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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-10 - Orange Coast Pilot7 .. . . . One Dam~ged. by Sh.at. • --. ~ ' . C~ast Pit~hJUan Guilty DAILY PILOT In Jobless Mail Fraud * * * 10< * * * - er Stor111y Bearittg Air Cal Handed ·- Five-year Lease By JACK BROBACK Of tllt DllllY Pllet S .. tf Air California. roundly condemned by Upper Newport Bay residents and highly p1·aised by the OranRe County business community. won a new five-yea r lease Tuesday after a stormy .two-hour hearing before the Board of Supervisors. The adopted co1npromise agreement. proposed by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald \V, Caspers of NeV(port Beach, did not v.•holly Please proponents of corr linued air service. nor did it satisfy op- ponents. But it-i ... as good enough .&o u•in approval by a 4 lo 1 1nargin and there were no boos or catcalls v.·hen the fina l vote was recorded. There has been some. pointed remarks .from the audience and sporadic applause as speaker after speak.er on either side exhorted the board members. Only Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden Gro\·e \'Oted against the new lease and only because he thought ii £hould be given more study. The co111promise lease extension as of· fered by Caspe-rs included six conditions: -The lease to be for five years with the opportunity for review at one yea r in- tervals at lhe anniversary date with op- tion to cancel subjeet to 30 days ·written notice. -.Th at 2t6 be established as a ceiling for the average number of Oighl.s and that additional flig hts require board ap- proval. -That hours of operation be limited to 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. for takeoffs and 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. for landings. -That no louder than Boeing 737 or Orange ()east Weatber Heavy fog along the coast )0,- night through 'mid.morning on ThurSday. lhe we11ther lady re: ports. \vlth highs along the coast a not·so-high 60. rising to 70 in· land . UJ\\'S tonight bet .... ·een 43 and "- INSIDE TOD~Y Local cnterfainmeut hits its peak tliis rime of year and to· day's eNtcrtoi111ne11t s cc ti o tt aerves up a sr11orgosbord of iheatcr ar1d nnuic 11ews, Pages 22 and 2.! l lrTIHo " ........ ,. Ct liJt<ltl• ',I ·c.,_ c..- Clle(•l,.. Ult 16 tla11(l!ttl 11-*4 C91\'tk1 ,. tn11w!11 1'I C.•111 N•hCt l 11 1E•1t.r11I ""' 6 1'11ttl't1l111M•I lT·lJ Flll.i!(f 4f·$1 ... ,.,ewe a.( •1111 Ll lllffrt » Mlllbt• ' M1rrl111 Lltl!IM\ !I Miii i11 S.rfkt 1'°11 MlvlH JJ•Jl Mlltllll " .... ' .. Htlittlll N9M 4J Ot1"9' C-ty U JITA ,. IYIWlll ,lf'ltr .. ,_,. ..... Dr. SMiM"""' • It Si.elf M,,..,,. 4'< .. T ... ~llleft n Th"ltn U.TI w .. 111., • Wltfll..,'I '41•4 )4•)1 Wlftf Ht'¥0 W 1 DC9 with 1ross weight based on runway 11trengtb be u.sed as equ ipment. -That all engines be rendtred smokeless prior to sigping or the new lea~e. He also called for a revie\V of rental prices which he believed to be low. Air Cal Presfdent Robert Clifford led off for the proponents notirig that he was speaking for "Orange County's own air. line." He stressed the need for a five. yea r lease as "good business practice for a finn which has such a large capital in· vestment. Anything less would not con· tribute to financial i.1ability of the airline." Clifford also made these points: · -Aif Cal has no plans for flights outside of California. -Sm<>ke will be eliminated and new engines will be quieter. -Five years is the very least tin1e period in -which there can possibly be a new site developed for an alte rnate coun· ty airport. -Orange County Airport cannot be t~· panded because of free"'ays on either end of the runways, Ground transport is also limited. I City Councilman Carl KYmla led off the opposition with a statement or the Newport Beach position. • He called for th e following conditions to govern continuance o! tenninal access privileges to commercial carriers at the airport: -A statement of official policy th at the Airport is not and in an probability never will be an acceptable facility for jet aircraft.. -That daily flights be· limited to the average daily level of the past 12 months. -Thal commercial· terminal leases be renewed on a year·~year basis only. -That jet aircraft be limited to those: no louder .than the Boeing 737 or the Douglas 009. (This was approved ). -That no new ca rriers proposing lo ISee AIR CAL. P1ge %1 Women De1nand Voice i11 Party· WASHlNGTON {UPl1 -Unless more than haU the delegates lo the Republican and Democratic rlational conventions in 1971 are women, there will be "serlou~ credentials challenges," the National Women'S Political Caucus has warned . Officials ol lhe cauCus said Tuesday tht national conventions s~d seal only delegations that fairly reflect the popula- tiOM of ttie states they repttsent. They s1id men constitute a majority of the populations in only Iour slates - Alaska. Hawaii. Nevada and \\'yoming. "Failure to ensure r e a s o n a b 1 e repre.senfation will undoubtedly result in serious credentjals challenges by women's groups In various states," the caucus said In letters tO the national par- ty chainntn. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER ·10, 197 t • \IOL , '-4. NO. l"' S SECTIONS, t4 PAOIES roun e Air Cal Protester Police Net DAIL'I' l"ILDT Sltll ,hll• Bomb Hoax Suspect MOLINE, D~ (UPI) -A mMt-ei11miJW to have a bomb forced an American Airlines 7ffl passenger plane to mite an emergency landingJt Quad C-rtles Airport ~ e aim!u1£0ftl.. ower said the su.spect was arrested. A search was launched to determine whether there was a bomb &board American Oight 101, bound from Chicago for the West Coast. All the passengers aboard the plane were allowed to disembark before FBl' agents, Illinois State Police and other of· ricers moved in to make the arrest. The airport control tower sa id the pilot or the plane notified the radar control center outside Chicago that a man was aboard demanding that the plane land at Quad "Cities Airport, whic h serves the Illinois cities of Moline, East J\.loline and Rock Island, as well as Davenport, Iowa. American Airlines planes do not normally land at the Quad Citie.s Airporls. but a spokesman &aid tbe airport is capable of accommodating a 707 landing. !~e £light was reported to have originated in Detroit, V1·ith Chicago as an int~rmediate slop and Los Angeles the ultimate destination. DESPITE DAN EMORY'S CHARTS AND NEWPORT PROTESTS, AIR CAL CARRIED THE DAY Lon9·1t1ndi!"& Airport Foe Stands Again Threatening Court Action to Abate NoiH Pollution There was.no immediate word from the airline as to how many persons were aboard. Ecuador Captures Four U.S. Fishing Vessels SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ecuador captured four U.S. tuna boats and fired a shot acro.ss the bow of one, damaging it slight· ly. the American Tunaboat Asl50Ciation said today. It was the first seizure ·since March 27 in the . runn:k!g dispute with several na· tklns involving territor~al flshins waters. TI1e Ecuadorian gunboat's shot damag- ed the bo\V of the 1,000-ton Venturess but none of the 14 crew members was illjur· ed, skipper J\faurice Correla notified the San Diego.based association. August Felando, general nianager. said Correia identified the Ecuadorlal patrol craft as the L. C. 61 , a <.'Onverted U.S. Coast Guard patrol boat . nie $2·million Ventures.ii, OS its maiden voyage. wa9' boarded and the radios seabo ed bul Felando said Correia was "able to snea k off a radio mess&;ge early today," 11e identified the other tuna boats seized Tuesday night as Trinidad , the Blue flterklian and the: Denise· Mari, alt·,t>Med .In san Diei:o. ' The bQals 'll'ere 65 miles southwett or Salinas in international waters, Felando sakf. Ecuador claims 200 miles Qff its coasl as territorial waters while mo'st other maritime nations recognize 1 12· mile off.shore coastal zone. Felando said Ecuador seized 26 of the ti .S. tuna boats earlier I his year and levied $1.33 million in rine5 and penalties. lie said 30 confirmed U.S. fishing boat 3eizures havt taken place this year arr 1-:cuador. the most of any year in the decade-old dispute. Coast 'Pitchman' Pleads Guilty 111 Mail Fraud A onetime Newport Beach man w9o parl2yed a little pitch into a big sum by promising nonexistent jobs to the wiemployed In lS states pleaded guilty Tuesday to mail fraud. • l\.obert J. Binney, 62, now of 9341 Hudson 0r1·ve. HUntingfOn Beach, will be , sentence<t .f!ec• 6 , in-Ftfk1:al .._District Court. Los Angeles. 1'he former Bayside Village residenl ('OO]d be sentenced lo five ye a rs in federa l prison and fined $1 ,000 for the huckster scheme. He allegedly Collected $15,000 from persons who cou ld lll·af!ord it. Binney, free on his own recognizance (See GUILT, Page I) - Reinecke Chided For 'C onspiracy' By Ousted Aide 1\-J'ari j uana Found In Surf Board LIHUE, KAUAI, Hawali (APi -When John~· Reed arrived on Kauai Island f{lr a surfing vacation, a police officer took 1 close look at Reed 's surfboard. The officer called for assistance and 5~. Dennis Higashi of the Kauai police SACRAM ENTO (UPI I -The fonner vice squad identified the leaf decoration top aide of Lt .. Gov. Ed Reinecke tode.y under the fibergJass on the board 81 accused him of spending hundreds ol genuine marijuana. thousands of taxpayers dollan to cam· The JP,.year-0\d Santa Barbara \11'\111-h paign for governor and or cond ucting an was . ~r:rested for unlawful possess~~; "undercover'' conspiracy against Gov. marijuana. He was released on $JOO baU Ronald Reagan. and will be arraigned in district. court on 'T'he charges by Hal Steward, No. 1 Nov. 19. assistant l.o the lieutenant governor, were Po lie~ said it was the second time an contained iii a letter released fo:day to arrest had been made for possesskln of new smen and sent to Reinecke Tu esday. marijuana found embedded in ·lhe design .stc.,..a~dSa,KI hefwaritOO tOeiplalnWhY -c;f.T=Wrtboard: · . 1 • • he •·iesigned'''.his $2b,~a7)'ea r.RQst ~ · -'-''-----·~-----;_ spcciill execUtive as!iistant. Othef top ' ~ aides,privately.~id ""., ... o,'l"; . P,J'CKEROO .A·DDS Re~ke said St,eward , o~ lhe jeb only·· , • · , " • ,., ....en .... l\i. 1e11.by '·Irl!''"~1· """'""t.". BOWL T1'CKEJI's· · The, shakeup followed a d1spule over t · • 1 release of a pre~r~ gpeech 'text @ · A ~nils prize.....: ty,·o.free . sA,s.I.~ ~nlM Reln~ke cr;~cd·statc_~emplo~e1"1 '·Pasadena Bowl rOr: t~fi ~pap! ~..,.• ~ncy a~ala cnrase'<, . r ~r..,.':'"' • ~einecko.~ ol~~iQp.~,i;F .-••c.h we<k --< ~a•>ld\led la_st W«k, toMho r~"' p•il)ii>lli & -" .• ~~J1'~"'""' ~~iliot s.eward's ltU8o r • .,...i..i ,.. ....T , .. E ~ 0 l. ~ft'~ · Steward told lteinecke he "resigned" fitrybtcinl: for tills weeks contest ap--.. . , pears 1n the newspaper today for the last ..... '"nuse . time this k It' P 30 De dll -"'T'he use by yoo and members of your . Wet; · s. on. age · a ne staff of hundreds of thousa nds of dollars for this weeks entries is S p.m. Thursd ay (that means entry mu.st be delivered in in tax~ayers money solely to conduct a person or by mail by s p.m, to the OAt- captp1ngn for your election to governor in LY PILOT) Top five wi h • 1914 " · • nners eac wee. _;,The efforts by senior 1nembers or each receive a $10 gUt c"1.l!lcete from (See REINECKE, Page!) _Sa_u_lh_co_a_s_t _P_la_za_. ______ _ \' I .- . ~· • • • . "·t o~ll v Pflo'r s .News Fo1·thcou1i119 . •• Price Control, < . ~· -.. Findings \Near . I . . ' WASHING'l'ON (UPI\ --Th e -~vernment:s .Go!Jt-or biv-ing Council c_q>mpleted final details t.ode y of ils three· ~tier system.for applying "'age and price ctontrols to the nation's business cnn1- munlty in Phase II of Preside nt Nixon 's ~ MOnomlc program. q orncials said. the details would be an- 'tnOUnced later today. Under the plan, the largest companies and unions whose decisions have broad t!mpact on the econo,my, will need prio r approval of the lndepef\dent pay board ... } i.nd price .. · commission before raising • .Vi>ages and prices. :• Smaller firms wilt be permitted to take . ·~isuch action on their own but must report 1\be moves to the government for possible ~~f~deratton. Tht smallest ftrms will ~ need-government 1pproval oC wage . • .and price hikes but will be subject to spot -.:checks for compliance by Internal " , - ~Officials Warn A. \ • :·;Tomi Shutdown :.1) • . ;Of Foreign Aid '_,. -~WASHINGTON IUPII -The'''State -~parlmfnt said today the foreign· aid ~-ogram will have lo shut down its · j)peratioos completely on l.1onday if · ..Gongress fails lo enact . emergency .iJ.egislation to keep the program alive. 1'; A department spokesman. Charles W. .. Bray, said the General Accounting Office , ·(lad advised the Agency for International -Development that no '"pipclint!" funds . seouJd be used either in \Vash ington or ~ !broad after e.1piralion Monday of ;in ex- 1i8ting continuing resolution allowing , ,operations. I ' The Senate voled earlier this month to . ~dU the aid program and the ad· :ministration has been battling lo revive ~It. Some senators who voted to end the .~i),rogram contended that for the time '1eing aid could be continued through the -:~of the "pipeline" funds -money that , _.,!as been previously appropialed but not yet spent • : BUt Bray said the CAO opinion rules ,that out. . • He told ne"•smen : '·The result of th1<; plling makes clear that. in the absence of '4-continuing resolution, AID"s ad- ~"1inistratlve apparatus, ils en t i re -:W.ashlngton headquarters. and the ad- )ninistrz.~ive oversight of pr o g r a m x -,abroad. will disappear and AID will er- .. (f4.1.lvcly be out of business a~ of Monday. --''"l'h.i.$.JeQd!·further urgency to the need to provide a continuing resoluiion until such lime as both of the houses of Congre"ss have been able to vote an - authoriiation and approprialion bill. "It seems extremely (lniikely !hat the four congressional committees invol ved and the two houses of Congr6SS <:ould c0mplete this before Nov. 15 ," Bray con- cluded. -·In answer to a reporter's question, he ·emphasized. "There is not one penny. nor ~ven a mil" to continue operations after '\<!onda y. wt -'ID employs 3.088 people i n JWashi"ngton and 3,378 Americans abroad. {" Bray said that unless some thing i . ., ~· there "'ould be no money to bring Jjome the U.S. AID personnel abroad. ·~ .. ·"There will be no money for gasoline. ~Jegrams or telepho nes." hr sum· rilarh:ed. ''There will be no money Lo -bring these people home. No money for ~lllaries. No mone y lo repatriate or ~i-minate these people." ~ Shortly before noon. House leaders an- nou nced that the House would not take up fhe stop-gap continuing resolution until "<the House first disposed of hvo other, ullrtlated pieces or legisl;i lion -raisin~ lhe ll£lSSibili~y that !he i\10 queslion Would nol be dealt with until Th~1r~da.v. ·~~~~~~~~~~~~-~ • • : i . • . :~ .. :; " " " . • '• . • . o•.t.NGI COAST DAllY PllOT N•wp•rt lnclll 1. ..... lcMit c .. ,. 111 ... Hu11ti11,1•1 IMClll f•~•t•I~ V.ility 5• Cl•111•11te OU.HG-I. COAST PUI LIS'lh,.G CONl,.Af'I'( •e'io••t N. Woo4 , ........ , .... 1'110!1th« J .~~ ii:. Cu•l•'I" va ''""'""! •l!d G•n.,11 M•<Mter lti•"''' K 1 1~il El·•or T~11 ... •1 A. /ril u•~~ine Mltftlfl"t EG•"'' Ch 1r111 l·t l••' R :c~••ol '· N1U Alllt!fft/ Mlftl01"8 Ed•lou Offlt1s eottt Mt>t•~ J)I! w"r ~·~ st .. •t /'lt.,.Porl IHt~· \IJ! N•w••I l oc• •~t_, L1f""' ..... ~, 712 ~"'"' A~••u1 i....,,""_ 111<11: 111r1 I••<~ lou11vor~ .,,. cr.n-1t: "" Hol!ft f l ''"'''"'° JIHI r).l ll,Y PILOT, ..,_llft Molttl It n<W!lr.N ""' Pltwo•Pr•t, II ..... Ho~N OOllV l •CUll S.,... ••Y M Mfllltlt "°'""'' lot Lt ...... 1 IHt ... Ht-f IHcft, C.,u """'• """"""-•9Kll• ,._toll! Vt Hty, 1'11 Cit_,.../ c..,.,,_ '"" Stlldltll"'<~. •ie'\C *'"' ..,, reio lon•I .. ltiooft. l'"'IC•M I l•••toft• flltflf ll t i Ill Wllll ltY l trH., c .... Mtoo, ,..,._. 17141 '4J.4JJI ~1-tfftlll A.llllNrtt•I"' '641·1,71 s.. c1 .... te AH o.,.""'"": t.i.,tri·~ 4tJ0441t (ffl"""''· 1tll, o,..... ''"' 1'1111.,.,1.,, ~ .... ,. ... """ ,,.,,... 111 ........ ,,,. •• M ll'tl'lt! mt1t1r If tl~lll'l'l-1"" ~trt~• _, .. rtP'Oft.IC.. .,,......,, 1~t1t1 ptf• 111it1iM " '""'""' ...,.,, ••• JtfflMI ('-U -···· _llllf •I fr/OWf19r! ..... ~ ...., -c .. 11 """"· e'""""1 •. ~11ot(•,••..., 111¥ «otrlt• '' 1~ ....... l'I'! ~y "''!! ,, " -tltl¥1 111lh1t•y '"'"""' ...... 11 u ,._"'''' ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' ·ReVenul' agents. .__ -- Another ·major <flll!Stlo·n concerpln~ Phase 11 involved regulated irutustrie!', such as utilities. airllnt>s and el'cn in- surance com panies. The issUe was ""hether thry should be subjec:t to the broad overall controls or whether the gov~rrunent. regulatory agencies, who .alrt4dy must approve rate Incre ase$ in lhest areas, migtit relieve the price and pay boa,rds of this responsibility. The C.O.St of Ll'9ng Council's action was a follov.'-up to the decision by th~ pa y board to set a S.5 percent wage ceiling for Phase Jl Jn tbe latest deVelopments : -It appeareq t~at only the largest companies, perhaps those employing 1.,000 or mQrt;, wlU have to submit their eontria.cU: to the government to see If they meet the 5.S percent yardstick. This would affect about 11 million of the near· Jy' 18 million workers covered by con- tracts but would -presumably set the pat- tern fo'r the rest. ' -The American Federation o I Teachers, an AFL-CIO union, aa.id lhe pay board's dectslon to deny retroactive pay raises caught in the freeie and to try to limit future raises was a step towards fascism. There were ind ic a tlo n 1 ' however, that soine teacher! might g~ retroactive 14·age raiseS. if taxes had been raised before the freeze lo tovcr thern. -It wa s learned Iha! longevity anrl merit pay raises caught by the rrceze would be allowed lo lake effttl when the "freeze ends al midnight Saturday. prn-. vided the increases-do no! exceed S.S per· cent. -Sen. William Proxmire !D-Wis l, i;ai d H the pay board abrogates wage pro- visions of existing contracts "then work- ing men and women may \\•ell consider thal, they ha ve no contract. \Ve n1av he facing a period or labor unrest and Stri fe entirely out of proport ion to 1he '1n1· portance of this decision ." · r..1ost of !he attention remaincri fixed on labor's' reaction lo the si tuation . AF'l..rCIO Presidentj;eorgc Mca11y."·as prep11rjJ11.( a report on the si tua!ion for his ferlcr<ilion ·s meeting in Bal Harbour, Fla .. next week. He said Tuesday the S.S percent wage limit will .. crea te widesprrad t-conon1ic: instability .~· The Meatcu u ers Union, represcn11n.i: 500,000 workers, said it would urge that meeting lo .. take "·halev<'r action necessary, including a na tional work stoppage or general strike" to prOl<'st lhe pay board's action. The leachers' union a'lso said it was ready to "join with the rest of organized labor in whatever s.eems the most effecli ve action lo take.'' Tht White House. ho14•ever. said it "'as ronfident it had labor 's cooperation anrl "we think organized labor "'ill proceed responsibly as they ha ve throughout thls proces1 ." · Authorities Hunt l/omeniade Foocl Which Killell 2 " SANTA BARBARA IAP l -Authorities tried today to trace home-ci1nned fruil.~ and vegetables so ld by two t'ldcrlv \\"1dowed sister~ y,·ho ma y ha\·e died Or hotulism poisoning. The sisters. Mary r..f. Sn1ith. 8.'i. ;incl .Jo (;race Hawley. 77. died within lhrce day.~ of each other after developing common symptoms. Jars of c:elery juice found in !he sisteri;' home among 200 bottles of hon1e·cnnnrrl foods arc being tested. said Or. Frank Cline of the county he11llh department Offi cial s said the two worncn h:irl hrlrl a s<1le of their canned good~ J'C<·<·nth Thi• authorities•;ippc;iled lo rcsiden1.~ t~ 111r·n th e food in for tests. r.1rs. Hav.·1ey died F'rida~· n1prnin.i,t ;ii Irr rlri nkin~ the celrry juice aorl wa.~ hur1rd Tursday Funeral arrangcn1cn1.~ for hrr si~ter. \\'ho died f\1nnd<1.\". are p<"nd1ni: , Several per~ni; have lurnrd in ca nned for.<l.~ r('('ehed fron1 the sisters. Or . Cline said . Stale orfic1a l5 said .'iOO persons h11 ve rlied of bolulism in California in thi~ rcn- tury. Botulism toxin h;is a n1ortaJ11y rate of 50 percent with rapid rned1ci1! £'arc, ~aid Dr. ijen \\1erncr of the Burcnu nf Disease Control in Berkeley. The. biggest recent outbreak wa!' in Rakersfield l~sl September "'hen .<1 ;\Ir~· ican-American ft1mily Qf ~eve n btrt1mr ill ;ifter e11li ng home<anned food~. he said . Four were stricken 11nd ooe died. f~l'f}lll l'Rgf• I GUILTY ... since arraignment in Scpte1nbrr. en!er('ri his guilty plee before l'.S .Jud~e A\"t'ry C. Cr11ry. u·e wa~ indicted St>pt 22 h\ ,. rcder;il J,?r~nd jury on cherr.e~ of u.~1ni:: 1he 111;111 In dcfraud joblr~~ per$0ni; throu!£h ne "·spaper cla~sirird 11d~ A b('O('hure promised fnr St ~·ahln ID 4'h1y~ 11nd $2 after that barJ!_111n pcnnd AileRcdly carried, l1slln~s of rob~ hy employers who bnt'lly nttded hc.'lp • Only posl1tl invci;t1irotors problnR 81n- n~y·s activitit>~ i;inre 19611 dc.'lerm !ned the pitch lo bt fal~ and mlslead1n~ to a cnm1n111 extent Binney. ~Aid US A!l orne.\ Rob<'r't L. f.Te.\·er. also ('Onned ~mr reclp1rnts into unsu~pertin.i;:ly "ssist1ng in 1he mA11 nrder bunNl ~rhcm!' Frdrrlll author1t1c~ ~:\]d at 1hr tune the y 14'fre inlllsting a crackdo"·n nn nf ffnders of Blnnt)''s lyf'I'. I ~ i Fr'o1n l'age l AIR CAL • • • • ... . -use jet aircraft be granted termlnal privl.le~es and nights be restrk:ted to 400 miles from the county . Hammett stateCI his city's stand whlell approved renewal of the Air Cal lease. Ht ~rged , ~h_at11 th~. boa1r~. pot, .bt; • .S~'i!iYtd by •·emotton• ' appea s. Countllman Wllllam St. Clair presented a minority rebuttal in whlch he aceused the airline of addinti flights not needed tn keep competition oul and urged the botrd members to limit a lease e.1tension .to one year to "put ~.airlines under pre1sure to aid_in_develop1ng a new airport.'' -That no commerclal carrier be allow. ed to construcl or lease termin1l f1cllltles Independent of the county's co n- trols . He also _asked that 1 public be1rl.11g be M_ld. that the EcoJog_ I noise moniloring data be made available lo t~e public end -the .cily..and that Newport Beach be con· ~~eQrt B~~$1L fd>L!!lcilman Milan 00.rtal 'Sttld ah atrp()l1Was ht'edcdDU! not- v.•here the present facility is locafM. He urged that fli8hts be limited to Lockheed Electras. a proirjet plane. ..... -suited oh lea-se~: • OAl~'I' PILOT Sl•lt P~oi. STRAT!'GY -HUDDLE -Air California won a compromise lease ex- tension for Orange County Airport use at <1 stormy board of super- vi~ors . ~ession Tuesday. Inte rested participants at the session gather here during interlude. Standing arc fron1 left to right l\1ars hall Duf- field and \\'illian1 St. ('!air, c·osta ~IC!<<i councilman. Kn eeling from left lo right are Dan 1-.:mory, ~:arl Hardage and ('arl Kyml a. Ne"'POrl Beach councilman. - ~ilitants Plead Guilty In Coast J(idnap Chase Ry ARTHUR R. VINSEL or th• D•llV Piiot S\111 A p;ur of t11ack m1l1!:1nl.~ 14•ho lerl lav.·mcn on a !hree·count y rhasc 1n ;i biiarre bid ~ ironi~all.v -In obta ln 1noncv 1n frl'l' 1{1ark P11 nth('r!'; nnw in prison today f:t ("e the jlf\ss1hll11y of life behind bars 100. The n1e11 pleaded guilty to 1wo counts ei1t·h nf kidnap1nj;! for thr purpose or rob- bery, 1n a i;urprise 1110\"e Tuesday at their prclinunary hr<1nngs 1n .Long Beach ~lun1c1pal Court. Ht nr v L. Madden, 2.'i! aod Denni~ A Griffie." 18. set son1e lype of record tn their Oct. 26 rampage. Taking three hosta12es in a Lucky r..1i1rket robbery that nelted Sfi.134, Mad - den and Griffie allegedly holeri up at the Leslie DtelS'""-home on Orellano W11y in J~agun~ Hil ls. Polic:-e tipped orr during the holdup kept on their tr<1il by ground and air. Aargalning ,.,.ith surrounding officers for the lives of r..tonlque Dreis. 7. and t.wo hos1;igcs fr on1 !he nrarket. the suspcc!s r1ni1ll y continut>d on in a commandeered Or<1nge Coun!y sht'riff"s car. The suspe{'ls fled the Dreis home before a $20.000 ransom collected by the market chain -assCrterily dc:iJined fo r hlack n1ilitant use -cou ld be delivercrl· to them at th'e scene. ~1 addcn and Griff ie. the lallcr an Ea!'! Const runawav. were finally ci1 plured ;it a ro:idblock "near Buckman Springs in S:in f)iego County. v.·here lhcy "tnssed out shotgun s and freed their ren1aining hnl'tage~. Returncrl to Long Reach. lhc pa ir 1vere {"hari,:ed \\'Ith a !nlaJ. O[ 14 fc!nny C'OUn tS belwren them. (t1111ty ple::is offerl-d Tuesday after :i 11Tck of neg11tia!1ons confe rences between J'r••••t l'tige I' REI NECl\E • • \our ~laff. \\llh \nU r knowledi;:r. to con· (t1u l ;i t"On~pl raC\'. unrlerco\·er . .:tp:nln~1 (in\ Heagan his ariministration. ;ind h1~ ~1.1!f .. _ .. y,,ur rt•ft1•al. d('sp11c rC\X'.:tll'd rt't~>111n1l'11d;it1on~ and urgin~ b~· nie lo a1tcn1pt to 1d('nt1fy "'ith or roosider the C'lhn1c prnhlcms and aspirations llf rnrmbC'r.~ of Cal1fnrnaa·s 1li in or i t y group~ -"The blatant r1·nicisn1 prarllred hv \ ou ;ind the senior 1i1rnlbers of \•our st;i{f \11 regarrl to p11hlit· is~u!'~ 1.1•hrri \Our And 1hf'1r only rno1iv:111on 11as 11'h<'!hCr.your po."i1 ion on the 1~.~1u•s 11 011ld hcl11 i;rt y1111 i•lrl'lt'd go1·t•rnor rathf'r thtn an 1ntrrcs1 in !ht' ro11rrrn and n~~d~ of the r1111.en s of Cnllf11rn111." • , ""''our r<'fu."nl. dC'spl\!' n1y repeater! 11 ri::1na~ lo do ~·our homr1~ork and kee-p Y'iurs rlf prepared OJ\ the .. \'ital issues l1e 111l'l'kl'. :ippoinlrd hy Reag.1n .is 1it•u1t'nilnl lfO\'!'rnor in 1969 aftrr formrr I.I {;o\, Rohrrt II. Finch 11·ent tn \\IA~hini;:ron \\1th President i\'.ixon. h:i~ ~nnounred his 1ntcnllon to ru/l for governor in 19it \Vo 111a11 Hits Fathcr"s A11 to111ohi lc, Kill ed • r>AL\'ll::LSV ILLE. c;a, !Lf'l l -~!~. \\"oodro\\" Bcal<'nbo. 50. 14·as killed Tues. rl.'I\" 111i;:ht v.hen ht>r C'n r !'ollided \\'ilh a 11·h1{·lc itr1vrn bi hrr f::ithC'r . • prosecutors and public defenders indicat.e !hey will get 11 measure of leniency. 1\'li1drien and Griffie were taken to court in handcuffs and body chains under hrary guard by r11ne offierrs to prevent an.r po~sible e~capc attempt E:.ich cou lrl receive l\\•n life sentCnces on the double kidnap counfs. but stale law forbids their being consecutive terms. Judge Kenneth F.. Sutherland also marle no formal find ing that the pair us- ed weapons 1n the k1dnaping. which would have added a mandatory fi\•e to 10 years on the possible life sentences. _ Terms of the negotiated guilly pleas J n-. elude dismissa l of the remaining kid- naping and armed robbery counts faced by both Madden and Griffie when they are formally seQtenced. They are due in cou rt a~ain Friday for presenlence hea ring ,al which lime it l.s likely Judge Sutherland will rule hostages !aken did nol su ffer actual bodily harm. i\ marke! janitor freed by the capture. after spending lhe entire 13 hour spree in custody of !he suspects, described Mad- den and Gri ffie as having treated them v.·ell A won1an bakery cler k from the Lucky r..1arke1 was hysterical, but otherwise not physically harmed. ' Chances of life ler1ns "·ould be somewhat reduced if the judge concurs. GEM TALK TODAY by Small But lmpressiv• 1'he 18th annual !Jia1n(lnds-lnter- national J\\\ards collection opened in :'\e,1· ,.nrk in m id-September . .lc\1 clrrs frorn 30 countries entered lhl'ir designs. and fron) over 2,200 1 pieces. one gets a view of diamond ~ lash ion~ for the con1i ng year. -~ !\lo:-;I people 11·on't be surprised M lo learn that ri ngs 1vere the majo r i, a11 1:;iction. bul they 1nay be sur-I! prised to learn of the i1nportance :.. of 1 er~ sn1all d1<1rnond s. Over half ~ , the 11 inning designs featured tiny } d 1<1 n1ond.~ in cnn1bination \\·lth 1 .,0111.cr p1;ec 1ous and semi·precious .i stones. \! The pie~e co11tt1ining the most ~ ''"~a ring 11ith :l05 dian1onds, but , i .1 a total \1·eighl of only tv.•o carats. Son1e pieces featured sen1i-prec- 1ous stonl'S 111erely ''dusted" \\1ith l1ny gen1s, ah11o st as though they hi.d been dipped in glilter, Kymla also read a lone ljst of r~asons why the ci ty's condiilons should he adopted lncluiling the fact that the Harbor Area already bears the burden of all of the scheduled Commercial jet operation s in the county, that the Upper B1y environment should be protected . Also that airport impact a re a homeowners will continue lo demonstrate unified opposition to airport expansion plans and they have claims of more then $U m!llion in damage! . Newport Beach Airport Noise Aball'- ment Committee Chairmi1n Den Emor~ repealed his ~·ell publicized objection~ and conrluded with a threat or court a<'- tion if the "noise po-1\ution" <X>ntinue.s to increase. Costa Mesa City Councilman 'tl 'tl Upper Newport Bay resident Harry Rinker compared the Orange County Airport to ''a misdirected sewer." "Sup- Jack pose. the sewer Was pointed In 11nolher dircctiorr. then how wouhf' !he other 24 cities in the county like it?" he queried . Some Jubilation Voiced Over 01( Edw~rd· Cook of the Newport Upper Ray Homeo .... ·ners Association said the present noise frnm !hr airport fli~hts wa!I •·equivalent 19 fi\•e jackhammers. The bay is a coUnty and state asset and should nol be destroyed," he argued. Of A• c } L · Cook talked -over the alloted lime and Jf 8 ease Board Chairman Robert Ballin in· _'" terrupted him . \Vh en he ronlinucd despite . Although there were rew broad snl iles Battin 's admonilions, th e ch;iirman said, or victory evident after Tuesday's con. "You have ju st caused me to change my froversial hearing nn lhe extension of the mind about voting on th is ." Air California lease lo operate out of This caused a noisy reaction from the Orange County Airport, statenients audience and remarks about "inlegrily.'' released later by spokefimen for both Caspers called the airport ""t he right sides were mildl y jubilant. thing in the wrong plat-c.·· Air Cal President Robert Clifford said After offerin_g his molion lo renew 1hc he w.as ""sat isfied" with the compromise lease for the rive-year period with con· solution offered by Fifth Dist r i c t dilions. Caspers added a statement ot Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Ne .... ·port poli cy he asked the board to adopt. Beach. Action on this suggestion was delayed '"It ensures !he con tinuation of our re-unti l Nov. 23 . quired service." Clifford said. adding that The policy matters proposed included he had no objection to the annual review that the noise moniloring sludies be of his airline's performance under the made avail;ible lo the <'ity, of Newport new lease nor the lO-day cancellation Beach: that no new construction or lease clause if the perforrnance record wa s not of terminal fa cilities be undertaken approved by the supervisors . withou t board approval; that the board Newport Beach Council1nan Ca r J reaffirm its opposi tion to the ~ranting of Kymla . "'ho led his cily"s assault on lhe terminal spa ce to add iti on;il commercial five year contract. c;i lled the decision. "a airlines. hell of <1 victory for Newport Beach. The Me also sUgges tcd that a cost arrd city received what we asked for down to engineering stud y .he made or th& week J Y reports ·-on-·11oise monitoring-feasibility-of·-ettentltng --1 ht:>· c-xi·sUng- equipment... runwav tow;ird the San Diego Freeway Kymla added. '"We mu st no1v lake an and th.e installation of a blast wait in an act.iv~ role in _ the Sout hern Ca llrorni;i attempt to get greater allitude and sound Av1al10~ Counc1l Inc. upcoming recom· relief for the rrsiden1s of Newport Beach. mendat1ons as thcy relate lo Orange He also wants a SI .000 fine for noise County and request the supervisors to rule violators . make tough policy Oecisions on the fut ure of !he airport . ., Ne14'port ilayor f:d llir"!h said. "\\'e got everything we <'Oul d get al thr preSenl time. \Ve must no"' v.•ork to get a new loc;ition." '.'A victory for t~e people against big -busines~." shouled Newport Assistant Ci- ty Manager Phil Bettencourl. '"\\le faced a high powered ~1adison Avenue public relations packa~e with fi ve days notice ;ind we were able lo get residenl.s in large numbers to the hearing, and \\IC won ." Ha rris Dropping Out WASHINGTON 'APi -Oemocratic sources said today Sen . Fred R. Harris or Oklahoma is planning lo drop his brief bid for the Democratic presidenlial nominalion. The se ~urces said fund.rais- ing problems were the major factor in a deci sion they said Harris was expected to announce later todi1y. (}OMEGA Air Lease Fee Tab .$166,802 The current Air Califo rnia lease \\•hich was the su'oject of Tuesday·i; debate before the Orange County Board of Superviso"rs w;is worth SIS6.802 to the county in fees p~id by the airline during 1970. A breakdown reveals pa yments for landing fee s. $120.907 : terminal space renllil , $17,\:11: Ue do"'" fees, S6.480 : sh<1 re of utilities nnd janitorial services in terminal building .. $27 ,284. These charg_es "'ill he reviewed and poss ibly 4h creased as part of :he new lease agreement approved by the suPcrvisors. 1 ' Chistrnas wrapped , . in 14k s .. alid g.old Isn't this !he year lo show her tiow much you rea lly eere? When she .see! the Ome ga name on her watch she'll know how m~ch extra thought you put into her Chr i.stma.s. /I nd beca us e all Omega \\latches are made lo be the lines! or !heir !<ind, she'll probably never need another watch 1or all !he Christmasesfu come. A-1•1( 1011111 pllll ll't~ "•tell •••• S111i 1 -1•11; •Pl•t• or fr111w .,ua ;4ld r.c.i•t w.it~ .... ., ........................ ,:~a C-1'1( •olld l old h~• btlCt~tl lttl'~ .. S4l! • J. C. .J/uniphrie11 J ewefe1•11 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA • .>\111hor111c~ ~~irl ~1ri;.. Bratcnbo WR~ rt>lurnlnJ! hon1c fro1n "'ork> in Atheni; 110£l her f11thrr . \\'111 Pitt~. 7ft. v.·as on hi~ WIJ~' In 11 nC'11rby rur11I groC""Cry . I( you feel you can't afford dia· monds, !Ake a second loo k at what can be accompllshcd \\'i lh even a few or the 1iniest. A few tiny dia· 111onds on a highly polished back- ~round are as impressive as lhe j?lcam in a prelty eye. Wt'll be happy to help you pick a design to suit your taste and budget. •• CONVENIENT TER MS IAN~AMlRICARD-MASTER CHAR GE 2~ YEA~S SAM [ LOCATION )HONE ~41·1401 l~Ov I • • H~niing1on ·oeaeh Founta.ill Valley I ~ 5. seeTIGli~ a+ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, '"CAllFO"RNI - • -. Today's Fliial N.Y. Stoeks ' ·---'WEDl'IE"SD.l. Y, NOVEt;ilER-10, are- ' ' Beaeh Buy OK'd Monterey Bill May Affect Others SACRAi\1£NTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan has signed legislation to give the city of Alonftrey authority to buy a b~ach threatened "'ifh urban development under Redevelopment Agency authority. The bill by Assenlblyman Roberl Wood tR-Greenfield J. would give legal authority for completion of a tent ative agree1nent. reached bi>t\vecn the cily and a builder. ll will allov.• the cit.v to '. buy the ocean frontage portion of the propuSf'd develop1nent site to guarantee 1>erinanent public access. Wood said his measure. allhough,spt'Cirically designed to help ri 1ontere~·. could have broad statewide implications. lie said O\'er half of C11lifornia 's 1,100 mile coastline is in private ownership. The Wood bill allows a city to define as "blighted" land in the situtati<ln where open oceanfront w11hin 1 city may be cli:>sed to the public by deveJo~ ment. Supervisors Won't Ente1· ---·· .. JJeacl1 -Ui1if icatio11 Ta11gle 7 By .RU01 NIEDZIELSKI 01 lllf Dt!IY f'ltot 1!1!1 Orange County supervison have refus· ed to enter the legal tangle over unifica- tion of the Huntington Beach Union High School District. They had been asked lo order the Qf. lice o( the County Coupsel to immediately withdraw from representing the Fountain Valley School District in litigation aimed at blocking the unification proposal. Supervisors. however, \'Oled unanimously Monday to file the request by Los Alamlt06 School Dist r I c t Superintendent George Plumlelgh and took no a-ction. Dr. Plumleigh"-t demand was based on the opinion that the County Cou1Uel's of. fie~ "has the resporu;ibillty or delending the County Committee on School District Otganiiation v.•hich has approved the plan. and not Fountain Valley which is challenging it. The dispute over !he plan 1vill be aired Holdup Suspect With Loot, Toy Pistol Caught A f..forrfebe\lo man was arrested early today about five minutes after a Hun· tington Beach hamburger stand was ro~ bed by a man armed with a toy pistol. Police identified the suspect as Joseph C. Lopez, 18. Officers said his companion. ~lark S. Deleon, 18, of f\.lonterey Par.k v.·as booked as an accomplice. Police said the robbery occurred at about 1:15 a.m. al the Jack ln lbe Box. 16311 Beach Boulevard. David S. Porter manager of the stand, 1aid a man came to the drive-through \l'indow, pu!led out what appeared to be a blue steel revolver and demanded the money out of the cash register. Porter said he put the money in a sRck 11nd gave it to the man who fled on foot. As a description of the suspect v.•as being broadcast to f-luntinglon Beach police units. Officer Blaine Da~id spotted a man dri,•ing a car who matched the description of the bandit. He stopped the car at Gothard Street and Ffeil Avenue and questioned the l\1·0 occupants. topez and Deleon. David alleged he found the gun and a Jack In the Box sack conlainiog $84 in the car. in Superior Court next i\1onday. ~1embers ot the County Com mittee have been ordered to "show cau~e.. why they adopted the plan. The committee has traditionally recei\'· ed legal advice from the county counsel but when Fow1tain Valley decided to challenge the plan. the attorneys swit- ched their allegiance. Chier County Counsel Adrian Kuyper justified the switch on the grounds that hi~ office has the legal duty to defend school districts but not the commitlee, which he described as a state agency. Members of-the tl·man committee meanwhile have hired a private la1i.• firm to represent lhem in Afo11day's Superior Court hearing. At issue is a unification plan which would divide the high school district into four new unified school systems. each serving students from kindergarten through 12th grade. The school systen1s \.\'hich would be af- fected by the division are not in agree· ment on the plan and ha\'e been battling each other for weeks. · Proponents of the plan are the Hun- tington Beach City School District. the Seal Beach School District and the Los Alamitos School District. ChaUenging the plan through legal ac· lion, in addition to the Fountain Valley School District. arc the high school district, the Ocean View School Dislrict and the Westminster School District. The latter three have hired private attomey.s to press their case but no formal action has yet ~ filed in the courts. Dr. 11fike 'Bt:ick, Superintendent of the F'ountain Valley School District. this morning described Plumleigh 's effort as "thro"'!ng sand in the gears." •le and the other three superintendents are opposing the plan on the grounds thal the division would crea!e impo\'erished conditions in the fountain Valley. Ocean View and \\'estminster area. The plan's proponents howe\·cr allege that Dr. Brick 's claim is unfounded and that they have statistics proving all of the school districts would share an equal amount of 18xable income. In addi!loo. they say, the division would preserve community identity. Action on the plan is stalled until the court mokes its decision on h1onda y. lf the court rules in favor or the committee. it will be submitted to the state Board of (See. TANGLE. Page ti Reinecke's Ex-aide , Opens Fire • SACRA!\IEr..'TO I UPI 1 -The fom1er lop aide of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke tod2.y accuser\ him of spending hundred"s of thousands of taxpayers dollars to canl· paign for governor and of conducting an "undercover'' conspiracy against Gov. Ronald Reagan. · The charges by Hal Steward, No. l assistant to the lieutenant govemor" were contained in a letter released today to newsmen and sent to Reinecke Tuesday. Steward said he wanted to explain why he "resigned" his $20.000-a·year post a5 special executive assistaat. Other top aides privately said he was fired. Reinecke said Steward, on the job only 8even "'eeks, left by "mutual consent." The shakeup follo"'ed a dispute over release of a preared speech lexl in . wh ich Reinecke criticized slate employe efficiency and salary increases. Reinecke and other top aides were not in11nediately available for comment on Steward's Jetter. Ste~·ard told Reinecke he "resigned'' because: -"Tl\e use by yciu and members ot your staff of bundrcdJ. of thousand a of dollars in taxpayers money t0lely to conduct a campaign for your election to governor in 1974." -"The efforts by senior members of your staff, with your knowledge, to con· duct a conspiracy, undercover. against Gov. Reagan, bis admlni1tration. and his slafL" -- -"Your refusaJ, despite repeated recommendations and urging by me to attempL to identify with or oonsider the ethnic problems and aspirations of 1nembers or Califomaa·s minorit y grQups.·· Puncli Pokes At Playboy LONOON fAP ) -Punch, the British humor magazine that dates back to days 1vhen the sight or a woman's ankle made strong men pant, went Ptasboy today with stx. nudes, (!irty jokes and a portrait of Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner stark naked. The parody or Playboy, produced Vt'ilh Hefner's pennission and help, raised eyebrows and temperatures in the stuffier London clubs, where Punch has been Establishment fare for 129 years. On the cover was Scandinavian actres! Julie Ege in the nude but protecli\1tly surrounded by barbed wire. I 11 the centerpiece. v.· h e r e- Ptayboy prints its r e m I n i o e playmates. Punch put a four-page fold-out drawinp; of Hefner. bedded on the Stars and Stripes and attired only in his habitual pipe. A typical article was b y "classicist. Mahmoud Jenkinson.'' who owns "the largest collection or i!rotic lkons in North Dakota, and heeds a team of sex courue.llors at Houston Space Center whOse job it is to de.arouse moonbound astronauts." ~-,··-:-' . -· "' r.' " . • • ~ ... ~ ' ' . -" . ' ~ . DAILY ,!LOT Sltlf 'Mtf Bewitching "Proph~l Jerry," \Vho elai~s to be a \\•arlock (~ale \Vitch), cntertail_ls at Huntington Beac.h Pier. He appeared on pier Tuesday dressed 1n blue and black robe, green turban, \vhite boots and canary yellow pants. He .announced he is getting out of the \varlock biz and &oin& -mto show biz-inste ad-be cause "there's more bread there!' Seal Beach Council Urges Action to Halt Freeways An immediate hal.t to plans for the Pacific Coast Freeway and extension of the 605 freeway has been urged by the Seal Beach City Council. Councilmen took 1heir stand 1'1onday night by unanimously endorsing a rcsolu· lion to stop the freeway. ]t was drartcd by Councilman Franklin B. Sales . The effort to block the rreeway was backed by a 400-signature petition of more than 400 residents of the College Park West tract bordering on Long Beach. Me1nbers of the five-man council arc asking the state legislature to '·res- cind any and all appropriations'' from the Pacific Coast Freeway and the exlensioo o'f the 605 Freeway south from 7th Street. In hi~ resolution. Sales stated that.the Pacific Coasl Freeway "could" serlouSly deteriorate the quality of life in the College Park \Vcsl portion or Seal Beach.'' The adopted freeway route. which "'ould cut a swath through a bird refu ge on the Seal Beach Naval \Veapons Sta· lion, has been under consistent attack by both councilmen and envi ronmentalists who are urging the State Highway Coni- rnission to "unadopt" the route. Sales and the other council members claim the st1tistlcs and conditions which were used to jUJtify no longer apply. They said any advantages of its con· struclion •·certainly do not outweigh the l remendously neg<1tivc environmental and ecological effects the freeway would have on the Cily or Seal Beiich." The route, earlier adopted by the Cities of Seal Beach, Long Beach and Hun· tington Beach, has in recent months been criticized by city orficials from both Long Beach and Seal Beach. 0£ the three cities. only Huntington Beach has taken no action to rescind its support. The latest attack from Seal Beach urges highway· planners to consider other methods of solving traffic Problems than "seemingly never-ending construction of freewa ys." Beach Trustees .. ,,_,., Slate Tower School W orksliop \Viii the -landmark tower campus of ·•1untlngton Beach High School survive? Will it be demolished or renovated? Police said !he gun used was a toy rei.~ica or a .4•·40 Colt slngle·actWn revolver. ' Minority Bi ·d Accepted Trustees or the l{untington Beach Union High School District are getting ready to answer that ti cklish question durlng a-workshop session on the campus Nov. 23. Although the architecturally.acclaimed Oiler campus has survived numerous earthquakes, it has been termed unsare and stale officials say It must be either. reconstructed or replaced by 1975. • Ma1·iJuana Found In Surf Board Lll{UE. KAUAI , 11alVl.ii (AP) -\\'hen .John A. Reed arrh•ed on Kauai I1land for a surfing vacatfon, a police orfice.r took a close loo\: at Reed 's surfboard. The officer called for asaistance and Sgt . Dennis Higashi or the Kauai polkc vk e squad idtntified tbt leaf decort.1.lon under the ribergh1M on the board as aenulne marijuana. The 18·vear-old Santa Barbara youth ~:as arre.Sted for unl11wful possesston or marijuana. He wa!i released on $100 ball and \\1n be arr•l&ned In district court on Nov. 19. PoUce slM it wa~ the second lime an arre!t had been made for possu:slon or m1 tlju•na foond embedded ln 'lhe design rf a $Urfboard ' Huntington Trustees Hold E1nergency Report Meeting By JOAN~E REYNOLDS '-0: flMI DtllY 'lltl $1111 Ignoring the majority report or an arbltration con1n1ittce. trustees of the •runtlngton Beach City (elementary) School District Tuesday night voted to accept the ll'linorily recommendations. The majority rerommeodallons. ac· cepted by the district's 173·mt.mbu teachers' association, 'was complied by UCLA-graduate professor Frederick l\teycn and supported by ROJi!er Kuhn. who represented the teachers on the re\•lew committee. The · mtnority report ~·as v.·ritten by Charles Pahner. assistont superintendent or the district and the \n1sttes, rcpresen- tallve to fbe r!vie1v committee. '·The morale or te~chfirs i~ low, I don't "·ant la ~ 11 go an:. Jli°"cr " comn1~nted Dotty l\lcClure, president or the teacher'• association after the bGard's action. Teachers are being summoned t.o an emergency meeting tonlght at Gisler School. The 7 p.m. meeting was described es 11 "crisis forum " by Mrs. McClure. One or the major points of Palmer's report was a recommendation that the 2.7 percent pay raise granted to teachers tarller this ytar. be maintained. l\feyer's report recommended an ad· dilinnal 2.2. perctnt Increase for 1 total ra.Ltt or 4.9 percent. Palmer said h.l.s 1uggestion was based on lhe fact that 1 study of the other e:ltmcntary school districts: in the county showtd the Huntington Beath distrk:t h•s !he fourth hlghe!lf. at1rting salary. the lhlNI hl1thMt mklpoint salary Ind the se- cond highest max imum salar}'· The meet and confer process which currently £over n s teacher-trustee negotiations will also be chan~ed with the acceptance or P 11 I m e r s recom· mendatiom. Rather than accepting mediation from the: Amer1can Arbitration Association. Palmer sugge.~ted the third member of the review commJtlee be selected from a list submitted by the Dean of the School of EduC!ation at USC. • Confidentiality also will be withdrawn lrom the process ol negbtiatiOO: '1Wllh both parties btlng able to communicate freely to the staff and the community, ( believe a basic right of freedom of in· formation and communication will bt !Set REPOR'I'. l'•Jt tl District Superintendent Jack S. Roper has invited the public to particpate in the \\'Orkshop during wh ich the district architects are expected to present several alternatives to demolition. These include restructuring the present facility and a plan whereby the tower and ~udltorlum would ~ht retained whlle buUding new classf'oonu to blend with the architectural scheme. Roper said that a restrictive lkent tax override levied for the pasi two years Y..'OUld create a special building fund of about $2 miUion by the end of the year. The money can only be used for the Im· prove.ment of the Huntington Beach JUgh SChool campus. • Board action on the graceJul campus had been tabled for !eVeral years to work out • proposal which would please a large stgrne.nt or the community desiring to -pmtn't tht campu! and its beUtow r-. .. . Qualifiers .. Outlined By Panel From \Vire Se:r\'lces \\'ASHING1'0N -ll'he Cost of Living Council announced today that 45 P.f!.Tctnt of total ~.S. sales and roughly JO Percent of pay increases affecting workers will come in for close government control during lhe posl·freeze economic period, In addition, the council announced a group of new exemptions for the period that will follow the Creeze. They include ell used products, such as used cars ex· isling real estate and in some cases 'new homes, and commercial and industrial rents. The council said price increases must be reported to the government before they go into effect if a company has ·~n· nual sales of $100 million or more. Some 1.300 companies in the United States, representing 45 percent or tolal U.S. sales, are in this category. the council said . As for pay increa ses, all those which 'vould affect S.000 1i.•orkers or more will have to be reported to the government before they can go into effect. The council said 500 economic unit!, presumably meaning bargaining units, are included in this category, represen- ti ng 10 percent of the total national \Vorle. force. The surprise in the news conferenct was the large number of new exemptions that will be allowed after the freeze ex· • pires midnight Sunday. Raw sugar, du es to noni:trofit organiza-tion~ international shippl!Jg___r a t e s • royalties aiif <.'Opyrights for materials rurnlshed for publication are among the new price items that wlll be exem13t front controls. So will C:ispou l sales by the govern· ment. such as sale of abandoned or con- fiscated property, Custom services and products made to individual order. such as leather goods, clothing. wigs and toupees, and fur apparel , will also be ex· empt. The exemption on ralv unprocessed agricultu~al products, financi~l securities and exports will continue in effect after the freeze expires. Donald Rumsfeld, director of the coun- cil, to ld reporters that other exemption! are beinl( considered and may be an- nounced later in the week. He also said he would not rule out ex· emptions to the pay standard announced earlier by the Pay Board. But Rumsfeld would not amplify that statement. The Pay Qoard has left itself a loophole that may stretch wide enough to squeeze a 12 percent pay raise through. But it may toke months to find out. ,.he three-level structure announced by the council would require prior approval of the bijigest-companies. BelO\V that level. the council said coril· panics with annual sales of $50 million to $100 million will have to rePQrt price, ('Ost and profit information qUarterly and £inns with t.000 to 5,000 workers will have to report pay increases when they take effect. Businesses below the largest and medium·sized categories will be subject to spot checks by the government, but they will not have to report their in· (See PAY BOARD, Page JI Orange Coast Weatlaer· Heavy fog along the coast '10o night through mid·moming on Thursday. the -v.•eather 18dy re- ports, willt highs along the coast a nol·strhigh 60, rising to 70 in· land. Lows tonight between 48 and 52. INSWE TODAY Local t ttttttOh1mt 11t 1ilU tu peak tl,ii tinie of ytar a>Jd to· day's tntef"talnmttit 1 e ct t on servt .s up a .,n1oroasbord o/ theater ond music. t1eu:•. Papea 22 and 23. l lr!hl ti •••lfftt • C1llltrftft 11 Car-CttRff" 11 Clltcklllll U' 11 Cltulfltll 11'44 CMtlkt M CrMIWWll H °""' Nttlttt u 1•1191111 ,.,. ' lt11trt11Rrrlff11 U·U , lllfllf><t 4J.JI "-K'" as ARR Ll"'ft' U Mtlllt1 • M.itrlt,. Lktlltor\ )I ' Mtft ft'! Ut"lricl 1•·11 Mtwltl U-1) M~tvtl 11111 .. 1 '4t Nf!ltllll Mtw1 4-11 Or•t11• c ... n1w 11 ,,.A )6 '1'"'9 hrttr • ·-" M-1t Ot, ltt111CrdrR II l'ttk Mlrtltll .. .., Ttltwltltll tt TllHltn '*Mt ' WM!tltr -4 '*-'• Ntwt lf·U Wwt41 Ntwt .... . - -flislaheled· ·-vitamins Recalled • w,dn,Mi1y, Nov1mbtr 10, 1971 • -- '3 B~y Areas Fouled? Water Quarantine Could Be Considered By CANDACE PEARSON ~ Of 11'11 Cl•Hr Plltl ll•ll Ballinger said lhe problem areas had the least amount of flushing action and were gene.rally shallower. .=-:--w*SH!liG N-Ci\Pl-=Th< FOA ano - nounced, tod3y it has reciiled dur~~u;;-­ Jasl halffYfar about 105 miUipn vit~min C pills which it said "'ere Inadequately Three areas of Ne .... ·port Bay a~ so polluted that the. possibility or quaran- -tihina--t.Qtm q_ainst _!Wimmi._ng 1 should~ considered, an Orange Coun y haroor·1 district engineer said Tuesday. • Analyzing county heal\h department tests over the past three year5. James Ballinger said \'lest Newport channels, the •Rhine Channel and the undeveloped areas ~of the Upper Bay failed ron· sistently to meet state pollution stan- dards for water coritact . He suggested solutions of adding oxygen lo the \\'aters to aid marine i ife . -deepeniffg.lhe -channels or intercepting drainage into the "Breas-:--COmmi~sioners were nol sure What to do s<:heduled at the morning 's Joint Harbor Committee. composed ot commissione r!I and Newport Beach C<1uncilmen: but it was cancelled. The report. whictl will include a study ot run-off and drainage, will be made at the next committee meeting i n Dtcember. ;.·l~beled and .posed a thre,at to heart pa· • Jtents trying to v.·ard off colds. • In its 14th major viUimin C re call since .:'May, the FDA ordered the removal from ·~ ~ "S1om of-about 8.8 mllllon tablets -· .. ·manufactured by the Cleon J\1attcson Co., _ ~oing business as the Sctabid Co. of Portland. Ore. . The agency v.'arhed the public last May • • "26-27 that excessive use of some vitamin "~ tablets, containing undeclared sodium • ~llscorbate rather than ascorbic acid m<iy • ~~ hazardous to persons .on Jov. .. salt diels. • "The problem has been magnified by .lhe recent popularity of heavy dosages of •Vitamin C to fight colds," an FDA ;<Spokesman said in an interview. 1 ·Last year. Nobel-prize wfnning sc ientist ·.~inus Pauling published ·"Vitamin C and .~·the Common Cold." in whlch he recom· __fuiend~ claily intake of one to three ·grams of vitamin C. and the increasing of ;dosages to four to ten grams at the onset -~fa cold . .·'!\ • ··wnen Pauling came out with his ·:000.k." the spokesman said, ' ' i t ··:;stimulated such a demand for ascorbic ·acid that manufacturers ran into trouble . .getting enough and they started using '' · • . ~&01jlum ascorbate. J.~-"'SOdium ascorbate is just as good a ··fjl'C>Urce of vitamin C as ascorbic acid ex- : ~pt that it has the additional salt con· ~#nt. .... ~. "We have nothing against them using this substitu~. but we're very · much ~ainst people nut knowing they're get· • Jlng-tQe salt," the spokesman said. -'i:' The FDA estimated thal at least 540.000 pl· the Setabid. tablets remain in thE!' , ___ J!iirket, prim_arily Jn. re.tail .health-food • ·s_tores, under more than 100 pri vate· _ '4istributor labels. _~The recalled PiUS are Vifamfn C Rose . }tips supplement. PN 259-C: Blueberry- , '"1!.avorcst vitamin C supplement. PN755-C: ·iemoh-flavored vitamin C supplement. PN 840-C; orange-flavored vitamin C sup- : l_fement, · PN 975-C, and ASerola-flavored ··vitamin. C supplement, PN 120.C. ·~1 · . : From Page 1 ::PAY BOARD • • • . :, " .. Gividual wage and price actions to the · government ~ However. Unle$s specifically exempted :..;from tbe-Phas-e II controls, all companies ,y,<jlJ ~·subject 10 tile ·guidelines. and --"-decis'°"s-oHhe-price-commissioirand the p y board, ·.,-: Rumsfe\d emphasized at a new~ con- ference that· the wage-price freeze im -. ·.posed by President Nixon·o11 Aug. 15 will .be feplaced by the Phase II controls at • <Jnidnight SaJurday and th.tot there will Pe ''no gap, no haitus," :-, He said the price commission would -4.lsclose its guidelines and standards on '..!Thursday and that the entire Phase II orga!lization would be in place by the · be&inning of the week. .. Fron& Page 1 !:i'ANGLE ... _ .... )!iiucation for placement on the June 1972 . J?tl.mary ballot. "The plan Would join both the Fountain .fJlley and Ocean View districts into a . ~w unified school system and the Seal ~ach and Los Alamitos districts Into -,.nother system. The Westminster and Hunington Beach City School Districts v:ould initiate unifi cation along their own ·!>oundaries. OIAH•I COAST DAILY PILOT OIUJfGe COAST .. UllTSHINO O'M,All'V llob•l'f N. w,,, '""i<llfll' •!'Id ,.u!Jll•htt J•di: R. Curlt'( \'kl l>1'1i0Wlf •'Id Gwwtl Mo1111•g1t Th~•• K.tevll 1:111...- n.o""' A, Mu,p,liiae Mt...,lftf El!IOr Al111 o;.~;, W•I Ortntt Coull!'( l!d!IW He11tl .. I•• k«• Office 1117$ l11ch l oM11•11C M1:'1i119 AJilr1n1 P.O. l11t 1f0, 92,41 Ott-Off'kel ' Uq,N ... (II! 222 ... ,., "~ C.lt Mtfl: D W•f ..... 11•Ht N.-t l •UI: 2.JlJ H•-' l>Ou'""'"' ... c.iem.ue: .w ...... tJ c.a.w. ~-· Mariner Orbit _. .. Artist:s-conception shows Mariner 9 in orbit around Mars after 248· million mile journey from Earth. Orbit of red planet is scheduled Sat- urday. Mariner 9's mission is to take television pictures of Mars, mapping about 70 percent of the planet's surface, and to study :r.far· tian temperatures and atmosphere. Orbits of red planet's two moons also are detailed. · '_ Ballinger presented the comparisons of two tests: both concentrated !Cklav sum· mer samplings al 4"1 stations in the.bay to the county Harbor. Beaches and Parks Com1nissio.n, \\•hich had been considering ordinances requiring locking of com- mercial boat toilets while in the harbor. After hearing that the Lo\.1-·er Bay wa s the only area. which met st andards with Jo\\' level., of j>ollulion, Cllstrict official Larry Leaman said. "Many 'f>eople directly relate water quality to boat ers. but the bulk of where the boats are n1oored is the least problem." with the figures and Harbol' District Director Kenneth Sampson qid they· \Vere "only indicators . Comprehensive cold weather samples haven't been taken yet." , . ~ But the statistics did seem lo make the commission &tiy awlly from re-en§cting the ordinance conce rning c::ommerrial vessels, "'·hich had been returned to them bv the Board of Supervisors because It Was O\'erly selecti \'e, A public heari ng on all related matter~ of \\'ater quality, including pump-pout facilities. disposal of wa ste and houseboat~ \\'!!S sug~sted ~ut not set, A rt port on pollutiOIJ sources was Co11rt Lawsuit Sampson said the district's studies \\'ere not meant lo make people think th11t ·boaleFS and water users were ci>nstantl)' abusing the water. "r-.fost of them have great respect tor it ." he said. And he added that part of the problem \vith the Upper Bay was the stonn and subsequent flood ing in 1969 ~·hich filled the bay with large amounts of run-off. Commissioner Us.ab agreed w it h Sampson, saying that he \\'as tired of a sclectf\>e ·view and \\'a nted the problem rela ted nationwide, "\Vhat the guy does fo his property in Denver affects the ocean out he1e,'"he said. Commissioners took no action on Ball· inger's report . other than to react to the ----------------------------'-. ..___ extensive statistics, \\'hich Commissioner ~lartin Usab called "scarev ." Hunti11gtori Music .Shop Militants Plead Guilty In Coast J(idnap Chase By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 lht P•ll)o l'liel Still A pair of black militants who led lawmen on a three-county chase in a bizarre bid -ironically -to obtain money to free BlaCk Panthers now in prison today face the possibility of life behind bars too. ' ' . , The men pleaded gu ilty to two counts each of-kidnaping for the purpose of rob- ber}<, in a surprise move Tuesday at their prellminar.y hearings in. Long Beach Municipal Court. Henry L. Madden. 25, and Dennis A Griffie, 18, set some -type of record in their Oct. 26 rampage. Taking three hostages in a Lucky P.1arket robbery that netted $6,134, Mad- den and Griffie alleged ly holed up at the Leslie Dreis home on Orellano Way in Laguna Hills. Police tipped off during the holdup kept on thei r trail by ground and air. Bargaining with surrounding officers ror the Jives of Monique Dreis, 7, and two hostages from the market, the suspects finally continued on in a commandeered Orange County shfrifri; car. The suspects fled. the Drei~ home before a $20,Q90 ransom collected by lhe market chain -aSsertedly deStinNI fiir Front Page 1 REPORT ... met." he said in his recommendation. Palmer also recommended that the board nol grant health and welfare' benefits v»hich total about $15 per teacher, based on the co'unty survef which shows them second in such benefits. Another focal point of the long-standing dispute between trustees and teacher~ has been the district's curriculum writing policy. As it now stands. teachers re ceive no exlra compensation for \.\'filing and developing curricula . The majority recommendation sug- gested seeking fund s -possibly federa l grants -to pay teachers who do this \.\'Ork in their spa're time. Palmer's report defended the district's policy. noting that teachers. as pro- fessionals , are "expected to provide more lhan just one scr\'iC'e in the scope of their professional employment to the school district." He did suggest. ho1vever, th;it the ;:ivailability of federal fu nds for cur- riculum projects be studied. The board's action Juesday marks the latest maneuver in the negotiations battle !hat began more than six months ago. Jn r-.tay the teachers association called a halt to negotiations and asked that im- pass'e. proceedings be irlvoked. Ai that time they \\'anted the. three-me mber review board to be formed to arbitrate the dispute. But it wa sn't until Sept. 23 that the board agreed to set up the re view com- mittee consisting of Palmer, Kuhn and r-.1eyers . itean\\'hite,, trustees voted lo give the teachers the 2.7 percent raise. The ma jority report or the committ ee \1'as given In the board Oc!. 19 and a week later Patrner made his report. Atito 'A ttacked' On SD F1·ec\vay A Garden.Grove 'ffistn narrowly avoided disaster nn the San Diego freeway Tues- day night \\'hen a metal r.ar wheel wa~ dfop ped into the path or his car, Fountain r alley police said today . Evertt! McElro~·. 30. lold police he was <!riving northbound on the free\\·ay at the' Bllshard 'SLrecl nvtrcrosslng at about 10 p.m. when the wheel was thrown or drop- ped into the path of his car. He said he ~wervrd to miss ii and the obJtct ,s truck th' Side of his car, tearing oH a chrome strip No suspects could be found J>y •police. One officer noted 1h111 the wheel left .a four ·lncb gasn in lhe fr~tway pavtng. • f black militant use -could be del ivered to them at the scene. Madden and Griffie, the latter an East Coast runaway, were finally captured at a roadblock nea r Buckman Springs in San Diego County, where they tossed out shotguns and freed their remaining hostages. Returnee!' to Long Beach, the pair were charged with a total of 14 felony counts between them. Guilty pleas offered Tuesday after a • week of negotiations conferences between prosecutors and public defenders indicate !hey \\'ill get a measure of leniency. Madden and Griffie were taken to court in hand cuffs and body chains under heavy guard by nine officers to prevent any possi ble escape attempt. Each could re ceive two life senten ces on the dou ble kidnap counts, but state /a\\' forbids their being consecul i\'e terms. Judge Kenneth E. Sutherland also n1adc no formal finding that the pair us- ed v.·e~pons in the kidnaping, which \\'ould have added a niandatory five to lO years on !he possible life senten ces. 1'erms_ of the negoti~ted guilt y p\eas in- clude d1sm!skal of the remaining kid- nflping <ind armed robberv counts faced by both Madden and Griffie \\'hen they are formally" sentenced. They are due in court a,i:ain Friday for presentence hearing ,at which time ·it is likely Judge Sutherland \\•ill rule hostages taken did not suffer actual bodilv harm. , A market janitor freed by the 'capture, after spending the entire I~ hour spree in custody of the suspects, described Mad- den and Griffie as having treated th em \~·ell A won1an bakery clerk fron1 the Luckv r...ta r~et was hysterical. but o,therwise ncit physically harmed . Chances of life terms would be somewhat reduced if the judge concurs . State Senators Oppose Merger Of 2 Gas Firms \VASHINGTON !AP) -Californ ia's two Democratic senators. Alan Cranston and John V. Tunney, announced !heir op- position todav to a bill lo wa ive antitrust laws to preserve !he 1957 merger of El Paso Nat ura! Gas Company with P;:,cific Nor1h"•est Natural llas Company. They said El Paso has not been able to prove clearly that consun1crs 'Will be materially harmed if "this giganlic private relier bill" is not enacted . "We believe !here has been entirely too much political invect ive involved In this case." they said in a joint statement. They expr\SSed firm con v i ct ion , however. that ~fagnu son and 100fhfr \\'estern senators sponsori ng !he bill did so in \\'hat each considered the best in- terests Of his constituents. They said there is no basis as yet for a determination th&t divestilure li tigation i1till pendlng before the U.S. District Court in Denver will result in two weak corn1>tlito rs in the natural gtts business . "\.\'e believe ihere is ample ftstifica1\on ·lo ('Onclude just the opp<>:;ite." they said. ''\\re th ink H is likely !hat divestiture could result in substantial benefits to <.:allforn ia and the Pacific North\\'t'SI by c::fcaung two strong companies. e11ch competlng to develop new wurces of gas reserves for the wesl coast." Chat·tcr <.:ouuu iltec Studies l\fayor Iss ue Membtrs of tht Charter Revision Com- millft of Hunllngton Beach will continue their st ud lts of a possible full timt mayor pn5ilion at their n'letUng Thursday. • The mtttlng "'111 be h<'ld at 7:30 p.m. In Hall C of the Murdy PJJrk C.omrnunlty Center, 7000 Norma Oril't. The publJc ls in\•ited. _. In the \Vest t\e1vport ·channels, the _fa ilure at meeting bacteria tests wen t from 12, percent in 1968 -to 21 percent in 1970. Dissolved ox.vgen tests were fafled at a percentage of 35 in 1968 and 44 in 1970.' ·The Rh ine area . just beh ind the city hail. had an increase in ba cteria count with only three percent in 1968 but 41 per- cent in 1970. Its oxygen count was 61 'pcr· cent in 1968. 80 percent in 1970. Undeveloped areas of Upper Bay, a ~ve Dover Shores. showed the greatest increase in bacteria count with 59 percent in 1970 up from th ree percent in 1968. Dissolved oxygen figures mcirked the highest failure increase also up from 29 percent to 63 percent. Only one area, the developed section of Upper Bay, showed any improvement. 1Jissolved oxygen count decreased in 1910 to only four percent from 22 percent Jn Ji!68. Bacteria showed little change , from three to six percent. Lower Bay figures were: bacteri;:,. two and four percent, an.d dissolved oxygen, tv:o percent both years. Youth Arrested After $40,000 Nursery Blaze A 16-year-old Fountain Valley boy has been arrested in connection with a fire which destroyed"$40,0oo worth of trees in a local nursery. Fountain Valley Detective i1arty Eng- quist said the youth was ·arrested Tues· day and charged with arson in the fire a week ago at the Exotica Nursery , 17902 BLLtjiard St. He said an investigation conducted by Lt Richard Feuerstein of the fire .depart· ment established that the fire originated frnm a !;pot in the nursery where high school students gather between classes to smoke cigarettes. An undetermined numher of trees were destroyed in the £ire . Engquist said four or five more arrests are expected in the case. -GEM TALK TODAY by Small But lmpres•iv• The 18th annual Oiainonds-Int er· national .<\\vards collection opened • Accused · of Tape Pi1·acy A Huntington Beach music shop is one of eight Orange County distributors of tapes and records accused of tape piracy in an Orange Cou nty Superior Court lawsuit filed by four nationally kno\\"·n manufacturers of tapes, records and recording equipmfnl. William and l\1argie J. Weingand of the Great Music Revival, 115 1.tain St.. are among the distributors ordered to appear Nov. 18 in the cou rtroom of Superior Court Judge J.E.T. ··Ned" Rutter. Judge Rutter_jssued a restraining order banning a!l sales of the affected labels by the defendants immediately after the fil- ing of the lawsuit by Columbia Broad·. ca sting System. A and M Record s. \Varner Bros. and the Atlantic Recording Corp. All four companies accuse the de fen· danlS of pirating carefully protected labels by using magnetic tapes to make inferior recordings of work s by artists under exclusive CQ11trac1 to the manufac~ lurers. , The companies point out in the !a¥:suit that lheir manufacturing costs in con- nect ion with the labels listed &mount to at least $26 million. they identify the labels lnvolved as "Reprise''. "Wa.roe11". ''Epic''. "'Okeh''.-~••tolumbla", ''CBS''• "Odysse.y"...and ,;Harmony", Park, Rec Meeting 1' Eyes l\'.Tany Topics , A variety of topics, including Halloween , parades. Christmas vacation progr;ams {lOd little league will occupy the Hun· lington Beach Recreation and Parks Commission tonight. Commissioners are !'icheduled to meet at 7:30 p.m. at the ~1urdy Park Com- munity Center. The public is invited . The court action is the second such ' . mov~ in recent months by all four com~ panies to prevent alleged piracy of Iha tapes and records di stributed by them through Orange County dealers. An earlier action was closed before trial v.'ilh the agreement of all defendant'J involved lo end I.heir association with th l!I labels identifi_ed and pay the costs of the lawsuit instig13ted by the manufacturers. Also nameQ, as defendants in the cur· rent aClion \.1-'Cre Mr. Tape Deck and Bryco Sefvice of Anaheim , i1usix ·Bo% and Grif's Sight and Sound of Fullerton, The Music Place of Anaheim , California Car Stereo of Tustin. The Crocodile of Orange and The Stereo Room of Garden Grove. Prison Inmates Discuss Drug s Three inmates of the state prison in Chino will offer their \'iews on the drug scene tonight irl the Huntington Beach High· Shhoo\ cafeteria. 'The 7:30 .o'clock symposium-also will feature two ex-drug users from Teen Cha!lenge, an Orange County youth movement working to rehabilitate drug users anCl potential addicts. The progruo is sponsored by the Adult Education Division of the Huntington Beach Union High School District. Eire l(ills 4 Youths GALION. Ohio (AP) -Four children y,·ere killed toda y in a mobile home fire at a trailer park. . Firemen said the victims, ages B. 7. 5 and 15 months. were the children of nlr. and r-.trs. Charles E. ·Smith. i. OOMEGA t in Ne\\' i:ork in mid-September. .Je\Veler s from 30.countries entered I their designs , and from over 2,200 ; pieces. one gets a view of diamond 11 fa shions for the coming year. l ! l\lost people \\'On't ~e surprised to learn that rings \Vere the major-H--- <ittraction. but they may be sur- prised to learn of the importance of ,·er~· srnall dian1ond$. Over half t!1e \\'inning designs featured ltny d \amo"'nd s in combination \\'ith. other precious and semi-precious stones. 'l'he piece contaiil.ing the most \Vas a ring \l'ith 305 diamondS. ~but a total \\'eight of only two carats. So1ne pieces featured semi-prec· ious stones-n1erely "dusted" \\1ith tiny gems. al1nost as though they haa been dipped in glitter. , C:histmas wrapped . in 14k solid gold Isn't this the year lo show her hO\v 'rnvch you really care? \"then s1le sees the omega name on Iler watch she'll knOw how m1tch e)Ctra thought you put into her Christmas. And ,because ,a.II Omega watche s a re made to be the finest of their kind, she'll probably never need anothe r watch !or all the Christmases to come. J. c -A-1oc 9011d cold ll•1eetel "'•itll •..• ,tns ·-1•1( wt111t crt )tl.~w t Ol\d $01~ lltt~l1t Wiit~ ,,.,,,,,, . ., . .,,,,,,,,.,,,.,.,,1:(0 i:;-t4K 1olrd gold l1~k bl'lttlet watUI , .MU ' 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA If you feel you can't af!ord dia· n1onds, take a second look a1 '"hat can be accomplished \Vilh even a fe\\' of the tiniest. ·A few tiny diB· mond s on a highly Polished back- ground are as impressive as the gleam in a pretty eye. \Ve'lt be happy lo help you pick a design t~ suit your taste and budget. CONVi:NllNi TERMS IANICAM[R!CAJIO-MASTER CHARGE 24 YE.t.RS SAM[ LOCATION PHONE S41·l401 fAOV) ( . I ·• ,. .. • -. ·1 • • • ' ' Wtdnfsday, Nowmber 10, 1971 H • • DAILY "ttr :I Air~ Cal G~~s New 'Compromise' Pact ' ' . • Tuna Boats Captured ByE.cuador SAN DIEGO (APl -Ecuador captured four U.S. tuna boats and fired a shot across the bow of one. damaging it slig ht· ly. the Aroerican Tunaboat Association said today. .. It was the HrSt seizw·e since ~1arch 27 in the running dispute wilh several na. lions involvi ng territorial fishing \Vaters. The Ecuadorian gunboat's' shot damag. ed the bow of the 1,000-ton Venturess but none of the 14 crew members was i11jur· ed. skipper li.faurice Correia notified the San Diego-based association. August Felando, general manager. said Correia identified the Ecuadorial patrol c~aft as the L. C. 61. a convetted U.S. Coast Guard patrol boat. The $2-million Venttiress-' os its maiden voyage. \vas boarded and the radios seal· ed but Felando said Correia \vas "able to sneak off a radio messoge early today."' He Identified· the other tuna boats seized Tuesday night as Trinidad. the Blue f\'leridian and the Denise Mari , all based in San Diego. The boats \Vere 65 miles southwest ·or Salina s in inte rnational... \\'aters. Felando said. Ecuador claims 200 miles off it:; coast as territorial waters wh ile most other maritime natio ns recognize a 12- mile off.shore coaStal zone. Felando said Ecuador seized 26 of the U.S. tuna boats earlier this year and levied $1.3.1 million in fines aod:penalties. fie said 30 confirmed U.S, fishing boat seizures have taken place this year off Ecuador. the most of any year in the decade-0td dispute. The fines and penalties paid by the U.S. fleet eventually &re repaid to the boat 0¥.·ners by an appropria tions bill of Con- gress. Jn \Vashington. however. Chairman Edward A. Garmatz (Q.f\ld.J. or the 11ouse P.ferc hant P.1arine. and Fisheries Comm ittee. said he. had been informed by the State Department a fifth vessel. the City of Panama , also had been seized. Garmatz said the City of Panama and the Denise li1ari were seized despit e the fact they possess licenses perm itting them to operate in the disputed waters. Gals Ma y 'Have Fewer Problems With Circulation Because women are. '·softer" and have more nexible arteries than men do, lh ey may have fe.,11er heart attacks. a female researcher said today in Anaheim. Dr. Grace P.1. Fischer, of the U11 iversi1y of Pennsylvania at Philadelph ia, told the A.qierican Heart Association scientific gathering today in Anahe im t h a t y,·omen's more flexible arteries are less susceptible lo the hardening whi ch strains the hearts of men. '·Ga ls ate probably more Oexible than guys -at least as far as their blood vessels are concerned." she said. Or. Fischer bases her ronclusions on research performed on female rats from Y:hich female hormone producing ovar ies v.·ere removed. Tile female hormone estrogen softens arteries. she t;aid. The rats l!iven injections o( fepiale hormone. replacing the missing sllpply. had softer, more flex ible arterie!> than fhe others. she said. Female rats with neither natural nor injected female hormones deVeloped tougher arteries. A team of physicians from the New Jersey liledical School at Newark told the "gathering that drinking a I coho Ii c .beverages daily for more than two years -even in moderate amounts -causes heart ·damage. Dr. Timothy Reagan. pres~ng part of their research, said the .alcohol causes more fat lo accumulate in the heart and disturbs t he metabolism of fat ty substances. _ ' Dr. S. S. Ahed said experiments showed depressed heart function after ··enlirely normal men and women drank alcohol in non-intoxicating doses.'' Dr. 1\1 . U. Jesr&ni ! a l d the depressant effect of alcohol on the heart may be caused by acete.ldehyde. which is also found in ciga rette smoke. PlCKf1ROO ADDS BOWL TICK ETS A bonus prize -two free passes t.o the Pasadena Bowl for the first place winner each week -was added last week to the PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo, 1he popular ' football season pick·the·wln ner contest. Entry blank for this week's conttsl ap. pears In lhe newspaper today for the last lime lhls y,·eek. It's on Page 30. Dtadline (or this "·eek's entries is S p.m. Thursday (thal means en try must be delivered in person .or by mail by S p.m. to the DA I· l. Y PILOT). Top five winners each v.·eek each receive a SIO gift certificate fron1 Sou th Coast Plaza. • ' • . • ,, • II ' ' • I , • 'I . ' , II ' ' ' . ~ ' '\ I . \ \ '\ I , I I ' ., .. • ..... DAILY l'ILOT sti ff l'bot.1 Six . Conditions Tacked to ~o.te By JACK BROBACK 01 ~ Ol llW l'lltt tt•tl Air Californ ia, roundly condemned by Upper Ne\Vport Bay residents and highly praised by the Orange County business community, won a new five-year lease Tuesday after a atnrmy two-hour hearing . before the Board of Supervisors. The adopted compromise a&reement, proposed by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald \V. Caspers of Newport Beach, did not whQlly please proponents of con· finued air service, nor did it satisfy ·op- ponents . But it 'vas good enough to win apwova1 by a 4 to 1 margin and there were no boos ·or catcalls when the final vote was recorded. There has been some pointed remarks from the audience and sporadic applause as speaker after speaker on either side.exhorted the board members. Only Supervisor David L. Baker of Ga rden Grove voted against the new lease and only because he thought it should be given more study The co n1promise lease extension as of· fered by Caspers included six conditions: ed · to construct or lease termlhal facUlties independent of the county's coo- trols. He also asked that a public hearing be held, that the Ecolog I noise monitorin' data be m4de available to the public and the city and fhat Newport Beach be cOn- suJted on leases. Kymla also read a long list of reasons .why the city's comlitions should "'be adopted including the fact that the Harbor Area already bears the burden ot all of the scheduled commercial )et operations in the county, that tbe upper Bay environment should be protected. Also that airport impact a re a homeowners will continue to demonstrat.a unified opposition to airport expansion plans and they have claims of more than $28 million in damages . DESPITE DAN EMORY'S CHAR TS AND NEWPORT PROTESTS, AIR CAL CARRIED THE DAY Long·standing Airpor' Foe Stands Agai n Threatening Court Action to Ab1te Noise Pollution -The lease to be for five years with the opportunity for .rev iew at one year in- tervals at the anniversary date with op- lion to cancel subject lo 30 days written notice. Costa Mesa City Councilman Jack Hammett stated his city's stand Which approved renewal of the Ah' Cal lease. He urged that the board not be swayed by, ''emotional" appeals. STRATEGY HUDDLE -Ai r California \\'On a C'ompro mise lease ex· tension for Orange County Ai rport use at a stormy board of super· visors session Tuesday. Interested participants al lhe session gather here during interlude. Stand ing are from left to right !\1arsha11 Duf· field and \V ill iam St. Clair. Costa !\1esa councilman. Kneeling fron1 left to right arc Dan Ernory, Earl llardagc and Carl Ky mla. NC\\•port Beach councilman. ' Air Calif 01·nia Exte11 sio11 l\lildl y Pleases Two Sicles Although !he re v.·ere rew broad smiles or victory evident .arter Tuesday·s con· tro versial hearing on the extension of the Air California lease to operate out of Orange County Airport , statements released later by spokesmen for both side.5 \Vere mildly jubilant. Air Cal President Robert Clifford said he \Yas "salisfied" wllh the compromise solution offered by f"ifth D 1 s Ir i ct Supervisor Ronald Caspers of J\'e\\·port Beach . "II ensures !he continuation of our re· qui red service.·· Clifford said. addiag Iha.I he had no objection to the annu11 I l'evie1~· of his airline's performance under the new lease .nor the 3<klay c11ncellatfbn clause if the perfo rmaAce r~rd 1vas not approved by t'he supe rvisors. Ne¥.'port Beach Councilman Ca r I Kymla. \li'ho led his cit~"s assault on the five year contract. called the decisiof\!ii.''a hell of a victory !or Newport Beach. The city rece.ived what we asked for do\\'n to weekly reports on noise monitoring equ ipment." Kymla added. ''\\'e. mu5t now t'3ke an acti ve role in the. Southefn California AviatioTY Council Inc. upcoming recom· mendaLions as they relate to Orange County and request !he supervisors:· to make tough policy decisions on lhe future or the airport.'' . Newport P.1ayor Ed Hirth said. '·\~'r got everylhinc ¥.'e could get at the presen' lime. \Ve must now l\'Ork to cet a new location.'' "A viclory for the people against btg business." shouted Ne"'port Assistant Ci· ty !\tanager Phil Bettencourt . "We faced 11 hfgh powered 1.1adiso n1 A\'enuc publie relations package with five doys noti ce • and v.·e were able to J:et residents in large numbers to the · hearing. and ¥.'e won." A uthori ties Hu nt Honie niude Fo od Wl1ic l.1 Killed 2 SAi\TA BARBAR,\ IAPJ -Authorities tried today to trace home-<:a nncd truits and vegetables !'old by l\V{) elderly widov•ed sisters \\'ho n1ay ha \'e died o( botulism po isoning. The sisters, tilary !\I. Srn1th, 85, and Jo (;race Hawley, 77. died 1vithin three days of each other after developing common· symptoms . J ars of celery juice found in the sisters' home among 200 botUes of home-canned foods are being te~ted, sai4 Dr. Frank Cline of the county health department. Officials said the '""J women had held a sale of their canned goods recently. The authorities appC:aled to residents to turn the food in For tesls. lilrs , ijawley died Friday hl-Oming after rlrinklng the celery juice and \Vas buri ed Tue~. Funeral arrangements for her s1Srt!r . ~·ho dil'd r-.londay, are pending. Several perso r\S ha1·c turned in canned r()(l(lg recei1ed from the sister~. Or. Cline said. Slate off1c1als said 500 pcrso11s h<ivc died of botulism in California 1n thi,; ecn· 1ury. Botulism t1>1dn ha s a mortality rate of 50 percent with rapid mrdlcal care. said Dr. Ben Werner or the Bureau o( Disease Control in Berkeley, Air Lease Fee Tab $166,802 The current Air Cali fornia lease "'hich was the subject of Tuesday's debate before the Orange County Board or Superviso rs was worth ,,166.802 to the county in fees paid by the airline during 1970. . A breakdown r_evejljs p;u:n1ents_ ror la nding fees, $120 .907: termina l space rental. Sl7.131; tie down fees, i6.480: share of utili ties and janitorial services in terminal building. $27.284. These charges \viii be revie ¥.·ed and possibly increased as part of he ne¥.' lease agreement approved by the SUpt'rvisors. Clifford Hardin Pla11s to Leave I Nixon's Cabinet \VASJll NGTON (UPJ 1 -Agriculture . Secre ta ry Clifford t.1. Hardin plans to leave President Nixon 's cabinet soon. it \\'as learne(l today. ll ardin. 56, \\'as returning t o \Vashlngton from a brief trip lo Turkey and \Vas unav<1ilable for immediate com· 1nent \\'hite llousc officials declined to com· men! on reports that Hardin soon will submit his resignation. Bul they ruled out speculation that {iov. Louie Nunn of Kentucky IS m line tG succeed him although there \\'ere publish· cd reports lo that effect. Administration officials stressed that lhere has been no dissatisfaction with Hardin 's performance although he has been under fi re from some la rm slate conj'.lressmen for not aggressively pro· tcct1ng agriculture. ~tany former agriculture secrcianes have frequently been targets of cril icisn1 dunng their cabinet lenurt. ll ardin. a native of Knightsto"'n. Ind .. was a dark horse choice for the cabinet post at !he start of the Nixon Admin istration. 43 STORES TO SERVE YOU -That 24.6 be established as a ceiling for the average number or flights and lhat additional flights ~equire ~ard a~ prGval. -That hour s of operation be limited lo 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. for takeoffs and 7 ,a.,m. tG II p.m. for landing!. -That no louder than Boeing 737 or DC·9 with gross weight based on runway strength be used .11s equipment. -That all engines be rendered smokele ss prior to signing of the new lease. He also called for a review 0£ r.ental prices \\'hich he believed to be low. Air Cal President Robert Clifford led off for the proponents noting that he was speaking !Gr "Orange County's own air. line.'' He stressed the need for a five. year lease as ··good business practice for a firm which has such a large capital in· vestment. Anything less would not con· tribu te. to rinancial stability of the airline." Clifford also made these points: -Air Cal has no plans for flights outside of California. -Smoke will be eliminated and new engines will be quitter. -Five years is the very least lime period in which there can possibly be a new site developed for an alternate coun· ly airport. · -Orange County Airport cannot be ex· panded because of freeways on either end of the runways. Ground transport is also lim ited. · .City Councilman Carl Kymla led o(f the opposition wll h a statement or the Newport Beach position. He called fGr the folloWing" condition& to go vern continuance of tenninaJ access privileges to commercial carriers at the airport: -A statement of official policy that the Airport is not and in all probability never will be an acceptable facility for jet aircraft . -That daily nights be limited to the average da ily level of the past IZ months. -That commercial terminal leases be rene\\·ed on a year·lo-year basis only. -That jet aircraft be llmited to those no louder than the Boei ng 737 or the DouJ?las DC-9. (This was approved I. -That no new carrieri; proposing to use jet ai rcraft be granted terminal privileges and flights be restricted to 400 miles from the county.' - -That no commercial carrier be allow· Councilmaa William St. Clair presented a 'minority rebuttal in which he accused the airline of adding flights not needed to keep competition out and urged the board members to limit a lease eitension to one year to "put the airlines under pressure tG aid in developing a new airport.'' Newport Beach Councilman Milan Dostal said an airport was nttded but not where the present facility is located. He urged that flights be limited to Lockh«d Elect ras, a prop-jet plane. Newpcirt Beach Airport Noise Ahal~ ment Committee Chairman Dan Emory repeated his well publicized objections and concluded v"ith a threat of court ac· lion if the "noise pollution" continues to increase. Upper Newport Bay resident Harry Rinker compared the Orange County Airport to "a misdirected sewer." "Sup. pose the sewer \\'BS pointed in another direction. then how \\'ould the other 21 cities in the oounty lilte it?" he queried. Edward Cook of the Newport Upr Bay Homeowners Association said the present noise from the airport flights wall "equivalent to five. jackhammers. T b e bay is a county and state asset and should not be destroyed ,'' he ar1ued . Cook talked over the alloted time and Board Chairman Robert Battin ir1· terrupted hlm.~When he continued despite· Battin's admon!Uons, the chainnan said. "You have just caused me to change my mind about voting on this." This caused a noisy reaction from the audience and remarks about "integrity.''. Caspers called the airport "the right thing in the wrong place.'' After offering his motion to renew the lease for the five·year period w1t h cOn: ditions, Caspers added a statement of policy he asked the boa rd to adopt. Action on this suggestion was de.Jayed until Nov. 23. The policy matters proposed included that the noise monitoring studies be made available to the city ·of ·Newport Beach: that no new constructkln or l~N of terminal facilities be WKl.ertaen withoot board approval; that the board reaffirm ill opposltk>n to the granting of termlnaJ space to additional commercial airlines . He also suggested that a cost and engineering study be made of the feasibility of extending the existing runway toward the San Diego Freeway and the installation o( a blast wall in an attempt to get greater altitude and sound relief for the residents of Newport Bead!. He also wants 1 $1,000 fine for nqlse rule violators. WITH FRIENDLY, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUL SERV·: ICE. PLENTY OF F R E E PA R KI N G IN BOTH :. FRONT AND REAR·MALLS. ALL ON STREET LEVEL. ·. • THERE A.RE MORE STORES • IN OUR BACK MALL • 2300 liARBOR BLVO. AT WILSON • JUST SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FREEWAY IN THE HEART OF COSTA MESA 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • -DAILY PILOT ' •• I ~ps Wedntsdat~ Nowmbtr 10, 1971 Castro Due ·Welcome .In .Chile SANTIAGO, Chile . (AP) -Prealdent s'aJvador Allende readied a warm 1 ~ailinn Official j Vie·t Politician Killed by Bomb • -~ .SAIGON . (UPI) -Terrorists t&.iay assassinated Nguyen Van Bong, a leadlng South Vietnamese politician. Bong, 42, was kllled when a time bomb exi)loded in Bong was heavily protected beca~ ol frequent threats to his life . *ormer Star finning Fight l By THOMAS MURPIIlNE DI I~• Diii~ ,lie! Sllll • ORANGE COAST, WILD COAST: wiuiam Wilcoxen. the Laguna Beach at- tcibiey, former GOP congressional can- dilate, Save Salt Cre_eker and coastal citservation.isl , has proved to be about a 't batter when -it comes to legislative p dieting. ' . . . all Bill. in a recent 1nterv1ew with our stirllng journal. predicted that there Wire goin.g to be a i:iumber of aiiendments to • Assemblyman Alan ~roty's proposed coastline control bill. ;\VilCTJxen also suggested that these atlendments migh,t rriake the measure a ldl mnre palatable to those folks along oar coastline v;ho still believe that Joca,l control of the shoreline has some merit ~ q'ffE· REASON I suggest that WW is hkting on about half the prediction is that ~i: wa:__d~ad right on the amendments •-"t thi.s writing, Sieroty's bill has been jiggered<With an estimated 30 changes of· fered from hither and yon amidst Sacramento's legislative corps. Wilcoxen. hoWever, may not be totally on target' when he suggests that amendments are going to make the coastal folks -a lot happier with the fin3.I product · · As you may be aware, Sieroty. the Beverly Hills Democrat (you didn't lcnow tJJere lS a, .Severly Hills Democrat?), has Pi'oposed a measure that would give the sfate authority _ to_control certain CQII:_ struCiion and development a I o n g Cilifomia's coastline. ar HAS BEEN lauded in certain qbarters as the approach that will save obr coastline fr om urban sprawl. It has titen damned from other authorities who claim it is an encroachment on local con· t~l and self-determination. 1Indeed, coastal development so obsess· ~ the Legislature this session that <linens of control bills were introduced. iost' died quickly in committee. Finally Jy two survived -Sieroty's and orle thored by Assemblyman Edwin Z'Berg <b-Sacramento). Z'Berg's was put out or 1• misery in a senate cOmmittee Mon- <tv. Now only Sieroty's survives. JEVEN SINCE the early going. Sieroty's ~I was th~ only major·coastal legislation tfat was given an even chance of adop- tpn. ~I would . tell you more about what it *s, except wilh those 30 amendments , l n't know what it does. There are some ts that maybe nobody else knows yet, f!!her. rAnyway, Wilcoxen , who admit~ he'd like to see some form of reasonable ciastline protection adopted by the slate t.ti)s session, seems to believe that the rtiodified Sieroty measure will do it. jpthers. however, disagree. Like Alsemblyman Bob Badham, the Newport Mach Rt>publlcan. tnAOHA.1\1 rr-..lfERPRETS the restric· th>111 lll'Ol)O!led as being so awful that a ~a~al dweller couldn't paint his house .,.;.tqout a· permit from the new st&te 8',peragency and he says it wouldn't alJoW you to live anywhere Vt'ilhin l.000 flet-Of the mean hil!h tide line. ~AJ)parently the \\'hole thing wil! wash dOwn next Monday v.'hen the Sieroty bill C6mts up for hearings before the st&le S.nate's Natural Resources and Wildlife <limmittee. ~SO if you have some thoughts on cpastline control, today miJihl be a good ctJy to write your friendly local legislator "d give him the be·nefit of your ~ghts. . E feking Recognized ~BI'::IRUT (UPI)~ Lebanon has decided Lt recognize Communist China and 41tablish diplomafic relation! with Pe- Jiing, ·Prime Minister Saeb S&.lam said to- • ~Y· • • \\·elcom·e today for Prime Minister Fidel Castro, arriving on his first trip outside (:uba in seven years. Tht Marxist presi· dent promised his Communist guest a personal guided tour or Chile. There were no extravagant welcoming . displays in downtown Santiago, but along the route from the airport bUilding walls blos'somed with "Salud, Fidel" and other welCl?ming signs. Members of the Com- munist party rode . about scattering leaflets showing Castro's face in profile ~and saying : "Companion Fidel, You Are Among Friends." On Friday Castro and Allende are to fly 825 miles iiorth to the J.Utrate and copper port of Antofagasta. From there they will go lnto the nearby Atacama desert to look at nitrate fields and perhaps a recently nationalized American copper mine. Next week the two leaders will visit Chile's scenic south, a land of blue Jake!, snow..capp!d volcanoes and c a n a I !I • Traveling by plane, boat and car, they are expected to go almost to the tip or the continent. Later they will return to Santiago for talks with members of the left.wing political parties that make up Allende's gov.ernment. Allende's Popular Unity government: which includes Communists a n d Socialists, was inaugu;;ited Nov. 3, 1970, and established diplomatic relations with CUba nine days later. This is Castro's first trip to another Latin-American country since he seized power narly 13 years ago and his first trip outside Cuba since 1964, when he went lo the Soviet Unjon. It was not known exactly ·how Jong he would stay, but Allende told a news con- ference TUesd3y there Will be a big rally for Castro's sendoff "so the people can applaud him once again." Castro's visit "will intensify the bonds that unite our two countries," said Allende. Chile and Cuba both are "strug- gling for pOiitical and economic in· dependence," he continued, but the Chilean government will use ''different tactics" to achieve this. Policeman Dead After Okinawa Studyfit Rioting NAHA, Okinawa (UPI ) -Rioting students beat an Okinawan policeIYlJl:n to death" today du'ring a general strike by J00,000 Okinawan workers protesting plans to maint ain U.S. military bases on the occupied island after is reverts to Japan. The death came when 1 2. 0 O O demonstrators were marchin~ towards the headquarters of the U.S. Civil Administration which governs Okinawa, the only Japanese territory still occupied by U.S. troops from World \Var II. Police moved in with clubs and tear gas and the studenls hurled about 40 fire bombs. The students seized one policeman and beat him savagely on the body and head. Although other police moved in to rescue him , he died en route to a hospital. "He was beaten to a pulp," a witness said. About 80 policemen were injured in the fighting . Police arrested 84 students and labor Union members. Pakistan Clash Told DACCA, East Pakistan (AP) -Indian troops supported by artillery attacked three Pakistani border positions, but 57 of tJie attackers were killed, a Pakistani army source claimed today. The source said the Jndlans attacked positions at Jatiapura and La\garah, on East Pakistan's southern border w I th ·India's TTlpura State and near the northern border at Panihat. . . ' . ·#IA':. • Indian Sut1amer Ends The clouds of autumn blew in over th~ nation's cavital today sweep- ing Indian summer away for another year. The winds that came 1n 'vith the cold weather blew leaves from the trees and turned Wash· ington, D.C. into a gray city. Mad British Troops Hunt . For Arms; 2 Girls-Sliorn BE.LFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - British troops, angered by the death of 36 of their comrades this year, carried out v.•idespread searches today for suspected Irish Republican Army (I RA ) extremists they blame for the. killings. The raids, carried out by nearly 1,()00 troops in Roman Catholic areas of Belfast and the co1:1ntryside, wer~ tfie se· cond in two day!. Today's raids netted more than a dozen suspects and large quantities of arms and 3mmunition. bullets, a map case, photographs and maps. Another 200 troops from the 45th ~1edium Artillery Regiment seized . 12 1nen in the village of Toomebridge on the shores of Lough Neagh. Gunmen in this village shot and killed a sergeant of the Royal Ulster Constabulary several weeks ago. ··-' his automobile. ...... Bong generally has beeq a supporter of President Nguyen Van Thieu, although. when the campaign for the presidency turned into a one-man race he declined to actively support Thieu on grounds the one-man election was illegal and im· proper. . The plastic explosive charge Went off ·as Bong and three bodyguard& were driv- ing home for lunch, JXlliCe said. The blast also killed one of his three bo;dyguards and injured the other two~ along with seven bystanders on the street. · SJ)okesmen for the Progressive Party. of which Bong was cochairman, said * * * Cam_bodia fi,W ar Families Killed In Red Assaults • PHNOM PHEN (UPI) -Communi.st guerrillas carried out coordinated attacks today against Phnom P e n h ' s in- ternational airport and a nearby radio station and destroyed a bridge, inflicting heavy los! of life on Cambodian soldier families who travel with their men. Capt. Chhang Song, a spokesman for the high command, said the death toll was at least 30, with more than 20 others wounded. Most of the victims were women aad children and Song said the toll would be higher -"there were so many children, we have not counted them all yet." The three attacks were similar -a h.eavy barrage of .mortars_and---rockets followed by waves or North Vietnamese end Viet Cong soldier! hurling hand grenades end satchel charges. Cam· bodian troops drove them off but the guerrillas already had reached their targets. The war in Cambodia is different from most wars, and the wives and children of the soldiers accompany them into the field because they have no·other place to Jive. Many of them have been killed in battle -and today's victi m! includi!d whole families . Bush mills. The -car was shattered, Its roof blow n off and · Bong's body badly · mutilated, witnesses said. The assassins escaped. It was the first slaying' of a pio- govemmcnt politician in South Vietnam since the firebombing death of Education Minister 4e Minh Tri iri early 1969. Bong, frequently mentioned as a possi- ble successor to Prime Minister Tran Thien Khiem and other cabinet posts, had recently _split with the other Progressive Party cochairman, Nguyen Ngoc Huy, over how the party should proceed "' light pf Thieu's re-election without op- position Oct. 3. U.S. sources said, however, the sj,lit could not be categorized as ;. feud. They said the assassination was apparently th& work of Communists who hoped to fo- ment political trouble in Saigon as well a!!I get rid of-an-able-administrator and potential member of the cabinet. It waS the second attempt on Bong's life. political sources said .. He was wounded in a wave of attacks 1n January of 1969 when Palace Security Adviser Nguyen Van Kiem was wounded. * * -tr U.S. Jets Bomb • Missile. Camp In N. Vietnam SAIGON (UPIJ -American jets crossed into' North Vietnam and destroyed a Communist antiaircr-aft missile emplacement in the fourth attack north of the demilit&Tized zone {DMZ) lrt as many days, the U.S. Command said today.-• The U.S. command said Air Force FIOS Thunderchief jets reacted after the Com·· munists fired a misslle at American B-528 bombing the Ho Chi Minh Trail in nearby LaOs .' The Thailand-based FIOSs sruck the surface-to-air missile site three miles in- side North Vietnam and 45 miles north of the DMZ near Ben Karei Pass, a major Communist Jnfiltration route into Soulh Vjetnam. · "Reports indicated that the site was destroyed." the U.S. Command 6aid. Two teen·age girls accused of dating British soldiers reported today they had been assaulted by crowds yelling ''soldier lover" and that -their heads were shorn. One was tied to a post by three masked \vomen, shorn and ta?Ted and feiilhered to the encouragement of a crowd in a Roman Catholic area of Belfast. The other was threatened with death . A force of 800 soldiers from the Green Howards Regiment and a paratroop unit swept through the Roman Catholic Ar· doyne area bf Belfast today, acting on a tip from what the army called in· telligence sources, and arrested three men in a four·hour search. They found 200 rounds of ammunition, three electriC bomb detonator!, two pistol holsters and The \t\lhiskey _that spans the generations gap. Egypt Says Je,vs Reinforce Troops By United Prelis International The Egyptian Middle East New Agency said today Israel is reinforcing its troops and positions in the occupied Sinai Peninsula. "Israeli troops are currently mak ing wide-scale sea and land movements in the direction of Sina i," the agency said, quoting sources of the Palestine Libera· lion Organi zation (PLO) in Damascus. Israeli military leaders were ··:;;ending armored cars and heavy tanks by railways to the Sinai area," the agency aaid. The report was not conf\rmed by any other soun:e . • ~Much of :Nation Wet, Co,ld • • • . • ' ' • Rain , Wet Snow .Criss-cross U.S .; Some Skies Clear For 300 years, a \Vhi~key fronl Bu shmills has been Compare it to your present \Vhiskcy. You needn't ,vlth. us. Charming us. Beguiling us in a smooth, purchase or bottle. One sip at you r favorile pub wlll poli~hcd and al1ogcther lightHearted fashion, tell you \vhy Bushmills h;;is intrigued so many gcn- 15 "CllCratton!i havc rei1 ncd it.15gcnci"ationsh;ive crcitlons. It is, simply, out df ~ight, sirpcd ii. Theverdict: Nea rperf ection. Bush111i ll5. Fu 11 IMPORTED of (harcictcr. Bu t no l heavy-handed about it. fl avo r· BUSHMII I s· ful. Bu i never ovcr·pO\Vering. Bushm11ls: It reflects _ <4 !"-- the past wit h a light and lively flavor 1ha11s all 1od.1y. ---.IROM 1l1E WORLD'S OLDEST DISTILLERY. --. • 8l{h~cr !~OS IRISH WlllS~ICS-ll n ooF-8011Ll0 111 l~fL&rlO. l~[JOS (iA~~fAtl CG ~tw YOll:~." '· •11111 • • ' ' • Weighs Future Thom~s G. Jolley, a 2i-year· old newspaperman, said he will probably nead for Canada now since his appeal to the Supreme -Gourt-WC!-S-rejected. He gave up his citizenship to escape the draft and has been denied re- gaining it. He is a man without a country. 'Death Is Beautiful' I . ) Labor Lashes Out Rehnquist Called-. . Rightist Zealot · WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Organi2ed \ l~bof branded Assistant Attorney General '\Villia~ H. Rehnquist a right wing zeaJOt today arid urged the Senate to re~ bis nomination to the SURttme C.Owt. The AFL-CIO thus joined th• Leadership Conference on CivU Rights, the NAACP and the Americans for Qemocratic Action in opposition to Rehn· quist. AJ d i d those o th er organizations. organized . lal;>or took no position on the nomiruitiOn of· Lewis F. Powell Jr., the Richmond, Va., lawyer nominated for a second vacancy. \ • House Okays Pesticide Control Bill Convention. City Gets Fund Boost For Police Work Andrew Biemiller. legislative reprtsen· taUve of the AFL-CIO, delivered labor's position paper opposing Rehnquist to the Senate Judiciary Committee. . WASHINGTON (AP) -The "We do 90 because Rehnquist's public House · PaSsed 288 to '91 a ... WASHINGTON (AP} -The Justice ··record demonstrates him ~ be a r,ight "°"'ftcides-control bill Tuesday Deparbnent said Tuesday it has awarded wing zealot whose sole d1stincUons in , r-. almst $400,000 to Miami ~ch •. Fla. to public life are th8t he was the only major after crushing several pro- belp its police force handle next year's person of stature who cpposed the posed changes th a t en- Democratic National Convention. Arizona civil rights bill in 1964 and that vircnmentalists sai4 w er e San Diego,· Calif., planned site of the h~ has been one of the.prime th~retl· crucial to creating effective 1972 Republican nominatirlg convention, c1~n~ or .and an apolo~st for this ad· "new legislation. also is preparing to ask for similar funds, mm1strabon's root and !)ranch assault on . the department's Law Enforcement the Constitutional system of checks and A series of amendments cf- ,,..... Assistant Administration said. balances," Biemiller said in his prepared fered by Rep. John G. Dow LEAA administrator Jerris Leonard statement. (~N.Y.), and bis supporters, said the Miami Beach grant is a recogni· The cnly reason Rehnquist's name Was was rejected as the House tion of the unusual pressure placed on s~bm~tted f~r the Supreme Court, went a1ong with the bill police forces in cities whefe political con· B1emiller said, was because he had · . ap- ventions are held. demonstrated his "complete fealty" to proved by its Agriculture He said the money "will be or substan-Nixon Administration programs. Committee. tial assislance to the convention cities, "It is preci:sely because he is the ad·. A major revision, endorsed for a national political convention ministration's man rather than his own b y Agriculture Committee naturally would strain the ·po Ii c e that he should not sit on the high C<lurt," Chairman w. R. Poage (D- resources of any community." Biemiller said. • • Wtdnesday, Novtmber 10, 1971 Loophole . In Draft • Upheld • LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A federal judge Tuesdax:,granted a 60-day injuncUoq against------i.he Selective Service to a 23-year- • aid artist who argued that • litUe.known loophole in th e d,raft law forbids the govern- ment to draft anyone untU Dec.~. ~ U.S. District Judge Robert J. Kelleher noted that the argument by Karl S. Bohn, of Santa Barbara, caur., "seems to present a case of national importance." U. S. Attorney A I an Peryam, representing . the government, told the judge the case could affect those of about 10,000 young men facing induction in the nen two months. , Kellehei granted Bahn an injunction against his selective service board, preventing the board from inducting him for 60 days. He set Dec. 2 as the date of the 1:1ext hearing, to rule on a request by Bohn's at· -torttey, Don R. Bay, for a summary judgment barring Bohn's induction. The government is expected to argue then that the loophole has no legaJ standing. F1owors that bloom .. Y'*' round. Harodoallod and enamalod In natural Cactus Canyon rock formltlon. 3h inches tall. S9. Do.Somethi1i9 Baaulllul HIDE-A-WAY !'OR CHRISTMAS cti.,.. Acco1,111t1 '"vi_. AIMrlc•n IElPftU. SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT 8EACH-644-1.380 / Open Mon. and Fri., 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. ANN ARBOR, Mich, (AP) -Two you,eg womi?n are in critical condition to- day' after setting themselves on fire because, as one explained to police, "Dying is beautiful." The 1968 Democratic C<lnvention tn Noting that President , Nixon had Tex.), to permit states to im- Chicago was marked by mass demoll'Stra· characterized Rehnquist as a "strict con· pose whatever add it Ion a I The injunction granted Bohn affects only his case. main- taining the status quo, and does not mean the judge agreed with his argumetrt. er rull'd against the draft law~ But Bay said that at least' 1..:::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;:::::..:; Kids Love Uncle tioris -followed by mass arrests and structionist," Biemiller said "he is, if restrictions they wish on all charge by protestors of police brutality. anything, a strict constructionist of the pesticides, was ipproved, 167 Leonard said $178,000 wOuld go for the Constitution prior to t:he adeption of the to 56, The original committee purchase of communications equipment bill of rights." and another $Hl0,00l for police training. . The AFLCIO witnes:t was among a bill would have preempted the . ; 'Len, "Saturday in " • ,-, Ann Arbor Potice Chief Walter Krasny Aaid Anita Louise McQueen, 20, Livonia, and Raelle Weinstein, 26, Skokie, DI., ap- pareptly wrapped themselves in ptper, sat cross-legged on the floor and set each otber on fire. "The orderly funcUcning ·Of national long list who test.ified or put ,_ i:--In power of states to put more ' ..cSunruny restrictions en what would be political conventions is an integri.l part of the record in the second-day of hearings the democracy," Leonard said. in opposition to Rehnquist. designated a s general-use pesticides. two ether suits had already been filed on the same grounds, in San Diego and eastern New York. and there was some thought of .con- solidating them to be heard with Bohn's, Other young men can fil e similar su its if they face induction before Dec. 28, the DfilY PILOT l Advance Men a Curiosity . Reds Draw Stares at U.N. UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -They are four secretaries and two messengers -not ex- actly top ranking diplomats -' but ambassadors rush to greet them, police guard them and newsmen dog their footsteps . As the first Communist Chinese to come to the United Nations in 21 yea rs and the first ever to come as U.N. members, the advance party from the People's Republic of China are minor celebrities Missouri Voters Reject School Funding Again I N D E PENDENCE, Mo. (AP} - A heavy turnout of voters Tuesday defeated for the third time this year a pro- Policeman Shot Dead DALLAS (AP) - A rookie policeman was shot to death and another was wounded to- day after stopping a truck because of a minor traffic ac- cident, police. reported. Two men were taken into custody shortly after the shooting. .The dead policeman was identified as Johnnie T. Hartwell, 30, a rookie still in training. Officer James E. Clark. 40, was wounded in the right ann. posed increase of 95 cents in the school levy, but officials said Independence p u b 11 c schools would reopen anyway in anticipation of funds coming next month from the state. Dr. Guy Carter, school superintendent, said school children, Jdled since Nov. 1, will return to class Mo!'lday. He said the state money is due Dec. IS. School administrators had said the city's public schools would remain closed through Ncvember because cf a lack cf funds to pay teachers. The final 1,100fficial tally was 8,846 in favor of the increased levy and 9,107 against. A two-' thirds vote was necessary to approve the measure. Disposer Installed No·Charge with Dish)irasher Purchase and Installation .. and major curiosities. • The six advance men at· ri'l(ed-Monday to make what they called "administrative preparations" for the full 46- member delegations flying -hefe.Thursday from Paris. Kao Liang, the former newsman who heads the ad- vance party, and two ether members paid ~e~ _ initial •isit to the headquarters ot the world crganization Tues- day. A crowd of more than 50 secretariat employes a n d newsmen gathered outside the office where for 95 minutes the advance party discussed the mechanics of cpening a mission with U.N. Protocol Chief Sinan A. Korie and Col. Harold A. "Huck" Trimble, head of U.N. security. Then, escorted by three plainclothes U.N. r; e cu r It y guards, the Chinese toured the Security Council c h a m b e r where Huang Hua, until now ambassador to Canada, will sit as one of the five permanent members. NonnaJJy restrained diplomats gawked when the three quiet men dressed in blue-grey Mao-style s u i t s entered the crowded delegates lounge for coffee with Alba- nian Ambassador Sarni BahoUi and four members of this delegation. KitchenAid Dishwasher r.tc11 Stan at For Moclol KDCS · JCPenney . The values are here ~day. ' Men's Sport Coats Women's Dresses Reduc:ed 11 .. JI te 41. Piem • ... ulors 1688 GROUP I GROUP II Orl9. Sf·S11 Orlt. S12-Sl4.00 Sollck ............. WW. ..,.... O..p """-Orit. Jt,tl-47.tl NOW Now $7.88 Now $9.88 WOMIN'S UNlfOIMS o .. I Two 4"' 7" GIRLS STRITCH TIGHTS. Pink, 50¢ pc. ltJI• Orft, 1-14. NOW Turq. & Lemon. Orlt. ~9c NOW WOMIN'S .t.NILI PANTS .t.ut. 5ryles 411-711 INFANT & TODDLER SHORTS Prl11ts 33c ..... ., ... °"'' 1·11 NOW & Solich. Orl9. 7f¢•1 ,7t NOW WOMEN'S ASS'T. TOl'S llo .. & '2"'4" Girls Boxed Jewelry Kolts. Orlf. 1·1.00 NOW . MATERNITY WUll ""-I '1" Rl1191-Nockl~dontt-Setl Clea~. Orff. 1-1.00 NOW .t.!ld Soporot..,_loltfol Ir llrtfttto .. NYLON Ir PO(YUTEl TOl'S Sllett '1" Orl9, Sl .00 Orl9. J.00 Orlt. J.00 S.... & Sl•••lw. Orff. S6.0G NOW NOW 10• NOW tt• NOW 1.tt P.t.maN ANlLI PANn 3" CetNll ..., &en. Orff. 7.00 NOW 61RLS l·IX SHOm. Asst. jNltNnl 33¢ Ir $olhh. Ort9. 1.00·2.00 NOW -IRLS 7•14 SHORTS. Au". 44¢ Women's Shifts Reduc:ed fobrfu & Colora. Orft. t .lt.J.00 NOW ""···-,,. .... ,. '°""· ,,.. s1aa Foundotion Clearanc:e Pebric. Per Mlf CON W-.. ... , . 0"9. 4,50 NOW ODDS Ir INDS of light te fhm 99' Colttt'ol. Polity & loltf let 1ryles. ' White olliy. Orl9. l •6.GO NOW WOMEN'S NYLON INrT r:ors. Leitt 2" .r .... strlpo. Orlt. J,50 NOW GIRLS SANDUSTIR SKIRT sns. ,. .. , 4" PULL OYIR IULKY KNln. zr,,:., 7" Sweeper Lentth. Orff. 7 .00. Nc;W' a.ct -,......_ Orlf. 10.00 NOW GIRLS IROWN SUIDI ICICKIR IOOT 4" WO.MIN'S MOCCASINS, .,. .. or ._ 3" Cvlhlo• c,.,. Sole. Orl9, I .ff NOW Soft ..... hed 111,,.._ Chtf, I.ft NOW GIRLS IUCllll SCHOOL SHOI 4" HAID SOUD MOCASSIN1. T•. 4'! INft utfqM. Orft. 7,ff NOW loft COMfett, Orlt 6.tt. NdW . IOYS DRUS llLTS I TllS 44c LA.Din AMPICANA IOOT. lhcf-wllt,• 13" ,,. •. , .••. °'"· 1.10 NOW. .... --, ....... 16.H Ne·:· IOYS CARDIGAN SWIATllS 5" POLYISTll DIL INIT Pc • ...._ 10" 2" .,.._ ••ly. Acrylic. Orft, 7.fl NOW .W..Col.,..._.., NOW IOYS CASUAL PANTS 66¢ Winh H' wter. Ort9, 1.44 NOW Men's Pant Riot Toys-Gomes-Punles, Etc:. .,_ & C-1 llocb -Stnttgllt 3aa . JIG SAW PUZZlls-.4AMIS-88' .., Am flfl -,.....,.. & S.llb. T•y Cers-Cemer• -Mnlc•l 111~ .... 21-40 Orft. 7.tl-1.tl NOW 1tn111•e•ltl lop I Glrh Actl•ltlM OW < ' 'I ' COSTA MESA STORE HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER . ' • 1 , ., . . I ' • ' Cjlueen Size Sheets Sollcl Color Percoln 4" Gold I Grfftl SO-J. Po,,_.., 10'1• Cottt10, Pu11 """®Orff. 7.tt .. . MENS DRESS SHlm 511 Lo119 llN¥e 5trfpes, Orft, 7.tl NOW MEN'S CAILE DESIGN VESTS • ...... . .. •1'91• wool·wllite. Orlt. 12.tl NOW MEN'S WALK SHORTS. Au.t • ..,..._ 99c lroken ,t1e5. Orft, 3•4.00 NOW ASST. KNIT SHIRTS 99c Orit. 4.91-NOW J.11 Ort9. J ,tt NOW ACRYLIC MNIT STRIPI SHIRTS. lfolta 2·~-Ulen-SI .... Orlt. J ,tt NOW ' MIN'S HISS SHOE .t.1tfq• hid• h!ttrod 'Sole •. ort,. 10.tt. NOW ,. . .. Towel • nia · .. . Scwltp•rff & Pr11t nkt Teny e IATH-Orl9. 2.21 1" NOW e HAND -Orl9. 1.21 60c NOW e WASH-Ot1f, ... 30c NOW MIN'S WAXHIDI lTIRRUP. IOOT 2311 Lff"'!' llMCI. Orl9. 21.00 NOW KIN• SID SHlm.;. Gold4NH" • .,.. r.rc• ow TWIN SID QUILT SH.EADS 10". lwltflowr rrr.t. Orft. 11,00 NOW 1 • ..., nLm SPRIAD .aLD .,,... Q .... U.. C11to111. Orlf. 125.00' NOW ILIC. ILANltlT Dlt.. DU.t.t. 1s• . s.,.,.. Fllthll. Otif. 25.00 NOW CURTAIN I DIArllY CLIANU, 1u.14aa,. Orft. J,ff '9 Jl.00 NOW ' Cameo Pendonts lealhtk C..... u FNet,.. soc Dro,-Wlttt two It 1'tM Str.tl . cu1 ... Orff. 1.00 1r 1.00 NOW .. • -' - IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR Bl VO. COSTA MESA 540-7131 • • --" USE YO~R PENNE~ CHARGI CARD -_.Shop Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 to 9:15 '• .. • Dt\ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Bacl{ward ·to .Spoils? ~ltmb~rs of Huntington Beaeh's Charter Revision Commutee are no\v holding weekly meetings as th eir Decfmber deadline nea rs and a recommendation must be prepared for the city council. The c~mmittee is considering several aspects of the charter fo revision, but the one that has drawn the most alten on is the proposal for a full-time mayor. The city couric ' told the committee the propos al would be put on the April balJot, so it has been ).Ip tO the nine members to labor over a specific proposal. At present there are no official recommendations from the committee. But enough has been said in the meetings to give Huntington Beach residents an idea of "'hat to expect next-montJl. The likely recommendation will give the mayor a staff consisting of a chief administrative assistant, an economic development coordinator, a couple of secre- taries and one or two administrative interns. All of these people "'ould serve at the mayor's discretion. He would appoint them, and without civil service status he could fire them at his own whim. U there is no Qther lesson to be learfted from poll· tics, it should be that ·a staff o! political appointees is one of the prime ingredients for a-political machine. It has aU the makings of a spoils system -a system which is being gradually weeded out of other levels of govern· ment. ' Rather than appoint staff members, or have present city staff members fill those posts, it would be best to = subjec~he.-jobs -to..competitive-.scieening._.as.j.s done for · mos t oLner city jobs. There is a good case to be made for the argument that the mayor's job has become too demanding for a man to handle on a volunteer part-time basis. But, does a full-time mayor and a large staff have to be created to solve this problem? The mayor could and should be paid a larger salary than city councilmen so he can afford to take the re- quired time away from his emploY.Jnent to hand.le press· tng city business. This way there would be no need to Questiori of Tipping Is Vex atious Sy dney J. Hanis -"-..... ,1') -•. A reader in Buffalo "'ants to know wbelhe¥belieYe that one should leave a lip in a restaurant il the service has been oad . "lf a tip is taken for granted," she writes. "then there is Jillie incentive (or the waiter to provide good serv. Ice. But my husband gets angry when- ever l tell him I re- fused to leave a lip -or left a small Dne -£or poor serv· ice.·• . The whole question of lipping in :nodern society is a vexatious one, and l ion't know that thCre is any "right" answer to it, as our economy now stands. Pt10RALLY. TIPPJ;'l;G should be abolished. becauSe it is a kind of legali<:ed >lackmail: but practically, this Wl'1uld :nean doing grave injury to millions or tmplo~·es in•the service trades. J always lea ve much the san1e :noderate size of lip. whether the se r\•ice ~as been adequate or indifferent ·-not >Ul of generosit~·. but out of co.,.,·ar<lice. I simply don't have the gum ption to Jtrike back at a careless or inattent ive waiter by hurling his porkelbook. Women. apparently. are much more rengeful than men in this respect. VARIOUS INDUSTRIES have tried to Dear Gloomy Gus Have things reached such a low level that we 're going to have to provide armed bodyg\lards even for our postmasters? -M. C. G. 'f~ll .. 11\lr. .. fllK ll rt•Hrl' "ltwt, Ml n1Kt1»rll' lttOH t i lttt ntwl,fHr. l1M '""' "' ""v' It GIMnlr Gu1. o.irr ,1111. abolish tipping, but the habit has always crept back in one way or another. Only the commercial . airline!, to my knowledge, hav~ been able to avoid this practice -probably because the industry started out on that basil and thus had no J n g r !I i n e d customer-tradition to overcome. Tipping is evidenlly an ancient prob- lem. There is a charmi ng tolt about Na sreddin Hoja, a 13th Century Turkish philosopher, who once went to a public bat h in a neighboring city. THE ATTENDANTS, noticlnc his shab- by costume. paid him little attention 11nd brought him a torn towel and a tiny piece of soap. On leaving, Hoja gave a gold piece to each of the attendants, who J'l'len· tally kicked themselves for having been deceived by his ragged appearance. ~le returned to the same bath the foJIO\\'ing week, dressed as before. but 1his time .,.,·as received "'ith great defer- ence -new towels. scented soap. much bowing and scrap ing with the anticipation of more gold pieces. But, on leaving, he gave each attendant a nickel. replying to their startled looks : "The gold pieces I gave you last week were for the way you treated me today; lhe nickels t'Ve given you ere for the way you treated me last week." Russia's Space Failures '\\'ASHlNGTO:'f -Thl!re are aulhorila· ~ve il!dications lhal Soyuz. top Russ ia n apa ce program. is being drasL1cally re- rised or possibly even abandoned. . \\'hether there is an\' connection be· rwttn that and the repor ted shake up n upper eehelons of :he Soviet s p a c e ~ierarchy is s t i 11 unkn o wn . Last 1110nth. this column lisclosed that far. reaching personnel :hanges were under- ,..ay due to the most :alamitous year in ilussla 's l!lp'ace op- trat1ons. Durilig this period. there has been a long succession of costly f;,ilures and dis· t.sters in lives and equJpment. Si xteen of 19 space probes were unsuccessful, some t( tragic proporlions. SEVERAL WEEKS al1~r the reported 2pheaval among leading space orrici11l!~ lhe Kremlin sudde nly announced the !eath of a foremost sp;:,ce scienli!t. He was in the van 1n developing the Soyuz spaet pl,1form program-Russia's rival of thls country'! histo1J··m1kln11: lpollo moon probts And landtngs. But enllke the laller's epic sucC'(!sses. Soyuz B11 George ---, Dear Geort:e : How do you get away with ~uch blunt answers in. your colunuf? Doe.sn't anybody evrr take ol> jedion! CURIOt:S I Dear Curiou s: What did )'OU th ink this bfg v"h1te bandnge on my nose was? A fi.11g or lruet! R-0bert S. Allen --) has been plagued by disaste r and tragedy. This dismal record waS cli maxed last summer by the asphyxiation deaths of 1hrre cosmonauts while descending from a record.breaking earth orbit. The So- viet Union has never disclosed that com- munication with the ill.fated trio was lo~t b)' ground control within secorrdf· after 1hey started down. OTHER CALAf\OTOUS crashes tlghtly concealed from both the Russian people and lhe world are: -The ~tars probe by two five-ton space- ship' launched earl)' !his year. They should have reached their tsrget long ago, but nothing has been heard from or about them. -A lunar probe last ·sprl~g that ell'.· plOOed almost immediately afl'r being alrborn!!. hurtllne; litr~e pi.rts nf the rock· 't brick to earth. killing some workeri and leaving a huge cra te r nea r the launching pad. -An earlier lunar probe restJlled In .In even \\--Orse ci.t11s1rophe. It blew up Ofl the pad "'Ith consid,rable loss of lire and hea\'y dcsttuctlon of equipment-There has never been !he slightest hint of these catastrophes. -IN SEPTE~18ER. Luna 18 did re11ch the moon, but the \'Chicle It was to land lhf'r .. crashed ins1ead -a tot;.! loss. \\'h31 space sprctal!Ular. If any, \\'ill re- pl~ce Soyui rem;:11ns lo be se,n , \\1estern space authorllie~ consider it highly unlikely th11t lhe Kremlin will ab:.odon !hi$ crucial fit!d . They antl~lp1te there \Viii be rar·rerichil'lg changes in pro- &rams and objecUve.s, bUt not a dropout. give the mayor much more power or authority than he has now. HunUngtcn Beacjl ougbt to be trying to hire the stronsest, best professionally-qualified city manager it can find. · X A proposal which would give the mayor mire p W· er. supported by a politically vulnerable staff or seco d level administrators, would be a step backward at this stage of Huntington Beach's development. Studying the Students Like businesses, schools and educators are constant· Jy seeking ways to determine how much effective e~u­ cation they are giving their children for the money in· vested. · • One of the most co mmonly used forms is the stand· ardized test which measures a student's academic achievement against a state or national norm. Educators in the Fountain Valley School District r ecently completed a study Of their students in high school based on two of these kinds of tests. The premise· of the study was that one way to test the effectiveness of the elementary schools is to see how the students do when they go on to high school. The study was conducted at Edison and Fountain Valley high schools and compared the Fountain Valley district students with all the other districts' students combined. ____ ·-:: The results did not conclusively show any area academically where the Fountain Valley students great· ly excelled or ftU behind their counterparts from the other districts. As district administrators note, the study was only meant to be preliminary and has served to show them areas for further detailed perusal so that if there are any weaknesses in the Fountain Valley academic pro- gram, they can be identified and corrected so that the t axpayers get the most for their educational dollar. H 'Say, Mildred! Did ya see where J ackie made Aristo tle Onassis sign this fancy contract?' . Tradition of Fair Play Violated Army Action on Herbert Condemned To the Editor : F_or over a· c~ntur_y i!nd <! half, the United States Military Academy has espoused the ideals expressed in its mol· to, "Duty. Hono r, Country." I was raised in a military family, the son of a West Point graduate. The in· tegrity of our military establishment, especially at the higher levels, and its tradition of fa ir play had always been something of wh ich I was proud and con- fident. l FIRST READ of Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert's situation and then saw him on the Dick Cavett Show. The actions resulting in the corruption of this man's exem plary military record were so In· credible, unco!)tested, visible and con- trary to the lfaditions of the American military se rvices that I was confident rectification would lake place without delay. I looked forward to the Colonel's next appearance on the show for a report on how everything had been straightened out. Instead, through the capriciousness of the military, Lt. Col. Herbert did not appear on the show. IT APPEARS lhat \Vest Point would better prepare men for service in today's U.S. Army by changing its motto lo ··cant. Parochialism. Obsequiousness." f\tay the original motto slick in the throats of those who countenance the SUJ>- pression of an honorable man performing an honorable action. FRED THORLIN 1-lerbert stirred nationwide contro- versy 1vhe1t he charged he was rr· lieued of Ji i.~ \tiernam co"1ma rid April 4. 1969 because he persisted in re· porti11g uiar crim~s to his superior1. The much·decorated officer said Sun· day he is aski11g the Arm y to retirt him next F'eb. 29, the day he will have completed· 20 'years' service and be elig ible for tetiremen t beuefits. The Army issued a "fact she et" de11 ying Herbe rt's allegations. -Edito r Proble1n h• Belfast To the Edi tor : ~1ay I ask why the DAILY PILOT con- tinue s to print "sheer propaganda" tha t emanates from Britaln 's BBC as regards th e problem in Belfast? · Do you really belie\'e it's "right and just .. for the United States to give foreign aid and (support by the press) to have armed British troop~. 1.400 strong. go on a rampage through a C a t h o 1 I c iw ishborhood in search of arms that hap- pen to be nothing more than "legs of chairs and tables?'' fl.lust th~ Irish Catholic in Belfast die for want or the vote. reunification of Belfast wilh South Ireland and• better than men i a I emi)fuyment ? FOREIGN AID can be good or bad ; lt could help people really In need Rnd it could also be used as a tool in the hands of unscrupulous people to practice (with license ) genocide on a poor class of peo- ple such as the Irish Catholic in Belfast or the people of Indochina. As a DAILY PILOT subscriber, I sug· gest you consider your source of in· Quotes C. \Y. Woodhouse, Indio. oc iun la'l'l'S - "The 30 percent rise in crime durlna thf< first quarter of 1971 ls due to the fact thlll the criminal knows lh~t his chances of t.ncountering armed resistance are about one in 1000." Peter F. Drucker, American author - "A free society rests on the freedom to make rtsponaible decisions." I Mailbox ' Letttr1 1rom readers ll:re welcome. Normally writers should convey their messages tn 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fi t space or eliminate libel is reserotd, All let- ters must include signature ll:nd mail- i11g address, but names may be with· held on request if 1.uificitnt reason is apparent . Poetry will no t be pub· lished, formation y,·ith reference to this most serious problem. My furniture is of the extremely heavy ~1editerranean type and were I located in' a more advantageous area' ge<lgraphically, J would be more than willing to supply these poor oppressed people of Belfa st with a few weapons (legs ) to defend themselves. We Irish aren 't violent and don't believe in guns, but watch those ''legs" of heavy tables and chairs! BBC needs a little watching also. BERNICE WELSH DAILY PILOT news reports an cte_. vetopmcnts in Northern Ireland come from United States-..wire serv- ices. Also. tliis 11ewspaper has taken 110 editorial positian on the problem in Belfast. -Edito r Appeal for Coupons This letter is intended for all thoughtful , generous. outgoing readers who would like to help save a life. Mrs. Dorothy Swiney of Reedley, Calif .. is desperately In need of a kidney machine which will be hers j( she can gather together 300,000 Betty Crocker coupons by Nov. 30. It those who read this appeal would add their coupons to ours it would be a big factor In giving hope and assurance to this needy woman. PLEASE BRING or mail your coupons to First Southern Baptist Church, 6.50 Hamilto n Ave., Costa Mesa or to the undersigned at 830 Plum Place, Costa ~fess: Pertiaps people· are ·saving-th~ coupons for silverware, china, colfee urns, etc., but wouldn't it bring them a great 1\ow of salisfaction to think th at they have he{ped p,ve a lite Instead? Thank you all, every Qne, in advance. MRS. W. E. COFFMAN 'Mo"e the People'' To the Editor : Regarding your last summer's editorial concerning Uie m I s g u i d e d and shortsighted people who would llke ta keep three California river1 In a natural state: I) The-bill to keep the Eel, Trinity, and Klamath Rivers as Wild Rivtrs (SB 107) '"'ould benefit both northern 1nd Southern Californ ia. Northern California because Ill rivers and natural recreation would not be de stroyed lthey have plenty of reservoin already); Southern Clllfoml• because more water metns more growth-and if there is anything Southern Callfornla does not need more of, it ls people. ZI AL THOUGH the construction and nood prone people of northwest C•lifornia want more dams, lhmisands of loco! residents have joined the Committee of T\\'O Million to block the destruction of these rivers. In addition, the pcnple sul>- ject to Ooodlng could be moved far more cheaply than build ~ng the dams, a solu· tlon which never setms to occur to the dam builders. 3) Recent admJS&ions by southern California water agencies indicate that the present California Water Project will meet all needs until 2025, so why hurry to destroy our natural rivers? f) YOU ™PLY that the California Water project is a mandate ·of the voters -ha! The voters in 56 of California's 58 counties voted against the project in 1960, hardly a mandate of the people. And finally , why is it that anyone who is not motivated by greed i !I automaticall y misguided and shor11ighted? KENNET~ S. CROKER V.N. I• D ead To the Editor: A realistic appraisa l of the con· sequences to be suffered as a result or the expulsion of Nationalist China from the United Nations would be as difficult as foretelling the future. And if one couJd foresee the future he probab ly wouldn't want to teU it. But the fears of the Chinese people in Ta iwan concerning a takeover by the Com· munists are pretty well founded. Apparently what has happened is the same old story about might making right. The countries in the United Nations that turned against Nationalist China would not h{lve done so had that country been the one with the population of 750 million people. FEAR, ~fORE THAN confidence in the future, seemed to be the determining fac· tor. Such fear was one of the chief reasons why the United Nations was founded in the first place . The nations that joined this organiza- tion were supposed to stand together to prevent smaller nations from suffering the same fate as did the small nations under the aggression of Nazi Germany. At that time, no naUon came to the aid of Poland . Czecho~lovaki a. Norway or Denmark. For one thing, they didn 'l have time. For another, none of the larger na- .tions felt like fi(tit.ti ng. While Germany was preparing for war, the larger nations like the United Stales and England prepared for peace. THAT IS WHAT is happening now. The counlries which voted for the tipulsion of Nationalist Otina from the. United Na. tion!I ?;ere wild In the ir applause for wh at they had done. But how wild will their aJ>- plause be when it comes their turn to fie expelled by the Chinese Communlsts? The United Nations is not dying: it is dead. The sole objective for which ii was originally organiied has been discarded. That objective was the unification of na· tlons working together to prevent in· temational injustice. 808 WANG LER School Space Problem• To the Editor: The storm brewing ove,r the San JOa· quin Sc hool Distric t and its lack of suf- ficient classroom space ls reminiscinl of the building problems we and many other parents have weathered over the past few years in the Octan View School District. And while the storm· here isn't quite over yet. J feel secure in the knowledge that the building program is procetdlng with ease, and a fair degree of speed. TllE OCEAN VIEW District ha s claim· td !hat the district Is growing at the rate of about one classroom each week. And in the past 10 years. with a master plan based 11n projected enrollments and ac· tu1l toning, the district has opened 13 schools. tn Its pe11k years o( ttowlh. Ocean View had a mnn who did nothing but e.xpedit (! school building programs. \Vhll' the school~o not open as fast as lrol over construction strikes or bad weather}, we do not face the double sessions and the staggering problems \~·hirh growth is today causi ng the San Joaquin schools. l\tv COl\11\tENTS are not intended to find fault with San Joaquin, but merely to point oul how lucky "'e are. Perhaps it is time for us in Huntington Beach to sit back and count our blessings -all 23 of them . (MRS.) ~t•RJON O'REILLY. (.'ourageou•. Police To the Editor: I and many other~ ta.Kpayers want to · ' bring to your attention events of the night of Ot·t 16. \\1e all had a frightful ex· perience. \Ve becan1e, as you. would say. curious bystanders to a police chase and a manhunt. An armed man had stolen a car. had kidnaped His ha by daughter, had given chase. and that became the subject of a manhunt in our neighborhood . It was not an occasion my family. and rm su re others. enjoyed. lt'was an occasion that "'iii not be forgotten by 1nany fo r quite a While. rt \VAS VERY gratifying to have seen our police in action. Evcryonl" of these courage<lUS men should be commended on his splendid "'ork. They all understood v.·hat their jobs were and did them well. There was no confusion on their part, they all worked together with confidence and assurance in v.·hat they were told to do. This. in return. gave all of us a feel· ing of safe-being in our homes. All of us had been afraid and worried as this man \\'SS armed and loose in our nei!?hborhood. The police gave us their :.ssu rance that they would not leave th e area until this man had been captui:ed. and believe me, they stayed, through the rain, wind, liaiJ, thunder and lightlling, till it was all over at aboul 2 a.m. THE HUl\'TINGTON BEACH police , ·the Sea1 Beach police. th e Costa Mesa police, the \Vestminster police. the Foun· lain Valley police the helicopter crew, the special units. and even Lhe crew that brou.e:ht in the trained dogs, all .... ·orked together as one great unit. -It-was most satisfying to see all these forces working together toward one result, the capture of a dangerou s armed man. 'Ve as a neighborhood want to thank all of them and "'ish it 11.•ere possible to thank each one individually for the job well done. Some people are always making bad remarks about the police. \Ve th ink it's about lime. some of us started spea king up tor the GOOD things the police do every day to protect us. · MR. and MRS. DONALD PLETZ (and mMy grateful taxpa yera) .J ORANG! COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, PubUshtr Thoma.s Kcevil, Editor Albtrt lV. Batt<J' Ed itorial Pagt Editor The editorls.I f'RJ.'C" or tile l'MilY Pilot t<C'rk11 la.._ lnf11rm 11nd l'itlmu• ll\lt' rr;\drrS-by pl't.'SNlttni; thi!o1 nC\\'f.pnfl('r·s 01•lnlnn1 11nd con1° mrntAr)· on 1n111cc 1•( lnltl'('~l And ait:nlfl ranC't", by pro\·idin!il a forum for lht" ~x11rt>Nlon or n11 r T'f"lldl'T'l\' ripinlons, 11.nd by fll"MC'lllln'i the d1\'I"~" vitwpoinJ.s or Jnrormrd ob- arrv('rs •nd 1pokesmcn on to1iia ot lhll' do.>'. Wednesday, Nov. JO, 1971 we would like lhe1Dlo, (nobody bas con--._ __________ _, ) • l ) . . -· 1 WHMIOal, Hovembw 10, 1971 DAILY rlLOT JG Trouble Runs· • Their Bloo d .. . ! DEAR ANN LANDERS:-niis p·ast-year-- f have had three relatlves in the hospital . 1 considered them all lucky lo be alive, and not because they went in dangerously ill. They got really sick in the hospital. Every one of these patients had suc- cessful surgery. The problem came with blood transfusions. It se.ems lhe blood obtained through the hospital (at a terrible price. l might add\ \Vas tainted. r wonder what. if anything, can be done abou t this sort of negligence. Don't suggest suing the doctor or the hospital. It can't be done "out here on the Coast . Give me some practical advice for a change. -FURIOUS IN CALIFORNIA DEAR FURY : It is not true that on the West Coast )·ou cannot sue a doctor or a: ho1pltal ''for any reason." Ask any California physician what his malpractice lmurance costs. (Surr eons a n d anesthetists pay the higbtst rates bteanse they are the most frequently sued.) ~ - I . " ' , .. / ... Q . lo\'ed one agains t tainted blood dispensed in lbe hospitals, there's no simple answer. Sometimes the blood of friends or relatl\•es can be used, but It must be the proper match. If the family ca n rouDd up eoougb donors. this could eli minate the necessity or buying blood rrom the hospital. blood from addict& wbo ll'e tbe CJMtel& helJatiti,-!pttaderS o( all. -7 ' DEAR ANN-l:XNDERS' I ~' • something from your column that s been a lifesaver, You said a while .k Jhat if a person can see the humor ta situation that bugs him, he has Jt • \Veil. I've been worklng for a man (fr nearly two years and he can't rememliir my name to save his nre. For the first~ months. he called me by his for . r secretary 's. name. Then he got mi.1ed p and called me by the name of another new girl. All ,of a sudden he began to ell I me Flora. (My name is Dora.) WhellfI corrected him, he said, "Oh, I'm soro'· Now he is calling me No ra and Cora. I used to feel hurl. Now I jll!t la~. Thanks for helping me over the hump ' A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME ."1 As for l''hat can be done to protect a Paid donorl" are sometimes boozers or ju nkies v.·ho are desperate fo r a fast dollar. The chances or gellio)!l: an In· fectio u from such a donor is, or course. grea ter than from a retittive or fr iend .. And this is an appropriate time to urge my readers to sup port th e American Red Cross Blood Donor Program. The more voluntary donors. the less need to buy OEAR ROSE -I mean Dora, or i;'t Nora? -Th anks for your letter. Tiie • portaot thing Is tbat he gets the ... e right on the bottom of lite cheek. · .!J!.,.'/l .;;;~t - Tijuana Tri p to Clinic on the Horizo n Teens Vie For Title Clothes, toys, bedding and miscellaneous articles are packed 'vith ca re by Okiponka Horizon Club members Oeft to right) Dorothy Logan, Terrie Sneathen and SJlellcy \Valsh for a trip to a Tijuana clinic. Camp Fire Girls and Blue Birds are making hospital tray favors, learning baby·sitting, hono ring 1nothers and staffing booths at the Scout-0 -Rama. ~tiss Robin Smith, Fountain Valley Junior l\1iss 1971 . greeled 14 candidates tor 1972 .Junior l\·liss -at a tea in the home of l\lrs. l\tarnelte Peek. The tea v.·as sponsored by -Jaycees' wh·e!. Horoscope: Virgos Hold On Girls were acquainted v.·ith the format of events to lake place Saturday, Nov. 20 in the Los Amigos High School auditorium. They will be evaluated on a judges' con- ference, scholastic achieve- THUR SDAY NOVEMBER 11 . By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (~1arch 21·April 19): Conditions subjeet to abrupt c ha nge . T h er e , are postponements, substitutions . Messages tend to go awry . Have alternative plans __ al hand. Those you usually de· pend upon acl in eccentric manner. TAURUS (April 20·~lay 201: Lover 's quarrel could be featured. Children could make unreasonable demands. Hold reins on self-control. No long· range commitments. Wait and see. E~otional storm will blow over. Patience. GEMINI (May 2l·June 20): Disruption of basic plan could boomerang in your • Iavor. Don't force issues. Ri<le with tide. Family member sings blues. Be sympathetic bu t refuse to act as human cryinc: Countdown Begins For Valentin~ Ball FREE 1.....:..Mcontrol ~ by phone . ' If )'OU'd llke lo loSI. unwanted ciound1 t nd keei> it off for pod, 'caU W1l1ht Watchlr1 for frnadYiCL Ctll •l'IY tlmt, niaht or day 835·SSOS TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ PROFESSIONAL WATCH · REPAIR Compl•t• ..-i teh t•p1ir t11wic1 for OMEGA ,ACCUTllON, ROLEX fhi1 includ1t ehron°'rt pht. tfop wJlch11 •~cl 'h'o"•" ' . PROFESSIONAL JEWELRY REPAIR m•lt rt. Wt 1•p•ir w1lc;h•1 of ttl typ11, Cotnpl•l• di•I r•• fini1hi11g frotn '' 111d w1t1r,roof .. 'Vtl•lt frotn SI. Rln91 •i1.0 •iic/ r•p•ir•tf. Di1,,.011ch 111 a11d ti9ht•11ff. Col'!• pl1t~ e1•ti11g f1c ility fOf c111lom d•tig111d jewelry. '••rl 1114 be1d r1tlri119i119. We do 11! fvp11 of i•••""'I 11p•ir. ment, po i 1 .e •. appearance, youth fi tness and creative and performing arts. AN EXCITING LUNCHEON FASHION SHOW By Ewen's 03outique (2300 HARBOR BLVD • COSTA MESA) Featuring fa shions by "\Dig:J(' of California ' Tuesdays & Thursdays, Noon • ,.,.. -J«»11.o:1c::e ------"" SHOETREE NEW MANAGEMENT ·- WOMEN'S SHOES SAVINGS UP TO OYER 2~000 PAIRS WHILE THIY UST! . jc»tyc::.e· SHOETREE SOUJH COAST PLAZA -. . , ' .• . • • \ • I. v---We Dare You ..• Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. Till 9 P.M. HAll:lOll SKOPJlllHCJ CIHTIEll Utl H•rlllr •~. HUNTINGTON CINTlll I Mcll & t:dlfltlf H~nllnttlll •-11 nwH• -1---in CO.tCLMua, 1 SSS...A,dams'---1--11 _ _..·QSTA MIS~·~---1 l •--1 UPPll ll'llL Every. Saturday CMll MIN ........ -- • 14M7t1 OPliM SUHOAY1 NOON -f 1'.M. 11>-f MONDAY TMllU fllllDAY ... , SATUll:OAY -·, ' ! • • •• • ' . • , • • DAILY PILOT H -i ' .Eal I T epics, ~eijp Rewards rt 'ditor'• Notr: A page/de· voted to Fo1tntatn Vat ti/,· !a tret to be planted en the school-grounds in honor of the winning closes in the membership drive. Tree will betr a plaque listing the names of the winning classes . . . Members con- · Huntington Beach, Ocean View crnd Se a L Beach Schodl District parent· teacher organization1 will. appear in the DAILY PILOT .each , week. I nformation must .be received by Afr1. Gitbert Turnbull, 5671 Man· QTUm Drive, Huntington Beach bt1 5 p.m. Thursday for publication W i!!dnes· day.) tinue to participate ln . a 1.f:'t'li~~ recycling project at Five Points shopping center ln Huntington Beach. ·'Angling for Fun Huntington Union Council Mrs. Loren L1mmu1 Pu!ident REPORTS: Who's Zoo in Educallon was title o f satirical ~presentation o n parent! and e_d us a t o ts presented at a en er a I meeting by Vic Knighf, 8"0Ciate director of field services et LIVerne College. and a veteran of 20 years service in public educafJon. Council voted to endorse Villa1e View PTA's plan for a corr.:munlty-wlde project to raise $4000 for a h e a r t disease detection unit for Ocean View School Di.strict. Arevalos PTO Mrs. Tbom11 HUI President Harper PTA Mrs. Kennet.la Keller President COMING UP: Student testing and evaluation will b e discussed at unit meeting Tuesday, Nov. 16, at 7:30 p.m. in the musjc rooAl. Guest Speakers will be . Robert Sanchi!, assistant s)Jperintendent or educa· tional serVices for Fountain Valley School District; Milo Bibelheimer, director o t special services, and Robert White, school P6Ychologlst. REPORTS: Room m6ther1 met to fonnulate plans for class Christmas parties, ac- cording to Mrs. L I o y d Cohen, chairman. Hope View PFO !\lrs. David Crandall President ~A fishirig booth will be one of the many features at . the Hope View PFO Swap Benefit planned from 10 REPORTS : Flags for the school fiag football tearrui have bttn purch1sed with $45 raised at the recent bake sale ... Unit presented the first In a series of after· school dances J o r seventh and eighth graders ... Membership drive has been completed and prizes .have been awarded' to the wlnning classes, according t.6 Mrs. Wllfred Cohen, membership chairman. COMING UP : Na.w Math will be ·subject of guest speaker Hal Chapman at general meeting Tuesday, Nov. 111, at 7:30 p.m. in the achool library . . . Benefit swap meet will take place Satur· day, NoV. 13, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the !iChoolgrounds. Proceeds wiJI be donated to the. Matt Kelty and David McCull1h families, both or whom suf· fered recent t i ag edl es . Persons wishing to participate in the benefit can rent a swap table by payin2 a $2 ree plus 10 per- cent of the profits earned or --ta.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 13.-Angling for a prize:- : is Jennifer Kelley, while Lisa McCullah seems hook· j ed on helping. Both their families, who have suffer· : ed recent misfortune, will benefit frohl the funding event. Eader PTA Mr1. Jame1 Powers President REPORTS: Unit has donated r .. ' •: . ' • Cruise Charted Tamura PTO I n v I t e 1 member• 1nd guests te a Dine-out Night. ht9in- nin9 at 5:30 p.m. tomor• rGW. USS: Tamur1 S1il1 for Schol1rships themes th• b • n • f i t. Heisting 1nchor for the •v•nt Is Mrs. Roy Rowland, while cr•w member Mrs. Paul . t Perry awaits command , fro") her 1kipptr. '?#~/ll~f~~-~:.~ '%e~Y-~O~ .>. . _., ·-···-· .... ; ··~· ,,_, 601 IAST'llALBOA ILVD., BALBOA . __..-... REFRIGERATE_D DELIVERY SERVICE : PHON~!10- ''ICIALS-THUIS::-•11., 1AT. -H Mnl-11!1J;r1---r- SPRINGFIELD 12 OZ·FROZEN CERTIFIED PATIO DINNERS SEASONS FINEST BEEF OR CHEESE RUBY· RED SLICED ENCHILADA BACON OR GRAPEFRUIT MEXICAN STYLE 1 LB. l'ACK &XTRA FANCY • c $ WI 11$11¥1 THI llGHT TO LIMIT qu.a.N1'nn • ' El Toro Air Station Here We Come M/Sgt. Ace ~1aline explains to Brad Brown and De Ann Snipes what they and fellow members of the Nleblas School Effort Club might expect while visit· ing the El Toro ~1arine Corps Air Station. This tour is part one of many outings planned as a reward to students who' sh.ow ouistanding effort in classroo m. can reserve a table free of charge If they d0nate their tota l profits. Tabl'e reserva- tions can be made by con· tacting Mra. Judson Grove at 846-3006. REPORTS : Mrs, St a n I e y Sawyer reports 321 parents and teachers· joined the unit during the recent mem- bership drive. Mrs. Ben Greco's class achieved 100 percent participation afld received ice cream sundaes . Mese View PT A rtlr1. George Blank President REPORTS: Sale of Mesa View Mustangs tee shi rts and sweatshirts began Ia.st Mon- day and will continue until Friday, Nov . 12 .•• Unit and student council cooperated i n collecting clothing and Halloween c~n­ dy for the children's ward in Fairview State Hospital .. Seel Beach , PT A J\lrL Norman Karkut President COMING UP: Birds. Bees, Bugs and Drugs is pro- 1ram title at unit mteting Tuesday, Nov. 16, at 7:33 p.m. in the Mc Gau g h. resource center. Program is for ¥ult.sonly, according to Mrs. Richard Kunz, first vice president. Le ad in g discussions on family life. sex education, drugs and venereal disease wilt be Mrs. Leo Levanas, high 5Chool nurse; Sgt . S ~ m D'Amica , Seal Beach Police Department. and M r s . Ronald Lofstrom. registered nurse represenling the Long--------------------- Beach Free Clinic. REPORTS: Mrs. Wayne Shad· dox, membership chairman. repo~s 864 parents and teachers joined PT A during the recent drive. First place winners, the c I a s & e s of Mrs. Charle! McFarlend ind J\1rs. John Bentley, re- ceived pereptua l plaques. S eco nd ·place winners were the classes of Richard While and Mrs. Jay Young. Wardlow PTO !\1rs. Jess C11r1nta President REPORTS : Me!"lbership drive produced 5S2 members. Win· ner was MfS. David Auerbach's class. Other win· ners were homerooms of Mrs. David Leichtfuss, Miss Frances Bowen and Mrs. Richard Vander La a n . Mrs. Auer b ach 's class received a Wardlow Warrior PTO banner. Westminster High Mrs, Joseph Fodor President MATERNITY S A L E DRESSES• TOPS• PANTS • 80% TO S0%0FF for the season's parties ... ! your maternity wardrob e -NOW! NEW,OJIT CENTER 21 F.ASHION l~L.AND NIWPOIT IE.ACM H.AllOI SHO,PING CENTER THI CI TY 2100 HAllOR ll¥D. COSTA MISA SJJ ,INI .AYE. LONG llACH I SHANNON IA.ST ORANGE MALL OF OIANGI OllANGI COMING UP: An Ounce of Prevention is program litiel====================== at unit meeting Monday, Nov. 15. at 7:30 p.m. in the cafeteria. Speakers will be Dr. Walter Winter&, director of Wintersburg Guidance Center; Michael Brigandi, assistant d elinquency prevention coordinator for Orange County Probation Department and E m o r y Fillmore. oppo·r.tunlty counselor at the high school. Wt'HAVf YOUR SIZf 2 1/2 TO 12 Not oll 1tyles In this sl.1e range. !I•••~"' •l••H 't1tu •id• .. 1~rb1 II.Oii •11ro . · Out 'N' About For Advertising in Phone Norm Stan/et 642-4321 \ ' ALDEN the fashion 1hoe1 that SIZES: 2Vi·11 WIDTHS: 4A.(W COLOlS: WE HAVE YOUR WIDTH EW 4 toll ( 4 to 11 D 4 to 11 C 2'Ato12 I 3\0 to12 A 5 to 12 U 5 to 12 All S toll ·UU 6 toll .. ,.. " Mi•" .. ,, •• ..., , .. ,,...,. II ,11 !l!-M •I- ,or 1111 llift' wf'lo dtllllflil OOl!lo fort ••• d1111n1d wUPi • 110111 • t•rt for 1n11111 fit • , • diidl• eo11to tort 101111 cvtllto• Into!• 11141 ltl'to Ing• ••• 11lr1°1h 1111t" 11111 111111111 ,., ldftd IOM!ort••I• Wllklftl ,, ... """ OPEN 9: 15 TO 6:00 DAILY FRIDAY 'Tll 9 P.M. CLOSED !VERY SUNDAY • llock C•lr • 1, ... ., C•lf • llack P11t1ftl • ... .,, (1111 • N11..y C.lf • Wiiii• Killl 11AMIE ., SIZIS: 4\IJ .11 WIDTHS: .JA·O COlOlS: ..... ,.,, >Com•I C.lf • lone C11lf _ i899 • l!t (k Cri~klt ,.. •·••111 Enna Jettick Shoes WESTMINSTER CENTER In tho Moll 6ltt WllTMINITIR AVI, PHONI 197·4100 DOWNTOWN DOWNTOWN ...... ----~~stap.t~c.__. SANTA ANA ANAHEIM 101 [111 4th SI. • 'h1n1i $42·.1221 101 W. L/11col11 A•t. • '"· 6JS.0440 • .. • ~ . • Newport lie~eh· .E DITI ON N.Y. Stocks • • • VOL. 64, NO. 269,. 7 SECTIONS, 98 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . WEDN ESDAY, NOVEMBER ·10, 1;ii' TEN CENTS -3 . . L . Newport Bay Areas .Badly F~uled-County By CANDACE PEARSON 01 ti!• DlflY P1t.t $1111 l'hree 11.reas of Newport Bay are so polluted that the possibility of quaran· lining them against s\vimmi~ should be considered,. an Orange County harbor district engineer said Tuesday. AnalyUng county health . department tests over the past three years, James Ballinge'r said West Newport channels, the Rhine Channel and the undeveloped areas o! the Upper Bay failed con· OS Dmibts Re11aaita icislently to 1neet state poll ution slan- dards for water contact. Ballinger presented tbe comparisons of fl\'O tests: both concentrated JO.day sun1- n1er samplings at ~4 stations in the bay to I.he county }farbor. Beaches and Parks Commission, which had been considering ordinances requiring locking of corn· mercial boat toilets while in the Harbor. • After hearing that the Lower Bay was the only area which met standards with IOw levels of pollution, district official Larry Leaman said . "~!any People directly relate ""ater quality lo boaters. but the bulk or \\'he.re the boats are moored is the least problem." Commissioners took no action on Ball· inger's report, other than to react to the ·extensive statistics. which Commissioner Martin Usab called "scarey." · In. ·the West Newport channels. the 'failure at meeting bacteria tests went from 12 percent in 1968 to 21 percent' in 1970. Dissolved oxygen tests were failed -reeze r at a percentage or 35 in 1968 and 44 i.n 1970. The Rhine area. just behind the city halt. had an increase in bacteMa count "'ith only three percent in' 196& but 41 per- cent in 1970. Its oxygen count.was 61 per· cent iii 1968, 80 percent in 1970. Undeveloped artas of Upper Bay, above Dover Shores, showed the greates t fucrease in bacteria count with !'i9 percent in 1970 up from three percent in 1968. Dissolved oxygen figures marked the highest failure increase al30 up from 29 percent to 63 percent. Only one a~a . the developed section of Upper Bay. showed any improvement . Dissolved oxygen count decreased in 1970 to only four percent Crom n percent in 1968. Bactt(ia showed JitUe change, from three to six percent. Lower Bay figures were : bacteria·, two and four percent, and ~issolved ozygen, two percent both years. Ballinger said the problem areas had Douglas Granted • • I , Airport Zoning 8}' JACK BROBACK 01 lb• D•ll1 l'llt! Sl•tf 1'1fcDonne!I Douglas Coroporatioa "'-'on the battle of the gia nts today over tht> Crvine Compan,v rega rding the use <>r land near the Or11nge County Airport in :;, r.plit 3 10 2 ~·ote of the Hoard of Su!)f'r- visbrs. BUI the final de!erminalion of' the issue is still in doubt because t~ couaty'i; Air· port Land Use Commission may eJer· cise its right. to veto the rt"ZOl'le from in- dustrial to commercial use or the 50 acres in question. A four-fiflil5 vote o( the Board of Super· \'i!Of!!I is required' by law to overrule a .Ex-Reinecke Aide .Charges 'Coris piracy' SACRA:'llE:".'"1'0 !UPI' -The fonner top aide or Lt. Go\'. Ed Reinecke today accused him of spending hundred~ of thou.sands or taxpayers dollars to cam- paign for governor and of condu cting 11n •·undercover" conspiracy against Gov, Ronald Reagan. The charges by Hal Steward, No. · 1 assistant to the lieutenant governor. were contained in a letter released today to newsmen and sent to Reinecke Tuesday •. Steward said he wanted to explain why he "resigned"' his $20.000-a-year post as special executi\·e assistant . Other .top aides prh·atcly said he "''as fired . Reinecke said Steward. on the job Only seven 11"ceks. left by "mutual consent ."' 