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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-12-01 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa"' ' 7 ' ' \ • _ec~ur .1 .... ' • • ,.- ( -·---'·· ·-. . -. ·"" ' ' . or .. --' . ' ;:Vil~. FHA . BO,te# 7'riniFned ,. ~l"-Be~,,O-.-te-EeonOID ' • •• • -· J., • ~ • '1 TUESDAY :Al'.TERNOON, D.EcEMB~ J, .1970 . ' ' ' ' l, ~-ph8Q8· w·a~.~ VOL.. U. NO. .,, l llCTMMtl, a , ... ll - . _Supervisor s ' ' OK$17,500 For Salary--, . Slick Stretc~~ 71 fd i ks AWng C~t -. · -· " l\£Y ~. rla. CUl'~A·•.oU BalJli "°""""ll:ll!iaatm!.~: the lfl!Ur ai>ll:fo ~.~ n.,.""' -· ·' · -• --111 iinood llY. a . dltector )!rii dtacloo<d-the oU lll'ill In be tai«n lo recover both •clUJI and ~~".!':~Cl[ -·~ ftlr·.7f"milel: Ii -!lia·-Tiniillikt."lfe ilJd,fi •&J:..-tef<by a* ·punitive dalna ... ,.Hoilgenaid. • -Florida ftl1i ·tllrUleplftg an· ·-I ~g boat about 4:30 p.m. MOllday aad HodC'" llid the majop µrunediJlt{ pro. llrq• Cloun!J>oapervllora llili _,,_ underwater• llate park made up of !hit a Marine Potro!Jpllot.toWr;lollo""!i blem .•u in fiJllll1DI how to contain the Ina ·aoolfild 'I!" "''•'!•mendatlon •I. tM bentlhil cor•I and otr~' Hiii. the 1Ucll to Its "'uthernmoot. point and slid< ind pr<Y~· the,o1J . from oinking t~. c· Grillll Jury.arid II!" tlliii ~y if 117,500 • The alldc" waa•opparenlfy amed RY the dlsCovered the Italian tanker "C.leaial." the bottom of the Pennekamp Park. "fl .. , .. , .Ye~r. Jl.SflO more • than tMy have been ship dumping· the resktue from jtl ww. Disclosure of the apill c:pinclded with a might be a quite expensive oper~ in j ' paid for lbe put four11ears. · Winds ol. about 1~ mph were driving the report from New Qrleans that 11 .. ·ell that particular area.''-he told the cabinet. ' The ecUOD W11 •ppr0ved by a 4 to 1 itlcky mau shoreward ind .Lt. Edward belonging to Shell Oil had blown out an~ ' Although the ~pill ·was clauUied II . v_o~e, sµPervllor RO'!'rt Battin dl"!en-LltUe, district auptrVllOr of the ·state caught fire in the G~f of Mexico, knoc~-"very large," Hodges said tJt .wu not ting , . ' DeJ>¥1ment of Natur1I Rteourc:es. said ing sever@I workers mto the water. The comparable to the Tampa Bay oil spill of This morninl'J move cllm1Ied 1 series ther! wft danger' to the unusuil cori.l we11 i! 60 miles smd.h of New Orleans, ·ad· laat February in which teveral thooland of 1ct.i~ whJcfi ?as itirrtd noisy public formations, which jut from the ).Uantic jacent to the Wisner_ WildlJfe Manage-. gallons,of oil spilled from ·~ tanker which protest beglhnlrll Nov: 4. · w1ters at low Ude mi&ht be smeated by ment Area. . l ·ran agrowid. - At thjf timt, the board mtmben met the oil. . ' By afternoon, the action of the sea Gov. Claude Kirk said the CQmpany In ~bed· session and 'allegedly decided tQ '!be slick" sprt'ad along the roast from reportedly was breaking up the oil spill which owns the tanker causing ,the· spill ha~e ~ ~ary_ ordina~. drawn selt~e. _ Kty La.rio to. M1r1tmn . ..:..At lta nearest alOng the Keyl into .unap globules. Little -ahould b~ "embarg~" from •ding any their pay at '29,Jea a year, the 11me as point · the Qll Wlf Only about one n1ile • said•some ~I had•alread)' wubed ashore. more ·shiPl!i into Flor1da ports Is punish· municipal ctlUrt judges. ' frQm ' tbt P.enneUJnp eoril ' Reef ,'st/i.te State offlaal1 are dleckinl with federal ment and Inducement not to clUD their ~teed.With.•~ hearina·rt!P(li of Ptrk. ·· · · agenclfl to determlne the destination ol tanb in Florida waters 1gain. . pro~tet1 Nov. 10, supervi.on ·,\ h ,.n dei:ided to Officially fie their sa'.larles to !hit of otale lqblaton. l1t,20ll a year nei:t yiar. · This action failed to ·qulet the furor and recall and rtfereridwn moVements were -wider way.-·Two week! ago the boyd voted ·to refer the matter to the Grand Jury for recommendation. · Before1 this· ~&'• ·vote, Cot/Jlty CounatlrAdrian Kuyper ha~ advl.!ed ·t)le board that their Nov. 10 action would.10 lnto·efleet Dec. 10. .- ... He said if the ~ board .acjopted the new ordinance today, 11 they did, on Dec. I! their pay level would be at •17 ,500 1 year. Fil! protaten . Yoi~ .~ir objections · Ulil mornlng but lho8e that did were ada- mut in their ·oppc.HIOn to any· raise Whatever fOr" the suPervisors. William Ewing of Anaheim threatened, , . :••1( t;have tO Wall( up and down the streets • to get you out l'll ·®1L l *91\lc1re wha.t · the others ·do -I wlll "dn thit myself ." _ ' · · fra~ Sherman. Oft s&nt&, AP& pro--. leatec\ tha• the ·pay raile ls •oat ol order bemiae ol the coonty'1 ~ - ": ~r of Saiita, An.a . told. the ouperv1'Dr1, "You gnofed again. ·YQU don~ care ·wbat the ,people ·tNhk lt!d a Grand Jury r e.c om m ~ n. d.a t I o.ri is worthleu. They, are' t.ht hand-pick~ ll'OUP,named 11y...., alld what they tblnk . !Iii llUPBllVUOM, !ap %) ' Children ofp6arie~ by recent cyclone and. ti68f •w;.ve .. lliat~kll1"'1'<" •ousands in Ea.st Pakistan wait.for food,.~ a· go~rnment~reliebsLa-· lion on Bhola Island. As of Sunaay. Arherican·beficdp!Us"ba6'0liwn fli:ote J,1$1'1. · 3001 missions carrying 141 ton·s of lfOOdL·apd .~llef· 11ubai~11 , ~ disa,te.r. victims. England, France, Gennany, Tbe .Netheil~s a&d S8tldi1 Arabia are i.mong natlons 'contributitig to1relief work-f JL : . . . : . . . . . · · . Kenn~y Denies .il'l t(n "Arrested in Dyn~m it¢· Report oi, farty • ' • • I • • t ' ~ " • \ I . • . . • WASIUNGTON CAP) -·A ·opokemtan tJ ~ F · H . p a1·ty for Sen. Edward M:KOnnedy (DoMiu.), ~se aces · eavy en .. · :::::..ian:iu:w~1:::':1:': -· • ' princeas the night before . a memortaJ · ' service for Gen. O»arlet de Gaulle ls Ir yo6.::..~Hawthome iman who-walked Platter. held in lieu .of '$112,500'ball en --· ''9 prtpol!ltef'oUS. . \ !nto'"I basfily·rl&led Costa Maa police lbe new felony charge, was achedu:led to ·.Richard o. l>ra)'111l!, _Kennedy'• press tT , allegtdly "!ith 102 stick,' of ' appear in Harbor 'Judicial District Court usistant, said.the accauat ii "•phony." dynamite· for sale ma'Y. be the first to suf· to hear his ·"prelimlnary...huring date ae..L KennedJ wu Mt naUlbte far eommerlt. fef ,confiequences ~f · 1 new Callforbla _ l:>etectiY1-U..-Hffoid-Fiaeher -"™' Tbe-,,tk111'1raceompiilW "t., 1 ptc. crackdown on bombings. was along 01f the rendeivous at wtKh 4U't ·abolrill · KennedJ and a mddtn· "'"'days before David F.Platler, l,3, Platter allegedly.,,.... to take !300 for tilled man"wftll Prlaml Marla I'll. '!be w.a, arrested, new Calirornia Peoal C'.ode 102 ·!\icks of d;nami&e -eiplt.lned· the . 1torJ llld-x..ed7 lni tie,...._. were oedlon.o; tooghenlng up en uploolves cbMge today. • !hen lelYilC a -ant and renWnecl . viQlatlons were adopted. He said the new teeUoa forbids 1111 tut dandnl antn I I .Jn. · Se was arraigned today on an amended person to recklesaly or Qt•Uciouily Drl)'De · nld the 1en1tor wu not du- comptalnt listing Section 12303.2 and will po11e11 apJoclva on a public ltreet, flt cine wtdl tlM! pnnre., doesl"'t even know face a minimum of fiye. years in priHa if anywbere near a public p&ece such 11 1 her and wu, 11 feet. wkh bia wtfe ii ""'9leled1 ICbool or !beater. Parl1. • ' &ldnar 'Jhnatened'l Secret · Ser viCe ~GuiirdS . Nixon Aide KiSs.inge r.. W~IUNGl'ON (AP) -.At lea~ one 111<1!1'i>er" o1 ,Pieildont Nixon'• top. Whtie Houae ataff has quteUy been &lven Secret Service • pri>leCtion .. -praumably lo guard ·against any poaible kidnap at~ tempt. ' • . Dr. ·Henry A. Kislin1er,, Ntion'~ us• . ~- ·San Francisco's . .. . .Sec~ty Tight - For ·Visi~ of ·K y . ' . ' . ......_._ tan~-rOr nJUona!:security affair~. bis "ad a SeCret Ser.Vice· boi:ty• guard ·for •more than a month. it was learned Tuesday. Just last week, dir~r J. Edgar Hoover of · the . Federal , Buteau of Investlga\19n told a Senate approPrtatlons subrorhmittei 'that -..: .mll1Uit .U~war "" gro~p 'wU-1>16ttb1Ji :tO lddftapc·a· Whlte 1 Ho~ ~e Of ~the; putillc~of_fl~i~~·. , "The plotters,"· he aald, '11are ·cc.,._ . . coctU\g i .<heme lo' kidiiap'a hlghiy·:p1•c- ed : goVernmeqt oiflclil ,The liatP.e of a wbtte"' Houae' staff .member tw· been . m~tiooed ,. .a ~'bt.e' victim." '· · . Neither• Hoover. mr ·any olher· gov.ern- "SAN l'lwiCISCO (UPll -· Pouce mint official haa,.then or ilnce,.Jd<ritlfied Chief · Alfred Nelder today ~. ~ llO ··the Whjle HOUM aide referred to by the mOIJ, •P but Ill _ In, uniform, to p1ttol tht FBf chlef. • • · . · · · ' · . P'alimc:int Hotel, where'· Viet President · · • . · . Ns\Jyen CH Ky of South Vietnam ii mU:." ij~ver,. the .fact lhat Kilsmger has Ing a-"· · been .rumisbed with! ab utraordlnary The cl\lef a~d hi~ 1plins ·after federfl+~fguard wai· eeen ·iS1 a str.ong . ~ce lf'OUPI deCllred they were caWnc • lndlC.tJon ·that ttbere .are genuine fe1rs for mus p1c11.unt tq ·pro~t Ky'1 ap. . wtlhlii government thit 'he mltht be • pearance belon lbe commonwealth Club. kldni) target. • · . Nl!ther Ma:ior oJoeph A!i..O-nor Kl11bl(er probably ·catTles In hi•: heod Governor Ron'.ald iteacan ii aUeftcilnc the marl Nnaithie aeeurity.tecreta thM ·any -ling. ,The .,.,.r annowiced he hH a other,' man •!JI . the White iHouae, pe[haJ>I previoua eq:age.d~nt aid the overnor;• · even lndading the Prealdelit. ~ i ... VA, FHA IAwer . . ) : I • ' ( : • Interest Rates ' . ' ' . ') , . . . . On Home. Lo.am WASIUNGTON (lij'J) .-T!'e ,&<>~· m~t today cut lro,n 8'h percent to·a·.per- cent the mu~um ·~terest rate which may be 'charged on hl?rhe ~orti.aaes backed · by ·, the •. Fe4etal J-l o u s,1p~a Administration and the Vet e r ·l'n 1 Administration. . · • The change was the first in the FHA and VA mortgage ceiling since I( was in- creased from 7\2 .percen.t to ·8\it percent 1$Jan.5. · rate, Rill the IMJCOll(f' Jilgllut ceillnl In ho' history of• theJ goverrunent,beckeil hof.e \ Joan ,programs, ls .effective .• il\1-- mediately. but .out.standing commiUnents ro~ FHA. morlgag"Jnou'ance .at the Jljd a\i percent rate wjfl continue to· '1e honored, Housing ·-Secretary Georlfl Romeny aaid., • ... ·Oru•e · W•u•t•er There may ·be·•· cloiJdy linilll behind those ailver 1kit1. The weatherman s~• a eo percent chance or rain for Wt{lnesday, with temperalurts ,JUU mired in th~ lo,we'r 60s. · . INSm E TODAY .offlce,..id'.mfirely .''no't wben.q~ Prell teel'ellry Ronild L. •Zi'egler w~s whttbli Reagafl would attend. 1 ,. ulld ~tr any other J!!ernbtn of Nl!on • "Divorce Italian stult" II legal , 1). addition· to -uniformed and ·plain Alff hid ~ 1lven. Secret serv~ pr~ now;--and an e'stimattd one mU· • cloihea Policemen 'Ky allo will be panl.-lecUon.1J:119 rlply: lio'n mismatched mot.ls ari waft· e<1·1 by SiCret~lce. llflDtl Ind other "l Can't 'Uy ~~ythina:'•1bout that, for ing to · !alee adoantnge of thtir federal Officers, • obvk>ul. rtuona.----j-.,,.w 1oun:d frtedom. Pogt 4. " Neldot *'1:1and: "It Ii traditional that It wu !ldelY r1por\ed l~•t moo~, Saa Fraactoco be courieouo to all · when· Kl@inaer w~pt to the Soviet vtallGrs. l.•hopa-alld 1Nat Ille· tradition mwloo lo the United NaUcina In New wJll,11111 be -·" • -Y<rk r..-·meellqs wit!> "Sovjet foreign JGba -· he bualneaa club'• mlnll1tt· Andrei Gromyko and am· pr111•n,1 llid: .,It bl the view of u. basndor AniatWy DobriD.111, lhat be "" C:O.--Club that lt obould pro. 1ccomplllied by 1 Secret Service a1ent. v1dl a bmn !W all Important poiJ1la of . , KllaiJwei: bu been oeeo with.• a10!1t vtow -ti., In the Io<al -. /dot!Rinl hla footateJ>I oo a number ol oc- tlloe KY Tl!J(,. Pose II · caalo111 1lnce th!•· ) I ' f I • 2 DAILY PILOT • T11t1d.1,y, Otctrnbtr 1. 1970 ·• • • • . . .. ' ... ~ • J • ... ' . ' . ·-· ·" • -He's ~iving His Thanks FQtBapp.y,Bachelorh,oQd By ARTllUR R. VINSEL Of Ille Dlltr P/11t t llff . . ... • Somethinc like temperin( steel. to toughen tt happens whtn a confi.rme4 becbekli-speoda four d1ya with ' three-females, two of them teenager1. • The ,turkey 'fHn't even out o( the oven ~t ~fore I was Civina: thank1, for being single. Naw, before the Women's Lib vjg!Jantes camp on the doorstep with flaming torches, let's make thls crystal clear: females are great. So are gaz.elles and griz.zly bears, but all three have someUilng In cdmmon. · , Qne -a'ppretjates them , best in ~ natural ltabltat. My shlCk on the bead! isn't it. • Some might disagree with the designation -calling 1t a routine or rut -but in the twiUght of my youth, I live by a system. · The wine goblets go here. The plumber's friend goes .. Women afti M~;temafk, U Spray Net in the dish drainer la any in- dication. •• And if you think il's complicated in the cramped confines of a collage, rtinsidcr accompanying three females to three shopping centers this frenized holiday season. The first 1top was mine. "Don't get out of the car," they were told ln tones of naive optimism. "I'll "be right out." One was missing and unaCCOU.Dted for upon my momentary return and the two kids ware funny looks. "She went inskle. Then she came back," said one. "She got her cbe<:k· book and went back in," ·thelOtber ezplained needlessly. · So I headed for the bank, wlUt naJvely optlmistic instructions to meet me there. unless I got back to the car first. By the time I returned from the one.mile hlte, the car was gone. Tiiey wut to Ille bull all rlibt. The wrong bank. Now it is Saturday. , They have voted down 1 trip to Sea World or Lion Country Safari. They have blaier 1ame in mind; South Coast Plul and Ne~ Center. They mustn-,r.~rook like coonttf6umpkins. So after more closed~oor preparation than Raquel Welch would need for the Academy Awards, we·seem to.be ready. Columbus could have gotten the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria off for the New World faster. Hannibal· got his elepbantl over the Alps in the twinkling of an eye by comparison .. Every llving sou l in Orange County seems to be at South Coast Plaza. My feet are killing me. I've got a cramp in the credit cards. A vi1lon of a gin-and-tonic dangles before me like a carrot before a mule... ~ The girls -bouncing from-boutique to bOutique -can't be found. My motlier suggests the corridors to the ladies' rooms: "' so long they could have been mugged and molested and nobody would know for 24 hours. Finally they showed up and we move on. Newport Center isn't so hectic, perhaps because while it has no mall , we do have a record rainfall in progrg by now. · Everyoee fee ls better after two refreShing stops. Their~ was ;.t an Jee cream parlor. Now it is Sunday. · Customary thanks and goodbyes and .seeyalaters have been exchanged. 1 Spray net is absent from the'. dish drainer. Hair curlers 11t a:one from my tie-- clip tray. The sllenct ls broken four hours later by their t.elephone call to qy they're home, despite foul weather and holiday traffic. · "'nlanks Lord," I murmur, In gratitude for their safe trip. And also for being a bachelor. Coun.ty Drive Fails ~ukemia Claims Girl, 6, . Mter Blood Donations Cathy Milazzo, the six-year-old leukemia victim who had been kept alive by the blood of hundreds of donors in Orange County, has died. Catherine, whose home was at 2811 Rutherford Drive, Huntington Beach, died Sunday at Children's Hospital of Orange County. She had received daily transfusions of eight pints of blood for the last two years in which she had been hospitalized. 1..ast October, however, the Red Cros.s Blood Bank in Santa Ana was running shbrt of the rare ·e.positive blood type and a public appeal was made. "We received over 800 calls from peo- ple pledging donations," JeiTy Morrison, DAILY PILOT Red Cross pub J I c relations direc· tor, said. "The switchboard was jammed for two days." Among those who helped Catlierine were members of the Costa fl.iesa police department who exchanged blood types in jts bank with other agencies for a suppl y of B-positive,. Marines based at the El Toro facility also donated. Catherine will be burled at Good Shepherd €errietery, Huntington Beach, Thursday following Mass of the Angels at 9 a.n1. at St. »onaventure Church. She is survived bY her parents, Mr. a:1d Mrs. Joseph Milazzo. and two sisters, Barbara and JoaMe, both of Huntington B<ach. From Page 1 SUPERVISORS . Airport Site • . ':.At AJamitos ' Under.Fire- A future general avlaUon airfield at Los Alalnltoo!l•val Air Stltlon 11 itroog· ly opposed b city ofllclah and res:ldents or the area, -mentberirof tlit Orarige County Airport Commilllon fo~ Ot.\t Monday nlght. City ~tanager William Kraus told th• commWion the field ls unsatisfactory for either ~ivi1Jan or military u&e • .He quoted Frank Sanders, assistant secret;µ-y of the Navy , as saying: ·''Selection of Los Alamitos to be phased out was innuenced by the fact that it is an area of high densjy population and restricted air apace, conaequently nulli· lying its useful~ss as an operation base for Naval avlalion," the letter read. Kraus said the same would apply to use as a general avlatlon facility after the Navy moves out next July. "The Parsons report foreca sts 2,000 nights per year in 1990 and that doesn't fit into our plans for the city," Kraus em· phaslzed. City Councilman Jost:ph Hyde attacked the airport proposal from a• }COnomic angle. "The facility would not be good business for Los A1amil.ol," . the. coun- cilman said. "Cost of arving the area with utilities and the obvious traffic pro--blems would harm the city and cost us mOre money than the facility ~would generate." About 50 persons attended the public hearing. Of 18 who spoke, o n 1 y one favored the airport plan advanced in lhe . county's $1~,000 Air Transport Plan just completed by the Parsons Company of U>s Angeles. The· city council or Los Alami\os has gone on record twice in the past nine monChs opposing any future air rel.1ted activities at the station. Sal,k Institute_ Clnims Success Iii MS Reversal LA JOLLA (AP) -The Salk Institute says a substance it has developed has been successfully used to prevent a type of multiple sclerosis in animals. Dr. Edwin H. Eylar said Monday the aubatance, a chemically m o d t f 1 e d molecule known u NHB derivative, alto has reversed the disease in rabbits, guinea pigs and monkeys and could lead . to development of a vaccine for humans. He said an animal condition called Ex- perimental Autoallel'gic Encephalomye- litls. or EAE, closely resembles human mu ltiple sclerosis and some scientists. tie.. Jieve ~ey are ide ntical. ''Even animals in the throes o! EAE recover, sometimes dramatically, when they are injected with the HNB derlva. tiVe," Eylar said in an interview. After a healthy animal gets a shot or HNB, which' derives from huma11 and cat· tie 'nerve protein, it become.s immune to lhe substance used to cause EAE, be said. If the animal is already ill, it gets well. .. All the evidence now points to a virus as the cause of multiple sclerosis," he said, adding that an esUmated 500,000 persons are afOlcted by the disease in this country every year. Eylar suggested the virus that causes multiple scler08is in humans works into the nervous syStem as the laboratory in4 duced virus does on animals. Th'~ virus gets into the nervous system and bec:Omes coated with a nerve protein called At, he believes, then the body's immune system makes antibodies that attack not only the virus but also the pro- tein. When the antibodies reach the nervous system they start destroying myelin, which is the protective sheath ' around nerve and brain cells. Additional _research may prove con· elusively that the Al protein is involved In multipl~ sclerosis as it is in EAE, he said, In which case the HNB . vaccine developed at Salk may be tested on humans. , • , U'IT~ .. YOUNGEST QENERAL OIES Gen. Frtdorlck In 1941 Gen. Frederick '• Funeral: Slated · Services will be held W~esday af· temoon at the San FrancisCo PresidiG cemelery for Maj. Gen. Robert T. Frederk:.k, the tf.s. Army·s youngest division command er in France in World War II. who died Sunday in Palo Al to.at the ag~ of 63. General Frederick . is survived .,by_ his Widow, Ruth, two daughters, Mrs. Jane See of J,.aguna Beach and Mrs. Philip Hicks of Palo Allo, and by eight grande:hildren. Wounded eight 'times; in World War II, he took command of the 45th Division after leadtnil: an airborne task force in the invasion of Southern France. He also helped organize the~U.S . .Cana· dian Special Service Forces which participated in the Attu invasion in the Aleutians, where he took command afler the Canadian commander was killed. General Frederick earned t he Distingui.hed Service CrQJS twice. the Distinguished Service Medal twice and the Silver Star and Bronze St.ar for bravery in action .. Rocket Destroys Medical Station; .· Embassy Bomhed SAIGONt (AP), -/Vt . f:nein)j 4 tOfk,et wrecked a:n Ameilcah medical stirto'h in South Vietnam Monday killing or wou.n· ding the entire starr. and in Phnom Penh a bomb explGded In.the U.S. Embassy at dawn but injured no one. Meanwhile, the Viet Cong announced its forces would observe three:day cease- fires In Vietnam for Christmas and New Year's and a four~ay cease-fire during the Tel festival of the Lunar New Vear at the end of January .. South Vietnamese government sources said tbe allies would declare cease-fires for the same holidays but would not aMOunce them until shortly before each holiday. They will proba~ly be only 24. hours each. The medical dispensary was smashed during a 2G-round rocket barrage on lhe Chu Lal base camp, 6e.aci.quarlers of the U.S. Amer le al Divisioo 50 miles south of Da Nang. It was the first rocket or mort.a.r attack on Chu Lai since June 19. Field reports said one or the UJO.pound missiles tore through the i:oof of the first aid _station aboul , p.m. 'hie rePorts said there were no patients in the ~ispensary, but less than a dozen Americans on the staff were killed or wounded. The U.S. Command's security regulations prohibit disclosing specific casualty figures in such attacks. Nbott Acti~ ·Inflatio·n ·Alert ; Hits "·Wage Pacts t • W .UHJ/iG'!PN (AP) -The W h l t e HouR, ~rttPc t'o a new policy it earlier predld~.~ ct¥~ tod1y the w1ge set- tlementJJl..tM.,.Gene.ral Motor& strike and ~i Presldentlal1:1oard 's recommendation to -tncrea~wae«* in the rfilrpad industry. -ln Ua ~~inflation alert, Pre1ident Ni1on11 1Ci of Ecooomic Advlsers at.9o focUaed· 1 ntlon oo price increases by, the l'utomobile indllltry, the oil In· dustry, transp6rtation industry and the . tWt>-pr ice system of the copper industry. • The White House thus moved into rostering an "incomes policy." a phrase covering presidential pressure to hold down inflationary wage and price; boosts. Th~ cOOncil uld that the General Motort settle~t, "if genera 11 zed throughout the eco1"19my, would' crowd further upw,ard costs per unit of ou~put and, therefore, the price ·level." : "Apart trom (Ucrther Ina-eases through ~ CQ.!lt of'IJvtni 'escalator for ij'ie years ahead, the increase substantially exceeds any tren<{ estimate of gains In nalional productivity," the council said. •·11 also raises costs further In an Jn. duslry where producer• overseas are ac- counting for a lubstantial and growing 1hare of the dorhtStic market." The council rqerved an opinion on tbe railroad wage package as a whole but · zeroed In on a ·~alled cost-of·living- escalator c;.11use under consl~~ration. ( "If an assumption about inflation tha.t represents no Improvement Is explicitly embedded . into a contract for future years, well thereby guarantee that these costs and prices will continue rising at an unchanged rate," the council said. Jt said that "freezing Into the contract such an usumpUon about future lnDation would saddle the iqdustry for the larger cause of aCbJeving a new stability for the prlce-<:ost level." The president.ial board has reeom· mended wage increases in the railroad industry averaging 11 percent a year over three-years. The board did not specifically recommend a cost-of-living escalator clause but did note that In· eluding one would yield a wage increase in excess of nine percent anntlally. Turning to price increases, the council noted that General Motors announced ad· ditional price boosts for automobile.s. "An increase or siz to seven percent !fl the price of passenger automobiles would add about $2 billion to the totaJ cost to dealers and possibly $2.5 billion to the co.st to consumers," the couricil said. Such an incuase, the council uld, translates into a rise or about three- tenths of one percent In the Wbolelale Price Index: • "nte counciJ ·alto ,noted .price hikes in the oil industry, 1aying that they . come San Clemente . . Breaks Him Vp San Clemente upataged Burbank Monday night. It hapeened on Laug))..In. NBC's Weekly prime-time comedy hour built around comedJans Dan Rowan ·and Dlclt Martin. Durini their parody of a pair of news commentators, Martin broke up seven or eight times after saying : "Dateline San Clemente." Martin wu trying to get out a joke about President Nixon's cliff. top villa, the Western White House. Finally after spasms of laughter, Martin got it said: "Dateline San Clemente - Residents of this resort community have been disturbed late In the evening by an unidenUfled voice singing, 'This: Land II My Land'." "wben petroleum inventories are. at I level higher than ls normal f~ze of year." -/ The ooutl(!ll said that on.Nov. I[• rn... jor oil company, not named in the in(]a. Uon alert boosted t.he price of crjfd1 oil by 2S ce~ts per barrel. 'l'hlt incrl!ue ii now under Investigation by the govern- ment. The 4l-page inOatlon alert a_tso spotlighted ''steadily rising costs of local public transportation" but said II is a dif· ficult problem for which there Is no simple answer. Specifically, ii mentioned transit rate increases in New York, Washington and Chicago. ''Ea1ch fare increase apparently· shifts . more per~l)S to the use ot alternative means of 'tramportatiori," the council said. Bomb Damages U of Oregon Office Area EUGENE, Ore. 'AP) - A bomb ex· tensively damaged an office and blew out windows of a 1Jniversity of Oregon ad- ministration building today. Four persons, including the vice chan.cellor of the Oregon state education system, were inside the building but escaped injury, police said. The investigating officers said the bomb went off out.side a ground-level win. dow of Johnson Hall, where the offices of the university president and the State Systein of Higher Education are located. Police said they had no immediate in· dication of who was responsible for the bombing. Immediate damage estimates were not made but observers said it appeared that the blast was not as severe as the et· plosion which caused $75,000 damage, to a faculty office building three blocks away on Oct. 2. Miles Romney, vice chancellor of the s.tate system, a secretary and two telephone operators were in the building when the blast hit but told police they were not hurt. Eugene. Oregon's second largest city with a metropolitan population of 130,000, has bttn hit by several explosions and arson-caused fires in the past three Years, including ooe night in 1K9 when five dynainite expiosions caused minimal damage to c}lurch, business and govern- ment buildings in the city. Most costly of the fires caused $250,00G damage to the university's. phyalcal education building earlier UUs y e a r . There was a Reserve Officers Tralnint Corps storage area In that building. Gerald Farmer Last Rites Set Services will be held at J p.m. Wed· nesday in Sheffer Laguna Be a c b Mortuary Chapel for Gerald O. Farmer of 4125 Calle Bienvenido, San Clemente, who died Sunday in South Coast Com· munity HospitaJ. He was 58. .Mr. Farmer, a native of New York, had Jived for more than 30 year& 1n California. ,. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Patrick Holt of La Habra ; two sons, Gerald Fanner of New York and Rodney Farmer of Paris ; a brother, Kenn eth Farmer of New York; and by four grand children. ••c ABPE·TEERS'' IT STARTS WITH A PHONE CALL TO YOU FROM A "RE SEARCH" FIRM ASKING IF YOU OWN YbUR HOME AND IF YOU NEED CARPETING OR DRAPERIES. IF THE ANSWER IS AFFIRMATIV E, THE CALLER Will OFFER TO SEND A "DECORATOR " TO ""'•" .... Let-• a..:h C•,._ Mn. H1wtllllfM ... .... ,.. ,.., ... Clo_ ~ .. 'f. .. way :epresenls whal the people SHOW YOU A .NEW TYPE OF "COMMERCIAL" .GRADE CARPETING . oRANG£ coAST PusL1s1t1NG COM'AMv From Page l ''''" N. w... m=;i:iraf~u"::..,:u h:cti~~d !':'; KY TALK WHEN THE ".DECORATOR" ARRIVES AT YOUR HOM E. HE DEMONSTRATES 1--i---"~·=·~';_"c':,,";, __ --t~ayJhauhua.ll!l' • • • STAIN RESISTANCE OF HIS CARPET, MAY OFFER TO PAY OFF YOU R DEBTS, MEASURES ""''"";:;.::~ ;:::1' ..._ ~C:an~ere::;,~~ ~,11~~~~ eronomic--m-u-ni-ty-,----w-ilh--or-o_p_po-,.-. 00-,.-ll--vouR-)IOOi.t-1N~'l:INITS" INSTEA0-0F-Y·ARDS~AND-OFFERS A BIG DISCOUNT (Oll EVEN """ slump. We ·should be working on that In· views." A CHECK) TO USE YOUR HOUSE AS A "SHOW HOU SE" FOR HIS CARPET. - Tho~::.~~:,~:~'"' ~~'aargdedof.qui!>bling over sal~ries," Battin Howard Wallace, speaking · for the "JUST SIGN HERE" IS THE CLINC HER. AMONG THE PAPER S TO SIGN MAY BE ui l>f&Ce groups, asserted: "We're not ...,:t,;~~;:,... "No matter how we move we will be trying to slop him !KY> from speaking, A SECOND MORTG AGE ON .YOUR HOUSE, NO ITEMIZATION OF YARDAGE BE I NG -attacked," said Supervisor Wllllam but we·re certainly going to picket him." PURCHASED, AND A LONG TERM CONTRACT FOR PAYMENTS TOTALLING MORE THAN Cotl•MN:J»Wtat•11 stiwt •Phillips. "We are now the set()nd most (•We're pla nning a massive outpouring N.wpor1 ll••cll: 21n w111 .. .,. 111111,.._.nt populous county In the state and San of people protesting Ky and all he stands TH E PRICE PER y AA. D QUOTED. L99uM 11 .. dl: m ,.,.., Av•Aue for. • .The corruption of the Saigon -.-",.~,·,~.';'~ ::!:t.':,•t.!1!14A= ~Je~or~:~~u:~~~~9~:eaj~ta~v-regtrne and the continuation of the w.r." DON 'T BE'TRICKEO BY UNKNOWN FIRMS WHO SE GUAR ANTEES LA ST ONLY AS· Phillips moved for actoplion and got • th~~'::n:O'~:.rs ~:uf11!'1:::! ~':. LONG AS THEI R SHORT LIVED BUSINESS, DON'T BE F 0 0 l ED BY "S0 "1ETHING FOR =~ ::':'m~u~:,".~°' William Hirstein, t1onal Co111t1on Aptnst war, Racism and NOTHING" OFFERS, PHONY "COMM ERCI AL" QUALITY AN D FllM-FlAM CONT RACTS. Board Chairman Alton Allen, who also ~pression and the' Marin (County) retires from olfice in January. said, "In Peace eo.uu.n. KNOW THE MERCHANDISE OR KNOW YOUR MERCHANT! my jµdgment from experience on this Individuals endorsing the protest in-__ board the job Is: worth every cent of elude Aasemblyn1an John Burton (0-San .,, . • I ALDEN'S ::: $17 ~. As I said previously when we set Francisco) Assemblyman W 11 I I am """' Brown 1n.san Francisco) the Rev. the salary at $19,200 U we had no Orie on Douclas Slden, San Francisco Council of this bOard worth Uiat m1.1Ch then the peo-ChUJ"t;hes President. James 8allird. pie should find sodte.6ne that l!." pmldent of local 61, the San Fri~ • MacGreg?r A1n:i oil}ted WASHING!l'ON (AP) -President Nlt- 6'1-today appolnttd R1public1n Rep . Clark MacGregor of MiMesota to a new post that will makt him the ad· rninl•lntJon's chief lobbyist be Io re Coner"" Federation of Teachers. Peace grOup spokesmen pointed out that a majority of San Francb<.'o residents 11 the last election ~proved this Statement: i'lt shall be the policy of 1he city and county of San Francisco that there be an Immediate ceasefire and im· mediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Vietnam 90 thet the Vietnamese people e&n teUlei@eif own problema." SANTA ANA. OlAM•I TUSTIN Celt ••• A\.DIN'I UD HILL CAl,m • DU.,.llD 11374 '""-· , ...... Cellf. h WJ44 CARPETS .e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA • 646-4838 HOURS; _Mon •• Thru Thun., 9 to S:ao -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sot., 9;30 to 5 • ·'' rr " ' " I I " I I ~ I f · I I I I I i I I .. ' Huntington Beae.h EDITION ~ay'• Fl••' .. J voi:. 63, NQ. 287, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DEGEMBER T, 1970 • lEN CENTS •• . ' -.. , -Pay , Hike Okaye ·supervisors Accept $2,500 llJCrease . . . • CAIL'( l"ILOT Sllff fthtM Cleaning Vp Beaches By JACK BROBACK Of ,tlle D•ll' '11•1 l!1H, Orange County, 1upervisor1 this mor~ ing .accepted the recommendation of the Grand Jury and set their pay at $17,500 a year, $2.500 more than they have been paid for the past four years. The action was approved by a 4 to 1 vote, Supervisor Robert Battin di!!en- ting. This morning's move climaxed a series of actions which has stirred noisy public protest beginning Nov. 4. At that time, the board members met in closed session and allegedly decided to have a salary ordinance drawn setting "the1t pay al $29,268 a year, the same as· !Jlunlcipal CQUrt judges. Face:d with a crowded hearing room of Maintenance workers Dick Esslinger (left) and John Battis dump seaweed and other debris inttJ truck ,during cleanup of beaches in Huntington Beach following Thanksgiving weekend storm. Mop- ping up continued today after crews cleared seven tons of storm debris from municipal sands Sunday and Monday. protesters Nov. JO. supervisors then decided to officially tie their salaries to that of state legislators, $19,200 1 year next year. This action failed_t!l quiet theluror and t recall and referendum movements were How Police Probe Started under way. Two weekJ ago the board voted to refer the matter tll the Grand Jury for recommendation. Before this morning's vote. County Counse l Adrian Kuyper h·ad advised the board that their Nov. 10 action would go into effect Dec. 10. · He· said if the board adopted the new Detective Testifies Stores Didn't Get Thanks By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 flll ~Uy ~ii.I Steff "Thank You" letters that never arrived triggered the investigation that led to dismissal of Huntington Beach motorcy· cle patrolman Gilbert Coerper. It began · when department store of· liciaJa .wondered why they had received no letters of thanks for more than two truck loacb of merchandise donated to charity. That was the teatimo.ay ol.Mo9!gomery Ward detective Arnold Rickets Monday night who appeared as the first ad· versary witness in a personnel com· mission hearing coruiidering the re·ln· statement of the officer's job. "The letters were never sent,'' said Rickets, who · told the five-man com· mission that he had given Coerper the loads of marked out merchandise for transmittal to the Police Wivu Guild. Coerper, 35, was fired from the force * * * * * * Beach Attorney Puts Gag In Fired Lawlnan's Case Huntington Beach City Attorney DCln BoiU'a has placed a gag on all comment on the reinstatement appeal of fired motorcycle patrolman Gilbert &er-per. At the opening ol the personnel com· mission hearing Monday night, Bonfa told pailel members and witnesses to ·"refrain from making statements to the press or anyone else" In the interest of a fair hearing. Bonfa said the case which involves the Coerper's alleged misappropriation of department store goods, had received "a great deal of notoriety in the press." He urged the board lo disregard any 1tories they had read in local newspapers .. and to "politely decline" any comment on questions that might be posed to them by ne~-smen. Bonfa is serving as legal coun;se) to the commission during the hearings while hi! deputy , Michael Miller, Is acting as pro- secutor. tended that "one city attorney is enough" and asked tbe board to remove Bonfa. Citing a court case, Bonfa replied that the law pennits the city attorne.y to sit in an advisory capacity to the board ,and that he would comment only on legal pro- cedure but not on evidence. "I don't intend to be partisan, but this board consists of laymen and it is my right to give advice and counsel to them." During the three·hour hearing Bonfa and Ricks tangled several times, especially when the defense attorney ouUined the reasons for his objections to certain questions. · Bonfa reminded him that it was not his duty to offer "lectures on the law." Mrs. Wandalyn Hiltunen, chairman of the five·man commission who acts as presiding officer during th~ hearing, relied on Bonfa's advice on any technicalities which arose. Although numerous objedions were raised by Ricks, not.one of them was eus- tained by Mrs. Hiltunen. drdinance today, as they did, <1n Dec. 31 last Augul!l for allegedly keeping some of their pay level would be at $17,500 a year. the merchandise for himself and•for fall· Few protesters voiced their objections ing to cooperate with a police ~ iri-this morning but those that did were ada· vestigation. .I.· marit in their opposition to any raise The notes of appreciation were ex-whatever for the supervisors. pected as a matter of record by t.be William Ewing of Anaheim threatened, department store manager, said Ri<;ktt.a, 1'lf I have to walk up and down the streets who contacted Mrs. Jack.Reinholtz of the to get You outJ'll do it. I don't care what guild last August. tbe others do-I will do UU! myself." "She said ~ "'l'll4. write tbo. S,~ fra-611onmJ1 of -""° ,.... but that the guild· had not rece~ved any tested ·that. tbe, pay raise is QUt of order merchan(Use since October 1969.'' he because ot the county's CW'ttnt economic said. situation. Ricketts aubsequenUy contacted Diet. Janice Boer of Santa Ana told the Sgl 1d_onty McKennon of the Huntington supervisors, "You goofed again. You Beach Police Department -a part timt.. don't care what the people think and a C1ff-duty employe at the store -to in-Grand Jury recommend al Ion is Jtiate the i.(!-house investigation. worthless. They are the harid·plcked The merchandise which included two group named by you and what I.hey think truckloads and one 'car full of applian~' in no .. ':'ay represents what the people and toys that had either been partia want. . damaged or phased out by the store, had · Superv1sor1 Battin, as ·he bad lm· been set aside for Coerper to give to the guild, he said. · No value had been placed on th• Residents Hit merchandise. The officer was lo have repaired the uems and sent them on. but not to have Future Airport kept any for himself since the store's policy forbids such practice, Ricketts tcsufi.o. • At Los Alamitos Defense Attorney Cecil Rick.! said he would prove that Coerper,had not misap- propriated any merchandise and that his client had refused to cooperate with the investigation to protect other officers to whom he had given some of the items. "The investigators knew all along who the· other officers were, but they belted him into protecting his fellow officers by lying," said the attorney. About 30 officers, ranging from Police Chief Earle Robitaille to officers on the beat. are ·standing by under subpoena. Some of Uiem are expected to include those who had also received merchan· -.c:lise. The hearing continues at 7 p.m. Dec. 9, ln the city_ hall administrative annex. A future general .aviation airfield at Los Alamitos Naval Air Station is strong1 ly opposed by ·city officials and residents of the area , members of the Orange County -Airport Commission found out Monday night. ill City Manager William Kraus tolri the commission the field is unsatisfactory .for either civilian or military use. He quoted Frank Sanders, assistant secretary of the· Navy. as saying : '.'Selection of Los Alamitos to be phased out was. influenced by the fact that it is an area of high density papulation and restricted air space, consequently nulli- fying iU!I usefulness as an. opetation base for Naval aviation,'! the letter fead. This situation was as.sailed b y CQerper's attorney, Cecil Ricks, who con-De~ision Due Kraus said the. same would apply to use as a general aviation facility after the Navy moves out next July. "The Parsons report forecasts 2,000 flights per year in 1990 and that dnesn't fit into.our plans for the city," Kraus t!.m· phasized. VA, FHA Lower Interest Rates On HQme Loans ' WASHINGTON CUPI) -The govern- ment today cut from 8"2 percent to 8 per· cent the maximum interest rate· which may be charged on home mortgages backed by the Federal Housing Administration and• the Veteran 1 Administration. The change was the firsl in the FHA and VA mortgage ce\llng since it was in· creased from 7"2 percent to BIA percent last Jan. 5. The rate, still the second highem ceiling in the history of the government-backed home loan programs, is effective im- mediately but oUlstanding commitments for FHA mortgage insurance ·at the old 811.t percent rate will continue lo be honored, Housing Secretary George Romeny said. "The sharp decline thRt has already laken place in other interest rates and the general outlook for rates finally make: possible a lower.FHA mortgage ceiling," Romney said in a statement The cut was armounceQ jointly by Rom~ ney and Vele.rans .Admfnistrat.or Donald E. Johnson. Valley Council May Aid Teen Help A request to give Teen Help $2,500 plus $150 a month for an indefinite period will be considered tonight by-the Fountain Valley City Council. Councilman, Ron Shenkman is making the request. He war.ts rellow council members to consider spending about · $2.500 to clean up a one-acre site for a Teen Help office. He also wants the eity to subsidize the youth.oriented agency at the rate of $150 " month until it can st.and on its' own feet. Shenkman has been irfvolved with reviving Teen Help since il was lorced out of its home in northeast Fountain Valley last summer. "In effect we would be contracting with an outside agency to perform a needed social service with a main. emphasis on drug prevention, youth counseling. Job- ffnding and related servicea," Shenkman explained today. He said be has been criticized by 90rne l'ndivlduals who thought he was_ seeking city aubsldizaUon of a'recreation agency. "Thia is oot meant to be 1 teen ctnter and the money for it would not rome. out of the parka fund, u P!~viously stated," Shenkm.1n aald. If 1t lea.fl two other councilmen agree with Shenkman t.onl&ht, the cUy will opea • • the door for a formal request for the money from Teen Help, probably two weeks from now. 1'We won't grant any money tonight.•• Shenkman said. "We'll just find out If the council is agreeable to the idea." Teen Help has launched a program of youth-related services last year, but when its office became a regular hangout for tee'nagers several n e I g h b o r i n g businesses complained and forced ill closure. Under Sh~nkman's prodding, Teen Help regrouped Its forces and some of Its former critics helped in the revival. "I've dont my job now, After this I'm stepping out of the picture and Teen Help .will be on its own," Shenkman sald~ He said civic groups have pledged about $4,000 in financial aid· for tbe first year of operaUon and Majeltle Homes, a Fountain Valley industry, Is bUildl"I a 111ovabJe om~ for Teen .Help. Part of Shenkma:n•s request for clty aid Includes use of an acre of ·city land off Euclid Street near tht San Diego Freeway where the old corporaUon yard was located. tr approved this will be the , new home of Teen Hi:lp. · The city council meets at 8 o'clot!k, tonight in council chambers, 10200 Slater Ave. f , . City Councilman Joseph Hyde attacked the airport proposal from an economic angle. · • "The facility would not be gocd business for Lot Alamitos," the ,coun· cllman said. "Cost of serving the area with uUUtles and the obvklus traffic pro- blems would harm the city and cost us more money than the facility would generate." Abour 50 persons attended the public hearing. or 18 who spoke, on 1 y one favored the airport plan advanced in lhe county's 1140,000 Air Transport,Plan juiit completed by the P,arsorui Company of · !.l)!: Angeles. The city council of Loa AJamitos hat 1one on record twice in the past nlf'f rnonlhs opposing any future air re11ted activitie's at the station. • JOSEPH BUSC H SELECTED DA LOS ANGELES (AP) -The l.oll Angeles County Board of Supervisors to- day named Chief Deputy Dist. Alty. Joseph Busch as dlatrlct attorney to replAce Evelle J. Youncer, elecJed 1~ attornq.-1e.neraJ. • mediately after recall actiQ!I w~ threatened, argued1todaY that the -.Iary should t>e returned to $15,000. "Orange County la in an ecoriomlc slump. We should be working on Ulat in· stead of quibbling over .salaz;i~:·· Battin charged. · "No matter how we move we will be attacked," said Supervilor William PhilliP.s. ··we are now the aecond most popul~a county in the 1tate and San Diego County auperv!Sors have juSt mov- ed to r&setheir pay to 1191000 a year." Phillips moved for adoptlQD and got .-- sewnd from Supervtscr William Hinteln, who ls retiring Jan. 4. Board Chalnnan Alton Allen, who also relifes from office in January, said, "In my judgment from experience on this board the job is worth every cent of $17,500. Aa I said previously when we set- the salary at $19,200 if we had no one on this board worth that much then the peo- ple should find '°meone that ii." Kidnap Threatened? _ Secret Service Gihzrds Ni~on Aid~ Kissinger ' WASHINGTON (AP) -At least one member of Presidint Nixon's""top .White House staff has quietly been given Secret Service protection -presumably to guard agalruit any possible kidnap at· tempt. Dr. Henry A. Kissinger. Nil:qn's assis-· tant for national security affairs. bas had a Secret Service body guard for more than a month, it was learned Tuesday. Police Clear Driv~r, 20, ' ' 1 ' ' ' ' • In Fatality: A Huntington Beach youth bas been . cleared of all charges in a fatal accident in whi~h he ran over a man lying in lhe middle of the road. • But the mystery or why the victim was lying prone in traffic lanes has not been · cleared up and the reason probably will never be knofm, police said today. "' Huntington Beach pollce dropped hit and run charges against the-driver, David Passmore, 20, of 1711 Golden West St., Monday ·afternoon. Passmore was the driver of the . car which struck and killed Michael S. Insley, 22, of 5182 Robinwciod ·Drlve, Huntington Beach, in an early morning actiCent on Warner Avenue in froQt of the Huntington Harbour Te11nis Club last Wednesday. Passmore said he drove to hfs sis~r's home on Warner Avenue and called the police from !here, 31 minutes after the 1:50 a.rn. accident.'· .Police accepted his statement that he was shocked and frightened after the: ac· cident and medical evidence and damage to the car supporttd ' Passmore's con· tenliOn that the victim was lying down at the•tlme of the crash. An autopsy. showed that Insley. had ·been drinking that night but was not drunk . Officer O. L. Akin of the traffic division 18ld. Insley's movements were traced to within 30 minutes of the accident -but the investigation shed no light on why be wu lying in the:. roadway. ·Seal Beach M;in Held by Police .. In Murder Try A business discussion in a Huntington Harbour home Wf!S punctuated by 1 gunshot Monday night, letvlftg a 34-ytar· old Garden Grove accountant seriously wounde<l. l · The shooting victim, Gerald D. Byrd, was listed'in !atls:factory condltlon tOday at HunUngton ln.tercommunity Hospital with a .38 caliber gunshot wound in his left rib cage. Meanwhile, Huntington Beach police were holdlng Joseph F. Bolduc, 48,.a Seal Beach real estate man, on suspicion pf assault with intent to cotnri\tt murdtr. Huntington Beach police Sgt. Monty McKennon aa)l·lht .two men bad been. metUng 1t the home of Mrs. Eleanor M. S&rnoff, 16008 Mariner Drive, where lhe 1ncidtnt took place-Mrs'. SamoU wu ln the hOme at the time .. investljetors 'said. .According to police ac:counta. Bo\duc went lnto Mrs. Sarnoff's bedroom whtn the argument reached Its high point and returned with a revolver~ rlrina twice. One of the bullei._ crashed lnto a waU. The other hlt Byrd. · lnv .. t]aatora uld they learned of the 1hooUng rrom Bolduc, who uaed the wou\ao'a phone to call pollce. ./ .J Just last week, director J. 'Edi;ar Hoover of the Federal Bureau of Iiivesligation told a Senate appropriations subcoQlmlttee that a militant lintlwar group was plotting to kidnap a White House aide or other public official. "The plotltrs," he said, "are ron- cocting a scheme to .kidnap a highly plac4 e!i governmegt official. The name of a White House staff member has been mep.tioned as a possible victim.'' Neither Hoover nor any other govern- ment official has, then or since, identiUecS.. the White House aide referred to bJ the ' FBI chief. However, the fact that KlS!!inger has been' furnished with an eitraordinary federal bodyguard was aeen I! a strong " ) tndlcaiion that there are cenuine fears~ within covernment that he might be a kldl\_a p targ•t. •· Ki!slnger probably cari::ies in hils head · · more sensitive security secrets than any othf.r. inan ·in the White· HoUlle, perhaps even including the President. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler was asked if any other members of Nixon'! • · staff had been given Secret Service pro- tection. His r.eply : · "T can'f aay an ut that, for obvious reaso " It was i:lely reported last month, when · Kissinger went t.o the Soviet mission to the United Nations in New York for mee~lngs · with Soviet foreign minister . Andrei Gromyko and .am· bassador . Anailliy Dobrtnir), that he Wa! accpmpanled by a Secret Service agent. Kissinger bu been seen. witb an agent dogging his footsteps on a· numbei' of oc- casions since then. Since qi.e Secret Service normally does · not actord personal· protection to members of the President's staff, it was believed Nixon ·himself must llave directed the posting of the-Kissinger bod'yguard. · Chamber Issues _ Maps for Valley The Fountain Valley Chamber of merce plans to release 10,000 copies I /' city map of Fountain Valley In ~ January as a service: to residents"" Aruf ~ loc-1 merchants. Somt?".8,000 copies of the color'"map will be malled to homeS with otfier copieS supplied to the mercha~ta1 1hand ·outs. The map will be ' -on heavy 1tock, according to c ber officials. They h0pe to make It an annual project. __ ·c:out Thert may be a cloudy Un.l.q behind those silver ·skies. ni. weatherman aees a 60 percent a,ance of rain for Wednesday, wlth tempUltures stlll mired ln . the lower SOS. , ~INSIDE TeDA~ • 1 • ~ "Divorce Italian 1t~lf:" ts legal iiow, and an estimated one miZ. ~ lion mbmatched matt1 art wait- ing to takt adDantage of their new joutid Jried.om .• Page 4. f (.tll,.rlll1 , Ctltcklllt U11 U ci.ultlM 1•n CMtkl 11 CmMl'tftll 11 =..Nlltk" . ; lillttritl ,,... • ••ttttal•-1 .. , ... _. , .. ,. Mor"llUlll H Allll Ullilt" lf• ,,,.,... ' -• • • , II ' -. ~Oil Slick / . -' • Hits Coast ' ' H~'s Givin.gJiis rpianks Of' Florida • -----. •.---it, ~Fo~·Happy Bachelorhood KEY LARGO, Fla. (UPI) -A hugt oll- !llck believed caused by a paulng Italian tanker st.ret~d for 71 miles ~Qllg the Florida Keys threatening ·; unusuil underwater stalt park made up of beautiful coral and strange fish . • ' . ' . , • . By AllTllUR R. VINSEL Of .. .,..,,. ,., lllff Something llke t.mpeting ateel lo to\lihen tt happens when a conflmled Ncbelor spends four dilyl with three femalis, two or them teenage.rt. The turkey wasn't even out of the oven yet before I was giving thanks, for being single. -• ~ ! ' · Now, 'before the Women's Lib vigilantes camp on the ,doorstep with_ flaming .torches. let's make this, crystal clear: femal'8 are great. · · So are cuelles and griuly beai-s, but all three have IOniething ln corru:non. . One apprtciates them best in their natural habitat. My shack on the beach isn't It. ·Some might disqn!e w\th th.e· desla'nation -calling It .. routine or rut -but in f.¥ ~IU1ht of my youth, I Uve by a system. · The wine goblets 10 here. The plum~ friend goes there. Women are ao& t)'lte.matk:, if Spray Net in the dish drainer la any in- dication. ~ And if you think it's compllca~ in· the cramped coofi:nea o('a cottage, consider 1ceompanyin& three female1 to three lhoppinc centers this frenb:ed bollday season. / ' , The" first st0p WU mine. .. ~ · .' "Don' set out of the car," they we'te told b;.,tones .oI na.ive optimism. I "I'll be Tight out." . · ·-· · · One was missing and..J,lnaccounted for upon thy momentary return •and ~ two kids wore fUnny looks. "She Went Inside. Then she came back," taid one. "She gOt her check·' book and Went back in," the otlitr'explalned. needlessly.' ' · So I headed for the bank, wlth ilalvely optimistic instructions to meet me there unless I got back to the car first. By the tjme I returned from the one-mile-hi.kt, the car was gooe.. · ·Tbey went to Ute baJlk all.right. The wrong ·bank. Now it is SatUrday. · They have voted down a trip to Sea World or Lion Country Safari. They have ·biager 1ame in mind: South Coast Plaza and Newport Center. They ~ mlll!ltn't, however, loot uir.e country bumpkins. So after more closed-dogr preparation than Raquel Welch would need ror the Academy Awards, We seem to be ready. . Columbus could have gotten· the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria off t tor the New World tutu. · · · , · Rannlbll p& h1a eleplluta over the Alpt in the twinklinl ol an eye by· comj)arlion. , . ..., . . . Every llvl~soul in Orang~ County seems to be at Soulh Coast Plaza. My ·reet are kill me .. I've got a cramp In ·the credit cards. A vision of a • 1~anc!-~c dan1es .before me like .a carrot before 1 mule. • -· ~ girls -tKiuncing from boutique to boutique -can't be found. • My mother lfUU!lla the coi'rldors to the ladies' rooms are so long they could have been mugged and molested and nobody would ~ for 24 hourt. ' Finally they showed up and we move on. " NeWport Center Isn't so hectic, perhaps because while It has no mall, we l do bave·1 tecortl·ralnfill in prosm by now. • Everyone feel1 better after two re!reshin,g stops. Theirs was at an ~ ice-cteun ~lor. Now ii is Sunday. . :· · Customary and ·loodbyes and seeyalaler1 have been exchanged. ·~net ii, absent m dilb drainer. Hair curlers an 1one from my tie- ' p tray. . ' . • " . ·-The allence b bro n four hours Tater by l.flelr_lelephone c.all 1o say The slick was ~pparently caused by the ship dumping the residue from its tanks. Winds or about Hi mph were driving the sticky mass shoreward and Lt. Edward ·Little, district· supervisor of the State Department of Natural Resources, said there wu danger to the unusual mr al fQrmatlon.s, which jut from the Atlantic waters at low tide, might be smeared bl · the oil. · The sljck sprtad along the coast rrum · Key Largo to Marathon. At ita nearest point, the oil was only about one mile from the Pennekarrlp Coral Reef St.isle Park. Ralp~ Hodges, state natural rts0urccs director, first discloaed the 1lil aplll in Tallahassee. He said it was rtported by a ; , fishing i.;.t about 4,30 p.m. Monday and ·Happier ·Landings ·, that a' Marlnt Patrol pi+l>t later followed • .. · ., ; _ • the'!° slic~ to its squtflemmOsi poin~ and • Plan~ clears_.12.-foot blest fe~ce on J~s way t~ safe discovered the Itallari'tanker "Gele!ial." · land1n1 at Meadow!ark Airport m Huntrngtoil Di~osure of 'the spill coincided with a BeaCh. The fence is. desiKhed to reduce noise arid f.eport from New Orleallll thlt a 'well dust from planes takrng-_oU.ft.em the airport. It aJsef homeowners protesting the extension of the runway toward Heil Avenue. City planning commissioners recently made construction of the blast fence a con· ditlon of apptoyal for a portion of the extension. J:>e!onglng to Shell'Oil had bloWn ~ut•and may muffle .some of the Criticism of the airport by ,-~aug~ fire in· the Gulf of M~icg, knot•k- ing several workers into the water. Tbe : well is 60.mlles souui of New O,leana:, ad- jacent tO the w1mer· Wild.Ille Manage-.. ment Area. By <ifternoon, the action of the sea reportedly was breaking up tho ·Oil 1plll along the Keys into 1mall globu1es. Little said some oil had alr.eady waihe<I. aahOre. State 0offldal1 are chec.klng With federal agencies _jQ determine the dea:Unation of the tanker Ind to decide what itep1 ran be taken to recover both actual anll. punitive damages, Hodges said. Hodges said the major immediate .pro- blem was in figurini ·how t~_contaln the slick and prevent the oil from ,sinking to the bOttom of the Pennekamp Park. "It might be. a quite ex~lve operation in. that partlcuJar area." he told the cabinet. Although the spill was claulfled as "very large," Hodges said It was not comparable to the Tampa Bay oil spill of · la!t Jf'ebruary in which severaJ thol.tsand gall90s of oil spilled from 1 tanker whlcb ran aground. -Gov, Claude Kirk aaid the comp11ny which oWM the tanker caustna the spOI should be "embargoed" from sending any Salk Institute Claims > . • ' . . . Possible Cure for MS ~ . Li\,JOLLA (AP) -The Salk Institute says a substance it has developed has been successfully used to prevent ,;,;type of multiple .,sclerosis in anitnals. . Dr. Edwin H. Eylar said Monday lh·e substance,' a chemically modi f I e d molecule known as NHB derivative, also -has reversed the disease in rabbit$, guinea .pigs and monkeys and could lead to deVelopment of a vac~ine for humans. Heesaid an animaJ condition called Ex- ptrimental A1.ttoallergic Eucephalomy~ litis, or EAE, closely resembles human maltiple'sclerosls and some scientists be- lieve they are identical. "Even 1nlmals lri 'the throes of ·EAE recover, aomeUmes dramallcally, when · they are 'ln'Jected with t.tie HNB deriva- tive.'" Eylar said in ap interview. After a healthy animal gets a shot of HNB, which deMves frotn huma" and cat- Ue nerve protein, it becomes immune lo the substance used to cause EAE, he ·said. If the animal is already ill, it gets well . "All the evidence now points to a virus as the cause of muitiple sclerpsis," he said, adding that an estimated 500,000 persons are afflicted ·by .the disease in this coun~ every year. ' :Bomb.Damages I (. U of Oregon Office Area · EUGENE, Ore. (AP) - A bomb. ex- tensivel y daffiaged an office and blew out windoY•s· of a University of , Oregon ad· rninistriM ion building today. Four persons, includini the vice cha'nceJ\or of the Oregon state education sys4em. were Jnside the buil<fing but escaped injury, police said. • The investigating officers said th1 bomb went off outside a ground-level win- dow of Johnson Hall , where the offices of th,e university . president and the St.alt System of Hig6er Educalion ere located.· they're home, deapite f weather .and holiday traffic. 't'I'hani1·1.Grd;'" I murmut., 1n1ar1Utuc:1e for·~elr ure trip. :· . And alfo for beinl ~ bachelor. • : m<tre'ah1pt lttto Florida portl u punlsh-. ment and inducement not to clean their tanks in Florid• waters aaain. ' ... '1' • ,. " ' .~ ' ' Maihn.an, Lauded Eylar suggested the virus that causes multiple sclerosis In humans works into the nervous system as the laboratory In· . duced virlll!l does on an imals. The virus gets into the nervous system and becomes coated with a· nerve protein called-A'l, he believe,s, then the body's immune system makes antibodies that Police said the y had no immediate.ln- ·dication of who wa s responsible for the bombing. Immediate A;lmage estimates were not made but ob;Si!fvers said it appeared th•t the blast ·was not as severe as the ex· plosion which caused $75,000 damage to a fa culty office building three blocks away on Oct. 2. · $an: ·Frariclsc~ ~ Cl()~s I{ y I ~ . . , ,.. ' • In .Tight ·Security Wrap~ • • SAN ··FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police Chief Alr?ecl Ntldtr today called out flO men, all but 40 in uniform, to patrol the Falrmcmt Hotel, where Vice Preaident Nguy•n Cao Ky of SOutl> Vletnlm la ma);. Ing a •peed!.· the chief IMIOW¥:ed his plans arter pe;lce groups declmd t~y were calling for , mass picketing to protest Ky's ap. pearance before the Commonwealth Clul:i. Neither Mayor Joseph Alioto D<U' Governor Ronald Reagan is attending the meeting. The mayor innounced he had a previoUJ ensagement and the governor'• office said merely "no" when questioned ' whelher Reagan would attend. Jn addition to uniformed and plain clothes policemen, Ky also will be guard- ' DAIL'/ PILOT OltANGE COAST PUll.llHllMI COMl'AliY Rtbt rt N, Wt .. Pr"141111l •M ri.itl.._. • ed by Secret Service agents and other federal officers. Nelder decla,~d: "It i! tradiUonal that San Francisco be courteous to all visitors. I · hopt" "Ind· trust the tradition will ~ot be broken." John Buaterud, he bllsiness club's president, aaid: "It Is the view of the Commonwealth Club that it should pro- vide a forwn for all important points of view whetfter these in the local com- munity agree with or oppose hose views." Howard Wallace, speaking for the peace groups; asserted: "We're not tryln' lo !top him (Ky) from •peakin&, · bu( we're. certalolY going to picket him.'' "We're planning a massive outpouring of people protesting Ky and all he &tands for ••• The corruption of the Saigon reeim' and theConUnuation of the war.". Among the sponsors of picketing are the Downtown Peace· Coalition, the Na- tional Coalititln Against War, Racism and Repres&iOlt · and the Marin (County) · Peace· Coa:liUon. J 1tk l. C1rlev Vitt ,.,..ldtnt <it.d "-•!MIMI"' lho1111J.-Kea.YV Edllor JndiVidlla1' ""endorsing the protest in· ~ude Alalmblyman John Burton (D-San Francisco)':'".Assemblyman W 1111 am . Brown (O:S..n Francisco) the Rev . T1iom11 A. Mu1plilnt • M1n11frul Edi.or Alt• Dir•i" w..t O"llM C&>rl1)' Mlltt Albtrt W. 1111• Altocl•lt Elllltll' H11'tlllf*I .._. OM" I 7t75 a.11~ ... levtNI ~tiling Adlr1.11t P,O. l o .. 790, '2'41 OtNr Offlc• L•o.,,,. '"""' m ""'"' olvt1111t .,... to.I• M-: no W..I ••v ,,, ... Hl'fl1IOlt letcll: n 11w..1 11"'1 kl.Ii..-.,.. 1111 Clmwllti a5 *"'I II ~i.. ... , -·-· Douglas .SiOen, San Francisco Council of Ch~s". President, James Ballard, president of locaJ 61, the San Frincisco Federation of Teachers. Peace group spokesmen Pointed out ' that a majority of San Francisco 'residents at the last election approved this 11tatement: "It shall be the policy. of the city and co'unty of San FranciscO ·lhat there be an lmmedlate ceasefire and im- mediate withdrawal of all 11.S. troop!: from Vietnam so that the Vietnamese people can settle their own problems.~' Modem Druice . Classes Planned The Hunltngton Beach YMCA will open a modern danc1 class at noon Saturday ln the multi-purpose room, 17931 Buch Blvd . 'Little Adam 12' Tunes In, Bugs Police Radios' After Foiling Bnrglary Try ~ H~ntington Beach mail carrier pick- . ed up a $100 check and words of praise · this morning for his alertness in spoiling Police of three Orarige County cities the burglary of a Huntington Harbour would like to find "little Adam 12" but home. they have sli1ht ?lopes of succeeding. Peter Beraz.su was honored \\'\th the A voice, descr~bed as that of a teenage · Post Olflce's Superior Accilmplish'men~ boy,. wa s for 30 minutes 9n and off the award ind· the check for his quick action police communlcati<>Ds cha Mel ~sed by Nov. 4. . Santa Alla, Tua Un and Orange Monday , On that date the mail carrier was night. _. covering his route in Huntington Harbour Most of the hall hour tbe youth!ul voice when he saw twn strangers leave a house. teased police for ''not being able to find Barazsu copied the number of. the me." strangers' truck license. When they saw "You e<>PJ are sure dumb," the taun-him doing it, they quickly· drove off. • ting voice· 1ald. ''You can'tfeven find one Barszsu phoned police who C'ame out perSon. ·• anci,discovereQ that the men had been at· Police tried zeroing in on the voice but tempting to break in to the home . were unable to do so before the youth Barazsu's intervention foiled the · attack not only the virus but also the pr~ tein. When the antibodies reach the nervous system they start destroying myelin, which is the protective sheath around nerve and brain cells. Additional research may prove con· elusively ·that the Al protein is involved in multiple sclerosis as it is in EAE, he said, In which case the HNB vaccine developed at Salk may be tested on humans. Pearl Harlior. Meal Set by ~ea~h Legion Huntington Beach American Legion Post 133 will hold its 29th annual Pearl HarOOr Commemorative breakfast~t a a.m. SiJnday in Memorial Hall. ... Mayor Donald Shipley i!1 the key speaker Jor the breakfast. Uaders from throughout the city hive been invited. Guests will •ee a film of Pearl Harbor action. Miles Romney, vice chancellor of the state system, a secretary and two telephone operators were irf the building when the blast hit but told police they were not hurt. Eugene, Oregon's second largest city. with a metropolifart population of .J3fl;OOO, · has been hit by several explosions 11nd arson-caused ~fir~s fn thea past three years, including oJJe night in 1969 when five dynamite explosibns caused minimal damage to church, busine'ss-and govern- ment buildings in the city. Fihn Showing Slated Earl Nightingale's a\\·ard winning film "The Strangest Secret'', will be shown to members of the Huntington Be~ch-foun­ tain Valley Board of Realtors at their 8 a.m. meeting Wednesday in the Mile Square Golf Club restaurant. signed off wlth, "Guess I'll see you cops . 'burglary, police said. 't later." . I-,;;;;;;;;;.;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Officers said they thought tbe aender I I was in southeast Santa Alla. Carl Forster Funeral Slated Funeral aervicts for Carl Forster, 23, of 1srro·Bedwood St., Fountain Valley, will be held at, 3 p.m .. Wednesday, in Westminster Memorial Park. Burial will follow 1n the park. • Mr. Forsttt, t three-year re.sldent of Fountain Valle,, died Saturday. He . tau1ht German in the DoYQ)ey Unified School for-lS years. He ii survived by his wife HmDI: two sons, Ingmar and Heinz ; htl mother, Elizabeth Fonter of Los· An1elu; and two sisters, Elizabeth Forster of Loi Angeles and Mrs. Lydia Lohrmann: Exchange Club Prepares · Feast ' A fiVe·hoor bant\,uet is beln1 Cooked up by the Uu.ntlngton Beach Ezd!anae· Club . to ~neflt 'MexJcan-Amerjc1J1 studenll. The dinner will be held at the recrta· Uoh center, 1708 Oranae Ave., Dec. I rrom 11 a.rn. to 5 p.m. Club preiddent Dr. W. R. Cohen said th at all proCceds wlll go for scholarahlpt fof. Mexica""American stuclent4· in llunt. ln.gton Bet<:h and Fountain Valley.· ••cARPETEERS~~ IT STARTS WITH A PHONE CALL TO YOU FROM A "RESE·ARCH " FIRM ASKING IF YOU OWN YOUR HOME AND IF YOU N EEO CARPETING OR DRAPERIES. IF-THE ANSWER IS AFFIRMATIVE, THE CALLER WILL OFFER TO SEND A "DECORATOR" TO SHQW YOU A NEW TYPE OF "COMMERCIAL" GRADE CARPETING. .... . '• WHEN THE "DECORATOR" ARRIVES AT YOUR HOME, HE DEMONSTRATES STAIN RESl~NCE OF HIS CARPET, MAY OFFER TO PAY OFF YOUR DEBTS, MEASURES YOUR 'ROOM IN "UNITS" INSTEAD OF YARDS, AND OFFERS A BIG DISCOUNT !OR EVEN ~ CHECKj"TO USE YOUR HOUSE AS A "SHOW HOUSE" FOR HIS CARPET. "JUST SIGN HERE" IS THE CLINCHER. AMONG THE PAPERS TO SIGN MAY BE A ~ONO MORTGAGE ON YOUR !lOUSE, NO ITEMIZATION OF YARDAGE BEING PURCHASED, AND A LONG TERM CqNTRACT FOR PAYMENTS TOTALLING MORE THAN THE PRICE PER YARD QUOTED. -, ; DON'T BE TRICKED BY UNKNOWN FIRMS WHOSE GUARANTEES LAST ONLY AS LONG AS THEIR SHORT LIVED ·BUSINESS, DON'T BE FOOLED BY "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING" OFFERS, PHONY "COMMERGIAL" QUALITY AND f.LIM.FLAM CONTRACTS. KNGW THE MERCHANDISE OR KNOW YOUR MERCHANT! ALDEN'S .--.-•• -,.-.-•• -.• -.. -.-.. --. CARPETS e DRAPES TUSTIN CeM ••• ALDIN'S • 110 ""' c.u.m 1663 Placentia Ave. 11114 ~,!:~=-~ c.m. COSTA MESA \ • fl.11ss Sbtrrl Qownes from the American Sdtool of Dance, UC, lrvlne will teach the .eight·Wffk CIX\f'ff, · Anyooe Interested In the. cour1~1TU.')' 1lgn up ~th the ·YMCA tllU w.,k. For reglstratiOil or fuither information phont M7·U l He invited all members of the com- munities to tht dinner wtt.h \ d'battion ('If $2.50 beln1 asked for adul(l ind $1 for children. ........ 646-483 8 • • A ~farJachl band and strolling IUitar playe1l wilt entertain. · HOURS: Mon. Tliru Thur&., t ~ 5:30 -~rl., t ~ 9 -Sit., 9:30 ~ S , -' I " I . ~j· ' ' ' ! ' . I I I '-'I ' I I • I" I ' I I I J · 1 ·I ,. ·: ., ' I ·--------------.....----------'""!"9"T" ___________ !l!!!!ll'~!'!""!"!~~"".'!':"~~ ' , •' Old West Lives Banker Roams It on Hors eback ,,...-._ While Mission Viejo is busy living up to its reputation of late as a growing • suburban area, not·far from the booming tract developments whiffs of old west nDSta1gia 1.1ay be found. Treasure .buried in the mission days of Rancho Mission \1Jejo in upper TrabucG Canyon still lies und iscovered 'neath the golden rolling hills. Cattle, once the mainstay of the O'Neill family, still ply the ranges of the 48,000 acre ranch that ror 44 years has been managed by the trust department of Crocker Citizens Bank. And, lhe rolling hills have been the 1cene of the leathery, cigarette-smoking cowboy who pushes a particular filter ~ brarid on television. ' Beyond the cigarette and cattle brands associated with tile changing f.1ission Viejo are spa~ age brands of firms that have located on the industrial portions of the spread. Owens-Illinois occupies 1,100 acres from which it excavates and processes silica for use in making glass. Th-Ompson·Ramo-\Voolridge (TRW ) leases 2,800 acres for electronic research including the testing of the lunar landing \. engines used by the astronauts in the moon landing. Philco-Ford . leases 879 acres for ordnance testing. America Cement extracts clay from 1.600 acres for use in cement. Three other fir"'5 produce rock, sand and gravel which amounted to more lhan two million tons, last year .. But the surprising element of the developing ranch is its banker, Warren \Vil.son, whose lank y frame is as likely to be found atop a horse as it is behind his <lesk in La Paz Plaza. "I jusl sign the ranch's paychecks," \Vilson says. "Once in a while I'll• go horseback riding to look things over, but usually I , take my pickup," the El Toro residenL uid. San Cl ernente Breaks Him Up San Clemente upstaged Burbank tttonday nighl. Jt happened on Laugh-In, NBC'1 weekly prime-time comedy hour built around comedians Dan Rowan and Dick Martin. During their parody of a pair of news commentators, Marlin broke up seven or eight times alter saylng: "DateJlnt San Clemente.'' Martin was trying to get out a Joke about President Nlxon'11 cliff. top villa, the Wutem White House. Finally after spasmuir laug~ter, """ Marlin got ll said: "Dateline San Clement&-- tcsidents of this resort community ve been disturbed late In the tnlng by an unktentified voice •nglng, 'This Land Is My Land'." • One of his recent tours of the ranch proved more exciting: than usual. "When a fire was eaU111:g 2,500 acres a few weeks ago. I almost got trapped by a solid sheet of names" he said. IronicaJly, Wilson's chief job Is eliminating his job by ending the bank's trusteeship. "My job is giVing the ranch back to the O'Neill family.'' That wasn't always the case, howeve r. Mission Viejo wa s once a slice of a 200,000 acre ranch called S a n t a Margarita, daling back to the late 1700s. T~ land has chang!d hands down through history being Owned at times by missionaries, soldiers, politicians and bankers. Father Junipero Serra supposedly hap.. tized lhe first Indian on Rancho Mission Viejo, and, later, Al Capone .was said to have been interested in the ranch's coastal area for smuggling purposes. The will of Jerome O'Neill who died in 1926 left the ra'nch to the O'Neill family and Crocker Citizens Bank was named executor and trustee. Without the inheritance' tax savings of the trust, the ranch Jong ago would have been sold off to creditors, considering l)epression· caltle prices and rising taxes. Since 1962 when the _master plan was drawn, the ranch's ' thrust has shirted from citt1e and farming. ~ Yet,• depending on the time or year from Z.000 to 6,000 head or cattle roam the M1ssion ~~jo rangelarKI, putting on weight -U · niocb 4as 700 pounds - before being senl to a feed Jot for further fattening and eventual slaughter. Someday3 "'isSion Viejo will have lost all touches with the past glories of beef· cattle and bunkhOuses, roundups and wranglers, but the buried treasure may always remain. •• "~ To save the treasures of"'Mission San Juan Capistrano from an Argentine pirate who'd p!Uered U(e Mission San Diego, the padre burled them In Trabuco Canyon. ...He tied"the key.. to lreasw-e chest on a near_by tree. • .. 'The padre di~ without telling anyone where the church valuables were buried. A cowboy later fowld the key and ·it passed through' ge'ltratlon's to a Charles Carrillo. Alttwugh he u.sed mint detectors to search for the burled treasure, Carrillo"" never met with sUccus. Now Phone An tarctic For $8 Per 3 Minutes NEW Y 0 R K (UPI) -Stau...to..ta· tlon telephone service bet,,... the Unittd States, New Zealand and Antarctica began·· Mondb.y at new ntes that will lower the cost to U.S. ca.lien: by $150,000, according lo Ole American Telephone and Telegraph Co. Three-mlnute station callil wlll cost ll Person-to-person calls, the type of strvice previously available between lh1s country and New Zealand. remain priced at $12 for thrct minutea. AddiUonal time charges on both types of calla are '2.65 per minute, a reducUon from the-former $4 rate. , • ~ _T_-=·:...°"='·=·..:1•:...1:.;.fldc.:_"'°H°'-=-___ __;NJ=LY;;.,;_;Pll.t\'=..!!3 Unruh Say.s Wage Pacts Criticized He'll Tea£h , . · . · .. . Nixon Inflation Akrt Focuses on Prices ·f olitics -l.(16-ANGEhES· fAP)-:..-1.., Unruh who gave up 'h1s powerful Aaemblf leaden.hip in an unsuccessful bid to unseat Gcv. Reagan , said today that he plans to "teach, write arid lecture about what is W?'Ull •with today's government and today's poliU<:s." He removed himself from any im· mediate role in the Democratic party. "I do not intend to have any mnre part In the 1election of partyy olflclals. partlsan office candidalel, because ' I want to be free to criUcize both llemocrall a1'l Republicans," Unruh told • riews conference. The •year old former Inglewood assemblyman uid be had signed • co,.. tracl f"' publlcatioo ol a book and plan- ned to wri1e )DAIUine. articles and ex- pected to baVe a "rather extended lecture ' tourriD tbe near future," He said in the tour' be would "try to thow why we are noi making progress in PolltJcl and government today, why the ta:r structure .,is inequitable, why we shouJd improve ' di.strlbution of school funda and why we need more people oriehted legislation.'• Unruh aays"that he wants to speak on political Issues without d I r e c t in- vojvement in partisan politics. Rocket Destroys Medical Station; Emhassy ,Bomhed SAIGON (AP) ·-An enemy rocket wrecked an American medical station in South Vietnam Monday killing or woun- ding the entire staff, and in Phnom Penh a bomb exploded in the U.S. Embassy at dawn but lnjµred no one. Meanwhile, the Viet Cong announced Its forces would observe three-day cease- fires in Vietnam for Christmas and New Year's and a four-day cease-fire during the Tel festival of the Lunar New Year at the end of January. South Vietnamese government sources said the allies wou Id declare cease-fires for .the same holidays but .would not announce them until shortly before Jeach holiday. They will probably be Only 24. hours each. The medical dispensary was smashed during a 20-cotmd rocket barrage on the Chu Lai base camp, headquarters of the U.S. Americal Division 50 miles south of ba Nang. Jt was the first rocket or mortar attack on Chu Lal 1ince June 19. Field reports aald one or the 100.pound missiles tore through the roof of the first aid station aboul 4 .p.m. The reports nld there were no patients in the dispensary, but les! than a dozen Americans on the staff were killed or wounded. The U.S. Command's security reguJatlons prohlbll disclosing specific casualty figures in sui:h attacks. Kennedy Denies Report on Party WASHINGTON (AP) - A spokesman for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy ([).Mass.), says a British newspaper repqrt that be was out on the town with an Italian princess the night before a memorial service for Gen. Charles de Gaulle is preposterous. ' Richard C. Drayne, Kennedy's prts5 assistant, said the account is "a phony." Kennedy was not available for comment. The article was accompanied by a pie· ture showing Kennedy and an uniden· tified man with Princess M"aria Pia. The story said Kennedy and the princess were then leaving a restaurant and remained out dancing until 5 a.m. Drayne said the senator was not dan- cing with the princess, doesn 't even know her and was, in fact, with his wife in Paris.· Quake Recorded In Philippines MANILA (AP) - A strong earthquake shook the northernmost Luzon islands of Batanes today in what the Weather Bureau said may be a prelude to 3 major undersea volcanic eruption. The Weather Bureau's commissioner on volcanology, Arturo Alcaraz. said the epicenter of the. quake was 31.6 l'l"iles south of Batanes. He said he could not exactly pinpoint which undersea volcanus ~ are activating "as there are several of them in the are.a." Alcaraz said resident! living along the seashores of the Batanes group were tc.ld to evacuate to higher ground for fw of ''tidal wave.s." Alcaraz said swarms ol tremors rang- ing from inleluity one to seven were felt sinct late morning. Alcaru: sak! Utt last volcanic activity lhat occurred in lhe area was ·In 1952 when the Diga Volcano erupted. Lewis Files Lawsuit LOS ANGELES (AP) -A II million · law suit by cqrriedian Jerry Lewis over the sinking ol his ya<h Pu•l!}'<I> h•• been settled out of court. Tht boat, a 65-- footer, went down off the coast of CalUomla ooon alter Lewis bought It four yeara ago. He and four other• 1bol.rd • rwam to aatety. . . · WASHINGnlN (APJ -'l1le Wblh H-, ~·~ to a new eoi)<Y It wller prt<llC!fil;-er!UO!Ud tOiliyW W"l!e 111- tlement in the General Motors strike and a presidenUal board's recommendation to increase wages In the rail}'oad Industry. In Its second Inflation alert, President Nixon'•· Cluncil-of Economic Adviserl al80 focused l ttentlon on price mCreases by th!= automobile industry, the oil in- d~tty, transportation industry and the two-price system of lhe copper industry. The White House thus moved into fostering an "incomes policy," a phrafe covering Pfesidenti.a.1 pressure "to bold down bllaUonary wage and price booits. The council said that the ft:netal Motors settlement, "if g e n e r a 1 J ! z e d throughout the ecooomy, would! crowd fu~r upward costs per unit of-output, and, therefore, the price level." "Apart from further increases QI.rough the cost of living escalator for the years ahead, the increase substantially eiceeds any trend estimate of gains in national productivity," the council said. "It also ralse3 costs further in an in· dustry where producers overseas are ac- counting for a substantial and iJ'OWlng share of the domes Uc market." The council reserved an opinion on the railroad wage package as a whole but ieroed In on a so-called cost.of·liYina: escalator clause under consideration. "If :an assumpUOn about inflation that represents no ·improvement is expliciUy embedded into a contract for future years, were thereby guarantee that these costa and prices will continue rising at an unchanged rate," lhe council said. It said that "freezing into the contract such an assumption about future inflation would saddle. the industry for the larger cause of achieving a new stability for the price-cost level." The presidential board has recom- mended wage increases in the railroad Industry averaging · 11 percent a year over three-years. The board · did not specifically recommend a cost-of-living escalator clause but did note that in. eluding one would yield a wage increase Jn excess of nine percent annually. Turning to price increases, the ct1unc\I noted that General Motors announced ad· ditlonal price boosts for automobiles. "An increase of six to seven percent In the price of passenger autOmobiles would add about $2 billion to the total cost to dealers and possibly $1.5 billion to the cost lo consumers," the council said. Such an increase, the council said, trapslates Into a rise or about three-- tenths of one percent in the Wholesale Price Index. The COUncil also noted price hikes ln the oil indwtry, saying that they come ''when petroleum invent.ories are at a level higher than ii normal for this t1me of year." The council said that on Nov. 11 a ma- "'.,_,,, not owned in the Inf!&. Uon alert. boosted the price of crude oil by IS -.per lwnl. 'llllt'lil<r .... 11 now under inv..U,atlon by. the 1ovem- ment. · The 4lNe tnnaUon alert also · 1pollllht<d "11,.dlly rlllng .,,.;, of local public lrll\l)IOrtatlon"'but Aid U ls a dif. ficult problem f« which tbtre 11 no simple answer. Specllkally, if mentioned transit rate lncn11e1 in New York, Washington and Cbieqo- "Elch fare incre11e apperenta shifts more pel'IOl\I to b use of aiftrnaUve means ol transportation," the councu aald. The report aaid rillnt wages were a principal actor in startinl the fore in- creases, which the council saya, "bu beeome a vicious circle." The in!Jatlon alert Aid the two-price system in the copper industry ruults In inequiUes aod inefficiencies. "As long as . U.S. producen fall to adjust 11\lfflclenUy promptly to tlJe w o r I d prico the ~ ol the --•11e1 It ll.Uly,tq be a matter for concern!' 1'1w•lnllalloa~lert 'uld Ulal 'li!illi~lht ~ of lnllaUon hu declJoad It nmahl(I 1!fll\<'r ·!ban· had been upec:ted at tilli mi•. The. """1Cll nld the Nixon o4> minlolratlon la now aiming tta economi. pollcl<!I "more vlgoroualy at e1J>Onlloo" NI Speaking J1<11erallx, tlJe """1Cll -for holding down proru., aaylnc UMi •• tlon cannot malle -in reduclnl 11\o · flatioo "if the galml we: hope to mU. • thl lobar co.st front are offaet by eoo. ra~id increases of profit ma,ratns.'" 1 It said that slowing down biilation alJo me~ that the: wortlni'mU .mUlt aped smaller wage ina'eue1 and' fndastrj mwit apect smalle:r price boosta. --n.11 may oeem unfair to aome, bCll Ibero Is 1)11 escape from ll" . ' 'Ibe report also cited large WIC• t~ ........ obtained thla year and :~ in the c:ooatrucllon indilatry. !I aald 1-r wap ln<Hues in tile airllno have afltctOd pnlllls. , County Drive Fails ' . \ ....... ' I Le~emia Claims Girl, 6,~: After Blood Donations (' ,_ ,. " t" ·calhy Milauo, tht 1 lx·y e ar·11 l d leukemia victim who bad betn kept alive by the blood of hundrtda ol donors in Orange County, bu died. Chrysler Tells Pnce Increase DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler Corp. to-. day announced an averaae increase of $15 in its manufacturer's suggested retail prices for tts 1971 passenger cars -"the second increase announced by Chrysler this year. · Applied to many of Chrysler's cars, the increase tak" efftct Wednesday. The bike, half of one percent, brought the average Increase of Otrysler cars for 1971 to itt9, or 4.2 percent, Chrysler reported. The earlier hike ovtr 1'70 car prices was announced in September. The incr~ . (!Dle .a week after General Motors On'p. a"nnounced a price adjustment on ila: new ean, t vtralin& · $24. This ii tn addition to an average in· crease of $208, which GM announced Sept. M. Catbtrlne. whose home wu at 1111 r Rutherford Drive, Huntinglot\ Beach...._ djed SUnday ·at· Childrtn'1 Hotprtal ot.1 Orange County. · "' She had received dally tranahlsions o · eight P;ints of blood for the la.at two yian1"'". in which she had been hospitalized. 1'- Last October, however, the Red er.1· Blood Bank in Santa Ana wa1 runniDll. short of the rare B-positlve blood typt '' and a public appeal was made. 't. "We received over 800 calls from peo-~ ple pledging donaUon1," Jerry Mon110e..r Red Cross p u b l i c relalionl dirie-o 't, tor, said. "11ie switchboard wu jammed. r for two days." "t. Among those who helped Catherine ,· were members of the Costa Mesa polioe. t department who exchanged blood types: mr its bank with other •1f;Ocies for a npply \.~ of B-posltive. Marines based at tbt El ( Toro facility a}so donated. j Catbertne will be buried at Good l Shepherd C.met<ry, Huntington Beach, ( Thund•y following Mass of tho 'Aneell • at I a".m. at st. BonavetitUre Church. Sbel111urvlvod by btr par-.~. aocl - Mrs. Joseph Milazzo, and !-.lo iilttta. 1 Barbara and Joanne, both of Huntingtoa I Beach. • - 5 DAYS ONLY! WED., THUR., FRI., SAT., SUN. . DEC. 2. 3 • 4 • S .~ o,.. Dolly ;,30 'ril '· , .... s...., 11-5 ;>-SUITS formerly Gentry Ltd Phon• 5-40-1500 HAUOR SHOl'PINli CINTll ON THI MALL HAllOl ILYD. AT WILSON 5T., COSTA MISA_ 540-1500 MEN 'S S·UITS ' Alt SlllS ·s .PORT .' cnAT.s ' Al t SIZES ., •• , ,, " ' I I I • j ) J ' t :1 , J . \ •• ~ ~ .I ,, ,, I ' •' ' • l ~ . • • l ' ' l • • • i· l ' t Mll.V l'ILOT Tuud<l.-1.1970 -· • Bad Times, Good Earth By DICK WEST WASHINGTON Although the economy u a. whole has been limping rather badly this year, a few mterpriael are nourilhlng. For example, nuraerles. "Busin~ is delinit.ely up," Robert F. Lederer, vice president of the American Auociatim of Nurserymen, reported a teW days ago. ..__( ~'We've analyzed the reasons and find thit in · uncertain economic times AlJlericans tend to put more time and P1·ohe Set On Costly ' I Space Bust CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -The m01t expensive, complei 1cJent111 c satellite, ever buUt liea in ashes aomewbere in Africa or the 1nd1an Ocean· today Wblle a revJew bolrd Mtkl to learn why It lalle(l lo reach orbll Tb9 cloon1e<i OrbitJJI( Altronomlr.al ObleM>atory, OAO I, bad~carrled the worl4'a largest JpACe telescope, wblcb might. bave unlocked 11111\Y secnoll ol the univerte. ,. ~ NaUcnal Aeronlutica 11nd: Spaice Adm.inlstratlon blamed the failure .of the $98.5 million pro~ on a protective nose cooe . which did not jettison u planned four minut.. alter launch here Moaday nighl The 12-foot-tall cone. made o f honeycomb fiberglua, wu destaned to protect theultlllle during the AUIJ.Cen. taur rocket'• Upward thrust tbrouah th• atmosphere. p 4 • It was to have opened like a clarru:hetl, and the two parts were to have bef!ri blown ofl the rocket by u.ploaive char1e1 nnee the booltet puJbed ·above tht at.. mosphere. Radio signals ~indicated the Wo:.id deployed partially: but did not fall away. There were tbtse result.: -The AUas-Centaur had to carry along an extra 2,000 }>OUnds of weiaht for the remaining ei&ht minutes of powered fll&ht. That wu too great a burden for It to 1chteve otbltal speed. -When the satetlite's solar panela and antennae tried to extend, they were reatricted by uJe sides of the shroud. Tbua:, even if orbit bad been reached, the OAO 3 would blve been uae1..,. • money into improving their immediate JUtroundings. This Is true even in areas ol'heovy unemployment in the country. NASA said the 4,116-pound ut.ellit.e · plunged back to earth over Africa or the Indian Ocean. It probably broke up from atmospheric lrictlon, Vnder Hea.v11 Securit11 ' ~DUnng the deprealon 1 lot of people grew their own food. ntil may be a liD>Uar ellJl<eill09 of ~inp and ..,.. Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky and his wife SN escort· ed by security officers in the Fairmont Hotel lobby in San Francisco this morninc. Ky was to address the Commonwe.aJth .Club. (See Story Page!). Nose shraadl blve been jetttaonecl 111c- cessfully on hundreds of ruatns from Cape Kennedy. But there were. three notable !alluree In the p11t. .. l~ wl1en the (Oinl gela tougblr, takinl ~: .... u 1111d getting eojoymalt from Shroud atructural fa.Hurts resultld in destruction of a Mars shot in 1964 and a cammunicatkma satellite launch in 1966. Tbe cone on the .decldq tarp! ulelllte !or Gemini I opened Ol!IY hallway, prompting -ut Tbomaa Slal!«d to call It an 40.utgry alll&at.of." · Warsaw Alliance Nations' Gather Supre~ Court to Ru"le On lmf!iunity o_I Solons wt""'""' things grow'." · ERtl\ Ill l!O right. Like a mmth qo my wt!e ~ that I take th l!1lilY out lo 1 movie. ~ S • M "There'•• rood mm p11y1q 11 the Bl· n 11mm1t eet jo • " Ille llid. . . . ' m really not in the mood for • movie· bscow (UPI) -Communist Party with economic conditions 114 Ufto Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev and other in I hesitate to invest in theater top Soviet leaders left for Eut Berlin to-",t~· -••." I -'led. "Bui !'ll ltll "' icw -v.. ~ • .,.,. day to attend a summit meeting of the 'i what l 'll do. 1'11 drive out to the Warsaw Pact powers, the Soviet new1 !:~ian nunery and buy • new !laxbel'fy l(fJIC)' Tua aid. tiulh. ~we.fin put it In the tell ~d · lresbpevwas accompanied by Premier 'Natch it lf'OW· -Alael tt. KolypP, Defense Minister My chlldnn lUDlped up and. clipped Aniliel Grecblro, Foreign Mlnisler Andrei tJieir ban4L "Tblt'1 lfU~ qd!" 00• oJ '" Gromyko and other high officials. they excl41ir!ed-And the olher one said, They will meet wtlh tbe party and ••Vfe w<ia1d rather watch • n..a:berr)' bulb governmept leaden of. East Germany · srowtbapro.to1movteanyol'day." lhmpry. ~Ula, Poland ' "':Y wife Aid. "but w~e are you 1otn& Romania IDd Bulg . • ' to find room to pt111t ll. The swnmit an almost annual affair "I was .thlnkint of pllllllng it next to for the tOp le~ers of the Warsaw Pact t1* fluberry bulb I bought_ Wt ~.eek in· aW1nce, probtbly will open Wednesday •lead o1 taking you out to dinner, I told and wtll 1ddress itself largely lo the pro- ber. .bl@Jn of West Berlin, the sources said. SHE SAID, "Well, we arr get 1 thrill 'nle last meeting of the Warsaw Pact out of watching the flaxberry bushes rulen was held in Moscow in August to grow, but thatia mainly 1 daytime activ-approve the Soviet-West German nonag· jty. When I mentioned l~I to the. movie! gresslon pact. J was thinking 1n terms of nlgtitttme en-Now it Js believed the conference will tertainment." adopt a joint policy on regulating the pro- "Good point," I said. "How about after blem of West Berlin without which, as aupper let's go out and shine our Chancellor Willy Brandt has made clear, fla1hJights: on the !laxberry? Does that the Soviet-German pact will not be sub- IOUl!d like a fui. evening ?" mitted for ratification. T1iey all agreed it was a~capUal· idea The Soviet Union believes in the and l 've never betn'ae popullr with' my popjbiltty of Working out a modus viven· { , family. Every tiine 1 bring home anotlier di on Berlin, Bruhnev said in a speech at flnberry bush, they hold hands and Yerevan, Armenia Jast Sunday. • dance around me 1lqrlng "welcome, Mr. ••we believe tt ls quite possible to reach Nice Guy.'' an improvement on the situation of Wett -UPI Berlin," Brezhnev ~ WASHINGTON IAP) -Tbe Nil<on ad· ministration has tossed the Supreme Courl a bot potato in trying to revive bribery cbal'{es against former Sen. Daniel 8. Brewster of Mm'yland. The question ii whether all memben of Congress have tmmunity from · p~ secution for corrupt official actions. A federal judge who o rd e r e d Brewster'• indictment dismi1aed in October said the Constitution's "speech and debate" clause gives blanket im· munity. , Congreu, by expanding in 1962 pre· 'Civil War criminal law to include its own members, and the Juftlct Department. in appealing to I.ht court Monday. contend the Constitution ii not that kind of a ableld. The answer ia likely to come from the court Jn the ~ewster case and possibly in a follow-up case involving Rep. John Ethiopia Recognizes Sovereignty of Reds ADDIS ABABA (AP) -The Ethiopian coverrunent announ«d today that it has recognized tbt Communist C h i n e s e rt1lme a1 the .tole legal government of Ill the Chln11e people. A communique said the t w o rovernments ·agreed last week to ex· change ambassadors. It said this was in accordance with Ethiopia's consistent policy !.'for a long time, both at the United Nations and at other international forums,•• that tbe P.eople's Republic of China ii the "Sole legal . governmenl repreeentlng the entireeblnM peopl•." Dowdy ID-Tex.). A year 110 Brewster was Indicted ()I) five chargea of 1cceptin& $24,SOO from the Washington lobbyist of a Cblcago mail· order concern to influence Ilia: vote on leglalaUon concemlng unsolicited mail. Two months ago, U.S. District Court. Judge Geo11e L. Hart· Jr. di$missed all the charges, basing his rulin& entirely on Article l, Section 6, of the Constitution, which says members Of 'Congress "shall not be questioned in any other place" for any "speech or debate." Hart said this meant Brewster could not be held accountable in court for his vote. Otherwise, the judge said, anytime a senator or representative voted against any admlniatratlon's bill be could .be in· dieted. Freeing of POWs Still Top Goal Of U.S.