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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-11-02 - Orange Coast Pilot' ' • oses or . . . . . ' . . •• ·2 G~~gla ~ilaers Caine .. . . ' West-Found in Gra.,es THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER. 2, 1972 VOL. 6$,. 110. lfJ', I l•CT'9'1I, .......... I • -I • .. • • • • • . -• • • • • Coast Cop Innocent---~· in . Auto .Death Inside Circk 2 Bikers Qf Fa~ifl~ · . -, .. · · -._· -~ 11"1 .... -.... --belllad c·· . . Hi . Ibo.;~ ... ~ tlill ~0ie Cl!"' ·· a -tne ·w.~est P'=Uie-..-~'dal&<il · "'' dent NW>n~tor McGovom are .u dilfilront as the caudidotea -·. 'Ibo l1ght baftter Iha! abounds at the McGOvem camp is cow.ter:ed by the more ,.rlous slllll In ·the Prt11ident's ·comer -men like Charles Colson who once said he "would walk over my grandmother If necessary," in order to get Nixon re-elected. · Meet the campaJgn staffs of both candidates on Page 38 of the DAI· LY PILOT. San Clemente Issues Flat No to Jetport By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. Dllt¥ Pli.t Sllff San aemente councilmen toughened their stand against proposals fur a Camp Pendleton jetport Wednesday by Wulng a nat statement that there would be no "8¥ that such a tenninal would win their llU)lport. In the second pha!e of a rholutlon declaring "Wlalterable oppoa!tlm," the council scratched Ill earlier demands that Dy.over tfftl be ,conducted in the Pendleton area to give residentt a oampllng of jet nolle. The tests were a auggatlon bJ Coun- cilman Thoma& O'Keefe, the only -ToD~ath FRENCH CAMP (AP) -"Big Tom• Shull and Charley Baker were motorey· cle partners. In Charley's 11157' pickup frock, they drove west' from Georgia last fall and found a"sllppery foothold on the ladder· of California motorcycle cliques and gangs. Charley wu cooteul to tab fast weekend btke t1del &cross Northern California's mountainll. But "Big Tom" wanted to Wear the red and white emblem of 'the notorioUI Hell's Angels motorcycle club. The decaying bodies of both were found burled Monday on a lann the state at- torney 1eneraJ'1 office 8lkJ :?Jll rumored ·to be "a HeJl't Angels burial ground," 150 miles northwest of here. (See story, Page 5) As friends tell It, Slmll and Baker were unlikely looking biUn when they rolled into lhill San Joaquin River delta town. They looted "green" and their cycles almost !mmedlalely broke down. Red flowing hair and beard, well over IOO pounds and sl% feet tall, Thomas Shephard Shull, 24, quickly euued the nickname "Blg Tom." He looked Ute a pirate in his knee-blgb boots, chain belt and swastika earring. He .,..... a knife at '1111 hip. Baker, 30, WU almolt a foot aborter and at least IO pounds llgbter. Hts rqalla didn't fit a motoreyc1Jst'1 -,po. He had curly bllcl: ho!r, and .,.... apeo- ta~gb bolll .....:.;:;.. cut i~ Jib ' . :-.-. ' , . .... . . .. -... ' . ' ' ... . . . ; . A Pittsburgh fireman felt the need for a drink of . water, and saw the source in a leaky hOle ~ing ~ Wiii ~~t .,l'lgtijtt used to light a fire In the clly. Being las proud than tbJmy, be supped. ). .• dialenter. -O'lteefe Jnststad, bow...,, that Iii op- .,.,iuon did oot ...., -an .,.. dJl!oement of the Pendleloo jetport. ~. the dty ahould keep .. "open- dlsllncl Georlla -.. Ibo polr -round lod&lnC wttli ldelldly .-eyclilll in the San Jooquln Vlllef . g;::,:.:i ~-:-~ ~ .-:; Jlanoi Negotiators Want BoysRoug~ Up As Water Bomb Hits Mesa Auto rDbted" attitude, he said. • Fellow coundlm"' <\ll'!lftad• however, and tnalllad tbll lllY c1vtllan terminal 111)1Wbere oii the bale woold hive aerious elfedl to the well being cl Ian Ciemtnta dtium. ~_,, from the ..... In another ;:;;;ii lllo qread .. ~y~ a-luUDD by thedty of 1rvlne to the Loll"• of Callfomia cities eodOninl PendleloO u Ibo alte far 1 major tenn!nal ~ Or-Counly. (See JITPOllT, Pap%) motorc)'cllll. '"!''"" -to ~ up t.o the Angela. That wu one of hit am- bltlonl. Cwley lll:ed to rido Im and party. To Sign Now, Talk Later ''They were old Ume baddloa btclt In Allgulla, G1.," Aid Iha c;Ydllt, who · ,,_ Win· Stt- refllaed to he ldenUfled !or f-of North Vlolnlm doClond toda1 the retrtbutloo from tlle Angell. ''OW'ley United lll.lta,mllll uoderlake to aicn • qcit bis Job U I pollce -..cycle VJ llll t her Hanoi 'mechanic. T..n dlv°""'\I bls . wilt Ind will ~ :'°' dllcua':. with they came out htre." Henry A. Klatnctr. '!be doo '""' llken Into the DMt 'Ibo Illa!-WU lJllde In PIJil bJ SCocklm home ,of ..,. 'mimtiet Of the ~ ,_ Lf, opoUlman for the "l'rench Cllnp ~ • molote7de Nanh -deloptloo, llfter the club. day'• "'""" talb. Pilot's Posiriom n::i:.~=~~-·i:~·~~·i::':..1::! I lirlfriond In -DD '1-1•:: ......... IO be llllded-. On. Pr.oJ""iriom .,.,. Sbull...,... • 1or ,_•,a.. • --In..,. 11 • .-·....i _...,until No+1 •.... . " ; 1111 .. 4-:t••..-ilordlll!J." 111e 1>AILY PILO'I' ... , ...,,. -· -10ot • .... ·= no._ 0 ·a·,,, .,...i io --~: It I • ....,..,mendl. tlanl job In I --<Jda obop la ... """' ........ ' ·-~~ Rodeo. ~--... ~ polnta. anaJyud earlier on all 21 ballet · The t"" Georatom joloo( Ibo "Prellch v m.r. •mmt be 1i111k1J dealt -1tlool wblch wm be on the1 Cam• Boyt" lot ,_ -"'-"'°' !!!!l. u.s. d1kr1o Wllllem J. l'Dntr Co1Jfmn1a ballotnert'l'uetdoJ. ~or I lo LdeT-lathl lllorra-. liildot,drtta~...,., l'"'°"''"Oll~ a ..._,. cl Ille ...,..,. "Wt'd .. .... Ibo -llna '*I ... W -·• wtltld jfopoldlzo mend&~. -Pap K4 IOday. ..-Jmeo ....... -two eon DD Iba wwt !bot ... baea demo •.• '------------' (let IOlllD, .... 11 "OUr ~ theftfcn 11 to cany rorwlld '(' . , • A trlO ol Coota M-boya In their early ...... leamed the ... 1... "' ....... reodlon W-y alltlMI!, alter me bombed a palfna car 'lfltb a ••ter bl-. oceordlnc to pollce. . The ml.wilt harltd !ram a home 1t 1111 El Camino Drlvt opla-tilt oedln, caustnc ltt drtver to nerve to tht eurb, 1.., out, ,fbotslnc Into tho -IUld up !lit lllaln. l'ltrolmln John C.' Whllo -I h'I! mu a!Jeplb' 1111111*1. ,iapped, pulled hair, kicked and Mn one Tk:tlm tumbl- lnl ............... ., ht domandad to tnow -boJ -Iha bl!--. 'Ille man II -.tit toda1 6r qi& llonlnC ... poootblt -wttb • -. I)' Wtlpoa c:barp, becl• on6 boy W':"I kl<Ud In the stomadl. llwdlpton ... .i ''l'lrt...,... .... w,.~lon -.... , after' tbt )'out-......... r.-no lor<eil to wipe oll Iha nter. ·' , Jury, Brings In Verdict Quicldy 111 JACK CHAPPELL Of .. D*""""' ' A verdict of innocent WU returned Wednesday in the mi s demeanor manslaughter trial O{ San Clemente poll<eman Gary Adami. ~ slX·mAn, llx·woman jury brought baclt the verdld qulcltly alter being In- structed by Judge H. Warnn Krught in the law pertaining to the Issue. Tbt tr1ar, 1t Llguna Niguel Municipal Cclud, 11....r nve daya lnclud!nc on< enUre day of jusy aelection. Adamt was cleared or t h e rnantlaughler allegation as a remit of the verdict. The charg~ had been btough folk>wt111 the deailh of 11 paueneer in • pickup truck which wu lnvolved In a cnl - 11.sk>n with Ad.amt' patrol c.ar over the . Mtm<rlll Da1 W..tend. Jelfrey Britt. II, of Long Beadl had been rldlng In the _. Ford RandlOlo bod prior to the acddom at El Camino Rea.I and A •enkla Dekires in San Oemente. He wat thrown from the vehJ- cle and onto the pavement u a rtlUlt of the collision. San Clemente Pola ChJel OU!ord Murray declined to l"Ommtnl on the mat-, ter d Adam•' remmplion or routlnt' patrol duties followlne the lllMCftlt verdict. The PollC<man had been 111tgnad to c1est officer duU.. alter the ml• meanor rn..nalauPt«r charge w 1 s bmigbl The JutY'• declllon -miden!il alter • ......,. ... of dolla( .._ -- made by the -Ille 111..,,.,. w-. dAy "'°"'""· -tloo Attomey Don Clumc., !Sff INNOCENT, ..... li 0r • .,. " ' -0-.. -• (.......... . ....,,. .... .. I:..,.,_ • .......... ,....;,.. u l'l : ... llPI. a _,_ n • • -<. --. --. --~-· --.. := ...... :: =:-. "C ..... ..\ -----. I • . • • / % DAILY PILOT s • Ted Kenned y Still Dtawing·the Cnjwds F,...P .. el ' INNOCENT ... the !Int to mab .. *-i. allfsed the ~ bid -en the IO "'fk By STEVE GERSTEL NEW YORK I UPI I -For Ted Ke>- nedy, the "thrill" of a political campaign b: gone, foreftf hostage of the memory . DI 1115L But Ted Kennedy ls campaigrtlni. Not I.bis time klr his brother, John F. Xennedy, a! be did in 1980; not lhiJ time !or his brother. Robert F. Kennedy, ., be did in 1'968, not this lime for hin1self. IJ.\Jt for George S, 1t1cGovem, the Deinocratic candidale for president ; for old colleagues and political allies; for' young frlends seeking political office for tbe first time. Day in, day out, in a scaled-down 'Not Funn11' ve.rdon of a presidentlal c.valcade, Ken- nedy has ~ traveling arouod the coun- try, !pirlted by a sil<"JlW<llgei Lear jet or a l01>1Men1er Falcon west and IOUth, north and east . "The thrill has gone out since 1968," Kennedy said as hi s motorcade glided through New York City traffic wilhout a 'police escort. . "I was in two national campalgm," he said, choosing his words, hi.! sentences broken by thought. "The} were very special to me." In 1960, John F. Kennedy was elected president. In 1968, Robert F .' Kennedy was asussinated. Jaywalktoc, darln& the tnfllc! on the • oct. I u r n I a 1 on the Crowd !or poot'4 speed ll!nll (prlina !acle ' ""8d ( ) ~la of lllnhattan. MeGovem. He 00.. It well. llmll), the mulmum speed limit ol 85 NEJYS ..tN.U.I.WV Blfl, .~ vlltnllt II 411 -'1'1 Is ~ The voice and gestures famllJar, rid-mJle> -hoar, and had l.liled lo·•·•• to -~ just bOPidnl to --.. ·-cltios u.. ~ -ridlalle... Ille ..:::;;,_. ..... ,_ ...._ _________ _._ al the temples -Keonedy....,. to".;,,. ~mil lh,.""7.ll'llr. ' ~ ---. "f realiz< It can ~ever be the same joy the !r«dom o! wal!Dng the atreets of "Do ,..1mqw WW 1mllbl Is? HI cboillf 11111 Ille Illa ClomeDle agaio," he adds. "Bui l'm glad lo work the nalkm'1 largeal ell)', moving ao fut "Do JOll lll!Dw ~\'1 happening •I the PoUOe ~WU acting "balft!llly haro for Sen. McGoven.." that reoogn llloa from -l'lby corrwtV ~ ~.1::, ~'L.,~ and L'1eQ1,.. 11 a private ln\'estlg1tor !or tlle Will it be this way forever? tco alowt1. ,. ...,...: --illel'C I a zmu.,dtessed up .... defeme.." direct' ret'erence to certaJn "I think so." · Totally foiled by a traffic anwl, K~ the P'nllidlDL., -n-:.. · Woold ii be different U be were run· nedy abandoned his motorcade In 1 Aqd tbea the lour ho r 1 e m en : • · .,....;. reporll which ~ not 11.,,. lo ning? desporate attempt to reach the rally "looo~ · •.:....,~.?"rt~ and • · the==·=· :ul':,'io "I don't think so." point in the garmait district be!o"' ~. • • • comi......-.. :.. , • p...,_. hlo .._ Ioli!• tflo· Jwry Edward Moore Kennedy, the senior McGovern. He arrivtd too 1'te. f.afttl&e, "It lm't ell)' to ... ve·a banif tn tbe-icddent .would hue blppeDed ao senator !rom Massachusetts and last or This Is one o! Kamec!T• ml"IMs ln Ille llD; loot la Ille moulll; IODIUe lo IDll1or -_.. the )lillke CV bod tho K• ......... bn>'~-w•'"-•--'·• the cam-•--pllchmm for the prod--aB 111 Ibo -time." .,..... __ , __ ., ....... .......... ~... "Do -md loall lllaiOOnla talk to -traftllac, He uJd the ..., - -~· 1-1• !or the colllaloo wu the truct'1 IUdden Y"l -· ... swerve Into the path o! the patrol c!ar. Not much, Kennedy replies, but add!: •••-lo the I "M. it gets cJo9er to the end and it ap-"He will live witb wa r rest o pear3 the race cootioues to be uphill" b.Ls life. there will be more. "ll you want to ruin one life because GI Gets Pass-Kennedy says be realizes that many aeotber life has been taken, I submit to people feel be 1a cam··•-•·g this year Yf'J that you've retumed lo tbe law of tbe ,,........ 1"-"'e," Williams said. as a prelude to a presidential campaign l&Ub' in 1978. Clarence's argument touched on con-- Bowo""°, ~ .. ,. u he bad not filcll Jn witness testlmony, particularly To Leave Girls ca-lpod for McGovern these same that DI one -who reported that a people would have Wd "l was waitlngMo search for heroin waa made at the ac- pld; up the ' plooea." cldellt BOOie by JOlllhs the day alter the • Kennedy remlnclo a listener that be -collision. . 0 Tbat's hogwash, you know that," wu on the stump for McGovern ''when Clarence laid. He said that the ~ time • HEIDELBERG. Germany (U PI ) - Pvt. Jerry Garrett, the only male soldier in a unit of 130 women, grabbed a super- 1weekend pass today and got away from it all with the blessings of a sy mpathetic Army. .. I don't think it's funny," the 18-year- Indiar.is Make Wishes Heard WASHINGTON (UPI) -About 500 American Indians, beating tom toms and singing tr ad it ion al chants, occupied an audi,torium at the Bureau of Indian Affairs today, demanding that the goveminent provlde the::1 housing and food dur- ing a week of protest I n Waahlngton. A delegation of about 7S met with two government officials, John "" Crow of the bureau and Harrison Loesch, an assistant I n t e r i o r secretary, complaining they spent the night in a rat-infested church. The Indians are part of a caravan of tribe! that drove across the COlD'ltry from the West Coa!I , protesting broken treatles and other actions of the whlte man. • Man Struck By .. Beer Glass, Dies A man was fatally injured in a Buena Park bar early today when struck by a beer glau thrown by an unnamed suspect. The Orange County coron~'s office ' reported that Jack Beck, 25, of 8991 Greenbriar Plact, Buena Park, died ln West Anaheim Commllllll)' Hospital prol>- ably because al severe lacerations on b .. oed. An autopsy ls under way. -•·\t · • -~)"R.IJik,p>IW Mid they are not " • oOnaiO ~IUajll'tr tm0w1 that lila actfun ""'11td in tbe death of the victim. 'n!ey aid be left lbe beer bar before the vie- , tim "'11ap9ed. •• I Police refuse to ldentlfy tbe place where the incident took place as well. PORKER ASKED TO LEAVE BAR SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) -A pig in a i:: ke ts one thing, but a sow ln a safoon? The bartender at Cunningham's Tavern called police when two men came in leading t~r small pig on a leash. Offlceni asked them to leave because city health laws forbid animals ln bars. OIANN Cl)AIT DAILY PILOT TM °""'ff C... OAll.'I PIL.OT, wttlt ~ " ~ ,,.. .......,,,_, ....... .., .... er.,.. QMt ~~ .:.......... ...... r•te ..UIMI art .......... MWf'r *'""' 'r"''' . fllr C-11 MIN. ,...,.,, hfOI. Hwitlflf!M ihkfll~.... V•llfy, ~ .--.. '"'"-'IMll!ell«l "" ..... o.n.r.1t1 Jin JtiM C.Plllr...., " •l...,i. ........., .. H .... Ill ~I.._ a.iwwrs Mlf ...... n. TM "1M:'-t "*4Wllr'I •!lflt It •I a w.tt a.r f!fMI', C.tt M.... C.""""'9, ..,.,.,. ••bttrf N. 'W.ff ''".._. .... ,_....., Jttli l. Clill'llY YIU "°"Nlfll n °""'" ...... 111 ..... , ic ••• u ..... 'no"' .. A. M11r,t.loe MMellflitlllllW ~.tt .. H. L..M ·~ P. Han AMi91•tliiUfletlrlt -C.... MW: Ja w.t NY flf'Mt ....... ~ .• ,........; ......... "--htdl1 m ...,_ ~ llS:dtQ ... ...01 IJWJ ~ ....,_,. a.o ..... ...,.11c:.-..a ... .,.,., 1 cn4t MMm C .,,., ..... 1 , I ..... ,. ,...0.. .............. .... ....... ,... .......... """"'··--""'" ....... old soldier from Greenfield, Ind., said before he faded away lo ponder his prob- lem in privacy. ''I enlisted in the Army to serve my country. I didn't· come in to serve with a bunch of girls. "I've got a fiancee at borne and 1 don't think she'll like it." Garrett wants to be a military policeman. But· a few days ago, the ArJny assigned him to clerking duties with B Company, the~ Women's Army Corps (\YAC) unit of the 7th Army 's "Special Troops Group." "This was not an accident ," an Amiy spokesman said. "It was done on purpose, although probab ly more or less as a temporary ar- rangement. "the company evidently was unable to find a clerk who was a WAC and had the necessary training. so somebody · prir grammed Garrett into the arrangement. I understand. he wants out of the job." Indeed he does. said his new com. manding offi cer, Capt. Anna Young. And the W ACs are trying lo help him. "He's had it," the captain said. "I !ft.ink he's kind or embarrassed. I un- derstand some or his male friends are razzing him about it ... "He's only 18 and there are 130 of us. "And he wants to be an MP. "This would be a tough situation for anybody. I really sympathize with him.'' said Capt. Young, who. Issued Garrett a pass good for solitude until Monday. .. I mun, bow would you feel in his position?" Ducking that question, a newsman ask- ed bow Garrett had beee doing at hll new job, "No problem," Captain Young said. "He's trying his best to learn the · }ob. There's been no reaction among the gfrls. '"lbere'1 an emergency Z.equut In to get a woman derk in here and get him transferred." Wby? "I cannot entciae command over any man. Thal la an Army regulation. So that's a polentflll problem, although not a real one so far." · 'so Tlaai's Where ••• Ever wonder where the pony tail got its name? Young pony-tailed. girl has the ans\ver in hand .as she braids tlla. tail of her horse for the start ol the 89th annual National Horse Show at Madison Square Garden in New York. PEACE ... ' o\ter NBC telemlon and radio. A •pok""'an aaid the politk:al broad- cast Would "touch on deveJopfuents ln Vletnam." The White Hoose declined lo dilcuu any contacta K!s.singer may have had In recent days with Hanoi to arrange a final session to wrap up a Vietnam peace agreement. SD Beach Has Night of Terrot BAN DIEGO (AP)·-HID..,_ -1 nlgbt o( terror In Son Dltgo•i ..... beach section, say bu!fnes6men. Cluaten or youtl)s ponded along the atrlp of store~. throwing eggs knd bi'c Jk- lng wtndows. Kiaslnger· attended a "national day" puty at tl'le South Vletnameee embassy Youngsters, Some, ... ~e ~~.~ ... ._ White Houae oHldal !O attend the Viet· /\. few were toiling eoch other and "acted aa If they were blgb on drup," saJd Joanne Pierce, a tavern owner. She described It Wednetday u "a full-sa:..!a riot" invo1v~l& about 350 youtbl. Police aid an liivestlgatloo o! the Tue>day nigbt activities waa beq made. Armed, Besiege r~Y. whlcb dttw more than Diplomatic IOUl'Cel in Par I 1 , the campaign waa lull o! hope and prom-given by the witness w., the same 'time il!il'd say flnJ).ly, the conditions which the only two youths not bolpi.tallud were existed for my not running for vice presi-taJtiDg witb the chief of police and wltb t!ent are as true after Nov. 8 .•. family parents at the Y~ where the wrecked respoosibilltles." truck was lmpoundi<f. Kennedy adds, "l am interested in the He termed evlderice of marijuana and party . . • bl achieving change . . . open beer cans irrelevant and said that rapoodlng lo the needs of peeple ... the "d that siren and that !<cl llgbl bad been time and energy invtsted in it by my ou, Jell " would not have died." family •. I went to be active in Its coun-Williams, ·defending hls client'• actions cil in the future." pointed to testimony about the dangers of !<cl llgbl and siren ll!e. Pro .. P .. eJ '.fJETPORT .... '!bat issue will come before the league neit week, but it is not yet known if a vote will be taken 't the Thursday meeting, or if the poll will wait until the December session . The fates! San Clemente move comes on the heels of similar motions tbls week by San Diego County Supervisors who al8o have briatled over, the attempts by their counterparts In Orange County to seek inslallallon o! the terminal on the "Exc:eedlng tbe speed by policemen is a fact of rue·," Williama said It was unfair !or the district attorney to file charges agalnJt one driver, the policeman, and not the other, wbO was just as responsible in the collision, Williams asserted. "Don 't you think that every policeman in San Clemente thinks, 'it's us against them?'" be said. • From Pagel BODIES ••. federal resei.valion. the comers to see who was fastest," said Copies of the San Clemente action one 32·year-old cyclist fr i e n d . Wednesday will be sent "to all ap-"Sometimes we'd hit l2G or more on the propriate officials," the council agreed. straights." Among the recipients will be President Aother "French Camp" cyclist, Larry Nixon, who bolds the key. McCurdy, said be shared a Manteca Without j)e President's approval , land apartment f .. one month with Shull and at Pendleton never could be released for two other persons. use as a jetport. "One day in December or J&n\.IM'Y, 1be Western White House lies closer 'Big Tom' just dkln't come back," he than any other residence to areas sug-said in a telephone interview Wednesday . gested aa pooalble sites !or the terminal. "I thought something seemed !unny. I The action Wednesday came late In the figured they, got into· some trouble or councll'1 JoacOl'tlwHJluaJ lDe<tin(, but something 1" llie Bat Area:" - one mem,b:er of the audience managed to Sbull's yellow and black Harley was Weatber '\he evening'-business to com-gone, but be left behind ••a few odds aOO meiit on the.jet resolution. ends, nothing big," McCurdy &aid. Local buaine~ ' Ray Campbell The San Joaquin County Sheriff's office strongly advised passage of U:.e resolu-said Shull's mother, Mrs. K. W. Shull of tion and reminded t;i0uncilmen of their Augusta, Ga., reported her son missing allies in the fight . Feb. 20. An all-poinll bulletin later was "You've got allies,. at Camp Pendleton issued after reports that lhe big biker and in San Diego County, even the White had been slain. . House," Campbell aaid. "We beard he was murdered and was "You can't forget that, and the resolu-in the bay," said a sheriff's office tioo should abow that San Clemente flatly spokesman. "He was a biker and was opposes any use of Pendleton for a jet-running with biking groups. We don't port. know if be was a Hell's Angel." "No matter where the planes would Tg, two motorcyclists Interviewed who land:OD tbat~·~!:'"'~~J'Pll]~ .~both_d_ead men were certain that be bit by noise from jela,"~··.,,...,......,,_,arrAl •• .lf-t>lit apres.ed~ said. · some doubt about Shull's status. 2 R k G Washingtoo and Saiaon aaid the main oe roups 1tumbllq block In the 1'1Y of a - LONDON (AP) 1 -Hlllldred1 o! slgnln1 wu North Vietnam's refusal to e•a<Uale Ill 11 dl?1alonl boctlzlil the Viet Coog In South Vlolllam. fall clearance SALE! screaming yowigstm besieged the hotel of two American pop groups today, ligbling with police for a gllmpS< o! lbe Jacklon Five and the Osmond Brothen. Hotel employes claimed some scream· lng teenyboppers carried knives and threaten<d doonnen haruaed by lour daya o! slrtnUOlll puppy love. A pasaerlty old be aaw a boy o! about 9 brandllhing a aledgebammer. "He rushed up to the rear entrance of tht hotel. sm~ open the door Mnd1e, and lbe fan1 surged in." he reported. Police detained tl&ht youngsters, in- cludlng one girl anned with a knife. They were laken home to !Mir parenta. The Jacbon Five and the Osmond Brothers arrived at Heathrow Airport Sunday within hours ot each other. An estimated 8,000 yoong fans between 8 and 16 sobbed and .screamed as ·the young performer.i emerged from tbelr jetliners. "I rtmember BeaUemanla," an alrportl or:icial said, "but it was never as great as thLI." The boy the girls were wa!Un~ was 14-year-old Donny Osmond, w hit r><Ord "Puppy Love" helped his pp lll#tcb 10 mllllon sales ln one year. ' But the Viet C..,. today ""'"""'1 an old Communist demand f 0 r the liq· uidalkm of all American mllltary ba1e1 In South Vietnam. 'lbere was no mention of U.S. bales In the 1ummary or the propoaed ceaae.Ore agreement publlahed by Hanoi m weeu qo, and 11 wu assumed lbe Communlm dropped the demand In retum !or American abandonment o( the demand for wlthdrl...J ol HMCll'• 1roopl from South Vietnam. Need Sex Counsel? Call This Agency SAN FRANCISCO iUPll -'n1e sol .. tion to a sex probleL.1 is as near aa one's telephone in thla clty. Tbe San ~ S e x lnlormallon agency opened Wedneoday and by telephone offert free and confidential an1weri lo questions about aez. The nooprortl q .'llC)' amwen~lmple QUfltklns directly and makes felerralJ for more compllc:alod problems. Lion Released Confinement Ends for Mauling WEST MILFORD, Ill. J. (UPI! -P1u, tbe ai»,.....s 11m1 w1t1c11 roc«ttly clawed ID lstatlJ visitor in 1 wll<l1~e pr.,...., bu been freed !ntlG :II daya o! ccnlln<monl to the CUllody o! ..... a1 .,....11nc lemalel. Kmy Smtih, a spolu!sman !or W1111<r BnlL Jun&Jo Habitat, aaJd tho S. year-old lion •• ddven Sn a, trailer to an IN•' ti the ,......,._ aod re1eaHd. A game ranger In I jeep opened tbe Ille and tho leri>tles began to Slither. ''Three or lour femal<1 went Inside '""'lln( around, and U... 1be1 all came out." Smtih Mid. He aid P1b lmmec!l11ely 1><8811.fillhlinc with two or nu.. oilier ljonl but 1bea aettltd down with the erouf>. Abraham Levi. an Israeli vlsl11ng1 llrootlyn, N.V. family, wu mauled by the Hoo through an open car window on ColwnbWJ Oly. He IUll&lned l;!Ytrt lact,.tbta ot lbe lace, nerck and cheat. i 100'1 of Valuea! OTdn now for eartv chriltmat dcUwry Plu1 ••ctlon119x7V1 ln lux- urious heevy import.cl vel. ••t •Y•llable in many choices of c o I o r 1 and f1bric1. s.1. $595. Orange County's Largest Selection of Contemporary Furniture open Sunday 12-5 entire inventory reduced! .. ' daily I 1-9/Ntfurd.-y 11 -6/iundey 1-5 • ph 5'48-5618 • toll frM 546-1262 • • ' a w J T s fi I ( By CAMlACB PEARSON 09 .. Dlolrr l"llM ll•ft New parents expect their baby to grow and cbange. And they're usually equipped to handle the need tor bigger clothes and mort suppUes.'l.. But I! their child suddecly begun to grow at an alarming rate, the parents would seek help. • And that's what the San Joaquin School Dlstrtcl. did wheo Its normal agartan In- laocy turned Into abnonnal growlb. It sought help !rom every conceivable source, from the state to land developers. A conglomerate of maturing children, the district bas freakishly grown more 1 than 1,450 percent 'in 10 years. lt started quietly with the Irvine School, built adjacent to the El Toro Marine Air ,Base· in 1929 by· James Irvine. Now criticized because of jet noise and danger, then the site was the onJy place arotmd with utilities. Surrounded mainly by comllelda and rolling hills, the rural school was deeded '. · the district in 1936, six years after it was opened. A second school wasn't needed until almost 30 years later when in 1958 San Joaquin merged with the now-defunct El Toro School District and El Toro Marine Advocates Only? School In East lrvlne joined.the family. What now seems a giant with nmaway pituitary glands was then normal enough. The distrlet wa1 an averase parent, wlth two average clilldreD in 1983. But tbtn the unexpected growlb uploslon bit and the school-bullding race was on, with the abnormality always outdiatancing the help. The district has grown to 18 ICbools in 10 yean (with two due open in 1973). It also grew to a psychological split which resulted in a successful wlification election last Jime. 'Ibe physical split Is scheduled for next July when growUIJrl1I be divided, bat not ·aolved. The Irvine Uniliod School Dtsbicl will open in July, 1173, wi°' about 7,300 to 7 ,500 students and the Saddlebact Valley Unified School Dlstrtcl CMWion Viejo and El Toro) with about 13,000 according tG current projections. San Joaquin district officiala are charged thls year with the double task of continuing planning in tbe now lameduck district and beJping new districts see intu their futures. San Joaquin District Superintendent emeritus Ralph Gates has been working directly with the new groups, as has Dave King, facilities planner. This time, help mlcht come-band-In-baod wtlh the problem. What hu been known In the state In recent )\'tars u Cllifomla's fastest grow· ing dbtrlct will become two of the lestff~growlng, with the Saddleback Valley apparently taking the lead. Using CUrT<llt housing trends and city. community pollcies (all of which could fluctuate), King estimated that Sad· dlebact will be built out by 1985 and t vine by year 2000. Almost ball of Irvine District is ln agricultural preserve until 1981. lllstorically, about one-tlllrd ol Joa· quln'o mutant growlb hu been In Irvine and two4blrdl in $addleback. Some Qf the latter ls now spilling over inf<> the neigbborlng Capistrano area and · the schools there are bulging as a resu!L A year ago, San Joaquin was ln. a crisis' no state funds coming In and eight schools behind. Last lune, so per<ont of the disbict'• students were on double sessions, an anathema to aimoR ....,.... . 'lbinp haw lmproyed. State lid came througb,.n»re -were .,id and loans from develOpen were used for planning. With the ,....t opeolngs of de Portola School In MJssJoo Viejo and Los Altloo Intermediate SdJool in El Toro, ooJy two pertent of the students will be on double sessions per se. All-year School Opponent Many sch;lols are still using their multi1>UJ'POMl rooms, f o r m e r I y auditoriums, as classrooms to relieve the pinch. Until last month, by state allocation board standarda (which many locally say are inapplicable because they don't keep up with aucb a fast.growing area), the di!trict was caught up. Claims Panels 'Slanted' By JOHN VALTERZA Of Hit 0.lly Pllet ll•ff A leader of the opponents to all·year school in the Capistrano Unified School District charged today that district of· ficials were "stacking tl\e dec k with p~ ponents" at a series or community meetings scheduled in several schools l3ter in the month. William Thompson of Mission Viejo, a leader of the parents' group mobilizing .to fight adoption' of the 45-15 plan into the district nei:t year, asserted that the public meetings have been calculated to Water District Calling Meeting On-Land-Outfall ,., A public meeting to Interest Irvine residents in the Irvine Ranch W•ter District's proposed Rattlesnake Canyon land outfall for reclaimed sewer-water has been set for 7:30 p.m. Nov. 21 in · Rancho San Joaquin lntennedlate School , 4861 Michelson Ave. mWD proposes to construct a 9.~mile line to Rattlesnake Reservoir, north of the present city limits. The project is part of a master plan for possible total reclamation of waste water. Reclaimed water is intended for use in irrigation. present only the advocates of the COrl-' cept. .. . And after ~ presentation, the au- dience would be allowed to comment and then cast a "straw ~ote on the question." School officJals coniacted about tbt allegations said that the format for most of the meetings set later in the month have not yet been established. But at least one school, said Director of Administrative Services, J o s e p b Wimer, would probably have oppOnents among the panelists. That will ~e place Nov. 9 at Viejo School, where many of the parents op- pose 45-15 {a CODCept which places youngste rs in class for nine weeb, followed by three week.s off, in a year long cycle). Thompson, however, bas asserted that the district is attempting to "pull off a complete mow job" at the meetings. · Opposition, be sald, ts '1'0Ullting among the district tea.cbers1 a situation which Wimer said·be-wu-not aware of. "I'm not reallf!!Ure 11 the'teacbel'!I in the distrlet are coodoctlng a straw poll to determine who likes 45-15," Wimer saJd. Thompson and fellow OPPQ!'e.Dts cl.UU· ed that teachen, primarily at Marco Forster Junior High School, dislike the concept. · Wimer said that if trustees were to adopt some fonn of 4S..15 pilot program thal teachers In the cboaec schools would be able to decide it they wish to participate, or transfer to a school with a standard school year. Thompson, in ari attempt to cmmter appearances made at several service The state was going by old enrollment figures until in October, ~district went past -15,000 pupil!: and qu.Alified f('r sil addllional clasirooms at Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School in Irvine and three mo,. ei ..... tary schools. Planning will noW move ahead on University Park U in Irvine, New World School in Laguna llll1o and a Los Allsoo- Trabuco Road site in Mi3sion Viejo. 'Ibose additions will "keep us neck and neck with the capacity on paper," King said. Neck and neck is better than always bchind and at least now new · clistrict trustees are learning to plan for ir· regular, not regular growth to j)eir "child." - At the end of this school year, a 4~15, year-round school in lrvine, El Camino Real, and Santiago Elementary School in El Toro are scbed.llled to be finished, bringing the disbict family I<> 18. Ten other schools -four in Irvine and six in Mlsaion V~UQ..El 'n>ro_or ~IUfll. Hills -are in varlout planning ltages. One of those, <;!rrillo Drive in Ml!slon Viejo, hu gone out to bid. It II llCbeduled to open•Seplember, l!l'IJ. A. few of the otben, especlaily In Irvine, were held ap while city officlalJ deferred action on surrounding developments. Work has begun on most of these. Gates says that as Jong a1 the aoutbern Orange Cotmty area ls so attractive to new residents, there will be no end to the race between growth and school building until the ground is saturated. ''Tbe tltemativ~ to Jtat~rJec{lji.~tion and reuse Is to convey the waler to the ocean for disposal," an mWD spokesman said. The joint water supply and sewage treatment public agency has completed an environmental impact report on the proposal. Copies are available for review in the UC Irvine Library, tbe ffiWD of· fices in Town Center, at Irvine city hall and at the school . _ clu~ in past • .weeb by admlnlstraton, already has scheduled two appearanees i.. San Clemente early ibis month to present the opponents' views. Developments proposed like I h e Canada FoothillJ planned community in El Toro, with its potential 30,000.plus persons waiting In the wings, hang over the beada of ocboOI dlstrlct plannera lite a sword of Damocles. The muci>touted baby bast hu bad no effect on the district. Lower birth rates may decrease classes elsewhere, but In San Joaquin thls year, klndergart.n 'Ladies' Soccer Games Too Rough DERBY, England (UPI) -The men who referee women's soccer games have had enough. The women's language is too much for them. "The trouble Is that some of the ladles do not behave Uie ladies," said Frank Hardwood, secretary of the 354-member Derby District Referees Society. "The language can be quite startling." He said the society is going to train women to referee women's matches from now on. "Although the ladies' teenness Is com- mendable," he aaid, "referees who of· ficiate at tbe1r matches rarely want to do ao again." Anita Mol.eley, secretary of '\be ~ Sunday Soccer League, admitted lhinc• get pretty tough when the women tab to the Deld. "some of lbe rweartna 11 wone than you ~ould hear from men," llhe Mkl. Mexican.Mayor Pat.ernal Type IOHCATEOPAN, Mako (UPI) -Resldooll In lhll vUJac• -of Mealco City are ':OllllllalolA8 about tbtir m.,.n ldet ol .ioounc wttll morall m>tten. They want the otate """""' lo do -"'"' about It. MIY"' Raloel llodl1aua del Olino. tba •tlla«ft ml In • ...,,. plaint Wecb.-loJ, ~ -!Ml """"~be <OMl6tn ........ tna ln .m." He also pledged a strong campaign by the foes to be officially included in the meetings at schools during November. "Unless tbe format la changed," he said, "it looks like we'll have to do our discussion from the Ooor, but we feel that in the interest of lalmess ther< should be an equal balance on the panel." Wimer conceded that the meetings would probably become "debates of some sort" because of the mounting opposiUoo to §-15. Coastline Initiative TV Station Sued By Pair in Raid SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Sacramento ccuple have filed a $200,000 lawsu.lt agai.mt a television station that Jellt 1 camera crew Into their boQ\t during an early morning nal"t'OUcs raid b y Sacramento police. M . Se T • h Edwiml and Deyette SaJaur state In eeting t omg t their complaint, filed Tuesday 1n ....-Sacramento Superior Court, t b 1 t An uplanatlon of Proposition 20, tbt ' cameraman photographed .hem In their Coastline Initiative, will be given at 11 , underwear, underelotblng and nightgown o'clock tonight during a general meeting In their own home and without their of the South Laguna Civic League at pennissl:JD. United Metbodlsl• Ourcb, 211131 Wealey They a!JO allte that the film as broed- Drive, South Laguna. cast bad been edited ao that it falsely Roy Holm, Laguna Beach \>ice ft\ll10r, pcrfrafed them as degentt1te penona of will address the organization on the sub-immoral character. ne auit 1llo states )eel of the controvenlal oooaervatlon that the announcer'• comments ...,. im- measure. The publlc II invited. proper. Monster Photos Academy Films Lach Ness Creature the IDDUll Northeast E I e c t r o n I c 1 R<oeardl .... £ncb-tnc moetlrtl. Rinet dllplay<d I ll<ri8 ol obo4o1 whlcb -• .,.....-. ~r., .... joct. --II a fla. movinc tJtroucb D1dR7 water. U.ald __ _ haft ~ tbe _plct,... ~ their 1.-.udty,...., tbouib.., -wlD -lo -tile _, ol tile CIW .. rt: ~ "'ti ........ and Illa ape1I aay .. -.· ~ 11111, "tlloo there ...... b_, .... -°"°' In Locll .... " . . \. 'Tlla --fl( Illa -pkbd :.----tos-0.un-"":l,~ "'""' tba -· -.... __ tobe•to ., ...... . • Thursda~. NMmbtr 2, iq72 So ... DAIL V PILOT :J • ID Edueatiou w.ooor--r--,~--1--1--1--1--,----i--1 13000h--.-'-----i--i--~--t--+--J.--~ '1 L I I I I: I I I I I I I I I I I I I I. I 12 ooot-----:+---+---+---t--"1" ---+---t---i 't I I I It I I I I I : : I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I 11 OOOt--t--~--4---l---1---l---l---l ' It I I I I I I I I I. I. I I I I • I 10 000~ --1---!..---~--!---+-- -~ - -i--i 1 I I I I I I I ,I I I I I I I If I I I I I I • 9000~--~--~--+---~--+--+--.,· '1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 0001 I I I I I : I s r---r---~--'T'--·---,.--.-,.--.-.. t I I I I I I . I I I I ,• I t -i I I I t I I I I I znoop----~--.-.--._..--.-.--.-. ..., t I I I I I I -I I I I I I 01 I r I-I I I 6000 --__ .,_ __ .,_. __ ._. __ 1 • I I I I I I I I : I I I .L I I : s,ooo~--r--. --r--r, ---. I I I I · : I I I ; 4,000~--+--t--1---i I I I I I I I 3000'---'-_, ___ , I I I I 2,oooi-~-t---I i 'l' ,. 1,0001--1 i I oi!-f-i ~ : --'~"---·· i 63/64 j 14/&5 i &5/&& j &&/-&1!·61I61 i 68/&9 i 69/10 ! 10111111112 12/13 ! ' IT STARTED WITH A RURAL SCHOOL AND SNOWBALLED INTO AN URBAN GIANT District Grew 1,450 P.rcent in 10 Ye1r1; Next It Will Divide ind Continue to Multiply enrollment was third-highest. Such phenomenal growth was unheard of in the early da)ls. Enrollment climbed from 928 In 1963-&4 to 3,273 in 1967 and then soared to its current 15.00J. The help San Joaquin received came in many fonm but little hall come from tn- dustrial tax bases. What there is, is mostly going Into Irvine, Gates pointed out. King estimated for Sadd1eback School District officials that, U all proposed developments go through, the district by 1983 will need 2$ to 30 more elementary and seven to eljbt more Intermediate schools than are built or oow being con- Slnlcted. ID bts projectkm, King Included the arUs of. M.Lssioil Viejo, Lake ForeJt, El Toro and mentioned specifically built or proposed developments of Aegean Hills, Capistrano Hlgblanda, Mathia llanch South, Rossmoor and Canada. Making similar projections for the Irvine area, King said that by 1985, the district will need 21 to 23 l1\9te elemen· tary schools and five intermediate. Usually four-fifths of an intermediate school qualifies a district for a high school, King said. Bond Issues In the Tu.stin High School . ...,DP.•rkt hive failed in I.hf# past two and a half · ye&ri .. and .... M -hlgfi, school con· PROFESSIONAL iNlEAlOR DESIGNERS ( ,., struction Is taking place ln Irvine or Sad· Cleback although the two high schools are operating at capacity. Although developers have helped stave off the abnonnal growth in some ways, ir others, King said, their involvement has only increased difficulties. Pr<>- jeclions by builden on the number of students to be generated out of certain types of homes are notorious I y unreliable, he said. For instance, the $250,000 homes on Udo Isle "should ~ve had no children." he said, "but generated four per dwelling unit." The central or north Irvine area, much • of it noo-Irvlne Company land, Is anotbtr problem for the new dialrlcl. Projections there are harder to come by altbouch King's initial thou&hll call for six to seven elementary schoob ond 1.5 m.. termediate schools In the 80-CIJled north "window" areas. By adopting an all-year school plan, he said, that slJ: to seven c .. uld come down to four or ftve. Irvine school bond campaigners are saying they need $50 million to stop playing "catch up " and that at least eight schools (five elementary, 1wo in· termediate and one bi~h school) should be built in five years to care for their hall of the San Joaquin giant. -Gales indicated further ocopcratlori 21" HAAIOR ILVO. COSTA MESA, CAUf. between dev elopers and districts Is a ltey to controlling lhc area's overactive growth glands. San Joaquin ~'Orked with lhe Miss)on Viejo Company this year to open in new houses lhc temporary El Dorado Primary School in Mission Viejo. It i.'i keeping three regular s.cllools off double session. The-lrvino Company has lent money for advance planning on sites to help lessen the lag time between Deed and available state funds. The state. ln a posmve note, has begun to lend money to plan when, not after, lmmedailte needs arise. "l think we've caught up quite a bit," Ga&et 11!<1. The vrtttan 1dmbllatr11Dr added that "the manner of building schools should be more effective by d.lvldlng UKl San Joaquin District In half.'' But Gates added cauUously, "Whal the future will be is hard to tell ." A lot will depend on the success or failure of the Irvine Diltrlct'1 $S0 million bond election Nov. 7 and the SaddleMck Dislrlct's $46 million bond·apportlooment elect""1 Feb. 6. UnJess they pau, the two districts wilt be vlrtually without tonStruction funds when they o~. But the arowth wW cer· talhlf"amthibt.'9-·-·-· ~.~ -:_-;-~-__ , ,,.· • ' • ' • I •• , • n.r..t.af, Nae l 1 Z. l 'fn Censor Lifts His Ugly Head THE C2NSOR COM£1'1!: -Anolbtt humJJua from wltbin our greal federal bureacracy lllrlacd juil the other day when our U.S. protectors lubed out on our bebaU against evil industry. Th.ii time, it was aft outfit known as the Federal Trade Commission that was ._,out to protect you al>d me by bashing a bout with a federal stamp or disap- proval. The object of the n'C's ire was an annpit spray. It's really nictr to call t~ products aali-perspiranU but thty are armpit sprayrall the same. Now, you may have read about them in recent times where some of the products: ha\'e been feared harmful if the spray stuff gets inhaled. So upon first readi~. yoo might suspect th.at the Federals are ooce again going out to protect you against some- • thing hannlul. N<n' SO. TIIE FTC in this case was gtMg after the teevee commercials being am (pardon the exprtMk>n) in favor of !Orne stuff called Ory Ban spray anti- perspirant. . From ~ ntWI reports, you learn that the Federals didn't like the Dry Ban com- merciah because they "purport to be evidence that Dry Ban is superior to competing product! .. .'' Now, how's that as a Federal &in for you? 11JE FTC BUB.EA.UCRATS weren 't complaining that Dry Ban was harmful. Or that the stuff might poOOn the fami ly cat. Or that lhe can might explode if ex- pooe<I to tho beat of a lighlbull>. None ol that. Where lht Dry Ban people sinned was in trying lo peddle their pit spray by tell- ing you it is superK>r to other like prod- uct!. ~ Obviously, we can 't have this kind or thing going on in America. Next thing you know, somebody will be trying to sell you a new car by suggesting their model is superior to the other guy·s. A contractor might try to sell you a house. by claiming the one be built ·tias a wOOle lot of features not included by his ~mpetitor. We mia:ht even suggest you'll like our newspaper better tlian some other. IF THE FTC CAN'T stamp out this kind of wlckedneu, we may eod up in this country with a whole lot of peopie ,.1Ung things to other -le. Folk> might rven compare producb and really find one they like be.st. , Clearly, you can't have .a thins: like this · going on. It's far better to have the rrc tell you what products are llq)ttior. I always had this dumb nolloo that Federal people involved lo pttidiJCtS were suppooed to protect yO<t oplrol harm. Like the llnlke oil salesiilu w!lo claims hi.s glop can cure cancer: """.: BUT NOW, APPAR~Y, even If your product haJ passed for safety and llldl, you .,.,,., .... try to ~ !'~· claiming it'• betkr Ulan eomeone elle •· So you can see haw big old government control can start out in one direction to . be your protector and end up your . ..,,,.. WE'VE A Sl'MlLAR deal coming up · next Tueaday on our state ballot in Propos ition 11. The good folks who sup- port it think by bringing on the cermor, they can stamp out smut. · After it paues. they can start searching with great 7,eal for dirty stuff 10 censor in books, magazines, movlell, newspapers and on television. AFTER A WHILE, they will run oul ol dirty atuff. Then they can rtart In oo politics, religion, personal beliefs, IOCial activities and the whole spectrum or human events. After that, if they run out of ideas on what to centor, they could always tum to tht F'ederal Trade Commisaion for no- tion1 orrnew fields to conquer. • Agnew Heckling-Staged or for Real? LOS ANGELES !UPI) -Vioe Presi- dent Soiro ~·· -s«:rellry today deni«f chall<S from t1!t McGoftnl camp thll lleplbllc:ms ddiborai.ly -an lndtleot In whldl .._ .... bttlilod. 11lo charges ....,. madt w-.y in OUctgo by Frank Ma 11 ll ie • j cs , ~'• political director, IOUowin& a speoch hy Agnew in San Diego. ''Tbe becklen are properly JCUlfy with toog hair just the length the Nixon poblidsts Ulinlt identifies a hiWie and they shake lhe-ir flSts for the cameras riiht oo cue," Mankiewicz said. "But when Mr. Agnew went into bis Wholesale Prices Take 0.2% Drop WASHINGTON (AP) -Wholesale prices of a broad range oC industrial raw materials, food , and manufactured goods declined an average of two-tenths of one pereent last month, the fint drop in 13 mooths, the governmerit sald today. The wholesale price report, the last before Tuesday's presidential election., said farm products declined 2.4 percent, largest drop since an ~decline in Seplember 1971. Industrial raw materials decreased an average of ooe-le.llth of ,one perc.ent Md prices of finished consumer goods ready for retail sale declined five-tenths of ooe percent, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics reported. ON A SEASON AU. Y adj•.LJ_ basis, the bureau said, over..all who~ )rices rose ooe-tenlh of one percent, amallest inerease on that bmis in eight months. The dediM in farm products on a reason.al basis' was 1.5 percent and the ~l decline in finished consumer goods was figured at two-tenths of one paooi!. 1'te over-all actual decline brought the wll>lesale price lnder down to 1.20.0 of its • base ol 100. This meant il cost wholesalers on lhe average $120 last month for every SlOO worth of goods five years ago. The report said the index was 4.9 per· cent above a year earlier. THE DECLINE, the report said, was largely due to a slow-down in the rise of wholesale food prices that peaked in Ju- ly. ln the pBSt three months pMces or farm products, processed foods and animal feed! slowed to an annual rate of 9.8 percent compared with 13.1 percent q>ei ~ ~~tbs. '!bl~ .-.J ~ over-all me ol 4.9 pen:lsii' In whole;ale prjces ill the past yeor compared,!llth a},2 perCent annual nte In tho ~ljt~ before President Nixln first ~ •,'wage-price freeze and then followed it wt.th less stringent eoooomtc controls. Trilhe,t"mool~ s1J16!·the beginl1ing or lbe presidential controls, the bureau said. wholesale prices have risen at an annual rate of 4 percent. Hemophiliac Bo)' To Receive Help HARRISBURG, Pa. <UP!) -Gov. MiJ&on J. Shapp personally has in· &el"Nlltd to make certain a 12-year~ld hemoplllllac boy would contlntt0 to get hls treatment without his family having to go on welfare. Ftancls MArshall and bis wife, Bonnie, exhausted all private donations for the ooe:tly medJc1ne for their son and were lold by state officlal1 Ulty would have to go on welfare to get the needed help. ''l want to auure you of two things," Shapp told the suburban Camp Rill housewUe, by telephone Wednesday. "Ftrs:t, we11 flnd JOme way jn order to get the necessary funds. And second, we will find a way without the necessity of going on welfare." . q &'T1lllod ,., clillur'li.,. flit -,._ dm~ ,... put Gii ,.... - 8Tlll -11111 ...... ,.... true colon, Ute ... ..., ,.... ll*illlil -. did to Ute -In G<nnaoJ," Apw/ ydlM II flit dmioaolnlon. "SConlllloaper mmlalily 1'111 WI Ii> llllo COlld17 jUll • bdln, ...... will ha~• !roe ..,...,.. In thla .......,._ u )'OU tbfnlt • llDall -"' ldooloclcaf '*>alko II pi,, to aep me !rem rmilhlnc thla ._:1i, you're <f'/%1." The Nam, Apw fold I h e -"lhougll t bey were equally lnlalllble, JUll ll\t you do." * * * * * * Campaigners Press On President Going. on TV; McGovern Makes Vow • UPIT.._... C'mere, Wascal Wabbit !loo, a dog owned by Henry Gentry ol Kem County, was delermined to catch th.is rabbit he was chasing when he got stuck. Firemen cut the bewildered Boo loose and in inset he is oomforled by .Mrs. Gentry. Resident,s of 2 Cities ROMULUS, Mich. IAPI -Hundreds ol families in Romulus and nearby Taylor were evacuated from an il'!a sur- rounding a propane gas storage field following a series or li!xplosions which rocked the two Detroit suburbs. It took two hours before firemen could · Deffiocrats lo vote not only fo r President Nixon but also for Rep. John G. Schmitz of Tustin. the American Party presiden- tial candidate. Connally, head of the Democrats for Nixon organization, said on the NBC-TV "-Wins.nm WASHINGTON -Pftsidml fflllOll will go Oil -televtSion loolgbl for what aides described as a di,.,ll!doo of his •'"'-"lorlhe ftlture-.t-thlnlation;"' including Ille Vietnam situation. It will be NixOo•s first ll9e of politically purchased t.eJe.visioo time for a live cam- paign s_,i, Ibis year. Pre.u Secmary Rooald L. Ziegler said the _., will be shown at 7:311 p.m. in au time ...... Increasingly coo6dmt of a larwfdidt victory over DemocraUc chal~er George s. McGovern nm ru.lay, Nix- on ~ lhe lo= of bis per- campaigning in an effort to spread his coattails for Republican candidates for the Senale. THE PREmlENT scbeWled airport rallies in six states: Friday and Saturday. Four of the lllates -()fuborna, Rhode fslJnd, North Carolina 11111 New Me11oo -,.... selected '-'""' lheJ are holding closely conteoted -....,.. Ju . w!lich • pr<9idenllal visit miglJt help tip the acale for lhe Republlcan eondidal<. Earlier in die year, Naoo's polillc:al strategists bad said Ille President WGUld seloct the states for penooal cam- paigning on the basis of lhelr Importance in the presidential contest without regard to the impact on local races. MEANWlllLE, M<GOVERN today said Na:on's farm policies have forced a million people to J!ave rural America and be reaffirmed a Jr01llise to fazm<n to raise their iocome if be is elected. In a poid radio address n!<Onled for broadcut today, the De m o c rat i c presideolial nominee said Iba!, u lftSi" dent, be would use ~ aUlborilJ lo raise fana price ouppcrl to IO ·percent of parily, wbichl is • lormula used by the govtrmnellt to determine the lheoM!cal fair return on beak: farm products. Herbert Stein, cbaimuin of the President's Council or E co n o m i c Advisers, once said that 90 percent parity would mean a food price increase to con- sumers or 10 percent. One of McGovern's adyisors, Gordon Wiel, today conceded that raising farm pi'ice supports would have an impact oo food prices but said McGovern bas conducted ~ study on control Wednesday night following lhe Jl'j_~ --~~~dJ_~11der Dead, 56 bring a serits or fires In the field under--* ) more tban ·100 Mploslons b!"tbe'!!I0!'31!' ._ .... , '""""'-""'-'....,,--_ -·--·-- area, which separates the two towns. PARKERSBURG, W. Va. {AP) _ One injury was reported. Today Show that George s . McGovern 's Bandleader Johnny Long, 56, whose proposals "turn them off," referring to recording of "Shanty Town" sold over Democrats be said would refuse to vote four million copies, died Wednesday. His for the Democratic nominee. band had just finww.d an engagement in Memphis, Tenn. e A<"tivlsts En Roule bow much they would go up. 'Ille candidate, · still tlllghUy boom: despite a half-day mt m W~y. also promlstd tanners to reduoe prop- erty t a x e s, -.and. support an "en· forceahle" '20,000 limil oo farm subsidy paymenb, and step up lhlpmeota ol surplus food to hungry people abroad. Hamlets Around Saigon Geared Of Infiltrators SAIGON (UPI) -Govemment troops repor1ed clearing all bamlets around Saigon ol Oxnmmiist infiltrators today, bu\ the Salgm mmnumd said the North VM'tnamese 1auncbed their la r g es t numb!f al altacb tllrougboul Ille .,...,. try In mor. lban lbree years. Mllituy "°"""" sald the area deared jndnded all al tbe m Corpe, wblcli is made up ol Ille II provinces surrounding Saip, ranging from 311 miles 90Ulh to 100 miles northeast of the capitaL THE srEPUP in mililary activity reflected efforts by government soldien and the Nof1h Vietnamese lo take and bold as much land aM as many people as po&ibJe before any cease-fire j s declared. The Cmunuolsts aimed ""' "' their atlacb against civiMm, reporta said. A Saigon command spbkesman rePorted JC"Comm1mist attacks in the 2t boun ending •• 6 a.m. today. South Viet· namese military spok"""en said .Ille figure WU Ille hlgllest liDce Ang: 2, 1989, when 2ZS North Vietnamese attacb were reconled qalost SGUth v;.m.._ and U.S. bases. SPOKESMEN SAID the current fighting was mosUy minor and the m.. tensity of combat was much lower than during at least six previous O:ammnrrtst; offensives and the CUrTent North Viet- namese drive that began March 30. Saigon command spokesmen said Sooth Vietnamese soldiers today drove eom. munlst troops from four hamlets in the ~pital's military region -the Ja..t of 21 the North Vietnamese had infilb:ated over the past month. H~avy fighting erupted again in CaJD. bodta today and officials iQ. the Laotian capital of Vientiane said authorities have ordered a rurfew on the royal capital of Luan1 Prabang because Comnumisl troops have infiltrated to witbid four miles ol the city's airfield. e Ru•• Set Off Blust UPPSALA. Sweden (AP) -Tbe UppsaJa Seismology Institute registered a very strong Soviet nuclear test today equal in strength to the American teat blast in the Aleutian Islands a ye.ar ago, Prof. Marcus Baath ol the institute reported. Baath said the explosion occutTed In the Siberian lest area at Semipalatinsk and had a strength of about five megatons and a Richter magnitude of 7.1. COPENHAGEN (APl Fi 'e American peace' activists arrived from New York today and transferred to another Plane for Bangkok, en route to Hanoi. · The group was headed by Tom 'Hayden of the lndo China Peace Campaign. Two other! are going via Moscow. Hayden said It is his understanding that the North Vietnamese invited them lo establish "undistorted communications with the U. $.people" in order to give the American people a clear explanation of Hanoi's position and views. Poet Ezra Pound Dead, 87; Backed Mussolini in War e S<"hmll: \/otes Seen WASHINGTON (UPI) -John B. Con- rmlly said today "the radica1ism of McGovern" would csuse ma n y VENICE (AP) -Poet Ezra Pound one of ihe most influential and con: troversia! literary figures of the 20th cen- tury, died Wednesday night in a Venice hoopitaJ. He bad DWVd his 17th bfrlll. day Monday • Snow Ill Rockies, Plains Speculation that they were going to help in ~ release or u. s. prisoner'! or war was 1"a comple.te misun- derstanding," he said. Poond entered a boepilal Tuesday night with .. intestlual ailment. -laid he died after a grave cardloclttula!Ory collapse, a heart failure. ' Autumn Srorm M-oves lnro Mississippi Vdlley Area I ....... &~·~""°"" f':m'"°""" ... ,~ Plrtl "'fll . . •:* -,,,... s.• "!"! low •• ,., ., 1J:tl •,m. O.t ::::: =·· ~;: :::: :: '"" ..... •. .. ..... .... 4:1t P.fl'I.. e Stud-ts in Contr•I NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Studeo!I still were in controJ of the-admtnfstratJon building on !he campus of predom\natiUy black Southern University of N e w Orle1ru1 following Wednesday's peaei!ful takeover. No deci.sloo had been made on whether to rerDOYe the ltudeob ln>m the campa, which bu be<n closed for classes mt!ll Monday , a Southern spokesman said. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtltftfy Of UW. Dally Piiot ··-........., ... rlleYI " ,.. • ,... "'""' Jl"l!ll: ~r rw Si» O.""-ul Miii .,.... °'" •Ill .. ......,.,.. ...... ,..., .. -lek9il ... ,,. O.tn. .. lr.lnlt'f' .... .....,, " ,... ............ I"N" """ "' , ........ iww, • ., • -•""" ......,.,, et11 ..... (W'J "'" .. .,.., • ""'· C..111 -.... ..... • .... - Tcliilpflioln 'Msl Or•• CWlt'f ""'" ... .. .. ...... IHr'ffl ... t H~ .... ""' ... ,.,.... . ................. , .. t.l'IC.........._~~ ""'Mlt Qipk1N119. C.. ....... ~ L.tfW*, UfWle MIMI ......... M-. lltlMt Jill •·m. '"' I :• jl.1'1. '------------.-J ' 'I • The.funeral will be beld Friday •• lhe church of San Glortlo Mqgiore °" San Gio<llo Wand In the Venice Lq°"'" Hla body will then be lal:eo by ,-1a to the Island cemetery ol San Michele. AJ author of "Hugh So I w y n Mauberley'' the "Pisan Olatolf/' u editor ot T.S. Eliot'• ••wuae !Aad• w mentor of .,..,y wrlln before ond after World Wor I, ""'"1d dJaopd lhe c:ouno of poelry and the lllerary ""' of the Englil1I '-· Bui lib ......-In hlJ natl•e America was clouded by l>r<Nldcub during World War D for MUllOIW'I fuebtl thal got him 111 ln- dlctmenl for trealOO 11111 11 ,..... Ju a menlOI boopllal In W~ D.C. On 1111 return to ltalJ to 1111. he told .. _,, "I donl l:mw whether It would be -•ble lo u... In America outdde 1 m"""'-," , --............... lo~ ol Quobr -. .... ·~....., .~ <111'. kl.J In 'u:".::·.:-....., ~ '• .IJlemr nillef, lllil -·-out DI. eollefe lie WU -M ... -II lf-a.a.""' 1'*'1·... ... , .. aad10ot1•.-• lie Jell Jn ......., fer ~ bl IQ •-·tbo-.-c1a....,cla- perlmontal PDdl! --... '"ll'DI""'" or .. .,..~ I Poaotl tnvtifd to -· Spobl and IIaly, tl'anllallnc tllt ...,... of the .,,.;.... I LITIRAlY QBIL l l'Mth:•""""" ) 0 r g d v ' n11qanlt11 Ott.- • Police Hold Four Angels m/Deaths . UKIAH (AP) -Four Hell's Angels have been taken into custody and authorities say more arrests are possible in connection with ..the discovery of three bodies on a remote ranch rumored to 'be a burial ground for the motorcycle gang. THOSE ARRESTED Wednesday were identified as William Mark "Zorro" Mitten, 32, Alameda ; Edward Junior caner._~_Rlchmond: (:bester_ M. "Festus" Green,, 29, Ric~ roond; and William Jolin Moran, ~. Richmond. C.ntra Colla County of• llcials aald the lour were beh1f held In thal San Fm> ciscO Bay area cOuntY ror ln- vesllgation o! o>llllkr. .,We' }Jave good cause to beUveJbe lRISpeCts Jn the C.n- tr4 Costa jail ""' linked with the "Mendocino Investigation and there Is good cause to believe the crimes occumd Jn ~ · Colla C,unly," said C.ntra Costa ll!$t. Atty. William A. O'Malley. "More arrests ar~ble." 'MEAMnm.E, Geq rge Wethern, 33, and bis wife Helen, 29, owners of the 153- -acre ranch where the bodies of Brown Beret two men and a woman were unearthed from old well boles, rejected on Wednesday an of- Mililallls fer of immunity from further prosecution il they would pro- vide iDformation concerning Dis~anding =~Angels ac11v111e. 1n the -_ _ _'..'.Il_WJlSll't broad enough - LOS ANGELES (AP) -The they didn't offer -wh8t we feel Brown Berets, a miUtant Mex-was sufficient," said public ican.American organization, is defender Joseph Allen of the disbanding to avoid t1ctional offer ~r Mendocino County, . author1t1es. violence, says a founder of the Wethern burl 2 6 o _ national organization which pounder ~itb8 a hea~ 6eard was formed five year.i ago in and bis-wife -both fonner • 6 Stations T ;':"""'::::::'·:~:"":::::m:M:•:2:·:1:9:72::::=:;--:::::;-~D~~=LLY~P~lL=DLT_.5L lllGf"~:::~~~~;;i;;:;:::;;Z:;::::--~~;:;;:::::::iiil TV Stan CALIFOllflA ' Offer Time • Against 20 By Tile AIM<laled Pren At least sll California television (rations have of~ fered free advertising time to the sponson of Prop. ZO -the Coastline Initiative -to counter a reported $500,000 media campaign by opponents ~vangelist Tells Vote SAN DIEGO (AP I - Evangelist BUly Graham says he has voted by absentee ballot for his longtime frlerxl , President Nixon. In a copyright story in Thursday's San D i e g o Union, Graham told an in- terviewer Nixon "Is a man of high moral prin- :iples and integrity ... a :nan with a deep religious :ommitment." R of the measure, a spokesman eagan Asks 1or the Ca!Uornia c.as1a1 '---------' Alliance has announced. For Network IN ADD1'f10N, the Angry Teen spokesman said Wednesday. Voting Ban a1 i""'t iour otbOr nations Kills Man have agreed to stop rblming Extortion Plot Told LOS ANGELES (UP!i-De- tails of an alleged $250,000 ex- tortion plot against Johnny Carson -including a dummy hand gemade delivered to his home -were revealed Wed- nesday at the fom\al indict· ment proceedings against the accused eztortionist. Richard Dziabacinski , 26, of Germany, was indicted on charges of extortion, writing a threatening letter for the purpose or obtaining money and passe.ssion of a sawed-Off rlfte. WASHINGTON (AP) -The advertlaements which suggest W1'th GJa;o.s F e de r a 1 Communications that Prop. 20 would apply ' to · 0 DZIABACINSKI, identified Commisskln says It may com-the Sacramento and San JCM1:-• as an unemployed writer who K/;;w;;;&t;~'t.; •. ,.~. " ........ -.. ... · .-4>.,. ment tqday on a proposal by quin River Della. That claiin 'COMPl'ON (AP) -Four had been living in North PICK OF THE SEASON California ·Gov. Ron a Id was put to rest earlier this youths, ordered ·out of a bar Hollywood, was arrested Oct. Reagan th a' radio and 'week in a formal opinion becaiase they were under age, 13 in a parking lot, where he She'll adore you for it. Diamond duster television networks refrain handed down by Al!y. r~-. 11 edl rings in 18 karat yellow gold. Top, $2.250. f akin "'"ii'' kicked out the tavern's plate a eg y was trying to rom m g national predlc-Evelle J. Younger who said • Bottom. $1460. tions in Tuesday's election un-Prop. 20 would apply only to glass window. Then one of recover $250,000 left there bv til after polls In the West are actual coastal areas. them burled a jagged piece of Carson, the star of television'~ Do Something BeauUful •• ~ ·closed. -.._ reported eflorts• of glass at the bartender, spear-·"Tonight" show. .lllC: a...,. Acc-K lllvlfM -Anltf'IUll a11,...., Reagan said in a letter to televisiqn stations to cooperate ing -him in the chest and kill-According to t e s t i m o n y •NU.~n1 _. ......,. a.,.., .... FCC Chairman Dean Burch with the initiative sponsors ing him instantly, police say. before the grand jury, the af. SL.t\. VJ......-.:r 'S and officiaIJ of four networks came only the day after it was Au th.or i ties said two fair began Oct. 8 when an .._,.._ Wednesday that ma kl n g reported that the alliance bad juveniles were arrested a ' Jewelers Since 1917 predictionswbilepollsarestill. filed a forma1 complaint with short time after the incident unsigned, typed note .was left 18 FASHION ISLAND open "undoubtedly tends , the Federal Communications Wednesday night and booked on the front porch of Carson's NEWPORT BEACH _ 644-1380 where polls have not yet clos-Commission against three San for investigation of rpurder. home in Bel-Air, along with.a Open Mon. •nd Fri. 10 •.m. to 9:30 p.m. ed, to influence many potential Francisco Bay Area television Two othe,£ teenagers were still dwnmy band grenade and a w1111 ioc.11on1 01; Torr•n«. Cf•1'91· u CMTrtot u Hw .. . I . 'I ( ) Hell's Angels -were arrested on 'charges of possession and sale of drugs Monday when deputies went to their ranch to dig, reportedly on ·a tip. Wethern additionally was charged with possessing stolen property. Bail has been set at 1100,000 each. voters ln their decision t.o vtte stations. ~ being sought. pair of binoculars. A•IO: s.n o• .no u1 "'•'· • or not-to vote, much like the1--="----------=::o.=~::__ _____ --".::::.::.::::::'.'.'.'.:::__ ___ ~:::;========='====~======,,J ' weather." BRIEFS East Los Angeles. David Sanchez, 24, told newsmen Wednesday that a "dangeroUs situation" e~sted, . but would not elaborale, saying only that other groups · bad been seeking to use the ·Berets "as a vehicle for their own purposes." e Conflict? FAIRFIELD (APl-A pros· ecution witness has given conflicting testimony about when he saw Juan Corona drive away with one or Z5 itinerant fann workers he is charged with slaying in 1971. ' In Solano County Superior Court, labor contractor foreman Byron S h a n n o n testified Wednesday that he ALLEN SAID authorities particularly want lnfonnation from the Wethems on Hells' Angels leader Sonny Barger, 34, and others who currently are on trlaJ with Barger in Oakland on charges of killing a suspected narcotics dealer last May. Six witnesses are said to be missing in the 'trial. But Oregon Gov. To m McCall said be didn't think the preQictions would influence the turnout in rus'State. Oreg~ nians, . he said, ' ' are sophisticated enough that they will not be waylaid by elec- tronic wizardry or a com- pulsion of the networks to be the first to be right. .. Reagan asked Burch and the FCC'to "use your good offices to get representatives of an segments of the broadcast in- dustry together to work out the mode of operation" so the predictions are oot broadcast until after polls are closed Naval Center's Women Cite 'Discrimination' saw Corona drive away from ... Marysvllle's , ~kid ~w May 3 SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Ten transfers and were threatened or~ 4, 1970 with Jolm Henry k> · ha and harassed when they pro- Jackson:· ,~11nb11 · i:r.-0.~. emp yes ve 8~~ tested,. encountering "personal Tuesday \ Sna.100n •had cuSed the Naval Undersea insults and In some iqstances testified that it was May 3 or Center of sex discrimination in obsci!ne names." 4, 1971 -one year later -job opportunities and pro-"Our management continues that be had seen Corona drive motions, and say supervisors to be oblivious t.o all of the off with Jackson. have harassed and insulted directives and notices pro- • Bridge Probe them repealedly when they mating equal opportunily and tried to complain. alfinnative a c t I o n for LOS ANGELES (AP). The women said Wednesday women;• the women said. Despite the company being in-they have filed a grievance'---"----~---- TAXES FOR volved in past structural against the center. A H. NMcal M . failures, St.ate Division of spokesman said the center will Highways officials say the hold an investigation. safety record vf P 0 I i c h In a letter to the chief of Benedict Construction Co. was naval operations, Adm. f!,lmo .not a factOr in 'a contract for Zumwalt, Sen.· -Alan Criifs\Un' bridges on the Foothill (D-Calif.), and three con- Freeway· gressmen, the women said Part of one of .the bridges equal employment opporlunity collapsed Oct. 17, killing_ six counselors at the center "have workmen. The A s s e m b I Y no authority and very little select C om mi t t e e on cooiteration from t h e i r Industrial Safety opened a supervisors." two-day probe into the bridge They said they w e re failure Wednesday. prevented from g e t t i n g • FALL SHOPPER SPECIALS <. illtA-1'-f'-. HARDWARE STl>f'ES YOUR LOCAL HAlDWAU WITH NATIONAL CHAIN IUYINli PO- We've All Kinds of Lights-Just laoll! • Coel WMte Plw11c..r Le.p, .. 0 w•tt. F4oct, ••, •• , •• ., , 1.Jt Sett WMte UfW ..... 60, 75 or 100 w•tta •••..•..•••• lie-. Oft4Mr Pfeedgpt. lliiO w•tt1, cl1.r l•mp. 150 PAR /Fl •••• J.41 AVERY.. 3.95 :%" LABEL MAKER E"'bet,•1 ti•nt J1t .. rt o" •-'f·1ti c• l•b.lt to 41Cet"•f• CAST IRON Fil! lilATIS """" 15.98 FAN.fORCEO HEATII 16J I ITU rHIOtlt lw•t•r wltll 11rtM1tlc .... ,.o•t•t, 11fety ff~ twltcli. 16IO\¥'. JOH26 • ., ' . . . . ·-. .. . . . - The strenqth of two stee1 '!'fie · nifor1' of molded full: The stopplnq power of• biq roofs, not just one. loam bucket seats. !Cl·inch front disc brakes. The economy of an air IUter that lasta up to 50,000 miles. The quiet of a built-In power The bandliDQ cl a superb little YentUation system. road car. E; 1 . JUST BECAUSE ITS DE'ITER DOESN'T MEAN ITS MORI laloctaY91Q"*'b_,ot~••,._.d!lfiit ......... --.. .... . ' .. . ,-,, '" 1fM f • .. ,laSS . '..Updoe'' tt ................. JI at t ...... 0 5 I .....,OSollll&OtddOOIZa-12, • ' ., • • • " ' . . • I' • / • 8 DAD,Y 1PILGT EDITORIAL PAJ;E / ·summary of · All Ballpt P Fopositions Proposltlon 9 ·-Repeated defeat of ,niljorlty ~ Preposition 11 -This ao-<alled anli-pont0gnpby . °'"" tlw Jll!i( siJ: W'eeks, lbe DA!l.Y PILOT bas Pre.JeDted tti considered views on the propositions on next Tuesday's statewide ballot In a series of editorials. The following summarizes -more briefly than we might wish--this-newspaper's recommendations on each of the 22 measures: . Propot.ition 1 -Cort\munity College Construction. This is a ('ell bargain for Orange Coast voters, assur· lng our community colleges of room to educate our young peoplt in the yem just ahead with the state providing $2 for each St o! local funds. Vote YES. Proposltion 2 -At a cost of about 50 cents a year for each Californian, this measure would provide bonds for expansion of health scienre facilities in ~e state's medical schools, including UC Irvine. Doctors are in short supply, and the shortage is worsening. Vote YES. Proposition 3 -Authorizes issuance of $200 mil - lion in revenue bonds to help companies meet new anti· pollution standards. No cost ID \llpayers. Vote· YES. Proposition 4 -Two-y'hr legislative sessions this calls for would compound woblem"Of failure to act unUl deadline. Vote NO. Proposition S -Gives local school boards more flexibility, counteracting too many state mandates. Vote YES. , ~ Proposition 6 -.. Brings state law up to date v:ith federal treatment of naturalized citizens. Vote YES. Proposition 7 -Updates state constitution on voter eligibility and various amendments already approved by v.oters. Vote YES. by anti-all bond issue minorlt!~ bas meant requlrillg measure would ~nd freedom , not obscenity, which ls many children ID attend S<hool m old, unule buildings. , best handled through education. Would alloW' vigilante-This would reduce voting requlre~nt lD nu1or1ty. only . in meeting earthquake bulldlng standards. Vote YES. type raldillg aquads lD censor and seize anything fitting Proposition 1 O -No significant tax loss while bene- fiting blind votera.ns. Voto YES. ' ,J' Proposition 11 -Unnecessary measure already covered by laws and court decisions on right of privacy. Vote NO. . Proposition 12 -Same as No. 10, hut for disabled veterans, service related injuries. Vote YES. Propolition 13 -Minor modifications in Work· men's Compensation law with cul in costs to state. Vote YES. Propositior.i 14 -Promising to cut everyone's taxes. the Watson Amen<!!l>ent would, In fact, raise them for almost everyone. Major industries wou,ld be major bene- ficiaries. Income taxes could go up 60 percent, along with boosts in all other taxes to avoid fiscal chaos this measure would create. V4'le NO. Propositions 15 and 16 -Would remove control from elected officials of salaries of state employes and highway patrolmen which make up more than twcrthirds of the IDtal state budget. Vole NO. Proposition 17 -This would return the death pen· alty ID the status it occupied before it was ruled out by the stale Supreme Court last February. Penalty should be limited ID willful murders of law oflleers, judges and political oUicebolders. These are double crimes - against victims and entire citizenry. Vote YES. ' their own definition of "morally ob jecUonable." Clearly unconstituUonal. Vote NO. . P...,...it1 .... 19 -The marijuana initiative .rlgblly condemn• tao-<evere penal~ for p0ssi<aion .ah.d use, which the Leglslature and Co~ should correct. But legalizing lhi.. kind o! drug US& would be a mistake. Vote NO: '"'f'!'oltlon 20 -The coasW initiaUve Is ari un- wise, urui~. cosUy and baieaucracy--pt.flied ap- proach ID acb,\eYlng a balan~ use of the ooaSial area. It discrlnilnates against residenl!J of the coastal area b,l'. imposing a special.purpose, non-e:lectivet n<;>i>responsive layer-of regional government with power ID velD d~ sions of their duly-elected city and county governments. Issue too complex for emotional determination at polls; a problem for le~islative expertise. Vote NO. Proposition 21 -Would tie bands of local school boards and J"'rpeluate dual public school system which, because of its mequities, was ruled unconstitUtional by both U.S. and state Supreme Courts. Vote NO. Propooltlon 22 -This Agricultural Labor Rela- tions Acl is needed to protect growers, workers and con- S\lIIlers. But this approach is serioUBly flawed in the! It denies a voice of any kind in union choice or contract terms to more than 80 percent of men and women who work on farms -the seasonal and migratory workers. Because of this, vote NO. ' High Resolve at 'l'op Prevailed Nixon: A Tale of Two A ~Larger Class Of Crime Victims War's Constructive Result \VASHINGTON -The war in Asia is being ended for all practical purposes. Jt ~·as the right war ending at the right time. The long struggle established the principle of an open and diverse world in a vast and rich area of the globe. The· result could have been and prot>- ably v.·ould have been othenvise if those who had lost heart ;and will had pre- vailed. They would have long since had. tu the t:nited States Ii=". give up and go home. renounce any vital \interest in Asii· Qr!tl let it fall entirely within a hostile sphere .... ·here Amer- ica or ziny ..other free nation could 1read only by sufferance. LET TifE COMMUNlSTS have it, said Senator Fulbright. "Stop the war!" cried the McC<trthys and McGovems, and the Jong·haired and ba re-footed as they plunged the nation into the bitter division !hey pretended to depkJre. "Beware!" growled i\foscow and Peking. HDesist ! " demanded the Swedes and the French. '"Give up," chanted the professors. "For shame!" clamored the editoriallsts. II was a hard time, but by bigb resolve al the top in the American government those conditions were finally created to which South Vietnam can survive aa a nation and all lhe unattached and free nations of Asia can savor their in- (rucHARD. WILSO~ dE!pendcnce with greater confidence that it will continue. 1111S IS A constructive result of histonet!I Importance, and not the ragged end' of a de!pised war which those who 'lfanted it stopped al any cost would have inflicted on this country and upon 17 million people in Asia with a duly elected leadership who wished to be independent or outside Communist domination. America would have lived with the other way in bitterness and recrimina- tion, unsure. still divided. falsely peni· tent. discredited as a world power. Why would Moscow or Peking need to be re· spect!ul of such a disorganized. weak willed competitor? THE BOLD MOVES o! the last year w1tieh were reviled as monstrous mistakes have been proved more right than W'l'Or'lg. 'l1le Invasion of Cambodia, the attackl on the Laotian trails, the heavy bombiag and harbor closings were all deoouoced ai: the stubborn delusions of tvil men whr> were trying to prolong the war rather ~ bring it to a con. structlYe end. But who can now deny that these bold moves helped to create the condllions for the constructive end of the war? 1be outstanding fact is that South Vief· nam is being guaranteed its chance to survive in independence. There will be delays and UDCi!rtainties, charges and eountercharges, but in the end the Thieu gi>vemment and whoever follows him will certainly grasp Utis opportunity and try to improve upon it. AND IN mE Firi'uM: il may be said that the free nations of Asia survived ooly because of the selfless sacrifi.ce Qf an America which claimed no advantage for itself, no territory, nothing but the right of nations to be lndepeOOent. Is this despicable~ Or is it not the expression of ttle highest Ideals of the American tradi- tion? The notion that this Wac could have been ended four years ago tDJder these conditions is so patently absurd as to deserve no serious attention. South Viet· nam could not have survived under the only conditions Hanoi would accept until its new proposal of Oct. 8. Until then peace could have come only with sur- render, and now peace is coming without SUl'ttJl<kr. NOR IS 111ERE SENSE in the argu· ment that the war opposition brought the war to an eod. It may hav~ prolonged it by feeding Hanoi's convictioo that America's will would collapse. But a government in Washington resisted that collapse and because it did, the terrible travail of eight years has not been suf· fered for nothing. Ah--M'odern Rapid Transit! \\1 ASHJNGTON -Oh, how the giant strides forward of this m o d e r n teclmological age will affect the live of 08 all! Tlike rapid transil For years. Washingtonians and San Franciscans. to citt. two examples, l\aven"t been able I() teU their rapid tran- sit systems from -. hole in the ground But now "·e are on 1he verge or Sf!'l'1ng lbe da y ...,.h'-'n lbest swift. s1lenL sumptuous. stream- lined e.1rs \I.ill \!o"hisk. the happy comm1111•r vast distances from his ofrice to his home in a t"'inlding. V.'e may even see that da_v in ror ov.TI lifetimd Think ol lhc elfttt lhl1 miracle will have on any 1ypical suburball coup le. Like. say, Wllbur and Felicia Wasp. FOR II l'E.ARS, Mr. Wasp has wearily 'lrit lbc office at 5:30 p.m .. trudged to ow .. Allila the Hun Garage, balled out his bat· tcred c•r. fought bla way lnto the traff~ jam on The t.tillard FLllmore Ex· Pf'IR'aY and -oil« II mltwlft ol horn-blowing. Ong.,..tapplojr, bnkHlam- ming, nerv~jangling Wheel wttllUDg - otlANOI CO.UT DAILY PILOT KOOt"rt N. Wctd, .PvbU1Mr Thomas K•<trll. Edll« A!b<rl W. Bolu ;;ditorial Pogr EdHor ( ART HOPPE ) arrived home at 7:02 p.m. Every evening, he would grunt at Felicia; snarl at his son, Irwin, collapse In his chair with his paper, down three mar;tiniJ. gobble his dinner moodily, turn on the television set and fall unconscious - a human wreck. At JO p.m. Felicia, as ,tuckered as he rrom a long day of cooking. scrubbing. chauffeurtna: and telephoning, would throw a bucket oC water on him and they would stagger uP to bed -pitiful victim! or an outmoded technology. BUT NOW 111~ MIRACLE of modern rapid transU ! 'Jbett:'s Mr. Wup, bursting In lht door at 1:07 p.m. He's rested and refreshed from bis swift. silent, sumptuous ride home. Ria paper's read and he's slept an hour longer that morning. 'Hi, tbere, you beautiful doll!" he cries, sweeptng FeUcia l.nto hbrarms and lryin« to plant a lingering klas on her Ups. ''Mmmmmmm.'' But •he pushes him away. tidying her hair. "Not in front of Irwin," &be aays. "Besides. I haven't had Ume to make my!clf pretty. what with nahlng to get dinner ready an hour earlier. And IC was an hour later before I got the breaklast dishes done and ... " "Irwin !'' says Mr. Wasp, Kr1bblng bill IUl'priaed IOI\ 'a hind. "I'm afraid I ltavon't hod much Ume lo !"I a good dod to )'Oil. But now let't -a i.., talk • Quotes James Y. Grealish, Daly City -"It misht be ,..II for J . Wiiiiam f'ulbrlghl to remember that he. If roerely chairman or tlte.Sonate Foreign 'Relllllon1 CoJ11mlt1<e, no! THE oommlttet." . . Btt.M 8e1;erty, Novato, UC 1h .. etl - "The 111& Is a symbol ot our tOUntry and actually ...,..Milla It. Nol 1aluthut tbe flag would bt kind ol rtl"'lnl to havo aUeglance to our country." about your hopes, your drea~ and your philosophy of life.'' WEU.. THAT'S ALWAYS a mistake. But the Incipient fist fight ls lnt<rmtpted by the arrival of diMer -haU raw lamb stew. Felicia Is DOW in tears. "Don't worry, dear," says Mr. Wasp. trying to put his arms around her. "I'll take you out dancing! " "Dancing!" she sobs. "Rush, rush. . rush all day -I can hardly walk." And she falls asleep on the couch without doing lbe dishes. When he awakens her at 10 by gently caressing her cheek. sbe opens one baleful eye and says. "I've got a headache." "Again?" he says and goes out jogging. WEU... NAruR.ALLY, in a month Mr. Wasp sues Mrs. Wasp for divorce on the groundJ of tncompaUblllty. Joins o swing· ing Slngleo Club, msniett a bloode H years his junior and becomes a director of The Sensual Freedom Leagut-. So you can lee that a modem rapid transit system LI one of the greatest blesslngs our advanced tedtnology has ever bestowed on nwitb'ld. As Jor womankind, they oueht to blow the "dlunned thlnp up belot< It'• too lite. Dear Gloo1nv Gus Lei Ute bleeding beort dtlllOiogu. cry ol Ce4ar Olavez and bl.I unk>n supporter1 cause no shcdd.lng of tears. CallfomJa's lettuce worten, earning $5.70 to '7.41 por hour ond up to $12,000 In a good year, are ln the l!COMmlc eUte among all qrlculwral labottrs the world ovtr. • • -B.1. T, Tiii• ,........ f'lfl4ctt ,.....,... ""'-""' _.,, l9leMI ., .. ~. ltM ,,_.. • -tt OIMMf o.. o.ity Pilef. Novembers EDITORIAL RESEARCH It is Nov. 7. All the election returns are in. Richard M. Nixon speaks to the press: "I leave you gentleme n now ... but as I le&ve you I want you to know -just think bow much you're going to be missing. You won 't have Nixon 10 kick around anymore, b e c a u s e • gentlemen, this is my last press con- ference .... " ThOse bitter words were spoken a decade ago -on Nov_ 7, 1962, the day after Nixon had lost the California gubernatorial race to Democrat Edmund G. !Pat) Brown by almost 300.000 votes. fyo years earlier, John F . Kennedy bad nosed out Ni.ion for the presidency by Jess than half as many popular votes cast io all SO states. So few doubted, on that autumn morning in Los Angeles 10 years ago, tba't Richard Nixon had delivered tils political swan song. Nearly every political poll indicates that President Nixon..will be singing quite a different lune on the night of Nov. 7 1972. A land.slide appears in the of. fing. If that should be the case, the President might be tempted to tell reporters that this time they wW have Nixon lo kick around -for four more years. NIXQN'S 196%. OUTBURST. WU-UD· characteristic. As .he himself sald\.IW"h1s " book, Six Crises: "The point of greatest danger for an individual confronted with a crisis is not during the period of preparation for the battle itself, but in the period immediately after the battle is over. Then, completely exhausted and draloed emotionally, he must watch his decisions most carefully. There is an in- creased possibly of error because he may lack the ~ry cushion of emo- tiooal and mental reserve which is essefl-' lial for good judgment." When Nixon moved to New York City to join a Wall Strtet law finn in June 196.1, his retirement trom public life seemed Irrevocable. But then be began to edge back into politics. He campaigned for Barry Goldwater in 1964 and for GOP ~ional and gubernatorial can- didates in lts&; he held numerDUI" press conferences and on "business' trips abroad often commented on U.S. foreign policy. By 19118, Ni.loo was ready for a come- back, and the Republican Party again waa ready for him . Jn the primaries and then in the presidential election cam- paign, Jules Witcover has observe( Nb:· on "successfully OCCtlpied the middle ground first between ( N e I 1 o n ) Rockefeller and (Ronald ) Reagan, then between (Hubert ) llumphrey and <9e0'1e) W11tace. Nixon's perfonnanct, bY any yN'thtick, was a remarkable e:r· erdae in political strategy a n d dllClpUne.'" OOONn.ESS NEWSPAPER columns and boob have bttn wrttten In an effort 10 explain how Niion was able to transfonn the twmlllation of 1962 lnlo tht triumph of 196&. Garry Wills. a believer In "the lnevltablity of Nixon." offered th is rat.Ion.ale : "Ir our system does not cho<ile 'the belt man,' itJJ winnowing.' tend to pro. duce an 1pproprla~ ~n to lead WI, one llJDOIUlble Io merchandising !mids of tbe moment : one who, If not rt.ally wwer• Ing the rKM.-dJ of popular .cymbolbm, CID nonetheless be given the requi.slle aarb of rtlevlUK"e. He becomu our •man ol. the mom<nl' by llCCOl!lmOdotlng tbe -ment.'' Nixon may ba\'e ICflMd that bis mo- <rnent would one day 1n1ve. In SII>crt. he =•lied hovlog heard Olorlol de Gaulle, quoUna Sophocltt. say: "One must wait untlI the ~ to 111 bow splendid the d1y has been .• mion lhen •dded; "For me. lhe eveolng of 11\1 life haJ not Ytt come." " - The federal government has recently appropriated funds with which to pay the victims of crimes, and their families. for medical costs and other losses suffered at the hands of crimi.nals. This is all to tlie good. But there remains a much larger class of "victims" to whom little attention has been paid. These are the victims of societY's crime in the matter ol bail and pre-trial detention. The crime consists in treating the rich and the poor quite dif- ferently when arrested. lN P.tetSr STATES -though not all any more -the accused who have some money and property are released on bail or their o~) ~gnizance. Those who lack money or propertY '1'e sent to jail - for weeks and often mooths -before the trial comes to court. What about those who are eventually deemed innocent and acquitted? They are demoostrably the victims of society's crime of withholding due process of law from the poor. Wi:.._~t 1bem in preven· tlve detention nof-necessarily because they are more dangerQUs than the others but because they lack funds and because our non-system or criminal justice is not able to dispose of their cases fairly and swiftly. They are the ones who pay the pr~ tor ~··-slafling. u¥1''l811· cing, and politicizing of our wliOle pro- cess of jurisprudence. 111E POOR PERSON v.•ho is put in ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ pre-trial detention often loses his job and the capacity to support his family, who must then go on welfare. This not only deteriorates the whole family, but is an added cost to the government. And what of the first offender, who. when brought to trial, may be put on pro- bation? The whole point of puttirlg youngster or first offeoder on probation is to avoid the degrading and co~pti.ng effects of jail. Yet, unable to raise money bail, he is thrown in with convicted criminals for a Jong period before his trial -which cancels out the possibly rehabilita;ting effects or the probationaey Syltem.~ I! "UNNECE.\SARY jail detention, in my ()pinion," 'testified James Beooett. fonner Director of the U.S. Bureau of . PrisonS, "is a factor accounting for failure among those released on pro- bation and even among those who a.re eventually freed on l'\l1Te0t charges." What is even worse, many of those who cannot raise bail will agree to Plead "guilty" to a lesser charge simpl,v tq avoid a lengthy yre.trial detention. This makes the conv1clion record look good, · and la a convenience to eV.f!~e except the' ·'dM~IU1t -who cannot afford to languish in jail until his trial comes up. Society seems to be solicitious eboui everyone's victims except its own. Why Reds Support Nixon Calilonla Feature Sttvice One of the Ironies of the presidential election ill the tact that Richard Nixon. who gained his early fame as a vigorous foe ol communism. is getting some or his strongest. support in bis reelection drive from an ercb-Ommlunlst, THE arch- Communist: Leonid Breihnev. moves especially: The Moscow summil invitatloo despite the renewed bombing and the blockade or North Vietnamese ports; pressure on Hanoi to work for a pr~lection peace; agreement with the President to defuse the Middle East; the v.•heat and other trade agreements and the settling of Russia's W~Jd War II debt: agreement to cenewal of the St ratejJiC Arms Limitation Talks: con-- cessions to Jews in Russia at Mr. Nixon's ' urging ; and promises of friendly visits after the election. Smith sought the answer to the why of all th1s from Vice President Agnew. It was that the Soviets feel that the' Presidenfg '1!8DY moves to dimbtlsh. \\1orld tensions, especially between ouf.1 two countries, demonstrate a pragmatic leaning toward "a peaceful world that sees them playlng an active and not an The secretary general of the ruling Soviet Communist Party has made many moves this year tblt have helped make the President's foreign policy a tremen- dous succe.&! and a sure factor in the e)ectkm. This in spite of Lbe iact that, as Klog>lxtry Smith, chief European cor- respondent to the Hearst newspapers, points out, Senator McGovern has prac- tically promised to tum over Vietnam to the Communlllll, to slash our defense budget, to cut our European troop strength more than 50 percent, to curb ow-nuclear weapons system develop. ment, and to tntsl In Ute good will of Soviet rulen. alienated role." . SMITH CITES THESE Breihnev As \op echelon pr•gmatl sts • themse .... they kno• a ioocl tbilti whia they,.. II. I I By George ------.1 Deer G<orge: Whal happeotd to morels! Back In the old di,. If e guy made a pass ot a lh'l, site slapped oome -Into his -! TI\at'• tbe kind ol thing-I mb!a! 01,D TIMER Dear Old 'llmf:r 1 It '1 courqeous of )'OU to face up to )'Oltr ,pnltlem -lbc aal step Is to find pi-mal belp. Althouih. oflhand. I cao1 tltlat ol a pro- fealonal oloppor. Couldll"I""' )ult ltJ to llrult tliil folllll Cit )'Oltr own! seemed to hover, then shoot off at eoormoua: speed. I have always thought about thiJ, and I waa juat wondering -hat anybody tbe in the world ever seen anything like that? CURIOUS Dear CUrioua : Nllh .. ·.u lite' had It would have -lo all lbc papera. Dear Georac: l"m .,...rog ao lhia . .-.aI caL How can I teU ~ he dip me for my Wellectuol mind « my fllutt, Georlle. baby! C'mon! (l\n! RAllRIET Dear"-· --°""' Rln1'1: About debt ,.ara qo I happened He llkeo you lot )'Olli' •--to OOlk:o 0 ~ object lo the • ... w~ ' 111t1. n -1o be "dioJ>ed like • (S...S )'1IQr pnt1>i.n. 1o o-p. uucer_lt bid atol a domn on top -.Prel:Hnw-nw.t, tte-,...,:=W Mil -all paluthtl llllU-It ttfte< mldnl1hi.1 I t , < . . . . • Tltur~. Novtmbtr 2. 1972 Edison Ac cord Nearing BJ JOHN ZALLER °' .. D9lfr .... ..." Huntington Beach officiala are nearing an environmental Impact agreemem ths,l could pave ·the way for early ap- prove! of Southerl'I California Edison's proiJO"'CI 12511 million expansion of its Huntlngton generating station. , Previously, the city demanct· ed a "full and pomplete" en- vlrorunental impact report. with city review not expected untll April. Simpler Reports Seen submitted. "WE'VE BEEN tlterally a.s other major developer• muat uae In writing en- v Iron men t e 1 t.mpact statement.., Severns said that "a b61ic change of -philo90phy" was made. "IT IS NOT a compromise," Severns explained, "because F.dlJOn still will be required t.o make the full and complete statement. But it will be mak· ing it to an agency equipped to evaluate it properly. The general public 11 not. "What we want is a simpler deluged wilh letters from ron RCUre as many pennlts aa sultants asking to help 11! soon aa poulble," Richard!on evaluate their expe ct e · explained. ·1 rtp0rl," ~verns said . ··~\·, Lut week tbe city Planning would prol>ably hr ve to SO'""' Comml.sskln voted 5--1 to reject 12.i !I"" 1n f'nd out ll'hat !he ful Ed Ison '• preliminary en· reporl really said.·· vironmental impact statement ~v1•"ri~ s;ud that E1isor 1 ·on the grounds that it was too now may be required to d< I sbaUow to allow meanlngful thl· w,,,.k Itself. public coritm"'t. "We'll · be 1eeking 1 report At that Ume, it waa in-tha1 lleal:o w1ln 1.:u11cept.s .:t n<1 dicated that the city would polluUon in terms that pt'<lpl<' take no ectkln until a technical \viii be able to und erstand.;\ he and complete report had been aaid . \ ----______ .L..11 ********************* But officlals now are placing (stress on "a document that the public can understand and discuss meaningfully." It is believed F.dison could produce such a report by January, i£ not sooner. yet substantial slatemtnt that * is suited to our needs." * Edison officials declined im· THE GUIDELINES f 0 r mediate comment on Severns' writing environmental impact statement. reports, which would apply to "The last we heard of- all major construction in the ficlally, they wanted the full city, would require City Coun-statement,' ' said Paul cil approval before t h e y Richardson, Edison district became fUlal. manager. "We're going to ()penMon.-Tlln.gun.-4 JR.ffrL 9•.m.-6pm. "What we had been re--wait and see these new DAILY PILOT f KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE VOTE l'OI BILL GOAT questing was 90 d~ecl-that guidelines passed by the..coun-* IUEIA rAll MOCMJ.~ Bldg,. Valley~lt Unalm 'l11e voting age has again not .one .person In a million ell ·before commenting on how * NU1f11111TllK IEACH Mtn:ury Savln;I Bldg., EdilOW 11 8lldl * Ix-en lowt•red to give other11 could understand it," Said they might affect us ." * * the right to vote. GlrlJ and Tom Severns, environmental TUSTIN MarcurySivtng1BIC1g,,trvlneBM1.1tN8WPOf1Avt. bc1ys attending any achool In services coordinator. RICHARDSON A D D E D , * LA HAlkA-FUUEl!iTOI MerCCI)' Savirvs Bldg., 1111*'1ail Hwy. It Hart« * thC' Ne\1-·port -Mcsa area can "If our purpoSe in re-however, that whether city a!>" * * 'Yin a trip to Sacramento via Air Callfomla. BaJIOl& questing an enviroomental im-proval comes in January or in * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * available Jn westclltr Plaza pact report was to promote April, there wouldn 't be al---------------------1 ihopa at 17th .tr Irvine A~ public opinion on the issue, ob-direct effect on construction N } E nue. Dt'po1it one only In the viously that kind ""Of a report timetable, which calls for ear y Ver yone ballot box at Jett's Petting wouldn't help,'' be said. groundbreaking in October, Zoo. appearl?\E Oct. 31 thl"U ••IL• ,._ .... ,_ -'~So~, ~in~•~ff~o~rts~1o~c1r~a1~t~e~xa~ct!_~'97~1~. ~~>':_~~~:__!1_ __ ~J~j~s~t~e~n~S:_~t~o~L~a~n~d~e~rs~·~---".:::N::0'=··='=· ======~ ,. guidelines t.'lat Edison as well "Obviously, we'd like to A Bucket For Washington Rick Sto<k dips into barrel of molten wax being used to pour 5,000-pound can- dle at Costa Mesa's TeWinkle Park. Candle, in shape of American Flag, will be presented to White House this Christmas. Nearly 3,000 pounds have been poured into prism-shaped plywood form. ·~--------------- Coast Swimmers Dominate Medals Capture<l by Police Team The swimming events at last weekend's National 1> o I i c e Olympics in Oklahoma were dominated by the six-man California team of which four members are Orange County harbor patrolmen. 'The California swimming team finished no worse than second in every swimming event, accumulating eight gold and eight silver medals. Schupb2ch won two gold medals and a silver medal and Fergus a gold medal and'three silver. TIIE FOUR QUALIFIED for the California team by sweeping all the swimming events in the California Police Olympics held in San Diego last month. "We are all extremely proud of our harbor patrolmen especially when you realize these men voluntarUy trained for this competition on their own time and at their own ex- pense," said Ronald Caspers, chainnar. of the county Board of Supervisors. The National Police Olym- pics are held annually for law enforcement agencies aroWld the nation. THE HARBOR patrolmen, lO!n Doesburg, Pat Fergus, Tom Schupbacl: and Bob Smith, won gold medals in five of the 10 swimming events and at least a silver in 811 the others. Zonta Club 01' N~Wl"ORT NAltBOa Boutique * Sale Doesburg led all competitors with four individual gold medals, and Smith won four silver and a gold for five medals. FROM NEW TO ALMOST NIW FOR IVIRYONI * Fri. & Sat. e NoT. 3rd & 4th * 10 A.M .... 4 r.M. ~or Cltbe9 ......... 15" •Im., Newpett IMcll Marcy and Little ... M~cy Award Winning Children's Rec:ordin9 Artist Huiitington Center Mall November 4th 12 am-I pin-3 pm Som e F avorite Ma rcy Albums * LITTL E MARCY TALKS WITH THE AN IMALS * LITTLE MARCY VISITS SMOKIE THE BEAR * MARCY SINGS JESUS LOVES ME * MARCY SINGS HURSEY RHYMES * MARCY SINGS SUNOAY-SCHOO L SONGS * CHR ISTMAS IS ON IT'S WAY WITH MARCY l 'fw..~ ..... .,. ......... ) 3 Autographed Albums REGU LAR PRICE $1.91 EACH 5.00 Sat. only ALL MAICY AUUMS AYA!.UU AT In Tho MALL 27 Hunti"tlon Center HUmtntton ... ch . 193-0555 191;,o554 United's H Cleara1ice endsl>ecernber7. 2t%~48%off. Here's how you can save on triid-week round-trip airfares. and relatives you've been meaning to visit. J. Travel bet1veen no 1v and Dece ,nber 7. (Trip must be started no later than Decen1ber 7.) 2. You must leave and return on a Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursda y. (Except November 22.) 3. You must stay no less than 7 days .. And no more than 9. 4. You 1n11Jt buy your ticket at least a week in advance. How much you save depends on how far you are going. Beca use United has '~-,, ~ Atl1n11, 01. Blrmiofhtm. Ala. Cedar R1pido.. la, (1'1111111100µ, 1tnn. Oic11(1. Ill. ~mb\I .. Ohio I 11\(nln, Nrh. ~1"1111:1. Nth. ~lrmflhi,, l 'cnn. J.hl•1uktc. Wh.. Moline, Ill "'"'"'P· ,_U,-h, ~~llh ltltd. Ill. 1okdo. Obiu divided the entire country into just three zones, and your air fare depends on how far you travel. Just look below at the savings and low fares to the cities involved. Now. while it starts to sink in how little these Fall Clearance Fares really cost. think about 1hosc friends Or that week's vacation you've been promising yourself. Then call your Travel Ageat. Or United at 482-2000. And ask for our new Fall Clearance Fares. Thal way you can spend a lot Jess going. And 1 lot more there. 11 you act aow. ------- I -· • j • I II I f DAILY l'IUIT Rare Fi sh Making Comebacl{ '· SACRAMENTO (AP) -An endangtttd s p e c i e s of California fish ls on its way back after transplanting ef- forts. the State Department or Fish and Came reported. It is the u·narmor e d threespioe stiCkleback, which looks about like it sounds. The fish. two to three inches long, originally i n h a b i t e d ( ECOLOGY) several waters 1or the Los Angeles basin, bUt has largriy di.sappeared b e c a u s e of development. The agency hes collected 363 of them from the Santa Clara River and transplanted them to pools in San Felipe Creek in Ania-Borrego Desert State Park near San Diego. e OK De11led SAN FRANCISCO IAPI The Bay Area Pollution Con- trol ·District. charging that service stations contribute to air pollution. has d e n i e d permission for construction of lB gasoline stations and in- voked a moratorium on their construction in its nine-<:ounty area. The district said the stations contribute to air pollution by putting reactive hydrocarbons into the atmosphe re when gasoline i.s pumped into station st orage ta n ks an d automobiles. A smog board spokesman said, •·uruess air quality im- proves throughout the Bay Area no more stations will be built.'' The district acted under a federal regulation that became effective July I, 01\owlng local smog boards to pass judgment before any facility affecting air quality · can be built or operated. e P11111ph1g Ult SACRAMENTO iAP J -The pumping of well water for metropolitan Los Angeles is harming rural Owens Valley. Assemblyman Gene Chappie t R.COOl 1, has charged. Re said he w.ill lead a legislative and political fig to stop it. . ' Chappie told a news con- ference that the Los Angeles Department of Waler and Power has pumps wh.ich "can extract as much as 300,000 acre-feet from Owens Valley per year. causing who knows what temporary or permanent ecological damage." The LADWP bought the land in the va lley 50 years ago as a water source. he said . 1be - valley is in Inyo and Mono counties on the east side of the Sierra Nevada. e Studies Due I.OS ANGELE~ (AP) -A Superior Court jud&e h3' refused to va""'fil~'idnlng • decisions that allow f o r residential development of the coa!lal Santa Monica Moun- tains. But Judge Dav1d W . Eagleson also o r d e r e d developers to h a v e en· \'ironmental impact studies completed before they start work In the area, most of It an unincorporated region betwee.n Topanga Canyon and Ole Veo. tura County line. In his ruling , Eagleson ordered , county supervisors -and the Regional Planning Convnission to issue n o building or use pe.nnits until the Impact studies are filed. The reports are required under Callromia's 197 o Environmental Quality Act. e Plant Pla111 SAN DIEGO <AP I -The San Diego Gas & Electric Co. says It doe!n'l care whether the\Tia Juana River Baain is used for houses or ~ e state park -u long as room Is left for a nuclear power plant. "We acquired property and had plan'! well before any talk of a state park or any other polnts of dispLIU!," oompany apokesman Dennis Richter said. r- Clty Planning D I r e c t o r James Goff i11ued a prelimlnary directive recently for the coastal river basin just north of the MesJcan border . 1be plan would set aside 1.600 8Cr'd for a par,k and stop uni.a development on aoother a.-....... _____ _ _ ... ca..n ' " .... w. __ .,. __ ., .. ......... '--' ...... ' • ·- qµilted nylon robes now at great savings cardigan swe.aters with dress-up embtoidery Long or short lengths with Peter Pano; round neck col lars. All machine wash - able. Choose fr_Qp:r"pastels or flowered prints on flocked dot fabrics. 