1'11<! shakc~p follo"'ed a dispute ovef T'Clease of a preared speech te xt in \vhich Rc ineckl' criticized state employe efficiency and salary increases. Reinecke and other top aides \\'ere not immediately available for comment on SteM·ard·s letter. ' Steward told Reinecke he "resigned'' because: -''The US<! by you and members of your staff of hundreds of thousands of dollars in tazpayers money solely lo conduct a l'ampaign for your election to governor in l9i4." -·'The cffo11s by senior mentbers of ~our staff. with your knO\\'le4ge, to con· duct a conspir~cy. undercover, again st r.o\'. Reagan. his administration. find his staff." -"Your rnfusal, despite repeat¢ recon1mendalions and urging by me to 1ltempt to identify "'ith or consider the C'thnic problem s and aspiration11 or member~ of Califomna's minor i I y groups."' t -"The blatant cyniciSm practiced by roo and the: senior members bt your staff In regard to public iss ues whtre your and theJr only n1otlvation was whether your position on Ute ls5Ue!!I would help get you elected governor ralht!r thrn an interest In the conce.rn and needs or the citizens or California ." -··Your refusal. despite rn)· repeated urgings, to do you r homework aod keep roui;;;etr prepared on the \'ital issues zonillg decision by the Airport L::.nd Use group. ,_1cDonnell Douglas had requested lhat the 50 ;,cres 011 the northeast corner of ~lacArthur boule\•ard agd Campus Drive be rezoned from industrial to commercial use. In two heated hea rings before thf. Orange County Planning Commission, the aeros pace firm 's representativr s disclos- ed plans for a 250-rooln hole! and 500,000 square feet oC oflice space on the site. Opposition to the zone change has come from the-Irvine Company, the Irvine fndll!!ltiral O:>mplex, UC Irvine and the ci· ty of Newport Beach. ·~ -~-·- " l' anishitag Scene Irvine interests oppose the change becauSe, they say it "violate s the in· tegrity or the seven-year-old genera l plan of the area." County Road Department officials said roadways in the area cOuld not possibly ~upport the· increased traffic which would be generated by the commercial develop- ment. This is a scene that is disappearing from the Nc\v· port peach scene. City councilmen have approved an or<linance banning dogs from beaches bet\vecn 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. from Sept. 15 to June 15. It goes into effect Dec. 8. Before 9 a.m ... or afier 5 p.m ... between t hose dates, you can take your c~nine to the shoreline On II leash. ~Ween June )5 ind Se(>t! 15, you can't take him U> tbe beach at all,. .Law ap- plies to all oceanfront beaches, including Corona del fi.1ar State Beach. Total ban already is in effect for bayfront beaches. ~lcDonnell Douglas offici al!\ argue that il is the best use for thr prope rty and that lo oppose the development is to sup- port a policy (If "gloon1 and doon1" as far as future econon1 ic irnproven1enl of !he central Orange County area is concerned. NeY.'):lOrt Beach offici als oppose the change because, they say, ii ··11·ould far outs.trip projected demand of the area." Newport Beach recently approved a hotel-office building development on a 200-acre site a short distance from !he McDonnell Douglas property. Clouding the issue was the adoption nt land use plan for the area by the Orange County Airport Land Use Commission. This body has designated industrial use ror the 50 acres under discussion . The rezone had squeaked by planncr!I twice by 3 to 2 vo\<'S. The land usr co1n- mission needs only lo rraffirn1 it!I <lesignation for the property and ii 11·ould by state law. requ ire i!I four-fifths vote of !he supervisors tG override !he coin· mission. h~vi11e Housewives . Urg~g More School Facilities A group o! Irv ine housewives have C?I· Jcctcd nearly 700 signatures urging the Orange County Board or Supervisors to take steps to stop further planned development "without first finding a w<iy to provide-nccdrd schools a n d £'1assrooms ... , i\lrs. lieorge Falkenstein of 178~2 Ciillman St.. Irvine, said !he petition 11·a:o1 dclh··ered Tue sday to a "surprised'' Superv isor Ronald Caspers. A letter accompanying the signatures said they expressed concern about the i;hortage of school facilities for children 111 the area , even though steps to ca se the l:la ssroom cru nch in the San Joaquin l!:lcmentary DistricL have been an - nounced in recent weeks. ''Thi~ is progress. yes." Mrs. J•a lken· stein said. ··but Gur children will probably he on double sessions ne:tt year and for years lo come unless more is done soon ." Balboa Bla~ted ''The responsi bility for achieving ef- fective coordinating and financing must be shared by the boards of education; developers and state and counly of. ficials," she concluded. Peninsula Subsidized-Parsons The petition requests ;'that no rezoning. development or redevelopment ·of family residential:housing be permitted within the Sa n Joaquin or Tustin High districts City Councilman Lindsey Parsons says 1·iding any off·slreet parking . until the propone nts of such rezoning , Ne'l\i?Ort Beach is subsidizing Balboa "I. don·t think \\'e like s;:.loons so mucll de velopment or redevelopment present Peninsula business1nen. lie says he 11·ant~ 11·e should subsidi ze them.'' Parsons said. evidence satisfactory to the Orange the city's Planning CorTimiss ion to put a '·\Vc 're ~ing ta xpayers dollars to sub-County Pl.anning ComlTJiSsioi:t that.. .re-- stop to ii. sidh:e them." he said. "A parking space quired public iehools w111 be fact be con· Parsons. whose council district covers for a business is 1vorth $3,sop, we should structed and provided concurrent with Corona del Mar. f.1ondny night criticized _eet the interest. about S295-$300. • the need." Agnes Ellsworth, Native Newport Woman, 75, Dies The daughter of a pioneer Newport Beach family, born on e'alboa Peninsula 75 years ago, died Tuesday night at Park Lido Convalescent Hospital. f.frs. Agnes Kelly E 11 s w·o r,t h, 209 Washington St., .Balbo~. w s the second girl born in Newport Be . She was the dpughter of Mr. and Mr . John McMillan. lier father was a ci employe for 44 years. Her mother. born at Mission San Jose, was the daughter ol Mormon immigrants. Mrs. Ellsworth was a member ol the Newport Beach Historical Society and an early day .telephone Operator and postal employe in Newport. Beach. She ia survived by a son, Walter Kelly of Santa Apa ; two granddaughters. Mrs. Karen Su Greene of El Cajon and Miss Donna Kay Kelly of Santa Ana, and a brother John D. McMillan of Newport Beach. Funeral services will be held at 9:30 a.m. Friday al Pacific View l\femorial Park Chapel , Corona del Mar. .. , ~ the city policy of allowing new businesses .. It 's unfair competition t.o those \\'ho The San Joaquin district presently has to buy city pt>.:-king per1nits for $15 each . 1nust rumi!th their 011•n parking." Coon-more than 3,008 elementarv pupils at--He said l l iii unfair to other merchants l'ilnlan Dick Croul or Corona <lel M'ar " Marijuana F,ound In Surf Board who mlL<;t provide their o"·n parking al ~f!reed. tending classes on double sessions .as a a t.'OSt of up to $3.~ per ~p..1ce P2.rsons suggested ma ybe some of the result or rapid growth, shortage (If spen· ·LIHUE, KAUAI, Hawaii (APJ -Whc!n "It's a misuse or taxparers funds to businesses in the area now should be dablc bond moneys and the usual Jag John A. Reed arrived on Kauai Island for allo\V this S(lrf of thing to happen." Par· I.om do1vn to make .__,ay for more park· betv.•een needs for schools and the com· a surfing vacaUon, a poll!'e officer took a sons said. in.I!: lots. plction of new buildings. close look aL Reed's surfboard. .He conceded that nlerchants in rer· He pointed out the ori1inal intent or The officer called for assistance and l;.tn areas couldn'\ be e.'tpecled to pro-!he annual penuits "·as •·for local resi· D T Lo C Sgt. Dennis Higa.sh~ of the Kauai police \'ide parking. Instea d. he \1·ants !he frc denls In gel to the beache6. to utilize our ick .t·acy SeS at• vice squad Identified the Jeal deoor&tipn ror those yearly stickers hiked to about retreational RSSel ~. under the fiberglass on Lhe board as $300, a figure hr sa1·s re prescnb U1e an· ''\\11! etl)tel wme buy In CorONJ de! 'POTTSTOWN. Pa. IU PI) ..... Dick genuine marijuana . nual interest on $.1.500. \tsr to cut do"'" the number of •chr.;rs Tracy's car v.·as stolen from 3 railroad• The 18-year-old Santa Barbara youth 'J'he $15 fee for a transferrable parkinR in his restaurant because Gt the parklnt statton parking lot hfire. Tr·acy, i\,not on-. was arrested for unlawful possession of !tick~ for individuals "·ould not be raised he haJ available," htr said. ''It'.! unfair ly th(lllftfesiRe of·t~ICSlriJf det~mifljuiiila.11e Wl!!I released on JI00-5ill under the proposal. ha t we i'ovide it. !or others at a low live, he Is also the Potlstown police chief. &nd will be arraigned In district court On the least amount of flu;hing aiCtion and were generally shallower. He suggested ~lutions or adding: oxygen to the wate rs to aid marine life, deepening the channels or Intercepting drainage into the areas. Commissioners were not sure what to do with the figures and Harbor Distrid Director Kenneth Sampson said they were "'only indicators. Co mprehensive (See POLLVTION, Page Z) are Qualifiers Outlined By Panel From Wlre Services WASHI NGTON -The Cost of Living Council announced today that 45 percent o( t<>tal U.S. salrs and roughly to perce11t or pay increases arrecung workers will come in !or close government control during the post-freeze economic period. In addition, the codnti! announced a group of new e:temptioru: for the period that will follo\v the freeie. They include all used product!!!, such as used cars. ex· isting: real estate and in some case!!! new homes, and commercial and indwtriaJ rents. The council said price increases must be reported to the government before they go Into 'effect if a company has an· ' nual sales of $100 million or more. Som• J,SOO companJes Jn the United States, _representing 45 percent of total U.S. 1ales, are in thi!!I category, the council said. As for pay increases, all those which would affect 5,000 workers or more wUI have lo be reported to the government before they can go into elfect. The council said 500 economic units, presumably meaning bargaining units, are iocluded in this category. represen· ting 10 percent or the total national work force. • The surprise in !he ne\vs conference was the large number of new exemptions that will be allowed after the free z.e ex· pires midnight Sunday. Raw sugar, ~ues to nonprofit organiza· tions, international shipping r a t e s , royalties and copyrights for materials ruri:iished for publication are among the new price items that will be exempt from controls. So will Wsposal sales by the govern· men\, such as sale of abandoned or con· fiscated property. Custom services and products made to individual order, such as leather goods. clothing. wigs and toupees, and fur apparel . will also be ex· empt. The exemption on raw unprocessed agricultufal products, financial securities and exports wUI continue In effect after lhe freeze ezpires. Donald Rumsfeld. director of the cou,,.; ci.I, told reporters tha t other e:temptioni are bein~ considered and may be an- . (See PAY BOARD, Pag:e 21 lt'eatller •1eavy fog along the coast to- Tlight throu8h mid-morning on Thursday, the weather lady r~­ ports, with high!!! along the coast a not·so..higll 60, rising to 70 in· land. Lows tonight between 48 and. 52. -INSmE TODAY Local enlertai'nment hits its peak this time of year a11d t~ day's enitrtoi1iment 11 e ct f on serves up_ a smorpasbotd of. theater a11d mu.ric 11tws. Pager 22 a11d 23. •lrtllt '1 1'\fll J11 SV'#kt 1 .. 11 ... lillt JI ,..,.,... »·11 C'•Hltrlll• It Mllhl91 l'tllllll• •I tll'tff' Ct1•t 1' Nllleftll Nft't t•I CllM~l111 V• U Ort ... CW!ltr IJ CllHlfitll Sl~ l"t4 M (IMltt '' S'l'Me ,...,... .. -r;,..,....,,----,,-,""' -n.w 0.1111 Ntllttl 11 Or. Sltffltttflll lY l lltvltl l't t• ' lt.c:lt Mlrflflt ..... •11tttttlll11Mlll tt.11 TtltYltl•11 ti Reinecke, appolnt@d by Reagan as lieutenant governor tn 1969 after fanner Lt. Gov. Robert II. Finch went to Wtshlngtorr-wllh-Prest<lenrN"tzon, 1nnounced hls Intention to run for eovernor tn 197C. P&sons' criticisms came as counc1. Tracy said he cannot understand why Nov. 19. men review~ a use permit &!!nled b''--.;~!'!ll~~~~~~~~~~-~·n~one took the trouble to break into his Po~ uidJ!...V.J the~ ti e an_ ptanrung commiS11i(lnef'ifor a B7ilboo bnf~ !--.rillon wagon to s eal 1 en ay frresL hi!bffn made for possCiiiOTI of 1'111...C:f If.ti Tllttltn 12·ll "'"K.,. "' if Wtllllff I -..... -,.'"' i w..,,..., ... -.o.: ' The Galley. that was requ ired to pur· when there are so meny newer cars marijuaM found embedded in the design chiue 15 stickers annually instead of pro-A.round. 0£ a surfboard. I' 1 Mll1N11· ' WWII , N... ... flU!trlttt l.lttntt1 ti • .. --::'-'~;:DAil Y PILOT N Wtd~sdq, NMrnber 10. 1911 --==~=--,,,.-= .'---..,..-- Mi'li tan ts Face Life? ·I ~ 2 Suspec.~ -in-Wil~ Chase Plead..l;uilty · By ARTH UR R. VINSEL .behind ban too. Qrllflt. 1i: .. , oel1)e tYje ti record In 01 "'• 0 1111 " .. ' '1111 The men pleaded iullty to two counta !heir Oct. JI rampaae •. A pair of black militanls who led each of kldnaping for the ·purpose ot rob-Tak101 ttu-e. boaltges in a Lu~y ,law n1en on a three-county chase In a I bery, in a surprise rnove Tue.sday at their Markel 'rob~~y that netted $6,134, Mad· bizarre bid _ ironica lly _ to 6\>lain prelim'inary hearincs In Long 'Beach den and Griffie allegedly holed up at the Municipal C.Ourt. Leflie ~is home on Orellano Way in motley to free Black Pan thers now In Laguna Hills. prison today face the possibiJity of lire Henry L. Madden, 25, and Dennis A Police tipped off dur ing the holdup kept 'i.aw1nen Cited Newport Cof C -Honors ·officers • ~ ·,lbe daring rescue of a Newport Beach own leg. man from a Ilaming apartment and a Two merit awards were also presented . • \Ke-and-death struggle v.·tth an armed The)'. ~ent to ~tecti~e ~I Epstein w,ho ·lt\.inman today won honors for two .had in1llated an 1nvest1gallon that led to Newport Beach police men. t h e arrest of 34 persons on naf'C9tlcs : ..... ,$gLDon-e}.ir.dial Land..0IliceLJ.nhn...Elh.....chfr1es_and l~:Officcr ~chael ~cEv~ny in· ham were two of five policemen WOO won nine gold me<lals wlifle ~pored al the first Newport Harbor rep resenting ~he Ne wport_ Be~ch police Ohamber of Commer« Poli« Awards depart~ent 1n the California Police lu.nc:heon at noon at the Balboa Bay Club. Olympics: . _J., Tbey both received meda ls of valor for .A special .surprise humor award w_as :,_ · d 8 d 11 h 0 d ror given to Officer Scotty McGregor, chief 111eir ~ee s. ur sa was on re h 1. .1 ho b k h. 1 · .... · 'd th b n·ng bui lding and e tcopter p1 ot. w ro e 1s oot 1n a rusnin 1ns1 e e u~ 1 . high-fl ying performa nce "above And Ellingham for \\Testllng 11 p_islol away beypnd the call of duty." from a ma~ who had shot his pa~tner · The award in the form or ai scale-model ,in·en though he had a bullet wound in hls of a sel of sti lls. commemora ted * * * Seal Beach Asks I/alt to PJans For Coast Route '· •An immediate halt to plans for the Pacific Coasl Freeway and extension or tfie 605 Freeway has been urged by the Seal Beach City Council. Councilmen took their stand Monday lftght by wianlmously endorsing a reolu· 000 to sto'p the freewa y. It was drafted -1'y Councilman Franklin B. Sales. --,The effort to block the freeway was backed by a 400-signature petition of mbre than 400 resldenls of the College Park West tract bordering on Long ,S...,b .. . Members of the five.man council •re Uking the state legislature to "res· 'clod any and all appropriations" from the Pacific Coast Freeway and the extension Gf>lhe 60$ Freeway south from 7lh Streel. • •1n hi! resolutiOO , Sales slated that t!'le ·riaciflf Coast Freeway "could seriously aeter.iOrate the quilit; of life in tl}e College Park West portion of Seal Beach." • \The .adopted freeway roule, which would cut a swath throu gh a bird refuge ·Q the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Sta- 9'Jn, has been under c9nsistent attack by 1;ioth councilmen and environmentalists Who are urging the Stale Highway Com- mission to "unadopt" the route. . S&les and the ' other council members d aim the. statistics and conditions which wet'! used to justify no longer apply. iMY said any advan ta ges of IL! con- 'ill ruction •·certainly do not outwe igh the lri.mendously negative environmental ~.nd ecolog ical effects the freeway would lt«ve on the city of Seal Beach ." '-'I'he rou te, earlier adopted by the Clties ~ Seal Beach. Long Beach .and Hun· fiilgton Beach. has in recent months been criticiud by city officials from both Long Bee.ch and Seal Beach. Of the three tjties, only Hunlington Beach has taken -no action to rescind its support. ~The latest attack from Seal Beach tlrges highway planners to consider other 0JT1ethods of solving traffic problems than '!Eeemingly never-ending construction of f~eways." ow•• COAST DAILY PILOl OltANOI com P\lllnMINO COMPNf't '-•"•' N. w.,. ,,.~, !11111 PwOtlllllt Jttli •· C Yrlef ~ ""' ,,......., ... 9-61 ..... T1io11•1t• r •• yn ..... t1io••11t A. ti1._,,,._l1t lll•fllt""411 t:•lllt L Pekt lt'ri•f ,......, llKll <llY 1,, .. Htwil"'ff '"-" Offk• J Jll w .... ,.rt ••wt., •• , M1ifl11 Mtr•••: r .0.1.11111, t2'4J -0- , McGregor's use of what he had been told was an "experimental , 11ilenl, · low altitude, aurVeillan« vehicle." The luncheon. attended by city of- fieiala, police department heads and other dignitaries, was presided over by Justice Robert Gardtier of the 4th Distri~t Court of Appeals. Many of the tables were sponsored by members of the newly-created "10.4 Clu b," the name taken from the police code used to say everything Is "OK." Today was also off icially proclaimed ''Pollet Recognition Day" by the city. The live award-winning officers were chos~ by a police dep&.rtment-chamber committee. Burdsall, 50, is in the pJtrol division and bas been with the department !Ince 1953. <He is married with one married daugl)ter. · Officer Epstein has also been with the force since 195.1, is 45 and single. Officer McEveny started In IH7 and works in the felony unit of the patrol ~ivislon. Married with two d.augbters, he JS 25. Helicopter pilot McGregor. 31 , Is mar· ried and has one son and one daughter. He has been with the Newport Beach department since Jiss. Valor. winner Elliniham, 15, began wo~lt -M1th' the Newport Belch depart· me-rft in 1988. He Is sln1le. Frotn Page 1 PAY BOARD • • • ' nounctd later In the week . He also said he would not n1le oul ex- emptions to the pa y standard announced earlier by the Pay Board. But Rum11feld woµld not ampl ify that sta!emen t. The Pay Board has left itself 11 loo phole that may stretch wide enough to squeeze a 12 percent pay r1ise th rou1h. But it ma¥ tc.ke months to find out. The three-level structu re 1nnounced by !he council would requ ire prior approval of the biggest companies. Below that level. the council i;aid com, pan les with· annual sales of $50 million to $100 million wll\ have to report price, cost and profit information quarterly and firms with 1,000 to :>,ODO wo rkers will have to report pay incre1ses when they take effect. Businesse! below lhe largest and medium-~ized categories will be subject lo spot checks by the government but they will not have to report theti-in- dividual wage and price actions tO the government . However, unl ess specifically e1empttd from the Phase U controls, all compan ies vdll be subject to the guldellnes ind dec isions ol the price commiss ion and the pay board. Rumsfe\d empbas\i~ 11 a news co n· ; rerenct that the wage-price freeze im- posed by President Nlton on Aug. JS will bt replaced by the Phase II con trol! Al midnight Saturday and lhi.t there will bt "no 11ap. no hiatus." He said the price commission would dJsclose Its guidelines and standArds on Thursday and that tht en tire Phase II nrgan ization v.·o uld be in place by the begiMj.ng o( the week. on their trail by ground and air. Bargalnlna: with surtoundlng officers · for the lh•es of Mo.nique Dreis, 7, and two hostages from the market, the suspect!t fi nall y continued on in a comman dee red Orange Cou nty sheriffs car, The suspects fled the Drei! home before a $20.000 ransom collected by the market chain -assertedly deslined for black militant use -could be delivered to them al the scene. Madden and Griffie, the latter an East <;o ast runaway, were finally captuttd al a roadb!Ock near Buckman. Spring! in } San Diego County, where they tossed out shotguns and freed their remaining hostage!. · Returned to Long Beach. the pair were chargad with a total of 14. felony coul)IS between them. ' Guilty pl eas offered Tuesday after a -week-of:negotiatio.!1:3·eonferences-between proseeijtors and public .defenders ind icate they will get a measure Of leniency. Madden and Griffie were taken to court in hand cuffs and body chains under heavy guard by nine officers to prevent any possible escape attempt. Each could receive \y,·o li fe sentences on the double kidnap counts, but slate law forbids their being e<>nsecutive terms. Judge Kenneth E. Sutherland also made no formal find ing that the pair us- ed weapons in the kidnaping, which would have added a· mandatory five to 10 years on the possible life sentences. Terms of the negotiated guilty pleas in- clude dismissal of the remaining kid· naping and armed robbery counts faced b)L. both Madden and Griffie when they are formally sentenced. They are due in GQUrt aji!a ln Friday fnr presentence hearing ,at which time it is llkejy Judge Suthtrland will rule ho.i;;ta r.es taken did not suUer actual bodily harm. · A market janitor freed by the capture. after ~pendi ng the entire 13 hour spree in custody or the suspects, described l\-1ad· den and Griff ie as ha ving treated them well. A woman bakery clerk from the Lu cky Markel was hysterical, but otherwise not phy!ically harmed. Chances of life terms would be somewhat reduced if the judge concurs. Fron• Pagel POLLUTION • • • cold weather samples ha\.'en't been taken yl!!t. ., ' But the statistics did seem to make the commission shy away from re-enacling the ordinance concerning commercial vessel s, whi ch had been returned to them by the Board of Supervisors because it was overly selective. A public hearing on all related matters of water qtiS:lity. including pump-pou t fa cilities. disposal of was te a n d houseboats was sugg6Sled.but not set. A repor t on pollution sources w11s ~chedu led at the morning's Joint Harbor Committee. compo~ed of commissioners and l\'ewporl Beach councilmen . but it wa s cancelled. . The report. wh ich will include a sludy of run-off and drainage , "'ill be made at lhe next committee meeting i n Decl!!mber. Sampson said the distrlct"s studies were not meant to m8ke people think that boaters and v.·aler users were ' 1nstant ly abusing the water. "Most of them have great res pect' for it,'' he said. And he added that pa rt of the problem wilh the Upper Bay was the storm and subsequent flood ing in 1969 which filled the bay with la rge amounts of .ru n-off. Commissioner Usab ag reed w i I h Sampson. saying that he wa s tired ·of a selective view and wanted the problem related nationwid e. "What the guy does lo his property in Denve r affects the ocean out here," he s11id. ~far tha Speechless? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Martha f\.1 itchell. who is not usually at a loss for words reported that Pr~sid~nt Nixon's closed-circuit talk to Republicans Tues· day night left her speechless. ~ "Mr. Prealdent has just ft me ~peechless," said the wife of y. Gen. John N. Mitchell . "He did 11uch 11 beautiful job, and he"s such a marvelous man." • Ottfto ...... : Sit W.-t .,., flrwt Lit-••<fll n: ...... "' ,._ ..., ... ,... e..dl: 1'97'1 I MCll l!lll'IMrf .... ~ ........ c...m .... 1 ---~a~h Buy OK!'d OAft..V tttt.OT, w'lit. ~ h _.,,,_!foeof ""' "'--"""-k ,,_..,..,. .. 111 •clfll .....,. ••Y 111 ...... ,. .. 1tltflt ftr L"""' 1-"o .. ..-w ,_.., C•i• ,..._,, k•••Oftf""" •-"• P'-'tlfl v.u.,., ,..., c.._ie/ """ .. _ .... ,...,,_(!(, ...... "'""' - ........... "'"-''""IN! .-... n,,. t lWll .. .. -w.t .. , 1fl"Wt,, C.NI M-... Tel 1t1•1 C7141 141-4Jlf Cl .............. '41·1671 Monterey Bill May Affe~t Others SACRAMl::NTO (A·P) -Gov, Reagan has signed legislation to give the • cil.y of Monterey authority to buy a beach threalentd-~ ith urb•n development undtr Redevelopment..,Agency aulbority. The bill by Assemblyman Robert \Vood ! R·Grcc ield). y,•ould give leg11I authority for complet ion or a tentative agrctmtnl rc.ac ed betv.'etl\ the city and ~ a builder. ·"' It y,·i.Jl Allow the c.lty to buy Ule oCtan frontage Jon of the proposed developm,nt slle to guarantee permanent public ):ccess. Wood uld his me1sure, 1Uhou&h 1:pecllk:1lly des\in.ed lo hel{! f.fontcref· couldhave bro1d sl.'ltcwlde lmpllc1tlon5. He a:aid over half o! Califomfa 1 1,100 milt coastllne is in private owntrship. -The Wood bill allows• city to define •s "blighted" land ln-the 1itutittlon where open oceanfront within ai City ma y bt closed to the public by develop- menL . To1•t1ired in Texas . Candy Marie Davis, Robert Franklin Davis and Ken- neth li1ark Co lvin, all 16 (from left) sit in a poli ce car after being rescued from a night of tocture in. Texas. Three of the five ,youngsters were found nailed in a cioset, another was fo.und dead, his hands l'ictitn and Suspect fl.1 ichael Wayne Davis, 19 (left) one of four survivors of a 'night of terror, sits in a Houston police car alter his rescue today. He and the others were kid· and feet tied together, face do\\'n in a bathtu b filled ~ith water,rwhile the fifth was hog tied . The young- sters sa id they Y.•ere hitchhiking to Texas to find jobs when they "'ere kidnaped . . ·~ -· ' I ' ' naped and tortured. Police ar e holding George A. \Vh ittington, ·27 (right), as a suspect Access Route Gets ,Qkay A full y-improv ed public pedestrian and bicycle ac'cess route through a view park overlooking the Coast Highway will be donated to Newport Beach · by the developer of Versailles on the Bluffs, an apartment complex being built adjacent to Hoag Memorial Hos pital. Donald J . Scholz. his -attorney. Thomas Peckenpaugh . told city planning com- missioners recently. proper ty ha~ not been fully investigated, Peckenpaugh said. The city would be responsibl e for maintenance of the path and for any ex· pansion of the area into state righl-of- way lands or the hospilal's temporary parking Jot. A io..root wide concrete pathway, landscaping an d an irrigation systtm runninR the full length of the southerly boundary of the project \\.'ill be provided at no coast to !he city by developer The path is designed as <\ ;,promenade park and ga rden area similar to the park area which runs along· th! bluff in front of the Victor 'H u.R:o Inn In Laguna Beach." Peckenpaugh salrl. Offer of the easemen t will be made of· fic ially when 10.3 acres in the second phase are purchased from the st11te upo n approval of a use permit for lhat phase, Peckenpaug h said. Entrance to the access wnuld be at Superior Avenue. ' Possible additional entrance at !he easterly boundary. which adjoins hos pital GEM TALK TODAY by Small But Im pressive The 18th annual Dian1onds ·lnter~ national .<\\1·ards collection opened in l\'cw \"o rk in n1id-Septe rnber. .Je\v elers fron1 30 countries entered their designs. and fro1n over 2,200 pieces. one gets a view of diamond fa shio ns for the con1ing year. !\lost people 'ron"t be surprised lo learn that rings y.•ere the n1ajor t atlr<iction. but they may be sur· l prised to learn or the i111portance of very sn1al\ dian1onds. Over hal{ ~ the \\inning designs featured tiny I diamonds in combination, "'ilh I other precious and semi-precious . rt stones. ~ The piece containing the mOst v.·as a ring \\'ilh 305 dia111onds, but a total \\"eitht or only two carats. Son1e pieces featured semi-prec, !1 h ·1 ious stones merely ''dusted" y.•it tiny gems, almost as though they U had bc..en dipped in glitter, r· If you feel you can't afford dia-J 111onds, take a second look at '''hat ,1 can be accomplished y.•ith even a I few of the tiniest. A few llny dia, monds on a highly polished back- ground ar impressive as _the , gleam in a PretL.y eye. \Ve'll be happy to help you pick A de sign to suit your t;tste s nif budget ) (20MEGA C::histmas wrapp ,ed· · in 14k solid gold tsn't this the year lo ~how her how much you really care? Wh!n she sees the Omega name on herwatc~ she 'll knov1 how m111ch extra though! you put Into "her Chrl&tmas. And be cause ~I Omega watches ere made to be !he finest of 1heir kin d, she'll probably never need another watch for a!l the Christmases to come. A-1ti( tOlid ga'd t·~ct'•I -.,1ch ••••. S27S a-1•>\ 11~1lt or )1110" ,,1;G 1~ld bu c11et "'flt~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••'''"'114\J c-1•1C eo1oc1 ;~ 11 111~ ~·•c•!•t w1wi , .s1:s J. {!. fiuntj.JhrieJ Jewefer:i 1823 NEWPORT BLVD~COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS I ANICAM EPJCAllO-MASTEk CHARGE l4 YEARS SAM E LOCATION PHONE 541·J401 ·--~-....--........-- - ' I I • -I . . . ' DAILY Pllff. f ' H· WtdntidU", Novtmbtr 10, 1971 Air Cal Gets --New 'Compro~ise' Pac • • r •. Tun,a Boats Captured ByEc~r SAN DlEGO (AP ) -Ecuadbr captured four U.S. tuna boats and fired a shot across the bow of one, damaging it slight· ly. the . American Tunaboat Association ~aid today. It \\'as the first seizure since J\1arch 27 in lhe runn ing dispute with several na. lions involving territorial fishing waters. The Ecuadorian gunboat'.! shot damag. ed the bow of the 1,000-ton Venturess but none of the 14 crew members was i•j~r­ ed, ski pper J\faurice'Correia notified the San Dieg<>based association. August Felando, general manager, said C~rreia identified thi Ecuado~I patrol craft as the L, C. 61, a converted U.S. Coast Guard patro l boat. The $2-milliOn Venturess. os ils maiden voyage; was boarded and the radios seal- ed but FelandD said Correia was "able to sneak off a radio message early today ." He Identified the other tuna boats seized 'fuesday night as Trinidad. the Blue 1"feridian and the Denise Mari, all based in. San Diego. The boats were 6S miles southwesi of Salinas in international waters, Felando said. Ecuador claims 200 miles off its c:oast as territorial waters while most o:ther maritime nations recrignize a 12· mile off-shore coastal zone. Felando said Ecuador seized 26 of the U.S. tuna boats earlier this year and levied $1.33 million in fines and penalties. He said 30 confirmed JJ .S. fishing boat seizures have taken place this year off Ecuador. the most of any year in the decade-old dispute. The fines and penalties paid by the U.S. fleet eventually ore repaid to the boat owners by an appropriations bill of Con- gress. In Washington. however. Chairman Edward A. Garmatz (D·fl-1d.). of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee. said he had been informed by the State Department a fifth vessel, the City of Panama. also had been seized. Garmatz said the City of Panama and lhe Denise A1ari were seized despite the racl they possess licenses permitting them to operate in the disputed 'valers. Gals May •Have Fewer Prohle:rvs With Circulation Because women are "softer'' and have more flexible arteries than men do, the y may have fewer heart attacks, a female rt?searcher said today in Anaheim. Dr. Grace M. Fischer, of the Uiti versity ()f Pennsylvania at Philadelphia, told the American Heart Association scientific gathering today in Anaheim t h a l ""omen's more flexible arteries are Jess susceptible to the hardening \Vhic h strains the hearts of men . ''Gals are probably more flexible than guys - at least as far as their blood vesitels~re.concerned,.'!....ihe-said,-~- Dr. Fisc her bases her conclusions 011 research performed on female rats from which female hormone producing nvaries \\'ere removed. The female hormone estrogen softens arteries. she said. 'J'he rats given injections of female honnone, replacing the missing supply, had softer. more flexible arteries than the others, she said. Female rat s with neither natural nor injected female hormones developed.tougher arteries. A team of physicians from the Ne1v Jersey ~1edical SChool at Newark told the gathering that drinking a I coho I i c beverages daily for more than two years -· even in moderate amounts -causes heart damage. Dr. Timothy Reagan. presenting part of their research, said' the alcohol causes more fat to accumulate i.n the heart and disturbs t h e metabolism o( f a t t y substance s. Dr. S. S. Abed said experiments showed depressed heart function after "entirely normal men and women drank alcohol in non-intoxicating doses .'' Dr. M. U. Jesr&ni s a id the depressant effect of alcohol on the heart may be caused by acetaldehyde. which is also fow1d in cigarette smoke. .. PICKEROO ADDS BOWL TICKETS A bonus priie -two free passes to the Pasadena Bowl for the first place wiMer each wetk -was added last week to the PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo, the popular football season pick-the-winner conte~t· Entry blank for this wee.k~s contest ap. pears tn the newspaper today for the last time this week. It's on Page 30. Deadline for this week's entries is 5 p.tn. Thursda y •-----, ttmt-means entry mu:rt-be -delivere&- person or by mail by S p.m. to the DAI · LY PILOT ). Top fi\'t winners each week each receive 1 $10-gift ctrfificate from South Coast PI11u. . . ,. DAILY P1\.0T Sll lf "IO!fl Six_ .. LConditions - Tacked to Vote By JACK BROBACK 01 l~t DlllJ' Plltl S"li' Air California. roundly condemned by Upper Newport Bay residents ai:id high1;1 praised by the Orange County business . comm unity. won a new five-year leaseJ Tuesday after a stormy two-hour hearing before the Board of Supervisors. The adopted compromise agreement, proposed by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald \l.J.. Caspers of Newport Beach, di d not Y.1holly please proponents of con· tinued air service, nor did it satisfy op- ponents. But it was good enough to win approval by a 4 to 1 margin and there were no boos or catcalls when the final vote was recorded. There his been some pointed ren;iarks from the audience and sporadic applause as speaker after speaker on either side exhorted the board members. Only Supervisor David L. Baker ·or Garden Grove voted ~ liBinst the new lease and only 'becaUSe lie thought it should be given more study · The compron1ise lease e).1enslon as of· fered by Caspers included six conditions: ed \~ conatnJ¢ or Juse terminal facilities independent of. the county'• GIR- troJs. He aJso -asked that a public hearing be held, that the Ecolog [ noise monitoring data' be made available ·to the· public and the city and that Newport Beach be con· suited on leases. Kymla also read a long list of reasons \vhy -the ·city's conditions should be adopted lncludiitg the fact that. the Harbor Area already bears the: burden of all of the scbeduJ'ed com1nercial jet opera~ the county, that the Upper Bay en~ent should be protected ... Als<t that atrport impact a r '.ta homeowners will continue to demonstrate .. unified op~ltion to airp6rt bpansron plans and they hQVe claims o{ more tlµ;11 $28 million in damages. -· DESPITE DAN EMORY'S CHARTS AND NEWPORT PROTESTS, AIR CAL CARRIED THE DAY Long·standing Airport Foe Stands Aga in Threatening (ourt Action to Abate No ise Po!IUtion -The lease to be for live years with the opportunity for review at one "year in~ -tervals at the anniversary date with op- tion to cancel subject to 30 days written notice. Costa Mesa City Councilman Jacti Hammett stated bis city's starld whkli approved renewal of the Air Cal le~. ~e urged, !hat the board not be swayed bY, . "emotional" appeals. , : -Councilffian William St. CJair present.a a minority rebuttal in which he accuJe4 the airline or adding flights not needed t6 keep competition out and urged the board members to limit a lease extension to one yea? to "put the airlines under pres&Ur1 to aid in developing a new airport." STRATEGY HUDDLE -Air California v.•on a compromise lease ex· tension for Orange County Airporl use al a stormy board or "super· visors session ·ruesday. Interested participants at the session gather here during interlude. Standing are fro!J1 left to right !11arshall Duf. field and \Villiam St. Clair, Costa !11esa council1nan. Kneeling from left lo right are Dan Emory, Earl Hardage and Carl Kymla . Ne\.\'port Beach councilman. · ------ Air Califo1~11ia Exten sio11 Mildly Pleases Two Sides Alth·ough there were rew broad smiles of victory evident afl.E!r Tuesday's con- troversial hearing on the extension of the Air California lease to operate out of Orange County Airport, statements released later by sµ,pketimen for both sides were mildly jubilant. Air Cal President fi9bert Clifford sa\d he was "satisfied " with the compromise solution offered by Firth D i s t r i c t SUpervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach. "ft ens).lres the continuation of our re- quired service." Clifford said, add ing lha t he had no objection to th e annual review of his airline's performance under the ne~ lease nor the 30-day cancellation clause if lhe performaRce record '"as not approved by the supervisors. Newport Bfitch Councilman C a r I Kymla, 'vho led his, city 's assault on the five year contracl. called the decision . ''a hell of a victory for Newport Beach . 'J'he city received what We asked for-do"'n to weekly • reports on noise monitoring equipment." ' Kyrnla added , "We must OO\V take an active role in the Southern California A\•iation Council Inc. upcoming rccom· mendations as they relate to Orange County and request lhe supervisors to make tq_ugh ~licy decisions on the future orthe airport. '1 Newport Atayor Ed Hirth said. ''\\'e got everythin&_~ geLat-the present Umt. "\\'e must now wor~ to get a ne"' location.'' "A victory for the people against big business." shoutl!d Nt"'port Assistant er. ty ,..1anager Phil Bettenct>urt ... \\It faced • high powered t.ladison Avenue public re.la.lions package y,•lth fh•t days notice and we were ah.le lo get residents in large numbers to .the hearing . and y,•e \VOn." Authorities 11 unt Ho1n e1na.de Food Wftich Killed 2 ! SANTA BARBAR1\ (AP/ -Authorities lried toda y lo trace home·canned fruits ' and vegetables sold by two elderly widO\Ved sisters \vho ma y ha ve died of botulism poisoning. ' The sis'ters. f\lary f\I. Smith. 8ji, and Jo Gface Hi wley, 77, died within three days of each other a[ler developing co1nmon .symptoms. Jars of celery juice found in the sisters• home emong 200 bottles of home-canned_ foods are being tested. said Dr, Frank Cline of the county health department. Officials said the two women had held a sale of their ca nned goods recently . The authorities appealed to resident~ tQ.Jurn the rood in foai tests . ~1rs. Hawley died Friday morning 3f(er drinking the celery juice and was buried Tuesday. funeral .arrangements for her sistei·. "'ho died Monday, are pending. Several persons have turned in canned foods"Tec:rivrd-from"th'-slstcrr. Dr.Clirre said. Stat' officiflls said 500 person.1 have died of botulism In California In this cen· "tury. Botull!m toxin has ' mortality rate or 50 percent with rapid medict1I cart. said Dr. Ben \Verner of the Bureau ol Disease Control In Berkeley. • i ' Air Lease Fee Tab $166,802 The current Air California lease which was the subject of Tuesday's debate before the Orange County Board of Supervisors was worth $186.802 to the county in fees paid b;y ~he airline during 1970. A breakdown re\'eals payments for landing fees. $120,907: termina l spa ce rental. $17,131 ; tie down fee s. S6,480;io. sha re of utilities and janitorial services in terminal building. $27,284. These charges will be revieY.red and possibly increased as part of .he new lease agreement approved by the su pervisors. " Clifford Hardi11 Plans to Leave Nixo11's Cabinet WASHI NGTON (UPI ) -Agriculture Secretary Cl ifford M. llardin plans to le<ive President Nixon's cabinet soon. it was learned today. Hardin. 56, was returning t o \Vashington from a brlef trip to Turkey and \Vas unavailable for immediate com· ment. \Vhitc House officials declined to com· inent on reports that 11ardin soon will submit his resigna tion. But they ruled oul specuJation !hat Gov. Louie Nunn of Kentucky is in line lo i>ucceed him although there \Vere publish· ed reports to that effect. ~ Administration officials stressed that there has been no dissatisfaction with J1ardfn's performal1ce 3Tthough he has been under fire from some farm sla te congressmen for not agg ressively pro- tecting agricullure. !Vlanv former agriculture secretaries have frequently been targets of criticism during their cabinet tenure. Hardin. a native of Knightstown. Ind .. 'ras a dark -~rse choice for the cabinet post at t~e start of the Nixon Adm inist ration. •3 STORES II~---'--/, TO SERVE -That 24.6 be established as a ceiling for the average number of flights and that .additional flights require board ap· provli l. • -That hours of operafion be limited to 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. for takeoffs and 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. for landings. -That no louder than Boeing 73~ or DC·9 with gross weight based on runway strength be used as equipment. -That all engines be rendered smokeless prio r to sig ning of the new lease. He also called for a review of rental prices which he belie ved to be low. Air Cal President Robert Clifford led off for the proponents noting that he w~s speaking for "Orange County's own air. line." He stressed the need for a five. year lease as "good business practice filr a 'firm which has such a large capital in· vestment. Anything less would not con· tribute to financial stability of the airline." Clifford also made these points: -Air Cal has no plans for flights outside or California . -Smoke will be eliminated and new engines will be quieter. -Five years is the very least time period in which there can possibly be a new site developed for an altema!e coun· ty airport. -Orange County Airport cannot be ex· panded because 0£ freeways on either end of the runways. Ground transport is also limited. City Councilman Carl Kymla led olC the opposition with a statement of the Newport Beach position. He called for the following conditions to govern continuance of terminal access privilegts to commercial carriers at the airport : -A statement of official policy that the Airport is not and in all probability never will be an acceptable facility !or jet aircraft. -That daily fligbJs be limited to the average daily level of the past 12 months. -Thiit commercial terminal leases be renewed on a year·to-year basis only. -That jet aircraft be limited to those no louder than the Boeing 737 or the Ooui;ilas OC.9. (This was apprllved). -That no new carriers proJtlsing tci use jet aircraft be granted terminal privileges and flights be restricted to 400 miles Crom the count~- -That no commercial carrier be allow· Newport Beach . Councilman Mij,an Dostal said an airport was needed but -.at where the present facility is located. He urged lhat flights be limited to Lockheed Electras, a prop-jet plane. : Newport Beach Airport rioise Abaii!"' "ment Committee Chairman /Dan Emory repeated his well publicized' objections and concluded with a threat of court .ac- tion U the "noise pollution'' continues ·to inc.rease. Upper Newport Bay resident Hany Rinker compared the Orange County Airport to "a misdirected sewer." "Sup: pose the .sewer ,was pointf4 in another direction, then how would the other 24 cities in the county like it?" he queried. Edward Cook of the Newport Upper Bay Homeowners Association said t~ present noise from the airport flights wa5 "equivalent to five jackhammers. The bay is a county and state asset and should not be destroyed," Ile argued. Cook talked over the alloted time and Board Chairman Robett · Ballin in- terrupted hfm. Wben he continued despite Battin's admonitions, the chairman r.aidf ''You have just caused ·me to change my. mind about voting on tpts." , This caused a noisy reaction from the audience and remarks about "integrity..'' Caspers called the airport "the right' thing in the wrong place." , After offering his motion to· renew the' lease for the five-year period with con: ditions. Caspers added a statement of policy he asked the board to adopt. Action on this suggestion was delayed uiitfi Nov. 23 .• The policy matters proposed inclu~, that the noise monitoring studies , be made available to the city or NewROrt Beach; that no new construction or leJ&e1 of tenninal facilities be lDlderta~erl< without board approval; that the board' reaffirm its opposition to the granting ol terminal space to additional commercial· airlines. He al~o suggested that a cost afld' engineering study be made of the feasibility or extending the existing· runway toward the San Diego Freew!.y. and.the installation of a blast wall in an attempt to get greater altitude and sound relief for the residents of Newport Beach. He also wants 1 $1,000 fine for noise' rule violators. • CENTER WITH FRIENDLY, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUL SERY· -;-ICE. PLENTY OF-f-R E.E PAR K-1 NG-IN BOTH FRONT AND REAR MALLS. ALL ON SniEET LML THERE ARE MORE , '{irciu_..JIL __ -:::'.:1 2300 HARBOR BlVO. STORES . IN OUR BA Cl<' MAtL .. -AT WllSON JUST SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FREEWAY IN THE HEART OF COSTA MESA 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA -- ( .. • • -OAILV PILOT * l ! • !-\ ' " ' "Castrl\ Due·- W elcome In,: Chile ' 'SANTIAGO, ChHe (AP) -Pr"ldent Sal~a~r Allende readied • , warm , -.. .. .. ' • Leading Offlclal • 1 Viet Politician I\illed by Bomb ' ' SAIGON {UPI) -Terrorllltl today Bong wa1 heavily protected because ol -~ ---"'~---welcome today for Prime Minister Fidel ~oastline Bill ' Castro, arriving ~n his first trip outside · assassinated Nguyen Van Bong, a !fading ,Y, . South Vietnamese politician. Bong, 42. -· I ., i · was killed when a time bomb exploded In frequent threats to his life. --;"" .. The car -..,as shattered, Its roof blown off and ~g's body b.adly mutUoied, witnesses •id. The assassins escaped. ' ~ Cuba in seven years. The Marxist presi· . A,. his auto'mobile. Bong generally h~s been a supporter of President Nguyen Van Thieu, although when the campaign for the presidency turned into a oTie-man race he declined to actively support Thieu on grounds the one-man: election was Illegal and im- . 'attered About l i By THOi\tAS ~1URPH1N! ( 01 the 01Ht l'I~ Si.H · ORANGE COAST. WILD COAST' wD.liam Wilcoxen. the Laguna Beach at· tcioey. former GGP congressional can· did&te. Save Salt Creeker and coastal e<jiservationi!;l, has prOved to be ~bou_t a .Sf!> batter when it comes ta. legislative predk)ing. . ~11 Bill. in a recent interview with pur ittirling journal. predicted that there wft going to be a number · of adiendments to Assemblyman Alan Siilroty's propo5e<I coastline control bill. lf/ilcoxen also suggested that these a.Jbendmenls might make the measure a J~ more palatable· to those folks along -ctr coastl ine v.·ho still believe that local control of the shoreline has some merit. 1ofE REASON I suggest that WW i! hilting on about half the prediction is that h• was dead right on the amendments bit . . dent promis~ hls Communist gue~t a personal guided tour of Chile, The.re were no extravagant welcomtn,g displays in downtown Santiago, but along the route from the airport buikiing walls blossomed with "Salud, Fidel" and other ~ .._, welcoming signs. Members of the Com-' ' ~ leanet.s showing Castro's race in profile ~ and saying: "Companion Fidel, You Are . ' muniat party rode about scattering[ Arilong Friends." . ..:l.J''~· On Friday Gastro and Allende are to fly 825 miles north to the nitrate and copper port of Antofagasta. From there they Will go into the nearby Atacama desert to look at nitrate, fields and perhaps a recent!y nationalized American copper mine. Next week the two leaders will visi t Chile's scenic south, a land of blue lakes, snow-capped volcanoes and c a n a I s • Traveling by plane, boat and car, they are expected to ·go almost to the tip of the continent. l.ater they will return to Santiag<> for 'talk.!J "'1th members of the left-wing political parties that make up Allende's government. Allende 's Popular Unity ·government. which includes Communists a n d Indian Su111.nier Eiids - ' Ultl Ttl1"'9t1 proper. --The plastic explosive charge went off as Bong and three bodyguards were driv- ing home for lunch, police said. The blast also killed one of his three bodyguards and injured the other two along with seven bystanders on the street. Spokesmen for the Progressive Party, of which Bong was cochalrman, slid * * * Ca1nbodia1i War It was ,tfie rir!t slaying of a pro- government politician In South Vietnam si~ce the flrebomblflg death or Eduqlion M1nister-r;e-Minh l'ri in early' 1969. llong. frtquenUy mentioned as a poss!. ble successor to Prime Minister Tran Thien Khiem and o~e~ cabinet posts, had recently split. with the other Progressive Party cochairman, Nguyen Naoc· Huy, over how1 the Party should proceed In light of Thieu's re-election without op- j>osition Oct. 3. U.S. sources said, however, the split co·uld not be categorized as ;.· feud. They said the assassination was apparently the work of Communists who hoped to fO. ment .political trou.ble in Saigon as well a! get rid of an able adinlnistrator and . --potential. member of the cabinet. Families Killed In Red Assaults It was· the second attempt on Bong's life, polltical sources said. He was wounded in a Wave nf attacks In January of 1969 when Palace Security Adviser Nguyen Van Kiem was wounded. ~ "-{:( * U.S. Jets ·Bomb . .----At this writing. Sieroty's blll has been liRgered"with ~n estimated 30 chapg•s,of· iered from hither and yon amidst Sacramento's leglsJa.tive corps. ' · Wilcoxen, however. may fiot be totally on target when he suggests lh11t anlendmenls are going to make the coistal ro.lks a lot happier with the final product. · "6ocialisls, was inauguated Nov. 3, 1976, and·establiShed diplomatic relaUons with The clouds of autumn blew in over the nation's capital today sweep- ing Indian summer 'away for another y~ir. The w1~ds that came 1n \Vith the cold weather blew leaves from the trees and turned Wash· ington, D.C. into a gray city. · PHNOM PHEN (UPI) -Communist guerrillas carried out coordinated attack! today against Phnom P e n h ' s in- ternational airport and a neirby rad io staliOn and destroyed a bridge, inflicting heavy Joss of life on Cambodian soldier families who travel with their men. Capt. Chhang SOng, a spokesman for the high commiilnd, said the death toll \\'as i\i least 30, with more than 20 others wounaed. Most of the victims were \\'Omen and children and Song said the loll would be higher -"there were so many children, we have not counted them all yet." Missile Camp-5 In N. Vietnam As vou may be aware, Sieroty, the Beverly Hills Democrat (you didn't know t~1S a Beverlf.Hllls Democrat?), has . ~posed a measure. that would ~ive the s · te authority to control certain co n· 15 uction · artd de~elopmenL a'! o n g Cielifomia's coastllne. JT HAS BEEN lauded in certain · q;,arte.rs a.s ~he approa ch that will save ow ct'laslline from urban sprawl. Jl has b{tn damned from other authorities who c•im it is an ·encroachment on local ct'ln· trel and self-determination. • lndeed coastal development so obsess-~ the ·~gislature this session that dou.ns of control bills were introduced .. ; J\fi;isl died quickly in committee. Finally oiDy two survived -Sieroty's and one aCthored by Assemblyman Edwin Z'Berg <1).Sacramento,). Z'Berg's was .put out of ii.I misery in. a senate committee Mon· d{i . Now Gnly Sieroty's survives. VEN SINCE the early going. Sieroty's b I was the only major coastal leglsl1tion thet was given an even chance of adop- titn. . J. would tell you more about what it dtes, except with those 30 11mendments, r din't know what it does. There are some hfhts that maybe nobody el~e knows ye!, eD.her. :Anyw&y, Wilcoxen. who admils he'd · u•e to see some form of reasonable coastline protection adopte~ by the state tli!s sess ion , seems to beheve I.hat the rqoclified Sieroty measure will do 11 -Others, howeve'r. disagree. Like ·Msemb\yman Bob Badham, the Newport Beach Republican. ::BAriHA!tl Jrr..'TE:Rl'RETS the restric· t.Wns prO{:Klsed as being so awful that a cbastal ,dweller couldn't paint his house vOthout a permit from the new state sQ:peragency and he say s _!!_ wouldn't a~ow you lo Jive anyWhere w1lhln1JIOO reet of the me<1 n high tide line. ·Apparently the y.•hole th ing will wash d!>cm next Monday when the Sieroty bill cemes up for hearings before the st11te 5tnate's Natural Resources and Wildlife d>mmittee . :so if you have spme thoughts on coastline control. today might ht a good dJiy to write yo ur friendly local legislat or aJld give him the benefit of your ~ghts. ' Peking Recognized :BEIR·UT 1t:PJ 1-Lebanon ha1 decided lo rcCognize Communist China and d tablish diplomatic relations with Pe- ldn,;, Prime Minister Saeb Solam s.a id to- day . • C\lba nine days later. This is Castro's first trip to another Latin-American counlry since he seized power nar\y 13 years ago and his first trip outside Cuba since 1964, when he went to · the Soviet Union. "' It was not known exactly how long he would stay, but Allende told a news con· ference TuesClay there will be a big rally for Castro's sendoff "so the people can applaud him once' again." Castro's visit "will intensify the bonds that unite our two countries," said Allende. Chile and Cuba both are "strug- gling for political and economic in- dependence ," he continued, but the Chilean government will use "different tactics" to achieve this. Policeman Dead After Okinawa Student Rioting NAHA, Okinawa (UPI ) -Rioting students beat an Okinawan policeman to de ath today during a general strike by 100,000 Okinawan workers protesting plans to ma intain U.S. military bases on the occupied island after is re verts to JaPan. The death came "'hen 11 , O 0 0 demonstrators were marching towards the headquarters or the U.S. Civil Administration which governs Okinawa. th.e only Japanese territory still occupied by U.S. troops from World War II. Police moved in with clubs and tear gas and the students hurled about 40 fire bombs. The students seized o n e policeman and beat him savagely on the body and head . Although other police moved in fo rescue hlm , he died eri route to a hospital. "He was beaten to a pulp," a witness said. About 80 policcme"n were injured in the fighting. Police arrested 84 5tudent1 and labor union members. Pakistan Clash Told DACCA. East Pakistan (AP) -Indian troops supported by artillery attacked three Pakistani border positions. but 57 of the attackers \\'e re killed, a Pakistani army source claimed today. The source said the India ns attacked positions at Jatiapura and Lalgariilh, on East Pakistan's aouthern bortler w J th India's T.ripura State and near the northern border at Panihat. ,,. . _,. Mad Brtl;ish T1~oops Hunt SAIGON <UPI) -American jets crossed· into North · Vietnam and destroyed a Communist · antiaircraft mis$i!e emplacement in the fourth attack north of the demili!Qrized zone (DMZ) Jn as many days, the U.S. Command said For Arms; 2 Girls Shorn . The three attacks were similar -a heavy barrage of mortars and rockels followed by waves of North Vietnamese and Viet Cong soldiers hurling hand grenades and satchel charges. Cam- bodian troops drove them off but the guerrillas already had reached their targets. today . , The U.S. com1nand.said Air Force FtOS Thunderchief jets reacted after the Com- munists fired a missile at American B·52s bombing the Ho Chi Minh Trail Jn nearby BELFAST, Northern Ireland (U PI ) - Britis~ troops, angered by the death of 36 of their comrades this year, carried out y.•idespread searches today for suspected Irish Republican Army (IRA) extremists they blame for the killings. · The raids, carried out by nearly 1,000 troops in Roman Catholic areas of Belfast and the countryside, were the se· cond ln two days. Today's raids netted more than a dozen stispects and large quantities of arms and ammuni tion. Two teen·age girls accused of dating British soldiers reported today they had been assaulted by crowds yelling "soldier lover" and that their heads were shorn. One was tied to a post by three masked \Vomen, shorn and tarred arQ:I feathered to the encouragement of a crowd in a Roman Catholic area of Belfast. The other was threatened with death. A force or 800 soldiers from the Green Howards Regiment and a paratroop unit swept through the Roman Catholic Ar· doyne area of Belfast today, acting on a tip from what the army called in· telligence sources, and arrested three men in a four·hour search. They found 200 rounds of ammunition, three erectric bomb detonators, two pistol holsters and Egypt Says Je\vs Rei~orce Troops By United Press .International · The Egyptian Middle East New Agency said today Israel is reinforcing its troops and positions in the occupied Sinai Peninsula. "Israeli troops are currenlly making wide·scale sea and ·!and movements in the direction of Sinai." the agency said, quoting sou rces of the Palestine Libera· tion Organization (PLO) in Damascus. Israeli military leaders were "sending armored cars and heavy tanks by railways to the Sinai area," the agency 1ald. The report wa& not confirmed by any other source. · bullets, a map case, • pQotographs and maps. Another 200 . troops from the 4Sth t.1edium Art illery Regiment seized 12 men in the village of Toomebridge on the shores of Lough Neagh. Gunmen in this \"i llage shot and killed a sergeant of the Royal Ulster Constabulary several week! ago. ' The war in Cambodia is different from most wars, and the wives and children or ttie soldiers . accompany them into the field because they have no other place to live. Many of them have beeni killed in battle -and today's victims included whole families. Bush mills. Laos. ' The Thailand-based Ft05s sruck the surface·to·air missile site three miles in· side North Viettiam and 45 miles nOrth of the DMZ near Ben Karai Pass, a 11\ajor Communist infiltration route into Sooth Vietnam. "Reports Indicated that the site was destroyed ,'' the U.S. Command said. The whiskey _that spans the generations gap. \Much of Nation Wet, Co·ld t ' : -' Rain , Wet Snoiv Criss-cross U.S.; Som~ Skies Clear V.S. Summary ' ' , -For 300-ye.:u a whiskey frOm Bushmllls h.is been \Vilh us. diarming us. Beguil ing us in ;i smoolh, polr~h~d olnd altogelher ligh!hearted fashion. 15 gcnc1 .i lions h.ive: rcf 1ncd i L,l 5 gcncr,111ons have sipped 1 t The''<'' drct : Nca1 pcrf cc l ion. Bushn1i I ls. Full of ch<1r.i.c1e r. But not heavy-handed about it. Flavor· ful. But neve1 over-pO\·\!Cr ing. Bu ~hmills. It reflects the past \Vilh a light and I ively fl<ivo·r that is a 11 todAy. • Compare.it to -your f)fesent whiskey. Y-ou needn't purchase a boltlc. One si p at your favorite pub win tell yqu why Bushmills ~as intrigued so many gen· era11ons. It is, simply, out Of sight. IMPORTED BUSHMIIJ.S FROM THE WORLO'S OtDEST OtSTlllERY. I ... I ' Welglis Future Ul"ITt~ Thomas G. Jolley, a 27-year· old newspaperman, said he will probably head for Canada now since liiS apj)e31 tOt.lle Supreme Court was rejectea. He gave up his citizen ship to escape the draft and has been denied re- gaiJtjng it. He is a man without . a counfry. 'Death Is Beautiful' ' ~~r Lashes Out ,Reh~quist .C~led Rigbtis-r-zealot , ~ (UPI) -·Organized labor branded Assistant Attorney General WJUlam H. Rehnquist a right wing zealot today and urged the Senate to reject hUJ Co1ivention City • ··Gets Fund Boost ' For Police Work WASHINGTON (AP) -The Justice Department said Tuesday it has awarded • almst .$400,_000 to Miami Bea#!; Fla. to help its PQllce force hatidle next year's DemociatJc National Convention. San Diego, Calif., planned aite of the 1972 Republican nominating . convention, also is preparing to ask for similar funds, the department's-Law ·Enforcement Assistant Al:lministratiop· said. LEAA administrator \lerris Leonard said the Miami Beach grant is a recogni· lion of the unusual pressure pJace4 on police forces in cities where political con· ventions are held. He Said ·the money "will be of substan· tial assistance to the convention citie·s, for a national political convention naturally would strain the po Ii c e resources or any community." nomination to the supreme Court. 'Ole AFL-CIO thus joined th e Lladership Conrerence on eivi! Rights, the .NAACP and the AJnericans for Democratic Action In opposition to Rehn4 qui st. As did. those other. organizatJons, organized labor took no. position or. the nomination of Lewis F. · Powell Jr"' t.be Richmond, Va .. lawyer-nominated for a second vacancy. , Andrew Biemiller. legislative repfesen· tative of the AFL-CJO, delivered labor's position paper opposing Rehnquist to the Senate Judiciary Committee. "We do so because Rehnqui!t's pubJle record demonstrates him to ~ 1 right wing ze.9lot whose sole distinctions in publle lie are that he was the only major person ·.of stature who opposed the Arizona civil rights bill in 1964 and tha~ he bas been one of the prime theoreti- cians of arid an· apologist for this ad· ministration's root and brabeb assault on the-Constitutional system of checks and· balances." Biemiller said in hil prepared statement. The only rtason Rehnquist's name was subn)itted for fJJe Supreme Court. Biemlller sai~, was because ht had demorislrated his "complete fealty" to Nixon Admini1.tratton prog?J;ms. "It is precisely becaus·e he Is the ad- ministration's man rather than his ' own that he .should not sit on the high court," Biemiller said. · ~-----'-. - ' Wtdntsday, N0vtmbtr 10, 1971 House Okays_ Pesticide Control Bill Loophole In Draft Upheld LOS ANGELEWJP!l -A federal judge Tuesday granted a 60-day injunction against the Selective Service to a 23-year- old lrli.st who argued that a littJe-lmown loophole in t h e draft law forbids t~ govern- ment to draft anyo~ until Dec. 28. U.S. District Judge Robert J. Kelleher noted that the argument by Karl S.,Boh'n, of Salrtl Barbara, Calif., "1eems to present a case of natJonal Importance." U. S. Attorney A 1 an Peryam, representing t h e government, told the judge the WASHINGTON (AP) -The case could affect those of House passed 288 to 91 8 about 10,000 young men facing pesUcides-O>ntrol bill Tuesday induction in Ute next two months. after Crushing several pro-K~lleher granted Bohn an posed changes th a t ~ en-injunction against his select!Ve vironmentallstl said w e r e service board, preventing the cruCial to creating effective board from inducting him ror 60 days. He set Dec. i a!I the new legialatlon. date of the next heafmg, to A series of ame~ents of· rule-ori a request by Bohn's at- fered by Rep. John G. Q_ow--"torney, Don R. Bay, for a (D-N.Y.), and his supporters, sunm;w:y .j~ent-.barring . wu: rejected as the House Bohn s tnductlon. -: . . The government l!I expected went along with the bill ai:r to argue then that the loophole proved by Us Agriculture has no legal standing. Committee. <Ill> .. Tbe injunction granted Bohn A major revision, endorsed affects only his case, main- b y Agriculture Committee taining the status quo, and AMINIATIJRE GARDEN • Flowers that bloom aD Year roand. Han.krafted .and enameled in natural Cactus Canyon rock formation. 3l'z.~ tall. $9. Do sOnieth;,,g Beautiful ---=1-1_1~!-Ac'tf:.-r.c~~~~;:Rl::S.:.TM=A::Sc,___~. · Am..-1c111 Expreu. SLAVICK'S, Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644-1380 Open Mon. end Fri., ro 1.m. to 9:30 p.m. , - ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -TWo young women are in critical condition to- day after setting 'themselves on fire because, as ~ne explained 1o police, "Dying is beautiful." The 1968 Democratic convention In Chicago was marked by mass demonstra- tions followed by mass arrests and charge by proteetors of wlice brutality. Noting that Pre!!ident Nixon had characterized Rehnquist as a "strict'con- structionist," Biemiller said "he is. il anything, a 1trict constructionist of the Constitution prior to the adoption of tile bill of rights.'• does not mean the judge Chairman W. R. Poage (0-agreed with his argument or Tei:.), to permit &tatea to im-ruled against the draft law!!, posewhateveraddltional But Bay said that at least~..:===:================ Kids Love Uncle Leonard $aid $178,000 would go for the purchase of communications equipment and another $100,000 for police training. restricCons they wish on all two other suits had already pesticides, was· approved, 167 been filed on the same Len, Saturday in •\ .> .. ,. Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny said Anita Louise McQueen, 20, Livonia, and Raelle-.Weinstein, 26, Skokie, DI., ap- parently wrapped themselves in r,per, , ut cross-Jegg,d on the floor and se e.ach other on fire. · "The orderly functioning of national political ~ventions is an integro:J part of the democracy;!' Leonard said. The A.F{,CIO witnes1 wu among a Jong list who ~stified or put testimony in !he reco~ In the 1econd day of hearings tn oppos1t1on to Rehnquist. grounds, in San Diego and to 66. The original committee eastern New York, and there ' bill would have preempted the was sogte thougbt of con· power of states to put more solidating them to be heard restrictions on what would be with Bobn's. Other young men designated 1 s general-use can file similar suits if they pesticides. face induction before Pee. 28, the DAILY PILOT ' Advance Men a Curiosity 'Reds Draw Stares at V.N. UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -They are fOUr secretaries and two messengers -not ex- actly top ranking diplomats - but ambassadors rush to greet them, police guard them and newsmen dog their footsteps. As the first Communist Chine~ to come to the United Nations in 21 years and the fi~t ever to come as U.N. members, the advance party , from the People'• Republic of China are minor Celebrities Missouri Voters Reject School Funding Again . I ND E PENDENCE, Mo. (AP) - A heavy turnout of · voters Tuesday defeated for the third time this yea.r 1 pro-. ·. J Policema1t Shot Dead DALLAS (AP) - A rookie policeman was shot to death and Jnother was wounded to- day after stopping l truck because: of 1 hl.inor traffic ac-cident, police reported. Two men were taken into custody · shortly after the 1hooting: The dead policeman was Identified as Johnnie T . .. Hartwell, 3'l, t1 rookie still in training. Officer James E. Clark, 40, was wounded in the right arm. ' . po15ed increase of 95 cents in the school levy, but officials .AJd Independence p u b 1 i c schools ·9rouJd reopen anyway . in anticipation of funds coming next monlb from the state. Dr. Guy ·Carter, school superintendent, said school children,, idled since Nov. 1, will return to class Monday. He said the state money is due Dec. IS. School administrators had said the eity'• public schools would remain closed through November because of a JacK of funds to pay teachers. The final unofficial tally was 8,846 in favor, of the increased levy and ll,107 against. A two- thirds vote was necessary to approve the measure. ·Disposer 'installed No-Charge wltl) Dishwasher Purchase and Installation '- and major curiosities. The six advance men ar- rived Mon'day to make what they called Hadministrative preparations" for the full 46- member delegations flying bere Thursday from Paris. Kao• Liang, the former newsman who heads the ad- vance party, Md two other members paid their initial· visit to the headquarters of the worlfl ·organization Tues· day . A crowd of more than SO secretariat employes a n d newsmen gathered ouWite the office where for 95 minutes Ute advance party discussed the mechanics of opening a mission with U.N. Protocol ChiefSinan A: Korie and Col. Harold A. "Huck" Trimble, head of U.N. security. Then, escorted by lhre~ pla inclothes U.N. sec u r l t y guards, the Chinese toured the Security Council c h a m b e r where Huang Hua, until now amha!lsador to Canada, wUl sit as one of the five permanent members. Normally restrained diplomats gawked when the three quiet men dressed in blue-grey Mao-style s u i t s entered the crowded delegates lounge for coffee with Alba- nian Ambassador Sarni Baholli and four members of this delegation. KitchenAid Dishwasher Prlcos ShHt .,_ ""'Model KOC& IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA eom1111rt/•I di,hwt,htn. 540-7131 • • JCPenney . The values are here every~ Men's Sport Coats Ibis JI .. 4'. ...,_ • ht•lers ~AP....,..WW.~DHp ....._ Orft. J9.9M7.91 NOW WOMIN'S UNlfOIMS OH • Two pc. lfY'°' Orft, lo14. NOW WOMIN'S ANKLI PANTS Aut. styfn ltrol .. 111111. Orlt. 1·11 NOW WOMIN'S ASS'T. TOPI llo-I K.it1. Orlt. 1-1.00 NOW MA.TIRNI" WU.I "llOI Clearc.ce. Orl9. 1 ... 00 NOW - NYLON ' POLYnnlf T0'5 Short ~ ............. Orit. U .00 NOW PAmlN ANKLI PANTS C..... .., c .... Orft. 7.ftO NOW 1688 4"' 7" 411-711 •211-411 •111 '1" 311 Women's Shifts Reduced Slo..,ol• ,.,.... .. r.n.. ,,.. '-ltric. ,.~..,core__._,. Orft» 4.SO NOW WOMIN'S NYLON KNIT TOPS. Lo11f _,..,. strlP9-Offt, J.10 NOW rULl on• IULh' KNITS. llppor Nck -,......._ Orlf. 11'.1.00 NOW WOMIN'I MOCCASINS. I,._ •t tet1 loft •le. .... sflpptrL °";f· l.9t NOW HAID SOLID MOCAISINS. T-. . loft co ..... Oflt l.t9. NOW LAlillS r-AMlllCANA IOOT. ..._..,,. WH Yll!yl ~'· Otft. 11.tt NOW POLYniu HL INIT Pc ...... &O'" .W.. Col.,_,,~ NOW Men's Pant Riot o,.. & C....t ..... -ltNlt .. ., ,..._..,. __ ..,, ...... ...... S-. 2MO Ortt: 7.91 ... tl NOW 211 7" 311 ' 411 ·1311 - 2" Women's Dresses Reduced GROUr I ••olJp n Orlt . $9·Sll Orlt. S12·Sl4.00 Now $7.88 Now $9.88 GIRLS STROCH TIGHTS. Pl11k, __- Turq. & Lemo11. Ori1. ttc ~NOW INFANT & TODDLER .SHoiTS Prllrtt • Solids. Orig,_...7tl:1.7t NOW ---Girls Boxed Jewelry Rln91-Nocklacft-Pftdonb-Sotl And Sepcrrat-lnlthll &: llrtflstoN 50¢ 33¢ Orl9. 51 .00 Orlt. J.00 Orl1. J .00 NOW 10¢ NOW t9; NOW 1.tt •1RLS J4X SHORTS. Aslt. ,_.. & Soll .. Orf9, 1.00•2,00 NOW IRLS 7-14 SttORTS. All'. hbrta ,A.Colon. Orft. 1.19·.J.OO NOW Foundation Clearance ) 33¢ 44¢ ODDS" i. INDS of lltflt to ftmt " 99"' Co.-r.1. Pnty .& lo"' lot stylA ., Wlllte ollfy. Orff. J•l.00 NOW GllLS SA"J".DUSTIR SklllT Sm. Floor 4" lwffl* ......... Orl9. 7.00. -NOW GiRLS IROWN SUIDI KICKIR IOOT 4" Cuttloo c,.,. Solo. Ort9. !·'' NOW GIRLS IUCkLI SCHOOL SHOI .411 ar.w. ...iq .... ort1• 1.t9 NOW IOYS DRISS llLTS & nn 44¢ StMt •P HW. °"9· 1.10' NOW IOYI CARDlloAN SWIATlllS 511 .,... ffly. Acryl)I. Orif. 7.tl NOjV IOYS CASUAL PANTS 66c WeM N' nor. Orlt..._l.44 NOW . Toys-Gam•-""nle~. Etc . • , COSTA MESA STORE . HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER , ' • q ,, ' ' -, J ' r ' I ' '· ' " . ' • -· ~ ' Queen Size SjJfft< Solld Ccilor ,.JIWCii.;; Gold •~G,... 10% rolyetfw _10% Cottoo, r .. 11 PHat® Orft. 7.99 MENS DRESS SHIRTS Loitt 1fffYe 1trlpe1. Orlt. 7.91 NOW MIN'S CAILI DDIGN VESTS. lelt9d •lrtl11 wool-wlllte. Orft. 12.tl NOW MIN'S WALK SHORTS. Auf. 1tylaa. lroko11 slut. Orlt. 3·4.00 NOW AHT.-KNIT SHIRTS Orl9. 4.91-NOW 2.11 Orft. 2.99 NOW ACRYLl'(]cNIT STRIPI SHl~TS. lrokM colon-SIDI. Orlt» J.t9 NOW MIN'S DRISS SHOI AMlq• Gold· PMltNd .Solo. "Orif. 10.tt. NOW Towel Bonanza · . Sc•ltp41N4 A Ptl1tt Tllkt T tny e IATH -Orft. 2.JS e HAND-Orft, 1.25 e WASH -OrJt. .65 NOW NOW NOW MIN'S WAXHIDI STIRRUP 169T , Loatflot lhlff. Q,J9. 21.00 · NOW KING SIZI SHlm. Golcl-Gr ... hrcot. t!OW TWIN SID QUILT SPIU.DS S1.tl0Wlf Prlllt. Orft, 11.00 NOW 1 ollly VILYIT SPRU.D •OLD , .... S..., Cnto"'. OtSQ. 111.00 NOW ILIC. ILANKn DIL. DUAL s.,_.., F11lell. Orft. JS.00 NOW .. 499 . 1°' '°' 30¢ 23" 711 10" "' 15•. ' J CURTAIN & DllA"lY CLIANUr 1 ... 1411 , Orft, J .t9 .. 21.00 NOW USE YOUR PENNEY CHARGE CARD -Shop Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 to 9:15 • • - \ I ---- • DARY PqJOT-i:DITORIAL PAGE One or the most difficult and ofter\ cheerless assignments ln public service has ·to be that or a Ci ty Planning Commissioner. But the Newport Beach City Planning Commission has opened ~p a whole n~w di· mension j o planning "'hich could hghten and brighten their wor~. By unanimous vote, the commission ordered the Pacific Coast Freeway route to disappear. poof! At least so far as they and the Community Development staff are concerned. Henceforth, presumably all of the city records, maps and correspondence within control of the Plan· ning Commission will proceed on the happy assump· tion that the freeway route just isn't. Other sticky city problems \\'hich mighf yield themselves to the·same magic l>anishment could be the '1Jpl,ler Bay, height limits around the Lower Bay, the C1\'1c Center bintl ahd the Bay Bridge bottleneck. Or. ho'v about banishing from civic consciousness some of those bootleg apartments that cause the commission so many headaches. .<\nd. ,\•e kind of like the observation of Jl,!ayor Ed Hirth: "\Vhy don't we ask the'm to do away with the Orange County Airport?"~ . ?ilaking city maps and records jibe with county and state records may even become legally embarrassing from lime to thne. But then again, along about mid· night at the -end-=of _a long, grinding Planning Commis· sion session, who cares? Fences Necessary Evil The Irvine Comp}hQ' has taken the unavoidable risk of arousing s<\me a4ditlonal local wrath by ofdering: fencing Installed around it. property fronting Upper N•wport Bay. ~ The stringing of the barbed wire has to be an un-' happy situation for both the Irvine Company and for the public. But there appears litUe that can be said against the decision to erect a fence . , If brickbats are to be hurled, they would have to be at the California Supreme Court which has, in effect, told property owners that they must restrict free public{ use of their lan d -especially~w_ater·oriented land - or face the prospect that it can become the public's prop- erty withou t comp ensation. And simply the posting of signs is not a legally sufficient protection. .The Irvine Company's plans to issue permits for entering the fenced off areas will ease the situation considerably. Of course, no one, including the company, is claim· ing the strands of barbed wire esthe!ically enhance the area, 'even though they do not obs~ct the view or the passage of small animals. / The;e are those who would claim that under the .court's ruling, the public already has established "pre· scriptive rights" to cross over the Irvine Company's VP" per Bay property. But this, of course, is a matter yet to be resolved by litigation or negotiation. And the answer could be some-years in coming. "- Meanwhile. of-course, there will be areas ·of pre- sumed public ownership around the bay which will not be fenced. So while access will not be as free and easy as before, it still will exist. So we have another developn:ient in the long series of events which. in the past few years, have made the Upper Bay an increasing problem rather than an in· crea'sing pleasure. N 'Say, Mildred! Did ya see where Jackie made Aristotle Onassis sigD this fancy contract?' Question of Tipping ls V exatio.us . Tradition of Fair Play Violated A reader in Buflalo wants to know whether I believe that one should leave a tip in a restaurant if the service has been bad. --- '"{f a lip is taken (or granted," she writes, "then there is little incentive for the waiter to provide good ser\f. ice. But my husband gets angry "'hen- ever I tell him I re- fused to leave a tip -or left a small one - for poor serv· ice.'' The whole. question ·of tipping in 'modem soCicty is a vexatious one, and I ~don'{ know lhat there is any "right'' • answer to it; as.our economy now stands. f\fORALLY, lf'IPPING should be abolished, becaUse it is a kind of legalized blackmail: but practically, this would mean doing grave injury to millions of employes in the service trades. I al'>'·ays leave much lhe same moderate size of tip , whether the se rvice ha s been adequate or indifferent -not cut of generosity, but out of coy,·ard ice. I simply don't have the gumption to r;trike back at a careless or inattentive y,•aitfr by hurling his pocketbcok. 'Yomen, apParently. are rnuch niore vengeful than men in this respect. \'ARIOUS INDUSTRIES have tried to abolish Upping, but the habit has always Dear Gloomy Gus No one is safe from bu'tglars and robbers unless he 's in jail, and maybe not even then~ Our he Ji. copters are extra protection and it's time detractors stopped dis· respectfully ealling them "Fuz.z. copters." ~M. G. Tlll1 k1!11rt ,..u.ct1 rt1<Hrt' "'ltw1, "fl 111e:101rll1 llle11 at lllt ~ew1p111r. S•""' ~eyr H I -¥1 II GIM111' Gu1, Dilly P1lll. crept back in one way or another. Only the commercial airlines, to my knowledge, have bee:n able to avoid this practice -probably because the industry started out on that basis and thus had no i n g r a i n ea customer·traditlon to averCome. Tipping is evidently an ancient prol>- lem. There is a charming i&!e about· Nasreddin Hoja, a 13th Century ·rurkish philosopher, whO once went to a public bath in a neighboring city. THE A1iENDANTS, noticing his shab- by costume. paid him little attention and brought him a torn towel and a tiny piece of soap. 011 leaving, Hoja gave a gold piece to eac h of the attendants, who men· tally kicked themselves for having been deceived by his ragged appearance. He returned to the sa me bath the following week. dressed as before. but this time was rec~ived with great defer· ence -new towels. scented soap, much bowing and scraping with the anticipation of more gold pieces. . ' But, on leaving, he gave each attendant a nickel. replying to their startled IMks: "The gold pieces I gave you last "'eek y,·ere ror th e way you treated me today; the nickels I've given you are for the way you treated me last week." Russ·ia's Space Failures Vi'ASHINGTON -There are authorita· five indicat ions that Soyuz. top Russian space program . is being drasti~ally re· \'iSIVi or possibly even abandoned. )\'hether there is an y connection be· ty,·een that and !he reported shake up in upper echelons, of the Soviet s p a c e hierarchy Is s I i 11 unkn own . Last month . this column disclosed that far. reaching personnel changes we re under. way due to the most calamitous year in Russia's space op- erations. During this period. there has bPen 11 Jorig succession or costly foil ures and dis· a81ers in fives and equipment. Sixteen of 19 space probes were unsuccessful, some af tragic proportions. S~ERAL WEEKS after the reported upheaval among leading space officials, ~ Kremlin IUddenly announced ~ death of a forem °'i:t spt.ce scientist. He was in lhe van In developing lhe Soyuz space pl,tform program-Rulisia's rival of this cou ntry's )loistory-ms.klng Apollo moon probes t1nd land ings. But unlike the J1tter's epic .successes, Soyuz B11 George --~ Df!ar George : How do )'OU get away. with such -. blunt answers in your column'? Doesn't anybody ever take ob- jection? CURIOUS Dear Curious : What did you think this big white bandage' an my nose was? A flag or truce? r-· i Rohe1·t ~··Allen : ~ -•J.. ., i ..,;I has been pli.gued by disaster and tra1tedy, This disma l record was climaxed last summer by the asphyxiation deaths of three cosmonauts \lt'hile descendin.lf from a record-breaking ea rth orbit. The So- viet Union has never disclosed that com· munication wil h the ilJ.fated trio was lost by ground control within seconds after they started down . OTHER CALAAflTOUS crashes tlgh!ly concealed from bo1h the Russian people and !he world are: -The ~tars proQe by two five.ton space- ships lnunched early this yea r. They should have reached !heir tnrgel Ion.( ago. but nothing has been hCard from or abont them . -A lunar probe il:i~t sr,ring that tl· ploded .almost Immediate y after being airborne , hunttne l!'lrl!"c ports nf the rock. rt back to earth. killing some workef'3 and leaving a huge crater .near ihe launehing pad. -An earlier lunar probe resulted in an ,.ven v.1orse cbtastrophe. It bltw up Ol'I the. J)3d With ~nslderable loss af life and heavy del!truction of equipment. There has ne\'rr been the slightest hlnt of these catastrophes. -TN SEPTOIBER. t unil 13 did reach the moan. but the vehicle It was to land there cra~hl'd ins1ead -a Iott.I loss. \\'hat space spectacular. if any, will re. pl11~e Soyuz remains to be seen. \\ estern space authorities consider It highly unllkely that !he 1Kremlin wUJ a~ndon thi!1 crucial field. They Bntlcipate there 'Nill be fu·r~aching change!! in pro- grams and objecUves. but not a dr opou1. • . . Army Action on Herbert Condemned ~ -. To the Editor : For over a century and a half, the United States Military Academy has espoused lhe ideals expressed in its mof- lo, "Duty, Honor, Country.'' I was raised in a military family, the son of a West Point graduate. The in· ~tegritj of oUr military establishment, especially at the higher levels, and its tradition of fair play had alwa_ys be~n something -of which I was proua and con· ttdent. l FIRST READ of Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert's situation and lhen saw him on the Dick Cavett Show. The actions Tesulting in the corruption of this man's exemplary military record were so in· credible, uncontested, visib le and con- trary lo lhe traditions of the American military services that I was Conrid~nt rectification wouJa take place without delay. I loo ked forward to the Colonel 's next appearance on the show ror a report on ·how everything had been straightened out. Instead, through the capriciousness of the military, Lt. Col. Herbert did not appear on ·the show. IT APPEARS that West Point would better prepare men for service in today's U.S. Army by ch!inging its motto to ''Cant. Parochialism. Obsequiousness." May lhe original motto :stick in the throats or those who countenance the sui:r pression of an honorable man performing an honorable action. FRED THORLIN He1'bn-t stirred natio11wide contro· ve rsy whe11 he cl1arged he 1nas re· /ie ved of Ins Vietnani cornmand April 4, 1969 because h.e persisted in re·. porting 1oar crimes lo his superiors. The m11ch·decorated officer said Stal· day lie is asking Llie Army to retire him '1ext feb. 29, tht day he toill /!ave completed 20 years' service and be eligible for retir..ement benefit.s. The Army issmd o "fact. sheet" den ying Herbert 's allegations. · -Editor IJ11ma11 Lltrer To the Edit or : I wish the city of Ne\vport Beach would spend less time being uptight about dogs on beaches and devote itself to teaching its fellow man to clean up after himself. Observe the overflowing trash cans on anv. beach and the lrimilles whn come lo enjoy the beach, bringing their picnics and leaving l h e I r non.biodegradable trash everywhere. They .r..r.e twice as Qad as dogs any day. I have 11ever seen any people get even reprimanded for littering much less J!'et leashed or expelled from our beautiful 11eaches. BEE LONGLEY T/1a11k• to Police To the Editor: \Ye just moved into the Newport Beath area last Friday_in time lfl have Ol!_r young children celebrate Halloween in a nc.w environment and I want to express, on behalf of our family, our thanks ti> the Newport Be/lch Police Department for lle.lplng to make. the children's Jfalloween a happy and sare event. THE CIULDREN had no s o o n e_ r Sl'l forth on their tr1ek or treat rounds when a patrol car drew up and the offictr threw open hi! door-wlshtng thc.m "!tap. PY Halloween" and presented them each with a ba.11: or "[toodies". which got the evening off to 1 fine start. THIS TYPE OF civic action by the poli ce department does not reeeive the publicity whlti: ~t deserves and I think that v.·c. as meriibers of the public. owt it to the hord·press-ed policemen to give 1 /'---- Mailbox Letters 11om readers are We'lCome. Normally t0Titer1-1hould convey their messagu in 300 words or less. Tiie rig1tf t.o condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ter& must inchute signature andt'r1tail· i11g address, but names mat1 be with· held <Ill reque st if sufficient rea.son i.s apparent Paetry wilt not be pub- lished. th em our public thanks ror everything they do in our behalf, particularly such actions as these. DAVID A. W. YOUNG Dredge lhe .Canal To the Editor: { appreciate your article in the Nov. 2 DAILY PILOT regarding the Grand Canal. Balboa Island. As I see it, there are 76 dwellings raeing the canal and we all pay a high rate of taxes. A C<Jn· servative figure would be at least $1.000 per year for each dwelling, or a total o! $76.000. WHAT DO WE get for that money'? As far as the sea wall and copings, they could be repaired by the same method as ...,·e re-the pilings of the bridge between the two islands a few yea.rs back. Dredge the canal, throw the sand up against the wall, strengthening and suppoiting the wall. rr HAS BEEN approximately tO to 12 years sinei! it was la st dredged out. I have been told that the city is con· templating an expenditure of $100,000 for a lighting system for the helicopters. (I do not 'know this to be a fact.) If so, it seems that they could afford to clean up our canal. H.·M. FORD Tiie city ha:s been considering ap- plying for a federal grant af $100,000 for a night viewing device to t~ble h~copters to fly higher with same sfl;~eillance efficienc11,· less noise ·be· low. Editor To the Editor: , Andrew May's antics so far ,In \his (Nov. 4) c"ampalgn are enough to make me sick. What is he afraid of? It seems that no one ha5 the right to try and in- form the public .. to the facts outaide cl May and his organization. ' emanates from Britain's BBC as regards the problem in Belfast? ·, Do you really believe-it's "right and just" for~the Urlited States to give·foreign aid1nd (support by the press) to have armed British troops, 1,400 strong, go on a rampage through a C a t h o I i c neighborhood in search of arms that hap- pen to be nothing more than "legs of chairs and tables?" 1\-fust the Irish Catholic in Belfast die for want of the vote, ·reunification of Belfast with South IreJand and better than men i a I employment? FOREIGN AID can be good or bad: It could help peaple really in need arid it could also be used as a tool in the hands of unscrupulous people to practice twllh licenseJ genocide on a poor class of peo- ple such as the Irish Catholic in Belfa st or the people of Indochina. As a DAll.,Y PILOT subscriber, I sug- gest you consider your source of in· fonnalion with reference to. this mos t serious problem. ~1y furniture is or the e1tremely heavy Mediterranean type apd were I located in a more advantageous area geographically, I would be more than willing to supply these poor oppressed people of Belfast with. a few weapons (legs) to defend themselves. We Irish aren't violent and don't believe in gun!l, but watch those "legs'' of heavy tables and chairs! BBC needs a little watching also. BERNICE WELSH DAILY PILOT news reports on. dt· vtlopments in Northern Ireland came from U11ited States wire serv- ices. Also, this newspaper has take1~ 110 editorial positian. on the problem in Bel/wt. • -Editor \... Appeal for Coupons ~ To tht Editor: This letter ls intended for all thoughtful. ~enerous. autgoing readers ¥i'ho would hke to help save a life. 1'1rs. Dorothy Swiney of Reedley, Calif .• is desperately in need of a kidney machine which will be hers if 3he can gather together 300,000 Betty Crocker coupons by Nov. 30. If those who read this appeal would add their coupons to ours It would be .a big factor in giving hope and assurance to Uils needy woman. PLEASE BRING or mall your coupons to First Souther)l ..... Baptist· Church, 650 liamllton Ave., "tosta Mesa or to· th• undersigned at 830 Plum Place, 'Costa Mesi.·. Perhaps peaple are saving their coupons for si\vtrwJre, china. coffee Urns, etc .. but wouldn 't It bring !hem a great glow of satisfaction to think that they have helped savt a_ life inste11d? Thank you all, every one, In advance. MRS. W. ~· COF.FMAN V.111. Is Dead People all over the world, less fortunate than we, would like ta be able to form a group which did not support the popular cause. They wmlld like to be able to participate and to vote, but they can 't ·• They art free from this respOnsibility. They don't even have to dcelde·~·ho \1 To the Editor : going to run the: country, s~te7ir city. A realistic appraisal of the con· .sequences to be suffered as a result of the expulsion of Nationalist China. from the United Nations would be as dif£1cult as roretetling the rutur~· )fAY HAD BETTER wise up to the fact that the mark or a free people Is to be able to hear all sides of 11 controversy, make up their own minds, and then go to the polls and vote. CampaiRn promises are cheap. It's about time the candidates l'ilarted defending the rights of the people they will' reprtsent now or else how will the people know that these views "'Ill be r~spccled after the election. R. J. "SKIP" WTRGES Problem ha Beftast To the Editor: fo.tay r ask why the DAILY PI'LOT con· llnues to print "sheer propaganda" that ' And If one eould foresee the future he probably wouldn't want to tell it. But the fears of the Chinese people in Taiwan conce1tntns a takeover by the Com- munl5t5 ate pretty well toutrded. Apparently what has happened is the same old stoiy about might making right. The countries In the United Nations th11t turned 11gainst Nationalist China would not have done so had that country been the: one wlth the population of 7:-0 million ' people •. FEAR, MORE mAN confldene< In the ' ' future, seemed to be lhe determining fac- tor. Such fear was one of the chief reasons why the United Nations was founded in the first place. The nations that joined this orgil.niia: lion were supposed to stand together 10 prevent smaller nations from suffering lhe same fate as did the sma ll nations under the aggression of Nazi Germany. At that time, no nation came to the aid of Polaild, Czechoslovakia. Norway or Denmark. For one thing, they didn't have· time. For another, none of the larger na. lions felt like fighting, While Germany was preparing (Qr war , the larger nat ions like the United States and England prepared for peace. THAT IS WHAT is happening now. The countrie!l which voted for !he expulsion <1f Nalionalist China from the United Na· lions were wild in their applause fot what they had done. But how wild will their a~ plause be when it comes their turn to be expelled by the Chinese Communists~ The United Nations is not dying : it is dead. The sole objective fOr which it was originally organized has been discarded. That objeclive was the unification of na· tions Y.'Orking together to prevent in· ternalional injustlce. BOB WANGLER Schooi·spa_ce P1:o_ble1M To the Editor : The storm brewing over the San Joa· quin School District and its lack or suf· ficient classroom space is reminiscent of the building problems we and many other parents have weathered (Iver the past few years in the Ocean View School District. And while the storm here isn't quite over yet. 1 feel secure In the kno"·ledge that the building program is procef!ding y,•ith ea se, and a fair degree of speed. THE OCEAN VIEW District has elaim· ed that the district is growing at the rate of about one classroom each week. And in the past 10 yea rs. with a _master plan based oo proje_cted .fnrollmcnts and ac· tual zoning, ihe district has opened 23 schools .. In its ~ak years of growth, Ocean View had a man who did nothing but expedife school building programs. \\1hile the schools do not open as fast a.!I we would lilte them' to, (nobody has c:on. trol over construction strikes or bad weather), we do not face the double sessions and the staggering problems which growth i!l tpday causing the San Joaquin. schools. · J\.lY COJ\.11\.1El\i'TS are not lnlended to find fault with San Joaquin, but merely to point-out how lucky we are. Perhaps it Is. time for us in Huntington Beach to sit back and eount our blessings -all 23 of them .. (MRS,) MARIOtHH!EJLLY. DAILY PILOT Robe.I N, IV «cf, PubU.her Tlioma.s Kitt1U, Editor Albl!Tt W. Bote.t · Edicorial Page Editor The tdlt6rl•I rmJ:t> er· the n.111 Pilot M!ek1 to lnlorm llnd 'Umu• -iittt· -rf':'lltrra lly pi'i>srnllnt: lh11 n~TiPArw>r'11 uplnfun,; e.nd r om- n1rnt11.ry n n tnplC!t 11f lntr~t 11nct •h:nlllcanl'C, by rro\•idlns::: A f"rurn fo1r lhf' c,.rr••,.,,ion i•f ·~1 r-l"'!ldrn' opin lon1, and by prCM.'nU n,ir the di\'"™" \'ic" pol nu of informf'd nb-1en·t~ 11nd 1pokC!mt:n on topics of tht dl)'. Wednesday, Nov. 10, 1971 • _) , 7 I r •• • - Costa ·Mesa Today's FIQ.al · • r. N. Y. Stoo5 VOL. o4, NO. 209, 7 SECTIONS, 98 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,-CALIFORNIA -WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1911 TEN .CENTS . . • j Gridiron ·Prop9·sed" ,for Major ·P;trk in -Mesa A city high school football stadium seating 5,000 l,o 7.000 fall! has btt:n sug- gesled_.as one use for part of· the 300 acres Costa ~fcsa hopt"S 10 develop as a major park. ''The idea is in its infancy, but we hope to gain support for it ,·• says Walter Gayner, chainnan of a special stadium comh1ittce nrgani1.ed by the Estancia HigtJ School football booster club. The ES1ancia group proposed the stadiun1 to the city 's Project 80 long t·ange planning committee recently. The Project 80 committee-is collocting ideas for dcvt!lopmcnt of the land between F'air..,iew State Hospital and the Sanla Ana River. "\\'e dc.n't have loo many specifics on the stadium, we just \~·ant to get our oar in for use ol' the ~perty." saiQ Gayner, the initial developer or ~lesa Verde homes. Basicall y. the stadiu1n and adjacent parking \l.'OUld CO\·er about 15 acres. Gayner said. The stadium parking rou:d also be used for park purpose s. He said the committee would like to see the stadium built by the bluffs be10\\' Estancia High School . The bluff itself could .serve ~ permanent seatint for the "home" side of' the stadium. The other side would featUre flexible seating for PQlential expansion to a stadium seating 10,000 to 14.000 people. Use of lhe stadium would not be limited to· football. Gayner pointed out. It could be used for graduations. band con'certs and other athletic events. · . Some groups have expressed a desire for an open air ampitheater for all types of performances -the stadium might double·up for that pwwse. An exact location hasn't been men· --11oned, but Gayner said it would beoest- to have it near Estancia Drive. The stadilim would ROt interfere with a 00. acre archaeologica] site also near the bluffs. Go.ynor said. Financing is one problem the football boosters have not explored. "One archilect estimated the cost of such a stadium at $750.000. not counting the land." Gayner sajd. "\\1e might gel · some n10.ney frotn the school dislric (Newport·fl1esa Uniried ), but I think inost of it would have to t'01nc fro1n private donations." "\Ve'rc just talking about the idea now. 1r v.·e find other groups support us then \le can laW1Ch a flill·scale fund raising ca1n paign next year." Gayner added. He emphasized the point that both Costa fllesa fligh and Estancia High "·ould share the slad.ium, it would not belong lo one school. "Right now Davidson Field at Newport Harbor Higb serves four high school teams. It's dUficult for the Costa Mesa schools to feel they have a home field." Gayner also feels the stadiwn at Orange Co<ist College doesn't really serve ei the1· high school. ' "It's costly to rent and It 'b r(aUy a junior college field,'' he commented. A/le question still unaruswered is who ViOUld own the stadium -city or school district? Gayner said-details haven't been explored. "\Ve plan to talk to olher grou()'. It's just an idea now," he emphasized. Robert Duggan, assistant city manager and ... a member of the Project 80 Com· mittee, said no stand has been taken oa the stadium proposal by the conlmlltee. "We want tO wait until all the proposals are in .before making deeislons on any specific suggestions," he said. OS -reeze are Land Use Figh.t Wo11 By Douglas By JACK BROBACK 01 ~t O•ll'I' ~lltl Sttlf i\1cDonnell Douglas Coroporatio11 V.'On the battle of the giants today over tilt [rVine ·co1npany regarding fhe USt of land near the Orange Couoty .Airport in • split 3 to 2 vote of lhe Boafd of Super- \•isors. But the fina l determination of tbe issue iJ still in 1doubt because the eouaty·s .Air· port Land Use Commission may exer· cise its right to veto the rezone' from in- dustrial to commercial use of the 50 acres in question. A four.[ifths vote of the Board of Super. \•iso rs ·is required by law to overrule a zoning decision by the Airport J 1d Use group. ·.· . lYicDonnell Douglas had req uested that the 50 ocres 011 the n1>rtheast corner or ~tacArthur boulevard and Campus Drive be rezoned from industrial lo commercial use. Discount-Rate Cut Announced \\'ASHINGTOr\ tAPl -The Federal Reserve Board cul its dis- count rate from s percent to 4s~ percent today, a move reflecting the downturn iu interest rates generally. The board· said the latest change, the first sinc;_e mid.July, was made in 11recognilion of reductions that have taken place in other short· term interest rates . . " The discount rate is the intere~1 · the Federal Rest>rve s y s I e n1 charges its meniber hanks for bor- rowing. Most other interest rates are scaled upward fro1n it. But the board's n'IO\'C, effectivt Thursday, represents no push tor more expansive money policies. Instead. the board indicated. il i~ aUempting to bring the ,rate into line with other shorl·term rates. The action is effective at !he Federal Reserve's regional banks at Boston, Philadelphia, Cleveland. 'St. Louis, Minneapolis, Dallas and San Francisco. The other fivt> banks in the system are expected -to reduce th e interest rate sbortly. Deputy, Board . Named in Suit In t\1·o heated hearings before the Orange County Planning Commission, the aerospace firm's representatives disclos- ed plans for a-2fi0...room hotel and !'I00,000-n _: _ Sh ... . _ . . . liQUare feet of office space on the Site. vve1• oolIJ} er Opposition to the zone change has come " from .the Irvine Co!flpan~. the Irvin:-• A deputy marshal and the Oran ge lndustiral Complex. liC Irvine and the Cl· Count Board or Supervisors have been ty of Newport Bel(Ch. Y Irvine interest!' oppose the change sued {or $500,000 by the parents of a because, they say it ''violates the In· young defendant who was shot through tegrity of the seven.year~ld general plan the heart as he allegedly attempted to or the area." escape from a holding cell in Costa ~lesa County Road Department officials said · · 1 cou t road\1•ays in the area could not possibly mu~icipa r: . support lhe increased traffic which would I\hchael Casimir and A n g c 11 n r he generated by the com n1ercial develop-Tuminello Clemas. 207 Federal St., Co~t;i men!. \\>less. clain1 in their Orange County l\lcbonnell Douglas officials argue that superior. Coui1 law suit that their son. It is the best use for the properly and that to oppose, the development is to sup-Robert Joseph Clemas, 21. Y.' a !I pqrt a policy of "gloom and doom" as far "negligently and deliberately shot and as future economic improvement of the killed" last l\tarch 22 by Deputy Marshal central Orange County area is concerned. Donald H. Andrews. Puncli Pokes At Pla.yboy LONDON CAP) -Punch, the British humor magazine that dates back to days v.·hen the sight or a \\'Oman·s ankle made l'ltrong men pant. went Playboy today \vith sex. nudes. dirty jokes and a portrait of Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner. stark naked. -~ The parod y of Playboy, produced ~ with Hefner 's permission and help. raisep eyebrows and temperatures in !be stuffier London clubs, where Punch has been Establishment fare for 129 years. On the cover was Scandinavian actress Julie Ese in the nude but protectively surrounded by barbed """ ~·Ire. I In the centerpiece, w h e r t Pia) boy prinlli its ( e m i n i n t: playmates. J>unch put 1 four-page fold-out drawing of Hefner. bedded on the Stars IM1 Stripes and attired only in his habitual pipe. A typical article 'l''IS b·y "classicis'. Mahmoud Jenkln~n.'' who owns HUle largest collection or erotic lkons in North Dakota, and heads a learn (If ser counsellors at llouston Space Center w™* job lt is t() de11rousc mnonb()und astronauu." Clemas was awaiting court action on charges that he took $11,000 from the Bargain Basket store in Costa l\lesa y.·hen he allegedly made a break for freedom . Andrews and a fellow officer later said they ordered the suspect to halt four times before Andrews put a bullet through his heart at a distance of SO ftt.t. A claim submitted by the Clemas cou· pie to the countgr board -.·as denied Aug. 10. ' St. Clair's Got i · Vote for Sure Councilman \Vi\llan1 St Clair recei\'Cd an early c::ampaign boo:.I frorn his son ror Ute April JI , 1972 Costa ~1e~a city e!ec· 1100. Tuesday, DonaJd Ray ~l. Clair. 18 .. limped into the city clerk's office to register to \'Ole. Under the ne~· state h1w IS. 19 and 20-)'r:ar-olds can vote in 11! elections. Oona1d Jt1y ~·as Umping on crutches because he has a broken ankle suffered In 1 ncent motorcycle accident. He told the clerk his dad urged him to re~ster so he'd havt 111 least one sure vote in the counciJ race . St. Clair, "?.1ayor Robert \Vilson and Councilman Alvin Pinkley ~1111 all be up ror re-election ntxl April , I , Reinecke's Ex-aide Opens Fire SACRA.~lENTO (UPI) -The· fonner top aide of Lt . ~ioecke toda.y accused him o~nding hundreds of thousands of taxpayers .dollars to cam· paign for governor and of conducting an ··undercover" t'Onspiracy :iigainst Gov. Ronald Reagan . The charges by Hal Steward, No. I assistant to the lieutenant governor, wel'tl contained in a letter released today to ncws1nen and sent to Reinecke Tuesday. Steward said he wanted lo explain wby he •·resigned .. his $20.000.a-year post as special executive assistant. Other top aides privately sam he was fired . Reinecke said Steward, on the job only seven \\'eeks, left by "mutual consent. .• The shakeup followed a dispute over 1-elease of a preared speech text in which Reinecke critici2ed state employc efficiency and salary increases. Reinecke and other top aides were not hnmediately available for comment on Steward's letter. Stell·itr'd. told Reinecke he "resigned'' t>ecause: • -'·The ust by you and members of your staff of hundreds of lhousarids of dollars in taxpayers money solely to conduct .11 l'Dmpaign for your election to governor in 1974.'' -"The efforts by senior members of your staff. with your knowledge, to con· duct a conspiracy. undercover, against Gov. Jleagan. his administration. and his staff ·· Pw·ple Motorcycle Leads lo Arrest !lis attachment to his purple motorcy- cle led to the downfall of Kenneth Price, 20, of 732 E. 18th St., Costa l\fesa. Price was arrested early today in Santa Ana on armed robbery charges • he sat nn the purple vehicle in front of the Red Turtle bar, 1019 S. Fairview St. Police said he was jailed because hi! description and lhat or his motorcycle matched Wormation given officers by a service station attendant who was robbed of $40 earlier Tuesday nig.ht. - .. ltlat•itrel· Orbi"t Artist's conception sho\vs Mariner 9 in orbit around Mais after 248- mHJion mile journey fro1n Earth. Orbit ot: red planet is scheduled Sal· urday. Mariner 9's mission is to take television pictures of Mars, n1apping about 70 percent of the planet's surface, and to study Mar· tian temperatures and atmosphere. Orbits of red planet's two moons also are detailed. City Cl1arte1· St11cly Unit Challenged by Citizens By Tt.:RRY COVILLE or tk D•n~ 1"1101 S!•ll A negative report by Costa l\·lesa·s l'harter study comn1ittee ap11ears to have kilted chances for a city charter. but some citizens arc stlll fighting fol' a change. The loudesl challenge to the charter con1mittee report comes from Theodore C. ''Ted" Bologh, a perennial city cooncil candidate. Bologh charges that the Hi·member committee was packed by the city council with anti.charter residents, He claim!! ~frs. H.elcne llollingsworth, chairman o( the committee "was not qualified," ad· ding that he \\'as, but was refused a place on the committee. 1 Councill]len. on the other hand. have praised Oie committee's work as "the finest job done in the city." 'rhe charter con1mittee based its 1~egalivc altitude on the difficulty of ehanging an obsolete ch:Jr!er once it· is adopted. l\trs. llollingsworth says. "There really isn't n1uch advantage to the charter," she added . "It only allow! extra taxes and makes it possible for the city. instead o[ stale, to set city council saluries." "'\Ve felt the city's financial goals could he met under the current structure," she t'Onlinued . Bologh, however, contends that a charter would equalize representation throughout the city by setting up coun- cilmanic districts. He c I a i m s the west s.ide, which he dsscribed as a "ghetto" bounded by (See CHARTER, Pa&e Z) Co~ple~ Up for Revie~ Co'uncil to Eye Apartrnent Bid 01t Mesa Ea.st Side Phil Spiller takes his proposed apart· • ment cOmplex oo Costa l\:Jesa's east side back before the city council Monday following a two-week delay for rcvtcw of the project. Spiller af.'Cepted Ule delay on the 40-unit (.'Omple'it at the last city council meetine. His alt.e't'native on the ione exception · pennit he is seeking. for higher density, at that ti.me appeared to be rejccUon of the project at 2G75 Elden Ave. It is-th~ fourtb Spiller development within • thret· block radius. "We're !IOft or martl.ed. to the. east. side," he told councilmen. Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley contended the property would be 50 perctnt overbuilt under the ft,.2 duplex deslgna· lion ind would literally be :;pol-toning. ' CoO'ncllnlan \Villiam L. St. Clair said Spiller'i p\;in is one of lh~ be.st apartment complexes yet propOScd toe ally. Vice ~Tayor \Villard T. Jon.Ian. an architect, 'is also impressed with plans. btlt expressed concern about density. 1'11&.yor Robert f\1. Wilson and Coun· cilman Jack Hammett said they 'Wanted to ft:view il, ~nUng 1£ Spiller wanted a decltiOn Nov. 1 ht.could expect denial. The Spiller project was opposed by neighbol'!I at Its original S4-unit design and 50 reduc:ed to 40 units on 80,520 :iquare fett , with added parking and green areas. Ba~ically, opponenL~ waiit the Jt.2 2one 11nd medlum density shown on the city's .... I" • General Plan retained. Councilman Sl. Clair 'noled no one showed up in opposition, sayina: he YLQ.uhl not vote with lhcir wishe! unless !hey came to express it. Spiller told councilmen he felt the issue invo lved was a need for new money and lnnovaUve design to stimulate eastsldc building activity. ·Vice ~1ayor Jordan replled ~It lhc issue i~ not strictly building activity In a :itagnating area, but proper ioning. Councilman Pinkley., cltinR the general iflan, said. U the Spiller project is ap- proved, It should be by area rezoning; not spot ch11nges. The property involved 11 between Mesa and Otl Mar Avenues and Is flanked on each :side by con1n1erclal development. \ • • Qualifiers Outlined From \\'ire Services WASHINGTON -The Cost 0£ Living Council announced today that 45 percent or total !-LS. sales and r~ughly IO percenl of pay mcreases affecting workers will come in for close government control during the posl·freeze erooomic period, In addition, the council announced a group ?f new exemptions (or the period that will follow the freeze. lfhey include all used products, such as used cars, ex· istiog real estate and in some cases nelf'· homes, and comnlerclat and industrial rents. The council said price increases must be reported to the government before they go into effect if a company has an: nual sales of $100 million or more. Some ' 1 ,300 companies in the United States, representini! 45 percent of total U.S. sales, are in this category. the council said. As (or pay increases, all those which "' would affecl 5.000 workers or more will have to be reported to 'the government before they can go into effect. The council said SCIO economic units, presumably meaning bargaining units, are included in this category, represen· ling 10 percent of the total national work force. The surprise in the news conference was the large number of new exemptions that will be allowed after the free2e ex· pires midnight Sunday. Raw sugar, dues to nonpro(it organiza· lions, international shi pping r a t e s , royalties and copyrights for material!I furnished for publication are among the new price items that will be eiempt from controls. So will ~isposal sales by the govern· ment. such as sale of abandoned or con· fiscated prope~ty. Custom services and products made to individual order, s4ch as leather goods. clothinJ.. wigs and tou~es, and fur apparel. will also be ex· emp(. The exemption on raw unprocessed agricultural products, financial securities and exports will continue in e!fcct after the freeze expires. ' Donald Rumsfeld, director of the coun· (See PAY BOARD,.Page Z) Orange Weatlter Heavy fog along the coast to- night through mid-morning on Thursday, the weather lady re-. ports. \•:Ith highs atong the coast a nol·»high 60, rising to 70 in· land. Lows tonight between 48 and 52. • INSIDE TODAY Local ellle'rtainmcnt hits its peak this tirnt oj ueur urid to- day 's e1l~ertafnme11t 1 e ct i o '' serves up a Sn\f'rgasbord of theater and -music news. Pages 22 and 23. •1n1K t1 ... tlllt ,. (t llftN11t lt CW• (trMt 11 Clttc•lrtt j/,. _ lL Cltulllt; -11 ... (tlftkS 14 ,.,..,_111 14. O.t111 Ntttc:tt ll 1111 ... ltl .... ' •~t•tlllftlNllt ''•ti flll!Met 4t.ll Mt,.MOH SI """ t.t1'16ttt )) MtllWll 4 , M•nlett Ll(MM• '1 Mtll "' Wwk• , .. 11 Mftltl ' P.U ,,..,..... ...... .. NetlM•I '"'-t .... o. .... ~ '' l"TA )6 Sflvle ....,., •I S""1 t ... n Or. Srtllltrtlltl It Sitt• Merllth 4M't Ttlt<tl•IM n T~•twn n-rt Wtllfltr 4 W-11·1 NtlH M>IJ Wtrif Htwl t4 • • • • -. ;! <f D•ll~ PILOT C Wtd"tifli, ~-1~ 1911 ~-Ba}r Ar.eas Fouled? Wate r .Quarantine Could B e Considered //By CAND'ACE PEARSON 01 "'' 0 11111 "llel i!tll .. Three areas of Ne"•Port Ba~· 11re so polluted that the possibility of quaran· tining therti against swimming should hf conskiered, an Orange ~unty harbor dil!trict engineer said Tuesd11.y. Analyzing county health deparllnent tests over the past three years. James Ballinger ' said West Newpor1 channels. the. Rhine Channel and th.e undeveloped ·areas of the Upper Bay failed con· 1istently to meet state pollution stan· dards for water contact. Ballinger presented the comparisons of ty,·o tests: both concentrated IO-day sum- mer samplings al 44 slatlons in the bay, to the coUnty Harbor, Beaches and Parks Comrl)isslon. which had been considerinJ: ordinances requiring locking of com. mercial boat toilets while in th~)larbor. After hearing th.at the Lower Bay wai;· the only are.a which met standards with low levels of pollution, di.strict official Larry Leaman said, "f.-lany people directly relate 1,1•a1er quality to boaters, FDA-Reca-l-ls~¥itamin-s Inadequatel y Labeled WASHINGTON (APl -The FDA an· nounced !oday it has recalled during tht last half.year alxlut 105 million vitamin C pills "'hich it said :•••ere Inadequately )abe!ed and posed a. lhreal lo heart p.a- 1ients lrying to "'ard of f col~. · In its 14th major vitamin C recall since P.lay, the FDA ordered the removal from t;tores of abou1 8.8 million labl els manufactured by the Glenn Matteson Co .. Cloing business as the Setabid Co. of Portland. Ore. The agency warned the public last 'May 26-27 that excessi\·e use or some vitamin C tablets. containing undeclared sodium .ascorbate rather ;han. ascorbic acid may be hazardous to persons on low·salt diets. : "The problem has been ma~nified by Jhe reeent popularity -of heavy dosages of yita?11n C to fight colds," an FDA spoltesman-said in an jnlerview. Last year, Nobel·prize "'inning scientist Lir.us Pauling published "Vit~min C and the Common Cold." in which he recom· mended daily intake of one to three j!"rams or vitamin c. and the increasing or dosages. to four to ten grams at the onsel · bf a (.'(l]d. Coast 'Pitchman' Pleads Guilty In Mail Fraud A onetime Nelol·port Beach --man who ·~arlayed a little pitch into a big sum by •prom\sing nonexistent jQbls to the .Unempkiyed in 15 states pleaded guilty Tuesday to mail fraud . Robert J. Binney. 62, now of 9341 Jfudson Drive , Huntington Beach. will be sentenced Dec. 6 in Federal District Qiurt, Los Angeles. The former Bayside Village re1Jde.nt could be sentenced to rive y e a r s in federal prison and fined $1 ,000 for the l'iuckster scheme. He allegedly collected $15,000 from persons who could ill ·afford it. • Binney. free on his own recogniiance Since arraignment in September, entered his guilty plea before U.S. Judge Avery e. Crary. . He was indicted Sept. 22 by a federal ~and jury on charges of using the mail to defraud jobless persons through Jtewspaper classified ads. . A brochure promised for SI within 10 days and S2 after that barj?ain period allegedly carried listings of }obs by employers who badly needed help. . Only postal investigators probing Bin· ney's activities since 1968 determined the pitch to be false and misleading to a criminal extent. , Binney, said U.S. Attorney Robert L. Meyer, also conned some recipients into tinsusJ>«lingly !ssisting in the mail order bunco scheme. . Federal authorities said :1! the limf' they "·ere initiating " crackdo"'n on of· fenders of Blnney's type. DAILY PILOT OUNGll (OAlf P'UalHHIMC# COMl'AHY l•b•tt N. w •• ol ,,.. .......... P'\lfll .. 1191' J 1t\. l . c~·l•v Vkt '1'M.o..,1 tnd C0-11 IMl'll~tt l h ..... , ic,.,;i El!lw ·l ~•"''' A. 1'111r,i.i11t MIMfll'W Efi .... C~trl11 H. l1•1 t ;ci.,,d P. Nill .-. .. 1111111 "''""'1rlt l.d!lllfl c, .... M .. • Offlct 3JO W11t loy Stittf Mt i1i111 A4.lr1u: r.o. l ei 11•0, tl•J6· Othr Offk• til~ a .. cll~ 3,JJJ N_,,.,,., lllllUl"'t"' 1.. ....... ••ell: n: F-1 ... ...., ... ~.,.,...,..,. 11.-11: Hl71 1~,.~ lou!1•1•(t $111 C'9.....i1t: ~ Horlfl £1 C..m~ ~WI / DAtl T Pfl01', """" '°"'lcti f'I ~ "" ..,_.,.,..,, .. ,.......,.,. ••n, •c...i s..-••f M _,. .. IM••IOtlt ,... l t ..... t ·~ ... ..-: IH(ll, ( .. ,, -·· .,.,,.!'lftf19<'1 .......... _,... Viii.,. 5•• <'°"""'"°' (t_..lr_ -.S-l•Nt\1 ...... '"'"' -"',.,tl M i!..,, P'"..o;•N I ..,...,,,.,. ..... II et -))I W... .. , $11Wf, (allll NI-. ,..., .... (71 4, '4J.4J11 Cl.....W A'-1\ .... •41·1•71 C .. l'flfM. 1111, ~... CNtl """'"'"" <1-11y. Nt -1•i.o., lllV1lr1•- M l-lt l -·--"'""M"-" .... t•ll INY .. r~9111 ..ntloul ..,..Cltl ,.. ''""lM ., unrifl'I: •-· •«..., ~ ... _, ......... ,, ,.._, ••ell '"" Q.o!I M .. t , C.!11-t , $<,ollo(rlt!-IW <•,.,...,. U.» _,,,,.,.! .,-,,...11 U 11 ,.,.,,lflfy, 11•ll•lt'Y "'"'"'"'ilM,. :\t.H "*"~ty. ''Whe.n Pauling came out with hi5 book," tht spokesman said, ''it stimulated such a demand for ascorbic acid tha t manufacturers ran into trouble J::etting. enough and they slarled using sodium ascorbate. "Sodium asrorbate is jusl as good a source of vitamin C as' a~corbic acid ex· ce pt that it has the additional salt con· tent. "We have nothin~ against the.m using this substitute, , but we're very much against people not knowing they're. get· ting the salt," the spokesman said. The FDA estimated that at least 540,000 or the Setabid lablets re ma i n in ihe marke.t, primarily in retail health.food stores, under more than 100 private· distribulllr labels. The · recalled pills are Vitamin C Rose Hips supp_lement , PN 259--C; Blueberry· fh1vored vitimin C supplement, PN7~: le mon·flavored vitamin C supplement, PN 8-fO.C : orange-flavo red vitamin C sup- plement, PN 975-C. and Aserola·flavorecf vitamin C supplement, PN 120-C. From Pagel PAY BOARD • • • cil, told reporters that other exemptions are bein( considered and ma y be: an. nounced later in the week. He also said he would not rule out ex· em ptions to the pay standard announced earller by the Pay Board. But Rumsreld woul d not amplily that statement. The Pay Board has left ltseU a loophole that may st~etch wide enough to squeeze a 12 percent pa y raise through. But ii may U.ke milnths to find oul. The three-level structure announced by the council would require pr ior approval of the bi11:gest coinpanie.s. Below that level. the council said com· panies with annual "'Sales of S50 million to i 100 million will have to 'report price, cost and prOfit info rmation quarterly an d firms. with 1.000 lo 5,000 worker.~ will have lo report pay increases when they lake effect. Businesses below the largest and medium·sized categories will be subject to spot checks by !he government, but ! they will not have to report their in· dividual wage and price actions to the government. llowever. unless specifically exempted from the Phase II cont rols . all companies will be subject lo the guidelines 11ond decisions of the price commission and the pav board. Rumsfe.ld t:?mphasb.ed at a news cnn·, ference that the wage·price freeze im· posed by President Nixon on Aug. 15 wilt be repla ced by the Phase II controls .:it midnight Saturday and thot there ""'ill be "no gap. no hii.tus.'' He said the pr;ce commission "'ould disclose its guideline.~ and standard~ nn Thursda.v and that the entire Phase II org;iniza lion would be in place by the beginning or the week. Se nate .4pproves -· OkinlL'Wa R eturn To Japan , 84 -6 \\'ASHINGTON (APl -The Senate to. da y approved the-agree{Tlent reiutnlni;t Okinawa and the Ryuk yu lslailft5 10 Japan next year. The vote was 84 to 6. The agreement represents the end of an er;i in U.S.-Japan relations. It returns · lo Japan the last n.•m11ininJt occupied !er· rilory held by the· United States ;ind end~ some 27 years of the sta!us..a£..-Occupying pil\l'f'r. < The treaty will not 1ake effect unti l after the Japanese Diet ha5 also ratlfifd it and adopted legislation required to c11r· ry out the agreement and derense Ar· rangements. United States is expected lo turn over the Ryukyu !~lands Including Okinawa lo .Japan by June :io. 1972. or possibly soooer. ' No nuclear weapons a~ In be stored on the island·ba.!if: by that time nor can such "'eapons be brought !here without the ap· proval or the Japane~~ go\'ernmenl. However. the United States "'Ill retain for an indefinite pt:?ribd the use or 100 or the 134 separate military insl11lla11on!I on the island. The C{lmmunlcations fnel~·ork nn_o~ma~·a ..-·ith ils airfields. port and logistic. facil ities Is considered vltally essential to U.S. securi1y C'Ommitme.nlJ in ' Japan. SOulh Kore.a, Taiwan, the Phlli p- pines and Southea1t Asia. The six who opposed the treat)' wer' Sens. J1mrs B. Allen 1 ().1\111.1. Harry F'. Byrd Jr. (lnd.-V1. J. Berry (;oldwater 1 R· Ariz.I, Clifford P. Hansen jfi.\\'yn 1, Warren G. Mitgnuson (1).\Vash. ~. And 1't1lton R. Young tR·N 0 .t - but the ~lit of where th• boats are moored is the Jeast problem." Commissioners took no action on Ball- Inge.r's report, other than to react to the extensive statistics. which Comml!!sloner 11-fartin Usab called "scarcy." In the West Newport c..·hnnnels, the failure at meeting bacteria tests · "'e.nt from 12 percent in 1968 to 21 percent in 1970. Dissolved oxygen tests were failed at a percentage of 35 in 1968 and 44 in 1970. The Rhine area. just behind the city hall . had an illCrease in bacteria count with only thrfie percent in 1968 but 41 per· t·ent in 1970. Its oxygen count was 61 per· c-ent in 1968, 80 percent in 1970. Undeveloped areas of Upper Ba y, 11bo\'e Do\'cr Shores. sho wed the greatest increase in bacteria count wilh 59 percent in 1970 up from three percent in 1968. Dissolved oxygen figures marked the highest failure increase !I.SO up from 29 percent lo 63 percent. Only one area. the developed section of Upper Bay. showed any improvement. DisS()lved oxygen count decreased in 1970 to only four percent from 22 .percent in 1968. Bacteria showed little .change. from three to six percent. Lower Bay figures were : bacleri:;·. two and four percent, and dissolved oxygen, '"'O percent both years: Ballinger said the problem areas had the lea st amount of flushing action and were generally shallower. He suggested solutions or adding oxygen to the waters to ajd !71arine. li_re. deepening the channels or 1ntercepl1ng drainage into the areas. Commissioners were not sure "'h;it to do 'A'ith the figures and Harbor District Director Kenneth Sampson said they we.re •·only indicators. Comprehensive cold weather samples haven't been taken yet ." . But the statistics did seem to make the commission shy away from re-enacting the ordin ance conceming commercial vessels which had been returned to them by the 'Board of Supervisors because it was overly selective. . . A public hearing on all related matters of water quality, including pump-pout facilitie s. disposal of waste and houseboats was suggested but not set. Hi jacker Claims He Has Bomb; Grounds Plane .h10LINE, HI. !UPI ) -A man claiming to have a bomb rorced an American Airlifies 707 passenger plane to make An emergency h1nd ing at Qu11d Cities Airport today. The airport control to..wer s,Jd the suspect was arrested. · · A search W11s launched lo determine "'hether there was a bomb aboard American flight 101, bound from Chicago for !he West CoasL All the passengers aboard the plane were allowed to disembark before .FBI agents, Illinois State Police and other of· ficers moved in to make the arrest. The airport control tower said the pilot o: the plane notified the radar control center outside Chicago that a man w;i s aboard demanding that the plane land at Quad Cities ..J.irporl, \\•hic-h f'er\'es the Illinois cities of !\Ioline. East h1otine and Rock Island. as "'ell as Davenport, Iowa. American Airlines planes do not normally land at the Quad Ci ties Airport s. but " spokesm;in said the airport is capable of accommodating a 707 l;inding. 1'1·01n Page l CHART ER ... Harbor Boulevard. 16th Street. Adams Avenue and Estancia Dri\'e, would gel council representation. , Boloj:\h recently moved !o tha1 arra afler selling his home ·on Del !\far A\·enue.. He charj?rd that four or the fi1'e coun· rilm'n -Jack Han1mett i~ lhe ex cept io n -live on the ras! side of town . The charter committee did not con!lidrr this point in its report 10 the c-ouncil Nov. 1. The commtrtee~s16 membtrs were ap. pointed by the city council last h1ay ;ind n1et !"'ice a month until Oclober. when their recommendation "'as fillftf1'zrd . f\'lrs . Hollings\.\·orlh said the comn1ittec did nOI m~ke a full re.port. just " four· page letter to the council. because the an.. ti·c-harler feeling 11·as unanimous. "We talked to representat ives fron1 several other citi~.~ who explained 1heir positions. We kept running into the {]UCS• lion "'hat do "''e "'ant for Costa !\lcsa. and \t scC"n1ed the chflrl.er would nol help very much." f'he sa id. lier tommiltee's report \\'a:; brief. poin· ting out that difficulty of changinJr fl charter. and It also recommended establishment (lf Another committee to develop future goals aod objectl\'C~ for the t•ity. Charter committre members alAA fl'lt the city should seek state legislation gi\'· ing general h1..-• cities greater freedom - mcanlnJ! taxes primar11y, bu& the con1· miltee did not define those rreedoms any further. Robtrt Dueg8n, A!l!li!llllnt c i I -; manager, point! out that In !he past ft\\' yeilrs the state Legislature has rapidly lollo\\'ed lnnova!lons of charter cities. by j:1ranting slttlllar power.~ to general IAw cillts. I Tht ro11ncil took no formal action nn· lhe commlHte's report . but it~ ac· rrp!ance and praise or lhe reporl. made it l.'lc11 r the Issue is dead -11:l 1t.11st tor the moment. • Tort111•ed ita Texas . . . c·and y ti1arie Davis, Robert Franklin ~and Ken· ncth ·r..1ark Colvin. all 16 (from left) si{ in a police ,('ar after being rescued from a night of torture in Texas. Three of the five youngsters v.1ere found nailed in a closet, another was fou nd dead, his hands V icti1n 11t1d S11spect f\1i chael \Vaync Davis, 19.lleft) one of four su rvivofs of a night of terror. sits in a Houston police car after his rescue today. He and the others ,,·ere kid· and feet tied together. face do\vn in a bathtub filled with water, while the fifth \vas hog tied. The young· sters said they \vere hitchhiking to Texas to find jobs when they 'vere kidnaped. , .# ""~,- UPI TtHIP""l,jl ' naped and tortured. Police are holding George A. \Vh ittington, 27 (right ), as a suspect. Alioto on Witness Stand SF Mayor De fends Self in Fee-splitting Tr ial VANCOUVEr!. \\lash.· fA Pl -San Francisco f\1ayor Joseph L. Alioto took !he stand toda v in !he $Z.3·million fee splitting !ri;il in. wh~"ch e is a defendant. are cndefendants with Alfolo in the civil suit br6ught by the State of Wa~hington and 12 public utilities districts. "I made il very. very plain lo O'Con· nelJ that under no circumstances would I pay a~referee" just for bringing the case. Al ioto testified at he told former \\1ashington Att y. G . ,JoJin J. O'Connell if. 1961 that it was his practice Ill share fcc.o; with Ja1\•yers "'ho "·orked with him on antilru~t eases. O"Connrll and (;eorf:(e K. Faler. a rorn1cr slate assistant altorney general. TODAY by Small Bvt Impressive • 'fhe 18th <innual lJian1onds-lntcr· national A"·ards collection opened in Nc11• \'ork in mid-September . .Je1\'~ers fro1n 30 countries entered their designs. and from over 2.200 pieces. one gets a ,·ie''' of diamond fa:o;hions for the co)ning year. !\fost people \VOtt'l be surprised to learn that rin~vere the major at1ractinn. bul . n1ay be sur- priser! to learn [ the ilnportance of \'cry s1na1 1 rlian1ond s. Over hat( thl! \I inning designs featured tiny diatnonds in co1nbination wilh other prccio~s and sen1i-precious. 1 stones. 1·11e piece containing ·the most \ra.~ a ring \Vilh 305.diamonds, but a total ~·eight bf only I\\ o carats. So 111e pieces featured semi-prec- ious stones rnercly .. dusted" with tiny gen1s. almo.c;t as though they had been dipped in gli tter. lf you feel you can't afford dia- n1onds , take a second look at \\•hat \can be accomplished v.dttl even. a J fe\.\' of the tiniest. A few tiny d1a· jrnonds on a h.jghly polished back· !~round arc as i111pressive as the glean1 in a pretty eye. \Ve 'll be happy to help ynu pick a design to suit your taste and budget. "I had a commitment ... that if they worked effectively on the cases, they would i;hare In fee.<;," Alioto said. Alioto said thcr~ was no di.<;cusslon a b o 'J.t whether O'Connell or F' a 1 e r specifically wou!d i;hare in the fee.~. He le!itificd abou! a 1961 mec1ini:: in San Francisco with O'Connell and Faler 1Yho, Alio!n-said. "'ere "shopping around for an ;;intitrusl l11wyer." "l didn't kno\\' if he "'as i;:oini;: to work on the case, .. Alioto said. As it turned out ''O'Connell and Faler did prodigious and effective work." OOMEGA Chistmas wrapped . , .. in 14k sil-Iid gold lsn'I !his \he year !0°showher how · m\Jch you really care? \Vhen she sees the Omega name on her watch she'll know tio1v mt1ch extra though\ you put in lo her Christmas. And becaus.e all Omega watches 2re made to be the finest of their kind , she 'll probably never need another watch for all the Christ mases to come. ,. -!~o< •~' ~ pi'cl t"~~J't! "~~~ ..... 12rs 11 -"•I( .. ~•I• er ~,.,G .. I G••G GGid b11ct •I ~•'t"I ............................... 12•, C-UK I C• d 90 d I ~k tll~• fl.,.,,, • ,St2$ ~-J. C. JJ-un1r1hrie:J -;}ewefcrJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENlENT TERMS IANKAM[RICAllO-MASTER CHARGE 24 YEAR's SAM ~ LOC.f\T!ON , PHONE S41·J40 I I ~ " I -----4 l '- .\ • • • r Labor Las hes Out Rehnquist Cid-led -- l..Oophole f--1·-tDraft Upheld Right!st Zealot LOS. ANGELES (UPI) -A > federal judge Tuesday granted 111).day injunction against the Selective Service to a 23-year--I UPI Tel~ Weighs Future WASHINGTON (UPI) -Organized labor branded Assistant Attorney Genera1 WID!am H. Rehnquist a right wing zealot tn(lay and urged the Senate to reject his Con ventio1i City Gets ~Fund Boos.t For Police Work WASHINGTON (AP) -The-Justice Department said Tuesday .it has awarded almst $400,000 to Mlami Beach, Fla. t1> help its police force handle next year'~ Democratic National Convention. Thomas G. Jolley, a 27-year· San Diego, Calif,, planned site of the old newspaperman, said he will 1972 Republican nominati,ng conventJon, probably head for Canada now also is preparing to ask for similar funds, since his appeal to the Supreme the department's Law Enforcement Cpur~ ~as re~ected. He gave up Assistant A~istration 11aid. . ·his c1t1zensh1p to esca~e the --~-.:-LEAA.:::;admmlltratot.....JeaJs-Leonard dr.aft and has been denied re-said the Miami Beach grant ls a reeogni· gaining it. He is a man without tion of the unusual pressure placed on a country. police forces in cities where political con- Ventions are held. He said the money "will be of substan- nomlnatio~ to the Supt'mle Court. old artist who argued that a The AFL-CIO thua joloed t h • little-known loopho1" In th• Leadership Oniference on ctvU Rights, draft law forbids the govern:o the NAACP and t~ Americans for ment to draft anyone unW Democratic Action In opposition to Rehn· Dec. 28, quist. . ·House OkaNS u.s. District Judge Rober! · A3 , d i d those o th er organizatloils, .; ~· Kelleher noted that the organized labor took no position on the • argument by Karl S. Bohn. of nomination of Lewis F. Powell Jr., the p t" ide Santa Barbara, Calif., "seems Richmond, Va., lawyer nomlnaled for e es lC to present a case of nallonal second vacancy. importance." Andrew-Biemiller. legislative represen-a ro..,trol B ·zz u. s. Attorney Al an tative of the AFI.rCIO, delivered labor'• ~ ..._&-l Peryam, representing the position paper opposing Rehnquist to the , government, told the judge.the Senate Judiciary Committee. • WASHINGTON (AP) -The case could affect thost of "We do so because Rehnqu:ist's pubUc _House passed 288 to 91 a about 10,000 young men facing record demonstrates him to be a right Induction in the next two wing zealot whose sole distinctions Jn pest.icldes-a>ntrol bill Tuesday months. public life are that he was the only major alter crushing several pro-Kelleher granted Bohn an person of stature who opposed the posed changes t ha t en-injunction 1galnst his selecUve Ariz.ona <?ivil rights bill in 196f and that vironmentallstl said w e r e service board, pi-eventing the be' has been one of the prime theoretl-Crucial to creating effective board from inducting him for cians of and an apologist for this ad· 60 days. He set Dec. 2 as the ministration's root and branch assault on new legislation. date of the. next hearing, to the Constitutional system of check• and A aeries of amendments of-·rule on a request by Bohn's at- balances," Biemiller said in hl1 p~pared fertd by Rep, John G. Dow lomey, Do~. R. Bay, for a statement:-----, --t°"N.Y.),-Blld hi5 supportefs,-:;;$U~~u~gtnent -barrlng .,. """""" that bloom d year roand. ~arid enameled In nattnl Cactus Canyon rock fo11nelicn 312 Inches tall. $9. Do Something Beautillll HIDE·A·WAY FOR CHRISTMAS --c11e..,...Ac~11,.,. ____ _ Amerlc•n b,....., The onJy reasmf'R!hnqulst s name was was rtjected as the House Bohn s induction. . '\ submitted for tht' • Supreme Court, . The government is expected SLAVJ"K'S Blem.iller said, was because he had went alo~ w!th the bill ap-to argue then that the loophole '-.! demonstrated his "complete fealty" to proved by its Agriculture has no legal standing. Jewelers Slnce 1917 Nh:on Ad.m.inistratioft programs. C.OmmiUee. The injunctio~ granted Bohn 18 FASH ION ISLAND "It is precise]y because be is the ad-A major revision, endorsed aff~ts only his case, m~ NEWPORT BEACH-644-1180 'Death Is !}eautiiul' ANN ARBOR, ·Mich. (AP) -Two young women are in critical C1lnditi0n to- day after letting themseJVes on fire because, as one eXplained to police, "Dying is beautiful." tial assistance to the convention cities, ror 1 '\ naUonal political convention naturally wou1d strain the p o l t c e resources of any community." The-· 1968 Democratic convention tn Chicago was marked by ma!3 demonstra- tions followed by mag arrests and charge by prote1tors of police brutality. ministration's man ntber than his own by Agriculture .Committee tainmg the status quo, and open Mon. •nd Fri., 10 •.m. to t :lO p.m. that he should not sit OD the b!gb court " Cbairm W R p does not mean the judgeJ!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Biemiller said.._ ' an · · oage (0-agreed with his argument or Noting ttia?' Prt&ident Nixon had Tex.), to permit sta~es to im-ruled against ~he draft laws. characteri:r:ed Rehnquist as a "strict con-pose whatever a d d 1 ti o n a 1 But Bay &aid that at least stnictionist," Biemiller said "he is, if restrictions they 1wish on all two oth~r suits had already Kids Love Uncle· anything, a-atrict_constr:uctionist of the pesUcides was approved 167 been d f1I~ on the same AM Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny said Anita Uluise McQueen, 20, Llvooia, and Raelle Weinstein, 26, Skokie, Ill., ap- parenUy wrapped themselves in paper, sat cro~legged on the floor and set each other on fire. Leonard said $178,000 would go for the purcha~ or communications equipment and another $100,000 for police training. Constitution Drior to the adoption~ of the ' . '. ·gr.Qun s_. in San Diego and bill of rights'•i -.-. to 56. The orlgtnal committee eastern New York. and there Le s d • The AFL-CJO witrleas was among 1 _ bill Wt?Uid have preempted the wa.s ~ome thought of con· n, atur ay m long list who tesWied or put ttstimony ln power ~f states to put more so~1dat1ng ,them to be ht'ard "The orderly funcUoning of national political coaventions is an tntegra;l part of the democracy," Leonard said. the record ln the second day of bearings restrJct1ons on what would be w1lh Bohn s. Other young men th DAILY PILOT in opposition to Rehnquist designated I I general-use can file similar suits if they e ' · pesticides. face Induction before Dee. 28. Advance Men a Curiosity Reds Draw Stares at U.N. UNIT!i:D • NATIONS (UPI) -Thlf are four secretaries and two messengers -not ex· 1cUy top ranking diplomats - but ambassadon; rush to greet them, police guard them and newmten dog their foot.steps. AJ the lint Communist Chinese to come to the United Nations in 21 years and the -first ever to come as U.N. members, the advance party from the People's Republic of Chini are minor celebrities .. 1.IDssouri Voters Reject School Funding Again I N D E PENDENCE, Mo. (AP) - A heavy turnout of voter1 Tuesday defeated for the third time this year a pro- Policeman Shot Dead DALLAS (AP) - A rookie policeman was shot to death and another was wounded to- day after &topping a truck because of a miflO[' traffic ac- cident. police reported. Two men wi re taken into custody shortly after the •booting. 'The dead policeman was Identified ,s Johnnie T. Hartwell, 30, a rookie still in training. Officer James E. Clark, 40, was wounded in the right arm. posed increase of 95 cents in the school levy, but officials said Independence p u b 11 c schools would reopen anyway in anticipation or funds coming next month from the state. Dr. Guy Carter. school superintendent, said school children, idled since Nov. 1, will return to class Monday. He said the !late money is due Dec. 15. School administrators had said the city's public achools would remain closed through November because of a lack of funds to pay teacher1. The final unofficial tally was 8,846 in favor of the Increased levy and 9,107 against. A two- thirds. vote was necessary to approve the measure. Disposer Installed Na-Charge wltli Dishwasher Purchtne and Installation - and major curiosities. ·The six advance men ar- rived Monday to make what they called "administrative preparations" for the full 46- . member delegations flying hue Thurlda)f.from Paris. Kao Liang, the former newsman who beadt the 1d-• vance party, and two other members paid their tntUal visit to the beadquartti1 of the world organization Tues- day. . A crowd of tnore than 50 secretariat ernployes 1 n d newsmen gathered outside the o(fice where for 95 minutes the advance party discusaed the mechanics of opening a mission with U.N. Protocol Chief-Sinan A Korie and Col. Harold A. 0 Huck" Trimble, bead of U .N. security. Then, escorted by three plainclothes U.N. security guards, the Chinese toured the Security Council c h a m b e r where Huang Hua, until now ambassador to Canada, will sit as one of the five permanent members. Nonnally r t.1 tra i ne d diplomats gawked when the three quiet men dressed in blue-grey Mao-style s u I t 1 entered the crowded delegates lounge for coffee with Alba- nian Ambassador Sami Baholli and four members of this d~legation. KitchenAid Dislfwasher · .. Prices Start • s 1 ssaa Fo< Model KDCS IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540°7131 • JCPenliey The values are here every day. COSTA MESA STORE HARBOR SHt>PPING CENTER ce ! Men's Sport' Coats Women's Dresses Reduced Queen Size Sheets GROUP I GIOUP II 11-JI tr. 46. 1Mrtt ..... ,.,. 1688 Orlt . Sf.$1 I Orlt. S1 2·Sl4.00 ~Id C.lor hrcales 4" .. ,~ • ,....,... WW. ......... hep hid ' ....... 10% ,...,_,. ....._ Ortt. H.tM7.tl NOW . Now $7.88 Now $9.88 10% Cette11, Pe11• ~ Orlf. 7.t t WOMEN'S UNIKllMI OM & Twe 4"'7" GIRU ITRnCH TICiHTS. Pl11k, soc MINS DRESS IHlm 5" pc.. "'"' °"'' I· 14. NOW T~rq. & ~ ••• Orl9. t tc NOW Lo11t 11...,. 1trl,..._ Orff, 7.tl NOW WOMIN'S AMILi PANTS Aut. atyl" 4""7" INFANT • TODDLll SHORTS Prb1t1 33c MIN'S CA.ILi DESIGN YI STS. Wtffl 8" ........... Orft ••• ,. NOW & Selldl. Orl9. 7f¢·1 .7~ NOW wfrth• wo.1-whitw. Orlt. 12.tl NOW WOMl~SS'T. TOPS ·-& s211·411 Girls Boxed Jewelry MIN'S WALK SHORTS, Qt. "Ylft-99c l1ftll. Or • 1-1.00 NOW lr.kH tlul. Or19. J-4.00 NOW MARI ITY WUI JfHt '1" lh1tp-Necklec• 1'1,1110~ ASST. KNIT SHllTS 99c c ....... ortt.1-1.H NOW A.IHI S.,.,crt..-h1ftlel • llrth""* Orlt. 4.t t-NOW 2.11 Ofit. I.ft NOW NYLON I POLYhTll TOPS Skrt• '1" Orft. SI .Gt Orlf. 2.00 Orlt. J.00 AC l YLIC KNIT ITRIPI SHllTI. ""-• .2" "-" I llwoalw. Oflt. $6.00 NOW NOW 10¢ NOW ttf; NOW 1.tt co'°'"'"Sldt. Orlt. J. ft NOW PAntaN ANll'LI PANn 3" MEN'S DRISS SHOI A.ti11M 4hld· 8" C..... ..., --. Ortf. 7.H NOW P.mN Sole. Orit. 10.tt. NOW &IRLS 1·6X SHORTS. Allt. petNn1 33c • SolldL Orlt-. 1,00·2.00 NOW Towel Bonanza -. -llU 7-14 SHOI TS. Aa'. 44c _f-•~M & Prfllf 1'kk T""" Women's Shifts Reduced ,_rkt & Col0'9. Orit. 1.1f•J.OO NOW e IA.TH Or&t. 2.21 1°' Foundation Clearahce NOW Slei:al•,...... II......._ p,_ s1aa e HAND-Orit. 1.21 60c ~ ,., .. , ...... ""'" NOW Orlt· 4.11 NOW ODDS A INDS .t l"ltt to flnrt 99c e WASH -Olit. ... 30c Co-.1. P..ry • lo1t ... styl•. NOW WlllN M r. Orft. J-6.00 NOW WOMIN'S NnON INIT TOPS. Lfft 2" MIN'S WAXHIDI STIRRUP IOqT 23" ~-ltripe. Otit· J.10 NOW GllU IANDUSTI R SKIRT sns •• , •• , 4" a,......, llted. Orff. 26.00 NOW PULL OYIR IULIT INJn, 11,,_, 7" s...,., Lertttti. Orft. 7 .OO. NOW ' Met -P•freh. Orft. 1 O.to NOW &IRLS tROWN SUIDI KIC•El IOOT 4" •1N• srn sHrm. ,..,, •• ,... 7" ..... r. . . NOW . WOMIN'S MOCCASINS. ltewo or .. , 3" Cnhfoa c,.,. Sol., Ortt. l .tt NOW Soft ..... hell 1u,,.,._ Chit· I.ft NOW GIRLS IUCICLI SCffO~L SHOI . 4" TWIN SID QUILT SPRIADS 10'' l1tllflo'Hf Pri9f. Orft, 11.00 NOW HAID SOUD MOCASSINS. T•. 4" lro .. _.Ill•· Ortt. 7.tt NOW ..,, co"'*91t, Orft 6.ff. NOW . ~ 1 011lr VILVn SPRIAD GOLD. 77 .. tor s-a1ns 111n & TIU 44c Q .... Sta, C•tom. O,ft, fJl.00 NOW LI.Din AMDICANA IOOT, hd•wllt.• 13" 5tMtl •P ""· Orft, 1!10 NOW w .. """' ...... Oriti-''·'' NOW IOYS CA RDIGAN SWUTIRS ILIC. 11.;ANKIT DIL. DUAL 15" 5" s.,_..p ff•I... Orft. 25.00 NOW '°Lrnn• DIL INtT ~ .... •i"' 2" ...... ••If. Acrrltc. Orft. 7.t l NOW .WO. C.SotMlectSH. NOW CURTAIN & DRAPllY CLIANUP 1' .. 14~ IOYS CASUAL PANTS 66c OrJt. J.t t fre JS.00 NOW W• N' -· Orlt· 1.44 NOW ·-Men's Paftt Riot Toys-Games-Puzzles, Etc. -Camiil Pendants . Dr.. & C....tl tlMb -........ 3~ . JI. SAW Pumlll-eAM IS-88 R ... hfk C:.-.. Fii .. ,.. SQt-__ ,... .... _,..._ ......... rrre-r.-c...r.-..-Mrfc.i I•· C. D~Wlfti two &. Tltrff s'tf.rid S._ 2MO Orff. 1 ... -1.tt NOW , ..,,_,,. h p & •IN AcH""-NOW CW.. Orlt. 2.00 I J,00 NOW • USE YOUR PENNH CHARGE CARD -Shop Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 to 9~15 ___ , ' . .. , I . l ., • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • -Political· Gamesmanship Considering some prior political campaigns on the Costa fl.1esa front-and the depths of rancor reached- it appears the 1972 race .might be off to a bit more light· hearted start. . Signs of jockeying ror position are already evident. Tal<e the recent Cabl .. TV Caper at City Hall. The basic players all are up for new city council te~ms next April: Mayor Robert M. Wilson and council· 1nen Alvin L. Pinkley and \Villiam L. St. Clair. The name of the game in politics is do unto other candidates before other candidates can do-unto you. If you ask: Do what?, chances are you wouldn't make_ it ill potitics. i. Essentially. St. Clair did a lot or legwork studying Cable-TV and tioped for appointm~nt to ~ Joint Pow~rs Coinm1ttee now \\'orking to establish a f1ve-commun1ty netu•orl<. Any candidate knows favorable public exposure is essential in seeking office, or election to a new term. ~1ayor Wilson is an astute politician and he knoY.'S ab'Out good exposure to win re·election. He also knows \\'horn he prefers re-elected besides Robert M. Wilson. So 31k \veeks ago ·he appointed Pinkley to the Calbe· TV committee post that St. Clair cherished. . Now Pink is also a shrewd; astute and adroit p·ot· itician. \Vbo _wishe.d to ~v9(d any _ ~npleasantness this early In the 197ztampalgn:Jte-le·arned-Sr.c_tairw~uld - challenge his new post at the very next council meeting. Taking his cue !rom recent county supervisors' and planning com~ssioners' performances. when faced "'ith such a potential for unpleasantness, Pinkley duck· ed the issue. He ducked right out the side door of City Hall, be- fore St. Clair could raiJe the question. And since Pinkley wasn't handy to discuss or de- fend appointment to the Cable·TV Joint Powers Com· mittee over St. Clair, fellow councilmen refused to consider St. Clai.1;"s appeal. . i•J tell 7ou, it sure Is fun working with. these astute politicians/ chuckled Councilman St. Clair. "I feel caught in' the middle, and I don't like it." Pinkley responded later, conceding he too got a good laugh out or the episode. The nice thing about the Cable-TV Caper ls that no one has blov.·n a tube. • But the picture inay change before April. Or after the ballots are counted. Appreciating Our Youth For ,17 years1 Optimist Clubs throughout North America have observed Youth Appieciation \Veek in November, and are now doing so again. "'During these 17 years, young people as an element of our culture have accomplished more and dra\vn more attention to themselves than in any period of history. Positive and negative aspects are all part of the picture. Acts by some which can offend should never be permitted to overshadow the achievements by so many '!10~ ~ha~ contribl,lte to the quality of a community's life. Too often, the adult citizen allows emotional res· ponse to blind him tllusly lo the wealth represented by America's younger citizens. During their current week, we aU wouJd do well to join with· the Optimists -what more appropriate group? -in mutual appreciation of Young Americans, from kin~ergarten through college age. c 'Say, Mildred! Did ya see where Jackie made Aristotle Onassis sign this fan cy contract?' Question of Tipping ls ·vexatious Tradition of Fair Play Violated A reader ln Buffalo wants to know whether I believe that one should leave a tip in a restaurant if the service has been bad. "lf a tip is taken for granted," she "'rites, ''then there is Jillie incentive (or the waiter to provide good serv- ice. But my hu sband gels angry when· ever I tell him I re- fused to !eave a tip -or left a sma ll one -for poor serv· ice." The whole question of Upping in mod em society is a vexatious one, and I don't know that .there is any "right" answer to it, as our economy now stands. rtfORALl~Y. TIPP"''G should be abolished, because it is a kind of legalized blackmail; but practica lly, this wC1u!d mean doing grave injury to millions of emp\oyes in the ser\'ice trades. I ah-.·avs leave much the same moderate Size of tip, whethe r the service has been adequate or indifferent -not out of generosity, but out of cov.•ardice. I simplv don"t have the gumption lo &trike baCk at a careless or inattentive waiter by hurt ing his pocketbook. Women. apparently. are much more ven geful than .men in this respect. VAR IOUS INDUSTRIES ha\"e tried to abolish tipplng, but the habit has always Dear Gloomy Gus Can the junk yard behind !he police station and Southern Cali• fornia College be utilized by all Costa ,.1esa residents? ti's a pity to have such a dump near our new city halU -M. P. Ttli1 111tur1 r1ll1<h r11d1r1' vl1w1, net 11ttuurur tllGs. .i IM R-u>•"'· l11HI ,OU, "' '"YI ,, OIMrnr Gus. Delly 1'1111. crept back in one way or aoother. Only the, commercial airlines,. lo my knowledge, have .been able to avoid this practice -probably because the industry started out on that basis and thus had no J n g r a i n e d customer-tradition to oven:-ome. Tipping is evidently an ancient prob- lem. There is a charming t.i.Je about Nasreddin Hoja, a 13th Century 'l'urki sh philosopher, who once went to a public bath in a neighboring city. 1 TH E ATTENDANTS, noticing his Shab- by costume, paid him little attention and brought him a tom towel and a tiny pil!ce of soap. On leaving. lfoja gave a gold piece to each of th e attendants. who men- tally kicked them selves for having been deceived by his ragged appearance. He returned lo the same bath the follov.•ing "'eek. dressed as before. llut this time wa s received with grea t defer- ence - new towels. scented soap. much bowing and scraping with the anticipation of more gold pieces. • But . on leaving. he gave each attendant a nickel, replying to their startled looks: "The gold pieces 1 gave you la sl week v.·ere for the way you treated me todRy; the nickels I've given you are for the way you treated me last y,·eek." Russia's Space Failures WASHINGTON -Th12re are authorita• th·e indications that Soyuz. top Russian space prugram. is being dras!ic_a!ly re· vlsed or possibly even abandoned. \Vhe ther there is any connect ion be-- f\l'een that and the reporletl shake up In upper C'chelons of ~ the So\·iet s p a c e hlerarchv is st 11 1 un kno."·n . La-;! month, this column -~ f::, disclosed that far- reaching per.sonnC'I changes were under- 'Y.·ay due to !he most_ calamitous yea r in .(Russia's space o~ I eratlons. During this period, ther~ has been . a Jong succession of costly fn1h!re~ ;ind d1s- as}ers in Jives and equipme._et. Sixteen of 19 space probes were unsuccessful. some nf tragic proportions. SEVERAL WEEKS 11rter the" reported uphea val among JC'ading space oflicia!s, t.he Kremlin 5uddenly announ c.ed !he death of a foremost sp&ce sciC"nl i~t. He ~·as In !ht van in deve:lopln~ lhe Soyuz: Jlipace pl,1form program-Rus~1_a's r ival of this country's history-making Apollo moon probes and landings. But unlike the latter·s epic successr.s, Soyuz ~--B y George---· Dear George: Haw do you get away 1'ith such blu.n l an swtrs In your cnlumn? Dotsn 't anybody ever take cb- jeclion? CURIOUS Dear Curious: \\'hat did you think lhlr big white bandage on my nose was? A fiag or truce? t (' "~~~~~~'.-~Hen. \. ~ ' ha s been plogued by disaster and tragfdy. This dismal record was clima xed last sum mer by 'the aspl}yxiation dent.hs of three cosmonau ts while Oesrend.inl? from a record-break ing· earth orbit. The So. \'iet Union has ne\·er disclosed that com· munication with the ill-fated trio was lost by · ground control v.·ithin seconds after they started down. OTllER CALAl'tITT'OUS. crashes tightly concraJed from both the Jlul'isian people and the world are: -The ri.tars probe by two !Jve-!on spilCC· ships launched early this year. They should ha\·e reached !heir ti.rget long ago, but nothing has been heard from or about them. -A lunar probe la~t sPrl11g that er· plOOcd almost immedla!elv aftrr being alrborne. hurUinir Jar:::e pi.rt.5 6f the rock-I el back lo earth , killing some v.·orkers and leaving a huge crater near the launching pa d. -An earlier lunar probe resulted in 11n even worse c~lastrophe. It blew up on I.he 1>3d wl1h ronslderable IMs or life and heavy de!lructlon of equipment There has never bttn the $lightest hint of these catastrophes. -IN S.EPTE~fBER, L11na 18 did rearh the moon. bu1. the vehicle h w1s to !ind there crashtd,Jnstead -a tot:.! Jo~s. Whal space !!peetacular, If an y, will rt-- place Soyuz rem11ins to bt seen. . \\'utern space authoritie s consider lt highly unlikeJ)' th.al the Kr11mlln wUI 11bt.ndon this crucisl field , Th<'>' anllcip.ate there will be far-reaching changes In pr~ grarns and obJtetlves, but not a dropour. Army Action on Herhert ·Cond~mned To the Editor : For over a century and a half, !he °'United States Military Ac&cft?rr'ly has espoused the ideaJS expreSsfd in its mot· to, ''Duty, Honor, Country." I was raised in a military fam ily, the son of a West Point graduate. The in· tegrity or our military establishn1ent . especially al the higher levels, and its tradition of fa ir play had always been something of which I was proud and con- fident. 1 FlRST READ of Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert's situation and then saw him on the Dick Cavett Show. The actions resulting in the corruption of this man·s exemplary military record were so in- credible , uncontested, visible and con- trary to the traditions of the American mil itary services that I was confide11t rectificajion would take place \Yilhout delay . I looked · forward to lhe Colonel's next appearance on the show for a report on·how everything had been straightened out. Instead, through the capriciousness of lhe military, Lt. Col. Herbert did not appear on the show. IT APPEARS that West Point would better prepare men for service in today's U.S. Army by changing its n1otto to "Cant , Parochialism. Obsequiousnes~.·· ,.fay lhe original mot to stick in ihe throats of those who rounte nance the sup- pre ssion of an honorable man perform ing an honorable action. FRED TllORLIN Jferbert sti rred 11atio11wide contro- versy whe11 he charged lie wru re· Lieved of his Vie tnani con1n1011d April 4. 1969 because he persistect ill re· porting war Crim.es to his superiors. Tlie niuc/1-decorated officer said S1111· day lie is ask-ing the Arnly to refire liim next Feb. 29. the day lie will hnve completed 20 years' service a11d be eligible for retire 1nent benefits. The Army tssned 11 ''fact sheet" de11yi11g Jlerbert's al/egntions. -f:ditor Helic opte r Nobe To the Editor: It. seen1s to me that ,.tr. Alex Takacs' com plaint about helicopter noi:~ deserves more mature consideration than it received from the citv council. The helicopters are obviouS!y very noisy. Noise is a serious problem. as attested by such authorities as the California State Environmental Quality Study Council, the Committee on Environmental Quality of the F'edcral Council for Science and Technology, the Am erican Speech and Hearin~ Association. Jfon. Mark ~latfield in the Congressional Rerord {October 29, 1969), and others. TO TREAT THE problem a-s some RSPt'Cl of a "personal vendetta'' is to fall lo address oneself to a public issue which in its larger sense involves the well·being of the citizenry. At the very least, lhe council shoufd hR ve commissioned a study or the pro- blem, to include (I) lhe effects of helicopter noise on en vironmental quality and (2) the cost.effectiveness or th& hC'Jicopter surveillance system. J SA,.f \VRAY, JR. '1Ho ve the P eople' To the Editor: Regarding your last summtr1s tditorial concerning the m i s g u id rd and shortsighted people who would llkt to keep three {Jaliforni.a rlver.sJn a natural state: · I) The blll to keep the Eel. Trinity, 11nd Klamath Rivers as Wild Rivers (SB 107) \\10uld benefit both northern and Southern California. Northern California because ill rivers and_ natw:al recreation .... ·ould not be destroyed (lhey have pTenty o( re~ervoirs 11lre11dy); Southern California because more "''ater means snore Mailbox Letter& 1rom readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey their rnessages T1i 300 words or less. The r ight..to condense Letter$ tq fiLspace or <:liminate libel is reserved. All Let· ters must include signature and mail· ing uddress. but names may be with· held 01t request if sufficient recuon is apparent. Poetry will 1wt be pub- lished, growth-an.d If there is anything Southern California does not need more of, it is people. Z) ALTHOUG H the construction and flood prone people of northwest California want more dams. thousands of local residents have joined the Committee of Two Million lo block the destruct ion of these rivers. In addition, the people sub- ject to flooding could be moved far more cheaply than building the dams, a solu- tio n whi ch never" seems lo occur to the dam builders. 3) Recent admi ssions by Southern California water a~encies indicate that the present California Water PrQject will meet all needs until 2025, so why hurry to destroy our natural rivers? 