1on moved In •ric:•. Leber 11.i.11om •nd tt-.... .,,.. T11r111on, "' this direction last June in hiJ Energy ~:~'.,.;:'~': ~~~nm:''~i!::n'::...:O~ FLANIGAN acknowledge,!I to us that a Gas is a big element in the overall the ratio of proven reserves to current Statement to r ..... ..-ss. Hearings on the ,,,...., 111111 SOKI. '°"'' H, l1.1tt• ll'OTll 0111,1r;1-ai. last-minute decision was made not to put oer-picture II provides a third of the production bat bee1I falling ateadlty for ........ '6'" 1rm hl<ll 1iw .. """11"""" ••MJi t'l.i1 c.n.. the President's Imprimatur on the e 61 • • , than tbr ~--de J 1 0 formulation of such • policy art being mmM1: EM•tltll. E1ec111111 •nd con111M1M• more ee ~ J. UI 1 yel.l'I h Id b th •--te lnte . Co 'tt Atfton<llf'llltllh w •le.I ttlilrm1n. T,.,.,_.,,lolt. message. But he denied th.1t the ORANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Publish.tr Thoma.t KieoU, Editor Albert W. Bat.el Editorial Page Editor ago, the reserves were tnough to keep e Y e. ~n• rt0r mnu ee. 1C1Mtlfl co,,.. '""" 011trkt-01. s.11 N. 1E11t1111. "·o. Teamsters had influenced the decision. t•-•~· f ••• f f What th N ti aJ En p 1· 101 '*• AN"'"" neao. c1mm111 .. 1: Ec11K1llon, uc coun .. , rom ruMu'6 out o gas or ever e a on ergy o icy L•blr ••''''°"' 1nc1 111vtnw 1nc1 r...,111111. our1,.. "There wasn't in any sense a last·minute 20.2 yean. "By 1974 the supply will looks like when Jt Is finally written, '"1""'"' .-1on1: s1111 C•P!to1, 11er•m111io, visitation by the Teamsters," he said. almott certainly drop to ten years," ac-Americana art probably going to hive to '1111• '*'· For more than a year the NI.Ion cording to Forbes ma1uine. 1bat'1 the Pl.Y more for all forms of energy . .M the ORAN•• couNTT •oA1to 0" su,i1tvisou Administration has been shaping Jegisla· l.yel ••·t J-•-N. Na111'kas, -••1-•n of bus'·--· mogulne Dun's ob• er v e d '1••1 011• .. ••rt w, 1"11" 1· t · · · I th .... uuri u1 .,._ u1CM Ste-011t •• 01w1o1 11t., .1on o 1ncreast competition n e the FPC, has indicated would be a bare recenUy : "The da.y1 ol extremely cheap Trim Db1 .• w111i.m P't111li•1 transportation industry. This should minimum. fuel are abOut over for both industry and ~m~"o~1'.~'"•~: .!: ~~~::,,,, lower freight rales which would reduce Natural sas was used as Jlnhtln• fuel the consumer in the U.S." Addreu: 0••1191 county Admlnt•1r11'°" i i.ie.. the cost of all goods shipped 1·n interstate f8 ~ lllllll'n '°'1o SU N. Srumtr1. S..nl1 AM "100, •• early 11 the Jnos. But &lnCe its mt u commerce. The savings presumably • heatln( fuel depended upon pipeline ~--a 9 Ge orte ---• Q could be passed on to the consumers. techooiOIY, it was 'not US<d for that notes purpose unUJ a century later. The event Deer George: ' THE RAILROADS, truckers and barge that'slpalled the openlng of the gaa era How dld the term deejay, which operators. howevtr, have been slipping came In JUI when a 2if..1nch pipeline wa1 came from the words dLsc jockey, Aan Landers -"Most nagging wives amund to argue with Flanigan against laid from the Texu 1a1 fields to Chlcaro. get Its name:? &re HCreUy dl.ssatlsfled with themselves. more competition. As the American Since lhm, plpeUne mileage ln thi1 coun-W.R. Picking away at 1 spouse ls wler than Trucking Association's President W.A. try bu lncrtued to'more than I00,000. Dear W.R.: doing aomething about one'1 own In-Bresnahan put it to us the Nixon pro- AOOording to the big oil companlet -'Ibe tenn "deej1y" lJ a combln•· 1dequ1cie1. Do you have outlets that p~ po1al1 would encouragt small, UJ]Slable which colncldentally own much of the tlon of the words "disc jockey and vlde you with self esteem? ~ wife who truckers "lo move In and out of the In· natural 111 -there Ira good rt1son why wu -WILL YOU LEAVE ME feels good. about he.rselr doeM't nq her dustry llk6a tlddlcr'1 elbow." not enough gu J1 nowlng through thole ALONE. W.R.? YOU KNOW l husband about detail.$. Her energy Is Bresnahan alao brought Teamsters plpea. Gu pricu 1111 kept ao low by UM FEEL BAD JN THE MORNINGS! ' btilJA used construct1vt1y -not dcstruc-boS$ Frank Fittimmoos into the White FPC, they cbarse, that tt is not feui!M " tlvely." ( House several months ago lo meet "We want a good bill ," he explained "that won't get such opposition thst ii will Just sink without a trace." Dear Gloomy Gus Jf that noted psychic speaking t.o the Women's Club Jn Laguna Beach claim! 93 percenl accuracy in predicting elections and disast- ers. does he allow for the fact many elections and diSAstera are one and the same? -M. S. H. Tiil• ft•!lll'I rtf1K'1 rllflr1' ""''"' 1111 llffll"'11"1' "'"' ti 11\1 ftfWtH"'· .. .-.. '9UI' "1 ...... It 01'flllr ht. Olllr ,111<1. .. t I I ·' ' ) ~·' •• -<:-... .. :- • -11,. BH ·"--"~-cites Octofler ·Ftgures ~ 1 <~ ~~~x; ' ~eagan--w elfa~el>rop .. •• . ' • "It'• 8ilfy'• fault 'cause he's the oldest and he -·~-. . •ho.ild know bettor J • Expande.d . z-.~es Stat.e Horse Racing • • t'. Faces Big Shakeup SACRAMENTO (UPI) ' ' ' .. ' ' . ,. SACRAMEN-fo 1 (UPI) -, said I.be ournber of persons on m!Won Wu' s~t when ttiere Who C"laim-tliat a massive· and bffn. n'lade · "OUr: ptojecUotu: Gov. Ronald Re14an said the 1 welfare declined by 24,00> laSt I were ff,031 lesa welfare reel•· coatly federa lly controlled.pro-show that there would now· be .number 'of welfare recipienti ·month to rotal 2.1 mlttlon.·He ptenU thlln Jast month. · gram Lt:1tbe Only aoluUon to a third of a •millioo -..more in California1decreased for the ·said the total was 137,000. leu. Req-" attributed • t be· the wtlfare pr,oblem. H11)dlnr-. peraol.1&: . on w.ellart • j n 'seventh " slraight 'month in then recorded in March. decline. .to.. .f(lmlnistrative over lb& welfare dilemma to California or 13 per cent more , O c 1 0 Ii e r -·~ i 1an ac· The Governor cited state change~. aQd a wel!are reform th~ feder~I .iovernment i~ not tha:n there . aclually are,·~ \ compllshment no ·~otber state Social Welfare . Department pack.age' enacted a~ negotia-the ao.sw~c1" he said. .creaUng :a.n .. addiUoqa~ $80 can matc'h." •. , figures which showed that tlons between the Governor ''The stJl~ can and must do ml,lllon. burden. · ~ Jn a statement isSUed Thurs· $159.9 million was spent on and QemocraJ!. the job. We know It can be Prior to the we If are day here and in French Lick, we1fare in California . In .. "What we.~e.accompllshing done, and we are proving it Jn ·changes, 'Reagan said, the Ind., where Reagan was at-October compared to $160.8 ' In Cllllf9rnia to br\ng weflare Californl1.'' state's ' welflie-ciSelo"ad was tending the Rep u b·J Jc an million in September. In ~ck un~er contra! ~nstltu~ Reag'ah estimated that ll the iilcreftsing·a:t a raie of50',000 a Governors' Conference: he October 1970, some $ 1 4 7 a dramaU c lfi;S~r to those· changes fn welfare had not •month. · • ,• · .. .. If you smoke a low :tar cigarette, i . . . . ' DAILV 'ILtf VNl'J'ED l -S 'J' A 'J' E :S NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NO.W O,IN SATURDAYS f te 1. P.M. MON.-THuas. 10.1. P.M. llllDAYS 11·1, P.M, 1714) 1140-1211. LM-4 I•: S.. CMlt P'tn•, Cnf• M ... H. M. STOLTE . . The Se n a t e Governmental Organization Committee ha.s endorsed major legislatiOn p r o v i d i n g comprehensive revision of California's horse racing laws. this year vetoed legislation ~I­ p;inding t h e · geographical i.ones for racing anl:l: called for a1 comprehensive revisiOn of tiie laws governing the tiqne racing industry. try this new one :=I ··. from Marlboro. ,, ,__...., :-, . . .. The measure by Assemblyman Mike Cullen, (0-Long Beachl. was sent Thursday to the Finance Com- mittee. where its revenue pro- visions are expected !o get scrutiny. Gov. Ronald Reagan earlier Sen.Tunney To Oppose Rehnquist Reagan later laid down several guidelines of what 'be intends for the revision ahd asked the industry to agree among itself on efforts to meet them. The multi-provisional bill approved· Thursday ~y the committee "generally' meets Reagan's demands and has near unanimous agreement by the horse racing industry, committee sool'Cf;s said.r One provision i~reasefl the takeout from the betting han- dle from the current 1514 cents on every. dollar bet to 15* cents. The state gets haU this amount, which presently total! about . $60. million . The , WASHINGTON (OPJ) _ increased takeout would in. Sen. John v. Tunney, (I).. crease the state's share by $8 Calif.), said Thursday he milliono · would vote against the con-The ineasure additionally firmation of William Rehn-sets up a new centr~I tone for quist to the Supreme Court. racing, which wpi.J.ld include Orange, San Diego a n d Tunney will oppose the Imperial counties . nomination because Rehnquist They prevfous.lj~~ part "gives greater weight to of the southE!fn' ·zone. which federal authority lhan to the r -A I . . . . ,, would include '"U,JS n~ es, liberttes of the lnd1v1dual. San Bernardino, ruverside. The senator is a member o( ·Ventuh Santa Barbara and tbe 'Senate Judicliry • Com-.,..'"Kem ic6Unlies;-The remainder mittee, whicJii has further ae-·Of thci "State ;s· Jn the northern tion on the nominations of both zone. Rehnquist and Lewi! , F • ' The'.. bill ·.al So . adds aine Powell· Jr. set for Tuesday. Week~"Of harness and quarter Tunney said he Would sup-li.orse iacing in 1.he southern port the nomination ol Poi.1reJI. zone, 'which now tias no )'he Calliornian reached his harness raci1tg and 13 weeb decision to oppose Rehnquist's of Quarter horse racing. nomination on the basis oC the The central zone will get two latter's own writings and more weeks of harness racing. record , not on charges made but not until 1974, under terms ••in lhe heat oC politics." of the bill. The Opposition was con-lt also eliminates the Dec. lained in a statement released 31. 1972 termination of the so- after the committee delayed called "breaka.e:e formula ," further action on the nomina· which includes the odd cents lions. not paid to a winning ticket. "The single p r e v a i l i n g · The formula contributes about reason why I oppose William $3 million to enriching purses Rehnquist js that he doe.s not to lure good horses. have the fidelity to the Bill of ;::==='========;' Rights that a Supregie ·Court justice must have in order to carry out his judicial man· date. "I believe he places a. very low value apon fundamental principles of equality and in· dividual liberties -a value far JoWer than that which they lire accorded in the Constitu- tion." Phone. 6424321 For Weekender Advertising PERSIAN RUGS 4MI otker yaluoble Orle1ttol rvgs AUCTION Lart• shipment of Im ported hand..-. Aft thentlc nd flfttst quollty I• ~h nd lart• 1i1ft. SUNPAY, NOVEMIU 21 at 2 P.M. Free eichibition from 12 noon until time of s•le NEWPORTH INN C-Sel Room 1107 J..,borH RM. N-port -h NOTE ABOUT Tl-OS SALE: The ca~ts Wtl'e shipped by overzN1 exporter for exhibition and promotion pur· po1es. Due to high operallonl.l cost 1.he project was abandontd and the cal"p!!ts consie:nect to us for Jiq11ida· Contents include: h'ERP.1AN, KASJ!AN, SAROUK. NAIN, INOO SOVANNERIE. .BClKHARA. AFGHAN, QUME. TABRIZ. HAMADAN, ARDEBil. and many more Including 1llk, flN'l eilk and some at1tlc:i ue pieces. AUCTIONll~: Cel. Lelli IOMftllltnn TlL: 4 41J.U4..2221 TIRMl1 C•th er ch«:k LIQUIDATOltS: GlelM TrUe l11chan1e Ce., Inc. ·.· . . ,. ' ' It's lighter. in taste, low in .tar. ' . • • , . . '· . • Marlboro IJ_.ts, for tlaose ·iiioken;·no ,mer Ui6 l!aler IUle of 1-'low tar ud Jlleollle eJprette. llde wltla die ... e.famoas quality u lall-Davored larl~ B~. ~e(a luiestinwll• brand. • ,. • • ... ~. ..... Marlboro ligh11: 14 mg::1ar;'1.1 mg. nico1ine av. pBr cigare111 by FTC m11hod . . ,. ' ' .. .. • ; . .-.... . :.· .. ~ .. . 1.::- .r. . I '.II' 4-·.: .·,;:. ... ... _1:-~ ,. • 0. . , :.r: "') "•' . -.. ,-., . ' .. .,., .,, < • """'" .~. ~1 , ... i'it' l _J . I '. . I I , . . ' • • , • • . . f DAlLV ~ILOT " • FrrC.o, 'fl&IMl&tr 19, JIJ71 ·----- Veto Tlareatened Redistrict Plan May Go to Court SACRAMEN'l'O JUPll -Assembly De:!nocrats today pressed ahead with thtlr oWn redistricting plan in the face of a threatened veto by Gov. Ronald Reagan and a looming court test. The proposal's architect, Assemblyman Henry Waxman, said he doubt! whether the Republican governor has tht power to \'l'lo reapportionment bills any~·ay . The bill shot out of the Democratic- cdominated reapportionment committee Thursday and to the full assembly after the collapse of private talks aimed at fin- ,ding a compromise settlement. Republicans cast the "no'' votes. Assemblyman Jerry Lewis. top Republican redistricting expert, con- Qimned committee approval of the plan IR a "railroad" and forecast that Reagan ''will veto it if it gets to his desk in that shape." Basically, !he plan is designed to ex· pand the Democrats' '12·38 margin to '14- 36: target Republicans Floyd Wakefield <>f Sooth Cate and Oiarles Conrad of Sherman Oaks as political casualties: and create "safe '• districts for five GOP incumbents. Addili1na1ly it would transfer the.San Francisco di~rict of Democrat John Foran to Southern California because of the south's greater population increase and retain the Los Angeles district of GOP election upset winner Bill Broph)' U prf>dominalely Democratic and Chicano. Republicans are generally 11atl1fled with their plan. The Democratic plan originally pro- posed at least 4fi Dt.mocratic dJstrictll. RepUblicans demanded a 43-37 break , then upped the ante to 42-38 when Brophy won 'fuesday's special e I e ct ion , Democrats refused and decided on their go-it-alone proposal. Waxman called Brophy'! election from the heavily Chicano, 2-t<>-1 Democ:ratic registration district a ''bizarre, one-time fluke" and accused Republicans of an "irrational, indeed· hysterical , glee and greed." Restored to a "safe" district v.·a9 Republican Peter Schabarum of Covina. Also ttlurned to districl! in which they would bt the only incumbenls at election time were Republicans William Ketchum <1f San Luis Obispo, John L. E. Collier, Frank Lanterman and Robert Cline of Lo! Angeles. The heavily Democratic district of Republican assemblyman KeMeth Mad· dy of Fresno was shifted to include the large Chicano population of West Fresno. Retained in the plan i! the strelched- <1ut '"H" shaped new 29th district which would reach from Simi near the Ventura coast through a lon1 corridor into the Mojave desert and San Bernardino coun- ty. Oldsters Set Desert Relay LOS ANGELES lUPI ) -A half doz.en or so oldsters aged 60 and t.bove will set out Wednesday oo t.helr second annual Thanksgiving relay run to Las Vegas, Nev. They. hope to shave two hours from their time of 46 hours set lllSt year. Thfi run will begin at the HollywOod Studios of KTLA-TV and end at the Sahara Hotel. One of these "supermarathon- ers," as they call themselves, is 72- year-<>ld NOel JohnS<ln, who6e for- mula for good health is "stop eating and gel out and run." Johnson, a San Diego resident, can run a 6h·minute mile and covers 150 miles a week in practice jaunts. He started serious traini ng in 1970. John~n recenlly was examined by physiologist Jack Wilmore at UC Davis. Wilmore reported that Johnson is a "superman for his age." Johnson's diet consists of dan· delion greens, alfalfa, lemon seeds and other vegetarian fare. He eats a doz.en times a day "but not ve ry much and very seldom meat." The marathoners group has six men between 60 and &I years of age and t~o <1ver 72. They will make the run to Las Veg.as in relays, with each running for an hour at a time. Ecuador Grabs 2 More Tunahoats SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Ecuador has seized two more American tuna boats, bringing to 18 the number of vessel! cap- tured in the last 10 days in a continuing • • • S wte· P olt $1u)Ws KeJJnedy,_ Favored SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The California Poll reported today· that President Nixcn has gained popularity among statewide voters since his August wage-price freeze but Sen. Edward M. Kennedy is stlll the favtirite for the 1972 presidential election. Poll director Mervin D. Field said a survey of 1,007 voters showed "Nixon's stock with California voter~ has taken an upward turn lately, and his chances or capturing California In next year's pre sidential election are now much better than they were just before he imposed his wage-price freeze on the domestic economy in August." An August poll showed. that 49 percent of the statewide sample favored the -.- • . . Ma.sucbuaetta senator, an 11 McGoveni, South Dakota ; eil.ber "or the two major party percen~ edge over Nixon. f o r m er s e n ~ E u g e n e candidates. But in the poll completed McCarthy 1 MinneS<lta, and Of the 1,007 California last week, a.imulated ballots votero1 chosen for the random narrowed tO 45 percent for New Y<1rk City Mayor .Tilhn V. sample, Field said 350 Iden. Kennedy, with 42 percent /or Llndsay, Field said, tified them s e Ive• as Nixon. The researcher reported R e p u b.11 c a n s , 484 as Field 11ald the potential that Nixon "maintains large Democrat.a, and • 193 clalmed voters "'.ere shown a series of margins of voter va,'Cr" over other <1r no party afhllatlon. pOssible presidential lineups Democrats, Se;n. H e n r y He &aid t representative'. pro- for ·the 19'72 elections and then Jackson of Washington, Los portion of new 18 to 21-year• were asked to Pick. Angeles Mpyor Sam Yc.rty, <1ld voters was included. Nii:on "closed the gap" on ArkarJ..!as Rep. Wilbur Mills•;;::==========. Sen. Edmund Muskie. Field and Rep. Shirley/QJ.isholm o{ reported. In August, the Malne New York. · Oemccrat let Nix,on 46 to 39 tn each seri~.IGov. George percent. but the new ballot Wallace was hsf'd as a can- placed Nixon ahead 42 to 40 didate en the A m e r i c a n percent. Independent party ticket, bot !JI YOU HAVI LOST 0111 Mll- ,1.ACIO YOUI. Sl•lllAN TOOL ICIT COMI IN ANO GIT CINI Jll.OM OUlt 8AltflHOllt. The , .... "'"9 At tti. Pt.r H\!NTIHGTOH llACH Nixon ran stronger by small he polled fewer votes than but mostly significant margins 1-;===========~ againsl Democrats, S e .n . Hubert H. Humphrey, Min· nes<1la ; Sen. George ""-----· WESTERN STATE UN IVERS!TY COLLEGE OF LAW • in ' . Christmas Cheer With Greeting Cards ANAHEIM AND SAN DIEGO now acceptfn9 mtn and wom.n who •rt t lth_er: /' e t'Vllf 11 -wllil t p&n ti ttaplUl1 """' Cro6UJ (60)1 •r From Karen Margreta's AMIRICAN & IUllOPIAN A¥01D THI RUSH ADO ILl•ANCI WITH YOUR NAMI IMPRINTED • OYU 23 '"cl h1•• •thlntlll In, 1p,1r1r1I , .... h ll•C"'•I 1blllty !ht .,.ulvtlent ef •IN•• Ill 111 lllt lt1111l11H. by lt1!) 'l'i:e J.l:l. er lt.B. degree <•ri be •trned fn 4 YIUI If ptrt·lirnl tlane" 3 clauu per wte~; 3 hovrs pt r dt"f, Apply Now for February 7th Day or Evening Classes ' WllTI 01 PffONI fOI lN,OIMATION Ol CATAl'.OGUI 800 Soulh Brookhunt An•heim 92804 1714) 635-3453 The plan was amended into the senate reapportionment bill ca?Tied by Sen . Mervyn Dymally CIJ.Los An1eles.) The committee took no action on con- gressional reapportionment. The district ti Maemblyman Kenneth Cory (o.Garden Grove ), who perennially is in trouble at election time , was un- changed from the previous Democralle plan when the .Dem~ratl'c regl!tratlon was improved substantially. The district includes parl.3 ol Orange and Los Angeles countie! -and -! I -cities-.- dispute over the.South Amerlca11 nation's . 'lh• degrM of J.O. er tL!. will lie conf•rnd ~ artduill°" territorial limits. Oantsh CDR'ee m.m th•"" y11r prparam eLthe eou19, of l.lw, o~r•tin; l.fndu . The Ame"riean Tunaboat Association 9<n'deri Ch1rtir of th1 ~""'if C1!1forn11. .• -reported the Vessels Wiley v. A. ana-tht 2'40 E. Co&llH~.~ Corona del Mor Gradu1t11 Ill ellglbl .. to 11ki-"ffi1 Ci!Jfon\11 SI.,.,., Ex1rnln1not1.' By combining the senate and assembly redist ricting plans into 1 single bill, Reagan's option8 would be Jmmited to either signing the bill or vetoing the en- tire legislative reapportionment. Senate Democratic assembly leaders are Lalk· ing more and m<1re abo1.1t the entirt luue ending up in court whert l11lll1t.or1 would be at the mercy of jucfau. Ecu ador, both based in San Diego, were ,.,,JOvm fOlt vmu.Ns taken to Salinas after they were seized D11lly •:JO to S:JO Toi: 644-7140 .• • . Private School Bid To Reagan SACRAMENTO JUP I) -A bill designed to provide frff statwpproved textbook! to pupil~ at private schools and allowing them to attend som1 classes at public schools w11 voted final legislative passa11 today by the assembly and sent to Gov. Ronald Reagan. The lower house concurred 43-5 to Senate amendments to the measure by Assemblyman John Vasconcellos ( D -San Jose.) Supporters of the bill have cof!tended it would he Ip relieve problems faced by public schools by encouraging attendance at private schools. It would require the state board of education to make available to students at priva te schools basic and sup- plementary textbooks adopted for use by the board in public elementary schools. If space were available. private school students could attend vocational, shop and natural and physical science classeB at public hig schools. 1bout 70 .. m::::ile=s~w~e=sl~o~fl~he~po=:.rl~c~it~y----'-''_•_..,~·-'_'_''_' _____ ''_'_•_•_~_M_•_C~•·_,.~· __ _J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tburlday._ State Bl.acks ro Plan . For Primary in Ju.ne SACRAMENTO (AP -· then have htin lose. California's black Dtmocr1ta: The National Assembly for a don't want to be boUnd by a Black PcUlical Strategy in '72 naticnal black strat•-In the has bettl meeting in an effort ....., to detennine bow bJ,a c.'.k tm presidential c 9. n le' t, Democrat& can be!t wltld reports a key leader.' · autborltfls a bloc neat yur. They feel to do so would risk One suggestion was to unite losing what autbority1hey will behind a single black can· wield hf ciKlosing t& party's didate such as U.S. Rep. Shirley Chisholm of New York. no~; said state Sen. Another pnipo!eJ is ,to run Mervy'n M·. Dymally of Los black favorite 'son candidates A'ngeles. in state preeidehtial , Dymally said .he planned to primaries. rtport the decision to Jeaders1-~----~~---I ol a national . black political caucus in "Washington , D.C., thi! weekend. "California will report to the national caucus that because of the unique nature nf the : California primary our blacks : would lil<e to be permitted to • litO where they feel most com-: • fortable,•· Dymall~. only black in the California Senate. sa id w .... , 1ou o11--· • 1Nn....t . h,.tomoly<on••dtundo•clo•tkMin • in an inleTVleW. ..., 0.010oo< .. u.~s. i.1 tnc1 i..itif\11 The decision wa., reached .... 1 .... 1<100.,1 • bl k n-•-lrv Co<ty"" Loi>'•. t prio11e .-t • bv about 500 ac 1-"=mocra._, ......,.....,"',• ,.n Jl .,.;1" .....,,,, •• 11 ot who met in Los Angeles L"" ... ,..i.._ lit•• .• n ... •• 1110lff 01 Several week! ago and by the "din1 111'110 •PriY11•t11t1W rintl.••h h i<i<il"'I uoncl, ud<rOClfll -"Cl 1tl>Yll , six-member black caucus in '°' ·~ ~ui.n ..,111.,1,... : the legislatutt, Oymallv said. 111.,•'• .ioo • cn.m,.tor>'1ilo ''" t1o1tp1-. .... Mc1 1 l.it.1,bit : Dvmally, whose dlslricl \n· .. """', for ... 11.-.11r11. i-tlrit n : eludes Watts. said California fi"'""-A ltclgl • ..;11111191nt IOUllP L. • *id '"'"'"""'· C...yon lok1'1 ISlnd is unique becau!e lire-winner : .,,.. 1t1t., .. 1.1011 blein11 s1s.4on. <1f the state's Democratic c.nveoi L•k• •.. •h• ,_ P<•1l09 ..idttll ........ VfN ewt lt•t ind plly presidential primary n e x l 11-111,. ..,1111e<i .. '"" nguide " I 1 • -.. ~ .-. • .June will get all the etate•s 2n ,,_,......,. .. ,_ delegates votes at the : iii ,.,,,..,,_,L fan finder I 14Kwhl1e or\let!ow gold·llll•d GIM wllh tne eleQ•ril look and nobility o! p11cious gold ... coriv1nl1nUt fined 10 your wri1t w11h h1nd1orn1, 1tlt-1lzlng m11h b11c11e1. ••• , .5125 : ~ NIMial"'i""r Democratic Na ti on a 1 Con-: , ,, (71 4) 111 ... 2113 vention in Mi:tmi Beach. : • t.1ott"lllt"'-•-""!. ... < ...................... . North Dakota is the only , •••• -t ._ ....................... , other state where that is the :· ,. 0 , ~"'""-"'-• • ! case. he said. ~ ~o:;i·.:·~=:,",i!U~;;;·· .. -! Dymally said blacks could : ;. ...... hurt themselves in California ~ • _...O<M-,a-------; by putting all their support : c11• 11~11_ : behind .;. single Democratic : '"°'"' ! presidential candidate and ... ::_ •• :·~ • .'.":".::;:'!':.:'::':'.'.~.~'r.":':'.': •• ,o· Pacific Goldfish Farm __.,. s999s D18P·--_,. __ _ ------® Califtlmia Federars exciting new sports and recreation map shows you over 900 fun locations in ~os Angeles and Orange Counties! I Onlf California Federal has ft! And ft's abaolutely free! !rs the educational nrrN Fon Finder Map that pinpoints "'"'Y major aports and recreational facility In the Los Angeles and Orange County areas. Golf, swimming, boating, museums, picnic areas. horseback riding-you name it and lllis wonder1ul pleasure map has il It's fun of things to • do, places to go, In nearby 1111!as. Come gel your free copy now and hft Ille road to family fun. Supply of maps Is Umited, though-so hurry In now! AND P.A"KS. AMUSEMENT CENrn!S, STABLES,. AIRPORTS, GUN CLUBS _»If> MAllYMOREI •(AklAKl" !1 J 11l9n.4 for fil. t•r!n9 w1l11 111 1m1ll pontl1, ••• pttl•llv 01111 witti tftMlint w•- ttr th•t t111tl f1t 1t11111t1. "A•l- AICf." •11l1trn1llt1fly tl1ant .rid ne11rl1h•1, t l .. ino 1b11t1d111t o•vt•n for untl1'rw1 .. r llfo, If ltft 1t111di119, po11d ••*•r i.,. cern11 f•ul, 1rn1U1 i.,41 111tl •~•" b.,, ... ,, hiufl'•""l'•llv tl11J, in which 11eu.6t •111 livt ••t•pt li1tl1ri1, lut by n11.,. Int 111th walt r, with ".A~IAKl'' yo11 ''" \11p c.l11n 1MI fr•1h ••'•• wilho11! c.011tl1111ou1 111p- pli11 of "'w •t+tr. 151 GC>lf COURSES MUSEUMS OF SCIENCE, ART, CUJ..TURE - SURFlNG ANO 19 RACEWAYS. f7 BOATING AREAS • HAHOR SHOP'PING C:INTU ')JOO HarHt llv4. C•fa M ... MJ..MtS HUNTINGTON C:INTIR INCi'! • 14llnttr Huntln1t•n ktch lt2·5501 IM,OITID 1FIHtl ... TY,. KOi FOOD N1w 1111 Sale LAYAWAYS I kOI-,lite" , ...... , tel. t9 120 Get - Atteuerln $69.95 HOLIDAY KOi 11 ... S111 ........ t 111" ff 11" $2.10 te SI.to OPIN DAILY lo.I l710 893-7105 Clott4Tfflffy ........ 14842 EDWARDS ST., WESTMINSTER SWIMMING BEA.CHES STADIUMS. ARENAS AND MAAINAS NOW AVAILABLE AT ALL OUR OFFICES Califo~~~~~!!!"°"Sa~s Nation's Largest Federal Costa Mesa Office: Anaheim Office: Qrange Office: 2700 Horbor Blvd. • 546·2300 600 N. Euclid Ave.• 776-2222 4050 Melropolilan Dr. • 639-3033 0,, THI SAN Dllct~ PWT. AT ctOl.DIH WIST ••II IOU.A ------------1··-------·. -------·-- • .; • ·" .Network;s Wobbling _ In: Kenya ... NAIROBI. Kenya (AP) !!!!!"" • .K e n y a ' 1 government<on- trollect ~·r11dio and television agency · has come u·n d e r critielain as it struggles with aqme of the problems of broadcastin& In a developing country. Expertise ia scarce and budgets are low. Slick foreign. made TV programs pull in advtrtiaers but introdu~ alien social values, Local pro- ductio111 n;iay be poor In • ,quality. ~; •' ~.difficulties have root!: in Y.:' The aplif in 'Kenya 's popula-~ tion. The African majority ~ largely 1~ks Swahili. A ·..: minority of Asians a n d ~ Weaternera speak English. , ~ The voice of Kenya ·radio "Let.'s-forgetabout the fiscal year and you and I start11:. ~ b:oadcasts in English. Ewahili fun year." . •· , ""~ ' . · -'.f and, 14 tribal languages. Until -----------="~---~·----,­ ~ a few months ago, the most · ·~-cosily TV retained the navor ~~ .of its British colonial begin-'~· nings. relying heavily on British and AineriCan pro- • · grams aimed at the minority who atill own more than 80 ·:.: percent of the cou'ntry's sets. Then officiala voiced ren- •. cern that the VOK waa beconi· •. lng too dependent on ad· vertising revenue brought in by foreign shows. Some on 11 10 • member committee that / aeta broadcasting guideline.! profused to see a lihk between violence on programs and an outbreak of armtd robberies ln-Keny11 . • Zachary Onyonka . 11n ecOnomlat who took over u in· for'matiOll mbUster a year ago, I 'ordered: most J oreign pro-to us . .,New ri'rttals_cfi.opped grams replaced with IOcal from 50 to as low •as' 10 a shows. month." VOK producers, caught un· Spoi'lsora lost int.eres~ and prepared, plugged the ~ps • viewers complsined about too wi th tribal dance troupes and many repeats and unan- talk shows. The SwakUi· nouneed' program changes. language content rose from VOK·TV has a budget allot· about 30. to near 70 percent. ling abc;>ut f140,000 ~or' p~ Westerners .and As i a.n,s grams. Kangwana sa i d reacted strongly. operating costs would triple il " 'Peyton Pa I a c e,' ~ the agency did a pr6fessional dtspised, is like an oasis in ' job of producing local shows. this desert of drearine , " But VOK personnel say the said' a' letter to a Nain:lbl changes in TV are already newspaper. · -\ paying off. African ownership "It was a disaster," said of television -sets is slowly Roger BeMett, difector of ·a growing: more-than 1,000 sets company that re n t 1 TV 4' cpmmunity halls around the receivmi. "We had more Utan cp~try reach a vast African 30 percent of our set.a i:eturned audience. 'No-Fault' Insurance . -Proposed NEW YORK (AP I -Tilt Continental Insurance Com· panies has said it will propose "nofault" auto insurance pro- grams in all iitates which do not now have or are not plan- ning nofault legislation. ConUnenlal said Wednesday its move was believed to :.e the first effort by any I~ iurance company lo market no-fault reverage on a national scale. Massachusetts Is 'the only state with an operating no- fa'ult law , but other versions of the law will go into effect in Illinois, Delaware, Oregon and Florida at the alart of 1972'. No-fault auto in su ranee covers a motorist for losses he or ~is passengers :1ustain, r'egardlesS of ·whether he was at fault in an accident. In states with no-fault laws, redress to the courts by in- jured~pa:rties is eliminated. Continental's prop;ised pro- gram would be a rider to ex- isting policies, · adding · im- mediate payment to the in- sured for first-party. medical expenses and loss of income resulting from most accidents regardless of who was at fault. Policyholders would retain their right to Slle for •damages, but would be required then to repay whatever they had betn paid by Continental under no- fault provisions. Conlinenlal's offering would be aubject to ~pproval by the variowi state insurance · departments to which it ill· to be 11ubmitled, ' ' Fnd1y, N"'mbff lt,•1'171 DAILY PILOT • ~r>-~~~-'.-~~~~~~~~~~: Yea r B o und S~hool Works. A nswe r to Failing JJ.ond lss~s in Minnes ota '-fORA, MiM. (AP) -After 500 persons but aurprlslngly the 45-15 p 1 an , also taxpayers twice voted down little opposlti-On. acknowledges· that it has bond issues to firtanct a new School officials began last created some problem1 in high school In this growing Fe~ruary to drJIW·UP details of actiedullng buses, cla.ssea, and community, o!ficJals devised a their program, handling or achoo! aup21ies. year-rOund school experiment By July &, about 8 month But not seriod.s hand icaps,.he to end ov'ercrowding. after school normally shuts for says. While not everyone Is happy three months of summer Air conditioning c o 1 t i n g with the plan, oUicials have vacation,• the first group of $18,000 also beeomes a concluded after five months in students went back to classes. necessity with the year·round operating that it's working, The new plan means voters program, school officials said. about Sfi0.000 1 year with thia program," aaid Lacher. The administratorl hive been able to tailor teachua' achedules to their mutual lik• ing. Some are on traditional nine-month contr~ct, other• • prefer 11 months. Those work• ing the II-month sehedult Lacher aaid, average about $2,500 more a yea~ in P•Y and benefits . The system's 811 childrsn in apparenlly won't be faced with But, we will have saved grades one lo six were divided 8nother bond issue for )'e.ars.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; into four groups of ap-although Fairview Principal proximately equal size. The Joe Johnson doesn't look on groups In staggered sequence the plan as a permanent solu- go to Fairview !:lementary lion because this Kanabec School for nine weeks, then Coun ty seat ls growing. are off for three. The seventh, eigh ltt and Allowances i'n the schedule, ninth grades may be con· school officials said, are made verled to a 45-15 plan some for Christmas and Easter. .day. officials say, During the summer t h e Switching the sehior high children in each ifroup get off grades of 10th, 11th and 12th to for a four-week stretch. lhs program, however, would The plan, known as the "'45-be more difficult. ln an ar'ea 15 plan" for 15 school days on where moSt students live' on and. JS orr, included two small farms, the arguments eight neighboring school districts heavily toward Jteepin' tee~ and eliminated the need for agers at wbrk during the sum- using an old sr.l:lool building at mer months: Brunswick seven miles away, Some town folks have let . At the Quamba di strict, fi ve their displeasure be known. Working mothers wlth young miles to the east, first through ones horn~ for three weeks sixth grades Wi!rP, transferred must hire sitters. BONG .. BONG CUSTOM TAllOIS I. $ttltTMAKflS IN OIANGf COUHTt "llMANINT SHOW.ROOM c,~ ... ~,~ ....... ~~-""-=-~'i· Pll-CNllSTMAI SAU , 2 SUITI $ AT BIG SAVINGS . 135 Htv, lf.Htv, U It 41,..,, • I it.111.I .~~~~ ........... 5AV~ UP TO so•;. .. .,..... re11 .. .., c. • ..., ,..... SPlCl4l '"ICI .... llOW s.n.. $.-1-11, SJ ..... ••rm. OOUllf Dllf ,.SllJ S6'f 100'% Gu_,_IM4 S.l\o'-c!IM l!ll MOKAll ,. II M 'WI flf ANT llZI C.UHMlll •••• , ti 59 'ANY l lTLI COl'llD SHA•KSKIN ., ., IJ 62 . Si ll WOOL ... , 12 19 lttl•TI ..... ••• 10 6 ,,.,. IM'•!· .. •• <lot, 7000 fllllll IMl'Ol:Tfl WOOLIHS a OOlllll IHITS •Fall AlTllATIONI • 4 WlllC DILIVflT • IAST PAYMENTS II BE ,., A-In-I ••II V..W. "'-' I SM 211., ll,•1172 2012 MICHRION-IUITI 101-NIWl"OIT llACH tO-lt. 0••~ .. c .. A~ Alrpwfw 1.., M Mfc.4H~W '"°"· OJMll tllll llNMl1y ••• to Fairview. The b r l ck Richard Smith, assistant schoolhouse at Quamba isf_p~riin~c~ipa~l~a~nd~coord~;i~na~lo~r ~o~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ used for kindergarten and mentally retarded children. ~ The plan was first suggested by Supt. Pius Lacher. He had heprd of similar experiments in Lockport, 111., South of Chicago, and al St. Charles, Ji.to., nea,r St. Loous. The board of education unanimously approved the plan and then held a aeries of public meetings. One meeting attracted about 86 STORES BRIM -FULL Of Christmas Goodies ; • .. I t I ! t f I f l ' I ~ • . ' • j l I • i I • I 1 • l ' _, I I t • • Je C/JL'i PILOT For The Record JfJarriage Licenses LAS VEGAS, Ntv.. -M1rrl1" Uc.nMJ !JW*d h••• lncl\ldl: ALLANACH·DISMl!iV -Oci. 'r. '°'" A .. 64, o1 Cos11 MQI, Ind V I Cu 61, ol Tu1ll<I WHltE·SPARl(,S -Od. 4. D1Yld U .. ,,, Ind Adelf, ... both of l •llUNI Hhl~ WALKEll:·JDST -Del. '· a.or .. Ill,. Mo. of Hun!lneton lltlCh, 1nd H1l1tn M ' a. ol G1rikn G•oYf. l'"'Lll( .. ROPOULOS·JOMES -Oct. '' Solroa, JI, Ind Miry M1Crl1, '), llOth ol "'"''"1n11t• I ULLOCK-OLINIK -Oct.). lltt'rY L., ... 1H FOUftlll11 V1lloly, Ind El\ler1 o .. i. .... ?t. of Hunt11'1910n lkldl. TUNNELL·STEIDING -Oct. L Art!Mlr W .• ll, of Mlrln. Ltt, 71, boll! GI Hun11nttc•n lutn. DONNER·MEHUS -· Oct. 5, ll!lbeft C., 7t. 01 SICrtmtnlo. Ind Edlttl LDUIM, 1•, o1 Ne'WlPllfl 6e1ell. CHUCK-l'AlllAMDRE -Oci. '' Gtof.-C1n111btH, 2', ol Huntlll9fon BtlCh. Incl Mlllll F .. , l1-ol, ~ 8t1ch. DLIPHANT..tlE.«r.TH -Oct 6, Rld'lltd • Frink, 2', Ind Robin M1rvl1 Montgomery, 21, boll! of l111U111 lletdl. HARVEY·VAUGHAM -Oct. I, Dtvld lltvc1, 22, Hlcl JOI/I Ell11bllh, XI, bOlll of Caron• btt Mir. RDOR1GUEZ·AO,i.MS -Del. ·1 • N1rcl1G S1~I. lo!, ind Dtwfl. tt, bell! of H1111llMIP11 8fK~. MILLER·HALIERT -Otl. t , "J" Rick, 22, 1nd O.n!M, 20, bOlh ol NeWl)ort 8e1ch. . OILllECK·IENJAM!N -Del. f, Jolin L , lS, 11111 SyOllfJ Ann. 21, both Gf Cosio Me••· lVMN.JAMES -Del. t, Arthur Don, :JI, tFld l-Dlf K1v, 20. bolh of Hunll"91Dn llt1dl. W Y·MAV -Del. ,, J...:11. M,, O, Ind Ctll>f,rlM! I., .... both of Hunllntlon lltlch. WARO.MAMDELIAUM -Oci. t, MIU.Ill llrvc:t, 22. Ind Ll11 (., lt, tioth o1 Cotll Meu. CORENTO<RUCE -Oct. t, Geoor .. J., 36. 11111 11e11111 lnet, 13, both of Hunll1111110n l11Cl'I. GAVANO.TIMM -Oct. '· Wiiier J., Jr., 11, 1nd Sl'ltron M4 lA. boll! Gf H11nlln111on 8e1dl. G!5T-GIST -Ocl. '· Eu-CMrlet, ,,, Inell NlllC'I Ltt .... , both of Co1!1 Mesi. MDVLTOM...,.ERRIMGTDN -Oct. 9, Mkl'IMI Cuflls, lt, ol Mani_.,, Inell Dtbr1 Oline, U, of Got.II MtSI. llltADLEY·llOU5E -Oct. t. 1111111'1 W., 40, Ind K11hlttn. 2,, bOtll ol Hunl!MIOfl lllld'I.. MORA·P ... Ul $ON -Oct. t, Arfhur A .. 21, ,, Du1rt1, Ind DotlM 1(1y, 2'. of Huntlnl!on ee.u.. CONNER.CONNER -Oc!. 10. Allpn D .• •1, 1nd Oorl1 M., 36. both ol Hu.,. Un!Jlon Boie~. HAWNS·PFISTEll -Oct 10, Gin' W .. l2, ol l-ltldl Incl COllnlt Jo, 21, of Hun1rn0ton leKh. DEIGHAN-MARCHANT -Oct. 10, Jtmes l"r1..c:l1, 3!1, Ind Ftll'ICOIM, 21. boll! of Hunt!""ton 811dl. HYNES.IMGEllSOLL -Oct. U. Chotrlts K1!11!, 22. 1nd A.Ute, It, llolll of Wntmlnil1r. CHAMOLER·Pl!IC.\RCIK -Oci, 12, Edw1rd J., «1. ol W11tm)llltw Ind Nllf'fMn J., :II, ol G1rdm ~ HART·KING -Oct. 1!. JdWI ilnGn. 30, 111d J111d C.:1111, 24. 11o1t1 f/I L19'1!MI lleldl. OARR<ARTElll:·U. ll'IUIMCE -Oci. 12, ,P.vld A!IHI. tl, Mid $Mtnl Chr111!M, n. lloofh ol HunllnVoll ltE~~-JOMIS -Od. 12, Rowi.nd W., ff, to1111 Miry G1tllmoN, SJ, both of Coli. Miii. lEVINION·MAUAlll:ELL.A -Oct. 12, LIWl'lflCI A., .)I, tl'ld EGl!h Jtl"' Joi, belt! ol LlouM lltldl. llE llNAL.WDHLSC:HLAGEL -Oct. ll, J111n J-, 45, ind 911'111r1, Arlfllftl, JS. both al HINIPOrt lllldl YILLA·l"ERNAMDEZ -Oct. n , Arnold R .. 11. Incl 81rtl9r1 AM, 1•, llolll ol' Huntl1111IGll ll11di, GUIMN·MICKl!llSON -Oct. 15, 11111 0 ., lf, Ind Dolorfot. l7, both of HU,.. llnvlvlt •••di. TDDO.BAXTErrt -Oci. l J, ni.n11 a ., ..i, ol' W11tm1Mt1r, uld Gr1c1 A .. SI. of Dow111y. IUCHARD$·AOKI -Dct: 11, Tlmathy II., 21, of M-POrl ll11cll, Ind Jo. An111, 17, ol HunllMlon 8Hdl. f Central Court • System Bacl{ed By TOM BARLEY Of ttie DallY ,lltl Sl•ff CALIFORNIA'S LEGISLATURE soon will be asked lo approve a massive and historic revamping of the state's court slrudure, says James Cook, an Anaheim municipal court judge and a member of the California Judicial Coun- cil. Judge ·c.ook says approval of a court reorganization plan backed by the judicial council would give Cali- fornians a precedent-setting single cowi system. · , · It would sweep away the tradi- tional superior and ~unic~pal ~u~ in favor of a single JUdlc1al district for each county. Centralization would be the theme or the -new court system, according to Cook. . The plan won the backing of the 21-mcm~r Judicial council during a recent meeting of that body in Laguna Beach, THE COUNCll. was set up by the Legislature as sort or a super managerial body to supervise Californ ia's court system. Fifteen of its 21 members are judges appointed by the chief justice of the stale Supreme Court. Four are attorney's appointed by the state Bar Association. An assemblyman and a state senator also sit on the council. They are chosen by the judiciary committee of their res- pective houses. The council also decided at its Art Colony session to back plans for a complete system of automation in the state's' courts. Under automation, computers would take over many tasks, Judge Cook explains. Among them : calendar set- ting, data compllat'ion for both civil and criminal court records and the exchange of infonnation between courts that currently spells out long delays "in litigation. Reorganization and greater use of computers will add up to economies in the operation of Calirornia's court sys. tern, Cook claims. He adds that further cost culling might be provided by allowing judges to take over from lawyers the questioning of prospective jurors. THIS PROCEDURE currently takes great amo~ts of time in state court... Allowing the judge to do· it instead of the triaJ attorneys would be copying a system now used in federal courts. Santa Ana attorney James Tucker, chairman of Ult state Bar Association's liaison committee with the judicill council, backs the proposals. He has urged Orange Countr lawyers to "stop deqrift« thai serio~ prgble1111 race u- today." . Tucker notes 1hll ()tllfoml•'I lt"YO" 0111111 •r> bib l<rly criticized fQI' Jttlpi!IJ 11! m111ll11!( p Judicltl i71!om not suitod lo the ~-Qf lt!Jlit!f lodoy. He compares \ht attut'tlon to t~t "whlth f8Qed 04r doctors a few yurt Q~-wh11n \Ny rn~flllP!1ly 1pent_mJl •. lions of dollars to lrY to d•f••t Medlett'fl. "We need c~ ltt our court 11y1ttm, but, above all let us make the~ INfltlves and not let 'ho pollUoians get lnvot"'!ll I!! II." !l)IOlltr say_s, adding: ''!lOUllft ~NII LAWYERS in lllllfoml• '" nol In veey ~ .;tml MtliY and it is \IP kl VI 1mon1 ourulv11 to • NWU\lnl it.our this situaU911, 11 •• Maridato~y Ju~enile Counseling Pro pos e"d SANTA ANA -Juvenile oC· ·tenden In Orange County are getting top filght cou~llng services but the approach might pay off much bolter il the counseling were made mandatory both for the of. fender and his family, the Grind Jury urged today. It is often a family situation that turns a juvenile into a delinquent and the inclusion of the parents in the counseling sessions could well cut down on an offender's instituUonal time and correct the situation at the point of its origin, the panel notes in a portion of a special report devoted to juvenile offenses and truancy. Behavioral problems that often bring a juvenile before the court can, in some cases, be aUributed to the minor's physical condillon, the report Juvenile cases drtw the at- notes. The Grand Jury urges tention of the 1971 Grand Jury routine phyaic'IJ examJnatiOO!I ·and ll recommends t h e for all fuvenlles entering transfer or juvenile traf.flc of·'-=========="! J1.1venlle Hall and 111 non.. Ir one referee who ta current1J acting u traffic court judge," the report notes. delinquent children entering fenders to municipal courts. 11" vou H•v• LOIT o• 11111s- ••-Al~ Sitton Home. liThL! would be more con-PLACl!D 'l'OU• st•••IAN TOOl. um "'""l~ klT COMli IN ANO G•T ON• The panel also criticltes venient for parents who must 111tOM ou• 1.t.11:r&No1:11 • delays between the filing of a appear with the minor and n. PlM•nHit truancy petltlon by the af-would save travel · and cour fected school district and ttle time for officers who must MUNT~:a:N'!:'•cM appearance of the offendlng1_:t::es:Ul!'.y~.~l~l~w=oul:'.d:!-!a:!:lso=:_rel~e~a~se'..:!:=========='. minor in the courtroom. What is often a delay of four to six weeks "is frustrating to personnel trying to enforce a state· law which provides that children will attend school from ages six to 18 unless graduated," the report states. Grand Jury Criticizes Fullerton Branch Cou11 "It is also frustrating.to have the juvenile merely returned to school without adequate en- forcement," the Gr.and Jury report adds. "C.ourt orders should be followed closely by probation officers who will im- mediately return the truant to CQUl't for a case review if he fails to attend school." ' INSTANT COMFORT . • • SANTA ANA -A branch court 1.hat has been strongly criticized by four previous . grand juries didn't escape the attention of 1971 Orange Coun- ty Grand Jury today. · The panel slammed the con- tinued operation of th e Fullerton division of t h e Superior Court with the com- ment that "branch courts are expensive to operate and disruptive of overall court Girls Win Name Trade On Positions SANTA ANA -Women's Lib has won a victory in an action of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Titles of County Medical Center-positions of '.'H~eeper" and "eusto- '1ian" were change . t o Custodial Worker I a n d ctistodial Worker Il. lkhind the move ia reason. Ina wl\lolt would 11..W,n Ille h@~U of NQW •nd •ll llM gther Wamt1n'• ~lb gl'OUJ!I. County P-erlllflf'f! Dlrt<ttOr WUll•in lWt Aki !I Md btln dllcQYli'td thaL !n pr(ICll,. m01t appl i o1nt1 ft'.Jr Houselreeper potltl()111 were women and mo•t for Cu~ dian, men. operations. "The practlei! of assigning a Superior Court judge to serve one small segment of people one-half-day per week is a Crowded condition in the section of the l\.1anchester Avenue building devoted to waste of judicial resources .•••••:..c1>-' ~- and an unnecessary burden on : Orange County taxpayers," : the Grand Jury's special : report says. : ~ ... GOLF LI KE ' A MILLIO NAI RE The Judicial Council, the :· governing body of Ca!Uornia's : court system, recently recom-! mended to Orange County : supervisors that the Fullerton : eo11 on '°"'' _, 11.J1o11 ~ • pioruhip c:ou,.. •• -ll(j-t.nyon branch court be terminated in : Lok11 rn11 •• c1uw. SCGA..alld the interests of court ef-: · _,.,. No --t. c1oa1....,.. ••· ficiency and ec()nomy~ ......._-n...·1 • pmn. IU.•,-. ,_ "We concur with t h a t bOltl111tl s.~;1111 w.,.,.rbn • ,..._.i. cou .. 1 An 111f91nt lodp, with <111-recommendation and suggt!st ,.,,1 -1"""'" .• A ""'mm!"' poo1. that legislation be requested • Honobtdi rkllnt Ind...,,., 1PO. Cony-on Uk1, 73milel-.,_1of, early in 1972 to accompli sh t.os ...,,..i" ••• mo nM ,_11p ldo th is," the Grand Jury com-drtt1lor-otdltcriml""11ntm-. ments. Wh«1 yw Clfl 11 ... tnd pllf likt 1111 millk>Mi• .. \ Judge Bruce Sumner : L~u ''"" 111,2011. recently commented shortly : .......,, ,.._..,. _ : . ,............ . after his election as Superior : ~l'..0 .. lllilll ..tPU : Court presiding judge tha t be : (J't~~ ,'\A. .i f71 41 1174-2113 i . ~c ~~ c.lotl •....._._..: • would be happy to arrange for '••• <--=-+ ...................... . trlal or a lawsuit in the ........ "' ......................... . • • Fullerton court if the parties : i..o.r:.s..tW.,,,.,,.,., : involved sought that venue. : '_111 ,_.,.,.-'-,..._..._ : ~B~i~:!~:~.:.:::~; I ~:N'-:.::::-J' fUC!b 'qtJon wu tr1'cl in the t 'r!"?,.1~.-•:...+i:"ilil&J.." ~Ulllriol' buildUlj:. •11f1i·1111 ,, ............ ,,..,,,,,,, " Arrives when you put, on a beau- tiful new robe from Jack Bi'dwell. They come in all kinds of differe nt te)tture$, .like all-terry, all-velour, •nd terry-lined cotton prints. One size fits a ll, too, which makes it an ideal Christmas 9ift, We even hav• slippers you can co-ordinate wi th them. What will Jack think of n•xf. 3467 VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-4510 -PUBLIC NOTICI -GLOBAL LIQUIDATORS OPINS ITS WAalNOUSE WITH THOUSANDS OF ITEMS THll PllDAY. SIERRA-ELllADNDO -Od. IJ, John ,., ....................... ,,. .................................... ... Anthony, 22, ol Or1noe, Ind 5YIYll, ,. His staff reasqntd that tJm .... because or 1111 ""' nol•llon of lhe lllll• 1!111 h• npl•lned thal lh• Jobi Win JdonlJOll as 1o dullff, WI WILL II OltlN IY.IY ·DAY, 7 DAYS, A WllK, 12 le t lt•lft• UNTIL Cf:IRllTMAS. All Jff ereladtldl1e Pt1reJaued trom INTERNAL REVENIJE SIEIVRES and the FEDERAL BANKR lJPTCY COlJRTS. 16. ol l"ounl1ln V1ll1Y. PETERSEM·HAU!IDLD -Oct. ,,, Arnold H., 5', o1 W11tmlMttr 1nd L-M •• 12, ol Lmt Bud>. NEVI TT·HUOSPETH -Oct. 15, W1lllct W1rne, 11, Of Fount1ln VllllY, Ind Rl'becca Lyr>n, 72, GI' Bttlfll:lwW WILLIAMS-MURPHY -OCI. U, Cyril. 311. Incl Ruth A""' 21, both ol' Hun. ll11tWI 8ffdl. Sl..4.TT·WOOO -Oci, 1S. Mitt, ZI, I nd P1mtl1, 11, boll! GI Coronl NI Mtr. CODPElll·TIRRELL -Oct. IS, Mldlltt J1mn. ''· ol G•rdln Gnwt. 1flllll Kt!flleln A. 1l, Ill Wtstmln1ler. ENDSLEV..MENl(E -Oct. IS, P11.1I Wl1111m, 22, Ind J1ntu Elllnt, II, bc!fl Gf Hunll"""°" lt1dt. KALBFLEISCH-MAKOWSKY -Oct. lJ, llff'I' ltlloY. 2t, Ind C1rot Allfl. u. both ol' Huntl"'lwl lllCll. Death Notlre• ARBUCKLE 6 SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY U'I E. 17th St .• Costa Meaa MM881 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Coron.a dtl Mar OR 3·'451 Co5ta l\1e1• Ml 1-UUI • BEIJ. BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa ~fe11 u g.3113 • McCOJUUCK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY lits Llpna Canyon Rd. lff.HU • PACIFIC YIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mom1r1 CUpel S50I Paclfle View Drive Ne..,.n 11<,Jch. CllllOnlla flW1• • PEElt F AMIL'!_ 1• COLONIAL FUNEKAL HOME 11'1 Bo!oa Ave. Weotaloit« -• SMITHS' ,MOllTUARY In Mola 91. llUJllngtn Beaclt - Judge Spier8 Cited For High -Leadership UP.Q!l motion of. l1J11trvltor R•!ph Clark, a 11h1pplly m1r- rled man" the ch1nf1 wi• iP. proved. Trial Set Death Case 30 to 50% OFFc.~EVERYTHING! sa'bfna's U.11:01 -OIP-TS -JIWl.lll\' ,. .. AltMll A\'I,. Hwtt, •tldl t6Hll1 IAr.l~llttn:IMl't' El'ERYTH ING GOES TOYS -TOYS -TOYS -SflORnNG GOODS - Hl·l'I 1,qUIPMINt -CLOTHING -IMOU and IOOTS 10,000 sq. yd1. of CARl'IT -ARTS and CIAllTS - HOBBY SHOP SUPPLIES -nc. -nc. -nc. 30 to 50% OFFoN IYllYTHING ! IRING THIS COUPON TO WARIHOUll! s1.oo off on any $5.00 IMINHM "O..t Coupon per CUltM•" GLOBAL LIQUIDATORS 7200 ••rtl•n Grove llvd. ::~~~,. T•• H.W N. to •..i• tM• ""..Y cw .. 11, off at hlll• WW oll-t••p. rltflt M ..... 9Nv1 tmt. Only Coast & Southern offers savers all three: • 6% two to live year guaranteed oertltlcates. • Saturday ~ervice. •Th• Insider• Club. Effective 5.00%-5.13% P111book. No mlnlm~m. Annual 5.75%-5.92% Ono V11r C.rtlflcot1$l,OOO Minimum. Earnings 6.00%·6.18% Two to Fl" Vur C0<llllcot11 $!,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days toss of Interest on 1m0Unt1 wltt'ldrawn before maturity on a ll certificate accounts. The Insiders Club: A new way to beat in flation. Ill m1mb1r1hlp card permits you to buy nearly everything you need from tht finest clottd· door showrooms at substantial savings-appliances. furn iture, stereo equipment, sporting good11 draperies 1nd much, much more. You can even buy c1r111t tM''1ltet11 price1nd mo1:>111 h0m1s and rnotorcycl111t 1ubstanti1t aavtna1. Th• lnald1rt Club lllO ptovidH big dl1counts on tickets to •porting Ind 1nt1rtalnm1nt 1vtnts ••• plus a whole list of ,,... services: safe deposit box~,~eyordecs, 1 travelers checks, notary services and the use of d? .. ent duplicating equipment. Membership requirement for savers-$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive associate memberships entitling them to au outsicle referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. • ri~~ ~rir.·~:~ A11ftlf1 •111·1351 0011r •111111 l'JtlW1~.\r,', ''~~'t'l~',Wt~:i ................. tnd a ltHdw1~ • tra.1 102 HUNTINITON l lACH1 11 H11n1l1111011 C1n11r • !1l •l 1'1·1041 • s,i.HTA ,i.NA LOAN I UIVICt A•INCYI ltoS N. M1ln It.• !1 1'4/ M1·S257 SANTA MONICA: 711 W1!1hlrt l lvd, • 393-0746 J AN ,101101 lOll't. , ...... 131-2141 WllT co11NA1 t1ttl1nd hptpl<11 Cit,• 331·2201 '°""OAAMA Cltl': ttl l v1n N11r1111vd. •192·1171 '''"'"'' . 11111 V111llt1I l lvd. • 345·1614 LONI llACHt 3rd ' Locu1t • 437·7411 EAST LOS ANGELE~! I th I Soto •M-4!110 ...,M11rt tAM te4PNO,.. .. •*r• :fAM .. 1 PM , •"" °""" 11tun11n ,, • • • • Democrats Listening - To Ideas • ' • ' F'rid1y, Nowmbtr l~. 1971 DAILY PILOT J.J Soup ~otulism Mystery May ~ever Be · Solved- OAu.AS (AP) -More than ''but, because these are only A company spokesman said a few cans at the Paris plant shelves and boustwives to were normal , the USDA 11aid. i:liscovet"ed Aug: 13. The fin· three months after the event, conjecture\ it would not be tests at Paris and Camden was the first such inciderit Jn destr<1y any In their homes. The "swellers'' y,•erc reported ding ot botulism was coo- the mystery of how harmful fair to state them publicly." have pointed lo a possible the compan)''s 102 Years' USDA infonnants said the to the USDA inspector at the firmed Aug. 21. General recall bacteria gol into a batch of The Campbell Soup Co. Is cause, though he Cilnceded history. None <lf the tainted first suspicion 9f a possible plant July 19 and he requested rollowed next day, Campbell soup seems no still not admitting visitors to that "there is·no way of prov-soup actually reached the con- WASHINGTON (UPI) nearer solution today. its big caMing plant at Paris, Ing It conclusively." He sunler. problem al the Paris plant Immediate recall o: all the The U.S. Department of The Democrats' two reform '·It will very possibly re-Tex .. where the trouble arose. would not elaborate on what The eompany first an-.came mor.e than a month chicken vegetable soup pro,__ Agz:iculture maintained two ln- C1)1nmissions are ready to main a mystery forever," saJd But production continues. tyt\ tests showed. nounced Aug. 22 that it was earlier on July 16 when the duced July 2. spectors full time at the Pari1 listen to new ideas for Dr. Willia Irvin, southwest Some new light on what The company's Paris plant. recalling from 16 states a con· chicken vegetable soup pro-On July 28, soft swells were Campbell plant. It still does. overhauling the party's com-regional director for meat and reaUy occurred may oome opened for production in signment of chicken vegetable duced July 2 was examined noted in an incuballon sample They monitor production mand structure for its peren-poultry inspection of the U.S. when Campbell Soop Co. December 1964, is one of five · soup packed at the Paris after ·its normal lt day in· of chicken vegetable soup pro-lines where soup containing nial eleet!on combat with the Department of Agriculture. President W. 8 . Murphy ad-Campbell plants. It covers plant, after discovery , of cubatlon· period. • duced July IS and this was n1eal or poultry is involved. GOP. "We have several theories dresses the stockholders' an· about a million square feet bot u 11 s m contamination. Some cans were found to also recalled. flard swells -Other canned goods art tht This joint venture involves of what might have happened nual meeting this afternoon at and has about 1.500 employes. Grocers were if\lilructed to have "soft swells" -lids swelling at both top and bot-Afjminislration's r~sponslbll· risks of minor or major civil at Campbells.' Irvin added. Camden, N. J. The discovery of botulism in remove the soup from their slightly raised -while others tom or the cans -were ity. warfare within thel-~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"'-~~~~~~~~- Democratic Party. The com- missions already have caused some skirmishes an~ more are in sight from disputes over decisions they have made. '!'heir new project is a study of the structure and functions of ·the Del)'Jocratic National Con1mi ttee. in existence since 1648 as the governing body of the na tional party between Uie national conventions he Id e very rour years. Dem oc r a tic National Cha irman .L awrence F. O'Brien first asked !he lwo groups to skip the projeet and let it be handled by a special blue ribbon comn1ittee. But the co1nmission on rules, headed hy Rep. James G. O'Hara of Michigan, and the commission on delegate selec::· lion and party structure, head· ed by Rep. Donald M. Fraser or Minnesota. both decided that they had jurisdiction and agreed to go ahead in a joint study. They-did inviie the party's l l·member executive com- mittee and representatives o Denlocratic governors and state chairman to attend a No\·. 19 meeting to hear ideas offered by political scientists. Any reco.mmenda!ions frotn the commissions could not go into effect until <'lfler the 1972 convention because c a c h novcntion renews the life and defines the po\vers of the na- tiona l committee. The comnlissions profess lo be reay to hear a multitude of proposals to strengthen the party. But the most attention- getting proposal heard so far v1ould "gi\'e weighted voting l9 the states, more in line wifh their pop u 1 at ion or Democratic support. As it no1v operates. the 110- member national committee gives lwo votes each to Guam and the Cana! Zone. equal in weight to the vote of the heavily populated states ol California and New York. With national committee ap- proval. the O'llara Com- mission did recommend a measure of weighted voling for the platforn1. rules-and credentials committees at the 1972 national convention. Youths, 18 Can Sig11 For Vote In her report to the city council \Vcdnesday n i g ht . Dorothv ~lusfe!t noted that 18- year-o!ds have exa::tly three 1nonths to register if they v:ish to vote in lhe April l I muntcipal election. Last day for registration \Viii he Feb. 17, she pointed out. but the ne\v voters do not have to be 18 by that date. "If they can prove the~ will be 18 by !he election date they \Vil\ he permitted to register," said ~frs. Musre11 . r .... ·o city council seats. the. offices of city clerk and city treasurer and a probable sewer bond issue will be on the April ballot. The lerrns of councilrnen Charllon Boyd and Roy llolm are expiring, as is the term of longtime cily treasurer Con nie Kimble, whQ has a local record or garnering t h e ~reatest number of votes . of an.v candidate in a long series of elections. Mrs. to.1usle ll. who ll'as appointed to the ofrl ce of C'itv clerk \n September. 1970. v:iil be facing her first elec· tion . New voter~. and those who must re-rrgister because they have moved or changed their nnme~. n1ay register daily at the Voters Registration office, 1119 Chcstnul SI .. Santa Ana. BURGLARY ~~'u IT'S JUST A MATTER Of TIME ••• Pr•~•lll rt fuim ~•PP•ni119 bv l1~in9 1 ~lio" now. 11111111 I b11rtl1r 1l1rm 1y1tem in your "·"'·· PACIFIC ALARM 494-2337 642-1212 Prices ol this e xtrO:Yagan1a are naturally eU.c:tive CLOSED THAHKSGIYIHG DAY thru November 24. 