10-18. 4 e 99comp. value ~.99 robe~ 815-exc. wil. warm footed sleepers O ne-piece cotton sleepers, long sleeves. In choice of three prints. Sizes S-M-L. available. 3.99 comp. val. 4.99 fashion knit shawls All of easy-care acrylic. Machine washable. Choose from many fashion colors al a big savings. 4. 99 comp. val. 6.99 accessories 826 • panty girdle values Save now on panty girdles for that perfect in-fashion shape. White only . S-M-L-XL sizes. 2. 99 reg. 5.00 l•)und.1tio11\ 819 ' • •· . . . (·-·.,--. . ~: ~ .... smashing stormcoats Water rep e 11 en t polyes- ler/cotton'. Belted. While and colors. Sizes 8-16 29 • 99 reg. 36.00 I\ Omens' coats 828 savings on handbags Styles and co lors to match all your fashions. In black, navy, medium and dark brown. 2. 99 comp. val. 3.99 to 4.95 handba~s 827 screen print tops Pure polyester for easy-care. Colorful screen-print pant tops with long sleeves. Misse s' 32·38. 4. 99 val. 8.99 'llOr f\\VrJr 800 "' 6 • 9 9 comp. val. 8.99 loun ~evvear 815 • cardigan sweaters Orlon• acryli c flat knits. White, navy, gold , green in group, reg 4.99 size 7-14, 3.99 2.99 size 4-6x, reg. 3.99 ~iris' \ve,1r 824 . misses' bike jackets <Al l cotton jackets with the ex- pensive look of suede. In brown tone. Sizes 10-18. 7 .99 reg.12.99 ( :-i.11-. 828 SHOP .MONDAY TO FRIDAY 10:00 TO 9:30 • SUNDAYS NOON TO 5 saturday hou1110 to 6 • may co so~th coast plaza, san diego freewiy at bristol, ci>sta mesa, 546-9321 :-t·• •• ·' . ··~. . ' • All acryli·c sw~ater.; with striking em- broidered flower patterns. Available in white or black with colorful designs. Machine washable. Sizes 5-M-L. 6 • 99~omp. val. 9.99 misses' sportswear 800 save on long dresses Avril rayon cotton /·umper. Wine or brown check. A so check skirt wi th solid bodice.10-18. 10.99 reg. 13.99 miss es dresses t!:10 boys' quilt~d jacf<ets All nylon shell. Acrylic fleece lined for warmt h. In hunter green, navy, brown. Sizes 4-7 4~99 comp. Vil. 6.99 c hildren's 808 sheer panty hose Stock up now and save dollars. Nude heels. In fashion shades, . One size fits S' O" -5' 11". 49¢ comp. vii. 99' hosie ry 807 M~VCO BcJDGET STORES. -, I a a .. a 2 •, . " I Thursday, NOYtmbtr 2, 1972 DAILY PILOT , , Rec<or· Edi.ti n Ori tand ·LONDON (UPI) -Mark well the nam,. ol l\uaty Field, Roy "Dooms" Sullivan and Gn>lher GlovlUUli ·Batti>ta' Onenigo. All are maker• of hillory. ~ for that matter, are J8ck _ f:" ~omir, Walter· Cavanagh, ~-: . Bob Munden. Roy 1>eou. Jofin. ~'"":i'a~~ ·' l\'l'Megod and Judge Albett R. .• ·:. Alei:ander of Platt!Jburg, Mo. 1· :: Chances are you ~" a ~ :. Nank m all Dine -unless · :. You've spent the last hour V. browsing through the Guinness :~ ·1 · He .,can 1Bnite a . r..ie of riratO at IO . •:teet tOith flame ' : lr!Jlil Jab mouth.' '° .~ • I: Boot of Records, which h11 I! made a 27-year tradition of • chronlclJng the w o r I d ' s : 11.1perlaUves. · i TRUE TO FOR¥ the Im '; edition, published this week, : has "11 . the longests and :shor-tes1s, highests and : Jowests, slowests, fastests, ~oldest, newests and . valuablests. . Bui U also has Rusty Field, • Britain's roost t at t o o e d • woman. .; It tells how ''Dooms '' : Sullivan got his nickname as ; the only recorded survivor of ' · four lightning strikes while · working as a Virginia forest ·ranger. • Far from being merely a trivia buff's delight, Guinness also sets out the result of this • year's Munich Olympics, in wtiich all but ·nve previous sWimming world r~rds were broket. BUT THE OUT-of-the-way facts are the ones that stick. Easy to find out, for ex- ample, is that Bob Munden ii a quick~aw specialist voted "world's fastest gun" for the past 21 yean. Roy Dean, 43, scribbled through a Times of Loodon crossword puzzle in three minutes, 45 seconds flat in 1970. And forget no I Johmy -Magoo, -the one-mah band who played dnuns; ~ca and the stylophone.Wiilloiil a break for seven h~~:.22. 1971 . Judge Al · ;JOlired In 1965 at the ~ '_ '105 years, eight ~ :Diel!'. has been . none older"·~.,,-'.;'' Walter -Olvanal!h · collects credit cardt-J(f·so far, all difl..-eiit. Jack fiholomlr, world cham- pion fire.eater, em ignite a bale of str.w at ~O feet with flame from }Jis ll!OU-th. GUINNESS DOESN'T atO~ at just people._ _ •· . It records the world's • largest brass instrument, a tuba 714 feet '"1J; J>ullt for a , • world tour by. 1he I a: t e bandmaster John Philip Sousa . The world's tallest pa~oda t Shwemawdaw, Pegu, :Burma, 288 feet high. Longest loaf ot bread? A 2,6()00.slice, ~root giant baked in London in July, 1971. AND DO NOT fo·rget Brother .GiOvanni. His thing is teeth ..... he's pre!ij!rved two million of them since going to work 36 years ago as a dentist in a Rome religious order. KNOW YOUR CANDIDATE FOi DAVID TORTOISE :-'. The votlna ap hll apln been lowtttd to slve othen , the dght to vote. ~"rs boy• attmdins..All1 n "the N!'!~l>rt-M-.-con win I trio' to Slctamenlo vla Air CallfomlL Blllotl av&ll&ble In Wtttclltt P~ 1ho1» at t1tb 6 lrvltw A.,.. nue. Depollt one only ln the ballot bow: at Jett',. Pcttfn(( Zoo. appeartna Oct. 31 thru New. $. knit dl'ess shirts at right now values Long sleeve and short. Patterns, stripes and prints in doubleknit polyeste r. All permanent press. S-M-L-XL. Tarleton • reg. s.oo·fashion ties 2.99 3. 99 reg.5.99 men's furnishings 806 save on car coats look-of-leather vi n yl. Handsome! Wa- ter~repel!ent. Brown, black, honey. Sizes 36-46. -. 24.99 reg. 50.00 men's clothing 81'4 Dacron® panels Sheer white Dacorlr• polyester ninon, For e very room. Machine washable. No-iron. 1.89 e•. 42"x81" value :Z.49 818, t'xt. mont., c~rls., 01cr1. antique satin drapes Window sill lengths <18"x54", In highly decorative colors, whi te, gold, and avocado. All rayon. 3.99 pr. v•lue 8.95 • . . r acrylic turtleneck Multistripe acrylic turtle sweaters. A fashion find at a budget price. Great for Christmas gifts. S-Xl. 4.99 comp. val. 6.99 men'illOS electric blankets ' 24.99 if perf. Full 14.99. 2&.99 if perf. full dual ctl. 11.99. 52.99 if perf. kin g du•I ctl.31.'19 12.99 twin If perf. 21.99 men's casual slacks Famous maker lelsLlre. Pick from jeans, cords, or regular slacks. Waist sizes 30 · ~2 5 • 99 reg. 10.00lo14.00 mtn'•ll7 \ man's slacks savings Po lyester double-knit flares wi1h heh loops. Washable and no iron. In solid colors. Size 30-42 7 • 99 reg. 12.99 men's 1porhwe~r817 ' deep shag pile rugs Thick nylon acryhc pile for look\ and easy care. Choose from red, o li..,e; roy· al , )!;Old, orani;tc. ./ 24.99 811'•11 11 ' reg. 29.99 1111-t-•c mont .. c .. rk ,o•n. men's flannel pajamas W1rm bedtime comfort in a bilj variety of pattern\ and co lo r\, Po lyeste r and cottons. ~-M -l·Xl si t e.,, 3.99 reg. 4.99 ~,..·, ll06 SHOP MONDAY TO FRIDAY 10:00 TO 9:30 • SUNDAYS NOON TO 5 aatuldoi>'c hours 10-to 6 • may oo south coast plaza, .11n di ego '-ay at brlstol, c:osta mesa, 546-9321 • • king-size savings no-iron king sheets No-iron polyester and coiton king- size sheets. Flat tops and fitted bot- toms. Colorful California styled flor- al. No matched sets. 3.99 if perf. 9.99 lo 13.50 domestics 803 boys' flared slacks Easy-care pcrmari"'nl prrss slacks . Blue, hrown o r w1n r-. Slim siLes 6 10 14, regular sizes 6-10. 3.99 ••I. 6.50 lo 9.00 vinyl lace tablecloths While, ecru, gold, avoc.Jdo J.99. 52 x70" 2."--'4"99, 60x90" 111blecloth or 70" 3.99. 1. 99 52x52"reg. 2.99 lo~, 1111 Orlon• acrylic sox f isherman knits and rep:ul1r wei1ve wic:. !-ioll d colors for ~very ou1fit you own. One si te fits all . 3/1.95 reg. 1.0I pr. , MAY CO B .UDGET STORES • I ' I ' , • "· Je DAILY Pl}OT •, . El CarisO Area Oosed ORANGE -Cleveland Na4 honaJ Forest lands north of El Cariso Station. including the Ttabuco Canyon area. have been clQ!led by forest officials for as long as there is fire danger due to dry. windy weather conditions. The southern portion of the Trabuco District will remain. open. Fires are not allowed except at improved campgrounds . For more information, call 293-5050 . Journalists Eye Officers FULLERTON -New of· ricers at the Sigma Delta Chi student chapter st Cal State Fullerton have bttn selected for the 1'12-73 school year. Tom Gorman of Santa Ana has been named president, Merriam Cannon of Fullerton is vice president and Christle Russell of La Habra is secretary-treasurer of the pro- fessional journalistic society. , • a ecw•:wwww • • 1'llwtcllf, Nail: .. 2. 1'72 County Groups· :Vrafse, Damn • •• roposition 20 BJ o.c. ll\JllTINGll °'"~ ....... _ Yoo. cu -)Lar7 Sctunlts. wife of lbe AmerWa !Jde,.eodent l'arly -· bearer, Sunday in Anlhelm 'l1le Voluteer W-1or . ' .,._.,,, L ... NaUonal TV _, I ,,..... 'Ille pu1y WWt . \:.·... * -It~ per•j;rim4ltl "·GIUllllNG aDCDNS: .... ,..., nlOt •of die 1lrqe. OOUdy 1lepubllean 'feta -way at ' p.m. Ind itbe pab1lc II invited. * *·* PROP. a AGAIN: The ............ of the Clllfomla Bl&b• •1 Cnmmluioo ~ be nailllllo II Ibo --All 1"'~ of lhe ......... .,. .. to ..... ffll d wUJ be the • .' .i '~ -(i' . 1 . . . :..: .:.c . Hinshaw Attacks ~vu~Prind;pks 'ti··~ ... . .. ' . . .... .,.. . . . . .. Of 0-pponent in Saddkback Debate -Illa! of ~ • ._ pr_." that-would l2llpter l'IOlldeol a.tot 11oa JD. Ille lnlllalm, bave delertmenll1 I m p 1 c t Kiimer 11)'1 ~ WflO clllm -~~ -tmoupout Ille ollte on Ill Ibo m11 •e would-.i,a.. 1111 of . Coul -of denlopnmt. m. -,,.., ..... of ........ ~ brldp onr u_. cludlot bww;qa. -oni II w& V-rt Ba "In _ ............ -t.1 H~lo.. ·-i>Or Y· "It'• mlolodlac becl•• H _,_,, --- -Jl'llJler told 1 --10 pd" Fidler aid. oppoolle II true. Thi -ol mee\lar-Gl.~Oounty 'lbe ..p1..;. ... _ w1 11111 ~ ~ directed to etaamber GI Onmelce that the VYEiwehC 'ltate tlDl'D-Jo·1Jcal, IObldoG11 'Ytit the lnltlalive "Cll'lllnly could -could be hoped clown' IOVemmeol tbat .......... llld -id hove 11 -· on In ~ projecU by JI"" and nopoodl lo boll> oniewlde mte plans to r•llevello§ traf· ' tells from "1 g grle ve d ·Ind locol•-b••M\Dlal prob. Ile llol!Jeneck .., Co I st portiel." ._ Tb Is p.r o c ou ,JlllJ' if· . "U u qgrleved penm or ~~ ~ FuUei •"' !bat nm 111er group not llllsfled wltb • ,.~ clOar thll)Oc"";i l!lan- p1ans ... lbe .-inc project boanl ~ IUmed lo lhe ~ bOI no{ -Obie to -lhrcqli the lqllly pro-couN 11 ~ lie 11P .a project. make more C01stllN 1n111 ..., of 1pprvval by • ftCloaal for yean, Fuller eaid. avallable-IO Ille public.• -==--* * * 'AJ. * ~A ,ANA -Andr<w J. views .of his oonslltuents !Ind had made. "I 1m g;,1ng to vote the c;andidates· Ibey offered :-.:: ••• • ~ i::! m~;.._tbe Be~~ '111E , ol tllreclon of Hinshaw. !lepubllcan and John -~ ... ~-•·1 WebOler to bact fOI' It (the -·"''uana lnl· were poor." """""" ., ....,. .. ----1be Municipal Water lllllrlct •----~ would bave to bear Ille legal Parts and -Com-r n.... C t •-W. Blad:, Democrat, engaged his stand. tlativ<)...;, ~I belleve Hinshaw .... uked II be """'inYOIY<d." mlaslon. followini the lead of 0 v:-.e ••• y M In a debete over lbelr respec-Bu 1 11 la be -·'d ~-for -.......1t1on 1, -· . ·~ city __ M, jortty •--U!UU!lmo!laly oppoeed t~ live candidacies for lhe 39lb ta ew momen l<f, lt 11 I bill·to•. I hope that ·~ ·~ • • .,..,. · ., Proposltlqn a would requir< "~ -~ ma , -Proposltim 211. ~ llld Congressional Dillriet ,.at gave lln!!!g1b IO lllnillow•f· 'enough v-.,. en! roe 11 to .tl!e .~ Wa..., amend-any public or priHto ·deY<lot>-11veo Its !m8nl010IJI support to it II "vogue in ~ and Wednesday in Slnta· Ana. chirp ol -wi... let lbe I e 11111 t or 1 in m<Dt !lllil<d It prop<l'ty tu me!ll witllin !ODii ymls.ol lbe · Proposition 211. threat...a IO adwnelY 11ffect Scene was tho Horth Santa in reply to.,_..,.,, be oald. Sacramet!IO -that they r<form : "We need tu relorm coast, wllb 1be aceptioos ol * * * . ._....,, Clllfornla water Ana Rotary Club moetlng .11 ••1 wu m•1ndoritood. ~I are oot dolor 1 IOOd job In and 1'lief. 'lbere must be a minor alteralloos to sing1'> 'l1IE SOtn'llERN Calilomia deYelopmml." · the SaddiebaOkJnn. said wui would ..... my·ooil-lawmakfna ca Ibis 111bjecl." c<iJlnB put oo Jllvperly tuis, lamlly homes, to be aPJllOved Claptor of the · Amerlcall"--~------"'--allor Wlilnc 'lo 1DJ' they ore b .ec om >~f.,.. by ·· atato-apPolnled -com-lnslitute or Arcbltects (AIA) HINSHAW SPOKE fin1 and cmtlituenll." THE DBllOCllATIC can-~.· Aid.j\le coan1y.fas mlftfeo. lilo bu "1doraed ProposlUon inunediately bit Black's of1. dldale poinled to t b 1·-'a~r~n~b:or~ ... jjji~~~iiiiiiiiiiii~Fuller~~Cl~ll~led~lbe~lnl~tlati~·v~e ~•~211~.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~=--re · · ......... ._. "be llINlllAW RAID be oppoeed NcGo-.r button he ,. uri:~d ... ~ .... •c<mtinr ........ _, u .... ad-wuwelringandsaid,"fwear to his princip1et ro1ber tban minllltored. "I think It wtl1 this not ........ I think what the p;Opie in ti.ls dlltrtct l'e9l1lt in a outflow rJ.. money George McGovern was the want..i. · · · · from Callfonlla to olber states best choice lot the Democrallc The county.,.._....,. be andlwtllwortlOcblntetbis. ocmlnatlon but becluoe I disagreed with this view, that I think Callfomlanl are m-believe in being comi.steot.. ARTISTE de la Rue -Tbru Sot. should .repre!elll tbe 'people I~ ..-ie.ln ITllll more than lbe party ---. , a rel"1'S"ntative in Congreos tiUed IO their lull sbu< ol "I heHeve people loot al the &oath ~-·· . "11 ua who· put him there. 1 ratio to tbelr.contrlbatkm!' llbef. 'Ibe reuaa the 1:.:..:.,":"",.:- lllnshaw also .charged that -~B!ln~cll:~u~~~in~!"!'~~~~~:.~lbe~.J!De~m~iOCT~at~1~btve~~dooe~~so~poor~~-!__-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:._-~!'!"!! ... !!'!n!4~1!77!1!1;eee~!'!"!! Black had been changing his Propoaltlon 19 ala ·be . Iy In Oraoge Coonty ill because stAnds on issues to suit his au-.if. dience. .. MY OPPONENI' sa id at one meeting before Sad- dleback College students that he was in favor of Proposition 19 which would legalize possession of marijuana," be asserted. "Then at a meeting before a mixed group be said he was against all propositions on the ballot." Black. when his turn came, agreed that he would vote his principles rather than the ,_ . . . • For the Reeo1~d f _..,. ___ ... oc:::._n.:""'""" .... ---.. " lT. JOllUM HOl,fTA.L ..,_. Mr. end Mn. K--"" II. Elclr~. tr.t2 \11r1no Pl.c1, lrvl11e. g!rl Mr. •nd Mt1. P1lrlck M. lt~n. t7'1 A•nl9r Circle, Hl>flll"lllOtl BtoKll, 9lrl. Death Notiee• ARBUCKLE A 80N WI!STCLIFP MORTUARY U7 E. 17111 SL, Colla Met1 ··-~ . BALTz-BERGERON FUNEIW. HOME C-de!Mlr - Colla -111-UU • BELL BROADW AV MOR'nJARV UI Bnodway, Coola M.,. LI MUI • McCOllMIClt LAGUNA BEACI MORTUARY 1111 l.apu ea.,.. Rd. -• PACIJ!'IC VIEW MEMORIAL PAlllt CemllaJ Monury °"'Pd -Paclllc View DrlYe Ntw,.n -· CllU .. ' ..... • P!l!lt rAMIL V COl.ONIAL PUNat,\j. -'1111 -.... ... I '" --• WJW llOn'UilY ,,,_ .. 5 ........ •1 I Mr. •nd Mr1. H•••v w. H..-r. 1762 G•rlle!<I A.venue. H11ntl1>9I0<1 8el>(ll, .,. ' OctoMr ti MT. Mid Mrs. SlllnMku Melclll9r•, 30:9 Fiii,_.. .. ,.. ·No. l:W,.. Cotl• IMM, .... - Mr. 9nd Ml""I. Tl'lomn Ul!Nft, 611 W. J6!h SI,, N-' lacll. glr1, .-M Mr •nl Mrs. lrvc. W. Mowll, tn'5 o n Trtt L111e, lrvlne, boy. oc1-.u Mr. Ind Mr1. D•Vlll L. Q11l1llng, 6112 MontKlto Ori.,., Huntt119Ton aHdl, 8 oy. /IN • ....i Mrs. Johll W llom.n, 17111 Goidl"n Wnt, Hun!ln;IO<! a..cn, girl. Marriage Licenses Mtrrl ... ""'11clftHI Mrt l11U9d 111 1111 iollowlnv • ot Oct. ·21. BUALAl·TIES.SEoae -...,.,,.,, L .• M, 11'1 AllMld All., Hlllltlnfhln Bffd'I, and Sulin C., 1'. 1"111.wood. DAW-MACKIN -l>enllt B,. 2\, 5112 Setsllore Or.. Newport 8191:1> •nd Pttrkl• A .. 20, 1,.,1 w......; Lti Hun!lnoton e..cn. ' 80UOAEAU4,ENCE -'Mlf 11 21 21'" •·~"· Hunllnoton hl>(n'. _. Delorah A., 12. ~. New York City is on the ragged edge.of financial disaster largely bE!catise most of the public emp~l'iiake more money than most of'.,tl\eJ>ublic. ' · . ·New York has oo workable way to prevent strikes .or curb the runaway pay of the people whose sal- aries are paid with tax money. Can it happen m Califumia? lt can happen ii\ California. California, like New York City, has no effective way to keep state pay in line or to prevent costly strikes by state empl~ . It also has no way to stop a hand- ful of politicians from manipulating state funds. (The way things are now, a small powerful group in sacramento is able to take money away from legitimate pay raises voted by the legislature fur state oollege profussors, ' ~ .. ~-- ·highway patrolmen, fire fighters and other .__.state employees, and put it aside for their own pet projects,) . The conflict haS afi:eady Ietl t6 ,, strikes. It has als.o led to a record number of state employees quitting their jobs in the past two years. All the failings of the present sistem can be eliminated by the passage of Proposition 15. Proposition 15 will put a ceiling as well: as~JO!'I'""~ "' "' on state pay. Proposition 15 will'pre- vent costly strikes by state • employees. Proposition 15 will take the politics out of state pay. · Proposition 15 will give control of the public payroll back to the public. After all, it's your~ • . 1 • . ..... .. 9 ..... -............ , .... '-....... • • ' • ' ' ' • t • • I ., •.• prol put 80 ... '· ~; _. .- : • . ' • '· ~ .. ~'fwes of Fµture • • • . ·-~Will Outlast Car •.· 1 ., • \ • · /tJJf MMll II· a -bird will a1ng evm II brought up lo a -idj&\i'OI cqt where It oe.w heei eootber llllle" 11 Wiii.' ConitU Unlverally reaearcbera ·proved that; 'Ibey ~er~ llllllg ~lr.ds eon ling lll<n thatt ... note AntPCti NRl'AIGHT .. at·• . ..,.. chords, aetually. .. . · ~T.'1IQllD .oplpller emt-to generate argu111t11l . Clliilt IDqulrt, .. lo the dtllnltlon' Of ' ' . A opiDllel' II any liDcle g!rl ""'° !'Ill 'to-ftllllaln-11111118!Tled . . Ill ... to Ibo altar: Statlltlcally, aucli ... lbo.OOdl after ......... 31. ::· ov.: ....._ --"-to ·-· ... ~ ~ .,...,...._ ........ r.,,.,. °"'8 ao new car 10 years from now will ,,..... .. out with spore -.. The car'• erif]nel fialproof tires, he pre- dlctl, will wtlast the rest of the ma. chine. Good. t . . l ~ ,-·Q. "How many of the brides .-r. age 1rare~ ... !" . A. li8il ol'them, tbe statisticians claim. . uGosh ! They're even a tacked up out here.•• ,Q. 'TELLOw ·on TV says cattails are edible. How do 1,-----------------1 )'Gd l*~f:le.m-!!' . . '. "·2··~~C{mlt .. eay., ~ ate a cattail. Only know the fto.. ~. * ~out at.them. Call It the new People's ·Fi'ou do.lbte .up ·y\,tir l1st when yoo're 'talkh\g 'to a · ·• ·"'~ q1\lle ~pt to regard It ., an lnllmldatlng ges-ture, certa'irily. But a trabier of animals, who was coID- mWl6ilOil 'to' advise pootl!l't" on 'the safest wsy to' aji. proacb .llrance clop, auggelted the doubled n..t tends to put cahlnes ·et ease. He says dogs are far more wary of "tlol,..,...,tloisWilnd'. For only 511%'of the rqular adult ! an opeii. pal!Jl•lban of a clenched band. • ' TEARS ..,. Studies conllnn the w)despread belle! ihat more women than men cry at weddlngs, but the:y indicate also 111¥1 more Dien llian women cry at'· llmeral$. . " NIHVOMAN on a dlel should overlook El!a Muwell's · sage observation: "There are certain compensations for overweight women. Men do not suspect them and other women do not fear them as .competition." ONE MAN in every 25 is colorblind, it's said. To some degree, at any rate. But only one woman in every 250 can be 110 described. OF ALL THE children in a fanu1y, that youngster who tends to be best able to keep secrets is the oldest son. N~ best' secret keeper, the oldest daughter. No, sir, that's QOt just whim. Students of such matters· say younger chll· d:reri get_ tnto the habit early of hotfooiing it up to their elder brothers and sisters with Dews ~lletlns.·-But-the .older youngsters at the outset have nobody to talk to but the enemy. . · ,..:· . fort. Anywhm on the Air Cal · sysf!m. Whit's Ille colthl You have to come home the same weekend. Which means,...,. 1ot 26 ham ID play; 12 pm Sobuday ID 2 Pll S1u1d11 of the...,. -keod. .W oo1J Ila~ Ille r... ID poy! From as littltas$2.70 (the world's Jowest'i;, fareQ To as much as $2~00. Maximum. Including hL · Gal lost! AIR. c•µFORNIA . Call (114)'540-4591 ·1 Address mait to L. M. Boyd, P. O. Box 1875, New- port Beach,, Calif. 92660. · , Try Saturday's News Now In Its · 21st · Great Year~- .. FREE ~c.OOl(ING;· :· ·scHO.OL •'. -·· ' • .. . r Mesa Theater 1884 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa Every Thursday, Now thru Nov. 1~9:30-11~30 AM. , HELPFUL HOLIDAY HINT·S . . . I MORE THAN $1,000 IN FREE PRIZES e SURPRISES e GIFTS Charmglow and Caloric Ge11s Barbecues and ' other prizes given each week Second• printing of one of the moit popular cook books ever sold·in-tfte. _Orenge Coast area .•• 247 of the .best recipes selected from the cook- ing school's first 19 years for just $1. PniJ>41red last year to marlr the" • 20th anniversaiy of the school,· the book was a sellout. Here's your second chance. • Sold only at ... Cooking SclMlol .. .. 4 ' • • ' I , ~ • lpllilMfll by :~· .... Mmb11 . SwlMn c.lf. hi Co. • Cll1rtc' Cespucllo .. ~u •• ••• .. Daftl • .,.;. . .. o,-.. Ce•I DAILY PILOT C••I Coumu h C••P D111t1111uti1Nt1t IOI•• C.-111111 to1•1"w.t Col .... • t • ' :---- - • - ... I . " • Thu~. ~ 2, 1972 DAI LY PILOT JJ :/·"'Ride the .. --- , o·Bit'' , ..• ~ L. '. · · · ::.:~, · !as · 1ne What a g~~~~ allthe salet$ or do y,qur regular shopping. The Orll!'IQt ~~~~iluialt.Dlstrlct, lovlngly known as The "Two-. Bit Bus une ,.. S'ai y'01.t'· Money, A one-way fare on any of our 'roiites ·I& only 8 • d transfers ~It free. . Fashion ISiand, SOIJ!li coast Plaza, Laguna Beach, Balboa, New- pqrt Beach, Cost9.'"l•1esa, Santa Ana and many other shopping . areas are. all seN~:b~ The "Two-Bit Bus Line.'' -You don't hav!! ~o '1orry about parking and there Is always plenty of room for shopplflg bags and packages. Catch The "Two-Bit Bus Line" •. : feu 0..'f bur hnepolfllflon .,,., oll•lllP•'· '. . • • . .. ...,_.,. !Rll ,..,...., -· ---------.,.,,. 4"NI\ l'IUOA . ""'""""' -_,, ...Mli ....... llAClt ·-·- I I / I ~~ I - '~' e• MC .. . .~ ~. n -' ' ..,.PIUll'MW uH•lrr.-•' ""' ttt~IOr.~ .. ·• • ~11•' • •• ... ..... J -: Fot~or~r.Cldl~s• ... LW'.tMT ..... oi .... -.'._:~111149 ~·~ e.. Wllll Ava.. 8lnlll Ana. l2701 . .. .. l J.,c... ••• , • ,. ·I . --.... .... ... , , . . ... ·~ . , ,. . . . . . . . . ~a· i::. =:=· ::::;;t:~itl~ -.......... _ -..... --.. --... --I , A "' p :II I • I I I f , J% DAil Y P1L(7! ~. NMtnber 2, 1972 : He's Taken the Lead • Candidaw Thorpe Charges Badham With Absenweism c ' • ' Coast Exec Runs Five Miles Every Day " Bv TOM RA••.'"' Of ... c.llr PIW Shltf VIJta, Daoa Point, with bl! wlfo, Ann, and three cbUdren ond be'• busy ICOlltlni the local te1Tain for good runn.lJll coontry. ... BY O.C. HUSTINGS Of "' Dmfr Pu.t Ir.ft from the 11cautornla Journal" long-tenn efrecu. which ''I ndicate that 11 N' W thl.!I dlstrl t ' • • Move over, Al Nest!ll\ter! Turn in your golden track shoes, lift the laurels from your sweating brow and hand them ta jogging Cyril Jorte1 . The Welsb-borri whla of The race tor the 71st Assemblyman , Badham bu RIGHT 0 c . . Newport Center can give you ~.. six years. eight incbes in .•. height and all the cbeeMi you "It loob good/' he aald. "l llWld l'UI in a 1ood l~mllt 11111 DOW and llain In Callbll'I and I see no reason why 1 can'! do it in the Dana Pofnt area." Assembly DI.strict pits the been absent from Assembly ; bll _..imat,ely two-and.a· Republican incumbent who seuions }llOrt than a third of · bfllf times the populaUon of has IO years ln the Assembly the ·ume during the last three some of'tbe" e_,tmaller as~?1b~y again.tt a Democratlc op-years. The ~tiatJcs are: 1970 -d1strlct!i fie pMnts out. This ponent who ls a relative -Absent M.l percent·, 1971 -means that there is one newcomer to politics. Absent 33.7 pereent; 1972 -legi.slatlre vote for these peo- .N=;;t1 B~:C,~ b ~:· n::t Aboent 911.8 percent." pie·~ there should be : like from yoor ooon hour au-JONES IS AVERAGING around (() ro '5 minutes for bis elected to the 71st district seat BA.DRAM BAS labeled this ~.!....._ ~ of. OD!Hll8D. : dlences in Santa Ana. He's got in 1962 and has served In .a~4.: .1.:. .. AA-lolall Sariramento since then. He ls charge an "absolute falllty" CJ.le VVMr lwi.I ~1 y ! you, Al baby, he's got you! dally Newport Center atlnt. SEEKS STABLE ECONOMY cha'-·" or the Joint Com-and a 0 lle." He points out that , aestroyed In this state kmger • • • I i I ! ' ~ ' JONES BELTS ou! at least five miles to your three for five days compared to your four and does it all with nothing more than an oc- casional flurry o( curious seagulls to spur him on. No noon hour luxury for swift Cyril. He leaves from his base at the Newport Beach Athletic Club at 7 a.m .. pounds out his five to six miles - octen through thick fog -and is at his desk in the Am erican Cement Corporation offices at 9 a .m. AND BEFORE THIS week he did it all alter an SO.mile drive from his old home at Calabasas. It's good time but he Insists Capo Mlyor Thorpe he's not bound to the clock as ---'----'------ • ...,._. ol gauging bis ""~' 1he "Calilomla Journal" ts a · than aJi;ywbere dse in .the mittee on Atomic Develop-private publication and cites a country." . . ' . • performance. "I'm fit and well and l believe my daily road wor.k is the main rtaSOn," he said. "It may look liU hell to 1he oolooker but tt'• the greotest fun in the world for me." ••oh yes"and by the way," he grinned. "It's lonely. It's very, very lonely ... " Courses Offered Judge Fines Attorney In Transfer ~en~~;a:i•m:!i:, :f!"l'J!:.iedli:~~ ... ~~\~~~ h1' cam~.'tb -;;\>~at Revenue and Taxation, Water, published any s·t at is tics the areas of communities of Badham, but be ~ con-- G o vemm.ental Organization relating to the preserice or interest aDd city Md county centrated on emplo'yment and and Pt.Jblic Works committees. absence of legis1aton... boundary lines." , educatlon. i Jim.Thorpe, :rl, i.s1be mayor !lili record for the past 10 In speaking of airport ex-Endorsed by the COWlly and or San Juan Capistrano and an years, Badbam says, shows pansion Badham says that a instructor 11t Sad d I e back that he was either present m-solution involving all leV!;?IS of state AFL-CIO and tbe United College. His first venture into Sacramento or absent 00 of· government must be sought ln Auto Woken, 'Iborpe says he politics came in 1970 when he ficial Iegialative busineu 97.3 the next two years. "The prob-believes .. strong steps" lhwld was elected to the San Juan percent of the time the lem is not just gohlg to be taken "at the state level to SANTA ANA -An attorney Capistrano City Council. Legi.!llature was in session. disappear if we ignore it," he build a stable eoonomy ln accused on arrest of transfer· The incumbent says he added. California which will. allow the TUEY ARE FIGHTING for belie·-reap......,..,_'"'ent is ring a Lido Isle woman's ~"A , A bl 1 h t ·~ ,.... ·-~· •·te '" ,_.._ fU11 u1e n.>5em Y seat a the imst important issue.fac-THORPE BAS been discuss-Sua w move ....... -.,.-home into his own name to ts Jh I 1·v•"g I t " represen e peop e J '" ing the state because of its ing a variety of issUes during emp oymen , avoid bank seizure of the pro--between the Pacifi~ Ocean and,_....::,----------''------------------- perty has been fined $5.000 the Riverside Coun\Y line and and placed on three years pro--from San Clemen[e ln the ~-Wanna here more , Al? Neslinger hit DAILY PILOT headlines as the fitness-eon-~ cious hvdroloj?y technician ,.. who almost dailv threads hi.! way th'"OU~l! a growing c0m. plex of federal, ·state, County and city buildings In downtown · "' A host of nf.w nine--week bation. south to parts of Costa Mesa, courses are being offered by Orange County S u p e r lo r Santa Ana and Anaheim in the Orange Coast O:>llege, begin-Court Judge Kenneth Lae im· north. The 71st district is Sallla Ana . But l(Jng, distance runners. no expl11~tinn T'"f'"Pd. just OAILT PILOT It.ff,..... . , , IT'S LONELY Jogger Cyril Jon-.• have to be lpnely. Lanky, lo~g-do some thing about t~m one leggcrl Al rr>ur..i ""\Ill .. cla1n1 of lhese days." that tijii:tirint it)n , •• :th "l3"V (l munchirir" ,..•r;..,_ ·· ~ .,,, .. h<>il. He has every respect for ing hi11 ~~,,, ... "~ ,,, .. ,.,. ... 1-i " Nes!linger because the two m0t•lh'··1 r •, ·,,,: -i.. ...,.,,.. men have the ssme ·-atma. :: a r.ois-' ,.., --· •· They both believe that their :: self-imposed task keeps them :: JONF.S ,.n, ...... "'"' ht> "riv "hale and hea1lby, at a perfect ~ lonelier i' .,,, ,•;, ,,;'I' 7 "m. weightandfreefromcoldsand :· stint on tnn rr ri~ .. .,, C:'101vrlon. infectiof\s that plague the :: (That'~ ;-11' • ' . ..,,,. • more sedentary male. ning 1lle week or Nov. 13. posed 1he term 00 Ward c. heavily Republican. Regl.stration w1lI lie held In Mikkel-50, Orange, after The Issues as Thorpe sees the Admissions and Records the lawyer pleaded nolo con-them, are 'Badbam'.!I record in office from 8 a.m. to' 8 p.m. ~tendre (neither guilty nor in-offiCe, employment and educa· beginnlnDa. aodg Nov. 1 8· 1 nocent) to charges of fraud tion. y even ng c asses are and peri·ury. Badha 1h t · available in such subject areas m &a)'! e mos un· b . 1 Mikkelson was accused in a portant issues facing the state as accounting, 1 0 0 g Y • Grand Jury indictment of il· and the 7lst Assembly District lf.\qJness information systems, . ?ccfmputer s c l e n c e , con· legally trans{erring the home are reapportionment aod the I h I of Mrs. Glenda Heller, 221 Via aJrport problem, struct onE t1~-~ nofogyd. Nice, into his own name During his campa·ign , economics, ngli:wi, Genno 0 shortly after she received a 'lborpe )las talked about servicea, French, an, demand from the Union Bank Badha.m's absenteeism. A health education, inhalation for immedate payment of a mailer sent to di s tr t c t therapy, mathematica, music, physical education ,1-,;';';00;,000;;;;;;lo;a;n.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•"'";;;;;id•ents;;;;;;;;;;q•u•o•t•e•s;;;;;ota;;;;;tis•ti•·cs,I psychology, secret aria 11 science, and ~ '!be tlasses ranp from one- baU to lour unlfll eoc:h. HONG «ONG .. : Stripne..f '" ~" · ~i..'l .. ., Jones' l>fllef in running as a ---------~ Q.lltOM IAiLOl.i ........... IM 09ANGI couwn :: he par's I·•~ 1•'"· 1i, .. ,, .. ,.,h means of keeping fit was llll•• ... iiliI'"i"""i .. i'lli.._iil•-..._. , .. .._. c-.,.. XMAS SAU :: Newport r "nt.-.-:ilring Sa'l spawne& in hi s boyhood in 2 5Uttl $135 :: Joaquin lfi!l~ P'l:•~. down Wale~ (many frustrated HE· DOUILI 1.1111 :; Jamhoree Rnar' .,.,,t Pacific Engllsh rugby international !Mr,__,• MD••«p!... ••ft Ip lo •-• LtmNS ~ ............. · "'·... --~ .: Coast Hi~h"•;n· "nd back up will testlfy to the rwming . o..w. IR1t ........ fl .. :~ MacArthur Bou levard to the ability O{ Welahmen), and o--w_. ....... n ., :;.:=::-.= = .. sui. ~ ••••••••• 19 •2 :: Athletic Club. fostered while be worked as a a.ct 11oorW:1 ............ 9s .. •wt "' ANT 11u .. A meal in itselt A gently·seasoned Polish sausage, with mustard and pickle, topped with a thick slice of Swiss cheese. All on zesty rye bread. DEE~iciousl :· The onlv sonnds are his mlnlng ..naineer 1n Rohodeiia sii.: w ... ··········" " • Nn '"" col'1m , ~·oe JOHN Coo-.-........... tt d • ftll .t.LnunoMS :: ~~edh off~t1r1,1811s1." •lhnde colhlde and South Africa. j II.A.CIC· SNrto ,;:;~·~·;,.,.1,0 .,1 ··•.UT l'•Tffi"'"'' ,.,,, .. , ••. ---· •: ""''...,..~ "''" ., ' BE BAS THE touihe!t jab fot Jooa •1Mm WOOLENS ~ .Ar. M .. ......,. :· clammy silence. be bad AHD oou111 "'"" MJH. io-sr.: .... 1ze1 ,• ever -vice J>l'Sldenl CONl!oUSI ,. OUR BIG, TASTY, TEMPTY POLISH SANDWICH! Regularly 594 (@54 J ust bring this coupon to OFF Der Wienerschnitzel. One coupon per customer. Offer ends November 15, 1972 :: 0 AH, YES. THOSE gull.!," of American Cement'.! in-• Pw ... ,,.,.....,.. ,.._ uio0211 •,:murmured the 4l·year-old vestment divi.slon-t be c~ ·~-·-.ius2 11UCUtMU1"W-·tum4U·MMr4 AMA 169, NEWPOR'T. ·aLV,D COSTA MESA. " :: flyer from Llannnt ~ a atllJ flliill time to nul. ,.,. -::, 'u;;;;..~ """;;',';::: ~.:;;,;;:;~· .. ~ ~':':"" '' · ' :~:!g1a~nce~u~pw~a~rd~.~ .. ,~~~·f0lnl~~ro~_..sc,n1.~aow~~u ... ~1~t~M~S21~M~u~•~·~·~·~·I!!!!u~·!.0•1 !!J!!i!.!111111!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~9~5~1'_1'.H~A~R~B~O~.~R~B~L~V~D~.,~C~O~S~T~A~M~ES~A~~~~~ :-. ) ' .. ' ~ ~:r I ' I ..... ~ . =~ .. :· '• ~ > :i .. '• '• :: ~ . " I , ' \ 23" ·- ' SUPll C~RCMACOLOR ...... W11Mf c;•llllf wUll IMltlil'• " -Cf!NIMtlc: -................. .. " .... ..... ,...,_ ... ,,._ CAU. FOR PRICE NO RHETORIC AT ABC WE'RE NOTED FOR LOW~PRICES &.OUTSTANDING SERVICE--NOT EMPTY PROMISES ALL AVAILABLE RCA & ZENITH MODELS NOW IN STOCK AND ON DISPLAY. 16" -SUPll Dliond CHROMACOLOR e 1'71 MODn e DICOIATOI CAllNIT by ZENITH SUPll CHIOMACOLOI MlANS • -Colon ·---........ c ..... ·-- e HANDCRAmD CHASSIS SJ18 88 WHY IUY FROM AIC? • No ...... CMrt• If hid .. '° 119'1 .. No -18i11 J6 M-to Poy f-J e 1 r--...,. • 1 r---. • J .J-,._ T•·W.,••r e "" D.a"'Y IN Sot Up e l•kAMorie«cl/M-Ck•JO e We Senlce Wllol We Stl t We llHw OW ,, ... ct ......... Owt l§A~' Color Bargain ( II 1 18 diagonal COLOR ER-405 • 25'' XL-100 Swiveler DJA90NAL e M-Stythot e 1000/o.s.ad Slot• ..C-.h e A•tMNtic Tiat s599 STORI HOURS: Meft..T...., It .. MN,.,,. • w-..-..n. ............... l•tv...., 11 .......... ,. , ..... IYfMl•J 12 a.ril.·I ,..... ' WITH UNO"~ WITH AIC'S EXCLUSIVE WARRANTY e 1 YEAR FREE SERVICE e 1 YEAI FUE PAIT$ e 3 YEAI PICTUR! TUIE WARRANTY e DIPOU ANTENN). e 1 SIT VHF FINI TUNINCO e IDEAL JIOI FAMILY YIEWINCO COHTIOL .. ~ '649 T Ii a n th 0 r" • j ra w b 33 ::i :•. ... .,.. :,11 :, ( • I • • ' ' • •lo " ~ 1' • • ,., .. · ,llhd T-!!yl~r (rijplt) reacts with increduHty as Trevor " .... llowir~i taps ·h1m for a dangerous espionage JOb tn ~· . .,.the spy spoof movie 'jThe Liquidator," airing to- ·1· • night at 11 :30 1 on the CBS Late Movie over Chan~ ...,•, .. rnel 2. · · ·: :·~-~---------------- :I ·.:','Radio Also Coverinu .. e '. Election Next Tuesday Bf JAY SHARBIJTI' ' NEW YORK (AP! -Next Tuesday fQl.F radio networks Jinked to nearly 2,500 stations " across the Country will start flashing election night results throughoyt tbe nation. Most of the attention will be on the television reports, but radio's method of covering the . national vote will be the same. ., There'll be computer pro- fections . of who won what races, learned analyses of how reporting the vote on the ABC •' informat Ion,'' ""en· tertainm ent,'' "con- temporary" and ' • FM ' ' . netwo:-ks. At CBS radio, as on CBS television, there'll be two anchormen and four regional correspondents. NBC · radio will have two ancho~en for the overall report and two cor- responder:ts watching t h e gubernatorial, Senate and key llouse races. · we voted aild why and remote AND THE Mutual Broad- broadcasts· from as many as casUng System, for the first 33•sepai'a~ locations with the time in a presidential election, .,.ries of winners and losers will combine its national radio :,t.lke. • coverage with detailed reports !t•Xor radio's elders -anyone by black newsmen of voting :.Y:.Jj> recalls "Allen's Alley" -trends and races in black :fll..this .is a far cry Crom the communities. !f e i t • o f • t h e · pants pro-Because of the sophi stica· :[Etications of 1948, when tion of reporting and analyzing ~ e was a long, long wait to vote returns, there's little ~ earn President Harry S. chance that the. radio audience ~l'ruman was indeed going of today wiU hear what NBC :flack to the Whlte House far listeners did 24. years ago. 'lour more years. ir======""=="==,I " ,, f. A.ND IT'S an even' longer "°ay from the ·.t.!'lp. m<¥1~. when the first radio coverage of a presidential election came from station KDKA i n Pittsburgh. The coverage, ·sfuong other things, asked if t•:a\iyobdy was listening. ~: "It now is apparent that the :;:ReJNbll.can ticket of Harding i{ond Coolidge is running well l!.abead of Cox aod Roosevelt," l id the KDKA announcer, his ~Chine-gun style of delivery . ~ting tlie burbling dots and ~dashes of assorted Morse code t¢.lransmissloos. . f ...-"At :u.e present time, '-~nling bas collected more J! ihan 16 rrUUion votes against ".JOllle nine million for the J:"Democrats. We'll giv,_ yQU the ~'Slate vote in just a Jftlnute. ~:,-"But fint, we'd like to ask you to let us know if this broad- cast is reaching you. Please F,op a card, aad~ sta- U<lo KDKA, Wemnghouse, ,,'E'ast Pittsburgh, Penn.sylvan· . IL" ·•· :;~THERE'S NO question these ~ys whether the news rs .llifug heard. The main pro- :bfem of today's radio is that ·~levision and the speed of the ;"' puter have stolen most of · elect.ion night thunder. • Despite that, radio still is in • pitching. And its means .Jlf getting lhe news out in 1972 ~as, become incredibly i'OPhlstlcai.d. 1, ABC, for 'xample, is broad- • i'Castlng the ~ov .. 1 results on ~each ol its lour sub-netW-Orks. It has e.tght anchor men . . KNOW.YOUR _ . ' CANDIDATE · FOR JOE SERIEMA. The voting age has again been lowered to give others tKe right to vote. Girls and boys attending any school Jn the Newport-lotesa &rea can Win a trip to Sacramento via Air ~mia. Ballots available In estcllft Plaza shops at 17 & Irvine Ave- nue. Deposit one only In the ballot box at Jett's Petty.g_ Zoo. appearing Oct 31 thru Nov. 5. ' . • ThursdaJ, Novtrnbtt 2, )q72 DAILY PILOT 3 TV Helps Children To Read High (; for Edie? ••••••••••• ·········r • • I I • I NEW YORK ,UP!) -Sur- veys of a television proeram designed to improve basic reading skills for 7-to-10-year· old children have ln"'lcated an lnCrease In reading Interest among children who watched the show. 'Cigar Lady' Pursuing Opera Career I I I By BOB 11IOMA8 HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Wi/ started u a lad< might t • Into an opera career for e Adtnn., mort widely ~wn as , a porlrayer of sexy dames and' seller ot cigars. • I can Guild of Ml.WcaJ Artlsts." 1 IT WAS worth It, she I remarked, to "i-evive a voice I that had been in mothball! for 1 15 years." 1 FOUNT ~ I~. VALLEY C R WASH Cordielly ln.-it•s You To Att•nd A •+h•r Unusu•I P•rly G ivtn in Honor of A .t\I t Remarkable Car Award Winning Elegance Automatic · Computerized Coltee, Cookies I: Free• car \Vasbei•• Will Be Served Wash S1h1rli•y, N•""'l>ef 4 tltr11 S1111d1y, NOYt"'b.' S. I '·"'· 'til t p.m. FOUNTAIN VALLEY CAR WASH I OO JS Ellis Ave., F.V. p,·esent Thi.• Invitation for a FHEE Spray \Yax 11 I I • I I I I I I • I I • I I The Children's Teievision WorksOOp c:rw, producer of "Th e Electric Company ," issued the report; by Robert E. Herriott and Roland J . Liebert of Florida S t a t e Univarslty. Earlier I a s t monih, the blonde actress completed four performances in the lead role of Offenbach 's "La Perlochole" In a fully staged production by the Seattle Opera Company. She astonish- ed audiences and critics alike with her full, ri.eh soprano. As a vounR:ster in New York. she had s t u d 1 e d classical 1 singing at the Julllinrd S.·hool I of Music and took rorlv;i te I lessons from such di\·as as 1 Helen Jepson. Du so I i n a 1 Gianinni and Marl.a Kurenko. But a Broadway rnle a1 the sister Eileen in . "Y!onderful Town" started her career of playing "Sexy, dwnb-smart blondes." •Wltll atoy IHH!I {loll -*I-I ........ YMr Owll Cir I A survey last spring ·drew replies from about 5 O O teachers who felt t h e i r students' reading skilis were improved. by watching "The Electrlc Comj>ln)'," CT W said. Earlier, the educators surveyed!,300pr Inc I pa Is around the country a n d reported nearly half or the s c h o o I s lacked either television equip.ment or the ability to receive the signal of a station broadeasting the educational program. Back al her home in Beverly Hills, Afiss Adams seemed pleased with the ex- perience -and with the offers that are beginning to come for appearances with symphony orchestras across the country. "AI~ they ready for me?" she mused. "I know that I am ready, musically. But it mi11:ht be too much of a shock fo r people to hear an operatic voice coming out of my face." TURNS TO OPERA Singer Edie Adams Edie mentioned that she sang opera as well as popular songs. Ross bead her sing at a Gay 90s night at th e liollywood Bowl and sito;ned her up for "La Perichole. '' Her career almost cl1'lnged when "Wonderful To~Yn·· com- poser Leonard Bern stei n heard her soprano. "Crazy Lenny thinks I can do anything," she said. ''He wrote "C8ndide' for n1e. he said. But at the same 1 imc I was offered the role of l.Jaisy Mae in 'Li'l Abner.' My me~ tor, George Abbott . decided it would be lv!st for rnc 11> take 'Li'! Abne~."'" . . . -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -. I See by l(xlay' s Want Ads e BUGS FOR SALE: h!':re'1 a 069 V\V \\•ith a ir, au10- matic, goad Ures, new ft>· glnl': and It's elcan. e BAJA BUG: '62 VW wllh a Corvair C'ngine. $1200 or ""iii trade for earnper. "If all schools are to have equal access to the growing national• resourcet i n in- structlor.al materiai," Liebert said, "it seems crear that an updating of school equipment is in order." TIIE SEA 1TLE engagement happened by accident, she Said. Two years ago, she ap- peared on a televison talk show in Seattle with Glynn Ross, "an amazing man· who runs opera in SeatUe and makes it pay off; the company has no deficit." "It was a noncancellable contract, and I figured I cnu ld block out the time for it," she said. "Wouldn 't you kno\v - when the date fially arrived, I had an offer to play Las \'egas for the biggest money I evtr got! ''Not only dip I lo.se the date. I also had to join my 10th union -AGMA (Ameri- EDIE ADAMS has cortinued to play dumb-smart illondes, as well as touring wlth her night club act, playing sum- mer theaters <:1nd selling cigars on television com- mercials. Now she hopes to add serious singing to her repertoire. ' · e TAKE TO THE TRAJLS on lhis 1971 Jlonda Trail 10. Jt has ~1mo croa bars and it"s lik~ ~·. • MARKC. 8l00ME rJUSES DIRECT TO YOU! ---~REE INSTALl.ATION • • • OYIR 100,000 t'IRIS· • ,.NITIS'TIL 9 m • ------------... DOMES'l'IC and ··~~.~'!~·· ••SUI.Air 7,95 WBEEI. FOBEION&SPOB'rS Al.lf,JNllfEH'l' ... ,.,.. tis'.. ,.,,..,,.., . • U.S. Cm T•IS w.m2Tn CfHJPOIW ~ - 5 ... zl5 5 ... :rl3 7.H:rl3 95 ai •• 1-11 l ach. + 11.41 ..... ,, ...... 1 •. '•• TVBELESS & TVBED" •1. 7.i"° I .iC t '78/I :i) 6 .:JOx l a CH78/12) :J.ttOx I;; .t .2:0x I -I .i.:ZOx IS $ ··aatnlll fllfOla ,.,...,.,.__---i '12 !.~,. or •• F 0 R ~~~~~ ... ~~~-T_r_•_,..~•-"_d_•~•-•_S_•~r_1" .... •-•_0~"-A_1_1_0~•~-•~r_s_1_:_e_•_!~~~-'-'.'!" •• ~ • .:.?i~~-: ....... UNIROYAL lJNl,,.OYAL LAREOO TVBELESS POLYESTER 41~~&'f/fi88 f10!1S~;::, TUBELESS· & Gll!IS IASTllAIC Tube Typ~ for. fords, Chevy, Buick, Pontiac, Ply., & Mercury 88· Bil'ITEICIES e il10l'' ... '32" '170114 ... 'M" The fan1011J Uniroyol Lcir.do M..,lti l ib tir• oho coll•d the "'loift Tire.• Th;, firt ho1 beef! pvrchoMd by 191jllj_, ef toli1fied e1n tort1er1 th,.,1ovt the r1otiofl. ICHWft f~ lh ptrf•r-JtCe i11 the roi1t, th i1 1h1hlo...ding lire it •-cwoilobl. 01 1he1• eatre._1, low price .. Don't 111i11 owtl UNllOYAl 1.Al fP() TUlflf$$1 ht CINlitJ Orif. ,..,, ....... ., lf7J Csnl •.•5zl5 9.ffzl5 $.18.r.15 ..GOxl3 ,,,., (•78/131 n1.: 1178/151 (L78/l S ) , 95 ·-· ,...,. ... . _ ...... . D I"' . REGl/l..AR E78/J4 •••••• •31•5 1'78/ l 4 ••••••• 3:19• 67811.4 •••••• •34•• . • ... 7•• B78/14 ••••••.. Gl70/14 ••• •37'' Hl70/l4 ... '39" fl70/IS .,, 'M" 11-,,.1 oi.-•~" C7•/l 3 .......... •zj•• LOW~ICESt Al.I. f ••« lf1r.4 1lfa •.'!,'!."!,.!!,PE ___ .... ,.. ----:.I!!!. 678/15 •••••• •35•• B78/J5 •• , •• , '3'195 £78/15 •••••• •43•• •••••r Polley lir ,....., ,.1k7 is " Mt· "' ....,. ,... "J:' ....... ~-·Ill ..-u .. --·----... "", __ .. ,,, -11t1ln; .... s ..... ... _... ...... ·-CHJ 11111 ...... .. llrn l!Mlll. ll1~ .,,.. " .......... "' ,, ,.. lin. ' -Qttr wit! II .............. I gtlf ... hfl'J 1t "" ........... ""'· 0170/15 ... '37'' Hl70/15 ... 139" ll70/IS ... '44" ~ ... _ ...... . ....... lt " le. ................. ,.....,,., 1n4t ,...,_ COSTA MBA , ......... ...... 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Treatment Discussed. The treatment of 1chl1ophrenla with meg1vitamlns will be dilCUIS· td al 7:30 p..tn. Nov. !1 at Estancia High School by • p1ychlattlst at Fa.J.nilew St.ate HO!PilaJ. The third In a lecture strles sponsored by the ~ Orange &hlzophrenla A!aoclatlon, the talk will be In the Little Theater. m3 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa. The public ls invited. For imlonnation a b o u t the associaUon, call 543-5470. REFLIJCl'IONS by Sheffer Reyn "'We aN llf lllfhnnt ·~ teu at lllfMNftt Mut't ltut we alwayt ft'MIY M N54i at ..... rt to M on the 1kl• of tt'Vth ..... .. Ralph Wallla Em.non We're not certain but It 1eem1 prohablt! that Emr.r· son made this observation during some election cam- paign. Bombarded with cam- paign literature and the 1tatemmtl ot candidates, we are "of dil'ferent opinions at dlfferent hours," always · .@eking fundamental truths we can use u the basil for aound decisions. Americans, l!nmasse, desire mosUy Integrity, slnoerlty Md a certain amount• of ability ln the men we elect to repraent UI and make ®r laws. We are, at heart, on the aide of truth and so, we hope, are the candidates for which we vote. Honesty and lnteKrfty, cou- pled \vith aympatbetlc un- dentandln&. are the founda- tion on which our reputation has been buUt. .·a;:H€FF€R ~ mo11nu.11v , lA&UNA IEACH t7' SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY ••4-1115 SAN CLEMENTE I SJJ NORTH EL CAMINO REAL • 4f2·0100 . Legal Threats Seen - By Bo~t Oper~ors By L. PETER KRIEG ot ... Dtlly ..... tr.tr Newport Harbor boatyard operators fear the federal government any day now ls going lo swoop through town charging them with polluting the bay, They're scrambling to put t<>- 1elber a trade association to handle their potential legal troubles the united way. They maintain they're will· ing to cooperate with any reasonable governmental re- quirements, but because a team of inspectors from the Environmental Protection Agency scoured the harbor a couple of months ago, they're prtpared for the worst. "WE'RE FORMING a group so that everybody will not try t6 fight it by themselves," said Hank Hill of Boatswain's Locker on Mariners' Mile. "We've got the word they 're about to is,,ue fed eral in- dictments against us so we've got a meeting scheduled Mon· day," he said. · They'll know for sure in about a week, but a check with the EPA in San Fran· Cisco produced ,,. a less-than-- menacing comment f r o m Richard O'Connell, a director of tM enforcement divi!ion. "We art forming our recOm- mendaUons -we'll have them next ·week," he said, "but we understand that the boatyard operators are willing N.. "41tk•I M . JOBS NOT WELFARE Eoct JOHN BLACK "" CONCiWS c-1111ttw i. •t.ct w. •IK* -,.II a1111.n, dim; Hln MMle v ..... , la ...... Nlfllel. to do what might b e reasonably required. "~ whether I.here will be anY, prosecutions required is not certain at this point," O'Connell said. llE INDICATED that more than likely his office will recommend some procedural ·challies for the boatyards. If they're followed, the threat of indictments will be dropped, O'Connell indicated. He declined to be specific about the recommendations. but did say, "Some facilities 'We've got tc0rd t laey're about to baue federal in• dfettnents against us.' "They say don't put scrob water into the bay," said Hill. '.'But they say don't put lt into the sewers, either," he said, "and they say don't drain it into the sand up in back. "The only alternative ls to bottle it and take it home," he offered. "SHORT OF NO boalyards, we don't know what to do," he said. "This is why we neeQ to organize," Hill said. "lo try to find out what we can and can. not do." 1be united f r o n t the operators are trying to present alreatb' has a crack in it, however. "Why organize for a battle that h.~'t started," argued · Arsene "Blackie" Gadarian, proprietor and resident pundit of · Blackie's Boatyard on Newport Boulevard. will be necessary to prevent the entrance of metallic com· ··WE'LL CREATE all that pounds into the bay. attention and they'll figure "What that consists of is we've got a real problem down more an engineering question here -which we don't," he than a legal one," he said. said. A water quality s t u d y "They surveyed up and performed about a ~ear ago down the coast." he said, disclosed that there are heavy "why focus attention on us. met.al de!).'.lsits at the bottom "They'll start wondering of the harbor. what ·a bunch of clowns from Newport Harbor are trying to <YCONNEIL ALSO s a i d do -then there will be a some controls are going to be figh~" he said. needed over the way boats are Gadarian said the trade washed down because that, association would "only go out too , leU pollutants Jnto the and hire a lawyer who would water. start making his own work. That's the kind of thing that He'll get a hold of the EPA Hill said has the boatyard . and have himself a real soup- operators confounded. bone," Gadarmn said. BOUTIQUE Cl~EANERS ALTllATIONS & RUTYLIN& FOi 'AlTICULAl LADIES ·Warner-Dale Center Corner of Warner & Springdale, Huntington Beach 842-2050 3.88 1.98 Quill ed cotton print matches bedspread and curtains. Polyurethane filled. LO!Jnger pillows BedpiUOw-siied throw pillows In a wide variety of fabrics and pattern s. ' . \ . The Treasury is here to save you. Prove it yourself. Pl .LL OW · TALK 3.49 Wet looks Crinkle vinyl, kapok filled. DIRECTOR DEAD G1ry Mlrk.ls, 42 Rites Set For TV ' Producer Services will be held Friday in Hollywood for G a r y Markas, 42, staff producer and director for KOC& TV, Chan. nel 50, who died Monday after a short illness. Mr. Markas joined the KOCE-TV staff In Huntington Beach in July where he directed news reporter Jim Cooper in current affairs pnr gram entitled "Focus : Orange County." He won two Emmy Awards, one as producer-0.irector of a one-hour documentary on the· Los Angeles black community "Many Shades of Black" and the other as director for a 1961 series entitled "Line of Sight." Mr . Markas had been· a staff director for J\NBC.TV in Los Ahgeles where he directed a live, 90-niinute news broad- cast, "The SUnday Show." He is ·survived by his wlfe, BUHe; and three sons, Rory, Troy and Gary, Jr., all ol the family home in Northridge. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Ftiday at the Old North Church at t h e Hollywood Hills Forest Lawn Cemetery. 1 -\i f;asiing AsparaJl'll• 1j 11'1line Co. GrOUJers tu'Woo French 1, G,...upanguaatalrVIDt Compuy la goJDc to try to take .. over the hearla mi palat., of the French come Febnlary from Its cun'enUy more favored relaUve, wblte aaporqua. 8"~ II\ mld·Ftbnwy, the agrtculture dlvblon of the Irvine Compuy will alr- lrelghl !ta first shipmen! of green aspara gus and stnlwberTies lo Paris . through lbe Import COJllj>llllY, Dunand and Cit. MOST FRENCH pr efer white asparagus because they believe the green variety is.. not ripe, according to George I '. .). Grey, presldef!I ol llunll¥I ~Jnce lho peoitle 1ho i::: and Cit. f .wt! la oM1 If 1ho Bui Grey, who ~111 chell ~:. • of IJ'W'btad a J":"""'Uooal ca More 1,1111 ..,.. "JIAl&l1 for ,irv~ In , Irvine laod an' lo uparqua.J caiDltn coovlDc!ni l'h e Jrvlne'a ..-lllalU were diners otberwlae • introduced'lnJtalylnlr70and.,. ''challeftge.'1 compapy olficlalJ Mid, receJT· .. The agreement between the ed ,.limiiOdlale acceplance. i.·. Irvine Company, Dunand and En&lantl -lhlpped· ·-Cit ol Paris and !\an Fran-as-~ )'Ur •nd W.. elm> shipper M~-.,.... ail!Jllarlj good; said com· 1.eller Co. cans. let an lnlual pony offldalJ. llhlpmenl or 5,000 pounds of the vegetable. EACH l'-l'OUND crate will retail for about 12 a pound. The firsl crate will' be sold to Frencb l'tltauranls In the Paris aru In an attempt to ,.---::L... '• deJ br'eahfast • 'Minimum 1100 Ptl'-•L l(IGOUflt ~ ·' Hop in your f · Orange juice, coffee and a piping hot Danish •.. all on a non-spill tray. Del Breakfast is the non~stop breakfast now being served at all DEL TACO drive--tliru 69¢ restaurants -it only takes a minute and Its onty NOW SERVING 7·11 AM NEWPORT BEACH Bristol (Palisades) at Campus SANTA ANA 4th St. and Nawport Fwy. TUSTIN Red Hill naar Santa Ana Fwy. .............. o,.... Co.rr ......... 1.99 Shaggles ca r and come as you are! Th e Imperi al folks are waiting for you I Imperial Balk CoataMeu Harbor Blvd. al Fair Drive (714) 979·1000 Shaggy pile of 50o/o acrylic, 25o/o rayon, 25°/o Verela modacrylic. Kapok fil led. • 2.99 Velveteens Cotton velveteen; Kapok filled. I GRANADA HILLS 1t!OOO CM,,wo"h St. WOOOt..ANO Hills 21 ~ V1c1ory Blv<I RIVERSIDE 3S20 Tyl or St. SANTA ANA 3900 South B'•&tol S1 I TORRANCE Sepulveda and t-tawlhorne LAKEWOOD Carson SI and Paramounl Blvd ., BUEt-IA PARK Beach and Orangethorpe ORANGE G1tdl!n Grove Blvd . and Manchester Opot1 -kdayw l'*I 101:)0 SundOya 1010 7. . Ijoct ) ·. UJll T91tPMID ' : A rms Lengt h ' i Animal control officer : at Littleton, Colo. wari· : ly watches wildcat : cornered in town. Ani· : mal was to be taken : into mountains for re-' I . I ease. • l1idians Prot,est ,.... Exhibit DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -Gov. Robert D. Ray bu ordered the remains of ftve lndian graves taken off public display after IDdian pro- testers suggested that the wWte man dig up t b e skeletona ol Wublngtoo or U!I> coin ti be wants bones to put in his museums. The governor said Wedne9- day the bones dllptayed in the state Historical Museum "Offend the sensitivity of at least some ol lbe people ol Ibis ,, slate." ~ BE REFUSED, b:>wever to -tu m over the remaiM to the Indians for r~ - The bones, wllkb bad been on exhibit 10< eigllt years, were removed by J a a k Musgrove, curator of the Dll1B1"Jlll. wllo dincted their exc&vation when they were discovered at a west Des , Moines construction site in 1963. MUSGROVE SALVAGED the bones, believed to date'to the 12th or 13th century, after a dump truck hauled the con~ents of 40 other graves .to a landfill site. He said, however, that the bones have both educational and historical significance and should not be reburied. What do doeiOrs' recommend ! for patients in pain? Ijoctors all over the country dispense over 50,000,000 : of these tablets to their patients each year. ~Cre are many medication!4 a tors recommend moet than any .ysician or. dcntii<l <~an pre-othrr ll'ading tablet. , !be for pain. Some are nar-l{eadach~and dental pain is c9llc. many arc available only rel ieved incredibly Wt; minor of ~ription. But there is one J>Hins of arthritis are depend-~ji{ ~l i~ver, available "."ithout ably eased for hourB; even the p~r1pbon, doctors dispense Dl'h(.>S and pains of colds and flu afain and again ... Anacin. respond to Anacin. So the ten- !Each year, doctors give over Mon and depression that can be 5~.~·~ A!laci~ tablets to c_aused by1such pain will be re- tlle1r pahenta Jn pain. If doctors heved too. And millions take ~ enough about Anacin to Anacin without stomach upeet. diipense all these tablete:, what When you're in pain, why better recommendation Can you don't you follow the practice of ask when you a re in pain? so many docton and take the You see, A~acin contains tablet a doctor might give xou more o( the pain reliever doc-in his own office. 'Thke Anacih•. / Builds op Size? Walking ti It On Your Chest LONDON (AP) -Ii Britllh mqulne b a I come up w!tli wbst co\lld be the .,,._ I<> a llat- chested maklen'• ;rayer -bum your bn and take a lo~ walk. Accordlng to HWblcb", the Consumer Alaocla- Uon'• monthly magazine. this .. appareDilY the only way glrlil with the Twiggy look can bloaom. into fUll- bosomed glory. SHORT OF plastic surgery, lhls was the only "happy ending" in a survey or bust..ctevelopi.ng aids carried. out among 13 women. . Tbe llUl'Vey produced a thwnb&<lown verdict on 18 produclt lell"1-C!U1111, water.-prays, pills and ex· erdsen. n-. it &aid, did • Jjil "' lblnP -... ....... llrls that bour- glul. lllbouette t b • y --.. CllEAJdS WEllE no ute at all and the water spcays -appomdly bu- ed oo a Frmcb cuatom thlt splashing cold water on the llreasts mU.. them flrme!' -were lltUe more than an expensive way to get wet. The magazine said the only real break-through ii Actress Slights Texas Governor AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) -Gov. and that Smith later said be co\lldn't recall becanse he waan't paying much attention. Preston Smith made actrea Shirley MacLaine an bononrry Tes:an and got a mild putdown !or bis trouble. THEN AS SHE ~ about to Smith visited with Miss leave, Mlsl Mad.aim said: Macl•tne, who wu here cam-"'lbant you for making p a i g n In g f<r George Sissy possible." McGovern, for a few minutes Later, Smith II.id he wasn't Wednesday in his private of-bothered by the actress' fice. 'nlen, the pair entered remark. could report , was that ol an anonymous reader who used to wear a bra becallle without it "I had no shape at all." AIL THAT changed ont summer when &be ditched her bra "becauae it made no difference to my ap. pearance at all" in a new smocl: drem. Soon, she wrote, her breuUI grew "because for the first time in my life the tissues In the breast. beeame eierclsed through the r!tylbrR of walking and movement instead o r being artificiall y restricted." Deodorizers Inj~ Cats DAVIS (UPI ) -JI your cat seems to be drunk, it may be a victim of poisoning by a household genn killer or deodorizer. Dr. Stuart A. Peopleo, a veterinary JRfes!O!' at UC Davis, said tba~ pheriol poison- ing obould be lllSpecied JI • cat staggers around tho bouse ss ii it "ts under the Influence of alc.ohol" or elhlbits muscle twitchel. the reception room, holdingJ;:::====================ii} hands. "She probably has been made an honorary citizen of Te1a1 before, but not by the present government," Smith smiled ., he oigned be< certificate. "THE NEXT TIME I am In TexM, I hope I am awarded Ibis by Sissy F..-enthold," Miss MacLalne said. Smith replied that while be, too, is a Democrat, like Rep. Frances Farentbold of Corpus Christi, be did not believe in everything that other Democrat! espoused. Mis.a MacLaine said aomethlng that was inaudible to newsmen standing nearby ALAN YOUNG Fot1ner TV Star - Wlft"•r of two Emmy Aw•rd• ...... .. "MR. ED'' --G•v• up l:.uiy c:are•r in •n• t•rt•i""'•"t to en9a9• i" • full time p r,•c:tic:• of Chrhti•n Sc:i•nce. MR. YOUN& WILL LECTURE SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 4th 11:00 A.M. IDWAIDS NIWPOIT CINIMA ,THUTll __ .,_ Subj.ct: '"CAN TOii lllllPl.T nvnr . Ev9ryoM i1 invi t ... to .tt.tMI -He c:h•f'9• The Treasury ~ ; 19" :1 I ! CHROMACOLOR. . ; I I ' "'--.. ·-. --~ -.. • is here to save you on a big selection of famous Zenith ' Color1V's Prove it yourseH. . ' -------.....' ' : ; I 19" ' I CHROMACOLOR' • . IDAYI ONLY' 16" diagonal screen portable ·the . reasu[Y famliy store and su permarket F••turetChromacol o,. plotu,.tuba and Chromatic e..in oolOrdemodillltll\' to r p1rf1ct colo rttnta. Tai-oping dlpOle-forllne ._ilon (Modi! " CS722) $288 . lhLJnday, Nowmbtr 2, 1q12 DAILY PILOT This outlet can save you up r to $30 lllil outlet mMM ygur hou .. 11 wired lor 220¥ and you can .... up to S30 by buying an electric: dtyef, The reeeon II th1t there wlll be no ptr1 wl""sl COltl for 6nlt1Watioro, encl elec:trlc dfYIJ• _. t30 i.. to buy than ga. In lact. II you dor!'t tiwe thll partlc:ul•r outlet, bu! you do Mv• #\ .iectrlc: range. thefe'1 all~ • WIY '(OU C#I •.ve. $338 THE PAIR F•bric C•re by Fti9idaire, featuring 1 the 1aundy peir' that can handle to. day11 f1brics , includin9 Xnif1 , perm•- nent press, delicates, synthetics and blend. This Fri9ida ire Jet-Action W asher has 9entle, thorou9h w•shin9 action, big I b lb . capacity, yet only 27 " wide. This Fr ig idaire electric dry- er features exclu ,iv e Flowing Hea t that eliminates hot spots, plus •n end- of.cycfe cool down and cycle-end signal. • 25 Years "' l1itegrl111 & Depe11dol>lll111 COSTA MESA ' EL TORO HUNTINGTON IEACH H.t.l lOI AllA 411 I. S.ue•l ... tti St. hly: ..... s.t. ,_, 646-1684 II TM'9 14. -' Ff..-.y I Nat te Se¥-ee I Dolly: 10·': Sot. 10·6 . 837-3830 FOUNTAIN Y.t.UIY lfMllHnt .. c;.flehll INe.t te Lite•y Mortietl Delly~ 10-6: ffl. 10.' 962-5528 RADIO DISPATCHED TV & Al'l'LIANCE SERVICE PHONE 541-3437 .... ·-\ ' . •l•AlllAD• Mill.I \&OOGAtts-mS:.•WOOIU•D11 Z1900~Slli •ll""91Mbltr • ...., ........ a11111 ... .,.... ............ La11Woot~1.· ,.....,.Ii ••••• ,, .......... ''",.. ... .... I 0 ....... tdl....,..11 .. 1 /) ' • I!• • • • • .. l : j .. j . I I • ... . l . ! I ' I .. . • " • ' • t . . • .. • ! • • . ' . . t • l ~ . . ' • • • • . ' .. • ' ' ' ' ' • . • • • .. °"' ... ,... ~ • ' I / . .• ' . DAILY PILOT Thllndar. N .... 2, 1~ . A ·; • • : ·: - Keeps Eye on Ball This young lady is part of Danish gymnastics team which will appear at Orange Coast College Nov. 1 O 3t 8 p.m. for demonstration of gymnastics and folk dances. Adm ission will be $2 for public. Residents Battle Meadowlark Plan By rtfICBAEL GOODRICll Of .. D•lry0Pllot ll•ff Hunting ton Harbour homeowners are expressing concern over a proposed plan vo'hich might lengthen the Meadowlark Airport runway and bring in larger planes. The proposal wouJd call for extension of the runway from 1.900 feet to 2.500 feet with provisions to pos11lbly extend to 3,oOO Teet. - A seven-man committee looking into establishing a count)"'city joint .. Po wers guarantee to build a 2.500-foot runway with space availab!~ to extend it to 3,000 feet. Bresnahan said expansion to 3;000 feet would not be man· datory under terms or the federal grant whose amouiit he could not estimate. The committee is studying a proposal to purchase Meadowlark golf course along with the airport and reroute th€-Jandtng sb ip t:lu bugh the golf course rather than over homes along Hie] Avenue. takeover of the airport is ex· BRESNAHAN SAID the ex· amining the plan u 'I means pansioo to a 2,SOO,foot runway to qualify for federal ftmding would not allow for larger of the project · ' planes to land, but Eggleston "All the facts of the pro-expressed fear that the 3,000- posal aren't in .yet, but I'm foot landing strip would open having troub l e with thewayforbigger a ircraft. homeowners perturbed about "lt's been menUoned that a any proposed increase of the OC-3 would be able to land ai rport," said Don Eggleston. there if the strip was 3,000 a Huntington Harbour resident fee t." said Eggleston. and vice-president of the "An expanded airport seems HOME CoUncll . to mean more planes and a R 0 8 E R T BRESNAHAN, county aviation d i r e c t o r . emphasized today that the plan was only being looked in- to and might mt even be ac- ceptable to the committee. To qualify for the federal funds. the county· c i t y organization would have to 2 Surfing Films Se t Two MacGillivray-Freeman surfing films -"Sea of Joy" and "Catch the Joy" -will be shown Friday in lhe Lagunn Beach High School auditoriun1. 1be showing is lo raise funds for passage of the coastal initiative, Proposllion 20. The program begins at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are $2.25 at the dOOI'. ( ' bigger complex,·• Eggleston added .. "The general con- sensus of the homeowners is that we don't want that." Under the plan to acquire the golf course property, the committee is also examining the possibility of establishing a recreational comlex on land .not taken up by the runway. BRESNAHAN SAID I h e Huntington Beach and county Recreation Commissions are looking into the possibility of rieveloPing a "total recrea- tion" contplex there. The county aviation director said the results of the findings would be taken into con- sideration when the committee makes a decision about pursu- ing the federal grant plan. Bug Pests Discovered Capitol Newt Servtce SACRAMENTO -How well is California's interior pest t'X· cluslon system worklngt Acrording to the State Ikpartment of Agriculture. during July, Au1l\15t a n d September, 125 shipments or plant material were rejec\td in the central part ol the state: 11\itty-flve important plant pests were intercepted 1n thL9 material which could have done exteMlve damage to Callromla'I farms, p I r k I, forest.I, recreaUon areas and home gard•ns . Among the pests found wt.re Gypsy moth egi:ts and larvae, European corn b o r e r , Colorado potato beet 1 e. melonworm, h ur row Ing nematode, little fire ant. magnolia white scale and citrus whlt.eny. -- .. j •• ... -. . -... ' ... Hi-Dottie doll 1011 • Battleship game Save 1.40 3.77 J Reg. 5.17 Play Family Airport 9.97 .... Talking G.1. JOe Save 1.53 4.44 Reg.5.97 , GRANADA HILLS 18000 Chatsworth SI. WOODLAND HILLS 21 500 Viclory Blvd. RIVERSIDE 3S20 Tyler SI. SANTA AptA 3900 South Bri1101 SI. \ ' I ' .. Tearful · Tender-Love doll 9~9:3 Snoopy power toothbrush asst ' 5.77 - Stick Shift assortment Save220 4.7~7:- Reg.6.97 • I TORRANCE S.pulvld1 ond HoWthorne LAKEWOOD Carson St. and Pa~1mount Blvd. BUENA p~RK Beach and Or1nve1horP:" ORANGE Garden Grove Blvd, and Mancheater < I ··..! Lazy Dazy ·'' doll ~:. Monday Night Football game Reg .4.97 • Superstar ..... ~. ..... ''! ~'fl:l to.._W ~· ~"' ·71 ,,., .. ' > 1rti ··M ; . 'J ""' ... . , l .. ·~. J . :_.,, : .. , "; ,• , ' '1,J . ·~t electric plane -9.77 oo~ .. o~ °"" _..,. l:IO IO l:JO -,.1oio1. . « • f • ' • Teacher Transcends Role • ' Uvlties to try to keep In contact wtth the school's 11,000 students. Funds Shared SACRAMENTO -Twenty- nine government (city, county I and IPflclal district) projects o 1 a r s hip ap- anii In ,line to lbare in the are now available state's 1pportionmmt o f for an who is under 30 -·- '1 hursda~. Novtmbtr 2, 1'172 Schol_.c Aptitude Testa must Sacrament , 9 5 I I 4 1Ti be t.akeo by Nov. 4. postmar before midnight Applicalioos are available on Nov Foderol Land and Water igh &ehool graudate by Conlervltlon Funds totalling the summer of 1973 or ac-E Wh t I R G d S llJ.I million, -ng to · e mo"' · ar e n ST AR rrom the office of Sen. Jamesr==;t::-.======; Wllllam Penn Mott, perks and cepted for admi.uion·to an ac-Grove), 131 6 1 Brookhurst , Sydney Oman ta one or "I TRY TO SEE THEM 81 people and recreat.loa director for the credited college tn California. Garden Grove, 92643, ~. 1hP w<>rlAts g~at ut1·olo. oot to see them as students" Is his state. Included are 10 county, A,tota! of 11,200 scholanhip They must be submitted to e;crs. Ill• column ls one ot • 14 city and 5 special diidrlct• awards range from $500 to the State Scbolanhlp and thl' DAILY PILOT'S rrtat j teacb.1ng pbllospby. And ' when many of · t .. 1JM.. In d to l'f Loan Commission, 714 P St., Cea turn. them visit him with IOUlelhing they want 1--.'.:p:.:ro::.JeC::•::.· ______ _:~:::-='-=.....:0::.:' ::er:......:::._::qua=• .::Y ·:......::=-=-==-=-=:......::========= URY 'TOO OLD' . . 0 BE HIS PEERS WASHINGTON (UPI) -A judge tmn11sec1 members of a jury panel here the ground that were too old to con- tttllii!oa "jwy of peers" for a ~year-old­ charged With Possession of marl· 'WHAT CAN I DO' Henry. S. Pon Ion the studeota ••• it's what I can do for them" that is important. This typical student request haS shown him "the classroom has b e co m e ste..otyped by students." Large numbers of stµde!lls 1 n classrooms and an aloof attitude of many of 1hem toward authority bas stereotyped both students' and teacher' roles until there is leu and less interaction between them, be aay!J. rr IS MORE difficult than before to overCome the anocymity created by the large classes: "We're almost strangers with a very little In common. You must &pend more time breaking down the Strangeness that exists," be says. A -11o11r ....ion with 35 students does oot give Pan1an enouch time to ade- quately ei:cbanle ideas during a semester, so be gives w r l t ten assignments: In _his 15-year teaching career, 00 baa found students reveal their individuality more fully on paper. In 19:j6, his lint year at OCC, he recalls be knew almost everyone. But to- day, be saysibe mmt go to all student ac- to discus>, he llateos lo them and talks about their interests. He clalma be II careful not lo influence his studenll' deciaioos. In the classroom, be believes hls authoritarian role could wrongly influeoce 1hem as they sll; a captive audi~, before him. Several weeks ago, a student spoke up In class about one of the propositions that will appear on California ballots Nov. 7. Paolan bad not inlroduced the subject but be allowed equal class time to a stu- dent wbo volunteered to speak on an op- posing viewpoint. lo' WHEN 11IE TWO students had finis~ ed, l'anlan says be 8llllOllllCed he would dlscusa the llsue with anyone alter class because be believed they abould bear· both aides, he able lo dlscusa them and have .confiden<e In being able to make their own declslons. His time away ' from sdJool Is spent with his family at home In Costa Mesa, his gl!den . of 385 plants and assisting with ·various municipal, county and con- ~skmal campaJgns. He has threJ children: Richard, 11, who is ,a scout with Troop 339; Loren, 15, a student at Costa M..a High School and member of its Pep Club; and Loren, S, a first-grader at C&Iege Park Elementary School. • His father, Loul5 Pani.an, is 13, and lives in Costa Mesa. . Eagle Hunt.er Fined $500 CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) -The former manager of a flying aervlce was fined l500 by a federal judge here after pleading guilty to tak- liJg part In the !tilling of 74 eagles. Doyle Vaughan of. Story, Wyo., fC111per manager · of the Buffalo Flylng'8ervice, also pleaded guilty to a coospiracy charge lodged following a federal Investigation of the deatbs of eagles in the winter of 1970-71. The Treasury is her~~to save you. Prove tt ypurseff .-· <· , ·' • ~MU.I 1IOOOChata~SC. WOOUUi111HLL12t!OO Vldory Blvd. llNll•IDl-T,itr St. IMITA--Soulh ~ristot St . ' ' ,~ 538 CENnR STREET-COSTA MESA 646-1919 AC2 Basketballs -5.95 CB2 Blem. Basketballs 8.95 CB2 Ref. BasketbaUs 12.95 Red-WhHe -Bme ABA Basketballs 9.95 Leather Basketballs 19.95 & 28.95 U6 & LF7 Footballs -7 .95 CF9S Blem. FootbaOs -9.95 NFL FootbaUs -24.95 Leather Vollef Balls -10.95-12.95-17.95 Voit Volleyballs -4.25 to 10.95 Leather Soccer Balls -10.95 & 17.95 4 Square Balls -3.95 Penn Xtra Duty Tennis Balls 7.95 Doz. Wilson Heavy Duty Tennis Balls 7.95 Doi. Outdoor Hand Balls -95c Racquet Balls 1.25 Table Tennis BaHs -15c-25c-30c ea. OPEN 9 to 6-Closed Sunday " : ,· ' : ;i ; i I ij II J f ~1-I t f ; •• ·-... ••• , t , ...... . ..... ,.1 ... 1. • Adidas Tennis Shoes 16.95 Converse Tennis Shoes -Mens 8.50 Ladies 7.95 lack PurceH Tennis Shoes 9. 50 All PulJlllse Shoes 9.95 All · Star Basketball Shoes 9.50 Adidas BasketbaH Shoes -19.95 Dunlop Tennis Rackets Frame Only 15.95 Kramer Autograph Rackets Frame om, 16.95 Stan Smitli Autograph Racket Frame On~ 16.95 Davis Classic Frame On~ -32.00 T2000 Racket Strung Nylon 34.95 Junior Tennis Rackets 4.95 to 15.95 Roleigh Blkos-10 Speeds & 3 Speeds Moto-Beco .. 10 Spoecl BlkH Tires -Tube1 -P•rt1 Bike Rep•iring" - Racket Stringing 538 Center -646-1919 • ..... .. I , ' • • ' . ' • • . ' ' l • . I . • • • .. ' . t • I • : .. " ~ • • " • • • ' • ~ • I lo A op lido • Im- • ... °"' ..... ... •• ... ,... • -J8 DAILY PILOT ·.Securities St rategy ' '· '.Big Brother' Arrives on Scene • • A s·t Paper Losses on Stocks Mean Benefits To Ove rlook Stare ~ult;> Repairmen1 By SYLVIA P<lRTER Fourtli tn a Strie1 If you have paper losses on your stocks as '72 draws to a close, one comfort would be getting your maximum tax benefits from them. Here is what to do: First, find out your tu posi- tion right now. List all stock. tran.sacti.'.>ns you have ,com- pleted to date. Divide your gains and losses into long- tenn sales and short- tenn sales. Long -tenn capital gains "o•T•• a n d losses are those on shares held for more than six months before sale; short-term gains and losses are those on stocks held for six months or less before sale. SECOiID, UST your paper gains and losses on stocks you still hold -also divided into long and short-term potential gains and losses. Third, check your 1971 tu return for any capital .losses you had in earlier years which you could not use up on your last ret1"fll and which can be carried over to 1972 and later years. You can use any unused ca pital Joss carryovers from previous years. on Your 1972 return -just as if you took the losses now. With thi s, you have the in- formation nece~ry to decide your actions -recognizing, of course, that your tax savings ., Donald C. Berman has been appointed director of product as&urance of the Missile and Space Division of Celesco Industries in Costa Mesa. Berman joins Celesco from Tracor, Inc. of Austin, Texas where he was product assurance director. He and his wife and two 9003 reside in Newport Beach. * WllUam K. Hood of Newport Beach has been appointed president of Hunt-Wesson Foods, Inc., a subsidiary of Norton Sbnon, Inc. Hood joined Hunt-Weason in ' J.985 u chief ffnanctal ol· ncei-. He be- came vice president of administra • in 1967 and later senior vice presi- dent. In April HOOD 1972 he was elected o:ecutive vice presi- dent in charge Of operations and has been acting president for the last several months. * Huntington Beach tt.!ident Stephen Mlllllfleld hal been named controller of the soft drinkl division of Coca-Cola Bottling . C:Ompany of Los Angeles . Mallllfield. fonnerly finan- cial adviser with Hukins and Sells, received his degree In accounting from BaU State C:Ollege. * G. Lewis '&.ldwla, an ex- ecutlve of the Irvine Com· pany, has been named "Man of the Year" by the California Avooedo Society. * Imperial Bank Ms aJ> polnted William E. Manhall vtce president and manager of the newly opened office in CoetJ Mesa. Manball bejan his banking career with the Royal Bank of Canada ln 196$. He and his wife and three chlldren reside in Anaheim. * ' fo"'ormer Laguna B e a c h Councilman Richard K. Stan, hu beetl appolnted vlce-preal- dent of tmp&oye relations at Av"'1 P.-, Corponttoo In Son Morino. Seara joined 1be «>mpony In must be substantially larger than your costs in com- missions and taxes to justify any moves from strictly a taz viewpoint. Here are your guidelines for proper year-end tax-saving steps : IF YOU HAVE already reallzed a net capital gain from sales during '72, it may now pay to sell stock oo which you have paper losses. .Xou ma y find this particUlarl y true if y o u r previous sales in 1m have resulted in net short-tenn capital gains -which are fully taxable just like ordinary income. You can reduce your short-term gains by taking ei ther short·term or long-term capital losses you now have on paper. One caution: il you also have already taken long-term gains, any lQng.f.erm paper losses you take now will first have to be subtracted from your long-term capital gains. So, if you have both short and long-term gains, try to take the short-term paper losses you can subtract to wipe out your short-term gains. IF YOU HAYE more than enough pBper losses to offset all your capital gains for '72, you may want to sell enough stock to offset oot only all your gains but also to give you a net capital loss you can deduct from your regular in- come. You can deduct in any one year up to $1.000 of net capital loss from your ordinary in· come, but the way your loss is counted depends on whether it is long 01· short-term. You can 1969 8J director of employe relations. He is a member of the board of directors of the Easter Seal Society of Orange County as well as e member of the San Onofre Surfing Club and the Newport B ea c h Athletic Club. He i-esides ifl Irvine. * Edwin A. Greatrali:e, as.m. lant Vice president for loans at the Su Gabriel ....... of Amerfel, iparka liit'llth'..,,_ .llfV..,,i..y with the bonk. Greatrake begau hli career as a teller in Los Apgelea:' He we promoted to officer rank in 1951. He and hia Wife and three chUdren live 1n Irvine. * rrr JablCO Pnducts has named Fall Stone as western regional sales manager. The Costa Mesa subsidiary of International Telephone and Telegraph Co'lJOrallon hired Stone as a buyer in 1966. He most recently served as area sales manager f o r recreational v eh l c le com- ponents. He residea in Tustin with ~is wife and two children. * \, Joba Grden of El Toro has . been appointed vice president and mana- ger of the c.osta Mesa office of Av- co S.vtn11 and Lou A• oodaU... Grden, who hal .... ed as manager a11o•M of the Costa Mesa branch for the put year. was formerly an aasiJtant vice president of the assoclaUon. Prior to joining Avco Sav- ings. he W8I asai.stant cashier nperatiof\S officer with Golden State Bank in Pico Rivera. / * Huntington Beach resident John J. McPbWlp1 has joined the Los Angeles office of Cabot, Cabot .. "°""' U a marketing repreaent.aUve ol the firrr.'s industrial dlvlslon. Prior to hl1 appointment. McPhllllp!I Wit vice president of sales for Michael O'Rourke and Associ~tes in ~ Angeles. Who Ceres? No other newsi-.prr 1.n thf world cares about your oom- munlty Uk• your commwrlt)I 11au, ....... I*'_ -. ir. the-DAU.Y "PILOT. dedod yoor abort-term losses Sl for $1 from your ordinary income, but your long-term losses must be deducted fl for SI from your ordinary lnoome. SACRAMENTO {AP) llceme can be revoked . or unit of ~ atai. lle~ment When Calilomians have a beef ~ed for -amona: other of Consumer Affairs. with an auto repair shop, they things -"any w 111 f u I can tell their troubles to a new departure from or dl1ttgartt lN .TRB F IR. S 'I' three of acc.pted lrade atandonh monlhs of t~ fi3oal year, the state c o n 11 u m er protection for good and workmanlike auto repair bureau , handled 1 • • • there hu been a --and try to work things 00\IJ f10 everyone Is bappy. -Aboaq,.. out of three.cues ere· "l!llod that way, Aleiander aa~'l'~ FINANCE agency. repair." 7,..,S complaints, Alexander It's part of what state of· For Instance, a driver tn the said In an lnteniew. The ; Thus, If you wlnd up in "12 with a $1,000 net short-term loss, you can deduct that en- tlre-Sl,000 from your ordinary income. But l! you have a "72 '---------"' flcials regard as the most San Francisco area ~ ·figure represented mOre tbo:in so p h istlcated government· paid more than $200 to have one-third of all conrumei' com~ net long-term km Qf $1,000, it can give you only a $500 deduction from your ordinary income. Earnings Up backed auto coosurner pr.. his car engine n!placed, !hen plalnts logged during the tecti on plan In the nation. found the original engine was period. First~uarter earnings In-still in the car. A bureau in-Aleunder's agency doe!n'l creased 21 percent on a 9 per-TO STAY IN business, all of vestigation resulted ln a handle new car warranty Bur WHAT lf you hold cen t gain in sales, Beckman California's approximately crlmiJJal complaint charging disputes and it doesn't step in stock.a on which you have In s truments , Inc. has 35,000 auto repair shops must the garage owner with grand on auto repair cases until the paper losses, but which you reported. have a $50 license from the theft. customer b a s C<lmplained are cOOfident will go back up? For the three months ended Ca I i f or n i a Bureau of Bureau Director Robert unsuccessfully to the garage Can you take the paper losses Sep~ber ~. earnings were Automotive Repair. Alexander aay.s his agency U owper. ~ JORN II.ACK .... CON~lESS for tu-saving purpose.s and $1,\4:7,l'l9, or 32 cents Per 1be law that created the the only one of its kind ln the .Ttle bureau will then call the yet teep the stocks! share, on sales of $36,~,314. bureau last March ·says a nation. It was created as a c•aae owner, let him kboW You cannot simply sell your I--,.__.:. ____ .:_:_.:__:.:.:::.:.::::._=.:_:=.:::.=::::__:___:::::::::_.:_:_.::::...:::==....:::....:.....'~:!:....:::'.:'..'...-:'...'.:.::..:::'.:::!!!!'!!"!' securities and immediately repurl!h2se them; this is a "wash" sale that bars )'.OU lrof11, deducting yoar los.s. Ndt can you buy the identical shares within :Ml days jJefore or alter your sale at a loss. But there are other ways to achieve your goal: •switch into s i mi I a r securities in the same field on the reasonable assumption lbat the sJocka of eqUivalent companie.s In 'the sime in· dustry unerally will · mbve together. •SELL OUT, realize your paper lo!.!, wait more than 30 days, repurchase the identical stock. This procedure is based on the hope that the stock will not rise in the :.> days after your sale. If you guess wrong, you'll have made an in- vestment mistake. •Double up m y o u r securities for more than . 30 days and then, more than 30 day.s after buying the seeond block of shares, sell the origlnal shares at a lo.ss. If the price increases ln the 30 days, you have your tax loss plus a pape r profit. If it drops, you have your tax 1065 and an in- vestment mistake. But suppose you h a v e substantial paper profits you want to freeze now while delaybtg the profit for tax purposes until 1973. 1ben sell your stock short now and freere the profit. But you won't report the profit for tax purposes until next year when you deliver your stock against 1be short sale. MARSHALL AT STEWART nnE Jim Ma(lhall, Jr., recently appolntlld district. salet man- ager ~or the · Huntington Beach area by Stewart Title Company, ii following In his father's foc::itateps ln serving the real estate bul1neu. • .11111 ~Jr, The 30-year~ld Marshall Is the son of James M11.nh&ll, vice prealdent and manager for Westalde Mortgage Co. In Ora.nge County. He joined Stewart Title Company of. Orange ~unty when the Houston-hued title lnsunnce firm re-entered the local market on Septem- btt 25 of th!. ~ar. Stewart headquartrn i. locat<.'CI at 900 North Broadway In Sonta Ana. Jim Jr. had 11. decade u fl. sl ni;rer and muildan, and latt>r a public relaUone man· , a~t>r for Ge:nen.I Talent As· ~rK'latlon, a mualc publlthlng company. Sonn,y 6 Cher, The IA-ttermen and the Beach · Boy• we9 some of the en- tcrta!nen he handkd. As a 1tngmo and: mutlcian, the Pittsburgh. PL·born Mar- sh&ll was u.oclated with several 11.natn1 KJ'OUpl In the Mtt. which recorded a num- ber of recordl which re!ed l\mong the top 10 In the na· tlon. STEWART nm co. 900 N. ROADWAY SANTA ANA ... .... 1114 \ • Soutli :,Coast -Plciza ~,. +.. BU~ 0 TOUll G~·, NOVJi' CAMERA NO !OR THI UPCOMING HOLIDAY SEASGNI • • • • < ~ -~ GAF . "GOVERNS" GOOD PICTURES . •. ST/1~ l!;M . SUPER 8 MOVIE CAMERA WITH10-TD-1 POWER ZOOM -~---.. ......-• Jullputil a bu!IOll .•. and lfw r.tfl.f.7 ..... _, llv!n U<!l111 wi<'-9l'OllfMI• .... ~ ..... • • • ' . ... ~ ............ _ .... ......, ... ~ SAVE IMIJ'°"hlcltlnoroutol--~y • lnclucltl CdS lllllOfl\Mlc "'9clllc• with l!llllllll~lorcOl!ll>leM....-conftf • Aoolpll 111tre-t111 GN !IOO 819di l WNtit Film fot m<Mt -.lllngwllh lowlewl Ulur!llllMlol\.tl'IDOt $150 bmHball orfootbell g1111R ml n!oht llllilltl' lood-llllltW. or nlgtrt "9llts..,,... llOQllll .uwt liaMlnlZI • "'*flt~ JllOllofl CIOllllOI • fleOl'tc:~d!tM.lkillMnbltlefy........ • -.. -.... .......... -.. . NOW ON• iy . · !'kit_,,-.~....._ . ... BY GAF REPRESBITATIVES SATUR:DAY, • NOVEMBER 4th, Al WESTEllS . USI GUil LAT A WAT REGUlAR PRICE 34951 GAf.MAKES PICT1'RES NOW roa CB1'1STMAS "PERl'E~TL T CLEAR" llDNL!B.9.A lqlO color film PROCESSING =!.1:.Tz-:~::197 12EXP • SILK ....... BORDERlESS ·*SllUDCEIESISTAllT5·9 7PRINTS *21'41111EmllE 20 EXP. * I• COllRS "'' .. ,,, "" ..... 11• ..... , .... It •llll'fl'll: NOR EL CO FLASHCUBES cfn. of 3-. II COLOR PRINT FILM 126-12 EXP IU PltCE .11 #41111 PAJE MAGNETIC ALBUM 47 IH Pl lCE 1.11 AGFACHROME C·60 WSEITT FILM RECORDING TAPI IH PllCE 2.15 YMKEE 20% ROJO 1RA YS 111... OFF GAF SAWYEI PIO~~IS 0 ARTISTE de la Rue 5 JU OI All A&FA ENlARGING: .·· PAPER -Thrv s.1. ' IU PllCE ~/1.11 lll·PllC( sus·l.71 ·D· To Dr. I-ti •Cibik, •tl!e.UC 1.ont: be s - Cammi •• I Ttlandly, Nowmbtt 2, 1972 DAil Y PILOT jfj • inner oHonor ....,.,..,to,r Student Mak _ ..... Prop. 2 Crusade A-lie----devollof bis .... IJGllt from n.otlZll llA YI be wu General -y-and Join H ...... , wbo beads tbe CalUornla Labor hderotion. •"TbrJ average penon can wall!: into the average hospital em.-gency lflom and be foro- ed to wait two or three hours to tee •• doctor • countered 10me oppo1ilioo to the m<dlcal facilities bond lllue. Talk Set ByDocwr Dr. Jean F. Crum, pte<ldent of lhe • CalUomia Medical Association, will address a Nov. 14 dinner meeting ol the Southern Cali forn ia Podiatrists. , --to lllrrti>c 1111>" lo Watts llld WU we~ the port for Pnlp.1 oo the~ way to booming a " exican bar i.oot ,viJlted ~ hood, I Padlooo" ti! hliJ County WI ftS. latber moved the Hy lo \JOO ~ 21, I aaaior ,It Lancasfor. Why la Joa ll'IGroa working .. bard for • bCIOd lalue? • "I want this measure to pus for evtrybody, but It's jUst a mlnortty 1tudent's w1y to repay the medical school for what has been committed to minority programs," he states. "B~CKS WILL only agree to support the isalt 11 medical school olficlall will guarantee Uwn a flied quota of places in such schools," he explained. Surprisingly, about half his classmates al UC Davis are opposed. he said. Dr. t'nim wlll speak about health manpower and health care delivery sy!terns at the 7 p.m. dinner at the Disrttyland Hotel. For more infonnaUon, call Dr. Crum at (213) 869-4505. HEADED DRIVE Dr. Nlnburg the UC Davill medical school, Flores proudly d I s p I a y s frankly admits that h l s copies of letters endorsing the "crusade" is i.Mpired by bis meaaure from Gov. Ronald desire lo provide b e 11 er Reagan, state aecretary of medical service lo Cb1cano Health and Welfare Earl W. communities. B r I an, ~ 11fE M ED IC AL "mi9- He says the Issue bas March ~x. Fong and YYOODe sionary" saya be wants to received the endonement of W. Brttlll'llt'alte, a 8 a e m b 1 y help the averag~ person get some ot California's biggest speaker Bob Moretti, Attorney better medical services. When you move into a neighborhood, l t ' 8 com- rnonpl~ not to be •ble to get into a doctor's oliice because the practices are often clos. ed," he argues. "With Mex- ican-Americans the problem is IO-fold worse. We don 't ha ve the econom.k: power to draw docton into o u r com- munities." "They give a wide variely of reasvns but they all boil down to one thing, they want less doctors so that they can make more money easily," he ac- cused. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Flores admits he has en-heod ol the !Jrael bond drive for the past oeven years. polltlcal and labor leaden. It ..:!:..::.:::::::.~:::::.:.c..:..:..:.,;_~..:....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ would provide $156 million In For reservations, contact the bond committee at 547- 5537. booda for building medical and veterinarian facilities on UC 2640 Harbor'Blvd. ' . COSTA MESA ttuni~tit$ OPEN DAILY 9 to 5:30 SUNDAYS 9 to 5 IT'S "IN"... IT'S INDOOR GARDENING! ' "' It's Also FaelBadllg, EDUC:ATIONAL atul ha I Indoor plants for every room . , • TERRARIUMS lass "bubbles" already ted. Several shapes sizes from which· to FROM 14.95 SHELL GARDENS lanted sea shells. Table be up 'to patio size. FOOM 5,50 BON>AI aditional Orle nt11.l nsai trees. Alar:vclous if ts. H OM 7,50 SPECIAL Choice small plants for planters, dish-gardens and temuiums. l fOI 1,00 SPEC JAL Attractive a ny\vhere . "Fluffy Ruffled Fems." 1.98 HERB GARDENS Grow near the kitchen. Have Herbs at your finger. tip!. 1,79 TO 11.95 Plants the kids will go for ... VENUS FLY TRAP Sensitive to the touch. It catches Insects bf fold· ing its leaves. 1.49 REDWOOD BURLS These Co me trom the oldest and largest tree. on earth. They aprou l 1.98 coa'RA LILY Looks like the C ob r a snake. )ta nectar attracts and destro)'I Insects. . 4.95 E ALSO HAVE everything you need to start an Adventure in Bonsal, Ines and Junipers ,., u . Dwarf Elms 2.50, Auorted conta1¥rs from ·"· t the fixln's' EARTH 'n' WARE Terrariwn Kits. Attractive Glau ylinders in 4 sizes from i. 79. Great for Terrariums or dried arrangements. "You'll Got lcle11 Galoro Whon You Visit Our Gardon Shopl " CALENDULAS unny yellow and onnge owers to e nJ o 'I all nter Jong. ,79 DOZ. Sptcial -priCt'S Good £hru. Nov. B. • • • WINTER BLOOMING FAVORITES PANSIES Excellent bulb eovtt. Beddln1 ulf.nl favorites-. .,,_ • CYCLAMEN A bright add1tJon to low., 11\ady 1pota. Bt9.uutul In ........ 1.49 _.am~~ PHONE 54"'5525 llClmcll JUTVUll ' llO "IONUS" SH HTS AND PlllOW CASUI MO "IONUS" IOUOOll CHAJIS BEAUTllUL THINGS ARE HAPPENING IN OUR RESIDENTIAL l~TEft,IORS dept. INTRODUCING OUR NEW SUEP UNE FOR '73 ~ llllP•PBBITI ''~~~~'~'' . A FllM MATIIESS WITI 312 COIL INNBISPllNC COMFORT EA. PC. HUN llatllus l lu S1ri11..128'! 11115 lattms & 2 los S1rl1p .. f78~ .... 11 • LIW, llW PllCE ..• llUBY m 11•E IET·IP "SUPllMI" SIO COIL ' INNllSPllNG MAlllW . UOOJlll' llAITQ Wl1IOl*!-tl!llU Clll.llllll USlD IA UAOtlot: HOIUS Oii lltE 11£ST COASI. OASfAS< COY!l-CMR 1001 POl.llOASI PAllOllC (•tr• coiil .r. ..,.. Clllltft .. ttmce. a.id·• ..-wJ. . r16\ll·pqt cal ~llC. W ''' utr• In C.-«t 11111 lcUI NW\. 'IWmllAnaD rwNtMAmtu .,_MtTllN• .. .......... 138" .. -.... •Tl• .. ••• 148 11 ·-·-.......... 178'' -- ................ so 4411 _,.. i.< 4888 '-'~'""'. ,. I 8'' --· 19911 ... - -~ 21811 ... ""'""'""' 268 " ... l .. .......... Li re. -..,,i"' a... . Li r<. J 1 ... 1~1-c en h1 PC .. ,, d ........................ ~, ... _ • -·f EOSTA ESA . ... DI.-,, .... y at "'"" . ~ . OAllT.,.. l,\TUll AT r•-.•••,. \f•OAl lt AM te 7,. "fhtft•tl Ith,-., .. '""'"' a.= • • " -. . I.:; E. ( •• ~ "" ke he .. • to ... iq ~b · '· • . , ' pl .. 10 A o)'i. II> .. op -.. . • In> ·-.. Ott --·-..... = • I • ' Police Dog'! 'Bruiser,' a purebred Bouvier del Flanders, of Belgium descent, is the first K-9 Baltirilore Police dog not of Ger· man ancestty. His mas- ter is Officer Lawrence Malst. Bill Blass Bares It In Style _NEW YORK (AP) -S.xy, slinky and bare Is the Bill Blass look for evening next spring. The accent at night should be on glamor, Blass feels, and be sticb strictly . _to !bat guideline in tbe e v e n I n I ~ and pajamas -. this week at hll!I spring col· lectkm at the Plaza Hotek "THIS JS MY favbnte," Blus aid, u I model gUdod clown the runway la 1 cll!!IY long jersey dNll showing plenty o! boooni Ind bore back.· The scooped halter neckllne started just barely above model's abdom<n, and the back was cut away at the waist. Blass liked the dress IO much he showed It in three color schemes -blue and beige, whit .. and peach. A FAVORITE with the au· dlence was another long jersey dress -this one in melaWc beige with a gold snaiHkin cardigan jack<t. A varlatloo T 1' e v fe...,re4 deep V neefcs, lualters sflo..,ln9 lots of naked Hek ••• on that theme was evening pa- jamas with a top of the same snakeskin material and a plunging neckline. Blass' other e v e n I n g dresses, short and Jong, were alao designed to evoke male whistles. 1bey featund deep V necb, hllten lhowlng Jots or lllked bact and clinging materta11 lib georaette and crei><- For daytime, however, Blau returned to his tradition of elegant, undentated clothes. RE EMPHASIZED dreues and belted suit.I In soft, now- Ing fabric1, wlth m o 1 t hemllnel jwit above the knee. Blau say• he want.a women to be able to weer bla clothel rrom spring thnlugl> !all, oo the ''nooseuonal" col.on of beige. navy and w h I t e predominated In the collection. Stripes were emphasized, 11 In 1 navy and white striped double-breasted coat over a metchlng 1klrl and Wool voile 1hlrt. 1be 1trlpes were con- tinued In a cowboy kerchlel over the lhlrt and ln a head turbo. Caskets Hit LONDON (AP) -The N1- . tJonal Unk:ln of r u n t r e I ~ Operatlvea hat doclnd •If oppOoed to the 1111 ot pWtlc llld cardboard ...... wllldl K Aid'...,_ lllMe ... lltrllllr Iowwtna ol funeral ltandlrdl." • ' ThwSc!IJ, 2, 19 2 ..................... ' • • HEAL TH SCIENCES FACILITIES . PRONJslTION A NON· PARTISAN ISSUE In Calihtrnia more doctors die, or retire, than Clre giiacl_uat-. . . . -- ' ed each year. Result: decrease in badly needacl mecllcal services. The bond cost is low. Less than 1' per week per P.rsot1• Bonds ·will be paid out of general funclsj-~ot .pro1terty taxes. Pa.ssi'9g the bonds will quallfy CaHfoniia for matching Federal grants. The Unlve~ of C•llfomla Mecllcal 'School In Or.an.ie ~Cou~· ·~; .... ..;. .... ~ .. !!11\f~.y~... .. c Vl'tft-"' .. 'I&" ' • ':,·]!( .......... .· . ' \ . t~ :t ~. . -.,. ~ •<to." .... ~ .. ty will receive sufRclent funds for a new teaching hospl.tal and riii(or"lileclleld-reMCifih "c•fffe•-O~ .. ~-e.i.i1ly need .. - Passage of the bonds m-ns more lobs . and more business for Orange Countians-on a continuing basis. -· ' -C•':>."•,..::-::-:-~.-....... _ -. Among The Many Supporters of ~11i1on 2 Ares • Eleded Officials Organizations Ora .... County Citizens Asaomblymln Robar! Bldh1m Auemblywoman Yvonne Brathwaite Assemblywoman March Font AIMmblyman Robert Mon191n Al'"'""1Jm1n Robert Moretti Senator Dennis Carpenter Senator Goo.,. Moacona Senator James E. Whetmor1 Go..rnor Ron1ld R-n Lt. Gevernor Ed Reineck• Schoola Suporlntandont Wiison Rllu A,_blJmln John V1-lloa Attomoy -11 Evelia Yovngor Pwt11•stor ~ G. OodlnOI F~ GOv.mor Edmund G. Brown TM Hononblo E1rl Warran John H. Burton, Councilman, City of Irvine Alvin M. Coon, Mlyor, City of Hunt!""°" llMch Arthur J. Ho!"'"' Mlyor, City of Sin Cl-..to Chari" H. L°"" "Mlyor, City of Loa Al1mltos Clifton Miiiar, Mlyor, City of Tuatln J ... F. Pwn. Mlyor, City of Or ..... Robert E. Root, Mlyor, City of, Fullerton Oon1ld 0 . Winn, Mlyor, City of Villi P1rk Wllll1m J. Phillipa, O.C. Supervisor, 3rd Dlatrlct R1lph II. Cl1rk, O.C. Supervisor, 41h Olalrld • w-~·· Auxilllry, O.C. Modle1I Auocl1tlon -l<1n l.etlon Auocl1tlon of 0-.11 Contr1ctor1, E-ut1 ... ComrnlttM Auocl1tlon of 1nc1_..i..,1 Coll-ind Unlnnl!IOI of C.llfornl1 C1llfornl1 Firm BUl'Mu C1llfoml1 Hoapltal Auocl1tlon C11lfornl1 Llbor Fadar1tlon, AFL -CIO C1llfoml1 NUrlM Auocl1tlon Clllfonm PlrOnt-T-hon AMocl1tlon C1llfornl1 Phlrmoceutle1l AMocllllon C1llfornl1 TIXJ>IYO" AMocl1tlon C1llfoml1 Voterlnary Modle1t AMocl1t1on Chlmbor of COft!ITl•rce of Onnge County Chamber of C.-rce, St1te of C1llfornll M""Jcon.ArnorlCln Llbor Council Orange County Modle1l A-lltlon I < Mr, ChlrlOI R. Ablo Mt. ChlrlOI W. HOiter Mr. E. C. Aldrich Mr. dydo Ha,..n Mr. Vlcter Andrews Mr. Carl Karcher Mt. H1rry Blbbltt Mt. Donald P. Kannady Mr. J•mes IHm Mr. Wallor Knott 0., Arnold 0. Bock1111n Mr. John B. Lawson Mr, Toni llll<kmln Mr. R1lph Luthoitly Mt. Roy C. Bolt Mt. John Lun Mr. J. R. Latter Boyle Mt. Wllll1m R. Mlson Mr, E. a Buster Mr. Tom Mlthow Mr, P1ul Cl_.y Mr. Wllllom McG1rvoy Mr. Keith F. Cordrey Mr, W1ltar Miiiott Mr. W. '· Croddy Mr. c .. 1_, Morris Mr ......... o-pator Mr. John Murdy, Jr. Mr. I. N. 0-,.. Mr. Hltoahl Nitti Mr. J. S. Fluor Mr. Pater J. Rommel Mr. Chlrloa Giibar! Mr. 0 . W. Olck Rlchlrd ' Mr. Roloori Gvgganholm Mr. James "R•ncfy" Salter Mr • .-... -Mr. Willer Schmid • Mr. Loo_I_ Mr. Oonn wun..,,. Mr. Glvln S. Horbort, Jr. Mr. J1...., T. Wortunan ' -........ o.mp~­ .................. 1 ... LL .... a · r.o ... ,.,,._.,_ • •• • 1 f ~ " ') j I t , • • I • • ! , ' • • ;i • • • ' • ' ' ' , ' ' i. I. • • . , • • . ' • . ' • -• • • • ~ •• .. •• • ., • ~ ~ • '{> •• I ' # .. ~ ~ "· • . • . • .. • • { ' ~ ' ' ' ' ! ~ • • " £ • • • • ' F·VHS ·Stu~ en ts Rate 'A' I .By ALLISON DEERR . Of fb• o.itr r1 .. 1 ltett 1' • • • • -• . ' 't \ , ;·w11ep ,1 lqok ba?k ~ane ~ re811f pro- ""'80lj .II I,ol, She can do so m~dl that afie ;..;,..,. '! .before. When I i:om< to get . r-~~ r. JIM. she ls 80 happy to see me, arid· a lot ~ ' rl times she likes to just climb up on my lap and hug." The words are simple, writte n neatly on an index card. They report feelings about a morning's work by a Fountain Valley High School .student at Fairview State Hospital. Two years ago a handful of FVHS students enrolled in a special work-study program. They were bused to Fairview to work for two hours each school day with teachers and technicians at Fair- view's school. Their number has grown to .ro and plans are being made to include 200 students ne:s:t semester atd. expand the progtam throughout tbe entire bqspital. ~ Kenneth E. •Wa(llins, ~inator of educational! senricest said tlje Com- munity ClaSsrom:n ~am·. offers high school students an opportunity to learn Crom er.pedence and involvement in the commwUtY as weU iB in. the traditional classroom. CAAEER' IDEAS • Studen!s explore Cftters in the beelth fiektl and act as community liaisons for Fairview. They give residerils an QP-- portunity to meet age peers from outside the hospital , be helped with learning· and develop more normal relationships than . are possible wittnn the residential facili- ty. Fountain Valley students work with the blind, blind-deaf and visoolly han- dicapped; in aduJt social development, habilltation, behavior adjustment and child development. According to Dr. Watkins the students are more like teaching assistants than regular volunteers, providing one-to-one • attention the hospjtal staff cannot. P11il Greengus,. teacher of the blind, WorkS with 19 FV'.HS students. ~·The kids are fantastic. They are ~e to establish rapport and greal· r<latiooships witij the W o rking one-to-one with students at Fairview school is reward ing for Foun tain Vall ey HS st~d ents in clud ing Su e Bend e r (above ), Valerie Ford , far right. Dolly Pilot Photos by Patrick O'Donnell residents. They are not afraid to meet the kids on tbelr own level, to get down oo the floor with them when necessary," he said. ARE CREATIVE "They 9re ne1lble, creative and l<>¥e to work . I could not have the pwgram without volunteers. I can't speak highly enough of them. While working here, I !eel. they become more sensitive to the needs of :othera and iecogpJ.ze the true 'meaning of human dignity." · With lhe volunteert, be 'said, he can ·work with 80 residents lnste8d oJ 10. The blind program now works wtder a ''sta· lion concept" which serves as a framework. Each resident can be taken to one of several stations which are directed at concepts from mobility to sensory-motor activity . Lon:aine Kennie works with junior , Paul Kizanis. Paul, al!ij> a Candystriper for Foµntain Valley ColDP'lun1ty Hospital, planS a nursing career . Besides 1n extra pair of hands, Paul brings ideas, she explained. For Halloween a spook house with a special record of spooky noises Wl\S bis sug. gestion. · Paul said be wanted to see fil:st band what the work is like. He gets along well with the residents and gets great satis- facti.on froi:n helping. IMAGE CHANGES Norman W i e be I, who teaches language skills has his volunteer, Valerie Ford, work with small reading groups while he \lo'orks individually with students or other small groups. "People have a stereotyped image of the mentally retarded," ht said. "But when a person is woi'ldng with the retarded, he realizes they are individuals like anyone else. You learn tolerance in general and toward the rettdents." Miss Ford, who is interested in the health field as a career, said, "I can see them improve and It gives m~ a good feeling tp be helping. I'm getting a lot out ' '• . • • Caring -1n of tbe program and I feel l 'rn doing something worthwhi le. It's great just to come here." Like many other volunteers she tel)J her friends about her work , aod in- directly recruits new volunteers. · Gene Flory, FV!IS t e a c h e r who supervises the class. said the program is self-perpetuating. The voh.mteen tell thei r friends and his recruiting work is sim ple for him whe n be v i s i t s classrooms. COLLEGE CREDIT Future plans include working out pro- grams with area colleges so t~t ~·ell· trained senic.-s can use their knowledge at Fairview and receive college credit. Expanding the schedule to four hours is expected by January as well as extending work to the wards. Students have told Florv, "This is the first time I've really beeii. able to see some practical value in my education." He added that there are. no prere-. quisites for the Fairview class aside from good attendance and a desire 10 ~ ·~ :· work with lhe retarded. - Sue Bender, a junior, works ~ teacher Lael Weyer and her claM ol~ "I have her do individual work tha& just canno t do," Miss Weytt said. ' teacher cannot g1ve 10 students ~ one attention, and ,tht.>se students ~ need IL" • "• UNCERTAINTY : :..: Sue enjoys her work but admitted, .• other students did, that she was un-- certain what tbe residenlS \lo'OOld be like and how to react to them. Like the others. stw has come to know each one u an indivtdual. with individual problem&.· "It takes awhile to get used to them, tO know ~·hat 10 er.pect and what you caa do for them." She plans to come beet iiQ January. .. "The retarded are human beings .. have rigbts. There is so much they CM learn." ~l iss Weyer said. "They reallj need someone lo take an interest iJ them." • The notes on the index cards tell mucb · about how the students feel. (See CARING, Page 14) .. • . . . BEA ANDERSON, Editor T~11n0•1. N•-•r L Im ..... 11 She Washed Her Son Right Out of Her Hair • DEAR ANN: My son t. 38, unmarried and lives ln another city. I get two weeks vacation a year and for the past several yean I've gooe to vi.lit him. t do not stay in his apartment, however. I have a brother in that city wbo wants me to 1tay with blm. 1 1be problem I am writing abput IA making me sick. Mt son'• apartment jl eo filthy I can'! delctlbe It. When I tell you be has .i,.