4) VOU L\1PLY that the California \Valer project is a mandate of lhe voters -ha ! The voters in 56 of California's 58 counties voted against the project in 1960, hardly a mandate of the people. And finally. why is it that anyone who i$ not motivaled by greed Is automat i cally misguided and shortsighted? KENNETH S. CROKER 'Arrest tlae Slobs' To the ·Editor: Anti-Uttering laws have not worked, are not working and will never work unless something is Changed. As things stand now. local. state and federal governments have passed laws prohibiting Uttering and ~t back and expect the police to )Seep our cities and countryside clean by arresting the slobs that throw trash all over the landscape . First lei me say that this time I am not trying to pick on lhe councilmen of Costa ~fesa but I am compelled to repeat myself by saying, "Why does Costa Mesa need a committee lo look into the fu tu re u•he11 all one has lo do is ride 11round the city on a bicycle to conclude that it will end up·one very large ''Litterbug Dump.'' 1 REALJZE THAT the ct>uncil of Costa ?\tesa has. as all other locaJ governments. relied on the police to keep our city ele&n but 1 wish that they would implement the following suggestion: Since the antl·littering laws don't work, the city or Costa Mesa should set up a &pe<:ial department for the sole purpose of picking up all litter, even that litter which Is on private property. Each month or quarter or wh~ever. the city should issue a report on just how much money was spent to pick up after the slobs. SURELY WHl=:N the amount or money spent Is known, a fe\v organiutions wbo are Interested in such things may &tart a c11mp1dgn to mske cillten arrests of the slobs who Jilter the landScapt. No doubt t wlll be taken to task for ad- \'otatlng a tax increase to pick up after lM litterbugs but lei me...say that if one v.·ants a cleaner enYlromnent th1.1:n one must be wUlin& to fOOt the bill. 1 do! Do you? HARRY B. McDONALD JR. Pro.blem 4" Bella•t To the Editor : fl.lay J ask why the DAIL 'r' PILOT con· tinues to print "sheer propaganda" that emanates from Britain's BBC as regards . the problem in Belfa~sl? Do you really believe it's "right and 1ust" for the United States to give foreign aid and (support by the press) te>-have armed British troops, l,fOO strong, go on a rampage through a C a t h o I i c neighborhood in search~of arms that hap- pen to be nothing more than "legs of chairs and tables?" Must the Irish Catholic in Belfast die for want o( the \'Ole. reuniflcaUon of Belfast with South Ireland and better than men i a I employment? FOREIGN AID can be good or bad : it could help people really in need and it could also be used as a tool in lhe hands of unscrupulous people to practice (wilh license) genocide on a poor class of ~ pie such as the Irish Catholic in Belfast or the people of Indochina. As a DAILY PILOT sub.scriber, l sug- gest you1 consider your source of in- formation with reference to this most serious problem. 1 My furn iture is of the extremely heAvy r..tediterranean type and were I located in a more advan t ageous area geographically, I would be more than willing to supply these poor oppressed people of Belfast u·llh a few weapons (legs) to defend themselves, We Irish aren 't violent and don 't believe in guns. but watch those "legs'' of heavy tables and chairs! BBC needs a little watching also. BERNlCE WELSH DAILY PILOT 1u?ws report! on de· velopme;it.i in Northern Ireland come jlom United States wire serv- ices. Also, thi.t newspaper has taken. no editorial positi u1l on the problem in Belftl$t. -Ed itor Appeal for Coupo11s To the Editor: This letter is intended lot all thoughtful! generous, outgoing readers who would like to help save a life. Mrs. Dorothy Swiney of Reedley, Calif .. Is desperately in need of a kidney machine which will be hers if she can gather tqgether 300.000 Betty Crocker coupons by Nov. 30. If those who read this appeal would add their coupons to ours it would be a big factor in giving hope and assurance to this needy woman. PLEASE BRING or mail your coupons to First Southern Baptist Churcb, 650 Hamilton Ave., Costa Mesa or to the undersigned at 830 Plum Pla ce. Costa Meso-. Perhaps people .are saving their coupons for silverware. china. coffee urns. et c .. but wouldn 't it bririg them R great glow of satisfaction to think that they have helped save a life in.Stead? Thank you all , every one, In advance. MHS. \V. E. COFFt\.tAN V.N. Is Dead To the Edlto" A realistic appraisal of the ct1n- sequence~ to be suffered as a result of the expul~ion of Nationalist Chins fro1n the Unlled Nations would be as difficult as foretelling t?Je future. And if one could fore.stt the future he probably wouldn 't want to tell It. But the fe.ars of the Chinese people In T•lwan conctrnlng a takeover by the Com· munlsts are pretty wtll-foondtd , Apparently what his Happtntd is the same old story 11bout might making right. The countr ies In the United Nations. lhal turned ag11inst Nationalist China would not have done 50 had that country been the one with the pcpulatlon of 750 million people. FEAR, 11-IOR.t THAN confidence in the • . . future. seemed to be the determining (ac. tor. Such fear was one of the chief reasons why the United Nations wa.s founded in the first place. The nations that joined this organiza· lion were supposed to stand together tCJ prevent smaller nations from suffering the .same fate as did the small natio1111 under the aggression of Nazi Germany. At that time. no nat ion came to the tiid of Poland, Czechoslovakia. Norway or Denmark. For one thing, they didn 't hav• Lime. For another. none of the larger na· tions felt like fighting. While Germany was preparing for war. the larger nations like the United States and England prepared for peace. TIIAT IS WHAT is happening now. The countries which voted for the expulsion of Nationalisl China from the United Naa lions ''-'ere wild in their applause for what they had done. But how wild will their ar>- plause' be when it comes their turn to be expelled bY. !he Chinese Communists? The Uni ted Nations is not dying: it is tjead. The sole...®jcctive for which it was originally organized has been discarded. That object-hie was the unification of na· lions working together to prevent in· ternational injustice. BOB WA NGLER Sclaool Spoce Problems To the Editor: The slorm bre\Ying over the San Joa· quin School Dist rict and its lack of suf· ficient classroom space is reminiscent of the building problems we and man y other parents have weathered over the pa st few years in the Ocean View School District. And while the storm here isn't quite over _yet, l feel secu re In the knowledge that the build ing program is proceeding with ease, and a fai r degree of speed. THE OCEAN VIEW District ha s claim· ed tbat the district is growing at the rate of about one classroom each week. And In the past 10 years, with a master plan based on projected enrollments and ac· lual zoning, the district has opened 23 schools .. In its peak years of growth, Ocean V1e'W h~q a man who did nothing but expedite school building programs. While the schools do not open as fast as we would like them to. (nobody has con· trol over constructic.n strikes or bad weather ), 'A'e do not face 'the double sessions and the staggering problems which groY.1h is today causing the San Joaquin schools. rtf\' CO~OtENTS are not intended to find fllult with San Joaquin, but mere ly to point out how lucky we are. Perhaps it is time for us in Hunt ington Beach to sit back and count our blessings -all 23 or then1. (MRS.) MARION O'REILLY. ORANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. 1Veed, Publish.tr Tl1()t110.t Kcevil, Editor A1btrt \V. Bates Ediforia.l f'QJJc Edi.tor Th~ C'dilf'IC"IAI P8'-"f' nr the f>lltly Pilot sttb lo Jn1orm 31)d aUmu. _late r1•11d~·rs hr, 11rcsc11tini;: this rlf'\\"!lpaflet''~ (lf)lnlont and mm~ mf'ntfU')' on topici ot lnlt'rl"ll 11nd Rli;:nlflcance, by j'lf"O\'ht ing 11. fnn1rn f or lh,. c."'prr,q.slun or nur 1'1'1tdl"ni;" n pinions, 11.nd by Pl'('!tcnUn11: the d1\'t-nr. \'IC''Apoints of lnrormtd nt>. SCr'\'tl'I and apok!'l!men on tople1 O{ \he day. Wednesday, Nov. 10, 1971 -. -- - VOL 64, NO. 269, 5 SECTIONS, 8o4 PAGES ORANGE COl.lNTY, C-"LIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, '1971' Today's .final ~ - ---·------N.Y. Stocks ' ; ' TEN CENTS South· El Camino Join~s San Clemente Chamber· By JORN -l'ALTERZA Of ftlt. 0•1/lf Pltet Slaff San Clemente's new South El Camino Business Association (SEBA) was joined lo the chamber af commer:ce as .aD ''af· rjliate" Tuesday after brisk discU:ssion. of the role of both organizations m tbe city's · bUsiness community. But dCspite the formal and unanimous measure which one director termed ·a ·~marriage," lhe ne\vly Organized an._d highly active SEBA organization might have a few crimps in ils style .. Chamber President Walter Hunter, lvho led discussion on the request bY-SEBA of· ricers for merger with the chamber, took iss ue Y.'itb one activity plaMed by the new group-screening and seletting a candidate to·run in April's city elections. Hunter said the chamber bylaws rorbade such political activity. . Dcb;;ite on the pOJitical iSsue, ho'W'ever, never took place. · lnstead."Hunter quickly shifted to other aspects of the uniOn of the two organiza- tions. Directors debated at length. hoy.·evcr, (In the fOrmal title or the SEBA role .. in the chamber-whatever the ne\V g~ups or y Saddlebaek Ta1•9et .Recall Backers Co·nvene Tonight A group of South County· residents laun- ching a recall campaign against Sad- dleback Coll~ge trustees will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Laguna Niguel. The session \\'ill be held to elect orficers CofC Considers Buying $9,000 . Bust of Nixo11 S~n Clemente hotel owner Paul Presley unveiled a plan thi! weeli: to raise funds tor a $9,000 bronze bust of President Nix· on in an effort to ketp the art work in the city and i>erhaps reinforce the campaign to locate the Nixon Library here. The bust. a Hfesize bronze likeness of the Chief Executive ~·hich has been ex· hlbited extensively here, now is on trt.vel- ing exhibition .and is y.·inn ing many awards. The art v.·ork V>'BS created by ~tiss Edith Bland. Presley said the idea for the purchase t.hrough local fund drives first began after acquaintances from elsehere on the coast had offered to jointly purchase the art work. "We had offers from all over for $300 donations to buy the piece, but it seems that the purchase project ought to be a local thing. \\'e 'vant to. keep the bust here," he told directors flf the San Clemenle Chamber of Com 1n er c e Tuesday. Local market.JTian~ger Leon Riley has joined Presley in trying to develop a plan to raise the needed fund s. Presley said the first step is to .see if youngsters in the local school district \\'OUld want to participate. Thi bust has been exhibited at city hall and at µie San Clemente IM in the past )'ear. If the bust were purchased locally and the foundation in charge of selecting a Nixon Library opts for San Clemente as the site for the facility, Presley said be hopes the art work would be. a prime donation for the museum portion of !ht. institution. "After all, it's the home f)f the Western White House," the innkeeper sa id," and it only seems right to keep the bronze here." and lG present to the group the results of iiJ-committee stud y of the recall proposal. The n1eeting will be held at She pherd or the Hills Church, 30121 Niguel Road. Acting chairman p3· Sayre of Dana Point said the inte rest residents will be asked to approve the recall petitions which have been drawn up by t.he 1teer· ing copunittee. 1£ approved. he said the group will take lhe first legal steps necesiary to circulate (.he petitions Jn the community college district. The residents plan to force a recall election of all five trustees serving on the board. The ci_tizens' group contends the trustees acted against the will of the residents in recently voting to levy a 34+ cent pennissive override tax on district property. The money will go toward construetion of a science-mathematics building at the campus, a project for which bond money was to be spent. Voters Sept. 14 defeated a $25 million construction bond issue and the citi1.en's committee·claims Ibis defeat indicated the voters do not want to spend money on building construction. In addition to the recall petitions, Sa}Tt said his group plans to circulate an in· itiative petition seeking to expand the board to 3eVen members and changing the method of election so that each trustee is elected from a certain area of the college di::trict. Rock·well Plant Sale Asked A. Los Angeles Cilnstrucllon finn wants the North American Rock. well plant in Laguna Niguel sol~ at public auction to satisfy a three· year-old bill for nearly $900,000. The F. B. Gardner Co. Inc. asks in an Orange County Superior Court lav.·suit for the sale at• a sheriff's auction of the North Amer- ican facility at 24000 Avila Road and the use of the proceeds to clear a lien of $889,072.17 on the premises: The Gardner company complet- ed air Cilnditioning, ventilation ani:t insulation work at the premises in late 1968. Repeated demands havt failed to ·produce full pay. ment, the lawsuit states. should be an£affilia te'-'--or-a-"dlvision." SEBA President \\'illiam W a I k e r described his organization as a "seed which if watered and nurtured could grow to represent all the merchants of the community." 1 Director Robert Beasley questioned "''hether the goals of SEBA should not ·spread to the entire business community. ''\Vhy sh{>uld. Y.'e have a separate en· lily." he said. ""'hen the chamber should be. the group to solve the problems?" But \Valker sai d the general feeling of South El Camino businessmen was that they had not been made to feel welcome ra $500 A · Plate . in the mainstream-of chamber-activity. He lamented that no evening meetings are scheduled by the chamber to allow the small businessman to become in· vo lved. .. They also see1n to feel that the chamber is drilling too far in one direc~ lion. ' "\Vhy is it that they reel like outsiders Lo ttie chamber of l'Omn1erce?'' he added. One selling point of the SEBA request to be formally integrated into the chamber'was tlie current rule in the ne\v organization that to become a member of -. S. ' ' SEBA-the. businessman also-mutt join the chamber. Although the "marriage" took place at Tuesday's meeting, some animosities still were apparent. Chamber Manager Robert Evans tood directors that in two contacts with S&BA'. members Where he· sought their In· volvement in Christmas lJrojects, both · refused to help with the chambe'r ~work. "I don't want to go over it again:" he saiil ... bu\ on those t\VO occasions the in· dividuals said they were too busy." \Valker suggested that perhaps the two • Frank Sinatra, former Democratic Party ally, Mrs. Ronald Reagan and Attorney General John Mitchell are among 1.100 GOP guests VihO paiCI $500 a plate in Beverly Hills for the "Salute to the President" dinner. There were 18 such dinners Tuesday night in cities througho.ut the country. The President spoke on closed circuit television. hinting he would seek re-election . "Demonstrators protested the Viet· nam war outside with a 14-cent·per·plate dinner. South Coast System Eyed Costs Questio1ied in Transportatio1i Subsidy Study Formation of a bus system to serve most areas or the South Coast and Mission Viejo would be feasible \\'ilh a subsidy, but costs for the convenience might be whopping. That opinion Cilnfronled chamber of commerce directors in San Clemente Tuesday as the latest step in a project to determine the need and costs cf a com· munity bus service. Gene Strachner, manager or the San Clemente division or Com m u n i t y Enterprises (a charter bus service) said that the average cost to the passenger for the maximum distance would have to be abQut 50 cent!; unless subsidies were developed. 11e said the service wou1d cost about 5ll cents a.mile i! hls concern were involved. Each bus, he saiC!. would travel 496 miles per day. To 1nake the project pay off, he added, would require 565 passengers each day on all routes. Buses would have to arrive at each stop hourly to operate successfully. Chamber directors also learned that a recent questionnaire project yielded about 160 responses from the (.'Ommunity. All those answering said they believed the service to be a good idea. The transportation invesllgation is far rrom complete, however. The next step is to draft a subsidy system involving local shopping centers and individual merchants. Directors agreed that ' members or a transportatiOll.. study committee should determine ir'" the business community would be willing to guarantee some sort of financial cushion to ketp the sel'Victr alive. Strachner. pointing out that subsidies are generally high, said in Santa Ana a private transport firm required $67,000 in subsidies in one year alone. He sa id that 'if a fonnal committee serving as a transport board were set up in South Coast communities, state pro- cedures could be avoided and the transport operation could exist under a contract between a.bus company and the formal ~ommittee. Hi jacker Claims He Has Bomb; Grounds Plane W 01nen ·Demand Voice in earty Irvin.e School Woe Raised -MOLINE , m. (U~l) - A man claiming ·to· M~ a bomb forced an American Airlines 707 passenger plane to make an emergency landing at Quad Cities Airport toClay. The airport control tower said the suspect was arrested. A search was launched to determine whether there was a bomb aboard WASHl~GTON (UPI) -Unless n1ore than half thC deleg ates to the Republican and Democratic national conventions in J972 are women, there will be "seriou~ credentials eballeriges," the National Women 's Polilical Caucus has warned. Petition Urges County to Curb Develop1nent t.~:~~ .. ~.~s~;:i'.·00unc1rromCbicaa• · \ All the passengers aboard the plane Officials of the cauc11s said Tuesday the national con,·entions should seat only delei alions-that fa1fly reOect"'the popula lions of the states they represent. They said men constitute a majority of the pOpulations in only four ·states - Alaska. Hawaii, Nevada and Wyoming. "Failure to ensure rt a so n a b I e rep.resentation Will undoubtedly result in serious credentials challenges · b y women's groups in various states," the caucus said in letter~the national par· ty chairmen. • A group of lrvint housewives have col· lected' nearly ?QO signatures urging the Orange County Board of Superviso rs to take steps to stop further planned development "y,·ithoutiirst finding a way to provide needed schools a n d classrooms."' . 1-frs. George Falkenstein of 17852 · Gillman St), Irvine, aaid the petition w"s delivered TueSday to a "surprised"' Supervisor Ronald C&spers. A letter accompanying the signatures 11aid they expressed concern about the shortage of School facil ities for children In the area , rvc11 though steps to eese the ' classroom crunch in the Sa11 ·Joaquin th~ San Joaquin or Tustin High districts were allowed to disembark before f8l Elementary District have been an· until the propon~ts of such re:wnlng. agents, Dlinois State Police and other of· nounced in recent weeks. development or ·redevelopment present ficers moved in to make .I.he arrest. "This is progress, yes," Mrs. 1-·a1ken· evidence satis£actory lo the Orange The airport control tower said the pilot -stein aaid, ~ut our_£h!ldren will probably County Planning Commission that re-or the plane notlfied the radar control be on double sessions llex1-year aria for qutrea pbblic-scfflJoti"'\Vill be racrbe con~·-c"e~nter Outside CfiiCag0tl18 a man was years to come unless more is done soon.'' structed and provided concurrent with aboard demanding that the plane land f.1 "The responsibility for achievif\g er-tbe need." Quad Cities _Ail'J;'C>rl, which SCJVes the fecifve coordinating and fili3ncing mu'st 'Oie Sin Joaquin district presently has ,Illinois cities of ~foline, "East Moline and be shared by the boards of education, more than 3,000 elementary pupils at~ Rock Island. as well as Davenport. Iowa. developers an~ state and county of· tending classes on double sessions u a American Airlines planes dd not flcials," she conc luded. • result of raptd growth, shortage of spen· normally lan'd at the Quad C1Ues The petition reque sts "that no rtr.oning. dable bond moneys .and the usual lai Airports. but a apokesman said the: development o~evelopmenLof family__l:>e:t\\·een needs for ichools and the com· airport IS capable of accommodating a residential housing be permitted within pletion of new buildings. 707 Jandin1. , already were 6usy on a similar project sponsored by SEBA itself. Some elements of the blend are stt11 l,JIU'tsolved, but at least one · ,project ~aunched by the South El Camino group 3.Iready has been merged into the chamDer. The chamber <lf cominerce. ~Yi committee will as~ume a monthly; beautification award to local businesses..;. 8 project l&unched by SEBA. That program will feature a framed award certifica~ to busl.neSses ercell,lDg in beautification of facilities. • I 1 Damaged JJy Gunfire Across Bow SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ecuador captured four U.S. tuna boats and fired a shot across-the bow otone, damaging it slight;; ly. the American Tunaboat AssoclaUon said today. lt was the first seizure since March 27 in the running dispute with several na· tions involving territorial fillhing water,:- The Ecuadorian gunboat's shot dama,g· ed the bow of the 1,00().ton Venturess but none of the 14 crew members was1 iajur-ea, skipper Maurice Correia notififll(i tbe San Djeg~b~ association. / August Fel&ndo, general m.«iager, said Correia identified the F.tuadorlal patrol craft as the L. C. 6\, a converted U.S. Coast Guard patrol OOaL , The $2-million Venturess. os ifs maiden voyage, was boarded and the radios seal· ed but Felando said Correia was "able to sneak off a radio messi.·ge early today." He identified the other tuna boats selud Tuesday night as Trinidad, the Blue Meridian and the Denise Marl, all based Jn San Diego. The boats were 65 miles southwest of Salinas in international waters, FelandO said. Ecuador claims 200 miles off fl! coast as territorial waters while most other maritime nations recognize a 12· mile off-shore coastal zone. Ft!lando said Ecuador seized 26 of the U.S. tuna boats earlier this year and levied $1.33 million in fines and penalties_. He said JO confirmed U.S. fishing boat seizures have taken place this year o{j Ecuador, the most of any year in tht decade.old dispute. Trustees, Planners Set Meet on Growth A special workshop bas been called by trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School Disttict tonight. The board will meet with members of the Orange County Planning Commission at 7:30 p.m. in the multipurpose room at La Paz Intennediate School in Missk>D Viejo. The purpose of the study session is to explain San Joaquin's growth problems to the county planning board. Oraage Weather :Heavy fog along the coast t<>- night through mid-morning on Thursday, the weather lady re.. ports. with highs along the toast a not·so-high 60. rising to 70 In· land. Lows tonight between 48 and 52. INSmE TODAY Local ent~rtai''\1ntnt hits it.s peak this time of year end tt>- day's etitertahonent st ct i o" ttrves up a sn1orgasbord of theater and mu.sic 11ew.s. Pages .... 22 and 23. .""'~ " _ .... .tu » C•llftndt lt Clrttr Clfl'llr lt ~/ltc~h·• "" 1• CllUf.... SI'" • Cemlc• t4' ,,,11-• t• °""' Nette" It ••11.,1•1 '"' ' •~ttrt•f-1 ft·t) ll'IAMu tMI HwfK-JI Allft LtM-U IMlftltll I M1rri.,. UC"""" n • ' I • .. I {9 OAIL 't PILOT SC • .. n · '0 l"l>clcl · .Ii,. ~N · · _;vo~.ua. _. a.s _ -:-·· ot s.. • -...... Clemente G:ets Leash Law Complain:ts ... :r ..... ' ~_An apparent backlash against ad· !VQl;ales of dogs on San Clemente city :~ches surfaced Tu"esday as police +.receiv~ a rash nf stray dog comPla!hts ·~tha largest single-day amount in recent fnonths . 1 , : The 'ca\ls -ma,ny epparently spawned '6y , an anonymous letter appearing in a new"spaper -exhorted citiuns to give ~ice "a. better picture of the problem" ;ty reporting offenders of the leash la"'· fines and for((llt.ed bail involved with a'nimal control violatioris. 1'.trs. Riley told councilmen last week that she had learned the animal control department assigns one officer to cover the entire area from Mission Viejo to the south ~an Clemente cit~ limit s. • She and councilmen agreed that one of- ficer could not adequately patrol that large an area. 1'.1 rs. Riley, a biller foe of relaxing the ban on dogs on the beach, told coun- cilmen last week lhal for too long citizens In San Cleme"te ba1' "turned around and pretended thlt the {stray dog) problem didn't bother us." · ' · In Wednesday's Jetter exhorting the bRrrage on local police the anonymous writer said: "Those of us who have been cleaning ui> dog di rt on our property, cleaning up ovtrturned trash cans and putting up with replanting ¥illed plants. putting up with annoying barking have just quietly turned the other cheek, trying to be peaceful neighbors." S 'More than a dozen complaints were teglstered through the day and officets issued citations all over town. (One dog call even re:.ulted in a ..naf,cotics arrest at a young San Clemente t11.an 's residence .\ •The letter was similar in tone to ciim· .ments made to city councilmen last week ~ A1rs. Eva Riley. a constant observer Reinecl~e Targ~ of Blast ., • of.the dog issue at the council level. .:; Mrs. Riley told councilmen that if ,tr_eryone seeing violallons of the leash By His F or1ne1~ Assista11t ·tiw . were to notify police '"the officers SACRAMENTO (U PI; -The formci- 'wOuld be flooded with calls." top aide of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke tode.y · Tuesday's police log entries showed accused him or spe nding hundreds of .t,hat patrolmen answered more dog coin-· th~usands of taxpayers dollars to cam· ~laints than any other type of call pa1gn_!_or_governor and of <:.Pnductmg an j}iroughout the.day. ----~ --_."undercover" conspiracy against Gov. ~-During the day'i:; activity one Ronald Reagan. J~trolman arrived at 245 Del Poniente to 1'he cha rges by Hal Steward, No. I ~te .the owner of a stray canine. · •;When the incident . ended Stephen assistant lo the lieutenant governor, were .Jf&rold Reise. 22, was Under arrest on coo.tai1'ed in a fttler released today to · effarges of possessing marijuana and newsmen and sent lo Reinecke Tuesday. .eeraphernalia associated ~·ith the weed 's Steward said tie wanted to explain why bile. he "resigned'' his $20,000-a-year post as ;:J?.eise also had a $10 ticket for a leash special executive assistant. Other top .Jiw violation. aide.1 privately .Jiiaid he was fired. -1:-City officials have heard chronic com. Reinecke said Steward. on the job only !l!Bints about stray dogs1 for years and seven weeks, left by "mutual consent.'' F.tle.ly have ordered a complete staff The shakeup followed a dispute over ~udy on the effectiveness or the agency release of a preared speech text iii diafged with controlling the pels in San Qlemente -the County of Orange. 'the cily pays no set fee to the rounty animal control department for lhe en· ~ement role, but the county keeps all lffarine, 19, ·Dies 1. pr Meningitis :.\.t Pendleton . ·~Ci\MP PENDLETON IAP) -A IS- ~{tr-Old Marine from Utah has died of nTeningitis five days after being admitted ti) Naval Hospilal. the first such death at :taJro> Pendleton this year, a spokesman told today. PICKEROO ADDS BOWL TICKETS A bonus prize -two fr ee passes lo the Pasadena Bowl for the first place winner each week -was added las t week to the PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo. the popular footba!l season pick-the-winner contest. Entry blank for this week's contest ap- pears 1n the newspaper today for the last time this week . It's on Page 30. Deadline for this week's e.ntries is S p.m. Thursday (that means ent ry must be delivered in '·person or by mail by S p.m. to the DAI- LY PILOT~ Top five winners each week each receive a $10 gift certificate from South Coast Plaza . wtiich Reinecke criticized state employe efficiency and salary increases. Reinecke and other top aides were not Immediately available for comment on Stewa rd's letter. Steward told Reinecke., he "resigned" because: -·'The use by you and members or vour stafl of hundreds of thousands of doilars in taxpayers 'money solely to conduct a campaign for your election lo governor in 197~ . ., . -"The efforts by senior members of your staff. with your knowledge, to con- duct a conspiracy. undercover. against Gov . Reagan. his administration. and his starr." -··vour refusal. despite repeated recom mendations and urging by me to attempt to identify with or consider the ethnic problems and aspirations of members of Californaa's minority groups." -"The blatant cynicism practiced by you and the senior members Of your staff in regard lo public issues where your and their only motivation was whether your position on the issues would help get you elected goverl)or rather th:.>n ah interest in th'e concern and needs of the citizens of California ." -"Your refusal. despite my repeated urgings, to do your home"·ork and keep you~~elf prepared on the \"ital issues . . Reinecke, appointed by Reagan as lieutenant governor in 1969 after former Lt. Gov. Robert H. Finch v.·ent to Washington ~·ith President Nixon, has announced his· intention to run for governo r in 197~. ~)i~ was identified as Pvt. Loren R. Jahes of Logan, Utah. .. His father, David Janes, was by his f>e4side when the youth died Tuesday night. Bluff Preservation Plan The illness was diagnosed last Saturday as meningococcal meningitis . Three other lecnaged ·~1arines~and the 2-year.old son of a Marine Sergeant were still listed in serious condition in the hospital, one suf- fering from the same type of meningitis that killed Janes. Girl, 15, Thro\vn F;rom Van; Dies .. ::). 15--year-t>ld Brea High School girl was killed Tuesda y when the van in which she ytas riding flipped over on Carbon Canyon fto'ad . near Valencia Avenue 2;C.!!-lifomia Highway Patrol officers said Kristine Alice White , JS, of 125 Violet Lane, Brea. v.•as thrown from the \'an .atteii it swerved off the road on a curve. !'he van then rolled over the ~irt. '.The vehicle v.•as driven b\' Kenneth R. Parker. 16. also of Brea. who escaped in- jbry. along with another passcn~er. A fQur'th person ln the van, Kim ~1cKenzie. 14 .~Brea, was tak en lo St. Jude Hos pital in. Fullerton v.'here she v.•as listed in satisfactory condition. ·-: OlAMGI COAST , . DAILY PILOT 0 WlGI!! COAST PlJBllSHl"C. COMPANY ftobo rt N. W 11d · Prn'4tnr Ind Pub!>111Cr J1cli: R. cij:r • .., Vici Pru;o1~1 1r>d Gtllt•ll MIMGr Tho"'•' K11•il EGl'W Th~"''' A. Mu·~~;~• M•M9•"' co.ior Ch•rl•t H. Looi Aic~1•I P. f'.!111 A11,,l1M Mll'1tgl119 £a1ll>l"J Letw•• lffcli OHi~• 21? For11t A•111u1 M1ili111111ddr111: P.O. l o~ 666, 91651 S11t C f111'1111t1 Offlc1 305 No11h El C1mi111 R11!, 92671 Otti.' OHlcM Coi!1 W1•1 · J)O Y.11! 11y S!.,~I NfWPotl 1111<11• )Jll Nt...,,..n ll011'••1otf 'tlllfl!l"G10rl a11(ll; 11111 ll11U1 ll111111v1rd C•llV 'l~<lf, w!ll< ""ltll 1• not!'O~lllof ft.1 Ntwt ~ffi!• lo. pVltlt!\fll •Uol"f lf(IPI J"°"' •1r "' UP4ttlt 1111..,,, ll>I" ll$11"1 fl••<~, ,.i1•DOn lltot~. (I•'• Mt"l1, H""'"'''"' ~. ~-!lift V1l 1V. ~·~ (•l..,...!•f r.Jillr-•nil $MollrbKll, 111nt '""''" -..... I I •Clll-, ~.,"(, .. I P'>"l"'f f lllll .., •1 ~ Wtll If)' J JtHI, Cos!I Mt11, , ... ,11. .. 171 4J '4l+4Jll -Cl...mM Ali .. rtkl,.. '41·1671 --,.. e1•-••• .An o.,.,._,.J 1.1., .. _ 492-4420 ....... a...111 .All o.,,.,. ....... : 1.,., .... 49 •• ,.,, (&pvr1gllt, 1,rt, o"""' C•ttl '111111•1,,. <•..,...~1. "• n•ws """"· ltr.,.,,.111••1, M •IWl9t "'9lltl" I I ldw~•lfl"lflll ~tttift fN't bl 1•11rodwt.fd Wlltwul •PC.Ill fllff• ,,.1111M ef C: .. Yllfftl '"'"''· S.cll'lllll lllM -''" .... 11 N-1 ltotlt •M Clt!I ~u•, Ctl.lo•ftlt . S11t11c•11111M II, Cf"•t• tt tS l'\e,•lflt11 Ill' ""1111 It 71 ·-"'''' 11111111,, Cltlll~fl!lftt, u.u fl*!lfl/f, Studied by San Clemente • • Initial discu ssion on 11 new proposed planning measure to preserve some of San Clemente's bluffs for a future scenic rnad wilt take ph1ce at tonight's meeling of the planning commission. The panel will evaluate the request by city councilmen recently that a new set- back requirement be imposed to extend the buffer area on the bluffs from 20 to 60 feel. The idea. according lo councilmen. is to insure thal if the mullimillion-dollar scenic road ever ">l'ere to be bu ilt, no private improvements would stand in its way . The roadway was described as feasible but expensive by the city engineering staff in a presentation late last month. As envisioned, !he rodd could o"cupy !he st rip between the base of !he h!uffs and !he railway betwee11 North Bc11ch and Avenida Del fl-1ar. Other items on the comn1ission·s light agenda for tonight include: -Final refinements on proposed new regula tions on adult book stores And other adults-onl y establishments in com- mercial zones. f<.1ost of the strict controls •1lready have been sent on to the tity cou ncil for approval. What rema ins al the commission level is lo determine the ex- act business to be added to the ordinance which proposes cooditinnal use permits before the acli\Pilies can be licensed. -A request by lh~ Rich·Land Develop- ment Company for a billboard ;ind ban- ner lo 11dverlise the sale of 15 new homci:; in the Shorecliffs area. -Continued discussion on possible tightening or off.street parking re· quirements in mult iple residential zones. The city's parking commission is also ex - am in ing the matter on a request from ci· ty councilmen: Services Held For Eugene Gale Of Lagu11a Hills Services were held th is morning al Pacific View Chapel for Eugene I\. Gate , 21J6P Via Puerta, Laguna Hills, who died Tuesday at Beve rly Manor Convalescent Hospital, Laguna I-fills. He was 64. Mt. Gale is Survived by his widow , Beatrice: son, Fred Gale of Orange: daughter, Patricia flan1n1 ond of Downey: brother. Charles of Oregon ; and by seven grandchi ldren and one great grandchild. A nat ive of Kansas who had lived in California for J9 years. he was vice presi- dent of the Scalwright f<.1anufacturing Corpo ration. The Re\·. James Stewart officiated "at the services. Burial was in Pacific View ~1emorial Park. Friends wishing to make memorial donfllions ma y direct them lo the American Cancer Society. Festival Seel{s Sculpture For E11trance to Grou11ds Laguna Beach Festival nr Arts direc- tors decided ~1nnday night to authorize a national competition for 11 scul pture design to 11dorn the pylon at the entrance tn the Festival groundi. The entry has been bart> since remO\'fll of a weatherbeattn pf aster Venus " cou- ple of seasons a~o. • Grounds manager f\togens A be 1 presented the board with a proposal worlted-nut lly l.aguna Beach Ari gB!lcry d!rector Tom .Enman for a conltst /h11t would be open to any sculptor living In the United States. "II would be a real fefllher Jn our cap,'' -said Abel Oirtttorll :'tgti:-ed thal since ~he fcsllval and Pitgeant now arc nationatly recognlied. 1 nalional cornpcti tion would not be out of order. II was dec ided th<it a $1.000 prize would 11(? offered for the wiruting_design. and en· tries. models made to a scale of one inch In one foot, would make an impresslvt!: rxhibil rot the Ari Gallery. Since the pylon stands above 11 reflcc· ting 1X10I ii was further agreed that some use of' running water in the sculpture design would be desirable. ~1embers o( the Feslival board ">l'Ould serve as a jury to select the winnl11g design, directors agreed. noting. "We 're the ones wlio "have tG accept tM sculpture • so there's no point in having some other )ury pick something we won't like ." The competing artists l'lhould be responslble for the cost of producing their models, the board agreed, and the ques· \Ion of paying to have-the winning desii;n produced in durable rnaterial would br IAken up by the board later. Entry date~ ilnd other dttails will be announced by tht Fc.!)tival. " ( • I ' \ \I I ' .. .Jj " . . \ \\, ~-­_ ______. \' ' . I' DA ILY ,llOT llttf ,h01t -DESPftt-DAN'CMOllY'S-CHARTS AND NEWl'ORl' P.ROTESTS, AlR-CALCARRIED THE DAY Long-standing Airport Foe Stands Again Threatening Court Action to Abate Noise Pollution .. Air Cal Wins 5-year Lease Carrier Both Praisecl, A.ttucked £1.t _§tormy Meet By .JACK BROB ACK 01 I~• Dolly 'ilt! Si.II Air CaJlfornia. roundly condemned by Upper Newport Bay residents and highly prai sed by the Orange County business comn1unity, won a new five-year lease Tue sda y after a stormy two-hour hearing before the Board of Supervisors. · , • The adopt~d compromise agreement, proposed by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach, did not wholly please proponents of con- tinued air service. nor 'did it satisfy op- ponents. But it was good enough to win approval by a 4 lo I n1argin and there were no bOos or catcalls when the final vote was recorded. There has been some pointed remarks from the audience and sporadic applause as speaker after speaker on either side exhorted the board members. Only Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden Grove voted against the new lease and only because he thought it should be given more study The compromise lease extension as of- Lcred by Caspers included six conditions : -The leas to be for five years with the opportunity for review at one year in- lervals at the anniversary dale with op- tion to cancel subject to 30 days written notice. -Thal 24.6 be established as a ceiling for the average number of flights and that additional flights require board ap- proval. · -That hours oiiliperation be limited to 7 a.m. lo JO p.m. (or takeoffs and 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. for landing s. -Thal no louder than Boeing 737 or J)C-9 with gross weight based on runway st rength be used as equipment. -That · all e11gines be rendered smokeless prior to signing of the ne">I' lease. GEM TALK TODAY " by l J . C. HUMPHRIES t ,j I" kl l«'fl :;::;; ti iM'.!QJliiB. Small But lmpressi.ve The 18th annual Diamonds-Inter- national A\Yards collection opened in t-.'ew ''ork ·i n n1id-September. ,Jev.,elers fron1 30 countries entered theii-design·s, and from over 2.200 pieces. one gets a view of diamond fa shions for the coming year. 1'.lost people \von't be su rp rised to learn that rings were the major , attraction. hut qiey 1nay be sur- prised to learn of the i1nportance of very s rnall diamonds. Over half the y.·inning designs featured tin~ diamonds in combinatior\ 'vitll ol her preCious and sen1i-precious stones. I ' ' The piece co ntaining the 1nost d \Vas a ring ,rjth 305 di~monds, but a Iola! \\'Cigf1~ of only two carats. So111e pieces fcalurcd scnii-prcc- ious stones 1ncrely "dusted" with tiny gems, almost ~s though they had been dipped In glitter. If you feel you can't alford dia· mond!l, take a second look al v.·hat can be acco1T1plished with even a fe\\' of the tiniest. A few tiny-dta·- monds on a. highly polished back- ground are as impressive as the j:;lea1n in a pretty eye. We'll be happy to he.Ip you pick a design to suit your ta!le and budget. IAOV,I j 1 He also called for a review of rental prices "'hich he believed lo be Inv.·. Air Cal President Robert Clifford led off for the proponents noting that he was speaking for "Orange Cuunty"s own air- line." He st ressed the need for a five- year lease as ··good business practice for ;i ftrm which has such a large capital in- vestme nt. Anything less would not con- tribute to financial stability of the airline." Clifford also made these point!\": -Air Cal has no plans for flights outside of California . -Smoke will be eliminated and new engine.~ will be qu.ict.er. . -Five years i~ the very lea st time period in ">l'hich there can possibly be a Air Leuse Fee Tab $166,802 The current Air California lease which was the subject of Tuesday's debate before the Orange County Board of Supervisors was worth $166.802 to the county in fees paid by the airline during !!170. A breakdown reveals pa Yments for landing fees. $120.907: terminal space rental, $17,131; tic down fees. ~6.480 : share of ulilitirs and ianitorial se rvices in terminal building. $27.284. These char!!eS will he reviewed and possibly increased as part of :he new lease agreement approved by the supervisors. new site developed for an alternate coun, ty airport. --Orange County Airport cannot be ex· panded because of freeways on either end of the runways. Ground transport is also limited. City Councilman Carl Kymla led off the opposition with a statement of the Newport Beach position. He called for the follo\ving conditions to govern continuance of terminal access privileg~s to comn1ercial carriers at the airport: -A statement of offi cial policy that !he Airport is not Rnd in all probability never wi\J be an acceptable facility for jet aircraft. -Thal daily flights be limited to the average daily level of the past 12 months. -That commercial terminal leases l>e renewed on a year-to-year basis only. -That jet aircraft be limited to those nl) louder than the Boeing 737 or the Dou.etas DC-9. ~Th is was approved I. -That no new carriers proposing tri use jet aircraft be granted terminal privileges and flikhts be restricted to 400 miles from the county. -That no commercial carrier be allow- ed lo ·construct or lease terminal facilities independent of the county's con- trol s, ,. He also asked U11at a public hearing be held. ·that the Ecolog 1 noise monitoring data be made available to the public And the city and that Newport Beach be con- sulted on leases. Kymla also read a lnng list of reason!!" ">l'hy the city's conditions shfluld be adopted ineludin~ the fact that the Harbor Area already bears the bu rden nr allof the scheduled commercial jct operations in the county. !hat the Upper Bay environment shoul d be protected. ., .. OOMEGA - C:histmas· . wrapped · in 14k solid gal'd Isn't this 1heyear lo show her how much you really care? When she-sees the Omega name on her watch she'll know how m\jcfll!xtra thought yOU1JUlinto h·er Christmas. And because all Om~ga watches ere made to be the !Ines! ol their kind, ahe'll probably pever ,need another watch for all the Chri1tmases to come. A ... 1•K IOlid GOid br•c•l•I "'•ldl ..... StTS fl -fll( wht:1 cl ~tilt..-tolld 10111' brltfhl 1o111t11 ............................... SltO C-1'K 10\ld ,o:d LI~• lir1ttll t Wllth •• WS J. C:. fiuniphriej 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA '" CONY£NIENT TERMS IANKAM fRtCARD-MASTER CHARGE 24 YEARS SAME LOCAT ION PMONE S~9-l4Ql • ... .j • ·-- • "'-La J oda '11 Final. N.Y. St.eeks voe. M, NO. 269, 5 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAllFORNIA WEDNESDAY, 'NOVEMBER 10, )971' TEN CENT_S Restrictions Seen on ----' By FREDERICK SCHOE~tEIU. sludge. noaling sewn" and "bypassing of the ocean. ot .,,. 011iv ''ltt 1n11 sewit~e or sewage materials of any sort O'Leary indicated that or $50,000 worth Three stringent requirements to limit to the ouUall or to Laguna . Canyon ·Of improvements on the existing 1934 the amount of solids and greases passing Creek." T"'O other requirements, if · plant -outlined by Dr. Jan Scherfig - through the outfall (){ the Lagw'la Beach adopted, would set limits for the amount "'ould enable the city to meet the new r~ sewer plant are expected to be adopted of suspended solids in the outfall effluent quirements. Dr. Scherfig, i Uc Irvine en· by the state regional \Vater Quality Con-and the amount of hexane soluble vironmental engineer, has been emplO)'ed 1rol Boarr 'f\VQCB) • ~1onday In San material (grea~es) that may be discharg-by the city as a consultant. Oiego. ed into the Ocean. Scherfig's plan is to utilize a com· A number of city officials will 'be on .. The three controls would bring the bination of _ fdters and chemic aJ hand for the meeting Or the board and level of t.aauna's treatment to that of a treatments lo remove as much of the \Yill present plans (or interim im-good primary treatment plant," said solid matter as possible from effluent provemcnl s on the city SC\\·er plant Until Dennis O'Le1ry, executive officer of the di scharged into the ocean \•ia the 3,100 a regional plant can be constructed. \VQCB. In primary treatment. he ex-foot outfall. The=propo$fd-resfr!ctions-w.ould....:pmi -plalned,.c:SOlid.s..:se1Ue . .:0u1....okthediquid ~he.-:!>igge¢cpmhlem-:for..the...cit)+.Said hibit "'the discharge of. raw or digested sewage, then the liquid is discharged into O'Leary, is the removal of the solid •• or Support Shown Parochial School M~y Stay Open ~ Possibility of keeping Laguna1s St. Catherine Calholic School open alter June, 1972. seemed brighler today after a meeting c( 1nore than , 150 interested parents from Laguna Beach. El Toro, ~1ission Viejo and Capistrano Beach. FollO\\'ing the announcement that the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet \li'Ould bt obliged lo ..-ithdraw rrom the achool'• teach.in& staff next year, it had been Seal Beacl1 Asks Coastal Freeway Pla11s be Halted auumed the sGhool 1Yould be obliged to close. However, 1 group or concerned parents, faftl!r contacting lhe Chancellory. Office Department <iC Education in the Los Angelt1 Archdiocese, learned there might be alternate methods of keeping the school open if enough support could parents, after contacting the Chancellory be mustered. "nle support w1s evidenced in the weil- Altended Tuesday night meeting at Laguna's Top of the World School. Many of those present \\'ere from the inland communities, \vhich now con- tribute about one-third of the student body of St. Catherine's, rounded 16 years ago to servt Laguna"s St. Catherine of Siena parish. ra $.500 A Plate • ~ .Laguna 'Sewage Plant sludge c..1cc. it is rendered from ihe in-During discussion of the proposed re--shell for a regional facility. coming wastes. ' quirements, O'Leary explained the The ne\y plant, he said, wouJd give "And as the plant improves in removal WQCB's policy about a regional plant to sewage secondary treatment with ef· or the solids, there's going to be that serve the Laguna area. ' fluents or a quality lhat they could ~ llS" much more lo haul away." O'Leary ·"Jn June, the-board adopted an inte(:im ed for irrigation purpa!es. An ocean out· noted. basin plan requiring Laguna Beach to f2.11 would be req~red, mainly to Joseph R. S$Yeany, city public works discontinue using the present treatll)ent discharge effiuents during times of rain. direcjor. is hopeful thM a federally fund· plant and join "'ilh other agencies in a "Our ultimate plan for the southe.rn ed demonstration grant for a new process regional facility." .said O'Leary. e<1ast of Orange County is to have three of sludge disposal will solve the problem. Constn1ction on the plant, \Vhich could treatment planb -one at ·Aliso Creek, But whether or not the Environmental be funded by the state and. federal one at San Juan Creek and one in San Protection Agency will fund the project is govern1nent up to 80 percent onhe cost, Clemente to serve all the cOmmunities," still not known. -_ must begin during the 1972-73 fiscal year. O'Leary explained. "\Ve would pope one The city p~esently disposes of sludge b)' Noting that the South Laguna Sanitary . pipeline could connect all the plants and -ln1ck.ing.....it_to...dagoons--located..-on-the ;..!)b:tri~has:its~plant-located in.Aliso t;lan· -.lhen..hau..~ingle..outfal.b;; somewbere -·-- Irvine Ranch. yon , O'Leary said it could serve as tbe west of Dana Point." s • • • I 1 Damaged By Gunfire Across Bow • SAN DIEGO (AP) -Ecuador captured .lour U.S~ tuna boats and.Jire:d a shot across the bow or one, damaging it slight- ly, the American Tunaboa:t Association said today. .,., Jt was the first Seizute since March 27 in lhe running dispute wiih sevtral na- tions involving territorial fishing waters. The Ecuadorian gunboat's shot damag• ed the bow of the l ,000.ton Venturess but none of the 14 crew members was illjur- ed, skipper Maurlce Correia notified the San Diego-based issociaUon. ·· Auguat Felando, general manager, said Correia ldenUfied the Ecuadorial patrol craft as the L. C. 61, a converted U.S. Coast Guard patrol boat. The $2-miJllon Venturess. os it! maiden voyage, was boarded and the radios seal· ed bot Felando said Correia was "'able to sneak off a r1dlo mess.i.·ge early today." He identified the olher tuna boats seized Tuesday night as Trinidad, the Blue tiferidian and the Denise Atari. a.II based in San Diego. An immediate halt to plans for the Pacific Coast Freeway and extension of the 605 Free"'ay baS been urged by the Seal BeaCh City O:>uncn. • Councilmen took their stand ~londay night by unanimously endorsing a resolu· lion to stop lhe freeway. It \Ya5 drafted by Counciln1an Franklin B. Salc.9. Among several alternati\'CS to closing the school discussed at the meeting were : attempting lo bring in a new order of leaching sisters: staffing the school with lay teachers only. with a religious supervisor ; bringing in the pa rishes of El Toro, Mission Viejo and Capistrano Beach, lo make St. Catherine's officially a four-parish school. with attendant sup- port and increased enrollment; or creating a simple private school. Frank Sinatra, former Democratic Party ally, Mrs . Ronald Reagan and Attorney General John Mitchell are aJJJong 1,100 GO~guests'who paid $500 a plate in Beverly Hills for the "Salute to the President" dinner. There were 18 such dinners Tuesday night in citJ~ throughout the country. The President sp.oke on closed circuit television, hinting he would se~ re-election. Demonstrators protested the-Viet· natn war outside -with a 14-cent-per-plate dinner. The boats were 65 miles southwest of Salinas in international wateN, FeJando said. Ecuador claims 200 miles olf illf coast as territorial waters while most other maritime nation.! recognize a 12· mile off-shore coastal zone. The effort to block the freeway .was backed by a ~signature petition of more than 400 residents of the College Park \Vest tract bordering . on Long Beach. Members of the fi\'e-man council are asking the state legislature to "res-- cind any and all appropriations" from the Pacific Coast Free\\'8Y .and the extension cf-the 605 Freeway south from 7tlt Street. ln hi s resolution, Sales stated that the Pacific Coast Freeway "could seriously deteriorate the quality of life in the College Park West portion of Seal Beach."' The adopted freeVi·ay route, which \\·ould cut a s\\·ath through a bird refuge on the Seal Beacb Nava1 \\'eaponJ Sta· lion has been under consistent attack by boll~ c~uncilmen and environmentalists 1~'hO arc urging the State llighl\:aY Com- 1nisslon to •·unad0pt" the route. Sales and the other council members clain1 the statistics and conditions which \1·ere used to justify nO longer apply. They said any ad\·antages or i~! con· !!truction "certainly do not outweigh the lremendously negative envjronmental and ecological"effects the freeway wouli:I have·<in the City of Seal Beacb." Rockwell Plant Sllle Asked A Los Angelts construcllon firm \\·ants the North American Rock- \\'Cli plant in Laguna Kigutl sold at pUblic auction to satisfy a three- year-old bill for netirly $9001000. The F. 8. Gardner Co. lne. asks in an Orange county Superior Court la"'suit [or the sale at a sheriff'a auction of the North Amer. ican fRCilily at 24tm A'Vlla--"Road and the use of the proceeds to clear a lien or $889.072.17 on the pre mises. Tht' G3 rcbler company oomplef· cd air condi tioning, \'tntilalion and insulation "\\'Ork at !he premiM:!l in late 1968. Repeated demandll have f8iJed to produce full pay• ment, the lawsuit states •. 1be four.parish proposal appeared to have strong support and was also pointed • out lhat a school in Buena Park which sol.ved a similar problem by turning to a staff of lay teachers now is functioning well. Tt \\'as decided that a letter signed by supporters of the school should be taken to the Chancellory Office, followed by a parents' delegation to meet with Father John Mlhan of the Depa111nent of Parochial Education and go over the pro- posed alternatives. Anotller parents meeting will be scheduled in about 10 days Lime, to report on the talks with Father Mihan and set up comrTiittees from among some 70 persons who volunteered to give time to the project. Y Indian Show Slated Saturday In South Laguna Authentic, Indian dances, a totem pole and tepee contest and demonstrations of lndian crafts will be featured at an In- dian Arts and Crafls show. sponsored by lhe South Coast \'MCA at the Y1s Camp Dolph in South Laguna Saturday. The sl10"' will run fron1 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at !he campground. located 1nree 1niles soulli of Laguna Beach off Pacific Coast Highway, direetly behind Ben Brown's Go}t Course and Restaurant in Alieo Canybn. There is no admission charge and the public is invited. At 11 a.m. there will be a _~gram or da11ceS by The Grey Eagles. with an e-x· planation of each dance1 The performers, Charlie and G"·en Grey Eagle. ha ve ~p­ peared on Jelevis ion and toured "'ilh Utt Hnrlem Globetrotters. Indian sign language also will be ex- plained and youngsters will be shdwn ho\.t' to make Indian craft items shown In display$. School Approves .Campout Felando said Ecuador seized 26 of tht U.S. tuna boats earlier this year and levied $1 .33 million in fines and penalties. He said 30 confirmed U.S. fishing boat seizures have taken place this year off Ecuador, the most 0£ any year in the decade-old dispute. Scienc,e Students to Study Material First Hand The fines and penalties paid by the U.S. fleet eve111tually &re repaid to the boat owners by aµ approP,riations bill of Co n- gress. Some 50 Laguna · Beach lUgh School students who bave been restricted to the v.-orld of slides in their slUdy of natural 11Cience will soon venture into the wilderness and see wtiat the lectures have really been about. High school teacher John~ilkerso has received school board perm\ · take his students on an overnig camping tri11 to study several "biotic communJties" prevalent in Southern California. '·All Ibis time they have been lieeing slioes and just hearing about tl'lese areas In class," Wilkerson says, "and now they will be able to see them ror real. The knowledge will become more relevanl" Wilkenon says a biotic community is distingubhed by having different plant and animal life because of unique climate and soil conditions. The youths. mosUy juniors and seniors, will travel 160 miles by bus Dec. 1 to Mt. San Gorgonio \Vilderness Area and to Joshua Tree National Monument. where they \viii spend {he night. U.S . Forest Service Picks S1nokey's Heit· WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Forest Service has found an heir to Smokey, the agency's favorite: fire prevention mascot. Smokey, now-21.--was an abandoned. flre·injured cub when the Forest Service adopted him. But after nine years of malrimony with "Cklldle" at the National Zoo OOe, Smokey produced no heir. Now, 58fS the agency, a cub gucctssor. has been chosen to carry on when Smokey dies. The a®ptlon will be official next 1-.londay with a ceremony at the Agriculture J?epartment. Each student will provide his own food and camping gear, Wilkerson notes. and the transportation will cost ~bout $9 per student. This cost is either Paid by the student or. if he Can't afford it, by the high school Parent·Teacher Association. While at Joshua Tree. a park ranger v.•ill lecture the students on the plant and anima l life round in the area . which include biotic communities of chaparral. yellow pine forests or creosote bush scrub. Wilkerson says. "Above all ," he adds, "it will give the kids a feeling for the wilderness which they couldn't get In the Classroom.'' Accompanying Wilkerson and hi.9 students On the two day field lrlp will be high school sociology teacher Dan Foster and science department secretary· Sonja 'fhiene. Wilkerson notes with disappointment that the youngsters probably won't be able to obserye much animal life In the area, it being late in the fall. The science teacher takes his class on such field trips each .semester and at- tempts: to visit diffefent areas of southern California. In Washington, however, Chairman Edward A. Gannatz (0-?\-1d.). of the House Merchant 111arlne and Fisheries Committee, said he had been informed by lhe State Department a fifth vessel, the City of Panama, also had been seized. Gannatz said the City of Panama and the Denise Mari were seized despite the fact they possess licenses permitting them to operate in the disputed waters. Oruge Co•t Saddlehack Board Recall Weatker Heavy fog along the coast ti> night through mid·moming on Thursday, &he wea'Ui.er lady re· ports, with highs along lhe coast a not-so-high 60, risin'g to 70 in· land . Lows tonight between 4-8 and 52. Group Se_!~ Niguel Meet ""A-group of SOuth-eountyresldents·laun- ching a recall campaign against Sad- dleback College trustees will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. In Laguna Niguel. The Session will be hfil.d to el~t officers and to present to the group the reSU:lts of a committee sludy of the recall proposal. Tbe mettlng will be held at Shepherd of the Hills Church, 30121 Niguel Road. Aclit1i dlalrman Paul~l!••• Point said the interested resklents will be asked to approve the recall petitions which hive been drawn up by the steer- ing committee. Jr approved, ~ said the group will take the first legal steps neceM11ry to cl~late the pe@Q!lS in the community college dbtricl. rJ'ht resident! plan to forf,e I recaQ election or all five trustees lit:J"vlna on the ·,· I I I ) boartt-The citttens' group contends th·e trustees acted against the will of the residents: in recently voting to levy a 34· cent pmnissi•e override tax: on district property. The money will go toward oonstNCUon of a science-mathematics 'building ill the campua. a project for which bond money INSIDE TODAY Local enterto:f11mc11t hits Its peak th is time of t1ear and to- dail's entertai11me1ii s e ct i o fl 1erve.t up a smorgasbord. of tlteater and music ?iews. Poge1 22 and 23. was to be apenl. Voters Sept. 14 defeated sinm 11 M•" 111 ltr•k• 14.11 a '2S mUUon construcUon bond bsue and •••"~• ,. Mt¥h• »·11 the cltiztn1s·corilm1ttee tl1tn\!-thit-de!e1t c.11"'1111 t• ""'•••""--', -.... ...~ Cat-C•t-It Indicated the voters do not want to spend c11tt-1nt "' '' Df'•• c.u111r n rnoney on building construction. ~~in~ 11~ ~l~i. ,.,.., !t l,n addiUon to the recall peUtloM, ·S,yre <ttn-11 i,•, ',.""'. ,_,.,, , .... ,, I hi 1 t . I t 1-Dt•fll N.ilc•I sad s group pans o c1rcu a e an u.-.,.iw111 ,.,, , stM-M•ttl•ta ...,., ltlatlve petition seeking to expand the :rri'!:!1""""' :::_:~ ~·:,':::" u.3 . board to seven members and changing ...,_.... » WHnitf' • r) the method of election so that each :i:1111i1'":"'.,, · J: ::;i·~:' "tJ · trustee l.i elected from a cer1aln area of Mtrrl•11Utt11t1t11 1 the college dittrict. 1 L------------' ' I I ' • ' • I· Clemente Gets Leash Law Complai.nts • . " . • ·• ·: . ,.e ~ An apparent backlash against ad· . • .. ~v~al~ of dogs, on San Clemente city . beacbes surfaced Tuesday as police received a rash of stray dog complaints 1 e largest single-day an1ount in r~nl •. 1+ ·monthsL ' The calls -many apparently spa\\•ned 1 'by an ano11ymous Jetter appearing in a newspaper -exhorted citizens tn give lPolice "a better picture of the problem" .by reporting offenders of the leash la\\'. . ~ More than a dozen con1plain!s v.•ere ' registered through the day and officers issued citations all over IO\\'O. (One dog call even resulted in a "narcotics arrest at a young San Clemente .• man~ residence.) · · The.Jetter .... ·as similar in tone to com· ments mad~ to city councilmen last v.·eek ·"by ~frs. Eva Riley. a constant observer .'of the dog issue 31 the council Jev'el. \ Mrs. Rile~' told councilmen that if everyone sceirlg violations of the leash -ilaw were lo notify polic~ ';the officers 'iould be flooded "'ith calls." . '"I'uesday 's police log entries Jiov.·ed that pati'olmen ansv.'ered more dog com· _L.1'1{1in~_tban any other fype _Qf_ ~~L .·~lhron?nountie Gay. --- Du ring the day's activlty on e 1patrolman arrived at 245 Del Poniente to ;.c::ile ·ihe 01-1'ner of a stray canine. \Vhen the incident C'nded Stephen Harold Reise. 22. was under arrest on charges of possessing marijuana and <paraphernalia associated with the weed's. jJ.Se. • , , , )>-Reise also had a· $10 ticket for a leash . aw violation. . : City officials-have heard chronic rom. ;plaints about stray dogs for ~·ears and lately .have ordered a complete staff jtudy on the effectiveness of the agency .1;harged with controlling the pets in San Clemente -the County of Orange. ' The city pays no set fee to the county animal control department for the en- forcement role, but the county keeps all _,Marine, 19, ·Dies , . ;Of Meningitis . :A t Pendleton CAMP 'PENDLETON {AP \ - A 19- , year~ld Marine from Utah has died of meningitis five days after being admitted , to Naval Hosp ital, t.he first 6uch death at · Camp Pendleton t~1s year, a spokesman .. .said today . .' .. • 2 He was identified as Pvt. Loren R. -Janes of Logan. ,Utah. ' : His father , David Janes, was by his · , ·bedside when the yo11th died Tuesday • night. -The illness was' diilgnosed last Saturday as meningococcal meningitis. Three other teenaged Marines and the 2-year-old son of a Marine. Sergeaf!l were still listed in serioUs coridition in the hospital, one suf- feri ng from the same type of .meningitis that killed Janes. ' Girl, 15, Thro'vn from Van; Dies A l~year~ld Brea High s'ChOol girt was killed Tuesday when the van in which she :Was riding flipped over on Carbon Canyon .Road, near Valencia Avenue ; Califomia Highway Patrol officers said Kristine Alice Whfte, If., of 125 Violet Lane. Brea. was thrown from the ''an when it swerved off the road on a curve. The van then rolled over the girl. The vehicle was driven by Kenneth R. Parker. 16, also of Brea. who esca ped in-tury along with another passenger. A ./ourth person in the van , Kim r-.1cKcnzie. 14, Brea, was taken to St. Jude Hospital m Fullerton where she was listed in iillisfacto ry conditio n. DAllY PILOT OWGJ! CO.UT l'VBLl$HJNI) COMPANY "-cb1tt N.·Wetd 1'1•o<1•n1 •rod l'11Cl11htr J1dc A. C11rlty ·· Viet l'tblOMI •nd Gtntral MIMltr 1ho/1'111 Kt 1¥il EOl!or 1\0m11 ""· Mu1pMn• Mlfl19lh9 EfolOr Ch1tltt H. loo1 "-ic!.1•d '· Nill As:list1.111 Mt11t11nt Eo11tr1 l•fYll• letKh Office :222 Fo r11t AY•o~• 6'ailing eddr1n: P.O. 10 1 016, 'i65:t S.11 Cl•1M11t• Offlt• J DS North £1 C1mi11• R1•!, 92172 Ot"., OffltH C'~lt "1.u1• .t» '\Yu1 &1y $!t~e'I tl;ewoo•I ltttll: iJJl N'"'"°'' 9..., tvtr~ tiwnl!W!on a .. dl; l1115 8UUI tw11vud • • t)l.ll.V •ILOT, •1111 ""'icll 11 c:MICflttd ftlt ,....,,.~,,,., 11 pu111t111fd .i1 11v ••ctp• S~>1o 1t1y 111 lt,..r.i1 fft1!otl, to~ Lt;IJ"t llltc~, l'll'Wllff1 l111e11, (.Ol!I M*>t, tl""Ullf!O'! ...,.., .. IM'lltin Voll...., ~Ill (lt.,,tllllf l':iJlllfl l'IO .... $~f01tbl(-, lr.r.f •>!II Of'• r ttlen•t .iuio.,, P•l"""r prJ"!I~ pllflt &a •I a• WtU 81)' Stttt!, Ct111 Mt ... =r . •' . i.f : l T .. tt••-. f7141 142·4l21• Cl.WW AdnrtJM11t 642·1671 S.. CfffM!t11te A'll DT,-..._•ht T•..,..•M 4fl -44JI i.,.r.. .._h All D1p•rt-t1J , T•t.fl~ 4t4·t 466 C'9Y1'itlllo 1rn. Or•"" C.t1t M 11rti!nt C:9Mffll'f, "' l'lt•• 110t•t1. 1h .. lft1Kln\o tdl!Orill mtlltf' ., ··~""'-'"" ,,.,,,~ rntr llf ''""od\11:"" wl1'*1t tPClal ,.,. "''"IM ., ,.,rrrttot •-· liw....., cJttt -''" "" 11 ,......,, It~ ..... (Mlf "'"'' (1111'11"1'11•, SW.~J-11• w u •r!..-it.ti """11117; 11r ,..." n.n -mtnllllp1 l!'l!lll•rr ... rriw1ion&, U.U l!'lllflllll)'. :--...:. I lin~s and ro'rftlted bail involved with animal control violations . Mrs. Rilel told C'J)uneilmen last \\'.eek lhat she had learned the animal controf department assigns one oHicer lo cover the ent1re area from '-1ission Viejo to the south San Clemente city limits .• She and counciln1en agreed that one of· ficer could not . adequately patrol that large an area. '°!rs. Riley. a biller foe of retaxing I.he b11:n on dogs on the beach. told coun· cilmen last week: that for too long citizens in Bail Olemente had "turned around and pretended that the (stray dog) problem didn't bother us." . '• In \\'ednesday's letter exhorting the bArrage on local police the 11nonymous y,·rilu said: - "Those Qf u~ who have been cleaning up dog dirt on our property, cleaning up O\'t rturned -!rash cans and putting up Y.·ith replanting killed plants, putting up \\'ilh annoying barking ... have ju·st quietly turned the other cheek, trying 1to be peaceful neighbors." ·.Reinecl{e Target of Blast By _ His For1ner Assistant SACRAMENTO (UPI 1 -The former which Reinecke criticized state eihploye top aide of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke lod<'•Y efficiency and salary increases . accused him of spending hundreds of Reinecke and other top aides were nol ~ thousaQds of taxpayers dollars to cam· immediately available for comment on Pa!i'.1 f_gi:.._go.verM.l::illfl. .of..:Cru)ducting--an -~rd's-letter-.--· ------~~=~== r.undercover" conspiracy against Gov. Steward told Reinecke he "resigned" =~--~===--===-=-==~~ ~y 11L0t..Slllf Phfll DESPITE DAN EMORY'S CHARTS AND NEWPORT PROTESTS, AIR CAL CARRIED THE DAY Lon9·1t1ndin9 Airport Foe St1nd1 Again Thre1tenin9 Court Action to Abate Noise Pollution Ronald Reagan . because : The charges by Hal Steward, No. t -"The use by you and members of your assistant to,!b,_e lieutenant govemof,.were staf[ of hundreds of thousands of dollars contained In. ~letter released toda y to in taxpayers money solely to conduct a newsmen and sent1to Reinecke Tuesday. campaign for you( election to governor in Steward said he wanted to explain wh y 1974." he "resigned" his $20,000-a-year post as .-"The eff~r:ts by senior members of spec ial executive assistant. Other top aQ.Ur .filal!J WJ~h your knowledge, to con· aides privately sail\ he was f,ired. uct a Ct!isp1r~cy, u~d.ercov.er, again~t Reinecke said Steward. on the job onl.v Gov.Ii ~agan, hts adm1n1stral1on, and his seven weeks, left by "mutuaJ .consenl." sta .: . The shakeup followed ' a dispute ovrr -Your r.efusal, des~1te repeated release of a pFeared speech text in rccommcnd~t1on~ and_ urging b~ me to PI CKEROO ADJJS BOWL . TICKETS A bonus prize -two free passes to the Pasadena Bowl for the first place winner each week -was added last week. to the PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo, the popular football season pick-the-winner contest. Entry blank for this week 's contest ap- pears in "the newspaper today for the last time this week. It 's on Page 30. Deadline for this week'!l,_entries is S p.m. Thursday (that means entr¥ must be deliVered in person or by mail by 5 p.m. to, the DAI· L V PILOT). Top five winners eac h week eacn receive a '10 ·gift certificate from South Coast Plaza. attempt to identify with or consider the ethnic problems -and aspiration~ of members of Californaa's mino 'rity groups ." -"The blatant cynicism practiced by you and the senior members of your staff in regard to public issues where your and their only moti vation was whether yo ur position on the issues would help get you elected governor r ather thPll an interest .in the concern and needs of the citizens of California." -"Your refusal, desp ite my repeated urgings, to do your homework and keep yourself prepared on the vital issues .. Reineeke, appointed by Reagan -as lieutenant governor in 1969 after former Lt. Gov. Robert H. FinC:h went to Washington with President Nixon, has announced his intent-ion to run for governor in 1974. Bluff Preservation Plan Studied by San Clemente • Initial discussion on a new proposed planning measure to preserve some of San Clemente's bluffs for a future scenic road will take place at tonight's meeting of the planning commission. The panel will evaluate the request by city counciln1en recently that a new set· ba ck requirement be imposed to extend the buffer area on the bluffs from 20 to 60 feet. The ideg, according lo councilmen, is to insure that if the multimillion-dollar scenic road ever were to be built. no private improvements would stand in its wa y. The road1-1·ay was described as feasible but expenSi\'e by the city engineering staff in a presentation !ale last month . As envisioned, the rof:.d could occupy !he strip ,bet1-1'ecn !he base of the bluffs and the railway betwce11 North Beach and Avenida Del l\1ar. Other items on the commission 's light agenda ror tonight include : -final refinements on proposed new re gulations on adult book stores and other adu!ts-Onl.v establishments in com· mercial zones. Most of the strict controls 11Jready ha ve been sent on to the city council for approval . What remains at the con1 mission level is lo determine the ex- act business to be added to the ordinance which proposes conditional use permits before the activities can be licensed. -A request by the Rich-Land De ue\op· mcnt Company for a billboard and ban· ner to advertise. the sale or 15 new homes in the Shorecliffs area. -Col!tinued discussion on possible tightening of off-street parking re- quirements in multiple residential zones. The city's parking commission is also ex- amining the matter on a request from ci- ty councilmen. Services Held For Eugene Gale Of Laguna Hills Services were held this morning al P11cific View Chapel for Eugene K. Gale. 2136P Via Puerta. Laguna !~ills, who died Tuesday at Beverly r..1anor Convalescent Hospita l, Laguna Hills. He was 64. l\1r. Gale is survived by his widow, Beatri ce: son, Fred Gale of Orange : daughter, Patricia Hammond of Downey; brother. Charles of Oregon; and by seven grandchildren and one great grandchild . A native of. Kansas who had lived in California for 39· years. he was vice presi- dent or the Sealwright Manufacturing Corporation. T~e Rev . James Stewart officiated at the services. Boria! was in Pacific View Memorial Park. Friends wishing tn make memorial donations may direct them to the American Cancer Society. Festival Seel{s Sculpture ' ' F 01· Entra11ce to Grortnds J.aguna Reach Festival of Arts direc- lo1·s decided l\1nnday niAht lo authoriz e a national competition for a sculpture design to ;idorn the pylon at the entrance lO the Festival grounds. The entry has been ba re since remov11l of a weatherbcatrtn plaste.r Venus a cou· pie of seasons ago. Grounds' manager ,,_fogcns Abe I preS('nted the ~iard "'1th a proposal worked out by-baluna Beach art gallery director Tom Enman for a contest that would be open to any sculptor liv ing in the United Sta les. "It 1-1·ould ht a real feather in our ca p." said Abt:l. · Directors 11greed l h11 t !ii nee the Festiv~J and Pageant now fire natlonally f't'COgn1;:ed , a national rompetition would not. be out of order. , I <' ' . be offered ~"r the winning ,design. and en-, tries, modJs made to a scale of one inch to nne foot, would make an impressive eichiblt for the Art Gallery. Since •the pylon stands above a reflec- ting pool it was further agreed that some use or .running water in the sculpture design would be desirable. Members of the Festival bc>Ard would serve as a jury to select the~ winning design, directors agreed, noting, "We're the ones· who have1to--acc9t-the-sculpture • so there's no polJit in having some oth~r jury pick something we won't like." Air Cal Wins 5-year Lease .. Carrier Both Praised , Attacked at Storrn y Mee t I 't Bv JACK' i&ROBACK 01 the D1Jfy Pl°lot "S!UI 4 Air Ca]ifornia, roundly con~mned by Upper Newport Bay residents and highly praised._ by the Orange County business community, won a new five-year lease Tuesday after a stormy two-hour hearing before the Board of Supervisors. The adopted compromise a(l"eement, proposed by Fifth Distric~ Supetvisor Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach, did not wholly please proponents of con. tinued air service. nor did it satisfy op· ponents. But it was good enough to win approval by a 4 to I margin and there were no boos or catcalls when the final vote .was reCorcfeO.There has ·been sOme pOifited remarks from the audience and sporadic applause as speaker after speaker on either side exhorted the board members. Only Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden Grove voted against the new lease and only because he thought· it should be given more study The· comprom~e lease extension as of- fered by Caspers included six conditions: -The lease to be for five years with the opportunity for revieW at one year in· tervals at Ure anniversary date with op- tion to c8ncel subJecT·to ao days written notice. -That 24.6 be established as a ceiling for the average number of flights and I.hat additiol\{11 flights require board ap· -pro.ral. d --That hours of operation be limited to 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. for takeoffs arld 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. for landing·s. -That no louder than Boeing 737 or . DC-9 with gross weight hased on runway strength be.use<t, as equipment. -That all engines be rend e red smokeless prior to signing of the new lease. GEM TALK TODAY by Small But ·Impressive ' I t The 18th annual Oiamonds·Inter· :l national A\\'ards collection opened 1 in Ne\v )'01:k in mid-September. ~ij' Je1velers from 30 countries entered their designs, and fr.om over 2,200 pieces, one gets a view of diamond fa shions for the coming year. ?\1ost people won't be surprised , to learn that rings v.•ere the major attraction, but they may be sur- prised to learn of the importance of very small diamonds. Over half the \Vinning designs featu red tiny diamonds .in combination with other precious and semi-precious stones. The -piece --con taining the mos t \\'a s a ring ,1·it h 305 diamonds, but a total \1•eight of onl y two carats. Some pieces featured semi-prec· ions stones merely "dusted" with tiny gems. almost as though they had been dipped .in glitter. If you feel you can't afford dia- monds', take a second look at what t can be accomplished with even a few of the tiniest. A (tw tiny dia- monds on a highly polished back- ground are as ln1presslve as the gleam in a pretty eye. We'll be happy to help you pick a design to suit your taste and budget. 1.a.ov.1 He also called f~r a review of rental prices 1vhich he believed to be low. Air Cal President Roberl Clifford led off for the proponents noting that he was speakin'g for "Orange County's own air- line." He stressed the need for a five- year lease as "good business practice for a firm .which has such a large capital in· vestment. Anything less would not con· tribute to financial stability of the airline." Clifford also 1nade these points: -Air Cal has no plans for flights outside of California . -Smoke will .be eliminated and new engines will be quieter. -Five years is the very least lime ·period in which there can possibly be a Air Lease Fee Tab $166,802 The current Air California lease which was the subject of Tuesday's debate before the Orange ·county Boa rd of Supervisors was worth S!66,802 to the county in fees paid by the airline during 1970. A breakdown reveals payments for landing feel', $120.907 : tenninal space rental. $17 ,131; tie down fees. )6.480 : sh11re of utilities .and janitorial services in terminal building, $27 ,284. These charges will be reviewed and possibly increased as part of \he new lease agreement approved by the supervisors. I new site developed for an alternate coun- ty airport. · -Orange County Airport cannot be e:(· panded beeause of freewa ys on either end o{ the runways. Ground transport is alsG limited. City Councilman Carl Kvmla led off the opposition with a statCment of th e Newport Beach position. He called for the following conditions lo govern continuance of terminal access privilcg?s to co1nn1ercial c<1rricrs at the airport : -A statement of official policy that the Airport is not ;:ind in all probability nevrr will be an acce ptable facility for jet aircraft.. -That daily nights be liinitcd to the average daily level of the pa st 12 month~. -That commercial terminal leases be renewed .on a yea r-to-year basis only. -That jct aircraft be limited to. thos it no louder than the Boeing 737 or the Dou~las DC-9. tThis was approved!. -That no new carriers proposing II) use jet aircraft be granted tt>rminal privileges and flights be restricted to 400 miles from the county. -That no commercial carrier be allow- ed to construct or lease termina l facilities indepll{ldenl of !he county 's con- trols . ~ He also asked that a public hearing be held, that the Ecotog I noise monitoring data be made a~ailable to the public and the city and that Newport Beach be con· sulted on leases. Kymla also read a long list of reasons 1-1•hy the city's conditions should be adopted including the fact that the Harbor Area already bears the burden of all of tbe scheduled commercial jet operations in the county, that the Upper Bay environment should be protected. ' OOMEGA • ·C::histmas wrapped · in 14k solid gold • Isn't th ls the year lo show her how much you really care? When ~he sees the Omega name on herwa!ch she'll knoi'I how much extra thougl'lt·you put into her- Chrislmas. And beca:use au O~ga watches ·are made to be the fin est orlflilr l<fnd. r she'll probably never need an other watch for au the Christmases to come. A-1~K 801i1$ ~!d bt1ctltt w11C:1\ ..... $17.S li-14~ w11h• er )lllGw 10HG gold bn••l•t Wiit !\ ,,,,,,,.,,,,.,,.,,.,,,.,., • .,,,J210 C-14K IOlld goht Uht brtet!tl Wllt!I •••• 1, I \ 1 • -J. e. .J/.umphrteJ Je"i;efe rJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD .. COSTA ~ESA _ ~ t CONVENIENT TER.MS 14 YEARS SAME lOCAllON ii ,, Jt was decided that a Sl ,000 prize would ;, The competing artists: should be responsible for the cost of producing their models, the board agretd, and the ques- tion of paying to h8ve the winning design produced In durAble material would be l8ken up by lhe board later. Entry dste~ 11nd other details \\-'ill be announced by lhe Festival. '-----------------------,---------------- IANKA MERI CARD-MASTE• C•ARG• P•ONI Hl·HO~ ' -.. • . San Clemenie -----~ .J. -;.__ I Today's Fl•al Capistrano EDITI ON N.Y. Stoek.s VOL M, NO. 269, 5 SECTIONS, 84 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAtlFORNIA WEDNESDAY,"NOVEMBER ·10, ·197r, TEN CENTS , South E-1 Camino Join·s San 1Jlemente Chamber.~ • By JORN VALTER2A Of fllt Ot llw •11tt Stitt San Cleme.ote's new South El Camino Business Association {SEBAi '"a' joined 10 the chamber of com1nerC'f'. as an "af- filiate" Tuesday after brisk discu-Ssion of the role or both organiuitions in t~·city's business <.'Om'}lunity. • But despite the formal and unanimous measure "'hlch one director termed a "marriage," lhe ne\vly organized .aild highly active SEBA organization migbt have a rew crimps in its style. · led discussion on the requeSt ·by SEBA of-should be an "affiliate." or a "division.'' flctrs for mera:er with the chamber, took SEBA President William W a I k e r issue with one activity planned. by the described his organization as a .. seed new grouJ>--screening and stlectlng a which ir watered and nurtured could candidate to run in April's city elections. grow lo represent all the JJM!rchants of Hunter said the cbamber byla ws the community." forbade such political activily. Director Robert Beasley questioned Debate on the political issue. however, v.•helher the goals <>f SEBA sbouJd not · never took place. ' spread to the entire business community. Instead, Hunter quickly shifted to othtt ''\Vhy should v.·e have a separate en· aspects of the union or the two organiza· tit y," he said. "when the chamber &houkl tions. be the group lo solve the problems?'' . Directors debated at length, hov.·ever, But \ValkCr said the general feeling of on the forma1 title of the SEBA role in South El"Ol.mino businessmen was that in the mainstream of chamber activity, Jle lamented that no evening meetings are sqhedu led by the chamber to allO\\' the sn1all businessman to become in· volved. ''They also seen1 tu feel that the chamber is drilling too far in "One direc- tion. ' • "\\'.._hy is it that they !eel like outsiders t9 the-chamber of commerc•!" he added. Onr selling point of the SEBA request SEBA the businessman a1so must join·tbe chamber. Althoug'h the ••marriage" took place at Tuesday's meeting, some animosities still \\lere apparent. Cham be I" lo.tanager Robert Evans tood directors Lhat in two contacts with SEBA members \V_here he sought their in - volvement in Christmas projects, both refused to help with the chamber w<>rk. 1---~~ Chamber-President. \Valter_JJunJe•, who -the-cbamber-,vhalever_ lhe_ new group.s._ tbey-1lad:.not...beeJ\..madA_to (ttl"•d_come · to be formally integrated into the chamber \vas the current rule in the new <>rganization that to become a member of "I don't want to go over it again," he said, •·but-<>n tho.st two occasions the in. ctividuals said they were too busy." \Valk~t suggested that perhaps the two 7 or Saddleba.ck Target Recall Backers Convene Tonight A group of South County residents laun- ching a recall campaign against Sad- dleback College trustttS will meet tonight. at 7:30 p.m. in Laguna Niguel. The session will be held to elect oflicers CofC Considers Bu ying $9,000 Bi1st of Nixon San Clemente hotel owner Paul Presley unveiled a plan this week to raise tunds for a $9,000 bronze bust or President Nix- OfT in an efrort to keep the art work in the city and perhaps reinforce the campaign to locate the Nixon Library here. The bust. a lifesize bronze likeness or the Chief E;,:ecuti,•e which has been ex- hibited e:ctensi\•ely here, now I! on tr&vel- ing exhibition and is winning maily awards. The art -...·ork w;ls created by ~liss Edith Bland. Presley said the idea for the purchase through local fund drlveg first began f'ller acq uaintances !'tom elsehere on the coast had offered to joinlly purchase the art '"ork. ''\Ve had offers from all ove-r for S300 nations to buy the piece, but it seems at the purchase project ought to be a al thing. \Ve v.·ant to ktep the bust here," he told directors or the San Clemente Chamber of Com m e r c e Tuesday. Local market manager Leon Riley has j<>ined PresleY. in trying to develop a plan to raise the needed funds . Presley said the fi rst step is lo see it ~·oungslers in the local school district would want to participate. The bust has been exhibited at city hall and al the San C1cmenle IM In the past year. f( the bust were purchased locally and lhe foundati on in charge of selecting a Nixon Library <>pl.s ·for San CJ..eme'nte as the. site for the (acility, Presley said he hopes the art work wouJd be a prime donation ror tbe museum portion of the institution. "Alter all, it's the home ol the Western White House," the innkeeper said/' and it only seems right to keep the bronze here." and to present to the. group"' the resuJls of a committee study or the recall proposal. The meeting will be held at Shepherd vi lhe Hills Church. 30121 Niguel Road. Acting chairman Pa°' Sayre ot Dana Point said the interested resident! will be asked to 1pprove the recall petitions \\'hich ba"e been drawn up by the sletr· log commiU,e. If appro,,ed, he 1aid tbe group will take the first legal steps necessary t.o circulate tbe petitions in the: community college district. The residents plan to force a ~ad election or all five trustees serving on tbe board. The citizens' group contends the trustees acted against the will of lhe residents in recently voting to levy a 3._ cent permissive override tax on district property. The money \\lill go toward constn1clion of a science-mathematics building at the campus, a project for which bond money was to be spent. Voters Sept. 14 defeated a $25 million construction bond issue and the ciliren's committee claims !his defeat indicated the voters do not want to sperid money <>n building construction. In addition lo the recall petitions, Sayre sald his group plans to circulate an in- itiative petition seeking to expand the board to seven members and cha ngi ng the method of election so that each trustee is elected from a certain area of the college di:;lrict. Rockwell Plnnt Sale Asked A Las: Angeles construction firm "'ants the North American Rock. well plant in Laguna Nigue l sold at public auction to satisfy a three- year-old bill for nearly S900.000. • The F. B. Gardner Co. Inc. ask!!' in an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit for the sale at a sheriff's auction of the North A1ncr - ican facility at 24000 Avila Road and lhe use of tht proceeds to clear a lien of $189,072.17 on the premises. The Gardner company complet- ed air Conditioning, ventilalion and insulation work at th~ pre.mise.9 · in late 1968. Repeated demands have failed to produce full pay· ment> the lawsuit states. ra s • • • $500 A Plate Frank Sinatra, former Democratic Party ally, ?.frs. Ronald Reagan and Attorney General John ~fitchell are among 1,100 GOP guests who paid $500 ·a plate in Beverly Hills for the "SaJute lo the PreSidenl" dinner. There were 18 such ttinners Tuesday night in citieS' thr9ugho4t the country. The President spoke on closed circuit television, hinting he would seek re-election. Demonstrat.ors protested the Viet· nam war outside \vi th a 14-cent-per-plale dinner. South Coast System Eyed Costs Questioned in Trnnsportation Subsidy Study Forma tion of a bus system to serve most areas of the South Coast and J\Ussion Viejo would be feasible v.·ith a subsidy, but costs for the convenie nee might be \\'hopping. That opinion confronted chamber of co mn1erce directors in San Clemente Tuesday as the latest step in a project to determine the need and costs of a com- nu1nity bus service. Gene Strachner, manager or the San Clemente division of C om m u n i t y Enterprises (a charter bus service) said that the average cost to the passenger for the maximum dist&nee woukl have to be about 50 cehtl, unless subsidies were developed. He said the service would cost about 50 cents a mile if his concern were Involved. · Each bus, he said, would trayel 496 miles per day. To make tt;e project pay <>ff, he added, would require 565 passengers each day <>n all routes. .Buses would have to arri\le at ea9h stop hourly to <>perate successfully. Chamber directors also learned that a recent questionnaire project yielded about 160 responses from the community. All those answering said they believed the service to be a good idea. The transportation investigation is far from complete, however. The next step is to draft a subsidy system involving local shopping centers and individual merchants. • Directors agreed that members of a transportation study committee should dctemUne if the business community would be willing to guarantee some sort of financial .cushion to keep the service alive. Strachner, pointing out that subsidies are generally high. said in Santa Ana a private transport firm required $67,000 in subsidies in one year alone. He said that if a fonnal committee serving as a transport board were set up in South C.oast communities. state pro- ced ures could be avoided and the transport -operation could exist under a conlract between a bus company and the formal commiUee, Hijacker Claims He Has Bomb; Grounds Plane · W 01nen Demand Voice in Part Irvine School Woe Raised- ?o.10LINE, UL (UP!) -A man claiming to have a bomb fOrced ·an American Airlines 707 passenger plane to make an en1ergency landing at Qua'd Cities Airport today. ~e airport control lo\\·er said the suspect "'as arrested. • • l ' . \\'ASHINCTON" (UPlJ -Unless more than half the delegates to the Republican and Democratic national conventioos in 1972 are women, there will be "serioutli Petitio1t Urges Cou1ity to Curb Develop rnent a-edentials challenges,'' the National A group of Irvine hoosewi"!eS bave col~ Women's Political Caucus lias warned. Jected nearly '100 signatures urging the Officials of the eaucus said Tuesday the Orange County Board of Supervisors to national conventions should seat only lake steps t.o stop further planned delegations that fairly re0ect the pop.all• development "without first finding I way lions of the stales they represent. to provide needed school s 1 n d They .said men constitute 1 ffi 8j0riry1it CIA!IUOOms ..... the populations in ool)' four stales -~frs. George Falken!itein of 17&52 Alaska. Hawa ii, Ne\•ada and Wyoming. Gillm,n St,., Irvine, said tbe petition was '1Failure to ensu re r A s o n a b I e dtllvered Tuesday to a "surpriSed" rtpresentation will undoubtedly result in Supervisor Ronald Caspers. serklus ercdenllals challenges b 'Y A Jetter accompanying the signalurts women's groups in v;uious slates," the said they expressed coneem about the caucu~5' leltors to the notional par· shortago of ""hool facUitlos for chlldron ty chai'icn In the ""· oven though steps to caso th e classroom crunch In the 5an Joaquin Element.ai:y Dlstrie~ have been an- nounced in recent weeks. "This is progress, yts, '' ltfni. Falk en. stein said, "but our cNldrcn wlll probably be on double sessions next year and for years to come unlen·more'llf done SOOD:' "The respooslbUity for achieving cr- fectlve coo rdinating and tlnanclng must be shared by the boarill or educatkm. developers and slale and county of- ficials," 11hc concluded, The petition reque1ts: 0 thal no rezoning. development or redevelopment .of family residential housing be permitted within ... the San Joaquin or Tustin High districts untll the proponent&-of such rezoning, development or redevelopment present evide!lCe satisfactory to. the Orange C.OUnty PlaMing Commission that re,. quired public school11 will be Jact be con- structed and provided COTICWTCllt"-with the need.'' The San Joaquin district presently ha s more than 3,000 elementary pupils at· tending elasses on double sessions as a result of rapid growth, shortaie of spen- dable bond moneys and the usual lag between needs for schools and lhe com· pleUon of new buildings. • A search was launched to determine whether there was a bomb aboard American flight lOt, bound from Cbicqo ror the West Coast. All the passengers aboard the plane were allowea lo disembark berore FBt agenta~ Illinois Slate Police and other of· flcers moved in to make the arrest. The atrport control tower said the pilot or the plane notified the radar conltol center outside Chicago that a man waa aboard demanding that !!>¢-plane land-a Quad' Cities Airport, which serves the Illinois cities of Ptlollne. East Moline fnd Rock lslarld, 11 wtll u Davenport, Iowa . American Airlints planes do not normally land at the Quad Citie~ Airports, but 1 spokesman aaid the airport l:s capable of accommodating a 707 landing. 1 already were busy on a similar project sponsored by SEBA itself. Some elements or the blend are stil l unresolved, but at least one project' launched by the South El Camino group already has been merged into the chamber. The chamber of commerce ecology commiltee will assume a monthly beautiflcaUon award to local businesses-" a project launched by SEBA . That program wiU feature a framed award etrtlflcate to businesses excellin& in beautification ot f,11ciliUes. • ' • I 1 Daiµaged By Gunfire 1 Across Bow . SAN DIEGO CAP) -Ecuador captured · four U.S. tuna boats and fired a shot across the bow of one, damaging it slight· ly. the American Tunaboat Association sa id tOOay. - It was the first seizure since ~1arch 21 in the running dispute with several na· tions involving territorial fishing waters. The Ecuadorian gunboat's shot damag· ed the bow of-the 1,000-ton Venturess but none of the 14 crew members w9s iPljur- ed, skipper Maurice Correla nOUfied llse San Dlegt>obasied association. August Felando, general manager. said Corre.ia identified the Ecuadorial patrol eratt as tile L. C. 61, a converted U.S. C.oast Guard patrol boat. 1'>e $%-million Ventureu, os Its maiden voyage, was boarded and the radios seal· e.d but Felando uld Correla \\'85 "able to · sneak off a radio messc.ge early lod ay." He Identified the other tuna boats seized Tuesday night as Trinidad, the Blue Meridian 'and the ~ise f.iari, all baaed in San Diego. The boats were 65 miles S<>uthwest <>t Salinas in lntemaUonaJ waters. Felando said. Ecuador claims 200 miles off Its coast as territorial waters while most other maritime. natioM recognize a 12· mile off-shore coastaJ zone. Felando said Ecuad<>r seized 26 <>{ lhe U.S. tuna boats earlier thls year and levied $1.33 million in fines and penaltle:I:. He said 30 confirmed U.S. fishing boat seizures have taken place this year off Ecuador. the roost of any year in the decade-old dispute. Trustees, Planners Set Meet on G1·owth A special workshop has been called by trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District tonight. The board will mtet with members o[ the Orange County Planning Commission at 7:30 p.m. In~ multipurpose room at La Paz Intermediate School in Mission Viejo, The purpose <>f the study sessi<>n is to explain San Joaquin's growth problems to the county plaMing board. • Orange 1\'e•dler · Heavy fog along· the coast to- night through mid-morning on Thursday, the weather lady r~ ports, with highs along the c:oast a. not-so-high 60, rising to 70 in- land. Ulws tonight bclwcen 48 and 52. INSIDE TODt\Y Local enu r tammet1t hits its peak this time of 11ear a1id to- da y'i entartainmen& • e c t i o ti i erves up a i mOT"pa.sbord of tl1eater a!ld 1nusic news. Poge.f 22 and 23. • •1rt~• fl ... ""' .,. C..llf9Mll• It (".,. ..... ,.,_ 1• ClleC'll"'9 "" _. _______ ,, (lff,llH• l'l•M Clilllkl a• ,,..,...,.. ,. 0.1111 llltlk • n •flttt'tll ,.,. ' ."""' ... "' '1-IJ ,,._ ft.JI -,. A• L&llftn » ,....... ' Mlrrlltl l.ktllwt t1 • • • ~ .:OAll V flllOT SC w,dne~dl.1~ ~owmbtt 10, ltJ71 · ... .... •! "."r• ':" Clemente Get_s Leash Law Complaints • I: -An apparent backlash against ad· \tocetes of dogs on San Clemente city bellches surfaced Tuesday as police received a rash of stray dog complaints t..1tne largest single-day,amouiit in recent fines and forfeited bail Involved with animal control violations. Mra.~Riley told councilmen " last week that she had learned the animal control department assigns. one officer to cover lhe entire area from Mission Viejo to !he south Sa n Clemente city lin1i~ In San Cleqltn!< llad' !il.!illd around-arnt- pretended-thar:-il\i (hray doCl problem didn't bother us." 1nontbs. · tr. The calls -ma ny.apparently spawned by .:an anonymous letter appearing in a • newspaper -exhorted c\lizens to give ·PO:lice "a bettt'r picture of the problem " ~y reporting offenders of the leash la\\.'. She and council men agreed that one of· ficer could not adequately patrol that large an area. ~1rs. Riley, a bitter foe of relaxing the ban on dog:i: on Ute beaC')l, told coun· cllmen la.st week that for too long cilii.ens In Wednesday's letter exhorting the barrage on local police the anony~ous writer said: · ''Those of us wno have been clea ing up dog dir t on our property. cl.canin up ov rrt urned trash c~ns and putting up with replanting killed plants, putting up with annoying barking , . , have just quietly turned the other cheek , trying to be peaceful neighbors." .., t.1Qre than a doien con1plaint s were registered through the day and officers issued citations all over to"'"· I One dog call even resulled in a itW;COtics arrest at a young San Clemente man 's residence.' Reinecl{e Target of Blast The letter was similar in tone to com· m·ents made to city cou ncilmen last "'eek by Mrs. Eva Riley. a constant observer oft~ dog issue at the counc1l level. ~fl-1i;1. RHey told 'councilmen that. if ~one seeing violations· of the leash By His Former Assistant _,, iaw "'ere to notify police "the officers SACRAMENTO (UP I f -The fQrmer wOuld be flooded with calls." top aide of Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke lod;.v wh ich Reinecke criticized statt employe efficiency and salary increases. i.. l'ue.sday's police log entries sho"'ed . acc11Sed him of spending hundreds Or -that patrolmen arlswered more dog com~ thousands of taxpavers dollars to cam-•---~si1Aints._ than any _otiJ.fil:._Jy~ of c..e.JJ _pa1gn_joc.1g,o.v.ernoLind oLconductlnf: an- tqroughout the. da y. ··undercover'' conspiracy against Gov. Reinecke and other top aides were not immediately available for comment on Stewa rd 's letter. ' During the day's activity one Ronald Reagan. .p~trolman arrived at 245 Del. Poniente tn The charges by Hal Steward, No. 1 ~1te lhc. O\\'ner ~f ~stray canine. . assistant to the lieutenant governor, were • ~en t~e incident ended Stephe n contained in a letter released today to ijir~d Reise, 22, '"'.as undc~ arrest On newsmen and sent to Reinecke Tuesda charges or possessing marijuana and . . y. ~aP:hernalia associated ~·ith the weed 's Steward said he wa nted to explain why w·. . ' he :'_resigQed" .his $20,~a-year post as .: Reise also had a $10 ticket for a leash special _execuhve_ assistant .. Other top Jaw violation. aides privately said he was fired . • -: CJfy orfictals ha\'e heard chronic com-Reinecke said Steward, on the job only DliirltS about stray dogs for yea rs and seven weeks, left by "mu~ual consent." fiite1y have ordered a complete sta ff The shakeup followed a dispute over .-.11.tdY on the ef!ec•iveness of the agency release of a preared speech text in c.bargtd wilh j:ontrolling the pets in San ctemente -the County of Or~nge. The city pays no set lee to the co unty arµmal control department for the en· {Qrc~ment role, but the county keeps all Marine, 19, ·Dies <. .Of Meningitis At Pendleton CAMP PENDLETON I AP) -A Jg.. lJear-old Marine from Utah has died of m'!ilingitis five days after being admitted tn .Naval Hospital, lhe first such death at Ci~p Pcndl~ton this year, a spokesman O jp today . ' PI<;KEROO ADDS BOWL TICKE,TS A bonus pr ize -two free passes lo the Pa~adena Bowl for the first place winner each week -was added la st week lo the PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo. the popular footbal ltseason pick-the-winner contest. Entry blank fo r this week's contest ap- pears in the newspaper today for the last time this v.·eek. It's on Page 30. Deadline for this week's entries is 5 p.m. Thursday ! that means entry must be delivered in person or by mail by 5 p.m. to the DAT· LY PILOT). Top five winners each week each receive a $10 gilt certificate from South Coast Plaza. Ste"'ard told Reinecke he "resigned'' because: -''The use by you and members of you r staff of· hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayers money solely lo conduct a campaign for your election to go vernor in 1974 ." -"The efforts by senior members of your staff. wit h your knowledge. to con- duct a conspi racy. undercover. against Gov. Reagan. his administration, and his staff." · -'·Your refusal. despite repeated recommendations and urging by me to attempt to identify with or consid i;r the ethnic problems and aspirations of meml>ers or Califomaa's m ino rit y groups."' · -''The blatant cynicism practiced by you and the senior members of your staff in regard to public issues where your and their only motivation was whethir youi position on the issues wou ld help get you elected governor rather th211 an interest in the conce rn and needs of the citizens of California.'' -"You r refusal, despite my repeated urgings. to do your homework and keep you rself prepared on the vital issues .. Reinecke. appointed by Reagan as lieutenant governor in 1969 after former Lt. Gov. Robert H. Finch went lo Washington with President Nixon, has announced his intention to run for governor in 1974. ~J:f.e~ was Identified as Pvt. Loren R. Janes of Logan, Utah. .•.His father, David Janes. was by his beilside when the youth died Tuesda y nliht Bluff Preservation Plan The illness was diagnosed last Saturday . as mcningococcal men ingitis. Three other teenaged Marines and the 2-year-o!d son I •----of-a Marine Sergeant were still listed in serious condition in the hospital , one suf- fering from the same type of meningitis that killed Janes. Studied by San Clemente • • Initial discussion on a new proposed planniTig measure to preserve some of San Clemente's bluffs for a future scenic roaO will take place a! tonight's meeting of the planning co n1m ission. -Continued discussion on possible tightening of off-street parking re· quirements in multiple residential zones. The city's parking commission is also ex· amining !he matter on a request from ci- ty councilmen. ' Girl, 15, Thrown from Van; Dies .• .a .lS-year-old Brea l~igh School girl was· k1ned Tuesday when the van in which she •as riding flipped over on Carbon Canyon loacl, near Valencia A\"enue. ~~Iifomia Highway Patrol officers said Kristine Alice White. 15. of 125 Violet Ume , Brea, was thrown from the van when it swerved off the road on a curve. 'f.he \.ran then rolled over the J?,irl. 'rhw vehicle was driven by Kenneth R. Parker, 16. al so of Brea . who escaped in· j~ry , along with another passenger. A lourLh person in the van. Kim r.IrKenzie, 14, 1lrea. was taken lo St. Jude Hospital {h f;ullcrton where she was listed in iaiisfactory condilion. ~-.. OlAHlil COAST DAILY PILOT CIWG1f CO.UT PUI LISHING CO ..... P4fjV Ro\it rf N. Wttd Pr•.cl•~I l lld P~Oh1~tr J1 clr JI. Curl•v \'iu ,ru iol.,,I 1M G1Mr1J Mll\t91t l~Dl!'ltl K11•il E~llOf Th0,.,11 A. Murp~in• f>\tfl.lflnt f:OlfOI" Ch11l11 H. Laa' Rit~1 rd P. t-!111 Anlsll~I Mlnlvll\D .llotora let•H lffcll Offl(e 212 Fo1 11t A•1"u1 Mtilin' 1dd'r1n:,P.O. to~ 6 ~6, !1652 5111 Cl1111111t1 Offlc1 30S ~oilh El C1 111i~o R111J2672 Otti.r OHlc11 C111ll M•11· llO Wt1I Illy S!r,•f' "t;_,, •••t;llr lUl NeWPOrl • .,.. , .•• rd t/M11!11WIOll '""': i1!1J 6t•'11 •01;l1v1r~ The panel ~·ilt evaluate the request by city councilmen recently that a new set· back requirement be fmposed to eK!end the buffer area on the bluffs from 20 to 60 feet. The idea. according lo counc ilmen. is to insure that if the multimillion-dollar scenic road ever were to be built. no private impro\•ements "'ould stand in its way. The road"·ay was desc ribed as feasible but expensive by the city engineering staff in a presentation late lasl month . As en\•isioned, the rood could occupv the strip between the base of the bluffs and the railway betwee n North Beach and A1·enida Del Mar. Other items on the c11mmission's light agenda fo r tonight in clude · -Fina l re finements on proposed tle1v regulations on adult book stores and other adults-0nly establis~ts in com- mercial _zones.-Mosl of lhe !'itrict controls illready have been sent on to the cily council for approval. What remains at the commission level is to determine !he ex· acl business lo be added to the ord1rtance "'hich proposes conditional use permits before the activities can be licensed. -A requesl by the Rich-Land Ocvelop- 1nent Company for a billboard and ban· ner to advertise the sale of 15 new homes in the Shorecliffs area. Services Held For Eugene Gale Of Laguna Hills Services \ve re held this morning at Pacific View Chapel for Eugene K. Gale , 2136P Via Puerta , Laguna Hills. who died Tuesd ay at Beverly Manor Convalescent Hospi tal. Laguna Hills. He "'as 64. Mr. Gale is survived by his widow, Beatrice; son. Fred Ga le of Orange: daughter, Patricia Hammond of Oowne,v; brother. Charles of Oregon ; and by seven grandchildren and one great grand child. A native of Kansas who had lived in California for 39 years. he was vice presi· dent of the Sealwright Manufacturing Corporation. The Rev. James Stewart officiated 111 the se rvices. Burial was in Pacific View ~·l emorial Park. Friends wishing to make men1orial donations may direct them to the American Cancer Society. Festival Seel{s Sculpture For Entrance to Grounds l.ai;una Beach Festival of Arts direc-• . tors decided ~·l nnday night to aulhorize 11 natlonal compeUUon for 11 sculpture design to adorn the pylon at the entranCf to the Fe.<1tival grounds. The l'nlry has been bare since removal of a weatherbealen plaster Vl'nus a cou· pie.of seasons ago. Grounds manager l\1ogens A be 1 presented the beard "'1lh a proposal worked out I>)' Laguna Beach art gallery director Tom Enman for 11 conte$l th1't would be open lo any sculptor livln& in the United Stall's. "Tl would be a real feather In our cap" said Abel . -~ 1 - Directors agreed that since the Festival tind Pageant !low are nationally recognized, 11 national compelillon would not bc nut of order. It was decided that a $1 ,000 prlic would • be offered for the winning design. and en· tries. models made lo a scale of one inch tn one foot . would make an impressive exhibit for the Art Callery, Sitl('e the pylon .ptands above a renec- ting pool it was further agreed that some use of running water in the sculpture design would be desirable. l\fembers of the Feslival boatd v.·ould • serve as A jury to select the winnln~ deSign. directors agreed, noting. "We're the ones who have to accept lhe sculpture S6 there's no point In haVl ng some other jury pick .romcthlng we won't like ." 1'he competing artist! should be responsible for the cost of producing their mOOelr.trre board agreed. and the qul'S· !Ion or paying lo ha\'e the winning design produced In durable material would be taken up l>y the hoard later. Entry da tes and other details wi ll be announced by th(' re:sllval. DAILY l'ILOT 11111 l'hOJt • DESPITE-DAN EMORY'S CHARTS ANO NEWPORT PROTESTS, AIR CAL CARRIED THE DAY Long-standing Airport Foe Stands Again Threatening Court Actton to Abate Noise Pollution Air Cal Wins 5-year Lease ~arrier. Both Praised , A tta ckecl at Storrn y Me et By JACK BROHACK 01 lht 0 •11• l'llol ll•ff Air California , roundly condemned by Upper Newport Bay residents and highly pra ised by the Orange County business co mmunity, won a new five-year lease Tuesda y after a' stormy two-hour-hearing before the Board of Supervisors. The adopted compromise agreement, proposed by fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers of Newpo rt Beach, did not wholl y please proponents of con· tinued air service, no r did it satisfy op· ponents. But it was goo:d enough to win approval by a 4 to 1-margin .and there were no boos or catcalls when the fina l vote wa s recorded . There has been some po:inted remarks fron1 the audierice and sporadic. applause as speaker after speaker on either side exhorted the board members. Only Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden Grove voted against the new lease and only because he thought it should be given more study The compromise lease extension as of- fered by Caspers included six conditions: -The lease to be for five years wit h the opportunity for review at one year in· lervals at the anniversary date with op- tion to cancel subject to 3D days written notice. -That 24.6 be est~blished as a ceiling for the average number of flights and lhat additional flights require board air proval. -That hours of operation ht limited to 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. for takeoffs and 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. for landings . -That no louder than Boeing 737 or DC·9 with gross wtlght based on runwa y strength be used as equipment. -That a!! engines be rendered smokeless prior to signing of the new lease. GEM TALK TODAY by Sma ll But lmpr•11ive The 18th annual Diamonds-Inter· national A\.1:ards collection opened in New 'lork in mid-September. Je\velers fron1 30 c;ountries entered their designs. and from over 2,200 pieces. one gets a view of diamond fashions for the coming year. ~ !\lost peopl e won't be surprised to learn that rings 'vere the major attraction, but they may be sur· prised lo learn ol the importance nf very small d iamonds. Over half the \\'inning designs featured tiny dia1nonds in COll)bina tj(l n . 'l'ilh nthcr precious and· semi-p~cious stones. 1'he piece containing the most \Vas a ring \vith 305 diamonds, but A total "'eight of only two carats. Some pieces featured semi-prec· ious stones 1nerely "du sted" with tiny i:;ems. almost as though they had"been dipped in glitter. If you feel yoll can't aflord dia· monds, take a second look at what can be accomplished with even a re"1 of the £1niest. A few liny ilia· monds on a highly polished back· ground are as impressive as the. gleam Jn-" prellµye. We'll be happy to help you pick a design to ~ suit your.taste and budget. (AOV I • He also called for a revie1v of rental prices which he believed to be lo"'· Air Cal President Rober t Clifford led off for the proponents noting that he was spea king for "Orange County's o"'n air- line.'' He stressed the need fo r a five. year lease as "good business practice for a firm which has such a large capital in- ves tment. Anything less would not con· tribute to financial stability of the airline."' Clifford also m~de these po ints: -Air Cal has no plans for flights ou"tslde of California. -Smoke will be elin1inated and ne1v engines will be quieter. -Five year!'i h1 the very least time period in which there can possibly be. a Air Lease Fee Tab $166,802 The cur rent Air California lease whi ch was the subject or Tuesday's debate before the Orange County Boa rd of Supervisors was "·orth $166,802 to the coun ty in fees paid by the airline during 1970. A breakdown reveals pa y1nents for landing fees. $120.907 : terminal space rental, $17 ,131 : tie do1vn fees.-· $6.480: share nf utilitiC's and janitorial Services in terminal building. $27,284. These charges will be reviewed and possibly increased as part of \he new lease agreement approved by the supervisors. new site ·aevetoped for an alternate coun· ly airport. -Orange County Airport cannot be ex· panded because of freeways on eithe r end of the runways. Ground transport is also limited. City Councilman Carl Kymla led off the opposition with a state ment 0£ the Newport Beach position. He called for the following conditions lo govern continua"nce of terminal access privi!cg?s to ron1n1ercial carriers at the airport: -A statement of offi cial policy that lhe Airport is not and in all probability nc'icr will be an acceptable facility -for jet aircraft. -That daily nights be limited to the al'erage dail y level of the past J'l months. -That commercial terminal leases be rent'wed on a year-to-year basis on ly. -That jet ai rcraft be limited to those no louder !~an the Boeing 737 or the Doui?las DC-9. \This was approved). ~That no new carrie~s proposing tn use jet aircraft be Rranted termina l privileges and flight s be restricted to 400 miles from the county. -That no commercial carrier be alJnw· ed to construct or lease terminal facilities lndependenl of the county's con- trols. !·le also askCd that a public hearing be held, that the Ecolog I noise monitoring .. data be made available to the public and the city and that Newport Beach be con· suited on leases. Kymla also read a long list of reasons "'hY the city's conditions should be adopted including the fact that the Harbor . .\rea already bears th~ burden of all of the scheduled commercial jet operations in the county. that the Upper Bay environment should be protected. .,.,, ; I 1-: ;o. ;:;::;g-™ m 't:l-'nt"2flll!:£ ..... - OOMEGA Chistmas wrapped · ") ~~ 1~~h~e;1?,~!~.~}d much you rea lly care? When she sees the Omega name on her watch she'll know how mt:u:;h extra thought you put into her Chr istmas. And because all Omega w.atchel, e re made to be the lineslol lheirkind, she"ll probably neve r need an other watc h for all the Christmases to come. A-UK so!ld gold b11ctltt Wl\Cl! ..... IV'S 8-HI( whnt "or )•·IOI# 1ohd 001~ buttltt WllCI! •• , . , , ...... , .•. , , ••• , , • , , , , , , .S~•O c -1'1( 1oli4 oo'd h~~ ~'tet!tl •ltti'I .,$4JS J. c. I 82l NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVEN IENT TER MS IANKAM EA.ICAllD-MASTE A. CHARGE 24 YEARS SAM E LOCATION PHONE l~l -J~OI ·,,,-- ' .. " I -j ' ) ' Econo1nic Trio Wtd11,tsd~, Navtmbtr 101 1971 DAllY PllOT 47. LEGAL NOTICK-LEGAL NOTICE . LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO't!CE ..... 00 "" SUPl lllOft COUllT Olli' TN• NOTICI tO CRIOITOllJ SUl'l!IUOR (OUltT 0 11 THI HOTICI 01' S•LI! OP ltl!AL ITA"fl 01' CALllllOftNIA Jl"Oll SUPlll:IOll C:OUll T OP THI ITATI! 0, CALll"OllN IA POil l'ROPIRT'f AT il'lllVATI SALi THE COUNTY 0#' ORAHGI ITATI 0 " CALIJ!OltNIA l'CUt THI COUHTY OF O•ANOI! H• .... Hlr No. l.•71011 THI COUNTY OP OllAHOI Ht . A"'4iJ S~i:ittlOI' Cwrl or 1119 lit.It of CllUornl• NOTICI 0 1' HIAlllHG Of' PITITIOll He, ~"""' NOTICI! 01' HEARIHO 011' Pl!TITIOH TO fw lllt C:o~nly 04 Or•ntt. l"Olt PtO•ATI 011 WiLI.. AND llDlll E1l•lt of ELMl!:lt C". l'ltANlWA, l DtlJIDW MOHl.V ANO TO l!Xl!:CUTI! 11'1 lht M.lln~r of 1119 Et1tlr of l.l.UltA LETJlllS 0 1' ADMINllt•ATIOH Olf Dec'1t«I. A PllOMIJSORV HOTI! LEE HAGEllMAN, .i10 knctW" 11 l.l.U•A IM THE ALTlllKATIVI ~l!TIYIOH Td , NOTICE IS HEREllV, GIVEN '° lht E 1111 t o ! H,.. It L 0 WE R . HAGERMAN, 1nd •I LAURA L. SET ASIDI I STATlf TO SUllVIVINGI crtcll!Otl of ll'MI tl:IOY9 P11mt1,1 de<edtnl lllLLINGSLEV, Ot(ffr.ed, .HAGlRMAN. Ot<flHd. S~OUSI mil 111 Hr50n• htvln1cl1lm11g1(n1t !ht NollQI II htreDv given m11 SANK OF Nollet 11 hertDY t lYf.!' th1I mt E1!1tt ol MAZIE GERTllUDE &EAT• 111(1 d«H~tjl .,, teciul•tcl lo tilt !Mm. ,..MEIUCA NATIONAL TRUST ANO Ul'IO,r1lg"'4 Wiii ~II ti P•!vii. ltlf. on or TV. DN:etltd. wllh !ht ntttHtr'f voucl!lr1, In llwl offlCt SAVINGS ASSOCIATION. U«Ulor ol' lht tlltr 11\t 1"11 <11y ol' Nlrltinbtr, !t11, 11 NOTICE IS HElll!SV GIVEN lh1f ol· int cltrk or llwl t bovt tn1111ed court, o 111 ot lht tDOvt ntmed 111cta1n1, h11 !ht ol!lct ol JIOl)ttt J. Johnston, 201 s.o. Otor111 w. Sttnv h11 lllH hef'tln 1 .,.rr. lo Prtltl'lt 11111!11, with fllt nt<tHI II.cl htrtl" Ill v1rtl!td Ptllllon tor Llllt Avt-. 410 Unlo11 &trill: Plfff, !Ion tor Probllt of Wiii Ind tot Lflltf'I of \IOUGllK'-lo lfl• u""er1llnt4 tf tne olllct Autl'!Orll'I' to llorrow Money •n<I 'to P•$Mkll• ti 101. CountY of Lm A11to'I~ A<lmln l11r .. non or tn tht AHtrnt tlvt ~•'I· of Mr tl!ornt)': AO&ERT W, E•1-tult • Promluorv Nott, •114 tl'lfl S••tt of C1lllor11ft, lo tllt hlohtst end bQI lion lo set· 1ilde E11111 lo Survlvln• ANOERSON, HO Et ll Colo/t do Ot<:emb4r J, 1911, ,, ':XI A.M., In !tit DI""''· •nd IUDletl IO con11rm111on by S~OUlt re!ertnce to whl</I I• m•dt let aoul1v1N1, ll\l~1dtnt, Ct lllornl1 11106, Coo;rtrcom of 0.01rtmt nt > of mt tbove Nld superior Court, t 11 mt rlt ht, tltlt tnd furtner p1rllcul1r1, ind 1t11 """ ind which 11 ll!t pttct ol butl~n of Int tfll/llf'd Ccurl. loc1te<1 11 100 Civic Ct!l!tr fnllrnt ot 111d Otttt l4'd 11 flit tlmt or pltct of httrlMI the ,,.,... 1111 bttn wl \ ut1<1ersl1,,.,, In 111 """'" perltlnlno to Orlv1 Wnt, S.1'111 Al'lt, Ctlllornl1, 1111 Otflh •nd 111 1h1 rloh!, 11111 •pd ll'l1trt1t ror Ncw""bt' f4, lffl, 111~.30 1.m., In tnt !tit 11!1te ol wla d~cMent, w11111" !.Wr betn llll.td ti mt llrnt 1114 ol1ct for me 1h1t Ult ttl1!1 &I 11Td dtcttMll h11 couttr~ ol Dtpfrlll'ltfll No. 3 ol wild monm1 tl!tr ,.. rfr1t ll\ibllctllon of lh11 t>nrlno of 11ld 1>t!ltlo!I, wllln Ind Wlltrt 1c111lrtd by -••Ion o111w or oltttrwl'•· court. ·~ l'OO Civic Ctn!., Ive Wu t, l!f 110tlce. 1 · tnY OIOOl'I l11ltrtll"' I" "'' •Ui. m1y otller "''" or ln t<ldll!Oll to m11 et 1•ld lht City et s.n11 Ant , Ct ll rn!t , Oii.ci O.:t~r U, 1!171 ·-·' .,,., 1r-CIVM. IF t nY lflrY ht vt, de<tt Std, ., "'' tlmt of lltttrl, In •fld TO 0.1..::1 HOll11!¥1Hr s, lt11 MAll!AN 8. IHRIG wtiv mt ordrr 11\11<1111 not be m•Clt. au 1111 certain rttl crrOPl!•IY -sltuate 111 11\ft w. E. St JOHN Cxtcutrlx or lttt Wiii ll1l1rtocr ls her1bv m•ll• lo lht ••Id County ol Ortn~t. Sltlt d CtUlornl1, Countt Cftrk or tne tbO•t lllmt!I dKtlltnl ~Tltlon lor 1ur!l\1r parllcUla'I. r>trtlcularlt de1crl"-4 ts lo!low1, to·wll: SIOH EY MALICK •OBERT W, A~l)EltJOH DATED: Ncvfmtltr f, lt11, Loi tlt¥tn 01) In T•tct No. sn , ltlt Htrtll Mt!ll llrff! llO E. COIOrtdO llvd. WILLl,o.M E. $1 JOWH V8ltnclt Park TrKf ti oer Mtr> lll•teo! Stlllt Ant, Cttlflfl'll P1pcr1111, Ct!lfornlt '110• County C!"k rtcOO'll..i In &ook 11, Pt~ ~l of Tt h ln41 Ul-"1' Ttl: (IU) •0 "4!&4 HA•WOOD, SODEH & AOKIHIOH Ml1al!tnK1111 M•~1, records of Ortnot "IMtl'll'I' for ""ni.111r Allcrntv lor E•~wlrhr .-.notflt'l't t i Ltw County, C1Ulo...,i1. Mort commMlv Publll!l.O Oran" Co.11t Diiiy ~llot, PuDllJl>e<I Ortng1 CetSI Dilly Pl!ol, "0 HIWPOrt Ct n1tr Otl¥t • 111111 434 known It ~41 E11t J.tferton Avtl'l\>t, HO•tmti.r f, 10, 15, ltll ~I Oc!cbor 20, 21. tnd NovrmMr 3. 10. 1"011 Olflct ... ltOJ Ora~or, Callfornl1, lf11 "60-71 NtWPol'I St11dl, Callkor nlt tU.3 SUllJECT TO: Currtnl t t ii t l, 1----.,-,=-:-:"'77:"==,---I Ttltohont 1110 4+1·1JIJ co Y t n 1 n I• , conon1on1. ttSlrlcllon1, L E GAL NOTICE An11rntYt fw E••~lfr ~11rv1l!ons. rloh11, rl11\ts of w1v,l--------------Publ!lllecl Drtno~ Co11t D•llY Piiaf, tt•tmr11l1 of record. · fl·1M14 LEGAL NOTICE SUl"ElllOll COUllT' 0 1" CALl,Oll HIA, November 10, 11, lt11 )IMO.I] T1•e1, rMla, aptrallnt 4 m1lnten1nce fllC:TITIOUJ aUSIHISt exp~n1e1, tnd Prtmlum1 on Josurance HA.Ml STATaMIMT' COUNTY OF O'tANGE ICttollblt IO "'• Pllrchtttr lhlll be The lol!owlllQ l>tl'IMI ... i olnf 700 Wt1! Ith Slr•I LEGAL NOTICE l>l'oti!ecl ., QI m1 <1ete or rttor<llno cl bu1lnt11 ti: Stnl1 Anf, C•lltornl1 conv-vtnct. DOYLE'S C,o.MPEll SE ltVtCE A.Nit Ctst No. 11t,10J Tht r•tmlntllM ol 11111, rttordlnt or ACCES!OIUIE$, 7tl'll $1tl9r ... ,,..,. Pit ln!llf; BAll B.:.RA ?E1LE1t VI. NOT'ICI Ofl MA•SHAL'S SALi! convtYtnco, 1ny ll!lt lniuranct POllCV, Huntington &t1ch, C.1!lkorn!11, OeftM1nt GARY LEE MUNDHENKE. • CAC Ol~ertllltd COrP. cl Ct lll, Pltfnt!lf 1nd hall escrow ~nltl •II.Ill be t i tnt J1m11 T, Do'tlt, 5411 Ctfllflill ......... UPI TtlHhtlf ml""', LEllO'( B. MUNDHENK £, OOE S VI. J1me1 0. Follr, et •I Dt"fld1111 Ho. t •Ptlllt or lht ttlltr. • Lakewood', CalifMnlo .. ~:;1..,1..,1 tltncl•r>'I' ; 16:v'7!1;1\1• ol t n r•ecutlon 111~ec1 ~ The uooer~ltnf<I rf1trv11 me tlohl to Ho'°1m1 ", D. •""'"•. c'"i'••' •,rtdt Lt!Mft A '~!vii comPlalnt hts tiff" !tied bv Ill• HoYt<Tlber J, •~n py 1"4-Munlclpt l 'Court, •tlfl:I 1ny an" 111 bl01. n 11'11 on HC ' 1 rn •. pitln!i!I agiTni! VOtJ, u vou wlih to lletend Los An11tlet Judld•t 01,,flct. Coun!Y ol Tt rm$ cl salt ctsh !n !ew!YI money of Rlcherd T, Dorie, 16'11 lt•v Lt,,., T h ese three men ,.,,ill play a ma1·o'r role in admini· tive director of the Cost of-Living Council, and c. 1111• ltw1vll. YOU mu1I flit 111 !Ill\ courl I Lei A"g•le1 , S!tlt of C1lllornl1, UllC)tl I ~t~ U~lrecl c~!,1'1.;n !~~ro';'''~i~ 0:01•:,-.: ~~!;11~~~~::.~·~~be'i:!1'~';.tl9d "y • t . wrlll•n ple&Olnq, In rtlf>Oll$C to !hr lu.,smenl entered I" !1vor ol CAC ck lit<! with blCI Pirtnir11\1p. s e~mg President N ixon's post-fr eeze econon1ic J ackson Grayson Jr. (r ight ) will b ead the Price Com-cQmPl•lnt (or wrlllon'or crtl pje,Mllnt, u Olvtfllflfll Corp, OI C1!1!or11l1, • :?; II I ' bl f Ill "" will J1mt• T. Dovlt pohcy. George H. Boldt lleft) \Vill head the Pay mission. • Ju1!1c1 Courtl within .ICI d1ys tf!fr 11111 Corl>Ol'ttlon "•t ludomen• crtc:J1tor •ncl ~ r.!rT;~ :;·,": •lort"..~J or,r,: ,, IMY ltlthlrd T. Oovtr Bo \' tummon1 1, 1e•v•d en YOU Dl~trw111, 1111ln•t Ja,...,.s D, Fo111 •M MMlorlt A, lime titer me 11,., ""bl!citlOtt nereot Incl T"ls ..-1r.mt nt 111M wit~ tM C:ou"t'f ard· Don ald Rumsfeld (center) will become execu vour Ot11Vll will w. ~n1tr..i on t Dnllcatlcn Fol1t ., lullgrNfll "ttltor. 11\0w\ng . nrl ,,,, •• ····-<-··· -.,,, .. , ,. • ___ _c' _________ ;__;_;__;__:_.,.;_;_;_;__· _____________________________ l tlY me pl1l11tllf tnd 1lwl o;eurl mtY tnltt I btlenct ot UU.lf tClutllY (lvf on s1\d t>tlcrt dllt ol t•!t. ltl1 , by BtY;;1Y J. "M;;ioo•, O.i>l.lt; lvdum1111 101lnS1 YOU for '"' mon.tv er lu<1umrn1 on'.m~ dete cl Ill• bwance of Dtlt'dE~~":;;'f;, ~ .... ~~~MAN. ccunty Cler~. Firm Starts • New lrVine Area Of fi<;e Construction has begun on a new home for Semicoa, Inc. in. the Irvine Industrial ComPlex. Scheduled for completion by the first of the year, the com- pany will move from t he City of Industry. Jim Rush. representing the Newport Beach office of Coldwell, Banker and C9., handled the lran·saction for 1.212 acres, which Semicoa has purchased from t he Irvine Industrial Complex. Don Koll Construction Co. of Irvine. is building the new struc t ure on 1326 Mc- Cormick Street. Occupying ·22.400 sq. ft., the building will house the com pany's cor- porate ortices, manufacturing facilities and 30 technicians. Presley Co. Tells Sales Pres~y Development Com- pany, New port Beach-based homebuilding f irm. h a s reported 529 home d eliveries and sales of $17,110,302 for its third quarter ended Oct. J I, 1971. This figure, which includes a land sale of $2,524,864, com- pares with sales of $7,461,862 for the s imilar period of last year. Nine-m onth sales volume totaled $44,908.502. compared with $18,321,460 for the first three quarters of last year. o!her rtllrl r1t1u11!~':.' In 11\1 comnl1l11!, Slid eKtcullon, I h1v1 ltvl.O UPOll tll lht Ilse llllOWn IS PuhllSht<I Ortnff c.o.11 Otlly ,.llot, II vou Wllh In IHk "'' 10\/lCe °' •n rlol\t, ll~t •net lnterr•t of Mid l\ICl9m111! E. T. HAGERMAN, Oc!oblr :t<J, n tnd NcvtmMr 3, 10. 11!crntV In 11111 m1tt1r, vou Slll)l)ld Oo to debtcr In !ht prCl>t"rty In fli• Coun!y cl 1t n t"4·11 promptly so !~11 vcur plftdl119, 11 1ny, Or111ee, Sl•!O of C•tllornl1, MKrlt>ed 11 !;":,~.,~~~=:,,Will mev tit flied 0" time, IO/IQWI; •01e•T J JOHNSTON 011ed Julv n, 1tlD. Lot SOS. Tr1c1 111,, map booll 50, 201 IO!llll L.tt Annu1, ($EAL) pegn 32/36 Commonly known '" 2080 110 Ut1lo" atnk ,.ltlt L.ack of Investment Funds L E GAL NOTICE WILLIAM E. Ir JOHN l"Monr011l1 Alltf\Ut. COiia MIU, Ct 111, P'IP"•no CtlJI '1101 1'·13112 County Clerk NDTIC6 IS HfltEI Y GIVEN lh1I on An•rntv 'wtri~KUIOI' P'1CITIOUS SUllHISS. ROSAMOND C, WEISMAN Th11rt<11v, D«fm~r 1, 1'11, 11 t :OC t7tt"9t · NAMll STATIMt MT o~autv o'tloc~ P.M. 11 Iron! cl Courthou1e, $47 Put1\!sl\.cl Drtnot COlsf Dilly Pllol, Tht lollowlno 111rson 11 4olll0 ..,_ln1111 COLEMAN & SILVE•sTl!IN w. 181h. (llY OI C~!• M"I, COllnl't' or NOYemlle•' 10 l'-1911 3011·11 11:----- .1, Wfll Ith Slrffl O.t1> .. , St1to of C1lllorn!t, I will 1111 ,_ ~· . RANCHO STEAK COMPANY, l tot02 Loi AnttlH, Ctllfclrnlt 9001' <11 publle <IUC11on to l~t hlo"1-ut blOC!er, $c1r1!091, Hunnnoton,Sttch, Cttllornlt, Ttl: UUJ 62'·JJl1 !Or call! In ftWfuf mo"tY of !ht Unhf<I LEGAL NOTICE Wtlltct P•ul Cot,per, 1• 401 Blnmed for Market Decline NE\V YORK (AP) -At the ver'1 lime the adminislration is attempting to accelerate-the • economy, the semi· autonomous Federal Reserve BO'ard is shutting off the fuel, or the money supply, official figures show. The puzzling b ehavio r, which is antagonistic to the goals toward whose fulfillment the Presideat has a s k e d sacrifices of a ll segments of the economy. has brought about a n actual shrinkage of the money supply, Financial analysts here at- tribute some of the stock market's sharp d ecline to the lack of investm ent funds. They add that a continuation of tight money could stall a decline in interest rates and subdue economic confidence also. The Fed describes its role as the fostering of "a flow of credit apd money that w ill facilitate orderly economic growth. a stable dollar, and Jong-run balance in our in· ternational payments.'' Figures show, however, that in the weeks of Oct. 15 and 22 the m oney supply declined on an annual percentage basis after having grown a t-more than 13 per cent during some previous ·weeks. The abrupt policy change came in the 'veek after the P resident announced his new economic plan. Each week therearter the growth in the supply of money-currency in circulation, plus checking accou nt s. lessened until the fiow went into r everSe -in the week ended Oct. 15. Anomer1 for l"l•l~•llf. s1a~1. 111 !ht rig/II, tl!lt 1r>d ln!erur Scarll11t•. Hun!l"oron Btteh, Ctlllornlt. Publls~tO Orll'IOt Cetlt Diiiy PllOI, of seld ludomtn1 dfDtor In lht aDO•t TMs 001lntH It btlno cooduc.ttd by tn Ncvemtltr 3. 10, II, Jt, It/I ,, ... 71 described praper1v, or 11 mucl\ 11\rreol NOflCI! 011 TllUSTEE'S IA.LI i""lvldu.al. "History shows it," he said.1--------------1,. mo~ be ne«"•1•rv 10 ••tlttY s.110 TO.ss,.;, .. n o111-1 w1111e1·P. Cotr.,., L EGAL N<YJ1CE t~..:Yllon, wlrh accrued lnMrtll •"" toi.h. Oft OKtmbH J, Ull, •I f :M A.M. Thi& 1l1temtnl Ill.cl wlltl tM CounW "They have gone to tremen-• D•ted 11 Co•to Meia. c1111crn11, Ft Rs T FE o E It AL E s c ll ow c11rk of D••M• County an Ocf(ll)tr 1" dous excesses. Their actions a AR JHt No•fmbrr '· itn. coRPOllATIDN, •1 "ury tP!)Clln~d 1t11, bv 111ver1v J.-M.Odole. 0.1Mo11Y OITOR DILLARD O. WILKl llSON, Trustee Yncltr I nd puriuao! lo Deed OI Counl"I Cltrk. have been opposite to common su~i1:fo\ Tg0~:~ 0,. T~E MARSHAL Trust recorded Sto11mtJe, 21. !'7o, 11 Putlll•htd or1nte Cotst Otlly ~1Jof. Sense and good J'Udgment." STATE 01' CALll'OllNIA FO• Municl~ll Ccurl, Orangt Ccvnl'{ Ins!. No, 1~~. In book 9~1'. Pl" 399, Of OtlOMr 2(1, V tnd Novwnbtr J, 11, Th hr. k THE COUNTY OF ORAHOI! H1rbo• Jvd~ie! Dlttrfct OU/cltl Record& ln the o!11(t ol 11'e 1911 2165-11 e S in age is largely t he W · ht I · th t ·r th NO. A . milt Bv vi~i•n Pcwtll countv 11..:onlrr or Orano• County, s11te1-------------r1g c aims a I e c Ir f LULU E CRAGO Otcta$1d 'Oroutv • or Celllor11l1 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC LEGAL NOTJCE result of actions by the Fed's tight money policy is pursued N~;l~Eo IS HEA Eav c.1'VEN 10 1n'e Cutrer •nd Cull•~ AUCTION TO HIGHEST BI DDE R 1'0111---------'------ 0pen M a r k e t Committee, it wit! bring about a market c•eoctltort of th• 11>cv1 111m•d dieced1111 ow•11a wu1~'''• 11d1. No. '11 ~::', 4;,'i~:1~11~:~1~~11~1)·~~ ~~ 1;:r~ ,. 11'41 · !h~T 111 Pl'"Onl lllYlng cltlm1 tU1ln1! 11\r tlllrt II ri nd Avt. O PICTlflOUS aUSIHESS made up of the seve n collapse. "It ls a dreadful $lld ott:edent art rt<iulrtd 10 111e 11'>em, L11 AnMltt. c11;1. t00"11 1"'°"'> Entr1""' to th• o1<:1 ra~e NAME srATEMl!HT members ol the Board or thing " he Said ' 'These wlth !~f nttt• .. rv vouClieri. tn "'" OlllCf Pl1l111u1•t Jlttornay ~O\]:ty c~~= .. ~~ tt;.~91'l~ltv t~. ''•n~ Tilt lollow!flQ oerson II dol"9 bu•llllU • · or"" cltrk of th• 1b0Ye en1111eoc1 ,ourt, or Putllhlltd OrtnH Co.tit c.inv l'llot, " ' ' ; nd ' h Id bv 11 11· Governors and the presidents bankers were not elected by to nr•'""' 111em. wtt11 /hr nt(r1•a•v Hovembtr lO, 11. 1•. 1971 :.O.•·ll ~"~:~~·~.~~of 0 r!utt ~"• 'Pro11erty · LtT1toN1c .1Nousr1t1Es. 1m1 Skir Or fl.Ve reg•'onal Fe d er a I the people but they can v011cner1, to lh• undtrolontd at It'• ell.le• •lt tl'd I wid counlY '"" s1111 destrlt> P•rk Cl•clr, trYIM, c1111ornl1 '1"'. of htr tllo,nrv1: CC»IEN, STOKKE .. LEGAL NOTICE ec1"" n Orll-tron. Inc .. • C•l llornl• Reserve banks. Jt meets destroy the economy." OWEN. 1211 Nori~ Bro1dw1v: su111 2n, ~·~ lAi Tr•ct 2173 11 t11r mtn corP01"111an. 11191 Sky P•rk Clr.:11, S. ·1 . . . [ • Fed Santo ,..~ •. Ca\llornla '1101 , wMcn 11 11\f ·.ec~rd..i in Book a P •••• " 11\d 13 !•vine. Ctll!Of'nl• tHU. r egularly in \Vashington to 1m1 ar cr1t1c1sms o. tue ~tac• or t1u1lnHs or mr yndu1lvnt<1 111 ti! SUPERIOR·~~J~'i 0,. THI! Mltctll•,,.ou• M•P•· 'i n lht oHlc• 01 "'~ Thl1 llll•lntu It blln1 Ulndlldtd bV • decide the m akeup Of the h ave been common lfl reCenr mattt" penallllng lo !ht t>lalt of lllll !TATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR Couotv llKordrr d 111!1 county, Ccrnor•llon. . . dtteoen!, wltnln l<>Yr mo~tht 1!t1r lh1 T ECO O MORE COMMONLY KNOW N AS: t7~ Frrd G"°'lflll system's security portfolio. years, but its defenders main-first oub11<ot1cn of thh no1.ce. H ~~:i.~:.~R•H E JcAnn strttt .. coot• Mti•, Ct1lkornia Thl1 1t111m .... 1 1u1d w1111 "" COIH'ltv When the Fed b u y 5 lain that its independence is Oiied Oc•obrr "· 1•11 ... HOTICf: (>II •HEARING 01' PET'IT ION Salo lllt will be ""'di 11111 Wllllout Clerk ot Ottnge C11<1nly an OCloblr ''· BEATRICE LINDBERG ' I 1ltll lt11 bV ltvtrlY J. Mtddcll, 0.l".llY securities, mainly th-• of the its strength and that in check· Admlnlst•a!rlx llOR PROBATE Ofl WILL •HD POR covtnanl or w•rrt ntv, t•Pr•u or mn • countv Cltrk ~ t Et! Ol !h bcv ll'lell I.ETTERS TESTAMl!NTAR'I' r~1Nlln9 !!tie, P ol lf \ll o n, or P bllh.0 Q Col l D ll'I ~ltof U.S: Government, it has the ing Presidential power. it has 0 me t • e e 1 ' n• E11111 ot HECTOR L. G1ea0Ns. encumbrences, lo 111v 1h1 '"""'!"l~u u ' rt l'llt • 1 • . , , aecedr~I O~cea•<"d ~rlnclPel tum OI' Ille nctlrfl) lt,urrd bv Ottobtr 21, Ind NOYtmbtr I. 10, 11. effect of creating · bank helped avert serious f1nanc1al ~~~~~n:1~r~~: ... :,,0;:,~~ J\\"0 1 NOTic:'E 1s HEREBY GIVEN thi1 ~110 DHCI ot Trust, 10-wn: nl.,8'.01, w1i11 1•11 2"t-n reserves, thus permitting the 'llroblems. s1011 Ant, c1t11orni1 n 101 WILLIAM B. GIBBONS 1111 tllect n1r11n 1 •ntereu tht,eon, •• provldM In 1ald LEGAL NOTICP t. • b . Ttl· (7UI IJS·l20t peT!llon tor prob1 le Pl Wiii 111d tor ncl1(1!, ldv1nct1. !I 1ny, ul'>der lht term$ ._ na ion S anks to make loans During the Job n s o n AttOrn•r• 10, Admlnlslrllrl• h1u1nce of Lc11er• rn11m1n11rv 10 or s11d Oted of Tru11. fees, charge• •Ml------7 ,-,,,,------ and other investments. Administration the Fed PuDll•llM o .. "~' coau D81!Y Piiot, Ptll!loner, retereMt to wl'>lch 11 m•"• to• ••Ptntes Jo"'' 0Tru1tH ~nd o1 th• 1ru11s ,,,,1,10•,·•,•,~.,1 ,,,, h Octotrer 20 21 1n(I Nl!Yfll'IMr .'.I, 1~. 1911 lurlhtr par!lcultr1, tnd lht t Ille lime tnd cr111ed by ltl" etd of ru1t , u T e result, in the Fed's OWn thwarted ·a n attempt by the ' r lW..11 pitce of hearing lhe ••m• htl W.tn It! Tht btMflcltf"J Under 1al" Del"<! of NAMt STATIMBHT ds .. ff ts · d' ti p ·d t t JI lor Novtm~r ll lt11 81 t •XI 1 m In 11\r T'utt hereto!ort r1..:u!rd t nd oenve'ecl Tht following ptuon is doli\t b\illnt .. WOt • a ec In u:ec Y reSI en 0 pursue an 8 -OUt \ ccvrlroom ol D;..,1,,.;,,nt 'No .. 3 ·~I itld lo tht undet1loned a wrll"n Declert!lcn 11: every phase o f American guns and butter policy That LEGAL NonCE court, At 1oa c1vk ce"ter Drive w11t, 1n of Dtteul! •n<I Demend kir Saie, ~nd • HEii CORNE R . .ICl6 Mlln. ••lbott t · d · . . · !ht City ol S1n11 Ana, Ctll!ornli. written Notlco cl Oel1ul! Incl E r~t·~n lo c~Ulorole t)l.61 en erpr1se an commerce Md IS, domestic expansion con· NOTICE TO CRl!DITOltS oe1ed November!, 1tn. se11. Th• un11e,1lgnt11 .c1u1ed ••Ill Notice Lvnn Evere11 sw1n. '°' w. a11bo• every person in the United current with spending for the 11JPt:111011 cou•T OI' THI! w. e. st JOHN, ct ~111111 111<1 Elt>Ct•on to s111 to be a1vd .. N•""'flort •••c~. c1111ornr1 tut1. States'" . STATE 01' CALIFORHIA FOil CounTy c::1er11: recor(led In !ht tQIJnty Whtrt lhe real Thlt 001lntH 11 Mint condUC:lt'd II Ill . Vietnam war. THE COUNTY'OF ORANGE OUllYEA, CAltPE:NTllt ' llAltNES prcPfrly 1s locetto. lndlvldv•I. This is not the first time that · h k No. A·6'0U (ly: .EllNEIT J. SCHAG, JR.I Datt: Novtmbfr t, 1t11, Lynn Evrrell Swan F By putting On t e bra eS Es!a!r of HEllBERT G. ALBRECH T, 45U M1,Arthur 801111v1rd FIRST FEDEll"'L Thl1 1tt11ment llltd wltn County Cltrk , ed activities have r U n that time lhe F ed brought Oeceaitd. Poll OfflCt Sox 11.. ESCROW CORPORATION ol OrtnOt Cnun!v on Ncvtml>et 1. 1t11, DY counter to a President's goals. ' NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 10 t~~ N-port &tt tn, C11J1orn11 ""-> •1 11>d Tru1tee, Btn•tv J, M10C10J1.. Deputy county Cltrll.. about 8 m oney Cr UOCh !ha t not crtOllcr1 cl me 1bov1 n1mecl llt cedtfll T•ltPhont: !7\1) 551·ttolt llV Gtrtld K. N1k1mur1, />ubll11\rd Orenor Co11I OtllV Pllol. Several presidents have only distressed investors bul rhat 11! cer5on1111vlnt ,111m1 1geln1r tne At!or ntY• '°'' P111nontr Pub!l~!:i'· ~~~~ ""Cciit D•ltv Piiot. No\ltmber l. 10, 11, ''· 1911 2'40-11 come into direct conflict with . s1 ld dttO'd•nt ••• •e<rulred tc 111r tnrm, Putllf•llM Orarnir coast Dally P1101 put corporate treasurers into wl!h tht ntccu~rv vouc11ers, In 111e onlte No•t mbrt' 10, 11, a, 1911 JD41.11 November 10. 11, ,,, t11 .ICl19:!1 the boan:I since its founding in frantic competition for fund s. cl m1 c11rk o11n1 •DO••1n11t1ed court, or LE.GAL NOTICE 1913, and some critics have ' · to presrnT !hem. wltll 111• nKtt»"" 11 UIH · Fed d efenders claim the Ycucner1, ro m1 11oC1enionec1 1t '"' 0111,, 1'rCT1r 1ous tUUNlll challenged its independence an crunch was needed to slow an of Selim s. Franklin, Altornev 11 Law, t19 HOTrcr TO CAEOlrOAs NI.ME STATEMENT anachronistic. Etsl 1)"1 Slrarr. '0'1' Misa, Ca!llotnl• IUJOERIOll COURT 01' TWE lUl"EllOll COURT 0 THI Thi tollowln1 "'"on II dolnt b\11ln111 u nhealthy, inflationary ex-19611, wnlcl\ 11 Ille plltt or ~~If/If., ot JTl.TE DI!. CALJFO•NIA FOii STATI! Oii CALIPD•NtA Olt 11; John Wright, influential head ' It ·r 1 ' th t th• ~Mdf .. !Ontd (~ Ill matttrl Ptrlalntng THI CO UNTY OllAHOI! fHI! COUNTY 01' ORANGI MEDICAL DATA SYSTEMS, '°9 of \Vrigbt Investors' Service pans1on. s c r1 JCS c aim a !o Ille'''"" of 1ald decedent, wlTMn lour Ho. A·l'Nst No. A·7tl11 Mlch•ISOll StrteT. NfWPOfl ll r1ch. any a brupt change in money mc~T~S •fl•• ll\1 tint nubllcallol'I of !hll EJIA!f of HA'l'WAllD c 0" T s NOTICE OF Hl'AlllNO 011 PITITION H1111n C1r1 DtYe/opm1nt, Inc. 2Wt which numbers some 1,000 supply is dangerous to the no0",'~,·, N•••m'-• •· ,.11 wHEE:LER, 1110 known 15 HA'l'W"'RD c , i~;1;:f',AeTs~1.0:rHwT1.',LYAHD POii Mlc.net1on s•re~1 •. Newoort Be1ch, c1Ht. banks and J "" · · WHEELER. 1110 ~ncwn tt H, C. C1lllornl1 !St•ll of lncorPOrtlJ.on) many a r g e economy BANI( o~ AMERICA WWEELER. Dtce11e<I. E•ll!t of w. OARL 8 AR NE $' lnls bu!ln•ss 11 coMOUdtc:I by • brokerage houses among it s ' NAT IONAL TllUST ANO NOTICE IS HERE &Y GIVEN to lh, Dtcea1rd. CO•POt"l llOll. SAVINGS ASSOCIATION crf'(lllO(I ol !ht tbovt n1m1d (lftedtn! NOTICE ts HERE&V GIVEN lhll SY Wll/11m f , Powtr, clients, claims the F ed has L EGAL NOTICE Sy: w. c. Engl1ch !h•I •II perSl)/'1$ "1.1vtna Citlm1 •O•lnst !~e Arthur Alrl htl llle<I ht rll". pellllon far Pr"51,,•nl more power over the economyl-------:-::::-:-------1 An1•1•n1 Tru" 0111''' ••I" dt«<:tn! i re r1t1ulrtc1 10 1111 ltltm, Ptobett o• will '"" for 111u1nc1 01 Ltllt" Thi• •l•temrnr wit rUtd wlltt "'9- h h P F·IJIJI. Executor of !hi WI!! 111. w;111 Ille niect118ry voucl\tr$o In rne oUlce T11!1menltrY lo Prtlllof>*r refertnct lo county Cltrk cf o,1n" CO!lnly Oii t an t e resident. " FICTIT IOUS IUSINl!SS 11\t atlOVt nemr<l ll•cf<ltnl of !ht clerll d tl\t aDOvl tn!llled (<>Uri, or wl\lcn It medt lor l~r!her penlcuters, t nd ()(.1obtr II, i971 , Some members Of !he Open NAME STAT!'MENT Selim S. Frank1ln IO P•t•en! 11\fm, wltn !hi nKt!ltrv ltllr lilt lime t n" plt tl of het rlno l~r Putlllth.0 Ortn" Cot1f Dtll'I' ~Uot, LEGAL NO'l1C E The 1Gllow1"9 ntrscof •re (lolng bu1lne·u 41t EJ1! Utn S!ro.tl vouchtfl, to tnt uoCltrslont<I rn cirri cl lfmt flt• btln 1e! lor Novl mbrr J(, 1971, Nov.rnl>tr l, 10, 11. 24. 1911 2fjl.1J J\tarket c 0 mm i t tee' he 11: [O•!• Mt1a, Ctllfornl1 PU2, JAMES L. RUBE L, JR .. ,..t!or11tY •• Lew, t i 9:.ICI 1.m .. In !ht CC!Jrtroom Pl OeP1•!·1--------------' t · d t d t d THE PURPLE TOAD CO., 111101 Ttl: C1UJ •0·?760 U.12 y;1 D!rorlo Nlwl'Qrl Bitch mtnt No, J of 1eld tour!. •I 10ll Civic LEGAL NOTICE matn atnS, 0 00 Ufl erS an Betch Blvd,, Space ,9, Hunlln~1on Alternty lor ExKlllor Callfc,nli tl66(1 w~!ch II the piece oi Ctnllr D•IYI Wtsl, In l~I CHY ol Slnll the WOrking Of the economy. Bffrh, Ca lllcrnla 91~1. Publl•lled OrtnOt Cot1t Oally Piie!, bulln•••;,, t~t ~ndtrslaned In I ll mt!Tt rs Ant, CAllletn!1 1-------------- NY Ope1•atio1i Impartial Clai1ns Unit Reduces Movif!g Gripes NEW YORK (UPI) E dward Goodstone of New York got an estimate of $350 to $500 for moving his h ousehold e ffect:;. but when t he bill came it said $695. The Goodstones also found t heir convertible sofa and two televisipn receivers d amaged, They took the matter up with J ames P. Harley. impartial chairman of the Moving and Storage Industry of New York for the past three years. Harley oFdeted a refund of $245. The mover paid prompt- ly . A Mrs. Palmrose was sup- posed to move on May 24, then the moving company, one of t he largest in the trade. said it couldn·l get to her job until July 9. \\o'ith her lease expiring J une 30, Mrs. PafmrQse was h opping mad.. She called H arley. The big mov ing com· pany soon discovered it could get Mrs. Palmrose packed and moved by June 30 after all. J udy Lutz got a $144 refund on her overcharge complaint to Harley. Bertha Turpin got $75. But no complaint is too rm.all for J-larley to adjust. P. Rosen got $25. Jn this case., the mover h ad quoted a price of $28 an hour and charged $35. of the impartial claims office has reduced c l aims remarkably. Out of 45,000 moving jobs in the New York metropolita n area in 1970, Harley rece ived only 168 com- plaints. Harley also handles complaints against firms that are not members Qf his association a n d frequently finds them willing to accept his judgment of the matter. Consumer Crusader Ralph Nad er recently urged the in- terstate c o m m e r c e com- mission to consider imposing a system modeled on H a rley's office on the interstale moving business. The moving business bas grown enormously in recent years. Its volume doubled in the past decade and presently is estimated at $3 billion a year. Nearly 20 percent of the people in the country move each year. The 300 New York movers a lone do a busines!I of $50 m illion a year. The division of !he moving business is interesting, Some are not {ta i O e d Robtrt E. Sendtrl. 20101 S•tcl> lllvd .. Ncvember l, 10, 17, 2l, 1911 2'169·11 ptr!olllino !o !Mt estalt o! ••Id oecedtn!, 0 1!f<l November I, 1971 P lJMi Sotct 69, Hun!lnoton E!r1ch, Call!crn!" wllhl" lour m.,.,1~1 lfltr !he 11,.1 W. E. $! JOH N PICflTfDUS 8USINl!U economists. Some. he said, are m.<11. A s 107 11 h LE GAL ·NOTICE PYbllttllcn of •~it ncrice. MAllTl~~'."Sc;~~~J:rtt: Tht tono:~',,.5,~~~~::i~ ...,11_ ' ·ncapable of mak1·ng nat'on· al 00'01"Y • inden, 01 ••c 01r.a Nov...,t>tr •· 1911. ,,, I 111v", Spice 69, HunJ ln;tcn Beith, ,..141,1 !<) vltolnl• oovli Whrtl•r 10lff wnsr.1,. aeu11v1rd . a5 Opposed fo r e g j 0 0 a I C1H!ornl1 9'1MI. FICTITIOUS IUSINEIS E•Kulrht at lnt Will of LOI A"lt!tt, C1tllornl1 to«l4 DtJ1tnd1blt M1lnlt n1nc1 I I r YI C • Sharl~"' l. s.,,., • .,, 7011ll B'acl\ NAME STATEME NT Tll: (2U) 11J.flst 2512' T1rr1no Or., Mlu lon vi.1 .. decisions. Blvd, SP1c1 69, HunTl no!cn lle1ch, '"' 1,11_,.,, '''''" 1, 0_,_ bo•I•••• J••••'",",~',•,•,••,", <lt(edt fll Anor"•v ior 1"1U110111r Cllllon A, snt1l•y, ism T•rr-Dr., C•ll!ornl• t2M!. 11. v.. "'"• Attorntv ii L;w ' ' Publltl\f'd Dr1ngt Co.111 Da lly Pllol, Miiiien Vlelo. Real Estate Head Named This buslnt1s-ll belnt conduded by I 'm CONST RUCTION CO., 136' lUl V(t DPPOrln Novtmber 9, 10, 15, ltll 303.l·ll lo'oi",'i'oo"oi'.lneH II be!ll'lt contfvdttl b'l llt Plrlntrs~lp, · •otrert E. 5,,,.,,,. For!ll\trn Dr .. Co1t1 M~ll. t1'16 New.or! a 11ch, Ctlttornle nM& LEGAL NOTICE Clifton A. Shelley ' ''' -C I John It. Alelto, 2l66 ~crdn1m Dr., T1lrnnent: (1141 •7J"4tlJ This lll!tmt nl Ill .. "11• .. C-·-Tnl1 11Tem,n! f<I w.Tn "'t ou n • Co:tt Mtlt . 91626 AHorntY fer Elttulrl• c -"'" Cle•k ot OrtMtt Counh on October 11, T"I' builneu 11 brlno tollducttc:I by tn Pubtllhed Cr•"ltt Co•ril D•llv l'llol, &A• Jiit !trk cf Or1ng1 County on: Oct. J,, 1,11. lt1l, by Btverly J , MiadQv, Otpulv jfl(llvldue\. N""tmber 10, 11, U 1nd 01c1mb1r I, IUPEAIDll COUIT OP THI 8,',,,,••vtrly J, Mtd<IDJO, OfPulY County Ccuntv Cler~. o "I 1 Pu~llShf<I Or•nve (oo~t D"llY Pil~t. Jonn , ,.. e o t11 JOll·ll STATE OP CALll'OllN IA l'Oll PubUstlld Ottn .. CO.II 0111~ Piiot, Tn11 ll•l•moM !llt'd w:tn 111• C11<111ty THI COUNTY OP' OllAHOE 0 10 I Oc!ober lO, 27 Ind Ncvrmbtr 1. 10, (fer~ of Orengt Coull!V on· No•. a, 1971 . LEGAL NOTICE NO. A·JIO.W cta.btr 21, Ind NoYtmbtr J, , I • 1971 19'9·11 Bv SHIV J, 81rol!~n, 0ePUT¥ COUnly l\IOflCI 01' HlAlllNO ON Pl!TIT10N 1'1! 2fll.n Jerome \V. Ernst of Hun-LE GAL NOTICE cte•~. l'Ollt PAOIATI! ol'. WILL AND FO• t ·ngton Be h h be d P~bll•~Pd or•11;• Co111 0111v p11o1. 8"11 l5'0 LrtTr •s Tl!STAMINTAllY LEGAL NOTICE J ac as en name F November lQ, "· "' lfld D•ctmbt• '· HOTICI! TO <Rl!OITOllS Est.It of TEO I RAINAllO ~OSIT, •k•'------~~~---~-. t t . 'd t I I ·ltO•l .ICl:U' SU~E•IOll COURT OF THI! 1-,. '"'' assis an vice pres1 en 0 rea llAlt 3111 1911 ' 1 STATE OF c ... LIFO llHI A FOil T~O B, AOSIT, ()f(flll!d. t t I · C k 8 k' P1CTIT IDUS ll UUNl!SS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N 1hM PIC'tlflOUS IUSIMISS es a e oans in roe er an s NAME srATl!ME HT LEGAL NOTICE THI covNTY OF OlltAHGI! UNION &ANK, ' c1111ornt• ccrnor111011. NAME ITATl!MIHT' Southern Counties R e g i o n Tht lol!owlno Pt'lon h dolno bu1lnr11 NG. A • '°'4l! h•• rllM ~,,.1,. • ..e11!1011 1or Protr11r of Tiit fcl11-r111 person 11 clolnt b;r1lr1111 h '" E1t1Te ol PAUL MELVIN llACOllS, Will in<I tor !Uutnct of letttr$ ,1, eadquarters In New p 0 rt AMERI CAN BARON COMPANY. 11oe1 fllCTITto"U~11 ~uStNEIS c:.cai:rie 15 HE11£1Y GIVEN to "'' Ttll&mtn!try to p1tll!on1r. referen,. to "Biii & Plec11", llSU 1111<11 IMI .. Beach. Mtnn $!'°''' Irvine, Ca11!crnl1 tU6• NAME STATEME NT crf<ll!cri ct the above named lltcrdrnt w!ilch h m•dt tor fyr1ner Ptr!ltul1rs, tnd Wunt!111ton lltt(h, Ctlllornlt. Ernst, formerly appraisal JaloQn D. llaeld ln1, 18056 Whl!twood Tilt 1o11owlno 111,ion 11 llcrlno bY1l111n thll 111 oerioni ll•vlng clalm• •••Inst 111, rh1! tile time •"" p!1c1 Cl nearlno me Ntney J. Wtrntr, ttlS.MtY• Avt., -W1~. lrvl11e, c.11ucrnl1 91'16t 11 ; ttlll oecl!'dtnl "'" rtQYlrtd In 1111 ll\tm, $tmr llal betn ''·' for NO¥rmber 26, lf11, 22, Gardtl! Grovt , Cllllor~Jt, officer in real estate loans, Tn r1 bu11n111 11 brlno (ofllluctrd bv 111 NEWPORT MARINE TECHNOLOGY, with tile ~ecrssarv ~0..,11.-1 1" !ht olflct al t:lO 1.m .. In th• ccuriroom ot Th!1 oos1nt11 11 bttna conducttd IW 1n J'oined Crocker Bank 1·n 1963 as lndlYl.,u•I. 2701 w. Coa•! Hw~ .• Newpott Be1ch cl the 'l«rk of tne above .~1i11ed touri. or Olnertmtnl No. J ot 11111 COtJr t, •I 700 ln<11¥14Ytl. Ja1<>n O. ltad!l l"ll , John F. HO!ltJ, 101' Visit C1~d1!, !o preitnl ftitm, wlth the nectllftrY CIY!t Cen11r Orin W11t, Jn lht CllY of N1nq J. Wt r111r an appraiser. Thlt 111ttmeMI Ille<! w'~h the Cou11!v NfwnorT Be"ch vouthtrt, 10 !ti• ufldtriloned •t Ille ortlce Stnl• Ana, C1llforn l1. This 1t1'11menr /!ltd wlt.h lhe Coum.,. E t · be r h Clerk of Drenot Cou11!y Oii Oe l. 19, 191!, This bu1lntSS II belno conclucttd by en OI hi ttto,ncy· HAFER SILLS & WOOD OaTecl Novembtr (, 1911 Citric el Orl nlt Cou111Y on. Oc t. J', 1911. r ns IS a m em r 0 t e Iv Btvtrlv J. Meddo~, Depyty Ccv nty ln,,!vlOual. U~len Benk ~o•re 50,',1~ Tower . Sult~ W, E, $1 JOHN, 8V Brve,!y J. Mtlldo• Deputy CCllnlV Knights of Columbus. Alpha i~~kf:RTSOH, "owseit & GA•LANO Jotrn F. HOl'!t'v . 0 '" c ... '°'' Ortf\Qr, c1111~11 9'1Mt, whl~ t11111 JAMESc~~'r.ai.'~'.kJ•. c~~~llthed Ore~"' Coasl 0811, ,.11ot K P · I I ·l d Thll 1tt1~mtl'll ll'f<I w<1 1 oun., clac1 01 cu1lMeu cf lht unders•orH:d in 111 o, ' appa SI ra ern1 y, an a ATTOANI YJ AT LAW Cieri! ot o,~1111 couniv on: Nov. t . 1911, mott'rs Pr•tmnl"~ 10 '"' '-''8" 01 111d Mn VI• Orio Octob•r 21, 1"" Nov1m~r ), 10, 11. Candi.date !or the A · •uo c1mpu1 Ori•• 11, Bettv J Btro5re" DtPulv co~"'' •• 1 · ''"' ·1 '" I• _ Ntw.ort •••ch, C1llf, HUI 1971 2"17·1' mer1can Ntwcort B1l (h, ceut, ttUI · ' ooc .... en, w n our m<><:' 1 t r '"' Ttl' c11 0 •7"41n I t•t I r R I E t A Clf'r~. llr•I 1><1tlll•~llC" ~· l~is nol.t t. '" 1 ' 11•·· ns ] u .e 0 ea s ta e p-Ttl: !40·56" Publlslltll 0 flft0f C'ctsl Dally Pllol, Qllfcl• Ocll:rtltt' u 1•11 .. orntr or: " ...... , LEGAL NOTICE praisers. Publl•h!<' Or1not t o.ti• O•llV Piiot, NO\ltmblr_ 10.. \7, 24, tnd Dtctmbtr '· TlolE "-l~T 'NATIONAL IA.NI( Pubtllh.O Drt nte Cotst D1Hr Pllot.,_~------------NO"Vembtr J, 10, 17. 2,, 1'11 19'2·71 191! .)o.U.11 OF ORANGE COUNTY N(llltmbrr '' 10, 16, lt11 30Jt·11 F·lhl' LEASE or F!""' out wrt~'• bf'!! tor Yl'U. En-lov the pr"!l9t an" OU'• d•lYlllO ptM1wre ..,,, 1 Contl~ll'l•I t•~ P•OYi<lt. Our l1111e ,.,..~•gtt" Wiii iet up • ~''m tlllt.cr tor YoU Pt"r1011t1tv. BUY • • • 1'72 MONTIGO Thi ntw Ptr10n11 tltt ctr wit" tllt bf9 ctr rldt. Find cul ttl l~t •11~~~••1111 of lt8Jfno lh,ovoh t l1c1try dlrttl <lffttr ctll our lttlt m1n1gtr .',,, 1 Mr. lud lowtn son Bv: Mlchtel P. 01kltnd, L E GAL NOTICE FIC TITIOUS llUl lNESJ LE GAL NOTICE Trust Office~ NA.Ml! STATEMENT Admlnl1!r1Tor Tht following prr1on It llolfll bulJMll I'. '"'5 of l~e El!lll of lht t b0\11 fllll'lf'd 1'·1404t I S: ' P'ICTITIOVS ll UUHl!SJ docedtnl l'IC:TlllOUl BUSINl!SS J & S JANITOlt SElt\llCf, lJW W, H"MI! STATf:Ml!HT HA,Elt, SILLS• WOOO HAMI .JTATEMl!NT Ad1,,,1, Sentt Ant , CtJllwn!i _t270t. The follcwlnt ptrlon fl O.Oftlfl bulllltSI U11l1111 fl•nll S1w1r1 The lcllowlno H•1cn 11 dolnt bu11nt11 Jtmet lli>fwrl K1111er, llO'J W. ts: S.Oulll Tt""tl' • S11!1t fOI ti: Alltm1. 511111 Ant. C•l!for~t• "1104. PRINCE CHARTERS. LTD .• 501 Jtlh Ot'l ntt, C1!1ftrftl1 ttut I, MAGEE ENTERPRISES Tlllt bu•lntU II Mino c-uctfll ~ 1n St .. Newcort fltteh, C1llf. 9'1.66(1, Tth (7Ul Jt7•'1.S1 '· DIAL ANO MAGEE. til 62nd l°"'tvl<lual. Gllllt" P1r11er Prince, 501 M11nol!1 At11rn1v1 l•r Admlni1rr11or Street, Ntwi:rott BHc~. Ct!lkornla J1me1 lltoblrt K~n!~r SI,. Apt, 211t, Soulh PtHdtnt. Publl1htd Ortnat Coall 01llY PHcl, Oouoltl 0, MIOff, 4li t.lnd Slrffr, Th11 l!lt""tnl !lied wllh In. Count'! T1111 Du1lne11 11 IHll110 conoucttd by In Octobtr 20, 11, and Nov1mti., 3, 10. HtwllO•l llNCh, Ctlllcrnlt. Cler11: cl O'•fltt C:011ntY .., October ,., !ndfvlllYtl, 19n ~ 'll!9·11 Tifis bO\lnfll I\ tielnt tondUC'led bi-t n 19n, tl'r Btil'rrtV J , Mlddolf, DtPutY (il!bfrt P1••1r Prlnct lftdl¥14Utl , County Clttk. Bv Sally s. ~onomtOe LEG~L NOTICE Douo111 G. Matt, P11blt1htd Ot1ntt Cotti OllY l"!lnf, kcr1l1'1' Thi$ llt!tmtflt !lied with ll'rl County Octobtr JO. 27 i nd Howmbtr J. 1,, This 1t11r....,nl filed wlllt ""' COU!'llY '·ltUt Cltrk of Otttlflt CovnlY Of! Novtmbfr 1, 1911 2147-11 Citric (Ill Ortl'ltl (C<IMIY Oii : HOY .•• ltll. FICTlflOUS IU$lNl!IS 1t11, by llavt,ly J. M""do~. 0.UIY av ll•tly J, 11'111111 Ot1111ly CounlV HAMI. STATIMl'NT • Covnh Clttk. LEGAL NOTICE Cttrk. TM followlnt per'Ofll tr• dolno Publl1htd O.t n" Cot1t Dtllr ~ltot,l--------------Pu1n1~'!d Otatlflt Cotll O•lly P!IOI bul1M11 It' ' NO"Ofl''"' l, 10. 11, 24. 1m 2'61-71 ~-1111• \ Ncw.,,.,btr 10, 11, '' Ind Ot«mHr 1, lERD·iEMP EQUIPMENT CO. ti JJT ,ICTITIOUS I UllNl.11 1J71 »:ll·71 C Eu~ll" Wfy, An11>1tm, Ctlllornlt , LEGAL NOTICE MAMI! STATIMIHT' W1vnt o, Sn<tnt, S~'1 ltocklH•• T'ht 1~1ow1n1 11er~n1 ••t !lolnt Drlvt, fl11tn1 P•rk, Ct!lfornlt, F·UMe buflne11 11: Jev L fleln11r1", '':It £11(tlYPIUI FICTITIOUS IUSIHISS llYFORO It E $EA ll CH, '311 11·111M Drl\lt, ANhtlm, C1l!fclrnl1, NAMI! l TATl'MlltT Ctndltwoad Dr., Hu,.flftt!Oll l ttcl'I, l'ICtlT1ou1 aus1Nl!St thlt bu1lne11 11 co""u~!td bY 11nt,11 T~t followlno "'"°"t ''' feint Cillfornl1 ,,. .. , NA.MB STATl!ME HT ptr1nt,llfo!p, bullnti' 15; ,.._ P. 0, Baa IOfJ, f'O!lll!ll!I \llllfta. 'TI\"11 loCloWfllt Pitlon II GOl"t bltlll'ltU JIY L. 1'1'•111Htfll KELOAKll°:lt TUNGSTEN COM~ANY, Ct!lfor~ll '210I. 11t ~r, 1ll!tft"tnr w•1 llltd wllll mt 30'9 81bb St•r''' Costt .Y,t1t, Ct!lf. Frtnk Bv!Ofd. t:lt1 ClftdllWOdCI Di!!"' WALTEll'$ SIGN STUO!O, 2'70ol COUftlY Cl.,rk of Or1n1t Cwnly on Mr. Ronlld Lint, 3019 ltbb S1,ttl, Hunllnv!on Btttn, C1l!lornl1 "646. HIWl>Orl Blv!!,, Htwoo•I e,ten, C•tll. Novtmlltr I. lt?l CoUt Me11, Ctill, M•r1trtf O, ll~lord, 9'0 C•M1twooi'_ W11!•r Woflt1ng Mt!hftf, 1101 Newriort Ct•T'IFICATIOH Mt. CCJln ltonild lint, 1'.i lrvln1 011~t. Hunllnoton lrtel'r, Ct"lornla. LEGAL NOTICE ... r Although the 300 m oving companies that operate In the New York market c reated their impartial claims set- tlement office in 1956, It still is the only one of its kind in the country, Harley !aid. Efforts are being made to se• up similAf plans In St. l..()ul!, Cin: cinnati. Los Angeles and several other big cities. About 25 percent is In transfers of military personnel Rnd their families. Another 35 percent is paid for by cor· porations. and this hustness Is about equally divided bet.,·een moving families and their er. feels and moving of fi ce furnishings and fixtures and light machinery. Ten to 15 percent of the business is moving he~vy or expensivt machinery and d e 1 i c a t e mRchines s uch as electronic computers. 1 --'-4f-!'!Y.d..,_t\t.»"llOCLJtttl\. C.lll I ~trelrt .!!tt!'~ !Jiit t~..Jott1tol111 IS .,.__,.. __ 1~1111t11~.it. -~ ' -,,,....--- r-Tlifi bul•~tU lt&ifnt Coiidu('tff'b-f n. cOffi<l<afy Of flitorr1in1l 0" flit In f hl1 bu1l_ntH 11 bt•llt (OflllUdtil bV I Tnl1 bu1lnt11 II btlnt condUClllf ltr lilt Over tht years the existence The remaining 25 percent Is composed of faMilie s and in· divlduals who pay for their own m ovins jobs. !ncllvtdutt. my of!o(t , W/111tm E. 5t Jofln, COUlllV Gt~trll P•rl"trshl~. ll'ltflv!dUll (hUlbt"" t n!:I Witt), Walt" Wcllg1nt Me1h1'1: Cltrk. av llt!!Y J, &110J1tn, Otou!Y. Rona!" L1!1t P'ranrt ll'rlo•tl. t hl1 111ttmtflt llltd wl!ll !hi Covntw t1'1.0(; Thi• tl•ltm"'t lllto:I wlm !ht County Thls 1ttlll!lltnl tllld with 1111 C'Ollnt'P Cl••• M Or~ntt CC\/n!V on: Nev. f, 1t11, C:h11tlt1 l . Tevltr, All,, Cltrlt: ot Or•"ll' C1u11ty tn: Dctotr1, If. cr,,k cl Or•ntt Covftty on Octobt• ,.,. ll y Bitty J. ltrt11tn, 0.l'\lfv C.cvnty UH lliu~by AYtllVt lt71, Sy lltvtrfy ~. MtidOJ, DtPU!Y 19'1, ~ 81vtrl1 J. M10dox, OiflUl1 Cit!'~. H•llll"•'on ,., ... Cttll. tOUS Cou"h CIPfk COll~IY Clttlh 2&2tl HAA90A l l VO., COSTA MESA • 640·5630 Publl1htd Orlt'llt Cot11 01llv Pllof Publlltlfll Ott~H C011I Dilly Pllol l"Ub!lllTtd Ort nH Cotll D1!11 PllM 'vbillht!:I 0.11111 Cct•11 Otlfy ,I~ Noull!¥lq,t1 10, 11, 24 tnd Otttmtltr 1, Novtmbtr JO, 11, 24 ind DtctmMr 1. October 20, '1 ll!O t«ivt"'Dlr J. 10. 1t11 OC!tbtf 20, 11 '"" NoWf!ltllf J, lOI "'------------------------·· 1971 »41·11 1f11 ~ J0.11.71 2131·71 ,,,, Hl'2•? ' ' • • • M OAl].Y PILOT se \Vtdntid,y Novtmbtt 10 1971 't = Your lflo11ey Insurance_ P-olicy Switching Safe? By SYLVIA ~TER Jf any 1~urance gent sug gests you switch a hey )OU own -life or ace dent and health -for a belier one tht law in most states r~ qUlf!S the agent to explain fully and clearly I.ht d1f ferences bet..-.een 1he pohc' the agent sa,rs you should cancel and the new one If the agent doem t makr this full d1Sclosure about the pohc1es he (or shel is brukinJZ Utt lav. and could forle1t hi~ hcense But '' tn if lM agent does tell \"OU tbe dtfftrtn<."tS thtre are mart} Utln'li Wdings to ruu cUsrlOSllre -and you \.\'f'll mav not understand v. hat IS being recommendtd Even 1f sou \.\'OUld ht-better off in some \\ avs bv S'-' 1tch1ng the d1sad vautages of change rrught rar outweigh the advantages the agent ts stressing And even 1f you are persuad ed by the arguments Frank Evans advanced s a 1 es manager for Continental Assuarnce Co g1'es \!OU the blunt warning ln \en few cases can changing 11\SUl'ance policies be ad\ antageou.s to the polic.>holder U n s c rupulous insurance agents sllll do exist although not on the scale of the pe5t \\hen thev lhn'<ed 1n the ghettos parhcularly They still do sell to the poor and uninformed then coax the 1g norant policyholder 1 n t o s\\ 1tch1ng to other policies after on1y a couple of .>ears - so !hat the buyer pays the front.end costs ove r and O\ er again There 1s still a real danger that JOU II make a ser1oos error 1n this area -If only because so many m1\hons of you own so many more 1n surance policies and 1n such a wide vp:r1ety than ever be.fore There are of course many reasons why you might change a life or accident and heatlh policy But the most hkely reason 1s that an agent ad vises you !hat another policy from another insurance com pany 1s a better buy Here therefore are a half-dozen basic guides to weigh if and when a switch 1s i;uggested ( l l Realize that with any new policy you are paying the full rront-end C{ISts all over again -Just a.s you did when you bought your or1g1nal pohcy Most agents com m1ss1ons and company ad m1rustrat1ve costs come out or your first-year premium If you ve had your pobcy for several years you ve already paid these costs once Don t duplicate them without ex traordinar1ly sound reasons (2) Also be fuUy aware of the importance of the con testability clause In most life insurance contracts -under which your insurance contract can t be broken because o{ statements you made on the apphcahon after the JXlhcv YOURS . TODAY! / - , htis b~n 1n forte for a penod usually t"o ~ear.s \\lt~ a ne" Placentia Vice Mayor Heads Firm Robert P Langer vice mayor and city councilman for the City of Placentia has been named property manager for Don Koll Company Inc Newport B e a c h industrial bu1 Ider-developer Company president Don Koll .sa 1d Langer will supervise th e management of all Ko 11 Business and I ndustrial Complexes 1n Cahforn1a Langer "'a.s formerly pro- perly manager for Dunn Properties Corp and con tract ad m 1n1 st rat or for Autonettcs A native or Long Beach Langer hves in Placen t1a with his wife and two sons Personalized • Stylish • Effi~nt r r r r t t t t I Order For Your•tlf or a Frien d Mey ba used on envelope; •1.-r1turn addres s febtl$. Also very h•ndy ts 1dent1f1ctt1on labels for mtrlunq pttJonel tems sucft e 1 books, record1 photo1 etc labels sf ck on gl•s' end mty bt used for mark ng home ctnned feed 1tem1 All ltbels ere printed with stylish Vogut type on fine quality white gummed piper. ---------------------, I l'Hlf!l llllttWlllMll tllJ •m•m•l ,.llltl Utt I l ,, .. , l"l'l"liflf Utd Olw 'o •~• If•• 1 1 ,.~1• .M••.., c1111 n.u .. I I I I I I I I I I L----~~L~!-~!~J'!~~----J OVER THE COUN1 1ER ..,....... ~-,...,., .. ., • ..,..."""""'a.-.~ •u-.:-'"flc'M .. "" ....... retlll .. -..-. .. '"~ .,. ct-11.-. NASO ll1tln91 for Tuesday, November 9, 1971 Complete-New York Stock List l I I • • WtdneJdq, Novtmbtr 10, 1'71 SC DAIL V PILOT @ • Wednesday's Closing Prices Coniplete .New York Stock Exchange List Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List I ,... ""'' lfllft.) Hltll l.tw Cl-Chi, S•lft "'' {IMlt.J H ... Ltw CIM1 C1t1 Stiff Ml (Mt.) "ltll LIW CltM Cllt . Briefs NEW YORK :-Compu ters are twamping businessmelt with inrormation they don 't need, AUred E1senpreis, a vice president of Allied Stores Co. said at the opening of the business equlpml!nt show In New York's coliseum Tuesday. He spoke during a symposium on point-of-sale tutomation. He said the major need reta il· ing Is lo reduct the fi ood of data to the minimum required information. ' J ( • • r . --- • ' .. r • ~· . . l . El Rancho Steaks ..