HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-11-22 - Orange Coast PilotI
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D.a.1L v ,ILOT ,..,.._ •r •1c11tr11 ..... ..,.
'l'l~NE 'ENDS UP ON BACK IN HUNTINGTON BEACH SCHOOL YAR.D IN SATORDAY CRASH
Y,.,.,g Pilot, School Children •I Cornlv1I EKlpo Injury In.Inc ident· Noor Mudowlork Airport
DAILY PILOT
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MONDAY. Al'TERNOON, NOVEMBER, 22 :1971
YOL.. ... N0..11t, I llc:TIONS, M ,&all
flash· Total
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Tee.ii Dies
Testi1nony Opens
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Dufttington Canlpos
School Gathering
Narrowly Missed
By Crashing Plane
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In County
Stabbing Tearful Witness
Large Force
Goes After
A teeiiag'e Anaheim girl Was stabbed to death early Saturday ind her former
bJyfiiend · has ·been jailed on murder
charges. .
Police said_ Jatiet M. Heydenhal, 18,
of 205 ·N. Western Ave., had just left '
the Anaheim Elks Cub buildi11g where
she bad attended a dance when Lawrence
E. 'tlndeboom, 91162 Valley View St.,
Cypress, grabbed: her and they engaged
in · a heated conversation, according to
witnesses.
Lindeboom, a Cypress Junior College
1til.dent, • ·climaxed the argument by
11.alhlng the girl repeatedly with .a large
knife, officers alleged. She was rushed
to the A:naheim Memorial Hospital where
11be-died ..everal houni: later from stab·
Wounds in at least six vita l organs.
Doctors administered 29 pints of blood,
donated by police ar)d fire~en throughc ,t
Orange County, in a vain attempt to
uve the girl's life.
Tht yictlm's father told police his
dl'Ughter and Llndeboom had gone steady
fur about a yur. "They broke up a
couple of wet.ks. ago,. and now this,"
the ·er.stricken father said .. ........
We•ther
o.'SUnrtY, elc.ies ·end crisp (mid-60)
temperatures are Corecast ~or
· Tu(Jday, with overnight lows card-
• ed ·between 37 and f1 degrees.
iNSU>E TODA l' • · c;iu1n11 ist Erma· Bambeck and
BU KtJ11le (f'amily.Circus), two
11/ thl'. real "slars" in the DAILY
PJWT talent lintup, teamed up
to produce the book, "Juit Wuit
Till You·Ha~t Ghildren of Yo11 r
Own."~ 1i%·part .serialization of
ezcerpt.I frdm thl'-book starts
tod<i11 on Page 2~.
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'THE ENGINE DIED',
Student Pilot Squirrell
Crashing Plane
. Narrowly Misses
Sehool Carnival ,
By ll~DI NIEDZIELSKI
Of , ... 0 .. 1, P'lj91 11111
A student pilot on his second solo
flight crash landed and flipped a small
plane in a Huntington Beach schoolyard
over the weekend.
.Neither the pilot nor pupils altending
a carnival on the Meadow View School
campus were injllred when the Cessna
1$0 made its forced lahdin'g on Saturday.
The pilot, 18-year~ld Clive Owen Squir-
rel! of Garden Grove, told police officers
his engine died just as he was ap-
proaching Meadowlnrk A,irport's main
runway around 3 p.m.
Witnesses said the small, slngle-engh,e
plane snagged telephone and powerlines
on its way down. They said the 1aircratt
dug into the Meadow View school
grounds, damagin~ it's 1Propeller, wing
and tail section as 1t nipped OYer.
"The pilot did a very nice and careful
job in setting the plane down, considering
what he had to work with," said airport
operator John Turner.
The'" elementary school, according to
Turner, is directly underneath the ap-
proach pattern. No similar indicen~ have
occµrred for the past 10 years, according
to Turner.