\nond><>ld "l"l ..... aild pop<n 1tacked'11P, you con lt<lleVc ~- J don't ace how 1 penon can llve In such !11th. Apple com, bonlno pttlt, bier botUes, dried out plonts, dotllel banging on the arms ol chain, on door knobs. on the floo r. On my last vlslt my 1m askttl me nOt to cleari hit 1portmtot b.aiuoe he "knows where everytblng Is." Jle Miid the last lime I cleaned up bl.I place he couldn't rind some bills and lmP,Ortanl papen. Well, I jllll couldn't lltlnd tho ,,,... oo I went to work and tklied tbe piece up . When be CllDO bollll llo WU flln.. 'Ibo -dlJ be -ill(-Ille ... to • , let roe In nor ,;roulifhe 11p11t to mo. on tho phone:~ I ielt town be -·t .., rt<t-a.n ,.. i..ve 11111 ~-evm ,., . .. • .... ' 11-,.......1c1 run • 1.1w Wbil I do tha wu m Wl'Cll(! Row rlOI to U.. 11 be plHMt. Nell u,.. can r .--tlblllb ..,......_ ....,t ""1 • If .., ,,.,._. A•I .,,. to cr11wllng l>O<k m my bonds Ind bed? mttl 7M II 7""' INolber'1 pl-. Wllll -SOUTHERN MOl'HER 7M .. , --·t ......, 1'L DEAR MO'lllEll' My -ii to . _ . lflff Y"' -otoM lw I few ....U.. DEAR ANN LAND&RS: I 1111.1 JUJ ti. tlleo l wtfU lt lllm -M ........., My JJrl it II. llbo'I I nifty cllih lild~liU ....... , --rel-.. "'" -her ---""t •11111 k -to I-1ac-. • pod<er -lbe rqlltero ..,,,_ To put W1lll 7M 61 ,._. -to fplft k bltlld1, l:ialloc lier it W. lr:illios I <e- mcnt will. I don't want to bun brr fHlfnp 10 I pttt«llt rm being l<llt. M1ybt W you p<lnt thll)n yoor columa lht11 tote the hint. ..:. OSCULATION · N 8 EDS Rr.SUSC!'J'ATION IN OHIO. DEAR OI: 1"'" dll<• -W -1 Utile llpt -~· , ..... w lt"' . ,.,...,.,... " . ~ .. ......... _. D!AJI ANll !.ANDERS: I noted wttb intert:llt lilt l('lh·r fr om !hi· 1 otl1•R1' 1rlrl wtx> got Into ttv· twt.111 of hllrh·h1~1nlo! - said 11 was• gr"111 "'a)' to M\'f' rnoncy. She! hllchcd fnKn hol'nf' to rollr R<' lor th~ run and nothmx happt'nt'd. u. apile of w1rn11111 frorn htr porml., Md frltndl. Thm on1 night I.ht Jrnt Into 1 ~r wllh a mkldle--ligtd man ~ho ~mt'd pleasant and f•lhtrly lie drove ofl 10 1 1MM rG9d and rapt'd hrr tUlJbl.,,... A brtkt one la Ml ..... 1111 '-'it <'•t i. lbr. flnl p&.ce. CONrto~~IAL TO NEEDl.NG A l.lf'T roH nil-'. UHIDO: NOt 1lnyt. In ftk1 ak-ohol ~tPn worb tull the tt>- polltt ll rt•mo,•ts lhl' inblblliona, wtdctl can be hrlpful. but alcohol II • dt-~nt •nd It C"an make m. lm- poSllble r PleMt tf!U )'OUt readto" who II,.. surt that nothinJ bid C'9M happm lo lhtm. to l.1 ,.e 1 dnll~ Cu I.SO .......... Cl"7 a baltpolnl pen Whm Uw)' hit lhe •• •tirids 1111" ,..~ ..., pi ·cs Ott l"Old. 11 wtll come tn hlndy to )flt do•lt lbfo r.ru ht Au 1.-dtn' ... • 11N11 on •n arm or lea the lkotftw numbtt of •·str•l&llt o.pc .. ONp." P• ...; lbe t11r. They will tbm be •h'e to Jl\'I ~ "*red, HW • ...._. .. I, ~ • ~~a,~.-when lhry m:tte the_...,, .V•ddk ....... 11, "'•~ 11 aoW1 1 .-r.-l'°'1 .. ter. -J.B. 111 tntt ftr ,...._, .. A.-I ' rt, DEAR 1..1.t ,_ ,_ Jer 1 llllol ... -~·IL - .. • , ' ' I· , . ~ • • ~ .. , .. ~ ..... 'I ---- ' ' U IW~Y l'ILOT ·. I Man in Woman's World Preschool '. Teaches ·Helper Jay Flkn lovff his work \. with children ond thay like to have him 1round too. He'• on the staff of Small World Preschool, Irvine. By JO OUION Of .. Oii~ ~ .... , .... 11Jt'a j115t so nice to hive a ·man around. Everjl ocbool should have one," said Mrs. Jutta Petzel, director of Irvine 's Small World l'rel!cllooL The man she was speaking of lJ Corty (Jay) Fikes, a bearded redhead who lJ lbe only male on the school's payroll and the nm on the stall In Ill blatDry. What's a liberated male like Fikes doing In traditionally female territory? II be doesn't change his m.lnd, be may be one of the first men to open a cooperative nursery school, and working at Small World is the firsl small Blep In learning bow it's done. A UCI senior majoring In comparative cultures, Fikes is thinking about obtaining a credential in early childhood education but can't decide whether or not he's up to another year of academe. ''The future ls one big ~lion mark," be said. FLOATING CAMPtlS and 1ttended the Unlvenlty of Calllornll, San Diego before lr8111!errlng ta UC!. Ho 11190 spent one semester alioard Chapman College's W o r 1 d Campus Afloat. Slnce he atlll Is a student hlmaoll, be la not ellglble ID be a teacher but enjoys his role u helper · and general alllis- lanl lo the three female tuchers. "I have always enjoyed relating to chlklren," Fikes ex- plained. "That WU one of the things that made me want to get involved in nursery schools. "One of my teachers at UCSD encouraged me when I tallted lo him alioul my Jn. l<rOSI in children. Going on the ship also bad a groat Jn. nuence on me. A.lot of things I had been conluaod about clicked into place." Fikes, who lB a soft-spoken, low-key person, said the direc- tor or the school "didn't really want to encourage me" when be applied for his position, and he feels the female teachers have not accepted-him com- pletely. NEEDS ANSWERS But he remains . uD11wa1 pa«fh ml cco- slanUy ll~annen. '1'>6 lied at lol ,ol Jhaucllla 1bout wblt kinds ol lhlnp are lmportanl In rlllalng children. "I don't know how I would handie 'dllclpllne yel. I'm still lwnlng. 0 'lhe boy1 need m 0 r e emphasis on coordination and pbyalcal defflopmenl. I would llko a lot more room for them to run around." He alao bas commenls on marriage, chlldml an d mothemood: "People abouldn't b av o children anloss they're willing ID Cini for them. Motberbood ls.really Important in. thO.flnl few years ol a chllcCs Ille. I think m o t h e r s should breastfeed their childttn. BIG DECISION "I'm not really sure about whether I will get married. That's a really lmporlanl and bani decision. I'm skeptical about Ibo v!Jbllity of the one- to-one relatiooSbip as We now have in marriage. As for chlldftn, I blvo doubb 11iout whither ID!' m.n P'<!J'I• abould be 00 the elf\h. H When nol studying or -':· Ing, Fikes enjoys blcycllng, hiking and travollng. Ho !Dok the train to southern Mulco during August and traveled by hlmsell for three weeks, "gel- ling Into Ibo culture.'" "I like to have a beer with my friends, 11 be added. "but l don't know If you ahould put that in or not." Why does Corty Fikes like children so much T "They haven't yet learned bow nol ID be tbemselvos," be Bild. "And being with chlldml ls a chance for me to get tolally oul ol my role as a atu- denl. I enjoy being around them." When the interview was over, he bopped on bis 10.- "speed bicycle, strapped on his back.pack and Was off to his home in Costa Mesa where the academic world was waiting. Preschool was over for another day and the "m.an of the house" was ready to relax. Fikes b a graduate of Corona de! .Mar High School phil090phlcal a b 0 u t blsliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil;;;;;;;:::=; 'Co avotd diiappomtment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo-.., graphs to the DAILY PIL01 Women 's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received alter that time will not be used. . ~·or engagement announcements it is lmperaUve that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted sis weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline Is not met. nnly a fiery will be UJed. . To help fill requlremenll on both wed· din~ and engagement stories, forms are available In all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questioll5 will he answered by Women'• Section staff members at 842-4321. By ERMA BOMBECK 1 was riding on an airplane last week when the man next to me said, "What is your line of work?" When I told him I wrote a humor column, his face lit up. "That's what the world needs today," he nodded vigorously. "More humor. People don't laugh enough. We're s o. serious .•.. so sen.'itive. Yotl must be an optimistic person.'' I dug my toe inlo the carpet and grinned modestJy, "My husband a1ways said ii some- one gave me a barn full of manure, I'd run through it in my bare feet shouting, 'There's a pony here somewhere.' " "Shouldn't make fun of the fariners," he said, sobering up. "Those poor guys bave quite a row to hoe thele days what with the government tell· ing them whal they llbould raise and pulling all kinds of price contro1B on them." "Oh, I don't write abcut farmers,'' I said. "I write about things aroomd Ille house like my dog who once aaw me cooie out ol Ibo abower and -1 have ta~ him for Ibo rest ol bli Ille liecame be knows. too much/' - AT WIT'S END I faced him squarely. "Sir, I once kept a list of topics that olfended people. In alphabeti- cal order they include : Agnew, banks, Cleveland, dirty books, education, FBI, G~I Scools, Hitler, insurMce men, joiners, kids, !Jl>ben, nostalgia, Don- ny Osmond. pantyhose , And, of course, ec<ilogy. Where quacks, religion, soap operas, do we start to restore our taxes, underwear, veterans, country ID the beoatllul clear .Wel&)lt \Vatcllers, X -r a t e d natural state it once en-mozodlvalesc 'nu~~ng people and JO. ·-A?" ,~ "That's quite a list," be "I started with my 900'& bedroom," I said. "Once I mused. "But you forgot M." harvested the crops ~ "That lian<b for me. I've under his bed and ·rolled the still got me to laugh at and no dust ball Into the frml lawn one complains." and put e)res and arms on He thought on It a minute, J~ .. " · then asked, "You aren't ••vou are ll'Teverent.'' bei ~ousi,, are • au? I mean those chasttsed:-"lrnothing-Sacred-e:-;have-h a d. - to you?" · emugb ••• ' IF YOUR HAIR-DO ... DOESN'T! PUN TO ATTIND OUI ONl·DAT HAii 9UAUTT, HIALTH AND COl.OllN• SIMINAI •• , Tomorraw'-Friday, 11 an to 4 p.n FREE CONSULTATION ON YOUR PARTICULAR HAIR PROBLEMS BY: HAROlD LAPIN CHIHoMllY i.-Mtllltl'llY " Mllr C1r1, l'or""'1r ., L1pllt l<Me .. ., CM_....,) REGAL BEAUTY SUPPLY 26! E. 17th St., Cott• Mesa , ............... ,... ........ &: 11) ,. ;:ceremonies Now Memories "I !Jope you're Ji04 ...,._ breedlDg your dog. People are doing a great dilaervlce "'-~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~============================~ animals b y over-breedinl ,. ··-~~~~~~~'--~...,.~~~~~ .. ,. '· ~· ,. E. I· Coupl'es Recite Vows .. ,. ,. .-. REES-FREEMAN ~-St. Andrew's Presbyterian i ~pel in Newport Beach was .. ~ihe: setting when Lewis D. j:Rees claimed Kem be r I e y '~man as his bride. .. ~; The Rev. Don Maddox 'firected the vow exchange for ~ ... daaib,:!."':1 ·~:.::; •• and the son of Mr. and Lewis Rees of Sierra . newlywed s, who with Alpha OmJcron Pi. Her hll9band, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mervin G. Scott of San UJ!s ()bjspo, was affiliated with Kappa Sigma al Ariwna State University a n d California State University, Long Beach. RIGELMAN-M~KAMY st. George's Episcopal Mission, El Toro, was the set- ting for the rnarTiage of Diana Charmaine McKamy a n d Gregory Alan Rigelman. Their rites were conducted by the Rev. Dr. Raymond Rempt. or Costa Mesa High School and OCC and now attends Cal State LA where he was named to the dean's li!t.. They are making their home in Alham- bra . MOCK-DEAN Carol Dean and Brian W. Mock exchanged marriage vows In the Lutheran Church or the Master, Corona del Mar with lhe Rev. Wilbur Allen of· ficlaling. them," be said solemnly. "Ail those animals roaming around with no place to go." "Actually, I write I lot about childreD," I said. "Surely you cannol, be <>I> timlstic about cblldren," be mused. "Of course I can," 1 laughed. "Just remember at the end of every wet diaper Is a rainbow." "Our youth ls in deep trou- ble today," he sighed. "Drugs, war. unrest, unemployment, lowering ol moral standards. If you really want to lose weight ••• .,.mated from Pasadena and Bloir high llCboall and at· -Pmdena C11J College, ' ..Jn mal:o lbelr lint home In lfuodeoa. ~t 'SCOTT-KITCHING Parenti or the -Iyweds are Mn. Margaret Breen McKamy , Coats M11&; Donald McKJnny, Los Vegas; Mrs. LoulJo Rigetman, Coota Mesa, and the late Mr. Rlgtlmsn. Attendants were M la s Theit parents ere Mrs . Isabelle Dean of Oceanside and the late Col. Robert M. Dean Jr. afid Mr. and Mrs . Lou Mnck .o( Coots Mesa . The couple were attended by Mrs. Wllllam On.Im, Odessa Felactu, Dick Frost and Vic Person . but you_ enjoy good food and . ... •Ubdo Mmedel Kltdling Mn. Gerald Reeve f.4cali la rltel conducted by :\tldp DooaJd Schroeder In lbe ~'iiewpan -home of ber lianlu, Mr. and M r s . ~ H. Kltdiing. ·Pamela Berkbeck , Mr. and Mn. William Luedtke, Philip Rigelman end Thomas Moore. Tho bride WIS graduated from Con>no d e I Mar 111&)1 School and Orange Coast College and now lJ junior al Califomi• State University, Los Angeles. Her husband is a graduate The newlyweds are makin& their homo In Newport Beach. The bride Is a graduate of WhltUer r.olleae where llhe af-I fillated with the Athenian Society. Her husbend attended WhHUer aDd USC where he was a member of Sigma Chi Fraternity. t: Attendants were Miss Karen' ~'taucban and Dean Miiter. ·~ brtdo atteaded UCI and I -:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~~-----·--, 1~, where she affillatedl !~ ;l,ength law ·~ : .. :School girls like sklrts •hove ~· knee or even shorter Ulan ~. F-IUthortllel 11y 1'INI -tho dtr1 ~ is "-Ill the other ~ I :aq.t. ·~ nming." ' . . ,. i DON'T FOROETI I : FUN AND fANCY UZMR 'f M. -· J. 1'71 ~ ........ ,,.... ;~ ......... 4, 1f?I ........... ----.... ,.. ..... .:...,.~ .... ,....,_..ci. • ' , I u.aoa COOKIO SHRllP ,. ..... 2.10 l(IMO CUB MEAT .... 2.10 KIM• COCCTAIL. uws t L.I. IOX ... 3.30 rcima LL3.30 ( ~-------, ~ co•o• COUPON COUPO.........COUfON l~ ~. '1-~~.L .~!! wl - -... .:i:n.. ........ -.... 2800 Lar• tt: -Ntwporl Beach •1t.-J410 er 14f..Dl7 Opffl , .• Jle•.•S-.; t -1:)1 , .... a lot of it C:..ytiu1ll ~ Weight Watche~! ·'•' The Weight Watchert psa••m olftts you an endlew v .. rlety of delicious fooc!I, Jncludin@: meat, fish, fowl, 5.li,ds. fruits, vegttlblei. potatoes, p .. i1 .. .tnd wonckw-- ftff ~10! And 11 reallyi • WOtkt. Olt1 • mllllon happy ~~have l°'t wei1h1 -.idt Weight W•1thm. So -Whyw.icfCome lt••m Mw to ~Im down "fely, tcn\1bty, t1njoy•bly . CLASSES NOW Ol'EN Cost• Mes• Center ........... n..... t ill•• .. 71JI,.... ...... ,., ... F,OR lNFORMATION /\ND FREE BROCHURE CllLL: 835-5505 WEIGHTQi WAlOIRS. 'ol."•(ClllWW-Mll._..,,,....tt11<•-•01 -·"'" ....... ,, 1 ... _._... .... ,Cn•-'-.. ' BONDED ACRYLICS Tiie !Ht If -fl I"" llHIM Mffll• fall ""' f '°" llltllO '81L H•ll w1Ullll1, 14''-M'' .rift. A .,.11 u!Hlln If ... ., .. H...,...... tlr fllll, IM,.,,. -_ .. 1111 '81111 U'' llle1, ............. lfrf•fl!ll91 ,,. ... MllJ -1111 1111 ... ,~ .............. 11111 ., .. 11111111-• ·-. -.., -.., ........ "'I ...... 77J. ' A lle•tifll 1Dt"91•t tf •ltrs- lllu11, ftlte, er••·"'''' crer, •• otllors. I 011% ICfJllO f1IH, ti"' 111111 ltaot,&111 wide, an b•ltl. Al -•111 11t1elloa 11 lliNll ... ""'" 1111111. '"" -.•"'11111 .... ,,., •• U''·'lf••· . . -.. -......... ... It .. Hll lllllillltl JllH II .... Th=·:·~~~A·~"A7 141 w. 19tft .. Plilcetltla COSTA MISA e Ph. 645-7132 • Fashions Harvested Raking in prizes for the Women's Auxiliary to the Orange County Pharmaceutical Association Harvest of Fashions luncheon are the Mme::;. Richard Majors and John Cernok, (left to right). Proceeds from Thursday, Nov. 9, event will go to scholarship fund. ----· .. -·-- Peering Around ' MISS SANDRA Tedesco, daughter o'r Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Tedesco, o f Newport Beach, has formally pledged the Phi chapter of Delta Gamma at the Universi- ty of Colorado, Boulder. JOHN B. prrr$ or Hun- tington Beach celebrated his 90th birthday at a catered buffet for JOO friends hosted by a son and daughter-in-la"'• the PauJ Pitts of Huntington Harbour. 11lC honoree and his wife, Bertha, recently marked their 68th wedding anniversary and traveled to his n at i v e Arkansas for a family reunion. He retired from North American Aviation in 1957. other sons and daughters, the Messrs. and_ Mmes. William Gleason, Newport Beach; Granville Layfield and H. E. Hix or Long Beach and Leo W. Pitl$, Seal Beach, at- tended the birthday fete along with eight grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. NATIONAL and s t a t e recognition has been awarded to Mrs. Robert Roper o( Lagwl8 Beach for her ef£orts on behalf of the Col. William Cabell Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. She was honored for the greatest percentage increase in advertising in the organiza4 lion's magazine. The cash . awards will go toward the Newport DAR's charities. PARENTS and committee members involved with the Im debutante ball for the Newport chapt.er of National Charity League will be en· tertained at a cocktail party OOsted by Mr. and Mrs. Edwin French Steen Jr. on Sunday, Nov. 5. The presentation will be Nov. 25· in the Newporter Inn . ATI'ORNEY S<ott D. Ri ci> mond has bee:rr named Orange County chairman for Stanford University's .annual fund drive amoog alumni, AMONG diners at the Infield picnic at Santa AniMI Park benefitting the Bishop Gooden Home was Clement L. Hirsch. His guests were Mrs. Donald K. Washburn, Mrs. Barbara Green, Robert H. Grant and the Urban Hirsches. ~,,....t"ta' ........_.,,. S·"1' A Gift of Melodies to Lin9er • , . BEAUTIFUL MUSIC BOXES we "'~• t'-911 ~ ••l;w.., 01 E"•D99 1w IM lll'ftl In Qllll o1 '°"""' ... co!Orl"I H-1 llollll . . ui..-U•li.tl ;-try tiosn, "'-·lined, l•f\Orl"'ll •idl wOOd 1n1 ..... ...... ~f!lrotlftllOl.ll'lll ........... , ........ flew"-d•no:.lne .nii ""'"Int .. llO"Vl•r -• . •II wllfl ''°"'' P"llCkloll __ , ••• ""'-Olfh 11o1 9JV9 pl•wre •I'll lllW.,. .-notlih for ........ A SPECIALTY AT SAllNA'S ••• \ • Reaching Out to Another . ·women Try Human Service Work By LAURIE KASPER Of flM O.ltr Ptt.I II.if Some 20 women left their homes for a short trip into human services the other day. In high school, suc h a look at an occupation would be formed as a field trlp - students getting out Of classes for a day or less to go and see how it is on the scene. But these women only had lo go to Fashion Island, probably a common shopping haunt for most. And, as participants in the second half oC the series on Widening Worlds of Women of- fered Thursday m o r n i n g s through the Women's Morning Programs at Orange Coast College, they didn 't even have to move off the metal folding chairs to experience the basics of what is called human service work. INVOLVES PEOPLE Human service work otr viously involves people. lt's helping them with lheir protr ~ems. It ls, very simply, counseling. Monta Lee HaN.ey, speaker for this morning as well as a counselor and psychology in4 structor at OCC, opened the session by saying thJt she mother has lo move out and meet new challenges. 'NEEDS MOR!i would "share (with lheO'l) some of the feelings I ha"ve right now and some of the feelings I had when 1 got up." T~ she told the women they · Sherry's apron swnmed up too would reveal their feelings her feelings . lt says "For this "so we can know each other." I spent four years ln college.'' In human service, she ex.: She loves her tw o , small plained "one person reaches children, husband and home out to ~other." but feel s she needs something So, she told them she had else. . . wondered what they would be Marion tS new Jn the area like ... if they would be friend-and plaM.ing to .. go _to ~ Jy, warm people or if they ~ext sem~er . _Reg~~ration would jsut come and then is an experience itself, Jean "leave pretty much as they warned. "If you get through all came." And, for a moment that ha.wtl, you k'!?w you when she saw the mountains want to go to college. and clouds beyond her LagW18 Valerie was there ~"so~~~ Hills home, she thought that's expand. my world a h_ttle btl. where she wanted to be. Her children are all 1n sc~I now and although she en1oys her home, "l have this feelin g I should be doing something else." Then, it was the other women's tum. Some simply had a feeling of curiosity. For Midge, the class is "my mental health for two hours" .• .it's her ~y time away from home and family. Jean came because she graduated from OCC in 1970 and is always intereeted in what the college is doing for the woman who is being "phased out of her home." She explained, "Home is a . nice place and you like it" but when the children grow up, Fran's children have grown. Alter concentratlng 25 years just on her husband and chll~n, it's a nice but sad and hard realization to accept. Now she says she is "sort of seeking a new way of living I think.'' Mont.a interjected bere_that there might be a feeling of relief ... "How lovely they've made it and I've made it." Althoogh its a happy realiza- tion she said, "maybe it means not being needed in some way and this can be pain.(ul." B1.1t Shirley said she got the feeling from Fran !hal "You did a wonderful job ... That's great. _ .In all the sadness I see a kit of rejoi cing:· And Jean thinks it's im- portant for her to get out because "There's so many things which need to be done ." Her volunteer work with retarded children. she said, ls "just an extension of what l'\•e always dor.e." SADNESS OKAY "It's okay to feel sad about having completed a very fine job," Monla said. "Sometimes we just have to allow ourselves Lo feel sad until we're no loriger sad." She also wanted to tell them how she felt about the group -"Here is a group of women who are very eager to not.only help themselves but to help one another." But sh!> .l<>l<L~ a little while later that It mliifit be more helpful for them to say, "This i., bow it is with me and thi! is the way it's been for me." Most d the women had been saying. "You should.'. .'' They had been saying, ''1 ought to be patient and 1 ought to be lhanlc.ful for what I h,ave." But, she said, "I think you're all here because you want changes." When thinking of a new career, she suggested the women consider their personal needs and how they might best satisfy these needs. T h e ultimate que1tion , she said, is then •'why do you want 10 be in human serviet>S?" If a person feels the need to give advice, "human servict is not (or you," she said. BE WITU PERSON To give them a better idea of whether or not they'd like this work, she had them le1ting the other person know that she was being beard. ~1ost people don't do th1a, abe pointed out. Instead, they can hardly wait for their husband.1 or children to finish so they can have their say. But it's basic to com4 municatlon-and counsellng can't take place without com· municatioo -to know 11 you can listen and give back what the other person is trying to say . For at least one woman who hld always felt she needed an answer , this was a "refreshing feeling that 1 don't have all the answe r!i." counsel each other. They could'·----------- use a real problem or make something up. But _ the task, she said. was to be with the other person, face her directly, k>ok ai her, listen and respond. But ~font.a qualilied tljjs, "The only response I cah give back to her ls what she has already given to me." It was a way, she said, of ~~RA$ RJNi @9Dht1Mtkoel..t w .......... .., .. N..,,,an Wiatt e Blaylo Alao CO.If W•r 2711 l•t C.-HWY'· c ......... 11M741 ..\t11crir11 :, /,aryc>t und .l/o>I Cornpll'll' .\ccdli•. \r t and Crcatirl' Cruft> Cl•nfl'n, Make it Now for Chnstmas @@13()UTIVUl~t7 MAt71tii ffil2 ffif ti()U[)~ / • . . STOA E HOURS • Monday th1w Friday: 10.00-t.oo 81turo.y: t :oo-e.oo Svndly: 12:oo-6:00 .... , .... • ' • WORTH $35 ·_MAOt;:UP · "· LHWarda Spec:l•l "Pin-11" Jewelry Safety Pins Plle.144 Gold .. -"7n.t ..,.DorOO I -::I,.. Look what you can make with a Simple Safety Pin It's the newe1tcraft rag'it : bright, oparkllng beada and llmple ufety pins •• , c..- llllwly cornbined to mal<e the moat fHclnatlng Jewelry! LeeWerda has all the mekln'1, Including FREE peroonal l1>- 1tructlon1 from conauhant.. 8ajc a ti 1 d a.rt. • ' ' t: ' • • • • • l • • • • • • • • , • • .. ' .--, ·-r r 1 -,.• · • t \ f~ DAILY PILOT TlluNd.r, Nowmbtor 2, 197i Memorable Testimony Courts Second Chance • By TOM BARLEY Of ,._ DllllY P'li.t Sl•H Time was when a divorce trial was just about t.be dirtiest fhlng a court newsman had tlo coW:r. T've had my share and l'd t~kr an ax murder any day to the tales of Cdultery, deceit and moral depravity that I've had to p a ss on to the avid reader. J bdges feel the same way, or at least thefBid before California's new mar-ria e disrolutlon laws came into effect. A ma r trial now is just a battle or fin in which the judge must achieve a f ir division of community property. netheless, it's a rare day when a ju e wants to commit to memory much of bat he hears in a marriage dissolu- tio proceeding. They are almost alw ays un asant, often distressing to even sc ned court personnel and now and · ag<On downright degrading. Superior Court J udge WllUam S. Lee ran Into the exception the other day, however. And the Newport Beach Jurist, more power lo him, preserved tboee pro- ceedings in written form for the enlightenment of all of us. Judge Lee believes that this partial transcript speab for itself. So do~J and here is a reproducUon of. the proceedings before him. All names ot the parties con· cemed are, of course, omitted. Judge Lee: "Mr. of course. you are ln default and you have no right to be heard. But the court will hear whateve r statement you would like to n1ake. Mr. : :'Thank you very much, your honor. "l just want my wife to know that 1 love her more than anything in this world and I do not want an annulment or divorce but that she does have a perfect right to at least the divorce because or the way I tr.ated her. "And I just want her to hear me say publicly that I was wrong and l am sor· ry . "The reason I didn't answer the notice in the 30 days l WU given WU because at that ttme I sWJ .....,1 1111re that I oould ever make her happy, But since then 1 huve taken a lot ol. time to think. I have been able to assign two major causes (or the problems that we had. "One was a set of goals, not related to home or family, that I wasn't willing to give up and the other wu the fact that all I could ever see in her were her faults and her deOcieocies. "Well, that set ot goals doe! not mean anything to me any more, now that l realize that I am losing probably the mo.st important thing in my life and I am giving them up. "And as far as her faults and dcfl- clencles are ~rned, they were only lbe result ol my atUtud• toward her. "RealWng th1!: makes me sure that I can gi ve her tbe love and understanding that ahe nteds new. That includes a child whlcb b what &be said Ls her ground for annulment. "What I told her before was that I didn't want a child Immediately bej:ause · I didn't feel It was worth trying to bring up a cbild In tbe midst ol argumen~ .,... fu sion and under two separate sets of ideal5. "I realize, too, that the argument and the confusion were probably a result of my attitude again and I think it bas taken 'the shock of the separation to make me see it. At least I don't have to be worried about having a child. "Whether my wife is Willing to adm it it or not, r believe she stiU 1oves me. But she can 't trust the cbaJ>C• abe ..., lo ine Mw is a lutiQa one and I don 't blame her 8 bit. "1 am coing" to wait as lon1 as necessary and do wba~er I can to prove to her that glvln8 me enotber chance lm't going to he ·a ropeat of wbat happened before. "She said a marriage counselor would not help. I don't know. II llll7 or may not but, at any rate, I am willlog and ready any time, now. When this b all over I just want another chance." He turned to bis wife. "I can promise you, Pat, that the change Is permanent, that I can and will give you lhe love and understanding you need, . that you will never hive· any reasoa to doubt me again and (hat if we can make it through this it should only serve to strengthen our relationship. "In view of what happened, I would • have to accept myself or be wUll:na to ao- cept the decialon for dlvo::ce. Aod I am willine and I would even appreciate if the court would make me clearly ...._tble for payment and reimbunement oi all fees involved In her mU:ln• this decialon. "Thank you , your honor!• Judge Lee : "Thant you , Mr. ___ .. 1be author of that moving and eloquent statement got bis second chance. It la too early at this point to know bow the COIJ· pie has fared but it will be hard to fmd a reader of that narrative wbo does not wish them everything that the petiUoner before Judge Lee begged for. As for this writer, he would have given a mooth's pay to be there and listen to that magn.lficent, spontaneous statement by a man who knew the meaning of humility. Mr. ---, I hope it works oul ' 'i' our Horoscope ! Aquarius: Long-range View Key to Decision YOU CAN FIND·IT AT Oranie ·County's largest & Fines( • Bazaar's Country Store Opens Doors The country store tradition of offering something for everyone is canied on by members of the Hun· tington Beach First United Methodist Church with . FRIDAY NOVEMBER 3 Older individual will offe r benefit or experience. GEMINI (May 21..June 201: By SYDNEY OMARR Good lunar aspect now coin· Libra natives seem con-cldes with change, emotional stantly to seek justice. These r espo n se, intensified rela· peraons believe in balance, tionships. Creativity surges to law end strive for harmony. fore. There is opportunity for 1be Libr1 individual medi-greater self-expression. Aries ates, attempts to equalize and is in picture. to see to it that no one-gets CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): pushed or persecuted. Libra New element ~ could enter is sensitive, s ub j ect to domestic area. You build for hypertension and is also af-security by taking chance on fectionate and often strikingly .your own abilities. Not w~ . · · DOW to follow crowd. Imprint attractive. Libra often mar· your s t y I e . Individuality ries on impulse, is generally becomes your ally. Act ac- loyal but emotions are not conllngly. always completely under oon- tro1. Libra harmonizes with Leo, Sagittarius, Gemini and Aquarius. Libra is drawn to Aries, must exercise cauUon in dealing with Capricorn and Cancu. ABIES (Marcil 21-April 19)' Accent is on partnership, mar- riage, the way you present ldeu to l)Ubllc. Permit others to eJJftSS tbemselves. Your~ role mw' lhol.ald be that of• keen observer. Direct action would be premature. Ask and learn. TAURUS (April 20-May 201' Practical issues dominate. Work procedures are em- phasized. You will have more responsibility. Rewards abo will be greater. Key now is to find what it ls you are seeking. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Family-member may have er- rands which are time-con- suming. Ma~ sense of humor. Bick · will ac· comptish nothing. Hunch could pay dividends. Accent is on · movement, short trips, spe. cial activity connected w i t h rel atives. VIRGQ (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221: Be more aware of budget, bank .account, earning capaci- ty. Study altemativ~ You ere not stuck with. one method, procedure. Be flexlble and versatile. Potential is greater than you might imagine. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 1: dedicated. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22- Dee. '21): Accent is on social activity which 1eads to prof- itable situation. Family mem- ber can aid. Proper .setting, atmosphere could bring about important reunion. Low-key aPPJ:Oach should be advocated . Win rather than force your way. o CAPRICORN (De<. 22..Jan. 19): Oareer, embit i on s , general standing in com- munity -these are em- pbaslled. Check with one in authority. Don't be sidetrack- ed by one who is enamored with red tape. Go directly to -· AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Decisionconcern i n g future seems imperative. Key is to take long-range view. Avoid rushing. Be aware of security. Your own philosophy is important. Know it and devefop yourself as a whole person. Message will become increasingly clear. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 201' There is en•altemaUve. Know it and don't SU<CUrtlb to feeling of deleal Finish project. Reach new uoderstanding with cne close to yau. Money prob- lem need not repre s ent dilemma. Key now is coopera. tion, .......... lt:'a""·y~· ••ma.a• llOTtcMll ftt --:::.o:r:. 8HOP . ge ~~':&':.. lt60 Kllltt (.,.. (It u..c.llJ -· . .... Tt IN IUIU. PAii • 121-3120 Start Thinking . Gifting •• The Initial Pendent spells success. In mock tortoise, end in 9old electroplate. In cludes chain, $8.00 The 3 Dimensional Zodi•c Pendents $18.00 their bazaar Wednesday, Nov . 8, from 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Old phonograph and cash register are displayed by the Mme s. Raymond Kible and Lewis Armstrong. From Page 21 Lunar cycte coincides with time when you can su c- ce~y take initiative. Stress independence of thought, ac- tion. M~ of opposite sex pays meaningful compliment. Personality shines. You are caJJed on to make special ap- pear~. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Emphasis is on illusion, situa- tion tbat is not quite out in open. Be discreet. Perceive meanings that may b e obscured by semantics. U you don't know , ask. Answers are obtainable if you a re IF TODAY IS YOUR BmnIDAY you h a v e fme sel18e of humor. You also ex· bi bit. tendency to scatter your er forts. You have natural ability to entertain . You in- trigue with what appears to be an offhand manner. In ac- tuality, you usually know where you want to go even if •111111 yoo dOn't always choose direct • Caring One wrote: "This wee k was a pretty__,nice week. Every day route. Two month!! ago an ad· justment in home area prob- ably occurred. Lu,.,, ''Tht Trutll Abolrt AflrolOOV!' S-blrltld•fl •1111 7! i:.nh to omirr 6ookl•t IN OAILY PILOT. Bed' 32'11 ro:oiri $"'?fi'r .St1tlon, Nirw York, N)Y '. ~ludV •nd°"'Mlf:i.'t='i to 11Kln11 na t feel he is getti.Qg to know me i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1 and trust me. Every day I'm getting to Uke him more. He is January Rites so good." And another : "I wish I could work with him all the time. He would learn 80 much laster." Betrothal Revealed The feelings go both ways as this card explained : "I feel that Steve has Powers of very deep sensitivity t o we rd s people's feellngs. He knew or sensed that I was very moody today end In a hurry. I felt Ulla." Mr. and Mn. Ralph Burton Conn of Newp>rt Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter• Catharine .. Elizabeth Conn to Glenn Arthur Van Walraven. Huf~nce. ~nof Mr. and Mn. Herbert J. Van Walraven of Santa Ana, is a graduate of La Quinta lllP School and now Is studying at Golden West College. Many acquire a deep ad- mlraUon for the residents with whom they work : "A really good day .. 1th her. ~ ...Uy worked with me. Far out tittle Kiri, isn't she?",. A Jan. 20 wedd ing ls be ingl--------------------- planned in St. Andr e w 's Presbyterian Church, Newport Buch. CATHARINE CONN Miss Conn, a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, now 1.1 a ltudeot at Ora.nae Coast College. FRANK RETURNS To cr••t• p•non•llt•d heir ••yl•1 for m•n A wom1n Aw•nl wi1111l111 l11ttructor I •••rllet, ff•nl h 11••tt, le ,. .... •• O.l,411t ,M,,;,. •• ,., ••• 1,.ci•ll••• '" ....... .,,..yt •ltd ~101101 1tvll11t. H•'11. •It• th•l*f o411011co4 tfytl111 cl••••• fot o,.r.ton, Coll hlM ••. •"Yflmo. DOLP·HIN MARINA,~:~"s I LUC&\' DllCOUNT CINTD A""'f•• .................... ._ .. Mi-Al< TV & ,._ 6 CMG Hl-7117 .. 1 PAm •2.50 -2ND PAm 1~ (Urnlt 9 l*r to a cuttomtr) • Large Sizes Orlon c1pe1 aN I ust right for California winters. Fl•tt•rlng to fuller figures, too. Try on• on at Holl Sin Shop. Notice tho dtlnty hind madt look. $22.00 Sundoy Shoppor1 ......... ............... ~.12 .. 5 Ella. Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP COSTA MllA , ....... ,.. ..... I V1Wedi..ntiefllrl$t.J HUNTIN6TOH .MACH 14 " ......... c..., Oot&IM "*Mel.,. • • , ............... PUWITON-214 !'' 11rt.ar u.n, tl'f 01 1 ,........,. I "-Mr Ba1tlcamf't'lrertl • llfulercllarge -, 57'15° Mirror with SheH Antique finish plate glett, swivel me•1I <•ndle holders with entique brass fhtl1h for •n•rance hall, living room or dinln9 room . r • • , • . • • • • . • . , : / ?"9als Slated Bazaar , Marywoocl lllib School's Chrlslmu Bazaar ill scheduled IOI' noon to I p.m. SWJ4ay, Nov. 12, In the 11Cbo91. A buffet ~ wlll abo be served during diose hours. Riviera Cl ub Dr. Genevieve C4rter Stack, coumelor · 4t UCI a n d California Slate University, Lon~ &ach, will speak on cos-- mellc face.lifting during the lj'ednesday, Nov .!, meeting of ~~e Riviera CJub at 11:30 a.m. in the Balboa Bay Club. Th ursday Gail Ferrell, of t h e t:awrence We I k television show, wUl entertaiD during the general meeting Of'tbe Thurs- day !4ornlng Club al 11:30 a.m. 'Ibursday, Nov. 9, In the ljabla Corlnlhian Yacht Club. Ju nio rs The South Coast Junior Woman's Club's first annual Christmas Boutique is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 11, In the Fountain Valley Civic Center. Proceeds will aid the anti-vtDereal dlseee program· of ·~city's Yoalh Service . ler. NOW Malvina Reynolds, 72-year. old grandmother, singer and eornposer, will be featured in a· concert sponsored by the °'llnge County Cbaprer of the National Organization f o r Women at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 11, in the Unitarian Church of Orange County, Anaheim. Ayudantes lrvine's Ayudantes Auxiliary to C2lildren's Home Society will meet for an associate membership champagne bi'lmcb Saturday, Nov. 11, In the home of Mrs. Eugene O'Brien. ' Newly lnsta11ed. officers for ·the auxiliary are the Mmes. Edward Mitchell, president; Allen Lawton and GeraJd Buck, vice presidents; Stuart Gibson, treasurer; Gary Leach and William Pierson, secretaries, and Roger Tapley, :publicity. BSP The Orange Coast California /Council of Beta ~tgma Phi will meet at JO a.m. Saturday, Nov. 11, in the Elks Club, San· ta Ana. Arts Fest SCHOOL TRUSTEE Ruth Duffy ,A Festival o! Arts and Cra!ill will be fealured from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 11 and U, in the R&ncho Del Rey M o b i I e Estates, Huntington Beach. COLLECTORS -Mrs. Helen Trautwein Oelt) and Mrs. Barbara Kincaid sort books which will be of· ' • • • • • • · fered for sale Saturday, Nov. 11. ALL TIESE MACl••SONSA• E! GOlDfN TOuctt & uw· "'''""'g macn.,... ... :r tit · 1M1 E•clt,111 ... pu1h-11unon. d•o~1n !•onl DObD n. io 1t••rcn.111tcht•. ou1tl••n ounonhOlt•. 1oh·:01otll lllll'lt IMO •yl1tll'I. El991M, ConlflJPOfl'J "~I· llfld" c10•11t;I. $ALE135oo SAIE ·er _ .... , Reg.Mr' IIJLllI:--·__,,_ .. It.IC .. ,,.. lo<I••"• O•~·~ ,,..,1 l>Cr&b« ... o. fl9'••o ... "' ..... ~ ... ....., .. __ · __ ..., twl•··('t•'' ,...,,.,..ft!. l.,......,... ot-~~ ... ....,,., . ' ,.....,.. Mll• J'9':ae MwWIO tf\IC.fllne :r.-. luflon. ,_, """°""'· --pe•-""°'°"' ~ lJC!\111'9 6'op-"' front llQGOo~ .._, JOl'l'f ~ lllf lr_ .... ,....., ..... ,,...rr .. -.r-'l•'-,.,. .......... ,. ...... " .......... "'P'l••olllt FAtA'ASTIC SAVINGS ON Ml I MIRICS AcrylcW.,IWt .....,_,._...., __ ...., A cf•nlin9 ••rl.+yl Monynfo W••r 0.titd 100 1. Acril.n ecrylic tcreen ptinf1, Ma'~ill• w1tftfbl• ertd cfryebJt. 60" w1cf•. SAU 52.77 ,. .... .,.4,,,. • Acrylc ........ _ A colorful turnout! Y1m~yN. 100% ecrylic. 601' wlcf•. M1chir1t w•1heblt •ncf clryebl•· . _ ........ ---~IAU SI .77"' .... $1."'"' s NQI~ Mori I~•::: .. . - , • • T~y. H....,btt 2, 1q72 , DAILY PILOT H · It Teacher Retires Onto School Bo·ard. - By LAURIE KASPER Of .. Ollltr """ lf9ft ~ IS ,yell'I of teaching and some years before that as a concerl singer, Rulll Duffy retlrod lo LWure World ooly lo become active on the Seal ~ Elementary S c h o o I Dislricl Board of Tnlltees. 1be grandmother •f tru.e men explained, "We're in- terested in the schools beeause of our grandchildren and their child.ren 8001edaY." Mos! of tbe people in ber retirement community are in· terested in the schools for the same reuon, ahe said. And, sbe notes that although they no longer send any children in- to the schools, they still send their money. Some ol the people do "try to get disconnected" and remove themselves from prob- lems. But that's not her outlook. · "You just go on doing what you've always done," she said. UIT RE.PORT Being on the board gives her a "completely different perspective" irom being· a high school music teacher for the Loo Angelea School District. And U a vlsJtor doesn'I lhink being a board member is a lot of work, she'll tell them to lift a !hick report oo tbe Slull BUI to see what she must study. The Slull Bill, whidJ re- quires evaluations or teachen and what the studenll leam, ill tbe moot oootrovenlal illsue facing the board now, &he thtiiks. And she doesn't like It. "U we in the schools do everything lh,c Stull Bill calls for, we'll never have time to leach," she explains. Schools cannot be evalua ted as a business simply because it is not a business ... it's kids • . it's people ... it's heart it's leamlog." Seal Beach schools, she belieYes, are In a "marvelous situation." They have just 1,200 studenta, two schools, 60 teachers, four administrators, plenty of money and an in- terested citizenry. There are no hassles in the district. Since there are no minorities.in the area, "which in a way I think is un- fortunate," there are no prolr lems with integration. Cou- pled. with the district's rela· '--tlvely small 117.e, "What el5e would you have but peace and quitt," ahe 11id. UBERAL·MJNDED Mrs. Duffy describes herself group of women who both play the guitar and sing. "It just takes Ume but then whardo you bave when )'OU're , _, my age7" W ukl. Aad ho'\ old Is she? Her annrer b "young In aplrlt but in ~ I'm an old lady." as a "very liberal·mlnded ,,jiiiiiii~~~~iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij" '; person" and the board u "all [ 1 " ... people with vision and an outgoing viewpoint." Of the adminiatrators, she said, "I can't !peak highly enough or them ." And in he r opinion. the teachers are the ve ry very best. Atrs. Duffy was appointed to the board seven years ago and ~lected with nlOre votes lhan anyone else on the ballot three years later. Last year, she was honored at Golden West College with the Out· enc.ore. B~ES IT AGAINI J 1111 new 9rg.tn' for the ho!M. (~ plete w1rh your choice of The 81hf· win l~elu1ives ... WondtrChord, f1nlomf1ngers 1nd Aulolhythm. Wh1t1nr ltlncl 1f -•k Pll llke. I h14-MI tl'llll ..... it llllM't fife. "'l'fOMI OI llll IAl.OW//~ .MUSI( (Al" WOODWORTH PIANO AIU> Ol(;All S-LfS standing Citizen Award. This 51 5 llOITH IWN, SANTA AHA • 5474151 she described as "really l-'lllllll•••ii"ii'•••••••••••••-' something." I Her husband, Frank, a l =;:;~~;;;;;2;;;;;;;~;;~ retired business manager oI lj movie studios, loves her con- Unuing Interest in education and music, she said. fl '""-/}_ ITALIAN DELI e BAKERY ln addition to her board wock, she Is active with a Lutheran church choral group and the Strumming OloraHers, a Leisure World ol.ucci ,,L,Jeli REST AU RANT • 891 1 Adams at Magnolia, Huntington BeKh, Ollt .. ltM ,.,..., Detl 0ptn11 ... 1 Ill ca-.. SllH "' ~ -n ..-n hltJ 10·1: Fri, 10-t: k•. IM'tCleMtll MM.;,,.._..... JltMI II M ....... l'rlf!I HtWJtlrt 8MCll-C .. t1 M•• 1'-t•i. ..,....., ITA1.IU 1 LI, LOAI' -a•G. 41c BREAD .... • ... ·~ ........,. e.,. 1111 38• .. " ' ' .. ., CM · Friends Set Sale lll(•D ITALIAH CHl•IE-lllG. II.» PROVOLOIE ... "" 89•"· IMl'OllTID A•GILA M.t.lllA In observation of Children's Book Week, Nov. tl-19, a series of events have been planned at Costa M e s a Library. Nov. 11, on the Calilomla Federal Savings and Lo a n parking lot. Before the week's celebration begins, Costa Mesa Friends will conduct a book saJe from 9 a.m. !o 4 p.m. Saturday, On the same day at llk30 a .m., the movie, "The Adven. lures of Huck Finn" will be shown !or boys and girls. Children's Theater Guild of Newport Harbor will present the play, ·~otter Place" at CERAMIC WALL TILE Hartl, bright ~ llnl!tlh &h l[l\'f! pumanrnl. ••lf'r.,NM1f . tw-.nty M kltclw.ft, hathrn11"' _..... 4.1;.1~4·1/t In. (..'om-- JIWC! M 52e ._lwno! 39~w .. J'IJIST QUALITY MATERIALS! SEU: STlC CARPET TILE r.., I• ""--mtnll f9N ...... '"CM~ lh.12 ........ " ... nMt! 29~w· FREE PRINTED INSTRUCTIONS I . . -. • 10 :30 .a~m. Thursday, Nov. 16, and that evening at 7: 30 the Olm, "The Cabinet ol Dr. Caligari" will be shown for young adulill. Closing out the week will be a prorgam on yoga by Marley Stevens at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 18. ITAUAI TOMATOES SOLID VINYL FLOOR TILE A lfM ... of ftO-"•• ...... 1 Ht ,..y.tu.I,.... .. lt11 I! M. ~!A 4llrr \aJVf'! MIRROR WALL TILE ·i~ Jhll .... ... ,,_ ................ .,,., ,.... .... lllWtT. ~t cu.• 4-\'r..~r.nA~ . 7 · M. "'"·" 5-VF.IN . • • . . 7 . l'A. COLOI 1U COMI IN AND on ACQUAlrNllDI I.. , • • STORE HOURS: MILT I .. l lltl MOIL -' fll. I .. t Of9I ._.,,,ti .. I 2221 .COSTA MUA HARIOR ILYD. lll:o•o 645-1126 Al.WAYS IU1fTT OI' Piii PMlo,11 - • ' 38• CAN • ' . l . . -~ i :i : •• •• • • . . . • . . . • .. :• • . • . . • • ' ! • • • • l • • • , 26 DAILY PILOT DICK TRACY NO PRl!SSURW AT 65 M.P.lol. IS TOOM"'°'. TUMBLEWEEDS . --. -..... _ by Chester • YA WA'&:S 'E'M ON 'ioR FoeTS! INUIANS DON'T WeAR Sf1'.le5. THE'Y WeAR MOCCASINS MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY ---trl'f,,,,,,~ I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I ACROSS 42 Unrefined Yatlt'dav'I Puul9 Sotnd: 43 Photogr•phtd 1 Genu1 of for o'ound . di9gnostlo beetli!1 purpoMI fl Monks of 46 M1de de1ign1 Mongolia in l11thw 11 Long-tailed 4fj: Contest rodent -. Time ol -14 Dull people prOS941ri1y 15 Like . ---irl 1 49 Win• chlrt11hop 60 R1wcabb1g1 1e Guido'• note dilh 17 Drunken le11t 52 Aom1n god 19 Mingle 56 M1k1 with 20 Anhur -: effort U.S. teonil 57 Chok:e bet.- champ WHn two 21 Boundery line 60 l1gal mlttllf 11 Penitent 38 Bandle1der 22 Pu1h with 81 C1n1d9 ·-! 12 FuR of verve Sammy - audden fon:1 Llrit bird• 13 M1kH I 38 SWHt- 24 S1rg11nts, 82 W1rnlng charge amelllng corpor1l1, deYlce 1g1lrl1t 11c.:Abbr. 13 Public 18 Andy'1friend 41 Rubbing of ~ Co1111 notlcn: 23 Move with tM body 21 High lnfonntl bounding 42 Murmur 11endlng 84 PttMtl'lt. N.ipl fondly 30 M1ke1 El5 Limit In 25 Billiard rod 44 "HOOl'f'I" thoroughty amount 2fi R9Quite to go 46 -l'lall: Wei DOWN Tl Force out In a Pu blic 32 One having 1 Ea1tem 1t1a1m bui.dlng love for: Church title 28 Arch•lc 48 ThMtric91 Sutfi• 2 &tlact birdl pronoun 3l Offer• 3 Pan of the 29 Fait method pf'*Mntatlon 1bu!WSantfy foot of moving 47 o-dltd 34 Dw1rt 4 Not!on9•oo gooctt:t 48 l.Mtom1t• 37 Sort of 6 ••• WOfdl 50 L9' h ltlnd fJlghtenitlg: We<fn11day 30 Indulged 1n 61 ·-m11ffty: V1r. 8 N1rroW appetl1e Crime agalnat 31 Creeled 1 country roadl fully ' the stale falN Danit 7 A1 blind a1 . 31 Secured with 53 Star In Cetut Mtence 11rin11 64 HNtln; 31 .. tt'•·-cry ti Slipper 33 form1I IP91f9tu1 from" 9 F1tlma'1 CUiiom 65 Gip 40 Mlnitcu)I hulb~ 36 Burden 68· M1n'1 41 Jo4ned 10 M1k.. 38 Actor-nlckMme doMIY v..n.t In MecMurray 69 QuadNped by Al Smith by Dale Hale I'LL TELL H IM OFF • YOU ·WON1T BOTHERED ..-- ANYMORE PEANUTS JUDGE 'PARKER MISS PEACH ! .~ " • fl!'l'llRE RJNC.IPAL.$ Of AMERICA MEET HERE PERKINS WHV Nor? HE'5 ON °™E 5CHOO!. 00ARD, ISN'T HE? HE WA? THE ONE Wi!O l'ANNED HER 500K ! ••• DOOLEY'S WORLD • SAL LY BANANAS TJu.&«>~ F~~ ~ ... lleRT GORDO MOON MUWNS ,_, '/ES-I ..!OGA MILE ~) ~ PAY~ ' ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Scliulz DO l'EOPLE OF COURSE, 11EAU.V TALK OIARUE 15«011/1'1. 'tl ~? EVEl<'I OAV •• DO °™E DOCTORS LISTEN ? ;1 ll Ii !I •• ~ by Harold Le Doux by Mell • by John Miies l'lfrft 11111 . . -· . by Roger Bradfield by Gus Arricila by Ferd John.son by R09er BoAen _Al.L llJe 11-.C 1a liJAr 400 SHOllJ f'ro:::F O' CCl!IEMPr /.»Dior HAll'l!D. " ~~11-Z "Tbe troable wt~ relafOIUd sleeves Is you always ff.el as If you 1bould be doing something:." DENNIS THE MENACE • • I \ l J ' ., -• • " • ' . .· .. • • Thursday, N00ttmber 2. 1972 DAILY PILOT Jl She .\\taited for Dad PhalWft ... - Wbeo 4-t Brldlt'I l'fpirter .... _ --to jail w· relUllnl lo re...i his llOUl'l:e8 In a newspaper story be had wrlll..,, llhe pramlled lo n1!"'1mUI be wsa mealed lo hlVe their thlnl chlld. She kept ber word. Sii days after Brid&e was released from jail, In Newark, N.J., a Tbe "'Q.year-old. f o r m e r teecher II lbe llrst '""""" to oerve Oil the COWJCi1 aocl also the ftnt of her ae1 to serve as a pennaqent representative to the U.N. . ~ent slva11or ADeode ol Chile, 'bu the flue. A JftsidenU&l p r e 9 s spokesman said lhat Allende came down wttb the flu Sun- day but went to his officea as I at a bsM!fit in Guadalajara, ftetived "enthuslastJc" reac- Melico for ao orphanage. tJon trom Japanese alMilences ft WU bis ftrtt public a)I>-and bis' mlsaloo Is being cert lince be perlol'med at the achieved. United Natlom in New York After a .....-11 tour In oo Ila l5lh llll!lv<ruary oo nortbem and ooXral Japao, Oct. %4, 11171. He later cllred.ed Montana said, 0 What I feel Is the Georgetown Unlversily · that they see a small sample choir last. J;>ecember in San of the West and oow they waot Juao, Puerto !!Ito, to see all ol the West." . HePstallJCe moved to Mex· "I atao roo,ed a mayor," ico and 'VU. invifed to the Moot.an& sai«(· Qf his visit to benefit here. · • mayor Kiyoshi Sugito of maal to Can')' out his nonnal ( 1 PEOPLE ) du=~ Pab: Casals, who ....., _______ _, will be 98 in December, played · * · Nagoya Oct. 16. "This is an Cowboy-~wman ~t o n t I e old cowboy cus tom t o Moatana Jr.. leader of an friends."~ American Old West show Montana's specialty is trick visiting Japan, ~d the show roping. UPIT ...... dlUlllli.'r. ellhl·pound, ounce Jennifer Marie, born. -WU "'It was a matter of mind over matter," Bridge joked aboUt the delivery. She expected to deliver between Ocl 1 and 12. J.....,.u.e La.. is named · u a $1 ,000 cmtributor to reelectioo campaign ol Sen. Claiborne Pell (D-R.I.). Mri. Onassis, who was the wue·of Prealdeot Jolin F. Ken- nedy. Is lilted 00 the official contribu~ion reportin& fonn at the Rhode !!land State House aS a housewife. ·* The Presbyterian ;Hospital Cehter Foun da tion bas honored Academy Award-win- nlng actress Greer Ganon and Olympic gold medali8t Callly. CmT for achlevemerU. :ltalJette Willison, art student at the San Francisco Academy of Art College, startled viewers as she sat in f:be window of the academy wearing a mustache. ,<;!aimed she saw so many whisken looking tnto the ·ymdow she decided to "whisker back at 'em.' .. . The awaros were presenled during the foundation '• fourth aMual awards dinner in A1bu- querque . Miss GlU'llOll, who bu a home in northern New Mexico. received the award in recogni· tion of her profess lo nal achievement for the benefit of ~Safety Package mankind. Miss. carr, from Albu- querque, recetv• a special recognition award for Olympic victories in the , 100-meter breaststroke and the 400-meter medley relay. · eadline 'Gives'· * . Jim Belter, whose marriage •, :.·· ~·· . -WASHINGTON (AP )' 7 7An ~ed sbortage of cbil'dproof cootainers h a s • ~pied the· Food and Drug A,dministratlon to q u i e t I y M ~y the deadline for safety ~i.ng of aspi rin , ;~eroos drugs and certain ·linaments. : 'l1le notice, published without public 6MOUDCemeot in the Federal Register a wJei ago, gives lhl .. ,nation's 55,QOO retall pharmacists until 1~&.R •. ·22, 1973 to comply. ', •,11ae oMginal deadlines, bas· 1 edii>ri a two-year-old law, bad t. wm Aug. 14 for aspirln, Sept. 21 for methyl 88.licylate or 'w!nllJl1p'een oil, and Oct. 24 , for 4,300 types ol such em. trolled d r u g s as am· ,pbetamines, ·barbiturat~ and narcotics. _ : · ~ ,s;, to ~,Onallll broke up 160-ol il()_young cht1dlen, vet , because o! fierce apposition maybeOflO!led by!IOola group from ber lather, Arblolle of 100 adults. Onassis, will marry t h e . l daughter of a Texas The FDA 1~lf aggrava e~ millionaire in Honolulu . the shortage 1n June .when 1t Boike Is scheduled to ur~ drug companies "to r JIUll'o voluntarily begin using special ry Ilene Bon.etm, daughter ol packaging · f 0 r potentially Judge.Roy Hofhemi, owner ol hazardous over· the. counter the Houston Aatrodome, on drugs" rather· than wait for Nov. 25. goverrnnent action. Before Bolker's marraige to The FDA's s l 0 w en· Miss Onassis, he was married forcement of lhe 1970 Poison to the daugh~ of L4s Angeles Prevention Packaging Act, financier Mark fiper. designed to cut the 500,000 ac-* cidental poisonings that kill up Shoe magnate Harry Karl to 500 children each year, has and his wife, actress Dt:hble drawn frequent criticism from Reynolds, were sued for •16.2 Congress. million in Los Angeles by Dr. Sidney Wolfe, head of Karl's sl!te. Ralph Nader's H e a I t h Sarah Karl Pollack alleged Research Group, said the In a petition med In Superior latest delay demonstrates that Court that Karl dieated her of FDA "again is p 1 acin g millions of dollars ,in a economic feasibility f O r business 'deal involving stock manufacturers above safety in the Karl shoestore chain consideratiom." held by her 8.nd her children. FDA omCIAI.S said a fiQd survey under way in· dlitates that Jhe packaging· sµjipJy back!\'£ may be efen THE PACKAGING industry, 'inOre extensive, and that the however, expreued gratitude ~ine might hav.e to be ex· for the extension. <iended also !or manufacturers "We have all available pro- of bottled aspirin, the leading duction facilities operating :cause of cllild pois9rJlngs. around the clock making child· ' ; 0 We just lee:r,ied of the resi!tant c Io s u re s and The suit also accused Karl of "squanderina:" about St million In eompaoy funds by gambling in Las Ve g 1 1 casinos. Shortage recently," said packages," aatd Kevin Hepp, ' ileory L. Verhulst, director or vice presidellt and general '.the chemical:mtimis division manager of the c Io s u re in the FDA's Bureau ol. division of Owens-Illinois Inc. ! ~uct S8fet)'.' ~'Packaging et Toledo, Ohio. ~pr;octucers jest· have not kept "But if we-stopped taking qp with the: d~mand." orders today It would take us Jeane M.;\.' aut7, I mother ol s!J< chl!dnn. tool< over as president of the U.N. Security Council. The Guinean diplomat IQC- ceeded Loola de Gulringaud ol France under a pni<edure tn which the presidency or the COUJlcil ls rotated mnong ~ ell members every mooth. i:a alphsbetlcal order ol member natloh!l o The delay now arfeds ~nly well into the first quarter of retail druggists, and ·covers 1173 to fill existing orders," he more than one billion preacrip-~ded. lions they fill annually. r i,r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiji;;;;;;;;;;il Leonard "Clay" Silk, ao FDA pharmacist, said the shortage was compounded by pharmacists deciding to put all prescriptlon.s lo child-re&is· tant containers. FINAL LECTURIS THE LAW REQUIRES that the containers foil efforts of .Here's How l ·Wives Rate ·On ~Market' ' FREE leaf ~tale ' !JnveJlmenl SemJ KING .SIZE Reg. $179.95 Typical Ortho quality at fabUkMJs savings. SCroll- Quilted Cover, Cotton-Felt added cuehloning & Crown-- Flex Center for extra support. lncludel: Mattress PLUS 2 Box Springs PLUS OrthcH'ak PLUS Double Bonus.· KING SIZE I QUEEN SIZE QUEEN SIZE ' ReCJ. •1st.IS Urlbe11eY.oi. iow price 1or I • grMl Oftho qUHn wllfl qt OCIMCNcikln • TWIN or FULL ......... .._ __ '"'-- Fireman Promoted A Loi Angeles dty fireman who l!ves In Newport Beach bu been promo\ed followiq his top ahowln( on a reotnl ezamlnation. lf~bl\llllllWJQeiaM' .. .. -o1--toow.-...-.ttll• Carl A. Butler, 'ol lat Pon l«blelgh Place, WU liVto the new title of auto-fireman in a presentation by Assiatant Chief WUUs Nelson. ao U.t W& rr.f ..__, a _.,. ......... and ..... ""'"'"'~~ .... lntbetrntW........_ Se. Cust Ylsilll' Butler has been with the Los Angeles department for four years. He and his family have lived in Newport Beach for the past two years. 4fM519 .... The new auto-fireman will now be assigned to fire station duties in Southwest L o s Angeles. llDr Yisllll' 646-4174 I 3Days Only! KING SIZf Reg. $349.15 lncradlbl' luxury can · t now be yours at bUo.e aavlng.s. Gorgeous cover Mutti-Oultted to l'l" foam over thick Urethane cuahlonlng. Includes: Mattross PLUS 2 Box Springs PLUS Ortho-Pak PLUS Double Bonus. Ortho-Pak Fle'deftal ~ KJne Of a-t t it• T Cl> ShMl • Flltlle,_. MIM'ton King 04' OuMt191m"'*I Bottom Sheet • 2 Fletek:tMlt No-ll'Ol'l IOl'IQI or Queei'I tire Plllowcnn • 2 Klrto or a.Ml\ Iii.~ P11'°"' •~or OuMn IMM M.ttfftl P.t • K"irtg or Queen 1lze Me\111 Frame on· e .. ~1c .. 1.,.. Double 8011111 . Kktg DI' QUMn: Padded V\'tY1.He8db&Wd ANO Quitted Bedspreed, Twlfl or Fun : Hedloerd AHO w.talF,_ .. ...,"""" c .. ,.... • •• Always FREE DELIVERY Use ~tit PORT MORESBY, New Gui... (UPI I -The lat eat 4uotaUons on the New Guinea : t.irtde market make interesting ~ r,etctlnl. NoY. 8tli "Capital Coaservatlon ThroUCJJ Ezchanc\D1 MlnlmlJlng Tl1eo" ·=:-....=: s _l'WI ... -l'WI--; A aovernmmt reP.Ort 111d • ........ marryln( for the ltrtt Umo in tbe"'"""" Jlml Valley . ol the Pspua dlJtrlcl ls wwth no more thin ae m cae, nve pip and -.... ..,. (a lu1• f!IPU• bird common ID Hew awn. and nortllem -111, but ranly aeeo). A _.. mamecf once -· .. 'fliloy'• loveminl ., 9lbncU uld, 11 worth DO mon -... ""' pip and • ~ary. And for -marrlad mm"e. thin opce, Ute CQW)o ellmen l1 1u1d aa ._nlfnlanlJ JoldllMnl - "such wotnm W f.l DO atlfto Loctunr -Bruce 11""1 "Tlllortar Your "IS ln•eol!Mnt" Lecturer -llaDd1 llcClrdi. TICKns AVAILAILI AT THI DOOlt IACH SISSION Mins 7:JO ·•.JO P.M. GOLDIN WllT COLLHI .__ea.,,,....," Or-. C.-· OolM WOii D~L~ PILOT · e C1ll111 merdal value.•• 1._ _________________ _.1 I OIANIE 2+4f N. Tustin A.,.. t..,... tr.. 0.. .... M1lll ~ 617·0111 SANTA AftA an• FOUNTAIN YAWY 161 l I Horba. llv<I. ,_.... .. .....,, ....... Zerly'a.. "--• '" .... ,. ANAHEIM . 1811 W11+ Uncoln Ave. ........ ww .... .,...,., A- J•tt .... ef'f.J M•rt ........ ,, .. , ... You can Only Buy OrthoMattreeees at Ortho seo ... OP Ut I •11 INCIAI llTS LAKEWOOD 44J) C.ndlewood Ave. c:...n...... SI.opt I M,.. fHe ~ ... -4 ee.t.r) ....... ., .... ,. 50 Stare• to S.ne YH 11 lll'f II !1.111 ! 'II 'J ':-.111 llJ u-:.1m '" IJ · l ll ll OlllVLllY . CHlOll llRrilS AVAILAHll 'Hnrrn nMHHCARU ' f11M.lll\ 1:111.111.1 • • ' .. •• • ~ DAILY 1"11.0T 11.n P'llttt SKYL)IB DECAL AVAILABLE-FOR ONE DIME Government Presses Issue Various Booklets Printing Office Cranks Out I tenis A Skylab decal , com· memorating the first U.S. manned space station to be put in orbit in spring, 1973. is available Crom the federal prinling office in Washington, D.C. for a dime. ' The stickt<>n, vinyl decal depicts the skylab to be man· ncd bf three seperate crews over eight months, A variety of · experiments will be carried out. The word "Skylab" appears in white, highlighted with blue stars under the i!llogan, "Man- ned Flight Awareness." IT WAS ISSUED by the Na· tional Aeronautics and Space Administcation (NASA) but can be purchased for 10 cents from the &Jpertntendent of Documents. U.S. Government Printing Olflce, Washington, D.C., 2<M02. A more expensii e space- oriented publication put out by the government is "Exploring Space 'With a Camera." for $4.2.5. It .ia a bouDd ,yolwne of pictures-taken from U.S. spacecraft In the Jast 10 years o( earth, Mars and the tIJOOn. ITEMS IN A RECENT booklet describing Selected U.S. Government Publications range from space topics to homosexuality. "Killer Current," a colorful blue alld green poster describ- ing rip currents and what to do if caught in one, is oo1y 10 cents. · For 15 cents, ~ iposter ex· plaining the use of "Defltal Floss, A Ufe .Lioe for a . Lifetime o'f Good Denlal , llealth'' or a booklet on "Cotn-- prehensive Plans for lmprov· ing Rural Counties" can be ob- tciined . In a slightly higher price range, are a 20-ci!nt booklet on prevention and control of "Subterranean TenrUtes:" a ~ent report of Nixon's Joint Economic Committee .on the ''Price and Wage Control"; a 2.5--cent report to the Senate on "Canci!lled Careers: t h e Impact of Reduction-in-Foree Policies on Middle-age d Federal Employes:" and a 2&- cent summary of "Energy Recovery lfom W~" .• method ofuslng shredded solid waste ks · tuel in boiler furnaces. • ONLY AT WARDS HUNTINGTON BEACH SALE TODAY THRU SUNDAY, NOV. S 20% OFF This la an entirely new concept In Blrthstont Rings 104' Mothers and Grandmothers. So dlffermt rrom the ordinary Mother's rl.ni! Your choice of blrthltones set In JtK Black Antique, or Natural Gold . , . also available In White C'.old ••. with any number of birthstones you desire. Ide&I lot CllrlJtma.1 ! - t001'H ANNt\11tRSARY VEAR 7777 Eilin99r HuntlllC)tOn leadl \ • • • TV Franchise . 'Losing Propos 1 ition' ,. Kitchen and Bath Faucets by Delta • t;hrome plat.ct with 1parldirHJ, durable linith • Ha11d1om•, good for yeat1 of u1a • Kitchen modtl 100 .... , • Ba++. rnodtl 500 wf Garden 1 c Sale lluv $1120 Edge Shrub end Hedge ~immer for re9. price of 29.99 Fof 1, more you c•n get :1200 9r•11 trimmer Complete 9•rden manicure 1ef Sentetion1lly priced Thompson's Famous Water Seal • For wood, c:Oft· cr1!1, rn11011ry Stop1 p1 int p11Jin9 Prov11'1 protector .... 1.f t 119 ... Drawer Cabinet • 'ort1ble 11111 fram• c1bin•f • c1 •• , •••·thr11 1fyre11e lllr1w•r1 • 10"•9 'h"•61/1" d••P • Model 11 °611 ]99 many yean." L. Burroughs, f o r m e r McKenzie, former Coata Mesa publisher ol lhe Orange Coast city manager; Pat Boone - Daily Pilot; Ben M. Yorba, Peu Parker, Jimmy Durant~· county developer; Art h u r and ilarry Babbitt. ..._ ::.:E: M,ercury P oll Set Grinds · Down High Prices Cookie Press Delta Faucet Has 12 Designs ti Th.• •it to stop faucet leaks • 12 cookie da1igns • Two 1pring1 • 3 pastry tips aru:I t ... o cup wa1har1 • M1ka1 1 ¥lri1ty • Keep an extra of t1mptin9 traah • 1•f hartely • Easy to u1a 2CJc 399 Prkft !ffwc:rhe thf11 WH., Now. I. Glidden Spred ln-Sink-Erator • '-aste Disposal e Q~i lcly and efficiently disposes of ga age and food waste e ~? talls ea sily • y.L. Approved e Model 333 '2488 Satin Glidden Latex Enamel Sem~Gloss Latex Wall Paint • ld•1I for kit . ' e /;o.,•r• b1111ti- ch1n1, b1tlu fulJy, 111¥11 flO ind woodwork I li•p rn1rk1 • Cl11n1 with ., W11h1bl1 for .... , • D11r1bl1 ind J 1dd1d conv1ni· w11h1bl1 I ft Cl Ea1y to 1pply . ... .... '·'' 2.ff 4 :; , Drawer &atiinet e Do11bl1 cl11p • ., ••• ,. 11'111• IUtl 2 lJ. "•2 1/1 " x5 'M" Porl1bl• c•bi· n1f m1e111r•• 10"•91/1"•6'h " Conven ienlly Located., .Easy To A:eachl Under &abinet Fluorescent • e E111m1I fi11i1h e W illi olu1 recepl1cl1 e On.off twitch 4aa . 2666 HARBOR BLVD. -IN COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7080 HOURS, WEEKDAY S 9 TO 9 SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY 9 10 6 PM ·- COSTA MlS A Keeps Food Warm ' Salton Hot Tray • l•rg•, t•m~ p9rature conttoU.d surface mak•• h111d0 soma 1•r¥· • in9 Good look· in9, great gift. 7so Interior Shutters from 3~. T; -- , .. Ir 16 .. Room Dividers • Bright, liv1ly d1° 1i9n1 perk up 1ny rolm • U11f11I, d1cor1tor look • Choic1 of de1ig111 • D11r1bl1, 1tro1u1 988 Old Time Style Chimney Swag • Choice of l color• 1h•de •nd b11e • Bl•c:k fini1h !rim •nd 1hede • I" dinetfe1 or f1mily roo1n1. Mocl1I 198 12'8 a I .. p T -w I He~g~ew Ma-qager ·. Of Rangers AIU.ING'l'ON, Tn. -Whitey Hermg, ~ ol the New Yorlt Mets' farm -ntem, Wli named manager of tbe Tea- • Rangers ol tbe American League to-llOY. Jleroos, 4%, who succeeded Ted '8llaJnl after lour yeoro .as Rangers JDIDlger, speQt six yean with the Mets IPder hb loniier capadty. , Re played as a major 1._.; tor ~ City, ~tlmore, Detroit, 'It~ and .Ule New Yort Yankees. Jlail&m owntl(1lob Sborl made tbt ..,. ~t, 11ylog: "Whitey bu signed a' omtrKt for the ne:rt 1"2 years Ind I hope q long 8a be wanta." • ,.,..,.. ol tbe conlract w"' not an- tlollr!¢ed. • ~,1111DOUD<le!llenl ended speculation tlial Dick· How1er, third base coach ol tbe . New . York Yankees, had accepted Ibo job. • ,... NEW YORK -Tbe ~ew York Mets, npeded lo be ezlra.actlve In blleball's ~ trade marlte~ !>ave made their fiRt 1D0Ve, a four..p.layer swap with the AUlllU Braves. ··The Meis shipped right-handed pitchero Gllt)l'Gellry and Danny Frisella to the ~Jes m: exchange for second baseman F.U. Millan and left-bander George -· ,... LCil ANGELES -Coach John McKay "'YI .he expects bb No. 1 ranked Soutbem California Trojans to nm up II~ an "extremely a g g r e s s I Y e" def..,. this Saturday when they face W~ State at SealUe. · ~ unbeaten Trojans, gunning for the &et Bowl, worked on their running game \n ~c:tice We$esday. . M_Cl{ay said he •anted !<> bone the USC rumllog game because the Cougar doleme bas been tougher on the ground attack than it has on passing. F1lnker Lynn Swann, out with a strain· td ~. returned to practice Wednesday tlolir with lallback Rod McNeil, who bad • leli Injury. . ,... ARCADIA -Heavily favored Cougar II llaged bis patented stretch run Wednesday lo win tbe 1100,000 Oak Tree Jnvttatiana.I for the second straight year lo !ll'ObablY ·eam a berth lo the rich Wasbingt<a D.C. International handicap Nov.r ll ' ,... ONTARIO The group operating Ontario Motor Speedway says it cannot pay $1 · millioo in rent due Dec. is,. and tlie -•!loo that built the multi- mlllloo dollar facility aald it Is accep"l!i bldl for prospective new operaton. BiJt John R. CooPer, president ol. Ontario Motor Speedway Inc., aaid lltboagh his organization was in effect defaulting on the lease, II bad submitted a uew projiosal for operating the track. Tbe default In lease payments al!O meam that the Ontario Motor Speedway Corp., the nonprofit organization that IJslfed hoods lo build the $30 million f2cptty, will apparently have to default on S>rindpal and Interest payments to hood holders in a year, officials said. ,... J Oi\KLAND -Former Oakland Raider __ :+tl<le receiver Wa?rfQ _:Wells, 29, was annte<l'Wednesday coor! ~rmisslon to lee.Ye Oakland for Houston to join the -Oilen of the National Football League. Sllperlor Court Judge William J. MCGUiness modified Wells' probation on a 1'89 attempted rape oooviction ao be mild leave the area. But be said Al ...... County Superior Court will re- lalil jurtsdict!On until tbe probation ex- Pi?' Jan. 13, 1'7$ and in the interim Tesu parole authorities will supervise Wofll. ilim.AoELPHIA~ The Philadelphia Eailes, suffering through a dlimal 1-3 1eiion, were sued Wednesday by four f... who demanded refunds on tbtir U4eta for the remalning four home gaQies. 'Qi. complaint described the Eagle•' thus far as "Inept, amateurish, in effort and far below tbe level tf. ;.,. professional footboll performance apoCted of a Natlooal Football League ..., .. • Z, 19n DAILY PILOT , I ' -~-. -• Kiek~r· ;.- ·Beauty QDe.en )JOl1llles 88 UY Wllll', Fla. CAP) -No. a, tbt pl-« OI Mary lmmacutate lllCb llcltool'• lcolhall team, pilued "I'! ., Illa -11111 fall. Sha -tlltt'• rlCli'. 1'o. a b • lltl- dldn't llllY ti bCIGwWnlog. 'Ille ·~~ !P"""'llA .... .._ ed log prlllcell. 'lbmla Dion, l<nown around tbo locker room u Good 'Ole 83, ls not on- ly Ibo fOOlball leam'• placeklcker; lhe Is ·alto ~ of her l"'Olor cla!I, an honor -Ind a betuty~ '!bat mokes her the ooly oo a blih ochool vanity lalm In da, oayo Floyd Lay, dlred« ii( the llate'a • 0 lllih lldlliO('Adl---lip • """"" -..... n.. -'l'benoa. S.looW with 8Y" ol blue, and a ,...... lntbtr. She stumbled fl1Ja ..... helmet wllh -ol -'lnio bor _... __ by --· curls. She allO llils lier ......,._. "It ~ -ol haPl*lfd • ,..., Ullllorm witb • trim IJO pounda and ..,,.. .... oak!. '"l'llm -aw. proper ......... Ill 118-~It powdli' poll -we bad bore - plocol. • 'I • . ' lirlo. l'JCI --and I lll<ed tt. "I'm DOI -tbo ljplolj --WI""""' out tbal I coold kid< ol tbe team " o!ie -wllh a ciale' eood." · "but my lllif 1< a lllllo<lo1jilr.''. ' ~ out .~ fall .,.c11ce, lhe Mll'lllen cooi:b BID b>hrril•_,., fjlmd .... wu Iii WU)'.'' But ber "She'• not only lbe 1lelt ...... .,i. but ""'* ..._ .... pliantly ottered lo abe'• 11111 ....... pd • ~·· . Ifft ........... boolillc polnlen Ind got." • iibo .... dev<loped • OOC<Or llyle The wisp of a Cit! wtio na tbo 40-punch. ya.rd -lo u oec;cxa d!dn'I .,.... '.1111!1 IOlved tbo ~ and now 0 obe'I IOlog for dblance II ft! II IC> 01ncy. Her fa lb er, Monroe County ICbool board member Robert DIOn, llllJ'l obe ave-. bot•"'"' 35 Ind II~ a punt In~. Zwuberb 11y1 Theresa ..U no favart and receives nooe -escep& she doem't ocrimmage and silo d!'f"I witb tbe cheerleaden. "And the no ocrlmmage rule ia mine, DOI hen," be addl. "l 'we alway1 liked football ,'' 'l'benu akL "I'm not afraid ol ,.i. Ung hurt, beca-tbe guyl reaUy loot out far me." Tber<Sa'1 lootboll caroer will tnd when Ibo -does. An " -. she pl&DI a career in commerdal art. "I havm'I board ol any art inllllula fleldmr • -........ Bui lllett u. ..uJ four -tbil -and Theresa hopes lo alone fOI' lut Saturday, when tbe Marlntn loll 14-tJ lo Melboome. Aft.tr wanning the benc:b for five IRlfUll, 'Iberesa was sent In to try for the ertra point. She rnlsaed -twice. ''I lust bardJy evtt miu, but I dkl.," lhe llld ruefully at Tuelday'a prac> llce. To prow> II, she promptly booted 1evm footbells lhr""lb tbe uprlgbl.s. I Carlton Caps Off · Great Season STEVE CARL TON Odd Bounces No Detriment For Newcombe GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP) Australian John Newcombe, exhausted by a vigorous schedule of play and long distance travel in recent weeks, found a reserve of strength Wednesday night and won his second-round match in the $50,000 World Championship t e n n i s tournament. A couple of ill-timed cheers from hi.! f.. year-old son, Clint, and the~ aggressive play o1 ·u .s. ·collegiate champion Dick Stocktoo of Pl>rt Wasltingt<Jll, N.Y., near- ly did in the fatigued Newcombe. But tbo lbfte-lime ,Wimbledoo cham· pion advanced to the quarterfinal!:, beating Stockton, 0-7, 7-f, 0-1. Newcombe, the top seed and leader in point standings for the WCT's aummer- fall circuit, was with.in two points of elimination as he served at 4-5, 30-30 in the second set. But be. rallied with two service winners, won the ensuing tie- breaker 7·3, and played well the rest of the way. "It's a litUe tough to get ,motivated,'' Newcombe said. "I'm still tired from the final at Vancouver 10 days ago." He defeated Marty Riessen o f Evanston, Ill., in a three-hour, 4>minute match at Vancouver, then played.-a doubles fl.ll81 and drove three hours to SeatUe, Wash., wbere be caught a'lllght to Esaen, Germany, lite of tut week'• Gennan pro cbamplonslfips. Riessen, the No. 5 teed, did little more than go tbroup tbo -and was !rounced by Ullleeded AUllrlllan Allan Stooe, 5-1, 0-0 lo leS!I tban a ball hour. New<ombe grumbled tbrolllb his match aboot odd bounces of the fast artifidal "Poligrass" court at the Scan- dinavian Arena and varioul other dislractlons, Including oulbunll from hia son In the audlenee. "Clint screamed ooce in the flrst aet, just as I was making a aecuid serve, and l double faulted," grinned Newcombe. ''He also hlt IOlne odd momenta to yell 'Ill daddy.' He b .not old ......,. lo - any better but for the moment I felt like climbina up In Ibo 1taodl and 1trangllog him." Clint's mother, Angie, bad a better llO!ulloo. She bundled tbt yoongoter off I<> bed and Nlun!ed In lfme I<> ... ber buoband "'mplete bi1 victory In reloUve peace and quiet. .... NEW YORK (AP) -T~ Ibo airpri1e ol the first man . lo win tbe award wblle absolutely no one, Philadelphia's Steve pitching for a )ast..plaoe team. Carlton bu_, Ibo Cy YOIDli Award as Carltoo polled tJ0 polola·fw bb bollol · Ibo bes! pltdlet lo Ibo Natlooll League. """'P -ftva points fw eac11 ftnl place Carltoo wu Ibo unanlmoua cllOlce of vote. Rwmenlp was Plttsburib'• Steve the %4-man oommlttee of baseball writers Blass, who -~ 35 points. FergullXI . -two from each NL city -for the Jenkins ol Chicago, lut year'• Cy YOIDli honor after turning in a remarkable 'Zt·lO winner, was third witb 21 ~la. recent for the last-aJace Philliea. Cleveland's Gaylord Perry was named The lean left-bander, who accounted . the American Leque winner 'I'Uelday. foe 46 per«nt ol Philadelphia's 59 vie-Carltoo'1 '11 vicloNo lopped tbt llll- l<>ries last seuill, Is only tbe lixtb joro .and tied tbe Natlooal League record unanimous selection In the ltryear for a lefthander set by Hall of Farner history of tbe balloting and tbe first 5andy Koufu lo 11113, 11811 and 11111, and Phillie ever lo win tbe awanl. He allO ia Bob Glbeoo and Deoey McLtln, -Ill 2,.,d Straight Win Jones Easy Victor In Mexican 1000 LA PAZ, Mex. (Af) -,.Pamelll Jones piloted a modifled Ford Brooco to bis ~ ond straight Mexican 1000 off-road race victory early today, crossing the finish line at La Pu on the tip of Baja California more than three cbeckpointa abead of bis nearest competition. Jones, 39, of Rolling Hilla, drove lnte Trevino Says He Deserves To Be Fined SAN ANTONIO, Tex. {AP) -"It's 1 matter of hJnesty," Lee Trevino said. "If it costs me $500 to be honest, well, th::it's okay. If it costs me SI .OM to get hot, wen, maybe 111 st<>p loalog my temper." The possibility ol a fine or .._,..,, hwc over his bead as the flamboyant, .oul-1POken Trovlno teed off 11 Ibo favorite today In the finit round of the $125,000 Texas Open goU tournament. '1 could have cleared It up an hour alter I'd walked off the eoune," Trevino llid of hi.s actioo lo llalklog olf tbo cooroe midway through Ibo thin! round of last week'• Saban Invitational lo Lu Vegas , Nev. "! could have got a doctor lo ltgn a cerliflcate tbat f wu llck. Or I could have called. officials and .told 'em I wu 1lct and had I<> leave to get a doctor. And they'd have let me get away with ll "But I'd luve been lylog. I wun'l llct. I was jU!l bot. I'm an boneat man.. I don't w:tnt to lie. If it'• gonna COit me 1500 .to be -· that'• fine. I delerve ll I'm guilty u hell. La Paz at 1:49 a.m., 1,000 miles and 16 boura, 47 minutes and 35 aecoods after he and eo<frtver Bill Slroppe, 52, Long Beach left Mexicali on Ibo Ctli/ornia· Mealco border. Rice oflldalS iaid although Jones C1'0ISOd lbe flnJlb line while all other competiton were reported no further than San IJnado, the -of 10 dleckpolnla, bla, lime WU not l r-.1 for Ibo ....i race. John Ulleldt, •• La Canado, - two !radured -w-.y af. lemooD when hb vehicle filpped three ttmeo 211 mn.. _. ol Ibo flist dleck· po1n7 El cruc.ro. . Ulfe1dt, codrtver, and the vehtde'I' driver, Sandy Cone, 21, Puedem, were taken lo El Centro Cornmunlly llolpllaf' where Ulfeldt ·W a s reported today kl 11llsfaclory Ollldltlon. 00oe WU treated for brui9el and released. Motoreyclea roared out of Mezlcall fint followed by lourwheel vehicles at a IXIHltlnute Interval Wednelday morning, then the field of 153 raced down a nanow two-lane road lo San Felipe where tbt pevemeatendl. From there tiie racers, eoina day and nigh~ muot 10 through rugged, rock· .._,, ..... witb either ... -. polled roads or no r06dl at all. The early' leader, Mlcli:ey 'M>ompMlll, wu out of tbe nee after the drift8baft broke on hit QeTroietl:lftled Yetdcle near San Inez, S40 miles n>m lbe llarl. ~ ..., no word on Bob r.m .. tbt reported leader at Ibo No. 5 cbecl<polnt. Ferro, ln a Volklwqm-powered dune buggy, .... filled u Ibo -leader -dleckpolnl No. 4 lilied lo ...,... that Jones bad -tbrougb. Rolf 11blJllo. ol La 11 ... , Calli., WU lbted u the leadlllg motoreyclllt oa a 450 .... llulqva1111. The cauroe -made -"'lly rough tltb year by a hmricane tbat wubed out mudl ol tbe .,.. lhHe ....U qo follow· ed by rain' Ind -earlier lhb ...... 11111, ,.... tbt only pre\'lolll mianhnc•Jll eyY...,,..-... Whtnever ar!too plldled, be filled Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium, pro- viding Ibo looe brtcht spot lo an otherwise bleak -for tbe Phllllel. And, lroolcally, Ibey tlmost didn't have him. It ~ a cmtraet 1quabble between Carltoo and SI. Louia Owner Gu8'ie Bu.ch tbal cauled.tbe Cardinab to trade the lefly lo Pbiladeljlbfa for pitcher Rick Wise during spring training. Carlloo nopoaded l¥ltb bb greatest -P"*lng the leque In llarll (41); Dodflert Bonored complete games (30); victories (17); ~ nlngs pitched (311); Slriteootl (310) and earned run average ci .91). And he capped it all off witb today'• award. Wei Parlier Otlt) and Jim Lefebvre of the Los Angeles Dod,era obow their Brian Piccolo award tor bumanllarian ltn'ice, the llnt such awlJ'd preoenled by the Nallonal Couildl of YMCAJ. The awanb ,...i. pr11aenled for' their work In dru& pmenllon 1mon1 young ,,. pie. NFL Official ls One of 84 I ,' Ozark's Fi.rst B~usiness -+Selecting New Staff "So they're going to hlove lo One me, maybe hit me ptttly bard. They can't let me get away with it U .tbeJ" do, every time you've got a 1aUery favoriie who'• plaJillJ bod, be'• ]ult pin("' pick up bb boll and go home. '"llltl'I not laJr to Ibo ....... I wllo'ft ........ -all )'OM lo ... laplher 1111,000 tbat we•n pl"1lnl for. !1'1 not fair at all, to they've 1ot to fine me." • Rookie Finally Makes It DETROIT (AP) -BttniJ a J4.1w°~ rook1t In lbe Nallooal FOOlball Latclll may ......S rather unlltely. "Chlcaeo Jent J. c. IWtia.-. ...... to c1lch and thlt'1 wh«I. J decided II quil" tbe "'1ner ClnclnnaU and Milwaukee .......... ". . • l clld DOI -al that llllto tbot DamrOuit -wl be aVlllUle. Ho ... , DOI-QNIA-tlim al tbo lfmtaf tbo Wcwld....._,, "Olalt llao a lla<qr .... GI a~ tr 'te w11!! t110 Loa A •1'17 ........ ...... ,. 0.-llAd. ........ ~ ...,_, ), .. ..... .a. _,, ____ ... __ be ... ..., .. 111111 trwMu.. Ill ... -tbo ' ;I w• GI .. Dodpra •pol•,_ Ill's a low _, -wtio ..... Illa -... ., -lotll ...,_,Yd,llo'la_............, 11e·-~.:!:r.-' lot .. -1ldmc'8 ....... " °"""-1114 ftnl ,. -be lo -a ---. a1 -lot --··-· .. "I'm oat~ to___._,.-... _.,,.. In lhlo lei>.' -oarlc --~ ... walld peU.... 1111 ll!lNll"I a!W Walter Abtm. No -bad beet taken by ....,. 0mluloner Joe 0.,. ol the POA'1 TQUmOo ment Pia,.,. DI-bt!Ol'l Tmlno bepn pi., toda1 ID t11t !Int round ol tbll m1...-tllilt'• ._ • the ·tour -~an. • ·~,.,. .a.eace,.. "I.._, -., .. al all," --"Ho - -"""11 , I'm pocklnc ......... ,.._ ... __ I _'i ~=.1:..-:.::=::,,.:." , .. ....... 1111 wJ llrltPI ()pm ----lflJoo and .... ........ 1n..-...-1o """" ., tbo y tar lad! llictlaut. Nlcklauo b ... '""""°"' tn °"" -oa tbo 1,on.,.,..i, ,,.,..n ~ Golf Clubcounc. Trtmo ••med up fortht ~ trilb a ft'l'HIDdlr_,., t7 iD Wrt 11•1T1 -""'II· "-IU clilol cbellaaln ... _.... to lit lllllJ Cllpor, a-Llltltt, ""'*-. !lift Hill, Qorloo Coody, Grier ,,_, .._, Wadktm and Oii dii _..,... ' . But lonner lllchlftn ltlla --0... Loot. ... )olood the ffFL thb ynr -u tbt ,....... ol M olfldab lo lllt ...... "YCMI call tbo playo lllt -..... u lo Iqb -.··Looi! ......... .-Uy. "ll 11'• -i. ... _ fl'• -.. -Alld ti 11'• oil .... fl'• oil lidt • "lilloOIWNa.,;a .. ," M *42 ' .. I .... "U a ll'IJ "'8 -It ,_ la tllt !Ch. be'• -.. _. --• ""' wbo lltO mad It,... la "P.odlool" LoOt-·--~aad bb pr-,. • • .... la Uiot ol • .,, --· .. ~·· -· bat"• -lot l!ta \ad ... _,... ____ ,_,_ try II Im will .. eli llow Yd 1llMI of u. Amlf1• ,. ............ After ...... r t 7111 -11111 lo 119tbtlrltlriliia•sr·"aiwlralill .,... ---la ... Oilctlo W1ltla Sol -IJllOm, ilrlloc elpad a r<porled ........... KINGS GO AFTER SIXTH STRAIGHT t.Ot! --,,. -.tnc Lie -lllaplrl'lor•-... mmol' I 71 ..... -.. tbtlr ab.tb 1tr"hdlll Mall •.ii.· ffodril7 ..._.. pme """ -_..,. ..... la ... w-.. Di- Tllll Kllp. ... ------T lqJlpt-a4-t """1 .... Yl91 ;a llr • dllb l"IC*'d. '-" .. ,,, ...... In& .... •Qil<[. by a ~ .... In tbo -..,, Tllll Bladr-llllWlai, Nol, .... la tbt -Yd W... Wftt ·,; 1i1C111 ed bovo U polDll le .. JClalt' 11. '' -· Loot II a llne -· -ti Ill -who handle an Nrf. -. -I'll "-111 II bCI crw dlld. "Wt ftt our wt-..,=~ nnce. "'Loe. npt·t llld. "C~ ... Jl iMcuc sames. wttb Clat wr t II elf • •. Wt pe -.-.,_ al dlt 11111 prwrsrm pmt aed IUf wttll U. w cnw all 1'-8-1." ' Loot d fmbed sl<ldUy ap lllt ~ -.11.--,..,.. .. a -ollldll tn tlla i-. -· -be olflc:lsled . lo u. 11 t e u ••• lnltrcolltPte Aihl<tk "-'llloll lot -yeon then -• .,_ -• .. Mlcf·-°'"'..._. IDd .. M. "ll1 -,..i lo to ..., la .... ................ .., . llllil J.a8'. w\o Iii ,... • a ,. I I -. . .._ .. :r......, .....,,. lot .... ..... -.. 11u.~ ..... .. ta. loft" tbt-' It'• .. .... ._to u.. oa 1"" •'•oat l!ld .. .. -t libenl~a." • --:-t • I ( ' • •• I ' :Jf DAil V PllOT ,,...,..,, NMRlbtt 2. 1972 At Santa Ana B°"'l Monarchs Clash • . . With St. Antho.ny Mater Dei H.igh School may be 1n for a big night offeMively and defen&lvely "when the Mona.rem host St. Antbooy et ·,the Santa Ana Bowl this evenJ.na. The Angelus League football game will . begin at 8 o'clock. ' ' Sl Anthony is giving up an average of ' thrff touchdown! per oootest wbile scor-; 1nl ju,,t 10, and hasn't woo since an open- ·:1ng-game , 39-20 conquest of Mt. Carmel. 1 Mater Dei's :;.1 record -the reverse of bllt S-IU and Bishop Amal both bad to score ln the last few minutes to btat St. Anthony," says Mater Del coacb !lob Woods. "'Ibere Im' anybody you can tab llgbUy. They have a ,.00 quarterback who runs a pntty sood oplloo and he can throw tht baD." Sl Anthony ""1Cb Bob Arboil calls quartertact Ken Knonier "u good as any iii the league for what be does. He throws and nut\ equally well." But, as Arboit says, H is unlike1t;"t: • " • St Anlbony's -Is marred on1y by a 7-& <. klSS to St. Paul , tlle ClF 's tnp-cated foot- "baU team . .,,•.·"I know they don't have a good record, ~i~=.,~ah~ hlndle , ,, '"Ibey ou1Jmn WI r1ghl down the line," says Arboit. "Our defeMe Lsn't big or strong enough . to handle their oUensive line."' JIM LIBERMAN DRIVES IN FUNNY CAR DIVISION AT OCIR THIS WEEKEND . . "· .. ... 2:Edison Can't · ;:Match SA V's -r.· ;'.Size, Speed Arboil i. getting some of hi> injun!d players back -two wteb ago eight starters mi...d the BWlop Amat game -11u1 lackleninehoclll!r Brian camey i. loet fer the season with a, broken ann. "Our line average dropped about IS pound! with his loss," Al'boi.l aafs of his 1>3, 240-pound senior. Arbolt ls most concerned about Mater v · Edison Hifi(h's Charp:ers are in serious Dei balfbact Jim Gardea, and Gardea's :,.. feOpardy of finding themselves on the performance to date substantiates that :-:mitside looking ;n with another telback f~ l70-pound junior bu run for 708 -S:just about kil\in~ any chance of gaining a yards and a 5.5 yard average and ap- •.portion of the Irvine League football title pun beaded for a 1,()00.yard lelllOll. '·aDd a CIF playoff berth. The Monarchs can alao call oo junior . And coach Vince Asaro's bunch i5 up quarterback Steve Martindale, who may r,ap1nst the fastest t~am in Orange ~un-be the area's best. He's completed 41 ol ~.it Friday night at Santa Ana Stadium 78 passes for 561 yards. 1 Uainst Orange County's No. 5 team, LE = Diii ~. 1:-:"'nlfll Dll __. E ·santa Ana Valley. LT .....,. 210 21.s Baca • 1 "We'll definitely be. trying to avoid one-'f =..,_ ;: ~;; =. : :"®• situations," says Asm'o, . "It's :f ;;:::: ;;: ~;; f:::... t: • ~Otns to take our belt effort teamWJSe to RE ~ 1• 111 ......., L• Slop Santa.'.'Ana Valley. Q• llM1~• 1• 111 lttllfl ltov •:-" he LK o.w.. ns 17' ........... MB "We can't do It one man at a wue, ,.. OOINclllle 1u w ., ...... ,,_ MB :· ~dds. Asal'O ticks off Santi Ana Valley's fl 'Y""-111 1• Murnfgnl 1 ;.-dvlnlage in size and speed as the lblngs ), ~ team must overcome. J s ks " ':To beat ~ta Ana vaner we're going ones par '.10 ' have to play without any major ~downs. f« each player t. do hi> Job "and be'Coosi8tent. Santa Ana Valley can. break plays Oii anybody' II jiu a very po-Sea Kings'. ... tenl offense," be adds. ~ ~'Two other items tantanpml to ,'Edilon'• pouttM.e succeu are tumoven D f 0 u 0 •'aM ftelil poollan according to Alaro. e ens1ve mt 'Even one turnoYer can be significant to a game's outcome," says Asaro, "and one that l'm,.really aware ol ii one l j!JSl saw In Slnta Aria Valley's game film with 1AI Alamil:o1. A majc:r turnover OllJy -tldllp _ .. r Asaro .-the 'Falconi' telup u a similar style ol ollmae u are the Charpn. "Ba1icallY the,y're '!«Y slmllar to cur offense \lilii the 11~ and a lol•ol tact!O blllta. Alld=olfeml .. blaclll are similar," saya .. _.. .c..-s. ..... aionges " tbt' •• ,.,... --Joe Morado bac;t'W wlnlltia<k in a · starllni role l\IOlll• Fnok-Ovledo •~ offUllve tackle. . , .~ , __ .... And Dave MUii Wiii be --al defemlve tackle. ' Leader8hip MV Star's Top Quality Randy Eellholdt bu steooed In to 1111 a mighty tmportaot poaitlon for the Million Viejo lllsh !ootboll taam, and his succeta bJ doing IO ii a bl& factor-tn the DlablOI' cunent 1UCCt19. Al least lhllt's the opinion of MJ111ioo Viejo c:oech Bob Hlvner. Eekholdl, I blckup quartar!Ja<k last season. bu fought -lllB way into the starting spot this season as lhe Dlablos have i'ecOrded three wins in four Q-estv\ew Leape sames lo tie for first place in the atandlnp. And 1as1 -t the ~to, 1'15-poUnd senior enjoyed hll ~ hour, llrlnl a 11111 minute toocbdown -to bring his team a 21·15 vk:t«y over san Clemente. It was aid before the 1972 prep loot· ball ......, pt under way and il'1 aUll the --by -lhlll Olrma' del Mai High poa !II• the best defew In . the lr'flne ~ Aid tllal ._.. --..... . !Inned lall -when c:oacb = l!ollalld's S.., IClap rfl'J>'d pftt~ -led Edlaon, 17-7. holding the lat- .... to lit yards nel One of the real keys to Corcaa's doleoalve -has b<eo 173-pound taClde Bob J ..... J-· cal·lllre ~ bu .been evl· deal llj' every C4roaa del Mar outing and hll -""" lnalnllnelllal In the trtumpb.,.rll:dllon. "Bob'• really like a llntb9cbr for 111," says Holland. "And he could play of· feoatve center for us too, but we'Ye pt a good· one 1n Jim Garn to we just me Jones on defense. "His forte i. being able to .. ad the blocker and then punue 'the ball. He's got excellent qulcknea to the ball." 'Jones tm 55)-plays bJslde the lzool four but a1Jo moves to'the outllde on pre- vent sifbaUOD5. But Jooes lm'I the only gem In the Sea Ktnga defease. Holland cites I.be play o! Pal Lynch, Mike F-and To/ti Pole. "Ind Nelaaa. Froll and Jones are all c1 ... in feadtof the team in tackles, but Jones wu our first Sliver Raider," aays Holland. The latter Item la a team award based on a point system. There won't be a whole lot of tlme for ltollaod'.• defeaalve crew to nady the ol· fense Friday o.1.ght, however, wttb Foun- tain Valley's Barons provldini the op- position It Newport Harbor. ''They really come at )'GU with their half_,trol ollense and they 1lways aeem to be ready for us,'' sunnlses Holland. Rustlers Get Toughest Test Since OCC Tilt ''The big ~ Rondy gt.., Ill ii leaderablp," Hivntr 18)'1. "He's a good -r and I good half handier, but we really look to him for lb INderah!P ablll· ty." W estminst.er' s Def eiise For the early part of the seuon Eckholdl WN in I 6attJe fe< tho ltartinl soot '1!1111 ~ Dove Sdanldt. He shonid dn» wllh ~In evwry pme up uotll lui -t. . A•boop the Dtabloo have been g.......Uy I nmntng taom, Eckholdt bas managed to c:omplete ~ -In 46 al· tempta, and hal totaled 1111 ylldl lhll -· He has ~ three time> !or touchdowns thll -· lfl ol them in tho lall lwo 1ame1. A tey 1tatllllc Iron> the Dlabtoo polnl ol view II lhlll ooly one ol &-'I -bu -lnWcepted Ind lhll In Ult_ ... -ol the-· Nol mialdenltl I running threat, Eckholdt baa manapd only • ,.... rulb~ ftl' the Dllb!OI In flve -· "He I not Ult -ns.-aod lhlll'I prolllbly hll ... bll cbwbadt," Hl-· AYI. "We've p ollter paopte to NI tbt td~" .u-.-tbt ... intbtpall, lftftlll' ... -ol Iha 111m· lot ,......,,., but ..,. lt'I DD rtdeetl. 08 ~qt.:.::=-... · · but I 10 ,..... .fl Ibid\ 111;.lt," Hlfllll' "11-"'ntatt' n tblnp "' can --'1111 ...... and.Jtit lllJOtlen Uta! Ila .... ~ Mt out U... And n try to IYold I COM ol a reajl1 bad call that would hurt """ I ·. - -_...__,_ To Get the Acid Test No one hal stopped the w .. i.m llJah foolball Juutrn1ut'1 0U1n11 for two yean and ·the Pi-tn are eurreoUy ratad the No. I tum In Orance County and c••lllCC'I cf the No. 1 back in 'Bob Aeot . ) · SOtanlay n!pt It'll ho No. 2 Westminster Hll)l'1 turn to try to put 1 stop to the """-' and Weotmlnotar cosdl Bill -U sayo he thlnU he bu the t: Mwl ond the &)'Mn that II CIPI II of pultll\J the tdddl to Acosta and .... "Our de!-lo -ol .... 1171 de,_ Ind 11'1 bald our -II to U ylldl per carry lhll year, W1'vt liven ;t ool1 IJI yards In Ila 1-with I q , 11 type dlfmM, OM-ftkb .. ......... t= out of 1111 ....... i-1 with lour ~." llJI BctnND. Uppei-In Ibo -" plduro "-"• -.-. ..., OraclY (115), m-tuanl SIM r.ttocb !1111); lactle Rlct Seaberry (1111) 11111 ea4 Ray-· (lit), Alld When quarlortJaek Dan -mtktl '" O<CaJlonal ._.. ... In the 10COndlry IOllltlhtng UIUllly happens. • Despite playing only about on&-rourth of the time when Westminster ii on derense, Accomando has pWered four enemy aerialJ. Ju for deltnllve tactics employed by Boswell'• Uons, he: says much of the cndJI goel to the middle llli'd Ind endl with their shlfllng and movtog out of the convenUOnal setup. Wutmlllller wen the 8111\Mt Loque II· Ue In 1'71, and Included In Ila undefeated 1tuon was a 21·14 win ovtr Wflltem. "Western came oat with 1 netr let and -quick. thtn •hen we had them down, 21-7, they -00 I tfcblf ntum. '!bit'• the only .... 1111* they hurt UI," ta)'l fk:lnml. - WOiiam went on to Ult ClF ttnals -. bowlns lo 8llbop A m a t . Weotmlnster was lmocttd of! by Puadena In the oecond round. Bolftll'• orr.... baa n>Ued up 22 touchdowOI en lllUte to Iii llrllght Wini and It mlcJ!I have hetn moro U""PI '°" nam.roos penalu.s. Tha tkN haw been called for e vlollflons totalUng !II yards In their 111 outings. • • • ------..__.., ------- It's An.;>ther Must Situation For Pirates party ' ' ... ~ \..-..;L • • i I • • l [ '" .. " ' ' ·' ! 'I .. .. '' ... ·-. .. ' ,. ' • ' ' ,., • .. ' '. • • DAIL V PILOT Newpo r~<Swie!f, May Mi.ss Foster Big Montgomery One of Eagles' Hard~ Sanfn; Ana Ga;tne Saturday BFrigVhtik~ Spot Unsung Heroes Up Front , or es As if facing resurgent Santa Ana wen not enough, Newport Harbor High School'• lootbsll team may have to play the Sa.lik.s without star linebacker Jim Swick. "ff•'• In a bJ ""if ond be'• Lent. "He'• had prob!""" with be<n ,. bealtbJ' oll .,_ !hat our def..,.. bee>.,.. he'• the we've been very fortunate. only guy returnlng from last "It reelly worries 111 and It year. could be one of the.big keys o1 "We have 10 lne.lperlenoed the ga111e. He'• been very ldda playing with him and i t's sick." Greg F o s t e r ' s statistics aren't lmpresaive, but a~ par<nUy bia ability la. F....... Marina H 1 g h he won't be available for pl1celliUJng duliea. A n d defensive speclallat J o e Dinatale ia slated to see duty, but Klees ls still penciled in to start at defensive ta~kle and olferW.ve center. The olfenslve backfield r~ ma.h:u lntact with Masner at quarterback, Princeotto at tallbsck. Buttellng 11 lullbsck and Dave Parse) at flanker. Newport will host Santa Ana Saturday at 8 p.m., but Swick bas been ill with complications arising from a bull. "He took some medication for It and had a reaction to it, and then he had to return to the hospital for more medica- tion to counteract the first," .. plains coach Don Lent Swick, a regulB In the Tars' bia job to mold tbem' lnlo a defensive lineup 1tnce hlJI de!eoslve unit. He's done a oophomore y-and an All· pretty good job, too -we've Sunset League selection la st QUtde mistakes here and there year, has been Newport's best but · any team will make player all seaaon. mistakes." "He's seen double duty, In the offensive backlleld and aa Swick bad a problem with our defensive captain," notes mobiUty last Yetlll -be lacked School'• 1 tro ng ·armed qllllierback. bas drawn oon- ttnua1 raves from opponent& of the Vikings football team. Playing oo a two-game win- ner this &ea!Ol1, the 195-powld ~ bas completed 'za ol 82 passes for 389 yards. He '• JI ol 45 In the past two games (W.-and Sanla Ana) as Marina bas begun passing more often. Estaodl Hfg:b's YI e.1 OU s cmmd same cootlnueo to roll behind !he Mike Magner-Dan Prl-.uo pundi with ,help from IWlbaclt Roy ButWJng as the Eagles prepsn! for Magnolla Friday night at La Palma Stadl .... And one ol the unsung heroes of the Estancia offense 11 the F.egles seek wln No. 6 ol the 1971 campaign ·1s ol- f ea 1 l v e ruard Mark Monlgomery. Several HB ·Players Nursi n g Injuries Sharp G~tting Sharper It -but· worbd bard playing baaktlball. aQd Improving bia quickness. "We think that 's the area where he's Improved the most," says l.enL "He has a very strong arm." aays Marina coach Leon Wheeler. "College people don't recruit a kid unless be can throw 50 yardll, and I'm 1alking about throwing, not lofting. Montgomery hM been one of the real plus marks fCl" of· fensive coach Gary ~rr, who baa rebuilt the Estancia forward wall arouod one returning starter { V I n c e Klees). . For Mesa Grid Team Swick, a 6-1, 220-pounder, promlaea to be h I g h I y recruited by major colleges at the end of the ......_ Montgomery Is HI, 170 pounds, and was an alternate atarter In the early golnp of 1971 with Bob Conldyn. While still deep into a winless season, John Sweazy can see a few spo ts of light for his Costa Mesa football team. And one of them is junior quarterback Steve Sharp who will lead tbe Mustangs against Los Alainitos Friday at the Western High field. "Steve 11 starting to gain maturity, and he has been doing real well for us In the past couple games," Sweazy says. "There's a lot of pressure on him, being an underclassmen p I a y i n g quarterback for a team of juniors and sophomores. but he Is har.dling it quite well." "A junior can step in on a team of seniors wllhout too · much trouble, but w h e n everybody else is as in· ezperlenced as he is, it's not an easy thing to do." · A 6-2, ISO.pounder, Sharp has the physical size coaches look for in quarterbacks. He has thrown for over 600 yards this season, completing 49 of 116 attempts. He has also thrown I 2 interceptions, however, a fact that Sweazy attributes to inexperience. Not distinguished as a run- ner so far this season, Sweazy thinks that Sharp will mature in this area too. ' "He doesn't have the quick feet yet that he needs as a runner," Sweazy says. "He's still growing into them I think:, and when he has fully matured he'll be a good runner too. He has the straight speed right now, but he doesn't have the moves that the good running quarterbacks have." One area that Sharp has proven himself to Sweazy's sali.sfaction is in his ability to handle the intellectual challenges of the quarterback position. "People in the st.ands don't realize it, but a lot of Wayne Vering's runs last week came after Steve audibalized at the line of S:CMmmage," Sweazy says. "He called an audible on which Vering ran eo yards, but it was called back. He has started to learn to read the defenses now, and with a year's maturity, be should be even helter." Sharp bas started every game for the Mustangs this season. His best e f f o r t statistically came a g a I n s t Edi.son when he completed seven of 20 for 182 yards. Five of the passes have been for touchdowns, including a 76- yarder in the Edison omtest. "Just about every school in the country baa inquired about him," says Lent. ''In bis last g'!'D• last year oooUt.s from UCLA and Stanlml were there to watch blm." Newport will need a healthy Swicl; to counteract ~ quarterback Mike Molina, who runs Santa Ana's wishbone of· fEllSe. "He's a fme foottiall player, big and slrong," says Lent. Coast Area Running 1 . .t.I!':: ~m-1ri.J-, n.i1r.~ (II~ ~lg:\~\ :h1 \~.! 1bi \~'",-:ah, "t.1:::n 0 11 :2)1 1.~ ~-J 1:i.1 •. I'll.,."° 1111 1: 1 t . ro f J l :n 1 10. on11-1 1 1:4'. Delall Hiib Its), U111wn1tr (ll) 1. Al.min (0! 10:.s:li 2. llou l"I 11 :09; !·Tovey COJ 11 :09; '· 51111 0 11:2111· . 8•kkll• (UJ n:i.kt· llowm.n CO) 1:271 J. llr•nMnll ( 11 :21; I. llr1nson (U) 11:21/ . 1lv•n (U) 11 :lil; 10. Onll.....,.os OJ 11 :'9. l>illftnllY l»j• .,., CMJ T. Wlllle,,.rtJlll 1 :S51 1. lt0$1 fttl 111:, .. ,','1· ''• 't (Ill 11:19; ,·~"','•'11" u : '' . ~'"' llr•~ : 1. • Jim rln'IClll (U) 11 :21; J. n II 11:36; •· Trl)PO!ml llll 11:f!; f . e>.1¥•n CU l 11:55; ID. Pr911 (U) 11:o:rL "He can throw wi.lh author!· ty for liO yards, and they aren't high ones but are cross- fi~ld passes. We just have to gtve him time to set up and throw the ball." Foster will be firing away at Anaheim Friday night (8) at Westminster lli&h School. "Quality-wise, they're better In different pooitlooa than In the put," Wheeler aays. "They have a good fullback, two good tailbacks and two good linebackers. They may oot be as large as they have been, but they're quicker." Although Santa Ana held Marina to six points last week, Wheeler thinks Anaheim plays that end of the game better !ban do the Slints. \ "They're lundarn"1tally sound," he says. "On offense they aren't e:s:ceptional, but they koow their blocldog assignments and r u 1 e s . + They're pretty well schooled and u nderstand their positlms." Wheeler has benched Chuck Sliney, the team's leading ground gainer this season,·and will go with Rick MerUr:old as the starting tailbsck, afthough the two will alternate most of the game. His trap blocldng" bas~ lnstrumental in 1 pr in g Ing Princeotto, Magner I Butteling and Scott Gayner {or gains through the middle and Carr says one of the things that has helped Montgomery bas been bia ability 1o· use bia feet pro- perly when be bits. "He's been In our system for four years and he's a pretty Intelligent kid. And he's work- ed hard with the weights," says Carr as the Eagles prepare for their I r v I n e League test with Magnolia . Magnolia presents a dif· ferent type of defense for Montgomery and the rest of h.is Esta~la mates to handle, but Can-says the major task is simply a matter of reading the atunts. "It's a slanting defense and they stunt a k>t ou t of It and it can be a bard aystem to block against, I I says Carr• Montgomery's duties are confined to a fairly small area with no pulling required in Estancia'• triple option style of play. With three games left in t~e regular season the EJgles' in- jury list ls shrinking. Fullback Scott Gayner m>y be able to see some action, but \ A great n·aflle for our toughest tire. · .. The Treasury backs it with a strong 36 month guarantee e 2+2 polyester cord body for smoolh rlding comfort e Fiberglass belt construction !or s1reng1h e 36 m6nth guirantee wilh 14 mon1hs 100% 21llowance e 15 to 2• months 50% allowance e 25 10 36 mon.lhs 25~• allowance 28.97 G78x1• plua 2.89 Federal EICCIM T~ll. No irade-ln needed-36 month QV•rtnte11 Sir• Fli. Price Fed. EL Sir• Fii• Price F•d. Ell.. RE LI ARI OE• TIRE PROTECTION GUAFt.t.NfEE ... 078x13" 7001l13 23,97 2.15 E78•14• 73~14 27.97 2.31 F78•14 775Jt1 1 28.97 2 52 G78Jt11 825•1• 28.97 2 69 H78Jt1• 8S5x1' 30.97 293 TREAD LIFE PROTECTION Tu 'J71,.1 4 885x1' 30.97 31M F78 ~15 775Kl5 28.97 2' S8 G711x15 82~•15 28.97 ,,78 H78115 855x15 30.97 3.01 900•15 30.97 2'.H W• b•Jild on1o tVll)I Rell.t.11d .. llre u lt lr•tlion il'ldlc•toni. They 1lgn11 wrien 1ou1 tore J~uld be 1ep!•C1d. II your lirt •••11 ovt (wio:;ept lor lnconn<:t •ll9n1n9nl) we .wlll "''kl an •llowatlce b1sft'd on or1Qin1I p1,11th•H prlr;1, exc:lud•no 1pplic1ble F9!H11I [IC!ff T••· IOWlld the PUICh• .. ol • new t!N. Wt •ill t UOW 1/J dvrlng !tit 11111 htll or 111 dutl11g th9 Ntotld h.111 Ol ltie tl•l1td lllOl'!lh1 c l g11.11rant••· r ltd•r•I E1ciN T•• .cllullfMlftC I I· lowtMe will be "'91'1• on the bliti1 of U!ot peortene of~ orlof11tl l••ld r1m•1n!nv. 'f(IUf Rell.t.rlde• 1i1• proteclion.gw•r•ntee cove•• 1!1 Reh,lrlde• P••Hnoer 11r•• l••~I 1~l•I •PPlic;•tlo<'I '"'' w•!h •eo•r•1• g111111ntte1) •V••rttl 111 rolld h.,11d or dtlect f11 111rt1 YOll 1111 0101ec1ed 101 lh• 9'1tlte l taltll ~ths of gu1r1n1te II yow1 1111 11o11 durong !he vu•rtnhM period, retwrn It lo 119 •11a wt win at our op1ion, 1ep1l1 your tilt, 01 m•'-• •n 1llo.,.~nc;11 blltf!'ll on 1'1• 011gln•I PU•Cl\IH ptlc;e, n•CILKl1nv •PPhClbll! Ftd'tf•l l •(•lft" T••. low••O IM ourctiun ol 1 new tirt. W• ••II 1110• 100•. or IM Ot<gln•I 1>11rch11H, I JCh,,1(11n9 •PPltc•ble '•dtfll C1c111 fl•. av11ng I~ 100'111 •11(1•.nc• peoriod. Th•r•11!t 1, .,., "''ii •llo• ~% or 26% ol tl'le orlgln•I pu1cti11e Pt•t•. eJ.clUO•"O •llllh· c;1bl1 f:edt••I Etc.IM T••· IO•l•d 1n. PWiCh••• or • new l!•t . rir0e11I EllCIM Tit 9dj111l~nt t llOWMC• will be m•C)e on '"• Ntlt of the pelttM ot lfte orlglnt ! ttelld rem•1,.1110. Tti't QI.I"· tntff 11 not llat\tletlltilt. 