1971 . DAFFODIL BULBS They don't work ••ry well tn light 1oc ket1, however, ii _you pl(l11l them you get much better reJults. A steal at twice the price. t-.. ,\' I 3~. SWAG SHADE LAMP WHITE AND GOLD A lamp that would look good in any room with the possible exception of the bath or the kitchen. · Might not look had there either. 695 SKI CARRIER 'Tis the aeaaon for the snow and you 'll 1ure}y"'!l:eed a b.tter way to get your skies up there than in the gloYe compartment. J49vw 1498 OTHER ROYAL TRITOH MOTOR OIL OR BRAKE FLUID A well known motor oil and brake fluid at a good price. Your choice of either. Change your oil and brake fluid. g•t change hack at Na!ional. 298r. ' ID LB. ANNUAL RYE Not th• ldnd of rye you can drln1r:. Plant it for a great winter lawn. Grown• in only one color, grffn, • HO. I CEDAR SHIHGLES V•ry attracti••· Mak•• a whole house look b.tt•r. Houses without tools just don't look v•ry pretty. 6'9 BDL. • ELECTRIC LAWN· VACUUM This buy includes 100 feet of cord at no extra cost. Next time yqur wile complain• about Yacuuming the whol• hous•. tell her you did the whole yard, # 1703 TREE 100 Fi. CORD. 59s7 ·- THIS WILL FLOOR YOU!! "NAIROBI" What a name for tile. Jt'1 gr.at. Sounds exciting. daring. and 11'1 good looking tile. 6 88 .CTN. "CASABLAHCA" . • .. .. -t . ... .. :,,I· 9 .:· ..... '. Another great looking fl oor tile with a romantic name. (Who knows. maybe ii originated ln Casablanca.) 7 88 CTN. "YIHYL PURITA" El Marco has returned and with him a language I can't understand. but it sure is a beautiful one. (I have a hard time understanding English,) Pure vinyl. 9 88 CTN. ALL !2"xl2" 45 SQ. FT. TO THE CARTON TURUE 3 MIHUTE CAR WASH I Car washes usually lake more lhan thre• m inutes so this 1tull is great. It might take you a little longer. but anything with the nam-. Turtle can't be slow. 48c PEGBOARD ORGANlZER TRAYS Fanta1llc idea. Wi sh I'd thought of it myself. Keep s all tho1e lit1le odds end ends put away and the next lime you nHd them you know where to look. 27~. 1/2" SHEET ROCK Adding a room? Well If you are this is a must. Jn tact. why not add a room. use !he sheet rock and then shingle it with cedar? 144 4'x8' PLASTIC LEAF RAKE You not only can rake leaYe1 with this little job. but you can ua• ii for grass. light junk and anything else you want to try. HELLO "THERE" SNAIL AND SLUG PELLETS Use them where those little 1limey devils crawl and presto. you may find them gone !01ever. (You may li.nd them gone and then you may not) 33~-l/2LB. BOX FLUORESCEHT TUBES How's your chance to replace those burned out bulbs In the garage or wherever you may use fluorescent lights. A good pric• too. ,, . ' I I , 1 ~ ' •• • ' . ' PLASTIC SHEETING 67c 4 FT. Great 1tulf lo protect ouldoor futniture, wrap a ham sandwich for your neighborhood ogre. or take camping to keep equipment dry. ~ , I i 297 i 12'x2S ' ROLL KLEEHEX 200 COURT Don't count them unless you have nothing else to do, Or better yet. keep track ol them 01 you u11e lhem. 22~ox KAL KAN DOG FOOD Make your dog look like La11ia. run ltli:e fUn Tln Tin. and fly lilte Super Dog. Not really folks . but II Js a good diet tor your pooch • 4 CANS 99c -· • I • • ,. .· ' .. • '• .. '• ·: .. • .. ' . ' • 'I .. :I ... I • I OAILV PILOT ' - L. M. Boyd Pentagon Confirms ·Snoopi~g • . The Flutte1·ing Of tl1 e Scarves ' WASlllNGTON '(AP ) -The ~fense Department • h a s acl(nowledged its s e c. u r l t y ' , "The melancholy days hal't. come, tbe._saddf1!t of the year, or walling winds, and naked woods, and me11d· 0~·5 brown and sear." -r}Tiinl _.: ''The Dtath of the Flowera" F'INE J\1AN, ~Ir. Bryant. but his outlook on Autuntn w11 too pessi mistic. II seaSQns \\ere catll,_ Fall _would 1!t lhe tiger. Please note, YO\lOg fellow. Th.at first d11.y the .air turns crisp makes a man snap to, picks up his stride, sharpens his eyesight. Here comes the fluttering or lhe ..;..J1gents C()fllinued to conduct nighttime forays on the Pen.- tagon·press room with a rum- mage through I\ e w s r o o m desks, but said this was a mistake and • will not be repeat~. scarves. a wind to tum a shoulder to, and for a change, everybody, rven the sun, can walk to work. Cllll.DREN born in those sunny months bet"·een 1.1~ and October lend toJeQre.. slig1itly higher on I.Q. tests. Slightly higher than ihe winter. born. A British scientist claims his statistics prove that. ·~ked it out \\•ith scvcrnl authorities. Those born bet~·een A1ay and October confirmed it absolutely. BRJTISU quee[ls and _l\ings "1ra~itionally. go to ~horse races. but American presidents don\. Why 1s that .• · • TWO OUT nf five men change lheir shoes at le:ist once a day. the pollsters report. That's the pipe-and-slipper crowd, J gather ... TAKE Hieardo Montalban. All dressed UR,. he looks like a stolen-yacht. \1•hat? \\'HINGOfNG -\\'hat"s a -w.blogding~ Any sort or ruckus, right"! But back when your · granddad was a la~. it was standard nomenclature among addicts for a fit induced by drugs. \Vhile they work: Profession<il vl'ine tasters nibble cheese bet\\·een drinks. Perfume chemists occasion1dly sniff gun1 camphor. Cigar testers sip milk. To keep their sensitivities in shape. · - An ant called lhc Dalmatie che\\'S grlitin into dough. shapes it in1o patties, llwn cook s.ime in the sun. So tar 11s I know. Ibi s is the only beast. be-sides man. thnt bakes his own b~uiis. QUERll-:S -Q. "\\fhafs Flddler·s Green? .. A. That's the sailors' heaven. Jncidcnlally. can you name any olher occupational group lhat has its O\\·n private hereafter? Neither can I . _ . Q. "\'OU Aft-:N can make a name for yourself just by building bridges or \\Tiling books. But what can a girl do lo become famous? .. A. Mata Hari v.•as shot. Cleopatra wa·s poisoned by snnke-bite. Ptlarie Antoin- ette was guillotined. Joan of Arc \\'as burned at the slake. Anne Boleyn "'as decnpitated. Lady Godiva rCH:le 21 horse nude. And Lucrcce was raped. BACON -A Los ~ Angeles librarian reports she finally found it necessary to pick up a gcntleman·s library card. Because her letters to him. telephone calls. face to face . pleas still failed to break him of the peculiar habit of us- ing strips of ra"· bacon as bookmarks. SO "·noTF. ~larcus Long : "A good woman is like a good book -entertaining. inspiring and instructive: some-- times a bit loo y,·ordy. but when properl y bound and dec- orated, lrresisliblt'. I "'ish J could afford a library. Address ninil Jo I,. M. Boutl, P. 0. Box 1875, N~!D­ port Beoch, Co. 92660. Copyright 1971 L. J\t .Bo11d Cost Also Higli Absenteei sn1 Marking '71 Sess io11 of Ass e1nhly SACRAf\1Ei'\TO (AP! absent ror various reasons - Electrical Expansion 'Too Late' SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A Cnltech scientist hRs told a legislative co1nmittee i t 1 s •. already too late to plPll on ex. pahding C:1rlrornia's electrical generaling c:ipacily to meet ne\.\' demand or the !:..le 1970s. Dr. Lester Lees told the A'\.~ernbly Plnnning and 1.and Use CQ111mittee Thursd ay that the long \t>:id lime required to build nuclear J>O"'er plnnts menns "we're in grent trouble for the 1970s.'' lie said demand for eltt· tricity il'! grt11\•ing al 8 rate of 9 or 10 percent .a year. but utili· ty companies cnn't add generating c a p a c i t y 11t anywhere near that rate. The conunittet is coIKiucting a series of he3rings on the problems of locoting nuclear power plants. with the hope of coming up with legislation to govern such fac ilities. A vice president of Paciric f:as rind Electric Co .. B. W. Sh11ckelford, told the con1- n1ittce that the industry is running ou t of new ways to produce electricity; and "large nuclear-fueled thermal plants are the best choice to meet the load rore<'asts" Shackelford said the best yocatioos for such plant! are -along the coast because the ocean provides a va~t supply of cooling water vital to opera· lion or the high-temperature pl Ants Jle said that becaLLc;e a thorough investigation is need· ed belore Cons.truction begins- and bcaluse most power plant site:s are · challeng~ by con- servationists-PG&E figures it needs 10 years between the start of ptanning and the start of operation. A spokesman Thursday said Daniel Z. Henk.Jn, assistant secretary of defense for public affairs, "was very distressed to know this happened." The spokesman said •Ienkin was tuld ·by the security people this "was an inadvertent cheek" · and "will not happen again." Reporters were given a similar assurance by Ilenkin several months ago but on ar- riving for work Wednesday cards were found on the desks of correspondents for Tin1e mpgazine and the New )'ork Dally News which SA id: "An Inspection or this office area-by the Pentagon Counter- intelligence Force revenled no violntions of security regula- tions." The PentngQn spokesman. Brig. Cen. Daniel James. said the Counter-Jntelllgence Force regularly check.'! all Penh1gon orfice5 to moke sure safes are locked and no c!as.,ified materials are left o 1.1 t overnight. But reporters noted -the press room is an unclas.<1\fied area and they do not hold security clearances. They complained these after-hours inspections gave the Pent.•gon an opportunity to go through their notes nnd learn the names of cuntacts. James said the counter-in- telligence agents appnrenlly failed to realize they were. in the press room. "If they ca.n't rigu~~ oui it's the press room," one reporter' told James, ''what kind of in- telligence people" are the"y?" Recycling Increases NEW YORK (UPI) -The American Paper Inst It u t.e has pred icted that the in- dustry's use or recycled Raper would increase 1.7 percent this year, 2.'8 percent" in 1972 and 3.0 pen:ent in 1973. The institute, in. its annual survey o( paper, paperboard and wood pulp capacity, said this would mean C()nsumption this year of recycled paper would be 12,345,000 tons and .13,071,000 tons by 1973. IF YOU HllVll l.OIT Oil MIS· 'l.llCEO YOUll StlElllllH TOOL · KIT COME IN llHO G.llT ONI FllOM outt lllllTllHOllll. Drug Sale Rap Hits 2 Officers Assemblym<1n Peter Wilson leaving onl y enough to pass Tit. Fw..r- had a snoria\ reason for being routine bills but not any ~-r VENTURA (UPI) -Two "' ,.. Pier absent from Sacramento one measures that call or spen- Ventura Countv law officers.1,==="=""='="='='="="='='="==='I day last "·eek. ding or urgency measures 1 11 As the S:ln Diego Republican "'hich require a two-thirds will be arraigned Monday on put it in the requi red letter to margin of 54 votes. drug charges. A!iSembly Speaker Bo b f\lorel-A Jav:maker "'ho mis.'les a Sheriff's Deputy Adrian ti day of session on purely Deongl!s. 24 . and Corrections I .. b · · I --1 Officer _Creg A. ~1arcotte. 23. '"I reS""C\fulli' r ...... ucs t lhat personlj us1ness 1s orco:u to "' '' · h d both or Oxnurd, were arrested I be excused fron1 session \\'8t\·e is ai!y expense money h. h 1 •· II · \\'ednesday after a n un-Nnv. 11 on !egislat1\"e busi ness. "' ic :l\\'nH11\ers en ect in dd . · I · I 119 2oo dercover investigatio n· that I \\'ill be confe rring \\'i\h San a 1t1on to t lcir annua .. I took three weeks. Diego city off icials about the s:i ary. The ~herHf's office said city's legislati ve program for The problem became so undercover agents b 0 ugh t 1972." acute this fall that Moretti, D-niarijuana from the pair on What 111.-l"kes the excuse Van Nuys, had to prod his col-two occasions. unusual Is th<1t after Dec. 5 leagues "'ilh a note Oct. 15 They were booked 0 n \Vilson \\'ill be may<Jr of San telling them to show up for the charges of snle and possession Diego and the city·S legislative session. of marijuAna and dangerous progra1n "'ill be his as a city One of the most celebrated drugs. official and not a \e~isla\or. absentee cases this year in-A!'i a correclions officer, The key phrase in the letter \'O\red Asse1nlllr 1nan Robert 1.1nrcolte i!'i not a sworn depu- ls that he \•:as on ··\egi~l;i th·e Badhntn, !H-Ne~·port Beachl. ty and goes unarmed. lie and business." That n1eans \\'ilson, lie subnlilted a carefully Dean~lis had been with the was able to be absent from phrased letter saying he plan-sheriff's about a year. tha t day's session or the ned to be absent while he was Marcotte's ~·ife, Linda. 24, legislature and still colleel $30 ''assessing habitat and feeding and his brother, phi Ii p living expenses. CQnditions of mi gr a I or Y Marcotte, 20, were also ar- The 1971 l'iession has been a \\'aterfo\vl ." rested ln the case and booked rCCQrd one in terms of length Later, Badham boasted to a on PCIMtssion or dangerous end cost. newsman that he really had d h h I rugs. Murray F.. lost 42 pounds so far. Eat, drink and be like Murray. With our prcwen melhod ·)'Oii not only lose weight but ...,. » · keep II otl ICM" good. 115,SSOS WEIGHT@. WATCHffiS. s-.~-~ ... . ,....,_ ......... . ~ ...... , •• ..,.., ... 11_ ..... JIC-lltll ....... ,-. .. CWl.1.ioLIM It also as ad sgpee~ia~p~r~~~s~n~l:;;'ilh~e"d~a~~d~uc~k~h~u~nl~in~;:::=================~===============:J-~1---~ l------151eros: CIUS4d oyal)sen ee1sm. an '-' an ac , agg 1s 1m1 . I Last Friday, of the 79 cur-After a storm of protest. rent as semblymen. -28 were Badluun gave up hi:i; $30 · Mexico cruises- one .week from s250! This winter, you can enjoy the physical and mental refreshment of~ seven-day warm water cruise \Vith the line that invented the whole idea. You'll live it up amid 3 S\Yimming pools, 5 open decks and with people who speak your language-for as little as$36 a day. One ticket bUys everything. P&O'!l 5. 5. Oriana leaves Los Angeles Nov. 29 on her I.a Fiesta Cruise and Decem- ber 11 on her El Cortez Cruise for Mazatlan, Ji'uerto Vallarta and Acapulco. For informa- tion or resetvatlons,contactus.All P&O ships are of British registry. N:EWPOH.T CENTEl{ THA VEL 644·1412 Lole lolthtttt ~agUJla leaGh GlBFY ~td. Strike's Over Bikes Are Here 100 Ten Speeds In Stock From. $94.50 Up BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS • BEFORE STOCK DEPLETES 5 SPEEDS, l SPEEDS, CHI LDRENS BIKES & TRI KES -·--...... __ _, Expert S~rvice & Repair CHRISTMAS LAY-AWA YS 240 THALIA e LAGUNA BEAtff e 494-1522 ·' 20% off oil alt· Sc~tter rugs in stock! • Nylon/Fortret• polyM!er sculplUred pile. • Ton~n-tonecolorslngeametric. brickeffecL • latex backing ... won'laldd. •·Machine washable. 27X48"/reg. 5.99, New4.71 ·36x~,reg.$11 0NowUO 48 x 7" ·, reg. $19, Nolf 'IUO • Sculptured effec~ geomell1c ~r. • Nylon pile, lndecoratorccilora. • Latex backlng-won'tlkld. • Machlnewaahabla. 27 x 48", reg. 5.99, Now4.71 36 x 7Z: •. f89. $11, llolf uo Save 25% Choose from hanging lamps, table lamp1, lloor lamps.;. modern, lradlllonal; Mediterranean Qr Earlf·Amilrlcan. 8n9 a full 25% on this larrilic group of lamps that regularly sell for 19.98 to $25, SlllonSUplr Kllhllltcnpel8llrlc In uc1Un9prtn11111C1-colora. Buyyardl and yard1 of-vibrant colq_rs In m&M1lous polyesterthafa "------eo'ffoy·lo~are-lor, eo1w<u1rio111r--t---l · 1se Solids, reg.1.98, Now . 238 Print.s, reg. 2.98, Now JCPenney The values are here eve,ry day. Avelleblt et th11 followtng sforas : NEWPORT BEACH , Fashion hlend. HUNTINGTON BEACH-, Huntington Center. Charga jt. Santa's Something 'homemade for Christmas 1tW 11 'the beat gift of all. Shelves ·Well-st ·ecked • • ..... "'"Dll•M*. ..... ,,..,, .. ..,.,..., 1t, 1m • -· -, . • .. :_\ . ' Fo r those who don't have the time to make something special, many coast women's groups offer the ideal solution: boutiques featuring band;·cr~ted gift and home Jfems. . -4 ~ -Ann Landers Two are being staged tomorrow a~. a third will take place Wedne.sday, Dec. I. Las Ayudantes Auxillary to Children's Home ~iety will open liS shop al 9 a.m. in the multipurpose room of Mission Vie- jo Jiigh School. Displayed will be the re~lts of a year's work, including Christmas decorations, home accessories, children's items i nd homemade gourmet foods. The safe will end at 4 ir.m., aCC<lrding to Mrs. Gretchen Walz, chairman, and all proceeds Will be given to CHS, the lariest private adoption agency in California. Admission \o the boutique is 50 cents. Las Margaritas . will open its Gi fts and Goodies Boutique al· 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Montanoso Recreation C e n t e r , Mission Viejo, and close the doors at 3 p.m. Gifls and decorations will be sold by th e St. James Episcopal Church Women on Wednesday, Dec. 1, from 11 a.m. to S ' p.m. at 2124 E. Billboa Blvd., Balboa, and there will l5e a $1 'admission fee. Included will be stocking stuffers, holi· day decorations, herb garden's, candles, wreaths and gounnet food s. Lunch will be served by members of St. Cecelia's Guild , under the direction ol Mrs. Ruth Stevens. Co-chairmen are Mrs. Joseph Whitacre and Mrs. Isabelle Keh1or. Los Ayudontes members (left to right l the Mmes. John Wetz, Eric Pepys and John Carlisle assemble gift item• for their bootique tomorrow. Admiring a hond·crofted nativity •cene from St; Jomes Church Women's boutique ore (at left, left to right I Mrs. John Ashey and Mrs . Joseph Whitacre. Selecting from Los Margaritas' boutique ore (above, left to right l tho Mme•. Lawrenc e Russell, Jomes Motossian and John Allen. ' rQuacks' J . . Goose . ' I ! • Cooked • . . ., ·~ DEAR ANN LANDERS' c:on,ratm.., lions. It's about time tom.tone Aid · . good word for psychotherapy. ' · , Infantile patterns can be hard to shake, How many men are afraid of their wives the way they were afraid of thel( mothers? How many women are cU~ pointed ln their husbands when they comr pare them with their falllers? How m.nj .. , sexual problems in marriage -. ~i potence, frigidity and promiscu.Jty -. i:ri anger misdirected? ' A good therapist does not change your personality -he 1Simply he.Jps you !W derstand yoursell. It cannot be Mae without pii1q_. You can't I et tranquilitf from tranquilizers any more than you cljt lose weight without experienclJe hunler. The people who scream that psychlatrJ: is quackery are the ones who need it bui don't want to .su~ject th emselves to the agonizing reappraisal. Maybe happ- can't be bought, but I am spending sonif hard-earned bread on therapy and U'1·aS close to buying happineS! as a person caa come. Please quote me. -STRU~ GLING IN CHICAGO ' DEAR STJ;tUGGLING: l5olllld1 al If you'n wtnnlag the battle. My ~ congratu.1.atlon1 and my Ui1nk1 tor .- superb leUer. • . ' DE:AR ANN LANDERS: I'm a 17-year• old girt with a nutty problem. If you think I've got a screw loose. ten me. I won't bl hurt 1?ecause I thin.k so, too. T h e pro-blem ts that I always feel I am imposing on people, taking up too much of their time -and that they are puUing up witli me because they don't want to hurt my feelings. For example: Last week I was invited (with a friend) to swim ln the pool of a distant relative. We spent about three hours there and bad a wonderful time. . .. The relative asked us to stay for sup- per. I said I thought we had better go - hut my friend begged me to stay and I agreed . We enjoyed the supper but I felt later that we bad Imposed a n d overstayed our wel come. Now I have that old guilty feeling and am mad at myselt J or not _yslng ~~r judgment. Am I nuts? ...!. INSIDE MIRROR DEAR I.: No, not avta, Ju s t tn- tro1pective, ertremely sen1ldve to t Ii e feeling1 of othel'I and perb1J)I e:1ces1lve- ly critical of yourseU. Tbe best n.y to deal with lJJl1 problem 11 to decide In ad- vance bow long you will ally, tben stick with the plan. It will reduce tbe guilt, aod. It .will alto make your company moi:e priztd than tbe per10a wbo &ta)'I toa long. DEAR ANN LANDERS' RecenUy I have read several letters to the editors from sad pet owners, angry with hit-and- run drivers who have killed or injured cats and dogs and left them alongside the &treet or highway ta die. Please, Ann, inform yoor extensive readership that often the driver does not know .he .. has hit a living thing. A cat or Ii dog, or even a child. can unwittingly t>e l _.. pulled under the wheels of a fast-moving · r---------------~---:---------------------_::_ _____________ ...,. ___________________ _:·~tru~ck or lrailer because of the 1uctlon .. . tect-b) hts· "ehiclr:-'ftriri.s-caU..1---, "Bernoulli's Effect" of air movement and ' pressure. Hands That Rocked Cradle Rock Washington The pet or the child may not even. tJ careless.1te may be patie ntly waiting A• the curb or on the shoulder of the toad when a fast·movlni truck comes ~ and sucks the victim under the ~ So, please, Ann, wam parents to ins~ By MARGARET SCHERF WASHINGTON (AP) -"Men Only'' re ad 1 sign In the U.S. House of Representatives when Jeanette Rankin i rrived to take her seal. Ttuit was In 1917, three ye!rs before American women won the right to vote , ind Rep. Rankin (R·Mnnt. I. was the first member of her JeJ to win 1 seat-in Congress. Today the sign is long gone and women 'make up 1 majority of the American electorate. But they make up less than 2 -percent of the U.S. Congress where their number has declined by 40 percerlt-during the past dec11de. Nevertheless. the doien women now 1uvln1 In Con1res1 e1erclse more power than most of the 80 who have followed in Jecineue Rankin's foolsteps. The mosl powerful is Sen. r.targaret Chlise Smith CR·1'1alne). the ooly wl)man in the Senate and the only member or her sex to have served in both chambers of Congress. She was elected to her late husband's House seat in 1940 and to the Senate in l949 and now fs ranking Republican on the Anned Services Committee. INDEPENDENT - Flerccly independent, she seldom discloses ahead of time how she plans lo vote and often casts the decisive ballot on close issues. "A woman's viewpoint should ht ob- jective and Cree or any emphasls ()ft feminine interests," says Mrs. Smlth. who has shown little interest in the equal rig hts issue. · The only "·ornan to vote against the equal ri~hts amendment recently passed by the House is Rep. Leonor K. Sullivan (D-Mo. ), ~·ho shares with Sen . Smith the dis tinctio n of being the only women In Congress today who succeeded their husbands. In contrast, of the 20 women In 'Congress when the high point of female representation was reached in 1962. 10 had succeeded their husbands. "There art difference11 between male and female roles in our society · ind r hope there alway& are," Mrs. Sullivan said in explainins her vote agains t lhe amendment. their children about this and urge u.Dt In Congress since. 1952, she bolds the where she almost alwaya wins," 1 col·-to keep pets on a leash or a aafe distanat I from-streets or highways where f11t'I longevity recorll among women in the ea,~ue says. moVlng vehicles travef. ~CONCERNEd. House. Chairman of the subcommittee. on · Her JegislatiY'e skill was demonstrated -consumer affairs, she is especially proud recently when the Rouse staged its TEACHER AND PARENT lN THRE'1 of having introduced and guided to lon~est, scrappiest session this year RIVERS • : passage the tru th·in·lending bill and of ~fore passing the $23 billion education DEAR TEACHER: 1 1tope ~ ••bite{ having-authored the-firsHood·stamp pro-:--b11l lhlkame--from her-1ubt'ommittee. -wmDt .... dliCiifttid it mtlfMs....., .._.- gram. I?urlng that 1Session Rep. Shirley tables tonlgbl It coald meu 1 life ....._ A power in the House is Rep. Edith Ch1~holm (0.N.Y.). scored the iucceuful Thuka lor wrlt1111. t Green CO-Ore.), chaJrman of a sob-ant1buslng amend~t introduced by , committee on higher education and an in-~fl'I. Green with these words to ber·col· ~ n t'·J f th t Ed r leagues ' Whal 15 French klHlnl! Is tt .::::= .~en i.:"ooro~~itie: paren uca ion ''Let me bring it down front_t.o you._. Who should set tht ~ lim its - ' Your only cOl'icern 1·s that whitet are af· boy or the glrl! Can a sliOijUn · TAK&S CASE TO TRE FLOOR fectect Come out from behind your succeed? Read AM Landers' boo~ ''A lot ot oommittee members don 't get masks and tell lt like it really ls. Where "Teenage Set -Ten Way1 to Cool ~ along with her -she't not liberal enough were you when black chlldren were bused Send 50 cents In coin and a lor!a:. tell for them -but when they won't go along right pasl the white schools?" dressed . stamped envelope ln care of with her, the takes her case to the floor, (See HAND ROCKS, Pace 14) Daily Pilot. 1 • i • ' ' I I . . • - . ~· . , ... -···-··-.. ' .. ~- .Holiday Happenings Fill Cal_en .dar Turning thought> to the holf· day season seems to be up- perm06t with Orange Coast club members. Kappa Delta Newport Harbor K a pp a Delta AlumJ11e will hive 1 cookie atld recipe t-:s:mutnge when they meet at '7:30 p.m. Monday,. Nov. 22. In the HWl- tington ,aeach home of Mrs. Clifford Jeffries. AJao on the agenda will be a speaker from PACE (Personal and Company Effectiveness). SC Juniors members Mercwy building. gather in t b e Savini: and Loan ·--- OES , Mn. Wllll1m Johnson will conduct her first meeting aa worthy matron of the Harbor SIR Chapter, Ordtr of Eutern Star. The session wlll be c&lled to order at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. %3, ln the Ma1<1nic Temple. . and Bruce · McCartney. sen- . tinel. Jim Graham Js Oaa bearel'. Mrs. Kuhn WIS installed president.. of the Starbrtghl Club, the ch1pter'1 ways and means aiection, during 1 noon meethig. Oelfa Gamma Mrs. Richard Miller will open ber Shorecllff home to Santa Ana-Newport Harbor Delta Gammas for a workshop · at 9~30 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 23. Members will mike Christmas articles which will be sold 1t the 1972 Serendipity. cond, collage. TOPS of lhe LagUIJI. B e 1 c h Toastritistress QW.b. Emphasis will be on balldiqg voice enthualum and quality. 1 The croup will meet at 7:30 p.m. lln the ,Peacock ,bajlding1 La1una BtaCh. • Nut> to Nibble Tops Clubs meet every Friday at 9:30 a.m. in the 'recrtatfon center -of the Harborview P&rk, Hun· Irvine Juniors • (ington Beach. · Irvine Juniors ca pt u're'd seven .awards during the Fine Arts Featjval .sponsorecfby: the Orange District, Ca.lifon:iia Federation of WoiJien's Clubs. ' Winners were Mrs. Stephen Lundqu1st, first place·and be.st of show In the drawings division , SttOnd, handmade rugs and third, oils, Mrs, Members of the South Coast Junior Woman's Club of. Foun- tain Valley will attend 1 Los Cerritos District conference and dinner at 7·p.m. Monday, Nov. 22. in the D:Mney Women 's Clubbollse. other new officers ai:e Johnson. worthy patron: Mr. and Mrs. Aroold A r f f • associate patron and matron ; and the Mmes. James Graham and Albert Kuhn, conduclresstS; William Ap- plebee, secretary: John Har· ris, treasurer; Cy Pitoniak, ch1plain, and Wilbur MacGlnitie, organist. La Leche ·James Hewicker, first and At a W~--•-N Mrs. John Egerer, second in 24, LI Leche League of' Hun-e '"' an rs. o Eng e, se-. p.m. ~ ....... y, ov. l;:~~l·~-~d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tington Beach will discuss the Birth of 'the Baby and Family -Others , are Miss Nancy • Collinson, marshal; Miss Can-Temple Hillel dace Werner. Ada; Miss Do.,. Making . Chanukah deeora-na Di:s:. Ruth. and t b e tions during-a work.shop at Mmes. Donald Ye a rs I e y, 7:30 p:m. Monday. Nov. 22, ts Esther: Frank Isselhardt. the project plaMed by '.l'emI!le -Martha; Robert Wetherbee, Hillel Sisterhood when Electa; CorWin Horne, Warder From Page 13 Adjustment. .The meeting will take place in the home of Mrs ... Felecia Savchenko. Toastmistresses Enth1,1siasm Ls the theme for the Monday, Nov. 22 , meeting • • • Hand Rocks This first black woman to forcing the ~ual r i c h t s perm.ft consumers who are serve in Congress, M r 1 . amendment out of t b e charged above-ceiling prices Chishol~ staged what. was Judiciary Committee where it to sue for three times the had been blocked for decades amount of money involved . 2515 E. Co•.+ H!9hwe ~ •t M1(Arlh11r Blvd. Coron• cl.I Mtf ANNOUNCES THE WINNERS OF THE ·AMALFI TRUNK SHOWING S11i.OO AMALFI KNIT AMALFI ,OL YEST ER Mn. V•r11• Dudley DRESS 2015 T•mp.le Hill1 Oriv• Mri. T~1oc/1:1•• H1rcl1 r ]117 Ulti mo Si. L•9u11e Hill1 lo119 Be•ch DllUIS e SUITS e cb.t.TS e GOWNS e ,.t.NT0 SUITS SIMs' te ZO Yeur Ch1r1J1 Ao:count W1l1tt1m• -Fr11 P1 r~ir19 i" R11r M11t•r Ch••'il• A¥1il abl1 probably the first successful by Chairman Emanuel Celler Mrs. Dwyer, Jong active in the /]/ 11 CJ/ . Jiinglehanded revolt against CD-N.Y.). field of consumer protection, Lhubbu JJiop the venerated committee as-She employed a discharge has not hesitated to critici1e d Touching Up A Boutique Art Gallery to support the tfard8n Foundation of Educational Therapy is about to open in Costa ~tesa. Mrs. Joseph Durkin , volunteer, readies a clock for sale as A. Earl \Vpoden puts finishing touches on two days' paint work donated by Orange Belt District Council of Painters, Santa Ana Local 48. All types of art items will be made for sale by Mardan children, local art- ists and craftsmen. Your Horoscope Aries; Climb Ladder signrnent system. p e t i t I 0 n , an unusual the White House in the past. Representing a Brooklyn parliamentary maneuver that SCATHING LETTER LANE B RY/ ANT district. she was incensed· at seldom succeeds because of She sent President Nixon a • T f-\ being assigned to a sub-House members' extreme scathing Jetter when he had committee dealing with rural reluctance to go over the, head been in office onl y a year ac· PRE•HOLIDAY development and forestry. of a powerful chairman like cuslng him of do i n g COLLEAGUES SURPRISED Celler. "absolutely nothing of She surprised colleaguk by FUTURE COURT NOMINEE significance in the field of s A L E striding to a microphone w o m e n ' s r i g h t s. re· during a Democratic caucus A former Detroit judge, s pons i bi 11 ti es and op· and refusing tObudge until she Mrs. Griffiths has been sug-· porluniUes." FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY was reluctantly recognized by gested by some colleagues as Perhaps most prominent In the leadership. Then she sue-a future nominee to the the field of women's rights Ls NOVEMBER 19 • 20 • 21 cessfully pushed through a Supreme Court. w h 0 s e ·Rep. Bella Abzug (0-N.Y.), measure changing her .,. members .she once charac-who gets lots of attention but, , GIRLS' Ir TUNS' PANTCOATS & signment to veterans affairs. terized as "nine sleeping Rip according to one aide. has 2• MATCHING PANTS "There are a lot more Van Winkles." hard time getting favors done R•9. $26.00 to $45.00 ·············-··· $12.90 to $22.90 veterans in my disbict than T\-1rs. Griffiths has-risen to a for her Manhattan constituents GIRLS'. DRESSES there are trees ," she uid. senior posi tion on tbe in-Rep. Abzug says of her Reg. $1 1.00 to $17.00 ............... ·-·· $6.00 to $12.00 "You've commiUed political fluential Ways and Means treatment by male colleagues : GIRLS' JUMPERS, asst. Acrylic KwJts ~~icedide,'B' atmaMrsle collChishea.gueolin-Co~~iltee1 .Re bl. "They have all the power, Reg . $I l .OO ........................... _ ........................... $8.00 ..,n . u . m, 1111; on y pu 1can women therefore they're very charm· TE"N DR"'SES not-yet dead~ is preparing a in the J:louse of Reps~ Flor-ing . .'..' _ _ '" u presidential campaign. ence Dwyer Of New Jersey and Also ei:tremely active in R•t· '15.00 to '1 1~00 =················· $9.00 to $16.00 SATURDA y , Encourage comfort -help rect. Doors which previously As chairman of the House Margaret Heck I er of pushing for women's rights is GIW' J pc. conON SUEDE sns NOVEMBER 20 family member to fulfill am· were closed open to you. Cycle . appropriations' subcommittee Massachusetts. ·Rep. Patsy Mink (0.Hawail ), Reg. f 15.00 to $1 8.00 ................. _. $1 1.00 to $13.00 bition. Give now and you also high; take initiative. Express on the interior, Rep. Julia They were the on I y who says a bill providln~ na· ••tLS' SWIA~ SKIRTS WM1 PANTS By SYDNEY 01'1-tAJ\°R WiSCOll rett!iVe. 1 . ~· .-; 'confldenct. GO . directly to ·B~tlledr Ha .ndsebnl'([).I Wasb.), Republicans on the House tionwide day-care programs "RegL l 5.001to $.11 .00 --····-··-··········· $3 .00 to $8.00 ARIES (~1arch ·21.Aprll lO): RPIO Oct. 23-NOV;i 21 l: source. Take lead. Highlight w1e s cons1 era e c out. Banking Committee to ; vote for pre.school ~hildren "iUhe GIRIJ :. TDNI• IRAS Accent on ambition, career. Highlight versatility. Be will· personal magnefism. · Her subcommittee handled for a narrowly approved biggest single legislative sue· · · • ability to make prOOu,ciive ing' to expand. Don't restrict AQUARWS (Jan. 20-Feb. S2.2 billion in appropriations amendment to Phase 2 cess I have achieved since Reg. $~.00 end. $2.75 .................... $1 .00 ancl $1.39 ·yourself. Study VI r go 18): Charitable institution can this year, incllj.d.ing a num· economic legislation that ·was coming to the Congr~ss in Not e\'~ry size 1n ~ery color Md sT;yle. Sorry, no mail or ~~~~es~e~:~~h.de~~i~r ~~ mes.sage. You will be moving, offer you chance to utilize her of pork-barrel projects strongly opposed by the Nixon 1965." phone rders on ~"· so ht a bright 'n early bird. changing. getting calls and re· abilities. Aceept. Harmonize dear to the heart of con-administration. Both reported· Reps. Louise Day Hicks (0. So"uth Coast Plaza. Costa Mesa authority observe and .pay quests. · domestic relationships. Accede gressmen. ly are under pressure from the Mass.), and Ella T. Grasso respects. You can climb some SAGlTIARIUS (Nov . 22· to request from fa mi J y Rep. Martha Griffiths (0. \Vhite House to change their (0-Conn.). both have main· BriatoJ If .Sin Diego fwy.· 540.771 7 rungs of ladder. Do so. Dec. 21 ): Emphasis is on col· member. Mich.), demonstrated her con-position. tained low profiles in Congress Store"°'": M••.·M ."lO •·•··t:JO I'·'"· - TAURUS (April 20.May 20): Jecting "'hat you need. Stirvey PISCES (Feb. t~March 20): . ..'."::'d'.'.e~ra'.'.b'.'.:le:_:_e::ff:::ectl:::v_::en::es:'..s _'b'..:y'__T'.'.h'.'.e-'a~m::e:'n':'.dm~en~l~w~o~u~l.'.'d_~si~nc:'.e'.Cth~ei'.'._r~el"'ec~l:"io"'n~s~in'._1~988~.-~~~~~~"..,~.1,.•,.,•,.,·,.,•,.,·"~•·,.,•,.,· ~,.,s",.,·,.,1,.,2,.,·•~~~~~~ Good lunar aspect now coin· situation. Take time to choose A l f · d h' h'chl-cides with journeys .. long.. ccen on r1en s ip w I distance calls a n d com-QU{l-li~y Your abiUty to can blossom into romance. Be munication. Write. plan ahead. analyze comes to fore. There positive. See good qualities in- Advertise and publicize. One is no net'!d to accept seCond stead of criticizing. Does not best - res pond accordingly. mean you should be naive. who admires you says so. ·CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. Means you should give benefit Don't kick toe in sand . 19): Your choices prove cor-of doubt. GE!\1INI (~lay 21-June 20):1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I stress ability to be perceptive. ti Draw from inner resources. Give ~U .. pJay. to . curio;;ity. Find \fmY·· Plsee' person could ~Y: ··prqmin~t role . A void wt:sbful thinking. CA¥l!J! (June ·2(.July 2"ll ' Lie I~, .filO' ft\Orl listening than tl.1ktnk. •;P.ertnit· mat~. partn~ ,ti)1lake··~Oit18tlve. You gain If' c;:afeflll in •leg'al a_rea. Gathef~f.~ ct s ; lnfor.?!lation. Plant ~· tor fo\ture growth. LEO ~}u!f~Aug; 2210."Stick to prael\C31' issµ~~ Obtain hi~t from Qi~r messap.e. Avoid the sd!Yt\onal. Adh~re lo diet heilth"resdl'Ul1on s . tmp'ro\o't!: relations with co- workers. Ariel person may arouse~-K¥P your cool. SEE A LIVE DEMONSTRATION ~tlntle w Mi~ Headquarters for Spanish & M·editen~,.ean. Furniture! VIRGO .. (Ayg .. ,23-Sept. 22) o New approacf'I if> necessaf!1 for success. ApplieS' to ·bu1nness and pefsonal ~·areas. Stress origineJi~ , . , jndependence Give yourself a ~hance to l--:---<:0 .. tereXP';.._J!efuse....lll.jl--J.E;:<,...~i..t~ work wi~h.1'1hd!_ti~. LIBRA. !S<e,t. 23'0ct., 22 \o Emphasis ls ori sloW. but steady pace. Attend to details. Be awJ:r'e of e i s e'n ti a 1 s . Tmprove 11 v i n g conditions. "' • . j ' ...... 1, Ir,• I •, . ' i~ -• -~ -" "· , Holiday Fashion .-. -~_.Show ,, ' , .. • L • .,..1.,, 1Jlitttro;, 1Jl•lftero11t lteli4tv ••••en f11h le11t thewll .. ., Mht ''i"' Metl•l1 i11 henor of Chrilt"''' S1•l-1 pm •rid 91!11 4 plft-S1f11rdey, Ne• .. 10. 111 ih• m•lt, Hu11flri1Jl o11 C1r1+11 11 l11th 1114 E.4i1191• •I S•11 D!•9e F-/w1v. SATURDAY -10 a.m. to 5 p.m. COSTA MESA STORE ONLY! Alft•r1•1 Homt E<.one>mi1I will 1how vou h&w food1 ••• te&k•d d'11it it1u1ly -Ju,+ !ht w1y you w1nl th1m ;., I •ti. tl>t 11o•m•I !ilftt . e Porl 1bl~ e ll S Vo!t Op1r1tic11 e Cook • 5 lb. 10111 111 Jl m•11ut11. e B1 k1 • poi1lo1 in 4 mi1111t1i. e No 111or1 m1i1y poh 1nil p•111. COST.t. MES.t. -411 !:-Stvlftltlftlh St. 646·1684 DoHy 9.9, Sot. 9-6 ~L TORO -Locauna Hlll1 Pla1a I next to Sev-On l 837·3810 DoHy 10.9, Sot . 10-6 HUNTINCOTON IUCH -l •ookhunt & Garfield 962-5528 Do ily 9-9, Sot. 9.~ · .. ' .. ' I ' • . ... .. I -. l F SAVE s2 on FM/AM portable r1dio, model 1221. Onfy4%• high. h:offers big room -filling sound. TelHcoping FM antenna, no-drift FM/AFC. slide rule di1I and Vernier tuning. Earphone 1nd blt- terias included~ A great gift I SAVE s10 .. on AC/DC cassette Frtdq, -mbtr 19, 19U Your Choice of these TOJA~ AUTOMAtl~C--. COLOR CONSOLES - TAC lets you kick that bothersome tuning habit by auto- matically keeping flesh tones natural and pictures sharp. No more jumping up and down to adjust controls ••• no more green or purple .faces. The new Matrix Tube has a black. ----opaque-substance-surrounding each-color dot,.-reaulting -in- far better picture contrast, sharpness and far inore brightn- and the new Magna -Power Chassis, with pradomirwrtly aolid- state components, assures better performance and greater reliability. A-Italian Provincial-model 7160. B. Danlall Modern styling-model 7162 . C. Contemporary-model 7152. D. French · Provincial-model 7158_ E: Early American-model 7154. F. Early American-also model 7154. G-Mediterranean styling-model 7156. SAVE $)Q) _ .. on UHF/VHF remote..,,._ trol. Available with models 7162, 7154 ind 7158. It offers more convenienca and more functionl. Yciu ...,. never have to leave your easy ==~ chair. See it nowt SimuMr.dTV'l'ictun ' SAVE s995 on slim-and trim portable TV model 5036 with uhra-rec~ SAVE s21 on Tottl Automatjc Colol partable model 6114with12" di· SAVE 5101 on--Stereo FM /AM redio-phono. Spcss..,.r tangular 19• diagonal measure pictuies, agonel measure pictures, Quick-On, re- telescoping dipole antenna and conve-movable sun shield, telescoping dipcle nientcarrying handle. Perfeci. anywhere -antenna and convenient carrying handle . in ·any room in your home. A perfect 1econd set. Save now. model 37.63 ·hn 50-Watta Eli.- power, fourspe1ker1 in an Air·$""*"'°" System, Micromatic player. Comempo.. r1ry, Early Amertcan, French Provlncilftao. • ' 1~~i------ow-SJ29S · recorc»r model 9023 with switchable auto level cOntrol, level meter, battery indicator, cassette eject end record button. Batt~ries, mike, earphone, Carrying cases and blank cfssotte m also Included. 9 . NOW_!!i SS ' ~~~:;1 ·~01-n_s_._~9~5~~~~~N~o~w~S~2~7Ll8~~~~--'!NO~W~$~3~9~8~·~~ ---~~~------..---....-------------------------------~ LAYr4WAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS - GOLDENWEST & WARNER HUNTINGTON IEACH SAW ONLY 842-5596 • 46 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE/ 401 MAIN STREET HUNTINGTON IEACH SERVICE & SALES 536.7561 ' BUY NOW NO PAYMENT DUE 'TIL MARCH '72 IROOKHURST& WAINER FOUNTAIN VAi.LEY SALES ONLY 962.2456 .. • • ' .. , ... . . ... ~ ...... . . . •• 'lo ' I • . ..... ' . •• -· • .. DAILY '1LOf Frld.1y, Novtmbtt 19, 1971 ·- Ir,vine . \V if.r Goes D()wll to. lhe Wire Tonight . -• It's~ers ~tBaron8 /\t . ~ ·lhe ........... lhe center o[ fhe table l<lol(bl H iountaln Valley and Edison club at H11nllogloo Beach High In a critic1d lrvlne League football clash. Kickoff la alate4 for I. At slake for Fountain Valley'• Baron• is a berth in the ClF A.AAA playoffs 11' UV!ne LeagU.e cham~, ~ampion or tri-champion. ,._ Edison's ohances for a spot in the eliminations rest On its ability to knock oiffountain Valley and gei aid from Los Aiamitos and Estancia to throw lhe loop into fl six-w/~ tie. Should such 8·'combination occur it'IJ·be u~ -to the league to find two represen- tath•es out of the six for playoff com· petition. Fountain Valley, Corona del Mar and Aiagnolia·Je.ad the'league with 4-2 marks followed · by 3-3 teams Edison, Los Alamitos and Estancia. ·ll'_he rivalry between Fountain Valley . •Pd Edison is perhaps the most fierce of any in the Huntington ·Beach School Bistrict despite the fact Fountain Valley ii' only in its sixth football season and this is the third year of E4i&On football. ·Edison broke the Ba-rons' hearts in 1969 witP ~a 21·20 upset responsible for Foun· tain Valley (1) miss the playoffs (2\ lose a share o( the· Irvine League cham· plci:iship with Loara . ,AJ!d last year the Barons had a shot at the· title but favored Edison romped. The Edfson jinx. has held true in basketball and· baseball crucials, too, making ,the riYairy all the more intensive. ·Coach Bruce Pickford 's Fountain V:al,ley crew employs the tri ple option ~Up with running backs To n y ~ijlveda, Les Becher, Mike ~alcol_m, Tony Scalisi and Matt 1 Mohulsk1 taking tUms stabbing defenses with their runs, f.nd the Barons have talented c.ary Hernandez in the lineup at wide receiver, defensive hal£back. punter and place- kicker. Quarterback Tom ?-.1eunier is an ex· cencnt passer when called on for the aerial game. C:iach Vince Asaro's Chargers count~r tliat setup with a ground game ot' their O\V-0 led by ju_nior tailbafk Fred Hernan· dez. ..... . Hernandez has ru shed for 781 yards in 15'2 carrlcs for a 5.8 average. The Chargers rolled to t~eir 20tl\ straight "'in midway through this season. But defenses have taken ad.vantage-of Ute. Ja-Ck of an aeri2J threat to dump the CJF AAA 1970 champions three of tbe past four outings. ft's a brand new ball game tonight, however, with past records. press clip- p{rigs and ballyhoo thro111·n out the win- dOw. Fount1ln V1llt'f LlntllPi ... .. OlltnM 1n l"OI. l"l1ytr WI, WI. Pl1ytr ~ Herne..0.1 165 uo Tro••ll , Duvall 10s m IC l<ld c NIP!> lU no P•••I c Ca.rrauo l&J 190 MllC~fll c; e..-nn1rd 1111 110 1- T !Cid 7llO llj ""'" TE P11coe ,,\ 1S erar..,,, OB Meun~r IU lSS Olld~v TB S..1>ulvll'd1 lW 16S fler09ndet RB Mo~u11~I 1•5 U~ Mollulskl l<I Been.er 17S 160 Vt"""" ... I MO ' ' ~I l Teamwork Key To Success Of Nebraska LJ.NCOLN, Neb. lAP I -Coach Bob Devaney. wh0$e Nebraska Cornhuskers are in purauit of a second straight na- tional · Wotball tiUt, is not one to pin his fortunes on-qne ot two superstar players. '"'I think ,the success of the Nebraska program js the fact it is built around a tearri of fin& football players who feel· they depend on each other," Devaney ---~--iirdin-an"intervieW-.• - Not .that there.are no standouts on the top-ra~ed Cornhusker team, headed ~or a Thanksgivfug Day showdown wiJh seoond-rankK Oklahoma. •:we think we have some great football pla~ers," says Devaney •. "We have players qn . our team v.·e ~·t trade -for any in the country. Certatnly. 1 think we have -playeTs who a N ~ndldate1 tor 111-"Amulcan, and the Htbln'lan 'l)'ophy, ror that matter. 1~But J.1 bulllte as a coach to ltngle out oqt._..p..,., t:hd say he is the player On otJr"<o(edL "I da11't think It's up to the coach to 81 .. cenala plly<!rs a buildup. I lhink a pllyer"1 abWty ts vt.ry evident lO •ll who "8' the pme&1 write about them a~d tal~abollt them." a.lam. teamwork and reason1151e ddi hi-. Mn Characteristics of the 1ltl'Ccwnbalkr!, Who wl11 be playing (or U.'811-.iit title llld_a possible naUonal ....... ""'· 25. • WVanef who owns a carttr record of 1 inl • ie tOdCI and six ties, says he no ' plrticular psychological ad- ge or disadvantage to being in dfll ..... of a Ho. 1 r•nking as opposed to No. 2 and shooting for the top apot , •! • lhe ca,. wilh Oklahoma. .. t, ht uid, .il'd rather bf number one llJIOlllTl!lln." .. • DAILY l"lLOT Iliff l"htt. CdM Clashes With Eagles At Newport ' .· \. One-third of the thrilling final act ol t h a t melodramatic spectacular-the Irvine League football race-will unfold .tonlgM al Ne'!PQr\'Ha.!'J!or High. That's when Estancia's Ea~les (3·3) and the Corona del Mar Sea Kmgs ( 4-2) clash with the opening salvo slat_td for I o'clock·. If Cororia wins, it assures itself or either the championship outright or of a possible two-or three-way deadlock wiOt either Fountaln Valley (4-2for Magnolia (4-2 ) or bolh. ~ For·coach Phil Brown's ~Lancia grid- ders, a six-way deadlock for the title could involve them, if they dump the Sea Kings while Edison and Los Alamitos are getting past Fountain ·Valley and Magnolia. At any rate, the battle between the Eagles and the twD-point fav~ite Coronans of Dave Holland is expected to be JuSt that-a real battle. - As in any other important thrilfer. both head coaches appear to be showing a mutual admiration society. BroWn says, "Corona has a very tough, •ggressive defense and we haven't seen any weaknesses in either their running or passing o!fense." And according to Hol12o11d, ';Estancia seems to be one of the toughest teams in the league right now. "We really think we're in a heavy game." It's also a direct contrast between the SD-n1any-yards-and..a -cloud-of-dust offense of Estancia and Corona's so-cal!ed big play offense. FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S LES BECHER .(40), ELDON KIDD (731 RUN ESCORT FOR TOM MEUNIER. TRY TO STOP EDISON TONIGHT The Eagles have a sizeable kont line in· eluding Kim Shores (200), Craig Dennis (205), Doug Brant (185) and Bob Conkly11 (185) to block for tailbacks Dan Prin· ceotto (1,0U yards) and Jim Schultz (175 -- Costa Mesa, • I . . Falcons' Matc·h ' Aerial Attacks Costa Mesa and Santa Ana Valley High Scl]QOls may be feel_!.ng_ a big neglected tonight when they put the 'A'raps on their 1971 Irvine League football season at -Santa Ana Bowl tonight. The kickoff Is l.Sla ted fon 8 o'clock and their clish .in the only one or four tonight that does not figure in the wild chase for the league championship. J\.1esa's hopes for victory rely on the right arm of senior quarterback Flip Darnell and his _ability to match the Falcons ' Martin VanderRoest in the aerial· department. The r..tustang senior field generaJ has come on strong as the season has pro· gressed and Mesa coach John S\veazy says his team has jelled under oarnell. And he has an excclh:nt runner in tailback Bob Bomboy. But It's the tough defensive middle four of Kell y Stroich, Kenny Warren, Chuck Glaspy and Don Delany that has been the heart of ~1csa·s forte. Bombay has run for three touchdowns and caught a TD pass in the last three games from his spot in the backfield to take over the offensive load. The biggest question mark for Costa Mesa tonight. however, is if the defensive secondary of haUbacks Pat Kalama and Paul Desmet along with safetyman Mark Schrupp can contain the aeriaJ blitz of Santa Ana Valley. "\Ve think they'll pass 35 or 40 times tonight so it may not be over 'Iii mid· night," surmises Sweazy. Mesa 's aerial guns could be active, too, since Darnell has accounted for 224 yards and a TD pass in the last t111·0 t-.1usl..'tng outings. And wingback Kalama is a threat pass- ing also. He completed a 61·yard touchdown~pass to Jon t-.1archior1atti last week and is seven for 16 for the season for 180 yards. Me sans • ..... ' ' MG ' cl 'I " "I ONTARIO -Bob Smail and Paul Baker or Costa Mesa 14•i\I be among 400 in vited contestants competing In the se- cond annual NHRA Supernalion:ils or drag racing at Onta rio Moto r Speedway thi., weekend. , The two veterans will be \'ylng with other top ranking drivers rr0m llCf'OAS the U.S. anct Canada llf the $200,000 classic which will decide lhC' 1971 Supernational championships In eight s e p a r a t e eliminator categories. Small has enlered a 11164 Plymouth in the stock f.limlnalor category for pr~ duction·t)'J>e llutomoblles. Baker will be at tht wheel or ~ 1956 Chevrolet in the 11me c11tcgory. Tbe •tocl tlimlnal.ors are lhe slowest .. " Lions-W,rap lJ.p. toop Titl-e; -yards) along-with fullback John Dixon _ (;04 yards). For the smaller Sea King s, 180-pound fullbe.ck Bob Ferraro has been the busiest mail carrier with 842 net yards on the ground. . . . Siemens.-Leads 27-16 Win But tailback John Miles has 9.9 JOO speed and he can also break for the long gainers; as CdM quarterback Reed Johnson is also capable of doing . By PHIL ROSS The ~I , !~pound senior dueled all -01 ihi 011"' "11'1 S••ff evening long with4he elusive Lappin and Jeff Siemens won the battle and his eventually won out in the battle of the Westminster Lions won t~e jtar Thursday statistics. night at La Palma Stadium in Anaheim. For·Siem·l!!ns, He was tfue on nine of 15 The Liops' senior qua~rback was passes for 114 yards and a touchdown, he matched up directly aga inst Loara's fine sprintout specialist, Dean Lappin, and it had just one aerial picked off and he turned out as quite a personal scume and • rush~ for 78 net y~rda in seven t~arries a heckuva team struggle. · and a }lair of TDs. However, Siemens was victorious on Lappin, meanwhile, clicked on 10 of 16 both ends of the stick in pacing coach Bill air attempts for 108 yards while -pounding .Boswell's Westmins ter bunch to a perfect out 64 net yards in 13 ground cracks. (7-01 Sunset League mar~ with a 27-16 Ironically, the only Interception thrown conquest of Lappin and his Saxons. by the latter was picked off in the second Westminster thus wraps up outright quarter by Sielnens, who doubles as a possessiOfl of the loop crown (its first frf!e safety on defense. since a 7-0 championshi p in 1968) and sits In fact, in retrospect, Siemens' hijack back to wait for Friday and Saturday job with 6:10 ]~ft in the first half could've night games to see which opponent it been Westminster',;i: Ji:ey play in the con~ draws in next week's initial salvo of CIF test, . . ,. AAAA playoff acl ion. Because the winners were •ding by 'T- And ii has to be the most satisfying Oat the lime after the cagey signal caller campaign -playoffs notwithstanding -had directed them on an 86-yard , 10.pla.y for Boswell and his rugged group since drive jutt· mj.nutes earlier to earn tha t that "68 crew made it into the AAAA early edge. semifinals before being stopped by El Chuck Winkles tallied the Lions' initial Rancho, 27-7. six-pointer on a three-yard run with Mark \Vhile lhe Lions (&-1 ) tacked on their Smith toeing the .extra point. 11th straight Sunset win and eighth con· At anj rate,.following the pass theft, at seculive this season after an opening 24-Westminster's ejght-yard-line, Siemens 19 rlon·league setback against last year's wasted 'no time (four plays to be exact) AAAA runnerup Lakewood, Siemens once again stood out like a sore thumb. Gray, Muniz Mix In LB Title Bout LONG BEACH -Clyde Gray, Canada·s weller\\'eigtit champion from Toronto, WZ6 rated a slight favorit t; over unbeaten Armando l\1uniz of East Los Angeles in tonighl'S bout for the vacant North American welterweight title. GA.Ml STATISTICS w First c1owm ""~"'° n Flttl dawn1 "11lng I !'I"! -nl lllf'llUll. 0 11111 1 flrit "°"'"' lt Y1nh Ml\1119 . 2" Y•l'([i PIHl"9 lH Y•"'• llM.I t Nit ~erd1 011Nd :!ti P11n"/lovtr1g1 dl1t1<1<1 J/ll P-lll•/Yerd1 peNJllrld •I» F11rt1blt1/Fumbl" lol;I . J/0 k • .. lly 0V•f11tl ' • • • " "' IN H •u ,,. "' "' Wt1!1T1ln1ttr LINlrl 0 .. , 1 . ' ' •USHIJfG 1 -27 Q -II 519me-ns Wln~I" T 1oc~m1..cll lloll1nd Ort ltu1 H1.,11 Te11!1 W"lml"11..-kll n Wl ' ~ ' 17 '2 ' J ,, 0 ' . . I d j ) A) I ll •• 30 .... 11 .1 ••• "' ••• " IJ.t "' in engineering, another scoring drive to push the. advantage to 13-0. Tailback Winkles opened t~ drive with a 12-yard sprint around right end which was followed immediately by a ~yard reverse pitchout .around the other flank by w1de receiver Kirk Harris. . . ·• • Then Winkles' 13-yard burst uirougi\ left guard set up the score -a U.-yard. bootleg arou_nd the right side .hY Sieqiens . with key blocks . by Gary Jennings and ' Joe Decoma. After Loara had narrowed the count to 13-7 just before the half, the champs stormed back with 7:59 rema ining in the ·third quarter with Siemens tallying six more markers on a five-yard left end keeper. Smith followed with his second of three successfu1 PATs. The Lions' !Ina! TD came with 6:45 left in the Ult on an 11-yard pass from Slemen$ to spilt end Gary MaddOcksi who, . hooked onto -the pigskin after t LOtn'J.: defender deflected it into his wa!lirfl arm!I. Looking at Corona's front setup, il"s a completely opposite situation lrom that which is prevalent at Estancia . In fact, the biggest Cdl\1 regulars up front ·are a pair of 180 -poun· den-offensive center Malcolm DeMiUe and offensive guard-defensive tackle Ken Carpenter. As evidenced by last yea r's 27-21 Eagle victory, when Corona let loose of a 21-7 last period edge, almost anything can happen. CfM l lnt\IPt Deltnil W>. W>. 1"1•,•r ·~ '" Lyrw;~ "' •• ~IH• :~ m •nMr •• f••l>flnltr •• '" e~rs m '" 88ndel ·~ "' Wnttler "' •• "'ndrew• '" '" Grower •• "' Pt1ller '" '" °"'"'' Leads Golf_ To~e~ ·w adkins' Prediction May Be Coming True WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) -Lanny He needed oiily 26 putts, one-putfin1fth9 Wadkins raised a lot 0£ skeptical last six greens, as he tied tour regular eyebrows when he predicted a glowing Herb Hooper, a four-year veteran who is future far himself In the tcugh world or pro go\£ -bul the'. 21-year-old rookie just righting for a spot in the top 6o money • may have the game to back up his winners to secure his 1972 exemption. claims. Buck Adams, a club pro from The ~tocky youngster, a former Na-Pinehurst, N.C., was nejt al 65 with tional i\mateur champion and one of the balding veteran Earl Ft.Mell and Len Gray, 23, who has scored 18 knockouts in his 31·1-t record. and Muniz are scheduled to box 12 rounds. !\luniz, 24, has 12 knockouts In 15 vic- most hlBh!y·touted amateurs s~ Jack Thompson next at 66. Thompson , who L~DDI~ ~r• 13 9, :in '·' • Nickla us turned pro, stormed Into 1 share was playing in his first round as a pm, is r..:::------•"--"-'-~1·!---ot-the-firit.round le8d i~5,000 . another rookie and a one-lime teammate1 loneS~~ , Both are ranking contenders for Jose f\apoles ' world title. In another sc heduled 12 rounder at Long Beach Arena, Ray "Windmill" \Vhi~e of Ventura, light he.avywC'ight champion. meets Arizona 17~pound champion Hill Chambers of Tucson . After of the eight categories but one of the most competitive with a large as..'tnrtment of ctirs from all parts of the country. A husband and wife duo from ?i.tuskegon, Mich. will be among the strongest CQmpetitors in this category. Ditve and Judi Boerlman have dominated the 11171 major evenls, eacH driving a 1971 Dodge, Dave won three of the National Jtoi ltod AS30CUltion's seven major eve.nts run th l$ year jncluding .the' 'A'Orkl finals in !)ctob<r. Judi, en attractive bklnde 1nd mother of two, oulr11n he.r husband durinsi: the NHRA summl!rnaliont1.I$ In New Jer!'iCY to become lhe flrst female 1tock &.:;. : ~ : t: Azalea Open Thursday with a sparklir\g, of-wiCOOns afWikTFores . · • 1•11;:1111 ~ 1;: J !:: sevcn-under·par 64. Still another Wake Pore.st man ' ""ss1No "Every time J drew it back , 1 seemed amateur Jim Simons, headed the grou~' 5.,.....,, ""1';. 1 ' 11 '::; -.1 " ""· to be hitting tt right at the..plll," nld •t 67. The others·•ere Allen-Miller, Jirii' •: : J n: :: former Wake Forest student who got his Dent, Paul Bondeson, Paul Moran, Ted. Mtrk T•uPlllo Tetel1 1• \ 2 it' ·"' approved players card from the PGA Hayes and Tommy Sanderson. ..;. L•:;• '° 1oe ''" school only a month ago. Tom Welskopf, the only one of the top Lt...in elim1nalor "'inner In national com- pelllion. Golfer Ken Venturi will make his drag r~:~ing debut Sunday tn the Sypernat.- ionals. He will drive a 1971 Barracuda in the H stock automatic class and hopefwty will continue into stock ·ellminations. He will also race against hl1 frien<l, comedian Diet Smothers. in a special ex .... hibition. Smother,, who has-several yeara of experience In drag racing, will drive a G stock automatic '71 Duster. Both cars are part of a six-car team - sponsored by Venturi, Smothus Rnd &inge.r Vic Damone -tha~ l~ based In Denver And m11inlal~ by 'Veteran hot roddcrs .Joe and J\1ark Coletti, Tbe top fuel tllmlnator Held ii headed 25 money winners who is competing in lhiJ satellite event, was far hick wl~ C4 C ---11 ., rown There were a lot of .ioh, yea h.,?" what · the am•teur Wadkins said earllier thll year, "On a given day, t can beat li'J1·~ay on the tour." - by three-time NHRA national champion And the eyebrows went even' hither: Don Prudhomme, MfRA. wortd champ when' he announced a goal for his fir full yetr of competition as ''four or fi'l'i Gerry Glenn and defending Superna-wins and .000." tionals winner Rick Ramsey. But lie finished a solid 13lh as Top funny car entranll include NHRA amateur in the U.S. Open, then woe national champion Ed McCUiioch of S3.S71 -hi1 finit professional cbeclt ..- Forest Grove, Ore., world champ Phil wllh • ninth place linlsbJn the Slh · Castronova ol Utica , N. Y. and S,=in:o.-_ nvlta~..Jhrte-~ aco'-- nNionals wlnne:r. l>on SCbumacher. Wad~. 