Meadow View Principal Mel Hamill
said aboot 1$0 persons were attendlna
(See PLANE, P11e Z)
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Descrihe·s Rape
A tearful, hesitant woman witness tO(Jk
35 minutes to ailswer three quesOons
today in Orange County Superior Court
after picking out William Ferguson as
Delay Ordered
In Murder Trial
Of Youth, 18
A tw1>-month delay was ordered lod11y
in the Orange County Superior Court
murder trial or the :youngest of four
men accused of invOlvement in the "devil
cult" slaying ol Mission Viejo teacher
Florence Nancy Brown.
Acting presiding Judge William Murray
ordere9 Christopher "Gypsy'' Gibboney,
18, to be returned to his courtroom
Jan. 17 for trial. The Oregon youth
is held in Orange County Jail.
Gibboney is identified as a member
of the gang of four men and One woman
responsible for the sadistic killing or
Mrs. Brown and the hatchet death or
a young service station attendant during
a 24-hour period in June, 1970.
Mrs. Brown. 31, of El Toro, was
butchered in an Irvine orangegrove in
a ritualislic slayi ng said to have carried
devil worship overtones. Gas station at-
tendant Jerry Wayne Carlin had been
axed to death the previous ni ght in
the restroom of his Santa Ana st9:iion.
Gang Je:lder Steven Craig nth-d. 21,
a transient, has been committed lo
Atascadero State Hospital as iMane.
Arthur Craig "Moose" llulse. 20, or
Garden Grove· is Serving a life term
in state prison.
M,.elanie Mae Daniels, 31, of Santa
Ana, is serving two state prison terms
of one to five years each for her role
in the .Brown-carlin killings. She was
llurd's paramour and the sang's unot-
ficlal treasurer.
Herman Hendrick Taylor, 18, a
transient, Is serving a Cive--year probation
term. He was the chief pro1ecut1on
wltnesti in the trials of Hurd and Hulae
and will be used agalllst Gibboney.
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the man who kidnaped and raped her
three years ago in Santtr Ana .
The 31·yu.r~ld woman kept Judge
Claude Owens and the jury waiting for
more than 10 minutes on one occasion
as she tried to recall the course
Ferguson's car had (aken after the 36-
.Year~ld defendant allegedly forced her
into the Vehicle at the Santa Ana bus
terminal.
Her testimony opened the second week
of the defendant's second trial on kidnap
and rape charges. .
The Santa Ana man 's 1968 conviction
was recently thrown out in a landmark
ruling by the California Supreme Court
wilh the finding that the prosecution
should have revealed the morals record
of a key witness in their case against
Ferguson.
That key witness was the woman's
husband and he has again testirled in the
current . trial that Ferguson wa_.1 the
man who se1ua\ly assaulted his wife
and then forced him lo parli'cipate in
sex acls with her.
720 Highway
Deaths Seen
CHICAGO (AP) -Between 620
and 720 person.! might bt killed
on the natioq's highways over the
long Thanksgivirig weekend, the
National Safety Council estimates.
The 102-hour period covered by
the estimate b e g i n s at 6 p.m.
Wednesday and ends at midnight
Sunday.
During the same period, %7 ,000
to 32,000 persom might be injured
·in highway crashes, the council
said,
The councn. which makes no
count of •its own of fatalities and
Injuries, said lhert were 651
fatalitie~ during lhe 1 9 70
'Tiianksgivi ng holiday weekend. The
Associated Press oount for the
period w111 146. The highest
T.hank1givlng weekend toll i'ecord-
od by the AP WH 754 In 1161.
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Ul'I TtlWIMI• Dark Da11
President John F. Kerinedy was
assassinated eight years ago
today in Dallas, Tex. See story,
Page 5.
Did India
Launch War
In Pakistan?
By United Press International
•Radio Pakistan charged today that
India "has launched an all·oul offensive
against. Ea.st Pakistan , , • without
formal declaration or war."
In New Delhi, a i::overnment
spo:kesman denied similar charges but
said lndlan planes drove orr intruding
Pakistani jets which crossed the border.
The rad)o Pakistan broad ca st
monitored in London said that one Indian
thru st came ln the Jessore sector border·
ing on India's West Bengal 1late. Jt
said that a second Indian attack came
in the Sylhet area, across Easl Pakistan
from Jessore, and in the area of the
port of Chittagong. ,
The broadcsst said that fightij,g was
going on.