11 •• only •or pt1Va1• P•t.M"9fl Cl tt Ot P••Mnger 1t•llon w•gont . With the purchaal! ot ReliAride" tires you get 1. FftEE lnstallelion ot tlrn. 2:, FREE lire toleOon ..... ry 5000 ml1n. RellArlde • Super Tire a 1 a month gu1r1ntH . Coming oU a bruising game with one of the league's top teams that found them losing slatting qulrterback Greg Nitzkowski for the balance of the year, coach Roy Brum- meU's Huntington Beach High Oilen football team returns to action Friday rUgbt a.0 __ ,. unpredictable Loara squad. "Loara ii~ a fute football team and they have a winning tradition that will be an added incentive," Brummett says. "And coming c.ff that game with WeStmlnster that WI! a real bruiser for ·us, we will have a problem with them .. "We are getting rather thin in certain areas and in ad- diUon to Joelng Greg for the year, we have several other kids on the doubtful list and we won't know rij!:ht up to game time U they will play." '111e Oilers had lost Kyle Van Amersfort earlier ill the cam- paign and with Nitzkowski sidelined, 50 percent of the original s t a r t i n g lleckfield combination ls out of action. This will . put an added burden on ha1fbact Paul Fiskness, star ol the offensive backfield at HB. F i s k n e 1 s ' perfonnance against Westminster I a 1 t weekend pleased Brummett even though the Oilers l<m, 21- 12. Flstnes.. carried the ball 23 times for 74 yards and a 3.2 average but his biggest gain of the night was a fumbled punt return for 90 firds and a touchdown. • 2for23 94 -.. MK•., ,_._, .. .....,,., ... ~ .. , ....... ,." Ntflf.0.••-tJOt<f I e l'our ply nyton COfd e 11 fl'IOl'l1tl oueranfff Ml~• Mor1ll'l1 1~ anowaftee e 5 to t month• 50'!11t altowefte.t e 10 1o 11 mOl'ltht as~ atlow'ance llM ,..... , ... ..._ T&11MCJl 1 II• ""°' 'M.la. TttNC.• 100llJ 1 10t 23.IM 1.t1 ,.rt1,. Nt-11 ''°' 33 9• 1-""'~ ns11• 7tor 33.94 1,12pertfr• Uh1S 2klr 33,9 4 1 )4perllff ,....... ~-lot -tit('' ••It ....... ,,"'"•,_,,..._''· Tat ,.,.,._,, Nt"*'411_..,.. Mii ... , u ... tlte .., .. .. ~ Ow ~IAMI' .... , it -" ,_ .......... ....... .., ............ ...._ ... ..,,, . 'f Replacing so ph o m o r e NittkowskJ in the starting backfield will be senior Bill Harbin. Harbin had been relegated to deleoai ve seron- dary duty in the early part of the season but came on in top fashion last week w h e n Nitzkowski was injured Jn the seeond quaner. Harbin completed. five or seven paMes for 54 yards and a 'table job in di~ the Oilers~ offense. • In. order for Huntington Beach to win, Brummett feels the team must play· ball COO· trol football and not make a lot ol milt.ates such u penalties at criUcal times. "The reason we stayed. with West.miMter so well was that we didn't have a lot or penalties that hurt us like we did ln S>me of our other games," Brummett says. "We will jolt have to p(ay the callber of football we played against Westminster and not make mistakea." Title Winners Laguna mus won t h e Southwest DlvUk>n of the American Lawn B o w 11 n g AssodaUon tournament Satur· day h~ Newport Beach. Followl'ng Laguna were San- ta Anita, Pasadena aod Long Beach. The h o S l Newport Harbor Lawn Bowling Club tallied to place. Pays / ff Fo Triton , ' Den ()r,bum bu coaie II long way this seallOn, rnudt to the delight of the San Clemente High footbsll coaching llall. And lhey 'd like to 1ee Onburn and his teammates go one step further Saturday when lhe Tritons take on El Modena 1t San Clemente. Orsburn, a r.-10, 185-pound defensive tackJe, transferred Into the Tritoos area flWn Texas this season. To say be was an lmmediate success would be an overstatement. "He really didn't figure tlllo our plans at the beg~ of the year," says San Clemente defensive coach Rudy Kadlub. "But he worked bis way into the lineup, and Jn the pa.i r,.. or five weeks he's been tu' most consistent player.'' • Orsburn had earoed himself • starting poaitloo bJ .• Jl>o opening game of the ,.19!>n and has held It with hil con- sistent play. He ranks second among the defensive llneiDen in total points on the teana'll charts with nlne unassisted tackles, 12 as5i.sts and two sacks of Uie oppoatn,g quarterback. When Tritoos head -Allie Schall or Kadlub talk about Onibum's auets, they both point to bis propensl~ as a hitter. "lle's just a good hanJ.oosed kid. one of the hardest h.lttets we have," Schaff says. "And he's only a junk>r so he's tm· proving every week." ' KadJub cit.el Orsbum u an ezomple that lack ol ai2e 9'Q't a fatal drawback, even In 'fbOt. ball. : . "He's short. and not rfJJ:Y big for the poaitlon, ~·lie makes uo frr It bv beinc ~ a hard bitter." Kadlub ujl. "He Isn't all that st1'Qng thro<Jgh the arms and cbeSt. bu I he has f U10 _.-In Ji1a le,l!'!I to drive people out." · . ' Other Crestview teems !14~ (>vidently noted Orsburn's ptAy alw. and have generally 8 \'0ided hi! side of the Qt.ld acrording to Kadlub. ' s " ,/ , ' r , I -' . . - I • I . ' ·' 1' I • DAILY l'ILOT j . .. ~ . ~~a frep Delensi-ve Stars Springman 1 .....--=~~~__._, ---r=-.......::::~-=-.-o--.-......-:,-;-;.:.......:..... GREG WHEELE R Coron• del Mo r ... VINCE KLEES E1t1ncle .. ~ .. • ·-: JOHN PETRIE --- Marina DAN ORSIURN San Clemente JIM DAVIS Costa MeN MIKE GOODSON Fountam V1lley BOB MACAULEY -Mater Dei MARK WHITING University' DAVE BUCK Di n• Hills BUCKY BOND Huntington Beach RICK WHITE Mission Viejo RAY ASEBEI Westminster El Camino Ranked MIKE MORADO Edi ton MARCO MENDOZA l•guna Beach CURT HERBERTS Newport Harbo r Nursing Inj1iry 8-for Dana Hills Hli!h School's f1tll win of the lo0t' bill seuon have b e e n da_.od by a chnlrtlc back injury to star quarterback Bill Springman that has n o t responded to treatment. The Dolphins meet winless Unlvenlty Friday n!gbl al San Clemeole Hlgb Scllool, 8 o'clock, and lhe game likely wlll decide which t e a m flnlslles lhe season I~ which one fmisbes Mr Of Springman, coacb Tony Leon says: "He has some bad· ly atrained lllU9clea and Ibey generally Joo.sen up about now from the previous week. but there has been no change since Saturday. "I don't know whether we'll have him or not; right now It's a very qllesUonable thing and Ibo injury <IQ!osn't seem lo be "responding to treatment. h rr Springman does not play, Leon will go with sophomore quarterback Al Benevldez. "He can pass as well as Bill but he can't run as well; he's a very mediocre runner," says Leon. SpringQlan's problem has been aggravated by h i s participation in sports almost the year around, says Leon. "He's such a good athlete that tie's in comtant demand -at a school like ours," .he ex- plains. "He also plays basket- ball and baseball during the summer, and I think what his back nee<b is total rest." Leon looks for Dana Hills and University to go after each other "tooth and nail." "It may oot be the finesf football in Orange County," he says; "but it certainly will be an emotional game. "Both teams will be aware that this may be their only op- portunity lo win a game this season.'' Although University ha s been stricUy a passing team in recent games -often throw- ing 35 times and usually operating out of a .shotgun formaUon -Leon looks for the Trojans to run the ball more . Prep Polo Result,s . ....., """"{ ' ' . ,_ ' AMl!tl l 1 • ...... 12 w rlr, or1nti1· Edw1nl1 121, erm- n.n n . F•llJ:.Jlvan11y An1helm l S-13 M1rll'lll Jll21-' Mlrlr'lll scorlno: s tltr n. HorrMtr (3), F1rrel (5). Varslly ............. l'l ... ' Sonor• 1 ,_fl Llo\llll Beach ICOl'lnll: MOrton ), WellfN (1), Redwlti. tn, Jatirison I . Junlflo Vlrlllly Uaun. B11Ch ! 4 I 3-2~ Soriora 0 0 2- :ir.un1 ~ KOrl"'!: Glnson li• O' "' \'\· ""-\;2>. "'"~' • W1 IKe 2 Skelton I ), Ano.rlOl'I 2 , Pede!! !I \ G1ea'°" Cl), MIU-11), O. Crcrwltv ), ll'tlllll·SDPI! l.lcl1Hll 81.cft 0 2 ! 2-0 Sono•• 0 0 2-2 "'"M i-~--' Am-1'1· N-ton /2 , P111ney UI, O'N1r1 1 , Bllftll1111 l . V1nlty Minion Vl•io l ~· ...... n Unlwnltv I 1 1-l MIHlor! Vlelo scorlna : S (II, L~I• fJ), B"'f> (2), L-~ \ ), loae (3), Oll'•r•kl (I), C1mllbel! f1 . UnJ,,.,,,uv Korlno: arotlltr1 (1), lftlf: Ll'OM (tj, McCormldl (1), ~(I), Pkklrd {l), Y1n.ltY' CClr'Onll Clel Mer • l • l--1' f:Mllllk•l'I 0 0 0 1-I ~o.1 wr -•rn: KrumD11o11 14 Yl•f:' 'l''I ......, l , Poonl nqtorf -2 ' at.on tftiN' '11nllv C ..... m Mar 0 1 0 I-2 LaM.111 n 2 J 1,,-1 C~ I Milr Korlno: Plltner (IJ, St1l11Mn l), Coronl .t.li ,t.~ 0 1 1-J ~urk-in • 1 1 3--is !NI ,,,., llCOl'lllll : 0.-r tl), F ll'W ( ),.Sldlller (I), Y1nlty N--1 Harbor 3 Saitll An1 0 0 0 0-0 12r.:i:rr'c2~1Q:::S-.'lf,r.;"a: s~1T. Glail« n >. :..1rta 12):' orrrM1t1 (1), Jllllllt 1n ty "'""'°"' H1rbOI' ' ( 1 ..._,, 51111• Ana o 0 0 ~ o N.._.t Harbor ICOl'ln11 : OICllCIY (3), K111rlfl11 (61. EIW (1), Fellctwn.nn en. wlltllf' cu. ·--"'-' Harbor l • 2 1-10 san11 Ana a a 1 0-1 $11t('1t (lJ. N--1 H1rbor KOl'lno: R_,, 111. <>wo•o \1). Newlal'd 12), 6ttl tl, Jllfllor V1nltv 0.mott C ), L.oomlt j2l. Ml11loll Viel• l O 1 1-! w-tmlnol•• ""o 'l 2 1 1 >-• U'*'°•rllly ' 2 2 1-1 •• Min ion Vltlo Korlno: Auburll 11), WHl•rn 1 2 1 2 2 0--I Lagunans ~eTwo Obstacles IU•forll Cl). w .. 1mlmter.: H1i..non (21, Goldfi.-ln No. 1 Jaycee Team i2~"t~~~n1~~~~~ Hl. Gauuer ~~~nk~111~\J.;:,~~~~1~!J~~rt11 n,, Ml•&Jon Vlelo o l 1 2-6 w1,rmln1ter 2 l o 1-S • UnJ"9r1Uy 3 I l l-I Wnl•<n 0 0 1 1-1 •'--'i'!lftlon Vl~lo scOtl"'I' Mlljt• (41. Wt 11<"l"11er Scorlnq: P11teo !21, Sur· ·· Nevllli Tll, Bu•ll fll. UnlYflr• tv Kor· rowt (1), Holder (2L El Camino College climbed back into the top spot in the state's junior college large absence by the Warriors. wholf"~~;;;i;iiioiiiiiiiiiiii~i;;;;i~-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiioi~-----1 have only a 23·23 tie with Cer· rltos to mar their record. L11'91 S<llooll Hal Akin!I has a couple of school football ralings this "i~'· Ef~~ .... lhing1 on hl1 mind. The first Is week. ~: t~:t:rn• The only Orange County •· F•ttflQ how his Laguna Belch High team to make the top 10 was j: ~"11~• School foothill team ill iOlni Santa Ana, rated seventh. The f i:~:: :::bl•• to beat Sonora, and the second only other South Coa.,,t Con-10: ~:;c:~cif1l is how to adjust to the loss of ference team rated Is 15th Mt. g: ~' ~1••n star runner Dave Marriner. San Antonio, beaten 38-17 by H: ~~~1" cc Ce 'los IS. ~'· S..n Antonio Marriner d l 1 Io cal e d a ~~m California Con· "· .. tv•• s"''" s<111011 should.fr last week against ference teams in the top 15 in· !: ~:::m":' Valencia ind will m I 11 elude West (12th) and ·t.os ~: ~~t v.11,y Saturday'• I p.m. 11me 1t La Angeles 'Ctty College (13tbl. ?: ~.;.r:" El Ca , , the 7. Wnl Hll!1 Habra High School. ile'll be m1no s return to '· T•n out for the aeuon. 1 _1-'opr=spo'=t=mar==k=ed=a=four=:;·wieeiikii,Z: =·\:' "Somohow ii doeln'I seem fair," Akins laments. "There's no doubt the kid1 relied oo him. "We Josi him on Ibo third play we ran and I thought It might be 1ucb a mental blow 1''e couldn't recover, but I wu proud of the way lhe lddl held on." It'• likely that AkiN will move 1pUt end Pete Cottam and defensl,. bc<k Spike AtkiMOn into Marriner'• 1pot 1nd alternate the two. "l'J?I exprrlmenting a little w1lb our offeote a bit now," AklN M)'I, "but l'n'l not IW"I ju9t 711 wl>ll we11 do. "0. lliD& ls sure, we'll Jiowl M lllnw mort and lhll'a ell "'"'9 .. I0 11." Jllll ....... " lhe IUrlinC q~ .. ollll \UlCfrlUL 1o111 MIDI and Jeck M ........ promlle, allhl ...... -•• """ MIYGa UAll AllY 'n ·~Oii . CAPll-llOWI -problm>a ~ ........ ,1 .. 1----::.-=--:-=-=---,,.----~-----~ =' .,~ :! ~,. Read the Daily Pilot ' , • . ... MESA CENTER,- rfjl and school ea1PA1ase -·~'In• ~ s300 For men & women-complete llne of PllOFESSIONAL ALL.PIO LINI 601.f IALU e TOP PLn l e Tit1li1t e M1rlly e Wil5011 tlOO't 1r!ilrl111'11'l'1Vl'll')')l!\)\ml'J'l'l'l'l11l'l'P1mfmmlYif!I --liiiiftD TIMI oii'Lim:l7Wii"i6i-1Mif"-- NATI ONALLY ADVERTIS ED WOODS I lltat4 • WI' •AN ITA" e IPAULatff e LYNI Chi ._ T -· ......... 141'• .. 1Jto'I .:...... • MESA GOLF CENTIR ~ ,nc1 School . ~ Jetty u.wl -......... 11 .... 681 W. IAKll ·-COSTA MISA (Al •• ~... PH 979-0462 DAI LY ... 7 I aalcer) • IUN. 114 • • YOUR L &. G STOR'E IS HEADQUARTERS . FOR FAMILY SKIING TOP GRADE EQUIPMENT AND LOW, LOW PRICES Skis, Clotlllnt, looll I A«.....,.., ~i Ski ...... D-lrii~ DODGE RIDGE SKI PACKAGE 58'e on F;sche• 5;1ve• Glau 1249 5 Skis. Garcia M-4 Step-lnSALE BinditiQS and Allsog Ski Poles! 1 , , . SQUAW VALLEY SKI ~d~E .. ...,_ Blizzard. Firebird Ra cer Skis, .,. s•rr > Minari !¥391 Foam Boots and .• • ~ ModelT-7 Ski Poles"'."". ' ,9 . IF PURCHAllD llPAMnlUff;lt., I Pll.HIC . . DONN~R SUMMIT,.Sl<'f Bllmrd AIU Glass Skis. Munari #392 Foam Boots, and Model T·7 Ski Poles. IF PURCHAllD SEPARATELY 17 •• 11 .pKQ, PlllCI -. . . lffAllM•UP PAN:l'I ~ lnsul1tlCI nylOl"I with :zip lidet. ~ J tl.98 STllETCH Hi PANT~ ~ri~;=:n ', I 14.11 •I PM SKI BOOTS FOAM LINED 29ss • STOlll llOlllll: MOii. TMllU ••· 10 A.II. 'TOt 1'.M. tAT, a IUJI. 10 A.M. TO I l'.11. LA MlllADA OllANGE TUITIN IHOPPINO CINTlfll 1HI #l'#f'Of'\AVI .. fll. TUI Tllll .. fl.IT ITRl lT "'°"9:121 ·1111 Ptt.M;UJ·fltO Phe>M:W ·- NOW, C SfCIRll IN OllANOI COUNTY ' IANTAANA at71.llUITOLIT, ~ ...... "'MUI 'i f'llelil:H1·U 17 . . .. .. , .. , ' . ~ ,. " , ,• • " ·. ·-·' , ' . ·~· ,, " ... .. " .. " •. ,. -~· w G al s I • v ;., w w n h a I a h a I I c d g DAIL V "LOT Iii.' What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC Severson New Golf Pro Burges At Shorecliffs Country Club ; :.:.~ Togetherneu Slwrt Hair AUls •• Sea Kings Win • A5 prodlcted the qlllll and clll.aer --lllil )Jul weekend w1s a big dlsappobllmellt. V~ few blnla were blued and not a single limit waa reported by any Individual ... u.r gWll1<T. The aven1ge bag per hunt<r w11 about 3\\ binls. Filll and Game o!flclals blame the low -op very poor feed, - and nesting condition> maklag for very·anall c:lutdlet ol blldl. Hunters on the Tejoo Rand> enjoyed the blgbeol averqo ol all SouthlllJd hwller.I as valley and DIOWllain qlllll o.-in front ol liloigwls as the small covm """ -wttb clop. Owkar were aJso reported as being few 1nd far between and the lowering of the bag llmit dido'! help buntero end the day early. The outlook for the ""'8inder of the ,..... 1J 1IJled as very poor for upland gamo btJntm Jn q-of quail and dlllkar .• Gol.ioil S....Mll IJ the .... ~ ""'-' f)ll i... -at Sbnclllla Country OUb In Sin a-ite. The ~ "le~ ... w ... - movet lo Slioftdlllt fmn De Anza Deoert Countey OUb In , llorngo Sj>rlnp wbm be lerved for two yeara u an uailtant. Ho la ortatnallY from Auburn, Wullb>Cloo. "I grew up wort!ftl on a ,.it .oourae and I'm Vlfl' fond of the gUPe," be Afl. ID colloge be piJyed for Pocillc Lutheran Unlvenity In Toooma where tbe golf team won a confen:noe cham- plonolllp wblle be waa a --Sevenon Is ..-itIY enroll-Wlad, cold weather and -IIJPU GI .nben 1*W U. eel In the PGA apprenlice pro- Improved tbe woterfowl hallq la tbe SooWnd. 111no1 wt.w VoJD-II tatea 40'-of early !Ms week farced tbe blnk on t1oe1r -.,. wal<n ... · active duly before be can ol>- lorced tbem onto the small,. poadl, -..,.Wmr Inmln. • ta1n b1J l1<eme aa a lull-lledg- clwlce of brlapg don tbe lllP ny1q fowl. eel PG:>. club proleaional. a ... arolllld tbe -Saa eojoyed a helter -a...... Larry Sears, a graduate of .-this 'put -k as lfmHI ol sprls were ctmDML ftlo'a use, Is bis assistant at ~ alao many w1g,.. lllld teol ...-t11o oea nd ...U.C ShonCilllt. shoald remain very good throop the ftnt Ult If the -Sbci-eclll& la c u r r e n t I y 'Private clubs la Oraqe Couty also roper! u illcraaoe la Wldergolng re-aeeding ~n the tbe waterfowl popalatloa. 'Ibo balk ·of aew hHI an!"'"' are back nine aod since Severaon •!'ril .... ~ •. la -to_.......... Joined u.e llafl, it has been Al lftlte, ol tlte 1rv1ne· -· uld dlal -llmli ......., clclled. was at bud for ....... alloo4llal Ille -oti the ~ -"I haven't bad an op-·~ 1eaaec1 to pr1nte -·Wldie ~ 111a1 ·111ere ... -portunlty 1o p11y the 1u11 'Very UUle ~ .ctMtJ oe takel lD tM eoatJ tG date. coune yet," be says. •1But •I! · . fa are 1ett1ng ..,.. gn1sa coming Ned Kborey and D u • D e PediJr. The Kb<Jr<y-Pedlar duo tapped F.d Hayts and Lloyd Stocker, 4 and 3. In the lower hall of the bracke~ Pat Hart and Ed Etbell deleale<I Fred Werder and Jay Hewitt, 4 and 2. They will piJy CharlCI Heeter and Vlnee Hogan, wlnnen over Jim Duggan and Milo Tedstrom, 3 and 2. The cbamplooahlp round will be plJyed a week !rom Satur- day beghmlnc at 10 o'clock. RCUleho ~ Action Jn the prtsldent's cup competition· at Ranhco San Jooquln (loll ~ will begin thlJ ...-...i wtlh tour ""1Jlda carded an 111cceedinc ....- ...... _Coat Bob Lunn, one of the outslandlng young pros on the PGA tour, b ten tat Iv e l y acbeduled lo plJy an exhibition round at Irvine C.Ut Country tlub on Monday, Nov. zo, ac.- conllng lo bead pro Rlchad Martinez. Lunn and Martinez were together quite 1 bit on the pro tour before the !CCC pro quit to remain in thl9 1rta as a club atid teaching profe53ional. Westminster, Edison Favored Over Rivals George llartmln iln't out to corrupl Bob B11r1ea, but he'd Ul<e to aee hiJ huge deleoslvo By HANK WESa1 a 21-yud nm Jn tbe - tackle be eomewhat 1esa °' .. ~ ,... '"" period iet up ihe dbx:btlc a<Con11U~11y wbaheUn Saddleba11 ~ Upoeto -the eplce that ICUcbdown. ege 1 oot team make toott>aU MUOnl in-And Lauderbaugh wu tM 8~an. whose Gauchos terestlng. And In most ctRS, woe lthone ln the drive to tfle toke on Mira Costa Satu<Uy upaeta don't jull haPl>Oll, they winnlntl touchdown, ~ (7,30) at Oc<an!ide, says .,. made. the bell eight Umea in the IS. Burges would be an even bet· For a ..,. in point, take plJy ...;,.. ter player U he developed a eor... dtl M.w'a 17-7 viclory • "We ~-"y -...,_ ....._ mean streak on the field. •-•-...... .-. "I think he'• definitely a ...,. lftviowly unbeaten rigbtlorhimlonm,"llolland major college pniopect, I ju3I i:diaon last week. ..ys. "We nitd"'1 lo the !- wish he wasn't quite eo nl~ a It started with a team soul f<rmation two weeb ago to guy," Hartman says. "He's searching Mnion the Monday take advantage ol tds run- got w develop U:e klller In-before the game. The ....Wt nine;" Holland aays. 1be One stinct that aU d e f e n st v e wu 8 trnaller team 8 ahorter· b&ocked unbelievably well for linemen have, and then he'll • him last ~ and . be ran •:;:,~·~... haired one, and a new well." T•k ,.,_.\/ ~ U.:etber:?ea according to Sta Until hll upriltng agabwt ::!:::JI ~==-= ~-.. o:;· Kings coecb lloYO Holland. Edbon k hadn't been the bell ,.._.... · "It wun't anything ipedaI of aeuom ftr the M, Jtt be able lo play for anybody." we -at the meeUqi" pound "'11or. Alter pie~':,:> Physically Burges hu the Hollanc1 uya. "We jtJlt ~ 33 yards In the - attributes. And he has proved that the team wun't playing Nowport, be was o!del ..... A J t h o u g h Westminster's by oqe while the Rams are himaelf in two susons u a ether playtn wtth a kidney problem end I,Jona are rated No. 2 in picked. by one over Atlanta starter on the G a u c h o s • !All ' we were g as ml.ued the secmd game of tbt Orange County be h i n d ::;~cghinn~tyi ~ ~~~ i l~.e~ dele~~~~·""'er out of San ~t:"1;· kids came ap with se~p· lcked up 81 and 45 Westem's Pioneers, coach Bill ~, ldeu on whit couW be done to ' m·-'.· on the pro list. Clemente HJ•h, Burgea -e ys<ll in the next two gamas, Boswell's Lions football team "'•~· " _. ._..ther and one of ....... ••~. -Atlaonl~• ,, co-winner ot t.~ GaucbOI' .... """'"' ' ~ but thtn wu knocked out in is a four-point choice over the t>en .. :r.:; "" wu that the whole team Anaheim school in a Sunset &= ~'" c C~ ! outstanding defensive lineman WOU:Sd set crew c u t a. 1be the e1rty KOU. apinlt Seta Leap showdown Saturday 8'-sc"°'~-WF-:vsf.t. ·~ 17 award Jut aeuon and was defense bid talked lboot doing ~ Valley and wouM ap ~ night in selections made by l'f.l'.:'M~~·'• named • oecood team all-it belore, bat we -that •ng yardage In only 6¥6 "(; Honkers Beul,.. So.t up whet<! 11 used to be P,.tty muddy." the DAILY PILOT staff. ~-7~ r'' l~gue selection by t be ~ the whole temn would do ll nes. ·. 1be main body of Canadian Honkers in the Pacific Flyway In another area titanic, " u\.'""~..,':/ ,1 Mission Con!.,.... coacl>es'ed "We lllar1ed the .-Ing A oeldom uaed ,_... last is just now being forced out of CAnada and the PacUtc Ncrth-Edl9on'• Chargen: are picked ~-1•· Tbls sealOfl he has bn~v with about '5 pla)'91'1 finilhed se.aaon, LaudertJeuglti b 11 west. Cold f-1 ..... tem.-utures are forcing the birds mutb-s-• A-by three points to topple ~~ c["7.,...J· t:e ;A11 ln most areas and with etch with 5t they all got ~cull shown great improvement um ·-~ r--Action In the annual men's undefeated Santa Ana Valley r.dci'T.t w~tt -· s'"'~ ='''' bv 1 game accontlnit lo Hartman. and ~ all played " Holland season, and his rMCbtd the ward. ,M...,1,1 __ , cl b ~1-toum ent t inanlrvineLeaguecruciaJ.. w .. ,=-~C~~11•11vbV•' "He's one of our beat J>&M says ' point where Holland thinks he It's going to be a couple of weeks before any ""'6'"' uuu. u n,i,., am a Corona del Mar is a one-. I::""' -H•rWr bv 4 rushers when he really decides .,1;m sure the hair ....__,t has the potential to p on to number-of geese arrive in the' Southland and most bunters Santa Country Club is El ~ ~" c~r. 1iw • to charge and he does a f(ood 'WQll junior coUege bell at leat. should expect to see the huge blrd.9 working ponds or lakel down to the semifinals with point pick over Fountain ~':~\::: =1:"'~1 11 job against the rush He plavs mean anytblna:, llbort Of' long ''He ls not rt.ally tat. but.hit cb be! the f. st of 'f'L--"'-two matches carded this Valley while University is tab-c~ Otl ~ -FGWll•ln v.ii.v the ••-t to' tbe t'•hi hair doesni make you win or ,_ _ _. ._._ .. mu ore ll' L..:11..'l:lllllCr. bed by c:ne over Dana Hills in 11v 1 on lKM nex -& loee It Just .. .....h.Jt.. Is 1 ·~ runner, 1lllW' Only a few specks and snows have been bagged around the weekend. other close contests 00 the ~"l'i~:'-°"&~1~ 'w, end !IO he gets double turned •hi..:.. :u~-1~7t.;; Ida weG, .m ll WI')~ sea but action should pick up within a week or ao, which, could In quarterflnal ro\Dld~ list. Lo.r"°:'::: .=:~"°~ i;~:: ~ most ol the time, but be still ::........., ,, ...... ,. for bll 1ile," Holl.ml 11Q11!... be speeded up with the help of a winter storm. ~~Clemed BlllandHu~..!'_-__ ., Other area games include Foaltlm -Minion vi.to iw i gets lnto the.play." ~ · "And he'I c:ne " tbe leldllil. "1::1~• u;ucuo CUN statistically, Burges ranks "'lbe reuon 'ft woo. WU on the tum." ~ Deer Hutttet's IMpro..e Seere Max MCClaln. 3 and 2, lo Foothill over Mission Vlojo by well up In the Gau c b o that b teom u a ""°"'1--:~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'~­reacb the oem1a across from two and three other aames by M"d •~ R II delmsive ranb, porllcularly playad Ito bell -GI the At tbe d-...,.. c1nwa to a c1ose r.. the im -lour points. I ge~ 0 011 a 11ne game 1ao1 w«it YM'-'Ibo -.. .,.. gnod, hanten an lll'lnlinl don some hie .,__ Door are la fill On the junior college Iron~ againlt Riverside. the off-line blocked weD, nil now ud trot*Y buob ""' ,,_.., -doe. . GWC G ls Orange Coast Is a four-point At EJ T Burgea has nine unau1sted and Skip Laudel1Jouah really ThiJ writer Iumted 00 !M 'hjoo -11111 ,oai -a cboico OVer Cenilol WbJle . oro tackles and has Bllilied on 17 raJI bon}u the aad la lea• than etpl hoan out in tM ffeld •• • leta -Golden West Is tabbed by othen tbil _.... He has a1ao Lauderi>aqh -moat ~ bob ~ lym911'a MEN'S SHOP 100 deer. Tbe Tejon Ruck often g..t1t11wcJ __,. • dallee BJitz Foe seven over Santa Monica and The two top driven on the caused one fumble , recovered vtJlbit ~U. cl tbl at some bi( hacb in -to tbe ltplud pme foul! .. the Saddlebeclt Is picked by nine midge\ racing cin:uit will three othenl and broken up Seo KlJW -=· !x .. llont Quality bqe ISO,OIO acre rand! locat<d )1111 -al Lot AJltltlea. over Mira Costa. meet head-on Saturday night lour pa..,. while hanlulng -die nn. GI the DOUIL! KNIT Tbe manqement o( tlle U.tlng operdoM at tbe ~ Sue Lehman scored 30 points Closest game on the college when DaMy McKnight and oppoeing quarterbacU. line and tbl Im ol SPORT N11fS art ander the uper1 gaidaace of Wiit ,,_.., fto hu lfU& Monday night to lead the front Ls Auburn over Florida &bby Olivero ra<:1! at lhe El A consistent player in hi! r u I I b a e t , ,BID Moir, """ tbe put %5 yeen In game couervttloa IDd muq:emeat. Golden West College women'• Toro Speedway. Gaucho career. Hartman says ~ Yd bll f1oelt. by ,';..CAJ,~fT Uuttacbed baaten can but Ute Te)oa. ·Rua bJ' simply basketball teem to e 57-33 win Action starts with time Burges' attrlbutet on the field pme In two ,_.. on tJle takint out a seuon membtnhlp at • very rea-'* fee. Tiie over bolt LA Harbor. Pro Results trials at 7 o'clock and the boil down to his strength and vanity." · · · •114 " ••• ,..,.., '111"" fe entltlew a bunter to Hitt"for deer u wtlt ._ aplad pme. Golden West is one game trophy race at 8:30. · BuOlt ,.._ r-MlltedlY at "'rt Hunter oac<eaa pereento1e 11 Ille bi(lleal la aD Calllftla r.. bclJind Fullerton In the Coast =::•" ·~, McKnight and Olivero have "~ile has the lltn!nCth to hold tbO JiCii1i. "lb;, 1:0ulitth1"" JANTZIN tropllJ bodts on the TeJon Ruclo. _._... nado -League lllandlng. .::"~Ji ~·· "-•1 comhined for 17 wins in the 2t off a double '!<am and then -the .,..,. wfll UI GOLDIN UllD Am1one Interested in lnndbtl· tldl lqe .,. ••• -otbert ICOrlng a g a I n at N:, Yllr\ 1 '-c.nJDm • i main event& 90 far in the rac-make the tackle, aod tbe me >"'* Dlt OD • ewNL 1111 KNITMAnll call hgletb at (Hi) !27-MIL Harbor were Linda Lawrence ~ •. ~~ r".w.W:...1 , tt1t1 1ng seuon. They'll cet com-to get put hil WocMr and pit•klm bllll a.I btlll 11 MUNStMGWIAI ' I rod p ~ otferetl (11), Kathy llow'1d (2), Jut11,• -v""'~c''t...,_" petition from oucb driven u deOect _ .. Hartman yantl two-... -...... IXCILLO nt ucto~ CC l·lM~s~·~'-~(~f)~,~Debl>~~~~H~utine~~·~j~~~·~~·-~~~·:M:__~~~Ro~y~Coo~k~Jr~.,~Ste~ve~Kaller~~·~P~ya~.~"Wllen~~be:'.::dovelopo~~~titha~l~~Illl~;•~1;~~'l'w.~~n.~•~.....,~~~al:~ .. ;;;.,;w~•;'""~;';"~~ 'Mie Green .Head Club in Simi Valley IJ offering an ~ (2), Lisa Herreru (I) aod l-'"· "i\:" Kemy Gidney, Jerry Dunithan kll1<r inllinct. he11 be hard lo 21-,-la Illa llrll -"" --- ductory package for hunters who have never lmnted uplaod Debbie Dur1llon (2). ur .... l>J;r~ I •• tot and Sohn Redican. stop." belpeil ... up. field pl, and game on a private club. GIP')' Wiiiiams, owner of the Greenhead Club, bas Rt up a special hunt for intereJted pheasant bunters. On a flrlt time only basiS, scatter gunners can ample the excellent bunting <i'fered at Greenhead at a very low fee. More than 1.800 acres are available at tbe club which la Jo. cated mly 45 minutes rrom downtown Los ~ For more information on the club and Jts open membenbipe: phone Wil- liams it (805) 644-3166. Dog Tralttf ........... - For tloe daradon of tbe _.., --cu -tbetr owa iaonttn1 dot at o. If ·le1ka a.m.ua'1 .- poI>Ofaii •aat1•1 dabs. Mike Qaa,,....., .,...._. of L1ae Ru- baap'a Pb•aaant Hantlal Prarf• la C-.. boa pet .,._ a dol trainisit proaram for ..,..._ dot ....,._ H-.. w111 be able to -k -the ~ pld-of Orville Sbuv for aevea _.. la ..,. to -tioafr en """" of h~ 'do( adapt in tloe fleld. Tiie ....., GI laa-'11111 co¥er Glie611ee, wortiq ~ llTe blrdl aad u aca..l all al· 1..-plooaaadll bunt in the lldd. FIS' _,. l!olormalln • lbe cluaes ,_.. (nC) -· Mixed C.Ufaes Reported Frtsb water fishing bas slowed down the put coup)o ol weeks primarily due to a lack of angllng pressure. southland lakes 'are kicking out a variety ol fish for anglen braving the elements. Bus, trout, crapp~ and belly catllah to 14 poµnda b!P- llghted fishing activities at nearby Vall LUe. Some ~I• crap- pie have been caught oo f'lloW Flea Fly Jip wblle -liJller. men working deep diving plop and pluUc wonna are boalnl a few 1n the 2 to S pound clus. FIJblng ii CODlldered alow at Big Beach Lake, Hmel and CUyamaca. 'lbeoe lakes are only good for small planted - and actlon will continue to a)ow down aa wint<r approocbeo. San Diego lakes are Dated u fair for mhled catchea o! -· trout and catfllh, but anglora are bavlng to ...,.k very bard lot a limit of any specie. . Pini. Caslta.s and Cacltuma are slow, Isabella 1J flU' for bass, ahd the northern IJkoa of San Antonio and Naclmlenlo are rated poor due to cold weather and very low water. GRAND. PRIX 5113'b ~«!~ DAW ltO!ll PON'Mc -~-·-··--&.UaDIMCf J:.MCNl'f'Alnll? --~11aaJ1•e• a~.,_., ( --.... , ' •• A - . SPORTSMAN'S SHOP NIWIOtl e ' • SKIERS!!! GET READY NOW FOR SKI SEASON AHEAD ••• .. Wl'ffi BIG SAVINGS ON FAMOUS NAME EQUIPMENT AND .APPAREL . . Ski Boots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 'I> OFF ' 220.00 FW. Alu skls with Mm .. Toe, Elastomat t.l ., •.. 9'.00 6(). 00 fiJCt. Sc,,,w Qlick. tld:s. • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 23." S0.00 Marte. toe & Eladanat t.l bindings • • .. .. • • • • • • • 24.9' W~• pony fw afl•-«i boob • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1h0FF Nrtda & -'• aid parkas • • .. • • • .. • • • • • .. • .. • • Y,..lfJ OFF lls(. & 1#011iml'I ••eat••· .......................... 1h OFF 2".00 ~ tfee • .a:... pcM'll'I •••••••••••• , • • • • • • • • • ... • 11." 36.00 ·~ o.vm piants..... . . . .. • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lt." Fi.:t.-Gaca....., •• ·······-·· •.•.•.••......•.•••••. lf.1-112 OFF WindlJrW1s • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • \la off 20.00 w~··· .................................. '·" ................ • . •• .; ..... ~ .. I I ' I :J4 DAil V PILOT 5 Amtrak Has Deal " ' . . ' PUT SOME LIGHT ON THE SUllJlCT -:itY 1'ERRY G~A:,•. . ! I• 'Never, nevt•r, tRkl' 1\NY 10cdicine In the dark~ Always lllfn on a light so you can M-e what you're doing 1t.nd ·c~k to make sure that _)'!)U'te taking the right med\· '" C&Uon. A lot of n1cdicine bot· 1:Jh are siml\ar In clc>JIRn and can be easily intel'l:hangC'd . ~ pith one another if you're ~ "°t paying attention to what ~·re doing. ~~. ' . It never makes sense to ~ ~ke unnecessary chances ~ and avoidable risks. In fact. ti's downright foolish! To- ~. :dlly's drugs are potent com- wunds, and accidential\y ~king the wrong one instead Of the right one can lead to ~rious -and perhaps fat.al ..:.. consequences. \'ou can't ' "be too careful when it comes ·to usl111 med.lclnes. and we ibope you will ex~ the ~ .nccessary precauUons. Chevr.olet's YOU OR YOUR !XlCTOR li---=-'-.:.....--'-+-H CAN PHONE US wben you need a delJvery. We wiU-""de- Uver promptly withoqt •U· tra charge. A g:i:eat }nan1 • ._ people rely on us for their health needs. We welcdme ~uests for delivery tervt~ and charge accounts. PARK LIDO PHARMACY 251 HMpltal ROMI N.wport ... ch '42-ISIO P'l'M DellYllf'Y 'YOU Section' There's something for YOU ln the "YOU Section" of the , ,DAILY PlLOT every Sunday. • .Check its personal appeal for _, you and youn. . . ' . . • . • , ' • ' ~ • . '• > • Fall '72 lof ,ASHIOM ·IQUMI SANTA Al¥i Tll, S47~S . ' OVER THE COUNTER .I ' 1 MUTUAL ·FUNDS .. ~ i •'' .. ... ·~ it ll , .. ... ~ ... . •• .. 7 .. ~· . I . 111:.. ~ . .a · •Wi~ ·~~ ·;a _.., ~'1 ... $ ' I • ' I~' d~ a'( 1"1~ \"' I I ' I 1 1 I 9AllJerU..'• BOISE, !dam -'U I Alborllon'• 1-. dla1n lw repor1ed record -a.ad eamlnp fw lbt Qlllll« -bu! Sept. IO. !looirt D. Bolinder, prpsl- deot of the Mf.llore dloln. aald the company recorded fl70,9.1'1,lff in tales lo< )be period. an lncrt1se or f7 1*- cenl over the aame perkMI of 1171. 81sss•1ta I I I t I I ' I I ' • CAIU I'll.OT l1iilftdar, .. at t II 2., 1972 TONIGHT'S ' ' TV .mGlllJGHTS ABC . a ll:SO -"The Man With the Golden Arm." Qllo Preminger's dramatic indictment-of Ibo drug -~c which spotllgbts the terrors of heroin withdi'aw.al. Frank Sinatra, Kim Novak, Eleanor Parker, (continued Friday): KCE'l' 9 7:80 -"As You ille It." Shakespeare explores love and lust in this romantic comedy • repl~ith dukes, wrestlers and shepherdesse,. ) CBS-. 8<00 ,..:.. "The Dirty Dozen.'" Lee Manfu > rounds ~ a corps of condemned murderers and · other Q>iljtary detelicts to undertake a suldde mis· J slon iJr·German-occupied France. Ernest Borgnine, i Charles Bronson, Jim Brown. NBC D 9:00 -Ironside. A Japanese puzzle prn\'i.de$ the clues to a mysterious theft folio.wing the accidental death of a construction worker. Ray· mood ~utr stars: c KTLA · U 12:00 -"Roman Scandals." Eddie fii Captor : ~d Lucille Ball are teamed in this 1933 ~ musicaJ. Comedy. t.~~-· ~~ .. e7:' TV DAILY LOG Thursday ' ' E\lei)ing, ... • 'Fridciy ..... ' •r7.: _,Wl*'J 'll *<Ooo- ' . • •• • • . 4-.: -Th~.aters Castingi Cornmunlly the.awn .an Tainbelllni at the Colla Mua ' Chrlltmu 'bolltlay•. '1"ilitMr beginnlnrl'l' ~ .11>e1r· fiUt4 11ocr<1Uon Department at ·tnronnatioo may be obtained f?eyond . the. Ch r i 1l ma I.; 't.belr earilest·convenieriet. fM. by CMtldlng Dawn 'fleet, • • EV.eat · ( ' ' -• ChOral.e Offers .. ' . 'soiig· P~tpourri holidays, with four of. them an-'3QO on weekdays trom 8· a.m. ~t of the · Foun~· ~ ' bOUnclng alldtllons for their to ~ p.m. Villey group, ,at 847-9811. , By TOM BAJILRY · were· In fine vo1<e·wt111 Wood'• lnlital produCllon9 of 1973. . °' .. °* ,... ...,. clear tenor 'blfng mo 1 t Tryouts fOf performers ol 'l1IE FOUNTAIN Valley "C-11 AMP A &NE COM. tvl'l'llTl .. uruT r 1l'ake· a Scltubert song eytle, · particularly iultO<i, from. tJ11a all age grou)lll·-and· In one Commwiity 'rbea.ter has an-Pl.EX'' will. be the Januan-~1 .. 1IUltKllJI add 1 few lfllrituals, t.llrow In -; crltlc's le41, In that· ctorloul case. musicians_ ha.ve been· noonced its .r~ad1ngs ~or the production of ~ Santa 1Ana a r.-o~ and coo~pn'arf" Welsh ,folk ~ "Ob.' yby announced 1i¥' tne Costa Mesa children's play, "Mr. Popper's C'._ommunl.ly'PlaYersti wl~, ~I and ~~11 ~ . • •• -Civic PlaybouM!; F 0 u n t 8 In . Albertsen in the dim:tOt s ' 0 IOrlP 1 ae.a cu•u earnest tbOu'tiefore lnet" Valley Community Theater, ( , · J chair. Alber!aen aJlllUrOd. _.. two and top 11 all oft with .a Sandidge. dl4 more than Santa Ana Community Plav.,:> CAL LB OARD the psychiatrist in the """'"4Y 1-Beach c 0 m m 0 n I I y well loved anthem before turn-'.justice to an llr 11111 ba ·lonJ and the Long.' Beach 'Com-' , ~ nearly oeveo years ago at. the Playbouoe, "Angel Street," Ing it'all over to your Cbo<ale.· been a favorite 'witli thll munily l'laybouse. . · . ,, . H.un.tlngton Beach PlayJ>ouSe_ 'lbe Patrick Hamilton drama · You'V• cOOcoc:ted a~aO. ~~.;.;,,.II;'~,._~,• ':i!hplny The . musicians are being Pengums. Tryou~ -.Will _be 1he Jmall cas_t CQD\td)'_callf WU:produoed c:m-the acreen-as that alla i .1A .. 1.. 1o111.... -. sought among youpg adults for held by di.rector Charles. ~n-for two ~ in the 25 ·to 40 i11e "G~." c or \oqtWl; ~~1 -mavit~"''!fie Tvtle· -DoVe.,. the Costa Mesa c i vie naert at the theater buildmg, rw;age and one female 1n her James Brittain is directing ahd. coiisidenible abillty.'froin ' sandiiltt Caught UM! dlftleuJt Playhouse's forthcolll\ng pro-t8280 Jiit. Baldy Circle, Fouo-lah! 20s .. Readings will be l>eld the show and will be casting a group or Just 20 perfttmm. llhra'!ll« Perfectly and -no ducUon of "You're a Good tain VAiiey. Monday, Nov. l3, at 'l:SO ,p.IJl. for three wonieR a:nd rout men And it's pretty eertaln. unless .fess liinnleutate in .the wort's Man, Charlie Brown," wblch Audition-liples will be Fr~ in the Playbouse, 530 N. Roos in all age (81\ges. 'lbe play Is a you're new to the choral equally cllfflcult COD!:luslop. goes into rehearsal Nov. 12 for day, Nov. 10, at 1 . p.m and St., .Santa Ana~ psy~ suspense drama business, that your singers THERE WAS 1ameth1Qc for a· mid-January opening. David Saturday, N<iv. 11, at 2 p.m., "Champagne Complex'' wUl about a husband wl19 ts trying comprise a well balanced, everyi:lody in an a~ve Pigman is associate director· wilh callbacks on Sunday, open Jan. 19, to be rottowed, todtivehlswifeimane. perfecUy autmed group. audience, rangtog · fP.Om ' • -. • -• for the shflw. Nov. 12, also at 2 o'cJOck. A appropriately, by a cham-T!youbWtll .be-1'eld;at7:30 Director Jack Kreftlng Richter's ''Tb -~-~'! Interested instrumentalists, number of teenagers .are re-pagne' party. Further · ln-: p.m. in the play'1ooe, WI E. shoWed us Just h!Jw it 's done Michael Efllt,11 ·cbanl ' ~. ·• who must be ·able to read quired for the roles of adults formation nlay;.be obtained by Anaheim St,, Long Beach, last weekend by using that "Cdme Lift, Come Deatb.'" UCI. music, should f>nlact Pali with 10 to 12-y~ar-old boys and callJng'531-9'738. · where the produ~ion will O'peD formula for the opening con· said ~ iM · ~lief t n Cl ' ·-girls playing the non-speaking J • • • on Jan. 5. Further lnformatiori cert of the Laguna Festival spirituals alt. the. way to • ~ ..... .,. roles of the penguins. • ALSO AUDmONING on may be obtained by calling the Chorale's 19'11-73 season. The Wlllametta ~·s · belovtd 1 · "Mr. Popper's P.enguins"· Monday; Nav. 13, w111~be the playhouse tiox office at (213) .. result w:aJ a pleasing and lm-"At ~ Round Ear t b •a will. be ·presented during 'the " ·January prodlk!llan of. tile 433-0536. pressive performance that Imagined Corners." 'Fling'_ .comedy B,ack, Feebly Ii . . ' OEORGE C. SCOTT . ·, PETER O'TOOlE .' : AVA GARDNER IN '. J•l ; . · · "THE SIBit' , ' Auo,·· RAQUEL WJL,CH IN '. . ·w __ .,.....,. ,,..,~, .. ';ti . .,..-. -........ ,,. ' . ' .... , .. c:.-. S.. J:tl P.M. ' ' . ' ' Costa Mesa Ci~ic Playhouse .. ~ dell&bi,t a capacity audience 'Ibis splendid' ncltal inust in the Laguna Beach Art have given Krefting's ~ Gallery. -all the confidence in the -lei for their next challenge -ai members of the chorus in "Amahi and the NI g ht Visitors" six weeks hence in the L~guna Moultop Playbouae. , 1'.MIU ~':'DAf "'Ttil GARDEN . OF THE FINZl-CONTJNtS" ... "LIVE FOR LIFE" Oh yes, Miss Pennie P'olter. Your piano 1ccompanlment played • great part in the .. .,. .... of thll ~tful nclta1. """°". H • ....... One Week Only JOE COCKER • ... __ wl ni I .,. ~-"WOODSTOCK" ,. ... tin s.t. llJ "W~".t7:JI ..... ce.t. S... tr.. 2 P.M.·' ·~ .a---.. f,'lti!dU.tfl 1b · . ~:. -t•vrT••ri.111 "-•• ......... c'°1 " caws. ............... AJllm ·! II. ·~·· :.:J .)-:::!Y .'Lo - - -R• Sf AD/UM •3 ' .. ' ..• : •.. --- •lw "l"LAT IT AOAllll, SAM'" •nlllllW 1111111....t ........ _.....s.tt Wlt!Mr If I Ac_,..., AW.t .... "l'IDDl.11 ON THI IOOfJ" M.liM .,...... " "THI 00Dl'ATH81" (IJ • "MA•••• CAULDI•" (I) -"EVl!ITTllllllO YOU IVll WANTeD TO ICNOW ABOUT SIX" & "MOflln' TALJ(t" (I) ''TMI llllW CllNfUalOMI'" Ill ....... c kefl ' .... • "'l"U"t MllTT l"Ofl Ml'" 1•1 . "ONE MR.LION · BC" · ''ME AND THEE" ., __ ••• w .... -. ........ '-•""•"'·· IM1•9'tl J2.00HI~--, 1 .... ~.rtla'! flt• a. ... tu,~ ..... tHI • . ' ' . --------·-r----.......... ,,.. ' .... ' ..,.. ..... ., 1r11'...,.••' . c ............. J" ; S,... .& S.. "-I P.M. ' ' r· ...... 5" .. &11i.1MJ ' """ ..... ' .."8nMIH. YPU ALWIYI wi.,tnlO ·10·· ' lllOW ' ... llr., , . ... .. " ".M""IT T~.:;_..,rr"J " . ~. 1 t-11. 26-27, ""· 2.J WDT •Att -'O ...... ( ~OUNTT PAllNOUNns ,,.,,_ .... ~ ...... UM. "9r ~,,._ ~ ONJll, ~ r c•llUWWI ' ...... "' -., ... • ,., c_, 11 . . ~ . ·-.. ... ~­IC•,...··~ ·~· ... '":";',_.:"" -. ...:.... ·~n:!Nt'' .... q...-1 ,, J: .. ~ .............. --................. .......................... 1 .... ''aiW• IN) ---. SUD/UM·! .. -... 11 - . .. -....... oflDW•ti• -- film"" the-lamlly,tilmodenthly·in tlw S.OSSAlps. · . Co.tlf • • ROB£RTLEWIS sfMNsoN-s ' "KIDllAPPED" '4 J' I ''' r I ', I I !( I I' l.'W!\OlJ<} ~~ • ' 1 ' ' ' • ,. • • -.. 1 l I • ' • • ! ,. • . I • • I ~t of My Bouse' Gene Benedict threatens John Corona as the latter's daughter, Louise 111.aroc, loo~ on. m a scene from "Summer and Smoke," the Tennessee W i 11 i am s drama now on stage at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse tn Lagwui Beacb. . 'Little Foxes,' 'Carats' Share Top Honors at Long .Beach * * THE FACT 01 LAW AND 02DE3 ' 8ADHAM'S ~BEST • Tbe California Peace Officen Ala. (The voice of your Policeman) •••• for th• •ntite meinbenbip ••• our 11•-:.• CIJIPNClcdionl« your IOlld oapparl cl our ~ 90Cllf" THAT SAYS IT ALL RE~ELECT ·BOB BADHAM 711t. D1111t..t "2: ...-f !llr..,..,., fl!.•'Jt_,., .'71. 0.-... P. T.,W, Oratie:ct -a.c..-tfW1 .. c...•,., • ' • .. **·1i1i·~**.*** - • ' . ~ I ~Ondine' . T~ .. Play· At Irvine Al I wl!lf.' fhl moie d . wtlll yOi. i..t to know ... .,.ic3 Ill II, rt dlplh I iii 2, 14172 l'lllUC llDna! . • " PUBUC NO'l'ICI: . • DAll.Y "LM If ' \ __ ) .... : . • • . • • • • 1 .. • I , l ' " ' ... • • (" 38 DAILY PILOT Th.....,, ~-2, 1972 • Staff Menabers Ma1'e· t"ke Ca1npuig~ ,, ~Nixon ~ Crew Believes •· Idleness Is Disloyalty .. By COURTNEV R. SHELDON '""' c ......... , ol n. Clwtltlu ~ MOftikll' W ASHIN(i'l'ON -In 1972, more than ever before, Richard M. Nixon's tam· paign recipe comes from his own orderly testing kitchen. The assistant chefs may suggest a lit· tie spice or sugar. But mosUy, they are there to learn from the master. One might ask whether President Nix· on -who has survived political dungeons >'·to live ln palaces -need ask advice. "Mirror, mirror on the wall, who already knows the most of all? TIIOSE WHO SEE Nixon often, however, report he is. a poised and prao- ticed listener. His acquisitive mind stores up idets be likes. His memory bank of politics rivals the computer ~Is ol the day. . • ..,..,_ Then, sometimes qWckJy, sometimes 1aboriously, he sorts out the options. Ultimately, It is Nixon's intuition that ad· vises bim most. In his last gr!at gallop for votes, the incumbent President draws heavily on the resources of the vast federal bureaucracy for supportive facts and statements. S.OME ON IDS pereonal staff In the White Hoose are 99 percent engaged in the politics of re.election. An idle band, t '~ ~:.,~n~~s~d~~~~~:! '.·-'more in the open than he is, some not. ; , The U!t has to start with a Jean, loyal ~ · powerful White House ez.ecutive with the ~··deceptive title of "assistant to tbe Presi· ~~·dent." H. R. (Bob) Haldemu keeps the t 'political freight moving -and any other l baggage that shows up at the White t · Hou..e door addressed to Nixon. He is mud-mannered, though intense. When be is relaxed, his smile ls friendly . Wherever the President is, there he'll be. On the campaign trail , his candid camera purrs endlessly, but his mind is checlling up on Infinite details of the WIUte House operation. Out ol sight, he sils In a commanding, posJtioo near the President's office. He Is 1 .in the direct line of fire on political I • decisions. To execute them smartly ls his : .reopomibllity. ·, 1• IUS JS N()T the job of town I fpbilooopher. If II ........ be Is bred of the same Middle America .conservatism of ·hill mentor. A former lAs Angeles ad· i vertl!.lng executive, be Mw has tbe coun- 1~~·· b!Qest accoont, the ,.lling ol • Richan! Nl>on. .. : ' . ... UP TO HIS CHIN John D. Ehrtlchm.1n •' lit does II throltgh efficient organlza. ''tkm, antlclpetlng the President's need for /i.':fw and advice, and being chi<! 1 poUcem1n, fJreman and arbiter of the \ , . White Houte staff. ' • Oil! frnat where the pollllcal buckshot ~lt>latten Is 1 gri!garlous man with owll.ah r1·11l-and a hwlget for pollUckI,., [ ' ~.a.ti MacGrepr, chllnnaa of the Com- ~mlttee for the ~lecilon of the Pml· deal. : He talks fut, thinks futer, hill hard, 1 1 and atW stays within tho political nonnl. ;tAI a former member ol the Houle of I· 'llepmaitaUveo before he wu appointed ~ eo.-J to the Pmldent fflf: I ·~Iona! R<lallono. he talked the ~ Jaraao with c:onc-. " He letped Into the ahotl ol Jo•• N. ,..,._.., former chairman of lhe com- ;.~ u H they ...,. his own com- ;tortQlo '*"-aUppm. .. . ' I. JDG.lllA!I, athlellc l1fll' who !root· r ·nlppod btlo Miami Beac11 poa1a, ho 11 lho ~~1Cce11lblem111._ • 1 He -·1 have to bone on llaid<mln'• ~ -lo ... tlto Prelldenl: he Is 11 .. ,. ~ In tbe f.X>lltlcal bl!ck lbop ol tho • Wblle ll«* Md fl lllero ftCUlarly. ' ·-'Wbea MaoGttp loliJ whit II on the Prfllfdml'• mktd, il la bocat• lie lmon. He landed ... the tMm u. lllllllOlailon .; . • RICHARD M. NIXON prize for having Jost the Minnesota senatorial. race to Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey in 1970. It may prove the most important diversion of his life. His job is to lead the charge, and most of the routine and. humdrum or the cam· paign is left to others at the committee. '. . . Jn the intimate circle, John D. LOY AL, POWERFUL •.• H. R. (Bab) Haldoman EhrUcbman, a Seattle lawyer and Jongtlme hiend of Haldeman'•, seems more vlsible and inllue.ntial as Nixon's first term ends. AS ASSISTANT to the President for Domestic Affairs, he is the counterpart of foreign affairs adviser Henry A. K.11s- lnger. But Ebrllchman, because dorriestic matters are more politicized end con- tested by the Democratic Congress, ls up to his chin ln the campaign. His nonnal role la to 11pread options on domestic issues before the President. His personal convlctlol\ll are strong and they parallel those of the President. Mxon ha! not surrounded himself wtth men itching to revamp traditional American ways. They do, they explaln, see~ practlcal progress. And politic• ii usually very practlcal business. G<!Uag campalin chores done successfully 11 eaaler for them than dcallng with an ' MOST ACCISSll~I MAH Clerk Ma~ lltertutalf unruly and ll~rll Dtmo- cntlc can,...... As 1 political operative, his e1pertence wu limited when ho arrived at the Wlllte Houte. He can tttot Ola(r<M and the pma with a tart legsllty . . . • He bu respect for tbo8e who take the trouble to reoearch Issues thoroughly and lntelli8eaily. Thal Is one of the strengths be himself offers N1100. Mitchell is less in sight these da~. He is not forgotten. He is as near as a finger and a telephone dial. He was, after aJI, Nixon's fjrst choice to bead his re-elec- tion committee. BIS CRITICS SAY be led NiJ:on down some dubious trails, that his advice in both the 1968 and 1970 campaigns almost brought catastrophe to the Republicans, and that his recommendation! for the fl.¢ two Supreme C.ourt appointments were political disasters. Nixon still thinks well of his » nonsense, ortbodoi: conservative fonner Attorney Geaeral and onetime partner In a New York law fmn. He bas the same urge to take the offensite_ e.ealg.st the op. position that Nixon doeS. The name of tlaarles W. CollOll is con-- troversial. It has been assOclated with S-Ollle of the roogb and tumble of Washington politics -from complicity with harsh political advertisements Jo being the man responsible for the work of two of the accused Watergate burglars at the time when they wcrked tern· porarily in the White House. HE W.OULD AGREE with the part of his image that cr~ts hlm with getting things done. ln one published memo to his own staff, he said that he "would walk over my grandmother i f necessary.'' The list of lnDuential assistants and ad- visers to the PreSident could stretch on to another half-Oozen names easily. 'lbere are numerous White House aides and friends who feed selective bits of in· formation to the President and have the President's respect. nere is Ronald L Ziegler, Press Secretary to the Presideat;,_Herl>ert G .. KJela, Director of C.Ommunications for the Ei:ecutive'Branch; Robert H. Flach, Counselor to the President; Barry S. Deal, Special Counsel to tho President; Patrick J. Bqcb•nan, Special Assistant to the President for COllgress1onal Rela· ttons: Doaald Ramsfeld; Cowl!elor to the President. And there are many others. The President's speech writers make their conlribuiloas, both In Ideas and crystallization of thoughls. And who knows what Bebe Rebozo, Florida businessman and frequent companion to the President, bas to say, or the other HE'S CONTROVERSIAL Charlu W. Col_, friends Nlson bas In the world of bustneu and high finance? MHrtce B. Slul, fonner oecrelary of commerce and now finance director for the Nl>oo campaign, can hardly be u · peeled to raise millions and then say nothinl to Nlson about tho campaign. Jcib Coaallly, former soa•lary of the treasury, and now head or • committee ol llemocnll devoted to Nl&oo'1 rH!ec- Uon, wu .. ver !hy •bout sharing his In- ner feelings with the Pmldent. And at the Ume Of hlJ mlgn1Uon1 ht WU I • ...., -c:oalldant. Seo. Bob Dole, chairman ol the R<publlcu N1llonll c o m ril I t t e e , IOIDltimel appean to be on tbe-out.side IC>C>idnl lo. Dul his word la hoard In the <>val Office moro when he ralles his vatce. Tbe PN!dent la lindlnC ..... and more Ume for Ill hio polltlcal openUv ... And laatl)' and DOI to bo rnlll&ba for lho leut la the man whe could llOlll8llmo be pn!lldont blmleU, V .... _, 6plrt T. Apow. i By the oalure of his job, his stall opmtes independently. Bia campolp wtgnmtnls ,,. toordlnol«I and Ap!w II aald to bo charac1erllllcally rrank with the Prtsldent. Then, u will> eve..,.... elat, the Pm~ dent ttllm to his owa thottll>ll and takla his .... bea edVlce. I . I Active McGovern Staff i Countering Adversity . ' By G-ODFREY SPERLING JR. ................. c. .... .. ""' QNtlll9 ...... .......... WASHINGTON -Frank Mailkiewici was not available. "Re has his door shut and '"YI he will shoot me if I bother him," his secretary told a reporter on tbe telephone. "He's up to bis ean." "Please pass a note Wlder Frank's door," the reporter ~lied. "AU him what relative of. Buster Keaton used to play outfield fflf: the st. Louis Canlinals". wrrinN M I N UTE S Senator McGovern's National Political Diredor was calling back. Both he and Senator McGovern play this little game of "who played wbat on the St. Louis Canllnala. ". Usually Mankiewicz stumps the Setlator; · but this time, stumped bims<lf, he was anxiOU! to find out, as be did, that the answer was outfielder Ernie Orsatti. And then the reporter got the lnfonnalion-ho needed from Mankiewicz. 'Ibis kind of banter goes on continually in the McGovern camp with many other staff members as well."l'ho lighter spirit is encouraged by Senator McGovern, who · seems to believe that it is healthy to counter adversity with a little laughter. But adversity is tblDllping the Senator hard the,. days, mt ooly In .the ,polls - where his race appears to'be doing quite poorly -but within this same outwardly fun-loving slafl. . FOR BENEATH the facade Is a slaff in turmoil, ooe in' which dissidents, in· cludjng former DemocraUc 1!•1ional Commltlee Chaipnaa l.awre~ F. O'Brien, have criticized the McGovern organization openly. 1be yooag man who doubtless bas the ear of Senator McGovern more than many others is campaign manager Gary Bart. • Hart, in his early 30'1, ls often viewed -{ram lbooe on the outside looking In - 83'. a brilliant amateur who, more than anyone elae, maJlenninded the highly successful McGovern primary campaign. DoubUess, Hart deserves much credit. But another young man, Rick Stearm, put together the McGovern orpnizalloao In all of the nonprimary states -and made them wock. With Hart heading the state campaign efforts across the nation, there are those withia the McGovern , TMli,. 'OLD PRO' Lawrence O'Brien organlzalloa -as well as crllks oa the outafda -wbo say Bart doesn't bave the professional know-how or, for that mat· ter, the autbortly, to "put It •II together." However, at this writing, Hart seems to have been given IOllltUtlng of a vote ol conOder.oe by Senator McGovern. IN THE WAKE ol a threat by O'Brien !Mt ho would bolt the McGovem atalf If the organization was not lllhtenecf up, Sellator McGovern met with O'Brien and then -tltat lite two bad wvrked oottbetrdll!..-~ He 111<1 thet .O'Brien, -bad been IClinC Jli lndpelly • • llalaon with Democratic leaden{ nild now hive 1 "coordlnallnf Voice" In thii M<Govera camll&lin operation. Thia, to oblerven, wu a rather enlgm.IHc ellplautlon. Bui Hart stays cm with the -In.II No. I Ullo ol "cunpolp ......., ... He ct.ntlnues to "'hndle. the campatp opentlan.'' tnclnd'nc fund r6111n1. med1a upeadllum, Ind vot.r reCtotratlon. What O'Brien does now Is subject to what best can be termed • "shakedown trl~·".:1"-...JI ---· -all~ aot conflnned.by.McGovera. - !Mt O Brien has now become lho over'lll -ol tho Clnlfll'lp ftlll. IUY llSAH lllot lleforo loal • DJ1i, who nms s.nator McG<ivern's i.. , .. ~ -dl"llsloq. BestdeJ put.-'lin(_ Jl'!Olllm IN1Pen (about one a __ 1i.u 11-days), Van ~· heads a slafl ol spee<h writers including MJI( . G~ former Robert and Edwanl Kennedy -b wilter-(Gw!r1znwl wrote Sen. Kennedy'o convmtkn "1-b thiB year); Jom Bartlow Marlin, ~ and ambosaado< to ~ Doinlnlcaii Re- public under Pr<ltdoot Kennedy: Sandy Berger, "'1mer •-11 ·mi.. ror s.n. Harold Hugbeii ol Jowa: ROOert shnmr, formerly a Jolm !Jn<lsay iand Edmund Muskie speech writer; and Steven Schlesinger, a son of Arthur Schlesinger. SEN. GEORGE MCGOVERN O'Brien, as tile "old pro" in the organiza· tion, will become, in fact, the staff leader under the candidate. There are other "old pros" aboard but none whose experience wouJd qualify them for the cc:mmand position. One is Frank Mankiewicz, best remembered for hi! linpressive ~ <>! equanimity as he 'WIL"Y AND TOUGH Frank Monklewfcz reported on 1V the momeot·by-moment condltloo of Robert Kennedy et the lime of the assa53inabon . -From · the press secretary job tn 1968 Mankiewicz became a newspaper columnist and TV com- mentator. Then he moved in early as one of the first experienced political people to join with Senator McGovern. But Utis time, Manlclewicz la the chief campalga stre.tegtat with another ambiguous title, "National Political Director." Mankiewicz really operates apart from the intrinsic campaign organization. He ill Senator McGovern's 'Tight-band man," the one who talked to SeJL Thomaa F. Eagleton and asked him about the "akeletons in the closet." Ma.n- k:Lewicz ls always more privy to Senator McGover:n'1 thinking on almost any sub- ject than anyone elae. Re ls a geaerallrt. And more Utan that, like his famous • PULLS UNITY STRINGS Mn. .lolfl WoOt- folber, film wrlltr He"*n Manldewics ("Citizen Kane" ..,,,... .many others), M .. klcwlci II 1 wit and raoonteur. He Is • lavorlte UllOIC --. with whom he always mlnglet lo the .. mpa!p plane. AN<mlEll "()LI) "/'O" la Ted Vu . ~ Van Dyk 1eeks to keep his hand on the "McGovern theme,'1 trying to 11ee to it that 811 thole who speak for the can- didate, including congressmen, ·say what the candidate tliimelf is saying. Another McGovern key aide with high professlooal standing Is IUchanl Doagh- uty, former New York bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times. He, more than anyone else, must be given the credit for the relaUvo lack ol grum&ing among newsmen. Dougherty makes SenaUr McGovern accessible to the press, much more so than moot caadidale! have ~ In past presidential years. Further, he seda to it that all staff, including him!ell, are available to talk to newsmen. And be doea il all with grace and good humor. THE MAN~WHO feels McGovern's low ebb In !lie polls 1\1 ml!Cb as jlll10lle is Reary Klmelmu, the V~gln !Jlando laad developer and longilme friend rl/ the Senator, who is in charge of collecting money for the campaign. ' Under Kimelman ill Morris Dees, who has performed magnifi..,,nUy In frecl- ing the direcl·mail, fund.raising •drive. The small bills Oowing in as a reSult of this mail app_eal provided the tlnBncial backbone .for the ,prec·Oll·VerJ:tion campaign. And now a fUrtber dire¢.-mail appeal (aided by McGovern's pl~ OVtr TV) bu broyght In 12 million ·~ the convention and during a period when the big contributors were holding back •. MILES1· RUBIN is ln cha!'ge of col- lectlng tbe big amounts which melns, at this stage, ho bas tho difficult ·lask of getting wealthy Democrats tq invest heavily in what, as of now, Iooki' like a 'BRILLIANT AMATEvR' Mlnottr Gary Hart losing cause, Mn. Jeu Welhmod, new 'Democratic NatiOnal Committee Chairman, I s devoting mo"1 of her time to pulling the party together. Thus, as she eeets to brifge rifts and court defectors, Mn. Westwood contrlbut., Importantly to tho campaign effort. But tho does aot pro- vide input into plaMln1 on any day~.,. dlybu!J. Jolla Holom, the Senator'• leclslatlve -· II tho candldatt'1 speech writer 1bcrd the co-Ip plane. Hll ex· pertlse lies in the .... ol f.,.lp policy aoo, particularly, military de!'"'° mat· ters. Fonner Robert KeMec!y advloer l'1etl Dlltoil la -political . llnllegilt wbo 11t1 cLose to McGovern U>e9t days. Dutton la a1lo I "lrOubfHbooter •• ·-to -.,,, UDUpotlod prob. l<m !Mt -up llOOi Ille -Ip tnJI. . ' ' . . JM llll!e)' II MeCIJtiVe ~ o1 C1Uut11 far McGoYlm, 1 """ wttlch seeks to hroaden the McGoveta _, among youth!, blacb, m I no ·r' l t I , 1 1enmlly, aa<1 othen. Ptam llllllc.,.1i co-41rector of this orpnlutlon. • • ~ •••• r -Al ~mpalin ptaonlnc -1ooa. be!d at ~~~~~ black and minority point of view Ii Ed Sy!-, htmaeH I black. ven er. the ll an- hal 'h gb- 1 ... an for g ern so ast il are he low .... the the col- a tic 1 s the lo the pro. Y·to- Uve • ' , Thund.11. N°"'"bef 2, 1972 IWLY PILOT -, , ""'•rydne' Hai H--~oriiething That OAILY PILOT ELASSJFIED ADS ;You Can SaU It, Find It, Trade It" With 11 Went Ad Someone Elie W anh -The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results, ~0...;;;;";'';l:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;Ge;;;:;n•;•;•;l:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;jjGoiiiii..,~jjojjljj•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiGeiiiiniiojjrjjaliiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil"-0....;..~-'-'-'~~~~~~G_e~n-•_r•_l~~~~~~·1 ~Goniiiioriiiiio~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim l .;G;•.;~;••;•;l;..,;;;iiiiijjjjjjjjjjjjjiiji;jj E•st Bluff 0 • WANTED 4. i:NKU: toil: CORONA DEL MAR· l4114t1M-S#IH4 ·~ AlllASSllCIA!8 REALTORS 2828 EAST C0UT HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MM,CAUF. 644·7270 VALUE CONSCIOUS ? ? . : . Fixer Upper 7.4 X's GRDSS "•.~ "\ .. ~;""'e~~:m.::;;: t1l'l1 8.18-150 1. Mesa Verde 28 UNITS Founraon v-.n-.. --- South of Coast Hwy. - a real charmer plus ..-:iall wtll -top value at $61,500 MESA VERDE MANSION ON MANDARIN ;J'bis Is a BIG family house; like a master suite that's 19'i25'. There's. also a formal dining room, a super· living room and a family room you'll never want leave. .... HOW ABOUT THIS ? ? All wr~pped ·up in this 2-STORY 4 bedroom , 3 bath home. HUGE rumpus room lbal will take your pool table. 2 brick fireplaces, buill- in kitchen, large yard & room to store your boat. VA NO DOWN. . ..... $39,950 . UOO ISLE ~9 pile shai, rock fireplace, w and Spacious 2 bdrm. & den on wide 50 ft . lot. A very splendid home for $75,000 all that! This four bedroom home is e and tbe landscaping is lovely. You s . see it. · LOAF IN THIS ... The area's top professionals are ,at your service. 675,a PHONI UNl9UI HOMU, MISA YllDI, 546-lffO Ui-lt:()UI: t1()Ml:S LOFTY TOWNHOUSE Enjoy this two-story townhoU&e and your own private patio. Large, loft, master suite & bath upstairs, 1 bedroom & bath down- stairs. Builtin Kitchen. A fun place to live for only ..... , . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . . $23,000. •• \ RIAL ESTATE i ~-:. BAY& BEACW HF,\LT\' '• ! • • :..__ • ·.1 .. ~~ • .• , .... ' .... •''·' ... ------------·~·· -·· AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES ·644-n10 ) * * * * ....... General * * General ofinJa Jd/e TAYLOR CO Exclusive Corona del Mar PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES CORONA DEL MAR "OWN-YOUR.OWN" On the water; Fantastic view & pride of own- ership bldg. Private marina, pooli..)~cuzzi & security guard. Adult occupied-. 2 t1e«rooms, Considered one of the best areas on the ocean side of the Coast Hwy. This older family borne is situated on 2 residential lots. Excellent appreciation situation. O\llNER leaving, swim pool. Every room Is wired for stereo, waJI TV Antenna, 3 spacious bedroonu, laJ'it! l11mlly roon1 "'i th iruplrlne fireplaCl', beautiful built-in IRVINE TERRACE -k1tct!en, dishwasht"r, SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 1()1 Linda Isle Drive handsome breakfast bar. Brand nn• llstlna · a ral'l' High block wall feoce for gem! 4 BR, 211 ba .• with irupreme prh>acy in tM l!ix36 htd. pool. l.a'e. brid.11. •--1 t I' N Lovely 5 ,BR., 4 ha. home with downstairs waterfront mstr. suite & lge.-game rm. or study, Mexican tile floors , beam ceilings, quality construction, slip ........... $155,000 2 baths. Call for brochure ........... $89,950. ''Our 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton Offered al $79,500 CORBIN· MARTIN area in kitch. Badminton C'I. ..,.,., Y con our plO · 0 Ix-hind gal'8fi:'e. Abaolotely down G. I. lenns. low dov.'n immaculate lhNOUt &: pric· OOn-w'tJ! Brk, S 2 8 , 7 5 0 . -- I'd rii?ht at $77,500 PIUA -=-=="·-~~--­ )'Oll o"·n the land . not OWNER sacrillce. uaime leasehold ! apr VA Joan r.,.-on pro- 2111 Son Joaquin Hiils Road 644-7662 For Complefl Information . On All Homos & Lots, Pluso Coll : NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 REALTORS ~ ~l,Blri<ar Spa~~!r~i~ll ~~!~open =rhly81 ~1:nttJ ':! heam ('('II. rlbJ door rnlry to leu than ttnl! Generous f11bulous, priva1f' palio. 7 sized bedrooma. cuatom Bclrms.. l 'i bath1 Pl.US shullen, hullt-in dream FIRST TIME l'll'at bachelor uni! In rear. kite-hen, tull dl.ning mom, Bill GRUNDY, REAriOR i:Go:;.:M:::.••::l:.._ _____ ~Ge;:;:••::•;.::•::.I ______ ,_Ge_n_1_r1_1 _______ G_1_nor_1_1 _____ _ C-1 FREE EXTRA ROOM 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, .N.B. General Gen1ri1I * BALBOA ISLAND * OPEN SAT/SUN. 12 TD 5 542 SO. BAYFRONl 675-6161 Brand new , exclusive listing. Ertra large, immaculate 4 bdrm., completely f~J:'.ltlsbed waterfront home plus apt. $180,000. Excellent terms. AND CLEAR 'FOR EXTRA HAPPY HALE CREST ADVERTISED Lo!:sa' room lo build lnromf' pro I r'&Jllonal landR'aped unit on th is R-2 Joi. \\'on't grounds. Enjoy the view OCEAN VIEW PARK • LIKE You'll wa"1 lo .,.. th~ EX· la.&t at S49.500. from lhe ck'lia:htful encto.ed SCENIC PROPERTIES patio. B,k. S71.000. 96U8650 This gorgeous 3 bedroom 501 DOWNI TilA SHARP adult occupied beauty has just been com· tO • 3 BR. 2!1 ba. home. SuJ)l'r LIVING IN THE BLUFFS pletely redecorated inside & BRAND SPANKING NE\V! l'Orll(>r location. One of our 2915 E . Coast H"''Y .. CdM OWNER &nxiow. 3 bNiroom. The expansive boows room out and it's located cloM' to Only 4 -2 story homes lefl! best areas. $55,500. Call Bwl 67>5726 <k'n, 2 bath h>me. Depnt lsn't the only extra in this .schools&: shopping. It's VA-CLOSE our SALE! Crac-kl· Aw;tin. TRU'LEX lin-plal"I' lendl! Added churn Bluffs condominium. Two CANT & J:MMACULATE at ing hrick fireplact's. Strp ~2430 UJ..0700 to grac-kius li\'lna: room . garden patios, a view or the only $29,950. Easy tenns -do\\·n living room and !'AM· I'"""""""""""""""..,. I Sharp, 2 Bedroom un i1J1. good Gani•' morn .,11h pocK tabk•, broad tree lined greenbelt VA, rnA. 5% down con· ILY R.OO?t1S! 4 big bed-SWIM POOL renlal aN>a. Exttll<"nt ron· ""'' bar. rniPrrom ll)'llem. and just the right distance ventional. Hurry, call now! rooms. Laundry rooms. dllion. Submit an offer. Call Near nil y·tw-..JI• & ~ping. to the community pool. Four Qualily cement drlvru·ays, S23 -. 675-7225. -~SZ'l,fWVI. '"2-2561. \. bedroom'-21\ batha. !annal • Co:TI "'"' Try 5','· DOW_, ,.,VV "' w ' I · 6425618 E~~~:~&~ ---.5<54'16R-4.~~~~ ~~~F~z~ ·t:~~E iLWll 1~~,rm J SALISBURY REALTY bea"tilully decoratod. Va· (Open E-lnfl•I Bulllln klleheo. Beaut;ful cant and easy to Att. Priced I""""""""""""""""""" I peril:· like grounds. No main- MMSfOCAaY Of fMI (CK WIU CO. 673-6900 ....-ju'1,ightatl5',500. =· for yoo. 8 ''· SOUTH OF HWY. I -..... JI.e l Wllt. l'enific loca11on• C.uuu i,""''"31,;,5,.MA""'R"'IN'"E""'A'"VE"'.,;,' 'l"B'"A'"LB~O!'!A"'l'"S'"LA'"N'"D""'""I . . C. F. Colesworthy THE MOTHER 2 • °"' • ""w 2 ~~~ . _ GoMr1l General Coldwal,Blnker & Company SAVER ""'"'"' • , .. ,..,, '"' ,c_1_._ .. _11_;._.,_,._,_1_0_0.124 1;;;;;;;;;;;:::::;;;::::;;;;;;; ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=c;I ~ 640-0020 Thi> beauHIU!ly -nolod 3 111.500. I~ I• • b<dmom homo'" a 1•'11• WANT LOW 2950 -· eo.ta M... MORGAN REALTY --flll WELCOME TO SPYGLASS PLAN 74 fioi•hod """""' mom" !or 67U642 675-645' '-------'· MARLBORO 3600 pl"' sq. It. io t"• 5 BAYFRONT SPECIAL -WOW-"' ehildtto to play in. In· PAYMENTS? ...--DUPLEX-BY OWNER Clenifiutioo 12S-149 bdrm., 4 ba, plua bonus rm 4 Bed ho ""' l'luding Dad with his pool Then asaume lhe exiAtlng home on a V.I.P. location. . i:oom me • ..... H R t bl Mod II ComplC'IC'ly remodeled I I~ COU. NTRY Central air cond., intercom mai?ntticent bay _ trontaJI:~. U RY , HURRY a c. em · we -organ-5~·; Loanand)'OUrmonth· l"l'&rly lo mll\'I' ln. Shullcn ... ltW•. & builtin record pla,yer. N~ Sandy beach . pier & .. slip • . ized kitchen. Large back· ly Investment ""ill Ix' $195.00. .-.-a.&. Ill .... GeMrM and bring :vour hone to this w&X vinyl, shag carpeting, ree 1anc1., ... o~r says sell Just hsted, a sparkllflK yard and the children can Spacious 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath ...oanV& rverywheT'f', bffu1lful MW ~-----~ Dl'8,t 2 bedroom ranch-style walnut cabinets in kitchen, , 8 todayill! •• ~-~~ ~ floor Haleclfil. walk to 'SCbQol. Close lo Huntington Beach Home in ....... ltlALTORS :!!:c!::',-S~v. ~tt:'· Cl•_1si!icet~o~~·ll4 home on lru'r(e lot. Perfect pool-sized lot &·breath-tak· !ill "Benui. ced right tor fut 8ale. major shopping. This Costa the Mqnolia, Hamilton ~-~~~=-~~'.:...!~'-''.i!~t"I" for the family who wants Ing view of ocean • 644-2430 833-0700 Owner bouJtht in No. Ca.Iii., Mesa home Is perfect. At Area. Fittplace, Bii Kitch· Cnta Mell ~ animals It wide o Pe n coastline You can celebrate needs to SEIL NOW! Hurry a truly realislic price ol en, Double c.r Garage. LIDO ISLE spaces. Located just a few the holidays in ~ur ~ 5 STAR ·auvs to see tttis 3-Bednn, den, 2 $35,Ml. Call now. 646-nn. Boe.I Storqe.. Ollt'red lor NEAR CLUB Cl•ssificefi-.. "OO.••• blOcks from Newport Beach. home. Call now $145,000 1n-· bath home. ~ Ut.950. CaU 646«65. Enjoy Lido y,•ay of lift>. Incl. ..... ' 'vv N"ew on the market. Call wi eluding land. ~3921 Eves: 644-8599 .THIE RRAL~ comh. ol ~rt ' IT.."iri. Uv-, -I~ qulclf, ) i eel h II * :;; BR Condo, C.M ... $2'l,950 There is a reaaon BS.~•cpS in;c, Trnnu1. yaC'hlilKt l club A.tally ComPMY ,.._ ..... 11! ~ (Open eves. r .• *Par! .~~'. ... ~~~· .•• ~~. lB years &arne locaUon . CRN Tl. tPM . ~~~Q.~;:1~vt~~ "' UPPER BAY -Cl ·1· . lo0.1·5 * 3 BR Home ,+ ~2430 UJ.07'0 NEW LISTING ••s• ic •fton "· REAL~y •'""'omUP• ·u:x·· ........... B.143A c·~ A RARE FIND Br11utlful 4 BR pentilrd FR, I 111 ) l n LARGE FAMIL y fll'f'plac'I" Jn ' MBR. quiet !pl I b -~ Univ. Park Center, Irvine Apt ........... ·· .•• $41,SOO 4 bedroom, 2 bath, bu~ lltrT't"I, HOUSI': A CiftOUNOS 1'·------..J- CaU Anytime. 833-0820 * 1 Acre, Ea.!!tside. Room y f.ilmily room with beamed _...... WANTED I $21,750 F.XTREMEl.Y S II AH r . Cl•11ific•tlO,t Ji>o.)70 OfUce hours 8 AM to 6 PM for 14 units ••••• · •••• $55.!KlO OWNER YER cellinas. fireplace. Double IJ~l'J:<' family wllt kw" thla Open Sat. I sun. · 2415 ,,------~ """"""""'""""""""~I CAlJ.. 642-lm anxiious to move Into hi• l'il"W prqe + bonua of •nother 4 bedroort1 homt" "1th 2 full Twltin, C.M. ll.23J [ -I[ •) Ontu Home and doeut't need this own1zed double garage. CcM-ril,llnls balh1. "''~fe·M\'C'r hulltln _ . ~ VIEW " extra house. AMume_ the ahop wtth 2:1> powtr A: lots ... dream kilrhl'n. Kttp rool Sil~ Joan and your month.I)' or extras. All for only ~IALTOll~ wllh air l'Ond1Uon,-.r. l..11.fltt' Cl•11ific•tio11 400-4•5 FANTASTIC Investment will be $156. $32.500 FHA or VA tennJI -rovcn'fl p;:1.11o v.11h lhadl'd '42-1225 644 62IO I I~ OWner may carry 2nd Trull available. Woo'l la.st. CANNOT ~IU'dC'n. coonlry qu1f'I k>l.·a · Jc..-ac rt "l'!'tll NEWPORT 1$S3,7SOI ,Deed. 3 Bedroom•, 2 BalM, Call SIO-J.15! Open """'· BE REPLACED Hon. l'olkl. All '"""'"""""' REPO .. zm sq. ft. beauty In b(>tter '·MESA VERDE Flreplace, Shake Roof. Ae· Turtl(' Rock Pntldent homt·. rw•r ty: Brif, ~)72). Fixer Upper Cl•11ifici1fion S00..510 than new condition! 4 bed-POOL ~e:sslble01~:titon ~?: Vie\\• . 4 BR, fa111 m 1., 2 lf!l:l:t:t•• $1500. 00\\'N ro AU •. QulC'I 1~ rooms, 3 bath1 , lllf'&e family c:a. e ot · · pRUtJt. Prof. ckcOr. J'rof. _ ·-_ _ _ _ ,,.._ area. hUll'r 1111 . 11JI bll · I -llii. room with. iMpjring lire-One ot Mesa Verde's most 11 &lti4i55. lndacti<J. Prict-d undf'r ni'i llarbot. Colla Mraa Int. rrp&. l 2 IJA '• l>nn-d . ~ rna:el;~~1'°~~~: ~l Roor plans, lea~':!_1'~ ;i:-J Ouk:~ al SK2.!i00. Fl't'. urwstt aU 111hrrs •t S21J.950 ~C:-i.,-,-il-lcs_H_o_o_S_,H-Sli all electric "Award" built •ug bl!drooms, 2 baths..... $25,900 .,.._200 m.t7IO .-.-Call Kt.M-24. SO t.: T II In kitchen. Patkl OVft'looks 1750 IKI,; ft. or run. ~ stiaa SWIM POOL OOAST REAl.m!tS I Liit J ,__ jfnl "'°cgoous "" yat"d • picture :1c· 1~",;:n1.,",";.".:: A kM!ly 3 bed>oom. 2 beth S27 750' .. ...I.ii. I D_._ * f .HJ. R£PO * L:iJ perfect laodscaplr.g. Bkr, water mftener and two fire-home, all tlectrlc pu#l 001. f • '-'AQML;D6W 0•11lfic•tio" 510·ti ll 540-lnll. ..1---. Sit ln )IOUr declc jUIJIOIAll' cw'"' cot ..... co. toll buJll·ln klteht'll, llgtil • .........ALTOlll • uo ,_.. ~~·1• ~"·'ti 1 tlo No Down Terms tt;\I.. 2 h1o . on I ]~ chair and barbcque your '"l'n'' '" · ~· U P8 • ! corTIC'f lol s:l!t. 1:.0. Sunday dfnner on th~ bullt· --hanfPnc bMkl!1s v.·llh OU..·· Near 9Chool11. lhopplnic l S't!DJ do<to·n ~ ,. tn ~B&Pb-q, run await. ers, )oa(ft Of dccklna, luah IWdl"OOIYll, 2 kwt'ly hftlta, CA1f1110 SHOltlS Authorl&ed lrdtlf' -. 2905 Harbor. Costa M... 1or · 139,5e11. Ca!l 546-23U ""n'* I,'"--'-low matnrtnantt ,..,. •nd IMll·ln -'""""· • OCEAN VIEW * 541-6$70 * Cl.nllk.otloo 57'-lllO tar l!lf9rmaUon. ~---IRIJll' H,..~~lful IWim pool! Bril;, ~·.OU. "W~J ~ .... dlshw..Wr 4 RR'1.. l bllthl. 90x2JO' lot . I I~ .it ~~ ~. · lllALT0118 "" •·~ """" · f•m. nn. din nn .. ,,_of BY °"""r-&-•ulllul mn. ----i!----chann f"l'lhill'IQltd by f\IT'-r.aft)'Ofl '~an, >'Im nut. l "ft.A. lnnl!rrl in qUll't . . plal'f'. F'rffh.ly palnlf'd In· tfl. J.c-. mlfr, II.rite. r'r'!•. E1irOt a.dull• only «lm• Q.-.1lflcati9fll 60Q.Mt ..._ ROOM ,OR A POOL side-• out. ~llchttul I beM"hts. na.!:Ol G ro . ·rmanltJ' sn.900. Cnm.-.,n11ona1 ~h;lll!llll,.~!88iil1Tllw•rl . 4 BR. ?ti bathl: iae. kil· ~ Harbor, a.ta Meu :',,,no~~~ ~.ms!r.1~ GfVDt. _.. -t1nandlW av a 11 a b ,,. . I (DJ ~ -~ '·-I ••·• -l43e ~·--Zffl. L ...,,_ 11 • -.~·= --· -· ""·· 1.......... "G" -. . t ...... A her. Lo. ~lo """" HOME 6 IN<XlME -""""'' '-r-,.----1-~-~· 't': h'-• ...-.. '""-.,. ~ MSJjO _._,ifjuti .. 700..710 w -" ..,.,..., _.. I ~ ·~ ... , AP .. ___ $25,000 ::!.. ...... , l __; .•. HERITAGE REA LTORS -~=-'---------=--------=--- TARBELL BIG CANYON 1nc1.-. &.51111. Howord Shup'" macu1.o1t ' bed-· -~... ..-·· •• ~ VllW LOT WHlt.. room lMnUy room honw, D'4 Hattlw. o.t• M,... 2 Mtroom I hlth h:>fM _Qp-llDh + 2 bdrm l'l!nCal onlt. I •••II a.. l<Mo.1 idte tor . IPICbill • ..... ,.. owt :ax> Ill· n. and i. P'9-poalt~ ~. M«"'A HMp«a1. Xlnt lonU011. 131 r. lt..iy, V ' OCEANFRONT eleiant i.::iaw, ~l,_ * 3 BDRM ta'rOCiM' ~ ~·-. t~y <lttoNted. Ntv --lckal kif' ~~IO,nal. ~fftce C.M. Hi-Tl31 'Ml-w.!__ O.ttific.•tlo1t IOOolJ• TRIPLEX falrwa)'11 • OftftlJ. Priced sa• • btauliful p&rlc wllh pool lkiutr w.-111 NIT)' ltlvwt;;;;J mlriii OOAST CJ:V ~ ~5-Bctrm .. 2be.thunlU: 1 attracti~ In Ml today!• lMMAC. air.<Oad 3 IE.STIAYCR.ISTBUY •nd tmcriit t'(llU:rt in lrvh.e. •hlit>1waJt1111deY1k9••11t. 'RR.'' BA. bwtt of tlnr ,,-_--..,-----.~li( :i-sn .. '" be. unit. Bit.,., ,Cf.' .. ~ Ortte. __ BDRM. ...,,. 12311 Pm. DH\pd 1or Itntlly Uvbttr . This ~ • ··m ... ·• 1<r • ""r&t·11I Bin_.__ RllURR.,!'..,. -~-ll b... ..,..."" • ..,......, -"· •~ carp., drapn. c;oms>letely .-,,.. .,....,_. M1aion Viejo •• , ••• 131,DI 4 titttaoou ... 6 dlninl room latxf' f•mil.Y at Oftf)' $42.tr.JJ. ~..-... .,.-fl/fl/ f't'llll;"'.,.,.. Ntl'Wlr ¥tttfll ,.llO. SJ),ml TttmL '-:,--,,---- florn. for summer/wtnttt i• .. '"!'""ll!!!!!!!l!ll!!!!!!•-I• 4 l;mRll ..-ocean ., , + tamlb' room. *500, f°f'e !Md. Now ""°"'"• ~Al.TOll.!......iiillil lilt ~"1ior1 Rh'd., c.M. K R.E. ~ 0.1•Hlc.•tiof'I 150-lle rental• "'"t .... a1 "''"""· BACK BAY l54JIOO PETE BARRETT """"· -59-mt RD'O!!l!EStos.• I ~ ~at $170.CXK>. 3 Bdrm. Bea1,1rttu.1 yard w/ 1733 Westclltt Dr., N.B. ~e11r• ~ LINI UP lnnil A Mhsiol'I Vt.Jo M'M -... _, l •:ill : ll7W86314:1-22Sl E .... picnic ..... 8-Q ..... LolSol 66-122! -REALTOR--nu you• ,AMILY -.. m:s,YIOHomo = .. PIM ...... Imo ...... ---~· fruit ll'ftt. Hlch aUWMbl~ THINKING Oil' 6a."9I 11IJrr1i • "I l"'Ar1h lnwr• lalrwf of l!Yln•• 1~• HJ.-17l!:._ Cl Jf \'A k>On Al s~. $167. pl!'t INCOME TAXtZilKtili lflli ~~---.. --u• pretty \''ftnn '"*'·· """ '"'a . l M. 2 ha. Mt""' tf'1I ..,. • "' lc•fiOft ...... , r io J".J.T.I. Only aMina .. ,,. ounn. on • l11rm kttfil. DI.a. 0.., lam "" °" """'"' int '-[ JliJ associated " n.<m. • · ""' llitl~ · ' i»n P"K'D" '' l!LL THI Wllt(flt-MUST H i&:D ~. Int wtth tot. °' fruit t~"' Mr"Ui ~h m..on._ _ "--. I'•· • t 01', Al ill l'i.lRS ; , W ' '>o 6')•J•6J CINP'IY r':>RRl~N oot bftl, tor lnfonMtion •.•• 8YI MXIOtial o-niet! Xhu klcalDI bi~ Mt-freH,Jlm '~,!,!_al1nl-\1-l•lll"' REAL ESTATI --- * •r: • -· F' l Bil • ·-~ 3 BR. c Jim 11>.~ TREASURES tW.....,. l "'· 2 bo. '""'"· 2 r•.·. ·~: •• •• ·n '-'••v-481LJ1" ,.. • ~"· rm. . l\'o ""'"'· an>art --1JM71t .,.,. car llll ~•"K•fl .. tJS.ftt .W!J. 15aJ,,... hurne + 1pc. ~ Co.ta with room for bOal or trail ,.,, ,..f"flllrt~n. NJ\. ~ • W..sllf • r-:-----,,..-.J llEW·DUl'L!:X ..... $40.llOll • o\'Mle llr ....... c.I. ,,_ "''"'""'I l<l."11 .... II--........ y -I ..... l'\11 olitllo """"'".,....'" -· v...-....... ....... .., ... n:,1 1 .......... I a 1....aa. a: W8R apt. 151 £. • • CoM.a. ..,,_ °" !T r~_, ~ . Pr1c:fd 10 lldlJ aaa m.c ~ -1 ~ 11 • .__. ,..,. ~ -£;.-.. ·-,. v --,·o;.c. -.--. . !so• 1 -,,_ IALllCIA BAY PROP. MOllGAN RIAL TY ""'' -. ur.. • ~,......., •-" ' l""' ' • .. -· '------''!.:..~ _ -~-~--,-~ _ -...... 11n.1>on,_ :·~ cw a-tnset ~e~· .P .-..... ,,.1n-.1•.---OUttOrd' M :.. . , , &U·'irl'M .'t-Opt'n r,,.nl~• ~"""1" ''rtwf''f Pl.tt •n 11rl' W-'"' ,. ,_ w5445t O..fled Ad, '°'°!il'TL -·· ...----. -,.. ..--• .-. • • • I -' I . I l', I l "· , ' • .. 4 OA11. Y PILOT T......,, N""'1At< Z. 1'172 ' (:-..... I~ ,__I -_ .... _ .. __,!~I.._ -;;;;;;;· .. ~l~;;;l;;I -;;;;;;;·-~]~;;: 1.-,; l~I --~- i,;iiiiiiiiiiiii!Piiiii;l;;;;1 !11111 •• 1 Fount1ln Huntl"91aft -Huntington lleoch H;.;tl......, koch ~ Newport Bu ell ,..~ Boodl El e.l!!..&Yr ' HELP ! A TIP WAL!.'! OPEN AND CLOsE. ~""' INTO SPACE -"· ...... lodoon and I MANSION OWNER WANTS ""'· <lance noo. """ oull<>'"' OUT when you enter tlllat._ tatte-bttr and patio. Royalty hu l..gJ' 4 bedroom on C'Ornf'r Joi. tully ch:.'(-oratt'd 4 bedroom rock &: rolled here. 20 M'1. Complettly bkxk walltd, This fant1Ullc J bl...-droon1, 2 home wi th hu~e. expos@d alll· Need.I rear lawn and prof Iandscaptna:, plenty of bath hOIT\e' ff'BIW'ft a large fan1Uy room. Be11.utilulll' bettftlom dnUiel, B K R . hlg tttea, cover'f'd ~x20' J!vin& room that has a built· at'<'t"nled by vinyl wAllpaper -~,..=,.·=-.===---I nwtone patio with bullt-l n 1n bar. Professionally d~· throuir:hout. Featut<es protea-OWNER ANXIOUS Bftr·B-Q, Ovenh:ed doubll' orated v.o'ith wallpaper and ll.ional landscaping . Beaull· Sharp 4 bedroom, 2 bath. garage, elegant entry, sep. !lp&ritllng clean. You'll t-n· !ul bath rooms and private $28,500. Immediate posses· arate (om1al dining roont, joy the pe&l'f' and qu1C't in rear yaJ'd surrounded by lhe sion. Bkr, 842·1418. 1~ kitchen "'Ith earing this charming rul·d<'·!lac only stand o( tf'('('a in mllc1. Irv ine ;1 rt'a, elt'C built·in 1'llllgf' A Slrt't"I. SU1)t•r large, !lie Pric('(j 11.t only $52,950. Calll-;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;;::;;;;;;,I 1toublc oven, dl&hws.sMT. siiapcd lot. All lhis tor onl)' now. S42-25JS. 1• ramily rm combo. Livi~ $32,cm. Call llCM'. 847~10. BEAUTIFULL Y ~~~'t~-:=~""~; (e'l'HR JllRAL~ ®!!!81, .. ~2!; .,h DECOdRATED 1 Ian. o . 'ful t ~ ...... -..s'IC&;;I Wl ·CUlllOm raperies, WR I· /l . ucautl Ct'11 er masi· u.. FA91'-B <'Ii suite w/pif'nty of ward· AID~ t PM ~~~~~OPf~N~'T~~~·~..,~~I p&per and upgraded C8J'P<'t· . Excellent neighbor· 1.:::;;:;:;:;:;;:;:-;=~~:;:'-;;. ing. Luah land~aping com· ~·~ nd "· 1 plimf"flts I.he quiet setting n•c~" .,. ma... DUTCH CLEAN PARK THE BOAT 37.500. A muat to see. and large patio. A lovely right beside I.his lmmaculale hom• r0, ooty $.17 350 3 -m. 1% Ba.th, buillins .. · · 2 story 3 bedroom, 2n bath -· crpts & tl rps. lllrge cul·dc· park. Full price only $39.950. induding d"hw""'"· w/w O.au\y. Walk to reach and 8 red h·111 t 71 ( =J ~103 sac 101. only steps to a NEW LA QUESTA Q\fNER desperate , 4 snacious bedrooms, 2 baths, fttnily room with handsome fi~placc oH the delu.~e b,i.iilt -in kit c hen, dt'hwasher. Patio. No wax linoleu m;• ~s shag c*'1>eting thruout. Beautiful ptcio awaiting yoor outdoor ;;;:s! Bkr, $32,500. Ch;ner anxious. 3 bedroom, dtn. 2 ba!h home. Elegant fireplace lends added charn1 I~ gracious living room. Gpme room with 'pool tahlc, \\J!t bar . lntercom system. ar a.II ~hools & shoppini;:. B , .fi!S,900. 842-2561. B Owner: Choice 4 Br. ~ fam. rm. + 2 ba. + le. Nr l\1ile Sq. Park. l~ lovely park. 4 yrs new & a.II improvements in. Qu ick SAN MIGUEL posse'Ssion. Full price only Corner lol, possible boat ar· REAL TY $29 500 Cl"SS, 4 bdrm, 3 bath, 3 cur Univ. Park Cenl t.>r, lrvinc ' · garage, sharp, clean and Call Anytin1c, 1133-08~ upgraded thruout. Only Office hours 8 AM to 6 Pl'\-1 . I $43,900 ... HURRY! CALL ~15"0458 CHOICE TURTLE ROCK • This popular model has 3 BR · • & tam rm. + 3 patio areas. · • $49,500. Terms or w/trade. BROKERS INC. King"nl R. E. 642-2222 962"'851 CLOSE YOilR EYES PAYMENTS ONLY $200. PER MO. Laguna Beach THE PERFECT ••• 5 room, vacant, immedial<' ... family home, with 4 possession. Newly decorated lxlrms. & 2 baths: offers you thl'UQUI. Large fenced cor-privacy without seclusion. ner lot. Full prite only Excellent ocean view from $19,950. Only $1000 down will 4n fl. glass window in com· handle. fortabJe living room. A very fine honi('. Call Earl Water· bury. $52,500. Pre-Grand Opening ·Salel '"m $5 1,495 lxctl""'' (ltl>~Mli6MI ,lftlfttlftl CONDOMINIUMS l of!y living awaits you! Act swil1 1y to select your own Newpon Beach condominium. Vls1t lhe temporary of!ices of the Newport Crest Information Center, conveniently located at 2400 West Coast Highway Suite B, Newpor1 Beach. Open Dally 10 a.m. to sunset. 17141 645-6141 --1. old. S300J do14n. T.O.P. $281 PITI. 833·1103. 38JJ6. art A6tan Mission Viejo Newport Be.ch H · ntlngton BMch 4 BDRM. SORRENTO GET IT ALLI B'l Owner-Beautilul 2BR, 1% BA. located In qui e t E-cide adults only oom· munUy $21,900. Conventional tlnanclng availa ble . 93-7187. NEW DUPLEXES _,__ 1§1 HouoM l'umhhod 300 • SPACJUOS! 1 er. Stove. ~!rig. &JDI child. Util Incl. iro. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 urfside Condo. after yau read this and pie· ture a SUPER SHARP, ijright find cheerful home nestled in one of the fineat H'beach areas. J o g g I n g diStance to the beach, chlp- pinl':' d\11tance to the GOLF COURSE plus many more extras. Full price S-44.000. 10'",t,. down \rill do it and we will take a smaller home in trade. 1-IURRY. REAL ESTATE BROKERS INC. U90 Glenneyre St. 962..8851 494.9473 549-0316 Newly decorated 4 Bdrm. feature's custom brick fire· pl, separate dining aref & plush w/w crpls. Rear yd. fully Cncd w/30' wide patio. $32,500. & term11 tor all buy. ers. Call 837·9400. KATELLA REAL TY 3 BR. condo. Entry, 2 Ba., pwdr. room. Dining room, frplc., bit-ins. Pool. TRIPLEX Laguna BHch Three 2 BR units in like new Jl40 -UTIL PD. f\!lly turn t 1D ._a_·no __ P_o_l_n,.t _____ , condition. Upper unit has Br. Nr. beach & town. 3 BR, 2,BA, frpl &: dbl .gar. lovely view o( hW.s Ir lights. $235 -UTIL Pd. So. Laguna 1 J ust redec. $285 per mo. No Good Income. Existing loan Br. Exceptionally n 1 c e. pets. TI4: 639-3883 Juft think: No n1ore yard work or upkeep! 3 Bednn: 1\ ba!h, builtins. including d1lh\v11.Sher. 2 car xar .. jwit ~miles to ocean. 57. down wJll handlr. 1--uu price only 112.000. I BROKERS INC. 962.USI ~ Sexy Spanish * Co~e and see !hill sharp 4 ~room. 2 bath home and sip yaur tequila in the soft warm glow from a beautiful Stanish fireplace. Price orJjy $32.950. Call now ""'" THB:PRJU. . BB l:A,"l'RRB OPEN Tfl 9PM ijp FOR GRABS 3 qe<troom. 2 bath, new sbji&:, r;~t and fresh paint. AD)" orle can l.ake 'over the VA lop: and $156 per monlh pays all. Grab this Walker &: tLee Exclusive now at the prJce of $26,950. r.::.,\11\lfl ~II! Re~ton 5'5-0465 • OP<'I\ Eves. llllG CORNER LOT entry ..eparates · llv. rm. w/ccny m 3 br &: 2 ba, then ~ big kit. & dlnini;i: a.tea. Detached 1Cantge &: I.., dOwn. 'PAULA THOMAS : 213/430-<129 • REVA OLSON REALTOR I 213/42&-7469 ., :LISTEN TO THE WAVES CRASH it: 3 Mdruom Oriental . Atrium entrance. D NEW ca rpeta , ' paint & landscaping. Better than buying a new hol'ne. Has a boat a:ate, too. fof only $33,900. CALL THE REAL ' ESTATE FAIR 536-1551 r~~~~~~~!, o( ,thtv rnA &: VA hornet, coatact · I KASABIAN Realtors 842-4455 From Tension-To Tranquility A terrific home for a grow· ing family. 5 bedrooms, family size kitchen, built· ins, large eating area. Up- graded through out. plus 18 x 38 H/F Pool \\'ilh auto sweeper. \fa.lking · distance to schools, chw-chcs. shop- ping &. parks. All for only $44,950. CaU 847-601D. ~ LET YOUR •HUSBAND OWNER must move SPA.NI$~ VILLA decorator's d e I i 1 e . 4 Overlooking city & .beach. 2 bedroonui, 2 baths, 1~ Sty. stucco wired tile rool. 4 famUy room with lovely BR., 3 Ba., 3 frplcs., lg(! din crystal chandelier and most & lam rms .. beam ceil's., appealing fireplace. Builtin Jots pf charm, plus I BR Newport Beach k Itc h en, indoor-outdoor guest apt. B ca u t I f u 11 Y!--'--------- carpt1ing. Like .new cloud lndscpd, lge. lot $89,500. VIEW soft shag carpeting. Load!! * 4~2800 * o! d<cking. Patio, '""' low CLIFF DRIVE maintenance landscaping •. ··. ~ . . . and a beautiful swim pool ~ ~ ..... ~ New listing. Charming home with vacuum inc lu d ed . ~"~ w/spcctacular ocean & hay BRK, $33,000, 962-13T.t ~ID~=. view. Very lgc. liv. rm., din· NOT A TRICK ----ing ,m, & tam. rm . 7 BR., 2'h baths & a 2 BR. guC'sl EMERALD BAY hou". Sliding gla"' doo" But a treat to own this prestige 4 bedroom. 2 bath home with all the built·ins. patio, double it a r age , fireplace, etc., etc. Full price ONLY $28,500. NO DOWN TO VETS. We will take a smaller home in trade. FINEST LOT VIEW • $50,000 TED HUBERT and A11ociates 3411 Via Llclo. NB 67>8500 & a picture window for that special vicy,·. $67 ,500. CALL G> 646·1414 A..-6'1-. TasALTY Ne•r Newp.orl Pe1t Office HURRY -$3,500 · --GEMM-- 1610 W. Corust Hwy., N.B. REALTORS 642-4623 Walk to Beach 1-Sty. 3 BR., 1% ba. Carp., drps, [rpl., bltns. Tennb, pools nearby. $32,900. over 80% can be a.sswned Ocean view. Dedl:. ' at 7%. $49,950. .$400 . RIGHT on Sand. 2 Br., CALL 1:.\. 646·1414 2 Ba., frp1c. Year l y. ,. .:. ~ Child/P't. ·~ NU-VIEW RENTALS llALTY 673.fOJO or 494-"48 Ntar Ntwpor1 Po1l O ffice CAYWOOD REAL TY INVESTORS -5 H°""'· Ooe Newport Bffch * 548 1290 * 3 BR. nu.. 2 BR & 1 BR. 195 . Bacf>.Io,, a1ao -nt • L€e trees, fre11hly painted. studio $145 utll paid. BEAUT NABORHOOD Inc. $805. mo. $7S,OOO. Rent·A-Houae f79..8430 3 Br., Jll,4 ba w/apac. den + Tt'rms available. Will trade brand new room addit. AJI for House in Newport ON nlE BEACH. Lovely 3 for only $42,500 ln the heart Heights area. 0 w n e r BR, 2 BA. C:Ompletely furn. of Harbor High I ands. 64&-0484. $350 mo. Avail. 2 or 3 mos. Kingaard Rea.I E s ta t c lNVESJ'ORS! Brand new 1 ~•1>-~70~1-1-· ~~---= 642-2222. duplex, fully rented. $48,950, HouHI Unturn. 305 Canel Oupl•x $10,000 down, 71* % k>&n. 1---------- With private dock. Extra Good return. Quick -9P-G.neral sharp &-well maintained. preciatlon. 151 E. Bay St., Will include 35' Cruiser. C.M. G4.'.>-1,1.37/G42...W7. Gary Co. TI4-645-4400. ESTABLISHED prop. mgmt. PORTAFINA BAYFRONT AT THE BEACH & R.E. firm "''" usoci•· LAGUNA lion &: space in active in-='.\,\1 1<11: ,1, Lfl LlOO PENINSULA DUPLEX, Lge. 4 Br. & 2 Br. come property salesOffice. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD have h.ls holidays to spend with you and the kiddies \vhen YoU own th~ 4 bed· room home near the beach. Has double gale for boat or trailer with slab for park· Ing plua double detached garage and HARDLY ANY YARD WORK. Full price $32,000. Reali 842-4455 · Like new. Great live-in and WW •--• N t ora Custom building sites & ~us 3 ~~ 2 ba con· tal $70 (OJ Pri Pt;y ,_.,v.,.... e w P 0 r SKY BLUE POOL homes. Lett on Nyes Place do1";:>bay1nium,:,~,:i;,11,1,'1"=.°"00' :~. ' v . OBchWNIColERta SMA•CsaR.ll'&»-IC7330ING. Swim all year when not en· to entrance. "" · ....:: 1u ... v~. • -* ..... * 141•0111 * '-iolW.tltllCOITAMllA 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;~1 ~1\"11 1 ' ~·I I .. \ '" \ .. ; Realtors • 842-4<55 $21 ,500 ' Enjoy the warm glow from lbe brick fireplace. 3 bedroom condo. N e w I y painted, new d r a p ea , washer, dryet, retriqre.tcir, carpets. V a c a n t • Im· maculate. Call 968-4456. •• n·s FREE Our time, that Is, lo llho\v you just the home you need. All you have to do· la tell us your housing need.s and we will do the rest. Call now for app't. joying huge family room of Laguna &ach 494.9388 pool. 2-<:~r garage. Security. * SPARKLlNG EYEFUL! Larger near: new duplex, ~ this 4-bedroom 2 story on Boat ahps. $84,500. BY H. V. Homes Monaco 2 br + blk 10 ocean. Must seU. These Are Just A Few Of huge cul·de-sac lot. Total OCEGAAZNEBOVI EW o 64 wN55E 70 R. 613-6 0 9 0 or ~~: .. Be1 low1 Owmkt at ;,fE_.J!J,· $76,(X)). Our MANY *RENTALS ... upernding, garden kitchen. ,::c:>-;.,;:;o.:..-~--~~ ....._."' nc ! ner, ~vi Call ~ Excellent schools. Only 2 3 BR, den, 2 ~ths. Slate en: BALBOA Coves. N . B. daily 1·5. $90 . J·IANDY! l BR. Stove, years old. try, sunken hv. rm .• fpl. Hi waterfront. Pr:ivate ramn & BAYVIEW DUPLEX EXPjoint. ,r;:;.r::._eonblll'dg •. ",!'!kijec'ngt refrig. Singles fine. Vacant. peaked cell., open beams, · ·---· ----· .'F -n·~ 1 1 tlon 1,. ........... ...v * CALL THE REAL glass gables. Bltn kitchen. float. Modem 3 br. $T1,500. """"· romp e · user w/lot owner, s.tJ.-fil48 eves. ESTAT_E FAIR A prize winner at $55,000. Call owner, ms--0150 for write of!. Owner 675-7297 or $125-SECLUDED! 2 Br. C:Ot· 536.2551 Mission Realty 494-0731 app't. Principals only. G4S.l460 Mount•fn, O...rt, tage. Lovely garden. Idea.I NEW 35' Traller & 25' R•sort 174 for couple. COLOR THIS LeguM NigtHI Newport Be•ch cabana. Park near Lldo. 21 --------..;... * 0 S LOT In famous Lake Havuu. 2 H . ME PANISH I NEW CONOO fi n East 9. Br. furn. Pvt. beach. Peta home of the worlcl tamowi $145 · VACANT & ready! Red tile roor, 4 bedroom. ooe view goU coune, 3 Br., 2 PARK UDO welcome. $9,750. 536-2438. London Br!dp. Local~ Br. Gar. Fncd tor kids. sto~, on C?m<'r lot. Beam Ba., owrie:r, 675-5033. These 3 Bedroom, 2~~ Bath •HARBOR VlEW HON-ES close all A. * ceilings, thick shaa, plush Lid I I townhouses are perhaps the 4 BR, 2 BA, prof lndscpd. .........,, to wtll ac':I~~ $175 . OLDER 2 BR! Porch. drapes. all SP.&nWi colon. O I • best buy in Harbor area. 3 $62,500 by ownr 644-8785 _,.,.., or tra E/side. Kids/pets welcome. CALL THE REAL car ga.ragl?s, {arge ·utility n.. 1 the Mesa or Newport Beach ID.. ~~i! ...-up exes near ocean colne n ..... p. 64f..-46r7. ,r,;,.'ff.i r· FR~ ~ . • • ..... ~. ESTATE FAIR rooms, good locations, low Miles Larson, Realtcir ... v .i:.r.. v 1t.:.t; 563-2551 monthly d~, beautifully * 673-8563 * Rul E1t•te W•nt.d 114 BEACON RENTALS maintained -ib>l areas and * 645-011 t * UNUSUAL KN l c Ks & Roalty Company "°" own the lood. From 1-N_•_w_,,po_rt_Ho__,l9'-h_1s ___ I* "'-lclc Cash * CRANNIES to decorate. Buckingham Palace? $32,500'. Available even on a BY OWNER _ WW :;'your ~. All LANDLORDS! Live in-work on-3 levels, 3 No. but the Quttn herself lease option plan. Call 3 Bdr., 2 Baths. Beautiful cash within 72 hra Call we Spceialize in Newport BA, 4 BRI .. unu.ual houw would Jnal'Y"I at the sight of ~ 7225-ldtche'n, large m a st e r · Beach e Corona de! Mar e plan but has all the latest this exquisite home. 4.5' ol ~ bedroom w I prl, bath I ... .t: t.quM. Our Rental Ser· fixtures and features. RED choice Udo Isle Bayfront. u•1' hll dresaing area, frvlc. Owner vice Ia FREE to You! Try ~=·~~1~EACH ~~~r~7~ii.~ <f:. i m~.t~1~~: I ~UJ.1Vi~w RENTALS COTTAGE! Hear the surf. V1de panoramic view of bay. ":'@.-.-~, ·" ...,... •n">n •n• ... u. n-+ 7" bath + r · 3 Br, conv. den, fam rm.,...un Df.)o1U.lU or ~-\\'indy location. 3 BRS, U'"l;'ll 111 1'1 gour-1 ahy heavy shake roof and bu\Ji. met kitchen. (L-33). 5uasi1>1AR' o, 11t1 c01.wtu. co. -:!~Y ~u~$"s t ~ ~ 0 0 ~ BROKERS INC. Bilbo. Peninsul1 CLASSIFIED HOURS AdvertlseB may place their ada by telephone ~ :00 a.m.. to 5 :30 p.m. Monda¥ thJ"U Frlda.Y 8 to noon Sl.turday COSTA MESA omCE 330 w. Bay 642-6678 NEWPOlrl' BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 00-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACH ~"\""Ul<acl> tuvd., .,~ MO'lll20 7 ·''1" • LAGUNA BEACH 22'J Forest Ave. ·~ SAN CLEMENTE 300 N, El Camino Reel 492-4400 NORTH COUNTY' dial free 5ll)..1220 CLAS$ll'IED DIEADLINl.S Deadline for copy .t: kllll irui:. \Valle to l!llnd on )'OUr 645-2552. private path in 5 min, CONDOS-,=c::..==------96Ul.51 •--•1 ·-.... R-• C ~· 5511 San Clemente BAYVIEW 2 br, formal din, is 5:30 p.m. ~ day be- -~=.,---~~-~,-frplc. pllllh shag, painted In tor pubUcaUon, except ~ "" ~~ -or pot ~-642-8235 644-6200 BA CK BAY HAVE buyer for Orange Co. & oot. i,fi blk to bay. 1 blk to for Sunday A MondaJ BY OWNER. La Cuetta Beautltul , uf)'l!Tru:ll'd, 3 BR. 2 OWNER tranatcred, G.J. Xtra nice. xtra ·lrg, xtra bf.th. J..&e Country paneled terma -lo-klw down * CHOICE + reo"E"RUon raclUties and Kitchen, Family rm. Thick, no~vetl'I! 5 bedrooms, larv Nord Corner LOt xtra good ldscpg. 3 & 4 BR family room with lMplrin~ 1• BA · t ·~ fl padded shag cpt'g thru f!Ut . fireplace, gounncl'a pride & 5 &Irma., 31ni baths plus din w... , up o w.JU aq. • 15 mo1 old. $«),900. 968--95.17. ""'y buUt-ln k 1 t ch en rm. plus IJte. aundeck. priced (rom $211,!m. to "" · $85 000 $35,!m. West aide o I ONE FAMILY COMMUNE diahwuhcr. Well plannat LIDO R'EAL TY Newport Back Bay. Drive complete wlth herb garden. home. Pnol 1lzed Kt'QUlKla! , by Irvine Blvd A Santa All ilaM kitchen with hang-Bro<, $36,850, 842-Q\91. 33i1 Via L\rlo, -~_pt. Beach l11Bbel and fotiow signa. Ing polled planll. French * 67:J..7300 * 10:30 AM to 5:00 PM dally. * 3BR-BYOWNER * over m> sq. fL. 2 BA. tam rm. formal din rm., atrium. 2 yn. old, tile roof, ale gar dr opener, wtr eoftener, s pr lnklen, cantaJeverecl income, 2-XI units, or Shop heh. $300 yrly. 60-6029 F.ditiona when det.dllne center 11torea w Igo o d Corona clel Mar \a Saturday, 12 noon. return. Pref beach iowns. ;::;.:;;;:...:::::;..;.;::;:... ___ I I ~6. Smith 279 N. 2 BDRM, lrplc, kmiy ea,., CLASSIFIED , Wilton Pl., too Angele~ Cod C<>ttage. 1m. RIOULATIONS . ------------173-1658 ERRORS: Advcrti$eni patio overlooklna g o 1 I , -------, course. Many 0 th , r rl 1 ,~ 4BR. 2BA. blk to beach, No amenillt'!J 148,900. 492.2784,. .~ n.wt.r ~ ~ Crpta. drapes, bltinl, -------~- 3 Bedroom, 2 Ba.th .. Country" lltyle 11 v In i · OWNER MOVING BEAtmFUL LIDO HOME , RED CARPET REALTORS, Wanti s cllon. Huge 4 bfid-3 bt, 3 ba. out.landing floor I' F~ that Item under $50, try 962·55ll. room, 2·1tcir:y w11h l'Vt'f'Y• pla n. Superb kltch. Appt on· R•I Estele 962-.i 1l' 1'',P Rti.11 f 1 !tC $295. REALTOR should cbeck lheLr ada :11.lly • report erron lmrnecllately. TH E t·AtLY Pll.DT assumes llablllty ror tht fintt In· OOl'Tf'Ct insertion only. CANCELLATIONS: 1 ="*=""""=~':"':""::"'::'·===C=l:"':'':'":d:A:•:·:·:·=· :":":":":::::':"':"·:·:"'::·900=. =B"='=· '::84='-="='8=1 ly, Bkr, tl7Hl94. 531·5111 I :::1 531·5111 I Mesa del Mar -------- S©\\.~1A-a£tfs· The Pimle with th• /Juilt-/n Chuc/cle \ \ • Mobil• -s For Sele Cott•-- • OUt on your Own? 1 Br. -Furn. All util loci. $85. ALA Rentals e 66-ltOO W hen killing 11.n a d be !!Utt to make a recons of the KllL NUMBER ~vcn yoo by your l!lld taker u ~lpt of your canoel.l&don. 'Dlla kill number mu.a~ pn:- aent£d ~-~ ~r in cue of a db;pute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORR!ri10N or NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING: P!vcry rrtort I.I me.~ to tc:lll or com!!ct a new ad h t hM bcesi onWred, ... t ... --tf!oe to do JIO WltD the t.4 has ·~ In t h e-,_,.,.., OJM&-A-LINE .lDS: 'lb~ •dt are 1t11ct17 auh In advance by ma{I or at ~!'!l' on~ or ror of· flca'PJ))honoonlon. nlE DAILY PILO!t..., tttVl'I thl rleht lo cl»- llfy, edit. CtNOr or r. tu.. uy advert.1Mme1, ml "' -!ta n llll ·--1 prior OOlke, CLASSll'llD MAILING ADDlllSS P.0 .... IMO. c.aa ta ,,, ..... lilS2JI ' . ., ~· •. I ~~·~·!·~·:~. ~1 ... ~-; .... ~ll~~il~i~~"";""~"';-=::.;lc...~= ;;:?~;,;;-:.:..;· ':..::" ...... :;;;.."'_"""_·_1ltl...:~::: .. ~ ... ~ .... :_~,,;,;;· ... _.-....,..1_*...._:~,;:;,-.· .;.:11..+um'""" .. ;.;..··-.... _~ .... * ... 11;.;"""""~ .... ~;;,;;·nlunt.;,;;·;;;·;...-_~...;~:: I ~~~-~. lln"""-~~-;-~l~l•;.*~l l .~~~.~:~:~ .. -~11~~~.,;'i~ p~---~···iiiiii~~ l'owt1ln' Vllloy UNFURNISllED .2 """°""" C--...___., ' ' -•I H I =-=-.i::::::::::-==~==!l=~ S BR, 119 Bo ""''"'" new, ept. drps, ~I, t :r pl c . J115/-%13. llS6-32!0. ••mlde 1--Carpat1, ...,._ ""' "flon BM<h -,..n -* HillDU SPtlll'IUALISt' * Dra-all builtino, "' C .o.. ......_ llE ON£ o r THE P1RST ~ERE * Prlvtll "-* Lat °"' ad -children, no peta. $165 pr .. .,.. VIV -.. "" ti wbole outlook Oh 111* D lbl month. 64&-!509 mm. W..11l'IL1TIES PAlll IL C~DOVA APTS. JU~ ~~LW~'Eo CONGENIALITY Ambulatory~"" 11an bettor Pro!Halonal ad>bj Coronl Ciel Mir Cotnpue before )'OU ttnt . ''°'" $145 e Luxury 1 br apl. PR!VAILS Good, nutritloul Food. on lile. Uc. Rttdtnp dtJb, ~ Oaltiom del1Decl.. featurtnl: 1/6 2 Bedrooms • Adult Ocean view, 2-t boor houle Nice, cheutul ~. 10 AM·lO PM. -.ms. ,. FOR LEASE-J bdr. l~ be., l\OOMY l Bedruim. 2 bath ~ Soaciolll kitchen with fit. Dfabwuber • Shi:!. ~ting . Walk·ln 00. e Oiahwaahen aerurt~ty, --~thp aar t mM_~ ... i:!.', * Call 5'8..fB3 * m"'9034, 312 No El ; t1tUlty rm., 2 car gar., fen--.. . ...a --... "o:n ..:... -t11' direct lilbtlns, ts F --• •"-t ~~ Lar Roo ...... _.__ "'' ... "",. n-1 ., __ ...., __ __._ Ced )'d. newly painted, ;i~~:-~ ... ~ e Stparate din 1 area e 1 O.n."1N n.u ea • Wu-• 1e ms • : ~of 2 color achemn tout , ezcluaive club with ._.. .,,.., ~-. ~ Huntlllf!on llN<h cleao, 2 hut>. •~m park ,. uooJaln: with prlvate· ,.. • Home-like ..,,... Beiut;ful Game Room • Heated Pool • BBQ'• carpellnJr unJquo Aquabar, lowttaln• VIC4ltlon Ront•I• 42S VELING . Aro ,.. tni. from beach, 53&«.66 trance. $225 pr rnontb. Both • Prtvate patlol: Enclosed. Ganges. ·Quiet surroundings and : ~aci:_:_1 1 fJ'ld formal gardens, All aolne to tht! Carlbbeu 31!R. 2 BA. Condo, Double unU.1 next~& tennll • Cloled pn,ae w/1toraae close to ·ah0nil1g. <!':{r Harbor &'Hamilton St) e o!!tt.oo&°iock! ~ 01 th@ Sooth Coast'• PALM DESERT 1al.anda or South Stu! Cu ~ t ~· I• rage . ~i. c.all Balley .a-. ' e Marble PUilman 1 ult· Ll·I-. u-Ptt.. ~ a Part men I eom-3 Br hOute ~1 -•,. c • cook. bartend, etc. For .:. • -r~ H 1 ~· e Kinl·a: Bdrma • ·-. ..._ •Only SlfO e_er mo. muruty. · ;kl ......... ., Pl......, small aala.ry. Love to • Oubhowle. Nr. beach &: unt ngto., Buch e Pool • Barbeques • tur-20n Chlrle St., 1Cott1 Mesi 642~70 BAHIA PU&RTO 1 bedroom/1ludio1 trom $195. wknt!a, y,_ mo, ~ travel. Call '46-3632. · • ~ center. $250/mo. rounded wilh pi.um 1aJxl. HACllNDA .;.RIOR 2810 17th St., H.B. 2 Bedroom trom $295. Rent1l1 to SNlre GO COUPLES PARnEs. Alone Ml k>t, -""'~ or fam-IMMED. OCCUPANCY Adul-t u:._ at II• ~--From ·S1M ~MOVE !Nor ro5J&.9535 = !~1. to Fi P.M. 2 BR Labuna Beach lnlle, l Call ~..:.._~.~. • P.M. I tile• .,14.5 ~-••• K'•d!/ New 2 It 3 Br apts ... ...,. ,,,_, * DAY * VERSAIWS blk IO bch, 2 trpla., ~-, • ~ ' -· Dbl ··--dohwoitr LARGE 1BR118(), DELUXE l "' 2. BEDROOMS $139 A MO. ··--·· --··-n-c R,,.u.ont·A-.Houso 979 ••~n Cor Hunu.· 5 'ii:',1A 11 damt, HB. No Pet.I Fumlahed & ~Unfurnished Spac. 2 & 3 BR In +.ptex. on the ILUFFS :ii';:'::'"'~~: M7. Soclel Clutts .. ~ · i· -_ 365 W. Wlllon 6t2-19'n Heated Pool -Garages ,,.... Shag Carpeting Several avail. ALL EX· et NEWPORT Copeland bet t pm. Mon.-· - 3 Br, 2 Bo. blt·1"'. • * $27.!0 WEEK & UP Dishwasher -All UtWtles Paid. TRAS. Pool, rec bldg, Kl"' From Newport Wvd., turn at Fri. f'IND YOURSELF J'eaced, Children ok. • Studio I: 1 IiR Apts Adults Onfw. No Pih welcome. From $U9, Ste Hospital Road (1 bkx:k SGL woman needs room-IN SOMEONE ELSE $2!i0/mo. IW>-4827 e TV & IJlAld Service Avail • Mor 17371 KeolJon "B" I abov p T Coast H DISCOVER I :p,rtmentsfor~ j[91 •Phone Service-Htd Pool 241 Avocado St., Coat• Meu 646-1204 blk W. cf Beach Blvd. Ott JJdo i.ie)~centrance.wy,at :=rShr expemes. HB DISCOVERY I * 3 Br CONDO, crpts. <il'Jlll, l: -e Otlldren I: Pet section VILLA MARSEILLES Slater. 968-7510 or 847-4260. ~ eacney Lane, Newport * c:all 5.1&-6286 * 114-835-6885 21.3-.387-S38! 'f ~. ~~~. RIO, 1 ,,;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii.I 2378 N"nJIOrt Blvd., CM SPACIOUS l & 2 BEDROOM APT. 3 BDRM., 2 BA, trpl.c., Be a c h , ca _. 9 26 60 . ROOMMATE ed <U.:r> At mentioned in November -I 3 BR, tee Fam 1'n. Cpts, Apts. FUrn. 360 5:°~~ fumlthed I Unfurnished ~~"4'Pa!u~· La~~ N~ ~~tl ~·R 4 br, Hie at 1~~1Hli:hcn?lt'. PLAY BOY. Page 2l. drps, bltins. 842-1972. $275 Bllbo1 Penlnlul1 BACHELOR. 11r..2 Br. apb. Adult Ltvlng park & lclU. Chlld:ren 2BA / 2BR 2BA, call Bmg lrvlne $80. mon. ( 213 l lr------' f!I' mo. M7...8531. Agt. Encl. carporta.'< htd pool. Dlshwaaher color coordinated appliances .. welcome, no pell. $185. da)'I 838-i491 Eves & 866-4!24. ootl. I ·' Irvin• NEARLY new 3 BR. 2 BA, Adltl/no pets, sm 4 up. PIUJb shag carpet .. mirrored wardrobe doors-1709'2 Emerald, 968-8611. wkends, rn.-M NEWPORT -bu11ineu or u.t 11111,... campl furn All elect ldtch., SSl Center 9t. GG-8965. indirect. lighting in kitchen .. break.fo•t-bar. $140 mo. ~mi. no. of Hunt. * BEAU'I;IFUL 3 Br. 2 Ba. prof. man to sharfl •harp I~-----;;~~ YES we have rentals. May trplc, patio. BBQ,• Leue D•n• Pornt b rl f ed ,... Bch, 2 hr, hltnt. crpVdrps, 'Ai block 10 ocean. Unfum. ~!"f~•irabJe area. f160·jl we ~ of .ervice to YOU in t h r u J u n e . :;.o;;;;..;,,;;;;;.c.._____ ugo ~ vate enc paUo • plush land.scat' pool, play yard. laund facil Blt-ina. Qpta, dips. G&rqe, u-w-.a.JU6 Found (frM .. , 550 )'Oltt' hollBlng n~s! =6311=~840,70"/=539-883==1.___ LGE 2 Br, 2 Ba, new crpt, ~ganal.-rick Bar·b&Ques .. large heated poo s & carport. Q>l -& 2 mm. 548-lZf. G•r .... for Rent 435 I :"Ii I \·iii!. . I I .. · -I '1'11 lur ''SINCE 1946'' lit Western Banlt Bldg. University Park, Irvine Days 552-7000 . Night. 3 BR. 2 baths .......... $325 4 .BR. 2 baths ......... $350 3 BR., bonus rm. .••• , • $400 I .red hill REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine · Call Anytime, 83.3--0820 Oftice~bours 8 AM to 6 PM 4 BR. 2 Baths, fenced yard, recreatlon prlvil'gs. Garden· er. $350/mo 552-7263 alt 6 pm or wltnds. $150 • UTJL Pd . Victoria Be&.ch. Lrg Studio. Ocean View. $3X1: • 2 BR., 2 blks be&.ch. Be&ut. view. Quiet. Priv. patio. $325 • 3 + DEN. 2 Ba. Frplc home. No end. Ocean view.'" NU-VIEW RENTALS fiT.J.-4030 . or 494-3248 e SPACIOUS! Bach. Steps to bcb. Sml pet. Util lncl $135. ALA Rantals e 645-3900 BALBOA Ialand, furn. 1 Br drps, troat·free r e l r-l g , m 1. Air conditioning. ch.ildren ok. No pets. call 2 BR. llid1ng doon off LR to FOUND: Light col.and, kmc • apt. $160 Per mo. Utll lncld. super clo&et1. $19 0 I mo . 3101 So. Brlttol St.; Santi An• 557-8200 842-4664. balcony, close to ocean, STORAGE-20 x 25 truck hah'l"d kJtten, wear l n I' · CTI4) 675-5837 or (213) 24681. ~· Open. COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. WALK TO BEACH available . tll Ju I y i. hi-at 2626 Newport Blvd. yellow collar w/bell; vie. " 287-4411. 4!J2..4225. MANAGING AGENT New l & 2 BR, cpt/drps 213: 943-2928. C!'ot $50. Schworer -23rd & Tu111tin, Co 1 ta e $25 Wk & Up On Ocean. Huntington IHch dswVir. 316 16th. 53&-7165 or 673-2654. Mc•&. I N e w ~ t IJ"dl. • Lovely Bach-1 Br·Roomt 8474957. S.n Clemente Office Rent•I 440 5'&&-28(2 or SC&--• ' MaldSerneeau"'.;,,,Pool 87 .cYWpd L·~'INTA HER .. -• Al>f, Untum. 365 Apt. Unfurn, W ~ARGE CLEAN 2 OLDER .male KITTEN . •n.... .,. ~ ~~ ;,;:;,;,;,.,.;.:.:,;,;,.,,..1-...,..-;;;:: BEDROOM $135. per LOVELY 2 BR, 2 BA oo OFTICE lp.&t'e for l't'ht, ex-yellow lAbby, aok1 eye1, Vie : 2 BR 1% BA, _patio balcony Spanish Country Dtlite IJv. JCiioiil'OflliiiiiiiideliiiiiiMoiiiiriiiiiiiiiiii ~C~os~t~aiiM~lll~"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil month. Call 8G-'4f6 after & quiet cul-de-Mc, ocean vu, ecuUve o~ suite, 3 luxury -Chane St., Costa Mesa. , 315 :E. Bay, $2so ~ .. on )TIY ~ Ir 8J:ilidoUI Aptl. .Ter-PM. · • · color Jn-Ord. Crpll/drpa, of6ce1 & ttceptlon room. M8--012'7 (wearing flea col· lse. tnq. &.t Apt c 673--15.21 raced pool; sunken Pl range, dsbwshr, Ia:e din over f;iO aq ft. Newly lul. or 548-7771. BBQ. Unbelienble Uvlng. ~·· HARBOR GREENS ldBR. wd/~frig, $130bl • Crpts, are&.. Priv balcony, rei! & decorated, ~w crpt, air ro~U~N-D-la-...,--, .. --ca-t_Oc:_t.1 • 0 .. 1.. " rp1, ... whr, tnl. No lndry -nns. Adults, .oo pell oond , on 2nd 1to..., nr. 29th. Te~ Rd., • __ ,_ 1160 Winter, 1 br newly ·~ pe-1--Em-'d Lane ....,. ~ •J ''" _ ... -. decorated. 1 BR. FURN. $175 cai'i' ~ cnu ' ...,,_,,,,,,,,_, Plevator &: stairn·ay. Abun-Dark iftylsh black W/wht Call 673-959 1 2 BR. ·FURN. $210 Fumlshed & · Apt1. dan1 off-street & oi»~t on c~ &: 1 tom• c b. Unfvrnt1t...-~ 2 BR, $135. Lg kwely apt. Furn' or Unfum -Par Jc Ing . ''Downtown". "97-1338. 2 BR. STUDIO $195 ON TEN ACRES •-\Vasher le dryer hookup. 