-Bruce PARIS (AP) -Tbe cbief U.S. envoy lo the Vietnam peace talks nid toda,y the United States will continue to 1eek the early release of American prisoneri ia Vietnam "by all means available to us." A~basaador David K. E. Bruce 1pok1 at hts first news: conference 8ince taking over in Paris the negotiations with the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong on eo- dlng the Vietnam war. He did not go into detail on what means would be used to obtain early release of the prisoners. ' December Debut Warm· \ Bruce said : "Hanoi and the Viet C.01'11 must understand, in wimlstakable terms, that their past and existing attitude on the prisoner of war question is in· tolerable. We will continue to pursue the twin objectives of humane treatment and early release of our men liy all means . available to us . Our men and their · families deserve nothing Jess ." 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"" •""" ~ ,,_, II'•""' Wfrle1 Hl•h wlflf _,1111111 ....,. -IW foP 11'1 ........ "r" of ,_ tM ,...,.., fw •1111 _ """"tr u " '° ... ri.. w '*"· ll'tttt«llJ,.11 Tlte 111111 ffl!'Ml'INrtt Mrt ~Nd "°"''!Id b¥ 111 ...,.., .. .._ '"'-<"'l'li'W 11:1110 Cll'J -Ml-SOii wllkPI WM N llll'lf Wtd l llllf ... ,,.., fll.Of" 1lr 1,.,.. N °"" i..i. 1'!M •- G,...t '-•-•• lt .. lotl. Giie w1rlll1111 S•<'lfl'llfllO ....... hi ttfftt t C .... tM Grut Llllr11. S.11 0!"° To 1111 W11!. _,, lllcl-n! -ttll' S.11 l'r111e!u:.o ••"""-' o~•, t~• lltc!lk. N.,,h.,..d Sf41!11t l~i. Cll!lorflll 11\0 Hl'llOI. lleln wit SllOll.1111 "'41 .. rMCf wit!! hltW"J 1Mw IVIP' tfll Tl'lernltl Pllllltr IMUllttllll.. W1tl'l!nt9'oll - Bruce recalled thal he presented Hllll LIW ""'· .. " form1lly lo the Communist side at tht peace talks President Nixon'• Oct. 1 pro- posal "for immediate ·ana unconditional release of all prisoners of war on both " . ,, . "° oil ,, .... " .. .. .. .... " " .... ...... " " .n .,. " " .. . . " n " " .. " .. " " " " .. .. " • " " " .. " • .. .. .. .. p " .. .. ~ " .. .. " ... " " " " " • " " .. " " " • .. ~ .. .. .. sides -an offer on our part fo release ·°' more than 36,000 of their men, including ·°' over 1,000 North Vtet111mes"l" Soll:liers 'Ji'I .ot return for probably less than 5.000 .11 American and South V I e t n a m e s 1 prisoners held by the other side ." Bruce s1ld, "The reaction of lbe other side Jl.as been totally negative. They show no concern for their own men and Oout :~ out conctrn for ours." .. Echeverria Becomes .. President of Mexico .. ·" MEXIOO CITY (AP) -~s ~bevu· " rla Alvarez takes over as texico's 2&th . .. OOnstltuUonally elected pr id!!:nt today in a colorful hiangural!on ceremony in Mu-·" lco City's Cbapullt irk. - ·" <Aftgoing President Gustavo Diu Ordu ., w11 to hand the: reins of government over ... to Echeverria with !ht ctremtmial ·" preaentallon of a green, white and rtd " sash embroidered ln gold by atUWu of Tlaicala State • Claeer•, itngul•Ja Italy Legalizes Divorce Actio·ns llOME1 (UP!l -Tbe ltallan Parlla- meat lapllaad di..,.. in tali catholtc nation w)J today and aa esUmated one mllllon -~· 11j)!cied·1o tallc ad-•¥tait ol Ibo 1llW law. Opponeata an· llOllllCld plaDI lo .rapu! U ill 1 utlooW rer.-. Pope 1'1111 VI let It be known lhrOIJib I Fed Reserve' Lowers Rate Of D'iscount WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tbe federal -..Ve Boan! bu ciut Ill Uy dllctunl rite for tbe aecoad Ume in three •eeks in another· 1tWnpt to revive. tbe 1111lne economy. ' ' . - Tbe independenr board 1IUIOUllCld the lateat cut !all Monday -lowering lts·dla- count r11e from 1.,.nct % tq 6 and in per· cent. The dlli:ount rite la the interest the rqlooal Federal llelerve banks cblr11 on Joans they make to commercial bankl. The discount rate tradiUonallY has been regarded 11 the 11uge of over.U covern· meat money policy, ind Monday's cut wu expected to atlmulate business ac-- tivity by reduciq' the cost of crffit. The reduction followed by less than three weeb J cut from ail: percent to five and Ii perctnl Although tht twin cuts made it clear the federal reserve was &ranting Nixon AdntlniJtraUon requests for an easier money policy, the size of the teductJoo reflected. a contlnulq mood of cauUon. · Tbe two reductions total only OJ1I ball of one porcentqe poinl I One government economist said the seven:member board may be trying to reduce the ai&nlficance. 1ttached to cbqea in the discount rate by making 1uch changes smaller and more frequent. 'Ibe day after the earlier cut became effective Nov. It, moat of the nation's major banks cut their prime interest rate from 7~ to 7¥a percent. The banks followed on Nov. 20 with an additional cut to seven pl!'CtnL The prime rate is the interest charged to a bank's bigest and most creditworUiy corporate customers. Other lhort-term ratea are 1caled up from the prime rate. New Waterway Urged by Panel . In Panama Area WASHINGTON (AP) -A presidential cornmillion has ended a six-year study with a controversial rroposal to build a $2.8& billion 1e1-leve waterway across Central America within 1 few miles of the Panama Canal. But belore a shovel ls turned the p~ posal faces major budgrtf,ary, diplomatic and ecological hurdles in both the United States and Panama. T h e AUanUc-Pacllic Inter-Oceanic Can.I Slud~ Commllslon 1pent · 122 million befcn turning tts conclusiona over to President NiJon Monday, calling for the canal to run acrou Panama and parallel to the existing ~1ew1y. spoknnw> that he Wll "prl!loundlY pained" by po.,.1• o! the bUI malWli divorce legal for the rtrst time in modem blslory In Italy. The pontiff bad opokan out against the measure many tlmn. _. Within boura-after~pauqe· at the .end of long debate, 2$ prominent Roman Catholics lJlllOW)Ced they. would seek te deffft tbe new l4W with a refereDdwn appeal to Italy's R million citizens. The last public opinion po~ lbowecf 112 percenl of the adult pilj)ulatlon oppooed lo divorce and anol?ler nine percent "probably" oppooed. But 1dvoc1tes of the Jaw were Vl!IY much in evi.dence today. They 1Wept throuch .the llreels of Rome in wild ctlebraU6n. Tbe first divorce papers were filed by a '15--yftr-old pensfoner who aaid h1a wife !ell him In 1932. He paid the 80-cent lillnc fee in the city of Bari and uld ·be wa1 seeklng 1 divorce on grounds of long separation. . The deeialve vote jn the chamber or deputies, wbJch cfu.naxed an eight-day marathon debate · and 18 bourt of balloting on 12 ~parate articles in the measure, )las 319 to 288 for pusa1e of the divorce bill. Since the senate already has given its: approval , all that remains is for Presldf.J'lt Giuseppe Saragst to 1i1a the measure -a foregone conclusion. As IOOn as the bill is publlshtd in the off lei al · pzette -probably Jn 10 or 15 days -it becomes law. Sleeples1 divorce advocates cheered, tossed firecrackers, danced around 11t· cient monuments and raced cirs throu1b empty streets: when the passage was an· noonced just belore dawn. Divorce wlll be Jegal for the first time in Italy a.inc• Napoleon 8Urrendered rule of the peninsula in 1815. Roman Catholic op- position blocked lt other divorce blll1 Jn the put 91 years. End to American: Suez Canal Spy Flights Told ~ WASHINGTON <AP) U.S. eources say American surveillance flights along the Suez Canal were stopped more than three weeks ago, about the time tht buildup of Soviet missile sites along the waterway's west bank came to a halt. officials declined Monday to connect the developments, but a great deal of the recent controversy over the roles played in the: Mideast by the two auperpowera concerned the reconnaissance flight.a and the missile site o;instruction. No reason was provided for the halt In the. flights by the high-flying American U~ 2 planes and officials declined to com- ment on reports that .Egypt had made a tough protest about the surveillance. They did acknowledge the Cairo govern- ment called in U.S. diplomats to dlacuaa the situation. The reconnaissance missions started when the original Arab-Israel ctase-flre went into effect last June when the United States took upon Itself the taak ol. policing the troubled truce In lll!Wer to an Israeli demand . At that time the United States informed Cairo of the flight! and urged the Egyp- .tians not to consider the reconnaissance missions as provocations. The U.S. message said the Egyptians "un· derstood" the situation. Ladglrird ·in London •• ,, Mrs. Lyndon. Jobnson, who is In London on a \risll, shake5 hands with • Jim Kay, a ltrickleyer; during her tour o! historic buildings with Lady ~ Dartmouth (center). --..;. • r ' I , I I I • • • . r,- ' ~ I l • •' • • ' I ·l , I • • . -F0011ia.in .. valley Teday'ir Fl•al ED ll 10 N VOL.63, NO. 287, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGE~. --ORANGE-C\!>Uti'IY, CA(IFOR NIA ' TU ESDAY, DEG EMBER I, ·1970 TEN CENTS ' ~ 'DA.llY P'tlOT Sltff l'Mlt Cleaning Vp Beaches ' Maintenance workers ·Dick Essnnger (left) and Joh.n Battis dump seaweed and other debris intb truck during cleanup of beaches in Huntington Beach following Thanksgiving weekend storm. Mop- ping up continued today after crews cleared seven tons of storm debris from municipal sands Sunday and Monday. · How Police Probe Started Det,ective Testifies Stores Didn't Get .Thanks By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of .... °'"' P'"-1 ... ,, "Thank You" letters that never arrived triggered the invc~.:·-auon thnt led to dismissal of Huntir:. .1 Beach motorcy- cle patrolman Gilbert Coerper. It began · when deJ><lrl:ment store of- ficials wondered why they had received no letters of thanks for more than two· truck loads of merchandise donated to chirity. That was the t.estimony of Montgomery Ward night detective Arnold Rickets Monday who appeared as the first _ ad- versary witness in a personnel com· mission hearing considering the re-in· statement of the officer's job. "The letters were never sent," said Rickets, who told the five-man com· mission that he had given Coerper ·the loads of marked out merchandise for transmittal to the Police Wives .Guild. Coerper, 36, was fired tram the !oice * * * . * * * Beach Attorney Puts Gag In Fired Lawman's Case Huntingtan Beach ' City Attorney Don Bonla has placed a gag on all comment en . the rein.statement appe11l of fired motorcycle patrolman Gilbert Coerper. At the opening of the personnel com- mission hearing Manday night, 8(;lnfa told panel members and Witnesses to "refrain lrotTi making statemen£s to the press or anyone else'' in the interest of a fair hearing. Bonfa said the case which involves the Coerper's alleged misappropriation of department store goods, had received •·a cre8t deal Of notoriety in the press." H~ urged the board to disregard any &tories they had read in local newspapers and' lo ''politely decline" any comment on qqeslions that mlght be posed to them by . . newsmen. 80flfjl.is serving as legal counsel to the commission during the hearings while hi! •deputy, Michael Miller, is acting as pr~ cecutor. tended that "one city attorney i.!1 enough'' and asked the board to remove Bonfa. Citing a court case. Bonfa replied that the law permits the city. attorney to sit in an advisary capacity to the board and that he would comment only on 'legal pr~ cedure but not on evidence. "I don't intend to be partisan, but this board consists of laymen and it Is my right to give advice and counsel to them." During the three-hour hearing Bonfa and Rieb tangled several times, especially when the defense attorney outlined the reasons for his objections to certain questions. Bonfa reminded him that it was not his duty to offer "lectures on the law." Mrs. Wandalyn Hiltunen, chairman of the five-man commission who acts as presiding officer during the hearing, relied on Bonfa's advice on any technicalities which. arose: -- Although numerous objections ~e raised by Ricks. not one of them was !US· talned by .Mrs. Hiltunen. last August for allegedly keeping some of the merchandise for himself and for fail- ing to cooperate with a police in· vestigation. The notes of appreciation were ex- pected as a matter of record by the department store manager, said, Rickets, who contacted Mrs. Jack Reirtholtz of the guild last August. "She said she would, "'lie tiler letters but that ,the 111ild bid not received any merchandise since October list," be said. Ricketts subsequently contacted Del Sgt. Monty McKennon of the Huntington Beach Police Department -a part time, off-duty e01ploye at the store -to in·._. itiate the in-house investigation. The merchandisfl, which included twa truckloads and one car full of appliances and toys that had either been e.artially damaged or phased out by the store. had been set aside for Coerper to give to the guild, he said . No value had been placed on the merchandise. The officer was to have repaired the items and sent them on, but not to have kept any for himself since the store's policy forbids such practice, Ricketts testified. Defense Attorney Cecil Ricks said he would prove that Coerper had not misap- propriated any merchandise and that his clien! had refused to cooperate with the investigation ta protect other officers to whom he had given some of the Items. "The Investigators knew all along wtki the other offic~rs were, but they balteci him into protecting his fellow officers by lying," said the attorney. About 30 officers. ranging from Polii:;e Chief Earle Robitaille to officers on tbe beat, are standing by under subpoena. Some of them are expected to include those who had also recf:ived merchan- dise. The bearing continues at 7 p.m. Dec. 9, In the city hall administrative annex. 'This situation was assailed b y Coerper's attorney, Cecil Ricks, who con· FH'A Lower D .•• ~~ISl"D Due VA . ' Vall ey Counc_il Ma y Aid Tee n Help Interest Rates _:~.~.~.~~~"'-~""""~~---~A~esr1.o give een e p $2,500 pita /1\.... Home. Loans iiso. month 1o. an indefinite period wilt V ll bt <Xlnsidered tonight by tbe Fountain 'WASHINGTON . (UPJ) -The govern- ment today .cut from 81,li percent to~ per· cent ... the m11xlmunf-interest rate Which- ma1 be charged on borne mortgages backed by the . Fed~ral H o u s i n g Administration and • the Ve t·e rans Administrali~n. · • ;rtie change was the rirst in the .F:HA and VA mprtgage ceiling since It was in· creased from 71h percent to B'li: percent last,,.Jan. 5. ,The' rAte, $till the second highest celling In the history or the govemrrIDil-backed heme1 loan progrAms, is effective im·· mediately but nutslanding commltnfents for FHA mortgage insurance at the old 81/i: r-percent rate will eontlnue to be honored, HOUllnl Secretary Geora:e Romeny Mid. "The •hare decline that ""' already Wten place m Othef interest rates and the general ouUook for rates,finally make ,OS.Sible a lower FHA morti111 ceiling/• Romney said in a Slltement. Valley' City Council. Councilman Ron Shenkman i! making the request. He want.! · fellow council member! to consider spending about $2,500 to clean up a one-acre site for a Teen Help of!lce. He alSO warits the city to subsidite the youth-oriented agency at the rate of $150 a month until it can stand on i4 own' feet. Shenkman has .been involved with reviving Teen HeJp' ·since it was forced out of ib · hame' in narttieilst Fountain Valley last summer. "Jn effect we would be contracting with an oiJ.tside agency to perform a needed social service with 1 main emphasis on drug prevention, youth counseling, job."' rinding and related services," Shenkman explained today. He said he has been criticized by some individuals who thought he was seeking ·city subaklluUon of a"Tecreatlon agency; "This is not munt to be a teen center llnd the money for It would not cOme out • of the parks fuild, as previously l!Uited.." Shenkman aald. the door ror a formal request for the. JllOney from Teen Help, prdbably two weeks from now. "We won't grant any money tenight," Shenkman said. "We'll just find' out If the ·council Is agreeable to the Idea." Teen· Help has launched a program of yoµt h-related services last year, but when Its office became a regular hangout for teenagers several ·n e I g h b or Ing businesses complained~ forced its closure. J Under Shenkrnan's proddrng, Teen Help regrouped its forces and 110me of !tis former ctitica helped in Uie revival. "I've done my job now. After this r1n stepping out of the picture and Tetn Help will be on i~ own/' Shenkman said. He said civic groups have pledged about $4,000 Jn financial aid for theJ!rst year of operaUon. and Majestic Homes, a Fountain v,;uey' Industry, ii building a movable ol!ice for Teen Help_ Part of Shenkman:'• request for city aid ln<:ludel ... ol ...... ol .cill'Wid of Euclid Stttiet near the Sin Diego Freeway where the old <Xlrporatlorf yard was located, If approved this ~II be the new home of Teen tfelp. .\ " Pay Hi~e Okayed Supervisors Accept $2 ,500 Increase By JACK BROBACK Of Hit Delly P'llM SIMI Orange County supervisors this morn- ing accepted tbe recommendation of the Grand Jury and set their pay at $17 ,500 a yi!ar, $2,500 more than they have been paid for tJie past four years. The acfion was approved by a 4 to t vote, Supervisor Robert Battin dissen- ting. This morning 's move cli}Tla1ed a series of actions which has stirred noisy public protest beginning Nov. 4. At that time, the board membera met in closed session and.anegedly decided to have a salary ordinanre drawn settlng their pay at '2t,268 a year: the same as municipal court judges. FaCed with a crowded hearing room of protesters Nov . 10, supervisors th en decided to of£icia1\y tie their salaries to that of state legislators, $19,200 a year next year. This action failed to quiet the furor and recall and referendum movements were under way. Two weeks ago the board voted to refer the matter to the Grand Jury for recommendation. Before this morning's vote. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper had advised the board that their Nov. 10 action would go into effect· Dec. 10. He said iI the board adopted lbe new ordi'nan«-today~ as lheY aid, on~Oec. 31 lheir pay level would be at $17,500 a year. Few protesters voiced their objections tbiii morning but those that did were ada· mant in their opposilion to any raise whatever for the supervisors. WU!lam Ewing of Anaheim threatened, "If I have to walk up and down the streets to get you out I'll do it. I don't care what the others do -I will do .th.is·mysell.'.' Jlrancet 1 Sherman of Sinta' Ana pro- tested that tbt• pay 'raise is aut bf order beeaustror the county's current economic aituation. Janiet: Boer of Santa Ana told the supervisors. "You goofed again. You don't care. what the people think and a Grand Jury recomme ~dation is worth less. They are the hand-picked group name-d by you and what they think in no way represents wbat the people want." 'Supervisor Battin, as he had im· Residents Hit Future Airport At Los Alamitos A future general aviation airfield at Los Alamitos Naval Air Station is strong· Jy opposed by city officials and residents or the area, members of the Orange County Airport Commission round out Monday night. City Manager William Kraus tolti the commission the field is unsatisfactory for either civ ilian or military use. He quoted Frank Sanders, s!islstant secretary of the NaVy. as saying : "Selection of Los Alamitos to be phased out was influenced by the fact that it is an area of high density pcpulation and restricted air spa«, consequently nulli· fying ils usefulness as an operation base for Naval avlalion,'' the letter read. Kraus said the aame would apply to use as a general aviation facility after the Navy moves out next July. "The Parsons report forecasts 2.000 fllghUJ: per year In 1990 and that doesn 't fit into·our plans for the city,'' Kra~ em- phasized . City Councilman Joseph Hyde attacked the airport-proposal from an econrimtc angle. "The facility would not . be gocd business for Lo! Alamitos." the coun- cilman said. "Cost of serving the area with uUlities and the obvious traffic pro- blems would harm the city and cost us more money than the facility would generate.'' About 50 persons attended lhe public hearing. Of 18 who spoke, on I y one favared the airport plan advanced in lhe county's $140,000 Air Transport Plan just completed by the Parsons Company of Los Angelt.s. 'rhe city council of lm Alamitos has gone on record twice in the past nlne months opposing any future air rel.'.lted activities at the station. JO SEPH BVSC H ELECTE D DA. ' LOS A~GELES CAP) -The Loo Ang_elell County ECe'lrd o! Supervisors to- day named Chief Deputy Dist. Atty. J01ieph Busch as dlstMct attorney to replace Evelle J. Younger, e~ted 1tate mediately artier · reca:n action· was threatened, argued.today lhat the salaey should be returiled to $1$,000. ''Orange County is in an' econOmi.c slump. We should be working on that In· stead of quibbling over salaries, ... Battin charged . "No matter how we move we will' be attacked ," said Supervlsor William Phillips. "We are now the second mOl!lt papulous county in the sta\e and San. Diego County silpervisora have ju.st mov· ed to raile tbeli pay to"Slt,000 a year:" Phllilpl opoved for adopUon llld got a second lrorh Supervisor William Hirstein, who iJ retiring Jan. t &a.rd Chainnan Alton .Allen, wbo also reilfes from oftlce in January, said, "In my judgment from experience on this board the job is worth every cent cf Sl7 ,500. As t said previously when we set the salary at $11,200 if we had no one on thi.J ~ worth that much then the ~ pie should find someone that i.!I." Kidnap Threatened'?· Secret Service Guards - Nixon Aide l(issinger WASHINGTON (AP) -At least one member of President Nixon's top .White House staff has quiri.ly been given Secret Service protection -presumably to guard against any possible kidnap al· tempt. Dr. Henry A. Ki.ssiriger. Nixon's assis· tant for national security affairs. has had a Secret Service. body guard for more lban a inonlh~ i! was learned Tuesday. Palice Clear Driver, 20, ' •· t . ' ' ' . In Fatality A Hunting\on Beach youth bu been cleared of all charges in a fatal accident in which he ran over a man l,Yina: in th e middle of the road . But the mystery of why the vk:tlm was lying prone in traffic' Janes has not been cleared up and the reason probably wUl never be known, police sald today. Huntington Beach police dropped .hit and run charges against the driver, David Pa!!lllore, 20, of 1711 Golden West St., Monday afternoon. Passmore was the driver of the car which struck and killed Michael S. Insley, 22. of Sl82 Robinwood Drive, Huntington Beach, in • early morning accident on Warner Avenue in front of the Huntington Ha rbour Tennis Club last Wednesday. Passmore said he drove to his sister's home on Warner Avenue ·and called the police from there, 31 minutes after the 1:50 a.m. accident. Police accepted his statement that he was shocked and frightened after the ac- cident and medical evidence and damage to the car supported Passmore's con· tention that the victim was lying down at the time of the crash. • An autopsy tihoi.ved that Insley had been drinking that night but was not drunk, Officer 0 . L. Akin of the traffic division said. ln.sley's movements were tracm to within 30 minutes of the accident bat the investigation shed no ligbt on why he wu lying in the roadway. Seal Beach Man Held by Police In Murder Try A business discussion In a Huntington Harbour home was punctuated by a gunshot Monday night. leaving a U.year- old. Garden Grove accountant tfrriously wounded. . . The shooting victim, Gerald D. Byrd, was listed ln satisfactory condition today at Huntihgton tntercommwdty ~ospital with a .38 caliber iunshot wound in his left rib cage. Meanwhile, Huntington Beach police were holding Joseph F. Bolduc, 48, a Seal Beach real estale man, ~ suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder. Just last week., director J. Edgar Hoover of the Federal Bureau o( Investigation told a Senate appropriations subcoqunittee that a militant antiwar group was plotting to kidnap a_ White HOu'se aide or olher public official. "The plotters;." he said, "are ~ coding a scheme to kidnap a highly plac- ed government official. The name of • White House sta.ff member has been mentioned as a possible victim.'.' Neither Hoover nor any other govern- ment official has, then or sinct, identified the White House aide referr~ to by the FBI chief. . However, the fact that Kissinger has been' furnished with an extraordinary federal i>Odyguard was seen aS a strong lndiCatlon that there are genuine fears within gO"Vernment that he might_ be a kidnap' target. . KiSsinger probably carrie,, in his head more sensitive sec:urity secrel3 than any other man in the White House, perhaps even including the PresidenL Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler waa asked if any other mem~rs of Nixon's staff had been given Secret Service pr~ tection. His reply: "I can't say anything about that, for obvious reaaons ." It was widely reported last month, when Kissinger went to the Soviet mission to the United Nations in New .. York for meetings with Sgviet f~ minister Andrei Gromyt!o aJWi.',.am· bassador Anatiliy Dobrinin, thit lie 'was accompanied by a Secret Servire agent. Kissinger hall been seen with an agent dogging his footsteps On a number of oc- casions since then . Since the Secret' Service normally does not accord personal protection to members of the President's staff. it was believed Nixon bimseU must have directed the posting of lhe Kissinger badygi.lard. Chamber Issues Maps for Valley The Fountain Valley Chamber of Com- merce plans lQ release 10,000 copies of a city map of Fountain Valley iQ early January as a !ervlce to residents and local merchants. Some 8.000 copies of the color map will be mailed to homes ·with other coPlea sup'plied ta the merchants as h'and outs. The map will be printed on heavy stock, according ·to chamber officials. They hope to make it an annual project. Oruge c. .. t Weather There may be a cloudy liniq behi,nd those silver skiea; The ·weatherman sees a fO percent ch8J'1Ce of rain for Wednesday, with temperatures still mired ln the lower 60s. INSIDE TODAY ''.Divorce Italian 1t~tl" is tegal now, oM an estimated one mil- lion mi&m.atcffd'. motes are wait- ing to. take qd~ntagt of their ntw found freedom, Pagt 4. Huntington Beach Police Sgt. Monty McKennon sald the two '.mtn \had been , meeting at the home of Mrs. Eleanor M. SamofI, 1601.8,Mariner Drive, where tbe , "tncldent took plare .. Mr!. Sarnof(•WU in the home at the time, invesitniors aaid . According to police ..LllCOllitlf...M<lll<> ~ went Into Mt!. Sarnotr1 bedroom when the. argument reached ill high polnl and returned wilh a revolver. firin& twlt:t. C1""'11Mi QtedllN U• ...... ,_ .. ---- , _ .. .. " _..... ......... -,. llOD ~1""" ... -" OtaflM CMll" 1 ,, .,..w ,.,., " ' ...... .. ' 19'dl Mt,..._ 1 .. 11 One or the bullets crashed Into a wall. The other hit Byrd: lfltw'ltl , .. • ,_ .. .,...,.._ .. -.. ··-,._II ·-.. ::''tr."'·· " Wllllt Wtlfl t " The cut was announced jointly by Rpm· ney, and Veterans Administrator Donald E. John&on. If at ltsst two other councilmen agree wilh ~benimwl tonight, the cllJo will open The clty council meets at 8 o'clock. tonight In council cliambcrs, 10200 Slater Ave. • attorney 1eneral. Investigators U!id they learned of U\f: 11hootlnf from Bohtuc,. who uaed the woman a phone to c:all poll« . """ ... • :.,7·;..:.. .... '•.!: . 1 >. • • I I' r • - .. • -· . , .· 1: •, • .. \ ' ' • lr.:i ,JJ ' .. ... "" ' ... " .. -1----.-s· -.... ·-·-···""'"'" .... H~'s Giviµg ~.'Thank~·.'· .Qf .Flpnda --.. :: .· . FdrHappy:Bachelorhood . ' By ARTHUR II. VINSEL CH -. o.llJ' ,,,ltf S•ff .&>mething like lemperillg steel to tcugben It happens wbeil" a conllnntd bat:he1or spends four daya with .thrtt females, two of thern 'teenagers. • . _~The turkey wasn't eveh out of the .oven yet before' I ·wu giving lh~ks, fot.·being single. . -. Now, beforl the Women's Lib vigilantes camp on the doorstep with flaming torches, let's make this crystal clear : females are gteat. · _ SO ore 1ueJJes and l'luly bears, but all lhnle ha,.. so'mething in commoti. - ' One appreciates them best in their natural habitat My aback on the ·beach isn't it. Some .might dilagree~with the designation -caning tl a routine, or rut -but ln the twillJht ol. my }'outh, I Uve by a system. ... The win;e 1oblets _go here. The.plumber's friend goe1 . there. Women m not 1ystematlc1 if Spray Net io the dish drainer ls any in- dicaUon. And if you think It's complicated in the_ cramped confines of· a cottage, consider accompanying three femalea to· three shopping centers thL,.Ireniied holiday jM!8SOD. The first stop, was mine. . . ,"Don.~ get out of lbe car," they were .. .iold to 'tones of naive optimism, ''I'll be right out.'' One was missing and unaccounted for upon my momentary return and the two kids wore funny looks. '$he' went inside. Then she came back·," aa1d one. "She a:ot her check· book and we:it back in," the other erplalned Medleasly~ So I headed for the bank, with naively optimistic instructions to meei me there unless I got back to the car first. By the time I returned from the one-D,lile hike. the car was gone. , . . _ Tbey went to Ute bank all right. .The wrong bank. Npw it is Saturday. They have voted down a t.tip.to Sea World or Uon Country Safari. They have bigger game in mind; Sot!lh Coast Plaza and Newport 'Center. They mustn't, however, loot like country bumpkins. • So after more closed-door preparation than Raquel Welch would need for the Academy Awards, we seem to be ready. ~ Columbus could have gotten tlie Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria oil . fOf' the New World futer. Jlunlbal 1ot bis elepbub over the Alps in the twiriklin, of an eye by comparison. - ~very living soul in Orange County seems to be 1t South Coast Plaza. My .r~ .are killing me. I've got 1 aamp 1n the credit cards. /l vision of a ' girr.a~-tonic dapgles before me Jike a carrot :before a mule: · ·The a:Vls --bou.gclng from boutique to'botttlqlle -clin't be found. My mother suggests the corrld0r1 to ·tbe ladies' rOOms ·m so long they If could .baV& been-muaged and molested and nobody would know for 2t'houn. ~ '· Flnally they showed up and we move on. - • NeWpOrt Center isn't so hectic, perhaps because while It has no mall , we ·do have a .record rainfall in Fogr5l! by now. • ; : Everyone f~ll better after {wo refreshing stops. T~lrs was at an Ice ch!&m parlor. Now it is Sunday. Customary thanks and goodbyes and seeyaJaters have been exchanged. • Spray net is ablent from the. dish drainer. Hair curlers are a:one from my tie- cllp t,ay. 1 j • 'The silence h broken four hours later by their telephone call to ay · they're home, despite foul weather·and holiday traffic. ' . "Than!is Lord," I murmur, ln eraUtude for their safe trip. ~ also for ll<ini a bachelor. , '· r ~an· Francisco Cloalcs I( y ' In Tight Securiiy Wraps SAN · FRANCISCO CUP!) -Police Chief Alfred Nelder .today called out 4!0 men, all but 40 in unifonn, to patrol lhe FaJrmont-Hotel, where Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam is mak· Ing a speech. 'I1le chief anno~ his plarui after peice groups.declared they were calling for mass picketing to protest Ky's ap- pearance be.fore the commonwealth Club. Neither Mayor Joseph Alioto nor Governor Ronald Reagan is attending the meeting. The: may'Or announced he had a previous engagement and the governor's office said merely ''no" when questioned whether Reagan would attend. In 1ddlUon 1to uniformed and plain clothes policemep, Ky also will be guard. DAILY PILOT ORANG£ COAST PU9LISl-ilflfl. COMPAwt R6bert N. w.n '"'"ld1nt •rod Publltfler J1ck It. Cy1l1y Vitt Pmldll!I •l'lf o.t.1r•I MM\ltlt Thorn•• J<,,,a E4iiof' _ Tho11•111 A. Muri11hl111 M•t1911irlJ Edl.or Al•• Qirkin W•t Or-. Cllllty l<lflw Albert W. 11!1& ~i.i. l&llltr Hntl1tttr1 ... Offlq 17t 75 lee•h a.,l•'l'tNI Meiling A.ddre11i P.O. hx 7f0, t2l41 Otller OfRMa L911J1M1 l...:1!1'221 l'-1 Avtl'l\Jt CO.i. Ma.t: ut w.t ar, i tr..t w........,, 11tcl'I: 2111 wrwt ••• ,..,~ ... i1n 'ltr!lll'llt; at fb'tll a1 t1mM lt:IM ed by Seeret-Servici.!' agents and other federal officers. Nelder declared : "It ls traditional that S~n "!'ancisco, _be_ courteoia to all visitors. t hope and trust the tradition will not be broken." John . Busterud, he business club's president, said : "It Is the view of lhe Commonwealth Club that it should pro- vide a forum for all important points of view whether these in the local com- munity agree with or oppose hose \'iews." Howard Wallace, speaking for the peace groups, asserted : "We're not trying to stop him (Ky) from speaking, but we're certainly going to picket him ." "We're planning a massive outpouring of people protesting Ky and all he stands for. , .The 'corruption o'r\ the Saigon regime and tht continuation/>£ the war.'' Among the sponsors of picketing are the Downtown Peace Coalition, the Na- tional Coalition Against War, Racism and Reprwlon .and the Marin (County) Peace•Coalitlon. JodiVtdu&rs endorsing the protest in- clude Assemblyman John Burton (D·San Francisco)· .Assemblyman W i 11 i am Brown (~n Francisco) the Rev. Douglas Siden, San Francisco Council of Churehes· Pre.!ident, James Ballard, ,president of local 61 , the San Francisco Federation of Teachers. __r.feace group spokesmen pointed out that a majority ol San Francisco residents at the last election , approve:<! this statement: "It shall be the policy of th& city and county of San Francisco that the.re be an immediate ceasefire and llft.. 'mediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Vietnam so that the Ytetnam.ese people can Mttle thelr own problems." Modem Dance Classes Planned The H1111t1"119n Beach YMCA will open a modem dance class at noon Saturday 1n the muJU-pulpose room, 179.ll Beach Blvd. MJ~Sbm1 ~"'"" from the American School of ~ UC, lrYlne will lOKil the eight-week course. Anyone tntett.ited In the course may lign ap wllli lhe YMCA thl1 week. For reciltrallon or further lnformatio~ phone 147-11622. - KEY LARGO, Fla. (UPI) - A huge oil slick believed caused by a paS!lng Italian tanker stretched for 71 miles along the Florida Keys threatening an unusual underwater state -park made up of beautlful coral and 'trana:e fish . The slick was apparently caused by the 1hlp dumping the residlie from Its tanU. Winds of about 15 mph were driving the sticky mass shoreward and Lt. Edward Lltt1e. district supervisor of the State Department of Natural Resources, aaid there wu daiiger to the unusual coral formations, which jut from the Atlantic waters at low tide, might be smeared by the oll. The slic k spread along the Ctlast !rum Key Largo to Marathon. At Its nearest polnt, the oil was only about one mile from· the Pennekamp Coral Reef Slll.te Park. Ralph Hodges, state natural resourCC!I director, first disclosed the oil spill in Tallahassee. He said it was· reported by ' fishing boat about 4:30 p.m. Monday and that a Marine Patrol pilot later followed the slick to its southernmost point and discovered the Italian tanker "Gel es la I." Disclosure of the spill coincided with a rep6rt from New Orle~ that A well belonging to Shell Oil had blown out and caught fire in the Gulf of Mexico, knock- ing several workers into the water. The well is 60 miles south or New Orleam, ad· jacent to the V/i!lner Wildlife Manage- ment Area. By afternoon, the action of the sea reportedly was bre.aking up the oil spill along the Keys into small globules. Little said some oil had already washed a.'lhore. State officials are checking With federal agencies to determine the destination of the tanker and to decide what steps ran be taken to recover both' actual and punitive damages, Hodge.s said. Hodges said the major· immediate pro- blem was in flguring how to contain the slick and prevent the oil from sinkJng to the bottom of the Pennekamp Park. "It might be a quite expensive operation in that particular area," he told the cabinet Although the spill was classified aa "very large," Hodges said it was not comparable to the TamJM!, Bay oil spill of last February ln which several thoosand gallons of oil spilled from a tanker whicll ran aground . Gov. Claude Kirk said the company which owns the tanker causing the spill should be "embargoed" from sending any more ships into Florida porta aa punish4 ment and inducement not to clean their tanks in Florida waters a1ain. 'Little Adam 12' Tunes In, Bugs Police Radios 1 Police of three Orange County cities would like to find "little Adam 12" but they have slight hopes of succeeding. A voice, described as that of a teenaa:e boy, was for 3D minutes on and off the police communicatiom channel used by Santa Ana , Tustin and Orange Monday night. Most of the half hour the youthful voice teased police for "not being able to find me." "You cops are sure dumb," the taun· ting voice said. "You can't even find one . person." Police tried zeroing in on the voice but were unable to do so before the youth signed off with, "Guess I'll see you cops later." Officers said they thought lhe sender was in southeast Santa Ana. Carl Forster Funeral Slated Funeral aervices for Carl Forster, 23, of 16770 Redwood St., Fountain Valley, will be held al 3 p.m .• Wednesday. in Westminster Menlorial Park. Burial will follow ·in the park. Mr. Forster, a three-year resident of Fountain Valley. cUed Satw-day. He . taught German in the Downey Unified School for 13 years. l-le is 11urvlved by his wile HlnDa ; two sons, Ingmar and Heinz; Ml mother, EliUibeth Fonter of Los. Angeles: and two sisters, Elizabeth Forster of Loa Angeles and Mrs. Lydia Lohrmann. Exchange Club .. Prepares Feast A five-hour banquet is being cooked up by the l:funUngton Beach Exchange Club to benefit Mexican-American· students. The dinner will be held at the rtcrea- llon ce nter, 1706 Orange Ave., Dec. e from 11 a,,m. to 5 p.m. Club president Dr. W. R. Cohen ia..ld lhat all proceeds Will go (or acholanhlps for Mexlcan-Americtn students In Hunt. lngfon S:eaCh and FOU11lain Valley. He Invited all membus ol the eom- munltlei to the dlnner with a doRatlon of U.50 being 1sked for 1dulti and' •1 for children. A Mariachi band and 1trollln• SUit.&r players wi~ entertain. t• ~ ' Happier Landirigs • Plane cl eara lZ.foot blast fence on Ila way t~ safe landing at Meadowlark ,Airport in Huntington Beach. The fence is designe,d. to reduce noise and d"ust from planes taking off from the airport. It alsa· may muffle some of the criticism of the airport by homeownels protesting the extension of the runway toward Heil' Avenue. City planning commissioners recenUy made construction of the blast fence a con- dition of approval for a portion of the extension. . . ,·,. Salk Institute Claims Possible Cure for MS .LA JOLLA (A~) -The Salk Institute says a substance it has developed has been successfully used to prevent a type of mµltiple sclerosis In anirrials. Dr. Edwin H. Eylar said Monday the substance, a chemically m o d i f i e d molecule known as NHB derivative, also has reversed the disease in rabbits, guinea pigs and monkeys and could lead to development or a vaccine for humans. He said an animal condition called Ex. perimental Autoallerjlc Encephalomye- litis, or EAE, closely resembles human multiple sclerosis and some scientists be- lieve they are identical . "Even anim&ls in 'the throes of EAE recover, sometimes dramatica1ly, when Mailman, Lauded After Foi,ling Burglary Try A Huntington Beach mail carrier pick· ed up a $100 check and words of praise this morning for his alertness in spoiling the burglary of a Huntington Harbour home. Peter Barazsu was honored with the Post Office's Superior Accomplishment award and the check for his quick action Nov. 4. On that date the mail carrier was covering his route in Huntington Harbou r when he saw two strangers ]eave a house. Baraz.su copied . the number of the strangers' truck license. When they saw him doing It, they quickly drove off . Barazsu phoned police who came out and discovered that the men had been .at- tempting to break in to lhe home. Barazsu's intervention foiled t h e burglary, police said. they are Injected with the HNB deriva- tive." Eylar said in an interview. After a heaJthy animal gets J 1hot of HNB, which derives from huma and cat- tle nerve protein, it becomes immune to the substance used to cause EAE, he said. If the an · al is already ill, it gel!i well. "All the eviden now points to a virus as the cause of ultiple sclerosis," he said, adding that n estimated 500,000 persons are affiic d by the dise.ase in this country every, year. Eylar suggested the virus that causes multiple sclerosis in humaos works into the nervous system as the laboratory in. duced virus does on animals . The virus gets into the nervous system and becomes coated with a nerve-protein called Al , he believes, then the body's immune system makes antibodies that attack not only the virus but also the pro-, tein. When the antibodies reach the nervous system they start destroying myelin, which is the protective sheath around nerve and brain cells. Addilional research may prove con· elusively· that lhe Al protein is involved in multiple sclerosis as it is in EAE, he said, in which case the HNB vaccine developed at Salk may be tested on hwnans. Pearl Harbor Meal Set by Beach Legion Huntington Beach American Legion Post 133 will hold its 29th annual Pearl Harbor Commemorative breakfast at 8 a.m. Sunday in Memorial Hall. fl.1ayor Donald Shipley is tile key speaker for the breakfast. Leaders from throughout lhe city have been invited. Guests will see a film of Pearl Harbor action. Bomb Damages U of Oregon Office Area EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -A bomb ex- tensively damaged an office and blew out windows ~f a University of Oregon ad- ministration building today. Four persons, including the vice chancellor of the Oregon state education sy8'em, were inside the building but escaped Injury, police said. The investigating officers said the bomb went off outside a groUnd-level win- dow of Johnson Hall. where the offi ces of the university president and lhe State System of Higher Educalion are located. Police said they had no immediate Ur dication of who was responsible Jor the bombing. Immediate damage estimates were not made but observers said it appeared that the blast was not as severe as the U:• plosion which caused $75,000 damage°'to a faculty office building three blocks away on Oct. 2. Miles Romney, vice chancellor of the state system. a secret!ry and two tel ephone operators were in the building when the blast hit but told police they v.•ere not hurt. Eugene, Oregon's second. largest city. with a metropolitan population of 130,000, has been hit by several explosions and arson<aused fires in th&> past three years, including one night in 1969 when fi ve dynamite explosions caused minimal damage to church, business and govern- ment .buildings in the city. F iJ1n Show in g Sla ted Earl Nightingale's award winning film ''The Strangesl Secret"', will be shown to members of the Huntington Beach-Foun· lain Valley Board of Reeltors at their I a.m. meeting \Vednesday in the Mile Square Golf Club restaurant. ··cABPETEERs~~ ... IT STARTS WITH A PHONE CALL TO YOU FROM A "RESEARCH" FIRM ASKING IF YOU OWN YOUR HOME AND IF YOU NEED CARPETING OR DRAPERIES. IF THE ANSWER IS AFFIRMATIVE, THE CALLER WILL OFFER TO SEND A "DECORATOR" TO SHOW YOU A NEW TYPE OF "COMMERCIAL" GRADE CARPETIN G .. WHEN. THE "DECORATOR" ARRIVES AT YOUR HOME, HE DEMONS TRATES STAIN RESISTANCE OF HIS CARPET, MAY OFFER TO PA Y OFF YOUR DEBTS, MEASURES YOUR ROOM IN "UNITS" INSTEAD OF YARDS , AND OFFER S A BIG DISCOU NT (OR EVEN A CHECKj TO USE YOUR HOUSE AS A "SHOW HOUSE" FOR HIS CAR PET. "JU ST SIG N HERE" IS THE CLINCHER. AMONG THE PAPERS TO SIGN MAY BE A SECOND MORTGAGE ON YOUR HOUSE, NO ITEMIZATION OF YARDA GE BEIN G PURCHASED, AND A LONG TERM CONTRACT FOR PAYMENTS TOTALLING MO RE TH AN THE PRICE PER YARD QUOTED. DO N'T BE TRICKED BY UNKNOWN FIRMS WHOSE GUARANTEES LAST ONLY AS LONG AS THEIR SHORT LIVED BUSINESS, DON'T BE F 0 0 LED BY "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING" OFFE RS, PHON Y "COMME RCIA L" QUALITY AND F.UM-FLAM CONTRACTS. KNOW THE MERCHANDISE OR KNOW YOUR MERCHANT! ..-~~~~~~--. U.NTA ANA, OU.N•I TUITIM Cell • , • Al.DIN'S llD NIU CA.INTI a Dl.APQI a 11174 lrH-. ,..,... c.m. .... ,, ... ALDEN'S ( CARPE'fS-e DRAPES · 1663 l'lac:Jntla· ·Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS1 Mon. Th ru Thur1., f to 5130 -,,1., f to f -Sot., 9130 to S . ' ' I. 7 , I I I \ ' ' f I ., " I • f I . I I l 7 ... • • • • -• • (;osta Mesa . .. Yot.iJ, No: 287, l S6CTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUlilTY, -C:ADFORNfA· TEN ~E~S:- .. County Fair Horse · Racing Hearing Scheduled ' ~ . '• A hearing 11 scheduled ln mid· December to fiiure the odds On whet,her iht} 1971 · Oran'ge Couhty Fair ' and Ei:· position . will -or c~n -f~ture hor·se racirig. The July~13 .through 19 event )llOU1d pro- ~ably be doubled in length if the idea becomes a reality. 1 Di.r;ectors of the 32lld D i s t r I c t Agricultt.iral AssoCiation 'are 'awaiting reSulbl:ol.a. st~dy~based on thoroughbred racing and the facilities required at other fairgrounds. · These findings will . be aired Dec. 17 when the Fair Board conducts its next regular J_Deetili& in administrative offices . •· Four Hurt • In Mesa Collisions • A series of Costa Mesa car collisions Monday and early today left fotir persons lnjured '!nd . cne jailed on suspicion of felony drunken driving. One woman suffered a fractured spine, J\'hile a male passenger in a car whose driver fled on foot required 75 stitches io hlS fac~; after smashing the windshield. Nigel tJradney, 55, of 2013 Calvert Ave., Costa Mesa, was bOOked on the felony drunk driving charge Monday night tollowing a headon collision on Adams Avenue at the Santa Ana River bridge. 'Mrs. Rae L. Potter, 50, of 29.17. Royal Palm Drive, Costa Mesa, was listed in lair 'condition today at Costa Mesa 1'1emorlal Hospital with a broke n b;Jck and a· broken nose suffered in the ac- cident. · ... She. ... a pa~"~D •~r ·*iYUthy­ her husband Frank L. Potter, 45, wM ·esc;aped injury, accordin& to Patrolman Tom Lazar. WitnesMis told him Potter swerved, but co.u1dn't avoid the crash, which occurred at the Huntington Beach·Costa Mesa city limit. ' Timothy M. Warten. ·24, of 20412 Birch 61., S~ta Ana, had 75 stitches taken in his forehead after a car in which he rode &lafilmed into another parked vehicle in the 1900 block of Church Street about 2 o'clock this morning. Mrs. Ola Taplin, 1917 Church SL, heard the skid and crash into her c~r, jumped out of bed and .called police. A s(!.cond ·witness said he saw a young woman hurrying away from the Aeene, while Warren refused to tell investigators anything. Residents in the area com.plained to the citN council recently about wild driving and noise problems generated by a nearby bar, resulting· in a study' that is presently in progress. Severa:! hours earlier. Mary M. Pyle, 34, of 613 Poppy Ave .. Corona de! ·Mar, 5Uffered facial injuries when her car, northbound· on Santa Ana Avenue, crash· ed into a parked vehicle at Flower Street. Rose L. Mason. 49, of 2904 AndrO! St., C:OSta Mesa, suffered back and head in· juries Monday when a car in which · she was a passenger crashed into the'"rear of another on Ha rbor Boulevard at 1~ Street. Police slid Richard R. Mason. 25, ol the same address, failed to see a slower . car ahead driven by Violet Lefevre, 66, of 2429 E. 16lh St .. Newport Beach, Stock Market Up F·or Eighth Day NEw YQRK l~Pl -The prolil takers robbed Wal! Street ol all of it.s early itrpng gains today. bot prices edged back up, as mea.sured by the Dow Jones aver· age after . being off fractionally in the mid:dle of the heavy tradln.iz session. At the closing .bell the Dow Jones av· era.le of 30 industrial stocks was up .2 to 7~29. EarJJef in the se!_sioA it had been up l)lore than 6 point.s aild above the 800 level for the first time in almost a· year. Tl)e eight day rally which was halted In . midsession Tuesday carried, the Dow 163 )points beyond its low for the year (tbe 631.16 registered at the close of trading May 26). lsraelis Kill Aral) TEL AVIV (UPtJ -An Israeli army patrol shot and killed an ArAb man and woUnded an Arab woman in the, occupied G-8 Strip earli today, 1n Israeli mi1K8ry spokesman said. Ttte -spokesnu1n--ta-id-ju!l before-d11wn" the ·patrol 11aw ·the two Arabs •cling sllsplciously and called on them· to halt. •'Thfy ignored tht order to hilt, shots were fired and tbe two Arabs wtrt hit," the sPoke:sman said. at the fiirgroupd11 in Costa Mesa. Tl1is would.merely_be the first stopr G~al . Manager James Porterfield pointed out today. "Our positiOn on this thing Is to gather the.fact,, about whether it i11 even feasible tp hav.e·,a.racing complex," he explained., Approval · by 1hiji:her agencies, develop- ll)ent· of. a O~·mile thoroughbred track,· CO.fUillrUCUon · of stabling fi.cilities 'and assignment of racing dates are other con· sld"e'rations. The racing study was initiated at. the Nov: 19 board meeting by Presiden\,.. Thpothy Strader, recently rttumed from a visit to the impressive Fresno County Fair.· Horse racing IS featur~ere -as at ~~bas a rodeo area including a one- several other state locitioo~ tenth-mile track, while thoroughbred rae- June 14 through October season -and ing would require a full·mile oval. ~as proved to be. a money·maker for the Porterfield said he believes the re-tight·budget a1". . . . A pf'oj , . the I , Ora quired land 1s there, but pointed out C9unty Fair an 'Exposit n places 1t at tables are available for only « horses, i.pa,OQO, up f!'Om ,286,000 f~r the event w e an average fair·time race card la.st .July. . . .1 be would require up to 700 hors~s. State funds totaling $65,000 wi 1 A typical race calendar would include allotted, compared to $.58,000 last year. . , . ·sa.cramento legislator's and t he 12 daily events for up to 12 days, six Cslifomia Divislori or Fairs and Ex-thoroughbred races and three each for PQSitions for · i'bout four years have been Appaloosas and quarter·horses. urging local fair boards to develop more Horse ril.cing as a method of increasing sources or year-around income. attendance and income has been discuss- 'Costa Mes&'s ISO.plus acre 'facility cur-ed occasionally in the past, but this is tbe first .concrete move by lily · local ·fair board toward it. U they vote to proceed Dec:. 17. the Division of Fairs and Expositions would have to approve, and a!So the California Horse Racing Board, which a8'i1!15 race dates. Public hearings are required ln each case. One problem foreseen ·is working the Orange County event, t e n t a t i v e I y scheduled July 13 through 19, into lll~ already established state fair racing circuit. One potential $01Ution lies In possibly setting alternate dates. The Orange County Fair attendance auffered coosiderably ln 1969 when thousands stayed home to watch the bi3toric Apollo 11 moon landing mission. A. new mpon launch is ten!-ativ~elf &et by NASA for next July 13 and alternate dates could be set if that Is confirmed. One feequent critic ~of th~ horse racing proposal -as outlined in prior discussion -Is Director· Burr Williams. of Anaheim, who voted for lhe current feasibility study. · · He has been adamant .against the con· cept or sellihg the existing·. site for development a.nd relocating elseWhere. advocating instead the improvement of what is in the public trust now for recreation. Pay Hike Okayed . Orphans Await Help Child}en orphaned by recent cy~lone .. a.nd tidal wave that killed thousands in East Pakistan wait for food :it a government felief sta· tion On Bhola Island. As of Su nday. American _helicopters had flown more than 300 missions carrying 141 tons of food and _.rel\ef -supplies to disaster victims. England, .France, Germany, The NeµierJa.nds and Saudi Arabia are among nations contributing to relief work. Unmerry Yule Christmas Crime Crackdown Starts ' Christmastime me3ns Christma,s crif1'!e viction ls. six months ln Orange County 11nd Costa Mesa police -said today they J~ih a $300 fine, or both. are beginning their annual crackdown. RecenUy compiled statistics in the FBI Teai;ns of plaiflclot.he;tmen , w 111 Crime Index show larceny, of which circulate among stores in Major a.nd shoplifting is a major share. ls the na· smaller shopping centers throoghout the tion's fastest-growing criminal problem. city, making the holiday eeason unmerry Losses for the last ·year studied hit 1320 for shoplifters. million nationwide. although this was not Police also note many gt.ores employ broken down to separate shoplifting from .. their own security men and these forces other type~ of theft . &re beefed·UP during th'e peak shoplifting One chain department store logged season. 20,000 arrests across the U.S. in the past Why not keep quiet. instead of warning year, police note, quoting from private t t I h rfter ., statistics. ~.en 18 s op 1• 11 • -Based on the nat.ional average or $28 Not only ls 1t a deterrent ., but we can , ·taken in .each such incident. these known conta~ .. merchants and advise them of cases involved $460.000 in merchBndiSe. precaub~nary ~e~sures t~ey ~an ~k~ t~ The offenders ranged from t:J.year-old help avo.1d the. 1n~ease 1n this crime. girls with Stolen lipstick! to light·fingertd says Pohce. ~1ef ~ger E .. N.eth. professionals whb know all the cunning ~e .erflph~size~ that shoplifting worsens tricks. · drastical.ly m December. . Reminding potential thieves of Detec!1ve Lt. ~arold Fischer, w~se toughened-up security by both sworn of· men will be assigned to the shophft flcers and store guards, police noted: teams. sars some merchants seem to be "Nine out of 10 steaJ because tbey·think soft on thieves. lh •t be bl" "We talked to a number in a rece.nl ey won caug sm:vey and find some don't even repor~ lh"' cases.'' he •relain•.' 1963 Miss . AIDerica The severity of punishment: for thbse ~ . ·who are caught can also be made to fit WASHINGTON, Pa. (APJ-Ja.cqueline the crime. .. May~r Townsend, M11111 America of ·1963, N6rmal1y i>rosecuted al peUy ·th~ft, a has been hospitalized with a stroke., m·isdemeanor. shoplifting become 1 Her . husban<t, John Townsend; a burglary In-some cases -depending on lawyer, ~aid Monday night doctors • cirtumst.ance -which ctn bring up toJ!_ believe there is~ a good chance th• -2?· years in state prison. • • .. . ... year-old beauty "will make a 1ubstan· The ma.rlmum o• 1 misdemeanor con-ti&lly total recovery.'' '. • .. ... • Supervisors Accept $2,500 lncrew;e By JACK BROBACK 01 "" EM1111 Pllet Jt1t1 Orange County supervisors this morn- ing acc.tpted the recommendation of the Gi-and Jury and set their pay at '17,~ a year, $2,500 more than they have been paid for the past four years. The action was approved by a 4 to 1 vote, SuperviSC1r Robert Battin dissen· ting. Thiii morning's move climaud a series of actions which has stirred 11olsy public protest beginning Nov. 4. -:. At that time, the board members met In closed session and allegedly decided to have a salary ordinanc~ drawn 11ettlng the!r pay a~ ~.Z68 a year, Uie same as DiUhiCipal'"COUft.'judgei'I. ' ~,' 1 · Faced With a crowded hearing room of protesters Nov . 10, super'visors t h t n decided to officially tie their salaries to that of state legislators, $19,200 a year next year. -.. This action failed to quiet the furor and recall and referendum movements were llnder way. Two weeks ago the board voted to refer the matter to the Grand Jury for recomm"endation. Before this morning 's vote. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper had advised the board that their Nov. 10 acti~ would go into effect Dec. 10. H~ s'aid if the boatd adopted the new ordinance today, as 'they did, on Dec. 31 their pay level would be at $17 ,500 l year, Few protesters voiced their objection• this morning but those that ,did were 11di· mant in their opposition to any raise whatever for the supervisors. William Ewing of Ap.aheim threatened, ''If I have to walk up and down the stree~ to get you out I'll do It. I don't care what the others do -I will do this myself.'' Frances Sherman of Santa An• pro- test.ed that the pay raise is out of order because of the county's current economic situation. Janice Boer of Santa Ana told the supervisOrs, "You gOOJed agaio. You don't care what the people think and a Grand Jury recommenda t ion is worthless. They are the hand·picked group named by you and what they think in no way represents what the people want." Supervisor Battin, as he had Im· mediately after recall action was threatened. argued today that th' salary should be returned to '15,000. "Orange County ls in an economic shqnp. We should be working on that In· stead of quibbling over salaries," B8ttin charged. ''No matter how we move-We will be attacked," said Supervisor William Traf fie Hearing Slated in Mesa Residents concerned about traffic con-- ditlons In northwest <;osta Mesa will gather tonight to discuss problenu and solutions with state and city officials. The gathering will convene 11t 7:34) p.m. at Paufarino School. '° PetitiOners went before the city council recently to requ~t . that Paularino Avenue be closed ,.off r.;.oM ~point ,and Bear Street conslr\lcted through lo Baker Street to handle the ti'affic now: State Division of Highw.ays pl11nners had hoped to begin this year; but coslJ climbed beyond th.e level 1et by the 1970 budget, Which already has bten .. adopted. A state 'Division or H I g h w a y 1 spokesmen wUI be present at the m~etlng, called to · 'discuss po~ible allemat1ves re.sld&it.s hope may lt)creue traffic safety, J Phillipa. "We are now the second most populous county in the state 1nd San Diego County supervisors have just mov. ed to raise their pay to $19,000 a.year.'' ,. Phillips moved for adoption and got a second from Supervisor William Hirstein, who is retiring Jan. t • - Board Chairman Alton Allen, who al!K> retires .from office in January, said, ';In my judgment frOm experience: on thil board the job ii' worth every cent ot $17,SOO. A! I said previously when we set the salary at $19,200 if we had no one on this board1wortb that muC:h then the peo- ple should find someone that is.'' Kidnap Threatened? Secret Service Guards WASHINGTON (AP) -Al tei!;t one member of Pre!ident Nixon's top WhJte House stall has quieUy. been given Secret Service protection -presumably to guard against any possible kidnap at· tempt. Dr. Henry A. Kissingef, Nixon's assis· tant (or national security affairs. ha.s had a Secret Service body guard for mol't than a month, it was learn~ Tuesday. Just last week, director J. Edgar Hoqver of the Fed~al Bureau of Investigation told a Senate appropriations subcoinmittee J that a militant antiwar group w~. plotting to kidnlp i White . . San Francisco's Security Tight For Visit of Ky SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police Chief Alfred Nelder today called out 420 men, all but 40 in uniform, to patrol, the Fairmont Hotel, where Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam· is m•k· lng a speech. The chief announced h.is plans· aftei- peece groups declared they Were calling for mass picketing to protest . ,Cy's ap. pearance before the Commonwealth C1ub. Neither Mayor Joseph A~Oto nor Governor Ronal!f Reagan is attending the meeting. The mayo~ announced he had a previous engagement arid the governor '• office said merely "no" when ·questloned whether Reagan would attend. · In addition to uniformed and plain clothes policemen, Ky also will be guard· ed by Secret Service agent..s and other federal officer.s. Nelder declared: ''It is traditional that San FrancisCo be courtlious to ·all visitors. I hqpe . and trust the tr,ditioi1 will not be broken." Police Schedule Bicycle Auction • One of the best Christmas shoppln1 evenlJ In Costa Mesa· comes Saturday, wher, .. lfl.e police dep~tmen\ Aag~s another quarterly bicycle arid uncfafined goods, auctioh. , . , · · · A. fieel of 51 boys' and girli' tiicyci~ may be examined •t t~ teat cl lb&: Police Facility. 11 Falr Drive, pr!ar: to tht · 10 a.m. aucllon.1 · • • .\uctiol)etlr Sgt. R®trt Goode wl\Ll!!? put on ' tM block 1utomobf1e urti atML wheels. dishfis. clothing, Ulpe reCordtrs, tool bo1es. a alee Pina bat: an~ other a:ear. ,. E\/en je'!"'tlry. •nd a camera a~ pn· the list compiled by sat. 'td Lovei.o, who handle&• unclaimed pfoperty. · · • House aide or other public official "Th~ plotters," he said, "are con- eocting ~ schime to kidnap a highly plac- ed government officiaJ , The name of 1 White HOuse staff member has been mentioned as a possib.le victim." Neither HooVer no?-any other govern- ment official has, then or since, identified the .White House aide referred to by the FBI chief. However. the fact that Kissinger bas been furnished with an extraordifl.ary federal bodyguard was seen as a strong Indication that there are genuine fearr , within ·government that he might be. a kidnap target. l{jssinger pr,obably carries In hls bead more sensitive security secrets than any other man in the White ·HOuSe, perhaps even including the President. Presi secretary Ronald L. Ziegler wa! asked ii any 0th.er members of Nixon's staff had been given Secret Ser\tlce pr~ tection. His reply: "I can't say anything about that, for obvious reas_oos." ft was widely reported last month. when Kissinger went to the Soviet mission a, the United Nations in Ne w York for meetings with Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko and am- bassador Anatiliy Dobrinin, ttiat he was accilmpanied ~y a Secret Service agent. Kissinger has been seen with an agent dogging his footsteps on a numbµ of oc- casions since then. Since the Secret Service normally does not · accord personal protection • to members of the President's staff, it was believed Nixon himself must have directed tbe posting of the Kissinger bodyguard. Oruge Coast . ' There nay be a cloudy lining behind thoae silver skies. The weatherman sees a 60 percent chance of rain for Wednesday, with temperatutes still mired 'in the lower 60s. . INSIDE TODAY . . . ' "Qivorce ttalta,i 1tylt" ia leg n,ow, a~d .'W';' estimated ont cfnj(. hon mtam.atcht,.d mates are toq:ft-i"-g 'to tak.it o~~ntage"Ot £heir ntw found freedom , Papt 4. " C•Nltr11l1 1 CIMC'6Jtt U• 1t Cllffllffof ll·tt Ctl'l'llcl 11 Cmrwtrf lJ DMltl Mflk" ' O!nrt• 1. fllflwltl ,.." • ·~""''"'-' '' '"'-' lt•ll "-'"" '' •1111 Yl!fert 1• Mlll!Mt • < • , 1 ' ' • , l -------. 1Wl.Y l'ltOT c ' ! ' .. Harbor .Boulevard mQtorists will soon see an empty ~lot where. thiS bouse. stood-at Princeton. Drive. .)'la~~ Cadillac bought the next-4oor property and . ,PIBD§..: (or; the -present, to lB:Jl<lscape it for better view of the auto agency. Lot -and one ·across the . , street -are last residentially zoned (R·l) lots on Harbor. Big Oil · Slick ferils Reef Off_ Florida - KEY iJ.JrGo, Ji'IA. (uPI) -A huge oil slick believed caused by a passing Italian ·t.al'tkt?r stretdre<t tor 71 miles along. ttie- F~rida·· Keys threateOtng· an unuSual urtdern<lt'.er . state pai-k made up Clf by,utifl,l.i cor.al.an~ straQ&e fish. . }'h.e slick waa appar.ently caused by th! - ship dUmping·the·residue from·its tanks. Wind.5 ol about 15 mph were driving the 1t1Cky mass 'shoreward and Lt. Edward Liitle, dis"trtct supervisot of the State Department ~! N!tural 'Resources, said th~re wB;s . Qaljger tO th~ ~usuaJ poral fal:mB.tiQN, which jut from the AU&il~ic "''aters"llt low ~e, might be smeared by the oil. The sUclC spread along the coast from Kly Latgo to Marathon. At its nearest patnt, ·th.e :oil was only about one mile rrom the ·Pennekamp Coral Reef St:lte Piirk .: . . Ralph Hodges, state ·natural resources dil;tector, f~··dlsclosed the oil spill in Ta)lahassee. H~ ·said it was reported by a fi~ l;loat about 4::30 p.m. Monday and lhal a ~~ ~a!(ol. pilot Jeter foll~wed the . .sJick .to i~. southernmost point and di!toVered tbe ltallan tanker ~·Gelesial." ~ure of the !pill coincided wtfh ·a report 'trom· New 'Orleans th8t a V.·cll belonging to Shell Oil.had blown out :lnd caugbt,ltre in U>e·Gult -of MWco, knock-· lni. sevUat 'workers into the water. The wl11 is 60 mile! ~th of New Orleans, ad· lal:tnt to jbe Wisner Wild.life Manage;., · m~rtt Arel .. · ' ·• · · By aft'efnoon, the actlon ~f the ~ teportedly was breaking up the oil spill aJong th~ lteys into ~all globuJes. Little said some.oil bad ah-eady washed ashore. Stale Officials are checking1with fedetal 1geocies. to determine the destination· of the .tanker and to decide what steps ran be taken t.0 -reco\ter both actual 311d punitive damages, Hodges said. Hodg~ uid the ~ajar immediate pro- blem was .in figurin~ how to contain the dick and prevent the oil from sinking to the bottom of the P.ennekamp Park. "It might be' a quite expensive_ ope.ration in lhat partirular area," he told the cabinet. Although the spill' was classified as wveey large;" Hodges said it was not romparable to the Tampa Bay oil spill o~ _ last 'February in whlch several thousand gallQns of oil spiUed from a tanker which ran aground. Gov. aaude Kirk said the company which owns the tanker causing the spill , 1hould be "embargoed" from sending any more ships into Florida ports .as punish· inent and inducement not to tlean their Ii~ in Florida waters again. DAILY PILOT OUHO! COASf f>U•LtsMING COM"AHY ••hetl N. w,,, Prai:l111I _,. "Ubl""" :Jack R. Cuti • ., Vice l"rltlfM'll •r.d "-ti Mnttr Tho111ts K1tYll '""' 'Oiol"ltS A. Murplr.i11t M•n .. fllf Edllor c..t• MIN Office lJO Weit ley Street M1111119 Adclr1111 PA In lllO, tl626 ' . OtlllrOM... rfWllOl'l 'llldl: 2lll w.t •111111 loyln1'11 LIOllM IMd!: ttt ,_, .. , A~"'"" JI ......... ...oi1 m1J IHdl ......... ,,, 1111 C""'*'11i at NW1ll &I Clltllfllo It ... Nrw Charge Leveled Mesa Suspect to Face New State Bomb Laws? .A young Hawthorne man who walked into a h~tily-rigged Costa Mesa police trap, allt!gedly with 102 sticks of dynamite for sale may l>e the first to suf· fer consequences of a new California crackdown on bombings. ) Three days before David F. Platter, 23, was arrested, new California Penal Code sections to1,1gbening up on _el'plosives violations \fere" adopted. He was arraigned today on an amended complaint listing Section 12303.2 and will face a minimum of five years in prison if conv icted. Platter, held in lieu of $62,500 bail on the new felony charge, 'was scheduled to appear in Harbor Judicial District Court to hel!l" his preliminary bearing date set Detective Lt. Harold Fischer -who was along on the rendezvous at which Platter allegedly agreed to take $300 for 102 sticks of dynamite -explained the ctiarge today. • ' P0,lice Identify .Ventura Body As . Former Me~an • The body of a man found in a Ventuia County: creek ~arly Thanksgiving morn· iilg has .. been identified through his fingerprinJ& as ~ ·1onner resident of the Harbor Are-. Coroner'• deputy Merle Peters of Ven• tura County said the victim of an ap- parent drowning was Charles William Guerin, ID, 25, Peters said the man's parent& now live in South Lake Tahoe , but once resided in Costa Mesa. · The nude body was found by two hikers floating in Sespe Creek, a hot spring about 15 miles north of the city of Ven· tura. The .man!s clothing was found on a nearby bank, and1 although there was no drivers license the pockets contained names and addresses of persons living in Laguna Beach and Newport Beach. Peters said the man had a fishing license listing a false n·ame and Newport Beach address in his wallet. The license h~d been recently purchased in Costa Mesa, Peters said. Cause of death has not been determin· ed yet, ~ aa.ld. Oil W eJ) Blast, Fire · Reported NEW.ORLEANS (UPI) -An oil well platfonn in 'the Gulf of Mexico burst into flames today, knocking 10 to 12 workmen into theiW&ter," the Coast Gusrd reported. A CoasfGuard spokesfnan descrlbed it as "a bad. blowout" on a Shell Oif Com· pany rig 60 miles south of New Orlea~. "The Coast Guard got word from the rnofar vessel Coaslal Cruiser that Shell platform Number" 26 had had a 'bad blowout and ii burning," the spokei!lman 8"id. He said a Chevron Oil Company boat ·was in the area and att~mptlng to'mC1le the workmen. "There's a fire ... that's all we know so far," said M. H. Boeger ot the Sbdl public relations department Mesa Man Hurt In Gun Accident Emptylog ~~ .22 caliber pistol while it was still cocked, a Costa Me11 man ac- cidenUalfy shot himself in the left bani:I Monday and was ho$pilallied ror aureery. JuliJn,R. Trujillo. 24, or 1331 Baker St., was Jltted in fair condition today tt Orange County Med ical Center, Police ta~· .Trujillo's o v tr.unde r barrel weapon ~lacharged at polnt·blthk ranit but the slq railed to pass through the hand, necessllltlng. sura:try. " He said the new section forbids any person to recklessly or maliciously possess explosives on. a public street, or anywhere near a public place such as a school or theater. The law prescribes a prison term of not less than five years upon conviction. Platter was arrested at Harbor Boulevard and Gisler Avenue last Wednesday night, after a 11 e g e d.1 y transporting the case of explosives down the San Diego Freeway from Hawthorne. "He just went rigid," LI. Fischer ex· plained, recalling Platter's reaction when informed he was under' arrest. California authorities have changed penal code sections in the wake of in· creasing bom b incidents and some of the neW sentences will be not less than 15 years in prison. · Tipped off about the availability of dynamite, local police went into action tn make a re ndezvous, but the agreed-upon price of $300 never·changed hands. They didn't have time to obtain th at much Money. Lt. Flscber said efforts were made In conta,ct the FBI for participation bu t it was Thanksgiving eve and none could be reached in time. · The case was further mmplicated by the fact there was no time to obtain search warrants ind make arrangements with Ha wthorne police to check Platter's home. · _A Treasury Department agent was finally reached aii.police rigged the trap and be accompanied them. Fair Officials s ·elect Theme Of Family Fun A broad theme representative of the spectrum of activities oUered and the potential participant3' interests has been chosen for the 1971 Orange County Fair and Exposltion. "Family Fun in '71." is the title selected by the 32nd District Agricultural Association for the five-day event ten· tatively scheduled for the middle of next July. The Fair Board also voted to restore SS,t176 in premium money cut from the .1970 fair budget as an economy measure, plus· adding $1,800 more to induce more entries in judged competition. General Manager James Porterfield ~as authorized by the board to negotiate conllacts for pr.emium book adve rtising sales, pr6gram sales and r e I a t e d agreements. The fair theme was selected from among several submlssions. including "COunlr)! Fun," which seemed too limited,for metropolitan Orange County. Police Arrest Drug Suspect , In Costa Mesa A mechanic questioned after police watched him loitering nervously near a Costa Mesa market was arrested early today on narcotics charges. Te rry D. Melum, 24, of ~77 Charle St., Co!ta Mesa, was booked·on suspicion of pos11esaion of heroin. dangeroU& drugs . and narcotics paraphernalia. . Police said he c11:rrled 45 pills ()f the methamphetamine, or so-cslled speed variety, plus three barbiturate capsules and a· hypodermic needle containing a milky fluid. Officer .David Brooks noticed f\1elum ()Utslde a T'ic ToC Market at Sl7 W. Wilson St., ab<>ut 2 a.m. The ~ntraband was found when he consented to be searched. investigators saJ.d. Me.tum told them he wa~boI at a party In Garden Grove anger who asked him to deliver It third person and lhat he found the items in· side. · ... ~reeway Petitions To Be Filed ~ " By L. PETER KRIEG Of ltlf OIJPY rtltf lhff The Citizens C.oordlnating Committee expects to file petitions later this week in j13 drive to kill plans for the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach. ~· I He's Giving llis .Thanks For liappy~BachelorhoQd By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of "" DIUr 'l'-1 Sltlf The...CCC.. executive board will meet Wednesday morning to pick a date for ffH I, 1 ing the petitions. which allegedl~r the • signatures of close to 10,fXlO person~. Sometru.n& Ukt tempering steel tn toughen U-hsppens when a confirmed bachelor speNb four daya with three females , two of them teenagers. ' The'-turkey wasn't even out of the oven yet before I was giving ~hanks, for being single. • -· · li . Now, before the Women 's Lib vigilantes ca~p on the Wally Koch, chairman of the anti· freeway group, called the number ef signature! "overwhelming tutlmony" to the anti-freeway sentiment in tbe city. Actually, two petition! will be filed. One seeks to force the city council te rescind the exlsti'ng agreement with' the state Division of Highways on a portion of the propo_sed coastal freeway through Corona del Mar. If the council declines to take the ac· lion , state law stlpiilates il must sChedule a refer endum on the question. ,., The second petition seeks a separate referendum on a charter amendment that would require this or future coU ncil! to put future freeway agreements proposed with the state to a vote of. the people before adopting theril. · Upon receipt of the petitions, city Qerk . Laura Lagios has 30 da ys to screen· the signa~res to certify that at least 4,200 tif them, represent_ing 15 percent of the elec· torate, are valid.· She mi.1st then forward them to the council which must adopt an ordinance rescinding the agreement or schedule the refe renda. • The city·wide vote would have to be set nn sooner than 74 days nor no later than 89 days after the date of that council qieeting. Koch, In ·discussing the response to the petition drive, which was launched two months ago, said the CCC fuls "the citizenry has responded loudly and clear~ Jy -they _do not want the freeway." He pointed out this is tht second time in less than a year residents of Ni!wpcrt Beach hilve let their feelings against the proposed freeway be knowri. "More than 21,000 persons Siined a Freeway Fighters petition Which opposed the freeway in general early in the 'year,'' he noted. While public epinion against any freeway at all Js building. original op- position was most intense about the route adopted by the state through the western half of the city. The freeway, as proposed, would virtually follow the Pacific Coast Highway from West Newport tO the U~ per•Bay, Wiping Out some valuabl! real estate through the area ·known as Mariner's Mile, then continue· easterly connecting to the Corona del Mar Freeway. Opponents to the route argue this will establish a barrier between the residents to the north ~d the waterfron t, thereby "dividing the city in half." Ea rlier steps to get the route relocated further inland failed . Immunization I Shots Slated ~ay. ma5! Immunization against German measles is planned by the Orange County Medical Association and the public he alth department for Jsn. 31 in 35 to 40 county schools. Children age one through 12 will be im· munized for rubella. a disease which if contracted by 11 pregnant woman, ad- versely affects the unborn child causing birth defects. Clinics will be open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Jan. ~1. doorstep wilh /laming torches, Jet '.s make th ts crystal clear: females are great. .. . So_ are guelles and grizzly bears, but all three haV'a something in common. _ One app;eciates them best in their natural habilat. My shack on the beach isn 't it. . Some might disagree with the deeignation -calling It a routine or rut -but in the twilight of my youth, I Uve by a system. The wine goble ts go here. The plumber's frlend goea there. Women are not ayatemadt, if Spray Net in the djsh drainer is any in- dication. And if you think it's complicated in the cramped confines or a cot tage, eonsider accompanying three female! to three shopping centers this freniied holida y .season. I The first stop was mine. "Don't get out of the ci r," they were told in tones of naive optimism. "I"ll be right out." One w1s missing and unaccounted for upon my momentary return and the two kids wore funny lookl. "She went inside. Then the came back," said one. "She got her check· book and Went back in," the ·other explained peedlcssly. So I headed for the bank, with naively optimistic instructions lo meet me there unless l got back to the car first By the time I returned from the one·mile hike, the car was gone. They went to tbe buk Ill right. The wrong bank. Now it is Saturday. · They have voted down a trip to Sea World or Lion Country Safari. They have bigger game. in mind; South Coast Plaza and Newport Center. 'Jlhey mustn 't, however, look like country bumpkins. So after more cloR<kloor preparation than Raquel Welch would need ror the Academy Awards, we seem to be ready. • Columbu.!I could have aotlen the Nina, the finta and the Santa Maria oft for the New World faster. HunlbaJ cot hi• elepbut1 over the Alps in the twinkl ing 0£ an eye by comparlaon. • Every living soul In Orsnge County seems to be at South Coast Plaza. My feet are killing me . .I've got a cramp in the credit cards. A vision of a gln-and·tonic dangles before .me Jlke a cauot before a mule . The girls -bouncing from boutique to boutique·-can't be found. My mother suggests the corridors to the ladies' rooms are so long they cou ld have been mugged and. molested and nobody would know for 24 hours. Finally they showed up and we move on. Newport Center isn't 10 hectic, per.haps because while it has no mall, we do have a record rainfall in proarss by now. Everyone feels beiter after two refreshing stops. Theirs was at an Ice cream parlor. ' Now it is Sunday. Customary thank1 and goodbyes and seeyalalers have been exchanged. Spray net is absent from the dish drainer. Hair curlers are gone from my lie- cllp tray. • The silence Is broken four hour,; later by their te lephone call to ssy they're home, despite fouJ weather and holiday traffic. "Thanks Lord," t murmur, in gratitude for their safe trip. And also for being a bachelor. r Alamitos Airport Opposed >. future general aviation airfield at Loe Alamitos Naval Air Station ls strong~ ly opposed by city officials and residents of the area, members of the Orange County Airport Commiasion found out Monday night. City Manager William Kraus told the commission the field ia unsatiafactory for either civilian or military uae. He quoted Frank Sander1, aulslant secretary of the Navy. as sayin1: "Selection of Los Alamitos to be phased out was influenced by the fact that it is an area of high density population and restricted air space, consequently nulli- fyin g it.a usefulneu as an operation till.se for Naval aviation," the Jetter read. Kraus said the same would apply to use as a general aviation facility after the Navy move1 out next July. "The Parsons report forecasts: 2.000 flights per year in 1990 and that doesn't fi t into our plans for the city," Kraus ent· phaslzed. City Councilman Joseph Hyde attacked t.he airport proposal from an economic angle. "1'he facility would not be gocd business for Los Alamitos." the coun· cilman said. "C:Ost of serving the area with utilities and the obvious traffic pro- blems would harm the city; and cost us more )-ooney than the facility would generate." About SO perso~s attended the publle hearing. Of 18 who spoke, on I y one favored the airport plan advanced in the county's $140,000 Air Transport Pl11n just completed by the Parsons Company of Los Angeles. ""CABPETEERS'' IT STARTS WITH A PHONE CALL TO YOU FROM A "RESEARCH" FIRM ASKING IF YOU OWN YOUR HOME AND IF YOU NEED CARPETING OR DRAPERIES. IF THE ANSWER IS AFFIRMATIVE, THE CALLER WILL OFFER TO '5END A "DECORATOR" TO SHOW YOU A NEW TYPE OF "COMMERCIAL" GRADE CARPETING. WHEN THE "DECORATOR" ARRIVES AT YOUR HOME. HE DEMONSTRATES STAIN RESISTANCE OF HIS CARPET, MAY OFFER TO PAY OFF YOUR DEBTS, MEASURES YOUR ROOM IN "UNITS" INST~AD OF YARDS, AND OFFERS A BIG DISCOUNT (OR EVEN A CHECKj TO USE YOUR HOUSE AS A "SHOW HOUSE" FOR HIS CARPET. ' "JUST SIGN HERE" 1$ THE CLINCHER. AMONG THE PAPERS TO SIGN MAY BE A SECOND MORTGAGI: ON YOUR HOUSE, NO ITEMIZATION OF YARDAGE BE ING PURCHASED, AND A LONG TERM CONTRACT FOR PAYMENTS TOTALLING MORE THAN THE PRlCE PER Y AR.D QUOTED. DON'T BE TRICKED BY UNKNOWN FIRMS WHOSE GUARANTEES LAST ONLY AS LONG AS THEil\ SHORT LIVED BUSINESS, DON'T BE F 0 0 LED BY "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING" OFFERS, PHONY "COMMERCIAL" QUALITY AND. FLIM·FLAM . CONTRACTS. . . - KNOW·THE MERCHANDISE OR KNOW YOUR MERCHANT! IANT4 ANA, OlAHll TUiTIN 0"9 .,. ALDIN'S Ill Hl~L CAlml l HAPHIU 1 IJ74 '"'"' """"' c ..... IJ .. IM4 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES • 1663 l'lacentla Ave. COSTA M!SA 646-4838 ' HOURS; Mon. ,Thru ThvrL, t to 5:30 -Fri, t lo t -Sot., 9:30 lo 5 ' ----~ I I , " I 1 I .I I ' I I ! \ ' I • ' I ' I " I • ' 7 • • • -· .. Ne rt Beaeh ·T•••Y'• Fina) •• N.V. Steeb YOL 63, NO. 287, 3 SbCTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNl.A: -' JUESOA Y, DECEMBER f, ·1970' TEM CENTS ' Freeway· Petitions Pay Hike· Qkayed To Be Filed Supervisors Accept .$2,500 Increase By L. PETER KRIEG Of lllt D .. 111 , ... , Sleff The Citizens Coordinating Comnlittee expects to file petitions later lhiS week in ' Us drive to kill plans for the Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach. The CCC executive board wilI meet Wednesday morning lo pick·,_ date (pr nl· Jng the petitions, which allegedly bear the signatures of.close to 10,000 persons. W,ally Koch, chairman of the anti· freeway group, caUed the number cf signatures "overwhelming testimony'' let the antl-frteway s~ntiment in the city, Actually, two petitions will be filed . One seeks to force the city council te rescind the existing agreement with the at.ate Division of Highways on a portion of the proposed coastal freeway through Corona del Mar. If lh.e council declines to take the ac- tion, state law stipulates it must schedule 1 referendum on the question. The second petition seeks 11 separate refere ndum on a charter amendment that wou1d require this or future councils to put future freeway agreements proposed with the state to a vote of the people before adopting them. Upon receipt of the petitions, city Clerk Laura Lagios has 30 days to screen the signatures to certify that at least 4,200 of them , representing 15 percent of the elec- torate, are valid. She must then forward them to the council which must adopt an ordinance rescinding tbe agreement or schedule the r eferenda. The city.wide vote would have lo be set no sooner than 74 days nor no later than 19' days after the date of that council . mffting.· Koch, in discussing the response to the peU~ drive, which was launched two molltha ago. 1aid the CCC feels "the ciliz.enry has responded loudly and clear· ly-tbey do not w~t the freeway." He pointed· out lhls is the second time in less than a year residents of Newport Beach have let their feelings against the proposed freeway be known. "More than 21 ,000 persons signed a Freeway Fighters petition which opposed the freeway in general early in the year," be noted. While public opinion against any freewa y at all is building, original op- position was most intense about the route adopted by the state through the wutem ball of the city. The freeway, as proposed, would virtually follow the Pacific Coast Highway from West Newport to the Up- per Bay, wiping out some valuable real estate through the area known as Mariner's Mile, then continue easterly coMecting to the Corona .del Mar Freew ay. Opponents to the route argue this will esta blish a barrier between the residents to the north and the wa terfront, thereby "dividing the city in half." Earlier steps to get the route relocated further inland failed. Flood Controlled • By County System Orange County's flood control system did its job during the heavy weekend rains. according to Operatibns Engineer 'Carl R. Nelson. The county received from 2.S inches of rain in some areas up to 3.5 inchu at Yorba Linda. Villa Park and cart-on Canyon dam Operators were able to keep the gates closed. Nelson reported and there was no appreciable rise in the water level. The level at Prado Dam on the Santa Ana River just inside Riverside County rrioved upward, N4!1son 1aid, and some water was being released there for underground replenlllunenL Orphans · ~!"ait H~lp,. Cbildten orphaned by recent cy cfone Ml tidal wave lhat killed thousands in East Pakistan wait for food at a government relief sta· lio n on Bhola Island. As of Sunday, American helicopters had flown more than 300 missions carrying 141 tons of food and relief supplies to di saster victims. England, France, Germany, The Netherlands and Saudi Arabia are aJQPng nations contributing to relief wofk. • Newport ~ssemhling Data For Master Plan Decision · Newport Beach will gather all the long· range planning dOcuments available to determine If an all-out effort to revise Its ex.istihg master plan ~f development is. really necessary. Members of the city council al'ld plan· niftg· Ct>mmission Monday rftght were shown, many of them for the first time, much or the data used in past year~ in planninR: .development of various sectors of Newport Beach. Top officials from the lrvine Company, t.Pe c;ity's large:;t landeiwner, nviewed the plans and planning .;oncepts that have ... gone into their properties, beglllning with Ee.stbluff in 1962 and continuing through Promontory Point and Balboa Wharf this year. • Raymond E. Watson, e.1ecutive vice president of the Irvine Company, told the joint study session that It seems likely a major overhaul of the master plan may not be 'needed. Watson pointed out· that everything the company owns wjthin Newport Beach already has been master-planned by the company and much of this already has received city approval. However. Councilman Carl Kymla said the city "has found itself reacting to what the Irvine Company wants to do -and that's not good for the city. "Let's get ·on ·wlth it and gel a master plan," he said. 1n re!ponse, Watson said the council ' and planners ''asually react to someq»ng put to them, whether it's by a consultant, their own staff or a landowner like the Irvine Company." "If there has been any lapse, it's one o( keeping the eiisting master plan · con- stantly visible," Wal5on said. Explaining later, he said, "You've got to keep the darn thing on the wall at every meeting." !dayor Ed Hirth said he feel s there is a i·1ack of stanctards" for city officials to use "to serve as guldeli.nes." During the meeting, James Taylor, Irvine Company general plaMlng ad· ministrator, displayed maps of the various deve1,opments built by his firm within the city. These will · be incorporated into the package to be assem bled by the planning staff for ,council and commission study. 1'he approaches te long-range plann ing were also discussed. and William Mason, Irvine Qimpany president, stressed the absence of. and need to incorporate economic studies into. the planning pro- cess. In disc ussing the relevant need for a new master plan, Mason·also reminded city officials .that overall plans for water and sewer needs, pointing out these have been prepared along guideltnes '.for city growth established by earlier plannin1 principles and precesses. . By JACK BROBAC1' 01 t1M Diiiy Plitt 51111 Orange County supervisors this morn- in g aCcepted the recommendation Of~the Grand Jury and set their pay at $17,500 a year, $2,SOO more than they have been paid for the past four years. The action was approved by a 4 to 1 vote, Supervisor Robert Battin dissen- ting. This morning's move ctimaxed a series of actions which has stirTed noisy public rrotest beginning Nov. 4. At that lime, the board members met in closed session and allegedJy decided to ha ve a salary ordinance drawn setting their pay at $29,%611 a year, the same as muni cipal court judges. Faced with a crowded hearing room of proteiters No v. 10, supervisors t h e n decided to officially ti e their salaries to that of state legislators, $!9,200 a year next year. This action failed to quiet the furor and re<:all and referendum movements v.