1 ha·ndsome youngster with Jn pro stock · tM'~rpbri't· su~rstar, his d11rk blond hair at mod len!llh, wasa'l NHRA tiaUonal champion Ronnie Sox of fazed at all when he bogeyed'"\he flt'll Burllngton, N. C. will fact worJd.chamr, hole after hitting 1 tree limb. Mike Foia of Southfield, ~!ich. and h s "I justs.aid to myself : 'Wr.11. J gul!!IS t runnerup from the natlonal1, Stu ~cDade better start making Rome birdies.' After of Dayton, Ohio. th11t, I had a real good Iron game and the Qualifying is .schr.duled for Saturday putts all seemed to go in. Jt't a good fee.lo and eliminations: begin at U Sunday. in&.'' ' --'--· .. • • Frld.oy, N"'mbfr 19, 1971 DAILY l'ILOT Winning Mofe Important, Says Laver HOUSTON (AP J -Corona del Mar's Rod Laver and American Arthur Ashe f!aure winning tennls roatches 11 more . tmPortant thin winning money "When You make It this Car on the World Cham. pJonshlp of Tennis tour . 1jlt means more than the prhe1ri0ney,'t Laver S&id Thursday night after ·be whip. peel Bob Lutz, 6-3, 6-4, 6-f, in a quarterfinal match of the WCT playoffs. "This aetermines your standing In b world or pro tennis," Laver said. "This means everything. lt's what y04 played for au year, juat for this eartlcular match." ' · Albe, the highest ranking American amonc the lo!l •tght pros compeUng here , had afmil&.r remarks after he rawed past Clilf lleyldale ol South Alrica, U, 7-6, &- 4'4,1 ' '"We•ve ,all made 1ufflCieat money thl.s year, &0 it's not all the money now," Ashe aaki. Two olher quarterfinals are scheduled tontgbt In llolbe!nJ Pavilion. They matoh JoM r Newcombe qainst f e 11 o w Auatralian Kea Roeewall and Tom Okkeri ol ·Tilt Nelher)•ilda agaln•t Marty l\iOi,.n Ol'tbe'Unlted Slalea. . '. .. ;!'".=:ye';, here ~~p w0":; mQUorialre Lamar Hun&'• fl mllUon pro tennis tour. • ' ' Quarterfinal. wlrmer1-wllrmeet"'Sunday, In · the .. m111na11, from w'hkh lhe turvivori advance to Dllla1 6eit week to . . ' pi.y for the '51),000 lint prlu. "I !cret with ClUf about the money.It Ashe said. "Rocket (Laver) i1 go far ahead as far·•• money goe11 we don't· la!k. 16ou1 II. We talk about lbe points." Tbe players ruebed 'th.iJ tournament qn a paint' lysttm based on their ad- vancement in each tournament. Laver enlertd thls tournament need.Ing to win .flJ,tm to Ulch the Sl million mark Jn career eamings. He-has earned $272,717 this year aloM. , A•be Jost tbe 'first set lo Dry$dtle but • jumped ahead In the second and finally won on a tie breaker after they deadlock· ed at ff. , tn the fourth an<l deciding set, Ashe broke-Drysdale'a servtce in the leCOlld and sil:th g:amu. Laver had little trouble with Lutz, who bad problem.a with his service. Laver broke Lutz• service 'in the first • and' seventh games of botb the second and thlrd sets. Lutz managed to bruJr· Laver's service only once, in the fourth game ol tbe fina1 set. Spoi:_"§ Clippe<J, Shoi:t YflLLIE STARGELL ' Valle.ly, .Houston .Take On Lakers John Vallely, -former Corona del Mar, Orange Coast and UCLA basketball star, will be making hJs firsi appearance at the Forum tonight in a-Houston Rocket uniform as the Texas team plays coach Bill Shannan's rejuvenated Lakers in an NBA contest wlth1ipoU at 8. Villely was recently traded to Houston by the Atlanta Hawks along with Jim Davis. The Lakera will be seeking their 10th straight victory and 16th win in 19 games under Sharman. The Rockets, who moved fro m San Diego to Houston this season, have won only three· games against 16 defe at.!. Intern&) problems be.set new coach Tex Winter earlier but the Rockets won their most recent outing against Philadelphla, Jl8·1 12. "" PlllLADEI.PHIA -Simon Nolet, the leading scorer in the western .division <1f the National Hockey League, scored his 12th goal of the season e.t 3:39 (I{ the se- cond period Thursday tO lead the J?hiladelphia Flyers to .a 2-0 victory over the Los Angeles Kings. Winger Bob Kelly fed Nolet a perfect pass 20 feet in front of goalie Gary Edwards and the right winger fired it off the goaltender's right leg into the net. The Flyers_ got an insur.ance goal at 14:55 of the final period when Jean Guy Gendron rired in his second goal of the season beneath the skate of Edwards. "" LON'DON -Georges Coven , F'rance's No. l tennis star, crushed Jaime FiUol o{ Chile 6-I. 7·5 Thursday night to reach the semifinals of the last tournament in the Dewar Cup Series. Goven will play Gerald Battrick oC Britain today. Bob Hewitt of South Africa plays John Paish of Britain in the other semifinal. Earlier Hewitt defeated Stanley fl.1at· thews of Britain 6·3, 6-2. "" PASADErtA -Memphis State. which crushed North Texas State, 47-8 last Saturday to clinch the Missouri Valley Conference football title, has accepted a bid to play in the Pasadena Bowl. Officials. said today that Memphis St.ate will rneet ·..the Pacific Coast Athletic Association, representative on .. Dec. 111 under· lhe agreement between the-two leagues.-- Three PCAA teams -San----Jose-State (Long Beach), and Fresno State -are in the running with one league lou each, and the decision won't be made-.until after San Jose State's Nov. 27 game, with UC-Santa Barbara. "" HELSINKI -Avery Brundage, chairman of the Jntemational Olympie Committee, said Thursday he would welcome Communlst China to the Olym· pie Game.s "providing Ollna makes a proper appllcalion and does not demand ~iscriminalion against Taiwan." ' Brundage denied earlier reports that he would not accept China as an IOC- member under any circumstances. "I ha ve ne ve r said anything like that," he said. Brundage also commented on a reCent suggestion by Finland's President Urho Kekkonen that the United Nations scien- tific aild cultural body:-tJNESCO, should becOme the top International body in sports. . Brundage said that the IOC Is an in· dependent and self sufficient 1ports organization and that this is a strength not a weakness. • ' IJ'I Tei.pft~tt JOE NAMATH BL6ws BUBBLEGUM UNDER WATCHFUL EYE ,Of JETS COACH WEEB EWBANK. Namath WOrktd Out With Naw York, Then Decided He Isn't Healthy Enough to Return. SAN DIEGO -The San E>iego Evening Tribune says Commissioner Pete Rozelle of the National Football League regards Seattle as a likely next expansion city. Soderberd at Utah "I'm absolutely certain that a pro fool· ~ ball franchise there woukl be-successful,-"-~~:,~~ay~as Q .. , ... by lhe newspaper Pros Show -Interest Although he said he doesn't know when additions to the NFL's pU!sent 26-team lineup may be made, the commissioner I E M • c sa!~:,e got one clly lhal I think should be n X· arina ager automatic. That would be Seattle. It's the onlv section of the colititry that we're not in." Sealtll;l tried major league baseball and that failed. but Rozelle said "I've alwa.ys been imp ressed with it as a sports city, going back all the way to the time when I saw Freddie Hutchinson pitch for the Rainicrs when he was 18." Remember Mark Soderberg? He was the nifty «nter on the Marina High basketbalJ team which made It to the CJF semifinals in 1968. Then he migrated ()n to the University of Ken- tucky to play for the ~on -Adolph Rupp. Soderberg performed well as a freshman. But then he and the Wildcat! began to drift apart as be became in· -..-.---- WHITE WASH ---------- cnasingly despondent over not playing more. However, the guy ahead of him was All·American Dan lssel and there wasn't much chance Rupp was going to let Issel gather splinters while S o d e r b e r g gathered playing time. Then lMt season-Soderberg still wasn_'t getting enough game time so he quit Ken· tucky and came back west -this time .settling on the University of Utah. He hasn't been able to play there becau!Se of NCAA transfer rulings whi ch requirt! him to establish a year's residence at the new school before he is eligible. That year will be up Jan. 1, 1972 and then the Redskins· will have his talents from which to draw . And that prospect causes assistant coach Jerry Pimm many plea&&nt }R)Ughl!. Pimm, former FuJJerton JC and USC whJz, says Soderberg Is clearly prop-rospect--U ht can-properly ad- just his attitude. "He'll have to toe the mark if he want.s a future in basketball,'' Pimm 1ays. ''We've had to clamp down on him a few times but he's coming around and poten- tially he could be our No. 1 player. "The pros are already aware of him now. We 've had letters of inqliiry from all the pro teams and I'm sure he'll be on all their llsts for the draft "He's a 6-IO forward who can shoot and handle the ball and you don't see many of them. He could be super if be can con· quer tlle ment.al aspects of playing. "One of his problems has been that he'd like to be a 6-10 guard -he Ukes to go f'lr those ~foot jumpers. We'll use him at forward and «nter . "He 'll be eligible ror the entire con· fercnce season and will be a starter. But missing those first eight or nine games is tough because there 's nothing to take the place of playing with the team under game conditions." Pimm , a Montebello High product, poinb: out that Utah is extremely high on Casey Jones, the bright young junior ca'ger at Corona de! Mar High. * * * Ramor1 now a1 to where Westminster Hlgb'1 super quarterback Jeff Siemens will ro to college. One close to tbe scene project• that Siemens, wilt cast bl1 lot with the Stanford lodlan1 becau1e of tbttr pro offense and reputation for lurn- lng out great passing quarterb1ck1 . · Westminster High 's 22-point win over Anaheli;n last week is the third widest margin over a Clare VanHoorebeke coached Co!Onist eleven. Ranking one-two In the above men- tioned category are Redlands' 32-7 win in 1958 and Santa Ana's 28-0 triumph In '67. Longe1t PAT attempl of the year? How about tk 51-yarder Erle "Bitogbtr trled for Syracuse_ •talut Pitt'!: _ Two IS.yard penaUN!1 . movecr-ttie Orange back lo tlte U, tht"lnlll wa1 1pot· led at the fO and &be kick wa1 ao good. Ru1nors End, Cubs Rehire Durocher CH1CAGO (P) -The rumor mill has come to a hall with the announcement by the Chicago CUbs that Leo Duroc~er will be al the helm of the National League club again when it takes the field next year. ~ Durocher, 6.l, went Into a high.\evel conference Thursday with Cub owner Phil Wr igley and other executives, then was wh isked away into hiding until a news conference today. Announcement of his retentiqn was made in a press release. None of the principals involved could be reached for comment. The announcement brought an end to lhe speculation that Wrigley had decided in fa vor of one.time Durocher cronie Whiley Lockman lo take over the Cubs' manager spot. Even Ernie Banks had been menti oned prominently as a possible successor to Leo The Lip. Speculation began in the waning moments of the 1971 pennant race when the Cubs seemed to fold and wound up with a share of third place in the Na- tional League Ea!l. It was Durocher'!! s)~th year as Cubs' manager, all of them without a pennant. From fans and oritl~ ca me cries ol "Dump Durocher." But the 76-year-old Wrigley shrugged them off until fine.Uy exploding in answer via paid ad· vertisemenls during the season In Chicago's daily newspapers. "Th is year there ha s been a co nstant campaign to dump Durocher,'' Wrigley said. "It even affecled the players. But ... there has to be llOmeone in charge on the fiel d to make the final deci!lions and, right or wning, that's It.'' 1'he ad continued that the "Dump Durocher clique might as well give up.'' Wrigley also suggested that players who balked under Durocher's lea~shlp would be found "happier homes" this winter. None was named, however, and so far no major trades have been made. Stargell Says He Deserved MVP Awru.·d Pl'ITSBURGH (AP) -"I feel I deserved it." Willie Stargell, the Pittsburgh Pirate slugger, says be.should have been named the Most Valuable Player in the National League this season . Instead, be finished second in the sports writen balloting to Joe Tom of St. Louis. • "I'm basing my thoughts on the fact that I did' everything I set out to de> and we wc>n the World Serles. I'm not takin& anything away from Joe," Starg~ll said. Slargell underwent surgery this W~ on hill left knee to repair a misplaced and tom cartilage, and the hospital has been a place for reflecUon -on his season, the Pirates' come-from·behind World Seriff victories and people's reactions to the World Champions. " "Last year, when Billy w1umr,.· (Chicago Cubs), Tony Perez and Joluml Bench had suc;h great years, the realOI}. ing for giving It to Bench was because he bt>lped ClncinnaU win the-pennant. "Xow, everybody says if_tbt play: er does well day in and day out, be de.serves ·l "f was1H'Klerthe-nnpressl0nifa reuow- had a big year and hi!I team got into the division playoffs, he would win the MVP," he said. "They mention me not playing enough gam es but the players, I understand, vote d me the Most Valuable Player. "I don 't know why 1 didn't win. 1 thought I had the credentials. And the thing I was tickled most about was scor· ing HK runs . Most of the guys who acort more than 100 runs are ihe greyhound!.'' Stargell even wonders if there might be racial tones in the voting. "That goes through my mind," he said. - "1 got three first place votes .. The rest went for second." Stargell feels his banner yea.r ol 48 home runs, 125 runs. ~•tted in and 104 runs scored should place him in the $100,000 sa lary class. "I really don 't anticipate .problems in getting lhat from the club," he said. "The doctors said they couldn't un- derstand how I could play, the condition my knee was Jn. I could have called a hall to playing (Stargell first said he would need surgery in July), but I owed somelh!ng to myself and something to the team. "I'm not going to be ridiculous, ask for $200,<XXJ or $70,000 or $80,000 increase.'' Any increase in salary, he says. won't take away the frustration of the Pirates not being recogniud with endorsement requests -or by the club Itself. "If Roberto Clemente, the be.st player In baseball isn't offered endorsemeob: I doubt if I will," he said. "I really think nobody expected us to win it and they had Baltimore booked to tbe teeth . "After other teams have bec<>me World Champions, they'v e traveled here or there, to towns around their area. Rams Announce Another Sellout LOS ANGELES -The Los Angelel Rams, who early this week aMounced " their game Sunday with the San Fr•~ cisco 49ers was a sellout, had another ·• disclosure Thursday: lhe encounter with the Washington Redskins on the night of Dec. 13 is also a sellout. The Redskins' visit marks the return of ex·Ram coach George Allen and numerous former Ram pJayen: to MemorlJI Coliseum for the first Umt , since they parted company last January. The Coliseum accommodates about 78,000 for professional games. I Newp~rt's Beasley ·Finds Silver Lining V'°I Ttl.,..... CAZZIE RUSSELL HITS P.OINT NO. S,000 IN 'NBA. · R•1,.ll Led Gold•n Slot• PHI Portl1nd, 115·105. ' DULIITH. Minn. {API -"Do you remember the program that used to be on television called 'The Millionaire'?" asked the Minnesota VikJngs ' wounded - Mrrior, John Beuley. "An anonymous fellow would come 11.round with a mllUon·dollar check for an unlikely person. The TV series was on the person1s re1cti<>n, and how heJiandled bis_ new-found welath." The TV series tventually died. Either the anonymous donnor's milllon1 ran out or the public begt.11 to doubt the crediblll· ty. ewn for lelevlsk>n. of 1uch a thing ever happening in real life. , Well, It'• hoppened , or la happening lo Newport Beach resident John Beasley, that It was nice to hear from another who Is sltllng out tht 1971 pro football Beasley," sa)'s the Buena Park High season with a knee injur)'. graduate. He explained: "About two years ago, I think it was '"I few weeks ago , I heard from him alter we played In the Super Bowl, J got a aga.in. It w8s quite an elaborate letter letter from a gentleman in Nevada nam· and the contents really floored me. It eel Dr. Joseph Beasley. • seemed he ls a scientist who has been in "He said he'd seen my play1 be wanted on the discovery of a wonder drug and Is some plctures&n'd that sQ..clofJhlng. ""''-worth mflllons. he asked me atiOiit my famlly, wondering "He Is also tl1e president of Humboldt if there was a chance we might be Silver, Inc., whose holdings are the related. · world 's largest The gist of hi!' letter was . "l wrote him back a nice letter. fined that he is 74 years old and about to his r~que5t, told him about my family retlr,e. His on ly heir Is a l~year-old .and said l doubted If '"e wt.re related, but dauahter, but he wantt a Beasley ~ be • president of the silver firm at $60,000 a year. And he's asking me -can you lm· agine that? There Is a Humboldt Silver, Inc., but whether It's holdings are the Lvgest ln the world is questionable. "I ahowed the litter lo Jim Finks (Vlk· l'ng~· general manager) and we hid the National Football League ch e c le ev.erytl]lng out. t also did some checkinl" of my own aod all the reports came blci positive." An NFL spokesman told T h • Associated Press that the league ta 1tl11 ln~esti&•lini the situation . •• • O..pllo tbe feel that Orange COasl C..Uep hat wrapped up a bid to the 11114 JC foottllll· playof.fJ, the Pirates have a lo& IOlna lw them lonlghl (7:311) when llloy lloet San Diego Neu Ill tbe regular llUOll fiDale. A victory would give the Bucs sole pouession of the 5o\1tb Coast Conferettee clwnplooshlp. And a win -.Jd ~ earn the Pirates their first regular undefeated 1eason •lnc:e 1183. • Anolber moti••Uni !tdor ii OCC'1 ~ pme unbeaten stnak. With the Pirates' first playoff game just a week away (with Santa..Rosa JCJ, • · DAILY PILOT Sltff """" ' .. \ ' ' • .. yanla In c:ompJotil!I 15 " :Ill -He needs jusl :II ytnll -i. lo 1111 the 1,000 mm. . White'• two llldln( -ivera an alao All·Aroericin candidates. r r· e 1 ~ m a 1l Sieve Monabtn, with eJabt caldlel laal weet. ran h1I teUOn total to 23. J,nd aopllomore llo<ll Y-bu eaqbl 2S Ill '71 lo stva him • for ~ •- . Little ioy In MD's 29-3 Victory lly ROWAIID L. BANDY .. Of .. Delly , .... lflltf 1bere were tears in the eyes ol. the Mater Del football play., en the turf fll the Santa Ana Bowl Tlwnday nlpt. They weren't the tean of joy for hav• inc posted J 2f.3 victory over Cl'OIM:OUJ\. ty rival Servite in an Anctlus Leque 1ame "befan: 4,500 fans. They weren't the uaual lean of ltnior• htv!n& played their !Intl came lcr a coach u welJ.Jibd u Bob Woodt. They ...,.. the 1Mr1 ol )'OUlll ,_ who had eodured a week of tension -then suddenly come fa~face wJtb stark reality and the realization that life muat go on despite the Jou of loved ol\el like Joe O'Hara, Dallu Moon and BW ·11an- nah. l O'Hara had becun hlJ C01C:binC career al M&ter Del and Moon al rlvll Slrvlle. ·The lean were UtoM of Dave Naary, a ~itrippflil l'!;-D>pounder ;-;;-lllc:k s~ a s.1, 210.pounder ••• RIJcky Stmpaon, a S.10,,lll'powider ••• l!IC!-111- the otben on the Monarch team who GM- by~ne shook the band of their coach in 1ilent tribute. MARINA FOOTBALL COACH LEON WHEELER WILL BE BARKING OUT OROERS LIKE THIS TONIGHT Standing at the door to tbe Monarch dressing room while coach Woods met brieny with IUs team Inside the am.all quart.era: for ~ final time, was the man who hand-picked the three Cal State (Fullerton) wistants who were dose to the .. two high ld>ool loams. HB, V~ikes • ID Cellar Battle Explosive Of fensive Display Expect;ed_ Hunt.ington Beach Will be a one-point favOrite tonight at Westminster High wh!n the Oilers tangle with Marina's Vik-- ings in a Sunset League football finale. Opening kickoff is scheduled !or 8 o'clock. lt's a chance for whoever wins to gain a final bit of respectability ~n_d to escape the throes of the dark dunes of the SUilRt cellar. Going into the tiff, Huntington Is 3-4-2 overall and 1-4-1 in loop hostilities while coach Leon Wheeler's Vlkes have posted marks or 2~ and 1·5. What ls supposed to be a mere match- Up of a rair d. second division teams couJd we! turn out to be an explosive of- fensive dl1play. For coach Ken Moat.I' favored Oil Clty crew, there's senior quarttrback Jim Martin, who has the last chanct in hlJ high school career to direct Huntington's veer offense. If he 's accurate tonight, names like Panthers F a v ored Defenses Pla y Key Role In Diablo-Oran ge Tilt 1"3nically it may be the defenses that • tells the story tonight when. offenslve- ~minded Mission Viejo and Orange meet in a Crestview League football game on the El Pifodena High field with kickoff at 8. Both teams move the ball well on of- fense and it would appear Orange has the better of the situation with itS defensive .unit. At any rate, the Panthers are 2~­ polnt favorites to win the season's final ·game for both teams. ,_c;oach Bob Hlvner's Mission Viejo team :Jost out in the' offensive columns for the (U'St tlme last week against Foothill. 0'This was the first game we were beaten in the stats as well as everywhere else," -Hivner admits. Part of the trouble comes with an ankle injury that has hampered star running ba ck AlU'ldre Hqlmes. • Holmes still won~ be at full strength tonight but will start his final high school game, according to Hlvner. fense, running and passing. As for the defense, Hivner aay1 his team must play better than it has in re- cent games in order to win. "Their defense is tough," Hlvner con- cedes. "In fact, 1 would say their defense is much stronger than their offense." If his statement ls true, the Diablos are in for another rough night at El Modena. Hivner know1 the lmportenct of con- trolling the football and -the put a defensive unit plays in such situations. "You can't score If you don't have the ball," he says in a simple, matter-of-fact language. "We have moved the ball close to 3,000 yards this year but we have had our pro- blems on defense." Ml•.iM Viti• LI,...,. OfflC. OefWIM PM. P'llJtr WI , WI, "!trtr l" Grl!t l\I• IU l!2 R~vn ' w~kll m n; ·f;~·'flltt• Churchill i; ~1te 1 1 '· !.•hd1!t Ir. 11! ell Gt ~11,,ott1 ,* , ... ~ i!i~11WOOd ! l W•M 01 Weed 1.0 C•ldwfll F Jenn llO Grlltlv• 'rl Holme1 165 UO l')'tlaf'I "L L••DOtl 1.0 HO CllffOl'd Tony Clarelli, Bill DruslU and Dave Clapp (the Oilers' prime rect.iven) could emerge 11 heroes. It Martin's passes don't pierce the Vike secondary, there's always one more op- portunity for 1enior halfback Steve Pickford to show his wares. Pickford hu compiled 423 rushing yard.I in 118 carries. Marina, meanwhile, f,e a t u res M>phomore QB Greg Foster, who's com· pleted 4' of 131 aerials for &63 yards and ai:1 scora. Foster usually throws to Mike Lacy and Rod Brown. Marina's ground threat is litUe Harvey Hirata, with 227 yards in 60 trips. ln the line, the two teams appear fairly equal with the bulk ot the interior trenchmen tipping the acale1 at under 200 pounds. Wheeler and biJ Viking c:oacblllg staff figure the contest as a tossup and they plan on staying with the same bulc slot attack which Marina. has P'ftUed Ill 1eason long up to t.hJs point. At the same time , the Yikes could have something sRtCJ1l devised to atop Pickford and Cl1relll, generally regarded in the Marina camp as the two most danseroua OUen. HuntlngWn'1 Moala agreea that the two sides are very ~ua.I and u.ys, "it should come down to whichever team is wllllnt to pay the price to win." 'Ibt Vlk.es won last year'• wtld IC\lffle by an 18-15 margin. The man's own son has inother year of football at Mater Del and he knows tht: wcrth of the 1ame -its: abllity to make men of boy1, IOmetimes "GVtmlpt u hu been the case this week. "Somehow football doesn't seem that important to me ri1bt now," be cam- mented with a faraway loot in h1J dried- out eYes that moisture had Iona since abandoned. The man 11 the coach of that Fullerton I.am -Dick Coury -1 man who muot band his Tllana together Stturdty nilhl for a 1ame in Sin Lui1 Obispo he know• hia departed 11SiJtanll would want the team to play. Coury hlmlelf ts a former Mater Dei head coach. Woods WU mild1y 1urpriaed to learn that the Monarch• hid eontrolled tbe ball on only 1.3 scrtmmaae pla)'1 In the first half white protectint a 7-3 lead. But he found the right second half com- bination and a bull-dot.in& fullback to tw-n the game into a rout. Sl'leldon, a aenior, didn't carry the ball in the first half but made up for lolt time In the eecond. He bad the ball on nine oc:- ca.stou for 48 yardl and tW'D touchdowns. He also.kicked. three conversion.I. Simpaon put the Monarchs on the scoreboard early on a four-yard scamper and quarterback Bill CIO!Jih added the final ela:ht pofnll on a on&.yard sneak ind a tw~int rollout conv,nion with 24 1econds Jen. VthO.tls M•t-.Ar-11ty1 .... ..., ... 11'1 Tlltllt IAMI ITATll11CS MD • • • • ,. " • ... -~ "" "' • • • • " "' " " ~' " ""' "' • c 1 '·' IOS.S f •.I ' ll 2 l.t I I I 3.1 ' 4 I 7.• :u ,,, 11 "' ,.t,SllN• Mtltt" ... '1 ': ~· 'a ~i I I I I .IOI l •IU_. -1211 71 .IU • • . ........ ,. . ~ DAU. Y ,ILOT ltMf """ occ FLANKER s:rEvE MONAHAN FACIS SAN DIEGO MISA TONIGHT. Defense Does It Opportunistic Lancers Th .ump St. Paul, 19-.6 By ROGER CARLSON Tiius Bishop Amil's ICOring e!!orta or ,,.. ~1tr ...., •tiff came on marchel bf eight me ud feur LONG llEACH -' B!lhop Ami t Hl&h'1 ylnls plus th< 11!ely. ' ' No. 1 ranked Lancers lived' up to thetr • St. Paul'fott twel of three fumble, while billing Thur~y night by ~efeltittg No. 1 -Amat trarlsfer John Sciarra (from San SL Paul, IM, J.D an Angelus Ltague foot~ Gabriel Miss\en) managed to commit aiJ ball crucial at Long Be1ch's"Veterans ·bobbles. stadium. . • ' The victory clinched a CIF AAAA berth A stadium record crowd of lS,141 for the winners. St. Paul iJ also under watched the Lance.n from La Ptltnte • · c:ons!deration u a second place entry capture the Angelus ~tt0wn with thetr providing room ia available in the 15- elghth 11traight 1971 victory without ·a team · eliminations. Joss. It was St. Paul's first ·JOSf· of .the ....... It wasn't done, however, with a flair. T • B The game waa bill~ .. • titanic betw .. n fOJ ans rea two great 0Uens1Ye threats. ' Instead it turned into a defensive 1tru1· gle and Am•l garnered 111of11.s pe1n1a... Mt•X It St. Paul mlallltea. · 1'1 • ·' The Amit ofienae ·accountedv for eo Up yltds runnl!lc and passing -yet the La~ra won by 11. SL Faul, on the other hand, althou1h it · wasn't numlna amuck, ttld eccount for 190 yards total o!fen!t. · The opportuniltJc Lancers were the recipient. of 1everal breaks. The lint one came early in the test when backup quarterback Pat Degnin managed to fupible the ball six Yards up in the alrand·A;mat'a Rlclt Bryan:plU;Cktd , tht bill out of the air on the St. 'Paul 2d and rambled to the eight. , 1• , It ended with JOit ARUim kicking I 29- yard field goal . Tbe Lancers won it in the third quarter 1e Chance int.ercepted on his own elght')'lni itne and rlmb 91 yards before ·atbmfillnc lllC! !11 oo the St. Plllll one lo set up an easy TD Carl Neder. · The Interception turned ari>und what _!ppeared to be a touchdown dri\le for St. Paul which had accounted for 57 yards before the errant pus. Flnlll¥ coodt MorijOn An cl ch' 1 Swordsmen ICOred but poor cqlniDUon hsmpered 'tbelr lwo-poinl conversion ti· tempt and Jt WIS ICM with ;4:30 re. maining. · · With lime ru""hl( out Injured SL Paul quarterback Jamte Quirk wu_jhrowi~ ::s:::n'Or= .riu~::: 1:::!°pt aJ\d rttum. the boll to th< St. Paul lour. Roael'• ICOred l(tln 'Ind I A(;ty 'WH •ddad In tile llllal moments. • , In '11 Finale Two prep football teams with commmt thought& collide tonight at Mislion Vlej6 High School es Unlvei::slty's Trojans bat· tie Brea 's"WUdcall in an Ortn1e Luiue finale. For either team a victory tonlcht can salvage a somewhat dlsmt1 1easen. J& starts at 8 o'clock1 Coach Jerry Redman'a Trojans entered the 1971 campaign with high bope1 of duplicating or bettering last year's 5-3 free lance schedule. • I But the loss of · quarterback Tom Walker, some key injuries, and a sput· terln1 offense crippl~ the Trojans' at· tack. . However, a w1n tonlt:ht would equal 11.st year•·, victory output since the Tro- jan& have defeated Laguna Beach, 13-7, and own a 1-0 forfett win over Saddleback High. Brea Is in th~ same bo1t. Tbe Wildcat. have lost four In 1 row (with the U · ception of.a 1-0 forfeit over Saddlebe.ck). c.o&ch Doug Kechter'1 Wildcatl had opened the season with four stral11't wlnll before running out of gas. P'or Redpt1n rt's been a cballena:e tn find II healthy gridden lo field for the finale with injuries dominating the lctnt ~ Hfs counterpart at ~range ts Clint Skagas who 11 averaging almost four yan!s per try and bu 5COred fiO polllt.s tills sea&oh to rank among the leaders in the county. Bol.b squads have outstanding ~backs who like to throw the ball. 'Gary Wood ol Mission Viejo· hM com~ pitted 70 passes for 932 yards. He hu ·thrown for seven touchdowns. Artists Bid to· Upset Hawks A·gai~ ' However, quarterback Ray-Hale ls U • pected to start despite a blnced up shoulder. Snapping the ball to bim will be backup center Jim Given. ftecWtr center Jim Divis ls oui with a knee in- jury. • • Hile has looked good in the pe;sslnc department, completin1. 11 of 21 for a yards ln the: two games he's started. Steve Walker 1t orange lias passed for <f78 yl.rda In the list three Panther games .. and averacu over 200 yards total of- Elliott' ~:ves Up . . M1AMl -Pete E!Uott. f o r m e r llnimllty of Michigan quarterback who ,,at to the Ro&e Bowl once as a p}ayer and twice as • coach, has betn namea 1ul1tant. athlt:Uc director et t b e tln!Venlty,of lllt.sml. Laguna Beach won its only football game of the season a year ago this wuk and tofrl&ht's final oran,e Ltque foe hasn 't forgotten the humiliation of that defeat. The Arti1t3 of coac h Hal Akins will trs .. 1 lo Valencia HICh tonight lo !•ca lbe El Dcrado Golden Hawks In ... the aeason finale for both teams with kickoff at 8. Coach Glen lf11tlogs of El Dorado makes no bones about I.ht 11tu1tlon. ''La.st ytar Laguna knock~ UJ 01( when they bad .ntJ business doln& It," he ' recalls. "We don 't hive ton many kids back but thoM that are htl'I!: are determined Ml to. tel the 11me thin( happen again tonl&ht." Akin• also remembera the game very well. "We were at full strenj:th a ye.ar ago but t.hJs Ume we have only tbttt starttr1 in the lineup and the injury situation 11 aerlou1. We evtn brought up 1 junior varilty pJaye.r to start at a tackle poaJ- tlon," he 11ys. El Dorado hat a 3+1 record for tht se110t1 1nd Is 2-3 tn the Orange League. Laguna, with Ill• 1jd o! two !orlelt wins, Is U and l~ Ill thtl"CUo· ..._. Th< Injury list that Akin• has -con- cerned with has ltrlppld the squad of Ila lop two quarterbtcl<s. Gary Fi1eUe, a 1tarte.r moil of the ytar, auffered a shoulder aep1r1Uon 11tlll1t Loa Ami,01 a -k aao and Ii out of action. HlJ early HIJClll rtplace- menl Clayton Bez:eyhill has been penciled In as a dtfen.dve at.lrter whh Bill Roberlaon ltklnc over tbe quarterback dutlt1. 4 On the brl(hltr aide o! lht led&er. ace runnln1 back Skip Wblahlp Is rtady for full duly. He has carr1td the blll on rt occaalona lor 300 ylnla and hll acortd two touc.hdown.1 thl1 season. Pete C.Otta.m. has taken over for brother Telford In the Artllt backfield. TeUotd w11 back on the practice !leld Tueldcy nt1bt bul aulfered • shoulder Injury, hi• thir.l mlshop o! lht campaign, aod la out o! 1oolght'1 -- Wt, wt. ,~ 'I Ii ~w'"' I' ~· ' ' ' ' ' -' 'll•'-1 1 I( Cl l IA iilf "' MWIT 'The obief runner for Un.lve.r1itj' 11 Beb Gill, a two-w1y performer at NM.Ina back lllC! linebacker. The lllS-pound senior haa 11lned 2U yards ln 70 carries but has betn llmlted the last two outings. AJld he's Ill I doubUul llalua tonl&hl due lo 1 badly apralned tnlde. ___ .._......._ ..... ltltY9!' Wt. wt. ,;;;- ,. ,.,,._ :11 ~ ll.'-~ r.T." '" a!r ' ·~ ia ~II t1 f . 11 !u lL • I •• • MV ,Crea Coaatry ~ ' l f • Togetherrwss . Mokls Champs ly PHIL llOllll " ....... ,.,..., . Toptberneu h11 broucJ!I -Viejo HIP Ill ftnt.· evtr Yllllly cblmplcnlllp, Foolblll,7 Wat« JlOlo! ·No, crou country, ot mune. Undw Iha lulelqt o I yoolhlul coOch Ge°' Gurule; Iha Dllblo CtOU counlr)' IC!Uad ftC'Ultly i 1• DD e I ed UM Creolvl.,. Lbiue'• dual med tille wllb t ipoCleoo M record; " WI:;: illllllrioul"" .... beblnd !ham, tbt Dia now trud,fe ever bul thot'o Doi tht whole atory: ''TIM bfqeat lilh\t WIS ~ Iba klda lopther' all ........ ·Jone hen """"" the l(lollin Vltjo areo and then we iOot a lftlUP of II boye up lo Devil'a POllpile bl Iha Hllh Sferra to train twice a day !Join .Aus. 21-Jl. .. Without hlWnr an eyeluh, li'o aj>parent In lht ~II thli the 11utnm·ertlm4 ....... gem1 deriaed by Gurule and employed' Iii lila chlraea have ·prodUced 1 &enulne wl.a- ner . • The~almer Methocl .............. ~ • AIM AlftOAat wn AT'rOP or rLAamac . . • l111'ol !Ml ll - --... tol>jtcl 11\eJ -w ·w that II'!'! __ ....,,_ ... - .. lnot lllu I• 1*1:. Yil. -· ....... lmriaWy 1111 ~ ot tlit ...... . . ' more oftm Ru tlMy JO owr. Jf they are not lbort or 111o ,,_ illtll, doer ••••llr aro •bort o1 the n.,..i.<. To .....-... mit MDdency to fall ab.on. l aaa.et Illa~. -.r ol "'"""' roe tlit hole, ,.iron should aim for· lM ... ol IN flaplicl<, Tllif will HIOl!lllically .... _ _. ·-10 COrTJ .., mo,......., .....---.... -totllc .. lc. •• "'1 """'" -..... -oowud 1ntp !lit lequa finlll thll Saturday at lO:JO a.m. at UC Irvine. . Tbe Diablao ... dominalid the ....,;i-Creatvle11 auat lllffl plctun tlaat, their .... ,~· ==================; aral -..:-...a 'UT flOWUI MCK INTO YOU!t sWINGl-Wlth tit belp of Aritotd beaten v _ ty ll~u "u far '•li'Mf'a llllatr'atiM booltltl:, ''T• 'Shott alld fli""1 Woods." But Miuion Viejo hu cotten whtrt lt ls today .at the top of CHalvlew '1 hJ&WI hill by abeer camtrlderit. ahead or the runnerup trJum· ,_, 201 •flll • Mlf·Mdrtned, •"'P'd ....,...,. io Arnold virate of El Modena, J'oothlll PMer,"' cere Of ttii. n...,.,.,-, and Orqe, H . : '-------.....,.-....... -------' Naturally, It helped con- siderably that everyone available for the tquad w11 healtlly at the beglnntna of the current aeuon and it'• *n even more benellclal that they've. all betn able to m&in· taln peak elftctiveneu. HoWever, yet another catch lw l{eta lnl<&l'll. In vaulUn( Gur:ule'1 runner• to t be ~ of Orange Counly'I ... i,rnmo,st ltq\le. ·~we ~Ind of Jl(Uftd we'd ..m the !Int clwnplonahlp tht school bu ner won in vanity 1pOrt,:• Gurule conftdet, "and tflat wu provided that we · didn't blvt injuries. Everyone hu i manactd to ally htalthy . - fro Cage, Hockey Standings ·soyo Gurule, "I ·Itel· Et Modena eave U1 the belt ra« at tbtlr course in Irvine Park. "But tbtn acain. we ran at thtir coune U.·Jrvlne Park. And ...-Or&iitlt 1nOet .... there allo but on an entirely' different courtt. In ~ct. 'tht 0ranJe cou1st W I I I ridiculously hilly one ind very JlOO• lo betbl with: li 1~ up a ll'adual grade, , ... d_.- and then llnUha with a llHP crade. "lt'1 just a little horlltr.tll full of rocb and crtVica." lD 9itt of ·ouch lwmll u dttcrlbed above, Miiiion Viejo aJao productd a 1-1 junior vanity Mark and f a I r l y re1ptetable. 3 • 4. froeh-soph record. For tht varsity, wbicb ls juit 1>e1tnnln1 lo do oerloua 1peed wort In preparation for pa-· ClF compeUUon, Hnlor Ed Radermacher hi• been the No. l runner. Holder of a J:05.7 lSIO.mark on the tract llat •prln(, ~dermacher turned in his best It'll cross country clock-ln& of~t:S3 for a-two-mile course at the Weatminlter "' !•vt''•tional. l.UTlllll CONPltlNCI " UI Afltlttk ~' Pt1. •a Followin&· thf: ta I en t e d ......... 11 s .• -aeNor have beell 10pbomor• =.,~,:11 ! ; .Ml 1 Mark Hower (1:44). junior• '"""' 1 • ·:. ~'h Mark Cingiaoo (1:51), ... Chuci: 1,itt-r. c.tl'lt ~ .• 1 Glddtna (10:02) aod Mike c11.i.~•tt s • .., 1 Tboinu (10:02), 1 en Io r .......... 4 " ,HJ' , .... CIMI_, • It .2-J Gordon Ro&trl (10:11) and • W Ttltt CPP•ttllfCI IDpb Jot Buono (10:10). --Mllwe 14 1 ·'" -Prior to cominc to Mlu»n =:i, 1! : :!'~ ! Viejo in J.llt,~ ~ tutored P""'h' 1 11 .4lt • the Monte Vllta High cros1 \ P•dfk IHYllllll ' Whllll I L11 .t.lllfl• 11 , .m -country team m· er or No Lboking Back For Bue Cagers 1Y CUJG SHEFF Of .. D6llY ,...., ,,.,, n.. Wll).71 basketball l6UOft wu a vay aaonlslng one foi Orqe CoUt College coach Herb Uvaef and Pirate followen. nit :8uc1, ahort on talent, could only win three times in 27 outllii•. But the 1971-72 Pirate · 11· trt1at1Gn figures to do a com- plete lbou.t face -and that's ba•lfilly becauae of that rn..iss-lnl Ingredient of a year ago - talent. Livsey not only h a 1 recruited IOme t a I e n .t e d 1hooter1, but be alao hlis beefy guys up front to 1lve him some board action aometbin& that was also mils. ins last sea~n. -· • And Livsey readily admits that Oran&e C.O..st could · be a conttndtr for Soutb Coast · Ctniftrenct hooora l.bi.l~n. The two keys for OCC are front-liner Skip William1 and , 225) fl(lll'e lo,.. a lol of duty. Southwick was not a •tarter lut aeason at Westm!Mter Hi&h, primarily because the Lions went to a fut break at- tack. Hanslad played first atrlng for Allan Hancock last year. ln the back court New Jersey product Glenn Nelson figurts to be Seymour'• run· ning mate with letterman Tim Conway also seting a lot ·of ac· tion. Nelson red-shirted laat-year. He'll guide the Pirates' fast break· attack. Because of a lack o( quickneu on the current team. Livsey will t'oandon his man-to-man dtfenee for a zone. CM Gymnast Seeks Title fruhman backcourt. ace Jcitn lr · , Ay)e Gayner:. a 13-y~:Cld St=~ prepped at Estan: sludent at TeWinkle (~~or eta · Hlfh, e1rnin1 111-lrvlne hi&h Jehool in Costa Mesa, Ltagut honors. He then apent may becorne the first ,area a ytar at Cal Poly (San Luis athlete to join tht U.S. Olyi-n- ) bef _. · · to pie team for 1972 if she Is 1uc-Oblspo ore . roe:lUl'JHng ce.sslul jn national competition the oranae Coaltt area. 11 h. k nd ~ s1111 u ' .a.l '"" two yurt and took hil 'M -· • mtt11 11 , .Mr ''"" HM1en 1 11 .1••1t.t. squad to the CJF He'• 1 I-?. llO-pound.er who at Urbana, I . t 1s wee e . Miss Gayner won , t h e is a fine ahooter for a big balanced beam competiUon as man. He also pouesses good a member of the Long Beach strtn'gth and quickne.lll, says Scats gymnastic team in the Livsey· western regional tryouts and ll'Vtto..,. t ,, ·.in 111.; preliminaries. .,....., ........ 0tt"'1t 1w, ""*'1• 1u Originally from ·Artesia, the o.., ... s..11 •u. hr111rwi1 JG1 Diablo mentor ran for Dean ~"' _._ """'"'""' ~ T1111t1t't ._ . Miler on two CODHCUUve N1· criiti-tt ot ... 1e" I ~.,....,... A I h I t I t111to1e 11 111111,,.1,..,11 tiona '1,.A,1...,11-.0:: e c ,.,,. .. •t 111"""" A 11 o ciaUori champlonihip Houften 1t Lii Allll•IM ...... ,,,.._ uad Jn )MO. C::Ttwt•l'Mf'"IT""1wtt1~=-----Cl'OU ....,......_J--IQ . • _. Mlfwul(11 '' ••rt'-14 for San Joee State. etil'I' "':::.=:'-In additiorl to hopu of ad- • ~•111',.,~:1 vn diJll the Creth'ie" ftn*h meet ~ ~ ,, 1u1t111 crown to the.Ir dual meet titJe. ti't!:''*'!. ':!~:ie.n stttt " tlfik· the Diablos have a goal of """ , going after the CIF AAA Williams 1111 only one pro-is one of 22 members of the blem -he CONJUintJy runs In-ngional squad compeUng in to foul problema. And aince he Urbana this weekend. , ls.-auch_a.n.Jmportant (fi In _The r_emnaJ event wa1 held the OCC att.ck that coul be-a In Fresno to dettrmine con- big problem for the Buca this testanls for the Olympic setison. tryout.$. Seymour, as a senior at OnJy othe Orange County - Outlook ·For· Skiers lmprov~ .. For the Southlind ·~ enthusla!ft ~ weal.her b 1et- i1J11 belt.r. At I.last that'• ~ rtP.0!1 from SnoW SUinffiit&nlf'Min\. moth Mountain .where skiing is expected to be ucellent thla weekend. • At Snow Suinmll, near Bil Bear Lake, the IOO-foot rope tow ll operaUng thla weekend on more than a foot of natural and man-made 1oow. And the aki. IChool and rental thop are open dally, • All roads· are open to Snow Summit, but il 11 recom- mended to bring chains. Hol!jay Hill'• private· lift and rope tow ~• . will be ready 1'ursday. It'1 suit.able for beginners a n d in- terrnediate . Ulers. The sld •c!lool at Ht'lllday HiU will a1so be open aoon. · · At Mammoth the total coverage is 'now 30 Inches with clear weather. Skiing i s reported very good . ln the Sierras there is ade- quate snow rover on the rum that are open with moat areas havlpg packe.4 powder anow and cold weather. There b a chance of snow fiWTies this weekend at high elevaUona. Here '11 the weelten4 rtport in Northern California and Nevada : H1ghway 89: Squa• Valley~pen Saturday and Sunday; operating · some lifts at k>p. Highway SO: Hee.venly Val· ly -opened today on the upper levels of the California side only: Sierra Ski ranch · -open Saturday and Sunday with one and possibly two Ufta in operation. Highway 4: Bear Valley-open Saturday and Sunday with thre~ lifts JP.. operation. - Highway 108-0o dgf: Rldge--open Saturday and Sunday with three chairs. one rope tow. Nevada : Slide Moun- tain-hopes to open Saturday and Sunday but needs at least four Inches more anow; Mt Rose--open through weekend with beginner'• chair and T ~r. Al_ Park Clly, Utah the skiing_ season btgiU Saturday with three new double chair lifts, nine entirely tJeW" nins, several widened and le_ngtben- , ed e1istlng runs, ·54 new c<ln· dominlum apartment! and I new ski shop. Following two years of master planning, the Utah resort wu purchased in mid- !eason last year by Greater Park City Co. and the $7 million construction program for the 1971-72 sea.son bega~the first phase of a 10. year •100 million plan. Stein Eriksen la director of akiing. For more Information phone Roger Haran at Mt-9'81 (aru Ci>de 801). Frld~1. Novtmblt 19, 1'171 OAJLV PILOT' Jf:-· Orange Coast Area Sports Ca'lendar ..,.,.., Mft, • fll'Wll.. il"flne l..... hftth. If \.• "-'"" -~I ~ wt AlM>llot It ...-.m.J, Or-l.M- A""*"t .t \.1 "•iiN 11141v!ft, Sin. fh1tl1 "' l1tu~ It.ct. tit 1.m.J, UC Collliff 11 •Iott Il l. WM...._.Y C~ Y'I \/Ill• P1rti •I II """"• Twtftt W11<tr ""' -cu• .+~ "'' !'ellfld), 5-llltrfl C.UIOnllt c.ntw- "'81 .r l.AC(, '°'11ft1m C•Nfotfllt J d'Mll'llPlotlVll!lt '' L .... tudl, (-.itl 11 I !•....._ WMI vt tllll ~ W1t1r Mle -lwlfllnl C1ltlotl\ll _. °' ...... c_. C11 ltl ..... ~ , CIMl•retw:I -frifft •I L.ACC--""'"'-" 11'MkilM~ll·t .. ~1r;;;.). i~~ll )C ~-1 et l"" ,,_. CGUnlry -CltUYllW """""' ••P:tlball. -Sout!!trfl C1H~i. wr .. -11f"9" -or-. COllf ti PllH'I' ~ Owl UI, CAllHn lllttl fl M "" Anl9fllo c.11111 'Wl4I 11111111. BOB HEUSSER AND HIS ALL STAR TEAM AT SUNSET . FORD PRESENT FOOTBALL FORECAST HIGHLIGHTS FOR NOVEMiER 20th by BOB HEUSSER What , Do You Mean ~'Rams 86, 49'ers O? -'""" b11t 1·~ bee• ,,.. dfc1l119 "' •11 12,. •fffft• f,ltht) ••d I "'" y111'll wht, bit '' te 01 lt'a -"'. I Ille le1111-27, .4ters JO." Plchlred 11t t.ft, lt1ttl1f l ....... , "-ffftbell ,.,... COit, k~ H-.r, Sulllott Ferd •H -111Nn et tti. LA 1.,.., 11lct11red left te tffllf, lob H111-, Mike l.eH.-4, . P•t C11rr•11, & !Wtld a..,. The Bob Heusser Football Forecast ......:NE•ltAIKA 1--AUIURN ,.2-0KU.HOMA 7-QEORCilA 3-AUIAMA I-NOTRE DAME 11-SOUTHERN CAL 1&-MICHIGAN STATE 12-L.S.U. 17-TENNESSEE 13-ARIZOHA STATE 11-l>HIO STATE 4-MICHIQAN 1-COLOltADO 14-WASHINGTON 1'-ARKANSAS $-PENN STA.Tl 1~TUAS 1$-HOUSTON 20--STANFORD Saturd•J, NOY. 20-MaJor Collllll Other G1mes-South and Southw11t SO Ian Diop St.tlo I U Ian J_. ILtll 14 24 TIU.Iii loch U • MIMKll ... ttl I 11 111)11111 u 11 Utoh 1 11 v.111.1. u U Mllml {Ohio) U 14 0.YldlOtl l ll Ho. C.rollM IUW lO ll •ui..r. 7 15 Alt ,,~ 1 U atoWn 14 » l'lflN}'hllllll U U Prinu11111 :U JI W11t TIU.It U 24 Col•r•OO &toll 20 JD TUIM 1 14 · CQnnocllcut • >$ Mltml, flt, 17 .a2 low• 1 24 Ulillhoml 11111 lli ll M1nouri u U Nouo Ol!M 10 20 Vl1•ln11 ll 22 ~Mii ltat1 20 21 01'110 lllto 14 ao NOl"Urwullrn 14 24 Wlooontlfl .U 20 w1om1n1 lo 17 Dvkl lS ;M X.IV••t 14 ll Mlrthlll I 17 ON1on It.II 14 20 ,, .. ('/O ltall J,• 4S r lttaburp- .a1 1nch11111 1 1' T.C.U. 10 U U.C.L.A. 1 I.I .. )'IOr I 2' CIUtornlo 10 " :ti Yll'IGlrbill 11 VHlll'IO'll lt :p Konlucky 1 Al1blml A&M " Mil•' .. An1110 " Sul Rou ' Appt\IChlt n " l ion " AtklitUI St1t1 " T,.,.,ty " A1klnn1 TKh " ArkonMI AM I. N .. 8'thuno-Cc:iokmon " FloriM M.M • "" ... 21 ltflOlt.fthJfll .. t.ltt T1nrotu.H .. Austin hi)' " test Tillis 30 T1rl1ton I foyotttvl/l• " CtMner Stitt • Fisk " Mo11houM • Fort '+'•ll•Y 21 Alblny 511!1 u funn1n " Clr50~owmon " GtsmbUna .. Southorn U • H1mpdln-S)'d~ Zl A1ndolph·M1COn 10 Howard Poyne " McMur?.; • J1cbon Sttto " Mls1l11 Piii V1U1y .. JICktonYllll .. Flor.mo • k1ntucky Slit• " S1v1nn1h u Llmor " Arli"cton I Uvlnpton " Mtrlln " ll'llll~llOnt ~ " Shaw " Loui• 1n1 Toch " NE Louls!1n1 " M1tl!!U1 " G1rdner·Wlbb " Mc "" 11 SW Lou1111n1 • More11e1d " E1st1rn 1<1ntueky 11 Mor11n Slat• " Vlr1!nl1 Sitto .. No. Corolln1 A&J " No. C1rolln1 C1ntrel .. • NW l0UIJl1n.i ll SE loul1l1n1 I Nortl'lwood " Ml11!sslppl Coll•P u Ohio Northorn " GIO!llt17Wn I OUlchll• " 1-i1nd•rM111 " Pr11byt1rl1n " M1•1 Hill I Quentlco M1rln11 " Gusttv•s Adolpl'lut u l•m H-ton " ~ti.1'P.fi11 !ll'hfO ' 11 South c orvll"• Slit• 29 0.11w1re 11111 • SOutnern Slit• " Ark. 11 Montlc:oUo ' Sout,,.,...11 TUii " l111s A&I " Siii• Colle11 Ark, " H1rdln1 " Ttnnette9 1111 ·~ C1n1r11 St•lo, Ohio • Tennoun Tech Mldd!• t1nnuM• " l1••1 LutMr1n " Bi1ho11 " Ylr11n11 Union " Hampton • • ... "'. 11 Ptor!JW diadem. ' er.ty .. ,,.,.. lldlllulltl Pct.•I ... - Gurule ficure1 the aUffest battle in that cateaory will et1me from Paloa Vtrdts, Upland i1ld BurblM. Servile High in Anaheiln last entrant in the n1tional mitt is !fUCJn, eerned A 11 • C I F Lynn Govin of Tustin. (AAA ) honora. He's 5-1 and 1-===================~,JI the best ahootu on the ·occ ,. squad, 1a)rs Livsey. ~ ll_ltllnl ILtlf 1 2' Ml•hO -21 11 Soulh'n Mlnlu lppl 14 t1 loulh C.tollllll JO JO W1.t11n111n ILtto 15 Wost.rn k111tuel!y " MU ff I")' " w ...... .. Gulttotd I Other Games-Far West Aluw 15 Sin Ol•10 U f '"' •• ., ""111111 ·"' " .m,.... -~. ..... •• 4 .... ·"' .m ,,~ .171 11'1 .4. 1 .m 41'1 WLTPtt•'•A ,,,.,.,,. 12,••n• 11)12'''" J&11111U J ll JIJll17 4 1el1JM 11 JISJ1J•n ... -ciiklfo '' ' • " If M\.-ot1 11 4 t M .M ~..,.,.,,.,,.JI lll'Jri\~11 , • ' ,, 41 (111"1f'llll ' It J If U 'i. l.11111 4 1f , 11 0 l Aftl'Mk J If 1 1 JJ T'"'"'°" llltllltt ·~,.... f, V•MOUY«I 1'\11 ... 1..ille t, L• AllMI .. 0 }I, l.llllt J, MtMrMI 2. Oil) ~lflrllll 7, luflllo J 'Ml....,t 4 'llllllul'lh J e!llY ftfftll .......... 111111111'1 ....... Nt """" KlltllUI .. . Skiing Trip Set by Club A trip lo Mammoth Moun-, taln thlo ,...tend la planned by the lalbot Sid Club, at· cordlnl lo publicity cha1rmatl Keith Whitt. !Va the flrtl of II trlpt lo Mammoth odMdllled by the -club lhrauCfl April. 'Ille ltlboo Sid Club mllll '"" tht flrtl and thtrd 'lllllday of Meli monlh at the NewJlOrl· It In• wllh Ill _..,. l'ttllil 1a..ier way ot I. • Gary Worthl.,ioe b the 'club'• prMNenl Prep Grid Standings XMAS EXCITEMENT HERi-NOW Ellewhere up front, center Erle Southwick (S-8, 210) and forward Perry Ham.tad (M, -ltlltl C111I ld!Mllll l 1l .. He¥. 17 -ti LA Trtft Ttdl T1111 .. HIY. lei -fl Goldtfl W•ll l'rl .. DK. t -I I U(LA l'r ...... J:'l WM.-Slt .. DIC. •11 -Mlltl l•lo" ""'""' •t DCC WM.4•1 .. rue. 1J.U -•I Cl'l•ff•~ Clllltl t.urlll'I' ' T1111 .. DK,' fl -Cl'llff .... lilan'lel WM., OIC, It -1111 HotMll CMmt) TIWrl,, OK. n -.i Vlfltur• IMll.•Woll., Dtc. lt-tt -•I S1nt1 Monkll-MY 11! ........ I -11 T•"· t 1.m. WM., JI"-I -II l'ullor'°"' Wllll .. J111. It -11 l'ulllf10n" Wllll., J .... II -Slftlo AN' (horrtll Wtf., Jlfl. If -I f (Orrttof' W ., Jin. 22 -Ml. kfl A1o1111lo' ·-· u1 .. J111. l't -Sin ~ M.u• l"-I < w. ........ -f1Pltr1en' tl*Ml WH., l'ft. t -&111""""-1!*"111 "'· $111. 11 -.,...,.,,.. ... ,.. wt11., "*· " -c ... rt*' thlrrtll SM., I'•. lf -et Ml, S... An .... • w.ii., Fiii. t.11 -ot llfl DI ... "'-' ........ tour... c.11 Centorena ··::· •• ,... IMlllfl ., .. 11111111 rwfMMflll, . . .. COME IN-••• l'tC• UP • ••1• o• ""' MOTO XIOCIS OOl s1• 110. SI.IA . .. U..lltf.,. ........... .. SH ~~MPUn SIOCI ... MOTOICTCLi.•• ••• CHECK . nu o•tSu••1•• HLICTto• .,. ,.,.. TY ntMS. Hl\MITS, .... Lii & •11.t.IDI. NOTE '"' NIW uc1•• LIATH1n. a111•• ... PAllt. JAClftS, tMtlTI. ¥'lln, •LOYll, lllNIT' 111.11 AMI IOOll POI MIN & WOMIN. . CHOOSE .................. .,;.., WIW """'YOUR RIDER JAMES LTD ..... ......... ~ ........ ,.. .. ..,.... IH4 .............. C01TA Mil'IA--6414t41 r \fC.')\J\{/~ S/~\.\: \/2 c.;/~\. •i\.UU Kam·cha(ka ' Dt*A 1 J~ftl.....,.. ... ~ ........ 1GD"lloOIMi....., ...... .CIOLCl•N aTATI! -rodeo finals ONlYTHETOP JEN COMPETITORS In mh tf sei1en contest events from Golden Stile Rodeo . Co.'s 60·ph1s rodto season. 1(0 OTHER REGION!l RODEO flN!LS Is al· lowed by the professional Rodeo Cowboys Auo<iatioo. $28,000 IH PRIZE.SI • SPi:Cl~l·!TTR!CTIOHS: Tht "Sa1r of lht Wist". F1mtd Madison Squ11e G1r•1n ·litfltniltr C Ranch Squart Datte• on Hom- bact louit Sil"'' 8 mammoth Cl!d•sd.111 draft horses. TICKllS: ,S.00 lhMI U.00, 1& Jfl. & 11nftr, • SI .DO ~L On u l1 at Cotrv111tio11 Cttllt t licit! Offia: W•~letl's, Mutua l •1111 l lhtrty Apricies: Or•~Cf: County So. C.lif. l111U. hr·,·~~;ii?:lll'rt,;; "'"'"'*: "°"· 2l.. "": Hot. 2:7, 2:'. ""·· ""'· 2l 2:30 , .. ro• INFORMATION CN.l 714/'35-!(l)O. l'ldoe ••Md ... CDNV•NTION 1MCENTBl't NOV.26-27-28 •• -.... ·--·ci...t-4 22 IYBe&lH 21 11 North Teittl U a ltle hmolMI U al H1rv1rd 17 80111 Siii\ !t2 Col/111 ol ldlho O Cll LutMrtn 25 P1cirlc lllthoNn ll Cll Poly (l'am0n1J 2J St. M11)"1---• >-Cll Poly (S.LO.) 26 f ull•rlon 1 Chico Stitt 34 Sof!Om1 o Other Gi1me1-£1st DIYio I 21 Humboldt 19 Etstorn ~•w Mulco 2S N1w M1xio:o HrJ111dt J7 Adotpn1 • SOulhlrn Con!Md.leut 11 lucknlll O Rochullr all l•l•t•ll• 1 Muhi.nMl'f 1 l"ton u :io LllJl('/On Volle~ 1 HIV.rlvrd 1 Jolln1 Hopldllll 1 E11t1rn 011aon 19 Whitworth 1 E1111rn W111'1initon 24 011aon Teeh o L1wl1 & Cl1rk 20 Ctnl•al W••hlni\011 J4 Lona e11cl'I 24 H1w111 1• Monttn• J5 Portl111d 6 N1v1d1 (L11 Vt111) 2& N1v1d1 (Rollo) 1 Northorn Color.do 27 Ad1m1 s11t1 1 Occid1nt11 15 Pomon1 lJ Or11on Co11111 JO Southern Oflton 11! S1cr.m1nto 19 Sin froncbeo Slit• 13 Sin Fernando 20 Los An11l11 16 Sin Fr1nelSC<1 U 13 Loyol• 1 Olbar &am .. -Mtlhi11t S1nt11 81rt11r1 24 S1nt1 Cl111 Zl southern Color.do ll Color1do Mln11 1 .... • .... .. " .. " " " " " " ,. 1J " " .. n " " .. " Youn,.1ow11 1 Aahl•nd 14 lnd!1r11 CelriNI 1 L Cen1t1I Oltll~I lS Woyne, Mich. ll Mltw1ukM 1 IW Mlll>OUtl al Mlnourl &olrthlrn la Rolle U IC Olll1hom1 17 w11u1m i-11 14 un,.1on 1 1111not1 hnodlctlno • C.ntt1I Mt11ourl 11 c.mr•I Mlchl1111 l• C.ntr•I OkJ1hom1 17 w,.,,., lS W11hlnrton a. l.M 21) ,l11Clll)' U u.s.1.u, 21 Rl..-flld• 1 Wobtr ·21 Idaho !1111 JC W11t1m W1•hlnrton 20 Sii"'on '"•tr 17 WhlttJor 11 R1dt1nc11 14 Thankscivlnr Day, Thursday, Nov. 25 c>.or111 Mlul11I~ Nobta•k• TIX•• Alcorn MM C 'N Poti l iric:oln Morris Bl'OW!t ,.,.1bYl1ri1n Qu1ntlco M•"nu T•••• SOuth1rn TUtll1•M " " " " .. " " " " " " " Geor&I• Tteh Ml1tl11lppl Sllto Okl1hom1 T111s MM J1ctuon Slit• Hotalr1 ll:olll Cl1rk N1Wbtrl)I l'orl Lowis Pr1ll11 Vlow A11'b1m1 Stlte " " 11 • .. • u ' " • " 1J I' R 0 FE S'STO N7'-c-F·o R·E-c A'S-T-S-- - Sunday, November 21 17 MleMI ., •• ,, •• 11 Mflt-.ete ···• 12 17 H•nt•• •....• 10 N•w Yerk Jett 20 JJ N•w 1ittl•ll4 • , 20 OOle114 ••••• , JO Dttre* ••••••• Jl Cllk .. • •• , • , • JI Plmb•tth •.•• JI JI ~ ~ ····•·•• 14 .St. Le1i1 ,,,.,,JI N•w OrlHlll • ,, , J _l~ff•I• ..••• , . , t S.11 DI ....... , 17 N•• Yett: Glett1 J4 PhllM•lphl• 17 ·--City .... _ .. t7 S.. freffilc• •• JO W_.."'9te• •.•• 1 l D•ll• ••••••• , 11 Monday, November 22 .,.. hy •..• 14 Atlat• •. , ,,. IJ 'Thunday, November 25-Thank19lvln9 Day ._... •..•. , •• 21 r .... Cltr •• 21 ~ .... ,.....,. •• 11 hi• ........ 10 Celt _. I• • •Nw whet ye11• rllllt .... t .., "91"'8ft l'etwest TAKE VALLEY VIEW OFF RAMP FROM FREEWAY! llMOJlfSTIATO•I NOW ON SALE . OYll I' TO CHOOll lllOM AT TUMINIOUI ' . SAVINGS .. • -· • . . • • IWlY l'!LOT • • .. . . . . • Frld11, N-It. 1971 • • . . . Ki is • ID Surge .. , " , ' Firm ·Boosts Home Building Almolt every man d(eanv of blJ\ldllll -ii 'own boat. Some CU, IOO\e do. Tbe lncrwed 1n1u .. 1 Of) the ))art of do-l~yooraelf home craftamen In 111e m b 11 n1 ·flberllUa"uilU. ,... from kill .II. ieflect.d 'lii tlli form•· Uon of~••~ ll• com-paqy··-, Saitciefter· Yacht Kil.I .• ' • •• • ~ up r t~ new subOidl,o,Y.ol Colwnbil Y1chts (Whltlalttr CorJ>.) ii Ken Wit· ,.1 Of Newport Beed!, recen~ Jy appointed u gentral sales mana,ger. He brings to thls lta~ing procjucer of quality libtrglus ylichl·kill stveral yeara of in-depth experience in the pltuurt boat industry. KIT BUILDER Ken Witzel' ( "Witbln the past year there has beeh a noticeably upward swing in the . kit-boat ln-dwt!)'," Witzel said. ••we ex-----~~------ , pect' 1971 industry sal~ to far exettd any previous year.'' . Witzel say.1 furthei that the trend amon_g owner.builder . enthusiasts is toward larger boat.. "With professionally molded fiberglass hulls available at nominal prices, many amateur boat builders are successfully undertaldng the C()nstruclion of yachts 50 feet in lengtb and longer," he added. Sailcrafter plants a r e Welsh. Gets Soling _ Unit Captaincy ,. l!EGATTA QUEEN -ll anything would .spur an outboard racer to -victory in the Outboard World Championship regatta at Lake Havasu it is the prospect of a:ettin~ the share of the S6Q.000 purse plus a discreet kiss from regatta queen .Kam . Nelson. located in Costa Mesa and Portsmouth, V a . , Head· quarters are at the local site. Component parts of kits are produced to Sailcrafter specifacations J A total of seven models - 22, t1, 25, 211, 36, 50 and 57 - are available. All are proven designs by such leading nava l architects as the late Bill Tripp and Bill Crealock. They roughly parallel the Columbia Roger Welsh, the o ri l y American to btat 1· h • Australians at their own lame (sailing the formidable Australian·18s) was re-elected fleet captain of the 35-~t Newport Harbor Soling Fleet, largest in Nortll America . Welsh, one of many world class helmsmen to go into the Solings after the fast little 27· fool sloop was seJected as a three-man keelboat for the 1972 Olympics, formerly ~ailed Intemational·l-f class dina:hies (and still does on occasion) in which he was the 1968 naUonal Single Engine Boats Hold Edge at H~vasu line. Further lnrormation o n Sallcrafter Yacht'Kil!I may be obtained from Witzel at the plant headqQarters, · 2 7 5 McCormick Ave.,Coista: Mesa. Ttltphoot ~53l. champion. · 1 lie also won the Lehrrlan·l2 dinghy championship t w o years.. ago, a g a I a"S t a formidable field which ifl. eluded Amer ica 's Cup defender Bill Ficker. former Snipe world champion Bob Davis, mu It i p l ~e North Am&ican. natioriit · 1'..n ·d NAYRU titlist in several classes Henry Spragu·e Ill, and fonner North American Star c hampion Tom Blackaller. Single engine drivers will have an edge In the prize moi1ey to be distributed this year In the $60,000 outboard Wor ld Championship Nov. '17· 28 at Lake HavallU City , Ariz. Ra ct director Robert P. McCulloch said an additional $2,000 will be awarded the first single engine driver to !ioish no matter where he places in the race. Another extra $1,000 will be paid the second sing_le engine pilot, $500 to the third and $250 to the fourth . These amounts are in addition to lht regular breakdown of the purse. "Flrst place money will be $18.000," McCuiloch·said , "but Club Hosting Class Race South-Shore-Sailing Club will be ho8t to some 30 Flying Jr. skippers this weekend in the Regional Championship flegat· ta for the Class. Racing will be on outside course, weather permitting. Arrangements have bee n made to bring the fleet to in- side-the·harbor C()Urse in the even Of foul we1lher which would make it unsafe for sail· ing in.the ocean. The live race regatta will featu re three races on Satur· day and two on Sonday. 'Die Hard' Cruise Set tr the driver is aboard a single tngint rig the amount will bt lncrea1ecfto1 $20,000." S--oat Snows Much M.ore Than Yachts, VP Says Other elected during the an- nual meeting were Terry CiCero, who stays on As· of· ficial measurer, and 'fred Miller. who takes the. new post of publicity chairman. Boal shows bring to the OOating fan more than just a chance to ee a Jot of boats in the aame place at the same time. This opinion was voiced by Peter M. Wilson , ad· ministrative vice president of the National Association of Engine and Boat Manu!ac· turers, and managing director of the National Boat Show in New York. But Wilson was speaking for all of the big boat shows which will be held througOOut the 4 Colleges Seek Team R~ce Crown country during the early part of 1971. All, that is. except the eipositions staged by in· dependent entrepreneurs. '1By buying an admission ticket to an ·lndustry=sponsored show, me boatman is getting involved I~ product develop· ment, water safety and C()ll- .&ervation, legislative support for his sport and much more.'' said Wilson. Bill Ficker ' Plans Talk Revenue from shows that are operated by local marine On Desi· gn, . trade associatM>ns a s against t h e independently Bill Ficker ' or Ne•~rt operated shows -is chin· .. .,,., neled right back int<> the sport, Harbor Yacht Club will be on~ Wilson explained. This was the of the speakers on a sailboat intent cf th~ boati9g industry design symposium at Redonnn. when it set up the associa· r_..,.. tloiu. Beach Saturday. : ~ The IS regional t r a d e A large turnout or bOth associations -including the amateur and professional sail· Southern Calilort1ia ~farlne Ing enthusiasts is expected fof Associa.Uon -""hich are af· Ancient Interface III, the .;.!rd flliated with NAEBM run a lu total of 12 shows. Box office annu al symposium on sailing Four Southland colleges will and exhibit spact sales monies sponsored by the AerospaC. compete Saturday and Sunday In the semi·finals and finab go toward such efforts as safe Related Applications Com· for the team racing cham. boating drives, c u s t o m e r mittee of the A m e r i i:: 8 n service studies and water pionship of the Pacific Coast cleanup campaigns or Institute of Aeronautics i!