2 · • •111 LocaUon on 17th St .1-""-'=-------1 • Corona del Mar 2 blk1 to Big Corona. Bach. · $125, util pd. Yearly. 1 adlt, no pets. 645-1624 FURNISHED bachelor for single person. $130. Ulil. pd. Al.L UTILITIES PAID Apta. furn./unfum. Lease children ok. 536-3075. 1323 CWt'ltclirn in Cost&. ~teaa. F 0 UN D : BI a ck '-' Adult• No. pell. Fireplace / prlv. petios. From $130 to $215 mo Huntington St., H.B. Cost• Meu P.in: Belloy,·s 540-48l6 Tsn/br'01''TI dog, m •I•. -Pool T · C inl'l B"'·t l h ' ' Lookl like Beqte. V\c. 1 enma on ~ · Bichtlors • 1 Bcfrms •9una BMc DELUX eustom ofticn for Orangt" 1< Colt.a Mea 14 blk:a S. o:f San Die&'O Frwy 9001Ma~~~Latlur nr' ~-·""t H·l6wyll) 2 Bel e 3 Bel e VIEW e * *' * le~. 2 adjoining 1Ulle1, 7o.> Streell, C.M. ~ on Beach, 1 blk w. on Holl '-'l>,I • ""'°"' rm1 rm1 * NEW * * !IQ. ft. each. or v.111 com.1 ..::===~=='--- to 16211 Parkside Lane.) 1 y2 or 2 Full Bathi OCEANFRONT b!ne, Prldng tac. See 1B17 FOUND: Vic. Villa Sweden, tn4) 1474"1 3 Br trpl beam I! 2 BR,· 2 BA. Lease. Mature Wcstcllff Dr. CdM, lite gray tlutt)t -cat - gar, 'below cbiWB.)I'. Adi:/~ Master size bedrooms w/ Adults, no pet.II. Elevator to LA COSTA APTS. • 548-34'11 • ~~ white f1ea c::ollU'. OCEANSIDE of bwy., yr lse, $14S • $165 pets. '285. Avail ll/21. high beam ceilings, large beach. Pool. Security. 31155 OF.SK space avrila~ l50 $-· 1 nr shops, crpt!, adlta only, Bachelor & 1 B~ paHol, &12'-5531 Eves or wlmdll. living room w/gas or Cout Hwy., S. Laguna. 1 & 2 Bedroom mo. wm P""'* furnttutt CUTE whl poodle, Jona: t&il, '""'5511. no pets, 1 & 2 Br. f!'73-.4096. -1 , \'!: · wood burning fireplace. • 49'-213.S e .._ 1 ___,_ blk: noee I: ~ gentW .... " c 1, v. garages • C M c 1 1 1 -1.... • Built·inl e Shag carpets at ... mo. Aimw '* _... .......... C , .... v•· M'-'_; $35 Week ; 1 Br furn duplex Divided th & loll of Oita HI onven en aun .... ,, area e Drapes • Walk ln closets available !TITS a.di Blvd an 1 ...,.,.p. '"'· '--~ near ocean. 317 Heliotrope' closet.I. Rec hall, pool & off kitchen. Enclosed pa· L•9una Nll"!I • Swtmmtna Pool Huntlnaton Bet.ch. IQ.4321 Viejo. &.5640. By appt. on!Y 644-4340 pool tables, aa.una bathl. DELUXE tios. 2 swimm.lng J>OO.is . LAGUNA NIGUEL e Bllr-b-Quea FOUND AtchM fern• 1 e Costa Mew See for )'OUl'Belf! 17301 APARTMENTS sauna, recreation facili· • Enclose4 Gorq:e DESK si-ce avaUab&e $50 vicinity Balboa PavUkln. Keeleon Ln. (1 blk W. of Air Cond . Frplc's. 3 Swim· tie11. Security guard. No Apertment1 Alf UtiHtie' S Pa'ld mo. Wiii provide tumlturt' Newport Reich, m.mt WEEKLY-MONTHLY Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). m1ng Pools . J-fealth Spa . pets. 1 Br., l Ba.; $185 e 2 Br., 1 at SS mo. Anawt:rtna llll'Vktl after 4 p.m. Executive Suites 842 .. 7848 Tennia Courts • Game and Models Open 10 tll 7 pm ~~ $225. e 2 ~r., 2 Ba.; available. m torest Ave. ~'O\IND: ',"".-..... -~old.,-pu-ppy-,I 2080 Newport Blvd. MEN, small beach hotel. Billiard Room. t Id G V C bl & \V li1aturr adult11, no peta LquM Beach. &-Hiii 11.·hlte with black ear , Coit• Mesa Rooms $2'l.50 week, apts $95 1 BR. From $160 2700 Peteraon Way, CM r:~ly c~l & ad~. ~ ~:!=:1a:~:r~ BAY VIEW OFFICES Vicinity Hundnaton A Un· l · 642:2611 per mo. 53&-7066. lMBERD. '1TEoe.:RAFromNEAS1BSN "' Horbor Blvd a facil. Hid Pool. BBQ area. 354 Avoudo St .. c.M. °"'"'" .All'-O>ndltloned coin St .. H.B. s.!HU!. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S 2 BR. upatain:, crpls. drpg, "' Adima 20041 Aloma Ave. 642-t70I R.tdecoR:led. Udo Area SOLID cra,y, 1\x-toed ldttrn. : ~~~ """u·illnsti ~~ "';J;'J'." t child. St50. VILLAGE c'~ n37Q ~~:':110 or ~5774 ""~;'l~,E~o:r"" ~" s'" ~~ i:! t cs BACHELOR Apt. Close to 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.l\I. """ 497·~ • Full Kitchen beach & shopping. 100/mo. <n4) 557-8020 S2S 11q. ft. UtU pakl. o:: !'. =c,.==,· ,-.,-,,.,.~--I e Heated Pool Gas & water pd. S47-566'f. RENTAL omCE BEAUT. appt'd. 180" view SPACIOUS paric:'g. ~ Nl!WllOl1, cor. nm. Med. ud wht. mlelvd. e Laundry Faciliti~s OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM penthouse. 2 BR., 2 Ba. + Luxury apts. of Bay g . 646-tm". die. Vlc Westminate:r vd. • TV & mald serv avail lap• Beach Time To Step Up dln. le.rrace. Slip avail. $700 For Adults only NEWPORT Beach. Wetlelill:-119H"11~=·------ • Phone Service Your ape.rtment in a French mo. yr(¥. A&t. ~5930. l Or 2 Bedrooms Drive. Air, (:rltt, pvt bl.tit. FDIALE Spttnaer or small ,• BACH. nr beach. $13S-$155. mt!81iBJIU 21 Country Garden • yet near Me111 Verde Sh~1 ca~ts, bulltlns 400 1q. It. $165 mo. can setttr type. Brown I white. : '. • BEACH Living! Furn l Br. All 'util lnet. $140. ~ - ALA Rental• e 645-3900 NEW_ B;P~ for adults only. -:-Cot. TV. 1435 N. Coe.It. shoppin&' a n d acUvlties. ' enc garq:cs Gent HUI,~ 6-9 mot. w-2?06: Baloo~i;es. Breplacei, beam-Open eves. 6 7 5-4 3 6 7: 2 Bedroom, 2 bath ••••• $3'.15 Impeccably man a If e-d . DELUXE 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba., Drive by 2:l.ll Elden Ave. 500 sq. 11. Ground ftoor SET Clrpler cu ..,.., 1 e:t ceihngs, wood paneling, 494--2511f. aft 4. 3 .. ~· 2 bat1!_.:·· · · 1~ penonal private. T w 0 encl pr, $160 up. Rental .,.,..,.eau11-..,· -~r mont• -lnUftrfetbt-Pu* 6 -1tUi -T 2 BR house, child &. pets OK $28.5, 4~. employed people only, ava.UNov. 11. Newport Be•ch carpeting, drapes. Recrea-auu.iui new a~. w .,.. bedrooms, den, 2 baths, Ofc., 3095 Mace Ave., " re: 11 1.736 Anaheim. CM 67)-2654 Colta Meu. Ml-31911. tion building with pool. BEAUTIFULLY furn. 1 Br paUos., garage, pool, spa. pa"'-, picture-book kitchen. 546-1034. HARBO• ~·m • ..... -Bachelor • apt. Ocean view. Patio, Lush garden .1etting. Adults, ~w. " PROF~IONAL Su.Ill! r.-ady PARAKEET. W'l'l' tame. V\c "'"' « ........... -1 all Ila CJ Fi-'"'ace and other plusel. Midway City ~---u B. ~• 1 bdnne: from $135 140 w ..,.., c, app nces. ose no pell. 151 E. ~Lat, C.~f. •qoo to ao. HeU at 8olA Chica. v-MA~ Hwy., ,,, \..&I.I W'"• ' (J t w' t ,· to bch. $275. 497-2587 646-8666 From $195, adult Jection. H.B. S275/mo. St&-1323. !t.S-%182 or 4M-S11. .....,n us ea o · THE VENDOME 2 SOR.MS., 2 ba, studio apt. Newport Blvd.). Newport Beach P•rk·Llke Surrounding Carp., drapes, b 1t .\n1 . COMPANY 8utJnn1 illlfttel 4Q FOUND ~1'18' S~ cal THE BLUFFS HOLIDAY PLAZA We haYe" Winter :Rentals QUIET DELUXE 1845 Anaheim Avenue Garqe. $140 Month 893-2872 REALTORS \ria. Rel A Golden West, HE'RMOSA DELUXE Spacious 1 BR Will Take Students 2 A:: 3 BR APTS. Call Mn. Phillipe 642·2824 Newport a.ch SINCE 1944 ''11fE FACTORY" hu 2 Hunt Sch. IG-7925. Delightful townhouSe style; fW'n apt~l5. Heat~ Pool. Also oceanfronts avail. ~.si:,~~: A:~'t ~; ** 3 Br., 11/J ba. ** 673-4400 ::~ L.tllemo. MalJ.:~ ~~Ca~ fayer entry. 2 BR. 2 baths, A~ple ing. Ad II, no 3 Bdrma., 2 Mths, frpl.c Marti I . Apts. Large, newly deeor. encl PARK NEWPORT small ,.tat thopt. Antique MHIM1 ft., ~ ) forn1al din. rm. Spacious Pf~ p A c M Untum., yearly •..• $275 n qu• patio, bltns, crpt. drps, APARTMENTS shop, Cand¥ ahop wanted. RED ~~ ..... ~ •• ,,. ' patio overlooking sparidin11: omona ve.. · · •.BR. 2 BA ••••..•• $325/350 rrn Santa Ana Ave., c .M. Close to everything. $170 LRG. 1 BR. u.nf\un $140; 425 30th St. Newport 8nch ~ ....... ma..-, ;<1 • =~ih~acant&waiting.$400 BA~W:Jn~BR ~=~·::t.::::::::::·.:m Mgr. Apt. U3 646-5542 :'·~p~n~k:s·.C:fr·~:~ on the bay ~· ~·~.B~~~ 67Hl)S. • '~.~~HISdd,Hta '(''f-Xtra nlce. Pool, BBQ,bcblndry. 2 BR. 1 Ba. P!.,nin .... $250 DELUXE wlmds, 642-8340. Lwc-ury apartment llvl~~: f7· !!td. =· ~ ~t!e._Lt~ ~. ~ fftn!~ IRISH Sett«, male. ~· ~ .,..... Clean. Nr .l . CALL: vi.,..3663 TOWNHOUSE 1 BR ,.._,...,.. Iv Uo e the water ........ .,.,, an . ' l t A A .. ··nu, 118 Af't 5 prn. : :,~!f{C AdJ W. .. ~ _ • ..... ,,..... " pr · pa ' S7:i0 000 health IPf,. 7 IWim· 548-5C'ro. I'll on U11 di l • :Sf ~:.. . CHARl\IINci 1 Br. furn du· . 2 B'R,""i~i BA'. Crpl"( drps, ~~w ClJIU'..,drps. nl!t.J!~'r' . ---~,..._H ... llfll.':Je'... ~~-... -_.. .f. ~J«9. So. nn.dway, S.A. 7 bltn stove, prlv. patio w/ n.csp. adwtl 0 Y· No nla courts' I lle r ·-·=--_.. 850 ·aq fl pound Boor at FDULE Of* · Oll'rftln _... plex, hew crpta, drps A:: enclo.ed garage. Couple. children or pets $12S • Pus m 1 0 BR. FrM Utll. Pool. Encl 1'131 · A h I CM Shephard f1f!I coua,..llmpt. !(? rea ly ~~~in~es'fi;~a::nt u'~~ Sml dog ok. n 65. ~. ,!4~1:~ EL.MS. ~L •· ~~~~~~';."~h~.t~ =·=· &hwarer n_ '~.' · .\'k'. ea, 'st.C.M. l&-:.7. I 2414 Vista del Oro adults onty. 548-69:K> 'WE VICTORIAN" • Adults Pool.5idc Sl40 up trom $114.50 monthly; allo 1 per Iha( ca~t! BR. up. ~R&-OUiCf'-m.plQ, Coht MALE Tabtw. 4 whit~ ht. l · Newport Beach * SHADY ELMS· POOL* B'A"'cim.oR apt, 1· bit 2.:t· ~:1"tio.Ad~t/r~ e t'hlldren rwxt bloclc ;.r::or!·~~~~ Ef~ S.100. mo. 642-~a.' prage, g!1r~~~TzmXO> blk ~ ~~"" dtl • 644-1133 ANYTIME •Adu lts Poolside $140 up ocean, awtm pool, gar. SlflO, bltns. Wit" pd. Call 636-4120 F .... Furniture Plan Irle kitchens. ptlvate patlot Fovnt1ln V•lley. lndu 1 1 ,...,. 1 ·-LABRA.DOR ~tril'wr vk:. 1' $125 . 1 BR. B\tns, new crpts, • ~!'F~:~:u;~iin 210 Cedu', Npt ShorH. {1 to 5). 177 E. 22nd St., 0 1 642-3&45 or beJconJn, carpetlna, dn· ''( 1 ::J, 1 -Tm1lerodc, trYtM 133--lt.58. child ok. Balboa Penln. 543-U31 bofr >: alt S pm, 661-Vlctorta St "A" ... 1155. UPPER Gold Mod alllon all peri... Sobternnoan park· SHAKEWOOD JUST COMPLETED , ~ ' ... $22.1 • LRG. 2 BR, 2 Ba. 177 E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 5'&-7290. e REAL Value! QuW:t 2 BR. elect 2BR apt, w/p.r I: mg with elevators. OpUonal l..al'f\'9t 2 BR'a in town. 103)3 ~' ~ ' N~ Shores. Childfsml 2 BR. UTIL PD $175 OCEANFRONT Ni:; furn. 3 Cprtt. drps, refrig, IJtO\ll', balcony I n qu ie t maid sewice· Just no: or :•1e5-tve._nr. Urookf~~f 1600 to,,. Sq. Ft. WALE cal. tiJf"!' striped. l I .J:, o . 3 BR 2 BA frplc Attrac. tum. Hid pool. Adltl. BR. 2 BA. , · ~. dlhwhr, pool. $135. Mature neighborhood, adlts only, no Fa.Mimi and at Jam rtt 1714 9G2~lr:. Ypri °i Ii IN SANTA ANA ~hnnm Ptnlan. Whf11t , ~,., • • • ' No pets. (Infant ok) Winter. Adlta only. No peta. adulll. 2295 PacWc Ave. pell. SU!!. 64+--0878/557-3372 and San Jo&quln HilJ. Road. 1 · T' v •1 u Nj'w Ult-up bid& 1'!.'/&harp, bi&• boota. u )1'I old. ,,_ ' ~;Jj:'W8R°EPJ'~~rs· 642-9520 673-«l88. 54H871. 3 Br .• 2 Ba. + 2 Br., 1 Ba. r1.i.-ta!m1J!~,;:3 = 11~:,1 ~~~!,a.~ ni>td. c-Dl*I cMolt1 A mllar. T•\\'l'*-le Sehl I i 67).-41).l) or 494-3248 * $25 PER WEEK* •BalboaPenin.3BR.2BA DELUXE 2 Br., 1% Ba. Fresltlypainted.Cpts,drps, orren n w1u.. 4 Swlmr.l~t. • Ourtlnnr 11 1o r•3e me11an ne Jowalt.tTl-IT.12. ) &: Up. Pool I: maid aervlce. OYf!r pn.p. On b a Y stuiUo on dead-end aln!et. $1SO ,. fl35. Avail Nov . 1. 3 Bedrooml, 2 Ba. Bea.ch. HBQ'i. e Ir.div. prtv Jll.lioa =htJ-~ doon. UO. S~Al.L. 10)' htM.ic. poocnr. WALK to beach: 1 BR. conv. Kitchens avail. Motel TahlU, w/beach. Ulll pakt. $350/mo. crpts, drpsJ."11, bltns, 715 Shallmar St., 54M78-1 ; S2:50. · Yf!arly. Frplc., crpts, • Shae t'rpl1. HUNSAKli"D!V CO tm\ak vie 8molOunl I: den, 1" M., bltnl, patio. No """mer Harbor • Vtcton'• .... : -.1233 collect. prtv. patios. . 1 chUd ok. 60-97TJ. drp1, blt·lt'll: fria. ~ at H •·--h II ' ' • •--,· N ~-.. ".lo Jo" pell. $275 Yrly 548-lDJ. ....., • ' •w ._,... No pell. S.7154. DELUX 3 BR 2 BA. bltlrw Ulm W. Balbot'I. C a 11 ulttintfOl'I -.• St•I ... °o,-"s 4 f -2 S 1· J: LRG new cust. 3 Br, 3 Ba. VERQu,'f "s.ice lbyBR, dplx. FOR Rent: Tr•ller NEWLY OF.CORATED encl dbl ..,,'trplc, covered 645-1011 dayl, Mn. Ran or •n~GTO-, C ord '"' !NOUS. Unll. 1000 ~ fl. ~'8rd. 4 home w/golf course view. ,.,-t, p. garages. wfcabana, $11D + util per patio. 2 children ok, no pell. 673-mJ f'Yel, nui, ''"" ,, N wport 8th. nt.O --( " 'I ~ """/ 557 n•nn Adlts over 30. No pets, mo. All adlt pk. For quiet 2 Br w/gar. New crpt'g, EW •· I V' Apt•. l·lell 111t DctbA Chlo . ea'JI •~t""'• per mo. RF.WAllD lo.t San. Oct. 21, 1..at ..-a .... ..,..., mo. •;J"l\r.ll. 543-l021. elderly couple. 54&-8391 Fncd yrd w/patlo. Wh' pd, Nr. Hat'll:lr A Dake r . N c .... nnt rront -N!W 84&-1323. Coolpere • ~ _. ,..,. lt.llr" red nui"9 frilh ""1tt, ~ 2 BR prlv. home, $175, has BAOIELOR Apll. $115 &e up. WATERFRONT, Lrr. 2 BR. Call btwn l Ir: l 636-U20. 968-0979. act. !i BRgj,, ~· :J ~ whllll )'()U're ml.ans. t'r. Ster... 455 hl!'l.Ui medk:a1 cuw. Call I everything. Fncd, gar. No children or peta. 2135 $2l!O winter. $:D'.t ?early. 2ZH-A Placentia ve. · · $145 1 &: 2 BR w/furn. avaU. Cl.II y ~ ~ · $1»f2!1D. 50-3612 aft I\ pm. R..t..A-HOUM 979..aaG Elden Ave., See &tar. Apt 6, * Call $44.:ntl * . LARGE 1 BR. Apt. Prlv. HeAd~~ ~· ~ & up . eor:m: y. m-¥113 OEWXF., Apt . prlv. i-Uo. SPAC'E .... lorlTTrallor» · ~lllll, e MAU.( Co&den RMrir\,.,.., c M pado. All uW, p:I. mt·lnic. ...ta. ..... ...... nttt St . V•·· ttm . mo. ,,. 5 )'T'!I o&t'J. """' mt'd\caUon. Mn C'°"*"' BA·CllELO· R. utll paid. lll5 OCEA!f( kl •• '?:'J) NTG ~':· Shll cpta, ~· $140. 6G-lllirS. LOOKING · for yr, 1'0l.lnd ;,.*s:=:.-:."!':·1':':~1.; Neon. lac.. 5.11-1114. lrvlM. REWARD. No ~ •• 1 CHARMING 2BR, 2BA, Lrg mo. Neat. Parking. Ovtt 30 no t~• . art.IC· .......,. M!::::§lf C[ !f=1517. ' se:· 2 I: 3 St apt. SltO up ~ at bd\f Hett It Is. S ~ SUO. M&-<ml. llefttaf1 W...W tklna. )II mt IROoma Frplc, panorarnk: -f ~1 Mc,. Dr CM 1""'8·R~BA ~ hi LffE:t BR. Cottqe. Sep. I, cpt/drp, bltna, kids ok !'~· ... frplcth St' !:f:-Only $2l[i. RI.SH Oor-1'. Plmbroob. •1 ocean vu, Wlk to bch & golf ... ~ · .Ml " • • ~ • on ..... ac paUo. Wuh nn. Gar. $1&t 1998 Mai>ie No, I .•. 642.-3313 "1-0"'-" viJ""V'ICl>1•· EXlX?l1l'tV'E wubl lro f'f'ftl. ftfoct I wttfte, Fftn, Vlit: :a:i. PIO mo. S73-600t. .e:N:·l & 2 BR Trallft ~'~·orthrustT~ =--~:c Meytr Pl. ~Cos:~! .1. ;u-, B~ Qull't 2 ·:,:·~· aundt-df. 1r.,· ~~.,~!f:aU~iu~ ... ~ ~· ~ tonL • ~ &: up, Ma lure adults, Bob. u' u-v~ n. ~ ""--...i .. r --·--· -I HOUMI Fum. of chil d ok. 642·1265. $1t0. CLEAN t Br. Furn. 3 ~R. 1'19 BA. $165/mo. S65 Contempcnry Carikn Apia. .... t"'•• ... _ -· .... SMALL.._,.~.,_. lbL 310 util. pd. No kids C# pets, UO depoalt AvaU now. M5-<1973. Patkls, trplc.. pool. f].5.). Adults, no ptta. 111 O · 4 BA. 1 •IY halt. nr Adam.I or vk'. Ha.II ' Gokten81. Unfurn. 2 BR. utll paid, $170 mo. .oo Hardlrw. 5C7-U55 75.1 Shalimar Dr., No. 2, SUIO. Call 541-51113 642-Ull. Rooms -MN9 VnW wf'IJ. 1 •t'hlld. Mu.Ill ~. rnoatf.1 1:0. ! Coron• dol Mor "'"· ";: ~t';.. * v.., clean. 1 BR. Apt Nr. C.M. -E,SJDI 2 IR $150 2 Ddnn.\,i t!i Bo., trptc, Call Ill: '3)-llltl. """""' MT-&111. I ...... ., ••o pets. LRG. 1 BR. blUna, ckh/W\h. Bltns, wt w, f'drti. Pool. ~·. enc1'"'-..,..,_'::r,w/two BEDRM "'1 pvt i.. In pvt MlllC. lteMAh 4'S IHORT har fltml -..a-~ the beach, unobllructed 1 BR. F'Unrlahed a:araa:e apt ,,..,,, ,,.. Adil ....... -· Adull no peta &tJ.95.20 ... ,._ LA.IWMI Nla;Uet home. Pvt -.1-i ... ea.a. ana. L..i Vu, pri road. 3 BR. 2 BA, No pets. 275 BroadwQ', liT.J..e2B 11 "° .. ""' ..... nu ...... ~. s. ' oc..n. Yrb' '-· 1'17, rntr. Llrw'nl furn. 19& mo. PAAXIKG s,.cn awll. 111 rr1.'"'R;;.n:1. M+-1131. . tum. or. Ad,J\dt for winter C.M. Sl«l/mo. a.EAN aw.. apt. UtWUn let>. • ~ 11 2 BR. Guo.ft Apel, Pool. '15-JIOI. ~!k"r-4729 ew•. w. Jtth a , CM. 110 Jllft' LOIT· 1 mo. old lf'tlb-· or lull Ume. 673.Jm. $115 • Uf'.. Nicely turn. 1 • 2 Included, SUS M0.-311b.IO l~: ,,.\:~:.'A~ ~a:itJ.Ul r:sJ: up. ++ ATl'RACTIVE • l.899 2 2 ROOMS. W'tl tldranoP. l10. mo. MMIOJ, hlMJ. ~ Lapa,.._.: Conclomlnlumi BR Trailen. l Adults _ ~l· bl!aeb. m-<ll44 381 W Bay St. C.Jl 6*-00'13 " • er.. 2 Ba., CID. bib. 1: .:i. manlbly, ret .. IH '1 -..... ..,--., 132 \V , \VUJon, Of. &G-4530. Apt UftiUrn. iilS · • · DI ,.. patlO, end pr. St I J . mm. m no.. St. o.1a ~ _ ·- Unfvrn. 320 1 Br. S1JO a Sl«I. Adulta onl,y. • . S BR, 2 8: ~ ~~ N nt ~ MHL NHUI 1 I .. r.o;° ~ .-m. ,.,./:. Huntl-'-lffch S/Pool. lde&.I for Bachelan. lal .... ,_...,.. =-sio-f791. fl90 per n'IO. 2 Br., 2 Ba .• Dt:l..VX£ • 28r, 2 Ra, I t~k ROO MS I ll •ic. up wl kll. ... • «. ,,__ caD n:t-ml. ......... 1993 Church St., 54&-tl3S. C':lllb drps bllns enct·pr to 8c:h. Ewtdoltd prap, S2'T.5o •1f up Apta. m :I BR Condo. Adult living. 1 Br furn apt. $14(!. No prtt. e OCEAHJ'ROtlT To w n · J llt, 2 IA..-PATIO ~l~ "'"· Nfw ape ~ 811·1111. UUI. Pit. Adu lts. Ne'fr1IO!'. OIVll.. CM , UlST: °""" lborta -. tfnnttnaton Bay, swimming no chlldrtn. Cl Center a.. :=•rm~~· l '::!: $11U. M~ll dfol \far. 56.tn ""-'c n.rta. 831.!9fr. Im fffrly. N&--TT.I. _ -· ~. ,.. ...... , BIMtl m1ftl ....... ,...._.. pool. J'f!Cf'l!adon. fr p I c. CM. 60-5848. )400 _1111 ·"n mo1inO Yrb' Sl'UOJO 2 Br, 2 BL C10. htt BIVff BAL80'A Bay Oub. Lttr. BALBOA 1.~l•rvl-)fl"n ll'T.~ ft~_J.D. ... ~fdr)'ff, ftovt. Lease Fum. lllch & 1 ar L m.at' · · · Bltna. N"r. OOC a SD,..,....,. 8ayrmn1 1 &-. A r> 1 . pf'r •1c. TV "" , ldkhen. P1ltORl..EM ,,,.....~. °r" W/mo. ~2290. ceptlonallj nict ·1119 AC:PDIS' from beech. 1 bt Enfl f!!do.. $115, ~ Wl11. ,d '4l'lfd 2 BR. 2 e.. SI001mo. lk!d&k11t.in on kwll ltf I•. m-lt1l. ~~u!.. ~;..;I _,.,, -Nowpott 11..i. C.M. -"'·Pvt -•-a * J BR ..,., a,.., "-2 Cu pr. 111111 -on lat. MH319 PVT ,_,,, -c..ta -. !!!'.~ · _..... ..i. AP· •• 1..:.==:.:...:==·=:::..-1 dr}'!I' is. mi--~ ~ ..-vu.. -1413. sm. •-· 2 .. 111. e;i. -· •.... l~-~t-~~~~~~f-~;~:~:3~ llull1-Llnd1 Model ikiBr. <DOI -. ~ .. Mlf .~ ~ Huntklfl•• iMCh -Y-. Dau , c.11 -JJIAl,S n'"' ii01 -.,_ ll!nll• level, l BR. Ltue..... .....·mo -*"' t'M-m.im .... 41'. aEAOI -1111 -Lii -.. --; ... ., ... lY. Beaut. G""nbelt. Sl'B. ___.J!' Mar• -, __ -"' -~ ..,. ~ .,., llACMILUPP Apia. 2 llft., 111 "°'• """'"'· b11i... Ind. ~R111.n. ...... aL ...... to trawl -tW • 111 -· '145 • Nloelt ,_ 1 BP..... peU 6 -.;;;i;:;"-..2!!.__ ·nll 2 6 I BA. -. eotJo -.... --. p'lj 19 W, 1"'1I:oo. --""' '""1U> o1 ll11W. Call ,..., .. ,..,, Toi:rnh,.,.. Unfurn. JU ""'" ooly. 131 w. ,,,_, -i-i:i1o pr .-_ 2 1111. 2 BA. & .,, .,,.., o..N. 1211 1CIUa. 142-~-· NH4ll. mmat11: ...... & llilrid ,!!!!!!' IM-.o.111 a U.. Hunt •---'--r Call -111.nt. --••~·~·; LllO. • • 1o.,... ._,..., tWml!Wn'. DIJC. .u-. ._"'" ua,""" -· ~llt6 ~ • ...,,a... _, nMI w 2 112<.. I &a:; ~ -v-. .. -SIJG, -.._ No -I Ill. 2" llA. lrllo, pool, IOI pl!. !HI!' !!!f. Coll , .... I .. I P.M. ""'°"' Ml ;.._ lo Now """' -..-_ aot. -...,_ ciii\ A Did P.!· 111o:t e 142 •& tll:l pr,,...._ °"""....... 415 -.ml 1-o loat -.......: DAILY PILOT 9wodloli ftll<, I 44·4111 -ha... OS. No I ITQll't,, mft, -.,, 811. 2 Ila. m;w, ""· ~iiiliiOUCi -r....,.., '"' ,,.., -. --an. t..... J!!!!. I• 1• ..,.. ---. Qoro, 9--'I'-llOOM, """"1 6 ..,.. In -IO-Tllf w °"'" 1'0ta it1t Milo: ... -CLASS .. D ADS 'Bl\ ... a..S""' lit, .... IPACIOUI -•• '· I .... 2 • 11124111 • Ir ........... ,,.. ...-=..-'""'=I P.O. -U%!. °""" ---c ~'I• t .... C&!I ........ ,--.. -· --t:o, na11N ...... pJ', __ , __ lllltMold 0-"'1tllo-llwn lltU>'"'""W""Mot:o .. :e'i'a,-. iiiUlii 11111... ... ,,. llWm.•S•taL -e:-~-~· !! •••·-::e:. OPIJf~ -L · !!pA f'l~.~:·~~'~.,..,_.. .. 9'J ..,.___!:'!' ........ • • '7 .. • ! ' I • • I tl ' ' I ... -· I , j •J ' l I .. 11 . -. 4J DAILY l'ILOT T-, N-i , 197< ,J ;m~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~·-~~~=~~~~~~,~~~~=~1-.-.. 1rm 1 ~1 ~-. ,~ .. , ~: ~'ll•~l [ ~--l~ 1---]~, I .!...:.--,I~ ( ........ : l[IIJ I m :'; --fill •el;.. l!Ill 1 ' ... , ,..,.~,-·-· "l[ll] I .,,..,.,:.: ' G•rdenlnt Pa'11flnt: I ~Ip Wanted, Ma" 711 H•"'Wairied,M a" 71 ....... Waol!W, Ma l'-111 .J,'W...., M111' 711tieleWantotl,M11' 710 He1e'¥~h'i~,l!}l P-n.. I --J: = -I SALESWoMAH YOUNGSetScbttol -openf *LANDSCAPING* apo 119 ':'! BABYSUIE!llorl~yrold Doll T-'-'--DI ,_ MALE Alttadant lor RtalE1tatoSaft 1 fine Ch!Jdm>' -de.YI: S:&-1:30 PM. f% to Nf!w tawm s pr I n It I er 1 *" Inti" c:-• LL boy, Your home or rniQe. !I v~r .. ..,..,_,e rtctof,.. -• Wbetlchalr patient. 5 da.y fR[[ er R-_. n~n~ 1 • 'cl. 6. Profealona.I teactwrs. S20 ' e "9 "¥"'cieiw :tr. Wft'k M. Mt 8800 di.ya. Men or Women 18 or over with cars. ttaUon wk. Call 540-.,._ · The cu .QtU&JUU, &.I i.1 •• 6'-decb, cleerwp. State llc'd. It MO , "'" 50 -· -~--1 Nowport Bea"" II ,......,, ~-..,._= l B D APr -· -· ~-pm. wa~ons. or llRht trucks. Pleasant outdoor • _, • Beech " ora~e. ..,1666 ~Ysmor n1~"G··"~"'..,.~~~-.· EXP. Kawa.tlan Gardenl!J'. OtSih'nclalre· Int "'r Ext"'',• Lubol '1, BAliYSITrER ~. 1 work. Your available daylight houn. Calif. ~· 2!K Cnty M:'t ~ Lleense T1 r•'"0n'"" ••WYER ~-• • • d 1 ~ ..., u)Vb ..._., Complete garden s e r v _ • e • r 'P<"l'" children ages 3 .l S. My Ii lates u1red A pl daJl~ for J b ...... p '""" req _ >tltt\dc ,...., Limited T nM )nly .;r.1• ~"" Lra-tncd rd· K a'l'n a I an I, 15 4 HS'1I, BENso,.ll~El.PEAlENT!Nsr G -home. 968-7071 aft 5:30. dcescnrlse p a. reqtn!nln . 8p30 y10 3 or l 080 mechan\cal aptll A: Famous license cou~ now mature ~--~ 642-tlABYSnTER for WOiillng e ptlon ,. •· : • : : oupervtotn ~b lllY. X!nt .,.uable tl\ru TubeU Com· houaekeeplnr I< .. -~ 1_C_•_r,_p11J_,,lo_• _____ ... .=.~ GARnENINC -~-'•'-i-642-~19!18""-'•...---I mother my home OIM. P.M. at the location nearest you. ~ture ~~co5 e~ pany. AppUcanis fully re-nunina:. M&-fT1&. lndvt/Comm'l/Ruld • LANDSC'.APING Interior-Exterior Refs. Can~-' 1980 No. Ol11Mll Ave. -Oranee thlnalter. st• r 1 181 imbursed 1,1pon quallrtcatlon. • ~ wanled, 1o All typri work. Remodel, Irvine Industrial Custom work gUIU'Tlln, Com-BABYSITTER • wffkends 6441 C•belMro -luene Park ~ de ndl New or experienced aale1 .ew •t l'IOn'le, m exp "9C. =°::~._ =i. frame, s;7_.f;;~~ Spm. ~t11i~~1:1~~:nc~· ~ ~cla i_:~~d~: fft&n 3~~· F~~ ~rj'!. S~ cc!.".,..!"-, m3>977-t~pe Mr:C ~~ ~J~iet~~~~ ~=~;: ~~~ ~· CARPENTRY-SMALL JOBS EXP.~nlng, landacape Color Coiisulting le Esl., 8artend1rt-Welter1 (Orange Co. Fairgrounds-MAN OR WOMAN to supply ~~~ m~Mr.i.en~!; SECRETARY ~N~ :-'TES A: work, hauling. ~~~. Llc. Bonded, lns. Polynestu nper. Min. syn. Enter from Nwpt. Blvd.) ~~Prod"=~ 832-5440. JOHN'S~~ & Uphol4'-::=. aftl!I' 6 P . m.' No Wuttng .~"" & p/tlme. Ajtply att 5 1405E6 WllllOppoow Ln.,EWOllml ln1tor earn $611 weelc!y DUHJme. TARBELL EXECUTIYE -~· _, * WALLPAPER * Don The n---•-m•-r qua r. mp opr Sl.50 & up tulf t1me. Call Ori-Shampoo f r e e Scotch· HAU.oRANS Lawn/Garden ~111,..v ~ [ •~:"!!!~"""'l'~~~~~'l"!!"'!'.'!""'!'"!"'!'!"!"'!'~~j -··~ !Soll 0 --' t I M 1 Q It W'hen "'""' call "Ma c" 3901 E ~-1 H CdM ((IS) 4t+-1833 or write REALTORS .......... '"""ta ... an s · a n' n c e • u a t Y 54&-14t4 -1--~1711 · o.NllD wy,, Help Wanted, M & F 710 H.tp W•nt«I, M & F 710 Rawlelgb Co., 30S Adellne1------===· Degniuen & all color wmiananahfp. Ral. Reas. St o-"'--.. ,,.._ ~ n .... , -A~ ... ~EN SECRETARY br1ghtenen .l 10 minute Frtt est. alt 6 • 962·9700, PAINTING & PAPERING, ., -....a:J, us. ~•· ~ ..,,..., ¥"' ~· blea c h t or wh ite GARDENING, H aul in g, 19 yn. lnHarborarea. Lie CROSSING GUARD FIBERGLASS MARJNEenglnemechanicto Why .not let ua train you carpets. Save your money by G• ..... e cleanup. Call a rt & bonded. M's furn. . The UCity of lrvl lne ppl' Exlper. lrkamlnaH '1m°' t needed!, run new 1hop tn marina. ~!!e yoHuunwo'"'~ntbeBehottac"h" Verl•n D•t• M..chlntt .. vine me extra trlps. Will --64 2-2356. is presen y accept1n,_a 1-ptte wo • e e manu. Mutt have 5 yn marine .._.,,.,,, ... -&..., • de llvl dining 4:30 free Esllm11.le. fiJS-993.l. BEAUTICIAN catk>ns tor the pMttlon ot Arr>lY 1m Placentla, CM. exp. w/gu It dBi!! + be CaJl Phil Mc Name e, A leader In the m1nl comput· A :ii $~ ~ nn. 17~: Ct ExperieMncedl Gardener 1 ~l'Y J:.mpJet:~:1Jcoa~~ Gd ~ppty ~:1 pleuan.11 llot, tal· ~ing gt.lard to belp ele-Flbergl•sl Tooling gQOd at welding,= & ~~E REAL ESTATE, ~~r ~us~~ean~ COUch 110 Chair $5 15 """" e'IU\up, 11. nt. R.easonab e ent~..... P•v• w o wing. ment .. n. school children ExJ!<r Ma•·-· gen. yocht re~'·. -1·-, oc~=-"=''~c--~~~=~ --·-• · • .,,--· ....,_, Nent work. Rov., 894· . --:~. 1.. 11.. ....,._ .-u """ .. .,,: to ... , vi--1dent of en exp. ii . what counts, not uul 646-68!S2 Best shop In tO\Vn. Miss cross ...... c..., at hesv..., trav· ~ R6Dotturbocharged R.E. Sales • Exp'd. H.B. '" -... i--..... • method. j do work myself. ~G-.-n-.-,.~,~S.ervfce-,---llOUSE pointing, lnl/ext. Prim, H.B. 962-2666. eled lnlersectlons. Guards Equal Oppor. Employer engtpes. We pay the most If Earn up to 90% com-gine<!rlng. Good ref. 5.11~01. acron:o:. t't!lll~. reas. Free BEAlll'ICIAN, experienced are needed from 7:45 am yoo're the best • if not m.lssion. Ecruity partlclpa-U you have an outaoinl pe.r- So I LED CAR p ET s. HANDYMAN • All ldn<h of est. TI41536-5857. only, Sand Crab H air until approx. 4 pm w/times Full Ir P/tirne HelP, forget It! 84&-4125 ariytlme. Uon, No broker competition. sonallty, xln't akilla (typing FLOORS? work, smllll johll a P-AINT-ING • Hone1t, clean, Designs, 9907 H a m 11 t 0 n varying at individual Inter-Del Taco, Newport Beach Desk le ph>ne wpplled. 80, ah 100) a background In cg~;:~l~~Jce.~ ~~::~: ~=~~~o.Lletmsed ~3.1~untlngton Beach, =~~~~p:nt~mf~~ GE~=~LP MATH MAJORS ~~~y ... CalJLtt ~~~ a price YoU can afford. bing -Elertrlcal .l Carpen-INT &: Ext A II *BEAIITICIAN W/NEAT by ttie City of Irvine. Apply MEN ~r & UP LRo'.EAL=7.CC.ES'=:r"A~TE=--_-,Two=--ex-.-I career w/a growing co. that 673-Sl'TJ. try Work 548-5n6. l . ~ ~· c; . App EAR AN CE' FOR at Irvl.ne Police Dept., 19002 Loe.I co. hlrlnt =need salesmen neaied. oHers xln't salary Ii btne-C1ment, Concrol• ng5 spray . c.. ns. Zee Street, Irvine. For in-PART-TI"E EVES. comm.I k>ll -11t fits pleue apply in penon, Local refs. 645-(8)9, Chuck. BUSY SHOP. 548--9919. !ormaUon contact Joan m NEWPORT BEAOt r .. 1a.. Call" G._, CUSTOM cement work , patloi, 1ldewalks , driveways, ~ est., call Joe, 536-7378. PATIOS.PLANTERS Hauling FOR I ' t . ti S HELP bonus .,_.'"' llley, c ean • nea pain ng, Bookkeeper Gumina at 834-5238. CHRJS"l'MA Financial lnatituUon has lm-557-4130. ' interior, t'l!Rs. rates. Call w ---• A to tl * START NOW edia'• p I lo · TRUCK and tractor, fine """ ~~ e n=u one u mo ve DELIVEf(Y of DA IL Y m .., 0 e n n g r RE I.LY •--gal f I gal di •-u11ng J Dick, ~. Bookkeeper with OMV ex manegement trainee. A s......... or e Kt'ft ng & llll ' ay perlence. Send resume t~ PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, 10 $4.75 PER H.OUR · secretary trainee. Mu 5 t Latham. Gen'I c 0 n t · Pla~ter, Patch, Repair newapaper carriers. Re-MINIMUM have good skills. Employer 496-5018, 496-5155. Box 50l, c/o Daily Pilot, quires the use o( a Station Growfhg co. hiring neat well willing to train. Full time. Mon thru Fri 8 am-5 pm All Concrete work. Brick, GF.N. HA111l ng. Treel~hn1b * PATCH PLAST'ER.ING 330 West Bay Street, Costa \Vagon or Van. Conlact Mr. groo~ed nien for customer * Co~~A1f!'1~TIONS Harbor area. Reply to Mesa, Calif. 92626· Harry Seeley, 330 We.111 Bay service dept. No exper. * Math Major clUsitied ad no: 509, C/o VDM slump.stone wk. 894·3533. b1m. Gar & yd cleanup. Est All types. Free estimates Bookkeeper St., Costa t.1esa. needed. Earn to $4.75 nu hr. * l~ Yrs Work Exper Daily Pilot, P. O. Bax 1560, CUSTOM CEMENT WORK 113!'1-2'.m. 5.''.i7·fi904. Call 54CHi825 \Ve "l'rd one Automotlvf' DEUVER TELEPHONE CALL DAILY ' · Cbsta Mesa. Ca. 9263;. 2722 Mlcheloon Dr. lrvlne, Celffoml• 83).:MOll, •xt. 336 Drlws, WALKS. patios. SKTPLOAnER & dumo tn1rk Plumbing pool deckl. Don. &t2-il514. 'vork. Concrete, asphn.lt, 1----''------Bookkeeper with machine On! --..,.-""perlence. Send resume to DIP.ECTOTIIES LH 7'""13 Y tiX>R with the1e RECEPTIONISr- PATIOO, walks, drives. Saw, s.'\1ving, breaking. 84fi.71 to. COLE PLUMBING bttak, remove & replace Hl\olinl: & cleanup by exp 24 hr. service. 645--1161 Box 501 cfo Dally Pilot, 330 Over 1B years of age, with ~ quallf\callona need apply. A lot of variety &: great spot West Bay Street, Costa can, vans or P 1 ck· u P GENERAL OFFICE: Great . for the gal who likes to ban-' M Cal.1 ,,._,,, trucks. Work daylight hours. .,___ f-ad·-....... -nt submit resu.me wfsalary re-die a front desk Good tun.. Equal Oppor. Employer esa, 1 · .:>....u<1, A I g 00 AM to 3 00 PM C11&1a..~ v• .... """' .. ~ quirement I.fl ronf1dence to: Ing-'""-will · ~~ 1:=:;:;::;;;;;:;::;;;;;:;::;:1 PP Y : = w/fine co. who needs gmJI. Classlfted ad no 532 cfo ~ land thlll one. concrete. 548-8668 tor ~t rollcge !h1rlrnt , lge trk. 534-Drains unclogged _ $7.50 QUALITY cement w 0 r k , lR46 or 534-2164. Sewer line to 100' _ $15 patioP, drl~ & walks. For YARD It Gara~ Cleanup. * 549--2502 * e'!t. call 842-5862, Pat. F'ree est. 'r days. Call PLUMBING REPAIR ~~: one automotive dally. 805 Laguna Canyon lng co-workers to work Dally PUot p 0 . Box 1560 Start $450. Call Jan Page, ~ Bookkeeper. Send re!lume Rd., Laguna Beach. w/great stall. $350. Call Costa l\tesa', ~. ir2sai. . 540-6055. Coastal Personnel • Sec'ys Many $500-$800 to Box 50l, c/o Dally Pilot, Delivery &: Sales ·opening Linda Ray, 540-60 55 , Equal Oppor. Employer Agency, 2790 Harbor Bl., • Leral Secretaries $650 330 West Bay Street, Costa p/time, $3 hr. 11tart. Call Coastal Personnel Agency, =C:.Mc=. ====~~~ e F/C Bookkeepen $700 Mesa, CaJlf. 9262.6. Mr. Wlbon, 963-2440. 2790 Harbor Bl., C.M. MEDICAL Assiat. X 1 n t RECEPTIONIST/typist, 60 lOOo/u:::e:. ~r CABINET repair work. Your DENTAL front ore. prior ex-GENERAL ottlee-tralnee. typist. To $600. Lakewood. w.p.m. Muat be attractive. 4500 Cam 5 Dr anytime, 548-SOn. No job too small 1_C_ont __ •---•-----YARD. garage cleanups. * 642-3128 • U•111o * n-modeU Remove tree!l, dirt, Ivy. Sewing/Alteratl?nl ~ na °"" ng Drlvewys, grading. 847-2666. Gerwick & Son. Uc'd place or oun. Mu.st have per prel'd. Appt. making, MUBt type aceurately, Like (213) 531-7420. C.M. area. 545-9425. 546--2ll8 N~ 'eeach 673-6041 * M~2170 Housecl•11nfng • DreMmaking -Alterations DesW1t'd to suit you truck or station wag. Call filing, posting, typing, etc. figures A detail work. RECEPTIONIST • Medical. 64&-674l alt 6 as backup to ofc m1rr. Health CU"e field nr Org Xlnt typist. To $ 6'(1 o. ~ JACK Taulane -· Repair HOUSE OF CLEAN Call Jo * 64&-&446 remod., addit. a> yn. e)('P. ll SEWING-DESIGNING eWI . • ·Sa1ary open & hrty. 646-2481 Cnty Airport. 546-9501 Lakewood (213) 531-7.m. SECRIITARY • Receptionist. days. 540-2485 aft 6. HANDYMAN _ 40 hrs 'M!ek. * , .. _..,,..,.. ... ,..,.. ..... I Electrical contracting ex- DENTAL Assistant, Exp'd Over 40. 31755 S. Coast Hwy. 1n ~ t ~ii ~ms.I ~ ~: Lic'd, My Way Co. 547-<lell>. F~~:::.' i';~;,s64~~!24~a s. ~.,. ... n 1'Vomcn. R"~". ~'\!,.·· Dreftlng Xlnt Honl'll"!'lesntni;t $10 min. Call 848-7450 CEMETERY ~e, 3 de.ya -.veek. ·-=So=._,1.agu~= .. =·c-,---~ oon eu en '"' opening. 831~1400, Mon. tbru HELP wanted for C11.ble a Fri.. PLANS-HOUSleB. Rem 0 d s , By Day. Otm 'f'nlnsportatlon CUSTOMS DESIGNS Room Addl:tiort11. $50 up. * 838--0648 * Mod to HI fashion a1teratlons and FUNERAL 557-0626. Eves. 557-9695. F.XP'D. HoollCC!eAning $2.50/ l'lso 548-9768 · 8 am-4:30 pm . * DENTAL secretary-bkkpr. television sales. Good pay. 2850 E. Mesa Verde Dr., F'lexible h on r s. Suite A, CM. 54&-m!. Teleprompter. An Equal DRAPERY _ Carpet-5a.les. Opportunity Emplo~ Call Decorator type ga1 to assist. Alan Linde 642-32&1. Laguna Hiiis SECRETARY, p/time far CPA firm. Stat typing, Ute bkkpng. Expet'. necess. Bill Todd, 640-06ill. hr. Own , .. ,.n•oortation. Alteratlons-642·5145 Gardening 673-29:lB Neat, accure.tE.'. 2C yellI'!I exr •. COUNSD.ING Now Interviewing AL'S LandscaP"t"i!:. Tree re-Prof. Carpet Cleaning Tile moval. Yard remodeling. Also windO'W's &: rtoor care. Truh hauling, lot cleanup. Call Dutch 53'1·1508. 8am-6pm busy store, $350 mo. to HOUSEKEEPER, ~IVE IN. We •re now accaptlnv Dishwashers Day & Nite SECRETARY • Xlnt typist. Xlnt opportunity. To $600. Lakev.-ood (2131 531-74*1. SECRETARY, part tinie, 9 to 1, Mon thru FrL 5tlr544l. start. Perm. 492-2'l54. Chllil care. f?:P d. Good apptic•tlons for_ Repair 1prinlden, ~1166. Janitorial CERAr--1-TC tile De\v & remodel. Fref' est. Small jobs welcome. 536-2426. BeautUul Pacific V I e w Memorial Park ls located on the hllhkle overlooking the Newport Bay area. Electronics References. Lido r s 1 e. 615-8399. EXPERT Japanese gardener, kmwhO\J/, upkeep, WINDOWS, carpets, uphol, plant, pest, trirp, cleanup. draperies, bouM cleaning. 968-3486. Dt1uxe Cleaning Se r v • PR0:=;00FE==,,o.Sl~O~N"AL.,--J~a-....,.--I ~536-~~"~32-----­ Gardener. Reliable. Free Landscaping Tutoring CR t L OREN'S Beginning Guitar Lessons S2 per 1iii hr. ·-=·. Cemetery Iott, crypts & nlchtl, before need purchase plan. A fast growing company with complete service faclli- tics. Mortuary, Chapel. :Mal1801eum A: O'ematory all \Vlthln the cemetery. Immed. Openings HOUSEKEEPER, full time. Inspectors Referenc8 , required . Assemblers Newport Beach a r c a . Lite Experience 646-1243. Long or lhort term • Housekeeper, to do work auignmentl on Thundsys for 5 hn, Exr.:rloncod Brolor & Prop Full Or P /Tlmo Apply In Per'90n 24001 Ave De La Carlotla Laguna Hills ask for Mr. 'nKlmu. 1 SERVICE Station salesman and lubeman. full and ~ time 'ava. Top ~ and fringe benefits -exp. prefer-I red apply af Shell l7tb and Irvine, N.B. ' UL Call 963-4974. JAPANDE Gardener . Complete Yardwork and Oeanup. Free est. 642-3102. * EXP. Japanese Gardener. By monthly job. NB, CM. Laguna area. 548-9479. QUICK CISH .THROUGH A WANT AD 642-5678 * * * COMPLETE land!C8.plng & Installation State licensed. r Comm. Industrial, Apt, _ I[{] 5.14-482!. liiiiiiii Palntint & I 700 Paperh•nglnp J:Jb Wanted, Ma .l TRAVELING • An! you INT .l-EXT painting, paper going to the Caribbean hanging, natural w 0 0 d Islands or South Seu! Can finishing. 548-'l'!m. cook. bertmd. etc. For PROF. patnh!r, hone! work, small salary. Love to l'8S. lie/~ ... Int/ext free travel. Call ~3632. e11t. RE'la. 54ft2759. Job Wanted, Female 701 We want 2 emotionally mature men. No exper. necessary because or our proteulonal training. Do not pass up thlll opportunity. PHONE 644-0212 Irvine ~ 10-3. Expel. 644-007. Anaheim 53.l-2322 NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO HOUSEKEEPER/cook ex· Nltes Tempo Tern.......,...., Help perienced, live-in, $300. Full Time (At the El Toro oU ramp S.D. Freeway) ....... -~ 673--1879 Please Apply EMPLOYMENT or f er e d Male. aml Ute mfg. co. needs reUable, full time. employee. Oppty to grow w- co. Min experience req'd. 979-2290 Jim <line', wkdlllll. ESCROW OFFICER TNSURANCE : P/time, ex-Betwn 8 &: 1l am It 2 &: 5 pm Equal Oppor. Employ('r P< " CdM ins. agency. Gd salary. Send resume P. O. 18542 MacArthur RN.LYN Box 8, Corona del Mar, Ca (Acro11s from O.C. Airport) Pvt duty • an shifts. Coun· 92625. NewportBeach -~ . I nterviews, ~ Equal Oppor. Employer registration 9-5 dally, except SUn. Lescoulle N u r s e s IRY1NE J>ERSal.INEl. NEWCOME!l WELCOMING• -· 351 Heepital Rd., ~~lll~Ci> .. rt:~V"V Hospitality llo!t""' N.9 . C4ll anytime, 64W95S ,,,,_,,""'"'""" nfl,,,JU ...._I To Call LOCALLY on new or ~ WALLPAl!ER HUNG CaJI Rebco 646-24-19 PROF. Painting, al!lo root!, Free & Fee Positions resident families brlnging1's~A~IL~l..,--.~h-an_d_wo_rk_OJ>!'_"_· GOOD TYPIST Opportunity to join onC! of the Adhesive Salesmen to $UK ~ & clyjc info. Good pay 1.nga Mciobbin s a 11 a Wiii do your typlnt •I DARRELL WARD nation'• large•t Mvlog• & Secreiary to $650 P/time. Must have haj>PY 54f).3684. • I accowi:. cell. lnter/exter. Licfln11. Free est. 645-5191. * * * her home, Will r lckup loan aaaoclations. Min. 3 ..,... Sec'ynite sh $500 smile, car, typJ.ng ability, SALES cl-ed FuJ .,,.~ Girl Friday to $S25 547...J095. want · I •nd deliver loci H .B., v .P. & Dir. of SaJe1 sale escrow exper. req'd. Accounting Oerk $500 NURSING Assistant for semi tllne, permanent, good ~· F'o'V':i W.~, ;Jc: pirer,.. .,...,.,..,....,..,,..,..,...,1 PoslM,...tloo~ffl~~tExed~jlourent -~~~ 'P.lt Beceptfl'yp_lst $2.f!O .hr .. invalid lacW, 2 days Yo'k· new store o~~ Fountain or wlll work by hour CHECKER..Auto Partt sales Ing concti&ns 1i"~ .... e =-New bus/lDS tiric to $550 Relief for nurses on regular x~·-~ ~.:_~S call 147--3095. cll'rka & patt, men & "'"'6 Girl Fri/Ute sh to $55() duty during Dec. Must be tom:-mc: Ml ~-t., caahiers. Some 18ls exp. fits. 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.M. e.ble to Wt. Expd. $2.25 hr. Costa Mesa, CallL NEED help at home?' We 1U E. 19th St., C.M. Pleaae CaU Penonnel 642.1470 ~3547. * S.l•s Maneser SERVICE Station Salesmen f/tlme ews shift. Also, p/time eve1 &: wknds. Must have llle inecJi. knowledi;?e. Neat appearance. Apply AM 2590 Newport Blvd., C.M. SERVICE Station Salesman-: Mechanic, exper. o n 1 y . I F/time. Lie. Prerd. Neat! in appearanee. APply AM, I 2590 N...,,... Bl., C.M. SEWING machine operators exp pref, McKibbln Salls, 541>-3684. SHAMPOO Girl1. Apply in penon. Hair Hunten, No. 70 Fuhton Island, N.B. SIGN Painter. top wages & bene!ll:s. Gold leaf • etc. .Ne1D 'tfeon, 531.,;m4. •· Stat Clork to $500 Trad~r's Paradise lines times dollars have Akles, Nurses, *CHRISTMAS MONEY* For Appointment NURSES AIDES St el El Toro Housekeepers, Compan»ns, (2131 243-6251 ~ el'OO ee. store. · Homemakers, Up j o It n , Earn Sl004200 week p/tlme ExtenD>n 339 JUNIOR Salesmen; 11).15. Exp pref. Day shitt. Beverly Exp'd, Aho p/lime help. 547-QiSl. playing goU. can Mr. Mac, Earn $21).$40 per week get-1f.anor Conval Ifosp, 24452 58&-l.210 or send resume Box * Bookkttper, Mon-Fri, 9 541-5304. Glendale Feder•I ting new customera for the Via Estrada, Lag Hills. 612, .lJ Toro. AM_ 3 PM; or wUl do your CLEANING penon, 3-5 eve. S•vlngs DAILY Pll.OT. This Is not a e OPERATORS e SALESLADY tor jewelry Knowledge of 10 key Good figure aptitude Call Lorraine WESTCLIFF Personnel Agency 204.l Wl'1iltcliff Dr .. NB 645:2nO books at home. 644-1074. per wk. Ole. In Npt Center. 40l No. Brand Blvd newspaper route and does stnde needle .I: specla1 store. Ref1 req'd. u-lp Wanted, M-&-F-710 Send reaume to: Claalfted GI--" ,_ C tl203 not include collecting or machine, exp'd on drell9Cs * 548-3402 * SI'QCK boys wamm. Part n-Ad No. 483, Daily Pilot, -• .. , • delivering. 'l'nlllsportatlon ls &: sportswear. &t&-<l3J8 time for Fountain Valley P. o . Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Equol Oppor. Employer Pl"OVkled. We work four o ............ n:woor>T.,..,. ·-· TIM"' FOR store "'-·--M--'·--ACCOUNTING, bookkeeping hours after \l;and 8 on r 1u••11:.1.iw.;>' aa..,., must ~ ' ......... ""' '""'I.UV• •--1 Wh d I t LA _C."=llC:f.°'~=2626~.----~-type U·-In C M ·-a Stores, Inc. 841 Baker St, .-..:u""ary. Y rve o CLEANING woman for ESCROW SEJ:RE'l'ARY: Saturday. We openlnlr! . ""' ' ' ....... • c.aeta M or LB? Challenging. In-N Cen m bl Fee Paid. Top Eacrow of· for Fountain I: South Mature. Full ar pt time. t!tiUICK CASH ===-~~· ~----1 tere8tln1t, position, female. ewport t~ 0 ce dp:, fleer needs sharp gal. Great Huntington Beach areu on-548--0SM am; 847-8910 pm. ,,. ~ENT 17 le over, Part Costa Mesa. CPA office ~~~~ti:1' 1n~r:':S . .:: location on waterfront. Al!KI ly. You mu.I. be out of P/time omoe CI ea n t n g . THROUGH A timl" job. Eve 4 hrs . .t.. ~-F 32' Columbia Sabre, aleeps 4. Trade for equll;)t In Mam· moth condomlnfum1. ~l71-0812 m 776-6tn "62 Ford Ptckup Ranchero, 'M Pontiac Grand Prix, Swap for mofon:ycle. Plul or mlnu1 fff!! "8-1859 ElmANT new 2 BR, 2 BA. ----· I bib l3.5M eq. lor tndo/T tor Palm Dnert aonda or 30' + yocht. m.:mo 0....... ONE btdaoc:cu CONDOMIN· Mir • Wiii trd moo: eq\)'. ._, cm', boet. camper er ?t c.11 la i-al HEii· ~ rl'.W: REAl.TOllS S'i>llll . LOT. la~ ..... - ... -"' o.._ fir 11. ' ... '*'° ._, -.. ··-~. .~ - .• ._,PIS. AIC.. liOOG oood, •'..,.... wanr ., ..... camuo, cr IVPor~C * * * CommeM\IJ'Rte ~n llChoof by 3 PM to Plush small bank, Ne..--t, and 4 hrs. Sat. a.m. :salary educ.lion • exp. • 644~4. fee positions. Salary to $ID). ..rv•• + hon A pl ·~ J ck C-" llel H •~·-• ~te. ExperlenceJ Ap.........,,, 2 hrl nite• ... Exper. ' us. P Y >..N.JU a -far •wlnt. CLERK TYPIST .... en aye1, ~. t ·---~ DAILY PILOT -· Mid Clh· CANYON lake lol, goU Cl'!M! [iOiiii~-"""",....,iii_,iiii Coutal Penonnel ~ncy, ven pr Io r ty . couple only. F1ne detail ~·· way 'J"• vi~. nr. lake. und. utll . Ad .. rtlsl-•--rot•ry Eooiogy m Ind ed pl 21!ll Harbor Bl., c.M. ==="'-_,,,.----,-I wortc. Toll PQ'. Ca 11 SUP ERlNTENDENT·tract- $10,0IXI tree A clear. Trade • ..., ~ w/general bu&lneu exper. KENNEL Manager for 1,=213"='/!m""'--OUl=oc··~--~~·I WANT AD homes. Plea s e tend tor lncorne property or TT Great oppor. for a.mbltlous, Work w/lntere1tlng people EXP'D SERVICE STATION animal bolp. N.O. To S4SO PART time office work, No resurite: Drawer A, Hun- Br"'"•7 "•"" highly akllled girt. Brains, who care about the future. G In • cl In t;...,,.0n Beach CA -· ...: .,. -· I I I I • -• 1-·• No h S •.1m MAN, permanent 673--1783. mo. room g .,. enn g experience needed. Over JB. 642 5678 '"'&' ' • .. ~ ~ eqb' on 950 acre1 nr. n tat ve m:i16WU ''="· • neceuuy. tart .-wu. exper ei.sen. Send ~~~me 10 ~~.c...,7'°'4"'19". ,.-====-·1:0===,,.-·.,,..,"''"' Class!Hcd Ads ... 642.5678 Yuclapa. Bal $400,000. Int. ""!!!~~~~~!!1!!!!!!!!1 ~·~ =: $ EXTRAS $ Cl8""11ed ad no. -c/o PBX . RECEPT Holp Wantod, MI F 710 Holp W•nted, MI F 710 onl,y 't~. Fantutlc views, '= 2790 Harbor m., C.M. Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1S60, M tu • hWI. vaJleyl. For lnc. prop. ASSEMBLERS *Companion:s.cret•ry M~~.B~P. ~:~'b.11' Cotit• Mesa. ca. 9'2626. MEDICAL ,_J>effiEPT or t ~. 547-6469. ht A 2M &bl.ft .tn ~ttm>nlcs Keypunch wilh ......,. Inaurance know- p••= •~ •••· AAA N firm, No Exper. """Ired. to la<IY In nun!ng home. CASTING SERVICE •- n.anu;:.. •JUo -· at. ·Apply Ln pttlOn. 9 lhnl 3. Must have car to vt .. 11 l or 4 Need• all agC!I A types All Shift& Thll A p/ttme. ledge. For new Medical Lab, T~t, 2J yr lae. $30,<XXI Potter I: Bnunfleid Div. tirMt a week. Wte tot tor lndependcnl A major Tmiponry. To $3 hr. Fas.hlOn Isle. N.N.N. blc. Trade Sl.25,000 AMF Incorporated drtwt and do occutonal productk>n COTnPftlliff. trvlM 540-44~ 6«>-0140 eQb' for lp I.PU, or com-26l.81. Aftopuerto lll!Cl'l!larlal work. C • 11 Licensed . Recent Ca1tlngs: Anaheim 533-%322 PBX Answering Service merclal, Bia. 547-&tEIJ. San Juan CapU!trano 494-16*> bet 9 &: ll:30 am. SfAR JS MADE NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Eventns1 A crave )'U"d m'.. U00.000 tqty ln $500,000 An Equ.i ~ empl M!F or after S:30 pm. KISS KISS KCLL KILL Tempo Temporary Help dudlna: weekends. Costa bide Portland, Ore. AAA ATTR.ACi1VE rtrl, good COMPANION • h~knr. for e Vlla1 Parts LAUNDRESS, F/time. Mesa Mesa area. 542-ll64. N'ationlJ. Ttnlnt, on N.N.N. ftaure, model blklnlt, etc. 1 eldtrly lady In CdM. ~ 0 Bladl:en~eln Verde Conv. Hotp., 6161 Practkal 'Nursn :31> )'r be. Want pr1me lhoPI afternoon per wt"ek. Tt'lrrtftc htnllh. but mentally defi. • BJack-Gold Center St.. C.M. 5'&-5685. & AklM cntr or ?! Bkr. MT-6469. pa,y, 1trtctly private. Wrlte clent, torlttt, etc. ~ e OM!erleaden LEGAL Secretary, exper. All Onu-. Co. Pvt duty ot TR.ADE 5 acret comtr of P .O. Box 10516, Santa Ana hl>TM. TBlrd to drtw. $3511 • BJ Hammer Good lkUli. Salary MIO· floor at pvt duty WQH. No eectton. Roed on 3 akiel, 9:2711 mo. Aft 3 pm, l'15-3a. s-cHord C•1tlng1 Harbor artt. Repl,y to wall fO!' pl)'. Ft.er. nf!Cftl. Near VldortSlle, IDr Oranre Automotlvt (213) 464-3121 claalfted ad no. SOB, c/o Int~. ~lion g..s Ooulll)< -· * S•IOI Tr•l-1 115) Cool< • Dally Pilot. P .O. Bolt ISllO, dally, except &in. Leacoolle ~ Huae ~110n pl'Off!'llm. Ftt Pald CU.ta Mf!la. ca a;28. N\lnlf!I R.eglltry, 351 WlLL=~-tn4o==:;;sr;,,.~Chrh~· I C!arftr bpportunlt1f•· lnsldt New &ullcllng Foreman, nibbt-r/ptutic1 LEGAL .cntary at leut 5 HOIPital Rd.. N.8. Call Roamer, •es. pl\11 tw Dft911"1 1eUlrw; ot lira I automotiVl' In to Sl!K )'Tl ~ ~net. Call anytlme, 6 4 2-9 9 5 5 ot Motor' Ytiebt. Bn*er, equip. Many bel'M!flll. APPlY Newport Center Adbeltve Salts Rep JUK Elalnc CTI4J55'..Q33. $41)-99$4.. 113J.1811 Mart C Bloom, a.to"''"· lndtMtrill E""loe<:r t!IK LICENSED ohom rhl 3 PROD\ICTION ...n~. •29TI :IOOO H"'bor Btv<I. au... ~:;._. SecJ:;;!ll,!1 to = d wt. v= SIOao TECHNICAL ~w.=w="'1o1""""oo'"'"'1.11"'"'"Palm..,-·,1 Pk. 6lltl2 Uncoto Blvd. Ga>'· CHll!I' CODK s.cr.wte. to llOO ~boa Bay Clob Beouty TRAINEE Aw m" flarbor Blvd, In df!n Grow, l«>«I Brook· PBXJGen'I Ofc $450 8&lon. IO«RI (Clan to Melkl SMl1) ~ Want property In harat. f"Ullertan, ll21 So. Gen. Ofc/Cuhlft' $2.25 hr UVE kl help-board A Growtrv co. dnJnos depel\d-w. Npt. Bch. Wiii alto con-Euclid SI. For Emp&o,ft Cafeteria Acc'otmtln& (l(o~ S4SO 1"COm + .:ime ltliaf'y. able person, Nib IChll:d sScttr T.D. SUbmlt. tmM.110. AVON om.lSTMAS EARN-ExPf:~ F!uentlal ln ren· Credit Cter1t $375 • '6-2>24 * Rl'ftd wlbutc machine lhop STEPHENS 40' FBTS INGS can http maJce ~ eraJ cookirla:· AJP CoftltrucUoa i 100 LVN"i, S IO ll ihltt. for 00~ malh A ICl~f)(.'f <:laMa or Y.ctd, Luxury~ =~AYaW::,"'U~~!:.,':f Jlours 6AM·2PM.5da)'lwk ~~~:r' vai..nt holptta1. t445 f"latrdexptr.tod"'t~ Cando. I MW 28"'8 im'l'ts, I•"•, nmi Avofi pmdncl.1 ro; Sopnior AW:., N.0. ~-~man '!°/tmlmo"' XlnlllC ,ur Hemet. !lab. tnoonw. Kl"n:, c;\d-lrM:lstfble Oiriltmu Apply ·1n tM P~I Atlsncy LVN nlatit lhltt. U0T:90 ~~. r e. t OP- or T (Ilt) ~ S1'7-640t. Celalcnue. Ca:t Now W.7tM' Pt'n(lnntl Dep1u1ment W 0owr Dr., N.L newrlv ""M"nor Conv HMp., Pltut ApPb Like to tnwSeT OUr Trader'• BABYSITI ER. Mon • nun • am~ _pn1 ~~!'!!;..,.;;;;;•;;;;";.."!' .... I ~Xlntifii(.Jrfnp~ bnftt. 49&-5781_:,. GUL TON INDUs'tRIE!) -..ce1umnblor)')ol n!tN. 5'30 to t •:IO. H.B. PACll'IC MUTUAL ! MAID"""' tn exc1wf110 1or 822 Pnxluctloo P~ : ~~ ...... own ...... 111-me aft BUILDING FEMALE~ ... ch. If. motel .... ms Nnport ·N ........ 8'•Ch ......,. 6:30 PM. 100 Nt'wport Cfnrer Or., NB tendant. LoetJ blCtl achool. ~~ C.M. ~ '42-0163 foll 5 budca. • 8A8\'SJ 11 ER. Own tranfl:p. Expft' Jftf'd. 53&-8314. MAINTENANCE-Man for Equal Oppor. F.mpklyft' * WANTED FOR Hochman's Delicatessen & Restaurant Opening In November • Delk•tesaen Counter Men • Waitresses/Hostesses/Cashiers e Bakery Sales GlrlJ e Sandwich/Salad Men • Busbo)'1/D!Jhwubera • Catering Truck Driver • All Aflpllunts To lo 21 I <>tor Apply In Po....,, I PM • 5PM 421 E. 17th Stf'MI Cool• - An Equal Opportunlty Employor M/P * * VI<. So. O>ost Ptua. Wed., The fut<ll drs,, In the WcAI. !Jlt> to .u.def Our Trw1"1 mottl,,ln ......... lor apt. Doo't fllW up the ""'' • ,_, --C:al ~ •. a Dally Pilot Ousllls<I -coktmn lo 1or ,...i 1!'11 "'"""' Blvd., CK. "!Jol'! It In clwllled, Ship !•••••••••••••••• am. IMHl'IL Ad.-5U....,5d!!l'lor511udto. 5'H'IS. toSltttnllnultat..,._ • • , ' I h t. or I• ill t. 9 ;, o. & k. ct- nd un- -· ,...,.,,, Hc:t · 2. 1971 l(IJJ ~ - .~;;;;;"';•EnJ;~;;;M;;;&~j:;7~1;0 1 HtlpWtnlod,MII'711 Antlq-eoo o... -111 "'---•i. 111 R Tr•lltn-Triwl , l---:;...;.;.:.:;;;;;;!.,;;:.::;.:..:.::1:c;;;;:;;;:.;:.="-----..;;.;;;; !!! ~ llLll . TV, ..._, HIP'l1 -· ' lm=wted .. ~ ~ SYSTE"S WAITJ:RS A waitnuH. OAK bclw ~ •• c y . GARAGE SALE SlturdQ AN'1'IQUE tnua. $25. Camp • ,_ '1tTl SEA RAY'' '11 wt::sn:rUf neld t.r:at ,. ~ M •tead.v . part time fOr ArmoiN. oad tlped lamp. and~ 10:0& •.m. IO ~. 1914., •/'f} EVERYZenltbaRCA in&Olda.Pn -jet .. -........ Ntu ..... sa,... ltlW ANALYST prlv.te country club. Muat St.__.._ Matoc dUna 5;00 p.m.-409 Hllh Dr., cuU. $15. x ... c:arda, "" _,. '"'· Alo -at ' • ~ -··-"' ... • w·-~.0......1 -old .... , a".,·~'. ;..,.<--------1 be experienced. Apply In eecy, Carv, touch .A chalr J..aawia Beach $8UT· ta. Otbet antique.., Belt .-. .... -.. --~ .,. u-...... VWI "' ,... bofnet , ·~·~~-~ >'tnan-C&nyon -·•' Oub, I Bir ··-~-•· In YT· o1n11e bed, 2 -t !roo 64&-'IQZI yr...:.. 6 I ........ 0. tratkr. Call aNr 12: -~. 12'15, 816-4600. t.R'WDl'\DW> a,,..,.,, (>f!l'IOn ~~.Lynch, Big ~~tt~~A~:_ 12 lY;.!· old A!fllQUE$-Yictol'iao ttfer. T23 W .VK:torla. C.M. =~~.:~~ Sklln& A fishbw, taade'm ~_!~..:All frtwls, tinted , G ~vum haa im,. Canyon Or, Newport Beach. old brome candkwdctt. prdtn bfncbea. ~ Fnmcb MOVING Sale! Beautlful all lets. 90 ~ Cull « tJOOrl. <n4) "'°'""°· Mrnn' SeU! "11·11' Nomad medlt.tt oS>enin&• for S1L WANTED: Gall! Pvt time Needlepoint loYt'leat. "Match pomdln beaten. nee9"00d dlninr table, ! ieavet. 6 red rerms to 36 1'1'11». fdces ~ SELLI Trailer • Self-eontalned -:ff'~ MUil have min. S2 per hr Tra1nlng I: carv lnWd mv table. Vk:toriaa needlepoint arm vdwt chain. 2 ~ llif.n the d1acowitm wtth 27' __ ..._,,_,_ .,.,_.._ Many Dll!M . Jmnwtcu.late. 1 yn. 1.vy exper. w/lrg materll.lt i urn I 1 he d Beaut 6 pc Fr carv. bedrm. d\&lr oU and bra.a chest, =-Szn. -.. Mile our own -· .. 11~ 8el"Vlce? -· .. -: •-... ~ ••• ~. s.s'. !Ul.JJ&& or ~ ROY CARYft, •---~.,. A abllll> lingerie. 6'15-1900, 6'15-18Tl.' ~ -Olis. Lota brua° ud -oil lamp. "·•· 'No -~ ' ·~ _, ,_ to min.la. ~ u 1 er re. m<n. m--un TUltin-Alto Oak ~ stacked CM!I' phone. rm ~ C: ~ _:tluta, Depth tinder, 135 itnY F\lUy Auto Serv&ce, parts M9 i:w E. lTtb SL ~ ~n::;ua:n~'...~-WHOD~A~?RKT Appl&ancn M glul' tront boc*ca•, oak Republic. CMMtr5438 un 3329. ~.u~·.,..,~ Call FORD Bronco tront end-Coo Meu 5tMt4t w/GROUP IN-~~ty CHOOSE --•-~. -~ chlld• n><lrer,, llm••• RUG, aYOCOdo, .,... ...... -·--~-and~ ~ USED BMW' l:/O{ PERsOv;:u,cr for ~'7be....,...~: OVER !llO wuben. cll7tn. dllbel. brua,: C!')'Btal, 2 ml 1111 ft wiUI pad. hauAe I · 24' SEA RAY FIB ~~~~'"':iu~nt · I N E L I p A y R 0 L L ap. bou Meii or women. Can be refrilereton b:um $S9.95. Fftnc:b ~ w I IJ e U'~ ~~P· Prt. Ply. h .. '1"111 s S P I ( I • h e r 2 3 5 H p ud plrdon lft,r for rear:: ~ .. 1600 plications moet ~ble slla:hUY handicapped. Vtl, 5'5-079J. dh1pemll!n, oootemponrcy Sat I: 'sun .~! . OM(;Tandem trailer • 6tll l50 pn.. 53'1..mt or 70 2002 ' reti..d. Age 21 to 10, Ill(>-e DISHWASHERS, -· ~-· twin 11)1~ A only. CL 1 LI-, 1 Tlmff, $2.0ll . """'M!l;r.;o. <n<l 6M-522!1. -· '71 2IOO SEDAN Podtlon imm1Wll documen-plement your income. Drive dryen. reblt, guaru I: bm ........,, walrllt .0 lnch U' Oak etwrch pew, $50. 1968 TROJAN 26' 100 HP,1~=~~~~~~~~ I CREIVER BMW tatkm, apeclflcatlon I: ~ a cab 6 hn or more a day. delv'd. !39-'fD>: 54&-6211.. round" table, Kodak 550 Antkp! aiD:>l desk, $20. FWC lntenrptor ftytrldae ordination ot programming Apply tn penim, Yellow cab $80. 1 YR. pam, del 6 in. Caroulrl slide projector, Antique ~. $30. Uned 3 Kittens, 7 weeks old. Call ss DF BT 'outrt ' 1 l§l Saln · Servke .. J.euing A lhaWla.Uon or these Co., 186 E. 16th St., Cotta ataD. i...te mod. aD Olde 24'.4" x 36" CUiiom brau drapes, J2'x8', 5"ldl', 6'115', before 2pm xlJtt_ (7t4>846--4m H Haen, t..twW. Q 3l8 W. Lst St.., Santa Ana -...... Kenmore .......... 1139-ltrl. llJoeplace ......_ 2 bnul $30. Call S41H>4m. M6-621T IS' """' 4> bp .;..:.,..,, . . IJ.S.1171 : WOMAN to design 1: sell 1am119. OUbkte wrought iron FREE to -""" home 4% .,.. -._.,_ ' Ct.ASSJC 1960 BMW t1 .... • _ benefit. 1: unique wot1t window ahadeL We will G.E . port dllbwuber. lJke mmtture' tru.c. chairs It MltceO.....aiua • ...,,.. · .,. ·• ~. new carpet, Ant'---~· •' en9b'onmetrt. For con-train. Custom Shade A new. $85.. 20381 Cypras, S.A. tables.~ white drapes, W•nted l2G ~d =Male. Adu1t. DI>-new lowtt shaft. $496. .,_./Cl•115cs 9Sl Xlnt cond. }Tf<eway spd. lO lidtn.tionln please submlt Drapeey Shop, 35.15 E. Coast Reigh ts. 541)-7325 1arp maboprot framed y. . ~1243. , l!M8 Pon =-hs.. 50 MPG. $ 5 0 0 • • resume, eluding salary re-Hwy, CdM. COLDSPOT REFRIG., =~wer me cab-ODNA·cablbet ot butch.~ 4edLO:iY ~S, mix-~, Rent/CMrt'r 9ii 4 dr tk.Sllxi: =.1'• qufrementa ln oontidence to WOMAN. Part time 11 &'OOd. woddlw COid.don ' •weaters, tique er new. La tee . ' wb. Make offer. 642-5334 •1 Oaumed ad no 5.14 c/o • am S,30. * 536-2953 brio+brae. Reuonabl°r: &M--4687 54S-&l81 LEASE: 40 day1 yrly $400. ---"""--=::..:...=='--;. ·=if~~ Box01560, ~~on~ G.E. R.e~tor Freezer. BIG CaO)'OD. Sat t: Sun, 4th WANTED~ t ~ ta *KITTENS* ms* ~·,;:::. 10 ~ 4. S to Sports, R•~, Rodi 959 1------;....,-- •--... 1 ' · 899 W 19th St CM Good condition. Avaflable t: 5th. 10lln-5pm, Sm1 bicy· hid ... _... aea 90 l male tiger st.ripe, 2 fem, 29'· · ,...., "--·- 1· """' --Oppar. Employer · " · · ll·ll. $50 ~ cie $5, t) gal aquarium SlO. e-a-""'"'..:~., _ 1 aolid blk. eves 492-6644. Boo-e.~n -.... UJl'V':tte-!lenl.i cwitom.f>lt ,, Woman to do Ironing • Eled:"weldhle kit $5, Elect ....__,, FREE German Sborthair ••1 _,, 7V7 Wftip eng • .sfg Enon cam, i· 'J'EACJIER Exper, for Newport Beach area Fumlture 110 $l¥>e jJoHahblg kit S2, Musical IMtrumentlm fem Pediaee,•no , 25' CAJ....25 Fbgla lloop, 6 F.U. beads. cyclone, Holly: NEWPORT DATSUN •, pre-«bool wanted 2 hr * 673-5990 * . QiUdren A adlt clothes. all All ahola. I!Ai , 6t6='a. HP. OB $55CXl Call Strat dme-ra.Ho ffpd. w/Hurst. • "daily, 10:3) -12 : 3 0, BLUE linen IOfa. oak MeditL an, Canopy BR Sui~ OLDS Studio trumpet with yr. En r 11 ·b t Mictuiuct.llell 4: ll polli. r.e. ntOO. To see. &t5--1M7 6 drawer cbellt w/dbl. w/d@llk IL dresser Rn No. and ... _ • ,._ --~ • • Call Chris at 53fi-43S4 ' " doorl· lf'!t!D studio bed & -a--1• ....,, case m ........ .._._ new. J:•~·~~~~-------ll~=;;i;;i;;;=-:;~i=;;i:i:;;--:;; •. TELLERS e 1~ bols..r., red ..i..i -~ ._,_ Saint G«rre Rd. Ideal Cbrbtmas gift. i1<0. 11~1 30• Wander Marll 11 '29 Model A Rauhter, all -Opioo ...... l!'.rr.,. spreads. Headboards. chow NB. 646-1287. .............. Yet1r old. Xlnt conclltlon. , ChevY ruoniM Far. Xtru. Teller exp ttqUired . V table, nlte stands. a 11 POWER mower $15., stereo CDNN trumpet, $11.D. Folk Slps .6. Slip !Sl, Baythore $850. OJ] ~G. (Apply In ~) walnuL Pecan rotlee tble. $25., o.ntsb r.cllner $35., guitar, $50. Lik< "'''" Marina. IH,000. 640-1'125. Trvcks '62 e<i.<000 A Aho Jam~ ski boots. ¥oto Ponocrib $9.. Prof. hair * 6G-982t * TRAVEi-looking tor sharp ntlques -Guzrl 750 CC Motorcycle, dryu UC!·· tge sailboat LYLE Ousieal guitar & Pets, Gener•I &Se l~~ ~mi::~. FORD CAMPER yng woman or man with SCRAM LETS cameras, m1sc. Abeolutely wincb, nusc. Items. 3089 case $30 Panasonic port. MONKEYS FOR SALE. Xlnt ed. Handles A non '71 YAN C:icel ~~!Jo~ve~ • ~nableoffer= = l.ADe, .c.M . taseette$18..&»-324t. Gd~~:· l-"-'='-'Ctm-"'-'mt=·-----I open. Reply Classl.f:ied ad ANSWERS MOVING. sargain;;, Admiral ANTlQUES: Oeltl. bed, rnd CELLO, Schlllf.er, Beautifu1, -Duffteld Rad,.: Sabot, F.quipped with automaUc f:J11 c/o Dally Pilot P.O. wabNt coneote oo10r TV, Oak pedettal tbl; Eider like new, :'t2538 C.tl 152 ~ER2916~ transmluion, VS, wid~ oval Box 1560 Coata Mesa. $3X). Remote TV, $Z). down sofa; old lteamer tim, near °"" mq Whffll. Typbt/Secretaries SUga:y -Glory -Tarry -Walnut CODll:lle ~ 3 pc tmJr, BO)'l lkpd; M.ll:c. & Offi~ Fum""r•/ PERSIANS and Himalayan 21 n . Sloop. Sleiep1 2. Inbrd Really ready·far your sport ~ Fees. Immed. openlnp Vestry -GRAVY see'1, dlr, SJ5 ea. Mpl fum. 216'7 Port Bristol Cr., Equip. 124 hytneds, CTA res., shots, eiwlne. 4 hap of aalll. & fun thing. •TG.'lA. lor lhart le: long tenn From a magic shop's ad: dresser a:-dbl bdbd, $55. Harbor View Hill, NB. Fri-many colon, $35 and up. 5.lHml, ~4. Seoe It • You'll Buy IJ ln NEWPORT BEACH 1000 W. CMtt Hwy. 645-6400 WE HAVE THE •NEWEST DF DATSUNS IN INVENTORY FOR YOUR SELECTION a.ulgnments or permanent "We sell pens with meat-ball Silver t: dbl hdbd, $55. Sat-&m EXF.c swvi. chr $15 • ~ gtt * 892-29'10 * '2> Glupar Sb:lp, new paint, flfo l 1,.:1 placements. Call us now! points that write Wlder Broadway, C.M. &rJ:O&I!· Don't milll Dana High Schoel chr $8 • 18 desks files st1s WANTED: 4 cyl. Inbrd, gas en, areal 119111 i'. P.P.S. Pacifie Pel'l!IOnnel GRAVY.'' OFF1CE FUR. S1''x34" De-Rummage Sale Nov: 3, 4, S 867 W. 19th CM 00-30 Fml white Manx cat. cruiama' boaL 494-5834 TIIOYOJA Services, 112 No. Tower, * ANTIQUE GLASS SHOW ec. Desk and Qi.air wlanm San Clemente Elki Lodge Planoa/Oraan1 826 979-7616. Bo.ts Sii /Dock 910 Union Bank Square, Orange, Large!t collectibles glass $'15. Reception room couch, New.frames, art I: craft. ,;:,:.c ' Pl 1 .CL 557-. Ask For 'how • .aie ever held. Nov. ~tnatchin< chair, ,,.._, ,..pp1teo, prlnb, pott•>rY. ap. Qlll'lll HOBBY ~· 154 SIJPS AVAILABLE 1966 Hubor, C.M. 646-9303 Raebet May. 4 A: S, SaL lo.&, Sun lo.6, Also club and 0cca. chain Plianct'I:, clotbes.. Beaut. U&-It.Mn AVOID RUIN'ED 45' kl 60' 1-ts 7J Chevrolet WArl'RESS, exper. Apply in 1717 S. Harbor B 1 v d . , and tahlel. ed Items, COior TV, GE elec CHRISTMAS 67l-t1l!D6 p~ & v-penon only 1 am-ll am, Anaheim. &U-4627 ranee •own. Don't buy any organ until TREES I: GITI'S Boeh "'"• Tuel. thru Sun. Mesa Verde WANTED. l.argt! china STUFFED cushion 8' com.l lS FAMD..Y pr 11&1.e. Nov 3-you can p)ay! Non-playen start mw ID train )'OUf' dog 'Speed: Ii Ski fll 8 Stock 'Co u n t r y Cub, XlOO cabinet. Re as o nab I e , fort. gold floral design S. 1M pm. Harbor View welcome to attend free work befofto the 1o.J.1tt ... -& haw a I) Ft .se. ~ -~-l • -Pr'---couch _.. fair1.. dble ff shops, For information _....,.. -..,.._ -· ~ Oubhouae Rd., Costa Mesa, 64+-4687. ...,.., Y nu a orn<."11. 1952 Port Laurent. Contact: Tom Dieterich well bebawd pet thst )'00 year new. Cl O&dsmebtle HOWAR~ Chevrolet DicJt Evarbl. Vacancies cost money! Rent bed w/metal frame $30, N.B. 642-2l5l will be proud or. Clasael pack-a-jet enatne. Equipped Newe-rt 8Mch WAl'l'RESSES Food 847-3!M6. RUMMAGE Sal N ..__. IL have just started you can for n.htnc t: watll!r *1fn«. ·-... ~ • & your house, apt., .ure e. (/!/, ...... -Coast Music Service join now. Mon n t t e I Fatly eciutPDed tan d 0 m MacArthur.• llambortt Blvd CocttaU exper. only. Sid's bldg., etc. thru a Dally Pilot MISC. Walnut dreaer, nlte ~~~~:30. St. John's .N.ewport 'Blvd. at Harbor 7:36-8:~ & Wed nlles 8-9. trailer. tb1I outftt ts lib m4555 . Bb.te. Beet, 673-99M. Classifted Ad. ~. = = ma~~i ..... , ..... ._.., ~ Costa MeM MARTINCREST ~ new. Ori&lMI cc.t $mQ. LEASE ar ~ I.he new . •••••••••••••••••••• bnch, •tc. 548-4189, 252 Son-Mlsctll•noou1 Ill *PIANDS*°RGAHS* ,._ Sacrill<P lmJ, Pb 0 n • Toyota llilf'too mini-pick- ·' :I ' • . . ". " .. .. ta babel, CM Hammond. Wurlitttr, many ** WANTED: Frtendb 830-6482. up. SU:r1JriM~~lf with 'TI DA mz. X1m: 7 ft. gr«n crushed velvet * AUCTION * others. J>re-seu:m specials, loving home for d.arUll&' MUST !"11 14' Ski boat t: Ill blah P/i'f or man c e, cond :m Pvt coo.ch & loveseat. Perfect mod l cl t. Piano A fema1e Silky TerTler JIUPI· 'Inller. wnatllit)' and economy or · ·~ae..., pty. A CONWHIDtT !iHOPf'ING 9EWTNG OUIOE FOR THE GAL OH TME GO. Far en ad In Wam•n'1 World Coll Mary Btth 642-5671, ext 130 SlenclerizinCJ! Hairpin Crochet condition. 1 week old. $225. FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. ~ l'e\'°:.b.1 Money aav-Housebroken. All 1 hot•, 5.ll-n64, 548-8995 operaUon;.C&ll Truck Dept. __..,;n sq1-csn. NOV. 3RD Ing bart&llll are here right Must se.11 lmmed. &»8333. · GREAT Ski no.t. 15 rt. w· Mer. mu Mala!)' To)iota, 1972 Datwn, •tick 1hlft, orance. 4484 rnlJu. AM/FJI radio, ._.L Hide-a-bed . like new . New color 'IV's, avocado side now at: AFGHAN male, S mo.. with mi&ht:Y H.P. Even rud e, =-..r-..:. Blvd., Hunt. Hen:ulon (;old Tweed . by"""-.,..,..,,.,• Eye Wallichs Music City .. ,,.... AKC ftl., a.mpl~Trtr~~· ~cover~~-~llll~90.~~-~~~-=1~~~~jjii- l87-50-* MHln * ~~-~";"~·=-s...lhe»utPw. ..,.,_ =.,..,t"."&<tr~~I: 72 DATSUN 6 Pc. Bdrm,,., w/deok, an-;:"~· c=-'1 = *PIAHOS+ol!GANS TO Qua1i""1 Homes· I" Tr 1 -11•1 PICKUP tique wht Drexel king 11: ~vet~ ta'mps, pl Golzw Out Far Businea Pointel'-RetrifWT pups, ,I ' 4 IPffd. ~.l.!!!,a!er, Uk" bed. A Beauty! 54M364, 8-S tures, large ciins1pment ~ Best quality • prtcft • 16'V. ~; $25. Call e v e I • ~....:., "!,W..., (~-u:.) $1995 pm. old bottles, fruit jars, Kawai·Ste~-Baldwin. etc. 552-7362. wr. --........ ***Sofa & matching JQye dishet,'lnsulaton, tnmbt: PJayerPiaooe&Rolla GREAT Danl' Puppte1 Campen,S.le/Rentftl 'M f'ord,.c:berr)' bod)<, new seat, neTer med. Both Sl50. MUCH MORE. ~~1,,;,······ We~*~ lnlm!'l dlamp. blood U. '71 Jl'crd E Dolt paint, lll!«ts. ba!f:t Pft., Usually homr, 968-7910. lllDlftVJ(l AIN'Tlftll ...-.q lrQ ....., ~ AKC. Reg $150. Aft ( co n e brics., R&H. etc. UJCll new ftlnUI o) Ullllllft FIELD'S PIANOS ,,.,._ ' w/,.,,.., bed. crpt, -lMS11ll6. ' . ' HONDA '70 HONDA CAR 4 speed, radio. maroon with black interiol'. 6SOBQE. n.e. """"'° $766 1 ~ It . You'll Buy Jt VELVET io1a, $175. Mat· Costa Mesa fn4J 64>3250 .......... ~ .. ••·•-ut am/frn Renio. Xlnt tires. '69 " T lntem'I Ptctu ~.1~ ~~.$llO. COME. BROWSE AROUND *PLAYER PfAN~ 1*' ~ifnt!IUW.uCc,e !pu~ $18>. ~·.ext~ w/10' cab o/camp«. F\111= ~I....!. ~ Newport Blvd. Iwn I: Pond Com • • •••• $!m masks, 3 wolf I r a y , SLlpE ln cunpw .lteper. equip. Sattif. $ 1 7 5 0 . ~ 2-PIECE living room set Behlnd Tony'i Bldg. Mat'hi. Story A Oark uprt ••••• $1085 nf.-6il&-.02S · INSULATED 80-07'79. tM11n _.,..,_ $8). Coota Mesa * ......., Ch>Dd"'r-t ........ 1813 WIRE ·~ :~ -·~-$215 , .. CHEVY P U 1111. 545-0340 and 3 otberl. all 6 piano& -,., • .-.... .............. st1-D>t -• • KING she bed, springs, mat-J. L. Nesbitt mmbeftd ltitmed. Davkl T. Dupree, ~-~' ~-!~: CycM, 8Jkn 6 cyel. !J fr' .5300. U ::; , C.M'.. M-!lJOJ treas $60 tchb:lp of 1b!t1. mill S50 3NO D Grace La. C.14. .._._. _. -...~ ' 50'3691 'TI Hondli car. 'L • .. 548-3915 * :a. 2 &ilver Indian 'betb SG-«i50 * 54Hl08 MT-3517• Sc:oot.rs ns .• ~ Pfi1'-Up See to •P-A CR.EAT! '800. HAR~ Table, drop teal, w/turlloo. lse $150. I!'•. PRIVATE PARTY WANTS fX:HNAUZER pups, blebrkn. 70' HONDA preda~. Sett o 11 er . * 675-0tSS •' Pecan, 6", Like new. $70. 673-$15. TO BUY PIANO FOR .... Stud _,.,., _. 175 CC !l1'REET BIKE -t>' JAft.U a• 496-2951. TO BE MOVED • l2lc1.8 CASH. Inc, tennL mt) S2J-C381. XLNT COHO 1900 ML 1'161 " Ton OMC Pick up. _ .. a~u.t _..:•;.:;...:-'----·I LRG COUNTRY FRENCH bldg., 2 rm.s, MKld oonst. e 835-2'.278 e BEAGLE Pupe, AKC, 3 $350 e M&-4m V-1 $1050. '6f ..XK£ 2 + 2, auto tram. ESK VERY GOOD COND $895. Olvd. 10 mi. or trade UPRIGHT P1aoo & bench, maJe, 2 female. from &f:ntle RO ~--all. 5·PM.. ~ .W. · D * &a-1155.1 * . for"!o-54Q...Q56 An~ white, Good cood. family pet $50. ....... l989 HOA S , ~nded Autol ........ Ml drt -wlN' eoM ' 9'.le:; r1 -~ JI "• ;':J~~S-.-~ Oder -J ..... _. fror4 ~nd, !=llltom -.t • \'ell, " • ~ 1:-i'.~ d~~'i~.~ i!=-~:;""~i ~?w:~c =: ;~~~:. t7~~:; REWARD .f,1~,::;, ~:~~i:~21~i ~,.:Xe!.~ ~i:' C~~':'P~V: =...l~'Re:_id.,._8t;\'. & :::.·~;.· ="" .,.., WIU PAi OVER ~~~t ooad. Jewelry Sl-$2. PIANO Collecior lte.m. Mint Black femaJe Poodle, '71 Yamat. 380 F.nd Wy .... •--&. • J lt1J ttd Vil G1rAge S.le 112 e Mll-1340·•-con4. 6t&-.st9'I' ·after 4 pm. 4 monthl ~. -$25. r ~ _. """ _.... ~· ~ 2 +~=·air Conct = bd •m-2789• -.... ........... ....... ' . GARAGE sale W1 ao1d. Mov-8' Couch, rattan kiJW bd, PIANO, Cable-Nelaln, X1nt ~ dayl; 6 4 I . O 2 S 3 ,.,. late rM419, dMft, Inna. I • ing. Antiques, furn, dishes, tape ~r. typewriter. =· ~ old. Walnut, ft ,..... .. '59 J.. J.4 S>rW p&lat. clothe•. too<s, hdw>', boat xtnt . Reu. 833-1085. . I j • ,p MUsr ..it .. ,. .. ., Y...U. m••• -""" ....i. S9IO. l&ils, 1CUba auns, lumber, SPACE for Traller, boats, Sporting Goods 830 ...:r.=... 1'-tl!'t: up tor dlrt. Mnst lltlJ tics, lrnpi1rt1~ trudrt W ~721& « 54T-Ml.8. misc. GI Rlvm:Jde Ave, campers. $7.51). mo. NeW . _ oow. "peue" make o&rt I ..,._ti. JAG. '10i, 2 • 2. Low N.S. 54&-6898. Neon, Inc. 5!1.mL ~ table, 41Ai'x9'. Xlnt IMT~llS Cd Uld ult 11W ~ ~ air. l.nfldpd. M\MI * JOINT SALE: P'rt, Sat 1 * 2 Chevy bckt 8Nta. ~ ~ ..... l" aJale, Quel, Que 1971 HO DAVE ms Saat4ot. orn:n.. ~ to 4~ Carob, N.B. blk apboL $50. Gu lawn =rn~ ~ ,#; IMh, General 900 t'TOU ~~ ~ ~: ~ '72 JAG. St-tt.an. 1.IXXJ ml. (Eut • TV, water bed, c'iji11o~we1~,iil15.:=.;;557;;.f,2tlll9;;;'.-;;,;::;;I cm-~~:11'$"!?:---~-~ 9' Wood row boat wtth oan ,~-~=~-~---rmnw: ~ Red, Priv ~-furnlture, garden mile., ,...,,,_..,.~ Je-~--~-1 • -11oe.... ·.,., U.-...1-.._n ~ f'Yl"llm-o&fl clothing spccts equl be.bf £.vc.n.i;..;>• ,,.,.,_. w11C"C MEN'S lkil, experimental '" . ,._.,,. 90 u.u & lltNft. • equ111, a ,...., •· chair. Good condl-$45-"'"""· w1blndlnp. r.i..,,. M;. 96H9!l6 """ --Ni. KARMANN GHIA Call &<+-<617. to -from. 5<H36<. lloats/M.rlne ......, Ill tlpm ,. ,._,_ llvd. GARAGE SALE: Fri., Sat. • FUu. me pool table .l ao-I ''l'O &c;A ,._ ...:.:!: ... 9077 10v,.1a~ Sun. Nov. 3-5. Hrs. 9-6 ceaonea. Good oondltkln. TV, RMIHt, HIFI, Equ P• fM / ldll f.Whtf:!:t C!Ofl4, "--'• -Sf6.IOl7 E"-erybod)''• doing hairpin ~~lscPn':rtoho~u~1~ f15. 55U463. Stwreo U6 zr Boat trailM'. Equipped w ~ ~aft s. WI Jiiy TOP crochet! t.nrn with our McConnack {off Fair'vWtr, KING SIZE BED, Elttn AMIFM T\S'Dft' with ntce 8 w/lide Dada. 12 wit .~ 1i'Ya.mahl 250 Strett BllDe. CASH book! , ~.Id.) 557-<506. llrm. Ul<o ,_ 165. tn. air _.., llPI-3 ~ •. .....i ui., -· Eltto.nt oant.._ -PIO SEND NOW for 'The Euy No l5 Beacon 8Q' Nt!Wpel't §73=1'732 Monthl old $100. Ca I I .,,.,...._...,_ or Bellt Ofllit, Clr.J1-mf. t:arnotto '=1126 =~ sdi. Pano9onic ~ table, NEWPORT a.c:h Tennis 84Miml Joe, ao.tt, ........ "'llTU YAM.AHA, 125 MX. LD1i1r fuhlonl lncludln& bat 1 • ~· Oothing; RoAemount Club Family Membenhtp. 2r' Admlnl CoQo TV f011 DIW Low MU.. ssz. eat mid can A tnackl. .1ut1 STOP HERE and now -scarvct sklrtl bags PLUS 8Jfl bot'tl1, men I a 10. Stem 644--81 stand, 10 me). old. >Ont m.t. Sacrifice a..t S.le . 56-253& ctll • iDr D'H t!tfbnatn. : ~-tin, 11f,..;...; 1(fM!" ... " '1 .. ., •ve found . the mo 1 t baby rtit., ata:hani, t&bte ac-Crystal. Unen. Bed frames BEDROOM set, oomplde • $425 lnwtted. $115/otler. 19" Rtw.bout a 4 wW titer, '61 KAWASAKI UO mo CllE9.ET enctertztne di'ea )'OU will c-euorleA. Step-by·1tep plc--1 ,;;Mllc'="''-,--,:-~=-,,-;-= $SO. 131 E. .. 11th C.M. m-ftl9 aft&. Kood owl. 518. ~ wttl\ mru, 4b1/ ~ASI SPIC.tAL N-'72 w want for tl'le days and dln-lures leech you quickly, SAT only. FWn, World Bk ~ ca...ltted Ada . · . &a.5671 Sell Idle Item. ... 604lll nee. ·m. ... 11e. AJ/11. tr SalN MatYatt : , rs ahead. NVrl NEW eull)-. Send! set Chlldrens encyclp. Mlle. MM.lie H•=• == l.12Jl 8Ndl Blvd. ! Printed Pattern ;NI.: SEVEMTY .nvi: CENTS CMrcol broile!' i-Ho furn, "' Wit "~ Stadl $57.51 ~. si:• ~*i4~~~ for e1ch pattem -add 25 to)'I. 171.l.1 i.dwardl st., Zld5, ~ ~ r pt Id r P 1 M7.al'I' KI Wlll \0, :u . s 60-1 h "'rt "'"" rar ,,.... "'".,.for HB. S,.,,.. 'II> G ,..,.._...,.-..1rf<.W. thro11~01t -WE PAY TO r DOU.Alt • 1-. ROTAl\T ""'""- f 2%. yanls nc ; a A1r Mall and Speda1 Hand!· FRI &: SAT Moving Han--... ~ ..t'1lrrAI~ •• ~ A ~ 50d FOR TOP um> CARS 3' mo. t TI L. tbr-l"l!!'lf. -'r /8 yard JS.inch £abrlc. lnl:' otbel'Wtle thlnklul "·-le· Al lU.w CUl'I. bid -~ .,........_. ply 'h'idfs -. . ·:O SEVENTl'·PIVE cmTS cSelfvery will tab thrw ~an ..... u ~hid gmlAC. a;g AMI M )( LmA. • TY-• -tr If )'OUI" Qt ls arn ckM. . . j"'7" .: !; tor each pattern • -4<1 25 weekll at rnon. Send to ;;o:~::."'!.. SL c M <In #M. l T y_.o..t,,w,eyO.W. T D lti. roupi.. • llmtW •ftfl., '" 111 fl~. '72 ltOTARY~I -eenta fol' each patttm tor A~ Broob, the DAILY rwi;;nnu:.-• · · """-n A ... .. ... ..... • ~ 27701 Bwll llhd .• Ho. 11. BAUER BUICK Air )<all and St>ecW Hindi· PILOT 111\ "-allq) ,.,.,., T• ,,_,op .... , .. fot Ftld.,., ._ _S)H,6."•"'• ~ .. ~~,.,.,.,.. Bt~-"Demo Sile" tng; otber'Wile thlrd-dul o.ipt., 'eox 163, Old O»llea MOVING. R.efrte-TV., dinttte PIOdWl:lldlcawNipOl•Gtonn*-----....... ~ ~, .. 6NV deThl<rY will take .....,. Sta-New Yort, t<.Y. "'· .....,,. ,,,..,,t..,, .,.. .~~!:'"""' 41 ..._ hie/bot Ml IMPORTS WA!m'lJ It TO CHOOSI -u or mote. SeM to IOO!l. Print I<...., -rup, ........ iDIDY -2-}l~r .,,._ :IT -·vco On..-~-, "111-llT ••vr-- -u • ..i ... n Vartln, the DAILY Zl:fi Pattiera Nmn•. ll'.lh lb!ml • t 6 0 5 • A ~c.... s .. -'~ roP I 8 --------~ Dept 0 ECJ\A1'1'.' ...,.,, Cododtr Dr: ~ ··~ q h ~ PILOT. 442. Pottom N• ., EE L ··~ • 1= "to... ZI' Dl9COVERER BJLI. .llAXrY 'mYOTA HUNTINOTDN HACH weet 18\h._.~t,. J>ri"' -€rochet. knit, etc. · CAilACE Sale. u~ Rm ::;:::=~ 6 _,. ,.::.;.. :,.., w.rr OOHTJNE?n'A.1.$ lAtfl BwA-81vJ. Yoric. N'.Y. 1~1.1.•· nt d\l'l!(tionl. SOc. '!It\. Hutch. lt\ldJO bedlr. 11vo.-"•'"•• "•f_.· MllTTtjft.. 71 PRIDE• JOYS H. ~ Ph. 147,'6!!6 MAZDA 1<..a. AJ>DU88 ..... -......,._ --........ J .....,_ 111)$ VAN COWER.'!IONS HT-' lll2Z ant1 mu Bu~. fancy knOIJ. s-t-~. C:::-11aa c10Ast.. ,:~:111111 ::::.::.• • t; ,., ,.(: Sala • kMct • ~rDI• AUTOS IOUG _, ~ORE Qui ck '::;..!i-000...-- -Sall ~~~"i'~Z... ~;-::., ;~ * Drn•11r i.e.* Wtpor'°'"'"""'"'I=======.:::.:..= FulbklrW and dlOOM! one tam rw p1etuna1 ht· 4 RMS of hsnlrure tir ...,,, ~ ~ 41.,.r:--1 ,--mm ....,._ &ML , c .c .. "'• ~clHll ~ fNt trom our tCTnL n.oo. 11ert0. lamps. palnnrw-• ~ ·-w1.-oo mrM' Catalog. AU Olmpittt W Olft aeoit mll1I)' mJ.IC:, Item& Lib nlW If :..., :r:.. . =--1'ol IO G.Q, Oa!JU\ Ml W. 8117 ltrwt Only50c. -.-than 100 gilto • A -1>!<. -· s-41poo n,.. 11~ T = -°""" --JNSfANT SEWING BOOK 11.00. GARACJ: tlalt: Ill ._ •.,-11,.•• -" -.,v w ~ . ...,. Didi+•· St~ strt1 ,,.._ ... ... Oe Or. Q01. to am.f, fFfti. l! ~ tt ,., ~ V1c1t ... 'lim.urr FASHION ti iinJ ... -. IOc-1'11., Id:. -...... ":,,., ii?: EF ~t * ..... .• AUSTINAMllllCA .. :i:.,,;....":"1'* ot ~·11-•w r~fTURZ . -· • 1=--ll,.!': I=' ,,!~+~to.• . .-n.--.tow -- 1 .... ---Mlle. ,.,._ -,..,, -117' .... ..... ..... -· -p., ,... ..., "'°""'' -'°"· a.. • -tH. me _ tt::"" :" !"..i tatm ""* ., .... m1. im. • •. ,.... . .,_ --· ,..._, .-ftlo " • - -I • Cl-Pl. CM. -•-• •---... --AUSTIN HEALEY OJD/fm, Ulll mL. Mlilll -tk tin i Dlll1 Pilot ~ 1""' I FANILT. r-. ~ , :.;_i1r .:::.. :::::::.. '12 'trtlOO!:llAA"". N.7IO • .,.1111 =~ldlt ..... -15:=: ..... _-::e::-== :n.---=--J~~~~~~~~®~A~·;;~t)fW~!;ll"~ -~~~L __ J~~--~~~~·,~~~·~·~·:,~·~l~w~ •;c:.c::.,:..~-::,·111 -.r IS Dtl. , 44 __ W'iill-U-~ .. ~ .... I I •• I ' I • ' .. • • ' ~ ' -..... • 21 YEAIS l~I iiiiiiiii":"._--~l~~1.:...-..... -~~~l l~--~--.-~l~~~ l .. .iii ~-~--~ S.rvln9 Autoo, 1...,..r1oc1 970 Autos, lmportod 970 Autos, 1"'por1tJ 970 I ~·· Imported 9 _ ....... Or•ft9• County MERCEDES BENZ PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN' VOLKSWAGEN Fllfl'l WARREN ''° 300 SL ltDSTR ·12 Porsche •U·T T.,.••· '63 Bug; New'"'• fl•od .'ff V.W. Campor '71 ·YOLY~ YOUR ONt,Y SPQIT CAR AM /f"M Radio, RnlCollect· Sll,.r, llhr. Asoume U.. up$600or bOstolfor. Radio. 9!1~-COi> 145 r& w•--N j.•-<a1t__ , or'• Item, •6100 tmmacu· -"$224=no:>Q.~m-~7183.~=~-A·I 842·2•27 _.tt. 5 dltion. (xA1D1U1. 5" AWV' · -•v JZE Jato. $AVE , ___ R_E __ N_A_U_L:_T __ 1 ·ss vw buo, Rill. xlnt en-$2299 Equl-' wllh ,au-Uc AUTHOA ,D r.ENTER •-n ~ Bl·-/Whlt -" CONN''" CllEVROLET trsn11._·A,MIFM 'radio', alr Ca "111 •c 7 r.-'" . ""'l FOR ..i. 196T Renault ,_ ~_.m-,-e, <~ .,... condl""""", WSW, 'dark -.,_ is r 1Uplll1 butt1' !ires, o~ owner, 53&-3os4 FOR Sale, 19&9 'VW ·van. ~-=C'l!rJJ;::Oll:::•;,;~:::esa:::·=.·.:546-:.:810.:vi'lm:::":::....., :~~~~~~~· ~. t = o1, Cad.II· 1000 w c... ...,.,... after 6 pm. Good LEAVING 11 "'-'Q.I ....,-1Q Closin~ Its Facmtios 11 :::==-=:;=-=="'=··--=·:::·.l , TOYOTA . 4~~· '68 vw v.=;.'!'~)w":'.. $3416 , _l!,.,,~ Coun1>. 11 •63 vw Sunroof G 1 d()WI) orti ownr, xlnt mech ~ n ~ You'll Buy'1t , \ GIGANTIC ELECT tnos~;ia~"ins ~. rea ~:.:~~be~:~~ • ta ·:. ~:'::c SAVINGS '64 VW Bug, $U1Wf, Engine ~Ott Sun! 644-<1616 imlm 2600 HARBOR BJ...... A ·~. Teblt in '11. GoQd cond. 1 Uo -· COST• ~ · 'J $475.Pvt.5.57-1827 1700 CC VW. cw ra · · ,. • ... 2 TOYOTA ,....,._ Flt.,... 11 · ml. 100 JB16 l!arbol;.' c .M. 6*9303 54o.9100 0..., _ ~~ ~~i HP. Eng. & trans. 6~cm mi., Autos UMd :· ,;o l.'10 Cadillac_ 4 mo:.·* ville. on an New & Used .Cars S.ve- NEW CARS -Save '72 lllUflfH * MS--£821 * $2500 Invested. $950/ofter. • • ... FullY equipped;•Shup:cond: •~· IUICK " Gold w11>nm ,;i.,u.,, .i>rt '57 "----•-1 'TI Super Beat1~. 31,000 mi '69 Sta. Wagon. Auto trans., pt;y. $4.\So. ~" ~~ Excel cond. S1650. Al -~ I ck 190 St Rdstr. * Cail im-:nm • r '-"""'·· uggage ra · · .. 10 Buick . cu.stom ~lark '68 Coupe de YWe.,.VJn;.vl.top, ON ll.CKX> mt. Mint cond. Orig. Wht Blk .tbyl •--:'P.S. full pwr, f&c &Jr, am/h 28~0r,;E:t~i MUST 100 NEW TOYOTAS 1'r.-~ ~;:!:.,,.Ji:."::,":~ ~,'47~~ subm!l P,B, IWI. 111;1 ak:'U--...SDJO.f!MlSl $14" """' llOOO 646-1318. ' '68 VW Van. Robll l_,. 30M. ·$425. lnler b>ok. CAM.ARO YOUR NEXT CAR CWRANCE SALE -I - "' • . • ' ' '69' Camaio S.S. '68 Fonl ·'l'Orloo. 31) oa\to. ' V-1 ---1pd -pn, p/dlac ----' iodlD t brltl. !aet air. 2 ,_ -· :hllder.'\ Wbitl ' ' .... .,. • ._ :an·t ~or T.0.P. (Jl8>CEYY) Dir. IJ36.ll53S. ol $51. .. 531-UllL • l9IW OIEVY Greenbrier van '61 FORD van clfupe.r out-• tor ..ie. Motor recentJ;v fitted. Gd. motor, ad. ttree, .rebuilt. in good runn1na con-etc. Sacrifice , $550, prvt:. dltion. Body~· does need pt)'., ~ • r./t111 ~ .... =. '° ... J~YEUN , ' •72· Nova JAVELIN "111. 'Prl> ·PIY, 4 -alltomlltlc lnllo., rac. ONE OWllERo 311~000 .!!'ii ...,, ... -.....inc & vtayJ top, air, -= ~ ~~ radk> ,,. &: beater cond. $135(1. lf8o-T9'1'5 836:¥ •m Jawi.111. ilU under L • • , warran. Loaded wtxtru. c-~· P/S. A/C. IS'/.a8. -·· . MAVERICK '95 -. lQl:d:_ e·o n l .. 1-_,..,--,.....;...;..._.;.;. __ , thruou.L Mech.··1~\ind . 1912~~cyl. Grabber w/air, S350/b611t otiM': ·: or tl'll«. PSr «uto l'l'lilkJ. T ,D m1. 557-llll. '57-'1272.hliii.. " _ Pvt. owner. ,Make oflft' O:lrY8!r · '62. 1 DtYt s • a -• o 5 I : eves· 110D0<ott... -66.o5t8 aft 5:00 SPITFIRES f .Nne·f 4 ,pd., r.&clio, 2200 11111•1. $2599 r;,r-· ""' _.... JI .. +..,.-] V.W. '61, filli, Good con· eng. New be.ttery I: front ~64S-""-'12$l~,-;6'4-'::;;29!=::';;:. ':' ::--1--..:::::::::::=:=-- !' .nl'µqlul l p<Wlllll' n,All ~ •• .:. ditlon, $350. or S..I oflor, ,....., bed, ca.uelle .... CADILLAC !BIO Camuo air, ...... P/S. 1965 CORVAIR ...... """'· MERCURY --~ 'OOOvtc:o.t:t::zoJ -Ulft, UlllO 6'1!>--8642. deck. Recent tune·UP·l--..;.;;,;.;;,.;..;:..._;..;;. __ I V roof. Excel cood. $2500. Auto "tran..runsxlnt.P».1'-'--------1 l . .......,, ..._ .. my tA "·=10'-'vw:;;c=a.-.-. -.. "•1-1 -.,-,"'. i"1""""· 548-6793 aft .4: ~. ·n. Cocllac 80-008 or 8f1'·311'11. 53&-4258. ·10 u.-~ * ,511 . Morcede<. N, w o' ""'• for older Bug plus '69 VW Bug, (loo<! oond, C"'' , •-v.._1· 'fl Camaro, ~; now CORVI: I IE '""'l'-cWi: ~1358 1iutomattc, L@avtng country, .,. .,.,.. tires Gd. Montefty 2·0r HT, V ,fAut painted. New front. ttre11. 1966 Harbor, c.~t. 646-9303 •66 VW 8 Ori owner Sac:rlftce 833-043.f. ~ · · ' • $1200. --..,...'------Trans, power •teer l n 1 Gd. cond.·$900. 673-4786. •67 Toyota Corona xlnt cond.~. g. '. 'MOn thru Fri s to 4~30 ~~~~·~~1 53&--lm. · CORVETJ'E "11. LT-1, 4 spd, Ra,dkl, Heater,,whlte Walla MG • '6&-7903 e •n vw Wagon, .lle,oulllul. FJromJst .!'lnllh'. CHMOLET :.>.OllO "'' • lmmaculato, wheel roven, A very nt "---...;.· _......;;.....__ 4 ,peed auto tn.n~. radio , AMIFM slereo s.wa.Y ·ate aterei· tape · ' m-9551 &ft 6 A wknda. c"r <716CTO ) $1896 dlr. Call " • li~I blue -Doo'I P"" this '69 VW SUS, SNRF., _,._ -·7-' '70 Monte. Corio-' COUGAR ~. , 'fi7 MGB Rdstr Super "'°"" •" ' "-" 11625 rad., cn>tg, muat sell! ..... ._ .. vntr'OI New wltf. f•ct w1rranty '72 PEUGEOT 504 SEDANS 6·1i11.6 to chooN f,.111 $3199 Now with f•c:.to'V w•rr1nt., b"" -h<'low book ITXPt24l ~" . 5SHl981 * 557-4961 $176 1M• MERCURY WAGON. fi~i'::pl~~cl~~t.s~: Only $899 at Bill ?o.faxcy * 673·8293 * · • Automatic ~lssion, fac.. 1961, ,.. ........... Blki .... R. R/H, ""'" A--~l.~ h. -"tr. -Cl 645-6844 Toyota, 188ill Beach Blvd., '63 V\V. Sunroof. Great ·54 VW Sunroof. Cocoa per month ICry air, power steering, lo mtl~~ cond $JA, 5l&-5l9l ~ ean, . llunt. Bcarh. 841-8555. transportation. brown. Nu tires, shocks 36 mo. O.E.L. tax radio white wall tires vinyl 300. . ' MUSTAN' ,,._ 'G9 MGBGT, cl)rome 'vi.re 1 . * ST;r-3715 • SA85. Ben Hur Gas, Harbor lmnMCllate 0.llQry root.' ( B 21 D TA}' Dlr. ~-Dys. 54!.&.164, eve w whls, FM"'dlo.Clran. llest 69 Toyota Corona lll61 vw ""'· R&H. vinyl & Bay, C.M. LEASING $2'95. ll36-<5.1S. ··~· • -· 1---------1 offer ov<"r $1850. 645-5073 Black viny l top over red, lo int., very clt>an. 1 oY.ner. "70 VW Sundial camper, good ALL MODELS 1970 Chev. oonc0urt1 Eltalit, VDQllGE '68 • MUSTANG, .\18, xlnt cond. See at Arco Station, '72 SUBARUS 2 l 4 dn. w-ttdlo1 4-fo11r_. MGA n1iles. See ii, try it, buy it! Pri. pty. $495. SoID-2759 body, strong eng. FiN.nclng AND MAKES . I Paa. 'SIL .Wp.. Pwr. l l---------l 1570AGG) Only $1099. Bill '70 VW bus, 7 pass. Many :r-a~$23Xt. Cit T.O.P. .'7J'• . Stefting ,a:.mu. t\M.·FM ** 'M MCA * l\faxey Toyota. l&!UJl Beach .xtras. Xlnt cond. $2300. ;r-• .. Stereo radii).' tilt .teer. wbl. POU)~ , ~ ~1;! .. ~Raal, '6• DOlJGE' '65 Cot1Ver1lble. Must ..n to chooN frolll'I $1899 N.w wi+ti ftcto,., w1rr1nty SM EXEC. CARS -Sa'8-.- '72 SUBARU GL SPORT CPE. 4 1pd .. rtcflo, t,000 mil•• $2199 • • '72 PEUGEOT 504 SEDAN A11to ... 1flc, •m·f111 7,000 111il1• $3399 • • 72 SUBARU 4 DR . SEDAN 4 1pd., r.dlo. 2200 ,.,a ••. $1999 • • AU n•w c1r1 c•rrv 12.000 milt or I y••r w1rr•nfy - Afttr 011r clo1 in9 yo11 ,., • ., h•"'• it 1•r¥ic.d •I 11ty lo· c.&I fr•itchit.d d••'•'· AR Used Cars WHOLESALE ta the PUBLIC!! '70 TRIUMPH TR& Rd1tr., r1dlo. 4 1pd. . $2499 '67 MG GT Co11pt, wlr••· r.&t11o, $1099 '69 TRIWl'H Spltfir•, wlr••· rtdio, $1099 '67 PEUGEOT 4 dr. w11on, rt dlo, f•ct, t ir. $899 '68 ALFA ROMEO 1600.Cp•. '69 FIAT 850 ••• '70 OPB. IW.I. YE Spt. cpe • .,,,..t..., f1ct. ,;,, $119 '66 SlftlBEAM '69 TRIUMPH TR·& · ·stit '66 MG RDSTR. -MtO'O'•W. H.T., wlr•1. '"It. $999 Thaftlt · v.., - l'or n.. M..iy y .. ,. ef l,oyolty COMPLETELY REBUil.T Blvd .. """'· Beach. 847-8555. a..,.;...., ""· 84&-2624 • '66 vw s-........ l'.Jlif111miM F ** 646-1011 ** '69 Corolla 2 dr. New tires. * .70 vw Sedan. Xlnt rorid. $650 * 586:-1827 1RIUIVIH "411 .. ~ ~· = .;:::.'. 4 door hard top. Automatic '650 ~ !Pake offer. m-r.m ·transmiaafun, VB, air oon-aft 6 PDl or wknda. MGA '60, Reblt .-.., S500 or Reblt trans. $600. 642-SSM Radio, blue. $1250 or best · • • -. 1 ..... .&.!ri .... .-. ....... ""ottor., ··~ ""64&-3545· ouor. 493-4801 VOi. VO 1st llatiilnill ·•· ~-·· ~·~. ~·--· dlllonlng, powor steering, OLDSMOBILE * Ph: 847-8670 * TOYOTA '66 STOUT 'i'-Ton, 1969 vw BUS · '12 01.evy ~bu,.vinyl roof, ·MGB PICK UP. R&ll..$7SO. . SUNROOF. GOOD COND. VOTE Bank • ........ P/S. P/B, -loclts, radio, a tine seoond car _ RPS499. Reduced to '6'l .'JJor'Onado, all pwr, k>ed '70 ;\fGS.CT. Top shape, S'2425.--641Hi827:-2400 \V . Coast Hiway, 811.lte 3~ Npt Bch. . '69 MGB-CT, xlnt .cond. \o mi's. R&H, make otter. CaU 673-4052. ofiil '66 Opel Kadett. '6nt cond. • 1345. Call 646--flbs M7-1751 ' S1750 * 5.16-7S24 MMWll'I' AM/FM. Loaded, Spotle~, 'TI CORONA, 4 dr, alr/,...,nr'I, !~~1~· 50-7298 aft ,, >-" '69 RED V\'I. AUTO y· ES . -·-•Nuto, ~1o1828, 1 owner, Like R!H . EXCELLENT COND. 2Xn.,Michel!IOn Drtve eY.·. ou.1-• 11400. 54~1553 • ·(Comer or MacArtli'url 1972 CHEVY Impala, custom Irvine, calif. -" 2 dr, fac air cond, AM/FM $666 . ... $7000 """'· best -·~It. You'll Buy It over $1200. 675-7900, . LfAli& .,,.~YMOUTH '69 Toyota Corolla vw VAN. CUSTOMIZED. FOR A n4/833-863> 213/»7-<l367 radio wllh .... speaker, 2 Dr., 4 speed, radio, .sharp, MUST SELL. $$(), '72 VOLVO '65 Cadillac nee~-Full ~l3,0CKI mi. Jl]al., ,492-0531. ' cute, yello\v . Say goodhyc •~1369*" po'ver, runs good:,· $195. 1 '55 CHEVY, 2 DR. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ·mora * "11) Road Runner, good shajle; needs clutch. $1000. 968-1551. to ga.s .~tatlons ll~CZMI · '62 VW, Baja Bug, Corvalr AT -%1.1/592-2>51 • New ttres. Needs minor work '63 n.w:i-Dart GT. XO ml on only $899. Bill Ma'<ey Toy· engine, .$1200 or trade for 'fi6 Cad Sedan w/Landau top. $150 F1rm 545-3691. N........... '64 Valiant sta wan. ota, L.'1881 Beach Blvd., camper. 644-0030 .Clearance Prices X1nt cond AU xtras Pri ....... ........R. u ·~ew Ena;.,~· Npe·:' .~·1 Rad.,,.'1.· 1 ___ !loo<l..:;_~cond°""'.=-$350-=--· --I Hunt. Beach. 847-Sfi.'l.'i. · · · ........, ... ,..,.,. Cheve e 1tat ..., """'' uu * ••• --* •A BARGAIN• •73•5 H-Now p1y. ILIOO 67J.7690 wgn. New-· auto'trins, ~ Ve,.,.tlle '72 VW camper. * 1911 Cadillac Coupe de R/H 1495 ph. ~. m.:mo, Fl PON11AC · '69 VW Bug, air, auto, tire"-, tlA. L.111111 675-all3. '66 Chevy Impala, P/S. ij rut.kBllto O:I loaded ''8Pontl:ac LeMW2drbard TRIUMPH 9.000 mL 135flll. 963-4717 fl I ·-!, Ville. Xlnt oond. $4900. Call aft S &tHl712. 1,.,,-~;.;R;,;E;:;B;;.;,;IR;:;D;:...._ '66 TRIUMPH nu eng, Clean, $1195/or of· VftlVft '73 CAD Cpe de Ville. Load· P/B, vinyl top, Xlnt cond. ~ct t(onatnv'cond'. top. Auto, pwr sfeerlrw, '69 Porsche tUT. 5 spd~ TR·IA Roadster, blue cutie, 1,cr.=-r·co84°"5--0'166:.,:::;co·co9'19--4895~=~= .., . . lut.•• ed. 350 actuaJ mi. frriOO R/H. $600.. Beat otter. . rtgbt. 'J'hlj car ~· air, radkl, =.1 top. Mags. Beaut!,~ $4600. normal mil~. priced below 'Tl VW bug.19,0CK> mi. Still firm. Pvt. pty.·~ "2-l«ll -' depi'fdate. $1700. -'..:o.P'Y=·_,,'1::D95:::..613-'==::,..- 547-7365: 521-crntD book (U11.J224) Only Sl!ll9 under warranty. $l700 or 1966 J-larbot, C.M. .646-9303 '70 Cadillac Eldorado, $4400. '68 Bel Air 4 dr Sedan. A~. =-=:::..,·~=,..-----MUST Moll '68 Pontiac Fire- PORSCHE ·n Po=he liilT. S spd. Bill Maxoy TO)'>ta. 18881 ""'off.,. 557-5718 '64 VOLVO Private Par1y. PB, PS, um..! ---FORD bh·d, 4 spd. convertible. ISM. lmN mnd. Beach Blvd., 1-lunt. Beach. '60 VW body. Everything but 2 Or. 4 IJ)eed; ·maroon with 675-1429 tttts. $925. 8*-m2. , . Best oUer, Rita 536-10 $6875/oHer. 9'79-3484 "840:77-855S="'.==,..,-==-engine. $99.00. rebuUt eni;lne 8000 miles * J.966 Coupe deVllle, $'950. '66 Chevy Caprice. Fui1y '69 .I: ''10 GALAXIE 500,11 "i'U Grand Prlx. Must sell to '64 Por:!!Che-SC::. Very clean! VOLKSWAGE.. * 645-7269 * ago. Better hurry far this Pri party. m-9931 or equl.p.$750.485E.18thC.M.. Retiring O:Juple buying male room for new Ollei Reblt eng. Must sell! $2400. --------'68 VW bus, 7 pa 11 s · one! <OPF607) On1y $749. 64H758. · 646:'1'1'40. Camper, Both excel cond. 495-CtS or 497-1394 ew.. i Call 645-1446 V.W. '72 Bug, Yellow. Better Mechanlcally 80Und. SJmO. BUI ¥axey T~ta. 188St '64 Cad. Conv. Very Clean! '68 atEVY Nova, ·very Under $2.<m ea. Call a.AMBLER . r Like to Trade? Our,T:der's than iiiew con d It Ion, or oUer. 830-9819. Beach Blvd., Hunt. Beach. $595.. 11.91 Augusta St., CM. economical, xlnt cond. Must 833-95'16. 1 --------~I Paradise rolumn ~! 5$-9159, 643-4714. \Vant ad results ... 642-5678 1.,::84::.7-8565=:;.· -----979-1473. sell. $175.. 66-82'Tl eves. '66 Country Squire 10 pea, 1963 RAMBLER WAGON. Motor Homes \ Motor Hornet Motor Homes Motor Homes Motor Homes Fast ~ts a.re Just a phone All pwr. Overhaul just com-Great mech. Air. S•lo/Renl 940 S.lo/Ront 940 · S•lo/Ronl MO s.i./Ront MO S.le/Ront MO call away·~ pleled. $8!11l/otter. m.:U90 $190. 5!1H5191 ...;:;;;;;;:.;.:.:;;:. ___ :.;.:._z:;~.;::;::.... __ ..;:;.:;__;:;:;;::.;.;.;:;:.:. ___ :.:.:. .....;:.:;;;;:..;,;;;;;;;;.... __ .;.;;.;......;;.;;;;:..;;;;;:;... __ ...;:;;;1A-, New 910 Aut•, New 910 Autos, Now 9IO INTRODUCING THE e~MF•V.l./llS :-'72DRMAR BELOW '72 PRICES · ~1ilSJiC BUYS •-:: '73 PINTO and 11:: 73 explorer 20 F11r..i~S..ML:MOl4 ' -.. :.::i.:l"".. •. BOTH FOR ONLY 59700 :" ONLY 515483 _ .. 73 explorer 20 .. ...,. .................... .......,,., """"" ...... ~ .... -v-... ,.,. .,..... •1 t .... _.., ,.. .... "', ,...,. NOW ONLY $7295 ~ PLAY NOW. PAY . .LATER $11eaa::o: ·:i .. ~:=-::~ 1 YEAIS IANK FINANCINt .:.:;.. :0. :'""~ :. awwu•l#flfVID<WT ......,.. -. : ~explorer of H~!I!~§J.! .. !~.cH · 842-8803 , . .. They're · Hot! New Pickups and V 8118! _-_..] ' ..... " ' • • • • • • rure w:e-ve -g"" ·em. Brand New '7? Chevrolet Pickup • ONLY 25215 -'22'95 With big 110.8 Cl enJ!no, lour ·sueed tr•n•., auxlllary spring•, brake bc>olter, side mllTor, oil filler, spare tire, etc. Brand New '73 Chevrolet Suburban . . With V& onglne, automall< Inn&, power -ONLY • $4,295 hlg, radio, extra 1111, HD rodlator, mlnon, extra chrome, side moldlllRJ, etc. .. I ·~~·-----.;.-- • - 7 • " .. \ \ I l ) • 7 • I I I I \ l . , . ' .. ........................ ~,_ ... """" San Clemenie ' ~Ca • N.Y. Stoelu VOL. 65, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 44 'PA&ES 1'HtJRSOA Y., . NOVEMBER 2. 19n TEN CENTS Clemente ,Council TOughens Anti jetport Stand By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. o.itr ..... ltllff San 'Clemente couocllmeri toughened their stand against proposals fur a Camp Pendleton jetport Wednesday by Issuing a fiat statement that there would be no waytbat such a terminal would win their support. Jn -the -seCond-pha.Se of a resolutiOO declaring "unalterable opposition," the council scratched jts earlier demanCis that Dy-over tests be CUlducted In the N. V ietoom • Gives U.S. • Ultimatum From Wire Services North Vletttain d;.ia,:eif today the . . ' . United 'Stites must undertake to sign a Vietnam pelCO agreement before l!Jmol wW · CGlllelit to further discussioo.9 with Henry.A. Kilainaw. · _,~~"' _ .... Ill _ ... ~ N'""v§f,._ '"'"'·~ = . . ~ .:=::" .r. lbl ··-· . . . -·-~ . AL= if llliDod .... lifd a.9%1 2-, ...... .... ........... ~ . 'I0"11etiiliW- • ~ . fl ·nlll!lieil ·-not be dlsmist,:: J .ai I prelat for 4leliy," The ·lour .tleliJlauom 181""1 lo meet •rralt! WI ~. . . "~ Oil serloul points, II they .mt, mllll be frankl,y dealt with," U.S. delOpto William J. Puter aald at lhe WU. "Ezcesal .. baa1e In set· tllng tbe final element would ~ the work thai bu been tlone • · •• "Our task tb!rJ!ora Is to ~ fonrmf to an equitable co..--with lull respect to lhe.NJewl ol.aJl.11uj!eop_ cerned -:be work that bas ·alreolly beeU done,' to refine and clMlly -re necessary, and to deal molutejy, can- didly and realistically with any dif. itcuJUea that may still remain." Meanwblle, !nsident Nimo met for 41> mlnuta today In Waallln&fon with bis Vietnam·r.,;r,u.tor, Kissinger. Asked wllere Kissinger was, presidential preaa aecretary Ronald L. Ziegler said "I don't know where be Is right now." . That was ahot11y belore ·noon and when reportera aaked U Kissinger might be en route to another negotiating session, Zi~ said "we'll let you tnow when a meeting 1s taklni place." ' Today'• meetlJIC took place • few hours Jrior to taping by Niuo of •· bail.i.ou. broadcast, t.. be aired at 4:30 p.m. PST over NBC tel~lslon and radio. A apokesm1n said lhe pollUcal broad- -wooJd "-b OD developments In VielDalb." Man Struck By Beer Glass, Dies Pendleton area to give ,.,idents a effecta'to lhe ..en being of San CleDiente sampling of jet ..... citiwla. The -were a sugg"1ton by .cc.m. In lllOtber sptDol; from lhe new cUman 'l!ioma< O'Keele, the only J>OO!iire, lhe COWIC~ •lao agreed to diWnter. ·~y oppose a reaolutlon by the cUy o·~e lmlated, -er. that bis op. of Irvine to lhe League of C8lilornia poeltloa did mt stem from an ... cities endorllng PeDdleton as lhe site far donemenl ol lhe Pendleton jetport. a major terminal aervtng Orange County. llllteod, tbe city abwJd tee~ an "~ That Issue will come before' the league DlliiilOa"lllltiiifClie aakt -·-nm week . but It ts not yet lmown II I . . . -Fellew.COUPCllrr :n cfiaacreed, 00-er, vote will be Jaken at lhe Tburad3y and ~ ~· any clvlllan terminal meetlni. er II tlie poll will wait until lhe anywhere on Uie base -1d have serious December -Ion. 80 Prime Acres Clemente OKs Palisades Annex The proposed anneution of 80 prime freeway , taking in· the sector · behind ~.in the Capistrano Beach Palisades Grant's Plaza shopping center. · f San Cl Coonci1men voted "!JllDlmously to seek to the city 0 emente -a m~er · aPrJ'Oval of the anne1atioo but also in- Uiat already is being opposed by s~ted that an $800-por-acre anne.ation P&lisa<les residents -won prel\mlnary f\!I! .on t!)e pircej re!l)8)a to effect. ~pprov;il ti:o111 city ~cilmen Wednes-.Clty • .Jlanaget,Kenneth:,;a: .said that '1;. ~· . . , lgu ~lt"~?Jr' "' . ' 'P,~; ~~· brlllC ~ =~~be' · · "claMl""I a aa CllDJme·1 ........ .,. --up ;to • ,.. --Camloo"'do ~ --~ · ' unoct'l!Pled 'annes atlempt ~===mi~ ~~~ ~aainty· If the --llicceedl In pissing Issue wlth•the PI CJP.11111. ~ lhe test at !ht '*"'ly level, ij>otesmen .Tb< ·acruge on<A WJlS plaoned lo bald for the Gnml' Company of Anaheim ha.. eajates on large lots. said they PiuJJoeed a complete con-But · In recent ·years densities have dominlum land use for the acreage. grown iri the .area and the land-use pro- The parcel boundaries start at the cor· pooala have changed from large lots to ner of Estrella 8nd Camino capistrano proposed cluster boualng and cornm,Jcial and alretdl inland to the San Diego develOjlmeJlt. to Grave < • · 2 Headed W est to Become Bikers . . FRENCH CAMP (AP) -"Big Tom" . Sbull and Charley Bater were motorcy· cl• partners. In Charley's 1151 pickup truck, Ibey drove west from Georgia last fall and found.a 1llppery foothold on the ladder of Caltrornta motorcycle ~quea and gangs. Charley WU eontenl to take fast weekend bike ' rklea 1icrou Northern Calilorn1a'1 mountains. But ''Big Tom '' wanted to wear the red and whlta emblem of lhe ootorlaua Hell's Angels motorcycle club. . ·.The d-ylng bodies of both were round baJied Monday Oil a farm the stlte at, tome)' general's ofllce said wu rumored to be "1 Hell'• Angels burial ll'Olllld," 150 mllea -o(bere. (Se€ story, Page 5) As friends tell It, Sbull and Baker wero un1lkel7 loottrc blbn -lhey rolled Into thla SU J-ln 'RI-dalll town. They loolrod "sn!ll" and tllelr cyclel --,~ .... '· 11«1 flowlnl bllr and i.;...s;-...u -. 2l>O, pouadl and lllt feot tall. Tbomaa Sbeplllrd Sbull, SI, qulckfy ooreed ·1111 nicknwne "Bi& Tam." He looted like I pirate In bis· knee-hlgb bootll, chain belt 11nd awutib earring. He wore a knife at bis hip. Baker, 30, was almost a foot aborter and at least 50 pouncb llgbter. Illa regalla dldn't fit a motoreyclllt'• tte:reotype. He bad curly black balr, and wore spec- tacles. Tbougb both aounded oul ol place with distinct Georgis -· lhe pair soon lound Jodclnl with friendly ~· In tbl Bon Joaquin Valle)'. .. Wbm I ftnt met them , they were green," aid one Ji'r'encb C a m p ......,.list. ''Tom wanled to graduate up to tbe Angela. That was one of bis am· bitlons. Charley liked to ride fast Ind pir!J. "They were old time buddies back In Augum, Ga.," aald lhe cydlst, wbo re!Uaed to be ldenUliet for fear of retribution from the Ancals. "Charley qcit hta job ·11 1 pollce moton:ycle mechlnlc. Tcm dl"""4 hta wife and lhey came out here." The duo were lakm lnlO lhe neal -bome of ..,. member ol tbe (floe BODIES, ..... II ' '.Candidate 'Oils Up Gun ' After Beach HomeBlast • The Jatos! San Clemente move comes oo lhe beeli of alml\ar motiooa tllll week by San Diq< Coonly Supervisors Wik> alJo ha .. bristled over lhe altempts by lbelr coontenwts In Orange <;ounty to seek lnstallaU.. of the tennlnol on the federal f'et!a'Y&tion. COples ol lhe San Clemente action Wecinelday will be sent "to all ap- propriate ofllclalB," the counctl agr<ecl. Amq the recipients will be President Nixon, who bolds lhe key. Without ;.be President's approval, land • at Pendleton. never coWd be released for use as a jetport. The Western White Hou5e lies doser th~ any other residence to areaa aug- gested as possible sites for the termlnal. The action Wednesday came late in the council's longer-than-usual meeting, but one member of the audieoct managed to weather the evening'1 bu.siness ta t.'001· me:nt on -the jet resolution. Local businessman Ray campbell strongly Advised J>MSllge of the resolu- tion and reminded councilmen of their allies in the fight. "You 've got allies at Camp Pendleton anci in San Diego County, even the White HouS<.'," Camp6ell said., "You can't forget that, and the re~­ ti on sMl.lld show that San Clemente fiat' opposes ·any use of P1!odleton for a jet- port. ··No matter where the planes would land on that abse. San Clemente would be hit by noise from jets," Campbell said. ' 1c.er nnocen Vp to Tlaeir Necks Amerlcm Gls hold their weapol!I bigb u t b • y prepue to wide through 1 streom during p1trol duty along the perimeter of the l.<>ng Binh airfield northeast of Saigon. (See atcry Page 4.) Four B u ses Char wred To Nix on Ontario Talk Four buses have b<en chartered by tlll loal Commlitee to -the Proa> dent to allow lllO mldeotll to tnftl to Ontorto S.turday ·--...... dent Nixon will mike hla lut·pubUc IP" pearance of lhe eampalgn. P1uf Presley, chalnnao of tbe looll YHlectlon e11oru. said "° r ... will be dmpl 10< ponons llplnl up !or lhe trip. • ReoervatlollJ. be said, will be • llrll> ....... r--. The rallr ii -!..-•boat I p.m. After the ni111 Nbu>n p11111 to nr 10 lbl El Toro MCAS Ind thin tMe 1111 - tlonal helicopter ride -to LI c.a Plctllcl lor•-.. , lbll wW ... thtouab election --.. Pilot'• Po1Wona ' On Propo1itiona Tbe DAILY PILOT todar aum- mu1Jtt t t 1 reeamrr••danl IMtyud -tm 1111 la blllal .._it1ona wllldl wlD bl 111 t111 Calllontll ballol --,. ,., i iiliiilfiii'7-.... •b. --·-"'at A .. leday. -- Th! eamp11lp, ho•fftf. will not tnd en btll mini. Durinl tbl Jut Jew days ol the reeitc- tloa dlort lhe PreaJdent pWu to tape I -GI nJlo ,,__ and ... ta at ltlst ooa m.a)Or telovillon ....,,_ Mon- dar •IPL Tbe next morning. tbe Presldmt "111 -hil ballot •t ~ Sdlool Ind tbeo l<eve Jmmedtately lor Wub..,_ D.C. No ~ dtllll• bave be<o .,..,. br hil Uiil ., lhe lormlt for elecdin day . Bui Jiii lut -lbl ,,,.._ --dllrlac till olf-yur tlactlam two ,..n .... Ill -lbl f1nC IDln It the potll, lfo rl'ffllf ollortlr lfter ! ..... ,,,. IOflr --t tlllt tlll lld>d>Otd -1111 but --lbl "'""""'--··· ftitl ... cal Preller aald tlllt 11tuni.y-1 ride ..in be -to -IDJas _,, ~· tJona lit'. cdJac Nboo ............. 1t 4111-lfll Pet--......... -.. o. !Jul lltlU wtU be .. 1ooa...s 10 till nl11. be uid. 11at PrM t 11&~1 IOUChdiwo II onwto wlD -pi.. Ill -I ·p.m,. lid 'tlie. pallllc -nod! ... """" befOl'I 5 p.m., Ill llld. A apodll -l!r r1 a a.. 10 ...-. will be """" all • ......, """ cled. ../ Auto Death Trial Ends WithR~in g By JACK a!APPl!LL Ot .. DMtr ..... , .... A verdict or innocent was returned Wednetday In the m is demeanor mamlaughter trial ol San Clemenle' pollceman Gary Adami. 'Ibe sb:·man, ail-woman jury brought back the verdict quickly lfter being ~ structed by Judg• H. Warren Knight In 1111 '"" pe1IJnlnc to tbl -'ft.·~. 1t Lq1.lla Nlauef MmldJ>ll 0.Urt, laatld five dlya lodlodlnc """ enUre day of jury selection. Adlml WU dured o/ t b < manslaulbter allegaUon u a retUlt of lhe .. rdlct. ~charge bad b<en brouih following the death ot a pulfnlft' ln a pickup truck which was involved ln a col· liakln with A.dams' patrol car owr the Memorial Day Weekend. • Jeffrey Britt. 16, of Long Beach had bttn ridln11: in the open Ford Rancbero. -- bed prior to the accident at El C&mino Real and Avenkta Delorf5 In San Clemente. He was thrown from the velU· cle and onto the pavement as a result of the colll•loo. San Clemente Po/Jc. Chi<! Clillord Murray detllned to comment On thi-'fuit~: ter of Adams ' mwnptlon ol n>uflne patrol du Ues followin& the innoctnl verdict. The policeman had been aullDf'(I to den omcer dutiea llter the milde- meanor manslauahttt charge w 1 ' brouiht. The )ury'I declsioo WIS ...00.red lfler • ioutb Id of c&o.ing arpmentl ftft made by the oppostog altomey1 w..m.. day momlna .. Pro9eculion Attom<y Don Cllrence. the first to make 1n ugu111<11t, all<ged tbe policeman bad broken the 30 mph Polled speed llmH (prlml fide ~ limitJ, the mulmum speed limit ol e mUai per hou r. •nd bad l•Ued lo yldd to the pldrup inldt . He charied that the Sin c.n- Poli« llepirtmeot WU actintl "boalcally .. u a private tnvestiptor tor the dele111t," dlr<ct ...i...,.... to certlln poUce rtpor11 which nre not &JVftl to the di..trict IU....,'1 -., II ii usual. Doi..,. 11-a.ntc1 WWlsm.a, in Pf<S<nlin( 1111 --~' ~ury u.. lc<tdOnl ---no malltr what apeied tbe police car bad been lnvelJnc. Ho Aid lbl "81 ,..._ ror the c:ollillon .... lbl ttuct'1 - tS.. INNOCllNT, .... ll _2 DAILY PILOT SC 'Not Futanfl' • -• ~ ' ,i GI Gets Pass,- To Leave Girls 11 EIDELBERG. Germany 'UPI) Pvt. Jerry .Gar rett. the only male soldier Jn a unit of 130 women, grabbed a super- \1·eekend pass today and got away from it ;111 with the blessings of a sympathetic 1\rmy. "[don't think it's funny ," the 18-year- old soldier from Greenfield, Ind., said before he faded away to ponder his prob- lem in privacy. " ( enlisted in the Army to serve my country. I didn't come in to serve with a bunch of girls. "l 've got a fiancee at home and l don't think she'll like it." Garrett wants to be a military policeman. But a few days ago, the Army assigned him to clerking duties with B Company, lhe Women's Army Corps Harbor Gro1ip Leader Shu11s Special Meet The chai rm an of the Orange County Harbors. Beaches and Parks Commission h~s brushed off a call by opIXJnents of Proposition 2Q -lhe coastal initiative - fc. a special meeting of his panel before the elect ion Tuesday. "I don't see any need for such a meeting." said Commission Chairman ~1artin Usab. "Ii seems like these people are looking for a forum before the elec- tion and 1 don't think that is the com- mission's function." The Citizen's Committee Against Proposition 2fi. an offshoot of a special committee formed by the Newport llarbor ~hamber of Commerc.e to com- bat the initiative, made the request Wednesday. ln a letter to Usab. the committee ask- ed for the harbor commission "to hold full public hearings or do whatever is necessary to fully divulge to the public al! the restrictive provisions of Proposi- tion 20." The authors of the request, Chamber directors, Dick Stevens and Dr. Nolan Frizzelle of Ne wport Beach. said the com- ~ion needed to explore t h e prop- osition because of its potential effects on beach and harbor matters. "The comm ission must be completely a14-·are of provisions that in all likelihood \'lould curtail develepment of additional boating and water-oriented facilities " · Frizzelle and Stevens sa.id ht their lett~r to Usab. "The committee recommenlh that the Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commission fulfill its position of respon.sibility and make this issue available for immediate public scrutiny," the letter added. Fl'OlllPagel BODIES ... "French Camp Boys," r. motorcycle club. After a month, cyclists said Baker moved into a wate rfront apartrr1~nt with a girllriend in Rodeo on San Francisco Bay. Shull stayed on for four or fi ve months. until November. · Mean while, Baker took a mechanics job in a custom motorcycle shop in Rodeo . The two Georgians jolne<: the "French Camp Boys'' for races frorr. Placerville to Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada. (WAC) unit of the 7th Army's "Speclal Troops Group." ''This was not an accident," an Army spokesman said. "Jl was done on purpose, although probably more or le8.i as a temporary ar- rangement. "The eompany evidently was unable to find a clerk who was a WAC and had the necessary training, so somebody p~ crammed Garrett into the arrangement. I understand he wants out of the job." Indeed he does. said his new com- manding officer. Capt. Anna Young. And the WACs are trying to help him. "He's had it," the captain said. "I ll\ink he's kind of embarrassed. 1 un- derstand some of his male friends are razzing him about it ... "He's only 18 and there are 130 of us. "And he wants to be an MP. "This would be a tough situation for anybody. I really sympathl7.e with him,'' said Capt. Young, w\)o issued Garrett a pass good for S-Olitude until Monday. .. I mean, how would you feel in his position ?" Ducking that question. a new.sman ask- ed how Garrett had been doing at his new job. "No problem," Captain Young said. "He's trying bis best to learn-the job. There's been no reaction among the girls. "There's an emergency request in to get a woman clerk in here and get him transferred.'' Why? "I cannot exercise command over any man. That is an Army regulation. So that's a potential problem, although not a real one so far." First Aid Course Set in Oemente A standard IO.hour first aid rourse open to South Coast citizens will begin late nut week at the San Clemente High School Library. IosJructon from the Orange County Red Cross Chapter, a United Fund w:ganiz.ation, will offer the instructkm Covering -emergency care for all· sudden illnesses and injuries. . The meeting dates for the fot.r--9Cg· ment course are Nov. 9, 14, 16 and 21. Each session meeta from 7 to 9:30 p.m. 'Ille only malerlah roqu1red will be a IJ.05 textbook. 11e1! will be no charge for i..nmuctiom Inside Circle Of Candidates It's the men and women behind the candidates that run the cam· paigns. And the ca~npaign staffs of Presl· dent i~ixon and Senator McGovern are as different as the candidate! themselves. 