In New Delhi, government spokesmen
said that Indian jet fighters fired on
four Paklslatii Sabre jets which lntruded
into Indian territory from the Jessore
(See PAKISTAN, Pop II
Sanctuaries
SAJGON (UPI) -Thousand6 of Soutlt
Vietnamese troops cnw:ed into Cambodll
In armored vehicles today In the openln,e
phase of a major new incursion aimed
11t North Vietnamese sanctuaries in the
neighboring country and at relievtnc
Communist pressure on its capital.
Six battalions ol South Vletnan\e.se
airborne troops -about 4,000 men -
made the crossing northwest of SaigOD
near the Krek rubber plantation. ·Two
other crossings were bein1 prepared
rurther south.
Thousands more troops massed alon&
Highway 1 where il crosH<I illto the
Parrot's Beak area of Cambodia which
juts into South Vietnam west of the
capital, 50 miles to the south of ~
first crossing. ~ '
Military sources sai that a.third force
was being organized in he Mekong Delta
city of Chau Doc to operate from the
South Vietnamese base at Neak Luona on the Mekong River in -Cambodia.
Preparations seen along the ro1d! by
correspondents indicated tluit It would
be the biggest Sou'1!r-Vie'tnamese in-
cursion inlB Cambodia aince the Allltd
drive of May, 1970.
Despite . _the initial border ~p
today, military sources indicated_)~&
the big push has yet to start. -Thty:
indicated that O.Day wlll be WednetdQ'~
The current strength of. the RepubUc
or Vietnam in the adjacent area ol
Cambodia where guerrilla aanct1iarlu
are located already stands at ~lOse to
a 13,000-man division.
Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Minh, com-
mander of military Region Ill who tr
directing the buildup, spent the day ••
his rear area headquarters at Bie.n HOI,
18 miles northeast of Saigon. Minh wu
expected lo arrive at his forward head ..
quarters at Tay Ninh, 50 miles northweQ
of Saigon and 27 miles south of the
Cambodian border, on Tuesday.
Though vehicles rolled across the
border, there was no[le or the heavy
0.S. air activiijt Ujat always accompanl11
a major allied push.
However, lhe Vietnamese themse.lvea
staged an air raid Sunday on suspected
guerrUla concentrations near Chrum:~
miles inside Camt:iod.ia, and reported EW• . Illa ~ suerrillas.
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DAIL't' lllLUI > MondtJ, Novetubtr C2, l '·
$25,000 Beach Heist
I
Theft Clues is tu died
Huntington Beach detectives today art
tryin& to piece together clue.s in the
$25,000 robbery o( a Huntington Center
jewelry stort which took place Friday
morning.
According to detectives, the four store
employ.es who were present during the
robbery have gi_ven them different
descriptions of the two ba ndits who made
off with sel jewelry and watches in
the morning heist.
The two men are tentatively believed
to be Caucasians, about 35 ye.ars old.
Police think one may be of medium
height and build and the Qther may
be. short and stocky .
The robbers made their esoape In
a car belonging to store manager Buck
Roberts. Detective Sgt. Monty McKennon
said this morning he didn't knoW if
the car had been located yet.
Preliminary reports indicate that
Roberts was in the store alone when
he was confronted by the two 1nen,
armed with a two.inch, .38-caliber
revolver.
Police have not been able to establish
how the men got into the store.
Roberts, who is a heart patient, t.Old
the men he was feeling faint and they
gave him some medication he carried
in his coat pocket.
While he was being forced to open
the safe, three other store employes
-Fred Lopez, Hqward Pollack and
Barbara Berk is --arrived for work
and were taken to the sto rage area
where they were bound with adh esi\'e
tape.
Police claim Pollack was hit on the
back of ttie head, possi bly with a gun,
while he was being tied up.
After the items had been taken out
1 of tbe safe, jtoberts· was also taken
tu the back room and bound. As soon as the bandits left the store, he told
police he wriggled free and activated
an alarm.