-nd Yacht Racing Association on whatever local conditions de-Astronautics. , Newport Harbor. nd Th Jn the seml·finals Saturday ma · e meeting will be held ln "It's the same with our th I UC! will meet Orange Coast e emp oyes ca f et e·r I a show, though we operate at 1 · College and USC will be the national level." says bui ding at TRW Systems matched against san Diego Wilson, who Is currently Pllli· group, One Space Park, ).vita State. ing together the huge and registration beginning at 8 The winners or these two C()Mplex National Boat Show a.m. The session is op'.en to pairings will compete in the for a Jan. 22 opening in the anyone interested in sailing finals Sunday with tht winner New York Coliseum. and sailboat design. ' The Jlalboa Power Squadron picklng up the Carter Ford The day.Jong program will bas l111ued invttetions fOr its Perpetual. • feature papers from ~allhig annual Die Hard Cruise to UCI skippers are Jeff Firiu Names authorities throughout t ·h·e Long Beach Y1cbt Club, McOermaid , Dave Hodges, United States, from Entta'rid Saturday and Sunday. John Billings and John SI&· and the Netherlands. •· In a~dition to the cruise and tebo. OCC helmsmen wUI be Rambusch Ficker will speak on his suC< predicted log race, the. Pat Scruggs, Dennis Durgan, cessful defense of fh e squadron will hold 1 business John Daigh al)d Bruce H. William Rambusch Jr. America 's Cup in 1970. Also on infw'dw~ooe1-at-...HwmF,en·;-SaJ,il:i;iri~11ik..m;'.:-uP:sc~w;"i111;-;ha:;•i;ijbtFe;."•"'or"'"t•m:iiedffi'";»f'r"i'"r•rl -iithii'ITT:"PIDro~gr;'•iimmwrr';llr,:be]i,ffiG;;•~rr~-LBYC. bt Jack Jakosky, Peter manager of lliris C' r a f' u . e 1Cner or t e a Plaques fill! be awarded to Wilson, Doug Rastello and Pacific, Marini del Rey. Ranger series of racing yac~ the winners in the predicted ' Steve Hathaway. ~ tMgo Rambuach, -49, owned and built in Costa Mesa. ~ ' Jog contest and the Chuck State sk;i~ are. P a ~ I operated a Long I s 1 a n d Registration fee is Q for Phelan Trophy wlll be award· Hunrlcbs , Brad Smith, Jim marina for the past eight AlAA members,. $3 for non ed to lhe Wheels Fleet winner. Grlines &IJd BW Guke. yurs. members and-$1 !.or student.s. Johnson Geri Heads Juniors Miss Geri Johnson col?UnOlifore of the Corlnthian Y Ill c h t Juniors. 11· the Bahia Club other office.rs · are Roger Rawlings, vice commodort: Cynthia Javelll, rear com· modore ; Leanne Mi 11 e r, secretary; Scott MalOJl, neet captain and Brad Muon, port captain. STARS Sydney Oman-11 ont af- lhe wGrld's great a1trolo. a~rs. H1s column Js Ont of the t>Ail..Y Pil.O'I"S rreat t~turea. Maipawns In Comebaek? Powerboat Classic Slated. As much as the pu.r\$1.s hate to 1dmJt It, the International prestige-of tbt: ·•port of offshore pawerbolt ricing bu grown in two w1ys -by •lhe heroics of the drivers and the · know·hoW of . boat buU~ers., Usually the two have betn combined. The upcoming Henne.uy Key West race in F'lortda Saturday -the last _.vent on-the--Union o f lnter111ll-0nal M<>- torl:>Ntina'• world cha"'" pionshJp clrct1lt -will m1rk the ............... ol tbt hoUle of Magnum -once lhe world leader in high speed otlahor1 racing. Jn previouc ywr others such u 8e.ttram . Thur>- derblrd, Maritime and Donil hive taken !Mir !hotJ. Today one company Is top dog -Don Aronow'a Cigarette firm. But pl1ni under w1,y at the Mqnum plaJ>t...jnAl!laml •~ expected to hive an effect on Aronow's cSominaoot. Lfned up ~t the Magnum Shop "1 Mlllml. !'la .. lo i new 33·foot ~1agnum being-readied for New Jersey's Billy ~1artin, the APBA 's national single. engine inboard champion for the past two years. His new boat. Hustler Ill. is only BV. feet in beam and has all. thf' equip ment needed to beat ~ be.st -~luding a pair or Soo. hp Mercruiser en~ioes w1tb wel·tuned elhau.st headers'. The last t w .. Ln..!.-e..n g Ln a Magnum h"'d made a lot of noise! In ocean racing when (t was pllotf!d tD tht world til1e in 1968 by Balestrieri of Italy. n- p r b h d al '· n m n- y J. st • , th ii· ' or rd ng ce n od in ia ' IA 8 to ng ill g '• d /C- O on ry • .. or n r h • f t • ' ~~Ctises No ,1Solved • Consu1ners' Caution Result of Confusio:p? NEW YORK lUPl) -Ana- lional consumer o p i n I o n · SUr\<ey rel eased -Tuesday says Americans are not likely to in- crease t.hcir spending in the near future unless t h e ~. eCITTiomy as a whole picks up. ';i cOnsumer caution may be · fhC ~result of general CQnfusion and uncertainty over the m~aplng of the Ni x on 'A.dminlstrations new , 'l Conomic policies, according 'to."a survey by the_Jfunference · 'Board. decline wa s mOstly in used ca·r purchase plans. Plans to buy new homes declined to 3.2 percent from 3.5 percent · in the previohs survey, Qut plans to purchase major appliances rose to 38 percent from 34 percent, the survey said. · The anticipated increased in appliance purchases included color and b I a c. k alld \\"hlte televisions, refrigera. tors, washing· ma c Ii. Ines·, clothes' ffrY'er/ aiid arr cooot:- ~ ..• , .iA_t lioners. -'' th is juncture, said "ftie surV~~.·~ ~~Mu~t~ by board economist Fa b i an the Nationaf'1tamuy Optnion, Linden, "It would seem that as Inc., for. t~,confer~IJCe bOard, the ~nomy goes, so goes the showed \5;~. J>Jr~1enf q~ thO~ cOt~mer. . . _ inJ~'tviewei:J_·r~,it ~.ur1en.t The national survey or 10.tlOO business conditiohs wer~ good. r~IJl~ies taken in September This figure compare(! wJlh 14.8 a;fl 10ctober showed 7.7 per-percent irt the previou~ period. cent or them planned to buy a However in th~ &rea of car during the next six employment, 43 petcen\ o( rno-~hs. This figure is down those interviewed felt _jobs from 8.5 percent in July-were hard to i et, co mpared ,,4pgl)st. The survey said the v.·ith 42 pe~cent pfevtOJlsly . Wall Street •, 1 • Thi small Investor is not ~ ly"Worrled and confused by the staiWof the economy, he's also lost faith in the stock market itsel f, obsererves Filor Bullard & Smyth. Well-publicized pro- blems of a number o f brokerage firms, the mark el'a vola(illty and sharp 1969-70 declj~e, its ''institutionali u.- tiqn,'1 a reel ing tha.tthe market is being &tructured to fa vor the IArge customer, and The dl'hlic overhauling of the l'edru'llie! lndwitry now being ~ed in \\'all Strt?el and Washington hAve all contrlb- trted to di.5couraJ:ing him . "'• •~-..e Lacking? .. . · 01\e reason the market's rt-c~t · decline hAs been so l!ie'vtre L, that a sufOcient blse wu itolount In AugU!it tO S\Jp- pprt, the rall y which followed t{i~ Pre.rildtnl's eco n om i ~ ~tdi . says E. F. Hulton. The tectvUcal 1tat1 of-the .. marktt Chatter U.S. Cites Worsening ' ' Of Balanee WASSINGTON (UPI) During the third quart~ of " ' , . 1971 tHe·United States suffered its worst balanc~ of payments deficits in -history .. The Commere't Department issued the trade figures Mon- o a y , confirming President Nixor\.'s apptehension1 about the dollar 'Wlien hf: changed hl's tto:norlilc !tr.iltegy In rrild- Augw:t.. The reportS.-id the "official reserve transactions" balance tietween July · and September reCorcted a re~rd ·deficit of $12. l billion. The balance measures the change in dollar holdings of foreign banks. During the qulrter, the "net liquidity'' bala~e, which measures nearly all private and official trans actions with • , • 1• I " ' (> • ., I Ft'fday, Nowmbtf 19, tn ) I Dl!LY PILOT Jf. • f OAIL'I-PILO Y-ot1r iUoner •• • Campaigni~g Cost C1trb Aid. to You? By SYLVIA PORTER • As.swnln& Coogress soon • passe$ tht llrst law in U.S. history sharply limiting spen- lng on politicaJ e.amPJlgrts, whit y,•ould it mean to you, as •an indivtd\lal U.S. citizen? Surely, you would be much more willing to make §mall contributions toward the cam· : paign of a candidate of your ·choice--if only because you. • feel the campaign is no longer so dominated by a few big, ._"insider" oontributiofl!. • ,.ou also would have a much 1 clearer idea than you have had · in the past of the sources of ~the financial conlributions pro- pelling. each candidate lciward office. • . You coold expect the ceil- , lngs on total spending to lead to more creative and im- aginative types of TV political programs and other methods of campaigning. You woold look for the spending curbs to encourage much wider participation in politics by qualified candid3t- es. You yourself a politically inotivated and ambitious person with ideas. convictions "and programs but \\·ith only modest campaign funds and :only m o d e s t expectations from financial backers. could .1:iope to take on a political race and win. ·· Now moving toward final ;passage by Congress is a bill that will slap ceilings on ·today's SO&ring campe.ign-- • spending costs. While details are stilt being hammered out. ·it's probable that the Jegisla· tioii will include : A spending limit of about 10 : cents per eligible voter in any candidate's constituency: pro- •vision for some effective en- -forcement procedure or agen- cy; a requirement of full . diSc!Osure by all candidates and all parties of the amounts ,Jhey have spent. Basically, this new law 1o1.·il\ repeal the 1925 Cotn1pt Prac- tices A~l which has turned out to~be an utter sham in policing or curbing campaign spending. ·To illustrate: the '68 cam- . paigns at all levels reached a . fantastic $300 million. up an almost incredible 50 perCent over '64 and, without ceilings. "the costs easily could surge to $500 million in 1972's elections. 540-5630 o,,.,,,~ c'"'""' Mf..u/7 oJ Fi11e c,,,. ohnson&son 1~--1 1626 HARIOI I LYD,. COSTA MESA• 5it().5630 Hand c.nrvcd bi;ro, darkened with just a 1ouch of atain tnd then laced with 14K gold "thread'' to a JOlld gold bac.k. makes a di~tlngui5hcd and unusual set nf ~.f!link~. ~2,.50. Available only from 8. D. Howes and Son - whctc quality items ran~ from ten dollars to tht mosl c1traordin'af'Y custom made jewelry in the world. 1Mal9'flln ----MA.SO~fl&id.) l!8JiQ~.~~d .~.Qjj •· .HCWl"Oltl IU.CH• r • Ll<I• · U>S AHO[lfS tllll 'I\ '\oul••1td USAOCNA SW~ ~ A ·llOl-SllWll.,, H011I .tAHTA IAllllAM 143 Stf\t 6l'HI I OOI.-"Cll S ,,.,""" & 8t011Ml•1t 1 • • • • ' OVER THE COUNTER Colllplete-New York Stock List ...,.....,.. ..... , 11 a t11t w •4#4 l _IWlJf A.&.._....._ ""'-........ ,...... ........... _.......I ... NASO llstlntt hw Thurtdoy, Nonmllor 11, 1971 ' ' . ·-• • • l I, l • • • • • • • • • • • • I r -. • > • • • . I I ! ., • . , • • • • • ' ' • • . • • 'fli~f-s 0~ .p.,ices-:..coliiplete NeW'·York S~oc~ Exchange List - • N"'m~ . ltn CAJLY ll'ILOT • !"!. I • • • ,. ti b¥.ri>tLOT I TOTAL .$ ..... . . '· $2n1.M 11 Iii•. ·tot•I ~.h ;rk, 1~ct. te1 & tic,-... Pi~• i• th• 11t.. ~ n"!'· Jrate l•r;I, 19•, llctt1M ~ •IFcilrrtl .. ci..r.11 ee °'' •P. -"1-Di'fOll'-loH-<rfflU.....iy-2'--tlos;-UIClW- ·ANMUAl PllCEllTHl Un.1S'.lU1% -- -- NOW OILY ----'-- $42 tDTALllOlilTMlY '69 MUSTANG '69 FIREBIRD DELUXI 400 MODIL txtllltm ~ion. (XXA90S) fRE£ '10 FORD STATION WAGON , A tomolic TrllftM10iuio11. la~it ~ ~. lmdlcl with~· .... 111f!rt~~300EQ) $1588 leach Olty SE HABLA 7 DAY TRI AL EXtHANGl ON All AOIJEltTISEO USEO CAIS '68 \MPALA • AS MUCH AS OFJ fACrOIY.wlNDOW ~RICE ON YOUR NEW CAR PURCHASE NEW '72 MONACO· WAGON. Ser.# DP-461201"36321 ... _ . ., .. ,,. ... _ .. _._ s7· MlllllllllliMd'-'•...._.......,.__. ... --Pll"'•11oerina llwM; .. .,.....,._..... ·A "'"'IMIJ _.....~ wilh 1 ........ --· 1'-rolrJt,.~.m -...... 1 ~--. /"'"' Wok•. •I"'' l l '""f olhoor lilnriu. IKJ11Gl'3177l1 IMMIDIATIDEUVllT NEW '12 8-100 DODGE VAN • 'uucr _ FJOMAU Tiii FAMOUS IRAllDS. ••• $888·· !1:_481 '69 OLDSMOBILE '68 FORD -'65 FORD MUSTANI . ~::1•S. lkO~Dflliclll I cf...;./ '68 CHEVY · CAMAIO lfedio, H111t1tr Tlit I' .__ ('f0,1.$36) • • • tr...ot cw '69 FORD '69 DOD 3/4TON GE =r.:.~~~aon'-f.hc• Conv · • ............. ,."':;.;;<,.-ers1on ~3588 i.i~78 8 ,_ \ . , -. .. I . ,, • • •• ' ' \ • - ' • I W,..,.._ _ _ , . - Guiile •••• Where · ht go • •• • ••• ' ' :· Qance ·Show P~cked Away -µ ·S.uitcase . •' f By GEORGE;LEIDAL • Of #le o.l" Pllet 'Shit ' · ~ the · l&at curtain ~s next.- Tuesday's UC Irvine dance program in tr the F..ilte: Arts Village ~cert Theater •. th~-~life Fuclicn wWibe~pack~ in a ·, 1u1tcase. • . · 'the orthestl~ instruments -an " < reeycllkl trash -the'props -including a r~led pi:rachute -and the sets - plt>f.J!, coat hangerS and ooloced strips or cel)ul0id, will pick up into cOnvenient tiupdles so the unusual dance concert can tour. ' J'ames Penrod and Janice Plastino, both' asiiStant prof~ssors of dance at uqr. prepared the. mobile dance program u llhe result of a.grant from the Creative · l · A?W'institute. · • .'1k grant. Was awarded for .the· P,Ytpotle of mounting a production which cOOl_d be toure<t with relative ease to otJ:ier 'campu~s. "'Pen'rod said. -The· idea? "TO promote an exchanie of tdt!as between facul ties and students of the UC -lystem." :The sull.cjse selection spotli~hts tradi- tionll dance forms as well as the angular up~~iofis Of modem-dance. · -, ~·The • five ballets ran·ge from , the clifl'ic;illy abstr~ct to a free-rang_ing 1bsufdlst piete wllh original music com-poa~ and ~rfonned by David Firjeon, o[~the UCt staff. Farjeon created the u~blage cf music-making junk. .. ' The final pie<:f:, involving the entire cam,any pf eight dancers, is billed as •io1a.tunctive Cbnglomerate." At a recent Mani I the panoplf of creative ·modini d~·'fonns lf'as merged With the heavy dti!ll•li• rudlng by Robert Cohen. 1ssoc:iate professor ot drama. : -.... . ' ' . . ~ . ...... -. THUNDERHEADS TOWER'OVER PANAllllNT MdUNTIANs'AND t;l~!IES IN · DEATH VA.LtEY,. ' ·Deat:li' Valley L.µres Crow'-~ . . ' . -(' 'Barren' Ex panse Full of Life, Man y A dventures ·.~ By FREDERICK SCHOE>l~l!L Of rt1<t 0.llY .-1111 lllH The sun , intense, radiant, rises over the pink, purple, and rust tinted mountans. Rabbits gopt\ers and scores ot other small animals retreat lo their burrows. Birds-herons eagleS, roadrunners, geese-ny and roam over11re rock ·strew: u\tbrush studded surface of the land. The air, chilly from co ld air descending rrom mountain canyons during the night, begins to warm. Another day has dawned •in Death Va:Jley-3,000 square miles of desert housing hundreds of species of pfan'ts and animals, lhe legends of lost mines and the kind of beauty that border! on the Indescribable. · temperaturu' soared well above 120 degr~25,000 peopl~\crossed the desert expanse. NoW, '8S winter approaches and temperatures drop considerably, more and more people will pack into Death Valley National Monument to camp, hike, explore and prospect. They couldrit pick a be'tte:r place t11 do it. The monument is laced with campgrounds-FumaCe ~eek, Texas Spriilgs, .Emigrant JuncUon, Midway Well, Daylight Pass, Mesquite Springs, Wildrose • Station and Mahogany Flats. While sh:ade doeSn't abound at most ol the campgrounds they are out t' it t e d with wa,t.er, real rooms and camp tables .. Hundreds of ola tunnels are still WJo the ·venturesome explorer. For tho•• have their· eyes on striking it r.iCb, • valley Is full of r number of orei aid geinstones. ' · ·· One of the rfiost'·popular 1pots•1n monument... -ii-Scotty!s .Castle, ~• multimillion dollar palace rislngY out ~or barren Grapevine· Canyon. 4 • l The castle was built in the 1920;. by · Walter Scott and Albert Johnson~ .lt1la open to the public during-the winter ~ docent tours are provided for a ~ charge. • :'.: ff_ Writhing cla4. bodles contrast sharply tifth'e blllowing presence of the parachute whk:h' altem_ate:ly hides the narrator and e9t-hkles him' Is if delivering the' absurd oratoey from atop an Olympian cloud. UCI DANCERS ,PLAST INO, FONG AND KING R.EHEARSE TRIO Despite its name, Death Valley,.by the md of this year, will have attracted more than 500,000 persons. Even during the hottest month of the ' year-July. when Miles of paved road, jeep roads and foot-traJls. ·wander throughout the monu· ment, many leadini to the now silenl.. rubu of lotd mining campa s~ as Sk.i. doo, Harillburg, Ryan ·an:d Chloride Clill. Another point of interest is ilhe ~ Yalley Museum in Furnace.Creek, ran.1J the federal govemmerit whii;h t}a.i ·""' mlnisteted the monument slnce 'tm.''ia addition to the museum and heldqu~ at Furnact Creek, ranger 1t1Uona de located at other r;trate1ic points.,ln tr. monument. . , , Motels, stores and gas eta;!Ons ... open throughout the winter ~i at both Furnace Creek and $to~tpi~,Welll ' f>if.lOlnted .u opposed to disjunctive t--•---nus~re....acc.uca!dY describe the fun. piece·.~~tMidancers contortions.are cerU!pl.y ovcrJill Jess ugly than most merit. aarde ·o.rrerthgs. 1"° ,_,~,. incl"""1 In tbe 8:30 p.m. itUfbhriance ,Tuesday at UCI. ca~ a pro-"'m "J¥te-wttti \radlUon breakliig. ~"ChbftolV1phy Is u1ually done by one ~·and olien ·the choreogra!>her does do&' dince ln the work," Penrod said. But1 ttie cho~grapby .for tht touring concert .ls a ·collaboraUve effort bet'Yl~'n. )(iss•P!ntlrio. PenroCI. Adri'enne Fisk anit ~the enUte cumpanr.,.as_in tbe closing nlmber .. l~iS1 · Fisk 1 ls a gr1duate. s~ent . in c!Pli.aild'l• rupo111lbte '"'"' Hght,cornlc• #. "The 1'11tclritf' Milters." ·OCher ~ate students performing are JC.attn Aodef'sonAnd Catherine Miller. Undergraduate student dancers are iJooe.ntJcl<er, Ron Fong and Lisa King. ()t1ler worti;1 on the prosram are a ci .. 11cany orl<nttd balle~ "Wot•ertln• Trio''; a solo ballet using props 1o create: ., envirbtlment er suspense, "Unear Epilode," Ind a pax de deux, "Sonat.a ror 1".. ... • Tickets for the UCI pertnrm1net a.re $1 and are 1v11lable at tht Flne Arla box· OUict, &13-6617. '· '1'1other Courage' Ad.ds Showing At UCl·Tl1eater An'."' iridditlO"f\:&I -perfonnance of tbe Bertolt Brecht drama, ' 'Mot.he r Courage.-" has been acheduled for .Mon-- day, Nov. 22, at UC Irvine due to Hei'ffln for Uckels. The earlier .ll}iw'.unced dates - Fr i d a y and Sa tu rday . Nov. 19-20, and Tuesday, WednesC11y, FMday and Saturday, .Nov. 23, 24, 28 and 27 are still scheduled as well . All performances are 1Ll:30 p.m. in Jhe VJUaa:e ~tre on campus. . Actress Lotte Lenya, lecturer In drama ot UC! thi1 loll, plly1 the Utle role In the production. Students form the reJllainder of the cast. H.erbert Machil Is director . Tickets are $4~50 and are aval!lble It the fine Arts Box Office, University of Callfomla. Irvine, Callfomla 92664 . For infOnnatlon call the Fine Arla box ofrice (111) 833-61111, Thattksgiv itag Observ ances Village. · , ' ' ~T~.P Talent Mar~s.1Q!sJt~yland Hollday ... . . . Two full day' ol~al ente°rtalnment Meanwhile ... u'P,-tempo ~try 50\lnds Sturges Universe OreheJtra perfornu LUCY BEU, Editor . , featuring,_,top-name..talent..at various Joca-will ring out from Tomorrowland Ter· from 8'p.m. to inldnlght. , - tions highlight Thanksglving•observancel race, where The StampedetSrhikt their . . ,Further-after-dark ritu!k: will be Friday, NtlvemDef 11, 1m·T at Disneyland on Friday and Saturday. . Disneyland debuL Heralded for their pro-fUml shed by 1jazz gr!at''i'eddy Buckn'er The Can~dia~ Rock. Thea~r win Nov. 26-27. fessional showmanship, the ·Canadian ' and his Btma> and Disneyland 'favorite, perform sel«:Uons rrom '"JesUI 1tn opera m rs ""tended from! group, w~lch {wl~ig!LIDr.:lli•r -SOUO~ilalr.-'Ltll. ---~11-_:CbtiSt:.Supermf" and~!Gochpon• a.m. through midnight bOth days, special chart1 with their hits "Sweet City • Oaytinfe'' .entertainment tttill7be •pro--at GOiden We11t College lh.Ja Sun._ performers, along-wit h Disneyland's Woman" and "Carry Me," will perform vided 'tiy ·tbe Dapper Dins, P-laza 1nn day. See story and picture In to. regular entertainment, will provide near· at 9 and ti p.m. Strings,. '"Roy11I Slrtel B1chi!IOrt, Banjo day's Weekender, Page 26. Iy 16 hours of mu1ic1I fun. Dancinf{ Ul &0fler 50Unds may be found King's,· Blue Bayou Slrin,1, the Pearly St.111 Otlaplue .. Pace ui Topping the entertainment list is the at the Plua Gardefl11 where the Jeff Band and tht,Disneyllrid Banc!. G11lde to Fu. Pap !Ii Pat Boone Family on Tomorrowland Also 'featured during the day will be 111 1" G1Udlea Pap H SI.age at 8 and 10 p.m. more thn 30 famous Disney cartoon "Sbrew" Ope:11 !beater P11e • Long a lovoMte oUisleners of all ag,., , MGM to Re·relea8e charocteri, who will 1t>r in twice dally llrteanlHlo• · P•1• n Boone is now joined by his talented wife parad~ on 'Main Street. ' DUler Re-cyclial Pace Z1 and lour daughters In a lun·packed lami, 'Joy in the Morning' Exclll(llng frlday IJld Satunlay's hol~ Out 'N' About Pain a · • ly show .. Stil ftatured are his early bits diy celebration Dlintyland's houri for Elena Verdup .P.,• a like "Bernardine.'' "Love Letters lfi the the eek Gulde &o Movies Pap ll, Sarni'' and "April Love," which due to his MGM will re-releue "Joy in.the Morn· "mww~ ol Tlid onk(Nsgol~lart ldOla.m. totoS EI.an la Ba d .,._ .... lng,".1965 love !tory starring Richard ,.. . ....ne1 ay v . ..,, an a.m. 5 C 11 ·-... -· distinctive style became. mus I ca I Chamberlain and Yvette MiiTileux. It the 7 p.m. on 11tlnkqivina Dey (Nov, 25). Live Tfttater Ptp .,., milestones. United Stales and ~nada starting this Normal hobrsi t'N l' 1.m. to I p.m. "f'rencll Ccnnec:Uoa" Plat D Joining the Pat Boone Family on January. The decl!lon was prompted by • Wed.Maday thf'ourh n-ktly, tbd 9 Lm. to 11Twlster1" Au1'or 'P•I• JI Tomorrowlan'd Stage wlll be the Rhodes the recent outstanding boxof[ice succe.ss 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. The park ls .... Ccmic1 Ptp • Kids with their fast-paced offerings. of the film Jn limited key U.S. 1ituations. closed Mondays ind Tue1day1. . ' WEEKENDER ·• ' , INSIDl; FEA '11.JJlES c ' ' J • -.. : i ' ' - T ... r hide to Ftati • NO\I, It .,.,... 1fl.M -•'IM Dr'Mlnl'-: 8Cl'eerfi at I p.m. Friday, Nor. 11. II ,..,... D ti Gii ... -Coll•1e. l!fl4 Golde Wiii it., lllllllllloo llwlt. 'r1cbts 11.SG. . • NOV. It PUNET411UM SHOW -Concepts of El\l.Uer, motion time and spaci will be delved Into every Wed. and Fri. nl1ht at 7:15 p.m. in the Tessm1nn Planetarium OJ\ the Santa Arla CoUege campus, 15.10 W. 17th St., Santa., Ana, with Ein- stein's Craey 'Coamos." Admission ls frff bot reservations are necessary. Phone M7-9561 e1t. 317. NOV. It • ZI Alll'O SHOW -Tht Ith annual Orsn11 Coimty Auto Sllow will be held In the Anaheim Convll'!Uon Center, eoo W. JC.. tella, Anaheim Nov. 11 from 5 to tl p.m.; Nov. 20 • 11 aom to 11 p.m. Admia.sion prices art $2 fer adults; 12 • JI years, .Jt.50; Children under 11 fr~ if with adults. NOV.ll ·ZI .., ART FE.WIV AL -Events featurin1 the work of artist Mar- Cll Duchamp (lhcluding IUms). m btinl -sored by \.the P'int Arta Dept of UCI in the Fine AN Vlllace Art Oal· le~ on Cam'P\Js, throulb Nov. 28. NOV. II· 3t • ; NOV. 10 CHORALE CONCERT -The Laguna Btacli Festival Ok>r· ale will be heard in concert at the La1una Beach Art Aaso- ciation, 301 Cliff Drive, Lal\Jlla leach at ~ p.m. Nov. 20. Half the pro1ram will bt selections rrom folk, madrigal, spiritual and !roadway 111uaica1J. The. balance will be "The Peaceable Kingdom," by Rand,all Thompson, American con· ttmporiry comPoser. Tickets, $1.50 for adults, 7~ ~ents for students and children, may be purchased at the door. NOV. ?O , ·M~A VERDE LIBRARY FILMS -The Mesa Verde LI· brary, 2969 Mesa Verde Drive East, Costa Mesa has '.sched· uJed aome films to be shown at_ 1 and 3 p.m. Sat. in celebra· lion of Children'• Book Week. Titles are : "The Hound thal 'Iboucht He was a Raccoon," "Stone Soup" and "Hansel and , Gretle." Admiuion ii free. NOV. ?O LILY TOMLIN -UC! As!oclat«I Studenla wjll prtstnt Lily Tomlin in Crawford Hall on U].e UCI campus, at I:~ .. p.m. Nov. 20. Bltach~ 1e1ts, ,$2.50; main fiflOr chair seats, $.1. Tlcket.s at ASUCI office (lr phone 8J3..5M9, NOV. II _-LAURIE HOOD ANO VICTOR GARIJR 'Superstar' Singers at Goltli·n West ColJ• • till . \V,ir ·I .. Ma~ld . . ·~STAM • -, MADKID ~ II lift -rtludUuJ and now--or a w.. alo -fl'l'&efl. ftm• Wal1n ·autumn 'The SpaniBli mmer goes south. To !he. posh cJsta del Sol. To thf' ~editerranean. as the ~ · the defeated King of G~n~ left -by the pass called "The Sigh of the Moo1. ~ ("Weep, my son. like ._ wo . . For what you would not fight like a man/\ said · mo~~r.) \ 11•s'b$en crowded b!"re. like all thO,,.~aeitals of Europe. But It's a slower ~ace. Franco ~ to ,nd th• Siesta hours. To put more production In the Spanish economY, .B~t S_pa!n would have non&,.of It Everything •closes don at 1 and rtpones at .t.~. There's been o'ne lmni.ng change. You can ... t dinner now at 9 ~.m. For years we starved In Sp11n. Waitl•f for 11 o clock and the tables were .. t and the w11ters began serving. "It ii for the tourists," nid the waitei: in the outdoor restaurant in the great aq\fare. The .P)ua May~. '"\'HEY want to eat early. The ·Madril•nM sun do not1Come until 11." -* "I heve hurd you ~n buy 1t1r upphlrtl 1t • pod prlct·1n lintktk , , ," · PRE.SCHOOL STORIES -The Ntwport Btach Pvbllc Lib. rary has scheduled pre-school programs which will take place at 10 a.m. In the following locations; Mariners Llb- rary, 200$ Dover Drive, Tuesdays; Corona del Mar Library 420 Mar:igold St., Corona de! Mar, WedntSdays; Harbo; View Clubhoule, 1171 Port Charles, Newport Be1ch, Thura· dlys, and the J!<lboa Library, 100 E. Salboa Blvd., Ntwport ltacb, Tueaday1. SUPERSTAR. AND GODS PELL -The 27-member cast ·of the Canadian Rock The1ter will present, in concert, selec- tions from "Jesus Christ Superstar" and "Godspell" in the P1vilion at Golden West College, 15744 Golden West St., Huntington Beach, Nov. 21 at 7 and 9 p.m. This is complete version direct from· AquariUJ Theater in Hollywood. Tickets, 14. avall1ble in the bookstore. ($3 with colleae or any hiah achool ASS card,) So I've been tOld . But I don't think good ones C di R k Th t are cheap, And I wouldn't know how .to tell.. In ana an OC ea er buying overseas, I buy .up to a $200 deCISIOn if I like --..._., it and-if I have the money. But over:-$200, I want· NOV. It -ZS P G -c n" ;. .. . .._ .. .§fl§tl. •.P.!!'!o.~ .. Ajrliii~ ~µ-ict managers usually erfOffilS-8t w 0 ege knowW'iierelogp~-..Ho-to11k.. ..•....... "What do you thlnk*of 'two boys who want to STORY HOUR -C..ta M ... library, SM Center st .• Coata Meu, olfera a chlldr~'s story each Tbura., at 10:30 a.m. "O'lildrtn'1 Book Wetk," 111 being celebrated throutb Nov. 20 with many speclal events and a contul NOV. 11 • JAN. I LAS POSADAS -Padua Hills Theater three milu above Foothill Blvd., oo Padua Ave., in Claremont, ls presenUnc "Las Poaada1" -the 1tory of Chriltmas -Wed .• Sat. at 1:30 p.m. and matlneea at 2:30 p.m. Wed. and Sat, through Jan. I. The d1ning room and shops are open dally for lunch, dinner and b~ ucept Moo. Tickets may be reserved by caJUnc (71f) m.1fll. ... tlt.e Gallerie• Sherman Exhibit ~·lo Oose T~e~day ~ -' . . ~FOUNDATION GAU.ERV -112$.E. ~ IJllb- ECorona dtl Mar. (Formerly COlfee t:llinletl Gillery.) 10'!0 a.m. to 3,,. p.m. Mon;Sa~ .'!'.11•~~ pl Harbor current elhlbit features palntJnls 'DJ Inna Cavat. GtJJiry CloHs Nov. 23 for ~-~-..,. ,(- ce.w.ls GAIUillES -1390 S'. ·~11 iiichni. taguna Beach. Houri : 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Watercolors and oil• by Phil Dike on elhlblt through Dec. 3. • .. i.MIUNA BEACH ART ASf!OCIAT\ON -ia7 Ctll1 Drive,,La. ~Beach. Hours: noon to 5 p.m. daily. Members all media show tl:lrou1h Nov. · -·Et ' FAGULTY ART EXHIBIT -Calif. State College, Fullerton, "6,'.',N. State· College Blvd., Fullerton. Hours: 1 • -4130 p.m. ~~· to Fri.; Sun., 1 -4 p.m. Oosed Sat. A speeiil show of ll\.,6al.State faculty members art work through Dec. 2. . ' MARINERS LIBRARY -2004. Dover Drive, Newport Beach. Worka by Lucia Anderaion on exhibit through NOV. durin1 regular· li~rary hours. . BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N . .h.1ain St., Santa Ana. ~ours : 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tues.-Sat.: I to 5 p.m. Sun., and 7 to . W~., and Thurs. No charge. Pacific Coast Archatt> I Society loth anniversary ezhibit and artifacts from ho San Joaquin, throuah Nov 21. Navajo Weaving Ex· of MJiS and blankets, through Dee. 5. A VERl>E LtBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive East, Colla Mesa. On eJ.hibit during regular library hours are oils by Jackie Lowry through Nov. CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY -do Marigold St:, Coron~ de! Mar. Worb by Linda Alga zi and sculpture by Vlr1inia Yeomans on exhibit during regular librAry houri through through Nov. COSTA MESA LIBl\ARY -~ll Ctnlet Si.,. Costa Mesa. Painling11 by Levene Charron on til'tJbit during ·regular U- brary bours through Nov. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OC -1650 Adams St., Costa Meaa. Paintin1s by Fred Olds through Nov., durln1 resuiar business hours. TRANSAMERICA TITLE CO. -170 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa . Oils by Shlrley Leyher through Nov .. during regular bu .. lntu hours. OCC GALLERY -2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Hours: 1-tOf'I. -Thurs. 7:30 a.m. -10 p.m.; Fri.. 7:30 a.m. • 5 p.m.; Sun ... 1 to 5 p.m. Closed Sat. Or exhibit in library , conttm· porary araphid by American . European and Japanese artists, Nov. 22 • Dec. 10. DOWNEY SAVINGS--360 E. 17th SL, Costa Mesa. Oil exhibit during rf.IUlar bualnMli houri, oil pa.intings by Cloveis Bink· Jey , Marian Helttr, Francia Morrill and Diane Neher, throuah Nov. NOV. II AUDITIONS -The Tod.as Las Ciudades Committee of the Oran1e County Philharmonic Society will hold auditions Nov. 21 at 1 p,m. in the Lyceum of Co!ta Mesa Hi1h School for college and high school students for qualification to per· form in the third annual Music Festival which will be held Feb. I. Interested students should call Mrs. Les Van Dyke, S4!>3932. • . NOV. ZS. If DANCE OONCEl\T -A proaram of dance will be prmnttd in the Fine Arta: Village Conce~ Hall on Ute UCI campus, Nov. 1' and 2' at 1:30 p.m. Dancers will be James Penrod and Janice J:'l11tlno, auiltant profesaors of dance -and their student!:. Admission $1. NOV. %1·!1 RODEO -The Golden State Rodeo FinaJs will be held In the Anaheim Convenlli>n Center, 800' W. Katella, Anaheim, Nov. 26-21. Performance times are I p.m. Nov. 26; 2 and I p.m. Nov. 27; 2:30 p.m. Nov. 28. Ticket prices range from $2 to $5 and are available at the box office and mOlt. ticket outle.ta. Phone 1.1$-5000 for Information. NOV. SO ILLUSTRATED LECTUJlE -The Committee for Arts and Lecwres at Uct ·it presenting an'-illustratecl lecture, "In the Shadow of Mao," by anthropologist Jane Goodall at 1:30 p.m. fi9v. 30 in Crawford Hall on campu11 It prtaents aequence tn a m.:ly of cbltnpamee relationships in the wilds of Africa Tickets P.' at Fine Arts box of flee or tlcketron'. · DEC.% , CONCERT PREVIEW -The Women's Cornmlttte of the Orange County Philharmonic Society is IJ>OllSOring a free Concert Preview at 10:30 a.m. Dec;. 2, in Edwards Newport Cinema Theater, Newport Center. Guest speaker will be Nevllre Marriner who will diacuu the concert to be played that evening by the Los Angeles Phllharmonlo Orchestra with Zubin Mehta conducting. DEC.! OC PHILHARMONIC CONCERT -The Orange County Philharmonic Society will present the Los Angeles Philhar- monic Orchestra under the baton of Zubin Mehta, in the second conctrt or the cUrrenl sea60ll, Dec. 2 at 8:30 p.m. in Crawford Hall. UC l campus. Tickets at the Society office, 201 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach, are $4 .SO for adults $2 for students. The 27-member Canadian Rock Theater will present in concert selections from "Jesus Christ Superstar'' and "Godspell," in two performan· ces Sunday, Nov. 21 , at Golden West College, 15744 Golden West St., Huntington Beach. The college concert is the complete version of the rock company's show at the Aquariu s -Theater in Hollywood, where the Cana· cUans won critical· acclaim for ~heir "innovative and in.. spiring" work. Concerts will be held al 7 and 9 p.m., in the college pavilion. and stud ent planners anticipate a sold-out house of more than 1,200 for each event. Tickets are on sale in the college book3toce, all \Vallich's Music City stores, and Bul- fum's in Sant.a Ana and Long Beach. The group opened at the Aquarius in September, after several weeks of delays caus. ed by lawsuits de$igned to bar their use of mll!ic from "Jesus Ouiit SupeL:Star,." The Andrew Lloyd Wtbber-Tlm Rice score has sol4 over two million albums, and has been the focus of several suits. Peter Mann, musical direc- tor of the Canadian Rock Theater, said "We are not doing a pirate trip on Robert StigwOOd's thing. This is no record lift. We're doing our own thing with thill great music. "We have a lot of incredibly talented solo voices inside the package and they have evolv. ed some kind or sound. They're gutsy, earthy. Big brass section, no string and a heavy girl sound. It's Bible rock, not rock opera. This is a First Perf orm·ance 'Taniing of Shrew' at GWC's New Theater • Von Shauer. or Huntington "The first play in a new Include 25 speaking parts. For Btach, and Renaia Florin, theater is very important. It the last five years the college Garden Grove, will head a has to be just right," said theater arts program has · Charles Mitchell. director. operated in a small theater in cul ol 35 in the Golden West M i t c h e I I d e c i d e d o n the round, awaiting the now College~roduction of William Shakespeare's ''Shrew" after completed theater wlth its Shakespeare's realistic com· considering sever a I con· massive stage, . edy, "The Taming or the temporary plays. "because il "Now we have the staging Shrew" whlrh has been picked seemed to be the best, nol on-space to do a great deal. We ly from the standpoint of are beginning to build our by the theater arts faculty to talent. but for the audience as wardrobe and set areas. In lnsugurate Golden Wes t's well.·• this production we are making sparkling new, 350-seat com-Certainly, Shakespeare is some costumes and renting munity theater . It will play on difficult. Often the dialog must others." consecutive weekends. Oecem· be made clear as much by the Ot~er major characters wiU ber 3-4. and December 10.11 , way a1 actor says It. by his be played by Rick Waites, 1t 3 p.m. Tickets are on sale gestures and apptAranct, as Chris Wilson. Dan Brown, Ron In the college bookstore at by the W1>rds themselves, Ross. Don Barkemeyer, all of $1.50. Mitchell pointed out Huntington Beach; Ronald huge rock group, one oT the most es:citing I've heard. Stigwood's version, with mim· symphony ~orchestra a n d choir, is good, valid. We do an earthier version with what we think is a gutsier sound." Mann, 30, who headed his own recording group, "The Sugar Shop," beCame the company's musl~al director following its Initial performan· ces early last summer, in Toronto and Ottawa, at which Prime Mlnillter P I e r r e Trudeau was an Interested listener. Originally, the group called them.sel...es the Imperial Rock Opera Company. but It ,didn't fit . Canadian Rock Theater seemed better because the members are frorri all part! of Canada, from Vancouver to Halifax-' with a few from the United States. Most members knew each other from the Toronto com· pany of "Hair" or from performing in various rock groups. When they g o t together there was a kind of musical happening. The 20 musical numbers on the Golden West proeram will run about two-hours. ln ad~ dition -to selections from ''Jesll.'1 -Christ Supente.r.'' the company (16 singers and 11 musicians ) also will perform numbers from "Godspell," the off-Broadway . religious rock musical hit, and a few original numbers. Arrangements are by Steven Brundage and Tony Mastrul. Lead singers include Laurie Hood, Victor Garber, Ooui Billard, Dorian Clark, Peter McGraw, Paul Ryan , P.M. Howard and Paul Saunders. The band instruments are piano, organ, drums, guitars. trumpe.ts and trombones. Tickets to the Golden West concerts are $3 with student body card, and S4 ieneral ad· mission. blko (10-tpoocO down to Mexico -City?" Better make it late or early spring. There is no cool way tnto Mexico in summer -you have about 500 miles of bot desert riding. Roads are good. I never see any bikers on the road though. Just weekend racing bikes. * . . ''We are going to Haiti for two weeks in winter, but we hear a lot of n191tive comment .•• " I HEAR the political thing is quiet. Climate Is pleasant. It's poor country -the lowest income in the Western hemisphere. Port-au-Prince bas a slum· my look. But the scenery is lush and tropical, and YOU will live well. 'The grand, gingerbread Oloffson ls my choice on hotels. There are newer ones, but this is the way a tropics hotel should look. Try a rum punch on the big verandah looking down to the sea. You'll understand. ''We want to take 1~reMnt to friands In Rot· terdam who ar• big horsa people .. .'' Something from the Navajo co untry? Like 1 carved Western belt with turquoise and silver buckle. I've found all that Navajo and Zuni work is unusual and prized by Eur.opeans. ·-"Can w buy paperbacks in English in EurOpe?'' All the latest American and English paperbacks are in the lobbies of the bi&" tourist hotels. The Hil· tons are a good place to s\arl (They'll cost about twice wlJ.at you pay at home -but it's the only game In 1town, Mother.) \.1 ~ * " •• 1• how tM road is from Mexico City to Ac· 1pulco?" Good -the last time I heard. And all down· hill. The-luriimo df~~s to-j:J.:._the grade out of Mex· ico City ahd tum off the key. That's a ride to re- member! ' * "Do we nffd hotel renrv1tloni in the Outer ltl1nd1 of Hawaii at Christmas and New Year's?" You do -or you'll sleep on the beach. A most popular time of year in blue Hawaii. * -", •. If you had a choice of visiting a South Pacific Island •. .'' I'd make it Fiji or Western Samoa, Second thought: for farout places, Bora Bora and Moorea in French Polynesia. * Pretty wet now in the islands east of FijL We had three days in Western Samoa with 15 inches of rain a day! That's not raindrops that keep falling on your head. That's the fire hose. WE'LL HAVE EVERYTHING FOR THANKSGIVING ! Fruit b11ket1 , profe11ionally mede ••. delivered enywhere. Glee•' gift packs "•II new crop.' Dates, fig1, apricots, etc. You save here end we ship or deliver enywhere. l,OOO's of fresh cut flowers, or 1 beeutiful Thanksg ivin g arren9ement, profes1ion1llr arr.sng•d by Debra Woods, winner of the Chember oJ Com· mete• Flor• Award. In the Produce Merkel, you'll find chestnuts, Mehan dates, fi91, Belgium endive, e1p•r•gu1, green beens, persimmons, or bet.ter y•t ... "If it grows, we have it." • . ..........••...... , ......... . • PLOWll IHO• • FLOWHS IY NAVEL • = MYST!RY : D E i tt A : ORANGES : ~ COUl'ON ' • •rom ...... •• • • • Peaturlnt Prla• ..I the Mrder • Winni"' Arr1n9entenh 6 $ 1 Ceme ... what t .,.. • • • Cemp ete W •lnp LIS. • • thl• tth yeu a Puntr.sl Plecff at • Lllllft -' ~- Limit-I ,... CUlt.mef' • l.nslltl• ,..,,.. • With thl• Cctupon • ~iF••·············•·1·········· I IXTIA PANCT • Laet wMk at this S1Mll, ~-I•• prk• I • CROCKER BANK -2400 Harbor Blvd ., Costa Mesa. On ~ ~ e1blblt durln1 rtgular business hour1, oil pain.tint's by Phyl- lis -McCarthy, durln& Nov. Shauer, a 6·4 sophomore The cast, the largest of any Uoeffer, Westminster ; an~ with a lull voice, hss been cast ~-G-ol-djienijWjjieiijstjjpjir-odjiuijctijlojjiniij. jjwjiil-1 jiRijoljjianiijdjjB~a~ra~j~as~, ~Sa~n~tojiA~n-aij.'li~ as Petruchio, tht playboy I• .. soldier of fortune whose clash • UllLID • ·~4koleeolyl.W ,.... • ICEBERG • •--.!A.LENCIA 1• . ORANGE ·• LEnUCE • • ORANGES · JUICE _I . • : 10, ... •1 00 : 29C9uAlt : 10c IACH : SECURITY PACIFIC -1116 E. 17th St., Cc!lta Mesa. On U · htblt durln1 reJUlar business botll'h oU painting• by Alma Phillipa, thtou&h Nov . GLENDALE SAVINGS -500 Newport Ceni.r Drlvt, Fssh- kln Island, Newport Beach, Lind.IC•pe and llotal ·oil· palnt- lnp by Faye Curtis on exhibit durinC regular butlneu bour1, Oirou1h Nov. • , of wills with his w I f e , Katherina, played by Miss Florin, produce e1p!Gsive and comlc situations. .• For Utt accomplished Miss florin. a veteran of numerous Golden West sl'low1, this will be her biggest stage challenge. AVCO SAV~GS M'D LOAN -3310 Bristol St .. Costa Mt11. PalntinC• by Eliubeth Crlasell durin& businesa houtt through Nov. SOUTH SEAS 90. CALlf'. FIRST NAT'l:. BANK -IOIO Bay~d• Dri... TROPICAL FISH Newport Beach. (Formerly Newpon Nation al Bank.) On nhibk dur-Wtt regular bualnw houJt t.hrouah Dtc., water· o,.... c......,·, ft..-oo&ort by Bud Hileman. , ..._ti .. et T,.,M• PW! :===========r::;;::::;:;;;;;:~;:::::=7=i::ll -•.Mh .. ffilot • ' e AOUAllU MS, For f.dvertising ,_, IJCIWJCI • uvi •ooH , In Out 'N' About BOOKSHOPS • .~''.: ~= ,.,., "'" Pbonfl Norm Stanley '"'CITY • 11t1 ... ""' .. ••.t J•·TN' THI WIST'~ FINEST IOOKSTOHS FOa 120 YIA,S-SINCI 1111 Locat.d At FASHION SQUARE IN SANTA ANA Phone (7141 543.9343 '6,500 loob "'•p-cks 3Z,OOO Uo....i Cirfftfot Cords IAaGAINS G•LOlll OPEN ·EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P./lf, :.......... Lllftlt -ao Lita. • Lindt-% 1al. • UMlt -4 • • -. Witt.'"'" c:",.. I Wltlli .thl• cev,en I With thl• ••vtttn • I e a • • a a a a • • • 8 .. • a a •-• • a • a • • • • e COUPONS EXPIU°)(OV!Mlllr24, .1971-CLOSID THANKSGIVING These re1t1ur1nt1 clem1nd the finest for their cu1t~m•r1. Thet'1 why they fe1ture Ne'!"port rret1wcel Patrenite them! ••lfltht lrolJtr, Newport ; VIiiot• llt•, lal· boa ; WM4y'1 . '#Mrf, Newpertl S,...tttl hMllf. Newport; Andl.ntos: Den, -Tustin; incl over 275 othws~ How-a'boUt-your-ceUin.g_u..·~"'-- ····-N 0 WI N1ilon1Hy Acct1lmed World's Fln11t l!roduco HouM ~ Mf:!.Q~! .. ~!Q~~CE -...... ..... &7W711 61M7ll '7Wrtl 2'1' Newport lollt..,d oo tflo Poof.,ulo ,_ __ _, "35 Yea:rs of Produef "Whtr1 qualitu ti th1 Know Hm.o" Ordtr of t.11.1 Ho111•" 'p11 ' 1 LU c.t i!o« ~ e MAINTINANCI SllYICI 84M.321 _ Ot•,...' r114J t.)f.7700 ttll All11111, HUNT!NITON ••AtM .. , :IOUtM CO•lf •lAl,I. Co'"' !NtJI! It Ntw ~\lc&~·l) 18NDeO PltUIT llltPPlll , l'Dlt • YIAltl. ~~~~~~~~~~1 ..::':~:·~·="~·~·~··~•1w~=·~·'~"~l ~•·='"="'~'-'L~~~...::•M:::••:.._~~....Jll ,i11111111i1 ........................................ ilill 1c:::z:!l=i:::"°""'"'"=>OS1""'Bl.., .. llll,.. ... m;;t:11..,lll""Kl ..... :CllEZ1E::::=zi!I . ....... .. -, • I I I ~I II ' • • DAILY PI LOT W ~ - lnfetomisslon Happy Ending for 'Mother Earth' By TOM TITtl~ Of ,.. o.11, Plltl SMlf When last we heard from ''Mother "--·--·-~~." th!_~~-\v~~-·~ Holl>'..~!'!_._ heading back to San Francisco, its disenchanted creators were returning to THE NEW \PRODUC\"ION, lo be directed by 11.!artin Be1son, will featu're only four members of the original cast -Sandy Marino. Sandra Mathews-Dea· Cini~iifii'"'Sffiilff -and Jim De Pries!, who'll take over as mUs\cal director. Others in the liew cast will be Ron Boussom, ·Jerry Patch, Bill Black, Jani c e Jamison . Carole a.1artin, Squire Fridell , Sieve Patterson and Diane Myers, while liberal use again will be made of Ken Shearer's slide projections. SOUTH COAST REPERTORY'S re-ac· (rhlsltioo of the "Moth~ Earth" rights will assure continuation of the big(.est .. home-grown sucee!S story ever written in . Orange County theater. The first engag .. ment of the musical revnue, which open.. etl last January, rewrote the county'• record book for I o n g e v J t y with 59 performances, sometimes two 1 nlgbt, over a four-mooth period. "Born ·Free' Lion cub pauses for refreshment orrered by Bill Travers during .. Born Free" movie which will be rebroadcast on Channel 2 at 7:30 p.m. this Sunday. Diller Cooks Again Phyllis Set for Face-lift 'Recycling' By RENA ~f. PEDERSON DALLAS (UPIJ -Phyllis Diller, who usually looks like· a sequined peacock on the ram- page in her comedy act. is becoming a new woman. f or the past year and a half. she has been wearing re- tainers on her teeth. has switched to the new "soft" contact lenses and goes to the "fat doctor" once a week. To top it all off, ·she's &,ettlng a face lift in Decem~ · "It's re-cycling," she ex- plained with the shrill laugh ttiat ha!'l made her a madcap queen of comedy for 16 _years. Sh~ explained that it's both a beauty and health nleasure. "so I can breathe and so my teeth won't rail on my jaw from mal-occlusion." " ''I've got to get rid of these bags under my eyes, t h e y make me look tired and I'm not tired," she said. She dug into her second helping at the Fairmont Hotel's buffet line. where she entertained her au - dience with Jines such as "My life is like the sixth day of a five-day deodorant p a d -i t stinks." Actually she says s h e is "gloriously in love" with her second husband, Warde Donovan, a handsome singer and Broadway actor. They have seven children from first marriages: Phyllis has five, ages 21 to 31 , and he has two, ages 18 and 23. "She and Donovan definitely presented a colorful picture at the hotel, she in a multi-col· ored harlequin robe "made up from re-cycled old costumes" and a triangular feather hat. He had on a patterned coat with a print shirt arid silk scarf-tie. all in various shades of pink and brown. "When I get through with my re-vamp I should be thin , adorable, my nose will be straighter and I can breathe - out of both sides instead of one. .. the only trouble is J won't be able to play any more witches' parts," she kid· ded. ~· ~ -";).. She said that D a 11 as residents will gel a before-and· , after IOQk. since her Urst date after the .face job will be as a concert pianist with the Dallas Symphony Dec. 31. tll!tili' ~~ .... ~·,-;~ • ~--: ... <:::;;'; ~.. , ~ . ' , • OCU.H·•rnw SlllTIS ·--• MMILT u1rt1n e llOOJ.I '"ONIS • " • ~-.. • Hun• l'C)OL • COPfll I • IOll:DlllNG suno ,,... e II MlfllUTll 10 OOWNTOWM I.,. WRllt for Fm lnfonRHon -• ,., .. i.-.. "'"'· tAN PllAMCISCO 21 , ........... f PHYLLIS DILLER Re-cycling Herself The M-year-old f o r m e r housewife got her first big break as a comedienne when she was in her 30s, but as a child sbe trained to be a con· cert pianist. ·•1 decided it was loo s.todgy !Or me," she said . "So I gal'e it up." But she has added a piano number lO her nightclub act- zi husband \Varde 's in sistence-and plans to add more. She also plans to add rnbre singing numbers like selections she favors from her "Hello Dolly" mu sical role. Confrary to "rumor" that • ''lhe police brou l!hl me." she saia she was born in Lima, Ohio, the only child of an in- surance agent, and h i s homemaker-wife . She started voice. dance and p i a n o training early in life. ("in high school l was always in the operettas and I al~ays h a d the funny part. "I She attended Sherwood PYlus;c School in Chicago aod Bluffton College in Ohio, but she did not graduate because she eloped tv.·o months before . graduation with S h e r w o o d Diller, a salesman. · The marriage ended in divorce 25 years Jate'r. She credits Diller with having talk· ed her into shoW busines.s but said, "I'm all for this mar- riage isn't forever thing. It's ideal to be in love and get mar- £:ied and stay married, but to stay in a marriage that's bad is v.•icked. ·• A cooking enthusiasm she plans to start a series called "Kitchen Kween" on syn- . dica ted television next fall . She said she doesn't want any more Broadv.·ay roles because "there's no money in it. I turned down "Mame" and just did "Hello Dolly" for myself." She said she wants more time to write. cook and be v.·ith her family ." "I'm a terrific cook," she said. "Isn't she humble?" asked her husband. For RtHr••dont caU1 Zenith g.gg24 Costa 1.1esa. and lhe local theater where it all began had given up all hope of seeing the stellar rock.ecology musical again. ln the few short months that have pass- ed. the situation has changed con- siderably. "A1other Earth,'' the pro- fessional tour ing prilduclion. is currently wowing them in · Washington. D.C.: writer-direc~or Ron 11\ronson and com· poser-musical director Toni Shearer are back· witli the show. and South Coast Repertory is getting ready to mount a ''revival" of it ln its Costa Mesa theater next month. .. \.Ve've acquire4 a year's lease on the rights," explained SCR managing di rec· tor \Varren Deacon in announcing a Dec. 17 reopening for the repertory company's hottest show in its seven-year history. •·well run it for three weekends, then keep" it in repertory as a permaiient at- traction, plugging holes in our schedule as they develop." ' . ' t.1eanwblle Throlll>On and fl, is s Shearer have settled their difh!rences i with the Equity company which purchas- ed the rights to the show, are back on tour in the East as director and musical director, respectively, with Miss Shearer again lending her superb vocal styllngs to her music. Longtime SCR member Hal Landon ~has joined the cast as \ve!I - presumably to be with his wife. Elaine Bankston. who. w i th ~11ke Douglass. jumped from SCR's "Mother Earth" to the professional product ion l•st swnmer. According to Deacon, "Mother Earth'' Is winding up a !uccessful-run at Ford 's Theater in Washington and from there will go to Philadelphia and Chicago. Aflcr that, be ·says with crossed fingers, possibly New York, but that's still a question mark at this point. · The unexpected box ofrice bonanza created by ,;~1other Earth" kicked off a phenoi-nenally successful year for the Costa Mesa company, which is currently ... enjoying similar good fortune with lht rock opera. "Tommy.'' Thal production ii being staged Tuesday through ThurSday, then following "Our Town" at II o'clock on Friday and SattD'day nights. . . It's pretty much of a foregone con- clusion that SCR will have little trouble filling t~ Third Step Theate_r for its new production of "l\1other Earth ." And while the duo of Thronson and Shearer carry their vet's ion around the country, South Coast Re~lory will have it for a meal ticket all through 1972. A happy ending all the way around for the "big show" of 1971 in Orange County. , CRUISES. THE TO SEA, TO BEUEVE. 11& 12 Days From $395.' Fll'St you get a $28,000,000 floating resort. It has three swim pools. two nightclubs, eight pubs, a spacious theater, gounnet restaurants, outdoor sports, and indoor games. · But this perfect vacation setting doesn't just hang around and let you yawn at the same old geqgraphy. You get a spectacular ocean view that changes-every..second • .¥0~-get-Mexico-Acapulco, Zlhuantanejo,. ------. Puerto Vallarta. Mazatlan. And you explore each fascinating port from the best hotel In town, the one that brought you. • Think of lt>as an 11 or 12 Day floating fiesta vou·n meet new friends. You'U let the sun and sea~btract a few years from the ·way you feel W!'ll even be nice t our wallet Our unprecedented low fares include round trip trans ation, air conditioned stateroom, all meals, and entertainment Jh.e T.S.S. Fairsea is of Liberian Regis!lY-with an enchanting Italian crew Who indulge your every wish. Its the vacation value of a lifetime. Catch the Fairsea dunng her gala maiden seasonl . Salling Dates From Los Angeles: Dec. 17, 29, Jan. 10, 21 , Feb. 2, 14, 25, Mar. 8, 20, 31, Apr. 12, 24; May-5. Additional 1972 sailing dates on request Call yoµr travel agent nowJ ,_.,011f\4tr--..... ... OCMM~.....i~10~~ SITMAR CRUISES The vacation you Moe to sa,tobelieve. 1000 Wilshire Bl•d., LOI Angeles-CA 90017 Phone (213) •SS-8862 !161 J'I dly South PIClftc ClulMs lrom 1730~Flnt Sllllnt !f0111 Los AntlM1 May 16, 1971. ' - • -· . '1•1 .,, ' ,. '' ' " •. . ' ..... • . . • . . . • ' I ' ~ ·-·-· ------.. . .. •• -· . • • -• • DAll.Y 'ILOJ • ,... • 'l I . ®UT ' , • •• NORM l'l'AN.tBY - • ORANGE -COUNTY'S . RES f AUR ~-N T, NIGHT CLUB ,. ENTERTAl/\IMENT SC·ENE ; Thanksgiving ij ., u • '! Although.they bad no way of kpowing it at the time, wh~n the, Plymouth colonists .•~emble~ fo r Thanksgiving they launched a tradJlion .thats as purely American as any \Ve have. The hohday they unknowingly bequeathed to us has. probably tM:come the most representative of our national obseryances. To be sure the Fourth of July, Memorial and Labor Days ar~ all·Americ:an occasions too, .b':'t Thanksgiving is differenl More th~ the others 1t. 1s an all-family celebration -a gathermg of blood km, 1.1eunion of the generations. '· l ~ .• I, .. ,' : I. Many countries l',Dd culture~ hauJVe ~eir nat.ive feast day& or special events th~t res t m a co.~1ng together ol families. The st.agmg ~f . Thanksg1~mg, though. is stricUy an Amer1can or1g1n~, a. h.0~1day .that's distlncUy our own through the rites lrut1ated ~ by that persevering little band of Mayflower seitI~rs. ~ Continuing the customs they started the fLrst •• Thanksgiving Oay, next Thursday we'll sit down at t! the table and eat and ta1k together and contemplate g ::: the many good things for which .we ~an. give thank~." ~ And in the America of today this will include fam1· lits young and old, rich or poor, pretty or plain and :: of ·every race and creed. t w . -~ ~ -.. 1: ~ In order to appreciate the way these variations !'i symbolize us as a nation in.1971, one has only to re- :; call those people who gathered together to celebrate l the first Thank!giving in New England. For the most part they were the Brewsters, Bradfords, <;:arvers, . Winsl.ows, Cushmans and Allertons -not to lJlen· ~: tion -John Alden the carpenter~ and Miles Standish the captain. . . t JOINEP BY MANY , i' Those surnames Jre still· aroun·d _to• celebraCe 1 this Thanksgiving/ ·of Course,\ but tbeylll be joined ·' , by many others that bespeak one of the most signi- ... "-YO-·-':"'"' t.W. THANKSGIVING co..i ... -°"' " I \I ........... , .... .... . IOAn-TOM-TUlllT a.---..-...,.~ ..... c....... .... -. ..... ,_._ . . ·-. ..,....,. ... -....._. 1'.75 ~ '3.25 VISIT OLD JA.PAN ® . ~ \ . . ·~ ffilYRKO I~//, Luncheon Dinner Cocktail1 · /// f':\S.'\DEi'\A 139 S. Los Rob Its • 715·7005 ft. OR.~'.'\GI:: JJ TO\\'n A: Country·· 1•1-JJOJ Thanksgiving 'Dinner Rout Tom Turkey or Virg'inia Ham Soup or Fruit Cup, Salad. Pot&loe1, Dessert tpumpkin or mince pie.) bevtraae C~,W• °*"ner CklWr" $2.00 vPlus Our Rerular Menu t of Fl1h, Prime Rib and Steaks &rvtd From 12 Noon (o 10 p.m. •l\1 ,AC1,IC CO.A.IT HWY. HUNTINGTON II.A.CH lt1en-etie•1 Acce,te4 .... ,.., $3.SO ~ ficant qualities about our country. Because also on hand at the feasting table will be families named Bogosian, Dombro,wski, Fon.g, Hernand~z. O'Brien, Schmitz, Takahashi, Ferrarese and Shaprro. In line with all of this, t~. next Thursday's out 'n' abouters will find the oUerllg of local restaurants almo.sl as varied as their petsonal backgrounds. It's just a matter of cheCkil)g' into· one where the entir~ family can exercise its united or individual prefer- ences for the bill of (are~ MlHl-GOIDE .• We surveYed a-.number of places early th is week to ascertain what diners can expect when they sally forth for Thanksgiving dinner. Time and re- sources prohibited a definitive study but we trust the foUowing listings will serve as a kiild of repre- sentative guide to the holiday offerings hereabouts. Ben Bro1vn'• A special Thanksgiving menu, served from 1 to 10 p.m., is on t11p for diners at Ben Brown restaur· ant, 31106 Coast Highway, South Laguna. Roast young turkey with apple·almond dressing and ~I the trimmings shares the spoUighl with glazed VLr· ginia baked ham and candied yams, $4.95 each. Aski ng price for children under 12 ls $2 .75 . Roast prime rib of beef is also available at $6.50. All dinners include· fresh fruit cup, choice of tossed green salad or chicken royale soup, fresh vegetables ja.rdiniere, hot bTead and butter, bever- a1e and pumpkin or mince pie with brandy sauce. Dance music will get under way at g p.m. Res- ervations a must. The Fiaherman In addition to all fish , prime rib and steak selec· lions on the regular menu, a special· 1'tanksgivini 1t'ancois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE . . f__1mou1_f_c~',r,,, .---~~·~ FLAMING DUCK . Open .11 :00 A.M.~-Closed Morul1y HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFO~NIA . 11151 BEACH BLVD. • 1"42-f91t Holid•" P•rt" •e•n.,•tions Noto A.,•flahle for Group• lfp to lfO Per101u :1201 E. PACIFIC COAST HWY. CORONA DEL ~R 673-1950 . .. ... .. •. .. .... . . • : ............... •11:." .. . ARI YOU TOO TIRED ' ~: [ TO flX · :YOQlrBIRDT-: · THIS THANKSGIVING· LET US DO IT FDR YOU! F•ncy F .. otlng For Th• F•mlly FAMILY STYLE DINNER FOR 4 -$18 INCLUDES: 12 Poun<fTurk•y Plu1 All Trlmmlnt• From S1l1d to Dessert. RlllRVATIONS MUST ti MADI IY NOON, TUISDAY, NOV. 2Jr4 SPECIAL 8 P.M.. FLOOR SHOW1fOR ni! FAMIL\ WIGULAI HOLIDAY DINNIRI FIOM $.).fS tl:tl E•tt e •• , • .,..., • .y C.'••• 4•1 Mtr . 675-0505 .... ... •• ... •• : .. Hun117~1 would like to :~ llMyou ••• ... , •• ... · lor :; Thanll,ctvilll dinner ~1 •"• Join us at the festive board I We're going ell-out \!. •• for Thanksgiving, with all our most popular dinners •, ... I .• ... •• ~· plus 1 very special, traditional Thanksgiving least. LotSof goodies and an the trimmings. We ~ -.'! • aug0M1-yoll'make ruervallons ea!ly. . li.