'Ille light banter that abounds at the McGovern camp ls countered by the more serious staff in the Prt1ident'1 comer -men like Charles C.Olson who once said he "would walk over my grandmother If neci!ssar)' ," in order to get Ni1.on re-elected. Meet the campaign staff.s of both candidates on Page 38 of the DAl- LY PILOT. • Taking a Sip A Pittsburgh !ireman felt tbe need for a drink of water, and saw the source in a leaky hose ~ing used to !igbt a fire in the city. Being less proud !ban thirsty, he supped. · .. ., From Pagel INNOCENT. • • swerve into the path of the patrol ca r. "He will live with this for the rest of his life. "If you want to ruin one life because . ar.other life has been taken, I submit to you that you've returned to the law of the jungle," William! said. Pair Win Postponement In Viejo Death Case Clarence's argument touched on con- flicts in witness testimony, particularly that of one witness who reported that a search for heroin was made at the ac- cident scene by youths the day after the collision. "1bat's hogwash, you know that," Clarence said. He said that the t1me given by the witneM was the same time the only two youths not hospitalized were talking with the chief of police and with parents at the yard where the wrecked truck was impounded. He termed evidence of marijuana and open beer cans irrelevant and said that "il that siren and that red light had been ou, Jeff Britt would not have died." Wllliams, defeodlng bis client's acltoo! pointed lo testJmoo;y about the clangers of red IJ&jlt and llr<D use. "ExceOdmg the speed by policemen ls a fact of life," WiJ.lia.m5 said· It was unfair for ·the district attorney to me charges against one driver, the policeman, and not the other, who was just as resp:msible 1n the collision, Williams asserted. "Don't you think that every policeman 1n San Clemente thinks, 'it's u.s against them?' " be said. Two Orange County men arrested on charges of murder after a spectacular high-speed chase through the SO.th Coast last weekend woo a postponement in their arraignment Wednesday in South Orange County Municipal Court. One o-f the pair, Michael McNabb, 30, of Stanton, had not yet been able to find a lawyer, thus Municipal Judge H. War· ren Knight delayed the formal charging of the pair unlll nm Wednesday in the same court. Arrested with McNabb after the high· speed pursuit was Joseph William Ruschak, 27, of Garden Grove. Both men had been released earlier Youngsters, Some Armed, Be8iege 2 Rock Groups LONDON (AP) Hundreds of screaming youog11ters besieged the hotel of two American pop groups today, fighting wtlh police for a glimpse of the Jackson Fjve and the Osmond Brothen:. Need Sex Counsel? can This:~;Agei"i~y · Hotel employes claimed some scream- ing teenyboppers carried knives and threatened doormen harassed by four , . days of s:Uenuqu.s WP.PY Jove. A' passerby satd'be .. ., a boy of about 9 brandishing a sledgehammer. SAN FRANCISCO (UPir -The !Olu- tioo to a set problei.i. is as near a.s one'.s telephone in thi! city. "He rushed .ip to the rear entrance of tb.Jiotel, IDlUhed open the door handle, and the fans surged in," he reported. this week from hospital care for injuries they received in the crash which ended the chase . The men had b e e n booked in the bludgeoning of Steven H. Brush, 27, of Santa Ana, whose body was found in a car along a dark stretch of old Highway 101 in Mission Viejo. The case started when sheriff's deputies came upon two cars at the murder scene, and the two' suspects allegedly fled in one of the autos. The pursuit was launched and in the meantime, deputies discovered the bat· tered body in the remaining auto. Durln g the chase, a sheriff's car was destroyed in a crash in South Laguna. The two men were arrested after their car slammed into a tree in Laguna Beach. Judge Knight ordered the pair held without bail until the completion of the ai:ralgnmeot process. Authorities •sald that the motive 1n the murder was ll!ted as robbery. )'lewspaperman Tells Loss of Boat Icebox One Orange County newspaperman may be about to embark on a crnsade for more law and order in the land. Newport Beach police said today that Los Angeles Times columnist Richard Buffum, of 306 Apolena Ave., Balboa lsland; reported theft of a $70 teakwood icebox built into tbe deck of hls boat. Someone boarded Bufililll's boat at the Lido Yacht Anchorage and ripped the unit right out of the deck,.....-- Prosecution ~veDraws .. ,, -~ ., • • 'I c • I )"',;-t J, 4 ~·•f • .06Jectiohs " By TOlll BARLEY Of .. Deltr .......... A bid by prooecutor stuart Grant to In· troduce evidence on how defendants in the Orange County Superior Court "Taj Mahal" trial allegedly sbared !500,000 reoelYed from the St. Bernardine llospllal bJougbt a .... te Of objectiOOI from four defense lawyen late Wednes· day. Judg>! James Turner ruled before call- ing a four-day recess in the trial that he will make clear Monday just bow far Grant can go in ~ering into evidence the reconls of the Pan American Bank or Los Angeles. Grant pul bank President Slanley Gonzales on the witness stand Wednes· day to back his claim that the bank's • records will reflect the d.JvlsiOn of a IS00.000 loan he claims was fraudulently ~btained from the San Bernardino hospital. Judge Tomer repeatedly ruled after a flurry of objectlorui that he wtll atrlctly limit the area of questlonlng on the bank's bookkeeping to arowid January of 1969 -the time that the hospital loaned fmancier Joseph Dulaney'a Laauna HWs enterprise $500,000 in reserve funds. ,· Gonzales testified at one point that defendant Daniel Hayes borrowed $30,oOO from his bank just two days before the bospilal approved the loan. It was testlfied: that Hayes told GomaJes that the Joan was to be used to obtain the collateral allegedly used by the Dulaney group in obtabling the $500,000 from the Roman Catholic nuns who controlled St. Bernardine's frnancial affairs. East Coast financier Fred Riley earlier testified that be was ottered $90,000 by defendant James: ShJpley to release bis controlling interest in tl)e Azalea Mobile Homes corporation Jong enough for Shipley to get the hospital funds . Grant clalrns the Aulea stock ls worthless. He points out that the loan re- mains unpaid today and that it wil.s im· )Xlssible to sell the collateral on the open market. Riley, 45, and hospital controller Robert Machan, 50, were two of seven persons indicted by the Grand Jury on charges of fraud, grand theft and con- spiracy. Both men were cleared of all charges after they testified as witnesses for the prosecution. County AttoIJley G~1 I(:C 1 ~~st Rodollo Montejano, a santa Ana civil litigation attorney, has ~ appointed a member of the Interstate Commerce Commission by President Nixon. The recess appointment Is subject to U.S. Senate approval wben Congms reconvenes in January. It was not con- firmed by the Senate before adjournment last month. Montejano is a native of Santa Ana, a graduate of UC Berkeley law .school and an attatney wtlh the firm of Cohen, stok- ke and Owen. Alao appointed to the commlss.ion dur· lng the recess was Alfred Towson MacFarland of 6utalaln Springs, Tenn. The San Francisco S e x Information qeocy opened Wednesday and by telephone offers free and confidential answen to questions about sex. The nonprofit ag.!ncy amwers simple que.stions directly and makes referrals for more complicated problems. fall clearance ~ SALE! Orongo County's Lorgost Selection of Contemporary Furniture "We'd go down the wh ite line sometimes passing between two cars on the corners to see who wa1 fastest," said one ~-year-old cyclist r r i e n d . "Sometimes we'd hit 12C1 or more on the straight!." Teddy on Trail open Sunday 12-5 Ao~ "French Camp" cyclist, Larry McC\lrdy, said he shared a Manteca apartment for one month with Shull and two other penons. OU.M•t COAST te DAILY PILOT l1-Or ..... C.t DAILY l"ILOT, •1111 ... left 11 c~"*I lllt N-l"Alt, 11 .,_...,_ JJif' Ille 0r.,.. eo.11 '"*""Ille ~llY. s.- r•te ldl!IGM 1r. ..,..llMof, ~l"I' ~ ,.V.y, fw Colli Mtu ...... I l•Ktl, H.,.tt.,.-IHCfll,9'11'ti.lrl \111...,, ~ II~, frvlMIS...lt\lolU. ...... '-" ('"""'II./ s... J-c1.i11r1,,., 11 .i1'01t ,..._t ~ II fVOlltlltlf lth1ri11y1 ... SunNn. tlle ,.-lrlciPll l'UtUMllnt pl1nl II 11 lJO Wttl ••• ilrnt, CMll "'-• C.llton1ll, mM.. RoMrt H. W.-4 ........... .,.. ll'llt>IW. Jeck It. Curley Viet l"r•Mlllt ..... OtMt-11 Ma~ Tht1t1 •t Koovil .. ,,.,. Thom11 A. Mur,.t.!111 MINtlrlO E1i..,- Clii1rlff H. L101 •1cht1~ r. N1U N1lllllll MMllll .... ltl ..... s. a. ..... OfflM JOI Horttr. ll .. C.MiM •••'• t2672 --"Clot• M.ii l» WMI &If ltnlt ~ tltdlr JDll ~ llu1e¥1•• Nwlt ........ htCfll ,,.,. hod! ...,...,,,.. ~ '*"' m """"" ""....._. M•••••• Cf14) MMJl1 c........ .............. , .... ,. ,... et.11 ·,, •••• ,. •.-z ."1k•l:•1 Cfl ... 411 - ''"' 0r .... , ... , ~~"'"'"¥'"""" Mo MWI , 1lorlft llllltfnl ..... """ ., "'"""'"""""" ""'"' _, ... "9t'llM.. •l"*'i ~ J1" ...,... • Cl!ffrllfrit ..-r. - llcMI Cl•• .......... CMfll ...... C.llftrflla. ~....... ., t.llTW ··" ~I IW flllll U,IJ nWltll'rl ...,,_ ..,..... "·" IMlllNY. Drawing Throngs for McGovern, By STEVE GERSTEL NEW YORK (UPI) -For Ted Ken-!le<iY· the "thrill" of a political campaign 1s gone, forever hostage of the memory of 1968. But Ted Kennedy ls campaigning. Not thi.s time for his brother John F KeMedy, a.s he did In 1960; not1this tim~ for his brother, Robert F. Kennedy, as he did in 1968, not this time for hlmself. But for George S. McGovern, the Democratic candidate for prel!lident; for old colleagues and politica l allies ; for young friends seeking polltlcal office for the first time. Day tn, dAy nut, In a iic11led-down venrion of a prealdenllal cavalcade, Ken- ( ND'S ..4NALYSIS ) nedy has been trave11ns around the coun- try~ splrltcd by • 11.11'.·pa.ssengei: Lear Jet or a 10-pauenrer Falcon west and 10uth, mrtb and east. '"Tbe thrill has gone out since 11S8 " Kennedy 1&id Ill hla motorcade &I~ through New York City traffic without 1 police ucort. "I was tn two national campelgna," he aald, choosing his woros, hl1 oeotenca broken by thought. "The> were very opeci.J Jo me." In 1980, John F. Kennedy waa elected pr,.ldent. In 1918, Robert F. Kennedy WAI usa.ssloated. '1t .realbr: Jt can never be the aame again," be adds. "But I'm glad to work hard for Sen:-licGovm .. " Will It be thll w1y forever? "f thlnk so." Would It be dlftermt It he were run· ning? "I don't think so." Edward Moore Kennedy, the senior senator from Massachusetts and last ol the Kennedy br.Thera, walking, jogging, jaywalking, daring the traffic on the slrffta of Manhattan. Big, robust, vibrant at 411 -gray ls just beginning to make tentative inroads a~ the temples -Kennedy seem.s to en- jny the freedom of walking the streets of the nation's largest city, moving so fa.st that recognition from passersby cornea tr~ slowly. Tot.ally foiled by a traffic snarl, Ken· nedy abandoned his motorcade in a de1peratt attempt to reach the rally point In the gannent district before McGovern. He arrived too late. This b one of Kennedy 's mission! In the campaign -pitchman for the prod- uct, t u r n l n a on the crowd ror • McGovern. He does It well. The voice and gestures familiar, rld-dllnc the Administration wtlh ridicule on llollowttn and the day aliu. "Do you know whit tonight b ? "Do you know what'I Nippenl.ng at ll)e White liouse?" he asks and then ans wer1; '"l'htre'!I a man dressed up like the l'Ttsldcnt." And then the rour hor se men : ''Incompetence favoritism ... secrecy ..• corruption .•. " and 1 favorltt, "It isn't easy to have 11 hand ln the Jilli_ fool In the mouth ; Jongue In cheek au at the same time." "Do atate and local Democrall talk to you about 11'7f!" Not much, Kennedy replies, buJ adds: ''M It «ell closer to the end and It np- pc11.; the race contlnuc1 to be uphlU" there will be mor't. 100'• of Values! ordtr now for earlv chriltmc.t ~IWtrv P1us s•ctional 9x7'h In lux· uriout h••r.t Imported ••'· v•t ava11able In m • n y choic•• of c o I o r s and f•brics. Sale $595. entire .inventory reduced! '' •• I .t. , • • • daily 11 -9/Mturday 11-6/sunday 1-5 • ph 5'48-5518 • toll free 5'46-1262 I ' I I l I f d g ' f .... ' ' .. , .... ' • ••I•• '•-· •· ,_ ,. "' ThurSd.11, NMmbtt 2, 1972 ' What's Doing Outdoors Severson New Golf Pro Burges Togetherness JIM NIEMIEC At ShorecliHs Country Club ~ ::~ Slwrt Hair Aids ' J Sea Kings Win Oordon St-la tbe .... '-----------~ .... -bold pro/•looal .,11 ID-~ Ol1UCtiJr at·!lbondlllJ Coonley "' pnMll<1ed tile quail and dlucter -Opener tbll put aub ID SU Clemente. weelumd wu • bll dbappolntmeol. VU'/ Int brdt _.. b_.i , Tllo :lf:YNM>ld Se...., and not a ala&le limll wu ropor1ec1 by 1111 bllvldull .,.iter IDOYel to Sboroclllla hm De fjUllllfr. ' · Ana l>eoert di>untry Cub ID Tllo average beg per huftt<r -about s" blfda •. Plib 11111 lklmlP l!prlnp w11ere "" Game offlclal1 blame the 1ow blntil .., _, -¥. -· amocl tor' m >"""' u on and DNlllig cmdltlona makln( !or Ytr'f 1111111 'dlildln of'-· ualltant. Bt la Gl'fcb>Olly HlDl!m ou the Tejoo Ranch "1joyed tbe lllibetl •-of from Aubunl. W8'hlDglall. all Southland 'iuml«I u :!f{ and 111C111111t1D quail llmbod ID "l grew up ..,..king on a lroot ol llilotguns U the .C#IO'fl wwe ~ with clop. IOlf ..,._ ~ I'm Vfr/ fmd Ciubr were at.a repoNd u btllla ,.., am! far bet•-ol the pme, be ays. and tile lowerlng of the bq Umll dldll~ help banterw "1d lbe In coll... be played for clay early. The outlook for tbe --ol llio ...... la lllltd. Pacific Lalbenn Un!Ya'lllJ ID u very poor le< uplADd pme hunters In queot,ol quail ml ,._ ~ tbe flOl1 ~~ d!alllr. -· a _....... ~ plomblp while be WU 8 -· ~-II prtllllllly emoll· Wlod, cold wealller aad -flllMa el MIWa 1*'111... ed In tbe PGA appreatlce pro-1m,.-Ille wmmowl ..... la ... Sc 'Npl ~ -...... II -40 -of earfl' tldt -foreed Ile lllrU ell tMlr ........ -.. ...,uve duly before be CID ob-hreed . llaem •to lbe nnaJler ....... *!I -I ...... la taln bis UC-U I full-.. clwee of brlqlns don Ile 1i1P II~ ml. -«! PGA club profeaslonal. 01lbl ...... lbe Soltoa SM .eajoJed a beller llal at•IP Larry Sean, a graduate of •-lhlt poll week II llmlb of ...., ,,_ --1'ln USC, II bis wlllanl 11 are llbo maay wJieoa aad loll ......i tbe ,.. nd l 1111 ShonclllfJ. lllloald remain very (OOd tlnaP Ile 11r111 11a11 of Ile -Shor<cllffs II c u r re n t I y 9. dabs la Oraqe Coal)' llllo repoll u -Ill undergoing ....-ding on tbe Ille owl -1alloL Tiie llldl: of ..., -urlvlll are heel -and alnce StverD1 ...., maJIOnb, la ........ to .,. ........ w11-joined the Ital!, It ha been Al Wllle, of tbe lrYlae -, Aid 11111 -llmll _.. cio-1. "" at bud for luleri ,....... Ile ......, ea Ile ruel, wlleli "I haven't bad an op- are leased to private -. liidte added 11111 llere ._ -portuntty lo play tbe lull very llltle bmllJlg actMty oa labs ID lbe """""' to da~ ooune yet," he aaya. ''Bill we . L are gelllilg IOIDO grail coming Bonkers .BN4ltlf1 Sostn up where tt uaed 1o be pretty Ned Xllony and Du a n e Pedlar. The Khon)'-P- duo topped F.d Ha;a and Lloyd SJOcUr' 4 and s. In the .... half al the bracket, Piil Hart and F.d Etbell deloaled Fred Werder and Jq Howitt, 4 and I. They wm play Chari.. Heller and Vince i/oean. wlnnen over Jim DJJaan and Milo Tedslrom, I and 2. 1be cbamplomhlp round will be played a ..... from Satur- day bqlnnlnc,al 10 o'clock. .._ .. SI Action la the president'• cup eompelltlon at Ranbco San J~ ClaJI 0.-will becln U. •&2 \ ... with four rounds ~ ion 1ac c ee dl n g w•-· , Jr.,l•e C-t Bab Lann, one or the oulllaedlnc )'OllDI pros on lbe PGA tolW, •teat at I ve l y scheduled to play an ezhiblllon . round at !rYlne C.111 Country Club·oo Monday, Nov. 20, ac- _, lo head pro Rlchad llarllnei:. Lunn and Martinez were toplber qutle a bit on the pro tour be!ono the !CCC pro quit to remain In tbls area u a club and le.aching professionaJ. W ' . Ediso eslm1nster, n -Favored Over Rivals B1 BANK WE8CR a 21·yltd run In 1be l<Nllh Df .......... """ ..... period tet up the cUndt1nc UJlllOlo .., Ille llJllCO that louclldown. male -u -In-And Lauclerilaua!J -the te ... tlng. And In ...,. cuea, workhone In tho c1r1 .. lo lht Upoeljl doo\ )Ult happen, they wUll'w,g touclldown, cor1ttic are made. the ball ellht Umtw In Ibo 1$. P'or a cue In poilll, LU• play oerteo. Corona dd Ma"s JM vlciory "Wo llnally IOI ~ aointf fNtr snvioualy u n b e a t e n right for him to nm," HoUlnd. F.dllOiilut....t. saya. "We IWildlod to the l- it started with a team aoul formation two web .p to oeardllng ..,.ion the Monday Jolio advllllqe ol Illa run- be!Dre the -1be result ni~ ... Holland .. ,.. Tllo line wu a tmaller team, a shorter· ~Md unbelievably wtU f« ~~ ..,., and a new him lul wwl, and be ran 1--~ well.'' tor-..... accordin( lo Sea Untll bis -.... qalmt Klnp COllCh Dive Holland. W-M badn'i bl«i the bell "II wun'I oll)'lhing apoctal o1 -for t11o M, 1111 be able to play for anybody." ,.. aald at the meeting." pound-· Aller plctq up Pby.ically Burg., has the Holland says. "We )Ult agreed 33 yarda In the -qalnal atlrlbutel. And be ha prevad tbal the learn wun\ playing Newport, he wao llclallned A It b o u g b Weslmlnller'• hlmtelf In two eeUOlll u a lotolber. we were p1ay1111 as with a ldcine)( ..-0 IQld LlolUll are rated No. 2 in starter on the G a u c h o a ' Jncllvk!ual& miaed Che leci:nd pme of the Orange County be b Ind delemlve line. "A lot of ldds. came up with IOllOD. Western'• Pioneers, ooocb BW AM, :JSO.jlolmder out al San Ideas <XI what oouk! be<klne to• He pie"'! up II, and 45 BolWell'• Lions football team Clemente Hlgb, Burgea wu a pt toeelher. and..,. al them yanls In the .. rt two pmeo, w a four-point choice over the co-winner of the Gaucbol' _, Chat the whole team but. then wu knocked out tn Anabehn ICbool In a Sumet outatandlng delenslYO llneman woold 1et crew cu t 1. 'Ille the early ~ aplDll SuU LeBgne smwdowo Saturday awltd Jut -and wu deleoae bed tailed -dolni Ana Valley and woond Ill> i.;.. · ni8bl ID oelecllons made by named a second leam all· It belore, but we decided that Inc yardage In only five car: muddy." the DAILY PILOT llalf. league aele<llon by th e the whole team would do ll ri ... -~ ••-•-Mission COnference coaches. A oeldom uaed ,_.e last The main body al Canadian Honlerl In the Pacific F!j,.ay In -area ·~. -•---be bu ~ed "We ltarled lbe ·fl':'~ >-~-·~ J ~--•-and the Paclflc !btJi. Edll0n'1 CbarJ"S are plcbd • ~ -· with about 15 pla)'ml, .....,., La-.i> h 1 1 i.. jllll DOW ~ .. r~c~ out w ~ s..u. A-by -poinll lo topple In most areal and ...:· each with Sf, Ibey all got crew cull, shown tp'OAI ln'.pio-l lhil =· Cold freezing temperaJnres are forcing the . birds -AcllClll ID the annual men'• .-reeled Santa Ana Valley '~e~ ::., 8:-"~ and Ibey all play.cl," Holland -I:". I ~ J:U...s ~ t II'• ""'•• lo be a --'· ol _.. !Jelore .,. -'-"'-·• clnb bJ&l>low toumamenl II In an Irvine Iague cniclal. -·-•-n -he-"-~ aaya. • .. po1"1tlal lo IU onon lo number ~g .... arrive ~tn""' the SOldllW>d and .;.,,,. ~ 8anl8 Ana Country Club la Corona dd Mar la a one-;.~ and i.; &;, ';";;i "1'111 """' the balr doeln't junior ""'c.o... bell at leut. should ezpect lo aee the huge blnll wortlng pooda "' lalea down lo the aemilinab WW. point plct over Fonntatn job agalnat the nisb. lie plavs mean lllY1blnc. ~ or lone "Ir. la aot roally 1111, but be mud! bele<e the !Int al December. ~ • .!'!"Idles canled lbll Valley wblle Unlvenlly II lab-on the llde nert lo the tight heir -1 male you win or iJ a bard nqmer, flodl lit Only a few specJcs and 1DOW1 bave been bagged around tbe . ~~ :::'!,by d:, ov:,~ :,::US 0:: end 80 be pts -le learned lo>o. II wa1 Just a 9)'111bolk boleo ..,.., and 11 ...., llnloC sea but adlon -.Jd pick up wtlhln a week O!. so, ~. oould In quarterfinal round~ moot ol the lime, but he lll1I ~ ~. bring the learn !or Ille 111<," llolllllll -. be speeded up wilh the help ol a winter storm. ~f:"s:'1Hu~-and llstcither area IBJD'" Include gelastaln1,~_l!ieUyp,l•X;::_., -•-'"Ille reuou ,.. _ ..., "And be'• ..,. of Ibo i.d\11!1• ""-FoothDl Misslo VJ jo by .. U!,;11 111.U '°' ,-.,U\11 .. .....,. OD tbe telrn. '' j: ,•' Deer Bunters Jaeproee Seer~ )Jax McClain. 3 and 2, 1o over • • wen up 1n the G a u e h o that the team as a wllole:i-"::;j~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--~ reilcb the ..,... acrou from two and three other ...... by Midgets Roll tlefe111t•e nmb, particularly play.cl 111 belt pine of thel A1 Ille deer .....,. drawl lo a elooe for Ibo Im -. •four points. o!! 8 fine game 11111 week year. The defeme wu IDOd. ~ bob hanlen are brlnrlal den oome big -Deer are la 11111 On the juBiar college front, against Rlveralde. the of!enalve lint blocled wen, nd -ud troplly -are ..... --. GWC Gals Oranae Coat II a four.point At El Toro ,,,_ .. baa nine unaallled ~ Sktp·''Laudc11augb nally •-•n'• Tldl wr11ar haaled oa Ile Ttjoa -*' poll ,.._..._...,_ cbolce over Ceniloo "Wblle -• ·-· ban!, , ... ud In le11 tban elgllt boon oal In Ile fleld -ao loll -Golden Well II tabbed by taclles and be• uabted oo 17 ~ wu the -UEN'S SHOP I• deer. Tbe Tejoa Ruel offen --... a -...,. over &mla Mooka and otbera lbll aeuon. Ht bao at.a vlllllle ~llon of lbe , .. -••W-the ......... ,_ Ile Blitz Foe Saddlebeck II picked by nine The two lop cbivon OD the cauoed one fumble, recovered lxetll ... ~ at ,_ bfl boeu la --to •...--• midget ra<1ng ctmdt will lhme otben and ......, up Sea K!nr -~· hnge ISO,• acre raaell loealed jut -ti Lt1 Mpleo, _ over Mira Costa. meet beackn Saturday nlJJlit four pwea while ""-Ing Belllnd tlie llDI of a.. DOUILI KN Tle muasemeut of Ille lnUlllq .,...-at Ille ,_ Sue Inman aeored 30 polala Closelll pme on the college when ,Danny McKnight and OJlllO"lnc quarterbecl.. lint and..lho lead al SPOIJ COATS are ...ter the expert pJduee of Walt F1lcle6. -lu ~ Mouclay night lo load the front II Aulium over Florida Bobby Olivero race at the El A cooslslenl pl~·er In· bis I u 11 ·b a cl Bill Mobr, Ile put ZS yean la fune comervatloa ud mu..-. Golden Weal College women's Toro Speedway. Gaucho career, HaO"!:nan says LauclertlOuP bad bis -lly LOUAIT Uutlacbed b .. tero cu •aat Ille Tejoo Ruel bl' almply ballelhall teem to a 57..!S win p R Action lllarts with time Burgea' attributes on the ffdd -ID two yeara cxi <the -• • • tatba& out • seuon memberthlp at • Vr.trf ,_. fee. 'fte over bolt LA Harbor. ro esults trials at 7 o'clock and the boll down to his sU'en(tb and vanity. ti •••• ,.. •'ilh••1111111 ..... ,... le eallllea • baaler to haal11fo!.!~ .... u.,.wellla ~ !'!'.';'"d..__ei: Golden Weal iJ ..,. game tropll,y race al 1:30. me. Bmllltll •W11Y ,_1edl1 IOI ,.~IN Hater ""''"" percentage -~,.. ~ ~--be!llnd Fullerton In the Coul =:'.'~""' , McKnight and Ollvero bave "lie boo the lllrengtb lo bold Ille l:4locio Uoe. Wudtrbeugb -• 6 1rOJll!1 backs on Ille TeJoa Ruel. -'-'• -~ -.. 'laaue Undlag. =-~,'!!! • ,_ , , combined for 17 wino ID the It oil a double loam and then O""'*' Ibo ...... wltll IOI OOLDIN lllllD Allyoae lnlermed In lmnllnf thlo large ..... ~ ~ oilxn .alng a 1 a In 1 I ~·.: • "'-malD eventa oo far In the ....,. m0e the Joclte. tllX! the alze JM* ml • • -Ria ICNITMAJTIR caU Fngtetb al (805 ) 32'74481. ilorllo< were Linda r.awr-t . ._ -.:..,., • '"'> Ing ....... Tbey'U 1et com-lo pt pall bit blocler and piltlom boat bed -II MUNWAll . ., fKtroduetory POf!kagie Dtferetl 11_J~~·~~>i.~::"1~tl~),~B~:::;4~· ~1et<:.~>;~;f,~==-· j=~~Ni~·~""~,~~~:~~f·~~'.__·_• -~~ll~llon~Coo~i~·~'.l'~r.~~steve=drt~~~~u~· J~r;:":£:~:·~1,.~·"~!,.~°eJooo~':1 m: ~lba~·:·~J~~-~twu~Two~ .. ~·~~"';;'°~p1aan,~ap~bl;a[~;";f!;•~C;~;L"'~LO;";';' ~~ The Green Hea d Club In stml Valley iJ oflerlllg an Jdn>. (I), Liia Herreras (I) and -"' "' Kemy Gidney, Jerry Dunltban kUler lmllncl, be'U be bani lo ..,.,..., In the -_... ---ductory package for hu.nter1 who have never bunted uJUod Debbie Durlilon. (2). ur ..... J:iw• It 101 and John Redkan. stop." belPld llit up. fllld ..,.i. and game on a private club. Qary Williams, owner of the Greenbead Club, has aet up a special hunt fOf' lntere.sted pheaaant bunters. on a first time only bitsla, scatter gunners can sample the excellent hunting dfereif at Greenhead at a very low fee, . MOre than 2800 acres are available at the club which la Jo. cated only 45 minutes from downtown Los Angeles. For more information on !he club and 111 opm memberlhfps pboDe WU.. !lams st (805 ) 644-31160. Dog TralKl .. PregreWI Ftt tbe duration of tbe ..... .., ........... ~ tra11 tMtt own llunttng dog 1t w ., ...._, CllltnW1 -* ptpmlar Hlltlec clabt. M1b •nz's ... , 1BUZltl' of ~ Raa:- .ba111e'• PMuut HaaUq Pfllwa te ta C..., Ml pal t111tller a dot trabt.bll' proeram f• lldh1 .. sl doe enen. Balers will be able lo -· -Ile _. pld-of Orvl1le Sllaw for seven Mwt 171 tr6!r to ~ &Mir t'Wll .._. of -. ·llOs adapt la Ile lllM. 'ne _,.. of lbb-wll cover tbedlew, wtrkblC ~ live blrdl ... u. 9Cta11 all af. ier-i*tAlll -la tbe lleld. Fw -.. lalormMloa • Ille c11 .... ..-(11f) - Mb:ed CnUJaea Reported Fresh water fishing hu &lowed down the post couple o1 weeb, primarily due lo a lack of anglJng pmsure. SoUUlland !Akel are ll!cllag out a variety al fllb !or anglers braYIDI the element.. . Bus, trout, crappie and belly calllali lo If pounds 11111>- llghled llalilng aellvltlel at nearby VaU Lale. &>me IArp <np- ple -been eaucht Ill yellaw Flea Fly jlp ·wblle -ftJl>s' men -ling deep diving plup and plalllc _,,,. are bei&lnl a few In the 2 lo S pound claa. Fllhlng 11 considered alow al Big Beach Lale, Hemet aod cuyamaca. These lakel ve only good for small planted - and action will cbntlnue to slow down as wlnta approect.. San Diego Illes "" liJled u !air for mtaed catcbea o1 -· lr<>UI and calfilh, but anglerl are bevlng lo -k very bard for a llmlt ol any ljlllCle. Plru c..Jtal and Caebuma are alow, l'Mbella 11 fair 1or bass and the northern lales of San Antonio and Nactmlelllo ar1 rsted poor due to cold wealher and Va')' low waier. Deep Sea Fish Report GRAND PRIX '113'~ SPORTSMAN'S SHOP . .. ...... :'" .... SKllRS!!! GET READY NOW FOWSKI SEASON AHEAD ••• wrrH BIG SAVINGS ON 'FAMOUS NAME EQUIPMENT AND .APPAREL. • Ski Boots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '11 0 ... 220.00 Flftr Nu llcil w!tlt Mai .. Toe, Elostoinat hetl ••• ,. "·" 6C>.OO ~ ~ ~ Ilda • • • • • • ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 23.n . 50.00 Mai .. toe & Eloslolnat t.el birdings • • .. • .. • .. • • • 24.9' Womm'1 pony fw aflwNld boots , • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • .. 1/20FF Nw<1 & Mm 1a'1 llti pmtua ......... , ........... 1/a-lh OFF ""-"• & Wlil/1 l\ttelallrl ••••••••••••••• , •••••••••• \Ii OFF 2".00 I ad'W Het • il:liC>ne pants • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • .. • 11. 99 36...00 ld1( ~ pcstfl............... .. .. . . . . . . . . . 1t.9t fi*"'r CIDi,.. ••••••••••• , ......................... Y,.1,-2: OFF w ...........•••••••. • • • I••••• e e•e • • " • • • e o o o • • , • • 1t1 off 20.00 WQiis.s1p1o ...................................... t.n .............. • ' NIWP'On e •1 PASHK>N ISL.AHO • NlWPOIT CINTll e ....iatt e MoND.4T j N.llMY, INf.t 1JI e SUJtOAY, IJ1M • l itO e OTHll OATS. lfM • l 1Jt 11: .•.· '~· • . . '· ::;1 .. I l I " t •" I "'If DAILY PILOT SC PUT SOME LIGHT ON THE SUtJECT lly TIRRY GRANT. R.Ph Never,· never, take ANY medicine in the dark! Ahvayli turn on a li~ht so you can i;ec ,~1hat you're doing and check to make surC: that you're taking the right mecli· cation. A lot of medlctne bot· · • ties are similar in design and ;; can be easily interchanged V.1th one another If you're not paying attention to what you're doing. • It never makes take unnecessary chances and avoidable risks. In fact, It's downright foolish! To· day's drugs are potent com· ·pounds, and accidentlally 'taking the wrong one Instead ot the right one can lead to •erious -and perhaps fatal -conseque.nces. You can't be too careful when it comes to U&ing m~lcines, and \\•e ·hope you will e~fi_se the ncce5S8J')' precauuor s. .. Thurscliy, No•• tim Chevrolet's RecaH Note Sent Again • YOU OR YOUR oocron 11--------"-'"--1 .. .. ' " . . . . " ... . ·- ; •.-... N PHONE US when you d a deUvery. We will c»-- Uver promptly without ex· tra charge. A gt<eil.t many people rely on us 1ol' their health needs. We weloome requ@Sb ·for delivery service and charge accounts. PAIK LIDO PHARMACY U1 Hospit•I INd · N.w,.rt leach '42·15IO Pree Dellwtry 'YOU Secti.on' There's something for YOU ln lhe "YOU Section" of the D.1,IL Y PILOT every Sunday . , , , °*ct its personal appeal for ·'"" Yot. and yours. •' . .-. ~"' " • ; :1 ••• .. . •' . ' ,. . ,.. 'l" ~ :~ ' , .. ·':l<t ' l I Fall '72 I• fA$Hl0H IOIJMr $ANTA. AHA Tl l, $47...,., .,_.....nc...i e l'fl••tw ct.•,p 7 ··~ 1J ............... ,., '44·5070 ~. ' • I ' OVER -TH \ ' • ~· ...... .,-..... COUNTEK ... .. • ( • I • • ., ... :t: .~ .~ f ~ ... ""+;,;, +•t• ~ :j:/,, 'i~ ~l~ i:. I I I l ; •• ' , U~predictaljle NEW YORK (AP) -The s!Qq_'mu:~ .im-. niered down Tbunci., afte. two ....ions ol'"11rdf. gllils ID a "peace rally." Trtding relpjlned'ai a til8'L level.· · . ' ·. · 'l'be Dow Jones avenge oi ·aa· ludUJbiala reg. !stored small gains at the start; dipped la midaet- olon, th.ell strengthened again ID ~ late going. · . Advancinr lssuea °" the New .York Slod: IX- change started with a modest lead over decliners, after which most o( It melted away. · "Tl>e market bad been · proi:eedlng slrOllal'r li!••d for two days,''. aid Lorry Wachtel, Ylce pi'Osl-dent of Bache & Co., "but It rm Into eome profit· laking.• . -------------11: .. • ' .. . '. .. ' . ' -. ' • . • .. .... ... -... • . . . . . " 1'" . .. , DAILY PILOT _ 'A- SEATIU: -Tllo Boelns Co. hu teamed with t w o Callfomla ftnna to 1n11lre 1he I~ low bid Cll I - water purlllcatlon Plat. u - pamlan. "\ Doting, Paul Jlan!emln. Inc. stanton, IDCI 1he H.C. Smith contrucllon c 0 •• Compton, put in I joint bid of W¥ler 13. I million !or wwl: to be conducted It Simi, DW' Santa Monica. Boeing woold pii>vlde business manacrment on tile project, to be eom· pl•t<d In mid 19'/I. •• a .. ~ .. ' '\i. '" .. " tt • .. .. _ .. r-.. ... • i5 •• .. .. t~ ~ ! ~ ... • .... w I 1 • -\ . I • 1-••~!_l r.Pj,•,f~' _ ... 4 rnJ~*~~~; '.: Casti g ~~~Q~l)ff e:,.g: ~ TONIGHT'S -• • ' . TV 'IDGlillGllTS " .. . . ABC • tl:llO ·-''The Man With the Goldl!ll Arm." Otlo"Preminger•s dramatic indictment of·llie dNf traffic which spotlights the terrors cif. heroin'. witlidrawal. Frank Sinatra, Kim Novak, Eleanor Parker'(conUnued Friday~ KCET ID 7:30 -"As You Like lt." Shakespeare explores love and lust in this romantic comedy replei. "1th du)<es, w;esUers and shellherdesses. CBS a ~:00 -"The Dirty Dozen.'"Lee Manin rounds up a corp9 "'Of .condemned murde~rs l!l~ other military derelicts to undertake a iuiclde !llli>- .... ~ ••.•• M,• 0 ' • t f ,,1 .. O ·Cdmmunlt~ .. Iha...;: ::. Ta.;~:w •• the~ »:.. · ~ ~. ~; • .. s0-ng-Pot~u-'" boslonlng .to .~ \llflr .,... ~ttan ~er11· a1, worma11on may be . ob-· . ~. _1r ~:."'. · · lli:)')llld tho·dl hrJ.o<m••"4helr--,'IM,:· br·l<to>lldtnl Down ~-"'' · • ' ~11· with four of them•~ mlon weekda)'i (rOin 8 6.m. ~t ,of1..l the 1i'oun\ain ' •,~ -· .!...:;, t'-, ',..,. ..J oounclng auditions' r.. lh<lr<-•·to 5 ;p1m. , : . " . VallOy group,.at 117-11821. . t II ~ 101\l BARLEY . -In ftiiit YOJot Wood' I lnln~t .. ...wt;'·.,.•'' "'''of" I.vi. ,. ~:· · ' '1. " • · •·' -, ·~ ,; ~ - ' L--!J ,lUU r .......... uon! :11.J. • • • . • 1 ,1 , •· ' , · i '1 •, • .;.·~ • • • ,,dur, teoor .. DmlllB .. moat Tcyouts !0< perl°'men. of .. ., _TllE F0~4IJ'I · • .. V~ley ''CH AMP AGNE. COM. -!NI ' ' ' ' " ~ ~a ~bert 1011i ~ " ' all. .ii• grolijd .-•anCl~lir.'Olle Co~nlty 'N!ler. ~ ...... PIJIX" Wt11 •be Ille Jan...,. EJlliilU1'1(Ji,. ~1,i '~.f<~·°*1tuall, t#Llii''. ~~~1":,!: case, muslcla!>f -ho~ ~-n<>110ced It" ~-,rqr ,!be JX'OClucllon of the Santa .Ano.· L~,old IDd ~ . announced b{<hO'.COil& Mela chi1'1'""" play, "Mr" Popoer',4" -Coilonlllllty Pla~ra, "1thllon", , .. ·: : ·• '1 ~,;Mi• .;.panda 'j,..._.;. or ;::?:!t :ti.~.'.. .,."Ob1, .. wily ctvie Playhobse', F o tz'ti fi •t~rr1 "'. • • ~, 1n" the directorli , "l ... ,,_ • ""'f"'l .. UIJWl,'C •• Vl!lJey Community in.uotor _. , , -. . ;""'" "' ," cbalj'. J\lbOI--.ppeand: u , two and top II all off ,Wflb a '· Sindldli 'did\ 11*9 than ' ' 1 • • " I " . slon in German.occupied France. Ernes.t Buz:gnine, . Cbarle's Bronson, Jim Brown. • • NBC 0 , 9:00 -Ironside. A Japanese puzzle provides . the clues to a mysterious theft following the accidental death or a construction worker. Ray· mond Burr stars. Santa Ana Q)qnil\lOity Pia~: •;e'JLtJIC)Ul}, · the jioyclila-In tho comedy • Lone Beacll Com mu nttr, well loved uthem beHi< f6rn. · )Ultli>e 'IA> .. 1111' tbal Ila 1!>111 "and the -Long ·Beach Con>.". ,. · «:;, ...... ; .. ...rty-,...rsqo'al,lbe Play-· "Aacel Streel'' lillttalloverto,..,..cbOrale r bem ·a:!."J.'ot:li. With ihli munlty Pl"l'bou.s<" . .'. ; . : , .. -.. , . ~11u9~ ·Qoacb P~: '!be Patndc Hamlllm drama . 'YoU'vt co'nCoct.a 1 ~ .;~ : ""'1111 V l U I h n KTLA. II 12:00 -"Roman Scandals." Eddie Cantor and Lucille Ball are teamed in this 1933 tµusical ci>medy. .,..,.,,.. ...... ·TV DAILY LOG Thursday . .. Evelling NOVl.MBER 2 '"°11oommm-rnlllll-a r.1em1 ".lack Knlf•~ i1l "'""" 0 ~Wiid Wiii· mlJM."-' ID'°"'" Py11 USMC ID z..n! . fl) Mi Dvlce.c.-ndl m Hadiepedfl lld1• OJJ Mlybefl'J RFD IE LI Se1Lll'4t Elpo&a ft) TtlrH Sbopl "' 1:1111 B Cil Tiit ...... A lloratlm 1 >"OUrtl min thl W-11tons haw l1kln in unuptclldlJ·btttlJS> lltir lMt · MidlHI FWpt.rt ~hd ,lol' l:Qftley 1uest John-Boy. Mal)' Ellen ind Ell111>elt1'fuld the 10~111 ~11'.\Glne,· lost In th1 .oQds ind abcNI o Wit 1n 'injured (fCCOOn tor food. Jafl~ 8of SIVI!' tfit ril:tooil," "'*If (U; ubtttr 11~es home · t6· cart b', ind Gir\o Is' 11¥tn' 1ood' ~itd. 1htll1r" unfll his re.al .n1ture is ·rrllllllf.,' .. 0 dO.!ll"" "~ l!I"'!' -· C.rol Chlnnl11L ldwlid .AIOlf ind . sinter· DoAny H1thlway .,,. flip'•· 1uesll. , • ' O OO IIJ E!l•od ...... .., .. bey" Cl?l 6rHr is framed bJ 1 11n11udtr tsyill( lo find the MR of his brottler Wllo was tilted' bf Gtwlt in 1 "*1tout Aft" 1rrangin1 !hi 10optlon of tlM orphaned boy, Gu• b111n bdildin1 up ·, banlli 1C:ount ., ~ could llm •• operation · lo cure 1 hip injury sust1lned In the slloolout. . m H.f•n'a ..... t!J kDtl Fro• tlM Dty9:,k ED t1tra1110S eon;. rn il>J "*"" . .,.. .,,...,., McGovern or IUIOll?'' list ti flW· p1rl 11<e-eltctloa Mbaft llfta. a)Pnllilr"MIN m1.11•·-'*' m-~.......,_,. ....... ~ff) '4&-)ohn Garfield. l:lO m ....... Criffi1 Sliow "°' IJ Cll ... "'"""' -!Cl (Dir) "The Dirty lklztn'" P1rt I (dra) '67-lee M1r1in, Ernest Bofpilll. 0 !Ii m lronlide O illlIJ E!IT1to""--fEu119'1ra .. hra~ m (1ll 11111111•ti•1111 hrttnlncl @ TM Vl1&111!111 m0n .. . The musicians are beinJ· Peoplns. TrJ~ .. wlll. lie. nio lftlail cut comedy calll 1 was imlucod on the,.,.... u !bat calla for de•"' v:>li:.m•~ \Vlll1-·~. deeply sought among y0W1g 'adu11s· rw:. Jield; tiY; dlrec\or _.Lollrlp Stan-'for. two riieit In the S to .• , ... · "Gllllf&bt. • · ,...., ::r -,...,.' movtoc "'!)&"turtle-Dove." the Costa Mesa c Iv t·c-oaer:t al· the ~(er &lldlng, • ..,.. and one !emale in llfJ' James l!rlttaln b dlrecttnc ;and conaklera_blo •blll\j·~ ; ~-.~.,the ~ Playhouse's !oribcomlng p<0-' I~ M~ Baldy, i;t!tle, .Fowl-late .Int. Readlnp will be:beld' the ahow aijd will be caatfnl· 1.-ol Just IO~ ~~WU no duclioo of "You're a Good tihi1Valley. • Monday, Nov. !J, al 7.:~·p.lD. 161' three -..a and four men Anil It's pretty certain, unless 'lesi' tmDiOc:Ulate Jn,~-~·· 1':111 0 •. Charlie Bi-own," whilfi. ','. A<jditlon llmes will-be.Jrl-51tn the 1!ll)tbouse; 530 N. lloll .In au ~,."l'be'play 11,a. ~·re u.w to the cbora1 eqllally dlflkult ~ ·'.' goes. into rehearsal ~ov. 12 f~r day,. Nov. lO,.~ 7 .p,~ ~ ·•Sala .Am. . · psycba:~rJl\!N!ptf13f! drama hnWneaa, tbat your singers TllEltE W:~lor -~ a mid-January openmg. David SaturclaY. No~. rll, -at~2 p.m., "Champigne eomplex'1;1rill about a __.nd •ho ii trying .COD1prile 1 wen balanced everyOody in an · ;I . Pigman is WOciate di1'9cf& with'."· catlbaCb ·on 9.Jnday, ' oPpi J,aia. 19, to ·be folloWedi ·~to drive bl!'Wlfe lnaane. perfectly attuned group ' audience ' ""fro ni ' for the show, · Nov;.U;·abo ala .o'dildt. 'A ·a~ by a chalJr. ~:will-be beld al 7:30-·Director J •• K l. Rldller'~-• ~T · e ~'' :1 Interested instrumentalists1 number: .. of teenagWs ~"te-'·pagrie ' pirty. Furtlt* --~·-p:m. In the playlioue, 5021 E. ·. · •~ r-e, tJ D g Mictiael Eut':l.~~-:1 who •mu.i· be able to read . quited !Qr~ roh!s .Qf .. adu.!ts . ~lliirimaybeobtalned•by . Analieim St., Long Be~. rm ... Just liow 1.1• done "Com<Llle Come~l'..W music. should ccntact Poli • w,lth-10 to U.year-old ooyl ind .<:.W°1 'mi.em._ where the production will open I~-:"' ~yo~ ~ said ...-', "'iilidJiW" ':.<ii d · ; I tlGMtS TMI STMDICATI WIJ'Mlt111.5T51 "tlAMMl•" (I) " '"1'1fU.llOl."1)w\•ll !II .... 1 17M411T II WITM•o\lllTtt') Watnt • ~• . ... " "' .... ~ 11.11. ''7·>591 Sl .00 Pll CAal°"O flltlACflOl'lftATUIH • 1. "T•I DOIUMA• GA•G" (Pl) 1. :Hllf MOtTMflllO IAtD~ ! ... ) MIWlllOM.H "GOii WITN TNI WIMD" (G) ..... ,ri,1••• ... ..,· Sot IS... ll1tl. t.Je . litl ,.._ girls playin~ ~~!Ktn-!pe~ing_ . . . . ' ~Jan. 5. ~rther lnformaUon cer1 of ~-.La-Festival ,Pirttuala 1 all ' ,-. · d!J .. 1 id ·~.o.j : r!l}~ o_f the pen~fm-.•. , ,,:~ . AI;SO _AUDMONING .. ~ . maybe obtained by calling the CbOrale's l972-73 season. The W1Uametta''~'i''l>el1Md ' , Mr._ -~PP.<\' ~. PenA\'IN. · · ,MOll<lay, Nov. 13, will be !be Jllayhouse box office al-(2131 reault wu a pleiising ...,i Im-"/u '!'be Jlowld E a • th ' 1 ·will be · presented durlhg tlie J"a'nuarj '. production ·-of · tbe 43&-0536. -'Y• performance 't11ai lnliglnW Cor'nera.'' . ~. ' " · ' de)lglited a capacity-audience Tlljs ipl~d recital mUBt ·" "" In the 'Lagllha Beacb Art bave given ltrefllng'1 ~ .-,.~~:lj:~g:.;,~Co~edy B~ck,.l?~ebly .G~ MAJOR work, lo~=;:~~~ . ., . , thts .cr!Uc'S way of thinking, "Amabl 1nd the NI.gbt . "· '.. ,. · · wu !be three Sdiubert -Visllon" ilx· weells hence In NEW.YORK, (AP ) ~,Tb<' Ill-. corral: · . " that ' olglit for a: plonlc dlhner wltll "An die Musik'1 .getting , t b 0 i. a·c;u n a M 0 ult 0 " d~-_ mue -~~,!'!Y1· •'ft":!ut ,--TI;i,n -_a .doorlaiob ·raJia oil and niaytie incre picnic laie..-the_ nqcl from this "'I"'"',.. Playtiouse. . , : l!t"""_eet el<mi.~ ·~ . . •"IL · anti • enttal"!' tllem : ,0 jhaf · B,i>tl\. yo1i ·Widerstand , 'are the plclt of a beautiflllly Ob yes, Miss Pennie -· .· •t!t,_":~_'i!,~1 "..!'~l'J~.? .author'Bo'b Randall ,caii ...,~ •et'Y proper jieojile. ' dcllvB1!d trio. · Your piano acco1!11J0111ment "' p.,.,.p ... a-.,,M . ....,-. up· aotne ac<t .of cltamatic · · Soloists Joe Wood and playtdagrutparttnllie,... ~ .ble, .In "'6 J!llls Riv Vu~' , s\<aril •)or !lib, bis lliSt pJay: . ~' secnr.d ·ball and the baritone Willlain 8andldge .'1<1" of~ tlellllrtful ~.« , 1 • A 'IOOd ma11y -people at the l\&mlall began in sho'wb{z As·a IIlOl'1llJll after arnve tpgetbtt. [ 'Jll'erillere_ln t\l!' ~y.,~tet Child "Singer on TV; anil Now. lhe two are back for . · . · , , ,8~n;iect : ·pl~ntij begtiiled unsq.lstng now Uves · wtth another. look.see with : their 1!. ~ 'II "' .stjll ·by its "!"ti:l•ed-..m~el wile and two oll~e; In 4' respecttve '!I""""'· Emotlo~ ,,· . , .: •I D.101 , and synthesized pOtgnancy. slx·roopt apartment 'o~ertQok· are pci~1 soon all over the , .. .• · •:. n;j ~ very . ~t~f-.: •of .~aimely tng the . :H.~ on •ltah)utf. stage In_ ]tirtiv~ ·remembratioe , NIWl'OIT arACli ,. ·ot.NUDi' . s~b1\inaled,la,n{JISJ, . . . , ,., tan's Wet) Side. of· 1as1;.r11ght. . · · · · J~rry · Orli!lch and · Jaoe 'To.gjr back to .N ond Aii-IP;;:,· --~~;;po;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Alexander, JM;!rfo~ers a,lw~.vs , JJf!, hfs ficUonal creations: , ~· ' . , , ,. '. One Wilek ._Qnly a joy to be~ld, enact tfte l~IMion qulckJy b r e e d 1 . · ·. _ .. · .• · ... '. 'i .. "' ... ~--. separate marrieds who m~t famiUarit}'.·They disoover hiS while exploriJ:lg a vacant analyst if her analyst. aDd all · &;~ment , which _ llas, ~s . Jh~ aorts of sw~t, funny idenU~ title , IOC?nK'all_y 1~~' ~Is: ,ioterests. By the .lime the .. rr~ .~"" 01L.·MA• ··rooms .~th a _r1\'et.vie~ ..-.. janitbr opens the door-, .they. '· He rs Jewl.'lh, fed· up Wtth have-decided to ~ w r i t l n g ad.vertisements, J-.--'--------- .vaguely uneasy about the ad- vent of midd1e-age . She is Catholic, !pends her days a't . the .family washer, ls', It~ mildly restless in the domestic GEORGE C. SCOTT PETER O'TOOLE AVA GARDNER IN · (4;, . 1:40 -c..t. S... 2:00 P.M. "THE BIBLE" ALSO RAQUEL WELCH IN Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse ''ONE Mllfl&n . BG3 . ( ...._WJk &a1w w....., ...... "nDnttlff YOU . J AL'!f'AYS WANTU JO . ----.... ," ,..;. .. MOlflY•TALO": "ll ~ • r r• . ' l'HSIJITS "ME AND THEE" 1y·a....·- -llO"- T~1u · TUISDAY "THE GARDEN . OF THE FINZl-CONTINIS" ... "LIVE FOR htti I• Cotor Ill -.. __ .I", S MDIU.tf I ·'·" .. -...•.•. : -----,, STAD!Utf '? .. .. -· ~,..-.. -- ---.. S!AOIU'rf 4 .. -.... ·-- JOE COCKER · ... ....,_ _. n111•• M.,. '11 ilM ........ "WOODSTOCK" ..... tin s.t. (l) "W...._."9t7:JI_,,, c..r. s-. ..... J , .... "IVl'Tllt,LllS ARIJ'ltll" CPO) . Gelllle H .... & l!clAnl Albttt ,• .... ""LA'I' IT AGAIN, SAM.lo ' M•rlon •r11Mfo " "THI 000,ATHI!•" Ill) , • "HANNll UULDllt" llt) "ll!'Vl'ltYTHINO YOU ftllt WAMTll!'D TO ICNOW A.OUT SIX" & "MONIY TALICS" C•I ..,.HI Nl!W CINTUltlOMS" Cit) •• --:, c:. sc.n ""LAT MISTY ,Olt Ml"• lltl ~·--. "THI! VAL.ACM! "M'IJU• (It) ... ,..y °""' .. "THlt •OSTOM ST ....... Ol.llt" lltl film fot tl-.e whole family, fllmfd~tntllely in the s.riss Alps.' ROBERTLEWISSffi'lNSON'.S . "KIDNAPPED" .... 1 ... _.., ... __ .., ·""·°""· -Wtt!Uliift6i:4~ 5ot.& SIM. l:MS ' " .. _, ... 'l .. "· ... ,- ' 1 • • ·' ' '. [iJ .__[ _ ..... _ ... _ ... _, i: I I ,;: • mi .._[ ;;;;;;' ;;;I ··-~=i: '·. .. l 1 .. J !'!I!' :jiiiiiiiiiii~ ~i· iiiiiiiii Holf W.tlod,M I, 71t HolpW~~:':' 1_,·71t All~-,· IOO Oar~.... 112 M*-'1Mi1.... tit TV, Radio, HlP'I, looto, l!'war "6 Tralltro, Tr ti 945 l5 A•utot••, •,m•.,..•• .... ••111191 l~J I ; I -...... •• 0 " WAITERS ,a wattrwn, OAK #bow' flloDf: 1 ety . oARAG!:&uz Satltrdl.y ANT?Qtntfnl:lk.fa'())mp SteNe U6 ''lmlIURAY" ·n 'iVttt'ERN Fleld tenl ·.. SYSTEMS ::"r. :..= ct"l."°Mtor =-~·~ = ...i ~ 14:UJ L m. '" "'-· W<. win EVERY Z.nlthldlCATV !n aio1<11, PtdH-Jtt ai· 111 ~~.:;'" SlP1 4·1 ____ 1_MW ____ 1 d ANALYST be~ ~ ": ._ ... ..:.:? chair ~J .~lfih.Dr., :'."'o.:; ~·.:i toloclron ul•-•<Onnae -.1:qu1pp111..;,. w'.,., ""'1i, l >"' o1<1. !t\t=~ Vll!t..., __ , •• ..,..,,, ,. Doc L>nch. B£c w/i:o,lf~~lul2 Yr. old AN'nQUES . Victorian Wer. mW .Vlt:tor!I. C.M. ~!'i~~~~ lllrllno 6 1lll>Jnr, !udom ·"' P.U. All """"· llnl<d G l'IEWPOllT BEACH Finan-Cll1)'0D Ootlntl'y Qui>, 1 Bic br&U • 112 >"'• 11n1Jo bed 2 """""' Iron 61&-""7 , >"' parts 6 1 yr -' -· Clll """' 12<00 -Im. 84&sllil9. Cl&! lnltttudon bu izn. CaD)'Oll Dr, Newport Blach. old · -.. candlestidm. prdrl!a ~ 2 l'teDch MOVDiG g.ie Beau all 1eta. 90 DQ Cub·: noon. m Cl DMC. MUST Sell! '11·18' ~omad medl&te openings tor SR. WANTED: Gall! Part lime ~~L ?ifs.~~~ por¢tlln beatert. rmewood d1nbw t.ble, S ~ g ~ tmns to 38 ~Prices lea SEU..J TTa.ller · ~lf-oonta1ned · ·· 'f (-LYSThea: 'Ml.Lit have mln. p per hr. TnJntna A Bea\ll 6 pc Fr c:arv bedtm Vk:klf1&D needlepolbl um vet vet eh&!rl.. 2 nahen than the' dl.countm with 'if ~ CUln Cruilier Many EWu · lmmacutate ~~~1:•a'-tllr!I mai.nw lu~n l 1bed , Love1Y-..oil..1'1.; chair,oak...S.,..cheot, ~&.!.~Mlle.,..; our own .quality-SC.! ~Pl•. ,,.ad,aalley s.S: llJl..mlor ,...8995. ROY CAJlVIR,lllC. to an&bra u •e ra ll!! lingerie. 67$-19001 675-18TT. ~f ~U'F't Tu.lttn. brUI and copper oll lamp. prion OYlt' • fl15 ABC Color 'N 9:i'll Atlanta, Dtpth finder, 135 any' Fully Auto S.rviee, P•rts 949 _ 2.3.t E. llth St. •l ~..,_II, In addition oo2 WHO WA!ln TO WORK? Applla_. I02 ;!;, ~"i::'..:,14~ Republlc, CM lllln"-• lleoch 96&-33:19. <qU!p, Sacril, 12995 Cali ~ --Colla --1 leae edw:a,Uon .&: t.amJJiUtb DRIVE A CARI . child • RUG awcado sreen lbal Jack .~. i-...-, Qn,N.,., front end- w /GROUP INSURANCE ~OOSE )Oltr """""' viorlt OVEll o w..i...., dryers, ~ =· .!.;:.!' 1 ; r.m' 111 ft wtib pod, ~ ~ -utl 350 .. an. !root USED IMW's ~'F:0[1 fAEYR.:8~L bou=·~~c.an°i! ~from $39.95. French ,poreeUn· w i ne eyn~~DUU~i [ ,._.,Yeo ,. S p t ~·s hS:: ~J ft~::;:':;:;~~ •ff160t •"··"··· ap-ll!&htly -••· ~·-di-...,~--$2. ,.., lhlf oood., · . . .. OMC·Tandem trail"' luli -•~~61 '7t -..--w moat dellzable. ..tired. Age 2l to 'Iii ;,;p: • DISHWASHERS WUhen !umltuJ'O lwJn --=· Sat A am only. CL r-19 -~ --~ or ,,,.. Poll""' lnwlyq documen-plomont ,.... Income. 'Drive -i'eblt, iiuarn • bOx '°""'""· walntll 42" ind> U' o .. cburcb l)OW, l'\O. 3 Lln11, 2 Tlmat, $2.00 ;;; ~..;,, n;;.' :-':· ~~~· ~~~~~ '11 2tOG SEDio. t1tlon. roecttlcltlon A co-a csb & hrs or .,... a day. delv'd. B-7831: 111HZ!1. .....r !Ule. Kt>tllk 51iO ..,,_ --. pi, FWC !nterceptxr fiytr!dge I: CREI VER BMW ontinl.tlon ot Pl'Olf't.mmlng Apply ln ~l Yellow Cab $80 1 YR. ruarn. Ml Ir in-Canluatl slide projector, Antique ~· $30. L1Md 3 Kittens, 7 weekl old. can SS. '"bF BT 'outrtaer.: I If '11 Sall!S • Service • l.aaing ... le lhStallatlon ot tl>e9e Co., 186 E. 16m St., Colta ~ i.te mad • .n (l)'Cle it-%" x 38" cuatom brau drapes. J2'x8 , N", l'X5', before 2pm. x1nt. cn.f.)~ H.lt ._..... 20tl W. lst .8,!;r Santa Ana .,.....,., ""8. Konmore -· 8311-1111. !lroplaco .....,,, 2 bra.u $30. Call.._. 61UZ17 15' ,,,.,. 45 hp .._..,, ' -.>3171 . WOMAN to c1e1Jin a, •ll G.E l::".r.· -"""'""' Iron FREE to ..,.<I -4\0 >"' k!c lrllle ' ' iiiiiiioiiiiiiilo CLASSIC 19"' BMW s..,. ·:~'·':~_A~~ ~ ~ ~e ~ ••. ~=:.:..~ tabla,~~~~ ~~n'!.c._,. l20 fl~~e.M&le.Muu..o~ ~w" lowerr, !:;.~ Ant '!uet/Cla11ic1 953 Xlnt cond. Frffw~ apd.10 ·: • akkration pleue ~bmlt Drapery Sbop,.3535 E. Coast He'lfhtl. 5«)..732$ lute mahopny framed )' "'~IM 66-724.1. 194& Pont Silver Strra.k ~hs,_ 50 MPG. S~OI ' resume, including salary re-HW)'. CdM. CO~ REFRJG., D\lnor, 3 drawer file cab-CHINA cablnl't er but.ch, u-4 LOVELY KITI'ENS, mix· Boats, Rent/Chart'r 90I 4 dr ntx. Xlnt cohd · ~lrements in conftdence to WOMAN Part Um 11 good ~ eoodltion binet. bet.ded •"•ate r • • tfque or :.w, La r I e . ed. 10 wkl, trained. Make otfer. 00.5334' DATSUN '• Oa.ssUled ad no 534 c/o' • e, am $30,. * &A&-295.1 tric-a-brac. R.euonable 6f4,,...4887 56-5081 LEASE: 40 days yrly $400. -=""-="'-'""'"""~- ' , ~Pilot. P. o.' Box'l!i60, tbru.~l:f;»-~ G.E. Reb1geratar ~. BIG~ SU i: Sun 4th WANTED ~t.;. IOfa. * KJ'ITENS *KITTENS *l!::~·PYl~Sall~.~c·:~:Pl:l=·~S~"1~fS;po;rt~1,~R~a~ce;,~R~od~1'.;.~t~S9 ---------I l • · Mesa, Caut. !$ w 19th St c M Good condition. Avallab!e I: 5th, lbam-&pm, Sml b1cy-. l male tigel" ltrlpe:, 2 tem., · · : • An F.qua1 Oppor~ EmplO)'el' w~ to do ~~ ll-13. sso, 6fHl83J. ~·,!~~um~ h1Je.a-bed.6"-4687 · 1 tolid blk. eves t9'J.664(. n tot :.;;;:1 ~to~ • TEACHER Eltper. for NeWport Beach area Fumllurt llD """° pollolJIJ1o kit 12 . Muolcall ""-122 ~~ Sh<rtll1ll". 29' CAL-25 Fball ..., 6 r:u. • eydOne. Holli'; NEWPORT .· pre-ecbool wanted 2 ht * 613"'5990 * BLUE llntn JOfa, oU Medttt. aildren le rdlt ·clothet, all M Af lhtD, I~ Y,.~· HP. OB. $500'.l. Call :tm ~Ho Hpd. w/Hurst: dally. lD::rJ -12 : so 6 mwer: ~ w/dbL .... Canopy . BR Suite OLDS Studio trumpet wtth •. Enrla:bt Michand-htll, 4·11 peel. r.e. suoo. To ~. DATSUN , &U-1057. · doon; ireen atUdlo bed &: w/deak I: cfreaer $50, No. case and ml.Itel. Llke new. l15-0915 ' ~ can Ouis at 536-4354 • TE"."' RS e_ JI" I bollten, red velwt twin 21 Royal Saint°"""" Rd. Ideal Cbrtl!mu &!ft. $140. ll'L.J 31)' Wander Mari< U ·29 Model A Roadster. all -~ ... '11 .V tpnada. Headbouds, chow NB. 646--128'1. ,__....... 7' Year old. Xlnt c:ondltlon. .Che~~ar. Xtru. ~:;ty ~ = · table, J!lle atirdl, .a 11 POWER mower $15.. '""'° <X>NN b'umoet. SU0. Foll< SlPI I. Sllp St, lllyohoro ISSO, · walnut ~ conee tble. $25., Danlah recliner $35., rultar, $50. Like-new. MarinL $14.000. &45--1725. Trucks ff2 -°""" In 612..fOOO A 11 _ IOO Aho, 1amoi: lk£ -· Mo1D Portocrtb 19., Prof. ha~ * -* P A-·-1 4, "-ea~---· + TRA VEL-16oldng tor sharp " q Guzzi 750 CC Motorcycle, drytt $10., l&e lllilboat LE eh, ~a . l50 ~-FORD CAMPER , yng woman or man with SCRAM LETS cameru, inllc. Aboolutely winch, mllc. """"· 3089 LY ~~~!tar..; 0 . l:l::i• ~ C,7 .... nld. 'Jl YAN '' mtn. 1 yr. trav e l exp. • no reuonable offer refuted! Roanoke Lane. C • M. ~ .,o ..-J2i. MGd NKEYS FOV1t SALE. wt!l ~ l'8CM Oiolce location, aalary ~ MHll1 m.7J;ol. _. :i~ ~ :· opom.c/oRe~11.~P!lotiedP.•Od. . ANSWERS MOVING.~. Admlra1 ANTIQUES: Chests, bed, rnd ~· ~· Beautfful, ~!~~ ~.~· £qut~ with automatic NEwPORT IEACH 1000 W. Coaat Hwy, 645:6400 :! 1560 ~ Mesa. walnut e cotor 'IV, Oak pedestal tbl; Elder uac new._,. Cats 152 ''-*~~611;' transmlsaion, V8, wide oval ...L U)). Remo TV, $25. down iata: oJd steamer SCS453IJ tires, nMr neo.\' maa: whtt11. Typlat/SecretarleB Sugary Glory -Tarry -Walnut ccnM>Je lteftO, 3 pc tmlc; BO:Yw lkpd; Misc. £:. Office F.umftv,..f PERSIANS and Hlmalayan 21 n. Sloop. Sleel)I 2. lnbrd Really ready for ~ sport • ~o Feea. Im.med. openin"' V~ -GRAVY • eec'l, chr1 $35 ea. Mpl turn. :ro&'r Port Brtltol Cr., Eauln. 124 hybreedl, Cl'A r.s .. aOOta:, eaglne. 4 bap ol: AilM. A fwl thin&. •T4MM. fCll" short & long ~ From a magic shop 1 ad: dreaer &: dbl bdbd, $55. Harbor View Hill, NB. Fri~ k. "" · · many colon, $35 and up. ~. 643-4n4. See It • ·you'll Buy It WE HAVE THE NEWEST OF DATSUNS IN INVENTORY FOR YOUR SELECTION aufgttmenta or permanent "We sell pens wi~ meat·ba.ll Silver & dbl hdbd. $55.. Sat-Sun EXEC swvi. ebr $15 -23 See * 892-2910 * 'XI Gluolr Sloop, new paint, ~· t • placetntnt.. Call 115 now' points tha.t wnte Ubder Brotltlway, C.M. 60-()&t0. Don't m1N Dana High School chr $8 • 18 desks files stls WANTED: 4 C)'L lnbr.i, pa en. sreat fADil P.P.S. Paclftc PerBonnei GRAVY." OFFICE FUR. 61J"x:34" Ex· RIUl1D1IP Sale Nov. 3, 4, 5 867 W. 19tb CM 60-3408 Ftnl white Manx cat. crulalnc bot.t 4!M--58S4 OT Setvicet, 112 No. TO'o'le', * ANTIQUE GLASS SHOW ec. Desk and Chair w/armJ San Clemente Elka Ll.>dge Planoa/OrpM 826 9"B.7616. Bo.h,'Sll-/Doeks f10 m A Union Bank-Squaze, Orange, Largest collectible1 glas1 $75. ReCeption room couch, New·frame1, art A: craftl ,.- Ca. 557-GHG, Ask For sOOw & aale evJl!r held. Nov. matching chair, buaock. IUPPliet. printa, pottery, ap. QBl'I., HOBBY Oops 154 SLIPS AVAILABLE l9fJ5 Harbor, C.M. &46-mJ • Rachi!!! May. ' 4 • 5, Sat JD.a. ~ 10-6. AllO !=1ub ~ Occa. chaln: pUanoea,. clothet. Beaut. us. KDRn AVOID RUINED 45' to eo· bolt. ·?J Chevrolet : WAI'I'R§S. exper. Apply In 1'11~ S. Harbor B'l v d ., and table1. td itenui, color TV, GE elec CHJUSTMAS ~ p!..L & V , · ,,.,... ooly 8 am-1! ·.., Analle!m. 6C-462'I ...,,.. • own. Don't buy any orxsn until _.,. GM . Tuell. thN Sun. Mesa Verde WANTED. Large c b i n a STUFFED cuahion S' com· 15 FAMILY gar Mle. Nov 3. you can play[ Non-players Start ~ ~~ dol[ ~ .s..-A llr:I t11 Big Stock : , Count r y Club, s:o:i cabinet. R e a 1 on able . fort. gold Oora1 d:;1"' 5.. 11)..f pm. Harbor View welcome to attend free work before the boUdll)lt I: have a ll Ft Set. Ru »> lfl1el. l low Prices ~ Clubhouse Rd., ea.ta Mesa, 644-488T. OOllcb $00, ta!rb nu u Home!. 1952 Port Laurent, ~~~ -i::~~rlch well bebavtd pet tbat ~ year new. 4S5' Cl OldcnoblJt> HOWARD Chwrolet Dick Evarts. v---~-~ 1 ft. 1 bed w/metal IJ'ame $30, N.B. ~ • .,1 will be proud of. 0-S l>ICk .. ·Jtt ·-· .Equimcl u-w-rt •·-ch ~ WAt'I'RESS!:S • Food A: ~""""•\""II~ money r.oon 847-.39M. RUMMAGE Sale. Nov. 3rd le _&".._ have just started )'OU can fer ftdl.tne • Wltft' aJding. .._ ·,..-.. -~~.. • .... Sid your house, apt., stme MISC w··-··t , __ rdl• 4th ·-·31) St. ,. CoestMvtlc Service join mw. Mon alte1 "'Uy equipped tan d om'MacArthurAJllmboree 'Btvd _1 """""" ........ exper ..... ...,. '1 bldg., etc. thnl a bally Pilot · lllllll ~"• • :....,....: • .,Qhn'a 11dl" 0 13J.0555 ·-: mue Beet, m-g(ll)f. C1.ll88lfted Ad. 80-6678. atndJ. iann chr, lamps, Church, CM. Newport Blvd. at Harbor 7:30-8:30 tl Wed nHes 8-9. tnJler. outfit ta tlke Cheat, twn mattretl, slat Coda Mea. MARTINCRESI' KENNELS new. Orlainll coat S9200. LEASE or buy the' new •••••••••••••••••••• bnch. etc. S43-ill9, 252 San-MloctlloMWI 111 *PIAN~ROANS* -~ -· Phone Toyota ilall·IOn mlni-pk k- -· Por an M In Woman'• World Coll Mary Beth 642~71, oxt 330 Sle11dwti1Lig! Hairpin Crochet ta Isabel, CM· Hammond WurUtzier ..., ** WANTED: f'rlebdt)' _,,_.. up. Surwile ~lf 'W'lth -·-~ I *AUCTION * ' 'ma." r.:t home for <1ar1•-l\ltJ!IT . llll 1" Sid boat 6 ltahlah p erfo r m •n ce, ·n DATSUN 2*'l-Xlnt .7 ft. green \;1-......:u w vet othen. Pre-sea.on -i .. 1., ... .......,_., .. ,...., cond. .lit _.._. Pvt~ couch & .loveseat.i Perfect ~el clole-wt:a. ~-. t e Silky Terrlcr P'IJll. '~a.utt. vena .... v and eoonomy or 'a:J).,4'194 ....,. cond!Hon. 1 week old. $2'J5. JIRIDAY '7:30 P.M. 0rPn mitab. Money aav· Houiebroken. All t bott . 531-2164, MS-8995 operatioo-Call Ttuck Dept. !i!i7~ NOV. 3RD 1ng barp1no .,.. here rlaht MUil rel! lnlmed. !0).&133. GREAT Ski Bolt. ll It. w-lllf. Bl1I Muey '!bitota. um ,,.....,., 1tlck ahlft. Hide-a-bed • like new. New color TV'' avocado aide now at: AFGHAN male, I mm. wttb might)' H.P. Eve a rad,., :.1 J:: Wvd., Hunt. orangt, 44M miles, AM/P'll Hom:ulon Gold T w • e d • by sldo ......,....,,.. 4 £,,, W al~chs Music City papen, AKC ,..., o.amp Trlr. _,,._ $WO. -· • ndlo, -- $87.50. ~ ConM tompo 1!0Ye1, ... ·-·tt. ~--~---·-~ •lDclo. -w/cblldND. '72 DATSUN HONDA * 64Hl.'11 * .... ,,~. edit Bedroom tet:•. -....-t r--_,.~ Reuonable. MS-tr.rr 8 Pe. Bdnri. oet ..,1-. .,.. commotlel, ooclotlll tahleo, *Pl~OANS TO QWJti..t H •• m • 1 I 11•1 PICKUP :70 HONDA ~~A~:~~ ~~~Best~~~~ =--:tr"c:i ~.~ ~ 6 ('f 4i::rAtwRdll>~f·n'= CAR pm. oid • b;t'tt;'i. ~t:-'~: Kawai-stemwa)'·~ etc. .!l5J..'13112, , •I . •'8r, ·as.es. 4 speed, radio, maroon wflh ***Sola & mstcltlntt"""' -.......... '""*'" ,.,.,..,. PWm 6 CREAT Dmr P u pp tu . C1m~, .... /ltont'2t ~ J'ord, d!my body, now ~~ 1~· fi006QE. Re· eeat, neYer ued. Botti $150. MUCH MORE. ' ~ntala .. .._ .•. • We Buy-Sell lltern1 cbame.__~ line. '11 1'olkt • ""E" 11 pa.inf, teats, be!f:1 aen., $766 U1ualiy home, 96&-7910. WINDY'S AUCTION llalty ~ S PIAN;: U.S ~-$1>0. Alt 4, wlnJria. bad, J:. ·-~!WI., etc. uu new, VELVET IOI&, $175. Mat. O.ta M~ 1714) 645-3250 ..... ......,. .. ,.. .. ~•-ute am/frn stereo. Xfnt ti(n, '69 &f T lntnn'I P1.J..-See JI • You'll 811¥ It ~~~-t~vh~ :~S llO. COME BROWSE AROUND *PLAYER PIANOS * ~tirw™AJtc. apuCk .sm. 53' ao, ext 235. w/JD~ cab o/camper. NJY ~I-.!. :am\I Newport Blvd. Ivon 6 !'and Com ••. • • .19111 nwk•. 3 . ...it I r 1 y . 8LIDI: ,ti) ClllOPll' ~-equip. Sacrif. 11 75 O • 1.11111 2-PIECE livfna room set Behlncl Tony's Blda. Mat'll. 91my • auti: uprt ••••• $1085 11~ u.SUU.Tm IO-OTl'6. tfll' lllil~ . ...... $als.s.-Costa .. _ * -Z::"l'""..::"'.iti .. ~ W1llE bl -~ & '55 CHEVY P.U. • .... KING stze bed, springs, mat-J. L. Nftbltt nmnbered ftlbed. David T. nupr., AKC. cbamp s I red • Cycltt llkn 8 cyl. l spec."d $3!!0. 19:::1tart*, C.M.1 • 141-9303 tress $60 etchllwl of ltee1 mm, $50. M D Graci 1A. C-liL Adan.bit. Riil beu:tla I ' ' • ~Jfl91 • "n Honda ' · *. 54&-3915 * ea. 2 llilver Indian belts 5l5-t650 * 5&6lOI 541'-IS!T.lll .. n '1S '49 Chrvj Plt-k-Up See to ap.· GR.l'!Af! ~ HARVE.tt Table, drop leaf, w/tm'Quoi.tle -ea . PRIVATE PARTY WANTS SCHNAUZ~ pupe. hlebrkn, 70 tfoNDA predatr. Best o tte r . * m..olS.1 Ii Pecan, 6', Llke new. ftO, ~. TO BUY PIANO FOR sboU. Stud mvb~ 175 CC S1'JlEET BrKE &.J>..l.UO JAGUAR 496-2957. TO BE MOVED .. 12118 CASH. e 135..t.m e bJ, t.erma. C?14) XLNT'COND. 1l(X) MI llS"l ~ Ton GMC Pick up. ---------fifilt~-rmx: ~ bids., J rms, wood const. ~Glf t ~~ $350 • ..... • V-6 S1050. '69 ~ 2 + 2, a\llo trw, oE8K~Y GOOD roND. S895. Dlvd. 10 ml. or trade UPRIGHT Plano I bench, r, em e, 1.8 ~ SA-malt. b PM. chmrnfl wire wNJ, QtC rl 'Ir M~ ·• for?'~ ~ whit., Good ·cond. = ~· 9 ,:,. frmt end cumrii~..:.t A ,.. ""Qt\~'~ 1'Dnd..,-«l.M · ~ MUST sell dlvan, 4 tables A =~:8J.~ ~q~ e 557-U!ll e Lona ~· otpu~pkml ~ $riJ. or belt otfilr, ll'W)' mL SM to 9))SftC. · 2 accent chain, $200 . $250. Berry Plant& $1.25. HAJIMOND ~ Model AKC. ffl. 5fJ.«i!M 84&-t.H;. REWARD l.l490. ..._ M&--2837. .,~;.____.. M llL Wal-•! c t ~·~ •-~-AKC '72 Yamaha 125 MX Don't '70 JAGUAR XKE ~ SOLID maple bdrm. set, ~. le ~. ssm:,.ivei. ~. 's;;; t:'UITfteld.-Shota A bu7,..0 ~ -'T.I· ~ ... ~~. w/wtre wbMll. kpled. outttanding cond. Port WHOLESALE to the Public! wormed Heu. ,.._UllO u.... _ L>H '• ~ Nd. "1111 ~. black & whllo TV. 536-%161. Handmade Clndler 50o4!!. CABLE-NEl.'lON PLAYER . • oJr.·MM135. WILL'"TA y-OVEI 131!19.-001 !UH!M. I 812 Jewelry $1"2. PIANO Col1ectol' Ite m. Mini -Black female Poodle, 'Tl Yarnda 11;1 * Ja.par l.971, red. Vil f'llS. G•rage Sa• • sct-13«1 e cond. M6--3C9T • aftel" 4 pm. 4 monlhl old._ $25. Looks Id. Niii aood~: Kely II• look 2 ...... + 2 •=•lf oond, a i ic G•n •GE --• 1111 _,, M 8' ~·-• nM·• M-~ p••~o. Cabl•N·'-n, Xlnt •929-2719• ~ -....... • 4 • o 2 IU'VI " ..... e ...,..,. ~ ta~~ ;wrl't';: ~. 3 yrs otd:' Walnut, =-....,.; v ~ • 6 3 Pw late rnedll, cS.ert, q . .Antiques, furn, dishlll, ~ .. .._ '5.9 Jq 14 Nf'W ,,.in1, clothe1, !oolo, hdwr , boat Xlnt'oon<I. !133-108S. $450. -[ l!t.f J MUST .. o "12" 3111 '(amalll '°"' ml'-.,,..,. ·-· ...,. """'-$!111l. taUa. ICUba IQDI. lumber, SPACE b' Trtller. boats., Sportlnt Goodt • _ _. • lt't up 1or dirt. Mu.st ttU tla, lmporta_.trvdtt or 6'4-m l flt MT-'tl.8. mt.c. G Rl'l'lftlde Aw, campers. $1.SO. mo. Nell POOL ta"", ,11 ..... Xlnt • ........... now. ''pew'' make ollllfl ..,,...,... JAG. '19. 2 + 2. 1'°" N.B. ...._ Neon, tne. &J:l..331«. ccnd. l" °';iate~ Qoes. Qm 847..nt.5 Cl.II and ul tDr BLQ'tr miJMlt, air, to.drd. M'lat * JOINT SALE: Fri, Sat. 1 * 2 aw, bdrt .all, new holden. 1 TUfany pool lite BMft, Generil 1971 HONDA TRAIL 'JO, Mola DAur W. SatTt&t>, OFn:R. IU-'1UI. to· '· 281J ~. N.8 . bile: \lptd, 15(1. Gu lawn ind. 8a)'el' movn. $100. r toss ban, Like ~-SIT5. ft Ru.» ·72 JAG. SPd&n. 1,000 111. ::::e~· ~termt:,: .=:·.!1'·,557,M~· ..,,..t ~~ 9._w,~ boat wltb OUI. 50--5659 llftlnll,. Si .. ·..w Red.-~•t"""'' elDddnc, llPOl'tl eiqulp, baby Co'l ~I .. _ MEN'S Udl:, expnimental , • .....,,_,,. A '69 Honda 90. tnll. IP'ML run•• .::;:•l-<>l6T:.;:""-' ;:.:.::=.:;•·::..:~:;:.:,~-1 .,.... a,,.,...! ~~ -"" roc1ng, wtb~.., 145· -· -~ l<ARMANN GHIA GARAGE IW.!:' Fri., Sa!.. FULL -..;.. ...... ao-.. -"""'-. Bo.ls/Ma rino all .,.. -,.._ e t..i. Son. Nov. S.S. Hno. 9-5 ,,,_..,. Good -1l••• TV, bdlo, Hll'I, Eqvlp. tt4 '1'1 BSA llOO. Xlnt cond. C.U Mou S4MDl7 1971 l<lrmllln Obit C.U,. Many m,lsc. houa'tKJld ltm\s Ste I» w/ma&clWIK Mbniti. -)ow ntlllql. >Ont cqndldon 9077 Everybod>'I t1o1ng ha)r>!n • c1o11>Jng prloed ,. oell. 12Z1 m. --2T' -tnller, roulpped Clll llWl5t Ill ~ ft P'AY TOP 11.,,,. He ..._.151 '· lO Yl-18\.l ~et! Learn wllb our McO::lrmack <ott Fairview, KING SIZE sm. Extn AM/TM T'mnm' wllh nlre • w/8* s::r· " will I"! ~amMt. l50 *'-' Blot. CASH 'M Ghia, Lora Dip, ,..,. -dr ~NOWb"''l'hl>'-C.M.1 501-«lO&. llrlll,Llll~. Jn. air ""'*"'1on -3 ~ -· -· ,,,,__.t..._'*1 ,_J.177L L.11T,..i-111,.;r'..o ·•'-of u.~. Crocllet-;r. No. ll ~ liq, Newport "'°""" old 1100. C & I I · . OI' Boot Otr., "'1-tlJC 111-tlfll "'! . ~ 1D ;·,. be.Utllul Bch. _.., -tablt. NEWl'OR1' -,,_ _, loe. llMft, ,_, tii iilii YAMAHA. !%I MX. Ub • -......... !ncludlng bah new. Clothing. -t Qub F&m!ty ..... benh! •. :111" -Color TV,.... . =-i-11111a1111. for -C'll'J 6 ""'*'· '"" M.•znA STOP HERE and raw -acarvn tkirtJ bags PWS 111d boots, men's sz 10. Stern 6M ... ltaad. JO mo. old. X1nt oand. ...,..,... lilt .... · 515--2531 aMl ti for b-ee' ltthnatf'S, )'OU've found~ m ~J baby Klfta. aflhan., ~Lte ac-Crystal Unen. Btd fraJW BEDROOM eet, ~ • $GS lmftted. SIWGOlfi tr RaNbmd 6 4 wllil tlW, .• KAWAIAJCI tJI a.II CllOIOlET MAZDA alenderlil.na: you Cffior1ea. Step-by-itep pie-Mlle. SS0. 1S1 E. lMb C.M. m-'8 aft C. • IVCJil cent .... ,... Lo.dtd wt~ dU'U dirt.I :ea:st a:adthe da.yS and dtn-. tlltl'so teach you qulcldy, SAT only, Furn. World 1k ~ OuslAtd Ads ... kla1I WI kilt ttelbl , • , 1CUm ~ .... •i&. ' Printed Pattem 9077: NEW ea.lily. Send! 11et Ollldrerle: enc:ydp. J&c.. HaU Sizes 10~ 12~ lf~ 8EVENTY·nYE CE!'CTfl Charcol brolltt, pa!iQ turn. 16"'· ts%. SizJ! ~~~ ~ ~~tern~ i! wr.· inn Edward• 9t., dreaS 214 yards.,.,. • Air Mall and Spedal Mandi· -"'"---------5/8 yard JS.lach fabric. 1 blr, , ett...wt. tbinklMI FRI & SAT. Movt,.. Han. !llEVENTY·nff O!lftl ttellWr, wW tUrt tlRM dyma.n a.le. Also ~. fer each pattml -add 2' wtekli or man.. 9nlJ to ~ baehJd rn.t.c. * cenll lo< _. ~ ~ All« -tlle l)AJLY -St.. C.M. (In Air Mall and SpOi:tll Hl!idl-PILOT, 1115. M-.n .0.,l , !no: otherwlre thlld-dul Dlpt., Beat 1'!. Old a.t.. MOVING . ..,.,..TV •• d!Ntt• dellvery wU1 tab~ Stadoa. H.w Ycft, N;!. .-, addtnc machine, llm. •'e'eki ar n'IOJ't, .,.,..... to 10011. Prtnt lf--. •' s • z..rs-.....,. -Marian M$rtln, the DAU. Y Zip. Patten pf_._; . 1ltftll -1 I 0 5 . A PTLOT, 4t2. Pltwn Dept., N £ED L ECaArr "72! Dr"t MH311 232 Wffl 18th St., New CftlChet. knit, f'trc. J'fte GARAGE Se.le Llvtrc Rm Yorlt. N.Y. IOOl1. Prtnl dl-lonl, 50<. • °" ff·•~ ·~~ ~ MAME. .,,.... with W Mwa 1 ..._ • ,,_ .. --· ZIP, SIZE IJ'Jd 8TYLC Bflsle, 1kncy knott, p1t. cklthtl, Jtans, Milt. ID ~ -SUIO. OtaJwe, a.ta -UllAm. SEE ' MORE Q u I ct r..cut ~ W .. ..:o!l::;:l:cl~---~-~ Fllhkn ud d)OOllf one Learn b)' ~t · Pit· 4 RMS of turnlt\n tor .Ut. pattttn tree 1"!fn our '""" Sl .00. •mo. 1-mpe, p&}rrtttu A Sprinr-Sum.mtr Catt.Joi. All ~-· W Gift.._ RW'O' mlar. Item•. Uke new 1bn! Only !!Oc. 0 800 -more than JOO &lttt -• reuona!M. 4:9'Ul6S5. !~STANT SEW1N K $UIO. GAJIAGi salO 115 Sa""'-... fDCll)', ... twnom>w. Ooiil ............. -u. .._ ,.._.:~A .. JI SI.at. • -· ... .,..... w tun .... tim'ANT FAS HION 11 1i11f ._ ... , Ille. M. -.. -ll l oc . '10011 --o f -" u ,_ »&' ,;G::'"':: ... :.::..· --------JI. :Ifie. FUllNITURE . doCl!tt --1·1'-'*1oold 5-._ M!IC. rrt. v--_, -!iOc-lot ' -lH. 2111 . >""S'·---~L __ ..... '! • ....... 1 -c.n.1z'iwB. CM. bldf., ffe. tt&n • ~PG.St ---.. . --n.am.y-""" ~ Cla.ltled Ad. Sell Idle tttml ~ .. ~· u.tiw .. ni1.:1 yoq' Mme 'tt! 11112 -1 Call-llqot! IS--!iOc-Van--Sllll r. Hip lldl. --------.. LIASI SP'ICIM. New '72 w $57.51 U>ldld. ROrAR Y -· lB mo. • T I: L. t or retJ>. pty. ~ oan.r.. • '11 llO'l'ARY'S . "Demo Sale" It TO CHOOSI "~IOOIST IAVINOI'' ~.:Oto..~ MAZDA I -, •. j . I 21 YEARS S.l"i'in<j 9•~1199 County FllTZ WARREN s•oRT CAR CENTER - ' ts Closing Its Faciliti .. GIGANTIC SAVINGS on .n New & Used Cars Save-- NEW CARS -Save '72 TRIUMPH ,,..JPITl'IRES ,.,., ... , 4 ,pct,. radio, !200 mil•1. $2599 N1w wl+fl f•ct .w1rr•l'ltv '72 PEUGEOT 504 SEDANS 6·1i•·6 to choo•• from $3199 New witli fectory wfff 1P1ty '72 SUBARUS 2 I 4 iclra. w-Oiol 4-fo11t·4 . to choot• from $1899 Hew wifti factory w1rr1nly Save EXEC. CARS Save '72 SUBARU GL SPORT CPE. 4 1picl., r•dio, t ,000 mil•• $2199 • • '72 PEUGEOT 504 SEDAN Auto"'1t!e, '"'·fl'll 7,0C>O mil•t $3399 • • '72 SUBARU 4 DR . SEDAN 4 1pd., r•dlo, 2200 'mi\11. $1999 • • Aff new c•n c•rrv 12,000 inil• Of I year w•rr1nty - Aft.It O\lf clo1!119 yew 1n1y h•v1 it 1orvic.d 1t •l'IY lo· c•I fr•ttehllHI do•ler. All Used Cars WHOLESALE to the PUBLIC!! '70 TRIUll'll TR6 -l drif., r.dto, 4 tpct. $2499 '67 MG GT Coupo, wlr11, r•dio, $1099 '69 TRIUMPH Spltfiro, wlrn, r•dio. $1099 '67 PEUGEOT 4 .Ir. w.,.ft. rodio. ••••· .r,. $899 '66 AlfA ROMEO ,I MKl-~pa. : ·' , ...... 2--1m I~~ ..... ~§)~ ["r.:.;..., .... · 1§1 ~-;;"'~~ .l§l 1~ .. .: .. J§J 1.:.il iiiiii __ : .. ~l~ 1 ,;;I -~iiiiiii"'""~l§l~. ll:;;;i::::~:i:::;:, "'r~f70...;. Autoo, 1,,_1od 970 ~too, I 970 f.~ IT!!!:!~ ; f'1'I A-. -, u.. "' ~ ~ 9t0 •• ~ .... UtMI , ffO ERCE-BENZ PORSCHE SWA,EN VOLK$WAGIN ' l-......:"Y~!.::.....,..,.-l--=C=ADl::.:=:'::::A::::C:,...... C~OLIT - 1PotD \ -;Ml 300 SL RDSTR ·12 """""" 911-T .,.,... ''3 ug, Now..,., fi xed '" v.w. ~· '71 YOLYO. • YOUR' &:Iv' ' '69. ,Cf!llwo .S.S:. ·111 !'<rd Todno. 3111 fll In.• AM /l'M Rad;o, Roal Collect· su7,,;..1i\tn~· be. up$600 ,!lf' .. ttoffor. -· -· .. .,...,.. ..... 145 EA w·:r. ... .-.. ~u'THO ........... IUZED .. , •<V-4. A·--""'.~·~ ~ ~ .. P2/-~\P~ •. or's Item, •6160 Immat."U.· s22 -. A·1 .-z.:.1427'' •fto:. s · dHien.,;. (YX'l'8D). "'wvn: "' -•'-"'• ._......,. • "'..., ~-.. -.u-w.-.. Mc. $AVE , c ___ R_E_N_A_U;_l::_·T __ r::'i'I vw '""' •Riii. xlnt :.,.. . • $2299 Equll>l'Od With au-C:, wblto • ""°' -Xln't ~4Cll or 14{· , ____ .. _____ , ,.. -.me U.ilOO °lliu•/Whlte,call CONNl;LL CHEVROLET tnul&, AM/FM radio, ,ir CAblLLAC C!lll:MEYYJ Dir. 1136<1535., 'ol·jC. "'53&' . r1\1_ ... m_ ... _. I ~R· sale, 1961' ~1i1!!'! St8-6%37, ·:., . I ( ' I ,2828....Ha.rb!or Blvd., conditlortlt:v, WSW. d.,it EALD l9IN QfEVY Greenbrier Van '81 FORD van campel" out- I. J;Vl1tn n, 1 Jt.141.Uillll ~.~ tin't. ~ne owner, ~ Fbn Sale 1969. VW , vad.: .. eo.t.e.:.M'el&~ $:&6-urJ blue with matchlha interior. D~ . . . tor-ule. Motor recently titted. Gd •. motor, &d. tires , ~ -rw>OO~-o... :t.::Jo 1 -"atjer"'."-'$_.p~m=-. -----I ;;;J 43'70'.rM· Reduced to • 1.arsnt 11l1etsoe cC Old.ll· rebuilt. ln·pod running con-etc. Sacrlllce ·$55!0, prvt. l" . --•. J TOYOTA Good ~ .,\WvW'~:f'~~;,!1 '$3466,. ·'. ~ .. ~ ,Qoun11. di-~::l\"'~·c1oe•nee<1 '"''"645-5562 '1l3 vw. 'sUi\i<iOI.-an.a ,_) ong·ownr, xlnl me<h SeeU • You'U lluy If · .a:' =Do or bet!~ to ... · ,IA YILJN ELECT ~~ * ~.:J~be;'J!'. ... ~ ft1" · 1-..<...:. ··N-•rs '72 NoYO · JAVELIN· ..; ,,..,. Pty . •57 Mtrcec1es- 190 SL Rd str. 2 Tops. Sharp car, li.1UST BE SEEN IJo"-'Rl~l $1499 !NriU"port ~"\1 I !9' .,..;...,_~Ii .• ~a.di . I,. ~ " • • '64 .vw Bug, euroot. Engine or bett ~tter. "'"" tell u.911 Ca•ac I -~ -· fie. ON!: ~ 311,tllO ml. A '65, reblt In '11. Good oond .. "!tor. Sun. -S -·.::: 3600 HARBOR m.., ti>ry alf. -_;.A ~"'l . :.~·-BeentllUI 177 TOYOTA 1475. Pvt. !ili7-'ISS'I rmo cc vw. cloee mtto 'llllo • COSTA ,MU&• --6 beater _,,-:::'.e''...!;::::;·,::-;::...:'::;::.""-.....- ·M VW .BUS trana. Fllt.-14 ml. 100 1386 Harbor c.M. ' ~ ~100 °""" .Sundo¥· • ~ ' , "Ill Jawlln. Still under maj<r am ·OF>J;ft , HP. £nc. & trans. S,000 ml., ' 19!0 ~~ :;--, , warral!.• Looded ,.,_. YOUR NEXT CAR * 54H8l'1 * l2SOO lnveated. ISOO/olter. A~. U'°" f90 Folly~~=: · (fQltYA~ ' PIS. .Af.C. IST-21119. CLEARANCE SAlE ·i~:.ra~. ~.tl)O ml ::::-.,..,,.,, Auto trans , llVl¢.K : ::: sl'loo. ~'!Op, Pr! '85 -· -·~. d . MA~K . * Oin ·89'.H169 * . Ah: cond., lugpp rack. •70 Bu.lck ~--~ '68 C.oupedeVlUe, vfnY1top, "~t:··Mecb.: aO<u.n·d. 1972 8 (:yL Grabber w/alr.' 108 NEWON TOYOTA'S '11l vw Sundial Camper. '!?.;:,:run:"';"".;;~: Whl Blk --~.-lf.S: lull, .... ...;..!'. air, ... ,,,,. l:{l': ~ ..... -., 'Pl; ..... -7,2» ml. 1 AM•J'M stereo radio, . new 675-(747 '°' fi'l5.1033. P.B. ~. fact w. J.under ltereo. __..1'D-4191 -· d 1'vt. · ·owner. Make ofter. tires $2500 646--1318. • .• 68 vw Van. Reblt UOOCc 30M. $425 -uni!er ,· blok. CAMA Corva.tr :st Ramf · Dl)'S 54i Or 4o59 ; eve• V.Yl. '61. Bug. Good con. eng. New bettecy & ·front .... !252. 6::,~0 :' Y RO ~·\~;oO _!fll~·!!!~!l:--· ---- L • dttlon. $lOO. or Best crr.r, tln:l. bed, ..... ue tape. ·CAlllYA ... C . 19!0 Camuo al<. ,-'oulD, PIS. 1965 CORVAIR Monza conv. M""'CURY - · llllit ~-deck. Recent ,t un e· up . ~ v -• Ex~ ""' WllO '70 vw Bu•. reblt ong, ·116511, 548.;r.t:l aft 4?30. _7J .~:. ~. or·!lT::if $2500. ~ ""!'-..,,. zlnt. sm . '70' u ..:.-IDOJA or trade tor o-!)ug plus ~ VW Bug, Good cond, ..,._, Tl r •*·-lull OR ..,..,...., • '58 Merce<les. New ~ 645-«9 I automatic, Leaotng country, ~pe De "'''.. um"":""Gd.' r,1:,-J!"·.,r:: c VEI IE MOJ1terey 2 Dr HT, v..8, Aut \ pajnll'd. New front tires. 1966 liarbor, C.~f, 646-9303 '&6 VW Bug. Orig. o~r~ Sacrlflee, 833-ot3t Full poww Air·Qlnd. j'.lnyt S3f-201J. , • .._. . Trans,·P>Wtt 1teerln g-, Gd. C'oncl. MsmG. ST3-47fjti. '67 Toyota Corona xtnt cond.\$8r!O ... ' 'Mon thru Frt '8 to ·4:30 Root'. ~ Comfort' ii8.ti: . : ' · ... · COR~ '11. LT·l, 4 apd,, ~·10, Heater, white walls,: · e -1!11ia ·• '11 VW Wogon, BeautUul Flrembt ~ CHEVROLET -, .m 1-. lmma<;Wato,, wheel ooven, A Vt'> nk • 4 speed, au!o tra.ns1 radio, ,69 VW BUS SNRJi' All.I/FM Jtttm 6-way aeats, ltueo . tape , • m-9551 aft 6 A wtmdi. car (n6CTO) Sl.895 dJr, Call '67 l\1GB Rdstr SUprr'strong g~~t-b~f~ ~~'~~:~~I BeQ. stths. ' ~~·7~!;~g* ~~~!! .cruise con$trol176. . '!0 .Monte Carlo CQU_iM~ ~~Mmy WAGON. engine • '66 Triumph Spit-Only $899 at Bill [l,faxcy * 673-8293 * . ""' A ""-~ .. ~ ..... .,·: ~ am:~built, Ex-Toyota. 18881 Beach Blvd., '63 vw. Sunroot. Great '64 vw Sunroof. Cocoa per ··JpODth utoma.;, ~Ion, tac-1961. Cougar .... top, R/H, A-1 ~~,_~· . ea • · Hunt. Beach. 847-85.i5. ll'ansportatlon. brown. Nu tlr@s, ahockB 36 mo. O • .E;.L. tax ~ white wall tins~ ~~ 1 ."""'1i. PeJ'f .cond. __ _,Sl,,15.::•,:: ••lil!Hl!ll ==--1 '69 l\tGBGT, . chrome v.'ire , * G'i;r-3715 * S485. Ben Hur Gas, Harbor lm--'lato' ~11v-r ' c 8 21"' ..1. ' •"'V · • ..,<JIN. Dys 547.:aJIK"'" eve MUST' ANG whl•. FM rad<O. ct .. ~._Be•t 69 Toyota Corona 1,.;1 vw Bug, R&H. vinyl & Bay, C.M. . LEASI~ -,, ~-83&653s':'T ... l.. Dir·' ·~ -. : • .' -. ·~ •• , bod ~ ~--~ , ~•• Chev. n.,_.,. l!lnate, . ....., :I"• · ~. muo• , ••• n otter m•t:'r $1850. 643--5073 Black vinyl top over red, lo int.. v.,..., clean. 1 o\11-ner. '70 VW sundial camper, good ALL :LS ·-• ..,..D·G:lt ' ' ·-• .,..,....ANG . ... xi t MGA miles. See it, try ii, buy ii ! Pri. pty. $495. 541)..n-a9 Y, .... vng eng. I' u11U1<;•ng AND ES I PuL . -Sta. Wp. Pwr. · ~ · · ClOllA. See at Aroo Station,. (570AGGJ Only Slim. Bill 1l1 VW bus, 7 pass. Many avail. $%200. or T.O.P. . . ,,.3, 1 Steftin&. A bnJcm All·l'M IW\.t.Ali1··· . zre N. El Camino Real,· * * '60 !\!GA * , !\taxey Toyota, 18881 Ek·ac_h xtras. Xlnt cone!. ;m. 645-772{). I'· Stereo radio;' tUt .bier will. • 'i~DOD san Cemel'lff-492-t'122 co>rPLETELY REBUILT . Bivo .. Hu"1. Beaoo. 847·""'· Bus'"""""· 646-2624 • '66 vw Solllhenrcaifamia Factory A<r; .....,.· ...... , 60 Gf! '65 . tiiii1\i&tlbie. "'"" ..u ** $4&-1011 ** . ·59 Corolla 2 dr. New tin-s. * •70 vw~. Xlnt cond. $650 * 586-1827 new tires"• b1;aket. Panel· 4 door~ to~A~tic $650or Jl!lllm:ol!er. 551--n&l MGA 'OJ. ~-bl! -·. 1·~ or Reblt trans. $600. 642-5864 Rad' blue or best · ' 1..:.. · · ,__ ___ , _ _..... ·'"' ---aft 6 pm W wtndl. i.1 011 .... = --~ ~ "'"-'646-354=::.:·::o."=--~ ..::o""'"'"''~_,··=,,.:::;·~=--VOL.VO lstflr'.· w_ .. •12-· Askina $2125 •• ..,-4861. ;;,~.X..er' ;;ee;;;;g: O"DSMOBILE *Ph: 847-8670 * TOYCYfA '66 STOUT '4 Ton, 1969 VW BUS ---~'----UUJI!"~ Chevy Aiahbu, vm,yl_ rqo_f,, falUo .a, fine ~ car ~ MG. PICK UP. R&H. fr:.O. SUNROOF . GOOD COND. vo· T'" aaa11·: ... _Slll(·: . P/S, Pill, -...... Rl'S& .. Riiduced ·to . . .-67-Ton>na--do,-ell--J;d -==847'-"'-1'0!51=-~-I fl"l'JO *-·-m4 1:, UM AM/FM. Loaded. SpoU.U; . $666 . pwr. • --= .i .....,..,... 9:»-4:30. 5tl--1298 aft 5, . '· . ied. rrooo new, best ofter· .70 '.\IGB·CT. Top shape, 'TI CORONA,~ dr, air/cond, •69 RED vw . .A.uro YES 646-1700. ·. Set'";lt. You'll Buy It over S121Xl. 675-7900 , ~·~,. <.....,,,.,.,·. 2.~ IV. auto, radio, 1 mvncr. Like RJI! EX-,~~ COND 2001 Mlchenion Drt\le .,. · " *. "'5-'1117 Beh. "lit Toyota Corolla vw VAN. 'CUSTOMIZED. FOR . A n•/833-86211 mii!-o367 nullo wltt>' ,,,., speaker; . c~~t H~Y:-'suite 3. Npt New. 8l3-l82B •• $1~~. . cc1:.0~~~) 1f2dr~ ~·~;~ '. ·, · .. ~· . .•• . ·~P_L_._Y_M. OR.....U1HJ'#t. '69 MGB-GT, xlnt cond. lo 2 Dr. 4 si>eed radio sharp MUST SELL. $950. '72 ' YQLYQ '65 eadiliac!'Fieetwood . FUU 13,000 ml. $3150. 49U531. mi'11. R&H, ·nuike offer. Call cute: yellow : Say ~b~ •645-1369* ............ · ~ '55 CHEVY 2 DR a needl clutch.' 673-4052. to gas station,, (188CZMJ -'62 VW, Baja Bug, Corvatt AT t>~Gi13 •"""'· •. .,...Mew tires. Needl~rniaor ~ 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 968-". OPEL only $8.<¥.>. Bill Maxey Toy· engine, S1200 or trade for ,66 Cad Sedan w/Landau top. $150 Firm 543-3691. '63.~Dart .GT.·• mi on , '64 Vallant sta wgn. '66 Opel Kadl!tt. Xlnt cond. • 1345 . Call 646-4629 PORSCHE '69 l'Urschc 911T. 5 spd. J\fags, Beautiful. S 4 6 0 0 . 547-736:i: 521-5196 Ola, 1'881 Bead\ Blv<l., camper. 644-0030 Clearance Prlciis Xlnt cond. All Xtru. Pri 1-~-· ~-~"-1tat Nb:':' • N= ll!es. Radio, • Good cond. J351). Iklnt. Beach. 847-8555. *A BARGAIN• '73's Here Now piy. $1500 ·673-7690 . ~ N;;"' ~t;· trans, Mi.~~. X1nt . cond. * ltM&tO' * Venatll• '12 VW aunpcr. * 19n Cadillac Coaoe de Riii 14115 ph. 9-5, 673-211311, RREBl~D . PONTIAC 9.000 mi. $3500. 963-4717 " I •. ..!. Ville. Xlnt cond. $41)1). Call '&ft 5 833-0742. '69 VW Bug, air~ auto, tires, f011, LUUU 67f>-~13. ·· '66 Chevy Impala, P /S, ' '68Pontiae LeManl2drbll'd nu eng. Clean, $1195/or of· Uftl Vft "73 CAD CP,e ~.Ville.. Load-P /B, vinyl top, Xlnt cond. '68 ~F °f'· ~· top · Auto, ;,,r ltetit tn&o TR4A Roadster, blue cutie, I.tr. &45-0766, 919-4895 IU~lW ed. 350· actual -ml. .$1500 R/H. $9)0_ Best offer. ~ 0riJt_ ~ n ~ brakrs, air, radio, vinyl top. normal nl.iles, priced below '72 Wt/ bug. 19,000 mi. Still .fltm. Pvt. ptj. 5tl).C1!1: 60-l«Jl won't , depreciate~ $1 7 O O. Pri pcy. $1005. 8'13--JML ' book (U1'U224l Only Slim und~ wamrnty. $1700 or 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9:303 '70 Cadlllac Eidonido, s.woo. '68 Bel Air i dr Sedan. Air, 6'l3-5507 · -MUST sell '68 Pontiac Flre- ·Blll Maxcy Toyola, 111881 _best ofter. rf!.m8 '64 VOLVO Private Party. ~B, Ps. tbited glul, wsw · · D. 'bird, 4 opd. convertible Beach Blvd,, Hunt. Beach. '60 VW body. Everything but · · 6'&-742Q .tires. $925. 846-QTJ. FOR · _ offer, Rita 536-10 TRIUMt'H '66 TRIUMPH 847-855.5. -..i .... $99 00 2 Dr. 4 speed, maroon with e ....... ~. · · rebuilt engine 800) miles * 1966 coupe. deVllle, $950. '66 Chevy Caprice. Fully '00 a: ;10 GALAXIE SOO's "lD Grand Prix. Must sell t '64 Porsche SC. Very clean! YOLKSW' AGE"' * &45-7269 * ago. Better huny for this Prl party, 61)-9931 er equip. S'l!!O. 485 E. 18th C.M. Retiring Couple I] u y 1 ii g make room. for new ~~~¥~1u.st sell! $2400. ·: ~call bus, ~P ~· one! IOPF607) Only S749. &IH158. ~1740. Camper, Both exCel com. ~.or ~IJMew. '71 Porsche 911T. 5 spd. 181\1. lmmac cond. $6875/oUer. 97'9-M84 V.W. '72 Bug, Y~. Better or ~Her ~ · · BBelll Max 1 eyd THoyota, 18881 '64 Cad. Conv. Very Clean! '!8_-~-N~ ~ !:!,~:;!_ $2,00> ea. Ca 11, __ -_RAMBLE ____ R __ 1 Like 10 Trnde? Our Trader's than new co n d l t Ion. · • ach B v ., · wrt. &ach. ._ UM Augusta St., CM. ~·~ ._ .... -un ~·1;>. 1 • Paradise column is for you! SJ&..9'S, 6G-C114. Want ad resultl ... 642·5678 847--8556. 979-1471. · Ell. STl5. 645-8277 eves. '66 Country Squire 10 JIU'. um RAMBLER WAGON. Motor Homes Motor Homes Motor Home• Motor Homes Motor Homes Fut ftSUlt:I are fust a phone All pwr. Overhaul just .(!Omo Great mech. Air. · Salo/Rent 940 Solo/Roni l'40 · Sole/Roni · 940 Salo/Roni 940 S.le/Ront 940 call away.-642-!im. · pleted. $850/ott.r. 673-24911 $1911. 6311-ml --'-----r-----~---"'"--_;..""------__ ..._ ______ .;.;....;..... __ ..:...;:IAutoo, _ ..... __ .. 980 Autoo.Now 980 Autos.·Now 980 ' ) lmODUCING THE ~flt/IP VANS :-'72 DB. MAR U::': '73 PINTO and 11:: 7·3 explorer 20 ,., ........... Sir.-. 2';Dt4 BOTH FOR ONLY 59700.~ .. j.,..., hll llcMfy ........ 51!'. IHI. MlOIClOIOOS ONLY $15483 ~ ' 73 explorer~ ,...., ........................... . ~ ..... °""'* .... .. Vlllrt. ,.... ........ WI 1 t '1W _,.., ........... ,_,. •ow ONLY -:':' PLAY N9W -PAY I.A nR $11888: o: ':II.'=°=-... • 7 YEAIS IANI flWKIM r.A ~ r...e-1 A•MAlU•Al•Wtwcmtl', ............ .,.._ " • • ~explorer ' ,,. of , HUNTINGTON BEACH _ _....__.,_TIUCll aft. M .. TilftTllllUC••-~I-- .. • ' I, ' l .. . ... They're · Hot! J New Pickups and Vans! • 0 0 0 • 0 anowe ve ' got 'em! ' 7 . Brand New ~ Chevrolet Pick.up ONLY 25215 '2295 • With· big 110.8 Cl engine, !otir -.speed .trap.s., •tlllllacy sprtnp, brake booster, side mirror, oil filler, spare lite, etc! Brand New '73 Chevrolet Subur~an With 'Ya M>Cin•, 1utomallc >lratia.~ Power lleor>- lnf, radio, extra -i. HD ndllU!r, mirrors, Ulr1I cbJOme, side mold!nll!I, etc. ONLY s4295 I I I I l i I I ' ' I '• I' I • • . . VOL 65, NO. 30T, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES 6RA~ COUNT;f, CALIFORNIA r THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1912 . Ted•y's Fl••I N.Y. St.eeks TEN CENTS Clemente Officer Innocent • ·Ill Cr· ash Death By JACK CHAPPELL Of Ille Dtltr !"lier Staff A VJ!id\ct of innocent was returned Wedneaday in the misdemeanor marudaughter trial of San Clemente policeman Gary Adams. The 11li:~n. six-woman jury brought bac~ tbe verdict quickly al~ beinB ln- stru&d by Judge H. Wauen Knlgbl in tbe law jJertalnlng to the Issue. The trial. at Laguna Niguel Municipal Court, lasted fi.ve days including one • re entire· day of jury seleetloo. Adams was " cleared of t h e manslaughter allegation as a resuJt of tbe verdict. '!be charge had been brough following the death of' a passenger in a pickup truck wbiCh wis involved in a col- lision with Adams' petrol car over the Mtmorial Day ·Weel<end. Jeffrey Britt, 11, of Long Beach bad been r!dlng In Ille open Ford Ranchero -bed prior to the accident at El Camino RW and Avenlda Delores in San Road to Gr1ave 2 Headed W,est to Become Bikers FRENCH CAMP (,\!') -"Big Tom" "Wben I first met them, 1hey were Clemente .. He wu thrown from tbe vehi- cle and onto the pavement as a resuJt of the collision. · San Clemente Police Chief Cllllord Morray declined to comment on the mat- ter -. .of. ·Nlams' resumption of routine patrol duties follo•in( the Innocent verdict. . The Policeman bad been assigned to desk officer dutiea allor the miJde. meanor numslaugbler cbarie W 1· I brought. 2 Officers Attacked Shull and Charley Baker were motorcy-green," said one French C a m p cle partners. motorcyclist. "Tom wanted to graduate I L . ' In Charley's 1957 pickup truck, they up to tbe Angels. That was one of his am· n aguna drove west from Georgia last fall and bitions. Charley liked to ride fast and · found a slippery foothold on tbe lad®' of party. California motorcycle cliques and gangs. "They were okLUme _buddieJJ back in Charley wu content to take fast Augusta, Ga.," said the cyclist, who A Laguna Beach police sergeant WU weekend bl~ rides across Northern refused to be identifle<'. for , fear of allegedlY usaulted' and another officer California'a mountains. retriWtion from the' Angels. "Charley injured during a fracas at the police sta- But ·,.mg Tom'' wanted to w,ear the red qcit his lob as 8 police motorcycle tion Wednesday nigbt. and white emblem of the notorious 'Hell's mechanic. Tom divoret-d his wife anCI Sgt. David Ayers was assertedly kicked An '" I cl b they came out here." • The Jury'~ decision was, rendmd alter a ·~ set of closing argumenta were l1l8de by the opposing attorneys Wednes- day morning. \ Prosecution Attorney Dod Clarenct, tbe first to mslfe an argumenl, alleged the policeman had broken the SO mph poated speed limit (plima lacle· speed limft), the muirnum spe<d limit' of 65 miles per hour, and bad failed to yield to Ille pidwp lnict. He cbarJed that tbe San Clemente • l Police Department ,.., acting "basically as a private b:Tvettfgator for the defeme,'' direct r:eference to certain police reports which were not given to the district attorney's office, as ls usual. Defense attomey Gerald Will iams, in presenting his argument, told the jury the accident would baVe happened no matter what speed the police car had been traveling. He said the real reason tor the collision wu the truck's sudden swerve lnto the path of the pitrol car. ' ge~ motorcyc e u . The duo were taken into the ntat Jn the leg as be attempted to search and The decaying bodies of both were found Stockton home of one member of the jail Brian s. P_tterson, 2940 S. Coast • burlecl Monday on a farm tbe stale at· .._ .. , . . torney general's 9ffke" aatd W'8I runioi'«I "rrench Camp Boys,'' t. motOrcicle ~ghway. , tabO"allell'{AnieW)>uriahrouod."150 club. ~-·' · 'n.l•~~lbal ,_._ Of.blft. Sec~sllrv. 'p After I ~ c:iodloil aid, Balair ~ '~ " ' ~ -:--r;"" _( llor7, age moved Into a-~~ -·--"'.'~~ ilil_ - A> frkodo..-'iiii! ifeie a glrllrt.end·-1n poUC. -foctllty. unliU!1 ~ "1lon llllJ "rolled Bay. 811111 ~ iiii' for four or Ii" ~ ·.., flnaJi.y booked 111 l\JIP~ Into lfd.t IU' .Rlftr deita tcnm. mootha.. until N-. . ckn ol -WI cm a Police ofll<e<, Tiley loolood "In!!>'" and thelr cycles Meanwblle, BUer took a mecl>anlcs resilllngarreol,pa1...,_olmarijuana, almoo) immedl4WJ. broke down. . job in • custom motorcycle shop in ~ of drug paiapl>enialla, and Red DowiJ>C'.l!l!lr and beard, well-over · Rodeo. cfrlvtna ilnder the Influence of licobol or 200 pounds and· aix feet · tall, 1bomas The two Georgians jolnec: the "French drugs. Sot. Ayers sald. . Shephard ·Bllull. 24, qulcily earned tbe Camp Boys" for races from Plncerville He aaid' the case first started wben or. ni&tame "Big Tom." He looted lite a to Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada. ficer Dan Bush waa called to a hit-and- plrate m bl! •Jmeo.bfgb boots, chain belt "We'd go down the ·while line run accident iceDe at the 2500 block of Wld sw~. He wore a knife at sometimes passing between two cars on Glenoeyre Street at about 1:3> p.m. bl! hip. tbe comers to see wbo wss fastest," said Wedneaday. ' Baker, 30, was ·almost a foot aborter one 32-year-old eycllst friend . "When be got there, be found a rear and at least so pounds.lighter.~ regalia "Sometimes we'd hit 121i or more on the bcmpef wtlb a licen:..e plate on it. He was didn't fit a motorcycll!l's stereotype. He straights." picking up, tbe. debria, wben be ssw a had curty black hair, and wore spec-Aotber "Frtncb Clmp" cyclist, LarrJ vehicle Jrive by with no rear bumper or , .. ,~ ...... ,.:.7. -. -..,...-McCut4f,, ....-id,...1-.-ahared.-a-lrlaDteca tail DglJ&a.~· Jay~ said. . Though both soundl!d out of place with a~t for one month wilh Shull and Tlie serg~t said IJlat as a vehicle distinct Georgia accents, the pair ~ two other Jiersonl. driver spotted the poUce ..tncer, be sped found iodging with friendly motorcyclists "One day in December or January, away. Bush followed in the police unit In the San Joaquin Valley. (See BODIES, Page Z) and stopped the car alter it became !See FRACAS, Pqe Z) Candidate "Oils Up Gun' After Beach Home Blast American Independent Party "Con· gresslonal candidate Lee Rayburn today declared be is "oiling up my shotgun" ' after au explosive device blasted out a window in his Huntington Beach home Halloween· night. Rayburn ls seeking tbe congresalonal teat in tlie 34tb District where be opposes Incumbent Rep. Richard Hanna and GOP challenger John Ratier.e. , Huntlz>ilon Beach Police coollrmed tbe 7 p.m. blast at the Rayburn home was caused by an explosive device that was ' probably • !JOWerlul cherry -· "My house was .elected from among hundreds for PollUcol reuom," Rayburn chsrged today in an ID_... "I'm seriously worried about the future safety of my family,'' be said. "I'm afraid 111 have to put some heavy screens and ban on my wtndowl ." / In tbe mesnUme, be added, "I'm oiling up my shotgun." Police confirmed that Rayburn bad reported the incident, bul were unable to provide further details. -t "George Wallace, John Kennedy and Robert KennedY wen all lhot "1 Com- munists," Rayburn aaerted. ti People ln tbia campalp an not ~ tbeqDelv" BP -hie pei>i!!e.n Rayburn sUI tbet be WU allo ID IJP candidate two yan ago but tbfl wu the nnt incident ol pollu..I abollp bl bu seen. l,agrina Council Actic ~1 ,_ ..;... ~ major ICllDnl.llltm by tbe Leguna lle8cb City Coond1 WednadaY nJOll: DESIGN IUMEW: OIVI prelbnlUry approval In the proposed dellp re- viow ordlnanCe, provJdtna fot an:hilecturol and other control• on city bufid. In& projecll. Final conllderatloo ol the matter will be msde by tbe """1ICll ' . Nov. Ii. A11C11 BEACB Dl9TlllCI': Tool< lint llepl to 1ot IUl,000 Arch Duc:b H<Jabla Im,,..-Dlltr1ct ping. Set I publlc beWlDI cm tbe !Ditter f« Dec. lt ml authorized tbe city clert ta eall I" ~ bldl. Am AND CaAl'rl ma:: -Ille 111·8 (Altl md a.its) -bid lo Ille 1'lllelltC ~--°"""" -' 5 lrlWI 11111 If .. .. thelr ~· tbl --coald • -· . • - mMM DSIAlll 'SDU'l!:8T: .1'1rned aow. -bldl for -en. .,.. Sloml DnlD (lrojoct. 'Ibo -bid -....... ., ....... ...... ·-clll' eotfmllol. '.Illa c.u.dl ·docltled to ..... llltll ... -Ibo ,..., -. • Mr8. ·Morphine To Join LHguna Zoning Board .. Mn. Tlanu MfD11blne wu •?Pointed WodDeodoJ u a member of the Leguna Beacb Boin! ol 1Allin( Adjustment by acllm ol the City Council. The 1ppob1trnent came foUowtns couo-. ell acceptance of the rulfPl"t;oo of Mllt HanlOn from the board which beara mat- ters concerning variances and Ule permits and will assume design review authority under an ordlnance oow pend-in • fin. Murphino ii I potter and a long time exbibltor at the Laguna Beacll F..Uval ol Arts. Sbo la CUl1'0lUIJ cbalrman of tbe Amer1can Fleld Service, Amertcanl Alnad Jll"Oll'UD at Laguno -High School. Other board members sre lb Chrllllan Abel and Arnold Hano. It IJ esptcled the board will be expanded lo five members when design review mponsiblllUts are added. Man Struck By Beer Glass, Dies I lip to Tlaelr Nech• American Gls bold their weapon• high as they prepare. lo wade through a stream dtiring patrol duty along the pertmeter or the Long Binb airfield northeast of Saigon. (See story: Page 4.) Sign Now, Talk Lawr, N. Vwts Say in Paris ..... W1rl ller•lta North VletllllD docllnd today tbe United Slai.t mllll undertake to ofcD a Vietnam pea<e qnement be/ore Hanoi will coment to fUl"the:r dllCUllionl wtth Henry A. Klssinflet'. The llatement ... made in Parts by Nguy.n 'nlanh Le, IJ'O-..., for tbe North VietnamHe cte1e1auon, after the day's peace talk.I. At tbe -Ion. the United !Ui.t tatd the Vletnameoe ~ lllot tht low "malnlJC probl<mo ta bo -bofore I cealf":fltt accord ii reacbed "should not be ctismts: I u I pnlell for dtlay." ,,,. ICU' delep-qrt<J to -...., _ _,_ .. _ .................. U Ibey ulll, mllll bl fnonkly dta~ Pilot'• Po•itioru On Propo•itiona The DAILY Pll.01' toda1 ...,. marilM I t 1 recunmer..__ ~ -~I« Ml oil II bit'°! proposlUam whkh wtll bt on lhc! Canfornl.i balklt next 'foetdb)' I'"'" a ........., ol tbt ......,. -tin, 10t Pap M today. with," U.S. deleflale Willlem J. Pon.r ~ld 11 the talb. "exct:.eift hute ln Id· lltna the nna1 element wvul!f jeopmtitt tbe -t tbat bas been done ... "Our tuk thtrefore II to carry fonnrd to an equi\tble coochdkJn -wtl.h run respect to the vk>ws-of 111 pilnlel con- cerned -:.he work that "'' alrtady hem done-. to rtflnl' and elN1fy wht'tt ncttUary. and to deal ~utely. a1n· dtdly and realiatically whh any dlf· JlculU. tbat may lllll ttmaln." M°"""""'. Prtsldm> lfuon, mll f" 40 mtnulel today In W~ ..itll his Vl<tAam po:,.;riatar. Kllolnrer- .Uted al wbonJ ~ WU, pr<Sidtollal P'"I """'"'7 llOnlld L. Zifcler aid "l don't -wbm be 11 rtcht now.'' Tlllt ...., ~7 belon _, and wbm rei>ortm uked II Ki.q.r mi&bl be en route to another .......... llftlllorl, 21.pr llld. "w 'U lot ,.. ....,. when • .,_.. 11 taklnl ....... TodoJ'•-tac _,._I low hour> prior to lallilw ..,. -ol a boU-bour lnMcOll. J.. l>o alrtd 11 t:JO p.m. PST 01'tl' NBC te"'11 tn Md ndlG. A 1poll••um llid IM political bnlod- caot -kt ·-., ........ ...., in \'lt'fnam, '' 1bt Wblte -declined to dlt<>Oll •~)' contactl klMf•p IUJ have htd In -.,. with lleaol ...... _a Jlnlj .-to-.,1Vl<lnampo ... acreemn .. { "He will live with this for the rest of- his life. .. If you want to ruin one life because arother life bas been taken , 1 rubmit to you th.at you've returned to the law of the jungle," Williams said. Clarence's argument touched on con- flicts in witness testimony, particularly that or one witness who reported that a search for heroin ns made at tbe ~ (See INNOCENT, Page ii Hearing Set By Council On Project The municipal ball began rolling aga in on the $833,0IXI Arch Beach Heights Assessment District Wednesday as !he Laguna Beach city council set a future publlc hearing and calltd for bids on the big project. 1be undertakjng involves construction of sewer lines amt connec:lioru, ac· quilitlon or rlghls of ~·ay, and 8trttl lm- provemenf1 for the steep hillside development Rtsklents of the af(ected area woWd be ~ m.ra-1 for bnprovemeotl on an uee.u- ...,,. lpttad esplained by Carl A. .~ --wflll Boylt Eng-. tnc. Cmiaon Akf that U I J9Ult of the Jm- provemeula four typer of beno!lts would accrue to raldeotl and that chlrges would be based oo : -F'r'Oflt footage or . ·bject properties. -Hoo..e sewer oonnectiorui, -Paving benrJill. -And property coversge. He 1&1d under the financial ,... rangement1 rttident1 would have 30 dlys to pay the aMeUment ln full. or bonds would be isaued to pay tilt city ror the charges. PubUc hearing on the matter wu te:I for the 7 :~ p.m. Dec. 20 meeUng of the ' Clly Council ot City Halt. Although tbe district 16H I has In tbe past generated I good dtal Of COO· troveny, no residents appeared Wedne&- cUly to a:tdl"H9 the council. It ii estimated Lbt project COit will average about JlJIO per k>t and will t..ke aix to nine moft1ha alter constructloa 11'1111. Tbe area 11 localed wert of Oro Strftt. bounded roughly by Summ it Drive and (See llElGKTS, Paa;t Zt Doctor's Brui'Jed Wife Found Dead SAN DIEGO tAPI -Tiit wif• ol a San Diego phytlcl1n wu found dead In tho bathroom ol their Imme, her body covr:l't'd with bruileJ, deputy ('Or()hfT Dnvid S11rt aakt. Dr. Wallace c . Hee no<Uled eutllorlti<s Tu.aday night ol the death ol bb wilo Janel. SS. An 1trtopry to dflermlne the cau.se ol de1th WU ICheduled . No erplanotloo for tbe brulsel ,,.. made public. Or•••• ..... .,r Nol mud! ~In -•law rspoctod atone the ~ Ooaal, with hl&J!I It the --ol II, r111na to n llllaad. Vartable .-. 1.... 0......,. Sllla111y • l.NNIDI! TODA'\' Do flaWh~1ltd '°°"'.,. ti0nt I.I) b111ld vp tMf ewp rin1 A H ri t f 1 ~ lllOQOlhl• lull Ult .,.. nc..,-. Gt I rid of .,..,. .,.. nd takt a l0ttO IDGlk. &1 •lOf'J o,. l'olJC IS. ...... ----('<w w• Ot ~ •~'"·" ·--·-- 'l -.. • M I ll. .. ~, --· " .... -. -.__. " .. -.. =---, -= .. =· ~~; -. ,....... ....... --. ' ,t • ' • I ADAILV PILOT LB Thl.lrlitf, flllll•-2f l97a . 'Not ,,.....,, I . l . ' .. . --• He'll Take Developer ' Over tl1e Government • By GEORGE LEfDAL Of !flt Dairy 1"11•1 Sl•H MY ENVIRONMENTAL AtTIVIST friends aren't going to like this, but I'm preparing perhaps to sp it in the wind and vote against Proposition 20 - the so-called coastline pr('servation initiative. lncreasinglY this inlandlubber who fa~·ors easy access to beaches as much as the next fellow, believes the eco-slings and arrows havt for too long been direc ted at the wrong v1llll1ns. It has become verv fashionable in some circles to be super paranoid about big deve1opers and ttlfir greedy intentions vis. a vis de~el· opment of the remaining fragments of fragile coostline. We hear a lot these days about the hundreds of thou- sands of dollars invested by firms including the Irvine Company in the campaign to defeat Prop. 20. THE MOST PARANOID or my friends call me to whisper surreptitiously they've just le'1°ned the big, had Irvine Company contributed $50,000 fh urge defeat of Prop. 20. "You ought to check it out." th(ly whisper, "but don't say I told you." LlilOAL Well. for the rt.'C'Ord. lhe big bad Irvine Company told me and just about everyone why they contributed to Prop. 20 when they, nearly two months ago, announced their opposition to the initiative measure. They said then, and I pres ume still maintain, the measure will tie up for many months. possibly years, their plans to develop a 3.5 mile portion of Orange County's ocast. THE DELA VS, they reasoned , mean a Joos or money. They make no secret of the fact they are in the busines of malting money by developing land. Now, perhaps some will view this logic as perverted, but I happen to be- lieve the Irv ine Company's desire to make money is consistent \Vith logical development and preservation of as pretty a stretch of beach as I have seen in California. I don"t think the 10.000 acres of Irvine Ranch land y;hich by happenstance are attached to the coastline between Laguna Beach and Corona de! Mar would be v.·orth much to the Irvine Company in future years if that 3.5 miles is done up in taco st ands, telephone poles, electric wires and assorted other urban litter. Now, it just so happens such paraphernalia as just described has been a!- lowed by Wlits of local and slate governments along other stretches of Cali- fornia beaches, not to mention seasonings or oil wells, chain link fencing and pov.'e r plants. DEVELOPERS DIDN'T clutter our ocean front properties. Governments did, do tind probably always will so long as they continue to legislate the morality of environmental preservation while ignoring the economic incentives government might provide to really do the job. While speak ing of morality, I cannot in good conscience support a measure that will force the cost or housing, not just along the coast, but throughout the couny, further upward. T've seen what building freezes in Jrvine have done to property values which were already higher than in neighboring commtulities precisely because Irvine development offered more greenery, open space and visual relief from urban tedium. Jf added to the al re,?dy ~laggering list of environmentally motivated court decisions and· st.ate mandates threatening lo shut down the state's building industry. Proposltktn 20 can only mean housing shortages. The higher the prices or homes, the fewer among us will afford decent places to live. PEOPLE ARE PART OF the ecology of Earth, too. If they can't afford to live within 50 miles or the beach, what good will come from state-protected access lo beaches? Worse, if the state record in developing public beaches such as the one In San Clemente r~ntly turned over by President Nixon to the people of Cali- fornia is to continue, what good will come from baruUog private development? A compromlse solution providing funds for public; development of beaches and Incentives for ecologically sound private developments Is what's needed. I'll bet the legislature WQuld do it, H people really cared. r But should government fail, I'll still bet on the developers' profit motive, Harbor Agency Chairman • Rejects Prop. 20 Meeting The chainnan of the Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commission h~s brushed off a call by opponents of Proposition 20 -the coastal initiative - fc. a special meeting of his panel before the election Tuesday. "l don 't see any need for such a meeting," said Commission Chairman Martin Usab. "It seems like these people are looking for a forum before the efec· tion and I don't think lhat is the com· mission's function.'' The Citizen's Committee Against Proposition 20, an offshoot of a special committee formed by the Newport Harbor Clamber of Commerce lo com- bat the initiative, made the request Wednesda y. OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT In a letter to Usab, the comm.lttee ask· ed for the harbor commisskln "to hold full public hearings or do whatever ls necesaary to fully divulge to the public al! the restrictive provisions of Proposl· Lion 20." The authors of the request, Chamber directors, Dick Stevens and Dr, Nolan Frizzelle of Newport Beach, said the rom- mission need ed to explore the prop- osition because of its potential effects on beach and harbor matters. j.The commission must be completely aware of provisions that in all likelihood l"TOuld curtail development or additional boating and water-oMented facilities ," Frizzelle and Stevens said In th(lr Jetter to Usab. "The committee recommends that the llarbors, Beaches and Parka Commiuion fulfill its posi tion of resporuilbllity and make this issue available for immedlalc public scrutiny," the letter added . Uub said his commission has every ln- lention of studying the impUcatlons of the coastline initiative -if it Is pa.wd by the voters. Move Draws " ~hjeeti~ns: By TOM BARLEY Of 1119 O.llY ...... Sllfl • A bid by prosecutot Stuart Grant to In- troduce evidence on bow defendants In the Orange Couoty SUperlor Court '"Taj l,\ahal'" trial allegedly aharod ISDO.Dllll roceived lrom the St. Bernardlnl HospitaJ brought a spate of objections from four defense lawyers late WOOnes- day. Judge James Turner ruled belor< call- ing a four.ay recess in the trial that he will make clear Mooday just bow far Grant can go in offering into evidence the records of the Pan American Bank of Los Angeles. Grant put bank Presldent Stanley Gonzales on lbe witness stand WedneJ- day to back his claim that the bank's records will reflect the division of a $500,000 loan he claims was fraudulently obtained from the San Bernardino hospital. Judge Turner repeatedly ruled after a flurry of objections that he will strk:tly limit the area of questlonlng on the bank's bookkeeping to around January of 1969 -lhe time that the hospital loaned financier Joseph Dulaney's Laguna Hilla enterprise $500,000 in reserve funds . Gonzales testified at one point that defendant Daniel Hayes borrowed $30,000 from his bank just two days before the hospital approved the loan. It was testified that Hayes told Gonzales that the Joan was to be used to obtain the collateral allegedly used by lhe Dulaney group II! Obtaining the ssoo;ooo from the Roman Catholic nuns who controlled St. Bemanllne's rmandal affairs. E'st Coast fJDBDcier Fred Riley earlier testified that he was offered $90,IXX). by defendant James Shlpley lo release bis controlling Interest ln the Azalea Mobile Homes corporation long enough for Shipley to get the hospital funds. Grant claims the Azalea stoct is worthless. He points out that the loan re- mains unpaid today and Iha! It was im- J>f'SSlble to sell the collateral on the Open market ~ Riley, '5, and hospital controller Robert Machan, 50, were two of seven persons inc\icted by the Grand Jury on charg .. of fraud, grand theft and con- spiracy. Both men were cleared of all charge! after they testified as witnesses foe the prosecution. OfCa~s ' , .:~.:;i::,':to /t4t¥ ~ "1t Ila :':ti"" 1tOll. ol Pftil. ·::1 ~~8:": :-: tliem-. Tbe Uahl bonier ll>al obounds at lb• McGovern CNDP II countered by the more wtoui atall ln the Pr~:ildent'11 comer -rneo like Chari°' Colson who onee Nid he ''would walk over my graqdn\otber lf ne<:esury, '' ln order to Jet Nhan re-elected. Meet the e>mpalgn stalls of both candidates on Page 38 of the DAI- LY PILOT. Planners To Deal With Arts Zone Laguna Beach's proposed Arts and Crafts Zone (Ml·B). which bas been bouncing back and forth between the City Council and the Planning Commission, bas bounced back lo the planners. The council, faced Wedneeday nlgblt. wilh a lcnol of aggravated Laguna Can- yon COWlty residents fearing the mne would blanket their properties il they join the city, decided to let planners cope with the matter. The sugges~ :woe speclflcall·y permits artists' sb.ldlos, cabinet shops, glass craft production, and clothlng pro- duction as well as slllg1e residential uses. Dr. G. R. Ekeberg, whose veterinary hospital ls in the canyon, told the council she felt that the Ml·B mne was too 'restrteUve and the! llgbt lndustrj lbould be encouraged. "It's time you stop looltin~ at the can- yon as a stepchild," she said. Other residents noted that U the zone wete approved and later applied lo the properties, they Could be prohibited from completing their conatruction plans. · Councilman Carl Johnson, pointed out that at present the only matter before the council was whether or not there should be an arts and crafts zone, not the re1.011lng of properties. He acknowledged Iha! discusQon of Jikely areas for the r.one overlay had centered on the canyon from the post of- fice annex to the city limits. · In referring the matter back lo the Planning Commlsalon, th> co U D c 11 directed· lhat small a-.Ots In the light lndu!lr1.aJ ""'° (Ml·A) be stripped from consideration of the arts and crafts wne. (;J Gets .-Pass·-· ' To Leave1 ·Citls .. , HEIDELBERG, Gtnnany (UPI) - Pvl. Jerry Gamlt; the only male ooldler ln a unit of 130 women, grabbed a SUJ>U'- weekend pass today and gol away from It all wltb Iha bleulngs ol a sympathetk Anny. 1•1 don1 think ti's funn y," the U.yoar· old 90ld.Jer from Greenfield, Ind., said before he faded away to ponder his pro~ lem in privacy. '"f enlisted ln the Anny lo serye my country. I didn' come in lo serve with a bunch of girls. · "I've got a flancee at borne and 1 don't lhlnt 9be'll like It.'" Garrett wants lo be a military policeman. But a few days ago, the Army assigned him to clerking duties with B company, the Women's Anny Corps (W .\C) unit of the 7th Anny's '"Special Troops Group." "This WSJ nQL.an accident," an Army spokesman saiO. "It was done . on purpose, although probably more or less as a tempor;i.ry ar- rangement. "The company evidently was unable to fmd a clerk who was a WAC and had the Fl'Ollt Page I INNOCENT ... cident scene by youths tbe day after the collision.• "That's hogwash, you know that," Clarence said. He said that the time given by the witness was the same time the only two youths not bospitallied were lalking with lhe chief ol police and wilh parents at the yard where the wrecked truck was impounded. He termed evidence of marijuana and open beer cans irrelevant and said that "il lhat siren and that red lighl had been ou, Jeff Britt would not have died." Williams, defending his client's actions pointed to teatlmony about the dangers of red light and siren use. "Exceeding lhe speed by t>Olieem<:!!. Is a fact of life," Williams said. It was unfair for the district attorney to file charges against one driver, the policeman, and not the other, who was just as responsible in tbe collisioo, Williams asserted. "Don't you think that every policeman in San Clemente thinks, 'it's us against them?'" be said. ' SD B~ach . Has n_,y training, so oomebody pro-grammed Garrett tnto the arringement. I understand be wanto out of the job." Indeed be does, 1aid hla now ann· mandln1 olflcer, Copt, Anna Young. And. the W .