Connally, Meany Fire
Salvos in Labor Clash
Fro111 Page 1
PAKISTAN •..
area · of' · Pakist an, btlt denied as
"absolutely false" Pakistani rad i o
charges that Indian tanks and the in·
fantry had ente red East Pakistan there
on Sunday.
From Wire StrYlces
WASHINGTON -Treasury Secretary
John B. Connally said today AFl.rCIO
President George Meany's at ti tu de
toward President Nlxoq F r I d a y
"reOeeted an arrogance, boorishness and
discourtesy that Ill-becomes • leader
or the labor movement in the United
States."
At a news cooference, Connally declar-
ed that "the comments I made go to Mr.
Meany personally. They do not go l.o
the labor moven1t!tit."
Meany denied today he or the labor
group were rude to Nixon at the AFL-CIO
Ciln\'enlion Friday. (See Story, Page 5)
Meany, meanwhile, accused the Presi-
dent of deliberately staging the allegedly
rude treatment tbe chief executive
received.
"The accusations of discourtesy are
absolutely and completely untrue and
unfair," Meany told the closing day's
session of the convention. "I think we
iihowed the respect that was due the
President. We were courteous and there
was no jeering, no booing."
But the 77-year.old Meany said Nixon's
address was "pure poliUcal propaganda.·•
He charged the President did not discuss
the one issue that was of greatest con-
cern to the labor delegates -honoring
the labor contracts signed be(ore and
during the wage·price freeze.
Connally charged this morning that
a 28.5 percent pay raise given Meany
by the union was a "nagrant contempt"
of the economic program to hold down
big wages and price increases.
Connally also said the Pay Board's
approval of a 15 percent pay hike .for
aoft coal miners was ver~ dlsappointtng
and ~sald he hoped it would not set
Shotgun Blast
Ends Auto Spree
On Cypress Lawn.-
Police said it took a shotgun blast
to stop Dennis R. Hanson. 30. of
South Gate , when he attacked Cypress
police officers with his car Sunday after
tearing up a lawn with the \'ehicle.
Police said Han!l<ln was treated for
minor wounds al the Orange County
Medical Center and booked on suspicion ·
of assault with a deadly weapon.
He reportedly tried lo run down two
Cypress of(icers who attempted to stop
hi~ from tearing up a lawn al 9922
Walker SI ., by racing his car back
and forth on the grass.
Patrolmen Ramo11 Peterson and Jeff
Haas reported they avoided injury by
jumping clear when Hanson allegedly
aimed his car their way. Police did
not reveal which of the officers fired
the shotgun which ended the incident.
OIAN51 COAST
DAILY PILOT
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a precedent for other wa ge decisions. s·· ' Co nnally, who also serves as chairm an
of the Cost or Living Council, told a
news conference that he was speaking
as a layman in attacking the Pay Board
decision Friday and not as a top govern·
ment official.
"I'm very disappointed in the co a I
action," Connall y said. He added that
he hoped it would not set a precedent
or is \'iewed as a standard for otber
wage decisions.
In the wake of the Pay Board's action.
the Price Commission met today to look
at the other side of the coin -a
request for a jump in the price of
coal.
Connally also announced today that
finance ministers ol the "Group of Ten"
richest nations will meet in Rome No\'.
30, and added that he was "very hopeful
that progress can be made."
JLullerion. Youth
On No. 1 Tearn
Held by Police
Special to the DAILY PILOT
LINCOLN, Neb. -Sophomore running
back Glen Garson, of Fullerton. may
miss the big Thanksgiving Day football
game with OkJahoma Thursday, due to
a le& injury but_ l}O:t a stqlen police
car.
Coach Bob Deva ney said Carson's
playing status la under evaluation on
the basi,, of his healing leg and not
his arrest Saturday.
The 19.year-0ld Orange County youth
was taken into custody after a pair
of Lincoln Police Department officers
had their patrol car stolen during a
corfee break at a cafe.
"No decision will be made unlil we
find out the details," Coach Devaney
said~of hi!· running back's getting thrown
for a loss by local law agencies.