• always naturally aged to pectk flavor ·and tenderness! Now's the ·tim~ to · buy them and save! • • . ' . -~ . U.S.D.A:. Choice, aged to perfection, naturally, trimi:ned for more value! Compare, see the difference at El Ranch~l Spare Ribs ... ~.~!!' ... 59~ So lean ••• they'll give you so much satisfaction, you'll be glad you shopped El Raiicho ! ·Rainbow Trout .................. 39:. Game Hens ...................... 89:. For cook-ou~ goodness! • , • min. 5 oz. each. Twenty-four oun""s of delightful dining! , fillet of Halibut ................. 89~ Sliced Bacon ................... :. 59~ Mild flavor • • sure to ".-in compliments! , El Rancho's O\vn ••• thicker ranch style slic.es ! Country Style Sausage ....... 69~ El Rancho's own, fresh, delicately seasoned! King Crab Legs ................. '1 99 From Alaskan crabs ••. and so much meat! · fREETURKEYSJ ... 10 at each El Rancho! Free! ••• All you need to do is .register • ". • and be lucky! No purchase nee~ry ••• just enter your name at a~y ~.l Rancho. Winners will be. no-- ti!ied Monday, November· 22nd ••• to come and ·Ket the-turkey· of their chooSi~ for that special Thanksgiving dinner! Delicatessen Specials! Rath' s Bologna .~L~ ~B~~. ~~ ~L. ~~T!. 3 i .89' Eveeybody'1 favorite lunch m.at ••• and when the name is Rath, you know the quality! 6 oz. pkf. sliC<!d Sliced longhorn ................. 69¢ Polish Sausage .................. 69¢ FiJher's ••• made of part skimmed milk! 10 or. SlotJcowski ••• with "old fashioned" fla.vor! 16 oz. Bar·M Franks .................... 65¢ · Homade Kraut ..... ; ............. 55 ¢ All meat ••• j~icy and delicious! l !b. pkg. Extra large economy size ••• 48 oz. jar McCoy's Chili .................... 59¢ With Iota or real meat! ••• 16 oz. pkg. Laughing Cow ..................... 55¢ French cheese ••• individual portions! •• 6 oz. Produce Specials! • . . 69 '.·_·. '--·-$ . · · m· · 1 orte . ouse. ~;;0~·.C.~C~C. -I&. Man sizfd satisfaction , , , U.S~l).A. C!toice, tender, flavorful • , , trimmed to afford moro good oatinrl T · · ·s· 1· • $1 19 op 1r 01n .... ~:'.~:4:~~~:.... lb. The Super. Stea.le for Super Shoppers! Fo1·k tender, "·ith natural flaYor ! Enjoy all the., goodness o! beef! Beef Brisket ....... ~R~"l !?~~L~~: ....... 99~ Ji.fore good eating fur your tnoney ! Lean as can be ••• and boneless ••• to offer more value! Extra Lean Grind ............... 89~ Chopped Beef Steaks ......... 99~ All beef .•• and always freshly ground! With all the hoarty flavor youofavor! I Super Grocery Specials! S&W Coffee ... !.~:~ ... 69' Your choice of grlnds.,, regular, urlp or elec.tra-pere ••• and no limit, no coupons tO bother with l (. • . ' a-9c r1sco ............ 3. L!: ~~~ .. . . . .. . . . . . " A value you're sU.re to \Velcome at this time of the year, with hQliday bakingjustahead ! Tender golden kernels from th~ Greeti Giant ••• in \•acuum packed tins to preserve flavor ! Tomato Soup· ...... ~~1~~ 10.~ .o!; •••••• 10 : $1 Stock up, at this price! You'll want to serve~soup, hot and hearty, often in the '~eeks· ahead! Cranberry Cocktail ...... 4~.~z: .•.•• 69c Ocean Spray ••• the name in. cranberries! Drink it for health ••• and because it's so delicious! Bractiall ......... •I· ' -Royale Toilet Tissue ........... 4 : s1 T'ovo roll packs ~ta price that you'd expect to pay for far lesser quality! More El Rancho value ! coilare the quality I •• ours has dark green heads, tightly closed .. stalks tender yet firm ••• fresh green leaves! They're reall)"fresh ! ' - Mushrooms ................ 89~ Potatoes .......... 10 La. BAG 39¢ E.xtraf1nc7 quality ••. hothouse grown! U.S. No. 1 Russets ••• in plio bag. Carrots ..................... 10~ G&tden freshness wrapped in plio bags! Red Grapes ......... 29~ Lusciously :sYt·eet •• inviting color! Liquor Specials! " -Crown Russe ~~~F:~A~~~H. $gss · Save 'le on the economy sU:e of this favorite! Don't forget mLxer:s! (uttysark ... ~.~.s11~ ... $16 75 Semational aavinis on the half-gallon size of a brand you know and trust! Windsor Canadian '559 Calvert's Extra .. ~4.99 Save .• 1.00 on the quart bottle! Blended whiskey. Save 40c fifth I Kai Kan Dog food 4 1" s1 Electrasol .......... ; ........ 69e Choose Jlleat Balls with Chicken, Chicken Parts, Chicken Ste\v, Burger Rounds, Beef or Ste\v ••• 15 oz. cans. Gets dishes clean and bright .•• makes glass,rar9· sparkle ••• and sa\Yes you 21c at this price! ..• 50 oz. package. Green Giant Peas .. 4 "'$1 .Hi Ho Crackers ........ 39; Sweet and tender. Save on 17 oz. cana ! Snack favorite from Sunshine! 16 oz. Green Beans ........ 4 "'~1 Noodles Romanoff .... 49; Green Giant ••• Cut or French No. 303 Stouffer's quality, frozen just for you I Asparagus Spears .... 69* Green Giant, so t~ndcr . ~ • 15 r/z. can Vegs. Monterey .... 3 '" 'l C&\V, delightful medley, frozen, 10 oz. Escalloped Apples .... 49; Stouffer's, so easy to serve! Frozen. 1 Broccoli au ~ratin .... 49¢ Heat and ser,·e, and enjoy Stouffer! Tumovel'S ............... 49¢ Handi· Wrap ............. 59; Froz.en goodness fron\ Pepperidge ! Big savings on big 300 ft. roll, Dow! Glade ..................... 49¢ Sliced Mushrooms .... 39; 'Vhoosh •• odors are goner Wohnson's. B 'n B, Broiled in Butter, 21!. oz, siz~ Stewed Tomatoes 4 '" '1 1-lunt's, for so many recipes! 14¥2 oz. Ajax Cleanser ..... 2 "' 29* 'Vith bleaching ac.tion I Regular :size. Petite Slrah ........ ~ M~teus Rose ..... ~2.89 Pricea in. effect Thur. throuqh Sun. Unpolluter .............. 79¢ Liquid Ivory ............. 59~ Dey ;.!De, ruby red •• ; fifth I ARCADIA '-· • • 1 .rn d Hunl •n>IOn 01 ' I ' '; ' Dinner wine that speaks for it:s'elf? 1111 I I 1111' ... PASADENA : 310 Wes! Coloiado Blvd Biil 1'1111' .. Nov.11, 12, IS, 14. No ~alea to dealers. Opc11 d~ilv 9 to 9 ••• Sundail 10 t• 7 Ecology minded detergent! 49 oz. pkg. So kind to your hands I .. 32 oz. SOUTH PASADENA : rr~.,,0111 and Hu n ttn~ton 01 1111 I. 1'1111' .. HUNTINGTON BEACH : Warner and Alr,onQu1n 1Boa1dw.1lk Cr.ntrr , 111.ll 1111 !' '·" NEWPORT BEA CH: 2717 NeV1po1I Blvd .ind 1511 [asthl11fl Or £,11ihl11ll VdiJge Cenir" I • l I I Wednesd1y, Novtmbtt l~. 1971 s Marine Corps fights Racism With New Cour·~e. - SAN DIEGO 1APl -The l'o1arine Corps. \\·tuch traditionally thinks of itself as the roue:hest and toughest or the military branches, is atlenipting to teach human relations to its men and women . T,fle .experiment in t ea c h i n g leatherneck& to live in harmony "'ith their felloi,v man is designed, in a 20-hour <.'Our6e, to elinlinate the cause~ of race turmoil which has marred mar~nf duly at many bases. Those behind it ~it \\'on 'l turn the troops into pacifists. The plans call for every marine -of- ' ricer and enlisted -to get about 20 hour$ of instruction and discussion about · hwnanitarisn values. the 1nilitary 's rune· tlon. and the philosophical and specific problems between the races -1rith a refresher course every year. Robert L. Humphrey , director of the \\'Orldwide inter-cultural progra1ns of lht' :i\merican lnstit~tes or Heoearch, hc_fped develop the program and says the.re is more to it than just talk. "The tlme' is past "'hen any minori~· group is going to accep t classrooni Snob-Sliopping· Neiv Ne i1nan-Marcus Book Out DALLAS 11.:Pl l -The 1971 edi1ion qf the Nein1an-~1arcus Christmas Book (not catalogue, please! is oUt -a bountiful· co llection of holiday gifts for the very discriminating as v.·ell as a bunch of things you can live v.•lthoul. Among the glitter of a 12-caral d1<1- mond solitaire ($1311.000) and the plush of a noor leng th broiidtail lamb coat ("very rare qu ality" -$12,500) are sprinkled i:;ome of your n1ore earthy items : -An eye make-up bar \\'ith 62 c~lors of shadow, eight creams and apphcators ( $300 -allow three weeks L -Six mugs v.:ith fu!l-color tarot cards designs ($8), -Three soap "snowballs'' in a· 6 inch tin pail ($5). -Fourteen-ear at gold collars stays 1 S2U Medic Explorer Scouts Looking For Members ' Young n1en interested in medical laboratory careers are invited to att end lhe next meeting of the l\1edical Ex plorer Scouts in the auditorium of Sou!h Coast Community nospilal at 1 p.m. Thursday. Nov. 18. · • The r..tedical Explorer Scouts program at the l~pital is open to young men aged 15 to 21 from the Laguna Beach, San Clemente and r.1ission Viejo high ~choo\ areas, \\'ho are interested in exploring careers in 1nedicine and para-medical fields. The scouts 1neet b1-11•eekly at the hospital \Vhere they are introduced to aH aspecls of hospital \\·ork by hospital staff members. Future meetings v.·ill be concerned 1v1th careers in radiology, pharmacy. physical therapy and nursing. Winter Festival In LagLu1a Beacl1 Slated Nov. 20 Folk songs, 1nadrigals, spirituals and se lections from Broad"•ay musicals, along \1•ith a ne"' American con- temporary \\'Ork \\'ill be featured in the Laguna festival Chorale's \\•inter concert in the Art Gallery, 307 Cliff Dri\'e. at 8 p.m. on Nov. 20. Jack Krefling 1vill conduct the Chorale and soloists include Judy Krefling , so prano: Joe \Vood, lenor : and Bill San- didge, baritone. Spotlighted in the first half of the pro- gran1 \\'ill be music from "r.lan of La r..1ancha '' and '·Brigadoon." The second ha lf \\"ill fet1ture composer Randall Thompson's "The Peaceable Kingdom." a 1\·ork for unaccompanied mixed chorus "'ith text from the book of the prophel Isaiah. Tickets, at Sl.50 for adults and 7fl cents for studenls and children may be ob- taine d at the door. or reserved by calling 499-1043 or 459-44~fl. lflari11er· Orbit the pair1. Then. from the for-those-who-ha1c- e\'erything-and-lhe11-son1c catcsory, you can se1ect: --Computerized diet' t battery included, $!0) -A 32-n1illimeler·long f' a berg e_ hip- popotamus wi th ruby eyes !$6,000). '-A koni n \\'ood scultpure tno annsl, 9th century Japa nese 1$3.5001 . -BrisS Engilsh bobby's whistle l"for his or her security" -SlJ). . But still. tucked a1nong all these prac- tical suggestions are the eye-poppers Neiman·s has made a trademark througl1 the years. Past extravaganzas ha\'c in· eluded a truC'kload of pink oir 1de!i\'ery date not specified). his and her sub- 1narines and Chinese junks. Through this year's biggies. you could : -Do some real planning ahead, by buying \\l'O "gratefully vacant'" mun1my cases !"his and her" authenlicated pair, approximately 2.000 years old. $16.000 lhe pair\. -Host a private shOl\'ing on Jan 1. 1973 of Broad\';ay·s "No No Nanette '" in l\ev.• \'ork. and a theater party for the casl. 1,243 persons plus yourself \$42,8801. -Buy the "fortr:ess or the fn.•e\\•ay,:· a total transp:irtalion security environ1nent ca r-tank, loaded 1\•ith safely and a11 - 11poll ution geegaws 1$845.300 -"10 per - cent do\Yn ... 36 easy payn1enls of $24,192.49 per n1onth"l. -Take a n1onth's charter cruise v.•llh five fr iends on the yacht F'anda11go.. ll has a ere\\' of six and a Cordon Bleu Chef. Suggested point of departure : Las Palmas, Canary Islands, Spain. 1S20,000 all inclusive, excepting V.'ine and liquors). And for the caplain. \\'hat about a blue tie-dyed cha1nois-suede jacket tS!l.il and jean-cut slacks tS9i>f. The crass are not forgotten. \'ou t.:an simply gi\·e cash in the forn1 or a Neiman-l\larcus gift bond ··in any denonination from $10.00 to exceedingly gene rous'" or N-~I gift coins in one. fi\·e and ten dollar denominations. plus SI ;)U for the gifl coin bag. And for good old flashy opulence, you would be hard-pressed lo match a $45,000 bracelet of 22 black fire opals and 66 pear-shape diamonds scattered as tea\·es and blooms along a golden l\\'ig Fi nally, there is sonic SGO-an-ounce perfun1e that can be t1sed as sn1ell1ng salts v.·hen lhe bill coincs (in January). Poor Clare Sho'v Set Dec. 11-12 The Se<·ond annual Poor C I a r e '.\!issionar,\' Siste rs Art Sho11' h~. bet'n rescheduled for Del'. 11-12 at the Village \\"esl art center in Laguna Beach. The charil\' sho11' \ras originally scheduled for South Coast Plaza in Costa ;\1esa but a scheduling conflict forced \1·ithd ra\\·al. Artists fron1 !hroul'!hou t Southern California donate \\'Ork for the sh0 \1". 1he profits of \\'hich help th<' Poor Clare i\lissionary Sisters do social v.·ork in the area. The sisters arc originally fro1n 'cuerna\'aca, j\.Jex .. and hope to build a 1nission in Sant:i Ana or Garden Grove. i\1avor Ed Just of F'ountain Valley has agre~ to be one of three judges lor the show and auction. The other hYo judges have not been na1ned. 1\r'tist's conception sho\vs ~1ariner 9 in orbit around ~Jars after 248· million mile journey from Earth. Orbit of red planet is scheduled Sat· urday. f\Iarlner O's mission is to take teJevlslon ptctures of ~lars, mapping about 70 pcrcenl of the planers surface, and lo study ~lar. tian temperatures and atn1osnhere. Orbits of red plancl's l\~·o tnoon~ al so are detailed. .. discuaslon as a solution.". Uumphrty says. That's \\'hy they are stressing as ~~~ most important part of the program v.•hal happens after the 20 hours of instrurtlon anil dist:ussion -lhe "Individual action program." Besides inembers of each race being fllCQ\lf.4ged t~ get out in the civilian com- 1nunfty and 1 work with-the poor in orph anages qr old folks' homes as a means of Jearping more alxlut a dil!erenl way or life. Kid . Jfleets Cliild But the major streu ls within the Marine Corps itself. The goal is achieving better personal relations aod, as a result, a more effective mili tary unit. At present, 19 office rs and-43 enlisted men bet\\·een the rank of sergeant -and gurmery sergeant are taking a three· month course to be human re!Jtions in- structors . Another class will take lhe a>urse beginning-In January. and a penna(lelll school w~I !>e set up after that. I · "1ost of the student s are volunteers who \\'ere selected on the basis of such raetOrs as persona}lntervte ws, scoring at least 110 on an IQ-like test and demonstrating leadership ability. Ten arc Negroes. two are ~1exican-American •nd the remaining are Anglos. t.Iaj. Herb Seay, the school director, says plans ca ll fo r the men trained here to return to their home bases where they \vii i train another group of marines tD serve as dlscli.sslon Jejlders. T h e dfscussio"n · leaderi will provide small groups with their 20 hOurs of human rela· . Uons inatruction whUe the fint ll'OUI supervises the overall operation. Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr., com- mandant ~r the Marine Corpe, ordered development ot the program arter rac11:I dis turba nces at marine bases and other mi litary installations bega n. "There must be a lfully Integrated Marine Gorps in whlch1 t.11 marint.9 ~ Y.11.atever ract', color or creed are u one," Chapman said in a message to commandes la.st January. Humphrey says a corp.5·Wlde aur\lef taken by the marines indicated nearly 90 percent want to do aomethiDg to improvo race relations. How do you tea ch human relations'! Of central importance in the Marine Corps program are philo s o phic 1l discuss\ons early in the 20 hours of In· strucUon. ?lfarines v.·Hl di.5CUS.5 v.na ( Humphrey calls the "dual life varue:• which. says that JI.lln, governed bY, reason, is concerned about a larger 1eg4 ment or hllplanity than jus~ himaelf'and his immediate: fam ily. " Humphrey says most people acce pt this dual life value. e.ilher because they gen- uinely-are concerned or becauae ibe'Ji feel society expects them to act as lf"lbet, are concerned. How much or the rest of society they concern themselves which varies with the individual. but Humphrey says he menlt wants to get them thinking along tbese lines. • This discussion is guided into one about equality. Here the Marine ~ hopes to make it s men and women IN other races as i~vidual human beings and see that by d~priving others of tbelr basic human rights they are threatening their own rights. As military personnel, then, they are encouraged to think of themselves not as potential killers but as derenders of life, Humprey says. --11ey. silly that's not to eat.'' says 11ealher Noelle sion Viejo \\'here n1any of the animals v.•alk around Sher\vood, as baby goat nibbles on her S\veater. It's loose nlingling \vith the visitors. Chil dren may pet He isn't wo rried, however, that thls concern wUI prevent men rro~ killing io a combat situation, he says, add ing : • ..-:.' ..:d::•:.:il:.cY..:OC:::.:c.::u:.;rr..:•;;;";:.':.•..:•;:t ..:D::l:.d..:~::.I •::;c:.:D:::o:.:n::•::;ld:.':.s..:F..:•::.r;,:m:...::i n:...::M::.i s:.· _ _,1,,,h"•..:•~n;,:i;,:m::•::;1lse._::a;.cn;d on some occasions feed them. "I have never found that teaching men humanitarian values makes them in4 tell ectual pacifists. They still see ·the need to ocea sionally kill an aggressive force to save life." Driver Co1nes to Aid Of Officer in Pain ' LOS ANGELES (UPll -Andrew Senyei. 26. \1'as dr iving to hts college classes Tuesday \1·hen a policeman stopped him for allegedly driving through a stop sign. The patrolman. Robert C. Houston. 26. \\•alked over to Senyei"s car and in time-honored traffic officer style hunched dO\\'n lo peer through lhe dri\'er's \l"indO\\". 'fhe officer remained hunched ove r for several seconds and then moaned, "Get help .'' He said he could not st raigh ten up and pains were shooting through his back. Sen~·ei fumbled \1·ith the radio microphone in Houston's squad car. "Am I coming in lo the right persons?·· he asked ... Send help .there's an officer in· jured here." • Other officers and an ambulance arrived to find Houslon kneeling in pain on the pavetnent. Doctors al Glend ale Adventist Hospital said Houston :so1neho1v had pi nched a ne rve in his back \\'hen he stooped over lo loo k in Senyci's car. He \Yas later reported res ting comfortabl y, , Senyei continued to his classes -\Yithout a ticke t. Ga1u1011 Heads F11nd Drive South Coast area telephone company manager Bob Gannon i\londay \\'a~ chosen campaign director for the i'\ovem· ber fund dri\·e of the New South Coast Unite Fund. Gannon 's 1·ice chairman 11•ill be Frank Bfinkman. Both n1en will play a key role in a special, e1·ening meeting next Tuesday a~ the San Clement Elks Lodge to explain the fund 's function and organization to the general public. Volunteers-needed tu insure the ~uc­ l'ess of the drive-can offer services at that 8 p.m. 1necting. The campaisn is continuing throughout the Capistrano Bay area with residential and industria l sources the prime targets. Volunteers already have begun meeting to map the fund drive calculated to blend many appeals for money into one annual Pediatric Unit At Free Clinic The Laguna Beach Free Clinic has an· nounced plans to begin opetating a week- ly pediatric clinic at the facility begin· ning Nov. 17. Officials at the tlinic. located at 422 Glenneyre St.. said the pediatric services \\'Ill be available on \Vednesdays begin- ning at 2 p.m. ?<.tothers with children up to age 16 may bring the youngster in for inoculations, reg1.1.lar check-ups ..and screeniog for referrals to Specialists. ~ .. ~. In the past. the Free Clinic has only been open in the evenings for adults. The new service, officials said, can be made available because seve ral area pediatri· cians have volunteered their serv1ccs. Dish,vare Thief Makes T'vo Trips project. Fund spokesm~111 said this week that teacher!! and olher employes in the Capistrano Unified School Districl ha\'e 1>on trustee concurrence l\'ilh their re- quest to have foir-share gifts deducted fro1n their \\'Biles. Other n1 ajor employers \\'ill be asked soon to follo\\' suit. said United Fund J>residcnt Roy Garbarine. Voluntee rs to share in dozens of tasks arc still needed and can contact the t:nitcd F'und offices at 492-9661 any business day bc!\\'een 8:30 a.m. and. fl:30 p.n1 . The fund headquarters are located at 305 N. El Camino Real. ~3 STORES Ill---'" TO SERVE YOU 2300 HARBOR BLVD. AT WI LSON JUST SOUTH OF Fire Department Headquarters Bids Scl1eduled Sealed bids fo r lhc construction of San Clemente·s new fi re departmenl head- quartrrs will be opened at II 1.m. Friday-the first step in the project v.·hich \\'ill be completed early ne.rt year. Budgeted amounts for the new head· quarters proposed for a dri\'eway area nex t to the existing fire fac ility are about $1411,000. The two-level structure complete \\'ilh offices, garage s and dormitories to house dozens or fire men wa! designed by architects \Villa rd 1'. Jodan and l\-1arvin Ren fro. Councilmen accepted the working drav.·ings last November, The new headquarters wi!l be the city's first large enough to acco mmodate fire companies on a 'round-the-clock basis. Special caissons driven into the slanting hillside si te will anc hor the foundations for the headqua rters. City Manager Ken Carr earlier lhis fall said the expected completion date for the hcadquarlers is about r.1arch of 1972. Funds for the project p,re already set aside and are the accumulative revenues from the state rebate on cigaret sales lax. Funds also ex ist in the sa me budget for the first yea r's salaries for foar more firemen who \viii be hired early next year. During the co nstruction period the city \\•ill reactivate its old fire department headquarters in the city yards on Avenida !\tiramar. \Vith this sort or ph i l os oph ic al background, the transition to iriter4 cultural or race relations can be made ~ause the problems can be judged in terms of human relations, Humphrey, said. How do the men taking the instructor cours~ feel about it'! "\Vhat we have Is the de sire.lo improve ~latlons" said 1st Lt. Bob Goeckltl of Syracus~. N. Y. 1'And the convtcUon lbat something must be done so that people can learn to live together." Sgt Dennis Edwards of Houston says "if it.solves JO percent of Ute problems,'' we have achieved something." Tustin Trustee Fails to Win Review of Books· Tustin Union High School trustee Robert Bartholomew failed to convlncti fellow board members they should loot at a list of some 400 books offered as a gift to University Hlgh School before approv- ing the gifl acceplance. __ .,, Stewart Brown of 18116 Leather•·oop \Vay, Irvine, was listed as donor of the 400 books and an electric pitchini machine in Monday's board agenda. Supt. William Zogg reminded the board or its policy on book gifts. Books given for use in classrooms are re viewed by the board while volumes orrertd for librarY, use are sc reened by the librarian. . All of the Brown books are destined to be used in the Un iversity High Library, Zogg said. Bartholomew. a John Birch Society men1be r from Tustin , withdrew his sug .. gestion that the board screen a list of the books. YOUR -~ CENTER WITH FRIENDLY, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUL SERY· ICE. PLENTY OF FREE'PARKING IN BOTH --FRONT AND REAR-MALLSr ALL-ON STREEf LEVEL THERE AltE MOltE STORES ( IN OUR BACK MALL \ ' Laguna Beach police are looking for a pair of young \\'omen one of whom distracted a shopkeeper f.1ooclay af· ternoon while her companion carted off $420 irl antique dishware. Officers said tM !heft occurred at the Brass Kettle. an antique shop at 439 N. Const Highway. SAN DIEGO FREEWAY IN THE HEART OF COSTA MESA 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA ' I • r-. • I , ~ ., , . • . . -. -I • . i_ l ' ' El Rancho Steaks ..• always naturally aged-to peak flavor ·and tenderness! Now's the time to buy them and save! Spare Ribs FRESH! MEATY! 59~ ....... •"·-· ..... · So lean ••• they'll give you so much satisfaction, you'll be glad you shopped El Rancho! ·1a1hbow Trout .................. 39:. Game Hens ......... : ............ 89~ For cook-out goodness! ••• min. 5 oz. each. Twenty-four ounces of delightf'Ul dining! Fillet of Halibut ................. 89~ Sliced Bacon ..................... 591. Mild flavor •• sure to ''tin compliments!, El Rancho's O\vn ••• thicker ranch style slic.es ! King Crab legs ................. 'l 99 From Alaskan crabs •.• and so much meat ! Country Style Sausage ....... 69t. El Rancho's own, fresh, delicately seasoned! . fREETURKEYlll ... 10 at each ii Rancho! Free! .•• All you need to do is_ register ••• and be lucky! No purchase nec~ry ••• just enter your name at an:y E_l Rancho. Winners will be" n°" tified Monday, November 22nd ••• to come and .ret the-turkey' o! their chooiinr for that special Thanksiiving dinner! · Delicatessen Specials! Rath' s Bologna .~l~ -~~. ~ ~~l. ~~T!. 3 : 89' Eveeybodf'• favorite lunch meat ••• and when the.name is Rath, you know the quality! 6 oz. pkf, sliced Sliced Longhorn ................. 69¢ . F iJher's ••• made of part skimmea milk! 10 or. ·Polish Sausage .................. 69¢ Slotkowski ••• with "old fashioned" flavor! 16 oz. Bar~M Franks .................... 65¢ All meat ••• i~icy and delicious! 1 lb. pkg. , Homade Kraut ..... ; ............. 55¢ Extra large economy size ••• 48 oz. jar McCoy's.Chili ....... ~ ............ 59¢ With Iota of real 111eat! ••• 16 oz. pkg. Laughing Cow.: .................. 55¢ French cheese .... individual portions! •• 6 oz. Produce Specials! lraccall ......... •I· Compare the quality I •• ours has dark green heads, tightly closed .• stalks tender yet firm ••• fresh green leaves! They'~• really' fresh! Mushrooms ................ 89t. Potatoes .......... 10 u. w 39¢ Extra fancy quality •• , hothouse grown! U.S. No. 1 Rnssets ••• in plio bag. Camts ..................... 1 o:. G&tden freshness wrapped in plio bags! Red Grapes ......... 29ft. Lusciously &\\·eet •• inviting color! Liquor Specials! -. -Crown Russe HALF·GALLON $88~ • • •••••••• Save.41c on the economy size of this 'favorite! Don't forget mixers! Cuttysark ... ~.~.s1~1~ ... $16 15 Seluatlonal 1&vinp on the half-pllon size of a brand you know and truatl Windsor Canadian SS.59 Calvert's ~xtra .. ~4.99 San .• 1.00 on the quart bo!Uel Blended whiJkey. Save 40c !i!th! U.S.D.A , Choice, aged to perfection, naturally, trimmed for more vti.lue ! Compare, see the difference at El Ranch? I ·P ··1 ·. h. . 5169 or . er . ouse .. U~~~~·.~~C~:.. I&. JIIan sized sati.Uaction •• , U.SJ>.A. C!toice, tender, flavo~ful • , •• trimmed to af!onl more good eatiniJ T , s· I' • $189 e»p 1r ~1n .... ~~:~:': ~~~:.... lb. The Super Steak for Super Shoppers! Fo~k tender, with natural flavor! Enjoy all the goodness ol bee!! • Beef Brisket ~ ...... ~R~"! !?~~~! ....... 99~ Mor,e good eating fur.your tnoney ! Lean as can be ••• and boneless ••• to offer more value? Extra lean Grind ............... 89t. Chopped Beef Steaks .......... 99:. All beef ••• and alwaya freshly groundl With all the hearty flavor you favor! Super Grocery Specials ! S&W Coffee ... !.~:~ .... 69c ~ -- Your ehoice of grinds ••• regular,drlp or ele<.tr .. pere ••• and no limit, no couponJ to bother with! (. • . . 89c r1sco ............ 3• L!: ~~~ •• ~. =·..... .. A \•nlue you're sure to 'velcome at this time of the year, ivith hq}iday baking just ahead ! ' Niblets CorR.!!.0.~~~s .. 5 i$1 Tender golden kernels :Crom the: Greeti Giant ••• in vacuum packed. tins to preser1e flavor ! Tomato Soup ...... ~~1~~ 10.~ .o.z; •••••• 10 : $1 Stock up, at this price I You'll want to serve soup, hot and hearty, often in the weeks· ahead! Cranberry Cocktail: ...... 4.a.~z; ••••• 69c Ocean Spray ••• the name in.cranberries! Drink it for health. •• ·1and because it's so delicious! Royale Toilet Tissue ........... 4: $1 Two roll packs at a pric.e that you'd expect to pay for far lesse r quality? 1'Iore E l Rancho value! Kai Kan Dog Food 4 1" s1 Electrasol ......... ,. ; ........ 69¢ Choose Meat Balls with Chicken, Chicken Parts, Chicken Ste\\•1 Burger Rounds, Beef or Ste;v .•• 15 oz. cans. Gets dishes cl~an and bright ••• makes glass\vare: sparkle ••• and saves you 2lc at this price! .... 50 oz. package. Green Giant Peas .. 4 for •1 .Hi Ho Crackers ........ 39; Sweet and tender. Save on 17 oz. cana! Snack favorite irom Sanshine! 16 oz. Green Beans ........ 4 for '1 Noodles Romanoff .... 49' Green Giant.,. Cut or French No. 303 Stou:C!er's quality, frozen just for you J Asparagus Spears .... 69¢ Green Giant, so tende r ••• 15 oz. cn.n Escalloped Apples .... 49' Stouffer's, so easy .to serve t Frozen. Broccoli au Gratin .... 49' 11eat and ser,·e, and enjoy Stouffer! Vegs. Monterey .... 3 '" $1 C&\V, delightful medley, frozen, 10 oz. lurnovers ............... 49¢ Handi· Wrap .. : .......... 59" }~rozen goodness from Pepperidgc ! . Big savings on big 300 rt. roll, Dow! Glade ..................... 49¢ Sliced Mushrooms .. ,. 39; 'Vhoosh •• odors :ire gone! .Johnson's. B 'n B, Broiled in Butter, 2Va. 0t. size. Stewed ~TomatoeSl~ •1 1-lunt's, !or so many recipes! 14.Yz oz. -Ajax Cleanser .. ~ .-:-2: 29 ¢ With lileaching ac.tion I Regular size. PeHte Slrah .. : ..... ~ . M~teus Rose ..... ~2.89 Pricea in effect tlAur. through Srm. Unpolluter .............. 79 ¢ Liquid Ivory ............. 59~ D17 wine, ruby red •• : fifth! Dinner wine that speaks for itself! Nov.11, 1!, 19, 14. No ~nlea to dclllcra. 0pm•d4i1v 9 to 9 .••• Sunday 10to1 Ecology minded detergent! 49 oz. pkg, So kind to y~r-hands I .. 82 oz. ARCAD IA . '. rnd H""'"''''" Or Iii! f, PASADENA: NM· SOUTH PASADENA : )i/i'i/. HUNTINGTON BEACH : NM· NEWPORT BEACH : nn Newport Blvd lnd , 1 , , •1 , 11!!1 320 West Colorado Blvd ." Fremont and Huntington Or •· W;11ner and Algonquin (8oa1dwa!k Cen ter 1 "· ])~~ [J~tblu!! Or (J ',tblJl! V ·llJ~r Crntr .. \ ' . • I I I '. \ \ Wedntsd1y, November 10, 1971 s DAILY '1l'1 :J Marine Corps -FightiRa~:ismWith-New Con~ SAN DIEGO IAPl The A1ar!ne Corps, which traditionally thinks or itseU as the roughest and toughest of the military branches. is attempting to teach human relations to itt men and "'Omen. The experiment in teach i n g leathemeclu to live in harmony \o\'ilh their 1 fellow man is designed, in a 2tJ.hour ' Course. to eliminate· the causes of race turmoil which has' marred marine duty al many baSes. Those behind it say it won'l turn the troops in to pacifists. The plans call for every marine -of· ricer and enlisted -to get aboul 20 hours of instru,·tion and discussion about hU111anitarian values. the military's runt· lion. and the philosophical and specific problems fletween the races -with a refresher course every year Robert L. flumplu·ey , direcl9r of the \\'OrldWide inter-cultural progran1s of the /\.merican Institutes of llesear~h. helped develop the Progra111 and says there is n1ore to it than just talk. "The time is past \\'hen any minor ity group is going to acetpl classroo1u Snob 'Shoppi11g New Nei 11ian-~1arcus Book Out DALLJ}S (l:Pl l -The 1971 edition of the Neiman-l\1arcus Christmas Book t not catalogue. please) is out -a bountiful collection of h-Oliday gifts ror the very "' discriminating as \rell as a bunch or things.you can live \\·\thou!. Among the glitter of a 12·Carat dia· mond solitaire ($150,000) and the plush of a noor length broadtaH lan1b coat (''\·ery rare quality '' -$12,500) are sprinkled some or your more earthy items: f -An e}'e make-up bar '"ith 62 c~lors or shadow, eight creams and applicators ($300-allow three \\·eeks>. -Six mugs with full-color tarot cards designs 1$8). -Three soap •·snowballs" in a 6 inch tin pail {$5). -Fourteen-carat gold collars stays !52\l the pair). Then. fr om the for-those·\\'ho-ha1'e-- ev~rything·and·lhe'n.son1c category, you can select: · -Computerized dice 1 batlery included, S<IO I. -A.. :r.?-millimeter-long F' ab e r g e hip- popotamus with ruby eyes 156.000/. -A konin \\'ood scultpure 1 no arn1 s), 9th ceritury Japanese ($8.fXMll. -J?rass Engilsh bobby's whistle ('·for his or her security" -Sil L But still, tucked among all these pral'· t1cal suggestions are the eye-poppers Neiman's has made a trademark through the years. Past extravaganzas have in· eluded a 1ruckload of pink oir ~de:lvery date nol specified). his and her su b· n1arines and Chinese junks. Through this year's biggies. you could: -Do some real planning allead, by ·buying l\\·o "gratefully vacanr· 1nu111my cases !'·his and her" au thenlicated pair. approximately 2.000 years old. $16.CIOO the paitL -Host a private showing on Jan. 1. 1973 of Broad1\'ay·s "No No Nanette" in i\ew York, and a theater party for the cast. 1.243 persons plus yourself 1$42.8801 . J distuasion as a solµtion ," Humphrey says. Thal's \\'hy they are su·essing as the most in1portant part of the progra1n \\'hat happens after the 20 hours or instruction and discussion -lhe "indi\'idual action program.'' Besides members of each race being enc.vuraged, to get oul in the civilian rom~ munity and ~·ork with the poor in orphanages or old folks' homes as a means of Jearning more about a different way of life. Kid lf'leets Claild But lhe major stress is within the ~fariIJe Corps ·Jtself. The goal is achieving bettl personal relations and, as a result, a more effective millLary unlt. At present, 19 offi~n and 43 enlis ted men between the rank of sergeant and gunnery sergeant are taking a three- month course lo be human relations in- structors. Another class will lake tile C:.'Ourse beginning r In January, and a permanent 1cllool , will be set up after that. !\lost of the students are volunteers who were selected on the basis of such fa ctors as personal interviews, scoring al least 110 on an IQ.like test and demonstrating leadershi p ab11l_ty. Ten are r\egroes, two are .fl.1exica,n.American and. tbe remaining are Anglos. ,_1aj. Herb Stay. the school director. says plans call for the nien trained here to return to their home base~ where they \Viii tra.in another group of marines to serve as discussion leaders. The discussion leaders will provide small groups with lhelr 20 hours oC hwnan rela- tions instruction while the first lfOUI supervises the overall operation. Gen. Leonard F. Chapman Jr., com- mandant of the Marine Corpe, otdeted development oC tht program after racial disturba~1 at marine bases and other military i.nstallations began. ' "There must be a fully Integrated Marin e Corps in which all marlnel ol whatever race, color or creed are u one,'' Chapman said in a message to comm.andes last January. Humphrey says a corps-wide survey taken by the marines indicated nearly M percent want to do something to improve race relations. How do you teach human relations? Of cen tral importance in the Marine Corps program are philosophical discussions early in the 20 hours of in• struct.ion. ~arines will . discuss what HumphreY, calls the Adual life value\1• which says that man, governed bf. reason, is concerned about a larger tq· ment of humanity than.just himself •:ari4 his immediate family. Humphrey says most people accept this dtiit life value:-either-becauu tht)'~gen--- uinely are concerned or because :fhe1l feel society e_xpects them to act as iflbeY. are concerned. ' How much of the rest of society they concern themselves which varies with the individual) but Humphrey says he merely wants to get them thinking along tbese Jines. J This discussion is guided into OM 1 about equality. Here the Marine Ccrjis hopes to make its men and women Seti other raei!s as individual human beings and see that by depriving others of their basic human rights they are threatening -..-their own rights. As military personnel, then, they a~ encouraged to think of themselves nol as potential killers but as defenders of life, Humprey says. Medic Explorer Scouts Looking For Members -Buy the "fortress or the free1vay :' a Iota! transportation s&urity environ1nent car-tank. loaded \\'illl safety and an- llpollution geegaws t$84i300 -"10 per· cent do1\·n 0-J ~ 36 ea~y pa:)'n1enls o( S24.192.49 per n1onth .. ). .. l·ley, Silly that's not to eat." says Heather Noelle sion Viejo \vhere many of the animals v•alk around Sherwood, as baby goat nibbles on her s\veater. lt's loose mingling \1-'ith the visitors. Children may pet He isn't worried, however. that this toncem will prevent men from killing in a combat situation, he says, adding : - \'oung tneo jpte__llsted i11 m~dical laboratory careers are invited to attend the next meeting of the ~·ledical Explorer Scouts in tile auditorium of South Coast Community Hospital al 7 p.m. Thursda y, Nov. 18. ..--•-d_a_il~y_o_c_c_u_rr_e_n_c_ea_t_O_l_d~_1a_c_D_o_n_a_ld_'._s _F_a_rm_i .. n_~-"1""is .. -_-'-th""e..._an"'-i1_n .. al"s-• .. n~d, on some occasions feed them. "I have never round that teaching men humanitarian \'&lues makes them in· tell ectual pacifists. They still see · the need to oceaston-ally kill an aggressivt: force to save life." The !\iedical Explorer Scouts progra1n at the l~pital is open to young n1en aged 15 to 21 from the Laguna Beach. San Clemente and r..1ission Viejo high school areas. \\'ho are interested in exploring careers in medicint> and para-n1edical fields. The scouts 1neet b1-\reekly at the hospital '"here they arc introduced to all aspects of hospital "·ork by hospital staff members. Future meetings \\'ill be concerned "'ith <:areers in radiology, pharmacy. physical therapy and ·nursing. Winter Festival In Lagtu1a Beacl1 Slated Nov. 20 Folk songs, madrigals, spirituals and selections from ~road\\'ilY musicals. along \\'ilh a new An1erican con· te1nporary \\'Ork \\'ill be fC?atured in the Laguna Festival Chorale's winter concert in the Art Gallery. 307 Cliff Drh·e, at 8 p.m. on No\1• 20. Jack Krefling \1·ill conduct tile Chorale and soloists include Judy Krefling, soprano: Joe \Vood, tenor; .and Bill San- didge. baritone. Spotligllted in the first hair or the pro- gran1 \\'ill be music from "l\lan of La !\tancha" and '·Brigadoon.'' The second half \.\'ill feature composer Randall Thompson ·s ''The Peaceable Kingdom,'' a \\'Ork for unaccompanied mixed chorus \\'ilh text fro1n the book of the prophet Isaiah. Tickets. al Sl.50 for adults and 75 cents for studenls and children may be ob- lainea at the door, or reserved by calling: 499-11H3 or 459-1445. Moriraer Orbit -Take a month's charter cruise with five friends on the yacht Fandango. It has a cre\v of six and a Cordon Bleu Chef. Suggested point of departure : Las Palmas, Canary Islands, Spain. 1S20,CIOO all inclusive, excepting wine and liquors\. Driver Co1nes to Aid ' Of Officet in Pain And ror the captain. what about a blue tie-<iyed chamois-suede jacket IS9$) and jean-cut slacks (S9i:i l. The crass are not forgotten. You can LOS ,.t,,NGE S (UPI) -Andrew Senyei. 26, \\'as driving to his college stmply give cash in the form of a classes Tuesday, \·hen a policcma~pped bim for allegedly driving through !'\eiman-~1arcus gift bond '·in an~' a slop :Sibtn. · denoninalion from $10.00 to exceedingly The pa Iman. Robert C. Houston. 26, \\•alked over lo Senyers car and generous" or N-il1 gift coins in one. five in li1ne-hono ed traflie officer style hunched do~TI to peer througll the drive r·s and ten dollar denominations, plus Sl.50 \\•indO\\'. for the gift coin bag. The fficer remained hunched over for several seconds and then moaned, And for good old fla shy opu<~~~jf-/J__!t' G~·:Jel~h :· I-le said he could not straighten up and pains were shooting through would be hard-pressed to match a S45.000 hi ck. bracelet of 22 black fire opals and 66 Senyei fumbled "'ith the radio rnicrophone in Houston's squad car. '·Am pear-shape dian1onds scattered as lea\'es ! coming in to ~right persons?" he asked. ''Send help ,lhere·s an officer in- and blooms along B golden t1~1ig. ju red here." Finally, there is some $60-an-ounce Other oflic s and an an1bulance arrived to find Houston kneeling in perfuine that can be used as snlell ing pain on the pa\'e ient. Doctors at Glendal e Advenllst Hospital said J~ouston i;alts when the bi!J coines (in January). somehow had pinched a nerve in his back \\'hen he stooped over lo look in Senyei's car, I-le 11•as la ter reported resting comfort~bly. Senyei continued to his classes -\\'ilhout a ticke!. Poor Clare Sho'v Set Dec . 11-12 Ga11no11 Heads Fu11d Drive The serond annual Poor C 1 a r c l\hssionarv Sisters Art Sho\\' has been reschedu!fd for Del'. \l-12 at the Village \\1est art center in )..aguna Beach. The charily sho\\• \\·as originall y scheduled for South Coast Plaza in Cost3 i\1esa but a scheduling conflict forced \\'ithdrawal. Artists fron1 throughout Southern Califflrnia donate \1·ork for the slx11r . lhc profits of which help the Poor Clare i\lissionary Sisters do social "·ork in the area. The sisters arc originally fro111 Cuernavaca. ivlex .. and hope to build a 1nission in Santa Ana or Ga rden Gro\'e. i\1ayor Ed Just of Fountain Valley has agreed to be one of three judges for the show and auction. The other two judges have not been named . South Coast area tclephcine company manager Bob l;annon i\londay was chosen campaign director for the !'\ovem- ber fund dri\'e of the New South Coasl Unite fund. Gannon 's vice ch.11nnan 11·i!I be Frank Brinkman. Both n1en "'i!/ play a key role-111 a special, evening mel'ting next Tuesday at !he San Clement Elks Lodge lo explain !he fund 's function and organization to the general public. Volunteers-needed lo insure the ~U(.'· cess of the dri\'e-can offer services al that 8 p.m. meeting. The campaign is continuing throughout thr Capistrano Bay area with residential and industrial sources the prime targets. Volunteers already have be~un meetin~ to 1nap the fund dri\·e calculated lo blend many appeals for n1oncy into one annual Pediatric Unit At Free Clinic The Laguna Beach Free Clinic has an· nounced plans lo begin operating a week· Jy pediatric clinic al the facility begin· ning Nov. 11. Officials at the clinic. located at 422 Glenneyre SI .. said the pediatric services wUI be available on \Vednesdays begin- ning at 2 p.m. f\1olhers with chlldrc17 up to age 16 may bring the youngslcr irt... for inoculations, regular check-ups and screening for teferrals to specialists. In the past, the Free...Oinic_ has onty been open in the evenings for adults. The \ new service, officials said, can be made available because several area pediatri· ciaos have volunteered !heir services. project. Fund spokesme111 said !his week that teachers and other employes in the C.'apistrarlb Unified School District have y,•on trustee concurrence IY ith their re· quest lo have foir-share gif!s deducted fro1n their \\•ages. Other major employers \\'ill be asked soon to follow suit. said United Fund Presidenl Roy Garbarine. Volw1teers to share in dozens of tasks are still needed and can contact lhe t:nited Fund offices at 492-9661 any business day between 8:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.nl. The fund headquarters are located at 305 N. El Camino Real. ~l STORES TO ll~---n SERVE YOU Fire Department Headquarters Bids Scl1eduled Sealed bids for the construction or San Clemente's new fire department head- qua rters \\'ill be opened at II a.m. Friday-the first step in the project which will be completed early ne:rt year. Budgeted amounts for the n~ healf.. quarters proposed tor a driveway area next to the existing rue faci lity are about $140,000. The t1Yo-level structu·re complete with offices, gara8eS and dormitories to house dozens or firemen was designed by architects \Villard T. Jod.an and Marvin Renfro. Councilmen accepted the working drawings last November. .. The new heapquarters \viii be the city·s first large enough to accommodate fire companies on a 'round-the-clock basis. Special caissons driven into the slanting hillside site will anchor the founda tions for the headquarters. City ~tanager Ken Carr earlier this fall said tile expected complelion date for the headquarters is about March of 1972. funds ·for the project ... ~e already set aside and are the accumulative rev enues from the state rebate on cigaret sales· tax. Funds also exist in the sa me budget for lhe first yea r's salaries for (our more firemen who will be hired cerly next year. During the 'const ruction period the city "'ill reactivate its old fi re department headquarters in the city yard s on Avenida J\1iramar. \Vith this sort of phil os ophical background, the transition to inter• cultural or race relations can be mad• because the problems can be judged in terms of human relations, Humphrey, said. How do the men taking the instructor <.'Ourse feel aOOut it? ' -"\Vhat we haYe Is the desire to improv~ relations," said 1st Lt Bob Goecklel of Syracuse, N. Y. "And the convic\lon·bat something must be done so that pe<iplt can learn to live together." Sgt. DeMis Edwards of Houston says "if Jt solves 10 percent of the problems/~ we have achieved 5001ething." Tustin Trustee Fails to Win Review of Books Tustin Union High School trustee Robert Bartholomew failed to conYim:, fellow board members they should look at a list or some 400 books offered as a gift to University High School before approv4 lng the gift acceptance. Stewart Brown or 18116 Leatherwoob \Vay, Irvine, was listed as donor of the 400 books and an electric pitchin&' machine in Monday's board agenda. Supt. William Zogg reminded the boar• of its policy on book gifts. Books give~ for use In classrooms are reviewed by the board wh ile volumes offered for library use are screened by the librarian. All of the Brown books are destined to be used in the University High Library, Zogg said. Bartholomew. a John Birch Sooiett member fro m Tustin, withdrew his sug· gestion that the board screen a list or the book.I, WITH FRIENDLY, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUL SERY· ICE. PLENTY OF FR E ~p ARK I N G IN BOTH _FRONT AND REAR MALLS. ALL ON STREET LEVEL ' THERE ARE MORE STORES Disl1,vare Thief Makes Two Trips 2300 HARBOR BLVD. IN OUR Laguna Beach pollct: are roo!dng for a pair of young \\'Omen One or "'horn distracted a shopkeeper ~1onday 1f· temoon while her companion carted off AT WILSON JUST SOUTH OF BACK MALL Artist's conception shO\\'S l\fariner 9 in orbit around i\lars after 248· mflllon mile journey from Earth. Orbit or red planet is scheduled Sat· urday. ~tariner 9's mi ssion is to take television pictures or i\fars. mapping about 70 percent or the planet's surface. and to study l\lar- tian temperatures and at1nospherc. Orbits or red planers l'vo n1oons al so are dctaiJed. $~0 In :inUque dtshware. ., Officers said the theft occurred at the Brah Reltie, an antique shop at 439 N. Const llighwa~" SAN DIEGO FREEWAY IN THE HEART OF .COSTA MESA 2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • I ' J • l ' i •• f bAJLV PILOT \' . \ ••• I ~ps f ormer Star • • WtdntsdQ", No'ltmber 10, 1971 -CastrODue We lco me ln Ch ile \Vinning Fight SANTIAGi, Chile CAP ) ~ ill!.ident 5alt"ador Allende readied ~arm welcome today for Prime Min{iter Fidel Castro, arrivi ng on, hi~ fir.st trip !)Utsld1 CUba in seven years. The Marxist presi· - dent promised his C.Ommunist guest a personal guided tour or Chile. .. There were no extravagant welcoming ~isplays in downto"n Santi!'lgo, but along • . By THOMAS MORPHINE the route from the a•__. buildin" walll Of ttit Ddr l'li.t , .. H .. .,... • • .j,JlANGE COAST, WILD COAST: blossomed with "Salud: F1del" and other •tuam Wiicoxen, the Laguna 'Beich at· welcoming signs. Members or the C.Om- -munilt par. ty rode · about scattering tGfney, fonner GOP congress_lonal can· dlOate, Save Sflt Creeker and coastal leaflelll 1howing Caslro't face. in profile clnaervitionlst, has proved to be about a and saying: "Compan ion Fidel, You Afe .l)O batter when It comes to legislative A~ng Friends." 'Jl'edlctlng. On Friday Castro and Allende att to fly ~---Ji~ BUI, in• recent i~lerview with our 825 miles north to the nitrate and copper -rhn.go-jmlmal. predicted=that= tbere--=-,iart-nt<\ritofaiE!tl?'fi'rcmf tl'iert ·they-Will ..-e going to be a number of 1 .:nendments tcr Assemblyman Alan go nto th~ nearbr Atacama de3ert to ~roty's propooed coastline Control bill . look at . n1tr~te .fields and . perh1p1 a ,·Wilcoxen alAo suggested that these r~ently nat1onahzed American copper ~endmenLs might make the measure a mine. . .. 19t more palatable to those rolks along t:Je~t wee~ the two leaders will vt11t tNr coastline who still believe that local Chiles scenic south, 1 land of blue lakes, «intro! ()f the shoreline has some merit. snow-capped volc11'10e.' and c 1n1 Is . 'THE REASON I suggest that WW is Traveling by plane, boat and cir, .they ~on aboutlialf the prediction is that are expected to go almost to the tip of ta was de•d· right on the amendments the continent. Later they will return to t(t Santiago for talks with .members ()f the ..:At this writing, Sieroty•5 bill has been left-willf political parties that make up jlgj tred W1th an estimated 30 changeg of-Allende 1, government. . fered from hither ind yon amidrt ~lletlde.a. Popular Unity government. Sacramento'! )egl1lative corps. which includes Communlslll 1 n d Wilcoxen however may not be totally Socialist!. was inaugualed Nov. J, 1970, on target' when 'he suggests that and e~blished diplomatic relations with amendmenlll are going to make the Cub~ n1.ne days l~ter. . . coastal folks a lot happier wilh the final Th11 13 Castros first trip to another product. Latin-American country since he . sei~ As you .may be aware Sieroty the power narly 13 years ·ago and his first 'Bt!:Y..ttlY Hills Democrit (y~u didn't know trip oull!lide c u.ha si~ce 1964, when he trre ls.a Beverly Hill1 Democrat?), has went to the Soviet Union. P-Q!ed a measure that would give the It was not known exactly how long he -e autborlty to control certiin con:-would stay, but Allende told a news con" ction and development a Ion g ference Tue3day there will be a big rally ifomia's coastline. for Cutro'1 Aendoff "AO the people can HAS BEEN lauded in certain applaud him once again." trters as the approach that will 11ve Castro's visit "will intensify the bonds coasUin~ from urban sprawl. It has that unite· our two countries," said n damned from other authorities who Allende. Chile and CUba both are "slrug- im it is an encroachment oh local con-gling for poliUcal and economic in- tiDI and 1elf-determination. de~ndence, '' he continued, but the ilndeed coastal development so obsess-Chilun government wiU use "different the 'Legislature this session that tactics " to achieve this. zens of control bills were introduced. !fost died. quickly in committee. Finally "Iv two IUl"fived -Sieroty't and one ihored by Assemblyman Edwin Z'B«g cramento). Z'Berg's was put out CJf lsery In a senate committee Mon- Now only Sieroty's survives. EN SINCE the early going, Sieroty's ti was the only major coa stal legislation at was given an even chance of idop- n. t l would tell you more about what it ~s. except with those 30 amendments, [ t •t know what it doeii. There are 1ome ts tha t maybe nobody else know~ yet. her. Anywa.y, Wilco1en, who admits he'd Hke to see some form of reasonable q;,astline protection adopted by the state tllis 1essi~n, 1eems .to bel~eve t.hat the lflodified S1eroty measure will do 1t. i Qthers. however, disagree. L i ke ~~semblyman Sob Badham. the Newport ~ach Republican . f BAORAM JNJ'ERPRETS the restric· OonS jii'Opbied as being so awful lhal a 4oastal dweller couldn 't paint his houM 'tithout a permit from the new state e..tperagency l'llnd he gays it wouldn't .tllow You to Jive anywhere within 1.000 ()et of the .mean high tide line, i Apparently the whole thing will wash town nest Monday when the Sieroty bill come3 up for hearing! before the state $enate's Natural Resource! and Wildlife Committee. : So if you hav~ some thoughts on Coastline control. today might be a good da v'to write yaur friendly local legisl1tcir &nd -give him the Wnefit of your ll!oo&hts. . ' feking Recognized . : BEll\lIT tUPJl -Lebanon has decided tb ucggnize Commun~t China Md *tablish diploma tic relatiCIN with p.,.. ~g. Prime Minister Saeb &·lam s.tid to-.py. Police man Dead A.ft,er Okinawa Student R io ti r~g NA.HA. Okinawa (UPI) -RioUnr student.'! beat an Okinawan policeman to death today during a general strike by J00,000 Okinawan workers protesting plans to mainll'l in U.S. military bases on the occupied island :ifter is reverts to Japan . The death came when 1 2 , O O O demonstrators -were marchin g towards the headquarters cf the U.S. Civil Administration which governs Okinawa, th e only Japanese territory still occupied by U.S. troops from World War 11. Police moved in with clubs and tear gas and th e student.. hurled about 40 fire bombs. .The AtudentA Aeized on e policeman and beat him gavagely on the body and head. Although. other police moved in to rescue him. he died en !'flute to a hospital. "He wag beaten t() a pulp,'' a witne ss said. About M policemen we re injured In the fighting. Police arrested 84 studentg and labor union members. Pakistan Cl~sh Told DACCA, East Pakistan (AP ) -1ndian troops supported by artille ry attacked three Pakistani bor der positions. but 57 of the attackers were ki lled, a Pakistani army S()Urce claimed today . The source said the Indians attacked positions 1t JaUapura and Lalgarah. ()n East Pakistan'g &00thtm border w i I h India's Tripura State and near th• northern border al Panihit. -. . • • • -u adi n:g-otflctol 1 \ UP'l Ttt.IM .. Indian Sum:tne r Etads The clouds or autumn blew in over. the n.alion's capital today sweep- ing Indian summer away for another year. The winds that came 1n with the cold weather blew lea ves from the trees and tur ned Wash· ington, D.C. into a gray city. · Mad British T1~oop s Hunt For Arms; 2 Girls Sl1orn BELFAST, North.ern Ireland (UPI l - British troops, angered by the death o! 36 of their comrades this yea r, ca rried out widespread searches today for suspected Irish Republicao Army (IRA ) extremists they blame for the killings. The raids. carried out by nearly l.000 troops in Roman Catholic areas of Belfast and the countryside, were the se- cond in two days. Today'g raids netted more than a dozen suspects and large quantities of arms and ammu nitio n. bullets, a map case, photographs and maps. Another 200 troops from the 45th f.·1edium Artillery Regiment seized 12 men in the village of Toomebridge on the shores of Lough Neagh . Gunmen in this< village shot and killed a sergeant of the Royal Ulster Constabulary several weeks ago. ·Viet Politician ' Killed _h_y Bomb ~ SAIGON (UPI) -Terrorists today assassinated Nguyen Van Bong, a leading South Vietnamese politician. Bong. 42, was killed when a time bomb exploded in his automobile. Bong generally has been a supporter Of President Nguyen Van Thieu, although when the campaign for the presidency turned into a one-man race he declined to actively support Thieu on groun ds the one-man election 'Nas illegal and im- proper. The plastic eirplosive charge went off · as Bong and three bodyguards were driv- ing home for lunch, police said. The blast also killed one of his three bodyguards and injured the other two along with seven byst.anders on the street. Spokesmen for the Progressive Party. of which Bong was cochajnnan, said * * * Ca rnbod ian Wa r Families Killed I n Red Assa ults PHNOt.1 PHEN (UP I) -Communist gu errillas carried out coordin ated attacks today against Phnom P en h 's in· ternational airport and a nearby radio station and destroyed a bridge. inflicting heavy loss of life on Cambodian soldier families who travel \Vith their men. Capt. Chhang Song, a spokesman for U1e high comma nd, said the del!lh toll \\'as at least 30. with more than 20 others \\'OUnded. Most of the victims were women and children af'KI Song said the toll wou ld be higher -"there were so many children , we have not counted them all yet." The three attacks were similar -a heavy barrage of mortars and rockets followed by waves of North Vietnamese and Viet Cong soldiers hurling hand grenade! and satchel charges. Cam- bodian troops drove them off but the guerrillas alread y ha d reached their targets. The war in Ca mbodia is different from most wars, and th.e wives and children of the soldiers accompany them into the field because they have no other place lo live. Many of them have been killed in battle -and today's victims included whol~ families. Bush mills. Bong was heavily protected because of fre(luent th reats to hili life. The car was shattered, its roof blow n off and Bong 's body badly mutilated, witnesses said. The assassins escaped. It wiis the first sliiying of a pro- govemment politici an in South Vietnam since the firebombing death of £ducation t.1ini ster Le Minh Tri in early 1969. Bong, frequently mentioned as a po6Si· ble successor to Prime Mi nister Tran Thien Khie m and ot.her cabinet posts, had recen tly split with the other Progressive ~rty cochairman , Nguyen Ngoc Hur. over how the party should proceed 1n light of Thieu's re-election without op- position Oct. 3. . U.S. soUrces said. however, the spilt could not be ca'tfgorized as ;, feud. They said the assassinalipn was apparen tly th e work of Con1munists who hoped _lo fo- ment polltical trouble in Saigon as well a~ ge t rid of an abl e administrator and potential member of the cabinet. It was the second attempt ()n Bong's life. political sources said .. He was wounded in a wave of attacks 1n January of 1969 when Palace Security Adviser Nguyen Van Kiem was wounded. '* * * U.S. J ets Bomb Missile Camp I n N. Vietnam SAIGON (UPl l -Ame r ic an jets cro~Sed into North Vietnam and destroyed a Communist antiaircraft missile empla cement in the fou rth attack north of the demilit.o rized zone (DMZ) in as many days, the U.S. Command said today. The U.S. command said Air Force Ft05 Thunderchief jets reacted after the Com- munists fired a missile at American B-52s bombing the Ho Chi t.1inh Trail in nearby Laos. The Thailand-based FI05s sruck the surface-to-air missile site three miles in· side Nor th Vietnam and 45 miles north of the DMZ nea r Ben Karai Pass, a major Communist infiltration route into South Vietnam. "Reports indicated that the site was destroyed,., the U.S. Command said. Two teen-"age girls accused (l f dating British soldiers reported today they had been assaulted by crowds yelling "soldier lover!' and th8t their heads were shorn. One was tied to a post by three masked women, shorn and tarred and feathered lo the encouragement of a crowd in a Roman Catholic 'area of Belfast. The ()!her was threatened with death. A force of 800 5()\diers from the Green Howards Regjmeot and a paratroop unit swept through the Roman Catholic Ar· doyne area of Belfast today, acting on a tip fr()m Y•hat the army called in· teltigence sources. and arrested three men in a four·hour search. They foitnd 200 rounds of ammunition . three electric bomb detonators, tw() pistol holsters and The whiskey that spans the generations gap. Egypt Says Je,vs Reinforce Troops By United Pre&& International The Egyptian Mlddle East New Agency 6aid toda y Israel i1 reinforcing its troops and positions in the occu pied Sinai Peninsula. "Israeli troops are currently making wide-scale sea and land movements in the direction of Sinai." the agency said, quoting S()UTces of the Palestine LibE'ra· lion Organization (PLO) in Damascus. Israeli military leaders were ··sending armored cars ind heavy tanks by railways to the Sinai area." the a,Eency said. The report wa s not confirmed by · any other source. Much of Nation W e.t, Cold . , j • \. .' ro1 300 yc.irs, a \vhiskey from Bushmills has been .ompare it to your present \vhiskcy. You needn't \\1\h u~. Cho1rrning us. Be guiling us in a smoolh, pu1chasca.bottle.One s1p.ilyourfavo11tcpub\vllt poli(hed .1rid al1osc1her lighthearted fdsh1011. tell you \vh y Bu~hlliills hds illt11gucd so n1<tny gcn- 15 ~cncra1ior's have refined it.1-5 gencril lions hilvC cra11ori s. It is, simply, out of s1gh 1• :,ipp<'d 11.Thcverdrct :Near perfccl•on Bushrnills. Full IMPORT£0 nr lh.lrJcter. Bui not heilvy-handcd about it. Fl.tvor-B USH M ILLS (ul. But never ove1·powenng. 8u.,hmill5. Ii reflects · the p ~s t \Vlth ii l1gh1 <tnd lively flavo1 lhdt 1siJ1l 1od.ty. FROM THE WOR.lD"S OLOESTDISTILL£1fr. \ A l1.!!oOOf 1cni 1~1s11w1110~,l~·H ,~001 -1011Lt0 fl( i•tll~O l~t J(lS Gl•~uu co ~cw YOR~. "y •11'0 • • ' • • • 1 Wtd~. NDYlmblt' 10. 1971 DAILY PILOT 5 Labor Lashes Oait Rehnquist Called Ri.ghtist Zealot Loophole In Draft Upheld LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A federlJ judge TUesday granted .. • 6G-day inju~tion against the Selective Service to a 7J..year· Welgl1s F11l11re • WASHINGTON l UPI) -<frgan1zcd labor branded Assistant A,ttorney' General William H. Rehnquist a right wing zealot today and urged the Senate to reject bis . Co1ivention City Gets Fund Boost For Police Wo rk WASHI NGTON (AP) -The Justice Department said Tuesday il has ·awarded almst $400.ooO lo Miami Beach, Fla. to help its police force handle next year's Democratic National Convenlion. Thomas G. JoUey, a 27-year-San Diego, Calif., planned site of the old newspaperman, said he will 1972 Republican nominating convent ion, --probably-neatHor-€anada n{lw--also is preparing+to ask for similar fundi;.- since hi s appeal to the Supreme I.he department's Law Enforcement Court was rejected. I-le gave up Assistant A~nistration said. hiS ~itizenship to escape the LEAA administrator Jerris Leonard draft and has been denied re-said the Miami Beach grant is a recogni· gaining it. He is a ma n without lion of the unusua l pressure placed on a country. police forces in ctties 14•here political con- ven!ions are held. He said the money "will be of substan· nominaiion to t~ Supre.me Court.. old artist who argued that 1 The AFl.rCIO thus joined t h e little-known loophole 1n t h e Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, draft law forbids the govern-" the NAACP and the Ameri,.ans for ment to draft anyone until Democratic Action in opposition to Rehn· Dec. 18. quist. H" Ok U.S. District Judge Robe As d i d ·those other organizations, uUSe ays .J. Kelleher noted that the organized labor took no position on the argument by Karl S. Bohn, of nomination of Lewis F. Powell Jr .. the Pes*:cid· e Santa Barbara, Calif., "seems Richmond , Va., lawyer nominated for a U to present a case of national second vacancy. importance." Andrew Biemiller. legislative represen-Control n:u u. s. Attorney A I an lative of the AFl.rCIO, delivered labor's 11 Peryam, representing the position paper opposing Rehnquist to the government, told the judge the Senate Judiciary Committee. WASHINGTON (AP) -The case could affect those of "We do so bt!cause Rehnquist'• public House passed 288 to 91 a about 10,000 young men facing record demonstrates him to be ·a rig ht . t· 'd t 1 "Ul T sd inductioq in the nezt two win~ zea1ot whose sole distinctions Jri pes !Cl es-con ro u ue ay months. public life are that he was the only major after crushing sever3.J pro-Kell eher granted Bohn an person of stature who opposed the posed change! t h a t en--injunction against his selecllve Arizona civil ri ghts ~ill in 1964 and that vlrorunentalisU said w e r e service board, preventing· the he has been one of the prime theoreti· crucial to creating . effective board from inducting him for cians of and an apologist for this ad· 1 ,_1 t' 60 days. He set Dec. 2 as the ministretion!s-root-end-braneh-essault on new eg~ 8 ion. date of the next hearing, to the Constitutional system of checks and A series of amendments of. rule on a request by Bohn's at: balances," BlemUler said in his prepared fered by Rep. John G. Dow torney, Don R. Bay, for a statement. (D-N.Y. ), and his supporters, summary judgment barring ' A MINIATURE GARDEN ~ that bloom an year ',;,und. Hanck:nlfled and en~meled in natural Cactus Canyon rock formation. 312 inches tall. $9. ~thing Beautiful HIDE-A-WAY FOR CHRISTMAS Cl\llrp A1~h ln\'ltlill A!Ml'lun ,_,..tu. Th nJ Reh · t' Bohn's induct;on. e o y reason nqu1s s name was was rejected 81 the House submitted for the Supreme Court, I I h th The government is expected SLAVJ"'K'S Biemiller said, was because he had weot a ong wt e bW' ap-to argue then that the loophole '-' demonstrated his "complete fealty" to proved by il! Agriculture has no legal standing. Jewelerw, Since 1917 Nixo n Administration programs. Committee. The injunction granted Bohn 18 FASHION ISLAND "It Is precisely because he is the ad· A major revision, endorsed affects only his case, main-NEW PORT BEACH-644-1380 ' ., , ,, . ' 'Death l s Beautiful' ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP ) -T"''O young women are in critical condition to- day after setting themselves on fire because, as one explained to police, -Dying-. is beautiful." lial assistance lo the convention cities, !or a national pol!tical convention naturally would strain the p o I i c e resources of any community." The 1968 Democratic convent ion in Chicago was marked by mass demonstra- tions followed by mass arrests and charge by prolestors of police brutality. ministration's man rather than his own b y Agriculture Committee taining the status quo, and Open Mon. •nd Fri., 10 •.m. fo 9:30 p.m. that he should not sit on the high court," Chairman W. R. Poage ID-does not mean the judge J~;~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~ Biemiller said. agreed with his argument or Noting that President Nixon had Tei .), to permit states t.o im-ruled against the draft Jaws. ' characterized Rehnquist as a "strict con· pose whatever add i t Ion a I But Bay said that at least structionist," Biemi!ler said "'he is. if restrictions they wi!h en. all two other suits had already Kids Love Uncle th. t · t t t' · t r th betn filed on the same any ing, a s r1c cons rue 1on1s o e pesticides, was approved, 167 . -· AM Arbor Police Chief \Yalter Krasny 5aid Anita Louise McQueen, 20, Livonia, and Raelle Weinstein, 26, Skokie, Ill ., ap- parenUy wrapped themselves ·in paper, sat cross-legged on the floor and set each other on fire. Leonard said $178,000 would go for lhe purchase of con11nunications equipment anrl another $100,000 for police training. Co t't 1· · t th d t. I lh grounds, in San Diego and ns 1 u ion prior o e a op ion o e to 56. The orininat committee Le bill of rights." -ea eastern New York . and there s t d • The. AFlrCJO .~itness was among a bill would have pret:mpted the was scime thought of con-n, a ur. ay lil Jong list who testifie4 or put testimony In power of states to put more solidaling them to-be heard "The orderly 'functioning of national pohlica l coAvenlions is an integro.l part of the democracy," Leonard said. the record in the second day or hearings restrictions on what would be with Bohn's. other~young men the DAILY PILOT in oppcsition to Rehnquist. designated a s l generaJ·use can file similar suits if they li";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;pes.;;;;ti•c•id~es~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;ir~a"'~i~nd~u~c~ti~oni;iibe~l~or~e~Deciiii~·;28~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i.- .. Advance Men a Curio~ity Reds Draw Stares at U.N. UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -They are fou r secretaries and two messengers -not ex- actly top ranking diplomats - but ambassaOOrs rush to greet them, police guard them and newsmen dog their footsteps. As the first Communist Chinese to come to the United Nations in 21 years and the first ever to come as U.N. members. the advance party from the People's Republic ol China are minor celebrities Missouri Voters Reject School Funding Again I N D E PENDENCE, Mo. (AP J -A hea vy turnout of voters Tuesday defeated for the third time this year a pro-- Policenian Sliot Dead DALLAS (AP) -A rookie policeman was shot to death and another was wounded to-- day after stopping a truck because of a minor traffic ac- cident. police reported. Two men were taken into custody shortly after the shoa ling. , / The dead policemaj was identified as J ohnnie T . Hartwell, 30, a rookie still in training. Officer James E. Clark. 40, was wounded in the right arm. posed increase of 95 cents in the school levy, but officials said Independence p u b 1 i c schools would reo pen anyway in anticipation of funds coming next month from the state. Dr. Guy Carter1 school superintendent, said school children. idled since Nov . I, will return to class Monday. He sa id the state money is due Dec. 15. School administrators had said the clly's pu blic schools would remain closed through November because of a lack of funds to pay teachers. The final unofficial taUy was 8,846 in fa vo r or lhe increased levy and 9,107 aga inst. A two- lhirds vote was necessary to approve the measure. KitchenAiil. Displ)ser installed Ho.Charge with Dishwasher Purchase and Installation ·, and major curiosities. The six advance men ar- rived Monday to make what they called "administrative preparations" for the full 4&- member delegations flying here Thursday fro m Paris. Kao Liang, the former newsman who heads the ad- vance party, and two other members paid their initial visit to the beadquartert of tbe world arganization Tues· day, A crowd of more than 50 secretariat emp\oyes a n d newsmen gathered out.side the office where for 95 minutes the advance party discussed the mechanics of opening a mission with U.N. Protocol Chief Sinan A. Korie and Col. Harold A ... Huck" Trlmbte, head of ti.N. security. Then, escorted by three plainclothes U.N. securi t y guards. the Chinese toured the Security Council c h a m b e r where Huang Hua . until now ambassador to Canada, will sit as one ol the five permanent members. Normally restrained diplomats ·gawked when the 1,hree quiet men dressed in blue-grey Mao-style suit 1 entered the crowded delegates lounge for coffee with Alba· nian Ambassador Sarni Baholli 11nd four members of this delegation. KitchflnAld dishwasher• hive always been built to meet /1igh 113ndards of perform· anc.e end reliability. Now thMe's 1 new ICitchenAid that's even better. KitchenAid Dishwasher AR MOTOR _ 5 -YE WARRANTY The Ki1chen'Ald 1" horsepower moror, th• biggest In an'( home dishwasher, is II?' r94iabte it has • 5.year warrantv. If ;r: shOuld fail, It wlll be r11)11ired or.replaced at no eott to you during thl! first ~ar: you'd be charged only fOI' labor dunng the: neKt tour ye11L Prices Start at For Mod el KDC5 PLUS many other outstanding KitchenAid features; • Pushbunon c¥Cles including p1tented Soak Cycl1 for 1U1om11lc so&king ol poti and pans. • 9·w•v upPer rack. that adjusll for big bowl11bov1 er p\atttfl; below. ·TV and APPLIANCES • Fully vsablt Sl)8Cetn11k« Rteb whh no wuted s~ • bclusiw ICltchenAid l·co•t porceltln-on-llHI Wlih charnbBt. • Exclus!W Khchel'IAld washing and drylng. Ho hlnd·rinling needtd. • M•do b'/ Hobart. th• wo1kr1 cldut and llf'Utlt makw of t.c,,.1111rci1I d ithw11lt10. l • IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-7131 JC Penney The values are here every day. Men's Sport Coats SI-ll te 4'-Sh"" ~ 1 .. 1111111,... S.lldt ' Petter91. Wide 1.,.11. Dttp ...ts. Orl9.•Jt.tM7.fl MOW WOMIM 'S UMIPOlMS OM • Two ,. . .,., .. on,. 1·14, NOW WOMIM'S ANllLI PANTS A.1st. 1tyl" aw.t: .. .,.., Orff, 1·11 NOW WOMEN'S ASS'T. TOPS II•-& l efts. Or... 1-1.00 MOW MATEINITY WEAl ff111I Cl1e1r011C•. Ort9. 5·1.00 NOW 1688 4"'7" 4"·7" •211·411 '1 II NYLON & H>LYISTll TOl"S Short S 1" SI .... & Sl•'f'I ..... Orlt. 16.00 NOW PATIIRN ANKll PANT!· 311 Cett.11 fft1 ce,.. Orif. 7.00 NOW Women's Shifts Reduced SfM"'-n l'fhift Ill l'MM, p,.._ fabric. Per ._, C•r• w9lll w .. r. Or ... 4.SO NOW WOMIN'S NTLOM tcNIT TOPS. I.Mt ti..-1trlfN. Orlt. l .10 MOW PULL OVll IULtcY llNlft. 11,l"'r bock -P•tels. Orff. T 0.00 NOW WOMIM'S MOCCASINS. lr•Wll " tn Self 1111. G-4 .u,,.,._ C>Tlf. I . tt NOW HAlD SOLID MOCASilNS. T911. Sel't comfeort. Orlt 6.tf. NOW LADllS AMlllCANA IOOf, IH·wh•.• M• •lltft l•••lt· Orlf. 16.tt NOW POLYISTll DIL l MIT h ....... 60" wtde. Col" MlectlM. MOW Men's Pant Riot ~ & e ... 1 1IC1Ch -Streltllt er lllere '"' -PettwM ' S.lldt. Sbin 21-40 Orff . 7.tl·l.fl NOW 2" 7" 3" 4" 13" 2" Women's Dresses Reduced GROUP I GROUP II Or/9, St-SIT Orl9. $12·ST4.00 Now $7.88 Now $9.88 GllLS STllTCH TICiHTS. Plrik, Turq. & Lemert. Orl9. ffc NOW INFANT & TODDLlll SHOITS Prl11t1 & Selidt. Orlf. 79¢·1.79 NOW Girls Boxed Jewelry 11,..._Necllleca-f'et1do11tt-Sm A11d S.,,.r1111~11ltlet & lh1MfeM soc 33c or19. s1.oo NOW IOc Orl9. 2.00 NOW t9• OrJt. J.00 MOW 1.tt GllLS l ·6X SHOITS. Aut. pcrthr11 Ir Solids. Orlt . 1.00·2.00 NOW lltlS 7·1 4 SHOlTS. Au'. Potirlu • 'Cel1111rs. Orlt• 1.1 t•l.OO MOW Foundation Clearance 33c 44c C111trel, P911ty & l111t lot 1tyl11. c: -ODDS • INDS .t HtM te nr111 99 Wlilte lfllr. Ofit. J-6.00, NOW . ' GIRLS SANDUSTIR SlllRT sns. Pl••r 4" Swff1Mr '-tttl. OrJt. 7 .00. NOW _.llLS llOWN SUIDI llCkll IOOT 4" Cwtlllot1 e,.,. S.I•. Ort9. I .ft NOW GllU IUCILI SCHOOL SHOI 4" ,,. ... e11tl41N. Ort1. 7.tt NOW IOTS DRESS lllTS l TIU 44c Sr.t.k .. , 11ew. ort,. I .SO NOW IOTS CARDIGAN SW-ATllS .S" o,... etrlr1 Acryllc. Orlt, 7.tl NOW IOTS CASUAL PANTS 66c Wedi N' Wffl'. Orft. 1.44 NOW Toys-Games--l'vnles, Etc. JIG SAW PUZZLl$-GAMIS-88 Tef C•n -C11111111ret -Mllilcet ltr• C 1trw1Mt1tt hra & Glrlt Acrt.ttln NOW COSTA MESA STORE HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER ·- ,• ' • ...----------~·· Queen Size Sheets Selld Coler Perccil• Geld & Gr"" 50% Pel,..._ 10% Cette11j Pett11 """® Orft. 7.tf MINS DllSS SHllTS Le"' .i...,. 1trl,._, Orft. 7.tl NOW MIN'S CAILI DESIGN VISTS. hltitd •lr9h1 weel·wfllN!. Orl9. 12.tl NOW MIN'S WALK SHORTS, Aut. styles. lrell• 1IM1. Orlt. J-4.00 filOW ASST. ll'NIT SHIRTS 499 . Orl9, 4. ti-HOW 2.U Orlt. 2. tt MOW 511 . au : 99c 99c 2·~.' AClYLIC KNIT STllPI SHllTS. lrek• Cfllers-SINS. Orlt. J.tt. MOW MIN'S DRESS SHOE A11tl~M Geld• P•trff Sole, Ortf." 10.tt. HOW Towel Bonanza Sc11ltp11Nll & "111t Tllkk Teny • IATH-Orft. Z.21 • HAMD-OrSf, 1.21 e WAslt~OrJt. .II NOW NOW NOW MIN'S WAXHIDI STllllUP IOOT ~ tlnff. Orlf. 2,.00 NOW ICING SIZI SHlnS. ••Id .. ,.. Perc•lti NOW TWIN ' SIU QU ILT SPRUDS S1111ft1'"' P\oiirt. Orlf, 11.00 NOW t e11lr WILYn SPlU.D 6 0LD 9•-st.. t"ntem. +Or ... llt:-00 NOW ILIC. ILANKIT DIL. DUAL Stipeni•' ~"'"· Orlt. 2S.OO ,MOW CUlTAIM & OlAPlllT CLU.MUI' O,lf, J,ff ho JS.00 NOW Cameo Pendant$ 13• -7• 10" . I Tr-· • 15• .. •• 1''"14"-; .... htlc c."'" ... ,1 ... ,.. ~OC · _: Dr111-Wlrtt twe & Tllr"' ''""'' CIMIM-Orlt. Z.00 & J .00 MOW USE YOUR PENNEY CHARGE CARD -Shop Mon. thru Sat. 9:30 to 9:15 . . ., • • ' • ). t • • , • • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Only Partial After lengthy consideration, Saddleback College trustees will consider at their Nov. 15 meeting a plan to Increase the number o! trustee area.s• In the district from five to seven. This action is -in response to~ a request from the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Urtificll School Districts, but apparently it will be only a pJ,rtiaI response. . The other half of the coastal districts' request was that each 1trustee be elected by the voters in his own dis· trict, instead of permitting voters in all districts to vote on all ca ndidates, as at pres~nt. The plan to be presented by trustee flans Voiet \Vould continue the "at large" elections procedure whi ch In fact permits the more populous inland areas to con· trol the board's makeup and, indeed. co uld literally eliminate a candidate "'"ho might be more representa· tive of his own individual area. The creation of two more trustee areas in the rapid· ly grou·ing Saddleback Valley makes good sense. HO\V• ever, it still doesn't give the relatively less populous coastal areas much chance of true r epresentation on the board if their preferred candidates cannot pull the over· ,.,,helming inland vote. United Ftmd Needs Helpers In. the Capistrano Bay area it is the United Fund. Jn.l..aGuna Beach it is the Community Chest.· The aims of both are the same. Both campaigns launched this month are calculated to ~eplace doz.ens of separate appeals for. funds into one \vh1 ch then will serve scores of benevolent agencies. The Laguna camfaign is the veteran along the South Co~s.t with a goa this year or $62,000. Spokesmen . there ant1c1pate full coffers as usual with half of the goal collected during the official campaign month and the other half in succeeding weeks. The South Coast United Fund, however, is much ne,ver yet with its first formal campaign less than two Question of Tipping ls Vexatious A reader in Buffalo wants to know whether I believe that one sh-Ould leave a tip in a restaurant If the service has.been bad. "Tf a tip is taken for granted," she writes, "then there is little incenti ve for the Y:aiter to provide good serv- ice. But my husband gets angry when- ever I tell him I re- fused to leave Ii! lip -or left a sma ll one -for poor ser•- ice." The whole question of tipping in modern society is a vexatious one, and I dofl"t know that there is any "right'' ansv.·er to it. as our economy now stands. AIORALLY , TIPPING should be abolished. because it is a kind of legalized blackmail ; but practically, this wnuld mean doing grave injury to millions of employes in the service trades. I alv.•ays leave much the same moderate size of tip, whether the ser\•ice has been adequate or indifferent ·-not out of generosity. but out of cowardice. I simply don't have the gumption to strike back at a careless or inattentive waiter by hurting his pocketbook. Women. apparently, are much more vengeful than men in this respect . \' ARIOUS INDUSTRIES have tried to abolish lipping. but the habit has always Dear Gloomy Gus Laguna Beach wouldn't be normal if there weren't some kind of a civic hassle going on full blast. Now it's a scrap over school bus service on a dange rous climb to the to p of Nyes Place, and park· ing at lhe bottom of the hill. What next? -J. G. B. Tl'll<I Mllll,. i-efJKI$ -··· YlfW1, "'' ftKffMr!ly ltloM If tlll lll'WIN,.r. $1MI l'IUr "' _ .... II G"°"'' Gii&, D1Ur "'"'· crept back in one way or another. Only the commercial airlines, to my knowledge, have been able to avoid this practice -probably because the industry started out on that ba1is and thus had no I n g r a I n e d customer-tradition to overcome. Tipping is evidently an ancient prob- lem. There is a charming tole about Nasreddin Hoja, a 13th Century Turk ish philosopher, who once went to a public bath in a neighboring city. THE ATI'ENDANTS, noticing his shab- by costume. paid him Httle attention and brought him a tom towel and a tiny pi!.!ce of soap. 011 leaving, Hoja gave a gold piece to each of the attendants, who men· tally kicked themselves for having been deceived by his ragged appearance. He returned to the same bath the following v•eek, dressed as before, but this time was reeeived v.·ith great defer- ence -new towels, scented soa p, much bowing and scraping with the anticipation of more gold pieces. But, on leaving, he gave each attendant a nickel. repl ying to their startled looks : "The gold pieces J gave you last week were for the way you treated me today; the nickels I've given you are for the way you treated me last week." Russia's Space Failure ;., WASHINGTON -There are aulho rila· tive indicat ions that Soyuz. top Russian .space prograin, is being drastically re- vised or possibly even abandoned. 'V"hethC'r there is any connection be· twe t>n th at and the reported shake up In upper echelons ol the So\'iet space hierarchy is s f.i 11 unk n ov.·n. Last month. this column disclosed that fa r- reaching personnel changes were und er- wav-due to the most calamitous year in Russia 's space op-- er.1tions. ::;:::-. • . During this period. there has been a long ~uccession of c<>s!ly failures and dis· asters In li\·es and equipment. Sixteen of 19 space probes were unsu<'cessful , some of tragic proporlions. SEVERAL \\'EEKS afte r the reported upheaval among leading space officials, the Krtmhn 3Uddenly announced the death of a forembst spb.ce scient ist. He was In the van 111 developing the Soyuz: space plt.1form program-Russia's rival of this country's history-making Apollo moon probes and landin gs. But unlike the latter's epic successes. Soyuz By George ---. Dear George : How do you get away wttb !Ueh blunt answers in your column? Doesn 't anybody e:ve:r take ob- j<>ction? Cl/RIOUS Dear Curious: \\'hat did YoU think this big white: band age on my nose was? A nag of ·~ce? I . l Robert S. Allen ) \, . ~ - has been plb.gued by disaster and tragedy. This dismal record was climaxed last summer by the asphyxiation deaths of three cosmonauts wh ile descendin~ from· a record-breaking ea rth orbit. The So- viet Union has never disclosed that com- munication with the ill-fated trio was lost by ground cont rol within seconds after they start ed dov.'n . OTHER CALA~tITOUS crashes tightly concealed from both th e Russian people and the \YOrld are: -The r..1arS probe by two five-ton 1space· ships launched early !his yea r. They should have reached lhelr li.rget Jong ~ ago, but nothing has been heard from or about them . -A lunar probe 111!\t spring that e:r· ploded almost lmmed!3telv after being airborne; hurtllnlt' larac pnfL~ of the rock· et back to earth, killing some workers and leaving a huge cra!cr near the launrhing pad. -An earlier lunar probe resulted Jn.an even wone catastrophe. It blew up 01 the p.id with con~iderable las,, of life and heavy destruction of equ ipment. There has ne\•er been I.he 'lightest hint of these catast rophes. -tN SEP'TDIBER, Luna 18 did rta<'h the moon, but the vehicle It was to land thcre crashed instead -a lot"I loss. Wha t space sprctacular. iT any. wlJJ re. place Soyuz remains to be seen. \Vestern space authorities consider it highly unllkely thttt the Kremlin will a bondon this crucipl field. They anticipate there will be far-reaching changes In pro- grams and objectives, but not a dropout.• .( weeks' old some strong gains already are being felt. Volunteers r'o r neighborhood collections and routine tasks are always needed. So are donations. of funds. To lend a hand in launching the new United Fund, you may call the campaign staff at 492-966 1. tn Lagun~. the Community Chest isn't seeking clerical help but if you have been overlooked in the mailings you may phone 494-1420. Covering All Bases Laguna's ne\v police chief, cx-?.farine officer Joseph Kelly, is determined to get himself a police force that will satisfy everyone in town-right, left, middle and don't-g ive-a-damn. In recent years. the Art Colorey's law-and-order de· partment has come under fire at fairly regular intervals. with one segment of the community demanding a halt to "permissive" handling of law-breakers. while the other is shouting "police brutality!" One sollltion to this confusion, Chi ef Kelly c!ecided. would be to let members or the communi(y in on the process of screening and selecting new officers. So no'v Laguna has citizen representatives on the o.ral boards set up to interview patrolman applicants. The make-up of the two boards named to date is a tribute to the chief's talent for covering all bases. Each one, of course, has included a woman (that takes care of Women's Lib). On one, the local American Civil Liberties Union chairman toiled alongside a representative of the mer· chant community. The next two appointees were the manager or the Chamber of Commerce and the proprie· tor of a rather-far-out music shop. Backin g JJP these good citizens are officers from the local for ce whose experience has given them some thoughts on what it takes to keep Laguna orderly-and happy. , s 'Say, Mildred! Did ya see where Jackie m ade Aristotle Onassis sign this fancy contract?' • "Miss' Made Her 195 Years Old A Type Slip, a Beauty and Her Boss Mailbox To the Editor: We thought you might enjoy sharing a little bit of fun we had with one of our employes concerning your Nov. 3 editorial on ~1ission San Juan Capistrano's 19Slh ann iversary. An obvious "typo'' referred Lo ~1iss San Juan Capistrano, who happens Ip be Rosa AJarcon, a clerk-typist and front office receptionist for the city. The enclosed photo clearly shows why she was chosen. There was no harm done. and the at- ta ched letter of reprimand really won't go in her personnel jacket. DONALD G. WEIDNER City ~1anager City of San Juan Capistrano MEMORANDUM TO : Miss San Juan Capistrano (alias Rosa Alarcon) FROJ\.f : Personnel Office SUBJECT: Falsifying of Employment Application Ii is a serious violation of city regula- tions to falsify an employment ap. plication. The attached news pa per editorial from the Nov. 3 edition of the DAILY PILOT established your age as 195 yea rs. Your employment application stipulating over your signature that all information given is accurate admits to an age of only 19. Recognizing the unerring accuracy and infallibility of the press, this discrepancy in stated versus reported age must be resolved in favor of the press. Therefore. not only are you somewhat past man- dat ory retirement age, you also represent a distinct liability to our life insurance program. THIS OFFicf:, as well as the press, has al so been attracted by the charm and beauty or your structure, and is somewhat chagrined at being deceived. Impersonating a vivacious and energetic beauty queen, as well as fal sifying your employment application. rank s among the mo.51 .mendacious of acts on the part of a public employe. As the Personnel Office sees it. you have only two alternatives: f I) Throw yourself on the mercy of the Personnel Board and ask to be retained under a "Great, Great Grandmother Clause:," or f2) Confess your secrets of puerility lo the editor of the DAILY PILOT. \Vomen's Section. In a gesture of enlightened employe relations and . democratic personnel management, you have 48 hours lo satisfactorHy answer the charges herein and provide a refutation of your reported age . f!fiss San Juan Capist rcr11o's de- fe nse against charges brough t nn b11 ti typog raphical . slip in (/i fs ne1vs· paper is awaited 1vith confide11 ce that she will be able ta-n1a tch or better he'LemplayeU_j i11e... wit 011d 11111-nor, -Ed itor Favors AB 1471 To the Editor : • The ocean front is disap~aring in r~t of our eyes, and it ls time for the stnt~ to lake action to protect th is pretlous resource. Delay would be disastrous. for it is irreph!leeable. We who llvt in small towns along tht coast have seen that our city and county i::ovcmments have been inadequnte lo the t.11.sk of protectinR our t'OAStlh~t from desecration by exploitive inter sis to the great loss of all our prople and of genera· lions to Cf)me. ... .,., Tll£RE JS NOT lime to wait lrllgcr for Miss San Juan Capistrano's (Rosa t\larcon) appearance belies her "195 yea rs of age:• See accompanying lefter and 1ne1norandutn. other legislation before more destruction occurs. Any measures now approved will at leasl acl as a stop gap to in- discriminate havoc and can alv.•ays be impro\•ed up<in at a later date with ad- ditions or changes. if necessary . Bill AB 1471 \\'as presented to the state Senate on ~·londay. Nov. 8. Village Laguna is asking that Sen. Dennis Carpen~r give his affirmative vofe to its passage . All individuals "'ho are con- cerned with the greedy destruction or the beautiful California coastline are urged lo wire hitn in Sacrament-0 immediately. FRANCES ENGELHARDT Secretary Village Laguna 6ah1l11g Per•peetlve To !he Editor: especially 1neaningful to those children v.•ho neve r have had any church af- filiation. But for all the boys and girls it is one small step with in our fine C'lemen- tary school program lo help them find a "hook·' on which to "hang·· their etflics, morals and their very decisions now and later. It gives the students precious tin1e lo think, to learn, to decide. IT JS, TllEREFORE, appropriate that our mayor, l\ir. Goldberg. should· call al· lenlion to the program·s s\gnificanee, urging the enrollment of the fourth . fifth and sixth grade studenrs. llis splendid proclamation may be see n hanging in our Released Time Trailer. We welcome you. the citizens of Laguna Beach. to come, to see and to undcrst:'lnd v.•hy 1\'e are v.·holeheartcdly in support of the pro- gram. Th:inks to !\tr. Goldberg fot""his sup- Lttl•r1 tram r11dtr1 ire w.lcamt . N1rm11tr wrlt1r1 1htuld c:onvtr th1lr m1n1111 111 :IOI wordt 1r llH. Th1 rlthl to candtnMI ltltlA II Ill IPICI tr 11lmln1t1 lilHll 11 rt1t tvtd. All l1tt1r1 m111I I~ c:lud1 1l1n11ur1 i ncl m11Un1 1ddr111. but ntm•I m1y b1 '"i!hh1ld on r1a1111t II 1u111c1en1 rt•Hn II •• ;~1'11nl. PHtry Wiii ntl bl P11llll111ed. bus loads of tourists? No place lo park! In the multifar ious expanse of gimcrack .shops sprawling over several blocks we couldn't even locate our favorite restaurant. So, settling for a makeshift lunch, v.·e were happy to leave. The allure for repeating the visit had vanished. Sensitive persons v.•ould avoid such a fate for L'aguna! MARY SCOT!' Incredible Action To the Editor": for over a century and a half, the United States ri1i litary Academy has espoused the idea ls expressed in its mot· to, "Duty, Honor, Country." I was raised in a military fa1nily, the son of a \Vest Point graduate. The in· tegrity of our mil itary est3.blishment. especially at. the higher lc\'els, and its tradition of fair play had always been something of which I was proud and con· fident. I FIRST READ of Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert's situation and th en saw him on the Dick Cavett Shot\". The actions resulting in the corruption of this man's exemplary n1ilitary record were so in· credible. uncontested. visi ble and con· trary to the traditio ns of the American military services that I v.•as confident rectification v.·ould take place \Yilhout del ay. I looked forward lo the Colonel's next appearance on the show for a report on how everything had been straightened out. Instead , through the capriciousness of the 1nilitary, LI. Col. Herbert did not appear on the show. IT APPEARS lhal West Point v.·ould better prepare n1en for service in today's U.S. Army by changing its motto to "Cant. Parochialism. Ob sequious ness.'' May the orig inal motto slick in the throats of those \\'ho countenance the sup- pression of an honorable man performing an honorable aclion. FR ED THORLIN flerbert s11rrect 11alio11wide contro- versy u1J1en lie chargccl he uias re· /ieved of his Vietna m comr11a11d Aprit 4. 1969 because li e persisted i n re• 1>or1111 g 1oo r cr111u.'.~ to l11s superiors. Tiie nu1ch-decoro tcrl officer said S1n1· day lie is a.'iki11g tile Arm11 ta reti rl him Jlcxt f'cb. 29. the day he will liave com pleted 20 years' service and be eligible for retircml'nt be11e/ifs. Tlit Ar111y issncd a . "fact s/iee t" denying Herbe-rt 's allegations, -Editor ORANGE COAST As the Laguna Released-Time Program cnfers ifs fiffh week . afleildance remains high with the enrollmeflt of about 60 students. When the enrichment program port. --j-- Tlie schedule for the classes is as follows: Tuesday. 2:30-3 :30, El l\1orro. 6th grade: '\lednesd.ly. 2:30-.1 :30. El l\forro, 41h and 5th grade-s: Thursday. 2-3 T O.\V., DAILY PILOT changes. more wlll be welcome. ~ The two classes offered under the pro· gram allo\v for i;tudy of the Bible, discussion . dramatics. expression or in- dividual ideas and relattd art v.·ork. Out of the classes can come a realitaUon or an ullimatl!: purpclSC In life, of the reality of a living God and of some of lht mean - ing of Christian respon sibll!t)'. ' DELVING lNTO Old T es ta me n I judges, king' and prophets helps th e children lo gain a perspective and to discover !he-Importance of the Hebraic laws and mores on Qur Christian lives, All of this Is relev11nt today to.all of u~ here in Lagunn Beach. l.l can be 4th. Sth and 6th grades: Friday, 2-3. Aliso, 4th Slh and 6lh ~adcs. CAROL ll. MAXWELL Cha irman S11l v n11g n11d To11rlsU To the Ed!tor: Before rcturnlng fro n1 a lv.·o monl h~ vacation in the uncrov.•ded wild~ of C11 ru1da and th e northwest to 'life in Laguna. the idc<i of lunching at dc.llghtful Solva ng see1ncd fill ing. Solvang had always been an acslhelic treat. But what did we find? Crowded stretts, Rol'tert N. \\!cell , Publi.,~her Tl1omll$ Kecvit, Editor -' Albrrl \\'.Bales t'd1tonal r age F.ditor ' 111c editorisl ~l:t' nf ~the OAily Pilril 1<.f'rk11 to inlorm and ,iUmu· IAll" r••:ldt'rs hy prl';!.t'nflfll:!' thl-' nt.'•1 •pA111·r·~ t1pinifm11 nnd <'Om· mcntnry 11n topiN of lnTrrr"t An(I iii::nlfirAn~"'· hy provldini:: 11. fnn nn fnr 1hl" c.'<Jlrt'""'on of "tu' r<'l'ldf'nr." npinions. 1111d b)· 11r11)1'nllni.: 1he f1i\'l"'r1'0 \'i('\\'pcJint11 or lnforn1i'tl nb- •rt'\'l'l'll :i.nd 11r1ok1~rn4.l11 on to1>1c1 or th~ dAY. ,. \Vcdncsday, Nov. 10, 191 1 • Closeout $5 I Men's better slacks in Grad or Continental styles, straight and conventional legs, wools and Dacron® poly- ester/wool blends,· solid colors and -patlerns. Sizes 29-42 waist. Closeout 2 for$5 Men's better sport shirts. Long point collars, end-on-end broadcloth and chambray polyester/ cottons in assorted colors. S..M-L-XL Sp ecial · 3 for $5 Fluffy Rolyes ter f1Ued bed pillows pric ed so low t hat you can buy a new <. 1pply for every bed in the house now. 19"X25" size. ' I I re- If you like to save mo'ney, save Sunday, too.• 0 0 0 0 .-~J ' \ I I I r Clearance 2ss to 4ss Orlg .. SS to $8. Sportswear tops and blouses for women. Select yours from various fabrics and co lors in broke11 sizes during our great pre-holiday clerance! Money-saving gifts! ' 4ss to 5ss Orig.' $9 to $12. Women's ankle pants In an assortment of fabrics, styles and colors 10 beef up yo ur wardrobe at terrific clearance prices now. Broken sizes. JCPenney The values are here every day. I *The following stores are open Sundays noon to 5 p.m . .• , ' ' • • . .... Girls' pants in bright, bold patterns. Acrylic bonded to acetate, for sizes 7-1~· DAILY PILOT 7 Special · 299 Women's sweate rs of soft acrylic knit. Placket front, shirt collar or zip-back rib knit styles tn rich solid colors. S-M-L. Special 2 for '5 Girls' knit tops of comfortable easy-care cotton. Peasant style or ZiP. neck style. Solid colors, sizes 7-14. NEWPORT BEACH . F .. hion Island HUNTING TON BEACH • Huntington Center COSTA MESA· Harl:ior oCnter (Closed Sunday) Charge it. All other stores open Monday through S1turd1y • ' l • • • • . I I I. I • ' f '<. D,\11.Y, PJLOT l\'od"l!I'!• M"!mbff te, 1'!71 -Altar ·Walks Decline ~ . Young People in A1nerica Not Marrying WASlllNGTON (AP) Young people apparently are abytng away from marriage these days. The Census Bureau haa is- sued a report indicating that more men and .women under 35 are: Slaying Sitljle than ifl the rt<:i!nt past. The report shows that 5' percent or the men and 45 per~ cent of the women in the · under·35 age group were single, when the survey was madeJn M~ Ttuit's an in· crease 1tnc£ lhe 1960 census of & percentage point! for men and 8 percen~e tK>ints for women. whether or not: ''These results may reflect l. people are deJaying mar· an increasing tendency for riage for a certain number of young persons to delay mu· years. but still eventually riage for various reasons untU marry in similar or greater later )'ears, or a newl:Y proportions than before. lltyeloping -t.eadency for more 2. more people are simply of the fOWl6 persons of today not going to marry regat.d!ess to remain single for their en-()f age. or . ''Ure"" lives,'' said the report, 3. this ls c y c I l c a 1 .. Matit{ll Status and Living phenomenon which will even. Arrangements. March 1971," tuaJly alternate with a pattern prepared by Arthur Norton, of more people marrying at Judy McDaniel and Robert younger ages than is now the Gry~l}:S. case. Ttle study says that In con-The Census report also trast to the young people, the shows· that the majority of age group 33 years and older divorced men and women in has continued a long.term in· the United States maintain S C creasing tendency to marry, their own households. ra;:.;;,;uE:;::,ENl=E----..::.!av...:.:Ph::!!.n !!!!'"'.:::.:.,,!!!!cmdT~ Soviet Families Pro test New Quarters in Israel TEi A VIV (AP) - A Soviet family stepped off the airliner that had brought it to Israel, kissed the ground in jubilation' -and went on a sit-down strike. The family' remained .at Israel's International airport for three days, ref6sing to BC• Russian Jewish immigrants are looked upon with ad· miration. Nobody -leaSt or all the government wants t<> appear in <>pen conflict with them. . Tb\18 a settlement is usually reached, &0metlmes· within hours, som'eiimes after three days or git-ins and haggling. The authoritleg uy there isn't enough urban housing for everyone, and compromise by offering newcomers apartments in remote areas with a promise of pre.rerential treatment 'When urban housing becOmes available. cept housing offered them. I-;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"!" They wanted an apartment inl 1•N.••l•·.w••••$•••Ti•'O••~··'£•••J••IJ.••'$•••,·•,••'/li••'£i••'/f.••l,••'IJ•••• a principal city, not a remote town. · About 100 Soviet families have ••aged •it-down •trikes iJOO "'. ,, •• "' .. •1o • .J,,A11il/11/m at the airport in the last ffi 5W•'ll lllPV• month, causing endles,s /JI 11-..l.. ... I. ,l headaches among officials. \ trHI wtniWll; CD. arpenler reducing its proportion of "However. a much higher single men and women. About proportion of divorced women, f~!g~S!~~~~=;~;!;'.;;~::::::::~ ~·-·t.fCt-"Talk -6· percent of the-women and 7 about 79 percent. were percent of the men in this housel>old heads than was the "l'm sorry, but I feel you people start tjnkUng much Iranian and Indian families also have used such tactics on occasion. It has become com· mon with the Russian newcomers. qtVINE _ State Senator group were single at the time • case among divorced men, too early in .the season." . DeQni! E. Carpenter (R· of the survey. _ . about 56 percent," the study-------------------- "They used sit-down strikes. 1 to battle the K.remlin, and they simply do the same here." commented an im· migration official. Ne.~i>Ort Beach) will discuss The report says that tilnce says. Hfurthermore, about "What the Politician Sees" in the increase in the percentage five times as great a pro. a UC Irvine Extension lecture of single young people is a portion of divorced women series at 7 p.m. l'iO~ -18, in rela~vely rec~nt phenomenon, than m~n w_ere household roclm 178 oJ ~ '1fumanities it will ~ necesaary to observe heads with children or other -HaU.:.-Ahi'UCl·gJIRpa!I'.~-young:-People-those ·persons-26 relatives-present, although Tfie talk-is l>art of the ex-to ·24 years old, for example-relatively more men were ten~rr-""series \on •'l T'h e for several years ''to see how listed as household heads.with AmerJCln· Mid& Class: Is they reaot overall to terms of no relatives present." There.; i. Sihin{ ;'Majority"!" their disposition to marry in The figures for· those living Adtni91Sion Is $5 for the public later years." alone were 42 percent for or $1.25 for stUdents, faculty The 'further observation will divorced men and 28 percent or staff of UCI. be necessary to deterniine for divorced women. _I A Vinyl pprlon® f 1loor, by the roll @r.'lnstrong .- ilochelle Vlnyl Corbalt l~eal for c1 .. n-lln9d trwll- qf today's fashionable Spanish and Mediterranean styles. 9 color combinations. Palestra vinyl Cortone is-a!'M- dom, multi-size<# cube.design · that serves as a subdlied back· ground fora variety of deco:; tlve effects. 7 color combina- tions. · · · Brigantine Vin"y1 Cartons. ' features a handsome inlaid vinyt cube design. Available tn 7 colors. Armsl{,ono. Castill1n has buill'lnvinY!,loam cusruon with Hydrocoid Back. · AYa1ki.ble ln;.,o color combi· n8tidns. ·: Brl1"1ln1your.tloor measurements for • ~ligellon estimate! ' \.lff Penneys tiM payment plan. ·--· ' .. "' . - Place'n Press Ercelon• tile. This new self-adhering floor tile makes covering an old floor so easy. To install Place'n Press, just peel' the release paper from the back of each vinyl-asbestos tile, place the tile in position, press it down, and it"s on the floor to stay. 29 <: 12·x12· tile Doll y9urselund save! ... Do a 9'x 12' floor tor only $32. _ · JCPenney --'-· _ The values are here every day. Com• in or phone: NEWPORf BEACH , F•shion Island (644-231 ~) HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center (892-7771) t· Mexico Lectm·e at OCC flora, fauna and Orange Coast E v e n i n g the •College is presenting a special archeology of the area. repeat performance Friday There is no tuition charge evening of the first session of and persons may register at biology instructor, L I o Yd the door. Smith's ''Mexico and Guatemala" lecture series. Smith. a graduate in ecology It will be held in !he OCC from the University of Science Hall from 7.9 p.m. California at Berkeley, has The lecture is an in-been a ranger-naturalist at trOOuction to the ecology <>f both Yosemite and the Mexico and GuatemaJa with a Petrified f<>rest N a t i o n a I c:l<>se look at Baja California Parks and was the first direc· and tht Sea of Cortez. It will tor of the Palm Springs Desert be illustrated with slides on Museum. T~e families arrive, enter the terminal and head for the im.migr.atiDo office..which will send them to low.cost hooses, purchased on e a s y in· stallments. Their relatives are waiting to pass the word: "Don't let them send you into the desert. Insist on Tel Aviv." Or Haifa, or Jerusalem. , Many airport porters are themselves immigrants from the Soviet Union. and they also advise the newcomers. If the immigrants are unhappy. they declare a strike. Usually they can gel away with it, because the Our everyday low prices will not be seen at this time, so that· we can bring you this sale. Save 40 95 The values are here every day. Even Sunday.• JCPenney service It's all part of the value. (71 q 52:M401 • Automatic fine tuning (AFT) • .. Oulck·Plc'" for instant picture-and soond • Built-in automatic coforpurifier • Front mounted speakets ior better sound • "'Contempor.iry" styte with walnut finish or "Mediterranean" style with pecan finish on hardwood cabinet _...__."••••-'Y ................ a.-. Chrom&-l.oc eleclronicafly selects proper balance between color and tint Chromabrite. our brightest picture tube "Quick-Pie" for instant picture and sound •early American" styte with maple finish or "Medllerranean" style wtth oak veneer on hardwood cabinet ,.._,..i ......... ,,_ .... ..,.. eeler ,.,.tell "' •lit> ir OIC...., __ ,.. ·-·fl1· ale $429 Reg. 469.95. Penncrestfl Contemporary 1tyte console colol'1Vwlll 23" screen meaaured diagonally ••• plus awlftl base. Sale $419'-- Reg. 519.95. Penncr••te E1rty American color-console TV wtth 23" 1Cr••n me11ured dl1gon1Uy. S•I• prices 1tfectlv• through Sunday • JC Penney •Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores: . " Newport Beaeh, Fashion Island. Huntinglon Beaeh, Huntington Conte" Use Penneys Time Payment Plan, • ro for by rs .. 'al g ' ' ' • ' ' . : ....... ' Wtdne~aY. Nawmbtr 10, 19n . ' The year's biggest -• -··-• savings are here during . . -. ~ . . -. a int and hardware month . • 95 Black & Decker 8" radial arm saw with stand. • Pow.erful 2 HP ball bearing motor gives depend'able, long-life service • Big 2Ya 11 dep th of cut • Li ghtweight, rug ged and portable • Automatic positive lockin g positions for 0° and 45° bevel, 0° and 45° miter, and go~ ripping positions • Lets you perform all basic cuts in woodworking Pieces sold separately total 1il2.90 '\ ·499 Penncraft " 100 watt, single .pole soldering gun. 88~ Replacement propane fuel cylinde r fits all standard propane torches and appliances. 444 399 Penncraft11 propane torch kit. Penncran• 30 .. heavy duty sawhorse legs. ' Sale! Your choice Savess Reg. 29.99. Penncraft * ¥s" variable -spe ed, reversi~le dtlll. Speed control lets you lock trigger at any speed, fo rw ard or rever~e. Double insulated,.V4 HP motor delivers up to 750 RPM. Permanently lubricated ball thru st bearings. Savess Reg. 29.99. Penncr aft • 2 speed, heavy duty 3.2 amp. sabre saw. Double insulated for more shock protection, V3 HP motor delivers up to 3500 strokes per minute. Self lubricating bearings, tilt base, rip guide. 99 •• V•n •b!,. $f><'.,d ft..,e.-sol>lc s,,... .. d lo..: o .... b1 .. 1,..ulafood PC!M ... CnAf'T S . $ ave 10 Reg. 34.99. Penncraft• 7V4 n double insulated c ircular saw. Double insulated for more shock protection, powerful 1.9 HP motor delivers up to 5200 RPM. P.ermanently lubricated ball bearings, adjUstable rip guide. Savess Reg. 29.99, Penncrafl • 10 gal. capacity shop vac. Features 1 HP motor, heavy duty steel drum. In-eludes flexible 6' hose, utility nozz le, conversion adapter for 1 V4" accesso ries, filter bag. ~ Sale prices effective through Saturday • . JC Penney· -·· ---, 99 . Rockwell 10" malorlzod 11w ML . • Complete with bullt·ln 2.5 motor, . table exten1iot1 wing.and stand • All ball bearing construction . • Cenlrallze~ fingertip blade controls • Big 24" rip capacity ~ Enclosed drive mechanism • Thermal overload protected motor • Saw blade guard Pieces sold seporolely loll!l 249.93 ' 599 169 Pennc raft • shop vacdolly. . Penn.cratt• 1o pc. drill bit set. ~c o ~ell Gl 249 Penncratt• 7 pc. SQCket bit set ' E · -, --~ . . cfiA 1a e;ll·"·pj +alDf@lj 3ee Penncratt• 5 pc. screwdriver bit seL Shop Sunday noo n to 5 P.M. at the following stores: Av1 il1bla It: • • NEWPORT BEACH, F1shion ISiand HU NTINGTON BEACH , Huntington Center ' Use Penneys ltme payment pion. • l \ I I • r · L .); r t I ,. .. j f DAILY PILW Wtdl'ltSdQ, Novtmbtr 10, 1971 Senate, Asse11ably Redist1·ict Plans Near Completion SACRAMENTO (UPI) - senate Democrats Tuesday t finishing touches on their p r o p o s e d reapportionment ' 'Riot ·Fu1id s' Souglit by San Diego SAN DJ:EGO {AP) -Miami Beach will get nearly $400,000 .,rrom the Justice Department 'to help buy equipment and , train law enforcement person- nel for the Democratic Na- '"lional Convention ·next year. torfi~ials in San Diego say they'll ask for even more for the RepubliCan meeting. Assi~tant City M a n a g e r j..John Lockwood said he ex- l pects to prtsent his request to the city council in about three ... weeks and 11kl ht would t recommend asking for a a:rant l>Of "con1iduably more" than ;$400,000. He would · not say what the fieure might be. plan i.•:hich Republicans have tentatively agrttd to support. Senate sourcts said one of , tpe. last changes involved sh\£. ling 1 census tracts in the district of Sert. James Q. Wedworth (0-1-Ia"'thorne), to reduce his proposed black con· stituency. Under !be plan , Wed worth • would ha ve had a 40 percent black district, sources said, and he feared a hie.ck Democrat could defeat him in the primary tlecrtion' next year. However, the sources said . tbe district would remain "'ilh a 1 large black population. which could defeat him if Negro voters united behind one candidate rather•· than spreading their v o t i n g strength between several. The current Democratic plan Creates a new Mexican- American t:listricf in Central Los Angeles and throw s two GOP senators -Milton Marks of San Francisco and Peter Behr of Tiburon -into the same dis trict. They would have to contest each other in a showdown to s urvive politically. Blast Hurts 13 P ersons In T orra11ce TORRANCE (UPI J -Four men ~·ere hospitanzed with critical burns early today when flammable zinc dust ex- ploded as flames S\1•ept these- Cond story of a 'rnanufl!-cluring plant. At least nine others 1vere hurl. including four firemen . Fire orficials said flames erupted at 2: 17 a.m. at the Torrance tubing division of Cyprus f.-lines Corp. and the explosion occurred about 14 minutes later. First reports said l h e tremendous explosion \V a s touched off "'hen a hopper of flammable zinc dust ·was ig- nited. · The Justice Departmehl's ft.aw Enforctment A!sistance Administration announced itsl------------------ grant to Miami Beach Tues- t da y. LEAA Administrator Jer· • ris Leonard. told newsmen in f Washington that the depart- ..-ment realizes that police fortes In hast cities are put under unusual strain because lot the conventions. r : Teachers' ~ ; Pay Hiked ·1 SACRAME NTO (APi - A bl/I boosting the minimum pay for Clllfornia teachers from ,000 to $6,MO annually 1squeaked through the Senate Tuesday wjthoot a v o t e lo spare. The measure b y Assem blyman Peter Cha con ,ID-San Jose). was returned to the Assembl y for concurrence in amendments on a 21.10 Senate vote. I I ' I I she likes • ' ' he likes Snrs Autom•tic W•ter Soltene11 Pfk:•d from '229.9S CAll 'fOIJt' neorftf SeCW'I SI ore I or FllEE waler o"olys" W•t•r Soll-rs et moet.h•r• ster .. .net In t he ""•lotr The new minimum salaries ·would take effect on JuJy 1, 1972. if there is no federal ~freeze on prices and wages. ~a.id San Francisco Democrat Geor1e Moscone. S e n a t e '.sponsor of the bill. '----------------------' t" ~ EARN253rro503 MORE Many banks pay a reduced savings passbook rate cf a low 4 "/0 • At Pacific you will earn the same high rates a s before. ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS 6.18\ 6.00% 5,0002.!! TWO 5.92\ 5.75% 1,0002.!! ONE 5.39\ 5.25% 5002.!! %th 5.13\ 5.00% 500 ONE DAY lntere1St compounded daily and pai d from date of deposit to date of withdrawal even if it's just one day As k how you can ob tain all these benefits service charge FREE PREPARATION OF PERSONAL STATE AND FEDERAL INCOME TAX RETURNS ft .. FREE ~ TRAVELER 'S CHECKS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES '!....._. ,, COLLECTION OF NOTES MANY OTHERS ......-S'f'> OPEN NIGHTand DAY- Hours: Mo nday thru Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PLAZA _.,PISTOL STIU!;IT e..COSTA MEJA, CAUFO.WIA • ltHON! .s..MOM ... t Will Tax Mon ey Go Up in Smoke? SACRAMENTO JUPI I - The. cigarette ta:t emey-ged t~ day a! the nei~·battfegrollnd for legislators attempting lo balance the slate's red-ink budget "'ith a "mini-package" featuring income tax withholding. A -O e m ocratic·sponsored proposal supported by Gov. Ronald Reagan which would impose withholding starting Jan. I was approved Tuesda y by the Senate Revenue and Taxation Committee. "We're going to be banging the income taxpayer with a one-tv.-o punch," remarked one committee member. Sen. John \\'. Holmdahl (O-Oaklall(l), rererring to the initial double tax that withholding would cause. The bill was sent on a voice vote lo the Sentate Finance Committee. v.•here Chairman ltandolph Coll ier .tD-Y_ryka l. promptly announced he will try lo amend it with a ci~ret­ te tax increase. The author, Sen. \Vatter W. Stiern (D·Bakersfiel d), said he was opposed to a cigarette tax hike because "not everybody would pay it. It's unfair to finance the state by taxing just that segment of the public which smokes." But Collier, an ardent non· "I'm not going to vote for a smoker who has banned smok-tax increase. to cover a deficit ing from his committee room, expected three years from said cigarette and other "sin now," insisted Holmdahl. who taxes" should be increased to presided over the meeting. "lf assure that the Legislature the recession gets worse v.·e're won't have to raise taxes going to .• ineed more money again next year. anyway. If it gets better. wt Stiern's biJJ would boost tax-1 v.·on't need as 1nuch." es by a·n estimated $343 The Revenue and Taxation million for the remainder of Commiltee. chaired by Stier1\, this riscal year, just barely declined to approve a rival enough to plug a revenue gap ·'min i·p a c ka g e'' by in the $6.8 billion state budget. Assemblyman William T . But it would fall roughly $110 Bagley (R-San Rafael). ~·hich million short of balancing the v.·ould have balanced bude,.t'~ following yeo.r's budget a n d for the foreseeable future and even more than that during increased cigarette taxes by the 1973-74 fiscal year. three cents a pack. TRAVEL TRAILER SPACES $5.00. clay St• the'deMtl c:ountryito• Palm Spring&' fh1e1I recreot!onal ecuil. Palm S•rln11 Oasis - ltw.011-1 v..,;,i. ....,, 36100 Dale Pelm Or. Cothedrol l:11y, Cal ifernlct 922t• (71,1321--4113 , I'<• Acfi•;tr .1 it.. U.S. l'•-*GN!o"'" 7 -- Foreign intrigue for floors .. Our international rug -.sale 15-25% off. • Sale prices effective through Sunday.• Sale 33 99 Reg. $.46. Imported from Denmark 'P rado' authentic rya rug in wool shag. Tone·orrlone squares. 4· x 6·. Sale 26 99 Reg. $36. 'Fleur' ny!on pile hooked (jrea rug. Bold .color flo ral in blue/green or copper/gold. 3·5·· x 5'6·· . Sale 1399 Reg. $19. Reversible !lat-woven 'Cadiz". Nylon /olef in fibers tor strength and long wear. Fr inged. 3 6'" x 5·5 ·. Sale 49 95 Re g. $59. 'Litchfield' reversible accent rug . Tubular double·braid· ing. Nylon surf.lee for long wear. s·s·• X 11 "6" oval. Sale 33 99 1 Reg . 546 . Oriental-look ·raj Maha/'. Three v1v1d Per~1an-style designs rn worsted wool. 2 color comb1na!lollS. 4' X 6'. JCPenney., The values are here every day. J - * Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m . at the following stores : ' Newport Beooh , Foshion lsl,nd. Huntington Beaoh, Huntington Center. Use Penneys Time Po ymen t Pion . ( • \ • - • • .. -- ' • • - - ' • •• . 1 PI LOT-ADVERTISER Wednt$diy, Novembtr 10, 197? • DAJLY PIUT ~.,E. HOLIDAY . J. c. PENNEY ~~~.~~l~~~::~O . r NE'f'PORT BEACH ONLY ' . 172 011ly Mo11'1 Tow1ter9ft Spert 2900 Coott. Solid '' t.Kr pen1r111. All · wnl or WMI blo111h. SI-]7 to 44, Or~. >•.t5 to 60.00 •~ •..• NOW 142 011ly Mo11'1 Cn1al Slocli&. zss Golf 11yln. fff11 1tyi.•, flora or 1t1al9lrit kt. Wol•t 1l1n 2f lo 34, Orft. '· '' 10 1.ta .......... ~ow ...., 185 0111., MH'I lktt~ o,.... Slock.1 500 Wool ., •••I Mo11d1 •. 1H111re MOii's t.tylft. Siqe JO t9 40. Ori9. 15.00 ••••. , .••••••••••• NOW Boxed Christmas Cards A ,,... ... G,.up. 250 o.ty. Or ... J.Nd.Ot NOW 11> PRICE . J FA~CfR~QjE OUTS 60. & 70 Series 'SPORT TIRES · 25% SAVINGS-ALL SIZES JOO ONLY 1601114 ........................ ,,,, )5.06 + 2.91 f,l ,T. J60114 ............. , . , , , ..... ,, .. , Jl.06 + J .15 f.l .T. G60a1S ······•··••••••••••••••••• J6 .56 + J,JO F.E.T. J60a15 ............•...•..•........ 1•.S6 + J.51 F.l.T. L601115 ......... , .... , .. ,. ,,,,,,,., 41 .06 + J.76 f.E.T. A70rll ,,, .... ,, ,,,, ,, .. ,, ......... 22.41 + 2.01 f.l .T. 170114 ......•...... ,. ,. ,, .... ,, , .. 24.66 + 2.51 f.l.T. f70al4 ......... , ... , , , , .•.... ,, ,, . 26.1' +. 2.64 f.l.T. 6701114 •... ,,' ...... ~ .. ····•·'······ 27 .66 + 2.14 F.f.T. H70t14 ,,,,,.,, .................... 29.16. + J.OS F.f.T. G7011i .. , ...........•. , •.. • ,. ,, ... , , 27.66 + 2,16 f,f,T, H70tl5 ,,, .... ,,, ..... ,,,, .. ,, ..... 29.1. + J.11 f.f.T. -WITH TllADf: - TRUCK LOAD SALE SPECIAL BUY GROUND GAINER TIRES ,50 ONLY-4 PLY NYLON-TUIELESS 70011.J ............................ 1,,11 + I.ts f.l .T. 171•1 4 ................•...••.•.•.. 19.11 + 2.21 f.l .T. f71114 ... ,, , . ,,,, ........ , ... ,, ... t•.11 + 2.ll F.E.T. G71•1 4 , , ........•......•..•..••... 12.11 + 2.55 f.E.T. H71114 . ,. ,, ,.,, , .. , .. ,. ,, ....... , , 22.11 + 2.74 F.l.T. 560115 , .. ,, .. , ... ,, ...•.... ,,., ... 1,,11 + 1.74 f.l.T. V71r1S , ~. ,, , , ,, ,, ,, , , , , ,, , , .• '! .. , 22.11 + 2.64 f.E.T. H1111s 22.11 + 2.10 F.E.T. WHITEW.lLLS IJ.ot MOllE WIT H Tit.I.DE I ' I WOMEN'S BLACK CRINKLE WOMEN 'S ACCESSORIES BIHk Ghllll• Tio, 6 88 <0mp,.ltl'" .. 10. . O•lg. I0.99 NOW • "· ----------------SMOKE/ORANGE SADDLE OXFORDS Lt11ther uppers, 1 88 compo1ltlon 1ole. .... . ........ Orig. 1.99 NOW • MEN'S MOC TOE OXFORD. CURLER BONNETS From Celebrlty, decor•tlvo flor•I prints. Ideal for 1 44 •homo or •••Y· ........................ Orig. 3.00 NOW • 300 ONLY, 4 PLY POL VESTER CORD MILEAGE MAKER TIRES 20'/o S1'-'in95 On All Siz•• 650111-1/W ................ HOW! 15.96 + 1.11 f .l .T. 700111-1/W ... ,, , , ,, .. ,, ... HOW! 17.56 + 1.92 F.l.T. E71•14-l/W . ,, , ... ,, , , ,, ... NOW! 19.t6 + 2.11 f.l .T. f71a14-l;W . ,, ,, .. ,, ,. ,, •. , NOW! 21 .5' + 2.ll f.E.T. G71r14-l/W , ,, ,, .. ,, , .... NOW! 23.16 + 2.55 f ,l,T. 560111S-8/W ... ••••••••••••• NOW! lt.16 + 1.74 f.l.T. G71115-11W ····••••••••••••NOW! 21.•6 + 2.64 F.l.T. H71115-W/W ......•..•..•. HOW i 27.16 + 2.74 f.l,T. L71115-~ W , '''"'''''''''' NOW! 2•.S' + l .1• f.l.T. -ADD J.Of EXTRA FOil WHIT&: W ... ll.S a OLD TIJIE. I GllOUP I WOMIN'S FASHIONS · / o ........ MCI Pflllt S11lfl, ouort~ fo11'1k, J111lor1 J .88 1 Mlur A ltolf flm. Or~. t .OO·ll.00 , ••••.•.•• NOW' GllOUr II WOMEN 'S FASHIONS Dr111n & Po11t Still'I, •••rtad fobrks. 9.88 • J1111!or, Mlur & half 1lrft. Ori,. 12.00-1 1.00 ,, NOW • G•OUP WOMEN'S FASHIONS Drff.5" & Pollt S11l1'1, •5Hrtff fobrlc. 12.88 Jwnlor, Mluy & holf .i..._ Or19. 14.G0-17.N NOW CAMPER TRAILER Darn• CloM 01r Co111plirta. Sl•r• 6. Ha E1tro Goodltt. 1 only. Orl9. 1645.00 $,. 900 NOW...... 9 JILLIONS OF JEWELS TRADITIONAL DOOR CHEST ~!~7ri.0~.~ .. ~-~.~ ... ~.p.:.'~~'.~.1 .... Orig. 6.11 NOW 2.88 f'.:;:~~ .. ~·.~.1.~.' ............ Orl9. 32t.OO MISTER BRAIN PECAN CHINA CABINET ~.~~ .. ~~-~.~~ .. -~Uh a m~~~~~: .. Orig. 6.11 NOW 2.88 rr:~11;'.o~al ityll~~.· ... Orig. 445.0o SPIROGRAPH TRADITIONAL LOVE SEAT NOW 219.00 NOW 335.00 '', '· Leather upper1, 7 88 A 1lmplt and fa1cln•tlng way 2 44 Bron11 1trlpt: mat1rl1I. Print• or sollda, aqu•r•• or oblong1. 88 not •II 11111. ........................ Orig. 17.H NOW • to draw. ...... . ............ Orig. 2.99 NOW • I only. .... Orig. J2t.OO You• cholco. ................................ o ,;1. UI NOW • MEN'S BLACK OXFORD TEETER TOOTER WATCHES CONTEMPORARY SOFA N~W 244.00 WOMEN'S SCARVES WOMEN'S PANTl·HOSE l eather 1011, 9 88 Her flr1t real wetch, If run·tick1 o1nd 1 88 Strlpod cover w/wood accent, 3 1lrn for proper flt colors 1unten & 88 le1th1r uppor1 ... -..... . Orig. 15.H NOW • keeps time. · .................... Orig. 2·'' NOW; • 1 only. .. Orig. JH.00 NOW 299.00 ;;~~G~·;· ~~':~·v~s;~ci1:1; .................• I I STATIONERY DEPT. I GLAss TOP ACCENT TABLE D11lgntd for 1tr1tch hose, color• whit•'& 1.88 I"-_____ M_E_N_'S __ D_E_P_T_. _____ , , , _________________ _. ~~~~;:~~-::1~1~-· .. C···H· 0A•l1R•·s60·00 nude. Sizes $, M. L. .. Or ig, 4.00 NOW NOW 34.00 CONTROL PANTY MEN'S SWEATER SHIRTS POLLENEX FOOT MASSAGER 5"'•"' Ho,.uloo. Llghtw•lght, colors wh it• & nude. 2 88 Wide vertlcel lfrlpos, thort slHve1, plecket collar, Relexe1 tired fftf, 3 88 2 enly. ···-..................... Orif. lH.00 NOW 99.00 Size• 5, M, L ....................... Orl9. S.oo NOW • tell color11tions. 4 88 2 only. ...... .. ............. Orig. 14.11 HOW . • TWIN SIZE MATTRESS I I SMl•E•N• ··s-MF·AL·SXHLl.O .. N ...... SWE .. A .. TOEdR's' 6.tl NOW • COPY MATE BY 3M Extr11 firm. 45.00 . WOMEN 'S SPORTSWEAR Instant copier for home or office. 16 88 5 only ............... _, ............. Orig. lt.•S " •• 1, ......... ,,. ..... 1 ... "'"''" 8 88 'c;,_"ply,M·A···TE .PA·P·E·-R··· 0.1,. ,..,, NOW • FKl,INm.G SIZE MATTRESS ~NOW ~-------------------' atyllng. Slzu S·M·L·XL ..... Orig. 11 .91 NOW • Y MEN'S 1.88 BONANZA 'or 2M copymete. 88 2 only. NOW 66.00 J\,INIORS & MISSES COORDINATES Mix & match,. broken 111•1, m•ny 2 88•6 88 1trl•1 ..... Ori,. .. 7.00-11 .00 NOW • • S)10RT SLEEVE KNIT TOP · 100•;. poly11tor strlpo, mis••• 1l1ot. · 2 88 30 •. only ..................... , .. -........... Orl9. 7.00 NOW • LONG SLEEVE JUNIOR BLOUSE D9nlm print, 1m11rt t111lored 1tjllng. SO only ................ _ ... Orig. 6.00 NOW 2.88 JUNIOR MINI SKIRT - 100•;. 11c•t•t1, f•shlon •trlpH 88 i°1G~twi:iGHT ... PoLYES·r·e~r~i.A~'Ks NOW • ~ 100•;. poly11ter 11nk/1 p11nt1 In 1 88 Junior sizes. . . ._ ......... Orig. 7.tO NOW • MISSE~ DOUBLEKNIT SLACKS 100% polyester, h111vy twill, fa1hlon colors. .. ... .. . . ... . Orig. 13.00 NOW 7.88 JUNIOR PANT SETS ~ 12 only. Cotton velour or 3-pc. wHkender 1et. ..... .. .... Orig. 2J.00 NOW 13.88 WOMEN'S COATS & DRESSES BRIDAL & FORMAL WEAR ""'"' ''""'• b•ld•I ''""~ 60°/o• 7 5 O/o Off brld•I vell1 ........................... . WOMEN'S UNIFORMS As1ortod 1tyl111, dl1contlnutcl 1tyle1, ·w•1h1bl• f11brlc1, llmltod ciu•ntlty. 1 88 4 88 ................ Orig. S.00 & 7.00 NOW • • • WOMEN'S OUTERWEAR J11ck•t1 •nd •II weath•r styles. A11 " 1 "' "'""· 9 88 12 88 . . .. .. Orig. 13.0G-20.00 NOW • • • BETTER COATS & JACKETS M'"Y °"'of' kl•d. Mlny '1"" 24 88 35 88 .. . . Orig. 3S.00·60.00 NOW • • • FURRY PILE JACKET W•rm & COi)', women'• 11111 .. Orig. 16.11 NOW 12,88 I GIRLS AND INFANTS . Orig. 2.ft NOW • · Ties, boltt, e1aorted 1port 1h lrts end dr••• 1 88 ELEcTRi'C ·TYPEWRITER I 1hlrt1. Broken 1l1:t1 11nd color1. . • Portable. pica type. 122 00 MEN 'S DRESS SHIRTS 1 .,1y O•lg. 1 ... 00 NOW • Fe1hlon sh•t 1hlrt, long•polnt collar, button cuff, 4 88 ! .. ------------------. mo1t 1l1:H In •tock .... -· ..... Orig. 6.91 NOW • I I POLAROID COLOR PACK II DRESS SHIRT CLEARANCE BEDDING DEPT. fo• I"'''"' col"" HW pl<tu .... A11ortod stylot, lfrlpe~ & solids, long ind lS only · o I 23 II NOW . ..... _ Orig. tS.00 CAMERA DEPT. I !. 15.88 short iltiY••· All Penn·Pr••t® 3 88 .._ _________________ _. KODAK .. MiOS"'M'()\iiE rPgROJ,ECTOR for •••Y cere ............... Orig. S.00.S.tt NOW • HAMPER CLEARANCE Lo11ds with cartridge or up to 400' rul. · 88 88 MEN'S SPECIAL BUY DRESS SHIRTS Qulltod" ,1,y1 ""' otyl1. 6 88 7 88 I ••ly o I 115 95 NOW o Long 1loey111, button cuffs. Av•ll•ble In whit• 99 6 ontr. . Orig. 12.00·1~.00 NOW • • • ' · -· 'I· ' illnd pastol1. Broken 1l1es. . . .. ............ • ELECTRIC BLANKET CLEARANCE I ~P~~~Sc~l~r~~.!~1,~~~. medium tone nlids. full size, du11I control. 19 88 SPORTING GOODS • k I I 6 only. Pink. .... . .. ,, .. _ Orlt. 4G.OO NOW. • ro •n 'ie1. Al Penn-Prut@ 1 88 BEDSPREAD CLEARANCE . I Z'EN·'l KNif' SH.IRTs·· .. Odg. 5.91 NOW • M""' '"'of. kl••· 3 88 19 ,8 FOREMOST CAL .. 22 I ll onlJ· Orig. f.00-24.00 NOW • • • Auto.l .. d, :~ kyShMlt,Lcrow nMk, short 0'1!'"'•5•00 NOW 3.88 STRIPED SHEET CLEARANCE . 11 only, ........................ Orl9. lt.H NOW 29.88 1 ME'N·S s'p()R.T SHIRTS"' r19, _. .. Multi colored twin & full . 1 50 FALKENSCHUM SKI BOOT 239 o nly. . Orig, l.00 NOW • Broken 111•1. 29 88 Asnrted 1tyles & p11tt1rn1, woven• only. 88 1,.•·-·-··-·-·-1·-··-"-'-~-·~-'·-~-··-S-0'-'~-·-~-··~-"-;-·.--N·0·w-·--.1 1 P!ECE GOODS I ~:~::~t~;::;. ::::~ ::·:: ::: 21 :88 GIGANTIC FABRIC CLEARANCE Belt m••••gtr. 4 only 5' 9 88 ' Sportswe11r, Unlng• dress••· 0 50 d Varl11ltle 1pud ............. Orl9. 119.tt NOW • ~ 4SO yd1. only .............. Orig •. 69-1.39 N W • Y • SLEEPING BAGS . SCISSORS CLEARANCE 72" """" 4 lb. fill. 3 66 M11ny 1tyli1 to select from. 1 · 44 3 88 30 I S I I B ' 133 only.··-Orig. 2.S0-6.00 NOW • • • cuSr'6M'i··poCfL"TA'B'l.'E""""""'""'""NOW • ~ DOUBLE KNIT POL VESTER SALE l V," h'"'Ycomb "'· · 299 00 BOYS' SUITS & SPORT COATS llngl• & double br•asted, mostly tollds, some stripes. l'°k•n '1"' 20 '"1Y 5 88 22 88 Orig. 11.91·37.91 NOW • • • BOYS' FLARE JEANS NOW 2.88 Solld1/1trlpe1, poly•1ter, cotton. Broken 11101 5/R/Husky ..... Orig. 2.91 BOYS' STRAIGHTLEG SLACKS Assorted tolld1, 6S% Rolyuter, JS% cotton comb. Sl1e1 12/14/16. SPECIAL. BUY ........... . BOYS' DRESS SHIRTS ::~ld:d1~rlnt1, textur~~lg. l .ll..-4.t 9 NOW 2.99yd. Floor mod11I only, .... Ori•. 399.00 NOW • · 1.441 --G-l-FT_S_A_N_D_L_A_M_Ps--1 I · HARDWARE DEPT. I • • SOCKET WRENCH SET Astorted colors, so-;. polyHter, so-;. cotton, short/long slHves, long point coll•r . Sl1e1 6-11 ..................... Orig. 1.9W.4f BOYS' CARDIGAN SWEATERS White only, 1hort 1l••vH. Si111 2·7. NOW Penn·Pre1t@ for e111y c11r1. Or~. 2.-49 NOW BOYS LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS 1.88 ~~!~~oT!.?.,~~r~~~NG DISHES 1 88 7 88 !n!~j~~~ .. ~-.. ~~4-~"~-~-'-~.~~ .. ~~~~~·;4~001a.:~w 19.88 42 only. .. Orig. 3.44-14.11 NOW • • • LIGHT FIXTURES 3.88 1.88 Varlout ttyle1 to I cu RT A1Ns & DRAPERIES I ~:a:.~~~ e~~~:oefi 0 ' 1 '· '"" 24 88 .. D_R_A_P_E_Rv_c_L_E_A_R_A_N_c_E ________ _, ~e~~cii:Aiifs;\eiie ~~·w"·" Now • NOW 9.88 ,00•'• POLYESTER Long point coll•r 1trlpo1 & 1olldt 11 All hnn·Pr••t@, no-Iron. 1 88 Limited 1l1e1 & color1. 6 88 15 88 2 •P"d or Yilrlable 1pffd. 30 only. Orig. 16.00-35.00 NOW o • • lS only ....... _ ........ -.......... Orig. 2f.tf NOW 19.88 CURTAIN FABRIC YARD GOODS A11orted color1. 1 0 44 ~go·ta R~li AciE~s;;~-,~o; Now • •• WoYen skirts. 1olld color. NOW 1.44• 1.88 Broken 1i1•1 ........................ Orig. 2.fl NOW • Size• 2-61. Orl51. 4.oo.s.oo PRE-SCHOOL BOYS' CARDIGAN SWEATERS WOVEN ANKLE PANTS 100 % orion 11cryllc, gold & grHn. 2 88 100% acrylic, p•tterns & 1ollda. 99 Sil•• 2/3 11nd 4/S. 42 only ..... Orig. 2.91 NOW • I GARDEN SHOP I ~i·RJ~~OY "A'N'KL'E"PANT~'11· J.oo Now• 1. 1 --------T-O_Y_S--------. 1 ~o:c!~i;: ~'.n!.•1:;,~~~g1•:s:~:6.oo Now .50·5.88 PLANTS 11 G11.s1ze> 100 % cotton, solid color•. 1 88 Buy now bofore It r11in1. ~1P'c.'t~ii!r sErs ··· ···~·1•·'·" NOW • ,,.._ ______________ _, I HOUSEWARES DEPT. I ~R'¥i:1tlA"L"ttiR1srM'AsT'1!~'EJ·" NOW .88 I - 100"/. 11crillc Vflth cotton ind r11yon 3 88 LIVING BARBIE DOLL • _ V11rlou1 sl1e1. Llmlt-4 t111u•ntltlo1. 15 88 ~UuFF .. L~ ·n~~ED ... BLO~S'ls 6'00 Now • As pos••b1• •s you •r• ...... orig. 4.44 Now 2.44 1 ~A-U_T_o_M_A_T_1_c_P_E_R_c_o_L_A_T_OR ________ ~ cHRi'STMAs··wR~1'r~;·'1•24·'' Now • :~~. ';.~t:.n'. .~~~ ~0~.~-·~~~r, •;:~.' j~~nts. NOW 1.88 ~h~~~1t boeutiful doll in 66 ~·:~~~ .tlnlsh•d. ...Ori9. 13.tt NOW 5.99 ~:'!~j:~': ... .. .................. Orig. 4.fl COBBY STRIPE SHIRTS th• w•"'· .................... o"•· 1.33 NOW • LE CRUSET BROILER COLOR-WHEEL 6S-/. Polyo1t11r, 3S% cotton, lont •ltov•, 11ut'd. 2 88 SUZY HOMEMAKER Fl•m• or11n1• color. 3 88 l!/ectrlc rot•. 'c'o'l"RD'·u•Rl•o"v"Al4N. K··L···E"P .. A .. NOT•lsg. 4.0I NOW • Tr•Y•I mlrNr •nd ... ow 1.88 25.°p"11yc. E'""c·o""o' .K. ·w···"A"··R···E·-1"s· EOTrlg. ti.ts NOW • ' only. -.................................... Orig. S.91 100% cotton. ill••t'd. solid colors. F111'S1:E\ cpR·1c·e....... .. ..... Orlt. I.II ., Teflo~@ finish. A'+'oc•do .., 13 99 I 511•• 7-14. ---.................. Ori9. 3.St NOW .88 Mu1lcel moYle cem•r• end 2 88 or gold. Ot'lf. It.ft NOW • ,. _____ A_U_T_O_M_o_r_1_v_E _____ ..rl BONDED ANKLE PANTS change11ble dl1c1. -· ............. Orig. 4.tt NOW • • • ~~;; :.~'l."" "11 •.·:.'. 1 '. 1 "'.'.. ~~~-"~'.Go NOW 1.88 ~E.~~•'1~:~:.. '" '" .... 2 88 5 88 I APPLIANCES & ELECTONICS I 40 MONTH GUARANTEE CHIFFON SCARVES Orig'. 4.t•·t.11 NOW • • • • • C•r INlthry. All 1lae1 for Stiu•r• ind obl•n1. 44 PLAY N SHOW PROJECTORS m•1t cert. 47 onlr ......... Orl9. 22.11 prints 1 1otld1 .............. -.......... Orig. ,.2S NOW • Heer •nd,.. exciting show In 4 88 36" GAS RANGE V.W. MUFFLERS GIRLS' BRA-SLIPS IGulllVcEoloA•··sH·o·w""'.p'R .. O .. J .. E. CToo'"· .... NOW • Whit• fl•l•h. 158.00 ... & '65 ..... Chnk -l00% nylon, white & colors. 25 R lp-o°"Rlf<A .. B···LE ...... D ... IS·H· WOArl9.H20fER.ts NOW thl1 on• now.............. .. .. Orl9. 11.tS lroktn ill••· . .............. ... Orig. 1.91 NOW • 16 1how of T.V. t11 .. orlt11, 1 88 T S RUBBER CAR MATS fillRLS' HALF SLIPS ITl02 NcoKl ... A c'lo"'N.ST .. R···u"·'c'T"'1'0' .. No.s11.T•.A4 NOW • M•pl• top, ,.,. •• 1... 159 00 Twl• .... 1 .. ., ... " .,,.. 99 So-;. polyHt•r & SO% cotton-100% nylon. 25 E 31_.p"1IJc· ·E· .. ··s··T···E···R .... E .. O. TOU•l•N·E2?.!.f5 NOW • ~ T~A"c"P"TlaAIPbEuy ................................... -......... P•lr • ID'o'"u'B•L1El1••B·R·E·A"s·T ... E ... D .. R00,Blt-S1..5t-1 .91 NOW • 1 l11uncher, 2 wohlcl•1, 1 88 E "' K S E 'cocl_lpp'·u· TER .. C .. A ... R·s ·· , . Orig. J.11 NOW • AM·'M·FMX w/phono, t11pt jac k1. 122e00 Popul•r •rtl1tt, food 11lectlon. .,,. 99 lOO% nylon 41ulltod, blu• & 3 88 M; Cl 0 onNlyT.E .. M .... PO ..... R ... A .. R .. Y. 0Sr!f._R199EO.ts NQW 100 enly ................................. Orig. s.tl NOW • yellow. so only. Sise• 7.10 ... Orig. 7.91 NOW • Cor of the future, computer 99 TE , J.-L MINI CYCLE DEMOS GIRLS' DRISSES & PANT DRESSES •uld11nc• 't'!e:'v ....................... O.rlg. 2.)3 NOW • Con10le w/1lldlng door1. j 6¥.00 2y, Hor1e lrln• & Str11tton •ntlne. Good 77 00 •••t4. 1tylw-&-.t•k 1 8 "8--7-.88--1' ~·:•l:";_·;;·;;·";;··,;:'~:: .. ::··:;:o:":'I-~-:"'~··:· ;;;;;~N~O~W:;;~~_;,;~~·~E"A"T •cnlyi..'1Ffi"'~E ... T ... s.'--QrJIJ_2t,ot NOW • ~i:NJ~t TIEl•NNiS sH'olis-""" • 44 APLIU•lcSkHy wThOIY•tls• ''": ........... 0.1,l S.11 NOW 1.88 ·1 FURNITURE DEPT. I ""'· •• 1.~:=1':.:'w. may h•" ... '" 14 00 '' Id •nd " t your c11r. 14 on~ ............. Ori .. 11.tS NOW • Sl=•s'l·S ............ : ........................... Orl1. I.ff NOW • .. RI•,•,.',•!~ •'i:I• .... o",7,'I .••,•.,-:C~·H•tuffMNOW o99•2o88 . Oh DDS.N·END WHEELS ' .... _ romn-m111a. dlah, etc. DontlJl. lomt 1cr1tchod, 5 00 I I MINI CAR AC ORY · VELVET OCCASIONAL CHAIR bont. 12 '"If< Whll• th•y Int. O•lg. 25-00 NOW • -·SHOf DEP'l'o lull• you•...,.'"" 3 88 llu• ctu•hod 1 .. k. 99 00 PORTABLE TAPE PLAYERS • • Orig. 7.11 NOW • I only. .. .... -··-Orl9. 17t.OG NOW • & •t.1~ ,_,k ..... I tree.le,..,.,.., c1rtrldtt 44 88 INFANTS' (boy•I STRAP OXFORDS c ~~Mf:°E~·0cllii:ifsii'r~'"· .,_.. NOW • I [i~'L1~:=1s~;:·p. OXFCl°RD Orig..... NOW ••• J Penney r:;~,~!~~·~;i··~:~~-~~:-HHM···················-·····-.99 lrown leather upjMr; 5 88 Gift for h11 er Mt car, tolhl lht• 14 88 cri!~~~· w~itf sADDLE~.i,. '·" NOW • &·o~i.1T'J'oo'D~ a1~1· ..... NOW • :::" .. ~~1:1~~··~1•. or11. '·" Now 2.88 -24 FASHION ISLAND :::~.·~~.:.~~.~.~~~:·:.t".io"°"~~· 110.00· BOYS' WING TIP OXFORD NEWPORT BEACH GRAND SELECTION SPICIAL . • Sprue• l•ather upp•rs, 2 88 1 . Newnt •rtl1b,_ ... t .. a.ct1-. teM t ltta. 2 99 ~ I•<• on 1tyll"I· Orl9. 7.99 NOW • 700 ... Tr.cir t111111 Orff. 6.tS NOW • ; ~ NOW 2.88 NOW 3.99 NOW 0 18.88 , • I I ' ·-~ .-·----· - ·- ' . I J tlj,1 DAllY· PJLOT , • For The Record Death l\'otlres ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLlFF J\tORTUARY 427 E. 171b SI .. Costa Mesa JIM8" • BALTZ i\IORTUARIES Corona del i\tar OR 3-9450 Costa J\lesa 1\11 5-24.U • BEU BROADWAY i\fORTUARV 110 Broad1\•ay. Costa Afesa LI !-3433 • McCOR~flCK LAGUNA BEACH J\JORT RY 1195 Laguna C8 )'O ' ---1: • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAllK Cemetery J\tortuary Cll1pd 35otl P1clnc View Drfve Newpon Beach. CalUoni1 IU-!70t • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7181 Bol11 Ave.i We11mtft1ltr ttWS!S • SMITHS' MOl\TIJARY C2'I Main SI. 8d11tlngUta Btac~ - -. • • Wfdntsday, No'ltm~ 10, 1971 Nabbed ·in Copter Claase Tustin Not Sure Rape Susp~ci to-Get Study If It Wants Land TO PRESIOE Judge Flynn SANT A ANA -An al· tempted rape SU.SR«! w_ho was tracked by the Newport Beach lice helicopter for more than 30 miles over three freeway!'! and in three cities before he was grabbed by Tustin police has been ordered to undergo a 10.week pre· srnten·cing disgnoslie study. Superior ·Court Judge Byron • Academic Decatl1lon Scl1eduled K. PifcPifillien ordertd Earl a drainage ditch, losing a Kenneth Lukins, 40, S a n license place and several ac- ---mardino, returned to l\IS ce-.ssO?Tes-iff1Jie process, t-: -· Tustin battled court;room Jan. 17 £or sen· emerged on the other side and Santa Ana for ~9 acres or leocin~ on his plea or gullty to resumed lb wild dash towards Irvine Ranch •p 'r 0 p e r t y charges of assault with a Tustin. be too high and would burden the city and l!l'hool district l.u structure. deadl y weapon. The Santa Ana patrol car northeast of the Marine Corps The Jong hunt for Lukins was less fortunate. Its purswt Jlelicopter Air Station, but CSF U111'011 OK'd began las{ April 11 when ended in the drainage ditch now city councilmen are not Newport police were advised with its two officers scrambl· .!:Ure the commUnity wants the • by a 17-year.old girl that a ing out q! tbe disabled auto. prope rty. By Bi!! Mar2in n1an wearing a gray hood had Tustin police ended the hunt ..., ~ attempted to rape her in the for Lukins shortly after he at· TB Tests Set Annexation proceedings are FULLERTON -Students at Cameq llighlands area of tempted to shake them off )>y slated to be debated Nov. I~ S h ed Co d I 1 , C,al late Fullerton ave vot rona e I\ ar. leaving his car and running in-For Stuclenli.i after being postponed twice. I. 0 to tax lhem!lelVes to help build I-le 1copter police picked up to a nearby home. Covered by Property owners in Tustin a $5.36 nlillion J$tud1::nt union the car described by the vie· the searchlights of the hover· lRV have objected to the lrvine Id d ed tim and followed it. ing helicopter, they finally Pin· INE -University High Co bui ini;. Stu enls vol 861 to Santa Ana police joined in ned their man down after a School. Turtle Rock will test mpany's pl an for develop-229 to build· the campus stu· ,JudgeFlyim _Wins Post In County the chase on the ground and, pursuit · of ·the unemployed all ninth and 12th grade ~~~~~i~~ :oc;~~n~%j~ de;~,c~~ia_l election assured direeted by the hovering chop-computer programmer over students for tubetculosis on ect $1.26 niillion of !ltudent funds SANTA AN Th 0 per. pursued Lukins as he neighborhood fences. Dec. 2. The plan would add about will be spent on the 60,000 A -e range wi,Jdly drove his auto off the Lukens faces a possi.ble Th• skin -'·palch" -lest 9 ooo · h b'I h Co t De I t f Ed r . 1n a 1 ants to t e city square·foot .conlplex. Th • t. un ~II hoparhme 1 n o 1 h uca1• NewpOrl freeway at Edinger. state prison term of up to live is part of an accelerated pro-eventually and opponents say ton w1 st t e our annua Lilli.ins' car bounced through years. t t 1 t be 1 . building is scheduled lo open Academic Decathlon Nov. 20\------------'--':C,-:..::::.:.:__ __ :---:---~g~r:•:m:...:0:...:':':":':':_::":::':':":"':':'·~·_..:t~he:..!"°~~ ~pu~la~t·~·o~n~d~e~n~s~it~y__".w~o~ul~d--'~d~ur~i~ng~th~e:.:.:t97'.'.:f>~76~sc'.'h~oo~.~I ~ye~a~r. SANTA ANA -Named to the bar by Gov. Ronald Reagan little more than a year ago, Judge J ohn L. Flynn Jr. has been unanimously elected presiding judge in Cen- tral Orange County Judicial District C.Ourt. He was chosen by fellow judges' balloting to succeed Judge '\'alter E. Smith. "'hose tern1 as presiding judge ends next month. A nath'e or California. Judge Smith ...,·as born in 1926 and educated at Long B e a c h Polytechnic High S c b o o I , UCL/. a n d South\vestern Uni versity ,\·here he took his Jaw degree. Judge, Flynn worked his way through UCLA and law school by \\'orking as a Los Angeles City Attorney's investigator, becoming a· deputy city al· torney ""hen he obtained his law degree. He entered private practic e in 1960, then moved , it to Orange County in 1963, settling first in Santa Ana with wife Patricia and their three sons, John 111, Jeffrey and Daniel. VCI Taking Applications For Fall '72 IRVINE -UC Irvine is no\v accepting applications for ad· mission by 'students who \1•ill enter as so phomores and seniors in fall 1 9 7 2 . Admissions Officer J a n1 e s Dunning announced today.· Previous policy limited new applications for fall 1972 lo freshmen and juniors. Dr. Dunn ing urged a 11 students who wish to apply to UC I for fall 1972 to return ap. plicalions during lhe current open. applicatiq.n period whict1 con tinues through November JO. The change in policy has been made because UC I enrolled fewer continuing students auring the ·current academic quarter than had been expected . Universities and colleges throu ghout the slate have experienced a similar drop frorn expected enrollments at the ad va nced levels, \thile continuing to gain in overall enrollment by new students. Dunning said. Increa sed em phasis on ad- n1issions al the advanced st::in- ding level is expected to ease lTO\\'ding in freshrnan level classes. particularly ... in th e laboratory sciences. 11 \\•ill also result in a better balance in enrollment a1nong class le,·els. at Saddleback High School here. John ~fc Donoush. special events manager for the county schools office . said. the acade1nic competitions in the areas of knowledge. co m- munication skills . and e,x:· tracurricul ar accomplish1nents are open to students in grades 11 and 12. Donations fron1 are a business firms support the a'vards program. Last year more than 180 students from 35 schools in Orange County participated. 8,000 Slate Heart Meet 111 Ai1aheim ANAHEI M -~lore tlian 8,000 physicians. scientists and nurses from throughout the U.S. are expected in Anaheim Thursday for the opening of the fi ve-day annu<1l meeting and scientific sessions or the An1erican Heart As!IOCialion. i\1osl of the medical and scientific sessions. many of them devoted to the latest ad· vances i'n cardiovascular research and medicine. will be held in the Convention Center. Business meetings or the Assembly. the nationa l ~d· visory delegate body or the association, will be held !\·Ion· day and Tuesday in tile Disneyland Hotel. Monday !$ also set aside for the presen- talion at a Disneyland rtotel luncheon of the Howard \V. Blakeslee ai1•ards for ex· cellence in reporting on cardiovascu lar diseases. Eco Ce1iter Must Prove Its Ability SANTA ANA -The new E c o • I n f o environmental resource information center will have to prove that it can ans\ver questions on any ecological qu estion before the Orange County Board of Supervisors ~ives !he new agency an endorseinent. After l\1•0 'vceks study by the count y administrative of· fice. County super visors \Vere advised Tue!lda y that Eco-lnfo lacks the expertise and man· JXlWer to supply all the in- formation it boasts that it will. The new agency i s sponsored by the Christmas Sea l Association. It is located at 110~ Civic Center Drive \Vest In Santa Ana. ORDER FRESH THANKSGIVING URKLYS Before Thurs., Nov. 18th • At Dee's we fHtur• Shetton's Turkeys for corn fed flcrvor, juiciness and 9reorer meat yield •.... HENS 12·17 Lbs • TOMS 18·25 Lbs. DEE'S NUTRITION 8891' WARNER AT MAGNOLIA FOUNTAIN VALLET 147°3323 -. ' ' • -( Qpposite Broadway) • Newport Beach-644.()981 . WESTCHESTER I . LOS ANGELES I CANOGA Pjl.RK I QRANGE ~ IC'hffl4 lelpht Merlltt lro..tw..,/Crffthew S•oppl"t CoRtet fellbro•• St111111re MeU of Or1111ve s 625' W. 17th l674 W. S1111t11 lorb11r11 6741 f11IU11reo• 2279 N. Orofttemoll BKi1°0PJ00.·';....1.l.l.l.l.l~..:;,;,,.l.l.l.l.l.l;;~.l.l.l.ll.l.1";;1.1.1iil _, l . ,( n at Id n to U• • • r. ) N. lrela11d Bloodshed Increasi11g Dy United Pre ss International Oerc.,ae Secretary L.ord Car· • ri11gton told the Bouie of Lor.di thnt BritRin 1nu1t . ex· ·pee~ much more bloodshed In .. .. • ' ' . . . . annual holiday sale . Wtd'rte1dq, ffovtmbtr 10, tm DAIL V PILOT • j:J '·. Northern Ireland and "~ven 11n etten11on or il to this ooun·/r--~------------~r--':"--"""""""""--•••------~~---------... -.. -----~----... -----------•"""• tr)' .'l.: -• • • Iii• warning 'mitde It • twlce-told·tale ror even as he spoke workmen \\'Cre putting back together again ·L.ondon'.s poatofflce tower after a born· blna widely attributed to the oullawtd I r i Sh Hepublican Army. It was in August, 1969, that Britain dispatched British lroopa to the six northern ,counties or Ireland in answerl Lo a new outburst of \'iolence in the 300-yeqr-0ld quarrel between Irish Protestants aod ' Catholics. In the followl na two years around 150 person• have been klllecl in the,dally bi.ttl~ that have turned Dtltut and Londonderry 1tre1ta. l n to avenues of rear and whole neighborhoods Into pockets of cordoried-ofr hate. More thin hal f of the de1th1 h1v11 come &Ince August, 1171, the beginning or the polley of interning suspected terrol'l1t1 wfth9ut trial nd the open entry of the IRA into the conflict. . lt hus toppled tv.·o Northern Ireland governments, weaken· ed the government of Prime f.11nialer John Lynch of the Irish Republic and posed ror the govern1nenl or British Prime t.·Iinistcr Edward lleath a problem rivalling the Euro- po11n Co1nmon Market in the public mind . ln·morC \\"OYS thun one, the slOry of Britain in Ireland is a twice-told-tale. In 1921 a Brit ish governn1cnt und er Lloyd Grorge wearied ot tho kil ling: and the frustra- UOns that n1ade up that other island in the United Kingdom and patched together an agroenlent bet ween t h e Catholic sou!h and Ifie six counties or the north which \1•ere prc<lominate!.v Proles· tant and 141hirh 11•ishcd lo re· main a parl of Britain. The treaty provided for a joint council by v.·hich it was . hoped the two parts eventually amid be united. Today's.., story is a repl ay, down Lo and including charges of torture agains4 the British . army. , Between lhe three capitals, Belfa st, Dublin and London, there is agreement only on one thin11, and thal that things evor again <·an be the same. In late Oclohcr, the Northern Ireland government of Prime f.1 inlster BriHn Fa u I kn e rl issued so:-Callcd gree n pripei" · on "'he fu ture development of the parlianlcnl and gnvern-1 mcnl of Northern Island." It proposes li1nited reforms, including c n I a r gi n g the Northern Ireland parlia ment and I i m i ~ proportional representation, both designed lo give Catholics a grealer \'Oice. But, il again refu ses to include the Catholic opposition in gover·nmenl. 11·ith the Catholil's a ll'ey issue. On a smaller sc ale, Northern Ireland has become Brltaln"s \lielnan1 . IL \vants 1 noth ing but ouL But even in sout hern Ireland \1herc Prinlr l Minister Lynch secs a new chanlle for unification, there is l agreen1ent that for Brit<1in to get out now. incl ud ing wtthdr awa! of its troops. would be ·'to invite a Protcatant·Catholic bloodbath. Honor Uiut Holds Meet Otricers for Sigma Delta , Slddleback Collcgr·s chapter or Alpha Gamma Sigma honor society. attended the state rOilonal conf<'rence aboard Ifie Queen 1'1nr.v in Long Beech recently. Preid tlenl of the nrgani?.a- tion 11 Wnyne Organ or South L11gune. 01her officers arc Robert DeBach. vice presi- dent, of San Clcn1enlc and Ca th e rine Kuhfm an. ~ecrctary-treasurer' or Laguna Beach . Co-adviser or the on:taniza· 11 o fl , J>hllrrsophy instrnctur Jeck P. Clancy . 1:.ccompanied lb• ttud nts lo lhc conference. 'L other co-advisers are in· slructors Wiiham 1'1. Williams and Andrew w. Kish. Hew To Hold FALSE TEETH Securely Do J1lt11 tt'llth 11mb1rr1M you b:r comlric IOMe wh!n you ""'· l1uch, or talk' A dontuni •dhl"'li~ C•n Mlp. PASTEti:Tll•.-iv...denlura 1 looc· .,,, (lrm.r, 1te•dltr h(ild. M1ke1 t.1.l· Inc more cnjoyabll!. t°OI' mom ~rcurity 111.d comfort. uee FASTEk:TJI Den: tur1 Adhe1lve P11wdet. DcnlUie• that tll •t• C!llentlll to b()&!lh. See Yo\ll'.Uentl1t rtcularly, . ' ., .,~~ ; ' . " inink trimmed coats 69.99 Luxu rious wool flee ce or wool plush ring- collared in natural mink ... fabulo us buys! Misses' Coats. Fur products labeled to show country of orig in of imported furs, . co tton-knit shirts 2.99-4.99 $5-$10 value The 'in' look.·' Wa llace Beery and mock - lu rtle tops, both in eosy·c.are cotton kn it; long or Short sleeve, st ripes or solid ribss Un iversity Shop eldon super-cycle 24.9.9 . , Kids wi ll love this great Super-Cycle from Etdon. Reg. 32.99 . Toys " • • houcle sweater tops 7.99 $12 value Striped sweater of washable ocrylic, S-M· L. Navy, red , white, brown, orange, bone, purple, pink and white. Street Floor Sportswear mens' flared pants 3.99•5.99 $8-$15 value Youthful flare.1t yling in a selection of jeans and dress pan ts in solids and fa ncy no-iron fabrics. The Pant Shop specially priced quiJted bedspreads 14.9_9 Twin Fresh and free spirited prints to dress up a holiday bedroom. Full size 17 .99; King · 19.95 Draperies. Bedspreads • lacy orion® cardigan 9.99 • • ~'. ' " .. "• \ A beautifu l diamond design with colla r, trim. White Wnituk® Orlon® acrylic. 36-40. Misses' Sportswear check takers 7.99 $10.00-12.50 Values ~anize yo ur purse with a convenie nt checktaker that herds eve rything ... checkbook, bills, coins, and credit cards. Persona l Leather Goods ' chrome wall unit 99.95 Reg. 129.95. Si< feet of shiny chromt with soti n black shelves. Great fo r books, · obiet d'art. Furniture italian stretch hoot 11.99 Glove.like fit in• glHming petent leather boot imported from ltely. Brown or bleck. Fashion Shots ' . ·' • youthc1·aft bandeau 3,59 $6 value Beautiful shaper in nylon tricot wit~ Kadel® polyester fiberfill fully padded cups, 1tretch straps and back. While, A, B cups. No moil or phone orders. Body Fuhions. 1Joyd'1 digit~I clock radio 29.88 - 39.95 velue Am/Fm rad io with inslent digitel time·lelling. Soft dial light. 60· · minute alttp switch. Stereos 1, A~AHEIM ' -i44 N. E11c;lid 17141 lil5·11 21 it~s at _the hr@adway ' I J NEWPORT . ' HUNTINGTON IEA CH 41 F•1hl111 ldt nd 7777 Edi1191r A'ltnv• 17141 !44.12 12 17141 lt2.J1ll SHOP 10 A.M. to t 1JO P,M, MONDAY THl\OUG;H FRIDAY, SATURDAY • THE IROAOWAY ORANQ.E Mtll of Or11191 -2100 No. Tv1t111 Stt11t 17141 •••·1)11 10 A.M. to ' P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to I PM, •CERIUTOS 500 Loi Co1r)to• M•ll 121)1. ••Cl.0411 • • ' • .- • • ' . • I • I . . " , 1971 .. THE GRANT BOYS · LADIES' DEPARTMENT CARRIES THE Fl~EST BRANDS AT REALLY BIG SAVINGS LM'S~-. . CITY PANTS-VILLAGER ••• AND NOW FAMOUS JUNIOR HOUSE FASHIONS. JUST IN TIME FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON AHEAD! *EVERY COLOR *EVERY STYLE r -*EVERY SIZE ~!r~~~~~.~~~~············ s25so :.!"~~~~.~~ ................. s37so :!1~~~~.~~~~ ....... : ........ :. s19so ~~~~~~~~.~~~~.~~ .. s11~ :!~.~.~.~~~ ................. •21 50 :!~ ~~~~~., .................. "" .... s15so :!~~ ~~.~~.·~~~ ....................... s19so :'!~~.~~.~~~~~~ ..................... s13~ YELm HOT PANTS FOR GALS! Gnats -arrfts flit hmoa Vl1llglr llM of S,.11s-.. oftht. World's IJnolt, Grttft.Gold Slit 6-16. , ••••••••••••••••••• ~ •.••••• s13so =1:;~1!1~~~~ ...................... : s17so ~~ .. 16 •••••••••••••••••••••••.••••• s23so ~~~~~····························· .s39so ~ . COOIDlllATlllG ILOUSU . s15so White, 11111, Beige, Pink Sin a.16. • • • • • .. • • • • . • • . • • • _ ., :i:i~~~.~~~~···················· s21so :'!~~~~~~.~~~ ............... s19so :O!~~~~~:~ ................... s23~ . -'------------ :~~:!~~~,~~~ ............ s23so YOU KNOW .THE GRANT ---------.t---t.!.tt.~1cao .... ~u..":iAi1!'"'~ ... -.. ..,1 ~~ .... .1 .... ~ ....... ~~~······ s41so DiCION POLYUlbllCQDllD""Rl"""'"IE ...... PDT'""" ~-s23so-BOYS ARE FAMOUS ' ltd,llat,GlllOSID6-16 ........................ . FOR LEVI'S~· ••• ·BUT DID YOU KNOW THAT THEY CARRY lEE··SHElBY•·DAY'S AND ENCORE BRAND PANTS TOO! LEE can change • your image You'U feel 161111 wild In Lio Innsbruck Fllru. Tliey'r. m<hido tough, ytt brushed denim soft, Siddle bag pockets ind two double stitched · lide 111ms. Thret n- lmago colon. Burgundy. Blue. Beige. Sizes 26 to 38 from short to 1xtr1 long. The price ls wild, too, Only $9 for the slKks. Try your new lmag1 on todeyl . ·Count on Cord. PlayMate Cord. D~. · Count on Day's to shape the s~son's top fabric into carefr~!!ocasu~ls: Then turn the spotlight on patch pockets, widest belt loops. ' -uo. $14.00 Sill ~1 ooo . Slll CH!CX WITH THE GWIT IO'IS FOi IXTU SAVINGS DUKING 1HE u~ llOUIAY SW0111 \ • ~!~!=.~/.~~~~~~~~ .. s29so YIUAGER SWWER ~!U~~tt;.·!~~~ .. ,;: ....... s10 to s17so ·cAMPING DEPT._ S1E ALL THE 1972 COLEMAN PRODUCTS AT THE GRANT IOYSI - COUMUl'S NIW PllO;ANI CATM,YTIC HIATlll IPOR '72 "'"' .bfii r· -•ur:in, flit cold winter -aht1 Proplill cllllyllc ... ,,.. with 16.4 IL dlspolllllo ,,.U bottle lncladtd. Con!rol pmldt1 i..,....lvra llltelfon from 2000 to sooomr.. ' s34•s IOTll 111.lTll ANll ITOVI MAY II OPIRATTII FROM SMALL DJSl'OSAlll PROPANE ·IOTILES OR A WGl llfllWll JANI. . COUMAN PROPANI STOVI A ,,.,t gift for tho h0Rd1ysl 2 IHWftll'J ori 11" CIDfll'I product up ' to 10,000 BTU'1 mh. Stovo In- . cludn ngOlltor Ind ColtmlR nsw -*·'·'':cs~~:~:. !27'' • lllCrRIC CO~ CHARGD 3011 \ l.arvo'llsJ1rfp hllllllo "" ,.;, Wry if,, chatair , onywhtro comfortably. Ont dl1I lets you qul&ly 1 .... wt frolll low beam to high. Elsy .to Rpl1<1 60 !'lit built llm 11p to 3000 houn of coo~ oisy I on tho tyn 11-.nt light. s39~s PRICE INCi.UDE$ 1HE BATtlRY .IOHNNY UN11'.AS Off!CIAL UATHU FOOTBALL lySpaldln• ·, . $611 _Offict1Laia and nfaht ••••••••••• PLUS THE GRANT IOYS SPORTING GOOf?S DEPARTMENT CARRIES A PUlL LINE Of ASSESSOlUES FOR YOUR GOLFING NEEDS. * GOLF IAGS AS LOW AS $8.95 • * GOLFCARTSASLOWAS$9.95 Plq the new lntematfoMI .,.. llflon, t1W1 teaN1 on y, 1C1l1, A specid action paddt1 1!1ows yo11 te nt It. , • nnn1 It ••• 1dll It. lt'I fat 1etlon for YoU11f inti old 1llk1o ...., th• •11 11m1 In 1 small 1p1c-. Ottfy 30x60 (folds .to 30x30). ld .. I for picnics, ltt1ch p1rti•• ind camp. Inf, Complett with p1t1d1 .. , net ind IMJL Only $J995 .UNICORN DARTS PERFECT for tho 11rious, ·polntod pl1yerl Gold pllltd, • chnmfllft plltod darts. let of thNe. .t 11•- «1 low u Tiit Gnni ltyt .,. ,..,. Jft shop for dart pllJWll • ' I • oA~Y PILOT \V~dntsday, Novtmbtr 10, iq71 f ' ~. . . . ...... .. '" ,::._ . .. ...... . ........... lt.lo .._,.""'"""'' ........ ""' ... 1 ,,.,.. •oeot.1• " . • • " . .. .. \• . " .. MR. & MRS. COSTA MESA r ' • • " ,.., ,4 •t•. "' , .. ' .. .•. " . . . .. • .. ' . . ...... 11(- ., 1'.• l , •• 1' , .-. " i. • •M•w! ~r -II ' ..... h. f ..... • A..,T.,• I 'I ;·HERE WE COME " •• .. i J~· ,,~ I ... .. " •• ~ . ••• 1 ••• I ~-• SAVE 40 %-70 % ~n XMAS » WREATHS'N ~ .FOLIAGE 15"HOLLYWREATH w/red flock berries 179 l lT. lS ' JUMBO IQ" SANTA CAHQLE 79c AT BRISTOL &MacARTHUR SANTA ANA •SAVINGS• A fLW £XAMP1£.S: $1 J.ROLL WRAP 40 sq. fe1t ....... . $1 &·ROLL WRAP 80 sq. feet ...... . 98c BAG OF 25 BOWS •• '59¢ $1 TINSEL GARLANDS 88¢ Js 1t. x 2v.·· •...... SAVE ·40%-70% ON CARDS FllLL LINE -oF NOVEL TIES , ANGELS, PIXIES, F 0 LI AGE, WRAP, TIE-ONS, TRIM·A·TREE ~ND DECORATIONS! *£VERY TOY .ELDON 18" DUMP TRUCK 1. 98 " 3"J6" p11lu c'ndlr ~r1\lid 1n rin1 al y»:?-:;;~;;;;~~\'-');2;;;;;~~~ •. 1hl~' 11rur holly J"d 1td berr ,e ,1w1· IEll. lG"I li11\1nf hoh;ily bEilaly. . . . '"' . ' ' 11 • '~'., .. ., .. J:;>.o ••• .:...,.. • p •t• 1 a. 11.o• I o •I • .. , . ' ;.,, p1C'N' SAVE CUT COSTS ON CLOTHING 1.~ 10 find !J ~~ion for JU you ld~ily at lar1J5\1c. u vin2 \! 79c M;sses nylon BIKINI _ 39' 198 YOUl 2/1.19 ::i / 2/98' LITTLE GIRLS /. $J.19 Boysl Shi rts 98 c Boys cotto n f l ~S T QU AUIY BR![F WASH 'N WEAR $4.00 Boys ny lo n W IN D~RlAKlR 1.5 9 I DRES~ES $1.50 Men'sorlon SOCKS . 49 c .. .i ... : I "'· • " r YOUR PIC' Sli.•li \lSSlY<l.tA).SN.i.Rf l.ZOJ~g~2 }9 ~s:ct8 ..........•..... : ...... .. S4.t5 ~.[l~lV•R .1Jtl~lr11Jr.I 6 Ill Cf.t:td 2 29 ~ol ........................... . ·1SI ST.IJHllSSSIULMliViSNn 49' lll lOf': det.b! ·~ ••••.•••••• ti. S2 corP!~lON [ JUlO MOLD 15$1. 2 a:. 7 9c S'llC'.:· •·• ........ •••••••:"" •' • \ NOW YOU CAN I SAVE 403 107.03 to find thin11 you netif •t low1r prlc11 th•11 v•u lllv•ll, ,., to flrtd th Intl you wan I •I prk11 you •r• ti.,,,,,,., TO SHOP AT PIC 'N' SAVE ) • • ---.:..----· ,, 111'1, .. '• ,-... -~ . ' . I • ·" . .'!'tt.I• ..... "-~ r1,o "• 1'1• to "• t · .._,, '• .. ,,,. " . 11,n•o u<o t!o . •.. " ..... " l~o W • '-'• Mto . .. 1 . ,., ,., ,._,, ••••• J1 ........ 11 ........ •1 • .. "'. '"' "" ,__ '• I ,.,, ., • ,, •• 11'•. I ' ......... ~·· •• '"• 1~ u•, 111 .... 1, 11 ~· .... .. ,. ... " "' ,., f ,., •• " ~ ·J!: ~ :: .::. t. ,. ... • ... 91\ ... ' tl"o 11 W o· 11 , I • l'o l't lloo_ ,.., M W',. ..... lo lf'o It • ffo .. • 10 , •• '"· '"'• !)'\,.. '• II•,.., 'ft _...,. 1•0 I •• l • " • •• t'o ro • ,...,,_ .... ,,._,, ··-·· ~. 1 ..... . . . . •.. . .. •• • • .... .... ···I '· '" "• " .. .. ,,., 11'1 trio u•:+ ·=~ • l o •• 1·, "-" ,, •.. ''• .......... , I !l'O ll o l)o IJl-'o, U'• 1''1 tf'o ~·, It olo o·o .. , .. ._lo' "'• '''• ,,., lJ', . " ' . . . . ",., '·· '• .. , ... , . . ~. ,,_ '• ... .. ' ,:1 .. . •• \oi wtROSEWOOO HANOl£ 19" ST.ilHlESS TRAY i ;:i -5.95 REr: '$11.95 "· .. 1 "I '• ·-·· S1.25 sn or FOUR STAINlESS ·491 ROSEWOOD FONDUE FORKS l ~.:1 ... .. '•i . ., SAYE 40%-70% ... "· .. .. .. 1 298 $10 JlWELRY ClllSf 4 drawer walnut 3se J I '-... ~· ! r i ··1 ... ... FAMOUS MAKER MOOACRYLIC WIGS 1.98 1"11i1 !o 1tll loi "'""~ mort! lo1d1 o! ~1Yle1A Nir CGkiB. $AVE 411%-70% TOILETRIES COSMETICS NOTIONS ... i.. ....... ~. \-------! Treasury Bonds • l.. J ,. ,, .. ,.,., "'"' '"' ., ,. \ ..... ' ~._,_If' a/11tl' I' M ' ,,. ·' """"'· ... 6111 • ' I )t• • •t (-ef Ill'!' L.,_" l" • ' • l" '"" Wftl " ..., J't 'Jf " .. "• I"• ... '"'C ,.,., '' 1'• 91 11~ 1· • I IJ....,.111111• u ~,I• , .. ,., "" ... ,, ... ! ' .. ,... .. .. "" , " •.13 l111GlfiPTOWCt ll/mel .. •ott dlsll ..... ". $4 SH Of 3 DUUl(' 111!&tt\cl lawels oat :~ho~n1 ~---- $9.95 KING SIZE PERMANENT PRESS FITTED SHEET 4.99 · famOus bran d! ! ~-1/'5-, ~AREA RUG 17,95 • ~i ... ,,,,,,.. ... •·CW.-.--... ,( ....... , ... ~ .. 1 1'\1 tllA il'W .. .. Ut• ..... . -.c;..., .... I . , ......... .. j """ c....c-•• --Cltlt-.. .. ..,c......., ... ._. """c.... .. ... ~·­..... ~f ... "'' --~ ...... .. r • • 'I. • • ' . I • • . OAK. Y PILOT ' WedntsdQ', Nowmbtr 10, 1'171 Wtdntsday, Nove:mber l0,.1m PILOT·ADV1'RTIS!• II CHECKING •·UP• Slow Learners Get Special Help money ftom each paycheck so they will return to the bank, do bust~ with it, and learn some-~ _t.~ things we take for granted." employment for one boy as a custodian, and another as a cook. Sec1·etary Spread Really Hereditary Finding other forms of employment for their students has proven difficult for the two teachers but they have been successful in securing "We see our class as a training ground for off-campus job!," explained Mrs. Par.sons. ''We wMt to teach the kids how to work at . another place, take orders and get fired, II necessary.'' JUST ABOlIT any barber can tell you it's easier to shave the back of your neck than your face. Why is un- complicated. F'irst. a scalp hair is usually about four times thinner than a chin whisker. Second , a scalp hair bends from the slcin surface, a chi n whisker from the root. AJ\f ASKED who first played Billy the Kid on the screen. And when. That was that snappy onetime A I a b a m a halrback Johnny Mack Brown. \llhen your dad wa s a lad. P.1r. Brown was the fastest gun in the Hollywood west. Used to beat up !he villians right and left Nothing so much COl)- lributed to Mr. Brown's fame as the fact he never lost his hat· in a barroom brawl. OPEN QUESTION: It's a proven peculiarity that the woman patient in a mental hospital is far more likely to swear a blue streak than is the man patient. How do you ac- coont for that? ON THE AVERAGE, il is not until both the husband and the wife pass the age of 60, pollsters say, that he spends as much money on clothes as does she .. , .GOOD NEWS, that theory about secretary spread has been .debunked. The science boys now say hip sire is a matter of heredity. How long the young lady sits at the job every day has nothing to do with it. CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. ''What's a Roorback?" A. Thars a political he . Just prior to the 1844 elections. the memoirs of one 8 a r o n Roorbaclt contended t h a l James K. Polk customarily branded his initials on the backs of his slaves. Not true . not true. But the defamation was spread no closely to elec- tion day that nobody had time to deny it. CONSIDER YOURSELF' a member of the you n g er generation. too. if you've never : Collected milk bottle caps. Seen a zool suit. Heard !he clarinet called a licorice st.ick. Sung "Chattanooga Choo Choo." Or witnessed some relative undergo a nervous br~akdown. WHAT SCA RES you? Wait . don't say , "Nothing_'' The medicos claim everybody, absolutely everybody suffer:r; rrom one or more of some 650 phobias. Fear of lightning, Jungle Polka Party Slated SANTA ANA -11a\loween is over. but the Polish love their polkas and colorful costumery any time of the year. So it's not unusual that the Orange County Polish Club - in keeping with its ''wild" Iheme -is urging member~ to wear jungle costumes ~tyrt:l~y night to the latest polka party. Food and music"1 by the Cavaliers will be reatured at the 8 p,m. to midni ght dance at the Plumbers and Steam- fitters Hall, 3904 W. BolSa Ave., Santa Ana. Student Cited Thomas H. Kanegac, son er Mr. 