•ere under way. Two weeks ago the board voted to refer the matter to the Grand Jury for recommendat ion. Before this morning's vote, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper had advised the board that their Nov. 10 action would go into effect Dec. 10. He said If the board adopted the new 11rdlnance today, 8$ they did, on Dec. 31 their pay level wouJd be at $17,500 a yea r. Fe.w protesters voiei!d their objections th is morning but those that did were ada· mant In their opposition to any raise whatever for the supervisors. Wiiliam Ewing of Anaheim threatened, "lf 1 have to walk up and down the itreet:i: !l'<td you.clUl.111 c\O it. I doo1:tart 1'1111 the othen do-I will do this myseU ." • Francet Sherman of Santa Ana pro- tested that the pay raise is out of order because of the county's current economic 1ituation. J8nice Boer of Santa Ana told tbe supervisors, "You goofed again. You don't care what the people think and a Grand Jury recommendation is worthless. They are the hand·picked group named by you and what'they think in no way represents what the people want." Supervisor Battin, as he had im- medi ately after recall action was threatened, argued today that the salary should be returned to $15,000. "Orange County is ·in an economic slump. We should be working on that in· stead of quibbling over salaries," Battin charged. "No matter how we move we will be attacked," said Supervisor William Sand Refurbish Project Planned On Balboa Isle Work Is expected to begin within a month on a sand haul project which will refurbish beaches on Balboa Island, Newport Beach Harbor and Tidelands Administra tor George Dawes aa.id toda y. Dawes said the oounly has budgeted $4,000 for the project and the city has set aside $4.400 to pay for transportation cif 5.500 yards of sand from the excavation for Promontory Bay to the nearby island. He said the sand, which the Irvine Co. Is giving to the city, will be used In several locations on the island. the most important of which is the northern por· lion of Little Island. At th& same time the city has a 53,000 contract with Gilli• ind Derby ConstrUc- tion Co. for the c:onstruction of two groins on the Little Island site. . Commissioner O.utlines City PlaJIS City 1Planner Laurence Wll9on Manda1 fic·.Coa,t "Highwa1 .. all. the tralle, park ,' no official future~J&MiJtg. nigi'!t ouUined four categories rl plan11ing near the Upper Bay. Beacon Bay, a community o! some 79 study, includlnR: redevelopment, that "It is time to dete~ new directions bome1 built on city.owned land under a &hould be fOC'JSed on all property within for these areas," Wilson 1ald, ·pointing out 75-year lease e.1piring in 16 years. ls in Newport Beach. • that poor. plan_ning that allowed poor an area past city council s have sug- He said these include the stable areas, traffic and parking was l.trgtly responsl-ge sted be the site. or an aquatlc park. -SUCh as Bllboa Island and Peninsula ble for the deterioration of many of lhO&t • Homeowntrs in.. Ula~ scd.Or . which 11 Point: the planned areas, such as New· artas. • south of Bayside Drl\te .adJtcint to Har- P'.l Center and Bil Canyon; and areas Wilson's remarU ca.me during a joint bot lidand.. have tried -w..;.< ~ 1'.:ily to where plAMlng declslona must be made. city council • planning commlsafon study nnew tile leue1 1JUt Ji.a~ to~ 1htto These Include the Lockheed and BIMing session cal~ to al.Udy the need and feasi-unsuccessful.. They· art. 'ppe<.'tect fo t?1' properties, and downcoist area (as yet bility of a new master pladi for the city. again. 1 not annexed) to Cryst.aJ C2Ye... , There~ was "°'formal actJon taken on any The Irvine eomp.,iy ~-~Jready start. But for the first Ume he outTned the matters. • , • ed demoliUon of the Villa Marina restau- 11tea1 of Newport ·Beach that, in IQn'l.e -Central Balboa, an area or sevual rant and Ken Niles apm:tments just to the 'orm or another, are In need of. "plannin& bl~ks surroundlni lhe Fun Zone, Is the ea1t, In hopes of winning' city awrovar for second generation u1e;t•-only section· of the rlty CWTtntly under--or a commercial project c:allect ,~lboa He named them -Central Balboa. Old going study for renew1I. Wharf, billed as "an extension ot·BiJboa Ne~n Bay·Balbol Wharf. Old Newport, much Of the area from JsJand." , :!ownt.own Corarll de! Mar. the buslMU MCFadden Place to the Coast HJghway Tht-downtown area of Col'Oll(,del Mar dhltrict ol West Newport aiOlll Jhe·Paci· and beyond, ,currenU7 It 1he subject ol hai long felt lhi 'effect. ol !Iii Jrvlne I I '/' -' Company'• Fashlon Island shopping mecca and Wilson sa)d that bligbt is beginning to creep to adjacent residential properties. Wiison stressed that redevelopment In these areas may be-neecsed Jn some - cues only on a lot.·by--lot · ba$i.s or in others .. such a1 the Balboa Wharf plan, coold be _acc:ompUshed by prlvat• '°"'°' e,.. . . Well over one.third of. the city lies In areai that WIJ10n 1111 lhould be rede- veloped or should be. the 111.llJect of fur· !her aludy, most or It In the latter. • 'Jn add!Uon to the areas already listed I~ that category. Wilson allo·included the Upper Bay, the Irvine Cotiat . Country qub., P.romontory Point. and the Nortll· FCi,nl", tract the Irvtfte CompanY oo• w•nt.a coneldutd for poasible c:ommer· clal developmenL ._.. • •__'._._c·~---~~-· :-~":'~ ...... ·•·h+·t •••••••• "''t 1.;e: • +·~·· Phillips. "We are now the second most populous county Jn 1he state and San Diego County supervisors ha ve just mov· ed .to raise their pay to $19,000.a year." · Phillips moved for adop~lon and &!>t. a second.from Supervisor William Hirst.ein.. who ls retiring Jan. 4. • Board Chairman Alton Allen, who also retires from office in January, said, "Ia my judgment Crom · experience on this board the job is worth every cent of $17;500. As I said previously when we set the salary at $19;200 if we had no one oo this board worth that much then the peo- ple shou1d find aomeone that is." Kidnap Threatened? \ -• ' ' Secret Service Guard1' • Nixon Aide Kissinger .. WASHINGTON CAP ) -At least one member of Presidenl Nixon's tpp White _ House staff has quietly been given Secret Service protection, -presumably Jo guard against any posslb!~ kidnap at- tempt. , •. . Dr . Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon's assis- tant for national security affairs. has had a Secret Service body guard for more than a month, it was learned Tuesday. Just last week, director J. t:dgar Hoover of the Federal Bureau o( Investigation told a Senate appropriations subcommittee that a mUitant antiwar. group was plotting lo kidnap a White House aide or other public official. "The plotters," he said , "are con- cocting a scheme to kidnap a highly plac· ed government official: The name of a Wbite House staff 1he,rnber .has ,been. mentioned as a pol&ible victim." ~· • • • _,,_ ... t NeJther Hoover nor any othtr govern- ment ofHcial hu, then Ol"aince, identifleit the Whitt House aide referred to by tht FBI chief. However, the tact that Kissinger . hat been furnished with an extraordinary fCderal bodyguard was Ren as a strong indication that there are genuine fears within goverrtment tha t he might be a kidnap target. · Kissinger probably carries In his head more sensitive security secrets than a11y other man Jn the ·Whitt House, perhaps even including the President: Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler was asked if any other members of Nixon 's staff had been given Secret Service pro- lection. Hls reply: "I can't say anything about that , for obvious reasOns." ft was widely reported last morith, when Kissinger went to the Soviet mission to the United Nations in /liew York for meetings with Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko and am- bassador Anatiliy Dobrinin, that he was accompanied by • Secret Service agent. Kissinger has been seen with an agent dogging his footsteps on a number of oc- casions since then. Since the Secret Service normally does not accord personal protection to members of the President's 1taf{, it was believed Nixon him.self must have directed the pospn' of the Kissinger bodyguard. ·~ • Hoover's testimony about a kidnap plot said that, "If 1UCcessful : the plotters would demand an end to the United Newport Opens Parl,<lng Lot Bid~ing Dec. 8 Bids for reconstruction of lhe'' city parking lot at the Balboa Pier-will be opened in the office of Newport Be8Ch ·c1. ty Clerk Laura Lagios Dec. 8 at 10 a.m . ·The project, expected to cost more than $250,000, will Involve· rebuildliig the en tire 680-space pa.rk!JJg faCility.' There wUI be 5$ metered spaces. The fest will be day-long paid slalb: in a Separate i~ea. Ed McDonald , project efllineer, said speclficatioM call for construction to be completed no later than April 2, the Th,~ay before Easter. ·McDonald aald that the lot will be rl!shaped, extending easterly to the pier, but about 40 feet further back from water'.s edge. The nwnbtr of ~parkint: spaces will be reduced ·b)' oo more tha.n 10, be 'oa!d. • He said bis office lsn't'aura.uaclly ho, many spacea are there now. !~ oilly wly to tell would be to io out and count them," he said, notin1 that manY ol tbtm ate unmarked. _ The pn>jtct, for whlch 1211!.000 ·hu betn appropriated In Uie cufrent -city budget, is the first major Improvement of . lhe public parking facility In • :11 · yeM1, McDonald Hid. · : , Ha. aald be ~ti between. ti~ ;tnd •ight r•n<rlll oon!tactori to .W.mk bicll on tbe proJea. ~1 · ~ ' • States bombing operation.a ln Southeast AsiJ! _and Uie release of all politica( prisoners as ranson." Hoover kicked up controversy by at: tributing the plot to a militant antiwar group he said was led by two Romil'n Catholic priests, the Revs. Phillip L. and Daniel Berrigan, brothers ·!~prisoned at the Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury. Conn. The Berrigans, who denied Hoover's charge, were convicted of taking part in' the destruction of Selective Service records in Maryland In 1968. San Francisco's. Security Tight ' . For Visit of Ky .SAN FRANCISCO ~Pl) -Police Chief Alfred N!lder today called out 420 men, all but 4a in uniform, to patrol the Fairmont Hotel, where Vice President Nguyai Cao Ky of Sot.ith Vietnam ls mak:· ing a speech. The chief aMounc:ed his plans after peace groups declared they were calJint lo t' mass picketing to protest Ky's ap. pearance before the Commonwealth Club. Neither Mayor Jos·eph Alioto nor Covemor Ronald Reagan ls attending the meeting. The mayor announced he bad a prev:ivus ei1fgaiement and the governor's office said merely "n0" when questioned whether Reagan would attend. In arttlition to uniformed and plain clothes policemen , Ky also will be guard. ed by Secret Service agents and other federal officers. Nelder declared: "It Is traditional that San Francisco be courteous to all visitors. I hope and trust the tradition will not be broken." • John Busterud, he business club's president, said: "It Ui the view of the Commonwealth Club .that it should pro- vide a forum for ~U important points of view whether these Jn the local com- munity agree with or oppose hose views." PBR Commission To Convene· Tonight A meeting of the Newport Beacli Parks, Beaches and Recrea tion Com- mission will take place tonjght ·at 7 :~ in. City Hall. The commission will re view its updated master' plan for city parks and will hear staff reports on vatious subjects. • Oruge ·Coan There may be a cloudy lining behind those silver ·skies. The weatherman sees a eo percent chance of rain for Wednesday, with temperatun!s still mired In the lowtr 60s. INSmE· TODA. Y "Divorce Italian 1tule" ta lt04l now, and an e1tlmated one mi~ lion mi-smotchcd m.atts are -wait- ing to take advant.aoc of tMir ntw found freedom. Pogs 4. ' Cl'"°""lli 1 CMdtlM u,. n C!eitut!M l ... t2 Cllflla U C,.._,. II DHlll M1lk-tt r ·-' ••llW'll1 ,... • lflltrlllft"""' II Plpl flCI 1•1) H-. 11 """ \.11M11n H Mlllllt• • . '------------.J ' l • • • • I ~----------.-----....... --........ ,,,---r!!!!l"'! ........ --........,r'""~''' . , .. R~r, Crunch... Ka -pow, Splat-. • • Thi• Old Botne I• Flat TRACTOR OPERATOR BILL CARNES TOOK 4 MINUTES, 40 SECONDS TODAY TO FLATTEN THIS HOUSE IN NEWPORT. HOUSES ON 32ND STREET ARE GIVING W~Y TO STREET WIDENING PROJECT • ' ' i .· ' He's Giving His Thanks For Happy Bachelorh.ood ' By ARTRIJR R. VINSEL 01 ,,,. ~llr Piiot S .. H Something like tempering steel to toughen It happens when a confirmed bach~lor: ~rld.s JOU{ days with .tine females, i,o ~f thfm .teena~e~s. The. turkey wUn't even out. of the oven .Yet before I was giving thanks, !or "being single. Now, before the Women's Lib Vigilantes camp on the doorstep with flaming torches, let's make this crystal clear: females are great. -So are. gazelles and grWly bears, but all three have 10mething in common. " One appreciates them best in their natural habitat. l\ty shack on the beach isn't it. Some might disagree with the designation -calling . It a routine or rut -but ln the twilight or my youth, 'J ·uve by a system. · The wine goblets 10 here. The plumber's friend goes .• · , there. , Womu are Dot 1y1tematle, U Spray Net in. the dish drainer ls any in- • dication. . , And U you lhlnk it's complicated in the cram~ confines. or.• cottage, consider accompanying three females to three ahoppmg centera thiJ frenized holiday season. The first stop was mine. ···Don't get out 01 the car," they were Joki in tones of naive optimism. ·"rn·be"'tight out." · One was missing and unaccounted for UJ>OD my momentary return and tUte two kids wore funny looks. . . ...... s~·went ill!ide. Then she came back," said one. "She 1ot ber check· !!booPaMt,,-ent1back;jn,11 the olheJl.'fJPlained neediessJy., .•.,. . , So ~ beaded for the-bank, with naively opbmlstic instructions to meet me ~'! ~ep;_ J go} bablt to the cat first. By ·\¥ time I returned from ~e ·one.mueMte;the"Car'wiJ1gone.~ .... • ·1 •• ~ 1 ' ' ·'l'lte~ Weal to tbe--RU all right. The wrong bank. • NOW it is-Saturday. ' . • ,. They have voted down a trip to Sea World or Lion Country Safari. They 1 hav·e bigger game in mind ; South c.oast: Plaza and Newport Center. They muStn 't, however, look l[kf countiy bulnpltins. f So after more closed-door pre~ation than Raquel Welcb wou1d need for the Academy Awards, \l(e eeem to be ready. [ COiumbus could have gotten the Nina, tbe·Pi.(!ta and the Santa Maria off I for the New World fast.er. . . : :8'Fbal .lot his elephants ove the Alps iD the twinkling or an eye by ' compariiln~ . · , E~cy living soul ln Orange County seems. to be .at .South Co~~ Plaza. My feet are kll!Ing ·µie . Vve got a cramp In the -credit cards. A v1s1on of 1 a:in-.B!Kl·tonic dangles before me.. like a carrot bef~e a mule., 'fhe girls -bouncing lrom boutique to boutique -cant be found. · My mother suggests the corridors to the la.dies' rooms are 110 long they ' COU.ld have been mugged and molested and nobody would know for 24 hours. ·Finally they show~ up and we move on. Newport Center isn't so hectic, perhaps because while It has no mall, we do have a record rainfall in progrv by now . Eveiyo11e' feels better alter two refreshing stops. Theirs was at an ice cream parlor. Now it is Sunday. Custom.icy thanks and goodbyes and seeyalaters have been exchanged . Spray net is absent· from the dish draiher. Hair curlers are. gone from my tie· clip tray. The silence is broken four hours la\er by their telephone caJI to say they're home. despite foul weather and holiday traffic. ~ "Thanks Lord,'' I murmur, in gratitude for their safe trip. And also for being a bachelor. DAILY PILOT OltANGE COA~T PUllLIS"ING COMPAHY R.obtrf N. Wttd l"rffklt!ll •nd l"ul:I~ J•ck R.. C11rl•Y · Thom11 A. M11rpki111 L p,,., K.rl•t "'wpen 81fdi Cl!'f Edllor N..,.rt .... Office 22 I I W•1l l•l~•:lo11lt~trcf_ M.a ili nt Add1t111l'.O.101 11?5, t2l6J Ott-Offk.el COili MtM: DO Wffl Illy SlrH'I L..-flttcll: 222 Fore,.t •- Muntlnq!On &ucll: 1111J ltldl IOul•"•"' ltn Cl1m1"t1: JDS Nwlll El Ci mino R.t1I Lower Newport Bay Committee Outlines Work "Preserve,·protect and enchance ," are the by-w'brds Gf the propo5ed Lowe(' New- port &,. Civic District, accor4ing to Newport Beach City Councilman Carl KymJa, chairman ol lhe special com· mi ttee assigned lo study formation of such a district. • Kymla, who supports the civic di.strict concept and a commission l<> govern it, t.tondly night agreed..-hoWever ,-ther may be other ways of meeting thal goal. , Kym.la's panel is considering the entire area south of the Pacific Coast Highway fmm West Newport to the Back Bty Bridge, and all land south of Bayside . Drive and ~n Boulevard for lncorpora-, tlon into a ctvtc district. The inltidl ·work of the panel was oat· lined Monday night al a joint City Coun- cil·Planning Commission study sessloo. The ccmmit,tee, which will meet Dexl · • on Dec. 9, feels that specific Conlrols on buildlh( setbacks, height, papulaUon den- sities, open spac-e, landscaping, parking and atthit~ure are nefded on futu~ de.. velopment within the proposed civic dis. trict area. ,1 ' Various council atra commission mcm· hers. ~xpre,1$Cd the fear a new ctvtc dfs. • trlct lloml mfght u'urp current Planning Commission teSPonslbillUes. , Kym!a expt.lned tllat the new agency would not have the tiuthorlty to 111111t tone chaoies but would exerciae addi· Uonat authority not now held by either munc body. ( ' Bomb Damages U of Oregon Office Area EUGENE, Ore. (AP) - A bomb ex· tenslvely damaged an office and blew out windows of a University of Oregon ad· ministration building today. F o u r Persons, including the vice chancellor of Uie Oregon state education lystem. were Inside the building but escaped injury, police said. The invesUgating officers said the bomb went off outside a ground·level win- dow of Johnson Hall , where the offices of the university president and the State System of Higher Education are located. Police said they heid no immediate in- dication pf who was responsible for the bombing. Immediate damage estimates were not made but' observers said it appeared that the' blast was not as severe as the ex· plo.!ion which caused $75,000 damage to a faculty off!ct; building three blocks away on Oct. 2. Miles Romney , vi~ chancellor of the state system, a secretary and two telephone operators were in the building when the blast hit but -told police .they were not hurt. Eugene. Oregon 's second largest city with a metropolitan population o( 13G,OOO, has been hit by several explosioru and arsorH:aused fires in the past three years, including one night in 1969 when five dynamite explosions caused minimal damage to church, l)usiness and govern· ment buildings in the city. Most coStly of the fires caused $250,000 damage to the university's physical education building earlier this y e·a r. There was a Reserve Officers Training C.Orps sWage area in that buildina. Residents Hit Future Airport At Los Alamitos A future general aviation airfield at Los Alamitos Naval Air Station is strong- ly opposed by city officials and residents of the area, members of the Orange County Airport Commission found out Monday· 'night. City Manager ·William Kraus told the commission the field is unsatisfactory for either civilian or military use. He Quoted · Frank Sanders, assistant secretary of the Navy , as S<!Ying: "Selection of Los Alamitos to be phased out was influenced by the fact that it Is an area of high density population and restricted air space, consequently nulli· fying its usefulness as an operation base for Naval avlation." the letter read. Kraus said the same would apply to use as a genehl aviation facility after the Navy'moves out next July. "The Parsons report forecasts 2,000 flights per year In 1990 and that doesn't fit into our plans for the city." Kraus t!m· phasized. · City Councilman Joseph Hyde attacked the airport proposal from an economic angle. "The facility would not be good blllinass for Los Alamitos," the coun· cilman said. "Cost of serving ·the area with utilities and the obvious .traffic pro- blems would harm the city and cost us mOre money than the facility wou ld generate.'' About SO persons attended the public hearing. Of 18 who spoke, on 1 y one favored the airport plan advanced in lhe county's Slto,000 Air Transport Plan just completed by the Parsons Company of LOs Angel.- The city cuancll of Los Alamitos has gone on record twice in the past nl11e :tnontliS Opl)OSlng any future. air rel..'ited actiyllles at I.he staUon. Newport Family Colkcting Toys _,_ A Newport Beach_famtly ls collecting toys for distribution at Christmas to cb.ildren of miirant farm workers in the Coachella and San Joaquin Valleys. ?itrs. Helen Ball said she is seeking new toys or used toys in good condition for her Toys 'n Travl!l drive. Deadline ror «>ntributions is Dec. 18. Mrs. Ball 11ld the drive has received support-from local churches, high school soClal ~Jenee clubs, UC Irvine students and businessmen ln Costa ?ifesa and· Newport BeaC'h. Shi! said anyone interested in con· trlbutlni may contact her at 642-6789 for Information about the drive. Ul"I Tt ....... '9 YOUNGEST GENERAL DIES Gen. Frtdo<ick In 1941 Gen. Frederick Funeral Slated Services will be held Wednesday af· lernoon at the San Francisco Presidio cmleieN for Maj. Gen. Robert T. Frederl~k. the U.S. Army's youngest dlvisi(>n commander in France in World War JI, who d.ied Sunday in Palo Alto at the age of 63. General Frederick is ~urvived by his widow~ Ruth, two daughters, Mrs.· Jane See of Lagwia Beach and Mrs: Philip Hicks of .Palo "Alto, ahd · tly tight grandchildren. Wounded eight times in World War 11, he took command of the 45th Division after leading an airborne task force in !he invasion of Southern France. He also helped organize the U.S.-Cana· dian Special Service Forces which participated in the Attu invasion in the Aleutians. wherl! he took command after the Canadian commander was killed. General Frederick earned t he Distinguished Service Cross twice, the Distinguished Servi~ Medal twice and the Silver Star ahd Bronze Star for bravery in o.ction. CdM Students Begin Fund Raising Sales Students from Corona de! Pi-tar High School have begun their annual candy sale to raise money for the studen t body fund . · Students will be selling candy for SI a box until Dec. 11 in an effort to raise money for campus clubs and the student body general fund. Ship Blamed Large Oil Slick . Perils Florida KEY LARGO, Fla. (UPI) - A hu1e oil ' 11Jck beUeved ~u.sed by a paul.ng Italian. tanker 1tretched for 7l miles alona: the Florida Key1 .threatening an unuaual underwater state park made up of beautiful cora l and strange fish. • The slick was apparenUy caused by the ship dumping the residue from its tanks. Winds of about 15 mph were drivln1 the sticky masa shoreward and Lt. Edward LitUe, district supervisor of the State Department of Natural Resourffi!, said there was danger to the unuwal coral formations, which jut from the Atlantic waters at low Ude, might be smeared by ·the oil. The stick spread along the coast.,.lrom Key Largo to Marathon. At Its nearest point, the oil was only about one mile from the Pennekamp Coral Reef Stllte Park. Ralph Hodges, ·state natural resourct?s director, first discloaed the oil spill in Tallahassee. He said It was reported by a fishing boat about 4:30 .p.m. Monday and that a Marine Patrol pUot later followed the slick to its southernmost point and discovered the Italian tanker "Gelealal." Irvine League N eui Directors . - To Be Installed The first bo.ard of directors of the newly-incorporated Greater I r v I n e Industrial League will meet Thursday to change officers. The meeting is scheduled for t p.m. at the Don Koll Company. Elected to the board were William Baker, president, Baker Hydro, Inc.; Alex Robertson. •president , A I ex Robertson Co.; Robert Clifford. vice president and genEral manager. Air Calf· fornia and Paul Duron, president, Airco Cryogenics. Also, Peter Jepson, general manager, Airporter Inn Hotel ; Ch a r I e s Cll!minshaw, vice president, Psrker-Han· nifin Corp.; George Riley,"'architect and Donald Koll, president of the Don Koll Co. Also. Timothy St rader, attorney with the firm of Duryea, Carpenter and Barnes; John Bishop, president, Dana Laboratories: Gavin Herbert. Jr., presi- dent, Allergan Pharmaceuticals; Van Hazewinkel. vice president, Daily Grin· ding and John Murphy, president, the Irvine Industrial Complex. Disclosure of the spill coincided with a report from New Orleans that a "·1!11 belonging to Shell Oil had blown out a,od caught fire in the Gu1f of Mexico, knock· ing several workers into the water. The well is 60 miles south of New Orleans, ad- jacent to the Wisner Wildlife Manage- ment Ana. By afternoon. the action of the Ra reportedly was breaking up the oil spill along the Keys into small globules. LiltJ1 aaid some oil had already washed a!!hore. ·st.ate officials are checking with federal agencies to determine the destination of the tanker and to decide what steps ran be taken to recover both actual and punltlve damages, Hodges said. .. Collins Radio Asks 4 Favors From Newport - The Collins R8dio Company, Newport Beach's newest industrial tenant by virtue of last wetk's annei:ation, wants a couple of favors in retum for the tar dollars it will be contributing to the city's coffers. Robert Walkup. facilit ies and main· tenance director of the elctronics plant on MacArthur Boulevard, has asked the city to provide some special and specific aervlces. In a letter to City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt, Walkup urges "favorable co~ sideration" of four items: -Install and pay for the connection of Collins Radio to the city water servi~. -Install and pay for the addition o{ 1treet lights on Jamboree Road. -Share the cost of the installation of a traffic light at the main entrance to Collins on Jamboree. -Reduce the water rate from 16 cents to 14 cents per 100 cubic feet for volume1 above 500,000 aubic feet. ,Hurlburt has forwarded the requests to Public Works Director J oseph T. Devlin to make cost estimates prior to presea· ting the requests to the City Council. MacGregor Appointed WASHINGTON (AP) -President Ni:t· on today appointed Rapublican Rep. Clark MacGregor of Minnesota to a new post that will make him the ad· ministration's chief lobbyist be fort Congress. ··cARPETEERs~~ IT STARTS WITH A PHONE CALL TO YOU FROM A "RESEARCH" FIRM ASKING IF YOU OWN YOUR·HOME AND IF YOU NEED CARPETING OR DRAPERIES. IF THE ANSWER IS. AFFIRMATIVE, THE CALLER WILL OFFER TO SEND A "DECORATOR" TO SHOW YOU A NEW TYPE OF "COMMERCIAL" GRADE CARPETING. WHEN THE "DECORATOR" ARRIVES AT YOUR HOME, HE DEMONSTRATES STAIN RESISTANCE OF HIS CARPET, MAY OFFER TO PAY OFF YOUR DEBTS, MEASURES YOUR ROOM IN "UNITS" INSTEAD OF YARDS, AND OFFERS A BIG DISCOUNT (OR EVEN A CHECK) TO USE YOUR HOUSE AS A "SHOW HOUSE" FOR HIS CARPET. "JUST SIGN HERE" IS THE CLINCHER. AMONG THE PAPERS TO SIGN MAY BE A SECOND MORTGAGE ON YOUR HOUSE, ,NO ITEMIZATION OF YARDAGE BEING PURCHASED, AND A LONG TE~M CONTRACT !'OR PAYMENTS TOTALLING MORE THAN THE PRlCE PER YARD QUOTED. • DON'T BE TRICKED BY UNKNOWN FIRMS WHOSE GUARANTEES LAST ONLY AS LONG AS THEIR SHORT LIV&p BUSINESS, DON'T BE F 0 0 LED BY "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING" OFFERS, PHONY ,-,COMMERCIAL" "QUALITY AND FLIM-FLAM CONTRACTS. ' KNOW THE MERCHANDISE OR KNOW YOUR MERCHANT! ALDEN'S .--... -.,-.-.-• .._-o-u-•• -.--. CARPETS • DRAPES TUITIN'C...,., ALDIN'S .... ,..._.,.,..,. 1663 PlalHllltl. Ave. 1.,74 ~.!.:!';'!: c.ot. COSTA MESA ........ 646-4138 l\OURS: Mon. Thrv Thurs., ' 1o 5:30 -frl., 9 to 9 -S.t., 9:30 to S ( -------- I I I I I ' • ' ' ' I 1 : I ! I ! i Saddlebaek ' VO~. 63, NO. 287, 2 SECTIONS, 22' PAGES • ) . 17 CIAllY ,ILOT tl1ff l'Mt. The Young -Chefs Bob Casey, left, a1'.d Bill Ginger, both 12, squash out some 11 su_per good" cookies at class for young chefs at La Paz Intermediate School. They used too much dough in their enthusiasm. For exciting ~ results see story and picture on page three. \Saddleback Hospital ~4rchiwcture Hailed ,- Fer its architectural innovations Sad- dleback• Community Hospital will be a ''landmi1 !k achievement." Robert• Hartman, director of architec- ture an<I pis.Ming for the Lutheran Hospital !«iety of Southern California- thus descr\bes the facility that will serve Moto1r Pool Site Move.\';· School Wins lleprieve Serra School In 'Capistrano ~ach has won a reprieve. Trustees of the · Capistrano Unified School Di!trlct · M~·!lday voted lo retiin th~ aging school buil1ding, wbicb serves as - an administrative center. The bu ilding wa.s to have been demolished to make. way for a '5,000 transportation center, \but plans approved by the board call for th•' center to be con· etiucted on-another p; 1rt of the school " . property. Hall of lhe playfield nri. the c<>rner or Victoria and Sepulveda i"ill be usefl for parking and fueling buse1~. The vehicles will enter from one street · and exit OJ•lo another and will be able to ·,park in-rows. 'ft.wo 5,000-gallon fuel tanks will J1erve the buses and space has bean pllMed for vla!hing and vacuuming the· vehicles. rpe, area nov.• ustd for bus .J'llrking will ~ µsed by district vehicles ;1nd r:nough rOli:n will be re tained for a little league field and playground so that ::the school will continue to be usef1 as a ne:ighborhood recreational faj,1Jity. ' ac- cording to Joe Wimer, Dif;uctllr of Administrative Services. . Jrt recommending to . rttahn • t h e buUdin&, Superintendent T r·u rn. an Benedict pointed out that If any Pr.tField Act bulldlni!:s are demolished, they \Should be ones wbk:h-atudents usually OCCUl'Y· ' ' ' Rosary. Slated \ ·Fnr Viejo Youtbc t l7,000 Saddle back Valley residents by 1975. Saddleback Community Hospital ,will be 1 "fun aervice health care facility. pro- viding much more \h1n aimple curath1e procedures (or lht medically ill ,'' Hartman IQJd a group meeting Laguna Hills recently. The hospital board cited Golden Rain Foundation for iU! donation of land and funds for co nstructton of the hospital. Planners heve been chaOenged to pr~ vide nexibility and adaptability lo avoid "inst.ant obsolescence" of the hospital, he said, due to .the projected growth of the Saddleback Valley to a population or 2.85,000 by 1985. "We are confident that this has been 8chieved in the concept of Saddleback Community Hospital to a degree not yet seen in any hospital in the country," Hartman :said. The hospital's Cillumn-free interiQr will permit entj,re floors to bt rearranged at will to a~mmodate advancements: in patient care, he noted. "' Further, this planning feature will 4'enable us to start building prior to com· rletion of the finished la yout or any given floor. compressing the total time span Cif construction and red.ur:ing finan cing costs." First-phase construction "'"·ill consist or twD service floors with nursing towP-rs abo ve. On the lo)'er floor dietary, supply storage. engineering. rommunication and employe f.acilities will be located. The ground level, main floor will house surgery, pathology, radiology, pharmacy. administrative offices and some nut· p'atient services as well i;,s the 24-hour emergency receiving and trel'.tment area. George Skelton Services Slated Masonic' funeitl services will be con- ducted Wednes_day morning ln San Clemente for George D. Skelton, 82, of Capistrano Beach, who died Sunday even- ing. Mr. Skelton. of 34052 Doheny Park Road., leaves. hj! widow. Ruth. of the home ; a son. Paul Skelton of El Cajon; a d;1ughter . Ruthm'ary Clapper of Bel- mont; three "brothers. Glenn Skelton of llOsary wUI be recited tonight £or Unionville. Mich., A. E. Skelton ol Lan-- R,tbert Christy. the t!l-yeal-old M~ill'f1 caster and ·Norman Skelton of-Red ·Blutf; , 'O'!ejo youth killed In a traffic accii:ient a. sister. Olive Day · of Wolf' Creek, Ore.; '-• )1111 Saturday night. ~ six gra.ndchildren and six g r e a t • •1': servlct will be conducted at 7:30 · grandchildren. p.m. at St. ·Nicholas Catholic Qiurch-in -He w~s a member of Palisades United L:aguna Hills. Requiem man will be Methodist Church and San Clemente celebrated WednC!lday at 10 t.m. at the Lodge 671 F and A.M. Mr. Skelton also same church. Burial will follow at was a past wwlhy patron ol the San Ascension Cemetery in El Toro. \ . aemente Eastern Stir O\apter $24, ' Qlristy Is survived by his parents. Mr'<' \' holding the post in 1914 1Dd..OO. and' "'Mrs, Ted 011isty 25752 Chrisanta l 5erJiets will ~gin at 10 1.m. In Orlvt. Mission Viejo and two sisters, An• • iLesneski Mortuary Chapel. Burial will ll& Christy .11nd Mrs. Delores ~lgtrt, \fo\low ln-MelroH--Abbey Memorial Park. both.of Mission Vie}o.-4I!•h('lm. \•oung ~hristy w11s a 1969 honor \ f'ricnm· may make memorial con· araduate of Mission Viejo High School trlbutlons to Pllii;adcs UnJted Methodist a11d • aopliomore at UC lrvine, where he Cf\urch, 2'1002 Camino de Eltrella. w.•e 1n~orin1 In 1n1inee.rit11-CJiJllatrano Be.ch. '" ~1 ·• • T9day'a "l'l•wl - ' . ORANG_E ~OUNTY, CAUFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER '·r, '1970 ' ' TEN CENTS • .-• Board Accepts $17,500 Supervisors .Follm-0 Grand Jury Recominendation . ~ . ' -.. By JACK BROBACK Of MM Dtltr l"llM Shift · Orange County auptrvisors this morn- Jng accepted the lrecommendation of the Grand Jury and set their p.y at $17.500 a year, $2,500· more than they have been ~ paid for the past (our years. The ' action was aj>proved by 11 4 to t vote, Supervisor Robert Battin di.ssen· Ung, This morning's movt climaxed a series of actions which bas ·stirred noisy public protest beginning Nov. 4. At that time. the board members met In closed session and allegedly decided to have a salary ordinance drawn settina their. pay at $29,268 1 year, the same as mllJlicipal court judges. Fae~ with a crowded hearing room of protesters Nov . 10, suptrvisors then decided to officially tie their salaries to th:at of state legislators, $19,200 a year next year. This acti!.ln (ailed lo quiet lhe furor and recall and referendum movements were under way. Two weelu ago the board voted to refer the matter to the Grand Jury for recommendation. Before this morning's · vote, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper had advised the board that their Nov. 10 action would go into effect Dec. 10. He said if the boafd adopted 'the new ordinance today, as they did , on Dec. 31 their pay level ·.vould be at $17,500 1 year. Few protesters voiced their objections this morning but those that did were 1d1· marit in their opposition lo any raise whatever for the supervisors. William Ewing of Anaheim thrutened, ''If I have to walk up and doWn the streets to get you out I'll do it. I don't care what the others do -I will do this myself.'' Frances Sherman of Santi Ana pro- tested that the pay raise is out of ordtr, because of the coiinty'.s' eurrtnt eec:inointc situation; "' ' 1 ' -• Jailice Boer ol Sant.a Ana lQkt , the supervisors, "You . goofed again. You don't care what lhe people think and a Grand Jury rec o mme ndation ·is worthless. They are the hand·picked group named by you and what they think in no way represenUI what the people want.'' Supervisor Battin, as he had im· San Francisco's Security Tight For Visit of Ky SAN FRANCISCO CUP!) -Police Chief Alfred Nelder .today called out 420 men, all but fl'I in uniform. to patrol tbe Fairmont ijotel, where Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam is mak· ing a speech. The chief annourw;:ed his plans after peace groups declared ·they were calling for mas,s picketing to protest Ky 's ap- pearance before the Commonwealth Club. Neither M<1yor o.Jseph Alioto nor Governor Ronald Reagan ill attending the meeting. The mayor: announced he had a previous .engagement and the governor's oflice said merely "no" when questioned whelher Reagan would attend. In addition lo uniformed and plain clothes policemen, Ky also will be guard- ed l)y Secret Service agent! and other federal officers. Nelder declared: .,.It is traditional that Sari Francisco be courteous lo all visitors. t hope and, trust the tradition will riot be broken." John Busterud. he · business club's president, said: "It is tht. view of the Commonwealth Club that it should pro- vide a forum · for all importa11t points: or view whether these In the loc1I .('.Om· munity agree with or oppose hose views." ' San Clemente . Breaks Him Vp Sin Clemente upsta,ed Burbank Monday night. · It happened on Lau&)l-ln, NBC'a weekly . pr:ime-time comedy hour built around comedians 'Dan Rowan and Dick Martin. During their parody o! 1 pair of news commentators, Martin broke up seven or eia;bf tlmea after saying: "D;lteline s., a~te." Mai!Jn WU lryiJI& to pt out I . Joke ebout Pmk\!!11 Nllon'1 cliff. Cit vUll , tht Westen lVblte ffoutt. . ,lna!iy afier -·ol l1uptlr, Martin &ot It Nld:' , "Dltellne Sin Clomenle ~ Rea:idenLs of this retOrl community have been diltlirbed late Jn Che • 'veninc by an unidentified v.olct 1illgillg. 'This Llod fl .My Lim!'. .. " mediately after recall action was threatened, argued today tha t the salary should be returaed to.$15,00), "Orange County is in an economic 11lump. We shouJd be working on that in- stead of quibbling over salaries," Battin charged. ' • "No matter how we move we will be attacked.," said Supe.rvisor William Phillips. "We are now the second mo.;t pOpulous county in the state and San Diego County' supervisors have just ffiO\r.o ed to raise their pay to $19;000 a year." Phillips mo\·ed for adOptlon and, gpt ·a second from Supervisor William Hirsteln, who is retiring Jan. 4. · Board Chairman Alton Allen, Who also retires from office in January, aaJd,'"ln my JUc!gment from experience en this ~ board the job is worth every cent of $17,SOO. As I said previously when we set the salary at $19,200 if we had no one on .thfl board worth that much then the peo-.. pfe should find 1<>meone that Ls." Bonds for New Clubhouse? San Clemente Counc_il Weighs Million Dollar Project In one of Its: slimmest agendas In monlh:s, the San Clemente City Council Wednesday will resume discussion on the chances for a recreational bond issue which could involve. a million dollars - part of which would pay for a new com- munity clubhouse~ The idea, offer.ed to councilmen by a split vote of the parka and recre.atkm commission , had been scheduled for discussion two weeks ago by the council, but was shuffled aside . .Thus fQr the council has he ld one leng- thy study session of t h e · idea -ex- amining the number of projects lo be .in· eluded and the amount of funds to bt 10Ught ·from the voters. While disputes still exist, general agreement has been reached on limillng the amount of projects. Too n'lany in one issue, councilmen agr'eed, might hurt the chances of passage. *•*-ti if -ti -ti Preliminary hints have come forth that a bonding proposition -requiring a two- thitds aye vote -might be scheduled in a special election early next year. San Clemente Ponders Other items actedul ed for the 7:30 p.m. Fire Department Site meeting includi,i:' · -Submiasio or pelitlona: steking an uride~ground tility district and ap- propriation or money from a special city fund to eliminate poles in a aegment of City Councilmen are expected to resur: rect discusaions on site conaiderations for a new Sin elemente Fire Department he1dquarteil bUUding Wednesday. With aeveral loCations in mind, coun- €aprCouncil Not Opposing Canyon Jetport San Juan Capistrano's swallows might be joined by some noisier birds· If the controversial Bell Canyon jetport ever gets constructed. • But Sin Juan Capistrano city coun· cllmen, keeping an eye on the ground, artn't ready to take a st.and. Despite urging by the .Planning com- mission to formally oppose the airport :site, the council adopted a "wait·and·see'' attitude Monday wbile listing questions to ask at the Dec. 7 hearing in Mi.ssion Vie· jo. Councilman Jim Thorpe summarized the dilltmma the council might find itself in. He said be personally opposes the jet· port and might move if it is constructed, but officiall y it might be good for the city's economy. "lf the city cannot affect what happens In ·Bell Canyon then they must face the far.t that outside forces will shape the city'• destiny," he said. He said If the Ralph M. Parsons report assumes that the airport would hook up to San Juan Capistrilno·s ·water and sewer, perhaps the city should move to I Mex the property. "If the alrwrt is in lhe city limits then wt'll know we·n be able lo control its ef. fed.I on the cify: t don't think Orange County cares What happens to San Jan CaPlatrano," he said. Commissioner Jerry Gaffney pointed out that the airport access might be Crowrl Valley Parkway and Capistrano would then have the noise and confusion without the "gravy.'' Councilman Edward Chermak, a flying enthusiast,' pointed out that noise: from the aifport shOuldn't bather residents: of Capistrano. M for pollution, he said El Toro MCAs was dumping fuel into lhe · akles and doing , more . to pollute the C1pi9trano Valley.than a jetplll't would., * * * · ~rport . Group . F a<;e 0,Pponents HundrtdS 1of oppohents to the eo~ llJitanl• ltlg(~ioft for r jetport II Bell Ca~on m npected to confront county .,.,..,. commllSionen In ·M"l!llon ·Viejo Mondoy in ,. • ....., public hearing. The bearing •. can,ct soon .,•ft.er ol!felals ·~re. f'tliuated a lic:11. evening metting of.the commJaslon, will begin 1t'7 p.m. In LI Pai 1ntermediate-1Chool 'a multlpur· POie room. PttiUon.• buring hundreds or •I>' pontnt11 slgnafutt1 are erp8cted to be brought rotth 11 the m .. tlng., One' .. 1 of peUtlohs alone bears 1,000 1lgn1iurt11 from the South Count1 1rea. .. cilme}I first will hear a report by City the city's Riviera district. The request ii Manaj;er Ken Catt on site considerations the second made for underground uWlties and P.refire~a. r Carr also la expected to .make r.eeom-. in rec:ent months. City coffers bold u mendations on the general upgrading of estimated $100,000 which can be parceled the dtpa.rtme.I"~ r·lr~fp.,n;itg it ~m·• · our fot such Jirojecta. The rtmainder o[ volunteer to•hih-timei dep1rtin~L"'-· ~ \ ' the bill would be ,borne by homeowners In 'previous si~ ;discu.ssfona · bt!foft summer, councilmen heard two ldea1 -t.hemR.lves. P.reliminary pllllll for a use of the exlstinl city yards (where the aimiiar district in the Pacesett.er• city's original firt headquarters once Hillcrest. 11\...l are being drafted~ was) or state.owned fallow land near the -A recommendation from parka and freeway overpass It Avenida "Presidio 1 short distance away from existing bead· recreation commissioners that the city quarters. spend about S.100 for trophies lo be But· the location preferred. ~ Fire Chief presented under a new program to tht Merton Hackett, is the driveway to the city's most active clubs and organiia· truck atorage .area of the present depart-tions. ment on the bottom leve.1 of the civic -Recommendations from Police center. ' Chief-Traffic Engineer Clifford Murray There, Hackett proposes a new depart.. that a tw~"ay atop be .set for the La menl headquarters•co3ling about 1150,000 Cuesla·Patero de Oro lntersectlon. Mur- and capable of houstng 1 Jaraer, full-time ray also recommends one-way streets at staff and new equipment. Navarro, Industrias and Lu Vegas. Councilmen have not yet e&mmented or -Authorization for bid advertisement acted on such 1 plan. in the reconstniction of the fourth, sixth It wUI be submitted along wllh several-, and eighth holes of the municipal 1oli other proposed solutions lo the city'a fire course. problem . -Discussion of the annual Chriatmu Staff studies have, concluded on ideu bonus for l itJ emPloyes. which include a proprietary department - A resolution citing city appreciation similar to that run by the city of to retiring County Super visor Alton E. Scottsdale, Ariz.a .• where the chief owns Alim, who relinqui shes his po1t to· Ron the department and sells ~rviee to the Caspers next Janu~. Casper• def~ted city. . the veteran ::;upervisor in elections earUet Other suggestions have Included con-this year. tracUi Lhrough a special service district -Formal adoption of atiff standards with the County of Orange. · for. mobile home park development, u But the proprietary idea already has action e.ipected to win awift approva1 by won disfavor from Carr. who has said thf': counctlmen wht1 have hammered the costs are more.than the existing service rul~ out after several study sessions, Jn San Clemente, but the service is . Planning commissioner• also pla}'1!d a almost identical. m8jor role in developing the tougb, new The county idea . Carr has said, also guidelines. would be too costly. Fund~ eJ:lst In the city budget which could cover a new headquarters building . _as proposed by the fire chief. The hidden advantage to a(I)' new hea~ quarters building would ht· the chantfl for expansion of the police department, which presently shares the same building with fire personnel. If thf': he8dquarters were lo 'be built, JlOlt.e offiooi could expand into· firt department st.orafie garages Ind orflce rooms -eliminating a pressing need for apace. Park Site Eyed For Capistraµo A 2.5-acre park bte with towerina oak trees form.mg a canopy of •h•de will be the first ever developtd by ·san Juan , Capl.strano'1 P~rks and Recreation Coi:n· mlssiorl. The site. localed In the Terrlce development, now colitaln1 dead •oranae ' . ' . trees which will be remov.ed anct -n old . houit wli!ch . Ill< commilal?" won~ to demolish. , ,. Dennis Paquin. comml!tlioa:d\&iin.,,, aaid a surve'y la beina liken of•re.fdeft'11 ·In the art1 tn determine f'hlt shoUl<t.be done on·tbn silt. • He said irtmm.menditlons lDclUde a tntnl1 court ind a "tot 1-0L" The commlalon ' "Ill pres:eftt ill re- que1ll to tho Clty-.Couocll 11 Ill next meeUna In order to obtain fUndt for these pro,iedl. '1 - MacGregor Appointed WASHINGTON (AP) -l!resldent·NiJ- on today appointed Ra.publican Rep. Clark r,tacGregor ol Minneaota to 1 new post that will make him the ad· minlstralion'a · clUef lobbyist be fort • Congress. Oru«e C:Out Weather There may be 1 cloudy Unint behind those lil.ver skies. The weatheq,nan 1tt1 -1· 80 percent chance of rail\:. for 'Wednesday, with .temperatur.a 111111 mlrtd In the .lowu aa.. • INSWE TODAY "Divor~e fkilion 1c11U 11 ii lioai now, aM Oil tstimottd Oftf! mil· lion n1i.tmatchf.d mate1 arc wati. ing to takt od00ntdoc of thtir ntw found /T«tdom •. Poot 4. : I ' tiltfwW 1 -...... • M Clltct.... u, II MWflttl ...._ M Cl•1911'11111 lloD lll•l'IMll .... W Ctmk1 ti o,._ c.wtY r C,......,. It .trtN....., 1f o..• ""'" ' '""' ... .,.__ , ......... 1•11 a:.,,.,... '"' ' ,........,.. " llli.t'l....._I I• "-""" 16 ,...,_, . ••n .• ......, • ,._,.. '' ...... ..... . """ """"" 14 ·-·· .,..,. ,,.,. Mii... • ...... ..... .. ' ' I • • w 0 • - .,. fi UAJL Y PllOl T ....... , DtctmOlt I, 1970 [ .. . • 'Oii··Slick ._ ,. , ' •• ,I .' ., :,.~ . , • Hits Coast ' \ .. ~ " • I ' ' '" l ' IJ H~'s ·Giving ~-!Th~· ;Of ·~on~;:. KEY LAllGO, F'la. (UPI) -A huge oll ·1?.o'r Happy Bachelorhood :!te~~~~:u:~ ~r ~i:f~·1~: "l:J Florida Keys threatening an unusual . • underwater state park made up of By A1ITlllJR J\;VINSElf . °'*~"•••ff • !lome!IW>& llb. t.mperln( steel ~o t°"*"'n It hJppens when 1 .,.llnned ~ aPendJ four da11 wilh three females, two of tbetn teenagers. · 'l'\e turkey wun't even out ·ol lhe oven yet ~ore I was sivtng thanks, for beln8 single. · Now, before. the Women's Lib vigilantes camp on the doorstep with flaming torcbea, let's make this crystal tleat: fflnaJes are areat. · ,,. • • So are PJOlles ODd &ti;lly bean, .but .all lhree have something in common. . One appreciates them best In' their natural habitat. 1l!y ahack on the blad1 iln 'l,Jl. S;ome, might ~ .-Ith the designation -calling It a routine oi nit -but ln the twilight of my yooth, I ' Uve by a lyl:Cem. ' ' The wirie 1oblels· eo bere. The plumber's friend goes .. • there. Wome• are Ht 1yste~, U Spray Net in the d1ib drainer l! any In-, dlcaUon. And if you think it's com plicated in 'the cramped confines of a cottage, • consider accompanying three females to three shopping centers this frenized holiday season. · The first ~top was mine. 1 "Don't aet out of the car," tbey were told in tones of naive optimism. "I'D be right out.'' One waa miaalng and unaccounted for \IP.9D my momentary return and the two kids wore funny looks. "She went inside. Then she came. back," said one. "She got her check· book and went back In," the other explained needlessly. . So I headed for the bank, with naively optimistic -~ctions to med mt there unless I got back to the car firat.-By the time I returned from the one-mile hike, the car was gone. Tbey went tb die bank all rlgbL The wrong bank. Now it ls Saturday. They have voted down a trip to Sea World or Lion Country Safari. They have bigger game ln mind; South Coast Plaza and Newport Center. They nulltn't, however, look like country bumpkins. So after more closed-door preparation than Raquel Welch would need for the Academy Awards, we seem to be ready. Columbus could have gotten the Nina, I.he Pinta and the Santa Maria oU for the New World faster . Hamdbal 1ot Ids elepbatl over the Alps in the twinkling of an eye by cor;nparison. ~ Every living aouJ 1n Orange County seems to be at Sou.th Coast Plaza. My feet are killing me. I've got a cramp in the credlt cards. A Villon of a gin-and-tonic dangles before me Jlke a carrot before a ·mule. The girls -bOuncing from boutique to boutique -can't be found. My mother suggeJJls the con'idon to the ladies' rooms are so long they could have been mun~ and mol~sted and nobody would know for 24 hours. Finally they showed up and we move on. · Newport Center isn't so hectic, perhaps because while It has no mall, ~e do have a record rainfall in progrsa by now. Everyone feds better after two refreshing Jee cream parlor. Now it is SUDday. stops. Theirs was al an CUstomary thanks and goodbyts and aeeyalaters have been exchanged. Spray net W absent from the dilh drainer. Hair curlers are gone from my tie- dip tray. . • The ailence b brotea four hours later by their telephone call to say Uiey're home, deaplt. fool weather and holiday traffic. . ''Thanks Lord," I murmur, in graUtude for their safe trip. And also for being a bachelor. Leukemia Claims Girl, 6, Mter Blood Donations ... Cathy MillZ%0, tht 1IJ:-year-old leukemia vic1lm who had been kept aUve by the blood of hundreds of donors in Orange County, has died. Red Cross p u b 11 c relations dlrec· tor, saJd. '"Ibe awttcbboard wu jammed for two days." _ beautiful coral and.strange fish . The slick was apparently caused by the ship damping the residue fnim it! tanks. Wind.a of about 15 mph were driving the sticky ma.ss shoreward and Lt. Edward Little, district supervisor of the State Department of Natural Resources, said ·there was danger to the unua:ual coral f91'mations, which jut from the AU.ntic waters at low tide, migbt be,nnure.d by ihe oil. . ti The slick spread along the coast from Key Largo to Marathon. At its nearest point, the oil was· only about one nlile from the Penneltamp Coral Reef St11te Parle:. Ralph Hodges , state natural rt90UfCeS director, first disclosed 1.be oil apUI in Tallahassee. He said it waa reported by a fishing boat about 4:30 p.Jl). Monday and that· a Marine Patrol pilot J&ter followed the slick to its southernmost point and discovered the Italian tanker "Gelesial." Disclosure of the !pill coincided with a report from New Orleans that a. wen belonging to Shell Oil had blown out and caught fire in the Gulf of MexifO. knoek- ing several workers into the water. The well is 60 miles south of New Orleans, ad· jacent to the Wisner Wildlife Manage- ment Area. · By a'rternoon. the action or the sea. 1 reportedly was breaking up the oil spill along the Keys lnlo small globules. Lillie said some oil ~d already washed ashore. State officials are checking with federal agencies to detennine the destination of the tanker aod to decide what steps ran ·be taken to recover both actual and. punitive damages, Hodges said. • Hodges said the major immedlate ~ blem was in figuring how to contain the slick and pre vent the oil from sinking to the bottom of the Pennekamp Park. "It might be a quite expensive operation in that particular area." he told the cabinet. Although the spill was classified as ''very large," Hodges said it was . not comparable to the Tampa Bay oil spill ol last February in which several tho11Sand gallons. oC oll spilled from a tanker "hicb rlJll asroond. Gov. Claude Kirk said the company which owns the tanker causing the spill should be "embargoed" from sendiqg any more ships into Florida parts aa punish- ment and ipducement not to clean their tanb In Florida waters agajn. Gerald Farmer Last Rites Set Servfeea; will bt held 1t t p.m. Wed· nesday in Sheffer. Laguna B e a ch Mortuary Chapel for Gerald O. Firmer or 4125 Cille Bienvenido, San Clemente, who died Sunday in South Cout Com- munity Hospital. He was 58. Mr. Farmer, a n8tive of New York, had lived for more than 30 years in California. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Patrick Holt or La Habra; two sons, Gerald Fanner of New York and Rodney Farmer of Paris; a brother, Kenneth Farmer of New York; and by four grandchildren. a a ¥ s E UP'ITt ......... YOUNGEST GENERAL DIES Gen. Frtdarlck in 1941 Gen. Frederick Funeral Slated Services will be held Wednesday af- ternoon at the San Francisco Presidio cemetery for Maj. Gen . Robert T. Frederick, the U.S. Arriiy's youngest division commander in France in World W~r JI , who died Sunday in Palo Alto at the age or 63. General Frederick is survived by his widow, Ruth, two daughter!, Mrs. Jane See o( La~a Beach and Mrs. Philip Hicks of Palo Alto, and by eight grandchildren. Wounded eig._t timeS in World -War fl, he took commlhd or the 45th Division after leading an airborne task force in the invasion of Southern France. He also helped organize the U.S.-Cana· dian Special Service Forces which participated in the Attu Invasion in the Aleutians. where he took command after the Canadian commander was killed. General Frederick earned t he Distinguished Service Cross twice, the Distinguished Service Medal twice and the Silver star and Bronze Sl.ar for bravery in •cUon. Child Injured In San Clemente Blaze Improves Tbree-year~ld Timothy Armstrong of San Clemente, .wbo Ded from his blazing home unassisted last weekend, is ex- pected to be released from the Orange County Medical Center burn unit Wednes- day. But the boy'9 father -who also sW'· tered second-degree burns in t h e devastating blau t h a t destroyed the $45 000 home -will remain under treat· me~t for the rest of the week, hosj>ital aides said today. ' t .--• .eeazJ! • = "'™ I I :"\I."' • • ' J\'txon Action !Inflation CTert Hits ;"Wage Pacts W ASJilN\iTON (AP) _-The W h I ! ! House., resorting to a new policy It earlier . predicted, crUiclud today the ware set- tlement Jn tht General Motors 1trike and a presidential bolrd'• recommendation k> increase wlges In the r•U~ Industry. In its second lnllaUon alert, President Nixon 's CJuncil ot Economic Advlxra also focused AttenUon ~ price tna-euu by· the automObOe lndtlstry, the oil in- dustry, transporlatlon industry and the twO-price system of the copper industry. • The Whlte House thus moved Jnto fostering an "Incomes polJcy," a phrase covering presldenUal praaure to hold down inflationary w11e and prloe boosts. The council said th1t the General Motors settlement, "II g e n e r al I 1 e d throughout the eco~y. would crowd further upward colts per unit of output. ~nd. therefore, the price level.,. .. "Apart from further increues threqh the cost of living escalator for the years ahead, lhe increase subltantlally exceeds any trend e!:Umate of gains 1n naUon.-J productivity," the council said. . ''It also raises costs further In an In· dustry where producUs overseas are ac- counting for a subitantill and growing share of the domestic mariet." · The council reserved an opinion on tbe railroad wage package as a whole but zeroed in.on a »<:ailed cost-of-livina: escalator claU!e under consideration. "If an assumption about inflation thet represents no improvement l! upllcltly embedded Into a contract for future years, were thereby guarantee that the1e costs and prices will continue.rising at an unchanged rate,'' the council said. It said that "£reezing into the contract such an assumption about future inflation would saddle the indust.rY for the larger cause of achieving a neW stability for the price<0st level." The presidential board has recom· mended wage increases in the railroad indus try averaging 11 percent a year over three-years. The board did not specifica lly recommend a cost-of·livjng f!sca lator clause but dia note that In- cluding one would yield a wage Increase in excess of nine percent ann ually. Turning to price Increases, µte council noted that General Motors announced ad· ditional price boosts for automobiles. ''An increase of six to seven percent ln the price of passenger automobiles would add about $2 bill ion lo the total cost to clealers and possibly $2.5 billion to the cOst to consumers," the council said. Such an increase. the council said. translates Into a rise or about three- tenths of one percent in the Wholesale Price lndex . The council also noted price hlkea ln the oil industry, saying that they come The "when ~troleum .!nyento!ies. art ,it. •. revet fiigher than Is normal to; Uill time of yearl" ' The council said that on Nov. fl a ma- jor oil company, not named in Lhe lnf1 .. •· Uon alert boosted the price of crude by 25 ce~ts per b'f,rrel. That Increase is now under Investigation by the govern- ment. , , The 41-page ~nfialion alert also spotUgbted ''ateadlly rising ~~s ~r loc.al public transportation" but said 1t J.S a d1l· flcult problem for which there I~ no simple answer. Specifically, it mentioned transit raie increases in New York,. Washington and Chicago. "Each fare increase apparently 1hifl! • more per.sons to the use of alternative means of transportation," the council eaid. BombD~ages U of Oreg~n Office Ar~w--.. -··-1 . EUGENE, Ore. (APt -A bomb ex- tensively damaged an office and blew out windows of a University of Oregon ad- ministration building today . Four . persons, Including the vice chancellor of the Oregon state education system, were Inside Ole buildi.o8 but eacaped injury, police said. The lnves!igating officers said the bomb went of( outside a ground-level win- dow of Johnson HBIJ, where the offices of the university president and the State System of Higher Education are located. Police said they had no immediate in~ dlcatlon cf whc was responsible for th bombing. Immediate damage estimates were nr t made but observers said It appeared th1 t the blast was· not as severe as the er1.- pJ09ion whi ch caused $75,000 damage tr/ a faculty office building three block! a\\ ay on Oct. 2. Miles Romney, vice chancellor of the state system, a secretary and ·two telephone operators were in 'the bui'G ting when the blast hit but told police 'they were not-hurt. · Eugene, Oregon's second larges'/ city with a metropolitan population of 1: I0,000, has be.en hit by several explosklit .s and ars00<aused fires in the past/ thn!e years, including· one night in 19£ ) wben five dynamite explosions caused 1 11inimal damake to church. busines.s and. govern- ment buildings in tbe city. San Clemente Home .Slipping .1Away Ronald Armstrong, a Newport Beach airline travel executive. suffered 'bums of the face, bead and arms during frantic attempts to reach his son during the The heavy weekend rains, aoaking deep curred early this year. stubborn blaze which erupted dur ing a Into San Clemente's soil hive caused Cracks also have forme.iJ on the nanks rainstorm Saturday night. even more slumping in the huge crater of the huge slide, eodaof.1~ing houses 00 Timothy suf£ercd burned feet as ~e behind the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene either side , Mrs. Seets $aid. scrambled to safety through a burnini: Seets. A few more fissures 11lso appeared In · Now lhe family ls worrylng about the !he Seets back yard. ·wruch had been hallway of the home at 1'07 S. Ola Vista. cha nces of having to leave I.heir home kept parched on purpo!I? -to avoid any The fire, which began in the boy's eve n before the Christmas holidays. more earth slippage. downstairs bedroom, destroyed the entire The family originally had planned on The civil engineer :ind his family de- Catherine, whose home 1Yas at 2811 Rutherford Drive, Huntington Beach. died Sunday at Clilldren's Hospital of Among those who helped Catherine were members of. the 0,,ta Mesa police department who exchanged blood tYPts in its bank with otber agencies for a supply of S.posltive. Marine! based at the El Toro facility also don1ted. house and all its contents, leavlng giving up their home at 717 Avenlda cided recenlly to stop, making payments nothing, fire oHicials said. c I bo after the bol.da and mov to on the ho wh1·c1 ••· I ' Stroke Hos. pi" tal1"zes nd I ed f o om ' ys ' f1'rst. me -·' w., "~ ooup" When father a son are re eas rom Jiew qua rters. treatn1ent they will join Mrs. -Armstrong But soil at the top edge of the cavern-The residence -rvith a repair price Orange County. . She had received dally transfusions of eight pints of blood for the last two years ln which she had been hospitaliud. Last ~her, however, the Red CrOS! Blood Bank ln Santa Ana wu ntMing short of the rare. B-posltive blood type and a public appeal ,was made. "We received over 800 calls from pro- ple pledging donl4ons," Jerry M~son. DAILY PILOT .....,.,. ..... , ......... .... LlipMle9cA ....... ..., Ctttt1 M... S. a ' re OllAHGE COAST PUlllSHINO t:IJM,.Nf'I lob1rt N. w,,, Pr•~I ar~ Pllltli.Mr J1cl k. C:lll'l1y Vk• P'rakl111t 1r.11 ~•I M.ll\ltlf no~., tC1nil Edllor 7Aorn•• A. M~rphi111 MIM9Inll fd!lor tlich•r' tt. tt•I Sllltll °"''* c...rit)' f:dllOI" -Co1t1 M ... 1.-w.t aty '""' ".wporl fltldl: Inf ~--· ~,.. • L•-llftCJll nt I AV"'ut Hur.11"9IOll llucl'I! 11J1S IMtll ICllllf'/11'11 a.ii '*"'"It; al Hwlll IQ Clmlnt A ... Catherine will be buried at Good Shepherd Cemetery, Huntington Beach, Thursday following Mass or the Angels at 9 a.m. at St. Bonaventure Church. She is survived by her parents, Mr. a:1d Mrs. Joseph Milazzo, and two sl.!tera, Barbara and Joanne, bOth of Huntinglon Beach. 1963 Miss Am'erica and two daughters at the home of ous bowl which once was the back yard tag set at about $1401,IXKI _will go up for relatives elsewhere in San Clemente. sloughed during the weekend rains, eat· trustee's sale soon. WASHINGTON, Pa . (AP)_ Jacqueline The cause of the devastating blaze ing perilously at what remains of the lot. Mrs. Seets, .coot11cted recently about Mayer Town.send, Miis America of 196.l, which recurred three times during the The edge of the crater is 10 feet from the family's fulurr~ plans, said bitterly has been hospit.ellzed .with a stroke. night before firemen finally quenched it, I.he rear of the expensive residence. The that they would ••never own our own lier husband. John Townsend, a slill is being investigated. first landslide endangerina the home oc:· home again. This ·taught us somethi11tg." lawyer, said Monday night doctors Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, believe there Is a good chance the 27~ year-old beauty "will mate a substan- tially total recovery." ••c.ARPETEER~~~~ ~ldnap Threaten~d? ' IT STARTS WITH A PHONE CALL TO YOU FROM A "RESEARCH"' FIRM ASKING IF YOU OWN YOUR HOME AND IF YOU NEED CARPETING OR DRAF!ERIES. IF THE ANSWER IS AFFIRMATIVE, TH~ CALLER WI LL OFFER TO SEND A "DR';OR " ~O Secret Service Guards . . · Nixon Aide. Ki.ssinger .. . WASHING TON (AP) At lea at one , member of President Nixon's top White House stall bas quJeUy been givcp Secret . Service protection -prewm~bly to guard qa.tnat any poasible kidnap at.- tempt. Or. Henry A. Kissinger. Nixon's assis· tant for ·national security affairs, bas had · a Secret service body guard for more th•il 1 month. it was learned TUe.sPay. Jbat list" week, dirtctot J. Edpr lloover of the Federal Bureau of Investigation told a Senate 1ppropriallons subcommittee that a militant antiwar group was ,plotting to lddntp a White HOUJO aldeor other public OUl<i•I. "The plotters," he sajd, "art COii· cocting 1 i!dieme to kldn•p • hll!hly plac- td a:ovtrnment otficial. The name nf a White HoUle staff mernblr his been mentioned aa a p()Saible victim. 1' Neither Hoover nor any other govem- ment omclalhas. then or since, Identified the While BOW:e &Ide referred to by th• FBI chief, However, the fact that Ki.Uln1er h~s been lurnilhed with an extr1ordln1ry leder'! bodyiUMd WU leell H I slro"I indication th1t there are genuine fears within government that be mlgbt ht a kldpap target. Kl!slnger probably carr~ In hlf hts~ more sensitive securlty secrets ,than any other man In the White House, perhaps . even lnclud!J\g the President. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler WiolS asked if any other members Of Nixon's 'start hed been given secret Strvlce _pro- tection . His reply: , ' , "I can't say anything about that, for obvious reasons." It was widely reported last month, when Kissinger went to the Soviet mis:llkln to the United Nations In New York for meetings wJth Soviet fortl&n minister Andrei Gromyko aod am- . b1ssador AnatWy Dobrinin, that he wu 'accompanl~ by a Secrel Servlee a1ent. Kiainfer bu been 1een with an agent dog11ln1 hl! footatepa on a number of oc- cask>ns aln~ then. Since the Se<rot Servlco normolly d ... not accord personal protection " lo memberi~of the Prealdent'1·1taff, It wu · l>Gllev~ Nixon himsetr must have , <ilrecti!d the posting of the Kissinger bodypard. ' SHOW YOU A NEW TYPE OF "COMMERCIAL" GRADE CARPETING. WHEN THE "OECORA TOR" ARRIVES AT YO~ HOME, HE llet-40NSTRA TE STAIN RESISTANCE OF HIS CARPET, MAY OFFER TO PAY OFF YOUR DEBTS, MEASURES YOUR ROOM IN "UNITS" INSTEAD OF Y AR OS, AND OFFERS A BIG DIS~OUNT IOR EVEN A CHECKj TO USE YOUR HOUSE AS A "SHOW HOUSE" FOR HIS _C!j;RPET. "JUST SIGN HERE" IS THE CLINCHER. A'MONG THE PAPERS, TO SIGN MAY BE A SECOND MORTGAGE ON YOUR HOUSE, NO ITEMIZATION OF 'fARDAGE BEING PURCHASED, AND A L_ONG TERM CONTRACT FOR PAYMENTS TOTljLLING MORE THAN THE PRICE PER YARD QUOTED. DON'T BE TRICKED BY UNKNOWN FIRMS WHOSE GUARAf\ITEES LAST ONLY AS LONG AS THEIR SHORT LIVED BU~INESS, DON'T BE F 0 0 LED BY "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING" OFFERS, PHONY "COMMERCIAL" QU~LITY AND FLl~-FLAM CONTRACTS. , KNOW THE MERCHANDISE OR KNOW YOUR MERCHA!'PI U.NTA ANA, OU.N•I TUSTIN Cell • • • • ALDIN'S llD HIU CAINTI , ........... 1U14 ,,...,... ,....._ c.. IJl.JJ44 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lacetltfa Ave. COSTA MESA 646--4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru. Thun.. f le 5:39 -Fri .. 9 le f -Sat., 9:30 Jo S I \ ' I I I I I I I ( I I I ., I ; I I I ! ! ~· •• •• • ' ~ ' Zt • ' " ' ' I' I I " l !. " \ I I I ) I I ) I I I ~I ' I ' ' ' I ' I I ! I I ' t ' ,, 1' ' '1 ~ ~· " ,, • Zl •• • • Zs • ' ' ' ' " ' I I " l' 1i " 7 .. ~ ~ • v w . ..... -. .. I ,' . • .. ""'. VOli.·63, NO. 287, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES -I DAILY ,ILOT lllff ,. ... ,. Takes Reins New Laguna Beach City Manager Lawrence Rose, left, took over duties and desk ~ay from Joseph .Sweany. city public works direc· tor w~o h8s beeri"Serving as acting city manager since the departure of James D. Wheaton. festival Board Nixes . ~, Hike in Ticket Prices By BARBARA KREIBICH ot lftt D11t1 ,1 .. 1 Sl1ff Spuming the possibility of upping its revenue by $112,000, the Festival of Arts board Monday night rejected a proposal for a major increase in Pageant of the Masters licket prices. The directorS agreed upon a more modest price boost, to bring in $35,000 more' revenue . ·niis, said director Stuart Durkee, would cover the tstimated $25,000 increase in productions cost which will result from inflation after dedication af the city's 17\h percent share of .ticket i;ales. According to business mana&er Robert Holiday Crime Seminar Slated Laguna Beach Police Chief Kenneth Huck has invited local merchants and their employes to a s~minar on holiday crime to be held in city hall council chambers from 9:30 a.m. to noon on Saturday. Dec. S. Speakers will discuss ways to prevent losses fr6m shoplifting and bad checks and explain citizen arrest procedures. "Last year alone: Shoplifting cost the United States three billion dollars," says Huck. "This type of crime increase.'J· dur- ing the Christmas holiday season. The seminar is designed to provide in· formation and answer que stions so Laguna business people may be better able to protect themselves fr D m i;hoplifters and passers of bad chl'CkS." Orange . Coast Weather There may be a cloudy lining behind those· silver skie"s. The ·, weatherman sees a 60 percent chance of rain for Wednesday; with temperatures' still mired ln the" lower 60s. INSmE TODAY "D ivorce Italian style" is legnt now, ond an estimated one mil- lion mismatched mate• are wait· ing to take odvantobe of their new found freedom. Poge 4. c1111tr1111 ' ....... " Cllte-1111 U1 " Mufl.ltl ,, ..... " ClltlillM ll·tt ... , ........... tr:k• " .. _ ' ·-" lfNll '""1v " Dffll! Ntllttt ' "'"' .. Leppert, it will necessitate onJy a slight increase in some ticket prices, with the overall range remaining within ' the present 12 to $6 range. In the iaterest of simplying book· keeping, it was agreed to set ticket& at the same price level throughout the week eliminating the existing weekend in- crease. • A revised price schedule proposed by Or. Harold Burtch, based on a study by his box Office committee. would have set tickets at $6,$5, $4 and $.1~ and included re-arrangement of the Irvine Bowl seating chart to include more high-priced tickets. Board chairman William Martin said he would not favor any arbitrary increase in ticket prices unless the board had some specific need for the additional revenue. Durkee noted that extra money could be used to cope with the serious Jack c:f parking facilit.ies. "The reason grounds attendance is not increasing," said Durkee, "is that people have no place to park." Helen Keeley felt it would be "more in keeping with the times to keep our ticket prices low," but said earmarking ad- ditional revenue for a parking fund might be acceptable. Paul Griem Said 'be would favor an .in- crease since 1'The money comes from outside the community and it can be~efit the community." 1 David Young said he could "see no justification" for increasing prices up to 30 percent in some sections, whicl\. would occur if the proposal were adopted. He suggested an increa~ to cover just the estimated ·$25,000 need. • Jilal Akins also opposed the increase hut said he could agiee to leveling off prices for bciokkeeping purpose!. When he ap- peared reluctant to support Durkee's pro. posal to authorize a· $3~.ooo overall ip- crease, Mrs.-Keeley oommented, "You'.ve already saved $78,000 by bringing 1t down from $112,000." · . rt·wasunaninidusly 'agreed to authori:ie ' an increa:ge suHicie_nt to bring in the ad- ditional 35,000 next year. Fall Critically ' Hurts Countian A man who fell SO feet from a freeway overpass after his car had cra9hed into a guardrail is in serious condition today at lhe Orange County Mtdical Center. Dh'Ote .. ' ••lttrl~I PIM • e1ttt11l-I " ''::! Mlf'WI , .. u T '"' ~,. Anaheim poli~ said Freddie Vasquez, 22, Placentia, crashed into the Riverside --Eree..\U¥v butmen<early 1bilwnornin · at Miraloma ~he. "' lllNMt 1 .. 11 --" AM L....,. " Mlllllo· • • •• .. ).14 7 ·""' w ' Officen at first could find onJy the car but a further search, revealed that Vu- quez hid faUen to the freeway shoulder Jwit outaide the traffic lanes. • . . • • I - .. . . '• ·- .ORANGE GOUtjTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER f, 1970 ,_ TEN .CERTS. ' Board Accepts $17,500 ' Supervisors Follo.w Grand Jury 'Recommendation By JACK B!IOBACK Of tll4o Dallf Plltt Sl•H . Orange County supervisors this morn- ing accepted the recommendation of the Grana Jury aiid set ~eir pay ·at $17,500 a year, $2,SOO more than they have been paid for the past four years. The action was approved by a 4 to I vote, Supervisor Robert Battin dissen- ting. 'I'his_morning's move climaxed a series of actions which has stirred noisy public protest beginning Nov. 4. At that time, the board members met in closed session and allegedly decided to have a. salary ordinance drawn setting their pay. at $29,268 a year, the same as municipal court judges .. Faced with a crowded hearing room of protesters Nov. 10, supervisors then decided to o(flcially tie their -salaries to ~ that of state legislators, $19,200 a year next year. This action failed to quiet the furor and • recall and referendu'.m movements were under way. Two week,, ag:; the board voted to refer the matter to the Grand Jury for recommendation. · Before this morning's vote, County Counsel Adrian Kufper had advised the board that their Nov. 10 action would go Into effect Dec. 10. He said if the board adopted the new cmlinance today, as they did, on Dec. 31 their pay level would be at $17,500 a year. Few protesters voiced their objections this morning but those that did were ada· mant in their opposition to any raise whatever for the supervisors. . William Ewini of Anaheim threatened, "If I have to walk up and down Ule street,, to g~t you out I'll do it. I don't C$l'e what the others do -I will do tlµs ·myseU.-'' :;· ~=~::i,~ Sel as Memorial To Verner Beck An art scholarship would be the most suit.able memortal to th·e late Verner BeCk, his fellow Festival of Arts directors decided Monday evening. The board voted to establish one $250 scholarship at the· School of Art and De~ign by adWng $18 to a (_Jonation of $132 " dollars collected voluntarily by artist ex· hibitors aiid turned over to the board to help finance a Beck memorial. Mrs. Helen Keeley then reported (In a number of memorial proposals made dur- ing meetings of the Beck memorial com· mittee and it was agreed that a major, continuing scholarship would constitute the most acceptable memorial to the late director who devoted many years to building the Festival. \ Mrs. Keeley said that a four-year scholarship at the School of Art and Design, covering 3, 744 hours of study and leading to a Certificate of Completion would cost approximately $4,000. The scholarship committee, made up (or directors Glenn Vedder and Hal Akins, was asked to check into types· and amounts of scholarships that could be established a'n d report back to the December board meeting. The Idea of moving a· tile panel, which Beck had especially admired, from the patio adjacent to the art school to a more prominent place on the· Festival grounds was hastily dropped when Mrs. Keeley revealed the panel belongs to the art school, not the Festival. · The panel, consisting of 300 hand· painted tiles depicting th!' history of art, was given to the School of Art in 1962 by the mother of the artist, Elsa Jensen, as a memorial to her daughter who d!ed in 1961, Mrs. Keeley told lbe board. San Clement,e . . Bre!;LksHim .Vp San Clemente upstaged Burbank Monday •night It happened on Laugh·ln,· NBC's weekly prlme-time com'edy hour built around comedians Dan Rowan and Dick-Martin. During their parody of a palr of news commentators, Martin broke up seven or eight tiiiies after saying: "Dateline saronntntt~·-- Marttn was trying to get out a Joke about Pre.s1denl Nixon's cliff~ top vllla, the Western _White Houae. Finally after 1pasma ----ollau1bter, Martin got It said: '1D•teline San Clemente - Ri,lidenl. of thfs 'r"°'t ci>mmunltn hav been disturbed late in· the ev by an unidtntffied voice 11"1 'This Land Ia "• Land'." ~ , , ;•v '\' ' ' ,, ---- tested that the pay raise is out of order because of the coUnty'S current economic situation. Janice Boer of Santa Ana told the sUpervisors, "You goofed again. You don't care w,hat th'.e )>eople think ·arid a Grand, Jury recommendati~n is worthless. They are the hand·p1cked group named by you and what they thiitk in no way represents wnat the people want." Supervisor Battin, as he had im· Laguna Panel '' ' ' ''' mediately after recall . action was threatened1 81ljlled loday';that the salary' should ,be re.turnedito $15,000.. • . . · "Orange Count_y , is in an economic slump. we: MoU!d be. working On lhit tn~ stead of quibbling QVer salarie"!," Battin charged . ' · ' • ' · · ' ''No matter how we move we will be attacked," sai'd SuperviSor ·williaih. Ptlillips. "We are now the second most populous county in the state and San Diego CQunty supervisors have just. D:lOJ· Feelings Spl-it Over High : Rise ' By PATRICK BOYLE he said, ''then It can be done in a way 01"" o.11y l'lle• Sl•H that allows -buildings to have a A panel Of four prominent Laguna distin.ctive character." Beach residents discussed the futUre of When the' di$Cussion was ,thrown open the Art Colony in terms of villige vs. to the floor, many residents suggested high rise Monday n\ght, and after two the only reason people Jive in Laguna hO!.JrS of talk,ing and listening, it appeared Beach is because .of lh~ clean air, tbe that none of the panelists had changed his ocean view and the_ lack of. congeslion, all mind. · or which high rise would destroy. The panel, sponsored by the newly Artist David Rosen said; '11The power ot organized Laguna Forum, i n c 1 u de d money will slowly push the creative Bernard Syfan, president of the Lagun·a artists out-of Laguna Beach and it will Beach Cba·mber of, Commerce;· Merrill just become another town." ' ·Jo.hnson, owner cf the Surf and Sand Asked by a resident if one high rise Hotel; Arnold Hano, magazine writer and buildi~~ would ~t !''precedent for ~ore, critic of 10ca1 aovernn;ient· and Carl Plannmg Comrrusa1oner .Jolmann said. it. .111.il "'~• -ber of tllt~·Beacb ' 1'ould. "! 'b.''t thO!k '~""',"!'!:""'""'. Piannlng Commlslion. of greater he~~bt to get a ;few dollif1 ,off FoUpwing a sbort ipeech by each of the your tax bill, Johnson said: . , ,. panelists; membets of the audience voie-O~ realdent even IUUe•ted that all ed their views·on . the subject and asked buildmgs between tJ:'e Coast Highway a~ questions of the panelists. ~·be~ch be de!!1olished and a pa~i bu,lt Starting the discuss· n Ch be -. 1n their place to reall.y humaruze the . 10 , am r pres1· area ,, dent Syfan said be was in favor of high ' rise development and contended that Laguna Beach ceased to be a village ''the d~y t~e highway came along the coast." .syfa~, a builder, said the city .Reeded high rise hotel development along the beach front to maintain an adequate tax base so the residents would not be forced to pay higher taxes. · · "The question is not if we will develop (high rise)," Syfan said, "but bow wt will deyelop, to what extent we will develop and where we will develop." San Francisco's Security Tight For Visit of Ky SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police Chief Alfred Nelder today called out 420 men, all but-40 'in uniform , to patrol the Fairmont Hotel, where Vice , President Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam is mak- ing a speech. ed to ra!Je thiir pay to 119,000 a yur." Phillips' moved for ·adopUoo and aot ai- teeond from Supervisor William Hirstein.• who is retiring Jan. 4. ~d Chairman Alton Allen, wba al» .. ret,ites from o'ffic! in January, said, "Jn my judgment from experience on this board the job, is woi:th . every cent of $17 ,500. M I said previously when w.e set the salary at $19,200 if we had no one on this board worth that much theD the peo- ple. sho\lld find sorrieoni that 11.11 . ,r . -. Council Eyes Main Beach ! ' ' Study Group ~guna Beach city councilmen wilt- nominate candidates for a special Main Beach Development Committee a t Wednesday evening's Co1,mcil session. .. At the request of_ Ml!,¥.or Richard Goldberg, each councilman will present the name of a member ,and alternate for appointment to the new commiUee .which' ·will review proposals for developtr\ent oL · ' the mile-long city-owned beacllfront pr~ pe.., .. Also at the Wednesday meeting, the council will consider , approval of a preliminary applicatipn for. a Housing and Urban Developme.nt (HUD)-grant, for aC1'.juisition of the 525-acre Spmore Hill! ·triangle. · The. Laguna Greenbelt Inc.' has been conducting a dri~ to raise funds to match a federal openspace grant to purchase the property but the -<lty at. torney has advised that no applicaUort can be filed until matching funds are "virtually in the bank." Jt had been proposed to attempt ac- quisition of the property in ·four parcels O\.'.er a four·ye~r period, for a totaJ estimated price of H.million. Howtver, since the entire $2 milllon matching share apparently mush.be in hand before the federal funds can be re-- quested it ls considered unlikely that the application will be approved at this time ~ F afe Increase For Bus Asked Responding to an often-voiced ar'gu· ment that high ri se buildings would obscure the ocean view, he said "people could see around it. Jt is not height ror height's sake, but height for the com· munity's sake." .Surf and Sand owner Johnson agreed with Syfan that the multi-s tory hotels were needed to raise more taxes, corr tending that it would take 500 homes to provide .as much tax for the city as his ewn hotel did. The chief annourr;ed his plans after An In peace groups declared they ~ere· calling crease in bus fares Is being sought · Writer Hano said he completely disagreed with both men and was op- posed to any form of high rise develop- m~nt in Laguna Beach, for mass picketing to protest Ky 's ap-by the South Coast Transit Corporation. pearance before the CommonWeahh Club. which carries passengers be t w e e ft Laguna Beach, the Newport Harbor area-Neither Mayor Joseph Alioto nor and Sant.a Ana. Governor ijonald Reagan is attending the The corporation has filed a rectuest meeting. The mayor announced he ·had a with the Public Utilities Commission, previous engagement a?Jd the governor's asking permission to increase its basic office said merely "no" when questioned.·· rate from 25 Cents to 35 cents for the first whether Reagan would attend. zone .and to Increase the charge for each I~ 0addition to" uniformed and plain additional zone from five cents. to 10 clouies policemen, Ky also will be guard.. cents. _,,._ ed by Secret Service agents and other ~dvising the Laguna Beach city clerk federal officers. of t)le application, the cwporation's at~ "Growth feeds on growth," Hano quoted from an editorial in a local newspaper and said ·that one high rise building would lead to many more. "l will be glad to change my mind on some or all of these things," Hano qui~ ped, "they day Emerald Bay builds high rise apartments ori its beach.'' Syfan : lives: in Emefald Bay. . PlaMing coritmiuioner Johnson sug~ gested that not all high r.ise was Qad for Nelder declared : "lt is traditional that torney notes that de<:lining patronage and San Francisco be _ courteous to all increased operating coat since the tut visitors. I hope and trust the tradition fare hike In 1964 have made it necessatY. will not be broken.'' to seek a fare adjustment. ' Lagunagrins. By. Phil ,lnterlondl • the city, p~ovided the planning or such structures was carefully. controlled by the city. The General Plan l)OW being COl}- sidered by the, city would provide such control, he said. · "If high rlse is only in certain places," ~~' FHA Lower ' I lnteres~ Rates .. On Home Loans WASHJNGTQN (UPI) -The; aovern- ment today cut from 81,S percent to 8 per- cent the maximum Interest rate which may .be · charged •on home mortgages backed by the Federal Hou s l.n I Administration and' the V e t e· r a n 1 · Admln.istratlon. ' The ch an a• wu-the-firsl Jn the . f\HA and VA mortgag'e ceiling since it wasin· cz:eased from 714 pei'cent to 8'°' percent last Jan. ~. ,. ThO rote, 1till the second highest celling ln tht history of the government-backed home IOJn progr.U\1, is effective lm- medi1telf but OUi:.tandini commilmtntl' for ~ mortgage m,urance at the old ell -"t !llt will ,cootinue to . be llonored, Houting secretary Georae fComeny said. f ~ .- t r • "I """' I Lant OV1rdU..A!Nmpt to Flt In Witl! ""'.r.w.. ' ,1 ) ! • • •• . ~ l f ~ -------. . ~ - -,jtl • OAQ. Y PILO 1 St .. ----. '' ; . \ Hits: Ctiast ·-I ., \ ~ ·' t '' . 1'e~s :Giving '~ .iAA~· l'1)f\~orida ~arHappy Bachelorhood·· By Al\TllUR .Ji:viNSEL °' .... DlllF ,.... •t•ff ' .f19D1eUtinc ·lib tell)perlng• sloe! to \ouihen It happens when a conflnnod bal:be)i-~1four days wt.th three femaJes1 t•o of them teenagers. .. 'Tbe turkey wasn't everl' out cf the -.oven yet ~(ore I was giving Qtanks, ' ' lat: beln& lil>gle. . Now, before the Womeil.'s lJb ·vigilantts carnp .on the ·doorstep with flamjng torchel, let's· make this cryajal " tloar: f~ ~-P,Otl. , • . ' . , So are p;.uea Ind .lria)y bears. but all three have tomething in common. ' One appreciates them be:tt in their natural habitat. · · My s:bact on1the ·beach llil't lt. l><>lne mJtht di>qree wflb !be deslgnaUon -calling it a rbuUne or rut -but in !be. twilight of my youlb, I ' . live ·by a system. i The. wine goblets 10 here. The plumber's friend goes :.. ' . there. • ,Wcimea lri not 1yatemade, U Spray Net fn the dish drainer is any ilJP dicaUon. . And If you think it's complicated in the cramped, confines of a cottage, ~1der a~mpanylng three females to three shopping centers this freni:.ed holiday season. The first stop WU mine. , "Don't get out of the car," they were told in tones of naive optimism. "I'll be right out." ., One was missing and unaccounted for upon my momentary return and the two kids wore fUMy looks. "She went jnside. Then she came back," said one. 11She got her check- book and went back in," the other explained needlessly. So I headed for the bank, with naively optimistic iJJtructions to mfft me there unless I got back to the car first. By the time I ' retur®d from the one-mile hike, the car was gone. They went to die baDk all right. The wrong bank. Now it is Saturday. They have voted down a trip to Sea World or Lion Country Safari. They "' have bigger game in mind; South Coast Plaza and Newport center. They mustn't, however, look like country bumpkins. ,. So after more closed-door preparation than Raqilef.Welcb would need_J_q[___, the Academy Awards, we seem to be ready. ·~ Columbus could have gotten the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria off for the New World faster. R~bal 1ot h11 elephants over lhe ·Alps in the twinkling" oC an eye by ccrnpar1.so1t.. · Every living 1001 in Orange County seems to be. at South Coast Plaza. My feet are killing me. I've got a cramp in the credit cards. A vision of a gin-and-tonic dangles before me like-a carrot.before a mule. The girls -bouncing from boutique to boutique -can't be found. My mother suggests the corridors to the ladies; rooms are ao long they , could have been mugged and motest.ed and nobody would know for 2f hours~ Finally they showtd up and WI move on. Newport Center isn't so hectic, perhaps because while it haa no mall, we do have a record rainf~ in progrss by now. Everyone feels beUer after two refreshing llops. Theirs was at an ,, Ice cream parlor. Nnw it i! Sunday. · ~ tbankJ and good~ and seeyalaters have been ercbanged. ,:S~ray net IS absent from the dfsh drainer.~Halr curlers are gone from my tie-- clip tra,y. . . _, b', .,. • 'The silence is broken four hours later by their telephone call to say they're home. despite foul weather and holiday traffic. '"l"tiank1 Lord,'' 1 mbrmur, tn 1ratitlld8 f<l" thtlr atfe trip. ( And aleo IOI' being a bachelor. • . f °""ti· Drive Fails KEY LARGO, Fla. (UPI) - A ~uge oll slickc believed caused by a passing Italian tanker stretched for 71 miles along the Florida Keys threatening an unusual underwater slate park ,made up of beautiful 1coral and strange fish. The slick was apparenUy ceused by the ship dumping the res.idue from its tanlts. , Winds of about 15 Dlph were driving the sticky mass shoreward and Lt. Edward LitUe, district supervisor of the State ' Department of Natural Resources, said there was danger to the unusu41 coral formaUons, which jut from tb'1 Allantic water& at lc;>w tide, might be smeared by the oil. The slick spread along ·the coast (rum Key Largo to Marathon. At its nearest point, the oil was only about one nlile from the. Pennekamp Coral Reef St:1te Park. UPI Tt!UNtt YOUNGEST GENERAL DIES Gen. Fr,,derick in 1948 Gen. Frederick • < Funeral ·Slated Services will be held Wednesday af- ternoon at the San Francisco Presid io Ralph Hodges, state natural resources directer, first disclosed the oil &pill in Tallahassee. He said it was reported by a fishing boat about 4:30 p.m. Monday and that a Marine Patrol pilot later followed the slick to its southernmost point and discovered the Italian tanKer "Gelesial.'' cemetery for Maj. Gen. Robert •T. Disclosure of the spill coincided with a Frederick, the U.S. Army's youngest report from New Orleans that A \\'CH division commander in France in Vi'orld belonging to Shell Oil had blown out and Warn, who died Sunday · in Palo Alto at caught fire in the Gulf of Mexico, knock· ing several .workers into the water. The the age of 63. well is 60 miles south of New Orleans. ad· General Frederick is survived by his jacent to the Wisner Wildlife Manage-widow, Ruth, two daughters, Mrs.~Jane ment Area. See of Laguna Beach and Mrs. Philip By afternoon , the action of the sea reportedly was .breaking up the oil spill Hicks of Palo Alto, and by eight along the Keys into small globules. (ittle grandchildren. said some oil had already washed ashore. Wounded E!l.ght times _ill World War II, ' State officials are checking with federal he took command of £fie .4!>th Division a'genctes to determine the destination or afte~ lea~ing an airborne task force in the. tanker and to decide what steps ran the mvas1on of Southe~ France. be ~ _ t_o recover both actual and . He also h_elped org~nize the U .S . .Ca~a- punitive dainages; Hodges sai . -1!1.M:-:-Spec1a!-8$:v.ice Forces _whi ch. Hodges said the major immediate pro-pa.rt.~~1pated tn the Attu Invasion m the blem was in figuring how to contain the Aleutians .. where he took comm~nd after slick and prevent lhe oil from sinking to the Canadian comm~der was killed. the bottom of the Pennekamp Park. "It G~ner~l Frede~1ck earne~. t he might be a quite expensive operation 1jn D!St!flgu~shed Serv!ce Cross tw1_ce, the that particular area," he told the cabinet. DlStin~shed Service ~edal twice and Although the ~ spllf was classified as the Sdv~ St~r and Bronze Star for "very large," Hodges said it was not bravery m action. comparable to the Tampa Bay oil spill of last February in which several thousand gallons of oil spilled from a tanker wruch ran aground. Gov. Claude Kirk said the company which owns the tanker causing the spill should be "embargoed" from senduig any more ships in~ Florida porbl as punish- ment and inducement .not to clean their tanks in Florfda weters again. . . Gerald F ariner "' Last Rites Set Child Injured In San Clemente Blaze Improves Tllree·year--0ld Timothy Armstrong o[ San Cleme@1f·1 w~lae<lfirtm ~~ff•I home unassisted fa!