".We're not going to judge the kid
until he has been judged by the
authorities," Coach Devaney added.
Despite the fact police warn against
giving a break to someone hunti ng a
car to steal, Officer Grant Shramek
had. left the keys in the Ignition.
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''Absolutely raise," Joint Defense
Secretary P. Krishnamurli of India said
of Pakistani radio reports which charged
that seven· Indian tanks were destroyed
and 90 Indian soldiers were killed in
fighting in the Jessore area Sunday.
1'hese were apparently charges of an
earlier attack than that reported by
Pakistani radio toda y.
"I should reiterate that Indian troops
have strict orders not to cross frontiers,"
Krishnamurti said.
The radio Pakistan b r o a d c a st
r.1onitored in London toda"y said that
preliminary estimates put the number
of Indian dead at 130, and that Pakistani
casualties y,•ere 7 killed and 40 wounded.
Jl said 18 Indian tanks were damaged.
The radio charged that .;the Eighth (In·
dian) Mountain Divis ion and some ta11ks"
attacked in the Sylhet area early in the
day but that heavily outnumbered
Pak istani army troops checked the ad·
vance. inflicting 58 casualties at the
cost of 11 dead and 16 wounded.
The radio said that two Indian brigades
attacked in the Chittagong area but
that Eastern Zone coinmander Lt. Gen.
A. B. Niazi visited the battle area and
was told "the situation is well under
·control."
.. Il is expected that the Indian army
\\'ill open up more fronts on the East
Pakistan borde rs in the next 24 hours,''
the br-0adcast said.
Tension between the two countries has
been building since Pakistan's govern·
ment tried to put down the Bengali
. autonomy movement in East Pakistan
by force last March. Refugees have
poured from the area into India. ever
since. Guerrilla fightin g has been
reported in East Pakistan against the
\'{est Pakistan Army.
Wc"st and~Efft Pakistan are separated
by J.000 miliis of Indian territory and
Indian and Pakistani troops are massed
along the border in both areas.
Poli ce Under Probe
1-IARRISBURG, Pa. (UP1 ) -The State
Crime Commissioo and State Attor11ey
Genera! J. Shane Creamer toda y began
planning for an investigatio n into charges
of police corruption in Philadelphia. The
Philadelphia Inquirer in its Sunday edi-
tion print.ed an editorial requesting a
stale investigation, and Gov. l\1ilton J.
Shapp ordered it begun tha t afternoon.
lt'orld's Stro•&fJest'!
Arttonio BarJ chieviC'b of Montreal. a 46S·poundcr kno\vn as "Great
• .<\1ntonlo," hasn 'L shrt1nk but is silting in an unusual 14·(o·ntTn'tklng
chair. Anlonlo, wh<rboasts he is the \vorld 's strongest man. says he
can pull rnur buses. 1'he 6·4, 38·y~ar·ol d performer tours the world
'"'ith his slrong man l!Ct.
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UP'I Ttl"'lltl'
Hi Ho Silve1•
Despite the cold \Vi nds sweeping the streets of Detroit, blonde
Geraldine Burke could not resist the. temptation to pause and pet
this large horse sculpture made from old car bumpers, which is hitch·
ed to a lamp post outside an art gallery.
Car The~t Suspect Jailed
After Cold Mor11i11g Swim
Dripping and shivering, a teenager
was taken to a warm jail cell in Costa
J.iesa early today, after a car thief
pursued by poliCe crashed a vehicle
lhrough one wooden fence, vaulted a
second on root and finally fell into a
swimming pool.
Gary Lewis, 19. of 2030 s~ Maple
Ave., Santa Ana, was booked on suspicion
of grand theft of an auto and misde·
meanor hit and run.
Watch Commander Lt. George Lorton
said the drenched sus pect wali shaking
so violently in the 40-d egree temperature
that y,·hen spread-eagled on a police
trunk, his hands sounded like a fa st
drum solo,
Patrolman Jim Watson spotted a stolen
1965 sport sedan aboul 3:30 a.m., after
residents at 979 Cheyenne St., and ow ner
Joseph Hudson. of Santa Ana, called
to report it was just stolen.