'and 'Mr~. Henry M. Kanegae, 1 I 0 I Buttonsbell Line. Newport Beach, ls one of se1'en seniors at the Mecfjcal CoUege of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. who wµ selected for membership In Alpha Omega AJpN, national medical honor ooclety, I J., Men in._SerV_ice -T1. L 1"1iliJ! lfS& w.;: '«A ;'ii:.'-· DUPONT DACRON .TRI-COLOR SHAG Carpet Your ENTIRE HOME r ·" "- LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM, HALLWAY AND TWO BEDROOMS YOUR CHOICll •DU ?ONT NYLON •COMMERCIAL TWUDS ·• HERCULON COMPLETELY $ INSTALLED . OVER LUXURIOUS FOAM PADDING NYLON SHAG ~' °"'"' 100% DACRON POLYESTER PILE. BEAUTIFUL NEW, DEEP SHAG. EASY TO MAINTAIN, MANY NEW DECORATOR COL· ORS TO CHOOSE FROM. LOW FIRST TIMf OFFERED AT THIS SALE PRICE COMPARABLE . RETAIL.,.: •• ,, $8 .99 99 , H .'f'O, SAVI si.oo .. t1£'/j KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DEEP PILE l 00% KOOEL POLYE STER PILE. RICH, DEEP, LUX· URIOUSLY °THICK PILE. MANY NEW Hl·STYLE DECO· .RATOR TAREE COLOR SHAG TO SELECT FROM. RE· SIS! DIRT ANO SOil STAINS. LOW ·FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE PRICE COMPARABLE RETAIL .......... : ..... $1.99 Tiii TISTIO •AMI 1• fllllS I 00.% FORT REL POLYESTER. LUSH, DEEP LONG· WEAR ING ANO HARO TO SOIL. STAYS BEAUTIFUL WITH A MINIMUM OF CARE. VERY RESILIANT. r eEAUTIFUl DECORATOR THREE COLOR SHAG. LOW FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SALE COMPARABLE RETAIL ...... $1.99 PRICE c.1.A-~ ,..,,.1 ;, • ""._.,..._ .r,;w;1...,,,,;n, 1..e. 99 st, YO. SAVI .... 1 OOO's OF REMNANTS CARPET TILES· SA YE $ ~:EGE . 60 % ~~~LL 80 % SAVINGS SAVINGS. • UP TO .. : UP TO .. LIVING ROOM, DINING HALLWAYS, BATHS, ROOM, BEQROOMS CARS, ETC. BRING YOUR ROOM MEASUREMENTS . . ~ Feels Like Velvet-Outweors Other DO·IT-YOUISElF Corpets -Eosy To Install. 12"•12'' • lndoor-OY1door • 10-Yr w,,,, Tts1tc1 2 9c • 5To.n Rt111tont • 8 Ottor111or Co~r' SA~ • 100% ~y!CKI Polt . 59~ NOW SAU •••CED........ EA. DACRON-HAG 100% Dacron Pq.lyester Pile. Btoutiful 4" New Dt!p~hog With A Full Deep P1!e. Moriy N'w DteorotorColors To st TD ' Choosefrorn NOW SALi PR/CED.,. sf.vi ' \J.00 COMPARABLE RETAIL ......... ·•· ...... $7.99 . . I KODEL POL1STER 100% Continuous li!ament nylon pile. 2" 1000,ti Herculon Olefin Pile, New 2" 100% Kodel Polyester Pile. 3 Pile 599 Popular nylon shag that combines beauty Miracle Fiber. Stain and Wear Re· Height Pottern In Groceful Design. and durability. Many colors lo choose from. 10, TD. sistant. Beautiful Decorator Colors. JI.''· RiJgged Durability. Beoutiful Color , so. TD. • SAYf NOW SALE PRICED .s:.: SAVI NOW SALE PRICED tJ.00 NOW SALi PllCID........ $J,oo ._c_o_M_P_A_nA_B_L_E_R_E_T_A_•L_._._._ .. _._._ .. _._._ .. ~·~·~$4~.9~9~-t-~-C=O~M~P~AR~A=B~L~E=R~ET~A~IL::-:.~·~ .. ~·= .. ~·~·~·~ .. =·=$4=·~99~-t-~C~O~M~P~A~RA:..:.::.BL~E~R~E~T~A~IL~.~-/~ .. ~-~"~"~'~"~··~·~·9~9:__ 4 ., . 1 KODEL PLUSH ENCRON RANDOM SHEARED ENCRON PO ESTER 1. J 00% Kodel Polyester Pile. Rich, 4" 100% tntron polyt $ltr pil•. Extr• h••'IY. thick 5" Pile of-100% Encron Polyester, eep 9" luxuriously Thick Pile. New r r•ndom sh1111d p1tt11n. Ru11•d, dur1b!t i nd Thick, l uxurious Carpet. Optimu Per: •, ' Decorator Colors. so.••· '''Y to m1int1in. V•ry r11iH1nt. B11utitu1 dee· form ance . _.Long Wear, Easy re ••• SAVI or1tor colors. 1f&Jf· Resilient. Many Colors To Choo fro~ 1:;.!;· I NOW SALi PRICED........ SJ.00 NOW SALE PRICED sa.oo NOW SALi PRICI •••.•••• $6.00. COMPARABLE RETAIL ............ $7.99 COMPARABLE COMPARAIU RETAIL ........... $15.99 .,. • ... i "' • NYLON SHAG NfWTIGH{TWIST 99 The Surface. Yant of This Ca rpet . is/~ /lJl.ln c/f {f,, II• I-'-.+-:__Qieml(GI (f • Popular, Beautiful New Shag Mode with Rugged Ourobilify. Mony Colors to Choose From. NOW SALE PR1'ED SO. YO. -SAYl~ $3.00 COMPARABLE RETAIL ... $7.99 NYLON SHAG NfW THICK YA•N The Sulfa« Yarn of This Carpet Nbw is /a$ ~., ~/(/ ~ p~~:' New Heavy, Deep Shog. Styled lo Add BeoUly 10 Any Home Beautiful Decorotor Colors. 'COM, ARA AUJfO CIUMIU.1 COi• ..... II OM' 1"'1 f!H• ••• l<Ol tltf t.utlf _._._..._ • JQ.10·90 OIYS NO INTIRESI •·COllYENIENll't REOll PUNS AND BINK TIRMS lVllllllE • Clll FOR FREE SHOP·ll· HOME SERVICE • VISIT OUR CUSTOM APER! 0£PT.· WEST COVINA ANAHEIM 11141 Wilshirt llwtl. 2526 E. Work"'•" AYt, 649 N. lo<lid St. 477-SS2S 966~471 635-7674 Soll Oilto fr...,..y to W~Wt Sotl ..,llOf'dwlo frwy, '° CifM 2 block& Nor1tl of SontG ,,,,,. ,, ... Tur11.oft, 6 blot•1 Wtt1 Oft'W._ St. 2 bloc:k1 No. on Cltr\ls to 'WOrll· woy Oft ludid. At:ros1 ftom (olrf, ...... """'· , .. NORTH HOLL YWOOO CANOGA PARK HOUY WOOD 7007 l•urtl Ctftyo111 210315htrMH Woy 1115 N. Yt""o111 A•t. llwd.-912·2200 347·2334 666-7415 ~zood f= to Slw'"llll Wr,. lost to l C~ N , Ytflttill'I F,.....,. to Conott •AW. llkll1t\ to SMtmofl Wrt I'*' ritf\t, . LONG BEACH PASADENA 3001 lellllowor llwd. 2660 I. Colordo llwL 42T ·IU4 . 577-1900 Soft Dit90 ,,........,. '° ""'°"""" £. Coior.do ll'l'd. ot M . TVrll off Monti °" llltfkMo. ~. ' Son Gobrtel llvd. VENTURA MONTEBELLO 2501 I. Moio St. 711 W. Wt.lttitr l lf'll. 641·5041 72MU7 TORRANCE 4236 Arttsl1 llwd. 542·6696 I l!lotk las! of l4ow1hornt llvd. Oii A11tSID COSTA MESA 1714 New,ort llwd. 645-3020 Nrwport Blvd. 01 I 71h St, OPEN SUNDAYS & EVENINGS SAN FRANCISCO · MILLBRAE 320 £1 Coml•• IHI 692·25$5 •• a a ne, , .. "' m· ck· an o! at nd ial- -w .. ..,..,, ftowmbtf io. im DAii. V "1.0f J l Orange_ Coast Area Men • Ill Se1·vice Around the World . Airman David ft1., Birman, pleted eight weeks of 1d· Army Private First Class recently was assigned to the · division. Norlce S. Norlander, 8291 No-Re!orger rn in Gtrmany. Dl'rilklll at n. RUey, ICla. son of 1'1rs. Dolores M. vanced. individual training at Gary Augustine, 1on of Mn. 1nd Infantry Division in ble Circle, Huntington Beach, He i.s a tank driver In Hb f1tber1 Levi A. Birman of lllSlh: Electric the U.S. Army Armor Center, Dorothy A. AutusUne, 14251 Korea. Army Speclallst Four.Larry ls participating with more Troops A, 1st Squ~dron. 4th Norlander, Uva itl Lo I Ave., Seal Beach, has com· FL Kno1, Ky. Goldenwest, Westi:nlmter, He ill a truck driver wlth the A .. Norlander, aon o( Mrs. than 11,000 lroops ln Eterclae Cavalry of the 1st Infantry Angele•, Callf. pleted his U.S. Air Force basic:,..-,--_;_..:,. _________ .:._ ______________________________ _;_ ____ _; _ _; ______ ....:. _ _:_.;_ _____ _ training at the Air Tralnin Command's Lackland AFB, Tex. lte has been assigned to Sheppard AFB. Tex ., for training as a medical services specialist. Navy Fireman Donald A. Edwards, son of Mr. and M,rs. William A. Edwcirds J r. of ~682 Scenario Dr~. Huntington 'Beach, is in the Western Pacific aboard the salvage vessel USS Bolster, and is scheduled tG return t o homeport in Pearl Harbor in March. Navy Seaman Recruit David B. Lengyel, son or Pt1rs. Betty H. Davis or 7541 Amazon Drive, Huntington Beach, has graduated from . recrui t training at the Naval Training Center, San Diego. Army Private First C:::lass Timothy J. Norr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugo P, Norr, 2285 Tustin Ave., Newport Beach, recently was assigned to the lOlst Airborne D i v i a l o n (Airmoblle) in Vietnam. Pfc. Norr is a rifleman in Company C, !st Battalion of the Divisions 502nd Infantry. Private Dean R. Johnson, Ji-, son of Mrs. John V. Gates, 121 E. Bay, Costa Mesa, is assign· ed to Ft. Ord, where he is training under the modem volunteer Army Field ex- periment. h1arine Pfc. Mariaoo Ruf- fino Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Mariano Ruffino Sr. of 775 • Olympic Ave .. Costa Mesa, is serving with the Third Marine Division on Okinawa. Private Harold E. Harmon, son of Mrs. Vesta V. Harmon, 177 E. 22nd. Costa Mesa, is assigned to Ft. Ord, where he 'is training under the modern volunteer Army Field ex· periment. Chief \Varrant 0 l f ic e r Harold E. Wyman, son of Harold F. Wyman (cg) 2032 S. Capella Court, Costa Mesa, recently completed w i t h honors the nine-week elec- tronics maintenance officer 'course at the U.S. Army Signal Center and School, Ft. Monmouth, N.J. ~· 1 The Warrant Officers wife, Jane. also lives at 2032 S. Capella Court. Costa Mesa. Army Private Daniel P. Groszkruger, son of Mr. an4 ~irs. Walter W. Groszkruger, 21462 Pacific Coast llighway 113, Huntington Beach, com· pleted on October 22, an eight· week administrative a n d personnel management course at Ft. Polk, La. Army Private \\'llliam D. Tnglehart, son of Mr. and Mrs. \Villiam F. Inglehart, 51121 l\1einhardt. \Vestminster, is assigned (o Ft. Ord, ca\if., \\·here he is training under the modern volunteer Army Field experiment. ---Army Private Curtis D . . Jones. son of Claude V. Jones, 6~62 Humboldt \\1estminster. is assigned to Ft. Ord, where he is training under the modern volunteer Army Field experiment. --Army Private Ignacio D. Gamez, son of Mrs. Beatrice Gamez. of Huntington Beach. recently completed an ll·week lineman .course at the U.S. Army Southeastern S i g n a I School, Ft. Gordon, Ga. Army Private John T. Ltahy DI. whose parents \he at 21821 Starfire Lane, Hun- tington Beach. recently com· pletcd an eight-week field wireman course at the U S. Army Training Center, Infan- lry, Ft. Ord. Calif. During the course. he \eam· ed to install and maintain field wire communication systems, operate field telephone switchboards. receive and process messages and operate a message center. Arm y Private Randall S. Q Nichols , son or Mr. and Mrs. Thomas s:-~lt?l·ots; 19011---- Leeward Lane, N e w p o r l Beach. recently completed eight weeks of basic tra ining at the U.S. Army Training Center. Infantry. Ft. Poll·, La. Army Private Reed G. Bucklr.y, son of f\.1r. and Mrs. William F. Buckley Jr., 1101 Shelly Drive.Huntin g ton Beach, recently completed eight weeks or advan1·ed in· divldual training at tt! U.S. - . . ~ m Marlbor-O 10+ erica's Iowtar ei arette smokers- a new ci arette that's Ii hter in taste,, • ' r l t r. low in tar. Marlboro I LIGHTS LOWERED TAR Go NICOTINE • Marlboro Lights, for those smokers who prefer the lighter tute of a low tar and nicotine cigarette. Made wlth : Ute same famous quality u full -Oavored Marlboro Bed, America's fastestirowlng braad. Ar1ny Armor Center, Ft. Knox, Ky. ---Army Private Ooua:l•s K. Marlboio lights: 14 mg'.'l!r; • 1.1 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by flC method Pncket-t, son of Aaron J. Puckett, 14111 Magnolla St., Wt:stmlnster, recently com· ' . ( I ... • • ,_ 8 DAI LY PILOT Wtdnr:;day, Movtmbet 10, 1971 Wtdnt~ay, November 10, 11)71 PILOT-AOVERllSCR G How to Succeed • Business--hy Trying F AilJll. V CIRCVS b11 Bil Keane By JOYCE J.. KENNEDY Dear Joy«; A Iona:: timt ago you wn>te about how to bit It off on lbe job u n d gtt pro- moted. l clipped the colu'¥n to suve but 11omeho1<1' n1anag~d lo lose It. Would ~'OU gh•e those iips agaJn? -l\.)I., Uatnllton , Ohlo. Ill •. \\bltt N. SC'huU111 hA Dad's , . .---------.. Design." which is an excellent psychometrics (psychological textbook. Also: sail as much tests) and he is also trained in as possible. \ the application of diagnostic Leiter to His Kids -\\'hat 1·,·e Learned In Buslorss .. " A'.sk for 1·oad·s Letter." Dfar Joye(.: I ~ould like to know all I c;.1n about s11ilbo:i1 Ca re er ·• Corner You can as'k specific ques-P.nd psychotherapeutic tech- tions by writing hiro at 79 niques. !\tadison Ave., New York, t!rY. OTHER SKILLS and tech- 74 Trinity Place, New Yotk, niques may be acquired as he N.Y. 10016. assumes new responsibilities ~·lichigan (Ann· Arbor) and .. • • -for example, mental b~lth J\lassachusetts Institute 0 r Dear Joyce: A friend says consultation with community 'f e c h n 0 I 0 S y ( Cambr!!tge, be Is going JJ:ito cUDlcal agencies. respOnslblllQ'." • • • TO Z.R. SEAITLE, WASH .: You can flnd 04.il about lumber camp occupations by writing for a free 23-~age pamphler. "Careers in Logging" to Depu. ty Administrator, State of Oregon, Employment Division, 402 L!t_bo.t.._&Dd Jnch15&rles Biilfdiag, Sa1em. Ore. 97810. • • • Mass.I. \\'rite to lhe schools psycbOlogy. What l1 that? I-Like most psychologists, the Assu1n1ng , y o u ' r e en· for bulletins. E.S., Towanda, Pa. clinician is also trained in the HJgh school graduates and lhusinstic about your 11,ork and SAU.BOAT DESIGN is a 1 skills and methods or scientilic other beglnners can get desigrung -"·hat colleges have courses a\•ailable. etc. f nsk because · I can·t lind anyone here U'bO knows about it. -\\'.rtl.. Columbu~. Obiu • gel 10 l!u! JOb 011 tune, check specialization of n a v a I RODERICK STEPHENS, or He.re's how the American inquiry. Thus, in the skills and valuable job-rinding: tips in architecture and only 4·iehools leading nuval arch i"t e c-t s Psychological Assoc"iatlon methods of sclenUfic inquiry. Joyce Lain Kennedy's )Ouri;elf on these fi ve common grant degrees in n av a I Sparkman & Stephens, often defines clinical psyc1\9logy : Thus, in addition to or instead jfSecret1 of Flnding Your First barriers tu advanrerhent : arrhitectu re and mar i n e counsels 1oung people seeking "The c 1 i n I ca I J>!Ychologist of his applied professional ac-Job." For a copy of this 20- ( 1) PLA '1NG BU~lP-TllE-engineering· information about careers in specializes in the assessment tivities, he may conduct page booklet, seDd 40 eeots BOSS. Soine people _ forget-·\Vebb Institute of r-:ara\ naval architecture. He sug-and therapeutic treatment or research -for example to and a stamped, self-addressed ting that their immediate Architecture (Glen Cove. gests that you sl)ou)d practice persons suffering emotional or determine the characteristics long whlte envelope to !'i1rs. N.Y.l, ,~·h1ch is a tuition·free· n1echan1cal drafting. using adjustment problems. or a psychotherapist which Kennedy in c~e or this ® su pervisor usually controls school \\'ilh compelith·e ad· plans from Yachting magazine Typically, he is knowledgeable are related to patient im-nenpaper their next promotion -are mission require1nents: 1t 1s to improve your technique, in the psychology of personali-provement or the conditions (c).1971, McNaught Syndicate, "Miss Johnson woul d give you o C in wri t ing , specialists in trying to make highly regarded. Also: U. of and that you shou1d read ty, psychopathology (study of under which young childr~n Inc. Daddy. She's on easy marker . 11 iheir boss look bnd so that 1 __ c_a~h~Joiriniiai<iBcirpkiie1~e~y1~ .• u~. ~oi1isiikiene~··,··,Ei1eimicrn~1s~ofiiijYiapciiht~~mte~n~ta1~~dijils~o~r~d~e~r·s·>·ani!·····d·eivlel1~o~p~~·, ...... 111.1,jiii~~Arll~R~1glhltsPJ\~es·er~v~e~c1.i'iijiiiiiiiiipiiiiiiiiiiiiijjliii1iiiiiliiiiiili~ilmli..:-they v. ill look better. But thrO\\·ing mud is tricky stuff: )OU '111ay 1niss your target anq ~ ou're sure to have dirty J1ands. Even the dumbes L su- per\'\sor i~n·t deal :ind blind to undercuttin g. Other \1·orkers. grown heady 11·ith a illlle success. 'hav~ becoine overly f::imiliar and cocky, trespassing on the boss's prerogatives. They second·g'.Ul'SS him at e,·ery turn. challenge his E'\Cr~ decision. undermine h is authority. ~obody is sug· gesting that you become a rubber stamp. JUSt take 11 easy. \Vhell you put your foot do11 n. first look around to 1nake sure your super\'tsor 1sn 't under it !21 .1\0 ACC.OU~'TABfLIT\'. Some people ;ire s t a I I e d because they have !he opposite problem -they refuse to take a project and run \\"tth it. If your boss gives you a JOh. do you drive hiin up the '~·all l·hecking back 11•ith mundane details or by ducking decisions you've been told to make? If your supervisor ha s to follo1\' up to see if !he thing has been done .. and lf it hasn't been done. to inqu ire why not. and then listen to the tiresome ex· cuses of "'hV \'OU didn"t fol1 011• lhrough. he ·has to \Vonder about your ability to accept rcsponsibil1tv. ill NAYSA''ING . Advance· inent may be eluding you because you react to-most ne\v ideas like an untipped waiter. You list all the reasons \\'h\' a proposal \l'il/ not "·ork, \l'h}· it should nol be done, v.·hy it should he done by somebody else. or 1vhy ii should be done in a different iv.·ay 1vhich you have n't really thought through. If you ""ant to convince your en1plnyer that you h a v e enou gh cooperutive optimism to be a !e;1dcr, evoluate lrci;h ideas objectively before ~·ou say no . i-11 TllEAOING \\'ATEB. ls your job performance nierr!I' passable? Can it be sumrned up 11·ith the story of one employer's retort to a ma· hnge rilu; employc. ··\Ve 'll 2.11 pitch in and do vou r 11·ork 11• hi I e yoLtr S:ck. .\1r. Smithers, just as i;oon as we can figure out 11hat )'ou\·c been doing··? You may be feeling sorry for yourself bec;.1use you thinK you're already O\ er.burdened 11·ith duties 1vhen the truth is you are dlssal!sfied 1l'ith vour job and it's taking you too ·Jon!! to drone through ii. Or 1>crhupi; you really don·1 rr>lt~h the \1·orkluart that c11mrs \l"l th a higher posi11on I lo1v r:an 1r11 1 expect B r!•\1Jnl I" r n1('d1ucri1v., ( 5) ·rnOl'HLE.\l1\l\l ... G. Have you ln.:ard the 11 n l' ;ibout "l)on't ~c! n1ad. f;et c\'cn·"'~ Si1n1r IX'opte d11 odrt 1hini::s to f.'t·I C'\tll -of ten venlini:: ln 1~tr11l1fln in the cla~s!c Pff1rc p:1~t1n1c of lrouhlcmakini::. J\\t•1d ! he lcn1pta!Jon lo nu11 !-: u1111 li!llP discontent ;1111011~ \ ,, u 1 cu"orkcr:-; c\ l'l1 1! 11°s a dull day. fll.'Sllil n1un1bhni; ahout J>eU y inC'nn\en tt>n•·r>s -take lcg1t1m<it(' i::rumbh·~ tr. tht· hoss privately. Hcmernbcr. tun. !h;it the boss i<\ 0111~· h11m:111 A~ humnris1 Holl<·rt (frhr·n .-;1,~· "Telling !ht! bo~<i 11l1:tt \,,u real.Jy !huik 11[ h11n 1-i11' liL· coiled ho11e.s t.1 in11'!~111 \· :ind self-asserf1\'c11CS!. Ir 1·:111 :ibol bC?. calle.;.1 a dn 1t·~T1U1 , !fl l'f.'Cl'3SI011. -- Reader!'> ~ h11 ~rnd ;1 ! I :.. m p c d . ~tll·:"l(~il tn\elo~ lo Jo~ce L:iill ..: .... ,.. ncdy at this newspaper 1 ,1n have a mlmeogrnpb«t r>np) 111 managemrnt con~ult:inl Ill' Alcoholic Law SACRAME\'TO !UPI • -I blU au1hori1ing toun1tt~ 1!1 pro1•idc tr c <l t me nt l1ir alc0holics undc1 the ~1:-111· menlal he~lth progrt:tm ha !> been passed by thii Senate. 11 was retu1·ned lo the Assembl} \V~dnt'sdav for concurrence ir $mrnd1ncirts a{ter clearin!' the Scnulc on u 24~1 vote. , ' • • BELOW GRO~ND POOL COVERS 19' x 35' II'' This sponge rubber gasket is a new and versatile replacement for worn goskets around refrigerator doors. Eosyto install. follows any conto.ur •. , Will never harden or deteriorate. 399 ··-··-~~~------' 12·YOLT AUTO VACUUM CLEANER . Just plug into cigarette lighter outlet. Cle on your car in o jiffy. Complete with brush, nozzle attachment ond lon g cord. . 299 CIRCLES < 24" CIRCLE •••••• 1.99 l6" CIRCLE •••••• 3.99 Porticle board, smooth on two sides. Mokes a good toble top. 12"CIRCLE --- 49c BLACK AND BRASS HANGING HOODED SCREEN Smort block top bar, with c.ontrosting bross hood. Block mesh opens manually with hon dies. Mounts on oulside of fireplace opening. 40" wide x 29" high. II'' CASTING RESIN Buy now to make your own Chrislmos g ifts . Artist's Touch resin is a top quality, clear resin for costing in molds fo r hobby or gift making. 11·S'i·i·I EXTENSION CORD _, 25·FOOT Heavy duty, 3-conductor, 18 gouge extension cord. Ideal for shop, garage or home. ) CAM·STAT THERMOSTAT I 24 VOLT ... 6.95 I MILLIVOLT T emperoture adjustment ron9e 60 degrees to 90 degrees. Snop action switch for sensilive control. 595 BULB CLEARANCE ANEMONES The most popular cut flower f:oni c1 bulb used by florists. Colors of the roinbow. P KG.OF15 CROCU S The most popula r bulb used for a border plant. Beautiful when plonted in clusters. 34c PKG.OFlO DUTCH IRIS Mixed colors• -put o touch of Holland in your yo rd. Beou1iful shades of ye11av.., bronze, 2·1ones and more. 3 9 C Perfect in pots. PKG.OF IS TULIPS The queen of tht garden. AH the most popular colors. Plant now for that ro\nbow 42 C of colors. ~ PKG. OF 10 · · RANUNCULUS The most profusely bloan1ing b ulb in 1he garden. Perfect cut flow er because of ' lhe lasting 62 C qualitY.. PKG. OF 15 MUMS QUARTSIJ:E Bud and bloom oil of the most popul ar colors. Make your yard come olive thi s fo\I with bril \ianl color. A pe rfect cut flower. 29' MOUNTED GRINDING STONES 8°PIECE SET With shonks to fit ony l/4" drill. Va rious shopes, sizes SM•l'f u .. , ... Sl Wlltl .. owt-M•U tl s I ~ (!~ ~ I ~.ltfJIOf 1•>1 .. 111110f'tc11" •~•• 8860 EL TORO and grits for many iobs. 19 2•J92 l • BAKERSFIELD • CtlATSWORTH • COVINA • ESCONDIDO • GOLETA • GRANADA HILL$ • u. CRESCENT A. LADERA HEIGHTS • LANCASTER • E.LDSANGEL'",-.-.-.-•• -.-o-.-• .;_.-,v-'-,-.-Sl-0-.-.-.. -.-.~.'".:.'.N~.-=.c:.O:..IN_O_l Iii'' . e SAUGUS e SIMI e SPRING VALLEY • TARZANA e THOUSAND OAKS e UPI.AND •VAN NUVS •VICTORVILLE • HACIENDA HEIGHTS ~ 1211 WllTlllllSTIJR ""r. aUlllA· PARK TUSTIN lf'VIN E BLVD, WESTMINST A AVE. VALL EY VIEW ST. ROCKFIELO 1343E. LA HAaRA 2221 w. FULLIRTOJi 2•65 E.. COSTA MESA '" ORAllGI KA.TELi.A AVE. LA HABRA BLVD. CHAPMAN AVE. E. 1711'1 ST. ' ( ' ' 5 PILOT ·ADVt:RTISER Bladder Trouble Painful By Peter J. Stelncrohn, M.D. Dear Dr. steiricPOhn: I am · in my 50s, a~_ have been hav- ing trouble with my bladder. I urina'le frequently and also suffer Crom constipation. I have no sugar or kidney disease. 1'.fy family doctor, who is kindly and compassionate, has one failing: He can't ei:plaln THE HOUSE what rny trouble Is. All he says Is that I need to go to a gynecologist for a pelvic repair job .• Jt seems to me as if he wants me to go into a garage instead of a hospila1 for tuneup. Can you explain? Thank you.--Mrs. T. COMMENT: Some women develop a weakn.ess in the sup- porting tissues in the pelvis. Result? A sort of protrusion of either the bladder or rectum into the vagina . Naturally, this feels uncomfortable. If you have either a cystocele (the former) or rec- tocele (the latter) you might have the explanation for your bladder and r~l symptoms. Often these are complications of recurring t s in the pelvic area caused by many and dil· ficult labors in pregnancy. The operation itself is not a serious one. It restores much comfort. You will not have to stay in the hospital long. As for you individual problem, ask the gynecologist. He may be more specific than your kindly but uncommunicative family physician. MEDICALE'ITES (Replies To Readers ) For Mrs. G.: l agree with you. The best time to go look- ing for a dependable family physician is when everyone in the family is healthy . Searching for one during an emergency often leads to frustration and considerable confusion. And worse, im· proper care. • • • For Mrs. G.: When a 4-year· old is scared of the dark, why insist that she sleep with the door -of her room closed an4 the light off? She needs un- derstanding until she gets ovei: her childish fear. I even know some grownups who will not sleep in a totally dark room. I suggest that you get a night light for her and leave her door ajar. The sounds the rest of the family make will not keep her awake. Most kids are reassured by hearing fam iliar music, conversation and even actual ooise when they are in bed at night. • • • For Mrs. K:. Red hands, especially in the p a I m s. suggest that you may be allergic (contact dermatitis) to soap or detergents. There may be other rea sons : Chemicals in cleaning com· pounds or actual physical disease. A3 you can see, the dete<:· tive work is a job for your family doctor or an allergist. Once di scovere d (and eliminated) chances are that the chronic inflammation will disappear. • • • For Mrs. F.: J doubt that swishing the mouth with but· termilk is a "sure cure" ror canker sores. If this works for 1 you -fine. But I 4oubt that you have discovered t h e blanket cure that will cover everyc>ne with these distress- ing little ulcers. Usually they are caused by a virus called herpes simplex. ~e is no specilic treat· ment or prevention. But I do _.swest that you try various remedies recommended by your physician or dentist until one seems to be more ef· fective than the rest. • • • Dear Dr. Steincrohn : I have lost faith in the doctor fitting me wUh contact I e n s e s because he suggested I remove them by placing my fingernail between lens and eyeball to pry them out. . <&uldn'.Hbis terjm;q.,. be da ngerous? -Miss O. COMMENT: Might Injure the cornea and cause an in· feeUon. Better ask for another opinion after you have discus.Y ed lhis with the doctor. .... Contact dermatitis may be ecu.te or chronic and seU· treatment Ii a waste or time and money -a competent dermatologist should be con- sulted says Dr. Steincrohn In his booklet, "Practical Gulde to ~Problems." For n cop · ite him in care or this newspa enclosing 25 cents in coin and a rtamj)ed, self·ad· dressed envelope. , • W~nesday, November 10, }q71 Wtdnesdar, No~ember 10~ 1'171 DAILY PltDT J~ HAVE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE AT: 30222 CROWN VALLEY PARKWAY AND HILLHURST IN lAGUNA NIGUn li'OUHTAr.. 'IALLIY-1rtM MltillllM If, 11 T•lllH'I l'OUNTAIH \fALLIY -16UI H•rMt" 11\1'16, •11111 ••llltlf l!L ro•o -II T• .... , •eckll•llll ltH• Hl,IHTIHOTOM l l!ACH -11Ul 1-M ...... •I AllMlll IANTA AHA -UM W. J•~ 111111 l rktlol $1. 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'°" fQy.rt "' ,,,.,._111, 11~ •• A ... code, G•ld; Ora119• hr11d1. 11 99 N_ ... id IMtck,. _...,oft __.r, l\.;Ml 1 "f Pt• Sale of leg. 59' Funac1 Filters ~ j • 14dS•1 IMll i • ltd51T IHll i f • 2CldS1l IMll ·~39;· Wit!. dont ~i111 ......... °""""' '°'"" Ille Pib.r9hi•. i---- We 1Ht91t •ttel'• l11tln We1tCH1tSt•ck teSell •t tlll1 fnt•1tlc Price! $3" TO '4" Values!~ Mattel's Animated Sk11llddle Kiddies • Sliei1«-•shir1., Ile •T•P•rti•S.kl -. , l-Y"E•lyllleO,,-f ... ~OWW..,_ ,.._ CHW I""' a.. ... 't N _,-* HWf'/ .!iii• tti.., ...... Pre-Christmas Sale of Games $2 1' to $3~ .... Rubber Gootls *2" Valuel 18x21" . ln1s·llke Mats $183 s r .. 11lat1d 9rou....,ketol• '""1i .. , ......... •'!d 'd11~bl• •11tdoor -•. Dhcov11t prko. •$2.4' ....... Tr11•1t Ciotti of "'""' • ltt-$1 .77 lokn14o AtfnrtollH ..... $1 .tl YMllH •$2.otC11tl•"·"'· SJ33 •$2.19 c.ur1n4 - YowCltolce • $4.991nr•ley0,1retio• Ga Me • $4.471,,.41ry lottl11hl' Go.,. • $4;111"'41ry Locy TN Party • $4.191ra•l1y Strat190 Ga11t1 •$3.96 lrdlryTtwerClinl~ ·-0.k• $J6'' Value! lady Sunbeam Hair Setter Scotts Glen Scotch •• Dominion Rare Canadian Whisky Your Choice saaa Two TMilty b .. 1.u.,. ... jay th•• bo1h. $Ioele up far th• holi· . .... -""""'""""~-'•;... ......... $J.67 Value! Anacin Battle of 100 ~101 Sava 59c in Sal1I Sudsi111 Ski a Cleanser 99c 5 Once -M~ior Label L.P. Records 59'Women's Panties & Bikinis 39c We ho"9 tl.1 record )'Oll'roa,. l•r -at .,,, ...,virigs. No"'• lo ... f, a kopp, V1,.,,., MGM f•olwi"I •oe..-Willio!M, Ja<lc Jo111•, Righl•OWI l1Dlh· · .f.. Th0Anhrtal1, Tho Cowtilli. .. c Savt21c ojor lobtl $)t7 Stereo Records ••••••• Nyt" ...,,_., b lkl11i1, .. , .. tole double· boclc pool!H, "., .... -rloy brl•blli1'fhile, : colen, $-#,.L,. XL Snt ~9't $3'' Madras Bed Spreads "'" , ............ $299 100" ce"•" l • l1"ly colan. 72l!10t~ ,...;" •h•• •4• Al11mlnum Roast1111Pan ThoUHR41 Sold af $7.77 Veg-0-Matlc • Clh • Sllce1 •;J•••1 l1tch1• T1111• t'ilt11d MtO.ft!il_'/911 C-0!'_$2 ,...,.,. ttocb & 1tocU 1f 99 ..,ioii ,;,..., pototftl for freMft fryi"ll I."'°"' •1" v.1 .. 1 Heuseheld lrHID 99A: o,... 'Jritlt """ "'""'_ ..... , •••. .sa.,. lik1 • Dtl ... t l'I & LMf leit." ..... &k • ·- ·,~ .. ' ' r • • • • l ---·---OAllV PILOT Wfdnesclay, N0vtmbtr 10, 1971 ------· _... 22 Q • PRICIS lfFICJIVI NOVIMalR 11th, 12th, 1 ith , a' s ---, THURSDAY,· FRIDAY, SATURDAY . #t 1:wsmi?' t:Z 2 s CT A Dlvl•f ... of S.S. Kre19e Ce., wtt• lt•re1 In the Unltff Shlter; C•n•lf•,'P"•rf• lico, A"itrelie -:Z·i'-Jf'·¥-i·''1l~'1,r4,11.11c .i1;w;t1:1::r.1a- Nov~111ber Discount Sale ' ' GENERAL ELECTRIC CLOCK RADIO l 3 DaJ I 0.,fJ.' 9.88 Low priced G.E. Clock R3dio ""'i1h value packed fea1ures. ~akes you to music :automa.rically. Big .• easy .. ea~y.ro-teaJ c1o.:_ckfaf c. Saves space on night table-iu~t 8 w1deo. Ea 5)'· tO·clcan rnh \tyrc-nc cahinet with fully molded back. THIN, COMPACT AM RADIO Discou nt Prirtd.' 3 pays OnlJ'.' 8~97 Table model rad in has a"uromacic vo\uine control. solid-state design, plus buil t in antenna. Handsoml"lfully molded poJy. :.ryrenC cabinet with C'.i1y-10-c\ea.n grille. Save now at Kmar1! Charge it. G.L TWO-SLICE TOASTER Discol(»I Prict <!Oh•rtl'lt! 1 ~0.68 Please every mC"mber of your family! Choose your favori1e 1ou1 shade from liAht ro dark. Gleaming chrome model features ne11, comra~t Je51,11:n Uses liulc counter or rable spacr. A Dl'fltle1t ef S.I. Kr••t• <•·with It'''' il'I th• Ul'llt•I St•t••• C•1'1•4• •. '"''i:f' •i~•. All'•lr•lie • . 1\/0DEL C4520 3-BAND FM/AM PORTABLE Crtdit Ttrms Availablt 29· 88· 3 Days Only! _ e G~t reception of p olice, fire-, marine, weather dispatches, listen ro emergency broadcasts, industrial and t ransport communicttion, forestry service. Built-in 2-way power for current or batttry. CLAIROL KINDNESS ® HAIRSmER 3 Days Only! 97 ..Custom care .. your hair with Clairol's instant hairsetrer and conditioner. Jn- cluCles 20 rollers in three sizes plus 6 fl. ozs. of conditioner. Regular or treat- ment ~elector. FM/AM CLOCK RADIO WITH TIMER 47 3 Days Only! Wake up to freshly perked coffee with the appliance outlet o n this G.E. FM/ AM full feature clock radio. Features Silooz-Alarm. RECORDMATE PHONOGRAPH Disco11111 Prittd! 3 Vays Only! 14.36 Durable Polypropylene cue, ·tiuilt'i:O Wee 1he puni1hmC11t youn& music lovers are likely to give. Solid-state perfor-· mince. Built-in storas:e·for 4~ RPM records. Wci&hs onl7 ' lbs. Charge it. GENERAL ELECTRIC SKILLETS Modt!s K27 AVT 97 New dazzling G.E. skillets, with excititig features like being able to bake, braise, simmer, roast, stew, 'fry. A choice of colors. ·Jmmersible. ... . . G.E. IMMERSIBLE COFFEE MAKER Distount Pri<t Moat! PcH -14.96 Completely immersible for thorough cleanins. Gives J>Hk coffee Oavor every rime. Makes up to 9 cups. Mini.Brew• basket mtkes inia11"2-3 cup 5ervinss. . BELLFLOWER BUENA PARK 1Mltlutcr• lf: et '':!'1!119 .ti '"'",,....., UK1ll UNTINGTON BEAC INDUSTRY 11111 flllHlll 1H1..-111t1~1Mlttlri 11 C1rt11i. JJJ S. Itel l ift, NO. HOLLYWOOD ORANGE UMS S~1ru1 l'f •. 111111 ti Tiit 11 lth l. 1111 I. Tnll• G.L SPRAY/STEAM/DRY IRON DiI(Olllfl Prict C h•ry;t -JI! 1-7.37- G .E. $1...a and dry iron. Wir h 2 spray seninp -permtn- ent pre11 or re1ulir fabrics. New up.1o-date fabric auide. Ch111e it. IUE A PAllK .... ..,., It ll llrMt 1"' r Ulf l ... l hi\l LAllCASTEll 11111ttt .... I 2 llMl1 L ti All...,.""· XNARO '""" •• cu..i ,,..., IMI ClllUtl l111M COSTA MESA ....... 1...,, It I ii• 2111..,., ..... LONG BEACN ,.,.,..,, .... ,...,,. .... ti,...., lllALTO fNtMll IM1111rl 11 Ptfl,.f 151 L fHIMll I..,._ C<OVINA riu. It '""' '"' 1111 L Cltnr MO VA fft.72'hJI 11111 ...... ... tt11.C1llt. RIVERSIDE .Jll1 1n1Slfltt II l l•IM lltlltt .. SAN FERNANDO SANTA FE SPRINGS SIMI VALLEY SO. BAY TORRANCE SO. LOS ANGELES S.IUI IHltn et l111J11t!tl llte. TORRANCE ,,,. "'9tHNlllJf. ........ '"' tt um It THOUSAND OAkS Jn•·•~"•• " '""" ''""' Ml •. '"''""''"· ll TWMlll II L Tltm It!* tw11111 llfW JI 11•1 IL IMtn li.Wil Sl tM l11nl C11111 lu• 11111 ltltltt,. tu• 1'111 tiu!fi Stint -. ---' .. \ • •• CASSITTE TAPE· RECORDER Motiel8400 20·· Eur-to-operate -with pop-in cassettes tha.t carry one fu ll hour of pcrforman~r. · . . • Ultra-ba~e capstan d~ivc operates at J-7 /8 ips •Solid-stare Jesig1L Instant-on recording and playb&ek •Simple T-bar function control •Record level indicator llghc • Dynamic remote co ntrol.microphone ' . : . . ' i;.' • • .. . Dis,011nt Prictd! 3 Days Only! 23.58 A rugged compact fun-miker chat will become your COn· Stant companion. Spins rtcords or plays AM radio on bat, 1ery or house power. ·stim.lioed sr}'ling. G.E. DRY IRON SPEEDS IRONING 3 D11Js Only! .9 ·. •Now fearures NEW Perm-P'reu seuing-gives correct ironing temperature for day ·s new fabrics • Poli1hed. alwninum so\eplate covers large 30 sq. inch area • Fearures NEW bllle' trim •nd contoured h1n'd[e • Ughtweight-:-only 2~ lbs.-helps reduce iron· insf11:igue UDICO CAN OPENER D iJ(Ollfll Prict 3 Days,0•11! Udico CID openers come in .a choicr of decorator colqrs: avoc ado, pinetpplt7harven, copperione, ind whi1e. Hu double Jevtr ~c1ion for easy can pu ncrurin,ll and fully 1u10. inatic With push-button cleaning. EAST LOS ANGELES lnlttiw IM. It lff~rt ,ft lflM 'Nltitr llff. MONTCLAIR Ctttnl .ht."~ hfttl•!M l nlf. .... Ctilnl ...... SANTA.ANA 1•111yJrl~~'.,'r11111 VINTURA 1 UI $110 flt1•11 ., .... ... ,.., .. ,,., .. , '· FULLERTON Plut11ll 1t YwN l!Mt llMl.PIHlllll "'- llORTHRIDGE Pl-Ii •I CtrMt , ... ,1 .... ., ..... SAN BERNARDINO II• tH •1tt1•H ttl W1ttf1HI 1- WESTMINSJER ..... '"''" ... r lk,,.,,, 1M411Ht l ltt • ' ' • " ' . 3 PILOT-AOVERTISE R Wf'dtlttday, No~m6er~10. 1971 \'lednt~ar. Noven1btr 10, 1971 DAILY PILOT :t -Vital Statisti~s for the Orange ·coast Area: Births SOUTN COAST COMM U,.1.,1' MOtl'ITAL Marriage Licenses OCT. Hiii tllAlONS·RMOOIES -~bY O .. 3', '61l ~··~ Avt., Cinlt M••• tnO Ger11 'I' v.~ '1. of CQll• Me11. a1GGE ·MONTES -11.avmond f .. n. DI 132111 "ltY8dl S!rtt!. Witilmln,itr and Btrtll1. n. of W11trnln1i.r. TOELICES.81tADY -Rtvm1111d ~ .. 19. Of n10-M1ne.-, Costa MHI ""' Marv E., 19, of 3040 G1r1!1ld, Cos!I Mt!O. WOL"E·STEWil,,lll -Jt'l!I' L .. lJ. o! 7111.l Roneld Slrttt. Hu~llnoton llr•\" "~d -01de111 M .• '6. 01 1«12 Ac1c • $tr~1. H11flll11V1on 8t1cll. 1!111.0WJll.C ... SPEll -WtVl)t C .. 20, ol 1115 Haw111 (lrclt , C°'I' Mn• t!\d Tht••ll L.. 11. or 210 Rroubllc. r.0•11 M•••-l EUTt-1,.RD·WALENTtNV -iltOlltld P,. 24. of nt.12 C1llt Sin M1rcu•, Stn J111n Cto!slfano and M1ro1rei A .. lt. of Sin Jutn C1ol5lr1na b"\Y·R05~ -Wiiiiam £ .. 'J, nl 1•1 I FOt"'•ew Ro.od. El r..-o ... ~ T'rl l .i. 11; of 1ll Gr!flllh Pl.. L1oun~ 11tach. ltOHRER·GROFf -Robld c .. ''· or JI! fl•~c"" 8t¥' Or .. N•wno" ftt•ch and M1rv L., 'l?, al 121 I 23rd ~I., Co1ta Mt$1. TOICUNAGA-MtlS -L•W•tnct T .. 33. of "'101 Hell "vt .. t-1~nT11101on Brech and Melodv (.. 13. of 6100 Ed!nc1r . .-unlln<1lon fleet~. ARlH·JAMES -Frtdtrl(~. I•. of •O.C C1!1e "••oon. L1oun1 t-11111 tnO Vlol1 ~,;;.u~· .t,'ullDJ ... Rondl Gr1r11d1, k UON·O,t..NIEL -Theodore H .. 3'. of '"° "lorl1' lf"lne. NfWOO•I 8tKh Ind Ooo1111 L .. 39. Ill 1'59 Or1.-... ~r .. Cosll Mf'fl. UPTl'IN·8ANEY -Onuallt E .• 1', ef 16'7 N1lom1. Weitmln11t• 1n<1 K1rn1Hn 11 .. 11. ol 1no1 8lfllanwoco 11r~t. Fllljnfaln V•l'rv. Dissolutiotas Of Marriage RI" Nr.rmllff ) l'tlli•r, [ll!ab•lll M. tncl L1wr~# R. Cotll1D11. M1rth1 Gertrude '""° L1rrv 0U¥tf 8vr111, Niner L '"" Wlnl1m A. ""111t . l!llonOln1 G. 1r.d J'rlM En1rd lt11""0, Jean H. 1r.d Robtrt G. Welfe. Snlrle'r Mlf Ind WllU1m Oon•ld Jd'ln1011, L indt C. 11'° R_, E. Serton. Nrlllr E. ""' Albert L. Gr1nr, Pt1rlcl1 J1ne ""' Norv•I Jart ~1r110U, $hlrltY Ann tnd II•~~ C••I 'to.,11, Ste!11 tnd Ever1do Pt~I-, Cherin P. tnd J1net l . &ett1ra11~. Amrll• Ro11 1no Aontfd """ l-le. liner lltncll!t a...t P1t•lcl1 """ ICU'llt. 9rtndl Lynnt Ind llobtrl OWtn Hollt nd, P1mt l11" Anr'! 1nd O.vld JOhn MHMMr, EVPrttt P 1nO M1rl1 E. Rowe, Grnrvleve P1trltl1 1nd Lton1rd Cl\lrlH Gt~. Oe1...,. L. 11\d l1wrrnc1 E. ROWt, (tydl W. Ind DoroltlY A. l obblft, lablttr Gf'ICI Ind ltoborl Holl1rd. Cf'llrln LfOfl '""' Ranmtrv k "-lnt. Sl>aron L. 1!!0 frPO,rlck W. ICttlY, John l!:Wll\ Jr. Ind Vtu11rl1 Ann Evrndrn. $h1ron 1nd Ro111ld lJcnod, G.,lld 0 . tlld ... 1!1 ll~Y ICU'dr1, Loh Jr111 1nd Jlll'ln Aoberl Mt•we11, Marv J. tnd L~"' E. 011!1cl5, 0!1nr 0 . Ind Uldll 1111111, Ntrtlda 8n0 Tnom11 F Cern~. Gl0t!1 Amt lll ttlll lt11mand Gtor9e LtldPr, MflOr~ A. 11"111 01vld 90t1t, J-fredtrlcil: 11'111 Jo.l'I Phylll .,,,/ ll11Ver, Kit"' 9, 1ncfll:obl!fl F. Wind.,, M«lnl It. 1nd ltk htnl H. Sr. 1'1'111" NllWMftt t Collltr. 8tt1'Y lOll 1NI l!mmln V. R1tl'IOlllOI\, R-ld 0. Ind liltl"" Ell11be111 Gtllos. Ml:llHI "ldllrd l<>d C~rllll,.. leul1e l!~l«lho<nr, Ir-C. t nd 11~'1 Wll· ""' 5,., Cltr~. Wll!ltrn H. 1no P11¥11h .... k•~tr•, l<U~r~~ 8. 1...t ltlthJrd M. ~trllhtn\Qfl, Llt>dt A. tM L•r<Y J. l1utrmdst1r, M••ltn Y. t flll Giibert •• Slnwell, Mlklrfld Mii•!"" tnd f'111t Jol!n ll •ltM, El1l111 R. UMI t-1111111rd E. C.011tff, Slllttl•n LM 1M Kt-'!! l!lwl11 Mic~. JuGlfh E. 11'H1 RoDlrl IE" Son111, S011:1 Tnner 1"41 Thtoclort It. f'IN.IL Ol!Cltll!I 1-... ,.._.,.,. I .,..,, Wllm1 Jttl'I 11\d lt1't'fTltollll Edw•rtt1 , Sow-1, L011!1t I. tllf StlnllY Y. Sr, llrt. Wlllllrlld C1r01yn 1M Albt<I W. Dit...io-, Wllllot"' EfwtrO It, •1111 (y111t1l1 A- PJ-,, Oltnt t!\d LO•tTI G. MY.,\. Cl1lrt I!. tnll RvtM'!I N lhllfttr. a,.tr!tt IC. 1nd Ml<~•rl E, Scllflilfr, C.r .. C. t ncl Ctrl Mtd<'IMJ, M¥1t G. end An!Olllo L•bof\M, Mt rltn J-w Stfffl'!' Jef> •w ti.....l1H111kl, C.tMrlM Md Cl\el!ff' I. NldHNl. lt.r..rt C. end l'tHr J. Slll1L C.tM $0e"llld Jiii• Noafl Bwman.. WtrM C. •1111 Nencl I.. MMr. "--' c. ""' ··-,., ••WI. w11n.a1 ••takttd tncl LW•M -C41Ui.~ ,....,, hrNtt DllN t<ld Al!.n Jlllln Kr.it, Afflff Md. Louil Eitwkl Hewfff, Plfit!Ollt AM Ind ll\OIMI Che1ltr ,.urvh, Sandtt Jtne tnd (llllV SltYt McO.nltL ..... .,,... J~M Ind Jtmli Htrr{I ltl'lldldl, Mil tnd IMl Cltucllt c .. n.. Kllthf9 cor .. n •nd tltll'I' •. Fr.:i.r • .,,... Ctrlt"' 11\d H"blrl LH Btlrd, WJUi.m Mtrlln tnd Mtrllvn ..,,H w1111 .... 1. Cttol H. Incl Jolln N. e..-loff, 9111l' Joe 11111 l"tt•lt\1 MH A"'1!lO. Ctrol ...... 111111 L-...ro "'' "'""'"· JitWtll Adi tl\d R.ON1G .... AllWlml, cn\.111 Edwtrcl and Jiff lt\l;Glnllv, Ktlflr-,n Allnt incl Mlch,el / C1rol M.lclC•rvJ• lfrMY. 11..trlC• K•v _.... '" .I, ltflll:Wr,, l"l•lt Mirlt •NI Nonn•n X1vl.,. Ji. J°""" 0.-Hlk, ~•Y P1trklf •ncl Gfrlld N0tm1'!< ~et ~ ._"'II 1111110 P.llllllll Dorolli .IOlwlMol\, Pltyltli LN •nod >amn c;:. Jr. CollfMll. lol'lnlt LOU Incl Ci.ar .. JOhfiy E ..... lbrKlll. M•rltot ""' ..... 11 ..... in F. H1rCllWIY, R11lll LOt-Ind H1•m1n Tr~. Jon M. •nCI SuMn c. ltHllUI l•IOJ'•· Fr1neu. tllll .,,lClrO c. ll-"'· S-·M:-atld ,.,,!II! --Piifon, JIQbffl L" Incl LIMllft Ann Scliulm.n, Georet L111., 111111 l'11•k.11 f0t,.r11I, .J,.rv ~" 11111 l1r0tr1 ·Louise Ecl!lh JQMa, ~1 loUt '"" GtlCf Htlim (;rl1oeuol<I, P .. ., Sr. 1"6 Mlldrltd $mlfb, Vtrftlld J , I"" 81vPrl1 J. KlftNY. Vlvl1n MlchHI foci f~ FLlmlftl, RklllrCI J. 1MI SlllrltY F, 00..lllft Pell•, LllOCI• G1V 11111 Brl•n G1ry CorCltll, Phylll' E, 1MI G!'n D. Rowt, J1ck L .. f,..0 W1nd1 Mt•lt,.. Ll.-.ellyn, Nor.et! L: IMI Cllt H. S11cc11, SanClr11 Jo~ Rlchllrll P1ul 1n.w1m, C11rol M. •l'HI Nill R, Wl"<if11• ;!i11t1n 5. 1MI NOblt S.Chltltr, Ron11d l . Ind JOlll\nl 0 . HPrron, Donn L . .,,., Rebec:c1 Vitllllf. 81rnlc1 I. Ind t-11rold It, J-, Jtrt A. 11\d M1rv A. . W~alty, WrltY E lnO EdWtfll (. Cl1rll, lomml L. 11111 RIYmond G. DU9tl't, R0111ld f . 11\d l1ri..r1 8 lln~•·· RIM JIM 11"111 MIUIHI Etrt Gtl!ndo. ""'Olr.t f . Ind Clludfltf M. Goctfff"•'. Mlll1rd f . Jr •. 11"<1 M1r'ftn Muller. A-ti Ind Mlrk JOHllll Rob<lrl.M>n, H1trlei 1nO Oonlld MlltPr, 01vid 1/ld M1rN•tl I(, ;;1 .. 111, Al(llnrd lM •!ICI tlnd1 Ito.• Cor~1h1r1. P1trlcl1 L, •l'ld Joo-" f , Giii-. Jo111111 M1•11rtl tnO Frtl\11 t-ill1"*11ndl, EOWln H. 111 Ind Elltllt '· WhllM, GINlt Ind llDMrl Jr, v1rtil, Con•utlo 11na 11lt•01" 1-1..,._.bl,10 i llMf, J-E, t !\d ,,_II,_. LIYIOll. Mk helle LOl.llN tA11 Oltl1ll111 Effo1rt fii.iy, MlloclY Anni Ind l om-Ttram1 I'll .. N1--S Cr1lt , IWW•IY J. IJld Rt• E. Wrlthl, R-rt G. Ind F1rrJt Lau Doo1y, 5tl'Clrl LH •nd .Jol'>f'I l!lt\ICI $i11e1, Pam•LI Sue 11111 8•1111 0ou11a1 8orlf,r, llnir.. Y. t l!O Ltwritnct A. Ru1'°' Prier Llncalfl •"" "111!1 Oet1u11 Mlflln, Jotnnt Lvnn 11111 1t1yrnono .f••nklln Slodcltrd. Jerry RIY 11\d 1<1r1n Ellitflf-•h INTf:ltlOCUTCllY Df:CllEES E11ltr .. N1Ytfll.lltr 1 Dlr~tv, C11rol .. <1 M. 111d Oonllf ll•v· """" Fin,,..,, Mtrv A. tnd l'1v P. Hu11.i. J'tf•Y Ind $111•on lltYU. Vicki.it 1(1y Ind Jiir. W1!ton, Roblrl ).YI.Ill.. Ind Nolmt. JIMI ICru!cl~. Oorrl1 L. tnd Chffltr J, ltallam, CttOI I. •fMI J-•. J11-lot, ICIY H. tnd Sl..,.rifft _GJirv.IJU, Al!Slt It.. f.!11:1 fr,,.Ci$CI C1mobtll, Robtrl LIM 1nd M.itHttl l!lll•btlll Trull, SvlYlot "· 1no Allred "· Enrlquti, Sltllt otNJ S1lv-• S1llco1, Ktll'lletn R 11na t-llci. G. lte!lk k, J1m11 T 1nd 8tw•ho A. H•wlf'r, }Dl'tlH tnd 51ff>ht'n J. Crowftv, · AUi M1rlt 11'111 (/\lflt l .Mfrlot1 Sd•11mtdllr, S.11¥ I. """ Steve" D. P_.U, JU!lilh L. l<'H:I JostP!'I H. II Lt¥tty, Jotln f. t<'H:I Tor1w M. Hoflm111, llerr1aoen1 F. Ind Jorin L, l{,SJ>, Mllurl ... W. Ind ~tt Or'1\ll, Ml'Y Ptlrklt tnd Gert ld PhlHl1 Vll1!t, Ml(hltl Vln(tnl ind C1rol • Mtr!t Cf\Ant1tll, Ctrll'lllill L«1tt1 and E.mttton L¥1111 1'11._..I. ,_ Cfll~ll'!CI 0t110r1 LM Mc1'9'111 lh1lll. J1m11 Ivan enll Glotl-.Jt.,.. Gr-i.. 'M111ll1n Mair lllld '""°"""" AYlll Rf1ll'IO, Akhlrf Oout!tl •lld Ptmtl1 '" Htll01, K,_l\fo"IM Mtlllll llnd EOWln J. ,.......,., Gr1e1 M. 111d E1ri. ,, l llvtn, fklrtM• I . 1'1lli110M tnd Wtlttf' Mf!IOtl Hullm1n, "'Ifft Jove• ll'HI I J1nw1 Frank Cl¥1,, S.+!Y Ind G-C. Jr. W1lr. Low111 LYnn Jr. Ind :S.... Oen CofftY, Edn• MIY 11\d Donald MJr1ndt, Lo.,1ln1 111(1 Edmul'IOO R Guthrlt, JHnr.t M1rl• 1nd $!ellillen w. kotvold, OerolhY ,., .. 1,.. tlld ( .. ''°" IE¥1<11d lllomPIOll. IUI Ml•l!ll Incl fdWl111 "'""' l,lf\[11, Mtrv /o>m Ii.Ill Plllrl S-u .. R""lrft', Mlt<lllll •1'111 0111ct.IUM Jt, Coic. P1m1l11"Jt1n fnG M.ldll1t J1m11 l{\Od, J1w111n1 1riil .J'tftJ' Wlltm&n 111'-1, Dorl• 1,,_., 111111 Dewe;' Ch1rll1 WllMlft. J-' IMI Jon P. Dolv, [dO!t M. tnd Kitty M. Pele<a. lhom11 si...., 1nll Debr• AM llt<f, Jtll\M $. Ind ltfa.1riJ 't'(, s11 .. ln1, IC•lll•een L. 111c1 8r11<1 A. Cl-111. fltiM eroelfnttl 1nd (lltthf $Pljfll0n Gulltf"r11. Mlkt Mid "n!t1 lu•!1v. CvnJlllt M. 11\d <>on110 w, ~~~!~,?.'.~~.~~:"°l!:ct;:::: ":.·-· FroO"k~ Hthr, Glar!1 M•Y 111111 L1rrv ,._ul Prity. SlllrM!f Ek"" 11\d G-" T11vr.ion P"l!lt•, Rot>f•I t1>d Edrt L. Rigby, LOl/•"I Ell-11\d 1111* Eaw"d Swinson, E1l11btlh H. tnd R!ui.rll a. ~ ~ .,, . ·· 13 01.SII( 11 0 1. SIZE l t •I. GllllTII "Foamy" l•1.Gn1ITTI Right Guard Dor1l-J Dti• "'lloJal Plusi• 'Toilet Cover' sn S·PC .••• too~ Or!oR ~11~. ~~:;~!or~ 4 39 •••. 4.!l • 7 01. \IQUID Vitafis HAIR. TONIC ~;;i "Tumbler"'" ~y ANCHOR KOCKINC ChoirP. ot det'(1r~ted J ·1;.nt,"lo~rS:dii" 111 1: or. •·son!! 8110" d~"r~ed ~dre 1n tllg'l\rA)OfS. )1i Miss Breck ~ HAIR. SPRAY ~~ ... ,.,.,, .. ~ "Breck" ;,~ 2 .99 SEi A [fil1Jlij Place To Shop I 1-Qr. "Spaghetti'' Cooker Ctl•111bia• £NAMEltDWARE "Mam1 Mia'",;. 1'•'! '. 'i 1·.~·1 !11 boil ~ dr~1~ ;-~, :-u1•1· tr'<IJ. l~•.tl 11 • 3 69 t ' ·~;o, ·~ ff' J ' • T o :~1' .. llffA69 1 "Bake & Roast" PAN PTRIX·W•RI Baking Dish ~booo.Ll!.'' . )18~, .. ,l .'' • .... "'·~.. 1. 99 PAPE DAVIS "Myadec" "'0 " -1 POTENCY VITAMIN FDRMUU W/MintrilS 30's fAEEwil~ 4 28 pu1clla::.e~l 100 lttf. 6.,9 • COUGH SYRUP Witll h11lli1 ••• cc;ltols ca ug~s_ mes b1ea!hing. 111-1.u 99c 31L "Robitussin" -tOUG" f"OtMUtA Pltas1Rl t1stinz e1~ectorant !o r cllildren and adutt".. !! 1.29 CGICI FGltMUU Gim 6-8 Mut reliel lpiftSl Wiiii llicking I FACE SAVER. F11hts S•1wia1 lrrit1U11 onuxE Baster frCYtON ••• ln:~" f r&du~l•d luDP. ••• 53 t >i\lrted tolm hul~ ;, C l e1. 79c Thermometer .. C11dr ·JeJ1y.rit .. 11!1osn~ pld!"d :it~:n wi\11 3djir..tahle 111rr • 1te1.1.2S 320 0 1. HOME lAUNDI T "ALL~' DETERGENT lrr PACIFIC ElECTlllCOllO l•leruls in two d11ect10n\ frorn ortt pl~g. [acll 6 !t. ~eclion ~d·; ii~ nt1n moldPd plu!!, 1111 l~!o&-W~Y nuU~t. 99c Biuwn ~r Wli1I~ . R11. 1.2! - •I DAILY PILOT -Wtdne1da7, No¥embtr 10, 1q71 By TOM TITUS tak.e a· Shot at the iany tale of 0t "'-Pf'" Plitt s••tt two 'oony ladies v.1ho collect The 1ver;ge playgoer can corpses iif' their cellar. tell you at the drop of a script "Arsenic" is oqe of three about the v.'f'itings of old new offerings btillg n1ounttd tiri1ers Kaufman and Hart, or on Orange County stages this Noel Coward, whose comedies \veek. The reactiva ed GardCn are enjoying a resurgence of Grove Civic Theater is open·· popularity among local com· ing the "Plaza Suite" of.1968. munlty theaters this yenr. But "Never Too Late," while the they'd have to scratch their Nationa1 Shakespeare ~n1· heads for a whilt before lhey pany plays a on&-night stand could come up with the in Laguna Beach Thursday theatrical significanct of one with "1\velfth Night." Joseph Kesselring. The Huntington B e a c h Nevertheless, Kesselring 's version of "Arsenic" is being lone lasting contribution to directed by Ron Albertsen. stage immortality, "Arsenic \\'hose "Rashomon" of last and Old Lace," is one ol the spring was voted the 1 top most popular oldies around. It play of the 1976-71 season. \\'as resurrected last spring by Bobbi . t.·lurphy and Katheryn the Irvine C o m rt\ u n' i t y · Offill take the plum roles of -theater, and Friday the Hun-the sinister spinster sisters. tington Beach Playhouse will Tony Castle will p I a y ·Wednesday • Evening NOYEMIElt 10 l<IO II Ill 0 D GI l!.l -8 llilp ffKlllr U Kinas vs. New , Yor\ Rf'Jlftrs hi PIM t1ped ye.sttr· d17, D CIJ lllW.,.,..,. m111o- m1DrN111111.tuni• (jj)-IDH ....... pl.Wp 1111 •-... Ull D .... , (C) l10l ""'"""" ""'· chnion (comtdJ) ·a7 -Dofis D1y, Rich1nl H1rN, MichHI J. Pollard, Ed•rd Mulb1rr. Story or t irl who becomes 1n industi1I SPJ while IC· tu1!17 SHrthin1 IOr 1 111rcotics rin1 that hid htr fatfler k!ned. 00 9111 -m...,....,._ m111....,_ (ij) Alltrkn rolk Muaic "B1!!1ds -Th• Flrsteoap Operas" ED s... S*nlt tltllil.tioii lR) Close·up Oft how parents u1 hr[p lheir younpten 1111kl th• most ol th1 """· Smtrll Street.. m, .. ,.._ 1111 .... Acm mt. M'ch ,, •• -· al""' 1:15 O llnp Wrap-Up ~JOO ®i m"7"'• MH1111 11M1 Wit• "Husbands, Wivtt ind Ki!Hni" A masqutradt b1!1 erupts in panic when 1 el1:15t friend of tht McM llla111 is mu1dered. g M1vit: (C) (2hr) "Woman Times -SMll" (comed1J '67-Sllirle1 Mac· Lai111, N111 Arkin. Rossano Brau!, Mich11I Cllnt, Vittorio Gassman. 0 (I) (I) f1D Courbhfp of Eddie's rtther "Or Else" Tln1 tMnks she dtstrws a salary r1ise and No1m1n d'l1mpions her Cillst to the point where tlllf' both thre1ten to quit Tom. ED (ijl This Week Bill Moyers rt· ports on m1jo1 news event. 9 m1111: (C) "'nit YIOlenl Men" t :OO tJ (() Mldic.ll Clnler Guest Jo Van Fltat p!1ys a stubbo1n woman ••• ecutivt who refuses ' sur1ery !hit totJld ffH her from a wheelehalr. .1ppartntl7 lb fon:t 'btf SOD (pl'Ytd by Michatl l1rrain) to cart ff){ her. O (l)@ &JTht Smith ra•ilJ fl;) (jj) AIMricam Dn1111 Madlin• Im>" .... Si) Rosas pm Y11011ica 9:30 0 (I) @ &) SAlrltfs WorW: ''Kni1htm1re", ShirltJ steps into mtditv1l En11and and litlp~ e we1lthy buslnwman prove ht is J:GI II CBS NM Walter Crnft!Ut1 not instnt. (l) uc·111111 Smith, Re1M1ner O 111111 W•rd News Cl CD• !Im Joh1t.thlnctllor---m-n·T•k• t Thltl (j)Tmtior~s (JJ - OWW• Mr LiM? (llJ fllMlfthll .. m'"""" OJ I DN811efJlunil (jj) Itel• .. Cm IJD_ .. _ .,,,,_ f8111o·-m•- 10:00 II (i) Mannix PetlY f'lr is kid· nipped by 'two mtrt who leave a note warnint .lot Man nix that only ht can s1vt her fife. The priv1te ,dettdivt lums that to save bis secrtllfJ hi mLrSI invesliflte 1 comp1117 whosa officers know ht hu betn hired for the job and are optnly hostile to him. Stephen Mc· Nal!r. 'GIOl'l Stanford Brown, Rob· •rt Colb1rt 1nd P111I Cur are le1t11rld in this tpbode. 7:30 II DDr hr Ill Hiii• Loc11 rrnr· B 11i m fllaht Clllery "The Di· sle13 pmcribt a sure remedy "'hen ary," "A Matttr of Semantics," "The a:ambtinr ·.few:r triDt the medical Big Surprise" 1nd "ProfeMOf Pei· students at SI. SWit:hin's. bodys last Lecture" are lour series 0 l'r1•11t M eltctricil st°"" dr1mas d11lin1 wit!t 1 virulent tOS· tilUSes 1n .. p10lion ind fire on an sip columnist and Mr victim: Count offstlort oil·drillint platform. Carttt 011cul1 e1urtit In • misundemand· Primus must meue 1 colle1rue who '1 ina:; 111 eceentrfc firmer and some is tripped in tti• ratin1 inftrno. overly curiolrs rounrsters; and a prolts$OI who belittles the power ol Cil To TtR Wit Tnrth 1ncitnt w th. Stars include P1tty {])I Dr11M If ,_Nllie Ou~r. Vir1ini1 Mayo, David Wayne. B FFank Sinatra & Dean Cesar Romero. E.J. P1aku, Jahn '1t Martin-"four for Texas" Carradine, Garf Reine1. 0 Mlllilll $ MM: (C) (2:h1) "Fovt 0 @@ Ill1llt Man tnd the for Tan" (drama) '63-rr1nk Sin· City "Tne Deadly Fount1in" 1!11, 0.1n Martin. Nick O!nnis. Two 0 TM Avt...,.s men c.onshntlJ f1ul wilh one •n· ED {ijJ s.111! AH·blkk variety show. other until cl'ODU4 bankn ctirnes up with 1 d1st1rdly .ehem1 'Jlfikh €E Modin T1patiu fo1ces the mlfl to unit• for the m In l"rolmion1t comll'IOll u use. 10:30 g """ MotrlS, McCormick m ...,... .• "'"" m ""' Bill Johns @ (}) Dni&MI fl) D Retrate d1 Dot1111 Cray ~ Tt Stet. Te TMO, Te Htll Qt ril11: °'Thi eo.dl1111M If Al· 'lJ Mlllfl,lllllft ton•" ~Lida U.1 m 11 •• "'"'" m- 10:35 m Ntwt Pulnam. F1~m1n U<>O IJ (JJ lmJ .... l:GO II()) CM! luntttt Cass Elliott I 0 !]_QI m Nen and 8em1datlt Peten ruat. 0 RIMI Adlo11 Q II' ,_. ... 11 "Ambulh" Two un· @ M1rst11l Dillo11 derworld klll1n Clplvre Olfice1 0 rn m """ Rted whilt R"d 1nd. M1llor lrt tr1mportin1 1 prisolllf throurh M1libu C.n)'Oft !ft lht ir $CIU1d Cir. 0 (I) CJ) Gl hwltchM "A Pl•ftle 111 M1urict and Slm1ntha" Sim· antha Is infected br 1 r1ra virus O Merit: (C) .. Siltflt Nirbl lone!, NllM" (dr1m1) '69-Uoyd Bridg es, Shl1ley Jones, Curie Snod(TtS5. trflich 1llmhu1tes fl1r powers ol eJl) This Week 'Bill Plloyrrs wftcflcrlft 1nd, mn worst, PISSIS 11 15 -"' ' I •. I the ailmtnt °" 10 her fathe r. : U11 ... ne • 1•rco ts m JAMES BOND RETURNS 11,JO IJ (JJ ••~ Criffi• *"CASINO ROYALE " O ltl mJahftnr C111011 r1om IJW .. llf'7 fllrltt Mnit: (Cl Burb1n~ Cllil. (1llf &) "Clll111 ..,.... (com· 0 (Il@ al DK• C.fttl tdJ) '67 -hter Selltn., Ul'Stll• m Tt Ttll ttrt Truth Wl'lll, David ftlwn, ~II )'fell.s. Gt Morie: (C) "Mulinr" (idven· 1 secret at~ Jtmn Bond rs pressed tu1e) 'SZ -M1rt Slevens Antel• 1 Oii! et 1et1rtm1nt wflen four Inter· l sbu ' Mlion:ll 11ents 11k for his htlp 111 an fl. sm1Yiln1 SMERSH and Lt Chtllrt 12:00 O Mtvlt: "Souls 11 St•" (1dven· II ltlt bK'Clfll tables. til~•)'37-Garj"C00pl1, G101fe Ritt • flit Ylrp.!11 m Ml'N: "ClaMila 1114 Dnld" ID @Ttle f.-dl Qrl (dr1m1) '46 -Dofoltry McGult1. Thursday DXffiMt MOVIES .... fq.. '• ... (westttn)1 'st-f•.JWllt. , •• thilltw, JltffllS ----·F.a'B.._,(iiiiliii~ ..... _ ,_,. _ .... <•-i . ., -htl7 ·-.... don1hl C.r17, D (t) "'Pepe" P1rl I {'°me47) .,1 -C.n1inll1s, Din Dtite7. IO:OO (j)MtM: (C) .i.lou111tr te tllt Ctn· tet If lht [Jftfl" Conclusion (sci·fl) '59 -Ptt Boon•, Jlmts MIWll. l:OO (iJ (C) "I,... M ...... " (t/1s.t$e) '59-AuclrtJ H1pb11m. let J. CObb. m *'Jh Stt11111f'1 H1Jld" (mp· terr) '55--Trnor ttow•nl. Rith1rd Basehtrt. :OOCDJg~KIJ$i!.11 tt. ,...... Part I (muslcal) '47- Jllllf "'""· M1rk SIMM. 3:00 00 "Little fufili'tl" (dr1m1) 'Sl- Rithlt Andru.co. Q1l (C) 1',!ut Yldls" P•n t (d11m1) ·~Robtr1 ta7lor, Dtbor1h llcrr. tiloi·timer Brewster and Hank Sorkin is his menacing brother Jonathan. with John Phillips as the latter's goofy sid ekick. Dr. Einstein. Deborah Hackett supplies the romantic interest as Elaine, while John Hensley is a late replacemnet as Teddy ""'' .... .... ..., --· M140ll ..n.-..... , ....... 17 .... .,bo .... _ "SMAn"llJ pl.•t.0"-<1- ''Pllln MAIO! AU II A IOW" (II) I I -··-.. ....... 't4!.JUI . "'' ..... ,,, .... u"""' ""'•" .. _"""'"' "DOCfOIS' WIVlS"l•I "WOMlN IN tovr• 111 '11 tSllMM " and S:t111 Verdecla cop O'Hara. Completing the Huntington Beach c~st are Ken Clifford, Colin Guiver, Larry Woodard, Dan K<.iSt'r and Dew e y Knighten. Nancy \Velis is pr<r ducer, t.1arilyn A lhert sen stage manager :.. n d Larry \Voodard set designer. ":\rsenic and Old Lace'' Will be staged Fridays a n d S<tturdays for fi ve wer:k:ends at . the playhouse. 21 10 Main St.. Huntington Beach, at 8:30. Reservations 536-8861. * Andy and i\1ary H e I e n Cleary, a husband and "·ife team onstage and off, are the puzzled . parents to be in "Never Too Late" at the Garden Grove Civic Thater. Rona Kramer· and Pall! Mur- ray play the daughter and son- in·law in the Sumner Arthur Long comedy. Also in the t"asl are Don Eberle, Jeannette Davis, Bob Shay and John Craig, who doubles as director. Performances are scheduled for two weekends. Fridays and - Saturdays. at 8:30 in the Pacifica 11igh School lyceum, Lampwn and Kno"tt avenues, Garden Grove. ReservatiOns 537·4200. I, Sh a k esp'eare 's "T\1'e!fth Night'' l·l'ill be staged Thurs- day night only al Lag u n a Beach Hi gh School under the sponsorship o I Saddleback College's COT)'lniunity events program. The 8 o 'c l ock performance has been sold out, College officials have an- nounced. * South Coast Repe[tory has its hands full this week \.11ith performances of "Our To\vn" on Friday, Saturday and Sun· daY nights and the rock opera "Tommy" on Tue sday. \Vednesday and Thursday. In addition. "Tommy" will be staged on Fridays a n d Saturdays at 11 o'clock this \Veekend and next. ~lartin Benson, co-direc1or with David Emmes of "Tom- my ," takes the central role of the stage manager in "Our Tov.·n." joined by Theresa Carden, Cameron Young, Don Tuche and Heath P a r k . Reginald Rook i)lay3 the title role in "1'on1my," backed by the SCR ensen1ble and I he rock band "Ambrosia." All performances ·are at 8 • SHOWING NOW! • The master of the grotesque EDGARALLAN POE tells his most terrifying tale I • ) 2 Shows -A~ight· OAIL Y l'ILOT Slllf P~t~ DRINK . HEARTY -Katheryn Offill O ell) and Bobbi Murphy stand ready to collect the body as Colin Guiver prep ares to sip some elderberry wine in a scene from "Arsenic and Old Lace," opening Friday at the Huntington Beach Playhouse. o'clock at the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Reservations 646· 1363. * The ··Roaring Twenties" musical "The Boy Friend" continues in.its second week at the Laguna Moulton Com· n1unity Playhouse under the. direction of Hap Graham and t~rances Rafferty Baker . Performances \Viii be given at 8:30 tonight through Satudray. Lana Walker and Steve Plummer head the Laguna cast. \vith Blanche ti1ickelson. Vicki Frederick, Mindy Mid· dough, Constance Crane, Otho Budd. Bob Rigg, Lee li.1illar ad Olive Riches filling major supporting roles. Music~] direction by Doris Shields and choreography by Lila Zali also are featured in "The Boy Friend" at the playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Be a ch . Reservations 494-0743. * Closing out their respective runs with final performances this weekend will the Fullerton Foot li hter "Nobody Loves lbatross. ·• the Ana· 1eska Players' "Plaza · ite," the Long Beach Civic ght Opera's "Hello Dolly;" and Fullerton Junior College's "fl.terry Wives of \Vindsor." Tony Brandt direc t s Li kc l\fother HOLLY\\100D (UPI') Dorothy McGuire's actress daughter. Topo Swope. landed the feminine lead in "I-lot Rock" which stars Roberl Redford and George Segal. ... r -\..' .. Albatross" at Fu llerton with r the college, 321 Bil! Christian enacting the Ave ., Fullerton. deceptive TV v.•riter. Ma r y 871-8007. E. Chapman Reservations Lynn Shea, Beth Titus. Floria Mose. Celia 11ansen and l~a!ph Appell are featured in the con1edy.· Final perrormances will be given Friday and Saturday al 8:30 in the Muckenthaler Center, 119 Buena Vista Drive, Futlet1on. Reservations 527- 4415. "Plaza Suite" takes the stage rGr the last two times of the year Friday and Saturday with the Ana-Modjeska Players' production of Neil Simon's comic trilogy at the Loara Sc ho o I auditoriun1. Auslin Peay is directing. Ted Grandke handles a!! three male roles in the trio of one-acts, \Vith Alicia Price. Carole Whitcher and Ru!h Smithton sharing the distaff duties. Curtain time is 8: IS at the auditorium, 213 S. Loara Ave:, Anaheim. Reservations 535-5814 . * ~1artha Raye winds up her tour de force in "Hello Dolly" for the Long Beach CLO \Vith final performances at 8: 30 Friday and Saturday and 2:30 S1Jrfday afternoon. J a ck Ritschel is featured aS Horace Vandergelder. The musical is being staged at the :Jordan High School audiloriurn. Atlantic a n d Artesia avenues, Long Beach. Reservations (213\ 432-7926. Fullerton Junior College's •·ti-1erry Wives of Windsor" performances. T h u r s d a y through Saturday, in the FJC Campus Theater. David Coun- cilman plays Falstaff under L. 0. Stoughton's direction. Curtain time is 8 o'clock at . -· * Elsewhere around the living theater beat, the Santa Ana Community Players continue their production .of "Stalag 17." the Buena Park Players offer "Come Blow Your Horn" and the Long Beach Com- munity Playhouse has "•lay Fever" in residence. Dick Langseth directs and appears in "Stalag 17'' \1•1\h Jim \Villiams, Paul Gcrsowitz. Bud \Veiss and Ron Langseth p!ayir).g the major roles. Performances are given at 8:36 Friday and Saturday at the Plafers' Theater. 500 W. 6th St.. Santa Ana . Reserva· lions 531-9738. Nei l Simon's first play, "Come Blow \'our I-lorn." is heing presented by the Buena Park Players Friday arid Saturday evenings under the direction of Jerry Weiss. John Loughman, flilike Fiore, Claudia Noggle and Marla Small head up the cast. Curtain time is 8 o'clock for the comedy at the Buena Park Community Center, 8150 Knott Ave .. Buena Park. Reserva· lions 828·0331. "Hav Fever" continues its long rUn at Long Beach with a flock of Orange Counlians in the cast and Westminster's Alex Koba directing. Barbara Crooker, Denis Thomas, Ron Filian. Randy Keene and Elizabeth G o r d o n are featured. Performances are given at 8:30 Friday and Saturday evenings at ~the playhouse. 5021 E. Anaheim St.. Long Beach. Reservations f213) 438- 0536. For SCR A first for South Coast Repertory· -and quite poSsibly the nat1orr-has been announced by Davld~Emmes, executi~e director of the Costa Mesa tlieater company. "In the past," Emmes noted, "repertory has meant t\YO productions running at tht same theater in the same week. We began that process over two years ago. Now, at lea.st for the next few weeks, repertory will mean two pro- ductions rQ.!Uling on the same night." The current SCR production of Thornton Wilder's "Our Towp" is running in alternate performances with the rock ' '<lpera "Tommy," with "Tom- my" presented T u es d a 'J through Thursday and "Our Town" 1',riday through Sun· day. All performances are at 8 o'clock. "Due to the po'pularity of 'Tommy'," Em mes said. "'ve will be presenting· additional 11 o'clock performances or 'Tommy' on ~ridays and I Saturdays, less ttian an hour after the 'Our Tdwn' curtain cpmes down." Emmes pointed out that the changeover-\viii be ' 'a herculean task for nur small technical organization. The set and lighting for 'Our Town' must be changed over te't 'Tommy' in slightly Jess than an hour." The entire operation Is something of a logistics pro· blem, he said, with cast$ o! both shows arriving on schedule. leaving on time and helping with the set shill-all \vilhout getting in each other's v.'ay. Some 40 pecip\e from both productions \Viii be in· volved. "The schedule p r e s e n t s nth er difficulties too." Em mes added. "Trying to com· municate it to the public i~ diffi cult. \Ve've already had a few cases of people arriving at the box office to find that 'Our TO\\'n' was playing when the1 expected to see 'To111my.' " Emmes suggested that all patrons call the SCR box of~ fice· at 646·1363 for schedule and reservations information. A theatergoer could catch both shows in one 11ight. he noted. like a motion picture double feature . Concert Set By Harpists Duo harpists Longstreth and Escosa will be the featured artists Thursday in the second concert of the Harbor Area Community Concert Associa· lion's 1971-72 season., The male harpists. who are making their first ·a ppearance in the Orange Coas t area, will present their program at 8:15 p.m. in the Ne,vport Harbor High School auditorium. The unique harp team has performed in New York's Town Hall and Carnegie Hall and is, perhaps, best known for a best selling recording of traditional and o r i g i n a I Christmas music. Play Settles , Differen~es • Special lo th e DAILY PILOT 'Jk The Falsettos ·-it iiounds ·' like a rock group, but it may @r)O CQLOR ~1 M1Nit11• e ""• ~" AMElllCAN 110£RNAflONAL Plch1t • -~:-,.:.;::::.:: JASON ROBARDS '""Murdm in Ille Rue Mo~ue" RI STINE kAUfMANN HERBERTLOM ?U 1 M~ OUNN !~lrn!.~~ • Co Hit · IN COLOR• be the ne\v Lunt and 1'~ontanne . combination'. Ken and Linda (Whitmore) Falsetto got together during ~ last year's Orange Coast 1 College product io.n of "fllarathon 33," and four n1onths later were married. They are no~· ·starring in the r-> upcoming OCC production of ~ "The Trial or the Catonsville .. Nine," scheduled for Nov. 17· • ' 20. "Actually. \ve knew each 1 olher before ti.larathon.'' Ken ~. ;aid recently. "but \VC didn't much like each other . We had gone together and broken up. In fa ct. "'hen the play \Vas cast, the di re c tor. John ~~erzacca, came to us and ask- ed if we thought we could \\'Ork together." The rcspanse was less than enthusiastic. the co u p I e related, but they agreed. 'MARATHON' GREAT TONIC FOR COOLING ROMANCE AT OCC Student Actors Ken and Linda F1IHtto Now Co-starred for Good Ken, sporting a light beard v.1hich will come. oCf for "Ca1onsvll\e," said t h i n g s picked up Ofter th11t. .. ll was a pretty physictil show." he ~aid, "\Ve spent a good part of it in tach other's ar1n s, and \l's kind or hard to not like someone under lhosc tirr:umstances." Apparently. The show was in f'.1orc h. and the l\'IO were mar· ried In July. And all past. ,, a11!n1osities are forgott<!n. Ken "'ill play Father Dllniel Berrigan ln "Catonsville ," and Linda 'viii play h-larjorie Melville. an ex·nun ~·ho is marred to an ex-prie!il, not Berrigan. "We first met d1..wlug the productiori oT'lndlant'." Lindn sald. "K.eo "'as in it, and I did makeup. I made· up hls chest." Future plans? Ken Is. now a student at Califo~ia State College at Fulle1·ton, and is taking some courses at OCC. lie is also an assistant teacher at il·I c Na 11 y continuation School, Teaching drama. Lin- da is fini!;hing up at.. OCC and will major in dramn at Fullerton. Ken, 241 has also appca re-d at occ in "T\.fan or La 1\Jancha, '' the Experilnent HI Theater productions or "The Tiger", "Antigone", "No Ex· it" and a rnhne show. He -.1~0 was assistant. director of "fid· dler on the Roof" . Linda, 20, appeared ln "Marathon ," "Fiddler" and severai..,exper.imcntal ~howtr · "'here do. they go from' h<'re? Anyone-'doing "Tlie l·'ourposter"? • I • ' . ' I ' .. ' • . Oh, Yoti Kid 1'1indy A-1iddough and Bob Rigg are ca ught in some peppy choreography in th is ~cene from ''The Boy Friend." no\v on stage at the Laguna Moulton Commun· ity Playhouse. (See Theater Not~s. Page 22). Schoenf elds Give Brilliant Leisu1·e W 01·lcl Pe1·f ormance By TOM BARLEY 01 rhf 01UJ ,llM 51111 Alice and EI ea nor c Schoenfeld comprise one or the most brilliant duos on the concert circuit today and their offering Saturday night at the Laguna Hills Leisure \Vorld auditorium adds one more rave review to a portfolio bulging with the ecstatic com- ments of delighted music critics. Their performance. given lor the benefit of lhe Laguna Hiiis committee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society, ranged from the r i g i d I y technical to the u l t e r I y romantic Sarasate arrange. ment of Gounod's "fo'aust " and "'as very effectively interided to 'cove r the wide tastes of whot was primarily a retire- ment C'Ommunily audience . Vlolinist Alice and cel\i~t Eleanore -superblY backed up, by the waY. by music pro- fessor June Lusk Nelson at the Steinway -\\'ere at their bes~ as a team in the Beetho\•en trio and Kodaly opus seven duo that comprised the first half of a demanding program. Their 8 e et hove n was faultless and their Kodaly \\'as \'efY nearly so. The allegro serioso non lroppo that opened the Kodaly work was tended to be a trifle hesitant. tempo ill suited to the adagio that so movingly occupies the center 'Brass Harp' Clinker lnBroadwayOpening By WILLIAAI GLOVER NE\V YORK !APi -''The Grass Harp," a badly n1istun- ed operelta. has plodded into Broadway's "-1arlin Beck Theater. Truman Capote's original novella about pure love and shameful avarice in yester- day's pastoral soulhlond has been adapted by Kenward Elmslie. supplied with music by Claibe ruchardson. Betv.·een them they have oblitereated wistful. poetic fantasy. and with indications of c re a ti v e desperation. substituted a preposterous pastiche of fairytale and freak show. Barbara Cook plays a spinster whose secrel formula for a magical gypsy elixir is sought b_v a wicked elder sister, Ruth Ford, and big city slicker. f\fa;c Showalter. backwoods evangelist called Babylove. turns up \\'ilh a quintet of s a cc ha r i n e adolescents caned the Heaven· ly Pride and Joys. Ellis Rabb d i r e c I e d v.·ith languorous uncertainty. Miss Brice unleashes her magnificent pipes in several rather irrelevant n u m b e r s thaf suggested a successful night club act. 1'.liss f\1 orrow unleashes her equally ~ten· torian voice in a poinlles.!! campmeeting roudelay that qualified indisputably as the nadir of a \'ery low profile af- fair. The production originated with the Universitv or Michigan Professional Theater Program a n d inaugurated recently that institut.ion 's ne1v drama center. Things there can only now improve . and hopefully loo. soon. at the Martin Beck. portion of this very attractive score. The Schoenfelds' ' ' part y piece " is an astonishing demonstrallon or dexterity in the form of 1'1artinu's "Ron· do'' and ' we observed some miraculous siring and finger v.·ork in the sisters' in· lerpretation of a work that is a rarity on our concert pro· grams for very obvious reasons. This critic's preference in Ibis beaulifully balanced pro- J;!ram \Vas for \lilla·Lobos' ··choros", a two-movement \\'()rk that is fast becoming a firm favorite \·;ith violin·cel\o duos. It has everything but its great joy, in this \Vriter·s tern1s. is in the fina l bars of the stirring anime movement that concludes the \vork - there we have the free, aoar· ing spirit of Villa·Lobos in a few cords that were superbly interpreted by the Schoen· relds. But there could be no doubt about v.•hich offering in the varied program appealed most to th~ capacity audience - Sarasate's "Faust Fantasy." a brilliant arrangement of the Gounod operatic score and one which Alice Schoenfeld tack.led in magnificient fashion . Both sisters use the coveted Guarneri instruments -25G- year-old masterpieces by the craftsman \\'ho v.•as seaind on. ly lo Stradivarius -and the lone lhat defies mort con- ten1porary eraflsmen was very evident in the Sarasate v.·ork. It brought the ovation of the evening from a very happy au- dience in a concert hall that should be put into much greater use in terms or the type or concert staged last weekend. Its acoustics are splendid nnd the uating ar. rangements Buperior to most auditoriums along our Orange f\1iss Cook runs off to her·l--:U:-;;:N::-:C::=-:=:-o--,=-- rhildhood tre<hou" wUh Carol LE LE N 1--------- Coast. Brice. a caricature n1ammy who thinks she is an lndian. and a cousin. Russ Thacker. There Karen Morrow. as a llal8!T Mf10-LM 1IDa1 1-0NARD JOHN MUS md SAR.AJ-l lv'4ES@ Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT MON. THlU FRI. ONI SHOWING AT I P.M CONTINUOUS SHOW ..$AT .. AND SUN. ltOlltf't Mlldltm "JIYAH'S DAUlllHTl"I" ... Oi~MY SllOrl "ALAll(AIH lSIUMO" , ,,,. !lllt"ltl Kk:tl Ml!, Stl, -I P·"'· IN THE GREAT TRADITION OF AMERICAN THRILLERS! Ana•Modjeska Production 'Plaza Suite' Has Faults But Still Entertaining By CANDACE PE.4.RSON distinguiShed with gray hair 01 "" D11!1 •11tt 111tt '"''' Ofl~~:i'-t~l~1t~·~,11 Sl'l'IOI'. and tall carriage. but she car- d1r1e1w ti~ Al11$1ln P11y, trfftnled tlY r1·es the look off Unl1'J she One wonders v.· h e t h e r , 1he An1·MC>c1l1••1 P11.,••• Frld1v •M !>11u•d•v onlv 11 t 1 n rn ,,,. Lotrt Hit~ wan ls it .drop~. -at the .nyone C.n go Wron• -rform Scl!oot 1110nor1um ~lJ s. ll•otdw1v. ~ ... .,... • Atn•i'l9lffl, Rtte•Y•t1on1 y~11u. point where she turns near Ing Neil Simon's successlul s1m, J.u, 1110!~~-·~-~! .. Ted Gr1nc1~. hysterical upon ripping her e<1medy. "Plata Suite'.'' ~-:rf.'1NT~'1~ ·:·::::·.··:c1r:.''~':.1fcr~~ stockings. , Norrn• Hul>ltY , , •. , Ruth SMlll>ton With Simon's writing. which Ml•• Mc<:.,,,.,1c~ J1n1ce L•dOUC•ur Carole \\!hitcher. as the star· can often make you laugh and ~1~~· ::··:: :··::: .... J~~~M~C::,~ struck hometO\\'n Ntw Jersev Wt II tr , . •.• . . .. Mtl COfl(.fO<lon · I · A I T h f' '1 cry simultaneously, as a------------g1r in c 11:0. as 1ne VO('a inflection but is a little backstop, can any reasonable awkward physically. Although production of it fail ? Can greater ease. her nervousness at tin1es ap- uneven acting, a distracting But. as if he were "'arming pears more rorl!ed th 8 n set and a need for better tim-up lo lhe e\'ening. he saves his natural . she readily handles ing drastically hurt tbe play's best perforn1ance for that of extreme changes _ from effect? the penny·pinching fa 1 be r declaring she has to lea\•e to No on all counts. Or 80 the \\'hose daughter locks hersell k' · h Id f · d in the bathroom at .her own issing er o boy rien production by the Ana-~fod· passionately. ~~:;layef!.in Anaheim has w~::k~ni!h~~=~~y,·~~~ he is A~:~i:.e st!;~!onu:i:i; a~~~~~ The Ana . Mod j e s k a storming around. sereaming Concepcion are all competent ''Plaza:· w h i ch opened or rightfully overac t ing . last \l'etkend at the Loara Whether there is much call for in the::-respective bit roles. School° Auditorium, obviously that in.too many other shO"'S Peay·~ direction suffers al has its short comings. but it is questionable, but despite his tinies from a lack of lirning still proves to be a highl y en-inconsistencits. he w or lo.. s and un}Xlli~hed stage move. joyable evening. courtesy of because the cbaracters around metit. Several scenes were M S. hinl work. ~tat ic r or uncomforlable r. imon . I h f 1· P h Id Cramped on the small Especially effective is Alicia engt s 0 Lme ; eny s ou school stage. both cast and set Price as Karen , the \\'ife in the match the pace of the acting often looked awkward , but the first act who can't remember with !he pace of the lines. former made a belt er her exact :i.gt or even the Granted, Ule stagr L'I small reaivery. righ t number ol thrir honey· and confining. but a few extra Directed by Austin Peay, moon room, but ca n touC'hes would hnve made the the three-vignette play was remember she loves her hus-set mo~ believable as a suite cast wit h one man and three band . in New York City's Plaza different women. ood Hotel. IFor instnnct. what ~iss Price is ver.v g in looked like a v.•hite sheet This is an acceptable both quiet and sarcastic method -if you've got the moments and conveys the true thrown over an old couch man for the job. Ana . ~1od· dichotomy : the wife who could be repla~. l jeska's man. Ted Grandke . is understands why her husband The show plays again this likeable but uneven and in· is youf h<()rienled but who also F'rida_v and Saturday at 8: 15 consistent. 11.•ants him to forget it all and p.m. If you've seen ··r1a1.a Jn the first vignette. a cou-come baC'k to her. Suite" before. there is no need pie "celebrating" their 23rd As the alte rnately sc~am-to rush out and see this pro- wedding anniversary when the ·ing . cajoling and heart. duel.ion. But if you haven't, husband admits to an ::ilfair palpitating mother of 1 ht'. despite this one's naws. go see with his secretarv. r.randke is bride in the third act. Ruth. __ u_._s_in_10_0_·_,_w_o_rt_h_i_L ___ _ unimpressive ai best anrl · · S111ithton turns in an exeellent demoMtrates a frequent abili· performance . ly to throw funny lines away. Not only does she look In the second act C:rand~e is'-============J a famous Hollyv•ood producerl: attempting lo seduce a hijilh • school sweetheart after a 17- year absencr. He finally suc. ceeds by rattling off names of movie stars. which lulls her into submission. As the producer. he im- proves immensely. gives a fair portrayal of a decei1•ing. leching man and seem.!! to move about the stage with rftfi Heet11 •.. .... .. Convenotionol Spanish Lttt" Quic~ly 646·2t01 .-642-S.Ztt diary otem•d hOu-wlf• a frank pe!"ry film ~ Your Hometown Newspaper Is The DAILY PILOT NOW SHOWING • CALL THEATllS 1'01 llCOND l'•ATUllll a SHOW TIMl"I STADIUM •4 -'oJtAN•I' -~ k•l•lt• nf. Si.dlum ' FOX CINEMALAND AINANl"IM -W.7 .. 1 UU Ht rbof •Ivel. LIDO NIW,OJIT &IACN OJI MUI Al !ht l!!nl. II Licit l•lt FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIU·IN l"OUHTAIN VAL\.IY ,,.,,., llt" 01 .. o Frwy, fl ·~-!\I/flt ALSO AllDlllY HINUllll AIDUlll .. == WlllT 111111.-- NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES , .... ALASKA , .. BAJA! " ClnMom• 20 Or•n.. 5J2·3J21 IXCLUSIVI O.C. DIGAGlMfNT 11ow•a.an•1 fTH w•111. DAILY r:n. ,, .... ..,. SAT.·SUN. -l •l :4f • S:IS & HOL. -1·t 14i ·H11t I So. Co11t Ple11 1 Co1to MHI f46.2712 uM'J-:1t If WEEKDAYS-4 iJ0•7100.t dl ·~~~1tl SAT.-l~:OO.l: I S·4:J0.1:00·t :I S SIJN.-1: I !i .4:J0.1:00·t ; I I I • WtiAe"'1, N0vtmt1tr 10, 19n DAILY PILOT · %3 All Ale Plclwtt ,.,,, f/11> A ~ .t tlll 'r•11t1tllilil · ,..,ic.. -...c.n.._ A ''btea" C..,.ftJ ~1. I.e. PrMIKU. • CtMI ~ Ol11t1'llt4ll '1' Cl11tr ... llltltlAC t«llOl'llit<I ·Direct .. tY JM' IMMlflt l!:!!J- • DWA" D S • 2NDOUTSTANDINGCOMIDT• ._.. ......... 1......... . --SAlll'f-••l~Slllt IENNmtMUS WAI-JAii-- 6"ERAl.D O'l8U&HUN .:.:..r .... m"P'ii'"WI fliiii ur ~-i:;;:~ ..... "' .,...,.._,. lllCNlll lrt4 AT MAllOI I 2 Clml h\rwood 111 "TMI IEGUlllO" fl ) IN HARBOR SHOl't>ING CEHTER lH 11 OIA•IE I I James Garner I: Lou Gossett Susan Clark l',l'\"M:.O". Ti-·rr«W ~ 0 2R~ AT HUNTIHITOll ~·by .foon -· THE D•wils is.not a film for 1weryon• VANESSA REDGRAVE .... OLMR REED IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM OF THEDEVllS ® • 2114 llG liTTltACTIOM • ·i'A WORK OF GENIUS." , ' ' , • l r:rt----- . • J.f' OAILY PILOT DICK TRACY Wednesday, November 10, l q11 1 • t ' . •• ' • • • • •• • ~ .. •' .- .. ' " , " ,. ~ • > ~ ' . • • ~ r; '· " ' • • TUMBLEWEEDS GROVfR1 MEET Hl~PEGARP HAMHOCKER ... Hl~PEGARP, TIJIS IS 6ROVER &AU-EY1 THE EPl'TOR ! MOn AND JEFF 'POP, CAN! GET MY DRIVER'S LICENSE NOW? FIGMENTS --··~~ -•~· ·• ""n PLAIN JANE ACROSS 43 Rtvolut!onaty acli~ist 1 Wise man ~4 Embrace 5 Plunge ii 4S Spoil !he weapon into quality of ill body 4b Glacitr of 9 B11st'bti1I play SE Ala~~a 14 Dance of 48 fatxic used The Is lands lo shtrt 15 Weapon: out light French 52 Throw olf lb Pr!es~s tille sparks In Spain SO Affi1ma\1~e 17 Strong cons1dr1atlon pervasive 57 "That'5 qui Illy enough!'': 18 Detroit or Slan(r Vancouver 2 words football er 58 Air: 19 Place in I row Comb. form 20 Cul of mrat 59 The onr 21 Noughts des ig11~ttd and crosses b(l Sharp ridgr 23 LtaVt' -·· ·-bl Horact ·-·----: untu111ed: US educator 2 WOfdS bl Quote 25 Monetary unit b3 Opentd ot Mexico to view 2b Hasten b4 Plunder 27 Outdoes b5 Secondhand 29 Brow 32 Spiritual OOY!N bei~s )5 ----bOl l Having been lb Lattral part d1Vt'Sled 37 One of I of ha11 Mosll!!m peopl e 2 7he sound on 38 Wood a TIJ progra11 39 Vlllagr of J Small New Mexico round drops 40 ---ol Ely 4 Atl~ntlon 41 Pub products 5 Relalim.1 42 Niagara -· to NaC l 2 l " • 17 0 21 " " ll •I • .. " • " •• .. • • r, jl ~' b An instant 7 Kind or psychic disturbance 8 Crooked 9 A1eas provided for par\1tul<1r purposes 10 Speafs 11 Newspaper leaturt 12 C011stella!i~1 13 Smooth: Phonetits 21 WOl'k stre.1uously 22 Fruit 24 At that place 27 Wea1ing a sleeveless garrtlf:n\ 28 Causes lrotAllt to JG Image of o1 divin ity 31 Untidy state 32 Muslim IOfd JJ Facial reat1re " .. .. ' ' 0000! Nl!WSl'APeR MEN ARE N01l>RIOUS FLIR'!'S! YES, YES,! KNOW! IN SOME COMICS 'THE 80\15 GROW UP 'TO BE '>t>UIJG MEN BUTNOT IN'l'MIS COMIC !! 2SO POUNDS OF TMEM?"' By Tom· K. Ryan PONT eE COY ¥00 NAOGHTY 00¥! E\ll:RYONE'S HEARD Of 1'JE Pl\l!SS PASS! By Al Smith BUT I DON'T WANNA BE A L ITTLE KID ALL MY LI FE! IT'S llNNATURAU By Dale Hale U'I: AIMER K100 • HEN~ THE ~th OF $.OB• BOVIA HAS A PROBLEM MOO.N MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS <lOO ~~QW WHAT'S l ~ WITfl'fH£ i a.PER <'EJ.ltl''.A'flO~? 0 \\JH,!;1'15 l 'fH~ • MA~? ~I~. ~ -----' :,..1:" ~· '-..... .._ !1"S 'fHE:I~ f~ux:aJfATl()/J \\lift! ~1!1/ol6 MA'ffl?IAL 1H11JE1$ ! PEANUTS Bv Charles M. Schulz ll/1Cl17l 34 Ori.! pr od11ci11g 3 rare metal: 2 words 35 Trtt-lin~d street in London Jb B~g in a11 activity 38 New Zealarid native 42 Food and drin k 44 Conlor111td as to size 45 Rellt'llion at sea 47 Cormine INJll e In inleresl 48 Chili coo -- 4<! Plant lCklse JUDGE PARKER EXC.\l5E ME .• !\.IT !'D &ETTEIZ LE.&.VE Ml/ NAME AT THE eox OFFICE IN CASE I'M. CA.llEO ! W~AT A.~E 0Uli1 SEA.T WU M~Ei'5, MR. DRIVE~? I GAYE 'fOll 1100' e!ANl<ET' 11l WP fOf! ME O!a.V 10 SfE IF I COUU> GIVE IT 111',ANO '01 IT lo\l.llf llll1l A flORT aJ';f' ! •,-,.~,.,_.,...,... ..... ~~~ ..... NOT A ~. '· SPORT COAT-~ ·-l· ' -TWO 500 COATS! By Harold Le Do.ux NO .. T14Eli!:E'5 n.!E C\.IAIJC.E fl.t'T 1 MA.V MAVE TO li:UN UP TO MONTIZEAL~ F·.5: I 'M GOI NG TO GET VOU INTO .6.NOTHER PIZOFE~ION, ERIC.~ VOi.iil !iUSINESS LIFE IS INTEIZ- FEIC1N6 WIT~ VOtlll PLEASlllZES! YOIJ'IZE fEALL V Nor SEEING EIZIC. "T l-llS BEST, ;.!BEV ~ FOIZ SOME: ~e.a.sow ME SEEMS TENSE ! IT'S Pli:De"!LY '™E l.Qt.IG PL;.NE T~IP •• "~11 Tl-IE TIME Cl<IA.N&E, .rEEP! MA VN .SO I "'°"' 'It\'.) ..SUPINE ®00,UR!S.f. " " Ii II ll •• ~Es,At>TO TEW. Yc>U AIJOOT THEI R C~Rl!IBEAH ~& 'TOUI< • • By Ferd Johnso• r---r )l)Ulf!E' .OOING WELL ENOU«H AT1 HOME, eMMA . J: AM -SOOll A-5 :i: Gf.1'. El\0061'1 1~AO' 'lll4'1'flil!l<: I THE GIRLS 50 Enraged 51 Observed 11Now, Henry, promise me eacll time we come to a sold oe, I 52 Strikebreaker: lnf0tmal SJ Dear: It. 5~ Source of lllumlnal 1on 55 "King--·'' 59 Fort WOfth lHli- vtrslly: Abbr. 10 11 12 13 29 JO ll " .. >l " ,. " • .. I MISS PEACH PERKINS lRA, I HAVE FINALLY ~EALIZED Tl.lAT YOUR: Pl<'OSL~M IS A DeEP·ROOfED SENSE OF GUILT. IT HAS TAKEN ME MUCH TIME AND HAli:D WOJ!I( TO F1'7Ul!E THIS OUT. • 11•/0 ... : '' • ., !"-: .. J l")J.,, _j you won't uy, 'A f91!! and his money."" 1 By Mel DENNIS THE MENACE By John Miies l • j j ' ! • ·' . itBA~i DlSPOSA'-~ . . . ' I 1'1od" • Surg\C:al •:..asi1y 1rtnds • Quic"\dy a w t• for effki~nt kitchen w•• ditpOS•' : • • £asv to insto1\ DILUltltWOLLAWA T PING PONG TABLE • Openi e~ by ene person to 5-ft. z 9 .. ft. • feakir•1·h19h intpact1 dent•resistont 3/8" "Prowood" top ', ,•N_,rereg_,,&.hh • J.1'."tubutarstMllegs PRE-HOLIDAY SAVINGS . ROAST RACK ROASTING PAN •10"x fr-"":' •Ideal for imalt fowl ~ •. RIG. I.ff · #100·63 CO VOID ROASTE R • OYOl·enameletl h.avy duty 15-inch roaster. RIG.1J9 .. ,,., ......... ::· :131-34 . •Enameled Jieavy dufy- e J 6" x 12" IARLY SllOPPIRI CHRISTMAS SAVINGS -- 1 'I WOLL PA&;• ·~ CURLING RIBBON •Drum of 9 rolls ( 12-ft. each) of exquisite curl ing ribbon • Assorted ntw colo~ H,AGOJ lS ST•CK-ON BO WS •Gay • bright assorted colors to beautify your packages rrr;,~ • Easy to use · Just stick ~-. ~\ thom on ~f,~_ fD \,i,)if\';'~~ RIG. ~. 59, EL MON TE 12260 E. GARVEY 3 BLOCKS EAST OFS POINTS • - ' WedntSday, Novembtt 10, 1971 DAILY PILOT JtJ J 3 8" (' DO!lt; Pt • Sand•cl .• An ffOftOmical panel within the reach of any budjet •Vinyl covering is easy to cl.an with a damp cloth • .• SOMISLIGHTl Y _. IRRIGUUR -· • Ext•rior glue •Complete: conskts of 1 ir6x6-ft. redwood fence boards. 414•1·ft. redwood posls, surfac•d 4 sid•s • 2x4x8.fl. rails, 1urfac•cl 1 OUR RIG. 4.39 SHE!T R' . • . • •Surfaced four sides • Direct from the mill to Angeli yards I PO 655 I. MILLS NEAR HOLT & MILLS JUST EAST OF INDIAN HILL BLVD. OUR RIG. 49< ll•ORAIGI SHOWID. 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CLE ANER •General purpoM house- hold cleaner e lg. 26·or. package UJlll lT TWO Pll <US10Mll Wl1M nus cou•oN. OPlllS NOY. 17, ltn. GARDEN HUNTINGT.01 GROVE BEACH .J2"2 CHAPMAI 7100 IDllGll . -1oo'YARDS EAST OF ONE BLOCK WIST HARBOR BLVD. OF BEACH BLVD . . ' . - • tll DAILY PILOT , Wtdnesda1. Nw-111bfr 10, 2q7 1 Vallely on Trade:. Glad to Get Out of Atlanta· one indi vidual more than any ether one.II • Special lo lbe DAILY PU.OT John V11llely has ne\'er been to Hous ton. eagerly looking" forward In their first !rip to Houston and the AstrodC1ml'. 1 "I'm glad to get out of here IAtlnnta)," \'111lely said in a letcphonr 111\C't\ 1cw. myself to John \Vooden ·at--UCLA," VaJle- Jy recalls. "f hope T will get a chance to play 1nore 1n I louston than I did at Atlanta - I don't think too n1an y teams make lradcs unlc.s they figure they can help themselves. There aren't any .tryouts in the middle of the season like there are during the er. hibit ion season. It was str ictly a straight player trade -two for two." right into the sta rling lineup. 1 have to learn the system first." Asked lf the problems some of the other Houston players have had in lea rn- ing \'linter's system. as repor te d recently, would ailed him ... he didn't he sitate to answer: not for me. I just want to play and Jim , looking• forward to the trade.'' ... For that matter, he has ne\·er played a basketball game lor 1..-oach Tex \\'in ter. either. "There are a Jot of pro!Jll'rns on this lt<1n1 ." \\'hen pressed for_1norc detail~ on the prnblcn1s, he sin1ply stated: But all of that has changed 110\v that Vallt>lv has been traded to the HoustGn Rocke.ts. along \1•Uh teammate Jim Da vis, in return for non Ada111s and Lar- ry Siegfried \rho ""ill rl'port to the At- J.;,1111<1 Hawk!). "They are just different problc.•1ns that should be kept wlll'lin !hr learn ." Jn his enlhusins1n over the trad~. V<11le- lv rcn1C>n1berrd how he \\aS rC'cruited by Rocket ctiach Tex 'Virll('r'>,1•hilc ii! Oran,:;e Co;.ist College during the J!J67-68 sraso n. ''1'1n \'ery optimistic about it. lloustnn is a young learn and is having its pro- blems right now. Hopefully, I will have a chance to play more than I have in Atlan- The ex-Corona del Mar lligh star was a high draf~ choice for Atlanta a year aso alter captaining the Bruins in his sen ior season \\'hen they \11011 their fourth straight NCA.A championship. "A year's experience in the league really helps. I've seen all the players and know mo re about \1•hat's happening and I've been playing more this season than la st. "To tell the truth . I know nothing about t1ny prob lems with the Houston team. We haven't played them this year and they have a different coach and different personnel 1han they had In San Diego last season." Vallrly and his bride of less than a year wrre in form~ 1'ucsd<iy morning of !he trade and "'hen reached bv the DAILY PILOT in Atlanta in the fvening, \\'ere ''':t'es, he tried lo recruit 111e whrn hl"' 11·11s coachi"g at the UnJl'ef!\ll~· of \\'ashington but 1 had already committed ta." I Is there an.v particular player he feels he might haYc to beat out for a starting position on the team? "That doe sn"t even enter my mind. ··1 hav41n'l been playing as n1uch as J "'ould like and reel !he trade will help me in this respect. But I don't expect to step Asked if the presence of Elvin Hayes .,..·ould make an y difference to him, Valle- ly added: ''To say that J wanl lo play with any Coach Reveals Torments Of Seven Incredible Games r ootbal! 1971 has just been nne con- tinuous never ending game to Coluhlbia Unlversitv coach Frank Navarro. .And sn;all wonder. His Lions have takrn the turf seven times, shO \.\' a 4-3 record and none of their i;:ames has been decided by more than three: points. As he points out. "we're eight points away from being undefeated . ··1rs been almost unbelievable," he says. '"Alter seven games ll"e\·e scored the same number of touchdo\\ns (17) as ' • •LENN WHIT• ---..... WHITE WASH .. ___ ---- our opponents and in lolal points \\'e'v e been outscored, 127·125. •·People ,ask me who's writing the script." Fo r the past decade Columbia football interest has generally been a candidate for nearbv Granrs Tomb. But noy,• a non- alumni c-rowd is beginning to fill the st ands sit Baker 1-'ield, near the Hudson Rive r in Nev; York City. Navarro finds it easv to recall the highlights of the Incredible Seven-a tag Piccolo's Widow you might \\'ell <itrach lo the g<1mes Columbia has played thu s rar in ·71. Here's hov1 he tells ii. Columbia 0. Larayr tt e 3-"\Vc had the ball inside !heir fh·e in the last two minutes \\ ilh a first do\\'n. \Ve cndrd ur on the one-fool line and couldn"t make it. .. Colun1bl1t 22, JJrinec111n 26-"\\'c h<':i the !cad but they had lhf' h;.ilJ with six seconds left. They lried a field goal from our 22 and 1nis:-.f'd. "To 1he alumni this has bl'<'n uur m0~t satis(\ing \\'in or the yc;ir hc><.·01u.:.r \1e hadn't beaten Princeton at Baker Field since 1932 and hadn't bcatl"'n lhf'1n at all since J945 .. , Columbia 19, llar\:1rd 21-''Har\,'lrd had a 21-7 lead. \Ve scored and 1-1·ent rnr 11-ro points and the p11ss \I ;.is Just knocked B\\'ay by a fingcr. \\'c scorl'd aiialn and \1·ent for IYt'O. but mi ssrr!. •·'fhcn 1-1·e got the ball back. drove lo midfield but lht·y inlrrccplcd :<nd the game \YRS over." Columbia 15, Yale 14-"This \ras one of the n1ost ;imazing games. \\le trailed 14·7 \1•ith two minutes lcf\. \\'c mRrchcd In th e 15 thrn scored \Vilh 1:.16 tn pl<i~'· \\'r-got the 111·n-poinl con\"eri.ion on a h;.illback oplian p;iss." Colun1bia 17. nutgers lfi-'·Ru1gcrs scorer! in the last three minutrs and \\"e blocked the conversion \1'h1ch 11·ould have tied it." Sight of Jersey ·No. 41 Still Makes Her Cri1i ge NE\V ':t'ORK IAPJ -Joy P1Cl"Qlo often gets the urge to cry -actually to ba11·\ her eyes oul -bul she sllffcns her upper lip and remembers what Brian aJwa.l"s told her. "Stop that, honey, ~·ou can·t cry," Brian 11·ould say. ··irs" league rule." "That's the \\'ay it \ras 1ri1h e1'ery li!!le tragedy in our fan11ly ."' Joy rC'Callc1\ t(}o day_ "II one of the g1r!s fell and hurt hersel f or if she expcrjenced a grcaL rlisappointment. Bz;ian alwa} s \\'as !here tn admonish her: '"[)on'! er!-' -rrn1rn1· bet it's a lrague rule.1' And nobody crie<i. Bul how docs a you11.i: inolher [('11 her lh~ee <laughters. ages 3. <1 12 ;"Jnd Ii, that their fa ther is not around any n1or!•: "11's difficult -irs been by far lhe most difficult par! of rny r('ar!JUSln1rr1t." Joy Piccolo said, her blatk eyes showing only a trace of a v;1grant tear. "I try to expl<iin to thc1n that he iii in Hearen. But it's no1 l'nnut::h. "They want tn kn1111• \\hat k1nrl cil pa· jamas he·s \l"earing, if hc"s getting enough to cal and if he's happy." Joy Pi('l'olo. 27. doe-eyed , dark-haired. beautiful anrf s1nart. is just beginning Id E>merge from the nrghtinarc of ll'alching her husband. a running back for !he Chicago Brars. \1asle a1-1av lo lhe ravajtcs of l'anct"'r ;u1tl rl1t• 111th his root· ball drrarn nnlv half full"illt•d. Piccolo dirr! ·.Jun(• 16, 111i0. insisting to the end . "rll 11hip 11 -I'll he lnu.:k." 1!1s leamrnatc and roon11na1c, Cale Sayers, sa11t Bl'tan Piccolo hlld "the hea rt nf a J?ianl"' ;ind t1dded : 1'lfe has lhC men· t;.1 ani1ude that n1akrs nie prn11{! 10 have a friend 1\ho ~p1.'lls QUl 1hc \lord 'coura~c· 24 hours a r!ay of l1is hf(•." J\ow the r c n1 ark ah I c rt•latJ(ltishi p betw~n 1hc !1110 foo1ba!I pl.1~t·r:--one of them Saye rs, blafk and thr !f'am ~lar and the othf>r, PiC'colo while an1! :t subslitule -is bf>inl'.: nlenlor1eli?.ed in a film entitled. "8r111n "s Soni:," to he !'ihown on ARC's f\to\·ie of the \\'eek Tues· dav. Nov. 30. joy is In Ne\\' York llilh hrr ('lpsc friend. Jeannie r.lorri~. for p1ibl1c aP- pe•ranf'tl!I in connection 1111h the sho\\·. f1.1rs. 1'1orns. A Chlrai:o !>port~ 1-1riter And wife of ex·Bear Johnny i\lorris, is au thor nf tht poignanl story of lhc pla_,·er·~ life and dl!ath , "Brian Piccolo -1\ Short Season ·• "I don't \1•ant m~· l'hdlfrl'n 1t1 !'if'e the !Jim." Jor insisted. "I think thf' impact \lo"Ould be too much. I c-an heRr thC'm a~k· 1ng nov,. 'Is that really m} 011dt1 r?' '113~ Oaddy come back to us~· They·rt' mucn too youni;: ., The three Piccolo g1rU.1 11 ho 1-1·cre spared Brian's nine 1nonths of su!lcring. are LQri, 6: Traci, 4 1 ~. anrl l\n~t1. :!. "Brian nomed thein," .Jn~• savs prt"lud· J~·. "He didn't \Vant nHnlf•!{ !hi!! ~flund­ ed as H 11•e'd just got nH the bf1at. ., The Bf'ars stage a bt•nrfit gainr <luring training in Brian"s name. Althouµ,h Pie· C'(l]() \\"ilS a 511/bSll[U\C -C\ l"'r Ill !he shado1-1• of the i;:reat Sayers -the Re<1 rs lia\·e rclired his number "4!," placing liim in the exl'his11 e ('Otnpoi11\1 11f Bed Cra ni;:e, Bronlio J\agurski <1nd Bulldog Turner. "I sll!I eringe a !iltlt• \\hC'n l 11;11ch a f()()tball .c::ame anrl )iCC 1hi! nun1h<'r '4!' on othrr pl;1ycrs." ,Jf}~· ~;iirl. '"l1kf" Tnn1 :O.f:it. 1C nf the Colts and Drt1e (lsbo rn of the \1ikings. "! 11e1·rr 111ic.-.; ;i ).'.1n1e ;11 1Hlll1C' IC'hil'<l~OI -I ln11· l1lf11h:d1. Al!linu}!li I ha1·e n1y cl\\'n rr ... 1·r1 cd 1'r,11s, l .~lt 111lh the othrr \1 i\"C'~. · The prct1.v ~uun~ \1 1d1.11 :-1"ll1~(' _g]u\1- inglv of the p, ·,11·~' "l•I 1·11n1111di;i:rnn. (;eo.rgc H<il<is. ;11111 11,,::1 ,' !i•1n-111-!a11•. J·:d !'.1rCaskr~'. the Bt•;1r ... ' 1 l\"C' prrs1drnt 111 charge of pla.1cr n·l;1\111n .... - "\\"r al\\·ays h1-;1nt ho\1· tough and 1i~ht t-.lr. ll<ilas \\':l!-." Joy .said. "Ile \1 n ... a . pcrfct ! chill. I could 'rrach h1n1 11 hrr1 nn unr rise cn11l1l. On the phonr, r 11ou!d l"hoke up ttnd not l)C 11ble lo la!li. lie 11 oul d settle 111(' cti •1111. ···\s Bnan sn1d, \lr, H;1la~ 111ighl :ir,euc :ihn11 I $500 but he chd n'I :-11are ;111vlh1ng in srring that Rr1ar1 .c::nt thl' brsl 1!<~·t11ro; nnrl incrlica! care ;Jnd 1hnl I t"!•Ulil he lln11n h<-lt'k :ind forth hrh1rC'n 1n 1· f;1n11lv ;111t1 Brian's side.'' · · Jl1y tl'<'il!ll'd the d.n· llri;1n <";ilfil' ho:t'1r illl~I annn1u1rt'fl lhr J1lrn111.v of hi' rootn· ll\iJlC-<;:.il!" Sa~rr.\. MnJn, 11 Si1ulhrr11rr lrn111 Fn11 l.aut1rr<l:ilr, Fl;i. \1:1~ 11,( 1·h\~t \'111ii::ihlc Plrn cr in !hr At1;111t1i' (."oast f onfrrl"'nce his last ~car at \l'JJ..e Foresl in 19fi4. Pifll..Al>t-:Lrl!IA IAl'I -\nw lhiit thc Los An_11rles Ham~ apprar '" hR~r only a Jon.-\hOl r hRlll'I' O( \.\innuli;: the :\0~l1onRl r·oothllll Conferrn\"f 's \I 1·~tC"rn n11 . .:.ion, coai:h Tnrnm' i'rn!hro 1~ hf•pir1c 111 i:rt in· lh The pott~cn~on pln\'Of!• lhr1,1n:h a b.'.H k rionr. \o; ti-r lt~·n~ b c ;;: a n v.ork1'1tl<1 htrP 'ru.r~rli3\ I r1r lh< ir 11,111nt \I :th Ilic L!11ru, Jn !)r!rfl1t Sund111', Prothro nolt·rl R !>1Y1! 1n the :-.111 1nn;;1 Fonthnl! 1..-;1i;:11(' rt11."nffli is rtSff\'~d (or the scl'1 nrt-p!tu c lrnrn 1n Colun1bia 21, Cornell 2~-"It was tied \Vith four minutes to j?O and th.ey had the hall: 'fhe.v le.t Ed J\1arin;iro carry nine straight times and then \Yith fourth and thrf'c kicked a field goat frop;i our 27 with less !/Jan !hrce minutes to play. "'Then \1·e drove In midfiel d and on fou rth <ind !en we rnisscd gelling a first do11 n by a yard and a half.,. Columbia 31, Dartmouth 29-''My most sati!"f.ving \l'in because !hey beat us 55-0 laEI ~ e<i r and had 11·nn 15 straight. \Ye led 2fl·l4 but I hey came b;ick ;ind \\'cnt ahead 29-'.!B. \\ith 48 seconds left 11·e kicked a held i;:o<1I 34 yards. one inch. The ball turnh!cd over the right corner of the goal 1)0~1." And \\h a! h:is .ill the drama and tr:1urna done to the 40..ycar-old Navarro? It hasn't .irfrcted his diet bul he says it ha 5 taken a toll on sleep. '"The .J\lond;iy befo.rc \\'e pl;i~·ed Cornell I 1Yas drcan1i11g ahoiit the g;irnc. \Ve had sl:n red and 1 l:nuldn"\ decide to go f(lr one pninl and the tie or two poinls and the 11111. •·1 \1"11ke up and laid the re thinking ::ihout it. l still hadn't decided when I \1·l'nl haek to sleep.'' 1 \";:i\·:irro has <tLS(l increased his late l'\"cnint; tvalki11g habi1s. ''Su1nl'I irncs I g('\ hflmc and go for <1 \l":~lk-a 1nilr and a half fJr so through the nrii;.:hhorhood. \\'hen I go ;ilone it's to nicdit<ite aud relieve tensions. •·\\'hC"n 1ny wife goes 1-1•ith 1ne it's a rrustr:1tion t\'alk-shc listens and sym- p:1thilcs.'' • UPI Telfp~tlo Thf' fnnner t:ni\'('rsi ty 'lf il1ary1and gu;ird of the early 1950s says al! the close contests ha\'e made steadily a\\·are of such things ;is limrout usage, kicks, p:l\Sl'S off the runt, etc. OH, PARDON MEI WAS THAT YOUR FACE? And he poinls out that .a couple of plusst•s include rrvived fnn in1c rcst and 1nerea'>cd player rnorale 1vhen ynu feel \"011·rc in t'Vcry ga111c. · \n1v r\ar<1r-rr1 is a victory at1•ay frflm C1llurnhia"s first 11·inning :-.cason in 10 \1•:.rs nnd (\\"O triu111phs ;i>,1;iv from inalt'i11ng its bes! reeor~! in ;i det'a~le. . \I 1111 11·inlcss Brown and !1111re-v1c- !111 1011s Penn left on the schedule ii 11·ould indi•(•rl :i:ccm that C11lurnbi11 ·s string of l 111~1' p.amts has reathcd i1 s end. But frCJm 11·hcrc f'\a\·arro sits the die h;i -; hcrn c;:i st anrl e\"er.vthing lakes !he ~hape of a close. last-ditch struggle in his minrl. /Ind th111"1; casv In undrrstand \\•hen you rt11c11 th.c Jncr~d1ble Seven he·s already end!irf>d. ~ • 'l'1•il••• 1llt111t !Jf!r h"cn ,\sprn11lontc has been nam- t;d n1;iqagcr of !he Clevelan d lncfians. succeeding Johnny "" Lipott 11ho replaced J\lvin Dark in mid·s un1mer. . , Portland's Bill Smith Hit by Buffalo's Elmore Smith. Sports 111 Brief Quarry Gets Threat; Worster Pleads Guilty L0:\00~ -llotcl security ~uarrts rushed American hca\'y1-1•eight boxer Jer- ry Quarry out of his room Tuesday after <in annnymous telephone caller said a bomb had been planted there. Cumberlahd Hotel spokesmen s a id the c·a!ler 111arncd: "There is a bnmh - and ii is for Quarry." 'fhe 1nan then hung up. 1·he \1·nrl<l-r11tcd Bcl!f101-1•er fighter ar· rived here J\1onday for ;i match ap,a1nsl Jo:uropcan chan1 pion Jack Bodell on Nov. 16. "Nnturallv 11·1• gavt! lhe room a VC'ry thorough ~~:1rtll J.111 we found n'lthing.'' said 1he :-JXJkt~tn;"Jn of 1hc l11xurious hf}tc l Joc:i!ecl nrnr the hisrvric :O.larble Arch an<I Jlv1t(' P;irk. Quafry, 1-1ho h11s Irish :-i_nd Cheroker In- dian a,JM:e!'.lry JOkrl\: "I l"e never done ;iny<l,mfii: to harnl the frj~h or the lndinns. ll 11•as kin<I of exciting.'' A11lhorit1cs ha\c been taking b<Jmb - lhreat11 mnr~ srriou!'l,v than usual in Llin- rlon :-1n<'e rrn.•nt 11!1Htk'i, including one on the rost office to11cr._ ... ll :\,\11LTO~. Ont. -,Sieve \Vorster, 22. and Sc!h J\1 iller, 2.1, two former players \\'ith the llamillf}n Tiger-Cats of !he Canarhan Football League, pleaded guilty in a prol'incial court Tuesday to charges of 11<:1ssrssion of n1arijuana. Thry ~·ere fined SIQO e;1ch. \Vors1er \\'as All-Amrn<·an from !he ~n11 crsl1y of Texas before turning pro. 1\l1llc r and \\'orsll!r 11•ere placed on voluntary waivl!rs with no recall by the foo1ball club af1er their arrest. They returnct1 to !he L:nitcd Sta res following their initial court appearances Aug. 27. .... BOLOGNA. l taly -Sixth ·seeded J\.1ar- ly Riessen of Evl\llston. Ill., and seventh- src•lcrl Ar1hur .Ashe of Richmond, Va., ]rd a qu;.rtrt or AnH'.ricans into the third round l)f the Italian Open Tennis Tourna· mcnt Tucsrl:iy ni ght. H1l"'sscn trounced Britain's Graham Stilwell, 6-2, fl-J, while Ashe needet1 a Ile hr(';11irr in the second sel In beat Italy's J!J-yc;1r·old i\h1ssi1no Barrazzutti. In fllhC'r rrsult.,., Americans Charles l':i srtri!!l and .IC'ff Borowiak defeated Nik- ki r11ic of Yugosla\'ia and Spain·s Andres C.imcno : A11s1:ilian Fred Stolle slopped Hob Lutt of•Los t\ni.tclcs: Tom Okker of the Nclherland-. 11•hippcrf Aussie Phil JJent : and thirtl-secded Australian Ken Ro.~wall rnuled Italian P1elro 1\farano, Also on TuesdaY. fourth-seeded Cliff nfvsdatc of South 4frica ousted Britain 's .l\l;;rk Cox and Hnmani:1's tlie f'\astasc, the :-:n. 5 seed. failed lo ~h(lw up for a rnatch \1·ith South African Bob Maud and had to forfe it. .... SA:"l' J UA1\', 1'.lt. -Fi 1· e neu1smen \1'alliC't1 out. or a luncheo n honoring Pittshuq;:h P1r::itr star Roberto Clemente TuC'~1rny 11·hrn t'lr rl:'fu~ed ln allow one of t111l n rn thjl(' ~0111(' of his remark~. e:1emrn1 c told 1he reporter in fronl of \l-'1lncsses 1hat "1n the United St11tes. 1 punchet1 a rcpor1er that tried to tape my remarks. 1-1•ithout pennissioa." Seeks Ba~k Doo1· .... NE\V YORK -The U>s Angeles Kings i;o after their lhir~ victory of the Na. IJnnal Hockey League season toniRht 1\hen they race the Ne w York Rangers. The lilt 1-1·ill be te lecast en Channel Sat 6. tAeh t'Onfrrcnce 1-1·(th !he be$! rt'COtd. "\\ 1nni11i;: 111 Ot'tmit and Dalla!ii tnakes lh;n po~~tbtc:· he sturl\ "They are crr- t;unl.\ our n111jor coinp<'lition." Th<' l!a1n~ . ._3.1 fflllo\Ying their 2~·17 lo•.; tn R;ilH1norc ~-1onil8) ni~ht. f<ite the t1111.~1on.tril1.h11~ S11n FrancisC'o 49C'rs. rlO\V fi ,2, u1 1110 Sunday&... i_\nrl !hr foll(l1-11na_ 'rh11r::da)' pl,!iy ~ Thanksgiving Day game "irh thf' Co1\ bOys. l>alla.~. 5-3. and 1he Lions, ~2·1. :;tan<! in !he 1-1.'!y of the Rams' hnpes lo re3ch the play"<lffs as a runner-up, prc,·1dTn~ ·1hry don't carch up 10 thr-49ers. An<1ther obstacle 1s .Allnnlil, no\\' tied \\'1th the Rams in !he NFC \\'cs\. 1\lldrlle ·lincb11cker .~larhn ~tcKce,·er, 11ho :-tayerl out of all but one practi ce session \\'Jth ll ll'i:: lniur~· fa st 1-1~ck hul f11 rrd th<' Colts Sunday, siud he wouldn't prili.:tice al pll ttus Wf'('k hut \VOU[d play against the t..IDnli. Running back Larry Snll!h, forced out of the R11tllmn re g3mr. wHh a mild concussion. m1s~t1 Tuesdr.y's ll'Orkout. .... ~ltt11•auktt's Bucks streak<'d to their 11\h -ciictory jn· 12 ourings Tuesday night, tt 118-1 13 decision over PhDfnlx. to highlight N11tional Basketball Association pin~·. In cl.her ~ames P.iuH8lfl tur ntd back rort!.1nrl, 109-100. and Goldl!n State down· , eel Houston, 11~~- Vallely. at .6-21/.i: and 185-pounds, is a bit heavier than duri11g hi!{ collegia !t days butfeels it is just a m11tte r of maturity. \Vhcn-did he le<i rn or the trade? "At practlcc tj,is morn ing (Tuesday) they told us about it." Was any reason given for the ex· change? "This is a business and 1hry didn't give us any reason . .And this 1s my first time to be traded. J "'ill be In Houston tonti;i:ht (Wednesday/ fo r the gamt in the Astrodome "'ith the Boston Celtics." Landslide Torre MVP ST. LO UIS (APl -"Over lhe ye<1rs I think il's gone to the ri,ehl player," sai d Joe Torre, who 1'ucsday cl1n1<1.~<'d an 11· season major leag ue baseball career \l'ilh his selection as lhe National League's Most Valuable Player. But, Torre adcled, ''l.o 11'in it !iO overwhelmingly is. a surprise. YotJ definitely lhink about 11; you know tha t the voting js-1.lone as soon as the season's over. I had a feeling I'd get it." The 6-foo!·I, 2no..pound TCJrrl"'. only the th ird third baseman to \1•in the award, also became the IO!h St. Luu1s Cardinal to snare <in honor Stan J\·lusia[ \.\'On three times. His n1argin O\'Cr runnerur \Villie Stargell of the Pitt ~burgh Pir;i tes. the majors ' ho1ne run king . 11'as 318-222 in balloting points by a cnrnmillee of the Base ball \Vritcrs .Association of America. Torre received 21 of the 1·on1mil!ce's 24 first-place votes, Stargell polling !he other three. Third plnee \vent to the Atlanta Braves' inveterate Hank .Aaron. '"\Vhat hurt Sta~cll in the voting, I think, was that it \vas tough to sin~le out a pl ayer on Pil tsburgh's ball cl uh," the 31-vea r-old Torre s:iid. .:I ne ver <.'Onside.red this kind or \"ear." said Torre. 11•ho balled .363 to leiid !he majors and had 137 HBI. 230 hits and 352 total bases for other leading marks. "There is more I han one reason for why Jt happened, I think, hut the only thing I was conscious of lhat 11·as dif· ferent from any other year 1vas con· cent ration . "l"ve nc\"cr had this kinrl of con· eentration," said 'forre, 1-1·ho hit c;afcly in 1.13 of 161 ga1nts in \1"h1ch he 11la~£'d. '"l think the rc:i.c;on is thnt r got 0111·~11• from catching. You don"t re;ilize il un11I yo u gel a\\·ay from it thaj ca1ching lakes so much a1vay." An All-Star catcher 1\•hile ~·ith the Atlanta Braves eig ht scasnns, Tf}rre call- ed his 1969 trade to the Card1' \1·hile in- volved in a ~alary dic;pute ''like being reborn." ··over in 'A1h111ta th rv t)101u::ht I 11"as a home run h1!1er.'' notcrl TorrC', 11ho in \9fi6 sluggerf 36 hnmc run~. '"l rhan,ecd when I came 01·rr hrrr. A gn(ld dtal of it had to do with !he ball park·· \Vil h lhe Carris. Tnrrf' h.1s had RBr totals of JOI in 1969, HIO in l!liO and the 137 of last sca~on. a high lot11l fnr the club since Johnny i1!11c eq ualed lhe figure in 1937. Another key to his ups\11J1g 1n OOnrn,i:,_ he said, "'a); a "'ater dirt respo nsi ble for the lnss of 25 pounds in hi s pla_ving 11ei,i:ht during spring training 1n 1970, '"It made me quic~er," he said . After surging lo a .325 batting m11rk in 1970, Torre "'as re\\•Rrded \l'i th .1 rnntract for the /!17! season calling !or an estimated Sl 15,000. Lal\:ers, 7 6ers Battle To11ight; LA Ri1Js Bt1lls CHICAGO t AP) -Jim r.1c~t11l can a<· counli!d for 28 pn1nt~ TuP~day n1,11ht tG lead the rrd·hot Los Angl"'lrs Lakcrs In a 122·109 victory over I.he Chicaµ,o Rt1ll!< in a National Bas kethall As.~111.·1.1!1011 cnn· test. The LakC'rs 11·ill he. hi1ll!ing for lh('ir fifth str<i1ght \"1C'tory lonight. The victory \\·a~ !he lOlh ai;;.1n. t thre~ losses for !he rac1flc l>1 vi ;1fln lritrlf'r!; \l"hilc the Bui!~ suffrrrrf lll1'1r third slralghl setback fnr :in nl'eiall 7 ·1 n1ark. 1\f1cr Chica~n rRrcttl In :i :.Zf\ 24 f1r.tt quart rr lt•ad, !hr l.;1krr' ra!lirt1 hrh1nd J\fr1\11llinn and Jl:ippv ll;urslnn 1o help Los Angr!rs to a 5ri.~ halftn11ne hul~r. Gail <:ondr1rh of thr Lakcrs, who ro!- lected 2~ points., lf':Ulle.'I u1> with Jer. ry \Vest !fl arrount fnr 18 points in a furious third qu11rtcr. The Bullc; rrm.11incrf in rnn1cnt1fln 11nlf trailed 88-11.1 unt il the LakC'r~ nnt sC'nrrd Chicai:to 13·fi in a lhrec-min:ite last· quarter flurry, Lot -'"•t~ c~.~••• • • ' • • T M("f.IOl,., " .. ~ S•""~ • " " "'••r•'11 ' '. " ' ... ' " • c~,.,1"" , " ' l -~· " " ., ~·I(~ '" .. ,, ... ' . ' ' w, •. • " " y , • ,, • ' ' ., "obln.111 ' » " ·-· • ., " !';Ill• ' '" I .... rl"1'~ ' " . lltll"Y ' " ("rn "' ' "' ' Tf OH ' " "~ ' " • n ...... .,." , "' ' "~···<r ' ., , fo<•'• .. ' 1)1 T~!~lo 4• II :>.. 1· .• -t.I!'" • ...,.,._ " " " ""-l)) C~I<~"" ,. " • • . .. ~l)Ulf(t r.h•! -,..~~~ T~·•I• •ov11 -Lil• Ar,ol• f1, C~1C~Ql1 ». -tM11. I Is 'm I bit YI y) ive ht th• I id ll· itll e's "' OU " 's h• d, al ec lie he in ha ·a. 24 he he [ ut e " e 52 nr ly if· n- n· in 'l u • • I· g a n d it e e e " r t e n ·t n r ew Coach, ro Attacl{ id It All Having had trouble as or late in adding consistency to both their offensive a n d defensive pictures , the ?i1agnolia Sentinels are faced with one of their toughest foot · ball tests Friday night at Orange Coast College' when they tangle with the Edison Chargers in an Irvine League crucial. \Vhen the Sentinels faced Edison last year, Magnolia \\'SS merely an al»ran going up against the eventual k>op champion. But a swift turnabout has taken place in a year's time and the Sentinels, Chargers and three other outfits are currently in a massive tie for Irvine leadership at 3-2. Also, part of the new life breathed into the Magnolia program is a result of a new head coach, Glenn Thomas, who moved over from a[I assistant's job under Herb Hill at nearby Loara High. And alorig with Thomas' move, lhe ex-Saxon aide brought along the pro-type, I formation attack which he had been well-versed in under HUI. However. the one catch has been simple -the Sentinels have looked either -brilliant or messy in adding the new attack to their format . According to Thomas, ''I don't know what ii will take to beat Edison. I do know that \\'e'll have to execute better in both our running and passing and we'll have to pl<".y a lit· tie more aggressively. "Getting some consistency into our attack has been a pro- blem and we've had trouble staying on top of things on a week-in. week-out basis." Thomas admits that part of the Sentinels' occasional. pro- blems could be attributed to getting used to a new way of thinking. He says, "l think from the standpoint of the team's abil· ity, it's hard to say what it is -we have some go<x:I athletes and they've had a lot to learn in respect to new assignments and responsibi lities. "Four turnovers last week (again st Corona del ft1ar l didn't help us out very much." ft1agnolia pins its hopes on the performance of 6-1, 100- pound junior John Kindred , an excellent s print o ut quarterback who can also throw fairly well. When Kindred doesn't pass or run himself, he pitches or hands off to fullback Hank Bauer or halfback 1.1ark Miller. East LA Must Top Rustlers LOS ANGELES -East Los Angeles· College football coach Joe Goldin figures his team is behind the eight ball as it prepares ofr the invasion of Golden \V est Saturday night. The Huskies are currently in a seco nd place lie \vith Rio Hondo (2-1) in the South ern California Conference stan· dings, one game betiind Los Angeles CC (3-0 ). Coming off a Loss to Rio ~londo last week, Goldin says lhis week·s tilt \\'ilh the Rustlers is a do-or-O ie situa- tion for East LA. "We have to win it. \Ve ha ve to be 3-t going into the LA CC game the following week," says the Huskie head man. "We originally hoped to..get by Rio Hondo. then we ~ould ;if- ford to lose to Golden Wes!. But we·re behind the eight ball now." Goldin says he fears Golden \Vest's quickness the most. "They may be the best team in the conference because of their quickness. Golden West s well schooled. "\Ve've seen films of their ]osses to LACC and LA Harbor and we feel they shouldn't have lost those two. They had a couple of turnovers and they ad a couple of fluke Tfis cOred on them. "You take those awa y and hey're undefeated in the coo- erence." says Goldin. "We feel we have to control he ba ll to beat Golden \Vest. ey have such good balance - t scares me." Ea!)f. LA hiu a veteran e~m. The J.luskles are loaded with op backs with 5-11 , 170.pound omore Grtg ~mlth cir leading ground geln~r. Quarterback J o hn hnebeek ge11rs the oHense. e's a 6-0, 175-pound lcl· rman that has been In and ut of the lineup, ' .. ' ' ' • ..,sdll, NMeimbtr 10, 1971 DAlLV PILOT :(7 St~ll Fumbling, Fooling Aro·und--Van One-game Seasons Clare VanHooreb:eke has ' -been the football coach at Anaheim liigh School since 1950 and has never to his ~owledge gone through a los- mg season. · This could still be the case in 1971 if the Colonists defeat league leading Westminster Friday night , or Newport Harbor next week b u t VanHoorebeke isn't making any rash predictions. The Anaheim coach has just brought his wife home from Ace Passer the hospital after surgery and "'hen he looks at the upcoming match with Bill Boswell's Lions, he says of his team : "They'd be better off if they ""ere home. too. 1 'll tell you how smart I an1. r made up the Sunset League schedule this year and I saved the ~oodies until the last - Western, Westminster af'ld Newport' Harbor." The Colonists dropped a 19- 14 ve rdict to \Vestern and are looking d o w n Lions' throa t11 Top Player ~,.,~~ < \ • ,. For Tigers ' RIVERSIDE -While most football coaches are constantly searching for an ample pass· ing game to lend balance to ' their running attacks, veteran ~ River side City College head t mentor Bob Dohr f l n d s J himself in an entirely different -' predicament. t In his 10th season as Tiger f grid chief. Oohr has passing to -• spare in sop homore Bud Kane. \ But it's the Bengals' rushing antics \\'hich have been a thorn in the • side or !he Riverside coach. rr As the Tigers prepare to host the Saddleback Gauchos ~· this Saturday night a t \Vheelock Stadium, Dohr says, "'*' ''we're in relatively good shape and we have everyone ready to go for this one." However, that is some sort I this \\'eek. Asked if this ye ar 1 s Westminster tea1n "'as one of the better squads Boswell has fielded against him •• he corn· ments: . "It sure as hell isn't one of their poorer ones. H e ' !J (Boswell) got a fine, well balanced football team. They have a fine ground game. an excellent passing game and the,v are so big yo~ can't get to the passer. "So what do you do?" Anaheim, a perennial power in the Sunset circuit since Van l-loorebeke 's Jnilial campaign , is currently 4-3 for tbe year but only 2-3 in league play. Asked about his team that won its two non-league en- counters Ibis season before losing to l·lunlington Beach and Santa Ana, the Dutchman comments: "\Ve're -still fumbling and fooling around tryJng to get ou r heads above water. "Our defense hasn't done ' what was e.xpecttd 9l it this year, either." \\'bile the Colony has been down in three or fivt league outings they came on strong last weekend against second place Western before suc- cumbing, 19-lf. ' Which should be a warning of sorts to Boswell and Westminster after they nar· rawly defeated Newport, 6--0. VanHoorebeke is undecided about his starting quarterback !or Friday's game. ''\Ve have two boys oul thert, both of them jWliors," he says. "We probably won't decide on a starter until two seconds before the ·1ame starU and then we "ill lllp a coin. "It wW depend on whoever we 'can get to have enough courage to go out there." The boys In que.Uon are Steve Coleman and Ron Anton. Running responsibility Is placed In the bands of Jackie Ohanian, Howard Carson and Mike Salt. Injuries Decimate Mounties \VALNUT -Injuries have cropped up to deplete the already thin ranks of the Mt. San Antonio College football team on the eve of a Satur· day night battle at undefeated Orange Coast College. Coach Mal Eaton, in his first season at the helm or the Mountaineers after a suc- cessful tenure at West Covina lligh, began the year with an inexperienced squad. Injuries have compounded the situation just "'hen the team appeared to have its footing. First It was starting quarterback Ran<JY Miller, an ex.prep star under Eaton. Then his replacement. Don Gray, broke a bone in his hand In a game \\'ilh the USC fresh- men. At the time. Gray was leading the South Coast C.On· ference in rushing. For CdM Corona del Mar High 's Sea Kings~ posst!Mlrs o( a piece of the Irvine IA.ague football lead, have a pair of one-a:ame se8.500J facing them according to ooach Dave llolland. His Sea Kings are Jocked in a five-way tie for first in the hectic circuit with a 3·2 mark and have been tabbed as bav· ing the ln,,ide track to the crown and a berth In the ClF AAAA playoffs. The basis for that assump- tion is that Corona does not have to face any of the other four teams contending for the champion3hlp. And both .encounters - Costa f\1esa Friday night and Estancia the following Friday -are at Newport llarbor where CdM plays Hs h o m e games. But Holland doesn't buy the idea of having an easy row to hoe. "Either one could knock us off and we know it. In fact I don't even want to think about any of the possibilities. "We just want to con- centrate on one single Item and that's to beat Costa Mesa •.. nothing else. "We think Mesa has ib best t8'!m in four years and John Sweazy has done a tremen- dous job. They have pride in "·hat they're doing and they 've been in every game that we've seen. "They walloped Magnolia and they gave Edison and Fountain Valley fits. Even th~ Fountain Valley coaches will admit that," says Holland. "We came back against Magnolia and of course that was before this thing was tied back up. Now we juSt don'i want to blow it. "We've1got to gel our head on straight. We know we're in !or a tough game," says of precedent for the 1'igers in 1971, since the, team has resembled a battlefie ld in· firmary ward at times. COSTA MESA HIGH'S CROSS COUNTRY TEAM LINES UP BEFORE RECORDING ANOTHER WIN There have been others along the way including Dave Chapman who suffered a dislocated shoulder in the game with Cerritos several weeks ago. Chapman is ex· peeled to return Saturday Holland. ., In fact. it's at the skill posi· lions (qua rt erback and fullback excluded ) where the Tigers have been hit hardest in compiling a 2-2-1 Mission Conference slate. Dohr has employed no less than seven different tailbacks this year with the No. 1 runner -speedy I7a-poonder Ron Bradford -having been a vie· tim of the injury wringer in the conference opener against Grossmont. Bradford will be suited !JP aga inst Saddleback, though, and he and Al Gilpin (180) give the Tigers better punch at tailback. The fullback. Mel Gleen. is rated a better blocker than , runner. While the running game is still doubtful. R i v e r s id e nonetheless possesses one of the better passers in current junior college ranks in soph Kane , a product of Ramona High. Up to this juncture, Kane has punctured enemy secon- daries for 115 passes in 229 tries for 1.408 yards. }!e's received more than ample blocking support from 205-pounder center S t e v e Henry, a second team all-con- ference pick in 1970. ..-\ Another second team all·"l'i· fttission selection in '70 - cornerback Dave 11oward - ·spearheads the T i g e r s ' talented f0ur deep secondary. The safeties in that latter ajignment also are blu e-chip- pers. Santa Ana Dunks OCC For Crown Orange Coast College drop- ped a 6-5 decision to host San- ta Ana College in the final-" of the ninth annual Southland lnvitational \\0ater polo tourna- ment Tuesday evening in the Don pool. The Joss was the Skond this year to the Don.'\ by coac·h Jack Fullerton's OCC squad. the other com ing in South Coast Conference action. 6-4. Orange Coast holds an 8·7 win over the Dons to remain in a lie for the circuit lead. however. In Tuesday night's cham· plon.'\hip game. Santa Ana was aided with four goo!! on penalty shots to one for tht: Pirates. The game was a physical af· fair from beginnin~ to er>d With the Dons l'lltting four times in the serond period to take a lead they nevt:r relin· qui~hed. 1'fike Beal and f\1att Creer hit two goals apiece In the title l!'~m& and BUI McAneney had the other for OCC. In an aflt'rnoon contest th e Pirat~ dr.feated Ri o Hondo. 13-4. to gain the championship round. Pass ing Is Los Al Strength Look out for Los Alamitos. r An inexperienced club1w~ich was rated as a spoiler at the beginning of the 1971 season, the Los Al Griffins ha ve re- bounded fron1 the nu bug and other assorted ills to squeeie into a five-way deadlock for the top spot in the Irvine League football standings. Latest feather in the Grif· fins' cap is last Saturday's wild 32-28 triumph over defen- ding loop kingpin Edison . One of the main reasons the Griffins upended the 1970 CIF AAA titlists la st week was the passing of quarterback J i m 1 lamitton, who is back to par after overcoming a back pro· bl('nl. Hamilton pierced t h e Charger secondary on 13 of 22 aerials fo r 170 yards and he's expected lo dole out nu1ch o( lhe sa rne treatment \\'hen Los Al (3-2) battles Eslancia's Eagles (2-3/ th is Saturday night al Anaheim 's Western High. "We're in pretty good shape with the flu iind everything else having passed us by," says Griffin head coach Frank Doretti . ...., "I'm sure Estancia \\•ill be n1oslly concerned "it h our passing after H a m i 1 ton • s perfOrmance against Edison." The fi-2. 175-pound signal caller has a pair of the lr\·ine's top wide receivers to fire to in split end Dave Slawson and s!otback .Jim Jvanick . The lat!er is d o u b 1 y d::ingcrous carrying the ball .on reverse plays. Tight end Leonard Carson (1751 is also available but he's generally u.~ed in throwing' hlocks to open up paths frir a whole slew or talented running ba cks. Best galloper in the Los Al stable is 160-jloun(I junior l\tlke SchWerdtf~ger. who's piled up 676 yards on the ground . lle's supported by fullbacks Guv Bobinette and Jeff Barton and backup lailbacks Jim Greer and Tom Jenning! with tht latter trio b e i n g sophomore whines. Dorelti says or Est3ncia, "It's a deflnltely improved ltam. 1 "They're pretty physical 11:nd have m11naged to have a good de fense." "I guess the mos! Un- fortunate thing lrl happtn to then1 "'as losinS! both or their lop quarterb;icks in one game." Winners at Last- CM Distance Aces By PlllL ROSS 01 I~• Dtl!J Pilot 11111 F ootball t ends to overshado1v any goings-on in other fall sports. whether it's good ne\\'S or bad . A prime exan1ple of the above has exis ted at Costa '-1esa High. v.•here , j he Mustang gridders have slrug· gled in va in to bccorne a c.:011· si~tent \vinncr O\'er the past decade . Such hasn't ~en the t•asc for J\1esa 's cross country fortunes, though . Coach Joe Fisher's current crop of MUstang cro.c;s country specialists is rncrl.'l y con· linuing a phl.'nomer1<1n 11'hich became co111rnonplace three years ;igo--win111ng. In 2~ Irvine League dual meets dali ng buck to 1968. lhe merry J\1ustang distance crew has failed lo have been d('railed. Brian Springer was the hcarl coach when J\1esa initialed i!s impressh•c st ring but Fisher took over the helrn in '69 and has guided the squad ever since. \\"i!h the yout hful-;1ppeari11r: F'isher pulling the reins. l\lcsa h.iisn't maintained 1he pace lh~ hegan 1vith Springer-the Mustangs ha ve instead 11c- c.:elerated the push . This year, for instance, Costa Mesa hasn't been touched.' The J\1ustangs disposed of a mediocre Katella outfit in a oon-league dual matchup and have since proceeded at :in alarminR pace in ringing up three invitational meet lilies an dfour loop triumnhs. For example. the Mustangs' first five runners 15-42 victory over a team ""hich is presently tied for second place. ''The \\•hole key to our suc- cess h:>.<> been willin g to arcepl the cha llenge and achieve goals \\'hirh "'c 've set for nurS('lv('s," Flsh('r savs. "And we've hecn working like mad In rln ii.' 1 [l;fcsa''Sr 1971 l11rget r 0 r achievement is three-fold, with overall loop titles for both the varsity and junior varsity cun- tingents greatly antticipated. and I.he CIF title within reach of the varsity. "We're not comp 1 e t e Ly familiar with how son1e of the stronger tea1ns in olher areas outside Orange County have be.en doing. but Lompoc is the defending chi:ln1pion and South Torrance always has a good leant and is tough again," Fisher notes. Adds the graduate or Emporia State T e a c h e r s College in Kansas. "we've beaten most of the county schools in the 0big meets ! Coron a de! ?\tar. Orange County and Villa Park in- vitationals I." Fisher boasts the Li!ents of such adept returnees from the '70 leai::ue til!e crew as lanky IG-3) Doug ft1acLean. a 4:19 n1ilcr in track; the Olswang lw1ns .. John and 'l'orn, who arc constan tly tagging along with MacLean: and junior Mike Hollida y, a 4:35 mile ace \\'ho ha!i already turned in a 10::!4 on the slow Mesa home course. It's a simple theory wh ich Fisher subscribes to i n determining wh ich individual \\'111 con1pete in what spot each rncet. Says Fis her , "whatever pfA'ces they finish in each meet, that's probably what spot they'll run in the next meet . . "Doug and the twins take turns Jn beating each other and it's nlso that way with the others." MacLea n has the top clock· Ing on the team thus far at 9:26 while Tom Olswang has zipped a 9:36 and brother John a 9:40. In ke('plng wllh !he squad's Ingrown form of L'Om·petition. ~ Holl iday. the No. 4 runner, gels beat by No. 5 so phomore Nlck Priest (10:21 ) on oc- casion. But it rloesn't stop there . Dulich Breaks Sophs Tim Gollnick and Mike Stutsman baute continually Ga ucho i\J arks with junior Phil Carpenter and -freshmen Dave Smith and s a rt 11 re ba c k Cotle.11e Ke~i~ Callagher for the re. quarterback Bob Dulich brokt mn1nrng varsity berths. three records last S.1turday Thtn. advonci~g yet a step night in the Gauchos' 24·14 set-( u rt her . Fisher adds, back to Citrus. "Gallagher 11nd Smith have Oullch . a rreshm11n , Ran'ICd lhe 53me sort of thing going. 321 yards pnssing and had 3!M that Doug .i\1acLean a~. the total yards, breaking the old Olswang twins. hav' h:id. marks of 317 and 3 OS \Vhatever It iJ. it's been con· established by Rod Graves In ta~O\f! over the last four 1969. autumns at t.osta Mesa High. And he attempted 42 passes, And tht rl!'s no outward sign to eclipsing Gravts' old 1tsndard lndlcA le when It wlll halt its 7-2 Season Monarchs' Final Goal fl.1ater Oei High's ltlonarchs will be seeking their si1.th vic- tory In eight starts Tbursday night at ~anta Ana Bowl and they 'll be trying to gain It agains a team that has never beaten them. Pius X invades Orange County and an Angelus League victory for coach Bob Wo<x:ls' Monarchs would give them a crack at another 7-2 season. ft1ater Dei and the Warriors of Pius X started competing in 1954 and only a 7-7 verdict marring an otherw ise spotless Ma ter Dei slate. "A 7-2 record is our goal and we know It won't be too hard to get up for next week's clash with Servite," says Woods, "so that makes this Pius game all the more important." Mater Dei is almost back to norma l in the personnel playing status with only Ed Poettgen a doubtful starter at safety . He's nursing an ankle injury susta ined In the St. Paul and St. Anthony tests. Two gridders who haven't been prominently mentioned in the press that Wo<x:ls Is particularly happy with our gua rds U.rry Drazba (1 70) and John Roth (165). night at OCC. ~ ljow does Eaton look at the upcoming match with Orange Coa~t? ''On paper. we don't belong on the same field. Just check the comparative scores and .'\ee how much better they are. They ought lo have verJ few problems against us If past performan ces mean anything ." One thing Eaton is fearful 0£ is the Pirate passing game. "We have to gear to stop their passing -and that's a tough assignment • with the way we've been riddled in the past. "We have killed ourselves with too many mistakes and far too many turnovers," Eaton adds . While the Mountie coach is a bit discouraged over the turn of events that has seen ifl.. jurleiJ add to the building proc- '55 ol a new coach, he hasn't given up despite wiMing only one game in eight. He got a late start at Mt. San Antonio and had little op- portunity to do m u c h recruiting or arta prep stars in the spring . "We definitely have a building job on our hands and we have lo orient the kids in this area to playing junior col· lege football. ."The klds down there in Orange County are junior col· lege oriented . Up here it's a different story." The Mt. San Antonio coach Is fearfu l of another blitzing similar to the one absorbed at the hands of the Fullerton Junior College Hornets last week, 52-7. His chief concern with Coata Mesa is two-fold : 1. The mental aspect of the lilt from either side. 2. The various offensive and defensive setups the Mustangs work out or. "r-.1esa runs a lot of counter plays and that can destroy alt your keys. ln every game they Sttm to ha\'e new wrinkles. "And it's the same way defemlvely. A lol ol different loOks with some pretty good people. Paul Dcsmel, Pat Kalama , Jon Marchiorlatti ..• and they have a couple linebackers who could play !or anyone in this league. "Ken Warren and Chuck Glaspy present a real problem for us." concludes the Sea King boss. Francis (8th) Top Gaucho Marvin Francis or Sad· dleback College finished eighth in the f\1ission Conference cross country meet at Gross- mont College Tuesday af· ternoon to qualify for lhe Southern California fin a Is which will be staged al the same site a week from Friday. Francis is the lone Sad· dleback entrv fn l h e SoCal meet as the Gauchos finished sixth in team standings witti 152 points. Winner of the meet was host Grossmont with 20 followed by Palomar, 50: Citrus. 76: Riverside, 118; Southwestern. I 3 8 ; Sad· dleback : and Chaffey, 175. Other Saddleback runners included Bob Garcia (33). Bob Mainwaring (38). Jim Quam r40) and Bri.d Winton (41 ). What you can expect from a little American car priced $335* less than VW 113. You can' expect an engine proven by 50 million miles in Ford-built European cars.· A body that's welded solid and painted six times. Rack-and-pinion steering like a sPorts car. Exceptionally good handling. In short, a car every bit as good and maybe • better lhan the little foreign cars. As a matter of fact,,..,, built Pinto to seH for about the same price as these little foreign cars:. ' And if ""'re now priced llelow them ($335• less than that VW 113. $228' _less than Toyota Corolla 1600, $300' less than Datsun 510), it's rot because we've taken anything al/Q/ from our car. 'ii's because their prices have gone up. See your Ford Dealer now;: ~~~ PINT06> 1972 Pinto 2·Door Sed1n snown With ol)tlontl whilt 1l0tw111 tlrt1 ($42) tnd 1«.nt aroup ($72). • '-comotrtson of mtn11l1etur•r•' •u11•1ltd r~it!I ;lctt.-tn'd tppllcabtt lm·porl 1urai1r111. fOf' tllt bl .. Z·door modtlt. Dttttr prtJlltltion ttltfl*I (if 1ny), t lttt t hd Ioctl t•••• i nd dttlinttlon tllttps (Sl05 for ,!1110) t r• t•lr•. ot 40, ~prcad. <-------------------------------- • •• I 28 OAILY PILOT Anteater ' Foothill Relies Los Amigos Record May Be Dec eptive Weekend Football Poloists Play 49ers On Good Defense Laguna Beach H I g h ' 11 football team get.s a breather from Orange League aim- petition Friday night when the Artists "llleet Los Amigos of the Garden Grove circuit. weighs 200 pounds a n d Johnson says his natural abili· ty overshadows his size. Favorites STEVE MONAHAN Orang• Coast--Off•nse BOB DULICH Saddleback-Offense JIM HARPER Golden West-Offen'• I ! DAN MOATS Orange Coast-Defense LARRY HERNANDEZ Saddleback-Defense SCOTT ALBERTSON Golden West-Oefens1 , Foothill High football aiach Bill Snyder says he hopes Fri· day riigb,_t.'s crucial Crestview Lengue-tllf witfi host Mission Viejo is not a high scoring one. If it is. says Snyder. his Knights may be In for a long nig'ht. r~oolhill comes into the tilt with a 4· I loop mark tied with El l\1odena for second place, just a half game behind league leader Katella (4-0-1 ). "I hope it's not a high scor· ing game.'' says Snyder, ''because ~1ission Viejo is pro- bably the best offensive team in the county. although I haven't seen everybody in the county. But they sure are ex- plosive. ,; Aundre Holmes is a grea t running back and they have an outstanding passer in Gary Wood and so me fine receivers. And Joe Jones ran real well for them last week against San Clemente. They pose a lot Hill Tells SA V·alley Weal{ness Consislency has been a pro- blem for Santa Ana Valley High's football team this season and coach Dick Hill is the fir st to admit it. The Falcons run up against Fountain Valley's Barons Fri- day night al Huntington Beach •ligh in an Irvine League con- test and a win is a must for both teams. fouii"tairi Valley is currently mired in a five-way tie for first place \vith a 3-2 league record while Santa Ana Valley is a shade behind at 2-3. The falcon overall mark this season is above the .500 po11ll (4-JJ. The Falcons will have to defeat. the Barons thiS "'eek and Costa ~1esa the following EM Would Lil{e to Get Friday night to have any chance at a lie for the top. "Actually, we have looked pretty good in some spots ," Hill admits. "But we don't keep the consistency. Tritons, Coach Admits "\Vhcn you go against teams lhat are capable of beating business," says the Vanguard you, they will do it if you coach. aren 't consistent. Against Los of problems.'' says Snyder. Foothill hss relied on its defense most of the sei.o'SOO, but has produced two top offensive efforts In tht past two weeJ<.s, defeating Tustin (20--0 ) ind Orange (30-27). "We've been playing good defense all sea.so""-except for last week. Up until that time we had been doing a good job. "But against Orange we didl'l't defense the pass," says Snyder. who figures he'll get more of the same treatment (passing) from Mission Vie}o. "We've got to shut Wood off and make sure they don't slide Holmes through if we want to beat them," says the first year Knight coach. Foothill'l!I leading running back is Sam Peek, who ranks with Holmes as the top backs in the league. And the Knights have a good one in fullback Freddie Mayrhofer, who is back after being sidelined for three weeks with a knee in- jury. Up front tackles M i k e McCray, (6-0, 206 ) and John Spurzem (6-0, 180) along with guards Richard Jacobs (5-8. 165) and Jimmy McKennon (!.- 11, 175) go both ways for the Knights. Defending NCAA champion UC lfvlne wUI journey to Bel- mont Plaza in Long Beach tonight for a 7 o'clock meeting 'with the Cal State 11..ong Beach ) 49trs before participating in the eight- team Gold C.oast tournament in Santa Barbar.a Friday and Saturday. After the weekend action in which the Anteaters are ex- pected to play three games, a two-week layoff loo1ns before defense of the NCAA title at Belmont Plaza, Nov. 2&-27, ~ In tonight's game, UCI will be favored to repeat an earlier 15-6 victory over coach Jim Schultz' team. At the moment. the Anteaters will play Chapman College Friday at 1. A second game is .carded at 5 o'clock betwee n the winner and the victor of a game between Cal Poly (Pomona) and Claremont-Mudd. In the other half of the bracket are UC Riverside, Fresno State, UC S a n t a Barbara and Occidental. UCI will be hea~ily ra"':ored to aipy the team title. The odd game comes about because both loops are seven- team setups, making a bye game necessary each week for one team. However. breather I s n' t quite the right term when ap- plied to Los Amigos, a team that is ainsidered much better than its 2-5 record indicates. C.oach Bob Johnson's 'Lobos have given Garden Grove League rivals fits, losing to Pacifica, 16-12, Ra n ch o Alamit03, 20-13, and it was 13- 12 with three minutes to go against Garden Grove before the latter extended the margin to 27-12. The big item in .the Lobos' attack is Mau Kalati, a Sa- moan senior. He was an all-Orange C.oun- ty choice as a junior and • Johnson says he's improved a great deal since then, making him, ''the best linebacker in the county," according to the I.Abos boss. Kalatl measures, fr2 and "He always gets to the right place-·and makes the ·right hit for you, a natural hitter. He 's the best linebacker in the county, there's no doubt about that," says his coach. Another bright spot in the Los Amigos attack is split end J im Lincoln. Lincoln (S-0, 165 sr.) was a second team All-Garden Grove Leag~ choice last year be· hind Rancho Alam.itos's Mark Rodgers. And compounding Laguna Beach problems ts t h e presence of tailback l\like Rouse. Rouse iS' the fifth 1eading rusher in Orange County in total yardage ·with 778 yards. He's a durable back (5-9, 160 ) and most of the blocking for him has been provided by Kalati and fullback Mike Powell. Powell is li sted as a blocking back but his figures in last week's game make him a definite threat with -tile ball too. He carried 12 times for 112 yards. Save25%on The Irvine League football ract b favored to go down to the final week with four teams Jpcked Jn a tie for the league lead according to DAILY PILOT grid picks. C.Orona del Mar, Edison, Fountain Valley and Los Alamitos (all 3·2) are narro\f favorites to di spose of Costa Mesa (1·4J, Magnolia (3-2). Santa Ana Valley (2·3) and Estancia 12-JJ. 01110 l'ICKS Dlrlrnll O\IPI' ll•m' bv J use o'.lff w11111noron ~ ) O!"ftOfl Sll!I ovt<" W1!ol!. St1!1 tiv 7iot' 0•-0\11< C•I bv ~ Noir• O•me """' Tul•"• bv 11 Mlc.lllO•n O\lef' ,...,rdut bf 22 lol~1n1•1 <IVe!'" ~MU b¥ 1 ArmY irttr Plt11bv•oh bf 1 G-1111 OV!lf" Auburn bV J 1111..0ll ov ... WIKOl'lln b¥ 1 'cnl~1do over 0~1111orn1 s11t1 tiv t Co•ne!I owr 01trtmouth bv 3 Florid• St1!1 ove1 GI. T~h b'I t Svr1CU$I owr NIYY b'I 3 P•l11Celon over v111 bv 4 Cal Slate ~Liii OYlr SD 511!t bv 7 Ora.wt C!Nl'I over Mt. SAC bv 20 ElAC ov.,-G<ltclin Wttl tw 1 S1ddl<!back oyer lil lvenlde bv' Wn1m!n1t•• ovrr Ana1'11!m bv 1• Fount1ln v1llev DYer SA v111ev bV J CdM over COl!I MQt bv r Edi'1!11 OYlr MIOl'O!lt bY • El MoctM1 over Sin Cltmtnlt bY t Los ~mltol over l aoun• lltadl tr>' • M.tlt• Del OVI< P\111 X by 7V.. El Oorado ovt• Unlvtr1!ty ~Y 10 Wrsttrn o.,.,. Hunllne!tn lll•c.h 1W 11 Ml11/on Vitia OYtr Fooll'llll b'I 1 Newport OYe!'" Mlrifll bv 14 Los Al1mllo. OYe< E1t11>Cl1 bY 1 60 and 70 series treads. Closeout 2 21,!a led. tax and old tire. A70-13, tubeless. SCAT-TRAC 70 Wide profile 70 series tire with fiber glass belts and raised white letter- ing. , ·: ·. At this time last season El Modena High's football team was iR ·second place in t he Crestview League stand in~s and there were indications the VanguRrds might get a Clf' playoff berth. "We only had five lettermen Alamitos ancl C.orona del Ma r coming back at the start nf "'e had that cOiisistency." the season and Scot t Prigel Hill says the defense has a • (guard ) was the only one o( lot lo do with the situalion. Closeout Site Fed. tax Orig. Now E70-14 •• 2.51 •• 32.88 •• 24.66 F70·14 ,', ?.64 , • 34.88 . , 26.16 G70-14 , • 2.84 •. 36.88 • , 27.66 H70·1l • , 3.05 ~. 38.88 •. 29.16 G70-15 , • 2.80 •• 36.88 •• 27.66 H70-15 •• 3.11 •• 38.88 •• 29.16 J70-15 •• 3.32 •• 40.88 •• 30.66 Without trade·in, add 2.00 per Ure. But San Clemente rudely en- ded coach Boh Lester·s team's plans with a 28-0 victory in the season-ending tilt. El ~1odena. "'ilh a 4-1-0 mark and just a half game behind loop leading l\atella, is just about in the same situa- tion in '71 as it prepares for the invasion of San Clemente Friday night. "San Clemente ha s been a thorn in our side. We 'd like lo get to them, there's no doubt about it," says Le slcr. El ~todena has b c e n somewhat of a surprise this season and Lester readily ad- mits ii. "I'd be lying if I said it hasn't been 11 surprise. But you need to have a pleasant surprise once in 11 while in thls Pirates Up To Third In Ratings Orange Coas t College's foot- ball team continued its climb up the state JC football lad- der. jumpini; from fourth to third in thi s ~'eek's JXl\I eon· ducted' by the JC Athletic Bureau. The Pirates have a season mark of 6·0..1 and are one of three learns v.·ilh unbeatem rei::ords. Large schools Jeadl!:r San 1flateo (8-0) and small schools pace setter Redwoods (8-()\ are the other two. 1n the second place in the large djvision is Metro}Xllitan C-:nicrf".,ce leiider El Camino 4 6·11 those five that pla yed full "They can n1ake lhat big time. But our younger kids pla y on third down situations have come' on strong and and turn the ball over to the \ve've played good hard fool-offense or they can let the op. ball." position slip away for a gain The biggest key to the and get the first down." \';o.nguards' success t h i s Leading the Falcon offense season has been the defense. ls quarterback ~1 a rt i n In the last four games El VanderRoest and his potential lo complete the pass is one of ~1odena has allowed just one the inconsistencies Hill is TD per outing. •·Yes, were really solid speaking about. Against Edison he suffered defensively, but we haven't an injury early but continued run against an outstanding of· 1 fensive football team either," to play and as a resu twas far off trirget in most passing says Lester. He figure s his team will get i;i\ual1ons, This brought him ood t t · t ti bcJO"' the .500 mark for the a g cs aga1ns 1e .ve<1r. Tritons. "They .have a good Runnin~ backs for the passer in Bill Kenney and a Falcons are Randy Kelly and good running attack." Joe Glaspie. Kelly, a 200-0rfensi(lely, Lester says his pound fullhack, is averaging \Vishbone-T attack has nnt reached its potential. close to seven yards per carry \Ve're still hunting and peck-while Glaspie. a tailback. is ing on offense. \Ve're still ;:='=1 =tl='ie=l=i'='=Y='='d=·~pe=r=t='ry'==m=•=rk::;.I trying to ease out the un· familiar problems as far as the \\1ishbone is concerned. Potentially it's slill a fine formation . It possesses a 10i of \\'ea.pons. but \ve're nowhere near our potential." Who Cares? Nro nthrr nl'"'!'lpaper In the \\'Orlt\ carC'S about your com· munily like your community daily nr\\'~p.1per doet. It's the DAIL\"' PILOT. Who sags goo can't win em all! J:f~ 86 P,ROOr l((l<jfUC•Y ST,•IC'4T BOU1t800,. WHIS•''o' ','',','','.",',.'°,.~,',n!1> t~~~-'-'_"'_'_··_·_·_·_··_··_·_·_'_"_"_"_"'~'-"_''_'_·~·-·~~·~-·~·~~· • 3. 5Q,993fed. tax and old lite. GS0-14, tubeless. SCAT ·TRAC 60 super wide 60 serf es tire with fiber gins bells and raised white lettering. Size Fed. tax Orio. Now JS0-1 4 •. 3.l5 •• S0.75 .• 38.06 GS0-15 •• 3.30 •• 48.75 , , 36.56 JS0-15 , • 3.53 •• 52. 75 • , 39.56 LS0-15 •• 3.76 •• 54.75 , . 41 .06 Without tr•d•lft, 1dd 2.DO per tire. • Benell! mini Enduro. Has SOce. 4 speed transmission, knobby tires. Reaches a top speed of 45 m.p.h Benelli Cobra Mo ta Cross. Ha s , aocc, 4 speed transmission. knobby tires. Street llcenseable. 34999 • So'I'ewhere between t he dune buggy and the mini bike. 5 HP Tecumseh en- gine. torque converter drive, chrome chopper fork, twin front suspension. Gets up to 30 M.P.H. JCPenney auto center Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following ~Auto Centers: NEWPORT BEACH, Foshion lslond • HUNTINGTON BEACH , Huntington Center ' Uso Penney's lime payment plan. i • l i ' • I I , , - • II "' • y n, s w ta ), I • • • . • :-• . . • . ' . -· ' -l l " - r - ' Prep Defensive ' Players of Week PHIL TANNER Corona del Mar • ' - PAUL DESMET Costa Mesa BOB CONKLYN Estancia ELLSWORTH ESKEY Huntington Beach JOE KNOX !\1ater .Del RANDY HA!\fJLTON Newport Harbor JEFF GREEN Uni Ot ftnsa ~ , ' DAILY PILOT 29 Other Winners For Pickeroo CdM, Barons -_Sink Rivals FV Parents To Be Feted Corona .del P.far aiid Foun- The DAILY 'PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo contest this week had five winners although the names of three victors .... ·ere lain Valley warmed up for Inadvertently left out of the their Irvine Lea&ue water polo story Tuesday. showdown next week by In addition to Bill Flan.igan r posting victories Tue a: da y and Cathy Supple, other vie-afre:rnoon ••. tors included Brian Ashbrook The Sea Kin_gs of Corona Un· of Jiu nlington Beach; Joann der coach Cliff ~lool)l!r, itop- Paige or Costa Mesa: and pied San~a Ana Valley. 17·?· 1n Glenn O'Bryan of Corona del the losers pool. Mar. Fountain Valley's Barons The three all had 22 winners were taking the measure of picked correctly as did Miss Edison, 12·7. in the Charger Supple. Flanagan had 2.3 to pool and Costa Mesa defeated win uochallcnged. host~Los Alamitos. 12·:'1, in the other Irvine encounter. Eslaocia 's Eagles stepped out of league action to drop a >J decision to host r.iiraleste with the junior varsit.y v.·in- ning. 4·3. Corona det ~1ar is un- defeated in five league games while Fountain Valley is 4-1 for the year. Overall, the Sea Kings,...lla\'C posted an 11·5 mark. P.ria n ~1ilich and Bruce Krumpholz each tallied seven goals for the Sefl Kings. Parenta' nlghl feativities will be held Jn conjuoctlon with Priday nlght'1 Irvine League football game between Fountain Valley's Baronr and;- the Sa nta Ana Valley Falcons at Huntington Beach High. Parents of varsity foolball players, band members and pep squad members will be recognized for their erforta in the ceremonies, which begin at 7:40, 20 minutes before the scheduled kickoff. SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY! Se habla Espanol WESTMINSTER SANTA ANA FULLERTON ' ' ' ' ' 15221 BEACH BLVD.• PHONE 893-8544 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS• PHONE 547.7477 1530 S. llARIOR BLW.• PHONE 870.0700 MONDAY THRU FRIDA y 9,00 A.M .. 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU FR IDAY e,oo A.M .• 9 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY e,oo A.M .• 9 P.M. SATURDAY •............... e,oo A.M .•• P.M. SATURDAY ........... , ....... e,oo A.l<A .•• P.M. SATURDAY ................ e,oo A.M .•• P.M. SUNDAY ....................... 9.00, A.M.-4 P.M. SUNDAY ........ , ................. 9,00 A.M:-4 P.M-, SUN DAY ................... 9,00 A.M.-4 P.M, 1S MONTH GUAIANTll" BELTED TIRES! HENO THUMP TIRE! CORNELL FUTURA TUllUSS WHITIWALLS ;:;...-; '·~-tf' /\.'.,..~ I T~~:. ..... '""" ... .. '" ............. . ... ,oj ........... ... •" ........... .. ....... __ ._ ... .... ........ . ................. .... _. _,.,, .. -...... -. .. ··•·'·· .,,, .. , .................. - FREE $6.98' WHEEL AUGMMENT -~ ~ .. ~ •.. "' ..... •• -........... ,ti ... h•totl A•o•o<•~ ••") IUY OI CllDIT 2 FULL PLIES OYNICOR" RAYON CORD . PLUS 2 BEL TEO Pll ES DYNICOR" · RAYON CORD GUARANTEED 36 MONTHS• CORNELL ARISTOCRA 1 TUllllSS llACKWAll 4 PLY DYNACDt• RAYON CORD 27 MONTH GUARANTEE • RADIAL !lll~ 6 l'l.Y TllAD " '"' "" '"" "STUROEE" IVIR'l'ONI WANT$ HI-RISE BIKES ••• -~if! MAGNETIC KEY HOLDIR . ICll• Qpoll IN· 'l'CM,ll"CAl .. ... 98 10llMI C 00-n. • ......... ,_r., .. 1.-i. ... 1 ....... ,,.., ..... ....... 1 .... Keo ... ""dec/ l"•IMtl'!"• WITH 2 KIYS· 69' ,.fYf/llTS THf'1 01 ..ti/TO & ,..,_,., ' HOOD & TRUNK LOCK Thio 1 .. ~ I• MGd• •f 11 .. •y ~ .. ly OIHI ... • ,..,,. tho P••••,.!i.,. of thol1. H" noiolNr • CO• ... that olip1 o•ot cho!1'. lo ••••. C0.1 on OfTllOIHT ,,... ,.;,.., .... 1 ..... , tl•-· -... i. .. ,_ ... 11_ ........ "" Oil TRIATMINT , 11.._, •U lou1"I"" -........ ~ .. '"' hl1 ...11" ........... Jt 5l( CAN u.. 6 OR 12 VOLT STOP & TAIL LAMPS· Ste • / I I I 1 \ 30 OAILV PILOT Wtdntsday, Novtmber 10, }q71 -~----- r Sunfis1i Sailiri~ Race Set In i-kunilton . B er 111 u d a , they're already beating the dr·u1ns for the 1972 Sunfisll \Vorld Ch a n1 pion sh I p s , scheduled for B e r 111 u d a ' s Advataee 10(» Jtflles La Paz Yacht Skippe1·s PraYi For Wind, Get Breezes Only, puted to-be the overall ban· Ragtime; (JS) Warrior; (16) dicap leader. Class positions Deblnda IV; (17) Robon lll; Cedros and San Benitos were not computed. Fleet (18 1 Quicksilver; (19) Free· 8~.---AtMON LOCKABEY 0.#olLY l"ILOT l •1rlnt ld!Nr island s oU the coast of Baja style·, (20) Ccl:',rity; (2Jl C l·r · f d Id standings: scenic ff-1stle Harbor next a 1 orn1a orine a m -sea (I) Star; 12) Concerto; (l) Alice; (Z2) ~tin Sette; (23) fo'eb. 11-13. altar \Vll1ere s khllp_pehr sLoand Sandpiper; (4) Quasar: (5) Dorothy 0 (Col.S7); (24) A}. The Sunfish falls in the crews 0 33 yac 5 111 the ng Counterpoint; (6) Pericus: (7) pha ; (25) Bohemia; (26) &.n-F Beach to La Paz yac t race Chiquita; (S) Dorothy 0 (Col-derliAg: (27) Centurion : (28) category of the · · s a i Ii 11 g OUJ•·man 'fuesday congregated to pray · -4l); (I) Bushwacker; (lO) En-Angelique; {29J Nightfigbter; board'' and has grown 1n for wind. chanlress; (II) L'Allegro ; (12) (30) Sayula ; (31 ) Bonbel'i!; populari!y to 11•here it ls Teams Race Their prayers were not Aquarius; (13) Aries; (14) (32) Ranger: (33) Samarkand. numerically lhe larges! one-being answered vtry prGlllpt-,pi~;iii;i~_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_.;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; BUSINESS OR PLEASURE -The 65-foot cruiser Poseidon is ready for charter sen •ice as a floating business conferen ce room or a luxury cruising packet equippe d for fishing, '"ater skiing and skeet shoot in g. ly. A 10.12 k•o t nor'wester • k• design sail craft in the 11•ortd . continued to tant alize the p • 1 t p 11 °"'""mhers the i.'"'"'. Sa tu. i·day sailors. moving only • li•ll• I 0 I g S In tional Snipe Class by several more than 100 miles J><>Sl their thousand. Team rac ing for the Jean previous day's pos it Io n. Twenty countries, mostly Cedros Island i.s 380 mile s /Ji~~IJ~IOO fro1n North and Sou I h Schenck Trophy in Lehman-!2 irom the start al Long Beach. I An1erica and the Caribbean. dinghies 11·ill be held at The race is r at e d at 970' ha1·e expressed interest in Ne11·port Harbor Yacht Club nautical miles, whicll means . cornpeting in I his the smallest Satu rd ay. the r.ace is less than half com- of sailing classes. Four-man tea ms fronl San p\eted after three days of sail-Poseidon: a Luxury Yacht Reigning \1·orld champiop of Diego Yacllt Club, Balboa ing. the class is Ted Moore of Yacht Club. Los Angeles Ragtime. the 62-foot scfatch Binghamton. N.Y. lie '1s-ex-Yacht Club. Long Beach Yacht boat 1na nned by a sil[-man pected to head a large U.S. Club and SL Francis Yacht Long Beach Yacht Club syn- co ntingent at Bermudci . Club have been chall enged to dicate of skipP.Crs, was out For Business or Pleasure The three-day ev e nt . compete against the NHYC front. a few m1les.11•est of San organized by the Bermuda learn. Benitos Islands. The rest of Sunfish Association, will be Racing will start in tile turn-the fleet \vas strung out some By ALl\10N LOCKABEY DlloJL Y l"ILOT •01ll1>t l!dlMr "This board meeting \\'ill please come to order." The chairman's brusque ex- ecutive voice is soflened by the throb or tllree p ower ru l General l\1otors diesels and the s11'ish of a creamy bo1v wave just outside the board room. Your board n1eeting is bei ng conducted aboa rd the 65-foot fi berglass cruise r Poseidon. Or maybe you are en- tertaini ng a group of pro- spective customers 1vho la• like to fish. (b) prefer \l'aler xkiing, fc) have a p~ssion for a little skeet shooting. or fd. e. f and gl prefer to drink. cat. sleep or spin ya rns. The $500,000 Poseidon is your customer relations velii· cle. Could it be a pleasure soiree for 24 swinging couples'? You 11·on·1 hear a n y neighbors' complaints fron1 the decks of the Poseidon. Yes, the Poseidon is a 11 things to all people -pro- viding they have the charier price -l\'hich cou ld range from severa l hundred doll ars a day lo thousands for an ex- tended cruise -in solid con1- ·1ort, that is. ·' Poseidon, the god of tile sea. would thrill at the sight of his namesake. as well he n1 ight. The sleek, luxurious 'craft is now completed anti ce rtified by the U.S. Coast Gua rd for 49 passengers p J us a crew of four. She was designed and built with the business executive in min d. Facilities are available for conferences. board of directors meetin~s. s a I e s sessions and c 1 i e n t en- tertainment. The yacht ,vas designed by Seair Dynamics and buill by \Villard Boats of Costa l\lesa. Luxury in transit. combined with speed. comfort and safety ore her Dasie abjections. The Poseidon is il. hosted by the Harrington ing basin al the east end of GO· miles astern. The yacht serves as a The fitt ing out of the yacht Sound Sai ling and Gilding Lidb Isle at 11 :30 a.m. If a \Vith the light-air grouping charter cruiser that quickly has been completrd in a slip Club. assisled by St. George's normal westerly prevails, tile of the neet. Lloyd Po,vell 's converts from a floating adjacent to Be r ks h ire· s Dinghy & Sport s Club. flee t ivill finish \\'itll the last Ericson-39 Star \Yas sti ll com-I business conference into the Restaurant. During I he International firms are ex-111'0 legs being sailed close by rnosl diversified recl'calional 1111lnlhs of completion. a peeled lo lend commercial the N~IYC cl ubhouse. STARS 1•essel afloat for its sizr. number of Ji1nmv Berkshif.e·.~ supJXlrl. Ai\1F-Alcourt The LA YC leom \Yill be led Sydney Omarr is one or \\'hatever your choice of luncheon customers l\'Ondered n1akers of Ille Sunfish and • by Howard \Vright. St. FVC. t ht' 1\·orld's great astrolo- diversion. yoU can enjoy it if J11nmy \Yas considering equally popular Sailfish -are Tom Blackaller and Chick gers. •lis column Is one of 11•ith the aid of stereo. "Oing into !he s h i p v.· a r d producing 100 boats especially Rollins will head the SDYC t hP DAILY PILOT'S ~ea t "' realurcs. television. air conditioning and __ hu_s_in_e_ss_·--~-----'-°'_t_h_e_champ,.i:'.on::'.s'.'.'.h'.Cip~s .. ~---'.'.'e~a'.'.m'.:.. ________ _<,,=========='11 intercon1. ; - 1'hings are not exactly •• • • • • • ... • • e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e • • • • • e • • • • •• • • • • e e • • • • • • • ••. spa rtan for the ere\\'. either. ~ ;..\',~ ~~"~,~~~; i~ e:'t';:,,~~ GO oa,,~ E:4R navigational gear, ship-shore ~ telephones and auto-pilols. The three ''jimrny diesels" p r o v i d e 1.000 horsepo1Yer :·~~"w;•; tl;;v~,lh~n~~~k~ ~i Polyglas Wh·1tewalls you'" in a hw·ry. The ranAe i' . about I.500 miles -enough for a roUnd trip lo the Cape. "The 1nen behind this ex- pensive venture are Lou Kauf- man, 39. president and Ed Ne11·comb. 40. vice presid('nl. Kaufman is a native of Beverly Hill!;. attended Be\·rr· I\' Hills Hii:!h School and USC. Served in the Nav.\' as a corn- ba l veteran in the Korean \\'ar. and has an aeronautical engineering degree r I' 0 n1 Northrup l nsli l ut~ of Technology. Newcomb. skipper or the Poseidon. hai ls fron1 Norrh Hollvwood and also served in coi'nbat in the Korean \\'ai·. His experience inc ludes the opera- tio n 'of i\1arina Shipyard in \Vi!mington. ski pper of several large yachts in California waters and a fonne r director of Italia America Ya c h t Imports. The two n1el in Korea and talked of son1edav O\\•ning their ov.·n ~·;;icht. Their paths recrossed in civilian Hfe \\'hen both \l'ere associated \1·i1h Italia America Yachts. Ther decided to build their o\1•ii eharter cruiser specifications. lo cxecu lt\'e "PO\Ver Belt Polyglas" at a price most car owners can afford ... Save $53 to $88 a set! 1·11·0 fibrrg\a~.~ belts •• , !o<lay·s rnosl pr~rerrrd tin! hrlt corrl plus l1vo pliP.s of poly~slr.r c.ord ... !oclay·s most Jirrfr.rrrd lirr body1.ord. You gr1 4-pl1rs un drr 1hr tn·a<l lnr st rrngth -rh:it' s thr ( :ondyear Po1\'r r Bi·lt Pol.\ ~la~ Ii rr. 1974 lffll'lllHJJ t•4 hod yplies in si'l:.cs, ]78-14, ji'-H-1.'i. !100-15 and 1.76·15}. l w~11111r;,,, 111. '•it• Sal• l"r.et El . "~' ,,._ Jt~lltJJ 11,11c11 ll tft Willl lit lrtl!t h . , •• Bill Ficlier to Co111pete For Co11gressio11al Cup! Sill 7.00.13 C78-14 E78-l4 f78-l4 G711·14 H78·1 4 • J78-1 4 6.95-14 7.35·14 7.75-14 8.25·14 8.55-14 8.85·14 l rldl ...... Prr Tlfl $40.30 2f.t1 t.'9 $40.30 $2&.t l $2.15 $41.80 $27.t J $2.37 $44.35 S21.!17 2.54 $48.40 $32.27 $2.69 $53.0S .J!!:.31' $2.95 $62.85 $41.10 $2.91 Bill Ficker, 19i0 l\n1erica·s Cup defender. will gel an early jump on the 1974 Cup series by sailing in Long Beach Yacht Club"s Congressional C 11 fl series or ma tch racing nrxt i\1arch. Announcement lhat Ficker had been tendered and ac- cepted an invi tation lo sail in the Congressional Cup v.as made by Barney F I a m . chairman of the e\'ent. It \Yi tl be Fickcr's fi rst !ry 111 the Congressional Cup which has grown lo be the mosf prestigious match race sailing event on the \Vest Coast.· He ""'s invited to sail last ~ear but had to dec hne because of preising business 11nd personal lnattC"rs after the America·s Cup can1paign. Boal .Future Called Good Prospects for the marine in- dustry in 1972 look bright and those of f\1 FG Boat Co., Union City. Pa .. are even brigllter. Ricllard S. l\1orrison. general manager. said. Ficker is the fi rst of !he 10 finalis1s to be invited to parlicipale. Also invilerl is John Beatson of Toronto. Canada. \\·inner ol t he Richardson Cup n1atch race series on the.c:reat Lakes. Dates for the 1 !I i 2 Congressional Cup hal'e been set for h·larch 16-18. They v.·ill be sailed in Cal·40 sloops of1 Long Beach llarbor. Ficker 1s nol !he fir~\ A1nerica's Cup defender to compete in the Congressional Cup. Bob Bavier. the 1964 Cup helmsman ca1ne \Vest for the 1965 Congressional Cup and was sound ly defeated. Fic ker·s venture into the Congressional Cup con1pelil ion may ans11•er a nagging ques· lion or \'l'ICh!Smen si nce lhe 1970 AmCrica's Cup campaign : \\'as it Pftkrr fha l was qu ick er. or was ii I he 1nodifications o( fhr 12-metcr lnlr<'pid by young Briton Chance lhat 1nade the dif- ference in Intrepid defeatini: the Australian Gretel II four ra cts lo one. F78·1S 7.75·15 $45.20 30.13 $2.62 G78·15 8.25-15 $49.45 $32.17 $2.80 H78·15 8.55-15 $54.10 $3t.OJ 3.01 •J78·15 8.85-15 $64.10 $42.14 $2.96 •9,00-JS $66.lS $.43.44 $2.89 •L78-15 9.15-15 $66.45 $44.30 $3.19 HURRY.,, OFFER ENOS SATURDAY NIGHT 3 WAYS TO CHARGE ~CMOIT CMOS HONOREO lf GOOOYlM ~VIC[ SIClllES lHD M05t OOOOTE.UI DUlfllS. US£ OUlt II.I.IN CH(CK l"ltOGll•N: 11.- t:t use of coritinu•d h•1vy d•m•nd for 6oooY••r titet, -ml., Rift Ol.lt of som• 11:11s durln1 th11 off.,., but ... win bto h•PPY to ord•r your 111• tire 1t IM •dv1rll•ed P"C• 1nd lssut you 1 r1in cheek tor lu1u1• oeliv1ry ot l l'l911'111rcil1nctlH . PRICED LOW TO MOVE FAST 4·PLY NYLON CORD "All-Weather Ill:" Tires $12 ""'" bll~~w1ll 1..tlllttl Dh.I 11 76 ,,~ l• I•• •"4 tkt 1u1 t I l•~n ,;,1~,~11! 1!•-•l;n.1~,1,.1 <i~l I ~"" 1lioul11 -r •) oor h•~I 1lr• b 11., Jn 11• prlt• 1i111e! buy now at everyday low prices GOODYEAR -THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS• TIRES Fi.c.ktr is reput_td lo bf' al •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • me11c~1lou.~ organrzer In .any - ---• • - - - - - - - - - -., ~·ar.ht1n~ 1·enture he goes 111!0. .. - - - - -.,,,,---- But a Cal·40. solL'Cled by lot. is 1 YOUNG & LANE Tl • E CO a far cry from a 12-metrr1 ' 1\•hich tu1s had tht benefit of I · e I thousands of doll:.r~ invested 1n her de sign. buildini;: and • equipment. COSTA MESA LAGUNA TUSTIN I I 'Co-Sponsored by &oath Coast ?lua And 'l'he DAILY PILOT BE A PRQPHET FOR PROFIT $10 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Merchondise Certificate For Each Winner 5 Winners Every Week of Contest BONUS· PRIZE Each W .. k's First Ploce Winner GETS TWO FREE PASSES to the Pasadena Bowl from the DAILY PILOT Be• pigskin prophet. Pl•y the Pilot Pi ck~roo gam• f_cr we•kly prizes. W inners each week T•t •1ve a $I 0 91ft certificate good a s money at any So uth Coast Plaza store or bu 5in ess. Each w•ek's top winner will be in· ..,jted,· along with a 9\lest, tc be honored •f the annual South Coast Pl•z• Football Pl•yers of the Ye•r Ban· quet. Wate'ti for this player's form each waek in the DAILY PILOT Spcrts Section . Circle the team you think will win in each pairing in the list of 25 gam•s ind send in tht pl1yer'1 form e,ntry blank or a taa1onabl1 facsimi le. Than watch th• DAILY PILOT sports pages for each week's list of fi..,e winners. RULES t. Sullmit tllt •nlr., llli nlr b110w •r • rt•ltntlllt li c11m1l1 ., " '9 t11!.,-1~1 Ctfl!tst. 1. Slftd it tt: l"tLOT l"IGSKIN l"ICl(£1l00 CONTEST, S111rt Dt,1rlmtnl, l".0. llX IS,I, Co1l1 MIMI. CA. '2'16, t . Ont., •n• 1nlry I'll" lltrJ•n lit~ wffk. 4. EntrO.. rn1111 H dtlivtred (lly m1il er In ,1rMn) tt OAILY l"ILOT •file• by s ,_m, T~1N111.,, I. 