( week.end, is ex- pected to be released from the Orange . County Medical Center.burn unit·Wednes· day. Nixon Actimt Inflatio·n Alert t -Hits Wage -~acts - WASHINGTON (~P) -The WI\ tt e House, re:5.9rfing to·a Jlf!W policy It earlier predicted, criticized today the wage set- Uement in the G~eral Molort strike and a presidential board's recommendation to increase wages in ttie railroad industry. In its second inflation alert, President Nixon's Clupcil of Economic · Advisers also focused attention on price Increases by the automobile industry, the oil in- dustry, transportation industr)r and the two-price system of the-copper industry. "when petroleum lnventori~ are. at • ltve1 hlghet than 'is normal for this time of year." The council said that on Nov. 11 a ma- jor oil company, not named in the inf la. tlon alert, boosted the price o! crude ~ by 1S cents per barrel. 1bat increase 1s now under invesUgation by the govern- ment. The 41-page inllation alert also spoU1gbted "steadily rising costs of locfll public transportation" but said it is a dif· ficult problem for which there is no simple anSwer. Specifically, it mentioned transit rate increases in New York, .Washington and Chicago. The White House thus moved into fostering an "incomes policy," a phrase \ covering presidential pressure to hold "<!2wl. inflationary wage and price boosta. The council said that' the General Motors setUement, "if genera 1 i zed throughout the economy, would crowd , further upward costs per unit of output, and, therefore, the price level." "Each fare increase apparently shifts , more persona to the use of alternative means of transportation," the council oaid. "Apart from further increases through the cost of living escalator for the years ahead, the increase substaritially exceeds any trend es~ate of gains' in national productivity / e council said. ''It also ra costs further In an in· dustry where reducers overseas are ac- counting for ; su~stantial and growing share of the dO_mestic market." The council feserved an opinion on the railroad wage package as a whole but zeroed in on a so-called cost-0f-living escalator clause under consideration. , "U an assumption about inflation that represents no improvement is expliciUy embedded into a contract for future years, were thereby guarantee that these costs and prices will continue rising at an unchanged rate~" the council. said. It said that "freezing into the contract such an assumption about future ~n would saddle the industry for the latger cause of achieving a new stability for the price-cost level." 1 The presidenHal board has recom· mended wage increases in the railroad industry averaging 11 percent a year over three-yea rs. The board did not specifically recommend a cost--0f-tiving escalator clause but did note thal in-· eluding one wou_id yield a wage increase in excess of nine percent annually. Turning to price increases, the council noted that General Motors announced ad- ditional price boosts for autonlobiles. "'An increase of six to seven percent in the price of passenger automobiles would add about $2 billioh to the total cost to dealers and possibly $2.5 billion to the cost to consumers," the council said. Such an increase. the council said, translates Into a rise of about thre~ tenths of one percent in the Wholesale Price !Index. ·1 r 1 The council also noted price hikes in the oil industry, saying that they come Bomb Damages U of Oregon Office Area EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -A bomb .,. tensively damaged an office and blew out windows of a University of Oregon ad· ministration building today. Four persons, including the vice chancellor of tbe Oregon state education. system, were inside the building but escaped injury, police· said. The investigating officers said the bomb wenfoff outside a ground-level win- dow of Johnson Hall, where the offices of tbe university president and .the State System of Higher Education are located. Police said they had no immediate in· dication of who was responsible for the bombing. Immediate damage estimates were not made but observers said it appeared that the blast was not as severe as the ex· plosion which caused $75,000 damage to a faculty office building three blocks away on Oct. 2. Miles Romney, vice chancellor of tha state system, a secretary and two telephone operators were in the building when the blast hit but told police they were not hurt. · Eugene, Oregon's second largest city with a metropolitan population of 130,000, has been hit by several explosions and arson~aused fires in the past three years, in"cltiding one night in 1969 when five dynamite explosions caused minimal damage to church, business and govern- ment buildings in the city . The ·nains Came • ! ~u1cemia Claims Girl, 6, . . - Services win be held at l p.m. Wed· . nesday .in Sheffer Laguna B e a c h Mortuary Chapel for Gerald O. Farmer of 4125 Calle Bienvenido, San Clemente, who died Sunday ln South Coast Com· munity Hospital. He was 58. Mr. Farmer, a native of New York, had li ved for more than 30 years in California. But the boy's father -who also suf- fered second-degree burns in t h e devastating blaze t h a t destroyed the $45,000 borne -will remain under treat- ment for the rest of the week, hospital aides said today. Ronald Armstrong, a Newport Beach airline travel executive, suffered bums of the face, head aqd arms during frantic San Clemente Home Slipping Away ...I ! After Blood Donations . ( He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Patrick Holt of La Habra ; two sons, Gerald Farmer of New York 'and Rodney Farmer of Paris; a brother, Kenneth Farmer of New York ; and by four grandchildren. attempt.& to reach his son dUring the The heavy weekend rains, soaking deep curred early this year. stubborn blaze which ~rupted during a into San Clemente's soil have caused Cracks also have formed on the flanks rainstorm S_aturday· night. even more slumping in the huge crater of the huge slide, er.dangering houses on Timothy suffered burned feet as he behind the home of Mr. and Mrs.''Eugene either side, Mrs. Seets said. la.thy Milazzo, the afx.year·otd teikemia-victim who had been kept alive btthe blood of hundreds of donors in 0 . ge County, has died. · therine, whose home wls at 2811 R erford Drive, HuntingtOn Beach. difl Sunday at Children'a Hosplt.aJ of or,nge County. -ihe had received daily transfusions of eijlt pints of blood for th'e tut two years in (Nhich she bad been hospitalized. \a.st October, however, the Red Cross Bltod Bank in Santa Ana was running 1htrt of the rare B-posltive blood type anll a public appeal was made.· •we received over 800 calls from peo- pl1 pledging donations," Jerry MorHaon, I I ' DAILY PILOT r_HtwpNt leKlll tlllMl91f• .... 't L .. •H IHU. h•'91a ,...,. l CMI• Mn• S. C ....... I OltANY£ COAST PU8L1SHIMO COMl"AHY I Roh1r+ N. W114 I Pttskl•nT i t.II l'ub!~lltf' I J1clt R. Curl1y ' Vltt PreslOlf'll It.cl !itrltrll ,........ I lhol'l'lfl K1tvi1 j .i.. EtUor I lkoih• A. Mvrphl11• Ml!ll\'1'"91 MHor lticf'l1r4 '· Kai $0Vlh Or.nto Ct\lnl)' E1111W Olli<• Q15t1 Mtlt: :JJI Wnt leY ltr'MI H..,.,..i 811"': '211 Wtll llllol ICMlllWl'lt • t.1~ ••e11: tn "-' ""'-MU11Uner11t1 111d1t nais 1 .. c11 1oi.11 ..... re $111 Clcmtntt: ~ tcor111 ti (llnlno ltMI " •• Red Cross p u b ! 1 c relations direc- tor, said. "The switchboard was jammed for two days." Among those who helped Catherine were members of the Costa Mesa police ?epartment who exchanged blood types in Jt.s bank witb other agencies for a supply · of B-positive. Marines based at the El Toro facility also donated. Catherine will be buried at Good Shepherd Cemetery, Huntington Beach, Thursday following Mass of the Angels at 9 a.m. at St. Bonaventure Church. She is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Milazzo, and two sisters, , Barbara anct Joanne, &th of Huntington Beach. . Stroke Hospitalizes 1963 Miss America scrambled to safety through a burning Seets. A few more fissures also appeared in hallway of the home at 1607 s. Ola Vista. Now the family is worrying about the the Seets back yard, which had been • The fire , wruch · began in the boy's chances of having to leave their home kept parched on purpose -to avoid any downstairs bedroom, destroyed the entire even before the Christmas holidays. more earth slippage. house . and all its contents, leaving The family originally had planned on The civil engineer and his family dt~ nothing, fire officials said. giving up their home at 717 Avenida cided recently to stop making paym ents When father and son are released from Colombo after the holidays and move to on the home -which was the couple's new quarters. first. treatment they will join Mrs. Armstrong But ,01·1 at the top edge of the cavern-Th ·d · h d t d hle l the bo f e res1 ence -wit a repair price an wo aug rs a me O ous bowl which once was the back yard t t t bou I •• I t. I h · s Cl ag se a a t lw,000 -will go up for re a 1ves e sew ere m an emente. sloughed during the weekend rains eat· trustee's sale soon. WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP) -Jacqueline . The cause of the devastating blaze ing perilously at what remains of the lot. Mrs. ~els, contacted recently about Mayer Townsend, Miss America of 1963, which recurred three times during the The ecfge or the crater is IO feet from the family 's future plans, said bitterly has been hospitalized with a stroke. night before firemen finally quenched it, the rear of the expensive residence. The that they would "never own our own Her bus band. John Townsend, a still is being investigateO. first landslide endangerini the home OC· home again. This taught us somethirig. •• lawyer, said Monday night doctors Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ believe there is a good chance the 'll· I year-<ild beauty "will make a substan· tiallY total recovery." Kidnap Threatened? IT STAR.TS WITH A PHONE CALL TO YOU FRO~ A "RESEARCH" FIRM ASKING iF YOU OWN YOUR HOME AND IF YOU NEED CARPETING OR DRAPERIES. IF THE ANSWER IS AFFIRMATIVE, THE CALLER WILL OFFER TO SEND A "DECORATOR" TO SHOW YOU A NEW TYPE OF "COMMERCIAL" GRADE CARPETING. Secret Service Guards Nixon Aide. Kissinger WASWNGTON (AP) -Al leagl one member o_f President Nimn's top White House staff bas quieUy been given Secret Service protection -presumably to guaf'4 against any possible ·kid~ap at- tempt. Dr. Hwy A. Klssin&er. Nilon,'s ass is· tant for national security affairs, has had a Secret Service body guard for more .. than a month, It wu learned TU~. 'Just last week, dlr<d« J.' Edgar Hod"ver of the Federal 8urt1U Of Investigation told a senate appropflatlons aubcommlttee that a militant antiwar group was plotting to kidnap a White House aide or other public OUldal. "The plotter a," he saJd. •:are con· cocting a scheme to kidnap a highly plac· td government official . The name of a White llou$e staff member has bpieil ~ mentioned as a possible victim." , Ntitber Hoover nor any other govern· menl official bu, then or since, identified lhe Whlli' H"""' aide referred to by the FBf chief. . However, the fact that Kissinge r h11s been (umlshed. with an extraordir111ry federal bodyguard was seen as a strong indication that there are genuine fears within government that he mljht be a kidnap target. . Kissinger· probably Carries In his head more sensitive security secret.s than any other man id tht Wfute Houae1 perhaps even Including the President. Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler was. asked if any -.,tber members of Nixon'• staff had been given Secret Service pro- 1tectlon. His reply: "f can't Sar. anything about that, for obvious rea11>ns." , It waS widely reparted last month. ·~ Kissinger went to the Soviet Tgi.ssion to the UHlted Nations in New York for mcttlngs with' Soviet foreign 'tnlnlster Andrei Gromyko and am- b@M•dor Anatlliy Dobrinin, that he was .accompanied by a Secret Service agent. Kissinger bas been seen' with an agent dogging his fool!teps on a number of oc· casfons slnCf: then. Since the Secret Service normally does not · accord personal protection to members of the President's start, lt was believed Nl1on hltn1elf viust ha ve directed tile pooting· of !be *'singer bodyguord. • WHEN THE "DECORATOR" ARRIVES AT YOUR HOME, HE DEMONSTRATES STAIN RESISTANCE OF HIS CARPET, MAY OFFER TO PAY OFF YOUR DEBTS, MEASURES YOUR· ROOM lt-J "UNITS" ,INSTEAD OF YARDS, AND OFFERS A BIG DISCOUNT (OR EVEN A CHECK) TO USE YOUR HOUSE AS A "SHOW HOUSE" FOR HIS CARPET. • . "JUST.SIGN .HERE" IS T,tjE CLINCHER. AMONG THE PAPERS TO SIGN MAY BE A SECOND MORTGAGE ON YOUR HOUSE, NO 'ITEMIZATION OF YARDAGE BEING PURCHASED, AND A lONG TERM CONTRACT FOR PAYMENTS TOTALLING MORE THAN. THE PRLCE PER YARD QUOTED. DON'T BE TRICKED BY UNKNOWN FIRMS WHOSE GUARANTEES LAST ONLY AS LONG AS ·THEIR· SHORT LIVED BUSINESS, DON'T BE F 0 0 LED BY "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING " OFFERS, PHONY "COMMERCIAL" QUALITY AND FLIM-FLAM CONTRACTS • ·KNOW THE ME~HANDISE OR KNOW YOUR MERCHANT! . . SANTA ANA; OlAN•I TUSTIN C4llt • , , ALDIN'I llD HILL CAIPITS & Du.n11a 1 IJ14 '"'•· , ...... Ceftf, .,,:,, .. ALDEN'S CARPE"l'.5 e DRAPES · 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HO\JRS: Mon. Thru Thurs,, 9 le S::JO -Fri .. 9 le 9 -S.t .. 9:30 to 5 " I ! . 17 \ I 17 ' ' ~ I I . l ..---· ~, . • • I • -. Capistrano· EDITIQN ' . ·- VOl!.;63, NO. 287, 2 SECTiOtijS, 22 PAGES . .. DAILY ,IL.OT SH1ff l"IM,. The· Young Chefs lk>b casey, left, af\d Bill Ginger, both 12, squash out some "super goocf! cookies at class for young chefs at La ·paz Intermediate 'School. They used too much dough in their enthusiasm. For exciting results see story and picture on page three .. ' ·,Landmark -Achlevem~nt' ·. Saddleback Hospital . ,Architecture Hailed '\. F~ its architectur8l innovations Sad- dleback• Community, HOllpltal .will be a "la.ndm1rk achie vement." ~.Hartman. .ctirerjor of architec- ture i.nd planning for the Luthtran Hospital Society Of Southern California thus describes. the facility that will serve Motor Pool Site Moved; School Wins Reprieve • 5erra School in Capistrano Beach has won a re.prieve. , Trusttt;s of the , Capistrano Unified SChool Di.strict Monday voted to retnln the aging school bullding, which serves as an administrative center. The building was to have bff:n demolished to make way for a $5.000 trin.portation center, but plans approved ,by. the board c.iu for the center to be con- tititkted ·on another part of the school property. 'Half or the playfield on the corner of Vidoria and Sepulveda will be usefi for parting and fueling buses. The vehicles will enter from one streel and ezit Qi1lo andttier and wiltbe able to park in row::. ~ S,<lkl-gaUon fuel tanks wUl serve tbe}>uses and space has been pl1nned for wahlng and vacuuminl the vehicles. nae area now used foclbJS p9rking will be used b'y district vehicles and P.,nough ~ will be retained for a little Jeaglle field and playground sd that the fiChoo l will continue to be used as a neighborhood recreational facility, ac- cording to Joe Wimer, Director of Ac1r6inlstr,tive Servl~s .. tn recommending . to retain the building, Superintendent T r u m l\ n Beqtdict pointed out that if any pre-Field ~ct J>uildinl• tire demolished. they •hould ~.~which 11!Udeli.U: u.sually occupy. .. ' ·..-11 '"J . . • lfos~ry . Slated . ~ ..: "' . ' For Viejo· YQuth .. . • Q)&ary will be recited tonight for Robert Christy. the If.year-old Mission •Viejo youth killed in a traffic accident 1itt~turday nighl . ~ service wi!I be conducted at 7:30 n' at St. Nichola11 Catholic Church in na Hills. Requiem maS! will W" · J rated .Wednesday at' 10 a.m. at the 81\* church. Burial will follow 1t A,..,Qnsion Cemetery in El Toro. 0¥°11ty Is survived by his parents. Mr. ~,)o1ra. Ted ,Qlristy 21711 Chrlsanto Df\~ Mi!ision Viejo and two 11i11ters, An· n• fOlristy and ~rs. Delores Sweigert, bothJtf Ml~slon Viejo. Young Schristy was 1 11169 ho°"r g1du1lt of Mission Viejo High SChool and 1 sophomore at UC lrvlne, wbert be wu m«Jorlni In engineerln1> .. 117.000 SaddJeback 'Valley .residents by 197S. Saddleback Community Hospital will'be a !'full llttVice -hea.lth are' facility, pro- \'iding much more than 1i.inple airativt • procedures for the medically ill,'' Hartman told a irroop meeting Laguna Hills recently. The hospital board cited Golden Rain Foundation for its donation of land and funds -for construction of the hospital. Planners heve been challenged to pro- vide flexibility and adaptability·to avoid "instant obsolescence·· of the hospital. he said. due to the projected growth of the Saddleback Valley to a pop~ation. of 285,000 by 198.1. j;We are confident that this has been achieved in the concept of Saddleback Community Hospital to -a degree not yet seen in any hospital in the country,'' Hartman said. The hospital's column-free interior will permit entire floors to be rearranged at will to accommodate advancements in patient care, he noted. Further. this planning feature will "encible us to start building prior to com· pletion of the rinished layout or any given floor. com~resstng the total time span of construction and reducing financing costs." First-phase construction 'll;ill consist or two service floor!! with nursing towers above. On the lower floor dietary, supply ltorage, engineering. communication and employe facilities will be located. The ground level, main noor will house surgery, pathology, radiolog-;, pharmacy. administrative oHices and some out· patient service! as well is the 24-hour emergency receiving and trt1'tment area. George Skelton Services Slated M~5'li:iic funeral 1ttVicf:11 will be con- ducted ~Wednesday morning In San Clemente for George D. Skelton, 82, of Capisirano Beach, who died Sunday even- ' ing. Mr. SkeJton, of 34052 Doheny Park Road. leavJ!S hi11 widow. Rulh, of the home: a son, Paul Skelton of El Cajon; a daughter, .Ruthmary Clapper of "Bel--- mont; tl~ree brother!!, Glenn Skelton o( Unionville. ti.1ich .. A. E .• S>lelton of Lan- caster and Norman Skeltdn of Red Bluff; a sister: Olive Day of Wolf Cteek, Ore.; six grandchildren and six a: r e a t • grandchildren. Hi!: was a. member of Palisades United Methodist Church and San Clemente Lodge 671 F and A.M. Mr. Skelton 1\so w11s a p.asl worthy patron of the San Clemente Eastern Star Olapler 524, holding the post In. l!IM and HI&!. Services will begln at 10 J . m. in l.esneski Mortuary ChJpt.I. Bufial will follow In Melrote Abbey Memort1J P•rk, Anaheim. Friends may make · mtmoria.1 eon- . tribuUOf\S to Palisadell United ftileihodist Church. 27002 C&ntino de Ettrella, CapialtlllO Beach. ' ' • ORAN&E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA_ •• TEN CENTS .. Board Accepts $17,5,00 Supervi.sors F t;>ll()w Grand Jury ,Recommendation • By JACK BROBACit Ot llM DtlW 'llM .stt" Orange County supervisors this morn- ing 1ccepted the recommenda tion of lht, Grand Jury and set tWeir pay at •17,500 a year, •iisoo more than they ha ve been paid for the past f~ur yea!s. The action was app·roved by a 4 to l vote, Supervisor Robert Battin dissen· ting . This morning's move climaxed 1 series of actions which has stirred noisy public protest beginning Nov. 4.- At that time, the board members met In closed session and allq:edly decided to have a salary ordinance drawn setting their pay at $29,268 a year, the same as municipal court judges. Faced with ·a crowded hearing room of protesters Nov. 10. supervisors t·h e n decided to officially. tie ~r salaries to that of state legislators, $19,200 a year next year. This action failed to quiet the furor and recall and referendum movements were under way. Two weeks ago the board voted to refer the· matter to the Grand Jury for recommendation. Before this morning's vote, Counly Counse l Adrian Kuyper had ad'(ised the board .that· their Nov, 10 action would go into effect Dec. 10. He 11aid If the board adopted . the ftew ordinance. today, as they did, on Dec. 31 their pay level would be! at •17,51.lO a year. Few protesters voiced their objections this morning but those that did were· ada- mant in their opposition to any raise whatever for the 11upervisors . William Ewing of Anaheim threatened, "If I have to walk up Md down the streel'.6 to get you out I'll do i\. t do.n't care what the others do -l will do·this myselJ." Frances Sherman of Santa Ana pro. te:Jted that the paY, r1i5e ls out of order be<aU.. of !he coimtr'i -.enl ~ situation. · ' ~ Jank.I! -Boer of Santa Ana told ~ the supervisors, "You goofed again. You don't care ·what the: people think and a Grand Jury "t'eco mm end a ti on ·11 worthless. They· are the hand-picked group named by you and•what they thlnk in no way represent.a What tfie people want." Supervisor Battin. as tie h.ad hn- San. Francisco's Security Tight· For Visit of Ky SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -Police Chie[ Alfred Nelder today called out 420 men, au but 4-0 in uniform . to patrol the FairTn(lnt Hotel, where Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vietnam ia mak- ing a speech. The chief announced his plan! after peace groups declared they were calling for mass picketing to protest Ky's ap- pearance before the Commonwealth Club, Neither Mayor oJseph Alloto nor Governor Ronald Reagan i1 attending the meeting. The mayor announced· he had 1 previous engagemenl llld the governor's office said merely "no'' when que&t:loned whether Reagan would attend. Jn addition to uniformed and plain clothes policemen , Ky allO will be guard- ed f>y Secret Service agents and other federal officers. Nelder declared: "II Is traditional that Sail Francisco be courteous to all visit.or!. I hope and trust the tradition will not be broken." John Busterud, he business club's pres.ident. said: "It is the view of the Commonwealth Club lthat It should pro- vide a forum· fl>r all Import.ant points of view whether these in the local. com· munlty agree with or oppose· hose view11.'' San . Clemente .Breaks Him Up San CJemente upstaged Burbank Mondiy night It happened on Laugh-Jn, NBC's we¥ly prime-time comedy hour built around. comedlar.1 Dan Rowan and Dick Martin. During their parody or a pair or news commentators, Martln broke up eeven or eight limes after saying: "D•l<Jlne San CleJ11tllte." Martin waa trying Jo get out 1 Joke about Pre1tde:nl NJ~·· cliff. top vl!IJ, th< Wemrn White Kouol. ..,...,,,111\er -of llllflhler, Martin tollhold: "tlaielioe San C.1emcnte - Residenll of tfiis ret0rt COmmUnilj.i have been disturbed late in the t.venin& by M unidentified volct 1Jnain&. 'Thia Land_ll-My Lind'."' mediately after re-call action was threatened, argued today that the salary should be returned to $15.000. "Orange County i!· In an economic 11lump., We Sllould be working on that ·in· stead of quibbling over salaries," Battin cti.arged. · "No matter how we move we will be . . . . . . attacked,'' said Supervisor WllHam Phillips, •·we are now .tile aecond inoat populous co11nty ln ·the lltate and Sin Diego County superviaon have jwt mov· ed to raise their pay to $19,000 1 year." Phillips moved for adoption and got • second from Supervisor Wl!Jlam Hirstein, who Is retiring Jan,. 4. Board Chainnan AJton Allen, who also retires from office in ~anuary, aald, "In my judgmenl from nperiM on this board the job is worth every cent of $1(,flOO. As I said previously when we set the-salary at $19,200 if we had no one on this board worth that much then the pea. pie 11hould find 110meone that is." Bonds for New Clubhouse? San Clernente Council Weighs Million Dollar Project In (fie of il!I 111immest agendas In months, the San Clemente City Council Wednesday will resume discussion on the chanC"ell for a recreational bond issue which could involve a million dollars - part of which would pay for a· new com- munity clubhouse. The idea, offered lo councilmen by a split vote of the parks and recreation commission , had been scheduled for discussion two weeks ago by the council, but wali shuffled aside. Thus for the council has held one leng- thy study session of the idea -ei'· amining the number of projects to be in· eluded and the amount of fund11 lo be . * * * * * * San 1Clemente Ponders Fire Department Site City Councilmen• art expected to resur. reel discussions·on.slte CQnslderations for a ·new San• Clemente Fife Department beadqllarttrs bOllding Wednesdly. With aever1I locatiOM in fnjnd , ·coun-- ' . Capo~ Council Not Oppo~ing Canyon Jetport cilme n first will hear a report by City Manager Ken Can on 1ite considerations and preference11. Carr also Is ezpected .to make recom-. mendatl ons on the general upgrading of the deP11J11!lt;nl -11-~·I\ ~. volunteer to fUll ·limt· departmCm~ • ln pttV'tous .. ai~ ~·~before 11ummer. councilrDen ti•rd two lde111 - use of the: existing city ylrds (where the city's original flrt headquarters once was) or state-owned fallow land near the freeway overpass at Avenida Presidio a .short distance awa y from existing head· quarters. · But the looation preferred by Fire Chief Merton-Hackett is the driveway to lhe truck sltlrage area of ·1he pre~nt depart- San Juan Capistrano's swallows might ment on the bottom level of the civic be jOined by some noisier birds if ·I.he center. controversial 8eH Canyon jetpOrt ever There, Hackett proposes a new depart- get.s constructed. ment headquarters costing about $150,000 But San Juan Capistrano city coun· and capable of housing a larger. full-time cilmen, keepiilg an eye on the ground, gtaff and new equiRment. aren't ready to take a stand. Councilmen have not yet commented or acted Ofl such • a· plan. · Despite urging by the planning com-tt will be submitted along with· se.vefitl mission to rormally oppose the airport other proposed solutions to the clty.'s fi re 6ite. the council adopted a "wait-and-see" problem. . attitude Monday while listing queslions to ~taff studies have. cnncluded on Ide.as ask at the Dec. 7 hearing in Mission Vie-which include a proprietary department jo. ' atmilar to that run by the c;ity of Councilman Jim Thorpe summarized Scottsdale, Ar iza., where the chief owns the dillemma the council might find itself the department and sells service to the in. He said he personally opposes the jet-city. port and might fn9Ve if it is constructed, Other suggestions have included con· but officially It might be good for the tracts through a special service district city's economy. with the County of Orange. "If the city cannot affect what happens ij,ut tl1e proprietary idea already has in ee·11 Canyon then they must face the won dit1favor from Carr, who h.as said ~! fact that outside forces will shape the cysts are more than the existing .J:4.!r'VI~ ctty's destiny." he said. in San . Cle~ente, but the service 1.8 He said if the Ralph M. Parsons report almost 1dealic~J . . assumes that the airport would hook up The county idea, Carr has 11a1d. also to San Juan C,,pistrano's water a~1 would be lO? ~stly. . sewer, perhaps tlle city should move to Funds ex 1st in the city budget ~l\!ch annex the .property. could cover a new headq~rters building "If the airport Is In the city limits then a11 proposed by the fire c.h1ef. we'll know We'll be able to control its ef· The hldde~ a.dfantage to any new head. fects on the city. t don 't think. Orange quarter.!! bu1Jdu~ would be the char'lcea County cares what happens to San Jan for . expansion of the police department, Ca · tr " h Id which presently shares the same building pis a~'. e sa · . with fire personnel. Comml!lsJoner . Jerry Gaffney .pointed ff the headquartets were to be built, out that the airport aceess mi~ht be police offict!:s could expand lnto fire Cro_wn Valfey P1rkwa~ and Capislr~ d!partment storage garages and office w~tiJd then have the noise and CDnfus1on roomll _ eliminatin" 1 pressin" need for without the ·•gravy." ·'6 11 Councilman Edward Chermak, a flying s~\ enthusiast, pi'.!inted out thal noise from · the 'airport shouldn't bother resldenl!i of Capistrano. A.a for pollutk>tt, he 11aid El Toio MCAS was dumping fuel into the 1kie1 and doing more to wllute the Capistrano Valley than a jetport would. * * * Airport Group Face Opponents Park Site Eyed For Capistrano A 2.S-ac.re park site with towering oak tree11 forming a canopy of shade will be the first ever developed by San Juan Capistrano's Parks and Re~atloo Com· miS.!lion. The site, located in the Terrace sought from the voters. While disputes still exist, gener.J _agreement has beea reached on limiUng the amount of projf!cts. Too man y in one l11sue, councilmen agreed, might hurt the chances of passage .. Preliminary hints have come forth that a bonding proposition -requiring a· tw<>- thirds aye vote -might be scheduled in a special election early next year. Other items sc~.eduled for lhe '7 :30 p.m. meeting include : -Subm ission of · petitions seeking an underground ut!Uty district and ap- propriation of money from a special city fund to eliminate poles in a segment of the city's Riviera district. The request is the second made for underground utilities in rvc.erit months. City coffers hold Ill estimated •100,000 which can ht: parceled out 'for such profectS. Th! remainder of the bHI Would be bbrne by bome'Owliert themselves. Preliminary plans for a 1imflar district in • the Pacesetter- Hillcrest an.a are being drafted. -A recommendati on from parka and re<:reation commissioner11 that the city spend about $300 for trophies tG bt presented under a new program to the city's most active clubs and organiza. tion11. Recornmend3lions from Police Chief-Traffic Engineer Clifford Murray that a .lw1>-way stop be set for the La Cuesta-Patero de OrO ihter11ection. Mur· ray also recommends one-way lltreets at Navarro, Industrias and Las Vegas. -Authorization for bid advertisement in tHe reconstructi'on of lhe fourth, 11ixtb and eighth holes of the municipal goU course. -Discussion of the aMUal Christmas bonus for , J!y employes. -A resolution citing city appreciation to retiring County Supervisor Alton E. Allen, who relinquishes his post to Ron Caspers next January. Ca11pers defeated the veteran ;;upe.rvi.sor in elections earlier this year. -Formal adoption of stlff itandards for mobile home ·park development, an action expected lo win 11wift approval by councilmen whu have hammered the rules out af(er several study sessions. Planning commissiriners also played 1 major role in developing the tough, new guidelines. MacGregor Appointed WASHIN.GTON (AP) -Prraldent Nli· on today appointed Rapublican Rep, Clark MacGregor-of Minnesota .to1 a new post that will make him th! ad~ ministration'!! chief lobbyist be for 1 Congress. ·Weather There may be a cloudy llninf behind lhoM silver skies. The weatherman 8eeS _a 60 percent chance of rain for Wednesday, with temperaturts mu mired in the lower 60s. INSIDE TODAY Hundr~ of oppo1t.enL, 1 to the con- sultant 1uggestion for a jetport at Bell -Clnyon are expected to confront county atrpon commi.!14ionert 11:1 • Pt1iuion ·Viejo Mond,ay In an eventn,-public-bearlng development,• now contains dtid orange "Divorce ftalft'll'l st11,1eu U•tegcl Tbe: ~' clDed '!ltlOn lftef Official1 helt.~··• local; e....ing meeting -Of ~<(l(lm1rduton1 •Ill ~gin at 7'p,m. in ''ti ·P• 'fntlrmed.late .chool 'a multlpur· poet.room. PtUUons bearing hundredJ of Op- J)Oflentl' ~ignalures are ~xpectcd-to-be brought forth at the meetin1. One set of petitions alone bears l,000 signaturtS from the South Count)' area. tree3 which will be remoytd and 1n old now, and an e.rtimattd one mil· , holise wlilch the commission waqtl to lion mi3matchtd matt.t are wait· ing to toke adoantagt o/ their dcmoll.sh. -1 -ntw Jound frttdom. Paot 4: ~ l'.>,:n~ Paquin, com.otlssio~ chairman. I • be~ k •C•U.,..!1 1 ......_ ..... • '. ' ?! · aa d a 11urve:y as u,g ta en of reslGen,.._,,__,1Mc11iw. "" 1 MirtRt ... •In the area 'to dtterrillhe \Vbf:t 1hoUld be ~=--'*"~ ::;: ~ ~ done on the site. · cm~ 11 ''""' ......., 1• H d ONHI Nttlfft I SMfft M e said recommendatlw lnclu e a' t11....-c•• -t ,_. .. ,. ... 1 .. 11. tenni s court and a "lol '1ol." 1:e11w111 l'•tt • Ttl"''"" 1s • l11ttrt1l11m11t1I 16 T'll!Mflln It 1The commission Will pr.estnt Its f't\ 11111111(1 1 .. 11 w .. ,..., • questt to-the CitrCtAJncll :at Ill nett :::?.":.,.. :! ::!:.n~·~~ ,,.,~ me~ilna in Ordu to obtain funda. ror lM.. ..,,.. • w..... .._ ... proje<t.s. r • . ' I l I I i j • ~ 2 -DAILY PILOT TutWy. OKtmbt, l , 1970 Oil Slicli ·• Hits Coast nf atio·n Alert .. Hits Wage Pacts -H~'s Giving His · TuankS ·.Of Floi;W.a .. . ~ . ;For ~appy Bachelorhood By Al\THUR II-VINSEL Of .. Mir ~-SS.ff Somethtnc lib tempering steel to touahen tt bappens when a confirmed ba"Cbelor spends fCMlr days with three female&, two of them teenagers. The turkey wasn't even out of the oven -yet \M;fore I was alving thank!, ror being slngl~ Now, before the Women's Lib vigilantes camp on the doorstep with flaming torches, Jet'a make this cryatal clear: femalel are great. • So are pzellei IOd lfmly bears, but all Jhree have something in common. One appreciate&: them best lo their natural habitat. My shack·on the beach isn't iL Some might disajree with the designation -calling It a routine p~ rut -but ln \t>e tWillght' of my youth, I Uve by a syst.em. The wine goblets go be.re. The plumber's friend goes the"' ' Women are iiot 1y1iem1t!c, U Spray Net In the dish drainer Ja any in- dlcaUon. . And if you think it's compile~ In the cramped confines of a cottage, ~1del'-accompanying three females to thne "shopping centers this frenized hollday season. The first stop was mine. . "Don't aet out of the car," they were told 1n tones of naive optimism. "I'll be right out." One was mi!sing and unaccounted for upon my momentary return and Ure two kids wore funny looks. "She went inside. Then she came back," said one. "She got her check· book and went back in," the other explaioed needlessly. So I headed for the bank, with naively optimistic instructions to meet me the~ unless I got back to the car· first. By the time J returned from the one-mile bike, the car was gone. ·ney went to tbe bank all right. The wrona bank. Now It is Saturday. They have voted down a trip to Sea World or Lion Country Safari. They have bigger game in mind; South ·Coast Plaza and Newport Center. They mustn't, however, look like country )>umpkins. So after more closed-door preparation than Raquel Welch would need for the Academy ·Awards;-we·eeem to be·ready.-- Columbus could have gotten the Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria off for the New World faster. Hannlba1 1ot his elephants over the Alps in the twinkling or an eye by comparison. Every living soul in Orange County seems to be at South Coast Plaza. My feet are kilting me. I've got a cramp in the credit ems. A vision of a gin-and-tonic dangles before me like a carrot before a mule. The glrls -bouncing from boutique to boutique -can't be found . My mother suggests the corridors to the ladies' rooms are so long they could have been.muned and molested ,and nobody would know for 24 hours. Finally they showed up and We move on. Newport Center Isn't so hecUc, perhaps because while ft has no malJ, we do 6ave a record rainfall in progr55 by now. Everyone feeb: better after two refreshing slops. Theirs was at an lee cream parlor. Now it is Sunday. Customary thanks and goodbyes and seeyalaters have been exchanged. Spray net is absent from \he dish drainer. Hair curlers are gone from my tie- clJp tray. The silence is broken four hours later by their telephone call to say they're home, despite fGU1 weather and holiday traffic. ""Thanks Lord," I murmur, in eraUtude for their safe lrip. j.nd abo for being 1 bachelor. jCountfl Drive F_ails Leukemia Claims Girl, 6, After Blood Donations Cithy ltfiluzo, the 1I1: ·ye a r·o 1 d leukemia victim who had been kept alive by the blood or ..hundreds of. donors in Orange CoWl.ty, has died. Catherine, whose home was at 281 l Rutherr'ord Drive, Hi.lntington Beach . died Sunday at Olildren's Hospital ol Orange County. She had received daily transfusions of ei8:ht pints of blood for the lut two years in which she had been hospitalized. Last October, however, the Red CrOM Blood Bank Jn Santa Ana was running short of the rare :S.posltlve blood type and a public appeal,wu made. "We r~celved over 800 calls from peo- ple pledging donatlona," Jerry Morrison, Red Cross p u b 11 c relations direc- tor, said. "The switchboard was jammed for 1.wo days." Among those who helped Catherin<!: were members of the Costa Mesa police department who et:changed blood types in its bank with other agencies for a supply of &-positive. Marines based at lhe El Toro facility also donated. Catherine will be buried at Good Shepherd Cemetery, Huntington Beach, Thursday following Mass of the Angels at 9 a.m. at St. Bonaventure Church. She is survived by her parents, Mr. a:td Mrs. Joseph Milazzo, and two sisters. Barbara and Joanne, both of Huntington Beach. KEY LARGO, Fla. (UPIJ -A huge oU slick be1ieved caused by a passing ltall&n tanker str~tched for 71 mlles alon& the Florida Keys threatening an unusual underwater state park made up of beautiful coral and strange fl.sh. The Slick was apparently caused by the shlo dumping the residue from its tanks. Wind! of about 15 mph were driving the sticky mass shoreward and Lt. Edward Little, district supervisor of the Slate Department of Natural Resources, ·said there was danger to the unusual coral formations, which jut from the AUanlic waters at low tide , might be smeared by the oil. The slick spread along the coast from Key Largo to Marathon, At its nearest point, the oil was only about one ntile from the Pennekamp Coral Reef St.ite Park. nalph Hodges,.state natural resourcts director, first disclosed the oil spili in Tallahassee. He said it was reported by a fishing boat about 4:30 p.m. Mondiur and that a Marine Patrol pilot later foltOv.1ed the slick to its southernmost point and discovered the Italian tanker "Gelesial ." Disclosure of the spill coincided with a report from New Orleans. that a "·ell belonging to Shell Oil had blown out lnxl • caught fire in the Gulf of Mexico, knock· ing several workers into the water. The well is 60 miles south of New Orleans. ad· jacent to the Wisner Wildlife Manage- ment Area. By afternoon, the action of the sea reportedly was breaking up lhe oil spill along the Keys into small globules. Little said some oil had already washed a.c:hore. State officials are checking with federal agencies to determine the destination of the tanker and tn decide what steps ran be taken to re'cover both actual nnd • punitive damages,..Hodges.said. Hodges 1aid the major immediate prD- bl.em waf'"in fi~ing how to contain the shck and prevent the oil from sinking to the bottom of· the Pennekamp Park. "It might be a quite expensive operation in that particular area." he told the cabinet. Although the spill was classified as "very large," Hodges said it was not comparable to the Tampa Bay oil spill nf last February in which several thousand gallons of oil spilled from a tanker which ttn aground . Gov. Claude Kirk said the company which owns the tanker causing the spill should be "embargoed" from sending any more ships into Florida port.s u punish- ment and' inducement not to clean their tank! in Florida waters again. Gerald Farmer Last Rit~ Set Services will be held at 1 p.m. Wed· nesday ip Sheffer Laguna B e a c h Mortuary Chapel for Gerald O. Fanner of 4125 Calle Bienvenido, San Clemente who died Sunday in South Coast Com: munity Hospital. He was 58. . Mr. Farmer, a native of New York, had hved for more than 30 years in California, He ·is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Patrick Holt of La Habra ; two sons; Gerald Farmer of New York and Rodney Farmer of Paris; a brother, Kenneth Farmer of New York; and by four grandchildren. U,IT• ........ YOUNGEST GENERAL OJES Gen. Fredtrick In 1948 Gen. Frederick Funeral Slated Services. will be held Wednesday af. temoon at the San Francisco Presidio cemelery for , Maj. Gen . Ro~ T. Frederick, the U.S. Army's youngest division commander in France in World War II, who died Sunday ·in Palo Alto at the age or 63. General Frederick Is survived by his widow, RuU1, two daughters, ti.1rs. Jane See of Laguna Beach and Mrs. Philip Hicks of Palo A1to, and by eig'ht grandchildren. Wounded eight times In World War lt, he took command or the 4Sth Division after leading an airborne task force in the invasion of Southern France. He also helped orgailite the U .S.-Cana- dian Special Service Forces which partl~ipated In the Attu Invasion '"in the Aleutians, where he took"command after the canadian commander was killed. General Frederick earned t he Distinguished service Cross twice, the Distinguished Seivice Medal twice and the Silver Star and Bronze Star for bravery in c1ction. Child Injured lri San Clemente Blaze Improves Three.year-old Timothy Armstrong of San Clemente, who ned frQm his blai ing home unassisted last weekend, is ex· pected to be released from the Orange County Medical Center burn unit Wednes- day. But the boy's fath er -who also su(. fered second-degree burns in t h e devastating blaze that destroyed the $45,000 home -will remain under treat· ment for the rest of tbe week, hospit.al aides said today. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Wh 11 e House, resoruni .to ~ new policy It earlier predicted, erltlci.Zed today the wage set- tlement in the General Motors strike and a presidenuaJ board's recommendation to inc:rel:se wages in the r1ilroad industry. In Its second inflation alert, President Nixon's CiuncU of Economic Advl.!ers ·al.so foctlse<1_ attention on price Increases by· the automobile industry, the oil In- dustry , transportation industry and the l"".(>-price .system of the copper industry. The White House thus moved into fostering an "incomes policy," a phrase covering presidential pressure to hold down infli.tlonary wage-and price boosts. The council said that the General f\Iotors setllern,ent, "If g e n e r 1 I I 1 e d throughout the economy, would .crowd further UPWard costs ~r unit of outpuh and, therefore, the pri& level." "Apart from further increases through· the cost of Jiving escalator for the years ahead, the increase substantially exceeds any trend esUmate of gains in naUonal productivity," the council said. "It also r:aiaea costs further In an in-· dustry where P,r'Oducers overseas are ac-- counting for.. a' substantial and growing share or the doinestic market." 'l1le council reserved an oplnion on the railroad wage package 11 a whole but zeroed ln on a »called rost.!of·living escalator clause under consideration. 1'1f an assumption about Inflation that represents no improvement is explicitly embedded into a contract for future years, were thereby ~arantee that these costs and prices will continue rising at an unc~nged rate," .tbe council said. It said that ''freezing into the contract such an assumption about future inflation would saddle the industry for the larger -cause.of achieving a new stability for the price-cost level." The presidential board has recom- mended wage increases in the railroad industry averaging It percent a year over three-years. The board did not specifically recommend a cost-of-living escalator clause but did note that in- cluding one would yit;ld a wage increa!.e in excess of nine percent arrnually. Turning to price increases, ·the council noted that General Motors announced ad· ditional price boosts for automobiles. "An increase of six to seven percent in the price of passenger automobiles would add about $2 billion to the total cost to dealers and possibly $2.S billion to the cost to consu mers," the council said. Such an increase, ,the council said, translates Into a rise of about three· tenths of one percent in the Wholesale Price Index. The council also noted price hikes in the oil industry, saying that they come •'when petroleum Inventories 11111: . •t • level higher than is normal for thil time of year." The council said that on Nov. 11 a ma- jor oil company, nol named in the tnna- llon alert boosted the price of crude oil by 2S cetits per ·barrel. That increase 1a now under Investigation by the govern- ment. The 41-page lnnaUon alert also apotllihted "steadily rbing costs of local public transportalion" but said it Is a dlf· ficult problem for which there is no simple answer. Specifically, it mentioned transit rate increases in New York. Washington and Chicago. .. "Each fare increase apparenUy shifts more persons to the use of alternative. means of transportation," the council nid: Bomb Damages U of Oregon Office Area EUGENE. ,()re, (AP) -A bomb ti· tensively damaged an office and blew out wtndows of a University of Oregon ad· ministration building today. Fou r persons, including the vice chancellor o[ the Oregon state education system. were inside the building but escaped injury, police said. The investigating officers safd the bomb went off outside a ground-level win- dow of Johnson Hall. where the offices 11t he-univer.sity presidenL and the Stale System of Higher Educat.)on are located. Police said they had no immediate in· dication of who was responsible for the bombing. Immediate damage estimates were not made but observers said it appeared that the blast was not as severe as the ex· ploslon which caused $75,000 damage to a. faculty office building three blocks away on Oct. 2. Miles Romney, vice chancellor of the state system. a secretary and twG telephone operators were in the bu ilding when the blast hit but told police they were not hurt. Eugene, Oregon·s second largest city with a metropolitan population of 130,000, has been hit by ~veral explosions and arson<aused fires in . the past three years, including one night in 1969 when five dynamite explosions caused minimal damage to church, business tnd govern· ment buildings in the city. The Rains Came San Clemente Ho1ne Slipping Away Ronald Armstrong , a .Newport Beach airline travel executive, suffered burjls of ~he fa ce, head and \lrms during frantic 'attempts to reach his son during the The heavy weekend rains, soaking deep curred early this year, stubborn blaze which erupted during a Into San Clemente's soil have cau.!ed Cracks also have formed on the flank s rainstorm Saturday night. even more slumping in the huge crater of the huge slide, endangering houses on Timothy suffered burned reel as he behind the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene either side, Mrs. Seets said. scrambled to safety through a burning Seets. A few more fissures also appeared In hallway of tbc home at 1607 s. Ola Vista. Now the family Is worrying about the the Seets back yard, which had been The fire. which began in the boy's chances of having to lea ve their home kept parched on purpose -to avoid any downslairs bedroom. destroyed lhe entire even before the Christmas .holidays. more earth slippage. house and all its contents, leaving The family originally had planned on The civil engineer and his family de· S k H . }" nothing, fire offici als said. giving up their home at 717 Avenida cided recently to stop making payment.! lro e osp1ta JZeS When father and son are released from Colombo after the holidays and move to on the home -which was the couple's I -~-fiM .reatment they will join Mrs. Armstroog B I h · 1963 Ml.SS' Ameri'ca and two daughters at the home or ut soi at t e top edge of the cavern-The residence -with a repair price ous bowl which once was the back yard tag set at abou t $140,000 -wilt go up for relatives elsewhere in San Clemente. sloughed during the weekend rains. eat· trustee's sale soon . WASHINGTON, Pa. (AP)-Jacqueline The cause of the devastating blaze ing perilously at what remains of the Jot. Mrs. Seets, contacted recently about Mayer Townsend, f\1iss America of 196.1, which recurred three times during the The edge of the crater is IO feet from the family's future plans, said bitterly has been hospitalized with a stroke. night before firemen finally quenched it, the rear of the expensive residence. The that they would "never own our own Her husband . John Townsend, a still is being Investigated. first landslide endangerinl{ the home oc-home again. This taught us something." lawyer, . said Monday night doctors rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;; believe there is a good chance the 27. year-old beauty "will make a substan- lially total recovery." ""CARPETEEBs~~ DAILY PILOT Kidnap Threatened? IT STARTS WITH A PHONE CALL TO YOU FRQM A ''RESEARCH" FIRM -ASKING IF YOU OWN YOUR HOME AND IF YOU NEED CARPETING OR DRAPERIES. IF THE AN SW.ER IS AFFIRMATIVE, THE CALLER WI LL OFFER TO SEND A "DECORATOR" TO SHOW YOU A NEW TYPE OF "COMMERCIAL" GRADE CARPETING. Newport letcl L..t11Mr '"'. Celf9 ,. ... .............. .. __ .. ~ OltA.HGE COAST PlllLllHINO COMrANY Robert N. w •• 4 Prnldlfll •r.<I Pvltlllhtt' J1clt R. C11rley Vitt Prulll9"1 Ir.cl ""-11 MtMttt lhorn•• K11v1l Edlltr 7liom11 A. M111phine Mtnllillnl Ed110f tl.ic~1rd I'. H1I S0\1111 O"ntl' C-_ty l"dllOr' ....... Cotll MKI! DI W..t lty Slr-' l'ltwPCN"t 1111c~; ml w .. 1 ,, ... I011l1¥1rd • 1.tfut11 111Kll1 m ,_, ..,......,~ MlltlflflOltn llucll: 11tlJ 9Hcfl lovlt¥t"' $tn c;;11m1n1t; JU NOfltl ~ C.mlne A .. / Secret Service Guards Nixon Aide Kissing~r WASHINGTON (AP) -At least one member or President Nixon's top White House stall has quleUy been given Secret Service protection -presumably to guard against any pgsaible kldna,P at• tempt. • Or. Henry A. Kissinger, Nixon's assls· tant for naUonal security affairs, has had a Secret Service body guard for !T'IOre than a monlb, it was learned Tuesday. J'ust list week, director J. t;dgar Hoover of the Federal Bureau of Investigation told a Senate appropriations subcommittee that a mJllt.ant 1nt1war group_ was plotting to kidnap a White House aide er other public ofOcial. "The plotters," he said, "a.re con- cocUng a scheme to kidnap a hishly pl1c· ed government offlclal. The namt of a White Hause staff member has bttn mentioned as a possible vlctlm." -»eJlher....HQovtr nor any other gomn- mcnt officlafhas, then or since, Jdentlfltd • th• Wbite_ Hcase aide re/erred to by lhe FBI chief. · However, lhe fact that KisSingtr hM bctn furnfJhed with an extr•ordinary lcdwal-body;uard was seen u a •lron.8 ·. Indication that there are genuine fears within government that be might be a . kidnap target. Kissinger probably carries In his head more sensitive security secrets than any other man In the White House, perhaps even Including the President. • Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler was asked if any other members of Nixon's staff had been given Secret Service pro- tection. His reply: "~ can't say anything about that, for obvious reasons." · It was widely reported Wt month , whtn Kissinger went to the Stlviet mi"lon to the United Nations In New York for meetings Wttb SOVJet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko and am· bassador AnaWiy Dobrinin, that he was accompanied by a Secret Service agent. Kissinger has been setn with an agent dogging bis footsteps mu number ol ~ caslon.s since then. Since the secret Service normally does not accord ~r!!Onal protection . to members of the President's staff. It was believed Nixon himself must have directed the posting of the Klssingef bodysuard. ' WHEN THE · "DECORATOR" ARRIVES AT YOUR HOME, HE DEMONSTRATES STAIN RESISTANCE OF HIS CARPET, MAY OFFER TO PAY OFF YOUR DEBTS, MEASURES YOUR ROOM IN "UNITS" INSTEAD OF YARDS, AND OFFERS A BIG DlstOUNT (OR EVEN A CHECK) TO USE YOUR HOUSE AS A "SHOW HOUSE" FOR HIS CARPET. . "JUST SIGN HERE" IS THE CLINCHER. AMONG THE PAPERS TO SIGN MAY BE A SECOND MORTGAGE ON YOUR HOUSE, NO ITEMIZATION OF YARDAGE BEING PURCHASED, AND A LONG TERM CONTRACT FOR PAYMENTS TOTALLING MORE THAN THE PRICE PER YARD QUOTED. ·. DON'T BE TRICKED BY UNKNOWN FIRMS WHOSE GUARANTEES LAST ONLY AS LONG AS THEIR SHORT LIVED BUSINESS, DON'T BE F 0 0 LED BY "SOMETHING FOR NOTHING" OFFERS, PHONY "COMMERCIAL" QUALITY AND FLIM-FLAM CONTRACTS. KNOW THE MERCHANDISE OR KNOW YO UR MERCHANT! UNTA ANA, OIAN•t TUSTIN C .. ,:, ALllN"I UO HIU CAaf'IT'S & lllANllD 1 IJ74 '"'• , ..... , c.llf. IJWJ44 ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lacentla Aft: C~STA MESA 646·4838 HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurt., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -"ltt., 9'30 to 5 I .. ' I I I . I . I OAJL Y JllOT 0 ' .. Coi·on~r-ep~. Ca-g-e -Ou~t_look-for -Coa st-~rea Tackles l Lancers Tb< pr<p bul<elball ltllOll b hero will\ opening ..,.. league warfare 1 ch e d ule d lonlgbL All 14 Orange Coast am teams will have seen action by the end or tbe week'. with -By ROGER CAl!LSON tounwnentrlollowlnr for the· CM 1t1t D•'" "* '"" duraUon 'of thl! month. L O N G B I!: Ac H -. Excellent racea are teen In Undefeated Corona del Mar the Su.nae\, Irvine • n d setks to move a step elmer to Crestview loops with area t.s second straight CIF water teams Marina and Corona del damplon and CF playoff participant, has five of Mohs' players ln the fold and three of them are first-line performer.. AU-le1gue retvrnee John Filher (M) ii ttie mainstay of Molla ' basketball loam and tie'1-been ope_ratina at split end In football while junlor forward Mark Harmon (&-1) is the grid team's safety aod ba ckup quarterback:. o Utle tonight when the Sea • Mar given the bttt shots at ~ <Inga tackle Sunny Hills in a circuit UUe1. ~30 CIF semifinals cluh at The Irvine loop rnlght be the. elmoot Plaza pool here. most Jumbled of all with at The power ladfl1 Sea Kings least live aolld contenders in • st 44 straight victories, In-the picture, Puahirig Corona :Juding 21 this year. del ~tar will be Edison, Foun- Others busy with football hive been Terry McN ay (5--1 guard) Lyle Raymond (S-10 guard) and Greg Mills (6-2), a transfer from Arizona, who wu originally thought to be beaded for Huntington Beach. ,Newport Harbor and La tain Valley, Santa Ana Valley uente collide in the second and Loll AlamJtm -noC oecuaarily in that order. ame. Coach CWf Hooper has built ln the SUnset acrambte, · Corona machine around Marina's chief antlgonlstl ap- e scoring prowess of Kurt pear to be Huntington Beaeh, rumpholz and Garth Westmin..ter, We1tern and rgeson , a tandem that ac-Newport Hafbor. Crestview led for 20 of the Sea League teama San ~nte · ngs' 26 goals in their romp ·and Mission Viejo ap~ to over q u a rt e r f i n a I s foe have out.side shots at Uii:t Other than those problems. the scene appean: bright with another pair of returnees in Bob Wright (&--0 sr.) and Mike Arus (5-10 sr.). Up from the junior varsity is Bill '111omson (5-10 sr. ), Todd Schooler (5-10 sr.) and a pair of transfers -Mike Smith (5-10 sr.) from San Jose and Wes McKinney (5-2 jr.) from South Carolina. Estancia Q-esc:enta Valley. crown. Corona's only OU;ling closer Here's ~br'ef r~ndown on Who's been the busiest Ulan a margin of three goals \ea&Lof e .area s quintet! coach lately in Oran"ge Coast was 'against Downey In JU.st Pf. tipoff: area prep circles? midseason (5-4) and the Vik· C · d l Ma ~ Try Estancia High's Gary tngs departed the playoffs in orollC e r Carr_, _ who ~kes over the t. last week's eliminations -8-7 Thert's an lmposfng 8rray coachlng r~ins at Estancia this to Sunny Hills: •· of talent on hand at Corona del year following Bill Wetzel's The Lancers scored with one Mar High wbere OOICh Tandy retirement second left on the clock to Gilli!' crew is preparing to Carr, an assislant in Estan- upend Downey. defend its pennni.a\ 1 r vine cia High's successful football Sunny Hilla coach Henry League championship.. entry, has been a man with Vellekamp says his t~am has But the situation is clouded two jobs simultaneou$_ly. a ~ good chance at beating somewhat with_standout junior Leading his group of small Corona del Mar U lt can ef· center Mtkt Sevier and a (the tallest is 6-1 and the fectively slough on the Irvine lightning q u I ck sophomore average is more like f>..11) is League champions' hole man. guard (Caaey Jones) still -... all-league re1urnee Gary Sunny Hills has had a nursing injuries. Orgill. balanced attack with Greg Sevier (6-4) suffered an . Orgill, a ft-11 guard-forward, Carey (49), Gary Najarian Achille! tendon during track was~ _leading__ factor _or_ (4S)-and-Mark....Newton--{it)~and-stlll------"hnii'l fu ·ry-Estancla liityear when the leading in goals. recovered. He's practicing but Eagles gained their first-ever Najarian ii the hole . m.an has not been able to operate CIF basketball W,ayoff berth. while the others are Juruor ~ 100 percent. l-le scored over -21> four times forwards. Jones, who figures In lfle in league action . Goalie Gary Farri~ is an ex· Sea Kings' starting lineup Sever a I other key perienced hand and has block· plans, isn't expected to be at performers, however, have ed 17 of 33 penalty shots dur· fu11 strength until January at been tied up in the football lng the season , including one the earliest. pi:ggram. Included in 'that list against Downey and thr ee Assuming the&e two will be are Lee Friedersdor r (f>..9 ), against Gan:len Gro\11'! in the healthy for Irvine battle, the Curt Thomas (5-lO )r Hank playoffs. Corona del Mar express, Moore (6-1 ), Bob Kaiser ($-9) Rounding out the starting dominated by a man-to-man and Bryan Steward (f>..ll). • Lancer crew are seniors Bill pressing defense and a Supporting that cakt is Craig McGarvey, Dave Ball and ·delibe rate offens,ve at y 1 e, .Hays 15-5), JeU Zelsdorf (5-1) Dirk McCuen. figure• as the early seuon and Doug Confer (6-0). But they'll be up against favorite for league honors. The Eagles will rely on a their most severe test of the First team A 11 • I r v i n e fast break offense and a sticky year when Hoo~·s machlne League forward Don Killian man-to-man press to stay in begins its relentless offensive (IN!h:) ts back and ready to contention with pre-season attack geared a r o u n d roll. He average 16 points per favor.ites Corona del Mar,_ Bergeson and Krumpholz. game and wa~ the team's Edison, Fountain Valley, San· Complementing that CdM leading rebounder. . ta Ana Valley and Los pair are Tom Boughey, cap-Mark "Grigsby (6-1) 1s a Alamitos. tain Greg Loitz, J 0 h,n &erlous guard-forward f~st Fountain Valley Holyoake. Rich Hyland, Tooy ~Im candidate and bolstenng Oliver and Jay Dwyer. ll'iat unit ls a crack group of And a couple ol senior junior varsity players. ioalies with near-equal ef· Pushing ·Sf:vter at center is fectiveness . are Rick Waller John ·Sumner (M ) while Karl and Mark Otto. Killefer (6-1) and Tom Queen Newport, La Puente . In Semis ·(5-11) could .,,,·ork1ln at guard. Forwa id Rick Longpre (6-1) is also a serious contender to make Gillis' starting lineup. Gillis indicatea his team may be stepping up the speed somewhat in offensive plans but his quintet's biggest asset will again be defense. Corona del Mar figures to have better board st.reagth and e1perlenct thin Ule tum LONG BEACH -Newport that won the league tJUe last Harbor High's water polo year. taskmaster, Bill Barnett, had steadfastly maintained that anything short of a berth In the C1F semifinals at Belmnnt Plaza here would turn the Sailor season to disaster. N,o\v that the Sunset ~ague champions have made. it _by virtue of elimination v1ctor1es over Cal Hia:h and Lakewood, the Tars will be trying to get another chailce at defending champion Corona del Mar. ' BUt to gain that goal the Sailors m u s t get by an eJptcially feisty La Puente crew tonight at Belmont Plaz.ii in a 9 o'clock g1me. follewlng the 7:30 Coro na d_e1 ?.tar-Sunny Hills tiff. The Warriors. gaining their first ever semifinals berth, showed poise. depth, a spark!· ing ~ole man)n John Hale and uncanny ability from goalie Jack Doyle In disposing of favo~ed Costa Mesa In the quar.ierfinals. CO'ach Dorton Steinberger credits the efforts of his bench lfour starters and the first two replacements had fouled out before the Warrlon: c1me from a 6-4 deficit to nail Mesa, 7-1) and the tearu's ability to come bAck under adversity for Its. atartling showing. LI Puente has lost only twice this year -to Costa ~ftsJ and Upland - yet came back lo defeat both in ...W.g enCounter1. Costa Jtlua 'Coach Emil Neeme, in bis second yta.r at Costa Mesa, will be trying to mqld a cham· pionshlp con tend er Jn the Irvine League with • smal· lering of varsity returnees_aad several promising candidates. Leading Neeme's candidates are Chuck Br'idges (S-11, 1r. guard) Rick Desmet (6-2, jr. oenter) and Alan 'Moore (6-3 sr. center-forward). A p1ir of players in doubtful roles 11t this time are Pal Sweet l an d (torn knee ligaments) and Scott Friested (6-2 sr.), who won't be eligible until the semester bre1k. ·Two .. outstanding prospects for varsity duty from the JV team are Mike Allen, .. good shoooter and ball handler, and Tom Sampson (6-0 1 r . ) .. Allen's physical 1tat1 are the same. Others who could work 1n from the JV te•m are Rick Young IS-ll ar.) and Dan BaJcer ($-11 sr.) while three undt.r clusmen ·are offerin1 the rett a slilf challen1e. They are Jon MarchlorlatU (&<>, jr.), Doug M1cI,ean (1-1, "Jr.) and Frank Roldan 0·10 Jr.). Meat will rely on the fast break offense, a N e e m e trademark. Ellbon l•we don't have a lot of finepe ind some of our kids ar~. 2felty small, so we 1et Don't look for Edlaon HI&h 's catj&bt foulfng qulte a bit. blsketblll team to 1et the Maybe w11 avertre around 25 world afire during Dtcember fouls per game," 11y1 lhe tournament It's QOt that W1111r,rjor mentor. • coach Dave Mohs doesn't h1v11 Newport, meanwhile , mu» the n~SAl'Y talent on hand io.,aaain without ace Jobn · ·at Ediaon High School -it's Wilcox (eye injury) 11nd Will just that most ol hie prime c1& be dt:pendtnt on the men·lt>-dldattt have been bu~y lately. min press that overwhelmed 1'he O\ar1era1 footb111-ie1m. Lal<owood In Ibo quartcrflub. undofeat<d lrvlno L • 11 u e .. ,. Coach Dave Brown of Foun· taln Valley High says he has the best basketball tea m in the school's five-year history on tap and the seco nd year Biron mentor appears to have ample reasons for the optimism. Included in Fou n tain Valley's lineup are f o u_r starters from last year's tough contingent plus a host or other key personnel. At the top of the list is forward Dave Lynch (&-3), who is an excellent shot from outside , along with starters George Gerber (5-7 sr. guard), l1 ick Power (6-1 5r. guard ), Ken Shibata (6-2 sr. center ) and ,Bill Kristina t (8·1 sr. forward ). Following a highly sue· cessful summer program the Barons appear to have the necessary muscle, talent and cohesiveness to be in serious conl.ention for the league crown. Giving!'ountain Valley ad- ded depth are Pete Gerber (S· 9 Rr.). Mike Foote (6..(), sr.) and Ed Pitts (6-1, sr.). The Barons' only significant Joss via graduation is 11.ll league player Gary Valbuena (currently at OCC). Fountain Valley finished in a tie for fouith last year but beat champ ion Corona del Mar, among other things. Brown's crew was especially impressive in summer league 'f)lay aga1nst Sunset League teams Marina and Huntington Beach . Huntington B each The basketball situation at HunUngton Beach High School Chargers Play Friday a t MSAC Edlaon High' s CT F' AAA footb1ll semifinals game with West Covina will be played Friday night at Mt. .... San Antonio College. Kickoff is set for 8 o'clock. ..... 11 lt1nt11t ._. 1 1""' Amil 11 Colltwm L.t;"""°° \'I ltHltN11 f f !Ut ' ... 9011!t• "" \.om-11 Cl'"-'t fdlWI VI 11¥1-' CO'lllM .r Mt, IAC .. T""'919 tih' V Cfftlltl Gltlll'I vs '°"*'"' 11 L.. ,,,,... • l~ ....... 191 Atouf"1 vt. St,.. i;-otlec:Y9 •I II~ lf'ltl'll lt! ttltll ... ""'""'("'"" ''"""'' ........ "' ltDtr1 DllNI "' U. •••fill •I Motir• Hlt11 HAS TOP AREA TEAM Marin•'• Jim Stephens 1t 111art1, lloq wltb Young. Swick, a f.1 , 20$-pound sophomore, and t!le ' • 3 McKinney, are prime forw1rd caadldaies for Ha1ey. Jt'1 Haaey's first ye1r In ... coachlng the Sailor van:ity , followlngD~e Waxman ' s jump to Sin Jose State. Hacey'1 major concerns are depth and tack ef experience. We•t•l-ter Tabor, a rootball All·League tn the Crestylew Ltasue pen-guard. defensive back. Tabor. at 1-21 nant clwe. Further enhancin& the is a solid forward candidate. Monl1'Ch roster are Steve Junior · monogram winners Mb1fo1t \/l ejo . Fritz (5-11 tr.), RJck KnllUnfg. are Chuck Corwin (~10), Mission Viejo High.with Gne S Jr.) and Steve Kemptr (W Vince Whilntah (&-1) ancl John returning starter, another sr.). Harbold ("3). Harbold figures varsity letterman and 1 horde Others who could figure pro. to play center in the Artlstl' of potential •llrs from an elite mlnent.ly--in-Monartft plans are dou ble post system. l 1 ·i t · Joe Prender1a1t (6-1, jr.), IJ\ . I It un or var111 y eam, is ei-Steve Cucul1'c (' • Jr.), Grog Up from e Jun o.r vara Y peeled to field another .,..... are Mike Neiswender (6-5, racehorse bukelblll c 0 n. Grten 6-1 sophomore and the sr.) Nick Gillespje (5-10, Jr.) Unaent. freshman tum'• MVP), Eddie and Brent Jamison {6-1, sr.). Coach Pat Roberts' free-Poettge.n (fol jr.). Dave Nanf'Y David Myers, a 6-4 can· ~··tin utn•·t 111 be ed ~6-3. jr.), John Gorman (M 1 Judalng from the number of d I Ith ood h W il'C'& g q ~ w pac sr.) ond Joo Ka~h 1• •,Jr.). di a e w g moves, as by • • forwards J e f f r--u-v returning lettermen and the ........ ·c1e11··• 'th t r• •·ti t u.:cn s1 •n:u w1 or n Muterson and Steve AJhcraft. Kiley, it g.2, ts the .._ ell summer performance 0 f ligaments and won 't be back The rest of the .,.,uad will be var1lty letterman w bl 1 e Westminster High'• 1 9 8 9 In ·f f 1-¥"" ..... •1 uni orm or Su. or seven com~-d from seniors Richie Rouc:rb m e a 1 u r e s r • Suntet League champions. · ks .......-H d ff I s-coach Don Leavey's crew is wee · Price (6-0 guard), Gary Brown aupert an Je J(j ey art Others In Fair's group in--t&<l guard!, Kevin Shannon (6--10. the puule or the circuit. · J d D Id K ('!) -d cu e av err to" • 1-.:: 3), Frank Mort (6-3), Tim Despite Mater De I's Le ave y 's contingent im· Nichols ((6-2) and Joe Polile n Bracken (6-3), Greg Hebets (5-cipabllities, Bi.shop Am a t preJsed few during summer (6-3). 10) and Keith Mundy (6-0) figures as the 1trongest threat play but It's also a fact the Laguna tnters 0 r a n I e along with several under ln Angelua Le1gue b1ttle. Lion mentor was doing a lot of League competition this year -classmen. e1perlmenting with Ii t l I e and Falr says he expects the They are junior Craig Citro llRlver1tt11 regard for winning or losing. most trouble from Sonora and (&--0), s 0 p h 0 m 0 res Rob U 1 .1 H' h' fl~ is similar to last year at this Back from last year's CIF El Dorado. Ferguson (6-l) and Steve n veni Y ig s •3~ ever- 1,·me wi·th th• Oller r··"· thin AA " quart·J1·nali's•· 1 re basketball compeUUon be1in1 &1111..11 IV\-c.11 ""' Saia Clemente Rudisell CM ) and junior Joe Wednesday at Mis.skin Viejo in-experience. starters Gordon Blakeley (&--0) Evans (1-3). The former pair High (4:30) againsj Glenn And th at probably means and Terry Meisenheimer (6-3 ), Coach John Baker has a pair are up from last year·1 Bee Hij!h and coach John Driscoll Huntington Beach will have along with junior varsity of se nio r returning lettermen team . will be fielding a uam com~ another fast break juggern1ut standout Eric Southwick (6-8 ), in which to build a Crestview One candidate is a doubtful posed of no vanity veterans. ; to confound the opposition and who started at center for the League contender with in participant because of a foot-But he's high on hi! group'f' fight it out in serious con· VJrsity occasionally, basketball and ju(lging from ball injury. He's 5-11 guard chances for the free lance tention for the Sunset League The other letterman is &-l wbat is available on the Triton Jim °"vb. -year with three juniors firur· championship. -senior guard Mark Pear!On, campus, the Red and Black Roberts isn't predicting ing to see heavy duty for ttMI: A good indication ot Hun· Top prospect.! for the vars!· could be the dark horse ot the championships from his ag· Troi·ans. : B h, -1 · tyincludeJayJohnson (6-l,jr. · ·1 t· It' I kof va rsl tington eac s prospec s 1s c1rcu1 . grega ton, c mg ac • Pacing that trio are a pair f forward ), Jeff Siemens (6-1, t I ••· h1'ef closeness o the summer con· Brad McCaslin ( 6 ·1 ~ Y e1per ence as un:: c o( ployers out of the .TU.stin I h I f · 1·r. forward), Jeff Morrow (6-3, delrl t t h. t frontation wt eague avonte forward ) and Craig Anderson men o ts earn . High 1·unior vanity program. sr. center), Jim Bragg (5-IU, H 11 VIII P k T 11·n Marina. tf>..10 auard) form the nucleus e ca s a ar · us Forward Tom Multni:r (6-2)' _ sr. anard ) and Bob Mendota e-d F th·11 t•· th tt teams The latter nipped the Oilers e~ for Bak.er to work wilh. an oo 1 •11:: r and guard Tom Wa lker (5;10) . after playing lo a standoff in (6-0, sr. forward). A 1·unior transfer from most likely lo get in the are the former Tustin playert Leavy opines that his team. o· bl ' regulalion play. must overcome mistakes that Royal Oaks High. Rick Bauer, la os way. while Mission Viejo High has . · Leading coach EI mer normally plague a young team could be the deciding factor Mater Dei contributed Bnice Mico, oQe of Combs' outfit is football ace and feels the sqy_ad ,.oo_ul<l.be for the Tritons. the mainstays of a successfu? Garth Wise:, a~ guard. He's at its peak by the time the .-Although he measures only Rebounding proficiency and Di1blo Bee team list year. the only returning starter fro.m league s~ rolls around in f>..3 and weighs in the varsity e1perience are a cou· Mico is. a si1-footer. Waflker last year and plays tile--point January. neighborhood of 100 pounds. pie of prime con~ms for was University High's irst I I I I 1 on defense. lhe t!:LoS Angeles Lakers ball coach Jerry Tardie of Mater .quarterback in football and -The other returning let· boy is a !llperb ball hanCl\er Dii tliili's l:lnketban tum. f\gurerto""be--u·.e--teanrtea•""1~-- terman is 6-2, senior Wes I' --uns Be~h and passer and could be the But the Monarchs could be the from his guard post. Thomas. ~ necessary spark for title con· sleeper of the. year in Orange Others in prominent posl· Up from the junior varsity Wlth four returning varsity sideralion. -Coast area circles. lions are juniors D a n n Y are Steve Brooks (6-3), Jlm starters and bright prospect.s Bauer was a varsity start.er Tardie has four lettermen Stuart, Jack WLesenberg (I · Worthy (6-2) and Darrell up from th~ junior varsity, for Royal Oaks as a rrom last year's C1F playoff 0), Steve O'Neill (6-1 ) and Walker (6-1). A bright pr~ coach Jerry Fair's Laguna sophomore. entry that turned in a higb.ly guard Jeff Styers, a $-10 spect is 6-2 Tom Crunk, the Beach High basketball team Adding to that is Steve respectable 21..g record. 50phomore. Bees' MVP. · appears to have the necessary Kalota, a 6-7YI center up from Relurning to the Monarch A freJbman who i!I given a Also figuring in Combs' tools to fashion a highly the junior varsity with fast fol d Is starter Dave Kiley, a fi.. good chance at making the plans are Scott Whitfield (f>..7), respectable season. break speed. 2 guard , who can ahoot We11 varsity is 6-0 Paul Simon, whn Lee Ordway (6-3), Bob Eagle It's Fair's second year at Others in Triton _plans are and has .good moves and a has demonstr1ted. goo d · (&--0) and Ray Menefee (6-1 ). the Artist 'helm and he's cer· Howard Valore (6-3~ senior pissing hand. shooting. The Oiler machine sustained tain his uam will upgrede lt.s forward) and Pele Sellers (6-0 And backing him are Pete Forward Jeff Thompson , ... a severe setback when Greg 3-21 season of last year. guard). Roberts (son of Mission Viejo 1¥1) also figures in Driscol1'1 Mil ls, who was at Huntington Three o( his four returning Two others who figure In High coach Pat Roberts ), plans. -then moved to Arizona -1tartets are juniors as Fair Baker's hopes are Steve Cope guard Bob Haupert ( an University will employ Uie came back In the area but in continues his bid to return (J.9 senior guard) and Chris alternate guard last year bet-reve rse action offense ag1inst the Ediso n High boundaries. Laguna basketball to pro-Elinor ('-3Y. senior). ter known for his football ex· the man-1.<>-man prw ind will Combs, a n et e r n a 1 minence. Baker opines that perhaps ploit.s at quarterback), and try to overload one 1idt pessimist, ranks Mar i n a , n.e only 1enior is Bart Villa Park is the team to btat Kiley 's brother, Jeff, a S-10 11ain1i the zone defenses. Newport Harbor, Westminster •-._::_::_:::::__::::.::.::__::_::::_ _____________ _:_ ___ c_ _____ _c_ ________ -c,;- and Western (In that erder ) as the most serious candidates for tbe league crown'. Jtlarlna There'a only a pair of starters returning to the Marina basketball fold but the Vike ship appears tO be the heavy favorite to capture the Sunset League title this year despite exptcled strong op- position from N e w p e r t Harbor, Western, Huntington Beach and Westminster. Coach Jim Step~ens, however, ls quick to let you know how good everyone else is. Stephens and his Vikings ap- pear to have Imposing strength. Leading Marina is two-year starter Kipp ·Baird. a 6-1 forward who averaged 15 points pe r game la5t year and was an All-Sunset Lea11.1e choice. Another starter Is senior guard and playmaker Bill McGuire (6-J). Andy Thurm is the th ird let· lerman returning, although not a starter on last year'.1 CJF playoff entrant. Beefing up the attack Is H center Dean Bogdan and Brian Sanders. Sanders, a 6-4 forward, ls up from the junior varsity after being plucked out of a physical education class last year. Others who figure heavily In Stephens' plans are Bruce Miller l&--0. jr.), Jeff Butl (6-3 sr.), Rod Rewaldt (6-1 sr.) and George Waggoner ( 5·1 O guard). Newport Harbor Newport Harbor H i g b 1 1 basketball team has only one returning varsity letterman on .tthe scene, but the blsketball oriented Sailors appear ta have another Contender for the Sunset League cham· pionship. . Taras Your.a 13 the lone let· terman in lht fold for coach Dale Hagey'a Tars ind ht'I expeeted to be back In tht familiar gu1rd 1pol. Hits an excellent outtide 8hooter ind rebounds well for his size (5- 10). • Up from the Junior vmlty squad, which tied Huntin,aton SfJach and Marina for the loop title last yeAr, are John Kazmer, J.ury Gentosl, Jim Swick. Bill McK!nnoy, Bill Jones and Denny Cline. Kazmer (&-3) Is the ltadln1 seoring threat (he averaged 21 point.I Md 19 rcboµods per game) while Ge.ntosl (6-(1) Is / , .. ' .. tFt860U ' • Especially at these ~w Low Prices 5rH s5,49 QTS. s6.49 I I . %GAL. s11.98 • .--....... 1 ~- I I i l..}.· .. ~ :~· IJ1lte lJlrue.Otd ·Stglc Ren1ut11u 6ourbon ' .I I I I expected w see 1tarUn&dutyl...!"!...------""=-'----------------------------~---• • • ,. • .lf ·,OA!LV PILOT SC r • Recession in 17th Month, Longest Since World W ru· II By SVI.VTA PORTER 'l'he receulon or 1969·70 Is now beginning 1t.s 17th montn Although th e Ni xon Admm1stralion has not yet called 1t by its obvious name _ and although it bas not yet been formally designated a re ce s sion by private authorities e1lhe.r, of course that is what tl IS ' ) ln fact, it 1s already by far 1 the longest of any of the five business Ctownturn." of the Post-World War II period The table below 1n this column will document lhat activity, fading profits , spreading blnkruptctes and Wall Streel dlsasters Is hardJy a successful game plan r As of this day, Dec. 1, I join the Conference Board on record with this blueprlnt for the '69-'70 recession to date. Let the experts catch up when they're ready (Prices are an-nual rates, latest reporting MONTHS date ) lllECESSION CYCLa'' NOY 'i8-0ct 'ff J111Y ·~""" ·~ J11l~ 51 Apr •,st MIY .0.Feb 'ti CUllATION n • JlllY '".0.C 7' f'ltlCtS ltECESSIONl Al WHOLf -'4-()c1, "' -1 1% July '53-AllO 'S. +11% July 'S1 Apr •u ..._, ,.,. Mt>Y '.O-l"~D 61 + l 7~• JulY .,_Otc. •1t1 +~ J'!i. " • • " COST 0" LIVING ... -1-1 ,,. +•'"' +1 oo:. ..... The recession or 1969--70, created by deliberate policies of the adm1n1Strat1on and the Federal Reserve System to curb the inflation spiral, so far ha.s bad less impact on 1n· fl aUon ,than any of the four previous postwar recessions .ln fact. the upsurge 1n prices -pr1Dces in general, at the wholesale level a n d touching our cost of hving - Nobel Prize Wihner Tops in Economics has been by far the sharpest By JOHN CUNNIFF rded I .. ~ •vliMll AnalYH reco 1n any pos war NEW YORK (AP) -An en· recession period I understand the reasons lire generation of Americans, why the White House would thousands of professors 1n- not admit this is a recession eluded, owes 1ts b a s I c knowledge of economics to Dr during the pre-election cam· Paul Samuelson, rec1p1ent of pa~~-November's elections the 1970 Nobel Prize 1n are over and 1972 is a long economics I The d 1 Sam u elson's massive way of a m nistration "toundations or Economic cannot continue pretending m- def1n.Jtely that what is is not -Analysis" was re q u 1 red even In the fuzzy, unscientifi~ reading m almost every col,. world of modern eCQnomics. A lege economics course an d, in Jot --0f-US-out-here,Jmow_tne__cl:;act, was the only textbook 1n def11ut1ons and play by the rniny Of thern.Jt covereO. rules everything, Nor cao the non-profit in-That this enocmously suc- dependent research organua· cessful book, a classic which tion which dates busmess cy-Samuelson updates every few cle turrung points 10 the u s years, was hardly the basis fthe Nahonal Bureau 0 f for his selection 1s a testament Econ om 1 c Res ea re h) to the breadth of bis work pussyfoot much Jonger Other No one area of Samuelson's presliglous non-profit research output, in fact, can be detach- orgaruzahons aren't that shy ed from 1;ie mass of his pro- and they are going on the line ductlon His writings ·-and ~1artin R. Gainsbrugh, chief research covers the field economist of The Conference generally and specif1cally Board, Inc, for instance, puts over-all theory, we If are the start of the 1969 recession economics, price theory, 1n- 1n July 1969, because that's the terrra:ttonal trade month 10 which industria l pro-And w h i I e he bas duction reached its peak at an demonstrated an ab1hty to index ol 174 6 This index 19 wri te for the masses, .,.as now at 162 3, off a full 7 per· evidenced by a p o p u I a r cent magazine column. the pro- Nor at this stage can any fessor's greatest strengths are a d m 1 nistration spokesman in the area of h 1 g b I y honestly claun the • game mathematical analysis Samuelson is consid ered a plan" for econom.ic stab1hty worked 85 plotted in 19?0 _ Keynesian meaning t h a t not without turning t h e much of his thinking appears credibility gap into a credibih-to have been influenced by the t h A gh ,...., late John Maynard Keynes a Y c asm. ru '1-"'are com-Bnt1sh economist who be+;ev-b1nat1on of cl imb1ng une(llployment. still shafply ed m go v e r n m e n t a I ITI· volvement 1n order t o r1s1ng p9 ces, sluggistl business rnod~rate the business cycle 1,000'1 0' OIL PAINTINGS WHOLISALI WAllHOUSl OPIN TO THI P'UILIC $5 .... . 1•it I . IOINCJllt, :.rNTA ANA f'MONIUMMI DEALERS WANTED Keynes-approach was fiscal. He felt that government spen· ding could be used to regulate the up-down cycles that have appeared regularly 1n in· dustr1al economies He didn t fear budget dehc1ts, and even suggested they might be used Tlie 101 w;ll 1Jd •11bh11cl, f!'lv1tlply by 111pe1l me,t,hod Qiv1 I ulo mefic cr1dh b1l1111c1 111d e v111 cl11r 111 1nor 1if ctnc1flv C1p1c!ty" I c.olu<T111t -t c.ol11ftln• tot4I t• •t• ''' 99 > dtr1ct •11btt1ctlo11, 11ulo1T1•t1c fot11I •nd 111b tot1I, 1vto1¥11hc rtpetl k1y for ••P••' 1dd1tlo11, ,ubtr11cl+on i nd 1¥111lllpllc11tion. Red & bl11cir 1 prTfttln9 w1tli lt •'ft •••l' to r111d type. M111u• h'talt P""* in red .-----------~--=-"""'l ·r S C M CORONA 70 NEW ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER .................. $118.50 S"CIAL PllCI ••• ··-- le tf!l~ .. U!l'J•.~ 1500 Adams at Harbor. Costa Mes;i 546-0701 .,_t JIOJ 5-L• .... ,. 01...U.. 711·7•00 ' Reality Firn1 Names Aide Beverly Creedoo has fiecn named assistant manager or the Ne wport Beacfl Walker & Let In c , offtce , reports Em1c LfBlt1nc, manager of lhe nrm's Southern 01str1cl MISS ~r~~ wt\Q h{l,1,)lceQ with"\\'aJker & Lee three years was previously with the C.OS ta Mesa office She has been a winner 1n the ffrif\'s ··7op 'T'en'' con test each year for hstlngs taken total sales, and number of liStings sold- J\.hss Creedon is I h e secretary for the Cosll: Mesa Foundation for the Prolonga- t1on of Human I.ire lier home 11 1n COsta Mt!>i:I LOCAL No other new1p11per teU1 you me1e e '11ry tley, eb,oul wh11 1'1 goi119 011 i11 fl.e G111!1t Or1111Je Ce11t !h1111 Hit DAILY PlLO), , UVER THE COUNTER •• , ....... ,,. 111 ......... i.r .......... ....,...,,....., ....... ~ 111,t.10.( l"ric.. .. ""' lllclllN Nll•H «" -l'llu, _,......,. 1W ~--. -· . ' ~mplete=New Yolk -Stock ·List Market .. • '• • '• ~ ... •• , .. f ... ... ... "' ... "' "' .:l .. ·-.. •• , .. '" •• ... ... ... ... "Q • ' tutld,.Y Dtcembtt l 1970 SC DAILY PILOI :l , . \ Co1nplete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List I I • • - r DAILY PILOT r,..,i.,, D"'oll)w I, 1970 CHECKING •UP• W. 01ne11 Better ·Bill Collectors By L. M. BOYD ~·rr l8 BECAUSE women •re ·. more tenacious, more persj1tent, more direct, that they make the best bill,.. c;ol- iecton," contends the boss of a nationwide finance company • • • CERTAINTLY YOU knew sauerkraut originally was not a German dish, but Chinese. But did you know spaghetti was .first invented in ChinJ , not Italy? ••. JT JS ALSO a fact, mister, that you do not · necessarily inherit the oolor of your beard from the same ancestor who gave you the col- or of your -hair. OUR LOVE AND WAR MAN has been studying the various wives who really make it tOugh on their husbands. He ooncludes there are five types. 1. The Cold Old Girl. Hardly e v e r smile;. Can't Bland leisure. Thinks romance is vulgar. 2. The cor- rect Lady. Keeps the place naUy. Schools herself. Gussies up everybody's grammar. 3 • The Child Bride. Coy and cun- OPEN QUESTION -Why Is Australia a continent while Greenland is an island? "HOW LONG can t h e 11verage forger go on papering the country before he gets caught?' inquires a c Ii en t. Pollce statisti,cians say he's good for a~t 17 hot checks. lf he gels away with more, he's at liberty looger than most . . . ALREADY MEN· TtON9D a Pair of custolJlers who were born in a railroad depot and an elevator. Now I have a feminine reader who was born in a gas station. If you can beat that, name the place. THE NATION'S highest paid factory workers Jive in Michigan, lowest paid in Massachusetts .•• EVERYTIME a jeweler cleans your watch, he puts his personal scratch on the works, detectives say , . A MEDICAL rt1AN in Atlanta, Ga., estimates 3,000 new cases of venereal disease show up every day. ning, sil.S cross-legged on the CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q, bed, thumb in mouth, and "During what month do the lisps. "Honey, do we have lawyers make the mo st anymore creme de menlhe in money'?" A, J an u a r y, · • the frig?" 4, The Mud Pack generally. June definitely is Woman. Fears aging. Creams, when the justices of the peace • • Faulkner ... EAM• Y cracv ---...... WasFired · From Job NEW YORK (AP William Faulkner won lwt Pulitzer prizes and the Nobel Prize for literature, but to the U.S. Post Office, he was a maiingerer and ne'er do well in lhe days when be was postmaster at Univen.Jty, Miss. The Post Office accused him In a 46-year.()ld letter of reading and playing golf (Ir cards during office hours 1nd · · throwing mail in the garbage car.. during office hours. It aJS() said he was writing a book on government time . He ~as fired . 'Wanna make a wish,-Doddy?11 The letter from M a r k Webster, postal inspector at Corlfith, Miss., and dated Sept. ---------------------- 2, 1924, was published in the current issue-· of the New Yorker magazine, which said Jt had never been prifited liclore. · Faulkner became postmaster at the station serv- ing . lhe University & f Hurricane Storms Most Destructive Mlssis!ippi when he was 24 , and was fired three yeara • WASHINGTON (UPI) for their generation. later. Whatever their local names, The storm's winds may The letter said, "You have they are the greatest storms-~ach 200 miles an hour, con- thrown mail .• .in the garbage siderably below to r '1 a d o can by the side entrance. . on ear1h. veJoCities: But they persist for .this has bec<ime such a com-We Ca.II them hurricanes. Jn days or weeks rather than mon eccurrehce that S()me the Philippines they are called minutes or hours. No other patrons ha ve gone to the baguios. Paci!~ n a t i o n s storm combines duration, size, garbage can to get their generally knOw them as and violence more destruc- magazinf!, should they not be typhoons. In the Indian Ocean lively. in their boxes ... you do not they are cyclones. Author\lies do not know ex- give the office proper at-They are one and the same actly what triggers a hur- tention, opening and closing kind of sto rm, the most ricance.· They agree that the same at your convenience : destructive and deadly of all tropical sea temperatures that you C&Jl be Lound playing that afnict the planet and it.s must be about SU degrees to golf during office hours." peoples and \forks. ---drtve---what-amounts'"l:o an-a~ It fu rther said Faulkner In all cases they are born in mosphereic heat e n g i n e . -a-..U:ing TOid=_ • Cancer Fou'nd irt Unsaturated Fat Users. ATLANTIC CITY, N . J . cancer deatm among the ex· tention to the po&!ibillty of ·(UPI) -Cancers appeared in pertmentaf subjecta that was harmful as well as . benef!dAI unexpectedly large n_umbers dlat.inctly "hlgtier thin the effects." amona: 423 men on an e1-unexpected incidence" for 1be L<>s Angeles study Is per!Jnental • iliet high in elderly men-all . over 50 and one~of fiYe. The Ql_her_!._re In unsatura\ed fat&. As a result, half (Iver 6S. 'I\Je scientist&, MJnnesota. Norway, Finland the sclentists"in charge issued tried to relate it to SliCh and Engtand. The others were a go-slow warning Thursday variables 8$ body weighf, total for, shorter periods ~t . they on aggressive efforts to cholesterol, and fats, ·blood tUrnecl up no stallstlcally change the United Stales diet. levela .and ciiaretle smoking, significant excess of · cancer Ors. Morton Lee Pearce and without success. deaths among C(lnsumers of Seymour Dayton of t h e Pearce siid he alld Dayton high polyunsaturated lats. University of CalifQmia, Los were "surprised and relieved" Pearce said his own reaction Angeles, spoke at t·he annual when they foiind that the "ex· to his statistics, as a physi~ scientific sessions of the Am-cess'"" oould be accounted for cian, was that he . would erican Heart Association by nine mertwho gave up the prescribe such a diet for which ror some years prompt-ex.perimental diet during an persons with very hilh blood ed a partial substitution of early stage of the experiment cholesterol levels but not for polyunsaturated veget'able ollt and subsequently died of those with normal levels. for the ilnimal fata in the cancer. '" J;;::=========; u,,ual American di~. Yet there were nd cancer Two years ago they reported deaths aJ11ong the dropout! that such a partial substitution from· the group that had been had substantially lowered the on the. standard American blood ·cholesterol leVelS in 423 diet. "This ~iscrepancy i! resident patients of · the Los p1,1ztling," Pearce said. "We Angeles Veterans Admlnistra• have\. not generated a tion hospital as compared to reasonable hypoth esis to ex- the cholesterol level1 o( the plain it." same number of patients: who He reminded his fellow -.had been -kept on the diet cardiovascular scientists that most Americans prefer. As the "there is no existing studied apparent result, the experi-JX!PUlation which has con- mental subjects hBd fewer sumed a dlet h i g h in cardiovascular deaths. ·-polyunsaturated oUs over long T1:iursday Drs. Pearce and periods of time. It seems Dayton reported on an unan-sensible' to continue ~trolled ticipated cancer aspect_. Dur-diet experiments with-;cfue at- LET'S BE FRIENDl Y If you have new neighbors or know of anyo ne moving to our area, please tell us 110 that ~·e may C!Xl~nd a "'friendly welcome and help them to become aCQ.uainled ln their new aurroundinp. So. Coast Visitor 494-057' 4'4-9361 Harbor Visitor 644-0174 ing the eight years rJ. the ex- periment, 31 men on the . ex. perimental diet and 17 on the standard high animal fat diet died of an assortm~nt of cancers. CUSTOM T.lllOltED SUITS $52.00 up Hong Kodg 1"1111 TAILDll. IN . NEWPORT llACH This wa s an "excess.. of Mori'! than 3.000 lmportl'!d.. Fabrics to choose from. CBU.."DREN- t----'-~oils, Io t i o "', shaves,_ make the most money ... Q, ·mager,1nd-talkrlo-Jotmn .. IS-JT--'l'RUE-that-holty-trtes l>frmitted "card playing in the the tropics, fathered and Warmed IO\V level air in· '---'IJJJi~l'J-----jJl---J;'ii office!' and-sald;--"Y~-by-the sea and-the-teraets--wfttrrokt-a1r-stnktng-1 '(OUll TYi"• 0, '.lllltCI, YOUlt TYl"t -..01' ITYLaS. SUITS ... Sl"OllT..$;0ATS • .dLACKS ·TOI" CO.lTS • SH/llTS • • TUXSOOS. Otll~t'l' Ill ~ WMllL • Cash in her miqor. 5. The are male and female?" A. Negotiator. Disco1ver~ at age That's right. The female is the 13 her wiggle was merchan-one wit h the btrries. habitual reader of books and atmosphe_re in seasons when from higher altitudes: to pro-NEWPORTlll 1.tf N magazines and seem [eluctant the position of the sun, the duce whirling motiOfis which ~11EE LEN-llll7 JA.Mao1tRt: 11ta. to cease reading long enough temperature of the water, and are the h u r r i can e 's '-J l.' '-' H•wl"o11tT u.-11• ._:l•:_:w:•:il~•:•~pa:t~ro:•:•:·-'_' ___ _:th~e'....'.'.m:•~tio:n'....'.'.o~f ~w~in:d~s~a~r~e~r~\pe".:'.:.·_:''~':d•~m".'.:ar~k:· ______ _..!::====================!'.'===='='=M='=~='="'=~===M=•="'='="='="'========''="='='=''="='=·="='=' ==::=-' disable. Now owns every house.hold appliance plu.s two fUr capes, liUe to the up- country cabin and an M-B 2.80 SL roadster. Our L. and W. man is not usually this cynical. Going to ~ave to &peak to the old boy. Your questfo-JU and com.