•'-_ ...... t.. __ • •:9 ·:-.,. ~· •• • Cock11lls 1nd live enlert1inment from 5:00 P.M. .. '; Enjoy Int Choicest of E11lern 111lood1 from our t1mou1 •· 0)'1ter Bar ••• Flown In 1re1h dilly ••t :;& AA me/or credit cards 1c<oepltd •I ~~-hungiy tiger lltllTAU .. ANTI •••• , ••D DYSTlA U•I ~. ~ ~ Call for Rese~1tions: 377·681 l Your Host: Phit Dt!1n ••• ~: 27300 H1wthorne 81vd. (1t Silver Spur) in P1los Verdes '.: :~ C1\I for Rosm1tionsd714) 673·~34 Y111rtlbsL)1fry Webb ~ ... •• .. r 353 [1st P1cilfc Co1st Hi&hw1y •• (1t Bayshor1 Drive) in NewpQrt 8uclt •?: , r . bi!J of fate will offe; din~;s a Cl}loice of rOist turkey or· Virigina ham at the fisherm'an, 317 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington BeaCh. The complete holiday'" dinner, served with a choice of fruit cup or soup, salad, potatoes, dessert (pumpkin or mince pie) and beverage·is tabbed at $3.50 for adults, $2 -for· children. . Hours Qf service will be 12 noon to 10 p.m. Reservations are being accepted. ~ P.aclflc Dining Car The Orange Coast version 0! a long-time ·!<os Angeles dining institution ....l... the Pacific Dining Car, 501 30th St.,.Newport Beach -is going to make it · a traditional 'Thanksgiving dinner !Or its second 'year of holiday service to ihe area. -, · First up 011 the dinner table· at the Dining Car will be mixed gre~n salad, with choice -of dressing, and choice Qf oniOri"'or lentil soup. The old standby, roast turkey, will be accompanied by a new twist in the form of ~banese rice stuffing and giblet a:ravy. ·~ Additional dishes include baked yams, green peas, and a choice of pumpkin or mince pie and choice of beverage. Youngsters will rate their din· ner at half-price. Dinner service will get under way al 4 p.m .• and continue until 10. Reservations-ar~ecommeqded and will be honored to the minute. · N etcpot'q!r Ina Thanksgiving dinner at the Newporter Inn, 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach, will lead off With a relish tray and a clw.ice;:...Gf consomme Triarfon, ...... · tossed green salad or Waljdori •salad.. ' . . l t Entrees are roast turkey, with giblet gravy and sage or chestnut dressing, $4 .95; baked sugar-cured ham, with sauce Cumberland, $4.75; boneless Rocky Mountain trout, saute amandine, $4.75;. roast prime ribs of beef; au jus, ,6.50; broiled New York steak, rnaltre d'hotel, $6.95. 101 J"MU. NIW,ORT IUCH -usr-lY:&TIONS '15-0JOO THANKSGIVING DINNER IN ADDITION TO OUR REGULAR MENU WE SHALL FEATURE A TRADITIONAL FULL COURSE THANKSGIVING DINNER CHILD 'S PORTION AVALLABLE . OPEN ~ tO ID ·P.M. fl j.VJ We Promise You Goocl ol..i ~ '<e:ilauranl . 00.l~ •ncl AMERICAN CUISINE TROP ICAL COCKTAILS E~TERTAINMENT POLYNESIAN SHOWS Thur. th ru Sun. Nlthto NOW APPEARING Thurs. th ru Sun. Nites 8:30 to t :30 The Sen1etion1I S1moan Voc•l i1t/Guit ari1t TIM FULOA 1961 ADAMS AVE. {at Mo9noli1) 968 5050 HUNTINGTON BEACH "' •• t • ~~:::::=:::~~ .. ' . Included are ba'ked banana squash,1 CIJldied yams, com O'Bri~n and whipped, potatoes. For de• sert there's hot mmce or pumpkin pie or fresh straw· berry sundae. 11 special children's dinner for $2.95 includes choice of turkey or ham;-soup or salad, des&ert and beverage. Reservation& 1ecommended. • ~ Boh Bu"'a A wee touch of Scotland Will serve as the l"I> ma.ntic backdrop to 'I'hanksgivinf dining' at Bob Burns re$laurant, 37 Fashion Island, Newport Ceo· ter, Newport Beach. This should provide an espe- cially agreeable setting for those whose hearts turn lo the·.highllnds when the holiday season sets in .. The restaurant is featuring a traditional Thanks· giving dinner but will offer out 'n' aboUters a choice of three entrees: roast turkey, $3.95 (child's dinner, $1 .95); roast Long Island duckling, $4.5-0; prime ribs or beef, $5 .75. All dinners include a relish tray, choicl! of soup or salad, green beans amandine, candied yaffi:S, and a choice of pumpkin or mince pie. '('urkey will be ·accompanied by a savory dressing, the duck with rice, and the prime rib by baked potato. Resenrations suggeste4. .. -Sheraton Be114'h Inn . Something a bit different is being offered by wax. oI .a family style "whole turkey or ham" dinner at the Sheraton-Beach Inn, 21112 Pacific Coast Highway, Huntington Beach, with diners being able to take home what they don:t eat. ~ At $18 for a m1n1mum of four persons, the whole turkey or ham -with all the trimmings - will be brought to the table for group feasting. UriOer still another option, however, patrons may choose one of four entrees to go with a complete dinner. Continued on Page 29 THE BOON DOCKS Proudly A.nnounce1 AN EXCITING NEW ~NU SEA~OD;,, TSTEAKS lo• RIBS · And bur ---- NIGHTLY DINNER SPECIALS· T"°""Y itoro s.turdoy -~Cetlljll .. e-$Z. 9S i'1ll 1INTl lTAINMINT f!IGHnY TUE. THRU SAT. IY THI or.... 'MARK DAVIDSON TRIO SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE IRUNCH 11 to J LUNCH e DINNER COCKTA ILS e DANCIN G B ~oN llll W. COAST HWY. V NEWPORT HACH l)OCKS ,42 ... 291 HEY, LOOK WHO'S BACK! ~w··-·.•··,.·•"'-~"·:~.,.("-'.,....-.'":-"..,.-~---... -...,.-il~ ; ' . On -the · Reuben E. Lee Nov.22 · 23 · 24-2&·27 Dec.19 · 20 · 21·22·23 ·---- Two Sho!"S Nightly, 10-12 Cover Char.ge 1.50 par psrnn I r . . WEEKENDER .. Contlnu.d from P1ge 21 They are roast young turkey, $3.95; baked Vir· ginia ham, $3.95; roast Ipng Island duckling, '4.50; roast prime rib of beef, au jus, $5. 75. 'Children's dinners, for youngsters 12 and under, are tabbed al $2.50.' JJ,eservations recommended. The Sher:aton·Beach is also offering a comple~e turkey dinner to go for $t5. Make your reservation abead and on Thanksv,iving morning pick up the whole works to take· t '"!:."". or where you will. • Cordi Reef A Thanksgiving menu offering a choice of four entrees -from roast turkey, baked IoWa ham, or shri.mp and Bar-~q ribs at $3.25 e·ach to roas~ prime ribs of beef, au jus. $4.50 -is on tap at the Coral Reef resturant, 2645 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. All dinners include a relish tray. soup or salad, c.an died yams, \vhipped potatoes. vegetable, rolls and butter. Beverage is included and there's a des· sert choice of pumpkin, hot apple or mince pie or sherbet. A child's plate with an enlree choice of turkey or ham is priced at $1 .75.' The Newest In Enterteinment .•... ..... Accompanied By The Finest In Food • PRIME RIB e STEAK e LOBSTER !TALIAN SPECIALTIES Now Appearin g ROMAN AND THE JIM MURPHY TRIO TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVING DINNER Turkey and all the Trimmings -from '4 p.m. DANCING NIGHTLY 1262 PALISADES ROAD INeor Oro..,. Cou11fl Airport! COSTA Mf.SA 546-8390 . . . ..-, . .OLJT CrotDn Housfl ThanksgiVing dinner at the Crown House, 32801 Pacific Coast Highway, Laguna Niguel -under either of two complete meal plans -will kick off with an assorted ch.illed relish tray and turkey ~tu\· Jigatawney soup. ~'- · At .:J5.50 per person, the roast young turkey key entree will also include e crioice of hearts of lettuce or jell0> fruit salad, fresh cranberries, sev· ory dressing, giblet gravy, candied sweet potatoes, creamed onions, toasted almonds, hot mince or pumpkin pie and beveTagc. Children under 12 will • -be tabbed $2. 7,5. _ · , Accompanied by all the same dishes. other en tree choices, at $7 .95 per pCrson, include broiled fresh lobster, prime rib of beef, au jus, and prime New York cut steak. Ho.urs of seivi"Ce are 11 -a.m. to' 11 :30 p.m. Res· ervations suggested. Satt&'• Sflafood. sa-m's Seafood in Huntington Beach will serve jts traditional Thanksgiving menu beginning at noon. Turkey will b.e th'[! main attraction \l'ith the tariff set al $4.95. including a choice of soup or salad, pumpkin pie, and beverage. 499-2626 496-5773 ' . THANKSGIVING DINNER SERVED FROM 11 :00 A.M. TO 11 :30 P.M. Assorted Chilled Relish Tray • Turkty Mulllgatav.·ntY Soup • HeRrts of ll"ttuce, 1000 Island dre5Sing c:ir Jello fruit aalad • Roe.st Youn~ Tom Turkey, Frf'sh Cranbt'r· ries, uvory dressing, stiblel gravy, candied aweel or whipped potatoes, creamf'd onions, toasted a.lmonds, hot mince or pumpkin pil', bevera~c. SS.50 ptr per1on-ChllOren under ·12 Jl.75 OTHER SELECTIONS, COMPLETE $7.95 Broiled Fresh Lobster-Prim,. nih of Jk.ef, 0 ALI Jus Prime New .¥nrk Cut Slrl'lk . . . ~ -All entrees will also be pvatlable from the reg· ul.zr menu. Sam's is located pt 16278 Pacific Coast Hlghway, and reservations 4lould e obtained in advance. ~ Tnlfl ot the Whal., Holiday dining at _the Tale of the Whale in the Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main Street, Balboa, will be built around 11n aut~entic New England Thanks· giving dinner. _, .. Promised on the bill of fare -at a tab or $4.95 per person -is everything from soup to nuts. A spectacular vie\v ,of New~ort Bay will serve as a b~ckdrop while eating ones turkey and pump.kin pie. Bamboo Terra.,., The virtually brand new Bamboo Terrace al 153 W: 17th. Street, Costa Mesa, ,is ofre_ring diners an option with two complete holiday d1nl)ers. The first is a traditional Thanksgiving dinner, priced at $2.95, while the second provides something differ- ent in the form of a Chinese style Thanksgiving din· ner for $3.25. The traditional dinner includes velvet corn soup, tossed salad, turkey and dressing with cran- Continued on Page 30 S•rv1d Noon •o t 0 p.m. Adults $3.25 Children $1.75 2645 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA 54S·9471 BEACH BALL COCKTAILS LUNCH • DINNER Sp1ci1li1in9 In Gi1nt Cr•b le9s Duck.Ii~ • 1a Or1n91 I 32B02 COAST HWY .. LAGUNA NIGUEL SA_T. AND SUN. - NNEllY--~ALL:..BRUNCH __ Entert•inln1 . 10 A.M. t• 2 P.M. Served from 12 ll•li1h Tr•r Clloic• of qon • Con'°'""" Trlanon l~ Gfftfl Sl!.d Wald<1rf Sil.Id Ro.1st Apple V.1llry Tutkey-Ciblet Gr.1vy, S..ge or Cheslnul Dressing B•ked 5u11.1r·Currd H.1m-S.luce Cumberl.1nd Bonelr11 Rocky Mount.1in Troul-S.1ute Almondin e Ro•st Prime Ribs o( Berf-Au Jus Broiled New York Sle•k-M.i.i\re O'Holel J1~td 11111111 Sq11.uh Com O'Britn. Cind~ Y1mi \\'hipptd ~Olllott 0..Hrl Hot MiM, 1'it • lflndr S1uct 1'11111pkin 1'ie Fre.11 Sl•lwb,rry 51111d•~ Speciill Children's Dinner Soup or S1l1d • 0ttJtr1 a. 1,ve11P ~ ' Choi'' of: App~ Yallt} T11rkty l1~t<:I thm '$1.H Reservations 644-1700 4.9S 4.75 4.15 .... 6.95 STEAK • LOBSTER • PRIME RIB COCKT ,o).ILS Lunch and Dinner Daily Your Hosts, Mr. and MrJ. Rick. Rick1rd , lnYite You to Drop By •nd En joy DOUBLE OX TIME Daily From l to I ~.m. Mon. rhru Frl. Double Drinks Sened For The Pr'fce of Ont 3010 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa (At h•er) For Rtstrvations Coff 5_.f.0319 Nljlhtly 2116 W. Ocean Front NEWPORT IEACH C.t. I'...,. 0..r1 Wttl ti '!". ,,...,.,.. l"ltrl '73-~621 -THE--BERLINER Ger""'!u Family Restaurant • Famoul For --S;<UERBRAlEN-~;th-POTA TO-DUMPLINGS • OPEN THANKSGIVING -DAY THURSDAY, NOVEMIER 25 , ~•t'YJt19 from 2 to 9 p.m. All items' o ~ our r&9ul1r menu Entert1inm&nt i nd O•nce Music ly The BOYS OF AUSTRIA Opell Dollr Fer Dh111er FreM I P.M. CLOSED MONOAY BANQUET FACILITIES 18582 IEACH BLVD. Town & Country Center HtfNTJNGTON IEA<;H '6a:s100 ';THANKSGIVING DINNER ' ~ " . Carve Your ; Own Turkey Or Ham TA~E YO.UR LEl"T.OYEll.S HOME WITij YOQ Roat Yun9 Tom Turkey •-lndV'(, c ... ..._. Dr1Uin9 lai.td Vlnjlnla Ham, C!"'"'pcttn• Souce · 39s ALL TIME TRIMMINGS . I I EVERY I 'SA TUR DAY l I • • 'French Fries 'I " • French ' Fried On ion Rin91 2 STEAK DINNERS FOR Roost Long l~lond Duckli•UJ Roast Prfmt Ritt of ltef --OU lu$' , --~---· -.___ ::: ·_$1 .575 . 210_ --1~-~-l'ohed Salad • Roll and Sutter Childrt1t's Dhuutn 112 end 111tlsr) Choic• of: G1"rd...i Fr•1h l roccoli er H•• Cor11 ... at. Lt"'• ••'"' Cliolce of: Wh\pptd Pol•lo••· C111dii!I Y1m1 or l1~ff Pol•lo D•111rti C~oic1 of Pu,.,plrln, or Hot M111c1 'le, le• Cttl"' or Sh11b1r;. Cofl•e l•• Milk Mi11ll COMPLETJ TURKEY DINNER TO GO . ' 1 15' 00 • Plu1 • T a11; • . . -........ 8rln9 • fritndl T1k-e 1d¥ant•9"• ol t~is d1litious idin. ner for 2, •+ • ju1t tight price, 1/1 lb. t1ndtr_choic1 steak, cut to Btidford Hous• sp1cific1tion1. 81 good to • fri1,nd. or m1yb1 t~e family? Thi1 m1al, ;,, a f•¥oriti with · tll , , • you'll be • winner! ~ 'llO!ll.fi. KNOWN FOR VAlUES 0,.., Delly MM. tftrv l•t. t :JI a.M ... ' "'"" t • .,....., 11 '·"'· ,.. ' ,.m. GRANT ,LAZA -BROOKHURST ~ ADAMS -l;IUNTINGTON ll~Cf1 • • f rlday, Novtmber 19, 1971 DAIL y ''Lor • ' . ,,., •1"1:1/NE 1N OUR RONIANTIC CELLAk LA GAVE RES'f AURANT " STEAK • LOBSTER • PRIME RIB COCKTAILS • WINE TWILIGHT SPECIALS J t• 6:45 p.m.-su ... f'hn Fri. ~ '· a ... t '"Ml Riii If llef, Au Jin ....... -.......... -... -·-.. ··-.U.• T1rly1kl lr~hltte ' ................................. _.: .. , .................. '$4.tJ T., llrleln Luncl\ffn Steik .~ .................... : .......... : ..... _ U.U s ...... d •ith toi11d 1.•ee11 11l1J, Choic• of d,1111119, 1nowf11lr1 pol1lot1, "G1ril111 v19el•bl11 111d 91rlic ~Heid ~tvtr•g• 1dditio11el I.•~ IMe•. tllr• ffl.1 •••••••·~···•••••• ll:JO 'e !:JO Dlltlllf_ W•lllleyi ., ••••••••••••••• ,: ••• ,. l :H '' 1J :to Ft!My •II Sehirlley ••• , • , , • , ••••••••• , •• , 1:00 .. 1 J::to 16fS1/J ll'Yln• AY•. (Com« of 17tll Jt.J COSTA MESA 646·7'44' t!J.en . if)l!~WlfB INJOY THANKSGIVING .Ql~NER WITH US S•f"f'ff from 1 to II p.m. ~•11h Fruit Cup e Choice of To11eid Gr••" S1l1d fH011•1 Ore••in9 ! 01 Chicke11 Roy1le Soup ENTRIES RO.It'· YOU"f Tom Turk•'! ... . ................ , ...... ~ ........... ..$4.fJ Apple enid Almon Dr•uin9, 6 lbl 1t Gr1vy Gl•zed Vlr9Jftl1 leked Hem ... .: .......... -..................... .$4.fi W}lipp1d ,ol1fotJ, Fr11h Cr111berry 51uc'1 · C1nditcl Y '"'' Ru•t l'f"lm• Rllll of INf .................. 1'..,., ........ ., ................ .$6.SO l1~1dl POl.1to '. Fr11h ¥191l1bl11 J1rdinit••, "tot lr1.tid 111d lulttr, ltv1r19e, P11111pki11 Pi1-Whipp1cl Cr••ll'I':'"""'' Hof Mi"'' ,i,, lrt11idy S11"1 · Chlllll'e Dinner ·(12 & Und•r) ....................................... $2,71 ' COCKTAILS • DANCING e ENTERTAINMENT l1106 COAST HIGHWAY SOUTH LAGUNA 4'9·2Hl Succulent Beef from C~ptain Cooks broiler. Delicaci'3 from the Seven Seas. Magnifu:ent Harbor View. COCKTAILS L'UNCHE O-R ' ' ~ antlDINN~RDAILY 25001 DANA DRIVE DANA POJNT HA,iilOA 496-6195 - .. • .Sonora Styl• Mexican fqocl • Steaks • Luncheon • .Dinner . 'Til Midnight NllE OWL BREAK.AST . . Midnight Tit 4 A.M.- ~C .E::I'.Ll- ".PEFFER CORONA DEL MAR ' Reservations 6 73•8950 3201 E •. Paclflc Coa~t Hwy • • I I l ' • • .. ~ . . • • ' -• • -• . . " . . - 31 DAJLV 'JLOT I I ' . . • • WEEKENDER ' . Contl~ued from Page 29 berries, mashed pofatoes, vegetable, orange i;nuffin 1 and butter, pu,mpkin pie or ice cream and be\'erage. Order the Chin~se styl e and you'll receive the soup. appetizers of-chicken shrimp egg ro ll and paper ~·rapped turkey, roast turkey Chinese style, marinated chic ken sauteed with black mushrooms, tender greens with water chestnuts, special chicken rice style, fortune cookies and tea . Hours of service 1 to 11 p.m . . . ' Berlit1er Keeping step \\•ith the fast pace of fall activi· ties, the Berliner German family restaurant, 18582 Beach Blvd., Town & Country Center Huntington Beach is moving from Oktoberfest and Fashing (C arnival} Season ri ght into Thanksgiving. TEMPLE ' GARDENS Q-JIHGSSRestaura.;t MICHAEL W. FLOl U VocaU.1r/G11ltorltt App.Ot'lllt 111 0 11r RICKSHA COCKTAIL ~~~~~~E Fri.• Sat. I to 1 F,ca.turlng Exotic Tropical Drink.I luncheon' & Dinner D•ily IUPPI T LUNC H 11 :30-l :JI M•rMl•1 thr11 Prlcl•J 1500 ADAMS (•t H•rMr) COSTA MESA 540-lt37 540.lt2J TRA DITIONA L THANKSGIVING DINNER lleat yo11 .. to111 t11rk.., e Prll!IO ribs .t ltoof loa•t Lo119 lllo1cf D11tkll119 Compl1t1 with 111 th1 Trimmingi S1rv1J from I p.m. RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED . . . . .. . .. • • . . ' . ,. ,.,,..~ ••(• .. ' ' . ' • ' - OUT 'N AB ·OUT There'll be a touch of the unusual here in that turkey won't be among the offerings but all Jtems will be available from the reiuJar menu. A holiday note wtll be struck, however, by tables laden with ,,a i pecial fruit basket and there'll be entertainment and ·dancing by the Boys of Austria. Hours of service will be 2 to 9 p.m . T he Stuft Shi r t Traditional Thanksgiving dfuner, served from 12 noon to 10 p:m., will be the day's feature at the Stuft Shirt, 2241 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Prices are $4.75 for adults and $3.25 for children The dinner ·will include a tossed green salad or ol d-fashioned v!getable si>up, roast tu r k e y with chestnut dressing and giblet gravy, fresh cran~ berry sauce, whipped potatoes; green garden pea's, and choi ce of pl!,lJlpkin pie, ice cream and beverage. The regular menu also is ivailable. Reserva· tlons advised. Marquis In addition ·10 i.11 the regular menu selections, Costa M'esa's new Marquis restaurant, 1670 Newport Blvd., will offer three special entrees for it.s Thanks· giving bill of fare. Tabbed at. the uniform price or $3 .95, they are roast turkey (dressing, giblet gravy, cranberry sauce), baked Virginia ham (Cumberland sauce, candied yams) and ro11t leg of lamb (mint sauce, dreS!inl), A child'• portion of each ii priced at f2 ,95. These enlrees will be accompanied by whip- ped 'Potatoes, buttered peu, hot rolls, beverage and a dessert choice of pumpkin pie, ice.cream or sher· bet. Food service gets under way at 1,2 noon . The Berl>" A number of special house features wUI embel- lish the Thanksgiving bill of fare bein( offered by the Derby restaurant, 1262 Palisades Road, Costa Mesa. . The day'• principal entree will be roast turkey acco mpanied by a dressing for which the chef claims exclusive preparation rights, as he does for the salad dressing that goes on the mixed greens if they're chosen in preference to soup. '~ , Dinner al10 include• vegetable as well as m1sh-ed potatoes and giblet gravy, the. Derby's 1pecial garlic toast, choice oJ beverage and a choice of pumpkin or mince pie or tbe Derby's justly-famous cheesecake. Tab for adults is $3.75 and there'll be a special priced child's plate at $2.50. Service will be 4 p.m. to 12 midnight and diners can also select entries from the restaurant's regular menu. Zany Pair ' Skiles and"'·Henderson will open at the Reuben E. Lee for 1 short engagement, Nov. 23-27 (except Thanksgiving Day -when the boat is closed), in two shows nightly at 10 p,m, and midni1ht (f LSO cover charge.) Jl.1ake Reserv•lions Naw COMPLETE TRADmONAL THANKSGIVING DINNER $2.95 Kin to Landowner YOUR EARS I I 11 I~ YOU HAV• LOST Oil MIS· PLAC•O VOUll Sll•lllAN TGOL KIT COM• IN AND O•T ON• PllOM OUll IAllTI MOl tt. ,.., ......... At tll9 Pier HUNTINGTON llACM Complete Chinese Jityle Tha.nks(ivlnr Dinner $3.'25 Writer Dates Actress-And Her Boy friend By Terrence O'Ji1U erty Md'-.._ 37 FASHION ISLAND MR. MIKE'S HOUSE OF PR.IME RIB THANKSGIVING DINNER ., l ~ • '• / ...!!~!!~;~!!.. NE~°Wi:1iTl~e .,~ e 144-2030 e lorM fro• Nffl to 1 P·•· Of all the actor1, actresses, writers, former b e 1 u t y queens, and ci1ar-cbewing ty- coont, currently in reaidence 11 Unlver1•I Studios, E I 1 n a Verdu10 ii tbe only person on the Jot who has a real rl1ht to be on the prtmisea. She'• a direct de1cendanl of Jose Maria Verdu10 who owned tht whole San Fernando Valley. He 1ot it from the King of Spain who stole it from the ln- di•nr. She escaped her uniform once Jast sea.son in a script when she fe ll in loYt with an Argentine millionaire and wa1 allowed to slip Into a glamoroua. Pucci drt11. But it wa1 a -Cinderella sort of thins and she didn't even set her prince. It seems he waa dyiftl of arthritis of the 1pine. There'• an awful lot of dying in this series. "I was back In white the next week rebear1ina bow to aay 'Good morntns, D r • Welby' In a-different manner,•• ahe uid, with..her ey., raiJed to the ceiling. =~~=~=======::11 TftANK!iEil\71NEi $3.7S ADULTS -$2.2S CHILDREN l>INNER ... s·21:g5-ti•--.-o~.n-,u-.. -.. ·-· -..... HAM -PllMI Ill 1 .. 1..._ ,.,... trey, , ... , ....... ,, NhMI, elteke 9f ,......._ DON JOSE' .,,.... Now App.arlnt Th• Noted Jaiz Pia ni·st CHARLOnE POLITE .. N1tian1lly Acclaimed 15 on e of +h t Country', Five Top J•n Pi•nists · Enchi11d1 i nd Ta co ........ , •. , ..... $1 .35 Chill Re ll eno • Enchil•da ... , ........• $1.50 Tlianksg iving Dinner Ser¥od fr om 12 Noon ROAST YOUNG TOM TURKEY Ores,inq, Gibl•t Gr•"'Y • Cranberry S•uc• BAKED VIRGINIA HAM Cumb erJ•nd Stuce, Candie d Yamt ROAST LEG OF LAMB Mint Sauce, Orassinq Whipp ed Potatoe1 Buttered Pe•t Everything From Soup to Nuts! ftMEM llt&TAUUNT' Conti nental CulsiM, Cocktails Serot1rg Lunch.ton and 1 Dinnn Mondow throuo~ Saturdaf. Closed Sundays ,."',.. ......... ,i.. MAll i n1nATIONI IA.ALY 209 Palm, Balboa 675-5774 RNI Cantonese food e1t h.,. or take home. ' ~nta, 4J Coro na del Mar ~· l'lne Italian C11ulne 'Coclctalu 2325 I . COAST HIGHWAY 673-1267 •• .., • ..so. o,_..·1o11y -I,.._ h I..,._ CLOlll MONDAY Ilili:il Mi.11 VertlUgo to din- ner the other night In Loi Ancelea. I h~ several reatonr for doin1 to. Finl, I have ki nd _of fa llen in lova with her on the "M1rcu1 Welby MD" show. Her setne1 with Robert Young •nd James Brolln are often the best in the show. Sealnd, 1he'1 single at pruent and I thought it would be fun to propo11 m1rrl1ge so we could tou everybody off the r1ncbo Including Warner Brother•, Bob Hope, Liberace and •II tht other celebrity 1quatters. Wt decided lo eat away from the hacienda. Be.sides, she doesn't own it •nymore. The family blew It •II lonr before thi1 reneratlon. But, I would have proposed m1rri1g1 anyw1y becau1e she tur~ out to be the. belt of au possi- ble d•te• -·lively and pretty and funny ind be1m ln1 and in. tere1ted Jn everything around her. Unfortunttely there w•1 thl1 one hitch -in additi on to the diaappoinbntnt about the land rights, that !1. She brought along her boy friend. And a1 if that w11n't bid ELENA VERDUGO l ively, Pretty, Funny enough he turned out to be a psychiatrist. Well, we. can 't win them 111, now, Cl{! we ! IN PERSON Miss Verdu10 looks at least 10 years youn1er th•n she dots in her role of Dr. Welby's nurse. I suggested that il had 30me.thing lo do with her hair which 1bt wore short and close to her head. "Oh. are you ever right!" she zaid, "That puffed-up thing J wear on the show iz a.wful but they insist on it. Don't ask why.'' "Why?" I asked. "They think it's more di&nified. The real problem is how to look different in those white nurses' uniforms I have to wear day 1fter day." PllMI 111 a SIAFOOD STIAKS a COCKTAILS OPEN 7 DAYS LUNCH 11 to 2,30 DINNER 5 to 12 MISS VERDIJGO'I peppery Spanish-American bacl:ll'(IU.nd has aeldom been &ivtn top priority on television but lht has already played enouch parts with lines like "Yeu steal gold from my people!'• to k00w how well off she ia now. She wa1 a platinum blonde In her firsl tt.levllion 1erle1 "M@et Milly," one of the medium '1 flr1t hilJ which ra.n for five years. Because of her interest ht her IOn, Richard Marion, Robert Young calls her "a mixture of• Spanish Don• aftd Portnoy '• mother." Marion Is • UC theater arts student who performs regularly with tllt Maglc Theater of Berkeley, Despite the :i erpet u al OYerla}· of terminal illnes111, the "Marcus Welby " tel It 1 happy place to which Mlaa Verdugo adds her own special kind of ma1ic. J h•ve a hunch she doesn't even mind the uniforms or the hair-do. After all, there are some undenialtl1 fringe benefits to the job GI nurse for televlsk>n'1 moil popular doctor. It could even help her buy back a corner of UM: old adetle hacienda. · Hot.,..Rolls Be¥er•q• 1----·I-""" mp · · •.•un ____ _, h.ar.b.1. Ad ultr$3.'5 -hlldrtr$2;t5' __ _ e •r• oc•t _ ne i:t fo tho" M•y Co, in South Co11t Pl•r•. 'suNDAY BRUNCH Al10 Serving Our Rogul•r Men11 1670 NEWPORT BLVD. JJJJ s. ........ COSTA MESA 642 -8293 c .... - PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT -- SINCE TH E OLD DAYS Now Me 'n Ed '• m9bile ov1n5 Spetd d1liciots1 pfplna·hot pims to your doortn mlnutta. Tor prompt service P~• 646-7136 (Newport S.aeh/Coola M..,.17lh•ndTu1Un) er 847·1214 (Hunlinaton ... ,h-lluch ind Hltl). 14f.l l41 HOUSI Of SIAfOOD DINNER • COCKTAILS OPIN DAILY 4 PM TD 11 PM SU!'!DAY 2 PM TO 9:30 PM -CLOSI D MONDAYS " 1814 N. Coast Hwy. IEI Camino IHI> SAN CLEMENTE 492°6571 NOW APPEAlllN .. THU RS •. f Rt·SAT. NITI S RON la MARTY "The Ver1atilf1 of Orange Countv" Wed & ·Sun. NltOl PEPl ,VILLA The lnt1rnatlonal Guitariat . ' Entert•inm•nf Wedne1d1y thru Sundey 1 DJ N. IATSIDI DI., NIWPOIT HACH In The M•rin• Dunes 644--40)1 1...--..-ri'iRUEUff'l'I GINO LANZI M...i..,ttnWe4......, TONY FLORIS ----,.-.-----· The N.w M1n•9em•nt ef The Dry Dock Presents . _, I ,. __ _ N•m• Eotlrt•;nmonf RON SHY A,p••let ' .. 11 , ..... .,.. I 'M•Cel•• 1, ... .,,.... Formerly.of The Ch ec~m•tel ~ THANKS51YING DINNll l'llOM J P.M. IM1t Utt h T9M Twkey All I FIA TURIN• DlNllllS 11 ff11 S111 fr111ci•c• M•,..., UCI OP LAMI ITU.II e SIA.POOi 'rime Rllli ........................ P .tS _I I TO t I Nt&HTLY COCKTAIL HOUl-JUMl O DRINKS DAILY I IAT. & SUNDAY IRUNCH~ Mice ef ~ 1. HUIYOS IANCljllO $175 2. STIAK .. lffS • I • lffS llNIDICT (,Ai..1 ... •uh ... c • ..-.. ~ a.c .. 1 J I I IUllNBIMAN'I LUNCM 11:00 TO I SATURDAY-11 hi LUNCH DR llWNCH .._ ........ c.Mtfllthf' ...... SUNDAY-BRUNCH -ONN nnT IAT ON TMI OC•AM AIJJ4Cll'IT TO NI Wl"OltT l lAtM I'll• 2106 W.~CIAN l'IONT NIWfrORT HACH l I ' NOVEMBER 11 • 1:00 8 lit ftfWl Jtrry DUnphJ CJ) .... IHI Huddy 8 DIC "'91 Toqi~lf .......... , £at lb Diiiin · D Nrn'lant( Schubttk • B""' WI!.,. ftjAa1-m111o ...... ··-~ ....... @at f ... CMI @) lltdi•• •Qt lodp' mm•-llll-·llt· ,, ... _ . .., - .. -:.ICl (IO) -"'"' dl&lon (dr11111) '65--Carroll BWr, llttl Buttons, M11ti11 Balsam. Cll o m """ . . ... ••••• -,-v-, ' . . . • ) · V otlr · Gidffe to MOVle• · --· ... . . -• ~ ·Segal .Plays Drug Addict ' . -..!NOVEMltR ~ i:OO ~IVl- 1:30. 00 si.lst ...... D...,fl_ ID l.ft's ttp 7:00 11 lb .. ,.., .... .,. a ei eer. Wtt1e1 "' D(])•"'"""-(i) TY I Cllwooa& \ ·I:" 7:11 ....... _ ......... !,., .,......,. .. D (])(ll!o" ,,_ r·BT-l"" .o.i -.... ' --r r1 ... l<tttr imm¢iat'111--\ JW. ~l}'D pollCi! detectlv .. aft~r the title in4i~~es the .try to ffixf the: American con1 roting gl~rn t~e picture bl/ nedion to French-American (ht Motion Picture Code, . The Code Avd Ratina pro-heroin ring. gram ma11 be found on P¥ , M'4nl1bt Cowboy (tR ) : of the motion picture J>OW& Dustln Hoffman. and John *' , ... ' ~ · ADULTS 1 Voight star . jn . a . .study of loneliness anCi sw-vival-ln·1iew • Ryan'•' Daughter •( 0 P) : . mlMhH •• t · ... . 111•~1·•-· '.' . < means tackling tbe wealthy rancher whole aidekiclu have killed a bystanQt;. •A.story or the violent West' starring Lee J. Cobb and ROhert Ryan. Lion in Wleter1 (GP)j With romantic love !Ong past, two Str.:ing willed monarchs battle over who will be successor, Eleanor of Aquitaine won't 'lorglve Kh1g Henry t I ' s philandering and he imprisons her for scheming against him. Stars Peter O'Toole a n d Katharine Hepburn. Angela Lanahury aJJd Tomllnlon. David • Blae Water· -Whitt Death (GI : Produce<! an(! dlrecie<I by Peter Gimble, this alory with vivkl photoiJ:aphy takes the viewer all over the world :be t!:a:::~~~ ~~~eda~a"r:~r , On Any Sunday (G): Bruce Brown, who did suTfing 's "EndlliSs Summer:• brings to life· the beauty, danger, joy anchbumor or young America's motorcycle craze as a semi documentary. Steve McQlleen • MlME RATfNOS FOR l'MENT'8 AND '1JUNO PEDK£ fi\t NHf,,...., 1i.1tlilrf.. ,. ... ...... • ._,,,.,,-~ti -· f1f'1!9'11 ,., ..i-11t ... lflw ~ • f'iiii1 All A&fS Allttlt'TfO L!::!£j P111!1lll ~· $"9QH!td ® 110 OM( Ullllll 17 ADtflTT(D I'" !11!'1•1 !Ny Ytl'y lft Ul\llAtf'IH) .. ........ , ••.•......•.....•.. -a 111 .... 11 ...... ---19 .. -.. -----..-..- . . m w, ,~, .. 81ih Ca1bJSMw ' lUl ewe.,. s..41 l;OG 11 lllP-..., 1 \ •• am....,..., D @@F..,_ -[J] __ ...... 8Gnr lo Win JR!: StOcy ol highs ind lows of drug 1ddicts life. Gelirge Segal is the junkie, Karen Black iJ his straight girl friend. Paula Prentiss portra)'s-his ez:·wife turned pi;ostltute to su1u>0rt her ha~it, Robert Mitchum, Sarah Miles and John Mills star in a IOve Story set in scenic Ireland of 1916. Restless, beautiful wife of middle-aged school teacher has.affair with British major. ' Tht Stewardeaaea ·cx1 : Film in 30 co~ning the aftei du· ty actlvitiu of five aitlioe stewardesses who seek sez: thrills with men or· Inanimate Marlowe (GP): W h 11 e searching for a ·client's miS.s· ing brother, private ·eye Phil\p Marlowe (JaQ'lel Garner) gets mixed up with some ice-pick murders and a blackmail plot. and pals ride in and dune1~=====::::==~ shots. 1- ~ fD n. Frtftdl clttt · !D1nttMOd<I OjCi1tt11.J.m:1 6:) Dutlo t1 Pttlllts 7:00fl(])lllD-· 1 (l)Trd•~llllCfl .• {[) Dr1ptl .......l.-fJ Whit's Mr l,lu? .,. ~ltTM tTMtl m I lM "'1 .....-Gr! Dr1111 ol Jt1nnl1 fl) Kisttry ti Millet di La lntruui OJ SW Clll••• Q) M111tr111 7:30'fJ Cltt111! "Th• Circus From Yu10· SbYit" Bert P1rb Is host 0 NEW NIGHTTlME *VERSION OF HOLLYWOOD SQUARES Peter Marshall hosts B Hollywoed Squares CIJ Tt Tell Utt Trvth (I') I Dre•• ti Je1tnl1 0 Millen $ Nnle: (C) (2t11) '11 Sbrtltl With 1 llss" {comedy) '59 -Debbi• Reynolds, Glenn Ford, m Hor1n'1 Htrtn m (l)Dr1pd m ~ CiwillsttiM e> Lu Co111drn iD Unbmtd Wtrli ~al NFl ,, .. or tf11 W11k 1:00 I) (I) Clllap Ttddy Bein A djlDTh1 DA CJ Mevlt: (C) (3hl') "CUJS tnd GI lltlie: .,.,_ kt'" ·(1dven1Uff)I '53-Rpbert Stld!, Colttn GrlJ. '"~ 1. _ _,__ . ' 1:11 • ""'' "' .• ; a a m:fi•~. hlitlMr B 1ii'!ir'C ,,,,.,. m Movlts: "Ambll.-1t"CIM11T011 P•~" (wesltm) '58-SCott Brady. ''Sl1vu tf tlle l11wb1Wt Monst1n" (1d'o'llnt11re) '6&-Richtrd Webb. l!)St111S0111 1:0011 (JJ ttari.. Clobtt11tttn 0 og iD l1tritr Rtt,I ' 0 llltwit: "Nitht ill Mtw Orttt••" (comedy) '42 -Pmton Fo1ttr, P1trici1 Mod50ft,. 0 (])00 -m Ap:utNftt Hullttr's Sftow ma" .. Su cu. al)hdtmu latint UO O (i).Tht Ka6r leer l unth 0 ®) m Tlb t Clllt Slep 00 Mobile Holle Show . 0 CIJ Udnillll 0 MovM: "Ride Out for Rtwt11'1" (western) '57-Rory Cllhoun, Glorit Gr1h1mr. 111:00 I) (j) f'tbblu Ind lam• l1Mm 0 (II@"'""'" .... 10:30 f) (I) Arthi111 TY Fuanla D 9 €t'!Thtl1p1ot1 .. 0 Movlt: "A PIKI tf OM't on" (comedy) '45-Jimts M1son, Mu· 11ret Lockwood. Dolls" (mus.lctl) '5S-Mar1on B11n· G.J ILIJ'-ll1t do, Jt1n Simmons, .F11nt Sln tlrt. ll•OO 1J (() Slbriu lhe lMJllll Wltcfl D (]) @n. ''"' ''"" . 0 fti Ill"','-Ill Truttl 11 Con-.lltllCll (J) tu! [dttl ... (Q Tht Yl'1111l1n 0 Cil Q) ut:(... W«W It 8'I (Wllalns Jportl ~ n1111: (C) "Jubat" --CJ NcMt: (C) "Coll!Mr cany.'" ml NIM '(wrstem) '50 -Ray Milltnd, Htdf aJ Ot.wrt Auctlo11 C111cry lima11. • 1:30 ..... fJ APPOINTMENT WITH :ll ~ U"' * DESTINY-"THE !ID''""'" LAST DAYS OF ll:I0811llni"°' ... ,,..,... DILIJN~ER" a a mT11t..-1 IJ (Jl O!W.41 App1l1t1111t IDMlwit: (C) "1tlt ltlMtl Arr..- --Wttt1-Dnt111J -"Tht-La1t D1ys-M --(llfil1ntur1)...!64-Jab HuaW,.Jll»._ Dillin1u" it !tie fil11 dram• 111 anfll Podesll. , 1 ierin of flw spec:i•ls rHf!lclint A~nioon-. l!lllmtnts In hblory. • '· Am Nit Werid l'fetllitn Mtrif: . ,, _ ' (C) (2hr) "Ellt17 Quun.: Deni ,I.II, lZ:DO IJ CIJ 1' ' '(I~ lthlnd YOll" .(mystery) '71--f'eltr Bl~~.,;;~ ~Simrt L1wtOl'd, H•ny Mor•an. £. G. Mir· m• , ··''.'n:t·: . shall. Skw Au6rey. Stefln!e Powers. Gl'illnpr. , .... -L iz:: r, ~: p ~ l1J The P1rtrld~1 funi!J @ ~ a.,..,._ , ®) Movlt: (Cf (2hr) "Msny Rlfl11 I=~~:;-::. to Ctoss"' (1dvenlure) '55-Robirt m rbcG Ta¥!01, Eletnor P11ker. a=-·w~idt , . m D1vld F11st Sh.w Jull1 Andrews Ui) V"lljt~ end Sallw Stru!hers aunt 12,30 I) (I) YH Are Thtr1 ff:1 [i!ICIKI M1rin11 '71 (R) . O Mowlt: . (C) ''Counldowll tt 1:00 A (]) (J) R' 1 • U2 Doonud'J" (dram1) '67 -Geortt. t'I Lt liat1 Ardisson, Hon! Frink. tml Rom p111 Yerortkt 0 CIJ @ a) fitCAA flotbtR USC 1:311 11 UCLA· 8 Robert Hooks. Robert 0 Shlrtock 11t1Mt1 Thutrl * WA,ner, Carol Lynley im ltOliO"• Conttf "The Cable Car Murder" a> eorwn Sa"•l• CBS FRIDAY MOVIES ID'"' "°"'" R CJ) CIS FrldtJ Mwle: fC) (90) 9 Rotb and Fritids ''Tiit Cablt Ctr M11nl1r" {m)'Sfery} 1:00 f) @ CIS Chlldrtn's Fii• Fath-II '71 -Robert Hooks . .l@'"rtmJ Sl1l1. @l lnslfhl • .._, Robtrt-W11ner. Clrol lrnltJ, Simon m Net![i'lld: Ctrtu Clakltnd, Jolin R1ndall, Jost Ferrer. €D Coftlllllltr's Wo,,. O (JI ['11 Tiit Odd Couplt , ~Addams funllf 0 BAXTER WARDANnTHE tm)Drau dtl Sl.bMI * ~'"..~for LOS ANGELES 1:30 ®ii Maril: (C) "Sbpco~ It Dine. A larttr Ward News lf's Rock" (wtstetn) 62-Wtrrtn l1i'J I! T1•1s 1 Thltl Sl!Ytns, X>dy L1w1enct. tlJ) HotlJwDOd TtttYislon Thltlrt m Unt1m!d World tO:OD R tl) (.J) r;f1 Love A1Rellt1n 51J11 t!) Mowll:, "fou1 l ulltb fOf Joey" A Couiid1 Dtbttt J1ek Rourk• (western) 64-Paul P11et, B1rba1t fl' Ntn f>utn1m , Fishman Neeley;. fr-) Sptdll ot the WN• (JI) EE U1to~etro (ri TY Musical Qwrt m Thi 111 Pldurt ~ fl1111: (C) "C1pt1ln Horatia Korn· 9 Tht Mun~11 blower" 2;00 8 Dust(s Tmlloust m lvch• llbrt B NFL '-iM ti tht .... lD:lO A Document11y fil11 (I) TY I lttb It LNmhl1 lfO) Tht klddlut11 0 loller ~rt., IJil Nm Bill Jahns , m ~ul Ttil11 (1l1 A111triun Dr11111 MKhlllt el CiM Ill II T1• In El Rtbtlt dt Dofl111 CrtJ = ~~ a;, Dr. SlrrlOn l.tdt l!r.'l\lerflltl (R) (.fllr) 11:00"' o Cil ro m..., -D Wu!~ Hamm bclltt 2:15 0 ~ Mlllul (i) Mt11h1I Dillo11 %!30 tJ Steps ti Lunriq p (]) al Nm B stllill te SlltlN D Movit: "l Htrtl Dlt's fltitbf' ~ = ~ (m_µslctl) '64-Tht B11tla, °' -"' ,.., mT1]th tht Tnrttt u:i t11 ... l ,. . Desperate Characters (R): Shirley MacLaine and· Kenneth Mars p O· r t r a y middle.aged urban couple who try to find 1a wa;t to go on, despite tile gloom Jand unhappiness _.Jn the ir Jives, .. objects. .. Vah11hingy~nt (G): Stars Barr Newman as ei-cop, ex- raf!f driver Who speed$ from Dei;i'ver .to San Fr8nci.sco with police in pursu.il encouraged by Black radio disc jockey against hard rock musical background. What Do You Sa)' to a Nak· .ed Lady (X): Film done by Allen Funt of Candid Camer'a. Tbe Skin Game .(GP): Quin- cy a!ld Jason-are pre-Civil War con men whOse game is a phony slave trade. Jason weeps when his master sells him, Quincy then rescues him and they move on to fleece th! next town. Then one day Jason can't escape, Stars James Garner and Lou Gossett. Zeppella (G):.ln World War I British soldier Is .sent to spy on German dirigible con- struction. He gets hlmself,.ln· volved with inVentor'a wife and. becomes a participant ia the 7.epplin's mission against his own England. Editor's Note: This movie guide is prepared by the fil.?m com~ittee of Harbor Council PTA. Mrs. Horf'y lrlellor U president and Afrs. Bruce Nordland is conimittee chairmati. It FAMILY is intended as a ~ference American Wllderne11 (G): in determining suit.::ible Hunting animal I i f e from f i I m s for certain age Alaska to Baja California. group.! and will appear Bedknob1 and Broomsticks weekly. Your views are The Devll1 (X): VAnessa Redgrave p I a y s hysterical hunchbacke.d nun used polltically to incite a witch. hunt Oliver Reed portrays worldly priest burned at stake in Aldous Huxley story cl. torture and debauchery iii 17th century France. MA1VR"'E TEENS (G): Disney story ·af wit-solicited. Mail thl!'!m to Mo- The French Connection IRI : Suspense mystery starring Jean Hackman and Fernando • AND ADULTS chcraft and fantasy. Both ac-vie Guide;---ecri of the lion and animaUon, starring DAILY PILOT. Anne of the Tbousaod Daysi-----~---------,-------1 (GP): Story about second wife · · Eagle Band In Santa , Lane Parade of King Henry VIII. Failing to produce a son and heir she is beheaded. Rich2.rd Bu rt on portrays a lusty Henry VIII. Genevieve Bujold is Anne Boleyn. Covers English history from downfall of Wolsey to beheading of Sir Thomas More and birth o( f u t u r e Queen Elizabeth. Dr. Zhivago (GP): Omar Sharif portrays young Russian doctor and poet caught up in his country's revolutiqnary. upheaval. Geraldine Cl}aplin is his wife and Julie Christle portrays the mistress he met 'rhile serving in the Army. Evel Knievel (GP): George Hamilton pOrtrays r u g g e ~ stunt cyclist Eve! Knievel.' -Sponsored by-the-Hollywood---Fiashba.cks s-h o w ram· Chamber o( Commei;ce, the bunotious .chi ldhood, courting . eve.nt has bej:{lm.e. a tJ:adition days, leaps over canyons and in Southern Cali!ornia. his hero-worship of . Elvis The Estancia High School "Eagle" Marchl~g Band ff9m Costa Mesa and an entry from Lion Country Safari, Laguna Hills, will be featured in the 4-0th Annual Santa Claus Lane Parade of Stars to be held in Hollywood or Thanksgiving Eve, Wednesdiy, Nov. 24. It will be televised in color; .. 5~gh.ts and Sounds 01 Presley and John W~yne. Ch ·1-1 · H 11 ood" ill Actual . footage of Knievel r s mas m 9 yw w performing be the 1971 theme and nearly · tWo hundred units of floats, Gone With the Wind (G):· bands, features, equestrians, Re-issue of •film based on· the clowns and stars of the en· Margaret Mitchell classic. tertainment industry w i 11 Story of the old South during folloW the Graild Marshall the Civil War and Reconstruc- down HollywoOd Boulevard to tion Era . Clark Gable and VI· reflect the spirit of the season vi en Leigh star. in the "World's Most Famous La (GP)· Burt La City" wman . n-• caster portrays marshal who Invitations to participants in enforces the Jaw even when It SIGHT I IOUNO PRODUCTIONS, IRYINQ QRANZ AND KALA PRESENTS 11~,~ ~o·~ "f ,JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR The Original concert version by the authoclz.ed touring company In assoclatlon.wU•0--- Robtrt Stlgwood ltld MCA. Inc .. br M.fttement wflh DIYfd Lartd WED., NOV. 2¥"'""'"''" SANT~ MONICA CIYl,C AUDITORIUM THURS., NO . 25 ''" ,. . LONG BEA H ARENA FRI. & SAT., NOV. 6 & 27 ''"'"''"'" PASADENA CJVI AUDITORIUM , Reserved Tlck1l1: $7 ~. I.SO, 5.SD, 4.50 ON SALE At Alldl10rl11m llll Ollk:", Mvl1111 A1Mt<Jn , Sith! &• SG!llld lier"' Tk:k1tren Oulle19. h1n, l f'CMldWIY •rMI t11llK.k1 510r11, 5f, Clllt. Mv1k: C1., W11Uch1 l!J' ~l .. rty A99lld11. Mal11..0nltrs lo Allllllorlum ••• Offktl the Parade are issue(t.on. ~ --------------------------------1 selective basis, thus all en· trants exemplifx. the flnest performers in their particular categor:y. The Parade will start at 7~30 p.m. at Hollywood Boulevard and Argyle and proceed West to Sycamore. ttLI. cot.o•SRorr ·'-... -···'"'boll<> ,_'If "AftlCAI WtU.11"(11 -~ui.WA,m. ;;IT• DurM" fGJ ...... -~ ' .ic; ..... .:.. ... ,,_., U4-IH2 Q) Mantrap 3;00 8 The ltN Is Ottr f-----1h11 . .,.C1111.. _00.~~· ...... "-"-----1-1 NRd-'•" ......... 111 . ll:JO B Me'llt: IC) "1llt • Jun,.. 0 Mme· (C) "411 C• W ApteM Ktheycan get a grip on each other, •meybe ·lh,eY, c111tuln their rtive• . arOlln'd. (dr1m1) '5' -Challton HHlon. Pm" ( • ttm) '67-Audlt Murphy 0 11i mJohnnyt.. wes • 11 Nm Ma11is. McCormick ;~~ T1ltltrt o moo m""""" m..,., .,_....., .,,.. (I) Nl(htflllll ;SO G ~· DIM mMer\1: "Sltttlr(1 H11rrltl111" (Clr1m1) -rqory ~ ...... {drama) '49 -Riehl~ Wldmuk. ~~ 11 m Mtwll: (C) "Cll4lllor1 Srl111" aii 11~ ·-'(comtdf) 'Cl-lfk:h11d Harrison. ,u:i.~· -1 .,. __ ....... t ''>!"'" ll:OO 8 M .. : "Tllt Iii Clld" (111)'1· J:lll ~ r.rdb: --ttm '41.._...fl..,.-Mllltr!d:----~IKlll ~ --I l!•,arOvtF'litb 12:511. llWt: Mhlllc" (dfll!ll) '63-1 m"""' "' .ltrl1nt Guy, Gip Hoinlon. OJ 5'a "'91 , . I GOOD SEATS AYAILAIU FRIDAY & SATUIDAY. 11 pm tommy • ADULTS $2 .00 JUNIORS $1.00 { ChUdrtn uncltr12 fl.EE wilh ;ortnll >- ' SEU THE Not DOMESTIC & FOREIGN CAJS-FACTOIY DlSPLAYS.~PROTO·TYPES 5'1CIAL $HOW CAl5...NOTOI HOME$ I VACATION VlHtCW ALL UNDO ONI llG l:OO fl SPECIAL DISCOUNT TICIC£TS AT YOUR ,A\IOllTE OIAHGE COUNTY NEW CAI OlALllt,l'OUI NEAIE5T Al.PHA 1£1'A MAlKIT, THllfTY DRUG STOii & I UENA PAIK ClNTEl , • ~·­·-· ··-'"''·toll. STARS Sydney Omarr ls one of 1 the world'• areat utrolo- t!'•rt• 'Hll column Is OM of the DAD..\' PILOTS tr91t ftatu~e • • DAILY '1LOT .. .... ·-·· .... -.. STH GHAT WH•I CA':IDICE llUIGlN • PElfR IOYLE IR.BASJ<IN !WDllml-Alfu<Tlff fUNffY HOW lOVlRS START AS.,, "friends"· !!ii TI ~Oil: A stOI}' of k:iYe. Filrred 17,< David Lean Ryans'@_) I Daughter "RYANi"DAtkifITTR" & "'HAitfOWE°' ALSO PLAYING AT mWAll:DS CINEMA VIEJO MISSION VJOl • 830-6f?2 I CINEMA WEST #2 I • HILD OVER· 3RD WEEK \lan1no Rtdgrave • Oliv.rRted '·' KENRUSSELL'SFILM THEDEVIIS ---. ·-~ llrol. A Ki•lll)' i.a..n; 5"-tb @ ·H LDOVIR I -l ' . •• • • • -;J 'Jf ·0All¥ 'llOT Frldly, Nowmbtr 19, 1971 ·uve Tlaeater UCI Has ·-'C.ourage' •'Motber ·Couragef' Brecht drama oa stage at the Village Thealer on lhe UCI campus at 8:30 p.m. Nov. 19- 20; 24·2'1. RtservaUoos 133~17. •'()Qr ToWD" Americana classic on stage at Sooth Coast Repertory. 1827 Newport Blvd.. Coisla P..1esa, Nov. l'-20. at B p.m. Reserva· lions -646-1363. "Staliri 11" War-time comedy-Orama on stage at the Santa Ana C:Om- munity PlayeNJ, 500 W. 6Jh SL, Santa Ana, Fri. -Sat. at 8:30 p.m. through Nov. 20. Reserva· lions -531-9738. 11Anenk:: and Old Lace" Comedy-mystery on stage at "Taming ol tile Shrew" Golden West Col leg e 0presenb Shakespeare Play, Dec. M ; 10-11 at 8 p.m. in the NE W c.Gmmunity Theater on campus, 15744 Golden West st., Huntington Beach. Tickeb at bookstore. "Mu of La Manclla" Musical production on stage at Calif. State, Fullerton, lllO State College Blvd., Fullerton, Nov. 26-28; Dec. 2-5 at 8 p.m. Reservatiom -870-3371 (noon to 4 p.m.) "Death· of 1 Sllesmu" A drama on stage in .Humanities Hall Playhouse on UO tampus at 8:30 p.m. Fri.· Sat., Nov. 26-Dec. 11 by Iryine Community Ybater. Reserva· tlons -547-1733. · · "Henry IV" • . " , . . " . .. .. . • . . .. .. . ~ • ' • ... ....., "'• hw.w 1 ...... sa.. Stwtl J P.M, CONTINUOUS SHOW s... ,,_ '-Sm. ,.,.. 2 UHAIN MATINll (¥'tfy Vf•~··•~ey--1 , .... Also James Garner ''.THE ' RACING SCENE" JUNIOR. MATINEE SAT. 2 P.M. . "TWO LI.TILE •EARS" "" "THE CHALLENGE OF ROBIN HOOD .ALL SEATS 75c tlie Huntington Beach Play- : house, 2110 Main St., Hunting- . ton Beach, Fri.-Sat. at 8:30 ; p.m., through Dec. II. Reser· · vations -536-&161. ''1be Boy Friend" • Sandy Wilson's l!ms musical : produced by the Laguna Moul- . ton COTiUTlunity 'I1leater, La- ; guna Canyon Road, Loguna : Beach, 8:30 p.n)., Tues. • Sal : through Nov. 2.0. Reserva- : tions -494--0743. Satirical comedy on stage at Saddleback College Fri. -Sat., Nov. 19-20. Rese"atlons 499-2211 or 837-.rroo. SONNY GROSSO AND EDDIE: EGAN STAR IN THE 20TH CENTURY-FOX MOVIE Pair Play Detectives fn "French Connection" Sho:-ving in Oran~· County .....,.. ... S1£ClAl. FAaLYl'Rl&ES!! CONVE#IOIT~. --M . TM•UTMUllS.AND All •.t.flN~U t;Zjt SAT IUN t MDU DAVI Fll.SAT • .t.110 llDLID.t.Y EWE NI NG!; u.n 12:Jli:~5 ~=•l:H• .... JUllORS 1JTHRU n AflmllE Sl.00 Moll. "'"' Fri. TV News Bias Seen B); Writer Two· Lawiµen Star in Film lOAlll tlAllO_l,lflDfR.t.llYJlllj( It•. 1:11 & f :)f "Play It Again Sam" Woody Allen comedy-on stage at the Lido Isle Players. \'01 Via Lldo Sood, Newport Beach, at 8:30 p.m., Nov. 19- :!0. Reservations -675--06.15. I At first glance, New York whom were French citizens. City detectives Eddie Egan sparked the interest of author Robin Moore. The result was and Sonny Grosso would seem 11-foore's best-selling accounLof The major t e I e v i 1 i on an unlikely pair of subjects for the investigation, "The French networks are guillty of gross a Hollywood Movie. Connection." bias in their handling of the Egan, 41, is ruddy.faced. Later, when film producer gested, by the book, it was with the idea of utilizing their in· timate knowledge of the case in the capacity of techn ical advisors. "But they kept telling me," says D'Antoni. "they could also act In the film as well. As undercover police, they . had very lives depending on the c redib ility of their performances." A quick screen test was ar- ranged. and the results proved so satisfactory to D'Antoni and director William Friedkin .that -they cast the pair In featured roles. ·J~al of CatonvlDe Nine" Contemporary drama on stage .at the Orange Coast Col· lege auditorium, Costa Mesa. Frl.-Sat., Nov. 19-20. No :charge. news, concludes Edith Efron blonde, a brash and outgoing Philip D' Antoni first contacted in her new book "The News Brooklyn-born Irishman, while Egan and Grosso in connection Twisters.'' Grosso, a year younger, but with his production of "The often been ~ailed upon to play ----------~ 1 f.tl .. you'll beWJ';f(lll · WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS' Award-winning TV writer more introspective a n d F r e n' c h Connection," sug· ·roles,' sometimes with their "Tbe' Glass Menagerie" and producer Andrew Rooney mature in appearance, is slim.1;=====''==================,I will challenge Miss Efron's dark·haired, dimple-cheeked, : Tennessee Williams drama ~on stage at San Clemente 'Community Theater, 282 Av~ :nlda Cabrillo, San Clemente, :Thurs . .Sat., through Dec. 4 at •8:30 .p.m. Reservations - 49U465. ... Under the Yum Yum Tree'~ Comedy on stage at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, west gate of Orange County Fairgrounds. Costa Mesa, at 8:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat., Nov. 19- Dec. 4. "A1 Yoa Uke It" The Shakespeare: Company of S. T. will present "As you Like It" on stage at Phillips Hall on Santa Ana College Campus, Nov. )0 at 8 p. m. ReservJtlons -547-9561 Ext. 317. -------1 conclusions when they join and an expert at the subtle art William F. Buckley on Firing of persuasion. Line next Sunday at 8 p.m. on A former Marine Corps drill KCET, Channel 28. instructor, Egan was into "law Miss Efron, a staff writer and order" as far back as his for TV Guide, alleges that early school days when he network news coverage "tends seFVed as a staircase monitor . to be strongly biased in favor Grosso. a former po s t a I of Democratic-liberal-left axis employe, joined the police opiniog.''___Durin& the last force following Korean War Presidential campaign, ~e dUty when a friend, intent on says, prime-time n e two r k becoming a cop, brought along news shows actively slanted an extra applicafiOn form. their opinion coverage in favor The team started with ar· of the black militants and restS of at.reel junkies in a against the white middle-<:lus round·t.he-clock war against majority, and actively opposed the Republican candfdate, hard drug offenders (Egan Richard Nixon, in his run for eventually totalled more than the Presidency. 8,000 narcotics arrests, still a Her conclusions are drawn departmental record). They were soon the scourge of the from a twt>-year, foundation-drug underworld, earning the financed study of prime-time nicknime of "The Seven-Up evening news programs on Kids" because those they ar- CBS, ABC and NBC during the rested often wound up with last 60 days ol 1he 1968 ~ ea~y-care active.wear if turtle neck velour~ from gant shirt m•kers L•nlro1"'erio:ard e ll'l•1f1r o:h••9• 7 f•1hio11 i•J•nd, newport c•nler 644·5070 PresidenUaJ race. jail sentences of seven years or more. Controversy surrounds both !'======================~! the issue and the book. Many Finally in 1962, they hit the NIW LOW PllCl11 Sl.00 S... fttn Fri. SI .~ S.-, 1:30 t. 7:00 P.M. M ... ttlN M 6:JG-7:00 ,_ HELD OVERI "RYAN'S DAUGHTER" pin "THE LAWMAN" wk\ l•rt U.Catet' S,.Clal lldl Mcitl- Sohlnlciy I P.M. journalists believe that ob-jackpot with the b i g g e st jective reporting of the news narcotics bust of all time - Is an ideal but impossible the seizure of a record 120 undertaking. But w h e t h e r pound! of pure heroin with an anything short of the ideal estimated street value of constitutes bias is debatable. $32,000,000. The one-hour Firing Line "lt was enough 'junk' to sup. debate, "The News Twisters," pl y every single addict in the will be repeated on Channel 28 United States for an eight· Tuesday, Nov. 23. at 7:30 p.m. month period," recalls Egan. and Thursday Nov. 25, at 12 The seizure of the heroin noon. The ·program w a s cache and the sub.sequent ar- ~.~ -::=1;;;pre;;;;;;VJOii·iiuiisiily;;;;;i8<iihed;;;;;;uiilediiiiOifoiiriiOc;;;;;;tii. ;;;;;;reiisiitiiaiind;;;;;;coiiniiviiict;;;;;;ioiiniioiiliithiie;;;;;;in.·I ~ j-ll 31,~bllt was preempted. divlduals involved, several ~f TONJTE AT 6:00 I 9:15 AND AT 1:00 ONLY • St1v• McQuHn fn Bruce Brown's "ON ANY SUNDAY" Co11ti111i10111 s ••. ' Swnd•v from 2:30 YOUR NEWSPAPERBOY IS A CREDIT MANAGER ,....,.. '" .. ,.. ..... lllwelwH c1 .. ·, Yefll ,..,.""' .. , ... w11 .. , .. ,.. •ff ,..,. .. -....... h,..t .. ,., -'" -'Illy blll for Mlhoery .. .,." ~., .... ht-· DAILY PILOT center Is 11 bnl-fer M~f. H• tnnts .,., t. "1' 111111 eN lie hen t9 ,., ........... ., ........ """" ,. yeti. .ALIO< A-l ·canliii ...... 1'"'1 ,. __ ... 1 .. M ................ ""' a I tlt9 I lttl ., Hell 111011tt. er c..t•lwlr br Hie 10th M tllr, co• N '7J-t048 --.-4 of MT" '914 lty tlte ffd •f tM ftlo11th wh9w they hcrre to ~Opn l'9f the!' bilk. If .,.1'11,poy '°'' 11Mntttlr 11111 eorlr It not •nlr wDI ':41 11.., ,.., carrier • .,,,, IM!t It wlll ,., .... -.. , ... '"''""''• 4.kp, .. ..... ... ._ ..... ~ ...... <# ASSURE PROMPT COURTEOUS--SERVICE DAILY PILOT CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT ..... ALASKA .. BAJA!/. Clneclom• 20 Oranf* 532-3321 I So. Cu1t Pla1a 1 Co1ta Mesa ~2712 UM~'EO: 12 WEEK0AY5--4:-30·7:00·9:15 A~~;fS SAT.-t 2:00·2: I 5·4:l0·7:00·9: 15 SUN.-2: 15·4:)0-7:00·9: I 5 NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ~1111Tt111U. ...... __ _ HNI Wlm THE WIND flll ft:al.'l'IODU)I ...... 0...llGAILE•Moll ... llolmo.o.e.mr..... KOCM stereo103FM -~...-. YlTlll'fLllGR ......... .. __ _ ,.. .. _ A--"WATER BIRDS " .. JjJt .. .._Whll'TlleW~" 0.....,9tlP.M. -1 the sounds of tlieharbor ~~~~7 24 hours· a da~ . ( ' Hild Ovtr "AMERICAN WILOEllNE55" ---- 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 ~The niftiest chase sequence since silent films I~ = --------------------------.. ----' ----------------------- -------THEl'RENCH - CONNECTION~ - --------- -------------2o. Cl•t ... > I•• ,.. .... .. ------- • • ... • , • ulCK TRACY • • TUMILEWEEDS FOR WE ~i:NEFIT OF '(()() POOHAWl<S ~ . . FIND YOURS~LVES A ~IT UNDERSNIJCK AN~~ LESS 1'1AN SATED SNEAK-WISE, we Wit.I. 'THIS Ym'IS SNEAKY WEEK AC11Vl11ES WllH A · · MASS SNeAK-ouT ..1=:=. TOMORROW AT PLAIN JANE • • •· GOPHER6!.~ '!'ROM 3105! '-n.lAT 'GUY l=ORGOTTO t.eAv~ ME . . A 'TJP! 0 • • ACROSS 43 Depleted • gradually l Man's name: 45 Profits Abbr. 47 Conditions 5 Instruments of status . ' .. . I Yesterday'~ Puzz le Solved:· 10 Radar screen 48 Ethiopian titre SljOt 49 Gas ustd ln 14 ''ifhe Tortoise refrigeration and the-" 50 Cloth worn 15 Regard with about neck esleem 53 Eq uali ty of l!i Frog gtnllS va lllt 17 Silv«-whitt 54 Quietly: element: Abbr. Musical ll/19171 18 Fruit used for direction 9 Coin of 35 Had a malcirig jam 58 Self·servict lndont~Ja _stlng!ng 20 Pardon restaurants 10 A s!nglt effect 22 Turkish bl Japanese. Inhalation 39 Nitrog en, ;ov~nor isinglass 11 Melodious bird fa.-one 23 Does a h2 Sorrowfu l word 12 In the matter 40 Nauv1 of gardtnlng bl Sustained of · 2 WOl'ds Spain chore without 13 Bears the 42 Extortion 24 One whop-its yieldl119 cost of 44 Spinning llkt ·i!llP!rllnently 64-ltvesque: l9tlukk and --: 20 Adjust Quebec active 2 words 27 Arranges by separatist 21 Hew Zealand 40 Stlzt and cl1ss t.S Civil wrong lrte hold lt91lly 30 Misfortunes !.6 Sew lijjhtly 25 Strings of 47 Straying 34 Ordinary 67 Barga in beads 49 Exhibitions seamlll 2!. Craftiness 50 Comm111d lo 35 Financial OOWN 27 "Whtn ... Ou a c<1t Institution Wish Upon -Sl L1nguage o! 36 Rlvrr of l Fish ·-" 2 wcrds Span ish ,. .PEANUTS ' I ··a Clillttl' Chlld =-'-=~= MORI QOOD NEWS. 10·4. ly Tom K •• Ryan . cAl'ht!IA MAKl<rfA ~rt. t.P,'TER? I HATES 1" 6'11' UP AFORE SUNRlsE! JUDGE PARKER I TAKE IT TMAT YOU PIPW 'T MEA.12: ~"OM. ERIC LASf lU ()HT, JEEP! • I OOUIT TM,\T HE'LL C,\LL UNTIL SOME TIME nus MORNING, 5.t.M! Seotland 2 Htalthy 28 Impudence: gypsl'ts 37 correct 3iC1l11 tl1y 1nrorm1I 51 F• IWI)' . . ·- ""'"' 0 ''"''"" 29 Toqdon 53 Mal•Y"I boat MISS PEA CU J .. . . ' J U'L AINa ,,.,., GORDO MOON MULUNS ANIMAL CRACKERS ' . -.. I .El/elZIJfllN<!i :t· m'rl:Mtt END5 UI' 1' Mi<£El<:AB~E, Dlst.11'\. 'A.OP ! l'U. NEVEJl. IAEA~ AlfiTHIN6 M>JJ( /16 LON5 AS I LIVE ! ly Harold Le DoUll ly Mel • " Frid.,, N0vtinblt 19, 1971 ' ' • ly Al C41P, . ., - ly Gus· Arrloh, .. By Ferd Johnst11 ly R0qer '°'" WllAT CAI.I I. .bO 1l:> CllAJlGE 1HIS , Piltl'l'e!!:l.l 'f" C/00 'Mlo!!>tlT ~ _'!O_Uf.1-IBEAA~ _ • FAii. f(r SOMefrll~ -~.. . . THE GIRLS "Herbert dM•n't hive to work on Fridays so I thought we'd just go out ind have 1 good tim.." 1 DENNIS THE MENACE r.-r=~'lm -: ( •• • • . ' • • •• . l .. • . ' .. ' • • ' ' . • • l • I pitch • lnd!an 30 Wrongly. 55 A.'tlr'J !• 1---<<---38~Spryi---S--=-Roach;_n!Pr~•;t; :.0;;r--"'56'iG~ra6-;nd'f,mi\'ioi"h~c.'1iro==r==========~--------::-:-:::-:--"""--==========!-+---l-~-4Q A.v&l1abllily Movie pioneer 31 Change over Baby talk t fat lllrchase o Certain clays to flt 57 City on the ·AND TlifN, IRA SAIC> 9Ul.~ euaa 91.1&1. IUU. •• TM!N RA ~ .... ' 41 Card ' 1 "Message 32 Mounta in of Olea WINT ~NE> IUlt. l~'l. JVI\ -·%IA AL.ta tuG aila 9'1~1 IUI•-J----- 42 Small-winged rece ived" U1rllnlqut 59 Tlde · AF11" W~I~, %SA 1 111.llVI If 09t M~ 9U&1. tut.t. IUI, •• " " Insect 8 Eritreaty ;3 Getins 60 .t.scertaln :tJtA •~1. 9U&'& •ut\ XJlA 9'1t-a ~'" --~& l.&A ..,,_,_ 3 I I I PERKINS J:vi;::. r.=:.. J. (t):t-l/•lt l I I ' OM1 Ml, TMfJ!Cf1 %1U!. .JUS'f' A L!TT'LI ,.!!VATI JOICI ! •• ly John Mlln . 'CAH I 1!4VE A OIM6? W~R£ TAKIN' A COUi:CTIG\'l 10 GI~ OJt 1'1WI~ 'WJEIZ A 'l!AY <;ff!' ' : I i I • . -. ' ' - I . I r ,• • . - Fl1AJ, NM ... lt, '1971 ' •. f ' . .A·.· \• t .. ·' ..... ' . . . . . . . ..--.. .. t • ' . ' . ' • • BRAND NEW 1_72 OUSTER • '' . I · · Vl2tl2111'144 .· ONLY ·LESS . EXCISE '"JAX .'REBATE UPON APPROVAL ~E Sl\ll HAV~ A GOOD SEl£tl\Otl' Of 1911 SAllll,lES lEfl AT tEAR-END CLOSE out SAV\tlCS. · .~!!~~~~?..~ .. D,~;;.~·~:,;. GALAX IE FL:?~J!ll!feCoAN 170 PLYMOlJTlt:"' • ____,6&.PLYMOIJTH'..~ •r tf11nn9 • br1k11 . window• VI t VI • t T ·FURY Ill . t • "J orn1tlc, r1dio, hi itor . · • riu o r1n1. Pow1r Steir• V ".'· ~ ' •a.a., ' ' • ••• · tilt whl., l1rwl1u top. t • • 1no p I A I T R DM'R n'•CUDA IVST•ll"I, , ... • ,_,. ''~'"9· whil1woll fou, '. '"" w :odow" St'"' ' ' "' !.'"" od:o, Hooto., · ~ 1!r 1oncl lhonin 9 • !SLL774) R1cl10, H11!1r, Pctwir lr•ktt Po~r St11r1ng, Powtr Ir•~•• I C'!!I ) Spd ·R· ,r · H · . 68 CHEYIOl.ET • · , ' · : lmpolo·Cust.'2 Dr. H.T; 68 CHRYSLER 170 jQYOJA 'V' "tomoH<. AM.fM ""'· ' 300· .<'69 ' VOLKSWAGEN ,h11t1r, pow1r 1tMrl!'f A VI~ 1utorn1tic, ridio, hiitir 4 1p1itd +r1n1111iui~n, AM-FM '""'" w.sw, .;.yi ,.;i, ,i;.. ""'· wh:towoll "'"· '"" SUNDIAL CAMP ~R l!'.lile1. IWEL217) AS tl • ' ' . , >' . . • . ' - • • . ·: :·:WINTER~SPECIALS · · ' ' ' . . . . . ·:. · aRAND NEW 1 7·1':· ",._ , .. -.:· E'L;DORAD O T., .. ,. ·, •· ·•· .. '·:·: .. •: . . , j • ~ '' • L ' ' ' • • ; . ~~=~!~~=:~ .. -'$. , -.V11t11i"tl Witt. 1tovl, 11111(, le• · •ox, llre,11, '''"''of clo11t ·.,oct, 111c. outl1t1, woM' •••· · . •Ii••· ,1;.onos7) . • ~ ""::'iiMEDIAfi DELIVER{ --' FULL PRICE .. . · .:: . 1972 FORD F~ 100 · re;~·t·:::::::;:; . F10ARMl44.4' . NEW · . KING 0' THE ROAD,CA80VIR . \ ' . • Eqpt. yt'ith,1tove, sink; ice~ox, etc~(ii2•s0} . ON A 'llEW '72 PORD'PICKUP .. . CUSTOM STYL~SIDE (F10A1™8-446.4) .. COMPLITl·CAMPIR:PACKAGI· ... $· FULL PRICE . ' . '' '. . .. ~ ~~-~~·· ~2&8 · _ PULJ, ~·ICI -TRAILER, Sleeps 4 ( ~9437) FULL . PRICE • \ -·--'---• ·. • • . ' ' -~~~N°1972 :PI. TO t#2R1ow11f4•s1 . ·. FROM FACTORY . LIST . ~RICE !MMEDllTE DELIVERY • ' 1 "LIKE NEW ·: • --.-:-·~...6::: . ' . I ' I . I , • • I . . -I • OAIL Y PILOT Friday, Nowtmbtr lq, iq71 • Every.one Ha t Something That S9.rneone Else Wants DAILY -PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Con Sell It, ~Fincf'lt, Troae It- With e Wo nt Ad ·-'-The Biggest IYlark~tplace on the Orange Coast-l?ial ·642·5678 for Fast Results Mother·in·Law's Hideaway You'll be delighted when you 11ee this s bedrooms, pool hOme ff':aturing Jonna! din- in&' 1are.a, separa.!t' rumpus room, 3 pDSh bath areas & most important, ~pa.rated livine quar!Prs for Ik-ar Old Mom. 1'Ull pri~ $34.000. AU Terms! 5'f0.85ffi SHERWeeD REAL TY 18964 Brookhu.rst, fo'.V. General Provincial Charm 2 Bdrms .. 1 bath. Steps lo OCt'all on Pt'nin!Ula Pt. Huge frpl.., open beam cell.: comp. furnished. Newly de c oraled &. carpeted. $55.000. lmmed. )>05'elsioo! Call: 673-3663 642·.mJ E\.'tS. associated BROKERS-REAlTO~S 2025 W 6olboo •7l·l66J Gentral CAMEO HIGHLANDS Fabulous view of ocean & bill s. 3 BR ., fam- ily rm .. in prestigious area. Open Sun. 1-5 P.M. 4824 Surrey. $59,500. Bob Yorke -. ~ EASTBLUFF BEST BUY Where can you get 4 bdrms. & family rm. with some view, in the best school area for $48,750? Vacant~& sparkling clean. Carol Tatuin 1528 KEEL -OPEN 1·5 SAT. & SUN. LUSK HARBOR VIEW -see this winner! Popular SAN DP I PER model. 4 BR. 3 ba., ram. rm. Gated er'ltry. Picturesque gardens. $73,500. Fee. Belle Partch WOWI WHAT A LOCATION Very nifty, custom home. Located between Harbor & Linda Isle. Only $69,750. OPEN SAT. & SUN. AFTERNOC)N. 122 HARBOR ISLAND RD. Jim Muller DECORATOR'S DELIGHT OPEN HOUSE 1707 CANDLESTICK LANE, BAYCREST, SUN. 12-5. Ivan Wells. $69.750. Can buY°"this attractive 4 bdrm., family & dining rms. -2'12 baths. Mary Lou Marion OPEN SAT. & SUN. I TO S P.M . 1005 BONNIE DOONE, IRVINE TERRACE . Fabulous bay view. 3 or 4 Qdrms., large den. 3 full baths, 3-car garage. Beautiful condition. $92,500. Bud Au stin LIDO ISLE -$67,500 New listing! Sparkling, newly dee. 3 BR., F.R. home with remodeled kitch. 