\Cs are trying lo help him. "He's hid it/' the captlbt aakt. "J think he's kind of embarrassed. I un- derstand some of bla male frteiids-are - ">azzlng him about lt ... "He's only 11 and there are uo of us. "And be wanbo lo be an MP. "Thll would be a tou&b situation for anybod)'. I really sympathize with him," wd Copl. Young, who luued Garrett a pa'8 good for solltudo until Monday. ''I mean, how would you feel in his posltion!'" Ducking that questlQ\I, a oewsman uk· ed how Garrett hod been doln& at hla new job. "No problem," Captain Young said. "He's trying hls best to learn the job. There's been no reaction among the girls. "There's an emergency request In to get a woman clerk in here and C't him transferred." Whyl '"I Cannot -commancl o..,. any man. That ts an Arin7 regulation. So tbal'1 a potenUal problem, although not a real 01M! so far." "' The Anny had the last word. '"Hi• ch8nces of getting out are probably good, but not right away," a headquarters spokesman said. Fro"' Pqe I BODIES ... 'BIR To.m' just didn't come back," he said ln 'telephone Interview Wednesday. "I thought !lmlethlng seemed funny. r figured they got into some trouble or something l1 the Bay Area." Shull's yellow and black Harley was gone, but be left ;.,ehlnd "a few oddll am ends, nothing big," McCurdy~. The San JoJquin County-S lff'a office said Shull's mother, Mrs. K. . Shull of Augusta, Ga., reported her son seing Feb. 20. An all-points bulletin later wa• issued after reports that the big biker had been slain. "We beard he wu murdered and was in the bay;" said a sberifrs office spokesman. "He wa.s a biter and wa~ running with biking groupo. We don' know U be was a Hell's Angel ... The two motorcycllsts interviewed who knew b9th, dead ~ere ceitatn. that Baur: ..U not an el ·bat upn!aed some doubt about S 's rtatus. "IJ<!Aaduated fro!ll a _small.bike club . · into! ltiol. blgr boys, ~ wilh the N° ht £ T Ange.ls," ti8id one. "He was either an caughl ln traffic, Ayers ttported. ... ...... P-1 1g. 0 error Angell' prospect or had some buajness Peterson allegedly wu obaerved lo be .... -dealings with them." under the lnfiuen:: .. of something and was HEIGHTS SAN DIEGO (AP; ......: Halloween was a He related an incident that occurred transpart.ed by Bush to the station for • • • nlght of terror in San Diego's ocean sOOrtly before Baker disappeared. booking. • beach section, say busines.'>meo. "When Charley was working In the CY· A3 the two men. ezlted the pollce car Norta, Baja and Allsos Street.a. Clusters of youths paraded along the cle shop, he sent an Angel's bike out with behind the station, Officer Bush reported, Plan provides for sewer_,,., and con· trl f hro no oil and it burned up," he said ,...._ . uuu.ua s P o store:. t wi ng eggs ~nd br' :-.k-"Shortly after Iha! old r•'"''i\,;Was gone Peteraoo ~w something en the P.ve-nectlons lo bullclable lo'' ln the ·-and """""' m t "° ......... ing windows. ' ... Angel's bike Is like his rig. arm." en · resurfacing of roadway . A plasUc bag cootaining oboul 15 A few were billing each olher and He conjectured that Shull .and Baker The area ls oow about two ioontb! into knew too much about tlllclt Hell's Angels grams of a leafy green aubstanee wu the second year of 1 building moratorium "acted as if they were high on drugs," tba ?efOV~, Ayers said. ~ Officer Bush inposed by the city councll ~health said Joanne Pierce, a tavern owner. She operalioql. Or t Sbull created vicious waited for access with bis prisooer oear1 .l'-~·· ,1 ... 1_ '--"-1 a. ..... 1.--_i.. _ . d .bed _.,1 ___ _,_ • enemies ln tbe gang by . h ls the rear jaU entrance, police allege tbe .""-A-~ P9Jctl!Cl'l.I iw-\lllCI'" -~.. Ult. escn It ·wt:W~Y u "a full-sc.:.'.:?· agiressiveness. officer was pushed into 8 rack o( lockers constru. on contract ww. be award· riot" lnvolv:::g about 350 youths. It's been common know1edge1hey were and the handcuffed suspect bolted, but ed Feb. 7, il all goes aeco1:ding to time Police said an 1nvestlgatlon of the killed,"' be said. ''I knew it aJ1nost a year was quickly apprehended. schedule. Tuesday night activities was being made. ago. One day they were gone." Bush's hand w.., injured at lhat time. -;::::::::::=============::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::=====::; Peterson wu restrained by offtcen, they said. bul later, during a seal<h, be broke away Crom the sear<hing officer, Sgt. Ayers, allegedly kicking him before being restrained again. Oops, We Named Wrong Quigley The story which nn In Tuesday's Dally Pilot detalllq formation of. an Orange County intergovernmental council in- correctly ldentif~ a speaker at the meeting. Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley was present at the meeting and made several CM1ments about tbe portions ol lhe pro- posed agreement deallng with t h e orga nization's ability to incur debts. The story erroneoua1y attributed hla comments to Ray Qul&ley, who is also an Irvine councllnwl. The Dally Pilot regrets the error. I OO's of Veluea! '"°'''""" , ... e<!Tl~ chrillmar dclhl<Ttl fall clearance SALE! •' Orange County's Lar9ost Selection of Contemporary Fumilure open Sunday 12-5 entire inventory reduced I Pair Win Postponement In Viejo Death Case Plus section1I tx7'h Jn lux- urious heavy importH ye/- Y.+ available In "'• 11 y cholc.•s of co Io r & and fabric.1. I ' Two Or•nie County men arrested on charget of murder after a spectacular high-spttd chase through the South Coast last weekend won a postponement In t~lr arraignment Wednesday In Soutn Orange County Municipal Court. One or thti pair. Michael McNabb, 30, of St11nton, had not Y'l bttn able to flnd a lawyer. thus Munjcipal Judge H. War- rtn Knlght delayed lM formal char11nc of tbe pair until next Wednesday ln lhe 58me oourt. • Anuted with McNabb olt<r tbe hllh· 1peed purrolt was Joseph Wllllam Ruschak. 27, of Garden Grove. Both mtn had been rell!ased earlier this week from ho!lpllal cart for injuries they received In Lbe crush which ended tbe chut. The men had b e r n booked In the bludgeoning of Stevm H. Brush, fl, o! Santa Ana, wbole body wu fotmd in a car &loo.I a dark attttch of old lllibway 101 ln MJ.lori Viejo. The cue started when &berltr1 deput~ came upon two cars at the murder tcme, and the two auspecU allegedly fled ln ooo ol the oulol. Tbe punult was launched and 1n the rneanUma, depUUes dilCOVlrtd the bat• ter<d bod)' In the mnllnlng outo. Durtna: the chaae, a lherlff'1 car wu delltoytd ln a cruh In South Lq\ula. Tbe two men ...,. orresled altft their car olammed lnlo • u.. ln IAsuno Beach. Judie ltnlaht ordered tbe pair held without ball until the completion of lhe arraignment proceu. Aulhoritlet .. 1d Iha! the motlw In tbe murder wu lilted u robbery. . . Seit $696. • • • dally ll~l/i•turday 11-6/sundey 1·5 • ph 5-48,5518· • toll frlie , 546sl262 • • f . ii \ • • Saad.lehaek -' E.DITION ----- ' ·~ Today'sF .. ia• VOL 1>5, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGE~ · ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1971 TEN CENTS Councilmen · Push · for Interim General Plan By G!Ollqg LEIDAL Of .. Ollllr•,... ..... AllLtbe'lrvine City 'Cour.cll wanta by ChrUlmu IJ an interUn'general plan, the adopllcla of wllich mlgbt be touted on New ·Year'• Evt. ·. eo.mtmeo gave their u n e ~ i t e m ChriltmU list lo·tbe clty'o planning staff ol lwo ,,,_, nigbl ~ wilrk on Ille .~for-.~ c:i'alb ploruling effort be "lop priority" ·until a final dedllon <ii project•is made' Nov. 14. Co\lndlmen agi,eed that failing ... emption by the legislature from state g~ral plan deadllne sc}>edules, the city may ~ subject to the legal argument !hat ii. bu no zoning unless ii bas a general plan. ·' Wltlnll a general plan and possibly without zontng, "anyone mlgb1 build anything tbe:y want anywhere in . the · city," City Attorney James Erickson said. The legal point turils on state legisla- tion which requires zoning "to be con- sistent" with a city's general plan by Jan. l, 1973. To meet that deadline, councilmen vowed they would hol4 the required four public bearings on the anniversary of the · city's first four-night councU session - Dec. 2S 10 31. Presumably, planning commisslooers would host the first two rounds of Christmas weet bearings and councilmen would meet Dee. 30 and 31 to finalize the Road public Input to the interim general plan. Planning Director Bruce Warren Tues- day night was told to begin gathering data for the interim plan effort. On Nov. 14 councilmen will make the final deciaion whether the effort will be need- ed, based on Erickson's views as to the probable. success of a bill by State Se.a. DennlJ E. Carpenter (R-Newport Beach). Carpenter's bill would give newly ln- corponted cities M-months from the date of incorporation to comply with the \. general plan deadlines. For Irvine, that would mean adoption of a plan would have to be acromplished before Dec. 28, 1973. Tuesday night, Erickson. said there is a "70 percent chance" Carpenter's bill will pass the legislature this a e s 1 I o n . Legislators reconvene Nov. I and the measure is expected to face little op- position.However, "technicalities'' of pasalng legislation might mate it dlf· ficult for Irvine, Erickson noted. Mayor William Fischbach reiterated his view thal the city "cannot sit on its hands" while awaiting remedial legi.lla· lion exempting the city from the plan- ning deadlines. Nevertheless he first moved to con- tinue discll!lslon or the interim plap directive until lhe Nov. 14 meeting. Councilman John Burton then quizzed .. planner Warren about the feasibility or preparing the Interim plan in the ltx (See fNTERll\.1, Page !I •• . ~ Trustees Seek Board Action on School .Route '\11; __ _ ··~'+· f ,. ,j ,:~,~·~ Ul"ITt ........ San Joaquin ~I District trustees ere sending a "nasty letter to nasty people" -the Orange County Board of SUpervison -because supervisors \\'ednesday again refuseJ to temporarily improve Los Alisos Boulevard. Many students going to the newly open· ed Los Alisos In term !diate School in El Toro will have to be bused to the school by way of the San Diego Freeway because Los Alisos road is considered unsafe for bus travel. 'Ille road is private where it crosses Aliso Creek. Supervisors are going ahead with plans for pennanent improvemer:ts on. nearby Judge Delay s DuUi'!'ey Trial . ·l!nf4,Mi~1-' ~ ~ 'By' 'IOI! ·BAllLEY Of .. o.llY P1'91 $!'" A boN1y _..,...stuarl Grant lo fn.. treduce evidence on how defendants in the Orange County Superior Court "Taj Mahal" trial allegedly shared $500.000 received from the St. Bernardine Hospital brought a spate of objections from four defense lawyers late Wedm!ir day. lfp to Their Necks Jud~ James Turner ruled before call· tng a four-day recess in the trial that he will make clear Monday just how far Gf"ant can go in offering into evidence the records of the Pan American Bank of Los Angeles. Amertcan Gli bold their weapons high as they Jll"pare U> wade , tbi:A411M--"'-::o!:"-'filfini Pllr•l4utr al~e .~~8' !~<WR" !linh aii!ield norlheast of S&lgon. (See story Page 4.) • -,~· /"'~..Jl:Ul ban)\ President Stanley ·· {;onzaleS on the witness stand Wednes~ day to back his claim that the bank's records will reflect the division of a SS00,000 loan he claim1:_ was fraudulently obtained from the San Bernardino hospital. AIP Candidate Fµming Over .Cherry ' Bomb Blast Judge Turner repeatedly ruled after a flurry of objecliona tha1 be will strictly limit the area ol questioning on the bank's bookkeeping to around January of 1969 -the lime that the hospital loaned financier Joseph Dulaney's Laguna Hills enterprise $500,000 in reserve funds . American Independent· Party caOOidate Lee R. Rayburn of the 34th CongreS!llonal District said today be was "oiling up my shotgun" following a Halloween-night firl!a'acter bombing of blJ Huntington lleoch home. safgy of my family," he said, "I'm afraid I'll have to put heavy screens and ban on my windows." ln the meantime, he said, "I'm oiling up my shotgun." Gonz.aJes testified at one point that defendant Daniel Hayes borrowed 13<>.000 from his bank. just two days before the hospital approved the loan. It was testified that Hayes told GonzaJes that the loan was to be uJed to obtain the collateral allegedly used by the Dulaney group in obtaining the Rayburn, 48, said loilay thal ht. son's bedroom window was comple1ely shat· tered by a 7 p.m. blast. l!Wlllngton Beach police conlirmed the blul, addint that tt appu,red lo have· been cau>ed by a cberrybom~. ' Rayburn will be lilted on the Nov. 7 ballot as tbe AIP candkiate in the 34th Congresalonal District. He Is being op-. poeed by Richard T. Hanna, the In· cittpberlt "Democrat, and John D. Rat· !tree, a Santa Ana buflnessman. $500,000 from the Roman Catholic nuns who cofttrolled st. Bernardine's financial affairs. East Coast financier Fred Riley earlier testified that ht was offered '90.00J by defendant James Shipley to release his controlling ln1eres1 In the Azalea Moblle llomes corporation kJrlg enouab for Shipley to get the hospilal funds. "My -wu-oelacled-1-"'8i<frida for poUUcal r_, .. Ray'burn cborgecl lnan-. "I'm aenously worried about~ Mure l'•lldier Not lllllCb cbqt In .._.an eipected liolli the Or-. Cool!, with i>fl!ll II the -ol ... rllln( "' 'II Inland. v~ .... _ _...,SltmU.y. 1.N81DIK TODAY Do flalo<Mtltd ... _ ...,., i<> b1dld wp tlt4t cwp al A Brllhh _..,.. IMu ~ °"' -·· Grt rid of ,... l>nl cmd lokc • ,... wal.t. s .. "°" .. PoQt 15. . ......... " fl.h., .J -. iFi';+ .~~-.... ,._ ...... .. _..,.."!.? • ,_.-n • --... --.. --. .......... = ... •.,. E::.~1 :-r.-...i --. ; ''GeOrplllllteo;-~; inii ROberi KeaaodY 'lltri Ill abol by Cont mUnistl," R17burD· uaerted. ''There In I lot of people ammd In elecliool wbo do not oooduct themoelva reuonably," be Wd. Rayllurn Aid that biJ bcJWe WU 00- cupled by his wife, DoMI, and thelr.four children at tbe time ol the b1Ja1. He Aid ' be wu hbrueU out c1mpaignlng and only 11111ved borne ofter the Incident had airiady been "'ported lo police. POlice today listed the cue as "still under lnvallg1U0n." llowner there dkl not appear much bol>t of finding I llllpocl becaUM the ltrHLI were full of lr1ck-or-trttten at the Ume ol the blaal. Raybum., who llao ran on the AIP ticket In lflO, uid be hu ,,..,.,. belon -lhil kind of violent op- poolilon lo hll vi.... in Bed Crant claims the Azalea stock ls worthless. He points out that the loan re- mains unpaid today and that if. WU Im· P"51ible to sell the collateral on the open market. Ril,y, 45. and hospital controlltr Robtrt Machan, 50, were two of sevtn penont lndlcled by the Grand Jury on charg .. of fraud, vand theft Ind - splracy. , Both men were cle&rtd of 111 charces 1fter they testified u w1tne:s.sel for the ~ That action leaves Dulaney. 38, of mt Ulee DULANEY, hp II Airport Comn1i 88ion Eyes Condo n1inium Or-. OJanl}' Alrplrt Lind UJI com-Couple Dead m"*-n Will ~ 1 JG&tt C!O&- Ol.ILAJID (AP) - A -lld a· .... ._,, proJ!<t po_.t •t Ill '!'on> -_. -· llalJbed lo doltlo Biid ...r s..c.id Simi IMlCJ!t It 7:JO II ,.-.,, ..... ,, ,_ ol • --.. CMo C..-llrtfe ,.... OoOlon4 -_, pollol ml. OU.... 1"I -tracl mop for the pi'o)fft ..... _.,..,, ti1o N$im1 a llrrid -1tlti1111I 1o tilo --bf the \llolra, 'fll, tlld ~ !limhr, II, 1 · oauatY ,i-ln( --boc-It 11 -ol Vllrto'1 11111 .... W -0.. -ll>i Bl Taro lbrlne C«111 Air Bue. lot --ot tloolr -on I-Com-•• will ,_ In llie plannlnt --betrinl """'· • Muirlands Boulevard which will relieve the problem but trustees wanted help now. Either improve the road or close it, they previously asked supervisors. About 7,000 cars cross It daily, bu.~ because tt i! unimproved, Los Ali9os school Principal Pat Bushman said, it is "a very serious hazard" ror children who might try to walk that way. School Board Chairman Ro b e r t Dameron made the referer:ce to "nasty people -because they don't pay at· tention to us.'' He added with a smile that the board's unanimous endorsement of a protest let· ter should be "underscored th~s." The letter, to be prepared In detail by district staff, will say that the action by the 1t.1pervlaors is unacceptable, that the .supervbon are not being responsive to the people in the Sadclleback Valley and that trustees are dismayed that one of their members was not allowed to ad· dress the board, trustees agreed Wednes· day. Trwltee Preston How>.!ll, who said he felt the board of aupervlsors was "lackadalsical" a n d treated the prob- lem lightly, added that he had wanted to speak to the supervisors but they closed . Attorneys Filing Law~uit ... ~~o~!melGt~~te~~ ... ... . ···-r , LOS AllGELFA(AP) -Attaeys wltlJ the Ceot.r for Law In the Pl>blic"-- sald-illty were fUlng a IUll tadlT·lliidnll a stale· agmcy In an altenpt-to delr confusion over a CaWornia Supreme Court decblon requiring environmen1al impact reports on building pro)eqa. Attorney John R. Phillips said the suit would seek 1 court order compelling the Office of Planning and Research to pro- vide guJdeline1 for preparation of en- virorvnental bnpact reports by state and local govemmenll. Pbillips ·said at a news conference here that the suit would be filed. wilh the state S1..preme Court in San Francisco and that he ooped .the coort would C0111ider .the case next. week. . The sui~ was being filed on behalf of the Plaming and Conservation League, a statewide conservation group. Meanwhile, T. A.. ShiM Jr., president or the B.illding Industry Asaociatioo or California, said. at another news· con-- rereoce tbat hit group would favor st.ate guidelines~ The statt court ruled recently that en. vironmental impact reports must be filed for approval of -proJecta that mlcl>t -I algnln..t llfleet cm 1111 .... vi~. · ' Tho ruling prompted oome local governments to clamp a freeze t .. buildf..i permit.s. The declslon was based on the court's loterprelaUon of the Environmental Quality Ad passed In t!ml. Shinn said bis orgaoJution· passed 1 resolution urging the Lrgislature to clarify provisiolll bl the act. "Tbe Office ol Planning and llelearch was created by the Legislature foi-the express purpooe ol preparing and adop. !Ing Uiese guldeiln_es. for 11a1e and local · qenciel," Pblillpo laid. ''It has been two ytMln 1ince the CalUornla 'Envlromr.enlal Quality Act was pa.ooed," PhtWpo uld, "yet local govemmenla all over the Rate ol caillornll are still without any euktellnes ,,,... .!IOt\'er • • • " The Olllce ol Pllnn!JW and n-rcb contendl it has no authorlly to atabUah guidelines f« locaJ agenclel, PbJ.Jllps said . Sign Now , Talk Later, N. Viets Say in Paris rr-· wi.. Strvi<eo North ·11e1nam declared today the United Stat.el mUJt undertake tO 1len a Vlttnam pelC't!I qreement before Hanot will ..-nt to l\Jrther -w1tb Henry A. Klulnaer. The 11a1emell1 WU made In ParlJ by Broadside Crash In Irvine Hurts Two Women, Girl A broadside car crub 11 ci Jnine """""loo ln)ur!d thrtt pel'llOlll ,._ day , lncludln& 1 mother • n d bu yoona dlucJ>1e!' Ind an elderly ~ Fla., ....,.. vllitlnC the Or-. Cout. 1n ... 11g1ton uid the -oo-aimd 00 Moulton Pllr\fty II Bio C.0. yan Awnue. whm a cat drtftll by Mn. Donni L. tllnrei~ •. o111m Oler1loclJ'f Drive, $orl1a A'll, .....unt In major dl1111se bu1 r.llUvely m-Pll-i flt. )urio<. Pollco aid llrw. llll'ftll, who -1-artandbndlawaa.-1oEI Toro IWine Cer1lo .Air S II ti o o dlape-y .... with her dMlill« N11> 01.s.-.-.u..o-WlndloJ'• pa-. MrL llldtJeo C. WUlll1111, lS, wu 1aHn lo 'lllllJn COa>- munlly Hoipllll for tn•-ol • llead culood•--· Nguren ftanh Le. spotmnan for the North Vtetnamae dtlt11Uon, after the day'• peace lllkl. At the -loo. the Unlled St11 .. !old the Vie-Comnwnllll 11111 the few "'""lnlnl problemll to bl ,..tled belor• • ~ ICCOl"d ls ~htd '"thould not be dilmil: I U I pnfnt for delay." The lour delepUom •an<' lo "*' ... tn -Thunday. "M__,1,.. .., -poln!J, If thor eltlol. must be lrontly dettt with," U.S. delep1e WOiiam J . Pl>r1er uJd 11 lht taro. "eua.fvt hute ln Mt· . 111,. the flnll ·-~ Jtoplrdlr.e tho -k U..t bu been -•.. "Our lllk lbtttfore II lo ClrTY rornnt to an eqult1ibl1 «tntllllion -with fuJI -r. !he -ol all portlel ..... ~ -'.be work ""'bu alnod7 ...... -· to -Md cfltrU) ""'" neotlllrJ, and to .... ftlOlutelt, c:an-- dklly and real!•k=tUy wtlb 1ny dif· ll<ultMo 11111 may IUll mn1ln." -1otilie, Prelldtnl N--for lO -_, In ,. __ -llil Vietnom _,. --· ~. Alted aft.tnratd wbtn KIMI 1i1t1 WU. =•Ill P.';"'!' _..,, -L. Aid 'I .. , --bl II rtll>I -.. .,,,.. -*1rll'J ---..... """""" -w It'= ... bl tn NUle 10 wt.btr D ... _,_, Zl<cJar lllld "ft'll la )'OU -~I ,_IJW II .,._ plKo." Toda)''I .,...U.,. look,..... I low_, c: II llltlol by Hi-II a ball ...... le•, t. tit alnoll II 41» pA PSf O\'et NBC ~ and ,..,_ \ , the public hearing before he eould do so. 1be letter again ask.! the county to im- prove or cle»e the road. County Q(ficials h..ive estimated it might oost '15,000 for temporary improvements on the road, which is scheduled In the county master plan to be pennanently improved In 1975- 76. "1 think it's disheartening and shocking when elected officlals don't listen to the voice of the people," Trustee Dennis Smith said. "Especially when it (the road s.itua·1 lioni endangers tile lives o{ childrt11," Dameron added . .. San Clemente 'Unalterably' Nixes Jetport By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. '*" .......... San Clemen•• oounclimm touet>eoed their sllnd •&alnst propouh .foi 1 Comp Pendleton jetport WednHday by issuing a flat statement that there would tie no way that such a term.inaJ would win tbelr support. Jn the second phase of a resolution declaring "unalterable opposition," the rounc.it acratched it.I earlter demands that fiy-<1ver testl be ronducted in the Pendleton 1rea lo give reskientl • 1amplln1 of }et nolte. The teats were 1 sugg.:slion by Coun-- ,cilman 1boma1 O'Keefe, the only . dlltearer. -,., ' . O'Keefe insisted, hov;ever, that hil ~ position did not stern from an en. dorsement or th< Pmdte1o11 jetport. Instead, the clly ahou.ld keep an ··open-- minded" attitude, he &aid. Feiiow councllrr "1 ciJlair«d, bowovcr. and insisted that any ctvUian tttm1nal anywhere on the bue would have 1erioul clle<U to tilt weU beJnc of San Clement• citluns. Jn aoother rplnol; lrom the new po1ture. the count'll alto •creed to vigorously oppoee a resolution by the city ol Irvine to the Le1gue ol Callfornlo l~ltiet tndorltng Pendleton u the attt. fer • major terminal eervlne Ora.nee C.oun&y. '11111 laue w!U com< 6cfcn 1bl leopot rut Wttk, but It Is not yet knowD U a vote will be taken at the 'l'td9day rnttllnl, or If lhe poll wilt wait uo11J 1bt (S.. JETPORT, ..... II Man Struck By Beer Glass, Dies A D\111 WU fltaliy Injured lo I Buenl Park blr 'lriJ lodly wbln IUUdl by I beer &I.au thrown by tn unnamed To..... c.u.1y ........... o111co n!portl'd Uut Jaclt Beck. ~. ol •t GMnbrllr Pllco, lluenl Pork. died In Wes! Anlhttm Cemm111lty Hoopltal pn>IJ- ably bee#•• ol. lltYtf'I lwatlom on h. ne<k. An ,....,.,. 11 under "'1· lluenl Park pollol ulli 1hty,.,,. not l'<rllln the .._. mows that 1111 - mulled In 1bt """"' ol lhl -Thq uid he tell "" -bar befon u.. tlo-Um c:ollopoed. """"' ...r-lo ldentlfy tha ~ ...... the loddent look~ • ..a. Pilot'• Po1 iliont On Propoi iliom ,,. o.m. y PILOI' lollai -· • 1Mrizet t I 1 rtC4•••w*' J analJud .. r1i.. .. Ill ..... '" ......... -wlll ba ... C.tUGmlrblltoo--,. hr I 1U1M111J ol Ill O ..._. mmdl1lmla, .......... .....,. ., I t I I .. ! Olll Y PILOT IS Delay .Seen On Irvine Pro posals Irvine planning commissioners \Vho Tuesday night were directed to get mov- ing on general planning, may be expected lo delay action on many items appeiiring on tonight's agenda for lack o( completed staff reports. Chairman Wayne Clark 'J\lesday night IVOndered aloud if city councilmen un- derstood the load they were placing on rity planning staff by making the groundwork for a possible interim general plan the "top priority" in coming weeks. Clark was told commissioners mig~t rontinue those actions whic h do not have "legal" priorities. ?i.1~tters having_ legal priorities. City Atlomey James Erick.son ;aid, are tract subdivisions. Two su~ ~ivisions in University Park are on toni ght's agenda. However, since the proposals by Na- tional Commun ity Builders and Standard Pacific Corporation both involve property along the San Diego Freeway, starr studies of noise problems may delay ac- tion. Other mattres set for tonight's com- mission meeting at 7:30 in city hall, are: -Consideration of the ci ty's proposed Jaw setting up a design review panel. -A city initia ted commercial zone ~hange for about 12 acres of land near Campus Drive and Zee Street in Town :::enter. /" -A hearing to consider the yet to be :irafled policy plan which city officials hope will be a base for both the interim eOO the longrange general plans. -Consideration of a conditional use permit aTiowing A-S De ve lopment Corporation to build a model home com- plex in Walnut Village near the comer of Sco ttsdale Street and Culver Drive. -Resolution of the backyard fencing problem attendant to the Presley Homes Company tr.act abutting existing Ranch home s in central Irvine. Bidding Nears For Ne,v · Scl1ool In College Park The San Joaquin School District will advertise for bids for construction of College Park elementary school in Irvine sometime in November. Authorization must be received from lhe state Oflice of Local Assistance befo.re...lhe_project._can be put oot to hid._ Trustees Wednesday night accepted the grant deed on the eite at the comer of F'ir and Chaparral Avenues, which lists lhe selling escrow price from lbe Irvine Company at $364,000. Total estimated cost of improvements on the site is $101,950. The school was scheduled for com· pletion in September, 1973, but that date has been eel back. Trustees also authorized appraisers Verne Co:1: and Cedric White, who just ::timpleted the appraisal. of College Park, lo do the same job on the University Park II element!a_ S<;))9o1 in 1rVine. "Facilities p aMer lla'Vt: Aing safd the school's architect, Kai Porter. is ready to go ahead witb v;orking drawings. The appraisers will oost about $35 an hour. The district recently qualified because )f increased enrollment figures to build three more elementary schools. Universi- ty Park II was chosen as one of these. New World School in Laguna Hi1ls is anolher one of these three. Trustees a~ :>roved the preliminary design of the ichool Wednesday as . prepared by architects Allen, Kno~les and Miller. The third recently-qualified school, on Cerrillo Drive in Mission Viejo, is in a slight quandary, King said. Five bids were received for the coruitruction of the ;chool, but all were over the state-a~ proved estimate of $1.2 million. OUN•I COAST IS DAILY PILOT Tlle OnftOi9 Ceh1 O&ll Y P'ILDT, willl wtlll:fl k ............ "-"'-~ II ,..elkhett b'I' 1tle Or.,.. CN1t '"'Wllnl C11tnp9...,, s.cr.. ,.,. ..,. •• ,.. llUOl!sNd. llMrld1y tftf'9Vlfl FfkSty, tor Coste 1"H. ljtwOOJI &udl, H¥11""""' aNdl/1"-telft W'tllty, l~ hedl,, l,...IMfieddlebtdl Mid Sen Cl9tMl!ttf k11 J-C.Cllltr-. A 1illtle r .. loflel edDlell It -lltllef ie""1H.,_ ~ IUfld•n. fllit IWWll!otl 11u•Ukhl111t pi.n! I• •I llO W.,! teJ I,,..._ C..le Mnt, C•llfonllt, t2':M. Jl•btt"t N, Weed P'r•IOMll 11111 l"uoU1flW J ...... c.,,, • ., Vice ........... eM 0.--el ......... n"'""' """" ..... Tito"'•' A. M11,plril•• ~I1Ulllr Clrietf.t H. L.•t Jtlclrief'ill I'. Ht.If AwollllMI ~ ElllllW1 CMte M .. : »I Wftt 91' S,,_ .. ....,, liMtil1 ma "-' ..,....,.. a..... hlldl1 m ""'"1 ,._ ............... lililcfl: 11U't ._.. """"""'· '" ci.--1 llS ..... l l c. ..... leei T•ft; I 41141 '4JAU1 Cl ... Muo:f1 ... '4Z.S671 s. c· , , os Al "'' --= ' lspt a 4h-Mn (""""""" """ Or-.. C-' Pulla t 11111 ~ .... -,,... .... ~ ...... .......... ....... w .,.,.,,IMll'l'ltlll ........ =...• '"""*"' wlll'IM .... ... .. ....,,,... -.. ...................... ,c..i ...... ~~ .. ~:ii~~ ._,,SM' IUif ~· • . !~,t:!J.,P~ ,, • j Mid-December Trust,ees Vote Split OnNo.14 • ' Awarding Sought · He:ll Take Developer Over the Government The city of Jrvlne will seek general plan preparation proposals from now un- til Nov. 20 wi th an eye to awarding the longrange planning contract by mid- December. Councilmen Tuesday night endorsed a suggestion by Planning Director Bruce Warren and City Manager William Woollett Jr. that the city begin asking planning finns to submit proposals. The Tuesday action steps up only slightly the city's schedule to seek outside professional advice on the plans program. An earlier timetable leading to adoption of a general plan called for seeking outside expertise only after the city's policy plan had been adopted. That document is nearing completion and was to have been heard tonight by the Plan- ning Commission, but a revised draft by ronsultant Ed Haworth is not yet com- plete .' In milling the city outline for pro- posals and the initial directions lo plan- ning firms. only one concern was voiced by councilmen. Councilman E. Ray Quigley Jr. wondered why the words "New Town" were used and asked Warren if that would mean to other planners that the ci/ ty endorsed the U.S. Department-'bl Housing and Urban Development lHUD ) guidelines fo r New Towns. \\'arren sugge sted it might. On motion of Councilman Gabrielle Pryor the language was changed to direct planning finns to sub mit proposals for planning a "model urban en· vironment." Her motion passed 4 lo 1 v.·ith Councilman Henry Quigley opposed. He said he liked the term new town if ii From Page I INTERIM ... weeks between Nov. 14 and year's end. Warren said he did not like going the interim plan route but saw no "Other choice if the city is to mee t the Jan . 1 deadline. Councilmen amended on a 4-l<>-l vote with Henry Quigley opposed, the action to continue. Mayor Fischbach proposed the amend· ment to make it clear to the planning staff the intervening two weeks were not to be wasted . Data the council suggests the staff gather together would be helpful In the event the city proceeds with the interim plan. If remedial legislation passes, the information wiU be used by the con- sultants who will be hired by the city to compl~-rang~ ge:ne:ral pl.an. Councilmen agreed that adoplioo of the in~rirn plan before Jan. I would not mean the final general plan could not revise policies in the interim plan. Neither does interim plan adoption mean the city will not seek "citlzen" opinion on the document that will govern the future development of the new city, the mayor emphasized. From Pagel were related to Irvine ln the "cluslcal" sense rather than ljelng restTlcted to the meaning ol the tenn e"'°""" by HUD. Quigley noled that the classical rnean- Ln.g or "New Town" lndicatea a com- mitment 10 provide a broad mix ol IOclal and acmomlc ---wltllln lhe .. ty; somelhln& repraenlaUveo from otber major U.S. New Towns have: faulted Irvine for not accomplisblng, Qulgley noted. The motion to seek comultants' pfO' posa1s passed unaninvv.isly IS amended. '!'bat means the cily bu embarked on a program to seek a pJarmjng tum which will draw up the city's longrange general plan expected IO be adopted by the end of 1!173. The effort may or may not proceed simultaneously ill Its initial montM with a cily staff crash planning program leading to interim plan adoption at· the end of this year. * * * 9 Ekme11t,s To Get Study For Adoption II)' GEORGE LEIDAL OI .. Diii" "'"" lllllff MY ENVlllONME!ft'AL AcnYIST lrlmds. aren't going to like lhls, but I'm P"P"rlni perhap1 to opll la Ille wind and vote qaln!t Propoalt1oll 20 - the ac><:alled coutllne ..-.alloa lnitlatlft. lncreasln&Jy th.Lt tnlandlubber who favors easy access to beaches as much as the next fellow, believes the eco-sllngs and arrows have for too long been d1reded at Ille wrqog villains. 11 bas becolnl! very luhJonahle In some eln:les to be super paranoid about big developera and their gree<ty" latmUoru vb a vis devel- opment of the remaining fragmenta of fragile coastline. We hear a lot lbele da1I about the hundreds ol'lbou- aands of dollars ln"""1ed by linnl Including the Irvine Company In Ille campaJcn to defeat Prop. 20. THE MOST PAJIANOW of my friend.! call me to wblsper surreptitiously they've jml learned the big, bad Irvine Company ccotribuled ~.ooo IO urge defeat of Prop. 20. ·. "You ought to cbect lt out," they whisper, "but don't say t told you." Well, for the record, the big bad Irvine Company told me and just about everyone why they contributed to Prop. 20 when they, nearly two months ago, announced their opposition to the initiative measure. They said then, and 1 presume stlll maintain, the measure wW tie up for m~ moot.hs. possibly years, the1r plans to develop a 3.5 mile portion of Orange c.ounty's ocast. THE DELAYS, they reasoned, mean a 1o.s.s of money. They make no secret of the fact they are in the bwilness of makintf mooey by developing land. Now, perhaps some will view this logic as perverted, but I happen to be- lieve the Irvine Company's desire: to make money b consistent with loglca]. development and preservaUon of as pretty a stretch of beach as I have seen in California.' I don~ think the 10,000 acres of Irvine Ranch land whkh by happenstance Nine elements make up the required are atlached to the coastline between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar portions of a city general plan such a.s would be worth much to the Irvine Company in future years lf that 3.5 miles the city of Irvine may attempt to adopt is done up in taco stands, telephone poles, electric wires and aSS()rted other by Jan. 1. urban Utter. UnJess the new city is exempted from Now, it just so happen! such paraphernalia as just described ha.s been al· the state planning deadlines, the follow-lowed by wlits of local and state governments along other stretches of Cali. ir1g are the nine general plan elements cl-fornla beaches, not to mention seasonings of <Jil wells, chain link fencing and ty staff will have to research and power plants. p~pare. fo.r council adoption by year's DEVELOPERS DIDN'T clutter our ocean frmt properties. Governn;ients end. did, do and probably always will so long ... they continue lo leglslata the Laad Uoe: DesignaUon of the types and morality of enviromnent.al preservation while Ignoring the econbmic lncenUves location of uses ranging from homes to government might provide to really do the job. heavy indU:Stry. While speaking of morality, l cannot in good conscience support a meuure Cln:alatloa: Detailing of transportallon that will force the cost of housing, not just along the coast, but throughout the routes existing or future . county, further upward. Housing: Setting of policies regarding I've seen what building freezes In Irvine have done to property values After spllltlng 3-2 In lheir opposillon to the Wat.Jon Amendment , proposltioo 14 on the Nov. 7 balio~ the s.. Joaquin School District trustees Wednesday voted unaQ1mously to ask area residents to carefully stucly tllat and five other' S<bool related propooltlons. The Walson Amendment would reduce property taxes, while generally in· creasing sales, liquor and use ta:1:es, It would place a limit on the use of pro~ erty tax to fund schools. Board chairman Robert Dameron and trustee Gratian Bidart would not join the majority of the boanl In opposing the measure. . "I~ going to vote for lt," Bidart said, as be leaned back In bis cba1r and Ht a cigar. The school board should slay away from polltlcal Issues, Domeron said. and "keep our skirts clean." He added, "We've got enough politics In our own board without bringing in outside he1p." Trustees, at the suggestion of Irvine resident Lo~ Benes, then agreed to ask voters to read and study al:J: propositions : numben one, five, nine, 14, 19 and 21. -Propooitlon one would all°" the state 1n Issue 11111 million In bonds for facilities at community colleges. ·-Proposition five ""1'1d aulhortze local school boards to ca.rry on activities not in CX>nfllct wllh tbe education code. -Proposition nine would allow a simple majority votll versos !lie current tw<Hhlnls to otay bond Jssueo.lo repair schools that don't meeet earthquake saletystandanls. -Proposition 14 is the Watson Amend- ment. -Proposition 19 would decrlm1nallze the use and culUvatlon of marijuana. Bldart orlglnally suggested a resolution opposing Ii alter the boanl discussed a drug .abuse educatton program. -Proposition 21 would repeal educa· !Ion code llatutea that say racla1 Im- balances In school will be ellmlnaled and problbils uslgmnent 1n scboob by rac•. housing standards, plans for improving which were already higher than in neighboring commwlities precisely because housing and providing housing sites for Irvine development offered more greenery, open spate and visual relief from Yo'ungsters Some all income levels. This element depends urban tediwn, ' on completion of an inventory of all · 1r ·added to the already staggering list of environmentally motivated court homes in and near the city decisions and state mandates threatening to shui down the state's building A d B ' g CootervolloD: Must ~over oon-biduslry, Proposition 20 can oaly mean bouslng shortage>. The higher the rJDe '· esle e servation, development and use of prices of homes, the fewer among us will be able to afford decent places to natural resources such as water, forests, live. 2 R k G soils, ftsberi.,, wildlife and minerals. •PEOPLE ARE PART OF the ecology of Earth, too. If tbey can~ afford to 0C rOUpS Opeo Space: (lnrerim pbm was due live within 50 mlk!s of the beach, -t good will CX>me from stale-protected Aug. 31) Most be a comprehemlve, access to be;lcbes! LONDON (Al') -llundrodJ of loogranp plan and 1nc1ude an .. _.. Worse, II !be llata record In developing publlc beaches such as the one In ocream1ng youngsten besieged the hotel program detailing bo.w the elty will San Clemente recently tumed over by Preeident Nhon to ·the people of Call-of two Amer1caJI pop groups today, preserve open space fomia Ls to continue, what good will come from buming private development? -·Sofety: ·odermtnes IOlsmlc or A compromise solution provjding funds for public development of beaches filihting ."lltjl poUce for a glimpse.of lbe other soil hazards wblcb mlgbl .lffect and lncontives for ecologl<ally aolD!d· priva/e developmenls Is vmot's Meded. Jacbon Five and the Osmoo<I Brothers. development. I'll bet the lelilslatln'e 'llOllld do It, ff people really cared. Hotel employes clalnied some llCl'WD· Noise: ReqJifres study of Ille noise con-Bui should government fall, I'll still bet on the developers' prollt motive. lng teenybopper> carried knives and tours at fivMeclbel intervals to ahow threatened doonnen harassed by four impact of highway and airport noise OD days of slrenuous puppy Jove. the city. Air S { T Jk S t • EJ T A pauerl?y said he saw a boy of about Scenic mpways: Should provide for . a ety a e ID Oro 1 brudl!ltlng a sledgehammer. development of scenic highway routes. "He rushed ap to the rear entrance of Fire and Geologlc Salety: Should delail A Federal AviaUoo AdministraUoo of· flee, will lalk about accidenls and what ti., hotel, smashed open tbe door handle, evacuation routes, peak water supply ficia.l will ac:tdrelm the Exchange Club of the FAA is doing lo combat flight Md the fans surged in," he reported. . needs, mlnlmum road widths and other Saddleback Valley at noon next.'lbursday mishaps. Police detained eight youngsters, in~ information needed to protect the com-Staman will also speak on turbulence eluding one girl armed with a knife. They mwlity from fires or geologic hazards at the El '.foro Jolly Ox on the: !klbject of as90Ciated with smaU aircraft, aircraft were taken home to their parents. JETP.Olt'f ... . ... --such as earthquakes or sUdes. .air safct•. ki nd 11 · sed b · raf The J -•-Fi d lbe O d ~~iti to t .... _,.11;....,. elements. " par ng a po ulioq.,cau y airc t. • a~ ve an smon .. g!el'i~ri!l·"'~ttfay·'''iis;;~ ... or all Woody Stiman, an accident preveniton Reservallons may he made by calling Brothers'~ .. .d:itl"'l!l!lfw.•* AJrport of a n~ber of penniss1ve ~ta. 1 _specialistr::::=:w:lth=lh:e=Long=:Bea=:ch=F:AA=o:f·==Bob=:H:ic:ke:y=a:t :1136-=7220=.=======S:Wld=a=y:wi:':lhin:'=bo:urs=:o:f:e:a:cb=o~l·he:r:.::::; These are: December session. The !ates: San Clemente move comes on the heels of simllar motions this week by San Dieg<J County Supervtfon who also have bristled over the attempts by their counterparts ln Orange County to seek installation of lhe terminal on the federal res:!,vatlon. Copies of the San Clemente action Wednesday will be sent "to all a~ propriate officials ,'' the council agreed. Among the recipients will be President Nixon, who holds the key. Without .he President's approval, land at Pendleton never could be released for use as a jetport. The Western White House lies closer than any other residence to area.s sug- gested as possible sites for the terminal. The action Wednesday ca me late in the council's longer-than-usual meeting, but one member of the audJ ence managed to ... weather the e·vmtng 's business to com- ment on the jet resolution. Local busine<lman Ray Campbell strongly Advised passage of the re:solu· tion and reminded councllmcn of their allies in the fight. "You've got allies at Camp Pendleton and ln San Diego County, even the White House," Campbell said. "You can't forgot that, and the re30lu- tion should show that San Clemente flatly opposes any· use of Pendleton for a jet· porl "No matter where the planes would land on that able, San Clemente woi¥d be hit by noise from jets," Camp~I said. FremP-.eJ DULANEY ... Via CUCadila, Son Clement<, Shipley, :is. · of l&tsl Lowell Circle and Daniel Hayes, tO, or 8211 Snowblrd Drtve, both 9f H\Jfta tington Beach and Rlvtnkle broker Wen· dell Warrtn Austin. 38, as defe:ndanta ln the f1nt pheJe of the trial. Mrs. Marlene Oullllney, 32 , will join her husband and Shipley 11~ defendanta In the second plwe ol the tTlal. That final pha,. will be confined to allegatlona that the trk> defrauded a number of lnveston ln the World Finan-, <!lal Trends enterprbe operated from tbe Laguna Hms "Taj Mahal" building and a Seal Btacb office suite . · Recreation, transit, public services and facilities, pgblic buildings, cunmunlty design, housing Improvement, redevelop- ment and others the city mJgbt want. It Is not expected the city stall wlll pursue MY. pennls!lve elements in its work on the interim general plan. Any or all of these, however, may be included in the long range general plan effort to be undertaken by yet to be selected con· sultan ts. County Attorney Gets ICC Post - Rodolfo Montejano, J Santa Ana civil litigation attOmey,. has-been appointed a member of the Interstate Commerce Commission by ""'1dent Nixon. The r<eess appointment II oubjecl to U.S. sen.ta approval when Congrus reconvenes in January. It wu not c:on- rinned by the Senatf. before adjournment last month. Montejano Is a nauve of Santa Ana, a graduate of·UC Berkeley law school and an attorney wllh the firm of Cohen, Stok· ke and Oweo. AIJO appointed to the commlAslon dur- ing the receu wu AUrtd Tow10n Mac!'arland ~I CUtalaln Sprlnp, TeM. Oops, We Named Wrong Quigley The aiory whlch ran In Tuoodly'• Doll1 Pilot delaUlng fOl'lllltlon of oo ar_. County lnterpvemmental councll fu. corTectl' Identified a opeabr at tha meetlftl. • · lrvlne Councilman llavy QulclOJ wu pn,aent at tho meetlnc end made .....i CN!lmeDll about the portlonl el tha pn> posed a.,....,,..,t doa1Joa wltll t b • orgAnlutfon'1 ability to.Incur dellll. ·The II Ory .....,_,.cy attributed Illa commenls to 11'1 Qulsie,, who b alto an I rvlne councllman. The Diiiy Pilot regrets the error. fall clearance SA LE! Oronge County's Lor9est Selection of Contemporary . Furniture I OO's of Values! Plut 1edion1I tx7YJ ln tux .. uriout h•avy importff v•I· vtt 1v11l1bl1 In m • n y choice• of color• and f1br le.1. " .. . ... , ·. ...:. . "'·, . ..,.;.. r1,.. ,., . ' Sale $595 .. open Sunday 12-5 entire inventory reduced! ,,, .. ', :.t, • f .. I f.9/saturday 11-6/aunday 1-6 • ph 5-48-6518 •toll frH 646-1262 c i f \ I I -.. I I Huntiugton .Beaeh Fountain Valle1 , -VOL 65, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, oM Plj6ES ·ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA /, / / N.Y. Stoelul THURSDAY, NOV~MBER 2, 1972 ~ TEN CENTS , West Led to Gra"e lor 2 Bilier11 FRENCH CAMP (AP) -"Big Tom" Sllull and C}\Jrley Baker were motorcy· cle partners. In Charley's 1957 pickup truck, llley drove west from Georgia last fall and found a slippery foothold on the ladder of California motorcycle cliques and gangs. Charley was content to take fast wee.kend bike rides bcross Northern California's mounlains. But "Big Tom" wanted to wear the red and white emblem of the notorious Hell's N. Vietnam Gives U.S. Ultimatum. From Wire . Services North "/letnam declared today the United States must-undertake to sign a Vietnam peace agreement before Hanoi will consent to further discussions with Henry A. Kissinger. '.The-statement was made in Paris by Nguyen Thanh 'Le, spOkesman for the North Vietnamese delegation, after the day's peace talks. At the session, the United States told the Vietnamese Communists that the few remaining problems to be settled before a cease-fire accord is reached "shou1d not be c!ismls: l as a pretext for delay." The four delegations agrea! to meet again next Thursday. "Misunderstandings on serlou:. Poillts, ll they exist, must be frankly dealt with," U.S. delegate William .J . Porter said at the talks. "E:rceasive baste ill set- tling the final element ·would jeopardize the work that has been done ..• "Our task tllereforo la to carry forward to an equitable· mncJrp'lft· -with full respect to !ht ·views of Ill potl!es con- cerned ~ :be wo1k tljet )las aJreod1 been done, to refiilt Ind cllllify """"' necessarf, and lo~ ....iutely, cin- didly and reallllllca1Jj with any dlf· ficulties that may, still remain." Meanwhile, Presideht Nixon met for 40 minutes today ip Washington with bis Vietnam peace negotiator, Kissinger. Asked afterward where-Kissinger was, presidential · press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said "I dcn't know where be is right now." That was shorU7 before noon and when reporters asked if Kissinger might be en route to another negotiating seS!km, Ziegler said "we'll let you knoVl when a meeting la laking placi. ". . Today's meeting took place a few hours prior to taping by Nixon of a balf-bour broadcast, t .. be aired at 4:30 p.m. PST over NBC television and radio. A spokesman said the polltical broad· cast would "touch on developments in Vietnam." The White Hduse declined to discuss any contacts Kissinger may have had in recent days with Hanoi to arrange a fjnal session to wrap up a ·Vietnam peace agreement. Kissinger attended a "national day" ptrty at ~he South Vietnamese embassy Wednesday night. • Youngsters, Some Armed, Besiege 2 Rock Groups LONDON (AP) -Hundreds of screaming youngsters besieged the hotel oi two American pop groups today, fighting with pollce for a gllmpoe of Ille Jackson Five and the Osmond Brothers. Hotel employes claimed IOme scream· Ing teenyboppers carried ilnlves and threatened doormen haruaed by four day> of stren\IOUS puppy'Jove. A passerby said be saw a boy ol about 9 brand!_, a sledgehammer. "He rtllbed .ap to the rear entrance of !ht hotel, mashed -Ille door bandle, and Ille r.ns surged In, .. he "1)0rled. Pollco detained eJclll ,.......,., ... cludlntl one tlrl anned with a Ja\11•. Tiley were t.aktn home to their puwltl. The Jacksoo Five ..i the Osmond Bt<)lller1 arrived al llHUmrw Air1>0rt SUnday within boUra ol eadl other. Pilot's Po1itiona \ On Propi>rition. The DAil. Y PILOT todq ..,,. mar1UI I I 1 --anal)'led llrller fill alJ 21 1'"llat l)l'090llltlolll 1rfllcb ,.... ba .., .... California balloj -,.,_,. p,.. a ..........,. at Ille ....,.. mendatlonl, M ..... I -J. • Angela motOroycle club. Tbe decaying bodies of both were found buried Monday on a lann Ille state al· toroey ·g~'• ofiice said"" rulnottd to be "a Hell's Angela burial ground." 150 miles nortlnrest of here. (Sec atory, Pate S) A< ftjeods tell It, Shull and Baker were unllkeiy Jootin8 blken 11ben llley rolled into lbia Sao Jooqulo Rlvert de!Ja town. ,They ~ "green'" and their cycles almost Immediately bro~e down. Red flowing hair and beard, well °"" Tbougb both sounded out of ptac. with lt!O pounds and six feet tall, Tbomu dlstlnct GeorgUi accents ._ Ille pair soon Sbapl!llrd Sbull, :It, quickly earned Ille found lodging with friendly motorcyclists nictname "Big Tom." He kloked llke a In lhe Son ioaquln Valley. pirate In his lmeHiigb boot.9, chain belt "When I first met them, llley were ...00. swastika earring. He wore a knife at green," aaJd one French C a m p his hip. motoreycl1st. "Tom wanted to graduate Baker, 30, was almost a foot shorter UJ> to the ~els. That was one of bis am· and at least 50 pollllds lighter. Ills regalia bllloos. Charley liked to ride fast and didn't fit a motorcyclist's stereotype. He party. bad• curly black hair, and wore spec· ''They were old time buddies back in tacle.s. ~ Augusta, Ga.," said the cyclist, who refused to be identlflec:: for fear of retrtbuUon from the Angels. "Charley qdt bis job as a police motorcycle mechanic. Tom dlvorctd his wife and they came out here.'' 'Ibe duo were taken into the neat Stockton home of ope · mtrnber of the "French Camp BoJs," i. motorcycle club. After a month, cyclists said, Baker moved lnto a waterfront aparlir.ent with a girlfriend ill Rodeo on San Francisco Bay. Shull stayed on for four or ftve mon1h.s, until November. ~feanwhile, Baker took a mechanics job in a custom motorcycle shop in Rodeo. The two Georgi am joinec; the "f'reoch Camp Boys" for race! frorr, Placerville to Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada. "We'd go down the white 1ine sometimes passing between two can on the comers to see who was fastest," said (See BODIES, Pa1e l) Jury Indicts Six Stolen Equipment Cited in Court .. BRIEF KIDS AND THEIR MOTHER TH E HOMECOMING. QUEEN No Humdrum Lii• IOI" This HuMlngtoh •Boa<:h HwMwlhl Mo111~s Queen OCC Hom ecoming Bea uty Has Kids By RUDI NIEDZIEUkl years, Mrs. Brief studied at Cal StaJ.e .; . .'t:~'!!;~,"°' ''"" -"'·Looilr..-, until she "ao,~;<Jllt_fo The ·"'\>'~ ou llornecomlng queens l>ecO~ a molher and • -wile." where ~ ~Ir ~· unmarried. and She · dropped back lnto educ:!ation two c amptoned by a ~mpus· fraternity ap-years ago at OCC after having her two pear forever · over at .orange Coast hild Ca and c· t both three College. c ren, meron aret , Last week OCC students turned out in years old . Her husband, Michael, ls a overwhelming numbers to pick Mickey marketing and sa1'5 .executive. Brief as their 1172 homecoming queen. Marty Pate, associate dean of student That was no surprise to anrone since affairs , at occ 'believes one of the she is cl1arming, pretty and blonde. reuom Mrs. Brief was chosen queen ls But the fact that she is 26, married, the becaute the average student age at the mother of twins, ·and that she. was CQsta Mesa campus ls higher than it us-- nominated by the OCC Parents Club tras. ed lo be. · "I w._s completely surprised. J didn't "Our average age is 21. Very rew or anticipate it at all. ll hit me as a real our students are very young. And at 11hoQI: when they announced my name. Coast, people aren't categorized like they But it wu a pleasant ttnd of shock," are on other campuses," she explained. Mn. Brief, a HIUltlngton B<ach resident. When Orange Coast College opened 2S confessed. • yean ago. most of the students were war A. health edul;Atlon l/!l!denl, Mrs. Briel veteram and in tbeir early 20'•· During is the tint married woman to be named the SO'f the aver1ge age dropped, but It bomeaimlnt -al OCC. The »-yeor·. cllmbed opJn as vtterans from lhe Viet· Jong tradition WU broten Jut Saturday .... Wor began onrolllng at occ. nlgbt wben her •lctory over lour oilier Mbougb then are no rules 11 OCC finalists wu announced durtnc lbe ~ blrrlng married women from homecom- Fullerton O>llege Jame. Jag~ candidacy, Mn. Brief was lhe An Onnl• COunty ...-1 for lour first to try It, camfl"S officials said. f%7' Millioa Proposal A Fountain Valley lawyer and five codefendants were indicted today by the Orange County Grand :ury on multiple charges of receiving office equipment stolen during the past 18 month! from 17 county firms -many of them Orange Coast companies. Arraigned this morning before Superior Court Jt.idge James Turner were At· tomey Philip Stein, 37, of 16049 Cat.skill Ave.; his brother, Larry Harry stein, 44, of Orange; Frank Marzolino, U, of Santa Ana; his ex·wife, Josephine Eleanor I.lan.ollno, 39, of 31203 Pierce Ave., Costa Mesa, and Henderson Steward Jr., 44, of Santa Ana. Candidate's Home Blasted • An\erican lrjlependent Party candlclate L<e R. a.,...,. of tile 31th~ Distr1d sa1d today be was "olllnc up my shotgun" foUowing a HallowetlHlight firecracker bombing of hia Huntington Beach home. Rayburn, 48, s2id today that his 90018 bedroom window was completely shat· tered by a 1 p.m. blast. Huntington Beach police confirmed the blast, lddtng that It appureo. lo have been caused bY a cherrybomb. ''My boute was selected from hundreds to> pol!Ucal reuons," Rayburn cbaraed in an interview. ,, ' ··;i;;;· Rrliilnl1 ·~-·-!!It -• safety of my family," be 11id. "I'm afraid I'll have to put heavy screens and ban on my windows." • In the meantime, he aaid, "I'm olllng u~n.'' Rayburn ~"111 be ·listed OD the NOY. 7 ballol as the AIP candid.It. In lhe 31th Congreulonal District. He ia being op- posed by Rlchanl T. Hanna, the in- cumbent Democrat, and John D. Rat- teree, a Santa Ana buslnessman. "George Wallace, John Kennedy, and Robert Kennedy were all shot by Com- munlsta." Rayburn asserted. ''There are a lot of people around Jn electk>DI who do not conduct theDuelve1 reasonably," he aaid. Rayburn Jaid that his bouJe WU oc- cupied by his wife. J)oMI, and tt.elt four children It the time of the blut. He said he wu bhnstlf out campaigning m:I only arrived home afttr the incfdenl bad already been reported to pollce. Poll<:e today listed the caae u "11111 under lnvestigaUon." However there did "°' 1ppear much hope of finding a sur,>eet -lhe slrettl Wttt full ot trlct-<ir~lrelttn •t the Ume of the bla>t. Rayburn, who al.lo •ran on the AIP ticket In 1'70. said he bu never before encountered this kind of vlol<nt Cl!>' position to hl1 v1ews. Bond Crusade Under Way Roper Olio announced I.hat O<oln View School Dillri<t Trull.. Robert Kll9I. wtll htad a dUzm't bond committee. Formtr Pomt&ln Valley Councilman Ron Shentman will coordlnat.e flnanca for lhe.-IUM. '"Ille -..... --M II .. pl the facll out II ... .t::::;" sold ~ "ll'a 811 a ::i:.m..,s:".!. ~ ~ thildra M ' i l<lloi ---fo !lit auiienl _..lion boom In ihl -wblcll -... -........... by about ~. It-. !cllool olllctll1 fft<)Jcl wtU be --•• pupll In the hfcll ICbooll by IMJ. The 117 million bond ,._.1 - • ed fot Feb. 27 would nnaooe two new ICbooll. Shonkman said be p._i to fann tine f...S rallloi CGm1J1ia ... emplorln( lhe..mc..o1-. .. -. and COIK'tlOed dtlmss. "Money _, ..... lhe -· --·but Jack., b will 1-n .. -.· Shenkmansald. --~a_..,, to nile _, titled "A dolllr for a Child." 'Ille money will be -to ,...,.,. an adffrlilt.. .... prmlOllon _,,,, whlcb -said would (IV<I the potltl,. Ind truthful illfonna!lon to lilt peop1e"" -C100dl11on1 In tllo NP ICbooll. • George Lindenstadt, 40, or Mn Molokai Drive, Huntington Beach, failed to ap- pear for arraignment. It was stated that Lindemtadt is receiving bo.spital treat· ment. Judge Turner deferred t h e ar· raig:unent of all six defendants to Nov. 15 in· his courtroom. Deputy District Attorney L u i s Cardenas said all 21 count. of receiving stolen property contained in the in· dictmena stemmed from infonnation pro- vided "by a confeSM<l burglar." "He was" granted immunity from pros· esuUon oa l h e s e particular cowit.s in Inside Circle Of Candidates -. "' . dent :ll.i:on a Seri.a.tor MCGovtm are u different II tbe 'Ulldtdata ....,..__ . ' 'ftli'upt -tbol ...,:$1t tha McGovern camp ii coontered by Ille more serious lllalf In Ille Prealdent'1 comer -men lite Charles Collon who once said l>e "would walk over my grandmothtr if necesury," In order to tel Nixon re-elected. Meet the c:impalgn stalls of both candidates on Pq:e 31 of the DAI· LY PfLOT. / .. Beach Firemen Plan Hot Time; To Bum Building The Hwtlngton Beach Fire Depart· ment 11 ln the process or burning down a country club. 1be HuntJngton Beech Country Club got the lord> Wedneldly an.moon u part i>f a three-week ftre training pro- gram the Huntington Beacb clepartmeot la conductJng. The 52--year-old irtructure wu donated to the department by the Manslo&H11J Compeny whk:h wUI ~vtntUl.!ly build homes on the country ctub ajte al 17th SCreet and Palm Avmut. Tbt Wednetday 1ftemoori burning Jn. eluded 1 Ore In lhe Laundry room aod 1n UJll!airs _. of the bulJdill(. 1"1rty·thr<e flttmen rrom lhe H..,. Ullfli<lo Beach. Wesbnlnst• lllCf Sell Be.icii f1Te lltportmtnts porttclp1"'1, In """""' lhe "''""'· The three cllJ.es, •klna with Pounlain Valley. hive a joint~ agreement to evtntu.ally oombloe :.heir rtrt O&htin& RrVlcet lnto OM coordinattd district. The fittm<n will contlnue to bum -. the clubhouN, • coup&e ot rooms 11 a lime. unUJ fl la tav<Jed. acconllnt! to Huntln&ton Beach Fire C.pl. Jim Hunt. Television Crew Rescues Driver MONTROOE IAPJ -'1111 ldtrillon rum cnw "" 1ocau .. In the °"""'" Pla- 11on>1 fOttlt to -a --pilot rum <~ .. _ .... •• ..-lnlo NrYfce to aJd I -In ... baltlo for ...-rival. . !lhe<lll's dlpullt1 Aid f11oJ -the Jwlp of lhe ·-u. .. 111 -.,,.... • ..._, nf&1ll -.. dlplt1es notiald I mae.w ,.... ' 't\ 8 Gln- Ye1ftllf """" O'llM'twi ....... 8 W-i.m l'Old -. of Loi Allpltl. 'Ille nlm CNW, --1111 pilM Dim ... m,, -lo 1111 -... baWtd the ollkon tum the car .... 1atl 6"" Its dmer. Jameo 1-.17. ol .,._ Ollb . return for the testimony he gave us," Cardenas said. "But he v.·ill still be pros- ecuted for many other burglaries lO whidl he is linked.'' Cardenas refused to disck>se the idert- Uty of the lnfonnant. The prosecutor stressed that the sl1 defendants dld not form a consplracy In receiving the vast quantities of office equipment represented by the 21 oounts, "But we are alleging that they were all involved in the act of receiving the equip- ment from this one !OW'ct and that il1 why they are lumped together in the in· dictment," Cardenas said. Harbor Group Leader Shu11s .• 8 pecial Meet 1be chainnan of the Orange Com'l\y Harbors. Beadies and Parka Commlllfon Ji:.> brushed off a oaR by :='ts of Propolltlon 20 -the ooutaJ IJIJti\.. - ft. a 1pecllll meet Inc of his panel before tho election Tuesday. "I don't 1tt ~ny nerd for such • meeting," said 'Commiulon Chairman Martin Us.ab. "It seems like thele people are look.Ing for a forum before the elec- tion and I don't think that is the oom- mW.lon'1 function." The CltlU!n's Committee As•inll Prnposttlon 20, an olllhoot of • special commltttt fonn<d by the Newport lfatbor ClJamber ol C.0-rai to com- bat the lnfUaUve, made lhe roquest Wedneldly. 1n a letter to Usab, I.he committee aak· ed fO< the ha-commission "to bold full publk hearings or do whatever ls oeceswy to ·fully divulge to the public 1tJI the restrictive providans ot P'ropo8i· lion 20 ... 1be authon or the request, Chlmbtr dlrcctora, Dtck Stevens and Or. NoJan F'rizuUe of Newp>rt Be1 ... 'h. said the c:om- mlnlon needed to expk>tt t h e pmp- osllion beca111e of It• pottontJaJ effects on bt-1ch Md barbor millers. "The commluklll must be C'Ompfettly aware of provlJicm th.II ln all 11.kel!hood \'l'Otdd curtail development of additional boating and water~rM:nted fadlhjef," Frt.a.ellf and Stevens uld in their ltttt:r to Uub. "~ commltlee l'K'OIRmtndt I.hit the Harbon, 8Ncha and Pirkl Commlaion flllflfl tu i>osltton ol mponslbfllty ond mate lblJ l.tlUt •YaJlabff for lmmedLlle fl"hl l< scnrtiey," the letter added. Uub ukl h1I mmmlsskln hu evtry tn- i.ntlon of lllUdytnr lhe tmpflcatlonl of the cout11ne 1n1ttsu,. -ir u 11 poaec1 by the voters. ··If this lntllati,. ii apprvved, 11 wouJd lllteM~ ...... 11 0r •• ,. ._..._ ------·--..... 't 7 " • -: , , .... . ,__ ... .. .... . _._ n ' • I " ' • ~ ~l~D.OT ___ K 'Not. ,f!&nn,11' GI Gets Pass,- To Leave Girls, "' •IEIDELBERG. Germany (UPI ) - p,,t. Jerrv Garrett, the only male soldier in a unit Of 130 women. grabbed a super· v1eekend pass today and got away from .tt a!l wilh the blessings of a sympatheUc Arn1y. "l don't think it's funny," the 18--year- old soldier .. from Greenfield, Ind., said be fo re he faded a'>''ay to ponder his prob- lem in privacy. "I enlisted in the Anny to serve my r:ountry. J didn't come in to serve with a bunch of girls. "I've got a £iancee at home and I don 't think she 'll like it.1' GarreU wants to be a military poliC('man. But a fe"'' days ago. the Army assigned him to clerking duties wi!h B Companv, the Women's Army Corps (WAC\ Unit of the 7th Army's "Special Troops Group." "Th is was not an accident.'' an Army spokesman said. "It v.•as done ·on purpose, although probably more or Jess as a temporary ar· rangement. "The company evidently was unable to find a clerk who was a WAC and had the necessary training, so somebody pro- grammect Garrett into tbe arrangement. I understand he wants out of the job." Indeed he does. said his new com- manding officer. Capt. Anna Young. And the \VACs are trying to help him. "He's had it," the captain said. "I ltlink he's kind of embarrassed. I un- de rstand some of his male friends are razzing him about it ... "He's only 18 and there are 130 of us. "And he wants to be an MP. "Th is v.·ould be a tough situation for anybody. I really sympathize v.•ith him," said Capt. Young, who issued Garrett a pass good for solitude until Monday. "r mean, how would you feel in his position?" From Page I BODIES ... one 32-year-old cyclist f r i e n d . "Sonietimes \\'e'd hit 12Ci or more on the straights." Aother ''French Camp" cyclist, Larrt l\.1cCurdy, said he sbared a Manteca apartment for one month wiUl Shull and t 14'0 other persons. "One day in December or January, 'Big Tom' jusl didn't come back." he s8id in a telephone interview Wednesday. •·1 thought :omething seemed funny. I figured they got into some trm.ible or S(J11lelhing i.1 the Bay Area ." Duck.in& that question, a newsman ask- ed how Garrett had been doing at his new job. "No problem," Captain Young said. "He's trying his best to learn Lhe job. There's been no reactiQn among the girls. "There's an emergency request in to get a woman clerk in here and get him transferred." Why? ''l cannot exercise command over any man. That is an Arn1y regulation. So that 's a potential problem , although not a real one so far ." The Army had the last word. ''His, chances of getting out are probably good, but not right away," a headquarters spokesman said. OCC Tru stees To Resub11J.it FM Req1iest Trustees of the Coast Community College District \\'ednesday night decided to reapply to the Federal Com- munications Commission for a license for a FM radio station for Orange Coast College. An application for the station was m;.de in the spring, but it was turned down in September. In a Jetter sent to trustees, the FCC said it v.·ould TKlt grant a license lo the associated students and the frequency selected by the college was too close to another frequency already in use. Trustees decided to reapply with the college listed as the station owner rather than the associated students. They also listed a new frequency. Dr. Norman Watson, district chan· cellor. ·explained that the station wou1d be used for practical learning experience frr radio majors, "much as the student newspaper is used for journalism ma- jors." The station. which would cost an estimated $6,500 would have a broad- casting radius of 10 miles. Watson said programming would include a music and education format with some OCC sports events. About $3,500 worth of equipment already has been purchased, he said . .No date bas been set for the station to go on t.be air. / UPIT ....... Taking a Sip A Pittsburgh fireman felt the need for a drink of \Vater, an d saw the source in a leaky hose being used lo fight a fire in the city. than thirsty, he supped. Being less proud Court Upholds Rule Requiri1ig Clean Air Law WASHI NGTO N (AP) -A federal ap- peals court today upheld a ruling re- quiring federal regulation to prevent the deterioration of high-quality air. Without further explanatioo, the court afrirmed the decision of District Judge John H. Pratt, who ruled May 30 that the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency must require a "non-degradation" pro- vision in state air quality plans. Pratt's decision was a major victory for environmentalists headed by the Sier- ra Club v.•ho sued EPA administrator William D: Ruckelshaus. There was no immediate word from EPA \\'hether it would seek U. S. Supreme Court review of the issue. Justice Department lawyers represen- ting EPA argued that the non-degrada- tion requirement would brllt economic disaster by making impossible many kinds of development in areas with air that is still clean. Monster Pho1os • Academy Films Locli Ness Creature BOSTON (AP ) -Nessie, lhe much photographed and still unexplained Loch Ness Monster, has had her picture taken again - and with the usual inconclusive results. Robert H. Rines, president of. the Academy or Applied Science, Wednesday disclosed a series of color and blaclc-and- white pictures which he says show a part of a large marine creature. inhabiting Scotland's Loch Ness. Rines says an academy expedition took the photos -50 feet underwater -this summer and that the pictures are substantiated by sonar and other SClen~ tific data. The academy, a group of scientists and laymen dedicated to promoting science and technology, presented its findings at the annual Northeast E 1 e c t r o n i c s Research and Engineering meeting. Rines displayed a series of photos which show a green-brown triangular o~ ject, identified as a fin, moving through murky water. He saitl international authorities who have seen t h e pictures verify their authenticity, even though no one will hazard to guess the identity of the creature. "U we are right, and the experts say we are," Rines said, "then there are ex~ tremely long animals living in Loeb Ness." The sound waves of the sonar picked up two creatures moving down an un- derwater ravine toward the camera, Rines said, and showed them to be 20 to 30 feet long. From Pagel MEETING ..• Pr.osecu~oil Move Draws -....... Objections By TOM BARLEY Of Ille Dflll't Net Steff A bid by prosecutor Stuart Grant to In- troduce evldeoce on· bow defendants in the Orange County Superior Court "Taj Mahal" -trial allegedly sharod $500,000 recelvecf from the St. Bernardine Hospital brought a spate of objections from four defense lawyers late Wednes- day. Judge James Turner ruled before call- ing a four-day recess tn the trial that he will make clear Monday jilst how far Grant can go in offering into evidence the records of the Pan American Bank or Los Angeles. Grant put bank President Stanley Gonzales on the wi~ess stand Wednes- day to back his claim that the bank's records will retJect the division or a $500,000 loan he claims was fraudul~ntl}' obtained from the San Bernardino· hospital. , Judge TUrner repeatedly ruled after a flurry of objections that he will strictly limit the area of questioning . on the bank's bookkeeping to around Jabuary or 1969 -the time that the hospital loaned financief Joseph Dulaney's Laguna Hills enterprise $500,000 in reserve funds. . Gonzales testified at one point that defendant Daniel Hayes borrowed. $.10,000 from his bank just two days before the hospital approved the loan. It was testified that Hayes told Gonzales that the loan was to be used to obtain the collateral allegedly used fly the Dulaney group in obtaining the $500,000 from the Roman Catholic nuns who controlled st. Bernardine's financial affain. East Coast financier Fred Riley earlier testified that he was offered $90,000 by defendant James Shipley to release his controlling interest in the Azalea Mobile Homes corporation long enough for Shipley to get the bospital funds. Grant claims the Azalea stock ls worthless. He points out lhat the loan re- mains unpaid today and that it was lm-~ssible to sell the collah;:ral on the open market. Riley, 45, and hospital controller Robert ~facban, 50, were two of seven persons indicted by the Grand Jury on charges of fraud, grand theft and con- spiracy. Both men were cleared of all charges after tl)ey testified as witnesses for the prosecution. ' Shull's yellow and black Harley was gone, but be left "i>ehinc:. "a few odds and ends, nothing big," McCurdy said. The San JoJquin County Sheriff's office said Shull's mother, Mrs. K. W. Shull of Augusta, Ga., reported ber son missing Feb. 20. An all-points bulletin later was issued after reports that the big biker had been slain. Walking Plank Water Unit . .\ids Kidne)' Patients most defiJ;titely be exa~ed by the harbor cp~lo11 ahd means of im- plementation woutd' I be car e.f u It y studied ," Usab said. Oops, We Named ' l', • I • W ,rong Qu~gley "We heard he was murdered and was in the bay," said a sheriff's offiCi! spokesman. "He was a biker and was running with biking groups. We don't know if he was a Hell 's Angel." The two motorcyclists interviewed who knew both dead men were certain that Baker was not an .. ,(fit'"': 'but expres9ed some doubt about Shull's rtatus . "He graduated from a small bike club into the Lig boys, partyin;: with the Angels," said one. "He was either an Angels' prospect or had some business dealings with them." He related an incident that occurred , shortly before Baker disappeared. "When Charl ey was working ln the cy- cle shop, he sent an Angel's bike out with no oil and it burned up," he said. "Shortly after tha t old Charle/ was gone ... Angel's bike is like his right arm ." He conjectured that Shull and Baker knew too much about illicit Hell's Angels operations. Or that Shull created vicious enemies in the gang by h i s aggressiveness. ' It 's been common knowledge they were killed." he said. "I knew It al.nost a year ago. One day they were gooe." •• '"'-°''""' C0.11 DAtl.Y ,II.OT wti.t whJch Is ~ ll'>e ~ 11 f*blltftd b't Pie OfWl"V'I' Coot! ~ltl\1119 ("""°""· S.. rolo edl1lon1 or1 Pll~lllled, Mond.Oy lh"""Jlt Frill1't, foi' Cosht M..,, NIWJIOl't 91Kh. H1111tt1111t1n 11...cll/FOV!llolll 'nlloy, l~.,... Booen, ln11M/S.ddlfbock o!ld Sot! ClotNnl1/ S•n Juoit Co11k1T1r-.. A 1l11Ql1 revioMI tdlllllrl " 1111t11111Md s.111.u•v• •fld suna1.,.,. lllit ~INI Jlllll>llt/llrlg Pion! 11 ol UO WHI ••r Slnef, Cllllo ~... Collf&rnlo, '141'. ll:eliort N. WeM '""'""'" .... ~ J•ck R. C11rl1y \'lc:t rraao.,1 Oflll 04rwf•I M_,.,- lh1m11 k ... il .. , ... Tliom•• A. Murph1111 "" .... '"' ldlllll" Ch1rln H. 1..e., ltichori P'. N.n Aui.10111 MoMOlnl fltltets Terry CoYlll• W..t or..,.. C-1., 16<' ........... -Offko f717S 1 .. ch 11111.,.... ... M•lll"f M*••11 P'.O. 111 7t0, t2l41 °""' ....... ...... -..ui· m ,.., .. , """"" c.i• ..,., • '::!::r ... .., N..,._. a.c.1 :am ...........,. .... C:,.,.....1 -........ ~ .... Tti111t11 c11•1 '41 .. an Cl ftW MwtU .. '42.ft71 ,.,_ .... of=,<;;;' Cell p M• °"1Wi\· 1m, Or-.. CM11 PwMloll"" ~. ..... ... ........ """"SltMI. ........ ....... fll' •a llMihS!ll ,..,.... _., .. • .... :IQll "1tflM ..... .. .......... ,. .. ...,.. .... . .._.. di.~ 111a;1 .... • C•t• Mtta, c.tHwli .... ~ .. aim.to "·"' ,,,.,.., "' ... , .,,,, "*"""'' MlllrW .. lfllillM a.a l!'Mlfll't. Harbor's Jolly Roger Bids Adieu By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI "'-Oolll' Pilot Sl•tl Standing by Harbor Boulevard with a century-<lld sword in hand, waving at cars passing"'like ships in the night, he resembled the ghost of Long John Silver, signaling a captive ship to strike her col - ors. Some motoris ts unfamiliar with the Jolly Roger pirate standing a lonely watch on Halloween Night might have thought him just another nut in costume . llls weapons were real -including his rr.usket -but he had only the lollipops and llappy Face pins :1e traditionally gave aWay in the booty bag 5Jung over hi s shoulder. And he had a lump in his throat beneath the ruffled silk scarf at his neck. During the past four months. Jim Fink. 32. has met thousands of Southlanders <ln his roaming voyages represe nting the restaurant chain. Cutba cks in the promotional budget forced him to abruptly walk the cor- porate plank, however. and on Holtoween Night the burly brigand of the bounding main was really waving farewell . "Aye, matey, 'twas really tough to be cheerful for awhile toda y,'' growled the good-natured pirate who on some busy days handed out 2.000 or those Happy Face pin~ with the black eyepatch. He pinned them on the bodices of young maids and old : dropped them Into youngsters' outstretched hands llke gold doubloons. and passed ou t lollipops llke pie<:es of eight. Jim Fink. a Costa Mesan currently moving to 7311 Seashore Dri\'e. Nev.'port Beach, clalms he got far more out of it ht'wevtr than he ever gave. Afld herein lies his story. -Following eight years in the Army - five of them 11s a personnel sergeant always close to the fighting In Virtnam -Fink left the service a yc:i r ;1go, " tlred. cbanged man . lie was walking into a Newport Beac h store last summer. a rotund. long·hn irf'd, be.orded, beach bum, when advertising man Bill Fawcett flagged him down · "How'd you llke to be my 11i rate ~" "five years in Vie\nam warped 1ny m1nd," 11ys Fink. "I took the job as a \fay to 1et back to reality." His being shanghaied Into service as tho J. R. pirate came in the nick or limr, two days oororf' h<i plnnned to Jlet ll 'shave and haircut and head for Flortdn. Hl't 1t1bseQutnt t'tperlences , intended as a method or getting back to tt1llty, were frequently a little unreal ond ln rare cases had overtone• of being back ln Vietn&m . "The only little kid who ever threa ten- ~ me was go1n1 to throw Frostee nll over my costume," uys Fink. "But he came back and apologized !he ne1t dHy." Trtnal(cd hecklen have occ:isionally ~ DAii. Y ,II.OT Still 1"""9 WALKS THE PLANK Ex·pirate Fink caused a problem. One group surrounded the Jolly Roger in a shopping center and announced they "'ere going to disarm him of his 100-year- old S\\'Ord and pislol. "I'll use It before I'll lo.se It!." be r:.spcd hRck. ··1 !!pent five years in Viet· n;irn, and 1f (he VC didn 't get me it would he foo lhard y for you lads and lasses to try." f'lnk says they lhrew pennies Instead, so he. plPyed real pirate and kept them. Once n freq uently.broke young GJ, Fink nlso i;ay!I he Is guilty of pick.Ing up h1tchhikcr!I and by pure coincidence gave n ri<lc 10 one of the hetklers a week later :.nd 30 miles oway, while in off-duty , clnthes. "Aren't you the Jolly Roger?" the h('ckler asked warily. ''Aye, Ind, that 1 am, and thanks for the 75 cenll from la~t week." he replied. "At first J felt rldlculooa," say1 Fink, who started the brief plr&te's career he hol>(l! may continue at t he chain rt'staurant In Dana Point, which _once really wa!I a pirate's cove. I The Huntington Beach Water Depart· ment has announced it wilt install ap- proved backflow prevention devices on the water serv ice of the city's kidney machine users. The backflow device will be installed and serviced free o{ charge by the water department. The department will also record the residences of kidney machine users so th at temporary lines can be installed if water·serv.Jce is ilKilT''.f.~ ...... All kidney machiiie uS-erS ~sllould co n- tact the water department at 5:16-5431. "Bui we prefer to judge such things after the fact of their passage rather than before ," he added. "That is only proper for a group such as ours." Proposition 20 is an effort to control development along a five-mile-w ide strip of California's coastline. It would establish six regional agencies which wou1d have veto power over any development proposal in the coastal zone. Opponents say the proposition would rob local governments of needed controls . an d would create a vast , costly new layer of g6vemment. The story which ran in Tuesday's Daily Pilot detailing formation of an Orange County intergovernmental council in- correctly identlfied a speaker at the meeting. Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley was prtSent at the m:?eting and made sev~al CT'mment8 :ibout the portions of the pro- posed agreement dealing with t h e organization's ability to incur debts. The story erroneously attributed his comments to Ray Quigley, who is also an Irvine 'councilman. The Daily P.ilo&--> re1?rets the err .. r. fall clearance SALE! I OO's of Values! order now for early ehrfstmas delivef'J/ Plus sectlonal 9x71/i in lux- urious he•vy imported v•l- Vet •'<'•ilabl• ift m • n y choic•s of c o Io r $ and f•bric;:s. 1 Sele $595. Orange County's Largest Selection of Contemporary Furniture open Sunday 12·5 ~, .. ' ' . . entire inventory reduced! • •• daily 11.9/ieturd•y I l·b/1und•y 1·5 • ph 548·5518 • toll free 5411-1262 ( • • • • Thur)day, Nowembtr 2, !972 H DAL V Pll.OT a • For l(ennedy" Thrill Gone-Not Cro I ~ -• • _By.STEVg GEllS'rEL ~EW YllRK (UPI) -For Ted Kea- nei!y, the "thrill" of a polillcal campaign is aone, forever ho.stage of the meniory of 1968. · But Ted Keonedy ii campalgnJJlg., Not this time for bis brother, John F, Kennedy, a.she did in 1960;· 09t thUi time for bis brother, Robert F, Kennedy, as he did in 1968, not this lime for himself. But for George S. McGovern, the Democratic candidate for president; for old colleagues and political alliea; for young friends seeking political office for the first time. Day in, day out, in a scaled-down version of a presidential cavalcade, Ken- nedy ha11-been traveling around the coun- try, spirited by I Jlx·-· Lear jet or a)~er Fale<io ....i ml IOlllh. 1¥lrtl! and eut. "'nle thrill has gone out since 1988," KanM4jy said aa hil motor<lde. 1tldod throug)i New York City lrallle without a pollce --'J wli~ national caml!llgns,• be sai , cjloollng .!UJ wonll, hil aentonces b~ by tbcioi,ht. ''The)· •-very special to me." In lllfl, John F. Kennedy w .. elected president. In 1168, Robert F. Kennedy WU USUSinated. "I reallr.e it can never, ·tit the same again," be adds. "But I'm glad to work hard for Sen. McGoven .. " Will it be this way forever? "I think tio." Woo.Id ii be dillereQI I! bt were - nlng! "l don't think 30," Edward Moore Kennedy, the aenJor senator h<>m Massaclluseltl and WI ol ( NE!fS ANALYSIS J lhe KeMedy brothers, walking, jogging, jaywalklng, daring the traffic on the .streets of Manhattan. Big, robust, vibrant at 40 -gray is just beginning to make tenlative Inroad! at the tempJes -Kennedy seems to en- jf'y the freedom ol walking the streets of &be Jll1¥xl's largtst city, movtng so fast that reoopltloo from paS!ier.iby comes I<. alowly. Totally (oiled by a tr,ffic snarl, Ken· ned,y abandoned his motorcade in a desperate attempt to reacb the rally point in the ga~t district before McGovero. He arrived too late. 1'hls is one of Kennedy's missions tn the campalan -pitchman for the prod· uct, t u r n I n g on the crowd for McGovern. He does It well The voice and gestures familiar, rid· dllng the Administration with rldltu.le on Holloween and the day after. "Do you know what tonight is? "Do you know what's happening at the White House?" he asks and then answers: "There's a 1nan dre!sed up like t~ President." And then the four horse men : "Incompetence , . . favori tism ... secrecy . . . corruption ... " and a favorite, "It lsn 'I easy lo have a band in the lill; fool in the mout h; tongue in cheek all al the same time." "Do state and local Democral! talk to you about lg'767" Not much , Kennedy replies. but adds: '"As it gets closer to the end and It ap- pea, , the rare continues to be uphill" there will be more. Kennedy says he realizes that many people feel he is campaigning this ye ar as a prelude to a presidential campaign Ill 1976, However. Kennody "YJ U ha bad ool · campaigned far McGovern thole Ame p...-ople would have s.ald "I wu waJUna to pick up the pieces." Kennedy rt!minds a lllteoer lhat be was an lbe stump for McGovens '"wbeo : campaign WU ~I of hope~ "J'd say finally, the condlUaJ., whla.· e-xisted for my not running for vice ptet'- l!ent are as true after Nov. a : .. tam.II:( responslbUitles." Kennedy add!, "[ am inleN!!led in the party . . . in achieving change •. , responding to the needs of people ... the time and energy invested m it by my family .. I went to be active in its coon'· c1I in the futflre. '' ,. Coast Cop Innocent •• Ill Auto Death . He'll Take Deve loper Over the Go ve rnment C"leme nte Sa ys 'No' To Jetpo rt By JOHN VALTERZA Of h o.llY Plltt St• San Clemente councilmen toughened By GEORGE LEIDAL their stand against proposals for a Camp 01 tt1t 0.11., P11et 11.11 Pendleton jetport Wednesday by issuing MY ENVIRONMENTAL AC'llVIST friends aren't going to like this, but a nat statement that there would be no I'm preparing perhaps to spit in the wind and vote against Proposition 20 -way that such a terminal would win their the so-called coastline preservation initiative. support. Increasingly this inlandlubber whO favors easy access to beaches as much as the next fellow, believes the eco-slings and arrows have for too long been In the second phase or a resolution directed at the wrong villains. declaring "unalterable opposition," the It has become very fashionable in some circles to be super paranoid about council scratched Us earlier demand!! big developers and their greedy intentions vis a vis devel-· that ny~ver tests be conducted in the opment of the remaining fragments of fragile coastline. Ptndleton area to give residents a we hear a lot these days about the hundreds of thou-szmPling of jet noise. sands of dollars invested by firms including the Irvine Company in the campaign to defeat Prop. 20. The tests were a suu~stion by Coun- THE MOST PARANOID of my friend s call me to cilman Thomas O'Keefe , the only whisper surreptitiously they've just learned the big, bad dissenter. Irvine Company contributed $50,000 to urge defeat of O'Keefe insisted, however, that hls: a~ Prop. 20. pOsition did oot stem from an en- "You ought to check it out," they whisper, "but don't / _...,_,,.menl of the ~-••·•on '-lport. say I told .you." . u 10.t.L u\n"" ~ ... !\UC\ ~ Well, for the record, the big bad Irvine Company told me and just about Instead, the city should keep lln "open- everyone why they contributed to Prop. 20 when they, nearly two month!I ago, minded" attitude, he said. announced their opposition to the initiative measure. • Fellow councllrr :n disagreed, however, They said then, and I presume still maintain, the measure will tie up for and inslsted that any ~lvlllan termlnaJ many months, possibly years, their plans to develop a !.5 mile portion of anywhere on the base would have aerkms "Orange County's ocast. . ~ DELAVS, they reasoned, ~an a loss of money. They make no -secret effects to the ·,yell being of San Clemente of the fact ~f 'ab! in the b~esS bf making money by developing land. citizens. Now, perhaps some will view this logic as perverted, but I happen to be-Jn another BPlnoC.: from the new lieve the Irvine Company's desire to make money is consistent with logical posture, the council also agreed to development and preservation of as pretty a ab1!tch or beach as I have seen in vigorously oppose a resolution by the city California. of Irvine tc the League or caliiomia I don't th ink the 10,000 acres of Irvine Ranch land which by happenstance are attached to th<:: coasUine between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar cities endorsing PendJeton as the site for would be worth much to the Irvine Company in future years if that 3.5 miles a major tenninal serving Orange County. is done up in taco stands, telephone poles, electric wires and assorted · other That issue will come before the league urban Jitter. next week, but it i! not yet known If a Now, it Just so happen! ~ch paraphernalia as Just described has been aJ-vote will be taken at the Thursd3;t lowed byt unils of local and state governments al ong other stretches of Cali· meeting, or if the pell will wait until the fomia beaches, not to mention seasonings of oil wells, chain link fencing and Oeci!mber session. power plants. The !ates'. San Clemente move comes DEVELOPERS DIDN:C clutter our ocean front properties. Gover:gmentl·, ~.-.Al tbt:We_•'of abnilar motions OU week: did, do and probably alwlys will so long as they continue to legislate the by San Diegc County Supervisors wi10 morality of environmentaJ preservation while ignoring the economic incentives also have bristled over the attempts by government might provide to really do the job. their counterparts in Orange County to While speaking of morality, I cannot in good conscienee support a measure see k installation of the tennlnal on the that will force the cost of housing, not just along the coast, but throughout the federal res~. vation. county, further upward. Coples of the San Clemente action I've seen what building freezes in Irvine have done to property values Wednesday will be sent "to all ap- which were already higher than in neighboring communities precisely because propriate officials," the counct! agreed. Irvine development offered roore greenery, open space and visual relief from Among the recipients will be President urban tedium. 'Nixon, who holds the key . U added to the already slaggering list of environmentally motivated court Without .ht President's approval, land decisions and state mandates threatening to shut down the state's building at Pendleton never could be released for industry, Proposition 20 can only mean housing ~ges. The1llgher the use as a jetport. prices of homes, the fewer among us will be able •afford decent place11 to The Western White House Iles closer live. PEOPLE ARE PART OF the ecology of Earth, too. lf they can't afford to live within 50 miles of the beach , what good will come from state-protected access to beaches? Worse, if the state record 1n developing public beaches such as the one in San Clemente recently turned over by President Nixon to the people of Cali- fornia is to continue, what a:ood will come fror;. banning private development? A compromise solutkln providing funds for public development of beacties and incentives for ecologically sound private developments Is wbal's needed. I 'Ii bet the legislature would do It, If people really cared. But should government fail, J'll stitl bet on the developers' profit motive. Four Buses Charte re d To Ni xon Ontario Talk Four buses bilVe been chartered by Ille iocBI Commltle< to Re-elect lhe Pres!· dent to allow 200 residenb to travel to Qntarlo Saturda1 afternoon where Presl- denl Nixon wUI moke his last publlc ap- pearance of lhe campaip. Paul Pl<sley, chairman of the local ,....1ect1en elfortl, said no Im will be charged for pe.-s 1iplni up foT the trip. Ratmtlonl, bt aald,'wlU be .. nrat- come. nrst-eerved buis. '!be rally II scheduled for 1botrt I p.m. Aller the rally Nixon plans to fly to the El Toro MCAS and Ihm take the tnldl- lioNI btlicoptor ride aoulb lo La Cno Pocillca for a •rt a.y tbll wlll last tlu'oulll -momlq. '!be compaip, bo....... will not end ... bis arrtYll. IJurlna tbe last few ""11 ol lbe reeloo- UOll eflo<t the Prolideot plana to lope I .. rr.. ol rodlo -II"' IDd mUe .. lea! """ major·tele•illMI -:-( day •Jehl- " '!be 11C1t mornlnc. the Prealdenl w!U cast b~ ballot al Coooonlla Sohool Md lbcn ltave tmmedla.tely for Wl!hlng:ton, D.C. No ~lflc details have bee'! 1iven by hls akiel oo the format for election day. But Ibo last time the Pffi!ld<nt ""ed -durtna the off.year elect.'°'11 two ytat1 ago, he was the first rtWI at the poUa, ar- rtvtna lhonlJ after 7 .a .m. 1blt e•rlJ appearance meant thlt the sclloolyard waa an 1>u1 -..i w11eo lbl Praident's vote wat cut Praloy aald that Sotunlay'1 ride wUI bt open to -nlins early .--..a- tlOnl by caDlni N-betdq\llrten al 411-Jm. .... _ unable to _ ........... the IM lllll wm be ...-to Ibo ra!17. bt said. The P!esldtnl'• -In Onlar1o will tUe plom 11 about f p.m., but y. publJc -.-the .u,on bdori 5 p.m .. ht .... A ljlOdoJ Mdltm lot Sa n Cltmeole mldeatl wm be ......, olf, """"' ad- ded. than any other residence to are.as sug- gested as possible sit~ for the termlnaJ. The actio.1 Wednesday came late in the - council's Jonger-tharHJSual meeting, but one member of the audience managed to weather the evening's business to L'Om· ment on the jet resolution . Local businessman Ray Campbell strongly lldvised -passage of the raolu- tion and reminded councilmen of their allie9 In the flgtrt. "Y,ou've cot allies at Camp Ptndleton ana In San Diea:o County, even the White Howie." Campbell asld. "You can't forget that, and the retOJu- tloo should show thal San Clemenle nauy _. liiy use ol P.ndlet<>ll for • Jet· port. "No matter where the planet would land on lhat hue. San Clemente wouJd be hll by noise from )eta," Campbell !Did. County Attorney Gets ICC Post Rodolfo Montejano, a Santi Ana civil liltplJoo .. ......,., hal been aP!>Ointed I m<mber DI the fntontole Commor<e Commillioa by Prealdent in-. ,,.. ---t 11 oubjoct to U.S. Scola oppoYll wbtn C...,.. WlftMI In J_,.-,, 11 wu not con-- nrm<d by Ille --. odjoumdlent Jul --lejano ii 0 naU.. ol Sacla Mo, I 1radua1< ol UC BerUley low -oncl ... --with Ille firm ol Collon, ...... ke llld °"""' Ala oppomled to the commlooloo .,.. Ina the ....... ... Alfnd -M.oc:Farlancl of CUW.in Sp1np. Tenn Attorney s' Su it Impact Report Guide Jury Br ings In Vfrdict Quickly· Requested A v.::~J::=~:. returned Wednesday in the misdemeanor LOS ANGELES (AP) -Atto:-neys with was passed," Phillips !aicl, "yet local manslaughter trial of San Cleme~ lhe Center ror Law in the Public Intecest governments all over the state of policeman Gary Adams. said they were filing a suit today against California are still '.vithout any guidelines The six-man, six-woman jury brought a state agency in an attempt to clear ' ;oever ... " btack ttedhe byverdJ ldct quHlckWly after Knbe~ght In- confusion over a California Supreme The Office of PlaMing and Research 11 rue u ge · arren ig in Court decision requiring environmenta1 the law pertaining to the Issue. impact reports on building projects. contends it has no authority to establish The trial, at Laguna Niguel Municipal guidelines for locaJ agencies, Phillipa Court, lasted five days including one Attorney John R. Phillips said the suit said. entlrt day of jury telection. would seek a court order compelling the Adami wu cleared of t h e Office of Planning and Research to p~ IT\~nslaU.ghter allegation u a re.suit of vide guidelines for preparatkm of en-p • W • D la the verdict. The charge had been brough vironmenlal impact repcrts by state and air l l l e y folklwlng the death of a pauenger in a local a:ovemments. pickup truck which was involved in ·• col- 'Fhlllips said at a news confere~ here J · A • lisk>n with Adam.s' pa&rol car over the: that the suit woulo be filed wi~ lhe state ft rraignm~nt Memorial Day Weekend. St.preme Court in San-Franci:k::.> and that Jeffrey Britt, IS, or Long Beach had he hoped the court would consider the For Mu rde r been riding in the open Ford Rancbe:ro case next week. bed prior to the accident at EJ Camino The sui. was being filed on behalf of Real and Avenlda DelorH in Stn the Planning and Conservation League,' a Two Orange County men arrested on Clemente. He wa! thrown from the vehi· statewide conservation group. charges of murder after a spectacular cle and onto the pavement u a result of' Meanwhile, T. A. Shinn Jr., president high-speed chase through the South Coast the coUlsion. of the BJilding Industry Association of last weekend won a postponement in San Clemente Police Chief Oifford California, said at another news con-their arraignment Wednesday in Sooth MurTay d~lined to comment on the mal- ference that his group would favor state Orange County Municipal Court. ter o( Adama' resumption of routine guidelines. One of the paif, Michael McNabb, ~. patrol duties following the Innocent The state court ruled recently that en-of SLanton, had not yet been able to nnd verdict. vironmental impact reports must be filed a lawyer, thus Municipal Judce H. Wat-The policeman Md been ftl!gned to- for approval or construction project! that ren Knight delayed the formal charging desk officer ctuUet after the mi.ie- mlght have a significant effect on the en-of the pair until nut W~y in the meaMr manslaughter charge " a I · t J1,1rr>e court brtucJll. vironmen · · J ' ~ The Jury'1 declaion wu rendtrtd alter 'I1W! ruling prompted .some local· Arrested with McNabb alter the hlgh-a tough Jet of clol1nc argummtl wtre governments to clamp a freeze , speed pursuit was Joseph William made bu the 0 ......... 1 .... auome-Wedne• Ruschak. 27, of Garden Grove. / l'I""-'& 1• building pennits. day mom_lnj:-_ The decision was based on the court's Both men bad been released earlier Prhecullon Attorney Don Clarenoe, - interpretation of the Environmental this week from hospital eare for Injuries the f1rst to make an argument,~ alleged Quality Act passed Jn 1970. they received in lhe crash which ended the pol\cernan had broken ~ mph Shinn said bis Jrganization passed a the~se. posted speed llmJt (prima tpeed re!Ol ution urging the Legislature to me n bad been booked in thf limit), the maximum tpeed t of 1$ clarify provisions in the act. blud eo1ting of Steven H. Brush, %7, of milt• per hour, and hlid filled to yitld to "The Office of Planning and Research Santa Ana , whose body wa1 loond In 1 tht pickup truck. was created by the Legi.818ture for the car along a dark stretch of old Highway •le m&rged that the San aemente express purpose of preparina: and ado~ IOI in Mission Viejo. Police Department was aetJna: "buically ting these guidelines for state and local The c&M: _ st"lte:cl .• w~ ~~url... N ..I. private~ Jnvesti&•klt .Jor &I», agencies," Phillips said. deput~~ ... e upon~l ... u car~~t die c:Wr~ ... direct rtfuence to cettain "lt has -been two years since lhe murder scene. and the lwo SU!pect! polkf reports wtuch were ooc sivm to California Envtronrr.ental Quality Act allegedly fled in one of the aut.ol. the di.strict attorney'• ofr.ce. at ls UIUA.I. ~~~~~~~-=--=-~~~~~~~~~--~~~~--'~~-'-~~~ • H.J.GAf\f\qf fLIRNrfLIRE PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DE SIGNERS Op•n Mo"-. Thvr•-& f1 i, br•s.. 2111 HA RIOR nvo. COSTA ME SA, C,t(llf, • . • • • • I I I • .. • 4 ~LY PILOT ' Agnew · Heckling · ~tag~d or fo ··Real? Censor Lifts His Ugly Head THE CENSOR COMETJ~: -Another humbug from within our great federal bureacracy surfaced just the other day v.'hen our U.S. protectors lashed out on ou:r behalf against evil industry. Thi.! time, It was al'l outfit knov.·n as the Federal Trade Commission that \Vas out to protet:t you and me by bashing abou t with a federal stamp or di sap- proval. 1lle object of the FTC 's ire was an armpit spray. It's really nlcer to call lhese products anti·perspirants but they are armpit sprays all the same. Now, you may have read about them in recent times where some of the products have been feared harmful if the spray stuff gets inhaled. So upon first reading, you might suspect that the Federals are once again going out to protect you against some- thing hannful. NOT SO. THE FTC in this case was going after the teevee commercials being aired (pardon the expression) in favor of some stuff called Dry Ban spray anti- perspirant. From the news reports, you learn that the Federals didn't like the Dry Ban com- mercials because they "purport to be evidence that Dry Ban is su perior to competing producls ..... NOW\'how 's that as a Federal sin for vou! -THE FTC BUREAUCRATS weren't complainirig that Dry Ban was hannful. Or that the stuff might poison the family cat. Or that the can might explode if ex- posed to the beat of a lig)ltbulb. None of that. Where the Dry Ban people sinned was in trying to peddle their pit spray by tell- ing you it is superior to other like prod- ucts. Obviously, we can·t ha\'e this kind of lhing going on in America. Next thing sou know, somebody will be trying to sell ·you e new car by suggesting their model is superior to lhe other gu y's. A contractor might try to sell you a house by claiming the one he built has a whole lot of features not included by hi s competitor. We might even suggest you'll like our newspaper better than some other. IF THE FTC CAN'T stamp out this k\nd of w\clldness, we may end up in this country with a whole lot of people selling things to other peM>le. Folks might even compare products and really fi nd one they like best. Clearly, you can't have a, thing like this going on. It's far better to have the FrC tell you what product! are superior. I always had this. dumb notion that Federal people involved in products were suppostd to protect you against harm.. Like the snake oil salesman who claims his glop can cure cancer. LOS ANGELES (UPI) ...: Vice Pml- dent Spiro Apw's press secrtW)I today denied cbaq,. fl'om Ule McGovtm camp that RepublJcalls dellberalely lilafled an incident in Wblcb Agnew was bedded. The charges wore made Wednesday In Chicago by Pnmk. Mankiewicz. Mt'Govem's political director, following a speech by Agnew in San Diego.. "The hecklers are properly scufiy with long hair just the length the Nixon publicists think identifies a blpple and they shake their fist s for the cameras right on cue," ri.tankiewicz said. "But when ?ttr. Agnew went into his Wholesale Prices Take 0.2% Drop WASHINGTON IAP) -Wholesale prices of a broad range of industrial raw materials, food. and manufactured goods declined an average of two-tenths of one pere€nt last month, the first drop in 13 months. the government said today. The wholesale price report, the last before Tuesday's presidential election, said fann products declined 2.4 percent, largest drop since an equal decline in September 1971. Industrial nw materials decreased an average of one-tenth of one percent and prices of finished consumer goods ready for retail sale declined five-tenths of one percent, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics reported.. ON A SEASONAIJ..Y adjusted basis, the bureau said, over-all wholesale prices rose one-tenth of ooe percent, smallest increase o.n that basil in eight months. 111.e decline in farm products on a seasonal basis -was 1.5 percent and the seasonal deCllne in finished consumer goods was figul'ed at twt>tenths o( one percent. The oveNlll actual decline brought the wholesale pd.cc index down to 120.9 of its 1967 base of 100. This meant it cost ·wholesalers on the average $120 last month for every $100 worth of goods five years ago. The rePort said the index was 4.9 per- cent above a year earlier. 11IE DECUNE, the report said, was largely due to a slow-down in the rise of wholesale food prices that peaked in Ju- ly. In the past three months prices or fann products, processed food! and animal feeds slowed to an annual rate of 9.8 percent compared with 13.1 percent ~...,.~ ... lbs. Tl!O repOrl iilif tlie over-all rise or 4.9 perceilt In ~o.prie<S in tbe past year compared wtth ;~ 5.2 percent annual rate in the nine m<i!ths before President Ni.xfn first b'npoSed 'a wage-price freeze and then folloftd it with less stringent economic controls. In the 14 months since the beginnhig ()f the presidential controls, the bureau said, wholesale priw have risen at an annual rate of 4 percent. , BUT NOW, APPARENn..Y, even lf your product has_ P.3Ssed for safety and such. You cab'\ evet•o.y-1&~~ it by ,· H 'hill'· B 1 claiming it's better than someone else's. emop ac 0, ... So you can see how big old government J control can start out in one direction to T R • H J be yom protector and end up your 0 ece1ve e p ccns.,-. WE'VE A SIMILAR deal coming up HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI ) -~v. next Tuesday on our state ballot in 1'-lilton J. Shapp personally has jn- Proposition 18. The good folks who sup-terventd to ma,ke certain a U.year-old port it think by bringing on the ceTl60r, henwphillac boy would conUnue to get they can stamp out smut. his treatment without his famUy having After it passes. they can start to go on welfare. searching with great zeal for dirty stuf! Francis Marshall and his wife, Bonnie, to censor in books. magazines, movies, exhausted all private donations for the newspapers and on television. costly· medicine for 'their son and were AFI'ER A Wllll..E, they will run out of told by state officials they would have to dirty stuff. Then they can start in on go on weJfare to get the needed help. politics, religion. personal beliefs, ~ial ''I want to assurt! you of two things." activities and the whole spectrum of Shapp told the suburban Camp Hill human events. housewife. by telephone Wednesday. After that, if they run out of ideas on "F1rst, we'll find some way;n order to y,•hat lo censor. they could always turn to get the necessary funds . And second. we the Federal Trade Commission for no-will find a way without the necessity of lions on new fi elds to conquer. going on welfare." 