-1. menu are welcomed and toiU be used in CHECKING VP Wherever possib~. Please address 11our lett·eTa to L. M. Bo11d. P.O. -Box 1875, Newport Be ach. Calif. Visitor to Prison Ready for Anything CHICAGO (UPI) -Ozell Hudson Jr., was held on $100,000 bond after guards at the Cook County Criminal Coorta Building searched him and found two handguns, a knife, 57 rounds of ammunition and 30 feet of clothesline. Police said Hudson, Savannah, Ga., a student at tht University of Wisconsin had come to .the building one day before a brother was scheduled to appear in criminal court in another case. Guards have been frisking everybody entering the ~ · building sin~ a convicted k.iller tried to escape four weekl ago but was killed. Many Heart Patient,s Are 'Sex Cripples?' SEATTLE. Wash. (UPI) - A University of Washington psychology profesS()r 8 a y s many heart patients become "sexual cripples" I a r g e 1 y because "uptight" doctor, and nurses seldom discuss the situation. Dr. Nathaniel Wagner said .--.recently 50me patients lbink they are impotent after a heart attack. And he sa id somt! wives fear sexual ac· tivity will kill their husbands while many male patients bear enormous fears of failing as lovers. "The rcbJrn to sex activity appears to produce very little stress," Wagner said. "We mi,R:hl equate it with a brisk. walk downtown (It climbing two night! of stairs." The psychologist said the patie nt's anxieties about sex- ual activity are heightened by physicians and n\Jrses being uncomfortable a'bOut discuss- ' < ing the subject. "If nurses feel that se1 Is dirty they arc going to neglect an important area of coronary care because most patient.s are going to be Involved in sexual activity," he said. Wagner said hesitancy ef medica l person(\el to talk about sex relates to the type of pet>ple attracted to the field. He told UPI that col· Jegiate medical training should include more sex education. 11e also recommended a pamphlet be designed on the subject similar to the many others available to the patient, "We have a pamphlet on just about every other subject, why not on this one?" he ask· ed. But he said much of the basic data On heart patient! and sex activity had not been rollected primarily because of I I h e p r e -Conditioning or medical personnel. I See by Today's Want Ads e FIGHT TH E BULGE! Ikln'1 btcome ,. '"\\IAI.l, FLOWER'" in~IP.11rt ... HP.re"s your chllnCf' 10 M. rome ll SUNF"l.O""ER TN )'fllir Oll.'11 ll:f'OOV)' 1111.'i[rl'!'° ••1tr th1111 you mllkf':: HUI'· t)' on down, NOW! 7100 • HEY! AJI )ll)U horlW! lf>Vl'tl -No Kidd ing! You MW can huy tor vrry low price Yriu r very mr.n "STEEL llORSE O')RRAL'i'' ITS A RE.AL STEAL! St'e 8600. e Th1u Mnd!JM"\" • itebofl. 1.ir -Su111\'' Colont'I SAl'lo df'l"I lg IOOklnfl tar you -( So don't lfll him or 1hl,, cM.nce d ip thni yf)UJ" fin. ttr -8'11 &n It: Okay, I But di. num ·~' ' f ' I I I A i I ' .-.-,.._ -' ··~ - \ ' ..... ~ .... ·--·- .i -· ···-· ----··· • l I I l f ' I I Telephone numbers are one of the most ml. portant things to leave the babysitter. :ft takes just a moment to jot down the numbtlr where you'll be. And on the inside cover df the phone book are spaees to write emergenc¥ numbers-the doctor, fire, police. Make sure I.hat your sitter knows about those aJs4 Consider telephone numbers part of ~~ that she has ---1 , everything ·@Pacific1Ai....i......!. she needs. ~ "'"'l"IUl'I' We're here to help. I I I I t I I t I , --· ------ reatmen ~£Sewage Show Slated • 'l(olllton-Nlpl wat.r District this wm bolt 1 eommerdal tlrm'1 •UOn of a nverse osmosis t proce11 thlt converts aecon- ted iew11e-efOuent 1 n t o ~water. ~.Oii'l Kymla, district manager, said th• den!Onstralloll would be pre,.nted by GBK Enterprllel Inc .• ·a PlacenUa firm that telll Ille equipment and proceu to liiduatrl .. neodlni io nclalm water . .. 'lbt proceu um: a membrane to 0 fUter'! 'fllte water to a mulmum of llJO parts, per mllllan' of total dissolved aollda (TDS) The waler presently brought io Calliomla t h ro u g h Metropolitan . Water Ililtrlct u ... from the Colorado Rh'er ,,_·4rink1ng purposes contalnl ·-parts per mllllon TDS, Kyiftla-.!. The membraDe allO removes organic IOlida, pbolpbalel and moat bacteria from llCOlldaiy treated eUluent. Durinl the, 1 ·p.m. Dec. 1s demonstra- lloll at .,t Camlno CapiJtrano in Laguna w.,..i. olficlala will taate Ute tre1ted aewage water, Kymla aaid. The unit Will produce U million gallons per day · l)f tertiary -third slage - treated Wat.et at lhl: outlet and 992,000 1afionl per day after three year1. Coot per· 1,aoo gallona ol lrealed water ls estimated at 3t cent.a, bated on the million pllon dally rate ol treatment. Tbe g...itred·unlt ii priced at 1975,IJOO and the electric verafon COlb llllO,IJOO. Secondary trettment of sewage costs about 14 centa per 1,000 gallons to which .... \ DAILY f'fLOf ll OAILY PILOT 119f1' ,..._ BASEBALL-SIZE DOUGH CAUSES COOKIE TOGETHERNESS AT LA PAZ SCHOOL Mrs. Bushatz Critiques Cookies Held by Bob Casey; Student Didn't Mind Th• Size .. La ,f',,_% School • Boys ·cooking Up Storm By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 t1M1 DtiilY l"llol Sl•U than Mom· makes. , regular school year, the teacher must • - the 39 c~ta: for reverse Osmosis proc-If you walk into one of Mrs. Marilyn esslng woold be added for a total. cl 53 Bushatz' all-boy ·classes at La Paz eenta-per--l;000-1allona·-of-reclaimed----Jntermediate-School~ in-Mission-V·iejo- Bob Casey had some trouble following plan lessons very c3r.efully. Monday'I directions ~uring the cookie lesson, Mon-cookie baking was preceded by last Wede day. When removed from the oven, the nesday's ccoky batter mixing, and tbt cookies had-met .each-other -on the.. cookie--dougb--twauefrjger.aled.o.ver_theJlOlid_ay:~-- water. you 're liable to walk out with a cookie. sheet, leading Mrs. Bushatz to admonish. Others orr Monday b e g an preparing ~-'ll'IW<-eODIJ!IBres.. .• .,dlifllb-"aJllAl-4allllUmated 3t History teacher Mrs Bnshatz ha:;) a ·-:--Ctilt -per ,;IXID-gilloris-for~standard -se.venth-pe.riod..side.IJ@, She teaches the ''I said shape them the size of walnuts, fried rice which they'll cook tod_ay, buetll nor baseballs.'' · <ln a recipe brought into clisi by Henry COWBOY BANKER WARREN WILSON SADDLED WITH UNIQUE JOB r Trust Officer Work1 Ranching (48,00JJ acres) Into Bank .Dutlt1 Old West Lives Banker Roams It on Horseback While Mission Viejo is busy living up to fts reputation ()( late as a growing suburban area, not far from the booming tract developments whiffs or old west nostalgia r.lay be. found. 1 . Treasure bUried in the mission days of.- Rancho Mission Viejo in upper Trabuco Canyon still lies undiscovered 'neat,h the golden rolling hills. Cattle, once the mainstay of the O'Neill family, still ply the ranges of the 48 ,IXlO acre ranch that for 44 years has been managed by the trust department of Crocker Citizens Bank. ' And, the rolling hills have been the scene of the leathery, cigarette-smoking cowboy who pushes a particular filter brand on television. Beyond the cigarette and cattle brands associated with the changing Mission Viejo are space age brands of firms that have located on the industrial portions of the spread. Owen s-Illinois occupies 1,100 acres from which it excavates and processes silica for use in making glass. Thompson-Ramo-Woolridge (TRW l leases 2,800 acres for electronic research including the testing of the lunar landing engines used by the astronauls in the moon landing. Philco-Ford leases 879 acres for :or::::aw~t!~~nt extracts clay from 11,600 acres for use in cement. t Three other firms produce rock, sand tand gravel which amounted to more than. riwo million tons, last year. ' But the surprising element of the 'developing rani::h is its banker, Wirren 'wilson, whose lanky frame is asjikely to .\ie found atop a horse as it is behind his /!esk in La Paz Plaza. \. "I just . sign the ranch's paychecks,'' l'Vilson says. . 1 "Once in a while I'll go horseback f'iding to look things over, but usually ci( stake my pickup," the EL Toro resident uid. t One or his recent tours of the ranch 1proved more exciting than usual. "When I I 1Lihrary Complex ~ids Sought : Saddleback Community College d18!r1ct trustees plan to seek construction bids in February ()n an estimated $3.7 milllorl library classroom complex. : Trusties this week voted to employ a 'pecial library and education consult.ant. frank G. Bouwsman, vice president of MiaznkDade Junior College in Florida. twsman will aid planning -for elee- nic audio-visual facilities for the rary. ~ · I Tbe tentative date for bl& Was disclOll· Id by Robert Lowrey of Ramberg aod ~lli"ey. archilecta for the college. t The library<lassroom building will be Ile fi rst permanent building for the two- b.it_ commun ity college located in a fire was eati•g 2,500 acres .t few weeka · ago, I almcist got trapped·bJ 1 toUd lheet of flames" he said. Ironically, Wilson's chief . job i! eliminating his job by ending the·bank'a trusteeship. "My job is giving the ranch back to the O'Neill family ." That wasn't'always the.cue, however: . Mission Vlejo was once ·i slice of a 200,000 acre ranch called S a'n t 1 Margarita, dating back to the late 1700s. The land has cbaDged hands down through history bein"g <lwned at times by missionaries, soldiers, · politicians and bankers. Father Junipero Seira -supposedly baJ>- tized the first Indian on RanCho .Mi~ion Viejo, and, later, Al Capone was slid to have been interested in the ranch 's coastal area for smuggling purposes. The will of Jerome O'NeilJ who died in 1926 left tbe ranch to the O!Neill family and Crocker Citizens Bank was named exe~tor and trustee. Without the inhei:itance tax savings ol ·the trust, the ranch· long agn would have .. been sold off to creditors, considering Depression cattle prices and rising taxes. Since 1962 when the master plan. was drawn, the ranch's thru&t bail shHted froqt cattle and farming. Yet, depend~ on the time <lf year from 2,000 to 6,000 head <lf cattJe roam the Mlasion Viejo rangeland, putting on weight -as much as 700 pounds - before being sent to a reed lot for further fattening and-eventual slaughter. Someday, MJssion Viejo will have loet all touches with the past glories of beef· cattle and bunkhouses, roundups and wranglers, but the buried treasure may always remain. .. ·To save the treasures of Mission San · Juail Capistrano frorh an Argentine pirate who'd piHeDed the Mission San Diego, the padre buried them in Trabuco Canyon. He tied the key to lrtasure chest on a nearby tree. Tbe padre died Without lelllng anyone where the church valuables were buried. A cowboy 'later low!d Ille key and It pasaed throuah gentratloot lo a Charles Carrillo. Although he uaed mine delectors to search for tbe burled treasure, Carrillo never met wttb. succea. La Paz Students Set Yule Contert Music atu~la ol La Pu Intenne11la~ Scho<>i, Mission Viejo Will pftfonn .a can- .cert of Oirbtm~ muaic 1:1> p.m. Dec. 14. • Alden Esie. condudo Ille La Pu btnd, and the mixed choruses wlll be dlrteted by Mrs. Nancy Buck ind Mra. Wuetha. Austin. The combined mixed chorulet a1ao •ill sing at the IA Paa' Center tree llCbtinC ce~mony on Sll!lday, Dec. 6. tertiary treated water, although standard popular boy chef class. . tertiary treatments do not provide 8 She a.nd 25 seventh and eighth grade drinkable product boys daily take over the home economics Th GKD 1 · t ill tre t t kitchens for 40 minutes of culinary e _ eq~ pmen w . a w~ er mayhem. that Moulton·Ntguel Water D 1st rt c. t The elective course begun some time presently provides ~ the Mla!Jon VieJo ago as .a regular home economics class ~If Course f~ use m Jrrlgatlng the golf for boys quickly changed perspective, lmks. Mrs. Bushatz said. "The boys didn't care This efOutnt Js stcondary treated much for sewing." wute wa~, Kymla ·noted. · So the curriculum was altered and now Although the district is interested in the the little league chefs tum out pizzas, reclamation process, it is not committed brownies, cookies, hamburger fried riett to purchuing or leasing the process, and just about any goodie they'd expect Kymla emphasised "W • el Mom to make at home. · e.re mer y fro-Some become so . proficient they take vtdill& a place for the dezilonatr,uon. • Most Festival Committeemen ' Get Jobs Back over some or the cooking duties at home. John Grant, 12, made pizza last Saturday night for his folks . "Except tl;iat the cheese all melted together ln big lumps, it was pretty good," John said. Rich Fisher; 12, now makes spaghetti, brownies, fudge balls and coffe~ and claims his coffee and brownies are bett er Bob and -his partner Bill Ginger, also Warner, 12, wbo-llfted-u :from ms Mom'i 12, didn't seem to mind their oversized cookbook. • version of the "Super Good Cooky" Mike Bradshaw, one or Hank··~ recipe. partners, attests to the recipe's taste and Cookies are old hat for Mrs. Bushatz. staying power -"It's good, but it makep During swnmer school when classes are you full awJul fast," Mike said. 1 two hours long, her boys produced 180 Students bring in recipes from ~ dozen tasties to be sent overseas to Mrs. Bushatz sa.id. She screens them "ID servicemen in Vietnam . ' · With the 40-minute classes during the eliminate the requests for hamburgetl. which gets quite. expensive" an 4 Israelis Kill Arabs TEL AVIV (UPI) -An Israeli army patrol shot and killed an Arab man and wounded an Arab woman in tbe occupied Gaza Strip early today, an Israeli military Spokesman said. The spokesman said just before dawn U1e patrol saw the two Arabs acting suspiciously and called on them to halt. · "They ignored the order to halt, shot.s were fired and the two Arabs were hit," the spokesman said. duplicates the recipes so everyone caa try them. A demonstration I e s so a precedes .the student attempts. l Mrs. Bushatz rates her boys as beinl: faster than girls in the kitchen and be:tt.ei' at clean,..up. Brigham CliftOn, 13, .did 115 doesn't mind doing dishes after c1aal "We share cleanup,'' he Said. Most of the boys never cooked bet~ entering the class, but now enjoy putf tering around the kitch~n. Bill Gingflll said "all I ever couJd fix was eggs ant bacon, but now I can make pizza. I'v' learned a lot." Continuing the "don't change horses in miditream" approach to , .successful Festival of.. Arts admiDlatraUon, bot.rd chalrmaft ·William D. Martin tills week re-apppnbrted most of the Festival dlrec. ton to the committee posts they held last year. 5 QAYS ·ONLY! The Festival directon named to com- mittees ·serv~ 1s ·direct liaison between the ~rd ana qie_ working staff. Appointed J>y Martin were: Boz Office Committee: Dr. Harold Burton, cli:nntnoStuut Durkee. Cultural Committee: Mrs. He l 1 n Keeley, chairman, David Young. Finance Commlt\ee : PauJ Griem, chairman, Dr. Burton, Durkee and 0. E. Bud Schroeder. Grounds· Committee: David Young, chairman, 'Hal Akins, Schroeder and Gleim Vedder. Irvine Bowl Policy Committee: O. E. Schroeder, chairman, Akins. Producti9n Committee: Stuart Durkee, chairman, Dr. Burton;Mn. !(eeley. Publicity CommJttee: Paul Griem, chairman, Schroeder. RestaQrant C.Ommittee: David Young, chaJrman, Vedder. Scholarship Committee: GleM Vedder, chairman, Akins. Martin also -re--appolnted Vedder to ~pi;esent the .. FestJyal )!_the Chamber of Commerce Ind Mn. Keeley as liaison with the Coordinltinc Colincil. · College Plans Yule Progra11_1 The students of Saddleback. College will J)resent a special Chrialmas program tJU- ed "!> CelebraUori of Chrlatmas" on Fri· day and Sunday. . More than 12S ~ will take part In the presentation of traditional Christmas music by the Chamber Singtrs, the College °"""'··~liege BIJ\d. the Chorlc Jrtterpr<tatlon Readeri and the Modern Dancers. The -wOI be sta1ed on Friday at 11 1.m. at the college campus and on Sunday 1t 3 p.m. at La Pu: Intermediate School in Mis&lon Viejo. r There b no admission price for the . evenb, open to tbe public. Lewis Files Lawsuit LOS ANGELES (AP) -A II million ~w IUll . by comedlaii Jerry LewlJ over the alnlung ol hll yacht Puaycat haa ~ settled out of eourt. 11le boat, a Mo· footer. went down off the coaat of California aoon after Lewis boUght it four years 110. He and four others iboard swam lo safety. · ' ' WED., THUR., FRI., SAT., SUN. DEC . 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 Open Daily 9:30 'tll t p.m. Sunday 11 ·5 lantAmerlcard-MC1Jter Chart• I· • ' • formerly Gentry ltd Phone 540:1500 HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER ON THE MALL HARIOR ILVD. AT WILSON ST., COSTA MESA 540-ISOO MEN'S SUITS Velues .to $145 -.: .r SPO.RT COATS ~ Velu••· to $70 Alr SIZES .. .· . • • Al~ , SIZES " / ~ w..mn. for th• c,."' .,.,. to 0 1'1CP 10"1' CAPE KENNEDY. Fl•. (AP) -'Mia most upeMive, complu aclenUfl,c 11""1te ever built U.. In I"'* -.1n Africa or tho Indian Oceall today while• review boord "'kl to learn wllY ii ralJed to roach orbit. Tbe dociclled Orbttlnl -.Oioal Obaorvatory, DAO S, had carried the world'• i.rrest lplCI .. 1-. wtilch mJrl!l l>a'(e unlocltad many -•II of the UjliVene: 1'be NaUooat Aeronlulics ind Spece Adnilnlotratlaa blamed tho llllure Of the '91.S mllltoo project on • prctectivo .- cooe whldt did not jetllaon u planned .. Bad Times, four mlnuta alter launch bero'Moodlly night. Tbe JS.foot.tall cone, made· c f honeycomb fiberllaa, WU deltaoe<f lo protoct tho 11tellile durln& the'Atla«:en- taur; iocl<et'• upwar<I thrull threugb tht ·-pbere. - Good Earth llY DJtlt WaT WASlllNGTON -Althou!h th• economy as a whole has been limping rather badly this year, a few enterprises are flourishing. For example, nurseries. "Business is defJnite1y up," Robert 'F'. Leaorer, Yloe .,mldont of Ille Amertean A-l&tion of Nunerymm, r<ported • It wu .to hive opened like 1 clamshell, and the two parts WeJ'!...!e have ~J1 blown off the rocket by -.ive chl!-fges once the b:>oltec1 pushed above the at- mosphere. !ladio signals indicated the !lhro:id deployed partially, but did not fall away. There were these remJts: -The AUa.ctntaur had lo carry along an mra 1,000 poundl or weight fer the rtmaininl eight minutes of powered flight. That was too gre1t a burden for It to 1chieve orbital speed. !ew daya a1o. -When the satelllte's solar p1nels and "We've analyitd the reaSons and find antennae tried to extend, they were tntt ln uncerWn .economJc tUnu r~lricted by the sides of the shroud. Am,,_ ltl>d to put more llm• ud ThUI, ovon ff orbit had been reached, the 1nto 1me Uletr bpmedlate o•o , weu1d have been -• .... ~ b true even mliiu --rt\SA1il<J"'l!it4;1110'pounillil0111te oi Iietvy ~t In tho CllWl!ry. pfunfed back.to earth nver Africa or tho Vnder Heav y -'Security . "llorinc tbt depreaieo·a lot of._., ln<lim Ocea>l·_ll !'fGl>al>IY broltl up from , .. ,. 1.~ _,_ ma be a a!moaphertc lrlclion. crew ....., own -· •~ Y Noee sbr~ouda have been jett!JOaed IUC· tlmllar ~ ol laellnla alld ""°" cwfully en liundieda of Olghta lrom · Cape Kennedy. BUt there were three notable failures in the p1st. Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen CaG _Ky and his wife are escort· ed by 11ecurity officers in the Fairmont Hotel lobby in San Francisco . this morning. Ky was to address the Co11UJ1onwealth Club. (See Story Page I). 1 ti.Ii.a wll8n U1e PiJi1 1111 tooatMr, ltklnC iOW-IOil ud a«tiac ~ 1rom ShrlfUd structural failures resulted in destruction of a Mars abot in 196' and a commwdcatit.m Nlelllte l1uncb in 1966. Tbe """" nn tho decltlng target satellite ror G<mlni 1 cpeoed only hellway, prunpling utronaut Thomu Stalford to call it ID "lft8l"Y alJ.t&ator .'" Warsaw Alliance Nations Gather In Summit Meet Supreme Court to Rule On lmmun.ity of Solons ..... tllJnp -·" f.sDERllB 11 10 rifbl. Like a D1<111th or.IO qo my -oygtlled thal I tallo lllf funlly ... to • -le. t"11Mre'I a pd !Um playtec at Ibo Ill· jol,". Aid. 'l'lll roolly oot In Ibo .-I!« a ll)OVlo and wtth -le c:ooclltloN 'IO Ufto -I healtate to hi-In thoatu Ucat1 llJYflfl1 :• J replied. "~ I'll tell ~oa whet I'll dO. I'll drive out to the tlnian •"""'7 and bui> a niw flu)!erry iioih. 'lbm ft CUI put tt In tho .,u alld w1U:b 1~ snw." lfy chtjdrln J1jJllfOd up ud ~ppod t1*r hlD!ll. ''nat'i crut, d.MI!" °"' ot tlleY aelll"lod Aid die ... -ul4, "W• wwld rather iretdi a fluberry-fr.' !IMP .. to .• D)OYie lllll' ol' day ... io!Y wife uld. "but"""'' on )'811 aoinC lo find ·..-lo p)ant It?" "I°wu ~ of pltlllill& it out to ~ ftuberry~booh I bouiht llJI weolt In· oteq of ~ yiu out lo dJmltr," I told Jior, lllE .8,Ul>~:·wou, we arr get a thrill out ·of wa ~ ~ Oaxbtrry buahes -·but tMl· ·~a do)'llD)e actiV· 111. """"~ pin to tho movies I "" 111 . bl 'li!ml of oJ&!i!UDle 'II" tor14lnment:" "Good point," I nld .. ''Kaw about after ~ let's go out Ind ihine our fJ11hU;ht& on the f)axbtrry? Doe1 that IOUftd Uke a rw. evetting?" )'hey-all qreed it WU • Cl£11~1 i~ea lind I've never bilD eo ,.,war wltlt my 1 .. uy. Ever7 timt 1 bfi•I bome IJ!O(hor ftuberry bush, Ibo)' bold haMa and <lance l1'CIUlld me oWilc ·.-.. Mr. Met. G\Qr."' -Uri MOSCOW (UPI) -CCIMlllllilt Porty Seeretary Leonid J. Brezhnev and othtt top Soviet leaders left for Eut. Berlin to- dlY t.o attend I summit meeting of the Warsaw Pact powers, the Soviet news alency ·T111 11ld. ·Brabnev wu accompanied by Premier Alatl N. KOl)'ctn, Defense Minister Andtel G~. Fnign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko and 04ber hiah officials. They wtll meet with the party and aovermpecst le•den d. East Germany, Hunpry, Caecbollovakia, Po I and, Romania and Bul&arta. The 1ummU, an almost annual affair for the top leader1 of the Warsaw Pact alliance, probably will open Wednesday and will iddreu ii.elf largely to the pro- blem of West Berlin, the sources said. 'Ibe last meetinc of the Warsaw Pact rulers was held in Moecow in August to approve the Soviet-West German nona&· ,,....... pact. Now it ii believed the conference will adopt a joint policy on recuJating the pro- blem of West Berlin without which, as Chan~llor Willy Brandt ha.s made clear, the Soviet-German pact will not be sub- mitted for ratification. The Soviet Union believes in the • possibility of working out a modus viven- di on Berlin, Brezhnev said in a speech al Yerevan. Armenia last Sunday. 0 We believe it Is qu ite possible to reach an improvement on the situation of Weat B<rljo," -v Hid. WASHINGTON CAP) -Tho Nixon ad- mil'listration has to~ed the Supreme C.ourt a hot potato in trying to revive bribery charges against former Sen. Daniel B. Brewster of Maryland. The question is whether all membtn of Conaress have immunity from pro- ucution for ct1rrupt official actions. A federal judge who o r d e r e d Brew1ter'1 indictment dismllaed in October said the Constitution's "speech and debate" clause gives blanket im- munity. CongreQ, .by expanding il'l 1962 pre· Civil War criminal Jaw to include its own members, and the Justice Department, in appealing to the court Monday. contend the Constitution is not that kind of a shield. Tbe answer ls likely to come from the court in the Brewtter case and possibly in a follow-up c1ae involving Rep. John Ethiopia Recognizes Sovereignty of Reds • ADDIS ABABA CAP) -The Ethiopian government announced today that it has recognized the Communist C h i n e s e regime as the sole legal government of all the Chinese pooplt. A communique said the t w o governments agreed last week to ex- change ambassadors. It said this was in accon:lance with Ethiopia 's consistent policy "for a long time. both at the United Natlol\I and at other international forums/' that the People's Republi c of China ii the '4Sole legal government represeJ'tinc the enUre Chµtue peoplt." 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" .!llOk•11• • .. TP!tn'1'111 M .. W1lllll'ltftlll .. • t Dowdy (!>•Tex.) . A year ago Brewster w1s indicted on five charges of accepting $24,500 from the Washington lobbyist of a Qilcago mall· order CflDCem to irifiuence hia vote on legislation concerning unsolicited mail. Two months ago, U.S. District Court ' Judge Georae L. Hirt Jr. dismiased all the charges, basing hls ruling entirely on Article I. Section 6, of the C:Onstitution, which says members of Congress "shall not be questlohed In any other place" for any "speech or debate." Hart said this meant Brewster could not be held accountable In court for· his vote. Otherwise,. tbe jlttie aaid, anytime a ienator or representi15re voted against any administr1tion'1 bill be could be in-' dieted. Freeing of POWs Still Top Goal Of U.S.~Bruce PARIS CAP) -The chief U.S. envoy to the Vietnam pea~ talks 1aJd tod1y the United' States will continue to seek the early release o( AmeriCan prisoners in Vletnam "by all me1ns avai11ble to us." --Ambassador David K. E. Bruce spake at his first news conferenet,,;ain~ taking over in Par's the negotl1~ith the North Vietnamese and Vil!lt Con1 on en· ding the Vietnam war. He did not go into detail on wbat me1ru1 would be used to obtain early releue of the prisoners. Bruce said: "Hanoi ind the Viet Cong must understand, in unmi1takable terms, that their past and e1istlng attitude on the prisoner of war question ia in· tolerable. We will continue to pursue the twin objectives of humane treatment and early release of our men by all means available to w:. Our men and their fam ilies deserve nothing less." Bruce recalled tb1t he presented formally to the · Communist side It the peace t.ailts President Nixon '1 Oct. 7 pro- posal "for immediate and unconditional release of 111 prisooera of war on both sides -an offer <>n our part to release more than 36.000 of their .men, including over 8,000 North Vietnamese soldiers in return for probably less than 5.000 American and South V I e t-n 1 m e s 1 prisoners held by ,the other side.'' Bruce said, "The re1ction of the olber side has been totally neg1tivei They show no concern for their own mu and flout out coocern ro.r ours.•• Echeverria Becomes President of Mexico· .. MEXICO CITY CAP) -Lu~ Echever· ria Alvarez ta'les over 1s Mexico's 29th constitutionally eleettd presld~nt to&y in a colorfUl INugui1tiori cerernoey in Mex· kc City'• Chopllltopec Pork. Outgoing Pmldont Gustav. Dlu o.dlx WIS to hand the relns O( govtrnment 0Ver to E rrJa with the etremool1l prt ntati of 1 1reen, whltt ind rtd ... h emb ldered tn gold by artlwu or Tlaxcala 'tate • • 1 , ...... €Jaeer1, A!lful1Ja Italy ~egalizes D·ivoree -Actions - ROME (UPI) -Tbe Italian Parlla• -· Joclllllod div°"" In th1a Catholic .. t1aa U!V todoy and ID .....,.ted one mWloll penou were expected to take ad· v~ of tbe aew law. Opponents an· nOomced plw to repeal It tn • n1Uonal .., ......... Pope Paul VJ let tt be ltoewo throu&h a. .• Fed Reserve Lowers Rate· Of Discoun t WASHINGTON CUP!) -Tbe rodtral Reaerve Board bu cut ita key discount rite for tbe NCoad time in three week! in aliotber att:empt to revive the aautng economy. • .. 'Tbe lndepeodeot bOard announced the latest cut late Monday ...... lowering its dis-- CO!l!llJ_ale from s and II.to S *"" II per· cent The dilcount rite is the interest the regional Federal Rtserve banks chlrge . on Joana they make to commercial banks. Tbe discount rate traditionally has been reg1rded u tbt puce of overall govern- ment money policy, and Monday's cut w11 eipected to stimulate business ac· tivlty by reducing the cost of credit. The reducUon followed by less than three weeks a cut from 111" percent to five and " percent. Althou&h the twin cuts made it clear the federal remve was lranting Nl1on Adminiltratloa requests for an easier money pollcy, the aize of the reduction reflected a continuing mood of caution. The two reductions total onJy one bill •l one percentage point. One government economist said the 1even-member board may be trying to reduce the significance_ attached to cb1naes in the discount rate by rnak.ing such chqes smaller and more frequftt. The day after the earlier cut bec1me effective Nov. 11 , most of the na1lon'1 major banks cut their prime interest rate from 71A to 714 percent. The banks followed on Nov. 20 with an additional cut to seven percent. The prime rite is the interest ch1rged to a bank's biggest and mo.st creditworthy: corporate customers. Other ahort-term rates are scaled up from the prime rate. New 'Wa terw ay Ur ged by Panel In Panama Area WASHINGTON (AP) - A presidential a:>rnmission hu ended a siJ:.year study with a controversial proposal to build a $2.88 billion se1-level waterway across Central America within a few miles of the Panam1 Canal. But before a shovel ls turned the pro- posal faces major budgetary, diplomalic and ecological hurdles in both the United States and Panama. The AUantlc-Pacific Inter-Oceanic Canal Study Commission spent $22 million before turning its conclusions over to President Nixon Monday, calling for the can1l to run across Panama and parallel to the uisUng passageway. l spokesman that he was .. profoundly painfd" by passage of the bill miking divorce lega1 for the lint time in modern history in Italy. The pontiff hid spoken out against the measure many times. Within hours after passage at the end of long debate, ~ prominent Roman Catholics announced they would seek· to defeB:t the new l.Jw with a referendum appeal to Jtaly~s 54 million citizens. • The last public opinkln poll showed S2 percent ot the adult populat~on opposed to divorce ahd another n1ne peroent "probably" opposed. But advocates o( the law were very much in evidence today. They swept through the streets ef Rome in wild celebration. The first divorce papers were: filed by a 'TS-year'i!ld pensioner who said his wife left him in 1932. He paid the 80-cent•fillng fee in the city ~f Bari and pid be was seeking a divorce on grounds '!f long aeparatlon. The decisive vote in the chamber of deputies, which climaxed an eight.day marathon debate and 18 hours of balloting on 12 separate articles in the meas1l,re, Was 319 to 286 (Qr passage er the divorce bill. Since the senl!lte already has given ils approval, 111 that remains is for President Giuseppe ,Saragat to 1ign the measure - a foi:egone conclusion. As soon as the bill is publlshed in the official gazette -probably ln 10 or 15 days -it becomes law. Sleepless divorce advocates cheered, tossed firecrackers, danced around an· cient monuments and raced cars through empty streets when the passage was an· nounced just before dawn. Divorce will be legal for the first time in Italy since Napoleon surrendered rule of the peninsula in 1815.' Roman Catholic op- ·position blocked IZ other divorce bill.a in the past 91 years. End to Ameri can Suez Canal Spy Flights Told . WASlllNGTON (AP) -U.S. llOllr,ees say American surveillance flights along the Suez Canal were stopped more than three weeks ago, about the time the buildup of Soviet missile siles along the waterway's west bank Ca!fle to a halt. Officials declined Monday to connect the developments, but a great deal of the recent controversy over the roles played in the Mideast by the two 115uperpowers concerned the reco nnaissance flights and the missile site construction. • No reason was provided for the halt in the flights by the high-flying American U· 2 planes and officials declined to com· ment on reports that Egypt had made a tough protest about the surveillance. They did acknowledge the Cairo govern- ment called in U.S. diplomats to dil!iCUSI the situation. ... · The reconnaissance missions started when the original Arab-Israel cease-fire went into effect last June when the United States took upon itself the task of policing the troubled truce in answer to an Israeli demand. · At that lime the United States informed Cairo of the flights and urged the Egyp- tians not to consider the reconnaissance missions as provocations. The U.S. message said the Egyptians "un· derstood'' the situation. Lad11blrd i n -London · Mrs. Lyndon John son, who is In L<lndon on n visit . shakes hands i' J im Kay, a bricklayer, during her tour of historic buildings with L " Oartmou!JI (center). • · , • ' • ' ' • • • • • ' Ul'I Tt ... llli. • Interior Repor t Says SSTs Can Seriously. Alter Weather WASlllNGTON fAP) -Th< would chana• climatle con- Interior O.partinenl hu urg-· .dltlool In polar re&lona and .ed developen of t b e eventually around the tfobe. supersonic transport plant to A almllar environmental heed warni.l)ga that the SST question wu rilled Sunday by could serloualy alter the Sen. Wllllam ~lre (0- world'a we1ther... Wll.), who uld a projected Sen. Gaylord Nelaon (D-fleet ol 500 to '100 SSTa by the Wis.), said the report rtbes 1llOI could de1troy 1 portion • such serious que:stlont he will of the oiont ahleld ·in the u~ seek a delay lD the Senate vote per almolphert which Pl'l> 1cbeduled later this week. to tects the urth fro m appropriate $290 million to ultr1violet radlaUon. continue work. on SST pro-Rtlease of the Interior lotype:s. report ·Monday WU one 9t The Interior Department aever1l maneuven by both questioned whether w 1 t e r sldet of the SST controveray vapor from the MT'a ahawits prectdlnt the appropriations vote, which ls e1pecttd to be clole: 'lbelfl were other major developments Monday: -Sen. Warren MalhUIOn (0-Wuh.), moving to he1d off SST ,critics, introduced 1 bUl ba1mJni sonic-boom pniduclng flights over all SO states. He said transoceanic fll&:bta alone would usure the S S T • a economic succeas. B o e l n g Aircraft, the.primary SST~ ducer, ts based In his home state. -'lbe National Academy of Sciences, through 1 study panel, said it "ls not accusing the SST o( potenti1t crimes '-· --l, 1970 QUEINIE DAILY PILOT g ly Phil lnterlandl A nchorage Probe against the environment" ind · --"d th l~·I >#.. ... uw not recommend e pro- totype program be slowed L--------...;;.J:!;' :::wt:::~~~~~'":!:-:::J<'.:;' ~·.,' J DCB Design Problems In Prior· Crash Bared down. -A member of the Coalition '-rhe love letter you &re about to receive ia true. Onlv of Environmental Groups 1ald the namee h&ve been ch~ to protect my job ••• 1' 1 fleet of 500 SSTs would pro- duce sonic booms over SO per- WASHINGTON (AP) -Th< The safety board, National Traruportation Safe--unanimously recommended In ty Board told the Federal its OcL ZI leller 0 thal the FAA Aviation Adminlstration a issue nmlng of the hazard, month ago it had found a which i~ dlacovered while ln- cent.of the AUantic. -A director of the Sierra Club, 1nother conservationls:t group, cl1imed a fleet of 500 SSTa would use up all the na- Uon'a petroleum supplies in 20 yeara. 28 Years Ago, Inferno Swept CocO?fiUt ·Grove ,~ _, design problem which couJd vestlgatin& why another ro BOOTON (AP) -Twenty· hinder takeoff of nca jetliners crashed. on takeoff from New Shoe Quota eight yeara ago thla week the -the kind of plane which worst nightclub fire on record crashed on takeoff Friday in York. N Q swept the Cocoanut Grove in Anchorage, Alaska, killing 47. The FAA said Monday its OW kayed Boston, resu1ting in 4 91 NTSB investigators i n engineers and the Douglas deaths . · Anchorage are check Ing , · Aircraft Co., manufacturtn of WASHINGTON (UPI) _ ' ••-thin •-th .in the years since 1942, fire among oun:r gs, Wu'I: er the oca, have been evaluatin" -~ this problem with the ap-e '•u ee previously absent mem-department rte0rds left one paratus which controls the up the NI'SB findings. No formal btrs of the Senate Finance Une"'blank: t'be cause. yeara after the fire said: "All reports of the Cocoanut Grove'\! tragedy Indicate that tbera-i , was a panic, a rush for the ·~ main exit, and t,hen helpless victims feU and w~re caugbt11 in the: nish of others comiDg , behind them.'' '• PO PE PAUL VI WAVES FROM STE RN OF LAUNCH IN SYDN EY HARBOR The 7J..ye•r-old Pontiff Stumbled Twice When the Craft Lurched and dowo movement of the FAA .staltmr.nl has been Cbrnmittee voted today to re. This week the department plane may have contributed l.o issued, and no notlflcation has tain quotai of shoe importl in finally cloeed the books on the the crash -Of the Vietnam-a:one to DC8 operators. a House-passed trade bill,. re-Cocoa.nut Grove fire. filling in 'One of the victiml was :: cowboy movie star Back.i& Jones. Two others were a'.y bridal couplr married three hours earlier. Alt 22 members rrt of a party celebraUna an 1, engagement perished. bound chartered Cap I to I The NTSB invetUcatu avla-the line : "Cause of fire un-i '-and ot•·r tr•••~atlon verain" the committee's earli-lnternalional Airways jet. '"" •Al" _,...,.,..' e known ori&ln." W em-y, hut R~s olute, Pontiff Full Probe U1uler Way Ori De fector accidents. The FAA ill the ei-tentative decision. In the weeks after the agency which regula~s airline On Monday. the committee tragedy it waa usumed that safety· tentaUvely voted I to I, to the fire was started ac- ?he NTSB discovered durinc drop the ahoe quotas. Bu,t it cldentally by a US-year-old bus But out of the holocaust came new treatments for burns replacing the tlme- honored. tannic acid. Talks to 250,000 in Sydney Its probe of a Sept. I aub at allowed °'1Jlocratic Sens. AJ.. boy who 1truck a match whlle1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, New York'a Kennedy Airport bert Gore, TeM., Hmy F. replacing a light bulb, igniting "that the movement of a DC8 Byrd Jr., Va.1 and Vance an tmltaUon palm tree .. elevator can re 1 d 11 Y be Hartke, Ind., wno missed the The fire department study restricted by the entrapment meeting, to cast their votea: to-r.ejected this. . . -- SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) -Pope Paul VI, standing frail but resolute against 45 mile an hour winds buffi;ting his -Out- door altar,· called on Australians tonight to "behave like free m~n and never use your freedom as an exeuse for wickedness.'' The Pope spoke during a bi- c e ntennial commemorative Mass at Randwick race tnck before a crowd of 25U,OOO that included the aged, Catholic and n o n-Catho li c and Aborigines from S,000 miles away in the outback. The race track, twice as big as the Vatican, was stripped of signs of gambling. The Mass was the en~ -0f a gruelling day for the 73-yesr- old pontiff who occasionally showed signs of wearine!s at the hallway mark -0f his 29,000- mlle, nine day journey. He stumbled twice this morning during a boat trip ·across Sydney Harbor and was forced to sit down. Tonight he swayed OC· caslon ally in the high winds at A rmy Infiltra tion Of Proteste rs Told NEW YORK (AP) -A former Army intelligence officer says the Army gave him an expense account, provided him with liquoc and offered to supply him with marijuana to carry out an assignment to infiltrate a.ntiwar groups. David Johnson, now said to be a college student on the West Coast, rep:irted on his Army experience during a film· ed interview to be shown on the NBC-TV ''First Tuesday" program toni ght. The program presents Interviews with five men identi· fied as former Army undercover agents. The men charge that the Army has compiled dossiers on civilian protesters. Fatigue, Controversy . this outdoor Mass that was the highlight -0f his vlslt to Australia, first by a Pope. But he wS:.s resolute as he ncalled the words -0f his predecessort St. Peter, the fir.st Pojie, to warn again.st the temptatiOns of materialism facing -an af- fluent society. "You are slaves of no ooe except God, so behave like freemen and never we your freedom as an e:rcuse for wickedness.'' he 11ald. The pontiff sp:i ke in thickly ac- cented .English in the new vernacular Mass aiid many In the crowd could barely un- derstand him. He called -0n "all who bear nsponslbillty in your nation ... to take. advantage of this oo- conscience. Parents. teachers ... C(lmmunications media, men in public life -it is not enough to bring p e o p 1 e pers<>nal success: their minds and hearts must be opened to their social and religious duties." The p:intill, flanked by tou r co-ct!:lebrants, celebrated his ?i-fa.ss at a 40-foot high outdoor sanctuary erected on the grounds of the race course. of 1 foreign object between day. "After 1 canful study of all the aft part of the atabiliz.er When the -three voted. the the evidence and an antly,,ls WASHINGTON (u p 1 ) _ and the leading edae of the decision was 9 to 8 to retain of all the facts ptesented," President Nixon has ordfftd elevator·" the. shoe quotas. said Dis tr id Fire Chief John the Coaat Guard to o:plai.Q, P. Vahey, "the department within 41 hours, why a Lithuan-. was unable to find the conduct Jan aa11or w .. handed back to British Remember o1 thb boy .. ~ the nre." the Soviets after he. trlt-d to Satd Vahey in hls summary: defect last week. The While "No evidence of incendiarism . - •\ . ' DIAMONDS ANt>- ESTATE JEWELRY PURCHASED fair was "poorly handled." is unable to determine the s.i.rth C•••t Pl•u • ' •)" Hoose said it appeared the •f-He Spurned Orders, la found. The Ii.. department Nixon directed a full In-original cause or causes of this flre." lrl1tol •t S•11 Diet• fwy. ,., vestlgatlon Monday amid new B K H N 1 F t 1 Co•t• M••• MO-t06' crlUclsm of the l•cldent I• eca-"'" orea er·o li~A~a~llo~n~a~lr~e~-P~ro~ect~on~~~~~~~~~·l'li Congress, and an added note I I l.4J AssoclaUon study published 20 of explanaUon from the Coast '.l Guard. SAN MARCOS, Calif. (AP) Thomas, execunve officer of IFE IME l The commander of the -The declalon Do n a I d the Royal Marine lnf1ntry A l J Coast Guan!, Adm. Chuter Saunchegrow made 20 r•rs Training Ctnter at Lympstone ·• Bender, issued a 350-word a10 rlJked 1 court--martla , but near Plymouth. Thomas wu 1 statement saying It was alleg-he did ft for a handful of 11euten1 n t In the 41 GIFT FOR ed that the man who tried to Englishmen. Independent Commando ln defect had stol'en money from Iii. the frozen . f t g h t I n g 1950, one or the men Saun· his ship. Be11der added It wts retreat from, North Korea'1 cbegrow aided. YOUR FAMILY "felt that it was reasonable aiOaln Reservoir, the it-year-A corpor1I, Saunchegrow and proper that we not permit old M.rine. disobeyed orders was one of 25 truck drivers of our ship to be used as a mean1 and ataytd with BrlUsh Royal the 1st Marine D I v I a I o n of defection &nd that the man Marine commandos In 1 asslaned tempor1rUy to the 41 shou.ld be re tu med." desperate rear guard action Commando operating with the The incident took plaCe one against encircling Cb I n e s e Americans. week ago Monday, in U.S. Communist troope:. Seven Red Chinese divisions waters off Martha's Vineyard The U.S. Marlnea forgot sweeping south from Man. as the C-Oast Guard cutter about his brcsch of dlJclpUne churla attempted to lrlJI the Vigilant and a Soviet fishing but not the Britllh who have allied force -0n Nov. '11. ship met to discu1s the ntent honored him al a formal In subzero c o I d , Saun- of nou11der fishing In the cerimtQny In the commando chegrow's heavy weapon• car- North Atlantic. Witnesses said unit's meu at Blcklel&b, rier brought up the rear with the seaman jumped onto the England. new British casualties. Coast Guard cutter, pleading '"Thia is like i oil\g home for After the ·wounded wen for asylum, but the Coast me," Saunchegrow 11.id in evtcuated, 111 surviving com- Guard later permitted the Jeavinl b1J home In California mandos volunteered to go Soviet ·crew to come a bolt rd on mlfitary flight arranged by back through Communist lines and drag him back, after President Nlion. to recover some g u n s . 'I ' J ·~ ' •• ,, " • Abdication of Pope Paul Witl1in Two Y eru.·s Hinted beating him. "It'1 kind of a funny feeling Saunchegrow d la obeyed The White House said Nixon In me, home is wbtre your orders. he admits, and insisted directed "an bnmeditte and [riends are." on drivinR: the handful of f u 11 r e P o r t on t h e Saunchegrow, now m•rried BrlUsh. They foul!ht f o r circumstances surroundlnll'. the and the father of four, waa in-enough Ume for the other entire matdter from.led the 5?'st vlted by Lt. Col. P . R. troope to withdraw. Gutrd" an wan repo ..... as 'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijijjiiii!i well from the State: Depart-11 o:~!.::n~b~~.-;;:::i'!;00" 1A_ 're You PHaAvingRaT. y' ... • SPECIAL PURCHASE I .. VATICAN CITY (APl -A fast success.Ion of indications tn the past week has set the Vatican bu:r.zing anew with speculation that Pope Paul VI may abdicate in lW'O years as ruler of the world's 600 million Roman Catholics. Pope Paul's heavy work schedule and exhausting trips have left him tired. Con- troversy within the Roman C alholi c Church and challenges lo papal authority ha\te placed him u n d e r u~ual strain. And he himself ha3 fi:red 75 as the age when hi! prelates should sttp down from their Jobs. Ae will reach that age on l;ept. U, Im. No Pope has abdicated in more lhlln five centu ries. But somt think Pope Paul has be!'? hinting at abdication rt(.e]ltly. They see tht trio!t • recent Indication In the forced retirement or Curia cardinals past BO. In a decree made public 1 wee'k ago, the pontiff even stripped cardinals over 80 of the Hght to vote i• election of a Pope. In the mo.st authoritative comment so far on the possibility or Pope Paul's ab- dication, Michele C a r d t n a I Pellegrino of Turin, a friend o( the pontiff, said over the weekend speculation th11t the Pope might retire should be taken serioUsly. In an interview with the Turin daily newspaper La Stampa, Cardinal Pelle~rlno said the hypothesis of Pope Paul's resignation is ''precise· ly In the line or pastoral con- cern of Pope PauJ. who gives first place to the good or the Church." Nixon's pres 1 secretary, Coupled with the Manila Ronald Ziegler, added "At assassination attempt -a best It appean: this sltuaUon grim reminder or t h e was i>oorly handled." vulnerability -0f any Pope ----------- were remarks by the French-ll lVI ,AIULOUI '''""L ILICID hon! deen of the Sacred il)M~ fE &"12• College of Cardinals, Eugene 51' l?JRft(66' Cardlnal Tisaerant. In an interview on French O.Q. f!i. ~- television last Wednesday, • EE Wla\PJlliJ Cardinal Tisserant was asked If the Pope was thinking of retiring Instead of holding the highest office of the Romtn Catholic Church for life. ..., "VEL ..., •1• •RS "'I'hh::hasbttnsald,"the84-lnft l nftr..5 year-old prelate replied. "It MOTOR HOM !S has been repeated many CAMPINQ '"'•n •RS times. His slate of health Is '""'~ such that it could well be that TRUCK CAMPl!RS he has no need to take a dec~Joo on that subject. It Is LONG BEACH visible that ~ope Paul Is ill ~e VaUcan promptly A~RENA denied this. DEC. I, 2, ~ 4 ... 5 P .M. to IOP.M. D!C.5 ... IOJolO RAIN ••• NEVER DIC. I ••• Noonto IP.M. Mllft.11-llJ! CciuPUS-IZJ! CHILOlllll -12-IOI FAMILIQ Ja,,--11.00 SHOPPING IS FUN Soatlt Coast ?lua 1-.dby@). BmMaW arrAIL ITOta 1222 S. IROOKHU RST 3700 I!. COAST HWY. ANAHllM CORONA 'DIL MAR t• kt! i. V*• c•1 ..,,.,, n •• w. ~..,. c-1 ,,..,.. MELVl.(LE CLARK REGULAR $795 PIANOS $595 by Wurlltier ... l lNCH & DELIVERY INCLUD I D PLUS ONE PREE IN HOME TUNINCJ GRANDS , .... .,.. lflll1 s:n•hl "" ""'" ""' -c,..,,.._ •f ~11111 T.,.._t ttdlltla. c ... 1M11 lllt -· Mfft l'lllnMI tlMI rw- ....... .... ...... , l11h '""' ~·""­...... It JMr wrtnwll WllTIRfyt JZ NIW 1'1.00R MODELS 150% SPINm & CONSOL!$ WHILI THIY LAST ........ SAVI UP TO 0 PlllT PAl:MINT.PlllU.t.1111' 11, 1t11 CHllllST"AS DILl•lllll' GUAUNTllD SOUTH COAST ~LAZA COSTA MESA PHONE 540-3165 ' I I I 1 ·! I • ,. DARY PO..OT EDITORIAL PAGE • - Next: Reapportit>nlnent Californians are soon to be treated lo a political iipectacle tbat comes only every 10 years followinit the federal cehsus. - Reapportionment of state Assembly and Sen~te districts, congressional districts (California gets f!ve more congressmen) and state Board of Equallzahon districts will be an early order of business when the Legislature reconvenes for its 1971 session. And with it will come pulling and hauling bet\veen the two major political parties for partisan advantage ' In setting district boundaries. This is why the Republi· tan Party was so aJarmed over loss of its control of the Assembly and Senate in the recent election. California Democrats have the 'advantaj!'.e in the Legislature, but they also face the prospect of a veto by Governor Reagan if he views their reapportionment moves as too blatantly partisan. The state constitution requires thi t all redistricting be completed by the end of the 1971 legislative sessi.on. So what will happen if ihe t"'o parties come to a stale-- mate. with the Democrats unable to muster the votes to override a Reagan veto? The ans,ver is foggy. The .constitution provides for setting up a commission of five elective officials. But the validity of this is in doubt. A possi bility is that the whole issue, in case of a stalemate, would wind up in the courts. In the meantime. it \viii be interesting to see what, If any, effect application of modern met.hods to reap- portionment will have on legislators normally deter:- mined to favor their own patty al the expense of the other part.y. Included in the data were census bureau maps and tabulations , pre·cinct maps for all 58 counties, party registration a nd vote totals for each county by precinct. Also to be included. are data collected last April on hous· ing, income and education. The committee iii fOUOwing a guideline calling for the Creation or districts with populati.on equalityi devia~ tions between districts would not be exp~cted to exceed one percent of the population of the "ideal" district. The legislato rs expect use of computers to allow consideration of much more information than hitherto has been passible. ~But despite declarations that the new methods will "make this a very open and honest reapportionment," past history belies thls platitude. It seems altogether likely that the drive for political advant'1ge in reapportionment will continue, though perhap{i in a fancier computer-age dress. And while this is ~oing on, other. more pressing problems o( the state, such as tax: and welfare reform, education and pollution, are more than likely to take a back seat- again. Help the Post Offi~e America's seriously overburdened and faltering Po~tal service is about to be deluged again. But postal officials suggest the Christmas m3il avalanche of mail can be delivered on time if the gilt· aitd card-mailing public will meet these deadlines : • -Parcels destined for distant points. Dec.1 (today). -Cards and letters for disiant points, Dec. 10. -Parcels (or close in destinations, Dec. 11. ·, • ·' The Elections and Reapportionment Committee, under the chairmanship of Orange County's Republican Sen. James E. \Vhetmore. began putting census data nn magnetic tapes in computer-usable form early in the 1970 session. ---(;ards and letters for c~~in points, Dec. 15. \Vith all their other pro s,. postal workers de- lierve•a break at. Christmas tim • 'See? I do believe in certain forms of guaranteed annual inco~.' Ignorance of Geography ls Widespread lt is strange and saddening how little most people know about our own world, even on the simplest geographical basis. We are so thrilled about landing on the moon. but we hardly know the sites, distances, or relative positions of platts on ou'r own planet. Not only on our own planet, but our own country as well. l recall how surpris- ,ed many readers were when l ontt devoted part or a column to pointing out some obvious geographical fact.s about the U.S. that contradict most popular im- pressions. SUCH AS THE FACT that Reno. Nevada, is west of Los Angeles; that the southern tip of Jll loois is farther south than Richmond, Virgi nia; that Jackson- ville, Florida, on Uie Atl antic, is actuaijy 'Jst of Plttsburgh; and a few others of a similar nature. I remember hearing, yea rs ago, \\'hat purported to be a true story about a salesman, with head· quarters in Chicago, who was travelling the Texas terrilQry for his company. He, happened to be in El Paso, and the sales manager wired him : "'Since yw're in Texas, hop over to Texarkana to see a customer there." The salesman wired back: ;'Send another man out from Chi- cago; it's shorter that way." WHEN I MADE a memo of this story. Dear Gloomv • Gus: lf slogans espousing politics and pot, God and gun control continue to proliferate, automobiles will soon be merely bumper sticker accessories. -J. T. D. 'T~il f11htn n l1Kl'I n1ltrt' "llwi, llOf ltt<tiilritr tho•• •I Ill• 11tw1••"r. s.,.11 'All• '" _.,, .. GIMlnr GYt. 011tr Piii!. my own secretary refused to believe it: she called the Chicago fo.1otor Club and . learned that, indeed, the mileage ftom Chicago to Texarkana is 795; from Tex- arkana to El Paso is 808. When Hawaii and Alaska were added as states, there sprang up a riddle that kids were asking : "Name the northtrnmost, southernmost, e a s t e r n m..o s t, and westernmost states of the U.S." I didn't hear a single adult (myself Included ) answer all four parts e-0rrectly the fi rst time. Look il up on your "'arid map, and you 'll be surprised at the answers. THE J\tASSIVE SIZE of our nalion is still hardly ~ romprehended. England, fcir instance, is smaller than the state of Alabama, and only one·lhird the size of California. Indeed. all the British Isles (England, Scotland. Wales and Northern Ireland) aN! only tv.·o-thirds the size of California. And Alaska alone is far larger than all France , Gennany !both East and Wf!!lt), and Italy put together. . We think of "Indonesia," when we do at all, as a little string of islands tucked somewhere along the Equator between Asia and Australia. Yet, when Indonesia was put together as a nation some 20 years ago, it became the firth largest rountry in the world, lllmost haU again the size of Alaska. As fcfcts ,'none of these is particularly important; but as an index to oor ignorance. they should induce a lit- tle moon-modesty. Unforeseen by Planners Not long aao, it was thought that if only a law could be passed telling the electric industry how to run Its business the ques- tion of power reliability would be solved. ' Politicians assumed> the attitude · that electric companies had been gro&Sly dtrelict in planning for the future. They gaid that If the wisdom of government could be. applied to determining "·here and when the electric plants were lo be built. U.S. clUzen.s could be assured of a reliable: supply of t}:Us form of energy. BUT. TIMES CllANGE, and currently a t»st of new problems ha\·e arisen that have a bearing on the reliability and ade- quacy Of electrlc·power supplies. Of late, concern has been gro1vlng over fuel sllort-a~e for power plants. The Tennessee Val- lw Aulhorlty, the govemment's giganUc , w-fawred power generating and distribution comple1 In the. southeastern U.S., is desperateJy seeking coal lo run tt! irteam plant!. one observer declares, "Wildcat strikes in lhe coal rields, plpellnt breakdowns. railroad car lhortages, trouble in the ~llddle East. a maritime strike, or an unusually cold winter could prod uct st\'ere fuel prob- ltms af!eetlni; large segments or Lhe population." A.SPOKESMAN for the: ln\'estor-o"·ned Quot~ Don1ld N>rdta, Oleldale -"The beau· t1 of being an American ls the freedom to ctmose a way or Ure. Let's ketp It that wa,y!" ' - Gpest Editorial ( , electric industry report!I, "Some electric utilities, particularly in the: East, haye :;een their coal stockpiles reduced below desirable levels over the past year or 50, and they have round it most difficult for • ,·arious reasons to increase the quantity of coal they have on hand. One con· tllihuting factor has been new air pollu· lion C(lntrol standard$ in var.ious loca· lions which disqu111ify subslarltlal quan· lilies of coal for power generation. Laboi interruplions in the coal industry 11nd prcr hlems of coal-car avallablllly ha\•e also had an effecl." THIS UTUJTY industry spokesman, represenlinA the investor-owned electric light and power coml)'nles, urges adop- 1 Ion of a number of measure, to alleviate :i lhreatentd fuel ~hortage. These Include increasing the depiction allowance for coal mining operations, the development (In a crash basis of a practicable method for removing sul(ur from stack gasses, lhus opening up high-sulfur coal dcposils for power gent'ratlon. the opening up of new leases for nil and gas explor11tlon :ind improved incentives for ga~ e«plora· lion O\'er the ne3r term . i\lajor problem!I lh1tt threatl!n electric tl'liabillt)' today were not considered by lhe polltkal electric power rella bUfty plitnn~rs a ye1r or so ago. ThiJJ .'Jhow1 the weakntM of trying to manage an in· du.slry by government fiat. lad111trfal N11w1 Revltw • ' Male, Female Actions and Attit1ules Are Co11aple11aentary -. ' Background of Women's Rebellion~~ To the Editor: l am a student at Orange Coast College, and l have done a little research into the Women's Liberation Movement. I was curious as to what led up to this rebellion. I learned that at one time, women were satisfied to be purely housewife and mother when there were ' more men than women. The chief goals of the feminist move- ment of the 1860s were to change tht laws affecting marriage so that women would h.il\re equal Z.ights to property and their own children. Then, after World War II, the suburban housewife was lbe dreain image or the young American woman onct again. The average married age o( women dropped qulckly to the teens, and everyone was satisfied to have the worp.an back in the home . So was she, for a while. THEN SIJ\10NE de Beauvoir's book, ''The Second Sex,'' bro11-ght out whal was · becoming the truth . Women had been feeling indescribab ly lonely and empty, and it was a relief for them le find out that others were feeling the same way, They felt (as many still do) that the pre- judices that re stricted women's Jives to the home were still hanging In the air like stale smoke, only perfumed a little by calling them the "woman's function.'' Prejudice against practitt in the fields of medicine, denti stry and law is the reason most \11omen do turn to teaching, nursing ;and library work today. WO~lEN DON'T WANT to be known as the "opposite" sex. because they don 't want lo be labeled either strong or weak in comparison to the male. The "slrong- weak" dimension simply doesn't apply to · -women. Yet, obviously, the male's ac- tion s and attitudes are more aggressive whereas the female's are passive. Therefore, they are complementary, neither superior, neittier inferior , together forming a functioning unit. NANCY NELSON Cm11erl by Foob To the Editor : Every foggy morning wheil 1 hear about or see 20-car freeway pile·up:;, often accompanied by death, and picture my rising insurance cosi., t know lhe newscasts will annountt that lher.e disasters y.·ere ''cailsed by fog." Tbey're caused by fool s. Until iaw en- forcement personne1 begin slappiog the.c;e offenders with huge fines (they may obey laws to protect their purM:s, but not li ves), this slaughter will continue. Let's get busy and write Utose lttter~ to the. high"·ay patrol an!9' the police departments! LYNN JOHNSON Drug• 111 Classroom• 1'o the Editor: The Review of The News 1Nov. 18) slates: Health, Education and Welfarl!: Secretary EWot Rlchanbon announces B11 George --~ Dear George: f\1y wife insists you make up your o,.·n letters and Jhat anybody "'ho \\Tnes to -you-;., an idiot. Is that true~ SA~I R. Dear Sam : Get. Sam. 1 don't know If you'rt an Idiot or not. What does your ...;ile think? HERE IS YOUR BO NUS ANSU'ER: If the delusion ~rslsls lh11t you 11re follow ing mysterious people, 6eek ~feMional help. I ; Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should·convey tl~eir 1nessages 'in 300 words or less. Tiie right to cq11deme letters to fit space or eliminate Libel is reserved. All let- te·rs mutt include signature a11d mail· ing addresa, but names may be with.: held on request if 8Ufficient rewon is apparent. P~trv toiU not be pub- lUhed. that the government ls looking ror new- ways to control the behavior of hyperac· live children without u s i n g am. phetamines, as some schools and in- dividual physicians are currently doing." Congressman Cornelius E. Gallagher, recently conducted a critical survey of dangerous experimentation with behavior modification drugs to make overactive school children more manageable. SUBCO~UTTEE investiga!ors al- ready have turned up evidence that behavior-modifying drugs have been or are now being used in school districts in Baltimore, Afd.; Fairfax, Va.; Little Rock, Ark.: Minneapolis, Minn., and the states of Hawaii, Michigan, New York and Califofnia. The highly controversial ··~1aster Plan for Public Education in Ha wail." which was developed by Ralph H. Kiyosaki, Superintendent of the state Department of Education, is considered by ''progressive" educators as the blueprint of the changes to be made in the nation 'i school system during the '70s. It forecasts the widespread use or ex. perlmental drugs in the cla ssroom . TODAY 'S EDUCATION (Jan., 1969), official magazine of National Education Association (NEA), had an article writ- ten by Harold G. Shane and June Grant Shane, who are professors of education at lndiana University. The article stated: "Educators will assume a formal resporu1i bility for children when lheY reach the a&e of two. New drama will play on the educational stage as drugs are introduced experimentally to improve in the learner such qualities as personali· ly, concentration and memory ." f\1any parent! have protes ted to Congressman Gallagher that if children are given drugs in grade school that this practice will lead to their acttptance o[ stronger drugs in high schoo l and college. Write your congressman and let him know how you feel about drugs in the schools. JACQUELINE NORMAN ~I 11 Lal Tri.II To !tie Edilor: I .wish to express my revulsion at the ••trials" being sta8ed to· expiate the ~1Y Lill ma&Sacre, ln which the "prosecutor.'' studiously avoids asking any of. ttf" ''witnesses" ir they even saw lhe deren· dMts at the scene or lhe massat.11\ let alone if they ''atched them shoot the babies in their mothers' arms: laying the grQtiJ{dwork lot' verdicts of ''lruiu!Jlcient evidence." \Vhile lhi!I wlll serve to clcar_lhe Arm.v In the eyes of the a(torS and producen it will convict the Army and l)Ur nation 1n the eyes of the rest of the world , And I am ashamed. E. 8. O'NEILL 'l'lcrory' Conf1ulon To the Editor : I 11m somewhat conru.o;~d by the 1tepublical'l8' JntcrpretaUon of the wO('d "victory." Flnt, it was thelr "victory" at • the polls; now, they are claim ing "vie· tory" in the Viet Cong ·exploit of freeing American prisoners of war who had bttn removed from the area for at leas t three weeks. I am all too solemnl y reminded of the Grimm fairytale: ,;The Emperor·s Ne\11 Clothes." As a footnote to history: \\!hat if a General like MacArthur had not been under the command of a President like Truman? JO HN A. WRlGUT A Scary Tho11ght To Ult Editor: • Section 1834.S of the Civil Code. as amended, provides that animals, aban· doned after being Jeri-"'ilh a veterinarian, and for which a.ne\V owner cannot be found, shall be human~!y Cleslroyed by such veterinlrrian. One wonders how much effo1t a veterinarian is able to expend in finding a new home for such animals. Th ey are not in the business of finding new homes for unwanted pets. FROM THERE dn "'e go on to allowing doctors to "humanely destroy" those fe\V darling "old folks " \Vho are placed in convalescent homes and then forgotten by their otherwise "too busy" and "un· caring" relatives~ It's .a silly thought , but "'hen this can be done to a lovable pet that never asks anything in return for all its loyally, what can be done to a complicated and somelimes troublesome human being? (MRS.) BARBARA WlLLlA'-15 D11fehtt1e11 Care To the Editor: As a IJ.year-0ld boy in wartime Holland, 1 was wailing. hoping and praying for Sgt. Robert H. Whitley and the rest of the Canadian and U.S. Army lo come. . I remember a salvaged rad io, hidden under the kitchen sink , permanently tun- ed in on London in low volume, giving us some minutes of information every night. Pins and arrow! on a map. PARENTS STARVING themselves to feed us kids -fa inting for hunger in the street. .searching garbage plies for food and, laler, much la ter, enormous big planes dropping food. Sgt. Robert H. Whitley did come. Count 11 million Dutchmen lo care. J. JONAS Reader Jonas refers to tl1e discov- ery. of the remains of Sgt. \Vhitley la.st Ju11e in Overloo1t out.side Am· sterdom, the Netherlm1ds. by a la nd· owner e:q:avati11g for a building. l 11de,1itification was 111ade 1./1rougli dental c1wr,ts. l\lhitley. age 2S, was killed in October 1944. by a large shell in n. battle ''ear Am!terc.Wni. 1·le wa.• given a soldier's fu11eral Nov. 23 at Fort Rosecrans National Cemfl· lery in San Diego, where 11fs motMr reside.s. " • -Editor flespo111i ve 1\'avy To the Editor : It lakes courage and convletion to go against the grain of military tr1dltlon. Even "'-hen lhl! traditions may hamper morale and sllne enlistments. llowever, the Ude _i3 changing ln the Navy ;1nd undet...tnUghtcned letdersh.ip such as that displayed recently " by Admir1l E. R. Zumwall. Jr .• -chief of naval operations. th e military career mey become increasingly worthwhile. and prestl1ious in the future. 1 would like to quote 1 raw excerpt.I from a message of policy changes which. ~ have become .effective aboard my 5hip ~ and boosted moi:ale tremendously. · •·THOSE DEMEANING or abrasive .~ regulations generally referred to in the ·~ Fleet as '~1ickey fo.Iouse' or ·chicken' regs : ha\'e, in my judgment, done almost as much lo cause dissatisfaction among our " personnel as have extended family sep. ~· aration and low pay scales , .. . , "I want to restate "'hat J believed to be "" c.xpticit: in the case of hail'C)Jts, . sideburns and contemporary clothing' l slyl~, my view is that we must learn let :·· adapt to changing·fashi"on!i. · ~ " • .' .. 1 wlfl not cOuntenance the rights ~~ or privileges of any officers or enl!Sted .. men being abrogated in any way because ., they choose lo grow sideburns or neatly ~ trimmed beards or mustaches or because : pre~erences. in neat clothing styles are at ·~ variance with the taste of their senior!. • ... . " ... l ~ftf NOT suggesting a more le·.'." n1ent attitude toward irresponsibile behavior be adopted, but r do believe that i~ w.e cannot pern1it general policies to be :; dictated by the need, which I support to ·• constrain those fe1v individuals who do 'not " respond to the trust and confidence ex-• ; ~ressed in more flexible and less reslric· ~ tlve regulations. • , A shipmate remarked "It's wonderful!··.· Jt proves there are those Y.'ho are"" resJ?O~Sive tn the needs and will of the 1 • ma1ority of Navy men." JOHN G. H UGHES ·~: U.S.S. Kitty Hawk ~:A Aborlio11 ... To the F:ditor: . . . A.ccord1ng to ~ou~ past editorials a~ articles. your ed1tonal staff believes that ,., abortion is a· good practice for all' con-~ ccrned , even the unwanted unborn baby, · I hope you understand that ·according to-"'· th~ policy lhiS means that all un"•anled .• people can have their Jives terminated • . whether they want it ended or whether .. -:: they don't want it ended. THIS POLICY killed off 6 million Jew.!J -children and adults -in Naz i G~rmany \Vhen Hitler was in power. [ think you know that at this moment both' Hawaii and Florida have proposed laws for tern1ination of adult life -wilh or without the victim's con.sent. J . Rem.ember, an unborn baby doe.!I nb'f 1 : gi ve his consent. rrs still not too late tft11'1 ~ change your mind about abortion 1 especially since this pOlicy can be applied lo all,cf us -our children and all fUtU~IJ generations. · MRS. DOLORES H. KAISER The D.4ILY P.ILOT l1as never stattd tho.t it believes "aborliOtt is a good practice." Nor hove we polled ~i; staff on the question. -Editor I ----•. , .1: -111 .. ,... I Tuesday, December 1, 1970 T~lt editorial page of tht Daily P1loi seeks-10 '"fonn and sli~·· 1date reader1 bt1 pre1enting this nt1011paper's opi11iona end com· metttar11 on topics of inhrre.rt and ifgnificonct, b11 providing a I tor11.m for tht ezprt11iun ~ I 01,r readers' ctpinlons, and b l. ,· j prcunting tht dlver&t vit ... " poj11ts of ittfonned ob1ervet't ... 1 nnd spokesmen on topiet of the I daJl. ,, •l•,b • Rob•rl·N. Weed. Publi.sh•'1 j I ·-' • . ,. "' .. ·--. Charter ~n Spotlight ' DAILY PILOT 'Cut, Squee%e, Trina' .Reagan Foes· Hit Budget • ... -' • .. County' Government Studied by CofC SACRAMENTO (OPI) Democrats and a major state e11.1ploye group warned today that Cov. 1'ofi•ld Reagan 's new economy plan could pitch ''It ls time the governor rovemor dots to lncrtue stopped attempting to tool the depresaive tffectl." people with his favorite whlp-Sen. John R. Mills (0-SU plflM boys -welfare and Med j..i Qiego), c:onttnder for senat• Cal .... and sat .down with tbe President Pro Tern, said "It ls legl.s latiir& to work out real fOrtuna te--that we dldn't-pau solutions to very real flhancial the goVernor's tax refonn bllL By JACK BROBACK and C .. E .. "BUI" Woods, Signal °' t11e n.1tr Pllli s11n • Oil Co. public relaUons man, --ANA\fEIM -~' charter Huntinglon Beich:-1~ California lntG an even more form 1>f • government f or The' last time' the charter Orange County, dfscussed ofr idea was studied was from and on for more lhfln 1 decade 190&-11168, also by the Beam aaid, 0 We •creec! that the supervll<l'.S1 J>8Y _was {>Ol adequate but.....,.e ·did not fffi that Propo1lUon IZ wis the right wax to ~ the situa- tion." · Orange County ls U1e largest In the state not operating under the "borne rule?' pr<>- Yisions 1 cha(ter.allows. serious (iscal dilemma. • problems," Brown said. last year . We woutd have had State department directors, Republican Assemblyman to spend that mOney t.D 'is1in the spotlight again. chamber. 'I1le atudy group at The Orange C o u n t y that time decided that no Chamber ol COnuner<e , bU chilhi• was needed. meantime, i mm e d i ate I y Wiiiiam T. Bagley . of Sanr;b=a=la=""==h=is=budi==e=t::.'=' ==::::;: starlied implementing orders Rafa~l sa~d that the "ultimate aowu. TO········ a [For 'Ille Recor.d I I I I I ~issoluti~s 'f}I Marriage INTll•L0c:UTOA't' DICll.111 named 1 four-man tuk .forct Bealn said conUnued growth tQ study the charter govern-of , ~ county ·and increasing ment idea. probl11n11 may have chariged .Clamber President James ,the picture. Beam said the current con-He hu asked this year's troYersy of s u p e r v I s o r s • task force to report back with salaries has atimulated in-a recommendation within 60 tereat in.the ~t.er plan. days. Named to the study com-.-The chamber president said mittee are H. Rodger Howell, his group opposed Propo6ition San~ Ana a t t o r n e y , 12 •hJch gave supervisors in chairman ; Carl Kym I a 1 non-chartered counties the Moulton-Niguel Water Co . right to set their own -salaries. manager and Newport Beach Previously. they had to go to city co u n c I Im an : Carl the• Le&Jslature for a pay Schroeder, Orange banker, raise. l ••"'91 ..._._. 1• ,C11rrtn. lll•llC9 I. 111d Ptul E, • '°"'''' Jack 1M1 .Vlr'9lnl1 c t Publi hi s • ¥?:::;,,~;.:,:::i :'·::::°'c,;..., oun y s ng ~ u1t f urtm1""' 'Ela MM 111111 llavmoncf Ectw•rcl • 'Donnt tt, SUT•nne !'. and Joh!'I e. D • • d d b N ~::..'."~:~,~;;":\;.:::' !.. ·~''' IVI e Y. ewspaper ,Wllllls. 1toum1ry R. 1nd Otl'l)el G. ___ , 'I'htte of four surrowtding counties have charters •. Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Bernardino. Other counties with charters are Alsmeda. Santa Clara, Sacramento and San Francisco. Counties with charters were not effected by Proposi!Jon lZ. They have proYision in their governing setup whtch pr<>- vides for salary control. One of the quesUoni which always comes up in charter proposals is the number of of- fici'1.s, other~than supervisors which should be elected. At preserit, nine' department heads are elected -assessor, auditor, clerk. district at· tomey, public administrator, recorder, sheriff-coroner, tax collector and treasurer. Mud Delays Tate Trial t ed neral fund spen-· solut10n 1s federal revenue n ~ r uce ge sharing and a slate tax struc- Defenseman dmg. , ture elastic enough to proYide locluded in programs shelv· for growth without raising tu ed was a bid call for 1,2$3 es." new state cars and Lrucks· and But Democratic Sen. Alfred a $100.000 , cmtract f O'r Alquist (f>.san Jose), said it -a new was "obvious to me and many preliminary design of others that this year's budget LOS ANGELES (AP) -The huge p r o t o t y p e water was .spending more than it sUrprise-strewn Sharon Tate desalting plant. was taking in ... so, I think murder trial is bogged down The Republican governor, the governor ha.s been less raced with a $1$0 million • than honest." by the absence of a defense bl o t · bd td l .. tth' 1. 1 A.sse.m y e mo c ra 1c ~ttomey who sent word he's u ge e ic i. . •s isca year, leader. John M 111 er of. marooned in a mudslide. ordered a hm1ted, freeze an Berkeley called the cutbacks a The empty seat at. the hiring, certain constructlon 1 __ '_'cl-.;;assjij;ic;jeijx;1;m~piileiiiiofiiiijjwjjhijatij;;a~~~~:::::: counsel table belongs to · p r"oje c ts, e qu i pme nt Ronald Hughes 35 burly purehases, most out-of-stat-e DANISH fUINITUll lllDAL ll•ltTlY SWIDISM CIYITAL CHINA .. smL ' ' ' travel and on contracts with bushy-bearded lawyer f o r outside management firms. defendant Leslie Van Houten , .. More cutting, sQueez.ing 21 . and trimming could well have _00\ ~ fi}L ., ,1'rve5• Na•• •n11 RObtrt -FUi:LERTON -A meys several of {hem. 11 Death Notlees for the FuUerton Publishing Both groups, the complaints In 1968, the, chamber study recommended tbat-only 4.hree be elected, district attorney. sheriff and assessor. He failed to show O:p Mon· the reverse effect.~~ asserted day and sent word that he Loren Smith, general manager A~~ ,.. . · . of the California St a t e doft.i9"9~ '' Co. have now complied with a charge, allowed "satellit e and In the past. opposition to a charter has centered aroo.nd such recommendations With opponents charging that ap- pointing department heads is taking another step toward removing the control o f government from the people. might not make 1t for three E 1 A · t' " l t .,._., days mp oyes ssoc1a ion . Other attorneys say they'll could propel ll1e ~.'a le 's 2'40 E.Coa.sHl'"V-, Corona cl.I Mor .,Jb..., c. c11,f1~~1'!:. 1,, 0, 15751 federal court order to split a throwaway newspapers to crw1unt1 ~ ..... Mlulon vi.1 •. 0.11 ef $2.4 million antitrust lawsuit operate at substantial losses. dH !h. N-~r 21. 541,.,,lYt'd bl' p.ar• ' t ( bsld' ' h °' h •nb, Mr. 11\d Mr1. Tld cl!rktyi two tJs-agams wo newspaper groups su wng t em uiroug the proceed with discussions in th e eeonomy. downward .. boillJ 9 =l0 tw>'i:)t Tel : 67,~211/tJ judge's chambers about jury ,, He said the public should ~Iii& •t +oS leFA -Me#uCMr,c. ••rL Ml1' .Anna ~.ie Chrlltv •M Mn. into two separate actions. larger newspapers." °*'" $w1'91rt, ba11'1 of Mlu lon Vleki. Th · · · d R,.,..,, tonlvllt, t~••v. J:JO PM. 11.. etr revise complaints 'The complaints accuse the •u""' ~u. WlldrlacNr. 10 AM, both against Freedom Newspape~ defendants • of eliminalina instructions, but they can't be wa~ed that furthe~ c~t·l-;;;;,;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;p;;._,;;:;o;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiii9;;miiiijp;m;;-; make final decisions until backs will mean reduction 1n1 Hughes arriYes . This tbey the le vel and quality of say, could bold up the ~lart or ~rvices ,.provided by state summations in the trial now employes and vowed the in its 24th week. ' CSEA intends lo ''fight for •t 11. Nkholl l C11!>1111(' Ch11rcll, L1tvn1 and R'd -~ f.l 111s. lnllr-f. Mc1t11tlon cen,.firv. e1 Inc. I der Publicatiorui competition and attempting ta "Toto. s ... "'"' L••uM 1 .. c11 Mortu1rv. Inc. will likely be reviewed in eliminate the News Tribune by OlrKlon. 111:w1s Los Angeles-federal-COOf\-WCh-practicu..and att.emptlng.- "10•tnc:• M1r11 0-.1. tos w. h v Allf., before the end of the year, lo monopolize the dissemina-N d" B .. ......,,.,,, l tllCh. 0.1• °' deol!h, tfoveft'lbel" u r.n ar 11. s11rv1v..i bt son. NonNn "!· o.wes. coort"ofJicials have confirmed. lion of news in Orange County, 11c;. Attorneys for Ch a r I es justified (pay) increases." Man.son, 36, and two otl\er Reagan was charged by women co-defendants. charged .. Assemblyman .John Bu~ton with seven murders in August (0.San Francisco ), . w 1t h 1969, were puzzled by Hughes "practicing the e c o n o m I c failure to arrive Monday. In policies of Herbert Hoover. mid-afternoon. chief defense Pursuit of these policies could attorney J>aul Fitzgerald said well plunge California into a ~ ~:,,."~::,~.;_~.,.~·h1 C:::"'!.;!i: .Both-acli~-char.ge_yiola-particularly in the Fullerton thlldren: four 1r111 ... r1rit1c11r1c1r.,., Prl· tions of the Sherman and _!Tea. ·;~'c'lfl'!~l~ ~~~·l!":;':!Mi::i. ~.:i~ ·Clayton antitrust. acts by the News-Tribune publisher Ed v~ Mmior111 P1rk. P1c111c v1-Mar· defendant!. And both calf for a Ellltrom set his company's tu•rv, o ir.c•crsp.""M•• rising scaJe of-damages which losses of advertising and r;.,.11d F•rrn••. ~11s c1111 111vMldo, t.n may, by the time the lawsuit circulation re Yen u es at CltmM1t. Dall of dttlfl. Hovtmber H. t -··• •~ the total M~ 000 f lb t lurvl~td bv cllllth!rr, P11ric11 F. Hovi. goes o Cuw •, WAe .......,, a year or e pas o1 L• H1br11 two '°"'' Ge1"1ld o. F,,.,. claim to much more than the eight years and blamed the ~•. N~ Yorio Ro6Mv L . l"1rm1r. P1rr1., ".4 million listed at the time "unfair practices" of the c'1ted C•lll.; bn>lher, Ktnneih Ftl'IMf', Hew ~ '°art; four •r1ndcl1Udr.,., StrvlcH will O( filing. newspaper groups for ~ bl htfd Wtdflttd.ly. 1 PM. Sl'llfW U1un1 Th Fuller! b I llnd'I c"'"''· ,,..,,rTMM, £• ,_ ~"1" e on c o m p a n y , eavy osses. CtmeNrv. Sl!tiflr LH 11M e.1<11 Mor· publishers of the Daily~News "Our complaint! were hi•"'· oincklrs;..015,e:• Tribune in that city, alleges in ~further delayed because of the ~.n F0t1ler. "" ~J. 01 1•110 ll:Mtwood both actions that the Freedom death o_{ Freedom publisher R. si .. Foun1•111 "'11"'· 0•1• ot 111•th. No-and Ridder oi:ganizaUons have C. Hoiles." •-sa1·d. "But our Yemblr tt. Survlyld bV wlft, Htrm11 uic: 11>111. •Mm•• "Id Kelni: rno111tr, Mrs. purchased 'nine formerly in-lawyers have complied with £1!1•bllll Forsl1r; bn>lflw, Htllr'I' For-d de I 0 C I the Cede I nf ,,.,, •l1t1r. Ellt•bt1h l'111"111r 111c1 Lvdl• epen n range o u n Y ra court o er and we Lvdl• Lotol"IMM. CNHI wv1c• 1nc1 1... llf!Y.'Spapers since 1962 ~ are now awaiting a further ~=, w,~,:;;.,!.;~·nc1w~=~ have deliberately closed down bearing on the dispute." F11f1llV WHtsts !how wlllll"' to rnffl m.mor111 CCH11r11!11111on1. plt•H mnlrltivll to !ti. h rl Fortlw ,,.._i.1 ,.WMI, First ll••llsl Chutcll, 11415 Ml•""i., F111nt1ln Vltlrt. llAIPP P~rl H•rff. 0.11 ol dMltl. Ho..ltfTlbet 1t. S.Urwlwd bV two d1111hl1r1, Mr1. l.,.,,lc• P. Swtl'lllln, Cotll Mt111 Mn. L111l1• .-.ncl..wn. Cclc...00 Sprln111 lwo -s. Loult ,ol Mln,..11101l1, L.,.ov, Arlln11oA, Vlr~lnl~i 11il1r. Mrs. 11111.,, O.nborn, SHI BtlCht SIVtn 1r1P\Ckh1ldrenr lh< 1re1!,gr111dclll1dr1n. Fvn1r11 Hrvlc11 •ncl ln!trmenf will be ht!d !n F•lr~•ull, Mln· ""°'•· 811!1 Colli M111 Mwlu•ry. !er· w1rd1.,. dlr~IO<I; MILAZ:Z:O C1Hltrln• T. Mll1110. 4111 ltutllerklnl Or., Hllnllnekln INdl. O.lt ol dN!fl, NovltfTlblr 1t. Survl~td bV rnolhtr. Mrs. C1!h1rln1 L Mll1no; !lthlr, J0stph Mll1uo; l'WD 1l1ltrt. l11b1rt 1nd Jo- 1nnt MUIUOJ •r•Mllttenl•. Mr. Uld Mr1. W•ller $!1fferil •lld Mr. 1rltl Mrs. S11v-r1 Mll•uo. Ml" ol , ... Anttl!, 'Thurld1v. t AM, SI. 8-Vl!'llvrl C1thollc Church. 1-tunlln1lon lle1ch. F1mflY ll/9- 1n11 ""'1• wlshl"ll lo m lk1 m1morl1I oontrlbllllon1, 11IHU contrlbulw to rhl Amerlun Cu .ctr SOclt,.... Dlrt<1td bf fttill Ftm!tv Cal<111l1I FuMrl l H-. MILL•lt Stanford Co~ervative Student Leader Beaten STANFORD (AP) -A con- servative ~mpus leader at Slanford University aays be.. was attacked and beaten following a meeting a t Memorial Chapel on "How to End the War in Vietnam." The trouble started at the chapel meeting' Monday night, ""hich was addressed by Dean Robert McAffee Brown, who spoke on non violence, draft resistance and how t o a b o I I s h conscientious ob- jector status. White said he • would file a complaint with camPus police. Trial Date Qets Delay SANTA ANA _ NU<lle bar Hughes had called hiS answer; depr~ssion._" lng service to say he was "He wanl.s to lay off state ,operator Harry Maselli bas "marooned by a mudslide" emplo}ies and ha It con· won a delay of his Orange duilng a weekend 'trip to st.ru,ction of all capital oullay County Superior Court 1r~ remote Sespe Hot Springs, 130 projecb!,'1 Burton said. "This raignment on charges of ex-miles away. will further add to the h'b·r obsce te . 1 ·• flughes was quoted as unemployment and we\far-e 1 1 m~ ne ma ria • en· saying be would try to drive roles and will ultimately result cruraging lewd conduct and out "when police allow us to in a depression in Californ ia." conspiracy. go out ." but he said thal might Assemblyman Willie Brown Judge James J. Judge be as long as three days. Jr. (0-San Franclsco). said ordered Maselli, 311, to return Southern California was hit that Reagan's cost reduction by torrentiaj r~ over the direcltves constituted "but a to court Friday. He Wued 1 weekend, washing out many band-aid on 8 major wound." $5,000 bench warrant for the roads. arrest of Naomi Frances Hughes bad been scolded by Shru, Maselli's shapely assis-the. judge previously for being tant at the ., Tomcat Bar and late. Once he held up court for his ab.sent co-defendant on the half a day when he was jailed lewd conduct charges. on outstanding traffic war· U.S. Air Ace Reassigned Maselli, Miss Sims, 211, of rants. Santa Ana , James w. Davis Monday 's discussions In AIR FORCE .('CADEMY. Jr., 36, of Santa Ana were ar· chambers were deYoted to Colo. (U PI) -Brig. Gen. rested last June 4 at the Santa framing the judge's charge to RobiD Olds. the United States' Ana beer bar. Their an;.est.s the Jury, and the defense top MIG killer in Vietnam and followed the alleged exhibition presented a list of instructions a World War 11 fighter ace as of lewd films and allegedly it wants included. well, toda y .was named direc· obscene conduct by several of Attorneys said there were tor of aerospace safety at Maselli's female employes. heated arguments o Yer Norton Air Force Base. Calif. Davis pleaded not guilty tG whether the judge should Olds, 48, will take over his the charges and wa.s ordered grant a defense request that new post Feb. I. He currently to face jury trial Jan. 25. He stale star witness Linda Kasa· is commandant of cadets at and Maselli are free on bail. bi an be declared an ac-the Air Force Acade my , a Santa Ana police testified in complice in the slayings or position he has held si nce Dec. Municipal Court that the three Miss Tate and six others. I, 1967. • l ' ,l:HARMING IDEA " This handsome pendant or. charm is made of a genuine S10 gold piece. Matching neckchain is thirty inches in length. Both in 14 karat gold .. Pendant, $125. Chain, $100. We're in show business. Clllf'I• ACC-h lllVll.C A-lc•ll .J..,_ SLAYICK'S Je\\'ele.rs Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644-1310 Opeo MH. lflnl Sot. 10 to 9:30 p.m. Lou•• Mllltr, All Y. 1f 7ffl Commo- ll<lr• Clrcl1, Huntlnwton a"dl, Dtll of Offth, No .. eft'lblr n. survlvtd bv 1!111· bind. Arlllllr; "°"' Jlrn; ft!htr. JMtPh PoUc:ll; brolt\tr1, Joe, Antl'latly, Nlc:M1111. Jllhll Ind SVIV1111tr P'ollch; 1l11tr1. K1th- ""lnt llull1r. ~hit ~lty, Fr11Kt s O&l!1blck1. St rvlctt, WtdnndtV, 11 AM, l mllfll ClllJ!ll, tnl'INntnl, Good SlltPllud Ctmtltho. Sml!hl Miirtu.tr't', DfrKlorl. Ray White, a graduate stu- dent in biology who is pro- minent in the Free Campus Movement, an offshoot of the Young Americans for Freedom, said hls glasses were broken and his knee skinned when six critic3 at- tacked him. Two other speakers saw White In the audience and demanded that he explain why -the y claimed -he supports bombing; Vietnamese peasant! and why he infonned on a liberal campus figure who was arrested last spring and con- co-defendants were present ~-----•MMIJllJlllMJllllMM,___...____ .. "ORIUI J-Norris. 21 lucklllff\1rn l•M· Ne,... POPI BHdl. 0111 DI cffflh, NCVl'mbt• 21. S.Urvlvtd bv 1l1ter, Mr1. AllC:t Ot Jto11, of M<111trc11, ~rwlc:tt, Thur1d1V, 12 noon. Patlflc: view c111p11. 1n1 ... m1n1. P1clfk Vl.w. Mtmcrlll P1rk. 81llJ: Costt Me11 MartuirY, DlrKICrt. PACH•co Jo-h P'lthtco ......... cf Ult Lakt SI .• HuntinQ!On l e1cll. Ot!t of llH!h, Ncvem- tier Ill. SerYlC:tt will bl htld Thur~¥· 2::rl ff M, l ml!ht Ch1P11I. lnltrrn""'' Good ShtPht rd Ct1111.fti"f. Srnllflt Mi:iorllltfVo Olretlll.,. ', ARBUCKLE & SON 1 We1tcllff l\fortaary W' E. 17tll Sl, Costa Mesa -• ll,\LTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar .... OR S-1451 Cotta Mell ........ ml ... uu • BELL BROADWAY MORnJARY Jil BrNClw1y, Coltl Men ·, LI~ • '·McCORMICK LAGU~A BEACH MORnJARY 171$ Lapna Cany<11 Rod. 111-Mli • -PACIFIC VIEW 1 1t1EMORIAL PAU 1 Cemetery Mortury ! 1CUptl ;511 PKlftc View DrlVt Newport &tacit, Calllornta I SU.rJ• • tpEEK FAMILY 'COLONIAL FUNERAL I ' UOME . 1 '1111 Bella A•e. -:W•i.I"""'"' .... 19W51.1 • -FER. MORnJARY !:-+~• Bt1cla .•..... CM-1511 s;a demeole ....... lft.tllll I "'j e , SMITHS' MORnJARY I 11'1 Malo 81. I fluaUattN Btlc~ Younger's Successor To Be Told victed of mi s demeanor charges of throwing roc ks and damaging campus property. White refused and Jefl the meeting, witnesses .said. He was followed by around 30 people. White later said they while obscene films · were i screened in the Tomcat and while s eY er a I female performers engaged w i t h customers in various obscene a els. · I Meeting Slated tried to trip him and that he ANAHEIM -Thr. Orange gol scared and ran. The alleg· County branch of the ed attack followed, after American Society of CiYll I LOS ANGE p which he broke loose and took Engineers will meet at 6;31) » LES (U I) -reruge in the biology building, p.m. Thursday in tth Anaheim 1~ ~~i~n%ay =~d a ~~1-p;w;;h;;e;;r;;e ;;be;;;;;sa;;i;;d ;;be;;;;ca;;l;;;led;,po;;;li;'c;;;;;;e. ;;;;S;;ta;;di;;.u;;m;;;;C;;lu;;b;;;";,~;;;a:ur;;an;;;;l.;;;;;;:;I cessor to District Attorney I; Evelle J . Younger today, ac-MANNINGS BEEF cording to Supervisor Ernest E. Debs. s.1.ct ,,ocl11c:1 I The board met in closed ORDER · I door se.viion Monday to FRESH I discuss the appointment, but TURKEYS no decision was reached . AHO T1t1MM1Ho1 It was rumored that the •••LT supervisors were divided ~2 between State Sen. George Deukmejian CR-Long Beach), and former U.S. Attorney \\'llliam M. "Matt" Byrne as the leading contenders foi' the job. U.S. District Judge A . Andrew Hauk was reported to be a possible compromise can- didate for the $40,ma.year post. Also In contention were Chief Deputy District Attorney Jose-ph P. Busch Jr •. , Younger's personal choice for the job; Assemblyman James Hayes CR-Long 8 e ach ) ; Municipal Judge J am es DeGiuseppe and SU p e r I o r Judge Willi1m Keene. II ' . !~ J I .. ' .. '·. ~: '' o ..... .., ,.__ ..,.._tau•·"' Delivery bog ln1 1 p.m. 67~3510 COLD ••• NEVER &oat11 Coast ?Im llllTOL •IAN Dll•O NWJ. C:OITA MBA • Tllis Gih Keeps Giving: • •• -To Order a. Gift Subscription, Phone 642-4321 Here's a package familiar ' to discerning shoppers along the Orange Coast. It has everything ... a gift for anyone of any age. And it keeps on giving all year round, not just at Christmastime. · -In fact. we hope you don't wait till Christmas to open it. This package is filled with ads, photos: features and the freshest news we could find to help you enjoy the holiday season. DAILY PILOT . ., 1 u.fllt ~ L•••••••• ••W!.MCOICWWW••·------~--------------8 I " • • ,. ~ - -. ---.. ~ ... ........ ---. -,.._ -·--... ._ ~ _._ ~ .... --.:----, • ....... ... -· ' -.· .. • DAILY PILOT Tl.IHday, Ot<tmber 1, 1970 . ~ Rojas V .-ws to Walk Again••SoJDeday ' By MILTi)N RICHMAN QO~Y (UPI) -The last Ume l , liw latnni. Rojas be looked rl&ht up to the minute in bla: colorful C.Ufomi• An1ela' uniform and he was walking ·· 'rathtr brtlkly off the mound after 1et- lin& the 1tde out. That was in 198? when he ~·u tbt American Ltague'a pren\ler relief pitcher with sparklln& 2.80 earned run average, a 12-t won-lOlt record and 22 saves. Minnie Roju wasn't w a I k i n I anywhere when I saw him .be~ lifon- day alt.emoon. He wu in a wheelchiir. a quadrapleglc at 32, and his wife. Marla, had Just brought hlm a cup of water which he sipped through a tilrlw. · Minnie Roju WU a fine looking specimen of a man un'll last ltfarch 31, '"'hen a speeding truck hlt the car tit, his wife and tl!tff children were traveling In near Miami on their way home from a day of fishing iii the Florida Keys. Rojas' two daughters. Barbara, 9, and Lourides, I. were killed almos t ~ stantly and their father. who was driv· ing. suUered a severed spinal cord. When I visited MiMie Rojas at Rancho.s Loi Amigos Hospital Monday he wu in the occupational therapy roclm. He was sitting in bia wheelchair bf:tween two wooden tables and his arnis Were stretched out with a pulley. like apparatus designed to increase the mobility In his wrists and elbows. Some of that old fire understandabl)" was misainl rrom Rojas· dark eyes and the shoulders sloped a bit _where ' once they had been straight back. But. he still made a good looking picture or a man with a full head of jet black hair and almost classic f a c i a I features. Rojas was wearing a wh ite tee shirt, khaki trousers and the kind of shoes they call hushpupples because he said they a~ easier on his feet. and there was a small gold medallion piMed on his shirt a few inch~ below hls right &boulder. "My wife," the Cuban-born Rojas explained about the medallion. "She believes a lot in God." "Don't you?" I asked. ''Yes," he answered-slowly. "I pray ••• J pray every day ." Minnie ,Rojas was In the intensive care. unlt at BaPtist Hospital in Miami for 19 day1. The doctora weren't even sure whether he'd ever be able lo sit up agaip and he dldn1t really care whether he lived. "Nobody ever tell me ·whether I walk again or not now,'' Minnie Roju said. "I keep Jn my mind I walk again. Maybe this year maybe next year. lt will be. I move my hands now. Look." Rojas demonstrated he bad some mobility in rus two hands. "Jim Fregosi (a former teammate with the Angels) Is d<.ing everything for me," ll.ojas went on. "He is like a brother to me. He has arranged for me to come here from Miami the 21st last month. J don't know how to say thank you to him and lhe others who send me money and write cards. I wish io write and say thank you but I cannot write, you see:• A special Minnie Rojas fund was gtarted by Fregosi and some con- tributions still come in when they are properly addressed to the fund at Box 3820, Anaheim, 92803. Rojas doean·t like talklllg too much about his tragedy which occurred around midnight as he was returning from lslamorada, Fla. "Everybody has one moment bad tuck," he Says. "That was my mo- ment. I llke to fish so I went to Jslemorada becaUSe bone fish is good there. I am a mile , .. maybe a mile and a hell ... bf:fore Key Largo and all of a s::dden is coming one big truck the other way. 1'He '1 comin1 from the middle of lhl road and he~catch me on a UtUe bridge about 25 yards long. I was golng very slow but when the truck come I have no place to go. He hit me on my aide to the door. My car tum around twice and 1 lost my two daughters." The words came hard and Minnie Roju didn't talk for a moment. His wife, who w1s llsteni11g, blinked her eyes. There were tears in the~ / and she excused heraelf and left th,..