40' Lot,' huge South patio. Paneled F.R. See it! Charlene .Whyte . ENJOY LIVING IN THIS AREA Large corner lot, family home with 5 bd- rms.: beautifully landscaped patio with 20 x40 pool & jacuzzi. Se parate children's play yard. $89.500 . Kathryn Raulston BAYSHORES -. GOOD BUYS Bayfront - 6 bdrm., 63' front. .... $149,500 3 Bdrm. -reduced -or offer ...... $47 ,500 3 Bdrm. on Bayshore Dr ........... $59,500 Private area. 2 Beaches. M. Harvey 1-ACRE SPANISH ESTATE 3500' Custom hacienda with pool , horses & privacy. Across from Meadowlark C. C. Owner will finance or trade for land Reno. $130,000. Bill Comstock DRIVE BY THESE TWO S04 FERNLEAF;-CdM. 3 BR., den , 2 ba's. Recently remodeled & redecor. $49.500 1941 COMMODORE, Ba ycrest. 5 BR ., lam. rm., din. rm., 2-frplcs. $59,950. M. C. Buie NO. LAGUNA OCEANFRONT Offers everything! Dramatic white waler & light views. Launch boat on white, sandy beach. 4 Yrs. old. 3 Bdrm. $195,000. George Grupe S BR. -DOVER SHORES -5 BA. 143 Ft. on lhe water with "U" type slip & all amenities of family executive li ving. May I send you a brochure? Asking $185,000. Al Fink SO. LAGUNA VIEW LOT Forever view on large, level buUdil)g site. ~Wj]J trade for small home in Cor_ona del f\1a L or Newport. $35,000. Harriett Davies EXCELLENT FLOOR Pl AN 2 Sty. 3 BR., 21h ba. + lge . lam. rm. w/ fireplace & wet bar; elega·nt townhouse. superb location -$48,950. "Chuck'' Lewis BAY & OCEAN VIEW Ima~inaLive ~esign . Three bdrms., 1.arge family rm. with wet bar -sunken living room. Motivated seller. Eileen Hudson 19 INCOME UNITS With excellent occupancy record. In heart -of-.Westminster-.--P-hone for-complete details '2()5,000. Harry Frederick LUSK HARBOR VIEW _First time offered. 4 BR. home -sep. fam· ily rm. w/frplc. & wet bar. Quiet street. $71,500 -lncludes the land. , Cathryn Tennill~ . .. POOL -CLUBHOUSE -REC REATION Area are all 'located close to this model perfect 3 bdrm., 2 bath home. Garden patio & kitchen. Cozy fireplace. Karastan cpt. Must see. OnJy $47,900. La Vera Burns • --Coldwell,Banker ~ 133-0700 550 NEWPORT CE NTER DR .. N.B. MACNAB -IRVINE A BAY VIEW ot.fettd by both of these cus- tom-built trl-hvri hornet. 4 or S bedl'OODMI, fonnal D..R & FR, giant living rooms FINER HOMES CHARMING HARBO R VI EW HOMES On beautiful Port Bristol Place. UNIClU f li()~[S cozy 2 BR plus den home. Spanish fl••I E•l•te,&?S-6000 tile entry. You OY.'n the land. Close to shopping. Please call 644-6200. Sunny Pool· EXCITING BAY & • . Dover Shores OCEAN VIEWS . ~~:us " bed~nis. comty rmmaculate one story, 3 BR home. cus~ ~ :~m~ r:;:n~ Fabulous near new k.it~hen. Pi~· aide View from upstairs turesque garden - spacious patio · · and deck. $55,000-Open Sat. & Sun. A-Frame Beacherino 12·5 p.m. 1301 Kings Road, New· Luxury at the beach. Sha~ port lleights. carpets heavy beams, J bedroorO.s. Use (lf clubhouse. BEACON BAY . JX>OI &. tennis <:ourt. $39,000. Beach and •nn1s Courts. Bay & Mountain View. 4 BR -air condi· UNl"Uf li()M(S tioned. Sharp and ready to move fl~ 67s.6ooo 1n. A beautiful . secluded garden - • 2~:~~~~:~,t ttwv. in a special Beach Community. Call Co1ori. Dal !Qr, Callr. 642·8235. """"'""'""'""'""'""'"I CUSTOM C ONSTR UC Tl ON 60 ' BAYFRONT with-badMie.y view. Choose Pier & Float for over 50' boat. Im· cartJet! and other ex1ras. macu)ate -·just.c-edecorated. Mas-Ii UNITS ter suite w/rireplace, sparkling and room for 10 ID!)re! Ex- pool. ·4 BR's, 3'l'.i: baths. Open Sat. cellent income on Eastside & Sun. Come see 507 Bayside Costa Mesa. Presently four Drive Newport Beach -OR 1-bedrooms end two 2-bed-pbon~ Tom Turner 642-8235. rooms . Tremendous buy at ~.SCKI. - NEWPORT HEIGHTS . ABSOLUTELY NO Owner must. sell fast.!! Unigue old· money down, Veterans give er home with partial VIEW of )'OUr wife a fabu!ous Christ- ocean. 30xl6 LR has lots of ~lass. maspresent.Sellermaypay Must see 'to appreciate. Call Laszlo all. buyer's C06ts on the J Sharkany 644-6200. bedroom, raml.l.y room, JX>OI home on a quiet cul-de-sac. CHRISTMAS IN EASTBLUFF! Open House Sunday at-1515 Enjoy the 1-lolidays in your very Davis Place. Costa Mesa.- own spacious 4 BR, 2 bath, panelled ---::--::"-::"':'--- family room borne. Eastbluff's larg- est & most popular I ·story, priced like a January sale at $47,500. Own· er will vacate by Christmas! Open Sunday, noon 'til dusk at 2826 Ca- talpa St., N.B. Call Jack Howell 644-6200. Pay Less Than-Rent Marble halls, beautiful like new This channJng 3 bedroom, 2 custom home. Formal DR -5 BR b.ih Costa M""' homo ""' _ 4 11. baths. Your own indoor POOL & VIEW-DOVER SHORES "SPANISH FIXERS" been recently paintw>d inside health room w/pool -sa una & sun Rolling Hills & Upper Bay Vi~w. ~ out. A iltl'ge covl'rcd pa. lamps. Air condjtioned. A fee lot Di stinctive custom home. 4 BR, Oo accents the backyard · I · f ·1 & f al d . · / BEACH $25 500 and 8 quaint counll'r bar in exc us1ve Dover Shores area. am1 Y arm ming room sep--, arate breakfast room. Luxurious and ~diding view doors for 9 NEW IVAN WELLS shag carpeting. Dble. drapes JUST LISfED! Need some ~~d:i~~~ t: t~~~k%:~'. CGUSTOdMbHOMES! throughout. 2 fireplaces. \Vet bar.' el~ ~ase. 3 Bedrms .. 2 fort & t'njoyabte Jiving. All roun rokcn for 9 n~w IVA N Lovel y patio surrounding large ~a. F am1ly ~· Beam ce1l· this a nd a VA Loan of 7'i~ WELLS custom homes in Dover heated Pool. Appt. only. Call Wal ter lngs. Adobe tile roof. Only with a total payment or Shores! Choose your colors & tailor Ki 644_6200 2 yrs. old. Near the beach. about $200 per month which to your desires! For details visit the ng. • low dn. Only $25,500. Bel· ·you can assume spells model at 2006 Galaxy Drive, New-DON'T BUY ter hurry-Ca.II <n4J 962·5585 GREAT. Call 646-TITI HUR-port Beach. Jn Harbor Vie\v Homes until you ' RY! DESIGNER'S CHOICE see this dynamic "Portofino" mod-el. Only $57,500 fee. I ORIS! [ Ol\O\ Let your interior designer custom-" Rflt,TOR~ ize an elegant Bayfront to your BAYFRONt-2 LOTS taste. }"'our dramatic Bayfront Balboa Peninsula. Sandy Beach -19131 Brook1iunt Ave. H?mes are rtearing completion, Live in large old homey house -Huntington Beach PENDING minutes from ·the Harbor Entrance. or demolish it later & build two,1 --====='-- FORECLOSURE 45' sli ps, you ·own the land. ALSO new houses w/2 slips. Please call Exc:eptional Ownt>r y,ri][ not n,>fuse any !lOxlOO split level lots_ available Gloden Fay for appt. to see this un· Neighborhood?? reasonahlt" orftt on rhis from. $121 ,000. Open DAIJ..Y -1641 usual property. Mesa Yer·de PRIME MESA VERDE Bayside Dr., Corona del Mar. home. J la1-g'.' ~>drooms, 2 THE HOME W/THE MOST SPECTACULAR VIEW-HOME --ExrepUonat home • ~ner_ bar/ls, nlJ built-ins and 1700 E II . . ff 4 I , O took special pride in this 4 sq. ft. of luxurious living xce ~nt construction, finest decor, So much to~ er. arge BR s. .ut-bdr or 3 + de11 Pacesetter area. 2 huge tin·place9, new kitchen, new lovely draperies. door entertainment area w/Swed1sb and kept tt 111 tip-t0p shape. large Irregular lot, S('parate papers. _fixtures & paints. 3 BR. 2 fireplace. Cascading waterfalls -Fresh paint Inside end out b th N d , -All electric B/l kitchen ! ~rvic.e porch a'."1 t'O~~rry a . . ice yar , at owners .c~st,.> sunken tile pool · -underground N~ patio • Lam-living size kitc~tcn. Aski.ng ~x.,~. Open ~at. & Sun. 1100 Cambr1age, -wine cellar Call Lois rgan for appt room "''illr!ireplaee plus a>x or SUbm1t ·Submit -Submit. Westcliff. ' · 40 'ft. poot made this Ol'Je' to Cal! rH:>-8424 IOpe11 Eve~.) 644·6200. HARBOR ,VIEW GEM see before you decide and \outh ~ (~ oast $27,750 T t f 11 d d 3 B ,<I.EASE OPTION o"IY l4Q,:;oo. 100% Um"<· as e u y ecorate R jewel. ing availablt'l. Call 673.8550. Cozy fireplace, formal dining, large Spanish modern 2·slory. 5 BR, 3 FR. Conveniently located near park bath. Formal dining. Quiet area. and pool. $47,800. Immediate occupancy. 644-6200. ro ·1H£REAL '~ESTATERS . . LINDA ISLE 1001 HAMPSHIRE LANE B ·Id Cl Prestige Island living. Exquisitely Open Sat. & Sun. Choice street In 0 U1 14 e~ ose-out 6°/o LOAN AT decorated 4 BR, 41;2 hath, FR, J)R . , n y remain. 3 and 4 bdrm . $~71 A MONTH home. 24 hr. guard . Private tennis tof)'oa.rea & one-of-a·k1n d home. Dra· Spanish Style homes with~ 1nct.ud1.ng 1axes. lnsuranre. courts. beach & recreation center, matic high ceiling; a flair for the balhs. No down GI buyers princ.rplC" & inr('rest~ 4 spac· plus large boat slip. $169,500. Call unusual Owner/buiider leaving and min. down FHA. Pr:i~ !oos bMlrooms, .2 ~1h.s. lam· Dave Cook. 642.8235. . $92 f I d from $30.650. Prk-e ineludt'll 1ly room, bu1ll-1n <lrea1n area -~nxJous. ,500, ee an · landscape. sprinklel'l! and kicchen. Deitghtlul covl'rt'(I BAYCREST OWNER MUST SELL! buyer chooses color on car- patio. Waler sortencr. ~.1any O\vn with pride 4 BR. FR, DR. . pets'? Oose to So. Coast :,rr~O.f{~r all convJ!111cnc· Beautiful pool. separate fenced Commutes daily to San Diego and Plaza and new schools. Mo-. TA. RB Ell pla~ area for children and pets. Low must sacrifice his lovely four .bed: del~E_pen. Cail maintenance landscaping. Only room home in Westcliff. Now Walker & Lee ~. $77,500. Call Dave Cook 642-8235. $57,900. .:;,;i.'"1 Harbor. Costa ?.11'5~ Realtors Home And lnc:ome If your looking fOl' a lal'J:'<' 3 BR-ho1ne Jlhls . ch11rn1i11~ t1ludio flPI owr rf'ar j?':trai::r (·alt now. Spacious Ii\.' rmn1 ofirplc -lkam ceiling. Bh Jn rice kit, dishwasher -2 ba1hs • 111111 privat(' rm 110 . f'Oll\'f'llirnt Cdi\1 locet1on. Only $6.1500. Call 673-8550. MACNAB. IRVINE mo Ha-Blvd. at Ad•ms R lty c ,.~ ... ! °""" 'ti! 9 PM ea ompany Just Ridic:ulous 644-6200 llARBOR VIEW CENTER 642-8235 DOVER DRIVE 1644 Mac ARTHUR BOULEVARD 901 Gener•I 295.'i Harbor. Co!tl• M'l'M I' ltOOd w11.nt 11d 11 • good lnV1"Jtment NEWPORT BEACH • * * General * * * * TAYLOR CO. * •. * FOR A VERY SPECIAL FAMILY I A rare find! S Spacious bedr~ms, fami)y room & 4 baths in this charming \Vestchil home. Beautiful 20'x40! pool + Jacuzzi. Im· maculate. Immediate possession ... $79,900. CORONA DEL MAR -$95,000 1 Block to ocean. Plenty of land -aCtually 3 lull lots. Also an attcactive 2 bedroom,, 2 bath quality · home + guest apt. Centcauy located ii1 this picturesque city. 304 NARCISSUS OPEN SA'.J'/SUN 1-5 EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE A Great Opportunity! Architect owners of these 2 brand NEW waterfront homes will consider in exchange: your smaller home, land, apartment bldgs., or Trust Deeds! Or \vill lease/option. Each one has 4 BR., FR., formal DR. & study. 1-ligh ceilings, spacious rms. & l1.M5ury carpeting. You will love the open plan. Huge price reduction $143,500 ea. ... 6 & 8 LINDA ISLE OPEN SAT /SUN 1·5 DOVER SHORES -$83,500 Immediate occupancy! Prof~ssional decor in this View home with 3 bdrrrl.s ., fam. rm. & study. Luxury carpeting & draperies. Rm. for boat. Lush landsc. Move in for Holidays. 2042 GALAXY OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5 LINDA ISLE -$145,000 Perso~al ity personified .in th_is delightfu~ 5 bedroom home on prestige Unda Isle. Fine appointments thruout. Panelled fam. rm. w/ wet bar, decorator wall paper. Plumbed for pool. 2 patios. Pier & slip. NEWPORT BEACH -$42,500 Custom features in two story 4 BR. & fam· ily room home. Ideal kitchen. Lovely cptng. & dcapes. Space for pool. By Appl. DOVER SHORES -$105,000 Bright & shining! NEW dream home sur· rounded by much higher priced homes. 4 Bdrms., music rm., study & formal DR. Ora· matic 2 story LR. Island kitchen. 3 Garages. 410 MORNING STAR OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 EASTS I DE COSTA ME SA - $39 ,500 Sharp 3 bedrm. home w/formal dining rm. Loyely yd. w/fruit trees. Nr. Westcliff shops. 2015-ALISO-OP-EN SAT/SUN 1-5 CORONA DEL MAR INCOME ~ $63,000. Live in one, rent the oUter. Nice 2 BR. frorit l unit w/fireplace and Brand new 3 BR., 2 bath rear unit. Near shops. Good inc. 1 --~ -- DOVER SHORES WATERFRONT! $175,000 .. Home for family who needs pier/slip & 5 or 6 bedrooms. Lge. terrace for dining or sun· n ing around the pool. Drai:iatic Courtyd. NEWPORT BEACH BEAUTY -$64,500 If you are looking for the unusual, call us to see this custom built home on lovely corner site. Spac. 3 BR .. DR. & huge recreation rm. Cedar paneling. Spanish tile entry. DOVER SHORES -$87,500 Rustic 2 story quality built home i'n prestige location. 4 large BR.. FR. & formal DR. 3;, Baths. Lge., beautifully landsc. yd. CHOICE WATERFRONT LOTS Dover Shores -$49;500 L in d a ! s I e -$69,500 • $75,000 • $85,000 - $100,000. • .. '• ' ' , CAILV PILOT ' #j -I~_ ..... I~ I _ .... l~I -.... I~ J --.. l~J . Oener•I General •, i SPEND CHRISTMAS Barrell R ea/Lg pr11611nl6 A .BAYFRONT .FOR CHRISTMAS THE BLUFFS, Atlr. 3 Bdrm., 2\0 bath home. Maintain only yo ur own patio ! Association does the rest. . . . . . .. . . . . . , : .... $45,000. Watch Ibo boat parade from your 42' EN- CLOSED VERANDA on the peninsula. 5 bed- room home with 67' frontage. - by your awn tittplace1 In this dellghtfU.I 4 bedtwtf\ home In dkri~ WEST'CLIFF'I area. Panelled family room It large llv!"C' room (both with til"P]>!acn) open to :ne.t POOL &t"l!a. School!ii &: m&· Jar 1hopplng close by. Soft water ditp., a4to rarap door plwi outdoor llgh~. ' ~fany more e~s. Ex:clua· ivdy ours and priced to Mt.I at only $66,500, C A L 1. 675-4930. Open E~nings 'til 9 P.M. CdM DUPLEX. Like new 3 Bd rm., 3 bath - 2 bdrm., 2 baths -walk or bicycle to beach in a matter of minutes. Best buy South of Hwy .................... , ......... $74,500, NEAR OCEAN BLVD. Deluxe duplex; view baths. Family nn. & frplc. each unit. of water. 4 Bdrms., 3 baths, 2 bdrm:t:-, 2 $134,900 CALL 675-.3000 AN·TIIME . BAY & BE ACl-J REALTY . II"'"" fMI ~&<I C$ aU• I •C< "' Dally Pilot Classified General General keep ttik lloHy dlrMtMy wltti , .. this ........ - yo• 90 hoine0h1111tl119. All the locotlon ll1tff belo• ore dnc:rllted lo ,....,_, '-'-11 by ..,_rth ........ where lo todcrr'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS, Potr.n 1howl11t opeti ho111e1 for sale or to rpt or• 1ir9..t to f/1t 111cli b1for-tlo• 111 rill• colum1 HCh f rld1ty ••ti Scrt11rdcy. HOUSES FOR SALE f (2 Bedroom) 304,..Narcissus, Corona de! fl.tar 644-4910 $95,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (2 Br & F1mily Rm or Den) 122 Harbor Island Rd ., Newport Beach 833-0700; 644·2430 (Sat & Sun afternoon) (3 Bedroom) , 20711 Goshawk Lane, Huntington Beach 835-4.422 $24,000 (Sun 1-5) 320 Marigold, Corona del l'lfar 673·6510 (Sa! & Sun) 1301 Kin gs Rd (Clif!haven) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 17682 Ash Tree Lane, Irvine 833-0700 $34,500 (Sun 1-5) 2042 Galaxy, Newport Beach 6444910 $85,000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2015 Aliso. Costa Mesa 644-4910 $39,500 (Sal & Sun 1-5) (3 Br & Family Rm or Den) 4824 Surrey (Cameo HldsJ CdM 833-0700· 644-2430 (Sun 1-5) 1528 Keel, '(Harbor View) CdM 833-0700· 644-2430 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 18712 Sagihaw (Turtle Rock) Irvine 675-2723 (Fri, Sat, Sun 1-5) * 1363 Galaxy Dr (Dover Shores) NB YOO'R BOAT & YOU With a Pier & FI041t tool RIGHT ON the cbanneL 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, built-in kitchen, FIREPLACE, carpeting & drapes. FLOAT IN al .............. ,72,000. UVE IN· THE .LAP ' OF LU.XURY, In "Posh" Irvine ATRIUM TYPE ENTRY, C)larrning opened, spacious living room with fireplace & VIEW. 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, carpets &: drapes and all the built-ins. ONLY 2 years old. .. ' .. ""."' ,., '",""'"" ' .. $59,500, • "BEAUTY AND THE BEST' On Linda Isle OEN with wet bar, formal dining room, 5 bedrooms, 4'h baths, 3 FIREPLACES, 2 PATIOS with built-in gas grill. Custom drapes & fine quality Carpeting PLUS a SO ft. dock, Best buy at ........... ".•$167,000. ~ HERE IS A REAL FIND NHd It? LARGE FAMILY, 2 story, 4 bedrooms\ 2'h baths, kitchen built-Ins, BRICK F RE- PLACE, carpets & drapes & only 1 block to the OCEAN ..................... $36,400. WORDS CANNOT D!SCRIBE This Beauty PANORAMIC VIEW OF NEWPORT HAR· BOR. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, SPANISH !ire- place. kitchen with built-ins. CUSTOf\i dec- orated carpets &. drapes. BUILT-IN WINE CELLAR & WET BAR. Entertain under the stars. BEAUTIFUL PATIO, AUTO TIME LIGHTS. For the discriminating buyer. ' ' . ' . ' ' ' . ' . ' ' . " ' ' ' ' . " . ' ' ' ' ' '$125,000. REALTORS 644-7270 Or Watch the boats turn in !ront o! your charm- ing OLD ENGLISH HQME with 52' front- age -'• Or Easily ENTERTAIN 200 FRIENDS as the parade passes. lovely Linda Js1e -_ Or Watch the boals on both sides of the channel from LIDO 1,SLE - Or Have a TENT PARTY on a baylront lot 73' x 260'! . Contact Bill Bents for information on these . and other spectacular waterfrt>nts. BALBOA PENINSULA NEW. -Unique home with studio apart-- ment. 200 % depreciation possible for first user. 1217 W. Boy Ave., N.B. Open Sat. & Sun. 1-5 PLEASE AX ME UP BALBOA PENINSULA 3 bedroom. 2 bath on 2 full lots, available at close lo lot price. 1521 E. OcHn Blvd. Open Sot. & Sun. 1-5 PRICE LEADER FOR CLiFFHAVEN 3 BEDROOMS, 2'h BATHS -$33,500. with extra large master bedrooms. This horn~ has ~reat potential in an area of more ex- pensive homes. Added features: Dark room, Dog run & storage area for boat or trailer. 111 C1iff Dr., N.8. Open Sundey 1-S CORNER LOCATION CONVENIENT TO TOWN & SCHOOLS. 3 bedrooms, built-ins, carpeting, nice p_Jtio & yard. · - 1901 Tustin Ave., · Open Sund•y 1-5 DUPLEX IT'S llEW & DIFFERENT. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths each. Steps to ocean !root. Carpets, . built-ins, fireplace in each unit. Closed gar- ra ng e Vil·sta age plus additional parking, ,72,500, Office Open S•turdays & Sund•y1 l PETE BARRETI REALTY Formerly LaBorde Real Estate J 160$ Wootc!lff Dr., N.I . 220 E. Sovont"nth St., COSTA MESA t.... 642•5200 646.0555--549-1910 Evonlnv• Call 642.MS3 or 646-5226 General 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY 1"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!co~R~O~N~A~D~E~L~MA!!!!!!!R~,~C~A~L~IF~.!!!!!!!!!!~l--G~o~M~-r~•~l~;;;;;;;;;;~-;~G~.~M:r~•~l::::::-;;;-;;;:ll;~if::~~~~;r.f!~B-R0-A-0-M-00-R~-I'! .,-ITS ASSUMABLE General General .Li !). " Anyone can 1ak~ over ~'fc . WITH VIEW! • / GI loan · $185. monthly ln-New listing _ scarce s BR., tnda ~ I! eludes t~e11 &. lnsuran~. SmJth built hor;ne. Lge. llv-BA YSIDE DRIVE WATERFRO,NTS PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Aloo off•nng new F11A • Ing rm., dining rm ...... .,, VA !emu on thl1 ranch a:tyl & harl>or v1 Reali ticall OCEAN & BAY VIEW 3 bedroom &. f11mlly room . f!W. 8 Y From 122 ft. lot, is the settinl! for this beau-SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT borne at only. $J:i,500. Fea· pnccd at ST2,000. tiful 4 bdrm .. 4 bath home with its own pier 2 Lindi Isle Drive -Open Sund1y = ~~=!Qu~~~,~~ CORBIN- & slip, $250,000. ~ Lovely, new 5 BR, 4'h Ba. home w/water-""'°"' Jiu Cail LINDA & HARBOR ISLAND VIEW front liv. Tm. & din. rm. Oak paneled family ,:"ri,! " <c;':, Ev«) MARTIN From this lovely 4 bdrm., 4 bath home. On rm. -w/frplc. Master BR. w/sitting area & REALTORS 644-7662 ~::1 CORONA DEL MAR I Room for another un i( on this level R-2 lot So. ol Hwy. wifh a lovdy 3 Bed: room 1 ~ bath in front. Own- er wilt carry '1xl TO. OWNER ·MOVEl> 111"!. DOWN . $42,500 Luge 4 bedroom. 3 bath home IJUITOUnded by beauti· tuC homes. Near ~ plus Id.rye hack yard 'Nlth heat- ed pool. O.W.C. 2nd TD.:__ 1860 Newport mvd., C.M. Call 646-3928 Eves. lM6-4067 Newport Heil)hts Older 3 Bdrm home in "BET- TER nIAN NEW" oondltlon • , .new plumbing, electri- cal, kitch & bath remodel- ed, Mlf carpeting, draper- ies I< llght fixtures. Vacant &: ready to see anytime. Drive by S39 San Bttnar- dino CoU 15th St.) Newport •• falrvlt'# 646-Hll (•nytlm•) NEW LISTING l\lesa Verde Pacesetter. 2 story, 4 bedroom, family roorn, aepa.ra1e dining room. Owner lransferred. $4.3,9;.o. OWNER ANXIOUS Will conr.kle.r all (lffenr tor this 2300+ sq ft home In. eluding 3 br, 2 be., den, bon· us !am rm .\_ 11creened patio room. Open Sunday 1-5. 11~ Boise, Costa Mesa. ROY J. WARD Co. REALTORS 1649 \VESTCLIFT OR. N'ewpon Beach 646-0228 THIS IS IT! 642-8235 $125,000 (Sat & Sun) 1100 Cambridge (Westcl ilf) NB 642·8235 $64,500 (Sat & Sun) a 59' lot, with pier & float. Custom drap-fireplace. Bay & Mt views. " .. " .. $179,500 ,~HWTAGll eries & paneling. $139,500. Just Completed --~ llAL IRAll For complete inform•tion 5 BR., 4 ba. home w/50 ft. dock. Marble mstr. On All Homes & Lots, Ple•s• Cell: ba .• crystal chandeliers. Fine carp., drapes Location Makes 4 roomy bedrooms and fam. ily room, large corner lot, room for boat. Neil-parka a n d £hops. VA, ¥HA $25,950 TERMS. $'8,!f..O. NO D.OWN • COATS 312 Morning Canyon Dr. (Shorechffs) Cd"l'lf 673-8550 $98.500 /Sat & Sun 1·51 962 Sand castl"e. (Harbor Vie\v Hills) Cdl\t 673-8550 $66,000 (Sal & Sun 1·5) BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR lsl1nders Bldg. 1t Linda Isle 341 B•ysido Dr., Sult• 1, N.B. 675-6161 (4 Bedroom) 2244 Vista Huerta (The Bluffs) NB GeMral Genera• 644-1656 $35.400 !Sal & Sun 1-5) 11 ----~--,--, . _ {4 Br & Family Rm or Den Mesa Verde Golf Course Fantastic View 1707 candlestick Ln (BaycrestJ NB PRESTIGE LOCATION 833-0700. 644·2430 (Sun 12-5) 1005 Bonnie-Doane (Irvine Terr) Cd"l'lf This extra clean home is located on one of 833·0700: 644·2430 {Sat & Sun ~·5) a kind lot featuring a fantastic panoramic 17892 Cedar Tree ~niversity .Park) Irvrne view that just won't quit. Super neat yard 833·0318 (Sat & Sun 1-5) designed for low maintenance surroun$ the 21902 vacation Ln, Huntington Beach model for gracious living. 5 plush bedrooms, 962·1373 $32,950 . {Sa t 12·5) formal dining, sunken family room, huge liv- 1001 Hampshire Ln. (\Vestcl1(f) NB ing room with high open beam ceilings over- & "'allpaper. Bit-in vacuum, dumb-waiter & The Price more. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .......... $285,000. 77 Lind• Isle Drive Twice As Nice! Beautifully decorated 5 BR., 5 ba. home on The Bel-Ail't' al Orange Coun- lr BR b il & l I tey. Near the golf couI'M!. lagoon. Huge ms . . w/ earn ce . rp · floor 10 ceiling fit"l!placto. L~e. liv .. rm. & family rm. Formal din. rm. Country kitchen wit.ti bullt- P1er &. shp .................. · ....... $230,000. ins. '1'htte bedrooms. Fully 92 Linda Isle Drive grown tl"ees. F'\Jll price. • • Beaut. 5 BR. 4 ba. home w/!onnal din. rm. SJl,500. CaU 546.2313· & famil y rm: 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway. Built-in gun cabinet & bookshelves. $155,000. 0 THf. RI.AL ·'."'.. ESTATERS "'. ''I ''•' low dOwn ntA or assume &. apr 5"'% G.l. loan now on . WALLA~! property &: your momh ly REAL TORS paymen ts will be like rent. Open Evenings Lovely home In "Mint" con-e 962-44$.4 • dltion inside le out. 3 bed-I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I rooms. all electric built-In BAYSHORE·S kitchen. Carpets, dra~ &: VIEW & POOL ptttty shutters. Den, large patio. Owner leavin& area! 540-1720 TARBELL Waterfront cust. home, 4 Oft 5 bdrn1s. View lrom most rooms. 81 Ft. lot, spacious yard. Red. to $280.~. Bill Grundy, Realtor 106 Lind• Isle Drive Custom Sin,le story 3 Bdrm., 3 bath water- front with pier and slip. Large master bdrm. with sauna. Dining, kitchen & living room 29-:J5 Harbor, COl'lta fl.1~ S.11 Bayside, NB 675-6161 POOL!! OFF DON'T MISS THIS OWNER ANXIOUS SEASON STEAL!f Near new tour bedroorn In \Vil! consider all often, have water view. 52' lot .......... $135,000. 642-8235 /Sat & Sun) looks golf course and miles and miles ol ***507 Bayside Dr, Newport Beach sparkling lights. Truly a -majestic home. 642·8235 (Sat & Sun) Priced at a e:iveaway S79.500. -It will not A reel bargain, 16 x 40 ff. roo<f !.amily tract. At-2300+ sq ft home. 3 BR, 2 pool, easy care decking. 4 tractive poor plan wllh Ba. den, .bonus lam rm & oven;l2ed btdrooms fam!Jy large carpeted family room. sc:md patio. WaterfrOnt Lots _.._ -room, brlde'1 kltc~n. cu.s-A STEAL . . . CALL -SEE ANYTIME 2826 Catalpa (Eastblulf) NB last long. QIU for appointment 545-8424. No. 76: 3 Car garage. Faces South .. '801000. tom drapn & carpril. At S29 500 ROY J. \VARD RLTRS. No. 56: North Lagoon exposure ...... $80,000. '30,000 and all term~. CAPISTRANO. VAU.EY 646-0228 644-8745 $47,500 (Sunday) (Open Eves.) 1715 Port Stirling,. Newport Beach SOUTH COAST REAL ESTATE 403 Baysiae, 70 ft. sandy beach. '' '. $+3,950. Walker & Lee REALTY MESA VERDE 31501 Camino Capi.ttrano You better see th~ nice 3 673.8550 (Sat & Sun 12:3().5) ~-nor.I 410 Morning Star, -Ne,vport Beach 11:~.::•n::;•:;.r.::•1:...-=---- 644-4910 $105.000 !Sat & Sun 1·5l Everythin9 You ------- **8 Linda Isle Drive (Linda lsle) NB Ev-Wanted DO YOU EARN 6444910 $143,500 ,1~at & sun 1·5J •• $820 A MONTH? 1436 Mariners Dr (Westen!!) NB < B«l<oom,, 3 ""'"" formol For Complete Information On All HomH & Lots, Plea" Cell: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boysldo Dr., Suite 1, N.B. · '75-6161 Gener el 645-5740 $43,000 (Sat & . Sun_1_0-_1_) -Hi-w·'.",' .. "·~· ,,r ... an1ily room, CUI-rr so • -1---11--11.i---.,.....,....-..= " • """' .. ,-... ....,....i---c:fHflOA¥---·f-------i..-..... """'-= •-r omt y m or en , "''"""' view o1 u.....,. COLLEGE PARK CAN'T FIND 938 Bellis (Easliblul!) N.B " N.._Boy•rdEutBlutt. 4 Bed-2 Bath 4·BEDROOM *WILL BU!LD yoUr drea> .. 644.7662 (Sat & ;:':!Un 12-4) Call 646·11Tt for an appo\n1· home. Have statt for mm- 2507 Windover (Broadmoor) CdM ment to see at your con· No down to wterans, Beaut!· PLUS plete home pt!liCkap, , 644-~662 (Sun 1·4) venif'~. ful \\'cil cared for ·home. ' -r--~ lly •--•·-•--" Family room added to ttlls (H V fl s) NB "'" .,,...,.,na ..... ...,..,, Y""· Put ......... p:mftdence in our 621 Port Barmouth · · ome Huge bedroom1• Include. lowly dean sharp -hornf'. ,,...._ 644·7662 (Sun 124) ~ A drapes. fJectric Gold shag carpell, 2W.4 Hv-49 Ytvt or quality cuatom *2006 Galaxy Dr (Dover Shores) NB . garage door opener. OwM:n 1111 room w/firepla~. din-home ·building. 646-1550 . (Daily) nttd fa.st we at only $25,900. 1nr room. Buiftln applianc- S (D Shores) NB JI D1aJ n . Walking dista.n~ to Se't example o1 pt'Ol!uct at **.afill Evening tar over (S 1 & Sun) FHA •VA TERMS WT)', 6's.o303 ,_,.,. '"' to o11 aohool1. 2006 Galaxy, Dover Shon•. 642-8235 a Sunkoo ""'"" MOm, all ,,.,.,. Only $32,900. Call now . Ivan Wells & Sons CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE trk buil8JLJ<llcben. bi<><il 64<!-1111. IORI \I I Ol\O\ vtall, ht-11\•y 1hakt roof k (2 Bedroom) t'efllent drl\'e 11.tt-just 90me 12 wE!stcliff Villa (Weslcliff & Dover) r..18 of 'the quality rcatu~ (If ii , A t l I N Tl JE: Rl:AL 1{ [;c;T/\TI 'P ; 644-7662 (Sat & Sun 12-4) th~ spar1dinit 3 bedroom, family room hOme. 01/crini --Ta~UUiNiffilTFlSi--j.;;;;;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiii HOME & INCOME anou•·.'"'"' ,, rn.500. c.t1 1o F.11ttsldt Costa fl.leM, irtat 13 Br&. 2 Br) 540-1151 (Open Eves! -rental area. Seven 3-bed· **312 Grand Canal, llalboa lsland ""'"" ond ,.,.. ~bod-Mesa de1 'Mar 4 BEDROOMS (Sat & Sun l 5) 1~·r::·1 rooms. AJt 1cparate-l!trlti. 675-3331 ' -with lo<> of '"""'· Sbow1 WATERFR ONT LOTS FOR SALE • -• f&nlH llc mum with In-H..,.. Is yoUr .,__ to l'!Ol'T\f of tl,400 per mo. SUb-purehue this nkeJy l•nd· **1641 Bayside Dr (Yachtsman's WANT 10 bur 4 BR tw:Jme: mlt on down or trade to -acai>td, \\1!11 kept family Cove) CdP..t Any oond/Uon (IJ' heh.ind w lk . & L home. Cfls bllnl:, 2. b&U., 542.a2a5 (Dally) PY"'"'" Prl•. • .. '" a er ee ..... ,, ... _ • patio. .,... -· ~· $31,951). . ,~. . .. ,,... ,, .... , '* •Wllteffrtat .,,-.; ~.,.. • 642-2$11 • •••PMt _, W~ II'• a. brtf'ie, .sell yoor 2790 Harbor Blvd. al .AdA.m.1 Oo\'t.r Reafty ,O>rp. ll!:::============ll_!ll~rnu~:,w~lth!_!!•.,.~·.!""~D&Uy~ 54r,.()t6$ ()pen 'tll t PM I !!!B!!B,..mB ... _ •..::::::::: ~alton: -493-ll24 bedroom, dining room, 2 842-4455 NO money down to Vtc'l:s. beth, huge patio, lots or ct- BAYCRESI', by owhtr, lge 3, $33,950. -3 Bdrm., 2 Bth, rnent, ~ paint. Asking · BR, 2% BA, compl ttdec. pool. Quiet stmt. Broker, $28,500. Heritage Real Es. $57,900. ~fay trade. 673-7784. 646-mJ. late-. Glenn Queen. 540-1151 • 0 R1orron~ let11r1 cf th. four tcromb!ed words '* low to f0tm fovr '1mp!.-word1. KIPTEC I 1111 ·1'. SCIAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 • I ' I • , -- . ' . . . . . . • • . . ' . • • . '• ... . . • - D"1LY PI LOT f'ridQ, NOYtmber 19, 1971 _ ....... _ ..... I~! _ ....... I~ General . Btlbo.11 Peninsut. Huntington~ ~ST SEU. WALk 1'0 THE 3~ L~DO Avf'Q bf'1"~n MESA VERO'£. Out~t-town BEACH 'i ~M-pe.n . ·• 1114·ner ha1 p~ rtW homt Beautiful Spe.nifp haci~nda SUn. 1:~ to s:311 .. chamufli tor qW.Ck ale -1 lrg ..... 2 >'urt old "' mne older Mme. Choice II)('. 3 Bd 2 BA 1 il -~ ' BR. '2 both B · k I J rma, • am Y Tm, lrom the-bNch, LAtV Pll· • .s. ric rp c., I I bltnl h 'I fncd Ard tk> •rtt J>illl room for pool., \\'ood noon. F urn l • h ed. lirp c, Ho '$~1900 Byk CrNtlw.ly 'decnr1LiM '111.._ $38,500 pa, • ' • r • •ti.l'p hotne hu built.Jn~ \)AV IS 1Jt1EALTY 642-71XX! 54.2--0998. ki!c~n. Wr Sp.l.l)ish 1lre· 3 BR., <ten. 2 Ba .. frplc. BY 10WNE&-Tttm11 • Act pl~. And ov~xed double Pcninwla.'Pt. $51},SOO. fail. Vfry attract 1 v e 1arap. On\y $26,SOO and on DUPLEX 2 Bit. ea.. $5.'\.500 weBtslde Joe. S Br, '2 Ba, land YOU own. \\'on,'.t lut • P.fal"!ihall Realty S7$-4000 hu.1e lam JTfl w/mauive all bnclt: frplc, 11\ag cpl, rlrps, Walker & Lee a.econ B•v ~~"''~· ·""'"''"•' Realtors 7790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 54.5-9'191 Open 'lit 9 PM For Sale By Owner Be3utifut n e w waterfront 3 BR, 2 Jull btlthl. ReeenUy 'a••U.•;;:;::;~::;: home, Cape Cod thnJ-l'M.lt. 3 painted lnaide and out. • JUST LISTED 2 BR DUPL!X Better hl(rTY this excellent duplex won't la11t • Choice convt!nienf location on ror· ner • sPacious liv roPms • FireplaQe • Carpel3 . Drapes -GArages -6nty $46,950. EZ terms•· C11U in.~. IO THE REAL '"-ESTATERS *EAST SIDE* 3 BR, 2 BA, Iamily rn1, fire· pl, hit-ins, huge walk-in clOJCl.!I. lllOO sq. It. New crptti/drapcs lfr: paint. Va- cenl. lmmed. possession. $29.950. Roy McC•rdle Re•ltor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. S48-1n9 JUST LISTED ·2 BR DUPLEX lkttrr hurry, this exN"llenf duplex \\'On't last -Choice ronvenient location on ror· ner -Spaciou11 liv rooms • FirPplaCC', carpct.~ • DraJl('S • Garages • Only $46,9'.iO. EZ terms • Call 67J.8$0, 10 THE REAL '"-ESTATERS ' 'I ' '1rr DUPl.EX Jo'QR SALE By Owl'ff!r. Shtpa to bay It. beach. Nake o!ftr. Ph 1.lt 6 p.m. 540-2676. A.Line ~71 • • B• dCn 3 be. Al'11 2,,,. Ill IV/IV cpi.., d'J>o. La,..• "DRASTIC REDUCTIO.N" ba1t1.pt. '3 Car gar. Boat fiip yard, room for boat. Corner a\•all. Prine. Only, 67S-Oil9 lot clM.e to 1chools in west. or 494-3197. aide CM. f.l'j,SOO. By Owner. College Park ;548:;:: ... ;49;:::.,· ~~--'-~~I _..., -OWNER llL I must sell 5 LOOKS like new model. 3 separate hDqltt on 60xJ05 BR, 2 BA, new cpts, drapes, Jot. One 3 'BR I. four 2 BR ~int. Lge yd. Owner, JNCOME $710. MON'Ili. 5'1().9593. Make oiler, 646-88U BKR. on this Spanish style home, 'Valk thru Uie courtyard entr&tnce into one of the smartest h"Ouses available. Priced at only $26,500. Call us today .• 842-2535 or 847·6010 • • . . ~ I _ ..... I~ lrvlne * TURTLE ROCK * Open Frl/S.t/Sun. 1.s .18712 SAGINAW 3 Bdrm.,-famfty rm. a: dlnlnc rm. Jtecently ~-~ t:r bought anothtt home • priced to d at $35, 900: 3355 Via Lido. Newport Beach * 67'5-2723 * OPEN SUN. 12·4 900 PARK AVE. I . . • I _ .... I~ I ":'.~ l~[. ~!::' Iii Lido lllo ~' ncome Property "' 1n<omo P""'°"' . 16' ' 9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APTS. . 4 separate 1>olldingr. Shake roofs. Private patioa . No stalta. All l story bungalows. 2 & 3 bedroom.a. Some have fireplace•. The type o! bui!Aings that altract and hold '°"" ten· ants. Income '11,740 ~· '145,000. Excellent flnancmg. INNOVATIVE INVESTMENTS 2 super df:luxe 4-plexe1 in Cblla MK&. Invest In one or both. Floor to. cejJlnr fire- place in 3 bedroom owners unit. Oose to •evet)'thini in- dudlng beach. A 1 k i n c $74.500. * CALL 847.&107 * 8u1lne11 Opportunity 200 • New L!l!llir!i * -1\tARTNE RADIO..:. TO BUY OR SELL A BUSINESS HOLLAND BUS. SALES "Tho Bmm with Emp.a.,,... 1Tli Orange A\.'t •• C.M. 64S-417U S4G«i08 ew. Sham 3 ~room on 11.rre EXCEU.ENT lnvesl. opport. lot. AH"m• 711?1 VA Joan. ttDANA· POINT lo• .. 1. or "ml·n!I. exec. Te>tll p1L..Ymt.s StM. month. w/mrkta or acctr. ex· Price red~ced to $2:;.500. New Oelux• Duplex pertl&e. Nell' produc-t. Mail Call now (!:u'..de.t1 Us. $49,950. order emph11!1. SlSOO Req. FULLER REALTY 'Webb Rully 642-4905 1o; m"'°rlly port1ct1>1tton. -1 ...,,..,..., _________ s~_m_9_. ----- D L ~ l • 7. • • "' "' r. •• • L. _ .... _ ' I~ I 1~1 .. Bu1lne11 OpPtrtunlty Houtn Unfurn. 305 HOuse1 Unfurn • 305 Hou .. 1 Unfurn. ·305 200 IG·-.-..... ,-.1---, ...__._'1.Cost• Mes• Newport Beech RECREATIONAL equip. MfJ. -------= &: Sales Corp. High pmfll. Pat. pend,f'rmirlf!taf')' item. RENTAL FJN.bERS Ntttt operating capital 1n · 415 ·w. 1,,.; con A Ml1rA exchange for controlling Hou••• * Apt\. "ock. PO. (7JCJ 64!-l;ilJ. . * 645-0.JU * RESTAURANT. La.guna'1 F. z-4iwdl most popular, u n l q u e r• .. ~. restaurtUlt. Com (I let et y $90;-UTIL.ITJES .,!aid! 1 en· ~ -equipt-Xlnt loc. »68.000. Duplex nr abi>p'g, parUy .. IP'OS• income, $35.000 oown: Jum. ldttl lot mature per- Re&lonom.i .... a•..:. _, .,.."" ain., Catt Toda)'! ' --· "'· ··~·~· * '*· * ~ E§'J'~L'D Int: Deatrn MINI Ranch·l BR. Cottage, Bus0>es11. Newport Beach Nr oeun. J..ota of room for area. {2131 339-1576 atter 6 prden, 1115. ~-* *·* . Mon•y to Loan 240 JUST Ritht for 2-Fum 1 BR. Couap nr the beach. Gar. -· SATI...-LER-,-· Av&lt ';' r:· * MTG. CO. IVON"T Lui! 2 BR w( hu .. 3.16 E. 1 ml STREET CASli ·FOR TD'S * 911% LOANS * fncd yrd, Children &: jlet ok. 1135. * * * PRIVACY Pha-2 1JR 11ep. 1ST T.D. LOAN -hom•. RIO.'""· d.,,.. foe<! ?'"-'rt INTEREST yard for kids. $150. ~. . . * * * L6we11t rates in Orani;te Co. NEED More Room~ 3 BR $115. Man--Wlfe. only. 2 BR, gar, fen yd, no pet. 17th &. Santa-Anli.-Av' 548-.J.'l.JO. OUR exttutive 2 hr, & den EASY STREET The Bluffs · home $350. mo eall 557-4467 ''L d L' . ,, for appt. ever19t 1v1n9 l Br waJk to Westclllf k all Her@ts your opPQrl\Lnity !o schools $225. mo. leMe a beflutilW home in a ~7-4467• beautiful community. ~ 2 BR. 1989 No. A t)arle $145 rqo. No dogs. 6;42--2259 ~7017. BRAND NEW 1 (Brina Your Own Dirt)' 3 BR. near U.C.I. Frplc .. Dbl , garaa:e, fncd, yrd. $200. Lease. 536-3777 5.16-1366 3 . BDRMS., 2 ha., gplit- level. Forevtr bay view. l..u!h carpeting &: derorator p1pering, custom coordin1JI· Huntington--a.•ch ---·------I ed draperie« & •!tr. flot1r _FOR LEASE "'"· Prlv. "'110" """""' ga.ra~s. 3 J-lomes avail. OPTION TO BUY From $450 to Sf60 per month 3 BR, 2 BA, dtp11, 1hag crptg, depending on !be view & a~ new paint inaide & out. Out· poinllnents). side palio wiiots Of stora,ge. Minutes to Newpoit Btclch Unbelievably large apts. Decora~r .futriish· ed. Huge Pool, jacuzzi, electric tuilt·ins, shag carpets, drapes, sauna & more! ADULTS-!.NO PETS SINGLES ........ $145 1 BDRMS ••....... $155 2 BDRMS •........ ,175 YOU'RE .RIGHT- THEY'RE UNDERPRICED! 1.561 MESA DR., Costa .Me,. S blk1 So. of N•WJIOrl Blvd. 546-98&0 '. 1 __ 642-2171 54~11 home w/ f,rplc, cpts, drp1, Serving Harbor area 21 yn:. kids/pet. \Wlcomto. $170. Morfllagos, BEACON * 645-0111 Ci,Olie lo sc_hools. 536-2677, ' 3 BDRMS .. 2 bl, 2-11ty. 846-7368, 645-0466. homC!! in The "Espana Ser- 2 BR, elec. blt~in RIO, FA ie8". Nearby pools. schools, heal, -carpets, dbl. garage, shopping unter. Complel,f!;- 60 x 100 fenced Jot. Move,.in with wall~ pAtios & priv1 11?911,y. $195. per mo. Ask !or gara~. $3'";,0 An~ $385 Pet"~------, rental agent. month. 1 • -Trust Dood1 . . 260 Hone Ranches 962-4411 ~•-for:hlt FO PROUDLY ottered. l BR .. 2 , · R sale 2nd T.D. Slt,000. $105 .•. 3 Bedrooms, 2 barhs BA fr 1 1 · w·u d" 1 "' · ., pc, b l-1rui. Near 1 1seoun1. nrerest 111 97.,, acreage, beach, freeYlays, shopping, BARELY USED l ';;m;;;i--~~~ YOiJNG family home, 41 ~ $245. · bdrm., 2 ba., family kitch., Dupl•xes Unfurn. 350 NEW carpeting & draperies. Bal due & payable 5 yrs., ALSO.' , .2 Bedroom on 2 ...... $110. per mo, ina. prin, &' &CT('.!!. ll""'. schools. $255/mo. V ic. . "" Brookhurst & Adams. Clean, frerll &: vacant. Dana Paint r· in!. 837--0289 776-7330 Agent 528-3567 all. ti pm. Re-ady to go: Bring kids & dogs. $375 Per month. .i TRUST DEEDS WANTED Corona del Mar l ~=~~------Ca!h for 2nd TO 3 BR, 2 BA, elect blr-in RIO, e e 673--0140 e e LEASE, unfurn 2 Br, FA hi, crpts, 60x100 ft. lenc-• 3 BDRMS., 2 ba., 2.i;ty. s~cious living, flining area, eel lot, dbl .gar, lndscpcl. ChOice end unit location. "'I ="I <0cpl"d. w•lled '"" & V>e•ot-mov. ;, tod.,,/$225 Ava;[. Jao. 15th at $350 P'' KGusnforRlnt J ...... yard, Z-<:ar garage. Call per mo. Ask for rental Agt. mon1h. Nicely decorated & l~mmmmmm.:;· ;11CJ;;~I wknds 673-0825, Eves wkdys ~471 easy to see. · 1 HouMs Furnished Gen•ral (2131 ll>-3770. NO FEE rent while you buy e; 300 BRAND NEW HARB 0 R 3 BR, 1% BA, $192 per mo. 5 ~t1)~J!j_iil' VIEW HOME. 3 Bedroom, lst Month rent only + $100 ( .i, \ • Jamily room, 2 bath.~. Com-sec. d('p, Vacan!. Bkr. ((,S ~· .. ;· U ·1 I 962-5511. mun1 y poo, courts, etc. tl {..~ real.Ly * YEARLY RENTALS * S395. -per mon!h. Broker. 4 BDRM. homl' ror ren! in ~;; DELUXE 2 BR; beautiful view, 16.'lO sq. ft .. 2 trplc!, ""elbar, 2 lge sundecks, !iv. rm & lge den, $255. S47-1457. L19una Beach UPPER duplex, 2 br, 2 ba., cpt, dps, view, 2 l,lks .bch, $~ mo. 494-1949, 494·3458. DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA. GARDEN APARTI.fENT lll E. 2ht St., C.M. * 646.1666 * $30 Wk. Up Apt1. $18-$25 Wk. Motol Rms $6 Night & Up SUNNY ACRES MOTEL This ad worlh $5 on ffnf. 2376 Npt Blvd., CM 548.9755 1 BR . Furn. 2 l.rg clnset.!I, queen siie bed prlv, dress. ing room, xtr.\ lrg rooms. Adults only, no pe!.!J. ·$EJ(I/ mo. Finer Homes in Beach~Al't?a 644-7270. exrcutive area of Hun. Bill Grundy Rl!r. • 675-61611,,,.B=R~dc-,~,1,-,,-.~,=,-,~k-, _g_ar_a-i::e. ting1on Beach, $350 mo .. 2414 Vista Drl-Oro 2035 FlJllerton, CM Ne1\'port Beach Apts. Furn. 360 I '1"1"2s.."m=o=-.-co;;c1c=x.:..:.:mo~b_=:ho::_m_o Balboa lsl1nd 620 Goldl!'nrod, 6 4 4 - 7 3 9 2 962--0661. 644-UlJ ANYTIME . compl furn. Hid p 0 0 I • *w . , y I R _,_ eves. LEASE \I/ITH OPTION General Adults. No n.it11.. , ".-. ,00., inter « ear y enl..u* $350. Mt>nlh. 4 Bdrm., 2 story 3 NEWPORT Shores homes ,... " • .,.,-d Ralph Hinger Relllty , RUSI'IC 3 bedroom & den, 2 lor rent $275 1o $350 iiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiii j Mob Est. 23.jg Newpor!. * 675-6775 * bath, blt-ins, f ir e p I ace , with pool. $500. Down, ' · . ' 548--6332 $38,IXIO. Kalel\a. S4?-606l. Caywood Realty 548-1290 A M<'w-:.::"-::-=:-,-,.--,- Balboa P•ninsul• walk to town. Agt. 675-49:.>. 1165 MO~ 2 BR, 2 BA Newport Heights Bold N C NEW shag cpts, nl'W' drps, 1---------12 BR, drp.B/crpt1, garb.age ew OftCept nt>w furn. in 2 Br dplx. Mod. HOMEY & Charming 2 & 4 displ. Avail Nov 15th. Call TownhoUsl', washer, dryer, ki! has rull s:i: lltv & xtra \ge Br hse, walled in patio, nr 675-2698. refrig. Va cant 536-9153 CLEAN-Nice 2 Br., T /yrd, FURNITURE RENTAL I water. Until 6/15 .C 1 M d•Y•.Jl6-1222eves. cpt/drp, slv, No rer. Deco. rolol'!I. Nn pets $155. 523 Brrnard 64 7622 213:2-43-5316. OS a esa 3 BR C d 1,t BA 1 child/Pet.s. 1 teen ok. $175. on o, ,,. • poo 5• 642-759:1. * Month io Monlh !JACHELOR ap1, full balh. 2 BDRM winter rental. 2 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, clubhouse, patio, izarage * lfJO'J., Purchase Oplion S9a/mo. Adult only, pets. Quiet, matur~ couple. No carpets, drapes, built-ins, v.·/storage, nr the beach. San Clemente * Wide St>lection-Call &12-8:!20. pets. 673-7898 near S.D. Freeway & 962-0986 aft 5 pm. 3 BR 2 BA. d•h\1hc 0-view, Style-Colors Harbor Blvd. across thr • . Attract. -Clean l BR. DAil Y I'll.OT ::::=="'-'' C!1 ' Ml1utn to Newpelt Beach 1 • * BACHELOR APT, Lido U bel " bl I •-H p I · I 't '•t•nd-Wa.terfrcnt. R Ieva Y argtapl.) .. UJt OO,)ICU.ZZ 1 $165/mo. can SiJ.-8816. electric built-ins, shag carpets, drapes , sauna & more!· . Oceanvlew, 2 BR. 1 BA. w;o~r $225. Yeuly $27~ ).DULTS-NO PETS * &1>3639 • SINGLES . .. . .. • .. • $135 BACHELOR apt, util pd. 1 IDRMS $l Q 1135. ""· • • • • • .. • .. 4 S<>-294< 2 BDRMS .......... $160 ' . 1 BR Furn. ApL No childttn, YOU 'RE RfGHT I'° ""· 2405\l 16th SI. N.B. - c.u .,....,..,. THEY'RE UNDERPRICED! 1. Blk To Bch. Clean 1 br. 1561 M&SA DR., ·Costa· Mesi Child/pet ok. Winter 1156. 5 blks So. of Newport Blvd. mo. 646-4071 or 642-99S5. 4& 1 BR. $150 per .mo Yearly. 5, •9860 Beam ceili ngs. Btwn Ocean 1 ~~~~~~~!;:1~==~ll~~~ .t. Bay. 67W374. 1Jill1: 1111•• ••11:• NewPort H•iahts Apt. Unfurn. · 365 Apt. Unfurn. CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlls, no 1---..,-----.,._ Cotti Mela · pet!', lg kit. s12~15il. 2421 Costa M•s• E. 16!h St NB 646-1801. San Clemente 2 BR, awnr'$ apt, compl furn. <le-luxe, nr bch. Priv sundf'Ck Jndry, shg cpts/drpll. Adults I no pets, ulil pd, $195. mo .. avaH till July, 2'17 La Pal- oma, 492-7006~ 492-0902. Apt. Unfum. 265 General HELLO RENTERS! \\lhy are you paying ~nt ? Lel'll \l'ake up lo what's happrning today. We have hundreds or home11 ready for Yo·ur ln!!peclion. VA iirid 1'1-IA Terms, some wilh not a red ~nl down, Let u• find that dream hou.!le you've been wanring for your l'ery own. Call Walker & Lee R('altors 2190 1-Iarbor Blvd. at Ad11.m11 M~'t Open 'Iii 9 PM $160. New 1-iR. POOLSIDE APARTMENT 2311 Elden Ave., C.M. 645·5780 CHILDREN •••NEW••• VILLA PEDRO Apts JUST FINtSHED-- Super-C.Omfortabl~Qulet CIOl 2 BR, 2 F-Ull BA. Mu1t '" to apprecl•te Near Newport Ba.ek B1y, school~. parks, YMCA, Boy's ClUb, shoppJ!', frwya, etc. Gas heat. gas cooking a.nd water, all paid. MO/MO from Sl85c 2332 Elden gee or call Manager Barbara Dav. is 64.'l-1.182. DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cond • l>'rplr'! _] swim- ming Pool~ • HP.al!h Spa - Tenni,; Cris • Game & Bil- liard Room . 1 BEDROOM FROM $1.55 'MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 Harhor Blvd .. C.M. 17141 551-8020 RENTA L Ot>"TJCE OPEN 10 AM TO 6 PM (AIRWAY VILLA APTS. 2 & 2 llR'1 Private patio pxi1 -lndlv. laundry tac.' Near Onnae Co. A1rport a UCJ. Adulti <1nly. 20122 San~Alla Ave. Mrr. Mra. Joachim, Apt S.A -BAY MEADOW APTS. Beo.m ceilinp, pa.neltna, prlv patlot, ncnatton f1. ci!itle!i. All adults, no pet&. ti 2 BR's FROM AS LOW J.i 1159/mo. 381 W. Bay St., C.M. call 646-0073 P•rk·Llk• Surrounding QUIET • DELUXE l-2 '-3 BR AP'I'S Pn• pe.tios * Hid Pools Nr 11hop'1 * Adult1 only Martinique Apts. Corona del Mar streE'l from a "~rk. Sl5S ""r 3 BR, 2 BA. big cul-de-sac adults on I y. $26.5. mo. * 24 Hour Delivery lf\d pool, Furn-Unfurn from "" ... ~ homt', all bltns, dlx area. Avail Dec. l'. 544-4294. $14 'O',,...,""'O""====== LuX"'"" Beach Home month, call after 6 p.m. 1~, v 1 ,,,9153 d 0. Adull~. 642·9520 18 k B 1777 f.anla Ana. Ave., CM Mgr. Apt Ul 646-5.Y.2 VACANT, RMec 2 sa. 1 BA, C'.rpts, drps, rt'frlg, bltn11, laundry rm, 2 c:h\ldren OK. no -pets. Walk lo Harbor shOpping, $.140 2 singles BRAND NEW sharing, $135 m 11 r r i e d -.,;u-.1.-. -5911 "°'"" s r. ~ ~ ~. a can . .,..,..--ays, S th L • ">""U°'RN"""'c;c~cc-=°"'~~ ac -av-Use of club & boats 557-3084. 53&-lm t>ves. ou aguna 2 Br. apt ulil pd, $170 • • ,7,7~ • * CLEAN 3 B 2 I @ S OM"" ~ ""r mo 2277 B Maplo Avo MfLLION I View, 2 B,, """" R. Bath, frp c, lrvo"n• LEASE lgc, clean, older ~ __.. --... · -· bit . d h h I 548-5913 bltns, cpt~. drps, pool. ~ $21.S/mo ut\I J)d, 2 Br. nr ·Ins.-s ws r, cpts, rg home, 2 Br, 2 Ba,.den, cpts/ ~,_.,~·=·-=---- 4· Albertson's r.tkt. Adu I t' patio1 Nr major &hopping. drps, Pri\'. bch, ocean vu, 1 Br Sl.25 & 1130. Lrg. Jdeal Sl70/mo. 673-:\690. only. 673-8936. S235. mo. lease'. Ca 11 3 BR., 2 baths, furnished $3Z5., 495-4764. 5~7 V.'. l!llh, CM 548-3481 for Bllchelor. Pool. Adl!11 Balboa Island Huntington Beach 54~83' att,J:30 Pm or Turtle Rock ......... $340 Houses Furn. or 2 56 N. Main, SA 547--0314 only. 1993 Church. 548-!ltq.1 YEARLY lease. Gran rl ::: -w ~-. l BR, 2 ba., atrium •••• $.125 Unfurn. 310 BalbH-lsl•nd * AVL now-1 & 2 BR. Furn. Canal, Liltle Is. Beaut. 2 · t 13t!droom, baby OK. $160 'New·V1ctbl~Custom '3BR, 2%'ba.,-fam· •••• $3251··-"·-~-~--------Pool. Rec Rm. Gd. Joe. No B 2 B . !' S350 month. 2 Blocks from ocean. Bach., utils pd. Sl40. mo/mo 3 BR, 2~ ba. fam ...... $.1~ Costa Mesa \VlNTER rental. J Br. 2 ba. children or pers. 646-5824. :·~tils. a., pri. pa. 10• 53&-7860 or 53&-1674 Spac. 2 br. 2JuU .ba, B/~ 4 BR, 21;1 ba, f<tm :··• $350 3 B 2 ti b '· Step !o the Bay. $300. in-LOVELY LGE 1 BR. quiet. Wlnfoli Real Esla1e 675-3331 o Newport Beach Spac. 3 br 2 ~uli ha B/11 4 BP.;t\.'J baths, family room, ~ r. Ba, pa 0• arhe-que', eluding utilities. Adult~. No pels. Garage. . DEAN·. REALTY 536.7527 Turtle Rock •••••••• .$360 wa.ter softener. ~11.sher, Winton Real Estate 675-3331 24:'>2 Elden, 64&-2768. *2 Bedrm·Fireplace* From $145. Dishwasher, shag 645--0700 or 642-1467 . carpeting, walk·ln closets. • • Forced air heal, extra large rooms. B!!autifut game room, WESTBAY ELDEN h('ated pool BBQ'11, enclD!'!-NEW 1 and 2 Bedrm. garden ro garages,. quiet i;urround· apartments w/pooJ, in~11 & close lo 11.hopping. FROM $180. . ADULTS Adult livin~. no pets. 23.U Elden Av~ .. C.M. EL CORDOVA APTS. 645-5780 20n Charle St. 642-4470 • • Near Harbor & Hamilton St. .. ·BA YCREST -S485/mo. 3 Br. WE HAVE OTHERS blttn vacuum. Childl'e'n O.K. lc.c==-7---~=-Cnri>eled. 213: 177·21~0 Frn\c. Custom furn . M..::A VE_RlhO•E 3 Ba!ElriDRo:>.M --· &f&-2011. WINTER l'e'njaJ, l Br. furn. NEWLY rcdec,.'Orated 2' Br., Bal baa Peninsula * * * . * , ___ 21:~ .. Ba. lrg DIR, FIR . .,,,,,.e wt 1 'v ng ."_is-Condominiums Elec. bltns. $200 Inc. util util. includt.'d. Adults only El Puerto Mesa Apt1 NEWLY DECORATED Charming 1 BR. duple", new carp, drapes &. paint. Lovely gardrn gurro u n d i ng•. Malure adults .only. $130. 548-6920. ·. Fcpl" Custom furn . taACe to sch90ls. Fam1he! Unfurn. 320 Winton Real Estale 675-3111 Sl50. 64&-2039. NEW 2 BR. crpts, drps, * * * * ':' · onty. Vacant & ready at ~~=~=----·I 1 B d A &12·4589. S2G5. per month. Call agent BAYFRONT J BR., 2 BA. e LARGE J. BR Slli frplc, garR.ge. Yearly, Call e room pts. NICE l BR Muse for qu if:'I 546-4141 General $250. Winler a ROOMY 2 BR $l:'l5 01rnf'r 67H644 aft 6. NEWLY DECORATED-3 Br. 675-1131 \Vinion R.E. Adl z $1.10 & up Incl. utilltie~. Also 2 Ba, bltn range, oven, -, workiog couple 0~ J3rd St. LEASE 3 Br., 2 Ba., spac !iv NEW 2BR. LR, DR. Eire. Is. 64 -21 111• 673--0507 Beacon Bay turn. Pool & Recrcatinn dshwhr, fully crp!'d & rlrp"d . ~ Yearly $180. 675-7;:1IJ. rm. w/lrplc, din rm., lam "SINCE 1946" kitchen w/dshwshr, w/w Balboa Peninsula Dana Point FOR Lease new bayvlew 11 pt. 11.r('a. Quiet Environment. POOL & rec rm. All ext. dbl 1st \Vestem Bank Bldg. I d p · p 1· Cl ' pd , , 3 BR. 2 Ba., frpl, gar. rm., pool-table Jl1.. playrm., cps, rps. ri. a io, 06-e S25 WK & Up. -On Ocean. '---------Jo private Mach com-Oft slreel parking. No Chil-ma1ntrnance & wtr . , _ Univeniity Park _, & 1 M ' Avail. now thru June 2 tJ. brick.BBQ.l5x35Fool.S250-Days 833-0IOI Nights ~ ....... i,::ar 1 .19_ ~~~!,· esa Lovf'lyBach-lBR·Rooms * SlNGLE.1V-POOL, Pets muni!y. 2 BR, 114 BA, all df'1'n, no pets. $185/mo. Call eves, $275 month. Agent ti75-164 ·. $300. 548-3446 or 494-G.364. e.ue ;i. ~" Maid Sl'fvice. Pool. Ut il. ok. DANA MARINA JNN, bltnll, garagf'. S400 mo. Al!!O Garage.!! For Rent 540-9365 . . Houses Unfurn. 305 A'M'ENTJON OWNERS! Condo. Furn.or Pd. 341ll CDast llwy, D. P1. 4!14--8197 or ti7>-0419. 1959-1961 Mapl~ Ave. HACIENDA 1;.:;;.;.;.;c;...;... ___ .-.._ \ve-nave· rental customers * UNIVERSITY PAP.K * Unfurn. 325 • Cal! 675-8740 • Huntington Beach Corona del Mar Cosla Mt>Sa. ... HARBOR :: General lor HOMES, APTS & CON· 2 BR+ den N'pl Bch .. $375 -~ 1 BR, crpls, drps, gar. utill """""',.-------1i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l :ra:~::"'*28::i~ 241 AVOCADO STREET II DOS. Call DEAN REALTY, 3 BR. 2 ba t:nhou.se ... $32.:"i Huntington Beach pd \" 1 Sl 50 I 2 $l2~LRG t\1odern 1 BR. Ii J 8dtm * 2 Bath Adult liv,·og . No pets FREE lBR &d J ba $'>= . ry .. A so BR, Rf'n!al Dtv "~" 7,·27 · en, · · · ·• · ~.,.., 1 BDR'I C · I 1 ·• h"I pd Cpl~. drps, redec, nr ocean. Llv•"og -m with th-'ral OelW<• J & 2 BR p-• Landlords~Owners _........,. · 4 BR., 2,L baths ........ 1350 ' ont1nenta crps, urp~. gar. u . 218 Chicago. 536 _1,.06 , -......... ca= '" . uui 3 BR I I I h ~ T ho SI"" Yrl SJ 0" 968--119' ~· ceiling & frnlc Separate Garage. Dlshwshr. Paid util. W! will ttfer tena.nts to you , rg o , ~ew 8 ag crpts 3 BR, 2 ba. horn('.~ .. $260/325 own u~e. corner, oJOJ y. ..,,, . , , 847-.ilfi9 "-.,. . FROM $150. 646-1204 F'REE of cha-e •• , Many $190 mo. Childttn & pe!s 2 BR. 1% ba. home ...... $275 mo. 962--5134 OCEANl'"RONT, part/furn. laundry a.rea. Encl patio. I "~="'=-"-''="-=-"'"'="-1 • ., OK bet 6-9 1~-~--~,---= Laguna Be.ach Swimming pool & children's • LARGE 1 BR. S\25 ' !~ii~~l~is:~nants on our 67~2999. ween Pm, i" ·.··. ··.· re, d· h1·11 TGoewnenhraolu1e Unfurn. 335 ;;:~~Yp;:~:lej, ~i~~ 7~a;: -------ON TEN ACRES playJtround. $000. e ROOMY 2 BR. $140 .. 'LA Rentals • 64S.3900 N"E"w"'"'2""e"R-. "2""'eac--. '"oo-o-·. --.~. ~= 6T~2582. BACHELOR fl p II. r 1 m I' n I ' 1 &: 2 BR. Furn, ... Unfurn. HARBOR GREENS Adlls 642-2181, 673-0507 • "' ''" ..,,,. sublca~ un!H Srpt, Aero11s F" I ... •-546 4353 Side C.M. Adults only. S195 Sl ~ M I l B trep ace. I pnv. pat....... • 3 BR, 2 BA + den, $200. 2 e OCEAN f'RONT-Spac furn ino. 13th mo. free. Phone aft REALTY CLOSE lo ocean, shopping, Q•". o.I yl'a.r y, r. RPI. from park & ocean. $150, POolsJJ'ennls Contnt'J Bldst. "GABLES" & "VICTORIAN" BR, 2 BA $165. Bl!ns, C/D, _, ,Bachf!IOr, all Utit inc~ $90. 5 or wkncfs, 64&-8665. Univ. Park Center, Irvine schools, 4 Bdrm., 21!, ba ., 2 uiet. cl':an, part\11.lly furn. incl. u!il. 494-37~. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2611 Lrg 2 BR wl pri gar, Adlt~. W/D hkup, Patio, gar. 181- ALA Rentals • 64a-3900 Cail Anytime. 8l3·M20 car enel. gar. Lease, $225 a Appl. only 673-1980. !-,'TUDIO 11.p!., north f'nd. All IMacArtbur nr Colla! Hwy) Cp!s, drris. bltns, sound· H Del Mar. 548--8278 2 Br, garage, patio, crpt~. mo. 536-7090 Brk. * l BR. S125 YEARLY * u!il. $100 yr r o u n rl, r F d d L · :-' .--SP"A"RKLIN6 View·l Br on ~ •. stave & reftlg. Quiet L.agun1 BeaCh UtllifiC'! P8id -~Ap0n~ibll' adult 0111 y. -p~ RIV°ATCSUNDECK-fvroo,, ~pd."'c-;;:J.,,-;','" mP,•.,1,'0,·. --r-2 Brr;-t'lJi., upstarrs, th• •·•ch. util jl'I(" Sl20. lrop•"••I •.• 11,.0g loc •'··It• LUX UR t 0 US lwnhse, a•u .. ~ Bl!o CID M V ~ • .. ""' .. = "" N u B Le E Michael Realtor 673-S880 499-1708. 2 BR., 2 ba!h!I; ups1aiY'll du· Call b!wn I & a. 636-4120. , •. .!!, .1· ll~a ~'~"'· . ALA Rentals.• 645-3!11ll ooly. 1 'lk 1• .•-,,. 1100. OCEAN vu walk lo bch. e\.\'J)Ot'I pper ay, aSe', · rig ava1 JU '""' " " ~1K' 2 P 1 C! bh e $ z· Q UP $40 Wk B h plex, Carpett>d & draped. 667 Victoria "C" ........ $li"i • . ' ' ' "6-!165 0, &I" '43tl 1,plc heamed ct!lling 2 br -car ~ar., oo, u s , $13.'"l-Bayfronr Bachelor. apt, I ;i M , : ., ac . s:i7-84oo 'i · 9 PRIVACY Aasu~-f/yrd, ""' ~ ' · ' ' ' O l S29" 557-8097 util pd. Winter. 926 E, Util pd. Color 1V. Crescen! Encl. gara,i:e. Comp. bltns. 2437 Orange Ave "G'' $15.'i, -co-co-cc-" --oc=c=-cc-= I •· gm! per. Util inc. $100. CHRISTMAS DINNER 1 1,.,b•.· "",.,n,~.ll~"f•u•':.· wM",',.;:_: Huonytlngt·'·00 Beac,h Balboa. 67.'\-9749. Bay Bch. ~94-2508, 675--4367. &aur. lnd~cpg. 7071,i Orchid. VILLA CORDOVA ' AVAfL Now-2 BR, 1\.2 BA ' ALA Re nta.l& • 64'.\-3900 Iii your 3 Br hom(', Crpt/ " " .. ~ "' c $2;,0 P!!r mon!h, yearly. TOWNHSE. Bl Ing, cprt!, d,..... ""'f Rto adult~. Call 525-3254 t714) 10WNHSE I ,. 2 BR 1 BR, Sll'i. util pd. on 1 BR Small Guest Ap!. Patio, . 0 e SUPER 2 BR e drp.~. pool. No pet 1 , e HARD to BeAt-2 Br stv/ ...... , , .... 10· gar, · v,-., ~ after 6 pm, -or rtni · pen·n ul f Ad Its ft ll fu rn $1 ~1 prr mo Nu 675°6050 M M Cp' •. l" •d .~. ll.35. · trig. $215. &16-6961, 646-1246. 1 ,-----.=----\V11.11.her/dryer. bltns, pool 1 ' a nr ~ITy. u • 1 Y · · • · '' · onth to onth, $170 54ii-&l81. .. '"' TO Laguna Hiiis f .1 11,.5 Ill 8927818 no PflfS, 673-9749. heads. 4!17-11:'>3. -••••--,& Gu J!eat-Ga1 Cooking. 1~1~~~~1 ~8~R~.~c----• · AU Rentals e 64~.1000 . .\VNHOUSE 3 Bt,_2 JJa. ac1. "' mo. -· · ---R-• -~..,... pt.!!, drpll. 1 P I K"ds t ok A'"all Corona del M•r Newport Beach Ga:1. Hot Wtr, ALL INCL. •dolt ooly. Ea•l••"d• CM, oo. 1 -pe • • NEWWORLD·,BR,2BA,2 BEDROOM CON· 2323Eld A CM RESH P · t 2 B tv/ e BAYPORT en ve., · N. ho "2-8429 -, -e F atn • r. l'i immed. $215/mo. Ph· P''·v ,,1,·0. -1 pr•·v,·1. TlNENTAL TOWNHOUSE, BACHELOR t Ad 1 e BRAND NEW e r:.. s ps. '" or ref. encl gar. kirls/pt"IS. Sl;il. 5.'i7-7648. ....,., -llJ)' u I • BAYVIEW 646-(1().12 61:;:.oo,1. l ALA Rentals . 645-3900 1 ~~~~~-~~~ Volleyball crlll. Bllns, refrig $180/Mo. Agent 5464)1114. ~·oman, $115 m?. 2 BR, 2 BA Rpls \.\'/ dish\\•r, Anoouncing the quiet op!!ning LrVE in nlanager \.\'anted. 12 t,.GE. 2 BR In court. Privat~ & w/w crp1. $249/nio. Newport Beach * • 6T.'>-.i359 ·* * huge closer11, prlv patio, of Bayport Apt! ';·. , lor furn apt~. Rentlll $l50 inc. E/SIDE 3 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, 1;.. 11---·-1-4t-NEE&-mor..-room?..l..Br. . lF pool,_ww.__ruyts, lg COY.~~~952L~~o'-'6&6~~-~97~6~==1···~· 11·11-~·F:;in;"j>,;;;;jj;--2-BR,-fully crptd;-pool. ~.of· -he11led-pool;--b1lll11.rtl-rtrt;111 namrs;A"rialtie shi[hnYJc!s ~1"00 credit for misc €/[);--gar;--W/O.-flyrd;l--- xlnt a.N'a , tfyrd, enci gar. p~tio, g~r. S18."i mo. A~Uh$, I Mesa Verde *All Facing P90I* 1-h~iy. Clo5e 10 shpg. Adults. cu1.7.i & bbQ's, ALL lfl'tL-quiet opening 01 Bayvic"' duties,, mo!T for cleaning Childl"f'n ok. SHIO. 646-4104 $160. m pets. fi.42-4422 or 64G-1730 • .-;;:;;;;;;,;;:;;:::;;:::;;::;;;;:;;:::=;13 BR., 21~ ha., 2 car garage S1 75. IN.. 673-821.'t ITIES PAID. ~ 11t 20102 Apts. for families. apl!. Adult couple only. * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 SR. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 l BR. 2 Ba. Crf)ts, drpF, t • 3 BR., 2 ba.., l car garage A•·••"I. Birch .~. (nr. OrenJe CO!Jll· Call (714) &14-5555 658-7976 eves. Contemporary Garden Apt!. I ch"Jd OK S200 Cl 1 * Immaculate! 3 BR REALTOR 548-ti966 2 BDRM apt, $210. • ty Airpor1, Ju~! W, of Pal· I $150-$l6S e SPACFOUS 3 Br, 2 Ba, f 1 • • mo. ose 0 2 Bath. 2 Frplc't . Bit-Ina. Duplexes Unfurn lSO Dec. 111.1. !sades Rd). Mgr 557-4246, 2 BED.Jl.OOM.NEWLY SPAC 2 k 3 Br apt $140 up. Patios, frplc, poo. ' ·ynt, gar, btg kld1/11ml pet. ~l'IOP•· &16-4662· $240/mo. * 540-0094 • * 673-t326 * NEW DECORATED. I-ltd pool, play yd, cptfdrps, 0tn 54&-Sl63• $175. DLX new 3 Br, 2 Ba, lrplc, Corona del M.r 2 BllRM, bath, prt. garaie. FI REPLACE. bllns, patio. ~ds ok. 1170 2 Br !ludio, a.dj shape, ALA R.ntalt • 64$-3900 drpg, bltns, 2 car 1ar. NewPort Baach S200. mo. 508\,ii Marigold, l Jxodmom11, 2 full balhF, GARAGE. $190. 2200 College No. 5 642..70.15. drp/crpt, patio, gar. Y.:1-8301 1 1999 Harbor Blvd. CM· Wesfclift $275. 675-1849, OPEN daily/vacanl & tt'ady Cd~t. Aval!. Imm ed, buiH-in,, dishwshr., frplc., * 541,.5003 * 1=994::..Mc;;ap::;l•;,N;:•;:·,:'~=&1;;::2-381_::;::3 j ;'•-",;S.;;21-.3;,';:592;;';·;,522;;-7-'co':IJ::. ::7..I . -.4TTENTION VETS 3 BR. 2·B·A,w!th heated pool. '!:7n~r~r:;d2 ~R, :rep~~ 'e°'A ocbocupa~ th1 1• 1 4 BR, 31 673-4649. Cl'lmpletely carpeJcd. Nict BEAUT Unique 3 Br 2\~ ba. * TOWNHOUSE * 2 BED R·e -o M, ntwQo • If yo~ are rer.tin.i1i'S_-t1int! "$'215" JnOrilh: 646-0097-·or -C~1 -A~ita~' 6'134i2io. Jone~ paliO, :· ;;~ A~n~art~. -. 'GUEST HOUSE" ·soo· • fJJrn . Stell$ to .beach. Gar-·rrpl, ~!ffi Cfll',Olln~: nik l~ 1-lr· 2 BR.· Sht'lg· cpt, DIW, ~1'!d,COff,I~. J.is .!.PJ a_s_e . to buy. We specia.lhe in '!A i:hll 694-29&.t Rl!y lnc., 2001 W. Balboa, $375 644-0504 or 644-4430 Bachelor. Qulct. Prlva1e. No ;:;;, $3.~~ m;~~~:.uly~s~j1~~ beach. S285. 673-SMa. ,,.u clean oven, p11.tio, garage. Sl90, 54&-5003. k 1-~A u.le11. We can II1" •* 3 BR Homt', fncd yM, NB. ' · kitch. Util pd. 673--0507. 64l-43."3, 1 _3_77=W_._W~l!!9~1.~"--*=-54-8·_3605_,,_2~B0R,~l-,_B,A, new 1ha~ crpll, ·you extactly wha1-yo1.1 '"ant C1'):1U, drp1, bltn.;. $ni. B"'ACON B 2 Bd I b I BR ne.w ly dlH:Or., cp11, C t " OCE hRtrt 2 ",ory, 2&BR2 2 BA den, MESA Vrrde 2 SR upf)t'r, rJ)!, Un~. nr OCC, gar . for Just $47.50 total fnVt!.!ll· lncl 's utll. 837_9517, c. ay rm. , a. drp~. rafrig., range, \ltil1 01 a mesa l \ ANFRONT cornll'r of crp •. 'l'flll car g11r. bltn•. gara.gr-, nr •bopplni;t. l l39/Mo. 5.57..GL'il ment 11nd monthly payments Frpl. Y!!Arl)' 11!1\se. $300 mo paid. $145/mo. Inquire 238 U "-II bl B t'L" 23rd St. 3 BR .• 2 BA. $3.in. $28.1/mo. 541--312.t ti44~10-10 less than rtnt. CAil EAS'rSTOF. Nl'w 3 BR. 2 BA Mr: Robinson Flower, n-eve y e•u lr\11 ~ V!!ry lfr. hf-1'1.ut. furn. Kirls i&nmom, newly dec<irall"d, Adull!', •no pets, $145. LGE-3-Br, 2 .... 811., new •hi.I W lk & L Spanish dupltx Ava il Dtc. DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 C f M VALD'JSEREG&rden·Apts. &. pei~ ok 646-6391 or ll I $lSO 5"1f4.