'spontaneous' •-m ~ cmtral castlog IJpeS 'be r<lunled "' • .mu.n tell a.od ~loll bis place twk>e," MankJe1rics ' Vidor Gold, bore -irith Apw um- ~ • ..i<!. "Yes, '"'bl'!'-· the vice preoldeot bas -bee81.,. we have been •coustomecl in tbe put Ill< -a to having McGove111 P.OOPI• tllero dlmtptlng our meetings. ' "Mr. Mllllklewlcz, Cllmlllg Ir om Hollywood, naturally MUld tb1Dk there was central casting. Tbe geoUellWl opened the campaign <haalhf aktle-, DOW in the closlog days he's cM•tng ( CAMPAIGN. '72 J wben San Diego Mayor Peto Wlhon was speu:Jua (Wlllm l!poke before Apw). The -people were becldlng prior to Ibo vb prealdoo~ people will! McGoVem alp beddln( 'and cllarupllnc, llld vice praldeal will .deal wllb -""" pie, .,. .In wbatem W1Y Ile deieml aitab&e." Gold 01Jt1mwt. •• AQd ttie_ only reucn we are prepared ii bec•llle Mr. Manldewlcz ...i 6"" McGovern bave DOI -"1:~ In the put." In the . . . """"' -by w h I• ' demonltia.wn, shouted at them that they were "ldeoloclcal fanatla'• and _,... them to Nalls and 'anlmel& The leader of Ule ~..., puoched in tbe lace by an "-~ and amtlled for dloturbillg the -"Wll1 clonl ,.. put ... ,..., 111'1utik• -boadl and ohow yuoll' true colon, the -..., ,..., oplrltual .-. did 1n the moo 1n ClermanY," """"' yelle<t"al tliii ilemi•.tnllorl, "Storm~ mrnt•llty wUl !ail in thla _,,.. jUlt .. before, and ... will ha•• free speech In thla COlllllzY, u ,.. think a small group of Ideological lonatlct . b Coto• to keep me from f~ this ai>eeCb, yOu're crazy.'' '!be Null, AiJ>ew told t ·h e demonstrators, "though· t h e y were .,qually inlalllble, Just like you do." * * * * c .... palgaen Press On • President Goin!! on TV; McGovern Makes Vow U"IT ..... C'mere, Wascal WafJfrit Boo, a dog oWD<!d by Henry Gentry of Kern County, was determined lo catch this rabbit he was chasing when he got .Wck. Firemen cut Jhe bewildered Boo l00<e and in inset he is comlorted·by Mrs. Gentry. Resident,s of 2 Cities Flee Fires o.f Propane ,l'romWlnSenteeo W ASil!NGToN -Pre&ldent Nbon will go oD nationwide television tonight for what eJdes described as a discussion of his "hopes f0r the future d. this nation," including the Vietnam·situaUon. It wiU be Nixon's first use ol politically purchased television time for a live-Cam-- paign speech this year. Press Secretary Rooald L. Ziegler said the speech will be sbown at 7:30 p.m. In all time zoo ... 1ncrea.s1ng1y Clllllldent or -a landlllde°- victory over Democratic manenger George S. McGovern om Tuesday, Nlx· on changed the focus of. Ills penonaI campaigning In an el!ort to opread Ills coattails for Republican · candidates for the Senate. THE PRESIDENT scheduled airport rallies in six states Friday end Saturday. Four of the states -Okla!Joma, Rhode 1'land, North Carolina and New Mexieo -were selected bemuse they are holding cloWy contested Senate races In which a iresldentlal visit tti!Jht help tip the acaie for the Republican ca!M!Jctate. Earlier in the year, NiJOo's political strateglsls bad aaid the l'ra!ldeot would select the states for pmooal com- paigning on the basis of their importance in the presideotlal contest without regard to the impact on local races. , MEANWHILE, McGOVERN t o d a y said NIJ:on's farm policies have forced a milJloo people In leave l\U'al Amtrica and be reaffirmed a promise to farmers to raise their income if be is elected. In.a paid radio .~ recorded for broadcast today, the · Democra.tic presldeulial nominee said !bot, u presi- dent, he Wldl!d me illatlng autbority to raise lanit,j>'ioe 611J>POll to 911,per<ent of parity, w'1idi .~. o. fiin!lwa Wied by the , government to cleternihle tllO' theOretical ' falr return on basJc lann products. Herbert Stein, chairman of the Pres:ldent's Oxmc.lJ. of E con o m i c Advisers, once said that 90 Percent parity ROMULUS, Mich. (AP) -llundreds of ,Democrats to vote not only !or President would mean a food price increase to con- tamilies in Romulus and nearby Ta}'lor Nixon but also for Rep. John G. Schmitz sumers of 10 percent. Ooe of McGovern's were evacuated from an area . sur-of Tustin, the American Party presiden-advi.!IOrs, Gordon Wiel , today conceded roun~g a pro_pane gas storage field tial candidate. that raising farm price 15UPPom would following a senes ~f expiosk>m which Connally, ~ea~ of t~ Democrats for have an impact on food prices but said rocktd the two Detroit ~~· NI.zoo orgaruzation, sa.td on the NBC-TV McGovern has conducted 00 stud on It took two hours before fl!'e11'1en could Y bring a serles of fires in the field under ~ · ) B di coo!fOI Wedpesday nigbt ·lojlowmg tl>.c;:r<r·-.~l.Ji. .• ~RQD'I' ~·-.~-_an ll~de.r Dead, 56 more than 100 exploswns tn the storage . ~ -. :;; -r .,.~.,__ • -~ ~ •• ~ --~ area, which separalel the.two towns. PARKERSBURG, W. Va (AP) - One injury was reported. Today Show that George S. McGovern 's Band.leader Johnny Long, 56, whose proposals "turn them off," re!ening to recording of "Shanty Town" sold over Democrats he saJ~ woul~ refuse to vote four million copies, died Wednesday. His for the Oemocrahc nommee. band had just fin1sbed an engagement in Memphis, Tenn. e Aeticlsts En Route how much they would go up. '!be candidate, still sllg)llly hoarse despite _.._ ball.tsy_rest-OILWednesday, also promised farmers lo ,redace prop- erty ta :res, and support an "en- forcet.ble" $20,000 limit on !arm &Ubsidy paymenb, and step up shlpmoots of surplus food to hungry people abroad. Hamlets Around Saigon Cleared Of Infiltrators- SAIGON (UPI) -Government troops reported clearing all hamlets around Salam of Communist Infiltrators today, -but-the S8igm oommand said the North Vietnamese launched their la r g es t number of attacks throughout the .,...,. try in ·more than three yean. Military oouroes aaid the area cleared included all of the m Corpr1, wbicb Is made up of the 11 provincea surrounding Saigon, ranging from 30 miles south to 100 miles northeast of the capital. THE STEPUP in military activity reflected efforts by government soldiers and the North Vletnamese to take and hold as much land aod as many people as possible before any cease-fire l s declared. 1be Communists aimed two of their attacks against civilians .........,..., said. • ""Y-"' A 5aigon command spokesman reported 142 Qnmunist attacks in the 24 houri ending at I am. today. South Vie~ n•mese military spokecmen said the ~ was the highest since Aug. Z, ISllll, w!jiiil.'il; North Vietnamese alta<b were -agaln!t South Vietnamese and U.S. beses. SPOK:aMEN SAID the c u r r en t fightili:g ·was mostly minor and the in- teritity of combat was much lower than during at least six previous Communist oilenslves and the current North Viet- namese drive that began March 30. Saigon command spQkesmen said $ooth Vietnamese soldiers today drove Com-- munlst troops from lour hQliels in tbe capital's military region -Ule last ol 26 the North Vietnamese had infiltrated 'o•~ tbe put-- Heavy fighting erupted again in CaJn.. bodia today and officials in the Laotian ~ital of Vientiane said authorities have ordered a curfew on the royal capital of Luang Prabang because Communist troops have infiltrated to within four rr.Ues of the city's airfield. e R11•• Set Off Blast UPPSALA, Sweden (AP) -Tho Uppsala Seismology Institute registered a very strong Soviet nuclear· test today equal In strength to the Amerlean test blast in the Aleutian Islands a year ago, ProC. Marais Baath of the Institute reported. COPENHAGEN (AP) -F i v e American peace activists arrived from New York today and transferred to anotln!r plane for Bangkok, en route to Hanoi. PoetEzraPoundDead,87; Baath said the explosian occurred in the Siberian test area at Semlpalatlnsk and had a strength or about five megatons and a Richter 11:¥1gn.itude of 7.1. e Sehnlit: Votes Seen WASHINGTON (UPI) -John B. Con- nally sa1d today "the radicalism bf McGovern" would cause man y The group was headed by Tom Hayden or the Indo China Peace Campaign. Two others are going via Moscow, Hafden aafd It Is Iils understanding that the North Vietnamese Invited them to establish ''undl!torted commwllcations with the U. S.people" in order to give the American peop1e a clear e%planaUo'I\ of Hanoi's position and views. · l Backed Mussolini in War , VENICE (AP) -Poet Ezra Pound, one of the moat lnfluenUal and con- troversial literary llgum ol the 2tJth' cen- tury, died Wednesday nli!hl In a Venice ·11oop1taI. He bad marked bis 87th .bh1!J. day Monday. • Ill Rockies, Plains Snow Speculation that they wore going to help in the release of U.S. prl!oners of war was 11a com plete rnlsun- d~" be said. e ~ts ln C'ontrol NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Students still Wirt In control of the --.Uon bulldln( on the campus of predomlnanUy black Southern University o( N e w Orleana. lollowlng Wedneoday's peaceM Pound eolen!d a holpJlaI 1'lelday nlgbt wtlla an lnte.tinal allmeot. Docton aold he died after a grave card1ocirculatory collapse, a heart failure. The funenl will to ·lieJd Friday ot the chun:b of San Gior11o Mqgiore cm San Gior&io Ia1and in the Venice Loeocn His body will then be takon by aa>dola to the Island cemetery ol San Mlcbole. -. Auturnri Storm Moves l11to Mississippi Valley Area - tst.o..r. • No decll1ion had bffn made on whether to remove the students from the ~pus. which has been· closed for cl...,. until Monday, 1 Southern spokesman said. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE 0.11"'1 01 UW O.tl~ Pllot b ,...,..utd ...... .,.,,...,.. . ,.. . "" ... .,... .. ,... ., l ilt """"' Clll .... ,... ..... ... .. WlllllM ..... ,..... .. -... 11• •·"" .. ""*t .,.,. ........,, It .,.. .. -..-. 'l'W' .., ., ...... ......,.. ........ lll!IM~. cell .,. • _,,, ..... ..._.. " -. C.111.,. ........ .... Te•111h1111 . • ~ or..,.. °"""' .,.. ........ ...-"""'""' "'~ ... . .,.. WlltmilillMI' l ................ -- k ... Cll!Nllft1 ~ 1-:ho ltn JVM CUIUb ... Ollll ....... '°""' YllNo .................. ..... ' Aa author of "Hqb, 8,e I w·y ii MauberieY" the "Pisa• baifAll," u editor ol 'r.S. Eliot's "Walle Laiid'< ond -of DWI!' wrtten -and_a(lef World War I, Pouod cl>aaltd the coune ol poebj and the llterarr ..... ot the ~ !quip . .But hb_reP!ltatlm In bis naUve Amorica -doadod by bnlodcutl durlnC World War ll for M.-W'o f-that Fi blm on & dlctmmt for u-ond 1J ,..... In a meGtal bolpttat In Wllllblllclon. D.C. On * mum to Italy In 1111, be told newwww: "I dall't °kmw -It ...Wd be -11i1e to UYe ID Amerb out&kle I rudhclfa. tt -... '=.: lllllc11o ldalle. ol =-~·lltt , .. ::: .... Jt:"~ UitmJ · nbol, anil ' -,_,. IUI ol collop Ile wu a..!_~ an -.at Wlhllh ~for "*II too._...., • .... loo .......... . ' • He•left ln dbl1lll for London In 1• aocl b1ocome tbt 1-ot a PP ol u · -tsl pilill c.n1 ... -tbeiiioeJvs r.;'...,.... .. or "tlataetii? fliliid tnvoltd .. -· Spobt and Italy, 1r11111111na the ...... or the l ... _ LITlltAltY ltlllL Poolla'll'-..t • • I I ' I ' I ~ , ' ·, • 0T4-es of Future ·· Will Outlast Car --'~-~ If a 11011g bfnl•wlll lliii even If.~ .P lln I IOlllldprool cqo where II DtYel' i.n -DOie. I ..W. Comell University'.....-, jllWed 1bat.. 'Ibey, a11o P!V"d -IOllll birds. C8jl slog more !ban ..,. DOie at .• limo. True-· actually. · THAT WORP opinlter l)Olltlnues to generate llJ'8Ulllel>t : CUenl lnqUlrel u to the. dellollloo ol . •' oame. .\,opinlter II any lingle slrl • who's. more apt to 'remain unman1ed than to ~· to tbe 'altar. staUstJeally' · Olidl be the odds alter abe 's age 31. :i OUR CHIEF prognosticato.. be. U"'es no , new cir 10 years from now wlll ...... Out with opare Urea. The car's original llatprool tires, he pre- dlcla, will outlast tlie mt ol Ibo ma- . chine. llood. Q~ -Q: "How .many of Ibo Irides under age 11 8fe expecting , • , ?" 1 I , • J QU~ B Phll lnt•rlandi ---...- • "Gosh! They're...,.. stacked up out here." ,\. H~ •of them, jhe statlsllclans cla!m.. , Q. "FELLOW 00 TV says cattails are edible. How do 1,--'---------~--------1 ~~ ~~er ate a cattail. ority know the Ro-~make booze' out ol them.'Call H Ibo new People's l\'hlU~. . , D' YOU dooble up your fist when you're.Jalkf!ig u '""";'he's quite apt th regard H as an Intimidating ges- ture, certaln}y. But a trainer of animals,~wbo wu com- inl!sloned \o advise postmen . on Ibo safest way to ap-, proach strange dogs, IUJl•s\Od Ibo doubled fist tenda ta put canines at ease. He aaya dogs are far more war, of an open palm °'811 ol a clenched hand. TEARS -Studies conflnn Ibo wt.despread belief that more women than ___!P!O_,~ l!t weddings.i:but they indicate__. also that more men tb:an women cry at funerals. , NO 'lfoMbl ;,. ·a dfer sllould overlook EJaa Muwell's - sage observatloo : ''There are certaln --Uoos for ovetweight women. Men do not suspect theia and othel' • women do not fear them as competition." . , ONE MAN in every 25 is colorblind, it's said. To aome degree, at any rate. But only one woman in every 250 can be so described. OF ALL THE children In • family, that youngster wbo tends to be best able to keep secrets ls Ibo oldeat ""°· Next best secret keeper, the oldest dau~. No1 sir, that's . not just whim. Students of such m•tters say )'<lll!lller chil- dren get Into Ibo habit early of hotfooting It up to the1r elder lrothers and sisters with ·news bulletins. -But the older youngsters at the outset have nobody to talk ·to but the enemy.~ , , i.,.....W..1..i,Far ea1J 50% "the 11plar ldult fare. Anywhere on th! Air Cal system. Wllafs the catch? You hm to ceme bo• the same weekend. • · Whidi meansyoo've got26 hOUIS. to play, 12 pm Saturday to 2 pm -Wy of the·.,.. weekend. Aid ooly haHthe r.n to pay! Fr11111 as Uttlus$2.70 (the wodd's lawestairfareO To as much as . $25.00. Maximum. Including tax.· . Get lost! AIR. CAll°FORNIA " Cill (714) ,549-4550 ... · Address mail to L. M. Boud. P. O. Boz 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. T:ry Saturday's News Quiz --~---·-------··---~---·-· Now In Its ·z-1 s1 Great Year FREE COOR:INti--SCH;Q{)L .•· Mesa Theater 1884 Newport B"d., Costa Mesa Every Thursday, Now thru Nov., 16-9:30-11:30 A.M. HELPFUL HOLIDAY HINTS MORE THAN $1,0001IN MEE PRIZES e .SURPRISES •~ G~TS Charm,low and Cciloric Gas Barbecues and other prizes given each week _, Second Ptinting of one of the most popular cook boob ever s.old in the Ol'lllfge eoast area .•• 247 of the best recipes selected from the cook- ing school's first 19 years for just $1. Prepared lest year to mark th.e 20th anniversary of the school, the book was 11 sellout. Here's your second chance. Sold only at the Cooking School Co· SpamM9CI by Alpha Beta Mart!llS c.,;c~ Dcms-ir.w. Soutliem CoDf. Gas Co. M-Theat., Ora~ C-t DAILY PILOT ' • Thursday, Novtmbtr 2, 1972 CJDODODCJt 1c 100< 1 ~00000000000 . $ • Ride· the · .. : o·Bit'.' . Ill$' Line · What a g~ li;ieal ~hall the sales or do your regular shopping. 1'he Onina,9. C6upti;J;~lt Qlstrlef, lovingly known as The "Two- . Blt -Bus -l~~Yi.i; yau money;·A--one-way·fare on any-of our routes la only HJ:arftl,transtera are-frM. . Fashion Island; Souttt-Coast ·Plaza, Laguna Beach, Balboa, New- port i;ieach, .Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and many other shopping areas are all served by The "Two-Bit Bus Line." · You don't have tow~ about parking and there ls always plenty of room for shopping bags and packages. Catch The "Two-Bit Bus Line" ... YOll ·a.i't illflF ,,.,,.,_.,.tlon .,,, ohesper. ....... ---------• IUfrAMAM'9CIA ... QWDI_ .,. .. Mlfl'A.Wi~llAQI 9MOOITAMIM .... """" COAIT """' ' o,• '· I ' ~ • ' / I \ ••-110p •I oll ...,., ., ___ ""°"fhoVI rov'9e lihown. For Information or 1Chedul11 call Tiie "Tw II lul Uni" at 1147-I004 « write tO ua Id 1126 E. Wlllhlngton Ave., Santa Ana, 927G1 - -_, __ I 1' I · OAILV PILOT T-, .N-2. Im .CandUla te l1rp e Charges Badham ith Absent,eeii$m '.He's Take·n the Lead Coast Exec Runs Five Miles Every Day • By TOM RA "',Q!'·· Of .. Da4W fllkol Sl1lt 1'1ove over, Al Nestllnger! Turn in your golden track shoes, lift the laurels from you r sweating brow and hand them to jogging Cyril Jon•, "' The Welsh-born wbll ef Newport Center can give yoo six yean, eight inches in height and all the cheers you like from your noon hour au- diences in Santa Ana . He's got ~ you,~ baby, he's got you! JONES BEL TS out st least five miles to your three for five days compared to your four and does it all with• nothing more than an oc- casional flurry of curious seagulls to spur him on. No noon hour luxury for swift Cyril. He leaves from his base at the Newport Beach Athletic Club at 1 a.m., pounds out his five to six miles - often through thick fog ~ and is at his desk in the American Cement Corporation offices at 9 a.m. AND BEFORE TlflS week he did lt all after an BO-mile Vista, Dana Point, with hit wUe, Ami, and Ihm chlJdnn , and ..... busy ll«lUllng the local lerraln for good Nlllllnl country. "lt looks good, .. be llid. "l """ ... , "' ..... lk\ilt ... now and qalii In Calabuu and I see no rtuon why 1 can't do it in the Dana Point area." ' \~.,, JONES IS AVERAGING 'ill, , around 40 lo 41 mlnutes for his SEEKS ST ABLE ECONOMY dally Newport Center stint lt's good time but he insists Capo Mlyor Thorpe he's not bound to the clock as---------- a means oC gauging hls perfonnanco. "l'm fit and well and I believe my, da lly road work is the main reason," he said. "It may took like hell to the <mlooker but tt•1 the greatest flDl in tM world for m1." "Ob re• and by·tbe way," he grinned. l'lt's lonely. lt's very, very lonely. . • " Judge Fines Attorney In Tr.ansf er I .: By 0.C. RU!ll'INGS fmn the "Callf«nl.a Jou11!11" , long-term effectl. °' .. o.u. "" • which • • I n d I ca t e that -,..,lt..W ,.,_ ··~- The race for 71st Al:leriiblyrnan Badham , hu J URJGD nv "...a -w.1.1.-.. ~ Assembly District pita lhe been •bsent rrom Assembly I 11# IPP"'idmately J-·o. Republican lncuml>ent who 1 lban third 1 • hall limlo tbe · -1allon of bu 10 years in the Assembly ~~Umeotll =... tbe :'_ __ ,._eeo • ..,,. Ql-lllO lmllllf -mbly against a DemOcratic op-161111' ........ _,. "'" 1~-" be • '-u1 ''Tllll ponent who is a ~laUv.e years. '11le statlstlc1 are: 1970 d fill';""• pouu O · ""'"'°mer to pollUct. ' -Absent SU per<enl; llJ'll -meana lhal tbere_. II ~ Aboent S3.7 percelll; im -leilllallve ..i. llr . .--Robert Bad ham, 41, Absent !U --1." pi. ........, !bull lhbu!d ho Newport 116acll, waa flm ~ ·-1~1('iiine, ~ec:::z to!; 7i!! ~c:.i SO: JW>1W1 BAS ltheled !bis ·~ ~ of -· • • : ·charge an "aboolute lalll1y" one · >Qle 1"!I .been totallt ._ ·~,-0-.' Sacramento since then. He ll and•. ''Ile." He polnla oul lhal ~~ 1tate l°"'er · 1, "..C:L:.~1-. , " ' ~ chairman of the Joint Com-the .. Cal.ltornla Journal" is 8 than -· , else in 4be . . l)C'fJ'-' , •••• mlttee on Atomic · Develo~ private publication and cites 8 1 cocmb,." r ."· . ~ • , 1 • JJ: mmlandSpaceandamember Jeller from tbe edit« alaling -~~:11&"" Jo ·., • 1* of the Waya and Meana, tbal the Journal bu "never .... a,.. . . nt ~ _: JIJ.I l'IJ!lPRi8J\ ~ ~r~~t Revenue and Tualloo, Water, publilbed any 'la II alt c 1 tbe llUl.cil_-i:O"l"'imlllil: of .~.bul,r l"'. -~ .'!F ~~~~-~mmlt'~. relallng to tbe preaence or in~ ~:tity and counly centraleuon·~~ ~~ ~ ai.enoe d. legillaton." 1 ~,unet.." ' •,, .,education. • I of J.~ 'lborpe.J .. •· ea!?.:J!anothe amandyanor His """"" for the post 10 1n speUU. of alrpolharl 1••· Endorsed by tbe COljllty'and ~· ~ ,... yean, Badham says, ·shows panslon Badham says ,a . -'-. instructor at Sa d d 1.e b a c k that he was either present ~ solution involving all levels ot state .,4.FL-010 mm the UnJted College. His fint venture into Sacramento or ablerlt on of-government must be sougbt 1n Auto Woken, 'lborpe aayk be pollllca came in llJ'IO when he ficW leilllaUvo i...tmu IJ'l.S the next two yws. "1be prob-bellevd "Slrong step;" shOuld was-eleeted--to the-San-Juan~rar-tM--unie~ -1enr"-is--not Just;-going to--1>e faken-0 at the state level to SANTA ANA -An ~ltomey CaplJlrano City Coundl. Legllla-wu In --disappear II we Ignore I~" he build a stable economy in accused on arrest of transfer-.... The tncmnbtnt 11}'1 be added. · • · f · which will -"--h THEY ARE ftGRTING for believes reaipportionment ls Call orrua tlUUW t e ring a Lido Isle woman's the Assembly seat that the most important Issue fac-m oRPE BAS been discuss-towards full drive from his old home at ; Coiirses Offered home Into his own nam~ represer.ts I.be people living inl the state bec8use of its ing a variety of issues during avoid bank seizure of the between the Pacilic Ocean andl1 _ _:: _________ _::_ __ ;_ ____ -"=-::::-'-=---~--~- perly bas been 1ined is. the ruverstde County Une and ~ge • " Calabasas. ·~· and p1aced on three years pro-from San Clemente in the . A host of new nine-week bation. south to parts of CoSta Mesa, Wanna here more, Al? _:_jt.. Neslinger hit DAILY PTLOT \ ·' 1_ headlines as the fitness-con- clous hydrology technician ~-··-~;--- who almost daily threads hi!~-«·'+'- cours<• are being offered by Orange County s u p e r I 0 r Santa Ana and Anaheim in the Orange Cout Coll'lfe, begin-Court JU<lge Kenneth Lae Im--11. The 7lst dlllrlcl II - ning ll>e weet ol Nov· IS. posed tbe twn on Ward C. heavily Republican. ~ way through a growing com- plex of federal. state, county and city buildings In downtown Santa Ana. But long distance runners, no explanatton needed, just have lo be lontJy. Lanky, Jong. ]egged Al could never claim that distinction with many a munching office worker hail- ing his powess throu~h a mouthful ofham sandwich and a raised thermos flask. • JONES COULDN'T be any 1oneller if he did his 7 a.m. stJnt on lop ol Mount Snowdon. (That's in Wales, you knowt~ stripped to shorts and shoes. he pads his way through Newport Center. along San Joaquin Hill! Road, down Jamboree Road and Pacific Coast Highway and back up MacArthur Boulevard to the Athletic Club. The only sounds are his muffled footfalls and the screech or gulls in the cold, clammy silence. "AH, YES, 'nlOSE guU!,'~ munnured the 41-year~ld flyer from Llanrwst with a glance upward. "I'm going to Reglslrallon wUI he held in Mikkelson, 50, Orange, after Tlwdssues aa Thorpe sees the AdmilSlom and Records the lawyer p1eaded nolo con-them, are Badham'.s record in office !tom I •·"" lo I p:m. lendre (neither guilty ncr In-off1oe, employmeol and educa· DAILY PILOT Stefl ,.... ~g Nov. I . nocenl) to chargea of fraud lion. ' Dey and evening cliwes an and perjury. Ba••--lh -~ · available in such subject areas 1W&U..1 says e wua\ un· ... IT'S LONELY Jogger Cyril Jones as aecountina, b i 0 1 0 g y , Mikkelson wu accused in a portant .lsauel facifl:g the state -"& Grand Jury i?lictment of il· and the 71.it Assembly"Dlstrict bualnes,, infonnatloo systems, 1-11 transl · th ho ....,...., I aod h do somethtng about them one cothputer 5 c i e n c e , con-· ~ga y ernng e me ~i;·~~en t e of these days." of Mrs. Glenda Heller, 221 Via ... ...,. ... ..._.... s t r u c t t.o n t e c h nology. NI-, into his own name n.~.. \,..:., -e 1 m p-a (g n , He has every respect for ~-1 11'...-.lish f d -_.,. -a..v111111ucs, ....,'& , O O ..1.-•·y after she N>N>ived a ...._... baa talked· about Nestlinger because the two · ...___.. ,..__ ::w.-..i.u. •}''"" .. ....,.~ men have the same alms. servteel, .rn ::uui, \.n:f-niaJl, demand from .the Union BanJc S.dham'S ebaenteeilln. A They both believe that their heal tit; education, inhalation for immedate payment of a mailer amt to d 111' tr I c t self-imposed task k-them lheralf., mathematics, music, $100,000 loan. , i'tsidents q u o t e s statiaUcs -~ p~1tcal educatlon ,,,1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ha.le and heallhy, at a perfect , sec r et 8 ria11 weight and flharee fromlacolds andlhe enc., and Spanish. LJot.,~ JIOA.iG infections t p gue '?be classel ranee from one-17 l lV l\ "1 more sedentary male. hl1f to four Ul)its er.ch. Jones' belief in runp ing as a ---,,,-.,-.,,.-,.,..,---"' means of keeping fit wu ........ spawned in his boyhood in Wale:s (many frustrat e d ffl English rugby international · will testify to the Nlllllnl L, ••• EH$, ability Of Welshmen), and fostered while be worked u 1 m..t mining engineer in Rohodella JOHN and South Africa. , ILACK._ HE RAB THE toogbest job •· 'fW be ever had --president CQN&o- of Amert<an Cemeol'i llt-· • ~I , vestmen t division -but he still finds time to run. CJ.Ill pow llv• pl ~\ //IJl4 ~, ...... c-,..... 2 !!!.~. 5135 i-., ... - ' ... = ...... UW W.t Rat-IOW °""""' bit ········" .. o--w• ·······" .. 11•......, ·•·•••···" 62 ~ ............ , .. Siik W ............. u 19 c.._ ............ ? 61 kiffl ..•.••..•••.• I~ 6 ,.,..,,.....,. I 700o ,.NUT WOOlfNS AHO DOUl\.I .&Nin XMAS SALE . SUPER , 25'' Dl._.I CHROMACOLOR ...... W111Wt C ... I .... w1111 z.it1t•1 •tl- C!'WWMtk ---.. & •II 1ftlw , .... r:::="" ~::1>1 ,· -"nlzel OUR BIG, TASTY, TEMPTY POLISH SANDWICH! Regularly S!H · Just bring thi s coupon to Der Wlenerschnitzel. One coupan per customer. Offer ends November 15, 1972 . f69& NEWPORllLVD.; CO$TA MEsA . . 95-1 HARBOI :BIND.,t COSrA . ME$A 18 '~iagonal COLOR - ER-Ill& WITH AIC'S EXCLUSIVE WARRANTY . e 1 YEAR FRR SIRVICE e 1 YEAR FRll! PARTS e J YEAR PICTURE TUIE "WARRANTY e DIPOU AN11NHA e 1 SIT YHF FIHI TUNIN~ e IDIAI. POii FAMILY VllWIH~ $ T1M ~. CM1$4W, (lll'IM'911 '"°" <Mt!, .. ...... I-I -tMnfll < .. tllry 1:"91111111 llflktn U .... ... °"'· ....... ~.., l'lctltlni , ..... C..""-.. .. c,,..., """ IM'IM ..... , .. '"· 1""' ..... Stet. fTH•• ., Clonll1. ,.,,. Ill ~ -tttt ..... ......... lk 25'' XL·1 ·oo Swiveler -- ... T• .. . .._ .. T .. • ....._,le C-Mttrltl • AwtotlMlll -CALL • FOR PRICE e 1973 MODI!. e DECORATOI CAllNU SUPR CHROMACOLOI MEANS ··--·--...... c ...... ·-- e HANDCRAmD CHASSIS WHY BUY FROM ABC? e No ""'•11 C"""" If PtW le to hyt w Ne -...i H M•• te "" 1-1 e I ,y--,_ • 1 y---•. J bs Plct we TM W••••r e - D ... , ...i ht u, e l •lt..4.«lc..S/M•wt C* ... • w. -WIFot w. Stl . w. -0.. Pro I I ...W. .... 0ot ' DIAQ.OHAL • ....... 5ty19t • 1 oo•.1o SoM -. .. 'c_,. e A11t11W1c n.t . ............. , .... ............ , .. ............... C.... 0. lmt':*'lf WITH UM01I COff'IOL '649 WAilfUT ... ,. .... .. I ( I I ' I I ,\ i ' I I "· ! ............. . ... , ..... ·--.... . I Thursday, MMrnbtt 2, 1~72 DAILY PJLO( Jf Dinner To Honor Doctor ·student Makes · Prop. 2 Crusade Talk Set By Doctor HEADED DRIVE Dr. Nlnburg bead ol the Isnel bmd drive IOI" the pell seven years. For reservatlom, contact the bond committee at 547· 5537. -, A ~ Mexican-Alnoricln <¥\pu.-1· Genenl Evelle v..,...,. and cleYOllD( his fllC8tloo lh>m n.ous' SA YI be WIS born Jo111 ~. who Moda the llledlooJ ICbool to ft,..... Colllonlla!IAbor Federation. ·-.... oup-In Walll llld wu weU on the Wll1 IJ Joo Flortt worklnc port for Prop.\l on tho Novem-"'!>' to bocon1b1f 1 "Mexican ., ,,.,.. 1' bmd tasue? bor bo11o1 vlllled Orlni• hoi>d, a Pacbeoo" until 1\11 "I .,ant 11111 mwure to Co!lnlYJ!!!!_ week. _ faj!!I' _ movt!l the family to ~ /or everybody, but It'• Joe Flores, 21, a leiiliir at tiilCaBtii'. ----jijjt a iDJDilrlty student's way the UC Davis rn<dlcal school, Flores proudly d I s p I a y s IO repay the rn<dlcal school frankly ad.mill that h I 5 copies of letters endoning the for what bas been committed "crusade" i3 inspired by bis measure from Gov. Ronald to minority programs," he desire to provide b e t t e r Reagan atate secretary of states. medical service to Chicano Health 'and Welfare Earl W. cormnunities. B r i a o, assernbJ,ywomeo 'l'1IE M E D IC A L "mis-- He says the Wue has MarCh K. Foog . and Yvonne aionary" says be wants to received the endorsement of. W. Brathwaite, ass em b 1 y help the average person get some of CaWomla's biggest speaker Bob Moretti, Attorney better medical service!!!. political and labor leaders. It would provide $156 million ln bond.! for building medical and veterinarian facilities on UC "the averaae per10n c8J1 waltt Into tile overqe ~Ital emergency room and be forc- ed IO wal& two e< three houra to tee a doctor. When you JDO'<'.e into a nelghbothood, l t ' s ~ mooplace not IO be 1ble IO get into a doctor's office because the practices are orten cl~ ed." he argues. "With Mex· ican-Americam the problem is 10..fold worse. We don't have the econcrnic power to draw doctors into o u r com· munJ.tles." Flores admits he has en- countered 10me oppol!Uon to the medical lacWtlea bond ...... "BLACKS WILL only agree to aipjlort the ""'' il medical school officiall will guarantee them a fixed quota of places in such schoola," he explained. ~lngly, sboot hall his classmates at UC Davis are opposed, he said. ''They give a wide variety or reU>ns but lhey all boil down to one thing, they want less doctors so that they can make more money easily,., he ac· cused. Dr. Jean F. Crum, prooldent ol lhe Calilomla Medical Aslociotlon, will eddress I Nov. 14 dinner meeting of the Southern C1lifornl1 Podiatrists. Dr. cn.m will speak about health manpower and health care delivery syltenu: at the 7 p.m. dimer al the Disneyland Hotel. For more lnlonnaliO(l, caD . Dr. Criim at (213) 116H505. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN BEAUTIFUL THINGS ME HAPPENING IN OUR 2648 Harbor Blvd!· COSTA .MESA . i Ha1tishttf ·· OPEN DAILY 9 to 5;30 SUNDAYS 9 to 5 j ' ~ITS i'. "IN'... IT'S INDOOR GARDENING! !(ii I ... ~· It's Also FaelBadaf, EDUCA.TIONAJ; .,.d Fan .; lndoor plants for ~ every room ... ;-"· f. if~ ~· ~: ~ ~ . . ~·i TERRARIUMS · iotolass "bubbles" already "!Jtlanted. Several shapes ~<tnd sizes from wh.ieh to ~choose. FIOM 14.95 j ~ -: ': .. ~· BONSAI . ~radltlonal 0 rte n ta 1 ~nsai t.rees. Marvelous ~fts. SPECIAL . Choice small plants for planters, dlsh·gardens: and terrariums. 3 FOi 1,00. ·SPEClAL ' .. ~ Attractive anywhere. "Fluffy Ruffled Ferns." • • HERB GARDENS Grow near the kitchen. Have Herbs at your finger. tlpe . .. ~ flOll 7,50 1.79 TO 11,95 ~-. Plants the kids , will go for ... Sensitive to the touch. It catches insects ·by fold- Jng its leaves. 1.49 These come from tbe oldest and largest trees on earth. They sprout. 1.98 COBRA LILY Looka like the C o b r a snake. l ts nectar attracts and des~ insect.a. 4.95 E ALSO HA VE everything you need to start an Adventure in Bonsai. nes and Junipers .19 ... Dwarf Elms 2.50, Assorted containers from .99. , the lixin's! EARTH 'n' WARE Terrarium Kits. Attractive Glass ~ylinders in 4 siz~s from 1:79. Great for Terrariums or dried ~angements. f "You'll Gtt Id-Glikwo When You Visit Our Gorden Shopl" ~ WINTER i ILORMING CAL EN DU LAS • lunny yellow ·and orange wcrt to enjoy all winter long. ,79 DOZ. Sf)fciol pri<:u Good lhru Noo. 8. • E HONOR ••• FAVORITES PANSIES Exce1Ient bulb cover. Beddl.na · ulant tavoritff- •79-. CYCLAMEN A bright add!lion to low, shady spoll. Jk>auUfuJ In """"'· 1.49 !l§lll ilrB ~ ~ PHONE 5465525 1111 1 RESIDENTIAL INTERIORS dept. INTRODUCING OUR NEW SUEP UNE FOR '13 . IFY•-ARE ••• HAI JUST THE MATTRESS FOR Y•I •CIMMal JUT VAl.lfll · 110 "IOllUS" s111m AllD PILLOW CASIS! ~ llBP•PBBlll 11CLAss1c11 . A RRM MAI llEll WITH 312 COIL INNERSPRING COMFORT Just feel it! It's cloud soft but firm, wilh a JJV,.gauge coil innerspring mattress with 72 coil box spring. "tWiN'-lilllTRESS Ol'Witr~ndlll -'"' ·aa EA. l'C. IUl(N Mattrtss I 111 s,r111 .. IZI'! llllC llJllllU & 2111 S'rloes .. 171!! lllllB 1~ • LIW, LDW Pia ..• 18.JVllY 119 lf.•E IET·IP "• ' . " ~ ~~~ "SUPllMl" 5IO tOtL INND$PRlllG MATTllSS "llORL-MOnL"EXTRA FIRM "ULTIMAn" ... LUXUllOUS MAllRESS & IOX SPRING QUILTED MATIRESS lUXIJJIY tr.1Tn!S$ W/JJllUBlf.Jl([IJl[ DU1lll!IG USIO IN lL'OHIQ HOIU.S Oii JH[ W!SI COASI. llNJLISI, CO'IU <Ml 100'.tlOlll<llM - £1111 COiis .tor ,.... c.lort lld Slf'l'icL llift.11 .-,. .• .l&Yt-a•re toil ~""-W lor otri ldt cmdott.; hUI ~ fwtllMAntOt "'"""Y"'' 13811 .. _,,_ ...... ,..,,' 148!' l••SIJlfltC)"" lfl 4411 l11itt1iJlfl1Cl11 , " ..._, 199•• ... • .......... 218" , .... lfifll9.... "' re. ...... ,.. .... w .............. _...... ............. , ... , ""9Mmn1 ..... ,... ....... ,.,... •1111ttr111 I 17811 -. ..... ~... .... ·· ea•• I'* •11tt tU I 268" IA. 11 ... ,.,1 .. tn "" PC. COSlA 'MESA .TOii HOUU DAJl't' ... IAT•aeAY , ....... ,. t1•DAY ltAM .. 1,. "'-""*••..,. ••t11.1..,.. • • • I \ , • .......... ' UPIT ....... Pelice Dog? .t· 'Bruiser,' a purebred Bouvier del F1anders, cf Bt!giwn descent, iJi the l!i'st K-9 Baltimore PoUC. dog not of Ger- man ancestry. HiS mas- ter is Officer Lawrence Mal st. Bill Blass Ba cs It In Style NEW YORK (AP ) -Sexy, slinky and bare Is the Bill BJass loot for evening next spring. '!be ac<ent at night should be OJ! glamor, Blass reels, and he llicb strictly to that guic;ldine in the e v e n i n g ilNl!lili and pajamas shown thb -at bls spring COl- Jedion at the Plaza Hotel. 4"1'111S IS MY favortte," Blu& Wd, U a model glided don the· l1llJWIY tn a clingy long jeney dress showlntl plenty of bolom and bite i*L 'l1lli ~ llfltor necldlae started )lot barely above the modtl's abdomen , and the back wu cut · away at the waist. Blm liked tbe dresa ao much he sbo-1 lt In three . ooJol_ ~mes -blue and 'lleige'.'wblte «nBi>eacll- A FAVORITE with the au- dience was another long jeraey -dress -thla one In metallic beige with a gold 1nake-sk1n cardigan jacket A variatloll T la e 11 INt•retl ~ v .... ,, ... , Hiter. .......... . lou of naked Hl!ll ••• on that theme was evening pa- Jamu with a top or the same snakeskin material and a plWJllng neckline. Blasl' other evening dreael, Dort and long, were llllo deolped to evoke mate -· They reatur<d deep V necks, balms alwln( lots of naked bock and dlngln1 materlalt UU poqet1e and.,.._ For doJllme, however, Blass 1tlamd to his tradition of eltpnl, undentated clothes. BE DIPll>SIZED >Ir.- and belted aulll lo soft, flow- lnB fabrics, with m o s t -jull above the knee. Blau uya be wantl women w Ill able w WW hll clothes ....., aprq ·lhroolh ran •. so tbe "nmweuonal" colon of belp, navy and w h I t e )Xlldomlnated tn the oollectJon. ltrtpea ...,. empllulud, u Ill a navy and white striped dou~ COit OV!r I lllllcblal '*Jr! and -1 voile lllllit. ,,,. llrtpea ...... - -In • mwboy ke<chlel -tM llllJt Ud In • -tmbu. Caskets Hit LONDON (.\P) -'Ille N• tlooal Union ot Funeral . =:-.. ~:.;,r ~ ~ = ... "' plMtJi: pi! cardboord ' .. • Is, Wtiieh tt oalil - 111tuto ... -io•..i.c " r--u lla11dardl. ... • ,. / fllundlr, N1t11:•1r 2. ltn ' ' PIM ,.,ffQI Afte.1.......,11 • • .. - • ' •' . • HEALTH~ SCIENCES FACILITIES PROPOSITION ,, ' .. A . NON -PARTISAN ISSUE • In California more doclors die, or retire, thcin are 1r.G-.ucit- ed each year. Result: decrease in badly need-.1 medical services. The bond cost is low. Les~ than I' per week per ;pers~n. . ' :. -Bonds will be paid out of general funds, not pr~-P•"''·Y ' .. . ' taxes. Passing the bonds will qualify California for matching . . I Federal 1grants. The University of Callfoirnia Medical _School in Orange Co•· ty will~~,,~i,,e '-Y.lftcle'9t ~~nds f•' a:-·~~~ -~a.ch~~· ~-·~~;f.1'i~1 and malor .. medical -research -·~enter -O .. nge County needs.· ' Passage of the bonds means more· l'bs and more business for Orange Countlans -on a continuing basis. ~ -<!' ,,,.. ··-... Among The Many Supporters of Proposition 2 Are: llected Offlclals -blyman Robert lllclham Alsembtjwom1n Yvonne Brathwaite ~.Aaemblywoman March F°"' Auemblymon Robert Monogan AaMmblymon Robert Moretti Senator Dennft Ctrpenter Senalo< Ooorve Moscone Senalo< JanMS E. What"'°" Govwnor ROnald R-n Lt. Governor Ed Reinecke School• 5-lntendent wu-Rllt1 . -blymon John Va-.llM Attorney Oenoral Evolle v._ --G.Godl- F.,_, Govemo< Edmund G. II-.. The Honorable Earl Warnn ' John H. Burton, Counc'llm1n, City of Irvine ,. Alvin M. c-. Mayor. City of Huntington Beach Arthur J. HolnMS, Mayor. City of San C'-nte Charin H. i..,,.. Mayor, City of Loa Alamlloa Cllften Miiier, Mayor. City of Tuttln Jna F. ,._ Mayor. City of Ora .... Robert E. Root, Mayor, City of Fullerton Donald D. Winn, Mayor, City of Villi Parle William J. Phillipa. O.C. Supenl-, 3rd District Ralph B. Clarl<, O.C. Svpervl-, 4th Dl1trld • Organizations W-1• Auxiliary, O.C. Medical Auoclatlon American Legion Alloc:latlon of Gen.r1I Contracton, Executive CommlttH AuHlatlon of lnd.,....i-Coll-ind Uni-altln of Callfomla C1llfoml1 Fann Bureau , Calllomla Hotpltal AuHiatlon California Labor Federation, AFL • CIO CalHornla N.,... AuHlatlon Calllomla P.,....t T-han -lation Calllomla Pharmaceutical AIM<latlon Calllomla Taxpayen Auoclatlon C:-at11w~ Vaterlhary Medical Auoclatlon Chamber of Comme~ee of Orange County Chamlior of c.....,.,.., State of California Mexican-American LObor Council Orange County Madlcal Asooclatlon • ' Orange . County Citizens Mr. Charin R. Able Mr. E. C. Aldrich Mr. Vlclot' Andrews Mr •. Harry ,Babbitt Mr. J11TtM Beam Dr. Arnold O. Beckman Mr. Tom Blackman Mr. Roy C. Bolt Mr. J. R. Lnter Boyle Mr. E., B. Buster Mr. Paul CINry Mr. Keith f , Cordrey Mr. W. F. Croddy Mr ........ Dempat .. ·Mr. L N. ov..,.. Mr. J. S. Fluor Mr. Charin Gilbert Mr. Robert G-halm Mr. RDlllrt I. Htneon Mr. i...,..._,_ Mr. Gavin S. Herbert, Jr. .• Mr. Charles W. HHter Mr. Clyde Hauven Mr. Carl Karcher Mr. Donald P. Kennedy Mr. Walter K~ott Mr. John B. Lawaon Mr. Ralph Leatharby IN. John Lutz Mr. Willl1m R. Mason Mr. Tom -- Mr. Wiiiiam McGorvey Mr. Wolter Mellott Mr. Coaloon Morris Mr. John Murdy, Jr. IN. Hllolhl Nitta Mr. Peter J. Rommel Mr. 0. W. Dick Richard Mr. J11M1 "Randy" Salter Mr. Walter Schm.ld Mr. Donn wmi- Mr. Jameo T. W-n . _,_.,:-:::.--,., ........ .... ... Ll....,,Cli I •.P.0 ... 2'17 .... ._ ' • I ·a d t r a t r n d (j p r r 0 c a r s f • - • • \lrang' Coast EDITION .Teday's Final , N.Y. Steeb ..;: • VOL. 65, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY., CALIFORNIA THURSD.A Y, NOVEMBER 2, 1972 N TEN CENTS County Unit Says No to Hearing on Prop. 20 The chairman of the Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commiss.ion b:.3 brushed oU a call by oPilonents of Propooltioo !II -the cOaslaJ lnittatlve - ft. a special ineeting of bis panel before the election ~ay. "I don't see any need for such a meeting," said Commission ~ Martin Usab. "It seems like these people are looking for a forum before the efec.. N. Vwtnam Gives U.S. Ultimatum From Witt Services North '/ietnam declared today the United States must undertake to sign a Vietnam peace agreement before Hanoi will consent to further discus!ions wtth Henry A. Kissinger. The statement was made in Paris by , Nguyen Thanh Le, spokesman for the North Vietnamese delegation, after the day's peace talks. At the session, the United States told the. Vietnamese Commwtlsts that the few remaining problems to be settled bl!fore a cease-fire accord is reached "sbduld not be Cismis: : as a pretext f9r delay.", The four delegaUons agreeJ to meet again. next Thursday. "Misunderstandings oo serlow; polnta, ll they emt, mlJSI be frankly dealt with," U.S., delegate W~ J~ Porter said at tbe ialks. "~cessive baste In tet- ttlng the final element would J!!opardlse tbe work .that b,. ~ dooi>.,.' 0 0ur wik tberetaie'.11 t6 ~~forward to an equitable 'onch1--lritll fuD respect to the view.,..of all part.k!Jli 1ipn-- cerned -:be w<litclllat .... aln!odJ:i.o.. dClle, to refine and cho.rily wbere necessary, and to dell resolutely, can-- dldly and realistlcally with any dif- ficulties that may still remain." Meanwhile, President Nilon met for 40 minutes today in Washington with his Vietnam peace negotlaJ<>r, Kissinger. Asked afterward where Kissinger was, presidential preM ae:::retary Ronald L. Ziegler said "! don't know where. be is r ight now." llon and I don't tb1nt that Is the aim- missioo's functlon." . 'Ibe Clti:.en's 1 CGmmlttee Against Proposition 20, an offsboot ol a special committee fonned by the Newport Hsrbor Chamber ol Commerte to com- bat the tnltisllve, made the request Wednesday. .-. In a le\ter to Uaab, 1bfO committee. ask-' ed for the--harbor commivion "to bold . full public beaitqp or . ~ whatever . is necessary to fully dlwlge to the pubjlc al! the rellrictive provisions of PropoSi- tion 20." '!be authors of the request, Chamber dlrecton, Dick Steveiis and Dr. Nolan Friaelle·of Newport Bea.:b, said the com- mllsim needed to explon! t b e prop- ositk'll because of jts potential ellecu m beach and harbor matten. ~ corumlajor\ must be completely aware ol provisions that In all likdlhood wfuld curtail development ol additional boating and water-oriented facilities." Frizzelle and Steverui aaJd in their letter to Usab. "'!be committee recommends that the Harbon, Beaches and Parkl Commission fulfill !ta position ol responslbUlly. and make this Issue available !0< Immediate public ocrutioJ'," the letter added. Usab said hi5 collllJlissloo has every in- tention of ltlld)'Jn1 lbe lmpllatioos of tbe coast.lint iniUatlve -lf it ls passed by the voters. "U this initlativ~ is approved, it would most defioltely be eumlned by the hatbor commiuion and means of im· plementation would be c a Te f u 11 y studied_," Usab said. "But we prefer to judgt such thing• after the fact ol lbelr paosqe .rather than before," ~ added. "'l'bat is only proper for a group such 111 ours.'' Proposition 20 is an eflort to antral devek>pment along a five-mile-wide ltrlp of California's coastline. It would establl!b six regional agenclel which would bave veto power over IDY .. d~velopment proposal in the coastal zone. ' Opponenta say tbe proposition -'<I rob local aovemments of needed oaotrols l and would create a vast. costly ne\f layer 1 of government. Versailles Ol('d · DAAY~Un".._ . .., • ....._.,...... BRIEF KIDS AND THEIR MOrliER ~ "HOMECOMING QUEEN ' No H""""""' Ll'9 for·Thls Hunt!""°"' -h. Houaewllo -' Construction to Begin on Bluffs By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. o.lly ......... Acting .Wider the U.-..t of a $12.7 million liwsuit, Newport Beach coun- cllmen Wec!nesd•Y night agreed to let the developer 'of Versailles on the Bluffs build ·SOS more apartments on the re- maining 20.8-acre site in West Newport. Councilmen retained the right to COil-- duct public bearinp on the use permit, _ height and tnvironmental impact of the project near Hoag Memorial Hospital. In tum, the developer, the Donald Scholz Company, agreed to d r op the lawsuit it filed Tue9d.ay. Candidate's . . Home Blasted ~m · ·--~ --;_ ~ 1'ldepeadeat Party •wMllt Lee IL '"''""' ol the Utlt cq, .. 1ono1 ~ .. Mday be .... "ollina ap "'1 • shotgun" Iollowtn1 a Halloweet>tlilhl firecr1cter bombing of his Huntington Beach home. • Rayburn, .48, seid today that his oon'o bedroom window was completely sh.at· ter<d by a 7 p.m. blast. Huntington Beach police confirmed the blast, adding that it appureo. to have been caused by a cherrybomb. "My houae was ,.iected from lnmdredl for poilUcal rellBOllS," Rayburn charged in an interview. The key issue was the density of the project, which the p@nnlng commission recommended be Uiiilted to 18 dweillng unlts per acre. The original 2'00lng ol the property had set the density at 37 units per acre. The settlement pennits about 24 units per acre. It also permits the developer to in· crease the number of bedrooms each unit can have. Versailles' 505 new units can have up to 1.1so · bedrooms -about the same number it bad sought in an earlier offer rejected by planners when the developer Inside Circw Of Candidates If• t.llt -aod -~ Uf ..... *'Nf'!\i''~I. And tllt•:amllllln atallo af PMl- deftt ;l!z4m ml &iaator JlcOonr1i ere *! dlffertnt It tlll cawft+tW ~-. The llaht banter that aboundo at the McGovern camp 11 countered by the more oertouo ltaff In tbe Prtsldent's corner -men like Charles Colson who once laid he "would walk over my grandmolber If neceuary," in order to get Nixon re-elected. Meet the campai«ft stalfo ol both candida\el oo Page sa of the DAl· ~y PILOT. asked for 32 dwelling units per acre. Tbe pubUc hearings on the project are scheduled Nov. 13 at 7:30 p.m. ln city hall. . And if the city makes any changes In conditions after the hearing, t h e doveloper bas the right to caned lbe set· tlement and reinstitute Ult litigation. Councilmen approved the 20-page set- tlement rotlowlng a four-hour special meeting Wednesday that began with a go. minute executive session. The vote wu 5-4. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers was out of town on business. lStt BLUFFS, Page Z) Fraud Trial Prosetution Bid Oppose<! By TOM llAJUEY ................ ..., A bid by ptOleCUlor Stuart Grall! to tn- trvduce evideoce on how dffendanta in the Or11111e Counly SUp.rtor Court ''Taj Mahal" trial allegedly shared ~.000 received from the St . Bernardjne Hospilal brought a spate of objtttk>nl from rour defense lawyers late Wednes- day . • That was shortly before noon and when reporters asked ll Kissinger might be en route to another negotiating session, . -Zi~iUffl. "we'll let you know' when a meeting is ~ place." Today's meeting took place a few hours prior to taping by Nixon of a half-hour broadcast, t .. be aired at 4:30 p.m. PST over NBC television and radio. Mom!'s a Qneen OCC Horrae~oming Beauty Has Kids "I'm oerlouJly worried about the fllture · ia~~Y of. my family,'' be laid. •;J'm afraid l'U ba•e lo put bea-.y ocreeoo and ban on my~." Agency Rejeets Reagan Request On Vote Totals Judi! James Turner ruled. before call· ing a rour41y receu ln the trtaJ that be will make clear Monday just how far 1 Grant can 10 in offering into evidenoe , the records of the Pan American Bri of I Loo Anfleln. a-· pu1 --.it _, I ''''"~" Gonzales on the witnea stand W-, A spokesman said the political broad- cast would "touch on developments in Vietnam." The Wbite Housa declined to d1'cus8 any contacts Kissinger may have had in recent <Jays with Hanoi to arrange a final session to wrap up a Vietnam peace agreement. · Kissinger attended a "national day'' pu-ty at ~be South Vietnamese embassy Wednesday night. Youngsters, Some Armed, Besiege 2 Rock Groups LONDON (AP) -Hundreds of screaming. youngsters besieged the hotel ot two American pop groups today, fighting with police fnr a &funpse ol tbe Jacbon Five and the Osmond 'Brothen. Hotel employes claimed 101De ICl't801- lng teenyboppen carried knl•e1 and threatened doormen barasaed by four days of strenuous puppy love. A pwert>y said he ,.l' a boy of about t brandllblllc 1 lleclgelwnmer. "lie ruobed .YP to the ftl1' entronce ol thb botel, smashed -tbe door bandle, and the fans StUJed_!"t''. he reporied. --..... )'Ollllplorl, ... ducfln& me air! umed with a lol!le. Thoy we'" tUm -to their ......,.._ , 'Ille J-Flyt and Ille Olmond 8IOlhen arrived at Heatbrvo! Afri>«t Sunda1 wltbfn -.. ol e9ch l>tller. Pilot'• Po1itiona On Propo1ition1_ '!be DAILY P!LO!' _, ..,.. nwi.$ l t 1 recommendllfons allll)Ud Olflier on all II ballot ~ wbldt wlU be oo tbe caut.rnla ballol nm~. r.,.. • • ...... , 9' u.. l'ICCllD- meadattnM, .. f'ltlo I -,. I' .......... ·:· .-•. ~. '··----. ···.·· By .RUDI' N!EDZIELsKI 1 ~ .. .,..,,. Pl ... Staff The day 1'ben all bolltecom111g - were ln their teens, umrulrried, -and championed by a campus fraternity ap- pear roreVer over a.t Orange Coast College. Last week OCC students turned out in overwhelming numbers to pick Mickey Brief as their 1972 homecoming queen. That was no surprise to anyone since she Is cliarmlng, pretty and blonde. But the fact that she ta 21, married, the mother of twiris, · and that she was DOl?lfn41'<! by tbe OCC Parenta Club was. "I was completely !UfPl'lsed. l dldn~ anticipate Jt at all. It1 hit me u • real -when thept.!'!'.;"'""" my name. But It "" I l!nd 'of· lboct, .. Mn, Brief, a Hlllltlqton Beach resident, «lllhmed~ - - A boaltb ~)In-,llrfel ii the lint -_..to bt .• --s. . bom<eomtnc -at" occ. 'l)t ,.,..,.., long tradlllon -brobn lat --night When her victory om" lour other flnal lsta WU ll1llOUlle<d cmtnc the 0CC- FiiUerton College game. .All Oranp County ·re!klel!t for '""' years, Mrs. Brief ltlldled.at Cal ,State Long . Beacb unW die · "chopped out to become a mother and a homewife." She dropped back Into educlllion t"" years ago at OCX:: after having her lwtl children, C1meron and Garett. botb three years old. Her husband, Michael, is a !See QUEEN, Pap II Newspaperman Tells Loss of Boat Icebox One Orange County newspaporman may be about to embark on a crusade for more law and 'Order In the land . Newport Beach police said today that Loo Ancelea Tima collllllllllt lllchald Buffwn, of• llflf · Apolena A""'• Balboa ltlud, ~ t!Mft of a flt -Ice'*' t:rlllO lho·deek ol hie-boat. Someone boarded Bub"t<m'• bolt at the Lido Yacht Anchorqe and ripped the unit rl&ht out ol lhe deek. In' &be meantime, he llid, .. I'm oillne 1UP my lbotgun." .Rayburn will be listed on the Nov. 7 ballot u the AIP Cllldldalo In the Utb COngreulonal District. He II being op- pooed by Rlcbml T. Hanna, the In- cumbent DOmocrat, and .John D. Hat· lel<e, a Santa Ana buolnemnan. "George Wallace, John Kennedy, and Roben Kennedy were all lhot by n>m- munlsts." Rayburn asserted. "'Ibere are a lot of people around In elections who do not conduct tbemlelves ruaonably," he said. Rayburn said tbat 1111 hou9e WU OC.. cupied by hi5 w11 .. Donna, and their four chtldr<n at tbe tbne of the blaol. He Nld he w11 himself out campalgolng and only arrlveCI borne after tbe lncklent hid already been reported to pollooo Pollce today liNd the C1M as "still ..... tnv..U,.llon ... -tbml did not ·--hope ol !IDdlnll • our,>lld --Ibo --fuD ol trlck....U.Oten al the llrne ol tbe blaol. Rayburn, who 'alJo ran on tbt AIP ticat In ll?t, Aid be bu .,._ bolero eooountered tbio kind ol riolent op- Polltlon to bio vlewo. Collins Report Studied . . . Planning Staff Says 'mpact Statement 'Lacks Data' "'!be Colllnl EIR 11 a typical eumple ol what boi>l>a• ---' otatementa ... -down without tbe ouPilortlft O'fldeaco, .. be added. tho It.ti .... .., 11 ~ ........i ol1-i.adi.rutlnmapfatfli- b0tenlll -projed • •d N~ Nld llo upocta tllt map wt11 be appi-al fho --•ton ..cllS.11 Illa IIR II ....,_, fte ODlltll ......... woWd cwllt .,.._.._ .... __ .... ,,.. --otatlono ... l'llllal out loll. Aioo fadllC tbe ~l·l<TUlll'1 w\11 be 111 ti& -od 117 lite ~AK -°.:t 4 .. Cooto -lor itll ,. •• fj c ft I I. 00 lbe allo al Balboo' ~ .... -. • '• A--1 ol tbe final map llld -o1 i buUdinl penn11 f.,.. 111a C0111rOVtr11a1 project bu -bold up ...... JJl'O"ll ol Ibo !Ill . --Mid hll ....... ol tbo..i:l; ed'• EIR ,......... llftr'll ll'MI ..... lackl!w ._..... -bat he Nld -.... lltlnr warted .. by Ibo developer. • .,,..,.. 11111 be .. cnl '-' .. tbfl ooo U be .... Ibo data bul I don, - whet Illa --wtD. wlll tt,• ... ookl. 1'a Pia -proJtt1 "' .1.., l•dna ...... 1<!1'11 wlllch II achedllled IO ......... TuoodaJ'. OftlJ -IMjor !IR boo ·-a ......,_ llill " booMla -Ille ..... IS.. PIANNIU, .... ll ' • WASHINGTON (AP! -The Federal CommunicaUons Commisskm uld today it is barred by ltw from requiring the radio and television networb to 1top br1>11dcasting national election projection• until the polls in tbe Wat clo9e. Gov. Ronald Reqan ot California uk- ed lbe FCC Wedneodoy to .. _ Ito good olllces" to hold up oo IUCb pro)lctlon.< w..t ol the lloontaln Time 7.oi1e. (S.. eatUtr story, P11e $). Roagan '1 letter to FCC Oialnnan Doon Burch and offlda1I of tht lour Dttwarks said that ~ pndidlaai wlllle polls '"' llllU open "'-'ftdoubtedly -. wbere polls 1¥1" ftOt "'·dooo<!·-to Influence many potenU1I vocm tn thet· dectl1on to vote 'or not to vote, mudt Db the weather ... The FCC dll<lllllld e_.•, request al ita -kiy .-Jnc Wedi.eoday. A telegram to llopn today olped by commlslion aecrewy Btn F. Waplo "by lhe -ol tbe contml•lon" 11111 the commlulon "II prolltblted by Section :m ol the c:omm..-Ad ol tru. 11 •mrnded, from aerct111C my OSlllOrlhlp ove:r rldJo communk::ldom." Oops, We Named Wrong Quigley '!be otor'f wllidl ran In,.._,., Dolly • PGol -.Jq !..-Ion al "" 0... Cully ........,.. •••• wt11ta1 ~ "" ......u, ldeotllled • --at tho .-.... lnlDt Ooaocllman llflWJ Q ... .., - in-& at the tDIOIInc 11111 -- """'""'ta ·-:lla ........ " 1111 ..... r 'l«'d ..,....,. .... wtdli I h e UffMtzailoo•o 1bllJc1 IO_...._ • 1111. ...,, ..... ,.., ~ ... -.. Ray Qolllef, ............ 1..-~ -,,. Diiiy PGol ...,.Uthe ....... day to back 1111 claim tbat the -•• • recon1o will mJect 1be dMa!on o1 a ~.GIO loan he clalma WU -1 obtained !tom the S.n -i hoopital. , Judge Turner repeatedly ruled alter a I nurry o1 olljecllofto tbat he wt11 111r1c11y : limit lbe area ol quesdoaltc Oil the bank's bool<k«plnR to lllOUlld !""'*'1 ol 19841 -the ilme tbat tbe hospltal looned Onancitt J<>1tph Oulaney't Laguna Rifts enterprl.e $500,000 in rtterVe fundl. Oonzalrs testlOed at one potnt thll defendant Daniel lt1yes bomnrfd at.talt from hll bank j11Jt IWO di}'I befOrt the hospital 1pproved the loan. It wu leltlrted th.al HtYtS I.old I Gooules that Ibo loan WU to be -to I obtain lhe collawat allegedly ....i by . ihe DulaftOy gniup In oblalnlnl Ille I ISG0.000 lrom tho Roman Cltltofte .... wbo controlled SI. -·· flDaftclof I affaira. Eut Com lilucler F"rod Rio:Y ..utr I ,.,uf1ed U>a1 he wu o11-•.• 11y , c1e1enc1an1 J•.,.. Slllploy. to -bla I tontrolllnl In-In the --llomn .,..,,.,.tlon lont """"' for , Shipley to sot the hooottal -. j !See DULANtv, Pap Ii 0r • .,. c.an I No< much chlnp In ....,,,.-. Olpeded .... Ibo Or-. Cooot. with htpt II tbe -al .. •illnl to n lnland. Vllrlllllo .-. Ines• tbnlolP Satoftl1. ~lllltB 1'09-'Y Do (14k""1H - -to bolld •P t.llol cwp ritt7 A 8 r f t I t " MO\iiUfNC U, U.. °"" ...,,_ 011 rid of ,..,. bn1 oiod l4k1 o IOllO l<'Olk, Sn 11..., Oii Pogo U . ._..._ == ... " I -• -. --.. --. ............. ..... ... . <-,,...., .,. , ... ....... _ • .. ' ::: ....... a . ·-OL 0. ,i!MMt ....... ... , , I • .. .._ " ,• • ·J;.": .. ~,':' I =-...: --. I J Inside Out 1\ dredge and suction device is helping the Irvine Company scour out man-made Promontory Bay in Ne,vport Beach, depositing sand and silt on the other side of the bulkhead as fill. Company spokes· men said the operation will take two to three months and no damage to the ecology is expected. From Pagel DULANEY ... Grant claims the Az.a.1ea stock is worthless. He points oot that the loan re- mains unpaid today and that it was im- Jl"SSible to sell the collateral on the open market. Riley, 45, and hospital controller Robert P.tacban. 50, were two of seven persons Indicted by the Grand Jury on charges of fraud, grand theft and con- spiracy. Both men were cleared of all charges after they testified as witnesses for the prosecution. That action Jeav's Dulaney, 38, of 2631 Via Cascadita. San Clemente, Shipley, 38, or 16951 Lowtl.I Circle and Daniel Hayes, 40, of SZI 1 Snowbird Drive, both of Hun- tington Beach and Riverside broker Wen- dell Warren Austin, 38, as ddeodants In U10 first plwe of U10 trial. - Mrs. Marlene Dulaney, 3%, will join her husband and Shipley as defendants in the se<:ond plwe of U10 trial. That fmal phaae will be coofmed to allegations that the trio de!rauded a number of Investors in the World Finan- cial Trends enterprise operated from tire Laguna HUis "Taj Mahal" building and a Seal Beach office suite. Court Upholds Rule Requiri.ng 1 Clean Air Law WASHINGTON (AP), -A federal ap- peal~ court. today upheld a ruling re- quiring federal regulation to ~revent the deterioration of high-quality all'. Without further explanation, the cou rt affirmed the decision of D!Jtrld Judge John H. Pratt, who ruled May 30 that the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency must require a "non-degradation" p~ vision ln state air qualltyplans. Pratt's deciaion was a major victory for envlrorunentall!ts headed by the Sier- ra Club who sued EPA administrator William D. Ruckel1haus. There was no Immediate word from EPA whether it would seek JJ. S. Supreme Court review of the issue. Justice Department lawyers represen- ting EPA argued that the non-degrad~­ tion requirement would bring economic diluter by making impossible many kinds of development in areas with air that is still clean . OIAN•I COAST N DAILY PILOT ,,.. ~ CMtt ~~y P'll.01', ..... tlMdrl .................... ,..., .......... .., ... Or-.. dMI ............ ami-T . ..,.. ,.... ---......... ,...,,. . .......,... PrNlf, fw Olel• MtM. ,,.__. l..at, ....,........ ""°''"-'•'" "''"""· ~ 9tlld\ ll'\'Mt/hddlt•c111 ..,. .l•n C""-'tl .... JllM CfPi.t•tne A Mlfl1 ntlOMI ... n .. h pilbll1.llM Sllunl1~ aN ..-.YI- Thi' prW: .. I publll.~11111 ,i.nt It 11 »O Wttl ttr .llr"'' Cot•• Mna. C.lllornl1, m1'. lolte,t N. w,,~ "'""~ •lid P'WlltMr J •• ~ •. c.rley Vlcle l'Ntldelll W 0--11 M......., Tllo"'•• 1(....,11 ·-1\em,, A. Mwphl•• .,...... .,_ L P•kt ICtl .. ....,., 9.-dl ClfY ~ ........... 0..... IJll Hw,_., a..W.er4 ...... ""4NUI P.0 .1 •• 1111, tz'41 --c.. ... ! -w..i ..., .,, ... =...0.1ttJ"-tA.,.._ ~ lffdl1 '"'' hid! .......,.,... IM I * Net1ll I I Cell'llMI "-' Tel ....... C11fJ UJ"4JJ1 CIM ..... .W.•1' ... '41 .... 11 cu;......., ttn. 0r-. c.e.1 ,.. 1nvssc ~. ... ..... ...... lll111!ftl""" ........ ~ .......... ....., ....... .... _, .. ....... 4. """""' ..... ,.. ........ ~-· ----·--~ I £Vli4• 1¥ (M'tlW 4)fi .......,, " ........ ,. """"'*' ~ I • Ike ... _,,,. Library Declares· Book 'Amnesty' For Borrowers There'll be an amnesty for overdue book borrowers in Newport Beach next week. All books overdue at the Newport Beach library, or any of the Orange County public libraries -regardless for how long -may be returned Wednesday without a fine, according to Librarian Dorothea Sheely. "Any books that have been misplaced that belong to any library in the coW\ty can be returned at the most convenient library with no questions asked as to whether they are several days or years overdue," Mrs. Sheely said. She's even making it easy to save face for those who've really done wrong. "The book returns at the three Newport Beach libraries wiJI remain unlocked to save patrons any embarrassment," Mrs. Sheely said Sile said U10 objective of the "fine.free day" iS to give Orange Countlans "a fresh start, and to have the lost books once more av11;ilable, because returned boob .tncrease lbe dollar value to the ci- ty collection." From Pagel BLUFFS •.. Councilman Paul Ryckoff was a block away at a champagne party be was giv- izig for the opening of his new travel agency. The action came even though several residents and city officials pleaded with the council to delay a decision until after the Nov, 13 public bearing. PlaMing Commissioner J o s e p h Rosener said no decision should be made pending the completion of the series of neighborhood meetings now being con- ducted specillcally to determine resi· dents' feelings about density. "It wou1d be logical to delay until we can follow through on ·the program we set out for ourselves,'' be saki. "There'! no hurry," he said. "On Nov. 13 It would be just as early lo lake action as tonlghl" Rosene.r's wife, Judy, suggested during Wednesay's meeting that the developer wanted U10 action takeo lmmedfaf<ly ID it could be recorded prior lo tho elec:ti~ in the 'event Proposition 20, the coastal initiative, pas,,es. "If Proposition 20 passes, we are fn a whole new ballgame,"'"she lakl. •'Tlfat'a why we'n! having a special meeting tonight. Let's face lt. ...1 "If this ts a good deal, It will be a good deal next week," she said. FromPagel ' QUEEN •.• City Att.Qmey Dennis O'Neil, in recom-~ mending the settlement offer to coun-- cilmen, had called the offer a good deal. D'Ulfbling and sates executive. Marty Pate, associate dean of student affairs at OCC believea one of the reasons Mrs. Brief was chosen queen ts because the average student age at th e eosta:JtCtu~__:.:;:is ts bJgher thaft lttut~··­ ed to be. ··Our average age Ls 21. Very few of our students are very young. And at Coast, people aren't categorized like they are on other campuses," she explained. When Orange Coast College opened 25 years ago, most of the students were war veterans and in their early 20's. During the SO's the average age dropped , but It climbed again as veterall!I from the Viet- nam War began enrolling at OCC. Although there are no rules at OCC barring married women from homecom- ing queen candidacy, Mrs. Brief was the fir!t to try it, campus ornclals said. From Pagel Thomas Peclcenpaugh, attorney for the developer and the landownen, James C<.goey and hil brother, William Cagoey, ooncedad "Propooltion :w is a part of U10 consideration, but not even the major consideration .. " . '! peaed by U10 voters Tuesday, Proposition 20 would require all develop- ments within 1,000 yanls of the coastline to obtain permits from a state-appointed regional commission. By agreeiDg to the settlement before th.: election, the developer and the city api,arently have now placed the ultimate deci1ioo in the bands of the courts, rather than a state agency, should there be differences after U10 Nov. 13 hearing and should Proposition :W pass. Lester Reynolds, president of the West Newport Beach Improvement Associa- tion, also aiked councilmen to delay any action. He pointed out that residents were given short notice of the special meeting, but were planning to tum out in force for the Nov. 13 bearing. PLANNERS , He contended U10 co1mcil had no • • busineu cooaldertng the agreement . before It bad received and reviewed the nmr staff -the 118-home addition ~project'1 environmental impact report Harbor View Homes by the Donald 3ren Em). Oxnpany. "It seema to me If we can consider • N•uhalll<D said U10 Bren E!R Is very · din& permit befott u,. environmental co.~ete 8lld hU few wealr: points. lmpoct report, we h .. e our pnioeduttll We have asked thlt aome minor arus out of aequenoe n Reynolds uld be !Uled In but !!"'Y should have that He &aid the aP..,...,t w• tai.tamoont done euily today, Neuhausen uid. to approvtna: tbe project Without any Other action before commlulonert: public bomnp -A request for adoption of 1 ma.st'r CoundJmea ~I Kymla and John store plan of bicycle t:raU1 Into the clty'1 agreed and aald liter they would not ap. generil plan . prove the aettlement without the stlpula· -A rtquest for a delay by the Don Koll tiOll that the council woulCt conduct publl(: Company on it! proposal to create a hearings on lhe height of the building and shopping complex and parking garage in on Its use permit ~he-~do Shops arta. Pec:kenpaqb, after one of several con- 11ultatlon1 with Chet Stare, 1t:rdor vice Students Plan Car Wash, Sales Sltth irldon from Woodland School wlll wash can ind 11ell plant.I. clothes, toya aid other -11le Items IJom I 1.m. to 2 p.m. Slturdly In thetr 1ebool ~ lot to n Jse money for a ooe-day trip to Sacramento ne1t 1prl.na. Studenta hive raised nearly AOO by recy.cUng aluminum canJ, Milin& T-ahlrt• and Ice cream ind 1ponlCM'tna a echool carni va l. But they need •t.!Oo bafore they can Dy lo the capitol l1ld ,.. 1late government In action. 'l'lckela llffCI not be obtalnod In ad· vi.rite, and the ttudenll have promiled to wuh can the followlna Saturday if there art more cw:tomen than they e1n han- dle on Nov. t. 'Ibo IChool ts located al 2025 Gmlon IAne, llOUth of 21st Street, Costa Mtu. I ' pre1ldent for ~SCholz, reluctantly agreed tt. •llowlzll the heartngs on the use permit l1ld the hl!lght lo be ploced on the Nov. IS apodl, alq with the bearing on tho EIR. ScllOll WUll the hulldlnp In Phase 11 to be thrte tlor.lol, w1llch woold be about 3'7 folt -,,,. ~ject lo In the city'• --· llaillll llmll -. "' that -· ltl1 _.,,. --:a lett In helglil "1ld aarmalt)o be subject lo • bearlnfl. ~ bad -led U10 belahl llnnlf ..,...i lo without the beartnc. Pancake Brealdaat Set . '""' Conlna de! Mar ltiwanll Club wtll ._ lit IJlftual po!IClile br11kfut Saturday from 11o 11 1.m. In the partlna lot of the Ollll Pep~ IWl.turant, 12Cil E. Coat lllgbway. 1'lcbll .,. fi eacll and procoeds 10 lo tho vartciua Klwlnll youth aetMU.. ...,. grams. I . . ' • Losses Seen With '14.; ~=~~fl:~~~!~~·=~~ $~:1:~ ~~~:~n~ay Tu: Jnltlatlve will lnean lhe loss of f1 size from 28 studenta up to 35 or 40 acboo1 year and the ellmmat1on of sum- ' . "would necessitate closing some schools, mer school. million to $12 mllllon from the $34. m~ion dlmnisslng m;i.ny, many, many teachen, "tq short," abe aald, "the , problems budget of the Newport-Mesa Unified r d wiping out at one stroke most of the faclnl the comm1,111Uy, board and stalf School Dl,strlct, according to school board programs the district bas been working will Include deciding which parts of a President Marian Bergeson. on for yea rs in an effort to JndJviduallze quality program to eliminate, which to, Mn Bergeson said the Joss which instruction and meet the needs of each of reduce and '9hlcb to maintain. The end · · ' the district's children." resuJt can only be a minimum, below~ would go into effect July 1, Im, would 'I1le plan ttl decrease the &IDCMUll of avenge educaUoo.al offering, far dil: be broUght about by U10 l82S per pupil time students spend In school would prob-leiont from 11111 charactetjstlc of the llmlt built into the tn&tiatlve. . ably result in a school year that Is 35 Newpert-Mesa School Dbtrlct." '!bat figure is !280 per pupil less than the district currently spencb, she ex- plained. "The variation In figures results from different interpretations by local staff. state audit orficials and Alan ~t. the Legi.slature 's analyst The mioimum im- pact is U10 fl mllliOll figure, U10 max· imum impact ls the $12 atlllion figure," Mrs. Bergeson explained. The school trustee outlined some of the considerations· the ~ve&member board will be faced with lr'Wtbe proposition passes. "That facing will be immediate. since the provisions of the Watson Inii.iative call for the school finance sections to become effective July 1, 1973. There is no phasing ;'1 as there is in other portions of the proposed amendment," M r s • Bergeson added . She listed five programs currently budgeted that are not specifically in- cluded in the Watson measure and if completely eliminated, would total $4 million. 'They are: - -Programs for stud~nts. with speclal learning problems. This includes pro- grams for mentally gifted minors, classes for educationally handicapped and transportation for the physically handicapped. -Health care programs. -Student tranapnrlalion. -After school recreation programs. These programs are nm in cooperation with the cities of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. -Reserves for emergencies. The district currently maintains a reserve which totals five percent of its operatiom budge!. She stressed that elimination of these programs would save the district only $4 r.;nuon and "the board would have to reassess its priorities for the so-called regular program in such a way as to reflect savings of somewber'e from $3 million to $8 million." That addltlnnal savings coold come about through a reduction In salaries lo staff, a·reduction In staff and an increase in the number of pupils per teacher, a reduction in the amount of t!me students are in school, or a combination of the three. .._ Mrs. Bergeson noted that speculation as to which alternative the board would choo&e is "fruiUess," but she did have some ·commentl about tbq ~JB&ini. tbe board. < ' 1 ·'I · •1 NeBity 85 percent of t h-e district's budget goes for salaries for the 2,000 employes. She said a 10 to 40 percent reduction would be necessary to get the savings needed. But sbe said lhe board would probably not consider such an alternative UI\til "such time when it becomes obvious that there would be a 10 to 40 percent decrease in the cost of living; a 10 to 40 percent decrease in the sale price of homes; a 10 to 40 percent decrease in professional fees and other charga; a 10 to 40 percent decrease in re.al estate commissions ; a 1 O to 40 percent decrease in the myri ad areas of living expenses." The possibility of decreasing the Family Bicycle Day Set To Dedicate Trill System ' Cyclympica '72, a famil y bicycle day lo be held SUnday at the Park Newport Apertments, will mark the dedication of the first completed 10-mile segment or Newport Beach's bicycle trail system. The event, sponsored by the Citizens Advisory Bicycle Trails Committee, wlll include bike racing, safety glasses, blke licensing, di.splays, c4-awings and ceremonies. Harbor Area Girt Scouts, who-were in- strumental in winning city support for the bicycle trails, will be given a special award during Cle dedication ceremony at noon. Judge Calvin Schmidt, president of the Orange County Girl Scouts, will be given a dedication Plaque by actress Sandy Duncan and U10 first JJan..of U10 proposed 50-mile system of bike lliids and trails in U10 city will be opened. "!'he dedication ceremony will be held at the intersection of Jamboree Road and Easthlulf Drive but all (be other cydlng events will be held on the ground! of Park Newport, 900 San Joaquin Hills Road .. Racing events, open to all varieties of bikes, will begin at 1 p.m. All auto traffic and parking will be pro- hibited in the apartment complex during the event and 1nsurance coverage is being paid le< hy the cily, accordtng lo Arnie Parker, Cba.lrm.an of the bike trails committee. Parter said those who don't come on bicycles will be able lo park al Faahkln Island Sboppiog C e o t e r and rjde a doobie-decl< shuttle bus baclt ailif forth lo the cycllng eftllls. The day's events will loclude a gymkhana, sprint racing, grand prix and bill climbing. "Non-racing events, such as a blke- rlding treasure hunt, drawing for a 111- speed bike and various bicycle displays will abo be held. J Parker said there will be special con- ~18 for oldest bike, best decorated bike and most unusual tricycle. Entry fee.a for the event are $1 for adults and so cents for children ullder 18. Anyone under 12 must be accompanied by a parent. Couple Dead in Bed OAKLAND (AP ) -A man and a woman were found stabbed to death Wednesday in a rear bedroom of an East Oakland home, . poltce--said. Oakland police identified the victims as David Vieira, 26, and Christine Hunter, 21, a friend of Vierla'a .wife All' proceeds will go lowml U10 ctty's continuing bicycle safety program. In additkw to all the other events or the day, Parker said the Newport Beach police will be on hand to issue trike licenses at a fl.SO fee. The section of the hike trarl system which will be opened Sunday runs down· Jamboree Road from EaBtbluff' Drive to Pacific Coast Highway and around the. east side ofJJpper Newport Bay. Mock Elections Aid to J;>arents? Who will be the next President of the United states? While voters all across the nation woni be answering that question until Nov. 71 high achoo! sll,ldenls In U10 Harbor Area think they wDI know by Friday. A series of mock presidential elections is being held this week at all five loc"1 bigb school campuses, with the exception of Costa Mesa High School. Both Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar blgb sctiools have scheduled their elections for Friday, and the Estancia and McNally high scliools on Thursday. Efforts are being made to di.stribute ballots tO all students and to have the electlon results a day later. Steve Barry, ASB president at Estan- cia High School, said a good student turnout In U10 dectlon might Inspire more adults to cast their ballots Nov. 7.- "We are trying to make this election as realistic as possible to encoorage students to become· involved in national poJiUca," said BarrY. Students at Estati- cia Will regl>ter '!or the party of U1017 choice and cast secret ballots in voting booths. ti • Airport Commission Eyes Condominium . Orange County Airport Land Use com- misslooers will discuSs a 143-unit con-- domlnlum project propOsed at El Tori> Road and Second Street tonight at 7:30 at 400 Civic Center Drive West. The tentative tract map for the project was referred to the commission by the county planning Jepartment because it ia near the El Toro Marine Corps Alr Base. Commissioners will meet in the planning commissioh ·hearing room. fall clearance SALE! I 00' 1 of Values! ordt r now for earl11 chriltmai dtlivt1'11 Plus 1•ction•I 9•7V1 ln luJ1· uriou1 h•••Y imported vel- v1t •••ileble in m • n y choices of c o Io r 1 end f•brlcs. ' ' Sale $595. Oronge County's Lorgost Selection of Contomporory Furniture open Sunday 12-5 entire inventory reduced! ,(,•• ', ~ ... 11-9/••+urd•y 11-6/sund•y 1-5 • ph 64;1-5518 •toll frit 546 :1262 • • 7 EO_ITION . - ' . VOL 65, NO •. 307., 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES " TEN CENTS ORANGE COUNTY, CALll'<:)RNIA THURSDAY, NOVIMIER 2, tm c .!ti@_,. ffrate Jina Finl Walhs Plan/$ • , .. • I - ' • BJ A'lmn1ll R. VINRL , .............. ~· bJ Har!>Or Boulevanl wtth a Clliliiry-ofd swonl in bud, wa.ti>g at c:us>puaiag IJke ablps in the DICht. be ~ lbe pool of IAl(..!obn Sliver, Iii~ a captive ship to strike ·her col· .... . ~ -~ ,tmfamillar with lbe JollJ, Jloler pirate atandinl a l!nel1 w~ .., ,~ ,N"igbt might have ~t bip> just another nut br COllllme. llil ~· were real -including his ' ., . mmliet -but be 'hid on!y lbe ,lolllpapo and'11aPPf Face plno U. trodltiolWly gave -way in lbe boot)' bac llq over ,bis shoulder. . And be had a knnp, in bis throat beneath the ruffled silk scar! at bis neck. · llarlPI the pul lour IDClltlls, Jim FIU, 31, bU mel lboo-ol --.., bis ._... --ting the ~----Cu~ in lbe pomotlooal budget forced him ·lo ~Y walk lbe cor-- ponite plank, 1io..ever, and on Boilowaen , . . .. ·DifCY"·,.a•~ir'PiWiiirft.1 a• BRIEP KIDS AND 'THEIR M!)THE~ THE; ~Ci~(~ .qUEEN . ,No HUfl!drvm-Li~ for This Huntingt..;'~ HOUoowlh J~C. llornecoming·Beauty.,~ KUh "l !, . . . . . ' ' • . . . • ByiRVDI NIEllZIELSKI 'COslli ~.,..,Js,bJgber-tllan il·us- ,. o; · I Of .. D1Ur Pijll Iliff . ed to be. · . 'Phi. day .~ all homecoming queens "Our average age is 2:f. Very few of '5 Years in Vietnam Warped My Mind' !Night the burly brigand of the bounding maln wa.s really waviOg farewell "Aye, matey, 'twas really tough to be cheerful for ,awhile today," growled the good-natured pirate who on !Ome bwly days band«! out l,000 of t~ Happy F.ace pins wilh the black eyepatch. He pinned them on ·the bodices of young maids and old : dropped them into · yoongsten' outatretcbed bands IJke gold doubloons, •ix\ pasaed out Jolll-llko pieces of eight. Jim Fink, a ea.ta Mesan .cum!lltly moving to 7311 Seashore Drive, Newport Beach, cl~ "be got far ipore out of it hrwever than be ever gave. AJld herein lies bis Stor)'. Followh>& eight yean in the Army - five of them as a penonnel sergeant always cJooe to the figllling in Vie!Mm -Fink left the service a year ago , a tired, cbance<I· man. He was wal.kfnc: lnto a Newport Beach (S.0 PIRATE, Pqe ll • ·Bikers Came West . ' Wanted Cycle Gang, Found Death FRENCH CAMP (AP ) -"Big Tom" Shull and Charley Baker were motorcy- cle partners. In C1wiey's 1957 pickup truck. they drove west from Georgia last fall and found a slippery foothold on the ladder or California motorcycle cliques and gangs. Charley was content to take fast Mesan Happ)· In Air, Wins Patrol . Award weekend bite rides c.cross Northern California's mountaiN. But "Big Tom" wanted to wear the red and wblto•emblem of the nof«ioos'Hell'• Angels motorcycle club. The decaying bodies of both were found buried Monday on a farm the state at- torney general's office said wu rumored Gun Blows Off Boy's Finger DAIL'( PILOT IMft ....... WALKS THE PLANK Ex-pirate Fink Fireworks Hit American Party Hopeful's HoJM Am«ican IJ>drpendent Party candidate Loe R. Rayburn of the 14th Consrea1'"'ai Diatrlc! aaJd _, be "" "oiling up my lhotcwl " followh!c a Haliowe<!H11abC ruocracker bomblnc of bla Hililllnftoo Beach home. Rayburn. 43, said today'that hll IOll'a 1 bedroom window was compiet.ely aha'-· tered by a 7 p.m. blul. I Huntington Beach police oonllrmed tliO ' blast, adding that it ll)pePfm. to haft been caused by a cherrybomb. : , "My bowe was aelected r...m oonclr ... for politlcal reuons," Rayburn cbarpG in an interview. : "I'm seriously worried about the lllhirf aaiety of my family,·• ht Aki. "frn lfralcl I'll have to put liiavy "'""" d ban on my windows.•• In the meantime, be aald. "I'm olllni up my ahotcun." Rayburn will be lilted .. the Nov. 7 boiJot u the AIP candldail in Iba ~ QqralJooaJ Dbtrld. He ii boil.i • poli<I by Rli:hard T. Hanna, Ille JD- cumbent Demoaat. and "'*' D. Jlot. ...... a Santa Ana bulineumlll. "Geori• Wallo«. Jolin K<mody, ud were in their -·t~ns., unmaJTled, ana ..,.. our students are very young. ~ at . . ·CoaJ!, people aren' cat<gorbled like they championed by a campus fratem1ty ap-are on other campuses," she explained. Propasition l 4 Passage Menw Loss-Bergeson • fiobert Kennedy wen all lbot bJ Com: munilta, ·• ~ybum 1111!11ed. • pear forever over at Orange c.oast Wberi Oraftge Coast College opened 25 College. )'ears ago, most of the students were war Last wee..k. OCC students tu~ out in veterans and in tbelr early 20's. During ove~g numbers to .Pick Mickey the 50's the average age dropped, but It Brief aa their l!rl2 homecoming queen_. climbed again as veteran! from the Viet- That wu no surprise to anyone s1~· nam ·war began enrolling at OCC. $e !s charming, pretty and blonde. Although there ·an! no rules ·at ·OC"C But the fact that she b 2&, marrled, the barring married women from homecom- mother of . twip!, and that she was iog queen candidacy, Mn. Brief was the nomtnal<d by the OCC P.1rents Club·was. flnt to try it, camp<is oflldala laid. "I wu cmJpletely surprised. I dida' entjCipote Ii at 'all. It bit me 11 a real' . , , . obock wllen they 8llllOUl1<0d my _,._ • S " ';'f. ... ' Pl But " .... ·a p1oaaant fut o1 Ilia." tooellt8 an Mn.· Briel,·• Huntington Jleaduelldenl, _ • · ~ _ "".:'::; edU<atJoo ~1. Mn. Briet Car Wash, Sales b 1111 l!nt t1ll1'Tled ........ to.be nomed ' • • . homecnmlnf queen at OCC. The 15-yur- Jong tndltJon was broken laal -1 night when her victory over lour other finalists waa annowiced durtna the occ- FuDerton Colitle game. 3 Charged Witl1 Procuring Mates SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Three San Francisc:o residents were accused of fl. legaJly arranging loveless marriages for emlgrantl who wanted to remain ln the United stales. A federal grand jury lndimd them Wednetday on charges of taking money in three instancet in whlch U. S. citizens were "procured" to marry immlgrants ln Nevada. 'lbe government saJd the brides and iir-s did not live together and did not consummate the marriages. · Cleanup Continues KA YENTA, AriL (AP) -W ....... are e>ealatlng their elfor1a to clean up an oil spm on the r.onli end LI Lake Poftll now that the .... tber baa impoved. HJah windl and two lncbea ol mow hlnden!d optratlonl Tuelday, altboucb an Amr/ Chlnoolt heilcopter flew In more equip- ment , Including a ~-dump truck. An Oma• County midint for !oar years, Mn. Briel ,\~ II Cal Sllte !""4 Bach lllltil abe "dropped out to beaimoaP>Otherand1houseWlfe." . Shih graden from Woodlancl Scbciol will waab can and aell plantl, clothes, toys and ot1let prqe aale iterm from I a.m. to I p.m. Saturday In their ocbool pukhlg lot to raile money for 1 one-day i:tp ttlllcramenln .... 1prlng. llt1odentl hove railed ii<arly l300 by nc:Jdlnt Uuiilnum cano, ..i11n1 T-shirt• and ico ........ and apOl1IOrin( a achool nmival. )!ut they need ft,500 before they CID fly to1he capitol and ... lllte pel IDoeot tn 1ction. Monster Photos . llbo dropped -into -two '!CO al OCC alter 6avlnl her two ~ ... ad Oarttt, liolll lbrto aid. lier liuobantl, Michoel, b a Acaderny Films Loch Ness Creature llllllDotll( ad .... -_liClllY ~. -..... ., _ -" occ -·· -of Ille n1 ••llln.Ww--11 --Ille ...... -... " 1111 'llcbla" need not be ol"4iDed in ad- vance, and the lludent1 hove pnoniaed IO -.... the followint Saturday ~ there ~·more ..-..rt than they eaa bm- dle m lloY. 4. Tbll -.I b Jocotod at -Gontea Lane, ..... ol 1111 -· OlalO -- BOSTON (APl -N&ie. the much pbotosraphed and llili unexplained Lo<h Nnl Monster. bas bad her picture tau. apin -and wHl> the UIUal lnoonclullve lft!llll. Pilot'1 Po1itio111 =, :A=·s.t:.."'"l:.:::Z Bail Counterfeit diJCi-t a -o1color11111 black· On ProjJmitioru ,..... ...--11e ""1i..., a por1 RIDllOOD CIT\' (AP) --ol a lil'ta -cnotuA inblbltlnf -'!Ill DAIL'\' PltOI' ..,.-___ o;---t--'4 M ' Ill-Iii' i Lml lloaC._,,, !.«ii . -Ill -•inw~~ lllwil-om1 a>-bollada-Ri1No11111•-!ltospedltloolooll _.._. ...U. ., aD II llalll-1111 If 1"1 -a -tM 11111. • 1111 ...... -• r,et ...... ter -tbis __,_ "-· ftt .. lll W"fi'I of .. palled MIW ... thil Ille· pi<Mft In Pl'4IOlldolll wlildt wt11 11e '"' ea x Csr ., --.. 11r a • z. ...... u1111d ., -anti --. tallbda lllllO! • ,.....,, ,.. =··~Lia ' Jallad Ii ... tlflc -• ••• 7 ti 111t _ ~ , ~ • _, • tr. Tiii wat •01 •..,el tdenUIU IDll llW-17 # ?; .. Pliltt ...,. ~-... ~ . .. Pftmont • ..W """"9: •1•z1&f -.. ~ K ..... .. .-Shtrtlr1 ~ & £1vandtt. and ltthiWoo.'tw llllk• Ill IWinp et ' • • ; • • - the annual Northtut E I t c I r o n I c 1 -dl-~--ru-dllpla,..i a -ol pllotol whicb .. • IJwrlNCHID trilnplar ol> joct, -... 1111. ....... 1111..P nwrty •tta". / He llid lntiermU•••I Nbm1del who have -I b e pldum ~ their 1ut1M!fttkk7, ntn ~ no one wm ho;mnl lo -Illa _, ol the crtilun... :JLwe .. rtcM. and the apm. ..-, .,. ere." ...._ llld, ''Uim there u. n · ........, .... -UYlllf In Ledl -·· 'Illa -wa .. ol Iba ..,.; ~ up two Cftiltwa lllilMIC din • • dMwat:..,"""' tonrd Ow ....,... .... ......... lllemlollelllo "'-'• , Passage of Propoottlon H, the Wal!0!1 Tu lnlUaUve, will moon the Joa ol 17 million to fl1 million '""" the $14 milllon budfet of the New,,..,._ Unified School Dlllr1i:t, _,,, dOif to -boon! Pttddent Kutaa ..... Mn. Ber111an lald tba klll, which .,..,id ., Into effect .htly 1, am. would be lin>ollil about 111 the flZ5 per pupil llmlt bu1lt Into the lniUaUve. ,,,.1 nsun ii QIO per pupil i... than Ille diltrlc:t curnotly spends, abe <1· plained. '"Mie vartalloa in n,.... r<IUlll !Tom dllfmnt lnlerpretatlooJ by local 11arr. ..... audit ollldall llid Alan Poll, the t.eglllablre'I MAbll. Tho minimum Im· paet II the rt milltan filln, the mu- lm11111 impact II U. flt mWion n,un." w .... ...._..,._. 1111 adloal .._ •llld .... or the t'Olllkterlilan die .......... board will lie r.-wlll II tho propooltioo -'"11111 f .......... I lllata, 11- tba """"''• ol .. ·-ln!JllJ .. call lot tho adlool --10 .._,,. elltctlft .lull' I, mt. ,,,,,. Is no ......... , ........ In odltr f!"'1imll ol U. "11ad ......-... Mr r-. .._..wad. - llil -"'* ......,.. rummry iludlJlod thtl .. DOI ~1 ln-dliifitl-111 ...-w.._ m111 zt ind 1r oc ,,. ........ lllJ'IJ o t1mt 'rd, Raid toUI 14 mm.-,_-.. ! ..,,... ....... -with "*1•1 it• .... «*••i ..... -.,.... ..--~L~ -· --~ (lot .... ,, • .• "There are a lot of people llJ<IUllll Iii e.ltctiom who do not conduct t.hem.Mltei rratonabl)'," he said, • Rayburn aaJd that hll -.. a6 rupled by hi• wife. Donna. and their lout chlldren at the time ol the blut. lie aald ht wu blm1e.U out c1mp1lpin1 met on1J arrived home alter the I-..._ already boen nported to pollco. • Poilce today_ illled U., cua u "llllA under invtttl(.allon." Hoftver · thara did not a_. tntd hope of flDdinc a Mpecl -.. -..... full ol ltldl....--" the -ol the blul. Rayburn, •ho Ibo .., on 1111 MP ' ticket In 11'70, aald ht bu nt .... - """"nter'fd th!• kind ol -oi> j>Olltloo IO h~ viewl. ....__ " == ...: -. =. . =.r.:. ~ ... I' ..... C::.1 .... = --" -· li~-E:---:a:L-., . • , c Thundaf1 lt1J1 't J, 19n ,, BO • • lo LUo Tolloe In thl!~a Novada. , "We'4 p ~ lhe white line aomellmet PflllQI ttn two cars on lhe comen lo tee was futest," said one , .. _ _., ~ fr ien d . "S... llN'"9 "''.JI bit IS ar D>O .. on the stntgbti. • v· Aolbtr "French C.mp" cyclist. Larry McCurdy, said he &hared a Manteca apartment tOr one month with Shull and two other pel'IOQI. "One clay in. ~mber or January, 'Big Tom' jusf didn't come back," he said In a lelephone lnterview Wednesday. "l thought :-.omelbln& oeemed funny. I figured they got In'° IOJ'De trouble or something L1 the Ba,j Area." \. Sbull's yellow and black Harley was gone, but he left ilehind "a few odds and ends, nothing big," McCUrdy said. 'Ibe San Jo.Jquin County Sheriff's office said Shull'• mother, Mrs. K. W. Shull of Augusta, Ga .• ,reported bet IOl1 mlssing Feb. 20. An all·poii* bulletin later was issued after reports that the b1.g bike r had been alain. "We beard he wu murdered and was in the bay," aald a aberiffs office SJXlkesman. "He was a biker and was running with bUdns groups. We don't know if he was a Hell's Angel." The two motorcYclists interviewed wbo knew bot.h dead men were certain that Baker was not ah Angel but expressed some doubt about Sbull's rtatus. "He graduated from a small bi.ke c1ub into the Lig boys, partylncr Wlth the Angels." :,aid one. "He was either an Angels' prospect or had some business dealings with them." 'Ladies' Soccer Games Too Ro11;-gh DERBY. England (UPI) -The men who referee women's soccer games have had enough. ne women's-t.anguage ls too much for them. "Tbe trouble Is that some pf the ladies do not behave like ladles," said Frank Hardwood, secretary of the 354-me~ber Derby District Referees SOclety. The language can be quite startling." He said the society is going to train women to referee women 's mat ches from DOVt' on. "Although the ladies' keenness is com- mendable," he sa id. "referees who of· fi ciate at their matches r::i rely want to do SC' again." Anita Mozeley. secretary of the Ladies SlUlday Soccer teaille. admitted things get pretty tough when the women take to the fleta. "Some of the swearing is worse than you would hear from men," she said. Mesa Calendar TONIGHT HARBOR AREA COMMUNITY CON· CERT -cx;c Auditorium, featuring Regis Pai!lq\lier, violinist, 8: 15 p.m. $1 .2.$ general. $1 student!:. CENTENARY CELEBRATION OF LIFE AND WORK OF P A U L LAURENCE DUNBAR -Poetry reading by actor-scholar Roscoe Lee Brown, Concert Hall, Fine Arts Village, 8 p.m. Series continues through Pt1onday, Nov. 7. Free non-credit admission to public with advance reservations. JAZZ RHYTHMS -Series of four modem dance classes presented by Department of Leisurt Services, College Park School, 7 p.m. $5 lee. FRIDAY, NOV. 3 NEWPORT HARBOR K I W A N I S TRAVEL SERIES -"Israel" Bill Stockdale, OCC Auditorium , .8 p.m. 646- 2163. "MONEY'S WORTH" -OCC lecture series, Science Hall, Oct. 20-Nov. 17. 7:30- 9:30 p.m. "ME AND THEE" -Costa P.1esa Civic Playhouse , 8:30 p.m. FOCYI'BALL -Mesa v. Los Alamitos at Western ; Estancia v. Magnolia at La Palma. DAILY PILOT TM~ CO..t ~11.Y ,II.OT, Wlfll "'*91 .. ~ Ifie ....... '"'--.. ,.. ....... :' ... er.... C-lt ....... fl'lll ~ ....... ,. .. aiflttMI .... ,,...,, MtftdtY tl'lrovln ,ttllaY, ""' c.tt. M-, H..._,. tad\, ~ IMdV"ount•lfl 'Y•llfY, UoolN ludl. '"''"-'.....,..-Cl! ......... c ......... , lel'I J-C•ol•"'-· A el"°M ,.,....,.. , Rltlllft IA ,utttl1Md S.llll"ll•Y' •rid lwlll•Y'I· "f .... pt~I .... llsl!-,..,,, II •I UI Wt11 l•r SI'"', C111l• Mn1, C1Utoml1, nu.. . lto .. 1rt N. w,,, P'rnllMftt .,. P'ublltlwr J1Q-*· c.,,,,., Vice ,.,..ld.-it ... 0-.1 MNllftl" TI.1111•• w. ••• 11 ·-T\1Jl'lll A. Mlft,Ail11• .. __ Chari• H. L..11 llJ.1'4 r. H•U ~-.... Ml ... ---JJO Wett l1y l+rHt M•Tltflf A4111,..., r.o .... '"" tJ&t& --........ lflodl1 am,...,..,,.........,. ..,,._. llldl: m ,.,... . .,_ ....,...,,._ ---! 11111 ~ ............. lfift ~fl! .. "°"" It C... ltltl 1 .. 1 .. 111 171•1 MMU1 Cl•ll'W A4wcll I ; MN61t °""'.._" 1th. o-.. cwt ,.,..., .... """"""'· ... -....... ·~ ....... ""'""' "' ............. ., .... ""' -~}-9 .. """"" ...... ,... tMlllM., ............. . --19:.i ..... llit c:.-. ...... ~ . .., an1lr IUt .......,,., W U,IJ .....,,, ll'lfliWr _ ............... . ln8Uk Circle Of Candid.ares It's the rneo and women bebbid lhe candidal<!I who !\Ill the cam- paigns. And the ca;11palcn staUs of Prell, dent i-Oxon' and SenatO'r MdOl'fltft.,.. are as different as the candidates themselves. The light banter that abounds al the McGovern camp Is countered by the more serious staff ln the ~.:ddent's cOmer -men like Charles Colson who once said he "would walk over my grandmother if necessary," in order to get Nixon re-elected. Meet the c::impaign staffs or both candidates on Page 38 or the DAI- LY PILOT. From Page 1 . PROBLEMS. • • and transportation for the physically handicapped. -Health care programs. -Student transportation. -After school recreation programs. These programs are run in cooperation with the cities of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. -Reserves for emergencies. The district currenUy maintains a reserve which totaJs five percent of its operations budget. She stressed that elimination of these programs would save the district only $4 r.1illion and "the board: would have to reassess its priorities for th~ so-called regular program in such a way as to reOect savings of somewhere from $3 tnillioo to $8 million." That additional savings could come about through a reduction in salaries to st<iCf, a reduction in staff and an increase in the number of pupils per teacher, a reduction in the amoWlt of time students are in school, or a combination of the three. Mrs. Bergeson noted that speculation as lo which alternative the board would cl'loo,se is "fruiUess," but she did have some comments abou t the choices racing the board. Nearly 85 percent of the district's budget goes for salaries for the 2,000 employcs. She sa id a 10 to 40 percent reduction would be necessary to get the savings needed. But she said the board wou1d probably not consider such an alternative until "such time when it becomes obvious that there would be a IO to 40 percent decrease in the cost of living; a 10 lo 40 percent decrease in the sale price of homes; a 10 to 40 percent decrease in professional fees and other charges; a 10 lo 40 percent decrease in real estate commissions; a 10 to 40 pe rcent decrease in the myriad areas of Jiving expenses." '!be po.oslhlllty or decrea•lng the nwr.ber of teachers and increasing class size from 28 students up lo 35 or 40 "would necessitate closing some schools, dismissing many, many, many teachers, ~ d wiping out at one stroke most of the program.! the district has been working on for years In an effort to individualize instruction and meet the needs of each of the district's children." The plan to decrease the amount of time students spend in school would prob- abl y result in a school year that is 35 dayfit shorter than the present 177-day school year and the ellmin'Btion of sum- mer school. "In short," she said, ''the problems facing the community, board and staff will include deciding which parts of a quality program to eliminate, which to reduce and wh ich to maintain. The end re.suit can only· be a minimum, below· average educational offering, far dif- ferent from that characteristic of the Newport-Mesa School District." Oops, We Named Wrong Quigley The story which ran in Tuesday's Daily Pilot detailing formation of an Orange County intergovernmental council in- correctly identUied a speaker at the meeting. Irvine Counc ilman Henry Quigley was • prtsent at the m~ng and made several Cffllmenll :ibout tbe portions of the ~ poaed agreement dealing with t h e orgnnizatlon's ability to Incur debtJ. The story erroneously attributed his comments to Ray Qu igley, who is also an Irvine councilman. The Daily Pilot regrets the error. Airport Commission Eyes Condon1iniu111 Orange Ccunty Airport Land Ullf com- mlatonen will d!JCUJs a 143-unlt con· domlnium project propo9ed et El Toro Road and Second Street tonight at 7:30 at 400 Civic Center Drive West. The aentaUvt t.ract m1p for the project was merred to the oommlllioa b)' the county plannlnf Jepartment becauae ll lo nur the El Toro Marine Corps Air Bue. Conunlulonera 1'lll .... t In the plllllllng <OlllD1Joslon hearing room. Lost Man, 67, Found SAN JOSE (AP I -A 67·year-old man, miss.log for two dlys In rugged. brush<'overed terrtln 30 milts cfl.lt of here , lull bten found altttnc on a h&Y.!lt8Ck about five mlle1 from where he d\M.pptared, euthorttles aay. Gullle.rmo V1rel, of san Jose, w•s tbe object of an Intensive search by Santo Clara c:ounty 1hertrf's dtp.itiel, a mounted po81e and a Navy helicopter, the Wrlff's office said. Sign"TThe Talk, Reds . From Wire Stniett North "/ietnam declartd today the United States must undertake to algn a Vietnam peace agreement befQfe Hanoi will coment to further discusslons with Henry A. Kissinger. The statement was made in Parts by Nguyen Thanh Le, sj>okesman for the North VietnameSe delegation, after the day's peace talks. At the session, the United States told the Vietnamese Communists that the few remaining problems to be settled before a cease-fire accord is reached "shou1d not be dismis:: 1 as a pretext for delay." The four delegations agree..! to meet again nezt Thursday. "Misunderstandings on serioWi points, if they eltist, must be frankly dealt with," U.S. delegate WUUam ~. Porter said at the talks. "Excessive haste ln set· tling the final element wouJd jeopardize the work that has been done .•• "Our task therefore Is to carry forward to an equitable conclusion -with full respect to the views of all parties con- cerned -:he work that bas already lieen done, to refine 'and cl?.rify where necessary •. and to deal resolutely, can- didly and realistically with any dif- ficulties that may still remain." Meanwhile, President Nixon met for 40 minutes today in Washington with his Vietnam peace negotiator, Kissinger. Asked afterward where Kissinger was , presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said "I don't know where be is rig ht now." That was 1hort11 before noon and when rep:>rters asked if Kissinger might be en route to another negotiating session, Zit:gler said "we'll let you know when a meeting is taking place.•• Today's meeting took place a few hours prior to taping by Nixon ol-a ~alf-hour broadcast, t.. be aired at 4:30 p.m. PST over NBC television and radio. A spokesman said the political broad- cast would "touch on development!: in Vietnam.'' The White House declined to discuss any contact!:· Kissinger may have had in recent days with Hano~ to arrange a final session to VtTap up a Vietnam peace agree ment. Kissinger attended a "national day" puty at tbe South Vietnamese embassy Wednesday night. Frotn Page J PIRATE ... Where Will You Be? DAILY PILOT It~ ~ f Kevin Gallagher, president of the sophomore class a t Costa Mesa High School, will be on the Mustang campus Friday, Saturday and Sunday participating in school's third annual Marty's Corral, a giant carnival that serves as a fund raiser for various school clubs. Game booths, rides, food booths, en- tertainment, arts and crafts, a haunted house and a rodeo will be offered to the public from 3 p,m. to midnight Friday, from 10 a.m. ta midnight Satur- day and from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. This Priva~e WantsJOut- Can't Handle 130 Women HEIDELBERG, Germany (UPI) - Pvt. Jerry Garrett, the only mate soldier in a unit of 130 women, grabbed a super· weekend pass today and got away from It all with the blessings of a sympathetic Army. •·1 don't think ifs funny·," the IS-year· old soldier from Greenfield, Ind., said before he faded away to ponder his prob- lem in privacy. "I enlisted in the Army to serve my country. I didn't come in to serve with a bun cb of girls. "I've got a fiancee at borne and I don't think she'll like it." Garrett wants to be a military p:>liceman. But a few days ago, the Army assigned him to clerking duUeo with B Company, the Women's Anny Corps (WAC) uni! of the 7th Army's "Speclol Troops Group." "This was not an accident," an Anny spokesman said. "It was done on purpose, although probab ly more or less as a temporary ar- rangement. "The comPany evidently was lD18ble to find a clerk who was a WAC and had the necessary training, so somebody pro- grammed Garrett into the arrangement. I understand be wants out of ~ job." Indeed he does, said his new com- manding of!Jcer, Capt. Anna Young. And lbe WAC. ... trying to help him. College Board Applies Again For Radio Okay Trustees of the Coast Community College District Wednesday night decided, to reapply to the Federal Co~ mllDications Commission for a license for a FM ra,dio station for Orange Coast College. An application for the station was. mw.de in the spring, but it was turned dovm in September. In a letter sent to trustees, lhe FCC said it would not grant a license to the associated students and the frequency selected by the college was too close to another frequency already in use. Trustees decided to reapply with the college listed as the station owner rathe( than the ....Oated students. 'Ibey also listed a new frequency. • . Dr. Norman Watson, district cMn- cellor, explained that the station woulcf. be used for practical leamint ts:perleace- f<'r radio majors, "much as the student. LI.on Released i::.A"'""r is used for jonrnallsm ma-: The ,station, which would cost air store last summer, a rotund, Jong-haired, estimated $6,500 wOllld have -a broad-: bearded, beach bum. when advertising c f. . 'E d f M z · casting radius of 10 miles. Watson said- man Bill Fawcett flagged him down : Oll lJ1.ement ll S Or au ing programming would Include a music and; "How'd you like to be my pirate?" ' education format with some OCC sports, "Five years in Vietnam warped my events. mind," says Fink. "I took the job as a WEST MILFORD, N. J. (UPI) -Paka, the 300-pound Uon which recently · . About '3,500 worth of equipment way to get back to reality." clawed an Israeli vlsitor in a wildlife preserve, has been freed from 20 days already has been purchased, he said. No.~ His being shanghaied in.to service as of confinement to the custody of several growling females. date bas been set for the station to go on.. the J. R. pirate came in the nick of time, Kerry Smith, a spokesman for Warner Bros. Jungle Habitat, said the 3-the air. two days before he planned to get a year-<>ld lion was driven in a trailer to an area o! the preserve and released. shave and haircut and head for Florida. A game ranger In a jeep opened the gate and the females began to gather. Couple Dead in Bed His subsequent experiences, intended "Three or four females went inside growling around, and then they all as a method of getting back to reality, came out," Smith said. OAKLAND {AP) -A man and a were frequenUy a litUe unreal and in He sald Paka immediately began fighting with two or three other lions woman were Jound stabbed to death . rare cases had overtones of being back in but then settled down with the group. Wednesday in a rear bedroom of an East Vietnam. Abraham Levi, an Israeli visiting a Brooklyn, N.Y. family, was mauled by Oakland home, poltfe, .. ,Jd. Oakland "The only little kid who ever threaten· the lion through an open car window on Columbus Day. He suStained severe police identified the victims as David eti me was going to throw Frostee all Jaeetatlons of the face, neck and cbest. ·vieira, 36, and Christine Hunter, 21, a: over my costume,'' says Flnt. "But he friend of Vieria's wife came back and ap:>Iogized the next day·" I ~:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:~~~~~~~~~~======j Teenaged hecklers ha ve occasionally caused a problem. One group surrounded the JoUy Roger ln a shopping center and announced they were going to disann him of his 100-year- old sword and pistol. "I'll use it before I'll Jose It!," he r&sped back. "I spent five years ln Viet· nam, and if the VC didn't get me 11"would be foolhardy for you lads and lasses to try." Fink says they threw pennies instead, so he played real pirate and kept them. Once a frequenUy-broke young GI, Fink also says he is guilty of picking up hitchhikers and by pure coincidence gave a ride to one of the hecklers a week later c:nd 30 miles away, while in off-duty clothes. "Aren't you the Jolly Roger?" the heckler asked warily. ''Aye, lad, that I am, and thanks for lhc 75 cents from last week,'l be replltd. "At first I felt ridiculous," says Fink, ~·ho started the brief plrate'a career he hopes may continue at t h e cbain restaurant to Dana Polnt, wtuch once really was a pirate's cove. "Those little lti<h really educated this per.ion about pirate's lore. The kids rtally made It all worthwhile," he ex- plained. • ''In four short months I've met so many grtat people and had so much fun ," says Fink, adding that he's em· barra.~ a few too. Drive a Dirty Car to Breakfast Thb 8aluniay you can eat breakfast. get yoor car w11bed.. ·Ind tn1ybe even take horn. a bargain il you vlJlt Esloncla I Ugh School. Tho Football Booster'• Club will orter panc1kts, sauaace. 1er1mbled eu•. Md bevtrage frOm 1 a.m. to 11 1.m. In the Commons 1re1. Coat of lhe brutfut ls SI 25 for adults and !IO cents for chlJdren under 12. Meanwhile. Estancia fm1hmen will havc'a car wa.~h golng lo the parltina: 1ot. Tho W8'hin& f .. Js f(, . Antiques, ......i-blnd loodl Md rum- mage well be on ule throuaMul the d8J by the Es~oncla lflgh School PT A. • fall clearance SAL·E! Orange County's Largest Selection of Contemporary Furniture • lOO's of Values! order now for earlt1 chri.ttma.t dtliverv Plus iectionel 9x7 V1 In lux- urious heavy imported vel. vet avail able In m I n y choices of c o I 0'): 1 and fabrics. I Sale $595. open Sunday 12-5 entire inventory reduced! l(\•• '· ~ . , . 11-9/ieturdey 11-b/sunday 1-5 • ·ph 548-501 8 • toll fr ee 54b-12b2 • ( '