's1111111 Ct tlf l"llU 11\11 DAILY l"tLOT •mJlilYU 1nd l~tir im!MOllilt. ftmlU• 1111 llit lbl1 11 111!1r. 6. Tll tll:EAKEI. ILANK MUST ti l'ILLEO IN Olt ENTltY IS VOIO, •••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BLANK • • • • • • • • ,• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Clrcl• tHIM you tllhtll will win thlt w ... '1 9amn Iheme tHm lt ll'COIHI 011• llsttdl Rams vs Detroit USC v5 Washington Washington St. vs Oregon St. Cal vs Oregon Tulane vs Notre Dame Michigan V5 Purdue Arkansas V5 SMU Pittsburgh V5 Army Auburn vs Georgia Illinois vs Wisconsin Oklahoma St. V5 Colorado Cornell vs Dartmouth Florida St. vs Georgia Tech Syracuse vs Navy Yale vs Priltceton Cal St. l LB l vs San Diego St. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• Golden West vs East LA Mt. SAC ' vs Orange Coast • Saddleback College vs Riverside • • Anaheim vs Westminster • • • • • • • • Fountain Valley vs SA Valley Corona dtl Mor vs Costa Mesa • Magnolia vs Edison • • • • San Clemente vs El Modena Los Amigos vs Laguna Beach •• • Ttl ••l'AKtlt -Mr •va1 Ill lftt ltl~I ~""'··· .. H lftll M;l rHI • 8 lfl 111 21 .. mtt IJllM IM•I !I ,, ··•••···. . . • • Ne1111 •• • A44mt • • • • • • • "I thtnk that the general ttonomic Indicators and the special conditions existing in the: pleasure boat ltusiriess 1vill combine to create . .an industry rise ot 10 percent.." f\lorrison forecast at a dealer previe11• of the 1972 Mi'~G line which in- cludes a cabin cruiser for the fir.st Ume In sever.al year - Ficker 11·111 bo one of lour I Southland skippers in j lht ! Congressional Cup. 1'hufhcr~ I v:i\I be selected after ~All-off~/ scheduled in December and L 1596 Newport Blvd. 548-9383 482 Oc-ean A:v~ 494-6666 305-El Camino Real 544-7650 I • • • '"•" s.. • • City 1 the ne," Gypsy 21 E·Z Cruiser . JtJ1uury. I I THEODORE ROBINS FORD -2026 Harbor Bl vd, e Costa M••• e Phone 642.0010 --------------------• -.I •••••••••••••••••••• , ________ .......,-....;..;-..;..;;.;,.;.~ • . . Yi Y. • (16) Ill; ree· \2P . (23) ) Al· S.n· (28i btf!; l'I:; and. ., Ht .. in· ., •• LY HI ;, le . ch ·~ '"'' OT "· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • -• • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • ' • •. W 1 a•lf, Ntvtmbtr lD, 1971 DAILY PILOT :JI •. • Wide Guard Sears , I Tire and Auto Center Belted Tires ~\!. t·.E.T. T" int l'i .. l'IUt.t: EA CH Tul>rlr~~ Blac k wa ll s 1'ul,ele!'s Wl1ite ¥l alls Tv..10 fiber glass belts beneath the tread rut the tire surface flat against the road t el redu c e squirm. and wi~gle. Th is n1ean s greater trac- tio n, bercer stability and longer n1ilea.gc. Alsc1 bu ilt \virh t\VO pl ics of ruggeJ ny- Jon cord for strength anJ safe ty. Con - toured safery shoul- ?ers for easy steer- ing. C78·136.511x13 28.9> 21.71 2.00 E78·14/7.35x 14 3S.9:i E78·1 4 7.:l5x 14 :ll .95 23.96 237 F7 8· 14 7.75x l·I '.{7 •1)!') F 78-14 7.75x l4 :13.95 25.46 2.:.1~ 411. 95 G78·l4 8.25x 14 J6.95 27.7 1 2.69 H i8.14 8.5!ixl4 4:!.9:i S.60x 15 29.9.> 22.46 l.60 (;i'H-1:.i 8.25xl.) 41. IJ5 (;78-15 R.25xlS 37.9.) 28.46 2.811 H ;s.1 :ll8.5:ix I.) 44. IJ.l H 78-l .>/R. :;5, i:; 40.tJ.} :lll.71 3.0 1 J 78-1 Sl8.8:"ix I:; 48.t).) 1.78· I 5/9.00 5J.9:i 9.!5xl5 26.96 2.37 . 28.46 2.54 30.7 1 2. 9 32.96 :!. IJ.~ 31.46 2.80 33.7 I :l.111 :!6.7 l :1.1 ~ 38.% 3.~7 4 Full Ply Nylon Cord CRUSADER 6.lH.h: 13 Tubtle,;11 Rlack·\\·al l 9 2,?. Ano! i •Id r...., h:-il(h, l.l Tuh~1 • ., Hl1o·k" ~11 1' ln.•J.) Pino $1 .":h F.E.T. A n<l.4 ~l<I T1r., •New contour, broad shoulder •New £read design J n1port~ SportA Car 4-Ply Nylon Cord Tires Tubrle~· Rlackv.·allJ 14?.~T Tu• An~Ol<ITI.,. SIZE 1'H.un:.JN ,. E T PRH:E • • • TURt:l.t;~:-; ltl..4.CKWAl,I, Super Drivers Super Cars Super Track •New 6/!0th·inch v.<hi(c side••alls Fits ?tfost: :i.20~ IJ 14.•/.) 1.36 Au<1in Ml.8 The NHRA Supernaliouals Drai: Haer• ,\u""' Hc..Jr !!olt mui :i.~1,1 .1 l•l.IJ:'i l.'8 n ... u .. ro,., ""' hJ~h 1:1 l~.IJ.'i '-" .... ll•n•ull YOUR CHOICE SIZE •· . .::r. ~ri cket s from Sears al Tickctron. Ontario l\"lfltor Sp eedway Sat., Nov. 20.th thru .Sun., l'ioY. 21,_t A1kAboutSeur1 Co,.ue nie nt Credit Plan•. Tuh,lf" fllarkw•ll• ,\ny Si1t Li&Led 1695 /1, ri;,, l ~ : ,:\.'ii.: 1·~ :.:.; .. 14 1.•11 Fn~li1hfo1<1 ".!.!II lnru• <)Jo• I :.14. ~•m•• 1-ul> .i.20,1•1 11.·1~ J.,lf) ,.()\<)!& ~.b0;>.14. 11.•l;'i 1.54 Tnumrh ''nl ~,,.~~11 ~ •. ~0.1 :; 1·1.'•.'i l.:o6 Ovtr950 Makes and''Models A\•ailable •40 or •so On l'urcl1ase of ~i\.NY 6 or 8 Cylincl er Re111au11faclured Co1n11lcle :En gine JNSTALLED ALLSTATE Car and ·rru ck Engines -Exch:tn.':tS :t\•ailahlc fiJ t over 9~0 makc5 and moJcls. Compare ALLSTATE Rcmanufac· tured Engine Qualit)'. • All Ntw \'('.rtr Tubes •.A ll Nt•1 Rocket Shift~ • .A 11 N"•Timing Chain\ •.A ll NtwTimiD1 Go~ • A 11 Ntll' t.liia B(·•n~,i.:1 • All Ne •· R'ld Bcirinp •.All New Hydr111.hc L1Hrr.• •All Nell' Bu•hing' • All Nc'll' Stal Gaskets SAVE $5! Qu.ick-FiL SeaL Cover Sale Rt11ulu $34.99 2999 Designed to be sclf-i nscallcd in as li11Jc as 45 minu1es. As- sorted fuhion colors . ALHAMll.t. COM,fON .t71·•111 tll•1Jtl1 t l1·S711 IUINA ,AIK COVINA 121·4400, ,,, •• ,.)0 •••·0111 CANOGA ,,all( IL lllONTl 140 ..... 441~•11 }. • All ;<;"e..-E.Jh1u•t ,-,i.~~ •.All r\cw l11u~c Valvts •.All :«c..-V1lvr ~r11n1u •.A ll Nell' P>11ont •.'\II Nt,.·C.hrome Trpc R1111' S,4 VE '2! Now on Scar8 Automobile Burglar Alarm Rf'11ular $16.99 1499 Forced entry of car activates in· termi uent horn blasts. All ncc· cssary wire, hudwuc . OLINDAL LONG llACN 2••·1001, 144°4111 41J ·Ol21 NOLLTWOOl:I NOITMl.1001 41t•J f41 llJ ·7272 ll\IGLIWOOD OLTM,I( 'toto f11.asa1 2•1·1111 \' •11>hall \'.,lvn Audo Al11.R"l!ICO. 5.bO~ l:t 11.'1:0 1.7, M.~.0,14. ~.l! : .:.; .. 1:; :!.If> 1'11l1J•ll ( n"'"" 1~ .... , .. 1'u11No&n1 Prices Effe•·li"e Wen. Nov.10th thru Sat. Nov. l:ith Plu,-F.r.:r. AndllldTire "'hi lf!"'a 1\s (Inly $3 J\·torc ('er Tire MGA !<r><l Monf 1'1orc Whitev.·:ill!i ~··;iil;,ihle in n1ost 1'i7.f'S wl $2 more perlir~. Li.feli;11e Guarar1tccd Heavy-Duty Shock Absorber SA l7E '80! Sporty3 HP MiniBike - Regular S7.99 99 •Rugged iron piston and c.hromc rod •Heavy duty forlongand smc1other riJe • Rcducr p!tch and sway fo r faster, safer stops and cornering 9999 • Rcgular$129.99 Ideal foroff-thc·road use. Small, compact ••• ~ell constructed. Model ao;09 01 .. Nor 111-'.100- ,AJAOIN'4 lll·lll1,l.tlo42 11 St'{ll'S ,,,0 t11·4112 St.\15~ IOIJUCKAND CO. •OMONA '''·l161 JANTA rl .,.!NOS ••4·•011 SANTol. ANA s•1~i11 Bullf!ry (;uurantre !;rec n:plaLl·n1c11t wuhin 91! Jays of purchase if biucry proves dcfcLt1vc.·.Aftc r 90·days '!"'C will rt•rl•cc 1t w11h a new haucry, if 1!cfcc1ive, (har.11:· in..: only tnr rh c rcr1nJ of owncr5hir. Your m11rnhly ch•r,11;c for nwnC"r~hir wd! bt! cnmrufcd by 1liv1di n,11; the" rurrenr scllinl( price le)~ rr:ulc.in a r the time uf return, by the number of months· nl ..:uarantcc. SAVE '5! 36-rnonth Batteries for Volkswagens, Sears 36-Month . Guaranteed Batteries tool Re~ular$1 9.99 Trade-In Price • • Fits9026 of all Americ an -made 12-volt cars •The replacemf'nt batlery desi41:ncd for most popu lar applications •Equals the orisina.l equipment b11tcry in most automobiles FREE Battery Installation 1499 liHTi MONICA ;lt .. ••MI IOUTH COAJT 'U.ZA S4o • .a.a.a:a THOjl:JiND OAICt 4f7~~l66. Sill· I la I TOllANCI J42·1Sl1 U•LAND •••·1t27 VAlLIY 71J•l411, tl4•llJO I VllMONT 7Jt··1t 11 Satisfac tion Guaranteed Or Your.Money Back • • I j IZ OAILY"l'ILOT Wtdmday, NO'l'tmber 10, 1971 . .., . ' Santa Ana Lease Car BRAND NEW BRAND NEW Santa Ana Lease Car . '71 TORINO '71 MAVERICK . '71 MUSTANG '72 RANCHERO 2 Dr. Hardtop 2 Dr. Hardtop GRA.BBER I Loaded with VB, formal roof, cruise-o-matic, Loaded !1F01F1464121 !2A4F71178101 power steering, power front disc brakes, tinted Loaded ! 1K93T184093'1 , glass, radio, Dfe belts, warning lights, ""color keyed racing mirrors, l'IA25F133452 ) $2377 $3177 $32 '98 ' ' ' $2999 ' Plus tax & license Plus tax & li_~ense Plus tax & .license ' ' BRAND NEW · BRAND NEW BRAND NEW Santa Ana Lease Ca '71 GALAXIE 500 -' '71 F250 '72 FORD 1 /2 TON '71 TORINO -Counny Sedan l/4 Ton .Pickup Station Wagon Loaded with it all 6 pass .. automatic fra nsmission, lull factory F25YRM02434 !F10ARM84458J 1A30F162837 equipped. ! IJ74 Hl48~68 / $3199 $.3395 $2598 $3177 P.lus tax & license Plus tax ·& license P.lus tax & license Plus tax & license . BRAND NEW ·BRAND NEW DEMONSTRATOR '71 T-BIRD 71 FORD !TD '71 MAVERICK '71 PINTO 2 Dr. Hardtop Brougham 4 Dr. Hardtop 4 Door Sedan . AIR CONDITI ONING, big eng ine, vinyl roo f, Loaded (1Y83N1217941 Loaded (1J6TS1822211 Loaded !1K92U198948) automatic transmission, protection 9roup, fl ip- per windows, white walls. I IR IOXl910·33) $5199 $3838 $2169 $2599 Plus tax & license Plus tax & license Plus tax & license Plus tax & license $1977 '66 CORVAIR 'Spud Co,., B;, '"''"" '67 FORD ~~~~.~ T~~G~~ ' li~t ntw, low milti. ISDC44'1 l $5 77 Cond .. Pow1r Sl11ri n9. !XXP271l $1177 '70 MUSTANG ~~~~~~-~.K.;,, P,S, PB/, l.:.1d1d. f 114VIM ) '65 COUNTRY ;?,u1~~ 't.~GoN $577 '66 CADILLAC :~~~:~~.~,;~~~;'. ,;, $1277 '70 ·f250 ~'::I'':~:.~'.~~~.!',.;,"·''' Powtr tl11ri n9. !NHE'1 1 I l --~~~~~~~~~~-- ' 64 T-BIRD '""· """"· 1"""' ,;., 1"11 ''"'" $677 '69 GALAXIE ~~·0'"'' """' 10'''" '' /;'"' $1377 '71 T-BIRD VI,'"''·'''"'" 1'"'" .;., 1"11 powu,$457· 1 S~i•p. !OMMS'1 JI blu1 with m1t<:hin9 i11t. I ZRGJ72~ low"""••· Bttufiful. 142 70801 REKT·A·CAR $.ADAY . S>LUS 6' PER MILE \ LONGTERM LEASING AVAILABLE FORD I ' • I H1rbor View Ctnttr, Wadn1sd1y, Nov. 1Q, 1971 \ .... ·::·· .. ··;.·. " .. ~· .. ::·· ·: .... , .. ·.• ·:·.. .. "· . .. , : .. ... . .. , · ..... . . ..... :, -~~ • ' I r I /~ -· --'"-''-0'"--'~~~~~'-L.:.~c:....;.....----L_~~~L '. OPENING THE NEW Center Harbor • 1ew ON SAN JOA(j)UIN HILLS ROAD, J.UST EAST OF MACARTHUR BLVD., IN NEWPORT BEACH YOU CAN WIN TEN · MAJOR PRIZES .. ~~:!~:~~~!:s PLUS WEEKLY PRIZES UP TO DECEMBER 1, 1971 "FLY TWA AMBASSADOR SERVICE TO SPAIN FLY AIR CALIFORNIA · ~ ~ ''t\ . '.;l'.f111 \ ~·,1 .·1 , AS OUR • , -:;be , ~!'.l ,,_ AMBASSADORS (';rnL .1 ·~0' ·~111;' REVISIT THE ~k;{l.J·l~f~.,fi!~~ MISSIONS fly f"'.i ' TO- Sf{N DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO WIN AS OUR OFFICIAL AMBASSADORS GUADALAJARA MARIACHI SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 1 to 4 p.m. -ON THE MALL ______ FLY ~ Western Airlines FREE STEREO TO MEXICO CASSETIE PLAYER RECORDER AM -FM RADIO RECORD AS OUR OFFICIAL AMBASSADORS WIN FREE COMPLETE I SKI ·cHANG~R_· 13,000 PESETAS 2,000 PESOS 100 REALES OUTFIT FREE TICKETS-ALL STORES WIN FREE 15 ' VENTURE CATAMARAN SEE IT ON DISPLAY ON MALL I CLUDING }~~ j No Purc;haH Necesury IN :~":(' WEEKLY PRIZE WINNER~ DO NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN ' I SKIS ·~, NEW NUMBERS POSTED IN ALL STORES-EVERY WE!!>NESDAY DRAWING FOR MAJOR PRIZES. TUESDAY~ DECEMBER 1 YOU MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN • • v ' \ • •• _. Suppl1"'4nl lo tho DAILY PILOT Christopher Columbus To Harbor View LAST OF FOUR CHAPTIRS Jedediah Strong ' ~mith1. a youn.er trapper, becomes· lhe first white oerson to reach 'California over- land. when he reach'5 the San Ga· , b~iel Mission, Nov~ber 27, 1826. ·outbursts agairut Jllexlcan author' ity con\,inue1 • •tr4 ' break out into ~~pen· rebellion. Mexico erria-ncipates the Indians and ~ turris the inissions into churches spelling their doom .. Valuable land drifts into private control. The gov- ernment administrators and their friends are enriche4 from the spoils of the missions. Their deterioration in· creases. I 835 California capital is moved to Los Angeles. Mexican governors no longer feel welcome in California. Mexi· canos caJl themselves Californios. 1836 Twenty seven year old Juan Bautista AJvarado assem- bles a force and takes over, issues a November 7, pro- clamation declaring California a free and soverei&n state and again makes 11-fonterey the capital. · · 1837 Mexican ·Governor, Juan Bautista Alvarado. in two grants, makes the 48,803 acre RANCHO SAN·JOAQUIN, .which borders the ocean between Newport BeacW-and Lag1Jna· Beach; the property of Jose Sepulveda. nis \vill a1$0 become part of the Irvine Ranch m later years: 18-41 The United States concerned as any other outside pow· er over futurp, status of California, sends its first.naval exeedition to the Pacific Coast. Commodore Charles Wilkes calls San Francisco the greatest harbor in tb1 world . Pio Pico in Los Angeles, lakes over as civil governor, Jose Castro in Monterey, as military Commandante. Old rivalry breaks out between the north and the south. California is .a house divided, and threatened by actual warfare. Californians reconcile to United States rule as the best hope for the"ir futur(!. I 845 Hqnareds of Americans begin coming to California by. the various overland routes -the Santa Fe Trail, Old Spanish Trail, Central Trail. Oregon Trail. Population is 10,000 Indians, 7,000 Spanish, 700 Americans, and 200 Europeans. 1845 Laxity of 1t1exictln control over California makes it ob- vious that it will fall into the hands of some outside power. of \vhich several have shown inte.rest. President Polk comes into office on a platform of annexing 'fexas, settling the Oregon bound~ry dispute, a.!!!). expanding into Cal ifornia. Any interference by a European power could possibly cause war. Because of internal Mexican politfcal di sCurbances1 negotiations with Mexico are a failure. Mexican-American diplomatic relations· deteri· orate. On April 25, 1846, following various border quar· rels, rvlexican forces enter disputed territory between the Nueces and Rio Grande Rivers. 1845 Secularized since 1834. the buildings and orchards of I.he seve nth mi ssion, San .Juan Ca pistrano, are sold at auction for $7 10.00 to Juan Forster. a native of England, and James McKinley, a native of Scotland. Churc h buildings, cemeteries, and gardens on 44 acres, are retained by the church. 1845 \Var is declared May 12. General Zachary Taylor cross- es the Mexican border and the action inflames the south· we st from Texas to California. A group of independents capture Sonoma. John Fremont refuses to let them raise the Stars and Stripes, so they raise their "Calif· ornia Republic," red and white bear flag. The bear Oag movement comes to a sudden halt, when Monterey is captured .1uly 7, 1846. and the American flag is officially raised al Sonoma. 1846 Californ.ians still resist American occupation, and sev· eral battles; are fought throughout the state. Battles: involvin£ famous names Jike Stockton, Kearny, Fre- mont, Pico. Kit Carson, etc. 1846 The son of Jose Antonio Yorba, Teodocio,Jj granted the 47,226 acre Rancho Lomas de Santi190, Dy the ·M!..,..---1 ican Governor. Pio Pico. It lies between the Cleveland National Forest and Rancho San Joaquin. In future years. \Viii al so be part of the Irvine Ranch. 1848 The. war between the Uni ted States and Mexico comes lo an end Feb. 12 with the signing of the Treaty or Guadalupe Hidalgo, which gives the option or becoming an American citizen, or leavihg the former Mexican territory. The United States also pays $15 million. I 84 8 About a week previous to-signing of the treaty, an even t happens that influences United States and California history -gold is discovered by James ?\farshall at Amer- ican River. By fl.1a y, the whole state is in turmoil. A couple n1ore months, the whole country. By the end of the year, the yield is $10 million. A human avalanche descend s on California. January, 1849, 26,000 perSQns·, midsummer 50,000, De cember 115,000. 20.000 foreign immigrants, 20,000 Chinese come to California. The speed wi th which settlements. grow is remarkable. 1850 President Miliard Fillmore on Sept. 9 siens (he bill . ad- mitting California as the 31st state in the Union. The only village in Orange County at this time, is San Juan Capistrano, which has grown '"1P about the mission . Otherwise, the great ranchos with their cluster of adobe buildings, dominate the scene. Partly because the forty niners are youthful and pafl· ly because their activities are so flamboyant, the gold rush era gives away g-ruditin~ly. Rapid build up o( population, wealth and substance hasten its passing. In time , th e argonauts age, and calm down The sons of the pioneers take over, gearing their .new life to the rail· r oad. 1960 William Wolf skill, a trader. and trapper from New Mex· ico, acqu ires R1ncho Lomas de S1nti1go from Yorba. In 1886, sells for $7.000 to Bixby and the Flints. James Irvine purchases in 1868 and 1876. I 862 12,155 acres of Rancho S1nti1go de S1nt1 An1, the only Spanish rancho within Orange County, are awarded to llewellyn Bixby, Benjamin and Thomas Flint. who sell to James Irvine. Settlers buy thousands of other portions. I 864 R1ncho San Jo1quin is deeded to James Irvine, Bixby, and the Flints, by the Sepulveda heirs. James Irvine later becomes sole O\Vner . \Vith in 25 years of the '49ers. the population jumps from a handful to over half a million . 1886 The original James Irvine, who had come to San Fran· cisco during the Gold Rush, dies. making a son,.James Irvine his heir. 1889 Governor \Vaterman signs the bill forming the new County of Orange. out of the southeastern part or Los Angeles County. --- 189'4 The tiUe of Rancho Lom1s d• S1nti1go, Rancho Sin Joa-- quin1 and part of Rancho Santi1go de Santa Ana,-are placed in the Irvine Company by James Irvine the. son . 1894 It's. the end of the nineteenth century -new residents exceed one million soul s . 1889 Oil, movies, autos, the real estaters, the health seeker. the orange grower. and the course of another genera· lion.culminates in the boom of the 1920's, and four mil· lion more people are added. These advances are· but a prelude for the great surge that foll ows. Airplanes. aero- space, electronics. rocketry, and by 1960. the urban- suburban explosion, and by 1970. it's eighteen millJon, enough to make California first among the states, 1971 479 years of r ich heritage ha ve unfolded since that day when Columbus started it all. Yet. another chapter 11 • about to begin on this colorful and historical land - the dediriatlon of the new, magnificent Jiarbor View Center, on part of what was Corm erly Rancho Sin Joa- quin. Jn honor or the occasion. a "Fiesta Grande" Is · planned. You will want to ht part of this Fiesta, recap. lure the spirit or the old rAncho, and possibly be part · of Its history. Adios Amigos/ t 2 Harhor Vltw C.nfer ___ w_..i_n_•_•d_•~Y~· _N_o_v_. _10~,_19_7_1 Harbor View Here 's H.;rb or Vieu · Artist's dr•"'-Di: of Sl 5 mill.Jon Harbor \'1e\\· Center is true-to-life repreu.ntauon of the 104.000·square-foot shopping center ,,·1th the d1stinct1,-e blue ti.l e roof ''hich Tuesday night held a gala champagne premier for benefit of charities of the \:irgin1a C~stle Auxiliary of l\"e.,.,·port Beach Assistance League. Center opened to 'Fie sta · Grande' Set ,J~ ........ ili'liiii'•m;•i~.· .. """'•W): "'•"•"·· '"· SAH JOAQUIN HlLl.S ioAD £ • L•r9e Selection ol .II Type F•brics Not ions • P•tterns Br•ids 'i ! . • Suppl-I le the DAILY PILOT Center Celebrates Grand Opening First Board the general public today and started three ,.., eeks of "Fiesta Grande" celebra tion. The ne"' center is accessible from San Joaquin Hllls Road on n·hich 1t fronts tsee map be;!o"') or \'ia "ne''''' ~Jac­ ,.\rthur Blvd .. \\'hich 1s extension of ford Road and curves to par- allel "old" ~lacArthur. Even before mOst stores \\'ere open for busine ss at new Harbor View Cente:. the first board of directors of center's merchants' as soci at ion posed for this "family portrait." Standing (l eft to rightl are Joe ·Pa yne of Richard's r.tarket. president; Colin West of Newport Stationers. vice president; Bill Cole of South· ern California First National Bank. treasurer: and Bob inman of the Irvine Co., secretary. Association directors 1kneeling)J are Jim Hoover of Guild Drug tleftl. r.torris ?i.Iolko of F'lot\'ers by 1i-1orri {center) and Tom Lansford of Imper· ial Hard"·are. • to O pen Newport's Harb or View Center \\'hat puts the "grand!" in the "f le5ta Grande" celthra- tion "''hich begins today as pa rt nr grand o pen i n g ceremonies at Harbor \"1rw Ctnter~ H's the prizes offered center \'1s1tors. the opposite 'd1rtetion. T"'·n othrr "amb.\ssarlors" selected by Harbor Vie~ Center "'"Ill Jrt via. \\"ei-tern Atrhnes to ~1exico C1ly, there tn pick up again the f0otsteps of Cort es as he made his \\'a~· to~·ard California from Vera Cruz. Atr California will fly still oth e r pr1ze-w1nners t"am· bassadors"! to San Diego and San Francisco, These travelers "''iii follow the chain of missions as they lead, link by link. to the developme.nt of the Cahfom1a coast . But that isn't all. Fie!'!ta Grande alsn offers other prius. lncluding ·-.. -,_, -A 15-foot Ve.nture catamaran ngged w it b mainsail and genoa -A Pan~~nic stereo outfit -Cnmplete ski o u t f i t l including the skis and ltsson! -ii lessons 11re nteded 1 \\'inners could mak! a !1!1lel/p:::i=:=======================;:===============i\: LT•" Ceu11try history~ -and they certainly S.ltri "''ill have !he opportunil~' to l ~-i~'~=m~wher~eilw~asma~de .. U--~~~1,lf-f(~lLA_D_l•-D-U-~ l=l-- H;i rbor \'iew Center's site 1 ,,,, n j l D • I I\ ' I on San Jo;iqu1n Hills Anad in lhe coastal foorhit!s o f !\e1,·port Beach is part of the l' old Rancho San Joaquin. Its past is rich in !orr and legend and Its history -fl!\ed ; "''llh names hke Corle s .I Cabrillo. Balboa. Por1ola and Strra -include~ the heritage left by the Spanish. the ~lex- 1cans and the ellrly Ca lifor- nians. All this is "Tapped up 1n thel ,R"rand opening theme -the "f1esla Grande ." After a series of "'·eek.ly prizes and e1•ents leading up to Dec. l. Fiest a Grandt y,·111 hal"e its climax on that date "''ith the award ing of 10 ma1C1r l pr!Zl!S. Thei-e 11 ill tnrlude thf' sen- d1 nJ; nf t1ro ptop!e to Spain as ambassadors to 1·1s1l and ex- plore the haunt~ nf !he ex· plorers y,·ho d1i-co1·erf'd and Optned tn settlrirs the \;i.nd on y,·h1rh Ha rhnr \"1e"· i~ located. Tht~· \\"tll rtlrace snme of \ the ear l~· steps 11! (nrtes. Cat.r1!l11. Ballxi.:t. P11rl11la and Serra in the Old \\'11rld But their 1e1t1nc ,·ia a Trans \\"nrlcl Airlines i~7 to Spatn in a ft \\' hours .,..-111 be far dif- 1 ferrnt than the rig11rousl journe~-or these earlv ex- plorers \\·hen they tra\'eled in .howard~ ( -. nutrition ~~ WE'RE SORRY FIN ER HOMES The Staff at Macnab-Irvine Rea lty Company is h•!)PY to announce the opening of the ir new office in the exciting H•rbor View Shopping Center. This wonderfu l location will heli:i us to better serve our many friends and clients from Cameo Shores to Un iversity Park, and from Eastbluff to Harbor View Hills. When you are shopping at one of the many fine stores we invi te you to drop in and say He llo. HIGH ABOVE THE BLUE PACIF IC )lagn1!1cent ,-ie\\· of Catalina & Cq,asU1ne from th1i-4 BR home. Exotic sunken pool ,,. fountam & uaterfal/. surrounded by lush tropicals for total privacy. The un derground ''1ne cellar \\ill fascln· ate the enolog1st. Call 644-6200 . S79.500 EASTBLUFF . ..\ realJ~· gorgeous fam ily home . Bea utl.fully dttOT· ated Exceptional lan dscap1n ;:: 4 BR 's. grtat FR. la.rge ~eclu ded pal10. immaculate and fre sh· throughout . $53.500 HARBOR VIE W HOMES It has all been done for you m this beauWully dee· orated 3 BR home. Ei-:peni-ive ,,·aJ J coverin gs. cu:;- tom drapes. deep ~hag carpet. bui.lt-m bookcases. ProfessionaJ landscaping and a great deal more. S47.800 HARBOR VIEW BEAUTY . .\.n adult home on a quiet street near pool & park. 2 BR. ronvtrtibl e den . Sptnish tile entr)•. quality carpeting. \1ery special buy. 54~.950. A PORTOFINO MODEL 3 BR plus "leenaie" ;oom & ba.lh. The only Porto- F1no av•tlable at this price $~7 ,50~0 111cluding fee land. R·2 LOT-CORONA DEL MAR ExceUent duplex loc1t1o n -$25.000. BA YF RONT LOTS Luxury. :'\e,,·porl Harbor lols. Pr1mE. locahon. shel· tered cove for your 45' boat slip. 50'x100' tots from S121.000. Spilt level fo r dramalic arch1teclur- aJ planning. .9 NEW IVAN WELLS CUSTOM HOMES! Ground broken for !'.I ne1,· I\11\!'\ 'VELLS custom homes in Dove.r Shores! Choose vour colors & tatlor to your desires '. For details ~'1s1t the rnodru at 2006 Galax~· Drl\·e -OR -cal! 646-1550 or 642·8235 A BIG BEAUTIFUL, SPACIOUS BAYFRONT I S BR. 5 bath. PR. gourmet k!!chen -pier & f1oat for large boat. \Vonderful closets. S169.500. Open Sat & Sun 1-5 p.m. 309 Evening Star. Dover Shore1. MULT IPLE UNITS 12 unit complex -freshly punted hi & ouL !120.000 . ,..\.LSO. a fre~hly painted 18 unit complex on 1.4 acres. ~187.500 . Call 644·6200 for deW!s. LUXURIOUS 60' ON BAY Imported Butto ns We fri ed1 but couldn't quite mak& the Fiesta Grand OF"e ning of our Pier & float !\'t\rl)' redecorated. 33 ' livmg room & ma!ter sui te Bay \ ·1 e'1" Sparkling pool. Imme- diate occupan cy poss~ble. Featurmg Din ah Shore 's .Xe~· 1\eedlepo1nt Corner pre•it visit one of our other stores. MACNAB·IRVINE llEALTY COMPANY ' . HARBOR VIEW CENTER '''' HerNr II"'., c ....... ... 1•41 MACAITHUI ILVO. 1n12 lcY'fck Dt. Ne...,_,. IMc.11 ! - 644-6200 HARBOR VIEW CENTER 1644 M•<Arthur Blvd. ' 642·1235 Ntwpert B11ch 901 Dover Drive t, • ., Who's Who At Center Disclosed FUteen new sources oC services and products were brought practically to the front door of a sizable slice of Newport Beach's ne west "suburbs" today with the of- ficial opening of the new Harbor View Center. Here's who's at the center : CAWWELL'S CANDIES P.trs. Vi Winn 1634 New ~1acArthur Blvd. Newport Beach CAMEO CLEANERS Groffe ltfurdock. 1.1gr. 1650 Ne'v fltacArtbur 81\'d. Newport Beach CHILDREN UNWMITED Evelyn Auld 1616 f\'ew ~1acArthur Blvd. Newport Beach · FLO~ BY MORR! 1'-forri 11olho 1&40 New t.·lacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach FRINGE BENEFITS 1i1ark and Sus Stoddard 1648 Ne'v t.facArthur Blvd. Newport Beach GUILD DRUG Jim Hoover, 1.1gr. 1610 New 1.1acArthur Blvd. Ne~']>Ort Beach HOWARD'S f\'UTRITION Howard Lopizich 1628 New 1'-lacArlhur Blvd. Newport Beach l?itPERlAL HARDWARE Tom Lansford, 1.1gr. 1614 New MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach MAGIC MIRROR Alice Meyers, fi.lgr. 1620 New MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach "IACNAB-ffiVINE, REALTY Tom Queen, fi.tgr. 1644 New l\facArthur Bh•d. Newport Beach NEWPORT STATIONERS Evelyn Johnson, 11gr. 1640 Ne\\' lifacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach RICHARD 'S MARKET oe ayne, fgr. 1660 New MacArthur Bh·d. r.1e\vport Beach SANDCASTLE GIFTS Don and Beverly f\1irecki 1636 N"'• lilacArthur Blvd. Ne\\-port Beach SHELL OIL CO. Tom Quintin , f\fgr . 2SOO San Joaquin Hills Road Corona del fi1ar ~CALIF. FIRST NATIONAL 8/\1\'K ·Dill Cole, r-.tgr. 1666 Ne11• ~tacArlhur Bl\"d. New·port Beach Se ville Has Gala Party Each Spring Each spring. 11·hen the hot Andalusian sun begins to make the chill.5 of v.inter only an unpleasant memory. a!J the ro&eS in the bec?:.itiful Plaza de San Fernando open their petals beneath l~e state ly palms and as the S\\'ett ora nge odors from the blossoming crchan:ls s\\·eep do\\11 t h e length of the Guadalquivir, P.11 roads in Europe tum to\\'ard Seville. For six merry. carefree. Tiotous da"s -from April 20 to 2S thi s Year -this ancient Spanish metropolis. upon \\"hich so many passing cil·H- lzations have left their mark. plays host to il3 residents and ,-isilors alike in "'hat. undoubt- edly, is one of the \\'Orld's most \\'Onderful parties. The \\'ailing songs of gypsies and the drum- beats of their heels keep the city alive. till da\\'ll. Ni~ht and day blend into one agNnst a background of castanets. Among the mcrry·maker~ next spring could be trrand prize \\rinners ol tht fiesta Grande Contest which is p.-1rl of grand opening festiv1es at Hr."'bor View Shopping Center . The grand prite is a lrin for f\l"O via Tr11ns \Vorld Airlines to the Rre3! Of origin for five Spanish c:tolorers \\'ho h lptd nncn 11n \IC\\"J)Ort Bt3ch tn e'ltb' .. ~+nrrs. One of those .,re..,s is Seville and one. of Se1·i1Je"s mO!t famous events ts the Seville Fair. Feria, mcMing fair. sug· gesu comme~ial activities. J1ut fe\V people in Stv\lle dur· Ing this traditional "'·ee.k ef 1tajety do IR)' buying O{ !Cll• ~.. . .New Gt1ild Drug State Heavy on The opening of the new the area please note, he asksJ Guild's personal interest in modern.·• 12,000-square-Coot Guild Drug he went to work in his father'! antiques is a major factor In AU antique! are n1eant to in Harbor View Center marks 11ermosa Beach pharmacy. He the "fun'' atmosphere that 'Mil along with all other the seventh in a chain of sue-threw aJJ upward cun•e into Harbor ·Al'f;a residents will ex-rnerchandise, so if you see one ces.sfully operated independent his father's business and perience on their visits to the that catches the eye. don't be drug stores. developed a $7 million per new Guild O r u g in Harbor hesitant about asking the Other Guild stores year chain ror himself. View Center. price. Manhattan Beach, NortJu'idge , Guild feels a pharmacy Guild uses antiques as There will be more. In fact, Wedntsdey, Nov. 10, 1971 Antiqt1es \·enienl'e, and sech.~sion. riien al50 will have their special departments easiJy identified as such. Its going to take a visit to demonstrate that Guild's speaks louder and bet- ter t h a n words. The o~ portunity begins today with the opening of the 11ew store's doors in Newport Beach. Redondo Beach. Torrance. must reflect -both In its ap. displays and props throughout Guild has been to Europe Cheviot Hills, and \\'estlake -peorance and in the nonheal1h the store, including the three times during the past range in siu: from 6,000 to merchandise it carries -the prescription d~partment. He is year looking for objets d'art tor========== 16,000 square feet. dignity and professionalism firmly CQnvinced the old and startle and amuse his Check the1 Mosl Don Guild is the man behind that are consistent with its new should be mingled, that customers. Htrbor Vltw c.nttr 3 WITH SALLIE the ideas and success. After basic function of providing the sum of both is mo1 pleas-\\'omen will discover that Popular New graduation in 1950 from the pharmaceutical service. As for ing than either alone. Mixlng they are catered to in Guild 's Column Alive . , NOVEMBER IO, 1971 Universily of s o u t h e r n merchandise. Guild says the kills the fussiness of the an-mini-boutique, and will ' love GUILD'S MANAGER Ca Ji for n i a School or key is high quality, good taste tique, and the coldness or con-th.e cosmetic department styl-'Checking Up' IS A VERY l, __ _:J~im~=H=oo~••~r'._~i~~P~h~a~rm~a=cy~, ~(o~l~d~U~SC~gr:•:ds~in~;•nd;;pe:rso:n:a~I ~se;v~ic:•~-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiit~em~po~r~arv~·~·~•;o ~c:r•:•:l•~·~·f;ci:end:ly~~ed~~fo~r~lh~e~fr~co~m~fo~r~t.~coin~·~iiiiiijf===11 r-.1E~iORABLE DAY ~ , HA RDWARE ? "The Home Of Qualify Products" I ' ·~ :fil\ ~~(.:iii' • • Wednesday, Nov. l·Otb . • thru Wed. Dec. 1st • Hardware Paints Housewares Ci if ts -....... -·- We 'II Stand On Our Heads To Serve You! lmperi al '1 stor•fu t of helpful •ssist- •nts sta ncl rti•dy to assist you in ell your needs! Your problt1ms l1mell or l•t9• I •r• our problems, too! II• 1614 New MacArthur Blvd. 644-8570 HARBOR . VIEW CENTER NEWPORT BEACH Complimentary gift for each visitor to our store November 10th thru Dec. 1st. HARDWARE 'Tis the day the firsL ten-, drils from the Unique Food Halls of Ivy, Rlcha1'9'1 · Lido, burst from the earth to shout, "Here I am, in Harbor View, people I love you!" LITTLE LADY APPLES PINK POPCORN BALLS F'or 23 years the name of the Richard's supermarket gan1e has been •• the king, the Tahj Mahe! •• the Food E1nporiu1n or everywhere . . • Doppte in the better things or food lore ••• peak or perfection, pr i me gourmet, top qua 11 ty, mu ltiformity, variety •• Sprinkle on the lagnaippe .• smile s , warmth, friendliness • • soft music . • courtesy, \vith service ooz ing out all over • , • Shake up, put in a pot and stir .... delovely , delicious'! Sneak a si p .. ye- um! The taste • . like the feel of mink, maybe, or the luster of fine pearls ••• the p e r f e ct wa ve,. or ridi ng the merry-go-round .• . . Name your fla vor ex- citement, you'll enchant to the big discovery. Find a dish. Pour yourse lf a brim- ful. Quiet ~·arning .• what yo u're eating is con tagious . . Once you 've had the treatment. you get the fever for more. PILLAR OF DISCOVERY HAPPINESS llOUSE S1nokcd Turkey Tidbits In exotic cream sauce from Colorado Springs cheese, hot dogs and baking powder biscuits • • • Beer and pepsi-cola or a shiny glass Pasha pipe, inspired by the Turkish Hookah, to fill the bowl and sip TurkJsb Coffee liquor through the stem •. , Reese super col- ossal Cannon Ball black olivfs .• m.a yo n n a i se, crackers, Jello-0 Bavarian cream pudding, La Victoria . .Green Taco Sauce and Gerbers Pretzels Frozen peas and TV Din- ners, rai nbow sherbet with 6 fla vors •• Chu Chu lobster rillls to gentfy heat for the end or a toothpick • • · • All the necessary good, every-Oay foods for you and you r next-door neighbor and U1e kids •• plus fresh cav~ iar. cttivas BroS Ltd. 21· ye?r-0ld Scoldl \Vhiskey, and sea scallop bisque for Lhe haute cruisine rolks. GENTLE REtiTJNOER Thr.riksgi ving bells are ringing t\vo Thursdays after tomorrow. Nam e y o u r turkey .. Swirt's Bulterball, Armor's Golden S la r , Tender Timed Norbest with pop-up ready when done thermometer, Checkerboard Honeysuckle all beautiful and frozen . , Richard 's has thetn all . , . If fres h turkey is your most wished for center o( happy family eatin g. ring the bell for Zackey , fresh, California grown ... juicy, delicious. tried and true for the past ID yea rs. Some folks order their turkeys stuffed with the Deli's own savory dressing. Some order them stuffed and roasted. Either way, lit- tle buckets of good turkey f:!ravY' go along for the Thanksgiving dinner ride • ~ PUMPKIN PIE AND PINE NUTS ••. The bakery's ready 11nd baking all the good things ... 24 Karat '1i'd is the cake of the hour .•• The produce is blooming out 1111 over with elegant fixings for {ruit platters and salad bowfs • : ' Rl CllARD'S MARKETS ARE TWO . . I h • peop(esl·IOvlng stores In Newport Beach Lido. 23 years young Harbor View brand new. ' . . : . • • .. • " I• ·' ·! '• :· • . :: " • ·: :: .. : : : : . • . . . '• ' .. - ' . • 1 • . . . • •I ' • ' --L , •• ~ • . . ~ ·: '• ' • •• I> '-• • ' , RICHARD 'S IS GIVING AWAY PRIZES WEEKLY inc:uding CHATEAUBRIAND FOR 4 L01\5TER TAILS .FOR 4 PRIME STEAKS FOR 4 TRAY OF CUSTOM HORS D'OEUVRES 10 BARBECUED CH ICKENS 3 BARBECUED SPARERIBS Enough for '4 people. I 0 SPECIALITY CAKES 10 LAYER CAKES 5 SPECIALITY PRODUCE TRAYS I 0 BAG S GRAPEFRUIT 8 BAGS FULL GROCERIES SIGN UP AT EITHER MARKET ~IRST ORA WING NO'liMBER 12, 4 P.M. FOOD CATERING A fttyful of hor1 d'o1uvre1 er• complete dinner READY -COOKED FOODS From soup to dess1rl-reedy to eet. TELEFOOD SERVICE W irt fcod giff1 ecrt11 the miles. SHIP'S GALLEY PROVISIONING Men us end food fore weekerul jaunt or e world clui11. .CUSTOM CUT MEATS From Crown rot1f1 to bon1l111 chicken tiree1t1. FREEZER MEATS·CUT TO ORDER Double wrepped and quick fro11n. GIFT CERTIFICATES CHARGE ACOUNTS HOME DELIVERY-IN OUR AREA ·?._•IOa VIP C91Tlll - -IAH JOAllJIH HILLS ROAD -' d ... .,.,, t c.,.~ .. ~ .. '-, : " ! 'i ' 1 ~ ~ ll Cot0rt• ''' ~,, ' COAIT HICHWAY I . • AD PRICES EFFECTIVE NOV. 11 , 12, 13, 14 ' rnarKetS s We're celebrating the · opening of · A glorious array of the finest t.oe our Lido store! loi•• us for fura, s _______________ .:..._ ________ ...... JI~ flifc er 1t, Jfeqj.s;" OUR MEATS ARE MAGNIFICENT-BECAUSE WE FEATURE ONLY U.S.D.A. PRIME AND FORMULA· -. . FED U.S.DA. CHOICE BEEF-THE BEST YOU CAN BUY. EACH PIECE IS INDIVIDUALLY SELECTED AND AGED FOR FL.A VOR PERFECTION! ?ACKY FARMS, CALIFORNIA GROWN, FRESH DAILY WHOLE FRYERS -33¢La. THE FINEST SAUSAGE, CHOOSE HOT OR REGULAR Jimmy Dean Sausage 69¢L •• CUT;.UP FRYERS 39¢ LI. Smoked Pork Loin Roast~:;~ 1.29La. P'trftct for chicken 1eute or c1cci1tore. Serve it with Hot Germen Pottfo Stied. HAND-CUT BREASTS -69¢LB . BAR·M BACON Re9. or thick 69¢ LI. Seuft with 1hallot1, mushrooms and crttm. Hand · Cut Chicken Legs Saute wi+h butter, onions a nd Re isling. 59¢LB. ROUND STEAK BONELESS le09LI. Select center cuts to 1ervt with t h1 erty lordetu .. wine. Chicken Livers Boneless SWISS STEAK Ot,lightful in• midni,ht 1upptr emeltt. Chicken Gizzards Brtist with some of our beauti ful f1ll ve91t1bl11. Bone-in RUMP ROAST · RICHARD'S EXCLUSIVE, FULLY COOKE D, HICKORY SMOKED WHOLE HAMS 10.12 LI. AVG. 98¢LI: A greet pot ro11t with wine , herbs end ve9et1bl11 . Boneless RUMP ROAST 1.09 LI. . . It's rolled t nd ti ed for btrbecue or roti11erie. Y2 HAMS · No center alic• ramewH 1.19 LI. EYE ROUND ROAST Boneleu 1.69La. Smoked PORK CHOPS::~ 1.39L•. W ith ptprike end sour cream-Hun91ri1n pot rc11f, Melon-cut RUMP ROAST 1.69Li: ROULADES OF BEEF 1.09 lb. lfi Stuffed GAME HEN 59¢ ea. P~h, NEW-AT HARBOR VIEW , A FANTASTIC SELECTION OF .FRESH, IN SEASON FISH. T end•r pieces ef lttn beef, rell td erownd Corni1h Gem• Hen witJ1--our lptcit l drtssinq. Whole Cornish Game Hen 79¢ ea. • 1p•ei1I p1r1l-ty drt11in9. · PRIME Chateaubriand 3.98 lb. The fin11t you ctn buy-U.S.D.A. Prime. A ldngly feast flamed with cc9n1c. Grtdt A. 22 01. minimum weight. Choose just the pie ce you w1nt t~ complete your menu, and we'll wrap it up for you! S()UABS 1.69 ea. MARINATED DUCKLINGS 98¢ lb. To 9ltz• with crtOtpplt jelly & Cointre•u. Half 1 Leng lsltnd Duckling in• superb or1n91-1h1rry 11uc1. Long Island Duckling• 79~ lb. As Avoiloble: CHICKEN BALLOTINE 79¢ ea. Serve with 1e uteed pot1tot1, Cebtrnef. Pompano, terrapin, oyster.s in s~ell, clams in shell, baby octopus, sc1llops, belluga caviar ind more! 8ont l111 chicken stu ffed with wild rice & mushrooms-or 1ppl111uc1 e nd mu11'1room1. SWEETBREADS 98¢ lb. El19tnt with red e1bb191 11l1d and • Pinet Noir. THERE'S ALWAYS SOMETHING MARVELOUS A-BAKING IN RICHARD'S IN-STORE BAKERY KITCHEN-BREADS, PIES, CAKE, COOK IES. SH THEM OECORA TE CUSTOM CAKES, TOO ! FLAKY PASTRY WITH A SPICY APPLE FILLING .•. APPLE DANISH PASTRY 2 FOR 29¢ MINCEMEAT, LAYERiO WITH PUMPKIN. TOPPED LAVISHLY WITH WH"PEO CREAMI HARVEST PIE 2.19 MAKES A MARVELOUS SANDWICH Cheddar CHEESE BREAD 47¢ WITH POPPY OR SESAME SEEDS ON TOP , • , Seeded Dinner Rolls 6 FOR 29·~ · LIGHTLY SWEET, WITH FRESH CRANBERRIES AND NUTS Cranberry Nut Loaf 1.19 WHO. CAN RESIST THESE1 Blueberry Muff ins 6 ,OR 69¢ NEW CROP, "CREST BRANO" JUICY TEXAS RUBY REC GRAPEFRUIT FRESH, SWEET "ROYAL HA WAllAN" PLANTAT ION RIPENED PINEAPPLE STUFF WITH CURR IED SHR IMP! DIRECT BY AIR FROM HA WAii, SWEET, FRAwRANT PAPAYAS 3 FOR $1 FOR OMELETS , SALADS, STEAK S, SPAGHETTI ANO ••. 1 FRESH, HOT HOUSE GROWN, BROWN STEAK VARIETY 'MUSHROOMS 'h LI. KRAFT'S AMBROSIA , FRESH FLA VO RFU~ FRUIT SALAD · 16 OZ. JAR HARBOR VI EW CENTER 1660 Mac Arthur, Newport Beach 673-2155 OPEN DA ILY 9 -8, SUN . 9 - 6 t -. • . ._ "-... ~ ~·. . . . .. Wednetday~ov._I0._1971 1 Harbor Vliw\ Cent•~ --- I rfllCHARD'S II· AT HARBOR VIEW with a gala 3 ~k Fiesta GratadeZ d ita a beautiful new 11iarket. You'll even see sonae old frietads from , savings, atad super pri:es!! ... ,.·. r---------------------------- i '· ' fjroceIJ l16JLde1iaJLdJ .. ~· . . . YU,BAN COFFEE I That's only 76c 1 pound-wow.) YUBAN COFFEE YUBAN COFFEE • RICHARD'S AA LARGE EGGS Sunshine KRISPY CRACKERS ARDEN AA BUTTER KERN 'S 3 LI.-2 29 • 1 LI. J LI . 79¢ 1.57 3 ooz.$1 ' "· 29¢ ' "· 83¢ STRAWBERRY Preserves 20 oz. 39¢ Betty Crocker Noodles Romanoff s•1, oz. B.etty Crocker . Noodles Almondine •oz. 39¢ 39¢ 39¢ 39¢ Betty Crocker Noodles Italiano Betty Crocker Strogenoff Mix Betty Crocker CAKE MIX SPRECKELS SUGAR · 'oz. 11/1 oz. ALL •LA.tots lforSI S LI. • Free orchids for all the ladies with tho compliments of Spreckles. (Thurs. t. Fri. Harbor View only.) AMERICAN BEAUTY CURLY RONI REESE CALIFORNIA ARTICHOKE BOTTOMS Sunsweet Pitted PRUNES Spencer Suffted Queen Olives I OZ. PKG. 10~ •oz. 99c " oz. TINS l for s 1 71/1 oz. 59¢ ·.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .... P@t 1Lo1@ 'Frozeri STOUFFERS SALE 39¢ PKG. CHOOSE ANY OF THESE : M1c1roni and Che111, I Z or. Sp in1ch Soufflt, Corn Souffle, Pot1te11 Au Gr1tin, Noocfl11 Romtnoff, Brocceli Au Gr1tin or Esc1llop1d Appl11-J9c ••· T reesweet ORANGE JUICE Birds Eye Strawberry Helves Morton HONEY BUNS • oz. '' oi. 'oz. SforSl 49¢ 29¢ Downeyfla.ke Waffle.s 10 oz. 4 FOR $) . Birds Eye Pees end CARROTS Birds Eye PEAS Birds Eye CUT CORN C&W Vegetables Monterey 11 oz. 11 oz. •• oz. 6 for $1 6for$1 6foc$1 10 OZ. 3 FOR $) \ C&W y.'hole Beby CARROTS "oz. . lfor$1 RICHARD'S FAMILY PACK, ALL FLAVORS ICE CREAM 1(, GALLON 69¢ 12.~ LID.O/G NTER ' CRISCO sHORTeHING GOLD MEDAL FLOUR Wilshire Whole Sweet Pickles LINDS.., Y RIPE l LI . I LI. IA6 JJ oz. 49¢ 49¢ -PITTED-GEM OLIVES 'oz.4 FOR S1 S&W BARTLETT PEAR HALVES S&W APPLESAUCE S&W Smell Whole YAMS S&W Golden Creem Style Corn S&W Deloro Whole Kernel Corn S&W RED 17 oz. 1• oz. 17 oz. 11 or. '' oz. 3for$1 5for$1 l forSl Sfor$1 5for$1 Sockeye SALMO.N 7'4 oz. 69¢· S&W MEDIUM PEAS S&W Stewed TOMATOES . S&W 17 oz. '' oz. Sfor$1 SforSl Oven Baked BEANS 21 oz. 3 FOR$) S&W Cut Green BEANS S&W Red KIDNEY BEANS "oz. 4for$1 ""' oz. 6forS1 HEINZ 1 .. 1/1 oi. Great American SOUPS s FOR$) GROUND COFFEE FILTER RINGS MAX-PAX 10 RINGS DISHWASHER DETERGENT CASCADE 35 oz. AN EPICUREAN SELECTION OF FOODS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD-CHEESES, FISH, MEATS. "CKLES AND SO MUCH MOREi RICHARD'S OWN, HOT, READY TO EAT, WHOLE Barbecue CHICKENS IA. 1,29 WISCONSIN AGED-- Sharp Cheddar Cheese FISHERMAN'S WHARF ROQUEFORT DRESSING LI. • oz. FISHERMAN'S WHARF, Green Godde11, Lovi t, Hor1tf•di1h Stuce, Sour Cretm, Tartar, Cockttil or lo-Ct I. 89¢ 49~ DRESSINGS •oz. 35¢ HARRY & DAVID Preserves, Jems end Jellies Crown Brend SWISS FONDUE OSCAR MAYER ALL MEAT "oz. 69¢ 140Z. 1.19 BOLOGNA 12 oz. 59¢ FRENCH CHEESE SALE ... 59¢ Oorm1n'1 IONIEL 1emi0 1oft t 11. L1ughin9 Cow CHEEZllTS 4 11. Solt ,ORT SALUT 7 01. Claude! IRIE or CAMEMBERT 41/1 ot. Otm~Thur1 ., Fri., Sat.-loth Stores. 3433 Vi a Lido , New por t Bea ch.! • 673-6360 ) • MORE PRIZES! Besides .,11 the wonderful prixes Richard's is giving ..) awey each week , the HARBOR VIEW MERCHANTS are 91v1ng Trip for 2 to Sp.,in - Trip for 2 to Mexico Air Trips lo Sen Diego, and Sen Francisco. 10 MAJOR PRIZES PLUS DOZENS OF SMALLER PRIZES Collect entry tickets es you shop al Harbor View. Save them for the Grand Drewing Wed . evening -Dee. I HOME & GIFT SHOP Three levels of lovely home app-ointments, gourmet cooking accessories, ind whimsical gilt idoas. LIDO YACHT SHOP A charming shof) tucked awey on the mar· ket upporded, devoted to nautical gifts end 1ctiv1 sportswear. COFFEE SHOP A cozy spot to meet 1 friend, h1v1 lunch , or grab a snack. Such a pleasant place to take a brtak in shopping. 'Flower £f 1<?)J GOLDEN YELLOW CLUSTERS DRIED YARB_OW Th• l•rgest 'it• to b• found- ju1t •rrivtcf! REG. JOc EA. 20~ EA. Wo have• wonderful, wood•y arH devoted to dried, 1Hv1$, pods, and flowers , THE LARGEST SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY! , OPEN DAILY9 -7, SUN . 9 - 6 .. • I Harbor View Ctnler Wodnt1d1y, Nov. 10, 1'971 I I -1 , ~1 J . "-~ .J Ti11ie 0 111 Ca ught in their "gelting·ready·to-open" clothes are some of Harbor Vi ew Cen· tcr's n1erchants a couple of da ys be fore the center's opening. Taking time out to pose are (left to right) l\1 ark and Sue Stoddard of fringe Benefits; Jeff l\lur· dock. Cameo Cleaners: Evelyn Auld . Children Unlimited; James CaldweU, CaJd· \veil Candi es; and ·non Mirecki, Sandtastle Gifts. Fabric Store Has The new hibnc: store I\ ith nC\\' m2.lcria)j Wt lh the 1he antique look at Harbor .. NO\\I" look displayed on the View Center has all kinds of "THEN'' look butcher blocks. It · All hoos1er cupboards. wash tubs , and the like. Also a complete line of -notions, threads, zip· pers. plus Bulterick. Vogue . and Simplicity patterns, lo show you how to put them to ' Imperial Stores' .. o~;~-~f·1~pe;i~'1"Sto;~;; Callpatfia a~d Yuina. and . newest ouUet at Harbor View distributing warehouse in El .. Centro. Center is a matter of coming In the l930s a further~:1· full circle for the longtime pansion occurred with t1l_e California rttail operation. purchase of a store in Long ·Tom Lansford tis-been -Beactrin 1937 and a store in named manager·of the newest Indio in 1939. in a series of stores which had With the advent of the '50s their beginnings in t he additional expansion occurred Imperial Valley just alter the with a new store in Redlands. tur.n of the ce ntury. in 1950 and a new one in · Imperial Hard.,.,·are Com· Blythe in 1953. pany was formed in Holtville, Jn 1959 the company bought Calif .. in 1908 by Howard P. the O. R. Westbrook Co. in Meyer and Gec.rge w. Ander-do\l:ntown Riverside and son . These two former whole-Carlos Worrall moved there to sale hardware.salesmen pur-manage the store. chased the slOre of King L. Now, the '70s are here and Kendle. It was, o· gene r a I the Imperial Stores are rising store c a r r y i n g some dry to meet the challenge. goo d s, groceries and hard-In September of this year ware . Since they were in-Imperial Stores opened its terested primarily in the first outlet devoted exclusively · hard\\.'are business they later to furniture and home a~ sold all but the hardware side plince.:; in El Centro and its of their business. first "large shopping center" At the end of 1923 the com-outlet v.·as opened in pany was success f u 11 y RiverSide's Tyler ~fall ln operat ing eight retail stores, October. Thls is an exclusive Holtville, Calexico. Bra1vley, gift .and houseware store. El Centro. Seeley. Imperial , Imperial Stores records Newport Stationers New Branch Newport Stationers, Inc. fThe West family) branches out into a nev.· kind of sta. Opens Sandcastle Browsing good use . Of very special pride is the tionery operation today with secretary and vice president and treasurer, respectively, joined the firm before the se- cond stor"tWas opened. Supprtmtnt lo tht DAILY PILOT Newest Store Opens another firSt' with ·1t5 0pe;tini h8°.:dw~.:e ·~·~fih~·g;~~i~g· for ~g~~~;th .which wouJJ rilSI in the Harbor V i e w Center. throngs of Valley ranchers. the nun1ber of Imperial Stores 'I1lis is 91J.r first outlet in a Within five years, the to 17 in many Southern Cali• ''neighborhood 1 b op p i n 1 business had been er~nded to fornia and Southwestern Ario center" and our f irs* other Imperial Valley com-zona communities in the en-· hardware, housewares and gift multities, fanning a pattern suing years. store. liF;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;i;;;;iiii;i7'~;;~;:::~------, "This expansion reflects a trend toward changing merchandising methods within our stores toward specializa· lion," John Kearney, Imperial Stores president said. But, in one sense, tht trend toward specialization aboUt which Kearney speak& is a return on an expanded basis to the original concept of the Imperial Stores. When the late Howard P. Meyer and Charles W • Anderson founded the business in 1908 with a single store in Holtville, Calif. they prhnarily were i!J,terested in serving the Featuring the Finest, Hand- Dipped ' Chocolates, ' Specialty Handmade Candies and Party Favorites. CANDIES Here is a shop that the browser will appreciate. It 's Salldcast!e Gifts and it's chuck full or a little bit of this and that to lntrigue all ages. of a new exeerience for Bever· ly and Don l\lireCkl-jn the~ retail business world. It 's a ftllfillment of a drearn for Beverly. a Corona de! ri.1ar ·native, to operate a store of :;ection devoted to braids and the grand opening of the com· ribbons. and as new as the pany's newest branch -the store it.self is the umounce-store at 1640 MacArth·1r Blvd .. ment that Fringe Benefits will in Harbor View Cente.r. The new Harbor View store will be managed by Evelyn Johnson. whop~e v iousl y 1,,,_ operated a stationer's at 328 --'------THE VERY FlNEST------ 16)4 M1eArthur Blvd. -H1rbor View Center N. Newport Blvd. IMPERIAL'$ MANAGER She brings her expertise.jn_~~~T~•;m:~L~•n~s~l:•~•d:...i;;;~:==:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the field of "social stationery" ----=- French and gourmel cookware, Emalia Palumba Ceramics. decora tive home accessories, an old-wood burn· ing porcelain stove from Belgium. all kinds of kitchen utensils and an assortment of crystal, these are o n I y samp\es\if what you'll find in this lovely shop. this nature. Don 's game is missiles. He is presently employed at Philco Ford. For 10 years he was employed at Lompoc, helping to send those spectacular sights Into the \\"estern twilight skies. Jf the shop launching is comparable lo One of those displays, their success \\"ill be unequzJed. have a "Dinah's Comer" feat-Sylvia \\'est, now president uring needlepoi nt designs by of Newport Stationers. Inc., the noted star Dinah Shore. opened the family 's first store Fringe Benefits ovmers in December. 1964, at 328 l\1ark and Sue Stoddard are Newport Blvd. The second sailing off into their fi rst ven-store was opened in July, 1967 ture into the sea of fabric. at 4229 Birch St.. v.·hich now l\f2.nned with scissors and cut· serves· as headquarters and ·ling table, they \viii offer in the main store for the three- addition to their line of great,_ store Ne1vport Beach opera· fabric!f fri endly "d o1vn home" tion. to the new shop. Previously, the West family's tQ;h_ $ - stores have specialized in W fulfilHngneedsofcomm"cial GRAND OPENING'. Sand castle Gifts is the first and office customers only. Now they will offer "social • stationery" at Harbor View. -A Luxurious ··New Assisting in the new sl<"e is Lyn Fritz who came from • d • f 1 s .. ntwood, Calif., to join the Kin 0 Beauty Sa on Nell'port Sfationers staff. sl'rvice. helpfi.il advice and Barry 'J'. \Vest and Colin C. suggestions. \vest, vice president and Macnab-Irvine Firm See yo urself in our exclusive 1 Magic' Mirror• , AT LAST! Bas ed at Harbor View Seven of the 27·member residential sales staff of !\tac· nab-Irvine Realty Company are stationed in the company's ne\\• offices at Harbor View Center. Committee of Chapman College, a member of the Lin- coln Club, Irvine Coast Coun- try Club and the Balboa Yacht Club. In 1967 he was presi dent or the Ne1vport H a r b r Cha1nber of Commerce. In 1008, he '«-•as Realtor of the year for the Newport Harbor I Board of Realtors. · '1 wearing the newesl coifs ... then choose the one 1ha1 suits you best. • f rom this vantage poinl they will serve customers in· terested in developments in the area for \11lich Macnab· Irvine is the exclusive agent. These properties include : Big Canyon, Ivan Wells and Soos' Dover Shores and ''ac htsmao's Cove Bayfront Homes. J\1acnab-lrvine also has of· fices al 901 Dover Drive in Newport Beach. Caldwell's Sweet Place Jim and Helen Caldwell , owners of the new candy store in Harbor View Center, have operated a similar store in \Vhittier !or the past five years. Magic Mirror Analysis including ~ Shaping, Protein Shampoo & Set, $9 . .!/' SPECIAL THIS WEEK . ~ /)/ Early Fall Frosting,( {-y $17,50 co mplele "'\ i WE'VE MOVED OUR FASHION ISLAND STORE NOW AT THE NEW HARBOR VIEW CENTER John Macnab is a native of Scotland. lie 1vas actively engaged in re;~ estate in Scotland and the Bahaina Islands before coming to Newport Beach in 19~. At that time he became a prin· cipal representative for Macco Corpora tion and subsequently. J\:111cco Realty Company. rn add ition to working v.•ith l\1acco ' Realty on the Irvine Terrace, Cameo Highlands a n d Cameo Shores developments. Macnab \\1as sales executive for Dover Shores, a develop1nent of 31 t luxury homes built on the west 11horeline of the upper Nev.•port Bay. They ·will have one of the most complete Jines of tine, hand-dipped chocolates, home· n1ade specialties and party candies available anywhere. The manager, ~1rs. Vi Winn of Nev.•port Beach. formerly \Vith Richard's l\>larkel. will be I on hand to welcome her many MagicMirrorBeautySalons l\1acnab ~is presently presi· dent of the Orange County Coast Association. a member of the Presiden t's Advi:sory PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANING BY friends and customers. ' Ed Smith, with over 40 years experience as a master candy maker, along with hnnd- dippers, eac h with many years' experience, will pr o v i d e : chocolates made in the old tradition with emphasis on the highest quality. You w i 11 ahvays be welcome al Caldwell 's. CLEANERS 1650 NEW _Mac-ARTHUR BOULEVARD HARBOR VIEW CENTER ·-- • •• • Open Monday through Seturd1y Phone for an appointment: 64 .. ·8040 1620 New Mac:Arthur Blvd. Harbor View Shopping Center San Jo1quin Hills Rd. 1t New M•cArthur NEWPORT BEACH ' NEWPORT BEACH -- ) I ,· ' . . . ---· -.. • .. •upplemenl lo the DA ILY PILOT Wednesday, Nov. 10, 1971 Harbor View Center ·c ·hildren Unlimited Shop Unique Old and New Mexico { • • • City Boasts :hi of Its Own I Children Unlimited offers the unusual combination of professional chi Id ren 's bairst}'ling and top lines ol ap. pinl, beautifully 1ituated in t Flowers by uniqut shop especially desi1n- ed for the purpose. Hairstylist Fran Gesswein. well-known to local parents, ls a !~year veteran in chlldrtn'1 Morri To Shift Location "Flowers SJ)'ak L o u d e r Than Words." This is Ole slogan you will bf: hearing more and more as Fkl\~·ers by ~1orri, Inc. moves itS fashion Island Shop lo a la;ger location in the new H.i rbor Vi~w Shopping Center, frtsh nowtrs will he fe,tured -from the garden type marguerite daisies to glamorous orchids al)d an· thUrium flown direclly from Hawaii. Attractively designed artificial and dried... ar- rangements as well as distinctive gift items also will be di splayed. palit August won intern.1lional acclaim as third priie v.•i.nner in competition 2J the Florists' Telegraph De I i ver y Co n- vention in Vancouver, B. C. He has participated and v.·on many awards in the Las Floristas annual Headdress Ball in Beverly Hills And I closer to home ) the Bal Mas- que Headdress Ball i n Fullerton. He is ·a ch<'lrter rriember of the Amtrica n lnsli tute of Floral Designers. f.1orri's son Rand v will ffianage the new shop. 0He has inherited his dad's talent for de.siJ(ning and is . fully com- petent in all phases of f\ori stry. He has been working with his father si nce 1961 wit h three years out for military service. Randv will ha ve Betty Hoeffliger and f.1ona Scott as his well qualified c<Hiesigners. Morri rlow has two shops - hairstyllng ~·ith six years in the Bullocks Pasadena Children's Hairstyling Shop. Miss Frances, .1S l he children call her, always seem!! lo bring out the best in her young patrons. A special play 11rea featuring crtative plaything s helps to entertain the younger ones. Apparel line! include Pic- colino o( Italy, Hang Ten. Chips and Twigs, Levi's and Harbor Shell Off, Runnin g Harbor View Shell got a run- ning start on the rest of the merchants opening in the new llarbor Viev.• (.enter on San Joaq ui n Hill! Road. In I.he cnuple .of months it has been open the statioh h a s demons trated lo rel\idents in the area, the type of service IQ expe<;t. Consequently, the fill- ing station has become busier by th~ week. New, modern equipment and trained courteous personnel offer complete aul0n1otive care. Specialists in the tuneup , brake work, and air con- ditioning plus a complete guaranlet of all prod ucts and services. should meet eve ry customer 's satisfaction. Jane Copeland and olh,.rs. Infants to size 12 can be llC· om moda ted in both boys' and girls' clolhes. The design of lhe slore presented a real chllllenge, ~owever Designer J:l9n Brown of Environments in NewPQrt Beach took the challeni:e in stride anct his design Is already receiving outstanding comment. . O"·ner Evetffer\Auld, herself a mother of ·thfee, has long been associated with an ap- p;irel shoit. and more reeently I '\'Ith a children's hairstyling shop-Little Guys 'N Dolls i11 Costa t\.1esa. It was her idea to combine the '"'O services in a ·Specially designed shop, and she has been planning and perfecting the concepl (or the past year. ti-tanager Linda Sc hw;irtz has been helping with the pla nnfng and buying, and is lookin'g forwar·d to opening da y wh'en the fun begins. 1'he re·s more ! For the rirsl 10 da ys as a special memento. Children Unlimited offers ii beautif ul 8xt0 natural l'Olor portrait or your child ab!iolule- ly fi-ee. This is ;1 top quality profession.:il portrait ynu'll ireasure forever. All you have lo do is phone for an ap- pointment in ad\'ance. Dial 641-08.111. ' ' OPEN THIRD STORE IN HARBOR AREA Howard •nd Joyce Lopiiich Nutrition Speciali sts Ope n 1~heir 3rd Store Hov.·ard and Jo}ce Lopizirh have just openci:I & """' Ho"•ard 's Nutrition at Harbnr View Cente r, !heir third stnre in the Harbor Area to open since 1967. Since the first one was cst<1blishcd LrT Costa Mesa, the stores have special ized in he;ilth foods ;ind rcla1ed prn- ducls, all dispensed in 11n at· n1nsphere reminisccnl of the old-fashioned and ra the r EurCl- pean a!mnsphere of the ''coun- try store." The ne\\'e.st store IS, BC• cording In Jn.1·t•t and Hov.·ard . the . "n1osl intri1;uiri1(' of the three 1 tht .~l'COnd one !:i; 11t. Bay~i(le C'entef \ and i~ under direcfinn nf Harnld Fcq:1u11on, ;is n1anflgcr. Drav.·ing no th e b;n·ki:rounds nf both ihl"':ird I c n 11r1Z r phartnary 1 and Joyce (hn1ne economics1, !he Hnwa rd ·s stores offer a wide selection of "·ho le J:rain breads, fresh j u i r es, vegetables. milk, cheese. yn J:url. meats, honP~'.~. rooking ulen~ils. cosmetics. vita mins and even "heallh" books. Charm ri.111ch Qf ~if!xico City's 50metlmes frusjraling, nev.t .. ' faM:\n11tlon Is In the !!tllrtlinl{ dull, and ever Latin. A~ Intrusion or modern no an· alt , it i.~ international. Sp)~ clenl. The walls of an old h1ns turn out by the thousartar Aztec bulldlng may !!land to see Spanish mal~dnrs, within sight of the Presidential Americ11n boxers and Soutll Palace, buill by the Spanish, American soccer tea in I ; and !hake IQ the beat of some motorists dri ve A me r"i ca 11 or the wortd'11 he a v i est, cars. women wear French wildesl automobile traffic. fashions: a top rock 'n roll A1•enuts of !his oldest city in the. Western Hemisphere are broad and green with trees. C:rntlen1en, long at lunch in sidewalk cafes. ogle the stroll- by of son-.e of the world's most beauli(ul and styli!h "'onien. Lovers wander through huge Chapullepec Park: bettors forever crov.·d the ifipodrome R11ce T r a c k: ambassadori?J limousi nes glide t b rough eleAant wooded dis tricts. Wesler"n Air Lines's hi· lingu11I staff .<!AYll it 's difficult In go In 11 party v.•here fewer 1h ;in lhr"ce language.<! ar"e spokeil. fi!lg"ht life -ahounds 1 with n1usic everywhere: in hotels. bars. restaurants and on the streets. There are almn.~I as man.v ;irt galleries a~ there are fill· ing station.<! in Mexicn. t\1ex ico City is charming. vibrant, cosmopol i t1n . ~f~~!{ is .. ~:ch, q"u':!n!~e 1•; , Norwegian. When Cortez, the Spanish <:onquisLador. first saw the~ Valley or MexicQ from a _: nrighboring hillside, it was a huge lake. On an island in the. center, rose a stone paJace and temples of the Aztec Empire. The waters are now gone er· cept for I he veget11tion-fring~ canals that make up the fl oating gartiens of Xochi .. -.. milrn. There. J11mall boats, each outfitted with one small table to make them noating restaurants, glide back and forth. Thus, Mexico's a n c i en\ capital. now ils moder n ca p; t 11: I , offers man~, f.1scinating si11hti'I for Its visitors ·from the United Slates. The shop is new but the na,me has been around si nce 1950. J\torri Malho. presiden t anrl rounder. started hls busi-n~s in Balbna as a one-man operation -hi!! goal being lo provide his cu.~tomers with the personal tou ch. He n n w eniploys 16 people whn are equally devoted to that goal. the main store located at 44Rll-----------------------------------------------------------------,- Over the ve;:irs ~1nrri h;i.~ become recn°gnized as one of the leading floral designers in Southern California and this E. 17th St., Costa Mesa and he has chosen the Harbor \1iew Center for his second loc ation to better serve the rapid ly ex- panding C-Orona de\ ~1ar-Irvine area. First National Bank Opens Newest . Branch Southern California First National Bank toda y .opened it! "'"'est office. according lo an announcement by George L. \Voodford. executive vice president. Known as the Harbor View Off ice this new facility offers drpositors all of the un iqut services and. ron· veniences tha t characterized the former Newport National Bank, plu!! much more. There will be free checking for the li fe of the account with a minimum Qf $100, or more. sit-do"'" banking for a 11 cu! Io me rs, day , • long refreshment~. cus1nmer ad- ding machines, cash reserve accounts. ne\\' •·write YDUr O\\'n loan" ser\'ice. Master Charge, person~I investment counseling, and nu1.ny other services not usually find in· most banks. - In add itio n. this ne\v offi ce also offers Vista Dr l v e · NEW BANK MANAGER Bill Cole ThrQugh Banking. with two lanes to serve the hurried customer, and with special hours from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. f.1onda y through Friday. and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday. The new Harbo'r View Office becomes the 71st office to be opened by Southern California First Nati onal Bank, one of the oldest financial inslitut ionl! in CAiiforn ia. Started in 1883. this bank has grown rro m one office and assets of $.l().000 to 71 offices and asse ts of over $700.000.000. The unusual new f:icilily lolals 4.850 square feet and was desig ned by the noted \Villiam Ficker, AJA , of Newport Rea ch. Alden Johnson is president of the bank, <'Ind is he11d- quarlered in San Di e g n . Genri:e L. WOOdfnrd is located in Newport Beach. The new office manager will be Rill D. Cole. who brings 10 years or di versified hilnking tn his new position . He has bee.i \\'ilh Newport National Bank for 1he past s i ,i: years, most recently as as..c;istant \'ice presidenl in charge of loans and office operations at the University Off ice in Fullerton . He attended Lllng Beach Stale College and Denver Univtrsity, specializi ng in busi ness admin istration. He has also taken numerous courses \Vhich were offered by the A.l.B . In his new capacity as branch . ma n 11 g er . his respo nsi bilities will encompass all personnel and oper.1lions of the new hank office. He is married. and is the fathr r or a son :ind two daughters. An avid sports enthusiast. he pl.1ys golf. bowls. and fishes. NEWPORT STATION ERS • Engraving and Printing. • Imparted Cards . • Office and School Supplies • Adult Games • Desk Accessories I b4b M•cArthur • H•rbor Vi\w Center 644-8444 •lio 328 Old N1wport Blvd. N1wporf Beach 6~2-lfla • 422' Birch St. N1wport Bt•~h 557°9212 TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ W e D•re You . ~very s.turd•y \ ( I,' E " . • • GRAND OPENING HARBOR VIEW OFFICE, WED. NOV. 10 tick-te-ek Just for opening your NEW PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT or for SECURING AN INSTALLMENT LOA~ Either way, here is your opportunity to check the right time, the easy, courteous way. Receive your choice of a beautiful decorato r clock. • e of Charge ••• for opening your new erson checking account for $100 or more r to slarting a new installment loan of $1 ,000 o mor . ualifying installment loans are: Home Improvement, Automobile, Mobile Home, Boat, Airplane, or Personal Loans. Add to the decor of your living room, den, kitchen, bedroom or office wilh these special ly designed el~ctric Decorator Clocks. There is a slight additional charge for clocks B and C. PRESENT DEPOSITORS may buy these fabu· · lous clocks at a cost that's hard to be lieve! It's our way of saying "thank you" for being a depositor at Southern California Fir$1 National Bank. One per fam!ly. SOUTHERN CAUFORNIA FIRST NATIONAL BANK ffdl ~,,._.,,If llt,GOt . ..;... f.t .l,C. HARBOR VIEW HILLS OFFICE MACA RTHUR BLVD. (New) and PACIFIC VIEW DR1\IE (off $1" Jo.quin HiU1 Rd. at Harbor Vlft ShoJ)Pll'll Cents) Newport Beach/ Phone (714) 644-8511 .. .. .. ., . ·- .-r 1 I ' ' ...J Ii I , I HerMr Vftw Ctnttr Wedn11d1y1 Noy , 10, 1971 -··~-""-'-"-'---"-'-"-=-=-c:..:c_~-'-:..:..:C:..:.::.::.'-"...:.:::.::_:c:!...:..:..:. Supplomtnl lo tho DAILY PILOT (Dick _ Richard -I B·eiieves • lll City New Richards Market Chief Goals ! • ! Ttll someone that t he. ;.. 1rocery (Ricbard '1) at Harbor i View Center ha11 a crystal i' chandelier and they may have 1, trouble be.lieving your story. l But It's true. And !rs part ot • lhe payoff on one man's ?Jissessment of the city he : •Chott to bt his own . : • jjll you bel ieve in a town : •like Newport Beach , Newport ~ Beach will believe in you." ; Twenty.three years ago. on : March 17. 1941. 0 .W. (Oick 1 I ruchard s m i I e d "Welcome 1 Aboard'' to the first friend who walked through the doors I or Richard's Market. It stood 1 alone in tht middle of several I square bl~ of sa nd. ~ Its only neighbors were a real estate office, a theater. one dress shop and a small • restaurant. · Lido Isle, two ' blocks of weeds away, was : sparsely built. City Hall "'as under construction. LOL! sold for $3.200. Neighboring people said it was the market that had no business opening, the market lhat couldn't happen. But it did . Dick Richard and his wire Jennie arrived in California in 1934, he with six years teaching experience behind him in C-OSl accounting and business administration at Oshkosh Business College in Wisconsin . Thoughts of goin~ i n I 11 business. "To see if the prin- ciples I'd been teaching all these years really work ed," made Dick's eyes sparkle. Bul 'what business? He chose the grocery business because he 'loved people and because ·he , could see lots or room for in1· provemenl. He flipped the cans and carrots on the Ocecin front by McFadden Pier for '14 years , learning and rhaking friends before lhe opportunity opened to build his own market. The past 2.1 years have un· folded a beautiful '?r. story for people who enjoy the ex· tras, the pleasanlries that come ~·ith making food shop- ping an experience you ~·ant experience over and over again. Richard 's is a gathering place with plenty of service, friendliness, heart warming • smiles. and music. Yes, even back in 1948. the office crew took their tum at fl ipping the stacks nf 78's. To- day a Hammond or g a n 11 ere n ad es from the fertnl department managers. mezzanine. Here's your chance to meet Over the ye ars. Richard's them and find out about their has coru;tanlly been on the go background: to make itself more appealing, NORM fl N H 0 W A R 0 , more .;onvenient. and more delicatessen manager, has u~to-date for people. \ worked his way up through the Jn \967 Richard's became 1 ranks at Richard 's Lido. Thir· wholly o w n e d autonomous teen years ago he started as a subsidlary of Arden-Mayfair, boxboy, while a I t e n d in g Inc. 23 years old in know·how Orange Coast College. While but young in ideas, the mark:el-matrieulati.ng at ~an~e Coast that made something happen and attending Cahforn1a Slate in the world of foods, College at Long Beach, where his 'major was music, then business. he also washed pots and pans and did cleanup in the delicatesserL Next he graduated to salads. then clerk, and finally In 1965 became manager. He is mar- ried l'>'ith one 6-vt>ar-Old son. He has spent a· lot of time working out the steam counter and the kit chen in the new Har bor View store, and has had a big hand in putting it together. And the newest Richard's, the one at Harbor View Center. figures to follow very closely in the footsteps of the original. • ·A great part of the success he has enjoyed, Dick Richard would be the first to &'.'.lmit, M: putting his faith in the people around 'him. At Harbor View, he's putting his (ailh in Joe Payne as manager and in several dif· 'Mirror' Moves In At Cenrer c:ood news for women in· Lereslcd in liie latest hair fa s.hions and expert hair care . ~1agic Mirror comes lo Newport Beach. One or .a group or beauty salons known throughout the state or Ca lirornia for qual ity hairstyling atr ea so n ab 1 e prices, the new Magic Mirror is located at 1620 New ~·l;icArlhur Boulevard in !he H11rbor View Shopping Center. You're invited to come and meet the slarr of award -win· ning hairstylists headed by Owner·fl.1anager Mrs. Alice Meyers. A master sylist herself. Mr.s. Ptteyers is well acquainted with every pha se of the beauty business. In this relaxing and gracious atmostihere . women ca n enjoy an Air Comb styling, a nature wave. a "Christmas Package Perm." or other specialities of the .house.· · A unique fe ature of !h is salon is the actu2J f\.1agic Mir· ror, a TV·like device which allO\\'S the viewer to see In ad· v11nce how she will look in a different hairstyle. DALE DUITON. bakery manager, has worked in Richard's Lido Bakery for 15 years. He has been manager for eight years. He is married and has a son and three grandchildren. Dale has come up through the bakery ranks. He began by washing pots in a bakery in Hutchinson, Kan ., and worked his way up to manager. He was lured by the weather to California where he wa~ in the retail and wholesale donut business until he came to Richard's. He likes :lo work out in front decorat ing cakes.· He loves people a n d makes many friends while derorating, he says. His famous 24 Karat Gold cake originated in Iowa has been at the top of the popularity lists for the past 5 years. 'He feels the bakery ;:it Richard's is his own, and he has completely planned the new bakery at Harbor View. JOHN TIMMONS, liquor department manager. ha s worked · two months a t Richard'~ Lido. l.ast. job was "'ilh Leo's Quality Foods in Orange County. While \\'Ith Leo'11 he became very in· terested fn the field of wine so he worked on the side al Harold Kloke's liquor .stores in Pasadena lo learn more about wine. ll wu a fascinating field and he wanted to become in· volved, he said. I-le was one' of the seven original founders nf the P;intry Markets 14 yea rs a~n. The same seven opened Alpha Bcl if& 17th store in 1947. He was with Alpha Bela for five yean:. Only time he hasn't been In the grocery Tries to Rack Up Some business was when he was in It has taken a long time for the army in 1943-48. ,Born aod Joe Payne to get aome or the raised in Iowa. fie has been in things done he wanted to do in the food business for 40 years. the food business. He has two married children He shuttled groceries. cash register tape .and was general run-around Ounky, he said. He worked in the m~t depart· ment a.nd also the fresh rish markel. Here is where he had a· dream of some day having his'.' own fish market -a dream: that will be realiled in the! Harbor View store. lt has a: fres h fish department. ' and is living in the Bayport But, as manager of the new Apartments right next to Richard's Market at Harbor~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Harbor View. View Hills, he expects to rack!; JOHN CATTANEO, meat up quite a few of those ac· deparlment manager, has HE STARTED IT complisbments. been in the meat business Pavne bad bee.n empJoved In · h s Id ·1h 'Dick' Richard ~ ~ since e was years o w1 the meat department a t hi~ father , helping him sell pickles for nickels. lie i! a Richard 's Lido for l~ years Ca lifornia native and has been and manager of the depart· with Richard's Lido for two ment for 13 1/J years when he years. Prior to that he was won the top Job of the new assistant meat director of seven Food Fair market.! in Harbor View store. Las Vegas and 12 from Santa Joe has betn in the food Barbara to Sari Diego. Before busines.s for tl years. All of that he worked up the rneat his mother's poep\e were ranks in Alpha Beta Markets "meat people " back in Kansas to become store supervisor in as far back as he· can cha rge of store openings. He remember. opened 40 Alpha Beta meat He,got his start in Kansas in l dep<irlmenlS. He quil the Las high school where he worked Vegas ru1i"of commuting three for A and ,P Stores. His uncle, limes a week by air lo get who owned the original Lucky married, settle down, and Markets (14 stores) in ha ve a home. He is married to California in the Oakland-Bay Phyllls, daughter nf Ann Boga· NEW STORE MANAGER Arca entic~ him to come to ty, who has been in !he bakery Joe Payne Californ ia · 1946. at RIChard's Lido for 16 years. )I; =====~=:::====~~~~~~====;iii JOHN HART, prod u c e manager, has been employed with Richard's Lido for 22 years in the produce depart· mcnt He ls married, with 6 children. 17 grandchildren. .:ind 5 great gra ndchildren. He has been in the reta il food business. mostly produce. for 42 years. He likes buying and merchand ising fresh fru its' and vegetables. "ll is much more challenging than a can of beans." He had his own pro- duce market in a store in l Anaheim for I:\ years before coming lo Richard's. I JIM CHERRY : grocer y department manager. started as a grocery clerk a I Richard 's. 13 years ago .. Jim has worked in the grocery husiness all his working life. He began as a box boy in San· ta Ana while goin~ to Orange I High School. and continued atl two different Markel Ba sket~I while attending Orange Coast College. The year h e graduated. with business management as his major. he heard about Richard 's, applied for and landed-a job. He has played on the R ic h ard's Baseball team for rive years ;ind is married and has fivt' ·children. UNIQUE GIFTS DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES ANTIQUES GOURMET COOKWARE 1bl6 NEW MACARTHUR BLVD. HARBOR VIEW CENTER Piccolino Heir to the Gino Paoli tradition • Braid On Parad• And it's the toast of fashionland. Jumper looks knit in Ita ly with that unm ista kable Piccolino touch. Every stitch glowing with Italian knit sawy. Yes, it's a jumper jubilee with braid. emblazoned down the front, contrast stripings on collar and sleeves. Hers. the· flingy jumperdress. His the zippy jumpsuit. Both, Mother's pr ide and joy in machine-washable Orlone acryl 1c. !SABELLA Sae$: .?-4. d .Q(. 7·1 4. childten unlimited~ ClllLDllE"l'S llA I• STYLIJ'IG .& l"INIE A~~.&llEL 1'1 6 Nl!W MlcAITHU .. ILVD., HA .. 10 .. Yll!W Cl!HTIEI One Good hing ) . Leads 0 AND ANOTHER AND ANOTHER • AND ANOTHER GUILD DRUG I S HERE TO SERVE YOUR EVERY NEED ••• , MANHAn&N I UtH A""'I• et ,Mlfk C-t Hwy. CHIYIOT HILLS Hetle11•I •""· et Ch1tlt Dr. TOllAiNCf T1rrt1Kt 11"4. at Au• -~ D NEWPORT BEACH HARBOR VIEW C~NTER M1CArthur 1t Sin Joaquin Hiii• Rd. • DRUG= WISTl.All:f Wtitl.ti• 11•4 .. ef A911ne 14, NO•TH•IDGI .,. ............. __.. 11.4, llDONDO llACH Peclflc C•nt Hwy. et ,,....,_, • Antiques, etcetera • Finest Cosmetics • Great Giftwares • Fashion Boutiques • Outstanding Values • Prescription Tax Records t • Free Prescription Delivery I I • • .. O.vens Warm Baking Seas-on • Good cqoks are warming up their O\·ens for holiday baking. Bo.ked goods to serve to guests or wrap up for special gifts can be made ahead and frozen or wrapped up like fruitcakes for an occasional moistening y.•ith branciy or rum. A fl.uted b&king pan can make holiday season desserts or everyday dishes look exlra fancy. Traditional frui t cake shaped ,like jingliag bells are a great way to _ring in tqe season. \\that "new" can you do t.9"i~rove the look.. or your family 's favorit gelatin saJad? Do your molded desse -have that humdrum, always the same J"'Ciok? Let the versatility of the fluted tubular pan adcJ, a new shape to your family 's "menu musts." The. ad~ptable pan is ideal for thoSe piggy-bank budget days ..•. its authentic Old World design tunlS a meatloaf into a royal shape and when frosted with a %.ippr. chfesre sauce, voila ! a s a v o r y family, and guest success. __,., The paii is exclusively designed for pound cakes, spec~altr. cakes, gelatin salads , froien desserts and meatloaves. Its new rashion colors add a bright, fresh accent to any kitchen decor. And, while you're trying to give your family a new shape. templ them with these new re~ipcs. !\1INT f'.1ARVEL CAKE I package white cake mix I package whipped topping mix :i4 cup creme de menthe 1~ cup water 4 eggs Mint leaves to garnish ~lix together creme de 1nenthe and V.'aler. Combine cake mix. "'hipped topping mix, eggs and creme de menthe mixture. Pour batter into v.·eU greased and flourtd pan. Bake at l50 degrees for about 40 minutes. Cool in pan for 15 minutes before unmolding. Dust with confectioner's sugar. Dip i;nint leaves in confectioner's sugar and garnish. MELON COOLER 2 (6 ounce ea.) package lemon gelatin 31h cups boiling water 31,1 cups cold water 'ii cup orange juice ~• teaspoon salt J 11.i cups halved strawberries 1.1 medium cantaloupe I cup m-elon balls (canta loupe , "' honeydew and/or watermelon) \Vhole strawberries to garnish Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Stir in C-Oid water, orange juice and salt. Arrange eight strawberries in large. rounded contours in bottom of pan. Pour lf.t cup of gelatin mixture over berries. Chill-until just set. Peel and cut can taloupe half into eight wedges. Cut through gelatin at pan ridges and stand a cantaloupe wedge in each ridge. O'lill remaining gelatin mixture to ~nsist.ency of unbeaten egg whites. Fold i'n . rerriaiiling-strawberries and melon ball s. Spoon mixture into pan between cantaloupe slices and over top. Chill firm overnight. To serve, garnish with whole strawberries. LAZY DAYS J\IEATLOAF 4 pounds ground beef 4 cups soft bread crumbs 2 eggs . 2 cups beer t envelope spaghetti sauce mix 3 tablespoons chopped instant onion Combine ingredients in given. Pack finnly into greased pan. Bake at 350 degrees for about J '~ hours . Let stand 10 minutes before unmolding. If served hot . 'garnish with calsup, onion rings or broiled peaches; serve cold with cheese sauce. Traditional fruit cake for tbe holidays lakes on a new note with canne<f apple sauce as the flavor innovator and the cake baked to resemble ringing bells, Plan to make the cake well ahead or the rush-and-hurry days this holida y ·. \ season. Store it. well wrapped, in a cake l'Ontainer y,•ith lid -or. in .the ref'rigerator. From time lo lin1e, if you like. spike the cake Y:ith a little apple juice-and a bit of rum or run1 extract. APPLE SAUCE FRUIT CAKE 34. cup butter ~• cup dark brown sugar 3 eggs 3 cups sifted all-purpose flour I 1S cups seedless raisins 112 cups cut mixl'd candil'd fru1l 31 cup chopped walnuts I teaspoon baking soda I teaspoon baking poy,·dcr I ~2 teaspoons cinnamon 3~ teasJXlO!l nutmeg lfi teaspoon clov~s 1,'4, teaspoon salt 2 cups canned apple :.auce Frosting. decorator gels and cherries tor garnish Cream butter with sugar. Add eggs one at a time , beating 1vcll after each addition. Dredge raisins, candied fruit and walnuts in I cup of nour. Sift remaining 2 cups flour VJilh baking soda. baking JXIWder. cinnamon. nutmeg, cloves and salt. Add allernately wilh apple sauce to q,eamed mixture. Add fruit and nut mixture. l\lix thoroughly. Pour into well sr~ased and floured bell -s haped aluminum mold lo within 1~ inch of top. Bake in 350 degrees oven for 11 ~ hours or until cake lester inserted in center comes out dry . Remain ing batter can be baked in loaf pan. individual metal molds or custard cups. Let cake stand in pan 10 to 15 minutes before ren1oving. Cool on wire rack. Decorate "ith ready-to-use frosting, decorator gels and cherrici;. as illustrated. 1'h1s cake can also be baked in JO-inch tube pan for JJ .1 hours. in 2 loaf pans (9 x 5 x 3-inchesl for l i 1 hour s. APPLE !\11NCE!\-1EAT PHESERVE Perfect go-a long for turkey or chicken during the holiday season is this easily 1nade apple mincemeat prescr\·e: Bring ~1 cup apple juice to a bail. Add 1 package !·9 ounces) min c emeat, crumbled . Simn1er for 5 minutes. Add 2 1~ cups canned apple sauce. I lc.uspoon lemon juice and 1 ·~ teaspoon atlspic<>. Simmer for 25 minutes. S!ir in I :: t'Up chopped aln1onds. Chill: l\l?.ke:- about 3 cups preserve. GREAT APPL.E·V JDEA FOR ROASTS A combination of apple juic<' and brandy. half-and-half. makes a n1arvelous inarinade or baSting liquid for rabbit, t'hicken or du ck. FUUITED CABBAGE SIDE DISll A quick and easy side dish thot goes perfectly "'ith pork roast or chops can be made by cornbining a "'ell drained can of red cabbag!' with l cup canned apple sauce. Step up the navor \vith a little minced onion, salt. pepper and a dash of ca ra\\'ay seeds. Serve piping hot . HOT NOODLE BAKE Cook fine or medium noodles according 10 package directions. Drain and bulter I hem \\'ell. then arrange in a baking dish with altemale \ayers of canned apple sauce and grated American cheese. Sprinkle the top \vith bulterd crumb., and bake about 30 minutes. Especially tas!y with ham, chicken or beef. .. Flut ed pan s mak e gelatin , cakes fes tive whil e holiday bell s rin g for appl esa uce fru ;t cak es. Fruit Cakes Ring Out • \Valnut Fruit Cake Confection 1s quick to make. but scrumptious. It"s spicy V.'ith fruit.~ and spices and chock full of fresh· flavored, crunchy "'alnul~. Hone v provide.<; !he sv.·eetness and makes th~ cake delight£ully mello"'· From the basic recipe you can prepar1• any number of variations. ti.lakes one large cake, or perhaps a number of miniature fruit cakes. Or. shape holiday wreaths. or even trees. if you are artistically minded. One secret is that se veral davs of chilling will blend the navors beautifully. And, if you·d like a va riation of the walnuts, try them toasted before adding to the fruit cake confection. Just drop the walnut kernels into boiling water for three minutes, drain well, then spread evenly in a shallow pan and bake at 350 degr·ees. 15 minutes. stirring often, till go ldeh. You 'll find walnuts available for this recipe as well as all your holidaY. baking and candy making needs. They're Whole nuts ring a holiday fr uit cake m·ade1-ftorm'ii'- graham cracker mix and ma rs hma llows. p<ickaged in-the-shell 111 one an d tl\O pound cellophaoc bags. and shelled in handy recipe-sized clea r bags and vacuum cans. r~ruit cakes can be made now and doused occasionally with rum or brandy or rum or brandy extract. Aging helps th€' navor or the cakes to mellow. The ca kes n1ake fine gifls for the holiday season. \\'AL NUT FRUIT CAKE CONFECTION 11 cup honey 1'1 cup undiluted evaporated milk I tablespoon lemon juice 4 cups miniature marshmallows, or 32 large marshmallows cut in pieces 1~ tea.~poon sail 1-.i teaspoon cinnamon '1 teaspoon nutmeg 1.1 teaspoon cloves 11'.i cups chopped raisins I 1tt cups dates. pitted and diced 2 cups diced candied pineapple and cherrtes 111.l cups chopped walnuts 6 cups honey graham cracker crumbs (about 72 crackers) '~ cup (about) brandy or fruit juice Use a large mixing bowl and blend together hooey, mUk, lemon juice, marshallows, salt, spices. prepared fruits and walnuts. Work tn cracker crumbs and fruit juices until mixture is moist ehough to shape into miniature fruit cakes. holiday wreaths, or trees. If desired, line loaf pan or ring mold with waxed paper. Pack fru it cake mixture into pan, covei top. Chill several days td blend navors. Cakes freeze wlth case. Serve small pieces wlth sherry, makes approximately one 2'fl·pound cake, or 48 petite 'cakes. BEA AND ERsb N, Editor WtdlMidfJ, Ntwtlfl"' If, 1111 Pi tt M Home News Value Watered Down ~y OORO'fHY WENCK Or111tt Ctw!llY tttmt AdwlMr Have you ever considered the high . price of water·~ Not water from the faucet~ water that you buy in your food. In many foods. water Is the chief in- gredient. And it may make the food heavier or bulkier to ship and store" or more likely to spoil and therefore cause the food to be more costly than one with water removed. · A good example of this is orange juice, ~r . you buy !rozen concentrated orange JU1ce. nearly three-fourths of the water has been removed. You add the low·pric· ed water from your faucet when you reconstitute it. The pasteurized O(ange juice, w·hich you find in the dairy case, is usually ~ade t;rom the ci>ncentrate. (It's rarely~ 1f e\'er, freshly squeezed orange juice - the label will tell you.) The manufacturer puts the y,•ater in for you, thus saving you a step. '.he prepared orange juice costs you twice as much as the frozen conceotrate. Yo~ get no more food, value -just.con- venience and high-priced water for Ille extra cost. - I~ you buy the canned drink products, "'h1ch do not have the word "juice" in Lh.eir name. )'O_\I get a can full of water, with q~it.e a lot of sugar and very little actual JUiee (JO perce.nt if you're lucky). This water is so low cost to the pr°" ducer that the can actually costs him more than the total product inside. For you, it is very high cost water. But the "·ater in soft drinks costs even 1nore -over I cent per ounce -with no food value in it other than calories from !he sugar. Dried beans are an example or how dehydrated food saves you nioney. Drv beans-are a very concentrated food _:_ loaded with protein, starch, iron and ii vita'!"ins. You rehydrate the beans b)' soaking them in water and cooking them a long tirne. · The cooked dry beans will cost you on!~ about, 5 cents a serving (the cheapest prot~1n you can buy). But because this soaking and cooking process takes time, most people buy the canned beans which have the water already put back in.· These coSt a.bout 20 cents a serving. (Both comparisons made on the basis of a 3-ounce serving of protein.) Nonfat dry milk is another example ot ho\~ removing Y.'ater can result in grea~ savings. for the consumer. Yo 11; r~co~stitute dry milk very sin1ply by stir4 ring it into water. It has the same food value as fluid l101)i fat milk. but .will cost only half as much. The saving IS even greater if you com4 p<>.re it with the cost of fluid whole mlik. Removing the water results in milk that can be shipped much more in· c.xpens!vely and stored without refrigera4 lion with no .Problem of spoilage. YoLJ have to do a little work to reconstitute ii b~t ~y doing this you can cut your n1Hk bill 1n half, or even in third if you hav·e home delivered milk. And did you know !hat the "lo"' calorie''. margarines are actually watered margarine? They have more waler than fat -and that's why calories are cul in half. IJ you pay as rnuch for 1hese as tor r~gular. margarine, you are buying very h1~h-pr1_ced 1vater. A111d it is really high- pr1ced if you follow the label direetioo.!I for frying with this 1nArgarine. They tell you to let the high-priced wa ter sizzle away first before you start to fry! On most foods, the labels list the lrt- gredients -and alv.'ays in order or predominance with the ·first on the list present in greatest amount and so on. So if you y,·ant to know how much wa1cr you're buying, read labels. Then decide If it's worth it. QUESTIONS \\'E AllE ASKED Q. \\'ould it be reasonable to have 94 pounds of waste from a 325 pound side or beef? And is ii fa ir to make us pay for all th is \vaste'? A. The "cutting loss" twastc in the rorm of bone and fat) on a side of beef ranges from 20 to 35 percent depending on the quality grade (grade Prime beef is exceptionally fat . for example) and the yield grade. · Yield grades range from I through 5 with yield grade I giving approximately 79 percent in retail cuts and grade 5 yielding 6.i.9 percent or less. Your yield was about 70 percent. When you buy a ~·hole side or quarter of beef you must lake into t.'Onsideratlon -when figuring lhe cost -that you wlU be paying for one-fourth to one-ihird "'aSle. The pr ice for W de or quarter or bee( is nluch higher than many people realize. In most cases buying meat by the carcass does not save you money com- pared to buying comparable retail cut9 - on special at the supermarket. I •:'J.f DAILY PILOT Wtdnesday, NO\ll!mbtr 10, lfl71 . . r -world of ·Recipes Ready in Minutes By CAROL MOORE Beat the egg whites until 01 ... tt.u" ,11o• si•11 • ·: • • • • ri1rr bot· -not' 'd",. Fold lhtO Results o l international . . 'J • cuisine may be tricky but mtxture unUI ~ell con;ibi~ preparatlon can be as quick as but not smooth. There still will American .. prepared f 0 0 d 1 be small clu~ps of_ egg white. thanks to recipes from the Grease 9-mch pie pan and 20th aMuat Orange Coast fill with_ pie mixture. Sprinkle College Cooking School. with cinnamon, 1t desired. . Bake at 350 degrees about 40 ~ African pl.e can ~ minutes until set. Serves a. '!hipped together m the same Jane o I t n g e r , home time as a b:oxed cake ml:r. economist from So u t be r n Italy's Fettuccine Verdi takes ca 1 it 0 r n ia Gu Co., no longer than ~t mashed recommended '• s t e a mi n g potatoes. spareribs before barbecuing ~rench Vichysso_ise a n d them to guarantee. tenderness. onion .soups or Olinese-style The technique is used in the spareribs are well worth the following recipe· ~tra time and can be cooked CHINESE ' STYLE in stages to. free cooks from BARBECUED SPARERIBS the last mmute, hot stove 1 'd k 'bs · routine. tu e por . r1 . . ace .nstru to G 1 d 2 ·e;een oruon, cut tn 2-inch 1 c r en a pieces Rid~ick demonstrated the: pie 2 cloves garlic, crushed rec~ s~e learned while 1 table.sJXlOfl chili sauce teaching 1n the Congo. The 1 tab! tsu custard-like mixture separates espoon ca P ' i n t o 'crust, f i 11 i n g and 2 tablespoons &Oy sauce meringue·during baking. 2 tablespoons water MELKERT SONl>ER KORS 1 tablespoon com syrup 1h teaspoon salt ~ cup flour . Steaming the ribs berore ~ teaspoon baJting powder marinating may be done the Pmch of sl!:Jt. <t8y before serving. The proc· 2 tablespoons butter ess thoroughly cooks the pork % cup sugar yet keeps the meat moist. 3 eggs, sep~rated PU.t 2 cups water in flat pan 1-~/3 cup nulk and arrange ribs on rack over Sift together dry water.Coverpancloselywith shallow pan or tray and cover with mfiinade. Let stand for 2-3 holll'!, turning and butlng riba occasionally. R e m o v e from marinade. Pl~ct on coJd broiler grkl. Broil in pr ebeat~d com- partment three inches from beat for about 10 minulU on each aide or grill on barbecue for same time, basUng once. After carefully' sauteing one batch of Onions to keej> tOOn as white as-pouible for vichyssoise, she thoroughly browned three more for this . restaurant-type broth topped with grilled cbetse croutoM. Also, she warned to be sure and use con.somme because bouillon is only hall strength. SOUPE A L'OIGNON' 2 tabtespoon:s butter 3· medium yellow onions, thinly sliced 1 tablespoon flour 2 cups consomme 4 cups water 11, cup scalded milk Salt and pepper to taste 2 ounces grated S w is a cheese 6 slices French bread, dried Melted butter SUr ln consomme and water. I cup freshly g r ate d Bring toi'OOO then Sir?iiiiir ........ vame·san:·ch'et&e · .. ··"·-·· .. . uncovered for 20 minutes. Add Fresh ground black pepper milk. &:uon with salt and Bring water to boil in large pep~, il desired. kettle. Add salt and noodle8 g=~ ~:t~i~b~i!!d~ gradually whil.e ·st!~ri~ (Bread may be placed in 200.. co.nstanUy. Boil r~pt Y . degree oven to dry. Will be stir for abo~t 8 mrnutes un~il crisp but not browned). Driz-noodles are JUSt tender. Dram zle melted butter over cheese well. -. and dash with pepper Just before serving, transfer · . noodles to 10-inch skillet and Place breads on soup 1n warm slightly. BlencJ crushed heat-proof tu r r e e n or garlic with melted butter. i~ividual bowls .. Brown Alternately add butter &nd qwckl~ under broiler. Se~ve grated cheese to noodles, immediately; properly _dried lifting and twnlng with fork .. crouto~ absorb soup qwckly. Toss until nooc:Hes are evenly Six portions. coated . Fettuccine Verdi was Quickly remove to heated suggested as a clever way to serving plate. Sprinkle with serve spinach to finicky eaters· b I a ck pepper . Serv e since the gr~n noodles are immediately. Four portions. made from this ·vegetable. Having simplified foreign FETTUCCINE VERDI cooking. the Mmes. Riddick 2i.i to 3 quarts water; and OLinger will share secrets 11,.i tablespoon salt of cooking with a gourmet 8 ounces green noodles touch at tomorrow's session .at ;2 cup melted butter 9:30 a.m. in Mesa Theater, ~ clove garlic, crush~ Costa Mesa. exhibition and.sale -. , ~SPBERRY TORTE -lfome Economist. Glenda Riddick offers Miss Evelia €~to a piece of the fancy dessert that will be feat~red in µi~ third session ~f •!)range Coast College Cooking School tomorrow. Miss ~oto is 1n. charge of OCC s ;llome Economics in the Community Program for Span1sb-speakmg homemakers. in gredients; set aside. Cream aluminum foil and bring to a butter, add sugar and egg boil. Lower heat and simmer yolks, beat well. Add dry in· for 45 to 60 minutes. gred.ients, alternating w i th Combine other ingredienf.,. milk. , Rel)lOve steamed ribs to Melt butter in skillet and add onions, stirring constantly until go lden brown. Sprinkle with flour and continue to cook and stir until flour and onioM are well browned. original graphics purchasnm•1becharge<1 ::~ View Artistic For the fifth year, Huntington Harbour Art Associa· tion ''ill sponsor Strol ling Through the Art s in the Beach Club. Prio r lO the exhibit opening to the pub- lic on Saturday, Nov. 13, exhibitors. guests. n1erri· hers an d judges \viii previe''' the sho''' during a'·cock· tail party on ;\ov. 12. .>\rr anging ,,·orks are 1i1rs. Everett Ri cker lleftJ and Mrs. James Solum. The show \Vil! close Kov. 21. hours are IO a.m. to 6 p.m. D is for ~elightful. . . wh ich is how you'll loo ~ in this soft, soft ~v,oo l press from the Bidtique, D's c.o lor is deep wine, ~ith rose and gr ey sleeve and shoulder de. ftiling , S24. will ha ve you 1itling pretty. _.:::;~ BIDTIQUE l467 VIA. LIDO NEWPORT lt:ACH 473-4510 e l lOWELL CNAIGI • IAHl(AMEJllCAltO e MAITlll: CKAllOI • -~ .. ·- • UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Club Calendars Crowded .... ' at IRVINE TEMPORARY UNION BUILDING THURSDAY, NOV. 11 -11 A.M. to $ P.M. Funding and social events highlight the weekend calen- dar. · Lyric Opera tifarilyn Savage, star of Orange County J..yric Opera Association's recent prD- duction of "The Music Man," will sing for members and friends of the association dur- ing its annual dinner meeting. The event will take place at 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 14, in the Forum Theater on t h e Festival of Arts grounds. . Accompanying Miss Savage on the piano will be her hus- band. Ray Henderson. noted composer, musical director and pianist. Art League l\.1embers o( Costa Mesa Art League have circled Sunday, Nov. 14, in red on the calen- dars for this is the day selected for the a n n u a I scholarship funding event. Gathering at 12:30 p.m. in the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. members and guests will be seated for luncheon and then participate in a lively auction of art works. Baritone Michael McCormack will p r o v i d e entert,ainment. He will be ac- companied by Glen Westcott, pianist and composer. Monday Club Dean and Lisa, billed as the Troubadours of fi.1 a g i c a I l\.1usic, will entertain members of the Huntington Beach fi.1on· G~\\\\W.t: day Morning Club on Nov. 15. A social hour .at 10:30 a.m. will open adivities in the Sheraton Beach Inn. The musical duo will sing and play guitars. Library Varied activities are plan- ned at the Costa Mesa Branch Library du r in g Children's Book Week, Nov. 14-20. Make a Guess contest will be conducted daily. On \Vednesday, Nov. 17, a special film, Ernest Hemingway's "My Old Man." will be shown for parents, and on Nov. 18 at 10:30 a.m. the Children's Theater Guild will make a special presentation. Concluding the week on Nov. 20 will be a con test and twn films, ''Ghosts and Goulies" and "Prowlets of the Everglades" to be shown at 10:30 a.m. Beta Sigma Phi Home Safety will be discuss- ed at the next meeting of Delta Delta Kappa Chapter Beta Sigma Phi. . Inspector Jan Sander of the Huntington Beach Fire· Department will speak at 7:45 p.m. Monday, Nov. 15. fi.1rs. Paul Stanley will open her Huntington Beach home for the session. Mou nt Carmel A potluck dinner at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 12, \viii kic k off Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Guild's used clothing collection f \\\)\\\)fil~\\\\\\;_ ,,. ••• IN ONE OF THESE STUNNING NEW WIGS by Elura-Mon•anlo! YOU'LL LOVE THEIR HIGH. FASHION VERSATILITY •CARMEN H1ndti1d front • lon9 e1u11I 9yp1y, 1w1pl b1c:k, p•rt.1111 er m1k1 b11191. •EVA For tht "'•fu r• wom•n• -th• Gtbor look, (In b1 1w1pt b1ck 1•p111d n1c:k, "'idow1 p1lk. •PAMELA 'H111cl-ti1cl, front 1w111t bee~ or 111rt1d. Popul1r l1p1r1d b1ci:, A flttterin9 wig for 1ny OC• c11ion. Priced From lt.•s REVERSIBLE WIG FALL Soll flOWlltf •"-uldlr ll'lltltt - Rl~fl'lt• M tltt' .. IMlt.t IY,IY IN-I Rt11. 1n.u ............. . S32.96 WIGS • tor Trinity Mission In Los donated by Dec. 15 wilt be 'Angeles. Miss Helen O'B"rien. · distributed in Mexico. guild president, invites all parishoners and guests to help Little League with the project. A benefit bazaar will be tHAGAll, BASKIN, ROUAULT, DAUMIER AND MANY DTHEllS F~ ARRIHGEO BY FIRDlllAHD ROTEll GALLERIES BILTIMOR~ MARYL.I.HO sponsored by Oceanvlew Na-~======~fiiRt~MlA:;s~======ii LA Ski Ball tional Lillie League at 9 a.m. I: VIBGINIA'S \Vinter sports enthusiasts Saturday, Nov. 13, on the Lit- win gather in the Beverly tie League complex on Heil SNIP 'N ST ITCH SHOPPE Wilshire Hotel on Friday, Nov. Avenue. 12 for lhe second Lo A I 333'4 E1st Coo1st Hwy. e Corona d•I Mir ' s nge es Emblem Club Ski Ball. Les Brown and his Phone 673-8050 Band of Renown will provide music for the entertaining evening that starts at 7:30 and henefil.i the U.S. Ski Team Fund. Moose Women Gift items and game booths will fill the lodge....when Costa Mesa Women of the Moose host their annual bazaar from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 13. The event will be followed by a turkey dinner. NYU Alumni Dr. James ?\1. Hester , university president, will ad- dress some 2.300 Southern California alumni of New York University at their third an- nual dinner danc~ Saturday. Nov. 13, in the BiltnlOre Hotel . Los Angeles. Project Concern Mrs. Dan Gordon of Foun- tain Valley is chairman of South Coast Juniors' clothing drive to support Project Concern . Baby sup pl i e s . clothing and other goods The Newport Harbor Em- blem Club will open its an- nual Christmas bazaar at noon Sunday. Nov. 14. in the New· port Harbor Elks: I.OOge. Cookies and coffee will be served during the event. Beta Gamma An old·fashioned hayride will take place Saturday, Nov. 13. for members of Beta Gam- ma Qiapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha, International. Follow- ing the ride, guests will gather in the Fountain v.&lley home- . of Mr. and Mrs; Bill Hewston f1;1r a midnight supper and games. · Youth Conference Today -the Beginning of Tomorrow's Career will theme the sixth annual Youth Leadership Conference to take place at Golden West College Saturday, Nov, 13, sponsored by Business and Professional Women's clubs of Orange and San Bernardino counties. Birthstone jewelry. Because her family means a lot to her. l•K gold ring with 3 stones 21.95. Avallable with 2 to 12 stonos, Add or deduct $3 per srone. 10K gold ring with 3 stones 19.95. Ava iltbl• with 1 to 7 stones. Add or .deducl S3 per stone. Gold lated ~re• ~fJit_1_pln with a 11onu. 1c.11 JCPenney . · fine jewelry Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. .. WINTER DID ARRIVE! Whi t ti.,,!119, W1 j~1I 1111~1ck1•I. 0 .. 1, th1 w11k111d, 1 f1bulout n•w 1•l1ctio11 of Steve111 end forstrne1111 woolen1, pl1ids, tw1ed1, •nd 1olid1 in dr111, 1uit •ncl coi l W•i9hh. w. invite you to 11e the new 111iv1l1 plut our ••t•n1iv• 1tock of !CO%· wool clo11bl1kn;h i11 •olicl1 end nov1lty p1ft11n1 •. We b•li•v• th•re'1 nothing to 1urP,111 wool for ••Sy 11win9 ind u1ch comfort lo we•1, e IANU.MERICAll:D e MA$TER CHARGE save 25%to48% tempting · group of current q"alitraft .. Shoes 0:70 were 8.99 to 12.99 Outstanding savings on shoes ta wear right now! Dressy and sporty styles, favorite foll colors. Come in early for best selections in your size. 79¢ to I.09 stockings Fovl?ri!e shades in range of sizes. 1.69 to 2.49 pantyhose f----Mo "ystyles, monyt~oi'l loCl'ioo!e, 3~n. $} 3P~2--1--- Uu your BfnkAmerit11rd • . -FASHION -ISLAND HUNTINGTON CENTER NEWPORT BEACH , F«shion lsl1ncl N1wport C•nter Hunt ington Baich HUNTINGTON BEACH , Huntin9ton Cont" FASHION SQUARE SOUTH COAST PLAZA Ch1r9• it • ., ___ s.•.n.t•-A.".• ___ ..., __ c.•.•.t•_M_ .. _. ____ _. • II . ' , • ' ) . ... ,...,. HovJmw 10, 1911 OAllY PJlOT 3G Trouble Runs • • Their Blood · Df:AR ANl'U.ANDERSc This. pasty ear I have had three relatives in the hospital. blood trom addicts .who are .lbe..IJ'.ealtJ.._ .,r bepatltl11 spreaders of all . I considered them all lucky to be alive, and not because they went in dangerously ill. They got really sick in the hospital. Every one of these patients had sue· ~ cessrut surgery. The problem came with blood transfusions. lt seems the blood obtained through the hospita1 (at a terrible price, I might add) was tainted. I wonder what. if anylhin~. can be done about this sort of negligence. Don't suggest suing the doctor or ·the hospital. It can't be done out here on the Coast. Give me some practical advice for a change. -FURIOUS IN CALIFORNIA loved ooe against tainted blood dispensed in the hospitals, there's uo si mple answer. Sometimes th e blood of friends or relative~ can .be used, but it must be the proper match. If tbt: family can round up enough donors. this could eliminate tbe necessity of buying bloott from tbt hospital. · DEAR ANN LANDERS : I teao1et, sonlething front your column that !Mi. been a lifesaver. You said a while ~k that if a person can see the humor lA ;'1 situation that bugs him . be has i,t ro_adi. DEAR FURY: It is not true that on the West Coast you cannot sut a doctor or a hospital Hfor any reason." Ask any California pbysiclaJ! what bis malpractice lnsuraD:ce costs, (Surgeons a 11 d antstbetlsts pay the highest rates Paid donors are sometimes booztrs or junkies who are desperate for a falit dollar. The cbaoces of getting ad' In- fection fro1n such a donor is, of course, greater than from a relath'e or friend. And this is an appropriate ti1nt to urge "my reitders to support lbe American Red Cross Blood Donor Program. The more voluntary donol'1i, lht less rtffd to buy \Veil. rve been working for a man for nearly two years and be can't remembe1~ in.v name to save his life. For t~e first,1.i-.:; months. he called me by hts forfut1 secretary's name. Then he got mixed"!:!I and called me by the name of ano~· new girl. All of a sudden he began to tail me Flora. tl\1y name is Dora.} Wbtn· corrected him. he said, "Oh, I'm _sorey Now he is calling me Nora and Cora •. I used to feel hurt. Now I just laUch • Thanks for helping me over the hump - A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME • • because tbey are the most frequently sued.) DEAR ROSE -J mean Dora, or llJ Nora? -Thauks for your lett.er. Tltejil· portant thing I! that he gets the .. right on the bottom of the chttk. :;; As ror what can be dooe to protect a Tijuana Trip to Clinic on the Horizon Clothes, toys, bedding and miscellaneous articles are packed \vith care by Okiponka Horizon Club members (left to right) Dorothy Logan, Terrie Sneathen and Shelley Walsh for a trip to a Tijuana clinic. Camp !<~ire Girls and Blue Birds are making hospital tray favors. learning baby·sitting, honoring mothers and staffing booths at the Scout-0-Rama. Horoscope: Virgos Hold On THURSDAY . NOVEMBER 11 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Conditions su bject to abrupt change . The r'e are postponements, substitutions. fi.1essages tend to go awry. Have alternative plans al hand. Those you usually de- pend upon act in eccentric manner. TAURUS {April 20.May 211 !: Lover's quarrel could be featured. Children could 1nake unreasonable demands. Hold reins on· self-control. No long· range commitments. Wait and see. Emotional storm v.1ill blow over. Patience. GE!\llN1 tMay 21-June 20J: Disruption of basic plan could boomerang in your favor, Don 't force issues. Ride with tide. Family member sings blues. Be sympathetic but refuse to act -as human crying Countdown Begins For Valentine Ball towel . Adhere to principles. Check legal aspects of any CANCER (June 21-July 22): enterprise. Accent on how to Hold off on journeys. if prac-hold together a special rela- tical. Don't \VTite letters or ttonship. Attention required in make calls while angry. Steer public relations area. Mate, a conservative course. Check partner expresses unorthodox facts. Be sure of reference desire. 1naterial . Older individual acls CAPRICORN lDec. 22-Jan. in cantankerous manner. 19): Communication Jines ma y LEO {July 23-Aug. 22): be disrupted. Be sure mean- Finish "'hat you start. Take it ings a~ clear. Some now have easy where financial ventures tendency to misquote you. are concerned. E x a m i n e Pvlake changes. Be flexible. variou s aspects of any prcr Listen and learn. But maintain posal. Some around you talk attitude of intelligent skep- for sake of hearing sound of ticism. their own voices. Respond ac-AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. cordingly. -18): Don't mix money and VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22J: friendship. If you do. both \Vhat appears an aggressive could be lost. Control temper. move may be mere maneuver Give logic equal lime with im· to attract your attention. pulse. Make living quarters Those who make threats pro-more cdmfortajl/e. Stri\'e for l\lrs. Arthur E. Briggs o( bably are bluffing. Ho Id greater family harmony. Laguna Niguel has been nam· ground. -but review position . PISCES (Feb. 19-1ifarch 20): ed chairman of the 1972 Valen· You get chance for new start. Work behind scenes. GiVe run tine· Ball planned by the Silver LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22 l: effort to project aimed at pro- Teens Vie For Title l\1iss Robin Smith. Fountain Valle y Junior l\iiss 1971. greeted 14 candidates for 1972 Junior l\fiss at a tea in the home of Mrs. Marnette Peek. 1'he tea was sponsored by Jaycees' \\'ives. Girls we re acquainted v.·ith lhe format of events to take place Saturday, Nov. 20 in the Los Amigos High School auditorium. They will be evaluated on a judges' con· ference, scholastic achieve- ment, poi se . appearance. youth fitne ss and creative and performing arts. Judges will be l\lrs. Peek, Peek Family Iiome: !\lrs. l\tary Lou Finley. director or Santa Ana Co lle ge's stewardess program ; E 1 iii. s Ramirez. language arts and Chicano studies. Santa Ana College; Ed Raphael. principal of Skylark Elementary School. Garden Grove ; and FV Coun· cilman George B. Scoll . Power Stored and Gold Chapter of the Aux-Difticu\t, if not impossiple, to rooting worthwhi le charity. ~e iliary of South Coast Com· keep secrets. Confidential con· considerate: toward one con-NE\V YORK (UPJ ) -Air munity_ Hospital. _ _ ference could turn into public fined to home, hospital. Jin-conditioners that store, or h · 1 k .gathering. Know !M.__ ~ng_ _be port.ant to be discreet: let T e February event, to a e prepared. Study published otiiers-----SOOw -their hands. hold, cold at night for daytime Place in the Newporter Inn, is k Id t mm po material. \Vhat you see A.nother Piscean figures pro-use cou cu su er wer the highlight of the auxiliary already has been made public. minently. consumption by 15 percent . year and a fund-raising oc-\ · f h h SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 : 'to 1;nc1 ou1 Wllo·~ lu.:kw-tor w-ou In say researchers at I he cas1on or t e ospital. Complete revision of hopesl . ,,,.,riff •114 "'~'' orw Syd,..v Om1rr'5 Assistaing 1'1rs. Briggs with boOir.ltl, "Se<:rel Hln1' fQ!' Me~ '"" University or PeMsylvania 's wishes indicated. Friends act women. s""' blrltld11ir 11'1d 75 ctn!~ preparations will be the in manner calculated t 0 10 Omarr ,t..stroloeY srcreh. thir D,t..I LV National Center fart" Energy ~Imes. 0. v .. ;.oh n s 0 n. PILOT, Sox 32«1. Gr•~d Ctntr11 SI•-M t nd p arouse animosity. r.1aintain tfon, N•w vork, N.V. 10011. anagemen a ower. :.:::· Santa's Helpers •••••••••••••••••••! s 1 o, k; n 9 stuffers •nd e CONGRATULATIONS ' other Chr;stmas g ; f I • SKI MART • , items will be-sold by the • on your new location • Coast Women·~ Club of • f and ,,. Corona del Mar during • ~ the annual ba1aar on • thank you for helping beautify ._ Saturday, Nov. 13, at • our city with your remodeling :f the Alpha Beta Market, C Costa Mesa. Filling a • ''P I H '' • stock;ng are Mrs. Mar· • . urp e aze . "" ,;o ttd• • jorie Feddersen (left) 1: boutique Newport Inch •• on Mrs. George Fox. • ••••••••••••••••••• -secretary; Violet i\.dam1, sense or humor. Stress 1:=============~========1.----------treasurer; Thomas J . Fl et· be b ck cher, publicity: Tulley E. versatility. Refuse to a - Brown. patrons : H 8 r 0 Id ed into corner -emotional or Ekman, invitations. and NAMED CHAIRMAN otherwise. ..)C>tyc:~~~~~~- SHOETREE f George W. \Volf. reservations. Mrs. Arthur E. Briggs SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- 0thers are the M m e s , 1 ____________ 0e_c._2_1_1 :_s_tu_d.;cy_c_o_nt_ra_c_1_,. 1 Robert de Ford, decorations; Fera Randolph, hotel liaison: Jim ?>.1onez. door prizes; Lowell Phillips. hostesses; ~1ildred Farmer, program; Tandy Coleman. table ar- rangement s. and Jack 11. Lyons, ex-officio. l\1rs. Brown hosted com- mittee members in h e r fi.fonarch Bay home for a plan· ning session. Committee reports were given and patron Jetters addressed. FREE . ,......;..wcontrol "~Vice by phone • tf)IOU'd 11119 to lo• unwtnted f poundland kHp It offfO< Jood, 'all w.!lhl WatcMrs for frH adVice. ~ll'l)'tim•, nirtrtorday 835·550S WEIGHT®, WATCHERS . ..... ~""' -li>ltftills, .... • flfOI'• ..... ~ ... - llltlfkl 'ltilltll•'l ii 1 Jtflll""' lrod-111 ti *'CM""''''" ltlttl'Ml~Oll, lllt. 0 W.'llJ.l""J'6! TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You .•• · Every Saturday .\ ' PROFESSIONAL WATCH ·REPAIR Col'l'lp ltlt ... ,td1 r•p•ir ttrvic• for OMEGA ,ACCUTkON, ' ltOliX th;t ;11cl11d11 ckrono9r1plu , 1lop w1tch•1 i nd chrono• PROFESSIONAL JEWELRY REPAIR "''*'"· Wt 11p1ir w•tcri..t of 11f typ11. Cornp11t• clt1I ,,. fi11i1hin9 fro!!\ $5 ind w1lerproof -.'V1f1l1 from $!. '1:11191 1i10 ---.tl"d 1op1 ired. Di1moridliit811cf ti9hto11od, C111m~ pltlo ca1ti119 f1cilify for C.YllOl'll d11i9Md ltwolry, 1'1011 t"4 boad ro1lti119i119. We clo 111 tvptt of j1w1lrv rtpalr. Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. Till 9 P.M. MARIOlt $HOJIJllHO C•HTt:R UM Hlf'lef' llWI, Ctlla MtM itJ.•• HU"TIHOTON CENTI!• •ndl a rdl•r-Mlll!fl1191it11 .._,. ltWstl • AN EXCITING LUNCHEON FASHION SHOW By Ewen's 03outique (2300 HARBOR BLVD• COSTA MESA) Featuring fashions by "(])ig:J(' ' Tuesdays & .Thursdays, Noon in Costa Mesa, · 1555 Adams • NEW MANAGEMENT WOMEN'S SHOES SAVINGS UP TO OVIR -2,000 PAiRS WHILE THEY LAST! -84 .,1aiyc SHOETREE SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MIS4 UPPll LIYIL 14M7fl 0Pl.H SUNDAYt NOOH-S 1".M. 1 .. t MOHOAV THRU JIRIDAY 1M IATIIRDAY --- . .. ' ' ' .. ' ; • • • • '" ·, • ' .. • • • ' • • • • • • ' ' • JI DAILY PI LOT S Wtdnesd.tJ, November 10, 1'171 • funds Raised, FL.in H.arv,ested ' at Fall . Dinn .ers (jdtior•a Nott A page de· •s'fd to Ntwport Bearh . C ta Mtsn , Laguna Broc/1 o Mf.s.riD11 V{ejo parent· te'acher organitations 1vill appear ;n the DA ILY Pl.LOT wch wee~. l nfonno.· tlo-must bt received by t'!f women'• dep<irtment nr ~!· Cared S»1ith. 1746 ~ptella Place. Ne wport B1ach by 5 ·p.m. Th ursday Id!. -publication \Vect11es· c10r). College Pk . PTA Mrs. Robert rt1arold President COMING UP: Rich;ird I. J:'adgham, deputy district attorney of Orange County f,od head of the juvenile ~staff will speak at 7:30 1.m. Tomorrou• • at the ~era] meeting. His topiC wUI be Rights a n d !roctdures In J u v e n i I e "Court. Cdm Ele. PT A Jim Wood • President COMING UP: Mrs. Otto J;hristenson, chairman for ~he fflnd raising father-son tiMer Tuesday, Nov. 16, an- 1iouoces that Surf's Up will theme the event and a film · On surfing and talk will ~ present at 6:30 p . m . Admission is ft for adults and $1 for students. CM Christian PTF ·• Mn. C11rl Nelson ~· President • p.m. tomor r ow , Eater· lot. ~trs. Austin Smith. talnment "'iii include a film , chai rman reports ·licenses choir debut and a tour or the will be sold General new library. meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thurs· Ensign PTA day. Nov. II. in I he m u ltipur p JSe room. Mrs. David Chevis }jandball Ctlurt will be . President discussed. COMING UP : Annual fund-LB H"igh PT A raising spaghettl d i n n e r from 5 to 7~30 p.m. Tui!'. st1ay... __ •Alr1. Robert Peacock Nov. 16, in the cafeteria . President Entertainment will be pro-COMING P: Homecximing vided by-the 12 Tones and night and foot~eaM. the String Group. will be hosted W-the PT A -REPORTS ~ J\trs. Robert from g to 7:30 p.m. Friday, W o If e. membersh i p Nov. I~. chairman reports an all-time Linda Vista PTO high of 660 members. Richard Niederhau1er Hope Haven President D I t Ct C0~1ING UP: Ecology drive eve opmen r. continues again this year. J\lrs. Pemcr G. Barnett Newspapers, glass a n·d PreSident aluminum may be brought COMING UP: Christmas to school from 8 a.m. to photos with Santa, beginning noon Monday, Nov. IS. FTiday, Nov. 26, at the Harbor ShoP,ping Center, Mater Oei PG Costa Mesa will benefit the Dr. Edward T. Haromer scholarship -fund , accol'ding President to Mrs. Robert Jacobs. COMING UP : Open house for REPORTS: Hank Jarb oe, parents at 2 p.m. Sunday, public relations representa· Nov. 14. Msgr. John J, live ofl>tange Coast Civitan Reilly will welCtlme the Club spoke at the general parent! in the auditorium. meeting on the history of the Followi ng wlll be shortened club and its plans for selling versions of student class fru it cakes to benefit the &'thedules. Mrs. Lloyd Sallot, school. ~1r. and Mrs. Ken chairman will be assisted by Cagasan. ways and means the hospitality co mmittee. chairmen will work in con-Refreshment..s will be served junction with the project. in the gym. Killybrooke PTA Meso Verde PTA i\trs. Ronald Aroold J\1r~. David Chamberlain President President Halloween carnlval, report that left~ve:r candy appltt and candr were prtsented to Fairview State Ho,,~ital b.v the: student.!. . ' Monfe Vista PT A' Mr1. Thnmas uerndoa President COMING UP: Book fair rrom 9 a.m. lo 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, Nov, 18, 18 and 19. Books also ma y be purchased from f :30 to 8:30 p.m. Thur5day in the muJtlpurpo,,e room. Newport Hts. PTA Mr1. Ralph. E. Stevens President COMING UP: Fathers and sons will hosl the general mee ting at 7:30 p.m. Tue.s- day. Nov. 23. Don Lent, CQach <J.t Newport •Harbor High School along with se:v~ era! players will present fil ms on outst.andlng games • .. they have played. ~·· REPORTS: Mrg. Jacquie ~ ·i Bockm ille r, ways and means chairman reports a profit of $39fl . was realized from the Family Fu n Night ... Aluminum can drive funds will be used tD replace shrubs at the cafetorium en· trance, according to Mrs. William Kitche:os . en· vi ronmen ta l studies chairman . Paularin o PTA Nick Hanson President Smile, It's Adams School Carnival Time CQ>IING UP: Gel -acquainted lbanksgiving extravaganza Jind general meeting will be ~ed by dinner at 6 COMING UP : Bicycle safety REPORTS: Mrs. G i I be r t C0~11 NG UP: Fifth grade students will present a skit .on erology al the unit meeting Tuesday, Nov, 16, in the multipurpose room. Miss Brenda Easley, youth ad- ministrator from Lion Coun· try Safari will show slides on animal conservation. Thoughts of the Adams PT A carnival, themed Have ~ Happy Day seem to be the only fa ce .Jeff Donn~ll LS able to paint. Wayne Rexrode and Teri Huff are delighted with the prospect of a fun day \vh ich is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Saturday. Nov. 13. program at 9 a.m. tomor-Divelbiss and Mrs. William row, in the school parking Payne, chairmen of the =· 1 Pr esi dio PT A Mrs. Hugh Thompson President REPORTS : Mrs. Phil Kilmer, Mrs. Hugh Thompson and ~1rs. Bert Field were assisted by the board in the Glue-in project for students. Proceeds will be used for school and student needs. St. John Aux . J\1rs. Anthony Becker President COMING UP: Rummage s.1Je from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Satur· day, Nov. 13 and from 9 a.m. lo I p.m. Sunday, Nov. 14, in the school hall ... Spiritual mass will be con- ducted by the Rev. Anthony McGowa n and p11sl presidents will lead the reading fo llo•1i ng the general meeting tomorrow night. Sonora PTA Mrs. Burth Pickett President COMING UP: Skating party from 10 a.m. to noon Wednesday, Nov. 17, at Harbor Roller Rink. Mrs. David Erickson is chairman. REPORTS: Mrs. Doug I a I Magee. bicycle s a f e t y chairman reports th11t of- ficers from !he Costa Mesa Police Department inspected bike~. tested riders and presented passi ng student..s with licenses la st week ... Profit from the Sonora Fun Day was more than $700. TeWinkle PTA ft.1r1. Lawrence Englehart President COMING UP : Swap meet from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Satur- day, Nov . 20, on the blackto p · at school. Spaces will be av&iiable at $2. Victoria PTA !tiagic of Make Believe \ •gic ~£~l ake Be lieve \I ill be "·oven into the annual carnival to be staged b,J P.l_ular1no PTA from 10 30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Nov . 13. Depicting a scene from "~1othc r l·lubbard's Cupboard" \vith a slight difference -it's not bare -are Cindy Bro\\'n and Mrs. Jatk Sikes. Mrs. Douglas Bowler President , COMING UP ~ Paper drive from 9 to 11 :30 a.m. Satur· day, Nov. 20. Mrs. Robert Brant. ways and means chairman may be called at 646-2300 for further in- formation. . ~~~ ;1 ·. • . ,.--. . ' ,.i.,_c--· ~,: · #L/!i-~ HJ~ / ,.., -· . ( . ··~ ~· :r · 1 • ·~ ~ :rex>d 0~ -: _· :""- SPRINGFIELD CERTIFIED SL-t·CED • BACON I LB. PACK 4 c 608 EAST BALBOA BLVD .. BALBOA REFRIGERATED DELIVERY SERVICE: PHONE 673·8310 SPIC:IALS -THUlS .. Pat .. SAT. -NO'f'IMl~l 11, 12. 1l 12 OZ·FROZEN PATIO DINNERS SEASONS FINEST BEEF OR CHEESE RUBUE ENCHIIlDl- OR GRAPEFRUIT MEXICAN STYLE EXTRA FANCY o ~ i 51 -WI llSllt'f'l THI! llGHT TO LIMIT 9UANTIT(S Yes, Virginia, Smartness Saves NEW YORK lUPI J -Mrs. Linwood Holton, first lady of Virginia, ha s turned h e r talent.! as a political cam· paigner into another type of drive -to help families get the most for their food dollar. Specifically, she heads the campaign for her husband 's constituenls, but what goes for Virginians app lies just as aptly to fam ilies in the other 49 states. As far as Mrs. Holton knows, she's the only wife of a governor involved in a reAI grass rools campaign. making personal appearances at semina rs with experts both from government and busines.!I going to the housewife with in- formation on food budgeUng, meal planning and nutrition. "We're working the hardest at the lower economic level." said Virginia "Jink s" Holton. "But we find the middle in· come familie.! are havi ng a difficult time too." Officially, the "family food dollar'' sessions were schedul- ed for fall in 22 geographical divisions devised to prevent duplication. But Mrs. Holton says the program, which a l read y ha s rea c hed thousands, will be a continuing educational one with the rood stamp people. the extension service and Roy Farmer and his state consumer affairs staff carrying on. One big phase of the pro- . gram has been to teach food traS: One woman told a pri ce of each item as she went stamp recipients use of such seminar that she took along through the store and when basics as lentils, flour. peanut one of those p u r s e -s i z e she got to her limit or $20, butter, chick peas, butter and calculators, clicked off the stopped. meats, · -----'--------....:..::::....:.....:. ______ _ She said the women want to know more about meal plan- ning on the food stamp plan. how to plan meals for a family working on sever.al shifts. some even ask about tools of the kitchen. Available at the conferences were "The Budget Watc her's Cookbook," prepared by the Roanoke Valley Nu t r i..t..l·o-n Commilttt and the nutrition section of the Virt:inia Depart- ment ol Health. It's full or low-cost menus and buying tips ( "ir you shop while you 're hungry, you may buy more than you need and your food bill will go up. It's wise to shop· after you have eaten"). The seminars also make avalliible tips from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Samples:· Plan at home . This is where good buying begin1. Jot down items as you think of them. MATERNITY SALE DllES.SES • TOPS• PANTS • go% TO S0%0FF for the season's parties ... ! your maternity ~ardrob e -NOW ! Make decisions before you start your shopping trip. As you plan. keep in mind what NEW,O•T CENTEI you ha ve, what you need, how 21 l-ASHION ISLAND NEWPORT l!ACH the item will be used. the size. HAllOI SHOPPING CENTER THE CITY color, quantity and quality you 2100 HARIOlt ILVO. l SHANNON IA.ST want, the price. the adver tised 1 ____ c,,o~n,.•'-"'"-"""•'---OUNGl special~. S2l l"INE AYL ---c.-.~,-,'-o"'•'""o°'u'".-.-.~-- Smarl shoppers buy needed LONG llACH OUNGI things first. the11 add the ex· WE HA.VI YOUR SIU 2'/2 TO 12 Not all styles In this slz• range. !u" e••r •l•••I f "h• •14• •!4•0• 11.68 <>lro the lathlon •hoe• that ALDEN SIZES: 2'11·11 WIDTHS: 4.A.fW COLORS: WE HAVE YOUR WIDTH lW C to11 I C to 11 D C to 11 ( 211 " 12 '" .... Iffy ......... "" ""'" f&rl • , • 4t1l1rtH .tit! a tro11t l•l'I ,,, Mill flt ...... .., • .,.... fort ,._ ...t11111 lflMle •IMll n.- ln• • . , • ••lr•·•ll•nalh •le1l 1t11ft-• l1r atlf1t1l:to111lo'r1atl1 .. , .... ~. OPEN 9: 15 TO 6:00 DAILY FRIDAY 'Tll 9 P.M. CLOSED EVERY SUNDAY • ll•ck Celf • l row" Coif • llock '•1111! • k 111 (nlf •No..., Coif • Wt.ilt kill I 311 to 12 to ,.<>-1~=- AA l ft 12 AAA l ,, 11 uu ' It 11 "'"""I ...... i. +rrtu "*' ... u.ai. I!> •II,~,,. ., .. , Enna Jettick. Shoes • t tnt k c .. 11 • (1,.,11 Cnll • h~t Colf $18 99 WESTMINSTER CENTER tn the Moll •lt9 WISTMINITH AVI, PHONE 07·4100 DOWNTOWN DOWNTOWN SANTA ANA ANAHEIM • llnrl (r~i lt ,.,.,,, ..._-----'~-s~. !nc.---J 10111,11 .t1h St.• Pho111 S.t2·322-4 101 W. Lincoln A••·• Ph. 62S·04.t0 • • • USDA Grade'+' Poppy Brand With "Pop-Up" Tem- perature Gouge. Pre- Seosoned to Roost In Bog. l 6·22-lbs, HENS ;:i'{'l.,,,;,,, 10 1014· 49• lb lb. Avg. I~. • • Fully Cooked Eastern Pork Eosteni Most In Quality-Western Most lri'Flovor." BUTT !~~ii~!. W~enslL 45c ~~~~~eef~!~~~~ 59c B · f B • k t '"''-w'01•M'""""' 98' Round Steaks .: '""io'!i~'~ ·93• ee ns e (Ftrst tut ••• lb. $1.29) ll Boneless Steaks ~~0C:C1~;;!:S:~ 1-.s1°• Boneless Beef Cubes :c.;;:;:~. "98' Fresh Beef Li•er ,;;:~.~. ..69' Sirloin Tip Steaks u~o'::';;::,,;~:., ,.$) 39 T B S k USOACho<o!HI $)59 -one tea s ,,~~"'1""""" " S S ks """"""''"' $229 pencer tea eoneiu, 111b Ev• 1L SAFEWAY SLICED SAFEWAY or McCOY BOLOGNA [01u1EfilBRISKET BICKS & 35c NECKS 11.7c lb. All Beef ·Ot. '""""' ' 69c for Snack pkg. or Sandwich ... ,,._ 98c Serr• Yo•r r1111 ilr "C1111j lttf l t1••a11~ lb. • 'GERBERS BABY FOODS · ' Strained Fruits & Vegetables Your Choice Each ••••••••• A DISHWASHER . Jill DETERGENT White Mogic SD-IL 69c Recommended For pk& All Automatics. · • • HEINZ BRAND KETCHUP So Rich It Goes Fur-14-az. '"k' u, Food 26C ther. Tostes Setter! Bii. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Floor Wax While Magic-Guoranlttd By Safeway Uncandilionolly 46 99c Oz. Protein 21 Shampoa Gillette Blades 'D':J;';;~,u Close-Up Toathpaste Pertussin Bayer Aspirin Wild hrry (OUQh Syrup l·IL$J29 ... 74' u 73c .. DURABLE PORCELAIN COOKWARE Hawthome By West Bend -3-Quart s499 Sauce Pan each !nhed From Nearby f Eu Rlnohn Tt Safe· doz. way, Daily, ctn. Eltra Lari• nu. Ctn. 39' Soft & Absorbent-low Prict Big ..___,,. Roll ... SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS Table Syrup ~:;:,~49.c Pnck Train-Pancakes, Waffle s, Etc, fl Golden Com wte~c;~~:m 1~!~ 23< dlll D t t MiradeWhitt M·•L$J25 • 9 8f98ft Al\. Purpose laundry lkt. I Salad Olives c;sr:~1~;iv~1 ·~;; 39< 8 B&M Baked Beans ':;','39' l!!:I.\ p t f d KalKanBrand 14·1l.26' Jiill 8 , 00 C~un~ Beef Vcrittf CH tl Mott's Apple Sauce '~:· 42 ' ' SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS! -Prices fffeclive In litensed Sofl'WOy DiM:ounls. Mac Nair's Scotch ~';'.';,:) '"''$499 Whiskey Blend ':.::;,' · -"'" s3st BAKERY BUYS o~iW~o~' ·DONUTS . fi Angel Food Cake w~~·. '/;:; 39' II Skylark Raisin Bread '~;:f33' fl, English Muffins w~~,.. ::•; 33' FROZEN FOODS "~iW~.:',' 8 '~!~!~co~'"!~ies , ... 12 ~ I Bel-air Peas •;:;:,::;-•·,"·27' ... G B ,.,, 1·"20· reen eans "~"'·•-,,. ii On ion Rings :t~ ::;: 31' ii Morton Dinner ~,: ::.: 20' .Genuine American Lomb-Tender And Delicate FlovOf td. SHORT SHANK ~~.~r,!!,!' Ham ~J 39 •Luers.Mini • Wilson Tendermode ' F h P k R t. '""""' 49 ' res or OCIS ' Shoulder Cut "· Center Cut Rib Pork Chops "98' L r' SI • d B '-'"m' "''·53• ue s ice aeon Savary5m~ktd ,~ •. Lamb Rib Chops ,,::o<l:~~:m, "·$pi Small Loin Lilmb Chops ~;~:, ,.sl" ~~~'~' ~.~~~sts,.69~ • W~tll ltlS • Dr.t111slit~S • fiia~s • USDA 'n~• '.l' • EDYnlRDS , ~~COFFEE I I :1 I Vocuum PoCk-Robust Flavor. Can ••••••••• ' , DAIRY -DELI BUYS ';~~~~,".' Egg Nog ~~~:~ '··89c Git Rich And Thick-Great favorite M • Piedmorit Poll~s argarrne '"""'" ·~~''"' "'"· 11 ' ... Shady Lane Butter '';},.' ""·BJ • llL C T • luten•t ream opp1ng """"' '" 48' 1111 a DIET FOOD Sego Brand Simply D•l<ioo\-ll·tL2 3 c • Stock Up Value I "' ro;~~ , .. 1.oc 2 -..29' PRICES EFFECTIVE IN LOS ANGELES & ORANGE COUNTY. EXCEPT CATALINA - • Wau11111, Nmmber 10, 1971 . USDA.Choice Graded Bttf Flavorful And Juicy Rolled & Tied Chuc k. ldtol To Pot Roost. DISCOUNT PRICED Canned Ham Dubuoue Rayol Bllffet Fully Caok!!d-5·lB. Can Beef Patt'es Fas.ter Farm,-ci.rc~"' '89 ' I fr\ed-Ch11t~ Wag1111 IL Fresh Calf Chops •;:,;;;;t::;• ... 89' Fresh Calf Steaks ,,!;,~:"'.r:,'Q'..;., .$!" F h 0 t '"'""'"'"'' '"''·86' res YS en ldtocll fer Stuffing }Ir S I St k .. ·~·"-'"' 98 ' a mon ea s (a.vgh! flash· froze" ll Can •••••••• Fancy Q.ualily Cobana Banonas Ideal For School Lunches or Slice Over Cereal. A OC d . lorfl S•JI y a OS Hon-Nw-· Valencia Oranges ':.= (astern Grain Fed Porkers Cut From Meaty And Tender Young Porkers. RIB END CUTS USDA Choice Graded Beef F!ovoiiul & Juicy Ideal to Broil or Barbecue! BONELESS CUTS --10¥.i-oz. Can ••••••••• Grapefruit f lorido Ruby Red or White-large Sizt $ lb. Sweet Corn Ftesh-AliifT!niftt Kif- . nels. Low In Price, Toor ' DAILY ~ILOT 69 ... . . . ' • ·• • . • . I • •• DAI LY PJLOT W~sday, Nt>ffmbtr 10, 1971 ~ ~l ·Peanut Butt~r Pies -She.lled Out;. ·Pick From Three Vers ions DEAR NAN: Slncf' movlag Wt 1CI DtlrOlt lbrtt )'tl11 ago I 1t1ve bee:n trying lo find sorMplatt Uu.t sells a peanut butter pie I.be w1y I could buy it 1t a Lansing resta11rant. It is aomelblng like a custard LETS ASK THE COOK by tun Wiley pie. You don't really taste the peauut butter. but I think It Is deliciou s. Do you or any of your readers have the recipe? JO HARTE. 11 A R PER 'S WOODS. l\UCll. l have 'three. Take your pick. First one is known as . "Oz.ark type". It is so rich it ~ me somev.·hat of "shoofly pie." Blend together I cup corn syrup. I cup~ugar. 12 teaspoon va11il!a, 3 slightly beaten eggs and 1/3 cup creamy-type peanut butter. t There is no liquid beyond the syrup.) Pour into an unbaked pie shell. Bake at 400 for 15 minutes, then swing back to 350· for 30-35 minutes. The center of the filling should still look a little wobbly and less set than around the tdges, but it will cook the rest of the way from its ov.•n heat when taken from the oven. A similar version scatters chop· ped salted peanuts over the pas~ shell before the filling goes in. The second one is a cooked filling poured into a baked pie shell or graham cracker crust. (.()mbine ¥i cup brown sugar. ~J cup granulated sugar, 'i 1 cup peanut butter. 2 eggs and 2 tablespoons Oour in a saucepan. Gradually stir in 1 1 ~ cups milk. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly till thickened but do not boil. Take from heat. stir in 1,i teaspoon \•anilla. Pour into baked pie shell. The third one is a refrigerato r chiffon t y p e . Soften I envelope of unflavored gelatin t I table- spoon) in I/~ cup cold water. Combine 3 well beaten egg yolks. ''4 cup sugar, 1,. cup water and ~J teaspoon salt in a double boiler. blending well. Add the softened gelatin. Over boiling water beat constantly with rotary beater or portable mixer until thick and fluffy. Set lo cool. Put ¥.!: cup smooth peanut butter in a small bov.•I. adding ~i cup water gradually. Beat till smooth. Set aside. Now that the .egg mixture has cooled stir fin 1,1 teaspoon \'anilla. Chill till slightly thickened but still sy rupy, pro- bably not more than 15 minutes. Now beat the 3 egg whites till foamy. Add 14 cup sugar. beat to stiff peaks. f old into peanut butler mixture. Turn into crumb crust or bak· ed pie shell. Chill Iii! firm. This is ver~· pretty topped with whi pped cream at serv- ing time but that does detract from the peanut Oavor. DEAR NAN: For years we have ~arched for a recipe for Bavarian pret u ls. They are the large sort kind but no one seemll to know how to make tbtm. \\'hen "·e were young, we bought them from sidewalk stands In St. Louis. hut recently "·e 'found son1e at Bush Gardens al Van Nuys. They said th ry were se al in from Philadrlphla. w r re prepared in a eaustir solution after they received lhem. They are so delicious we would be eternally grateful if you could help u~. !\!HS. J..ESTER LAR~11S. PO)IONA That I can. 1 get repeil led requests for these. Tht>y are crusty on the outside bur the interior is more bread-like since they art> 1hirker than commercial types. i·ht·~· should ht eaten the same d:iv as baked but they do fr~ze. \l'ell and can be reheated 1 You can find them in !iome n1arke1s i• the froien food can.J Greens Savory Qultk and savory! FIESTA GREEN PEAS 1 tablespoon huller ~( teaspoon onion salt ~ teaspoon oregano Pepper to taste I can ~811 ouncein \'Cry yoong small early green peas. drained J canned pimiento, dieed y, cup pilled ripe oli11e!i. oliced In a small saucepan melt the butter and 5lir in the aeuonlngs. The lye solution is a low enough cooctntration_ that it dQfSl1'l stay on lhe pretzels in dange.rous amounls but be careful \l:orking with the hot" solution. Splashed on your skin, it can cause definlte burns. So here Is how you make Bavarian Pretzels. Soften 2 packages grt.nulated or cake yeasL in 1 ~ cup lukewarm 'A'ater. Scald I quart mij_k, pour into a ,large bowl, stir in ~~ cup soft shortening and 1; cup sugar. Cool to lukewarm. Add the softened yeast and 6 cups all-purpose flour (not self · rising) stir till smooth. Cover and let rise in a warm place (S0.8.51 until light and bubbly. c.r m 1.a '°' \d(IOlt " "°" ....., ,... Col ...., if lol ••• about 30 minut~. Silt anot.her_5_cu_pa or flour with 11/i telilspooo baking pQ.wder and l 'ii tablespoon salt. Stir down the risen dough, gradually beat in the flour-baking powder mlxtur(. When 'i\'eil blended you may find you have to add I more cup of flour but don't get the dough too dry. Agaln, let rise1 cover~ ill a greased bowl until doubled. About 11? hours. Then punch down, divide into 6 pieces. let rest 10 minutes. Now divide each piece into 10 equal pieces. Roll between palms in- to a strand \2 inch thick and 18 inches long, Twist into pretiel ahapes, lucking end.! µnder . Cover prel1el! ligllUy. Wben all dough ls shaped, fint pretzels will have risen. Now add 2 tablespoons household lye to % quarts water in a Jafge pan, nothlng aluminum. Heat to steaming but NOT bolling. One at a time, place pretiels right side down on a wide slot· ted turner, lower into lhe aolu· lion for just 1 to Z seconds. Lilt and drain. Place right side up on greased baking sheets. (The old timers used J>iiralfin). Sprinkle with coar~ salt, bake at 400 .for 14 mJnutes or until well browned. Good luck! DirectloM for malting white chocolate .wJtaj P.reqet.s are given in Nan Wilcy11 booklet "Rec ipes You've Loved and Lost." To obtain your copy send 25 centa and a Joni, s t a m p e d , self·addressed envelope with your request ror it to Nan Wiley in care ol the Daily Pilot. DOUBLE I Fresh Amer~~"*I 0-Bone Chuck "": 89~ LAMB CHOPS ~ Boneless Chuck ,>g'iJr ~a~ :E:., $)0~1 ShoulderClod ~;;r '1~ IHI•,. shoulder •11'. i Center Cut Chuck """ 69· '--~,..--~· F ., s ks "'"'"" '111 :-: ,1~ 1~ ... •l~tl =~ .... •11J.~ am1 y tea THic.w:curs •· ···~im111111ilii!mlllllnll!llll!ll!ll!Hllll!IHllllU-l!ll'fl .• SILVER SALMON TIOl.l (.O.\JVHI f~Oll"' 98" ~•I(.! '0 l.O.~f PORK SAUSAGE JIMl"Y O!A"' ~!GU~A~ 75¢ O' i<Ot l~ ~Oll Wv/o/M/sl!Ml!.l;flli;\!l!Jf& S 40 C ON EACH ave BOTILE MclNTOSH BOURBON ~c.io;;~ ... s319 OUART$47t IOTTLE -f IFTH ,_ s.iood lllysJ taruti11 Flsll Stieb "°'" -.. ............... 55c Cnltlll Fbll Calls Q.OL -. ·············' 55c. lhlptrts frtod Jbllllt ~ -, ....• _,,,,_,.98c I ilCnallrts Frid SulNpS U«. ..a.. ......... $1.98 ! l;iiitons fisll Ii c~i,s -. rm~··············l5t WClllllG RISI!, JUICY Now (Jr ·~· F/o.,or! ......... -OSCAI um SUQD UCON :::;.."'" 73' I ~;;: '::. 7311 ~ 2 .. '1" 59~ BLUE CHIP STAMPS PILUBURY INSTANT 69C ~~~~ 1~~3!!!~.·~4•91 • • MARGlRllA Ml;; w""'""'"'· 89' ~ i:iUISTl'l~llUJll!NM:.ll:rllU11tm11111lllll.111111;°i r randscape MUMS Oranges~:::.. ....... ... Cucumbers :;:: .... .... r~-TOMATO .1~ JUICE LIBBY'S Rich in Fl'1¥or, •• 46 . oz. CAN Buy Hall Gallon & Sare! CUTTY SARK SCOTCH ' Flow•t o' ,,,. WM.kl • 86-PROOF ii\ilil ,.,, $)675 • IMPORTED _.; •• ·--GAL. Vons Enchiladas .. ::i:..0~Lu:: .. 35C/$f/ Del Monte Green Peas ~ 24cJMW Wheaties Cereal G·~~.:~~~· 39c~ Vons Heavy Duty Foil ~' 45cJe/ DEUCATESSEN 1·DA Y WEEK-END BUYS! i';~ 12-M.35' iifiON'WMicm ,:, 79t cl!OC• Ml O' """" ••• YOllS UISIM llllD ~ ·39' ....._ono:on. _, ·~ YOIS IWI MUfflNS ::~ 43' !,~l!~!.!.'ill'L'o. .......... 35' C....... IMi', '-"-'-CMGM ., Uthf T~.t,ey. s.o.. l\e. •. ••.. .... ••• . ••••• 4$' snctd lllltrfcn Cflllll ,_""::.. 95~ .. ~Y0~~~~~:!2u.~ .. 4f4 ~,,..""" c.b 11«1,.. .. .-if.we• V"fl4 . t101Mt,J2JiMll'.l.V!litJ;Zf,)ft/lul;llil4 • VONS COFFEE ~:r:: 69c FRESH BREAD ~~25c --L-ARGE EGGS ~~-37c WIENERS ,~,'.','Mu.~.'." .... 49c APPLES w~=~" 4 ~ 69c· Persimmons ::::: ..... DRIED APRICOTS GOUlt'.H GI.OW • t.OL PKG . (v/o/M/s•ljlofjJlll0i·i 0i :!ltp ' ORANGE I JUICE ~ Mn. Poul $w..t Potatots 12-0L PJG.. ................ ~~ Green Giant Wlld & Whit• Rke 12.oi. Pm ••••••• -4 llrds fr• Cut Corn f.OL Ptt0 ......................... 21 1trd1 Eye PRs 1ooi. n.o. ............................ .21 Morton Pumpkin Pie otM11tcr. »0L no. ............. 30c Jeneymokl Bvtter Ol.o.lll"" • 1.u.c;tM. ................ a1c .............. ...., ....... """'""""""' ... ..., STOUFFERS MACARONI & CHEESE '"NM:" IOVPIU. 45 ... ~ .. · ..... ~.1~.·.~.~ .. · ..... J.~.:;..·.:.,,-D .• -.. c,_,,, • ORANGE JUICE ''. ',:'.' 48 ~: 89' OKor Mtr;er Smold1 Unb 1J.01. flltO. ..... 83c Ok.Or Mayer IJl-MtotWltrllrl 1.&& tm. ••.•••• 79c Olcar Mayer All-8etf W°MMB UL PIO.. •• , ••• , 83c SpnryDeodorant.lnd. 10c Off,6-0z.Can,,. Tll TODTlllUSI eavn.-.m1WD Sit COUlTl TDOTtlPASTl WlllR. l'40ll. • IOTUSHITHTIAPlllS ""·-lie HEINZ OCHUP DETERGENT FAB w .. ._ , ........ ..... TOILR TISSUE PllDll 89' """" ..... 1.0:."" Solt-wiv• 2 IOU by Scott Pit. • Add remaining ingredlenls 10111 and mix light!~; co11er andl hut gently, shalltng pan Olten . 34081 Mikes S servings. Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach Laguna -Hills Plaza, El Toro .,.. 21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain VaReJ • • 1 II PILOT·AOVERTISER N Wtdntsda;y, Nowmbtr 10, 1971 EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES ~QUAil ~Catsup .............. , ,, •.. I 7c IOYAL DANISH Luncheon Loaf .......... ,, .. 39c /.Ji!:\ IDEAL&. CHOCOl.Alf '1NWHfEL5 ~Nabisco Cookies 1r;-;.49c HORMfL . • Vienna Sausage ....... ,~ .. 25c ~c~;~k· Light Tuna .. 35c ~WtlCH'S ~Grape Jam ........ ,.. .• 45c lOYAl > Decorator Towels .... ; .• b. 29c ~QUAlt ~Fruit Cocktail ..... ,. •. 23c • SWANSON'S-. TV lf.\Lflo\OM fllED CHICKEN, CHOPPED SllLOIN, MEAT LOAF LEMON TUUIY -· ·- JUICE FROZEN 4ac ~~.s•c DINNERS 7 EA. PA#UEU-Di1pooabl• 0Yemight Diapers ... 12 .... asc TIOf s120 Detergent •............... .:1~, ~2fE · ~Lunch Bags ......... ,, ... IOc G~pefruit Juice .......... 49c crt5TAL·WHITE--·Liquid Detergent ......... 59c ~WISHBONE' • ~Italian Dressing "" 59c VITA PAKT (Cwar! ••• .53cl (1.·~·Gol •••• flc) 75 Orange Juice Blend..... c A fOOD TlEAT fOI YOUl PET ~Figaro Cat Food ..... o', ac K!N·l·aATION SPECIAL CUTS 14 ate Dog Food ........ , ........ oz. MtfW.UHEl DfTElGU. C Cascade ................... 6i. 56 · Ol' VIRGINIA-BEEF, CORNED BEEF, ~ HAM, TURKEY CHIPPED 29( M~ATS •• :-~l~. ~ ffilA Cltw.IY · ~Swiss Knight.•.:-::·:-. 37c SUl't:ltlOR All Beef Tamales ........ 25c JANI: AN01150 N -J"l"P•"" "' ,ilMftl" 47 Cheese Spreads ..... ,, '"' c Hf.llf.W HATIONAI. k05HfR $ O Franks or Knocks .... ,,... I 9 All lllf Wl'fNll5o (All M.<or ~roftb ••• 73t·lb.) 77• scar Mayer ............. lb. ~ c"i.;';~~"inchiladas 39• 10 1'5 Roquefort Dressing ..... Sac 101'5 0Rf55JNG 4ac Blue Cheese ................ . 101'5 Dll5SING-lcirt.,., f .. ,,.h, 5hri"'P 3a 1000 Island .............. •~· c LIQUOR DEPT. QUARTS OLD CARAVAN BOURBON GRAMZEE VODKA LONDON BRIDGE GIN 90' HILL RIVER BLEND -A. BAR TENDER-ORY MIXES 12-ENV. 89< • • PKG. • • • • •uJu, Ntvtmbtr 10. 1971 DAILY PILOT 3!> , We don't want '.l youtogo .. · s'"""laee / elie ••• )ii&\. . -~- EASTERN GRAIN-FED PORK LOINS at 0 KCBOPS RIB END WAFER THIN ••. POJIK CHOPS........ .~. FRESH LY MADE-BULK 4 5 C CENTER CUT llB or 8 C SAUSAGE . . . . . LI. LOIN CHOPS . . . . . . 'I.. •. COUNTRY STYLE -PORK. 65 c SPARERIBS.............. LB. HORME~CURE "81 " : . RIB END J_. LOIN_END. L~~RL~N~g~~R:~T : PORK ROAST: PORK ROAST ORf·IOA HASH BROW MS "19c 01. DEL MONT'f , 1tOSHlR OR Dlll H"1.Vl5 PICKLES ,,49c oz. SUNNY VALLEY' lARGE FRESH EGGS GRADE "AA" 29 c DOZ. CTN. ' ALL GRINDS COFFEE FOLGER'S VAC. PACK _ •• c ·l ·lB. TIN -1--V LAURA SCUDDER MAYONNAISE ,,.oz. 55c JAR DEL MONTE TOMATO JUICE ••oz 21c · HALF ~~·:, SJ29! 6RIB 5: I! c l J·LBS.65 c HAMS -lOSERYE-LB~-:----~LB. l AVG. . LB. WESTWOOD-CATERING QUALITY . MO~RELL'S YORKSHIRE . ~-,~-·t-"~-----1,E-CRE-AM-~m~ SLICED BACON ... :~~.. Al~~~~ .. 59c sticro"eicoli::· .. 73~. ! sLicYo™eicoN'~: .. 59.~.l Linti"f'111E11s .::t . 79l~. GALLON DISCOUNT FRESH SEAFOOD IOIJ" FILLETS of ROCKCOD .................. 79 ~. IHlff *l" flLLETS of DOYER SOLE ..... , ......... , " ftUM FILLETS of aunERFISH ................ 79~ ••tlH WESTERN OYSTERS ..... ~ ....... ,._,.. 79!. ,.nll BROOK TROUT ••• : •••.••••••.•.••.• l or .1 •• 79~ .. THRIFTIMART GOLD BOND BONELESS ROLLED FOR THE ROTISSERIE " <.:ALIFORNIA GROWN GRADE "A" RIVERSIDE BRANO-OVEN READY 18 TO 22·lBS. TOM -· · . 35c ~llRKEYS..... LB. FROZEN MEAT ITEMS fOSTfllS CMUCI W,.;,o>l • 11 rotD IISJ • • • 1·1 J I , ... , ••.......0-1 ..... 1 PATTIES ••••••••••• • •• 1·~ ,.. I STEAKS •••• , •••• ,, .':!.~ 8 : I CORN DOGS ••••••••••••• 79~ .. t!tUU.lolll-Al!Vo"'':., 63< "KIDS FUN" DINNERS •••• 11 ... . iA(AK'fAScj INERGIIlR , ...... 15 c CIO!Uf ()01,.Ul•Of 79• JOHN 'S PlllA ••••••• , • , , , 1.._ .. llOO~IY! 57c "ORANGE PLUS" JUICE ••• , .... 10-11••· $10U"U'S--•-l I ci.-.o.1.1oot~· 45c SIDI DISHES •·-•11·"-'1"" ._.. '"'"'""A• O"'ft• .....UC~u-. !1'-~ ... l l,UJICM,.,. .. ,11,,,.) •1 OO APPLI Pll , .. , ... , , , •• , • , , :it ... CH!C•IOIO••O-•II v •• ;.11., -"IWI 68 PICCADILLY CIRCLES ..... 10-... c lllLOGG'l -"11 Vo•i•li•• E&Ci ROLLS ••• l'•"1'"'""·"c1 "·•• 62 c 'OIJo JllHllMI" JS BREADED FISH STICKS·"'"· fl fOUI P1$HllMUI , 1 OI FISH KRIS PS ...... , ,, • , •• , ,.,,.,, MELLOW 'fASTE TEMPTING TABLE READ'( HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLES ...•..•..... HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS I • • -..... ...... -• -- ' • I I 69 c : lEG. ffc I SlrM.IT -lfG, .47c " I ASPIRIN .... r•, :,';~:! 38L -l s A1Tvrr..-2saM.,.....- VITAMIN ''C'' 100·. .. 1RIS LOMG SPAGHETTI ,:.19c DQWNYfLAltl fROitf.4 WAFFLES lllS FACIAL · TISSUE ~2Sc VAN CAMPS PORK & BEANS 280Z. 27c BIRDSEYE FROZEN AWAKE :.;,~~' 29c l 'h-QUARTS SOFT WEYE .';:~~, 22c r-~------~----------------~ · · W.COIJPON iw.w.11... . COUPON GOO[) NOV, 10 TH.RU NOV, 16 . ·zse OFF I ON FRESH ~ MEAT =. WITH COU,ON &. $3.00 MINIMUM lil>UllCHAll ONI COUl'ON Pllt AOUl1' CUS10MlR • . . 2701 HARBOR .BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA ANA 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO • • ,t ' • • - • l!i. ... l..---.=~~'~'-!!!.~D=A=IL~Y~P~IL~O~T ~-----W-~_M_ida_1_,_No_~_m_b~_10_,_1•~71 , 1 ·Parisian Fare Produces i' By JOHNA BWIN • a Fa~orite rarely eat with · more than abou.l 20 miles outside the :ity. had 10 to 15 guest.a: for Jun. ~cups soy nuce • .6 ·~ ... .n Ma~I 1.'00lc··. 1 teU:pi>on minced chives 1 It is exqulsitely terractd 1t cheon. If wu chicken, mashed 1 can walerchestnut. (1..2-15) Makes appetizers for 8-10. z teaspoons EScoffier Robert NEW YORK -"I've alwa ys Lhret people at a time. the bl.ck and has an un. 1 potatoes and monotony in ~ pound lean, thin sliced gauce • been 8 gourmet, going back to detest going to big parties, believable variety of cuisines. Oakdale." · bacon "-, DUNGENESS CRAB Fresh lemon juice to taste • my early trips to Europe when particular ly on New Year's The Germans. who had never TRADER VJC,S RUMAKI Quarter chicken livers or MU&~R~~Y=ISE Salt, freshly ground pepper I was still at Warner Bros. I Eve." had food like this in their eut In hall. C.Ombine all in-SAUCE Lemon wedges knew everJ resUlurant , its This may explain his lives, took it over during the 1 pound chicken llvera gredients for marinade, except Arrange chilled Dungeness _.. t quality and "speCLallies. Paris preference for another. more war." 1 table6PQOn sugar water chestnuts and bacon. 1 pou.nd cold, cooked lump crab meat on crisp chilled let~ always has had the finest food intimate Parisian restaurant. Zanuck's foodstyles are 1' bay leaf Cook chicken livers i n Oungeness crab meat (or tuce on plate. Combine re· t in the world," proclaimed the La Perouse on the Left Bank. diametrically different from I stick cinnamon marinade until bart:Jy tender. lobster or other cooked malning ingredients, except • I ~!enlu"c'k'. film giant. Darryl F. "It 's upstai rs," he said, "in those of his boyhood in 1 eup chicken stock Cut bacon slices "and water crab meat) lemon ' wedges, to prepare • -"Cl the or iginal building. They Nebraska . He was born in t inch pieee chopped ginger chestnuts In half. Wrap bacon crisp, cleaned, drained let· mustard -mayonnaise sau c e. • "Now I usually eat have about eight or to priv ate Wahoo and raised in Oakdale root (or dried ginger) -around chicken liver and tuce leaves Top crab meat with must&.rd· do~stairs at Trader Vic's -:-dining roo ms." by his grandparents. 2 tablespoons star anise waterchestnut, secure with 1 cup mayonnaise mayonnaise s ·a u c e. Gamish they make a special Mata1 "There are other fine "As a kid, it was meat and (available in Oriental food toothpick (or metal skewer), 2 ~ teaspoons prepared with lemon wedges. Serve as FILM GIANT cooler there for me, without places, of course. One of the potatoes. We always had our shops) Broil until bacon Is crisp and mustard first course or maia luncheoo rum - and, at least once a ..'.m~o~st~be:"_aut~ifu~l_'l~s ~Coq~~H~ar:".d'.:.·'· --".b~ig'-m~••:I _:•:t _::noo::::•~•:nd::._:•:lten:::._.:.l .:sm::•::ll~c::lo::.ve:_&~lit:_li:::'c::., cru=.:•:::hed::__:bt:::ow::n:::·_:'"::'"::_:.•· _:•ec=•S5arl'=:.:·~_:.lt~e:.as:!:poo=•.:Di::.io::•::m:::"':.tsrd=.:~_:c.:ou::":::..'· ::S.::r.:::'°'::....c'.:..· ______ 0_1_ry'-l_Z_•_n_u_ck __ _ week. I go 10 '21.' ~1ario 1_ knoy.·s my habits well. I 4 usually go for exotic dishes. When it is on the menu I love pheasant, cooked in its natural sauce, or poulet au pot." Up since seven, the veter~n film makct was 'Still in his floy.·ered bathrobe with the familiar rig1tr stuck in his mouth al 11 a.m. His sunny corner suite at the Plaza Hotel ------overloolts Central· Park...and is full of mementos of a Hfetime of making movies. "I'm still a gourmet," he said, "but I gave up wine 10 years ago 10 rid myse_!f of t~at drowsy feeling. I dr ink o~~y beer. Piels beer, because its the lightest and yet has the some alcohol content as top foreign beers. I ha ve. two glasses if I ta ke a rest tn the afternoon and so metimes before I go to bed." Al 69. this remarkable gentleman'" is still v er Y energetic. His excellent he~lth and great physical stamina always ha ve been a mystery to his rolleagues. "I eat only tY.'O ·meals a day," he said . f "Breakfa st. when I get up. and dinner at about nine !1 o'clock." :.. "Of course," c o n~~ u tehd Zanuck. "the best f""" 1n e wor ld is still in Paris. And the •: fine st restaurant is Chez I There's more to ' than just low prices. USDA GRADE A -SOUTHEIN WESTIRN -lOoz.Jar Here's .a tough choice to make! .,....,..~l!""i At Ralphs you can.buy moot nationally ... dvertised brands and at low everyday pricea. o,; the other han~. you could cboooe OW' own brand on many items. And with Ralphs good name on the out.aide, we get very particular about-what goea inside. Qur own private 1,ICP',,,..~:-· brandeollerthefinestqwility products •.•· .. ;, uwally at 111betalnial 1avings. • BAKERY DEPARTMENT . L'Ami Louis. It's very small 1----_ .l... -seats oolY 30 ~pie -and 1, Ifs way out Of the way. im-= - possible to find.. B u t everything there 1 s un- FRYING ·~Ji. -CHICKENS _ ~.27 FRESH OYSTBIS .88 RALP'i'.t·s•CnclcedWll ... 35 BREAD 1 .... a-.1oo1• crNNAMON Rous .35 UNIAs lb .• 10 FLORIDA RUBY GRAP-&RUIJ each• 1·9 . _I • MEAT MASTER llEf : believable. 11 Za nuck's favorit e for late night dining in P'aris is Lip~. one of the oldest bistros there. "l tell you. to get in to eat at :• Lipps on SUnday night, it's like making a p e r so n al. ap- FRESH ""NTCUTS 83 Beel Brisket~ pointm ent with the President EVERYDAY LO.,, PRICES in Washington! C .. "You ,., all the top film alifornia Grown people , v.•riters and the cream Day's Fr••h•rl Gr•de A , " of Parisian society. It was FRYERS -• ~ -Hemingway's f11vorite. He ..... .; _wrote a. v.·hol~pt.eun.JL.•· ~----' one of his books. He would ilff::-GfOWn-Graff......_--~ -., 4 "''°up nis money in his poor Four Legged Fryers I 5 days so he coul d go there C•tlf. Grown once a week to gel something FRYER BREASTS • 165 ... 35 I to eat. They have a ''aried menu." Zanuck said , ··great Dridout for Soup! • (4 I sauerk'8Ut. wonderlul herring fryer Backs .... Necks. 'I in sour cream. There's just Hot Dog on a SUcld nothing like it in the world ~ CORN DOGS 55 "lt"s importanl to me to be . 111"-•" "•· I ·th I I · and to Shurt•ndt-Heat 'n Eat • ;:;,.e 1:%ef1en1 ·;:;, but 1 Chicken Fried Steaks89 MEAT MASTll IRF 7-BONE Beel Steaks~ 78 EVERYDAY wr PRICES Meat Master Beet a..t CMltr cue. ' ROUND STEAKS •• 95 Center CtMtcl Boneless Roasts .. (,09 E••Y to C•rv• RUMP ROASTS ., 195 • (.09 Faet Cut BEEF BRISKET Jliruny De1n or llrd F•rm 'Pork Sausage 1 •. Ro• , 75 Center Cut Alb lb Smoked Pork Chops ( .09 Princess GIFT SELECTIONS J 1 1 ' l . - ' \ ' • •. ~ .• '· .. ·"'".· ,.,;6< ~ .· "· ... ~. ~ ~. . ' .... ~ ' ·~ I 9144 •• SIZES 10V,.2!>Vi r.., 1Tf ,..;,_ 1Tf "'1'- NON-STOP SK!t\-1 -\\'ear it day or evening. to v.·ork or .,._ parties all thru fell end winter ! Sn1p.Dr1ggt1"1g from Monoor•m Toya TOY MODELS ..... ..... , TUIPOlAIT lllUCID 'lllQ PLUS/JUY ---.. ,. "" .. -.. ,,. - FROZEN FOOD .88 Vin De K1mp 39 ENCHILADAS ,,._ ... ,. .. 1 .......... 55 Birds Eya COOL WHIP Pet Rltl PIE SHELLS 11n. .. , •• , 2 135 fr.sh Pact Gr16t A 11Ht.1. '*.. ( 8 PEAS & CARROTS I R~i:";t¥~;~~).·ti~a""it3.t9 Chedt:•rbo•rd F1nn1 Whit• Meat • Turkey Roast-· ,.,.2, 79 Frith Pict Gr1dt A Chopped Broccoli ·~(8 Weketl1kl Snow CRABMEAT a.oz. ,.,(,(9 ...... 5 99 DROWSY DOLLS old! 1 UQllll 111 tllilJfJ JOY ,, ...... ,, .88 PANTRY FILLERS None Such MINCE MEAT ..... ,.., .32 111•11•)'• BEEF STEW -.. ... 160 All V1rl1.Kn 14~.... 25 Recipe Dog Food , l lncts1y L1rg1 1-oc. oan 33 Pitted Ripe Olives • Blue Molilfttah' HorMftM1t ., ltMf a.. 23 DOG FOOD . 1 ........ I ,...... I HILLS COFFEE 10-..1ar (, 3 a.tedlorPM-1 .. .,.. Ptct.Ofl 48 Hunts Snack Packs , (lac.pt OukllM W1ter) 21-o&. bottle 29 CANADA DRY MIXERS, FROHN fOOO ....... HOUSEHOUJ NffDJ MEAT Pill ,..,.,,._.19 -·-"" ,,,,--.. PIZZAS IN IAQ "'-'·"' 1 • ··-TUNA PIEi ......... .25 --···· ll Hatti atoWT1 ftot•toe•-• • ___ ,_ - CHICIC.I N DINNl llll ,,...,,. .~w W"Amtt -. .-. .30 !if" D01 .. 0 INT _."'°" .M -·.. 6S OFIANULATID IOAI' ..... ,..., • Ol•d l andwkh lags ~. o1 • .34 GLAD TitAIH IAOI "'-'"' 11 .71 RALPHI ILllAC" • -.J7 -,ACIAL T .. IUI .... .21 DREn DlTIPIGINT -N .17 GAIN D!Ta .. OINT -....... 7 -~ ZEST IAlll IOAll -.20 ~--IP1C a IPAN --.93 ti(;Vi UOUID --.17 -PHAll 111 9AR IOAP .lS :j.. _!>rlnted P•ttcrn "''' NEW _ ~o~· lilfpmi; 'A ~A.ILABLE NQUJ ~ T RALeHS _ .-q -Hau siz~-1oi.,. 1z.i..,. 14 1it, -n•-~W-::.1.·~o ~t-J!'..' 1 16~. 111.i,, 2()1,., Siu 141-, 1bus1 37 ) Llku 2 yardJ SO.Inch. SEVENTY·t'JVE CENTS for e.ach pa ttern -add ~ cents for tach pattern for Air Mail Del Monte Puddings ... ,.,,. (ldeel tor kttoor Uii'lcft••) - Recipe Dog Food "'•·.,' .63' Choot• fro1tt: Itel I l ff er "oall Turit•J (Th• Dog 'OC>d th•t L•t•la l!•tsl 14\o\--ol. can .. .... -- APPLE PIE --·-11n. .49 R•lpht DATE NUT LOAFeoch .55 DEUCATESSEN DEPARTMENT Ralphs 1-lb. '*8- FRUIT CAKE MIX ...... SLICED MEATS LM'• Pa1t1..r,~a1c••I'. Twr11.,- .45 .35 1ucm · CORNED-BEEF, .... ,. .. -.45 ... .,... Aetorted GELATIN SALADS .37 ·--·!' .......... Sliced Cooked Ham .55 ........ 62 Farmer John Franks , DAIRY DEPARTMENT "·~· SOUR CREAM ""' R11pt11 A11I Cr11m . 15-oa. .... WHIP TOPPING ' .49 .85 u.oi. Mttr. WESSON OIL .59 . HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS Rq. or Mint w/''" ZOO Anlm1t1-Cre1t 72 TOOTHPASTE • ., ........ I ANACIN -o1100 (,(9 Citpn!.a 78 DRISTAN .... of I I OilL DEODORANT... .59 11«.can 179 lhlvl Crt•M RISE LATHER CASHMERE BOUOU 1Er .55 Clelrot 76 HAIR so NEW WI. ...... I •••.• Olly 77 VO 5 SHAMPOO, .......... I lweet. Miki BROWN ONIONS Frtth, Crisp CELERY e1cb .. ,(0 .(5 ... (5 .. .(9 .to IWfft, Juicy Valencia Oranges WlnNr NELIS PEARS -.... • JUICY LEMONS •och LIQUOR DEPARTMENT 11nc1y lllCAIU•t•• 4 2 I SCOTCH '••••'°" DltHed Jn lcod•nd Fifth I HALF CALLON SAVI NGS LIMITED TIME O NLY ::..._ Cutty San: ( SCOTCH """ su• 11-o•L 6, 75 Ten H .. h BOURBON s ... so. ,..,,1. 9,85 Kamchaik• 8 VODKA .... •1• 1'.g•I. .88 Chl'lttten Brother9 BRANDY a ... 11.110 "'••L ( l,97 WJIHS CATERING ICE CREAM "~·~89 HOUSEHOLD NEEDS DIAL BAR SOAP ••lh .20 ALL Detergent.o.lb. pkg. 3,89 . Ftmlly Scott . TOILET TISSUE .... or• ,34 Pyr••ware (JS.15 V•lut) 4 99 PERCOLATER ''"""' I O.targtnt 35-or, pkg, DISHWASHER ALL ,49 No Pttosphata 41-oz. pkf. PUREX DETERGENT 173 4ML pkg. RINSO DETERGENT 168 Oro Suds BUBBLE BATH 2-. """ ,49 ' ,ANTRY ffllERS HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS -VANILLA WAFE"I , ,...,.,.,... ..41 C.;,Jttt10 ONl~I , ., .... ._ .• 57 --ITAAINED l•by Juk:a •·• 111 .01 ;;""..,.. ~ .. Co1tH :· .as --............. CoffM = 2e21 _ _,_ OIL MONTI: CORN --.22 ·-Ma•••• HovH CoftH ':' I .OS ;:: ••• Hou .. CoHH '~· 1.45 --MINCE Ml AT ....... _... .59 ___ ....,, "UM MINCI MUT --..65 ·-MALTID MILK I.I.LL.I • ..,.. 011 Hl.NUT 1um111 -.., .M PONDS Cotd Craa"' tvt-.)lt .79 ·-VAS ELINE JELLY ,_,.. .SS u ..... MOUTHWASH ,._._ CL.EARASIL 'IXODENT ,..-.-.1.J --.1• ,,,, __ .78 IAVElll ASptfltN ~o1tt1 .78 . .,.. . -CRISCO . SHORTENING ~ and Spechll Handl i n g : olhtrwise thlrd-clau dtllYtry will lake three wttks or mort. Send to Marian Marlin, the DAILY PILOT, 442 Patttrn Dept.., 232 West 18th St., New Lipton 's c .. ,om .1 °"'°"Soup Mix .. (Ou k:k A EttJ to Prapara) 1'119. or I .25 .38 More tha11 just low prices li111it 1 -011ly 01'1411 Co"PO~ ,., C1>•to'"eor Ce11po" Good No••Mb11 11t~'W11, 1971 v ... k. N.Y. 10011. Pr In t DllPHS NAMli, ADDRESS with llP, M.L SIZl'.i and STYLE NUMBER. STORES ARE LOCATED AT~ 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER ,. • '· • - STORE HOURS: 9·10 DAILY, 9·9 SUNDAY . . I ( ' f. .. • • • i ~ ~ ~· ~ y ... . . Wtdnrsd1y, Novtrober 10, 11171 p.lll Y PILOT Alpha Beta's Man in Blue • says: JIM ILLINGWORTH STORE MANAGE R l 4 1 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA · P,'Rllll'RJOHN • SKINLESS LINK SAUSAGES c BREAKFAST FAVORITE! IOWAMAID BACON DUBUQUE'S I·LB. PKG. 1A111t11RJ.OHN BACON 1-LB. PKG. -LEAN AND SKINLESS· SMOKED HAM HOCKS .llMlwlY C£ ... N • 1.lB. ilOLL PURI POIK SAUSAGI 75' JJ!QJEN FOOUS •RC>H fROllN D ----. fllllT or D .... ":-. l !'l'E. lC\.'i Cl. ~1'· 53' llEEMlAND &Be CORN DOOS TURB T ~ SHUl lOIDA • 11~~·01. P~f. 68< 0 IHF PATTIES- - • n I -I u featuring 70 Double Discounts FRESH ALPHA BETA IU!Clila'S Pall! DEPENDABLE QUALITY in this Ad.· ALPHA BETA l~!CHEl'S !RIDE BONELESS SEVEN BONE CUT GROUND BEEF CHUCK ROAST ECONO PAK 3-LBS. OR OVER EASY TO CARVE • WASTE FREE FR[[ Your Alpha Btt1 Neighbo1hocd Butchtt (lht M;in with the Red Apron) Proudly Offers JU:cs:i·:· BUTCHER'S PRIDE MEATS ,.,:f[:~., . MEATS YOU 'LL IE PROUD TO r-£RYE OAsr •1~ 1· ~5 VE "' ' -----,,..:·,::'::::"'::;' ":;.' ;'":.::.' .::'':;";,;' ''~';;;t•on~'";":;'"~";·•~·~O~I·:::"'.'."';' :.:''::;"~'':..,..,-.,.-...:::::'::";:;"~'!.i"U I r • ALPHA eErA sutcnts:s PR1oc s£EF FROM coLoRAoo STANDING RIB ROAST IARGE 97c tNO lb T·BONE STEAK PORTERHOUSE 1sa STEAK 1b . SMAll ENO ., ........ t.1! I~. , BONELESS 10• n,o ESS RIB STEAK ID. D' NEL 111 C1HVC~0~0AST 55;. TOP SIHOIN lb . ,1: " " .. !L• ., " GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS THICK MEAT ED • YOUR CHOICE .~.--:::. SQUASH •BANANA Sc • llUBBARD lb •MEDITERRANEAN TH E.SE MEAT PRIC ES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY through WEONES01'Y NOVEM BER 111hru17 TOTAl DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY •omr OFW l l'lll. l fTl Dl'tDUllll N ICI CHOCKS ·Children's VITAMINS 1 Jt \\'lfH' JRON I ,It Co...~ ~ ;5 ,.. : !'JB?: • M£D1Cj 'ttP 1 OT Tegrin Shampoo (8\ .4-0Z. l!OTTl.t, f AM 'LY Sl?t 'M SCOPE MOUTHWASH 143 6-00:. lSPll.l Y • ~ - AlfTt.PtJll'iP!MNT ~ SCEN'Ttt> AND UlfscttfTED :~ ARRID EXTRA DRY • ~ )OH.,SOH ~ JOHNSON'• 'l'-0% ~ lllY POWDER 91' ----------------· I ' TOTAl DISCOUNTS lVl AY DAY l l,lll l lll DISCOUI T , ,llC[ "oz 31• ALPHA BETA MACARONI SALAD ALPHA BITA All MEAT BOLOGNA 36• 1. J.oz • 1UTTr Rsr,orc11 • CARAMf.L • CHOC:JL,.T!: fU[•'J I: SMlr'CiER'Sl oPPING 33i: ;>WISS CllOCOL>.T·· l!J< l l,8·0Z. STRA WBCRRY :1.W 12 OZ. • BOYSCNBtM\' • APJl'C'OT ~,--.., • STRAWBERRY 43' D-. SMUCll:EAS SYRUP D....... ~Tl'IAwar.Mr P.11i:stll'Vr.!: "°"' APRICOT P.llt SEJ\Vt S • :)f., CHtRRY PRl:StRvrs "" :', GAUON • GOUltMCT • 8"' ·ALPHA IETA ICE CREAM 111· BIRDS t Y!:. ~oz .