-6.ti7. cpt, $169./mo, freshly~in-a er ee 15. R<'fs. rtq. $235. 54&-442A . BA)'CRE$T . $4:fj/rno. 3 Br, OS a es• Adults • no pet.!!, J1owt!rs . •644..filll. ' 1 ~~~~~· garage.. · 1 & 2 BR aplJ;, $125. &. l<'d Nr. OCC. C11rport 5.'i7~5't 2 B• tlo $'~ 2" Ba ,_ D/R </R 2 BR 1 1 ·--' ·d e.ve:rywhet~. StN"1tm & I-=-=='"'°'~-,.,.~== $1 j2.50. Spacious, large , e WILSON GARDENS e · ... Pl.· • gar., ..,., a • "• · " · • c e.an, cmp ('!,...,., mi · \Vs!erfall, 45• pool Rec. Rm, • ON BV-Nr Lido. UN IQUE 2 BR !~ drps bl1rtll gar ~1~· I Adami 3 Bit, 1.ra: rd, ra.r .. $3)0 1-'rplc. Ove.ru'd k Itch. die aged couple pr!!t'd. Sauna. %111·2 Bdrm. }'tJhl. I BR ..,,., priv. patio. Slip •und~~. No ~ts. s19s1~ blfn!I, cpts. dr~. 548-4014. 2 BR. 1% BA. Critlrlrp1, 2790 Harbor v . a BKR/M.ANAGtR. &46-8126 &42-4589 Adull,,, no pet~, t cat• J3S SEE IT avail. Util ruoid. 1195/mo 7 DELUXE 2 BR.. Bltns. encl. patW>, $140. 642-63ll. 54$-94.91 Optn 'Iii 9 PM 4'..,, ,, 2 Unfurn. trom S . : ··-incl uW. ti 5-Ai737. 1-:=;;;;;0-.,='jiF,~IT'"'-! BR. Sl~ Crpl, <irps, lrx 2 BD. home o11: Chan~I front ""'1'""1114 · ~ PArMlns, 642·8670, ~ Ye-arly. fi7J..&400. -=-~-~~~--·I RC'frli .llr'Jls Yl'/w cpt. Prlv. ELEGANT 2 BR. home Ii.kt, FREE RENTAL I~ ~ • VI t" CM I I ~k dul I I BR f I •· ,. 2 Br. hHrui. lrpl, 2 c:arports, bale. Gar. Lnd"" rm , quiet A M"cutHy, shOpplna;. SERVICE nw.r•v<ln co,.a, • wpr . .,.,..;, A ts ony . rpc, .,..-a.ms, paio, SPAC J Br, pool, nr ATTHEBEACH.f'urn.4 I 8 S:n:t .,...,~,.,. .·• (fill .f46..0873.' ~ Marc'r'fl Ave. v.•/w~ uUI Incl $1411. J adul!, BR, 2 BA. \I/inter or yea.rly poo' nr. oct n. up. iJIW"'I Sl85. Adulta. 546-401& Shp 3, Bd 2 B .. •Mc c:pl. !:=='::: no .....,11 &12-Sm shops. Adib:, no pe!JI. Sl5.'i Adltt, no JK"I~. 673-4447. blt il\I fe1\Ctd yd: pttt I: l BR Houee tn ~COW"t. ~ar, \\1~~T ..Exec. _homE.• 4 1''" • • u!IJ pd, 1884 f.fonrovla, rate!!. '114: 675-7057 or 213: Coita Mel• LC.E 2BR. Nu cpl & pt1!ni. 1 BR. bfl1m ctll, frplc. wfw, · cbildrtfi OK. 'Baz:saln $225 rt~. 2 kidl ok. E/s1de... Br. 2"' BA. lg! cott1er lot on 2 BDRM. garaaf', nice yud. ~!548"1336.:,:...=c,· =-=~~~ 4314406. -OillhWasher Sl!JO. w/pe.l l'f'frtg/11ove, glU'. $1$5. l p/m. \Valke.r t tAt, ~tn 1160/mo. ~. qtilet st. S500. &16--0806 Ad.ult1' only. Sl33. $90 • NOW t SR Traile.r. OCEANfRONT W \ n r '-r, LCE modttn 1 Br. apt., c:pts, $l60. 642-084.i/968-46%2. •dull. &li.gj)J, 842..U:». LOt d,a.n 2 Br., N(W (:»I.I, RE MODELED oceanfront S4M335 wkd&yl liter 6 Very nice. 2 BR Mobil• Vtrlouf I,«. 1·2·3 br1. drpt, bltrit ldl~~t\r. 1 child ~ MO. l~it. 3 B~. 2Mi LARGE 2 Br.. 1~ \ath1 +Turn unuted tteml Into Q\lldc rar. Priv•ef. Bab)' ok. No home.. l Bit, 211 BA. dln rm 1 Month f rM R•nt Home •v1U1 12111n . sm . Adults only, no . Ji 11,1.. ok . • $150/mo. All vb!. pd, &A., ('l'fllr. drp1. A\l'•ll. 1rud1o apt. r.mUy only. ci.sh. call 642.-5678 f>'-1&. $140. 19..S POmonA. $450. mo. &45-i402, 813-0053. J BR, 2 Ba. sm. $48.l.309 ll2_w_._1_vu_,._•_· _ci._r_M_l--<_530_. __ 67_~ _ _,·,...· -----JO? AYOcW No. ·~· , .;;"':..w_ • ..;C:..•U;..;.ll_7-_Ti..;'61:..·---~'•· ll,4$. la& JO.ntl SI ... I , • • } -· • -. -• • • ~- • • • • • • ' ~ ~ ~ ~ i M ~ ~ ~ ~· ~ ~;i ~ ~· -ti • • ' . . ' ' . . ~w::a:a~:a::a. • . . -'Tis '"r.Iie ~ " . . . . . . . . • • • • I . . ' ' • -·· ' . ' . - ' . And Here 's • ' The Reason -=·~==-=----'=-"""'~ --~ - • ------.. - ---~- rM·------~----------------, I Watch For Special Sections Filled I -1-~ith_ Ear~y .. Ch~s~as ~ies In I I . ~ 1-. I The DAILY PILOT I &~---------------------------J --· . • ,-, .~ . . ' . , in fbct, here are 5 good r~sons for ·shopping early: ' •• 1. Stretching out the Christmas shopping season gives retailers a chance · to function more efficiently. W.he n clerks are less ' harried, shopping is more· pleasant for everyone. 2. Many retailers offer their really special "specials" early in the season • to encourage the public to shop early and to help allevJate the last- minute "panic" buying.,_ 3. Just in case your favorite · Christ mas gift merchant has underesti- mated your enthusiasm fqr the se~son, a longer period of shopping gives him a chance to re-order popular items so he doesn 't have to . ' disapp~int shoppers later 1n t e season. 4. When you take m.ore days to shop you cpn do the job more thor- oughly, visit more stores, compare prices and quality and be mor.e satisfied with the · gif fs you finaf.ly decide ·to buy. 5. And there 's no secreta bout-it, the-Christmas -shopping-season-is-the biggest sales period of the year for most retailers . Support local merchants now ';and you'll help them make enough profit to keep the ir prices reasonable all year long. (And prices will never be more ' ' - - -""' reasonable than_tbey._aie~_ni>w...J ---~ -· --·-· --·-' -----"'--- . This 11iessage presen'ted as a Piiblic Se rvice on b ehalf of o'ur friend& and your1, tlie retail nwrc hants of the Orange Co ast A rea, by the • DAILY PILOT . . . ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \ I ' ' ' ' . . . . ' ' , '' ' ' " ' . . ·.· ' -. . -~ ~ -, -. -. J ' ' Frld1y, Nanmbtr lt, !l.t71 ·~,~~~~··~;~~· ~f~'~S~P ,, I._ Q ---. ~ -, I .. ? .. 12 -·-·~ -~. -·--~ . M s s . ~i/Ji [_ .... iiiiiii, __ ,,. (~-·"1~lltJ;i;i [. _,_ ....... l[tl [ .... ·-~· "''";' J[tl I ........ ~ ....... lrtl, _~_ .. __ ,,._ ...... _1~_·1 [~R;; ...... ~]=[21;;1;-.-~·-"'~""-;;;-;;l~.1 ;;1 __ ,.,....... __ ~1~~11L..~-... _ ... _ ....... ___,jlL Q~,, DAJLV •IUIT iJJ1 • ~~1~Afll~·~u~m..~~··~·~~~365~~A~p~t.~U~n~f~ur~n~-~~~3~6~S~Apt~.~Unt~~um.~~-~;N5~ Apt. Unfum. 165 Apto.. liR~00t~m6•;:;;:;:'.~400;;,l:&f:""f.__,i;;;""_,1•71~:"'-~&:1~P~or~so~n;•~l•=;;;;;;;;::;:;;;~·s:;;30 Lost --' C..ta -;;;;;:&;;;;;j;::==;::N;;;;;;;a:;;;;;;;---·-Furn. or Unfurn. 370 :-=::-'"'."::--:,,.-,-:-1 --1--Newport Be•ch • Newport a.ch s.nta ~AM -..:. .LO~ ' "" room A bl.th, _ .. - -\VH'!.. ml lW'Pri"" her ,JM IJ..OST, fully tailed ton& I-T, Costa Maia .... 1p1clous clo&eta, pn. en-New W•~h'ofll OUlota ChriAl.n\J&? 'ol c&rat Dia· haired cal\co-1erril1e a' ' LIVE LIKE A KING , CAN1 BE BEAT "'"""· onclohd Pl'll'· From 1.1611 l\t""lh. mond rin1, 'futa.,, .. ufoa. ,;,. P"darlno l &hb• St. Now You CAN AFFORD MURJMAC · 1!rlaklul & lunctqlri..,. In P.lme ~tlon Retail -vatue-sooo. AJkll>g Small n:ward. "1>-4786 9 I'>_ SSS At Bud9et Prices! · WOODS f.fonttc:Uo. ~.mo. 5Sf-~ 341 &yJk!~ -ih-., N'pt Beach $2i$. SUrpri&e • (matchfng 6 pm or 51&--0;H alter 9 pm FURNISHEI>-NEWPORT BEACH , S!JilGLE Sl'ORY alt •.""', • Bill Gnondy Rltr. 67H161 Lady" ~ man's w.ddlng & wkonds. ; UNFURNISHED E . """ :i. Sou~ ~·.:~~.:U:bere A Nice Place to BALBOA{ Island Baylt'ont: · bands, never worn • e"LA~c=K~m-,,-1.-,-,71.~1c-,,,-."',........,t1 DJOY 1750,uw health club & spa; 7 pools, 7 room wlbath, prlv. en. FREE!) Call 54fr5Tl0 after 11/16 bel\\'C4!n 9th & 10\h St. l * POOLS • tennis courtr. Bach elor, 1 or 2 Br's. Also 2-i~C::u!: Be T,ether • • • • 1rance, kitchen pr iv I g 1 1 OR 2 nfce aultes 111111 Jert In 6 pm I: "''eekends. . Balboa. An ,11wer 1 to ; * ENCLO~ED ,'~ ~ ~sto1x· tgwn.hou..ses W/ 2 or 3 BR ts. Elec. kitch-... . vate Patios ADUf T 'l:IVING ,. flOi.Slbl~ S85. ~ ¥~-5680 • .Lido Bldg (tboy'!· Blue Want to f4lt,!lnv:olved?: _ ' 'Ka.tu kl a. ' • Reward. ~ • GARAG~s 1~. • e!J)~.Mt:Wate balcony or patio. Frorri· $170. ;. TED ~i; eve1 & ekoda 6n:;..1779i'I,~ Dolpblrr Re.st). Fine for Volunteers ~ lo "°'Ork sn-215lS. • ~ * CONVENIENT :.\SU))terrane~ parking, elev, maid s~rvice. PJenlY. ot lawn ~Fr-om l\:40 t9 $275 BEDROOM, den -& prlvate ~ror. or a:en 1 ore ~· Drop with primary ase children. 'WST: Female b 10 n d t TO ALLj8EAt."ffE.S , ~JN-line f~ inarket, dPy .cleaner, beauty \~Carport• Storaie~ entrance &: bath l 'or 1n .. r:1t call Jones Realty In the OceJUt V.i"w School Cocker-Retrlwer. Nr. 20th t FROM$ ,'~.5110NTH ,, ... '8J9a witbfll ·complex. 7'b8!(~" model 1pts. RIDDEN VD..LAGE, , 1 & 2 BR. Apts. · xentlemani no • s~nx. ~· 1~~171• Suite C, Dist. 2 llours rier dJy, 5 St & San!a. Ana Ave, t:.M. l~: AD.~Ts>p•:'C :.:S E ·~ -;~v ... ~,tb ·! 9m daily1 ot;hei ~imee: by appt. 2500 Sautb Salta with T,rraces drinklng, 64ir.3606 ;;.' 1 .:::n P!"@ml.ses. ~ "· · ~s .aal1w:J:,k;.,.,~or inf23onua· 5'1$--138S. ,1 • ,' ~. "·.;,J,am boree .& San Joaquin R1lls-.Rds. N.·of Sarita 4n& • 546-ls25 . DLX. Pri hQme1 nr. 10CC, v~ ~ce 1,,va ... we $50 c ..,,.. • ......,, ef'l 3. ...,.c=~--~-~-1 ; V/L~A PpM0fi~ "~~asbion fsl~d,. 714: 64.4-1900 for leasing info. ~~t e:~ce~J. loads ot . J>rff. perm. ~lite stttde1n~: _:;.,:: ~ ~ Soc'lal C!lubi 535 ~~~~v~~lll~ntrik'!~r. ~:;. t PHOHE .642-~1$r', ~·!i'.·JJARJ( cNrwnliR~! ap•nTMEHJS · · 3 Hested Poob • 425 ~rrlmac Way ~~wk. 540-8555 ••k or a"'1labte: • 305 No. !: 1 MARRIED and s;"ll';.· w• Rowan!. 431--3&12, Lon 1 <l760 Pd'\'P!U.#vf.'l · 't -,.. T ~ (,_Jg:U t. M bou&e BBQ Costa Mesa · Camino Real~ San are now 11ccepling ·l)l('m-Beach. ' -1: 6 .L~I r ~f 1=· "·.!!'~-..:. .!" ._,. > v •· · t..:c~du~.C:~~ SlilO-r..iOVEINAllowance nJRN. room ftJr renl nke Clemente.49i-4CI benh.ipglntheNev.'J)OnBay LO$l': Silvt'J' & Ian male 1 ,, Grat new 1 2 & 3 Bdrma Pre-Sehl chlldmi welcome quiel home, Costa l\feu.. DESK space aVlUlable $50 Club. For fur I her In-Silky Tttrier, 11/12/71. Vk:. I• AGI.;:E, -, r.~ un ton Bet.If ... ~ Newport Buch · N••••u PALMS Fo:r "'Ori(.& .-~ • onJy. mo. Will ~ ····=-tormation· call, 67J-lJ66. BrookhuN;t Ir Hamilton. Re-, UPSTAljlS tlst. · ' . ' '· . ,_ t1'9 ~ 642-47'H • :i ~--, '~" · · i;_ DQ.WNSTAIRS $l6S. . • ... NOW OPEN e SOUTH COAST • 1T1 E. 22nd St. • ~5 · ., ... . af ~mo. Azmw:nna ce :rravel 540 want! 968-1854, l CALL r.t'anagtii aft 6 Pri.t,• ON BEA HI BR.AND N~. l Bt: SIM. 2 VILLAS SHADY ELMS-POOL SLEEPING room, J>AV. en-available. 222 Forni A.ye: 5 nio old black Lab in N. • 642-1131 • Br ·S:lS9: A.LI.. ~(I,'lES l uin MacArthur Blvd. Furh.' & Un.turn. l " trance,. priv (oiiet.;$85 per Laguna BeaCh. ~ NEED someone lo driVe my 1...aguna, Ans to "Gus" 'f ~EW ownelj u'pgrading Ira: 3 J .. B,Ri.Unturn F't. st!a.!mo. P<t\ID. Priv paHo billtard ~ ·'2 BR'• from $135 UP ~ .. Costa _l\lcsa. 6fM1878. l'ofEQIC~ '1Ulte or 'office. U-Haul truck, incl. rum. to J't(?11se hflp, Re"'' a rd. f BR, 1112 BA, New crpt & • Fil'mt!uri! Av&nable nli, heated pQdl wi jacuzz( S,outh. L.-auna ' LARGE comfortable room Alr-corid,., 10 rooms. 425 N .. Detroit, Pttich. the end of ~4~M-=3,_'~",..·--.,.,--,..,..,-,,.,- l ·drp.s. Just·pninted:Chlldren Clrpets-drape:.-dj,sbwasher huge ~~ta aeep pile car-.. . L1gun• .. Be1ch far Employed adult. TV, S20 Ne11.·port Blvd, n>O J710nth. NoV. 962--098\. •: LQST: 7 mos. n!d Irish Sf:t. I ,OK. No dopJCals, Sl$S: 'lTl ·~a~.pooi-sauna•~~nnJ,I " peting, :1u~~ landscaping., OCEAN.front, newly~?'ft-we~k. 642-17~ _ • , OAVIS REALTY 64~TIXMI t . · fiir, male. $.JO RE\YAR.D Shallmar. Call, S-16-4.159-.for l" •rec ,room-ocean view .. 1 :Adu~1s. Ypu ~ust See Thi•, e<f,, 2 br, 2 ba.~guna ~-LAGUNA large ll'l()Ckm 1 BR G~1LEMAN ropm for·nn\ :It* 600 A<f· ft. 2nd floor "'l: 'Young Daughter Distraua:ht. ~ appt. · · pat!OA-arnple parki.nr ?: . One. 20102 Birch St ... NBt; ale <199.-1075 or 3J3..3419,. 'ap.ts. Walk blk to .1hoppln1;:". "1 cOsta l\1csa. ..:.. t90lrno (,'flsrA MESA. I Lost 8..c. FOWICI ... jlnl. 6J3--0~>jl. · • ._ , ; · ·~ ·· Security guards 1 55~246.•.. Tustin ~ or 11<) blks -to beach. All 979--0'1'26 : 1 '· · Catl--'46-2130. ' . . L:iJ LOS't': <I Yr. Female Afghan ~NEWLY DECORA'I' : :~·H•di'l'tNGTON ·'., ·~.~~RANR•NEW 1"' Dl$hwash.r, ,.,;ant """ ·R1 &· B d'~;·s· AIR8 0RT CENTIR '' . ,. 2 BR w/ gar. Di~P~\i.t ·. , .. ,, '"flT! , 21)432 t-a! .-,.,_ , DOW.NI NG APTS ~An view. lge11rl. sundC'C. oom oar ·~ -,.,. . I' . Apricot v,o/blk ma a k . l '.'Call btwn 1 & 5 636 .. '. -;t1•·•·:;.:rp)\·Cff;JC . 1 i11 ...... ,ta·ni ... Ave. (Acrog1 NORTH CORNER $185. 1 OR Riso at -$100 . ..c...w'w aoa' nl .. &. Roo• m • ..:.. ' 0e,1"jxe 1._2A&. 3 room .oHfhcels Found (frM .-ds) -550 1',avon front lcfl paw. ' isn 0 A e :'A" $130' . ...w · ·• u;,..._ • rom S.A. Cbuntry Club)· 17141 "7 9367 77"°003 .. ,. a a~nt irporter ote. 612-~57 or &12--005!?. i_ • range v " ,, 1.u. OCEAN Avi:. .. H.B. Spacious 2 BR units. ;:-s. WILLIAMS & "" -or 4'"U ambulatory person. Le I Lowl'•I rate•. full services. -,. 2568 Orange Ave D ... $135 CTI<ll 536-1487 FIREPLACES. Priv patios. ALLIANCE ho . 548-2873 _:-.... BROWN & whit S ri 2 Jl.1ALE German Shepherds, ·:r Br, 2BA, encl patio. 1169. o.rc ....... n 10 am-6 pm 00•,·1y load• of cl--·t•. Hoata» W B h P ne ring. 83.l-2R40 or 833·3223 WkdaYT e P nger 1 t'n ,\ l hlk & tan. Vic. J u,,.. ..,_, ~ St80. Adult, OvM 18 ewport eac Guest Homo 415 BAY VIEW OFFICES ~anie.I, no collar or tag~. I & 19 h SL , Open Sal 10-5 & Sun 1-5. \VJLLIAM WALTERS CO. Pool. Ad . I I 1, Manager Upper 2 BR. 2 BA. ·-• -' found at The Ral'llCh 1n \Va lai;e Ave. 1 • _, 1010 No. B El Camino, C.M. 979·1!i8. Privace deck-Fireplace Costa Mesi Deluxe, Air Condilioned, Irvine, ' ';Jeffery Rd & C.1\1'. ~ Rew11rd! 646-3189. ·568--0744. LARG-E 2 BR. $f40 WESTCLIFF lax> sq fttt:Pool rodecoraled. Lido Area f.1oulton Parkway. 544,8857 SIAMESE kitte.n, u-10-n. ! $~1BR duplex, 1 adult, non-· ~·11o1ove In Allowance CAPRI Soundproof-Cntrl air cond PRI. room avail wlloving Realonomles Bkr. 675-6700 or eves 968-7318. COMt Hwy nr MilcArlhur smo .. er. StV. re!rig. drps.-_Cb.ildren &: sml pet w.clcome. lT08-I?3S Westclilf Dr Special!-Owner-646-500:1 RESORT LIVING care for ambularory male DE.SK space available $50 BLACK pupp 12 tbs Cd!'!-1, He'1!o•ard Dy 833-7240, No -ts ..._ Ref 9:,.i \V Newly decorated. SEA AIR Adult Living . No Pot• Manager 16507 Alliance or female. Balanced diet. mo. Will provide furniture ulri \l.'hife m!i-ki~.,. :hn·,nd eve 6#-7226. \ .,.. · ....,..,, · · Apts. 1 blk N. of Adam• ·" FflOM $125 642-9862 540-2562 fl 6 at SS mo Answerl"" service ~ . ..,, ==~~-c--,,-~,-f ,. 17th, 645-3787 ---...-Beach Blvd. .. ... ,,.., ~uxe 1 & 2 BR. Pool, Apts., . or a · availabl;, )'7875-~;cll Blvd. fQ!lt. Area of Prim~ St. PUPPY. female Slmoyed. ; 2 BR. apt. Crpt'g all rooms, 733 Ulica •t _ 53&4S69 Carport. Di&hwasher. Furn. or Unfur~. 370 Vacation Rentals 425 Huntington Beach.~ ,(toyal. Pal Driw, . Meu Vic: Brookhurst & Adams. drps. bllns, refrig, carport, NE\V Shag cpt .1 BR 2 BA Funi. ,Available:. 642·6774 • · It's Oakwood Garden CABIN·Big Bear Lake 3 Br FURN Ollice· Crpts drps ·v~~ area, 557-7297 aft Re"'a.rfl . !162-.'i2S2. Ind U55 to mo ' ' ' I'ENlNSUlaA 2 br, yearly. 1 C t u. 2 •· I ' ' . ' ' ' S:,)IJ. LOST: 1\.1'c1ta Verde Area ~ 2 • l"Y rm. mo · gar, chi\ d re n /pet con-..:lk • OS • n:-sa\ • fun, fine neighbors 111nd ""· Avai . by wknd or v.·k. pvi. "IJ.tr., 100' t ro m l;;,="'"°-,.,,-,_~-..,~.,-~ ' '646-6961 or 646--1246. sider--'. 1 blk 1• ,, • ..:.,. ·u <Jeean & 'bay, unusual Reserve now for Ctlrislmas, Ne"......,rt Blvd. (downtown FOUND -German Shephf'rd, hlk Dachshunds, malt A 1 BACHELOk. sharp, close to " OCC & UCJ. $130. Incl utU 's 1 & refrig. 557-7768. , 1 BR Apt. unfurn., water paid. Adults, no pets or · chl:dren. 5'18-6954. . ==~~--,.....,-pELUXE 1 Br., gar. Avail . .. Dec. t Adults, no pets. $135. 150 E. 21st. 646-0016: , * DELUXE 2 Br., ;l~'Bat , cpt/drp. stv/ D~W. a:ar. · _ Cl:tildren o_k.. Sl5(1. ·p.ii. 79SlJ. DELUXE 2 BR, cpts. drps, . bltns, S14.;i. 1 •I Call 6~4-1103 ·1--~-----Dana Point LARGE 2 Br .. 2 Ba..,-din-rm., ·bl1n, cpl, rlrps. ocean vie ...... r 1 balcony, 1i . ml. to Dana ~i Mai'ina. SUKI. 837-3927, : 837-5118. ·. ,0Ht Bluff · NEWPORT BE/l~H -., ~ VIiia Granada 4pts. J ~.!?.$ bedrooms with balcon- ' ies above & below. Gracious living & quiet surrounding for family 1vi.!h children .. Nea.r Comna de! Mar High School. Fireplace.\\'('! bar & built·in kilchen ~pplianCC"s. 835 AMIGOS \VAY 64-1-2991 ()>!dwell, Banker & Co. J Managing Agt>nl TOWNHOUSE 2 BR. l'i ba ., lrplc, pool. $225. 848 Amigos Way, &14--0906. Fountaitl 'Vallejo . ' ~v u u•" lri level d" I• I I Apartn1ent5 ... and It's ,~ • 5 V I R rd' ••• ~" $1 85. Also 2 BR. Furn $165. -· P x. r P e · New Years or \V in I er C.J\1.l util,. pd, $75. mo. approx " or mos. le. em. ewa · iNV"'<l'JJJ· 7681 Ellis, Apt A. S4t-ra47 :~~;'1;knd';.. pets, 67~125 prestige living in one hL'ttlr-Skiing. 644-15'18, ., 675-1141. . , ~tg~~:!»-~I. Th~ I~ a, ~~~~~~~~~' or 847--0932. me8liB.JIU i~s package. There's St Rentals to Share 430 Business Rental 44} ;:. I~ • $lJ5 • LGE NE\Y 1 BR. SEACLlFF Manor Apts-2 E milllon .In recrefltion . . . ... WHITE female t!llt blue eyrs I tn11ructlon ~ Sm! complex:. "'·iet. All BR, $160 Unf. $175 lum. -LOEN -swimmlnit, tennis, billiards, \VILL hare f ll f il'f f SPACE for beauty parlpr or vie. Circle View School, ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~·,;;~ """ Cpts, drps, bltns, garb dis pl. s u . ac 1 ies 0 similar opt'ra-tion, ground H.B. Very a fl e c t i o n a t bHns,, dsh wshr. Close to 1525 Plaet"nlia Avr. Allk Sparkling NEW 2 BEDROOM health clubs, 111unas, pro. large, well-appointed home itr Lido Bldg. 3355 . Via gs.1_5980 . shop'g. Adults. 8262 AUanta .. about our disooun!, M8-26B2. shop, indoor golf driving w/rellncd, mature wo1na'n. t·do NB Se J Realt ==~-,..,---,,-,-I Schools & 536-7780 . prden apartment. Lu.xur-Pvt drESs'n & bath 1 ' ' e ones Y GREY & white poodle rypr. Instructions S15 · DEL~ 3 BR 2 BA •· t '""' ~. l"•h land•-plng nngo, clubhouse, etc. · 1 g rm ' Service on premlaes or call .. _ ,. 1 Bl k ,· ·~SINGLE STORvr • ., upc, "' l""'O,..... ...... · •Spaclous.~ttractiveac· 67:>-3771. i uug. emae ... ac ~roun bit· s. cpts, drps. Nr. H°"&: $180. Adults ~ no pets. 23ll commodations f 0 r en-E1°)'Pll, Curled tail. Friendly. LOOKING FOR A JOB DI 2 _BR, 2-BA, 'Pvt pat & f!ospital. $250. Mo. Adults, Elder\ Ave., Costa Mesa. custom decorated singles, I er ta in in g, view lot. FORJease: 900 sq. ,ftl M·l 64!>-3878 aft SPt<-1. · WITH A FUTURE? u·~ J17S. 8~7 G~~va.. :no pets,. 642--4387. -, ·1 &f5.5780 or 6<16-8666 l & 2 BR. Furnished & Un-Cara~e. 830-1034 hldg. ll0-220 Power · FOUND ln N.B. art:'a one Na tional Auto Tune·Ufl Train- YEARLY nr ocean: ipaeious funilshed. No lease required. NEWPORT Rttorney---wi:U M.adl.ioe .st.Jp, garage. or ~grey shttJ?dog;-with ins::: renter-! lll'lectlng a BEACHWOOD APTS. upr. 3 BR. 2 Ba, frplc. $225. * 2 BEDROOM * 41odels Open Daily 10 to I. .shani home w/--i. Want 2 small bus1nes11. MS-8797. light brown leather collar. HmilPrt m1ml>Pr of carttr Brand ne\V l·2·3 BR. ~ blk R·· A ., 499-1" B ... .,_,__ """' ,....,. . I •-·-· .,,s, va1 now. 2128. .,. a •Owru,..,u.se concept. over 35 mature business e WANTED e 673--uv,. minded f"l"'lfl e to,,.. ira1.,.,.,, 10 BEACH! Cpts. drps, bl!Jls, Beam ceilings extra lrg 1\1' · 7:,00• t ·1 nn 1he l:i.tP!lt in autnmoOve frPJc. 125 16th St., HB. GARDEN type, grfKI le.v 2 Br ....... m nc l P' ,,u. _,,_, OAKWOOD GARDEN types, $125 + expenses. ·C1n1mum,.,;. ._.,,,,re at space. FND. little male. puppy with dla::-l•·c ,qu,·p. & m•thod•· triplex. Cpt, stv, d ..... , enc """' s. e ""· •c-.•" · 64:>-1512 "'knds. or 1 ·Max, ...,..,..,w ' biue eye1 and a bobbed tail """"" 847-3957 .,. tion rm, sauna baths, etc. , Jl.tuat be willing to start 2 & 3 BR'1<. fl<IO UP. Patio, gar. $lli0. ~~9695. Adults. Our Sunday after-APARTMENTS 68..\-24.lG ask for P ickell. SliOWROO?.f mfg. & o.ffi!e vie Hamilton & Charle in v.'Ori< immf!dialely after pool, children. MORA KAI EASTBLUIT luxury 2 Br., noon B·B-Q'• & Free Art WANTED employf!d hep space'. Close in Lagu~ ~~ C.M. 64Q-973.i. • training. e No expttrieoce Apls, 18881 J\1ora Kai Ln., l,i 21-1 Ba., bltru:, frplc, 2 car Lessons starting soon. (Resort Living for Single & chick to llhare with same $95 lo $155 mo. 494-4653 . ., 1.' BE~trrlFUL \Vhlte altered nee. blk E. of Be<!ch. 962-8994. gar. pool, rec •re a . HARBOR GREENS ..Married Adults). Muse yours or mine No Industrial Rent1I 450 male, ~at.-whiti!'-collar e DaYl! nr ev~ning_s DUPLEX 1 & 2 BR -apts. 644-6405. • 546-5025---cllildR!n. C713T 59Z-'"Z690;-t'-.~c. 19th & Pomona C.h-1 . CALL NOW Nell.', d{J!UXe, private. Cpts .• $185-WESTCLIFF 2 s,.! * BRAND NEW * NE\\'PORT BEACH \VANTEO 3rd girl .(2>35) to 7500 Sq, fl. Offices, tui&embly 646!-:841~.. -~ !714) 5.58-1815 drps, bltns, ·dishwashers. Adults only, no pets. ·~ 16th at Irvlnt1 shart? hour nr beach 1ii1-l.B. Area & machine shop area. MALE Beagle, Ii mos. old, Gi6 E. 171h SL. Santa. Ana $145. & SI75. 218 Kooxville, Bedford Ln. 548-7533. La Costa Apts, 66{600 or 642·8170 96Hl797 $100 mo. Heavy power, fluorescen1 found Co&ta ~tesa lfigh 536-7633 1 & 2 BR, bltns, s"·immlng 2 teachers need 1 female llte'5, forced Air heat & tile School, 11/16/71, 546-0JAS. e CHEZ ORO AJJl'S. e ~n .Clemente pool, lanai, bar-b-que &: gar-roommate, 3 BR apt on lloors. Ideal for electmnics FOUND 11mall friendly fluffy ATI'ENTTON MOTHERS! Bring your !itrle ones to visit our ne1v flffl-l'!Choo!. Staffed by c!'f'dcntialNf lt'ilchera. t<.1orning or afrernoon ses-IJZ~ft~P;yAM >."BR~ : : ·: ··• ~. ••le-'AIJ util •pd.' $150 to $170. Westcllff .Riviera water. 673-4624. or lite manuf. 153 5 white cal Vic. Dartmor?. St., P I t>ri 1"~ ga,, i2' BR d~uxi. 'nr bch, priv Adult11, no pe!s. Spacioui; 2 Bdrm. Bltn~. c11r-440 Monmvia, Ave., Nwpt B<:h Laguna. Beach, 491-2463. Wa er/d e . 5.16-0336 patio, ocean vu, shag cpta/ 354 Avocado. CM. 642-9708 pets. drapes, he.ated pool. Office Rental 646--0994 • FND: Alle'n'd male cat. ~ion~. d I-• d I / 2070 Mflple-Av"" Cosla Mesa 2 BR, apartment on · Cul-de· rps, nury rm. scar, a u It Nr 11hop'g 111~a. Adults. 1 -•Ii.-,. f For Least Costa Mesa blk-grty striped, wht feet. EDUCATIONAL M c, adjacent Park Vle\v no pets, $180. mo, 227 La 1 LRG 1 BR. furn. util pd Ask About Fret! Renr 3 VERY n ce secouu ,..,,,.r p. 1440 SO. FT. . 54.5-1678. R EADINESS ?c!tviol.~ •. 2 ~n, t ,k. ~lll!:'rria 492·7006, 492-9419. ·!!~'~~»$~/~~.' li!R2 ~~~ 1800 V.'e~\cliff Dr, NB Ollces. ,1::J1, 39~~~ D~yl~. fndust~al .11pac-e nr Newport -ALL blk kitten w/flea collar CENTRE Sll1-:t3!17 art 4. ' -642·5388 wner San Diego Frwy. 2930 Graei'.' . Santa Ana unfurn $165/mo. 998 El L 1._ 1 "·k E 1 vie Blue LJHntern, Dana &16-4334 . WALK TO BE4.CHI . Camino, 541)..{K51. n ""· 0 ""' er · 0 Poin! 496-5516 1--~="'"~=,,.--- Lo.Jeiy 1, 2 & 3fgRils. Cpb, 1~ Fairview, 1' mi.)· Repre· · · EDUCATION d-•. bltns, dwhr. 847·39j7, 2 BR. 1% ba crpUL, drps. l BR. furn. $140. l BR unf. r ~mentaforltent ., I Aparlmen\5 r«_Rent II~ sentative !here from 9 to 12 Jo'OUND Pe! rabbit vicinity For Childbirt~ ... bltM, pool & suana $165. Sl.15 util pd. Adults, oo pets. L _ 11..-: daily. 557.i'JSS nr 1179-4711. Orange & 21st St., Costa CJasSl'fi tw ex~ctant BEACHBLUFF APTS 540-6.Xi9 eves. Sal Center. 642-5848. e WANTEDe Jl.teu. S48-6.'i02. pa1'f'nts. 644-0962 Spac. 2 Br 2 Ba. Pool. Pa-Apts., Aph., Approx 600' w/'120 for sm FOUND Parakeet vicinity READING TIJTORJNG 1n tio, DAV. 8231 EUis. M2-7644 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfum. 370 Ap~~·;n. or Unfum. 370 A~t:;,,. or Unfurn. 370 mRchine shop. 646-7684. Arnold & Beach, Costa VIE\V & privacy in a 5-plex. . LAND available for boat !\te!!oa, S-18-9406. t.rg 1 bi', N'r~w:·~h~&1 ~.Huntington Beach Huntington Beactt Newport Beach Newport Beach building or storage. 1535 FND: Keys on le;ilhf"r strip. l\1onrov1a Ave., . . """""" Vic. Mariner's Par , .8. your home. Cert. Teacher, all grades. 1'1r. liathcock, 644--0144. ' PIANO LESSONS encl gar. 846-5671. ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ... iiiii ... iiiO;;;;jl~~~~· ~~jN~~J~·~ ~~' k N SOMETHING 10 bt' thank111,l ME -1 Br ap,!\~ gar, Rentals Wanted 460 646-4j()7. ' tor! 1 BR. sUper clean, dble niarried ooupl~ or 1 single YOUR MOVE 1 "' P'SSTI l-G-R_E_Y~&-w-h;-i.~ki~tt-.,-.-,~ic. Your home. Cert. Teachers. !\1r. lla!hc.-ock. &14.014'1 : gar, ''"asher &, dryer. Call adults. $125. 84~549. . • BUILDER wants to rent 2 or l\lissio• & !\fonterey, Costa 1 s'.at or St1n for appl. 613-l972 2 BR. Apl. Closed gar, cpts, 3 Br. house Jn need of Mesa. 540-7731. I • drp~. child~/small pet ok. KEEP) IT UNDER l'l'pair, exchange for part FOUND ca r key. vie, Pilol ' , ..,.... $140/MO. 847-2940. rent. 642-7377. ore San Clemente. , · ~ Jrrrrr.... p,.DSE I~ Bea~!.; aR, c~ts._. ., • I 3 BR. HOUSE • 492-44Xl ', ~~2.stove;-'nb: pets. l>h. ' ' YOUR HAT Rea~. priced * 557·86'.'iO Lost 555 Accounting J STUDIO 2 Br~ 11,4 ii, l>i-i Misc. Rentals 465 ACCOUNTING, Conaultln; ~ VISTA DEL MESA ---------LOST: skinny gray & black Financial Pro 1· e c ! Io n•, yrd. encl gar: nr park. --... d f I t II I . BRAND n•w '"'"· 2 BR Con· ""P' 'm" " • •a co. Bookkocplng. O"'/Yoor Of. grade & hi. sc~ls. 54?-0469.. i ' OFFERS FREE .t • • do, Palm Springs area, lar. Vic. Balhoa Blvd . & fice. 642-1;»4. • ' - ' I I I • - . ' $1JO.S160 1 &. 2 BR., 2. Br .. 2 ' heat.NI pool, mountain view, 35!h St. 67l-1858. , , , Ba. Blk 10 beach. Pool~-. • , REFRIGERATORS OLYMPIC SIZE POOL__ 645-37'6. 125 Rewanl Blk Lah Rtt,.j-:8;;;•;.:;b;.:.Y:".:;11;:;;'";::9;;;;;;='-=•I-··--1~/ !\tgr: 220 l:lth. ------DISHWAfH(RS BllllARD.S · Los! on 4th Island In Hunt. LIC'D Day Care. 7 am-5:30 I . -' ). f · The ' ' \ ,r ' L19un1 Be1ch e OCEAN View -250' lo bC'h. 1 & 2 Br. $175 Up. Pool . 2175 S. . C~t. Hwy. 645-5429._ 528-6743. TO PRESTIGE LIVING , CASA MONTERREY CARPETS & DRAPES GYMNASIUM I l[j] }farbour. 846-4072. pm. llot meRl~. Xlnt care. PRIVATE PATIOS CARPORTS P1rsonal1 .. LOST: Shetland sheep d~ ii :i. rho r I Baker llI'e.l. , 'W (Sheltle:l Ma I e. \VhiJe/ 546-15.19. P1rty Room With FIREPLACE, T.V., STtREO brown I black. 673-0538 NB. c~1~11~LD~&~1,~1,-n-1 -•• ~,..~,n-m-y1 That's righf, when you rent one of our super Personals 530 LOST pug dog grey & black lo.vPly C.!\f. home-. Exp. & I h Vic. Baker & Bristol, C.~f. reas. Large fenced yd, apartments a ll these extra features Pus muc ' SUDDENLY single, little, Re.'!'!'.INL~lh____ ~7. Lido Isle _ . _!.~1stig1_1iving 1w1its you in our-main,tenance-fret~ -much more TsTncluded at no extroCOsf:-Coml cute, educated & like tennis * ADULTS Dix 2 Br., l'it Ba., young marrieds or young retirees, you'll find living ments and you'll agree it's the best deal in traveling, books, partie11 &•,.-----------------""I 2 car gar .. bltns, refrig.. at Casa Monterrey I pleasant, re:laxing way of life. h I . r ., cl. d men. Are 1here any over 40'' '-- l -luxury 1parlme:nls. Whether )'-OU are an executive, see our roomy one and 2 bedroom op.art· & bridge, back _ packing. * * * * * lrpl, CPI I drp._ ~r. Lido For in-door comfort our 1 and 2 bedroom apartments town. But urry as supp Y is 1m1 e . QO -MIO ·haYc ... some....oLJb·.<>• ,tw~t-·::.·::.·_.,,~· :=-.:·:1~0-:::f.::~r ' -,!';-"• -8hop'.g..$29S':'on-lse . -"'-1re-air-conditionl!:d and-feature-wnrnr.-tozy-fh·9J:1lacn-, •+•r fiey'ri going fast:-We're-tocated in;~e-Back-lnterc~s &: are looking for Traae· r"S c:r::-a=1:-::Jnr:1-::s :-e:::---i l----I I ORANGE 675-3.C!67. plush shag carpets and custom d;apes, decorator Bay a rea neor U.C.I., O .C. Airport, Fashion friendship! Wrlle, CIRssUied 1"41 • · l ·BR +Den, li( Baths, frpl. ,'kitche:ns with dishwashers, king size bedrooms 11nd Island, South Coast Plaza, Newport & S.D. ad No. 243 Daily Pilot, P.O. t Adults only, $290 Yrly. private p&lios and balconies with large storage closet. d , I . t f ~ r,Bo;ii: 1560, Cost.a Mesa, Calll. 11• nes ! · ~AS.SOCIATED BRQKE~ Year 'round .recreation facil ities are just steps away , Freeways en 1ust a coupe minu ·~ rom · 92626 -1 , ' COA. ST'S ti13-3663 ~~ Eve~. from your front door. Whatever your ple&surt, be it the blue Pacific. WILL he.Ip child or children < • MeH Vtrd• sw;mm;ng, • wotk-ouJ ;, tho gym,. game of bHUords, BEAUTIFUL LIVING ru-Ar· . nl late Dan M ". n l" ti mes ~ • , • • prKticing your pultin~r.and driving, 1 HU(ll·bath or n 4 hfformatlon ~e pt con· DELUXE 2 & 3 BR. 2 Ba.. relaxing o few m;nultS in tho lhekrapehuUe pooh I, it is BABIES THE, BUDGET I • , ndool.laL Mr. ·M "'" "· I I 1----1:~:=._)eading-encl gar 5150, up. Rental all here for your enjoyment. Ma e t e rig t move, ~, 5 § 8-4:30, ~5910. or write P. dOl farS Ole. 309~ Mace Ave , to Casa Monrerrey, 1nd start en/oylng all that prt5tige ~ S 1 o . Box 1002, Garden Grove, I ---SP""i---·----living hu..to offer. __ _1 ______ f:.:rc:o:.:m::...._...R_.LI~----IU..:Cal;;;. ;:9264;;;;:1;,. ~===~l~-.... ---------------.J.l---..1.l • ... I • ' , arketplate DLX-2 BR, 2 BA, '.i-blcR' to' beach. shag crpts, bltns. yrly tse $245 mo. 615-3126 eves, ~ , BRAND _new 2 BR. 1 BA. ' • ·~ ; ~-•• ,,, DtuU,~ ~· 1 8R. 2. , , BA $350; _Be.i.ch aA{.L A~ • l _ t;, I :..;___ nWtl "''°' 511~ W. llsy .... 1;' .;:;:,_ .. ,;; • Ave NB :0 .... -. · ' BR 'eoiido '" mlii&: "'· ... - l J . d~, d l);V"'1', pool, ·1ar. .. ')t~ ' •t.o.. $32.1. Calt:W:MaJtln .,. · "' (.'O[)ecf (714) 341i-a1St. !,.ARCE 3 Br., -2 Ba. Dupl,x. ~ ,:_ _._ ~ .. !l'rplc •-b1~. !i bUt to bch. -i .... S.Ulfmo. yriy. 644-7214. , I ALL UTILITIES PAID Adult Llvlng-Fnrn;•h••I° a Unlumltbed ·. 655.1 Wamer,.Huntlngton leach 714/847-1~26 ' - . -'--... 1 • .- Vista Del Mtsa Apartments Tuttin & MetCI Drive .... ""'"' ·'"" ,.... .ac Ph. 545-4855, it· --.... - SPIRITUAL READINGS Advice9n all matters ** Will 1rade my Sl'i,OCO--42) R .. l lots, 11Ulttable ~r 5 _ Daily 10 AM-10 PM eq(ilt.y tn R.-4 tot In County units C1', So. ShOJ'f' Lake Ta- 312 N. El Camino Real Corrldo~ with olrl rerted hoe, 1rd eq for 5 BR hm or -..:-• ll ~"Cfl!riiente hou~ for cood TD's or in-Inc profl in U.B. C&bin at I -,,,.,';;;9;;>-9,;;;136,,-.""°4!J2..;:;;;!lt1;;3;;4;;;-;;-l!;com:=::''-'''-'""':?::,· ..;*;_;".::2:..·21=50'::o-* Rt~ Sf!nr or 7 962-3163 . DISOOVED DISCOVERY \Vhlte: bamboo bar: semi-EXC'lfANCiE whal )'OU have Find YOURSELF tn Someone clrcul•r regul•11on siie. for what you Wlmt. Many Else portable, bought 11t S1oano'$ pl'Op(!rticii 111 ehoole from. Call now • No obllgaUon for $200. Trade for small Brod<man Jnvtslment O> • r(TI41 ~ (213) 3S7-3393 Mllhoal or ??. 673-0;"!68, fi?S-2163 . NATIONALY RECXXiNlZl-.D Have-tqt in Cambria.Plncs NaV1\JD nigg k pa.Jntlng1 br IALCO•lOLICS Anonymou1. near MOJTO Bay. Trad!' tor Conlry for tnide for olher Phnne S42·121T or w r It e lot on Colohldo Riwr, near r11gc, Ji;Un11 .Pr eny 1YPt ol P.O. &x 1223. CQs:ta P.lcM. llavaau a,,.11, Ownur me"'handl11e ot equJI val, COUN,ru··NG • 1"0 for ~13-1965 -t 4 ue. &!6-0620 • Pttft1t!.n1Uy M111tt1~ ~Savttiem Cou11ll11 M1m1. Ct. ~ .,. 1111 ...... ~.-•• ·.~ v •.•. ~.'•'"•'•"'•"'•~•"•'•"·· .•.t<i.G.J•,•c.•'•'""•"'•'• ""'''•' .. 1~~~~:~~;act®: 4Jt ~ 'Ii '· -~~--li' * ' -. ---. -• -J • , . IJ I . ~·. ][{),1!~ --"'~·i,.._,.-.._J!IlJ,1 !._ _"'_...,_, •• _. ~l[Il) ...... ( _ ... _ ... _,...___JJ~( ...... _ .... _ ... _-__. Bobyslttlng Oordtnlng Jell Wo~ Malo 700 .~.•Ip W~~ olp Wontocl, i.!'&.; JIO ~olp Wonted, M & P 71D Holp Wonted'-M & F 710 1-~1-~COS~TA~M ... l ... SAA-F-~~==::zficiii1f·[itTICASHIEIU: Car wuJo: put MEN .. """' p/8-Jn,... SAl.ES WITH L • AL'S GARDENlNG • • il tua ttme-for'CM;-F;V, &: HELP Wanttd Ft'lnale. Owr tal ~ A 20-30 M. ps~:~~~~L I« ~ • •mal l ANSWERS l...qwla atffl, Drper-req'd. ts. nJte •hilt onzy.,_.A~. tn ~y'A'k. w.Jri':in Mat tn ~:t~= iaoAntlqUH -~-.. - 2 SPECIAL AUG-TION DAYS r SAT. & s~~OM~~L~E~·~.!~ " Zlst l • .....,.,....,. landlclPinc .mets. call . Muat 'be ovtr 1'. 644-4460; oel"On. 4pm to 6pm daily, 1:M_ ha' 18lb Ir Monrovia, 'ioi day ·+ 5«)..5191 StrWw Newport, 1900t Brnold)unt, Ho!). appearance:. ~ .......,; ll'. Looking for · a Io ca I • full day aeaslons. PlaM!d Cd.M, O.t& Meaa, Dover Picket _ Mousy _ Rocky -Cleanin1 wo"men Wan~t'd ?'ilust be avail. all day salesman for e•reer w/lra: prorram, hot lunches. Ate• Sbcnll We*1itt. ' Wlnktt-OtrrotWORK Wttldy on ThumlaY HOLIDAY \Ved/S&t 6' Sun. Apply 1930 firµ.n~lal lnattlutlon. U, hta 6:30 A.fol • 6 PM. PROFiSSIONAL Gardener, Oepreuion days: "I eome 1-5 ' 64$-7647 Nev.'J)Ort Bl., Costa Mesa. Sub1t~ntlal 1al.iry + com· $20 wk.COMPARE! S.2-4050 tree v;ork, prun tni, from a .very Iarre famlJy c:LtRK Typist. El•.c ~ M. ONEY• MontERLESS home. Lake mlukit'll Jor a 3 yr, period. CHILD Care, my home, all iprinklen, dean up jobl, ~qu &ee:, my fa~r w11 OUT typewrlter, .50 w.p.m., Ac-forest, Jive ~·'or .,out Married, college rr•d ar day or ..hrly. Fenced yard. land a c 1 pin C. eeorp1 of W01t.K • lot .curat• fiaufe typina, 10 key houAdleeper. Mon. thl;Y.1rL o\vnetr of a bualoen Pl'f'f'd. \Vhlttier School di.strict. 19th 646-M93. rte Bookkeeper. Ex~ , adding mach. Good phqne Pa~t Time 6PM'·lOPM s & 9 yr. old (irli. Cd. Call 6t6-8972 ~tween 5:30 & & Monrovia. 64fr2395.Go •='-n::.,::1:o1-,51.-::,.::-:;:1c::0::,,----p&,yrOll thni FI 11an cI t1 ,personality, ,Apply ~ 14. 1 ' a a I a r y.. Phone eves;1 _7..;'p_.m_.~M=-lf~·=~~-- RESPONSJBLE High School 1t1.tementJ. Allio type. Placentia Ave., C..M, !l1!1.lable IJ\lll ln the.IUlTOUnd,· 837 ... 1961. . SALESMAN girl v.·ants bii.by!lttln& orrn ·-IN-,G°'s-·by Moose, Lt. 54&-~l. ma Pranp,C:O. are,. needed. ~fGR. Salea. earn$~+. Co, Y<IW\i. agrrenlvio:, experl- homework, Npt Hgts an:•. eled., plumb, fene!!, tile, Jeb Want.cl, FM'Nile 702 CO~ts,J;,..; • No l!X_per', ~1s. Earn up to tr11lning, bonuses flex hours. ence not n~ssary. f~I Avail. a.ft lP~L Cal Jeanne tmtlns, urpe.ntry, paillt ek:. -====--=--;;;;;;;;;;q ' 64&--0949 Ltt. commiselon p&kl while tra • ••• -22 .,. -20 • COLLEGE DI SY.RI CT $'.96 Por Hr,· · ing, Manag@ment asaistan~ VU'"\IU • "'"""' • ~ HELP AT VOMET ~ MGR sales earn $800. + mo. II rt •·• "· ..-:::-:;;=-------Mk for Service Dept. · · · at a mio:t, ..... ts posiuun EXPEl,llENCED child are Hauling For T~poruy ~: • Hu tbe Jol.lowma: ope.n· {714) 142_0667 comm .. Full co. training. with a future. Oemo avail- \lo'ffkday:s for children 3-5 ·""°'==~:-'.'"-":-'.""":'."' e We Have Ccmv.--n n.ka: Flex. hrs. 846--{1239. at>te, insurances.. ca I I yn. Fenced yard, LunchH WANTED! Mt&sy tr e e·i • >.idet e Nunts e House-HOUSE Organ Pute--0p l\10DELS needed pltime MS-801.7. • tncluded • .Jusl of1 San Diego yard& & C&raaft • movinz .l ktoepe:ra. , ;_~ SKI LlED Quote fee on 4-p&&:!!' l)'IQnthly. e~ & wknds . Will train.l'SALES""=°'Lo°"'d"y°"f".,.-g°"il""t-sho=p. Fwy near Bristol. st!}-f0.38 haullf'll, ST.SO pu hr. +. HOMEMAKERS/UPJOHN MAINTENANCE MAN . ~ork at home; Costa Mesa Call !l39-64911a.ft6pm. Perm. p/ttme. Som~ eve. 6 BABYSl'ITING -Uc-ensed. ~e. <TNT Lawn 7 I ol . ___. ... i .... firm. Prtf expd. P. 0. Box p ,_. "· A I t M Ult) ,,.., ~ ....... ~ n-__ ___.. ._._ .. _. n .area 4lf' ........... iuon .. ,. •' ,,, Fu'ue--C 1 N@ed &om@One to au .me Wiu1t1 wo,-,., pp y a Brookh··-1 • A I I a n t a . a .. ~. • OT' ...-~ ....... ~ -..-vi...... .no 'wn a 9 A A "'" ~ heating-.mainteaanee 6 -' ' In my fa.st ._,.,win". -ness Sabina'•, 904 tlanta ve .. Clean. Fenced yd .. xlnt food. HAULING, clean.up, kx:&.l ·H~~-,~ve Com~ti ~. Salary ranp ~S'fM.. HOUSEKE, ~PERS. full tim.e 2 .hrs a d,;:-s'SJ• i<l. 'For H.B. •-vi"": !l6&-6819. moves, exp'd colleie ltu-• ~eepen: • ..-~.c • •lll'l.ol ...,_ exper d f d A 1 --;;=:.--=,,,-===- ....., ''b d 1 Lrr truck Real cal Nlll'Sl!I etc. At Monthly ...,....,, ........ cement commetl· pre · PP Y in intervl~· appt. Call Mrs. .Search Ll&:ht Operator Carpenter ~iS46. • • Ratea. &Urate v.ith exper, Pl!!'$0D. 'Huntinfton Beach Olson 535-2277 betv.-een 2 & wanted at the Fitthouae, de 1 HEALTH .ti , OFFSET PRESS OPR ~n~al.es~~ Hospital, 18811 4 p.m. 177 E. 17tti St., C.M. ADDJT. & Repair. ctilab. T1tASH & Garap ,,~~-FAMILY CARE AGENCY To .~. ··'th 2 _,;_ o•··t 0 a, . " PART time recept. Beauty Appear in penon. formlca, marllte, flr ~. days. Frte eat. n .. u,,......,., -~No. BJ'oadway, _ ...,,.,. ''"" ........ ,, ..._, HOUSEKEEPER, pa.rt lime, Salon expet"d. Send re!umE',l miiii ...... iii! ... •iiii,._ panel!ng, Antlq. Furn. -548-5031. Santa Ana · sn~ It. direct imprHSion dtlpll. Spattl1h.spl!'aidn& pref~ Refs. to ad No. ~2 Da.ily Pilot, SECRETARY repair & refin. 644-'IW8 ·y'Aru>o.:--c;.;;:;:--;;:-, -~i;;,, .. ;p..1 !;!;;;.;;;;;~ ... .;;;;;~ ca.tine eQUipmeot, prio:para. call ..rt 8 p S«>--03.54 x_ --... " ·tion of nezative & plate!. m. · P.O. Box 15ro, Costa Mesa. Accurate typist, 65 w.p.m., EXP. Remodeling, cabinio:tl, Remove trftl, dirt. ivy, PROF. mature nurae, cart Opaquelnr !: m.askirw. Sal-HOUSEKEEPER -, Cook. PBX. RECEPTIO'NIST ell!ctrlc typewr.iter. SH 90 repairs, matnt. No job too Fill sand, backhol!. 847·~ for mothtrlHS Or' o:>mp for ,,...., ta",.. S59'7·S'125. Pia~· I...tve•in, .Newport, pat m n...· . 1 1_ ....., e w.p.m. Dlverslflt'd dutie1. Re .. ••"224 I I Sr Cit Re'· • x c h1 _, ·~-8 · 2 di 'Re f' & r U&tllOT'J• opeo or e ua"uv Call "or A-t &m. • .......... • Housec Mn nt · · ' a ' -mcnt commensurate --wtth pr1ngs. a ts, s PBX Opr in H B ofc. _r .... • ALL types of Carpio:ntry. By ••• -541-~. exper, drivt'l') liceru;e nece1s . Give ~";iir. typio: 320 dial ·cord lndustnal ~lattons local man.. DEDICATED ·CLEANING RN de&irn job in physician's n.a.me & . telephone No. to hn,,~ X!n 't working ronds. (714) 494-9401 536-l6'8 * We Do Everythina: * ottic-e. Call a.ft@r 6 PM. INTERMEDIATE Brue No. ~4, Daily Pilot. ~"fringe benefit program JELONIC -;;;'::':-"'-,·:;:c.11=::6:-13--4-0o.::;;72:::--I 492-5721. STENO CLERK P.O. Box 1560, COit& 1'1'.esa, & competitive sallll')'. Carpet Service Mesa Oeani.oa Service P/time pos.ilion wanted. Lit« P/Time from 4PM·9PM Mo~ Cal. 926lfi, -c-A'"'R"P"'E"'T::-:c""o'"'M"P:-A:-:NY=-Carpets. WindoM, Floor etc. Typing. ... ... 4 haalc . .... 'd9,!_ tluu ,,,""'.,: Will has Rt!id. k Commc!J .. 548-4111 Call 642=fln. o~te the MTST. Sa,lary EXCESS CARPETING JAPANESE l&dy wJ.-• s Help Wontocl M & F 710 ...,, .. $271-$32!1. CALL· PERSONNE·L 842-77S1 Industries Inc. Laguna Baach Equa.1 opportunity employer ANTIQUE FURNITURE i & ACCESSORIES ' 4 European & New England Van Load.s + Special C~Jl1nm1nt1 from oth·er Antique Shott• Including furnlture, gl8ssware, dishes, silver etc. Partial listing: Austrian &: French armotres, l sideboilrds, butch cabinets; ·bookcases, cheval . i' mirrors, loads of great scrubbed oak, desk1, dressers, dinlng room tables, cheats, ch8irs, rockers. 8-pc Duncan Phyfe dining room suite, brass & fancy iron beds, English roll top desks, Tiffany type lamp shades, old cookstrive. Victorian loveseats. Clocks, an· tique pitcher & bowl sets, oak secretary'1, oad pieces, occasional tables, etc., etc. HUNQREDS OF PIECES TOO ·NUMEROUS TO LIST HERE Terms: Cash or check only. Min . '25% cish . deposit upon award of bid. Alf sales a1~is and final. Inspection: 10 a.m. daily until sale time. 'DEALERS & DESIGNERS ARE WELCOME ANDREA'S ANTIQUES 23'0 l;lowport Blvd., C.M. 64~70 GEORGE H. BAR~LAY CO., AUCTIONEERS ' ' . Anflques 16 Furnitur• Iii ) . ' NEW SHIPMENT REMOBEIJNG H<)ME/OFC V ALUE.S TO $15 PER YD. hoUJework, Dttda trans. • $5.SO PER YD. Avail. wk-<lays. 54G-ll32. Apply INSURANCE , Aj"ency Girl. Commercial l i nes. Underwritinz &: R.atinc ex· per. nl!"C. Salary open. Health & retirement plan. Peacock Insurance Inc. Call Mn. Bradley, 549-3058 , 494-1087. UNIGARQ INS. GROUP fTom Ensland, 18th Century White naur. "L" rtce'pt. Counrry llllTliture. Si¥1wing 6t'tttt, 15' nutmeg custom Sat & Sun. Nov 4".l & 2lsL "L" seltee I Banquettt • Noon · to--5. Johl). Hall ~ Co. W!Harve!t tbl, blk na~ ; f17..Jlat St, Newport Beach. reCll~r w/vibrator, PektD.t i GOLD pocket wateh , lounge, day bed w/coVr!r, 5 i w/chain, 1 5/8 diametl!r. drawer Fruit"tf dbl faced , ARY, versatile, in .,_ k 2 ~-Koy wind w/ke.y. Enamel ~s • ._,.,.m b&ntls, root : new, 1-girl office:, n r 1 & "P installed with .-..d. -··--• r....... Accts., Attract. ..-H~eaniJt& By ""-'OJ• ntAIVA l.tJen pi.-Shags, hi·los, corr:tnerciah, 0i.vn Transportation ,.., 1370 Ad1m1 Ave. Co.ti · Mesa, Calif. An Equal ()ppor Em~ Personnel airport. S/H typlnr, tiling, face Hunt 1 n g case. op Santa w/Rudolph &: : PR, tigurea. Re 11ab 1 e, Bea~tifully enaraved, $150. helictOpler. J'x.50' MW w\rt : all col.Of'll, Extt Stt'y-Trawl. CUSTOM DRAPES c.n ..,.._ ""'-J!ookkeeper 54G-"""". 213/422-4872 fenC\ng w/pogts. 646-2496, • ~ «&.283i. I Counsellor Trafnee Phont': 134-5708 made 10 order ll"om Maintenance Flt Bldcpr-Lecal $2.49 VO. INC. LABOR LATE NITE Maint. Co. ~~a~!~ Free ~-All work . guaran-Janitorial, ,rounds k blda' P.T. Sec'y-Lacuna t!ed, Financing avail. Howe • maint, both ~idio:nt It P.T, AIR-Gen'I Ofc ot Carpet. 5'1G-1523 comml, tsi-839T aft 1 pm. NEWPORT Jg:~!rs~~~ ~~ Painting & 133 PorDo1onnelDAgenNcy Bet..-een 8am Ir: 5pm Mon·Fri C0JtK 'N CLEA VER. Now hirl111: Day oook, C.ook'1 helper, &: BwOOy. APJ>IY in IJ!!rson 4.28 E. 17th St .. C.M .. poo tree Sootchguard {Soil Ptperh•ftlfnt ver r., .B, Retardants). De...,...asen & 642·3170 COUNTER g~I pt/time d•Y• •·-BAR N ETT Pa i ntina,r """!!!!!!!!!"'!'O!!!~"'"l!!!!~ all color brlrhtenen I: 10 material labor, $135 Sin&le, 1 · AccountJ-. Clerk 1naturl! \lo'Oman on1y . .,_PJ'l.IY minute bleach for while ... o= 2 S Ea ··• in person. Mrs. Swiss 18959 Sa ~.-.. sty. tucco, vt1. 'l)plng 50, l yr .expe:r. M -'·Ila r v ~ts. ve )'(?Ul" money Specialized biddin&' for Call ~aint ., a¥riu :r . , by aaving me extra trlps. custom homes. 968-3236, WESiaJFF DANCING G~GO Will cleao living nn, dining -.. 1'" E•t. PERSONNEL AGENCY GIRLS & BARMAIDS rm & hall $15. Any nn $7.50, 'VU .. w-" couch ;10, chair $5. 15 yn, HANGMEN, Wei &: l!Utl., -r.u.olff Dr., N.B. ,QUEEN BEE exp is what count&, not Paper, vinyl, flock, paint. 64.>mo ·J.562 N~wport Blvd,' C.M. method. I do work myself. Store oomes to yaur door, A.Pl'. Ma.bater. Mature COil· apply ill perr.on. 646-9935 Good ref. SJl--0101. ·Schwartz, 541-5846. ple. U d~u:xe u n It 1 . DISTRIBUTE Health ' & * INTEJUOR ...-TOR *" We1tclltt. No pool, th11dren, Ecology linf, pt/full time. LI In .r.A•::::; ....,_,, or pell. Call Plnover, Bobor Bill~7tri6 ' c.. •.• ru&rani=u. ....... 6f6..-0228. BEAT 'The Rain! Concrtte Hanis, 64.i-4558. Expert .::.===""°"""""""--,-Drapery-'Carpet Sales floors, patios. drlv •1, leu sprayin&. :ATTRACTIVE glrl. to model Exptt. "deoorator type sidewalks. Don 64 ~ ROF. Paintln& exUillt. Ac-~·· linierie.. Gl'f'at piy pawn. Store leads. Draw QUAUI'Y Cement Work. Let COWi. eeilillp, a 1 r I e 1 a lor one aftermon a week. + mmm. 492-2254. Cemerr:, Coner•'.• ~P~ONNEl SERYICES .. AGENCY f'?'e1! Ir: Fee Positions lt you Are aggressive., en· SEC!lETARY, _exper, Heavy thushutic & want to work typing. f /lime. Ca l l w/people, we will train you 642-9990. to make above avg. income. 'sE"R"VI=c"E,-,S"t•""o7ko_n_t"'w"t"""& Call ~i!a \Va~n. 83.1-2700, pa.rt time. Ex~. aa.le1 & Dennis & Dennis P~rsonnel service personnel. Apply Ag~ncy, 2082 Mi~lson Dr., lOam-4 pm In pe.raon only, Il'\'lne. MeSA Verde Shell St'rvlce, PLEASANT 11mall office In 3131 Harbor Blvd, CM. N.B. needs an exper. Clerk SERVICE Sta. Attendant, ~l!t. Must ~ fast accur. exper prefd. Top pay. Full typist o.n electric & capabli! & p/tim~ avail. Apply, of\\"Orkingw/numb@ts. Shl!ll 17th&I I NB Penn. poslt¥>n· Xln't wo1"k-• rv ne, · • i9fl condt. Call beN>n. lOam SERVICE Sta. Allendant1. to S500 &. 1 pm, 642-6667. Full & p/time, Apply In 1,;'""'""'"-==-==:::nd;;l:-::::I person, 200 W. Coast Hwy. 48.8 E. ll!h (llt lrvine) OJ PREFER male to bu e cut NB. NCR 3100 Bkkpr fabric for N.B. p.nnent ==,.,-==:-70:-;:: 642-1470 · manuf. $2.00 qr. 540-4511. SERVICE Station 'help "!!!!!!!!'!'!"~~!"''!'!"~!!!!/--=--.~~-.--1 wantl!d, exper. Fuil Ir: INVEST IN P rofoss;onal p/tlme. Apply 900 E. C....1 Clerical -Industrial H NB .YOUR FUTURE> • MANY JOBS SE:ICE. ...... F" "" e AIL AREAS BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Men or Women C•l·Paciflc Agency Brush CUstomen. C.M. Up to $160 wkly to 1tart. 27'50 Hatbor Blvd., C.M. 9&2-04l6. George do It. Uc'd. Bonded. sprayine. Re[I. M7-1358. sfrictJ.y private· & for tun. DRIVERS .. 5-~""" Cc.on.icier itrl for full time Pl"-1 3 at ··•· Le•s·e A Ye11ow· 0 h .... "'"' No Wurinr rece p tlonfsf/holteu in ....... e. · ~moons a w11. PROFESSI NAL p one c~tENT wortK, no job 1oo * WALLPAPER 1( t>t:..utltul oHiceJ. Write In Over"2S. Neat, friendly&: in Taxi, Cab solicitor .. Dana Point, San 549010 SHEET ME'TAL • MECH. " u~. -" ••u. • ·"""""' h•alth No ... ~&! lie Clemen••. Cap•-no ·-a. Clw A electronic small, rt!'llsonable. r re e """D )'QQ ~. '!!41C' clau'"•d ad No. -•, n1n.. •"""' · '"' · ..,,.., ""'" 646-...... Ml'I '"Y • ttq'd 1or pe:rfonning art Call for Appt Work in YotJr own home. chassis exper1erice. OAK tables, chrs, marble top dN!,sser, crocks, d ish e 1, goblets, broilers. churn 1, much more-. 968-7079, ND'rnING over ssa. Birch I sidt'boards-maple tables-3 beds-Deacon'1 bentl'l-cedar chest-barrel Jamp:-Mtiqi,ie: 12 PLACE 1ttti111s. bt'autiful mirror-bin ta b l • -s m a i I Etru&can sterlinc. Best of. desk-pine chair~more'. -l fer over $300. 499-3861. Francisco Dr, N.B. 642-7}Jt. Appllancea I02 QUEEN 1ize hide-a-bed, COST + 10•f. lovely uphols!ery $75. Jtaund APPLfANCE SALE!! pede'lltal dinette &io:I. • 1 ENTIRE STOCKI I swivel chrs, yeUow I: whl RJ...;.--""" w h r-.. $100. 271 Lilac Ln, Ccata nc111,_...,..,f'I, 41 ers, .,,,_, Mes.a £46..2516 ··•· er&, TV's, Convenient • · 1arare .... e. I Terms. "MOVING Sale • Interim' l Firestone Store, 475 E. Desig ner's stock mark~ 1 17th St, C.?.f. 646-2444 • down JO 10 50% thru Tue., 1 CLEAN late model Nov. 23rd onfy. Hrs. S.3. 1 washer / dryers J mtch sets. 1803 \Vt!'Stclitf Dr., Ne""POrt 1 Del-90 day guar. 531-8637: Beach. . : 839-1778 ALL you need It the baby. t USED Appliances & TV'1. Compl~e decor. finished l We iuar & d ellv t.r , nursery furn , Glass top 1· Dunlap'1, 1815 Newport Bl., bt'f'akfa.st table&: C chn:. AU C.M. -~7'180. • • lik~ new. 644-1~ STOVE, new $150. Wuhl":r, new, deytt ~ boih for sttS. Washer &: stove li:ave l~i yr'gUa.f. 64~17"6 a'ft 4. g•· HERCULON 80fA .&: loveseat, round nme set, tufted crwhed vtlwt HVfnr ·rm. aet, hand carved coffee & end tabll!'ll. 675-3343. · Estim. H. Stufiick. 54s-861.5 ~1444 l?U Pilot, P.O. Box 1580, Costa schOol. Call· 541-3325. 546_1311 Best · deal in area. Phone Spac• Tek· Industries PATIOS, walks, drive, ~tall PAINTINk G, protmionaJC .1All Mesa, Calif. 92626. EARLY morning newspaper '!35-1465 between 9:00 a.m. 1922 Placentia, Costa Me1a new laW111, saw. llll:ak, wor guarn. 0 or AVON PRODUCI'S ls the dl!livery .. job open truck and noon. SERVICE Station Attendant, O'KEEGE a: Merritt gas remove. 548-8668 tor est. 1 Pe eJ al is t • 9 62.6143, worlds Wrest 4 mort needed. Call a.ft 5 PM. Aik for Harman R. E. SALESMEN all shltt.11 open. 4678 Campus 11!ove griddle, & 1ep. broiler ADMlID\L duplex reftlg/ freezer. GoOd &indition. $70. *&»-5255• FOtt sale desk, dlnina aet. bar 1tools, odd Ibis, cedar chest, doe house. 2453 Orange Ave., Coata Me·sa, Apt. E. Child Care 547-14u. ~ape<:ted COlm.etie com. 9&2-1489 LADIES if you knit or &ew How about growing with .a Dr., N.B. 546-1757, $50Cle~! 5(5-&75. FOR clun &: neat palnting, pany. AVON ftprtK'nfaU~1 brtna your garments to us. brand new office: Jn a prime SERVICE Stat.ion Help. Part fRfGlDAIRE Refrig. Older LICENSED No. 9663 in my inte'rior &: extmr~ can can take advantqe of. this , EXECUTIVli We can sell t~e'm , Bulky lo.cation'! Let's get·together! time gr11veyard shift. Apply mode);. good mnditton, $40. home oU Golden West, Hun-Dick, 968-4065. tine reputation in aucee5dul Personnel Agency ,.,.,·eaters & original d~sse1 Call G i J e 1 Kavanagh. 3636 E. Coast H\VY. COM. NEAR new 5C<llchiuard 8' &0(11. &. love 1eat wW sl!parate. Sac r ifice!!! tington Beach. S36-2600. PROF. pa.intin&-illtt.r/nter. proflU.ble buslne1ae1 of are xlnt holiday items. 979-1050. r.IAIN REALTY,i======--,,=1~8.1.>-34 __ 39_·-o;,----- Contractor Honest v.'Ork. Li c /Ins. thio:ir own. c..n now, Girl Friday 673-1000. 688 Baker St. at Bristol, C.M. STENOGRAF.IER • Diver· C1mer111 It 1-::---..,------11 ~7041 r ~=~~-~---=-l =~==~~~--,.-1 sified exper, 0 . C. Airport Equipn11f'.'lt IOI G11rag1 Sale 112 : GENERAL 54&-2759, 5'0-1.f.U, · . Lite Boo,kke~ping. Penional LIVE-IN housekeeper. Care RELIABLE couple or m-area. Salary open. Sio:nd ._ , 64~1701. CONTRACTOR INTERIOR-Exterior. Quall· --.A'°U=T"'O'°M"O"'T=1v"E;;---· i sec'y, SH gd but not nee. <>( toddler. lite housekee p-dividual needed as agency 1fttlme to C!agslfi"<! Ad NO. KODAK supers Insta-matic 3 FA.~ILY patio a.a.le, Fi. ! Harry E. Brown Co. Better ty \Vork. Re..,nably priced. BOOKKEEPER Ing, N.B .. arta. 6'1S-n98. represent8.1ive. · Applicants 248, Dally Pilot, P. 0. Box, cam~a. 2Q0m lens. Like Prov, lllerM AM / f i\1, : Built Hom6. For free ~ Free estimate&. 646-1308. Exper. Small of.lice. Various 410 W. Coast HWy., NB should be willing to 15fi0, Cost r.1esa. Ca 92626. new 673--0448, 67>2723. gturdy bar stools, drtsstr, ; d a S&J Lt Suit. H 645-2716 LUHRS BOAT CO '"P"""''" !rain, & motivate===--~,....,.,-!~-~----..-. Call Hunt. Harbour job sill!, PAINTING/Papering. 18 yn; u es. aJ'Y open. cuna • group: Write, g i.v i n g TE~M'.l'E crewmllJI Jl~c'd _or Furniture 110 mirror & cheat, marble C()f.: (714) MG-7681. or main ofc. in Harbor area. Lie & bond· =~~n. area. 546-9967 otEX!> ~~!!'Elt~fEN~CE~o~ .. "1'!d.,.""r."":. 6 , quali fications: T.A. McCui!, unl1sc d. We <>fft.r h.fe 111-THOMASVILLE Italian pro-fu-tbl, dinttte st.I, patio : l213J 442-1444. ed. Ref1 turn. 642-2356. t 1 M-•u 149 W. 11th St. "t• No. Ha~ P tom . "".·· group. health . 1n~ur.. &!!I, curtain beads, clothe&, ,' BABYSIT 3 d k •'211 9-3 mo. · 0 yr exp. uu e " ._.. d p r t h vincial tab l io: and roor ha.t Sa! k s .... QUALITY 1m. gen'l con1tr. PA IN Tl NG: Hon@ 1 t • ay w .....,. Communication•. 2'330 Co!· Costa Me11 Anaheim, Calil. 92801. ~i vacanons. ro J 11 Ar· ... , ba k h . s. un. ....,J 1 with l Child. LlTE l"" 5 d11y work week. Call matc ... nr cane c c a1rs. Prospt>cf, Neu....-Shorei. , ~ien~'. ~~:~:"pl= ::r;~~~~ ~;:~d Atty bouse...mrk. &MW. ~~ t.~~-" J:~r & Ba.k· Needs RENTAL GAL · B:rde'n's Ex!r.i-lninatlng Co. 2 la.r&e ll'llvts Sl95. 968-2324. sup ER NE~~~ORHOOD 1 ref1. Niles, Ken 646-20(2. YOU '"PPY the p·'•t. n •• m, BA11YsrrrER riVE ··'••women PT. Le•d• ,Experienced Large apt complex Santa Ask for Joe Laux or Dave SECTIONAL couch $60. GARAGE SALE! Must ari : .. ""' nuu r ..., Ana, attrac Individ ual for Bardi!n 696 No. A Randolph Stereo / TV conaole $45. 11 'lY \"•• q"allly home · t d llll Al my home t 1 h d 492 4048 . 1 .. -'· fo be eve the m an y ', 11 .... ...,., .. pain e ea. so ex-urn s e • -E I I t II full time position, '"o'." Ave., C.l\-1. or call 5-16-5570. Baby's po r t· a· crib &. re.mod. \Valls, c el I I nr, ttrior. C-11 S4!>--T046. 543-2378 aft 1 pm 492-S208. ng nt ns 11 t rl comnlences Dec. ll!I. Submit itmll~r. 646-43~. bargain& you will find in : I floors, etc. No job too &mall. p R. BANK Stcrttary wanted. & Boat Carpentera resumes to Classified ad a URGENT! Boy 6 nf!f!ds homf!' turn. toys_ 11ppliances, CO!· ; 547-0036, 24 hr ant. serv. Plaiter, atch, •:>•Ir Exp 'd in ban.kine p~f. FOOD Servict Mer: Salary 286. Daily Pilot, P. o. Box bast after Rchool. 2:1_5-4 P-:11, DECORATOR blodspread, lectors items ete:. Sat Nov j Additions * Remodeling Plaiter :Patching Interior Please contact Mr. ~s :ef:::c~~~e. C..U 8l8·1lOJ Immediate Openings 1560 Cos!a Mesa. ca. 92626. Mon/Tues/W!!rl I Fr1. Vic. like new, pink/gm, $14. 3 27th 9-5 3891 Finla'tt.rre, 3 : Gerwlck & Son, Uc. Stucco Repair Ext!nor Al 673-2500, An equal op. MAID. liV'f-.in, over 35_ Ex· · Adams Sehl. Mesa Verde. pc !OJa, 'blu/grn $ 35 · Island, Hntg. H11r. ~·: 61J..00.11 * 549-2170 Small Jobs. Lie. 847-3471 portunity tmployer. Gel 'COat~r peritnced only! 2 children. RN'S Call 5(0-4187 il';Ves. 962-3655 NEW & uAed fW'n & rum.: l E-lectrical Plumbing BAR ?\-1&id, 20 hn. wk. al '44-0040. WAITRESSES-EXPER DANISH couch. ~. vlnbylkl mage: Camel saddles &: , Mother'• Salooll in 1 .... ,". ExP,:d only !or. fiberglass · MANAGEMENT Day/Eve Shift. Apply In per-cu1hion11, 2 blr ~ ......... s, jewelry; Cha irs S 1-S g ;-1 ELECTRICIAN, lieenaed, PLUMBING REPAIR 494--6245 a.ft 6 pm, ~--· p0w~r .bo4t .manutactur,er, --r-Mn ifl 2P~. Tlie ,Dtrby vinyl se11ts, wood-backa $50· LaWttffi6".'tfs '-m11ny othtr , bonded. Small job1, m&lnt. No job too small BEAUTY Op r,.ii-. .1.... ~nnanent I bl!nefits. Apply NeW fast. growini _national ALL SH. IFTS Rl!ll'laura.nt . 1262 Pallsad@s all. 642-5168. great fltrn11. Sa.l 9-2~. ' Ir repairs. 54~5203. • &12--3128 • r. U&OV-..... tn person. Skipjack J;kl&ts, & internatklnal company Rd., Costa ?tlesa. r DINING Room set: Hand Methodist Youth, Me 1 i. Co B Gu&l"&Jlteed or comm. Alm, 1763 Placentia.·. C.O.ta Mesa. seekinc loca..I rrtgmnt &·1up. ~ k --·ed m ahoaany Chi""-Verde & &krr, c. ~1. • Furniture LE PLUM ING' 1 manaru. 0)..1010. ervtsory penonnel.-.Inter· \YANTED -live-in houae eep-...... v .. 24 hr. serviCI!, 6'5-00 BEAUTY Opr. Xlnt --. GENERAL ' OFFICE: Fine viewing Thur & ,Fri. Call Fountain Valley e.r. Nice home w/ awn room pendale, table 2 leats se~s Harbor View H~e Sal~. SPEOAL! Avr. chair or R mod I & R I .,..,_. o::i. with areat v.wldn, con· f.tr, Ketchner, 12·6pm, The & M.th. 3 chlldt'f'n • 10, 6 a: 10, '"ti chairs, bullet. 61~1'!!.)J . :Eine-dHttng ts!Sle. · chairs, br!:r = :~~· c:STOM. ~:.~ r Work, ~~~~to~ or ~~ ,,~~ benefits ~~~~ ::in~Mlm . ·Community Hospital-~-~~=~=~1~itL~ -~~~ : ;~~I= :: ~:::~. ~~~ ~:i~: ~~' Gat dening iltl!tiliOm. aMttlMa,-irlll'lof -soo~INC"" -Othtr .Fee Jobs Avail MEDICAL Re c e P 1 i 0 n is t working out l or 2 dAy1 a 1801 Port Abbey Pl .. N.B. Port Mugatr, N.B. ' ttpain., Finish or roua:h MAOiINE OPEftATOR Call J@an Brown. 5t0-6()5.; nl!tded, bilingual. E~lsh 17100 Euclid 11 Warner 7~~~tf~nces requezted. SA/SW. ' CLOTHES. dishta, turn ,, Exptr Japanete Gardener <.&rpentry, David Stewut, Will train recent hiCh school Coutal Agen(y Spanish. good typln&:.-5d~s 979-1211 • • Mt. Airy bN!aktront toys. 606 Orchid Ave., CdM. _ ~:1~';;:!.~~~tH...,iiNilll,..;;;;;;C8~o.;;;;c;;;;;;;;:;;-sttd w/rd knowledge of .~mo=-H~ar~bo~r~B~l~a,,1 ~A,..dam_•-1-~l":dic.aL.exp_ml:'.d~ .R.E....Cbeckout & Qualit)'_Con: WIG Stylitts, exper~ f~!: fnlitwood~rini!~ttt-~ _rn.:n;LEri!SAt/.&in;--t,---.- INK mp& -RAna:e cnuntt.r1 :=i:;~~~~r HAIR DRESSER, ex· Salary open, conta.ct Mrs. trol m11n needed for 1mall n la.ll ~lg i'\i:;;Zh p PP~ ••• 644-1034 *•* * * Garage· Sate ·* * : AL'S Landscaping. Tree ban. Expert I n 1ta11 . Blvd CM ' peritnced only. Willing to Tillotson. 54!4!386. n@W electronic bu1iness in chain. G ~ Y 7800 ~I mAr ,ffldeabed $67.50. Couch 219 Onyx Avt, Balboa 11• , : removal. Yard nrnot!elin&. Reuonabll! me estimatf', ' · · work. Guaranttt ll.1 com. ~1ECHANICAL designe r or We 1tm1. qi I er . 6 3 91 ~';·• · ' or nre ' $65. Velvet chair $47.50, Sat & Su"4ay 10 a.m.-5 p.m. ; i:~hlr ~~~~~~~~t6~~~~· MS--0740. IOYS 10-14 ml1sion, 499-3165. 'technician to ci-ta!e-hard· \Vest m 1 n st _e r Ave, · · All l~ new. fi42-817l . GARAGE SALE: QUALITt • S PE CI A L I Z E 0 !louse to deliver Pfopers in the San H'ANDYMAN for Md job!, \Vllre & equlpmeht & push We1tmlnster · Call 894-3301. ltema, S.t Ir SUP. !M6S Elii1, ! , '~ Japanese Gardener. Oemente, San Juan CapJ.I. · 1 llDrr...) NEARLY new velv~t .. Repa ir. Carpentry. paintin.c, trano and Cal>Jgtrano Beach Over 30. Appear 1n person projl!ct to eomplet on. 1631 I ~ V loveaeat &. 80fa, a 110 Foo,ntaln Val!io:y. i ~'::~ ~~m~~~'";i,:~":; ""Call Olok, 642-4722. .,.,_ ;~ ~:::";,;~~77 E. 17th Placentia, C.M. RETAIL DY . na"gahyde '"· 5.\1.@5. SAT. 9 AM;·refrlc .. '90fa ~ 968-3486. Roofing DAILY PILOT ;·D I ha • , * + ' • * d SALES LA MAPLE-Lovt5e11.t Rocktr .ch1llr • ....,1.abll! & chairs, ml.c. i EXPE:R. Ja.pant.'Se Gardener • T. G11y J\oo&li, Dta.l Dl· 492-4Ql HE~. ve ~ new Men · R·et1re· Antique• IOO .... ,..!40234. 6+ ~7!-,,lON,~.e.u.s Harbor l~. °'eo"x;-;;eo::::-<.:::-=i=:;:::-=c I bu.a.Inns th town & 1 need For .Ou1l1'ty Bokory m Tree trlmmjftl", Oean-up, rect I do my own ~'Ol'k. YJ-lot mbminr: 1hllt. hri u -··• ~ La\lo'fl ~taintenance, £4.> 80 MS-9:!90 Must ht' ,.,..,II med ne t your .. f:.. !u.,_ ...... ou uvur $AAO M CHINESE Porcelain vues w: S FAM . ar lr--t'.~~~~~~~::::~l;~~li':'~~~~;=;~n~~~~~~e~~~;?'.:•-:r--••v .O•=~--t-C--<n.;r.row.'iOi>T0:-11"'.<i'·iisliaiiii!i•l..>t2':·1tr• hiNI app'l., elc. :ll222 Sunsh1 or REPAIJlt. reeovtr any roof an. pply Richard's ntw comp&Jll' w/new idtas As Sanca.5 ln alorn & Fa1h· PP Y n e?'90n bU)' in thil column & mott. 8 ~· Udo Markel. 3433 Via· Lido, Mr. Ander~n pa inted platrs .,.,./atands, 53&-l64& Dr., H .. "N·l176 Sat. COMP L ' lawn-gardtninc IJroblmu, Weneda Roofinl, New-port Beich _ & financlal opportUni.t;y_for •· lOn O-nten tn s.'i; ilnitr jars. $5: candl~ 9:"in.: , ' • •er v, cl ea n-up/maJnt. Free •St. 64$-1691. boss averaae inttre1t1 YoU • Newpbrt·Or1ng1 Cnty SNACK SHOP j holden:, 50 cent•: ttapqi1. 9'X11 ' W iiton Ruo, BABY Fu Cl th ;1! R.io:u. Rates. CaU En~. S I /Alt II BEELINE f1..5h)Qru needs YO\I .1n11r111 mt. For & San Clemente BAKERY • ti ~ I -m"""' • llS *'* 644-8905 m., o ea, ; ew ng era ont tul ...1.._.;._, nl -" an que uuw s; '"" btd, much nio~. 1 7 1 ,· 540--355li. _ _ ll'Omen, I or p/time perliQfi..i Interview o Y caa \\'e tr&Jn it provide COl"tumes l"' E-C t H many other items 497-1910 BEAUTIFUL MeditHTl.ntAn Cf'ntella Pl., NB. Sao/•·'· , CCMPLETE lawn & 1--"·n-Europell'I Dre'l•maklnc work, We train, car ntc. "TtC /87()-4782 r.1on thtU Fri. PHONE F\OR INFO: ..._ • 0•• wy. .,..,. lloe't'I """' ~~ 1-•M k 636 I Corona dtl Mar or~·· dlnin.rroomsetwlthaervtr. 10-4. l ma aervb. All. eu1tom titted. Penon&I ,,.,...._, w · -014 • 1°*1n·2pm --.;:--i5~2~1-~3~36~1=:;::cc:-l'"...;;;;;:,;;;~~~;,..~ll~:S.~[~:2ra-~"~-oiF~F'~ ~ 10 apprtelate! 5(5..~ • J1m M&-0405. Fuhkln adv\ct. 673-JM9. SJ9..S435. l:LPI I hA nni.i u-,,. SAT. 6. Sun: Hdbld llerria, : ,;;;;;;n;-;;::;--;,==--;::;;IH Yfl. • ~fen, Wom~n. Ch~drto SAL.