- room. "You understand ... " 1'1lnnie Rojas said, watching his wife depart Then he continued. / "The truck driver ne~er stopped," lie said. ''He just/ keep~ running because he must ~/scared. J dunno, maybe he's still running." ' " " ·' Estancia ' Halos Wheel and Deal for Talent xilen Vows / Deserves Plaudits "surely in line tar medals from the safe .are the 6,500 brave souls who weathered a drenching downpour at Orange Coast CQ!lege Saturday night to watch Estancia Hifh fall to Bonita,t 1$-14, in the CIF fool· ball playoffs. -That's loyaJty befonct the call of duty. And while medals are beinJ dished out, LOS ANGELES (UPIJ Th e California Angels obtained center field defensive whlz Ken Berry in a six.player deal-with the Chica10 White Sox Monday at the opening of the winter baseball meetings and announced they think the swap could win the American League'• We!tern Dlvlsion title for them in 1971. "We have made ourselves a con- tender," !aid Angels' general manager Dick Walsh, pointing out that Ben")' com- pletes an outfield trio that also includes American League batting champion Alex JohnlOn In left and Tony Conigliaro, ob-- Wned in October from the Beaton Red l how about one for each player and coach c OO ·A, from Estancia. The Eagles had . a • · OW y ce dramatic turnabout from their previOU! campaign when lhey owned a 3·5-1 ~:::Estancia figurtd to be little belt•; Facing 2nd thls year. But coach Phll Brown and his aides whipped the Mighty Mit.s Into ohape ond Morals' Rap U..y surely did their school tnd their community proud . 'l'hey 1ost two of 11 football games. And those defeats were by a srand total of-1hree points. Further, those setback!: were to the ------WHITE WASH --- eLIMM WMITI firtl and stcond ranked AAA powers in the California JnttrscholaatJc Feder•· lion's Southern Section. Edison (No. 2) topped them 14-11 in the Irvine League operier then Bonl(a downed them Saturday. Against the latter . Estancla's IUck seemed to J:llJ'J the wrong 'way . On the deciding tw(>.point conversion the Bearcat. ball carrier "'as caught at the line of scrimmage but somehow wriggled loose and got to the end zone. Then in the closing minutes o( play Estancia blocked a punt, taking over deep in Bear cat territory. Howe vet.., an errant call (a pass ) resulted '1n an in· terceptlon at the goal line and the 1punky Eaiiteii were had. Nevertheless Estancia·s showing was 111 credita6Te as the turnout of people \\'ho sat in the rain. * * * Biii Bloom. former Corona del Mat High basketball coac:b, 1la1 altt1dy tarn· td 1blng1 around at b.. new place of employment-El Camino Colle,ge. For Friday's bome opener against Oranie Coast College, El Camlro drew oite or tls largest eyer basketball throna:1-some l.?:80 fans. A.od with the 1%-$3 wl.a ove r 0CC and Saturday •l~bt'1 tt-51 conqu.ett of Weit LA, Bloom ba a matcbtd dM: tntlrt: Y1t:· lor)' output bf the Warrlora last aeaaon. Ht says El Camino m1y be tbe best defens ive &um be'• ever Iliad. Wltb fom'\ freshmen lD tile starting llDtap, Bloom'• bu.tilt can only set better. * * * Man, ~·hat rain and TV must have done to ticket scalpers the p1st two wee.ks at the Collstum. bn my ~·ay in ·to the SC.Notre Dame game Saturday a guy offered me two seats on the 20 • yard line for $5-that'~ S2.50 each. And the previous week when USC battled UCLA, United Presa Intern&· Uonal reporter Art Hoffman came to the preu box shaking his head . He had a pair of tickets on the 50 and couldn't even give them 1way. DALLAS (AP) -Lance Rentz.el of the Dallas Cowboys, charged with indecent. exposure invol ving a IO-year-old girl, was on the inactive list at his own request to- day while he settled his personal affairs. The 17-year-old star wide receiver of the National Football League team will be unavailable to the Cowboys for a minimum or two games. ."He will work out with the team as time permits," said Cowboy president Tex Schramm. Schramm said, "Within the league structure, we are able" to put Rentzel on the "move" list. Dist. Atty. Henry Wade told the Associ1ted Press it will be al least 10 days before the grand jury gets the case. Th~ felony charge carries a maximum penalty of 15 yeara in prlson. Telephone c:al11 lit. up the switchboard of the Cowboy offices after word was releaMd Monday that Rentiel, the hus- b&M of television star Joey Heatherton, had been charged with exposing himself ~fore the young girl. · The offense report was filed Nov. 19 In 1uburban University Park. Rtnlzel posted a $1 ,500 appearance bond Nov. 23, Rentzel, who holds the Dallas Cowboy sln1le game record of 13 catches for %33 yards, made no immediate comment on the charge. A native of Flushing N.Y .• Renlzel grew up in Oklahoma City and became a high school All-America at Cassady High School. He later starred wilh Oklahoma University. He wu "With the Minnesota Vikings' NFL team when he wu traded to the Cowboys in 1M7 for a No. 3 draft choice. Before that, on Oct. 4, 1966, Rentzel pleaded guilty in St. Paul, Minn., to a charge similar to the University Park morals count. A municipal court judge In St. Paul did not sentence Rentzel' but ordered him to seek psychiatric care. The football pl.Iyer and ?l-1 i s s Heatherton were married April 11, 1969, in St. Patrick'• Cathedral in New York after what the athlete called a whirlwirid court!hlp rtarted when the couple met in Los Angele•. Lockman to Coach LOS ANGELES -The Chica110 Cubs announcM Monday the appointment or Carroll "Whitey" Lockman to the post of supervisor <lf minor league development for lhe National League club. Lockman, an ex-major league firlit baseman and outfielder, managed lhe Tacoma team In the Pacific Coan League last year. Sox; In righ( The S.for·3 swa p was the highlight or a Monday session that touched off th~e days or minor league meetings to be followed by the major league conclave. The deal overshadowed the a n n u a I draft of minor league players by the ma-. jors -which turned out to be the smaJlest in recorded history. Only eight players were chosen for a total of $200,000 -and the Angels were the most actiye team in that, too, as the Only club to draft as many as two players. The Angel-White Sox swap al~o overshadowed the first deal of the • meetings, a 1-for-1 exchange In which the Baltimore Orioles sent Yeteran relief pitcher Myron ·~Moe" Drabowsky to !ht St. Louis Cardinals for young infielder Jerry Davanon. In addition to the 29-year-old Berry, who is far more noted for his brilliant glove work than for his bat, the Angels also received utility infielder Syd O'Brien and pitcher Billy Wynne from the White Sox, tor center fielder Jay Johnstone, pitcher Tom Bradley, and catcher Tom Egan. In the draft, lhe Angels picked righthanded pitcher Fred Lasher, 29, who / was briefly with the Detroil Ti&efs and Cleveland lndi8J'ls, from Wichjli of the Amerlcan Association on th~ first round and catcher John Stephenson from Phoenix of the Pacif't Coast League in the second. The first player ~osen in ~e draft, by the San Dieko ,Padres who had first choice by vlrtve of their last-place finish last season, /Was 22-year-old lefthanded pitcher WUliam Laxton or Audubon , N.J. The Padr€s took him from Eugene, Ore., of the PcL, where he had a 1·3 record. E;attier in the year he was 6-5 at Reading, Pa., of the Eastern League. BOSTON 'S JOHN HAVLICEK OIVES FOR BALL IN IOl-106 WIN OVER PHILADELPHIA MONDAY. Anaheim Coach Guilty Undue l1ifluence Cliarge Upheld b y. League By ROGER CARLSON Of lht Dtlhl 1"1111 "'" After slightly over five hours of testlmony and an hour in closed ex· ecutlive session at Newport Harbor liigh. Sunset League members voted, 6-2. in favor of the Santa Ana Hlgh accusation that forme r coach Nei(Reed used undue · influence on an athlete. Howard Carson. At 1: IO a.m. today administrator Glen Dysinger moved, "That the Sunset Lea· g\le council find Anaheim coach Neil Reed, formerly Santa Ana coach. did ef· feet undue innuence on an athlete under section XVII . "Due to the complexity of his employ- ment 1 further move that the sanctions de!cribed under this section· not be automatically eivoked. The final disposi· lion concerning any penalty be placed on the agenda of the regular league mee ting Dec. 7.'' Anaheim and Loara were the lone dissenters. A second motion. passed unanimously : ''That the student in question, Howard Carson, be relieved from any jeopardy under CIF by-law XVII of the CIF blue book as charged by Santa Ana principal Fred Pasquale." Carson is the ~lebrated Anaheim sophomore three-sport phenom (football. basketball and track), w~ transfered from Lathrop Junior High in Santa Ana to the Colony in September. He played under Reed for two years (off and on) In the junior high program, although tlckeled for Saddleback High as a prepster. Further action against Reed and Santa Ana and/or Anaheim will be dealt with in an open meeting at Greenbrier Inn in Garden Grove (I p.m.) Monday. Reed and/or olher persons encouraaed her to move into the Anaheim High boun. daries. A key rem ark by Mrs. Howard in- volving Reed and the undue influence regarded the possibility of her son chang. ing residence from the Saddleback High district to Santa Ana, although the lad \\.'as attending Lathrop Junior High, a school that normally funnels into Santa An•. Because of a residence change earlier, however, the youngster was bound for Saddleback !Ugh. "Coach Reed told me to move into the Santa Ana High attendance area," but I make my own decisions. Witnesses for Santa Ana included athletic director Larry Arason, football coach Tom Baldwin, former player Don 1'1ott and May. UCI Hos~ Sonoma Five The dramatic co~lusion wrapped up a night of testimony that included Santa Ana teacher Ron May accusing Reed of asking him to procure a rental for Mr!. Mary Carson Jn the Santa Ana High boun.. daries. Reed denied the charges by ~1ay in the only direct confllct in lhe testimony givf'n. The Anaheim defense, led by attOflley Duffem Helsing. countered with principal Avon Carlson, Reed . Mrs. Carson and son Howard, Saddleback coach Ben Haley and Mr. Nick Roussos, a teacher at Santa Ana. Much of the testimony dealt with dates as lo if and when Reed had contact with the student and his mother. - By HOWARD L. HANDY forward as 1 llOphomore tnd lhe team's· dlcatlng both will see con.siderable ection. • To Be Back; ,. Miami Rolls ·~ LOS ANGELES -George Allen, once· fired an d then rehired as head coach of •' the Los Angeles Rams, declared Monday, "l intend to be coaching the Rams 1n .. 1971." Allen's statement came at 1'.1onday's ,, . metting of the Southern California Foot•' ball Writers. President Dan Reeves, whet dismi~ •;- Allen two years ago and then changed his;, mind shortly afterward, has said the,~ question or deciding on a coach will bt' ansWered following this campaign, the last year or Allen's current contract. '1 There have been frequent reports that 1 Allen would not be back despite his win .. r. ning record with the club. The coach took ,1 note of these rumors, u he said: ;i· "I think it is .. terrible thing for anyone '' to tey to sabotage our football team. U ' we were in last place, it would be some- thing else. "But here we are driving for a cham· ' pionship. My only job is trying to do a great job for our team, not just a good · job." . ' • ATLANTA-?l-1iami's 20-7 ivlctory over ·t At18tlta Monday night reYived Dolphin hopes of makin5 the American Football .. Conference playoffs. but Coach Don Shula ~' was thinking only about the next game. '11 "' •i we'll let somebody else worry about the playoffs," he said. "All 1 know is right.,;, now we're l 1Ai games behind Baltimore ,:. ~;e~.':'.e still have a chance to catch';· Miami's record Is now 7-4. good for se- cond place in the AFC East. Baltimo~ i!7 8-2-J. The Dolphins wind up at home with games against the third, fourth and fifth· place teams in the division, New York's, Jets, Buffalo and Boston. , • SAN DIEGO -Alex Trompu:, lathe~: of top-ranked junior golfers Aly and AIU' Jr., was found dead Monday in the fam~ swimming pool. He was 56. 1 Deputy. coroner Warren Chambers said··:· an BS-pound flowerpot was tied to hiit:-:· neck with a short nylon cord. Police rul· . • ed the death an apparent suicide. '" Police discoYered the body ifter the ~~ firm for which Trompas was an aC. · countant reported he had failed to sbo'W· up !or work. • . LOS ANGELES -The Atlanta Braves'-· reacquired veteran relief pitcher Hoyt. .. t Wilhelm in a trade Monday with the.·. Chicago Cubs. "'' Wilhelm moyed to Atlanta in exchangwc· for first baseman·Hal Breeden. who biif .. 1 ~ ted .193 wilh 37 homers and 116 runs-bat~' • ted-in for the Btaves' Internatiori'al .. League f8rm club al Richmond, Va. ",' The Braves also received an UQ-: ' disclosed amount of cash. • Wilhelm, 47, spent most of last season :· with the Braves, appearing in 50 games ·; for Atlanta before going to Chicago i, .. , September. He appeared in three gamu ~ for the <;ubs and rtni!hed with a 6-S . ._. overall record, a 3.fO ERA and 13 savq. ...... Football Polls '"' TNM tH·I l"tt, t. Tn1• UJl 9·0 1t1 1. Ol\111 SI, (UI 9-0 151 l. fltlltor, CS) 10.1 1fl'J •. Af\;tl'lftll t·I 4'J .f. T-•ff f·I 431 '· Nol., Dtrnt f-1 •U 1, Mich~" •·I 311 I. LSV l·J lA1 t . At!i, II. UJ f,O '91 to. Aue.i.n, t·1 7JJ l'IPI I "'· ~ ,, .. ,.. Of tM o.llJ l'llH s-.n d I di tll t ~in:rlMries are out of the w11y and _...._secon . ta ng JCOrer, w open I I / ~A~non geta under way toni&ht as front hne poaltlon. Sonoma State is an unknown quantity for the Anteater coach, ri.1rs. Carson lashed out at the council, ~aying. "Coach Reed gave Howard the dis cipline he needed . ' Reed wa! hired at Anaheim High June 21 as ·a teacher in the educationally han- d1c&pped program and also as varsity basketball coach. roach Tim Tift sends the 1970-71 edition Phil Rhyne, a 6-5 transfer from USC ~f the UC Irvine basketball team to the who red-shirted lost season, will open at post against Sonoma State College IL the other forward with Richard Clark 16- Criwford tfall on tht Ante1ltr campus 51, a transfer from Riverside Cily be-ginning at I o'dock. College, steMifli at center. A lttshmtn pttllmJn1ry e6llest with Troy Rolph ($-11 ), a transfer from ~a Pacific College will start. at ~:45. Orange Coast Collegt, gel! the nod at one Th:e Anttaten boast an lotJ:ptrltnctd guard with the other star1cr undecided !c!1m thi3 lellOn despite lhe rtturn of between two relurnlng squadmen. two •tarten. only one of whom .is lltted Brad Baker lS.2) and Gary fox 16--2) n the atartln,q tlve. have bt'n wagin11 a torrid battle for the Bill Moore, 1 m.Wtly 1111 .year II st.vtln& blckcourt post .with Tift In· • "I don't kno~· a lhing about lhem,'' he says. "'Thty usually have a good)>asket. ball team and I expect this oni to be a tough opening test for us." Following the opener. the Anteatrrs journty to Cal State {Los Angeles) Fri· dny nlglll for a game with an eXperienced Olt11blo · quintet. '"They ha\•e four starlers returning a11d ar' Yt'r)' qu ick wilh &ood board 1trenglh, '1 Tift met+s. \ "I had decided to move while in a seminar al UC Irvine. AJ a mother of a black child I knew I hnd to do something. "I'm pretty upM!t about the whole mat- ter. It wasn"t lh&t I was running, it wu to get Howard away from the crowd he was in. "l wanted to get out or Santa Ana. I hnte that place, I hate the pcoplt there and I hate the school systtm," charged Mrii. Carson. Her remerk.s countered statements that ' 1'1rs. Canon revealed that she had made up her mind lo enroll her son al Anaheim lhe flnt part of Augu!l, "because l'd heard "° m~h about Anaheim. I read the sportl pqes." Molhcr and son agreed they were not aware that Recd was the Anaheim basketball coach until arter he had ~roll­ ed al the Mother Colony, in September although both sa!d they ·hid hurd "rumorf" to that effect earll,r. '"• 1. l u •1 llt) t.Q Jt7 1. •-olll9$1, (S) ''° ,. '· •·fltotbr, t•l 10+1 116 •. t~,.. •·1 "' J, Art1"111 t-1 1M '· lf•flt, 0.MI ,., lil 1.)Mllthlftto t 1 !Of I. LSU 1·1 10' • • l • ii p ~ 7 E b c I i • ( t I ' t • ( l ' I I I l • • T €orona " facldes I Prep Cage Tllo prep bublbaU ...,.. la bere wiih-tpeninC _...,. leque warfare 1 c bed ul ed lonlPL champion • 1nd. CIF playoll parllclpanl, bu five of Mollo' playen In the fold and three of them are firtl-linl perlormen. • TutsdlJ', Dtctmbtr 1, lt70 .Out.look for Coasi ~rea . .. . : ~ ~ 11 cuard. alOll wltb v ... ,. Swick, a 1-1, tl)6.pound oopho,_., and the • -! McKinney, an Pfime forward -for 11.igey. .- / Tabor. a lootball All·Le~ In the C,..Mtw L<alUe pen-auard. 'defensive back. Tabor, at 1-2, nant chaat. rurt.blr t.D1wtcblc th• 1' a ooUd forward candldale. Mourdl • -111• Sttvo • Junior znonovam wlnnen llfb•iott Vlej• Fritz (HI .... 1. Rick Knllfln(J. are Chuck Corwin (5-10), M'· 1 VI j · u· h 'th 3 Jr.) and Sltve Kemper (f.3 . Wh. h (•t ) "".John 1311 on e 0 11 ;WI OM It ) • All l4 Oranae j:out area teams will.bave seen· i.ctiolt bx_ tht tncl of-tlie week with , By ROGER CARIAON loUmemen1' foliowln& for the °' ""' DIMY r1w ,..., dW'ltlon ol tbiJ month. ,,. All·leque returnee Jobn~ Fisher cw) 1a the •mainlla}' if "l!l>bs' baaketball team and he'• been operating •I opllt end In football while Junior forw1rd Mark Harmon (J-') ls tbe rrkl team'• safety and backup quarterback. I'• HQly's-itnt yeori coadllnc the Sailor vanity followtnc Deve W a 1 ltl a n ' • Jwnp to Sin Jooe St.ate. Haaey'• ni.aJor CMCe.rns are ~pth and lack .t erperleoce. Vince 1tna · • · -a"'" -·rtlurnlnf-N11er.-1Jl,O UL ' ' _ . . Harbold (6-3). Harbold fl1ure1 varsity lettenn1n Ind-a-horde. _ OUlul $.could fll\lft pro-:.- to play' center in the Artitt1' of potenUal stan from an elite minently TiMonarcb plus are , double post system. junior vanity team, II ei:· Joe Prtndersut (f-1. Jr .),> Up from the junior va~ity pected to field another Steve CuallJc (M Jr.). Greg. L o N G B E AC H EJ:cellent races are wn in Undefe.ated Coron• dtl Mlr lbe suneet, Irvine • n d seeks to move a step cloler to Crettvitw loops with arta its second stralahl CIP' water te1m1 Marina and Corona dtl pOlo title toni.j:ht when the sea Mar (lven the best ahotJ at Kings tackle SuMy HWs in a · c1rcult tJUu. 7,111 CIF semifinals club at The lrvlne loop might be the Belmoot Plau P!)Oi here. most jumbled of all with at 't1le power laden Sea Kinp least five IOlid 1urntebderl in boast « otralgbt victories, I!> the plctutt, Pushing Conlna c!u(iing 21 this year, del Mar wW be Edison, FOUJ'loo Newport Harbor and La tain Valley, Santa·Ana Valley Puente collide in tht aecond and Loi Alamitos -not gsme. neceuarily in that order. Coach Clllf Hooper has built In the Sunset ICl'amble, the Coron• machine around Marina's chief antagonist& 1p- the scorin1 proweu of Kurt pear t.o be Huntington Beach, Krumpholi and Gar t b · Wutminlter, Westem and BergHOn, a tandem that ac.. Newpart Harbor. Creltvitw counted for 20 of the Sea Leaiue teams San Clemente Kiiigs' 26 1oals in their romp and Miaalon Vie)o appear to over q u a rt e r n n a l 1 foe have outaide abOta' at that Q-e!ICf:l'\ll Valley. crowo. Others buoy with lootball ha .. been Terry McNay ($-1 111ard) Lyle Raymond (HO 11\!ard) and Gre1 Milli (&-!). a transfer frnm Arizon., who wu ori1inally tbougbt le be beaded for Huntin4!00 Beach. other than those prQbiems, the scene appears bright with anotht.r pair of returnees · in Bob Wright (IHI 11.) and Mike Arus (5-10 ar. ). Up from the junior varsity Is Bill Thomson (5-10 sr.), Todd Schooler (5-10 sr.) and a pair • of tramfen -Mlke Smilh (5-10 sr.) from San Jose al)(f Wes McKJnney (i-S jr.) from SOUlh Carolina. flltallda Coron.&.'s only outin& etc.er Here'• •·brief rundown on Whe's been the busiest than a margin of th~ pala each or the ar•'s quintet.a coach lately tn Or•n1e CC111t was against. Downey In juat -prior to tipoff: area prep circles'! midse"°n"(5-IJ a!ld the Vlk-CorollG llel Mar Try ~tancla-High'• Gary !ngs departed the playoff• ln Carr, who takes over the last wee.k's elimlnaUons -1-7 'l'bett'• 1n fmpoainc array coacbln1 reins at E1t.aocia this- to Sunny Htlls. of talent oa hand 1t Corona del ye.ar followinl Bill Wetzel'• HAS TOP AREA TEAM M1rtn1'1 Jim Steph9111 are Mike Nelsweoder (1-5, bulr:etball Grffl\ 1-2 sophomore and Ole'· sr.) Nick Gillespie ($-10, jr.) :Cce:[1e con· freshmJDte&m'tMl'P),Eddle. and Brent J1mI10n (5-1 , sr.). eo.ch Pit Roberti' free-Poett.en (1-1 jr.), i;>ave Nan.ry,. We•t•l .. ter David Myers, a M can. wheellnc quintet wUI be paced (f-S. Jr.), John Gorman (M, Jud1lna: from the _number of dld1te with good moves, has-b M forwards J e f I ar.) and Joe Kapech (f-0, jr.). returntnc lettermen and the bten sldeUned with torn ~asterson and Steve Ashcraft. Kiley, at 1-2, la tbl Wiest IW1'llntr ptrformance 0 f llgamtntl and won't be back The rest of the -uid wtU be varsity letterman w 11111 e Wutmlmter Hi.Ch's 1 t I I · il f .1-"" n-"-•1 m un orm or -or 5even compMed from seniors Rkh.le """""'rt& m e a 1 u r e 1 .... Sumel Leap champions, weeks. Prt-(6-0 guard), Gory Brown H1upert and Jell Kiley are $-coach Don Ltavey'1 crew ls Othe In F · • ---~ rs a111 group in-(6-0 guard), Kevin Shannon Cl-JO. the puzzle ol the clrcWt. clude--·David Kerr (6-J), ~ S), Frank Mort (5-3), Tim Desp;te M1t.tr De I' 1 Le av• Y '1 contingent im· Nichols ((6-2) lDd Joe Pollien Bracken (W ), Grtg Hebets"($-capabilities, Bllbop Am 1 t preued few durini summer (6-3 ). 10)' and Keith Mundy (l-0) figures a1 the ltronl•t Uriat· play but It's also a fact the Laguna enters 0 r 1 n I e aiong with ttveral under in An&elus Leap battlt. ,_ Lion mentor wu dotn, a lot of League competition this year claumen. uperlm,eptin& wilh Ii t l I e and Fair says he expteta the They are junior Chiig Citro V•l~dt• .. reri1rd for wiMiog or losing. most trouble from Sonora and h R b (6..0), 1 o P om ores o Unlttrsity HJP'• tint evU Is similar te last year at this Back from last year's CIF El Dorado. Fer1P150n (&-1) and •Steve baske.tball competitioa btsl"' time· with-tile OUer ranks tbln AAAA quarterflnalbts a r e • S•1t Cfe"'e1tte Rudlaell (f.41 and junior Joe Wedneeday at Million Vloje in experience. start.us Gordon Blakeley (6-0) • Evarui (5-3). The formfr pair HIJh (4:30) acalnlt Glft)n And that probably me1n11 and Terry Mtlaenhelmer (W), Coach John Baker has a pair art up from last year's Bee Hilb and coach John Driacolf; Huntington Beach,. will hive along with Junior virslty of senior returning lettermen team. will bt fieldln1 a team cornt another fast brta~ juggernaut 1tandout Eric Southwick (M) • in whicb to build a Crelltvltw Ont candidate 11 1 doobtful posed of no varsity ·veterans. '•. to confound the opposition 1nd who at.arted at center for the League contender with In parliciparit becauie of a foot-Bul he'• bl&h on h'il group'i fight it out in serious con-v1rsity occu.lonally. basketball and judging from ball Injury. He's 5-11 1uard c'"Ancei for the free lance t ' . f ••· ...... t ~ -.,,, The other letterman ls 6-l ·1 bl the Trlt I o I •~ en 100 or we: ..,......., .L<ele-e what is 1va1 1 e oo on J m av s. yelr with three junlon flfur'( championship. --~senior p.11rd Mark Pearson. campus, the Red and Black Ro.be r ts lan't predicting ng to se<liil""' ctutv fer thei d ti ( H Top pros-'•-for the varsl-be the d k ho f th h 1 -•1 f his a '' ' • A good in ica on o un-..--could 1r r1e • e c amp on.,,., P' rom &· Troi· ins. h• ts · ty include Jay JohMOn (&-1, jr. "t u It'•• I ·• ( aral lington Beac 1 Pf'O.'JPtt tS clrcu1 , gre1a on, c u,. •""" o v • Picin• thit tr:lo are a pair f th forward ), Jeff Siemens (&-1, t I i ... hi'! -~ closeness o e summer con-Brad McCaslin ( I • 1 'A Y e.xper enct I ~ c o;; ef' players out of the Tustin T~ Lancers scored with one Mar High wbert coach Tl.Ddy retirement second left on the clock to Gillis' crew la preparin& to Carr, an wlstant in Estan- upend Downey. defend ita perennial Irvine cia High '• successM football front.ttion with le1gue favorite jr. forward), Jeff Morrow (W, forward ) and Craig Anderson detrlment to hla team. Hl&h junlot varsity procram. Marina. sr. center), Jim Brigg (S.lO, _lS.10 auard) form tbe nucleus He calls Villa Park. Tultin Forward Tom Mulin11: (1-2)-·- The latter nipped tbt Oilers ar. guard) and Bob Mendou for Biker to work wrth. aild Foothill U>i" three teams iDd RU•rd Tem Walker (5-10)-' Sunny Hills coach Henry League championship.. entry, has been a man with Vellekamp says his team bu But the situation is clouded two joba 1lmultaneously. after playing to a ·ilt.andelf in (6-0, sr. forward). A junior transfer from most liktly t.o &el ln t.he art lbe former 1\iltin players-· re.,ulation ptav. I · Ltavy opines that hls team _ .... B Dlabl05' w1y. . while Misalon VieJ·o High bH . a good chance at bU.llnl 90mewbat wtlh standout junior Leading hls lfOUP of small Corona de! Mar lC it can ef-center M1b Stvier and 1 (the tallest is &-1 and the fectively slou1h on the Irvine lightning q u I ck tepbomore average ia more like 5-11) is League champjons' hole man. -guan1--.. (€a.sey --Jones)~ still all·league returnee G • r y 0 -J must o-vercorne mistakes that Royal OW. High, Rlu. auer, 1 Leading 'c:o1ch EI mer nortiallY pllsue 1 )'Ollnl team ..could be the decidin1 factor Mater Del · C011tribu~ Bruce MJco, ene ot" Combs' outfit is .football act and feell the squad should be for the Tl'itons. the malnltly1 el a•auccelafuJ Garth Wise, a &-G guard. He's at ita ~•k by the time the Allbougb he measures enly Reboundil:I proflciency and Diablo Bee team lilt year. . the only returnin1 ltlrttt from Jeasue season rolls aroul'ld in $-3 and weiahJ In th• vlnity experience are a cou· --Mien la a ail-foot.er. Walker . list year and plays tbe pntnt January. neishborhood ·ef 100 pounds. pie of prime concerns for wu Uftiven:lty Hlth'1 first .· on defense. the ex-Los Angeles Laktn: bill coach Jerry Tardie of M1te.r qu1rterblck in football and ;. Sunny Hillll has bad • nurainl lftjurie1. Orgill. balanced 1ttack with Greg Sevier (M) 1uUertd an Or1lll, a 5-11 suard·forward, Carey (49 ), Gary Najarian Achilles 'tendon durlq track wa1 • leading factor for (45) and Mark Newton (44) afid aUU hasn't f u 11 y Est.ancl1 last year whe.n the leading In goals. recovertd. He's practicing but Eagles. 1•ined their first-ever The other retumlnc let-boy ts a wperb ball handle.r Del "'Hi1h'1 bas'ketball team. figures to be the team Jeadet . terman is f.2, senior Wtt I". --Mtaa Bead an·d passer ·and could be the But the Mon1rths could be. the from his guard poat. Thomas. ~ neeessary spark for title con-slee.per of the year ln Orange Others in ·prominent pOSI· Up from the junior varsity Wllh ·four rttui-nln& varsity aide ration. Coast· are.a circle.s. tions are Juniors D • n n '/ •: Najarian is the hole min bu not been able to operate CIF basketball playoff be.rth. while the othe.rs are Junior 100 percent. He scored over 20 fodr Umes are Steve Brookl (6-3), Jim .._arter1 and bright prospects Bauer was 1 varsity start.er Tardie has four lettermen Stuart, Jack Wiesenber& (8- Worthy (6-2 ) and Darrell up from I.ht junior varsity, ror Royal Oak11 as a from last year's CIF playoff 0), Steve O'Neill (&-1) and '.· Walker (6-1). A bright pro-coach Jtrry Fair's Laguna sophomore. enlry th1t turned in a hiahly guard Jeff $lyeri, • 5-10 ,. forwards . Jones, who fiaures In the Jo league action. Goalie Gary Farris i1 an tX· Sea -Kinas' lllrtinl lineup S tv er 1 I other k e Y spect is 6-2 Tom Crunk, the Beach Hl&h basketball team Adding to that ts Steve. respectable ll.f record. sophotnore. Bees' MVP. · appeara t.o have the neceaaary Kalota. a &-7~ center up. from Return.in& to the Monarch A freshman Who ls 1iven a Perienced hand and bu block-plans iln't opeet.ed to\be-lt performers, however, have ed 17 of 33 penalty shots dut· full 1irt:nsth unW. Jan~bttn tied up in ~e foot~ll ing the season, including one the earliest. prorram. Included tn that hst g inst Downey and three Auumlng theae two will be are Lee Frledendorf (5-9), :,:inst Garden Grove in the healthy for Irvine baWe, the Curt Thome (~10), Hank playoffs. c.orona dtl Mar _ e1preu, Moore (&-1), Bob Kaiser (S-1) Also figuring in Combs' tools t.o fubton a highly tlie junior vanity wltb fat fold I.I start.er Dave Kilty, a 6-good chance It mlklnc the plans art Scott Whitfield (r.-7), respectable IUIOD. · brtak speed. 2 1uard, who can shoot well varsity ls 1-o~Paul Simon, wbe · Lee Ordway (W), Bob Ea&Jt It's Fair'• aecond yw at Ot.ben in Triton pl1ns are and hu 1ood mom and a bu demOftltratad I• o d Rounding out the st&rtinl dominated by a me-to-man and Bryan Steward ($-11) .. Lancer crew are senlora Bill -pressing defense and a Supportln1 that cast Is Cr1ig McGarvey, Dive Ball and deliberate offemive 1ty1 e , Hays (5-S). Jeff Zelsdorf (5-8) (6-0) and Ray Menefee (1-1). the Artist helm and he's cer-Howard Va.lore (f-3¥£ senior pauina hand. 1h00ting, The Oiler machine sustained taln hls tUm will upsrade ita forward) and Pete Sellen ('-0 And blckin1 him art Ptte Forward Jtff Thompson (g. a severe aetback when Greg S-21 season of last ye.at. guard). Roberta (son of Million Viejo l Y.i ) llso ncures in Dri1COU'1 Dirk McCuen. figures as the early seuon and Doug Confer . (6-0). Bul they'll be up 1gainat favorite for league honor1. The Easies will rely on a their most severe: test of the Finl team A J I • I { v i n e fast bre1k offense and a stic~ year when Hooper's machine League forwat,cl ~ KJlllan man·lf>-.man preu to stay 1n begins !Lii releo tless offensive (6-31i\) iJ back' ud ready to contenhon with pre«ason tla k seared a r o q n d roll. He averase 11 po1nt1 per f1vorites Corona &I . Mar, Mills, who "'s at Huntinston Three of his four returning Two others who figure In High coach Pit Roberta), plarui. -then moved te Arizona -1tarten are juniors 11 Fair Baker's hopes are Steve Cope guard Bob Haupert ( a n University will employ the came b1ck in the area but in continues his bid to return ($-9 senior guard) and Oiri1 alternate au•rd last year bel-re~ene actton offense 111.illllt the Edison High boundaries. Laauna buketblll t.o pro-Ellinor (6-31,A, senior ). ter known for his football ex-the man-to-man prea llld will C o m b 1 , a n e t e r n a I minence. Bak.tr opines that perh1ps ploita 1t quarterback), and try to everlold one 1iU pessimist, ranks Mar In a , 1bt only Hnior Is Bart Villa Park is the team le beat Kiley's brether, Jeff, 1 5-10 a1aln1t the iofte defen1e1. · Newport ..Harbor, Westminster '°"'•,..:.:::_.:.::.:_.:.::..:.::.....::....::....:: ____________ _:_ __ __: _ _:_ __ -,-....c-,--------.. and Western (in th.It erder) 11 the most serious candidates ~r~eson and Krumpholz. iame and wu· the team'• Edison, Fountain Valley, San- eomplemenilng thit CdM Jeidlng rebmmder. ta Ana Valley and Los pair are Tom Bougbey, cap-Mark Gripby1 (g..J) 11 a Alamitos. t.aln Greg Lolli. J 0 h n oerious ll""rd-lorward first Fou11tal11 V alleu tor the league crown. Holyoake, Rich Hyl1nd, T~y team c~dld•te and bolstering Oliver and Jay Dwyer. that unit is a crac_k group of And a couple of senior junior varsity players. i oalies with near-equal ef· Puahing Sevier at ~nter ls fectiveness, are Rick Walker John Sumner (&-4) while Karl and Mark Otto. Killefer (1-1) ind Tom Quee.n (5-11) could work 1n at 1uard. Newpor~ La Puente In Semis LONG BEACH -Newport Harbor High's water pOlo tasl<master, Bill Barnett, hid atti.dfastly maintained that anything short of a berth tn the CIF semlfinah: at Belmont Plaia here would turn the SailOr seaaOri to disaster. Forward Rick Longpre (S-1) is alao a serious contender to make ami.· •lartilll ilntuP· Gillis indicates his team INl' be stepping up the speed 10mewhat m offensive plans but his qulnt<t's bl11eat uset will apin be defense. Corona del Mar figures to have better board 1trencth and e1perienct than the team that won tile lta1Ue title tut ye1r. CoJta Meaa . Marhta Coach Dave Brown of Foun-There's only 1 pair of taln Valley High says he has -stir'ters returnini to the the best basketball team in the Marina baaketblll fold but the achool_'s five-year history. bn Vike ship ~appears to be the tap and the ttc0nd year Baron heavy f~~orite t.o cipture the mentor appears t.o _ha~e ample SunSet League. title this year reaBOns for t~e optunl!m. despite expec~ stron1 ep-lncl~ded _in Fountain position from Newp erl Valleys lineup are , four Harbor, Western, Huntin&ton starten from last yeai; II tough Beach and Westminster. contingent plus a host of other Coach Jim s t e p h e n 1 , key personnel. however is quick le let you At the top of the list is know ho°w aood everyone elle forward Dave Lynch (S-3 ), is. .,_ who Is an excellent 1bot from Stephens .,id his Viking1 ap- outside, along with 1tarters pear to have i m p 0 1 1 n 1 George Gerber (~7 sr. guard), atrength. Rick Powe.r (6-1 1r. guard), Leading Marini is two-year Ken Shibata (6-2 1r. center) starter Kipp Baird, 1 .. a and Bill Kristinat (6-1 ar. forward who averaged ti forw1rd ). points per game Jut -xt•r and Followin1 a highly sue-was an All.SUnset Leasue cessful summer program the choice. Barons appear to have the Another starter Is senior nece11ary muscle, talent and guard and playm1ker Bill cohesiveness to be In 1erlous AfcGuire (6-1). a6on .·. Now that the Sunset Ltague champions have made it by virtue of elimination victories over Cal High and Lakewood. the lfars will be tryln1 to 1et another chance at defendlnl champion Corona del Mar. Coach Emil Neeme, in his second yw at Costa Mesa, will be trying to mold a cbam· pion1hlp contender in the Irvine League with 1 1m1t- terlnt: of varsity returnees and several promJsing candidates. contention for the league Andy Thurm 111 the third let· ... But to gain that goal the Sailer• m u 1 t get by an especlally feisty La Puente crew, tonight at Belmont Pina In a 9 o'clock game, following lM 7:30 Coroa1 dd Mar-Sunny Hills tiff. 11\e Warriors, gaining their first ever semifinals berth, sho'fid poise, deplh, a spark!· lng11ole man in John Hale ·~~ uncanny ability from 1oahe Jaclc Doyle In dilpoalng of favOred Co.rt• Mela In the quarterfinals. Coac'h Dorton Steinberger credits-the efforts of..bls bench (four starlel'I and the first two replacementa hid fouled oul before the W1rrlon c1me from 1 6"" deficit to nail Mu•, 7-&) and the team's 1blllty to come hick under 1dvmlty for Ila startling showl.,.:. I.II Puente h•• IMl only twiee thl• year -to Cost• Mees ind Upl•nd -yet ume baC!k to' defeat both In ensuln1 eneountert. ''Wt 'don 't hive 1 lot of ti~ Ind IOrnt of our kids are-pretty &mill. 10 we set caulttt fooling quite a bit. hf1ybe we Jver.p 1rouncl 2S fouls per 11me," 11y1 the Wan1ot' mentor. Newport, me1nwhile, mull 10 ;11111\ without act John Wlfcox (eye Injury) and will bt 1depfndent on the man·t.o- man prtu that nverwhelmed LdewaOCI In the quarterfln1l1. • Leadin1 Neeme'1 candld1te1 are Chuck Bridg~ ($-11, 1r. 11Uard), Rick Desmet (f.2. jr. center) and Alan Moore (W 1r. center-forward). A pair of playen io>doubtfUI roln at thi1 time a.re Pat Sweetland (t.om knee ligaments) and Scott P'riested (f.111'.). wbo won't be elllible until the 1emester bruk. Two --ou11tandin1 prn1~ for vanity duty from the JV te1m an: Mike Allen. a 1ood 1hoooter and ball handltr, and Tom Simpson (U 1 r . ) . Allen'• physical 1tata are the same. · Othen who could work in from tbt: JV team are Rick Voun1 (1-11 ar.) and Dan Baker (HI or.) wbUe. ll1roe under clusmtn are offerlnC the rtat a 1Utf 'chaUenie. They art Jon Marcblorlattt (IHI, Jr.). °""I MacLeu Cl-I, Jr.) and Frank Roldan (J.10 Jr.). Mesa will rely on the fast break orrtnae, a N t em • trademark. ~ E4U.. Don, look few Edlaon Hieb'• buk.etball team to . set the Wllrld alire durlnC December toumameat. n·s not !bat crown. terman returnin1, althou1h Giving Founta in Valley ad-not 1 starter on last year'• ded depth are Pete Gerber I 5-CIF playoff entrant. t 1r.), Mike Foote (6-0, 1r.) Beefing up the sttack Is M and Ed Pitts (6-1, sr.}. ce.nter Dein Bogdln and Brian The Barons' only signifiCIJll Sanders. leas via graduation Is all Sanders, 1 M forward, 11 up learue player G1ry Valbuena from the junior vanity 1fter (currenUy at OCC). being plucked out of a phy1kaJ Fountain Valley finished In a education class last year. lie for fourth last year but Others .who figure heavily In ,belt champion Corona del Stepl}_ens' plans ire Bruce Mar, among other Wngs. Miller (Ml, Jr.), Jeff Butt (&-3 Brown's crew w1s especially ar.), Rod Rew1ldt (S-l 1r.) and lmprualve in summer learue George WaQoner ( 1-10 play 1galnst Sunset League auard). teams Marina and Huntington Beacb. Newport B•rbor Bu11th19to11 Beach The basketball 1ltu1tJon 1t Huntington l!<acb High School ~hargers Play Friday at MSAC FAison Hlgh 's Clfi'·· AAA footblll semifinals 111ame with West Covin11 will be pl1yed Frid1y night at Mt. San Antonio Colle1e. KJckoff ii tt:t for I o'clock. .... II lttiteM YI 11"'-Amt! •t Clllll"""' ltll-..d YI ltfliillt'* t i l!LAC coacb DIYe Mobs -.1 ban " ·~ --ry talent on hand • • ,...,.i. c1" •' c ••1 •~ •--•·~j , Gltnll YI kllot• •f • r11m11 l\EdJtonU' ... ~ fll • 'U6" ICflitfll,lell I jusl that most of hll primt can-..._""''' .... ''· 0t111¥1 • 1t 1 1"". didata hive been buly lately '"'111"" H11~ • tm•n '''*" Tbe Cbraers' football team. cc~"""""""1 undefeated 111" Le 1 1 u e Hi~:•r• Dim. n LA M11t1 11 Monr• I • :· ..·. . . . . ... .. ... I " I :··. ' .. ' . ,I I ' \ I I I I -,p DAILY l'ILOT Wortla ' Reces sion in 17th Month, Longes t Since W ~1·ld War By SYLVIA PORTER The recession of 1969-70 is now'beginning its 17th monlh. Al t hough th e Ni xon Administration has • not yet calltd ii by itJ obvioos name and although it h.as not yel been formally designated a r ecessio n by private authorities either, or course 'that is what ii is. 1n fact. it Is already by far lbe longest of any of the five business downturns or the post.World Wiir II period. The table below in this column will document that: activity, rading pro 11 ts. spreading bankruptcies and Wall Street disaster11 la hardly • s:uccessful game plan! As of this day, Dec. I, I join the Confereoct Board on record "''ith thls blueprint for the '69-'70 re«sslon to date. Let the experts catch up when they're ready. (Prices are an- nual raks, latest reporting date.) •IECIESSION CY(;LIES "'°"· •.....ott. '#f Juh' '5).Al.ll. 'S4 JUI~ '!1-,,,,,, '!I M•Y ·~Fib. 'II Ju,., '"'°"1:. 7 0 .... c.s llECIESllONS AS WMOLI Now. 011-0c:I. '" .1.1•. July 'Jl-Aut. ''' +1.2'1 July '51·Apt. 051 +1.1 .. MIY ·~F•b. 'II +1.2"> JU(Y .... 0«. ?t +~.A MONTHS OUlfATION " " • • " COit 0" LIVING .J.l!'o -t;-1.1•. +1.1•. +1.0-o +1.11'. The recession of 1969-70, created by deliberate policies of llie.-admlnlstration_.and the' Federal Reserve System to curb the inflaUon spiral, so far has bad lesa: impact on in· flation tban any of the four previous postwar recessions. Nobel Prize .Winner Jn fact , the upsurge in prices -princes in general, al the \\'bolesale level a n d l.OOching our cost or Jiving - has been by far the sharpest recorded in any postwai: recession period. Tops in Economics I understand Ille reasons why the White House would not admit this ls a recession during lhe pre~lection cam- paigns, But November's elections are over and 1972 is a long "-'BY off. The administration ca11pQ1 continue pretending in· definitely that what i:S iS not - even in the fuzzy, unscientific \\'orld ·of modem economics. A lot of w out here know the definitions and play by the rules. Nor can the non-profit in· dependent research organiza- tion which dates business cy- cle turning points in the U.S. (the National Bureau of EconomlcResearcb ) pussyfoot much longer. Other prestigious non-profit research organiZations aren't that shy and they are going on the line. By_JOHN t\INNIFP' .. ~ '""""" .... ,.,., NEW YORK (AP) -An en- tire generation of Americans, thousands of professors in· eluded, owes its b a s i c knowledge of economics to Dr. Paul Samuelson, recipient of the 1970 Nobel Prize in economics• Sam uelson 's massive "FoundaUons ol Economic Analysis" was r e q u i r e d reading in almost e\rery col· lege economics course and, in fact, was the only textbook in many of tbem. 11 covered everythlng. That this enormously suc- cessful book, a classic which Samuelson updates every few years, was hardly tbe basis for his selection is a testament to the breadth or bis work. -Martin R. Gainsbrugh, chief economist of The Conference Board, Inc .. for instance, puts. the start of the 1969 recession In July 1969. because that's the month in which industrial pro- duction reached its pea·k at a_l'I tndex of 174.e. This index is now at 162.3, off a full 7 per· cent. No one area of Samuel.son's output, in fact, can be detach- ed from L'le mes of his pro- duction. His wrillng1 and research covers the field generally and specifically: over.all theory. we 11 are economics, price theory, in- ternational trade. And whi le he bas demonstrated an ability to write for the masses, all evidenced by a pop u I a1r magazine column. the pro-. fessor's greatest strengths art in the area of highl y mathematical analysis. ~ I Nor at this stage can any R d m i nistralion spokesman honestly claiin the ·•game plan" for economic stability worked as plotted Jn 1970 - ·not without turning t h e credibility gap inlo a credibili- ty chasm. A nightmare com- bination of clim b ing unemployment, still sharply rising prices, aJugglsh business l ,OOO't Of Oil PAINTINGS WHOll SALI WARIHOUSE or1N TO THI PUILIC $5 .... . 1619 IE. IEOINOIEI, S1NtA AMA PHONIE llMMI OEALfltS WANTEO -.r;;~ Samuelson is considered a Keynesian, meaning t h a t much of his thinking appears to have been influenced by the late John Maynard Keynes, a British economist who believ- ed In governmental in- volvement in order t o moderate the busiriess cycle. Keynes approach was fiscal He felt that government spen- ding ct>uld be used to regulate the up-down cycles that have appeared regularly io in- dustriaJ economies. He didn't fear budget deficit.!, and even . suggested they migbt be used NEW •.• HIGH SPEED ELECTRIC ADDING MACHINES " ~ SPECIAL PRICE • Th• 201 wlll •dd. tubh1tl, l!'lultiplv .,,. r1p11t method, 9l•e •uto. 111 11ic credit b1l111c1 111d '"'" cl11f '" '""' 1l1ctri,1Uy. C1p1cfty h I c11lum111 -i 'colum"• let1I t t ,999,ttt.ttJ 41r1t:t n1Dtt1ctio11, 1ulo'111lic t1+1l 111d 1ub-tot1I, 1wt1111'1lic r1pe1t ~., f•r 11p11I 1ddilion. 1ubtr1clio11 ,,.4 mylt:plic•lio11. lt1d I bl1ck pri11ti"'· •ilh 11•9• 111y t1 11111 lyp1. Mi11w1 lol1h pri11I 111 r1il. • S C M CORONA 70 NEW ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER ~i:·~ ............................... $118.50 1e~'J.!*'Ji~ ~ 1500 Acl.ms al H1rbor, Costa Mesa 54M701 • AtM: l1fl 191 t.11 hf, Oce.1t1141. 711-7tof ····~·~ . Beverly Creedon bas been named assistant manager of the Newport Beach Walker & Lee, Inc., office, reporta Ernie LeBlanc, manager of I.he firm's Southern District. P.11ss Cretdon Y.'bo has been with Walker le Lee three years' was previously with the Costa Mesa ornce. She has been a winner In lhe rlrm's "Top Ten" conttst each year for listings laktn, total sales, and numb<r-ol lbtln1s >Old. P.flss Creedon Is t h e 3tcrelal')' for the Costa P.1esa f'oundatlon for tht Prolongo· Uon of lfuman Life. Her home is In Costa fl.fess . . LOCA L N• ether 11ew1p1p1r ftl11 yo11 mere, '"'''I' 4•y, 1btijl wh1t'1 9ei119 111 /11 fh1 Gr11ltr Or•n9t Ce11! th 111 lti• DAILY ,ILOT. " OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New Yor.k Stock List Symbols,--:~;;: ! ' ; • I , ' ' . ' • ' ' , .. 1970 Monday's Closing PriceS-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Stoek .,... .. ..... a;,.,.,,,,,,., ...... ., ..... .., ................... ,,..,, lllh.) Hlfl 1.tW CIQt Clll I' Complete Closing Prices ~ American Stock Exchange List ,.,.. .... lllft I Hlell L'"' C .... Clll !Ml) Hltfl Ltw CltM (lltl lllM Ntl ,.... ..., IMt I Hllll Lw CW Chi DAILY 'ILOT lllM Nd. lM1) 141111 WWI C._ C-S. ' • I r L CHECKING • UP !>• Wo1rie11 Better ' ·Bill Collecto rs By L M, BOYD ' ''IT 15 BECAUSE women are more tenacious, more 1persist.erlt, ,more di(ect. that they m¥e the best bill col· lectorS;-" contends the boss of a pallon~ide finance company • , • CERTAINTLY YOU knew sauerkraut originally ~·as not • a Gennan dish, but Chinese. But did you know spaghetti was first invented in China, not Italy? •.. IT JS ALSO a f11cl , mister. that rou do not necessarily inherit the color of your beard from the same ancestor ~·ho gave you the col· er of your hair. OUR LOVE ANO WAR ~tAN has been studyin.it the various wives who really make ft fiiugh on their husbands. He concludes there are five types. 1. "J;'he Cold Old Girl. Har~ly e v e r smites. Can't stand leisure. Thinks romance is vulgar. 2. The Gor· rect Lady. Keeps the place natty. Schools herself. Gussies up everybody's grammar. 3. The Child Bride. Coy and cun- OPEN QUESTION -Why is' Australia a continent v.1hile Greenland Is an island? "HOW WNG can t h e average forger go on papering the country before he gets caught?' inqu ires a c 11 en t. Police statisticians say he's good for about 17 hot checks. If he gels, liv.·ay with mare, he's at liberty longer than n1ost . • . · ~READf. ~tEN• TJO,,'ED. a Rair of cu.st9mers \\'ho v.·cre born in a '"railroad depot and ai;i elevator. Now I ha ve a feminine rea'der who v.·as born in' a ·gas station. If you can beat that, name the place. THE NATION'S highest·paid fa ctory work~rs live i n Mjchiga11 lowesl.i_ pakt in ~l assac hUS etts '. •• EVERYTl!t1E a j ewe I er cleans your watch, he puts his personal scratch on the works, deteclives say . . A IUEDICAL ~1AN in Atlanta, Ga., estimates 3,000 new cases or venereal disease show up every da y. .Faulkn er " • w~lf~rcil . • • From Job FAMILV CJRCVS ' ' • - • ' Diet Warning: Told • Cance r Found in Unsaturated Fat Use rs- (UPO ~ Cancer:s appeared In perimen subjects that was harmful as well as beneficla1 NEW ' YORK (;\1')-- William Faulkner won 1we Puliuer prizes and the Nobel Prize for literature, but to the U.S. Post Office, he was i · malingerer and ne 'er do well in lhe days when he w~· · postmaster . at University, ATLANTIC CITY, N . J. cancer ~ea amoog the et:-tenUon to the possibility of UfH?X~Jy large ,11urgbers distinct .. higher than the effects." ::::.i.-among m men on an~·ex. wieXJ>e'Cted incidence" t ·b r 'Mie Los-Angeles study ls perimental· diet high In el~ly men all Ovtr 50 and one of' five'. The others re In unsaturated fptl. As a resulty;alf over 6,\. The scientiits Minnesota, Norway. FinJand the scientists in charge issued tried to relate it to such and England. The others were a ga--slaw warmng 'Mi~ variables as body Weight, total for shorter periods but they on -aggressive efforts to cholesterol, and lats, blood turned up no statistically change the .United Sta diet. le vels and cigarette smoking, signHicant excess af cancer · Drs. Morton Lee P,e~rce and without success. dealhs among ~s.umers of Miss. The Post Office accused hiin in a 4&-year-old letter of reading and. playing golf er cards during affice ~ours and throwing mail in lhe gatbage can during office hours. It also said he was writing a. book on government time. • . . He .,yas fired. . . The letter from Mar 'k 1wanna make a wish, Dciddy?" WQ~J~i't ,~ta! inspector at-----------.,,--.,----------Cor111th, Miss.,' and dated Sept. . 1, tni, 'was' pubJlshed tn the · cutnnt ' Issue of· the New Yorker magazine, which sald it haa • never been printed before. ,. FauJkner became Hurrican e> Storms ~ Most Destructive pastmilste)' ati he station serv- ing · the • · University e f Mississippi when he was 24 • and-__Was .Ured three years -WASHINGTON (UPI) -for their generation. liit"er.-. ...-:. Whatever .:their local. names, ' The storm's winds may The letter said, "Yo_u have they are the greatest st.Orms reach 200 miles an hour, con- thrown mail. . :in the garbage . on earth. siderably belaw tarn ado can by the side entrance. • . velocities. But they persist for .this has become such a com· • We ~a.II ~m hurr1c;ines. In .dfl.ys or weeks . rather than mon Occurrence that some· the ~hilippme~ ~ey Me called minutes or' hours. No ot her patrons have gqne to the bagu1os. Pacific n a t i o n s storm combines duration, size, g~rbage can to gel their general~y ~w t.hem as and violence rriore destruc- magazil\eS, should they not be typhoons. ln the Indian Ocean lively. in their· boxes ... you do net they art c~clon~. Authorities do not know ex- give. the office proper at· They are one and the ft.me actly what triggers a hur- tentlon, apening and closing kind al storm; the most ricance. ~Y agree that ·1tie Seymour Dayta9 of t h e Pearce said he and Dayton high polY.unsaturanie fat.'!. University~( Hilomia, Los were "surprised and relie\•ed" Pearce said his own reacUM Angeles, spo at IN! annual when they faund that the "ex-to his statistics, as a physl~ scientific ions qf the Am-cess" could be accounted for cian, w·as that he· WO\l.ld erlcan,, )t art Association by nine rmn who gave up the prescribe such a diet for which~ some years prompt.-experimental diet during an persons with ve ry high blood ed_)l partial subst.itutian of early stage of the. experiment cholesterol levels but not fa( munsaturated vegetable ails and subsequently died of those with normal levels. for the animal fats in the cancer. I;=========:; usual America n diet. Yet there were no cancer!~ Two years ago they reported deaths among the dropout,, that such a partial substitution from the group that had been had substantially, lowered the on the standard American blood cholesterol levels in 423 diet. "This discrepancy is resident patients of the LOs puzzling," Pearce said. "We Angeles Veterans Admini stra-ha ve not generated a \ tion hospital as compared to reasonable hypothesis lo ex. the ~holesterol levels of the plain it'." - - same number of patient,, who He reminded his fellow had been .-kept on the -diet cantiovascular scientists that most Americans prefer. As the "there is no existing studied apparent result,_ the exwi-population which has con- mental subjects had ~feWer sumed a .dJet high in cardiovascular deaths. polyunsatur.ated oils o-verlong Thur&Q,ay Ors. Pearce and periods of time. It seems Dayton reported an an unan-sensible 'to continue controlled licipated cancer aspect. Dur· diet eq>eriment,, with due pt· LET'S BE FRIEND~ Y IC you have ne\v nelchbots. or know of anyone lnovtni to our area, plee.lt tell ua so the.t \\'C may f.xlc nd a friendly ""'eicome and htip them to become.acquainted In their ne.l'!. surrouffl:lin&s. So. Coast f ISitor 4"'4579 .... ,~. HarboC Y)Sffiif' MM174 ing the eight years cl the ex- periment, 31 men on the ex- perimental diet and 17 on .the standard high animal rat di et died af an assortment of CUSTOM TollLOlllO SUITS $52.00 up Hong Ko~g cancers. This was an "excess" of l"vH Gnr•nl• TAILOR IN NEWPORT IEACH ning, sits cross-legged on the CUST0~1ER SEkVICE -Q_ bed, .thumb in mouth, aQd ''During ¥.'hat nionth do the lisps, "Honey. do ~·e have lawyers make tbe mos l anymore creme de menthe in money?" A. J ;an u a r y, tbe frig?" 4.. The Mud Pack . gene.rally. June definltety .is Woman. Fears aging. -Creams, when the justices of the peace oils, Io ti on s . . shaves, make the most money ••. Q. massages, and talks to Johnny "IS IT TRUE that •holly trees Cash in her mirror. 5. The are male a n-d fei;nale ?'' A. Negotiator. ·niscpvered at age That's right. The female is tlle 13 her wiggle was merchan· one with the berrJes. same_ at your convenience ; ~trucUye :end deadly of all troP.ical sea temperatures ;:===========,fl lhal ydU ~an,be found playing that afflict the planet and it,,..,. must be about 80 degrees to More than 3.000 Imported Fabrics to choose from. golf durlpg office hours." peoples and works . drive what amounts to an at- 1( ·rliiihei' said Faulkner In all case.s they are born in m~phereic heat en g i n e. 1 pernJfUed "card playing in the the tropics, fathered and Warmed low level air in- offict". and• said. "You are a mothered by the sea and the teracts with cold air sinking habitual r~ader af books and atmosphere in seasons wheo from higher altitudes to pro- inaga,zines and seem reluctant the positian of the sun, the duce whirling motions which to.·cease reading long enough temperature of the water, and are the h u r r i cane' fi CHILDREN LIKE UNCLE LEN VOUll TYl'I 01" l'AllllCS, Yl)IJll TYl'I 01' STY LI'S. SUITS · Sl"OllT COATS• ILACll:S . TO" co.-rs --SHllT.$- TUXIOOS. OtOV•ry 111 4 wMll: .. NEWPORTI R INN 1117 JAMIOllEE lcf. Nl'W .. OllT "'4-UOll can or Ylll! s. Ravi disable. Now owns every household appliance plus two fur capes, title to the up- country cabin -a'hd an M-8 280 SL roadster. Our L. and W. man is not usually this cynical.. Going to ha ve to speak to the old boy. ta .':"lit on patrons"" lhe motion of winds are ripe trademark. Yourquesttonsand c~1~:::.:::.:_.....::::.:::=:::.::::.:~~-.....:::.:_.::.:::::::__:__:::.:_=-:::::__:::::__.:.:::::::::::::::__: _____ __!:=:=:=:=========:!'.::=============================o:=======~ ments are welcomed and wilt be used in CHECKI!J.G VP wherever possible. Please address 11our letters to L. 3'f. Boud. P.O. Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif. Visitor to Prison .... ,. ..... Ready for i\nt[lllilg"' CHICAGO (U PI) -Ozell Hudson Jr., was held on SJ00,000 bond after guards at the Cook County Criminal Courts Building search~ him and found t~·o handguns, a knife, 57 rounds of ammunition and 30 feet of clothesline. Police said Hudson, Savannah, Ga., a stude nt at the: University of Wisconsin had come to the building one day before a brother was scheduled to appear in criminal coort in another case. Guards have been frisking everybody entering the: building since a convicted killer tried to escape four weeks ago but was killed. Ma1~y Heart Patie11ts A re 'Sex Cripples?' SEATILE. Wash. ~UPI) - A University of Was hington /:'-. psychology professor says many heart patients become •·se.i:ual cripples" I a r g e I y because '"URlight" doctors and nurses sel~om disc uss the situatian. Dr. Nalhanlel Wagner said recently some pa t'ients think they are impotent after a heart attack. And he said some wives rear sexu11\ ac· tivity will kill their husbands while many male patienls bear enormous fears of falling as lovers. • - ''The return to sex activity appears to produce very little stress." Wagner said. "We might equate it with a brisk walk downtown or climbing two ni ghts of sta irs." The psychalogist said th e patient's anxieties about sex· ual activity are heightened by physicians an d nurses being uncomfortable about discuss· ing the subject. "If nurses feel that se x is dirty they are going to neglect 1 an important area of coronary care because most patients are going to be involved in sexua l activity,i> he said. \Vagnc.r said hesitancy ti f medical personnel to talk about sex relates lo the type of reop\e attracted to the field. He told UPI that col· le~iate med ica l training should inelude more sex education. I le <tlso re commended a parnphlet he designed on th e subject similar lb the many others available to the patient. ··\Ve have a pamphlet on just abaut every other subject, v•hy not on this one?'' he ask- ed. But he said much or the basic data nn heart patients and sex activity had not been collected primivily because of t h e p r e -c onditioning af medical personnel. I See by Today's Want Ads e TIGHT TH E BULGE! Of'ln 't bticome a "WALL- FLO\rER"' ir1Sll'afl ' .• 11ere'! ~'Our chancr to ~ ('()me a ,o;u,..·F'LO\VER IN ~'Our o" n groovy i;Y.im. 1\~llr lhll! you make :: Hur- ry on do11·n, NO\\'~ 7100 • HEY~ All you honw-k>vers -Nn Klflrlln~: Ynu now ran huy for vt'ry Jo1v price 'i'our \'Cl')' 0\\"11 "STEEL l!ORSE COH.RALS" fT'S A REAL STEAL! See 8600. • 'f111.r h11nd11orne -debon. air • Suavt COlnncl San. rl~r& Is looklnr tor ypu -( So don 't let him or this c-hanct sll p thru your fln, gttr -But on It; Oka.f. You ·1 ' ~ ' . '-• :...·~ ,. ,, • • er cookies, milk, Chips~ the ··baby. But .di .. j •, /, ' I I J ' r . ' . --·. _.._ I ' I I I t } 'J '· ·-·' /' .. .. __ ._.._, .... . ' ' l I I I I I I s I I I l ! I I I I Telephone numbers are 0 one of the most uJ. portant things to leave the babysitter ••• takes just a moment to jot down the num where you'll be, And on the inside cover the phone book arc spaces to wri Le emergeri numbers"-the doctor, fire, police, Make su that your sitter knows aboul those al Consider telephone numbers part o! ;.,.in that she has- everything @ PacificTe"-.-.. --L 1 she needs. "'!"""" Wfire here to help. • • , . . , ' . ' ' ,, • -- . Enfera 'ld Isle • ·t .; •);.'! • ~ l ·, .~~~· ,,,, . " ' . ·. . ' ' ! ' .. ' ' . " -.. - ' Irishmen ha.v_e designs on California women, such as David Kenna's blue checked tweed midi coat and skirt (left) and Galway Bay 's Erin Kn it tam, sweater and .mini. BEA ANDERSON, Editor THW11, DK1111Mf' 1, ,,,_ Pl .. 11 Shoes Compleme·nt Midi Style Chang.es Taken in . Stride By JACKIE COMBS 01 1111 D11t~ Pll.t lltlt Elegance is the word coined by fashion viewers for w I n t e r ' s footgear. Nearly pointed toes and higher, thinner heels are arriving in deep chocolate, rich rusts. and cool pewter. .. Geared to the "proportioned look" of the new midilength, the l'ihoe.s have 1oft oval toes with a complimentary 2-inch heel. Those whQ endured the pointed toe of six and seven years ago may shudder at the new trend toward nar!'ow toes. But milady need not wQrry. Although the design is definitely elongated the shoe buyers ·insist that moderation is voque. "It ls a softer, mQre refined shoe Of : lo complement the mfdi," claims • ,_. • lhe May Co. The big, chunky t;tci n· "monster" is out lhe wJndow and It's taking the blunt toe and heary heel with It. "Although the trend is , definitely more narrow. there are u.ii no extremes. tt is all planned -a ' , I look or proportions." 1·"' c-., • • ~ JO!iph Magnin's sees It as an il1- .J;>.:.; dlvldual choice. ''Everything is Jn fashion ... whatever the ind ividual ' decide.. We are lrying to keep up ' 1 Kit by offering a varleti of shoes." The stores maintain that the m~I needs a leg to stand on. The longer skirts show leS! of the leg. What 'does shtiw needs to be displayed. well. •• The lightweight look of softne ss and elegance found in the new shoes is the mO!t exciting look oC all the fall collections. Magnin 's claims it is cyclical. "These are the same toes and heels that appeared al the end of the pointed toe era. ln another two or three ye3rs, the heavier heel may come back again." The verdict won 't be in until spr ing, according to Buffums'. "We won't know if the midi is going to be worn until then." But the ''modified toe" should be su~ cessful." they maintain. "It does return to a narrnw ba!'le but never to the match!tlck heel s goneby. There "'as nothing graceful about those shoes." Buff urns' foresees Jots of straps, .. ties and shiny buckles Jn high -· places. hugging the 1nkle or going high up the instep. . "Women have been waiting pa- tiently for 1 change. They 11ceepted the monster only begrud&inal1 but will appc.eciat!.Jhe elegmoe of the new shoe," continued Bulfumr'. The concept is to "highlight is much <!S we can, knowing that much or the Jq is going lo be covered," e~lained Robtnaon '1. Before, it was all leg and such an extreme demanded a I o w e. r , chunkier shoe. Le!ll round, m<>re lapered for 1 genteel look of airy lightness. con· tlnutd Robinson's. "The ahoes 1r.1 finally being made to flt· the foot. rather than fOrcing the foot to con- form to impossible designs." • ''Shoes are taking a conservative swing to give balance to tbe mldilength but in a casual and natural vein." Robinson's forecasts brown , pumpkin and maroon in imitation reptiles enhanced by lots of brass' and buckles. "Ifs all ·part of our 'New EnCounier' campaign. We have lots or confidence in the new lengths and accessories. It's time for a change." ' Glossy patent In the guise nf rep. tiles Is mil.king 'the si:cne In open toes, sllng .. backs and cil~o11ts st th! Broadway. "Becau.~e of the midi, women need a fashionable, more feminine shoe." · Most bu)'.ers agree.. Boota a~ everywhere. Many longuettea need the boot to ~arry off the elonpte.d look. So shoppers will<lind laceupo, zlppen ond form fitting boots with allghUy higher he<ll. "Tho Ci>oucli look Is definitely out Fuhkwt ac.- cents the Slim 1ppearance." • h evi.do!l<:o '!!!Wiii. • ltt!ld tOw1rd indivktuaJiarn takes Wpe. Varied 1ges Ind life styles, oo- cuioM and pennnaUties merit fuhioll Infinite. ' The ca1e rests on the midi verdict. l( the-longuette Oouri.she!. the outcome ts 1pparent. .. toes and heel• tapered, lengthened and 10ftened to iichieve the eleg1nce d<sll'ed, • ·. • • • ... Irish ·:·· . .. I • ~ .. ·· sm .iti.ng :· rrillt · Jllil>lona dieslined •Ith Ibo Southem.Calllomli ....... in rilind -cr911fd the 1eu with uW ble.uin& ol: the Jep;.dlauni. . Pr<mlered ill Southenl ·California dUr· fftf .-i!IP dlrouihoUt' the• -.o! the . ,_ ....... pr-amt.II· by· Irllh . Jnternaticlnll Alrlinel\:lftd. ~ It)' Mite Ame Fl .... lin,·l • former ll)Oft! Ind current hottea· for the 1irtiiiel'. ·• 1 ' Spiclni; her . cOmrneftlary w I t h referenCea to her na'llve libd. Mta Flanapn; inlroduced pull ilUlta In linon, poplin ond hand'crocheted Jriih\Jact •nd fUhlonable eftsimbles • 4'' niul.tH5oioied t•etda frori'I .mfnil to ·m1*8; ' · 'Leri~ ran1ed frOm ··cfas;sj iq ·~idl, with Mfleii i.uued lo e"v~ry.tt.iftc from Utt Rnee ol Tralee Festlvil in' KetrY ·lftd uie Opera Fe1tlV1I in Werford·to"ttie Galw1y Oyster re1uv1r 1rid~·]l'1J1'l.L~ as ,..11 !!!.lht_M•si<:.,Ce~r ind~ oo lin 'Otini.e Co11t ave.hue. -· · · : ,. . Dalgoer1 represented ·1re ¥ary·Q'Don- nell, whole most erquisite conbibut*9 ••• 1.Jiand crochete'.d JM» bridaf aowtl: David~· G1hiay Bay. Barry O'Jni. nell, h, Dlvid Henry, PillU Knitwe. ,•Patricia Crowlq:ind ·ll~e or Kilb11ny Ud., all or-Dublih, and Cyril Cullen, Carrick-on-Sh1nnon. · ·' The Irish-fastuo,\s IOOn. , will bl av'1ia~Je In Southlond ~. Irish ilosi9"tr Miry O'Do""°R' visits tho Victori•n' era with h.r ha..d crochotecl l1co bridol 9ow". • . ' Kenneay Women Coi·ff ures ·outdated B.Y MARI.AN CH!USTY NEW YORK -Tboee fuhiOlllblt Ken- nedy women have never been ordinary mOi'tlJll buking in the 1U of +1nonymity. Every move, m1jor and minor, is con- ducted under the gl•ring and r.elentleu 1az.e of the dlacri"!"1•tin1 public eye. Now one nf the . world's most famous beauty conSullants and cosmeticians, Charles of 'the Ritz'• wi-Y Bandy, h11 m1de ·the gutiy decisiQfl thit the Kennedy women are In dire Med o~ make-overs. Bandy has 1 atroAg opinion: "Tbe Ken- nedy women ·are too Occupied, too-. Jinked with \he ·past. They 111 ·1ook froun into bygcm er111 inst,ad of beir\I con1picuouf. Jy 1970 -IS their polilia lf'e." Jackie .Xt.nnedy On.isis and Bandy were· both born iunder lb!' same utroJogj. cal ai,n. i.,G, ao B1ndy·ctai~ to be on_ her wive lts!lth: 111d ii ,the !ti.St' critical of her. NEEDli UPDATING . . Since Jtckie ii rweuin& Valentino'• midi clotflu. Balldy uy1 "11'1 "dead wron," for'lier to ~i"'f' wt~ .~e ,.m, Iong •. Jlllffy balrdo ·that 1Irc .wot< durinl · the ilOi."IUiper iiiln~. -, · Baitdy1i 1eonCepi of Jaekfe: 1"Her h~ir 01uat .be tut to 'ran t9*1f. arOU:nd her face, w~1n1 \he area ... hei' e·yes. God'.·btr-eyes are ..,ectac01U.1They h1Y1 . llln animal quality abiiut ~ iy ~ tng W\e hair arotmd htr eyes; she'll dr1w atteliUoft1•W.iY ·~m bei wide jaw. · "She ,....,. bu broken tlie mold ol Whitt-· Finl Lady, •Ith her 1trlcl, ultr~1't1v1 clot,Ms. Sbe is 1 tpe<jal =•lure . ol lhe .Juoill<. with a precise. Slit Ind the atartJed, ftuhy eyes of~ or ·an Ar;bianJ111ne.·Sb.-.1~-~ wtar dothea of h ~ -d;\1moi1 <Iruael .and butlsy ,...a. tl)at. drip frll\fl. and Ue witll jllaolp. Jackie. - to bl' looaenod -·lier u;tith( laahl• Jmlfl." . " TON!"DOWN J..., K...,.ey, wife ol Sen. Ttd K'"' nedy. i•ta a terrlblt·'l!llicltlnc from Ban· dy . Ht cal)f llu Ille ....,,. With "the wont tai1o iJ..,.,;. li'lhe ~ O)'O." • Bandy "" JOlll; ~·--dteadNf . . . . ~ ' ) "" (...._i., _ ,. ' . ' mlitakes ond llhe'1 not big eaough· la lake adv.Ice 'fr.on'.. profeaslonal.sl-11thou.a,h. ahe has"· tt>e .,. money .and the time. lier ey~rows .are, too dil"k, her hair is loo blea~ •nd •she 's too obvious about herKll.1 She ha1 never' ~•rned the art of f1sit1ofi sublleiy. ·Even her bc;>anm ls con· triVtiCs with built-Jn btl1 ln he;f., gowns th1t push her up ind out." · :J ..!,;... i o ........ _ would give Caroline a trernendow upUtt." LOOKS UNKEMPT E,lhel Kennedy, one of Dandy's favorite women, has streaked hall and be de1piSes it. "It makes her look older 11nd ,..terribly unnatural. Her hair alwa~s lookt messy and unkempt. I know it's difficult for a woman of achievement and a~ Bandy, whrl sometlJt'!es calls Joan Mrs. comPlishment tll discuss fashion and Fl11h, thlnka· th1t • thls Kennedy shotlld beauty -they sttm IUCh frivolous sub-~·~ her'-toou by wtirlnf"tl grlMY· jects. ~Buf1 if her haw' were .med.tum bun iiti• ftape of her ne.di: _ without brown, pulled b~ck an<f an a~llid.il braid K'-!.&...,.11,., h , ••-'d .... attached -shes knock off IO yt•l'3." sp ~..aa -r "•ewer eac ear. '~ic uc 1pecl.cwar...U~lha learned aimplicil}'.'..'._ ........ _ Ban~y would like to see Elhel give up htt ' 1fl;wfl"5ermed clotherby eour, Carollrit Kennedy, on the. verge (If _ reges and . Ungaro and setlle on so!. y~ "°m&Dhood, ian't apared the rGd, · fabrics like crepe blouses, tailored .,.inta eitl!!'.~Bandy 11)'1 ahe. his inherited her and knit blazers. He'd 11so like her to "1iwty-awkwanl" atrkte from lM Ken-wear IS.karat gold rings.on every fin&:M'. . "She'd be fantastic if she hung loose." hi nedy .men ·~last tblng In the world says. "She should reverie her fashion 1ht1needa .ll a droopy straight hlirdO. thinking and•wellr tighter halr 1t1d 1- conslricted clothes.'' Hts .comment.I: "She can't pull off the. Alice-ln-wonderland took' Jtckle is forcing '" llel' boca ... bor llr1do ~ too•heavy. She naedl moppet curb 1 beadlul ol theln, falllq &ll'llY ~ her fa<:t. It . • Bandy sees the Kcnnedy1, like mllllorlO of other 11lrtlng-willed women, too lft 1- thelr ways lo chAnge. And. he ll)'l, it'I their bl~t fashl011 falllnl. , • ) l ' ' t i I Hands Work 'Wonders Admiring handcrafted table decorations to be sold at the Christmas sale of the United Foursquare Women, Costa Mesa Foursquare Churc11 are (left) Mrs. Henry Rowell and Mrs. Milton McBride. Months of preparation will culminate when the sale takes place from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. Friday and -Saturday, Dec. 4-5. in the church social hall. HorQJ,cope .. Scor·pio: Heed Voices • ~pproYial Not A~ways Met . ") ' • DEAR ANN LANDERS : ,I didn't car< mUc.h tor tba~ Iett'° fron{ the stuck.-up ~Ls who were unhappy about tbelr IOfl who had f3o.OOO worth or =otlon and decidecf ~ wanted to be a m•l . . . You answer, "to f.ICh his zone," ·wun•t lhe greatest response in the world elthier. My h1111'nd didn't have a ci>Ueg~ educallon·bUt, If you 've aaid so often, not everybc\dJ belonp in college. He· tried, factory WQrk, selling and clerkin1 -five years or it, then he made up hia mlod he didn't belong ID business and wanted to try something altogether different. He dee~ to be 1 postman. That wu 12 years ago and he ~aves It. So do I. I know eucUy when he 'll be home. Once hf: ii home his time la his own. No night calla, no maDuals to study, no briefcase work. Our kids know their father as a human being, not a money machine. This ia more than most high- : aalaried executive. can say. The best thing about my husband'• job ls that it keep.s him in wonderful physical condition. The walking and being out-of· dooni has· kept his weight down and his heart stro:ng. ·So please, Ann ~. don't let people look down their noses at the postman. He's a very Important man in his community and usually a happy one. -WIFE OF ONE . , DEAR WIFE: 1'e postmla Is lbe se- ·cond most ~poitant man ta MY'We. I couldn't get aton1. without klm. Here'• a letter from uok po1tman'1 wife. SM prewiU: a different point of view. Fashions Corra led . ' Equestrian fashions will be modeled by members of Cot- ral 76 of Eqaestrian Trails, , Inc., during a fashion show and brunch Sunday, Dec. 6, in · the South Bay Club, Garden I Grove. Included during lhe 11 a.m .. affair, which is a kick-4ff for 1 the corral's annual mem- 'betship drive, will be a talk by Tack Maluy, first vice presi-' dent. ' DIAR ANN LANDERS: "To each his zope." huh·? I'll bet you get some lovely ' letters from wiv,es of mail carriers who tell you bow hapPf. they are that thetr husbands ha.fe set hours -home esrly, time with the kids -etc. And they always mention "fresh alr and exercise." I've been married to a mail carrier for 14 ;years. While it's a good life in some ways it's not without Its drawbacks. My husband has seen plenty or rain and snow and sleet. 1t's nice that he can be borne at 3:30 in the afternoon but bow many women would like to get up at 5 :~ in the morning and fix a big breakfast! Did you k o o w thal mail pouches sometimes weigh over 40 pounds? And let's not rorget the dogs. My husband was bitten twice last year -once by a dog and once by a three-year~ld kid who got mad because my husband didn't bring him a present. No job is all peaches and cream, so if you print one or those gung-ho letters, please print mine and give the story balance. -PREPARER OF THE FOOT BAT!! • DEAR PREPARER: Tbaok1 for tbe balance. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I've been married H years to a man w ho could· never make a auccen or anything. He went to night school, took correepondence courses, • tried vocationa1 t r a i n in g . Nothing clicked. I've always rna~e more money than my husband. There were times when I was working 10 hours a day and he was unemployed. We are going through one of those -periods now and I'm fed up. Our two kids are on their own now and I'm tired of carrying the load. I'm 46 and look younger. I reel that now might be the time to make a new life for mysell. Do you? -R. L. DEAR R. L: A woman wko would dump a bubaDd 1fter H years beca111e be ~·t succeed In bu1Lne11 rates iero mlnu 11 In my book. l doa't know what you envlaloa as a new IHe for yourself, bot Kirk Dou.&la1 lm't waltl•& for you, Hoae)'. What ls French kissing? Ia It wrong? Who should set the necking Umlta -the boy or lhe girl? Can a shotgun wedding succeed? Read Ann Landers' booklet, "Teenage Sex -Ten Ways to Cool It." Send 53 cents in coin and a long, Self-ad- dressed, stamped envelope in care of the DAILY PILOT. PAM!LA ELDER To Join Briel" Betrothal Revealed Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Elder of Huntington Beach have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Pamela Kay Elder, to Michael P. Siuung. Miss Elder is a senior. at Fountain Valley High .SC~! and her fiance, son of Mrs. Donald Dennis of Reno and Paul Sisswig of Garden Grove. is a graduate of Hwitington Beach High School. He is serv- ing in the U.S. CoHl Gliatd. Party Planned GalherlnJ for their annual Christmas party will b e Orange Cowity Ste p be n 1 College Alumnae on Saturday, Dec. i. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alley of Huntington Beach will open their home at 8 p.m. for the affair which includes husbands and guests. Interested Stephens College alumnae are welcome and should call Mrs. Wynn Chap- man for information. r • A squar~ dance demonstra-. lion will be pr~nted by the,. RusUers of Huntington Beach with Ron Russell calling, and horsemanship exhibitions will be given by Miss Tami Powers and Miss Kathy Hobstetter. DOWN TOWll • WEONESDAY D6CEMBER 8 By SYDNEY OMA!lft Marlene Dletrlcb argues wfUI ~COO'•Pben who term • .. tro101Y a pseudoscience. ,...,._ great actrt11 dedare.11 , • "Whal coticelt le think that we buman beings are Immune to Influences of wbleb we have acknowledge the p<tWer. Tbe fad that we cannot put our mental finger on the exact form these Influences take car.not give u1 t~e auda<!lty to deny them ." That Is Capricorn MarJene Dietric .. '1 view of dicdonarle1 which edJtoriallze rather than defliie. ARIES (March 21-Apiil 19): Accent on how to fuUill desires. Be willing to make changes. Welcome opportunity for travel, creative thinking. A friend you take for granted LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Lie performs meaningful service.. low. Let others do most of the TAURUS (April 20-M a y talking. Not wl~ to commit 20): Accent on accumulating yourself. Applies especially to required material for special legal matters. Finish rather project. Build sµpport. R¢pe than beg~ project.s. Time js to be lull~ into @!titude qf , on your side., . care!~. Press your ad-VIRGO !Aug, 23-Sept. 22): vanla'ge. Push ahead toward Take ~tock of prospect.a. major goal. Streamline a p p r o a c h to GE!\llNI (May 2J.June 20): various proble~s: S~ess in- Good lunar aspect stresses dependence, or1g1nahty. Vol.Ji. ability to perceive long-range mak~ head way by display of possibilities. Be analytical. con~1dence, knowl edge and Don't accept s u r rac e in-daring. dications. Face facts as they LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): exist. -.Bide your t i m e . Good junar a.specl accents Measure actions. Don't rush. romance, creative endeavors. . Your hunches pro'{e •c1=urate. CANCER (June 21.July 22). Speculalive ventures appeal. Your .work, how you relate to Younger persons look to you assoc1at.cs-th~~e areas ~~e as example. You can live up to ~mphas1zed. Slu.:k to p~acll. '" potential. issues. ~ave theories tv SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): others. Find c:.at where :~n I Properaty basic security mat- y.•an! to g~and why. ters are 'emphasized. Heed voice of experience. Avoid ten- Pair Exchanges Vows dency to be careless with details. You may be receiving a flurry of messages. Refuse to be distracted. • In Texas Ceremony ' • • MRS. C. W. SEXTON Vows Recited President Tells Goal College Hills Baptist Church. San Angelo. Texas, was the set- ting selected for the nupllal ceremony uniting Beth Fern Downey and Charles W, Sex· ton, for mer Harborite. Parents 0£ the ne,wlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Glyn 0. Downey of San Angelo and Mr. and Pi-1rs. James E. Sexton or Oceanside. Conducting the double ring rites v.·ere the Rev. George Archer and the Rev . Earl Sherman. Given in marriage by her father. the bride asked Mrs. Robert Washburn to serve as matron of honor a n d bridesmaids were MiS.'I Pi1arty Lewis and Miss Joy Grounds, all of San Angelo. Serving as best man was John Bullock of Dennis, Pi-1ass., and sealing guests w e r e Robert Pleak of Emporium, Penll .. and Mil ton Dana of San Angelo. The bride is a graduate of San Angelo Central High School. attended Texas Women's University and Is a Reg ional president Pit r s . sophomore at Angelo State Lawrence Scmar ~·ill report University. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): You may be Laking short journey. Check direc- tions, inst ru cl ions and reservations. Maze or rfl}· tape opens. providing oppolturaty for significant advance. Hts. pond accordingly. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on fin ances, possession, how to add to in- come. Be alert to special op- portunity. Ge mt11l individual proves a valuable ally. Outline plans and execute tham with precision. AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Feb. 181: Take initi ative . Emphasize the new and original. Definite galn in· di cated . Cycle is high: push personal ambitions. Family member makes cons tructive suggestion-heed it. PISCES (Feb. 19'-Marc.h 20): One who Is confi ned to home, hospital needs encouragement. Provide it. Work In con- junction with special group, organization. Stress realistic approach. IF TODAY IS YOUR BJRTHOAY you are sensitive, receptive to needs or others. Recent block to efforts is due to be removed. Forward pro- gress will make efforts if you are willing to change with the times. Keep open mind . The benedicl was grad~ated on a national board conference from Corona dcl ~1ar High . SI p I M" r To nl'ld""' ....... .-.it ¥111,11HN .... 1n . au . inn ., or School, attendee! UCI and is ~tre1011• • .,..,,.. St'6n1Y am.rr1 » members of the South Coast serving as an instructor at =~oio.~~ bl~1,.1z,::' '° ~= Chapter. Women 's American Goodfellow Air force Base, to o....rr 11oo1c11t. 111s 0A1Lv to1Lor. A scholarstip to Hickory Hill, a horsemanship camp for girls in St. Charles, 111. will be i iven by the camp to a member of the group. Can- didates will be introduced dur- in& the brunch. ·corks Pop For Show A champagne brurn:h and fashi on show sponsored by the Saddleb.ack Business a n d Professional Women's Club will begin at 11 a.m. on Satur- day, Dec. 5. in the Airporler Inn. During brunch at 11:30 a.m. fashions from Bobbi of Laguna Hills will be modeled with wigs by Daisey Rigdon of MiS.'lion Viejo. Models will be the Mmes. E . L. Fle1nlng, E. R. Farrell, H. W. Finney and Clarence Jean. The club has elected to donate proceeds to Saddleback Community Hospital. Jack Stanfill , community rela tions director of the hospital, will speak and , answer questions regarding the faclllt~. Members of the club may be contacted for tickets at $4.ia per person. Shoppers Invited Medical Group Every seaind Tutsday of the month members o"\()range Shores Medi'cal. Aslistants' Association assemble at I p.m. Location may be obtained by calling Mrs. Janis Andtrson. 4!19-2511 . OrnaniuiUon for fichabilita·. Texas. a.... ne. Gr11111 c~1r11 s1111on., Htw " Yortt._N.Y. 10011. lion through Training CORT) r--~jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;:----11 tomorrow. The mettlng wW begin at 9:30 a.m. in the San Clemcnle home of Mrs. Herman Sobol and Is apcn to interested per· sons. Mr1. Semar, one or 400 women to attl!:nd the parley. will dlscuSli taakl set by the national board· ind consider what 1oal~ Ile fht•d .for ORT. • 86 STORES-.-AU INSIDE SHOPPING IS FUN South Coast ?tua NUTS SMASHING -Freshly shelled nuts will be sold by the Westminster Woman'.s Club throtl~h Christmas. Proceeds will go toward a scholarship fund for a graduating high school senior. Slinging a sledge hammer is Mrs. Frank Miller while Mrs. John McShane steadies the nut. Scholarship Fund Nuts Abound Could you r holiday fruit cake use more nuts? Freshly shelled w a I n u l s , pecans and cashews are being sold through Christmas by the Westminster Woman's Club to raise money for a scholarship fund for graduating high scbool seniors. Sale Date Set Rummage will be put up for sale by lhc Ladies Auxiliary of the Boys' Oub of Huntington Beach fr9m 8 a.m. to 5· p.m. Saturday. Dec. 5, in the Odd Fellows Hall, H un ling to n Beach. Anyone wishing to donate rummage may deliver it to the haU on Friday. A full pound of shelled ·walnuts and cashews sells for $1.50 while pecans are $1.95. Orders are being taken by Pi1rs. Frank Pi1iller and Mrs. William Shook. A Christmas dinner dance is planned for club members Saturday, Dec. 5, in the Grand Hot.el. Anaheim. Cocktails will be served at 7 p.m. and dinner is at 8. Mrs. Ted Brewer is chairman. assisted by Mrs. Emory Clifton. The latest in hol lday fashions will be show n the group during its 7:30 p.m. meeting, Thursday, Dec. 10. ift the Westminster Civic Cet1ter. Admission to the fashion show will be canned goods to be us- ed in Christmas baskets for the needy. '9"'fn1s Year! Put some atmosphere in your gilts! LJ Select our Internationally famous olives In the very place where they have been processed and canned 1lnce 1894. You'll find them packed with other gourmet delfghts In ou r Casa del Olivo and La Casl ta gllt shops. Open Mon. thru Sat. 8:30 to 5:30; Sun. 10 to 5:30. From lhe San Bernardino Freeway take the Euctld Avenue offramp to Fourth Streel, then east one block. · 6'bber01iVe Hou.se OHtAIUO, CALIF. • l"'·-Fulluton Opon Sun., 12·5 p.m. "'!Ill~ ' ~hristmas Ji \ ~weaters wonnly with a lu1dou• 1w•at•r from HALf.SIII SHOI". ChooM •••Y· ca,. erlon• In d,.t•Y er toilored 1tyle1. Sl1e1: 42·.52. f,.rn $ 14.00 T SUITS • DltlSHS .. ltOllS Other Gift Suggestion• ~· • IPS • CAl"ltlS • ltOUSIS GOWNS • PANTY HOSI ·~~~~~~~~~~~ \ LAYAWAY e GI" IOXES • Gin CllTl"CATIS \..I. Ella. SI "HOF . I Nor'sHALF • ZE ,1 1805 NEW80RT BLVD. COSTA MISA Cl/I lftl N. lltlt St.I 84 HUNIINGTON CENTER HUNTINGTON llACH f N•lf te ......... ltM. '9n11ltlr,. J I ., ~. DICK TIA.CY TUMBLEWEEDS By T~m K. Ryan KIN I W1"RESTYA l~A M!OlO'lllESE KEEtl, Ni:IV '°°1MYlWl6 ARRYS?l ... tREAt' FER HUNllN'! YA JIS' SHOOT 'EM AT·A AMINALt AN'IE YA. MISS 'Tll~Y COMES RIGHT MO< TO "4! 'TllE RU99ER AARY· HEAP! LOOK, FfltA! IVllff'T~ 'ail! I JIS' si:u. 'eM! Mun AND JEFF By Al Smltli IF' YOU WANT YOUR MARRIAGE IO BE A success YOU MUST ~APPILY DO THINGS ".TOGET+-IER! »)~£, ~·~ loi'iC>-- lF YOUR INTENDED WIFEWANTS""R:IGO SHoPPING, GO SMOPPING WITI-1 ~ER' IFYolJ WANTTo RAKE LEAVE~ 5>lE SHoULD RAKE LEAVES wml '>tJIJ l'-.r'l:I. ANOSOOll! JUDGE PARKER · By Harold Le _.Dou ,,,......,.,..... ...... ~,,,_=="'" CAN 'i'OI UX:C. IU. PltYR 61\/E ~E •• ARE '!IOI oa:t-- mE NAME 1M6 01 4 PRIVATE 05= nlE INVESTIGATION OF 1WCIPENTALL'( ME W~ Oll MIS WAY WHERE WA.S , MOME! ME MA.D MAP ROCKEl" GOIN& PIMNE~ M.DNE lrJ ~EN ME WM A resn.IU.NT~ HIS KILLED? WIFE WAS .:NAY YT ITIN6 5=AM.tl Y OIT OF'. TOWN! RE5TAI-SOME SOCT? I'M -AT_, I "51" WAWT 10 IJll'l86 ».'/ I05S WITM · 11.'f nk>R· Oll6MM.E!6! MIJ.f WAS 1ME MAllE a; 1\fE RESnltANT? PLAIN JANE By· Frank lkHJinski FOR RELEA SE TUESDAY, DEC EMBER 1, 1970 [DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. ~-POWER I ACROSS 51 Rtpresen- tativt Ytsltrday's Puzzle Sol11rd · l Not genuine 5 Screens 10 Far aw•y 14 Piece of ' g_lass 15 Expect lb Fury 17 Overly big 19 E x~rts 2D Show I displeasure 21 Feline sound 22 Orfeat 23 Postpone 2S Slngle or doub It, 2\ Contfine1 JO US patri otic , group : • ,-Abt.. 31 Kind or ~ bi11ot 3'1 Composers' ~ group : A!Kl r. 3' Ballpark l employee l Restrt l 19b5 Oscar ,.. winner: "'.i 4 wo1ds ~Pio -· 4l L lterary (a work ll.fi~u~_a?~-: '·~'2 words ~·The gums if\Notices . ._,R1ct of · lettuce I 5) London section 55 -can 5&Tr ar , poison .uld natural -·-·· bl Adorn bl Ext1em t humllialion: 2 words b4 ''--of the Thot1sand Days" 65 Pe1letl b6 Otlle1w ise 67 Alcoholic beverage 68 Cash 2~ 16 days, etc. bq Amphibian OOWN 10 Der ived /ro!'I .Ar abia 11 Paper pioduct· 2 words 12 Eras 13 Stop 18 Connective 24 De ities l Item of 25 Oamaqes equestrian 2b S"\nger gear Page 2 Enjoying 27 Pale good health 28 Kintf of J lnsec·ts . refrigeratOI': 4 Sim ple 2 wirds 5 Cured 29 Spanis h & L!19gr1's article union: J l Ice hockey Altit. olflcial: 7 "The-····" Informal 1947 Loretta 32 Backbone Young JJ Faslrnr1s vehicle: JS Litei11y 2 words creations 37 A d" 8 Big feline ccor 1ng 9 Wouy to-·- ' bQJ 5 ' • ' llL'< " '. ~ " I "'• ~ J • .. -""~ JO " ' ' 1211170 40 Naval insignia: Abbr. 41 --and downs . •6 Landlady's tOnteUI I " " 48 Calilcr nia ball clt1b 51 01amalic SptKh 52 Sallor: Informal 53 Pitter 54 French rlve1 55 Smalt amount: 2 words 57 Barracuda 58 Agricultural slrucl ure 511 Miss Maxwr t1 bO Vehicle bl H d .. covering II " " .. '· t,Jl J2 " k:\J" . " ,.,. .. " I I I I " ,. .. • I .. ,,_ ,_ .. " . ' -~! ~ ... : " " .. ,, ' . " " " " "· ' ':. " ' I ~ " J .. ' ' ' I .. ' PERKINS MISS PEACH ' J I • ·AND· >Q.lfl:f' ---1\.1. i;eT A F'A.lt "T'lllAL •• ? I STEVE ROPER ,, PEANUTS - .a::. -- U'LAI 11 · SALLY IANANAS l'lemo from th. Pnk Commission,er iuhom isl: Thei<e ..,;I/ &e.no nepotism on the Pa rk sta((. GORDO MOQN MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS ,.----...... l«lle,1!1.WOCO. :S: ~ Tilil6HT A 1iN11801o I "Gilt' IWlll!OIO«S Ket.\. y SCHOOL .SllJDENT COURT J\JDGE M:e. l'Alll1U> . 1!11 frlllilE'S • By John Miles By Mel ..... By Charles M. Schulz .---.-..~-----. . 1'tJ. ~net es 1---~ - T utMtiJ, Otctrnoff 1, l flO • I 1.£,AAJeD nlAr AU --CQJr.AWll.\6 'flE C~0"11¥ ~I&~ Ill '1111! -1!11 1ME llERICf!OIJ~ iEl'leCTl~ AllD DIS~CIFR ·~S f!IRS IU 1',l.Wij40 llA!ij • .. ,. .. ·' .; ;o OAILY I'll.II' JJi ly Al Capp -By Chcl,,_ l•~i . . ' ' By Roger Bollen -~-IJ:t .,.._At<D,.W.. ~ liCMOOl- l!OIDl~S -~! DENNIS THE MENACE ,ta.D.•. i2-1 ... f , I • ( I ' I r I I .• r . r--~-~~-~------~~~~~--~~-··· ::<· f • II llolll.Y PILOT 7 LO• A ngeles Opera .~-. • Depth Applaude·d in-'Lucia' DIK ""'111Ylct (C) 160) I jNly Wiit »-(C) • .. I .. llllls (t) (60) Hriy DunphJ. Sii ""'* llM: (C) ...... • (.....,.,,) '65-Rid111t Will· Nil, Do11111 ltetd. M ¥• o,11t (C) (JO) 1't ,,.._ IC) (30) II TM 1 1W (C) (60) Cl) Ster TN (C) (60) ,... .... (30) · ""-'"" CCI (lOI [1) CIS -(Cl (30) r.a..r r .. ., <30> llltldlrt 34 (C) (30) • , ... "' .... (C) (30) Lt Merl ,...., Clllt Pnrkll """ ii .. .. (C) (30) ............ (C) 1:1181.ms ....... (°' t2 llf) Los M111ts l 1H11 YS. llltimort l ulleb tt lattllllOtt. •:•le.MW c...,. 1Jo) n. ,.,.. Nu11 (C) (30) # • ,._, f.Cllipllttlt Alldlt1 (90) 111 00 .. -(Cl (30) • 1 WlllllLI QINrN 611 SMIWI (JO) A film dtpictlnr th• whole Blllt .r 1111, f11 lin1. 1nd thlnklna If OIWr• 111 lll!rdef Kibbubl111 whl 8'M btt11 IMn1 11 lllllttn liM1I tilt . sa.o.y W1r. lllCll Mr ·-.... (30) ·--(Cl ......... -(C) (lOI ., ............. (30) Ill• - -(C) (30). 1:'511!) MaicN 7 .. 8 CIS E-1 -(Cl (30) W1lhr Crollkitt. Dllll ... _ -<Cl (lO) DtYid BMkllJ, fnnk McGet, .IOlln Ch1nc:1llor. CJi Wl11t1 MJ' UM? (C) (30) ID I l wt LMr (30) ....... a.. (C) (30) iUl Cl) I lM "" (Cl (lO) !IJ(j)-_, CCI .... MM h M ltllM." Jtff Hunler, ... ,.... ThomplD!I. • ,... (C) (60) (R) "l'CEl 0pP TllNtn: 'flM ·tllt Houte ol !ht DIM'!" 9 (l)TNlll • C.nMlll._.. (CJ @m a.rill .. )~111 Wori (C) (30) 111 -(301 Ir!) ~ti Mlfll (55) m n.t , .. <C> 1.101 D i IHC~, ._ (C) (60) Pro- 111m *tiinc tht m rdl 11111 rtKIHI at tlavtt1·~1r.014 am~ Stioenftl4, lost In tht Si1r11 MMraL II T,... • C11 11•111• (t) (30) ·--(C) (00) lll Cll"' -·-"' CCI e lac:n•lllt fl• (C) (lO) • "' Cfae .. '" .. bf .. (30) 1"51t)C_ .......... t:• m Ta T.. Ila Trvt~ (C) (30) Ill r: .,_ Atr11 (C) (30) OliY11 Dou 11 la au..,.ctad ol "X·ratad nir• baflnlor". G M .......... 'IUI (C) mu -<301 l:tlllll lllo u.. 1'51 a,118 ._ W~U. (C) . u m lll Cll "" ... <C> <601' Cllartts 1114 lrncl1 K. l llltt lrt ...... 1111111. 8 • .1111 (C) (30) .. l'trtnts C." . it Jiliw.." Cort1 alld Etr1 &NI •• t .' •. I ', r-1 :. ' • DAYTIME MOVIES ... • ., lat • S.Wlt,. (COll'ltd~) '44 -s6nllf TllfQ. P111llttt Godd11d "'Slit .... Hill Wrllll" (m111~I) '3J-MM Wtlt. C1ry G11lit. D CC>._, -(H · .....,i • ...._H....._ pll .... ...., ....... ,. ..... • """ (Ct ()0) "'WllWlll ltl'• pt.• A hllll MU11 IMlan polioa elliclf k a_...., tqlt.. Gl'Ulli .lllMI l*fl.---~~ G @{)]Ill AIC -<I .. ""* (Cf ... 11a, Si ....... (,, .. .,) '70 -Burt ReYMkh. lnpr siMn.. Row11 01no, Jttne1 Int. An lndltn b forcad to dlooSt bt· tWllll '"""low lot 1 wtlllt aodal worker 1n; 111 1f'ldent tribal tr.di· tloft thll 114Uhts hill to tvtnat hit brothf(• dttlh. D TM Stilt IC} (60} ~ 81 ...W ftlll Slltiw (C) (10) Jul· la Cltlld, Fru TtBtll!Ofl, lllllC DI· vis, Or. Jut Dt111clo. CIJ lfapel (C) (30) Fridtr ind G1nnon starch for tht 1110U11r of • foW·JUl·ok! NbJ fl)llncl 1n . 111111 ttn. Cutsls '" Pim Webber and Mich1lt GIUl'lltl. m "-CHwtullM Wltll '"'I' ._...... 1114 111tRi1 D....,.rt (C) (30)(~ . t!) PIHlr1 lot LM• 130) 18 Lt Crildl l ln er-. (() (30) • By TOM BARLEY lt is a triumph tf teamwork ",.. 0.111 """ tt•ff and U.e-n io C.poblanco pr-r Na one 11 more eager than duction baa tbe added impetus thbi crlUc to add plaudits to of a faultlep orc~stral at· the long overdue guahinl of c.ompanimeot U!Jd:er the diree· praise for the girted Beverly"' lion ~f Charles Wilson and the Sills but we 1;ouldn't he lp.feel-stunrung and completely con- ing Sunday in the Los Angeles · vinclng &e\I ol Ma.rsha Lou is Music Center t h a t .a Eck. J remarkable achievement in Wilson's baton was im- t e a m w o r k was going peccably &eared ta the bel unrecognized in those final canto that gtves this' opera so waves of applause. much ef its charm· and the Eck sets bad thia reviewer Miss Sills was magnificent practically smelling th, in the title role of "Lucia di Lammarmoor"; she added a heather and tastint: the por-d 1 ri dge, so convjncing we re gi:eat ea of iron to-the part those reprodiJCtions of the with her own innate acting ability, and sh'i gave us a dour Scottish moors and the stupendous mad scene that even more dour and gloomy deservedly brought the house' High.land castles . do Given a lesser leading lady, wn. M. bel 1c e· Molese as SI r But it alto has to be Edgardo d i Ravenswood, recognized tha_t her own role Richard Fredericks as 'Lord l:DO B 9 @ ml r1111 T-*t (C) in ~ partfcularly handsome Enrico Ashton and Robert (2 hr) HBC NtwS's monthly ttle· and lavish New York City Hale ... n.-tutor o-tmondo vision m111zl"'· flews a)lltspond· Q od --~ int Sander Vanocur Is 1nchorm1 n. pera pr uction of t h e woul d have dfawn a Car Toni1hl's leatures indude topics Donizetti classic i S im· greater share eC the applause. wch as lilt · Unii'ef1ity of Noire measurably eM.4lflced by a They deserved more than +hey Dime's new lma,e. British 1ctor supporting cut fh • I tr ~ Robert Mof1eJ'• editorial on th• , •~ s S ong got for eacb brought to ·a dif· 200\h 1nniven1ry o1 Mteriun In· ~d thoroughly, schooled in the ficult role an authority and d1pe11denct: 1 do3•·UP ffim stlldr arts and crafts of "Lucia'' aplomb that has not always of psyi;lwle&ietl W1rftrt by M1tkln· from the male lead to the lu:t been evident In earlier ttag. llist Chin• 111IMt Communist humble ••rv I •th 1• cMria. "" an w1 a U"-5e-ings of this opera by the New c011d spot ln Act 3. Yorkers. 