• rRO'ZrN -.-:::CJ' SMALL WHOLE ONIONS 441 . Al•I& l [ll DllC.OUIT ,llCI ·' (;7 ~·II\ l'''.'. PO'JSOS ·:,"'1;:·,·u· ·~;1 ·. :.;rtw ~ ::. CH r ,;:. 'I P>.R15 & ST£W DD...... r r: , ·A1: • bllll1MP/111T.A rs ...... ,., TABBY CIT FOOD @ 8ATH~10MPTl~SUE n·1 :: © ROSAR'IJ,," REFRIED IEAH S ~ lt-O'l. JIE:GUU.l'I ~ PILLSBUIY CAKE Mil ~ '3 OZ • 'W ALH•JT ~ PlllSIUR! l!OW!llE MIX 27' "• n. ... 14' &1 1 29' 36• 63' QUALITY BAKERY AT DISCOUNT PRICES SCHATS • l&.OZ COW POKE BREAD 1!11:1: • !-PAcr.: • M!NIATIJ'lll: FRUIT CA!ES ~ PACK. BIR!HOlMS DANISH PASTRIES D _ ALrHA BETll • ~ PA•~1. D .. ~~· ENGLISH MUFFINS • Br.ITT r,'llOC1:t!ll • 1~·07., JIO;( l .~ILP .!NO lSTt:P CHl ff~l 1:&.s • , A"6El FOOD CA!! UU lVllTNY D-15 07. CJll:AMY • '&lllllTIC © . 11sconr D1o .... ft. PlllSIUIY fAOSTINli MIX 36' 461 ~ S·O'l., • GRAVY & SUCED TIJJIUY ~ flltt\ti&~R~"firlli°S'" 231 SAL!Sl!IUR't' STtAK J7c · ~ 16-COUMT • SHlllMP.,. CliJCUl;l:I:; ~ lELlOIGS Ell ROLL UU @ r~n5C,;rRlA11RtN·E 16·0'Z. PKG: 41' ~ GOLDOI Gll.O\'f, • 1b,_,l'J>.U!JN B2' ~ORANGE JUICE ILt•O ' .<. @.lMPERlil·M~W~11~E ~lS.O?.PlG ~KRAFT SOFT PAR!AY ~·OZ. JAJI uscco SHRIMP coCKnll ~ l'NSTANT COUJA'IZ 11 11 4"' ~ SHAY£ CREAM ·~· ,. Lime g • BB' '" ~ 15 !>.01. • Jll:AOY ,.0 '.':1,RV1: ~ PILLSBURY FROSTIN; ~ HUNC:llY !ACK'• 1""11ft11 •Yo. 0:-, 86' ~ MASHED POTATOES ' !.~. PACV.Gr. • ALL Ml:AT OSCAR MATH WIENERS 131 i.oz. PACKAGt . COJINtD Jrrr . CH1CKtN T~KtY • P>.mAMI JI&.. LEO'S SLICED MEATS , 'IV 1' 01~ J:NOCk.Wt/1'.t"'T SKl!olLtsS r ""ANJ:S HEllEW NATIONAL ~lfto~'1ouSll SAUSAIE r .. TOTAL DISCOU NTS lV[AY DAY ~t,llA 111a lllltOUMT PllC( HUNTS . 29·0Z..CANHA.LVES llT SLIC.U 31 I YELLOW CUNG PEACHES ~.oz. CAM 14• HUNTS TOMATO PASTE . t HUNTS • ]~.a:. l'OTATO ~At.AO ~-BJ:>.N !IALAD •PORK ~ l\l'ANS 481 -SNACK PICK r~ HUll1S • ',!g.Q'l ~ FAMILY SNACK PACK DEi. MONTI: PUDDING ~ OR FRUIT CUPS 55' @ U~SCUDD?!I •f l OZ.. .BAG 39• WA M CORN CHIPS f O'l • WlfO r. •ONION'• G>.l'IUC • !"!:$AMI: 461 OLD LONDON ROUNDS ~CV. !IOX •MILK. Ofl DAiii':: C!lLAS CHDCOLATE 49' COVERED CHERRIES © . 11.ot. • RtG. &. r11.osn:o 43' KRLOGGS POP TIRTS @ <IOZ.HOt BUC WHEATS 41 • 11.-0Z BOX: 421 WHEATIES @AUl'lt ltMIN A • f,.\ll. ORIG PANCAllE MIX 68• @ PiiYiiu\f";A'f{AKE MIX 421 •&..CX. BOX ... @ 3·t!I. CAif • )lf.Gln.J.R A.•.: Ml,'1WfFW 22• 10·01.. JM.• INSTANT 1.U @ CAllN>.TJO~ • lHfiT. • 1.' I,. HOT COCOA MIX &1 • 3-0'l. t:W!LOf'[.'; 10· WTLUS O!IN!S @l/Y'lias LEMONADE 34' ~lilsTIJIT TU 811 3·0lt. JAPI. I .I I 11.oz. • U':WON IU..VOllED • 10.Pl'. 791 NESTU ICE TEA MIX § 11.0'l • too COUMT 1o t "'--llJI TEA 1.18$ . •• @V.T All I>tl: • at.t-0%. C PIZZA MIX 81• COSTA M•IA-141 I . 1rn. SI, HUfllTINOTON •IACM -"'41 At11"" MUNTINOTON •EACH -1tR1 H, Miii! SI. ,OUMTAIN Y>.LL•Y -t )tt W1111er LA•UMA MILLS -'"41 C11i. tit 11 L11l11 Ul\llMI -11 ... Cullftl', Uftl't1n!l'f ,,,. SOUTH LAGUNA -llll}I I . C111t HllhWl'f x ' m WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS llf AMY lOS AMClllSj •1Vl1SIDC Oii OIUJj(;[ COUHrY lPlli llfi • STOll HOURS MOH.·fRI. 10 .lM. TO 9 P.M. SAT. & SUN. 10 A.M. TO 7 f'.M. HAWAlfAN GROWN PAPAYAS TDTAl DlSCOU~TS EVERY DAY ~ 14!>.0Z.CA.ll •SC11.ft>l'J.C% ~ HUNTS TOMATO!; • ~ 14 ~~.('AH •m:wt:D ~ HUNTS TOMATO[$ D •• -:n.oz. BOTTI.I: 431 .... _, HUNTS KETCHUP D..,... ~-OZ. CAif 1,.. .... _ .. -HUNTS TOMATO SAUCE W' ~!I OZ. CAN' ,,_, !;/f5N~~~S· O'R MUSH1100MS HUNTS TOMATO SAUCE 161 )c Cfl CAtr 111 HUNTS PORK l IEINS "O OZ CAtl' HUNTS CHILI IEANS ~ :J(l.07.. CAr-1' HUNTS RED BEANS 31' © 48-0Z'. 80111.C WISSOll Oil 104 2•·0t. ~OTTU: -© HOllMl:L• 15-Cfl. CllaW/ltaM 36f CHILI CON CARNE © r.rsKAJIDT • 40.ot, "II~ CHILI CON CARNE 11' @ C.l:llH>.!IOT •~OT.. CAN JUMBO TAMALES 37• ·--• ;1 PH AkDT • 16.)..0Z. C Ail 3&' D-,,~~·• ENCHIUDIS 4 ' Z r,;1o.~: .121 CAMPBELlS TOMATO SOUP • r.z r 1o.n -i C.r. • ~ f'AC!: i '>,!~!" H VEGETABLE JUICE 21' ;11 OZ. • li PACK CAJ<S 11: •~OZ.•~ PAC~ C>.tlS ...... la D••<•u•• ') .•• O'l. PACKACf' Mil INSTANT RICE. 88', ·--Dl~TY MOOR.t . u.o:. cm 61 ' D., •••• , BEEF STEW ©:'NOW~·807: !"Atl CHOPPED CUMS 31; © j R,I.( 6 KAld'M!;ll.. •~.Qt, WASNllffi SODA 441 @ Ii.OZ. WT-Off OVEN Sl'RIY 1" @ -· ra.ot. 111 WDOIJTE RUG CLUllH ' 41 . i ... •• ' I . I • DAILY PILOT Wtdnesday, No'lfnlber 10, 1971 · AN OLD SALT'S FAVORITE Spicy Hermit Cookies ' May Attract Crowd . E 1"--k . veryone oves c oo · 1e s. There's a flavor and texture lo suit every taste. And when your favorites are home bak- ed, mmmm, they're twice as good. So here's son1e help for guys an::t gals \vho appreciate an Country Look k-5 Y,-il~2~t:t--21A~ fxiA6a13~ Gfvc roon1s a new "counlrv look" with puff pillows' · NE\V ! Add zing with PUFF PILLO\VS'. Join 6 x 6" scraps or use solid fab ric. Pleat, then sturt. Pattern 73.'18: printed l~sue pattern pieces for 12" square and round p1llo\I· SEVEl\'TY-FJ\11-: CJ::NTS for ea<:h pattern -add 25 cenri; for ea<.11 pallcrn f1Jr Air ~ .. Jail and Speeial II a n d t i n ~ : other\l"ise third-cht~s delivery will take three \l.'l'eks or more. Send lo Alice Brooks !he DAI- LY PILOT. 165 i'\ecdlecraf\ Dept .. Bo~ 163. Old Chelsea Station. r-.·e"' York. N. Y. 1001 l. Print Nnmr:. Address . Zi p. raetcrn Numhcr . NEEDLE C Ii AFT '72' Newesl crochet. knils for the e.11'.pressive generation' Sc11·- ing. embroidery. q u i I t s . ,afghans. Free p at le r n s ! Catalog 50 cents: N e~·! "lnslanl Crochet" Book. ..~tep-by-step piclurrs ltach you ho"' 10 crochet in- stantly! Plus nev.•esl p.auerns. II. Complete Instant Glft-BOok -more tha n 100 gifts. SI. Complete Afgb11n Book -$1. 1'1' Jlffy Rug 11" Book. SO .:en ls. Book or 11 rrJie Arghan9, 50 ""'"· Quilt Book 1-16 pallcm> st cent.a. Maseum Quilt Book % -50 centt 8ooll:'l. "Quilts ror Todoy•s LJyJna:". 15 paUcrns. 50 cent.I. ' ext ra delicious treat. Hermits and ~lolasses Peanut Butt er Cookies are easy enough to n1ake and give a special lift to snack lime or dessert time. Hermits are made much like a bro1vnie but they have a spicy navor. Sugar and butter are creamed together. then eggs and molasses are added. Topped \Vith a sugar glaze. llern1it bar cookies arc the answer lo snack time ap- _eelities. And v.·ho doeso'l like the rich, creamy flavor of pe"anut butler. So ~·hy not capture it in a cook ie -l\:lolasses Peanul Butter Cookies do just that. You 'll like Hermits and l\lolasses Peanut 8 u t I er Cookies any time, for a 1vork break or a play break. And )'Ou'll like them even better if yo u ma ke them yourself. HERJ\tJTS 1'! cup butter or margarine 'z cup sugar 1 ~ cup molasses 2 eggs 2 cups sifted · all·purposc nour 1"' teaspoon salt 1 1 teaspoon soda 2 teaspoons baking po"·der I teaspoon cinnan1on ''1 teaspoon clo\'es 1 , teaspoon mace 11 teaspoon nutmeg 1 ~ tea spoon all spice a~ cup raisins 1., cup chopped nu1s Cream together butter and su~<'J" until light and fluffy . Add molasses and eggs: beat well. Sift togetber flour. salt, baking soda. baking powder and spices; tnix "·ith raisins and nuts. Add lo molasses 111ixture: blend 11•ell. Spread cvenl~1 in greased 12 x 8 x 2- irn:h baking pan. Bake in 350 degree F. oven 30 minutes. Gl:ize "'hile \Varm. Cool; cut inln squares. Yield : I 2 hern1ils. Glaze Blend together ~1 cup sifted confectioners' sugar ,and 4 le<1spoons \rater. r"llOLASSES PEANLI BUTTER COOKI ES a , cup shortening 11 cup sugar 12 cup mola sses 1:. cup peanut butter I egg 2 cups sifted all-purpose nour 1 1 teaspoon salt 1• tcaspoo.1 baking soda 2 teaspoons ba king powder Cream together shortening 11nd spgl'lr until llght and nur- fy . Add molasses, peanul but- ter and egg : blend \\'ell . Sift together flour . salt. baking soda and baking po1vder. Stir into' molassei mixture. Drop --by--11-b 1-e-slJ-o o-n-ttx I s onto ungreased baking sheet . Bake in 375 degree F. oven 10 to 12 minutes . Y iel d: Ap. proximately 2 dozen cookies. Use Cool Suds \Va sh gclatin stai ns in cool suds. Avoid hot water \vhich Is Ukely lo "set'' the}e :stain.!!. ' ·-, , •FRO M <iUR 1WA YFRES H F4 ittll Y OF PRO UDBIR DS .GAME HENS MAYFRESH U.S.D.A. GRADE A 19 oz. Ml~. NET WT. CORN COUNTRY .. lb. ~M~l~~!!'i5~~E ...................... 8 or PKG 59 ~!..~5'1!~~~~ ........................ 8 Ol PKG 29 MAYFAIR DELI CAT.ESSEN CHEDDAR CHEESE 891~ MILD BY THE PIECE IOl'S ASSOITED SALAD DRESSING T.t.llT .t.R SAUCE, HAMBURGER REUSH 1000 ISl.t.ND. GARllC & TOM.t.TO & SPICE·SHlllMP COCKT .t.ILS 8 OZ ..... . .... 39' flUQUEfORI ...... _ ..... II Ol. Ste Bl EU CHEESE .......... 8-01. 49c PILLSBURY BISCUITS······ 8 0 , 6~ 49' aun ERMILK-SWEETMILK ... CllOC. '"' COOlllS PlLLs&uRv ........... 16 oz. SSc PILLSIUIY SUW COOKIES .............. "oz. 55c 001£11 111 CARTOll EGGS 33< DOZ. MAYFRESH GR ADEE~! ~R~:RGE ... ·:::::: 37< DOZ. MAYFRESH GRAD • · ::~~t~~~r;E\IEf~T s(~E.~l'A ...... 89'· !1M~ .. ~~~~~1 ~··~················ 35'. M.J.B. COFFEE l~lb. CAN 84c . l 'lb. s22s CAN • • .... ,/ ... ~· ''\'•'' .- ·-· 2il• BIG WEEK ·COME JOll U$'.FOi I FBE SLIG'OF AlllVERSARY ~U SAT., IOV. 13, 1 P.M. TO 3 P.M. AT YOUR •IGHIORHOOD MAYFAIR PORTERllOUSE $ OR T'!'BONE TAILS OFF ..... , .. , ............................. : ...... . CHUCK .. ~:111 STEAKS : ........................ : .. : ... : : ...... . ::E,E~i"\c~;~~~.................. ... .. .. B ~ lb.' LEAN BEEF RIB ROAST WILL TRIMMED ........ .. ..... GROUND ALL SIZE BEEF ~llr~ ........... ~~~.~.~~~ ............................ . a.~; ~ lb. BONELESS w,::r $ 89 TOP SIRLOIN ............................................... . ..... lb. LAMB · U.S.D.A . INSPECTID FRESH FROZEN FROM NEW ZEALAND ~ SHOULDER ROAST .... . .... i lb. ~L~~~Ts5'141~.~.~lllJ'.5. . lb . 59< ~!~!,~!'.c~!,~c!. lb. 98< ,,.--SEAFOOD SPEC/ALS -- (iREENlAND TURBOT WHOlEORBY THE PIECE CUTEI 4"° CUTIUCD '7lb 3cr... LAMB SllOULDll CHOPS ROUND BONE ... , .................... . lb. 69< !~!Uo~~~ ~·~~ ..... lb. 49< BOIEUSS STEAKS CENTER CUT CHUCK ············· lb. 91< SllOULDU CLOD IONELESS ROASTS .•...........•. lb. $1.09 STEWllG BUF IONELESS ........... ··•···· ..... . lb. 91< IUMP ROASTS IONE IN ... . . . ............... lb. 91< ROUID mAKS '°"""' ....... ....... . ....... lb. s1.09 FAMILY STEAKS '°""'" ...................... 1b. $1.1.9 Ill STEAKS ... ~···· .................. 1•.$1.19 KAL KAN CHUNK BEEF 4 PET STEW, BURGER RNDS . ME~~~ce:~~~~/~~~ ~1i~z ························ CAMPBELLS SOUPSJ~ .. 4 CHIC. NOODLE , CHIC. RICE , CREAM OF CHIC., 10 Yi OZ. .......................... FOR LISTERINE ORAL $ ANTISEPnc 20 •• ' ....... OB !~~~1::~T ................... 78' !~!~!!!!,, 150, •127 "73' ~~U~~J 1" ••· ... •1°• ~!~E5ot .. PROTllll21 ~~REG.,OCY, OllY, 7 •z. .STYLI HAIRSPRAY REG .. WPfR HOlO llo>. 5"" UNSCENTED. COi.Oii: TREATED .......... -~ ..... -.. .,- NUTS INSTANT COFFEE HILLS BROS. S J 29 IOot.JAl ................ :;: www ~wwwi Van de Kamps. ALMONDS • BRAZILS • MIXED NUTS FILBERTS • WALNUTS NEW CROP YOUR CHOICE APPLES DEUCIOUS EX . FANCY WASHINGTON, RED OR GOlDEN PEAR SALE 5 s1 II · .. . .............. . r----"'ORTAW ESltARTL-ET-T-S-.....: . D1 ANJOU $ ~!r!~J~.~ .... : ...... 2* 29' AND BOSC .............. . LIS. ~afvH~~.~.~.~~~.~ .... ~ACH 39' , • I I , SPECIALS Thurs.·Sun .• HD\'. 11 -14 Bear Claw 49c· Coffee Cakes ..... ,. "·'"· '" Blueberry Muffins ... Rocky Road $139 Cake ........... 11.,.,,, '"· 11." .tYAILAlll OMlf ATMAl~[TI WITH flll D[ 11.tMN Df PT, i • • . CALIF. GROWN FRYERS-FIRST DAY FRESH FROM FOSTER FARMS Wl:IOLE BODY lb. CUT UP PAN READY ............... : ........ lb.35' WHOU UG5 5~. DRUMSTICKS ................ lb. 69" THIGHS _ __ • 69" P-INWHm ....... " '"'""' ... 69< BREASTS ----... 69' ENC ILADAS VAN DE KAMPS 71/2 oz. ~ EGGO WAFF~ES 43' FAMILYPACKSCOUNT 13oz ......................................................... . ~H~~~s!!~~s'1S~o ~~~~ ...... . ! ........... 69< • FIFTH SCORESBY SCOTCH RARE SCOTCH WHISKEY 86 nOOf ............................................ . 100%GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS !!!!~9£C.~~~~.~~~~-·-..... OUAAT$429 ?i~~i1i~iwrtlsl<Ev 0"~·T :3:: CHAICOAlflLTEREDfUll86PROOF ..................................................... FIFTH 3 !!~$A~E~!M,}!l~.~.~.~.~~............ . . 6PACKs1 29 ADVERTl~ED PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS THURS ., NOV. 11 THRU NOV.. 17 1 175 East I 7tli Street COSTA MESA • • I WITH THIS COUPON · UMIT 1 COUPON PfR: : ADULT CUSTOMER . NOV. I l:.N9V~ 17 __ YOU SA VE 16c WITH THIS COUPON LIMIT 1 GOLD MEDAL FLOUR ' ; YOU SA VE 20c WHEN YOU BUY TWO LIMIT 2 . CHOCOLATE CHIPS GHIRARDELLI SEMI SWEET 12 oz LIMIT 2 WITH TH IS COUPON LIMIT I COUPON PER ADULT CUSTOMER N0V.11 ·NOV. 17 YOU SA VE 20c WHEN YOU·BUY :rwo LIMIT 2 • HAIRSPRAY SHONTEX -REG&. HARD TO HOLD 13 oz UMIT2 WITH THIS COUPON UMIT I COUPON PEif ADULT CUSTOMER NOV. 11 -NOV. 17 WHITE KING D 53' DETERGENT-GIANT ......................... . SAFEGUARD SOAP !!!!'cJ!m'I~.~. . 99' 39< IATNIAI llUl I'll. 2 PAK ~.~!!~ ... ~.~~.~~.~~~·~·~···································lCJ< !~·~····~·~.~~.~~.~~~.! .. :'~~~.~~····················· 53c fG~''I~.~~~.~~~ .. ~.~.~~. ...... . .......... 45( ~,~.~~~~·~·~····~~.~.~.~~.:.~!.~ .......................... 53< RB!~s~A! ... ~.~~~ ............................................................ 89' -' ' r Wedntscfay, Novtlttber 10, 1971 .. ILY PILOT , FISH FOR OUtOOOR COOKING Seaf odd Hooks Hearty Eaters If you are hooked on fish but lukewarn1 about fishing -~·ou can bail vour book at the neare.sl sc:ifood market. fl:Jan.v clever ho1nen1akers keep 1heir unlucky. wotild·be fisherrnen happy In just this way. f'ron1 cold ocean waters Rnd shallow estuaries lo your lable is only a short journey with today's fas!. modern transportation. llundreds or varieties of fi sh and shellfish n1ake the journey daily for your eatin g enjoyment. Some of these seafoods are considered gounnet and are scarce and expensi ve. ~1any more, however, ,,,.hich 11re equally good to eal, are plentiful and consequently inexpensive. Whiting, among the more plentiful of ocean fish, are in this category. Have you tried whiting lately? If not, you have a treat waiting for you . These versalile fish, caught along the continental shelf of eastern North America, have tender. lean, firm -textured flesh that is very tasty. Whiting adapt readily to a variety of preparation methods and are ready to thaw and use as they are already scaled, headed, and cleaned. Whiting In 'Vine Sao.ce was created tor cooking on an outdoor grill, and i t s tantallz.lng aroma as It cooks over the coals as well .i.s its succ ulent goodness w I I I establish your reputation as a · 111aster chef. The tecipe is so si rnple and easy -place each fish on a large square of foil , then pour a buttery-wine sauce, accented with. mushrooms, greer. o n i o n s , lemon juice, and a touch 0£ crushed bay leaf and thyme, over the fish. Seal the foi l packages and cook until the fla vors blend and the fish flakes easily. Eat this tasty entree on the patio or tote the makings along in a r efr ige r ate d rontainer and cook the fish at your favorite picnic site. _ If the weather outside i:111 scorching. however, and beating the heat is on your summer agenda, this entrtt is equally good when enjoyed inside. Be ·flexible -there isn't any rule that rays all foods cooked out must be eaten out. How about cooking it out and eating it in? You'll keep the cooking he at out, Joo, and the flavory fish will taste even better Jn the cool of your home. WHITING IN WINE SAUCE (Cooked On Grilli 6 pan-dressed whiting or other small fish, fresh or Chicken u;~~u1y < 11 -1 nch> aluminum foil d 1 cup dry white wine Fee S ~i cup melted butter or margarine (or oooklng oil) J can (4 ounces) mushroom stems and pieces, drained Guests '\:~. lhinly sliced green 2 tablespoons lemon juice Delicious with a before-2 tablespoons chopped dinner beverage. parsley 2 teaspoons salt CHICKEN NIBLETS 1.1 teaspoon crushed pay leaf 2 teaspoons Worcestershire 1 ~ teaspoon pepper sauce . 1/, teaspoon leaf thyme 2 egg whites, slightly beaten Thaw froien !ish. Clean. ~ cup nour wash, and dry fish. Cut six ta. 2 tablespoons cornstarch inch squares of heavy-duty 1 teaspoon salt foil; grease lightly. Combine Vi tea.spoon white pep!>ll{ rema1nln& in1redlent.s; m Ix I cup corn oil and reserve. Place a fish on 2 wllole broiler-fryer chicken lfl ot each sque.re ol foil'.. breasts, skinned, bimeif-tl ii!ieiSUghtly to keep arid cut into I~. to Z..inch sauce l'rom running off. Pour pieces, 1/3 cup ol reserved sauce over Stir Woreestersture into egg each fish and seal edce• by whites. Mix together Dour, making tight double folda on cornstarch, nU and pepper. all cut edges. Arr an g e lleat com oil ln medium package• on barbecue grill skillet ~ver medium heat. Olp . about I l.Jlches tr om mod· each chicken piece in egg erately hot coals. white, then In flour rniifiife; Cook 20 1o 25 minutes or shake off excess four. until fish flakes easily when Fry S to 7 minutes or until tested •With a fork . To serVe, golden brown on all aides. cut a big crisscross In top ,£f Drain on 111>aorbent· paper. "each ~~k1110nd fold foil ?!lakes Bbou~ 3 dozen. back. ?tia.kea 8 servlnas . ' \ \ . . • • • ' ' • ' . ' • • • ' • -'• ' • ' ' • • .. • .. T . . . • \ I '' : \ ~ .... . . . • 4 DAILY PILOT \Ytdnfsd~, NOVtmbt, 10, 1q71 Don't Be Chicken, Bone Up on Slimming Cordon Bleu Dishes ly BARBARA GIBBONS Jf yOtJ"l'e Jookln,a: ror a dish I that'1 lo"·..calorie yet seenu fattenina:, inexptnsi\·e b u t elecant, easy-to-make b u 1 doesn't look It. v e r IOphbUcated yet kids k>\·e 1 then try the Slim Gourmf. "Chicken Cordon Bleu." Don't let the French nami fool rou. It's s.lmply v.·hitc- in on the edge of the pie tin. SLl~f GOUR~1ET , PIE-CRUST PASTRV ':: cup all-purpose nour Pinch of salt 2 tabl8spoons salad oll 1 teaspoons cold wattr Sllr all Ing redients' together 11lth a fork. then knead lightly until pastry rorms 1 ball. Flat· ten and chill thoroughly. Roll out on a liibtly noured board. VALUABLE COUPON f'or a tv.·o-crusl pie. double the recipe. THE SLIM GOURMET'S DEEP-DISH APPLE PIE Pastry for one crust 4 cups sliced apples 113 eup brown su&ar 1,~ cup sugar (or no-calorie sweetener to equal •,~ cup sugar) 2 teaspoons lemon juice 1 tablespoon cornstarch ~4 teatpOOn 111t 1.1 teaspoon. ciMamon v. teaspoon nutmeg Allx the apples with au rt· malning ingttdlents and ..,._ range in a 9-lnch pie pan (not the kind \\'Ith hOWa:!l Prtpare the crust and cover the top o!, the pie, pressing the edges lo the rln\ whh , fork: Mike slits for 1teim to tscc.pe. Bai:e in a hot "25-deg~e oven for tsl ~linntes or until Ct'U!t is golden broivn. Serves eilht. If pre.Pared wi th all sugar. 174 calorleSi P!1 slice. \Vith browft sugar 1bd sugar subslitutt : only 121 calories per slice. I OI WITH THIS COU,ON 1:11 1. VOID AFTER SUNDAY, NOV. 14 ii DRIVE GIANT SIZE 49c I WHEATIES lSc 12 Oz. Box REG. 43c . " NO MININUM PURCHASE -NO MAXIMUM PU~HA5E • 111 ' ONE ORDER ONLY ANY AMOUNT YOU CHOOSE TO. IUY " __:GOOD ONLY AT BARGAIN ·~-_J ' JI ' BANQUET PIES CHICKEN• TURKEY e BEEF MINUTE MAID ORANGE JUICE 16 oz. CAN HEALTH E. BEAUTY AIDS .sltllT CRIME DEODORANT llG. ISt AT OTHll STOllS -I.OS OZ. U.YORIS MOUTHWASH I CONOMT o .. $129 llG. S2.2f AT OTHEI STOllS PLUS WHITE TOOTHPASTE RIG . 1.0f· AT OTHER STORES --------F,REE EASY-RIDER RAZOR wnH •uoc""' o• PKG. OF 4 SHICK IHJECTOll ILADES ALL REG. l 12f e VARIETIES Golllll'S TRAINING PANTS OR SHIRTS SLICED BACON • f11ll 9•· 6.75 oz. TUIE 49' 59' 3/25' . FARMER JOHN TOP QUALITY 59~ Wilh thi1 c.011pon. no minimum p11rch•1• r•ci~l.ed , L:i~mit I bor P•• coupon -On, coupon P•• tu1tom••· Yold •ft•r S11 nd•'I'· Nov•mb•1 14. . ---:0000 ONLY AT llARGAIN llASK"IT __ 5Pringf ield ~~COFFEE . " '~ ...• i '•.. . • ..~f, ~---- CHICKEN USDA GRADE "A" · FRYING WHElLE BODY . 29~ EASTERN GRAIN FED AIESH PORK SPARERIBS 69~ IAI M SKINLESS 1'M HOCKS :;;;;;:GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IA.SKIT LlllT'S Fi'uir cocKTA1L 1 'c!'~. MARSt-:· :1ALLOW CREME 7 oz. , .. JOT LICj)UID DETERGENT GIANT St?E .. COUNT MICHAEL VODKA FuQ Quart ROYAL SCOT SCOTCH GOLDEN RIPE BANANA SQUASH THICK MEATED CRISP, EXTRA FANCY DELICIOUS DATES NEW CROP 10 OZ. CUP 29~. · PERSIMMONS 10~. LARGE EXTRA FANCY Prices Effedlve: Thursday thru Sunday Nov. 11, 12, 13, 14 Prices subject to stock •• hud. WE IOLADLY ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS $18~ .. I I $1.09 .. G. 79~ . I " ' ' J PILOT ·ADVERTISER Wednesday, Nonrnber 10, 1971 STATlllaOS.AUMIAT 49< WIENERS ......... 12.01. PKG. . llALM.C.OY -PUIE 25( BEEF UNKIES ............ PKG. SWIFTi llOWN•SEltvl 63( SAUSAGE LINKS ... 1.01. . 0$CAIMAYllAUMIATS4.ICED 4ftr: ~OLOGNA uoi:. "' ..... 1.oz. 7 · OKAIMAYllS4.ICIO 531 iEEF BOLOGNA ..... a.oz. .OSCAl/IAAYll.(LLIElf .•. IJ.191 73' WIENERS Al.L MEAT ....... La. *Satisfaction Guaranteed on all of your Purchases! ' . • . ' * \ , U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF OR STATER BROS. CERTIFIED LB. . . We~esday, No11embff JO, 1971 DAILY PILOT ft ~---~-----~ &~~~HRIB PORK ROAST ROAST USDA CHOICE OR STATER . EASTERN GRAIN-RD BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF PICNIC STYLE SHOUlDfl 79!.. 37~ ISTT~IU STH 111 ." .. --·-U. ffc . HAM SLICED HOCKS BACON DRICOUS •MEATY TABLE BRAND TENDER SMOKED 1-POUND PACKAGE 39~. --45~,. USD.t.-CHOIQOISTATllllOS.atTlf•DtlEP 6ftc ROUND BONE ROAl.T ....... _ i.a. "7 1 IONIUSS IHf SHOIA.04il ' -'ftc ROLLED BEEF ROAST __ ......... i.a. . 7 U~DACHO+aOISTATllllOS.atTl'IEOIHf 89c ROASTING -CHICKENS RtlSH •UAN•Olltc10UI •GIOUNDHOUILY 57c GROUND BEEF ................. _._ .. _,_ 1.1. UIDACMOtCIOISTATllllOS.CllTIF•DIHF S 1 •s T-BONE STEAKS ............................ i.a. •AtMll.tOHN 1-U.llGUlAIOl l •LI. THICtc SIC ILIGD BACON .................... _ .. _ .... i.a. IM>AOtoKIOISTATRll05.atT1FaD_1m -• 1 •• PORTERHOUSE-STEAK ........ i.a. IASTllN GIA.IN FED '<)II( SHOULDll ROAST 59c U5DACHOICIOISTA.TaUOS.atTIFIEDlllF • 119 ROUND STEAK BONI-IN ............. La. USDA CHOta Ot STA.TEI llOS. QITlflED lllf 9ftc ROUND STEAK BONIWI """"' LI. .., USDA CHOICIOI STATBllOS.-CllTYllDlllF 89C RPMP ROASJ ....................... -----·-i.a. FRESH OR FROZEN U.S.D.A. GRADE'A' 49L~; BOSTON BUii ROAST ......... i.a. TOP SIRLOIN STEAKS ... , ...... i.a. USDA CHO.cl OI STA.TH llOS. CllTIHID IHF . 95c RIB STEAKS WllU TllMMED .............. La. IJSDACHOICIOISTATllUOS.CEITW•OIUF • 1 •• STEAKS CUBE•CLUB•SIRLOINTIP _ ....... OUIOWNCOIMTIYSTYU•""" 39c !!!',.~~J!!~ .-........... _ i.a.69c PORll ITEAll S ._ ................ --..... i.a. -GRAPEFRUIT LB. BAG CRlSP LB . JUICY BAG SMALL FANCY RED DELICIOUS LARGEFA.NCYSWE£TV.t..LENCIA. 2 25' ORANGES . . ....... 1.1s. LARGE FllESH TENDER CRISP 3 4 9 C CARROTS ........... 1-LB.PKGS.6 ,u.s.NO.lSWlfTIROWN 3 29' ONIONS ............. I.BS. ................. :- ~i>';:lf ""'~~,-~~ 'i-t ~ tAHaun•SHvtHOTOICOl.D • , 59'~~ FRIED CHICKEN ............. , ....... . WUTPA( • AlllXCU'T IAIY LIMAS 33c VEGETABLU "'"··--··20.oz."''· • CORN MUFFINS . . -'""' 35' HASH BROWNS __ 2 ,, .. 47' lltUlllElllll 3nc IWPilll s109 MORTON MUFFINS _,,,.., '1 HALIBUT STEAKS ___ """ • SW1~&SOluRCHICKEN _55c SAL.MoNSTEAKS _ uoi 5109 IU)lO-J ISI 45' OOWNVf\Jl~I I C()Vlrlt 2 • " 33' SIRLOINTIPS .---·'" WAffLES !~' -·-,,. WlflATUlltMNATION ilNOOO AT LOWDl'llCU 85C COD RLLDS ,._.._ .. ~ ......... ... I .OS,t,ttTA.U~TIQ I 4nc . MEXICAN DINNERS .. -.... "'' .., (l!_Ol•lllTllGllEfN 52' 1011.ST •NOSl•vt 47' I CHILI BURRITOS ·-'""' EGGO WAFFLES -""' I /111r11~1A.~tlllll"I~ 37c 11~osr.v11\llWAllll.NITYLl 45' CHEESE STATER BROS BIRDS EYE AWAKE -·'"" VEGETABLES ----'"' RANDOM WEIG'1> --1-0L 2SC FIS1H.i.C(HIPS -ll 79' ----·--AS M':t11~I& HACIENDA FLOUR .. _ .. 25 "'· s1,99 FLEISCHMANNS YEAST ..... 3 ,..J!I' WILD RICE-A-RONI g~i?J~... .TOZ 65' PEAR HALl!ES OELMON1E ....... -..... ~.?c';~ 51' ·GOLD CORN OEL MONIE JOJ 23' CREAM 011 WHOlE K .•..... CAN DEL MONTE CATSUP ............ 200• 41' PIE CRUST STICKS ~lii:',., .... 11 .0, 3'! WHEATIES CEREAL . ----"oz 4'! SPAGHml SAUCE ~l;,'c'K!R. 1'50Z 47' PET EVAP. MILK i~~~.~.11' 't.'~ 211' FRUIT COCKTAIL ootlS .. ".0 c'..~ 45' GRAHAM CRACKERS l":Cl,~~·. . 41' BISCUITS ~~tiiv ~jf1keAM IL1t .. ,. ...... 9'h ·OZ. 2f RED CHILI SAUCE ~tM" ......... ".0 z;~ 34' ENCHILADA SAUCE ~t • ., .... 100• 19' CRISCO OIL Al lO'UR>OSE ........ 38·0 < 87' MARGARINE ~~~rt~~~~'..'.~················."· 37' . CAMAY BATH SOAP ......................... •::: 16' ZEST BATH SOAP .......................... ~::: 2'! . BATH TISSUE ~~~~~\··········--~"; 31>' CONFIDET NAPKINS ............. ,., 83' . SAUCE CUBES ~'1:i" "" _ '""' '2.89 ST A TEI IROS. LOW·LOW PRICES SMUCKER$ SYRUPS ASST.-·-12-0t if/' BORDENS MAYONNAISE --·ors. 65' BQRDENSSHAKES Assr. -· 5 9"-o<lf BEEF STEW OINTY MOORE-........... ~ '4·0< 69' PRINCELLA YAMS _ _ __ .,,.o, 47' • SPAM LUNCH MEATS .,.; _ 12-0< 59' CRANBERRY JUICE ~~~----.. o, 79' ·CRANBERRY COCKTAIL ~::~, .. 12.02 CHEESE PIZZA MIX :::i·~-1rn.o< 55' GLAD FREEZER WRAP _ 101J.FT 34' RODS GARLIC SPREAD --•oz 35' " . C&H SUGAR ~~::.",':tJ\~.,, ___ 5 '" 67' LOG CABIN SYRUP i:l'i~:~v __ 2~0• 7'! !LOG CABIN SYRUP i:l'i~::.v __ ,.o, 99' 'BEEF STEW "'"v MooR• --·-''"o' 51.09 DOG FOOD ~.:lcil~, ---··--·-· ""' 39' DOG FOOD ~.~'rif~, .............. 2ou 12.59 PERSONAL IVORY SOAP -4 •• ~, 3'! STRETCH N' SEAL -·-···---"'""' 59' I f81fAlS~s ___ Jl:~i"s1 FIGHTS OOOIS • GlllMS LYSOL SPRAY 21-0Z$ )5 9 I DISINFECTANT .......... cAN · WILSHIRE• SWEET COUNTRY STYLE ~Hfi!'i~~---___ ')ff 9( ICONOM Y'Slll PACKAGE WATERSOfTENER ~;~· ..... -KING '1.08 DETERGENT FAMILY CLEARASIL CREST · ---·--... SIZE ....... _ RIGUl.AIOI '~~m JAN-U-WINE .. FL ... A""""o'°"R'KIST s1 ~;~.G .,,,. 66< DINNERS TOAlTER PASTRY .!. 79 c r.=.a . ~lf:~, ... S)11 bTsiGrtiii1NE · 2C)< ~~ $120 OI MUSHIOOM '-'------+.;.;.-"'"-·-~-----otOWMllN ---• TOWELS ~IUMBOIOLL &L•"· uv•1s ..... 99• • ........ _.. n"J ... A BAGS 99 .. llLTD• llOUTllWASll -' SOL15c. c Sftc RtOIOf ld·t·Wl!!I SOYIHCI u T KG =~--.., · =--·~95' •0<2>< 100-CO N P •. DllMIGL ITmlLIP&H HAPPY LIGS SIA •111 s 11 • l'AICTY HOii UTISIPTK 16.0t. CHEF DRESSIN(l~Q.~t ---•~ 41' ITALIAN DRESSI NG ~:~,_: •0<.41' BLUE DRESSING ~~L 1.oz. 4f 1000 IS. DRESSING ;tt'. -""· 41' 1000 IS. DRESSINO"ta,g, -'"°' 6' '"0 . 43c Of1·0 _ .,., 69 C IKI 94' OOl.On -~-•IL.OL S1111 With St•t•r Bros. Law-Law Pric.1s • • MJBRICE INSTANT 24-0l.69 ( MJBCOFFEE INSTANT I ••·PZ. s 129 DRISTAN $109 TABLETS,KG.Of24 .. ~ (J]JJ W1 ffldurn US(/A Food S1•rnps "' Oin LOI A11gel1s, 01111g1 .t R1111fsid1 Ca11111~ St011$. ., 4600 s., ,,......,. .......... , ... 101 W•t NI~ Stffet, Cott• M*' 6161 liflittff A•11•, H111tl119t01 1Ht'- 1J 60J WW ,,., ...... th SffWt, S...H AM 1111 C)l•p-A'""· elltdft '°''"' U60 Nerti Tltlttl1 AYHM; hit• AH ..> ~~ICES Ef.FEC. THURS. thru WEO .. NOV.1!.l!t\71h 1100•1Cllt Cefl"IM A9'11-. o,.... IS11 Wllhlllnt« lltd., w .. t111llttel )420 Wett UHolt AtHH, AllOht h• 16JO Edlfltlf ""''"' S.11t• AH 12JO Mcfocl4ff Att1••• S111re AM . 1564 W"' ,,....,.,., AHllllfll 11111 Nwpllft lfn1,, C1ste M .. 1171 labt·"'"'-C.-M ... 141111.ed HUI AtHMe, T•"- 14211 Ma..A ...... WMttltir I I • " , . . . . .. I 'ff DAILY PILOT WtdMSdtY. Novtmb« JO, 1971 High ·school Study . Reveals " Variables, Few Answers By JOANNE REYNoµ>S higher grade point 1ver1ge. the Other group 1t the ninth achievement. which tlcteded lhe p~on twelve, Fountain Valley School lrylnc to reach any con-1taff member1 ~th a ltlrtln& 61 t1r11 CNollY l'not 11111 -The prediction ol Jticher grade level. wl\!cb exceeded -At the twelfth a:nde the that at the twelfth grade the District exceeded the Other clUJlonl from the report point. for mort &'tailed report achlevemcnt for the Other the predlctJon that the FVSD prediction of no sfgnilieant dlf· two lfOUps would be equal in group in ab coropal'ilona, the becaUM of the number of on 90mt ol the variablu. "Al How much difference can rroup at the ninth crade was grade point averqc should be fcrence in achievement was all 11cu of achievement. two groups were equal in eJ1bt v1riable1 lnvolvtd. it atanda now, the.re Isn't be seen be-tween hleh school fulfilltd in achievement tut lower. fullilled only for two out of the -On an over-all bull the comparisons and in two the ln acceptlnc the report, enough Information to c1use 1tudenl1 "'ho attl!:nded school scores in the areat of soclal -lntellljenctJ test results three achievement a r ea s F o u at a l n Valley School Other group e:rceed the Foun-board member1 ubd that us to chance any of OW' proo in (Uffe.rtnt e I em en t 8 r Y studies. natural s c I enc e , show that at the twellth grade (English and math}. District rroup exceeded the tain .· Valley School Dl!trict 1lmllar in depth 1tudies be cram1," he aald, "but wt diltrlcts'! English and math. level the two groups are equal. -At that level the Fountain Other lf'OllP in comparison of ·1roop. conducted on 1 Continuina would like to look 1t aome ol The answer depends on the _ The grade point average Th.11 would predict that there Valley School District group Jeaderlh.lp, discipline and Sanchll 11.id .the report it a basla. · -that thinj:1 .I little closer to irade level of the students and of the Fount.a.in Valley School wouJd be no significant dif· exceeded the Other group in dropouts. ln II comparisons prelimihary kind of study and SanctJ.is aa1d the study will set U IOtne chanau art la whether you're talking about Districtgroupwasidenticalto ference between the levels of tbe are ol social stud.le., for grades nlne through stressed the difficuJUu In be uaed to provide diatrict order." JQ, achitvemeot tests, grade~=:=:.::.:::::__ _________________________ ..:.., _____ ~---------------'-,,;,_--,;,;;.-.;,,:.,,;,_ _____ _ points. leadership, athletics or discipline problems. Mile~ then. you don't gel a1i answer that means much. unless y are an educator . That ~, s the conclusion this wttk...aJ er such a study was prestnfe<I ~ to the Fountain \'alley School District Board of Trustees. The year-long study was Cflmpiled by Mil o Bibelheimer. director of the distr lct'k special services and Joe Spaulding, principal of Foun- . tain Valley School. According to Itob Sanchis. assistant superintendent for educational services, the study was done with two objectives in mind. -To find out how well the Fountain Valley Sc h oo I District high 5Chool studen ts d o when com pared academically with studen{s - from other elementary school districts. -To find out how well students ·from the Fountain Valley district do C1l mpared to students of other districts when compared in leadership, drop-outs, discipline a n d athletics. :'The major purpose for the study was to set if there was a specific correlation between a specific educational poin t of view or organizational struc· · ture for the early adolescent and their future performance at the high school level.'' Sanlhis said in a memo to board members. ·The study was made at FOuntain Valley and Edison high schools. The students , for purposes fo the study were divided inlo two groups -the Fountain Valley Schoo I District students and the students from all o th e r elementary districts serving the two high schools. ln the academic portion of the study. Bibelheimer and SpauJding reached the follow· i.Dg conclusions: -At the ninth grade. the other group showed a &i(nificantly higher !eve.I of in- telligence, which would in turn predict a .significantly higher level of achievement and a Recycle Unit Takes Mesa Glass, Metal A city-sponsored recycling center is now accepting aluminum and glass in Costa l\.lesa. The. center is located aNim Tice Chevron, Del Mar Avenue and Newport Boulevard . Citizens can dump any form of aluminum or glass bottles lno metal attached I at the center . Profits from sale of the discarded materials are given each. monlh to civic organiUI· lil'Jns which alternate opera· tion of the center. The recycling progrRm "'as established by city staff. bur is now handled by !ht> volunleer organizations with occasional help from city hall. City officials said the center has been open one month on an experimental basis. depen- ding on word-of-m nuth. for its business. A staff spokesman said the center is now ready ll'l handle a grealtr ''olume nf glass and aluminum. No profits from the center go to the city. The center does nol accept newspapers. because there is no longer a market for them. !he spokesman said. Evaluation Of Un..i Higl1 Scheduled IRVINE - A UC Irvine dean and a Corona-Norco school adm inistrator \VIII learn up to evaluate University H.igh School in Turtle Rock for ac· creditation by !he \\restern Association of Schools and CQllege!. -rhe new high school, opened ln January, "''ill be visited by James E. Dunnlni. UCI dea.n or admissions, and Dr. Charles S. Terrell Jr., guperlntendent of the Corona-Norco Unified Scl!ool Oillrlct. Tht accredltstlon procus compares the school's physical plant, servicer. curriculum, student .services ind 1cllvllle$. Jibrary and laboratory of· fertngs with those of other schools ln the-Western U.S. ' • • -. • L • err1 on We hold no brief with those who take a dim view of America. At Merrill Lynch, -We are bullish on America. Now and for the long haul. Here are some key indicators from the reports of our own economic analysts: • By the eIJd of this year, America's economy should top $1.1 trillion-highest in our nation's history. •In 1972, U.S. corporations expect to spend $89 billion for plants and equip- ment-up 9% from this year's indicated total. On top of that, $21 billion will go into research and development. ' • Industrial production should climb at a rate of 5 to 6 percent per year during the 1972-197 4 period. • Consumer purchases of goods and services are expected to increase at a rate of 4. 7 percent through 1974. Spending for durables will be sharply up. \ • IS • er1ca. new customers. Approximately 35 percent of those people will be making the fusq investment of their lives in the securities market. They must be bullish on Americ;a. A matter of attitude. Any long-range view of America's future must, of course, be tempered by the realities of today's problems., And economic projections-no matter how exhaustive-do not suggest· how those problems will be solved. Will they be solved? That is a matter of attitude rather than facts. Of.spirit rather .Oian statistics. We are businessmen, not sociological seers, but we have been al part of America's economic life for a long time: And we are consciously aware of a force in tills country that is more easily felt than defuied. It is part energy, part imagination, part pride. Call it American know-how-call it: ' . American instinct-call it what you will, · Those are just a few figures from our economists (we'll be glad to send our current business outlook on requ es t). • it gets things done. And it is alive ahd We see other favorable signs , some Within OUf Own offices-and we have 197 Of them throughout the U.S. This year, Merrill L)rnch will welcome about 400,000 ' .. • thriving. . Let others count this country out, if they wish. · At Merrill Lynch , we are bullish on America. • Eco110111ic Trio " • • • W1dntsday, N1vtmbtr 10, 1911 DAlLY PILJT 4Z {.EGAL NOTICE L EGAL NOTJCE LEGA~ NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE IAlll Utl .SU~••10• COUltT O" TMI NOTl(I TO C•IOITOIS tU .. l!atoti COIJltT 0" THI NOTICS 01' SALi 01" •IAL tTATI 0111 (ALlllO•NIA !SOii '"flRIOR COUIT Oji THI tTATI 0, CALll'ORfUA JOit ,11.0flllaTV AT l"RIVATI SALi THI' COUNTY 0" ORANGI ST TIE Ofl CALl,OllNIA ,0111 THIE COUNTY 0" OltANOI! N•. A>4UU Ht. A·7117' THI' COUNTY 0, OllANGI l"e. Jti..u.ttJ S.;i>edor Court 01 IM S11!1 OI C1ill11rnl1 NOTIC¥ 01' NEA•INO OF l'•TITIOtt ' Nt. A·1"M NOTICI 01' MIA1UNG 01' f'ITITION TG tor th1 ClunlY o1 Or111... l'Olt 1'1tOaAT• 01' WILL AND l'O• E1t1t1 ol • ELMER c. FIU.NZW~ eoltltOW MOffliY AND TO tXl!CUTl In flit M11t1r ol ,,,. E111t1 Of LAV•• LE1'TlllS o• ADMINISTllATION Dlt Dec11...i. A l"ltDMllfOlt'f NDTI LEE HAOfJIMAN, 1IJO kllll'llll 11 LAURA IN TKE ALTl!llNATIVl,f'ITITION Td NOTICE IS HEltEBV GIV'fN '° "'' £11111 of HARLOWE It , HA<;ERMAN, Ind ., LAURA L. Sl!T ASIDI IS:TATI to $UltVIVIN• crM!hor1 o! !tie Ibo,,. n.mtlf dtcM,11111 lltLLINOSLEY, Dt, .. ltd. HAOf:ltMAN, Otte1Nd. ll'OUSll! 11111 111 l"tllOnt hlYln• cl1lm1 111ln1t 1111 Notice ·11 hereby tlvt11 lhll BANK 01" Nollet II hf<'lbY 11...... 11111 1111 f1t111 of M"ZIE GERTRUDE BEAT• 111<1 deCt<ltnl 1r1 r..iuht<I to 1111 ll>M\, AMERICA NATIONAL TRUST ANO ulldertllntd Wl!l ltfl "orlYtt. 111•. Oii or TV. 01«1~. wllh ""llt(<llPrf YOUClltrJ, 111 1111 offl<• U.ViNGS A~SOCIATION. IM.CYIW or ftlt tl!tr lht lfftl Oat ot NOVfinllt•. 1971, ., NOTICE IS. HEltEIY OIVEN lh•t ot t111 clfrk cl 11>1 11>ov1 1n!ltled court, or •Ill or lf>t 1bov1 n•mKI Otetd1nt, 1111 lht ollltt OI 11.olltrl J. Jollnllon, '1'Jl $0. Gtortt W. 811111>· h111 fllld hlr"lln 1 H!lo kl pre.t11nl lNtm, wlrh !ht n.c1u1rv lllfcl htrtln 111 ver!llld P1Ul!on tor L1k1 Av..,u1, •10 Union l ink 1"1111, lion tor 1rol)fl1 OI Wiii •nd lot Let1trl of .,OU<;!ltlfl, 10 1111 ul'l(llr1l1ned 11! th• offlc• Av!horlty to Borrow ~Y ind 10 Pt••lll"' fllO I, cC.0111., of Loi Afllfc!••, Admlnl1tr11Hon or In ttit At1tr111llv1 P1tl• ot "'' 1t1or111Y: A.OBERT w. E~t<Ult I P•omlnorv Nott, tnd th•I St••• ol C1lllor11i1. to fll• 111t111SI Ind blSI lion to "' .,ldt Elllll lo Surwlwln• ANOEFISON, 190 E11t Co Io r Id 0 Oe<tml>tr 3, 1'11, •I 9:lG A.M., In lhl bldOer, Ind 1ublt<I lo <onllrm1!1on 111 ~pouP ret11ttnt1 to wh!QI 11 mtdl !Of Boultvlr!I, P11tc11n1, C1lllornl1 t1100, COl.'rtroom OI 0.1>1ttm111t J OI lhl tboYt 11ld kptrlor Court, 111 fflt r!tl'll, 1111• lllO further ptrll(ul1r1, tncl !ht lim11 tnd wn1cr. 11 ll>t 11l1c1 of buslntu OI lh' et1!llled Court, IO(tlld ti 100 Clvle Cllf'ter lnttrtll of Mid dKtllKI 1t tllt tlmt cf pllltt ol h11rl111 11\f MMI 1\111 tlffn p l 11"°9t1l91\1d h> 111 m11111r1 Hrttlnl119 to Drlv1 W•t'I. Stnlt An1, C1l!torn11, 1111 <ltHh •llCI 111 tht rllll\t, 11111 incl lnl1r111 lor November 2~. 1tn, 11t!lG 1.m .. 111 1111 Ill• rot.re ol 11ld dt<edtnl, wltM11 four be•n llKf!I 11 ltlt tlmt •nd 11l1c• lo• lhl !htl lht 1il1t1 ol Jtlcl dlc:lfl•ed h11 courtroom OI Off1ttmtnt No. J of 11ld month• •II..-tPll tl"'t 1>Ubltc1t!on OI 111111 M-erl111 OI .. Id HtillOll, Wlltn •"" whtrt KC1ulred tiv Oll'tfeli..-If lltw flt otn.rwl••· <Ol.'r1, tf 11)1) (!YI< Ctnttr orlvt W11t, lit nolltt. tnY peraont l~ttrfited In I~• nl1t1 m1y olhlr 1n1n or 111 td!1Jtlo11 lo lh1t of t1ld lht Cllv of $1n!1 Ant. <;1!1f9r11!1. 01Ted Oclob9r u, 1111 ·-•r ll'ld snow (IUll. II 1n., ltltY h1v1. de<t11td, ,, ~ 111!'11 ot dt•ll'I, '111 llld !O Dllld NoY ...... tM!r J, Jf)I MAIUA"I II. O~R!G wtov 1111 ordtr lloOV!d not~ m.at. 111 1111 (llr!t!n r11l pr-nv 1!1u1te In lhf w. E. SI JOHN E•tt<1trlx of 1111 Wiii RefHl!!ICI 11 nerebt m101 to 1111 11ld Counlv of Or1n11, St1t1 of C1lllornl1, Counlv Cltrk of ltlt tboYt 111mld dt<edtnl 1>1lltl011 tor lurll>llr 111rllCul•••· p1rtlcvl1rl., dtKrlbtd 11 lollow1, •a·wll: SIDNEY MALICK lt08111T W. ANOl:RSON DATED: Novtmblr I, 1tll. Lal 111.,111 (II) ln Tr1cl No. J71, 1010 Norlh Mii~ Slf'llt N& I . Coltrtdo l!vd. WILLIAM E. $1 JOHN Vtlrr>e:lt P1rk Tr.Cl 111 ptr Map lhtreor l1nt1 Ant, C1llhrlll1 l'llfftllt, c111tor11!1 91101 Coun1~ Cltrk ••tordtd ln 600lt 11. P101 •J of Tt h 1114) IDJ.U1' Ttl! UUJ ""9-41H NAllWOOO, SOD!iH I ADll,l~SON MltcelltMOUI M1p1, tKCM"<ll ol Ort~it Anorn•v tor l't1Ul1111r AflornlT for E~KlllriX Atttrntl'I II Llw (oun!.,, C1tl10rnl1. Mort oommonlV PubUlhld Or111t1 COltt OI U'!' l'l~t, Publllloed Or1n91 CNtt Dilly Piiot, "' HtWller1 Ctn!lr Orlw1 • l ullt U4 kMwn •• J41 Eell J1fttr.on Avenue, Nov11Y1t11(t, IG, 15, 1971 :IGJJ·11 Octof)tr 2G, 21, 1nd NoYtmtllr 3. IO, l"Oll Offl<I' 8ox IKJ Or1ngf, C•lllornl1. 1t1l 2U0-11 NtwP•rl •r•ch, Clllforllle t1"J SUBJECT TO: C11rr111t t •Ke 1, LEGAL NOTICE l-----L-E_G_AL--N~O~TJ=c=E:---I !:::.."::: ~~4~x~~J!~' ~ti~:.~1!..:. t 1riv~~1t~~~~;;t•!f1(1~::.1-----~' ~=-~------ 1--------------1 P11blll/\ed Or1nt1t Cotll 01!1y Piiot, e&•emtnl• of record. 1'·1 M114 SUl'lltlOR COUllT OF CALll'OltNIA, Nov.roDtr 10, 11, 1911 JQ.l;).11 T1•11, rents, 011tr1tln1 & m1lnten1nct l'ICTITIOUS I UllNlll 1tXPen1n. ll'ld Prtml11m1 on ln111r1n<t NAME STATIMINT COUNTY OF ORANGE IC<to!lblt to tPll putehtser llllll 1M Tiii tollowlnv per•oru. l fl •oln• 700 Wist Ith Strttl Stnll An•, (ltlklrnli LEGAL NOTICE prorated 11 of !ht d1te ol reccrdlnv of bu1 l11111 ti! Ctll No. 176,lOJ convw1nc1. DOYLE'S CAMPER SERVICE AN CJ "ltlntlll: aA.A.BAlt.A ZEILER Yt. NOTICE OF MARSHAL'S SALW· Tf\I n1mln1tlorl of llllo!. tecor<1ln9 of ACCESSORIES, 7670 Sllltr ;.v1,. "' tendaill GAR' 'EE MUNOHENICE, 1 CAC Olv•rs!lled Corp, ot Cillf. Pli!n!lll CO<lYtYIMI, 1n1 11111 ln1ur1nc1 POllCy, Hunhngton 8tKll, Call!o(nl1. incl 11111 •KrOW eXHn~ tlltli be 11 1~1 J1m11 T. OOYlf, 5'-0 C1nehlll Av1,. Uf'I TlltllhOtt mine" LEROY e, MUNDHENl(E, DOE$ YI. Jtml1 D. Folll, II I! Dtfendent No. _,.Ptnll cl the ttlltr. Li•ewoocl, Ctllforn!i. I tnd 11 16~ 6'2 Tiit undtrilg~ re11,...1, Ille rltM to J1mt1 D. pov11, 111.$1 9rtc11 Lin• To thf Oel1ncl1nh:, 8y virtue ot •n tXKUllOll tswed on reltcl Inv •nd 111 bids. Huntlnolon 811ch, C1Jlklrnl1. A civil comol1Jnl h11 been ,tlled bY 11110 NovtmAblr J, 1,91101','"o' ~l'~ltlPCtl ~Oii•~ Termt of i.o1it <••h '" !iwtut mcneY of Rkll1ro T. Dovll, 16612 lrb., Lint, I Pl••"!IU ttllnll YOU. 11 you w Sii to dtlrn LM n1111es •ll<l c t IS • c • oun Y the United S!tttl 011 conl!,mirlon of $tit, Hu11t!n1to11 1111ch, C1111or!ll•. • '-~·--•. The?e three lnen \\lilt play a majot role in admini· tive director of the Cost of. Living Coun cil, and c. this l1w1ull, YC.U mu1l flit In this court I LOI Antlltl. Slall o• Calllornl1, Ul>Ol'I I Ten ~· (l!n! OI 11moun1 bl!I to be Thh bu1ln111 Ct btln• CONIYtled bv • St g P 'd t N' , f wrllten 1>lttdln1 In ''""°""' lo the ludomtnl enleted In l1v or of CAC dtPoolled wlfh bid. _ Ptrlntr•MP. e~m .• res.1 en IXOll s post· reeze econontic Jac k son Grayson Jr. (right ) will head the Price Com· (omp~l!I! lor wrllltn or oral Pie.-:llnt . ll OlvenlfllCI Coro. of C1l!lorn11, a BIOi or''ol!trl to bl I" wrlllnt 11111 will J1mc1 T. DllY11 policy George u Boldt (left) will head the Pay m1'ss1'on. • Ju1l1ce courtJ wu11111 XI d1v1 iner 11111 CorPOtct~ '' ludtment cre<i!tor '"" bi rtcelved '' the i1or1uld oHlt• •I ~n1 Alth••d T. oov11 • i~. _ summons 11 served on "'°"· Ollltrwl11, l110ln1t J1me1 D. foll' tnd Mlflorlt A. time •lier ll'lt llrt! pybllce!lon herrot ind T~ll .,,1em111t tllld wllh 1!11 COl.'n~ Board; Donald Rumsfeld (center) will become execu-vour llt!lul! wlll b<' oinlere<j on IPP1kltlon Fa.Ill,.. lu~nwnt dtblor. lhowlnt • ntl btlor• O•I• of 111•. Clerk of O••n-oi• County Oii Oc!ob9• 11, ----------,,--.'°'~'----'-"'-----'-'-.:.::.::_.:.::.:.:::__~------------------------_:,--I by lhl pl1!ntUf 1na 1111 twrl maY 1nl1r I b1l1nc1 of U U.79 1clu1Uv dYI on 11ld Oiied No~eml>tr l. 1911 1971, by 8evtrlV J, MtcldoX, OtPUI., ludvmenf attll'lll YOU lo• !ht montv or lu!klmllfll on lllf dlllt Of 1111 l11u111c1 OI EGBERT T HAGE A.MAH Co11n!Y Clt•k other rtllll rMut1ltd In lh• com~lalnl. 111<1 e•Kullor!, I h.lve l1wtld upon t!I th• t\to known ·,., ' ruhllihtd Ortnte (~•I 01!1y Pllol, Firm Sta11s New Irvine Area Office Construction has begun on a new home for Seinicoa, Inc. in th.e._Irvine Industrial Complex. Scheduled for completion by the first of the year. the com· pany will move from the City of Industry. Jim Rush. representing the Newport Beach office of Coldwell, Banker and Co., handled the ti:ansaction . fpr 1.212 acres, which Semicoa has purchased from the Irvine Industrial Complex. Don Koll Construttion Co. Of Irvine, is buildi~ the new struct'ure pn 1326 Mc- Cormick StreeJ. Octupying 22,400 sq. ft ,, Ufe building· "}II house the company's cor· porate offices, manufacturing !acilities and 30 technicians. Presley Co. Tells Sales Presley Develop~ent Com- pany. Newport Beach·based· homebuilding firm. h a s r eported 529 home deliveries and sales of $17,110.302 for its third quarter ended Oct. 31, 1971. This figure, which includes a land sale of $2,524,864, com- pares with sales of $7,461,862 for the similar period of last year. Nine-month sales volume totaled $44.908.502, compared y,·ith $18,321,460 for the first three q~arters of la.st year. It you w!•h lo •H• 1M t dvlcf OI en rltht. lltle ind lntere1t.ol 11ld lud11mtnl E T HAGERMAN ,. Otlob9r 10 11 1nd November l 10 1ttorntv Jn 11111 m•!ler, you ll'lould oo"' deblor I" 111• PfOlll•lv In 1M cw~•v'cr e~eNror of lh• wnl 1911 ' 2M..1I promptly to 1n1f vwr plledlnv, 11 1nv, Or11t9t, S!llll ot C11lfornl1, detcrlt>l!d II ol' stld de<tdtOI mev be flied on time. IOllOW1: ROll lA.T J JOHNSTON Dated July n, 1910. Lot 50S. T••cl 11'1, l!'liP book 50. 201 SDlllR L•ll• Av'""' tSEALI peve• lllli Commonly ll!l(PWll 11: l'DIO a11 UnlMI 11n11 f'll•• • WILLIAM E. SI JOHN Mon11wi1 Aven11e, Cotti MIM, Call!. l'ltldtnl Cllll tllOl l"·IH12 Lack of Investment Funds LEGAL NOTICE Coull!~ Clorl( NOT ICE IS llEREBV GIVEN th.ti on AllOr"-Y .for e'1tc11tor f'ICITIOUS eUSI NESI ROSAMOND c. WEISMAN Thur1d1y, Dlctmber 1, U11, ti ':on t1:14·0C NAME STATEMENT • Dep~•!y o'elotk P.M, ti lrO<ll ot Cour!hou11, 5'17 Publllhed OrtnH C0tsf OlllV I'll<>!. Tht followl1111 tefMln II dOl!lt butln11t COLEMAN & SILVERSTl!I N W. Ulh, CllY of Co1!1 M..,.,,, Cl>Vnty OI November t 10 16 1t71 :>Qtl·ll 11: 116 Wnt Jiii Hrnt Orange, Si.11 of C1llfornl1, I will 1eU ' ' ' RANCHO STEAK COMl".f.HY, 1M02 t.01 An11111, C ~!lltrnll 90014 at Publle euctlon to lh11 hl11he1t bld<lor, Sc1ra!0111. Huntlnllon 8111c11. C1llforn!1. Ttl: Ull) 421·JSl1 fol cell! 111 l•wl11l money ol the Unl!eO LEGAL NOTICE W1ll1c1 P1ul Coerp1r, 14 101 Blamed .for Market Decline NEW YORK (API -Al the "very time the "adminislration ·is attempting to a ccelerate the economy~ the -·s~emi • autonomous federal Reserve Board is shutting off the fuel, or the m oney supply, official figures sho"'. The puzzling behavior, which is antagoni.stic to the goals toward.~wbcue_fu.UiJlment. the President has a s k e d sacrifices of all segments of the economy, has brought about an actuaJ s hrinkage of the money supply. Financial analysts here at· tribute soine of the stock market's sharp decline to t he Jack of investvient funds. They add that a continuation of tight money cOuld stall a decline in inleres t rates and subdue. economic confidence also. The Fed describes its role as the fostering of "a flow of credit and money that will facilitate orderly economic growth. a stable dollar. a nd long.run balance in our in· ternational payme nts ." Figures show, however, that in the weeks of Oct. 15 and 22 . the money supply declined oil an annual percentage basis after having grown at more than 13 per cent during some previous weeks. • The abrupt policy chani;:e came in the week after the President announced his new economic plan. Each week t hereafter the growth in the supply or money·currency in circulation, plus checkini accoun t s - lessened until the flow went AllQmey1 for f'lllntlff. St1J11, 111 tile t1111\l, tl!l1 1nd lnle•"I Scaratova, Huniln1ton a11ch, Ctlllor11!1, Published Orange Co111 Dally Piiot. cl ••!d h,Hfff"4!nl deblor In !ht abovt This bvtlMH It bllnv coneucltd bV llt NoYtmber l , 10, 17, 24 1t7l 2964·11 deicrlt>l!d prOPefly, or It much Iller.of NOTICE OP TllU$TEE'S SALi l!ldiYld\lel. ''H' t h 't " h ·a'd II ITh'IV bt nt«nary' lo 11!11ty said T0.5JM·t.,lll7H Wt111CI P. CoerPlt !S ory S OWS 1 • e S 1 · L EGAL NOTICE execullOl'I, wUh accru1d 1nr..re" ar.11 cOllll. On Dec:emb~r l, 1911, II 4:00 A.M. Thlt U•t1men1 flied w1111 lht CountY "They have gone to tremen· O&tf<I ,1 co"• Mtia. ca11torn111, FIR 5 T FEDE It AL IE 5 C It o w C!•rk Qf Or1n11t cou111v on 9e1ot1er 11. d Th • f tAlt JSJf "IOYtmber t , 1911. CORPORATION, II duly aPOolnted 1911, bY 8ev1rly J. Meddo.l, DtllVIV iilto reverse in the week ended ous excesses. , eir ac ions _ NOTICE TO c1tEOITOJts 01LLARD o, w1LKIRSON. Trustee 11n0er 1nc1 our•u•nl '" Dti!ll of couniv c1erk. -• . -have been.oppostte.ta..common -SUPERIOlt-COURT Of' TH•-MARSHAi..~ Trud recorded s.,,,11m1Mr 2!. 1'10, Ill Pu~ll1h.O Or•nOt. Co1tf O•lly l'llot. Oct. 15. sense and good J'udgment." STATE OF CALIFOllNIA FOii .Mun1clp11 C011rt, Or•n•• Counf'!' 11111. No. 16"50, In~ 94U, oaoe ltl, of O.:!ober 10, 21 1nc1 Nov11Y1Mr >. 10. h h Tiii! COUNTY OF ORAN OE . Harbor Jvdkli l Oh tr It I OHie ia! RocordJ In !he office ol Ille t91l :ztU.11 T es r inkage is largely the I'" ht I · th t ·r th No. A. 10106 By v1v1111 Pow.=11 C011ntv Recordtr o1 Or•noe county, St•l•'l----,,.,,-,,-,.,--,,7::-=,.---. ,.,rig c aim~ .a I e Estell of LULU E CRAGQ, DKtlted. O..putv • ct C&\llor11l1 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC LE GAL.NOTICE result of actions by the Fed's tight money pohcy JS pursued NOTICE IS HERE8Y GlllEN to tMt Culltr Ind C11t!tr AUCTION TO HIGHEST 810DER FOR,J-------------- Ope,n t-.1 ark et Committee, it Y.'ill bring about a market creditors of th• 11iovt n1m•d dtted1n1 On• wlliMr• llldt. No. u t ~~~ 1;-~~!1~:i:e!1Sr.1:1,1'~: ~~ 1::;:;i~ 11 1n 41 !~II tll p~roonJ Mav!ng claims 1oaln$t !ht W1l1Mt1 ti Grtnd Ave. ' ll lCTlTIOU5 8USIN•SS made Up Q{ the Se Ve Il COlJapse. "}t is a dreadful 11ld dt<f<l•nt art r,qulrtd to flit llltm. LOI A~ .. !tll. C11fl. HOU ~Fro~!l·c En=I Ito ~:· Cl~~d ot o;~~~= NAME STATEMENT th. •• h 'd " T h wl!h Iha n«euary vouo:hert, ln !Me oftl<• l'l•lnllll'I Allerntv oun ., ou 11 11 The fOllowln-oi parson 11 do!M bu•l11tH members or the Board of ing, e sa1 . es e of lht tltrk cl lht •boY• tnlltled courl. or Publllhe<I Or1ntll Co.11 Dallv Pilot, Ana, Calilornlt. 111 rllfl'I, title ind ... GoverllQrs and the ·presidents bankers were not elected by 10 Pr•.unt in~m •. wllh int. neten1rv Novem1>1r io, 11, 14, ltl! J()«.11 ln!ereit ton':..'..~'! J0T1""1 ~hhtlll ~ i' · LITRONIC 1NDVSTA1Es. 1m1 Sk., h I b h Youthtrl to the 1,1r.denl!lned 11 !he offlct uncle• '1111 ..,.... r\n n e proPf r Y Pi•• Circle, Irvin•, C1lllornl1 11144. Of fl ... , reg>'onal Feder a J I e ~p e ut t ey can • · , 111w1111 111 wld county 1na-s1111 d11cr1ti-• _... ol h..-1ttorn1v1: COl-IEN, STOKKE LEGAL NOTICE td Drlt-lr.,.,, Inc., I C • t I f Or 11 I 1 Reserve banks. Jl ineets destroy the economy." OWL".N, 1212 Nor!h aro1ow1v. suue 211, t~ 142 ,.,Kl 21n 11 per ....,111 corpor1r1on. 11191 Sk'!' P1rk Clrct1, . 'J . . . S11n11 Ant, C1lltor11l1 9'llil!, wt>lth Ii the ded j Book u p 22 rod ?l trvln1, C11ltor11l1 '26.U, regularly in Washington to S1m1 ar c r1t1c1sms o.f the Fed p11ce o1 b~11n1n o1 ftlt unoer11v1111d Jn ~n SUf'E1t to1t'~~J~: 0,. THI ~f:eui~ MIPt, '111 ';:!~111,e1 01 1M Thl• bu1r11eu 11 1>11111 cond\lded IW • decide the makeup of the have been common 1n recent mat!ers 11trUlt1lnt 10 "''" ••l•tt 0' '' d STATE 011 CALIFOllNIA FOii Coun!Y Rtcoreer o1 11ld couMt. Corporlllon. , . decedent, wl!llln four mon!l\1 tller 1111 O N OI' O ANIO MORE COMMONLY KNOWH AS: l/4 Fred GOGtsen1 system's security portlolio. years. but its defenders main-""' 11ubllc1111on o1 in11 not.ct. THE c u TY R E JoAnn str11tt, c0011 Mt••· cintorn18 Thi• it1tem1111 1111d wltti "" Countv When the Fed b uys tain that its independence is 011"" o.:tober 11• 1911 RG NOT1ca OF HN:A:i~:'' 011 f'ETJTION s11d 1111 w111 be m•dt, 11u1 w111>ou1 C1••k ot O••noe COl.'ntv on (ktober 11• • . BEATP: CE LINDf!.E FOii l'lt08ATI! 011 WILL ANO f'OR coven11nt or warrlnty, IXPfl15 or 1mPll.0, \911 _b1 llev1rl't J. M~ Otf'UIY securities, mainly thOOe Of the JtS Strength and that 10 Check· Admlnlstr111r1X ., LETTERS TESTAMl!NTAFIY rq•rdlnu !l!lt, 11 o 5 1 o 1 t I o 11 , or CounW Clerk. U.S. Government. it has the ing Presidential IVIWer it has ot !he Eitite °' the it.a 1 nimtd Eit111 o1 HECTOR L. GIBBONS, 1r>e:umbr1r>e:•1, kl ... ., 1n1 ,..,,,,1n1nv Published Or•no• Ceait oinv "11°'• d ..... v • • ~tdl!flt Ol<t ll•ed p•IMIPll ium 01 111, note\s·) iecurtd bv OctQber 21. tl'ld Nov1m1Mr ~. 10, 11, effect of creating ban k helpe avert serious financial ~2~r~~rt!T~.~~Ew:v.0~~1= 2\~FGI NDTicE 15 HEREBY GcvEN lh•t ••kl ott11 of Tru11, 10-wit: •~3.•es.o•, w11h 1971 "''"11 reserves, thus permitting the t>roblems. s1n11 Ana, c1111orn11 91101 WILLIAM B. GIBBONS hi• !lied ll•••ln • inierell thireon, 11 prowlded !n ••Id LEGAL NOTJCP . Ttl· 11111 US.1105 l>l!lillon tor orllb•lt of Wiii illd !Qr nclltl1J, 1!1w11ncet, U Inv, undtr !ht lerm• ._ nation's banks to make loans During the Johnson Att~rM'f• tor AGmlnlltriirir 1uu111ct p1 Let1er1 T111ame1111rv 10 o1 11ld O.ed o1 Tru1t, feet. th1rrge1 •"d'J------7 ,,,=------- and other investments. Administration the Fed Publl1ht'd or1nt1 c11111 O•llV Piiot, Pet111oritr, relertnct to w111c11 11 melle for ••111n111 lo ~· 0Tru11: ~no' of '"' iru11• F·Ut70 • O.:tober 20 21 ll\d Novtmblr J, 10, ltll lurthtf p1rtlcu11r1, •r.d 11!11 ll'lt tlml 1nd cretled b'f II 0 f'KI rust. FICTITIOUS BUSINl!SI The result, in the Fed's own thwarted an attempt by the ' 7111&-11 p111ce o1 he1r1ng 1he sam• h•t wen .e1 Th• btnellc!arv ..,nr11r 111d OtM 01 NAMI! STATEMENT els air · d' ti · tor November 2• 1tll ~1 t·JO 1 m r11 !he Trull htrelofor1 e~e<uttd and df!!.,trtd The lollcwong ptrton ;, dO!nt bu11ntt1 wor , " ects in tree Y President to pursue an all-out cwr1room 01 0~111r1,;.,ent 'No. ·3 ·;,. 111d 111 '"' unders1vne<1 • wrluen Drc11r1111on 11: every phase or American guns and butter nnlicy, That LEGAL NOTICE covrt, ltt 700 Civic Citnter Drlvit W11!, In ol oer1ult ind Oe'!'•nd !er S•le, "'" • HER CORNEA., 306 /M!!I, t1lbo1, . . ""' . the Cl!Y of S•n!t Ant, Cilllorn11. wr!!ltn No!lce 01 01l1u~ 11110 EIKt<on to c~111or11l1 92661 enterprise and commerce 2nd JS. domestic expansion con· NOTICE TO CREOITORI o11ttd NoYMlbtr s. 1911, ~e11. lne under1lvntd c•u•ed ••Id Nolle• L~nn Everrn sw1n, '°" w. B11bo1 every person in the United t •th d' f th SU fl>ER!Olt COUll T 01' TM!' w E SI JOHN ol Otl1ull Ind Election to Sell to Dir Bl~d .. Newport lle1ch, C1llfo<nl1 '2061. C~rren \\'I spen 1ng or e STATE OF CALll'OllNIA FOii c,;.,niy Cler~ ' recorded Jn tn1 eou11!y wller• !h1 reol Tiil• bu•lne11 1, being conducted •• 1n States." Vietnam war. TllE COUNTY OF ORANGE DUR YEA, CARPE NTl!A. & ••RNES pro11trtv h located. lndlvlOual. This iS not the first time that No. A-tf1H1 18.,. l!RN EIT J Sc;,HACl Jlt,) Ollt: November t, ltll. Ly~n Everell Swtn ,J B y putling on the brakes E1tote ol HE:RllERT G. ALBRECHT. •ni M•cAr1hur ioul••··~· FIPST FEDERAL Th($ 1lt1tmont llled wlth COl.'ntv C!trk Fed activities have r Un th t f th f d b ht Oeceaied f1>11I Ofllct loa HM ESCROW COA.PORATI ON of D•en9e Coon!y Oii Noveml>lr 1. lf11 , by I t P 'd t' I a ime e e roug NOTtcE n HEREllY GIVl"N to lhl! Newpocl a •• ,~. C•lllO•"'' '1611 II ttod Tru1t11t. an-1tr1V J. M•ddo•. 0.111,1ty Counfy Citric, coun er 0 a resi en S goa s. about a money crunch that not crt<tllori o1 ""' 111ov1 namtd drc1de1n1 T1lep~o"~" 111'1 n1.ttoo av Gtr•td K. Nakimuri, Pvbll•hed Or1n11• co1$1 0111v Pilat, Several presidents have only di•t essed ·nv to S b I 111.1 111 Ptriont hiving clalm> •ga1n,i the Attorn1r1 1or: P1til1011•• Ant. Vice P•"· 0 ,,,. "'"'· NOYtmber 3, 10, 11,,)4, n11 2'~11 · t d ' nil' · h f 1 es r u said decedent 1rt •eoulred to !Hit thtm. Publl1hed orange Co11t 01l1v Pilot Publlil!ed O•en-oie Coall • ,. "' come In ° irect co lCt Wit put corporate treasurers into wllh !he ne,en~•r "'°"'~,,,, 111 the onice Noveml:>lr 10, 11. 1~. 1911 36(2.lt November 10• 11• 1'· 1"1 307•·11 LEGAL NOTICE the board since its founding in frantic com""lition for funds ol lh• tltrk 01tht1bo•• enr!!IHI (our!, orl'::::~~;;;~'!'~;;;;;;;,:;----'~'.:'.:1"-""C:::....::.;.c..;_:...'-------'--l---_'.:".'.'.'.~~~~:';:--- t,13 and 't ' h I''" · to oresent t~om, w!th !he ~ecttna•vr· LEGAL NOTICE E ', .. ,, • • some cri ICS ave Fed defenders claim the v011Cheri, 10""" unoer11tned •'th• e1n1ce LEGAL NOTIC •fcTITious-eus1NE11 challenged its independence an h eed d I I or Srllm s Frenklin, Allornev" LIW, Of NOTICE TO Cltl!DITOlll NAMI! STATEMENT h . 1. Crone. was n e .; 0 SOW an E11! 11111 °Stref1,·Co1t1 Miii, Celltornle , .. ,,,,0, CD"•• o• 1"0 SUPl!lllOll COUA.T 01' THI! Thit folloWl110 111r1011 IS dOlllt bu1lnnt anac ronis lC. unhealthy, inflationary ex· lMl1, which I• :lhtt pllCf ol bu•!MH or s'TATI! OF CALl11011N1A FOii STATE OF CALIFOR NIA l'OR II; John \Vright, influential head . ] .. J . th t 1111 under1;g11ell In ell m11t1rt oertalnlno y GE T/11! COUNTY Of' Ott.A NGE MEOICAL DATA SYSTEMS, 2011 r W , ht J , Se . panSIOn. ts CrJtlCS C atm a lo lht Hltle of 11ld dec!!<lent. wl!hln tour THE COUNT 7"0s:AN No. A·70lll Michelson Street, NIWpar! 8eicl'I, O rig nvestors r v1ce any abrupt change in money mo'111~1 11uer 1111 t1r11 publlta!lon 01'1hl1 Estat of N~AAYwARO c 0 A Ts NOTICE OI' Hl!AlllNO OF l'ETITION Heal!h C••t oevel<>Pmtnl. Int. 2on Wh''ch n"mbe s some t 000 . ncl!IC•. e l'OR l"ROl•TE 01' Wll.L AN D FOii ••• c u r , supply " dangerous to the 0 ,-.. " , '''' WHEELEA. 11io known'' HA'IWARO c . ,,.-,,, .,,., .. ,,-,,y Mkhe!•on s•re~t. N1wrort '''"'" 1111. b ks d J a= .. ovem r • · WHEELER. 111<1 known 11 H. c. '' • ' '"' ' C1llklr11l11 !Malt of !ntorl>Oft tlolll an an many a r g e economy. 8ANIC o~ AMERICA WHEELER, oeceii.o. E•ratr ot w. llARL 8 A A.NE s, lhl~ bu~lnen ;1 cgnducied bt • b rokerage houses among Its ' NATIONAL TRUST ANO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IQ tnp Dect&ll!d. corPOrttlon. I LE SAVl~GS ASSOCIATION creditors or lhl ebovt nim.cl llK.clenl NOTICE 15 HEREll'I' GIVE N !he! ay W!lllam f , Powfr, clients, c aims the Fed has GAL NOTICE av: w. c. En-oil•th l!IM 111 1>euon• h•v'"' clalmi •••ln~t th• Art11vr Artl f\11 tiled herein • 11ttl!lo11 tor Prttldtlll more power over lhe economy "'"''''"' Trott o111ter iald dec:tden! •r• •Mulred to 1111 ftlem, 11rcb1t• ot wlll •nd lor l11111r>e:• of Lentr• Thi• i •1ttmen1-wi1 filed wllfi 1111 F·lll15 • E~ecutor of 11\t Wiii of wl!h !ht nftfl..,•Y VOllchert. 111 !he oll lce TH.t1mtnt1ry lo Pelll loner referenct lo Counl'I' Clerk or Dringt COU!lly on than the President. FICTITIOUS BUSI NESS the ab<ive named decedent of 1111 eler1( Ol lht lbov• inlltlld court, or wl'lotn 1, med• lo• turlher P~•tlcuM,,. 1no OttoOtr 11, 1911. Some members Of the Qrw>n NAME STATEME NT 5tllm S, Frl~k11" 10 ort1tn! tntrn, with the MCll!lry lh1t !he lime Ind PllClt of he4rlng !ht PubUlllKI Orinff (NII 0111'!' l'llO'I, I'~ The following 11,.10n111re doing bu$!neJ1 4\t E•tl JT!ft SlrMI vouchtrl, 10 !ht unaerilgned 111 c••• of ••mt ha11:letn 111 lor Novrmbtr 24, 1911, N~ber 3, !0, II, 24. 1911 2tSl·ll -Y..1arket c 0 m m 11 tee ' he '" COl!I M11t. C1lllornl1 '1•27 JAMES L. RUBEL, JR .. JltlorntY" Law. Ill 9:XI t.m., In !Mt tourtroom of Dtoarl··J-'------"--"--------. t . d t d sl d THE'. PURPLE TOAO CO" 20701 Ttl: (111) '42·1'»10 ~2 VI• Oilorlo New~rl Bitch menr No. l of said court, II l!IO Clvlc L EGAL NOTICE main a1n5, 0 00 Un er an Bt•cn 81v<I.. S~acr ,,, , Huntington Allorney for E,tcutor Cilifornla 91660 wi.rth 1, lhe pl•ce .,; Center Orlvt Wea!, In lht CHY of S1nt1 the working or the economy . 8e&ch, C•llfornlt '26-lS. Publ!1~td Orange C~•l Dally Piiot. b<JllnfH;,. the ~nderolvn..O In Ill m1!tero An•, C~lltorrila J--------------NY Operation Some .re not tr a I • n e d Rot>ert E. S~r>dtr&, :10101 bParh Bl•d .. November J, 10. 11, 1•, 1971 2'6'·71 per1•lntn-oi lo !ht eitelt of Hid tteceoerit, Oaltd Novtmblr I, 1t11 I' 1:194' I S1>1c11 69, Hun!lng!cn 8tech, Ctllfcrnla wllhln lour lT\onll!t l!llt lhl !Ital YI. E. St JOHN l'ICTITIOUS 8"51Nlll n)pal'lt'a} Cla1'ms Uru'l economists. Some, he said. are ~!othv A. s'""''"· 2C101 ee1cft LEGAL .NOTICE pug~~::;1~"o:1~~~ ~~,~~i. MART1~~~:c;~'i';zl'• Th• to11o:~n~1P:r~~:'::!. butlne•• incapable Of making national l!lvd , Space 6t, Hunt/ng lon Betcl'I. F.14167 (SI Vlrolnla Oivli Wh,.,ler 10Ht Wll11'1rt lltUllYt rO I I: as opnnsed to reg i 0 n a I C•l iforn lll '2641. FICTITIOUS llUSINf.SS E: l IK ol th• WHI ol LOI A"••I••· C1tlf1n1l1 to024 OtlH!ncllbl• Mllnlt!ll'ltt St, vie• ....... Sn1rltn• L. S~nde••, 10101 B~•ch NAME STATEMENT "'•ec':,; ntmed dtcfdtnf Ttb (211) 2n.tu• 25224 Ttf'l'tncl Or •• Minion Vlt lo, R dec1s1ons. Blvd .. SD•Ct 69, HuntTnoton Bo1ch, ., .. ,, ,•, ',,•,•, •• ''· Allor111v tnr l'•llllo111r Clllton A. t.hellev. 2"24 Ttrr1111 Dr., d M • G e Tht fol lowing ptr1tn 11 <kl!ng bu1ln1t1 ~ .., ~ ~ (1lllocnl1 t;6'8. as : AHorne., 11 Llw Publl1n..i Or•nOI Cotll Dt llV PHof. Ml11lon Vltlo. e uces ov1ng ripes T~lt busintn h bllng conduc1td by t AM CONSTRUCTIO N CO., 2366 :MJ2 VII O•"rto NovMlbtr 9. IO, IJ, 1911 30H·11 TMt bu1lnu1 II bel"' eondUClld bV lit PtrTnersl'llP. F<1rdh1m Dr , C<>S!I M•w. 'IUM Newport lell(h, C1l!ltrnl1 ""• lndlvldv1tl. R l Estate •c• Robert E. s1,ndt". ' ' ' John A. Altl:J. t3M Foronem Or., TtltPhOlll: !110 .n .. 112 LEG AL NOTICE ,.,. ,',',".~.·.,· ~~.· .. 1e~th .. c-···· ea 'n' 1111emen1 fled w.1~ he OY~V Co•Te Mesi , t1476 AllorntY for Ext<ulrlx " "'" vu'" NE\V YORK (UPI ) of the impartial claims office Clerk of Or1nt1 Cnuntt on October 11, Thi• bu1lne11 11 beln1 c<>nduc!td by in Pvbllllled Ortl'IG• Coa1l Oal!v Pllo!, 8Atl SSll Clerk Of Or1nv1 Co11nlt on: Oct.~._ ltll, Edward Goodstone of New ~e~~r;a:l~.uc~u~ ~/a 4~~ H ead Named ;?ii~;~iMe~:,:~!~·c~;:~~;~y ::~;; 1~~~:du!~~m~·nt1ij1::0 with ,h~ cwn•., ~:;.,,..b•• •o. 11 • 24 11 "" D•1m~;1.;1 ~~~!::gC"c:~~fJ'O~~N~~: ~r~~~~:~; ~~~:;::;~~~~.,.~;; York got an estimate of $350 Clerk ot Or1ngo Cou"'"' on: Nov. a. 1911, LEGAL NOTICE Na. A•JIOU 0.:tnber 27• moving jobs in the New York 1911 '2114'·'1 Bv 8e11V J. 811v1!en. Dtouh Countv NOTICE 0 1' Ht!AlllNO OH l'I TIT ION lfll 2'11·71 to $f>OO for moving his t i·t • 1970 Jerome W. Ernst of Hun· LEGAL NOTICE c1trk 11011 Ptto1AT1 DI' WILL AND Fa1t l-------~-,-,,----mc ropo I an area 10 , • n..A d Pub111he<1 or11nt11 co•$' 01ilv p11o1. BAR is. LETTl!1ts TESTAMI NTAllY LEGAL NOTICE household effect!;, bul when Harley received only 168 cl'lm· hn!;,ton ~ach has been name F·l*'I t'fl!Ytrnblr 10, 11, ,., •nd D•c•mhlr 1, NOTICE TO CRE01To11s Es!ite ot TED eRAINAA.D AOSIT, •••J------o-,,=----- lhe bill came it said 1695. pla ints. llarley also handles assista1nt vice prssident of real , ,,, 111R iin ,, 1,n 30n.11 ~~=~:1g: c~C:.~:JR~iA ~~= 1~,00,',,· ,•",'•" ,°",,",',",· ., .. , •. ,.,, ,, 1,,,, :1 estate oans in Crocker Bank's I TIOUS llUSINE THE COUNTY OF ORANOI .. • .. " l'ICTtTIOUS 8UllN!ll The Goodstones a!so found complain1s against firms that NAME sT•TEMEHT LEGAL NOTICE No A . lo.tu UNION llANIC, 11 c1111ornt11 corPOr1tton. ~AME STATEMfNT the'·, COO"ert,'ble sofa and two a re not members or h,., Southern Counties Reg j 0 n Tiie lollowln' PtflOn Is doing bu1Jne•s Es!all ol PAUL MELVIN ltACOllS h•• filed herein I petlllon fl>f J'robe!e of Thit loltowlnt p1r1<1n I• <kl!nt bllll"'" • h d j · N t 11· · l'·l l!U Dec d ' Wiii 1nd for ls1u11nce of Ltltert It: television receivers damaged, association ·3 n d frequently ea quar ers in e w Po r .AMERICAN BARON coM"•NY, 11011 FtCTiTtous au11NESS NJ;~CE is HEREBY GIVEN 1 111 Tutament11rv 11 l'l!lllloner, reterente 10 "lllti & Plect1", 1•m B••~ t 1v11 .. Beach. Ma~n Strttl, 1rvln~, C1111ornla '2664 NAM! $TATEMINT credlrort 01 t~e &bove nemtd decol'<l•n~ w11kh 11 m~dl !or lurt~er Par!ltulatt, Ind H1111tl1111on l!t•(n, Collfornl1. They ,I k the matter up with finds them willing to accept Ernst. formerly appraisal ~J1scm o, R1ddln1, 1aoS6 Whl!ewoocl T~• followlnt ~""" It c:1o1no bu11nu1 thll 1111 perion1 hivino clilmi 11111n•• •tit th1t tne tlmt •nd Pl1ct cf he1rln1 the N1ncv J, w1r111r. ttU Mlv• A.,,. .. N .. Jame J1ar]e · f I his J'Udgment of the matt Wey, Irv ine, Celllar..ia 92W 14. P l<I 0 ed 1 0 led 1 lite lh•m 11me ha1 blln 1et for NllYtmb~r :IJ, tt11. 21, G1rdllfl Grow, Celllornl1. · Y· 1mpar la er. officer in real es tate loans. lMI• bu1 ine11 Is beln1 collOucted bY 1n ·NEWPORT MARINE TECHNOLOGY, wl!h th':' ,.:;e .. ":r'v ~~~1,1, ~nth• ollki 111 t:lO •.m .. In the courtroom ot This bu1tn111 11 belno conduded bv .,, chair n of the Moving and Consumer Crusader Ralph J'oined Crocker Bank 0•0 t9£a as lncl iv!du11. 1101 w. CoiiH Hwy.; NewPO•t 11e1c~ ot the clerk of 1~1 ibove tnlltlrd cooct, 0, Deo1r1m1n1 Ho. l o1 ••Id. cdlort, 11 700 Individual. St t d t f N y k N d ti d th · Jeson 0 , Redding John F Hontv, 2QU VIII• C1vd1I, 10 · P•e ent them will\ mi ntttH&rv Clvlt Center Orlvt Wf1!, 1n 11!1 City of Nancy J. Wtrner ~ or e n us ry o ew or a er recen Y urge e Ill· <jn appr~iser. Thi~ staT~lllent 111ed w"ti 1h1 cou~tv Nl'W1>1rl iie~th VOllC~e:i. 10 the u"..lltniene<1 81 the office sent• Ana. C1111orn11. Tht, ,1atemen1 tiled wltti th• COl.'nrt l~-~-'fo~ the past three years. terstate com mer c e com-Ernst i's a member of the Clerk ot O•ano1 coun!v on · Oct. 19. 1'71. Thi. builntu 11 bel~ conducted bt 11n of fti ittor~evi HAFER. SILLS & wooo. Dlled NovemDtr '· 1t71 c11rk el Or•nge count'I' ori: Oct. J', 14n. . t BY 8evfrlY J. Moddo•. Deputy Countv lndivldu•I. Uritcn 11~,.,~ !.t>u~re. ~outh Tow•r _ Sulte W. E. SI JOHN, Bv a1verly J. M1ddoM OeP<ilY Countv arley ordered a refund of mission o consider imposing a Knights of Coluinbus Alpha c1ark. Joh" "· HOMY '°' Or•no• ,,1110,1111 t'l668. whlcti 1, tlll CounlY Clerk c11rk. $245. The mover paid prompt. system modeled on Harley's • llOll!llTSON, HOWSER & OAltLAND 11111 11 .. 1,menl flied w111i the county 111,'c, of bv;•nan cl ine urn:ler•ogn..i In 111 JAMES L. RUIEL. J ll. P11blllh•d or1nlll! Cot1t Dally PllClf, ff . h . f Kappa P si fraternity, and a ATTOR HEYS AT LAW Clerk"' Oc•~v• countv on: Nov. 1, lt7L miit~11 per!Alni"v 10 th~ ,.l 181, 01 1~1a ~1 VI~~: c llt ""' O<lober l7. 11nd November J. 1:,1,'k Jy, o ice on t e Jntersta e moving· candidate for the American 040 C1mpu1 Ori.,, ev 11e1tv J. e~ro1te~, Oeouiv counrv de<f<l~t. within lour mon.tht 1111r th• T•'i'"!.",,,,, ,",M' ·,-1 • 197! • A '1 P I business. I l't f N1w"rt Beech, c1111. nu1 Cll!'rk. . ti•·• II• 111•,~110" ol '"'~ "ll'''· '" ' . '••,,..,. i• rs, a mrose was sup-ns 1 ule o Real Estate Ap-T••: Hll·J400 Puollshtd or~""'' eo111 01i1v P11o1. 0 ted· Octot>t ,. 1,71 or111v or. " r LEGAL NOTICE posed to move on t-.1ay 24, then The moving business has praisers. 1'11blr11>et1 O•~"g' Coa•t 0111~ "11o1, Novernbtr 1a, 11, ;4. '"'° Ot<emner 1, • 'r i•E Fi ~s r ·NATiOtt1.1.. llANK "ubHstied or1n-oie co111 0111v Pllel,1-------------- lhe moving company. one of grown· enormously .jn recent NoY•moer 3' io, 11• 14' 1'1.,1. ??42·71 1911 104l<1l OF DRANc;E COUNTY NOYember '· 10· 11' 1911 J0 31 ·11 F·lll16 llv : Mith.tel P, 01kltnd, L EGAL T ICE f'ICTIT IOUS eUSIN l!U lhe largest in the trade, said it years. Its volume doubled in LEGAL NOTICE Tru11 0111ttr NO NAME STATEMENT couldn't get ta her job until the past decade and presently LEASE or BUY I'. 141'5 ~dr;;,1;1~~i;:: of fflt" •boY• n1rnld F·l~t ll~hl lollowlpg ;rion It dOIM bullMU July 9. With her lease e)Cpiring is estimated at $3 billion a • • • f'ICTITIOUS eusll•IEll dKtdtnl •tCTIT10US 9USINE51 J & s J•NITOR SERVICE, 110! w. f 30 •\ p J N J 20 fth 1972 (ONTINliHTAL NAME ITATEMENT HA,fll,llLLS &WOOD NAM'ElTATEMtNT Ad1m1.S.n"An1,(1lltornl•t210l, , une , 1• rs. a mrose was year. ear Y percent o e The follow!no per111n 1, e1o1no bullMu u"1on l i nk 5qu•rl Th1 1011owlng Ptr1on 11 do!nt butl111H J 1me• Robert 1<1111er. 1101 w. hopping mad. She caJled people in the country m ove f'!llld out wl!ah ~!t ror vou. E,,. 11: kouth Tow1r • lull• tOll ••: A<l8"11· S•~'· Ant, C•lllorn lt t1JOl. ll I Th b 'g . each year. The 300 New York !ov tnl Pfft1!9e •~O eourt driving PRINCE CHA RT EllS, LTD .• 501 Xll'I Or1n11, (illf1rnl1 t1t41 I. MAOEE ENTERPA.1$ES Tl;li bukl~tu 11 belno cON:lut'led lly .... ar ey. t' I moving com· PIH1ur• O<ll'!' • ConllMnlll cMn .11 .. Newport 811ch. Cellf. '1640. T•h (111\ 111.m1 1. DIAL AND MAGEE. •JS ,,,.,., lndlvldu~T. Pany soon discovered it could movers-alone do 3 business of Pl'llYldt. our tN\e ""'o•oe• w111 Gliblrl P••~'"' Prl>Ke. 501 M11ncl1l1 Allo•n•v• tor Adml..U.t,•lor Street. NtwPOrt Beach, c1111orn11 J•m•1 Rober! K11sll!'r l tl Ull • pro;r1m tulted !Or ~OU St .. API. ~.South P11-1dfn1, "ublll~ld Or11111 COllll D•llV l'llot, Douot11 G. Ml9H. ·~s 621111 S!rtll, Thll lllltm~~r ll!ed wllh "" Counl'Y get J\.frs. Palmrose packed and $50 million 3 year. i>er-Uy. Th!i bullne•1 11 bllnt condlldtd bv 1n DctODer 1'J, 21, tnll Hov•mber J. 10. NtwPOrl 8tech, Calllc<'nll. Clerk of Ortnt~ Countv on October II. m d b J 30 ft ti The d·v· lo f th · 1n!llvldu11. lt11 11Jt·71 Tl\11 blJ1!ne11 I• bfln1 ,ondu<:•td o~ •ri 1'71, by Bevtrlv J. Ml9do;>o;, Dtllllfr ove y unc a er a . I IS n o e m ovmg ont1er1 P•rke• Prl11<• lndlvtdu•t count., c1~·~ Judy Lutz got a $144 rerund business is interesting. lf72 MONTEGO ~ av Selly ~-Lon11m1de LEGAL NOTICE o0...1111 G. Meg'~ P1,1bl1shed o,r•n•!~ c2'~ o.,"' ,'"",,· I Tlll• st1!......,t flltll with 1111 co;,nlY Octobtr ». I '"" ,.., •• m r _ • .. • on her ov;:rcharge complaint About 25 percent.. is in Th• _ '*""''1 111, ti, wuh Tlli• .r.:::_r:, 111"' wllh 111e couniv ... 1•11, c11r1t o1 o,.,,,, Countv on Nnvember 1, 1t11 2«1·TI • to Harley, Bertha Turpin gol transfer.s of military personnel ll'I• bit c•r •1111, Find out -11 1111 c1m ot or.,,.. C01111ty on: Nov. 1, 1t11, FrCTITlous •us1N1ss ltll. w 11vtr1l J. Mttklox. o.11u1y $75 B t I · t · I and thei'r fami'li'e• Another 35 ldv•nt•t" of' iee•ln; 111rcuo11 llY a1nv J. l•ro111n OtPYtv Counl., NAMI STATIMllNT Coun1., Cttrk. LEGAL NOTICE . U no Comp a1n 15 00 <>-I lt<IO<'!' dlrttl d .. ler <111 our Cl ... k. . TM fol!OWlf\O per~ 1r1t dOIM l'UbHSl'IH Orlntl Ct1111 0tl1., l"JIOI, small for Hnrley to adjust. P. percent is paid for by cor-'"'' rMn1c..-.,,. Publlthed or1noe Co.ttl o11rv "!"" bl!1ln1tt• •t: NovtmO.r i, 10, 11, ,., un m1.n ,..,,.,, , NOYfinl>tr 10, 11, 24 Ind December 1. lEFIO·TEM" EQUIPMENT CO. ti 111 l'ICTITIOUS IUStNall Rosen got $25. In this case, the poc:at1ons. and this busines.s is Mr. lud low•n 540·5630 1t11 JO:U.11 c Euclid w1v, A....,1111m. cau1orn11. LEGAL NOTICE NAMI STAT•MENT n1over had quoted a_ price of about equally dtvided between w~Yne o . &rv1111, s.in Rock11<1oe Th• fo!1ow11111 "''°"' •r• tfo!M h • LEGAL NOTICE • Drl~e. Buen• P1rk, C11ltornl1. F·UIOO bu1ln1u 11: $28 an hour and c arged $35. moving famtlies and their ef. or,,,,,,c.11,.11.,.f,llfi/y•/FiiuC•rJ' , J1y L. "•ln1111", "" EU(•tv•IY• 111cT1T1ous au11Nl11 BYFoRo 11EsE..,1t c ", t)t1 • Although the 300 mov,·ng £eels and rTio"ln--g 0 ff • c l'·U16f 0r1w. An31111,,,, c1urorn11. NAME STATEMENT c1ndtOJW10C1 or.. Hv1111nt1on t11dlt • • • I e & f'ICf1TIOUS 9USINESI Tl\11 ltutlneu I• COlllfUdtd bv .. l'lefll Thi lo!!owlno Ptttolll 1rt doln1 C1!lk!r11l1 11tf6. c ompanies th11I operate in the furnishings and fixtures and h NAME STAT&MENT 11rtn1r.i.111. bu11n,,, ~~: P. o. m 1ou. Foun11r11 va11ey. New York market Created li"'ht mac hinery, Ten to J5 0 nson son Ttll fol!owl"' ~flO!I 11 dol"I bullntU Jav L. F11111111n ICEL!AICEJI: TUNGSTEN COMPANY, (fUlor11!1 '271)1 • ...., 11: Thia 1t1tem1111 w11 flied with 11\1 '°" Bibb Street, Ct1111 Me11, Cll•f l'r•nll Elvlord, U17 C11!dllWOOd 011,!"- their im~rtial Claims Stl• percent Of the business is WALlElt'S SIGN STUOIO, '21:14 COl.'1111 Cl't'k M Or1ng1 COOJnty an Mr, Rontld Lint, Xl7t EIBbll Strt1t, Huntlntton lle1c11, t 1lllor111a t?d ... II c r· . I ill I I h nst N-l 9!Yd,, N .... l'Ort !~ft. c1n1. Novtnibtr 1. 1171. '°''' Mull. (1111. M1rg1rt1 o. tt'ford. T)fl2 c1nc1-.."' ement o ice 1n 956, it st S mov ng cavy or ~xpe ve w111,rw01111,..1 Methn.. :;oi Ntwtorl c111tTUllCATION Mr, ce11n Ron11d L1"t •• >411:1 •rvlnt ortvp, Hun1lno1a11 Bt•<h. c1n1otnlt.. the only one of its kind in the machinery and de Ii cat e 11vd., N•wftOl't &•ch, c11u. · 1 h.,tb'f <lftlFY !ht! 111e tor11ol11t 11 Avt .. Ntw DOrt B•~ch, c11o1, ·~-. m 'Cho'ne• SUCh as eJectrooJC Thll bu1!nu1 15 btlM condVClllCI bT I ll t (Ofrt<::I COllY Of !hi! or11tn1I on !lit In TM1 bv1lntJI lt Mint cOllOU(ltd by f l "h butlntJ\ 11 bt!nt C1)nd\1Cttol bV tit country, }fariey Said. EffOrU " ll'llll~ldYll, mv Olflce. W\!lla"" I!. St Jol'!n. (DllnlY Gtntr1I P1t1n1r)hll>, lnd•vfdY~I lhulblM l fld Wiit). are be·ng made t t up computers w111..,. wo1tte111 Mflh"• c11r1<. 1, a111v J. B1•1it111, De"""· Rontld L1111 Fri nk Bvroro . I 0 se · Tftr1 •"'"""'' 111tc1 will\ I~• couniv no.oc; · This 1111tm1111 1111c1 wllll m' Coun!v T~I• 1t11tmtnt lllld w!th t111 Coufllf similar ph!usJn.St. Louis. Cifl. Tbt remaining 25 percent ls C!ttk of Drtnoe Counrr on: tlo.,. •· lf11. c~aritt 1. T•¥11•. Anr, c11rk ot O••ntt Cou111v f!l'I" ociocitr lJ, Cl-rk ol 0•1not Cou~tv on oct•r I&. cinnati, Los Angeles and romlVlsed of families and In• BY &ttlt J. B•ro1t1n. 0111111y counl'!' 1n• 11u1~v Avtfllol• 1'n . ev &tv••li< J, M'6SO~. Dt01111 1t11. bY '"'"'1"' J, MIOoloi, OffulY r-C11trk, Munt1111te11 l'•r•, C1!1/, "Ill CounlY Cl•rk. Counl"I' Cltrk. several o1her big cities. dlvldu11ls whn pay for their 1>11bll1htct or1n-oi1 (NII 0111v Pllm "ubllshtcl or'"" CNtl 0111r l"llol 'vbni11..o Or'"" co.11 01lw l'llct Publ!•h"' or1n1• toe1t D1Jtv 1'11ot. O\·er the years t.he existence own moving jobs, 2621 HAABOll BLVD., COSTA M£SA • 540-56» f;nvn11tr 10, 11, 24 1nc1 Dtctm~1.;; ~:n.rob«r 10. 1r. 1c. 1nc1. o.um;:.,~i October ll>, '' 1nd Hove"'tttt 3, 1~,7311~;; ?:.Jr'' ff, i1 ,..., NOYt111W :t~r • I \ • D~ll Y PILOT s --¥Our-Moraey OVER THE COUN1 1ER Complete-New York Stock List lnsu1'a11ce PQ}icy a..,_t1ll•t ~lltor eW'll ..... t lff • ..,.JlflllfWl\t t A.M ....,. NI.Sa. ~tl<t.1 M .i llacl-tetlM t.f m1rtl•• lll<lrt ...... It ""'"' ._. ..... NASO L 11t1ng1 fo r Tuel.day, Nowtmber 9, 1971 - .... ... U. I M.,lt LAW c-. CU. !JF,~,,. u ll?. a: '~': ~" :a~t '1! ·~ ~ 'I:~ t:2!11iW:"1: ,r. n r ft"4I" :~!-. ~r" t U\1 lf:I• ·~ -,.., ,in... •19 H • li IYiwnlflf 'lft fl lf~ 1t.~ n'~ +Ii ~'lrvc ~r1 '!~ 11ttt uT~ ,41.., t2~ 11111:'~• if •i ..! !~ J!!: + v. ~j(~ :f ~:ft / 1R(l. *ti 1 =.'ti Switcl1ing Safe? -'°,.!',",,',-lf !' !" !" \ltnl'n " ... 2~ h, f 1Wa + h 11 !W Dlf.15 II lJ,\.'o t!:!:'! II\ H&.w vo11K j"'"\&•rr111 111 i if:'''''""" 1•1 111io1111rOt1 1i 1,..,,", M'• ''"''"Nlld ~~ '"' 1 \NC1~i~i1 • 1i J-• ,f,,. ,r~!"' ~~u '':f J I ·~ '"•-1: "1'°"-1 "' v .... ~ -T1t1 tolf.o...r'W I 1 81u~I! P: JJ\1 II 0-l•b ', "'t!t P•lfll 1 ''° fl,MI "" »~ JIW OIJl•J M ll ll\l ~~~-~ s~ F.ll 'm 1J.,.. 1;\ .. = ~ urf!:~WJit ~ Ii "i 1 '= \l W114i -'l.H;~--!1:4 t -" I • .-1-c:MG 8111mrll :ll 1 2·~' M 11 • 11 EOHtll r~ )\1 ' FIP~ wt ..... ,.,, It "'" 61.lo 41' ,_,. 14"9 il 'j rckn " l~ • '"' -\'1 •I p JI NIOtl!Ml murJ11"1r1.1tr,MrJ 1lt1~5, .. &b-Ji:,~~:.\": 2~ .. ,~~~~ 1v, '"'°"it'"~• 11~1• =0~\~'~ • im 1 11 1.,,-" u1 11 1 1 RO 11""'" ""' U"4l"~ 111 SYLVIA PORTER 1l any lnsuranct agent sug -gests, you 1w1tch a pobcy you own -life ar accident and health -!or ' a better one the law ln most states rt- quuu the agent to explam fully and clearly the dtf ferences between the policy the agent says you should cancel and the new one If the agent doe sn t make this full discloa:ure about the policies he (or she) ll breaking the law and' could forfeit his license But even if the -agent doe! tell )'OU the differences there art many many shadings to full disclosure -and you well may not understand; what 1s being recommended Even if you would be beder off m some ways by sw1tch1ns the d1sad vantag_es af change might far outweigh the advantages Ule agent is stressing And even 1f you are persuacf. ed by the arguments Frank Evans advanced s a I es manager f o r Contine ntal Assuarnce Co gives you the blunt warning • In very lew cases can changing insurance poUc1es be advantageous to the 'JIOhcyholder U n s c rupulous 1nsurance a gents Sill d o extSt although not on the scale of the past v.hen 1hey thrived 1n the ghettos particular ly They still do sell to the J>OOt a nd urunfo rmed then coax the 1g norant policyholde r 1 n t o s w1tch1ng to other policies after only a couple of y ears - so that lhe buyer pays the front-end costs o ve r and o ver ag ain There 1s stlll a rea l d anger that you II make a :ienous error 1n this are a -1f onl y becau.se so many m1lhons of )OU own so many m ore 1n lillr ance policies and 1n such a wide variety tha n e v er befor e There a re of course many reasons why you m ight c hange a life or accident a nd he atlh pohcy But the m ost likely r ea son 1s that ari agent ad vises you that anolher policy from anothe r insurance com pany 1s a better buy Here therefor! are a half-dozen basic guides to '4e1gh 1f and "'hen a s witch is suggested (I) Realize that with any new policy you are pay ing the full front end costs a ll over again -1ust a s you did '4 hen you bought your or 1g1nal policy 1.-iost agents com m 1s:;1ons and company ad m1n1strattve costs CQme out of vour hrst yea r pr emiu m If y ou ve had your policy for several years )OU ve already paid these costs once Don t du plicate them v;1thout er tr a ord1narily sound reasons (21 Also be fully a'll.are or the importance of the coo testab ility clause 1n most hfe insurance contracls -under v.hich your insurance CQntract can t be b roken because of sta tements you made on the applic ation a fter the pohcv h as been In force for a period :S:i:?~~ 1-Ji~t :¥fr !~11 1\: 'I;: g:l: ~E s:n ~ ~ 1:::·$~:, i; 1;:: ~~ w~ru ~ ~ S:::s\; ~~ ~ ~1=c~'1l~ i~u H~ ff~ ii~ =1~ ~°"' -~~ " ~ ~" ::;:i:;_.J fi •li! 1f.: 1$-~ u:i:ually two )t:ars W ith a new 1' 11 •kick• ~\~1cn~ 7~l! 7i , g:vi,"/o 1~ .. 1~~ ~idfil• M~ i!11 1 ~ ~~n1F&" 1: 1: ~:;t,,,~tt 1~1~ 1U! ~~u•fJeoJ "u •" nu ff ~ ui ~i~·•\,U £ rl~ !~1 ii~ :r:;~;! !Jo '' J!.., 1.~ ~\;, ~ ~ contract you &tart a new two-l•~'a"! .. ,!"° Trvi io~"11.H~.· 3: ! 31 : B:r~nx 1c" ~;. ~,. ~~ r;;od ~" ~~ ~~·~ ... , 2jJ~ 2~ 1:: J: 2~~ 2itt !r~m(~r~ r II !f\• ll\1 l5 -~ fi~(O(P..'/.~t 111 ~~ 1'u p, :=";/I )0 ll43 !ff!' d~ j!J :f" ,ll Year contestablllty per I 0 d ,•,','!!.. s! Jt , .a Boor "'H 1•, 11 , Otco 1n 10 , 11 , l!I« • c~ )l~ •~o Fotorri1t '"' N ''"'' •r w:1o1 1114 A~1d 011 1 '° 3,1 ;r,, ~1,U" '•'S .+ ~ ,11 .. J• 1 J;i~ u.,, 1'h =" •,~r., 1~t , s• 11._ ~" li +> .. _ ~lh1•8•1dcn ••l10ll<llPO«l••1h nit011 •!1 lR1 F•/lkl(p \5\lo~PK G R1 f)fft .. Ano••f\fll' N -'4 vt~uaso 6J lo!V1JW.~-~H1r1'°c.'1 ,,~ .... . The person w ho sv.itches .... n NC 1' ;it1'B tnli. 6&16t -t c~~ on ll \ ?~ l\llOV c ,,.... "''*"'"*'l""'"' 1'.Aka o·"" ~ ~~ ' i:~ ..u -11'1 •vlnPl , .. 131-·· 2J\ro J•l• t \; H1rl1Arw~ Ill JJ fi"' 1 )~ ... .. policies frequtntly not only ~,.: .. a:;. :/. ~r! =~~:r ~ ~~1 8:1 fn~B! u~ ~~ ~:~ .. T:11 11 l : Jl: ~~":' ~~ ·;~ ';t: ::r10. 11 .. IJ ~."'~··-~ fj ~ I ~ .... -""' ~:~'2"'--t~Jc ti~""'+ ~·•VA Iii lt 1 ~ 0 10•• -I II V1 Bli.1 ". Jib Brio/I W•ll 11. 114 Cf; .. e. El ' '" EP\CO n l .. l\1 G1111 M•• :t\'i tt P1rk1 " S>t '"' AlllJ-'°9 1' lMi "" --Oef1T19t' 111 u I ~ 11'• ~ ~ HtW\I 1-!."l t? I .. u~: it-pays the front end cost:i: ove:r v1 N arui: :n. 1n1o 1...0.11 M 11\t 1t 01am ''' 11 11 i;qu•Y 011 '"' lo• 1r1n1:1 21 • u~ l'11'kv Gt 10 ''"' Allcv,",,. ,~. •,,1:-< ',:~ ',l~ -• ~ Mrtlt 1 Jcll.i tw 2'1 -I,, ,..::~in. .ii •t• '"' t~ + "" bu' I I l I ll>lUfl Mt Bucli.•v• 11i1 1 .0111t'• \'o l 'oErltTK ·~'"'&''Gron C\15 P1111wH J.l!oaltviAU lc!IMl7 ~t .... -n1 4lt <46\~4.S .. +l'tHCAINI I ...... •II'"'. again r are Y ie S OU 0 FH:I u .. Ll ll l!i. 1u11111111 •'• l lo 11 ron l 11~ FPA CP '"' 10 "' Alrt Jli ~ P11 "•sft J'4 ' Atlllcll~ofl 75 l2 o, ,~• •tt" ,~ +1 •K,.,•nt __jj_ si.. "' '" -'-HUii t r• ~ u l'" ",. /Sllll + ·~. t h I I bl lod E nd111tr Ila Bu•n $"' ,s,,, 11 .... O!lt ll'IC 1l l FB Ctca 1 1"1 "' 1ue1 ...... ""P•11llp ' ..... '"' At1 R J .. ,,._ -,-,,, -..... 0-... 1. "' )1\lo ~ XIV.+ l'i "" •M '°' IGt ,r; 11.. ,.. +. econ CS a e per vans .V.1 C• 1, u, lfW$v )SJ.o 2$1t Olxn Ctu J1 l Ii, FID Te-,i: 1lo Git!... >'-3-" PtVtlll 1\i 1~ "'llltcll I M iJ ii: 1\4 f'i -S!!.!t'Yltsr~ •• 1i.o ·-Mflllr "T -t--11-,-'2~ '2'°' , emphas izes !FoA rnc' 11 . 1: ~ c:::iiD'M~t ,,~10::: ~~:etJ 1:~ lf!:l ~rr.r:~~ E j ., !"' ~1~~1~11 w ~~v. ;i~ :::.r M~ Jl~ n~ ~~os,~~ 11 • •• IV, .... T ~ g;;~'YJt.l "''r n; llh fi,, t ~ Htlentlt~ ,, 1i " ':t. ,. - {3 f Find our nrec1sely what AltS inc • , ·~ c1nrion B 90 tl Oaw Jo~e • ~, "' F nt o 1 l\o 111 Gola cvc1 IHI 1' • P"rlli T 1' 11 ~:;?:;:," 1~~ ~ •m 'f" tfi i' O.Satol"\ Ill ~· 111..\ uv. iJO + ~ :!:JT;' 1,.,urr,. •! ;1.\o llil 1t: -I! r AVM (p 11\· U\.'I C•"••d p ... • •• Ocv t OB 11 11 • F "' h 1.! 15~. GOllld IT ,,~ l \1 Ptf\11 P1C ,.. ,_. Aw.o Coto $1 1 •~ '~ u~ g:!E10J• ott'°n l,.{ 1~\: 111"' 11 114 -+> "' Htlltr p!C 07 1 ,~, 1;, !11~ ~ .... "'llbe lhepremlum p ayments•t>ttl >\Cl o 1\'l tuM!llt )11t,,,)!o0un~n0 lli JoFl!Bo•I n~11.Gv EF!n 11•1 11\'i P• Gt.W l):W.1>1 AvtOCPwt 1 ' lto SMl-l'i [llff dPl76f 1200 W 102 102 HtlmPd....Ob Jl 11 IH11 lit.+ 0 ro' Yo"' new pol.Cy a _; com Atutl\nl 11\• U ... CtP Sw1t 6 6• OUO ~p 11~ I! o F11 Gtnlt l l ( o GtlPll Cn \1"' 11 Pti11I BW ~ ·~ AllCa pf) l'O l •Slit 4! • 4.S -11, §!' d pf.S,14 7 &», ll llb + 4\ H•llm:!EiP . )0 J.S~ 2.S lo Jm + • 111,1 Adnii 1lo J\l C•ol1> ,,..i, J µ. G P'I ~cl 1V. 11 Ptlrollt ft it Avt<T l'1'l 2' 19 ~ ,..., 1'11 -l't ~rer 14 16 U\fJ 11\.'t U\1 HMI CtP ' l o 3 I ll'I pa'eth.mw'th .. hatuou··eA<ldl•nW 11 1' ... C.i•TK .:J 3>1 _ _... _...,._ Gr!AMlt l•~~l.OiPe!He.ti U'loU\oo Avni!'l 1~ "10\t l~V, 10.+1\, ltlrlnln .st (111 ""' '""t"Ht'f!lllC Ht 11 1'1o 1 . n'-"' ., ~. .., "'av Ros l, Slo C1 • C, 1"' J • Gtn1>•MI 1)\o 14 .... Plllti. L t tl.:o A~NI fl I t• 14 11 ~i. I 11 1.tO 11 '1"' 41 41'9 ~ "fl"CUl9 t l'09 10 .S l.1111 .501-t -•• pa) rng If the benefits are A • s.x !" t• C•rle 1111 ? • 1 , G•n Adw 1' uv. P11o1on 7 l"i -P.d •.J1 xi~ "'.i. t4v, 1.s -1141 11~ ~m 1 ., lt\li t\o 1• He'""" '10 t JP. 111, n • -'-Ar ll'ICI • J~ C.1rl Ga lt 1 1(1 G•OYI P l\o fl\ Pltctmt A 1 o II.. A.t!ecOlf 1 2fll U 11~ I~• J\'o °'" <I ll Sft OIC 2 1 ,...._ 1t\ll 7tl "-Heutlltln U 12t ~ 4J,. U't s1nl1\ar )OUr p remium s pro. Al-Ho ,...,, ~· r.1K 1o1c; •. 10 MUTUAL G1111 1n111 •. ,.., P!M11" ., 1 1114 -8--i.s ,, 01 1<1 11 "" 1'"" 1, .. -=rr.ft P~.,.1<1 Jn .1ri. ~"" '°•"• '" "'IOtrll 11 lj CIV'lllh C ' ' •t• Gvrod" .S 11'1 Plnkrln ''"" 611'4 Olcl1""-If 7"' "o ~~ I 2' ba bly will be higher -m erely A .:.11c .si. v. c'"''' VI 1 l1 H1•.-11 u nv. P11rn1.. n, u BotKkW,,. "° 11,' !t'" lQl'I 11~ t "' o -,., '1 !tJ.'U " loll1' -""" '°" He11 1 11 11 1 a 11 ~ + '• Iha" .. l~1n El HJ ~. C~VI P\ i. 1 1 , Ht1Uhl ((o $\'o POii HIC It\\ 2014 1--•0o!o .10 1.t l" lt\.. • OIGion 60 l'iJ UW. ll h IS :i=•r1 ! l'O l!l ~2 .. '1 .. 6J•t + I because you are old er Al ta LnO , ,,,. c~ .. 1 L•n !J i"' "e" ta F '' 11 , Pnul\ M 1, u, 111 'GE ''l tl \1 JI .+ ..., g1G1or• of 111 " " " + \I. '"w11 "' ' n "'' ~ h bo h h r I '"11 ... ,,, '' ' '' • '' ''' FUNDS "''' ,.. •• · , .. , P -Pl 1i.. t 1•,•,•,•, Pu",. n Uh 111 -+ h ,1111 E1111 P HIJ ''"' 11 ,, II'-Ho\I Elftir,. i. 17.,, j • l" • wen you u n t te 1rsr • • ~"(•~ 0 • ~· 0 ""p-,.1, ,, ,,,. 1,,... • .... ,,,1.,~.011i....,,,...ri s231M., '"1n -~Ho11v1"" 1 1s •li..• •m-~ l'e> AID lie~ 7 a C"~ I 01 S • I 1 H~ Co •?• 1 •• ..,o 0 8•nko1N Y J j i1 J11, 11 ~ -, omlnw pl "' 1 c 71v, ,,, 11 _ '-" Hol1£ 110! t ! , 61l ~ 6 •l -+!Vi policy A.!ld E1111t S•1 6 C~m ltl !l IJ Ht l AO S • Prud Mf! ' 1 ~Bin~ T IS. 1 I JJ\~ ~1\ 5JW +,,, Os~Y Jf1 1'QO !ll<lh !~ "'° 101 ... Ho!v 9 JDo i I \II ll\'I I .... A lvn 81t t t• C"""'' In •lo C!J. Hldo(: In l • • PuOS NM 91• ~ B~rO<O 1 •11 I •1"'6 • , •II• -~-1. OlllS...• 1 ?O lj I~ .... 55 SS ' :. ,,.. Hornes k' 40 1'1 ?l~ JO'-~. -Vt /4) 8e e""""ISl\y ca refu)Aloe(•"I Ho C!>ewll1 lt U ., Haanm I t\.oP11t1SNC 11 ll~•BtraCA ~J.& t~ 62"-•l """"nv•slnO 'l6 61 I>.; J"° 7b -•"Onvw l JO 10111 Of110 -Vt "1""~ .pl\..,., 1 1 C~ BfOll)O 111 ---~ ~--~HH~v,,v,~ .S Jl,P11t1hllr 41 , 4lti 81•lcot 40 1 I"" 1\1 l•1 +\1 01vM .. Jllt h• J7\lo :J"'o n>o + ,Hoo•tB 1}0 •l? ... 31 • !111 -• about this aspect of premium A!PI" c.eo 1 . 1-. cn tan 10 , 101 ---~ •• 11•. J\' P11r"'' 11.,,. 11v. Bltu Mt• I I"" I .. lo"' -• orPeo..er 40 1(1 1'\o ,1.., ,,._ ~ '• HMP11Cp A,., 1•1 <IO"I 1»o Jt' .i.. • Am Bu•P 16 ~ 16 0 (hr I.St n• lH 1 n • ,. l'lowra GI 6• '. p Bf'Mtl 3' JS Bl1fl M• pl 1 J 4\1 •U -\, OomtMn1 IO SS 16 s."'• .SS\O .I. '-HO$! ~II l6 lt JO 1"· 7t -~ payme nt.s If you are sw1tch1ng ,. £1 l•D s • J • c ''"U' .. )0 .. ]1 NEW VOlll( IAPJ v .. Pv • 9' s ·r "-md .JO JO" P11ID C1p ..... .i ... ,,,.nd 1D -r.J ··~·· ,.·~. 'ff'' ... \' no ... F..., 111 It I"\ • • -• t:l~•I,.•' M,, •, !~ll 11.. 1J~ ... 11 h Ith I A di AfT>£•P l•'Olll':•C UrtUIB ll•11•o f~tlo1<1 .. nw11uo.1nvRu11,~··,·"11<kMl1 I l\tOUll CM r..1 61111c~Lb ..... ,si, .... -Oonrttti. .... 16 ,, ... ,, 7111\ ... .,.....,, ~.Jl)l.,~ a ea po lCy ny e eriora ...... ""' 111, ,,.._ Clltll Ml n. ?J 1111.onl WPPlild D~ I~ •I .. """"" '•• ,, 11 8T 5v11 I • .s:o;, 1··· Lll> u Jl I 1-'~ i \\ oar ( (p .l2 II It 1'1--· ... "' "ouia.MIU '° 11 19 . II. ll'o h A Fl"! LS t t l'I Cl•us"' ', ..,, 1~t N•t on11 A.noel· rvv 9J I fJ "urs! p S• 6 ~ Jlt1en Pr 1' 1•11 •Yk q ~ 1! 1h4 ~ I ' '° r'>oft Ollver ' ljlit 1)1,.\o 11\~ + v, HO'./l'tlF r ?O Ull 52) st~ '2 , • hon in your hea lth m1g t ,..., Fu n U•• 13,. c1 "'" o 1 1 , ,., g• on ol 51Cur1t t1 J Hinck 1 61 I lS ""' CP 7•1' ,, • 111111 t c. • "'' ::fF~1 1 l;T ~,. ~. i4' t,; t>o>ri.n 10 11•1 ' I.lo uv, ui,, _ ,~ tt1111s1< "" 4D 1 1551<> ISS' 1 us, ""-l'l m ean y ou would h ave lo pay Am Grttt 1110 ''"' c-CP 11 11 , '' t•$ inc •rt Jaron11n n n 11 6J HY1n 111.1 lo , i 1 R1n1t>t E 1t ~It! ..,w,...~ n "'"' lf: r,"" + 11 Oovt• CP 111 lJ s '.7 s1 s1h + , ~oui; ·~so,, 01 SI ,,., s1 ,. :1 A Pro .. ! , 4\oCOVI I 6 )tll9 11~'1 II WhtlllCtv•an.t Fund1 lmlllf Sv Oil ,ll1vchC11 ''ti t<tOlct lO II• JI•) JO ,,, .... t'l'>WChm 10 5'/ 1fl 69 • 11'1~-OUI II 11 , 71 18\',+'11 considera b ly m ore for a new Am Tt ,,, 1tv, o col ,. ~" n , n'" '~'11 ~cu•' e1 "'Pollo 1 u 1111m1, co 1>.i 110 Fl•Ymntl • l u "°"A 60D 1s 1sv. 1s 0 1 , -OPF Inc " 111>1 tv, '"' -"~ous~~ 1~ 111 ~ • • • ~,.,-. 1 policy than you have bec,,n ~:;".,n"i:111 ~~ ~\.II ~::1 \ft ·~~ 'i,,; ~:"a"111"~·~~ ~i~ ~~! :; ~:21~~ 1:.1orN11~' ':!i '~t ::~": E• ,:~ ~~+J :-fa"p.~·k~ '1 t~! 1I" 1~·:-1-8;:r,,~~ l: 1~ ~? ?;~: r,,• .:'. ~ 01~~ •11)0 1! il ! ~io ~1! +: r M1>tt11B Sl\o51,..CornGIJ 11 J (ts~~l lueJ<ltr (11>81 ltl 9/'l"laOW> ''-•Vo llt,,..Env l\li) 1tle11120 71""' 11 1 11\:;~:ores1ol 'l'O 1111 J~ 3"'" 3"•-">HawJOl!n lf lfl ll JI J1V.-• pa\l'lng Or your Old Worse An•~n In , ~ JV. Camw p1 1•\o H it! •• ... Cus I( 7 It I U Jnl 1 Ind 1~• 1 t lleid E• )4 }f\lo tldr>Q" bOD lj\t J! lS 11 ,.. '°'I f>rtu of~ 2 t l1 • 3 ~Jt:l?l(o + Howmet 10 JI I ' 1111 llto + • Arn lr.G J I ... (nip! Cm 6 1\ "'Ci£ F"' $ '' I II Cul ICJ S )0 • 02 tn1 m• In I 11111 llQbln M UV, UV, I! "ow .60 ~lf • ,,, -dl!o + .. R!.!YI IS (P I 4! )"'\ Joh '~1¥. .._ ~ "llt>bold 1 ~ 40 72'h ""° 11\"t + o )OU m ight not be able to get •ra M•• t't 10 CmP 1n.i ,., , .. Aroera" 110 110 Cus Jl 1t1s11201n1mr G u 1~lll)Ott1s J 10 10,'--r.c1•,f •?! Ul; W' ~-:~N:';.'1.1~" HO flt. 11 '1171 ~:~·~.,«t:, l 1~ ll,,. l~i z t he new insur ance a t any cost A ;;wrG !Ho 11'-CIMt Tee ••• ' ,.~.,,1 •I • F'unOi Cus SJ 10 2s 11 n nB• W1h P t '\lo ll11111on tu. ti _1_ DI' J 'J ..,,~ 60 : 60 : -•• 111• JI)>\ 11' o 1111• .,..,..1 Chm • ll ·~ • , u,,. _ '• Arn.1vln l ~((IM" 1\o 1 G,...,lh jJ'l lOO CUl!il tOllNnL~l1Ce 1l~>ll 1 llDUSI 11 ll'h tnef Ca l60 131 61\"t 60 60.:o f 11ott'lulc•o!-"" 11.!1111111 ~101"'tcl"'>-.\l.HWC:tCa Cl 116 CJ •• 0 •t• /51 Be wary about the Arrow H 1Sh 11v, can P•" 1fl l'Ol.o 1ncom , n •" CVI S• • t1 1 :it "' s~um ll • " • 11aw1n '" 1'-11• enetl Ill'• so 1100 ~ sa ~ 1, + 1 ,,....,~ "'' 15 ' ~1-t4 1 96' llllPloPw 1 10 n l-4 lll1 JJI• _ , Arvtl• 10710hCon Jlnc:• l•.,,11 1 nsu ftO Q)) Pal1r 't '51 nlrw1v •~• l\lo llu1 5ov t0i..C011o -11 otfJO 21 '' tJ •• +ll\f>o.o,.l •tl 1.loOll ,_ 11\/o 6"loo i .._, tle.ia11 IO 15 1M. •6 16 wailing period involved w hen llW>t" 5Y "' ? 'can ••~ 1,. '"' AO•ll" s Ill s ~ l<n nn , 11 , :If tan c1 Inc 1 l'I. s.auer JI.:; t 111<111tl 11 s ~ 1 , , , °""tan 111 11 n1'. nu. ,1,. -ldt11 tav 11 s 11 1 J~ JS , .i.. ~ a new po 1cy IS l!ISU ys AIGIS l! 111 17v.Carp s ' ; Al la<I ,,. IQ lt"C• "" 611 111 J1cot1 Fl J o Cl k •ntn IEI l "' t~Sll 110 :HI '3\1 2" + tl a~P°" ol•~ t ''•At~ ~9 .... -t !!ICM pJJO .! S9• '' ,ff • I ed Sa A1CC Bot ll"o U lo Coren(a ]1 ]JI> Attn.I F o JI 1 If I( nick Gr I fl f 1 leS.OU UI 11 ' 21 $Cll> Oil ~ t\11 ttktV Piia 11 [~ !''• n~ -lo\ d11 ...... I l 11'1 131 1-l •<>lo I-.+ "" II Cenr 1J 4 t4 J6 :JS:W. l5\ -to E All ' It I BCC l~d 1 ttoCc~m'r'l 5 'r 6 >Afu!v~Fllll lJSltXG~ 96110JIJ1aulnC 1'h 1'llioStllol!ln Shi';;, q Tn tt 1 I JI 3t <tuP""'t ""l50 V>',<•>o !t~-\ll1Powr7l0 119)41,.J4 lo! +to vans 00 0 en peop e Bair d ,u 4 , .. Cr1w Ca !C 1! 1111.,,.. l'O 1' Ii Lti ~.~ IS ll ll 69 J1m W1I J ~ lllo Stlt Cp r J 1 2:\li BllOfk°""k' J JS H , II 71:\i t , nllO LI l f~ M '"" '' o 1•Uo .+ "" Pew al7 O• 1?0 19 1 ,. > 19 .... appJy for a new policy and Jet Bt I Pnl( ~ l 10 CrOS• Co 15 U • Alll!lle 11 Qt 11 91 Lib Iv Fd I 40 '9'/ J•m1bp I o t,. Scrlpp1 H J 21 I t rJOM If 17 11 'I 1S l'!uol 4<>• ''"" '114i JI\~ '1 \ -\ Im Pr I Co Am 215 11 16 1 6t~ B1n11 "v 1', 11 ~(:rut 11-1 6\ 1 A cni 111, 1J 6J Liie S k 5 N 6 *' J If~ Fdl 1 ,._ Strleto J , l 'li !lln L•U!I 1 70 1 !I~ t >.(, ~ 3 ISJ"1 81 rll~ i+ i+ " ~ INA Co CO 3'0 !O\\ ,.. "0 -1 0 lhe Old O"e lapse before the Bk•"' 1111 )Iii 7'\• Cu ft Fed 4"1 ! •-,,, 0 1 • >O ,,,, ''' 0 '' 0 '' Jostvn M 11• 19 ~Stiled Pa '5\.ii ?6 kick till 1• oil n i,, » l' • ",•~ ~, t 14;'; 1' 1' 1ricom1 Cea I llJ 0 ro O , ~.. • ' • ' '' ' a I'" ae I .. • I 17' :r,ou, 3'., ... ' vn•"' "' 41 • • ' • 1 0 -.. ncCC11 141 6 10~ G\.ii 1o:i.. + • I beco rf l Am 8us u111v1I Llnc N1! 10 10 1l t1 ,•,,,', '",',, 6 ' 1 ~ "'11 P "'" &obtl l• B k1 11 •loo 1 1 E F Inell 11tl to '' IP -• new po 'Cy mes e -,,. ' 0 ' ,, • ,,,_ '' ·-·· c-,,,, ,,,, ,_,_ '' ... ' ' -"' - -i n • '" • JI\., <-""-I'\ VP 0J9 1!SIL"9 ' " •~---•" $ •• '"'~"' "" 7$1 1~ 1J\ IW,~ A IM .. OpU)O 1102\•101~1(17'.~-JU The tragedy h-e IS that the Am E• 1v .1 26 J 11 L_,.,1, Si vie• Kils!n "' 18' 1)1lo _,,_, ~ r-Bif.C11 lJb uu I!'• u. u,,. + , ~1011Plc: tO 10 j tl't 2' o lndn.1Gs 1 n s 1• 2!'-1 1ru _ ·'.' ... A"'R E•Prns c ..... a 2.S 125 u ICllVlf h I 'Is,..,,, .. !1'< 1~. llnO 1;.J 22 10\., 10 ~ 100,, +lt .. 11co Cp to u »-1J\.o INIPllPL 1 so 6' J'ru ll 1Slio -"' ...,._,,nmav du!1nthemean c c1011 e 11 toe t•P 1 161~1111<•"'1n A l)'>U Snenu '1 'J 11ori1tMr~1 • io 2~,'3l•Jl~ E111 A r L 7 116lf Ill• 1ne1PL01111 '' ,, ,, '" ~· -D ts tnc:mr t M t t) Mui u ll u l 1<1~ G t J • J.,, SlloP ll lrt llo tloo llortl!'n 1 l'O ,., 11"·• 1' , ,, ., '~•srG11 V6 1" lt • jffi 2ll ll>Clsll Nil to s i.,, '"" ltlo T time With JlO JnSurance at all ogs, a ~•1!1t '--" , .. ! Lo a Aft! 11n1v1 I ICIVSI"' ]l;o l\lt 5"'1111l Ill .!~> ' llorpW1r 1 H j7 710.. 2:14' 26" flS!,.Ulll I XI 16 ~ 2D'li -' lnH r ll 1nd I J7t SI•• .SI 0 Sl -• r saecl 116 Lu!~ a~ n 11 a K11r tr JJ.i lj~~ SnlJ> t h ''"" 10 ~ arorm~" 10. '' -'h • ·~• "" .. ~·~°"f~ 11 .)Of 114-~11 lllh -..., ln!R" pl 15 1 3'"> :111 31 • 1n orce snc:~ 1 ,1 tJlM•~ne n 11~ ts1 Ktt11t c1 l 'o v.s-c11w11 1•v.ui Bo1Ea1. 111 11 l l l~• l' +~.,t11 .,Mf .a "tt 39~ .. 1"\l'I~ ?J,~-io 1n1nds111 11 ,,,, 11 11i.+"" -A"'G!ll 6!0 l!OMin~n •ti .!l1 ,,u >,.1 io SoNE Ttl 37"\>l! l'osEdoll ll 11"'1tJ~l''t11 •dJ I 20" "'Ii""+'°' Nn0nl C0>"11 '3 U 11\1 17\+ (6 J As your bestprotection v d •m .. ~ 51,5 1,M~!GI~ .slollsloll•wd 7"._JO ~SwG1CP n n<1ollovrn•l~c nn 11,11 1,_,)Jic~;d~cJi ?s ~s:•ls'"li -1 1n11co10 u1µ,17 u.ito t : h h tappe Ani r.ul 1 16 t S)Mll~l.:hvsrt ~a l<t lv Svc » ]1 SwEI Sv !I"~ I 11'?,"1 A w •~• ~ 1'" 14~• + 1iiQ.n8os 1 , •j U J +I lnfc!rCao l 19 lf'" 111'1 ll > 1 1 eve an insu rance a gent Y. O I l AmN c. h 3 1 3 "' Freed 1 °' Ill 1<1u11 Eu 1 1; ... !lo••" Co 1t~ :it , "r "f5' 1 ~ s1 11 \ 31'• JJ~ to 10 2 fii. ~ In .,co 1 10 " •~Ill ''"' •1>.:o t , bl "'"("C ,._,~,, ln<rep 652 1u1<n1 Fb 11 l•'h S111cerv 7'• 11.111,,•,,.•,• ',~, 191 ~],~I• 6J -"Itel Ancc ~J , " J.,111+\·o1nrrlklnc 1!0 II 11:;;. 16 .. 11..., -. cepresents a r e puta e com ... ~ I(~ c , 1 , , ,, -·•• " :to " e ·~~ u ,,,.. -~ -in~"-' ,, .~.. 0 -o,;, BM 5 10 11• :m m -C~at ltl 1 71 Mtn I 1fllJJ ~ us ''"' fl !Pt! l'-11 1l '• ll'• .-1 1•Me,..":!: "' .,.,. 41:0...IOl'4 1 lnlCllm N11< 3; )11.0 2~')j 1,op-' pany If you re think.in .. a bout C.rw1~ !! JJ 11 l MIU ~ IWIMI l<tYS PC 13 ' ,, ~Std Re9is ,, • 1! Br Pel "')9Q I lJ'4 1,,.. 1'111 , ..... ~ ,-, 1 '' .... ,, I\;. !'" -"' '" F •Fr 6llb JI 13~ 1J , ... , '~ • J d lr>em1 7 ~' 1 o MtT ll lJ u st l<lnir "' 11° )I• S11n "Pd •! .. It! llOWY Hilfo 1 1" ., n .,, .i.. """ ~ y .. c lr>I ..... chang1ngpohc1es ask h1sad ll l'"try ~0 1,.~ 1 ,6 ,17 MtG 11211336 1<1nw1Et 1 >1S1tr1.s1. n.10.B,,,.....ll• 111"' • • ~ • • 1a .. 11 n, J •, 11••v 11t1 116 1~. 1s 1sv..o. WJ Vel\l 4111 41.Jf MIO 1• JI 16 U I< rll C11 Jlo 5 '> S1•1wb Cl ll 1 14 ~ ll rkWY<':ls 70 $~ rJ 11>o ri ~ .:!:_"~ 1r.~~H~ ,I, t:i: 1~ 11j• 1.io f~1.:.i"1u':i'r ~ ,... i~ :,, -t v ice II you re not sat1sf1ed Ast on , 11 " 11 Mt1es l ll t"l1 1<n1a \lot ~1, •s SubK T v 1 th BlynuG l n ',', ,", ~ ?lh E.! -~ mer ~\ "t ,. jtm f:~. J:~ = :: 101Mhiw os. 1JD 16 u"' 16 "" " Wi th What h e reCOffi A•t H01191\ on Mlll'lttl unlvt I Linet In 4\-11 '9\.o Sill:<lll , ltlO 1""" "lllYnUt" I T1 ., 'I" , ,.,.,.., -ll'll!f'/A ,.. M VJ .. ~. ..... ~ lrtl Mrl~ 99 7') l1t ~ .: \, NEW YORK (AP) FndA lltJlfMOAM Slt51tt•n0 ~1s JI• l'-Sv1>eEt~ l:~i:"l°Tco,.. '~,,_ t.i~ 111>-'4 mervln JO Kl• 1'° 11•o 1l••-'ln1M,.ri1r1120 20 ~·~" ?~o+it mends a sk thie c o m p a n y ~:;,~i. B ~ ~ : ~ ~=~ s 1~..1J g y L:~~" c'r" 1ri~ 1 l\i l~~P•~ Jn \II 11s,.. 11=::s~J 1 10 1: ~11: 11 ,, 1;t; -"" Z ~r''I.. 1 l:o :, ~ ~; ~," •1"1 11~: Pt~kti~ ~ 3~·! ~1o! ~7~ + l• Thr oughout th e entire process Americans are expec ted to sc en , " , 15 M F Fd 1 ,, 111 L"' co• 1 1 .. t1n wy u:i. 11 ., e u~•""' ? "•'• •,';.._ 1,"• ~~ ""1 mo6i.t 1 u n II"" 2' 19:' _ ~ 1 .. 1 Pa11 a! , 110 J• 1 s9.,, 59 , di b ll d d B•b~on 9 1 t ll MIFGll .SID!!JL•>Uro 1•o 2tol1rto I 1~, 2 ,llu(~" IJfl lS 11 ·•11u, 11:,, +1-11::mgJ 1 •• :JI I 16!\t fl +! lrtl llecl l er 1'I 7l !\) 1, d o not forget t hat 1t is the spen I 4 1 ion on og an B1vr~ ~a , 11 • 0, M 0...,,G 6 o , 13 Ltw 1 BF 10 J 11v. l,,1 w1 lS uv, ~~ c~ ~ • , .. .,, Ert0!11M1" '° '3 J~sll"' 11,,. _ .-. 1n1 t& r s ~, )01 19~ ,.,"" .., t d nd h I f a .. v l G• s 31 J" M Om•"I 10 ._ I.SI L" lc1st 11'• 1 ~ Tf(ll Pub ' • J' R~ff; " 1 l"1 36~ :J~ + v, 1E~t.~,.014JS ,•, t ~ I~ !;16•. _,," Intl & t pre 4 l10 16th 6!\ol 161\'i = ~• as en s uty u er t e a w to cat ood this year Recording BMcn H 1 10 52 10 57 Mui sn • 11:111•11 ~~'!.~n ~ 1 1"' T"'""' P U• 1.s,a ,11~'""r.; ~go 11 ,,,~ ,. 1, _ ,. ourm 11 ug ~· • HO ~ intl & t .10 ' 111J 161 111 "! ~• d isclosieclearly allthe factsto 1·•cn n ui1J?IM"'''1 1 1111•~""'•"' 1 • .io te1«0"' ,,,l.:;11u.,..,11 ...... ,.. 4i.:. 1)6, ... 0 l"'l'·' J -·re·~"'+,,1T&T prl •5G 1t 90 1 +1 lo the Pet Foodlnst 1lute an er1l<•n •nt71NE•Mu1 t6'tU~"'~"c" , .. , tvc,,... l ot\ .. '"""""'''IO •67'1.\11~''"-~'o~L!t6"' U 1• \l -..,1n1t .,Jp1J • lU'>U"'ll"'-1 you before you s witch a ny B•-G!ll S• lt!Ntl Ind lO IO lOID~·"'" ?1•o 2fl,Tt M1nl 31 ll l!I.,. 1ne11.IO II Jl>o }' .. ,,.,, .... QulvFd \(IQ I y.; \ .. .),f,)+ lntt .. l pllCI ll ~ IS IS -1 industry trade a ssoc1at1011 &on.I•!~ 6 DI .... N8 ~KU ~.. ~..,, ',' .. (; • ISlo Te~ Atn(I 1 .... I,... ·~· N .... I YI " ... r . ,. -1 ~ !"Inc I l'O I l l..a' l'~ ]I~-\~ lnTT ptL J.!O uo 7J~ ll n I -., J>Ol tcy ~011 f'<ln 101111 11 Bt!1n 10CS II 0"'' Jl1 l~ Tl>tr"' A 4<i • ._ l<u Nor rtf.S! '71 nt 11.1 n , .+ , sou rt .311 1 ~' ~ I~ -.... ll,TpfM JU 1261 6l o 61, 61~-1 1 This represents a l4 percentB•wnFtl J'''I' ao"" s1s61MM•\,,1u1v I 1:11 T1trwCo 1 .1 .•u•ndvlA ''"''"''nl<.-1Mw1n11 20" llt lt'll-lr>IT.,TolOJ ,.,,11 u -·~ If after a ll this y ou feel 81! (IC• C• vfn• 0 ...ia , 1, , ., • '' s~. S:,... l:l~~· J~. 1 3 '.'.I 13 • :~~o~nl!° 11s 11• , 1111<o 1:v. t ""'"" lsHx of1 •• 1 'h "' ~~ I; Int u111 1 .i 19, lt'• JI ll ~ YOU Ve been Unfairly treated Increase OVer last year for an ,•,u~~.· ",'.' ,',S ~~ g;w,', ;ri ',•,,::::·:.row~ 1!¥. 76\lt tr1cer C 1 1 !O c lJ" llll l1'• -"' :~1llC,r'I: ~Of ~~ 'L •.c :-I\ r~:l~C: l ~~ ,',"• ,", .. l4\\ .+ >.lo '" " M ' •> '' '" • "''' G >>" ,,.._ - -'"' -., '1 .,. ..-' I " Jlll + o b l h I I d h h Ovtl Jj9 llJ l~<OM Sl1 Sl1 IU.. .. ' .. ... p -"" Joi"' l61/i "'nTerJICt OI s 'IS > IS 15 Y e company or i s agen s 10 ustry that 1n t e past a s •. ,,. 5 0 ,, ,, 0 ,,,,, , •• , ,, Mccor " 1s , r an.o o 211o 13.., caooi co 10 • •J '1 47 v1n1P 60b •:11 "'' ,..,., ,..,. ' _ .. 1n1abGp ., ,, ,, ,, • ' Y ou d o have a reco"'se Yo u Nv Vn 10 IJ !l IS Ntl G II ';; 0 17 McOUIY 11 16>.o T I Hom tlo 1°"'1 C.1atnte lnO 13 • • I ' -lo MCt 10 1 " 7t 17"' " 11 ... .,. ii: nl~8 In(! •6 11 n! 11\o i~ I ~ ' been g rO" Jing at an a nnual Bvrn" Fd ] I 1t 1 7t Mtl $1dt 11 }4 11 If :::ed c H f'4 I Tr Ito Pd ll"' l~ r:I F "'" 11 lh 7 4 '"'° -\o ~Mkl f 2J lt lf"' !~ .:f. 11 tnlersPw I 21 I ti 111JI )! + ' can lodge a complaint w ith Bu1 Mq i 16 111 1<111w crt 1 76 • 14 Mic M ~i ~ ~ f;~: OG ~~ ~~ :::..•:Gj:'°"':J :~ ,:1• 2~ ~ 1!1' I: Ftdor°l :& !: ij~ ~1~ Wz ~ 1n1ers1 51 s llJ • • ,,. , 1 lo"' SI.le lnsura nc . COm rate of JO percent 1ndust1 y cc; Fvnd 1 1• 10 s> Ntuw Fn 10 11 1 1J :,:'Id" 16 • ""' '~'°" " ,14 .,, 1mp p 1 1t :. 21 • u , llh -11 F1<rc1>, ,,.,. io1 7 o n..., Jll 7 .., :_•••, ,',tt' _ ,,' "•~ '°,, • 10111 C•P•m Ill l•SHtw Wll 12.ffll.lt " '' ' ... ' , .. '' C11>Sou ~ l 120 "° 40 "° 1 F1rr nO 1 11 '• I•• I~ "" ... 11. mlSS'on Orflc. spokesmen say C.•P • G" J Jl J" Newt"" s •S 11" .~'," cw " ' • ... ft ec ... •con Brew 40 o • 6 1 F• •mant 1 101 n"' 11~• 12\~ _ 1 •ow•tlGs 'll n 1t 111., iu. _ ) Placentia Vice Ma yor Heads Firm Robert P Langer '1ce mayor and c ity councilman for the City of P lacentia has been named property manager for Don Koll Com panv Inc Newport 8 e a c h industria l bu1lde r -developer Company president Don Koll said Langer w ill supervise t he management o f all K o 11 Business and I ndustria l Complexes 1n Ca lilorn1a Langer was formerly pro- per!} manager for Dunn Prope1 ties Corp and con tract ad m 1 n 1 st r a t or for Autonetics A native of Long Beach Langer hves in P lacen lla w 1th his v. ife and two sons C~PI Sh 1;16.,1'11c1>St1!1SOUllCI I:" I &o l"'U11 C~1 llo l 1 cdnPKlt 1U1lllt11 o }'lo.+"'"'""'' lfl'-'16U1~ 'low1P-!1:0 1 !llo 1llo ?J 1 +~ And the market still re C•P r n 11n11 l' Norris• 15 !1 u s1 M" e• 1•• 1~ u11 1num Jlt. 1111. c .... 111 1 10 l 1 16 • 16,. + F1,1sr111 ta j'' 1" J'4 _ , 1-~"Sv 1 '° 16 n • w. 11 , t " cenrvs~ lt7ut,Oct•"llr 11J 1nM,t-GJ 111.119\iUn MtGll 1~ "•C1t1 CBdcr• •Soil • •j 11 FemlvF/n 40 »I 1 • 11 ltto,..es l.., xll u 11•1 1Jh '• I I I l ped C~e"11"8 F~r>Ch Omelt 61( 'JIM• IC 61 US Bn-nt I l"Cic lHOld u ><II J9~o • 39 ~'"\\_.t"tl nc 11 "'t '_ .. ,ITE lm11 60 J1, lJ., JlV.-U. m a ns arge yunap i;a)li Be•n 1 60 111 D1J Fu""' 1372 • .,Mne In •• o .vi Ertvll l!\~u•c1,brun 1.so 1} SJ'• 51 , S?~-o..r:r,~s!..F~~ ,1 !If• 1, 1 o 1,11ei.; CO<"a 10 J7;; 3'\o »""-"" B l S Com SI 1 ~1171f0 Fund 9311011MPtGs l•l•lJ\1US TtV> lD l C"lsl1 60 lll 19,. I t\'l .+l\.o l'eddt •v 50-'JI l().t, ~-io -JK l I t 1r1tz a vice president at Grwr" s •• 1 1• o ... wms ~ 31 l!l JI Miu 11 t 1~1 is,. Univ Afr si. "' to oe .. oh J 1 co " 1s11 " .+ 1;, f edtr!t I l'O 1$'° ,••• ·~~ ,•,,_ --lntom ~ill!J0Nt!1 11u 11sM11VIGIClo lS 0 Ut Ptn P 2'111t llceraFr1ll6 7Jll I ll'lo etlMoal lO 11 jl 'tl'• ... -1 Jaf~er10 4 1 6 •7 Ralston Pur ina m akers o( ~1111t1 1 n 1 •1 OPotnft e 111 t 11 Mo Rach ,,. 1 ut t 1ncr 2J • "~ Ce•o PU 1 ~ •uu ~ 20~ is~ "" '' ed NM 1'2¥ ,.,, ~ jJ~ ~l'o t ' J<1m•1" JJ 19 ls 4 l•~• l! ~ .., ~ Do Ch d Ch k W ",•~Gt Bo> QopC •,• ',,"",lXl~Co,' •1 , !,1,/o~',',',•,,F~r, 111! '•''c•rP,.lKC '" ,'I 16:W. ]!• 16\f>-0 ,FedPta!IO 4 1't 141,1, io! ~ J,1•11,~n tloO I ltlfl 16'1o 1.,_._ la g ow a n UC at!'On •al 111 1.rOT « co111~~ ~·-..• " ·• '"•rr ..,•1 60M!l40 ••""(0 + edSonS 11C1 71•1'oll'1'o 1I ePnd l 6!9 109 I t .... ·~ e ~untl t'Cl lCl')PltmM I JS t l1Moare S 11~!1..,,Vt! ... tD .!l ~l.:iCertGen 0t. 1 1S:W. lS\o IPo+i..F"""r•ls lllC .16 6'4 6 6! 'JpnFlnlllolq t 1h 71., 1'4 brands F anr H 0 P111I R~r 111 I '3 MM'" I( 16 16:11 V1nO •I• ll• ... C8r!Wl l '°9 .. 11;, ,.,,,, 11\t FedOtatStr ' .. I ft\o IJVo " JtflnPllot !II J9 " •)'• •s:i. S~ftd 11 11 1J!IPennSQ 7l77J1Mi.Gtl 16~16 ... Vfr>et lo lt\1 I (1JlltCk1 60 16 IP< JS ll•i -l'oF"""rtt~ 16 tl'o t 9 -11 JtrCPartl6 1 0 114 I i 11• +I Ir A r I ed S1tetl OOJ Pt Mui JM la Mi.Tr""' µ,, l~Vtl(ra U 141'i C1tcrTr 140 111 ~ 4S o 46'11 -+ F,f;!!P0C0o .10 •110 JO:t4 :JOI\ J0"1 .j. ._J1wetCe 1ol0 10 J6'l0 Sl-.!6"" •!to mer1cas am1y-0wn cne..,< llotltnPnn1 ,,,,u,7 MolcftM '"' s.,,v,...1ran Ul4164CCICorP 11 •~ ,., ,.,_ "''' u n 111 n ... 11'4 -,,Jmwiu loll 1eo l?.\w lf'll :tt _ 0 d d ,_ I c"'""' Plkl•"' 1o u 11 D1MDICl11b l.l~ll\.W..i• Pu IJlti U cec&Corp to 2 21.., 11 2111 + ~~~r~l~ '~" 46>0 40ll -.. Jfmw111111 11 111 11 111 ogs an Ca i.;, ale on Y com Eau!• , 0 , q PI0<1 enr 1 SJ I 1:l Mlll'l'-'r 10 ~ 10 ~ w11tt BO • '"' ce 1roe.uCP i 1» 1• n , n , -J\o .,1 111 1 ... ,' '• Iii!' ts , , J lmw P' 1 '° JO 11> 1Jllo ~Jloo _ rood Fund IOI• I " Pan Fl'ICI t101110I Murel\ P •o 1\lo W ll11dt • 1 •Celen pfAC)O J 61 '\; 6 \lo+ .. ' •v • 10'>"" J"I" nv I'll 41 II -• n1er c ially prepa red In G1wh &ti 6 f,Pan nY 10 tJ1 1t NCC Intl ~. 6'1/W1h NG 1S •""SI C1nco 1n1 JO 11 1 1 "° <O'h-•Fl~.,f:::~1" 10: J!• 61.l '8 • ~ • JallnMtn 1 ~ u •oo lt•! ~~~T ~ ntom j1 1 1 ~J Pllt tft 11 9'/ • 10 NI 111 CP 11>1 ?!• INtl!O lie I n.o Ctn "IHI I d 1 21 > 7l~1 7? '> °'" o fSIChr l •ll llJ 1: { l1~ ~ .JJh 7 ; John Joi> 40, li tt , II•• 11\o _ .. Stead Of table Scraps and V~~I , t.S J 01 Pr ct Fur\ds !°!t,IC!r,011 6 1 7 w,tglll W 1' '1, 'CenUILI 56 76 11 11"" J7V. -1 '!Mia I -70 ll& lll' ll ~ 11t .j. 1,' Johrt1 Svc 80 4• JO 1 30 JO I h rood k A (:o u G 11> , 1 t• t G w h J6 11fl 11 rol " 10 • 1 Wt tll n 5"" .S'• C" ILi P" SO JI.SO 6! 6' 60 -" 'M8 Bos 3 ll 6 >o 6 1 11 Jonl:ovn ID J J.11 J.11 r egu ar uman '"" says cw,,, Aa n 1 39 N E•• , •1 t,, N Ho10 ~. ~wt "!I M ?011 1 • cenl P~ 1 to " un '"' lt"I + , FstNCl!Y 'I' "! " ,t,,: :: • """.._ Jonl auq Ila ,, 11 111. !~' 'he m k t Id •-h CwllhC 111 115 NHo r J!uJ uN1!l b •l•" we sF M n .. 1J'1C~lllL1E! 1D1J\lo ?\"'1Jlil ~•IN$tBnc j1"'l?V•l1' Jon1L1ua1S 1 0ll .Us +1 a re WOU 111:per apS ComP •• Id J0tPo F~nd 100i lO OI N P1t¢nl 14 }1j'o W• G-16 16 ~C,...MPw 110 JI 11 1 1 17 0 • ,F .. N1Sr •Q .SO I 26 ... 11'':j:' ~JorQensn t :IO I t9Q lt 1t _' three lim es its current size ComP c1 1 u 111 Pro Po 11 un1v11 "', ,",t~ l\io ' wun NA t • ''• c~1sw11 J 111'1 •1 . " • is + '• Ft1Vtl!k1 '° I 10 , t1, 01 + ~ Jos1tn1 70 r JS"' 1s 0 !Sli _ , ,_, '' '''''''Prevtd 111 sn • ,,.,.. 1 • 1~w,111 Mlt ,~, 6 • Ctnt Sovt 1 10 11 . 11 , n o + , FstWJ,c 160 1 ll '> jll, ll, • Jov Mio I IO 1l 59, y , .. , _ •- p I rood N 1 Sit • 1 ' Wstn Pub 10 '> JO 0 Cenf1IU1 'Cl 11' ltl.o ltO.. I'" + •o F' SCll!Kh Ill 10 JI,,. 11'> JI'-_ KaisAlum .$0 181 J • 111, fl •_ i: e com panies a r e ~::::,~~" :;~,~~~1;~uni..."F~!ci°s'11 00 ,..'E..,l'E 10 "'" 11stco 1 114 Cerraco eo so 1J o 11~ 120+, sh~! t» ?I rJ>:, IS'> 1j~ IC11l"' c 1.s 1 6 11 " spending heavily to increase Ct>n1 In~ 0 11 11 :n Eou11 1511 , 1' NJ Ntt G 11•1 '"' w,1101 t 11~ Ctr! 1-IO UJ •S''> "~ c1\o -•• Fl!ller cl 1• " 11 12"4 1 , :;-, IC•• l901 • 1.s ,' 6ll o0 .io _, l h h r lh k I Can>tr (; S•• !tS Geot4 1•J11!111Nlcht1n F J6~•ll~Wellmd 14 lJ4>~Ctrtled !>Ito • •9'11 41> 4'\I Flet'IE1>! 11 111 jl t 30 J0h _._1Ca>~t>l •1S tl II 61 -l't etr S are 0 e m ar e Cc" Mu! I , 1 H G w!ll 10 1 ~ 11 N e!•n A ~ J9 ~ W 1111 WM •Clo •lo Ctn...,A!r tO 1' 1'1h no,,. 1'111 .._ • ~,1f,;"~~e fl' lf 3]'' II ~l--+ 1 ~·1~:Mf;" 1~ ~: 14"' 1'' It • lryrng I f I Con!Gh 1001 0 1 •co,., 101111N•lsn 8 l9':19~Wlac PL 1 1•1''o CFl!!llo. ...\.~,_n n,,,+ Fnto1B2JJ 14(1.1,~t ,0,,:t ""K"'PLtJOI 1l!-.~:·~?i!•t,;, o convinc e ami 1es c.o 1 Lll ll ll 61J "Y~ll 1 s 9 a NoC1 Gs ll 13:\tlw""'rd L l6 31 ChAdl>tn Inc ~ ,,... J • • -• F •\Cot•! 6ll i" 1,..., 1,..., ~ sou n0 J 19 36 1511 16 l th a t commecc•ally p repared c v c .. a 1] is • 5, v, • a llJ 9 40 N Eu Oji J1'o l'• w 1<1w • ?1 1 '"•db pt JJP J 3\0 3 11 F11 •s 60 1~ iv. 11"' :;:".. so11 or zJJO 13 ~ 11 11 _, 1~ CnWOv 18.sb>f UO••~ 16 IJ7NWN~!v 11',I' Wrol'll W )I 11 1 ChlMOSllO •O 41 CO\i f1 F1 ow!6' 4l '3 jJ ,.. '"GE 1 i o 2c Jl ~ food IS m ore nulr1t1ous than c " WO•! I I ' •• R~vt. '51 0 SI"',• , .. ,sv 11 lHilVt""'Y E ) • J,, Cll•r • ... NV l •1 Jl i JO,,., J • F 1Pwl1 ' 2 7t i1 ... 61~. 61,,, -"' ICanN'D NG 5 17 I ?: + • lleUtvl'I 10 Jl 10 1J II 1>! er ii 5o 11 ?S o•t I' l1' l9V, !1011Ut.... 11 o I 1 Ch•'>eM•n~ 1 391 JJU s.ll'I • Fl1 Set 17 ll~1 ?S , 2! -'II l<l"P\! ! loll 14 )6 0116 ' K .. + table scraps O• aw• t G oua ~., tt s 11• l l• CmMT J l!o S6 St • sin. !t Flvorco 111 1i '-" Jl. 15 I<~~ nd 1 11 • 10'<. 101 RI' P OK~! l l6 J•ISthusl 11 .Slllti Cllec•.,. Mot l Xii 10 • 10'1 Fl~T"' ) I JS • l-4~ ,,•+ ~~·v cl81•6 1 lt!o JI H .. a son ur1na s a n 1 m a I o• ""' 11 s.i IJ 6, scwtlr• FunO! Chetse1 l• 11 11 u '> 12 1 -FlvTt ~11 10 •9 '', 16 1' ! "" :"' B " 1~ 11 .I? J:t~ JI~ nutrlllon ''pe't Dr J'm OI! ~ 1 I l IS I"! nv l I 1' C~mel" CO wll 1,1.' 1m o ,',r .1 FMC Cp 15 10lt JS 0 I•, 14,._ i" ~1:'1"! \ra IG 29j lh, ,',1 o 11 ~. 0 c.~ i!9 72' So>ecl 31.11•.JJ~ NEW Vl)lll( IAP1 TutSdlYS tomole1e ~';.:':': .... ,~ .. tO l 'II , ..... , FMC Ftl)5 I JI J7~ Jt -II b 1 ""' • Corb in says Amer1casdogsg~~ca~ 1 ~·;•.,. 2:..:~!• 1 :i1 1~~:M•w Yor~ 5tock £•eh1"te Pric es c~uOlllD• ~~ 5~ ~. ii·t !~::'.~'8 iD'IO 1~1 1~,, 1l1: •::+ .:~IT\:,'1;:: !o :l ~. ::1. ~;;!!l! and cats receive better ot•r Fit 150 '•~Ste~ v Fu•••" S•l•1 'lot ~~'~"l'~sJI' 11 f?~ '•Foo ~ Min s 1 11 11 llrlloo<i 1 ,i 1~' J~ ;:\; • )' bl d h red I O ~•!Lvlt•I U1'EQulv JS•l H !M1 l Hlt~L1wClt,l (ftl c'M'S''' 1,0 ','0!!-. lll>lo•tFoo!ep!)la l1S IJ 1S ~l1<,11e•H!JO 1040ol'•lt •-• a ance rations w en tie,,"''"••• , '"'''' , ,, , ,, ~ ,••,,, 6 "'F0td M i ~o 11• 111, u 61"---11-nc11 "° n .,,, ,,,, ,, Cl\ P"tuT 1 Ji 31>• .. JI'° 1, F0tMt''" "" f I> >>'' l<tnnm!AI • •·Jc I d I lh B•an ~1101J u1~ lj5'5 A ChRIFtlUP 11'1>11,11.,, 'Uov 1• 11~. , '"1 l• 1• -•• u..:S on1merc1a 1e s an c; .,, ~ 11 09 , 10 5• tc ed Fu"d• - -c~ 11 ct"'"' ,. 11,.. 21 11 7 • FMcK ot1 so 1 11'" Jn.. 3J~ .,. ,.. l<•nnttao l :19• 10, 1J 1174 , .. , the ma;ority of Americas ln<am , u 1 CM Stl Am 't6 ~ tt "b•t~sF I•• 1 5 o 1sr1 l • C1'o<:F 1 ~ 21 1,. 01,. 11 tt Fo•t w" 10 l l 10'4 ;o>.1o 10"< _ , IC;r~,!.,1G'61 1• ,,..., ?I J7 , • • ~P<"cl ••oo. seoc1 •10 1,01Abt1L1>110 is,~,'lf',•611 c~i.(11 1 60, ,, ~g:~,11~1 ~•!,!• •·,",·'• •">eMc~e,.6£ 151 l81•l 1 11,..i"" ch1ldrenreceive ~roe~ 111 11•Jt se1sP1 1 1,•1 10",',.•,1no;11~ s1, Jl +~•c11•1!c11.,.01 1 6 1 6 0 -1 ""' 11,,,31 .... 1< ... ,r...,..J1J f 91 •J '' , ~ En JIO 13 DO 4 J S~n1 Gr" IS• t 11 & t ev .., U't 1 ' !!'' .:.~ C~romtll 1oO 11 11 17 0 1711 Fr1,.;, SI 40 11 11 U.. I .>-1 l(lclde Co '8. ' 1' tl Ull Ad\ erlls1nt!' expenses w1ll EO e ~~1 n.J• 2111 Stnt v F " JI 11 60 A~'l:.',,",'" .•,n 1" 11 t', 11 , + • Chrv•lr .a 7'1 21 l 11• ,,.., -1 FrttPM " llO ~ "' 16'4 1, • li ' -i... ICltl<I pl Aw 10 ~1 11 u.,,,;,~ -141 o E '' '>ll 11 1n ~tl 10 '4 JO U 13 11 Clirv lt wt JO 4 t IJ• ll 1 FrutN 110 61 lJ l• J.01 .+ o l<mtlCI~ 1 )'(I 01 SI! SI! SI }Ump nearly 40 percent this £~:" Tr a " 11 ~ft!";....illers Go ~~M ~!' 1~ ~ ~ ' 10'" .Wi = c ,:,. 1 • 11 s1 9'9S • 1 61 , • F~• 1~ 131 1i7 11'4 llh 11:i.. IC\rio10s1 " !t ?t, • i1 ;;1• -4 'ea' I 17 II Emt ~K univ• Cm1 k • l •J •amlr1I 10 11\1 fi,11! I• -,CI M!I I"" '1 li 2J\ ?l'o ~ -G-l<n~tV !iv IS 111 JO ?lo!7t • 0 ~mJIOn Sa~SaEnttV llllJ E"tp 6Jll96Aetn1Lftj60 l\l161l ~!i St -t ClnnB~~ JO •11'0j1•1~ Gtbi<llNI l(nMvpri a 21n .O 99 _1 Spokesnia" for Quaker Oats Equtv 90• O&J ~tl•C s• 616AetneLlp 1 'JOI, 50, loll\'>-•-.Cn1>GE 1w 131 1'• '"• 1•1.\ ~ •GACCo"' J l 1 11 •l<nnt• 011J ,' "•' 11 J.11 >-J'1 EQU1Gl>81ltn FtFdl 1166'A~u•CO ~6 1' ,,, 1 1" CnGEP!I 1IOS1 t51\lt57>-7c;AcCaPrl 1 ' C•o lOO·l~ IC J<ftCol ~.SI ... , .. P 'odd puce rs of !he Ken L Ration ;gu ~~~ a ~ f8 : ' ~=c~r : :~ : ,1 : :'t" Od nc:l'Ob ~ 11'~ 11t. Pi ... = VJ ~I~ ~1~1 11 '° ;J ~,, ~,: ~ ... '• g:~ err ... .., •7~ ,f I 1~ • ~M· ~ , ~ti$ ".," •• ~·o 1f 11 j1 ll -~ an ussn Bootsl1ne Quaker~. ,0 ,61 1o J.1S11e1 ,., 'I 'JC! ~·r'anarn:"ri: •f'l 1~,,. i~, \•i...-•CT PUsot l16 ,~~1,~.,,,: a .... ~~o'"lO •• ""' 21 11•0 ... '•K"~niN C 9 1n 11() ~ • ~ Oats has a pproximately doubl :~a:'i .. !~,. ! .. ~ 9 SI i~~:"' 'O" 1~ ~: 1~ ~! ·"·'CJ!•,", • ,,· '• u.. 36 J . -0 ~:::•f:~ lo10 a: tt'~ ll 11 " • 1., S!1"'s ,, ' IS l ~·· ~,, ~ • -, ~:g~J, . 60 1! ~ ~~ JJ d I! ~"~ sa Fd ,,3 0 2 ... l~ 11 . It + •CjlY nv ..,, u c~. 1ov.; 10 -u1mSP1160 J Jt :1111 ll••~ 'll'o •co a ncr 130 J.11 l'' 11• C llS OUl lay he Sa\S ~nll 9 St ~'I f Allsl<I lnlttl 14 17'\t 11 tt'• .+ ~ C !ylnv ol Bl 63 lJ Jl o ~)c1 -, Glnl'M!H a II Sl•t JI • JI ~ Kr•flca 1 70 l 9 1 t ~ t • C••' l S)UJtSome Funo• _.lborloC.J7 l.SJ'tl•n 1 -+ •CllyStrs l 1 1 I• 1:11 -O.raOtn!)O JO•S'"''•'S -•"rein~SSJll 16•11 ~••0 0 '" The 1nduslry IS aided in 1\s CC" d 111 9 J.11 CtP I • 61 ''1 "bl>rt1n1 ..)& ,,•, 11•1 ~ 1 • -\i Clltk ea I .a JS9 41 }f.,, .., -... Ciarlo(-IO 11 1•. ,,., 11 .. -•• K (Ith e Ill 91 9l J ~I • - Ir 01 nv t )0 n•tsl 11 10 1113 AICfn A um I 17 1 -1 C 1 ~ OU Ill 61 16'-16 , U" ,. 1 GIJ SllC 1 DI ~J tit 11 1 .._ II( >OI ?! 11 • 12 ~ -~ e Ori bv the growing trend Et~~· 11 fl n tl t•1111 t 1 '., "'1cos11ncr JO 10 lS • 11 • u • + •Cit~ c11 1.., 1 &J , 11 • '1 . Ga1 ..... 1v 11>11 l 11 1 '" 11>o ., r_, JO -L·--?I ia '> -~ I d E~!I 171•JtJSmhB 10 601060 .. ICOt>L~Dlf> 1'Q ... "1 ~•1•-"'c1eveuniu JIJS lfV.l<••""tGCACorp 16 flo'' owar convenience foods for "at 1s 11 11 ~ ... 1nv1 1 sr ta :1e,:n0r1 JOr J. t0, ',\\' \'!' -• C1<1• pnr1 11«1 16 " " Gt...,1~ c.~ 1s 11 o ,.,. 1• • .. • L G 1 h SI I Th Pvt In '61 lG IJ ~WI" GI I]\ '•! mLf Ho ·~ • 0 -• c Ot"" <I 7(1 .SC . )() ~ ...... Gemlnln ,... J n~. I] 21 t ~ L:~, .. ·~tu ·~ ORDER ~ 1000 Beautiful UmanS lrlZ Says e St~"' 101 )<1Sc¥1! "v 111.11 •Cl:11l:L~~ /~ ~; !l 0 n· j,1! Chl•!Pea 90 ll t\, 9 1 1'~ Gn•lnv 1011 ? )] ?2." t•nt&rv"" familythalsupsona fV d 1n T!~d 'l15U ~So>eclr• ~·s l l l•e11Ll/Clc/] 1)1 j," l' 11•-1 Clut tPPI 11 n!o IS~ i>.-1 GAmOl Mlb I JI 17 l1 "" •l•obeSll I' n~nc al P oo $~It B""dGr ., ''""' 1 .16 Jt jl.o + l~ CN• F n lO 13• 11 > 1J o 1 ~ GAl ttn 1 60 11 .Sl SO )0 -1 , tf8 S to Jn ner will have fe"er table ov~A .11 11 Comt !l~6AltnEIEll! JJ 6 0 1"!''•-;,.cN•~1"'10 • .>OttJO JO"'"C.1.Trn1111 so 161~61 •611· e~rSooni.s n<:lutl J IO•Of Ovfit 5•JtAttll,.l'o10 11 n.1 _,CM•l ~tC.11 11 •Y.••5 ·~·1~G ... a..onc1G !11J U~IJ Lta1c~CG•Q scraps lo feed the dog he ncom s 91 , s P ooo ~ J '1 ! •• Alld M~ n ,!l !', !,'" !' !"' t • C•tSG1 a11 • 1 1.1 • }) • SJ • , GnC~b 1 !ll 1 e 1J'i 11, ,1., Le•«a en lO Vt" 4 I c jl' F m G1 ••I 1 u A. lltO Ptl H Ill 9 'Ccc:eC.cl 1 5' 1 • 1 1 1 2 1 1'4 + ~ Gtn Cit 110 IU 11'• 11 o 21 • ~ t'.~"'1'~• . .SQI> • Per5onalized • "• (. Stick-on YOURS \ LABELS ~ TODAY! notes F1Fov~ 11n1711!rt•• .s •It ooe•m1c1sr 1 •0 Jt 31 JO>o ~, i..coc1B11~" io IJ• n •3 -~G110eve 11 l6 1~l a a -Olotffio~. ~ AJSO mo'e people •re F! n~~l!G J S1,•dl"All Fun<rs Alll"ll ~u""r "' 1 6• t >. Cattlwt Bn-r , l)> 131 !J>-oG'°" Ovn1m 1' It•• lt1 lt 'o -o el>PCtm"".o n Oien I t? IS! Am tnd l•1 lt6A 1C.h lOo 22t 11 .. 11~ !1)-loColetoln Olb '31 J7 JI + ~G""E!fc 140 •11 !l•o SI • 5111 tif\Vll Ind bu..,1ng pure.bred dogs savs a G""'~ • 11 1016 "'" " 1 JG 1 J:o Allr19 A"t 60 1 lH• u"' ,, .. -• Co!1 P11 1t1 n nv, .sr. n ~ -• Gt n F rt "' 1 1v. 1 . ,.. v ne1 !" ~ ~ ~(IC. I 90 t 1J F!<IUC-6 I• •IC AIP!\tPC JOa •It 1Jto ll'1 ll .. + ..... Col~ P oil SO rlO .SI !l 5! -1 Ge11FflO(I I 'II 1111! 3µ. 3.1 ll .. + ~o tt"'"n J2<1 spokesman for the F'r1sk1es1<11 M11• 1•1 •o..1~"" "°' Fd1 Altot to 111 J9 :19, J11-.. ca1w ,,..1k 16 111 111 11 11 l."' ,..,,,, 1 1s•o 1s•• 11 • -~•nc 50 F1!NM 101163 Bit" Xl~JOMAm1l!iun IO J '!\•IJ.\1 1!"--~•Colll1>1R1d 1111\111~11 •-~~1 .. ,1,ut t11u,1.f'o /•->LtverFaCee Pet Foods [);v1s1on of Carna "' $r Sll 60o! C1aO •1• 'l•Am• E11~ '?O l'O l'O Ca!OllS !00. t J1 .. 17 JI • '"Medi<:•! 11 11 . l' 21 ... 1.LevFlnc J.t h I "nd G ~ • .SS • ti Mock J ~·I) H Am~r E• I ?O ' 20 1G 10 Ce OIMSI t 66 '° ,.. 18 . '" -.. tr>MU s ... jl' ff',~ '. }o . -"l!'VjSl•8 160 t 1on Co T ese an1ma s Found~ 1 G OUP S11at "•d lrt• Am E• p 160 I ,ii,,, .o~ • .., " -"Colo Sou Pl . l 0 Jl • 51. SI ., ~ "'~Mm 1111 7S DC ,. .. ff' tt~· -~Lew,, Furrt rep1esenl a s I z ab I e 1n G wh Ull 11) Grwl~ IJO 11•AmHtU 110 IOI 41\o ]9•1 J'. -1 . Col ll'ICI "° lO 1'l. •\I IC\o 1 , :~g:~-, I 13 R' ij•; 1 • -.. trir ~~' I"'°"' 1Jl0 •O 5um1 1076 ! ltAm•H pJ)O J4 t'O 11 .. 81 -lt Cl!l l olOb tt U•o U ulo + Mo!ol l11 i ,0 t {f~-I! ObO t.I \estmenl and people tend 10 M111• 11J 1t11 T"<:ft &tJ 1•1AAr~1 •r IO 1 1& " ,, -'"c11 p1 1 & ,.,, tti 1'~1 -~GtnPCtm eo 11 1•• 1 ,, tJbD'Cc,c_, ~Peel 11 ID 1) ) Svnc G ~ t OC t U lom Al I .a.> l:lt 31 .. ll J C61U Goi I 1' Ill 11'• JI 3'1• t • r, PuDUI I AO 91 • ,., ... f l:.rr~L~ ·~ bed more COnSC10US Of lhe1r ~~~n~rln Gr~u~ 10 5' ~::i~ft:Pa ~! ~~ 1l jj :e:~ai ~cfo lS~ .J ! }.l ~ ~r~ + , ~=$~ 1 '~ ~ J ~ ,:~ ,:~ _ ~ ~rn11~~\ ~d20 li 1:~ 61 •• J • -, 9 tl=rMvol~ n 11'.'ls he declares ONTC I 11 • 6) Tecl\nlcl ]I l SJ Amide'' 110 ,. " '1 4l 11 CnillEn I I& 1JI "'• I• • s• I fl l en lt n •I ' ' 1 llo 110, Ill'-.. • lloa M Ill ' S I di II hi c. win 1 o 1 o• ftfT>P n.1 • 61 f !1 Ami ""M l• 1 lf'l1 lt\ JJ ~ CamlSetw IO f1 l'O • l'O ~ 10 -'• .., ~'I \"° it ' • '"' 71.: tlooM o1 s.H peCla ty Cts are aV l'I t V1 h S It i )4 T""' C•a S J9 l" Am Cln I ?0 lll l<O.. }1 ~, J ' -'• (llmWEO J 20 111 JI 3' • l6 o .._ '4 Qt11£ S) 111 '"" 7t ,.. -.. lhv El n Ill ror Ill. I P l Co for In<;.... • 01 11' Trn• ... o 'Iii .. ,, A c ... oll 15 I "t 161-t HY! -• (OMW£tl "" ,,, u. 1l . 1J ..... ,, • Ft 111~ 511 IJ ,, CJ . " '-L\n<otl> N1 J 311ng Iler us Gov 1o11112 Tf~ f o 1011 11 1t1omc1m n 1 S3 1 •1• 1!~-~,comE at'f 11 J l1'.,11• 1111 • t TF~ofl)O ''!!ti *' ~ -' .. LocN a J example P"ls out a lnw "rt" ~P ia t 10 11 11111 "..i 11 11 11" • ci.11" 1 .o ,1 "., 2t>• 21 l + "cornE Pfl"' 11 l6 • ,. l• -,,. "' re 1 ~ ,. Ut. ' 'lo • 1-1..., Tem \/1 F~~d nc C.r11 Tw~C GI JOI 5 J6 ACrv511'1 1 IO !O' 10\.t JO 1 +'a (oml!; atl •I I ?• JI 1• :.;:,~ ~: I ?TWi flit 11'0 t ""L 'lllfV •A Order For You r•t lf or 1 Fr1tnd SO<:hum food fo r dogs Wllh C""'m t '' 10 JJ Tw~C nc l JO 1 11 '-C'v~ '&, Ill ll'o a 31\o Comw Oii llJ 11 131~ 1)11> 11 ~·~ j PI 11 It lo\f :!1 ~ J l • tW:: Coro !m~~c I 00 O 01 US•A GI C $1 10 ~1 11,0111 • 12 'lli illi' -~ zornO oil l'7 Jf Iii 111• 1• ; -• ,,_ ' --I oo 0 •> ·• "7 'i 1 cm !>Cl IOI hea1tcond1J1onsand a b\and 1""r'''''''''''"''' o••e-A~ •!lie• • 1, w-. __ ,,,, "l ~ 1•~ n • ,p~ i"'11u1 "' ' ·~• ... •t1•1onattol I (p I I h Pint ln 1.01 ft ! M~I 1a';011 )j,. VI 01to a l' j l' 1 \o + t., co;;;nr, kol ' »>~ 10.\lo lt.\4 -\l '-''~ fi!i; I~ l~l lQ!? l01 lon cYnf l n1ix ure r anima s w l F"a ""' 1 ~.s t c1 un tu""' o 1 11 80 ,.m Pw 1o • loo "-J + \t C~•' 10 11 11•0 5111o 5110 , 1 ~ ~tvo ~,, '3 J{; fi" /;" ~ \J 1:::;r,..~~BA ~ Ma y b• us ed on envelce as 11 raturn 1ddt •11 l•ba ls Aho very ll•ndy •• 1d•nflf1c1t1on J1 b1ls for mark ng ptrsont l 1fem1 1ueh '' bock1 tecord1 photos etc Lab el s $t ick on 9 l•1s i nd rna y ba used f o r Mark1n9 fioM e c•nned foc.d items AU labels are pr inted with 1tyl sh Vo9u a type on f1nt q ue l1 ty w h1t1 gummed paper JO h bJ Th G1•t-t 11 10 !1C1 Vnlooo $vc Gr" Am},kn ltld ~.. ~-• C-M lit 1 •11 '1 M ... '°"' -l~I) "'~ • O'i 1 • 1" -• t c fi mac pro ems ese GE ~.,17911 B•e•d l••1s 1Jt:; •oo: 11 14 jt:1j,ff\";-~C00"11tMt 111 1111,.311,l .+,,. 11f,PC'i,.'!3 !l 'l"ll''ll~•-'=1:".."' spec1t1lly foods available nnly G"" Sl'C • .. 1 ft M•t 1m. • • 1 t1 ""' 1~" 111 !. 1Jll it~ 1~· t\s .. I ""rte .o • »"'" lG'• '°'' -• F :r." ~ " ton•Ster 1 r G 11<'1!1 , • ow u C•• 10 " 11 01 •G"" '''! II "" , ,,_ _ C°" f:dl1 I Ill ,,, ;J:i. UI• 1.1'" • t• ~J;.', .. ',,~, ' "'t 1f~ ·~ -• orttSG• "" from veterina rians consttlute G•-SK w,,,., n n 1,_,, A G,,..,1n1 s. 211~ 'I' "t-Ii. cen !di• p1 • 1 i• •• •• -, 1 " r 1~ " J1'• -L('ntlsL• 1.i I II lh llot• 1.S!llU~ttaF\rl>ds AGnl"pllto )410 \Xl o 0 ,c .. alto!J Jtl 6!i•W~ Htttl"\ ,:I J1 ~.11 -'l ~lolBj onvasma parto le pet B111n 1 16 1., Ace"' 1n1t1 Am,..0111t0 ••lH1l&1, to -'l'ICOfl Fll1 1H 0•4l 1 •,~&J1-, M0t1 Br \i J1'"lt•*'•LLr1s 15 food market a spokesman (\~~as~ 1P\ 11 ~~ ~::: ?~ 1 i ~ H ~:: J/f 11!' ,,1~ t~ ,, n t ~ ~:: ::~:' ~ 1!: . '!:v. 1:1, ~:: :: .~ ~ 'r: 1~! 7 ~: t!'L.~r.~ , >a) S (j 1~ l~tl "tl lt •J Ir><""' lJ JI lc ll A"' "O\P .~ 16 ~\1 f,'t; h -1 COi' 1.et1I.,. ti • t f fllll\ Pll l~ l I' 1 1~ 1' , ... • Lnuv G£ 61 ou.10 M 21 •• 73 .., St en 1 t i ~ AM ~"~' """ !!• ' • 11 H ~ ConNtlG II .. ~i. II , "" + ' iliM or: f! l 1 l' 31 .1. 7 Low•"~'" •o The Pet f'ood lnstltute Him 104' v,..., ~ ~ • 1 A, "•"'I''' ti !' / t. lO, 1~ cons Pawtr l ll ))loo JO tJ • + , ~h .. •• M~ ~ ~ l.,, 1~ 1' -Lul!rltol 'II ~ Mll'I 1 11 •tlU "dC~n 711 7to , td tO P ll 11 If\• 1 i{ConPw plli J\01 10 10 -, :T Urt '° C ,.,. !lo 1\••+ JlUCkV 5tr t sthnates that there are c;.,.," 7 .1' i •• v, ,. LIM "" A :::,lE!! ~.1 I j it"' l~ = -1' conPw P"I'° H'i' .n 63 ll -1 ~0~11~~ ~1" 1: 1~ , l\ • 1 • -• L11111c .. 1 DI -presently abotll 33 mdtion dogs H .. ~";, ,J ~ ,t~ ~~a! t:i i!; ::~,E'"'/• ~ lil~ ~~ 1': -11 t:: ~~n ~ ':.o )~ Jt '~ ~~ .. : .J ~AtJ 11 ·;; "·: Pi.': n: :1 : ~~.':',~;."' .-• 22 million "•I• I n Ml.C L-V 1111 d" $pl )!I '11 'l4 AltH !Ill :J •7 • "" • Con!ICllP "' 1• ' ,... ..,, -'t 70I> tine I IO 11 n,.,, .0 0 ..,... ... ~ '"' ... t'lt!'I! Go• '16 110 Vl"'C~ s~...i· • Am •' fl lt ... 1• -,.,.,. C<I•• 211 ,,. "~ "'• •1 • rlCf I.SO ~ " w,~ ,. :i: ... Lv•r. ... ...,,, An1encan house.Mio~ \Vh1le "rm.~ 10 IQ 1! ~r "~''" • $! 1 11 ""' s n '° !'' ~ • ., l r ct c' 111•1 )0 ~ • " '' -1 1n11~M Ill l•i.. • , _ ,,. Lvkn v,., 1111 H•r t<• '11 d Bat Cm I &I I )f A1 ..... n• I l'O JU l\o 1 o I'> \• C ... lllFI ? )ti .. ]l'o 36\a )6 -I\ rtndUIJ. 60 J.l'lo ' )l \oo lht eel population ha!\ 11n.110t Min 1~1·1~11 S•*C.~ • 11oaoA"'\oAI• 111 1 :Jt'\l 7'1 t. --~c.... 1"""1t • 11\lo 11 11 ....... l, r•"hv l li\9 1 -. 11 .. -.. ICM"'" I 1 t tOV•nd~I •'4 'C•"'"'Atr lnhl )o 4'•• f ''•-ll'IM.ttAnll' :Kiii plarb<lnlly remal1ned f al I r II y isc;~.,,-,. ' i ~= ™ : ;i i~: :ms•f'~W i!.o )ll U:: ~' .., -211 °" t .i ~ ' , • ~ .. .,P '» 11.s ~ fl:i...fl,. = ": ::!P:c~ a» 11a e 1n recen ye ars 1'1111)'" tM"'" •• .uv, ,.p 'tt ,,,~~'~ .51 U..'1r , .... ont ,1 !'l I ~, •~or••°" 1.t • 1o•T 1r1) M•,111,.. 1 owned dogs ha\«1 been tn ~~: ~ 11i~u·i~~n~s1 G :1, t~~:;:,1.11,r;.~ iif ti: 'f', • ~U !!!.!t~i! 1 .. ;1-. : ~ 1 : ~Jt~!A1~1j 'f -. ~~: h~~~E5:te~J~t creBsing 11 a rate of about 5 '""" C•• • '' 10 tt w.,~ .o.1 1112to 1i 1• Awe1M .o f 1 \'" \1 -10 -. u..r1 3 "i 1:11, , 1• 1 Wtll r "1 tJ tt 1 ,. , M• l'vo• 1 Jiii I 1..,. Ot~ I JJ 10 WtMl"'t~ C:,~111 AW nro11~ "~ I"' "o 1 •-\io _,.,,, 1 ~ ''• 10., 70,_ .. IWV"t " !'" c11 lt'•-t"t Mlt(ll'• lllCI percent a ye111r t Sa) s 111<" ,,.. t• 1o 1\ •5 E,.11• 1'1111 '1 ' Am-roro 1 • j.._ u~, -1\!i -•1>11 et t. n n • i wu-.. of 1 u " Iii u 10\ -" M• Hto• ,, T d I he rnr;F B~ I i! •ti !""SI lf1)0 tA:i.I~ I ft flo iffi"!"" ~'\"1111 .t '" W,' l'l"' l~W•lh I""' I f'O •\f •I ••llUNI Ub he llVerage Og n I '"""'rv 111 •6 Mort ll llllJ AM '"' 11 ij 'It! -~~=t' • fj r• 1'1+\ '"Gl•ftlN u l~o ~ 11 , ... \.1,...to,H•nl• U led S I hi II t...-'f •U OOll ttt~~ JIS .t.ml-.c. 60 J 1 I ' jl' "'i -"''.Jj 1 -, r11511M: IM 111 ~-1 • nl lleS t S yett1r \'ii 12A" 11"'1'lJ T'lt< \l )l l JIAMPlnc '' \o -'o J~ H fU t ~I' .:1 •t'l"llWl>Clr 11 ?lo i 11 ~ MAPCO 1 consume About $29 worth Of ~ ~,i:i ~ :J '1;; =~: ~ 1l ~~ \; ~ ;::::lt•ft~~lM lf; ~n u~i ~~ =: a.~~904 ii I~ 1~!.! 1}1;: ! ~ ~ _; Ir~ ,~ 11 t l' l 7 ! =:~ 11 commertlal dog food Ills '""" 11~ 11 ll 1 •1 w "~ • '1 • • ~=,:·on s 1 .. , ft\'! .. , Ccu;'"I. ri ,TA '1• ~ -11 .,.,M1J.~1o1 1J 1 "'' ~J~ ~ ' ' ' ::;~~ •1 r I I Ill I tnw ••!O Ci OU~ W•\t !i'tt S fl J '' A"'•'td l I~ jl .. J) . l"' .:&. i, A: t1>! 1•2 I J'\J l + , \~Id iJll )t ••Mo 11 ""'° M1r Mid 1 !ti '00u'"'1 I roul nterpar wl I ronc1ta Jr~ .. 111 ~ ir ,:!;,: ~' ~ :~ ~ ~ ~ r, ;::,'m•"-'"•' ~·: W':, Hs,; +-,· ','~"' ~ ~~1"•' ~,', ,, :;: ~ ~' ~'K\,11>, , "'" .,1, n 1, -·~ M•• o11L11 •o a ta n ""mmerc a er" , tr , .,1 ••. ,, ; •• 1 '" •--~ ,,_,-"' \ " "" ''j '~1• 1" l }to--• ..... '" 1 u. w <> -l te ,...,, -roc•,.11 .Wif/J $ I I' •, ... ,, Mat 1v co l heln~tlt11lienotes ~:~ :~ ~1t ~";:r l:f, Jll::r.;:c:an,, l1 JI ~ 1;•"'"\e ~1;.G t 1 ,.., 1\':. ,,,~ ~•of111:~:'J\jg 11? 1,' ,~~ ..,11 :~~~71 c:;o I • • "---1 , NMmbf!r lm ! Tuesday's Closing .Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange Lis-'-t~--'-_:_ • Finance · Briefs CHlCAGO -Steel JndustrY, shipment.s of 95 million lons nexl year were f oreca st Thursday by Pre!ldent Ten· nebaum or Inland Steel Corp. This would com111re with cur· rent estimate! of A million tons for 1971. Tennebaum made hi3 prediction at a meeting cf the Ill inois State Chamber of C.Ommerce • ..J • I \ \ • • . . ' . . \ • . El Rancho Steaks ... always naturally aged to ~ak flavor and tenderness! Now 's the time to buy them and save! ' ' Spare Ribs 59~ FRESH! MEATY! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . So lean ••• they'll give you so much satisfaction, you'll be glad you shopped El Rancho! ·Ralllbow Trout .............. , ... _39: •. Game Hens ............ ,. ·' ...... 89:. For cook-out goodness! ••• min. 5 oz. each. Twenty.four ounces of delightful dining! Fillet of Halibut ................. 89~ Sliced Bacon ...................... 59~ Mild flavor •• sure to win compliments! -El Rancho's o\vn .•• thicker ranch s.tyle slic.es ! King Crab legs ................. '1 '' From Alaskan crabs ••• and so much meat! Country Style Sausage ....... 69~ El Rancho's own, fresh, delicately seasoned! · ·FREE TURKEYS! ... 10 at each El Rancho! ' Free? ••• All you need to do is.register ••• and be lucky! No purc~ase necessary ••• just enter your name at any El Rancho. \Vinners will be no~ tified. Monday, NQvember 22nd ••• to come · ap.d ·&"et the turkey of their chooai~ for that special Thanksgi\•i ng dinner! Delicatessen Specials! · Rath' s Bologna .A.l! .s~~. ~ ~~l. ~~~~. 3 i 89c Everybody's favorite lunch m-eat ••• and when the name is Rath, you know the quality! 6 oz. pkg. i;liced Sliced longhorn ................. 69¢ Fisher's ••• made of part akimmed milk! 10 oz. Polish Sausage ............... , .. 69¢ Slotkowski ••• with "old fashioned'' flavor! 16 oz. . . U.S.D.A. Choice, aged to perfection, naturally, trimmed for more value t Compare1 see the difference at El Rancho I . . P ·1 h·' $1 69 or . er ouse .. u;~~-~-.~~c~:.. lb. !Ian sized satisfaction ••• U.S~D.A. Choice, tender, flavorful ••• trimmed to afford more good eatina:I T · s· I • · $1 89 · . U.S.D.A. CHOICE! op 1r 01n............. .. . . . lb. The Super Steak for-Super Shoppers! Fork tender, 'vith natural flavor! Enjoy all the goodness ot beef! . Beef Brisket ....... ~8~~"! !~~~~~! ....... 99~ l.Iore·good eating for )'our money! Lean as can be ••• and boneless ••• to offer more value! Extra Lean Grind ............... 89ft. All beef : .• and a1ways freshly ground! Chopped Beef Steaks ......... 99~ With all the hearty flavor you favor! Supe'r Grocery Specials! Your choice of grinds ••• regular, di:-ip or electra-per~ •.• and no limit, no coupons to boiher~ with I Crisco ........... !.~:~~ ........... 89' A value you're sure to \Velcome at this tiJne of the year, with hQliday bakinl:' ju.st ahead l Tender golden kernils from the: Greeri Giant ••• in vacuum packed tins to preserve flavor ! Bar·M Franks .................... 65¢ All meat ••• juicy and delicious! 1 !b. pkg. McCoy's Chili .................... 59¢ HomadeKraut ................... 55¢ J t S 1Q'$1 Extra large economy size ••• 48 oz. jar oma 0 oup HEINZ tOV2 oz 0 Laughing COW.: .................. 55¢ stock up, at this price! You'll want to se~; :o:p: ~o~ ::d 0b:a~;.:o;t;n•i: ;h: :.;eks ahead: With lots of teal meat!, •• 16 oz. pkg. French.cheese.....~vidual portions! .----6•-m-----------·--~=-· ---= Cranberry Cocktail ...... 4.s.~z: ••••• 69c Produce Specials! Bracco// ......... III Compare the quality? •• ours has dark green heads, tjglttly closed •. stalks tender yet firm ••• fresh green leaves! They're really fresh! Mushrooms ................ 89~ Potatoes .......... 10 Ll BAG 39¢ Extn fancy quality. , • hothouse grown! U.S. No. 1 Russets • , • in plio bag. Carrots ..................... 1 o~ Gatden freshness wrapped in plio bags! Red Grapes ......... 29~ Lusciously sweet •• in\'iting color! Liquor Specials! · Crown Russe ~~~F:~A~~~H. $8 88 Save -4lc on the economy size of this favorite! Don't forget mixers! " Cuttysark ... ~A.v~.s11~ .•• 51675 5-iional aavinp on the halt·l!illon size Of a brand you know and trust I Windsor Canadian·'5:59 Save •1.00 on the quart bottle! · " Calvert's Extra .. ~4.99-· Blended whiskoy. Save 40c fifth! Ocean Spray .•• the name in. cranberries: Drink it for health •• ~ and because it's so delicious! Roya le Toilet Tissue ........... 4 : 51 T\ro roll packs at a price that you'd expect to pay for far lessei· quality! 1.Ior~ El Rancho value! Kai Kan Dog food 4 '" $1 Electrasol .......... ; ........ 69e Choose l\fcat Balls 'vith Chicken. Chicken Parts, Chicken Stc\v, Burger Rounds, Beef or Stew ••. 15 oz. cans. Gets dishes clean and bright ••• TI:iaku glas.swar9· sparkle ••• and saves )~ou 2lc at this price! ••• 50 oz. package~ iant Peas .. 4 for $1 .Hi Ho Crackers ....... ~ 39; s Snack favorite from Sunshine! 16 oz. reen Beans ........ 4 for '1 Noodles Romanoff .... 49; Green Giant .• , Cut or French No. 303 Stouffer's quality, frozen just for you 1 Asparagus ·spears .... 69¢ Green Gia11t, so lender •• , 15 oz. can . Escalloped Apples .... 49; Stouffer's, so easy to serve~ Frozen. Vegs. Monterey .... 3 1 .. $1 C&W, delightful medley, frOZA)n, 10 oz. Broccoli au Gratin .... 49; . ' Heat and serve, and enjoy Stouffer! · Turnovers ............... 49¢ Handi-Wrap ............. 59" Frozen goodness from Pepperidge! Big savings on big. 300 ft. rolJ, Dow! Glade ..................... 49¢ Sliced Mushrooms .... 39; \\'hoosh •• odors are gone! Johnso n's. B .'n B~ Broiled in Butter, 214 oz. size. Ajat Cleanser ..... 2 '" 29' \Vith bleaching action! Regular size. Stewed-Tomafoes 4 for $1 llunt's, for so many recipes! 14¥2 o:. Petite Sirah ........ ~ Dey "'lne, ruby red •• ; fifth! Mateus Rose ...... '2.89 Dipn~.r wine that spcau.for itself I Pricca in effect TJu1r, tlil'Ough, Sun. l•lov.11, 12, JJ.14. No ~ales to 1lealcrs. Unpolluter .............. 79¢ Liquid Ivory ............. 5,. · Ope" dailv Oto 9.,. 'u11dav JO to 7 Ecology minded delergenll 49 oz. pklJ. So kind to your hands! .. 32 oz. ARCADIA \," , ' •11d Hun1in11on 01 t/i'i/. PASADENA : i1/iii· SOUTH PASADENA: il/f1t; . HUNTINGTON BEACH : n1t· NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 New11011 s1,d 11111 1 ~, , r111 r 1 ,,rp, ... 320 We st Colorad o Bl~d " Fremont and Huntington 01 .1.•1 Wai ner and Algonquin (8oa1dwatk Center I •:, 2555 Ea\tb!ulf Or Eastblull Villa~e Centrr • ' .., • ' -"ES-TA'rE-lJY.ING" . ' A rus\001 built home with niany !usury !l'aturl's, such u , 1 fireplaces, a chal'C'081 J.!rLll, "M'et bar, s:o,·geous carpets and dr11pes. A· \·rry vt-ry e:i.:· clush'f' 11rca of Hunt.ins:ton Beach. Call us !or an appointnlent. 842-2535. I ' ; r ?-r1 --. ' ~ ·-,, . . " . . ' ~ I. l:. , • • j > l . ONE OF A KIND WATER FRONT -., ' < ' • I I 1 f, this homr nf di~t!nct1\'I' desii.?n on 1he bay· Cron!. LAtest rrfinrn1rnr8 Rre l'mbodif'd in this drlightful family homr. full of "11rmlh and charm couplrd \.\'ith clc~ani·r thal makrs enttr· ta!nlnt:: an 11ff11 ir 10 rrrnrmht>r. Ch11rm & utility are rombl nrd In this 3 rn>drnnm, 3~1 balh, Ii· ~ary & breakfast roon1 sr.tting, $164,000. Call 673-8550. -"-1 ·~ . . .. " 3 AND 1 DUPLEX See \hi.~ nice home plus incun1c -in choi('C Coron111 dPI !\far }l)('ntinn -r11~11r ~ hrd1·o0m. 2 iu!-th homr in llporlrs~ condition. Brlgh! 1111 e"lpr. ~c buJl t-ln ki•chf.n -dish"'llshrr, also studio Wt. OVPr th!" 2 car s;::11.r11.:e. Call fnr details. OP1Y S63.500. 673-8~. ~ - START PACKING Toclay. This likr. new Ian:" 4 bedrrn.nn hn111r is V..c11nt and "·airtni:: for ~nn1(' lucky huyPr "·ho \\'lints 21,y hath, lari::r perk-li kr ~·11rd "'i lh srrink· lers. Quali1y \V/"M• cnrprti; & ('Ustn1n dl'AJ'lf'S - i:parkllnt:: built in <'lrclric k1trhrn -SPpR.ra!e fam ily rnnn1 " \vrt b11 r. l"N' l1111d. Only $57,900. Call 673-R550. CLOSE -yo WESTCLIF'F Choi ce lnralion nn 11 lrl'r-Jined srret-t. 3 bt>d· rooms "'Ith 111 charmins:: dining l\J'ea. a pnol-sizPd )'a.rd and frl'&h p11rlnt. Only $27,500. Dial M6·231J to view lhi1 home. . • ----~- Wednesda,v, November 10, }q71 DAILY PILOT $J NO ONE OFFERS MORE! ESTATERS N • '" S.Nlct -.. fo,. •ntl •ft•r the Ml.. 12 O • ., 'tF•lMlf .. r •• ,..p1t In ' off\cH to ftllew thfU, • NO. 1 In Allvtrtl•l.nt-Complttt ctvtr•1• 8Y•rY ll•Y· N 1 '" St l• In th• H~rbor Ar•a-PrHf ,011tl~ Oo This Is wh•rt "Tht Action 11.'' ' ''It's fun to be nree to people.'' We've Helped Thousands Maybe We Can Help You .. • • • • If you have any questions call us we're ready, wlllln9 and able to as• slst you solve your problem. tto obllgatlon, of course. The Real W. TOM CONIL Niwporf Blvd.'t s,1,,. "''" of tl>ie "'"11th for thr•• "'onth1 ;,. • row, Au9., Sept., l 11ow Oc:+. Toll) iu•I Ii~•• I• l>i•lp , ... ,1 ...... doll • ~ •• ., qoecl job of ii. W1 ••• 111 proucl of him 11 I 71h I N•wpor+ ll~d. C•lt fo1 Tom ,1 6~6-7 1 71, lllll CHASI Lil Twe lim1 winn1• of S1l•1· women of the "'enth •W1rd, Core"' cle l M,r Offic:,, 1,11,, • 10 v••r hom 1 ewner of H1rbo.r View Hill 1, fe rmerly Qf. fio e M1n191r of • New- potl l1ecl>i l'roperly M1 ne91m,nl Firm, Hob- bv m•"Y Yl l 'I Wll IC:• tiwe ;,. v•chl r•cin9 out ef N1wporl l t 1ch. •;"'J 1,11, for Tep l'rofe11ien- o1 I Reil Eit•I• Service el 67]-1550. VIEW! WITH A VIEW! _, WITH A VIEW! Tr> en,iny 1h(' finest in Ne1.11pnrl Brach li\•inrot. Sf'C this gorgPnUfl :1 bfodroom, \\•ith ~('fl8'•1tr ma!ITPr t<uite. 111.ri:e family room leading nut to It sparkl· in,11: hPated and filterrd )Klol and the mosl breath· taking view of Nl'wport Bay and Catalina th111t could be found. Truly a gem by the Pacific. Call 646-7171 f,.,r more details. PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP EASTSIDE GI TERMS Sparkling rlran 4 bcdroon1. 1 hlll h home w/firr· plac-e-El Br1, D/W, Covered pt1tin. All on d,.ep lot hPautifully Jandsca~: Don't wa.it ·to see this one. Only $33,500. Dial 646-7171. • ters of The .Month DON IOll lTIS Oen joined Tl>ie ••11 E1· l1l•n in Jun1 of 1971 •nd h~ b1co"'ll -en1 of our top p1educen . De" 1ptci eli111 in lh1 M111 V,rd1 •••• wh1 re h1 l>.t1 tiw tcl 1inc• 1951. He h•1 • low•lv wilt, Me rli" i nd th••• dtu9ht.n , 11.ebin, Kelly tncl Tr•<•Y· 1f v•u w1.nl 1inc1rt prel1u ie,.1I 11 rvi ~• c:1ll. Don -.f 54'· 1 J. ). OLYMPIC POOL-MESA VERDE ,Just rf'du~d l:l.~50. on .. of lhe n1n~l bf:-11ullful 4 brdrnnm homr11 -rh11nnin1:, d~nlni;:: room - \art:~ rorn'"r lnl. rir111ilrd h1.ndsClll'f' -nn m11i,1n· 1r n11nc" ha.ck yard -hea~y shake roof. 549,950. SUB1'1IT TERMS. Call 646-7171. "BARGAIN HUNTING??" ThPn look nn furth('r, Th" nwnrl':I fi re mnvint: h:i.rk rA.~I and must srll thl:t brauty Sh11i11; rarprr11 throu,11:hou t a nd douhl" dr11pini;: nn r111·h wlndn"" Thf're i1 a hu2r cnvrrf'd pitl in and ii is "M•alklnt;" di:t l11 ncf! 1,., th!" bt-11 ch:t. ALL TERMS AVAfL- ABLf.-l~1MEDIATE OCCU PA NCY, C11.JJ 842-2m SHAKE ROOF NEWPORT HEIGHTS BEAUTY ':A CHRISTMAS PACKAGE" "HANDY MAN SPECIAL" A liUJ,. paint 11nd :-omr curtains nn thP VJindo1.1•s \1·ill frr:-hrn up thP .1 brdronm, family room homr. Al $25,800, whn cA n rPsist? Call today. 842-25:'15. Usf'd brirk firrpt11crs in both Livinrot Rnnnl 11nd 1'"amily RMrn of lhi.~ ch11 rming hnmr. Completr "M•i lh .1 lari;::e brdronms, 2 balh~ A cnverrd pa rio for outdoor rrlax11 tion A fun. Q"UiPJ,.~frr"t. Prire S34,750. See it today! 646-7 171 for itppl. Prrsf'nt thi!I hnme tn your f11mi ly And watch lhr ohs 11.nd ah!. A he11utitul .1 brdroom hnmf', wilh 11 firrpJ11c1•" 11u1om11.rir. ,11prinklrrs. prof. l11'nrl· •r&Pf'd l\nrl m11ny nther t'Xll'all. Don't del 11y, ·call now 842-25.35. "WANT A POOL ?" Li~lrn tri lhis ... ;'\ lart::f' hf'rl1·nom~. 11 famil.v tl)flm, R ·drtachrd rrrrr111lnn rnom nff thr. pool 11.rra. anrl a quirt cul·dP-sRr. Jocatinn. PrirPd 111 $.11.7~0 fnr R quick salP Bctlf!r check this one OU I. 84 2 · 25.J!'J "SPANISH POOL HOME" lnlrnd111•int: a fa.ntastic tri-lcvel horn,. on' hui::r Jn!. .1,000 ~.r. rnromp11ssr!I 4 b('(lrooms, R fRmily rMm, formal livint:: and dining rooms, PLUS . NOW AVAILABLE New illustrated c•talo9 contains 35 of the best home va lues in the H•rbor area. Call or write us we will mail your CO!)Y· If you have a friend or relative contemplatin9 a move to our area, call us. We will mail "Homes of the Month " to them anywhere in the world . INVESTMENTS 11 UNITS OCEAN VIEW • IF YOU HAVE IMAGINATION And ynu'rr lnnkin~. looki nR" for a bu,\', 111.kP a lnnk 11t !hi!! :\ hf'drnom hnm" in Baycrrsl with nf'W shaiz i·arprl!! 11.11d cuslom drapr~, elc, Only 10% down. $56,950. 546-2313. PARK PLACE VALUE Ju.~l 2 blncks tn th!" Cot1l.11. Mrs11 Park. :\ l)(>d. room.~ and 11. den. 2100 liq. fl. .Tust rr.duced to $31.000. Call [)46-2313 before you Invest. THE EASY LIFE "PRICE REDUCTION " Thi!! lmmaculAte 3 bedroom hcauty w11s a!Jtady priced ri.1tht and n ow thr price has been reduced by $1.000. !or' a quick salr , , , concrete dr!Vl"• "'ay, hea\'Y shakr roof, lath 11nd plaster, 11.nd convPniently locatN'.I to ~rhnnh, shnppinK and the Dou"las facility. Call today ... fl42-25.~ ,_ i "WHAT A LOCATION!!" 'rhi!i i"M•o ~lory brauty 1·11n hr found in I\ prln1~ rr:ddrnti11l area 11.dja1·rnl !'I \hr ~t:\V CENTRAL PARK. 4 brdrnoms 11nd a. h11i;:r 21· x 1~ ripen bram family room. Fully c11rprted lhro!Jf.:hou t. A lnt of livin' fnr only :S.14,100. Call today., 842-2335. ' .-..... "'"'._. .. ,,..,.,,., ... ,'< .. :. ~ -·,·---........ ' ~ .. .,. . ., " . : ..... ~. ' "SMART INVESTMENT" rirsl tirnr nffrrrd is 1hi.~ rhanning oldrt· 2 hrd· ronn1 hrin'r in cnn\'rnirnt Corona de] ~111r lnra· , lion'. f':xflflsrd hr11n1 rriline-s. 11sf'd hrlrk flrPplarr. ,11p11rinus livini:: rnnn1, plu.~ 8 largr onr hrdrnrrm rrar uni!, builtins & bath. 01.1•n priva1 .. patio. llnmP r;i.;IPr-if)r lif'\\•ly paintrd. Varant. Only $57,500. Call 67:l-R550. BUILDERS A l'TENTION Chni1•p R • ;'\ -180 x 132 lrvel Int. Ready for building 16 units. Excr!lent location askin1 $52.500. 673·8550. a hasemt-nl rumpus room 11nd a Jovrly pool arl'a. PRICED BELOW J\1ARKET • , • 842-2.535 SMART INVESTMENT Lo"' in ~ur>ply, hU't:f' in demand and now "'f' h8v" jusl rrceivrd 2 hcl'luliful six-plrxrs. It's a primr loc111ion. Rrally musl i1rr In 111 pprrcia1 ... LISTED BELOW ORIGINAL PURCHASE PRICE. C&ll us today , .. 842-2~. lnrom" ovrr ~19,000 pr.r yrar. Th"Y are always full. Listed at $16.6i.OOO. Good Terms Available. CALL 546·1600 No wnrk, ,Just rf'lRx! This Dolorrs mndrl rt'prr· sent.s onr of thP besl values in the Bluff!!. WAik .., 10 schools, .~tnrM, rrnnis, & pools. 3 Bf'drooms. 2% baths. EntirP prlc,. $.16,900. This is ctrtainly SWEEPING VIEW S\.\·rrpint:: My vlr.w -functional lari::r :l bed· room homr In cht'!iCl" Dovtr Shorf lora lion.· 2 hath~ -f!Pwly drcorAtrd "'ith Rll nP\.\' w/w crt!I & dra pes -sr1>Rrlllf' masll'r suitP with rom11n tub -lllfl:I" rorn>:>r lol room for ponJ - Grcal vi\lue 111t $85.000 EZ trrm! -Call 673-8550. FHA/VA 3 BR + BONUS ROOM $33,950 fn:st 11mP nffrrNI wi th all ll'rm,11!? Ntlw you may ""'fl lhi!I rharminc 2 !llory 3 hr home featurin~ hui:r. 19 x :ZS rumpus room. VPry sh11rp Ii neat thrnut;hnut. Sltuatl'd in cood Costa Mesa loca· lion n"ar schnol,11 and shopping. for additional information, pleasl! call fl46·2313. 6 HOMES ON LOT 11 Jx305-2·Jbd. And 4-Br. l..Llts of pnvacy. can add mnr" units . .rust RPduced to SSS.000 and owner says .ret a deal nO"M': CALL 546-1600 WANT A MOllLE HOME PAIK! p.K., Build one. 20 11.crc!, ready to go. Exl.stint Club Hou.se included. P11.lm Sprinl!'.A area. To· t81 Price only $85,000. $23,ooO will bandl!!. CALL 546·1'00 R fast seller, 10 call no"'. 546-2313. VACANT AND LONESOME nv.·ner des~r11.te, moved nqrlh. Mu!!I. :tf'll lari;:e 4 bedroom homf'. Immaculate In ,.very w11y. Brau- liful c11rpe~ and dn1prs. URGENT -MUST StLL $38,500, lopcn evening11 Cal l ~46·2313. LOCATION MAKES THE PRICE TWICE AS NICE!! The Bel -Aire of 0 1'11.nge County. Near lhP golf ~ourse, floor t.o ceiling brick flrcpl11.ce. Country kitchen witb builtlnfl. Three bedrooms. Fully grown trees. full price •. SJl.500. cau 546-2313. TIRED OF TRACT HOMES? T,-.en consider this 4 bedroom hcauty, Lush shllt:" cllrJ)elinc. lntlirecl li~htlng, drame.Uc f'n try with lron. eates. front courtyard, and rural 11tmn.s· phert. Betit of all It~ nnl)' S34.~ with an as· sumable loan, ca.II 546-2313 to stt. CAN YOU BELIEVE $23,9507 · \Vith only 10% rln11•n or 11ssun1 ini:; 11. fabulou- :'l \4 ';Ji VA loan, this is lhr brsr !n)w !)rlc-e v11.Jue in town. Tn top it nff, lhi,11 nrat :. RI?; 2 bll.1 11 hnme has a wood shlnt::lc rnnf, 8 i.:ood sizP yard, 11nd i11 ioca1ed close to all lichools and shoppinc. Better hurry 11.nd call MG-2313. THE REAL ESTATBRS Opfl! 'Tll ' < • NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. 646-7171 . COSTA MESA 279 0 Herbe r Blvd. 546°2313 HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH CORO.N A DEL MAR INVESTMENTS 17 931 Bea ch Blvd. 601 4 Wa rner Ave. 332 Ma rguerite 0 2784 Harbor Blvd., Suite 2011 8'4 2-253 5 8'47-601 0 673-8550 Cost. Mei• 546-1600 1 \ ' \ \ I \ \ \ • ~ . ' . ' .. , 11: ,"' 52 DAILY PILOT :>"":" ...... tftvtmber 10. 1 ~l PILOT -A OVErnS£R J 8 \ ' " ' ! I ' • -· • ' • ... ., : : : Everyone .H .. Somethin g Th ot ; Someone Else W on!s DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Fin d It, Trode It With • Want Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results l~I _ ..... c I~ I HouMI for Sal• I~ I General G1n1r.al "LET'S GO TO THE BAY" Deluxe Duplex OK BALBOA JSL1\NJ) · ('uston1 buil l 4 bed· roo m, 3 baths, 2 fireplaces. deep SH1\G car· peting. kitchen v.'ith b uiltins. glass v;alled staircase PLUS 2 Bedroon1 RENT..-\L C\'l'f. A real buy at . . . .......... $99.500. "SEE YOU AT THE POOL" Let us show yo11 this SHARP SPLIT l,~:Vi':L 2 Bedroom, 1 •n bath home, all carpeted and draped. kitchen u1ith au the buittins. CJ.L:~· HO USE and POOL PRl\'ILEGES. Only ............................... $23 .800. ARE YOU READY For 27 Units? NE \V ADULT APTS., Consisting of I, 2 & 3 Bedroom units \ri th 1 & 2 haths. fea tu ring a POOL. B·B·Q and REC R00~1 . Individual garages. builtins . .shag carpeting, forcecl·a ir heat, laundry facilit ies and av.·ard·\\·inning landscaping. \Viii trade .. S422.000. ENTERTAINING TONIGHT in Baycrest? Here's the perfect setting: 4 larg:e bedroom~. 21h: baths, family room . 2 firc plac:es. large covererl pa tio. fabulo u.s Jand.scapin~. IDE.!\I .. FOR INDOOR·OUTDOOR ENTERTAI NJ!\G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $54 ,500. "HONEST TRUE" yo11r boat and you! FLOAT INTO this 2 bedroom, 2 halh,• bu 1l l1n kitchen. firepl:ice. carpets & drapes. \'Ol'R OWN PRIVATE PIER & FLOAT ... $72.500. REALTORS General oflnda J!Jfe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 12 Linda Isle Drive Elegant new 5 BR. 4112 ba. home v. formal din. rm .. lam. rm .. v.•et bar. lmpressi ,·e en- try court,,,. 16 ft. mahog. doors. $179 .500. 341 For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Islanders Bldg. a t Linda Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.8 . Isle . 675-6161 General General .BIG CANYON 1-·i ve bedroom, 3 baths. fan1ilv room, laundrv room. 3-car ~ara~e. BcautifUI corner lo t a·t llermila?e Land and Royal St. Geor,i:?e Dri\le. This hnn1e 1s heing fia1shed now and .should be available for moving in before Christmas. Driv e hv and ~ce ii. then call O\\'ner at 644 ·1 140. Price S92,50~ General Newport Heights Olrl<'r :: Rtlrni hr1111r in ··Bt:T- TJ-:r. T/11\:~ Nt.'\\"' ennrt111nn --A HOME WITHOUT TREES r~ lik" a r!~y 111!IY•Ut sun· sh1nr. 1·h1~ \'O~)' 3 hrlrn1 .• 2 hath, n.~,1 ly r·arpr1!'rl cor.. ().'/.\,O~J. :'111\I~ h•Htl<' i~ In. 1·1111·11 un ;i n,.111•nnc: Eur·:1J- * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Quiet street. nn traff ic but close to \\'e:;t· cli ff shops & schools. Sharp 3 BR. home ~·' forma.I dining room. Professional landsciP" ing & fru it' tree s. Hurry! S39,500. "Our 76th Ye•r''. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Ro1d NEWPORT CENTER ~910 4 BEDROOMS VIEW· POOL nnP nr thr flnr~I \'I('\\".~ ill C11111ro Shnrrs. ·I mmarul111P 3.11(~) ~'l. Ir .. J<ho'>I·~ Ilk!' l'l rnorlrl hon1r. \\"arnHh r:>i:· prr~s,...1 1h1u-ou1 l\!lh the C"llf'l'OU~ U.'if" .,, Jo1·rly f)illl· rl1n~ f,, \\!Ill m1·rr1ni;:~. f1rrl)i<'!1·.., Jn ti1·ins:: & film· 1!y ronms. ,l R11th~. \\" 11 rilrf)!'INI k. rirs:iprtl. Nifr1y /Pnr"f'l'I riool. .l f'ilr ears:ii:r. •171. S9:-i.:-iro. C.<tll 67:>-7725, Home & Investment Realty r.:1J E. roa~t lh•·~, Crl~I General Macnab-Irvine l~(·al!y Cor11p11ny QUAINT, QUI ET CUL-DE ·SAC A ro1~· 2 BP.. 2 hath .'!Q11<1Q. n11n 1um. P1r1ure !hP f1rr- plarr t-r<11·klrni;: \\ h1le h.:ir· bl'quhll'.: on 1hP pal111 unrl"r !llf' t11g EUr>1J~!'p1u~ 1rre. :'p;irkll nt: l·lr<1n m'l'irrn k11rlwn. llurry tn sre. Cail Arn \' Ga<1on .;12.J1.tt·1. . BAYFRONT DOVER SHORES fl1i<llnt"ll\r rJr:;.01er 1n 1h1~ :1 RP. .. "I. .~tnr.) hnn1r. Fnrms:il DR.. fanH!.v l;11i·hr11. 60" R"l~i<id(' p11.110. Pirr k llnar Tnr :11· hr>a1. OflPrl'd for $1 ·~2.lloO VIEW BAY & HARBOR .n1·">1" plun1h1 11J:, rl,,c·1ri- 1·~J. k11.·h ,t· hn1t1 r••n1,"l1•J. "rl, 11"'' (·11rp•·t1111.'., 1lr<1 1•.-r· 11~ .~· lr~ht l1;r.IUJ"f'S. \"111·;,nt .~· 1<'i«ly lf1 ~···· 1111~1 1111<'. ll11\f' hv ;,·:'l .-;.,n BC'rna r· din" 1,.Ji i:11h SI 1 . v111us II"<'!' hn"d ~11'1"•·1. I'll·. WESTCLIFF 11" • ~.ira>;1' 011 J!a\"Pd :1l- J'rf>St11:r nr11:hhnrhno<1. ;i Br.., r!•·n. /JR. l;rrcr flf'ltll. t:J<('rl hrrek. 1>hak!' ronf . r ... ,, ~lnl· pl1•. rri('C' jUSI !"!'i!UC"t'd . S7ti.!"J(l0. Macnab-Irvine J hrlrn1. 2 ha!h Mm,. nn Ill ft. LI DO ll'lt. ~™'r ri"'~l!'ra te. II ill arCf'p! "'"Y rralll)nllh.l e. oflt>r. $.i9,FllO 11~k 1n;: LOW DOWN II 11! lrr ~'lU 1n"1" 11110 a .l l'>-drnnm hom,. nn ii l.'1.J1lP lot 1n 11n arf'1t nf Cn~1a :\!C'5'll. \\"uh ii ~m11JI 7rtri TD. )OU C'an a~~U.'llP !l 6,..r \'A Lo&n. Fu!l prwc S2!l.'li0. 6 UNITS anrt J'"Oillll fnr JO more! t:..-.;. f'rlirn1· 1nCflmP on E11s1~1rlr Cn.<ra \]P,l11°. PrP<;ll'lltl.1• fnur 1-hf'rlrn<lms 11nrt tll"O 2.bed- rnnm ... Tremendous buy al $'19.Jll:l. EXQUISITE BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM LN·111 rrt "11 lhr 111a1n i:rrr11. hrit. <1rrp •·arf""'l'J<:. lu.:ur1ous fin1pr~ pin ... m.'l.ny nrhrr e~· rr11 i:: n1~kr" thi~ .l hrrlroom, \11 inc: ro<1m .'1.nrl r11n1nc: room h10111r an ('\f'rllrnt huy .'1.l 5 1.i:.~1~1. PETE BARRETT 1'05 !;.~,~;~, l HEW1'0RT IEA.CH ..... J 642-5200 '"' .. Newport •• Fairview i1'y. Loc;111•d ni·ar cr~1111nH•r DON'T BE TOO LATE! :-•·hon!, i;hor1p111::-and C.D .. \t. 1.~1! Sus~1·x Ln. Daily t-<"1 lkal·h. O."lil.Y S'.tt.~l:ill. O"'n<'r a("<'C·p11•1 I n•·\\' 1~>~11 1011 'Grange Vi~t.a Jn S.•11111.-.. ~· 1h1s ~haq1, 1·lran, :I t11~lr•~n11 2 h111h h-1111('. ~'p<ir11I(' l11int.: ro.1m pl u~ f:1111tfy P•Hl\. 0 \111t"f :1d•lf'cl 100111 f1>r his nrlu•f'. l1u1ll1n~. flf'•11la<'f'. u111 r ni. \falk 111 s<·lwul .(· !-.hll/N. 642-8235 644-6200 I ::::::::==:::~::::::i:::i::::::: ,........,......,......,....,.., HEY BUILDERS! 646·8811 (•nytime) S23,450! PROPERTIES f<•rn11•rlv l~1f'l<1rrlr fLF.. 220 E. lJth St ., ·c.M. CALL 646-0555 El RANCHO Nearly 1/i Acre Guest House + Coral Oen + Dine 1alo1n:! ! J-:1·rry1 hi11:.: frw t¥lllllllrlr f;11nily Ji1111~. Lochenmyer Realtor lSC..O N··11porr IUvd., c .,\1. CaU GIG-~.llf F:1·f's. G12·1l::7 LOVELY -2 STORY S28,000! OCEAN VIEW Sr.111t"s 1111·ri,1· 1'1 ll(';h·h • d('· IU\e d1lph·:-.: •I IJ<!rni.-· •• ::•, ha"!!. ,V,. '.\ IKlrn1s. :!'~ h<i"s. R<i lh unit<; h;1\·r lani1ly rnl. & f111lc. A~k1111! $13-1,!lm. C11ll lnr p1clure o.:a111Jr,::- 111th prit·•·.~ .~. <lt'1ails Bulltl. "'h1lr r"11 111·,. 1n rhi~ _..:11111!). 3 tirtlr•V1n1, 21• hAfh hnn1r , \\"f'~t~1tlr Cnct;i \lr.•a ]111·;ir1nn, "'1th a ;;.·1 1~X.1/"lfl R.2 llJI. Rmn1 fnr 4 i111u·" unnc. To1aJ r ri re on J ~ $2'.l.!Ol. COATS . & . WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pen Evtning1) I~ l.__.-_._ .... __,J~; 4 BDRM .. 2 BATH $12 ,795 Built On Your L•nd -1Jl3 5<1, ft. livi.ng an:a -AU li1th & phunrr -Harri'>lood Cll blntla -Br"f";okfa.st ba~ -Pullrnan haLM -!'pat'LOU< '>l ilfdn;ibes JUST $9.53 SQ. FT. Planning·Drsi):'n-r1na.nCmg ".I 100 liomC"s & Apcrimrnts built r;1nre '57"' CALL 537-0380 10666 11·r,.rmin~1er A\"e, G.G. OPE:-.· sc:-.· 10 10 4 CORONA DEL MAR CANYON SIDE Like bt'llli: In the :'-It!, ~·ei only 3 Block!\ lo ;, Cro" M L"n 1que homP, nisl!l' & St"Cludt"d On lar2e lee lot BR . Jar;:!!'· rumpus rOom Ulls of "rvvi k stonf!' s:JJ.roo RF:llLTORS SIXCE l9M 673-4400 SHHHH!! ''Dori"'t let It Out" Dandy Duplex -VA -FHA -22l·D2 -ONLY 129,9!0 BE FIRST DIAL 645-0303 fOR[\T E OL ~ON "' R l'A 1. roPs G1n•r•I I ===--' UNIVUI'. ti()"'U R••I E1111e, 115.-IOOO • VIEW VIEW! Sre,.r,,cul11r \·1f!'ll" 1n nn: rR\'!XE TERRACE. Exc:ir.1 ing firepl.'1.rP~ 4 ~rooms I fam1l~, mnm and a sheltf!'rtd pool. SJTJ,ll)"J. BACKBAY ESTATE I l .l Arr .... t.1g trrrs, spa.rklini; pool, 4 herlrooms, open beam I ce1hni;:5 anrl a ma.sSl\'e fll'f!'· pl11ce. $5!1.000. I UNIVl!JI'. ti()"'l'.S R11I E.W., 17S-6000 ~HJ "E. Co•1t H.....,. c;orvr. 0.1 Mar,CIMt 7222.L TT ~---- OWNER BAILING OUT $49,950 Rl!'duN!d ~000 Under Appr&ls· 111. Prime re~1dPnt1al art.1 310() ~ fl l'lf ]11·ing ITl'l f,..rm11I rl1n1n2. 3 bath~ H11~P rrrrr;it1nn,,.! ilrl'll. Th i~ i.~ ll ::or.i::mus 4 hf'riroom 1r1. lrvrl \1' n""llf'r fnrre-d ro ~ll. Call j \5·8421· 1optn eves.; -VETS- sJ 00 l)owo n101es YOU In RPU<>r PRY~ ... 11 your CoSI! Hu£""" 4 hf'rlrmm CoLLEGE f',\rtK hrlmP \\"tth i:n1ri shqg rarp!'I~ aorl l'<l\"errri p;:ino n1·('rlmk1ng a !!.p11rklin11; J.1:-..; :;6 rt pool. VA '4'111 loan :-..,u S3.l :Jl0 !-. $1.0(I riO'>l'll IO!.ll 11·1i1.J1101·c y11u 111. Hurry. C.<tll 5 16-~80 (Oprn F.1·f',•.l • r.>. HERITAGE llAl UTITI I,,,. . . '. ~ l~·dn••111. :! ~paralc hath'!, ~u 1l•..-11 1c '"A11;u~r· \\1f~ ~;i1••r k1h·lw11, 1hsh1vrislwr. ~·li.1d1•1I l't':lr livini: l~iflfll '' 1lh in111111:.: f11"f•µla1 ·r .• , N~11l.1 1111i111Pd iusi•h• .t· 11111. ljilrflJ.:<' f1111shl'1I fur f:i111lly )'(l'!m. l'a!10. r1nnl. 1·h1hhnuse & pl111 :.:rou1Kls. hl;r., :1'10.li"l.O 1(Jnly 7 Y<'HI'.~ 11lil. Gu,,,i 1 l~·dr....,n11~. 3 :'l"flllrfl!<' h11th•. hot.IM' ha ~ .1 Brri!"nlllll.•. \\·r l ~•ri.:r fnn11I~· l'•llll 11 11 h 1n· 675-3000 BROADMOOR t .. ·1 1nur '"1111n1s huv 111u a hJ\tu·:v d11pl<'.: il; lhr. h(.ar·h. horti uni!.~ h111·r h110:,. t1v1rii:: ron1n~. l "pp••r ha~ 4 hr<1roon1~. 2 balh«. lnwrr ha~ 2 hf'flr<1nn1s & hath. R<1rh r•)n1plr1Ply furn1.<hNf. Only ~1rrs frnrn ~ach .'I.fir! .:11:.itliihl•· for nnly $.l.COO rto"n. C.ill 67:,.151]0. ' .. ' . .; . ' . • ' 644-7270 (Farmerlv Oel1ncy Real .Estatt) 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR , CALIF. BAYCREST LOT Vvel Jl(J' x 1111 frr 1111 nn • TRADE\\'INOS <·an hu1lr! 2 ,,nry . plil ll~ in1·lurll'<f. VIF.\\" or u rrF:n RA r . f'ull prier only sz.>.noo . sub- m 11. ~range Vista PROPERTIES t'nrmrrlv l.11 Rorrlr n .r:. 220 E .. 17th St .. C.M. CALL 646-0555 COMPANY TRANSFERRED HPrf' ii IS 1111 111 1•11•' . ..:h;1n1 .l hr>rlrni. 2 h111h 1'::1~1~1•1r Open Evenings hnmr, rul·dt··~;,1 \ror;i11on • 962-4454 e .11·1th low n1111n1n11nnt'f'. ;..., 1.,.., _______ .,.. TARBELL $27,500 ·~T Ll."vrJ-;!J IT. So JIUlTy, I 11 1111:; f1rr11l 111·••. h11i!I in Dia ~·l f1e11•111·y k11~·hrn, ri1sl1"ad1. 645-030] IOR[\T E OJ.SON '" RE .,A 1...TOAS rr. 1'11110. t"1·r~hl.v p111111rri . ~01h111g In 1!0 hu1 111n1·r r1:;ht 111 & ~l~rl In rr11ll) J11·r ,r,, rrlax. P11r10. Drr<11·n1•1r fr11111rr~ 1ns1dr k 11u1, Bkr. ;>Jn li.!O. TARBELL $24,950 4 Bdrm.+ Family Rm. 4 BR:'"WATERFR0Nf Hl'au11ful r.u111ly hnn1r. Enlry IA1C'l.1• )al"ll ,t:_ p11 tin. FrplC'., hilll .i1n1n1? J"•W'ln1. l'<l/I' rlrn. 2 h11!hs. 1'1rr ,t· sl111. 2 h;llh.c; fi1~'11llll (' hu11t-1n Sl '.t."1,floO !'illl~!' .f.. u1 1•n. p:i.,rk J 1 k r Call. li7.1-.'li~;:: 11 1~·:!"1.·,.~ J-:1·r'\" ~11rr!, hrk. '..111.1720 TARBELL ~!.U Harbor. Cn.,ta ~lr~a INVESTORS PARADISE ~:ll~l~1r\r• 11•~111(' + d1Yfllr.:. :\Int l<w111 1nn .inti 1·n11rl 1r1"n. ll ll!h 1nl'fln1r. \l't")' 1•)11 n1s:i1n· 1rn1u1l·c. Pr1erd for '"~! ~alr. CAii ~·~6-.'>.'I~ jOJ}f'n ~:vr~.l associated BAOKEAS-REAL TORS JOJS W. lalboo 67J•J66J AH.'-a·:i'\TJ::E 011 nrr 11111.,1 ,,..II B<'llrh11r~l ll nn1 r, [\r,1· p.11111 & rl•"(·nr. rr~.1 11/h.vdrnlw !'•'\•'I", llUl'l ~1'1"1llklr1,, 1111· 1ni-1f pus~rs~lt•ll. llr\1hl!' l•'l"ll\S TO l"f'.<JlOllSl h]I' r ur.·hnsrr. Jn,1i"<'l1nn !.· nt· f1~·~ 11111 lrd. ~1ql fo.>1 l\1ll ~ /\1 r . Burnn 1'111k $27,750 NO DOWN TO VETS ~haq1 .1 hf'.i:lro~•111 in b<'11u11. ful \l~'.:'A \"EHLJE, Ovl'r· s11rd .:arat:<' h11·rlv Ml'rr· l'fl p11t1n. drlu~r li1111:isci1p1ng. ~·asl 1nn1 r 1n OK. Call ~10.n:,1 1()jlf'n f'\r~.) WITH VIEW! ."i""V.' 11 .. 11111! -~·i1rl·e 5 SR .• S1n11h huilt hnn1r. Lj::r. II\"• 1n;:: rm., d1n1no::: rm , fll"f'-'n k. hilrhnr 11,,11 . r.r~hsltcally pricrri ;i1 Si~.!ll'XI CORBIN- MARTIN [ ~ HlllJTAG!I .:;;;;;;;-;;;:':::""::;"';';";i REALTORS 644-7662 YOU WAITED FOR THIS -CONDOMINIUM - 111 1\lrk-1 1~" ~r!T11it.:. 'l AP., Z H11. n1:.tn1· '\Ira«. nn nnP Jrvrl + lart:" pa!1n + p<Yll. $31,."llO. For 11pn1 . TRI HARBOR REAL TORS II)\ EA . ..,·r ITfH. C \1 ~ITE ort P.\Y n1i;.:::z:1.l OWNER ANXIOUS- CITY ESTATE t:nj•\y 1..-.un1ry !11 111~ hr1r in Thi.< Ill'\\" 1 BR .. 3 halh Lu<k hnnir. ln1[1"l"llHI! f'tilry. Bf';iu!1f1tl rif'1·11r' l'lu<. '>1:111· I'd pnvAr:-i 111th hllrhor \ ,,.,1. s11 .!l: ... 1. _...... Coldwell, Banker ~ 833-0700 644-2430 '\ •II 1~111 . .irj .. r ;ii!, 11/lrr~. ~:100+ ~q fl h11111r. 3 Rr:, 2 H11 . drn. hn11us fat11 rin ,t:_ .~<'1"11rl fl11I U• 1 ==::::~==::::=== CAI.I. .'F! · .\ '\Y'fl\1 E *BACK BAY * l1fl1·n 1-:1 rn1nc~ ·111 ~ •cru~&co.I -I lllCI ~-·ll·OJI -4 Bedrm. + PoolT Quality $31,500 LUXURY LOVERS Yn11r 'l'llr~t~ 11 111 f:A.~P as 1hl'y ~ll'fl intn fhl~ rlramafic R . .\Y('P.E."T f'ntr.v . .l B i I? Bf!".t w11h ~ph1~t1r11lf'fi msrr ~ul!r. i'park!n1':, sTr/M'.'l.l"f'r li11. P1cturr.~11ur lnd!!,cp5. See 11·ha! ~!l.500 \\'Ill buy. -GEM-· 1610 \\'. C'oa~I Ii\\)', X.B. R E:\L TflR~ 642-4fi2,\ Ocean View Lot ~ .. \\.J)'lf1 Hl'lli(hts IP<e lanri. Call for Apnp1ntmr nt to ll'f' \'rry 'flli<'lnU~ f;untl.1· [1\"ll"K:, rif"(\~nrd fnr l'nrrr111.1n 1ni;:. 2 hR.th•. ram1ly room '>l 11 h n1<1«~11·r f1rrpl11rp fnr inrlnnr <11·tio11. ClnU•! l'<lfl Cl'lr?f'tll"li . l'U~IOfll rtraf!(')<. r rirP ll"l· !'hlrlr t'rl!\tl1111nn f"l") tahlP. r1u•n. l<111r!s or rlf'rk1n:;:, J11~h • IMnrl~1·;1p111i;: f'/l<"irl"lr~ roe hP11rrr! flf111l. Rrk. O.ln..17W. L•ckenmyer Realtor 1>Hi-,1921i Eve. 646-4007 Balboa l11an4 • GARY HARE 2161/2 Apolena Balboa Island • TARBELL You s:irp thP 1r1nnl!'r of '.! T1f'krts rn 1he: Orang• County /nttrnlttional Auto SMow :I! lhr 0o11·n \','· ·•r 1n11 no\\n r111\. BARGAIN !!! 1 V11ctu1t Alld rr11il.1 for )Ou r l-4M!'ili!ilf>ijil··~H!RIT AG! ~ llAl lSUR MODEL HOME 1~<1Y J. 11 \r:n ru:rn.'>. f:lfi-rrl'l~ 3 RP.. 2 HA. f:11n 1ly rm f1n-rl. hl!!n~. hll<:e 11·11lk-1n •"lll!<f'!•, J.~('(l s11 rr. :'\('11 crpis dra~s. S.Vl,f"lffi. • nn\·rn ~Hnr.r:.i;; * }:LJ-:t ;A.'\T thrunur. ,'\1Jrh111g ("lllllJ>IUllhlf' Ill lh•~ 2 & r!rn. hr;:iut. homf'. $79,::.ctl, ~(j 1.r:A~El!OJ.n. I c · ~ rx. qu1 ~11<>. Open h.<c. rl11ih· _ Rr~ant l\"1r~t Rl!r. 6i: .... 2Tz.i· 61&-:i.l1~ r11rly A:'-f <1r EVE.' ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER •, ' ' --+ .· .. . ,, ' irn<prrhnn. Call ;~:lR.V.O .'t Rtf rn1< .. 1 ftuh~ {l\\"Nt:lt 1l"iU1~. 4 1W•lrr•1111. :! !'!Pp~ to •lf'l•ll,IJ S'l9.~ Put " little "IM!" in your l.t 1 i~ . l'Cll rhoo;e hauhlro fnr '"hut·k~'". C11ll Clusif1(!(! (H:t.:i(i711. t>.'1.thc, ('ntry h:•ll. h1n~(' A-FRAME lirr11larr, htuh·lll!<. f1;\t10, :t Rf:. t":1n1lly l'rll. 2 ha l h~ .'<pru1klrr "} ~'""'· Br k. \\";:ilk 10 hro:1i·h. S"Ui.'lf(l e OLD SPANISH e :'0111! ~rlntw-hh. 3 Ft n. rir. 1n11n k. pk. Onf'·OI a·klnrl, ~ror!rcc rh. fnr rlrl"11l.c S:l l,!f.ll ri-:nno:'ll Rt:AL TY m . 6,lil-1"l'.il. Ray McCardle Realtor lltlO N°f'WJ"'f! Rhd .• C.~t. NO DOWN l"o\•ernt...r 171h lhru 71.!t Plf'll~ rillt 642-;.tji~, !'XI .ll~ bell'Pi'n 9 11nd .\ pn1 10 claim .\"(\Ur 11rker~. rXonh County roll-free numhf'lr is 54().17201 • • • S:l-1,S:-iO. Ph. !lli:l-JJ6G. ('~_1111~ .. 1 rtr11l1.v .'1l~ l:f.llJ General General General General General 548-7729 \·r1~ hnn1!'s · XpA C\I Call .r. rrc:k, Rkr, ~\5.fHfi5 'G•ntral ·--General 'l'Zfil " :• §4· ~DJ §j =t NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY .~ Huntington Beach Office 842-4455 7612 Edinger Optn Cvenings S40·5140 7612 Edlngar oppo1h• Huntington C11nt1r MOTHER·IN·LAW RETREAT !! .,,..1th 111rr ~111 ''I-It ,,r 111.liury li1·i11j;: A11d 2 •1'1t1,.~. 11"141:' p,,...h m11~1,.r •1111" 111lh .l11nrirrk 11nd !L1t 11n~. 1vw:m. ~uprT' ~hae: r ll.f1'l"'l lhruci11r, iHll) :.! )f'llr!L .111ung and \\Al,h TO THE BEACH. G.I. REPO 5 IR 2 IA Only $1.i'i:i T(IT(.'11. In 11,.~un1r thL• (;I t¥'11fl 111 prr~1 1:;:" -n"1chllnrh~. L.-•1 •I~ •111f'f'f"1-;'l'"<i-bcdrN>nll,....1\'lodel'.Il P~~­ bullf\n kllrhf'n, frn1•rd y111'd, ll real STEAL $.11.~ total. No Di~crlm~ll!'lhnn " BEACH COTIAGf PLUS INCOME! Ll\P i11 thr 11~111\ ll,,11lf'I 11.nd r11joy llt'11rh h\ine: tl'h11" ~..,U rPnt l)UI lh•' n•111 unit tu 11111kr )"llr l'll)Mrnt~ Z\'r>'d~ II lHtl,. TLC hut hlil1 i.:nln 1u'li~"1111 ~ti.li~il'l • 2 STORY STEAL • " 01·r r 170l'l ''I· (!. ',, r11n\ll\ Ill Ille' II l!h 4 dPror111br tiritroom! . plu~h rsrr.:1~. hrtrl"''~ ktll·hrn and }•lu o\\n 111ver1•Uun1. r\(J GtMl\flCJ.i S-t:n.~OO. ,. ........ Newport Beach Office -646-7711 2043 Weslcliff Dr. at Irvine Open Evenings NEW LUXURY \\'1\h a Bil.\ \'11:.\\1 nff,.1,.d h~ bo lh 11( thr~r ruc1nrn h1111l tn ),.1,.l h0111r~. 4 nt !'! hrriro111n,, fclrtlllll fl!? k t"R, $:111nl lh in;:; n""'!\ 1• 1th hAc k ha.y 1·lr11•. Chn~• c.<tr['PI-" and olhl'r rx1r11~. Oprn hou~P ~11.t &. Sun lronl 12·5 P~I at'2t:O l. 2111 Jrvlnl' ,\1 I'., .\"r11111•rt Br11ch. ' GOLF COURSE llAUTY 11nly 6 mo. nld v.·1th all thr buil t-In c:on\'r'M lf'nC'f'<.-bo<aut1· fully arcentl'd ... 1th " aard,n And prh·a tt patio s11u1ttd ntar lhe S11n111 Ana CC. A ' ~!CST SEE." MOUNTAIN CABIN !971")(} lull rnc• 11.nd ju~t rl'mlld,led 1200 ~Q. ft 11.nd.a!l 1t l· llni nn " ,, arp lot. Costa Mesa Office 2790 Harbor Blvd. Days 545-9491 Ni9hts 545-0465 TWQ_ON A LDT llPrll' " i;:Q(l(! rrr1111J propr11..