&SMEN Noi.o 11th-2bt. .Amtrlca.n ' s'PJECE bdrro •I. IOtn'l\cei hl:by 4':qulp. and muc• LAWN M&int. Jla.ul• .... , new Alttr1tlont -642-lMS. BUil.D 2nd Jll(.'l;)m@, Seil bu1lnts1 fn town "& I need FAMS & FORTUNE .., , ...... .a •• to E tum B~ ·--att 2 • "• Ba1ie H. Vit1-t. Proteill. ..-.r help. Jt a ........ und noor ~,~ men wi.., are tttoq Ul"Opetn ·• fin1'h, $50. -If mon! 2041 Tu1thl Ari., • LIWN. cletn-up, pruniJ\c. Ne.t, act'lll'ate, 2'.I )'tat& @xp, .,v.. ••w Could Awalt You letlrn ~ C'li' busliw?sg ind Pnta;'t, OrlentA.11, AcctllOr· p.m. ~ . cu. F'l'ff Est. Call &16-7379. Slrin Care. Call 961-4m or opportunity oHtnid by " Jnde nd FU Prod Co wllll ) l M 11 "?be Bfle.m A -~ ""' Tiie • 64&-4""~. ne-·-w/-w lde11,po'••i· pt ent m F ·TV· l.t'I": DI 0 tran. u IM, etc.-1 •· COMPL:E:TI: "ou1ehold GAllAGE"Y·~•-~ s d I .H.J .. '""' '"" Nttd& New Faces or h&vio: Cood J'll!1'90nal\ly, be tlques, zoo Newport B Yd., , :.~ S . · ... '"""' -..". tmr R1ll•ble Gar tn nt ctlUMIC tUe new ' CABI.E TV "SA.LES.l\fEN blr eunlnp In f!XctP flt Commm:iAls. Movt.:1, tnttuuted In a f'llture , dreu C.M. Items A ~ti®'" tove, ' turn. M11e. ho o If ho 1 d . MaJni. Yd Cleanup. 6f6.l072 rernodtl. Fl'M u.t. Sfnall HiJh COmmlaiiii111 S.10.IXXI or .rT'iOl't"""fltr )'I' 1n+ Ad vuUstna. ~.-111. Mlesmlnded.. Benefits: The f&lteat draw m tM weat ntrJ.a. Dl!ilcl. 6U<5&51 lttm1. JJ/ls.20-21. 2 O 3 1 TALL Yard and Garden jobs ••elcome. 5l&o-2.42S. S.n Cltmente .• 'T'uAtin • te.n!lt' Y® .. You i~ten!&t 1\1•! NO tXP"ER. NECESS. Domo., grnup lns., gu11ran· a Dally PUot CJauttied ROUu:rTE wntel $35, Bar PaJoma Dr. CM. ._ Clean.up. Rtuonabl• rat.ff. Trff SJ!YICt Mhaion Viejo • Viita • And I \l/CIUld like to m~l $3l-S138 Ptr Oay teed aa.Jary plu, commi•· Ad M:J...~ • $25. elPCI trple lot Sl<I. GAR)CE s:&:le· Irvine T 4 -646-0™ •ft 4. -Z:scol'ldldo are.a you\ f'or-a ~rtOMI. .,.. (W) 461-3051 slon1. Unlimi1cd incornt. Ai: Don:t Jive UR the •hlp! Tripod $3. mlao. ~ rtoe.J400 Stm:nad1 TerrA EXP. Jltt4'alian Gardtner. 'GENERAL 'fret ~rv. Yard Call /.tr . .r'l'>mpkliu. •92-6350 tm.>iew call W..9130, SEw!UJNth ... G =~.!*,.,",.··~a~~:; TYply tnOLDPe~fa·e~~ "'List" ll, In duaitled, Ship 5-Plect a..lrMM ~t Sat. NoV!mbtr 2()1h •• , h Complete ranle'nJne leJV, clt.l1Ml'P1 haullnc. 1prlnkln !~n 1:30 I 5:00, Mon· uou:z Huntfn&'! W•tcb lbl .... .-u M _.,, = ~ .. ...." - -•.... • .. ~~.r $p • Kamalanl, ~ • ~In. Jltta•. 6*-6MI. Fri. OPEN HOU&& ~11.. Pilet.Oa.UWMS. 66-5'11 -Harb<lr Bl'l'd., Ol8t& M~. tD Shore n'9:ultll ~-_, .,... ._ --·------"-' I , ' . • ., I • DAILY ,!LOT ~ Frldoy, """'bit It, ltn 1~ V •• .i .. 1r,i [ 1 ....... i;j' .. , ·· ~I ··· ·· ~I ~ .. ~ ISi -"'t~., •ior ... s.ie· 111 o ..... s... :M1:.: .. :1: .. :.:.:.l:.~lili~ll=• Lt---Ill .._ a!'rq,ITliw,.UO ..... I~ .__I· r_,.._.._ .... __,J[i] ....... --jAl\'i~~~'"'iiif"'i<O~l-.,;=:::-=,,,-l-lll~~===.,,,,_-. Mloeollow ll ..,..,. __ m a-Cyclu, an... ~ ':f~ iliilr-:-f<O.. ~.6,c~ ... ~ •AUCTION• ~-, 110 SALi ,, • , -YOUNG, lh>.LJU!!t ~-ol too 5-t t2S "'" !bl •• ~~ ~ • ~ w•alm&s --....--.... ---~ "-_,_,.. ,_ ~ ~-~ -~ •--' --=.,,..,,,::::;~,_..-r"'"" ---~ lbll ~ Goo! •-• ... • ~~-,. -~, .. -• N<w ··--11!2 ~ W ~u---. ~~...-• ---· c.mwi ,,..,, .. llO. -· """'":?.'.'._~ ·-HOUS --·-~. . • -liill ............... &lr '.,,...IM'iUtlc'~•l•···· Call --· .... ~CEN'lUllX-lhJU!•, '&9 SUZUXJ bl.ck chh: ·$1). CU Band • -.!"'"' pQrt •ltNcl, E t&rnous name ~ · ~ •.a apt a i Ion 'Ptaktrt, w/auto ~ 'Winder. P\tt tL P«rlect ~· cheap! 180 hp rad.lo uo. Ho\ywd btd near new, lA.rre. kM!t.Y tnc. Mink A ermine tu'" AM/FM ata.o .. ad l o a "GOU>IN TOUCH" to ALliliGx Men lnbd bait tank: 4 pump, ril· fltme S!. U-baW •feel trl,r $tara1r•Ph.P i ctur~ Auction.'1twryFrl,7pm !':';u:~\.::11a1F:!! w/rtr •tape dedr..1tW )'OUr--•wtnawUh~OM!! ot'l'bor•t11wTUdTw: rM a .Ma.run. Call PJ, ~~~·Wl'C·· uo. s hp &l(lt motor siJ. w/d••pny. wau • cc. n t . Furn. Appll. Antlqt»t OGntll1\IMflt l"QntJ .. ~ brand NW, •u It 11 Au!OrDlltkdy:. bu~. old ldUitia. .u • h 0 l'-1 s.r..-wkd)ol t to s. Harbour vw Comml tbl aaw, cott JMO ~ umater vacuum' '3015 W. WIJ'l)tr, S.A. i' Utt Hoo., sX S. _.,,.__,,,. uricla&Md on layaw-.y. Sold bttnd' Mma, ew:T'Caltl • ._ 5'Ml9t • iHtlJM.rlne lell S2CIO. S4>-25ll:l. ' •Wi~l Wmpoo ~hair tor Llollow ae..,-cl\_llcb.O _ • CA '-AllllJ ~ $321 ott Wane. ~ et'l"., Med~ I I • l""==~~--!:~--1 ahop or homt. Nlcf' buUet Sf9-2Ul e 547-7733 Jte.at, Tuf4,ln, &32"'212. , lllS or' ~ -----~! ..n~et.bl°net irid\Jaf!il. Sactl-** German hphtrd LI. :b 't" P. to4 ll.871 Beach Blvd, HW>t. &h. ~F~IC'E lurn for nctfl rm: 52" wkk x lS" htJh, J.UdN-* AUCTION * -affl&,LI '31 puppitr, he to lovin.a C<raJ ...... ····~ ........... ,1c .... ~ ........ --,. EXT. ldna .... 11 50. ... ....... eoti.ct1oo Dept. "'" ...... "'-" -.. ~ -· 'c~.H .. R1's'r=t L .. IGHTS11 8<""'5 ·~ •• • Hump .. ck tnmk $35. Twfo Tl"" 1'tmiiw. , n41_,, """""'"' c....-, L<0: '·~·~· . MM er~E BIKE SHACK• combo. Rem1111ton • l • c 4eyer, quality c Io the' btd Ht $&). Jtecl. ctialr •M, ._ A~•· -REft'Pff • . _._.., __ ,, '°"'· !l6ma. YOUNG MALE lJURMiSt l2iO Watt! ACDC J>Ort .• l!iht I PD BICYCLES ·typtwriter, I"' metal file women's, mtn'e, t.een •1'. -• ~-.-.:. .--.,...,. up a..-1,ni: plantt idNI forOui eabinrt, Secy'e ch a Jr' various slset. All in '""''*'!Sillm;Tm proJ, .$35. AnUq. dbl Au~ Friday, 7:QO D.m. twin btd1 whit. dlett" oi Sper1iftt Geel• .. !HOI'S I: PAPERS tiahts ~t paNtJe . atmaa: PARTS e ACCEs90RlES Polaroid camera, Dtsert «>nd. 567~96. $3S. Skit• boots (U.9} Windy's Auction Barn drawers, 't1raqe1. to7 1 , '" IU-01'5 ~nr etc. Sold~( EXPERT REPAIRS he1t lamp, 1ludio couch, .sM. Ice akates C2I 11. S&Mn. '115% N-CM .-....... Chlne1t cottte t&blt: e:1: 11 SU1U'80ARD, t •• t • coac .... -poo puppiee: I wQ sm.z. Umittct -i t ON ALL MAKES . utidt XMAS llbopplJI&'! Try UI game-tbl .. 4 din. $150. ~~-:· -• • •tabl~. ao..11 wan. ~tone old black. brown. • bit . WJ"l"Y • T" -. mix •· Sat. t-3. 2lD first Youth bed m&ll 644 6333 Behind Tor\)' a Bld.r Mat'l pensive modtl • wardn>M, JoM, pert eond. 12 :5 St· .tantutic avtnp, $US.SO, ires I: TUbes • All Su:~ •Via Ithaca, Udo. JM~• ehtita' ~ 1 i: PAINT BRUSHES _ PURE eUa 12 to 14; at. t.eenqe 146--'f&U ' • S4MW. Mlnney's, zm W. Cout 1093 ( BAKER, CM 4 GAJ\AGE Salei in Broed-ot c1othta (~~·a .l Beauty Shop Equipment BRISTLE AND ALSO dot1W'1. 1C37 Anrtcua Way, FREE Cata A: Kltter9 Rwy,, N.8. Near Fairview e 546-4Uo 'moor Hetbor View: an. women·11 'record bookii (ll TWO StaUon Flm;tntine NYLON -RANGING 1N '*-5IOI. a:2 MARIJN bott action J'lle Call Work MM565 12 VDC to ll7 vac Inverter '69 Yamaha. OT 1-B 21" tique1, blke1, tum, k>y1, nicJi:-naclat:. Sat A: 18ua. Nov'. ~r;:sina bar w/l )If' mir-SIZES FRQ.\f :'' tG I" My LNI .. Ye41r Gainl : ~= 31" IOOlt l\.Ul. Home 5'3-U47 or 3l3-3)U Heftb MP 14, 4M \\1arta ~I. Kana, camber h , dottie1, aklia, etc ••• Silt 3'th 4 2bt. 211 .14th St., df'lk 3f~w~a:;~~I DROP CLOTHS, LAD-%-carat diamond r!nr. Tif. ', , ' MALE, white kitttu. contlnooui, frequency con-~red frame,al:lftt~uip. NoY. i>th km-41UT1 llll6 Ii N.8. in back alley in cha·:.. J air nif . ~ DERS, Fl'C., BllAND NEW fany ,91!ttifW. Value J&OO. GIRLS 10-fpMd. lUot MW Tnined. Adon.bl~. M7-WS tr'(il 8) eye.lea, polarity pro-Xtru, (n4) 968-6179 I.ft 2724 Wawcreit, at J: tru garqe. dry1 • A: Wco ltlo ***BARGAIN*** Alkirw ~. (FR.EE • mwt' toft(. Hu tenden 1: lluJcet, eaD wtlme· ttttkm, input ci rcu i t 5:30: ·Windover, CdM Mlscelltneous Ill Bel:'edue .~1;;o ~ Call Anytime -MJ-lllO ~· Jady'e 4 man'r wed· l70. MJ-ml. PARTJJ;o;;dre puppy· 2 mo. bretktr. N~-CeckM out. "•"'u"'SE""our-"lk>nd&~~Chris~~tma-, EXTRA Special G •rare "°"""':-------with ft!Tinz A:-chair, 2 CARPET du~ bl.ndl..) 0.H MS-S710 Mwi's SKJS.Het.d, ll0'1 (MW old, Jona hair, ell white. Ncwr .Ultd ·l100. ~no l&y.._way "plan. H e rb Salr!! Lovely pine SABOT, nr new, r•cina .eparaten. $4!0. Beauty FAC"l'ORYOt.rrLET afterlp.m.•weekendt. • ~1)w/bindiftrs•• Low1cfilldt'f:n.UG-71SO. afttrl'P.M.~wknda. FriedlaMer, 537.6824 , secretary, flower bin table, center b 0 a rd ., on.np suppflH: elrtra. CM t'19-0T26. SAVE $ $\$ SWAP MEET, TeWJnkl e oftft". ltt tol3. MAIUNE radio, . :Pe arc~ ;;m,"'7S6S=•·-.,,...,,=;...,,,,,_= I Queen Anne dinln,s table, fibertla1, comp. S2f11. 2 Jae. CHRISTu •s LIGHTS Attention .Apt Owners School (PI'A.)1 Cl.ll~ • 2 10.tpel licycles SirnplOft B tm t n l 550 YAMAHA 250 FW1 Gyt Kit E111ll1h JKlh chair, Wlnd9or wood etorqe nit k '""" Nyion Sha $190 yd 1; Gialft', C:C.ta MHL Sat i2s $fl5 I~ w/anttnna. & mount Pft· Desert -read .All ' Chair. wicker, cuatom .:ita, ott w· bl.e~ ~ rru. e 1250 Watt, AC-DC port. iilhl F 11 P,, -~ up Nov:-st'(t tO S) Call tor bdo a: A-* l73-QIO ............ tuned. New tl75. 646."6082 y, extra etc. 1m Port Carney Pl., ~~}26.'"I' · $25. ~lanll • XJN.l for Chri1tn1.a1 511¥1"":; ;.t. F.dinpr, s.i ~-' itwe~ Rtlt•uPIM, 1 ·-eve. ' ~ :.:ii~t. pl1.15 more. N .B. 5U--281.1. ASS hgh.ts boat parwde. ct1mpen, Comer ot Edingott Ir Euclid POOL T_..•LE SLAT r , l•r lft SCUBA compmllOl' .l WO !SfANCE ·uallll' Holl-cab1n11 e1c. Sold new •t ~ £> Pttl Gent I ISO " Boys SchwlM 3 Speed GARA.GE Sale. 7' day Fuhion Speeial Sat.10 $278.25. Limiled supply at PRJV. Pty, nr new wa1her, Beauti.M repJica antlq~. FOJt Mic Olmmi C.. "ftOY-e ' ra anchcn, Nyl. A-Dae. ft!pe. Stiniray, like new, 1 Mantiomcry .. 111na DIJllhy. lo 2. 505 3:hl St., Newport tantutic •vinp, $129.50. lop ff!'at~ $1~, J'U drytt, walnut, Sold cloth, leather I. hOod_ (W6lf-Junior #C-Mll:e. Mt.rint • q U Ip · year old. UO. 6'B-2278 Stove 125. ltttria: $25. '59 Beach. Minne)I '•, 2537 w. Coeal xlnt S&S. U~ new eol.Uaat-~ell. MU9t .ell ~or ~ 2 ~ &t fr)'en, FOR. Sale, CWkml bul.lt 100L•~·~·~-~;,..,----=,j ·66 YAMAHA 250 Scramblf'r Mel'C\ley St• W-.a:n $60. WILSON Sabot $1.95. Lido Hwy., N.B. lier 40", ru ranp ~. A otter. ~173. Oiminl kit. sink, UpdJht 1a.Uon aquarium eomplete loats, e.ower f06 re-bit •nc. Looks & rum Uke , Drifter -tor 25' aaU .boat, mainsail~ or make offer. DELX Sears Waaher $60. Reel mo~ $60, Coppertone USED !'Um. Heu1ehold ffttter. l'dl wt.l'l'Mr_ bot SlSO, 1'11-m10. -$195 645--4008 plut many othtr l!em1. Spinet piano $250. Nora;e Dryer $50. FM'ezer $80. ~rrir., nr ntw si.z. BIW ilem11, mile. '"Boat motor doc wumtr. Stainle91 ttff1. Doti• IS4 27' CABIN Cruiltt in very new. · · Sterllna !t., off Pomona n!'friientor, '493-l92!. Breakfast table $3. 6 Din nn T.V. b Ion d, n;c. "'°· etc. 19522 NaJu o-., Hunt 10' counter, b cre.m rood t.'Orl:t, a1eepa 4 or more, '67 KAWASAKI 251) SS ~Jany Co1ta Mfta. Sat 4 Sun. U . chefn; SS. ~a. 2 Platform ~. Harbour. flttRr, 2 ~ Dlf.dUn-WANTED: SnWJ. male SiilQr ha.I head, plley, radio, bait xtn.11, runs aooif, i225 or CARPETING, &ood cond, 40 e1 cuh ftltster 'booths Terrier;. lank, dinfhy &: mooring nr. beat offtt. 64&-2547. CHU.OREN'S book-I: toy1, .yds, white shq. llll Yda chairs S30 4 Sl5. Divan. .2 SACR.IFICE! N.B. Tennis Oub Mtm: 1ablft: bencb cte_ Mak • Object: Matrirnoey • eoon. The' :Pavillion. , A sood :-ua lloolt A:-b 1katn; ~an-nut -hi-lo $1.50 per-yd or .eclions $45. <l> Twin bed % Cant diamond riJw, Tlf. benhip Gftt hi an Mlida,v ~di or .,..:.·-.IJJf.;, CH-'991 before noon Gr ewa. tilhit:w &-pltasutt boat. AU BICYCLES 1»-$40. tique-door knobs, hrdwre, beat offer. Ped .ao avail. $20. All 111 lood cond. fa.ny .e~. :Reta.ll value> activitie1. ttw S$ • ._'IM7. 5 A 1llknd& GREAT Duw fe-·'• ... -. flOr $3500. See-al 3510 Xlnt cond • . tablet, bv 110ol1, stationary 962-874.8 $600. Aakinr: $.285. <Matchlnr . ma1 .... 646-4:161 1t1ppliea. 1 mi.&c hlhld 50c Pft' yd. 83.1-0367_ alt f -Lady's .l Mart'• ~i1ll YACHT Oub Membtrthip TV, It.HJ.. Hll'I, .AKC ]lf'CIVen show' qua.lily Marcw: Aw, Nwpt Beacb. j ;C:;oo"""""=;:':::':"'-,.,.,,.,~=. lft.ms. Fri I. !at t--5 1606 wkdys, anytinw Sa.t/Sun. BLUE chair xhlt cond $25, bands, never Mini, FJlEE!) $850. ind. tr&Nter t.e. Steree Q6 4~ ~ Cropped 4 lhotl' Call 67l--1'64 tint. D Christm.u ideli., '70 'K Ln NB MISC baby furn, matching De:, lnz, twin bed Yi/cpread Call St&--5719 after I pm Ir. CG-31'11 ~ • 2.l' pU'tia1J.y tinlsbed hull, Hodab., lood df:rt bike, , ent ' . . crib 4 dreuer S3S ea. + bolsten, new $50. weekend1. DININGl'Cl!llll~t..__._·-.sALLlm.Zullthl.anonlale . pl I lb S50 &ood cond. + xtra•. PATIO Sale lc.otfff), Baby lamp $5, towel •ts $1 ea, ti X 1 ,.., u...Nl"I' ,.,,,,. f'retw pnee• remain AKC ~. Poodln, lilver. 3 mannt yw lb. 644-1664. ·furn., Bike1, Mink t tl, Great O'Kttle A--MeJ'.ri tt ru dilhe1 by ~ne Df Italy SERRA Thrift Shop, 113 ..._•.... -nt eond. SU. in e!rect while inwntary Fem. l Male $llO. Depc111 250 KP Interceptor V...S w/ M"A"'VER='°'r"CK"'"M""l-n~l-,,..----<1·; 'b ,, I range' $75. Codctail lable .~ .. I 14 I MainS',Huoli~6_1....._ ,..__ holds 'til c 'hrlitmao ·. velvet~.$30orbothfor -....,-& o" •, W or d b co k . $2' C · ..,,, It' • tare Ln ... • .......... .,., ._... Juts. ~ le. tha.n the ......,. ., •• ~-~1 cle. 4 apeed trans. Exc.llent 'T. -•/tam.,, Girl'a bf'd, · · all after 5 PM (Bia; Canyon) 644--33%1 i1 havina annual <lui1tmu Schwinn Bila Lemon" htlu -. ........._. --.. l -, pie-'42--09T.I or M&-0142.· •'""· ~ · v;s 642-187!1 .._.........,.... ., • ..,., .,. .... u-··· ·-•.:""" cond. $160. MS--1879 aft. 6. J\olall., Child'• book~ 1. rn l1. . UPR!GlIT freezer, 6 rnoe:. •ale Monday, Nev. 27nd It 5 epd. SM. lure tube, 1 yr parta, 1 yr * 2 SIAMESE· SEAL.POINT.., wu.14' .........,, ~ or .All day wknda. 'f'ri. Sat. & Sun. 610 WIN~back 10la $50. Slippe:r old, S:l.25., Ke 1v 1na1 or Tuts Nt1v. 23rd. t :30 tt1 7 *675-5127+ aerviee, Mliwry .\-9tt -\Ip. K11TENS. ·Good ditpolition trade lt!f< trailer boat + * ,69 Yamaha 250cc Enduro. i ;Jurninf", CdM. ~has i_rBll•b uphol1te-cd chair fn"lll--frtt nlrir .• Avocado Pt 11). M~~Y ~~~-Mar rM!'W Mlteella,...,. ABC C:Olor TV, Ora~ ~.~.!1"-ill«l· $15 ea: cuh. Owner, 846--1430-. -Xlnt cond. 3000 ml. $525. or fll!o ••, a Y &ell• $4 . New s•~ Ma~ar _,_, __ •~. cy1, IJnl • ....,,,.-..,tma1 ac-WI--... County'e 1---1t %enith ,,_. """°' * 41' am.IS Craft tri-cabin, P "'-'e! Tools, tabl• M ~ J• ....... ~ ...., -• -... • ., '"·•t oUer ~· •~• -~-6 _. a1t1aYOX turntable $35. l)Ml90rie1. DH.ltr. -AH.,,•-at ...... --·al -h lo d d' """ · .n<>""V<.w .... ..,r ••"'· elec emo..., whffl, Kenmore r•• dryer $8(), ...,... .... GUAltD DOG: See _., lw•n....,. .. .r er..,.,, P a e · P~l "'wtmd ··iardtn tools, Jte;inpn ot-l.f&-.50U. black/white bdrm . ecrner MINK jl.cbt, natunl sun Mqnolia, Huntin1ton miniature Schnauzers. A.KC. Ownerl73-i780. · · s • . 'ftce typewriter, m i , c . MINK Stot.1: Sllvtr :Blue, lf'OUll, SlSO. 962-{]661 metal, !incerttP I en rt b, ~. 911-3329. houtebroken. I .,.1cg, a.J..1 SELL or pu1ner '70 Formula ~ b 1 ke, ~mon 'Thun., Fri., S.t. 10 •m 5 Breath ol Sprlnc. Arrenta. WANT a pool tablt for late1t row collar slylt, worn CASH PAID FOR GARRAR.D cam pone ft t (]wnp)Oft linn, "'5-Q'.)9, 23', xln't eoad • .Mr. Joyce 5 apd, .$50 , pm. 5.12 Center SI., No. E, Sl.crifi,Ct'. Pvt pt;y, Call for Christmas! Have dftn 1 ft. only I timtl, valued at &. tandtur9. a,,u•-. • Y • t •I'll, u n e I aimed A.KC Fem. Collie SlOO or .fM...7114. * 67>3627 * ·c.~t. . a.ppt..646--«171. w/cuee 4 ball& Com-$1'100. Ml $100. .Evu, an~ OJ,. Peee or layaway• 100 watta, amlbn 8hare ol litter Gr.-t JJ' Ffberslul power boat, r. POOL TABLES w ... ~... t'Jt.-lllO. . ... ___ ,, .. ,._., ..11 .. _ -..c.... •term, .. _..... • .... _,_ --/chJl•-n • .,. ;._. .. SUZUKI 80cc dlrt fut IOOd Nelthborbood Sal~ Tum., ex-uuu po1ition. Will ta.ke-paymenll ............ '-Al.I ...,,. _ ._.... ..._ -....--.. W"1< w_._, John.IQ,n 00 hp enr. $850 cond. Many xb-u. ' $1.SO. :ercile: equip, u.nd 'tires, car Sale. Frel1ht da.m.aaed $4.9 & bold SUD FP. 54~UOl'alt I' DECORATED Chrlatmu •2Ml cr MT·Tl1S. IUlpe:Nlion 1Pkr. Qttftn, GOLDEN tri * ~rm* :kennel, eltc b t: d, col· to U99. New slate fa.ctoty 6 pm. trH UO port. typewriter com.pl Gunni turntable re eVft' pupa:, ;:~,,...-"°"==·=,,,,,~~--·I ; lectiblel, aun lamp, tapt: crated, S195 to S 3 t 5 , BALBOA Bay Club _ Full $2!J. Cuh ttailter ~· .aid te"pa.rattly b-$.109.15 ~:1.ale:Ax~~~ Champ loata:, S.JI 909 '70 SUZUKI 90, 8 pan, : recorder, mile. 9531 Smokey ~. 529--8416. family mem~hip inclda Divan 4 chair S.125. Mixer WANTED A. m •I e r pay ell .small N.l. ot Sl.59.97 · · CAL 2?, SX50. g h.p. street/trail, Ile. Lo mi. •Cir., Park Hnlp trad, H.B. YAQrr CLUB MEMBER-Irvine Tennis, iavt S65(1. w/attac.b S.'Jl bunk bed1 $50. ~~~cal~e!i rat'!;°~· «' pym~-~f J5.4.l. U.S.A.. e:-u;rxnn-little m. Ix Ev\nrudt, bow pUlput, had, S280. Call aft 5; ~. , t8&-9079. SHIP Sll50. 0ndd'1 !J'an.tfe-r Wrile, Clu1ltied ad No. l67 546--87st alt I. e, a No. ~. Stereo """""Ip. Wa.rebouse, &I e puppy, trained, &Otld Amd. Spara, hinged rnut, 305 HONDA Scramble, must • f ·~ Dre.Hy Piiot, P .O. Box 1560, J1t E. lTth St .• C.M. homt'wan~. SJ.0.. &12-48U. MW bottom, 846-2218 or LEAVING STATE, Kitchton ff). -•Vinrs. MUT40 Daily Pilot, P.O. &x! 1560 I'M in the-U.S. 9elling Lon-0xta Mesa. Ca. nug: M>-2"2 JO to JO dail ~to apprec, $3'.Xl. or make applia toys caroera 4 t'Vtt. Costa Mesa, CaHl. 9l6J:i. don rf.d doublH~k bu••· · ' y. YOtuaES. MALE FEM. 53ft..4935. offer. 548--3093, aft 5.. :projec::.•· llttbery tqUip. FULL krw"th dark nnch MAN'S Diamond % C + 2 Price $4,«ll. Deliwnd L.A. WANTED! New er Ueed STEREO, Seott rcvr, lmported. lt mo'1, AKC. FIBERGLA~ dinghy, 2 '70 HONDA CB'50 xlnt ' , Wnpt, rup, dilhN I< mink (!(11.t. Sec to ap-•ide llione1 lw&vy yellow Muit Lucy rm. 2t Mariner &.~ = :U" =--~ ~ = $11»-$175 537-4144 ftotation tanks. Mahocany corm., 6000 mUe1. Best at- ;steawan. 1 O a rn. 4 pm • preclatr. Sacritioe $ 4 o O. Sold mou~tina. $ 1 'J 5. Moti!1 di W. 0.. Hwy., fin1ah Prov ~ / MIN. SdUlatlZft' t wk m&Ie rudder J: 1te boud. da.cron fer. 642--0928. •Thun. to Sun. l 01J2 962--m"t. -:, ~3173. NB. ._ WANTED IJl:lfll106d d:ain kn Bea· ~ •,.: PllpPy, alt.&: pepper Nil. $115. 833-3835. 250 cc _ Suzuki _ X5 :eon.titutton Dr. HB. FREE! Water bed (5 yr, FOR ale janill'.:lrial equip. RUG: round, llU n e• w/a.rm~ W-M3ll e :um: S'm. ~ Prfv, PrtY DT--5460 SABOT .eml-race @qUfpptd. Dirt or street GA.JUGE Sale: Wed thru .cu.ii'.) w I poreha,w el. any 17" butt~r. .,.et I dry w/pad ll'ft on blue wu uk-. -, OOXIE ~ies, I wb, red, J.N.S..A. f'fl· $275. CtlJ 646--1950 a~ 5. , 'Sun. Mini blkt-, Coll clubs I. frame I: liner. 141--2296. vacuum, uprifhl vaC\ltlml, Ing SU5, uJcinl $69. pr. liV· Mu1ktl lftlt"""""" m ~ .. ~ traclt stfftO tape AKC, m~, &bots. Stud Offer .-6'4-8014 '7l KAWASA.Kl 500 ~ ... Ah Ill • Sz: 1 hOf: 1. 1 inr rm tamp• $38. trple ~-r • 15 r • e 11 •rvice 830-7338 . "'""' • • • •. aw r amp1 REGINA F1oqr-shampooer, etc. 646-1082. ecreen1 n5 A ff. lined KIMBAU. uPrta'hl P1-no 1140/bnt otftr. lnq. alt 5 • . SABOT, like ne~. 2 JnOJ. 1,000 mi, xlnt cond. :wtmatch. 1pread, dbl Md, waxer-polishtr S20. SEAR'S ~ lathe, tt.kts dra 1 re.uonab]I!!'. 6"--36l• Ex. cond. with very nl~ pm. Apt. 3',.lto W-. WillOl'I, SAMOYED Pl.II* JD wka, Xlnt. •••• all equip. $950. S97-n90. 1pln1 Jk)n& I pool tbl, llv. rm 5*--1J79 approx 30 .. len&fh,.-J. HP P" tone. "25. ta-76l9 CM. tKC, Champ line. MA.Its. $275 •-546-675.\G ==rru.s=,.,,3-,--~~b-1"'-.-h-.,->d I ;•t. 8x10 tenl, etc. 0!2 MAYTAG Ill dryer, JMdf!I motor, I turnin& 9'>011, $50. SLEIGH • One-hone open, AMPLIFIER. 12" -ktt SONY -I.....__ ..... p•·-r . alOl'l&ble. ~7-2504. **.CALM** brake1, Xln't Cond, $40. I Da.ny Dr., H.B. MT-9581. ....., 1 Id 67~ ..,.,.,, authentic antique', p •rt. _..._." "'"-.....,.. p.-boa!~ tood 100~ Prl le pa....,, ..,Jc .. ,,.~ POVER SHOtiES _ MOV-ouv, yr.o 'perfectcond. .......,...,.,. cond. Bumper pool table, U5. Elec. cuitu, Aria, liker~. Crate Pleneer ~.. "' • ."'tre.h V& .... ...,. V'l<P'"......,. 6'13-8050or6U-8932. I Id I TV 1150. or beat oiler. 15)..1302, C 0 LL EC T I N G old eirtn lone. twin beds, new $65. 540--4419 TPn5 I track f'M ear mqto t, ~~ !~7· ~wred Boats, 511_,s/Docb 910 HONDA 3M CL, tare •70 ING. Pcol tb . o too a, • NICE ., d _ ., __ , H old L •~ -·-YoUr sJu.11111: --. vt<Hat, nee 1 ...-r-wn=•· 1ve an 544)..-0617 ewa. WHITE :PHl'l Drum Set 1.,.. ..... ••--'· • · perfect cond Sfi50 or best · wine bun.la, :refriJ., ehe.lrt uphol1terin&, $'°-m W. C. Smilh 1uptr speed, l Druma, "-bol PIO .. ...,_ -1 tor•0 , MALE black Leb. 1 yr okl NEAIU.Y new cement deck otter 54U76i, aft 5 ' • furn.. Mite. Antique: drill 11 h S C ~7 .~25 , .. ..;e !:ASY Wt trt.iler hUc.h $%1, ... ""' ,,~ ~ ,,., • • 11\p float 2lx33. 13 • · pm. ;preu 1143 !anliaro, NB t l •. M. --.... ............ Cherrywood dinm. tbl. $30, 646-1647 pionftr rewrtltrator .l 10 -M&-Qlt Qeuwa.ter: Call Croft j: l9T1 HONDA SL 125, very ;So .;,t~"'"'="-H~~~~~=l25'' TRIMMER ~er, yard ~~"TCH. ,,:hN.GNauBt~• 'aohl!arr: 71 '" blk 4 wht TV, malq. SAJUTONE horn, J:!nt tond. ~!°*·~l~'l!. part «JI 'IV YORKSHIRE T I Neville, 675-8m. low mite,, must seU. $450. E6ATESaJeNov.ltth-J'Jth Yacuum,powu~rer. ..,,, "' ... ..,..,..., •cab. $25. al., mi1e . ND :repaire nftded, si:.o. •.i..w.~v,... frr •rs,1971. VENTURE 24 548-4247 • 21•, llO F•-'•af. ~-,, 96M612 chair, S75. Uprl&ht trffztr, 536---ML"i Privat~ party, m..lS55 lt" coLOi -.."le TV, l male, 9 monthl, lhot.J. $100. SCllWJNN===,..,,,---=~""T"--,~--" n• ~" S7S 546-"""' · · .....,. ...., or hnt offtt ""' ..,_ w/trailu. Loaded! 1tacina: ...-..-=u auu•:u1. del Mar. Grandfather clock, SL!."lGH, one bane open & · "'-"''· ARG US llide projector. IJets n:NDDt Super 1teYftb amp yr tl&d. !tik b' $400. ' -..-...... par 1; Spinnaku. $300 &: Like new. $15.00, 646-m.91 ,china. cabinet, j•w •lrJ. tr•e. Perteet ccnd . OLD fashioned meat chop. draftint btlard I. stool. •Mlllt&JWpitar.MabOf-SacriticeU75.~.Aak ~~:Puppies: T.0.P.~2935. atter5:30 , quUta, -poll 1; Jll.N, ett:. Reuonable. S«l--0617 eve. ping blocks 30'X30" z.lnt 968..o776. fer. ~*3. for kn Pritt. fioo .... ':n~:Jc. VARIOUS 1~ and up to --.,,,15""'H"OND=~.-300~--1: ,Jane'• AntiquH. T.V. RCA color 1 ! • • cond. SIOO. 543-ll6 IBM e I e ct rt c typewriter. Office Pvmlf'Ure/ SWL Reoirivu Hn.th GR. Sl. "'°' Beam. Nr. :Pa.Yillon UX> or trade tor good VW • LroO rate Gl.n.I• SI.le; w/ttmote $125. Kirc me ••QUEEN 1i:re msttre-u, W'rf nice. ~ l~ulp. a 4 5 8and' lM K C)'Cln ~ 30 M O!f! Erwtisfl Sheepdos Pupa, ~ (213) 967-1259. engine. 536-Sln or 645-m. Sk>vt "Rffri -....1 cond bl'd complete $100. 61H:ll6 •Prinr• A: t:rarne. Xlnt cond. m.Ql2 eycles $45 MS.mo· aflfr c .31 .. w A pd quality from SCHW . ,, ........... . , ~=~~--~--$50. 968-4590 BM '13 •lec:t !tanaanl p M I: wknd. Champ. stk. 645-&lU. BOAT Mocrlnc, Up to 45'. INN Bl~ Boys Bike • . Furn I mi1e. ReatoNble. DOUBLE Well porcdain sink SERVJSOFT auto wtl2r ~ • · • • · Choict location. Newport $35. No rtan but perfeet Sat A: Sun. 11-4, l'" .i Via l faucet S25. Baby dttulni PERSIAN Carpell, 4 pa.In-ditioner, J:lnt t'ltllld. $115. typewriter $285. 3M AM/f'M FG!'ll ear radio, P:· ADOtt.ABLE A.KC Toy Pl»-Harbor. 67>5666. for eJC!tllllona. 675-.3627 ZUr\eh. lable$6.Ml--B505. tin11, antiqut:oopper,srand 6'1WIS2S. Thermafa.x COlritr 1150. eel cond.. Or!zin&I value, d.le'J'Wkl,SilYft', b!1tottft<. , . piano !:i3~51U after 6.,.m. 1 :0:.:..;:.:;:,;;,..-----0 I port. rt'tOl"der ct e, •• 11N for tauntdlate silt U'-Ml& &it-Udo Penin. $195. Call Schwinn Mana SUper Sport KEl..MtT!, .VLV hd.~by SchwiM :Blue Boy1 Bike. LEA\'JNG state, mUlt aell tll 17S-ll41. mr1' at M5. M-U ' MIN"TU"• S h 673-2792 bHwffn 9 a.m • 2 Near ne-w $130. 'i ~~~·=-u D :·!=bu~~ ENGLISH SADDLE 1umishlnp in 1 wk. 331 W.1---:u"si:=r"'• "M"Y"'AL"""--MAiTtJi===wo="RK""'"'AM.,,.,,.,/-:FM=:I mai:. l':wkl~ ~·;; :PM d&)'I. , * 540--0U. eves &M-~ 1 flurnltu,. 110 'urnltur. 111 'urn:,.• M5-2MI 110 ;::...•:;;,..APt 1, SC. 111 SJ'ANDARJ> TYPEW1lrtt1t did starP, multf-Jle:1 4Ul.J. Llvf'ly, kMnc. llhotl. Boats, SPMCf &. Ski 911 ~M~t R--60, Full drea1,, ~·· * M>--Ol80 * attfto with c.n-trd tum-567-3780 em. ' SKI Soat, 16 ft. mah()f., ~~7~ or 494-3015 jjjjiiiijjjijj Pl1Ml/O..,an1 · 126 •atiJc. itOO. __, •; GRb.T D&ne PlQllS AKC w/lU HP Grey marine '7l HONDA ·-, ilio MOili'Oia 9tfttG conai1e 7a11111, 13 wb ~. Champ. mtr. Nice cond. wso Or er. -HERE WE GR OW AGArN! THI USED FURNITURE OU ..... T~LET- NEW LOCATION!! -T• S.r"Y• Our Cu~t~n 1e~W1~v• Rlf.uted te 1 L•rtM' and More Centrally Lecat.41 Paclllty. · -------- WI WOULD LIKE TO START OFF llGHT IY OFHllNG A- 3 DAY PRE-GRAND OPENING SALE!! •• .., .... , ...... c...a '4" , ...... c........ • .... .,.. .. .._ _...__ -·-................... ............. ...... ,.,. .. w ..... a .. ,.....,, ....... ' ......,. ..... , ,,, •29:. '7911 ..... '14" 79" '54" '49" • '69" ,,_ •Mir .... ,.,, ......... , ................... ,,.... .... Hl•A·W . . IMI.: ..._.,, •I,,.,. Ml ............................ l1aurll" 7' W. I M ...... ................... ..w,.... - '149" '29" '64" .'1"" '39" '89" I '10" (On '""""" L-. formorly A.,oiuo '•mlhlN Ca, A41-t i. P11h .......... ,.. Seftt• Ano ,_., .. .Mohl -· ...,_ ... Main St_,, ' - ...... 1 ....... M. ' ........... -"'· .. t, let 1t ....... , ... -..... 12 -... , ... .............. I l . • * SALE SALE * AM/n.t tuner, -\&bl<, olrtd. lllltl 6 •P """'· fer. &"""42 alt 4 PM or '111111"" '°""· 545-l318 PIANOS •• ORGANS tai-dtck. GOOD COND, UJ...4n7. .., wkends Motor HorMa 940 · Stcinwa.y.__~ai, lltnunnnd, SD). ar bHt ef!tt t4S-4f11. s::HNAUZERS avtU. f'll)w er MUSI' .ell by Dee l!t! CORTEZ oomple't.c, x In t ~· Mldwin, etc. 1'nli" i5NTS10-~Reeordtr, ~til Oiriltmu. Groom-'10_T&hi~ 13$ H.P.!.. Green cond. w/Honda 90 motnrey- .....,, JtDn'ALS. • $100. Xlnt condition. C4JJ tna. stud Mr'Vice. ~. metal ~. 9DA!ll92 -cl~. 49t--T135. """lFrt.-Hit llMlo5. H .., 9'mda.y 11-5 TV 21 .. SCl'Hn rwivd stand .,,... ..,. Tr1tl1r1, Trtvef 94! "ILD'S l'IAND CO. ..... <Ont!. Pi. ' APPALOOM Gfldlnf, I yri, [ ll•l HEAVY ' lt11 N.wpan Bt¥d. -M&-1.U '15 Mnttt, lna11Jh, futn))f , Trwp1t111"'9 -ramp, ~~'k'f:11%r ~:~ OolMa M~ 7l4/tf6..1250 W!, toad 1•tea_ Ir._ oo~ ,,._ --~-buggy $200. St&-1819 aft 6, ORGAN SALi---lliinal!On, Very v<!rntile. ,aJl day wlmds. 0-O!alt Anllual J'aD [ Ill Smart, .xlnt dl1p. $800. Ctmpen .. S.te/Rtnt920 1966 13' Trave! Tra11 e r Q~. !a"I •tit SUllD "'"'6N3 aft I. * "l'ant: 'M F·250 camper W/c..btlwr, beaut, cond. (If!. ~ttd. __.. 6*' , a--· d I! ....-~ Bcmdf:d. 0>rra1 or special, v..a. ' •Pit. A.tr, ~ua ng. • Parktt's JUdi Pl.S P/B. Indd'1 '70 j ~~~~!!~~[!; .. =T MUSIC "'5.1 ~1rr Nr.Wl'OJtT I: HAll*>Jl LOV.UU: ' me. fem.alt Mt eamprr. Sr!a-P • M.t, COJ\VAlR (not runnlncl with oo.ta Mete. * ..,_. ~ 1. She:p!Wrd mix [ "" 1~ •IP. S. Jacki • extru. IOOd uphol A pa.rt.a, it tn.-"'i5 w/rbca CaD an ' pm. .....,.... -_. ~ ~ _ tereltf:d in dune bURY $100. ".~~~1J:U -: '""' ,.,. · ": Ill fT, Opon Road Comper, Call 547-8325 t.cle. l1tD OM.AN loDIO!a 2 Ldvr;t.Y AU Whftit Kit-llHJ119 '· Str>vt A-ovtn, sink, WA.Slf 'n Wex $19.90. Hand 1 .. loal u ,oa UlllJ HO,.. ant. .U Wetjrl Old. Gtfter1I NO b-box. larre closet. don~ "Cluslc'" pa1te wax. t.htlm. No ol!Qptloft. Jut HeuHtftlatn. ...UIT. C&rptt. Boot and other C!)C· 3201 Newport Blvd.. N.B. (ldme, .._,., 7,11 _ AV61D 'l1IE MilliDr Marino C...ultant tru. ·lJk• newt 601 N. 673:9686. ~ INDEPENDQIT Harbor, 8"'!a Ana $795. "!!!~~~~~~~' COAST MUSIC ,._"'°wit -lritu. f l'urcliaolnt-SJl:43!0. . r -~ ~Ina .., -911' ELDORADO p,...,.. ---r"'- 1.0WRJ:Y Pia• • Ortaiw: '"""""" -~. • 'Cam~pet'~-tttlt~• ;;:~~:r,;;;;;;;;;;;:;-;;:i---~ YamahaPl.tno.lOra1.n•; I. 1 )Tl old, IOOd -with e Marine Survey•r room a: Y.nil)'. s toya SUlinwQ Pian6t. Bt.t 'eu)l1 ct\lldM:n. :5M 5122 . .....2977 w/fNen, prtnurt W'l.ftr 1n MW A \&Md. Sdlm.ldl CAT 16vtr atw eutt (n.y 5 NO INVESTMENT no do'Nn &17~. ~u.t/Cla11ic1 9.53 M\alk Co., EIL ltt" U07 N. montt. old Mm. kftW:ri a _payt: "° taxe., l'WJ' allp ~L * '65 VW CAMPElt 1952 ROU..S Bentley. 5 ntw M.aln. Santa Ant.. home. ,,,__, You dripper, 21' poww $35 Xll'lt cond w/lidf tent anUqu!'!' white walls, R/H le UIT Grand. Broob-Zvw, HiJSiY.(X)l.UE JU,, ftlnllt, day, 27' Nil $21. ~· MUST SEU.!! 67s..63'3 P/B. S l Iver l?'&Y· New rood cond. N.• tftl thie ·~A ....s. I004.htlme. ~. • Brand New ntw:r ulfd uphOl • bead liners. ~750. wk .. 11111. bt)ow aHrtJ. $fB. ...,_er m.15u. U' .o8rON Wha.ler c:.mptr IWll 'tort' truck Will t.ake nic9 speed boat N •an. enu'fi661) w/trtUtr., ~ N&tl, u sr tllfh wlbu.bble a:1ua. put. A1mo. 5t6-lt()9. IA1..DWIN Walnut -.,bwt, BUILt>INC 9CaA1S 1'J Johneon mow. UM .,_., Sports, Race, Rods '59 ""' llD!. """' ,. ) I, * *'11111 * -· Clll -. OLDIE CAMPIR JB67 AC~ 2111 cu Iii, I IMO/bit otr. "5-aoM. i'iJi1 lllJnttt-ea.ta...._i: WANiii>: U' Bo1ton lfPii' * tl375 + 962-6422 ti.rt& ff m&l"I· Blacll:. ~ *TllOMAi OllOAN* -· 1,:._•·--'1'1111HPo,.6 IJ1r "White Elopllan~" 0,.,.. otter. cau an~ m-!MI. -* MUm · ,.. ii:)' "' tmtJ, l13-IOtO tvtl. Nnnint )'OU!' bouts? TUrrl IT'S Beacb baGM time. B\a:-i3iiJNY HAl"'°ND ORGAN G006 6illf, Yoo utll. ,.L iClft6N WIWZll 1.11" ...,. Imo "CASK" , ..U ..,, Mltcllon ...,, lite "" w1111 A'!'•'M*: ' .,,, w1on11tr. • lofl --111ru DIJly.-p 1101 mr PllDT a·=!flotl -••• ..., +• S1-1DJ ++· • ~. O•MHIM, ~ atctton JIOW'J 1• .,.. • • .. \ . . : :: • • • • • • ·-l ~\ i ~ • • • • . .. . . . ~ . . . " . • ' , . t ·. .. • <. • .. . . " . . • • • " ++: ... . + . . f • • • + • • •. '~dly, NMmbor 19, 1971 ' ll=l 1 f :; Ml !!!!!!!!!!~~ . . -............ Aull\•-.~ ... ,. l._I l.__,.. _____ ~ .. ~' ~~.~;1~~~~f~7llH~A~u1~ ... ~h~nl~""-~~~~ 990 A"'"""* , , ,, , •·'QM tfO ,¥!=• l£!4 · , ~ Aullo, ""9 "' yow~i"'EiL VOLKSW~GEN _,..,CA,.,...,..D~ILLA:Y_:::"c,...._ -==~'""'R=-"-.... :~:~ ,,,.. ' MA!'iiCK 0 ... 0llLI. ·: •• ~ . ·: ~r --· '69 vw Camper 91·11 YQfes , ':.u)oiJ:r·• · · .... CIJm!tr ,.._ , , ·~0110 cu~.~~--......... VEIUCIC, -.,. ",., ::;mu011 L1 ~ •• .:, ~~ ..;....:•~1.e ' I I ' I i I ' ·-I . ' i '· _ T..,., l!:x"'U.nt Corid, SILICTION 0 1' Dr., v1cyr, ... ;.t, PIW, ~...:.,, "; G'**"• '.iwmil. IUo •' SUl'!iiifCUTUd -.:111 _., .ti.,.. u.~ CATALINA ., Thia beaucy la for Ibo e&ml> CADILl:JICS IN air. SacrU. FAR BELOW IJ!r, !ZlBELf'cin.nt Blue p,..ts. flUI_.,. $191!8 colb. llatdtoo °""'"' A.u-ti<, ,-..,MWITJ o.n.nt -·""' ecq,., V.f, ,A,,.. Ina t.mlly, !YPZJQJJ ORANG! COUNTY WHSLE IJ!!l5. 61:>-""6. Booir $19JI)! S39 ""1 dowll. 5'0-l&!O. .,..,. _,_., Po•e'z ._._-. 1111.""'1 ,..~ --. - Si895 ~ SA~g;=NO 9P...._W-'6l,allextru $5.l .... """"1Jy,$1~ ... ll . ~Qll'f ,, '==T~~ ~~ =·.llr~~ Wa.rd .s.·. Lee -SERVICE' :si:.~1::=c:5 .... -.z;:~.~ . 'iJ71iii1tCU•~· =..-~....im= ·= 0-.. edia.:.:t =:::f =: \ '· Nt1Mn CacllDaC:1 CONTINENTAL P<'ioe •m•I .. ,SJATIQNWA~S .atf.'lolho •totil'...;,-,)la'1nc1udinr!lx, ly.Wt.11 .. la -- . •· 1 J • ~ n .., IWUIOR m.. • taxch!:'"J ~ ,ffERTZ CORP, "'"" 1nc1udlns 11x .• "°' ....,._+a11-e11us-,.,.. tox • 11c. ·~~ .. AuthoriudSAJu•S.rW:e • ICOS'l:Nll<ESA 'Ilf<MRKlll '-Oll\OUT•PI>""'""' 221W.KUllla,..-.. """0.fotftd .~ .. ,,..._on-ap, =\l~~- 547·5126 """' vau. Rd.. "°·!!!PD , . Open ·"""""' ™• beautil,uJ l~ ,.. ;, ,...,. lood ·c...tlc ANNUAL (7H> n..-·' pnoa ·..--lncludlna tU. ~~ 1D'J .,..r-. -• aB w;,loc ~: ~i..M;,::st. "'~~'";'i\'7~ CAMARO =.,.~=.~:~ ~~NT~GE RATE 19111 ·>D<TEGOMX,JD< .. ?t°:~:":; k.\!ziSit.~AG~ ._..,._,....,..,. VOLVO -------1 .. -. ll'a _, -cmdl· l\)AVI ROSS PoNTIAC Hrd{d·"" ·:: Vbu":._.t.e.-.lr. ,...al ti ,_ -' '""" LtlfcQ ltOIS '°'4TIAC =: ~~ '70 ftALLY .Spart, air, stick, tion will ·be appttciate4 1,1 MllQ ~Jii~d~ P UC • ..,.-~a w.ts, ANNUAL PERCENT.A.GS ....... llJhld;, UTE~ '64 YW SEDAN I i,. A bll!f.uti.ful 1.ittie transport!· tion car. Original tbnlqutJ_ CJKL8Z7) $899. '72 VOLVO lo ml'•· all ...... Saerillce. ., .... ,.,., , ... drive 1hll '<loOta .,..,.. =. """·;...~ )Qnt RATE 18.]l,.;, ,J ~ -. DAVI aoss PONTIAC 61S-6999. d..mc. 306DTA . ,71 T•-' 500 c· . • """"' . • DAVI ROSS l'ONTIA<:I ;a fiiptv> 4tlO • MUlt Mt -Blvd , '68 CAMARO~Ralley Sport. 181Tl VJ•ftO pe '11 MERCURY c::o1or\y Pk~ ,_, Hubtr Blvd., .tilt ..... Wlelr• au!IO.. tran.. <hit& Mel& .. , , LufO S.loc:Jl111 For Im med.late Deliveiy Bill ""'· ;.,, '°"' "'""· DUNTON FORD fJr c-. Rad», ..,. ...., • ..,,_ a11 ""'·tilt °"" M--dloe-..... ..;... '.,.,7 R-. Bill YATES YW 32852 Valle Rd., San Ju.an Capistrano !l37~/-493-45ll/-499-2261 .. '61 YW CAMPER . ~-oond .• :Priced riebt a.t $12l9. VEJS28 ! . · Harb~ur. VW ' :· ' ' I um Beach Blvd. -Hunt Bch 8424435 ' "71 YW PICKUP I'. Hard tD find truck in e.11:cel· 1.ent condition. <875 CCK) I:. B ill YATES .YW .. . ' ' •' .328.52 Valle. Rd., San Juan Capistrano 8314800/4934511/499-2261 '63 YW Big ,S••lr>tt.pn Rem•fnln9 • 71 VOLVOS &16-9303 1946 Hirbor, Costa Mesa. VOLVO, "For a. better deal", Ne.w or· used, Pam & • l@'l'Yice. Htrlt l'riedla.nde.r, 11400. !&-7469. 546.-707a HNtor, Viii>'! """· ...... ""1. ....... • ...... ...... PLYMOUTH .... '""_ .. tilt -... D IWllll» C -_ 22'0 So. Ma.in at Warner Tla..nl, m.367'a. ,eoM.-Jt,lley ~wide -, ' HEVROLET Santa""' $2690 MUSTANG '7QPlyJ>uster _,., .Deluxe .. ,..... •ril· v.s, A.ut. Tr-. :!!t Cood, '66 Ch Mal.b •7o·c t M ... Ill . Newport Ne1111111 AUfD,.....,. -. ·~--sia er bit """· -~vey&an. . •vy I . u on a.,. LM•lnt Ce.. '66 MUSTAN" Radio, Low ....... s;;'th!O . -·-• 11115 ""*t·-· Will ..... 2 o.. Hardtop, v.s. Auto Leather, ruu Pow.r Equt1> , ,_ ot s,;, '!=allf. . II be<u!llU! .u -,., can. ''1 PONTIAC ---. Trlns; """"" $.toerina, t "'"""·Split i*t. "91!!!.i'J!!:· '' • 111 ,.,,.,.,.. ...... AFC) lioNNIVl~L· <Ntl.l!OI .. sr.-owner c:u. !BSP681l «,Ai!c.ndltion....._ 111121-~~ --·•utn-oO '"$2095 ~ o.a,..· -·a '16C4T4tJNAJ•fii':Rr,V· $1195 .. -$5890\.; \ ~1620. ~ .. ~-=-Good...,.at · ·Jl'-l\lr.(Ve!Ql14JOU-1.:<u'•t. P.IS. Pili, Lo mt, 111~-'SLee··' ~~=~:.·~~· ·~''69FAJRlAN£·5do · Hirbour vw wr~s.Le&-=::.~=~: =-"'.""'~·~P ly. ft a.cu • Divifion ot So. c.ia 1 Ql:U. ~ !)' .. $1J116.95 ts-. tutat cuh 'S6 Poatiac\ata ~. 1tun1 r,Anw'-n""-·r1-~ i:.:.t!~m":"', lrY!ne ~~'°;..:· .!·.! =-~"l;;H""'.llch. fA11 hn1Hll•~ ':!': ~~~ .::£"~:.~ ... ~ ~ .. :r .. ,. ·so cONTINENTAL ""'BTUii1¥fvw-H'u~~~:;. llW~i·:;," =--11.S:.;'"""cm':: · 'Wtaua ·. Aut .. ,u.... "° '.68 SanCH14M .... YAN 'l852 '>'allt;JW, 221 wc71'f1~-'69 -PLV ~.D =~= . ·u:Wli,a•· All.~·pov.w •CftSS(r· Sim Jua.n C..piltram I, flUA RATE 21~•"· V-.. __.~. '1'nAf. """' M . B. 'tlb\DES ~. "'.""" llanf!op. (UIT. 13f.l800/493-<Sll/ .... 2261 'IS MUSTANG v .... *" DAVI IOSS l'ONTIAC _.. ...... Ur ~ (Sllll· 537~. '7! Chevy PkkuP, AutD, air, I cyt Stick ..... " Appercj; • S278 * '71 FORDS-* ' ·. at """' MUii ""'· ...... RUNNER -~ l&1l,' so• Q)eyenJJe' option, custom ate <1t231Al $1899. • GA.LAXIES • MttttANGS mimr weft, after ' pm. ._..... :t .. •.• "'"'7ll(.tonCh•vy Bill 'YATES YW TOJ'JNOS ~ ~tjo. Apt. D., '""'. """'' "·'"' •ctual • * $185 .... Van, 3000 mi·., PIS, eulo, HIGHLAND MOTORS H"R.., CORP. C.M. milQ. S.vo at 11499. Yzt.. 'G PONTL\CI P/B, Loni wbeel. base, will / 21A" u~-a.-5 •• trad 32852 ValJe Jtd., ..J •..uUU[" Blvd. f89 MAO{ I, 390, 4 •P, p/1, 577. •JS ... ~ MBz o.aJ., San Ju.,, c.,;. ... "" °"" M... ......,. 221 w .. Kat.!!& • ..-.. •'"' .11.!IOO. Pvt. , ty. Harbour VW Wants.Lee ui .523.7250 137-<&>it 493-<51V$2261 SILVER 0>odneo1&1 .. cen11y 1114) nM050 ~ **·Ma: 11am, v--. 3 a, "1rdsr-in v...,, ""°" ........... tion. BUICK '63 IMPALA """""'"°""'· sm '° · • S!'EERJNG WHEEL-19!7 •KACH " l91I, w.. ..... a1r 1lBll Beooh !!lid, Hunt -~--~-~;· w.:U. Will aell 'fast at $649. FYC-~,,...,...,.,"'"',._..,..,,...._ plete. CM-ner la.vmr town: Ford Galuie attached. !'ac-cand .. tape deck. Mazi)' ex. lf24435 UM & Main It. " 886 '69 Buick-Riv:laoa, lull power, 4 Dr, V-8, Auto Trans. Pew--Wlll u.eritlce lot $650. , tory air, automatic trl!'l!, .Jru. ~. S JJ 9 5. "'TD O:inv:Fluy m air, Art, '•1iiONTIAC S1JQ. Ana , Harbour ·vw l&e alr, am·tm "'""· strata ., Steering, Radio, Heator, .... 1'56. ""engine ".::IL;'""'""'' 615-ml. ~.PIS, Sa er" Ice ru GRAND l'RIX 59 RA ... rn w•l!ftN bench, landau vinyl top. ExCl!il~t Transportation. 1970 MARK m, Ilk~ new, Very &:ood1 ru S7B9. ·~ MOSTANG 6 eyt, BELOW WHSLE $1995 Hardtop O:ilpe. FuD poM!f' 1 IWDLUI MU .. ~7'5 or be1t ofkr. 543-1578 $295 fully equ.ip'd. low mileage, 644-mt eves. : new paint (~}· new 51'5-JQ86. ' .f.aetr.iry air; (XSUttl) e.ir.'. , .,. ll871 Beac~~l.i Hunt. Bch. aft 5 pm. &t6-269fl or S5?--4S40 flexible en price and terms. 1966 Ford Van. R / H , brUes. tttld cond.' $11}5, PON'" •C rent ~ book: $3COO. $121.16 'JO Buick Rivif;!'a, xlnt cond., * '71 CHEVY's·* Phone 546-l600bef~ 5 p.m. •.ir/cond, ~ CIUI, I"°" 847~75. 1""' :-'~ :3 :-Utotaim: . '60 YW BUS •'"'"·wind.OW.. tilt wbl, IMPALAS • CllEVELLES CORVAIR =~.,:. &T5-JIOI '65MU5Mr,'alrmod,it.,... '69 FlllEllRD pi.. includin!?· lax• llo- J; Runs better than it looks! Good transpartatlon! <QRK· 736) $499, air,. ioldlblck \vinyl tllp. CAMARO'S ;··· ·· • . , Goosl oen4. '550. Call Hardtop O:MJ~. Automatic en.e. ~ payment $3500. -~ HERT% CO.RP, ~ a>RV'.\JR. MDJ<la .Coupe. 63 GALAXY 500, PIS, All •~132. TriNml.....,, ...... .._. ,m. 11-trdltc!U., WO. HIGHLAND MOTOltS 'TO BUICK El!Ctra. 2'25 Oat. ;2'l w. 1'C4teUa, Anaheim :&.u~ Orlf. 1iw mUes. nE!'W tires.. Good rwtruna: '66 MUST.ANG $500 Ing, Radio A: Heater. (YPP· 11cen1e Is aD ca"71ncetars· , 2llS Hertx:lr Jpvd. BIU YATES YW 2.1,CXX> s.ctual mL Full pwr. c714) n&.40SO ha.dif• ,ear. onlt, ,J l 9 9 • cond, Ori& om", $350 • Or Bit Otr 646-3881 &ft g 069)' CUnent blu. book' •tor G months M our ap-a.ta Mns. ~ AM/F'M . at.,... + alr. • 546-!41.l. • OLDSlifOllLE 1'!'65. $197.95 lol&l -. llll -1 DI .,..,; -' ~ '68 •L£R'W11!ftN Shownnoond .. 642-10&1. '62 IMPALA New wattr li:''"Si._• totalmonthly.$2101,SS!ttbt .ANNUAL PB:RCEN'I'AGE . IUIU . fuel pumps. bait., ball chafier1 set.ta"f ·spd Ford FairlJJ>e w a 1 on . total cub price tndudlrw: UTE U.ll", , .. • . • ' ' ' . . 32852 Valle. Rd., San Juan _Capistrano 837-4800/-t,IJJ-4j] 11499-2261 '68 YW FASTBACK '59 Bu ic k. A·l, must 1el!! S225. Mr/Ross 350 W • &y, c . ~t....Blf8...o67 •ft 6. CADILLAC joint.!!, radials, Looka iO(ld •. rww· titt• • tune-up. $215'. Nffrl• Mn $50. 546-0UM 'ff Olds O.lt• U "tax & !:icl!m;e; Deferred PAY-DAW ROSS PONTIAC Musi seU! 6#-0644. ~ "' 83.1-8922. ·• ROYAL. Eull powu, YCR.985 ,mentpriceis$2520indudin~ -Hutior Blvd., '68 CHEV \\"agon, 9 pau. 1~ ~-· ,. JI) _ •61 ........ _ r--~-9 $24t9 t.ax. license & all cmt)'inr: o.t.. Mesa C . . k ...:>,;I...,~ ''Y ** • ... vu.utry.x:ualt charleafor36 moatbs tw1 ,..,~_.,exc •llent ~utomatic, Radio, BeUer. (EE!'/$1) . $97.50 apr1~. 111r, ps. r11c , Turbocharged. GOO<f cond. Pu1 Wagon. Looks It runs our appr!Wal o! )")Ul' aood lU 4 1<.1-..-........... u. ..... v.- ' •mllm. •harp, J IBH. 1<00 • 51"'37'l6 good. $195. 6'!l;2lS6. ·Cftdit.ANNUALPEltCENT• -cu ... --·-HIGHLAND MOTORS :· AJr Cond, 4 Spd, nu pain!, '67 CADILLAC ~1721. 'fil. CORV'Am Van recnrtiy ,64 .1'AI.C0N , Waion, V~ . AGE RATE l3.S2%. Pt. N.B.-ltl t032. • 21.45 Harbor Blvd. : Excellent Cond, $50 undto:r SEDAN DE Y!LLE . •s,, CHEV lmpala 6 pus reblt f!'nl. Xlnt cont!. $500. auto,-PIS, deJ)t'ndabletnri.-TWO Ul6I OldaCUtlua.-2 Dr. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC GT0·1M&i mt~, Medi 0.. Mt1111 UlatOl • • .. :h.e!!.,We price. 551 ...,~,. Fun Power, Factory A I I'. wa.(l)n. PIS, P/B, 8.l.·r, . 5f8...4fll9, , -portation, $315. !·968-897) hrdtp, pis. au+... tram., 3480 Harbor \llvd.. ~W. tbdJlc,· Grat tiui at .. , •llRD ' =-or ~~ (~) ~t blu, boo'<. 1!4H xtra dun. ~~· . ;:; li ,.. ~. M --11 '66 vw. near nbl.t eJli'.., new $25'70, $116. 74 total down. S83 · 546-8739 .......,; 1 COR YjE '64 roru>•station Wqoa-· rib, air. oond.r.$1650. Aak fix '-<-.& ea , -· .heavy duty clutch&: ex)laust , ~~ ~~· ~1i;95}8 ttMi ' · • · •i Ont owner. Xlnt emf, Mr. Marki, 673-.11301 t am-4 ''5 4 SPD. GTO '69·&f'•ncl1 Prhc lo rni 'S7 Ct.ASSIC , "gystem. Have. receipU, Stt lUlGJ. ~ prl~ incJudi.na: '67 CHEVY Caprice, pwr I: 'Ii& ·STING R AY Semi * s.o;.'t81J, * #• • PlJ'I• wkday1; ~ $600 545-94.St ~--~5tNCIS.* 90-3813 * S6.a:m * : . ., appredote, !850. 548-7246 ~~ l!if."f-l~ ~· •~ Xll<t· cood, Sacrlfii:o Cullom. Exceptional. Many 'ID J:OUNTRY Sedan. 300 "8 COST ....._ !lt1I P"I'· Autos. New 9IO -· -MO Autos. -9ii5 • or ~7135. pn ,..._ in Udl71J' $895.. + 830-8036 +· '68paru,327f11pd, lo mi 's. enr. 1'act air, pafpb.. Sood tac air, am./fm, t1lt whl,;1:;;;, :.:;::;.;,,;-;;:. ___ ~;.;,,;;:;;;;:;:.;,;;;.;;., ___ ..;.,..;.,;;,;,;;;:.;,;;.;... __ ..;;;;;;.I :· '69 VW Delux Sundial ~~~&36.all carrying 646-4941. cond.raclc,$73).~. ·Cl'Ut contr, W-.. tbrp, l ,..__ · c._"'"'."T'I!'~ . mon~ on '65" CORVAIR AfONZA .C SPD owttr, 6.IS-1079. t..<Lmptr, AM/FM rad., New our ~pproyaJ t1f: yqtlJ' rood 139• 646--350S af 5 1971 Orvett.e, like new. Sun il9flf LTD 2 Dr., Mtp. Shal'p.1 =~--'~~~--=- tirts, Xlnt cone!, 557~23 aff · ~iL Af>mUAL :PER.o:N"T· "· t roof, A.\f/FM, autn, a l r Low miln. Powtt. $ZOO. "61 OLDS Cut I a • c ,Oxs- 6 p.m. AGE RATE ).7.86~. ' '66 Oiev. Impala St&. Wq. cond. AEtec aold. Must eell. 540-2674. wrtible. P/S, PIB, .. Xhlt '68 YW CAMPER DAVE Rq~s PD.Nl lAC in .. ,,. ...., "'""· """"' A•IMiSSJoo.'91-8561. GREMLIN "">!.,,.,. -· wm ,dft!. . 1;:!480c'~,,i,~,.\.f<l., lll9'. M1Ml? alt 6. '65 'VETTE $1100 ~-~"~"'_,..-..,.--.,,-..,- . -• 1964 CHEVY • Chnside!' trade. 536-~ '70 G II •n cut. Sup,, pJ:N. plh, p/1, Pop top •• 1pd. dlr. Fully '69 EL Dorado, Bl.ck ., ""' P/S.P/B COUGAR rem n ale, ....... l!:x. eood. lOOO camJ>ll!r e.rruipped, Take old· b"ck, ...... -ulp~. "·, e ••• -~ e Chrame Wheels, AMJTM Jta.. ., t''>iCl'W'I •--ef forel"'n car or lrnall .. 4....., ~'I t""" ........-.JO«rl-JJJ ~'-...,_,_ _............ ml•· ...,......, ~. down. ~-bnanct. 54&-8736 leather, AM.IFM, Stereo, '66 CHEVY Biaca,yn& • Dr.. '67 COUGAR. :tU, tl; ~~Oi)Jw '&f Old.-98. xlnt. new tires. -4 or 494-6811. (WJBI&) · full powll!1', ,viro1 top. low Good condition. Hardtop ~Pl!· Automatic $1495 dr, air, all pwr, runs lib: 1971 SUPER Be.aUe., cash or milll!'.'ie. Pvt. ~ty. a~cy Call 646-555( Transmh:sion, Power Stttr· new. $5Sl.· 646--Mn. . ~erviced. $4,595. 968-2929 or ,R_ PM.: 1>..0.1-_ ft. T.0 .P. Cons1dl!r trade. Call S62-i.ul. · ·n VAN, V-8, auto. tape, "'5, ·er uuu•..-., Z\.&dio &: 962-6031 aJt 6 pm wk days, panelina:, ice.·box. S2,9JO. BHeaie_;:..._,~VCDS.53\ CUrtent ,17,.,-..2 S.Lee anytime wkend.5. CAD '69 Eldora.do, 31.<XXI * 675--635.1 * lue ~ $1445. $55.62 total HQ.CU. e '61 OLDS 4-dr 98, PIS, PIB. R/H, Air. 645-"'68 , . . mi's, oni. owner. All xtras. down. $61 tDt4l moilthly. 71 · KOMB!, 9,000 m>. Lil« Immoc. Local ..,.. Wlnl,.. CAPRI $1.1ID 95 ts the ""41 cul> Amllll M-+an rl ''2 OLDS cutlui V.f Good new. $2595. Radio and Ex· 847-9696, wknd & ~. price. including tu & UC· - 7 • 1.,,,119 7 --· cond. $200. tras. 220 Sa.It Remo, N.B. 642-1178. l9n LINCOLN M •reur)I es-. Defttn1d payment S4 ~6 Call ~ro:Q 67~1784 ,Capri price Is $1608 including tax, UW S. Main st. '68 Olds f.U. Xlnt cond. $1.W '64 K .. GHIA. like_ new ·~YFLE~~ii ~~: 1 0\\11e.T, AMfFM radio lice~&:. all canyina: charz· Santa Ana or best cffu. 675--4989 throughout, 1 men~oUJ le.11thtt lntn. Blk vinyl top + &12-0451 * es for 24 montM on our ap. JAVEUN M1ore 8:3tl AM. owner •. Pvt. pl)'. I 915 • .,,., M.,...., P.t. p~. CHRl'.SLER P""" of )Ol>r ..... cr.dit. ''° Old•, A/C, RIH. ,,... , 968-1!9.1 kdy evu. ., ANNUAL PERCENTAGE ,69 Jay-" • ~--; .; . w . . ~ !'"tp. ~~ , · RA'J'E..JUB~. .nft-llll!&t owtrS • ~ " .. '69 VW s.,.. SU.-, ¥,>:U>UPE De vm. !u11y '61 CHRYSLER DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Autotnno.WldeOv&li,RD&l -'·"'""$195.16-"'8 ' · -··. ~ I; tako ,,.., • !""I'd, AM/FM, a1r:; x!nt· NEWPORT CU&TOM ll4!'0 -BoW...,.,, Sharp ""· CYCS<Gl, "'4 OLDs 911, t . F• ·,!oo<fod, • ~ 'pY,..tJ. .'">. $l2lO ~b. eoltd. $4500.· •• Co)! -llanftop, Coupe. Autom&t!c Ooof,t,M_ , $1495 lmmaculaW• """';~1 ~ : ,., ;¥.8-~ \ , ... ! .. 176-8890. # Tranmn.sdOn, PolWr Ste.f:ri... 1ii''COUGAR. xlnt mnd~, new 60-324.7. ,,, '_ , · ......... Vl'i :(@S. ... V.erY >?w 1961 SEDAN °" vw. 4 1dr. 1"'· Power B:raJ<es. F&ctory .-ttres .1: b'taw. a 11.00 : Wa.rd. S Lee '64 F..as $250. 1 ' X · f' ~· ~t .,telJ,. ~ . xlnt cond. New pa!nt, ateam Air, New Tttts. (VTD835) "~ • * 968-5197 + • '' I _.. . .. . . . . .. _. . eun.n< btue ,_ $1960. a... I ..._ n , _,.,, , . . . -· IDll .. <Ait Stan, $95.77 '1<>1al do•m. "'total DODGE. . .... amw1 V.oanet•·--··- '69 V:W, hke new, ~u.nroof, fl&-8890 m00tti_y. f1891.95 \s the tot.al -J.t7 .. $12i-> -)Qlr hoult;-.'ft.• ...... · AM/FM, 35.cm .nu. Blue ~DILLAC, Gold Colfv. cash ~Ce including -tu It '66 DART GT, Auto, lfr. 1234 s. Main tlt. bldz.,etc.~Pilot Best oUer. 846-t594. ~mium "'tond. S28SO . lice.~ De-ferred pa.yJM'nt 'fslS, S795. ~·tws, or Sant.a.~.AZ>a Quattil!dAd. • ,_. '118 KARi~ANN Gbia, Very W~kends only 642-2'173, pri~. is*1'J76 including tl!X, 646-9351 Dys, Mrs.. Hoff-Autos u..d Autos UMd de.an: tteb1t e.ngine • .can oWner. license A all t'arrylng charJ· ~-~ ' _....,.....,...,..,..... Q68....97Q8 or 534-4@_,_ CAD '6.Convm .ftilly ~Po ... nJor.•·mentbs °" bYr •P.-'68 CORONET 4 dool" ~ ~-Jn VW BUS. Air, Rl,H. etc. peel~ one ~. 46.IXO"imf. 1~~ ~E~~~ V-3,,new.pairlt, rood tifts, i ' still on warranty. 16,llOO Imma.c! $1595. BU-1993. JtATB :19.1:-4%. • owner. Sll.25. 646-6759. l I ' I mi's. I~. '46,.mtlL "8 El Dondo. B.,ut cood, DAVE ROSS l'ONTIAC 1969 DPDq~ ·""!!'ii fan. 1963 VW .. C.mptr .;JI xt:ru, $.1150. 2t80 Harbor Blvd.. U~ •al'bl'lt;. IUlK ftftd $995. 673-48fl *'*· 673--9266 + * ' ~ Costit M@M S1900 o/ best otter. 548-2935. 1969 DODGE •d l'I ·an , ~· 6 cy • auto., 22.000 mi Xlnt cond. $2600. 4M-JOJ9. '67 XT-29 Ch&r1er air. fiJ1l p~.__auto.~]tlnt cond! Mab offer 540-7899 .... FORD .'. 196.1 Ford Vu $S50. 1965 ~--a.-1.-ea!l -· -l'1ieetltia. Alt. IPM, 311!\1 LaPer!a Ln, CM '-69 LTD Wqon. 10 -pus:., 429 HP. Power, AM'!FM •tflefiO, air. mint. o:>nd. ... 67H16L Sacrilice equl!yl 191U Ford w-. Oltry ...... J<i/pl>, air, 11a1. rack. Ewt/wtmds. m<Jl(I. FORD -·-·-· ... ,. "'"*" ............ """" ,..., ............ ...... I• AllYJ . ·11 vw -- ---·-it2il ................. , 'l1 DAnlll :2:.~'"'i:S • • .,,, l' . I Horoar:ib, Ql.-ol .. • DU£.TQ THE TRfMENDCIUS l'UIUCACCEPTANCE Of THE 1972 CADILLACS w.11aw_.&ttM,.......~ of Quall~(adlllac Jrelde lns·to·Cho0se Prom SALE PRICED 1'70 R DOl•OO ,...,_,..,,"-.. ........ . 1.,;,m• .... ' ........ ........,. Dl'AO&.l 1; • •4222. ... ......... ,.~ ...... ... .a....._,.., ........ , ... .............. NAJPM .... i.. .........,..._ .......... , .. ....... _, ...... _... .............. , ... #S2'W) • •7515-• • a? ......,. ... ,....,. ..... ......................... .......................... . .-... .__,.,.. '-....,,_ .._.,,..,IOf r ~ ......................... 1·~· ...... ~ ...... ~~1 . --.,......J ........ .... ~ ........ ML•-..&.. ....................... -. .......,. ... : ............ -.. ...., • ,_~,..,., CT'l"ntl I ,, ........ ..................... ..... ............................ ................... ...wio ................ - Jm OL 11 'ftll ,.. .................. .. ,,., .................. ...... ........ ,.._.. ..... . ............... ..._ ...... .... _..... ...... JOit • f6222. --·-.......................... "' ............................... --......... All__. ..... ........... ...,_ .__...,_, ,.,...., • •3777. --·'"" ............................ ...................... "ft/ ........ _ .......... ... .. ~ .... ~ "' ...... _ Q'ftlNll • •27.77. , ........ 'ftlll ....... ............ ..., ... ....................... ....... """'!'et • •2511.e. ' .......... ........... ... .... .......... ...... ............. ~ ... -. .......... ~ .... ...... .__ ...... _.. -- Serie• t1•rl119 :Au1liarluCI Ser'llfee NABERS CADILLAC - -• , I . .. .. .-.. . ... • • • • -. ' " eln,y l'llOT Novtmbtr , 1 ~ i . • -. • TEST . DRIVE THE .. NEW -HONDA -• • • ~ l FINAL CLEARANCE _ r . . The SASSY umE CAR, IS SASSIER TttAN EYER! Ready for immediate delivery . In a .big selection of new colon. USED 1970 l636IQDI Honda Car. ~1295 . . - 1971 -GMC TRUCKS!- EXAMPLE SAYINGS 9 PASS. SUBURBAN SUPER CUSTOM AIR COND. STICKER PRICE $1019 Discount $6270.35 AUto. T rans.1 Pwr. str. and brakes, AM·FM, full length ceiling air cond., chrome cvrs., . , twin camper mirrors, cust. instrumentation, tilt whl., two tone-loaded! SALE PRICE $5251.35 ~-Pl_~KUPS • SPRINTS • CAMPERS NOW AT ACTUAL FACT~ INVOICE I . , LEASING? We Offer "Personalized" Leases on Oldsmobiles, GMC Trucks, Rec- rea.tional Vehicles! TRY US BEFORE YOU LEASE ANY DOMESTIC OR IMPORT CAR. -. . '78 MALIBU '68 CADILLAC . '69 VOLKSWAGEN You must see and drive this one. Full power, factory air, vinyl roof. IXRK0981 8u9 . Re~d heater. IZQC717) ' 52795 '2695 '1195 '70 AMX '68 OLDS DELTA 88 '70 GRANP PRIX --. Coure· Radio, heater, •utom•tic, •ir cond., white walls, Automatic, power windows, •ir cond., vinyl roof, radio, 4 speed, r1dio and heifer. IP90AI viny roof, IWPB661 I 51795 '149-5 '70 GMC · 2 TON '70 MAVERICK Tilt c1b truck 5500 series. 5 speed tran1mi11io'n. l_.5821 3 Spd, R,d;o, IZLA7081 --- ---'3295 '1295 - '68 vw '70 MUSTANG M·ACH I (610D~BMl The popular one. Automatic transmission, radio, heater, air conditioning:. IACH608) '1095 s-2395 ,. • T , . -· . he ater. IZMV262) 53495 '69 CADILLAC Sed•n DeVille. Full power, f•ctory •ir conditioning, AM-FM r•d;o. IXXZ464 I '3795 -'59 vw VAN IJUBOl71 '695 -COSTA MESA .. • . ·BILL JACOBS GENERAL MGR. HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMP OF THE INFLATION FIGHTERS • '69 DOD GE VAN Sport van with aut.oma tic transmission, ra dio, heater. IZAE74l I '2395 '69 TOY OTA Automatic transmission, radio and heater. IZYL93 S) '1355 • '69 SIMCA Radio, he•ter, 4 speed transmission. 1786CQSI . 5775 '66 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLE Full power equ~pment plus fa ctory air conditioning. I KSJ8051 ·-s1595 ' • . · . . . • • . ' • • . . • . . ' ., ' •, ' ' ·. ' WE APPRECIATE YOUR r BUSINESS PURCHASE . ~. ·FORDS· CHEVYS · PL YMOUTHS IM tt ll•llJ hi~: t•l t! I p~:~~~S[E s·21 ssoo PRICE FULL PRICE ~.~?.~,~2~~·~·~ s7360 ..... , ... ,,~. ··"'9 ""'q"0""""' '""·''"' MONTH ~ ""'' °'"'" .. ••'"' ··~· \1811 !lil ... , ••• ~ 1 .......... ,. ..... 111a?•O n l.IO• ~ ....... .,.,,,., ... 1.,,1'1""•"t 1119... • •. , FOR 36 MONTHS '70 MUSTANG BY FORD Red , WSW t ires, wheel covers, heater, high back bucket seats, 666ANB '70 CHEVY IM~ALA • H. T ., au to , trans., radio & he at er, tinted winds hie Id, fact. air can d ., ·W$W's, full wheel cove rs. ·241 AIR '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 H.T., V/8, .-,.sw auto, radio & heater, power steering, fact. air. 176ALQ. Meadow Green '70 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 dr. H.T. V/8, auto, radio & heater, power steering, oircond, full vinyl int. 342AIY. Jade Green '70 FOR D GALAX IE 500 HT. \l ·l,~aulo. radio, & heater, foci a ir, w1w wli11I cci•1r1, pciw1r lir•kll, llJAVOHarvest Yellow '70 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNE R H.T., radio & heater, fully factory equipped. 6JJ.ADV Rid '70 CHEVY IMPALA • Th is red beauty ha s au!O'. trans. fa ctory air conditioning , radio, heater, whitewall t ires, •inyl interior Tilt wheel. 186AGR. SPECIAL s21 sso ~URCHASL _ _ FULL PRICE • ' ; '72 CHARGER '71 COLT "THE STYLE LEADER " 2 DI. H.T. IMMEDIATE '""'M••••M•.~···• DELIVERY ................... .. M.m i.n "••., .. ,;tu...., ncllto ... Wck•I t•ll, -I $2538~~ $l"6t9!r $58oow~~~n Wl27C2/11.127680 n•a-... ,.,-.u•••-,.....Wt ......... io. $58 FO i " -,_, .. ,...,........,.,. __ .,.. ... ,._.°'"""" MONT .. ............ .,..... .. ~•120111 ""·""·"''""-'·~ffiltllflliG( H IO""" t1i1111.a"t;. · • , •1n• loodtd wilh radio & heflter. nuto. trans .. doy & night mirror, reor seating, dual mirrors, chrome g11ll & humpers, E78xl 4 !ires, heovy duty brakes. Ser. f( 812AB2US1900S IMME DIATE DELIVERY -BRAND NEW , '72DODGE TRU.CK IMMEDIATE DELIVERY COtlA12Sllb)ell $2469~ $)99 DOWN .,., .. ~ .. -·-"--·-···· .. ·-··· s79 MONTH '0131 '"'""" , .......... -· .. -'"' :i. ..... °"'"" ,,,... .... · MOITNS 'JO<ll ... l llo&lot_. -Pl:.J{llllt.GffUl lO ... ,,; • '71 SPORTSMAN ROYAL loaded. V-11, ou10. power •tfffing, oir cond .. p!>Odtd clDUI, tmled glan. plush dll . uphoh!tcy. chrome wesl coo11 m11· ron, power broke1, wir11hhield wo1her•. I ply bl!l1ed !ire1. chrome drenUjl kit, popoul window1. corpeled thr04."9l!ou!. cu"om 1111p111q. 860CVC '68 FORD CA MP ER '66 MUSTANG Rangers s 1388 ~:~~~:.1:,~::11ioni~. · radio. healer. lie. ~762 1 A F LL PRICE- '69 CHEVY MALIB U Mol1bu ?dr . Hr, V-8.rodio, htOl!lf, •i'u!twoll t1ffl. landou lap. BYFORD Rod •D. h1ot1r, wheel CO•eri. butkt! \fOl l, ROW7b~ $688-~:::~:,~:!~~$2~7; heu1er, power 11term11 ' & brok11, VII elet't. w1ndow1. foe:! cur, wsw. n-ll rnck 272AEf Gold FULL PRICE MB•oo" FULL PRICE '68 CH EVY WAGON '69 FORD TORINO loodt'd with ovlomolic. htoltf, power s TIH!onq. PIK. wiper1, wind\hield Wlllhen. WVZ59 I , 2 Dr. H.T .• V·lt dio. hea!ll', '. .. woll t1r11. vinvl ~ 1triof, rood whff11. $888 1 G.l . $988 '--=--.....,...--..!.F ~LL~P~Ri.;IC~E~·=-.f-----...:.aF PRI E '"""" FULL PRICE '68 OLDS CUTLASS '68 DODGE 440 '68 PONTIAC Le Man 5988 CUTl.l5S S 2 dr . H T out11. llnn1 f(l(IGrf oir cond1- 2 DI.HT. Y-11 • .,;,-c"'4~ , .. power stee<ing. f(ltt. 011 "'°-"""'· • ....,r ilttrior.ioCMI .... ~!~~.!~~~~ s7360 PR ICE ........... o11 ........ , ............... ..i.... MONTH _.,... Do~•d .,-1 I"~• UI" eO •d '°' A "'""" ... ..,..1,.• '1101 •0 "'-·· ... '"'"''" FOR Ji MONTHS ~ !1oning. rod•n. ti.Gier, whiltwo!t 1ir11. vinyl 10111. VVV6?6 $988 '"'··'""'.'"'"· $789 $-688 cond. tinted glo11. v.a, •h11l1, kiclt1 11111. WPl820 VtM775 A •IKFNUl"A ~Ut 11 lt'lo • • • • --.J>•,. ·--· r • t ~ ,• ! ,• ? • • ' ' .. • • .• ' . .. .. ' " • DAll.Y Pll.OT , ' .. ~ .. •' •• -:: ~ • • •• •• ,• :. "' •"! • . ' • • ·' ' .. -'· : . . . . . .. '• . . -~ ,. ·.;; , .. .• . ' . • • .. . . R'EAD · .. --' . ~ . " -. , . --- CAREFULLY! ' . / . . · l"IS .MEANS, YOU STILL CAN CHOOSE·· IROM ROW UeGNc. RQW OF iRAND NEW I 7 2' s T-H AT c AR ., y . u N c HA NG E. D "EREEZE" PRICES., TH£lt c11s-ARE ALL·: SUBJECT TO 1°/o CASH R:E Bl TE . UPOK a»NGRESSIONAL APPROVAL OF EXCISE · TAX . REDUCTION, . AND ALSO SU1JECT 'TO OUR YEAR ROUND ' ... -VOLUME DISCOUNT·l COME ,lff-TODAY AND ••• .SAY.El·!! MAVERICK-PINTO SALE! 1970 I: 197 1'• '4·s,.M1, J spe,1d1, •l1e.1ir-col'Ml. l -111forn1tic fl'IM1l1 . .-:EXAMfW: ~ ____ -==-= '· .'70 . MAVE.~I C" '71 PINTO • Fully feclo ry ~11ip;,.d ,l1di1, Heter, {611- .-.. --------- - -------l ~P ), -;TRAN~"SPE~ OUR &t~bb,, ''''l\i'r1ch11 sm,., 4 .~. 9..j .. i1eJ. lll1CAX J • SLUI ~ll PllCJ jll JD ~~~. .. . ~1796 --------------•RICI $15 96 ~--------~ .... 1----..-"""""!!'!""l ..... ""'!'!'~""'!'!'------'--lµ-/:5 OLDS f.15 WA•ON $696 --------..-~--·· ------~. ~i0:z:..!.§!~~· 514-9.-6,· -~'!!ot..!~.z2S: . . -· s996 °~ ~~~~·;.i::'.,,~·;~~::i'.'· s 6 . ?b'~~-~~lu~.·M.:,'·, s349il. ;.;~':ft~~~~;!: s2496 . low miles. <ZLK366J 14.apeed,.l~·tnlln. · SI c• 00· o v -..-.. · Y""'"" -: :: :::..,· s259. 6-"I•.~-~-·¥-.:!"':-~-... -... -----· f &7 M ~ 1 -root , A> -FM, ~w mil,., ::~::? ' s1"2· ·9. 6 •. air cond.. vinyl roof. a ' .-~ rood mil... ...... . specu, p s aJ• c •' ~ VS. auto., ~6H. P-steeoodrlnr. pusena;er. A1Lsea:ta. PLYMOUTH VALIANT $8'96 s·• R&H 4 _. 4 (Ir. HiT. R&:H. auto.,. miles. C861ADE) . cy\Y$75o) ' , . · R&H , •uto., P.S., ~1rir e-anditiono. · good mill!!. CTUP633) rritt'fs. (utPii41vvu -- Blue Book Prlc• S21tJ -. ' ing. Good mil es. I SVZ 862 1. ----------' 67 RIVIERA . $1896 1'JI ;1A, T SPYDIR ·s1· 6'9.6 1i6s· P~YMOUJH.FURY Ill $796 '70•ALAXll1 DR. H.T. $2196 d t 1 2 Or. 'H.T., R&H ,·auto., P.S., a ir VS, automatic; radi~.ht!at-· ~ · ~~ .·:.!/,.'%!.,,".~ · . ~::U°ie~ter. Appx.,BSOO cond_. Good mil •1· I PIT 484 1. er, vinyl roof. a.ir. (~3.\i{C) . -~~h]o~_m0_.,,, . . --~. ~ ;~;~L::;:::::: $369'6 :,63 ~~.~~~~!'!~, .. :,. N•w p,;,,, s99 6 ~;:· :~::: s::··. $2. 49 .. 6· '67 MUSTANG H.T. $1 296-A~to., R&H_.'P.S., PJJ., p. Full Pow•r, air conCI. 1.UE~ 8791 Radio, heat~auto .. P.S., VS, automatit'; radio. heat· windows, vinyl root, AMI · air cond., vinyl roof, r ood .'67 eOU6AR H.T. $1396 .va, automatlc,,RA:H, po'-'"''r •tJ,rinr. air cond., ta~ ~eek .. Goo(l miles. {UJU 911 l · 'H CORTINA •T t dr. Very low miles. (412.AGE) . llu. 1 .. k flr lc.t $1410 .er,powersteerinf,&oad _ FM,1owmil,es.·(T45BMQ> '66 :·MALllU S.S... $996 miles. (1 18 AGE )· mJles. (UKD 125) '· ·11.,. ... k prlc• $4220 Hardtop. 4 1peed, radio, heater, lllM look price $2160 _...., c....-,.--.... good miles. fSLV41 5) 1-------------........... ~~~---- TRU CK SALE! ST ATION WAGON SALE! · MUSTANG SALE! .. . M•y to cloMse from. '65 llml '11 modlh. Coupes. loonlto .... .__,ll>lo ...i· 1+1.lastbocki. Somo wltlt 4 1poock,~aho·alr .-1IOftl"' ..,i-otlc !ftOCllh. EXAMPL~: 'Tl . MUSTANG H.T. l 1dio, h11t1r, 111tom1tie1 pwr. t+ .. r. & b'r~k11, f1tt. 1ir, t •M 111i111 CIU 9CQ~) ·ILUl·IOOI PllC:l·SJJll -OU R PRICE .$2~96 Ma l\y to 'choose frorn • ."Ch~vy, ·tit-+sun, R.a nehero , 1/1 te:n and -% tons, Flat btd.-'67·thru '-11 models. - w.M~: '. ~,:foio F-zio P1cKuP · 'So• 111ilw:C•1"J1i r 1jMt i1I, V8, 4 1p1M , r1J J0, h11+1;, (1 4148(), OUR PRICE ILUI IOOK llRICI SUIO 52296 ( .. 15 TO CHOOSI FROM. Imports l Domntlcs. Cov•try sHs., Squlros, Torino, Y.W., Volvo, Datsun, Olds., M.,c.., Toyota. Opet '65 thru '71 models. Some with full power & air c.Oftd. EXAMPW: . . '65 FO RD WAGON Co11ntrv 1.G111. R&H, 1uto., •ir, P'.$., 9boJ mil11. tWWK769 l OUR PRICI $796 '70 FO RD 10 PASS. Squlr1, V8, R&H, 1wto., 1ir, ... S., P.I., 90M 111il11, IJ06IEJJ ~~~! ILUI 1001( flllCI f2e896 . __________ ....., ____________________ ~ 2060 Harbor ~RYS-SERVICE --.-· ·HOURS -·-··· 7 AM T~ '.PM MON I ' PARTS DEPT. ONLY • 7· AM To 6 PM TUE·Bll .:. .,. a-AM to-r PM" SATURDAYS -__ __, .,;_ L < • I