0"' """" (C) (60> .. .....,I :;;:========~~::::::====::;! Loses AH Ult Time." Kkiible 11'\'U ~­ the lilt of tht :one·t tl'llild 1111n'1 1irtrri111d. -~ M00t1 pntL m f--(Cl (30) "N· r1n11mtllt Wltk Dulh." Pitt I. Sam Stor11.,.. h MiM • hauri· OU1 iourMJ out .... CllMJntfJ .. ac:ort I wil1iq: cri• ... Nell ti testify Nlora • ~· Jury. ,. stir is H1rold J. Sto11e. fID TM AM<tla (C) (60) ''Sltoul4 tli; [1der11 COVtmmelll provide 1 1u111•t1ed niinimura lncomt lot mry Mitrictnf' !ID ........ (C) (30) f.I) C..ciertt IM AllllOI (30) (lD RllKlll (60) 1:30 El l'HJ (j) Tt Ro•t, W'~ Lewi (C) (30) Gr111dia Pruitt Is twntd on by I lonely Illinois widow IJotl· phine HutchiMOn), B ,.._ (CJ (30) Saller War4. m..., .._ <60> m•-111 Mulitt J Estrel1u (C) (30) 9:45 Ul) Pullt'I Dtsll (£) ll:JO B aCIJM-,,111111 (Cl Au PtrMti•"· Atty. Genr'I. 1!1m1e1 C!•rk. Jot Thtism1nn, iht Milli 8101. D ID 00 m JotinriJ Carson (C) Jerry lewis is auhstituh ho1L 8 .... , ... (C) IJl ... ""'" (Cl 12:Cllllllhwit:...,.. ....... (1dY1!1· tu11) '40-Douslu F1iiti111b Jr. IJ TWlrl I: -"C• Ctarr" (drtmt) '5&-11111 Cumntlns, Jolln Otll <HJ Cil ... """' (C) 1:00 U Mtwit: "'Sl11 AMMf• (wt1twn) 'S2-Rod C1me1en, Fomat Tucbr. 00 ""' (C) m All·Nipt Sier. •Mtp!fiCllllt Alllbel'lllla,'" "'M• ttM11 Cfy" 1nd CC) °"" ftllt. • l :JO 0 ''0111ttrM l tutll" (dr1m1) '$8 -Geor1• B1k«, fr1nk!1 V1u1h1n, ID (C) ''TIM H11'11 111111'" (wutem) 'S7-G111 Mtdlton. Y11erit Frtndl. 1:00 ID "littlf ~ (dr1m1 l 'M-lli"clllrd h iton, Curl Ju11ens. Rut~ Rom111 • 2:00 Cl (Cl "ht ''°"' .. btl" (df1m1) ·u -011v11 " H1vir11nc1, A11n ...... 4:30 . (C) ... "' • ~ (•tsl· t m) '57.AofrM MtcMurrtJ. Ol'IN 7 DAYS 11 .A.M. TO 2 A.M. •· Brunch lunch Dinner "L•unching- Hour" 5.7 2.al W. C 111d Hwy., N1wport . .. , .. For lttt•rv•tiont, c.u 5-41 ·1166 "That Romantic Little Place on tht 8011 " Tim Morgon ENTERTAINMENT LIMITID ENGAGIMINT ONLY DEC. 1st thru DEC. 12th I•• Oflict O,••t •:OO P .M. S~ ... Sl•rl1 .lt t 1JCl •J1. ''Xeep on "'.:ellin 1 me a'!Jout the ~ good life ,Ell~..o~1 bcc a~se i t make s r.'le pu.~e . '1 "YOU MUST SEE THIS FILM!" f JACK NICHOLSON r·· / .· ;· .. · , . . '· \ .' . "-:-, . ~ ~ FIVE ERBJJ PIEC~!.~ l11u41r l<~t4oto Wiii lo 11 lllu t n-~ .. ~ h f C~~;;;;;:;:??i.;~~ 111I11111111111111 111111 · : 11111 It , llCllSIVl 191.ltl*lll -In 100,1.00. 10,00 loo• 100-• 00 .W.100. •OOG s .. 100.iu,>>11.1>0.•>11 e JOI PIU!SllCl!'"-------e PUBLICATIONS O-o01•..,..,1 ......... ,_ '10'f'Ol .lllt OT•r• m•Kn1~ (11 1111' I 111111111111111111u111 11 t tlu•. , ... ,_ -, ........ , '" "1'1111 lllOOJ HlllJ. ""'1 Tllll l"' ti') EXCLUSIVI "M.A.S.H." IR) e NEWSPAPER S ' Queilty Printin9 end D•p•ndebl • S•rvic• for more then • .qu•rl•r of • <•ntury 111111111 11111111111111111111111 I -.1...,c .... ,,._ ~10llOll lfl-.llltlll" ll .... _.-'4 __ ,,.. .. ...,_ ..... "(.(,AND COW&lt" (I I .•• 111111111111111111111111111 11 1• I ,t.! ... Mo .. ••ot!W'" . ' Pll -' PP INT l>JG U11 WUT IALtoA aYI .. NrtnOIT IU-CM-'41-4J21 .. IACI .. I I '"'11-.sw,Y ... *-"""'•'.01'· I .... ( .... 1.0.l .. --·ll 111.lr IGI! 11111111111 111tlf lf11111tt l lfl l .. N(D 'al17Yt0G"; . . ' . MolMe bad a maplflcont final ,,~nt. Jn whkb he learu of tlie trq!c. cleatb of ~ and imq)tdlately resolJ_tl to like his own ure. His ari• ever .her body was the best 'thing in lhe opera with the e1tceptJon of ;MJss Sills' mad scene aod 1t dese rvedly produc e d a baodUrchlef or two in the capacity audience. What can one say about the mad scene after the comment that It was pure Sills, perfec-, tion from the first hesitant step on the staircase to the~ last swoon and 10 minutes ot _ operatic artistry that was worth the prlct or admission in Itself . ~conae Ott, Auntie' This critic can only think of two sopranoe wbo can top that superb Sills efCort and it ii very unllkely that ene of those girted lediel will ever be around our way to enthrall us wllb what ls one or the most moving.and dramatically co n-Ron Polazek (left) and Ron McCall attempt to calm the protests of femin ine- vinciftg scenes in grand opera. lyt'.garbed Ron \Valker in a scene from "Charley's Aunt." which gives its clos· Jt most certai nly wM Miss ing performances Thursday through Saturday at the San Clemente Communit,- sllls' moment of glory in a Theater. faultless rendition of "Lucia"J~~~~~~~~~~~,jiiii--------------------. :·~.!~ d:,':'r~i~ ~~;~g~~;': ,, , ..... ,,.. .. ,., .... -. 1 VILLAGE WEST PREVIEW-NOW bevy of bravos. How it ..,ould l"'I Service, You are M t ,.t- have looked Jn the overall light tint all of your <•Ila. f rod l. t .,_ TELEPHONE 0 a p UC ion no qw1e so ANSWERI NG BUREAU 835-7777 rortunate in its castin1 or. key supporting roles we can not say nor should that coojecture ii~~~~~~~~~~( I be construed as grud1tng of Misa Sills' triumph. Bul it would have been nice ~· to tee Molese, Fredericks and ' · Hale get • bigger plect or lhe illl•r pie. We have to remember, •• ~:.ai.:c7."~hra=~:~ ~~~·':::'!':,' .. than just Lucia di Lam· marmoor. BALBOA I ~?.~-4048 I bch , ...... "Mc!<ENZJI I RU K" Mick J199•r "NED 91ELLY" Sr.tt Witdllftd"Y '"PIECES Of DREAMS" "UNDll&ROUND" UPHotoll J.tf .IJJ7 lot OllfO~IMUQ ENDS TONIGHT Geoi1e C. Scott ;n "PAnON" STARTS WEDNESDAY larl)Clin Matinee Every \Vednesday 1 p.m. Adults $1.00 793 LAGUNA CANYON RD. LAGUNA BEACH 494-9390 ' GAtlER'f STUDIOS AMPLE PA RKING / NOW A NEW NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRE IN COSTA MESA SOUTH COAST PWA II INAUGURAL PROGRAM ~";',:J~'.';1!J:::" STANLEY KRAMER preaent. 1MAa, f/MAD, MAD WORLD" ,,.. I 71t I . lillk9 lillMll ,..,.1,..11 I ··.. . .. .··• NOW-End1 Tuesday LM Mani" "PAINT YOUR WAGON" .... Llr• MIHlll "JUNIE. MOON" -letll 111 C•l•r- St11rt1 W1dn11d1y NOW -for PM flnt ti'" I• tt.. -Y" c-_. Hie •rltl•· .. .....lttft4 ,.,.... ., tllh tNlll ftlM thott we• ttlls yeft't ....... , ••• ,4 ·~ ,... ..., llereltti Plt..t '691 St.ttl .. Yffl Me"'-9 -1,._ ,.,_ .lw·L•• Ttlll"p•t AIM e Jec111 .. 1t... l llMt "THE GRASSHOPPE R" ,, .. ,"" ........... • ;o.o;;.,;:r ~~":i.'t.""' • • ALSO: J1•n·P1YI B1l"'o"cl11 i nd A!1i11 __ ,._a. ..... -........ ---·---·---CALL 546-3102 EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ' ' w u s A ' ,!Pl PAUL NEWMAN ond JOANNE WOOWARD ANTHONY PERKINS "' '0' HIT-<h• ... ,_., "ZIG ZAG" 111 W.!loc• ' A•,,. J.U1.+1 i• ICl'I Ell iott Gould Oon•ld Suthtrl1nd . ' ••• .,. lll:i\S·ll .. JA C9UI LINI II!/!!_ 11ssn --··~ RATED "G" -IT'S FOR· EVERYONE -Exc:lu1iv• Wilk-in Run IN Tlll.Wl'ITMtlllTIR C•NTl:R CALL 192-4493 A llOSS l«JHT{I! ,,_ .. AIRFICJRT BURTLAN~R· DEAN MARTIN •.~ ••• HELEN HA YES FUN SCORES ANEW HIGH/ also playing ''PUFNSTU~" • • , I • r Frankfurt To111 Up By Su))way By ROY GJJTMAN LllGAL NO'l1Cll: LEGAL NO'l1C!l Wtdnndtr Otctmbtt 2 1'70 LEGAL Nana: -- DAILY PILOT .J'f - C:llflll'KAT• .,. .......... .... CllTU•ICAT• Of' DOI .. aust•UI llOTICI ., SA~ °" ...... CllTllllCATa 01" IVllNlll 'IC'l'ITIOUl~I CllfllllCA1'• Of' •WIJlltl. UNDlll ,IC'flflOW MAMI HOl'llr'V AT ,.IVAT• ULI MOTIC• O" OIHOLllTIOM 0" P1'UI •1ctlTtOUS MM'll T'i. ll(*ll'llrl'*' ... urtT,, ho! 11 ~ •tC'TIT'°"S •AMI Thi loO!lfff11tMll .... ,..,....,. urtlfY fllO A dMf l"AllTNlllllltt .. AND c111T1•1CA,!'9 °' COllHIATIOM POlt TM ut*"ltnM "'' «rlfho ..... 1. c.'1--d4.ICIW.. M"-., ars ~' Ylw Or.. n.. ...... ,.. ...... diet'""'"' file .. ~ lh•I fie •• WIMklcll'll • •l'r\ldv ..... ., ... SUPlllOlll COU•T ... , •• COltTINUAMCI OP •us1NllS TIANIACTION ... MlllNllS UNOll ill\ICflnt • ""'''-.. -w ltlh SI l...,.... tMdl. C•llttnl• lllllN~ ... fie-kttN • ......_ ., 111&1 MM*•" 91111-11111 ~··-l'I Int l.•llt ~ ITATI °' CALl,OIMIA. ••• ,. ... NOTICI! IS HERl!IY GIYIN ~I PICTITIOUS NAMI Coo•• Mo:1• C.llklf111t, ullcltl' IM rk llllow fll'I'\ M,,.. Ill CHAltCllll: ""°' Wt• l,.,.lt'lt C.UMNll .. \1111111' lllt llO> H~~ C.-... -~ .. -COUNTY M .......... to .!Ktiofl llOlS.S o1 !11t c.or-11i.n1 THI! UNOlltSIQNEO COllll'OltATION Tlllolni fl"" NllM .r VllTA IVIU1lU1 OUCTIONI Bii tfltT Miii "'"' II -Hllo\ll ftt'll'I -tlf t• ..._t.e .... L.N Or~ Ill'-II (•11111'1111 ~ llW ~ Ill rr.. t.\liflff ti lfll 1!1t1T• tlf "ATltl(lol Cedt o1 1M Sl1l1 ti Cttlklfllll filll lloel ... ....., <:tt1'lfl' n..t II II COfldUdlllf I 11111 11111 MW tltrll II Ulll-till 9' IM _., of tr.. to""""lll --........ •NI lflel P 141 ftfftl 11 ~ fl !lie llltwl 14rl'!I MIM II It l POll"'f ANO M,, IMIOH DK"6M OONALO O ~Ill FA'f TlllUlCEL M l-IOU!'°' •I UIU Wet! .. ~ '-li.wlllt "''°"' """'°*' MIM Ill f\111 ,,.. Mmt Ill lull •114 •i.e. .r retlftllc• II 11 ftllowlM .. ,,__ ,..._ -Ill lull ASSOCIAJlfl 1/MI !NII 11111 fir"' Is c-NOTICI II Hlllllt'f CIYIM °"' J. fi1C1 LOIS f SMITH ""'"'°""' Nlfll l tl.11 .... ,.., ~I 8"9dl C.llftt"I• lltt. .. rttlftNll' Is II f91i-. follfWt Inf "K• .. ~· -II ... ._. -.M .. fM .. t!Owl"' ~ ,.._. OONA\..O EMIGH IO Mmltlls"l tor fll .... butl""'. Mr1M" \lftOlr tt,. lltl'll MIN 111'1119r tM 11(111*'1 llrm NIM qi .. 'f\.I N_,. 0 l+twltf W Wl lowf Siu J.rt l-111, 111 ( .. of vi..., 0t l l teilY W A~1 tlMfal .. ,,_ 11MWt Ind lddttilll 1r1 •• ""-111111 ., l'ATltlCIA M.. fMIOH Wiii lltll 11 O ANN 11 100!' So<1ff1 f l lNlnr !111!1 t V JALlfi ANO IElllV CE 111111 lhll Hkl HI LH\!111 IHcll (1111 UU2 MMdtalll WI Y l•Ylfw Ctlll •1CHAlllO L ,01.IY Mt I H•I,. 1t ...,1y•t. Hie t. 1111 ~ .,.,.. llltl •111 Ctll'91'1111 •IMI lltlftr .... l!rm 11111141 flrtn 11 awnltOM!d "' 1111 lol!owl ..... COt 0.ltd N .. 9!71. JO ,.,. DI.., H ....• lt1t ,,... O."lel M. •r-.M flMt"ll ·-c ... -Oii ""' (1Utrot111., lllddlt' llllillKI ,. ctnfl lllllltll ot .. ,. ot llEST llAUTY SU,PL'f •I 1011 ,...,,,, -•tloll w""' 1tl11tlNI 1t1c. ti N111CY D H9w1'4 Jedi L..-11 N ttntr 11~ LW. Otli; (lrclf f'-lt lft WITHEll lftf 111.-llllt 2'till dlV ti S-rllf Cwrt ti! II 1!'tw,... l'ltl fay 11 1'1lrYllW 5•"'• ""' (1Utor11I• lllYI bullMH I••• IOllOWI Siil•" (1llfoN!llo Of•-c-,., "'"'II' (tllftrfll• o, ..... c ... "I" v11i., c. ,,,.. DtYN • Anlell NO'IOM\lllr "" DIC9'!1blt lt1t ., 11111 tlfflc• ot IM•T H •111alVld llM:lr J11fln11Wll1 11 9f ~ JICliC &flotMl"tl T 'I. 11111,. tl>C Oft NO•t1111N; •-tt1' ....... -I 0,, ,...........,. JO tf1t. Mtort ..,. • -11 Mrfw IUM AIMlloM Otl-ltldllrd l l'lltY M DSTlOW $111• Sit, tl1t WU1hlrt toui. ... ,,., br muhlll U!IM!'ll NfWPOrt ltldt. ,, ltanol• Nol• y "ubllc "' ..... .... Mid lltlt Noll rt P~llc '" """ far Mkl "•.. llvilllt> c"' c. t\4114; ·~ "" • STA fl ()fl CALIJOlN A • wttd, ......,IV ......... COllMf "' Uol ...,.... FRANKFURT Germ a n y 1.011 , SMITH 111t wlt11or1w11 •r-w1TNElS 1" 111/MI 1~11 J•11 d1't' "' .. .._u, ,_.,.., "'"° o. !Mwtrd, ..,_1rr ,_,,. J.ct L..-11 11-M Mll4trld M. Al1•111C1tr 111111tld ,.,.,_,. couNT'f OF OlANGE 1 It• 511,.,. C•lllanll• '" lhf '!"'' 1 ti• '"" .... <*I'" lo Ill •liOClllld 111 "" HOYllftblr 1t10 k_,, IO INI to .. ,... --wl'loH 1111 to ... """ ....... wf'lolt •lfmt 11 lSlt No Ylllt II M&llYWOOcl. C• ton• On ltll• 2~rd dn .. No•embl!t lt70 11\d llltlt'ett ol "'" •••lid al , ... "''" (UPJ) -Having rebu11l once c,,,, 111 on a1 "" bu11111111 tc01tl"OttATE SEAL• n•111• 11 '""'rlbM to 1toe w11ht11 1 ... 1ut1ter..., to 1111 w1111r11 '"'1t111111111 11M1 Joton 111111 Ul'lllltd "''"" 10'50 ''In 11ttor• l'llt ht Ulldtr1ro11ee1 • No11 v ., w1111 •llll ,11 1,.. rllht 1,, '"" lM• DON•l.0 0 COOPEll Ind FAY TttUll: J1cll Shtlll d I •UIM"' '"" iloek_lldtl .. 11111 U9C'lltld Kk-410tld llt ••tcltll.O "'" 11m1. brld91 LOI Alltt ff5 Ct !'0021/ Cl•1{ Publlc In •nd lor t lll c..,n .... •l'ld ,, ... Ill llltl ,.,. •""" ., wlcl dtctl ltd hill practically (rom s c r a I C h EL wl t cOnd\ICI 1toe bu1I"'" 1" 1111 1u1ur• p,.110 ... 1 1111 """' tlll!ALJ t 1. Do1om't' cu111ml"t 11r11111111 •111 r111c11,.. t11•r1i" oul• comm1111-.:1 1nc1 be llld .,.. U 111, i nd i11lad11 .. 1 111 lllbllllltt STATE OF CALIFOttNIA (QFFIClAl IEALI Mll'l' &tit! Morlooi llliM Wrlth-L1111 S!Utllo CllY C 1worn H•-1, """"''ICI lt1¢111td L IAUll'lll 11' -"llctrt Cit llw .. Glhl•w It Frankfurt now seems to GI '"' """ Ind r.c11 .... ,u mtnl11 COUNT'f OF LOS ANGELl!S 14 "'-"" ""' Mtl'IOll Not11'1' Pub It Ct llarn . t1~1 P•lll' G • lvtlYll M Nie••" FQllY ·-10 ,,,, 10 bl "" "'-Oihtr '"'" ., Ill ~lllOll 10 lllll al Uhl t I ryth art !'"' "'Y•blf 10 1111 firm Oii lhll 2111 <111 ol Ntvffftbfll A 0 NOllr'Y l"vblle<11 ''"" f "•ln<I .. Ollie• I" Nmti.ct P•rl-77, 6t E Ylllt• • vO wllO" 111/'M !\ ll>l>Kr beG 11 tM •fllllft cltct...., •I !fie tt""' of '-llh Ill •ftO to eaf ng eve Lng ap "' FUltTHEtt NOTICE IS GIVl!H 11111 lt70. ti.Iott tM • Nolll'Y Publle Ill •IMI P([.lltlPll Offlct lft Or1ftlr Ctuft!Y Or•,..1 CounlY Ai111mlw1 (1 '1IOI Vl(!Clt" C.. ltll,_ lm!""""'11 .,., •c--llillt .. 10 IM tl'Mll tit lllt Ctr11l11 ,.., il•-rtY 1llu. Id I" JlS DeW SUbWSY LOI$ F SMITH Wilt not bt r-tlblt kif Wl4 C-IY ..a $111' llrwMll• -M~ C-lt.aloll l!Ulrt1 My CO<fll'nlulQll li.u rt'I ill'lllltd N rllllr tlfli MIOwlcJI Dml• 1M 1•tcUlf(I "" Mmt IM Ct111t1Y ti Ortl!N Slllt ol Ctltlo "lo! I t lrom Oc~ u. 1'10 IOI" f ftW Clbllt••lolll _,.,, J1ck """"G kllOWll .. ""'IO M Aotll . lt11 AOrll t ltn A.II....,. C•llf tllOll Otllll.lf 11.-IN WITNESS WHEAEOF I "'"" HlllC\lll rl'I' dltcrl""' ., toJlow1 For the driver I S I Slmp t lncvrred trf IM otlle'I In 1111 r nt!Ui Of IN "l'ftldent o1 Jtck ShtHrd TY S&llt Publ V!W °''"'" Con! Dt lhl p IOI Pueollll\ad .,....,, COl•I Oaltw P IOI M111llld Hrt"-" 1'0I Wl<olrn AYI LM l\tr.u11!11 -" mY llfM 11111 1llli1C1 mr ti A -IOVrth lllr.u1 Ill ff'll l111e1111• matter 0£ trafflc J a m 5 Ill '"• ...... ol "" 11r111 lllt of "" cOtPO .. ilClll 11'111 1•.CUllid ,,.. 0Ktrnlll'r I • IS. tt ltN n»n OKltllbt I • u 11 H10 »'ll 1'0 A11ttlll. C• '*' Norm•" •o-nc:111 -· ,... H r •flCI •••• ." 1111• lftl'1ttl ..... """"" INI Ctfll ill Llllt DATED Oc••· 79 "" wlfllln 111uro1mt11! °" brltlll of .... Ctr llmU.O Otr'l'lllr ,IOJ u Mal Ori ... Ctrlfflcll• ""' •boYe wtlllt" Ol)ICI ...... '""""'" ». ""' llltwetft Ol)f detours ooe-way s tretls and Dalltld 0 c-· ..,,,1911 ""t.111 "'""° •IMI KkllQWltdt L&GAL N011CS .$1111• Monk• Cl I ltldl•rd • & GtlCI !OFFICIAL 51fALI ON w Tu••• " TnnlM "" ~ ki B t r h p T 1 Id lo ..,. 1111.1 1UC11 c.rMt•lloll 1x.wt10 LE"'' NO'J1C£ N TllOlll-11,.,119t1 1•r1111r I Cir>-/ti l•nN ,. Wt!'911 E1u11 •' V V TUl•I. ~ I/Ml J no par ng u or l e L!1~ F ~:..tit Ille Ml'll: UJ'U.o .. .mff ... _ L.... Portwu.w ltfld C1 Nt11,.., l"l>bllc.C• llornle OONA LO ~MIGH '"" itO•lltT M pedestrian the answer IS a gas HU«WITt. HUltWITt ISEALI PICTITIOUI MAM• '°'17f How1rd c .. lls•llOI' 0 PrlM~1t Offlc• "' °''"''(tun.... l!M OH Lii... ""' --"'1 I ts & ••11111 LIW/flltt I( Hll'\ln' Vtl-11, llmtlltl ••r1Mr lttJI M' Con\tlllllloo! I J1•lrt1 lhttlt illllltl Cl:"°"' tf lffl Sl fd mask Melero ogis say """"1¥1 ,, Uw Noll" Publ c .... nu C:lltl,ICATlf 01" IUllMllS Wrl1lllWDOO L•"' Stltldl• CllY Cl OK \] ltJl IHllllCllljl It WOllCI '• (Utl"flll 11~•1 Frankfurt has the world s o•rtN llr .. I M¥ Cam ... ltllall EXPl1" NOTICI TO CltlfDlTOttl "" lHldtrtll rltd Clo Ctrllfy '"" .... t1604. PU.TT '"" IAINll (. ".II 1111 . CllllCll!lant , .. 1r1c11oru. HIWMl't •••tll (allf MtY I 1'73 lVl'•ttUUl COUltT 01' THI ctftl!UC'lllll • butl,..t1 11 'Ht2 T•lft lr 50 Ottld O«obtr 21 1t10 Alllrllt,I II &.iw ttHNll Ol'll 1'141 M"'"'"l1 .r ncer41 WOf'St a uto elhaUSt ptoblenl PubUl~ld Ort nff CC11! OlllY Piiot llltOl"tt OINSIUIG I. HAIVIY ITATlf 01' CALIPOINl,l •Olll r:!"n~~ll~r~lGJM:.'' .['::R:1d~0~ 81rtt1' W ArdP I tUt C•mPUI Drl¥9 Sllltr lo Colrltfll I rt!•-lrMI For the t our••( skip that OfCtmblr I lt10 , 12tl l'lt ,' ... '""'w',',,',,,, ·-·Oo•o_. THI COUNTY O• OllANlll ' H' ' O D1 n!tl M Arfflt SUlll 1t1 $UbltHet •t SHllall '°I Ollllon It .., ..,. ,. Mil. ...... ,.. ol • •lld 1!'111 II ill I rm 1 ComNIM ot Otvkl I Anllll -"'1 INC~ llUICllltt ~nOlr wltlelll ktltt to N • plaza the H oly Roman em Lat""'' IJ. Clltforlll11"1S Etl•t• al LEVEJIETT CH•ttLEI ~'::. ~l::!":r-::::~:~.· .i:-~·~!': fl.Ill G1111r1I P•rlnl•• C•llf9nll• """ "'""' •Krow ch••••• •IMI lolll '" ,. sed ft be! LEGAL NOTICE T..,.., ~OH ROE •JO kMw" •• ll!Vl!llETT C. fr Mil ,. Htf'f\ •ti 1m1 T•ll•lr $o Stitt .i c1 11ornl1 Liit Allt•I•' COU111Yt T•L fJUJ J.U..., llftl '°'" lfld P•Yoff 1111 tltm•nd ti! frllrt pe rora cros a er ng Pl>l>ll•h.O o '"'"' c .. d 0111y P IQt MONROE o-11e1 Oft OCtobt ,. 1t1e1 """• _ , ,,., •• ,. -·-,_, 0, ,, ,,., dtN io.n 1r1 ·-o eovtl'lflt 1~d '"' '' -· ••o•oc• '' HE•••' o•Y•H ' ,.. ,_,,.,.. Jld< T Wllc.k 24111' E1l1cl1 ··-"' "" ... o , , S •---• o I crowne d m the cathedral It IS DK11111>1< i • lJ n _.. .. ' ' d ~ lieu,.. Nottl'l' l"ue11e 111 '"° "" Mid '"" OK'"'Plil' I I. is tt ,.,. m1" n ''" ' .... .,.,11 .... .n a .,.,,, (..cl lot'• flf '"' t l:loYt lltltllCI dlcldff;f O.hd fol 1 1 """"JI~ •-•ltl ltrcllr w A'*H lublt111 Ollld Flbtu•~ lffS 1/MI 1 .. now an excaval1on seven c1ttT1JICATI OI" IVllNlll 11111 1 1 "'"""' h1v1"' c 11"'1 .. 11"''""' E,::;"~H•m~~' 0.11~ M ArN U '"° C1v1t1 1 A'*H LEG" N0'11CE «ut.o M9rc11 :i. ltU bll'-fl J •-·· be PK:TITiOUS NAME Slkl __,.,,, ,,.. teolul ... IO II I 11>1"' T ktlCIWl'I lo 1111 Ito toe 111t .. ,_. WIMll n&> ODNALC EMIGH llllf ltOIEJtT stories deep auuul to come T~ ul'ldtrtl•nfO °"" ur11f"f thtY .,. LEGAL NOTICE .1111 1 ... ,_,,,..., -..c111n 111 "" olfltl St11t .,J~11orn'f!1~1,...1 c-" ,.."'•1 ,,. 1~u • .., 19 1111 wllllln 1,,. EM IGH ,, 1..,,1ot1 •IMI lOU•I ,.,. a future subway statJOn ,_uct ,.. 1 111111 .... •t 100J 11111 s1 ot 1"' d1rt1 el lf\t '"°"" tfllltltd cw" ,,, on NO¥tmblr 1 1,10 b9fflr. ,,,. • atru"""1 •NI Kli.,..lltlt,.. """' ••ICll!ltl "Mn st••CUSE •• lt1111 Tht ,..., ,....,..,. Co1l1 Mtll Cl for"ll uftOl!r 11>1 llC' hi """'t 'Mm Wl!ll 1119 llttt111ry Notl l'l' Putollc I" •llO for Mid Sii'-mt Ufl'I• ..(llTll'ICATI Of' IUSUlllSI °" Wflldl MIO ltlHl>Oht _ ...... D riving does not pay Even I llau1 I rl'll 111m• al KEITH 5 CAllflET VOll(llel'S Ill 11\t II~ •rlCI ,, 1111 afl1C• Mf"IOlllllf ••M•rtO lrNil .. Hlmllll (OFFICIAL SEAL) •ICTITIOUI •AMI o.tulbtd ,, the thoroughfare Passing the lEJIVICE "'" m1r u !O II m 11 comooud MOULTON NIOUEL WATllt 01STlllCT of"'' l ltomt"f'I WITTMAN & SCHMIOT '"° Jt<k T WllCa• knvwn lo"" Ill .. lht WILHELMINA •EMIEllT ""' lll'dtl"ff111..i Oo "rtlfV filly "' "" 11'111 c.tl•l11 11..0 sllulltd In tllt al I~• •al owlt11t pe •O"' wl'IOI• n•m11 I" NOTICE lNYITtNO tlALlfO SIOS UOI W11lc IH Drlvt Sul!• )10 N....-.ort ""°"' wlloM l\lmtl .... lu~crlbtod to Nalt rv "ublle C1tllo•nl1 c-ucllnt • 11\11( ... H II "' CllllfO $f1!1 of C1trtoml1 c ..... ,.,. .. °'"-railroad stalion IS now a one-•u 11111 pl1c11 af re11c1e11u1 ••• •• ,,01 TMI •Mch C1111 t26H wh '" la 11111 •I•« llf 1111 wlllllll inilrurMnt i nti •ckncrwlldl"' ,.,111etp110111c11n Hltlll•nd1 DI" Corat11 c1e1 M • r c 11y ol S."'' oln1 d11crlbtd ••loll"'" IOllOWI ••lOCAT ON OP IAITlllN bullnlH of lh• Und•rthtnld In t it "ll lltrt ll'llY HKUltd "" .. ,.,. LOI ..... 1., Countf Cllflornl• unOlr 1111 ftc!lllo\lo 111"1'11 1\11111 Thll -'lo" ol 1111! F,11 ... 'f•rH way street The thought of an IC1n10eth L Ftnroro •Sell 1Cen1l ..... t0!' Ttt•N5MISilON M•IH •T "rt'I"'"' to Ille ,,,.,. of 11ld Oectdt~I CDFflCIAL SEAL! Mt Can:imln llllO t••lre1 .. N'l'Olo.sAGI (Nortf'I ,..., DI-c-Tr1cl II 11\own on • M•o 1<•rdtd 111 .'ghl b lock d etour Should -0 Hu"""' Oii Stach ••• •••MWAY INTIRCHANOE wllhlft lour rnOl'lllli lfllr 11\1 II,, P1Jllllc• DOI OTH'f w JOYCE Aut1Ull s 1t11 "' •1111 th.r llld """II comMlld ol"" look :n PIH 11 ol MIK4111ntOUI Ill Y ICr th W kll 1«21 W1rd SI Th• IOI d of Olrlt!Ol"I al tht MOUi -llOll llf llllt nollCf Noll /Y ,ubll¢. Cll lornlt T~Wolil lallowl"' HrtOlll wlloM 111 .... 1 In lull R1cor01 9f Loi Al\tlill Count., tiut d oes not d e t C r Gt Ot" G~vr N ;url Wi ler Olt!Fl(f ot Drlntt COUlllV Olhld HO¥tmbtr '1 ltl11 .. rlllclPll Offlct 111 fl~bl lh.O Or1ne1 Cotti OtllY Piiot Ind P •«• of lt1k1111« lfl II followl C•lll0t11!t OtKrlbtd II lallowt motorists The Jams are 011tc1 11 2110 C•lllOfn • .,.r,1,,.1 er 111 '°'"' 11111,nc. 1'1'tlm• Gr.c• Mr.nror O••"ll• cou"'' OK.,,,tw 1 .. u tt 1t10 11i;,, J1c1< w Mle~•llOll n1 G•rnto Comtlllfl(I"' •' tM ..olnt o1 '"" 8 r' tee h Wlldi •terrtd tfl 11 Dlitr\cl Clo M•tOt' lrwll• £J11C11lrla .r '"' Mr comml11I011 1x1!rtl Hlth •1111• OI'., C.,._ Ml Mir C•l I terMdlon of lh• ce1111r llN ol Four!h Unbeue"able ll•ft"''h I. F'"'°" WI~ ti thl 11Mwt namN StPI 11 lt"ll LEG" NO'l1,.., oort~ L Mld!tlHlll U• C•"'" SlrHI •lld IN c""!tr 11111 TU1tln y 51•1• ol C..Uk>r"le D•-COUll!Y MtllCI bld• "" 1111 loltcwlnl fflU\btd O.UO..I ,.ubnllltd o...... C61$1 Otllr "licit n&> .... a. Nl1h •llCll l)r c-· ftl ""' C• II AY-Mid l11t1rwctl0fl Is s/lown on One subway LS already o" NO¥ 11 1•10 belort "" • Not•~ oubl c work Th• Re•outl011 o1 E•'1...,. WITTMA• • KMMIOT No ........ blr 10. 11 :• 11111 o.c.,,,blr 1 °'"° .....,..,.."" JJ 1t11 -"'-' 11t Tract PW m rteor~ i,.. Pub c I" •lld tor Hkl Sttle DlrMIMl1¥ T 1n1mln !D11 Mi ft 11 OIO P~I~ 1111 Wttkllfl DrlYll Sllllo nt 1t 10 :lfltJ..1'11 ••Ml• J1dl W:. Mldl:ll-laolr. .. -'°" Cit MIKtl 1111111/t operating a five m ile •011e1•ed K•""''h L F'"'°" & l utY IC• 111 '"t•tth•"" tooetllfr wllll 1 1 -n Mlwl9t'I llff<~ C1lll' nu. • °""'""' l Mickel...., Mao. "'°'"' ., °''"'' c111mtf Stretch to lb. Nordwestst.dt wl1ot knowr; lo m• 10 119 Ille "''°"' work 11'1111!0 1$ ""°*'" tn Ot!tH t rv:I T1h 4*TI7' LEG L N()'l11'91 SU,111101 COUit" o• THI STAT!: OF CALll'OINl.t., Celllomlt m...c1 5oufll tt" JO' fl" Wf1C1H llltlltl 0 0 111Mer !)f(I lo tilt wlllll" ft1erlblCI I" lllt pltM P ontti clr•wir>Ot AlltrHYt llr l llCUlrll: A '-D ST•Tlf O• ColLIPOttMlA OltANGf: COUNTV EHi 1Jtn1 1111 ctlll•r Hiit of F-1 .. suburb The cenlral term ma! 1~1••umtftl '"° ICk-..,..., It'll~ f.0: tK1IOft$ Ind .....ell ufkM\$ °" I ,•, 1~': Pllbl 11\td Q "'" C011I °"'"" flltot .. -:.· JOit THI COUNTY 01' OlAN•• °"' NO¥ JL ltl'O. btl-1111 • NOlll'l' Sltffl lOll 00 '"' wlcll 30ll 00 ""'' I ,, H ( ch I tcut!'CI the 11rne alflct ol Bovie Ellllnt1ri11t 1 o.utnbff 1 .. 1S 22 lll'G :r2J,J.70 .... , N• A IHU 1'11blle In 1..o fat 1tld 11111 llf'OMlllY llltllU Saum O" 1P' It' Whl to.IO lwf a ..... e aup v;a e Ill a vas !OFl'ICIAL SEAL) LTI>n Street SI"''""' C11!klnol1 wllldo Cl"JtTIPICATll " •USllllllS NOTtC• 01' H1•1tlNO o .. "lfTITIOlll ·-··.., J t ck w MldtrlMll ..... ti"" lrUI l'Ollll flf ~1111'11118 fMll<• undera-round concourse al Ml y II: HtflfV oocumt n I I e l>I' m I ,,,, ·r•, 1... ..ICTITIOU$ MAM• POI PIO .. ITI 01' HOlOOAAf'NtC Ooroll'lt • L M Ckthan ·-to"'' to "' Sau"'.,. w •1 .. E111 ltol JI '"'fa. e• Nclll'l' Publlt Cl ner11 • tofl>Ot•led h1r1" Far tur!Mr P• 1 cu'" LEGAL NOTICE TM ull4•rtlf,llllCI "°'1 ctr!lh flt 11 ,_ WILL AHO •Olt LlnlfRI Tl IT AMIN !he 0t.,0n1 wlloit .,,..,., ,,. eubtcr!bld pa"' In lflt Whit tf """' ot P1rctl t t hve for s trollers and P• -••• .... Ile• In rt1er11•c• 11 l'>ttetrf "'"' •o ••ld ''-"1 ouc11 '"•'""Mc"• 11 11'' N•-rt 11""·· tolttY ... -, _,,,,, ,,,,,,_, '"' ,,•----dltcrll>MI 111 o,.. " --''"' ,, ·-vo 0 ' ,_ ,_,,_, '"' ,_,, '' <.OJ I e11 1lllor11l1/ ~ridlr !flt lie "''''" P•"•OCK '''" 0 ''" •v "' ~ ··-· """"" '"'" t di r h f 0 .,,,. Cou111Y pro •• raw ,.... ~ ~· ~ Ill OUI ll•m "'Ill' " ltOUNO THE ' ~ .. T I • y od lflty ••teul.O !I'll '""' c1111ornl1 r.corllttl Die-bf• ,., , ... Xpe<! e Y Or 1pp1eS rom My CQmm(,,1011 E:torli l ont tor !hi •lllw• OtKt\l>tll Im WOll:LO VACAT IONS <Ind 11111 Hid fir"' PATltlCIC iCl!l.L't' O•c••ttd !Olllclt 51•1! I" lloot lli7 NII H of Dlflc!al over the slate of Hesse NOY ?I 1977 orav1111e"t •ftllt1ed Corot •c1 Oo<.Ymeftll SUPlttlOI COUit 01' CAllFOltNIA, 11 airnl'Clffd al '"' follow1"9 "'"" NOt lCl: IS HEltEIY G VEH lhll "'"'" M•rv llt!h Mllf&n ltKtrdl lhllltt Sallfll ,,. ,.. .. E11t Pubt ilttd o '"9' COISI OI fy " tot 11\d Cllfttlructton INC llc1!1C1111 tftd COUNT'f OF SAN llltNAIOINO wl\;li.t "11111 111 full •IMI pl•c. o1 , .. ro-. John II Dolo• tf ~1, !!ltd 119 t i" • M ii No i ry Pub le Ci lie nl • If 6J 1"I 10 '" •Ml• IMll"t I" ••Id U'e Jewelry displays com 0.Ctmbl I • IS, 22. 1'10 1217 111 COt11!•uctlot1 Pllftt IOf lhf Rtltc•tlon "' SAN •lttNAltOINO C.1.Lll'OINlol II 1:. f~o:: W•IMr SMt :kPullVdl lllllO tor oroblrlt of hol111rall/llc will .... Pl111el11I Ott Cl lft wm1rl\I II"' 111f'l(;t *"' 10" »' .... t ,_ h tk rt ( f ( E11!om Trt.....,lnloll Ml II ti Olo CASI NUMtllt l"L 1'<W l lvd No. 1)0 Lot A/lllln. Ct lft lo~ luutnct of l •llftl Tt1!1111111t1ry la Ortllfl CIMITY Wtlt 1._ Mid Wnt•tl\' lllll ns.ot fMt pe e Wh.u ( 3 a IS S Or a P1rt<.w1~ lnltrcN-5110 Ollnl 11"' SUMMONS IMAlltlAON Oitfd HO¥ 1' ltN Ille llll llotltr ttltttllCI to -lcf; 11 mM11 Mr CQmmlUlon !••lre1 ta 1 POlflt Ill I llnt 11'1•1 Ii P•flllel wll .. lention Up to 50 stand around l.EGAL NOTICE """ llc•llO<H "''' ~ ou c:h•IH ~• 1ht In •• 1111 m•rrl11• ot Ptllllono JUNE Nlcllalli w1 k•• tor fl.I '""' "'''cul••• "'" 11111 111e 11"'1' A,,11 , ,,11 .,.., 4111,ni Nortr.trt't' 540 oo l•t oNlct al 8arle Eft1l11etrlftl !or $10 aa Pitt LEOEllMAN •rid 11,,_.....,, 0 11.0SS 11•1• of C1lllo•11l1 Or•nH COl,llllY I/Ml pll(t ot ht•r"' me H l'lll 1111 """"' Plltll"'" Or•~ C6111 Otllf' •1101 ,,_,Ill" .. •I rlehl •nt11S ,,_ "" Char1labJy acet!phng the ffl C~edt ITIUll bl ITl'ldt a1v1Dll lo Ille LE OE AMAN 0.. N°"""°'r 1-. 1910 btlott 11\t I Ill IOt DICtmbtr 11 lt l'll fl f JO Im In Novtmbtr U 1f1t1 o.ctmbfr 1 t. 15, '"'''' ll11t tr! Finl Slretl llltnee-Nerlll t f nl k d 1---------------·f MoulfM.N 11111 W•ltr Oltirlel To Ille RQf'Ol'IOtftl Nol1ry PVblle Ill Ind !or tllf Sl1!1 IN coy11room o1 DINtlrnt"I No J If lt10 "" 70 .,. 'l1" '5 Y7ift t loM lll4t Nr•llll ""' s ares 0 0 00 ers surprise Pur1111n1lo1111 l•DOr Cade al""" S!1tt Tiie """-·~ •• flied . ptllllan CM-C"°"""~ ·-••ICI Nlcllal•• Wt tkff ••kl C"Ollrl ., 100 CIYle C111t11 0r1... ~Sil !•I". "°"'I 111 1"" E"'""" llM t o see such numbers of Mick T-IUJ1 of C•tllorftll 1111 MlullOll'Nlgutl Wlttr Urflll'l8 ,..,, 1111rrl19e YIU m1w 11•. -" 1'° ~,~ ~ ... ,i:r'°"mi~ WHI In 11\tCll'JlofSllll• ..... Cttllornll LEGAL N<n"ICE ol Tu1lln AYllMll IOO ID lffl .1 .. , J P F d NOTIClf TO ClllDITOltS Dh!Md Ill• 11C•l'l•l..ed !I'll P ....... I HIM writ!~·~ .. •llh n lfl.lr!y .,.,. ol lf\t ~:.nr 1"' ,~lNWlldlld .,.w •• ~ °''" "°""""' n "" ll\fflCI N01111. ,,. ,,. E••' •lent .. 1 .. aggers or eter on as in SUPlfllOI COUllT 01' THI rl. of Hf diem"""" ar !ht klctl tf In dllt lll1t "'" """'"'"'" It Mtwd an YOU I"',..... w E ST JOHN l!••hlrly llllf '" n '"' fo I Miii! Ill • one p lace STATE 01' CAl.ll'OttNIA l'Olt wnldo "'I WCltl It la be""'"'"'" la Ill II VOii 1111 la tilt I ""''"If' rHPOfltt IOF ICIAL SEAl.l Cou"'' Cit•~ , ,,. 1 ... ""' 11 ,.r•H•I -~ '"° tltshlnt THlf COUNT'f Of' 0 111.AHGI •1 Otll ell ft I~• Soulllt n C• l!Gm I wltnfft IUCll llfl'lt •Ollr Otllu I ,.._., Ill MollY K HENA'f N.l.Allll AND HCILllNOIWOttTN INC Clttfl,ICATI OP SUllNlll Southl " "'IO /"I ""''"'"II rlt hl Hashish IS Consumed here '''''' oO °!',0•,•,""o JOHNSON M11ltr L1bar AQ ffmtftl I ed In lht ol 11nltr"ld •NII lht (OUrt m•y «o tr 1 IUOI ~°l''Yc Publ!c C•lllor"l1 (1J1 W"i C:..,tu,., l lv• JulN 1n •1CTITIOUS NAMlf invltt. from 11 d ct11t1t 1i,,. II' l'-'h But pol h h d ' ... 1 ct ot "" Aooc .,.,. G11>et1! Conl••clfl.-. mtnl <"011t11111no '"l""tllv• o• olhlr orlllln 0 r nc "11 Olfle• In l" ..,.,.. ... C1H'9rlol• ttMJ Th• ll'ndlrll1ntd t1o tt rlllY 11'11• ••• Sl•ttl ll'ltnct Soufll " JO' ,1 .. !i ll ice ave a ar 1me Oece•M!d 01 A111trl<1 southl n c11 kl•n ~ Ch1al•• 1111nctmlnt otvlllan cf o•OC111"1¥ .-.r111 ,./,'1:m'm°t'.':t:n e.,1,., '" UUI ,,...,.., oMllt conoUC1l119 1 bu1l11t11 •I !l:U N"llOtl Pl 11 ,1 w m ••kl ctnltir lll'lt cl Fout111 clearing the area Most NOTICE u 1-lEllEllV G \'EN lo !ht COP es al !ht Qtn1t• O•~v~l1 "" ,,,, or auPPOrl c:hll4 Clllladv cM d fUPPatl II Nav Jt lfn Ant-YI .., fltll!Morwr lliv(I (111!1 MtP Cl llor"I' urldl '"' Sltf"I ISO Oii IHI lhtMI Harth 0 ,.. t ICll ori ol !ht •bove 111mtd dKldl"I per clltm Wig" II Otftrm1Md b• lh1 lonllwsc..lta tatll ""' IUC~ o!Mt tllltl .. 11bll1hed Or•"" COll1 D1llv .. !IOI l'ublllhtd 0 IMI Co11I Of IY Piiat I dlllOU• firm "'IM ol Y•NKEE PEI). It Eli! UO 00 1111 to 1111 lrut IMll"I o1 trading goes on 1n a park 11111a1 11e •an•"•"' nv c11 "'' 1v1!n11 1111 0 111r1e1 1 ea" 11e "' 1i. a lftl;l1111 at1ce ••mt¥ bet •nlld bv Ille court HO\lttnbtr 11 1• ind Ot«mblf' 1 1 No•tmlllr ,1 'J •~• O.c1mtoer 1 DLEI 1nd lhat 11ld tlmo 11 corn-ti bfoll""'""' behind lhe St ock e change Jl SI d dKIO<!lll I 1 reQUl...0 10 II • tllem of butlllfft fo WI! ' MDllf r<;h lltY p IJI II 1'111 Wb~ It --1111 a•Yl~I ti IR II lt70 11.t~l'lt ltN 2211.5-10 !hf lollawl"' P1tlall1 \l(f'IG't Mm't I" Ill t moro commonl't' ~-ft t i )al Nll'lh I w I~ the ""'~"'" ¥0\IClll'I II\ , ... oll!ct SU le 102 L18Ulll Nl•u•• Ctllfornl• As ""'" "' ml1 m••""" YIU t lllltlill .. tll •NI al.uo "' nrr•ld-• ••• II lo t-1 TUii II A .... 11\11 kn•• AM C•lllom . JS rucknamed not surpr JSmgly c1 1111"'11.al""'1bav• '"lllltd avrt or re<iu " bY Std1on 1m of rM Labar ,,...."" 11 1111"1 .,our .. r111111 ,_ 11 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ,.,.,.. F H1U n1t1 w ., ... A•e T• m1 ot ,.It t•"'"' 11w1u1 _.. o1 lb hash ha , lo ott1$11 11\em •111'1 lht nKtllll'l' Codl! 1111' Cor;lr•cl01' lo w!'oCllll !ht ton-I R• m1r IN lllM Ill llm• NtWPOtl ll11cti Cl II lt>e UnllM !lt!H 1111 canllrm&llOll II' J e eXC nge vDLJdllrt to 11>1 l/Nkrl Oiied 11 1111 oUle• trKI htrdw 11 IWlrOtd 1h11l POii I eo11r Dtfed Oct 26, ltl'O CllllTIJICATI OP. •UllNllS, II ... • L. (llrkl IK MOlllt Viii• II' Pl" c-tl! 1r;O ''" utOll mt~: :1 Drugs aside c1hzens a nd ol lltr •lltl'MY HENR'f H TUttlCll: 1n ""'"" 11 tit~ lob •lie l5EALI PICTlTtOUS lllAMI ..... , Cotti M•M C•HI tudo credit .. toe •ccftlf.iblt lo !he Nartlt G1rll1ld ...... "ut A' h."' e,. "'°"kll1111 111.111 -tllO -4\111 , ..... v Olf>t"lll W•r41e Cltrt Tht 111M11t11ttllld .... nrt!fy "' 11 ~ su .. 11101 COUltf" Of' THll "''" Nove ... bt<" ,.,. AOlnlnl•I '"" •IMI "" •bcrtl ... "111~ pohc e alike are taking a lea! C1Ulornl1 tlllll wlllch 11 IM pl1ct cl ""'111d ptfVtlllftO r1ltt"' WIGI "'' Ill ., EtNnor YM kha7t~ oudlntr I bulll'ltn ,, .,,., l't<11n ltd STATI: OJ C•l.IPOINIA •01 11 ...... 1 " Hill (<111' A t•sl> ""6111 "' .... ltn 111111 from discontented youth -bl.otlne•• al ""' UllOt., entd '" •II m•lllll Pl d tar •QY WQrf!IOM II"" "'° e , .... ,, D""""' No J L1111t11 Nltutl C1llftw11l1 ll/Mltr TMI COUWTY OP 01t•--· •••• , o• ',','.",,",,', c,111kr TEN PEii CENT CIOOl.1 M tt>e ._,, bid perl1l"!t11t to lltr ei!tlt ol ttd dKfdfnl tlll'ol haur1 Ourlntl l~t -c•ltndl• dtv JI"" l-l"IOlll 1f1t fC'lllloul tll"IOI Mfl'll of SEltVICI Kl. o\otf1" • ' .. ""'' l<tClmPI"' 1f1t 8fler bllll>tr ct everybody LS marching will\" lour ....... 1115 1lltr Ille I .,, publlcl wt.tr• IUCl> •orl I• eaurreo lft , .... ol •II• :It P•I .... Hlt~w·• CAl.IFORN ....... ""' II d "rm 11 '""' MOTICll 01' H•AlllNO OM ... TITION Oll:ANGE COUNTY Clsfl la toe ••kl~"°" COf\flrmt!ICtl ", •• Sol d b I on ol IM1 llOllce •<tfr•ord Ml'l'"""' ..... 1 .. <•""" e. fir• J1M1111 Tr• C•" tttJ2 JIOHd ., Ille lolltwl ... ---w ..... l"Ott .. ttO&ATI 01' WILL AND •011 °" Nov n ltN bltor• IM • Hcl1ry ~ ll'lt 5uot•lor Court llX•llo nrr"" I uergers (citizens) Olltd NOYtml>I 21 ,,,, I -or d811t•' ta 'f~ or D•-rlY 11111 Tll.. 71• -,.. ttU n1me '" fl.Ill I/Ml PllCI II r11kltne1 I• •• L1n111s TISTAMINTAltY PubHc n 11\d !or •• d Siii• P••-•I y '"'.,..'""' 11\d !ht alllt• ......... Ko of the city s west end twice CO~A TOLi.AOAY OOublf llme C" SUlllll~ '"° lllt l•Y... l'11bll1"eo or.Me Cots! 01 • Pl ot fo IOWI E•t•lt ol I OV c MAT!ICI( Ot.e~•llld IPOlf .... Il l ,1 F H11I ............. I. cealtblt TO '"' P11rd1111r ""'" "" p. E•Kul ~al 1111 W of ,..,, llo dt~• ta w I N-Vef I DtY NoYlllllllr 1D 17 ll 1nO Dtce"'lllf I Herb< I W Ntwm•n ttll Howl!! NOTICE IS HEl(llV GIYl!N !Ill! tfltS Cl1rk1 kllGW" le mt lo bf 1111 11'10fll r1i.o 1, o1 !M claH al tK~ ·~ Carried black flags and ban '"' 11:1o>1e fttmld OKtc:11n1 M1mor •' O.Y J ulY "" L11K>r D•Y u10 70!'l-N "•c• Ne , GitOoft Govt EMMALt HE MA.TZICIC hi• flltd lltttl" 1 w11o .. "•m•• '" 1ubKrlbt<I !o '"• wl!h!ft '"' n11 Dll o1 11111 rtco di"' "' cen d • d 1 to Hl!NttY H TUttlCIC V1 '''"' D•Y Thank•G VlllG D•Y '"d 01.,, Novtm!Wr )0 1'10 Ml lie" lor Preb1tr el w II nd for !"'"~men! '"o •cknawl .... td """ ·~ YtYl llC• 1111, llllllllllCI IOllC~ I/Ml ""''' nerS ecry1ng SCan a In 112 Ntrt~ Gl"ttld Avt Cit 11111115 D~Y Prov cleO tu,,.,er lh~t H W N1wm1n luuanc, ot L'1lltl Tii!Amt"l•t• 'to otll Kl~"',,,',"',,',',ml norrnl l •PtrlMI of 1K row 1hlll bl Frankfurt T h e y protested Alllamk•• c111ftr11I• '"" tiw P•v to torl"llltn lar e1c1t • •M flour LEGAL N0'11CE Sllh! ol c111ror1111 Dr•nt• counri '"""" "'""""' fo 11 h 1 v•" 111nc111d 111 1111 "°"-1 11s1>1on Tlil9 h h d T•I UUI ,., 5'11 dtV sh1I be not , ... "'~" Two Do ... °" H0¥1111blr lO ltl'lt Wltrt me • furll'ler "'"! .. • .. • ,,.' I ~-mn'" for MllY 11th Morton lllldet1l111N ''""'" llM: rftrhl 10 r•IKI 1g rents an spol zoning All•rnt• '°' l•K11ttlx (I? Ml 1110 e ma" lou ""vm1n r11e !or !hf Not•IY Public lft ,,.... for w kl s111, w "' • ,.,.. m• •lld Not1r, flulllle c1nrtr1111 1nv '"° 111 bld1 which a re turn•ng tile on"" Publ 1111e1 o '"'t Cot•• o. 1 .. 1 ot cr111 or ..,,r11m•n 111vo1vt0 ,.,....,. ,_1.., ._,.., Hl•bln w ..._11 ~t«o.c°' ':''1j'J" ,':",. 11"'• h11 """ .. , Pr!ncl111 Offlct 1t1 atc11 ., .,...,. .,, lfl•llld iN '"~'' M .... Dlc:emDtr 1 • u 22 1'10 ,,,. 70 II lhtlt be fl'lln411o ... -...... c-NOTIClf TO ClllOITOltS Of' •uut k-lo 1111 lo "" '"' "''°" --em ' ,, • )0 .'" 1"""" Or•-c ...... l'JI Ill wrlllne .... mlY bl ... 1....,.., " h fesh.ionablt resldenhal area trtctor to ...,.., • cot1lrK1 I• 1 w1rc11ct TlaNtP•• ,..,,,. k tub$Crlllld 10 1111 wlllll" 1 ... COUt"t _,, cl o.,.rtlMlll No J 01 H kl M't' com1111111tin E111rn Adfl'llnl11r11or 11 111e effleoo .i hk • ~ d t t f •llO llPOft 111'1' llltoor.anlrtclar unci.r Ill"' hi Nolet Ii ... reClw l lYll!O Ill f11e CrN!ttwl ''""""" •1111 •~1t61ttl Ill llltCllllCI court .r 1llO Civic Centtr Drlvl Wtlf Ill Aprll t ltfl 10rnt¥t DSTIOW CJtUCl(ER HASATI._ h ln a IS r1c O company LEGAL NOTICE "'~ ""' l•u tl>•n 111e uld WKHltd t•lt• 111 FRANll: l.OGANDICE Trlllllltror Ille "'"" ~~~ ~.!:::.:; 1~~1!tmll "ublli.htd Or-• cu1t O.llY "1101 a KUIET su1i. sn ttn W1tllllr1 e quarters The clly s new lo •II .. bortt• wor•met1 Ind !llK ... lllCI w ..... butll>HI IOdrtu 11 '"° Wl>kltrf (SEAL) w E ST JOHN N-Mr 21 Ind Ole• ...... I .. 1! loulp•r• ·-·f Hiii• (Ill,,,..,,.. to210. Soc1ai-nemocrat1c May 0 r =~~ ~ ":.:.:;:. ~ ·,~=Oll"al c!: Ltl\I Analltlm COllftlY al Otlntf "''' MAlllY IETH MDtllTON ••• ··"--... "" ~",'!'-,,,. 111»-lt ~ m,.",'?!..',~ 1,._1 ... ~lc.~OI' ~ c.•-~ lfi.tr .. NI 111""'71 ol Ct Uarn .. m11 I bulk lr1111...-It l boul Nol•f'l' .. ubllc C1llfor111t ..,. ..., , ._ "" -..,. •• ,., "'""' Walter Heller has s 1 n c e NOTlCl Ci' IUllt TIANSl'lflt ol't' ht.nw!lll k '' 1PKlllt0 1" Sld1a1t t77J 10 bt "'"''"' 11:1CH•110 • YOU NG •1111 ,.rrnc!pt Offle<i n UlllMI '''* S4Nf"I 11111 lHt LEGAL NOTICE 1111 1 rtt Mllc•rloll II' 1111• Httlc• _,,. d d ti d Nol Ct • "' •l>I' •IYtn la 1111 c ...o '°'' of lllf L•bar Colle I HAZEL M YOUNG Ttlftllllttl ~ Orl lllt Countf Or••• Cllll bllort llM mtlll119 II' ll!f Mii or ere a pen Ing pfOJCcls OI Ltiler Ell.,.ln CM lie"'"" 1114 M•rli n T"' Canlrtdot 1h1I 1>1v !ravel 11\d bus ntn tddrtit 11 10ll Yorll1awn L111t Mr Con1tnl11'9" l!••ltlH Tll 171~) 1#-WU ",,,_ 01tltl 11'111 Ulll d1y ot Novllllbv l li'I. he ld up 'OU .. Christfl't"' hu1bllnd •lld wll1 tutltltl•M• Plll'lll"'h fo ff(I; Wll•km•" Collt Miii CwnlV al °''"'' Sttlt ol A•rll ' 1911 A"-r..,. "•Hllllltr c••t••ICATI Oil sutrN••• J OONAlO EMIGH • 0 nN<Wd to u ewl• t~• wor11 •• 111<1t co ,_,, Pub! ahtd Or•~e c~" o o• , ''"' , ..., -~-AGml"I''''"' --E tile Tr•n11f c t wlloie bllllMll ldd PU I .SJ I i vtl trod slJ!llfsiffiC~ D•Vfrltnl< •, "" ,,.. u.,, """d 0 •nit Cotti 011 y "lot l'ICTITIOUI NAMI "' ..... ven police marched •n w '''" ,, _, ''''' •-• c-·•• ,, ,., , -r•v to bt tt1n11111tc1 , Dtc1111bfr I 1 is u 1'7D u,. • •••-" '' '' "' 0 ,., "' , , ,, ,.. " E•••t• ot ~· •• ~·· dlfl"ed n l~f t•PIC•h• Cft tcllv1 -· ~·· • lctmbt I ~ l tt•ntO Olt (trl Y can PATttlCIA M EMIGH mid-October to demand Or•"G" s11te o1 C1Utarn • th•l 1 • bu~ 111rre11,,1"' ••r-ttment• 1 ,.. ¥>: tn !he ~°!:,,~ ;1 1 ~!~~1~,0~ ;1~~11ft":!:..M'" LEGAL NOTICE 1t7o 11"'1~ dudlno • 11111111t11 11 1'lll Jtrr• ¥" L•M OSTllOW OIUCKllt h 'gh e r Pay and better lra'n'ng I'"''• • 1bout lo 111 m•<M lo Cf 1a n 0.Pftlmtftl ct rfllluirr •I II• 1uon1 In •c s•io P Ol>t-'-l• Oticrlbld In ,_,11 LEG Huntln1tOt1 ll11clt Cl Uorn I UM411 1111 lllAIATllt l IC Utt IT To• e1 •nd J°'" 11: Torre• ~u1b•"4 '"" co•d•n« wl 1; $KllCtl 1m t o1 1111 L1bor 11 A •lod: "i;," 1,101 I atunrr• fllU '"''"' AL NOTICE llC!ltlolll t rm 11111'11 II' COMElll 1.0AOER •r MAltTIN M. OITttOW Daniel Cohn Bendit the pudgy w 11 T •n1lt•efl """°" butlnen i:d•n• Code •nd •llO<I • al '~•' •"' T1•11ft T-&MIJ IENTAL •nd "''' "d I"" ft c11111PCIPd A1-w1 fw Atll'lllnillnr!<il" ed h d h I USO Mlr•m1 Ortve HeWPGrl tlCl'I Al e"l!en I dlrecltd t~ f11e provl<loni t" bull"eu .,....." 11 THlf Pt.A.Cl! I nd IU"llttOI COUttT OF THI al ""-lo lowlnt ot SOii WllOfl M mt I" tlll Wit.Ill"' hulrltl'll r aU"e an arc 1st who 1n Cou"IY of O•'"'" SI• ' DI C•l 10l""I• S«llDll• im 5 .,,., 1111 t ol l~e Ltbal' IOClltd 11 2'10 llrl1la! S•rtel Cot11 MIN ITAT"lf 01' CA"-IPOltNIA !'Oil PJIMO f~ll I/Ml ',,. of ••ldltnCI II •• to!IOWI ..... rr Hiii• C..lllwlol• ""' spired the French student Tiie PtOCl<lITT to bf l••ntli!O"ttO h lace 1tr-d c-CotKetftl ... !he irrn111<w111enl al ..... '°""IV al Or1net St•'• "' C11ltom11 THI COUWT"Y OJ OltAJMI CIRTIJICATI 01' •UllNISI M<I JM £ c-· ltU2 Jt,,lfy11 Publltl'lltl er.,,.. CCllll o.nr Pllllf •• 15! w ltllt Slretl Co1!1 ,,,.,. °""'"' P•tftllCtl bt !ht Con1rlCl&r "' llW tub-""' bulk Ir•"•'•• •Ill bl ~""'""''" N1 A4ntl l"fCTITIOUI lllltM NAMI Lllll Hunlllll!IOll •••ch C•lll ,,... N-Plilr ,s. 2' •IMI DKllll!ltf" 1 riots In }968 Set>.m\ to have al .:;r:"!'o:.':~e r: ~:~~~ t" 'l!\ttll contr1C11r vnd~ ~Im °" a llltr fht i:rh dll' ol OKlll'lblr l'tOTICI 0~ HIAltlNO 0, l"ITITION Tiit u11dtr1'9Md llOll her-~l•lllY 01lt0 NOYllnblt 2'. ltN lt10 It!! It become Of alJ things a police 11 A I 1!ock I" ltlOf ll•turH. eau ""'"' c.!.~~~o ln!.s :!t::~"!:i'c,, eQ~~i!.~ H10 11 10 OCI A •I l 11>trt l4t l!KfDW r:~::rA~IJ Of' ... :!!'1'to::: .. :i:: ~':' :...•."~,,,, .. 01~ '.,',,~, ~,,'',,'"",. STATE 01': ~lt1;;.~t~OrntP• h .,,., Qoad will ol lh•I llt111tf 5-Cor-1llan '1'1 Llnco II -'"'""' llut"' WITN THI WILL ANHIX•O .,,. •w ,,. ·~• ·~ Ott ANGE 't:OUHTY ero A young patrolman WOO llutlMll krlCIWn 11 Tl'I• llt.UIY P•rlour ~u~":tl:'" 10 1" 10~"! :0°":lc~~~~ ~ :,·~~U~~:'"I' CounlY ol 0"1'18' Slllt £1lllt o1 DOLL E E JAMES Otelia-~~.~:I z~:::1 /1~11r~°':nd~~lr:lltflltl: Oft NO¥ '' lt1!1 btlor• ,,,. 1 Nell,.,. LEGAL NO'l1CE .applause and headhnes at a '"" •oc""' 11 65! w "'" S!rttt cai•• prtr111e"~1P eorr1m1""" Mert.t tit• •II• "' 50 l•r ,, --to 1~, Tri nrlirw • 1 ICI 11r1au1 firm "•m• of ll:AL FA.a SYSTEMS Pub! c In 1..0 to• 1110 11111 P111C11'11ltv 1-------o~~-------meeling to organize the march M'51 Cou"•r al Ort ..... f 5tllf al ,,.. Pllb le •otkl p•olfd •NII wll cit •II-butlftt51 ....... 1 tnd .00 '"" Ulltl tw NOTICE II HEttllY CIVEN , ... , '"d 11111 Mid I rtn II COlllJIOHd ol lht ..... , .. M" JM E Camtr kl\I""' lo .. ~ Cl lie<"" • m!" 1tt I '"' I PP '"' rn~ a orov tm n T • I Ille Ill • OPAL L SM TH h11 flltd h•retn • 1111-""'°""I"• " IDll Wllo1• 111m I !\Ill "° 11"11 lo °" 1111 ,,r..... """" 1191111 I• c••tlf'lCATI Of' •UtlN•S• lvhen he r emarked \Vhal T~t bv t tr'"'''' wur bl con1v111m11rc1 thll 1 •O@ ro , ,..,, Ilea e al 1.,.,0,,1 ,;:"•$:,;~ or ree v11" ••• ••ll lien tot 1ro1111~ a1 •I I •nd ,,, 1uui nc• a1 lllt(t a1 •iild•nc• ,,, •• '° ~"1 to !it 1vbsctlbld to tt>t. w111>111 lntlfllftllnl 1nc1 PICTITIOUS Jot.I.Ml! We need ls a Cohn Bend '! for ~,.,,••,,",',•;,•~ _i~,' ,",,¥ N~&so:c~~ Thf ""lflCll• w • ,0 11~ fh• •81 c al O•lod Nowtmber fill 11?0 l111• • of AGmlnlllr•llon wl!h.ff> .. w II Sl•nley C Al 111 Jr lOJ21 ltM<ll 1clnewltdt1d IM tx1tul1d llM: 11m1 du1~ ""'°• .,"','/,~. ,"', ,'..,".,"',"••"'c-~o -Cl• w• •PP '"I C'\I to lou ""v"'P" I~~! W I be Rlcltt rd B Voulllt °'""11td IO 1111 Plll11at11r r9fet11Kt hi Av1n111 Lttun1 Nl•Ut C•l 1 (Oflltlll II•) cit Colll M.M Ciltlonil., ul'ldlr "fh. 11;: the police I r• h SI Co•t• M•» Couftl• of 0 •ne• U!td In , ... Pt"0'"'""'' cl lht con! •ct Tr1n1l•rH .... di 11 ....... for f11rth1r ,.,.1c11•1r1 I nd Otltd No ... 111111r lt 1'70 ~·,., IC .. Nb~rl"I' c Ill I ll!IOlll f '"' Mlllf "' MINI TlllAINS .... Slllt o! C•l lo "1" T~e ,,, 0 al AOOtP"tl(~~ to IOll"'fYfl'lfft ft ~1rtl H Youn• lh1t "" !!1111 •tld Pll CI of hN r"' 11\1 Sl1n ,, t Alt" Jr OllN u c I er" I fh•I •• 0 firm II Q'.lnlMltO el Ille to llW There IS certainly a new ~,,!~~ ',,11~~~.!: ~~1·:._~" Y~:i t! •ucti t•••• 1h111 110I be '" ltltn o"' 10 Tr'""'r" ~m•,;111 bffn ••• for DIC1111blr 11 u10 STATE Oi' CAI.I FOR NIA I ~;~"nee:' c!:11~' In :1 "'tan wl1a•1 1111111 111 full •IMI 11..:e .. p ublic 8p1r1l about Ju st Trl"Jltrotl '"' Ille th tt •e1r1 1~•' Pfll I Vt .. e~c~ 1 lmll'tkl lfl(rlW c .. ,.. .. IN • ' • m lft "" court -of °""'" COUNT'( OF DIANGE hi M• C11111ml11lat1 Ell •n ·~~~~'W' ~.r~al\: S1nl1 CNI Cif". bl '" I b I I 1 f 11 d !tt tn1 from Tl'lf 1DOve i re None w u"•""11 ov"'"'1 ~ 1~' ~rr• nf IHI Llnc.i" A,,_ mtnt No J cl •• d court •l 1116 Cl• c On Novtm"r If H10 bllo r 1111 1 Nov ,4 n n clt COil• ,..,_ c1111 921'-J>OSSI Y 1.uJS Ur U en CJ Y 0 Oiied NovemDt t 1tl'lt tOYe IOt tw '"" lo nt IPCI t"nc,,~ • ·-· 1"111(, Ctllf11'"1'-tN!t Ct11t1r Drlvt WUI 111 !flt Cl!W Cit S."I• Ne111'1' Publtc In ,,_,. It 11ld CounlY 1114 "ubllihlCI O••"tf COii! Oa11\1 p IOI OtllCI Now1111blr U 1'79 cap1lahsm _of banks depart C• talft o Tott•• '""'"' ttte ~·1 t•<Pld!HI •n ""1'''1 01 •t-nn s Ant C1111orn • s111e Otf"fflllllY •DH• Id ll•n .... c N°"""bf' 2• 11111 o"""'""' 1 1 is C1r1 o NtltOl'I Tr1nllt H 15"" I" ,~. tO ·~YI Prior lo the rHllelf Pub '""' 0 • ._ C61ol Dt llY ~Ila! °"'"' NoY•mDlr" 1t)fl Allen Jr know" IO .... le bl !ht l l ttan 1t70 220110 St•lt"' C•lltar"""f °'""" C:ounlY menl stores and home offices JOI" ii: TMr.1 tor c•'"'11 <•'• or Olc•mMr, u10 22•10 w E ST JOHN w11att "'"'' 11 1ubu:•lbde 10"" w1111 "1----==--====----1e n Novtml>lr • ''" lltftr• "'" • e w""' ,_. "umfo.!r or 100 '"' c~• ~ c o ,, • , o LEG" N0'11CE ~""' "utltlt" 1" •..o tor wkl '"" _ ,, starting lo de"elop 8 T tftttttH 1 , , ou11 r "" 111 rumenr '"° Kk-t0tt0 " m1 11111 IU.I .,.~,. ,_,,,. ,,,, 0 ,,,_ -• ~ub l ... tO Ore"tt Cusl OI .., p ot ti ftlftt ft Ille I ti ttcttd1 I rlllo ol CU.UOI • WATSON 11d I'll l•tcultd mt lllM M '~-!ti .. ~!Ill ltl"IOll ~ ,,.,';;;"'; human face OKemlltr" 1 ltlll n» l'lt -10 1 vt er LEGAL NOTICE ltAJtOLD w STEWAttT wu,,..1 MY ~.,,., •IMI 1111 LIOAL NOTICI 1111>1crlllld ro ,... w11111n 1nstrU1n111t w c Wit ... !flt "'•d• Cl• fl'law ·~·1 II h snr Mtlltlnr't' .... (0,,l(IAL SEALJ lllllWPOltT-MllA UNIPllO Kk!>OW .0.ICI ... ••IClllllll,... HIM LEG.L NOTICE ~.":11""11 ·o'y~:·:~p::::c:.11!"1 :::,~. ~:r ~;;';,"'su.\~~..,.nl• ,..., ~:: ~ .. :r;~~llO•n • SCHOOL OllTltlCT iOFFIC;:!.~EQLIHEN•'f LEGAL NOTICE Oii •n '"~~•I b.1111 lllltWlcl• er loc•I' .. J<llll ""'""'' ..,. Pttll1• ... r o ...... Coun11 Ntllc• IRYltlll• 11t11 Nt11ry Pul!llc C•lflor11l1 lief°"' tNl J. Of" CEll.Tlll"lCATI OP IUllNlll PubllllllCI Otl "ll Ca11t o, Jr Piiot Mv Comm 11 °" l"x•ltn NOTICE IS li!ltEIY GIVEN 11'111 m1 Prlnc!NI Ofll~ 111 NOTICI!: TO ClllOITOltS OF D Whe" !he cJr. ~t OI' prov dt• ,.ICTITIOUI NolMI N0¥1111btr 'I ,J ...... o,c.,,.,., 1 Aprll 11 ,,,, lot. of educ1lla" ol lht Ntweort Mt•• O••nt• ClunlY IULIC TIANS,.Elt ANO NOTICE 01' fV dl~C• 11111 "' emalovt• ttllll' Id Tiie Uncltrtltntd do Ctrl f'I llllY •• 1tl'lt 21'110 ,.ublll~M O••"•t Co•ol ••••• ,,,,, u" lltO Sdoool o r1trlc1 of Ortnet COO""' ,,,, Comilif1ilat1 £11i1lr .. INTl:NOIO TIANSFl!:lt OF T-11$11 aoor•MfCfi O" • OI ~•con! ICll en In cot\duct!n• I bu11 ... u 11 t6l1 WMl1k1r Novtmbtr 2I 11111 Otc.....,lllr l I IJ C•! tom I •Ill r1c1IYe HI tel blOs 11• lo N .. ''· lflt LIOUOI LICIN51: 01 l.ICl!NSEI NOTlCI TO Cltl:O TOAi lft!Wt 1vt•1ae ot "01 ltH !htn o.,. 10 lluen• P1 k C1U lornl1 ullO• lht fl(' LEGAL NO'l1CE flO 21,,_10 IJ 00 NOQ<I °" IM um dtY flf J1111.11.,. Plllllli...., Ortft91t Con! 0111'1' PIW NOTICE 5 HEllE9'f GIVEN tf1 Ille IVl'lfltlOlt C:OUllT 0" THI a••nl te IO e 111'11 lout"tVmol\ l !le<.r1 I fm Mme al T • INOUITJtll! lt11 11 1111 olflct ol itlG 1cllaol Olllr ti N1~1111btor 11 24, I/Ml 0.ctmPlilr T I c eo rau al GEORGE E ltEGAN Soct•I STATE 01' CALlilOlHtA Th• Ca"t 1e10 It rt11Y rt<! to ma~e 1..0 11111 uld 1 '"' 11 cOll'IPOMOI of "'• SU,.l"ltlOI-COUit 0,. TH• L EG ,, NOTICE loclltd 11 11!7 "l•ctn!l1 A~nu1 COlfl Jlfl 10 Stcur ty No OlO 11 01?2 T '"tleror tnd l'OW: TH E COUNTY OF CCI!\" bu! Diii to IUndl t lltbllMltd lor IM fol 0Wln11. per1on1 wl!oH 111m11 In full STolTI 01' CALl•OltNIA ~ Mfl• C1IUtr11 1 1t W/I cit '"" II 4 bkl1l---------------- L c'n1tf """°'' bull""" tOcl en 1• Iott OltANOI odm "!ttrat on al lllOrt"I c11l1 P a•otram1 Incl P 1ct1 al ru dt"'t• ••• 11 tfl tow1 l'Olt flll COUNTY OP OllAHOI •lit bt Pllb le v "'"""' I ncl ltd for LEGAL NOTJCE A llaklT Sll"ttl I" ff;t C IY ot COi t Mesi NO A~TNI I he fmPttr1 rtt ""'''° 1011 enllar1 o• THOMAS Ml TCHELL 1):tl If NI .... ,,,, PllO,.OSAL FOtt STUOY 0 1' /)ATA .,.,. Countf al 0 •n,. 51tlt al El.,. al GllACE H GREEN O.Cttl lcurMY"'"" I" '"' IHr•n!l~••b. I ade WlllD ... 0 l "Ot C•!llDr"I• NOTICI 01' HIAttlHO 01' l"lfT11"l0111 , ... ur1 .. AOCESStNG SYSTEM '---------------· l(;flllor" 1 ft6611 -I • bu k lr•nl er II ell Oii lllCll CD11tr1c11 Incl I olhtf Cll'"llr1ctat' 1. NOA LEE MITCHELL 1lH E •01t .. ttOIATI Oil WILL ANO ,Oil SUPll!OI COUtT 01' TMlf All bid' Ir' It bl In ltCtwtlll'ICI w1m1-•boul to Ill m•Oe ft1 W LLJAM O•LUISIC NOT CE 15 HEllEIY G VEN IO I~• O" !flt l'\lbllc war1c1 1 It t rt l'lltkl11t 1uclt WI Km 0.intt C•! tor" 1 llTTlltl tl$f"AMINTAltY l lONO JT•TI 01' CALIPOttNIA Condll OM. ln1lr\ICll0111 Intl Sotell!Cf!Grlt l"JttN Ind JUOITH E DALUISICI ""'"'"" ..... ~ ... ta I al "'' l l)O\lt fttmtd OKIOtnt cantrlbullotll Dl1fd NO¥ ..... bfr n lt"ICI WAIYIOJ l'O• THI( COUNTY OP OltANOI which l fl -an 11• I" ""'allle' ot "" CllllTJr)~j\T• o• , .. u ....... w It •• lal"I ltMnl• Soc ti !IKl/rlh No .... , • I otfSC/11ltl Yll'>O c 1lm1 ... 11111 "'' Tiie Colllt•dor •!Id •m IUhl;O!ll•tctor ThOll\11 Mltcht I E""' of ANITA ,,, JONES Dtcttotd ........ In• Purch••lnt A•'"' •• ••Id kllOOf Dlslrlcl Tiit lldllii.;.:.J0~ Ct~~ """' ... !'4 111111 11\d 15t .. 1401 T '"''' ·~ 1114 1•lcl <l«Hlfltl • r f"U eo la I e "''"' unatr ~"' 1111!1 (111110 y WI"' h~ ... Llncl• Let Mllcl'lt. NOTICE IS Hl!ltEl'f OIVl!H lhll MOTICI: 01' NIAllllNO OP PITITIOM ttSI Pltctnllt A.vtnur Clfll M ... C'Dlleludr .... ""1llllff ti IOI N l ulh I ~· <ltd T IMltrtt •hos• ~u• "'"' Id •I~ th1 "'c1uorv vouchl I 111 lllt olllc• oulrtmfnh al 5tdill"• 1 n1 I tnd 1111 6 111 sr~I• of Ct lllot11ll Orlntl COllntv H L. J J 11 t l'Otll PllOSATI! 0:1' WILL ANO POI C1lltornl1 I"~' 5lnt1 No.-C1Utor1111 ulldtr 1111 1J".trs~ II IOlt A liker St ff! In Ille C ty ot 1111 c e k al lllt l l:lovt t nll!ltO court or """llllPIOYll'lflll at •DPrenllcr1 Oii Houtmti.r it 1'10 Dflert "'" 1 ,:,1,70ll larO"!~oi..'le '°:t1 w~ ~~· nl 1 Llnlltl TlfSTAMINT•R'f Et-ell blflk• mv1I prM Ytlllf 1rlot M le! lloul 111111 """' cl COFFEii! •I CC11a MaUI Coun" al Orin" Sl•lt ol lo ar111nl mtm wllh lht nttlH~rv /•lll'"mtl Oii re 11 Y• to IPP<t"' trtlt o No lrY Pub tc I" •nd far ll kl Sii • IH.,.nc• II IAl!trt Ttllt ..,enilrY to l't~i' Ellllf Of LAUllllNCE <:Ll~flOll:D Jl"Vll'l' I 1'11 Sil tlolLISJI CO r.IMI llllt Mlill llf!TI 11 Ctll!orftll f26l• vouchtrl lo lht 11nd•t1IOlltd ti l~t olllct 1ltllO•rdt w1gt tchedu n Ind a! .... .., a••Mllll r fPPlll>eO THOMAS M TCHEl.1. llontr (II-WI vtO) relert nc• Ill wtr ch O•HVER 0.ctfNd NO bldlllr m•y "llhclrtVI' hl1 tild !tr I corr\l'OllCI I Ille lol -lntr,r-t Wh-. Th• p oatnv h de1Cr l>td lft oe"e ii I$ al htr •Ila"'¥ JOHN P HOFFMAN Xl7 dul .. ~t m•Y bf ablt nld tram 11'11 •rod LI NOA LEE MITCHELL •no.ft to lo mlllt for f~rlltir Olrlkult•I •NII 11111 NOTICE IS HElllY GIVllii~ !!>ti Pll"lod of tl~IY UOJ dfVI llllf 1111 dllt ::'t't'~1 lull I/Ml PllC•I r•lldll'ICI IJ'e Al 1rock 111 r 1oe llxlu 11 '~" oment t"O L•~• & C01or100 l ul O np Pt11d1"1 01,..tlor of 11'1dv1trl1 Jl1!1lla"' ex oflltlo ,.,. 10 bt 11'1• 0.,'°"' •holt n•m•• i r• ,,,. rr"" •tld a •ct el Mirl.,. tllt l•ft'I• M• lft L.. 01nYe 1111 1lltc1 h"'1n • H tl Ml lar !ht OPt"1"" 11\trffl ll:oorwr A Aln • !llW ,.Ill St H-..n l oad w( I of 1 t•rl•ln L ouor S o r Cl llc<"nl• t 101 '#lllCh 11 lllt P11Ct ol !ht Adm ft 1lr1tflr al Apprrnl Clthlp Sin IUbKrlbfd la lilt w thl" lni! umtnl Ind ll•I bffft 111 lo O.c1mblr 11 ltH 11 llotl for Ptaltl t 9f will Ind tor l11u111a 9f The 9Nrd OI l!•uullon ol 11!• N1W1orl-l e1ch, ti " !wt ntn ~MW" I I LIQUORS llY bu'l"fH al Ille ull0~•1lgnfod n I m1llrt1 F •~clltO Cal!forn I a l am 11\t. IC~now tdoed lllt.¥ e.o:tc~lld Ille i•ml t XI Im I" IM ceurtrPClll'I cl Oeitrt Lllllrt T11l1"'t"IUY to !hf pefttlo11tr Miii U"llltd lcllOol Ob lrlCI !llf"'tl !ht 0.Yfd lttCll J0t Jlfll SI N_.,, (;EDIGI" 8nc1 tocilfod 11 tOtt A laker pe t1" ne to t~t 1tt1lt 01 ti 0 deceOtM Div t Dll ol "'" 11111 Crsh o S11nd1rd1 11\d (OFFICIAL SEolLl "'""' N• s al lllll tour! ii 700 (lvlc rlltrtMt le w~ cit 11 "'l dl lot furlll1r rlt ltl 10 "Itel •"Y flt 111 bid! •rod ""' g11ch C1ill Slrlel Jn lhe City al Cot!• Mtll Cou"ty wl!hln lour rnOl'llll• llllf' l~t I rt "'b I Ill bri ne .. all!CtJ ltv1 lr Gt¥ MCOI mo I Cenltr Orlvt Wfll '" Ille Cltf ti Si nll Pltltcul• I tnd m11 Ill• ll"'t 1rlCI •llCt l\ICIH•tlly I CC .. ! 11\t '°"""" b d lllCI ti llMI NOYtmbtf II lt)fl t Ort"lf !.!tit ot Ctl fa "I• 1"4 c•1 Ol'I ol lh I 11Glkf' NOTICE 1$ HElEl't' GIVEN lhtl tt... Nallt¥ Publk<• torn 1 .. "4 Ci lllttnl• ot hltrlllf 11'11 ltft\I hit bit" Ml flf" •l lvt t n¥ lnlarm1lllY er ln" .. U l rl!r In lt~l!h' ~ Alnlp ' lllntlft ,~. la ow ng 1tcC>lloHc btYtr1•t OlllCI Novtmbto u lt70 Mo< tan-NI•~! Wtl•r 0111r rl •Ill •K •I"" D11ne1 Cou"IY 0.led HO¥tlOlbl '° 1tH D.c•mber 11 "'° •I ')It • I'll 111 ~ lftf &Id Ktlvld STATE 011='(.l°i. ,n.8,fr.f" I Cllll5t Ol'F SALE Nulllbt<" 71 "°'" JHlll"lt Grt'" Amll•I" tt•lld bd1 ., ""' oflk• ol IOYlfo My C,,..,mr1111111 E••lrn w E IT JOH N (OUtt,oarri ot DtP1r1 .... ~. Na I "' 11ld NEWPOlfT MES• OltANGI!: COUNTY naw lu ufod la ortm ttl lot•llO It 1ott I E•@<ulrl• QI lilt EMlnterl"' 112 $outl\ LYOl'I $ ..... t l•ftl~ AOrll t 1'11 County C trk COii I •I l'OO C!Ylt C'tnlt Orlv1 Wtll Ill UNIFll"O SCHOOL OtSTltlCT On Hwtmbtr lt ltH .,,,.., IN • lllke 51rttl Co1I• Me .. Cl lornlf tllll Wiii of Ille 1b0Ye Mmltl 4HIClt"I A"' Cl flor" I Up tfl l)\oo l'IOUr al 10 Olll lt•tll' I( D .. "'1' '""-Y MtlK~ lltOXON ANO SIOXON Jiit. CllY al J111t1 ~ Cl ~klf~ll al" °''"'' c.unlY C1 INr"ll Hot11'1' Publlc 111 lllOf lot llkl Sllkro to \ht p .... , .... lcK.1tH I l(ltt .. ltktr JONN • HOPFMAN AM °" D•c-w u 1'1CI II .... lcll I"'• All.,...... • .. C•l'll .... Dl1V• S•I'-H~,.,...,. NI Otltcl' NoY1n1ber lJ ll lt •• Oartllt~ Ht .... , l'llltlt --•Ur ,_,.. RotlMT A .-.1n1 •• ,,. 1$1 HI I" !Ill c,.., el Cat•• Mtll Countf ,., Llkt & C•lortllll l wl .. lllf .,,., 1l1ce "'" wl I "" """lc!y OCllnt'd ........ N Mii• II S•lll 11• N.-1 •••c~ c11111n1i. w E ST JOHN Purch•1l111 "-""' 01•ld .. :.l~_ltll ·-Ill ""' " ... "" ,l>f Dr•~·· 11111 ot C•"'°"'I• ,. ..... "' c.11,.,,,,. tilt! HO u 0 HI eo 11141 1~•11 "" "" !ht ••nll Alll C1I H nn• ftl '"'' ..... IHI CaunlY Clark 145-llot ~-~· ...,.,.. •r• "''*'I"" " Th1I '"' 1mounl of CIUl"(htH 1!'1c1 fjo Ttl (JU) m .,. dOI"' ol me Pullllc work '""'lnbllo•• Publl•Md 011"11 Cu1f 01 " Piiot .. ""'""'" ..,. ""'""-" c ..... UL 011 1011 D1tltl Navllftbtr JL ,..,, wlllllll .!!111"'"'"'' '"" ICkNWt ..... '°"' Ot tllon In (at11WCllon w lh llkl Altlm.r kif f:•«irtrtlC liticrlbld • ..., orilllrld Ill lllt ''ld ttfOIU NO¥trnbt 11 21 lllO DtClllllDlr I I Publl1111C1 O••n-. C•111 OlllY Piie! m O...r °''" Pub llhtO Or•,.... c ... , 01 ty •1111 ( ··1ei:r~iT1"" Ml'll: 1•1ftlftr al .. 11 Hcel'll• lor llCll!Oltl) '"° Pubtlthld o""'' (Olll 0.11~ p IOI ''°" 1110 11»-10 N .... lllltlf ,,, ,J 11111 DK .... 1111-" I ........,, •-11 Clllf ""' Navtn1blr '4 1t10 •IMI Oletmbtr ' M•l'l' 1"111 ~ H d bu1l11t11 lncludlllt 11'1• ,,11 .... Id N0\"1mMr 11 ,, '""' DtctmDI• I I E1th bid or •ro00111 th•ll -'"""out "'° ""-11 Ttl C71t) ....... t4 1'70 110).70 Nof1rv Putli< • C•ll"°'111• .invllllOl'l' 11 '"' 1um di •.U.OOO 00 1170 21J7 70 1..0 Wbn'l IM "" • lotm lo bt obtl rltd 11 AIMrllff' flt """""" Prlnclt>ll Olfl« Iii When c 0 1 1 11 cl !lie 1 n 11 ow ", m' tiff ce Gf 110)'!• Eft•l""'r n1 I!) JClll h LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE: "vblllMd o,.,,., C•t1I Dlllr "lie! LEGAL NO'n.CE Ortnill9 ("""1't' l:1. .. Eau p ,, lOt sn Goodw I l.•O" 11 ... 1 SIMI An• C• Ho II. F..Clt NOYtmbtr 71 21 '"" O.c1mblr I Mr C111n"'t''*"' 1-.1 .. l!l tll !4 Covn llOI 0 tOll'lllf • LEGAL NOTJCE b 0 or • -· must bl •cc11111o•~llCI llr ' "'° ,_,., A.Prl • 1t"ll 11,ttt S• LIQllOI" Llcen1t wooo sn c111tle•1 ch«k or clttct c•rttl.O bY • T-4N•J I Alt 1Mt LEGAL NOTICE ,_11 Pvblllhtd 01\"9• Co.11 O.llY f'llOJ. ~ •tit"' IU 12 r''"°"' bll ll•~k or I bl<Sdl t bond IO•I~ NOTICI 01' INTI NTION TO SUPll OR COUllT ~f' "tHI ..,,. No~1111b« 11 ( t l'll Otetmffr 'b-7' , •t1 01~·· bul ""'" "111111 '"° tOd t ue1 f"ICIU"' not ltU !hlft 1&"<. of the '"'Oii"' c, .. •,TI SIC:UllTY INTlltlfT •••• , .. ,',',.",.',',"•'···.·.·.·... FJr ·ow"• Hlfltll'r Cl!IT FIEO AS 1'11 " '111lttlrt' ht T '"""'o w IM" th " ,.. • p ""' al '""' !lid or ol , ... lfl!•I llftDllftl IM NO IC II ,.. fbV ,1..... " "" .... •~•l"'"'o•il, 16 !tr 11 known tfl tht '""IOI '~'' •Ill •«~Pl 1 U111lr1ct 1nd C•ldlltr1 or I CHAllD I VOU NO Ind "' A41MI Todllt Thi """'"1•neo 01rlM" h1v1 c•ned LEGAL .NOTICE 111"t1"ir•rtl\ 1 t NDllf ClftllTIJIC•,i~T !PtEO AS l"ld~ N••b t Ill Ill• ordtr o In""' ltYM HAZl!L H VOV HG Dlbltwl wlllll t11111 If WAL TEA fOWAAC CLAllC NOTICI TO Cft:IOITOll illol111 bu1l"'11 I" 1111 St11t "1 (l lllol" I Th1I It h11 been 10..,, bt!Wfffl ... d lT 1S HERiAY al Ille Mevltfln.Nl-1 Wtltf c llri(t blltlfll.ll •cld '"'' 11 !Oii Ytrki-Llllt Sit •k• WALTER t!!OWAttO CLAltlC ·~· IU .. lllOlt COUAT o• TNI: unOlr m. flCl11kM 1\11111 "PlfC:ISION•f·--~~----------- tlct"M• 11111 l"!e"'61d r '"''"" 11 • '~~LOW~r lt/llO • Ct 10 tolt car EKll wdo bid or • _,. "'•11 bf t111td C&t!• Mtu C-IY t'I' Or•nM Sl•ll ol WAL Tflt E Ct.Alt!( U.• WALTEtt STATI O• C:ALt•OltM1ol 0" T 1 C ol L M.AHUl'ACTU llllNG COM llH'lltlOlt COUIT OP Tiii >!_ulrtO lrt' lie Jl:\11 of tM lu' ntn '"" N~ltt~ 11 ;..,,_ bu$ Mii In l~t Slftt of fncl n1ec1 11 m1 alllc.. ol ttlf Ol1tllel •I tr Ctllttwllll 11111 • MCVffty llllt .. 11 II Cl.A.Ilk. l~t W f Cl.Aft: 11: Dtc .. tld , •• THI COUNTY OI' PAHYN !Mlr ,,lnd MI PllCI ot MlllKI ITATI 0, CALll'OltMIA POil .. ,,,,,UIGt" c-lh•I "'' contkltrtllon c111toml1 ulld1r mt net 110\/I n• .... btlD•I""" tr .... '" 1111, "Ollet Pl'O¥lllld llooul Ill bt cttalfd "" D.tlll!' Ind NDTICI " HllllE•Y 01\IEN fo "" OIAJMI • lac•IW •1 .., Wiii 11111 llnll Cffl• Tlll COUMr'V Oil OlllAJMI i or !I'll ,,1n1trr al .. Id bw1IM11 '"" PllliCISiON OPTICAL MANUl'AC Tfll tbevt -tlonlid clllck or bond 1rt nlt0 IO "IANK LOOANOlCI ~ crltlllort ti !ht ·~ lllrllld dl<ldent NI A ... JNJ Mffl on,,.._ Clllllf'/' CtlllornLI Tho NI. A..iU1 lr1n1l•r al ... d lie•"" I lo bl ltlkl Ofllr TUltlNG COMPAN'f IN( Th• P• .... llllH b9 • """ II I UI lllfft 111•1 , ... trlljl. il•rfr WllOW ... olllffl NOrtu It tt:10 11\11 •tt M"'Dllt "41vlnt Cllll'llt 11•1"''.... frltt " ELLA M•• I CA•MIAN lllllllS '" !vii ""' PllClf "' , .. llltnq "' ... TICI .,. ,. ..... ,,.. 01' PITITIOtt •11tt ,..10 tr1n1ltt lttt beef! 1-l•td lrt' I I •lice of MllllU l fld !lot , tel Of H wl 1 lfl'ltr llllO • COl'llP•(f It 1w1n1td Wltllltrf Lint A111Mlm (Ollftly ol Olllllt Mid dltodlllf lft '"~lrltl fl lilt lhtln DlcHMCI 11\t PtrlNrt It• II .. lp"t POtll A""°INT"41•T T•UtTl ll Oii ""' Otptrlmllll al ACOllOCIC ........... ~.':rdtnu ol tlll ~t.!lt<n It IO<llld ""wort ...... in bt cl•!!l\fd II !!9111d1!..i ,, ... ol Cllltarni. Willlh ll!f """''1'1' Y911Cl'rtt11 111 ""alltn llOTIC! IS Hl:ltll'f GIY~N 1, "" Cllttllt L.. ..,,,. 21111 C11111; TlnAMIMTAAY TltUIT TO l"IU. C01'11'111 I ... W 11 l1!h l!tittl Coal• ~· d1m1•tt lf i!oe JllCCenf\11 ~lddt< •ttu111 Tiie lroolITT II which !!It SKur"" of Ill• t ltrk al 11>1 1110.-. fllllll td COlltl •t Cl"Hllll,_ 91 lllt •l>ovt ftlmld cltctlllnl Ntw-1 IHdl CIF!for11l1 ¥A,(AN(T T1t1I. II. ''"''•r '"" 1ul1M1•"' Of ~ ....... C~nlY (•lltvn!I to""'• '"'e th~'""' I(! lnhrrt1I WI' .. creel.., .. In tell•••• ..... l"' ..... I"""' wllll lht MCtllll"I' ¥ClllC~ "''' '" ""°"' ~ ....... c111 .... 1111"11 I • Rum l ltr ... "" C1ul1 N-1 11111• ol (HAttl.!S A 0 0 LIP" Jh• •forru 0 tlOCk In •••de ll•lu" 0. N "" • ltl'lt Thf IUCCtJlful blddtr wm bl ret111lrM I •IVl'ft Ind ..... 1 ...... nl fvrnll11•1 Ind ""' fa 11'1• und111l1nld •I '"" lrfllC• II' .. ~ clK:IOl"I '" '"lll•ld ,. flit I""" St..Cll Cellfol'flll WEiT-HAL Ole ..... ~· 1pmenl Ind •oed w I o• llld bu1lnel) ttO o;~;:;:co En 1n1rl11• II[ lo lu•" lh. !tl!Or •M mR. 11.,,.... In an furnltl!l11111 et Dtlller CCIYtflnt l flllll'IY hll •flfl'"""'¥1 DUttVl!A CAlt,ENTlll • •llh '"' l'IKflH 'I' vouchln '" ~ tlflct OATIO HO""""". ''1'0 NOTICI! .. HIAll'f CIVIN "'-" "'11 111 lnlllf i nd 11>1 (Ofll dtr1!1111 IS CM !tr L. 8• rv tmoullt 111111 la 1~ o! lllf Ctlftlfld r;aw ioUfld •I 7'~ I lllo1 ll•t1I (111!1 IAllNH Itri' l!INllT J SCHAO. JI J Ill lh1 cl1rll of '"' 111o1Yt 111l1ltltl tMrrt If Chftflr L ltrr• J6lllll Wlllf 1111 lf!M """"' 1 "111lall ... 1ner1!or 1a1111t1r w m 1~1 conlfCll 11 o~ P" cl 11 trlc• •ncl • !lllhfut o•rforfl'l111<• l:lolMI I" Mt11 CounlY or 01•n.t Slllt OI' tns MtcArinvt aau1tv1t11 '"' Olllct to trtl•rol fhtlll with 11\t ""'"' .. ,., lllJlll \.... •• ,,., -i~"""" ltutllt " Tn'-t~;; tor ""' 1r1n11,r lflll •ltllMlf"I o! It>• Tl! OF "'c'.~"POIN.. '" ll'llCl\/llf HUi i le 1~ ot !ht C""lrlet C111for"1t 1fld buJlfttll kll(rwft •1 THI l tX !PM Hlw'9f'I lttdl C..119,..ll YOUCl'ltn 16 1111 llntltrtl-11 tho! elflct STATE" 01' CALll'ORN!A l T1"11!1 ft lltl v.c:•llCY ttllortnct It wtrlclil ''°""'Id tlctl\M,, '•bl COl'l,Vll\ .... ! ... an STA ) SI ... 1e. tllofl band• " bl *~""' ,_ • PLACE ,, .... Wiii<~ I• 11'1• •It.et " llullllh• 81 Of h!J l !!frllt'I WILLIAM • MAYIS .01 J SS h m•d, lllr flirtl!tf Mrtlcut.er .. .,,. 11\M I •!ltr 111t !Ill d•v ol J111111ry 1t71 11 IYttlY Cfll!'lll1" .. I lltcllrY lo lllt TM •for ... d lk\l!"llY fl"l"lltlloll wltt 1111 l/llCll'lllntf I" 1!1 19\t!ft " H rtt Jtllnt Norll'I $tft 0 1brl1I Avlf\ut, A111M COUNTY 011" OttANOI 1 l!'>f ti""" I nf •I.ct .r tlffrlrll' Ille ttlf\I "" nc .... dfN~I of NIWHl"I N• COUNT'( OF OlllANGE I MIUl!Wt Nf1..-1 W•lll' Ol1trlcl bf CCllllUlftlnl ltd (ill or .11 ... "" lflh "y fl"" •l•lto"' ,,1. 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Kll!lll W I JT JOHN WI! 11r1 01 llllkl t•tclliH lhf Uflll rt111'YU. lflt r!1ht M •l !ttl In~ 111'11 1H lrt HOllt D\lltTl.I. CAllPIMTt• A •••MIS lf•ICVlll' 111 1111 WHI 1111 M-Clln!" Cltrt. Tr'"'ltrtf inti I"""""" COJP'l(IAl S£•1.I • llllh. tr .. rtltM ~ ""' •'lill •I bldt tr to Ottld NO'itlnlNt ti~ llH a , ••MIST J KMA• ,. ti tM ttle¥9 1111"11 Mfftnt !OP'l'l(t,t,L SIALI ...... A. l•IWIM. T ""'"'"" e~tlYll M Ch•m .. tLlln w11 .... "" "'""""'I• I~ • bid "" ti .!KurtO ... ,... .SH MICA/1111wr ............ WILLIAM. MAYIJ lf¥9IY11 M. °*'111trt1l11 22tt "~ ........... J\11111111 E. O•IWltkt Holtl'l' Pub I< C•lllot"1' fftltd ~ llW l'rlr'4 Lot•,..lu ,._, Offlft 111 11" 4U .-tti till f1"111 A<tt No6irY ,USllc , C.llfom1I $1111t """""'"' "' ,.,,lltftfll llld IMtnd"' °''""'' Collfll• f<!OOLTQN NIGUP"L '"'•r•ltl llK,.... c.-111111 N...,..,. I Mtfl (1111 t'W6I ...... (lllltl' ... '"" Ol'•llt• ("""" (tell MtM Cotl ...... ,... Tr1"''''.. Mr (ommln lon ... plrtt W,t,TER D tlll:ICt •Ill \.111111" oll'tR" T.....,_ m.c) Ut,... T•lt 111'1 ~ Ml CWlll'lllHltrrt IUll"ti Tll 111•1 ........ Gf'ottf E It"'" Mir"' ''" Ir •lr"{llldff I H I• ·-· P•nc C1llftrf;ilt .... ..."'"""'. -1:a .. 1111w ... __ fir l !l,lellllr MIY .. 1rn ....... , .... HR-- Trt"'"' or •lld lletll-"11b 11!od ()l"•n'" Caul 01 r flllot $KT1!11'1' •s 111tol P~tl tlttt Orfn1pt c .. 11 Ot IY "1111 ,.11tll11!H1 Or•l'lft c; .. 11 011" Pllltl "llllll....., Or•1t• c11" 01 IY ,Ito' •uM •hid 011"'" c..11 o. ty ,1111 & '"Yblltl\fd Of1"11• Cot!! O•lll' .. tlftl H1v1mOI 10 11 rt •IMI Dtct111toer 1 .. 11bll1h"' Ol'l• Co.ti 01lly •!Iii! '11bll11\fd Oll<'!fl CMlf 0.ltt Piiat N1-btr fl •NI Otf"" .. r l I II. Nllftmlrtr I• 11111 Oftt111Dlr 1 1 11 N-llolr 1t 17 If •11111 Dtcwnbtr 1 Novimblr ,.. M •M OMrttMlt .fr. -.itl-I ""' 12JI 10 Ul'lt 21•11 Otctl'lll!otr 1 • ,,,, ,, ...... ,. 01( ...... btr ' 1110 nlt-N It.II "'*"" "11 11NoJ19 ,.,, 11fl 1' "" nt•H , ---o::-=-:--·,..-,....-":";! __ ":"'~~--------'"'!----------,,--,,---------·-----.~------------~-------~--~-------- I - • HOl,JSIES l'OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSE$ FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Gtnerel 1000 Gener•I 1000 i;Ge;;;;";••;;a;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l:;OOO;;;:;c;.,..;;;;;:;':;a;;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;1;;000;;;;;; * * * * * * TAYLOR CO.· "SP IC AND SPAN" DOll HOUSE Newport Heights 2 ·bdrm home ideal for cou- pl e. Lge rooms w/beamed ceilings. Lge. rear yd. Owner moving north. $25.950. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 52 Lind• Is le Dr. Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/4 frplcs ., circular stairway, decorator selected carp. & drapes. Shown by appt. .......... $210,000 l MASTER SUITES · $1 29,500 Trenlendous View! A great family home in lmn1ac. condition. 4 Bdrms, Cam rm. separ- ate D.R. & 3lh bas. Professi9nal decor. For complete inform ation on all homes & lots, please call : Bill GRUN!)¥, REAL TOR 83l' Dover Dr., Suite 3, ~.8. 642'""20 "Our 25th Yea r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 S•n Joaquin Hills Road l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!IOOO!!!. NEWPORT Cl:NTER 644-4910 Gen erol 1000 General * * * ;* * *'=..;.w_H_Y_P-AY- I 1G ,_._,,._,_._1 _____ 1000_1 General 1000 RENT? Collect lt with lh<'St! two hom- es on chOice E'ASTSIDE cor- ner lot A 3 bedroom I: a 2 bedr00m, each with its DA'NDY 1>UPtEX ' East-side 1oca1lon 'A'ith block "-au, t>nclosed yard. Try $1,000 Down on 2Zl-D2-nfA. Full Price Only COMPANY OWNED!! This beautiful 4 br Paceset oivn yard. Both lreshly painted too~ Both homes for only $39,500 t.. owr1er 1vi1J help finance. Colesworthy ter is &\\'ailing a new owner because the oon1pany "·ants out of t/W' Real Esrate busL Jlt'Sli. Outs111nd ing area, and a dellghtful filtered & heal- ed POOL nestles in the back- yard. Located close tu golf course in fifes.a Verde. Great & Co. $29,995 u~rn'IS avail. & priced at REALTOR -"" $46,!m. Newpor1 Beach Of(icc EXCLUSIVE WITH Newport •• Fairview OCEANFRONT CAMEO SHORES · -Spacious Ii luxurious 5 bedroom home with steps down to private community beach FormaJ dining room Paneled den with bar poolside family roon1 1232.000 Real tars 1~0\.lr 15th Y ••r in The Herbor Are•" 673-4400 $19,500 WHAT A LOW PRICE for this gorgeous 3 bedroon1. 2 bath dol.l house. Lots of Tender Loving Care here. Deep pile ca'l'E!IS wilh matching drapes, Tim!'·SHV- er kilchen. double garage. Yard COmpletely IPnro:I in- cludini; front !or the kid!. 10% down will handle! CALL Walker & Lee Realtors 2790 Harbor Bh:d. at Adams jl.)..9~91 Open 'til 9:00 Pt.I COATS 1028 Bayside Drive .• WAltAc~ , ___ fa_67>4_r~;;-ut--- y REAL TORS Beach House -546-1141- {0pen Evening s) \0 THE REAL 0-ESTATERS NEEO A TAX Macnab-Irvine Realty Company HARBOR VIEW HOME WRITE OFF? Likr new 2 bedroom den 2 Tllen use a ·pa11 of t_he ~own baths. Beautif\llly Carpcied payment as pre-paid inter-and draped. Many extras. r sl in 3 units, Costa ?.tcsa. Ownt'r transfcrN'd. A8king Convenient loc~tion near $34.950, Another exceptional schools ·& shopping, 2 bed-buy' rn1s each, garage & pool, · · Macnab-Irvine · asking $36.500. Anxious own. er will cany 2nd. Make offer~ 642-8235 675-3210 PAIJLoWHtl1! CARNAHAN •&ALTY CO, 1093 Baker. C.M. BEST BUY In }~arbor Highlands/\Vest.' cUff area. f o·u R l:Hirm. home in TIP TOP shape. Unclt'r $40,(XX}. Try lO'k down. Owner "'ants action!! $24,300 V.A. LOAN Subject to 1\~3 annuaJ per- centagt' rate with totaJ PRY· ment of $111 per month. Huge 3 bedroom, '.! bath borne cloS(' lo !IChools and shopping. Gorgeous f1RE- PLACE. ''Glist('fling Hard- "''ood Floors." Submit a reasonable down payment. seller \vi U co-operate. Walker & Lee Only 10°/o Down -'!'"""" \\'ill buy this roomy 1900 sq. ........---~ 2790 Harbor Bl vd. at Adams ft . 3 bedroom, J balh home Coldwell,Banker 545-9191 Open 'ti! 9:00 Ptlt 1vl1h large separatl.' family ~•DCOMMllY. BACK YARD room and formaJ dining. You'll lovr tht> near new MECHANIC •hag '"""'' ""' ··~ ... ' 60 I 83l-0700 641-2430 $22 9 50 . "'ell landscaped rear yard. _22 _______ Tb. h . ' rf • 1 lh Priced for quick ~:.I{' at A L t for Your is ome 1s pc .cct or e SJ2.500 with cally lcrnis -1 0 backyard hobbyis~. It has Call 67~YI. Money 2 two car garages -plus three bedrooms and \\'OIL! '0 THE REAL .. "-ESTATERS • • l • '·~ HOm. Plus Units rn a private run.I !!ielllni;: - spa~ and lots or 8hade 11tts. Homey. neat lhrt't' bdnna. l\\'O balh home \\'llh lireplaa-It. picture view \\·indo~··· \\rJTH TI1REE CH 0 I C E \VELL KEPT UNITS 10 pay expenses . \VHAT A BONUS: Bolh home l'nd un!tA 11ho11· pride of O\\'nt•sahip and are in immaculate cnndhlon. Priced lO'i.eJI 1111 only S!'i8.500 _ with Unv.rn:lng av11llablf'. M. M. LABOROE, Rltr. 64&-0555 Kves: 642-7438 Here's Your Chance!!! Srn111\l'r _rhr1•r bc~room. home 1 CALL NO\V S46-8&10 on a 4:i fOot \\'Ide Lido lot RSI. · n111.kPS for grea1 pa1io par. lie~. ~~nr 1hose 1vith visions. 646-1171 ~o'THEREAL \"-ESTATERS , ' "' '< J ',Tl 1 ,; $17,750 FULL PRICE 2629 Harbor, C.tlf. EASTSIDE, C.M. 3 Beclrm, 2 Baths • plus * 3 hug<' bedrooms \1·ith mod-2 Bedrm , I Ba th ern i.:orteo~s bath. 11 needs near t11h SI. Shopping, trplcs !'nine cleaning hu t you reap in each bltns in 11pt recenl- lhr harvf.'sl. \Viii sell \\;jth 1y red~. 4 Garag~. F'l!A and No Down Terms L h Rlty GI 1ern1l!. WHY RENT! GC enmyer • W I k & L e c.11 "'"'~E"'" "'""' a er e VACANT Realtori Immediate Occupancy 27flO llul'lxir Blvcl . at Adams 4 bed PLUS lor1T1al din- :1l't-0-!65 Open 'tll 9 P\\f ing ;~~S fanilly room ·with BEACH DU PLEX fireplace PLUS drl'an1 kilch- \fest N~'lllJOrl duplf's. l BR. Assume a $24 ,SOO low inl e!'fsl 2 ba, <'a. unit . Spacious liv, loe.n on thi• dellahllUI l bed. rn1, w/frplr, Nicely carpet. room, 2 bAth llOmt. ~autL ed Close to tw-ach ful corTll!r lot with l)CCMS sn.3oo3 6'12-zi-1.1 Eve1. tn PLUS pool ·PLUS xlnt financini. Assumt! 6%. ~ VA Joan. Asking $48.950. Call Ginny Morrison, S o u I h Coe.st ReaJ Estate. 545-8424 or 540-2286. ' for boal or tniJer. Frffh, • clean, ntat. $30.$XI. 546-2313 associated $24,950 0 TI·!f; REAL "-ESTA TERS ' CORONA. HIGHlANDS Vliew ._ pool Ii )'OU own Ult! land, in Corona df'l Piiar. 4 Bdrm1., 2 baths.. 0 n I y 169.500. CORBIN- MARTIN REALTORS 641-7662 - 3 BR + DEN BROKERS-REAi.TORS Z02S W lalboa 67J·l••l S\26 • month, Aasun~ ti~ 5\.. •; apr. klan. l 1wi n ailed ---bMrooms, C'O%y de n. 2 bal hs. IMPRESSIVE dreani kitchen, b1dlt • In!. Pool. P11tlo. Vk-11 +! 4 Bed-541).17:20 rooms, 3 baths, IK'P ,powd ,TARBELL 29SS Harbor rm., 'A'f!l bu, Iii! dtn rm, lg'"'=====;-;;== kit w/~p brkfSt nook, panel. WATERFRONT PAT IO It'd fl m nn., tn rhl! r xclu. Ont of th(. belt 1n ~ Covea, 5ive Dover Sh0rt5 home. Rdom for a lal"'Kc boat Roy J_ \l/11td Rltr .. 1033 tllar. 4 Bedrooms lncn Dr 646-1550 open dAtly, S12:i,OOO THE: .~~lctil draw in 1~ LIDO REAL TY INC. \\'e;st, .. it OAil)' p 110 t 3377 Vi• lido 673-7300 O JJ"illed Ad. 512-5678 DAtl.Y I'll.OT \YANT ADS! o THEREAL \"-ESTATERS LIDO WATEl!FRONT APTS.-320 LIDO NORD $150.00J Price with 7% lsl T.D. 6 Beaut. furn. units; 6 car garages &: util. room. 80 FL on swimming beach. \Vil! consider trade for boa! or maximum $85.000 lge. 4 BR. house. Bill Grundy, Rltr. 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-467il • HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES l'OR SA!:E HOUSIS POii SALi HOUSES FOR SAL& HOUSES FOR SALE General lOllO General 1• Newpert lliNch 121111 Hunt!""°" Beach 1400 lfunflngloft lle•ch 1.ali MOYE IN BEFORE WHAT !1~ PRICE 71/.0/.-4 11$08[ VACATION AT HOME A~N~.~~N&.,M5ll% for thia: rorpou1 3 bedroom, Ownu'a divorce aacri!lce in FHA Joan or $50 down on CHRISTMAS 2 bath doll houre. Loi. ol 8',y<:rat noar ochoor. • This unusual ..&tie home now FHA 22"°'· 2·""""""' Tender Lovin& Cano here. stortt. Fee title_ New cu-. is oompletely customlled 2 bath Sl8.500 full price . Deep pile carpets with pets A: drapes, family nn, for crtt.cloua living. Swlln In ~~.er~•-~wa~':'.', '"•n~:-t Ready and waitinr Is this matchinr •-.,. --· -•-cond Sa be •·• f • -, ....... ......., "'"" ... ,,. .. OK-. _ , uuo:· AW1 , pme rm. ve your own a~ poo _ UJV • •--t.,' ~··. •-, call and beautiful Glen Alar borne. saver ldtcben, double pr. about $10,000! ty pool area sporta 2 patios. u"' .... r.,. .... t"' CloSt to schooIA and ahoP-age. Yard completl:l)t fenc. 54&-1211 Deluxe bltn all elec kitchen Jee loday ·walk to i&hoppi.fl&, ping. r-.tagnifictnt trtt1.aur. ed includinc front for the &: family room lanai. Price If round this 4 bednn, 1% bath kids. 10% down will handle! includes w/w crplA, drp&, home. 1'ht owner has paint. CALL 1hutten, water softener, -....... •11J ed the inside and will install w lk -I L PMwport Hefthtt 1210 tu.4471 (-.)-a er ee waahe:r, dryer, refrl&'. + ne-w carpet!' fO! you. It'1 BARGAIN I I much more! Assume 6% ASSUME 5% FHA mortpgt vacant and waiting for your Lovely 3 bdrm_ A den, l-% FHA loan. Tota.I monthly of $24,000. Cash ou.t for family to enjoy Christmas Realtors ba. Alley entrance, rm. for payment only $159. UNDER! $15,900. Heated pool, two by the fireplace, VA/FHA 7682 Edin&:er boat & trailer, Covered UNDER! PRICED!! $26,500 story, 3 bedrooms, 2~ baths. terms. $28,500. fn4) 842-4455 .Gt 54().St40 ..:_ ... __ G 1 Hurry!! formal dining room, family -Mhop. Ma,y • • Harbor View MORGAN REAL'TY "'°m w/Ottpla"'· Carpots • J6iiir.. COATS ~WAltACI RIAlTORS • ffl-4454 • In CorON del Mar 67U642 675-6459 drapes. Vicinity Brookhurst &: Indianapolis. By owner -4 Bedrooms, family room -BY OWNER: 4 Br, 2 ba, after 6:00 PM 962-7635. garden kitchen on extra frplc, blb11. Many xtras. REAL ESTATE la.ra:e loL Luxury bath with Walk to 3 schls. Would con-HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. Fountain Valley 1410 sunken tub + many extras. alder least, 543-5306. 194-5311 n-...n Eveni-1 •A .. ooo You 0 .. -... •·-• ....,.... ... ~. .. .. "Ill:' ...,.... Open '1 days. 8:30 to 8:30 Lo Int/Lo Down "'""'""'""'""'""'""'"~I Pho,,. 646-nn 10 THC RE:AL "-1;sTATl:Rs Realty • 642-5200 University Park 1237 ired hill · REALTY O THE REAL '"-E:STATERS CUSTOM TDWNHDME WOW! $16,750 IT's GREAT! Relax and en- OWNER MUST SELLI ROOM FOR TRAILER Extra large rumpus room +3BR&.2BA, HAf'FDAL REALTY 64>-4""5 joy """""' Hving. No up. OWNER MUST MQY(I. keep \\'OrTies. Large master suite. Cozy living room. All elec k1tchen incl washer Reduces Price $2,000 &: di-yer, Private 2o• patio. Lovely, large 5 bedm1, 3 Clubhouse & pool_ Low, low 'bath. Good terms; Undu- down with an investment priced! cheaper than rent. Don't be HAFFOAL REAL TY late! Call ITI4) 962-5585 842-4405 FOREST l OLSON Inc. Realtors _ 19131 Brookhurst Ave, Huntington Beach BUY OR RENT REAL ESTATE HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. lff.5311 Open 7 days_ 8:30 to 8:30 . $15,800 F.H.A. Anyo~ quaJifies subject lo FHA Loan with 6~~ annual pereentage rate, Total pay- ment $148 per month. Sharp 3 bedroom home glistenlng with HARDWOOD FLOORS. 2 luxurious baths, modern built-in kitchen. Ready for immediate occupancy_ . 'I buyers welcome. CALL! Walker & Lee ReaJtors 2790 Harbor Blvd. at ~dams 545-0465 Open 'tll 9 PM NO NEED TD WAIT Sant• Ana 1620 DELUXE Quiet tree-lined street, cus- tom built 2 beclnn home, hrrlwd firs, new shag crpis, frplc, drps, closets galore.: Sparkling clean. Take over 6~ % FHA Joan or re-tin. ance, OexibJe terms. 347-8507 Eves: &t2-0427 mi1i§ 11t..11 1705 DON'T RENT Own your own I-Bedroom apartment in North LagUna_ Walking .distance to beach, shopping, churches & Heis. !er Park. Modem built-in kitchen, spacious bedroom, generous closet & storage space_ ONLY $1~,900, Call- .A&tan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre SL 494-!W13 549-0316 EMERALD BAY Just listed! Attr. b-aditional 3 Blt.. 3 Ba., sep_ liv_ rm., din_ rm. & tam. rm. TI6 Emerald Bay $75,000 Sho\\'n by app'I. Bill Grundy, Realtor 833 Dover Dr., NB 642-4620 • • $73,500 • 2-STORY, 3,000 SQ. Ft. 3 Br/2 Ba, living/rm it. Sensational 2 story hoine that , family/rm. 2/fp's. has everything! Only 2 * GOOD TERMS! I * yearw new. 4 B~n., 2 404 Emerald Bay bath, panelled family room, 494-2609 antJque brick fireplace, for. RENTALS ma.l dining rm, elec bltn Houses Furnished kit., dishwasher, w/w crpts, 1 ---------~~ drps and many extras. Price General 2ooO reduced for quick sale ---------,-11 "8,500. cai1 now" * Oceanfront -/;; , REAL ESTATE HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. 894-5311 Open 1 days • 8: 30 to 8: 30 cozy FOR 2- 0NLY $17 ,900 Inc. Realtors 2'J99 Harbor SELLING Your Home? ' e \VE BUY EQUITIES e rREE APPRAlSALS e 2S YEARS EXP. 847-3507 Ew!1: &12-0421. 4n-376'.9 'ftit®ll!.:W BUILDERS CLOSEOUT Credit rejections place 1 hom. e1 on choice lot1 on the mar- ket again!! 3-7 Bcdnnt, 3 &: 4 bt.th11 blU., crptg, ibake roo1 etc. from m.Mo. RANCHO LA CUESTA Btookhu.nt A Atl11nt-., IT.B. 969-1338 Open 10 am-6 pm ASSU~TE 6 % loan-4 hr. 2 ha, Pf\!IO w/brick O.s.Q. Move tn for Chrlslm!l~. •Owner, 841--0509• ________ , S90 including .. Ulil. Groov)' 1 BR, Singles fine. Av8U I')()\\', ~. BLUE BEACON •' 1 * 645.0111 * RENT e A• HO $95.00 " UP ' ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS, 1 FURN. OR UNFURN. «J ASK FOR JODI 832-7800 ' . *SINGLES OK* ' SlSO-NICELY fW'l".I 2 Br POOL. Nr. CXX:. Avaiiable now BLUE BEACON * 645-0111 * R1nt•l1 fo Shere 2005 f:Ei\fALE teacher seeking girl to shal"C ocean view apt, N.B. (Yrly or 9 mos) Call 6r.>-TI54 Bach will sha.~ trg apL w/ ·same. Nwpl Fwy, McFadden area. 835-8027 ... wport BHch 2200 WTRFRNT. Balboa Coves home, 1 Br. 2 Ba, SJj() mo. Mr. Briery 671--6210 l ido ,,,. 2351 S BR., '4':i bA. ~·aterfront { home w/dock on Lldo Nord. , Sl!lOO Monlh • 3 BR. l Ba. oft.water home fumlshcd ..••.•. $450 month Blll Grundy, Rllr. 642-t620 SELLING ''our hon.I?' ''List" "'1th us .. ~cu it rast.l ~ Piiot Oassified. 642-5671 ! I . 114111!!12"1"'"""'"'""-"'""''•;l'•'"+o+o --•-'"""""''"""P"ll"O\,..., """'·"''"I'"·"'"'·'"'·"""''"' "''"''"&"''"·,...,11 .... s .,,..,.,..,,.,, .,._.,.,,... __ ..,,,..,._.,..,e....,.f..,., "'·"'' 'l'J =•r..-r"""""''~' ,....,,,....,.., .. ...,,~. -· .. ~·_,,,.....,~ •. ,,!-·•·· ,,..~, -++-:--· -;-c:. --:r,•; ;...-. , • .-~·------· • I' ..... • •• T~e~ay, OKembt'r l, 1970 18 1t~L&L1=-~,_,..:_,~:~u.s,,.-.,.__,..,.,-,,-"µt!ENTA~.~--:...-~~~~L Rl!N:rAL.s:===:;~j::lll!NI.AU'---'-==RINl"A -:::r.RI::llIAU =i.:::::'.~~!5!~~=1----!PI Hou-Furnished Houses UnfurnlshOd HOUMI Unfurnished ...... Furnlohed ~IL Furnished Apl1. Unfumlsh..t ' Aptt. Unfumllhod Apts. u-~~ • r l•n... blond 2355 Coste MeH 3100 Co~• del Mor 32511 Hlintlngton Boe<fi -Huntington Boach -~port ilffch 5200Niw!'!!rt Booe~ 5200 H.untlntton .!!!~h S400Hunll!'!!!'! --. ! 1010 SO. Bayfronf; 4 br. 3% COLLEGE Pk 3 Br. plus din-3, Bf. U~ house, \ ha. waterfront home & 2 br. Ing room 2 a.. brand new furn), $180/mo unturn. ~ Q.-.JI. (or • PRESTIGE LOCATION ii lb&. Cartge apt. Dock. golden harveat carpeting --·-"'Ctll"-_<94-_2250cc;;_ __ 1 • l I Bill CNnd.Y Rltr MZ-4620 throughout bu 11 t Ins 1.n-a . Utnia erm.o~a ~ 1010 SO. Ba.yttont: 4 br. 3~ eluding 1~ .. h"'ashcr,Rld•bl• -B-1-lbo_a _____ 3300-i Casual estate-living. Enter La Quinta H er· l ha. waterfront home &: 2 br. !~J~,,, .iuu mo. r • 1 . 1 ba. Karage apt. Doc:k. ~. $325/MO. Peninsula; 3 br/2 mlino:da•s lulsk·h green! a~mosp.hetre & stroll tree· - MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS 1 8111 Grundy Rltr. &12--4S20 LEASE 6 MOS. OR ba. Yrd·patio-frp.lc. Blk to wa ways o your ~. immediately adjocent Westcliff shop· . . LDl'!GER. .• N.•al,. < 19' n.. Jll)y,°!Jldllll;. ' •1 ABRL_Lu·UTI, ll$llT5IOE~ CFLUDE$D180 ping center -hos 0 Townhouse·ovoil· • Be ch 2705 vacant,.A-L.EJR in ?ii~ --=--, -• n , -urn. _ +-l-•~tm-•--•----Verde. $260 fncl, grdnr. 2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. $210 oble featurtng privat& residential at··- ARTIST'S arM'AGE At Victoria Beach : , Channing studio cottage, higti windows, l.11 wood pan. ,. 1 elinr, brick fireplace, \\'ood. ! ed grounds: patio leads to I beach, a few hundred ft. aw~. Completely furnished. SI~ Mo, MISfilON REALTY 494.0731 Coll•go "'al'Y 5!6-5880. Huntlntt.., Booch 3400 3 Spa.c. fir, plans, decor. furnlshlngi:: live mosphere. 2 Bedroom. Woter,. gos & • MESA Verde, Large 3 BR, REN'(' or assume S% % loan. ' withln romantic setting W1fun or prtva·cy. b I 2 ba, frplc, Dln'g rm. 4.Bdrm, 3 Bath, crpts, drps. Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ co le TV inc ud ed in rent. Kitchen Breakfast rm, lncd yard, 211-0 Binghampton Cir Call seculded seating e<>mpl. w/Ramada & Foun-built-ins include d ishwasher & disposa/1 $225. 543-8124 or f>40-0190 ~230. . ' tain. HOMES For rent unr. C.M. LOVELY 2 BR hse Lge * Color co·ord. kit w'/ indirect lighting. wall to woll carpets, full length linen uppei bay 2 story 4 Br. plus yard, garage, B -'s-Q, * Oelu•e r•nge & ovens * Plush sh•g crpt9. drapes. Also available 1-2 & 3 Bed - tamily & dining rooms 3 Ba. privacy. Children ok, $170. * Bonus storage spec• * Cov. carport S350. 646--0;s>. 1229 Oelaw.,. St. * Sculpturad marble puliman & 1;1a baths room, $185 to $255. Coll Bob Buckley 2 Br. 1 Ba. Lg k.itch, din 3 BR,2·ba., cpts, dt'Pfl, fncd, * Elegant recreation room. ot 645-0252 or come by MARINER J,kntinglon . v~ta Custom Garden Apartments I, 2 & 3 BEDROOM . fAMIL Y UNIT NOW OPEN CUSTOM F.EA'l'URES: C•nfr•f Recreation Area-Swimming Pools , Wadin9 Pool1 & Stunts--Pvt Gerden Patiot ,. Color Coordintted Drapes & C.rpeting- Soundproof V.'tlh & Floorino-Blt-in R•nge & Oven-Oi1hwt,her-Ceramit: Tile 81th1 Ope n Betm & v,,u1ted Ceiling1-l/1 Mile To The ~Bea ch. 21551 Brookhurst StrHt tS. of Hamilton) Huntington Boch PHONE' 962-4458 RENT·•Ls area, displ, wsht 'trook-ilp, cul~e-sac, bttna. 1220 mo. FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY SQU ~ t··• d Ch"td k ·~ ARE Aportmenls. I 244 Irvine I 8 -Hou••• Unfurnished 6·7~29fs. · 1 0 · ., ... "". 714/847-Mn or 2131347-2843 BFrlk froGomldHuntingCtonll Center, San D iego rvln• .523 Coron'e d1tl Mar 5250 1~-oc--.,o--=-o;,--=:-: CUTE 2 br house ,on CarP wy.. enwest o e£te. Ave., N.B. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IFOR Rent Corona de! Mar. ' Gtn•r•I 3000 3 Br. Mesa de! Mar. ne'v Circle, Htg Bch. $175 mo. San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on NOW LEASING!_ $250 Pt'r mo. 3 bedroom-2 paint & crpts. b 1 t.!,5,.· Pets ok. 646-4191. Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to . • • N il d du! 1 bath. s""cloua d·'· no • * BUNGALOW * S250/mo. Days :H6-""~• L ew, ram · y an a ta un ls ,... l,..... eves 54f>.-435·t CLEAN 3 Br Frplc, fenced. aQuinta . Hermosa 714: 847-5441 Costa Mesa 5100 Costa Mesa 5100 with total recreation club small children, no pets. Agt. Clean 2 BR, new cpls .. Gar-ICU -~T::E,,:..:l~B'°'R~.~,~.~,~h-'-om-e, $225/mo. ~~~~en ar io. ,,. 3 615-4930 or e~s 67"'>4841. age, fenced for kids & pet, w/w epts, trplc, Jge yard, C C d I M 4250 DELUXE • MARTINIQUE • ~:00~.1N:.' s~~ 2 BR, clean. cider, upper, ! n4~l.UE BEACON E-s id e in p J ea s ant 4 BR, 2 BA, new crpts, drps, osta MeJa 4100 orona • er · TOWNHOUSES Park-Like Surroundings ping, golf, schools. Just stove, rclrig. gar, eptt, * 645•0111 :...L neighb<lrhood. 546-2191. bltns, . S235 per mo. e $30 WEEK & UP · BACHELOR Apt Lrg, prlv ON NE\VPORT i:tACK ' BAY DELUXE 1·2 &: 3 BR API'S. south of San Diego Fwy. on drps, S. ol hwy $190, no >< . I 1 h"ld Tradew1nds Realty 847-8511. l BR. o• sru· O!OS .I"-w/ enl, ilpg loll. Cl-· 10 '-h. Also FURN. BACJISLOR Culver Dr., Irvine. 833-3733. pets. Couple pref. 61a-7478 !-~~=~==.,--2 Br. New crpts, c rps, c 1 • ..... ~.... "" 3 ' p . PARK WEST or 213: 431-1195 alt 4 roll. LANDLORDS (( · ok. No pets. $165 I mo. Laguna Beach 3705 comp!. kitchen {all elec.). $125/roo. 673-6904. & BR.J Ba, Frplc, fam rv patios * Htd Pools •• 54S.1405 or 646-6762, . . Free linens, heated pool, air. room, double garage. Beaut. Nr shop'g • ·Adults only APARTMENTS * COROLIOO APTS * ~=~-.,.--cc---ccd7"'.'°'d' IMODERN Drean< Hou~··. 2 rond. TV &.· maid service Balboa 4300 lounge. Pool, Bllllan:.!s. lm Santa Ana Ave, CM oWned and Managed by 2 BR Studio. Unfum. AU 3 BR, Fam/rm. fence Y · "" Adu! & Childre M A ll3 1 $200 A il BR_ beams _ shag_ frplc avail. t ns area gr. Pt • 646-5542 The Irvine .::otnpa.ny e.leJ'.', dshwhr; dbl carport & Vacancy Problems Ended ;!~. ~~;&1, eves~0· va trees.~Bltins-refrig. Walk to Daily &: Monthly rater. BAYFRONT YRL Y $250/fflo, 6'12.fJ.300, 54Q-5147 $15S, Very nice & spacious 2 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I Irg pool. $190 &: up. 673-3378 1 FREE liUpply ct qualified o-o=""°c---..,;.c=-;=o I beach. $275. 673-3173. '2Qlo Ne"vport BlVd,; at 211it, 2 br, 2 ba. Furn or unfum.I~~~"'!"'!~"'!~~ BR, 2 ba studio, New cpts, tenants at no cost to you; 3 BR, 2 ba, AU bllns, f'ncd I ========='<.I e 642'..26ll e Pvt beach & patio. No pets, DUPLEX 2 BR. CLEAN, drps, bltns. Walk to all Back Bay 5240 Huntington, Buch 5400 Alik Jor LEE er OLA yard. Children & pets Laguna :Niguel 3707 8/Americard e M/Charge $300 per mo. CaU 6T3-0T14. QUIET! New cpts. mt-in schools & shop'g. Responsi-....;;=...;;;.;;... ___ ....;;;:.;.: l -,-~8~3~2~·~6~6~0~0'._-c--lii'~"~1"'if,;m'je~. ~",;;;:''·~•211~;;:302~8c;·;;i;C I PENINSULA BAYFRONT oven &: range. Garbage ble adults, 1 child ok. ·No XLNT Locat:lon-2 Br, crpts, HOUSE Jn court, 2 Br. Crpls, $250, LSE, 3 BR, 2 ba, View! ~~~A ;~:n~ b:i:nd:~ 3 Br. 2 baths tw'tl. Winter disposal. Gardener & wa!er pets. 549-3524. drps, heated pool. adults, no * RELAX * drps, patio. 976 \V. 17th St. cpts, drps, Beach & pool rent I Frpl $300 th pd. Prefer mature' n1arr1ed * THE SEVILLE Pets. $140. LI 8-4845. N A CM E ft 6 privilege. 831H171 w/palto, Infant ck. $145 mo. 0 a, c. mon adults, No children er pets Beside the fireplace. 2 Br, 2 17 =coo-. ~· _, ~· ~"-'-•_,.-·~-, 1 gas & wtr paid. Phone AVI~ REALTY 642--TOOCI $145 mo plus 5ecu r 11 y New 2 Br. 1'111 Ba w/ gar. Bath studio, Bllns, shag 3 BR, MonticeUo condo. 2 car RENTALS 839--0959. 12192 Edinger nr • $25 WK-OCEANFRONT deposit. Available n 0 w. Adi ts, cpts, drps, fncd yd East Bluff • 5242 crpts. $175. ·gar. $220 mo. Call 546-0158, Apfs. Furnished Harbor & shop'g center. Lovely Bachelors, 1-Bdnn. 548-3036. w I pat, \Vtr I Grdnr pd. 1----------; BLUE BEACON aft 5 pm CHARM.ING 2 BR. 1 BA . Maid ser, Pool. uW. 636-4120 * 645-0111 * -General 4000 Garage. 2 pallos. Feplo. OI-e 61">-8140 e * STUDIO APT. * 2619-L Santa Ana Ave. 115.I ARTIST'S CO'ITAGE Mesa Verde 3110 RENT FURNITURE fers securi!y, privacy, com-2 Br. 315 E. Bay. Winter $200 e 2 BEDROOM 2439-C Orange Ave. $155 lWO 3 br, 2 ba. Nice areas. • for t. 1 person $165, 2-$180. monthly. yrly avail. Inq. • 1\2 BATIIS 0 NOW R"Eu"JING 0 At Victoria Beach 646-9797. No. C. 673-1521. 548-77T1. e ADULTS ONLY ,.._ Ch · I d. Ila $225 & $250. Avail 12/5 & M V arming s u 10 co ge, * DIRECT TO TENANT e HEATED POOL esa erde Area. NE\V Du. h.gh · d II wood 12/15. Eves 838-6341 NEW FURNISHED APTS I WUl ows. a 24-Hr. Delivery BACHELOR 1-2 BR 1024 Mission Apt D CM plexes, l ·& 3 BR, bltns, encl paneling, brick fireplace, 100% Purchase Option Lido isle 4351 54D-9608 "' 54o..l559 gat, patios, wshr J dryer wooded grounds: patio IE"ads Newport Beach 3200 Complete 1 BR Apt 88 FROM $130 MO. hookup, Also l.rg 2 & 3 Bi:t to bE'ach, a few hundred tt Int Pomona & Park 642-2015 1 BR. l.rg closets. Pool. L ln 4-plexes. 54&.1034 away.ComPletelyfurnished. 3 BR/2~·':! ba, fam/nn, 2 Lo\vasS22/mo. Shuffleboard. Ne -RG1&:2BRapts.IOm!n. $lS5 Mo. frplcs, 2500 sq. ft. Kids Ok! 30-Day Minimum CLEAN & QUI_ET B cpt/drps. Util pd. 1884 from coUege, ocean & could ATTRAC 2 br, l'h ba studio MISSlON REALTY 494·0731 2300. Heather Ln. Avall 12/t * WIDE VARIETY Furn, Bachelor Sll:i, l r. ?\"onrovia Ave, CM walk to shcp'g. Has laundry apt. Crpts, <!rps," bltns, $325/mo. 645-0146 or 213: CUSTOM FURNITURE $125. Adults only, no pets.1 -----~----1rac., carport & pool. Ren t refrig, pool. No pets, < * 3 BR.•$150 * 968-5945 RENTA~ See M.,.. #6 2!.15 Elden, €M lrom St:J0.$145. Ask about &16-6610. Eastsidc. 3 Br. ,v/garage. $125. Separate 3 rm guest 517 W .. 19th st., CM, 548-3J81 $30 wk-1 Per. w/kit $35. Balboa Island 4355 our discount. 1846 Plattntia.N °=EW~~L~U~xu=R~Y-1_&_2~8~,_ Fenced yard for kids & pets, house '"/pool. Util paid. Maid ser, linens, TV&: te!e. J;~-;;;;;;;:i:-t;;;.;;:B,;;;-;,;l~M~.,.~·:..A~p~lc!Hf!:.c.!64~""564~~--Dshwhr, shag cpt, garages. VACANT~ Bii.ck Bay. Woman or APARTMENT Seat.ark Motel 2301 Npt 2 BR, comp! furn. Bltn kit, Pool & Rec. Quiet adult liv- NEWPORT BEACK Villa Granada Apts. Furnished. Five bedrooms &: den, with balconies above •, patio below. Gracious living & quiet surroundings for family with chjldre11. Near Corona del ?.tar High School. Fireplace, w_et bar & built. it> kitchen appll.ances. WW C<'·nsider unfurnished or fUrn_ iture purchase. 835 AMIGOS WAY 644·2991 Coldv.·eJJ, Banker & c.o. Managing agent 833-0700 BLUE BEACON woman & child pl'eferred. ' RENTAL Blvd. 646-7445. new cpts & drps. No chldrn, BRAND new SUPE;.R Jlflf. 2 iog! 642-4470 646-S8S3. ln!Rio~:a,;i:<CiQ;;IO"aii l . ..'no!':!pe':I'!':..· S~225~y~r~lyc_.~61~3-<945~~·1 \ baths, 2 I-places, Wei. bar & I .-~"'"--.,-~-~~-e NEW DELUXE e * 645-0111 * $70.00 & UP FURN, 2 Br. apt. Cl<l6e to all rctrig, beamed ce 111 n gs' 2 BR. apt. Range/refr., 3 BR,. 2 BA Apt-...for lr.1SE!, 3 Br. 3 Ba. Condo. Frpl. ALL SIZES • ALL AREAS ~J.pl~nq·. ~~·''ts i:~;st_~0, 1 -H--tl--t--B--~--.. -~' paneling, all rec facilities, dshwhr, w/w crpts & drps, Incl spac, master sulte, din 1 BR private home •••• $95 Xtras. Avail i m med. FURN. OR UNFURN, CM. un ng on eag'l -close in. Avail mid-Dec. 3 $150 Incl util. Adults, no rm &: dbl garage, auto door ' 2 BR lncd, kid s/pets •• $100 SZ15/mo. Agent. 646--0732. ASK FOR BONNIE Free Service To adults ck, NO pets. $215. 387 pets, 646-846-1. opener avail. Pool & Rec. 2 BR 09 1.4 acre········ $120 3 Bdnns., 211.r baths: ne'" 832-7800 FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. Tenants \V. Bay, 646-0073. NEWPORT HEIGHTS 1 Br. ~· 2 BR 1 blk frm coll, ''" $l25 carpeting. Faces pool. SZ75 -;-,-:-;---,,,.--;--.-...-·! Excer)tionally nice! ~ clean, stove, relr & garage e FROM $265 e 3 BR Bring kids ........ Sl35 Month. Realtor 548-S96G. Just for Single Adults 2110 Newport Blvd, CM * 1 BR. ~ blks. to ocean, HARBOR GREENS pvt. yard $1.20 includes 865 Amigos Way, NB Horse ranch/5' acres •• S225 I o'=="="'-=~~~,...~ SOUTH BAY CLUB $130. Adults only, utilities Rltr 646--0555. Managt'd by STAR*LET 776-]3~0 NEWPORT Shores-3 Br, 2 APARTMENTS A'ITRACTIVE 2 BR. Tradcwinds RltY. 847-8511 GARDEN&: STUDIO APrS Ba pool & clubhouse prlvil. Quo"et Pool Adult• (w/te•ns Ba·' 1 2 3 BR's ~-•no *2 BR, 1 ba. ME SA Wll.LIMf WALTERS CO. su01mO. Jse. 213/681-1278. Newport Beach . . .. LRG attrac 2 Br. AVail now. ... ... ' ' 'UVIII" • * CUDDLE UP * 880 Irvine Ave. ok) $155. 642--9520, 642--2825 Pool Kids & pE'ts ok. $1.59 2700 Peterson Way, C.M. VERDE. Nu cpt, drps; gar, TWNHOUSE 2 Br/2~ ba: ON BEACH! O 2 BR unf. From $225 e 2 BR Furn. From $285 Carpef&..dr2'P(!s-dlshwasher hented pool-sauna.&-tennil · rec room-ocean views palios·ample pa.rk!na. security guard11. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 7U OCEAN AVE., H.B. (714) 53().1487 Ofc, open 10 am.S pi.. DaUy ?.1anagid by \VILLIAM WALTERS CO. Sublease On Beach Lrg 1 BR. Only $200 2 Br, 2 Ba, Only $225 2 Br w/ocean view & 484 sq' priv deck, Only $300 Furniture available Huntington Pacific APARTMENTS 711 Ocean Ave., H.B. 536-1487 Managed by William Walters Co. Huntington Gral!ada by the fireplace, Nie~ 2 br, k 3237 {Irvine a nd 16th) BONUS ARRANGEMENT 847~" ~7510. . 546-U370 . ~1 !":oo".· $150. Avl mw. blfins &: Frplc. enc)' dbl gar. ho' I · T OK University Par l B ~t Util pd fi49 ,,.., .....,.. ·752 Amigos Wy; 675-5033. c ce oc:alicn. ots • (714) 645.0550 r. w, ... "' c. · ., .. · *· 1 &: 2 BR. Crpts. drps, VILLA MESA APTS. I BR, From $135 $~LUE BEACON DON'T DELAY! HOLIDAY PLAZA Eastsid~~~·~i...ss2o ~27-7.33 Lake. 53&-J700, 2 BR, Priv paLio. Htd .pool. 2:~. u~;~d!.tn~:i: Corona del Mar 5250 2 BR. 2 hA. From f155 * 645 0111 ·* CALi. US TODAY! DELUXE Spacious 1 BR BAC~ELOR . C ts d ;i, ' 2 car encl'd gar, Children no pets. $140. 968-1455. ---------Sep FAMILY SECTION tar • !urn apt $135. Heated pool. util pd 1 J>ei-soi: ~ ;~· $125 LG mdrn 1 BR nr bch welcome, no pets please! E=.s~ID~E~lg~l-B~,-.-,-.-1,-, -d.,,-~. ARTISJIC APPEAL children ur.der' 5. ,_R_E_NT-~.~A-.~-H-O=M~E ~ ::· 22b':~i5 r~'.;;,'.'.'.'. ~~ Ample partkinfiissN~ child: $115/~ 548-1405' &16-6762: ~~~· ~5 i4~~1~id\\·ay ::125~0. 719 W. Wilson. bltns, patio, gar. Ad1ts, no Fascinating Tri-Level with ~;:'~~~~ ~~s~~ El'g,nt 3 B• 2'' ba ••2,-ren -no pe s. mona, · ' -~----~·~-----·!---'-."'-"'-------""Is; 1135. fi46.1762 fabulous VIEW of ~-oan •nd ' $95. & UP .. ' 12 •• "" CM SMALL Bachelor apt, older .-~ ......., (n4) 847 .. 1055 ALL SIZES _ALL AREAS 4 BR. 211\i baths ........ $3.10 · adults, $85/mo. all util. * $170 * LRG 3 Br, 'crpts, drps, new Harbor. Beamed cellingS, •-~~~~~~~--• F URN. OR UNFURN, 3 BR., mo. to mo ....... $350 Costa Mesa ,100 646-846.f. Laguna S.ach •705 3 BR, 11h BA, patib, bll.Jns, paint. Kids ok, 1998 No. 1 slate fiqo~, FIREPLACE, Free Service To 1 3 BR, 2~i baths .... $3004325 crpts, drps, Ask about our Maple Ave. 64.2-6344. 2 patios, $375/mo, Tenant• ASK FOR JOO , BR 2 B tnho $340 * FURN. Baoholor-w/lrplc. $30 WK LUXURY d'•oount plan. llllO Cent•r St. I"'~~'""""~~-,-~ Walker &. Lee * '.BR, w/w crpt., -. 832-7800 " · a, USf.