('" or U~I' 11• a n1n!hrr.1n·l111• quar· h•rc (ln-o ~ hrrlrocim 11 nrl nn,. I r th !flr 1ti~ prlrr nf n:-.-F:. only ~12.7flfl' ti,..• n Ab\" on d0\\71 paym,.nt 11fl1"r monthl.1 pa~ mPnU 1n udini; ta.· .. Setter chrck th1A OOL Euta1df! Cost• J\lesa. E~•t ~nu.J e1.. Se,·e:n 3-~~m~ and thr,, 2·bedr00mi. AU separal• unlU 11.1th '"" n1 i.parc:e ShQv.·" a l1n1111tlc r,turn 111th income ot $1.-400 Ptr mo. Submll nn dm'TI nr trade In - 6 UNIT~ASTSIDI llll '1 bdrm. Ii., b~t h, 1'111.Ufl.'. Ju~t P11-Jn t•d. S hou 1 t~ r-turn nt SI I ~oo rrn•~ lnc:nm,.. Grr!'l t lnralll'ln 11ith (lftiy 3"f ''4• r 11.nry f11.rtnr -f• WALKER & ~EE IS AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE . ' Valley Office f!rookhurst aero•• from Llrittrook Hardw1r• 968-337 1 Open 'ti! 9:00 P.M. ~ OCEAN VIEW $17,500 -.: .. I'd\ e he11.p r.f ttxin' RI 'T-lm11g1n" tl'ut" '1 BR, hllh on I hilltori In lh,,. path of rrncrr~• 01"•rlook1nr the city. oc~11.n. 11""' rl!y p11rk and 11Rlk In 111ci gl'llf cnurst~. Let Alone ts 1\·nt th !ht n1on"l"· 8l'l\"r ,,.,. it•~ 4 BR BLDRS. CLOSE OUTS 111 1·hn11 .., 11.rPii .• lu'' :i l"fl--<'hno.t" yflur ov.·n carPtt colon lmntf'd111.1"' pri~sru1on, only $764 totAl cost to \l(U, 3.,,, all others. '16,400. Sl t ,950 IS THE ~RICE fnr lhL~ ll'l' rl~· .1 f;r,, :.! hit h"m"' 1 :'-Ill• frnm bll'11.ch J\lodern h1111t ·1n~. d"'•ri pll,. rllri""l• 1111h rfl'il i;:11.r11s:"' to bcint.. l IR , IV• BATH CHARMER II' )n\rl~. 1)1u"l nti:::bbr.rhl'l1"9 1mmaiiulateh ma1nl.1.ln,d hv t11du!t rtrup!"' F.-.:l re 1v1r!"' rlrtV"l''"l' "'hh ~t ,:lllt 11nd 111.ri;:r rn1 "r"d pllln t'!\rrtnr.klng h"l\Uti!ul rtar )'Ard 11l1h BBQ. SJl.950. Tt.Y IO"l d"'"-n, ' ' ! " " " " " ·: " :· ' • J9 PlkOT-AOVERTISEJI OAILY PILOT SJ ' ' I, [ HouM&lorSale l~I _ ...... l~.__I -_ .... _ .. __,I~ 1 _,,, .. l~I _ ..... I~ !...___·:.:...._'"~-·,_,I bill.___~_, .. ~_··_,!~ I 1~1;;;[ __ ... _-;;::1~_,ie, ' ,. ·' • ·: NEAR UCI. J BR. lam nn .. l'ii BA. 18x31 liv rm. huge brick frplc, mu11ive book CBSt-5, sep ulll. Hrd1~·d firs, crptd, drps. Cov patio. Del. 2 car gar. Cor Jol/fn . ii;l;;;;lrv;;;;:;;lne;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;';;;rv;;:l;;;Mi;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;; Mountal~ o ... rt. Mountain, Ou.rt, Resort 174 Resort 174 •='"'•='°"•=-·=-:.=--=.,;.:,=;;;..;;.;,;. ........ =--.---• .;.;.;.:... 8u11Mu Opportunity HouMt Furnished 300 ' ' ' ·: . .. .. ! . , • $2'.9.950. Broker, 545-3663. '·1 ~~-~~--'-~.::::..._.1 College Park , -·· -LOOKS like new modt>I. J BR. 2 BA. new cpta, drapes, -.-paint. Lge yd. Owner, ~9593 .. ASSUME THIS GOVERNMENT LOAN OR USE YOUR G .I. .. Corona del Mar Cul-de-soc street, 3 baths. Squeaky dean! 893·8533 Bedroom. 2 545-0458 *DUPLEX* Tenific View. <21 1 Bed· rooms, South of High.,.,•ay. Open beamed ce-ilings in upper unit. Copper plumb· mg. 1\ Good Buy~ MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 67S.6459 l,H~u-n_t_ln-g-to-n~e-.. -c-h--------~-- Costa Mesa 1. !\.'lediterranean Ranch 'v/atrium, formal din. BY OWNER rm., Huge masler bdrm. suite, w/garden $25,500 balh & Roman tub, large lam. rm. Only • $43,900. 3 BR .. 2 full ~~~s. attrac!ive 2. Vac!lnt. Spanish t\VO story w/tile roof cour t- v.·eu kl!!pl !n1er1or, carpeting, yard, 4 bdrms., fam. rm. w/frpl., secluded wall to 11.·all, d~-apes. L.arg£' den w/frpl., boat dr., fish pond rm. for pool. fen ced yard \\'llh room Ior $49 500 ' boat. Corner Jot close to elc-3 C · · . I . menrary & hi sChools in . ontemporary tn-evel, .3000 sq. ft. ltv. a rea , v.·est side c0518 i\1esa. Phone 20x30 rec. rm. w/frpl., Liv. Rm. w/cathedral owner for appointment to clgs., formal din. rm., 4 Jrg. bdrms., hrdwd. Stt. 54&-&149. firs .. plush shag crpts. custom drps. Assume 6% APR. VA loan. BRITE & CHEERY 4. Brick front Spanish \v/tile roof, sparkling pool, sunken liv. rm., formal din. rm .. fam. r . N · rm., gold shag ~ Assume 6'h % VA loan New LSt1ng near c_wport $269• mo. Ht~. 4 ~R .. 2 ha_-Kitchen 5. On a hill overlooking City lights. Calif. bltins, .A. heanni;. New ranch w/courtyd 4 bdrms formal din rm carpeting. L.arge fenced · ·• ., · ., n!. . 1 2 d ~ .1 fam. rm .. private cul-de-S"ac. huge lot , 6t;'o ya rk, ~~ 30 ~~ uum CJ Y Joan. $43,500. pa · .Y s ~ 646 4 4 6. OnJy ~700 Dn. & move into this 4 bdrm. CAL'1L ~,, ·l 1 beauty nr. lake, park & beach. Plush avocado "'"2#C. pile crpts., formal din. rm., covered patio RfALTr on lrg. lot. r.tust be seen. Owners leaving Ne1r Newport Po 1I ortlce area. CHEERF'UL homl'", 2 BR, i ba lndry room, gar., lge ~or Professional assistance in buying or sell· mg. back yd. $21.500. $1500 Broker·~ Agent doM:·J~~~~r~~~~ T~ts. CALL JUNE BLAIR 612-8400 14 Years experience (714) 968-7833 l-=co=L~Lc"EG_E_P-AR-.C-1'H"u"n""ficn'-gt:-onc..cBe;;'-•'-c:h,.:C=-.H,.u-n-:cfic-n'"gt'"'o"n'-'B-'"•'-•"<'Ch:..:.::.::.._I 4 BR, fam rm, shag crpls,1---;;...---------:....------- all this on xlra lgc corner ,. lot. JO');, Down or VA or • tradC>. 239 Princton. 823·4205 Open House Sat • SUn 1 !o 6. .. BY OWNER FUR:\llSHED or unfurn. R-2 lot w/2 BR, din rm 11~ ~BA. rK'''' crpls, drpi;, ·Easl side. STJ.000. unfurn. Ph: 642-2'.)52 VETS: Short on Cash? Leaving Country! By 011.'tler, 4 BR, 2 BA, ~ lge lot, 55'xl;>5', al!cy, cove~tio on quiet st. N l c~ Try1his for size -$400. lotol.cosl. A;g family rm., 3 BR., 2 BA., $27,000. landscaped. S25,5CKl. Try $2.000 do1vn, v:c'll carry 2nd. 548-4~. art .j or \\•cekcnds. 3 BR, 2 Ba, \iv &: din, bltins laundry rm. crpts, drps. Coll today!! 545·0458 893·8533 Ocean view , no traffic. l or.--;c---"°"'-~--~~~---~~ S25,500 Owner, 642·~. 1014 untingfon Beach H 1· B c:h \V. 19th 01. un 1ngton ea BY O\\'NER: 2 story, "' e JUST TAKE OYER I 'IXURY LIVING rool. < Br N Ba, Bit ;n•. < BR or 3 k don lox"'y type Frpl. ''"""' pal;o. 1 NO·QUAllfYING rondo locotod ;, H.B:, n;,. gate, storagP area. Xlnt. est area. No bo1hcrsome cond. thru-0ut. 540-nl ;, yard maint.. lovely w/w OWNER. comm l BR cpts BEACH MODER.t~. -Low dn. drps, panUd, gar . $18,700. buys equity. Still like nc\I•. $3j()() dn. b.11.I 7<;r, C;\t l yr. old. 4 BR. 2 BA. Built· 64&-5632 ins. Dish\l'asher. Bcautilul inlerior. S~0.000 area near 2 SHARP REPOS. 3 k 5 rhc-bcaeh for only S27.500. BR's. in xlnt area S3-l ~I . For rleta ils call 1714) 962.j,585 BkT. 54&-m9: 545-3412. VACANT 522)50: 3 BR, 2 car .s:ar, In:: lot. Im· med poss. No dn GI /Lo dn FITA. Raymac SfH. 1351. l'OREST E OL\ON "' P£AlT0/IS • 2 BR, large gar, fenced yd, 19131 Brookhurst Ave. close 10 schools & shop-Hunt\nglon Beach ping. $16,000. 272 Cost.11.l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;,iiiiiiiiii;;;iiiii 1\IE"sa SI. 64&-9136. 5 BEDROOMS East Bluff 1------=---Lrg i;ingle slory. $32.500. FP. e TIIE BLUFFS ,e t'1rcpl, \V /\V crp1s, drp'l, P'I· Homes & lnvestmrn!s tsting 'F1lA loan payable $227. pc'r mo incl tax{'!;;. Your .... , d hod ~.~-.,.. 01,·n w / 11 le. 6L'll15' Joi. (_ , ~!.} ,,,, 1 dbl .i;ar, patio, klscpd, !ool illage Real Esta te '"I.Sf '. } ~11/{' 1'""'· ~ todoy. • .' ·"' rcaJl y ~·· ~lultiple Usllng SC'rv1Cf' 2~1~ Vi11ta Del Oro. NB 64-1-1111 Anytime El Toro '61-4471 ( :::: J 546-1101 OCEANFRONT DUPLEX FOR ule by o\\·ner. nr shop-Let your tenant& make-your ping & school!!, 4 BR, 2 Ba, paymts in this prime ]oca. lam rm w/(rplc, cpts, patio lion. 3 Bedroom Duplex. \\•/B-B-Q, fenet'rl .vd. 3 car Borh units arr ' " fu rnish· gar, $33,500 .. 495-41.33. l'ri and in 1 r "dition. : Priced a! ()nt· 1 Su]). crpts & drps, all bl!ifl!I;. Prl· vate patio for childrens safety. Loads of s!orage. Has pool & lennls courts. All type financing anti on I y $29.000. Hurry and call !or appr. 962-5523-Eve~. 962-5081 COLLINS & \YATIS 1NC. C&W UP FOR GRABS I 3 BR .. 2 ba. plus 500 sq. ft. hobby -family room As- sume r1.fA loan. SIS( per mo. $23.800. Low Down. • CALL S.17-8:io7 * U~lATtD ~ TOWNHOUSE LIVING About lime ro lt>ave th~ ma1nr. 10 someone else. SCf' lhi!l lovt!ly 4 bedroom 2 bath Townhouse. Has all huilliru in QuN'n's kitC'h, Loads of storage thruout. Exceptional buy al $24 ,!rJO. Submit on terms. ror furth- f"r Info, c a I J !J62..5523/ f.vr>s 536.8554. COLLINS & WA TI'S [NC. C&W SHARP FIXER UPPER . • Fountain Valley n1it your orri r, .~., ·: CUTE A S A BUG!! SHERWeeD REALTY : 189&1 Brookhurst f .V. AS!!ume exlslin11t: VA J011 n, 11nd pay ju.~t $168/mo. Sep. arate matter bedrm suirf' firepl, bl!ln RIO &: larg~ roverM patio. Priced for f11s1 Sllle ar S21.~'I()(}. ~JO...ilSJ!'i SHERWeeD REAL TY 189&1 Brookhunt f .V. NIFTY & THRIFTY •' ' • l Bdrm, 2 b11th tC1wnhou~ ' 10 F.V. L!k• "'" ""°'· SELLING 1hrou.i;hout. 011.>ner tr11n:i;. YOUR HOME? fP.r:r«f & owner has lo sell !-~ apprai!lBI . \\'e huy quick. Subm~t on lt'rm~ or ~l!iei;. Personal al!enlion. a~sume FHA_ ldl.n. Pr1~d 25 yn. t'xpcrience. • right at S23.9~. . COt.LlNS & \\1ATIS INC. COLLINS & \\·A'fi"': TNC1 962-s.JZl &t2·0-127 962·5523 (Open Ev.,.) C&W 2 BEDROOMI- • cr.Jl. y $2:t.OOO * · t..ovely Sp.<i nl\h rondo: tlf'l'I ' • cor: dbl 11:<1r! 2 pl~· 1 <'IUh h5tll. s;d trm~: C&W $ Cj)UICK $ WE BUY HOMES '.\fR. fu\SABtAN 8-17·~1 KASABIAN HAFFDAL REAL TY REAL ESTATE : 8'"""'1'; E .... , "4l»l4Sl -~B~u"'Y:;;.:E;,,R:;:;W;,:,:,;,IL"L'-- ' Huntington Beech PAY CASH FOR BULLHEAD !f'.tllity, ancl_ISll\lme,f11A or HANG I 0 VA loftn. 3 or • BR hou1e1. • Any r.ondltk>n. any area. rry ho11.nl 10 1Jt1rf. ·BR, Bk·r . S.l?·8407 3 BN!rm + 1ep. 15' x 18' ¥t'l'lrk&hop or rumpus rm, forml din area. IM""'I)' paint- ed lnsidt, nicely ldscpd lot. Jw.1 redue'Cd lo $22,91).1. All tmns. Call 847-1221. SEY~10UR REALTY, JTlCl Beach Blvd., Hun t. Bch. BY owner. ll'aving 1tate, S BR, 2 sty, vtry cltan, close to grade KhU, ~tarinA Hl,i:h, Golden We11t Colte,c, new, park. :n~-;~ Fl{..\, will consider 2nd. S 3S,SOO . s.1G-1m. 1 BA, :dnt ln!ll, qulal at. _::;:c:;..:,:.:.::.,::::.... ____ ~ VJeant. $32.950. DEAN Sell ldlP ilt'ms MW! Can Fas! result.I are Just a phone REALTY f).36..raZJ 6-1~78 NO\\•! ~111! av.'By. 642-~ SWEEPING VIEW • Double Size Lot * KENNETH * OCEAN 1ide. view, 1te"9 10 or roothilis from giant balconied Jiiii;k & Jill bdrm.: fr.pies. In !iv. rm. & mslr. suite. Brick· -W-patlo:-Owner ~;s offering this ·tmma c. z.ooo .... ~. It. 4 bdrm., 2'h ba. townhouse for only \'000 INCLUDING THE LAND. (Hall Acre) 29 Palms, Callfornl.t TAKE OVER PAYMENTS $30 PER MONTH . BIRK BECK 23312 Via S•n Martine LA9un• Hillt You Art' the winner of 2 t.lckets to the Orange County lntern1tlorMI Auto Show bch, 2 hr, 2 b&, trr beaut. fam rm ""'/lrplc. View Uv • rm. w/frpl<:, waah/dr>'t'r d6hwhr. Avail to July J. S32S 494-4147 ' \VINTER rental, 2 br turn frplc, yd & close to town. $22'5 mo. Call 497-16'18 eve-1. "I l11h '.l 'i·llt!, "SINCE 1~6'.' ht \Vestcm Bank Bldi;. Univl'rsity Par)c (Ad joinin8 Goll Course) Water • , • Utilitie1 ••• StrHtt at the ---'l li ·ull ur· Dey1 !~J..0101 Nlght1 Coll Steve 17141 646-4871 ANAHEIM CONVENTION 2 BR, frplc. lge patio, norfh side, close to beach Ir: shopg. Responsible adult.s. 49'H628. San Clemente • • • • • ··-• • • • • • ;_;_:;-;_:;_;_:;-;:_;_;;;_;_;,;_;-;~_;;_;;;_;;_;~_:;;_~_;:;;_;_:;-;_:;-;:_;I MR':~~n, Oetert. 174 CENTER Lido Isle November 17th thru 21st 1----------·I Please-c-all 647-j678, ext 314 BAYFRNT 5 BR. 3 BA, furn. betv.ttn 9 and S pm to claim Avail. 4-8 mo. $.DI. mo. I _ ...... 1rei -------. . ~ • * * BIG BEAi. LAKE )'OUr ticl.:E-11. {North County Brittingham, Ag1. 675--0123. $57,000 SALE PRICE You own the land on this love-ly panoramic Pacifjc View Biurrs home. 2 BR. I: ";;;;;;;;:;;;~1 Put YiJUr ·sn:1s"· in this toll-free number ii! 54G-1220) N Be h * * * owport •c • large A-frame cabin on a Mobile Home• For S•I• 125 Complete San ·Diego County Mobile view kll. Only $17,700. E-Z lerms. Call Rosa ( 7 1-t ) 536-1738 or write: Spenttr ,. Real Estate, P.O. Box 2828, Big Bear Lake, Cali(. • New Listing * -BOAT RENTAL - 3 BR, 2111 BA, 11 hick to beach, unrurii. if desired. lmmed pou. $225. AllO 2 Br TO BUY OR , borne avail. l\.tcNa~h Realty Huntington Beach TOWNHOUSES fron1 $16,000 to $24,000. l.o\1°, low do\\'n paymC'nl. DEAN REALTY 536-T:ill. . BY O\VNER · California dasllics. lmmac. ?.Tust sell. Sl&-2328.. Irvine IT'S A SHAME to let 1h1tc iv.-o.bedroom houSt' go any longer without a ni('(' coup!!" to enjoy itll horniness, comfort and hospitality. Price, only S30.;ioo. i)red hill B.EALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call An)1ime, 833-082.0 UNIVERSITY PK -4 Br, 2~'2 Ba, Irpl, cpl, drps, fam rm. $31,000. Owner, 833--0313 Laguna Beach HERE'S A REAL "SWINGING HOUSE" And il's •'REALLY BIG." lm["IOsini:i 2-slory arch11cc· lure. w/rll'lailed ex1('rior of \1'ood, stucco weath('red Cf'· rlar shak(' rooni~. \\tell landscaped grounds, \\'ITII FRUIT BEARrNG OR· CHARD TREES, LOCATED IN F'INER CITY OF LA· GUNA SECTION. The ls! }('vcl has huge '29 IT. LIV. Ri\1., INCL. DIN. AREA. 0fle' \\"all has ma.s· sivc BRICK FffiEPI..ACE & .,.,nod panellins;. rtfSTR. 80- Ri\f. SUITE, OVF:R 20 F'T. LONG, \\'/private bath. Con1pl('tcly modC"rn kitehen, has all huit1·in RANGF: & OVEN, DISffiVSHR., OJSP. ETC .• t, \\'ALk'.·lN PANTRY. Ct>nler s1aiN·e11 leads to 2nd !!!Or)' • .,.,'ith 2 brlrm:i;. & ren- lral bi11h. LGF.. fA.i\·llLY OR GA.\lE ROOi\f, open!< to Partlcu· Laguna Beach TOP OF \YORLD CHARM· ER · 3 BR, fam rm, 2 baths, w I 31 x 55' deck & Grear Vie"·: $37,500. Sell or lease w/ ortion. Own<'r. 494-3381. or 491'-1260. LAG R-nY ALE, ocnfrnt, 2 BR. 2 ba. t'ab vu apt. l..&e opt, $~7,500. 21 3/8 19-5225, 499-3005. 4 Br, J ba, lam rm, pool sz lot. Big valley view! SJ!),500 ov .. ner. 49.\-7fli1. Laguna Niguel SOl\.1ETHING SP C. L I AL? Laguna Niguel Terrace. 4 br, 3 ba, fam nn, high bC'am cei!ing11, lge lndscp lot, sprinklers. ou t.side ligh!s, .,.,·alk lo bch. r-.1us! see. Open 1-4 daily. $65.000. 496-.2456 Principals only. OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUN OCEAN VIEW. NE\Y 2 Br. den, 3 Ba 32311 Caribbean \Viii Consider Trade 492·9764 or f213) OL 5"6652 Lido Isle Nord Waterfront Brand new 5 BR., ~1,t balh~. deck & dock, on Lido Nord. $197,500. 40 Foot Lot Att.r. exposed beam 3 BR. 3 ba home w/South paiio. Only $63.000. Bill Grundy, Rltr. :'141 Ba}'llidr, NB 675-6161 4 Br, 3 Ba 60X90 $17,500 4 Br, 3 Ba 70X88 $125,000 Home · Community Information SELL A BUSINESS .,,.....,,,. , _________ _ HOLLAND SUS. CONSIDER renting 1ml b~ Real Estate Wanted 114 .. SALES on 33rd to quiet, worktng. CASH ONLY "'The Broker with Empathy" couple. ye a r I y $180.! For )'Our lot Jn Newport or-1716 Orangi Ave., C.i\ol. 67~7513. ·Costa Mesa, must be mood 645-1470 540·0608 eve.'',~B<l~rm-.~,~ .. -.-P-,-r-"•-1-ly~l.,-n, for duplex or triplex • also LAWN route gross $750. per Until JunP :10th. $185/mo. oldC'I" homes that can be mo, 4 day1 a wk. new equip. Adlts only, no pets. Phone torn down tor new construe-incfuded + truck & ·collect 714:78~. tion. training. FP $3.000. 839-3051 \Viii lease back until you can aft 6. · San Cleme~t• find new home. Stale lot'&· tion, Jot aize, pri~e &: phone ESTBL'D Int. D e 1 i g n VERY priv. beaut. furn 3 number Business. Ne-wport Beach BR. 2 Ba, nr shop11, $275., Act fasl ·as our cuh budget area. 1213) 39S-1576 after 6 492-M.35 or ~92-4308. ls limi•ed to lO purchase• 1,c'~m~·=~~~-~--·I Houses Unfurn. 305 only. CANDY Machine!! for rent.I----------· I Write P.O. Box 1515, New. S5 mo. Alrc.11.dy in esl8.bli1h-Gener•I port Beach. ed place. 646-2Sl6 545-51*> 1-----==-,.---·I REALTOR~ FREEll Cash for your clien!s • need Money to Loan 240 Landlord1·0wner1 land or older home with R-2 __ ..:..,,:.;.....;.;...;;..._..;:...;.1wt' will n?fer tenanta lo ~u or R-3 zoning, We have-SA nLER FREE or ch8.rge •.• Many builders ~·aiting -quick ff· MTG CO desirable tenants on o u r Cl"O\\'S. Call 642-4000 ask for • • waitin~ list. B£'fore you purchase your George t.1aschmey£'r. 3.16 E. lT,l'H STREET ALA Rentals e 645-3900 mobile home -Choose PRIVATE p&rty wants -t BR CASH FOR TO'S \11here you will live-. Smog-home !or own use. Any cond * 90°/o LOANS * (rec San Die<>o County h" (r•lt" o• sol• ) e PRIVACY AssurM-~pac Bach fum util inel $111), ALA Ren1al!t • 64>3900 " or behind pymnl11 OK. · fresh a ir, shoppin~. moon-71' 7c fNTEREST light ))('aches & re<'reation- 1 :~-~~~·~~~~~~~ ,z"c el facilities. Lcr>.·est rates in Oran~e Co. • STEPS to hay or J>C'h-F'urn 642-1171 545-0611 Bach, all util pd. $100. For More Info. Write: ll • l Serving Harbor art'a 21 yfl!. ALA Ren!al11 • 645-3900 Fln1nclal Mobile Home Info. '-;;;;;;;;;;;;::;~ Money Wanted 250 • HARD to Bl'at-2 Br tncd # 7 • --'--:-=-:--...;.""-I yd, cpt~. kids & pc'!~. $135. Busineis $4000 AI..A Rentals • 645-3!!00 802 W. Mission Opportunity 200 10;;, :!.~N~1~R ecur-• OOLLHOUSE-1 Br. Fncd Escondido, Calif. THE PROOF IS ed by a 1st TD on :101XX1 yd , Child/pe!. Util pd. nso. Call This Toll-Free 7.eni:h IN THE'PUODING cashable value, clear. Prtn. ALA Rental~ e 645-3900 Telephone Number: DISl'R.IBUTORSHIPS ap.. cipals only. e WE Likr kl<b & pets. 2 714/747-8410 pointed by the leader, Ne1v-{71f) 536-7511 H .B. BR. Stv/ref. Encl ~r. $150. port lnlernatlonal, ci1n c:oc· ALA Rr.nlals • &ta.3900 l\IEW ADULT PARK Huntington Arbor tl:lobile Home Park. faeitirirs in- rlude: Jacuzzi, card rm. .\IA.TV. outdoor BBQ .. pool, billiard rm. i;huffl<'board, in· dividua.I m<'lrring. Pct St'C'· tion. 19350 Ward SI., llntgn Beach. 968-4445. MOBILE Home 20' x 55' Roarlllner. 3 Br. 2 Ba skirrs -awning11 -porch -shed, etc. SJJ.j()(), 968-3160. peel luerative ramings: Mortgagt_s, Tru.t D .. ,, 260 e LAGUNA Rctreal-1 Br. whil• wo"·ln, only • lew -S •• ----------1 fvlrcf, cpts, child/pet. $150. hours per wct'k n'filling NEED CASH AI.A Rental!" e &t'l-3900 AUTOMATIC ~lERCllAN· OJ SERS ~·Ith nallonally e LOTSA Room.J BR. Sfv/ known • • p U DD ING ref. Kid11/pels \\·clcomP. $175 &. FRUIT CUP" Snacki, Sl.000, OR UP TO $3,()XI ALA Rentals e 645-3900 $10,000 AND !o.10RE See Avco Thrift for .11. Real E11ta!e-Loan. Upon approval, use-lhc money however you e MINI RallCh-4 BR. 2 BA. Huge yd. k'.idl!/pcts/1ngll. $225. ALA Rentals • 64~~ 4 Br, 4 Ba 90X88 $135.000 I ~~!"'~~~~~~ LIDO REAL TY INC. I 3377 Via Lido Reill E11a11, l.8.J and collecting the moncy boxes. Whllt an <"asy way lo make money! If you are nli11b!e., have a good car, 'and can' immed!atC'ly invest $Z100.00. you may be sclect. ed to join our .bccess !earn. Drop us a note sbowini;- your sincere in lerei;t, a.nd we'll 11hnw you how. &-nd name, addres..'I, and phone number lo: Newport Inh.'f« national Di11tributing Com- pany, 3700 Nrwporl Blvd., Newport Beach. CaJif. 9'1660 Jilre. Al50 ask about our unsecured personal loanJI. CALL DAY OR NIGHT ALA Rentals • 64~3900 1999 Harbor Blvd., CM 673-7300 .__ __ ... _._ .. _, _ _, BIG HOUSE .•. ••• SMALL PRICE I ·A_c_•_•_•il;;.•_f•_•_•_•_l• __ ,_50 4 BR, 3 ba., din. nn. Bonus rm. Lge. 101. $.'ii,500. hou.>cml> lowson jA. ---3"116 Via Lido 80 actt11 TAKE OVER all or par!, mountain area, trees, roll ing hills. NO 00\VN, $58 mo. 96S--OCW7. Dept. #30,\ 1'.tONEY 1'.l/\KING OPPORTUNITY IN 620 Newport Cenler Dr. 833-34411 TRUST DEEDS WANTED Cash for 2nd TD •• 673--0f40 •• RENTAL FINDERS 4JS W. 1flli. COSTA. .-U. Hous••*..\~ * 645-0111 "" ;,.,"""-f' ,-. to Lrutillorth -FURNISHED - $80-l.ITIL PD. Nire Bach. !he most un ique tfen you MUST sell th1s 11.·eek! ~.000 have C'Vrr Sf'('n . Approx. 20 or be~t oll£'r. 3 Br. 2 ba. 40' FT. LONG. HA.'\ i\tASSfVE lot. 673-Tis:J. SAN .JUAN CAPISTRANO. 1;, 1 & 2 acre Estate lots. Horses OK. Broker. 493-4774. * BIG BEAR LAKE * Q\vn your <1wn Co l onel Saunders Country Fr I e d Chicken • land, h Id R:, equip'mt. Illnf'~s for ce~ prese"nl owner to sell. C11\J RO!!s (714) 53&-173R or \"7rite: Spenc<'r Rr.al Estah•, P .0. Bo:oc 2828, Big Bear Lake, Calif. I ~ SteP!! to ocean, N.B. w/gar. .~ $100-lfrIL pd , Laguna! Lt'g ~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ •• · • Bach wf loft & patio, 2 blkll oce~an~·-----~ Houset Furnlthed 300 Hou1es for Rent 7 or ~ STOOL \YET BAR. Condominium• WI REFRlGY.RA'l'OR. The Newport Be•ch for tale 160 -UNFURNT$HED - room is decorated in ''OLDE I ·~1~4~36,.-;M.,-o-r~;n-.-,-,-D,-..r~lv-.-1 _.:;.....;......;. ____ ...;.;.;.1 TAVF:RN" tfrsic:-n. w i I h B 2 BR CONDO, by owner, low $11:>-MATURE cpll'l dream! 1 BR h5e, gtv/refrig, cptJ LOVELY. lgc. 4 Br. J Ba. drps. J)lenty of room toi- home, lo rc.•ponsible party chick('n11 &: garden. \VOOO PANELLF:O \VALLS. Y Owner. spac!ou~ Westclif1', CA11-£F.DRAT~ REAi\1 CEIL-4 BR, 21,S BA. lrplc, charm· down paymenl. •. 1· N h · · & 557-9-140 or 968-16?.I TNGS \V/\VOODEN CROSS ng pa 10• ear s opping 1----~----- Tli\ffiF.RS. Lgr. pirturr win-schools. Lov"lY family home w/ref's ., $400 mo. incl. gardener & water. Pr!n. Sl35-2 BR HSE all l"(!(lec w/ cipa.ls only. Owner 54().3862. stove, refrig, cpts, drp5 &: tiow afforrl!I !In AWE IN· in imm11cula1e condition. Income Property 166 PARTNER SPIRJNG Vll'~iV of !hf' val· $43.000. Can a~ume 51h'h EASTSIOE TRIPLEX Active w/ $30,000 CASH ... _. ------ I-·. Wood ,h,tl·-• doo...., loan, owner v.•il! c:i rry 2nd. 2 !-'OR LT. MANUFACTUR ING Balboa Peninsula "J ~"--"' "' n..· · I onl C It"•-~1 Lg BR uni!Jl. Garages, pa-Ge b · ----------1$)5(1.QITLDREN "'elcome? o""n 1., sun deck. Th i 5 .-1·1nc1pa 1 y. a '71.>-J 40 _ Xl ncra1 tnune~ back~nd :-.,. tios, .. ,,lc's. nl oond $470 ,...-1 d r · · · 2 BR. I BA. Igo f,.n,_d -t~. Oean 2 BR ho~ w/ <>ar, un!nur homf' i~ our "RUY BAYFRONT molnrome.Yn only$4·2•500. , .. ~erre · lrllt year!\ in-" ..... ,~.,.., "" 01'~ Til'E i\10NTH" fnr nnly By o11.·ncr . Dovrr Shores. BR rome-ahould exettd S:-.0.000. garage, on Balboa ~en. 3 $17'S-LRG . 3 BR 1% BA. OKER, 64&8226 For intervirw \Yrill' CJaggj. 1~ouses froht bay SlT::i. mo. Bltns pt d ' ~'Id $41 ,950 FULL .PRICE ~pac~l'l 5 sq., oonv. den., INVESTORS SPECIAL lied Ad #280, Daily Pilot, Inq at m Alvarado Pl or -n1-' c,, 'o·k. f"P!I, ga r. '"'"1 . SF.E 'IiJOAY! rg. am. rm., S('p. dining P.O. Bo· l=. "··I• M•··. 86 " ~·=~'-""----- 4 ba ·'I I ,. L-Divorce! " ... .-, '"""" .. -.... phone o"•ncr 213: 1-7788 -GQ:-.;oE T0~10RR0\\I! rm, . .., e ec. 1tcr ... ·n. C -MISSION REALTY Newly derora.ted. PrL beach Mul'll 11e1I now! ..='~·~"=·w~·:_ _____ IMr. White). Pe-ls welcome-. SrNGLES or 2 lamili~ ¥.'t':I· 9.!5 So. coo~t llwy., Ui~ina & dock. 64"400. Duplc:oc at Ne~·fl0r1 BP.ach RESTAURANT. Laguna's J-IO~rEY & Charming 2 & ~come! $310 5 BR'1. Bltnt, Phone (714) 494-0731 STAi~DOUT \•alu":: Br, t .. e, __ c~·~"-":...:'~'~•~m~·:..c."~9--084!-=~'---I most popular, unique Br hse. walled in patio, nr cpts, drpa, trplc, gar. fncd • ,. C 1 II 6 Yrd. pets/ki~ok liv rm, lam rm, 7111 ha, re111aurant. om p I et e y w a. t er. U n t / 1 5, BEACON RE,NTAL 6 + BEDR.OOMS Ovcr lJ(l() ~. Ft. Terrific family home -right nexi to lligh School. There's even II nUn:{'ry, ale'.'OV('S & !of!! nf 11rorage. Huge' family room with rlreplacr.. \\'Ood walls & bramii. r-.1as~ive 11unny hvin~ room has fire- place & bf.'11ms. Spacious deck, lo1v ma1ntcnilrM;.'t yard. $68.000. CnlJ • ..A&tan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glrnncyre St, 4!M-!).17l 5~9-031' HIGH ON A HILL Playroom J8J(2(); 4 bdrma .. :! bAlh.<i, Llvlng rm. w/frpl. Ctlflltll!I, drapes: ~autilull· )y lnrlM:flCI ., fcnttd )'Ard, klcaJ I~ lh3t growlnt •m- lly. $36,ro() Laguna Niguel Realty 130-5050 499.1344 E:\fERALO BAY • Charming contemp. 6 Rr .• tJr :i 1ulle11:'. Gorgt.-1'.JU! Ww. Jt-45.t:m. LOVELY view lot • $<10,tol. TEO lWBERT & ASSOC. 3471 Via Lido. 675-6980. OCEANFRONT. Own your own 1.pulmt>nt. S 3 9 , O O O • W1tllact NeU, Realtor . •!>4-9318. ''White Elephant&'" over· · XJ 1 1-•000 213 24'°'16 bltns, fncd. $.11.500 10% dn. running ....,.,r house'!' Turn equ1pt. nt oc. wo, . . ~ . • . Finders * '4S.0111 ~2366. ,,¥~ gros11 income, $35,000 down. Pu! a httle .. _ m _,. them lhto "CASH" • scll 0 -alo · B ~ '100 ,._ F BY o""'Tli'r, J BR, J BA con-them thru Dally pl lot '""' nomiCfl. kr. 0 '"""' • LA!vl~ • sell those baubles IXER UPPER do, Nr Hoag llospital, Cla~lf~. 64Z-567S. Thi' "Yellow Pages" ol for "bucks" 00 Oassified Old 2 irlory home w/attlc. I classified &12-5618 642-5678, ' S140. 3 BR + lnrmJ clin nn. 32,500. 645-3522. 645-3438. :=:=:::;;;;;::;;;;i;;;;;;;;;.;;;;:j;~· ;;· ;· i;i;;~;;;~~~~~;:=;:;::;=:;;;::=:; NC'eds 80me work. Kid~ It Newport Heights pe-tll ok. e©~~lA °'if}ss 77~7330 Agent. CHAR?.1ING 3 BR home, fril _. bea.m clng w/u11ed brick FrH Rental Service . !rplc. !om mt, XIT• 1•· ~·. The Puzzle with the Built-In G:huckfe Shp 3 B<I. 'B•. •h•g <Pl. b)I beaut. krrit ytl, lmm11.c cond. Ins, fenct'd yd, pct11 &. chlltl- SlJ.950. 645-5322. O R.eorronge l11tters of the re1Vnlk0K. ~"!~aRin S225 p/IJI. San Clement• lour ~rombltd word• t... a er &. ..... -.:, llni 8424155 low to form four simp!., words. 3 Bedroom plull Large Yard * • OUTSTANDING * * l T U B N 0 T $185 Per fo.1onth l..nvelY 3 BR, new cpt1/drpll, 1-...,.:....:;....:-.....;....;;..,;'-..--I Broker 5-1&-0072 Open ~ many xtras, 111rium, ocean ·1 l I I 11 I Balboa P.nlnsul• vlew, llllking $39,800. • • • • • Soulh Coast Realty (114) 493-13-16 I R E T B H I ' BY Own<r.' nc .. ,...-;. I I' I I ' ·J \'it"\\'. 40:l "~. A"'"· San Juan. . . _ • S41,900. Tenns. ~294. ~~ An• Heights I H U SE E ·1' ~ Tho compu1el' .In my o~a OWNER SAYS I' I I I J fu~t l°'t as job!oa-ino- ''SELL •T! !!' ..-------_,ttune.. · Shari> 3 btdroorn· on la.f1'1' lo!. ANume 7~'iii VA !Olln. Tot•l paymt1 s·186. mcnth. PriCP. ttduced lo $25.500. Call now for de-t11llll. FULLER REAL TY M6·081 4 An)'llml' lf1 a brtee .. .-ell your 1tcm1 with ~1'1'. :;oe DAILY P1LQt..Cl11.nltlf!d. 642-!'i6711, I G/lt-YNE .C I ' 11-ll> ~-,~;,;:,.:....;;;_:;,.;:.T,-J 0 ('.omp•t• tti. cJttiddll q~Mf 1· I' I I I' rou!~:Tr!Zt:?~.:. ~ PRINT NUMBERED LElTERS 'V IN THESE SOUAR~S 6 ~F:.t.'~i', tmus 10 I I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFIED 700 Near Bay & Bcac:h. br11nd new l BR. J BA $450 mo. • 6'13-G450 * Corona del Mir NICE. l;:·,·-B-R-. -,-.. -.-.. -.,,-'-,! duplex. Ocean JiM of hwy~ S300 mon1h. OEUGHTrUL 2 BR. home. Large patio A-yard. Near Ba.yskl~ Dr. $275 mo. AtSO -Blllm Island rental!! av•ileble Sallabury Rt'a.lty 673.-690n RUSTIC 3 bedroom l den, 2 b11.1h, hl!·lns, f lre-pla~t. w11.lk to town . Art. 675-4~. BACHELOR Apt. UIU pit Pool .\ ptL cntnnc~ 1100. ~~1 or &IMlTI. r I • 1 I " -. ' . I • r " . . -. ' . w......,.-10.1m ~[ _,.._ ]~ ~~!~~~,;~~ Unfum. , 30J House• Unfurl\. 305 Townho\11• \IJll"f!\< 335 "eh· Furl\. 360 Apt, Unlllrn. MS Apt. Unlllrn. MS Apt. Unfvrn. US Aiif. •Unfum. ·-.,..~~~~~~~~ ~-~.,..--,,.-~-·- .... ,~ .......... J~ [ .................. ][~] [ _,., .... , .. -1~ 1-,_--·I~ ~"'~'"'"""" Apt> .. t:urn. or Unfum. ·d•I M.tr Huntlnfton a .. dt Huntln;ton' Be•tH ~ C•ta· Mete B•lbo• Penln1ul• Coif• Mei• Coet1 Met. N~wpett Be•ch mo r..p 3 Br, 2 Ba db! 3 Br condo, 1"'° be., poo!I, TOWNtiSE ~r leaff, 2 BR. U'nbellev•bly BeautiM ;*;*--;;Ni;..,.;;;-):Ba~y;"'.•oe.B;;,;cich,h: I :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;-;..l-:;.;-BEA;;;:;t11'1FUL:;;:;;:;;;;:-l;:lt";2;";BR.;;;;-SEAp.lFF Manor .f\P14-1 Br _c_ .. _t_•_M_•_• .. •-----1 patio, bltna, p.r. cluil '""'· .p.nge W/ Wilh<<idry•r. blw; pool VAL D' !SERE Gan!en Apia, brand new I Bedroom CHILDREN eon .. ....,.,,. Gard<• Apt& 1140.~2 )ldrm, ""°' Crpts, THE EXCITING rnilld/ptt ok.. 675--370!! eves .wrap, nr the beach. facil. $I65 mo. C~) 892-m.8. Adu.Us -no pets. Flo"·en pn,p apt. $250 mo• e e e NEW e e () Patios, frplc, pool. Sl51»165. drps. bltne; gard dJ.l:posal. PALM MESA APTS. ~·knd.. ' 962-09i!f), ! 5 pm. • N•wpor"t Be~h ewl')'Wbere. StrMm & 673-M50. . Call 546--5163. 1525 Placentia Ave. Ask M1NlfTi:S TO NWPT. 1{"2 Br, Orp1/Crpt1 .2\.BDRMS.\ 1U' pa:tk. W!W Wa.terfall,'5'poo!Rec.Rro, , \YJLlA PEDRO ·~ ~. i'M aboutouzdl~ 5-&8-2682. 11JRN. OR UNJ'URN, "t;""arb•ae Oisp. '4vaU. Nov. drapes... Hn pt'\IJ C19n. * All F•clnt~ Pool * Sauna, Sets ]...2 Bdr:m. Furn-2 Br $150 Util'• Paid. On , $ .aw. J.1;nmac. 3 BR, 21" e .NOW OPEN • Un~levably l~ apll, h -l' G ·.~ ~ 3 BR 2" bo. 2 ca .,.,..... U.,,,, ..... from $135. SEE IT: Peninsula, IU' Ferry. Adults, M ~BAJ,, crpts, drpJ. Avail. BRAND NEW l B• 11.i 2 pool, Jacuui, elect bltiN l.5th. 6i~2698. anlentr It, water paid. £..,. " 79' • • .,. ·---• ...,...... > t-j m Call SST 7768 • • "of lh=-,,-"7-.;:-±::--==:I appt. (213) 339-7882 a.ft 6 3 BR.,. 2 ba.,. 3 CCU: g~. 2XJO.P,anons, &t2-867Q. no peta. 613-9749. JU$r'~1 I ~ "! - ' Br ~. ALL uTn.~ 1.bag ttpts, drps, sauna BR, 2 BA. din rm, Harbor pm. ' REALTOR 54.8-6966 1 BR ·tum apt. ·Senior NEW 2 BR. crpt:s, -drpt, $ipt~~ .'+Deluxe 2. e;, 2' 8.1.* PAID Prlv patio billiard etc. Adults, no peta. Vlb\'. $350/mo. ~mm. pool citizens. Ground level, in-[rplc, aara.e. Yeari,. Call (10) 2 BR, f l'~U ·a ~ts, no pets. Act 546-tl4l.. nn, heated pooJ wi jacuril, SINGLES ........ From SJ "I park. &.\1-3894. ' I EXCEf'.TIONAL value, 3 Oupl•x•• Furn • • us 1ula1"1 panel h@at, priv encl Owner 67:H&U att 6. Must ... to apP,..;r.t.1 • Ml.80N Gi.iwENs • Jl_lolge clouts deep plle car-1 BED RM •••••• From n BR, :I ·BA, tarn m. nr . , turn pe,tio, revolving shelf Near Ne........,. Back ··~. ~· B"' iii: -;·n.a. '•Cpt/•-, pettnc-lush -landacaplna ·2 BEDRM ...... From J1 •Costa M_ •.sa , Brookhunt ' Adams. S255 New.v.rt Be.1ch ..,._.. -.,,, • "" 7ll 9ft< "'I"' ' ..... Ydu' ight th< • u d --,,.... retrlg, new stove, parking. C~ron• del M.r ~hools, parks, YM~. Bof• ~· pJltlQ. S*· &U-68ll. Adulta. You .MU.t See Thli . re r . Y re n JTdR, 2 BA. lge f~ rm&. mo.S28-3567aft6-P!.t. . Oceanview. J BR, i•B.A. No peta. F.xtra qu l et. Cub, shoppg, frwYs etc.· ."' · One! 2Jla2 Bitch' St., NB. -<pnced1"1561MesaDr. i ~c~1v 15 "; 35w~:~: 3c:!~t. 2crp~d. ~~~~~~ Winter•~~ ms. ::::· 173 Delmar, CM. ft~y ~e~a~ g~~~~ ;:4~1~1U::~t .;14:AND NEW ~ ,;~i.;~~= Blvd. oillli board, brick BBQ, bar&. sMpplng. $230. M6-769.t $30 Wk. Up Apts. .. from $18;,. 2332 Elden 11tt or , ID1S2 Santa Ana Ave (ACI'Olll • ct'.EAN VIEW Fro Sl .:reawood: furn. Bl.g crptd _ D_,plex•• Unfum. 350 $l ... $25 Wk. Mertel Rmt ~· call Manager~ Dav-.J BR Unturn apt. Util paid,, from S.A. Country Club) 1 BR.·Funi.:'6r Un~ 0 '!po6! ta.ble size playroom lrvlne Coron• del M•r $6 Nlglit & Up is 645-1182. $145~ 54M:9&1 •• Spac)ous 2 BR wilts. :::s, count W sh.identa. . F l 'bar on cul -de· sac In SUNNY ACRES ON TEN Ac."R.D -'"'"""':":'""::':°::"""""'"'I;;..;·;,·;·~~~~;:~= ~LACES. Priv ..pattqs, . PLAYA.'l•tb & Walnut. HB ~College Park. S300 mo. on 3 BR. 2 ba., atrium .... $325 bPEN daily/vacant .IE re'acty MOTEL 1 I 2 BR. Furn, 6 Unturn. DELUXE 2 JJR 1 ~A. new •~ag crpu, olldl ol doeets. Heated ~ · · '11rL" l.'a&e. ~~3446 or a SR.~* ba., fam .... S325 fOr occupancy thls.4 BR. 3 Ftreplacea I prlv. pado&. AP'RTMENTS · c1rps.. bJtit1s nr OCC oar Pool Ad . Ita Ma.riagt2 ' c,-,,., bo ·~~ This ad-worth $5 on rent. n.....1_ T -•-Co In..,.......... .., •1-~·-. "'7' ~·1 '...,,, _ ;_ . . . J>-klDe: ua.ELCOMEI ~· 3 Bit. 2 ba, nus rm .• ~ BA ·11<1me. O::lzy frplc, aree,t 2376 Npt mvd CM ~ .. · 9T::>5 ~-UW,jll e,...... ll • 1 PAY .. Air Cond • Frplc't _ 3 Swim-' ,. ""'mu ,,.,, "!;tu ••;,a.._. "f ,.... (]11,1,\CULATE 3 BR. 2 BA. 3 BR, 11i!i ba, fam ••••·• i 350 pallo, no pets. Annual l,:se ·• .,_.. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-2811 I Poo'-H alth S *~=o=E"LU~XE=-.~8-,~,,~,,-.=".•• 2· BR l BA crpts drns, Movo Jn Today! 2 Br $13!1 & ...:.,,. bl'•• dJ·••·•hr cpl• 4 BR, 2* ba, film .... S350 $3'75. ~ or 644-4430 ~ 1 MO'S FREE RENT IM&cArtbur nr Cofl.i: Hwy) mT•nnlng ,.._.~" G' ... Bil" cM ,....;,.-;,_ stv/D/W• .~., 'b1t1... d&hw* N; .,_;:.... 1159. P~. Pets ok. AU ex· ~ ,__.... ..... u"'1• ,~'1 'd ,,.:i'. 4 BR. 2;, baths. family room, I BR Qui t •·-dufh . NASSAU PALMS ,, _ _, 1Room._,.,. • ame -~ .. .:.1:'r. .,150 .,;7958 ' H,:..-, fl?O/mo' Adlt ,...._ tra10 1'1382 "A" Kttlaon Ln1 )le patio, ow..,, e~~ ~... Turtle Rock ••••..•... S375 e • ma ..... " a . 177 E. 22nd Sl ~5 * BAYFRONT ua..n.1 • ...,,..,,..""" ...._ ., • .,..... -·r· ""' • s., no 968-7510 842-6235 ~ major shoppl1li, all 4 BR 2 bath f•m<·lv -m No pets. No children. $210. I BEDROOM LARGE 3 SR 2 BA bllns peta. &ci.4381 Aa;ent. or ' , ·-· Shady Japanese Elms -Pool • BAYVIEW f'ROM $156 ' ' ' L1guni Be1ch :gchools. $250 mo. lease. Call TurtJe Rock Hills •••. $400 67.5--0114 aft 6PM. l "R. 1150 "URN A . th 1 t . "EO\TERRANEAN trplc, dahwshr, nr shopping. WATER.fRONT new 2 & 3 ..;:;.... ______ •i MS-1~83 fter 4 ~ pm or ., £ nnounc1ng e qu e open111g M .,, .. """" ... ~ 1 a : . . WE HAVE O'I1-TE'RS Cost.1 Met• 2 Br. S16S FURN t Ba A · 1 Encl. 1arage. 557-8188. '°""',..,._,to $4p0; al9o, BR, MODERN deluxe 2 itOry; wkends. Boat -Camper Storage ~dults~:a, th:~li;htl; le~~ VILLAGE Huntington Beach block.to beach-$325. · -·view apt. 2 br, ii.. ba, 1u ~3CEPTBR 1,o'Ba'ALLCoYl'·gCLEo ParANk 1 .... !0%snew;:m:ecc::n~· * AVI; now·l .IE 2 BR. Furn. quiet opening ol Bayview 2400 Harbor mvd., C.M. FE.ASTHorvBLaUthFF .. all tor 6'7S-197Z ~ck1, .:,.!lk toAdul~· s~ • • • "' -r. ' ' '· ' Pool R Rm Gd •--N Apts, for famil ies. tn4J 557-ON BE'ACH! UXUI}' 2 Br., ....,e, •<Ml· ..,, ~ ho_,, 1 ·-e 1antlly rm.. pall<? &: fenced yd. 242 . · ec · · ""'· o .....,..., 2 4.._"'12 me • .__.6 ' chil.,.n or-• ''"582' Call 1n<11 644-5555 RENT•' OFF!,.... 'iii Ba., bltm, 1rplc. 2 car ·:;:.:.:::::..· ------J big double prage, nice Flower, · r-• · vror ... l'U,, l.-L gar, pool, rec are a, Newport S.ic:h ~·ards. $250. per mo. Call 1 Month Frff R•nt FURN 2 Br. Children ok. No _OPEN ___ io_AM_T0 __ 6_PM __ 1 J "BR Unfum Fr. $230/mo. 644-1405. \; 'SllS:-5880, Heritage ·Re a I "SINCE ls.Ki" 3 BR: 2 ·Ba. $2"IS. 54S.1309 pets. Heated pool. Lndry * BRANO NEW, Deluxe 3 Furniture" Available Diute. (Open E"·es.) lst \Vestern Bank Bldg. L•gun• Bt•Ch nn.126 Monte Vista, CM. bedroom 2 bath, !lttplace, * • * * CarpeU-drap!'li-dishwasher WESTCLIFF 2 BR • $235 MONTH Universit)' Parle builtins, OCEAN VIEW. El Puerto Me11 Apt1 heated pool-saunaa·tennls " -• • Days 833-0101 'Nights UPPER Dt!PLEX, 3 br, '2 _D_•_n_•_P_o_int-----· I pool, jacuzzi. Avail. Dec. I * * * * ~ room-«'l!an views $185/mo. Adults only ~ No pets. 1728 Bedford -Ln. ••548-i;iJJ. &f_es& Verde Ken Koll home ba, cpt, dps, view, 2 bllts $325. Ask tor Jerry or Peg, 1 Bedroom Apts. . patloe-ample perkinr '\1ith 2 1irepl 's, \V/w crptg, bch Jse $300 mo. 494-1949 ** SINGLE, 'IV, pool, pelt 644-7270 or evn: 644-7721. Secarity guards. PARK Newport 2 Br, 2 ba for Sub-Leue. Harbor & Bayview. Close lo pool & spa. 644--4524. 'drps & 3 huge BR's. Ed Rid-* UNIVERSITY PARK * 4g.i.'.3458' ok. Dana Marina Inn, 34lll $130 4 up incl. utilities. Aho' HUNTINGTON .fill' Rltr. 646-88'11. 2 BR + den N'pt BclJ.,$315 •11 ,eo..,.......,t,,H_"'Y7-'"-c,--"7--LUSH cpt, retrlg, range, cln, fum. Pooi &; Recreation ~ASTSIDE-4 bds., 2 batb, lBR. 2 ba t'nhousc •••• '325 L1gun'--J:fl 1 HuntlrJgton lle•ch --1 Qr+ l!\l«b'. Yrly, $225, ar@a. Quiet Environment. PACIFIC ,Wplace fenced yd., nr. 1 BR. t .den, 1 ba •••• ~.nso YOUR hoice of 2 "NeWr -~RE=E~-.-,il·lf-;,.-,--1--8-R furn U desired. Utif pd, OU street parking. No Otll- aclV>Ols. Available Nov. 4 BR., 21h batl1' ........ $350 td'.'d 1 b nd adlts, no pl.I Nov. 15 dttn, 00 ,. ... SZ1 3 BR 2 ba. homes $1Ji0/32S ,for up exes, ra new $130/Studlo $85/ Block to 642-9890 -roth, Yn. lease req., 5 · " 1275. 3 BR 2 'BA Crpt & drp! beach. 3>l·I01h St. 536-l'm, Also Garages For Rent '-. Opt<. -b"y For 2 BR llh ba. home .... 1. • ' ' 1=1961 ••-1 A ~''f\. on "' " ' .'. Bltn &ppllances. 2-car encl 536-7282 or 536-131i6. LARGE 4 BR, l% BA apt. ;r.n-...... p e ve. ~ .. call M8-lS62. e· '. · d h·1r garage. Pvt. patio & yard, =~~~~~~~-frplc, cpl&, drps, all elec Costa. Meu. VACANT 4 BrDROO'.\.I 3 . . . re I Panoramic view of en~ $l35. LGE mod 1 Br. CpU.. k!I. Annual Ist. s 3 7 0 ........................ ... 81\1'R !0\\-nhou.se-w Ith. . Saddleback Valley. Even in-drpa:, redec, nr ocean. 2lB !M9--3262. ~ts. drapes, and use of REALTY eludes all exterior main-Chicago ~l506/M7-5lG9 ~ ~e=E-A=UT~. u=.~,-.. -,-,=a=r-,"',=1;~ .. -. fAJRWAY ttereation hall & pool. Univ. Park Center, Irvine tenance. pool & tte facµ. BACHELOR APT. frpl, beam ceil, bltns. Blk to lease it for $225. Call Agent .Call Anytime, 833-0820 Only $265 per mo on year $100. 646-2687 beach. $285. 673-5.548. ,, 5'16-414I , lease. 837-5506, Bkf. L.1gun1 Buch 2 BR PENTHOUSE, bltns, l ~R hou:t 1cpts, ~rps, Lagun.1 B}llch Duplexes, 355 $iiS r.IO. \JP; $40 \Vk .. Bach. dsh.,·hr, fplc &. l!undecks: carage, pa • a""ll, 1 ove, . heh, Furn •. or Unfum. Utll pd. Calor TV. Cttscent l=~=~22S=l=·~~--,,-=,..-, rdrig, util~ room, central PPESTIGE area, Jll'.lV IOC". -$225. lse. 646-6961 or spec ocean vu, lse, lovely General Bay. &h .. 49-1-2508, 675--4367. DELUXE Du{>le:it 2 BR. 2 ~1240. older. clean. roomy home, CHOICE loc. 2 Br, 2 Ba, pvt Ba. 323 Jasmine. $200. z'"'ii. garage, patio, crpts, cpts/drps, $325. 495--4764. *' MRS. W•ILLIAM * patkl, ,gar._ S200 mo. 1st & 673-6612 las!. 5.18-209!>· aft 5 PM 2 BR Twnhse, blhus, dshwhr, YILlA APTS.. 2 & 3 BR's Prtvate patio pool • lndiv. Jaundry tac.' Near Orange Co, AJrport • UCI. Adults only. 20122 Santa Ana Ave. 7ll OCEAN AVE., H.B. 1 BR, apt. 1 Bl• lo Ocean. (714) 536-1487 Ne.,.,·ly decor. S.15 O Imo. Otc open JO am-6 pm Daily Yearly. 646-1632. WILUAM WALTERS CO. ;;B;;;RAN='"o~n::,w::-4;-;B;;R;-.-2"'ba'°. Studio. 7 doors lo Ocean. FOR Lei.le: C.Ondo 2 br, 2i.. ba. Complete bltns, n>frig, ~UIO=,;''"'~·.,,y.,.,.,"'"ly::. =-=.,163::1..o. w a 15 h r/dryr, crpt/drpg, YEARLY beach rental, new. frplc, pvt gar &: PRtio, pool. ly decorated 2 BR. lmmed SJ i p .avail. 6 7 5 -3 1 O 8 , occupancy. 832-1825 846-3336., 01;'".=a~uc=10~,,.-,-oh'",-,-,-.,°'Jy-no-w LARGE 3 BR, :l BA, garage, secluded porch, quiet, dead· 2 BR 2 BA $245 yrly. 675-3126 aft 6pm. l'lld st. ChHdren, pets con-0LA=R~G=E,..3~B-r.~2~Ba-.-Ou~p7le-x. sidered. $175. 2 BR also !rplc & bltns, %: blk to bch. $ISO. 76Sl ElliJ, Apl A. $300 mo Y,ly. 644--7214. 847-7547 or 847--0932. 'LAR.,..,"G=&-'""•"e"'R'""nt"'""oce=sn,,..,& Ciil>s, stove & reirig. Quiet L•guna H.ills CORWIN l'E'frfg avail. 2 carports. tropical selling !or adults I I Br & garage close to shpg pnty. 1 blk 10 shops. $169 NE\V WORLD -3 BR, 2 ~~· 19132 Biddle Dr Yt & ·beach, north end, $190 $195. 673--4447. 557-8717 LARGE 2 bedronm apart-* OCEANrnONT 1 BR, li-16-1765 or &\6--4·130. priv. patio, pool pnvil. Irvine yrly. 499-1708 UNFURN 2 BR, nr beach & EL CORDOVA ment with built·lns. Near Sl5() / mo. Yearly. Crpts, bay. Avail Dec 5th. $199.50. Yearly. 673-1909. Mir. Mn. Joachim, Apt 3-A ~ * $145. * · . _ Volleyball ~rts. B 1 t n s, You are the wlnMr ol. No 1 B h shopp'g_ SlS5 per mo. _.1.hoP'e!I!& & schools. CHILD-d-. '"·5307. TOWNHOUSE 3 Br' 2 Ba. f(!f l & w/w c p t . 2 tickets to the -wpor , eac • 548--5003 '* A-• ..-¥ _.. Pool. Kids -, pet ok. Avail $24;/~o. 96 2-9 s 2 t or Or•nge County e BRAND NEW e "'l'ts• REN *·~36.1731 .* "L°'G.;,E-.2°B"r-. •2~&.,."""Y'"n,..,-1,.'°'. RES-ORT LIVING . FROM $125. 1t'a Oakwood Gar de fun, fine neiahbon Apartments ••• and It' ious package. There'• milli6n In recreation , • • swimming, tennis, bllliardt, heaJth clubs; saunu, pm: shop, indoor golf dri · range, clubhouse, etc. custom decorated singles' 1 & 2 BR. Furnished &: U furnished. No lease required. A-1odela ()pen Daily 10 to 8. OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS I (Resort Living .far Single &: Married Adults). NEwPORT BEAOI P.Jwled. $715/mo. Ph. 96S-£'.ri6 International 2 BR 2 BA •-I d"h LRG 2 story, 2'BR 2 BA den, New 1 " 2 BR Luxury ApU. '"""""'=""""'="''="'""='="""' ·si~1mo. 215 _Prospect Avt., ·~~6'&8. Auto Show ' ap.., w la "T, crpts, drps .IE 2 car gar. Dshwhrs, xtra closets & cup.. Nt.\.\'pQl't Shores 494--9502 L Una Nigu.I huge d08ets, pr1v patio, 128;/mo. 544-3124 644-1040 L.--->--1 BEACHWOOD APTS. 16th at Itvine t •BR. Home, lrg din area, ag lit the heated pool, billlafd nn, ja-........ ua, uxury ihag crpt'g., Brand new 1-:Z.3 BR. * blk CLEAN 4 BR, 2'n! BA, studio 6-15-00Xl or 642-817 ,l:lrps, stove, dbl gar, lrg NfGUE'L Shorcs-SJM!c. New. ANAHEIM cuzzi & bbq's. ALL UTIL-3 Blt, 2 BA, cpts, drp&, bltm. beaut. rec facll & PDOL. to BEACH! Cpts, drps, bltns, apt. 1 blk to ocean. Nice 1 , #ooded fncd yrd. Nr UC!. Priv. beach. Ocean View. 4 CONVENTION ITlES PAID. See at 10102 .gar. 609~1 Po Inset Ii a · AduJts e No J>e'tl. trplc. 125 16th SL, HB.. area, $300. yryly. 673-2455 Sftl6. Util pd. ~8--66M. BR. S390/mo. A1•ail approx. CENTER Blrch St. (nr. Orange COiin-S275/mo. 67S--6354.' 2077 Charle St. 6424470 847-3957 iB~RAND:'i;ii(-~n;,,.;;c:,di,o~tux;;:e:.,2i"'iB~r ... l "iy'l'11'l5~Ti':Ai"'!D~E~L~M:'l!:E!'lS":A~'J ~'BR. apt-garage. No pets Nov 20. Ph. 835-18S9'or get November.11th thru 21.st ty Airport, Just \\'. of Pal-I BR Partially furn. Newly INDMDUAL PRIVACY NEWLY DECORATED 2 Balh patio yearly. Ap.1rtmints JJZ..E. 18th SL 01 lnqwre key from l\!r. Bates at Please call 642-5678, ext 31J i!ades Rd). Mil' 557-4:246. decorated. Nr. Sh 0 P' g Dix 2 Br w/1ar & 1tor. 1~ Charming 1 BR. duplex, new 675--3800 1 & 2 BR. Furn. & Uni. Dlsh-li~ 4 or ph. 645-2451. Broad1moor Homes, Lag. be~een 9 and 5 pm to claim LG£ I Br furn W/gar, $150t. center. Adults . .C 9 9-14 6 0 Ba. adults, crpts, drps, carp, drapes & paint. Lovely 3 BR Condo in Bluffs "'asher • Stove &: Retr1g -~VT patio, tmclos~d garage, Nigue · your tickets. (North County Winter 1.se: m:z W. Ocean-.. AM /PM. bltns, fnccl yrd w/patio. garden sum:>Undlngs. Mature Shag crpl'g·Lrg Rec ctn!er, J BR, Crpl.! &: drps, Sl65. M•sa V•rdi toll·free number is 540-1220.*) fron t lnq: Apt C aft 5 wkdys 2" BORr.1 nr beach. Bltn&, Wtr pd. Gardener _ melnt. l)<ll\H! only. 1130. '548-~ ~~~~~ 0~~563t;,ase , RENT Starts Sl5S fu.'.169o, · · . • • · , , * , or anytime wknds. 67>75~. pool. $225. Also pt."r'tlhoUM" Call betwn 1 & 5, 6J6...4UJ. DELUXE 1 BR wlth pool, Tu'stin & M1sa Drive \~:;;;~:,..-.,..,,,=-;;-=13 BR. 2 Ba, s24otmo. 1st & OCEANFRONT corner of ·llpt. $~. 675-5»1; 67>353.5 ~9 Santa Ana Ave No E 1155 $13512 BR, SI55: 2 BR plus Newport Het'•hli '* 545-18 SINGLE hou&e on lot, 2 BR. last mo's + SlOO clean dep.1 l[tl • 55 * ,~car gar., No pets, Sl.85 Clt>~e to s~hls k ,;hop'g. ApwtmtnbforRMt • ;:re St., 3·BR, 2 Ba. $375. 2 BR. Cpts, drps, bltns. gar., VILLA CORDOVA.. 2 ba, $160. 1303 Walnut, set ----·--- m, o."G42-8766. 5-;a-6084. . very lge, beaut furn. Kids.&: KUndeck. No pt'ls. $210/mo r.lj:r. ~12th St .. H.B. * * Nice 2 Br. POOL. Gar. PtlS ok 646-6591 or 64~111 7• 0737 e SUPER ·2 BR e -, Bltns. Cpt, drps. Adults, no TV ROom. 3 BR, 2 BA. Patio, •TM:O.!ACULATE? 3 Bdrm, 2 · · · incl. util. 6,,.... · Month to Month, f170 LGE, I br apt, encl gar, mar· pelll. SlSO. &42-8001. l!:tnt1l1 9BQ, fncd, cpts, dhl gar. Bath. 2· FRPLC'S. Bll-lns. Apt1. Furn. 360 3 BR,~ BA, frplc, patio, no $175--Util pcl. 1 BR. Garage Gas Heat-Gas Cooking-rled couple or 1 single S230: 548-9536. Leue $250/mo. Avail 1118-. pet&, l hlk lo B ch• apt. Stv/retrig. 41 5 ~l Gas Hot Wtr, ALL INCL. adi.ilt. $125. 842--4549. Sant• An• . *LGE. 2 BR. foo:I yrd. $150. Ph. 540-fi094. G•neral $250/mo. on yr'• · 1 • e • Dahlia. 67f>..4092 alt 5 pm. 232.l Elden Ave., CM. 2 BR. Lrg Priv patio. Blfiu, :;;~~~~~~~-Roomo ~~·' 335 u · lty 67l-6788· 646.0002 crpts, drps. $130/mo. ·No .. C ~W::ANTE-::=::'.'.:0------.f nto.-I•"l"'re n1vers Newport B1ach Rent Beautiful FUmiture 1 BR F til pd 'th Cotta Mesa pets. I503 Alabama. AN'J 8( BEAT P&sl mlddle-ag No, .. A'. or 642-8029. . for &!1 little as urn., u " wi __ l MO'S FREE RENT woman 10 rent room & share 75 C l/Lr f d BEAUT. Modern Townhouse . ONE MONTH g11.r., ocean view, Balboa NASSAU PALMS 53&-ti785. lovely Corona de! i'l1ar home · 3 ar, 1l a. r~ g ence 3 BR, 21-1i BA, Frplc, patio, Peninsula. 968-1793. * BRAND NEW * 177 E. 22nd St. &i:i-3645 I --.-CH=E=z="o"'R°'O'"A'°'PTS=:-. -=e=-• SINGLE STORY be companion wi!h same · yd .()n Victoria, c:.t. Call pool 2 car gar all bltins 2 BR Duplex. Frplc, bllns, 'iii Shady Japanese Elms -Pool 8234 . Atlanta. 1-2·3 BR's. South Sea Atmosphere per mo. P.O. Box ™ Qi?\-f week days (2131 446-0673. crp~. drapes. Lease $295'. complet• with blk to beach. Nice. $260/mo La Cost• Apts. 1 BR. $135 UNFURN W11sher/dryer. 536--0336 2 BR. -2 BATII 9262'j. · ' µRGE 2 BR house, big ~l. your 100"• Y "· 64' rn• 1 & 2 BR, blbl!, swimming 2 B0 114·, UN~'RN Pool. Private closed gar. Carpets &: dl'Pll b k rd "'ill redec $135 11 r.,,. .,... ... pool, lanai, bar-!).que & gar-n. ~u Alr Conditioned ac ya • · · J-IARBOR View 2 br & convt. Purchase Option 2 BR $185 Winter, $235 yrly age. All utH pd. $150 to $170. Boat -Campet.Stq::age -2 ·&: 3 BR's. $145 UP. Patio, Private Patios (l!772-0I4l. den 2 ba, w/w crpt, drps, Ind. item selection, ind ul il: 1019 \\'. Ba.y Ave, Adults, no pets. $160, NEW 1 BR. pool, children. MORA KAT HEATED POOL :l BR house in court, cpls, blln·,, patio, frplc. comm. 24 Hour Oelv. 673-1674 . 354 Avocado, 01. 642-9'108 POOL SIDE Apl1, 18S81 Mora Kai Ln., ~ LRG room. linen furn. washing faci!Hies avail. employed adult. $7 1 536-1742. ciw. no pels. onE.' small pool. $350 mo. Eves & CUSTOM I'~ y t Bah t APARTMENT blk z:. of Beach. 96U99ol. r=~ty.olslawn I "URJN U ~ld. $145 mo. 6~2719. "·knds. 644--0173. Furniture Rental ua-mo. ear y. c e or P•rk-Like Surroundlng .__....,n toraKe r or nfurn Lak \~c:;~:::.cc::.,;:i'-::'::-s"200;;;;-517 w 19 C apt. btwn Bay & Ocean. No 151 E. 21st. St. WALK TO BEACH I RIDDEN VILLAGE Park area. ll.B. ' 2 BR, lg yd, dbl gar SPACIOUS occanrront home. A h '. th, .r-.f, 548-3481 pet!. Util pd . 6T3-2256. QUIET -DELUXE * 646-1U6 * Lovely'], 2 & 3 BR's. Cpts, 2500 South Salta 536-7842 or 962--3497 3 BR, Jg yd, 1gl gar $200 4 BR. 2~2 BA, din rm $450. na c1m . 774-2800 7~ O •front Sp ,. I l·:I & 3 BR APTS LUXURY 2 Bit. "ppor drps, bltns, dwhr. 847-3957. Santa Ana e 546-1&25 ~St'°'.E=.E=P~l~N~G=Roo~.:.mc.P~v"i". Ba-~-.·~ l\1ANAGER, 646-S226 mo. ~. 6'i3·0983. Balboa Island .,.,,.. cea.. · RC ous f'r\• patios * Htd Pools u "' br. \\l inter. l'l!fs, no pets. Nr lhop'g *Adults only triplex. Only $130. W/W. LGE 3 Br, 2 Ba studio, lgi:t Cd~1. ·Cloi;I!' tu b each. Dane Point Newport Heights \\'lNT£R rental. 3 Br, 2 ba. (213) ~9101. M rti • A ts Gar., B/l. Nr. O.C.C. &: ,_fncd yd, encl gar. S1S5. No I .!!!!!!"'!'~!!!! ... ~!!!!!!!!!! 675-2698. $:250 r-.tO. 4 BR. 2 Ba, liv nn., $l~iet Adults. oo pell. 2 S!ep lo the Bay. $300. in-, 1 Blk To Bch. Onn 1 br. Q nlqUe p • shopi. Matutt Adults, ~ sngls. 842--4549· ·Larre 3ci'ue::!~k BBQ SLEEPING room In privat din rm .. .kit, 2 car gar. ne\.\·· BR. New shag, bltns. beam eluding utilities. Winier $165 mo. 64&-40TI or rm Santa Ana Ave:, CM pell. 548-0059. · BEACHBLUFF APTS Chtid care Cenler home. Jy painted in!eriar. Dana ceiling, H/pool. 642-2514. Winton Real Estate G'ia-3331 642-!1955:-Mrr. Apt ill 646-5S42 DELUXE 2 Br, 2 Ba;· ~ar, 1~ac. 2 Br 2 Ba. Pool. Pa-Great new 1 2 & 3 Bdrmt l,-,="•~•~54_S-~'-"_"·-•~*--~ f>4~.in.!...,.,K.nolls, 496-3434 or Niwport Shores WINTER rental, 1 Br. fum. 1 BLOCK to beach, 2 BR. • • used brick fr.p fc; tio. D/W. 8231 Ellis. 842-7644 From St•9 UPSTAnts Room for f'e ,,.....~"°' Elec. bltns. Snl Inc. util new 11.:hag crpl, S22S mo incl WESTBAY EL OEN cpt/drps/bltns. Adu I ts 2 BR. Apt Closed gar, cpts. SOUTH COAST male Student or i\·orking gir fountain V.1lley 3 BR, tam rm, 2 BA. Cpts, \\'inion Real Estate 6'i5-3Jn ulll. Yearly. 673--07Sl. NEW 1 and 2 Bedrm. garden only, oo pets. $1!5 / mo. drps. children/smaJI pet ok. VILLAS 833-0J98 I ;..~~.;;..--.;...---I bltns. Walk'g dist. Io 2 BR e WI t 8 b apartments w/pool. Yearly. 642-85:l0. Sl·~/~fO 847 2940 1JD1 r..tacArthur Blvd, LU~Y 3 Br h\nhse, plush Beach! Comm. pool & ten· 1 BR' ~ ·WI ~er • 1 R. modern apt twn FR01\f 1180. ADULTS '"" · -· ~8823 ' qi~ drp_s, patio, dbl gar, nr ni11. 548-9637. Hinger R.ealt;e· ~7~775 ~:r~y. ~all ~~37:~50/mo. 2311 Eld .. ·~,.,~:·· C.M. r. i~~N:a~uc~~. D~. :51M1. la. tip new 2 hr, In-2 BR, encl gar, new c~ PRI. rn1 fnr ambulalory lad """'1 SUI 962-2326 5 Cl •ou sulated Chlld OK. 17542 Jef· ·r · 1· 1 hm ood 1 ~· , , ~ ~mente -WATE*RFRONT·l Br. F'rplc. 1 BR. furn lip!. No children •· e «elf clean oven, PRtio. ferson Ln 8'12-6447 842-2834 dtcor. Sml child OK.Cul-de-in ic gues ' g ~a::'I!!~°" B1ach -..... LEASE or Lease/Option priv patio, 400 S. Bayfront or pets. 2405',i 16th St, NB. 3 Bdrm * 2 •-h 377 W, Wilson • 548.~ CLOSE to Btach! 2 BR. Sac. $lZ mo. 839·2458. served fam style. ~3391. ~R. 2 Ba home, Crp!ng, oce'an front, priv beach. Apt 1. 673-6640. Call 646--4664. IKIT 3 BR, 2 BA + den, $200. :l W•ltcliff Summer R1ntals Jlrtit. Bil, Frplc, p atlq1 custom home nr \Vestern Balboa Peninsula Newport Hoi,.htl Llvlna; room with CAlhedral BR. 2 BA fl65. Bltns, CID, 1~!,·!:"p~ 1~~. pel!. • * Jncd rd. Nr. schools t.· \Vh!te llse, o'>'·nr, 491)...4618. • celllni &: frplc. Separa1e W/D hkup, Patio, gar. 131· ...., 2 BDRM. 1 BA, Wlllk 1 blk to e. b , "\Valk 1o Doui:;las or 3 BR ~[!.A dsh\Jhr 'O-view, BAYVIE\V72 Br $~ utll pd. CLEAN>.-1 or :l Br. Adlti, no laundry area.· Encl patto. H Del Mar. 548-82'78 L•gun.1 Be1ch :!!t.cllfrprt ~:O. pps~::::v ~~~.~ # MRSH:~~~ARD . $235/mo. wtr. pd. &dtiits o ~ 1 y. '26s. mo. Beach, pier, prk g. Adlts. pell, lg kit. SIZ-Sl:IO. 2421 Swimming pool .IE c.hildren'1 I I LRG sunny 1 BR upper . • OCEAN Vitw. 250' to bch. sifs. 642--0239 .., 25222 Pizarro Road 48, . Avail Dec. l. 544-4294. ~-ioo. Edi~ waler. 'E. 11th St NB &46-1801. ~R~~S New crpta, bltns, refrig, 1 It :l Br. S11S Up. Pool. 2175 :;-:~-------El Toro 3 BR ·2 BA. elecl bl tin R/0, Condominiums Sant• Ana 546-4353 $13S/mo. 969 MI 11 Ion' S. Cs!. Hwy. 645-5429, Aptt., You Art the v.inner ot F,J\: bt, crpl&, 60x.100 ft fenc. U f 320 LARGE 1 BR furn., Penln ~O. 528-6743. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 2 tickets to the ..,;-tot. dbl gar, ldiiepd. n urn.. Pt. Pvt. patio, ~wtw crpr:, BACUtWR apts by lhe c!A)'· BAY MEADOW APTS. FAMILY Only • l2 chldm) ,Oring• County V.ac&Jllrlnove ln ttxlay/$225 Costa M isa adults onJy. Lse lll June ol' "''°'k or mon\h. Ulil. & Bffm ceilinp, p!l.neling, Nr. AChb. 2 BR SlSS. 9!1~ .L~id~•-••..,1_,•..,..· ..,,~~'::"-Catt•, M••• lnt•rnition•I ~ 1110, A$k tor rental Aa:I. Sept. $1110. 644..(,()16. linens furn. 3225 W. 1st, S.A. prlv pi,tiot, reereation fa-Valencia. Nr Bakt.r Ir MM-.LOVELY 2 Br, l~ Ba, 2 car ---·------Auto Stfow 96f:.447L NE\\'L\' Decorated 3 BR. 2 e $2;; "'KI.:. Up .. On Ckean (near HarbOrl MJ=<l429 cl:lt:ln. All adults, no pets. dor:a. gar, bHni, ntrig, lrpl, cpt. st the ~ l' drp 2 BA. bltn range, ov en' L.ovt-ly Bach -l BR. Room• Apt., Unfurn, l6S • 1 BR's FROM AS LOW STUNNlNG Cuden Apts drp, $295 on lte. Shown by me8liBJIU ANAHEIM Wt1t Hom• 41 ' • ' ' ' ti -;J. BR.nc;:: ~ ,s. ~llhl\~r; !ully crpt'd & :0.1old Servlct. Pool. lit!! Pd. .-,; Sl59/rno. • pool 2 BR's :I Da pan·j _apl!_t. 544-2>45. 6Th-3967. CONVENTION '"8~. fe12~1 '190~ drp'd, Pool" Rec nn. All • Call 67S-8740 . Gener~I 387 ~.~~~"Stoo.n' C.M. dtn.' $1.80 lnf~nt or .;ru dog M••• v.-1.. -ELDEN -CENTER prllgt. ~ '!1°· , ext. ma.intenance l wll' · _.. _.,.. .----; ~ J..n. lin.-6578. paid. SZIO/mo. C.a,11 evn, 'oron• d•I Mar VENDOME HACIENDA ok. 2 BR. $165. 645-~. **""2 B~ •Pl ;t ndu;J SpluidlnaNEW'lBEDROOP.! November 17th thru 21st ~ l\fOBlLE Home", 3 BR. S.IG-9365. l-BORJ•t. ullJ M. $'~. -J 0 EL U XE apl, Spac. ._ I to I Ple&Ae call 64.2·56'78, ext 31.C, 11i1i· ,..... ~ HARBOR Bit-ins / 01hw1hr . renl rorcoupe manaie garden apartmenl Luxur-betwttn9a.nd5pm,.toda . Ba.iocfjtdj ·~~eckutfi N1wport Beach Quiet tenant. UGIACULATE API"S! 241 AVOCADO STREET ·PaUo.-$1M. 725 James. Apt apts. Harbor .t: BaJrtr loc. ioua pool, lush land1Caping. your ticktta. CNorth County pauo, • pe 1 · . Ph. 675-4833 ADULT.u.d Adult living_ No n.18 to s•--&l"-"7l5. 64&-3$1$. 1180. Adult. -no pels. 23ll toll·!~ nllmber b 541)..tDJ) #.1· Lease. sa&-8360 or EASTBLUFf' TownhN:. Ne>.y FAMll.Y ~tlon Ott 2 B rn____. 0••,. .,..,, Eld Av ,._,t At ·"'-·-1<. 2 •· & --·crf. de·n, 2" Ba, Cott• M•s• llJl:t! l &: R. rvul DELUXE 2 &: 3 mt, 2 Ba, ('fl e .. .....,. • esa. • * ~ '"' ....... y n Clot• to shopplnn, Park Ga.--. D!shwthr....Pald utiJ, LOVELY 2 BR wfw cpt, •ncl .. r. ••~ •··up. Rental 66-5780 or __ &46-M1811 .;;::=::,,,.=-;;.---"°:'I 2 1 d bltn .• -..... • .,...~ -"' 11-d tu >&--• R•nt.111 to Shtre ~OBLLE Home, BR. cps, rps, , '· -: I BR. ~rn. 2 lot clostts, \ Spa.dolls S BR's, 2 ba rnOM $150. 646-11>4 .......... u.<I, rps, fllr, ma ~ o re.: 3095 Mace Av•· i===:--:-:--;-:-.,-.,--/~:;-;'';"":::'7.".:'.':::-:--:--"~ " tum.. patio, fni:d LA!ase & Rtf s. 213 . qun:n •llf: bed pr1\" dren. • Swim pool, pu,l/ifttn 11.dull~. no pt.ts. Rtas. 2260 ?.!ALE or fetnllle to ~ • Ill 3.)l-m61 . SPACE 2 &. 3 Br apt $140 up. Pla-tia. 646-3l60. 546-1034. Ai\lAZING Adult LI v Ing ,,., • ktdalpel.I OK. u · · Ing room, :ii:tta Jrg rooms. '* Frpl, Indlv/bndry fllc'ls Hid pcd, play yd, cpt/drps, '-"'" Newport S.•ch Beaut. l l 2 BR tum or uni lrg. 2 BR 1pt in Newport, fd .. _ Leuc. ~ or NE\V ('Xecutive condo 3 Br, Adulta only, oo pets. $150/ 1145 An1Mlm Ave. bltns, patio. Kids ok. 2 BR. w/rar. $130. Wtr pd. Apts. Self clean. ovel'l$l hGu~s I.am bch., )'1'. round ~4. 2\-t Ba, In the Bhills $475 mo. COSTA MESA 00·282..c 19!M J\1:aPlt!' No. 3 642--3813 lSTI "A" Orange AW. Cill PARK Nl!WPORT D/W Oti 2 Bf> dilpls, shag Refill. workina perion, , s;thlt: 2 'BA. blg cuI~c-nc n10. avaU. ll/15. SS7..Q12 2035 Fullerton, CM me Coll"P No. 5 642-7035, btwn 1 & 5, 636-4121. APARTMEN"{S cpta, drJ>t, jacu:aJ A &auna 38. Must ltkt peu. SlOO : • all bltta.•dlx ,.rea. aft 6 1 Jlr $125 2 Br~-~. PVT J>ttlo, ellCloecd aarige, LRC. -Mod.m..l .BR apt. Attr•ct. ~ Cliin 2 BR. Bacbc:lor, 1 err 2 Bedtoonui, biths. Hure pool. ·~ a:pllttlng utU '1, Call a115:l>. I acant. 536-9Ul dJ.'I; Townhous• Unfurn. 335 Ideal toi: Blchelot. Pool. 2 Bft, c;tPts It ctrps, Sl6S. Cl'Jlll, arpt. bltns. chhwhr; 1 Hid pool. Furn·Untum trom and Townhoulll. Spa. pooh, Mtrrlm•c: Woodt ei')..69S2. l ' ~'ti. Adlts orily, l99J Church 6fl..3690, child ok. $150/mo. Alt ut11 Sl40. Adults, 642-952(1 t9Mls. From $170. Acmet C25 Mmimac Wey, C)f. FURNISHED room W/Vlt! Slj • Ato. 2 BR, 2 BA. Gener•I . MS-96.U. B•lbu l1l1nd pd. ~ .,_Avocado No. 9. $170 2 Br studio, •dJ 1ti'.fpt. ·from Fa1hlon Jsland •I JIHT~ l 81\ turn. n40. I BR unf. ol Balboa Jslantl In l.1e 5 br I T~· waahtt.· dr;yer, LifXu JJ. t 0 us 1wnh 1 • &ch. For unr. ruo up Y'E'AfU.y lrue. C r.1 n d 64:M>984. drp/crpt, pntlo, gar. 548-8301 boret A San JOflquln Hilla SIJS util pd. Adull•. no pell. hnute to 1hatt w/4 olhe ,~. Vacant. 538-9153 d)tl; 11.'ewpart Upnt"r &y, U aAe, • l Br. }1'\u·n qJ' unf Sl2S up. Canal, Uttle Is. Bc1:1ul 2 2 en: ipt. Crpt'a 111 rooms, aft s, 21J : 502.5221 coll. Ro1ds. (7J41 &U-1900. 820 Ccn,.,r. fW2-5M8 . girls. SM mo. 67J..-1017. 1 S36-1222 ~cs. 3 J!R,'i_ BA, 1600 aq ti, Z:ar Ad~ulta. PqQL "2-21&1 Br., 2 81., pct. Pitka: ~ drpa, bltnl, r1fMi, carport: LGE l Br, a Ba,. new _, YEARLY nr ocu.n, spacious The futnt dn,w In !he Wut FEMALE w/8 yt old ~ o.u1 mot: want .Adl-.ba.ve pr.._Pool..-OubhM, •OrW>' 'l'\U'G lJli:> 4UicJc: + utlll._ 1 __ , .~~ Sl.S5 mo 10 mo. CJ>t. n69./mo, fruh1Y PAI~ upr, 3 Bt, 2 &, Frplc. S22$. . . • a Dally PUot Clwtfled Ip apt lb lhart .JI b8.rgi.lnt 18kft• • sm.·'~7-.mT. cash, call 64 78 Winton Real Estale ~ -64Mi961 or.._"-1248 ~ Nr. OCC. Carport :167"61~1-Rell1. Avatl .tow 499...2UIJ. ' Ad. 642-6678 • f ~T..0196/~lU .--•• 'I ' , , J PILOT ·AO'IOTISER WtdlWJdl.r, Nowmbtt 10, 1971 Are You Letting Cash Slip Througtl Your · Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WA-NT-AD Will Sell Fm!-· I. Ste .. 2'. licytl• 57. Electric Tnfn 2. Guitar 30. Typewriter 51. Kitten 3. leloy Crib 31. a.r Stools 59. aanic Aute 4. Electric Sow 3~. Encyclopedia 60. Coffff Tabla 5. C1nMra 33. Vacuum Cle1ner 61. MotOrcycle 6. Washor 34. Tropical Fish 62. Accordion 7. Outbo1rd Motor 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 63. Ski• I. Stereo Set 36. File Cablnat 64. TV Sat 9. Couch 37. Goff Clubs 65. Workbanch 10. Clarinet 31. Sterllng Sliver 66. Diamond Watch 11. R1frl9or1tor 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-Kart 12. Pickup Truck .0. Bedroom Sat 68. lroMr 13. Sewing Mlchino 41 . Sllda Projactor 69. C1mpin1 Trailer 14. Surfboord 42. Lawn Mower 70. Antique Furnltu'11 15. Mlchlno Tools 43. Pool Tabl• 71. Topo RKordor 16. Dishwasher 44. Tires 72. Sollbaat 17. Puppy 45. Piano 73. Sports Cor 11. Cabin Cruiser 46. Fur Coat 74. Mlttr .. 1 lox Sp11 19. Golf Cort 47. Dropo1 75. Inboard Spoedboot 20. 81romet1r 48. lintns 76. Shotgun 21. St•mp Colltctlon 49. HorM 77. S.ddl• 22. Dlnotto S.t 50. Alrplono 71. Dart Ga- 21. Play Pen 51. Ort•• 79. Punchl"I le1 24. -11"1 lell 52. Extrcycl• 10. loloy Carrl•1• 25. Woter Sidi 53. Rare looks II. Drumo 26. ''""' 54. Ski looh 12. Rifle 27. SuitcaM 55. High Choir n. Desk 21. Clock 56. Coins 14. SCUBA . Goor so Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT • ·-60-56UI These or any other extra t11ln91 ar1111nd the lloHM can be hll'M4 Into CGlh witlt a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD \ - • -I ' - DAILY •lLOT SIP - Rontal1 te Share 4311 Po..-la PO Loot 1--------WILL .O.re full !acllltlita otFASr cha.nin cauafac 0»-* * *MONTHLY ~ .AL'! GAltDZNJl«J lara:t, ;i,rell-appolntfl:J hOtne fusion in )'tMlt Uh! Can TOM MYIRS "'"1ce. All reporu: and W ....... 6 •••I wl~tlned; matun: ~'ODlu. Pt:nouJ Manar•m.•nt 660 W. 17th Sr., w:... · la~ -~ _. Pvt. dftulng nn t bath. c.on.w.q Senicff tor coa.-CMt• Mtt• • flS..U45 • M0-5lw.. a..tac ........ Sp.cioul, at tr a et iv e ao-tick'ntta1 Mlilttnee in eJul. You ar. 1IMI winner ot a...._lttl Cdlif, ec.ta M-. -~ -_.,. .. Shont. w-commodl.":tn' tor ~ fylnc -· , pro-21 tiCloets to tbs t er ta 1 n t n I. Vie'll' k>t. blem -IOMna:, ttlfU!nc Ora .... Ceunty EXP. Mother wou)d Jib to PROFESSIONAL Gudener; ,c:::.,...::::::::.· .:B»-::..:t:::OM:.::._· ---I cttativit)t. etc. AvallabW IOI' International cu. tor c:hlldnn. Any hrs. tr'ff wurX. P r •·n·i •·1 WOMAN, w/dilld OK, to ottlqe « .hOme ca 11 *· Avte Shew De.)' or nlJbt. AU IPI. Le. tprlnkkn. eleu up l?\att hOmt w/woman 6 96J...4614, Co111Ultlnc f&r at the fenced yd. hot rna.11. &ood landacaplns. C..:, children. S«>-.566S. Blue Chip corporate ANAHllM atmoaphert", UJ.50 wk tot 1 ~ ---------1 manartmf'nt • p-tvate lfto.. CONVaNTION chlld, $25 wk I O!' J'OC)ft, "w"ANTED==:--, ...,,Me,,..,.=_,,y" .. '"'""""1 Gar~e1 for R..,. 435 "dMdullsc;...;~0c-'"""-~1955.=-=~-1 CINTIR Monie Vtat& tehool area. Trfta Ir Gualt'L DOUBLE 1arqe cam· SP1RmJAL JiiiDJNGS November 11th thN 21ft CM 5'S-r'?Uit. MOVinl I:. HauliJIC, l<.TC!al area, nr. 15th A Advice on all metttrs l'!eaee call ecz..sm. ext 314 COSTA MESA La~ Maint. ••I-Sil 3.-iv.'port. $30/mo. o..uy lOAM·lOPM between 9 and 5.em to claim Pftl.SCHOOL Anytime! rfic• Rental \ '40 312 N. EJ Camino RH.I yoor tidoetll. fN~ O:itlnty Stat• ~ .AL ~""'·s'"'Land;:::;,..=P°'ina=.--::T"r'°a-,:1 _._.__,_......., ..... _,..,.._ San Cl~nt~ toll·fl"&e numbtt ts 5'().1220) 18th 6 Manrvvta, % day + removal. Yard remoddin&. ~EWPORT CENTER 492-9136, *"2·9034 * • I 11 tuu day llHSjons. Planned Truh hl.ulin&, lot cleanup.' GROUND FLOOR SISTER Grace. Teacup , LOST: Small z1PIJi'.relJ wit· ~. bot luncheS. Ages Rl!pair aprinklers. &'n-1116. iOO To 68!M feel, fully Jm. Card RtadlllC. Optn 3 A)f"" cue, containina a he• t 2-6, lira t :30 AM • t P1'1. EXP Japanese G.rdentr. I µro\."ed, prime location for PM. 525 Victoria St. CM. music. ~ately needed. ~ wk-O}MPAJ\Et 6'2-4050 Know tiow, u~keep, p.m tenant W&l?fitll' identity, Ex• &45-1463. No qUHtiorrs asked, just EXPERIENCED child care pest, trimminr, clean.up ,¥-ellent parltlng. 60c Per ELECTRONICS Student plnH return to 127 E. weekday9 tor c~n M 963-3486. month per foot. wants dilcudtd TV '• Bayfront. Bal &1. or call yrs. FQC!d yard. Lunches EXP==rn.=~J.----~~---1 . Wea{ey N. T•ylor.~.. Radio's, Phono's, etc. c..ti 673-3103. included. Jut on San Dicio ...... ~.·-~, ~---. , Re•ltors Ron 5.n-97Gfi. LOST ~.~. ntar Bristol .,_ .,._ .............. ...._.....,,., %111 San Joaquin Hilts Rd. : Silver Tabb>'• • .. I · · '"~ Lawn Maintenance. , .Newpon ~n ter 6t4-lgl0 GOING to Minn.! T~e a ~ntly alte'l'ed ma.I~ cat. LIC'D Day Cl.re, 7 am·5:30 646-06If or ~7951 • motorcycle to l\lph. -and Cropped can, wht bre11:5t, pm. Hot meals. XJnt care. lu'"""WN=-:~-,Cvd='°•"n-=s.-""""~. . COS'l'A1'1esa.,dcluxpvt.of· earn S15. 536-41)5 after 5 palewhlrra.Ypaws.Ansto Hatbot/Bake r atta. li~s or desk space "'/drat· .. All". Vic. SUnfiower· Apts, S46-l539. SmalJ Cleanup Welcome. ting rm. Furn, crpt, air p.m. Gmnvllle 6: Aurora Dr, • .;;:;;.;::::.~-~~--Call Rog, 548-614-C. cond. Avail all or In-CM·SA arta. Re ward! WILi. Can!' for 1 or 2 1ma.1J Exp. Japranfte Gudentt dividtlaUy w/answering &: I J[{)l Sf6-624l dt 4 pm. children, m)' hotM. Reliable Lawn Ma1nt. Clean-Op 1 secrctar:aJ acrv. From $100):miil.aotmii ... m•;----~L::\J-: REWAJlO, Uttle finpr _riDa. ~tbe~::n:~Fri. Trfnunin& _. 546-l.89'i mo. 548-3486. wide aold, chip'd d1amond, BABY_; . COMPLETE lawn Ir ruden... 1 OR 2 nice suites sf.ill left in family rina, acntimcntal "''' • ,,..c -Be a c b in& .ervice. Lido Bldg {above Blue found (frH a4s) SSO value. Loi vie: Bro&dway anea. my home, by hZ' or Jim 543-0405. Dolphin Rest.). Fin!' tor store. Fashion J&land. N.B. wk. 3 )1'S I-up. 6'13-M70. ,-.;;;;;;-;;=;-;==:--:~ LA\\'N ~ta.Int. Hauling, M W prof. or gen'! ore use. Drop ORANGE /yellow cat. well Fri., Oct. 29, call ftU..fl95, BABYsmING my home, la··-· clo•-·•p "'"'"" . II J R al ""'" .,,_,, ' P·--•· in or ca ones c ty cared tor-w/~a col. male. LOST Au• tr a 1 i an' Shep.. AJJ ~ Paularino Atta. Free Est. Call 546-7379. Service. 615-lm, Suite C, k:rtles his hffd .cr-~tchfd, herd / Otllie, 4 mo, grey 54&.5166. on premises. jumped from: car on Niw-&: white. Cockcr/poodl•, s1'BAB~,;Y;.:s:ITl1ll="c:-'"24~h-n-.~all EXP. Hawallan Gardener. -Bl·~ C M Call Complete 11.tdcniJW ~.' DESK space a\•ailable $50 ,..... ....... · • mo. blk wlbrown front legt, ll.lfL B.ic 4 ~ Dack mo. Wfll provtde furniture ~ or 646--4982 found please call 64.2-2'.llJG. yard. MZ-1592. I =Kama-_lan7';',-646-<6-~6"16-·-- at $5 mo. Answering service FOUND: Nr. Hoq>ital in So. Gener•I Servlcn avaU&l:lle. 305 No. E J Laauna: il'aY A white short 2 MALE Gennan Sbcphcrrla, C•rpenter Camino Real, San hair cat, pink noec a: cars, 1 tan l-l blk & tan, Vic.I-,,-,.=,,,....,,._,,.... __ THINGS by MOOIM!, -LL _ Oemente. 492-M:m )'"earing dear llea collar. Wallace A••c. l-19th st., LARGE OR SMALL elect., plumb, fence, tt>e, DESK apace a"VaJlable , $50 _Call •99-M aft 6 pm. C.P.f. $25 Reward! 646-3119. All types work; Cut door!J, imtln11, carpentry, paint etc. WW -fUrniture WHITE Germ Shepherd 9 P a n • I, cabineta, finiM., 54.s.-0820 • mo. FOUND, black male eat. mo'•· No •·-.. ~, __ ,:_ ... ~. rep&.lta, etc. 962.1961 I=====-~~­at $5 mo. Answering ll!lVk:e brown col:'-r, yellow e)'t'a. --ftl&::lll& CARPENTRY, pa Int I a 1 , availal>l@o. m Forest Aw, Vic 1.flner St. " Wilson, Would appreciate yoor ~ ADDrr. 6: &pair. cab, cement. Dec. Bob, ft6....8.HI, Lquna Beach. S-9466 C.M. 551-&380. -.act tr found. 663381.. tonnica, marllte, fir till', 5t9-C98 Sm. jobs ok. BAY VIE.W OF.F.ICES ,. •• , t"< wht .. brown "'"'"Y• SAMOYED, femaltf' puppy. ~llfll, Antlq. Fum. -H•uli"I -1 A Cond ~ • ,_,.r Vic Bmokhul'flt 6: Ellis, n:pair 6 refin. 644-'1'59S -.,,,--------I ..,., wee, ir . itloned, blue eyes, bobtail. ·v~ .:; redecorated. Lido Area Chart &: Hamilton CM H.B. 96l--5282'-ALL typc9 Ot C&J]N!'ntry By YARD, l"•r~. cleanuP1. Realoncmics Bkr. 675-6700 646-9'1~. · · · 5 ~lOS. lri~h Setter puppy local man. Remove trees, dirt, ivy, DESK ·"-'! •~ (C.M.I 1, •l<k n-·"• m..,,'I 536--1643 •k l PI o ad er . backhoe. space av ........ e _. YOUNG bl-·k ml! · t = "°' 847 ~" mo WW provide fumitutt --e ca atttntion. Reward 5494'.l670. EXP. Remodellnc, cabinets, =o.-~-=·,.-...,-----,.- at $5 mo. ~·erf.nc service w/whlte boota &: white FEMALE Irish Setter, Cd M ttpaln, malnt. No job too HAUIJNG, clean-up, Joc.J available. 1'1115 Beach Blvd. whiskers. Vic. Orance Aw. Red leatlw,r collar, m-4&42 Im. Reas.~ moves, exp'd c:ollep ftv.. Hunriqton Beach. 6f2-a2l 6: Bay St., C.M. '416-5244. or 615-'1919. CARPENTER. "Man tor all den!. Lrc. truck Reu: On"ICE Space Clty Cen~ JOUND: Wooden d in I b 1 l.05J': 2 lticoona. male 4 ft~,,. Woric I u a ran. ~-=!~SIG=. --~-~~1 BJk. N.B. Elevator, JanifOI", adrltt.Noreri•tra tlon fem. Reward. Arry info ap.. Rte.ltisde prices. 613-1161&. HA~G ~ Movln1 . p·..a.J--. "'""'', 300•0',. &N"I·, numben. S1)...430l aft 6 pm. Anytt""""' ..., "" ...... '"-··-+ .,.,.u'IO 4UU """' prec. MS--0796. . C•rpet Service .... 0 ... ~"",.· ,.. .............. ,..,.... • 1n•J 544-1243. GEID.1AN ah or t-P: aired .._.....,., Poin!er vie Prftido -San LOST: Cream c & I & rt: d JOllN'S C•;...I • Uphol ** 600 sq. ft. 2nd noor tn Afghan w/black face, $2j ~..... . ~tery TRASH&: Garage clean-up, 'I' $90fmo. COSTA MESA. Clemente. 544-8442. rd 5.16-79?'> Cleanf'ts. E~a Dr1..Sham· days. Free '~'-Anytime. Call 646-2130. FOUND In W eo 11 t c J l ft rewa ' •· poo free Scotc~lrlJ.ard {Soil 548-5031. Business Rent•I 44l lilueprlnts for Nevida Coun-LO.W: Blk --'\ca!, P •r t Retardants). De(Rasers & H . .,-.-~1 -~1-----1 "Ptt:;;-;.:;-;;;:::;:;-;:;:;;:.:-;::!,,'"~"'~bd~;.,,~·~1o~o;.. !_6n.~:ms~':_· _ Siamese. Vic: Princeton &. all color brlahtc~s &: JO ou1ec Hn "I ~ACE for b@au_ty parlor or BEAtmFUL Black Persian Yalt', Reward. 546-3467. minute bleach for whitti HOLIDAYS AHEAD'f aimllar opera.boll, ground r.-·I 11 c-Call carpeta. Save }'OUr money Have a Ccan Holld8J'! Cali fir, Lido BW1. 315.5 Via .,_ e, 11 '"""' by aavlnc ~ extra trips. Du tch Maintenance St!rvice Lido, NB. See Jones Realty mornings, 613-3269. ktltructielt Jl J• J Will clt:an Uvins nn, dinina: for all floors , windows "I. Service on premises or call FND: Small puppy on Knox· rm .l hall i l.5. Any rm $7.50 carpet cleaning. Xln't wofi 675-3771. ville, -H.B: pis Ide ntify. cOuch $10, chair $5. 15 )TS: don~. No cm•. 537.1508 any. SHOWR00~1 m1g. &. office: ~162. Scheols & @'Xp is "'hat counts, not time. space. CIOlle In La~ loc. sr.-tALL Kitten, lft!Y, striped. method. I do work myself. l 'E"XP""°'E"R"°.~Re-.1~.,~.-Can-y~-~All $95. to $155. mo. 494-4653 Vic Me'&a Verde School. Instructions S75 Good ref. Sll--OlOl. Cleaning Equipment. Phone lndustrl•I Rental 450 545-7642. ... AL'S RUG CLEANING Aft.er 3P?i1, Mfr3307. Dl1coyer a Grfff New \Ve wuh rura a.t our local DEDICATED CLEANING 1100.1440 SQ. FT. Lost 555 Car .. r With The plant. lt'e the only way to * \Ve Do Evtrything * Ready now, nea.-Newport· thoroughly clean r u I•· 24 hr. Call Gi'.':-1.072 San D! .. o r....,..,_ Bl..L-. hilly FE~lALE Cat, lon(-hait, lite AIRLINES \Vl'V Carpet Cl e'e.ning. Frtt -••"I -.,. #It NE.AT &: CL:·:.'....~ * sprinkl~. Cabinet makers, lf'Y & blk Hrer W/f/Ofnc Es!. fiberglass v.'eicome. 2940 tan h.ichliitll!. Wht chin &: 383 \V. Bay, C~l 548-2020 Prof. Housccieanin1 C L 'So ( D-•· E -" • A •·-al ( ~nl-& Palnfincr 557-424-t race n. . o D<ll'er, · Fffn eyes, .,.. .. , .... ,ng a 1.1l'<l oa.... or younr ~ Cemenf, Concre'.e ... of Fairview % mi) Rcpre-collar. Last 1ecn Nov. 4.. Y.'ho want excitement plus! Housccleanlng By Day. scmatives there from 9-12 8"-1'775, aft 5: 6.ffr-3506. 1 Ticket Artent! Air Freight? BEAT The Ra in! Collerete Own Transportation dally. 557·5585 or 879..fnl $lOO REWARD, lo:11t la.rre Sta1ion a rent? Rescrva-noo"', patioA, drl vea, Call 836--0648 COSTA MESA 10,000 sq. It. Gennan Shep X king hair. lions! Ramp or . rravcl aldcv.·alks. Don 64Z.-S514. Mesa Cleaning Service agent! We'll train YoU for clear span + yard spael'. Oct. 23, nr !' iularino It Additions -P atioa Carpets, WlndoWI, Floor etc. llO. 220 )>O\\'er & com-Fairview Q.\f. Blk & tan. the# and more, day ot nlte. CEMENT WORK Rc sid. &: Commc'I. 548--4fil · · d d We Include placemeiit u.-pressed air pr o.v 1 e · lthr collar, tq:1, "A.rlo". • 64.2.--11>38 • M•aonry Sprinkled, fiberght115cd I. Call collect 213: 871-9746. si1'tance. QUALITY Cement Work. Let - cabinet ma.kf'n: v.-el~. r.t ALE Aplirot Poodle, vie. E.91. n yrs. Approval fQf' George do it. Llc'd. Bonded. BRICK, B!Qck & Stone Work. 1 9 t h 1 p 1 a c' n 1 1 • • 1400 block Seacrest Dr Vettrans. EliJP"ble institution 64.5-1695. Call . "Reuonablf priced. Call or ·• . ; l~C::;:='-.,,.---,.~~~ a40-0!!29 64£..t&t<. come, 348-348£. Cdl\f, Luz~, Homt' . ~~ under the federally maured PATIOS, walks, drife, lnstall i •:--=--0-• __ .._. __ Answers to C ha r I 1 e . ltUdcnt loan program, nt"'.\' Jay.•ns, saw, btta.k, Movlng FOR Lease. 400'.l sq. ft . MI 644-5173. remove. 548--8668 for est New Bldg. Ampleo parking, LOST· Female long hai r Airline Schools Pacific CEMENT WOJ K . · * 54s.67JO, 673-6169. tiger. cat. 1 yr old. Lost in 610 E. 17th, Santi An• all -< b.lno '°1·b too " I · • • 54J.6596 sm , ,.., .. 90na c. r e e STORE front building, r-.t. area of 594 Joann St., CM. _ _ Estlm. H. Stufilck, 5-lS-8615 zone. 2000 sq. fl. 2072 SM's all I havt. Plea!ll! call READING TUTORING ln C * • Placentia. 01. 548-7698. 642-7158, 548-4004. your home. Cert. Teacher,1_0_•_t_,n_ct_•r ____ _ Rtnt•I• Wanted "60 LOST: Gray female poodlf'!, Ill! gra~. Mr. Hathcock, l\JY \Vay, quality hom!' BUlLDER wanta to rent 2 or •1carina red_ collar w/stick &U-0144. remod. Walls, celling, noors GREG BURKE 17940 S•nt• M•rl1na Fountain V•fley \'ou are the winner <t 2 tickets to· the Orange County lntern1tlon•I Auto Show --~ ot ansdtod.. Vrc: Oranre I. PYANO LESSONS etc. No job too sn1aJJ. 3 Br. house in ·~ "''7 ~'" 2A h 1 -~-Walnut, C.M. Mua-41 alt Your home. Cert. Tf.'aehcn. '" '"V'NIU, r ans. serv. repair, exchange or .,.... 5:30. Mr. Halhcock, 6U--Ol4-l rent. 64.2-7317. Addition!! • Kemodeling Gmvlck l-Son, Lie. ' Misc. Rontal1 465 * * * * * * 67,_..,I , 5<9-2170 ATTENTION OWNERS! Drlv•way1 Rt !)le ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER \Ve have nnta.l custonicnj,.-----------------,1·:;_~,,;;~-o--,..---,- for HOMES, AM'S & CON· HA\\!"LEY'S Orive\vay Seal · November 17th thru 2ht Please call 642·5678, ut 314 bet\yeen 9 and 5 pm IO, d&tnt your tickets. (North ~· toll.fr~ number itJ 540-U'JO)" oos. can DEAN REALTY. Trader's Pa"ad1"se eo.i;., • •m"' ... lri .. Rental Div. ~7527. 11 Jou, 545-5195 aft. 5 pm, Eltctrleaf • * *. 11• nes ELECTRICAL lmlallallon. ?elnlint I &. np1.ln. No Job too mW!. Paptrh•"li"I Reallatlc prict1. Free est. -------''---1 ti mes lJ<'d/JM. S<&-02JI. * w~L.t'~llt. * ' [ - 5:10 ELECTRICIAN, lictnltd, When you call "Mac" ' -·-------11 dollars bonded. sma11 Jo ... maint. ,..."'' "'-171l COUNSELING ' tnto tor I repa.lra. SCS-5ll3. p•--C abortion, vucetomy 6: adopo Jt...U'I 'IN , proleuionaJ. All "~~~~-~-_!·~~ .. ~-,,_,,,,.l"-----------------.lllntr•Ylftl -work 1uarn. Color tion. A.--., .,........,.... ALC'OHOUCS Anonymout. I---------apeclaliat . tt2~43, EXP~T Hand Erllf&vinc _5'=7=-="-41_. ~~~--Phone 542·7:nTO: •,; 1 t • TRADE Homea Kona Cout Beautiful COW!tf)' 5 acrea Tfolllrlce. plaquft, cupa. etc. PJWF. palntiJl&"-inter/cxttt. P.O. Box 1223• a esa. Hawatt for N•wport an-a MXt to Sequoia, will trade lbmlill, SU.279C, days. Honest work. Lie/Isa . nME FOR - 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT · WAN't-AD Dec.____lS to Jan 5. AdUltl $Int cq. torJatu model &U.SJ.S.S evu. Ms--me, 540-1.4-H. >Ny. P.O. Box 1031 Kealake. -·tion w•.... •an bot.1 F I .... -.-·• ' " urn ture EMPIRE PAINTING kua, Hawaii. 96750 etc. B3M515 er ~'1'321 NMJ' new 1910 Holiday 27' Servinc Orr. Co. tioct 'IS• _, IJ-tl---"--.... .,.... SWAP"tra.c.k ,o-ctrt for CV, SPttlAL! Avs. cha1r °' 53-1-3749 OI' B-033$ "uwr ""''"'' ....,., ...... -. truek or · roc:kiu .-..t.-aA •~ Cluinc PAINTING/Pa-tine " -Trade tor property or '!'! !JWAP G, N!at "Dane pup tor "----... ·~:r:.. ~~·-. ·' ~ · "" J "• Box 4196, PaJm sipnnp. usan .. ,ieu .,....._ in Harbor area. Lie I bonct.: elec typewrl~r. etc, G ·•·-j ~ •-" rur ••• -~ Tl4-328-3401 531· 5()27 •1vwn "I ,,.,.. """"• n. ~. ~~blp triplex. 'Want':ior%TonPickUp,-PAI NT ING : Honaa' C.M. fn(!()ft"le $730./mo, b · tor 5 aet'M Eastern Utah SPENCER'S Lawn Service, ~~rantecd .,'Ork. IJc'd A1J1 chall(t $1'1',ea>. eq\lity tor RecrMtlon Land. $1500 f'rtlt! eat. Lawn -e,,. r-e , ~ Job, Call 61:>-5740. mWdple zon.1nr bulldinc. Value~ cleanups, rtu. 3'8_:-S2U. YOU wm the ptinl. lot-Pmvn Realty, 64.2.lm. G'l'l-1010 evts txper Japa11de Gardener painted $10 o.. Also o- £41 21 BR l~ 8A dull~. * * Will trade my '11,000 Complete fd ttt'Vict. Neat terior. C..U 540-70t6. f Gar, patio, bl:trll. cpta, equity in RA Jot in O>unty A Rella. Free est.~ E>M'ERlORrlntcrlor. ~ drpa. Uh nu. Jm. mo incm OJrrktor ~1th old. mrtfd lrt al'":>'.! tb1 r11ht Unw a: 1)1 \l.'ork. Guannte«I to latt e&· $53,500 ea. SUbmk tnd· houle for pJd TD' a <!f in--a.!Wl)'a the r1ght pltte tt 6734T;iO bltore TAM. H. Bob Ol1on Rltr 5*-6580. come prop. * fn.2150 * )'OU Mnt RESlJL TS! C&ll FOR clean A neat pahttl.nr, * * * * * J * tc~I I: place thtt ad tntmor • exterior. ~! Dtck, 9SM0&5. - ( • I • . • I ' , • • • • • • l ---- l • • . . .. . ' . . . . . ' Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts! -- H•rt't ht tt't htrt'a CHAFIUE BROWN ,,. lftd LUCY. , , and L!NUS ••• 1nd htrt'a VIOLEI'.,, and SCHROEDER ... one! • l•st but not lll1t. here's SNOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally • ...,•..:: •.-...-• • • , . . • • 1 .. • , .t.S "LOT ·ADVERTISER • WtdntJday , N0vtmbtr 10, im • ,. FREE .PASSES Find Your Name • " • . Y Oii Could Be One of Today's Winnen ' 1 0 Pqln of $2 Tl~kets Given Dally If your Mme l1 ll1t.d fft a 1pecl•I ad-Jt could ~·r up(fer any clatsification, tO &Ook at them all -phone 641·S671, Extension 314, between t a.m;and .5 p.m. to makt arr1ngtment1 to pick up your tickets at any convenient DAtL Y PILOT office. FOR THE YEAR'S BIGGEST AUTO SHOW Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT . ' • • • t1 ----~ '-I ---~·"·-· ___,)[Ill L ._,_t J[Il] ~--·_-_.t ~![HJ \I ..,..~t ~ •Inti.., & l 1 Holi> Wontod, M & F 710 jolp Lontod, M & F 710 .H elp Wonted, M & F 710 ;H;o;lp;W;•;n;tod;;,;M;&;;F~7;;;;1 anted, M & F 711 , ~•P.rh•nglnv • . ..,_..;.. ___ ._._..__ BEAUTY' OPERATOR apls-"' l\tEOICAL Recept. to $400 SERVICE· Station Allelklant, ~ CUSTOM Painting At Reas. A Better Temporaey tant, ful ly licensed. Contad BACK OfFICE Like .a Jront office spot In a au .rhift. oprn. 4678 Campus \. 'Rall?#. Position Ken Ten1pleton'1 Ha ir Local Dr. \11ot.lld I l k e lovely ne11.· oHice? F.ltj<)y' Dr., N.8. ~1757. t; SPECIALIZING IN Styh.•s, 1701 \Yestcllfl Dr. personable skilled pt"rson to grt'elln,g peopi~ & ~Ung SERVICl-: estab. F ulle T ~ BEACH-PROPERTIES URGENTL y N. B. &12-6857 I~ respotlslble position pl~s .-. Then you 'old! kwe Brush customers. c.~l Up : }Ve kin the mildew 4 fUfl&W BOOKKEEPER FJC 1vith top salary In beautiful !Ins Jn•1ne area sJ)OI. Pleas· 10 Sl60 wkly to •I.art =~ that i•& known problem w/ NEEDED Unique firm "·ants sk\Us o( fie\\' oUict>. ant "'Orking conds. & Io p !l6~-0-1lS · t: paint over the mildew. We belp kttp balance here. DENNIS le DENNIS-S.:,7"612'J, Abigail Abhor Ptt-SERVICE Sta. SalelQ>an ;; , beas::b propertil!S-We do not • kno\\•ledgeable person to'j'~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~I CalLPat Ke.nocdl', 833-2100 benefils. Call i\!iss Laura. 0·==~·,..-..,,,--...,-.,..---1 "· uae a proven method not 'I'rf:1T1endous oppor. for ad-PERSONNEL AGENCY 90lln£'1. Agency, 230 W. \\'ar-p/tin1e, evu Ir wkndt, e~~ ~; ~=·~~·au~~~ Receptionist ~~nc:~~~1. Paid Vac., Holl· 1 ~meni JI 1• f• J 1 ._,,..,. 11·1• 1) [ E~meot 11•_ 1 ~~;~~5:~1.Dr. n':;P~~~~,~. S.A, ~ N~:!.:na~~~: Ap:1J. (-·'so ¥.'e can ·l\lar&ntee a Jong-T I t Ca.II Marion Mann, 833-1700 '·-------' •--~---~ ? L_..:=::= _ _J\!J?~·,;:;l~A~NC·-1~0~,;;0;;;,.k,,~00;;;;;0;;;,i;,.~6 °HAPEY TALK :~:·.er Ille '"p&,lnt job. L!c'd. JPS S DENNIS & ·oEN;NIS •••••••••• nigtus a 11'f'ek. Clean cut. Be a prop\e gnx.ter, no Technle:la~ ·~ f:,615:800& 1 j ' PER~NNELAGENCY20 HI W dM FJ 'Hal W dM HelpWantedM&F,IO Perrnanefll. Trot1er 's borPdomhere.Saygoodbye ._ ,. laiter, P11tch, R•:t•lr Secretaries ~1ichelaon Dr. ep ante• &· 10 P ante• &F710 -----·-. .....__ &kery, 234 i-·ores1 Ave., todulldays &lov.·pay.~ta. •• lo ·· · 1' · · lrvi~. Calif. DENTAL GEN'L 01-"C $;:.<X) INVEST IN' Laguna Beach. Call A1ut f ox. 833-2100 ,•: * 'J)ATCH SiLJASTEruNG DENN IS & DENNIS ~: AU lypes. 't estimates. Repro Typists BOOK! KEEPER: For a . Slink you~. teclh, },Ill()\ 'nh is t -1 CJtllpHllY 11,·a nts,· 1hl' YOUR FUTURE .\IAN wanh:.\1 for t I 0 0 r PERSONNEL AGENCY ·~ r 1· 1 · · "" " 2082 i\11ehl'lson Dr, PRODUCTION TECHNICIANS ~ . S.•.I call ~" .,.,..,~ . sma 1 grov.·ing service co. in , JU cy position. ....,.:a r. l' ever person Y.' a nack niain len•-• & olher d"tie•. • ' the locaJ 11rea.. lnterf'Sting seeks beginner \1•/bright or gl't 1ng r lll\l:S Ln order & A I · I' · ·1 p•--te P .:.hr.. .. I . Hostesses • i BE YOUR OWN BOSSI PP Yen person, ~unflngton Irvine, Calif. "' ,... r a!A' "'6 nter1or yoork. Computer handlf'S the sn1ile. ccp ng thern tlmt way, B<>ach Convalesct!nt llosp, ;:;====;-=-,-.,,;-I { Stucco ~Ir Ext1?rior routine. Handle the bosses Call Kay Star. 833-2700 Lovely orfir1 ' v.·/ni<"l' boss. 1 Men or Women 18811 ~·lorlda, H.B. RECEPTION IST' Start $375. Logic & Annlor experience llect'SSlll)'. Day &. Pin& shift available. \ ' -: sniall J obs. Lie, 847-..14TI penonal 1vork from your _ DENNlS & DENNIS Call Jann Davis, S.13-2700 Afll111o·er phont>s. 1)·Pe min. ~· Plumbing ! Interviewing Hours ov.•n privaW office. Different PERSONNEL AG ENC\' DE.:NN IS & DENN IS Lease A Yellow '.\tl'.:DICAL RF£EPT. $600 ~ w.p.n1. a cc u rat el y. l J 9lm·llam & lpm-4pm benl"fits. $52[). 2082 Mfr:h<'l.son Dr. Pt:RSONN EL. ACF:NCY Taxi Cab Local Dr. St"'k!I cht't'ry in. Laguna l-lillr. 830-1600 i PLU¥B~d REPAri Call Helen Hayes, 5-l~ · Irvine, Calif. 2082 l\licllt>lson Dr. dividual 10 1tnsv.·er phorlf', RN ar LVN ror 3 lo Jl shift >, 'No ' too smo!I \l'o~· w' "-o & ... "-re I C 1-1 arrange appoinlment!I & COLLINS RADIO 19700 JA1\1BOREE BLVD. NE\\'PORT BEACH EquMl opponuniry emploJ¥r •I\ '""' "'"' Coasta~ Agency · DIPLOMAT GIRL rvirl<', al· Call for Appl GIPn HavPn of Nev.onnrt, ' e "" ,,_ e -,--;;:-c-1 keep clients happy, Respond "" --.>UC! YoU v.·ant! 2790 Harbor Bl. at Adams TRAVEL GENERAL OJ"J"ICE: This 54~1311 646-7764. Equal Opportunity TIIE \\'onderlul \Vorld Of Co E PLUMB N lnterl'm u-lo l"hallt>ngr. i\I . . L I G BOOKKEEPER \\'ork all around Disneyland great ro. fur n Is h e s Call Lynn Todd, 833-2700 Employer. 1 ov1ei; Could Be Your .•• . , 21 hr. sen-Ice. 645-1161 Personnel Service Requitts full charge v.•lth in fashion circulation i1"0rk. transpceta11on 11.l & fro111 A~k for Hennan DENN IS & DENNIS Restaurant Help BRIGHT PROMISE ! Jtem"'I .& R91'alr profit & Joss & !en key stand Comn1ission, bonu..o; & 1111_ their officr. Can you 1111+ iiiiii.,.iiiiii.,.iiiiiiiiiOiiiJ PERSONNEL AGENCY New Faces No1v N~ For • 778 W h C M m11chine. 1>1atuno, to SSOO a nM'd. expense account. E.x-ai:inl' t>atilll!; lullC'h all mon1h W82 l\fichelson Dr. CASHER/countrr girl for De-?.Ia.ior ... : CUSTOM' Remodel Work, · 20t • • • month. can for appt 540-9010 per. not ncCesi;, as v.·e rra in. for $;). If you ha\•r good ol-Irvine, Calif. II-Restaurant. Food exp. TALENT HUNT : :atte.taUons, ad;llitions,'minor 642-7S23 S46-2592 Cal-Pacific Agency Aboveavg-ea.rnini;:-s.S.J50prr f1L-e skills hurry in. 1"ro111 pref'd. 2'1·ri, apply in per-l;;;;o.;c.i"~l~llc...:46!:;:·3051:;:::_~-I : :repairs: Finilh 'or rough "::i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i . Costa Mesa mo afl tTainlng. -English S·l12. l>ICR. Sale!t, l'arn S900+ · Co. 1IOli afft-r 2 Pf,f , Deli Shef, TRAINEES, male for cuok &: ~~ tarpentr')'. David Stewart, ~st Booki.---r $450 BOYS 1~14 speaking lorejgners aett'pt-Call .Irnn B1'0v.·n, :>10-60:'5 :~~·:;;,uses rlex hours. Brookhurst :., Adams, {nr other restaorllJlt ~'Orie. The it;: ~1108 . F1tAIVA u:;;pkg ed. If hired, must he ablt> 10 Co:1s!al Agl'n<"y Savonl Hunt ington Beach. Zoo, CsfHWy al MacArthur. '~: R~•1-o--·y ~--'·k-...... r,...~ to deliver papers ln the San start immect. ConlaC't i\liss 2790 llarbor Bl. 111 Ad11n111 Nel'd son1eone lo assist me --·• .x.: 'D!Jl.NI. --r-• .,.,.,., aemente, San Juan Capis. · 1 1 · b · ' Compuler Trainee s;;.:;o Star: j2J3) 424.-7095 all 11·cek GOVERNESS for 2 yr old 1n n1y as gro"11ni;::-us1nrss .. ~ ! .T:'".Guy Roofing, Deal DI-See'y-&nla Ana S550 trano a·nd Capistrano Beach including SUnday. hoy. !.1Vt•·in. lltl' h;<k/111 2 hrs a day, $250 mo. For ~;: •rect .• I ti? m,Y own work. Sec'y-Anaheith .. =n Al'eaD. AILY PILOT DISTRIBUTE Health & N.B. arf'a. ;\fu st drivr. $3.iO :R.VtNE PERSONNEL i111er1•iew appt. ran f'.1n;. '•• 646-7180 ~ ~ Olson 535-2277 be1"'ren 2 & '.i• ' · Jr. Secretary S450 492-4421) Ecology line, pt/full !in1e, 111<1. Call 67T>--2692 for 11J1p1. SERYICES•AGfNCy ~.~ ~. ing/Alterailon~-Gen'! Oftice·Anaheim ?!!s,----~ ... ~~'"'"'"""i,;,B~ob~o~rB~;t~\ ~&~16-'.::7~0~56~-~ HF.LP for Caniper Fac1oi·y. r 4 p.,_m~·=='""'= Ca&hier-Jns. Agcy .,.,.. CAREER DONUT Shop work-Ft'mAle. \\'ood"·orki11g tquir>ni1•n! ex· Fr~e & 1'-ee Pos.ilions NCR BOOKKEEPE_R_ ~: European Dresllmaklnc . NEWf'.'ORT Night shift. No rxp'd nrc. per. Apply Majonvay 869 \V, \ViU operate n111chln1· 3100- :.; All custom fitted . Personal Personnel Agency ·OPENING C 3300. n1u:rit do AIR & pay· RETAIL SALES LADY For ~elity Bakery Apply Tn Pcmin To: · Mr. Anderson 1'~ Fuhnn advice. 673-1849. 833 D D T:t-45. Apply 135 E. 17th St. 18th St, .il·l. No J>honc c!!lls f ~ 1• over r., N.B. for CM. please~·==~-~--Bookkl't'per/EDP 10 :~ roll, ~pital exp pre· $-!:',., SNACK SHOP J .. : ~~~::!!:!.:;~!a~. 642·3170 SALESMAN WDORRAKPREOROYM, I~~,~;~~~in~n~·a~1~~~~~ ~:-:~n;'~~na. ~ ri~ool~~o .. ,can for 11pp1. 3444 :~~;a~i Hwy. file AS.Sa1BLERS • Southern SLAVICKS Sec'y ;\1arkcting $•1S5 Ce -Pacific Agency 0 Co "-•--• Se11o·ing & pressing. Exper ,r., ring for 18 and ovf'r. Call Rrt•p/Bkk"""/Ty""' $4:f.1 Costa Mes a Corona del Mar ,. range · ~""_,. lanufac· JEWELERS 5-IS--9288 or apply at ,.., '"' -o;;-=====oc-=c:-1 ~~~~~~~~~~ CERMMIC We ne\\• &: turer n~ assemblers for trainees. Beacti Drapery, 900 NCR BOOKKEEPER: Great ..,__. •18 Fashion lsla nd \\'. 17th St.. c--.'I''"· . Po(K'yrts, ISlh & PlaCX'nlia, A88 E !llh 101 r-·1·-1 C't ROUTE S'LES . , ren'lodel. Free Ht. Small ..,,IU shift Will train. Xlnt Newport Beach ""'0 ."''" C;\l. .. · 'y .... 1' ro. in ideal local ion. Rapid " ~• !Ob_ s welcome. 53&-2426. benefits. Ou mplo ~ 1.1 . DRAPERIES exJl('nenct'd J•-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiii 642-1470 advancenit>nl for gal 11.'i th $9048 + Commi!l.!iion ~ r e Yl'e uo:ne. 1 s JD* hel needed p ·d hold Sharp perwl'lable s l a b I e '• lt_H Service •v1 ic.R & BRmtFIELD elude: profit sharina. slock P · ai 1 ays, • H k n>et>nl exprr. thru trial ~ ----Div, Ai\IF lnCOl'pOf'Bteri . "e bonU$ program, plenty of ouse eepers KATHY ALL'S halallCt'.. Start $•lj()_ person. l"o e:<per. -neces.,, -option, medical' ho5pilali2a-"'ork. 558-11131 • Companions C reations Offer &>r>iC(' & ~I( io -estab. GENERAL Tret! Serv. Yard 26181 Ave. Areopuerto tion insurancr, and ottlf'l"'!I. • Prac. Nurses Call Jr11.r1 Brown. 540--005.J "'•' 'cl@a.n-up, hauling, sprinkler San Juan Capistrano FOR APPOINTMENT F.J.fPLOYMENT Exciting 11.•ork for allracti\'e Cot1stal AgPnry 1rad. Great co. hl:'n1.•fits. i~· repairs. Reas. 64&-5848. An Equal Opportun ity CALL COUNSELLOR • Babysitters inrelligent people &.I all lcv-27!1(] Harbor RI. nt Arhim!i Call Don Evans. 1133----2700 if Employer •1,. •t"n••-°"!.""" If you like 10 \\'Ork ~ilh <'l!i. ...-,.U-R_S_'"_S_ll-.h,.71,~p""7·-c1 DENN IS ,f( DF:N~IS 'f: " .. ""'~ ·>OU '\'e hol'<' rnany !1nr JO. i>< Mr. Joyce .~ "'' • 8 8 1 "· rivll " PERSONNE.L 'GENCY • ASSISTANT M A N A G E R '"""""""""""""'""'"""" peoplr & ha1-•e had sales or I " " t llJJl b av11.il. in th(' Harhor are11 111 494--7184 Duty. RN,...l..VN . Practica. 2082 i\ilchPlson Dr. l.:.,,, __ E_ .... _.,_'_"'~"'-~ 'TRAINEE: Front line co. CHILD care, 3 hrs af!er pu Ii~\\ eonlact eXP£>rieoc-e ,ooc1 pay ratt's. P/rinic or I ;;..vn,-,=oo-==-=~o-Refs net'E'!iS::.-L f's co u I ie 1 . C l'f _ . has fasl aQ:vance & .....-1 school, in my home. Santa v.·e "'' train you in an in-1 . So 1. h'.EYPUN0-1 OPR: TI1is fint' Nit'"!'"~ R .. .,.ictr y .• ,.51 rv-ine, a ,•~·---.,.~u teres!ing career. Co1nm1~-fu I lime. me 1vc-1n, some .. -.... ~ ... Q ,,. -SALESMfN l·Jlill!I"•••••••• training for beginner. To Ana. .Hts area. Alt 5: . lit·,. out. ('(J, is moving lo one of !he 110.1pi!11.I Rd, N.B. Coll ~ $2700 ;iSi--8820. s1on + Salary provide high areas finest IOC'ations. Th!'y &12-995:'i nn~· hr. Inter\/\\' ~ J Wanted, Male 700 Call. Bob Wilson 54~ earnings, Firs! year $6CJOO. Apply \\•ill rrain an exper. gal to 9A.!lP, l\T/~'. I,•: l~RAM LETS Coastal Ager1Cy CHRISTMAS ~-'.\fr. 11ar]X'r. MO-Ql.).j 01K:Tati> ~ keylape machine. ORDEl'l: rfF~~S~K~,~,.-°'-c1.1~1 -,~d- •,. • ·-2790 Harbor Bl ., 111 Ad!lms MONEY Coastal A"€tl<'V HJ::ALT!r ,\· Znd ! ;;irr f'I bor~~~ R<'a!Jy va nce (as!"r in your car't'er ANSWERS A'ITRACTJVE yo4ng girls lS -2790 Harbor 01." at 'Adarn~ f ,\,\l!LY CARi-; AGF:'.llCY ~~1~~ Jr<1~e ~~11.~ ~W-@j;) "'i th a finf' hlg fi.r'111 seckinii: .~·. yrs lo 80 for direct selling. ism No. Broadiin.i, C•••l•I •• 2:90 11 bo l"r"fln1ofahle local pmplf'. To c"' Fantastic money. Sell an MALE HELP EXECUTIVE Satlla A11u. :Wi.fi&!2 v ., " ,,.,rnry (. :ir r SfitiOO )-' tfo RJ at i\dan1s · -:.: ~~ n -Berth'-Ensue -idea, eam tangible money. . "c> Personnel Agency HOUSEK.EEPER-1 --~-.-.--,-,,.---Call Rob \\1i l.~on :;·J(}.W-i:'i ~" .t;'IS"'hcy -YOUNGER 645-3997 behl'een 9 & ll am Part Time Eves 6-10pm Secretary Legel Secretary Coasla\ Agency •:. .. The computer in my office & between 3 & 5 pm Tues No Exper. Necessary Good skilis. ex""r. in sales. l,ivf'-in. Cal'l' for 2 childN>n Criminal La 11• E.'<per. 2i90 /larbor 131 at Ad11 m$ '"., -, 1~ Job to a YOUNG-thru ~. $98 .A WEEK ~ ti 1 c.11 '-••. ,,., or.; ""' ,,. "'' Tl'Chnical background. i\1a· 4 ,'I, 7. 5 Days. ·oust'Ccan-..... ,, ... ~ tR machine.· A1TRACTTVE girl 10 modf'I /Un>, inJ,", laundry. E.Yp 'd & 1't'-\VESTCLIFf ,;• frNi\l\\' Studt;"ot needs bikinis, lingerie. Great ·pay 842_0667 410 W . Coast Hwy., NB sponsihle w/ rrrs. F.ngli11.h T'F:'RSONNEL AGENCY ~· ~ time employment. for one afternoon a v.·eek. Suite H 645-2716 sp.•akul:ll'. Prcft•r drivr. 011•n 2043 \Vc.~~'.~~~r., N.B. i. • 645-5693 Strictly private & for fun. rn1 & ba. <·olor TV. Paid l;c==7"C--,---;c- Job Wanted, Female 702 <Consider girl for full lime COCKTAIL -.-Experienced--1·acat1on. S7.0 (lf'r 11k. R.a1."4" LIVE-IN Qousekl.'rprr, Carr ~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;:;;;;;;.;."';;;;;;;;;;I rec e Pt i onisl/hosles.!! in WAITRESSES Executive Secretary in 3 il'IO!i. NewpoM Area. or l(l(kllcr. litf' hous<'kN'p- .. "';NEED HEl.P AT HOMET beautiful office). Write to ,, Previous experience in ttd· 64.i-l::l:iO. ill£. N.A. lll'l'a. 675·229!1 "" classified ad No. 284, Daily ministration office perfcm-d HOUSF.l{I::EP1':R-Cook. \V iii LLOYDS NURSERY or Temporary Servlce: -Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Cosla Apply In Person Typing 7o. sh. JlO. ResPon-con~ic\f'r courlr v.·/hu~hand JOB OPENJ:-l'GS : • We Have. Convalesctnt l\.lesa, Cali!. 92626. siblc, full time position, good f'niplO)l'd rlSC'Wll<'r'f'. Carf' PAINTER ProfM1(ionnl painlrr~ need- ('d for our IDN:"~ Garden Apt. con1plcx. ExtM'ior, i11- 1erior .~ llnish cXPf'rience llCCC"!!Sary, Anf"I V: OAKWOOD Ne\\1>('1r1 Nor!h ARF. you !ired or un~pl p1'Q)Tli~rs-about your ad- v11n&mrnl? /\re you now able lo h11ndle n $25.IXXJ a )'el!r .~Jes job? rt so. DO YOURSELF A FAVOR AND EXPLORE THIS OPPORTUNITY Work directly v.i1tt national Mies manager. Lead system that guaran1ees lhroc calls fl night_ Pay weekly with monfh end bonu11. Chance lo manage yourself v.·ith a con1ract that \vi.II supply you with unJimiled inoomC'. * TYPISTS * Regisler fur a lemporary job loday Intcrvwis: 9-12 Eq11at Oppor. Empl:ol:F J\-lale & Felnale Western Girl Inc. 4667 f'.tacArthur Bi.Yd. Newport Beach >10--03>; TYPIST l\tust bl' ahle to type 6'.5 'Npm, son1e short.hand &-have~le­ phone rapport, to '"$Gl month. Cali for appt. 51).9010 Cal-Pacific Ag9ncy Cos~ Mesa \\'AITRESS wanted, °""r n, part tin1e. 96S--0365 or 961-'7212 Waitresses Exper. /\1.B. ;W~5383 WANTED mature, llve-Jn housekeeper, Spanls~ .speak- ing OK. 495-5438. . WIVES, perm11nent part time posltioii at O.C. Ra~ay food concession. 838-U03 OC>f1)1-e noon. , \\10i'>1 AN \1•a111f'</ fo r stock conrrol &. ~hipping ct~k. J\fust 1ype & bt-able to drlve car. Apply lo Box 1438, La· guna Beach. for app'r. . ..__-____.!~ Antiques MO ANTIQUE organ •. 98 yn old, Sl.500. Excellent co n d. 494-8983 11her 4 pm. Appliances I02 ;Aldei< • Nunes • House-2:30-5Pl\.[. i'>lor'I lhni Fri. 1 · ... . for 7 yr Qld txiy. Tor l1vin~ k ALA RM and/or intercom nnge ut·nef1!s. Send resume • ....,,._ JOLLY OX to Classifif'(f Ad U2itJ c/o 1u11rl!<. ,\\usl IM• k·ll;al r!;'!';i· AAo Irvine, NB E(fllal Oppor. EmplnYf'T Nur.;rry df'tivery n1an Nurs<'ry Sall'Sn111n "lr h al leas! I Yt>ar exp. I=====:::::=== J11lervie1v by appoinlmerrt - 1 _________ _ 10 A.J\1. ro 4 P.J\T. 558-7071 a.~k fen: Mr. l\lcGuy. HOMEMAKERS/UPJOHN service & installation. h 0 .1 , p (!en! S.· Ill' ;11.1111. v.knit.~. ~· 642"38.10 RESTAURANT t e a1y Pilot, .0 . Box Rrf's rf'q'd. State skill.~ & J...;1ndsr•111X' insl!l!lf'r wirh at e PLASTICS e leas1 1 year ""fl LADY Kenmore auto wiaher & Westinghouse au to * SAL~SMAN * wa sher. Both !ale ~ls, P nt o--·•-A C 156o. Costa i\!esa. OT ermane .JO<•Tv ..... ,..; R HITECTURAL sahuy r;iqM·ct,,rl. r.o. Bnx ·:. We Haw Companions DRAFTSMAN 25192 Cabot Rd. F/C Bookkeeper needed in1-M c SpnnklPr l\lli!! 111111 n! lea.~1 1 Jnj<'Clion molding Ofll"r11rnr:t y<'lll' r.~11 in l't'sidenlial QI' trail1<'1's. Graveyard ~hif!. S • G d in xlnt cund. $65 ea. Gllllr·& L . •n<•\ c 1 t ' :l!n. Corona drl nr, u. » Howtekeepers • Practi· l\.lin. 2 yrs tollege + 3 yrs aguna Hills -, · ons rue ion exper. ~Zli'T:i. ~prinkh·r~. i\lust he nr11t & <k'penrl11ble. port1nq 00 S deliver~. 546-8672, 847~11;,. BIG 5 SPORTING GOODS cOLJ)SPCYf' frost f ~al N•-es ere. At Monthly <lesirabJe. Contact l\l rs, .,: ''"' exper. Iocal A/E firm. llSKP"'S r I I • 'Ra (La Pu tumO!I S.0. Frwy) A!l io ne, !H0-8833. · '" ,-.mp )'r Jl!IYB {' · tes. 833-8320, ext 8. Georgr Allen Uyli1nd Agrn- Call for 11ppt. 6·IB-7·111 Female prf'fcrrcrl. Apply S"l'ORES has full .~ part . r e P 01ne posiHons !or ~alesnien. ~fr1gt>~lo~ XlntLA cond.Bclh& HEALTH '& APPLY ----F'f<~l\fALE Pitino p r fly(' t' : l'.Y lOft-B E. l61h. S.A. FAMILY CARE AGENCY -r now for permanent }'ri/Sal nire~ only. Call LOVE c!~?Con.ducr 8:30am 'Iii 11 :?.0ani. l1C'rl Inc fa~hion shov.·s in Sl/lll'e tini•. Comm. fre,, Retail sale$ l'XpPrience nrr-~mlT'I\ ay, g. f''>.~ry. Apply zm Harbor ~'='H=-62~\0-·-----~-1805 No. Broadway, part time lSe<."urity servit>e, COOK nires, b11rlen<ler. &l&-1·12R. ;;.i7--0395. Sant.a Ana 547..fi68.1 Position A.! 0 .C. }\a~way. ~ 1-,.-.,,-,-.. -.. N-.-------1 <'lo1hcs. car Ill'C. 892--5'197, • Apply '1:3().ll:WAi\f Or11n~f' Co!ls1 Pla~tlcs • lC1(l W('ll! !11th St., Costa A-1esa, Calif. i\li\IDS, P/TiM<', v.·UI train. """"'""'""'"""'""'""'""'""' AJlp!y in person. Don Quix-PROFESSIONAL p bone Blvd., CO!lla Mesa. USED Appliances 1: ~TV's. ~3593 before noon. XI.NT Erao. N""" A,,.il. !or ASSEMBLY Tra;,,..., day WAITRESSES live-In job •I monthly salary 1hl!t, female, age 18-28. no n.ll'. Health Ir: Family Care exper. neeeu. but must OISHMEN J i\gency, 18:>5 N. Broadway, haw rood eyesight & finger ~·· ,S.A._547-6682. dex!erily, Apply in peMIOn. ~ ER~IAN Woman wl!I do S.A.E. Advanced Packag-~ h-pert housecleaning. 4 hn. ing, 2165 So. Grand Ave, •min. S3 an hr. 892-3008 or S.A. -· A0u_t_o_mob~il~,-----­ EXP. dog trainer. Sho\\·lng, LOT MAN, t tu den t af-·C:ornJ cleanins. hone ex-termons. Apply, Mamis Cer'. Laurie 6G,-02J7. Motor!, 2100 Harbor. Costa :• Mesa. •. ~obs Wanted, M & F 704 . ~ AlrfOBookkeeper .Ex-"f l'.X}UPLE !'° ·ma.naae .a.pis. iwrince only in auto. office. ;Orantf' County 9.l'ea. 548·21162 I m m e d i a t e p o JJ i l i o n • a.f!ET 5 pm. available. Please apply . H I w nted M & F 710 U11lversity Oldsmobile, 28.50 ?· ' e p ' 8 ' llarbor Blvd. Co,ta Mesa or All Shifts Av11ilable Apply 9 AM·3 PM . See r . Mir. Dave Cornelson Sa1nbo; . Re6t~uranl ~ Acctng Bkkpr' to $600 call Buslne.lll Mgr. ~9640. f CooJ<111~ for that opPOrtunlry ( AVON PRODUCTS is the 3001 S. Bristol ~ :Ji>:_1rL into 1'"7 hi~ J>ll:Ying ~worlds laraert & mosl Santa Ana < .. ~nacUon field · --r'h1s ls respected. cosme1ic com-J •!!!!"l:~:'."~~~!:"'"'"'i C :J.11 JCJn't promotional 1pol In pany. AVON representaUyes * COOK, FEMALE * I ~. ~ Oight I~ne anoa co.. can tllke advantage ot this n-rnR,EMENT HOTEL ~ Call Miss Diane, 557.nn. tine reputation In 1uccnStw 962--5531 • , AbJ,:all Abbot Penonnel profit.able bullnesse• o f ~C~O~O~K~/ ~H-0-,-,~.~.-.. ---,-, -2.1 ~rency. Zll W. Warner, their own. Call new, ··-SUltt 2)9~ S.A. !>40--7041. adults. 51,i ~ \\'ttk. Top ACT Now I =-===,,,--,e7"°",..,-s.al8fY. Ref.a. 673-7877 BABYSITl'ER ~ 6'30 to C()QNTER GIRL 8:45 am. \\'artier t NewU.nd • 5*-1436 * ' • Full or P/Ttlme f"RONT Ofc. Girl tor physi· cian lintemistl Pleasant pC'rsonality & 90me frnt ofc expPr. imPor!ant. Ca 11 6-14--0228 aft ipm. FRY. Cook. exper. Fast. A~ ply in prn;o11, Co Io n y l<itchen, 3211 Harbor Bl , Ci\!. FRY Cook, exper. Full or p 'time. Apnly in Pf'N!Oll, 512 W. 19th St .. Costa l\.1esn. General OffiN> \ LEASING AGENT Our expandi~ Ookll.·ood Car· <lPn Ap1 in Newpon Berrch need~ a girl w/some book· kC('fllng, l:OOd phooe ~n· ality & prevWius l~asing nr rental experience. Typi~ 60 w.p.m. Thfs Is a+ IU!lllmf!: pofl\fion, hut must be able to \\'Ork evrnin~ & v.·eekendli. Go00 salary & benefils. APPLY OAKWOoD GARDEN APTS. C>Ung all twr• l(lMrilepen· > lltnt films It commercials. f'J,;, desperately need ex· ':ec:utlvt; ~ men Ii bt>aul}' ;"):o:>ntest type eir11. Call San· •lord En1erprlses. (1131 area. Could brine 1 amaa child. 0\\'n tnlnl. 842· 7902 at~r 4 pm. DANCE teacher, must haw pmfeaaloral b a 11 et tn. Newport Buch North tlni<:tor ~/strong jtia 880 Irvine Ave, N.B. BEAUTICIAN wJsome lollo~'lna. N.tWpQrt I o c • Newly 6tcOr st)op. Ca.U alt 6, 675-8281. ~121. . 1 Don't give up, lhe 11hip! FMt results are juirt a phone I "Li1t" It in ch1ssified, Ship call aw.a)'. 642-5678 fo Shore Resu!ttl 642-5671. back,grtlund. Al.t0 n e e d bi:!l(lnning lftP f1:1!11chf'r"" for H.B. 11..rea. Call 9-noon $41~'. The fasleat draw 11'1 the Wl'lt .. ,3 Dilly P 11 o I Fut rnults U'tl Ju1t a J)bonD Cltssilltd Ad. 642--5678. Cf.ll aw~ • 642-5611 I FILE CLERKS >10-&101. SALESLADY We guar & deli ver. P!Time For Christmas Rush. Duhhip's, 1815 Ne ..,iort Bl., PO!<itKJns 6rten in our Hunt. Bf'ach l)fficr . Full & p/tim<' hf!;. Xln't bf'11f'f1ts & oppor. for advancf'mcnl. Qill J'1•rconrK>I 842-7751 Equal Oppor. EmrlnyC'r INSURANCE GIRL f:Xp'd pl'1"50lllll iHll'5 & raling. lmmrd ()JX'n1n~. Besl Office Ti>mfl"lr11rics 16-18 Newport Blvri . Costa ,\lesa * &J."1-.1ti!XJ coll' ~lotC'l, 2100 Ne~rport solicitor • Dana Point, San Blvd., C.j,\1. &IZ..~10. CIPmen~, Capistrano area. itAID v.ftrk In exchan~~ !or \\1ork In yoW' own home. 11 pa rlmrnt. 2.176 Ne11·port Best deal In area. Phone Blvd, Cl\1. 548-97;i;;. ,835-1465 bet"·een 9:00 a.m. • * • and noon. GEORGE SLACK kR=-,-,,-l '°E'°'"-c"c:,-,s"o1".,:---- ·707 Poppy INSTANT MONEY Corona del Mar Join The Prof11slonal1 '\'ou are the winner of 0°pening1 now for p11.sl, 2 Hcke1s lo !11l' J?~nt .~ future R.E. prople Apply in PN'SOll, C.l\f. 548-7780. KIRK JEW~LERS SEARS Kenttl!Jre washer. 2300 Harbor Blvd. Maint. on all part~ &: labor Costa Mesa unll\ 3/10/72, $60. Sears S ALE SJN11tionally 11d- vfo't"tised SJl(lrls\\~ar com· pany & leAder in irs field has openings in this area. Age JR to 60. Eam $20 to S-IO (X'r evening, Full or part timf'. Call i\fr. Parsons. i7~: ~5435. bell massager, $25. 557-iOCJ9. CE elec rnnge. Hotpolnt (bltn/ di1h11o·asher. 8 o th good cond. 836-7941 an 4. NEAR new G.E. Rebig. for office, boat or c11mper. $50. 673-J75J Orange County iii new homes, resale11 &:. in· SALF:SMAN-PAINT DEPT. ISLANDER International ve.~tment prop" r I I cs. Salary dl'(K'ndent on exp. O'KEEFE & Merrit bltn dishwasht'r, all xlras, $75. Good cond. 3.13--3329 alt 4. YACHTS Auto Show Bonu!!es paid. Up, to 8.'i1o Xln't bcrwfi!s ,1:, v."Orking e MAYTAG me.n-wa!lhen/ Now lntei-viewing <lt lhe CommiSt'iion., Paid vaea!ion con d • I\ er m RI ma dryers/nilch JJel.s. ~-00 day For ANAHEIM plusmedica\COVt'ntge, Free H11rdw11re, 2666 H arbo r guar. 53)-8637; 839-1778. PRODUCTION CONVENTION M:hoo!Jng ,& draws avail 10 Blvd, C.l\f. 1 e~u"1"-1d;,,i.::ng.:..:;M:::•:.:tw,..::ri;..1.cl1...:;.,IN=I LINE November 171h !hru 21st ttualHied. Anah., Hlg. Bc.h., 1 ;;Sec:::re"t~a,.,=------- SUPERVISOR Pica~ call &12·5678, ext J.lf Orangt ofc. Call Jack Sey· LEGAL SEC'Y ST50 * * betw~n 9 and !i pm ro cl11im moor MG-4212: • An n1mosphere ol excitement RON RONGSTtlD With mim -of 2 yrs. r.. your !lckt<t<1. {North Count}' *SE·YMOUR• & lllverslty v.·/4 JJha rp at-25051 McKenzi• cent exper. In th.-field loll·frte number Is 54().1220) Realty & Investment ' toffl'y awaits 'you if you're L1igun1 Hills of fiberglass boat 11s-* * • RELIEF' Cook, t")fJ>Cr. req'd, carttr mtnded. )'ou are tl\e winner ot sembJy. Please 1ubmit I•---------• 1 Baptist Convalescent Hosp, Call Jana Davis, 83.l--2700 2 tlck~u lo the resume w/cover l1tt1r MAINTENANCE 661 Ctnter SI, C.M. 548-5585. DENNIS &; DENNIS Orangt; County in person to: PERSONNEL AGENCY lnternetlonel ISLANDER YACHTS MAN Rocopt • Sec'y lll82 Mkhelooo Dr. Auto Show m W. 17th St. Ou 1 1 .E;xec olc girl W/frnt 11ofri~ Jrvint, C'.alif, r 11rge a-p1.rtmen oom-er>pearance, pertona ty • at the Costa Mes• pie.~ In the Orange County publlc contact txptr. Req'a SECRETARY. Onlnge Coun-ANAHEIM 11~A nctdJ fl res;dent maln· akllla: in typln1r, SJI. ,s., otfc ty Dt'mocr111ic Part)' needs CONVENTION lfµ)nnce man. ,l\1u.st be a gystf!ms. Call -for appt, brl&ht llrtractl~ a l rl . CENTER * need a profe1 11lo nal meeha.nic. Must ha\'t ref's~ Xlnt pay, Trwn Sharf1 UniOn OU, 67J-J320, 2201 E. C11 llwy, Cd:-01. \.n11 1ritenan<'~ engineer, f>r.e. TI.418f1·8111. Democr111ic pohtica.I exp. Novembr.r 17th 11\N .2'ht tM11bly with ' llp:u1men1I--~------desired. 833--3185. P~.ue can 642-5611, d t Jlt malntenlt11('e background. It't 81..,,..,1 the ........ t time&: l,'SE;:R~VJ~CE=~s~,.c:.tio;:;.o~Sal"""-· ~ ... ~u between 9 and 5 pm'° claim It's a hree:tt •. M'll your ilcm! with ease. U!!lll De lly Pllot 011.!Mi~. &12°5678, Apply ~ lrv!ne Ave. NB fllual OpJ)l)r. Employer --• ~" • d ...... , .. "tickdt. (~ ,._, ..... alwa.ya the right place U lime, Must ~ neat <N e-~y-....,... .. r )'OU W!Ull RESU1.T$! Call pendable. Apply 1)91) New· :''·free numi:r Is S.lbOl 64Z..fi6ts It place that ad !porJ::::.:..:B:::lc:.''::·:..· .::C:..• .;;"':o· -----~~-~~ 0.JJ &fl-5678 A-SA\-'fl MW Stull • !. .-. " . ' . . .. ... "' 0AJLV PILOT Wtdntsday, NO\ltinber ·10, 1971 ~(_ ~ .... ~ .. ~. ;1l§JT~1~ ~ ... :;:~~.j1~;;·~1~L!~~-;~~~~l[§Js· ·!I ........ _ lrB ~I _-..... _-.... __,I~ I PlLOT-AOVERTIS[R 24 I~ I _._""_'~"_'' l§J !.__~_, ... 1_"""'_,]§J Camer••. MIK•ll•neou• Ill Mutlcal lnstrum1nt1122 ~-''---,.,,....,. __ as..,2_ ·11oa·,·.·. ·P·ow· •• ---'°'-1 cvs::..~~ke1, 925 Equipm1nt IOI * FEND~R Ja~ar, d\.1!P bllJl'. BJo.:AUTlfUL llimala)'an kl!· SKI • FISH • ENTERTAIN 1----------• Trucks 96'1 Autos, Imported' 970 Autos, lmporhd ----~-----i ---D-A-TS~U-N---PORSCHE "' * AUCTION Xlnl , w/rase $250. teni;, (\tale, Utter IH. 1---------- NON l"actory «kmo Sat., FRIDAY 7 P .M. A~fP . bet-fed • up Band-t'<'l:l~tc.-red. Call alter 4: 20· Glamon lfiO llP I/0 TM• NEW '?'l PICKUP 'M WQRSCJIE 1600. Burnt Nov. 13th. aU day. ~~clals, NOVEMBER 12th master . re\' f' r b he-t\d. 80 6~·!-lf.>91. w/l raller $4500. 644-2693 HQ-.TT"tl a 4 spd. dlr. dlJC, Bumpe:r. Ra· ort11ie, blk Int, chromt: lkff Ul electronic n1u1h >"URN .. >'RO,>! \.\llllS R)!S. custom t'ncl. c0~A~RL~IN~G~P~A~R~T~P~ERS=~,-AN~ SELL ot partner '70 Formula ,_,. ~ lnte~Uona1 llarvestcr dio. 1'1irror11. PL7'.lll20. Take rims, sld rack. AMIFl\'J, "'/p\11'Chase. of Canont't 28. I< Al La 1 '"" ·'11 23' xln'l ....,_.. •1• Jnv..... -RECREATION CENTER -all "-··no• •-•d<. -'"~J o-1 ti t All 6 61°"-' Harbor Photo, Cd ~1 . MODEL HOMES & RF:PO'S w tee n11 ng ... " KfITENS. S3 to good ' ... ~, .... " •. -J'"' ROY CARVER I ... u """ ' " ...,..-vo• uc:a o . e . er ' ~ i 6i$-4670. Nl'w ii Ull'd • 90 day nltt musical intr. s11krs. $jj(l, homr~. 641-4818. 49-1-7184. ''FRIEDLANDBl,. ' nc. aftr to 5'M).8736. Im CPE, nu trans, clutch, titagnavo.x1 color c.'Ombo w/ Tom ~7888. 154 &o.tt, S.il 909 -MADI .....,. an 2925 •rarbot Blvd. DA'fSUN Roadster 1967 Good pai'nt, inl, chrm eni· $1895. -HASEl..LBLAD 500c taPt-de-ck. Colored 1V's ,t· "G"I"'B"S"O"N.,_,L-.-,--=p-1u"'l'-S"'G.,,... Dogs Costa M~ 5464444 clean car ln · A-1 shape. or trade for \·ari. SS7·W IlKE NEW $450. gfel'ro!. Nt>W rllvans, Bunk fl!"IO. 3-16-9632 "1.""'AB~R~A~DO""°'R_p_u~p-,,-.-.. ~.,....,ol°'d. FAMOUS 26'!: Swedi s h c.ash fot your Hood& '66 CHEVY % Pick Up. Owntrleavingandmlllllllf'll. before2pm. ' 644-2649 beds, S1udent dl"Sks. Offi('(' Ollie Fumltu,../ READY TO CO! r.1UST .. F~~l('cl ce.n_t compl 5.17-6824 • 893-7556 SICt"pt'r/camper, . ·he av '~ $895 Firm \1$-2083. 1969 Porsche 911 T . ffvmltu,.. 110 de11k.<1 k ch:iln1 Ch<'st~ or e. SELL $10 ch c 11 ov., ..... u in . ena1ne, i:ood •THE BIKE SHACK• tires, IDwing hitch, trJr lint, FERRA' RI .SUv•r I Black. A/M-F't f.t. 1;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;.;-;.;-~-;;;I drawers, Dlrwtit>li, Custni Equip. 824 GiJ...i721. ea ! . , • u .. ei~.u11 54 riflce! $3100. 10-SPD BICYCLES .i 11pd tram, spqre tank!!, • 24,cd> ml. Blue Book, I' bar & stools, Maureiuies, 'TI ADLER Pon. Elec. BRADOR RETRIEVERS =~===~~--PARTS e ACC ESOORTF:S $1350. Owner 545-0953 eves. 1---::=:-::C-::'::,.,...--673-7"" FINAL Book~a.ses.Buffets.R.efrig's, typey.·ritl'r. Brand .new.~ h I bloodl" 13' SAILBOAT f.1etcalf EXPERT REPAIRS 1''0Rsaleortrade19SO'Ford f~~~~ v-· Stovf'1. \\-•a.'llM!rs, Dryeni & Pl'rfPcl Studl'nt Christmas A!\C "ampon ines. y.•/yd. dolly. Xlnt cond. ON ALL ·MAKES Pick Up truck Ii camper SAI£S & SERV1C£ l96B PORSCHE SUS 3 DAYS "wUC!tN'o'y'OsREA! UCTION ~ill. Pn id $2·1Q. Asking S210. :~llo~::~ si:~: 4gf~~~'art ~ ~"~""-"'-'-· ------Tires & Tu~ . All Si7A'9 shf'll. 96~125 PRl~E~~ S!LL! ' Pri. P1y. 637-R.~t·i: pni. 8' SABOT+ TRAILER $350. 1093 C BAKER, CM '66 DODGE Van Camper. -"I t Colt N F · · • "16 'I'" s · k .. _ '68 Porsche 911, imm&CUlate W-.1 Th. & 197U IB.:\1 .Exet·. ·rypc"'rftl'r, or ....., separate y. ear a1rv1e"' ., .. ., .,,,. rove, sin & iceuux, Auto., ...... , Urs. fri. C0!\1f. BRO\\'b"'E AROUND U 3 · ~.,_-.n. \\'El.\IARAl\~R P1,1ps, AKC 5J6..2651. TRIUMPH, 650c1·, J 9 66', poptop. Sips 4. 2 ne'\.'Ttln!s. condltlop. . N ~ nw 1; • .,.....,, 1'f'g1s. Ovrr 100 champ. I 6'15-5214 ov. 10th, 11th, 12th 207a'~ Nf'wpor! Blvd. 61~-ll066 SCIIOCK racin,,. Sabol No. beautilul cond. Extended 64>4038. USED Behind Tony's Bldv f\1at'l11 •~~-~~----= Pc dig r e I'd· X 111 't .... t "· I I k 158 1600 Su""r reblt enr • p · /0 826 1 ndo """ :::.rw::i 6132. Full raeing '"'· lbgls ol',..., eng per eel no e11 ·s. CHEV !2 Ion PU, V/8, auro. 3100 W Coast I-I""' I ...... ' ·• Costa l'lesa * ~ 1anos rgans ""a c gs. <TTOT""""'1V'· ' • •• ,. M perlecJ 1 ks great , FURNITURE op~• DAIL\' 9 • P UPPIES AKC Ado bt mut, $375. 644-2766. Ow1lE'd & lovingly cari'fi.for r/h, nu lires v.·/2 bunk Newport Beach ru , /.! .,,.ai: ' i iii!!ii!'"!!"' !!ji!ijiji·!!i!i1"!i!!i" iiJ * SALE SALE * · ra e by mechanic. Afiking i100. "••n-• •h•ll • ·•-o "-.1 ---~-~----I going cheap!! uo.:r-1-.... { & 1 poodt all 1969 tloblP Cat. Trailer & .... ...... .,. .. ~.. .., FIAT •• OUTLET BANKRUPTC· y ""' oy " ,.....,.,,. "0 211· TOYOTA ii · PIANOS •• ORGANS colors. 1 tiny female Yoridc spal.'t' 'Ill January. S850. or '"'u-:J. ,(; ~ l~·H·~~&.9:~~d., CM LIOtilDATION SALE 51~~~~.ayn::;;~~· ~1~~~~~ 393-9719· . ou~~~~:!82,,· sLOOP Al~~~:;_,~.,~~.:~Lb~~ •. 20 ·;~,.,::0"'.i,~~;;,:"";,•;";" 7illiiU SANTA ANA 1 B~· nrder of U.S. Dilllrit"I ~ AKC reel female Doberinan, It too• 8 Jt wld p~--Al 6 --•( 6-1"· ,6•7 Beau!ifuJ 5 pc. $panil:b ., .. .,., ll'mperament hr e d , CX· Strong Racing Class · e, "''""' 1er ; Cl:l.L .v-. :J • 4 . TOYOTA me !able scts,J79.95 each. Court: Equipmc.-n!, Stock. l\tOn & Fri t'l,·es 'Iii 9 . 5-ID-5630 ask for Bill Harold 7' Solas. nice condition. Machinery & fixtures of Col· Sunday 12·5 ceptiqpal, $25, 830-9633. $6,~. 714-544-3200 532-4443 after 5 pm. '52 DODGF~ P ick goodUp, 4 s,,pd, Service dept, open 7:30 am fi;f9.~ each le~ "OffiC'C' F:qulpmt>n1 & FIELD'S PIANO CO. FAWN Boxer puppll"S. AKC LIDO 14 No. 398 w/trlr, 21-.-.. -KA-W_A_S_A_KI_250~-S-l-d,-w-l-n-·I new tires, runs ' $ 5. TiilM See 'ti: 9 pm M0Dday thru Fr:I- ,/. Ra book Supply. llltl Nev.-Blvd. Champ Sired i\1 /f'. ~7-t9'l5 M'ls of sails, racing eqpd. 646-4947. ''fRIEDLAN.OER" d "! ti.an CaMS, $2-l.95 AU Items D1"scoun1-...1 Stnrage a\•ail. •0"". :.48-4170. der eqpd for dirt only i 775· ''~60~F-O_R_D~>-·a1-ro_n_Ra~-~-... -. 1 ayp. HONE u•2512 ~ch ftl Costa Mt'lla 714/645-32j0 or 546-2695. " "°"" aft 4 Pl\1, 2·l La Jolla Dr: ~ .fl 5 pc. \Valnut Bf'droom .~ovenht;'~1~/~~ & 14 ORGAN SALE DOXIE puppies, 7 wks, red. Boats, Slips/Docks 910 Newport Beach SHllO trans, rndio, good tires, 1375G IU.CH ILYD. 417 \'f. \Varner, Santa Ana Js. $49.95 set Conn ~ An al Falt AKC. miniatu l't". Stud ·n !IONDA •=CB $lOO. 536-0269. !Hwy. 3fl . TOYOTA ~ Crushed velvet chairs, 23CKl Harbor Blvd C.i\1. .....~ ... n nu Service. 8~7338. Newport Slips $2.50 ft. 11,1,,, ".-''"" ~ Hot-·t Auto Leasing 964 893-7566 • 537-6824 11995 1 Clearance. Save up to $1CXXI Days ;..i8.2:;92, Eves 494_2671 . ...., ~· ...... CLEARANCE SALE ;i--· eac 1 STEREO. i~ Go-~ ha• on selecred console fJoor .1 sa;..o * 67:>-2785 NEW 1971'S # Overs!uffed occasional J •1< '""" ,. SHA~"LCTIES, NEARLY new cement deck OUR volume lease depart· ~DBfi f ""'" ·~ull 'stereo cbanger,' air demos. HUge discounts on ,... 2= BULTACO "-u tt all ··• • airs, $-1.JJ each . "'-bl• •. •••hl .•. "7_786, slip float 21x33. 13-' .,,, , .,.,st o er, as ment o crs popwlll' • Lam Shad h·t -.A au.1pension !""'akers. aU models. ""' "".. "' 1 c t 1 It 6 A · • I -k p es • w le lu1:y ""'" Clearwater. Call Croft & 11-. on nc a er pnt mencan "' {l"lpo, • ma es ..DeMLewiA W TOYOTA st, 10c each AM/~l stfftO radio COAST MUSIC GOLDEN RETRIEVERS, f'. Neville, 675-8222. 646-6268. at l.'OIJ1petitive ra!es. Le! our WATCH THIS ;:ar;:;"": ~y.~~Pe y.~~· 1 :1~~ n!!~::;:T &*HA~~ ~~h",c,,.,, Tu,, . .,' ,','!w .,.!., _•,:dl. 3t1· BOAT Slip, Villa Marina., 12&1 2SCH4 .. 11v2~N::,,•hirl's bikes 20 ~:= =~gJia!:is~?.~~ LARGE 5i~ETION, SEE • • :.. SPACE FDR J GRAND OPENING i • SOON of USED FURNITURE OUTLET «'I Fashion L•n• (for- "'erly Angelus Furni- ture Co. Adjacent to •••hion Square. Santa Ana Frwy. & N. Main ,t.; Senta Ana). l\10S'T Sell Chinese tifodl'rn MPttt Livln,1: Roon1 furn. •. l'llcct"ssoril's. Exquisite e9rJy & marble lables. tall ~nese floor Jan1p on base. J.4:1:e Scarttgraph pic ture" ~ wall dra1M"ry accent. 'ljakwood game d i n i' n g lAle with chairs. AU in *1t oond. 5."17-0309. 8' l lERCULON sofa & ~81. l'OUnd ganll' RI, t:Ol:ted crwihl'd velvrt Ji\•inii: nt . .'lt't: hand can•f'd coU1:e ~end tables. 67a.3343. F'Jt:ANK ilamilton \IJ n 1 r r Color. AppraiSed at $1000. }t!lst offer over $ 6 O O. &,U.-2649. USED Furnllure-?ttust sell P.ftvate party'. Beds, s\o\•es, ..,jng, couches, etc. m--. 8' .. PRINT s· 0 fa . con· thnporary design, exr<'UE"11t ~dition, $50. 642-1648 after ~ O~ R set -Chest & mir- ror dres.c;cr, 2 bedframe.11, ntte" llland, gd cond. $250. ... 14%. n'#'L move anything you ~ in this col1.unn & 1nore ,..,..... . iq:rqc ~i~ tJe.d compl SIOO Rla)'f'r piano, Kindall $200 d.,11 aft 6 n1: 8-17-4776 4:l-' ROUND DN!xel Tiki ~kl~il ~~~le, xlnt rond. ~ 613-l1:ia DplE'TTE M.!t-blond 1\00d. :! lf*Vt'!i, 6 nf'\.\" uplMlbten-d l&Je chair11 $45. 91'9-14JlJI. ~PLE che~t & df'.<:k. S25 ijoth. Gl't'y ~I. SlO. School f'k $2. Cn~ 644-~-·-­'* 5 PIECE \VAL.NUT • Dining Room &r Stoo 9f.8.-3991 ~arage Sal• 812 Everything Must Gol OLD HOl\1E BEr:-.:c DD!"Ol.ISllED'? FtJn."lTTURf: .. AN'l1Qm:s ~ Vlf'lorian mirror, rlay btick l lOVf". ml!.JJlf' furnltUl't', P!i:hO, 1'f'fn1t, !<i10Vf'. liRhl t.li)urf'. Bargrtin Prit't's! ! 7:1!1 Seashore Dr., Nr1,1J0r1 a#tch \Ved 1hn1 Sun 10 ro 6. $v1NC ulf'. furn "" qjothes & houM!l'lold 11f'I AltJ lo -4 PM Slit/Sun, 1 .. ' · "'"· "'""'" ·'· Balboa. All servil.>eS avail. • a '"" · ~0~1~~ ;; !~f'::~?~!°~~ W~~t~eJ~U * sr .. BERNARD pups, ~/mo. 547-9277. &$-4257 ~e:~:~. that makes the SPORTSCAR CENTER Su . k AKC, S50 & UP. Tcrn1s. I oo-=~--~~~~ '70 SUZUKI 90, 8 spd, THEODORE a or la e over ~mall FREE ORGAN LESSONS 2 .. ~ .... ,,.,. SLIPS for ·po.,..·er boa!s 13' to ~ymen1~. Collection Dept. as long L!i you like! No reg· I' 131 ,,.,,...,,.,..,, 38', Bay5ide Village 300 E. xlnt cond. $2!'15 ROBINS FORD 11·1/893--0501. i.11tration. No obligation, Just AKC Afghan 11ound puppies. Coast H\.\'Y, N.B. "* 830-1901 "* mG0 HARBOR BLVD. '70 Fiat 12'1 Spyder, 5 spd, lo 2S.13 Harbor, C.:l.f. B I Sh E I C Show quality, ~lales & T"'O '69 KAWASAKI 90 dirt COSTA ~1ESA 642-0010 miles, Pirelli's, good cone!. eau y op qu pment OITlt'. tifondays 7:30 pm •·•ma'"· Call "'l =.·" '•· BOAT sllps avail. 2S'-65' M 1 tt• 12300 o:•o A.,_ .. 2 lU T"'O Stallon Flort>ntil'N' COAST MUSIC "" ~ . .,,. Xlnt accommodations in ~:~c;.;.g2~ cond. fl~ each. Autos Want~ 968 ' us ~ · ,,..,.......,,, · dressing bar \.\'/2 lgt' mir· 6t2-28Sl F'OR SALE: Germalf -rK"W ].farina 673-fi606. "'<>-""" JAGUAR rors 3.11x48 w/matchin.• LOWRE'.\' p·,,-, & ~,,, .• Sht'phl"'rd. AKC, black "& 7 . '69 Ai\1ERTCAN Eagle 175, WE PAY TOP' "" ,,. 5 fan, $50. Call 96Z-5949 l ' SIDE lif'. $34 mo. 633 des~. 2 Rnd ~~ h~i:aullc Yamaha Piano & Organ.11: & Lido Park Dr, No. 18. like new, $3Zi. . CASH BAUER BUICK cha1r5, 2 air ~nd1l1oned Steinway Pianos. Best buys IRISH Setler, female, JO 67J-93f)!!. • ~ '1: (ll'Y<'l'S & chairs, 0 n r in new & usetl. Schmidt ino's old, AKC regis., $85. 1----------HONDA ol:.O CB xlnt cond. ~le\·ecle': shampoo -. bo"'"1 i\tusic Co .. Est. 1914, 1907 N. 6-12-8129 af1 7:30pm. SAI L Boal !!lips a\'ail. up 10 See to appriclatr. $-150. "'lh ft'ITng & ha1 i la' Np.,..·port Beach , 1 1 c 1 ·, i\1ain, Santa Ana. SAMOYED pups, !l Y.'kS. f~IS-5.1&3. 67.">-322~. ~paratt>n;. $4ll0. Beauly -~~~=""°"~-~ "" ,. _, ' "ppliell ,, .. 1.,. 9"" "7"". BABY GRANDE Brooks C<mnlp inc. n·i.ues. ·&1 Honda 160 CC " '""' '""""' "" Rl'a~riable. ;,j7-250-t ONE 15'8"x30' U-slip $93. ~--~---~~-1 r.,·1n.11. Beautiful lone. $-175. Orw l1ide tie, accommodale Gd. oond. $EiO:- Custm Drapery Sale ~9-2673. SCHNAUZERS avail. noy.• or 548-02.01 II.pt B-3 ah. 5:30 Drant>ry '\"orkroon1 clo.~ing ~-7, -~-~--= 30' boat, $75. 673-6880. •-S rt Good 130 hold til Christn1as. Groom-MAILSTER .'63 \Vestroasler. nut~ yds of n1ateria1, ill po ing S Boats, Speed & Ski 911 JI F 7 ing, lllud lll'rviCf'. ~. Very goort c 0 TI di l I 0 n ~ pri~. ahrios fronl 5c S!\f Clothing, Ladies llilf! 12, Registered SZj(}. 5-16-7888. yd. Bring m•'_asurr~1ent.~ .~ l><lnl~. imrkas &. etc. Lang AKC GREAT DANE 15' THUNDERBIRD 100 hp sa\'e. 38:5.1 _B1n-h !>t ••. N.B. )''lo bools .11iie !, at) prtC't'd I ·Pu~"'~· _•_•_·k_, ___ 968._>3'=8 Johnson, ('lee rnotor lilt, '68 Honda, xlnt cond. 4000 5-16-1431. AdJ toO.C. A1rpnr!. 10 Sf'l!. 67:;.:li92 afler fl p~1 Horses 8S6 ('ll'c hllgl'.! pump, full t'O\'ers, 1ni. y,•/new carb.11 &• ballrry. •-" BUYS 3 V · I----------good cond. 714:Sl&-I492. $3\.i. 962-7052 ask !or Tim. -.... Pc. \ edding Stor Re t r t ring se 1, (intt'Tlocking•, 8 •· s au en • 832 ARABIAN Dispersal sale: Motor Homes 940 ,,. h ite/gold. Engagl'nien! Ir St>rafb;, Sott1J, Rt'gi11 £ Real llil ring ill-tilfany style v.•\Jh 1~l ·N~~=-c-,-,-h-. -.-,..-,-,,-,.-.--11 1'1cCoy mart>1, Fill\f'S, & Tr1n5p0rt1tion rill RECREAT!Of{ vehlcle5, carat diamond. Call :w ... ~,710 totals, Good ooild $350. colts. Term11. 1213-l a.;z..3624. ~------~ -n10tor homes,. trailers, ('an1- aft 6 p.m. \\'krtays/all day * * 962_5!Y.t.l '* *" HORSES BOARDED JX'r5, ho11ts. Hold ing lank k { P · I P -2 A · 0 -t A rlum11 station. 11 g ht f' d , Y.' enr s. rive l' ur1 y. TV, Rad"io, HIFi", ~,......, cae1a. """n a na Aircraft 915 II · h A k f L" frnc{tj, Y.'ash rack, centJ·ul POOL TABLES U'arehous<' Stereo 136 ,~'-''-"-·-'~-°'--"-·~---· * llunt. Bctt. area. 968~1i68, Sale. }~reight damaged S•l!ll-----------Part q\Htrll'r-horse neffis f'X· '* * 9G2-2.l84. to $199, NPw s"late r1tctory STEREO : Garrard syi;tcnt, JX•riellC.'1' rider $150. or hst. A . L. BATTENFIELD cratl'd. St!() 10 $3!1:1. ll'fl on lay-a·\.\'ay, 100 \.\"alts, ot't'f'r a.i:;..scns. 21782 Kiowa Lane ' 639-8623, 52'l-8•16G. A1'1/t'~t stereo. 8 track, I~~--~---~-Huntington Beach 2 Horse!!, One quarter hnn;e, .,., I TEAC Tape Deck, Nat'! phonu, sold for $478.25. J>ay Ont' Slandard Bred. RPas. Jou arc the ""inner o off sm b&lancf' of $197 or 1<n1 2 tickets lo the l,a noson ic 11tereo w/ 1;r){'akl'rs & 6 band radio, Nikkomal 1.4 c am c r-a'. 67!>-3592 Call 962-4792.. 0 C t pymnts ol $6.28. U.S.A. range oun 'I Stel't'<) Equip Warl'house , International li!I F.. 17th SI. C.M. I -~~·----· j~ Auto Show 6-l:rU-12. ---at the WIDO\V Br l' akin£ UPI:-;-;-=;,-,===---,-ANAHEIM house k e '"P i ng selling ALL -197'1 ZE."NITllS on sale CONVENTION household articles & ap-m iv al Orani.:e County's pliances. crvt. 5-l&-l£l2. largPsr Zf'nith Drier. 19" General 900 CENTER Chron1arolor i\lodl'I C4030, NOVt'mbe r 17th thru 21st DIAi\fOND engagement ring. S395. fref' rolor antenna in-CAPTAIN Please caJI ~2-5678, exr 31 4 !\1u~t geiJ 55 P 0 in 1 s · stalled 1\'/nll con! o 1 e Unlimitt"XI. license. any gross bt't\.\·een 9 and 5 pm tG claim Insurance apprals11l Sil45. 30 y ,. k {N lh C ty purcha.'lt'll. No do\.\'n l'f'-tons. ears experi<!nce :your ~c l'ts. ' or oun .c"='=--"='°~·~-~~--~I 1ruirecl 0.A.C, Ask aboul AAil & power. Professional toU-fnoe number . 5'10.!2rol Sf!\1~10NS H i d" ab f' 11, cash &. rarry prires. ABC ~port fishirtg guldt>; l\tex.lcan "* * * reduced from $100 to $50. Color TV, 9021 A1l11nta. & Central An1erica & Paci!· Campers, Sale/Rent 920 :\lusl St'll. 26.j 16th Pl. apt 4. JlutitinR:!on Beach. 96S-3329. ic Coast waters • InslrtJC· C)l. tion in boat handling. :o;ea-_----------i:\IAC.NAVOX rnaplr roll· NEW 1971 9Yz FT. n1ansh lp, DR & (.'('!estial 6' \\'h1!p couch, , F't'<'neh sol<'. ~lid st11te A:-01/f l\f, . Prov. bdrm Ml. Y.•hilf' chair. phorMl & ta"" re1-.:irdf'r. Xlnt na\•igat.ion. PICK UP & ,... DELIVERY ANYWHERE: Cab over cdmpt'r for Chf"-'Y dinPlll' Sl'I, mi~ household <'Ond. $.32:i. Call 6i3-il92 F ~ k It Ou captain available for ~X· or 0111 true , · ra\'y 1y good11. 64>-4390. c'"~"='=·-~~~~~~-tended crulsina:. Extensive Construclion, $750 or bl'st DJNE'lTE SET w/6 jN"l'lt'd :l.tUST sell Treark Nikko adminilltrative experience. offpr \VlU consider tradl'. back" chairs, be11utiful con· amp & Pio n!'f'r turnlablf'. 646-2977, 6-IS.26~ or 5."i7-4:>IO rlition. $22S. 675-669!!. l\1uirt llf"P to :ipprrc. C(!nlaC"I "u~s">:~D_,Ro,_.,,...,,~,~-.-,~~,,-,.-,0-1,.-QR sAlt' 19i1 lo\('n Coach NIAGRA Cyclo !\lasl!age in airer lipm. 6-16-626~. \1Pl'I, t.uauni:: acrv,r,:~nei::. campt"r .~hell. B1,1t: rear door . gocwt Mndit1on. tl00-2."1 ca~h. ff'Crealional rquip \lclcunir. -4 nm nlcl. !\1nt cond. $-IOO. 646--4761. ,------~ Df<c. 3. 4, ;, • Across Coast fi l~4i16i ur I"1~81JJ;, COPPERTO:'>IE BUILT-IN S. I frH to You 11 1 fh\·y fron1 Ri•uht'h t:. l..l'f', 'fiti OPt~N Ruacl C11mprr on Rot isPratt>J>, 1·hnlr-broils, · N.B .. For ~pa~·r l't'Sf'rvatiun. ·:i11 F'ord 1 T lrurk \!)dual grills. $.JO. ~S-4485. 3 Lines, lTlmes, $2.00 714: 66-~i!"17. \•'ht't'I~. Good com!. s1:m. 11' HV\' Ulilit)' Boat 6 cyl 5.16--0-269~. ~--~~­ Chryslrr. N1•1•d11 .... "Ork. No 'Iii V\\' Can1pt•r. rrbl\ f'n~. irlr. $3!"{1. 64:....1120 aft 7 prn. T.-111, !!h'T't'O lapr, pop top. GOLD & y,·hite 8' Much. $100, ~mington 1YJJE'"·riter, S30. WVABLE 10 mos. old 518-2~5 af\rr j pni. 01·1u1i.;<'/Y.tiitf" n1alP k11t~·. l\IARBLE IOfl C'Olfl'"<" & <'tKI ;i[lf'rrd, shols, ho.'< trni11c•d. h:ihlf'~. 8' ~la. Call after 614--0139. ~: 30. 9&Hi407. c=.:~R7r.t-A~N~~S~h,-ph.,...,.-d~. -,,~,"-c SF.RVISOFT au1o \\'Iller con· \.\'/Pflllf'ri<. 11 nio·s ru 'l'.ood 1hr1onf'r, xlnl rond. $1!10. hn1nt". ~ Ali:o 11rn. supply -0f 6i:'"'5.i2j. loorl. 6i3-8/l00. HOS.PITA.I~ heri c.'0111plf'll', t-.1/\LTESE/Poodlf', n1a lt . to good rond. S4:'i. ~R-237j xoofl hon1r. f'\'f'S !) lo !t ._ * 6i:J.--liii~ + • e Talking ~t~nah Bird e .JUNK rJAT & CAGE $50 YOU HAUL • 54S-448:'1 • ~l0-fl663 Afler 6 pm Wint.ct 120 'YR SPll}'RI fema!P mi:ii:l'fl Beagle, _good \.\/childN'n. Needs frn{'('d ~d. SJl-7482 Boats, Power 906 f'xa·s. 642-77~7. JR' CllRIS. T r i -r ab in Const1'1la1ion, 196~. Lrnlrled &· 1011 rond. SZ2.500. Dayl'!·: 2131 636-07j7, t~ves: 71 ·I /:"i."1 i-2:t50. 28. Unlfli1f" 1900. $6.)()1) ol' tr1de lnr tra\lt•r bo~t + rash. Chvl"lt'r, IH6-1'1.''.0. Cycles, Bikes, Scooters 9'l5 • • ·;o BONDA 750 rc Trtk(' O\"l'r paymf'n!11 * 'It j.18-fiOAA •• 11r U~f'cl 3· speed bicycle~. 26 uu·h lf1ri1ctt & n1en. C n 11 n.ffi .• :fs~. Trailers, Travel 94~ 23' Safeway, $SSO low down. 642-1265 Trailers, Utility 947 FOR sale 6x·I' utility trailer. l\1ake ofter. :;Jt-7468 Auto Service, Parts 949 GUARANTEED "" USED TIRES "" YOUR CHOICE $4-$6-$8 * * • Large S<'lection to choost-f ron1 ! ! ! F1resrone Store, 475 E. J7!h SL . C.:-01. 64&-24+1 Cor..-a1r parls, engine and misc. pa,rts. • 5'15--0906 • L..7._._~ .. _ .. _ ... __,Jl~I Antiques/Classics 953 .J93i r ortl 60 2-dr ~edan, Orig n1i111 con<! .. Bt's! ofr o\·l'r SliOO. :H6-44i2 aft 5pm. Oune Buggies 956 ·71 !\1YERS Tow 'd, V\IJ eng. Likr 11{"\',', Sl3j0. • ;,36--0269 * FIBERGL'\ V\\' b11l!ed. Dune Buggy.' 1600 eng. i\lany xtr8s .. S1600. :JGS-5820 t>ve11. Trucks 962 '56 !-'ORD P.U. cylindf'r, Runs 6-16-7622. 1t ton. 8 J:ood. Call ·ii Int'! Tra\'elall, V-8 Air, Full P\\T, -Xlnt Cond . 776-S"Ali, Eve~ 49-1-5408 TilC Harbor A~as Only Authori7.cd for u.wd ears & trucks, :tUJt JAGUAR DEALER call us fur free estimates. Ah1•ay11 has an excelle:it llf· GROTH CHEVROLET ~".:';:,,'.' ""'h N•w & ""' Ask. for Sales Manager 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847 -6087 KI 9-3331 WE DESPERATELY NEED Clean used Cftl"S FANTASTIC PRICES ''Specializing in Quality" BAUER Buick-Opel-Jaguar 234 E. 17th St., Costa 1'fcsa :>4&.7i65 '67 XKE ROADSTER Paid for your car, paid Jor 4 sptl. cltr. \\rif"l' 1,·lwe~. mini or not. ronduion. A1'1/F)1, radial DEAN -LEY/IS -tir~. SaetHice!· Take ..limall TOYOTA e VOLVO c!o\.\·n. IUJC505J S46·87J6 or 1946 HARBOR BLVD. 1 ~"'-'·~6S~l~l.~~---- Costa ~tesa 646-9300 4.2 JAGUAR Sedan. 1966. C....,7.c~"°=~=~=~I \.\'\lh air<"Ond ., while \\"/tan ANNIVERSARY •SO lthr. in1e r. 1.0wner. A AUTOS WANTED Beauty! Blue Book $2,88;;. Top dollar for clean wed 642-8235. ""'· S.. Andy Brown. --~J~E~N~S~E~N~- TH EODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 6-12-0010 WE P AY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS Ir your car is ~)(tra clean, 6t" us 1!n;t. BAUER BUICK 2.'Y. E. 17th St. Costa. l\lesa 548-7765 JENSEN AUTHORIZED SALES '. SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 \V. Coast ilv.'Y. Newport Beach TOP DOLLAR KARMANN GHIA IN CASH Paid for your clean used car '6.~ KARi\.lANN Ghia , TJttid for or not. 11u!olron\1!. Rims, \\"ood SANTA ANA DODGE in lt"r, mars. Sac. $1600. 1.Wl N. Tustin 49i-lll6. 835-3691 ~t9~;o~G-RE-E~N-K-.,-m-,.-.~G-h~ia, -~~~~~~~~-1 IYIPORTS \VA:~ED auto slick shifl, xlnt cond. Orange Counties $1850. 646-9152. . · TOP$ BUYER BILL 1'1A.XEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. lt. BPach. PIJ. 847-8555 Autos, Imported 970 Prestige Sports Cars ·59 Lan1bo~hini 2+-2 • '70 210.Z 121 • 'GS & '69 Porsche 912, air • Peugeot 404 class- ir COll\X'rtible. Author1~d i\fBZ Dealer 111 :l21· 7Zi0 LOTUS LOTUS AUTI-IORlzt:D SALES & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W, Coast Hwy. Newport Beach AUSTIN AMERICA MER~~DES BENZ 1969 AUSTIN Ameri<:a, i:;ooc1 rond., auto. A.'.\T radio. 25 ;\IPG. P..·t. ply. S9()0. Eves: &l2-i.ffi9. BMW Automotiv~ Excellellce & ROY CARVER, Inc. 01 an'JC County '"' l .ir 9c~t SetC'ct1on New & u~vd Mer(('de~ B"nl Jim Slemo ns Imps. W;irner & M,ll n St S ant.'\ An.1 546.4114 i;}6.931!3 1M6 Harbor, Costa ?i.fesa '71 TOYOTA Corolla 'Vagon, 5,000 miles, radio. auto trans. & tape deck. T.O.P. 893-3169. TRIUMPH I TRIUMPH I CLEARANCE SALE NOW! HURRY & BEAT THE 10%- PRICE INCREASE!! FRITZ WARREN'S SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E.J.st St., S.A. · 547..(1764 OI>en daily 9·9: closed Sunday '69 TR-6, Good con d , Red/blk in!er., ~lust &ee xtru, $2400 or citr. 675-7873. VOLKSWAGEN '69 VW Bus, 28,0CO mi .. lo mile!!, drp1;, crpt&, radio, green. h1nt running cond. \\'f.'11 cared I<1r. Must sell! Best otter. Call 545-0S49. '68 VOLKSWAGEN, xi nt rond, lo n1i. '.¥.! V\IJ,runa great. Make offl'r, mUJt !It'll! 557-li06. '70 V\V Bus Kombi-camper, sunroof, AM/FM, x I nt . S2m5. Days 5-15-9807/Nites • 1\·k ends 673-7194 '63 VW Camper, stoVf', refrlg, v.·ater. $900. Call Larry Morgan, 673-0397 or 644-4031 bef 5. '62 V\V w /runroof, radW>, new gel'lt'rator, $450 or best offer. Must sell now. 496-3095 49&-3095. * '65 V\V BAJA BUG. RC'built engine, Xlnt cond. Cal! MG-2133 . '69 VW. EXTRAS. EXCELl..ENT CONDmON 968-3545 or 646-~15 ·68 VW Can1per. body excl, needs cng \l"Ork, $1800. Pr ply 847-1688 eve.'l/\.\'kndll. '69 V\\", Convert, >:Int cond. i\IU51 sell thi.~ Y."H'k .• Best of- fer 644-6760 aft 6 pm. 1963 VW Camper $9!}5, 6i3-4868 • 1968 VW Camper New eng. $2,050. 494-7&12 '64 V\\' Bus, l'f'blt f'ng, new lire!'!, radio, immac. $1200. 833--0351 '69 V\V Squart'back, «Unroof, auto. am/Im, $ 18 0 0. 646-22311. 196-1 V\V Bus, 1 owner, 71,000 miles. Jlo!.ak" offer, 6-14-0718 '57 V\V Van, Jtd mf'chln. cond. $450. Befort 5:30PM, S-18-7988. '66 VW Fastba<'k, 12,IXXJ rnl'a on ove'l"haul, New clutch A atarler STI5, 968-5632. &_ J.&, 18.~J Highland !Jr J ;;;;;;;;;; ~;;;;;;;;;;;J KITIF.N . 5 rnos old, mAle, ~ has shots. To l(OOcl homr. #t; 5'1£..ti~• 2925 Harbor Blvd. 1\ Costa l\ll'Stl 546--4444 ' DATSµN ·n Z'Jl..SL, lully equlpd, 400'.l mi's. F:tctory '\'arranty • '69 ~SI~ 1'0UJJE' road.\ler, auto. air • '69 280-SL COUP«' road$11cT. auto • ·si 2;;o.s 121 e '70 2ro-SE e • iO 25().C • llurry. !hr~ ""flfl't last! Authorizf'd t.IBZ DeEller CLEAN .65 V\V, sunroof, Runs "lnt, $750. Ask for Andy; 54~3315. ·;,1 V\V Camper buJ. Xlnt in- trrior, cherry l'tlglne, $>1,0 or olfl'r. 64a.l496. 116 AIR CO~tPRESSOR II. ).Use: .. •ood.,.·ork l ni: tfdUntt)' ~71'10, J N=-S~E UICK CASH HIOUGH A ',DAILY rlLOT : WANT AD '42-567B CASH P"AID FOR COCK-A-POO """"' ..... frnt rurnil urc, af)pl\Af!C('ll, 11 l?tJO(I homl'. 84&-0015. antique~. Onct piece M J, A B ll A D O R . Cif'n11~n houK""f\ll. Call day C>f nicht, Sht>phfl rd Pupp1t1. 6 Y.'kl M9-00 or 5f1·7'133. l)l•l. Cull ~7.163. ~~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;i;;ilGOOD homr11 "anttd !or KILN lmall elec, centrlsug11J Cock"r·lkagll" puppit~. 6 r11stn1g machine. Elec, '\1"8.x \\"f'f'ks old -&tl'.-fi8.t9. t•11n.tr. 8J9..213.!. ~!ALE k\tlf'nS, i wrtkl old Muslc1l lnstrvment1822 Y.lltll good hom <'5. Call 64&-i02J. --------·-COl\:'>I J.O t°f'f'nt'h Horn. ~lint conrl. Cntt WJ. nf'\l',1,1-------,lrB attkfni,:: $681? or bt-~1 olle.r. Ptt.• and ~" ~. !J,t,;...7010 afl 7 11.m, . • . Baldwin l\crosonl<" SJul'lt'I. 1''ull keyhnard. s:m e !l-4~ Cfv'llT•:LLO Arl'tlM/rin, 0.1>1, x.ln1 ~mt SJllO. ... ~3842 . Pets, General ISO l~ f l.1$11 .Rabbi! Doe $3, Baby II ' I ,. '70 240 'Z' Local c1u· ruJly equipped. Like nt>\\ ~ Vndf'r li.000 miles. dlr. \\"ill take 1radc or fllllllC(' pvt 111y. (-424BLOJ Call 4M-681J afl l pm !'tl&S736, '67 DATSUN PICKUP ~ 1 l 523-7Xi0 MG MG AtrrnORIZED SAL&S & SERVICE NEWPORT IMPORTS '67 VW BUG Xl..i'l'r COND * 675-8486 * '59-KARl\IANN Gh ia. E'llf. $400. 646-9557 11000 Rblt. •67 V\V. GOOD condltson i\IUSI' 'SPll ! $900 or olie:r. &1~1349 days. 3100 W, Cout It_,. '6.'\ V\V SUS S11'0ng h<'art! 4 s-pd. dlr. J...o. Newport S.acl. EXCELLENT CONDmOK cal pickup C1'Y1'140). T11ke l----'------I tTI-4l SJl.9359 -11rnt1ll do"'"· Csll ,'\ft 10 11m 546-R736 or 49-1.S.~1 I. '66 DAT UN ROSTER R11dlo, Jlr11tf'r, Conv & llard- ll)p, Gdod f'onl'I. nu paint. $595 a lMINI ... \llV ·;o Enaine "~G'' New CHltch & nre.1 16:.t 492--0tEll '' W h It f! Elepn&ntl" o~r­''fft ninnlna )OUr hooM? 'I\lrn ffDIJNDfft" lh•m t"1o ··CASH" -.. n 1n1t 11•c" 1""'" ni them thnJ Dally ·p 11 o S$6-2Rlt or 1\7~ 89J.7566 • S3'7..ea:24 Clani.fifli. 6'v.i&TI. "'-""--....::.-....::._;.~1-~--~~~-· . I I • 25 PILOT ·ADVrRTISER DAILY PILOT ~ri WtdMsday, Novtmbw 10, lC)7l • [ M"~~ 1§11 l§J! 1§11 _ ... _ l[ij [ Aul01 lor s..Je l§l l l§J .:;;I ;;'"'";;"'"'';;;;l§l~~ I .• ,, .. ,~... l§l I Autn, Imported IJ10 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970Autos, lmport9d 970 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Auto" UMd 990 Auto1, U1ed --.. -~---· 1Xnnounclng 1972 l !T!O!YIQ!T!AJ THEY'RE HERE!! ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON ALL CONTINENTAL FORD '71 MARK 111 * '71 FORDS * Th.ls beau1itu1 luxury car Is GAl..AXJES e' MUSTANGS luUy equipped with all the TOr.INOS luxury features )'OU would HERTZ '"ORP .-poet. lr1 '~" oew 0>ndi· 'W. • tlon will be appreciated 221 \V, Kattlla, Anaheim w~n you f~t drive Uti.1 (714) 77M050 classic. 366'DTA l ;:c=""'c:'=--',-~~ $83TI 1959 f'Otto. 390 cu. in, 4 spd, N 0 new high perform ance DU T N FORD heads & valves. Ne"' tirt'!i, 546-7070 2".AO So. Main at \Varner Santa Ana ba11r ry & radiator. 427 duaJ point distrlbutl!r, hii b lilt cam, $350. 492-8643. CORVAIR ·n Fon! .T'''"' GT. 9.000 ml. ,,.,-_,,~.,......,.·----I A/C. Lt ii'"· pert cond. '63 CORVAIR. new paint, .$2950. 644-&Wll dys, ~1666 t·pe J:teck, rebuilt eng. & 4 1,._"-'-'·~~··====-- •pd. "'"'· 11"· 894-4008, MERCURY Sat. & Sun. 8-2. CORVmE * -----PLYMOUTH PLYMOUTH • · * GAR Y SOKOL 204 <14th St. * '65 BARRACUDA • Rtbll 273-'IV nu paint. wide tires, mags, ~to. S150. 968-6564 . '64 VALIANT. auto, R&H, lo mile1, xl nr eond. $400, Private party. 962-2105. J'ONTIAC ------'67 Fl: ·no \'-8, Auto Tt-.tns. A!r Con Po"·er \\'i~·1, Very a eaa,1 S99J or best offer, will cora· 11dt:"r U'ade. &16-2698 . Newport Bt•c:h You are the l"inner of 2 tickets lo the Ot •FlSI• _County li'tter,,atlonal Auto Show at the ANAH.EI M CONVENTI ON CENTER PONTIAC--,-'70 Pontiac. ala 111a,gon, xln1 8-Y--Ow-.,-.,--19-1-0-Po-,.-,,-cl co!Kl . Call betwn 8 A:-01 & 5 C PM 7>40-99-15 ~1t. Gendron. N'ovl!mber 17th thru Zlst Please call 642-5678, ext 314 betv•een 9 and 5 pm lo d aim your tickets. (North County toll-fr!'e number is ;,.J().122.0J * * * Oiml'-A·Llne 642-5678 atalina , 4 dr sedan. p'AT., 1t4MBLER heater, air co!Kl. One o"·ner, pri~ for quick sale. $1990. 842-8781. '66 Amb,a.ssador \Vag. Vil') ·"10--,-,-,-b,-.,.,-,Sp-,l-t.-1"'-d-,d-, 1 Clf"all. Kew tires. $895. Call x1nt. cust vinyl, p \V r 644-5565. everythlng, wire w h Is . 673-4314 e\.'et. PONTIAC GTO '68, 4 spd. air, dl1e brks. positractlon ~ar end. 644-8909. T·BIRD 1959 T·BIRO, cood tires. $275. • ~17l:t . I 1972 TOYOTAS!! '67 WH1TE Corv~te con- vert., >,1•/air-cond . &: ~ new t\rei. Llke new. $2000. MG-9581. 1971 MERCURY STATION WAGONS HERTZ CORP. llutos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 • ALL MODELS • ALL COLORS !TIOJY[O!TIAJ 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MlSA 646-9603 ~ 540-9468 91!/llll!VIWllthlllllllll! l1r I 111 fJ:fitlll»l:. AUtos, Imported 970 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Auto1, Used l--:-'.v""o..,..LK"'s~w'"'"A_G_E_N_ NOT A BUG I 1967 V\V Seda t'i, 24,000 miles, 1 0\\'l'lt'r, lop cond, $1200. 6734899 or 6'JS..2440. VOLVO -------CADILLAC CAMARO CHEVROLET LARGEST '69 CA:\IARO SS, an1/fm, * '71 CHEVY's * SELECTION OF 11~lp disc, p/\\'indo"" auto, I'.\'IPALAS e CHEVELLES CADILLACS IN a ir. vi11yl top, orig Qll'nr . CAMARO'S . ORANG E COUNTY '"""· ''''"'"" 0 ' "'""'"·'· HERTZ CORP. SALES..LEASING '69 CA:\IARO, li~r nr11'. 'G:> CORVETI'E. 2 tops. 2Zl \V. Katclla, Anaheim (714) 778-4050 MUSTANG 40.000 or ig. miles. 4 iu>d .l--=------ $1700. a48-2330 or 536-t:WO. 1971 MUSTANGS CORV. '61 Rd ... """ .... HERTZ CORP. Super Car. $2595. Toni, · 2Z1 \'1. Kalt'lla. Anaheim ~3730 \\lk. 67~3289 Hm. (714) 778-4050 COUGAR j\lUSTANG '68 like new. V-8, ----------air, auto, xtras, lo ml. Pr '6!1 COUG AR, 3 spd, 302 E'tlg., prty. 837-7856 IH&-2644. xln1 ('(Ind. $1395. Dy sl°"""'"'B"O'°SS°'302'°'. '°'N",-w-...,,-,,~,-.. &16-3831: E1·e11 675-6:)39. X!nt cond. -1nus1 sell ! DODGE '69 DOD.{)~ RT, -t<i() cu in. 4 spd, xfi1't cOndihon, $1750. M;,....J61~ art 6Pi\I. '69 DODGfo: Dart 2 dr. lac. $2,400. fl.IS-78·IO 4 to 9 pm , HarOor American 646-0261 1969 HARBOR. COSTA MESA air, V-8, RJ.H, P IS, $1700. 1968 CUTLASS, all p11T, auto. 963-1307 R/H. air. St.600. '68 Dodge Van. VS. aulo.,1__,.,,_,..-00•~4'9-"°.°'2009~~~- new tin's, new paint. ';i7 OLDS 98. Top Cond., 962-67'61 i\lust Sell, $273. *. 5-l;)-7361 •• FIREBIRD PLYMOUTH '67 l-"i~blrd. P/S, P/B. R/H, Crager i\1a.,,gs. Good .~-------­Cond. $1100. 673-6197 '6j PL\'i\1. B\IITacuda, 273 ---'-===---.,.,.14 b11 rr. carb. 4 Spd. FORb O ean & Fast. Lo mi's. $700. WARD S. LEE Announces PRICE REDUCTION LAST CHANCE TO BUY '72's AT '71 PRICES Now is really the time to buy. All cars ordered or de- livered before the price freeze is over !Mon. Nov. 15) will be protected re90rdless of delivery date. GREMLIN HORNET SPORTABOUT JAVELIN MATADOR AMBASSADOR Full Service Dept. Serving The Harbo' Area Since 1953 WARDS. LEE AUTHORIZED. American Motors '1 DEALER ., 1234 s. Main St., Santa Ana 547·5126 : AUTHORIZED Load<'d! s2;,oo or trade for 221 \V. Katel!a, Anaheim ·SERVICE-Van or Caniper. Pri. P ty (714 ) 778-4050 , 'VTHOLINI Nabers Cadillac 673-2191. '66 i\IALIBU, r.tetallic blue 646-5621. 1970 FORD pick up F25Cl,I-,-...,-~·~~---= ~"""'!'!"'"""""""'!!!'l!~""""~"""""""'!~""'~'"'""'"~"'l'""'!l!!!""l~ auto, heavy duly spec .. 2 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 V01 2600 HARBOR BL. CAi\1ARO "iO RS JW, tt ir. auln 11•/black in1. Great rond. .. ' Gd. brakes. $6j(), Ca 11 after lanks, \'{Ty elean, $2600. 'CalJ 493-1103 btwn 10 -3 & ask for Tl'd . COSI'A MESA 1nany xtras, vrry clean pr " • F •"' '''" "31 10~ 8 pm Ask for i\lark. ' Rl£0LANO£R" 54o.9lOO Opeo 5""'" ply ~·~I .. , -~. •"2331. nr-1968 Ford Station \\'agon. 300 1uu 1u.c .. onirv. •• '7D COUPE drVille onlY CHEVROLET-eng, pis, air cond, 40,000 8-~· e 531 """'" 15,000 n11. & IM i\1AC. -.. •. '69 CHEVY LONG VA'N. . . & . •-,-...,--~-·~--'--'--.;;;::~.:....,-· .... "' BEST OFFER! ~23 m1. New h~li new paint. 'Autos; Used 990_ Every COnct'ivaWe extra. '66 Chl'\"r !le )lalibu, V-8, ASK FOR JOE $1495. for quick s a I e. Yellow ""/hlk. landau rop & 1 I ih bk! 1 °"" "7'" M. B. TRADES '70 Cadillac Sedan de Ville e '70 'Cuda, auto PI S e '71 Chevy Piclrup '• '69 Olds Vista Cruiser ""agon e '69 Monaco <.'OIJpe, fully equip'd. Authorized l\1B Dealer ( 1) 523. 7250 au o. p ~. r , sl"a s, .,...,....,... ..... blk. lthr. !n!l'r. Aski ng ivhitr-hlue intt'r. S750. '69 EL Camino, P/S, Air. '66COUNTRV SQUIRE $5195. 833--0101 or 833--0144 5.JR-5-13:>. \\'i!h or without camper eves. =~==~-.,-~-., shell. 5'-1~1657. Full power, Xlnt condition "63 Cl!J•:VY Jmpa.ln 6 cyl. ==="""-..,==--= 675-:l33l Ask for -Phil '65 c a d F' Je e 1w 0 0 d auto . J.;ond .to clean cond. ':l7 CHEVY. reblt trans, $200. c.,.,..c6,0-.0'--,dccc\'ov,'",-,-,.-'c,Ai7'<--'«>-00~. Brougham, :il.000 mi 's, vin. 1 ()r bC'st otfer. :\l ust sell. $~173. ;,:> -52:i5 aft • 812_1181 * Very clean, Good rond. top. full p11lr, leather inter . 6. i\1ust sell fast. Call Lynn, Xln't cond. $2150. Pvt p1y. '7D EL CA!\flNO 396, SS, klw 6-12-2168. BEAUT. borl}, great chassi~. !"l48--8j2.(). 54~91 · .--" ,·""'''"'·. •o• Bel Ai,· n1lles,excellcn.t condition. '"'""" "" L .... of96--'2S4 1969 LTD WaiQn, 10 pasa. '6!1 S.D.V. Loadt'd. Good S22J. $.· Xlnt. '62 Impala, Evrnings: po"'·t'r. air, immac. $2650. cond. lSf. $2,600. Pri Pry . $-100. Ph: 673-4141. '63 CHEVY Impala SS Cpe, 644--0591 after 5 pm. BUICK &14-8600 days, 675-f 1 3 4 P/S P/B -•· '64 l :\1PALA SS Con1•er tiblc ' ' x .. as, o.ig. own. '64 GALAXlE 500, 6 cyl '69 Bu!ck Riviera, full po\\'er, lac air, am-fm radio, stra!o bench, landau vinyl top. SJi75 01· best oUer. 548--1578 Eves. >..1.NT CON D. $550. $350. 968-7973. ..,....i nd $350 '6.l Cadillac Cou pe de Ville 8~7-7~7 CONTINENTAL :~~~&:H, ~""'"'co · · Co nvt. 58,000 miles. Sl,250. c.,~,~CH=E~V7.~v-,,-.v~.,=-.-,-,..,10-.• 549-1839. '62 FORD Converti blr, PIS, R/H, ~1rrco, r i ;-ht e o u s Lll7D r.tARK III, like new, P/B. l"K'W tires. S 2 O O. a.ft 5 pm. 1969 CAD Coupe de Ville, lo '6.l BUICK Le Sa bre, 4 dr miles, good ('(Ind. S·l,200. rond. S199i 6-17--6-111. fully equlp'd, low mileage, 968-6:;65. HT, ps/ph, air, new tires. • 49~/6 '61 CHEVY flexible on price and tern1s. '7l COUNTRY Squire LTD Lo mi, orig owner $895. s1 ;i0. • 6-15-.l264 Phone 546-1600 before 5 p.m. sta. 11·gn. Like nu, lo miles. 644-5i9-I..~~--~= \Ve 'll help you sell ! 642-567..!._ J \\'e'll help you Sf'IJ ! 642·5678 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Sell idle ltema now! Pri pty. $3595. 642-6~. Autos, Used Autos, Used 990 CONTINENTAL SALE ' • 1969 MARK III • • • • • • • • •ti $4875 Jmmaculate. Bea utiful Silver j\1ink fi nish 1,·ith black !ra ther ~nterior & matching landau roof. Equipped \\·ith full po"·er including 6·1vay scat. Clima te Control Air Cond .. Tilt strg. 1-1·heel, Automatic Cruise Control, etc. This fine Automobilr obvlou~Jy has had the hest or ure. {\VXF534 '· 1970 Coupe Exquisite. Satin Black finish \\"lt'1 1vhile leather & v.·hite Landau roor. Luxury equipped lhmughout, Full po'A-er. Tilt str~. wheel .. AJ\.1-F'f\of st.erro radio, Climate Control Air Cond., 4 Brand new tires & much more. See & drivf' this bcautiruI car to apprecia te. (815AGB 1 $4575. 1969 4-Dr. Sedan Uiv.1 rn ilc~lran. Attracti ve medi- um ~old "·ith matching Leather in- l<'rior & bro\\'n landau roor. Luxury f'quipped of ~oursc. Full power, 6-way lit>Bt. Till strg. ,\·hi., Tf'rnp. Conlrol Air Cond., etc. Rrf\rcts brst of car<'. Clearance P riced. (YBj\"Oi6). $3375 1970 4-Dr. Sedan Beautiful glamor' ~old metallic fin- ish 1vi(h lcathl'r interior and match- i,ng landau roof. Luxury f!q ui p1>t'd ot course. Full pov.•er & 6·way JlO\\·cr seal~. climate control air condition- ine. tilt steerln~ whrel. stert'CI t.3pt" systems, ctr-. Immaculate through- oul (838AGA ) $4575 • MANY MORE TO C:HOOi~ FROM • 1966 Coupe Bfoautiful eold mist me- tallic fJni1h with rvatch- ln1 lnteTior A: landau ·roof, full po w er tqulp- ped, climate control air conditioning. 1trreo tape gyslem ete. {SJC108) $1775 ( Orange County'1·'Family of-FW Carl 2a HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • &IO-li830 1970 Mark III Attractive light yellow gold with black leather interior & matching Lan- dau roof. fully luxury :Quipped including.cllmat«> control elr rond., tilt steering whrrl, Aj\l/F?i-1 ate~ radio. M lchelln n - dl11.I ply tlrt1, etc. This bl'11.ut1rut car reflPCtJ the ~l of etre. f<*IACK) $6675 These Prices Will Knock You Off Your Rocker! Here are savings the likes of which you've never seen before! We couldn't get tliese prices any lower if we pounded them into .the ground with a sledge hammer! Come on in and grab the car of your choice because at these prices, they won't last long! EXAMPLES:. KELLY ILUE BOOK '68 '68 '69 '69 '10 MERCURY 1'1r1111n•. IO<. H,f ., VI. AMIO .. F1d. Air, F•ll l'OWtr, ••H· 1 Vinyl Roal. T. Glln, 1 Vr. W1rr1nly. /VHA Ull LINCOLN Ftrdor. I Y••• W1rr1nty, Flcl. Air, .~11tr P't•••• RIH, T. I Gl111. L11lll1r lnlerlor. (RllN IUI FORD G1l1de JOO. t Dr. H1N11hl•, VI, Avlo. fr1n1,, P'.S., ltlH, W/Jf'#, I T. 01111, WhH I C•v•n. jWWV SJI) MERCURY M.,,1d1lr. 2 or. H.T .. VI. A11l1., F1d. Al,, 1'.S., l',I, R&H, I W/S/W. T. Gl111, 1 Vr, W1rr1n1y. (XOC JlOI FALCON s1111o" wigo11. v1, Avie. Tr1111., to.s., l'.I ., R&H, W/5/W, I f , Gl111, W~tll Co•trt, I Vr. W1rr1n!y. ('91 IZOI TOYOTA Corftnt Mu~ II. Sl1llOn w111n, Avll. Tr1n1., ll&lj... TlnlM l Oltu, I Ow111r -Llkt Nn11t (HJ ASl'J ' MERCURY Mon1190 MX, J Or. H.T., VI. Avie., F1c1, Air, "·'·• ltlH. I \Piny-I Roof, r. (11111, F1ct. Wttrt.nty, !lGl AEll • LINCOLN l'tr<lor. 1 Vur W1rrtnly, l'ttt. Air, "•II Powe,. R&H, VJnyl I Roal, T. Gltn. CJOS ltS) MERCURY M•nilll•. 1 Or. H.T., VI, Auto. l'tcl. Air, 1"1111 ....... s11..-, I Vl11yl RIO/, T, G!IH, F1ct, W1rr1nty, tVRN 110 9 FORD LTD. 2 Or. Htrdl•F• VI, Avhl. Tr1111., Ftcl, Air, P'.S., P'.I ., R&H, I W/S/W, V!nyl RIO/, T, 01111, Fact, W1rr1n11. tm AOOI '11 COUGAR ! Dr. H1tdtop, vt, Aui., Tr1n1., ''''· Air, l'.S., l'.I ., RAK. I • W/l/W, Vlflyl Tlfl, T. Gi•u. 1711 COTI '69· LINCOLN C•u11t -1 vr. w1rr1n1J, '•ct. Alr, Fun P'ower. RIH. v1nv• 1 •Nf, T. 0110, L11111tr lnl. llRE JUI ' . '10 '10 ME*'CURY ~1ro1ul1 11'9\!t~•"'· 4 Dr. H.f ., VI, Ault .. F1<!. Air. FMll I Q l'tWtr, Sltr~, Vlftyl RHI, T. Gltll, TWlft C1mltrt i .. 1,, 1 "'· Wlttlftly. 1041 AGEi MERCURY C•IDt!Y 1'1tlr. 10 P1ntt1t•r w..,on, VI, Aul•. F1c1. Air, flull I 1'1W1r, Sitt .. , Of"l"fll Oftly 11,IOO MU11, l'ltl. W1rr11,,,y, , fft1 ADX I •10· LINCOLN C.uPt. lfi'1<t. w1rr1nty, FYH P'1w..-, Ptd. Air, lier .. , T. 011n. I Tiit """'· 1,...i c1111 ... 1, l.Mllltr la!ffitl". Ott COOi '10 MARK • 111 1 o...,;,, I vr. W1rr1nt•· '•tt. Air, F11ll l'•nr. Sl1rft I Vlo!yl ltMf, T, OllH, LM!fltr lftl,. S,.., Ct"""I, Tiit Wltttl. !411 AOKI I· 11 I"..:,.,., W•rttnl• Dl"I""" UAOI Miia. F.oKI. Air, FYI! l'•wt•· 1 51.,.., Vll!yl •ott, LHIMf" llll'trltr, flit Wllftl 6 Miii)' &~lrlL llfHUI $1325 ! $1143 $1390 I $1173 $1505 i $1299 $1505 [ $1299 $1690 t $1428 $1no 1 $1499 $2400 I $2125 $2640 I $2293' $2855 [ $2487 $2865 [. $2516 $3215 [ $2954 $3635 1 $3219 $4010 I $3552 $3860 I $3559 $4500 I $3999 $5082 / $4558 $5805 J $4995 $7350 I $6990 ·- I • ' .. • • I ~'""' •• .. ~• '• ..... . : . . . . . ~ DAILY PI LOT Wtdntsda,, Nowmbtr 10, 1971 I • . BEFORE YOU BUY11 CH~CK"··ouT OUR W!dntsday, N""'btt 10, 1971 PILOT·AOVERJ1SER .. .26 I I I I . LOADED!! Turbo· hydramatic transmiuion, power steering, AM ~adio, white \ · side wall tir~•· tinted windshield, and more. · \ . ' . . . . . TEST DRIVE . THE NEW HONDA The SASSY UTILE CAR, IS SASSIER THAN EVER! Ready for immediate delhre,ry in a big selection of new colors • USED 1970 l6368QDJ Honda Car. 5119_5__ -· ALL REMAINING 1971 GMC PICKUPS * SPRINTS * CAMPERS AT ACTUAL FA ·CTORY INVOICE - POSITIVELY NO ADDED DEALER CHARGES ~.-' LEASING? We Offer ''Personalized'' Leases on Oldsmobiles, GMC Trucks, Rec-. . . ' rea,fional Vehicles! . TRY US BEFORE YOU LEASE ANY DOMESTIC OR IMPORT CAR. '66 PLYMOUTH -'68 CADILLAC '69 VOLKSWAGEN 4 Or. Sed•rl. V.8 , Auto. Tran5.1 Radio, Heater • .IRYOS98J Full power, factory 1ir, vinyl roof. IXRK098 J -Bug. Rad io and heater. IZQC717) 5599 52895 51195 '70 AMX '68 OLDS DELTA 88 '70 GRAND-PRIX ' 4 speed, radio and heater. I P90A I Coupe. Radio, he•ter, automatic, air cond., white walls, Automatic, power wjndows, air cond., vinyl roof, radio, heater. IZMV262 l vinyl roof. IWP8661 ) _ 51795 51495 . '70 GMC 2 TON '66 TORONADO Tilt cab truck SSOO seril\I.· ~ .. speed transmission. (45821 Full power equipment plus f1ctory 1ir conditioning. ISHE~IOJ . 53295 51395 '68 DATSUN '70 MUSTANG MACH I 4 Or., 4 Speed, R1d io, Heater. (VH8314) Automatic transmission, radio, heater, a ir conditioning. IACH608 1 5545 52395 . . ' ' I • . 53495 '69 CADILLAC Sedan OeVille. Full pOwer, factory air conditiorlin g, AM-FM radio. IXXZ4641 53895 '68 CHEV. IMPALA CPE .... Radio, heater, auto., •ir, power steering & brakes. • IXIV5S9) 51395 COSTA I MESA I • \ ; ' I ' \ \ " BILL JACOBS GENERAL MGR. -'69 DODGE VAN Sport van with a utomatic transmission, radio, heater. IZAE743 I - 52395 '69 TOYOTA Autom1tic transmission, r•dio and heater. IZYL9 3SI 51355 . '69 SIMCA c::::: Radio, heater, 4 speed transmission. I 786C_Q.SI 5 775 . . '66 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLE Full power equipment plus factory air coiiditioning. IKSJSDSI 51595 . . ' . t I - I ,. . WE APPRECIATE YOUR . BUSINESS OPEN TILL 10 P.M. PURCHASE FORDS. CHEVYS • PLYMOUTH$ . I MtJ,fl•llJ ,u: t•l t! I SPECIAL PURCHASE PRICE . 300 5218 FULL PRICE -. ---------$195DOWN· s1•s;._.._,.,.....,1Jt0•"""'-·'l""' ""'1 to<, I~-& ..... , .. ,,..,. ... ""'·".a' .... llo ...._ Dt!onod ,,..., '"' $Jt1A . .O lfld. to• & lic ..... hlll , ... , ..... 11107 00 lid ... & ........ NNIAl.~EICEHTo\GlkAll 15.St~ $7 ·360 . MONTH · FOR 36 MONTHS '70 CHEVY MONTE CARLO 2 dr. H.T., V/8, auto, radio & heater, power steering, fact air, landau top, wsw, nylon int. 123At:B Sunshine Yellow '70 PLYMOUTH COUPE • auto. trans., factory air conditioning, power steering, rad io, he ater, whi· tewall tires, ~inyl interior medium tan metolic 073ANF '70 FORD GALAX IE 500 . H.T., V/8, wsw auto, radio & h1ater, power 1t11ring, fa ct. air. 176AlQ. Meadow Green '70 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 dr. H.T. V/8, auto, radio & heater, power sftering , air cond, full vi nyl iitf, 342AIY. Jade Green ~ '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 HT, V-1, auto. radio, & h•1t1r, foci 11ir, W5W wh11I c11v1rt, power brok e•. 12JAVOHorvest Yellow · '70 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER H.'r., rad io & heater, fully factory equipped. 633·ADY Red · '70 CHEVY IMPALA This red beauty has auto. t rans. factory air conditioning, rod io, heoter, whitewall tires, vinyl interior Tilt wheel. 116AGR. ''70 FORD H.T •. • VJI auto radio & heater, power stee ring, factory air•h•yl int. IJOAYO Light Blue MANY MORE AT COMPARABLE PRICES I t!1 tJll•llJ ;l!: t•l t! I SPECIAL PURCHASE PRICE . \ Wud ssdlf', Novtmbtr 10, 1971 DAILY Pll.fT 8:1 I CALLNOWll '71 COLT . Phone 557-9220 2 DR. H.J. l•••N wllti ... le."-" •Ir k•••··· •• , .. ,,,,, 4111 k .. k ... t1o11 .... .-11., .... ... u.1"' M kol -•• -1 '""""<•M I ... u HI & INSTANT CREDIT .... k...... · · IMMEDIAT£ YOU •HD A•D •ftLL •AY• YOU MO•Y $169900 $58 . DRIYIRY 1. If you are new in Colifomio 3. If you ore new on your job 2. If you owe money on your · 4. lfyouhove littlearnocredit~ cor . ,~ ~~\kE $ DOWN , ..... o11{.., .............. _ ......... ,. ..... D11 .. ., • LET ME TRY TO ARRANGE THE CREDIT AND TERMS YOU NEED SD THAT YOU MAY l~lr.10lill .... ~)llOl.$Y '-10lll_..,..l .... ..i. •. io ... 11o s--s . FOR-31-·-·- :ri;·r;=:.tm• .... o.r.io.11~-.t.IMIAl,llWll~l MONTH MOllTHS Drive Home Today in the car of your choice!! BRAND NEW J~ ABSOLUTE MO · '68 CHARGER 2 DR .. ~.T. V-8, oulo. powtr s11trin;, radio, h~ter, !ac t. air loodou lop. WSW. WQ0572. $788 F '69 CHEVY MAL BU Malibu 2 dr ~ H.T ~ V-8, rodio, Moler, whll•watl lir1s, ........ $988 · F LL PRICE '68 OLDS CUTLASS CUllASS S 2 dr. H.T. 111110. trans. loclort 11ir condi· )i11nin9, radio, hloltr. whiltwOll tir•s, •inyl roof, W'i626 $988 '72DODGE TRUCK --~---" ___ .. ---IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $2469~ Pll(I '\''"toll! .. """ l "fo-..... ,...t .. I IO•l li< .... ol .. ... ,, ............ --........ lt -Dll•""' ,,..,., .. ~. $)1)4) .,.!. to• I i.c-. AIHIAI ptp(IHl.\lil IAll 10" 'II. 1 ..... wllti fr"••lr t...Nor, ' fltr.11or, hlLUt_w __ •••ti!.- tl••· ...... 1,tToTW'l'i'•-... ,,,. wet ...... •tSIUllW .... $)99DOWN .$79 MONTH FOR 31 (0 1 IAB2$516S63) MONTHS ll298281176S 1 IMMEDIA'fE $2199~ $74 DELIVERY. PRICE DOWN o11 • .,.,.... ,,,.,,., ... _.""""It< J6-. °""'"" ,,., . '"""'"'""'1"'1-'uh...., ... ,,.. .... , ... "-' $74 FOR 3& j,~~.';.IJ'Jt ... l lu & "-A-'l PIAWll.\Glllofl: MONTH MONTHS . '70 FORD Maverick '70 FORD LTD ~~;:~;~~;~;~ $237;8 rodiQ, healer, whi!twall tires. Sentromelh Irons. 2DR.H .T. $1188 014ASf • ' & bro~es, V/8 elec't. .. windows. foci air, wsw, · · . roof roe~ 272AEf Gold· FULL PRICE ~•·~" FULL PRICE '71 PINTO '69 FORD TORINO ~r..~~~-·"''$159· 9 ~;,1~r.v• $98·. a· . er, vinyl 1111tr111r kttket dio, heater, . FULL' PRICE ·seals. Gold melolit W(lll tires. vinyl in· 2000ct eng. + (~uth · terior, rl!lld whltls . ""•""''·"" FULL PRICE "·""" '6tVW BUG · '68 PONTIAC Le Man 8UG radio. h11111r, red high back s•at1. • 217~UH $ 7 8 8 2 Olt. HJ. V-1, air tnf.,. diG, heo1t1-, winy'! intrricw.rood . ... ,.. '"''"' '""'· VIM77S • ' -. • • . . I . . ' ft 0All Y PILOT Wfdnesdq, N~mbtt 10, 1971 . I Wtdn6day, November 10, 1971 PILOT-AOVERTISU 28 'ATL·AS CHR'fSLER PL'fltfOIJTH! IMPERIAL ~ . Costa Mesa Cll RYSLER -. LOW PRICES . ALREADY . ATLAS CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH ~ • _A A . HAS LOWERED PRICES . ON ALL 1972 MODELS BRAND NEW '72 DUS!!.~ YoK~A~~':!,Ti.~!°H" ONLY $ LESS EXCISE TAX REBATE UPON APPROVAL S.r. # RH23-C!E.105674 BRAND NEW 1971 SATELLITE . $ LESS EXCISE l'AX R1EBATE UPON APPROVAL Atlas Si • Departrn ervrce ent Wei Anti Ii cornes Cltrys/er ~nors All Veit· I orporqtio S rces R • • n ervice And equrrrng Work R Warranty -Wit' egardless Of p ere Car W urchased W as , . eH Master · Cit onor BankA . arge, C rnericard A Orte Blan It ' rnerican E c e' Din lCpress And ~-ers Club. . 2929 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ph. (714J 546•1934 oF iA~Lg~tio s~~ETE~Av .. FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM va, aulomftlie, R&H, power liearing • br•k1, . window1 • 11al • door loek1, erui11 con- trol, li1r10 AM-FM, l1nd1u top, WSW, manv, m1nv mor1 ,.,. h11. Ultimal1 tu .. irv. 11 3811441 $AVE '66 PLYMOUTH · BARRACUDA \) . ' '64 FORD GA LAX IE ve . •u!omelic, r•dio, he•l•r. pow•r 1leeri119, whi!ew/liU tir•i, air conditio11in9. !Sll77-4 ) '68 CHRYSLIR '60 DODGE 'h TON PICKUP E•c1llenl for odd job1. (LIO· l3 3) '70 TOYOTA '65 BUICK LE SABRE VI , 1ulomalk, radio, ~11!1r, power 1te1rin9 & brak11, w~il1 w1ll1, •ir conditionin9. (Rf8. 754) '71 FORD '66 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE VB, •ulomalic, redio, h11t1r,. power 1leerin9, white w•ll lir11. (S VV605 J '69 VOLKSWAGEN SUNDIAL CAMPER B1autiful convetiton equipp•d with ic• bo•, clineli•, 1inlt, bun~•. bubbl• top, ale. I ZVZ. 120) $AVE j I • .. . . ' I• ' • • . • . I , Z9 PILOT·ADVERTISER Wfdntsd1y, November 10, 1971 DAILY PILOT §,'! DEADLINE: November 13th! FACTORY SCHEDULES CALL FOR .PRICE RAISES WHEN THE PRICE FREEZE GOES OFF. BUY TODAY AND SAVE! . . Time M .. al• 9u•llty DHlft Award fer 1 t71 . FORD ·FOR '72 Th·e newest Cars you'll COMPA.RE With import prices rising, here's how Pinto compares: • Pinto now priced $335' leu than VW 113. • Pinto now priced $228' less than Toyota ••• this I Corolla 1600. • Pinto naw priced $300' less -than Datsun 510. . . • ,. ctm,...1_ "' ••llllllfl <l'llNl'I' ......... ,.1111 ~. lllt ... 1111 ,.mi.,, •. Mr "'" NM 1.-.r PINTO IMlltll. O.tllr '"!MflllOfl cN ..... (If lft,I, IHIHMllM dll'1tl, 11.it 111111 llCll I••• ,,.. Utra. year. I I . H.UGE USED . CAR ''OVER~STOCK'' CLEARA·NCE MUSTANG SALE - Many to choose from. '65 thru '71 models. Coupes, hard· .. t ops, convertible and 2 + 2 fastbacks. Some with 4 speeds, ' also air conditionin9 and automati,c models. EXAMPLE: '71 MUSTANG H.T. R•dio, heater, a utomatic, pwr. steer. & brakes, ract. air, good mile1 !Ol 9CQR l BLUE IOOK PRICE $3l1S ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED TRADIS ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOl! TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS L.T .D.--GALAXIE--T-BIRD--TORINO SALE Many to choose from. '65 thrv '71 Models, Sport raafs, formals, 2 door & 4 door hardtops & sedans. Full power, air conditlonin9. Warra~tles available. EXAMPLEz '71 T·81RD H.T. Auto., P.S., P.8., P~window1 , P-bucket 1eat , AM-FM Stereo radio, air centf., tilt whee l, w1w, body 1id1 mld91., remote mir ror, good mil e1 ', !6948ZJ ) ILUE IOOK PRICE $4785 OUR PRICE $279_6 1::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::;:;::;:;;;;::::::::~ '67 ~1~• u!~o!n ... " '67 FORD WAGON '67 FIREBIRD ?~~~~hru-ouL . OUR PRICE $4296 $ 59 6 ;::::::::, 6:9 ::M::U::ST:A::::N::G::2 +:::2 ::::::::::, 6::9 ::v::. w==.=s::::T::A T::IO::N:::B::µs~ Cc111"1ry •"'•"· R•cl+o, he•t•r, •~iom•tic, powtr H. T. VI , c11lom•+;,, lt,..5._ r1clio, htt lt r, rt ci119 1ftcri119, good l'fljlt•. (UCZ106l 9rtt11 , 9oed mil 11. !UT)(849) '71 VEGA 3 DOOR '67 RIVIERA '62 CHEYROLIT IMPALA 4 Dr. H.T. VI, radio, he1.ter. P.S., aulo. Good mll,.s. fTEL21J!. VI, r1d io, h11ltr. 1ul1m1lit., power •l11rin9, 9oed mit11. !ZVCl07) / $1796 '67 COUGAR HARDTOP 9 p11111191r. All 111h. <4 1p11d tf1111. Good mil 11. IYW57.SOI '67 MUSTANG HARDTOP • . . . • ·: • , ' ~ . • • ' • • • --• • . . . . . • . . • • . . • • • -• . .. • • • • • ' l • • . . . c,.,,, 4 iptid, rtdio, hit .. t. low 111it11. {935. Air co11d, pewtr tl11r•n9 • b•t~tl • wi11tlow1 • ' 111h, 111w p1inl, '!Ow m1l11. CTZ0.0 241 1·61 ME~CURY COMET Sed. R&H. factory equipped. Good miles. (XSP0.371 . V8, 1ulem1lit.. R&H , pow1• tl11ri"t• 1ir t.011°d., 11 pt d1d1 . Geed mil11. l UJU9 I 11 VI, t ulom•lit., 11tlio, h11l1r, pewi t •l11d11g, '" good mil1,, !Ul(Dl251 .; IZTI '70 COUGAR HARDTOP VI , c11lo., ll&H. p11w1r 1f,,,;"9· ,;, co11d., ~•11vl roof, 9011d mil11, llOIADEl BLUE BOOK PRICE $2895 P~~~E $2596 '70 TOYOTA LAND CRUISER . "· St1tion w19on. 4 w"eel d•iv1, 2 tont, good mtl •1. Exctll. t.ond, 17J 9BQE l ·MAKE OFFER '69 TOYOTA CORONA MKll ll11iio, h11l1r, 1111t6rru lit, low mil1 .. fZLKl66) BLUE· BOOK PRICE $1870· OUR PRICE · '70 MUSTANG HARDTOP R1d io, ~''''" 111+0..,•tic, P.S .. low -l'flil11, ~i11vl reef. !066AGll BLUE BOOK PRICE $2555 P~~~E $2296 '7<r CHARGER RT Ridio, l-11l1r.' 1u+e .. P.S., 1ir cond., vinyl roof, 9ood miltt. 11 ll~GEl BLUE BOOK PRICE. $2860 OUR $249'6 PRICE '69 FORD COBRA ~1id1n1 2 D•. H.T. R1die, "'''''· 4 1p11d, 1p1ti1I whl1. J. II•••· 11151 It l BLUE BOOK PRICE $1740 OUR PRICE entry. Sedan. R&:H. auto., '65 FORD WAGON air, P.S., good miles. f\VWK76~). '65 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 Dr. K.T. R&:H, auto .. P.S., air cond. Good milts. I PIT484 J • '65 OLDS F-15 WAGON R&tH, automatJc, powtr st~ring. good milt!>. fNYP412J. '66 PLYMOUTH VALIANT R&H,a uto .. P.S., 11.1r conditioning. Good milts. CSVZ8621. '67 SUNHAM' ALPINE H.T. 4 &))fed. low miles. good condition. (VGX~991. '68 V.W. FASTBACK Fully equipp!d. Good milt!i. (V\'rftl81. 1970 & 1971 's. 4 speeds, 3 speeds, also air cond . & automatic models. EXAMPLES: '70 MAVERICK Fully f•ctory equipp1d. R•Jio, heat. er. [bBBBEP J. . SALES DEPT. HOURS '71 PINTO Grabber grefln/rac.in9 stripes, 4 1p••d, good miles. !ll7CAX!. BL.UE IOOK PRICE S2130 OUR PRICE $1796 8 AM TO 9 PM MON·fRI 8 AM TO 6 PM SkT 10 AM TO. 6 PM SUN • j I OUR PRICE ·PARTS-SERVICE HOURS $796 ~796 •-~~~~~~~~~ '70 GALAXIE 2DR. H.T. VI , 1u!Om 1lit., r1dio, h11!1r, ·otinvl roe!. 1ir tend. l '141Al(CJ BLUE BOOK PRICE S2705 ·p~~tE $2196 '70 ELECTRA 225 CUSTOM 2 Dr. H.T . R.&H. 1ulo., P.S .. P.1 .. 1i•, Yiny! reol, tit whl,, AM.fM !OllBSW ) BLUE BOOK PRICE $4015 P~~~E $3496 '71 LTD BROUGHAM Aut,.., RIH, P.5 .. P.1 .. P.wi"de ... 1, Ylnyl reol, AM .FM , lew mil11. !7451MQI BLUE BOOK PRICE 14220 '71 FIAT SPYDElt - Re1tl1t1r. Appr. 1500 tni111. BLUE IOOK ~RICE $2215 OUR PRICE '68 GALAXIE HARDTOP • VI , 1ulemtl;t , ttd;e, h11 !1t, pewit 1'11ri"t· Yinvl •o.of. fYCY632 ) ·• ILUE BOOK PRICE Sl620 OUR PRICE -'70 IMP~LA 2DR. H.T. Auto .. P.S .. R&H, Yinyl roof, 1ir t.ond., Yinyl r11I. !lf7ASQl BLUE SOOK ~RicE $3135 15 TO CHOOSE FROM. Imports & Domestics. Country seds., squ ires, tor ino, Y.W., Volvo, Da tsun, Olds., Mere., Toyota , Ope l. '65 thru '71 model~. Some with full power & air cond. EXAMPLES: '68 OPEL WAGON R•tfio, heater, 4 speed, goed mil•~. IXJES5 6 I. OUR PRICE '70 FORD 10 PASS. Squirt. VS, RIH, auto., air, 11.S., P.B., good miles. I l06BEJ) BLUE BOOK PRICE 13340 OUR PRICE $2996 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6. PM TUE-FRI I . . PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • . ' . • . • . • ' • • • -: • • ' • • ' • • • • • • ' • ' ' • • ' • • • ' • ' • ' • • • . • • I• . - . • • . •• • \ v.a,Wt..tr,...._...._,...,.._._,........_<MWllJ 1-, I • , ' . JI ~J.. ) . v ......... -..,.-•ra1111r....,.1r.<111.at0 J' ~ • v.a. ftet.etr,,_.....,.., 1m. m•s.. l•11 ... , tn.ryft'l..i. ltH ACAJ ) . . 10h111111rft's1J ........ .._......,,eit,,....•1 .............. ti,.._ f4UCI W) '" --• ................ 1: -..... -~409J ·c0Ullft"f-·10•·r•1ru;v.~....._-,_ ...... _ _,..,, l11119191'11tt.,.Otl.CCI) .REGULAR PRICE •••••••••••••••• ~. $3488 REGULAR PRICE ' •••••••••••••••••• $4288 . --' _REGULAR PRICE •••••••••••••••••• s341g OUR PRICE . • •••••••••••••••••••• 2988 OUR PRICE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • 3688 -0 OUR PRICE •••••• , ••• ; • • • • • • • $2988 SAVE AN ADDITIOllAL 7%. SAVE AN ADDITIONAL 7% · • SPECIAL SPECIAL '· 4 -... -- PURCHASE . PR la _ IMMIDIAU IDIUYlllJY IMMIDIAn DILIYIRY · '65 COMET COUPE '69 FORD CLUB WGN. . ECONOLINE. 123 Wheel base , Radio, heoter(WIG~252) auto. trans .. · 3 seot i ~ FULL PRICE '68 FORD Galaxie -soo·HDTP.-VScoutotron• pow- "tr s1eering, rodio, heoter, roocft oj>ple red (WAP-570) ' • . FULL PRlCE COLONY-PA RK. y.s ... ~ cood., .. 1,. ,trosn., power steering. (OSY-754). · (E21Alfl33079) FULL PRICE .. '67 CHEV IMPALA ~s. FACIOR~ AJR...-_ttam, po.w_er_ steering, rod io. healer (164097R1189Sll FULL PRICE '69 FORD CUSTOM ,-. V-8, outo. trons .. JK!wtr stteriftg. ,.. c!H>. l!llSBSW) 70 FORD Town Sedan V-8. out<>. trons .• lonllou roof, :, · P<>W<r slelfing. (022DIBI ; 'FULL PRICE . '69 FORD WAGON ~ -FAIRLANl Air_c.ood., outo._Jrcm.s~-_ (9K37ll81194) FULL PRl(E '69 JAVELIN V8 Power steeril'g, outo trons. rodio, htoter· Xlros nice (ZDV-' 904) PURCHASE PRICE ' . IMMIDIATI Dli.WIRY '69 PONT. BONNEVILLE Brougloom with Y ,_.,-, foctory. . oir plus '"mtf other extras. r· (3$SCKY). - FULL PRICE , '67 VW BUG. ' . 4_~,.a<lio • .h.~r. MB·SIBL_ FUlL PRICE · '68 MERC. MONTEGO v...a •. outo.imS .. facJory air, pwter' •· sleer;ng . (W)(R-l 4S) -· __ ....;.FU;.;L~L-PR:.;,,;,IC;;;,;;E;-miiioooi .... -iiii4----FU•t-.L-P...,R.-.IC.-E __ ._ FULL PRJCE FULL PRICE N E~,!:N!IJRD NEW 't!ll~INTO NEWI!,~~! ANG ; '72 RANiHERO - IMM EDIATE DELIVERY / FROM FACTORY LIST PRICE . I FULL . PRICE IMMIDIATI DILIVIRT SAVE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW 1972,FORD F-250 3A TON PICKUP (F2 5BRM4441 1) rl ~ IMMEDIATE DEi.NERY ~ FULL "-,,,_,,.,if i P ·RICE ---·----L-' : ·· .... ' . 19 71 CABOVER CAMPER ~ippell wim sflWe. s""'-lc.Oo•. drapH. pltnty of tlowt $(M, .i.. out- lt!t,. wood pOn1h11g.(#116.221). SAVE ' . • , W//{j;!-~\'!;;· \~\\ ,. , ., j . ~· ---~ •. _'/.' ~~)~ f ---,~ ' ·;~io -*_ ' ---~' <'. 1 ·\ _.\ • ,jo!-· • I • ~ FULL PRICE FROM FACTORY LIST P•ICE OROll YOUS llOW IN THI CO\OI OF YOUI CROKI BRAND NEW CAMPER KING , .. THI ROAD '71 CABOVER Equipped with 1tove, sink, icebox, drapes, elc. (2480). COMMANCHE CABOVER CAMPER f11Vi9PN with stO¥a. ti"k. ietbo~ dropn, plenty of closat ~ lflc. out- lt11, wood pnlMg. {#01 l0.57) • .- • I '