> ·••• REM4RKABLY Util pd, $115/mo, Eastside, "" .. ™MAC. 1 Br. Lrg closets. "'1"> i d h•11 UNBELIEVABLY CM. 6'12~20. & up. Bachelors, singles, 1 64z.8340 Rcdec. Pool. Adul!s, no bltns, relrlg. $150 per mo. * COOL IT * . •' "'. ·: re . I EXTRAORDINARILY ''•~B"'EA=u=11'""'=e.~h~&~l~B~: Bdrm, steps to bch, all uW,'N°~EW~~,~B~D~R~M-.-B~e-a_m_e_e~il. pets. Utll pd. 548--0336. Realtors Incl, Util. Adults only, * 1 Delux 3 BR, 2 ba w/pool, BEAUTIFUL "' c ' r. htd pool , linens, rec rm, ings, wood paneling. All ree ~,=~,~~-~---2043 Westcliff Drive Br., pool. Nr. beach. $140 V ID" G d A 1 apts. $29.50 wkly & up. ta 1 -·•·oaU d BR. Ba. freshly pain:ed. per mo. * 2 Br, nr. beach bltns, wall to wall, Child a 1sere •r en p s Furn. incl util. 545-0451. res uran • '-""'-" s, anc-features. $165. Adult.s, no new shag c:rpts, upper. Xlnt _646-7711 Oi>en til 9:00 PM S150 per mo. OK, $170. REALTY Adults, no pets ' ing. pets, Call now 646-0073 area. $175. 557-6151 BLUE BEACON Unlv. Park Center, 'lrvine Putting green \\'aterfall & 1 BR.-idcal for Bachelor. Village Jnn Hotel Apts 387 w. Bay Street Tradewinds Realty 847-851J * stream. flcweJ.s everywhO..,, Drps, w/w c.rp~', pool, priv 494-9436 NEW TOWNHOUSE 2 Br. Apts, blms, crp1s. drps, CASA del SOL 645-0111 eaJJ Anylime 833·0820 balcon $135/mo 557-6682 clean. Inquire 1552 · A ~ ~ • 45' pool, rec. room, billiards, y. · · 2 BR, l~ Ba. &: 2 BR. Crptg, Coriander. 546-5268. fl,.. b" Sl~Nr ocean 2 Br kid/pet BBQ's, Sauna, furn.-unfurn, NO\V Renting-2 Br furn, gd Capi.rtrano Beach 4730 drps, self cleaning gas ov-Ort• Charming, easuaJ, new apts t10-1,2 mi ocean 2 Br 3 BR. & D.R., 2 ba •••••• $325 Singles, 1 BR, 1 BR + de n, Joe , rec rm, htd pool. No en, encl gar, Patlo;o;, 54g.3005 Newport Beach 5200 at the beach. kid/pet 3 BR., F.R., 2~ ba .... $300 2 RR. From $135, See it! children. $140/mo. 646-5824. $29. wk-$98 mo .• furn . Apt 377 W, Wilson. ON TEN ACRES l BR. From Sl3.'l Broker. 534-6980 3 BR, + huge bonUs room: 2000 Parsons Rd., 642.SS7o. TV, linens, utilities incl., no * * NEW 2 & 3 BR. Shag PARK NE\VPORT care t I: 2 BR. Furn & Unfunl 2 BR. From $2l5 VERY CLEAN, 11ewly redec. month to rnonth ....... $350 Between Harbor & Newport Newport Beach 4200 pets 492-5078, 492-5342. d hh 0 1 3 free livg overlkg the water .. Fireplac€1 I prlv. paUGS I 21661 Brookhurst St, HB · 3 br, 2 ha home, crptd, \VE HAVE OTHERS! . 2 Blk N. 19th. crpts, w r. gar. n Y 7 pools, 7 tennis cts ST"o0,000 Paoli. Tennis . Contnt'l Bkf~ (7141 962 ,,.3 AN W T LI 4740 neighbors in ;>our Bldg. s F fi1S 1 1450 900 Sea I.ane, CdM 644·Ztill _., drpd, fn cd. lmmed. Occup. a a a a a a a a a 1 ew ay o ve Da na Point Child ok. Nr. S. Coast pa. rom .,, o · $250. Call Agent 546-4141. S6 nite up $27.SO wk up in Newport Beach Plaza. Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Al.so 2 sty (MacArthur nr. ~81: Hwy) * BEACH BLUFF ' * BARGAIN * STUDIO & l BR Apts OAKWOOD GARDEN SINGLE. TV, pool, pets ok. 540-1ST3 or 5.J5-2J2l 'lownhous'cs. Elec, kl. pri. APTS. e Color TV, phone serv, pool APARTMENTS $2." & up wkly. DANA Ma·1-~-~------1 pat or bal Sub!rn prkg, opt NEW DUPLEX 2 & 3 Br, 2 ba, dishwasher!!, $130-NEAT 2 Bedroom, stove, e Linens, maid serv avail. On· lSth Street btwn rina Jiin, 34lll Coo.st H wy. Quiet Adult Living maid ser cpts, drps" Jus! N. Priv, patio. Enclosed garage. pool, ()atf<l. 8231 Ellis, l"CB.I'pets, drapes. Child ck. e Children&: p·' secticn Irvine and Dover Dr. 1=========:11 & 2 BR. Shag cpts, bltns, of Fashion Isl at Jamboree Carpeted & draped, Comp. 842-8477or847-3957. '" BLUE BEACON 1st Western Eank Bldg, *SUNNY ACRES* (714) ,642..g170 Condominium 4950 beaut lndscpd. $150 &: $170 & San Joo.quin I-lilts Rd, 644-bu1lt·ins, ln1mac. l11ndscnp. * FRESH AIR t 645 0111 * Universi!y Park '---------t incl aU util, Adults only no 190C' for leasing Info, Ing! 3 BR. 3 ba. Price re-• 0 83'0101 N. ht 2376 Ne,vport Blvd. 548-9755 BAYFRO'-APT. SSESS -'" b . ays ~ tg s CLIP THIS AD 1~ • * REPO ED * pets. SEACLIF1'-Manor Apt s, duced to~ µer month. \VlW\ J lks to Beach! SUPER Clean & sharp 2 · · · Furnished Studio w/ maid PARK LIDO. Near Hoag & 241 Avoeadc St. 646-0979 """' h lid d. 675•6050 ' Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w good fer $2 on night's service. Write Daily Pilot "'J""c. o ay Lscount + 1 Story + bonus rm, ail bltns, Corona del Mar 3250 rent or SS on week's rent. Box M·lO 33ll W Bay St. J-lughes, Newport. 2 BR, 2 SPACIOUS 1 br w/w crpts, 111cnthly disc. $14>-$160. 1 & crpts, rlrps, bltos except i '$275. Heritage RE 540-1151. a a a • a .• a a a 1 Costa MeSa Cal.· · BA, builtins, Ji.replace, pool, new drps, tres'hiy painted, 2 BR, l'ti: BA, crpts. drps, IMJll IUUHllllO Cl .. *l rcfrig, $225. No pets. 5.16-1111 $90-Util pd. 1 Br on ocean, 1 BR. ne\\•ly dee prlv house. e ASSUME 7~~ LOAN e ' BR'S. complete mntce. Sell o-elec. bltns, nr. frwys . palio, pool, lnlant ok. 1525 ~=~-~=-~~ 2 BR, Dbl bath, pvt patio, 1 child ok. e $180 uU pd, 2 Br Crpts, drps, :stove, re(rig. Cof.ta ~Tesa· 2 BR House OCEANJi'RONT-3 lease. Chvner 494-2313. Adult!!, no pets. 545-4893 Placentia, MS-2682. CORONA DEL MAR rlshwshr. Pool. Adults. Quiet 16'ceanvu. Brkr. 534-6980. Ad lts, no pets. S 150, + (4) 1 BR apb Room 2 \Vlnter rentals. Adults. no I ~R"E"N°'T=A°". "L"S---~-;..c.=-N:c,,E;,.Wc,·c:,E.,:.Ac.S~T~S;.t'°'D'"'E:;c.-1,~"s""r.--.3"b"a-,d"e"lu:::xo:-:-ap::t Deluxe 2 BR. 2 ba. upstairs & beautiful. $185 1ne,!'11 utll. 673-1953. more. $56,000. Gr0ss $6,500.loC-pea"il·:-IF27'<i5nlm;ao.PLGlll-0088MPo. ilil:l-!.A~pt~s,~U'.!n~fu~m~lsh~ed~-Open for inspection 10 to 4, w/frple, lge balconies, view apt, w/priv. sundeCk, all bit. 17676 Cameron, H .B . C01ta Mesa. 3100 CHARMING honle, 3 BR, 2 548-4059 12 BR. Furn apt. Uti l paid. 5000 1 t-2 Br, all facilities. 324 E. of bay & ocean. Avail Dec. Ins, cptd., draped, Immed. ~"',.,27-6"12;-t.=,,,.-c--c.-~-I r I' ba, unfurn. Walk to beaches --~----~--•Garage. Yearly. General 20th St. 646.9148 17. Apl. l, 745 Domingo Dr, occupancy, $225 Per Mo., WANT Older couple to l 'BR, 2 BA, new larpets & Acapulco Apts attractive, ""oll"] NB Call 64>-"'''" 1 I d S350 & shop'g. 67>-5372 Pool. Ulil pao·d. G•~en -'· E · · uov. -year east'. manage 6 units. (2 bdr). $50 jpaint. Imme poss at •~~~-~~~~~-•v APARTMENT * D LUXE 1 & 2 BR ~"'"~~~~---·! mo Call MR. ltOEGEE, SO. NR. New 3 Br. 2 Ba." On living. Adults, no pets. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths Garden Apts. Bit-ins, priv. 3 BR, 2 BA, delx 4 plex apt, '75 6050 0 allowance on $130 rental. COAST REALTORS. Prop. area, F.A. ht. bltns, cpts 2 BR. $175. 1 BR. $145 Winter n::ntn.ls (1 occanrront) RENTAL patio, heated pool, frplc. frplc, bltns, cpts, drps, nr W • Write Dai ly Pilot Box M-12, i!l;iMgmjE;;t.;,O=:lv=. ;";S-'4:24=. ==·-'_,._,,_1_2,,7'=N"o="',,'=',,6=15-"2'=l1=-. -"'=lBOO==w='="="'<e"A"v"•=· C"."M".=:lrAiCBBfiE"NY'i'RRnE"NA'i'LT-;Y!iiii64:t:Z.;:;IDl;;;.::I $70.00 & UP Adults. $145 mo. 546-5163 lloag Hosp. $220 mo, lnq . Ullll l'N'MIDIJ Cl.,WC. 330 \V. Bay~ SI, Co.sta Mesa.. I~·*' OCEANFRONT 2 BR. frplc, 4150 Patrice Rd. &12-4387, WALK TO OCEAN I ,G;;.;;on;;.•;.;rco•;..1 _____ 3000 __ G_e_n_•_ra_l _____ 3000 __ G_e_n_e_r•_l _____ 3000 ___ , gar_ $200_ Adlts, no pets. ALL SIZES . ALL AREAS 2 BR duplex, cpt, drps, 0 & 6'12--1771. 2 Br. 1 Ba. w/f'rplc. No t & 2 BR NEW apta. Frplc'•. i: FURN, OR UNFURN. R, FA heat, Encl gar, pvt ~,-B~R~---~. -d~-children, no pets, $175/mo. p tl Ad I L"ndbo Co • i . Winter 673-8088. ASK FOR BONNIE pa!lo, 1 ehild ok. no pets, ' i;ar, patio, rapes, Call 6~9183. a o. u ti, ' re , -' " . .. I •'( . " . I 1 •• ... ·- 1.:..:..:.. 1 .~.,r ' fl(,- \Ct.I !Ill .. I_., • I ., ~' ' ' ' 0 Reorronoe letters of the fovr acramblod words b.-low to form fovr simple words. R I G TIE A I .}I~E-x 1111 i \\\ ·1111 i f11 D U G R A I ! '-A-cto~(~,",'=quelch to o woman l-1~,..-.,,-,,-~,-l 9· spec:totor's cotcolh "Get a _ . _ . load of all those flowers she's ~ wearing. She lotiks like a 1 ,-..,R-,.,,....,,T,....,.B"'E,...,_N--.I woll·k•pl -.· 1i-1 1 4 1 1 1 1 , O Completo th1 thuckltt quoted -by tllll"9 I" the mlbl"g word _ • . _ . _ you develop from Sl•p No., 3 be/ow. • P_RINT NUMBERED lffi~IS IN ' ~ a ' S ~ THESE SQUARES 6 UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETllt S TO GET ANSWfl • I I I I I I _s£~AM·LETS ANS~ER IN CLASSIFICATION 7000 r I ------- stove, private St. adults ~2579 * OCEANFRONT l BR. ___ 8_3_2_·7_800 ___ =:-·l~ll~5.l=-·=646-,-,--7_4ll_.~"'-'-· ~c-:·c-only, no pets $145, Back Yearly $175/mo. QUlET-4 plex, huge 2 Br, Bay area. Avail 12n. 673·2259 or 644-5972 bltns, nu cpl, FA ht, QW, 642--2267. 2 BR, 1 ba, OR 3 BR, 2 ba, RENTAL FINDERS pallo, gar. $140. Adlts. 2 BR den 2 ba ept drps oceanfront apt for rent. Mily Free To londiords ,_,...... __ ,"-·------L 'u ' 1' ' ,· rent unfurn. 21.3/~1709. ,.,. rg v rm, 11 orage, pa ' 1 NEWLY Dec-2 Br. pool, jaccuzl, b-b-q, sm CHARMIN9 4 BR, 2 ba, 64S-01 I w/carport, S120, Wtr pd. Nr pets ok. $255. 642-5765. frplc, 'i\ blk to bch, yrly, 4lJ W. ltrfri, CMr• MHO sch!. 21.9'1 Placentia No. D. furn or unturn. 673-2455 636-4120. 3 BR. 2 ba. frple, dahwrr & 2 Br, den l1Ai ba, encl patio, HOLIDAY Spec. 3 hr. 2 Ba, disposal, nowly decorated, pool, WI?, stv/ref, CID, bltns, nu cpt/pnt, gar. ~~:· $290 me. &15-0662, pcls & k1d1 over 12, $190 Move now-Rent starts 15th. LOVELY 2 rm & bath, J?VI 830-R886 !l62-0670. YEARLY -$2tl0. per .mo. 3 entrance. util pd. No BR 2 BA w/w epl deps $175 SPARKLING n ew .... I & 2 BR. Newly c•-1·•, ' ' ' ' cook'g-dr l nklng-Refs. " ... ,~"" bt-· patio Hall bl•·k 'o deluxe 2 br apt. Decorator drapes, elec. k 11 ch en, u~, · "" u Working l)el'!l()n, $100 m,. colors. 3S6 E. 17th St., CM Children ok Ph 646-8153 beach. 6'15--1272 or 646-0:t-8. 675-0621. 64Z-4905. · · · 2 BR, 2 BA, bllns, crpts, 2 -BR, fully crptd, pool, So. 2 BR studio 1% BA, util rm, drps, $190 mo. Nr Hoag of 1-1Wy. Close to 11top1. Cost• Mesa 5100 ~!le to schls. Avail 12-15 Ho.sp, lnq, .fl,50 Patrice Rd . Adults $1~. 1!1e. 673-8213. $165 546-1753. 6424387, 642-1771. &'1 apt, cozy. \mmllc, nr WILSON GARDENS AJ>TS 2 BR, Unfurn. $130/mo. In· * OPEN HOUSE * beach. Reipon\lllble ycung 2 BR Unfum. Newly dee. fant ok.. No pets. • __ 1,1 New crpt\11 & drps. Spec Joann St, CM, 54~3437 Dix 2 Br, 2 Ba, CID, bltns lady artly, $l25, util .,__., ground!I, Adul11, no pets.I~~~~:..:;.:;..;.:.:_.::.;:::.:_ enc gl'lf, t1'15._ 548..3~ Box Sl3,D;>roo11. del MM. LRG 2 BR apt pallo dep• ~_,,;=-'=-~-=--"C'=-·i 1~'==~~=~~-~1 $140 mo. 2283 Fountain Way ' ' • • NICE 2 Br. Pool. Bltns, CHOICE 2 Br. 2 "Ba .. So. of E, (Harbor, turn W. on cpts, utll rm for washer & c:rpt drps AdultJ no pets Hwy. Elee. bltns, cpt1, drps. \\'ll.son1 . dryer, si:nr, $155 up. 54&-8:688 $140: ~l. 642.'.sooo. ' S200 ~fo. Rltr 6'f3-.2m GOLD MEDALLION LRG 2 Br, crpts, drp9• bllnS,2 ~~B=R~.~,-s=A","'1"rp~1"',,-'-ur.n~lu-m-,1 S125/mo A 11p, Utll, pd. Modern 2 Br l 'ilt Ba patio 1--2 ch!Jdrtn ok. Nr acbIJ & crpl.S, drp&, blk to ocean. % block 10 oecan. erpts, drp1i.' CE kl;: Encl: shop'&. $l!il. 962-1515. Yearly $185/ll'l(), 673.8088 2500 Sea vieW, Cd?\1. "I I " ' , BR. 2 ba i.car .. , la --gnr. " any wcury t" 'All. • , crp . 3 Br. 2 Ba. unfum. Bltns, 12 BR 1-Blk to Ocean Nr. bus. $156. Adults. 120 E. now drva. Pool & clubhouk crptJt: drf>5, $225/rno. Call Call Aff 4: 5t4-455.S 3'th. avail. $200. 540-0912. 540-7573 or aft 5 •B&iS. 'Coron• del Mar 4250 --- ' Fountain Valley 5410 Fountein V•lley Jhe ~ounfain.j 11Jedl1<1rran""" Siyi. Lusury 1 a z Bedrooms -i Balill Adult Living Furnllhed a Vnlarnkbod • '"°' • • Di•llw•lt• -•~&•11..._c.,,... • rri.,. .. p .. ,,,. • Cloud G11t1141N e 8-'"N C.fUNp 9565 Slater Av~nae 0 • • j J .. _ ... I $410 Apt.. Unfumllhocl - Huntl"J'"" !loMh - MORA KAI -2 BR. PatlO. Pool. Washer I: dryer hook .. up. IU1 Garncl4, ~ blk E. of Beach Blvd (off Gorf~ld). 962-Gf, 1nd NOT!CIS .ANHOUNCIMINTS SIRVICI DIRICTOltY •----------------------:. Contr•ctwt 6620 M••tlMn _., ~.u tf*r oh •r ~ lllutl~l!n~IOl!!l!!!!!~!-~~!/•P;•~•~-~·~ll~~~;;;640S;:= GEN'L CONTRACTOR 1•'29f ! I rtuNtf• 6JDO Calif. Lie. Over JOO Develop. JANJ'l'ORiAL' Strv1oe for GRAND OPENING I 1M11t1 laat 5 yrs. Prder new l&Jt-. Equipment • con-Oriental, SWedlsh I: fftncll. conatruction., Low Over-~~ bu''""'· MASSAGE b<ad,Boodab!.o.'420000. Phones Ara Open 8:00 a.m •• 5:30 p.rn. 9 to Noori S•turd1y -Oosad Sund1y DIAL DIRECT ••• i.42-5678 2 BR. Avall Nowt Cilldreft I: "'1alt pet olc, $140. 962-763'1, - * GREAT POrENTIAL * NO INVESTMENT GOOD EARNINGS -m.1112 All MW )'()Ung It attracl1ve female te-chnlcians to serve & satisfy our cwtomen. Private n;ioms • Sauna MY Way. quality borne repair. WA!!~t celllnc. Doon etc. No joo too small. 54S-1~. 24 hr ans, serv. U C'D O>ntr. Remodeling, add-ons, rootina, painting le repal~. 540~7858 ot WESTMINSTER & NqRTH COUNrY DIAt"fREE 540-1220 ·.: e NEW 2 BR apts, rron1 113S. epu. -· .,..., F1unlty teetlon. 146-7717. Nl-.:W! Never Lived-In: 2 & S DORMS. Nr. Beach * Aat. 645-1070 * SfUDIO apt. 3 Br, 2 ha den, pa11o, frplc, closed 1ar. 8U-7062 aft 6pm. 1160 2 B.R., pool. pvt pailo. rat. cpt., drapes, •love. nr. new. '1S'll Glencoe, IH2-2834. 1t NEW 2 br with crptl, drps, stow. patio, l'lf1&e. $165. 536-<027, Pount11n v.11.., 5410 ALL NEW ,..., Whadclya Want?' Wheddy• Gott SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spoclol Role 5 Lines -5 t imes -5 bucks RULll -AO MUIT INCLUO• l-WPlll ,... ....... .. ..... 1-Wll .. .,.. •Wit • lni6L 1-TOUI ,._. ""''"' .. .._ 4-J II-.. .,_. .... s--MOTllllN• P01t SALi -TllAOIS Ol'iLTI lnvertment Opportunltln 6310 Hnr. l2 'tU 12. 1113 N1wport Blvd, 540-7664. S.VIALL 1nve1ton, limited Costa Met• oppor. lo acquire in· 642·0450 Remodellna: *Additions vestment aeeuttd by highly Llcen&ed KARL E. KENDALL reselll'CMd fast appreciating 1.Jcenied-Bond@d 548-1537 pre-development land for as'I!!~!!!!!""""!!!!!"'"""""""' I Additions * Remodeling low &1 $175 .down $16 per PROF. l\1an 60 Interested ta-Gerwick & Son, Lie mo. up, Uruque approa~h slim pellte 'NOmen ut.50 for 673-6041 * 5'$-2170 backed by large pubhc dancing, bridge, eolf, oom· corp, Call Mr. Gene Ober. panshl p. Travel when Carpet Cleanine '625 To Place Your Trader'• P•radlN Ad Professional, F i nancial retired. COtll. marriage:. --'---'-'C......;;;:::.......:.:= PHONE 642·.5671 Plannin1, NB. 644-6760, Write Daily PilDI Box M~ Diamond Carpet Cll!:aning: 644-7761 . ' J>re.holida Tra•-13 000 -·••· 3 br 2 '64 CADJLLAC CONVERT. . 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa. y special "'t= ' ~ ... ..,, ' IBLE All .__ Xlnt cond $4l,OOO WELL seaso~ 1st * MASSAGE * Free Minor Repain W/Ong, ~ Lake Havasu home tar . exu ..,.-. · TD $250 mo 6% CM pro-JOO' $15. We .abo install. property or ? Uuvout. My $250 equity tor perty WW d.iscount ~~ or SAUNA * WlllRLPOOL Free est. ~1317. CAU anything of equal value. e<J" sOO h Owne ~6 Love!): Girls. PIW!h facWtiet. Huntington Buch: 540.1220 L1gun1 Beach: 494-9466 S.n CIOtn1nt1: 492"4420 Hours-Regulations-Deadlines lltltOlll: Allwrtl..,. ttt.uW check tftl;lr "• "•llY aM rtport lmmocllat91y ...,..,,. er ndacluafftcatteM. THI DAILY PILOT aaaurn• llablllty fM' •rrors •"ly t• tlM •shnt el ,uWtshl"I ttt. Mnrtl•ment correctly •n• tlm .. DIADLINI POil COPY AND KILL11 5:30 P.M. tho day Mfor• publlcatlH , •K.,t forM_,.y ldltlen wfMn .,Mllllln• ls S..tunlay, 12 noon. YOU MUST HAVI KILL NUMl.llll WMn kllll"I an M Mc:auM of qvkk ,...,,... tie MJN .. mok• • r«onl 9' the kill numMr 9Jy911 yoa IJy your M tlkor • vwtflcattM fll Y9W C•IL IYWY effort la .,...e te klll or cornet • MW M tMt has a.... ordered, llut we c•n- not ,.,.,.."..., .. llo .. untll th• all has appMr.,. In th. pa,.r. DIME-A-LINI Ma .,. strictly calh In allv•nc• a.y mall or at any •ne of our .tflc.._ NO,._.,..~ ..... Eves, sn..tm S747 bal due. ~96-2500 ..,.., cu · r Open 6 days, noon-midnight Clean-Cle&ner-0.~t! · Tradelike-newlT Coldspot Have vacant'-improved Money to LCH1n 6320 2930W.CoastHwy,Newport K:hols~~rCleane .1 .~ top-lrtt"' ,._rator for 'll '"co-· w·~·. RI Jot Beach. 548.3608 ..., •• ... ""' "'~~ 1 TD L average rm. 53-4-5305, YAUEY PARK Tht DAILY PILOT ........,., tho rl9ht to cla1tlfy, edit, tonlOf' or refuu any .;...,.... tllomont, •Ml t• chaftl• Its r•'-•nd NtUlatlons without prior notfc.. .1 For FAMJUES with pre- ICbool children only. 2 A S BR and 2 BR Studio 1UO to 1215 1'1256 Sou.e· Euclid, FV (Just SoUth ot Warner) (7141 540-4715 similar model with left or home, c0.tat atta, New-st oa n PReLANNINbGI Nto Tr ave I ? 633-5642. hand door. port Beach thru Dana Point spollSl e ewport Beach I =--~~------1 833-4904 .,.__ 7u,., INTEREST couple will babyslt your F le M Cleanin& Service 11. "IQ home to June ·n. Call Holiday Special. Certi·Foam. ~~":· i: ~~.;. '68 Firebird Landau a1°'-20 d TD Lo·a n 675-4206 ~::.· 1n 2 hnt. 5.16-3508, luxe, full I power &: r. SWINGERS! We're formlng Trade for $50,<n'.l to $60,000 Trade for equity 1n AS-Terms baaed on equity a new club. bt 25 reeelve CRPI'S/Wlndows -3 nns &: M1li Mii,....: lox 1175, N•port INch, C•llfornla CL>.SSl,llD COUNTERS 111'9 loc:ated •• follOW1 : COSTA MESA 330 W, BAY HUNTINGTON BEACH 17175 BEACH BLVO. NEWPORT BEACH 2211 W. BALBOA LAGUNA BEACH 222 FOREST'AVE. hoz:n::h::k~~ ;;1l~ SUMABLE LOAN: 3 or 4 642•2171 S4.s.o6TT free 6 mo's membership. hall foam shampooed + 1,S.;;nt;;;•;;;AM;;;;;;;;;;;;;56~20; J :~~~~~~~e br home. 536-9153 St'Ivin&: Harbor area 21 yrs. Artisans, P. o . 6245, Santa comp! window washing both 11 TRADE new 8 track cart. CAPISI'RANO C ZONED, Settler Mortgage Co. 1..:.':::":o•·c.:977=116:::..-_____ for $37.50. 827-3182 a.ft 4:30. VILLA MARS(JLLES ~:~;iTo~~~:r:ii::.~:j 4+ acres, Free & Clear, 336 E. 17th street ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. STEAM Jet carpet .cleaning. SAN CLEMENTE -305 N. EL CAMINO REAL BRAND NEW $130,000. TRADE for Income Phone 542-7217 or write ID By ClarKare, nation-wide SPACIOUS "'' '""" camoru, "'""' or ' ANNOUNCEMENTS P .O. Box 1223 C..IA M•M. """"" F..., "t. 642-4055. Daily Pilot Classified - 1 " 2 Bd A t -"~"~· 53&="'=21"'· =-:-.,,,-,,.,.. REALTOR 548-7711 1nd NOTICES rm. p a. HIGH DESERT for Health. C•rptt L•yinn & Adult Living WANT Calif-Nev, "'3M .i.. wr •85 & 86· Approx '°".,F ':!°"~nd~(!,!;F,:.:rH~Ad~o):..!::6400~1'An'.:::'nou""":"n'::ce:"m"'on0:1;:•=C::"''°IO~ I Ro~lr • CLASSIFIED INDEX Furn. & Unfurn. HAVEClcor.90xll72bldga: 180' each Corner m Vlctor1• _;.;.;,•=-'----...:."::::26 D~h"-aaber.colorcoordinat. $68,000 eq..$42.000 inc. $445 Village. O es.r. For mobile PUPPY Approx. 6 wlm: old. CHRISTMAS CARD EXPERT MOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS c.t.1tl'•NTa11N• .... ed appliancea:. plush ahaa: mo Owner CM646-8558. home or cabin. Palm Either Busett or 8e""ie. RETURN ADDRESS r.t11ui;..,. INSfAU..ATION ~{ Ah. F • h-..1 tl:Ml!NT, ~ .,. ... A·~-ol 2 I 1~~· ~"""'~· '""""""-:""'"~· -414"" .. .,..... .... ""?:'... ..... e11111UL ,. 'P urn•• WU CHILO CAii. u..... "" " eafil'l!t • ...-iun;e-co or Bal,_, 3 8 + 1 b prlngs area. n "'""'...,,, Found Friday aftn , STICKERS &'R'.EPAIR. 646-U!l. 01111•u\. .. coNTUCT01s ,_ schemea 2 baths 1tall DplX u.i. r r. · A Cd1 $1 FOR 1000 conA MIU. n• COSTA MIU ,..,. -....... ,. clF.A"'ti.io .,8 sh>wrrs : rtlrnred ·....;,,.. $19.SOO eq, Trd for b~ines.s What do you have to trade! Marruente Ve, ll;f. • • EXPERT • Ml:SA Dlt. MAlll U• MIU YlltOI ""' CAlll'!T U.YIN• • ltlPAllt U» , ' aho ctr o.--•J Ex Ll!t it hei-e' -in Orange 673-3014. Send your dollar and carpet Installations MISA YlllO• 111• NIWl'OllT llACM .... OllAl'IElllES ... robe doors • indirect light-or png . ~ "'"''" -• Im-_A .. trad you to CO\.Llel l'AIK nu NIW~T MllOMTS Cit OEMO\.ITION ~ i""' In kitchen • breaJdut changorl, 108 McFadden Pl, County s ...... est 'c.iw . BAS.SETI' Hound puppy . . r. copy : . * 539-8.127 * NllWl"OIT lllClll '* NIWl'OllT llllOllS CM OllAnlNQ SllYICI ""' • 11 •oe. NB. 61S-8800 ing post.642-5618 w/brown & whlte markings Pilot Printing, Label Div. l;;;;;;;;;;e::=o:::====:INIWl"OIT Hl!Mn"S 111• WISTCLIJlll' .,. OltYWALL 6'11 bar • hUlt' private fenced • . found vie. Orange Ave & Bo.'( 1875 IALIOA COVIi 1t11 UIOVlllSITT PAlll( am lill.CTlllCAL .... !lo pl""1 Wxb<apl-* * * Dranaries 6630 Nl.Wl'OltT IHOllllS Int UCJC IAT Cid IOUll'Ml.NT lllfTAl.t "" ":;:' pa • ... -* * * Monte Vista St, CM . After 5, Newport Beach, Ca. 92663 r-&AYCllST 1m IAST ILU•I' .,., ll"ENCINO ,... J I brick Bar-SQ'•. Wire heat. 643-1949 Your labels Will be gent by IATIHOltl.S 1~ COltONA OEL MAit cut JllU»Oltl .... erl pools & lanal. tu .1 MANUFACTtJR.Ei DOv1.11 11t0111s 1DJ aALaoA u.. FUllNACE 111,.a11ts. •tt. "1f F • 3101 So. B'l.tol SI. VIC WestcllH area, female re rn mai. DRAPERY-Wl.STCLl•• IU• .... ,. Ill.ANOS ... .,. FUltNITUlll: ltlSTOlllN• ·' '1 R EAL ESTATE REAL ES'rATE .,.._ She h ~ c 22 y . Are I 5i1nn235 !iAlll;OJt N1e1U . .ANOS UH LIDO llll an &ltEFINISHINO "" (~Ml N. of So, Cou plaza) uc:J1!1an P e1u. ontact SERVICE DIRECTORY rs in a. ~ uN1v1111m l'AIUt 1m aALIOA isuNo uu OAROIENIHO ..,. General Gener•I Shenfia Animal Ce nter , INTERIOR TEXTILES llVIN• ,. 1111 HUNTINGTON IEACN 44" GENl'RAL SlltYICl.S ""' • ,~:.;.· stU200 1-...;o='"'-'-------· 1-c~.~m~m;;.;.•~.~.-1.-1----60IS--1 548-37"';>2. Accounting 6500 We've Done All The Models-::~~.~:, ~~: ~:~~T:~~c"..ALLIT = :~~~NG. OllCINO = •,: 1:========~~1:l::n~com;;~·;o;P~·~·~j.rty;;;:;:~::1 .=;;~:.~--s;;cl;Si;;;-BIG black dog wfbtown Let Ua Design For ~U! Ill Tff9 1144 LONO llACH "* GltlliN TKUMI AN ': . s b l SpeclaJ Pre-Holiday Sale, lltYINI Tlltlt.t.CI uu OltAHOll COUNTY ..... GUN SNOP ,,.. . ' CUSTOM FOUR.FLEX L•gun• Be•ch Shop points (Gennan Shepherd m us ness-need dependable, Call !)49-0236 24 H CORONA OIL MAii 1ut OAltDIH 0110v1 ..,11 HI.AL TH cLu11 ,,,. , CAN, BE BEA. T Choice Newport~•. 3 BR 2S ft x 47 ft on Fore1t Ave. type) found in C.l!f. Jnquire accurate&: reas bookeepin11 =:::;:=:;:;::;~·=::;~"~·=·=ITU1tTLI ltOCK ..... _ ........ lut w11TMINST1.1t ottn HAULING ,,,. ·.• An, I Sh I do 'I' Will iclc ""0 ......., IALIOA •IHINIUU. i• MIDWAY CITY ottU HOU51CLIAMINO a• Ar: 2 BR units. Ideal owner nr Coast Hwy_ Ideal for at Laguna nna e ter ne. p up --£U•O IEACOfll .... ,. 1m SANTA ANA tlitt INTE1t10R DICOltATIJile •rJI SINGLE S'IURY O<:CUP~ & tax &belier pro-speclalty, SUbmU lease.off. FOUND Small whlte male Electrical 6640 LINOA ISL• 1• SANTA ANA NllOKTS ...,. INCOMI TA)C ia• South Sea Atm here G bl n-c IAT Ill.ANOS llJf TUSTIN t6d lllOH. Cln!llMM ... ate. ,,,. 2 BR 2 BA~ perty. $9~ooo~~e~ .. ~·(IOO !~ ~neooll.Mrs. a e : Poodle with choker collar. Bllbvslttl-6550 ELECTRICIAN. Small jobs, .",",,,".'",---· ,1: COAST.I.. 4ttf tllONINQ "" '•. . • '" down, ., ... , O'M'""WO• or ....,..,~ Vic l'.lf Jamboree-and "-'===··"'-~---""-'-'I al •-· ........ uou1tA 11ACN 41'1S tN!lllU.TIN• ,,., •_· I "·-ts Ar; .1~ r~" m m ntenance at r epair s . HUHTINOTOH II.ACM 1• LAGUNA NIGUl.L 4791 tNSUltANCI •1'11 ...... toe ... ~ ~1 . --------?tfcArthur Blvd. 493-4194. NEWLY LICENSED Llc'd &: Bonded. 548-5203 HUNTIMOTOlt M.u1ou• 1-s MISSION vi•Jo 41111··1NVl!ST10AT tNG, DlttetlYt '"' ·~• Air CondiUoned PRICE REDUCED G bl ,__ COSTA MESA pn~ •~OOL FOUNTAIN VALLIT 1411 ''' ,,,.,.,.,.. 4111 JANITOIUAL '"' 1 Private Patios lnclustrlel Rentel 6090 IRL'S ue bi...c found 1n ~n s ..... llACM :: SAN JUAN CA,.lfTllANO .. ru IEWEL•T ....... I.le. .... ·. Eaatblutf eus 6 unit1, Ownrs ;.;;.""-"'-=--------1 Santa Ana Hgts a re a . 18th & Monrovia. % day + Furniture Restoring SUNSIT 11.ACN 101 CAl'ISTllANO •lACN 41» LANOSCA,.INO ,.,. , HEATED FOOL 4 Br, 3 Ba hm + 5 studios. SMALL UNITS 54D-5640 Full day sessions. Plan. f' lsh 66 GAltOlN G1tov• IMI DAN" "OINT 41• Locic:sM•TM ,_ -' Plenty of la"ATt SIS6 ~ Owne ~ ~• n~ p-m h 1 1 hes & Re in ing 75 LOHO •lllACN 1.,. r111,.L1x. •~ ""' MAIO s11v1c1 .. -.. _ .. _ .. .a21 I: S •"""· r 0 •,,..,..,.,· COSTA MESA FOUND Parakeet vie '"" -~ ....... 0 . unc · UKIWOOD lMt CONDOMINIUM -.H MASON1tr. 11111cK aae .,,1 """""' I..... Cl or 2) -· .... '""'''in A . w NB Owne Ares u hrs 6·30 am-6 pm FURNITURE STRIPPING 011.t.NOI COUMTT .... MOTIL.I ........ -··-----· 4tlS MOVING I STOltAOI ... IUDDEN VILLAGE ......,.. ~ $95 & Jll5 mo Jmmed occu-n gua ay, · · r ' · , ' ouT o~couHTY u• l'AINTINO. "•""'-'" '* ., , GARDEN' .t.°D'n:' C.Osta Mesa. By owner. Prln pancy, tu.n. 775 *" ft. identify. 642-0865 Sl8 .,!!'~~mpare. 642-4050 GRAND OPENING SPEC OUT °" nATI '''' RENTALS l'AINTrNO, s..-• ~ ·~ "' Inc ... ., 750 548-6956 .....,. .... or ~· IAL! Arty average chair or STANTON l'ATIOS .... 2500 South Salta 0 Y. •w· · · *NEW BUILDING* FOUND · Youne Siamese cat · w1.1TM1NsT•1 ,,11 Apts. Unfumish~ ""0Too1tAl'NT ..,. •-~ •--. • Sf&.1525 TWO 16 units, sell or trade. ,.....,, sq lt uni•-·. olli--••· w/Dea collar. 89&-3128 or BABYSI'IT. ING my C.J\.1. rocker stripped SS. 642.3445. MtoWAT c1n iu• MN•1tAL Sltl l'LASTt:1t •i.i11. l'tfdl. ..,.., .- ;,ai•1A n><m UGI. .... ""'• ... ho v Harbo &. Bak SANTA ANA 1'" con• MISA 11• "LUMllNO ... 7x pws. Call 645--0303. room, ll{).220 pcwer, plenty 846-5329 me. ic. r er G d I 6680 SANTA A.llA 11nL 1.-MIU. v••D• 111• l'ET 01100M1N• "" I Apnt. of parking. 18th &. Whittler FOUND 1.fale Yorkshire Ter-~;,. ";:ro yd/hot limc:h. •r en "I OkAMel 1m HIWl'OltT ••...CM tHt l'OOL s111v1c1 fflf •F• 1 T ustin 5640 I-'-=---------.nor-v;/W runlN 1, ...... Nl'#l'OltT Hl/GHTS nu •OWllt ••• 1 .. 1Me fflt Cj Ave., C.M. rfer. Gold, Brown & gray. AL'S GARDENING NOltTM Tun111 uJt NIWl'OltT sHo1t1:s mt 1'UM,. s111v1c1 •m G APTS C. Robert Nattress, Realtor Mesa Verde area. 54&-2376. LIC'D day care, toddler. 7 for Garden•.,... & small land· ANANllM WISTCLIF" ~:.M llOOFINO .,. I DOWNIN Business Rent•I 6060 5 30 kl H ~... s1Lv•RADO cANYON ''" uNiv111siTT l'AllK int 1tA010 ••• ,.,,,.. •ff-•nt ~· CORNER of Coita Mesa 642-1"85 Calleo cat, long fur, female. ~i:· ~I s pm H:bcliJ·Bake~~ ~~~: ~=~~~~. Cos. ~:::~ ri-L~~ 1,'•,.'= ~:~~N:AY ~2:. :::~g~t:::. "K~T~~'i':s = ; t WILLIAMS and CORONA Del Mar. 660 Sq. INDUSTRIAL Looks young, Vic. Granville 54frJ5Jg.' u.ouN.t. f!llACM I I.ST i1,ut11• lltt s~ ~ m1 I All.IANCE. Ft. E-Z Parkin&, prime toe. LEASE Dr, NB. M.OU7. ~es~!~· Dover Shores, ';:,~~.'::.. ~1~~:L ~.:,,, ~:~::: DIL MAR !: :::::: MACKINI! Rll'AllS :: .... \ $175. 2 Br. 2 B&. Frplc, J>\!l Realonomlcs c.orp. 675-6700 FOUND Blk le wht Dalma· BABYSITTER, all age!, ~ IAN cLl.Ml!NT• ,-. IAT ••LANDI .,,. SEl'Ttc T .. .NKS, s....,., 11c. ~ 1 patio. Pool, Adults over 18. ,.._ . . hours. \Varrn 1neals, big lt YRS exp. Harb, area. Av SAN JUAN CA,l!JTllANO ,.,. LIDO !Ill 11'1 TAILORINQ ''" I .I Ul Office R1~1.1 6070 8000 aq. It. Sprinklered, mod. tlon. Vic '"4lahna pr., N.B. back yard 642-1592 c r.t CAl'ISTllANO llACN ;: HUNTINGTON 81ACN S40ll fl'illMl'l'E COHTllOL '"' Mgr-16507 A anoe ;c.;;.;;;;_;..;.;;~'";.:.;__....;-""O 1 em, clean, ample parkll')I. 642-5512. · , · · lawn $8 • i10 mo. C&.M DAHA l'Oll'IT FOUNTAIN vALLIT .MU TtLE. Ctrttmk ff14 I or call owner, 646-5501 SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY .Immed. Possession. lOe gq. YNG black male kitten OULD CARE my home, any ~:;215 Maint. 84 7 -S 9 S 9' r.:A:.~= ~;: ::~o:,l~':"D :::: ~~LElii2 ~~":'v~~ 6 M•""' !'.: "' L.11una Be•ch 5705 1-2-3 room, "P to 3,000 sq. ft -The Real &taters w/crooked tail found in age. Near F airview & lttYl!RSIDI COUNTT ~-... LDNO llACM -rELliiYISION. R•"""" •JC. '"' • ..•1111. ~--1bl"'' ·-· ..... -Adams, C.J\f, 549-0752 CLEAN UP SPECIALtsr MOUSIS TO •1 MOVl:D , ... OltANOI COUNTY Ult U,.NOUTEllT .,. }l ft. office $Ultes. Jmmed. oc-V'fQ-Lilli ... ,. .,....... 'tUI CONDOMINIUM OAlllOIN OltOYI 5'10 WELOINQ tttJ OCEAN VIEW • lzl 2 Bit. cupancy. Orange c n t y. NEW Bldg, 1388 ID 2300 ft . FOUND-kitten in Corona CHILD or i~lant, lrg clean New fence & :repair. 1'1ow. ou,.L1x•s ll'o• IAL• ;: Wl$TMINITE1t ,.11 wlNOOW CLllANINO _ ,. .. ''" apts. Unfurn. Crptl, drpt, Airport Irvine C.Ornmerc. N Bak •· F 1rv· 1 Hl"hland1 Call 675-3193 home. exp d, reasonable. Ing It ed&ing. Reas. APAltTMINTt 111011 ULI M,J!?'",,",,','" "•~ blt·lns, patloa, walkln1 d r. er• a iew, yr ._ · References. 6"6-5537 548-6995. _., •• dWance to town . 100 O IH Complex, a j. Airporter lease. SUilivan, 540-4429. GENTLE Siamese fem RENTALS SANTA ANA NllOHTS UM Dr.,Lagun&Beich.494-5498 Hotel&: Restaurant, banks, College Parkarea.'MS-l44l•MY hom:. C.lil. -a n age scaping. Tre e Hount Furnithtd ~g!~'lL . :;: San Diego &: N'pt Fwys. 1-----------· 1,;:::~;;.::::,::.:::.::::;::::::~ day Dr nlle. Hot food, te :removal. Yard :remodeling. LAOUNA llACN ms Den• Point-5740 UNCROWDED PARKING Lots 6100 Found White Rooster, Irvine yard. 642-5299 •ft 3:30 Trash hauJing lot cleanup. o'ENIJIAL ,.. LAGUNA N1ou1L sn1 LO\VEST RATES ~rrace, 673-6257 Repair spmklers. 673-1166. RINTALI TO SNAii HU MIUION VllJO ml ATIENTION BUILDERS I========== CHILD Care, my home, any COSTA MlJA 11• su. CLIMINTI sru Owner/mgr. 2172 DuPont Dr., hours, hot lunch, lge fncd Exper. Japanese Gardener, MISA DIL MAit tlflS SAN JUAN CA"ljTflANO IJU Rm. 8, Newport Beach One acre with existing 3 BR Lott 6401 ard 540 ~o~~ Complete yd service. Neat Mis.A VlltDI tn t CAll'ISTllANO llACH 5131 home. Room for 12 more y . <rVOJ"f. COLLIOI l'AltK nu DANA l'OINT SJ• 833-3223 C.Ou.rtesy to Broke" &. Relia. Free est. 6424389 NIWl'OltT 11Ac11 ntt Tlttl'Ll!X. fie. '"' unit!. Possible subordlna· CAT long hair grey & blk Nl.Wl'OltT NOTS. Hlt CONDOMINIUM SHI tion, 7~% financing $45,000. tabby, altered' male. Frid. Brick, Masonry, GARDENING ",,•,w,'°,,',',,sNoRll Htt 111.NTALI WANTIO ,,,. "'"'387 642 lm By Experienced Japanese ''" ROOMS ll'Olt 111NT ms DELUXE JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOI WANTED, Mm ntl JOI WANTIO, W-7121 JOI W»ITID, MEN a WOMIN SCHOOLS a INSTIIUCTION Joa ,. .... AltATIOJll THliATllllCAL ,.. ,.. --MERCHANDISE FOR SALE ANO TRAOE FUIN ITUltt -. -OFFICI ll'UllN"U•I lllt OfJlllCli IQUl,.MINT •n ·l ' '• ,, DELUXE Duplex, new In Aprll, nr. Doheny Slate Park &. new harbor, 2 Br, l~ ha. Fenced yard, newly lndscpd. Garage w/extra ent. directly lnto kitchen. Bit-Ins incl. dishwasher & prb. dlBpoQ.I. Carp. & drape• thruout. 2·Sl.Orles. $200 Mo. Avail. to ah:lw, renting Dec. ls!. No petl. Drive by 33901 Copper Lantern, Dana Pt. or call 494-2328 da)'I, 494-4791 eves or ~!&-1397 Llnao Real Estate Jnveatmenta .• .,.._, or . . nite, Vic. !\1esa Dr. & Nv.'Pt.,_~·~t~c _____ _:6560 OOYIR lllOlllS m1 ROOM • IOAllO '"' Executive OHice suite avail-e 75' x 100· prime corner Blvd. Reward! 892-2052 att1 1-==~*~"'~>-0:..:;228:;_~*~--1 wt:stcL1"" ttM MOTii.i, TltAtLll cou•n 1m ST0-1 , IOUll'Ml!NT •11 CA,,I, lllfAUltA.NT •14 . l CondomlnlUm 5950 BEAUTIFUL Country Club Villa, C.M. 2 br, 1~ ba, pvt paUo, c:rptl, drps, bltna, etc. $2iO mo. Cl.111 J e a 11 n e -.ros,96M323 Rontels W•nted S990 · BUILD Re _, 1 · EXPER H all GA-' uNrve•sJTT l'AJtit: nn ouen MOMllS "" able on Campus Drive, view lot in Laguna Bellch. 6 PM . • nl\Ne · ft'pair. · aw an ...... ener lltVINI ml MISC. ltlNTALS mt JAR IOU!,.MENT MIS HOUSliHOLD GOODS ltM across from Orange County 545-8424 *owner/agent Brick, block. c o nc r e te Complet e Gardening IACK aAT n4t airport. 2 offices, recepllon · LOST Sm. fem shaggie carpentry, no job 100 small Service. 6464676 aft 6 pm. 1.-.ST 1Lut11• ~~ room, storage, commercial 1----------·I Cockapoo: Blk w I w ht Lie. Contr. 962-6945 MONTHLY Lawn ma I nt . r~v;r:; T•J11tACI t14S front-pn"va•A side entrance. Acreage 6200 mark!. Vic: Santa Isabella BRICK •BLOCK*STONE. • ·wn & sprinklers install-... co1toNA D•L MAit ",.," ~ ;.;_o;.;;="-------1 & Santa Ana St. ~1649 ..... = IALIOA 708 ~!r:!~,54~~~kers. SAC! $16,000, s plush level Wkdy-Eves. 64:i~~he hou:-alter J~758 ~!!~~.n~s1~s, shrubs ~~o"o '~:f'a"°' =~~ Acn. Lake Mat ews MALE Irish setter c:hild's IALIOA llUMD 21.H .-0ELUXE 1-room ott\ce. Estates, 14 ml/Rlverald..e. pet . Dee • W BRICK. Block, stone. Patios, Complete Y•rd Cerel NUNT1NeT0tt 11ACll ~4: Adjacent to Airport.er Inn & Un1mdtut1'1. Gorz vieW. te:iun vi~RGEa~E\VA~b· entrance \Vil,}'!. No job too Jl!\f 540-4837 ~~~~T:~:c~ALLIT tut Orange Cnty. A i rport . mount & la1ce1. 548-&U9 alt 4.._,934'8· · small. 646-78TJ, Ref furn. LOMO •IACH Hit '~.:.:;_~~~~-==ld~~~~m"'m~lh;;;:I~~~:::;.~:==';.:;; "'"'-ORANOI COUl'ITT 1Mt Ca111 .• drapes. music, air-~ · .rr-i ;G="="=·~·~•~I ~S~o~r~v~lc~•~·-~-;:::': 11.a11TA ANA ,.,. cond .. etc. $125 Month. GOV'T Land $5 ac \Vrfte LOST: 1:-£· male mixed box· Cabinetmllklng -w1sTM•NSt•• '"' OR .,, ... Land p i..: ... i:i85 A er. Diamond mark on1 .o:.:.:.:.;;.;.;.::.;:;::.:;,,___..::;;:::1cARPENTRY •. Cabs., Pain. MIOWAT CITY "" 833.-0lDl ~i..., h a~._A've Sar~ forehead, LI 8-0101 or CUST'Ol\f \VOODWORK ling, Formica. Plbg repair, :::lf'AtN" NRIOlln = DESK SPACE l' ow ea • 646-0781 Furniture & Ca.binetll concrcle, appliances & LAGUNA 11ACH 1111 Bernardino, Ca. LOST: Black female kitten. 3 MS-42:lS or ~ water heater replacement!. ~~s~::N N~~:,~L = R E W nted 6240 rm., w/wb!te paws & chest. -646-lSU Mon thru Sat. 1 to IAN CLIMINTI 2111 :;;:·;...;;~·--•------1 Vic.. Francisco/Tustin area, Carpentering 6590 7 U#ll JUAN C.t.l'llTIIANO trts ' CAl'ISTllAJllO llACH 11'1 222 Forest Avenu• REAL ESTATE, General INCOMI "RO,.lltf'f' IUSIHISS "llOl'lltTY TR.IALll "ARKS IUSINISl ltlNfAL Oll'PICI ltlltTAL INDUSTRIAL •1tO,.lltTT COMMlllCIAL INDUlfltlAL RINTAL LO'l"S • llANCMll CIT.US OIOVIS AClllAOI LMI ILSINORI ltllOltT "1101'1.llTT OltANGI CO. l'lt01'EITT OUT 01' STATI PllOI'. MOUNTAIN I Ol.llltT SUIOIVlllON U.NO RIAL ISTATI SlltYICe It.I . IXCNANG• It. L WANTIO OA~AOI SALi! nu FUlllNITUlll AUCTION ltlJS Al'l'LIANCll 11tt , , 1 »ITICJUlll tllt 4IOO SEWINO MACHINIS IUf dff MUSICAL INSTRUMIMT llH .. ,, l'IAl'IOS & O•OANI llH '"° RADIO ftll .. ,. T•LIYISION 11M . .... 'll·fl a STlltl.O 1111 I Uh fAl'I ltECOltOlltl ft ' U9t CAMERAS a IEQUll'MINT IMt ,,. HOll't' SU,.l'Lll.S Met 1 41ff Sl'ORTINO OOOOS ... It ans 11NOCULAllS, SCOl'll ISM 4tot MISCILLANIDUS 1Hj1 nn .\\IS.C:. WAMTIO Mlt Otl MACHINl:llT, 1111. tlW " ''°' LUMlllt 11Jf atot STOltAGI ft •11• IUILDlJllO MATlltlllJ 1111 1112 SWAJ'I OM 4111 '"' PETS and LIVESTOCK Utli l'l"TI, GINllAL -Private buyer wants apt ~Ill N.B. 548-lMS or 54tl-&1 10 CARPENTRY RAIN G ut , er s Installed. DANA POINT ",,.• RE!PO~SIBLE Younc man _.....location any c:oncl!tlon ....... 11 k Re bl 111v11t1101 CDUNTT •• ~<Jt . . $.l REWARD, lost dar_ k -y MINOR REPAIRS, No Job .., ....... ty V.'Or . asona e. VACATION ltlNTAU ""' Loguno Beoch '9<9466 CATI mi 8USINES5 and DOGS - (City '""'loyff) wl>hH to DESK SPACE 0 •~ ··-t 96K-220S rent 2 D.R. hotue, preler bunny, very tame, Vu:: San-Too Small. CabinP.t in gar-Free es , . ~=~::::1u,~•11. :; Beach&IU·Upto$I25mo. 305 No. El C.mino Reel BUSINESS and ta Ana A~~ Ori !'.lu. ages & other cabinets, TYPING FINANCIAL . MOllSlS .... IUSll'llSI WANTID ••I LIVltTOCK - INV•STMINT 0"'"'9ftftlM Ult CALIFORNIA LIVING Talce excelhint care of pro-San C lom•nte FINANCIAL 64&-T';J61, 644-6550 ext 235. 545-8175 U no answer leave m~1 Extt. Ovemite serv. pttty. ~17U. 492-443> B I Female gray Yorkie Terrier , msg at 646-2372. H. O. Accur. gU&r. S4S-0260 e~s. l-'"'o""L"'A"N"D=L"'O"R"O"So-;•---1 omCE-Gan.ges "' fe nced us nett 6300 tatoo in ear, Lost in Calif. Andmon ---· nu:E RENTAL. SER.VICE Yrd 11p1ce w/1as pumps, In Oppo!!.!nltles Clu1\c • off \Varner . 11127IR·-EM,-'-OO""'ELJ~-N-C--C.,,,.~-,,-., cH.:;•::•::l;;lng,_._ ____ ~6;_730;.: Broker. 53U982 HB. Avail for rent from A1TENTION _ attn. 846-5420 or 540-9980. needs work. 35 yrs exper. TRASH &·C~e clean-up. 12/1. call: 536-SG86. DISTRIBUTORS LOST Large male c at, By the hour. 642-1505. 7 da,)'1. $10 a IOtld. Free est Room• for Rent 5995 * $15 PER week-up "'/kitchens. Sf?.50 per v.ttk-up Apts. MOTEL. 548- 9'115 * DOWNTOWN H.B. NEEDED ora~ & white in vie. t'lf R E PAIRS-ALTERATIONS. Anytime, 543-5031. Remodeled ofc or shOp, blk to HUNTS ntw mulli·mllllon Wilson &: Joann. Re"-'al'd! ~ABINSI'S. Any th:e job -"-'.~M~O~Vl:CN~G.c=L~E~AN=-=UP,...,...& ocean. Lindborg Co. S3&2S79 dollar advertised snack pack Plt!a.se, rehirn. 642-9883. 25 yni exper. 54S-iTI3. • HAULING. VERY REAS! • XLNT Office Space Now products, NEED NOW! Re-DISAPPEARED U/2(l. Lusk SMALL JOB * * ROY: 646--6629 * * Avail. WOO Bl.DG. 3355 liable men or women In Homes, Cd:-.!: S m I J.t . SPECIALIST y ARD / G "r. Cl t.anup. ROOM • SMf mo. Utll pd. Community bl.th. Student Vla Lido. NB. 673-4501. Southern Calif, to aerv:lce Yorlcahlre, flea col lar. Call Gordon. 846-6545 Remove tree~. Ivy, trash. 3700 NEWPORT BLVD. NB. fu t moving coin operated Rewud. 675-8200 ROOFING Grad~. btckhOe, 96z..8745. only. FURNISHED room tor rent. C.0.ta P.lesa. SU week. Call >t&-l!Ol NICf Room. prlv. heme. ldtcl\. privU • + Near •hos>'c I: tr,nsp. C.M. 549-1061 ON THE BAY product• In co. tecured 1~ FEM. longhaired sray cat. A All Home Improvements. 67f>.'4&4 MJ.5032 cations, commercial & tac· 4 wh\ft" feel green eyes n--E t ,..., l"""' • •tory·putor f\lll tlrne !Oto 1~-· NI '1 •-·-'1-·-·=---•-· _________ c_ 1670 •••-A ANA AVE CM ' , _ .. na sue . "~"' '31\l, • • U houra per we1k • no 1t:U· 35c sq, fl c•i u.... ing. CASH REQUIRED • *~10 ~ ~nt~;~ ~e Cement, Concrete '600 61'>2464 or .... ·~ ~1000 to $3900. \Yrtte ror pe:r. --:--- • Executive OUieet: e tonal lntervlew, r Iv I nf C.M. Re.ward. 646-2628 CEMENT \\'ORK. TIO Job too 4 office• Lido Isle name, addrtss ,\ phone LOST fe male Irish Setter. m all, reasonable. F'ree * m-6384 * numbtr to: Dtstrtbutonhlp Ntar Marco Forster. Re. ~tlm. H. Stufl lck, r.tU6l5 -........ ~-Div., 51, P.O. Box 24851, v.·t1rd Offered. 493-3467 ~!ORE Concrete paUO b ..--IP, ft, Cal 90024 OmCES, $9).$91).$181), Los Anatlaa, . . p I .... luess ~~My, Arill~JA ~'e!.,lnl· Co&tl Mna.. 646-2130 MAKE extra money. put erson• • -c., .:au ax at_.._, FOR rent • Store or oWce. ·time. No phooe soliciting or FULLY LICENSED * CEMENT Wtlrk. R.tu . C\!y Mlsc. Rent•lt 5ft9 Carpeted. 'I't>p 10 c at 1 0 n , door to door selllr11. For Renowned Hindu Splrltualllt & state Uc'd. Side walkl, STORAG .,. ,.____ Newport Blvd, N.B. 61l-51'3 !l.,P'!...,wl 1 th no obll11tlon call Advfct on all matters. drives. patios. 64l-8514. ~ ....... _~ -..u... Lew. lllarrlqe, Business ""' ptt mo. Comrnercl•t 6115 COf'FEE Shop. Ideal for Readln11 given 7 d8.YI a "ti;fAKE Room F or D&d· Phone M2-m1 untll t pm. couple. Small tnw almenl wetk, 10 am ~ 10 pm. d Y' '· · c It • n out lhe m• x m· Ptllt $35. mo, nr OOMMERQAL.IN'DUSTRJAL wlll hand!• ror rt!.ltablt ptr-312 N. El camlno lteal, Pt'ait .. )rour trash ls CASH Eldtn .t Mon&a Ykr.._ C.M. Rental• 50D eq. ft. to 2300 sq. ty, Ca.U coUec~ 4 l 5 : Slln Clemcn1e 'vith • Dany Pilot Clusltled $1$<.1657. ft. Uc to IOt:. <!J6.1~ SC. 9:11-mi <92-.9136, '92--007' •d. I NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD IUSINSSI O""OlfUNITllE$ '* NUlllS•lllll "11 INYllTMINT WANflD Ull IWIMMING l'OOU "-'I MONIT TO LOAM IJ2t l'AT/0$ etU RENTALS "llttONAL LOANS 'l'lS AWNINOI mt JIWILllY lOANI '3W VACATIONS et» Housn Unfurni1hed ••Niii.iL c:onA Ml.SA lflll:SA OIL MAit Ml5A VlllDI COLLIGI. l'AltK NIWl'OltT tt:ACK MIW"ORT MGTI. NIWl'O•T SMOlllS IATSNOltl.I DOYER IHOJll1 W•ITCLIJllll' UNIYllSITT l'AlllC ~",.~I: ... ,. IUT ILUJlll' II T-tllYIHI TlllJIACI COIONA OIL IMa IALIOA IAT Ill.ANDI LIDO till IALIOA ISUMD •IWl"OltT win HUNTINGTON 81ACl\I ICUNTtNOTOM ltAltlOtJlt •"I •f'lfAIN lllolll1' llAL llACH •AIHN OllO'VI LOl'll llACH 011.a1101 couwrr SANTA ANA nSfMIJltTlll MIOWAY C.ITI' JAMTA AJllA NllOH'TI COAIT4L UiOUNA llAClll LAOUNA NIOUll MISSION VllJO 1AN C~IM9'ft• IAN JUAN c:AP!STIANO CAl'lllllA.NO •IAUI DANA l'Olfllf ...O"DOMINIUM •U,LIXlt UNJll'V•JI. , CDLLATlllAL LOANS IJU -RIAL •• , ... ,, LOANS d41 TRA"NSPORTATION II• MOJITeMIS, Trlllt 0..-VU IOATS & YACHTS lllf MONIY WANTID Wt SAILIOATS :;:: ANNOUNCEMENTS "ow11 c:1u111.11 Sl'llD-°IK1 IOAn :: end NOTICES 10AT T1tA1L111s Int l'OUNO (P ... Aft) '4M 10.tT MA!NTINANCI LOST fJ 4401 IOAT L.AUNCNINO ml l'llSONALI • ., MAlt!MI I OU•"· itt1 ANNOUNCllllllNn 4411 IOAT SL!". Ml)OIUN• n• l lltTNS 4411 IO>T Sl!llVICIS nn •Ul'llllAl.fl .. ,, IOAT ltlN1ALI :: PAIO OllTUAlt'f' a.llS 80AT CHA•TIR mt l'UNllAL OlllCTOltl 4114 '""'NO aoAn 21:44 l'L01111'1 .. IJ toAT MOVING .. CAllO OI' TMANU .... IOAT ITOllAO• ,,. "' MIMOJl.IAM "'" 10.tn WANTID -CIMlflllT LOT$ 4411 AlltCRAJllT *"' CIMITlllT CIT"Tt 44\t ll'L'f'INO LISSONI JUI CltlMATOltlll 14:11 MOllLI llOMll nll M•MOlllAL PAllKt 4411 ~Oil HOMll •n AUCTIONS _,. ... l lCTCLll Met AVIATlON SlltYICI t1Ji ILICTllC CARS ,_ ttAVIL -4US MINI •1JCls Ml• All TIAltll'OltTATiON -MGt OICTCLIS .. AUTO TltANSl'OllTATIO.. :: ~~Tr~":i:e1::.· a PAllTI Mrfl LI.AL NOTICU AVTO TOOLS a ICll.111'. -TUTOltllfO ..... rutLIR, TUVl:L ,... SERVICE DIRECTORY r1t.ti1L1.1t1, u11111y •M A(COUNTINe '* fltl.ieltl •n ANIWlltlNO lllVICI .SOS Sll•S Mi. Al'"11~CI lll'Alltl. fttftt 411~ CAMll'lllS *"' Al"PllAll... . llltl c:AM"lt ltlflTAU JM All'HALT. Grit Ull OUl'll IUOOll$ .,. AICN"ICTUJllL lllYICI UtS IMPOlttlO .tUlOS Jn! AUID as.PA lllS 'lM Sl'OllT CAI.I 1N1 AUTO, l•t &tll'I. T..._ lie. U4I .t.NTIQUll, CL.AISICS 1Jlt •I TSITflNO .ue IACI CAltl. •oos W IOAT MAINTIN .. #llCI 4SI &liTO l 'f'INTS S111 IRICK, M~IONllT, •c. ~ AUTOt Wlo/'ITIO 11• SUllNUI 11.ltVIC•I 610 MSW CAltf W"-I UILOIU "" AL!TO LIAltMe tt11 C.A•INITMAltlHO -UllO C:AJll ... "" "" ... . .,, .... ... ... ... ... . ... ... -.... .... -... ... .... m1 ... "" "" ... .... "" .... -.... "" "" "" "" -"" ''It == .... ... .... - s H JI I I .ii I I ll ' ' H " • " ' w I ' • I c. 2 p ' ., w. • ,. Ir IR E In "' ,; lo ;( Ge u D n NE " n El o• "' M IL ., k M co M " " HC E u Fl k ' 541 Ho !'. .. " P> " .. ~ E> E n ti PJ ~ w ~ Pl p h • • I p ~ • IN • • p, • • r ........... ---------------------------------------:-~----~-----------------------;-~-----·-~-. ·~· -.. • Tut~ay, l)tetmbtr 1, 1970 DAILY Pit.OT !fJ ~m. llECTollV-:-ttRVICl!""OIRI! • 5-WMPloVMiNT ,!OIS &-EMl!LO!lt.11.liNl-.JOIS.l...EMRLO¥Mllfl'-MIR~HANOISl-F~ MIRCHANOISI-~ MlRC-HANdtff'.'.FOR-Plfs;ftd-1olvlrrockl- H•ullnt 6730 Palnll"9, Jobt Man, Worn. 7100 Jobi Mon, Worn. 71o0 Jobi Man, Worn. 7100 SALE ANO TRADE SALi AND T~DI . SALE AND TRACI! Cop 1111 .iiiNKwanied. Fr« ...,.., • Paperha"91nt WO ADVERTISING • Womto w Office Equipment I011 HI-Fl Ii St.roe 1210 Mlscellanoou1 -SHERRY'S POOOLIS pick \IP le pnp cleanups. DO Jt )'OUneU. 'You do trim. airk. P to 13.!iO ptt hour, • DISHW,,SHER e SAW LADY • TYPE}YR1TER, m~f elec-LAROE HoUaa.an 1tereo, CLOSlNGoUlce: N!!!arly ntw 9 yn upcrtenee J;laWlnc. Ed Stone,' 543-8913. Ava;. S Br. hOult. Exter f\IU time. CaJI or come ln, trlc. Recently recond. Long maple cab!Pet, extra •pu..k. equip: Elec typewriter. elec All bretd croomlna:. Frec1 JUNK Wuttd. Fl'H nM!lal atucco Still. Joel m•l'l & 5'18-5501: 1869 Newport FtJLL TIME CASHIER, cacrlage. $175, 673--4006 er, $50. 546;6715 after 5:30. adding machlrw,, 'nltrmo-pick up Is Jtllwry. Qriaf., Pick up'-........ , t'leanu ..... labor. AU work ;uar. Blvd. Suite F, Costa .Mesa. A 8 DI k M' -'M ' tu. ccpler, Ania-phone. mu pup, tn all colon, ·--,. ••111<1 A ., .. I W · · c imeo, ...,,,,, .,.-T R rd -• ---than " t •--t ·~ -·• ~ullni. Ed Stone, 543-8913 .,.. -· Banking Prt..1 n penon anted by tt:lati\.1!1.f 1mall overhead projector $ 9 o , •pe ICO •rs • .,_ ~ ~ COS • .xt:o a .,__ ========:<I * TELLER/CLERK food 1tore -not a 1upor-4~ ... , 1381 Munster Dr .• ILB. nrl'e~a~~= .. = ... ~8~,-~,.,.,.....,.,-1 HAVUNG &: Cleanup. Trtt1 Plasterlnv, Patch, TH _.......,., · AKAi tape recorder, SO wait ~ach Blvd l Indianapolil. ~.uu~ 0 r a r le shrubs removed. Frtt Part time. »34 hn pt'r wk. E RIGGER market. $2.25 .hour. No Sat. amp bltn, Mii in wood 10 7" ' . Pointe•, 6 . mo, ready for (ll!i.mf;le, M5-.SC3J. Rep.Tr 6llO 'l'op waie&. ~r. pre.t'd. NO, 18 FASHION ISLAND urday night or Sunday work. tapes tte?eo hea.dohOnei W'E Lcan-Bu)':sell anyUtlne training, AKC reg. Line of Apply or phone: lit Wealt.rt1 t-IEWPORT BEACH M!die&} and hospital be~-G1r1 .. Sat, to22 $375. 'Ai.LS: 64~ ' CouN• t Pawnv. A Auctlon. ~ field champions, 644-5194 H,uMCIMnlno 4715 * PATCH PLASTERING Bank, 18932 Goldt>nwe11 Dr., Uta: Unlfo1•1n furnished, Ap.. ACCORDION • ~---~. • wport Bl~. §424400 GERMAN --.herd • re. I-'----~---All types. Free estimates l-lun1. Reh, 842-1741 DENT>J.. asst. 1ect. prevcn· p)y Llndbcri:: Nutrition, In • ......_ -''""t' FOR Xlnt Work -Call Dutch Call 540-6825 tative dentistry. 1':tust love rear o( the TO)' \Vorld store Xlnt cot!d, Tape ncordcr Spo ti g Oooclt 1500 M isc:. W1nted 1610 male. Good watch doc. Best M<lfnt. for windows tlr!I &1---------BABYSM"fER wanted, my people. Exp. 968-5782; on lowrr level South Coast V.O, aewtni rnachlne $50. r " otter, crpt cleaning. Before 8Ai'1 home or youn. Bayview 64&-:172! Plaza Shoppini Center Cos-elec:/Philco radio $10. & FOR Sa I e-Scuba equl_p. WANTED 5.10-&340 or ah 3PM, ~'l-1508. Plumbing 6190 Sehool area. 1 &: 6 hr old. ta r.1esa ' baby clothe• ~ -$1.50. ment-72 cu. ft. tank wet Good U sed F rffler TO'l POODLE PUPS WLVDOWS &: wa.ll1 washed. PLU~!BING REPAIR Call arter 6 pm, 545"-1200 EVERY DAY IS XMAS SERVICE STATION AT ~ St.u1. Nov 30th s u ft-we i g hts-fln.~maak Prefer Chest lYPt. MU&t be Gd. Quality-Reas: priced, Call: Fln, atrlppcd, aealed A No job too amall BABYSITTER -3pm to 5:30 EARN CASH TENDANT II hlft • 4 Bikes XI", l 1p. 26" -2 apd, regulator $200. 675--2806. &OOd runner, Not over $50. 52&-8188 waxed, l'UJ cleaning. Free • 642-3128 • pm, Tues thn.J Fri. Vic Vie-$50-$100..$200-$300 Apply in pt'~n.s 467: ~':~'. 28~' 3 spd, 27" 10, apd , ~ kids KOFLACH Ski boots, Jiu 1~6~15-m~~O~•~·~.,~&~w~k~n~d!;•·.,,--1~::'..'.~:======;;;;- ' ~"-t.~d>=y=/n-it=•=6~1>-3090==·=-l'o~RAIN~=s-P~i~ugg-ed-,-. -D-,.-,-.n-in-& toria lcllool. 645-2605 WEEKLY OR MORE pus Dr Ne11o·pt Sch skis &: boota, 1 boat and llO, used 1 &euon. ADDRESSOGRAPH -New Horses ... ·-HOUSE OF CLEAN low rv.... cl BARMAID. Eacapade Room Have you been laid off -or " . ' misc. other stuU. NB * 673-tm * sed Will b t 1-----------1 ,_ 1 1 H~·-· Cl _, ~ ~ ~~~aned $9. Full &. p/time. 21 •30, tired~ We require immedL * SUNf"LO\VER 548-4731. ~~t Auction u~ orp:~· 4 YR Old·AQHA ~tare, Xlnt vump e e """""' ~••un&' I------"-'----I 548-9069, Costa Mesa ately, hard·'ol.'Orking people SWIMWEAR * . B~lng Th(ffbars, Val)o-642·6824 1o earn hi"" cash today and Needa exp .. power opera Ion Mlscellaneous l600 642-8400. dy, Joe' Reed A Chubby. Roofing 6950 Mesa Cleanln,c Service Carpet., windows, !loan, etc. Res &: C.Ommc'I, M&-4111 LEE ROOFING CO; Roofing of all types. recover. 2 Women, efficient, w'U y repairs, root coatings. Lie &: preferred. C.7'J . area. Call bonded since 1947. W-7222. eves. 557~. BEFORE YllU buy, call T. HOUSECLEANING Guy Roofing Co. Recover By day. Own transporlallon apcclali1t , 645-2780. 836-064S 54S-9590. WE will clean your house or apt. Reasonable r ate 1 , 673-1437 or 673-1667 RE-ROOFING, shingles & rock. Repain & sno-coating, No job too amall. 897-4223 * * BOOKKEEPER, ex. every day~iull or part time, year round or will fTa in exp, Appll•ncn 1100 WANTED: Wheel chair with Show or Breed. Alm her per'd, part time, l-3 daya a taking orders for i\W'an.. hr>me seam11tresse1. San 00 IX'ed ~ MOVING into Moblle.l{ome, 1winj:back foot rests. 7/mo Fill)'. Pack/ or sept. ""1k· Will become Ml time teed fast selling products. Clemente 49'2-8211 . ,)'OU a " ........ :econ· can't use the followtn.a 6'B-84Zl after 5 All : 6. 847-7609. requrrement. Knowledge of NO EXPERIENCE d1ho~ed .TV or a~p!iance? items, all In excellent con. -;;BAS=E;i;;BO;;ARD';o;,';HE:;;i,A;iT"E"RS;;---1-'.::::_::_::.:_:;.:::;::_ ____ i co nstruction acoountJ NECESSARY. THE DAILY PILOT Dont.m155 Dunlaps diUon, must see to ap-SQUARE DANCE CLOTHES TRAtfSPORTATION desirable but ml a req'mt. TRAINING GIVEN has an openlng for sn experl. S1dew•lk ~a~e preciate: like new (k>p. FOR WILLIAJ\.1 MESSENGER If """ are ready to work enced, journalist in 111,110-this weekend, l'ri til 9, Sat pertone stove and l'l!:frir. MEN & WOMEN 492-0170 eq.ts & Y1cht1 9000 CORP, '4667 Ma c Arthur J~~ tll 6 'ol.'ilh I ake 1 Blvd N 8 Ph u.9010 1 hard today and want to men's department. Applicant \V d·_,, -~ • ce m r, map e 16' Convertible 1970 Ouchita ' · • : .,....,... or buildforatutureforlomor. must be able to report, ~ cuver, Sf!•v•Ce"" guar. dinette, four matchlnrl----------1 appt. wri I anlec. chain, hutch and room FREE TO YOU glass boat. 40 hp Evinrude, row, call now for interview, le c early, understand Vanson trlr & aU extns. BOOKKEEPER r.1R. TODD (213) 787-8972 t.s.sentiala of photography & DUNLAP divider, electric heater, ~ sell for balance owed. ;ms. Full c"~-. 1\Ulo leasing e.x-or write Box M·2089, The layout. Top company bene. APPLIANCE shampooer, 8 X IO rug, near (21 12 week Terri-Pao pup-Call 642-1232 att 5 or wkndr. ·-•• U ••• W n-.. fits,~ ..al·~. attractive new, di.shes, aweeper, I bl k need I •:========-perlence preferred. Long-.. Da Y Pilot. ~ ' UCl.J• .......... -J 1815 N t Bi d c M fi"place 1creen and tools. Pei,. pure ac · OV·i· tabllshed fir,m. Write BO~ Costa Mesa, Calit new quart'l!rs. Apply in writ. ewpor v ·• · · 5'18--5207 1f\i horn ea desperately. Sailboats 9010'. Ironing 6755 Sewing 1--~-----M ~ w Ing only, citing cx-rlence, • S48-n88 • Sh0t1. Would like to find J 6960 ..... Daily Pilot, 330 . ,~ ,...l3ay, C.M. EXPER l eg al 1ec 'y, background & education to WMJRLPOOL Elec. dryer UNIQUE AUCTION hoRdme,~°!:the~-~h T•1rTY218 RENEGADE IRONING In my h o m e, Balboa area. $1.50 an hour. 673-7916 1'TOPLESS'' 1-~~=--=-====--I Empha!is on probate. 1.1argaret Greenman, Per. $35, Whirlpool washer $40. .. .._ .. na ,pcac • of \ 2~ yds. Guys Muslin Shirts CARRIER Reaume req'd, Call for In sonnel Manager, Box 1560, Both gd cond. Guaranteed & FREE To qU.l).ltled homes: NEWPORT ·1 lnsuranc• 6no $5. 2 yds, Ponchos $5, Tap. BOYS 1ervlew, Gunderson ' C08t"'< Mesa, Calif, 92626. delivered. ~2. 847-8ll5. AntlCJl.lea -Import!! "Ai Rua&ian Blue male ki~n Famoua 25' Tops'! cutter, estry 4 yds. Long Gypsy Keeler, Lazuna Hi 11 s , TYPIST & Glrl Friday SUPER 1970 dlx. 30·• Friga. Unredeemed pledi;es... llooks like purebred) & diesel, A.P .. 1 be.gs of saila, .. dresses $8. 3\1: yds. Maxi. WANTED 837-TilO $85 a week to star1. dab'e elec. range; yello'ol.'; Art work black Ir. grey tabby female, every poaalble equJpm@nt to 1-------HAVE You had trouble get· ting Health &: Accident lnaurance because of pail illness! Call eves, 6~. skirts $7. 2'it .Yds. Peasant Experienced * 6<16-393l rOr appt * used 2 mo. Sacrifice $125. COAST PAWN & 3 mo. Call 540-5487 after 1 go anywhe1e i!J the world. dre~s $6, 2\,1 yds, Blouses for the e BANK TELLERS e 496--2686 or 493-4196. pm.. •1.2/3 Asking $9500 646-1914 E\'t'. $4. Belli $5. Dig the nev.· Ph: 536-93TI WAITRESS . • Experienced. AUCTION HOUSE DEAR Santa., pleue flnd a 21' ~ w/tra.ile.r. gypsy look . Bea1 inOation DAILY PILOT Arphy's Coffee Shop, 3021 8 · Dec 2, 7:30 pm. 642-MOO good home for a lovable Sleeps 4 head Joe.di or Janitorial 6790 let me do yoor sewing. Just DanaCaPomp'~-~k!uan Ffp~~ :::!ca: :r'"twntiJ~~ Harbor, C.?.i, · Antiques 1110 2426 Newport Blvd., CM mutt, female, 1 yr old, xtra.s. Muit .ff to &pp. bring your tapestries or ma. ... ........ .., ........ FRIE WANTED: Captain for 80' SCARCE collector's item: -adores ch I ld re n . $2850 531~1 terial to: 821 w. Balboa Capistrano Beach, pm, KEm'UCKY D diesel powered yacht. CHRJSTMAS 847-5223 1213 · A'TION 81 N .,__ C.Onta.:t Mr. c:--n .. nt OUCKEN, 693 S. Coast * 376-9421 * Pre \VWt vintage solid oak FLEA "•"KET HOBIE CAT, sail No. 562. '""' Yd, ewport oca.ch, aft, ~ Hwy. 1..ag/Bch. Jee box, 24X28ta8. 2579 . •nnn FREE To qua I If I e d Yellow hull w/yellow panel t.fAINTENANCE COMPANY 5:30. DAILY PILOT Wastcliff Personnel Willow Ln. 642-9600 'eves. Gifb Galore -Bargains! home-Longhair blond male . XI t nd ·,~ ....... ~iKn eall Office le Housecleaning I ·Q~U~ALITY""'=~Y~ou~·v-,-al~w-,-,,.-San Clemente office FEMALE Cook wanted: ap-Agency Santa Ana YWCA, llli N. altered cat. Gorgeous. 2~ ~~ · .---.. -· Guar. Satisfaction. ~e est. want~. Dreumaking • 305 N, El Camino ReaJ ply In penon. MESA It's not luck It's Know How ANTIQUE Mmoire, app. Broadway, Dec. 3-S yrs. 7 toes on front. Veryl-"'"-'=·~-----,- '-====531.=3315====' I alterations. Key Say, 1763 4924420 LANES, 1703 SUJ!l!rior, CM -64'&-mo 1880, orig Devel~ &la~ Th~Fri-Noon to 9 loving. 54~1846. 12/3 45' !-u:dllary cutter• i ~ Orange Ave., CM. 645-1292 FULL Or pt. time. Take 20U \VestcllH Drlve, N.B. dlJOOoors,67~J~s. Exe end, Sat-Noon-6 PM. Antiques -"MITZI" Lo v ab I black $19,000. Moored at Newport. L•nclscaplng 6110 Christian Woman Companion on:lers &: make Fuller deliv. · · Jewelry -·stocking StuUen f · 1 k e 1 Will trade tor Income pro----~~----1MINI Maxi ? Pantsdress, for elderly woman. noo mo., $2.50 hr prof to st. 546-5745 ANTIQUE Picture, Utho. -coll 1 ectibles -toya. SNACK ~~ e t~. -a-~l ld r rn perty. Bkr, 54&-S022 LAWN Ma!nt. & Cleanup. jumpsUitc. Dressmaking by rm&: board. 645-1062 aft 7pm * GIRL FRIDAY * Schools-Instruction 7600 gn.ph, re.lnnade in 1000, BAR. 1_,,,9293 .,. '49J. 1213 CHRISrMAS SABOTS De nd bl Ii bl &: Lady Grace. Reas. 847-4315. M k bl u -_..... ra:S. ~7~; a e reas e Dressmaki""' _ Alterations CLASSiflED Sale1 GI r I IT'S YOUR MOVE a e rea~ o er. M~LE Dinette 1et &. 4 SMOKE'{ le Teenle {Fem ~st Quality &: Realistic 1""""';,.'-----'~-~~~-I . .,. wanted. Experience With experien<;e in general cl)a1rs $35 ~tl~ue green, kittens) 6 wks _will pay Pnces.64>1567 NEW Jawna & 1pmkler~ Jn-~:tg~e: !o ~u~~~· necessary. Stsrt immed. It office dulie~ to include book· INDUSTRY CAREERS French Prov1nc1al, 3 piece part of neutering service atalled, Shrubs planted &1 -~-~--~~=~ you like money phone for keeping, tax returns, ac· Sewing Machines 8l20 bedroom set 125. Mahogany 64z..6897 1211 Power Cruisers 9020 removed. Free est. 64>3433 Alterations -642-5145 appt Mr. Bu I ch er counll rec/pay. Ability to Ncvcrmar coffee table & 2 ,;;:;:;::;.-~~-=-=:1~.;.;;.;.;;_;_;,.o...;..o_-'----I Eu R 0 p EA N Landlcapet Neat, accurate, 20 years exp. (TI4) 673-2510. deal with people and handle SACRIFICE end table1 $40. Metal desk FREE; To iood home •. Daisey 21' Trojan on tandem trlr, in. own design &: workmanship, CLEANING person, 2 one girl ofc. Age 25-35. gc;od AIRLINE & TRAVEL 1970 Singer auto zig-zag, auto $10, CU&tom slalom water small shaggy pt terrier and lx>ard py marine best of· call 4!J6..3383 eves. Tile, ~•ramie 6974 hours-early, each morning. blcgrnd would be llelplul. J, buttonholes, blind hems, ov. ski $20. Occasional swJvel ~le hlbrk well tral~~ fer over $91'5 &f6.3ooo dys, Animal Hospital. N. B. J . KNICKERBOCKER ercast, :zig-zagi, etc, w/out ehair $15. 1V tables $5. 963-3925 evea." MAID SERVICE * Verne, The Tile Man • Cust work. Install le rtpairs. No job loo sml. Plaster patching. Leaking shower repair. 847-1957/846-0206. LOCAL Girls want to clean apts &: priv. homes. Gd ref's & reas. rates! 642-1224. j-;========= CERAMIC Tile \\\'.Irk. Free Mesonry, Brick 6830 COMPLETE Cement &: est No job too small. 536-2426. .. l!J3.-0261. CARPET CO. Huntir~n ~OPERATIONS AGENT attachmenta. W/walnut con.,=83~ .... ~"=· _______ ,BEAUTIFUL Brown cock a COASTAL AGENCY Beach. 96l-3351. Cail fore.~ e TICKET SALES sole $34.44 full price, or PINK Kenmore wa1her & poo fema1e 8 mo. shots and Speed-Ski Botits 9030 A n1ember of Snelling & Snelling Inc. The World's Largest Professional Employment Service 2190 Harbor Bl CM 54l)..Q)55 pointment. Bring brief •RESERVATIONS small payments. 545-8238, dryer $125. Kelv l na tor ·lie. Needa lots cf love andl~---------1 resume. • AIR FREIGHT.CARGO l0...7 daily. washer 135. Westinghouse attention. 646-1813 121114' PLEASURE-lid. Must e COMMUNICATIONS SPECIAL re.trig, ·~10. Brl~ica en-KITTEN Long h&ittd and sacrifice to pay t.axe1. Xlnl e TRAVEL AGENT cycloped1as + l>ookcase short haired S v.-eeks to 3 cond &: buy, $495. 646-5537 Repair any make, any model $125. All xlnt cond, 3033 months all colors 548--0813 M I -•• in )'OW' own home, Clean, Coolidge No. 58, c , r.,1 . 836-449J 1211 1r ne Equlp. 7V<Y Masonry. 21 )'CS exper. Free est. Anytime, 846-4917, Topsoil 69n Harbor Blvd'. at Adami -'---------** COCKTAIL WAITRESS.. Girl Fridiy--$400 Errands & filing. Able to use stick shill, Company cat Mercedes. No Orange Co. Hi.caliber. well groomed, young lady. Airline Schools Pacific 610 E. 17th, Sant• Ana 54US96 oil it. adjust, on I y ~.95. 557-9423 54s.m8 1--=~~~~~--RESERVE your Chriltmas MISC. Marine hardware It TACO 22 kittena early! One multi-col· equipment. AU new. Float "'-""· Top Soil, Sand)' Loam ES (Experienced only need LYMAN LANDSCAPING apply,) An equal opportunity 4-10 W. Coast Hwy, NB MISS EXEC AGENCY JAPAN KARATE FED. Black Belt Instructor. Music.ti ?t1ini-bike in perfect eonditlon. Instruments 1125 l owner and llaWleas. New ored, ~'O all bl a c k , dinghys, etc. etc. Sac:r!Uce 54!MXl22 11130 Pvt pt;y. 968-8873 &ft ' le =a=E=R~M~AN.,.,--Sho=--~rt~.~.~ •• ~.~.'1,=w-imd='=·========-1 pointer female Six months D--t Sii Moo I _, aid to good home ~ P r ng ~ P•lntl"9, Paperh1nglng 633-76.36 employer. Laguna Beach. 646-3939 Upholstery 6990 <M-'100. I ~ Gary Hallenbeck 642-8387. 545-2096 843 W, 19th, CM 1----------1 seat, perfect tires, never Rolh Corol'let $'75, Roth ttom. wrecked and oll changed bone S7S, Noblet clarinet rerularly, 3 hp Bria:i le $120 I Oboe $150. Artley Straiten engine, S85. Excel. HOLIDAY Special Inter Ir: -'----"-----CCX:KTAIL Waitre.sa young, Hrs. 6-9. No Contracl~ 646-1060 ll/3 1S TO 30 ft. a1Jp1· avail. for MERRY Christmas preeents power boats. Also dry 7 week old puppies mother storage for·boa.tJ &: trallen Is a cock a poo weekends & Bayside Villqe, 300 E. Deter Painting. Free est Local rel'&, Llc'd &: Ins. Free window washing in1ide &: out. Call Chuck, 64>-0809 No Wasting C z y _k o s k i 's (Csy-kos-keyl Custom Upholstery, 1831 Newport Blvd, CM 642-14~. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Job W•nted, Men 7000 attractive. App. in per!On. 719 W. 19th St. C.M. COMBO Tople11-barmald & straight bikini. Yng & at· tract. High. wages on the bch. 2 shift s open. The San· i;: .. PLAY Drums? Then play Flute $125. 54&-1841. Jent Gift . Call &14-0577, aft 6 caU 546-4639 12/1 Coast Hwy, N'pt Beach. them right! Don'I be a clod, 8 AN J 0, . Gariepy-Never $5 per hr. 644--0990. Cash. used. Co~! $150, sell for $95. MERCHANDISE FOR Call 642-1232 aft s or wknds, Fine Furniture SALE AND TRA[?E CONN CORONET, very gd . & Appliance!! *AUCTION* * WALLPAPER * When you call "Mac" 548-1444 646-l'nl Houses, docks, boa ta, SCRAM-LETS '-d-ai 1=682=1 P~"-· Co~"-' H~wy, 1 ~nset Bch, 592-9182. ** COOK wanted, Apply !R\llNE PERSONNEl SER.YICES•AGENCY roncl . Appnilsed $75. Bst oft Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. GUINEA Plga. 3 breeds. NEWPORT BIG BAY SLIPS Furniture 8000 takc1 64~2475. Windy'$ Auction Ba rn Also a few rabb its· $2.SO PER F'l'. ---------548-6000. 12/3 * 548-2.592 * l\10VING Into Mobile Home, can'l u!if! the 'tollowing items, all In excellent con· dilion, must see to RP· perclate: like n e w Cop... pertone stove and rcfrig. with ice maker, maple dinette, four match I ng chairs, hutch and room divider, elei::trlc heater. rug shampooer, II x 10 rug, near new, dishes, &\\'ecper, fireplace acreen 1nd tools . 30 :2075'Ai Newport, CM 646-8686 FREE mack & white Cocker · Pianos & Organ• 11 Behind Tony's Sidi. f.fal'I. type PllPPies, 7 wk• old. Call Botit Charter f03t fl agpoles, 1U1)'lhin1 everything reaaonably painted. Free est 646-9752. PAPERHANGING-Free ANSWERS ODIE'S, 212 E. l11h St .. Costa ~1esa NOW IN ONE LOCATION FURNITURE art 5 PM, 644-1~ 12/3 32, Twin-screw Chris Craft Conn * Yam1he FACTORY AFFECJ'JONATE Female Slps 6 * Delux boat Gaiter -Vixen -Guard - Banter -GRAVE est., satisfaction guaran· Actor's squelch to a. v.·oman teed, Dan Schwartz, spectator'• catcall: "Get a 547-5&46. I011d of all those nowers she's l,EXP.:..:.:,.:E:,:R::_.~P-1i-nt-,-,_~,.~,-.,~il v.-c::aring. She looks like a Exler. work by hr. Xln't \\.•ell-kept GRAVE." ref's. Dick Fielding, Hui)-1 'x7-eo=~NT=RA~cr=o~R~-w~1-,~,-., tinrton Beach, 968-4065 position as pro pert y PAINTING & paperhanging, manager or maintenance. 25 yrs exper. Only quali!y Well qualified. dependable, work. Mix any co Io r , bondable, 492-4339 546-1943. Pl'.OFESSIONAL, 30 yrs exp, paperhanging & painting, Job Wanted, Women 7020 1 ..::Jro,.:m;;_,E::"c;•;::'''="""-~968-°=14~6~1~ XLNT hsekee~rlcompanion S & H PAINTING avail. !or llvl'-tn. Very & Complete R.emodelinr Serv, tAlented. Min &alary $350 SJ6.lll1 or 642-1403. mo. Employer pays fee, ./ n-rr. or EXT ER 1 0 R Health & Family Care Agency, 547-6681 PAINTING. Loe. Rel. l?.f· MEO. Se rv ice. Free PRACTICAL NURSE ertlmt.!es. 646--0210. Full or part time t..oca1 l'l'fl'rt'DCeS 646-9762 INTER & Ext~r. Accous. ceill~ sprayed, low pri«s NIDES -For convaie!lttnee, gd Wbrk. 557-7455, 548-2759 elderly care ·or family care. Hom.makers, 547 ,.,...., , COSMETIC SALES: NEW 488 E. 171.h lat Irvine) C.M. 642-1470 * Thom1s Organs LIQUIDATION! Misc, lools, cat, altered, needt good * 548-2434 6J6...4034 .,; Also complete selection furn. parts, work 1ables, home. 847-7043 12/3 .:___ __ of pianos & organs etc. 1618 Ohm1 Way, C.M. 3 MO Old S!ameae male • Mobile Homn 9200 ranta!tlc product. Guaranteed c 11 e n t e I e , I !""'!!'~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I 546-3904 LAGUNA Sch 1m. mote.I Data Processing Clerk $425 Work as assistarit, patching. Good handwriting, lO key adder by touch, accurate typing. Newport Personnal A9ency 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-3870 DELICATESSEN MAN, full time. Only neat, ambitious & sleady need apply. See Tercy, 495 E. 17th St. C.M. DESMOND'S · Fash ion Island managen, Couple prefer· red. 494-5002 LVN, 3-11 shifl, medications. Park LI do Convalesefnt ffospital, 642-2410. ~1ACHINE OPERS. Single needle for 1portswear. Exp'd only. Gd. pay . 642-3472. Open Sundays 12-5 645-0991, 6'f3.QI09 eves. ' ~s special home. Befol'l!:l---'-.;...,;c;c;:.:.. ___ " I Daily Tit 6 p-Fri ti! 9 J.15(),000 B.T.U. Day &: Night 4. 546-3566 12/1 Want To Live In COAST MUSIC furnace exterior mounting SEVERAL cats & kittens. COSTA M~SA NEWPORT le HARBOR $100 n;ntact Mr Lane)' or Need unique homea. Before l..oeal spaces ~vailable mw! Costa Me5a * &IZ.2851 r..1rs: Greenma~ at the 4 M6-3S66 1211 U you a.re senow: about buy. CHRISTi\IAS Suggestions -DAILY PILOT, 330 W. Bay, ' Inv a mobile home .• ftow'1 lfammond, Ste i n way, Costa Mesa, 2 Kittens, 1 Calico & 1 brown. the tlme to att d . Free to good home, 548-3927. BAY HARBOR • •-1 ood h · 15 h Yamaha. New & use piano.• FOR --•··. u .. d ,, ""•-•-,.12 Ll:~ght ~u~~s bed, c~~·i~ of most makes. Be~t buys ~n cent {;~res, $5 each. .;is. u MOBILE HOMES 548-5207. • size $40. G&S stove $25. So. Call!. at $chm.1dt Music Contact Mr. Laney or M.rs. YOUNG White and black cat. 1425 Baker St. (at Harbor)' •MAID* Table & chairs S.1.5. Girl s Co., 1907 N. Main, Santa Greenman. Daily Pilot, 330 Nced.5 home with children Cost.a Me.sa. 540-Sfi?o Part lime days, 5 days Stingray bike $17. French Ana. West Bay, O>sta Mesa S46-7308 1213 CONTEMPO A wk. •644-25l7 sofa, clean, $40. 4 bed Baldwin * LIKE NEWll * 2 Terrier mix puppies 3 & 4 LAGUNA HILLS rt-lARRIED? Too many bills? frames S3 ea. &12-2281. PIANOS & ORGANS Z.SNOW TIRES ?75-lS W/ mo old male and female 23301 RIDGE ROUTE DR. Perm ., part time VALUABLE lmported mar-.New&. Used studs. STllL UNDER 836-4493 12/3 LAGUNA HILLS t>rf'lployment. Apply; Sun b C . $900 WARD'S 9ALDWIN STIIDIO % Poodle P"PPles I,( telTier Prestige adult community, thru Wed altr. 7pm, As'k for hie rlin'J:" ta lo, ha.iri, GUARANTEE! Pvt Pty: two black l•mal•• 9 w•--old' adjace.nt to Leisu-:e World. "-,ut. F--h & -Americn.n 1819 Ne .. ...-. CM 642-3484 "•"91-~ manager , PAULO lK ....... ..1''"" • ' ,,..,. "" G4<-l16S "/3 BeautifUI surroundings, all Orig. oil pa i nting&, OPEN SUNDAY 'Trmcr.1'h.;<;;;;;;;<;i·iti\;;:-;j~~'.';,~~--_,.--;~::'.,:'j1 t DRIVE-IN THEATER, 3051 AFTERNOONS !GREAT Christmas gift for a uxury appo ntments, Newport Blvd. C . At · 1~$7!50-=S~l""°~·-646--0-~1'27• -·-----~~---~~=cl Loved One! 1/3 carat each AOORABLE Long haired putting grttn, bobby shop, NO-phone calls please. ?.iOVING, s e 111 n g new PIANO-like new-pvt pty. 36" diamond earrings for pierc· Holiday kilte1111, tralned, much mort. MALE/Female: r.tust be couches, extendable dlnlnit 88 key Kohler-Ompbell. ed ears. Best offer takes! 644-4445. U/3 CALL &30-3900 e DOORMAN e over 18 CASHIER, USHER. table cabinet. Alao baby Provincial style. Full t?ne 549--0674. GRAY Tiger kitten 12 weeks Tripi• Wide Cornell furniture. 5'18-6279 !or profea5ional or child. old ~7308 12/3 r.1ature • for Christ.mas only. E'ITES, DCXJRAfAN. Apply $450 cash 673-~. CARPET Layer Has Carpet. Continental • Paramount PAllf.l'JNG • Ext-Int. 18 yn, -· expel~ Ins. Uc. Fm est. A~I. Ceillnga. 968-9126 INTERIOR It EXTERIOR Jell'Y'• Painting Service APPLY TIIB TilEATER (FOX), MOVING : U Rooms ' Polyesters, 501's, Hl-10'1, FOX Terrier female pup 8 &n1.ncton •JJntwnaI Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 •3 FASHION ISLAN D Soulh Cout Plua, C.M. lurnitu~. Mirrors, lamps, EBONY Flahcr Baby Grand. llhags. Sell tor I a bo r, weeks 645-0017 afl 8 12/3 Flam.Into e Genenl NE\VPORT BEACH 546-2712. artifacts etc. Golf club!!. What a beaut Christmas ~. CUTE Puppies mix!d bre!d Bro&dmoor • StU' ··~· 49&-ltm • ' ••• •• ' ,..., 1;· .. ... ... ... '(,,.. I, ,.., .. "'. ··-·-' :"" ,..,, ' ,. I ===~-~-,-.,---~~~=---~~-64&-2962 prelt'!l}li! $1195 0 w n er, n n•-e ~--~~ APJ'. Cleanlng: Woman BUSIEST marketpla~ in MANAGER or couple for 673-• 644-59n DECORATOR'S Sample area 8 'ol.ttka old 642-8043 12/1 ~ .. It ~1-..... needed, viper. Own transp. town. The DAILY PILOT coffee shop opeMl.tion, Will l\10VlNG-Pia~. Span l iih • rugs. All colors, Fantastic FR.EE To gd home, 1 Dutch CHAPMAN Per30na.I rers. 642-1224. Cla.saified section. consider Investor or percen-couch, HI-Fl, leather chair , * WHITE upright p I an o Savings. 2001 Highland, NB rabbit 646-5479 U/l MOBILE HOMES • tsi:e of profits, CaJI collect, Washer, Refrig & misc. See w/beoch. Good cond. 642--0m. lXl6 N Harbor S.A. 415 9"·' ~~~· Sat al 218 Jasmine, CdM. Sl~ 962-2662 ADORABLE Kitten needs * .... ~1rtt1. .. ~ * : ...,.,,,,.,,., . CARPET layeni:. have ahaa: good home, 847-7043 12/3 ,_.. ....... "(»...., MATURE person to work in KING 11ize hide-a-bed, $150. * BALDWIN Organ model crpts deal direct exp in· Triple Wide Cornell ,mall ice cream store in Walnut dresser, S60, Pr. 47. Like new, full pedal stall, can tin.• s:!S.8J7T, 3 Male half Slame11e kittens 6 Hillctt!st e F'lamlnao Balboa. Lile work, shOrl Windsor chairs S60. Pr, keyboard. $1600. 644.4277. 827-8740 weeks old 545-5973 12/3 Paramount • Unlvtflal hours. Salary $50 wk . stereo spkTll, S50. 675-4!"10 llA;LLET. Davis S_p ine t 1/3 CARAT . 35 Pia total PETS 1nd LIVEStoCK Barrington e Bl'Olldmoar 642-9006 after 6 pm FORCED TO SELL Piano, Frultwood, $850. Call --'di N .. ~-• ._ Continental e Star PRIZE POSSESSIONS 644-l.300 w"" ng 1et. ever ""-.;n ua. Pats, General _, ,,. ____ , e HIU -Nursing ' ed. Cost $375., Best ofter. u.:uc1-"" Cttat RELID" RN or LVN for 3-• Ct.II for Info: 6'7>5855 * .544-0617 1 Pair of Frtnch Angon ral> CHAPMAN 11 :30 1hift to work e DINE'ITr. table w/chain Radio 1200 CARPET layer hu hi-Io's, bits w/pedigree papers, '& MOBILE HOMES n1edlcl.ne1. Apply: & leaf $35. Maple bed 17"37" Silver!Dne stereo radio shags at fantutlc u.vings. ears ta too ed . Make 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G • Park Lido Convale.acent \11/mattress S20. Ml-'?623. con&0le, $50. Free est. will p 1 ea• e. reatonable otter. 543-6000 * 71~29XI * Cente.r. 642-8044 TRIPLE Dresser w/mirror. 548-6328 8TI·9958 CHINCHILLA.S: Em1rgency COSTA MESA e PART TIME HELP • solid maple & ch l 1 d · g HOUSEFUL or fumit~. · lllneu forcer aacrUlce ot Casual Mobtle t!state Uv'a EARNINGS UNLIMITED bedroom set. ~9"127 aft. 3. Televlslon 8205 R.euonable, 17391 Queens, ~ipl'S:~~ • equlpt. Ni:.12, XI A: ~ WSde Models * 493-1872 * * RATl'AN fumlturP for 19.. SL I r.t_.L y NE B&W Apt. No, 2 JtB. C.U Now on display in 5 Star Rock OrgAn player r'lffd~ aale: Sofa, 3 chairs $150. 'Porta~ UID~ I VHF $35 847-2493. ; n...... Ins GREENLEAF PARK for amalJ lfOUp. Over 18. * M7-2064 * Ph: -61~ ' ' FOR Chrlstmu . Model train "'"'Is l750 \Vtl_ltUer AWNJe 64,2..lrJO 646.9!13, layout, N gaup. Ex:ceplio.n. AIREDALE Puppies: AKC UNIVERSAL lOxSS ~ SKIPPER LICENSED Office Furniture I010 Hl·FI & Stereo 8110 at, ,muJd ,ee, $200 tllnets, Bom 9/11170. ms ea. rq Uv'g/l'Tn.· Catm bit. Adlt f'\111 Time . Part Time Refin'd 34x60 wood deaka, CASSE'T'TE R.cntr. Nor"l'.ICC 673-3349. _ litter/champ pedlsree . Prk/Sp/rent $47.50 1535 l\fu.ttqualityforpilotA:navi. $69.50 e Rdin'd wood ann LlkeNcw,$40: Stcf.eophono HERMES Porta hie ~ =Sp. No. 3S NB . ratk>n. Guaranlttd sals..ry, ro1"'l chaln, $29.50 e W• Columbia prtbl, hardly used typewrite.r S7S: Lowry elcc. BLACK Minia. Poodlt, m&le1~==,,-,----,,,......,,.,..,"1 Power &: Sall. 40' or betlfr ha'19 the 1upst selection S30: Tape deck Viking organ ~. Both llke new. SZI. Purebred, no papera. NEW 1970 Lancer, 5T X 12 tn Appl, SJ5.;W2. of U9td offtce film tn UU. itereo $30. *965(1, 642-9766. 968-1920. S atv park. $5(0), SERVICE STA. hclp wanted, area. TIRED of that old furntture'! Sletl Hone Corrals 10 wk Sprln1tr Spaniel, I& 646-8612 full time only. Apply 3195 Mc Mahan Desll Jl'a rtlllly not thlt hard for aale 1.2'x24' Lov~ly &: Adon.ble. AKC .\ Sixt TRAILIR llarbor. C.M. 1800 Newport 81\ld. to replace. Jual mtch the $150. • ~1817 Shots. 54&-1655 SSOO. MMl91 DtAL dlrecl &tl-567&. Charge &IU.C!iO 1 fUnllture A: mlactUaooaJs REFRfG. Bunk beds.. 9 pc * SCHNAUZER pUp~. mtle 28' TraUerf::apace for rent. YoUJ' ad, lhen sit beck and For an ad to i;cll arounlf columns tn the Clualfitd KltNien set, ltlaplt Md aflt. at atud, groomlni. llold Iii Stone Villa T'l'aller Puk. m llslen lo ~ phone rln,gl the clock, dlal 642--567a. Stet.Ion. Couch. Kl 3-0436, Chriatmaa. 84&-0839. W. Bay St. CM. •. - I I 1· , I I • i • I I .. • • '.'! -~· ... 8. IL l TRUCK CENTQ ,.... .. ·~ ,CALL S46-671t' j.., I l 11 I' I il1:i1:,;i l.' -~ _ ·...u hr ....... -. ·" S-A'L I I e 01.l IV I C'I . UNMRSITY oLDMlllE " llOD w. CoUt ""1. N.& 2l50 Horlloro llwl., CMl1 ljlioll · -- ' '540-1'14 1========:;:--:======== 1 '60 BUC EYE SPRITE-Gbod ena:, btt.ku, top P1lnt A: ftll MolorcyclM ' ' '300 ""'-.M.., on ... ""'919. i Ht: tnE:ADUUJS Country C1Ub ... . MOBJl.E • • i• I llVlNG ~DBY llJµt)TltUL mVINE '" .. 01\A)IGE GROVES SPACE RENTALS. -PROM·llJ.50 1 M>"iNDUSTRY- NO, OOMMERCJ,AL AlluHs, Aft Aps! NO STEPS ro CLIMB PET ALLOWED $300,000 ~REATIOIW. C£NTl8 · Mti ~ __ BMW __ ,_ , H Autblrtzed Dtr. -.·~ AllSaI:.!i,~ ~·--+-_ •. ~-!II~ I •'Dlml_ a·~ Sen>ice Man4aY 'till 1:00 PM ... l'IQ ~ Sat 'till Noon COAST IMPPRTS 'lRIB>UllDER" e BULTAro 'e Dirt ready, {!:xpan, cham. Head. $375. Eve: Gf6.&t40. FOR sale: '69 650 cc Triumph Bonneville, $1100 or best aUer. 842-590.l. Of 0,.,,.. County Inc. !21() w. -CO&>\ """ ...._, • !116-4529 DATSUN '71' DATSUN-PICKUP Used • Jladio, heater, step bumPtr. dlr. Pin strippift&', WW take Car'1n trade OJ' will ftn,ance pr ! vat e ·p&J"ty. 54IJ..4ml (ll' .cM-6811 . D.?.,~~:Ji~~N AllD_ 111• •llACtl UCWV, •1 893-75116 • 5.17 .m4 NEW0 USED-SERV. ............ MG • ~a. Service. Parts Immediate Delivery, All Mode:h .!~ l'lll p lll I 3111 nn1 rt " 3100 W, Out Hwy., N:B, 6'2-9400 540.l 764 MGB SUNDAYS lJll3S Beach Blvd. Hunfuwtot1 Beach 8412-7711 or~ '70 1RIUMPH 5llOtt • mo. old; e:xct'l1ent cond. $91Xl. 1961 MGB GT, YELLOW 5.1&-7'91 dtu 6'P.M. t -,-68~DA~T=su=N~P=1c=Ku=p~ sitdf Ml. ~IN.E_CQ~9 Sh•re. MW way of Auto Service 1969 MGS.COvrt BRG. All felax'ecl .llv lng with & p11 m f400 Radio, heater, cilr., 4 speed. Xtru! $2300. cal I nv real neJahbor1I CWPP 782) WU1 take car in 67}-6994 Lawn ..,;line, poo1 tabl,., SACRIFICE tr~ortinan<epriV>tepar. ======== ·-croque~ """'1eboanl W>der ,.. Chevy ~nion<-C<>mpl•l<lf 1.,.;tyc;,--=--~='~°'=491-'811=~-~ PORSCHE f ca.rdroomt. dance prl. rebuil~ Tri-power, race cam, '67 DATSUN WAGON ---------:~-.dininc room & ::.tlo, tolida. Much · mort. OnJy '66 PORSCHE whirlpool .,th, kitchen + $299.95, IJ93.6460_ snack bar, laundry facilities, VW Qutch· JOb. $20. Labor Automatic, dlr, Radie, heat. Cou°pe 912. 5 speed, brown .,.dou&fencedpatioaround p l us parts , M .D . er, special wheels, <VOE-with black interior. Brand . 1-~ ... at·-' poof, 0-.. 1zec1 Automotive. 642-3625 , or 951) WiU trade or tinancf: new Pe:inlli tires. XYJ474 .... oi: '"" "'u ........ o:•o .,,,,,7 priv11.te party. 540-4052 or 53299 tOcl.a1 actJvitl!•· arts & "'-==~'.,""oc·-.--,'7"-,-,,-494<;8U crafts. WANTED' Rod>e•te r fuel in. I ='=----"=-==~==-CHICK IVERSON ' 14 'MODELS je<Hon for-327 d. Chevy '70 2000 R0411SJER YW ·FURNISHED-'"""'· Call 84>-ll.ll. ON DISPLAY CHEVY V-8 motor with Lib nev.'. Must RD. (WPJ. S49-3031 Ext. 66 or 0. Muncie 4 speed trans. $225. 104) dlr. ·Will take car in l970 HARBOR BLVD. ' Sktgle1, Doubles &. or tnde. MS-1609 aft 6 pm. trade or finance private par· COSTA MESA Tripi.. ty 546-4052 or 494-68U; '61 PORSCHE ''D" . FOR EXAMPLE Troller. Tr1v1I 9425 1 ,,=sa~1-=so""o"""R"'DA"'DS=T'"ER--Conv_ .. ., ""-everytMng. Double wide, wttb carpet, 1----------MUst sell! Make offer. Th! dra'ra • appUances, dellv· 2 TRAVEL trailers for Ill.le. cleanest '61 ln town! &;&.1914 ·ered and aet up, ;with awn-One ~ 17' Shasta with gu Ready ta &o! dlr. (WEZ 710) Evenings, kw. ~.~tax&: Ucerue. ~~.--:_::;:· s;-0 v:i -\Vi:U-taJ<e: _trade OJ' ___ --,-6-5~-~,-0-_-R_S_C:: ___ H_E_,_ ..... ceUent condition, S1500. Ala>. pnvate party, MM052 or <fiN"" GUR1!, -· 356 ·SC Clo41pe, with •unt'OOl. (!tr. • nml FINANCING AVAILABLE $ WE SELL YOUR HdME 6 SAVE YOU MONEY I -14851 JEffREY RD. 15' Northwut .c.oaeb,. &toye, • Earth rr@f!n, with luaap ·a:as refri1. avu, aleep1 I , rack &: tape deck. YCC-525 moo. M .. ,.,. FERRARI $27" '""AL.JO SELF-CON--·~------CHICK IVERSON TAINED. _ FElllARI * * PHONE: 536-1150 * * Newport Imports Ud. Qri. VW a.rip County'• an1y author-549-3031 Ext. 66 or·6T Trucks flOll v. MILE SOUTH OF 1--FA .... L-LCAMP_E_R_ SANTA ANA FRWY. 832-8585 CLEARANCE 17.ed de:lller, 197rtHARBOR BLVD. SALESSERVIC£.:pJJtTS COSTA MESA 3100 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach '83 PGRSCHE l mm a c ! BicYcln 9225 Sell'I 3 1pttd hand braft ladie1· bicycle. Like new! 6T.>3169 Ml .... Blkn 9275 TACO 22 Mini·bike:· \n perfect condition. 1 owner and Oawleas. New teat perfect tires, never wrttktd and o i I changed regularly, 3 hp Briggs & Stratten engine. $85. Excel. tent Gift. Call 644-0577. BONANZA Mini-Bike. Brand new BIS 3 hp e~. $100. NB $48-4731. MINI-BIKE Runs well and ·in aood ' condition 832-8498 -eye I•• 9300 BROIEN LE-a- 'FORCED SALE 1970'Huaquarna 250 Made for motottols or des-Ut. raclEW. Very low .mile&, nerir raced. Piife:ct 1hape. Plmty of extras. 1875. Phone 429-9551 (L.B.} Over a doien bn.JM1 new 8 ft. to 11 . ~ campers now &lashed to · $49 OYll ACTUAL •ACTORY . I N~OICI Positively. no added dealel' charges! Every unit ready for inunediale. installation on your truck or a new ~.! l'HEODORE RO.INS FORD 3l60 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 642-0010 New '71 Datsun lliOC OHC, Pickup w:lth camp. er. Sale price $2099 dlr. I• 459454) \Viii take car In trade. Will' finaf'!ce private: 642-9405 541).1764 SUnroof, AM/FM, Dunlap Autborlzed·Ferrart Dealer radial& .. Recent cvrhaul. Ph: 725-4301, dys-49i--0207 Aft g pm. '86 PORSCHE'9ll. Xlnt cond. ·------_-_.._..---I Ntw transmis.sion &-paint, .----- -• $3800. • 138-5211 d a "IS ; FIAT K 543-5610 eves. "-THJN " '" PORSCHE 912, • ,,,.,_ r.aigrOfJ ~'~~~ wave. S29XI. ,.j 'ljlj 1960 PORSCHE w I '6 4 ·NEW 124 CPE. DEMO o,..;ne. $1250. $2795 1261> ""h St.. N .B. ... "FRIBILANDER" 13710 tU.CH ILYD. !Hwy. Jt) 893-1566 • 537-6324 NEW·USED·SERV. &n.n.l'U'l.I SAAB Authorized Dealer Sales • Service • Parts Sonet Coupe! In Stock Orange County's Newest Olr, COAST IMPORTS party. Call 5464052 or ----.,.,----<'™1l ,_,_11. al o...,,.. Couoly Inc. '67 Ford P.U. Camper ~ •• ,1..IJ m'.> W. Pacific Cout Hwy. Special; VB, air cone!. dbl .. j ==~"'='===·=~~== ~iiot,10 . .n;o,, ""'· 1' ' TOYOTA '61 BSA 441 Victor he ean ~~',.'0sod.;,,~~ 7 / .1 jT!OIY!OIT IAJ HONDA CL70 mo1orcycle. NOW ON DISPLAY '71 '.t HERE NOWI New cond. $195. Ca I I SEE &: DRIVE THEM 64Z-1232att5orrinds. auto .,,.rt ltd AFEWREMAININGlO'•AT '61 Chev. P.U. % Ton Good 8 Authoi-lzed CLOSEOtrr PRICES! ply tires. MUST SELL nns SALES • SERVICE fli l ••M ft1.:1 WEEKEND. SfJ..0674. e PARTS U&R Wl&I '$CHEV .. ~·Ton P.U. Mmt 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. IMPORTS tell, Xlnt. cond. S2.'il}. 1621 537-7777 Gall CoUect ""·n1ron~ Apt s. N.s . _ ,66 912 Coupe 1966 ""b••" c.M. 646-9303 Ma~":u~ORD VA~7-3CS9 ·Lo<at, l owner. (RGW !168 '69 CORONA 1910 Honda ':l;O IL Moto-S Hardtop. Vinyl roof, 4 speed, ~ ~ •t:reet. Ex.tru. $369 Immaculate, Sky Blue. Sac. ""' !!rm. S!' u. n•, c .... J'!'? '~20 DON_ BUR-NS rilke, IXTS 343) Will .... 1 ,;o81;::'-:,:23l;::;::I~~~~~-I • .__. • •-... • .._. • trade or finance pvt, ply. * •69'Hlrley D•vhi9'f' '70 OPEN·ROAD Porsche Audi, LTD C&ll Sid dlr 540-3100 or -1'4 Chopper. Must 'llM t• ap-Avalon Deiuxe. 9 ft. mono. 13631 Harbor Blvd. 6*2333 494-7506 11.lt 10 am . precif.._te. Sacrifice, c.n lnl.tlc, butaiie stove'• OVe"t. Just S;()f'Garck!n Grove Fwy.1--------- 63.5-8ll6 ,.,. "3-9264 a!tr 6. b:unJ><r ext., boun<e .. w.,.,. BILL -MAXEY elee 6 h>nd weter pwnp, JAGUAR 10 Not1olt O>mmando "°"'· oubl<le--, " -ITIOIYIOITIAJ ~~· w, ..... '""' . ~ "l:a~·~ **:. . JAG\IAR' ~• • ... HONDA "' I ••• I •• I • • HEAD9UA'lTIRS l•T lllACH BLVD. - &rambler. V«Y iDood -· ECONOUNE CAMPER Van. n,. oni, iuthort&ed JAGUAR H...t. llffch 147.-Sll Lo miles $4T5. 664-00$7 M111t' tacritice! c ont p I dealtt lit o. •ntin i1artior 1111111 H, fA Q,aJt RwJ: • ~ HONDA •19'1t ca-<SO, lib equl>P<d tor th>uble """ An&. 1968 TOYOTA new. $695 ~ carnpiJll. Michelin X tittt, . enrn,.. 8!1-ntf ot 4199-23115 ne:.w &hart block. Only $195. ~*L ES ~ Radio, heater, aut~ B._ I! -.. -~ _.. s -matlc tran&mlssion, 11,0IXI 1969 CUSTOMIZED Koada· e.:: .::,. 1"-..JU'I or .... SERVICI actual milea, Uc. WA~ 351). $600 .... an.r. I =-?~=·===== PAltTS $1 399 FOR = •H•••• Dw lupl•• fS1I . iUICK CHICK IVERSON ~.:'."· Gd. °""'·.'-~ :·~':.'.!:,~5 mt. COST ~ MES a 51"'3031~ 66 or 67 • :* JM JftiffiA I •· .... '• ANJ .... m • " " 1970 HAl\BO~ BLVD, Saolnblor. X!m -· _ · a&-Ull 234 J!l, 17th -aJST ~ MESA mo, !111-lllT \iW DUN I iiJGOY -$41-"'5 In """ ot ""'"' Yoo'll HONOA 'mtm trl.1150, blliNd wUh .tiberzlua bclcb' •extra '59 JAGUAR 3.4, auto, id find the t11ht one 111 the out twice, 1tralabt Jlp9, tnotor. 17$0. or mai. alftt, cond, ne111 !Itta, reblt en1.. St:rvlcc Directory of the 495-53TI ..:C&U:::..:~==·-----•...;"""=,;.•ll<r.,;--°""--'~-"--'-"""'°-Cla11ltled SecU09. ' 1',1:;i·:1· 11111 ~I I! I i ' 3100 -w, c .. 11 Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH "642·'405 540-1764 AutloorllO!f MG D11l1r Author Ind Ferra ri Dealer 1970 MGB LIST .... $3635 - . .. TllANSPOITATION. ~T;;IAN=S;;,PO=IT-"/l.;;.>Tli.;. ;:;~"-">.''-l'==~=-~ ... J l!!'f!"rlM --Uood C-. , ""u...i C•n -1 -VOU($WA5EN IUICIC . ' POU J ---=;:;.;;~;..... __ , _ _;;_..:..;;:.;.;:;__~" •! '68 BUICK IA'St,lln t . Dr.. . TOP .... ·--: "'! CUllDm· H.T. 'Auto., RAH, ' ]1.S.,.P_.11.,---'ill.-whed--., ··_._.,..~ •" .y toty air, vinyl l'Mf, (SDI.MO) ' ·• '~'t T 1208ti 11AUE!t BUICK 134 '!;. (LI AM , USID ""'8 , •• 1 8"" ... BrewD--xt 'i ~n:.·• Colta Me1a . 11llODORI •• ---...,,>--' •edit .. i::-. v•-·l~at': ROllNrllOlit. ' MY _., JOID Barbor 8&yd. d I J $2450. ~. · aiirta. M .. · 'l' ~ 1 ·sa 'RM:ERA. OuVe ~n. 1Ga01o · lo ~· i Air A. tull pwio., #975. Pvt , ro· • : • 1__._ • ?I pty. 'tu-1634 or '6'f3..&90 .69 • RD ..-.-. . :::;=::=:;=:=::=:;:::::=I Futback, VI, •u1D., P : j ''5 ·vw '" vw Metallic &l'ft'!'«r\iUanew interior. Glftfl with iontrut:inc inter. Lie. -.... klr, tuned exhali&t, ~ -$lt9 new, m.,.134 CHICK v:nsoN eH1cK'Tv1RsoN 5"~ 'EX!. a or .,-: VW 1970 HARBOR 'BLVD. 549-3031 EXt. 96 ct 6'1 COSTA ~ 19'!0 HARllOR BLVD. '66 VW-Xlnt rebli ,~; COSTA.MESA needs little body work. '65 VW BUG Flanod tenden. Xlnt cond. GOod eona. $600 ea.y Header l)'ltem. $W> er beat 6'2-012> aft 6 PM offer. Call atter .5':301 968~89., I C•_ DIU'AC-P.B .• -AM ·™''".. .,I '6.1 VW, Pttfect bod 1. in. ,.. . _ tactot"y atr OCW'~l ~ I i.r .• &-runn1 ... Good """· 1--CA...:.cDIL_'-_LA'--cs=7 . ..,._ 0 -,5-1 ilAuER-aOiCJ< z .-~ 1 '65 vw bus . xlnt cond .• re.built erw., dew tirts a: map. $1400 New tram. $700. 60-5566 st.; to.ta Mua. 5tl.-1'1& I 1968 vw Bue. Radio, rear 1H.t·1pea1cen, $1315. pri. P,?'· ,65 VW 8"-4118"1' after S pm, Gold..custom paj.nl, very few '61 vw .. rood CODd, aria rnUes on new ·---<-. YRS-owner, $1300 finn. 9S-1!20 ~ .... .., * M2-&l30 * 795• Sitt --i~"':c.::vw=a;,,u""'o-- CHICK lVERSON 11•150 * * * 831-1140 vw 549-3031 Ext, 66 OJ' 67 1970 HARB6(ti;BLVD. Lart• S.lectlon Of VW Campen, '67 COIJN'!'RY i!<!Ul&o "I L1...,11.Stodc ol.Qulllty 10 -· ~. all -· , I Cldlll1e1 In Or .... , ..... J17'0. P'!l. -I ·Couoty %116 -Bl~. 511.-. • .... Cpe DtVilln, Bed, De.Villel 1& J'tird Sta. w_. \ and El Doradm V-1 Au.tOm.,tic . tt., 1963 throurh .mtl Excellent CQfl(ti• t,;m PIUI Many Oth!f· Fine C&n. M6-f.1T7. . hfl ALL SALE PRICED '.64 ··rORD _-WIND""' u19'ERS · ~.-.. ,_LA·c VAN-IWI. .... P•l•t; M I.: enai,ne, clutell, •Jtal ....,_ 1 $ I COSTA MESA 835 VW €omplete w/oot b<idy. Vani, Kombl.s. '::\ Bu-, N•w & U1" lmmedlele-DollYlry CHICK IVERSOrr. -1395. 557....._ I J&(I) HAltBi:>R BLVD., ,89 ~·· J '·•~ ~ aJSTA MESA · --'-~'" ':"""· 'f SAVE . , • __ ..,;;;,....;_.;;,,,. Run1,40+HiranaP b "'axle A: 36 HP e:1Ja:. . e er system, 50-9100 . o~ SUNDAY ::· ... Ca~ ~mo 1 '6' C1d •• s.il. Do'(J)le ~· RD . ".•n. ,j l\IOW. -• s2soo 6.02 IZH' + TAX l LIC. '69 PORSCHE 911 S '193.1006.1 $6499 FERRARI '67 FERRARI GTC XOX391 $7899 '67 FERRARI 2+2 'VJG21l $8699 $3,950 " ,peec1,a1r.......,., ..... surpooy w/tan vtriYr rOOf. Nit'! 'tirel ~. ~""' 549-3031 IStt. 88 or. 11 WANTED 1'711 HARBOR BLVD. ··~i. •ir-<Ond .• , .. lhir ,., • uNco•_--.. , .-. '_,_. I'll pay top dolla.. for your COST A· MESA tu, AM/FM 1tez:to, entiae , ., W'.'I VOLKSWAG..,.... ~ .... ,._., control. 6 Way pWr, Rat!'--_..,.._ --,-.-_.,_'"--.,,·,I and "" .,.. ~;..., ""'Pb.c;;; LooklnllS'··/ ·~·~ ,.,.,., door '"""' • • ..,,.: ~6·2· UNCG!,.N . 5f9..3G.11 Ext fi&.6':. 67U!IOO. Call Auto Referral !rte ol Tl.It &. TelelCOJ)e whttl. CONTINENT.\f. Head.lia:ht dimmer 6 . twJ. JUU power "=' aJr { e 1970 VW BUS • Good con-c:haf'ce. We have •llen light sentinel, PmniWn tit-. S2" ' · dition. $?$5. waiting. All .types A: price.. es. A beauti!ul, a _ded ~Ill(-ANCHOR MOTORS Call pvt.ty, 66-1207 Sellen Wo welcome, ury car at a be.rpm price. • • ' 6U-4431 Original ovlriei-Mr Taylor· .. 2150 Harbor Blvd.. l!'I 1960 YW BUG Aolo 11.te>T&l.s..vioe ""'"""' ..W.10: ,..;_ -~.'""-l050-C,M. Rod, with mag whttb, wide --------si~7957. : M. ER_ CURY • ' ov&l """;new engine...,. VOLVO '70 CAD c;:oupe de Ville ·i--f.,.-..,--.,..,.:"!!!!!1 1 anteed tG:P 90 days, IFT174 ~ml. Like new. 197.-11 U--· · • I CHICK$1ERSON l.i'Ll'Ll'VU !6000--·--C~'d,;;.-:1 : VW ~ TMllll CAMARO C<>mpeddon or..., with -' 'VOLVO' truUnr'blaek Interior • 1 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 ,68 CAMARO 39S,. -1 owMr. driven 7000 miles, 1fut_ • 1970 HARBOR BLVD, -..t. COST' MESA Xlnt cond. ·i;iia, i&h. $16(k'I. fa~toey ~arn.nty. "1lJ ~" 1 "FRIEDLANDER" P"kod at ~tanaanl Station tory ...., • ...,, 1..,h1elln1 4 '63 VW Camper. New eni. 17th A: Orana:e CM ' .' ipeed tr;"I~. Lie. 128ASJ, • tires & brakes. $950. Call 1me ••ACtt CMWY. •t · ' · $23" 1 ~ ~: ;,,:;;:;,N GHIA _ driven 5 N~~'.lfs :o.~~'. CHEVROLET -CHICK_ IVE,RSON, m;_ •n "'"""' •ni0ne. ""''" __________,, ·70 Ma· libu· . 55· vw -. antted, nrw tires. $475. .._...._...._.. 549-3031 Ext M·"" fT 49,...15. VOLVO VI, loaded + alr cood., pow. mo ·HARBOit BLVD. : '67 VW Squ•rebAck '71 '• HERE NOWI er windows. C~ AGO)' COSTA .~ $300. M0-3118 btwn 41· & 6 vw pm. Runs & looka l~ nf.'w, 1007c SEE & DRIVE TiiEM $2995 OWNE_R MU1t SeU like ne~ '70 VW iuarante<ed parts & labor A FEW REMAINING 70'J AT llLL JONES' '69 Marauder. Air, ~ Pop top e1111p1r. 1.000 1etu1I for 30 days. WYB273 Cl.DSFX>lIT PRICES BJ. Sportsca·r-""ilter''-=m=&ny='=x=lrl=•-=83l-=.mo,:='==='I 111il11. Li\1 "1w. CIGt61 $1399 Ila t• $3799 CHICKVW_ IVEl!SON .JJeu le.wi,t ~Harbor. ccM. _ ~STAN• -IMPORTS ... CHEVROLET c.m... '61.MilstallCJ• ; '" AUSTIN HEALEY 549-JOil::;Ext. M ·or 17 RS. V8, auk!., R&H,-P.S., H --1970 HARBOR BLVD. 19616 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 fa.c• .. -· air, vinyl root &l'dtop:"Owned by little aJd Ce11•. !ZK•7J7) ..... ;r COSTA MESA GOOD Buy! '61 Vohoe, xlnt. (ZSR2lJ) $2595 B AUER .cboal ~ache?, 29,000 $1799 '64 GHIA P141l6 $799 AUSTIN AMERICAN '69 A·A · ZLK516o $1099 '59 PORSCHE Red c.eupt, UAM067 $1699 '68 TRIUMPH GT !LI,, XTK-171 1 $2099 '64 PORSCHE 1600 YeUow, PHH19l $2299 '65 PORSCHE SC Rtd, XHT29 l $2999 '66 MGB-GT White with r1il i11t1rior. SVXfOI $1999 '66 PORSCHE l lu1, 5VE652 '61 PORSCHE T111111r!111, VVV612 $3699 '61 TR IUMPH 250 !CD41206.0 I $2299 _l~l \LiP Lll I ,11111 p Ll I I " llGO W. CoHI Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 540-1764 Authorized MG D•eler TAKE OVER PAYMENT cond. Sacrifice. $4 50. BUICK 234 E. 17th St., miles.. (U0F612) MUii: .zit '68 VW "BUG" 847~"JOJ Calta Mesa. 54S:."l'Jfi5. Call... SH dlt ... MO-!IOD '~ 549-1506 Eves 1 _________ 1 •rr Fleef'M!Od i\ftlUlh&m _ 49f..750.6 ~ 10 am. • l---.=,.,:61=VW,,::;.:;*;__ Antlcfu-s, Clatslcs fflS lmmac! Full pwc. bl.adc +'69 MUSTANG Mach I. 3$[ S300 or bffl ofter. 1618 lrvine leal'htr, black top,. black air, f.spd, fUU· pwr, ateNo. Ave, N.B. '47 CONNIE CONVRT body ~~ho!'f, etc. Pvt ~u. 6U-2886. . • : PV'.T Pty must aaerlfice 1970 Owned by Movie Acir,u • _pty, 3 I.It ·fl 'If w~. '67 Mustang ·V-1 autama~ vw aquareback sedp.n-auto, Have cmplt/ History It. Pa. 00 CHEVY V-3: 213 cu :ln. R/H. Very clean, 1 owner r&h, fac air, 6000 mi. Can l!'l'S. S2500 F1RM. 213/ *I'll· Premium tll'e•. 837-7856, .f99-2179 •. · • ·. retinanct. 548-6079 686 949-1469. Recently · tuned. $895 .:l===-='='''?='"'===="ll """"'•n s•. cM _ -.=w'-'N=oo'-N-T_AX_I -,1-90l_l_*-1l"ii'73-4i'ciul!tl9:V.Y2;;s:-.n;n;~•l:=O~L:.:D~S~M=:O~B~IU~-l 'GB BUG-R/H, nu brakt'!ll, BEAUTY! RUNS GREAT! '70 CHEVY Z-28, IDIO mi'11, 4-, ., .. · 29000 I XI · Petrol -499-3688 1pd, J60 H.P . Mu1tSUPER Sport 442 Qldf !Ires. , m . nt cond. if! $3'-.... Co '6' · Sl375. '497-12:Jl A..vtime. Per· ce wv or ~t cl-upe, , tn IUPff• conl "J" fer. 536-2'7ss dition. new paint and ttr.s1 '10 VW Camper. Save $1(01! Autos W11ntecl 9700 .59 CHEVY BELAIR. R.lH •pmte whtt.Ja, bucket ~-1 Deluxe. Nr. New. Priv. Pty Re 1 harp 1195 &t6-2S98 ' ·•1r eond, po""er ·~ M"'' Sell !143-3297 WE PAY CASH ' ' . . . or -Gray wHh blook i-557-4540. Ont hu tree.led '66 YW Sunroof e 1955 Chovrol1t •-1ov1;..~;"'e':1ow ~1"' b6ok' Imm"'""'' rood;Hoo. Yellow FOR YOUR CAR 4 d" & cyl, aolomati<. $DI. 494---or <19>-11!ij l with pin stripping, new titts $100. 962-6363 eyes and wffkends. • engine iU&ran""' tor 90 CONNELL "'STA. Wf11, Vi. Very loo4 '67 OLDS Cu••• 2 Dr. H"I days. Lle.5~-CHEVROLET 1hape. New brkl, battery. Cpe. Auto., R&J:I, P .S., fad. · $175/ofr. ~~. S to 7 pm. toey air, chrome ~ CHICK IVERSON 2828 Horbor Blvd. (YrNJll $1695 BA~ vw Costa M ... Slf'.!21() COMET BUICK "' E. 17th .... W& PAY TOP ___ :;_;...:,.~_-COsta Mesa . 548-nM. : 54~3031 Ext. 66 or 67 , '61 COMET '69 DELTA 88, 4 dr, au : 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CASH Automatic, radio, beater. p/l, p/b, 390 ena. 29 ' COSTA ME.SA (Jffi-171) mi's. $2600, 494 -2Cl7',: 1969 VW Squareback, white $219 , 494-7792 · , ~ ' w/black Interior, radio, full for ul16d' C&l'I le trucD·juat ~-,..,. .£1.-'66 F85 WGN, p/a. p/b, ;J. : lenrth rear cullofl1 pa_d, call Us for free estimate. ,......,... nrlfl&N VS, air. Jo ml't, by :;:!· , , Carello driving light•, GROTH CHEVROLET In> od Gabriel air aMcks, chrome 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 u er book. ~ · r ims, radial tires, exhaust •. ·~ Olds 9' • : . extractor. $2295: 6TH125 Ask for .SU. Manapr CORYEJTI . Very clean, ,R.una ~ / after 5pm. l82U Beach Blvd. 75. 4~ ~· 1;!,~ ~,:~N ~~ M7.a:,untinfton Bo:~ ·~.s~!e~~ S~G~ P.ON11A 1 C :-~·' . SlSl'.XI. 30,IXXI mi. Many WE PAY ·TOP 00µ.AR 557-4549 or~. ~~~P~~~. 544-965S. u ~ 1!; ~8!x°~~an. ~ ~~~~ '71 GTO I . VW LEASING see w tint . * Aft 6: st&-25.li -• 455 cu. ~n;'if,.m Alff t. e Tax A: Lie. Down BAUER BUIC'K cJoM•ra& Wpeed,·, I .• • SS0."1 per month 234 E. 17th SI. DODGE -·lma tad>, Ride .o:!Ul!A'r , Costa. Mesa 5*--7765 ___ .:;_;:;_:.;.:;..::;,.. __ , pq, P/S,' P/D/B, ltadtd • 36 month open end INS! .._ ..... _..._ v -Ft I~ VW 9 11., IMPORTS WANTED •r:n n....-. ..;.1 ,.. __ _. , •--.ier~: ,... .. , ~ · ,,., ... "" UU4&" Am ""'Ill Wide ovllls, "ALL BLACI(" AT ~;ae =~· rio,000 mi's * .$300 ~ otter or tr.de tor, CHICK IYERSON ' ,. * 6lS-09n * .1ai. .,...,..-Ford ""'"" : Bll.L MAXEY TOYOTA '64 DODGE STATION WGN. MM665 . · VW · 18881 Stach Blvd. Air, Jwil like MW.• $415'. . . ri'l 1 • 1970 HARBOR BLVD. H. Beach. ,Pb, 847-8555 -646=-~ or 557-4540.> ''&I · ""l'ONTlAC Le ~· ~COSTA MESA ** WANTEb ** '67 Dodge CU1t Sportsman W.hlte W/ furquot.e~tn.ai;r. 1966 VW Bug. U blut wtblk Want lo buy '64 or '65 VOL-w tula $1900 · · bucket Rat&, auto,. ~ Int. New tires. A-1 body &-VO: From Pvt pty: In. gel. ' ." ~760J * ttJ'I, 'xlnt 'mteba¥k'/ palnl. Floor qiats, Tadio, 3 eond. Reas Prict,.673-3117 di\ion, Very Cleen 1 a '"'"'"-$&50. ~ FALCON ri\iu l1'0. ,_ . 1964 vw Bus wttolddown Auto L.Dfnl 9810 Lane, Hunttncton , Md &-pa.neling. Xlnt cond . LEASE FALCON '6.1 ~r. automatiC .'*-'285 · ~ See at 2l72 Newport Blvd. A ·NEW 1971 .r&h, pvt pty. • ' '68 POAfiAC BOnne~ S , Apt H. Anytime $1000 firm. PtNTO sm ~ aeat ""'°"' ·Au.to., ~tY I 1"2 i/W-G'OOD COND P.11., . P-wi-"' ' "''" otter. 67>143:1 $50.00 mo. PORD alr, RAH. I.Ow : m H~-: (3& mo.) (\l'Xl!S!O ""' 8A ' 1969 VOLKSWAGEN Bua, open e.'111 TORINO "JO 4-dr. 2 ma old, ~' 234 E. 1Tfh ., b?ue:, xlnt condition, only RENT Save SllllO! T.O.P. Tab U• Cotta Meu..-SQ..7l15-t 27.cm mi., S200o. ~92-1288 A NEW 1m td car ln tndt. 61s..o390 or l9jl PONnAC TtmPat ~ g , '6B YW PINTO 675-3751 . cyl, hanl•oo. I 6"1,Z R/11, Sq L-~k $4 DAY N""w/w-•A~-- UGl't-A11D " NOYl,'5 _ THE '*--• Whlte with-ted btterlor, new 4,. MILE TIME FOl '68 Pont!&< l,oMlfO V4 I <k tire9, 500 muea on new f.ac-~ trr, air cond . t+6,'TI, tory '""'""· VlJR3U PUT A LlTlU f?UICK CASH km-Som ,14'"21121 •ltr S $1 69' IOCK IN YOIJll THROU""H· • jMI\ ~ ... nd .. 14$-0<tll....: CHICK IYERSON LIFEI .. .. .• '11.Pontil< VW THEODORE WANT. AD . Good C<lod, $12r. RDlllNS ~DRD • •·· ~ '> 54!).31)31 E>t. 66 or 67 lOEO HARBOR BLVD, DAILY PILOT '89 Firtblnl "'1 Spd, many 1'70 HARBOR BLVD. CQSTA MESA 642-!SiJI xtru. UWO or make -· OOSTA MESA ' 642-0010 521,..7122,