Police said \l.'alson pursued it about
hvo blocks, at wh ich lime the car ra n
off the road . smashed a fence at 3054
Van Buren, and skidded lo a halt.
Paper Urges
Mobilizing
By Israel
By United Prtss Iniematlonal
An Israeli newspaper called today for
mobilization of the reserves alter · the
weekend statement by Egyptian Pres!·
dent Anwar Sadat that there 11 "no
alternative" to another Middle East war,
The Israeli Army scheduled a n.-
tionwide air raid warning test !or Tues-
day.
An Israeli military spokesman said
that the situation along the Suez Cana1
was qu iet. He added, hoy,·ever, that up
to 70,000 Egyptian troOps and 2,000 tank!
are there and that the fighting could
begin without advance warning.
Western intelligeOce sources in London
confirmed the Egyptian buildup along
the canal but noted that a crossing
would be "haza rdous in the extreme''
as 1 o n g as Israel retains mastery in
the air.
The Tel Aviv newspaper Yedioth Aha·
ronot h said in an editorial that Sadat's
statements meant that "it is necessary
for a call·up" of reserves in Israel.
Israeli newspapers generally called on
the government and military leadership
to make clear to Egypt the dangers
of anolher round of fighting.
An Anny-spokesman said that ~
na tionwide air ·raid warning network
would be tested at 2 p.m. Tuesday (4
a.m. PSf), the first test since a com·
memorative blast on Memorial Day six
months ago. The spokesman said the
test had nothing to do with Sadat'•
speeches, but it served to unde rscore
the . mood of public apprehension in
Israel.
The newspaper Davar said that the
developments of the past few days lent
''u rgency and gravity" to Prime Minister
Golda Meir's meeting with President
Nixon, scheduled for next month.
Four African leaders arrived in Cairo
on a continuing mission to seek peace
in the area . They were Presidents
Leopold Scnghor of Senegal and Maj.
Gen . Yakubu Go"•an of Nigeria, Foreign
Minister :..tario Ca rdoso of Zaire (the
former Congo) and State Minister
William Eteki of Cameroun.
In Beirut , travellers from Egypt said
leave y,·as cancelled for the armed forces
and they were on a state of standby
alert.
Sadat. in .two speeches to !rontline
troops along the Suez Canal, said ''every
hope we used to have for a peact
setllement is finished, and we have no
alternative but to fi ght to re~ain our
land, our honor and our dignity."
The only hope for peace, he said,
would be for Israel to withdraw com·
p!ete!y lrom Arab lands -something
Israel has steadfastly refused to do.
PLANE .. ; W ome11 Score I iii Court
Fron• Page 1
the school's annual PTA carnival about
2f>Cl feet from where the plane cra shland·
ed.
"The guy gave us a real good scare.
lf he hadn 't hit those phone lines and
fl ipped he would have gone into the
playground equipment. It was fcirtunate
!hat he hit the telephone lines," said
llamill . Al the moment of impace two
youngsters were using the sy,·ing. ac-
cording to the principal.
The plane. owned by Bassee Flight
Service of Huntington Beach, is being
probed by authorities fron1 the Long
Beach office uf the Federal Aviation
Agency.
"\\'e "re still investigating this. We will
get all the pertinent facts but the
ultimate cause of the crash will be
det e rmined by the Nalional
Transportation Safel y Board," an FAA
official said.
WASH1NGTON (UPI ) -Advocales of
equal rights for women won their second
victory of the new term in the Supreme
Court today. _
A '1--0 vote In a complex Idaho probate
case held that the "equal protection"
clause of the 14th Amendment bars state.s
·from legally discriminating against
women in naming them as administrators
of estates.
That was the same clause used by
the court to prohibit discrimination
against Negroes in the mil~stone civil
rights cases of the 1950s and 1960s.
In today's unanimous opinion, Chief
J ustice Warren E. Burger said the con-
stitulional gua rantee of "equal protection
of the laws" denies to the slates the
power to establish different classes of
persons to be administrators ''on the
KING SIZE
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basis of criteria wholly unrelated tG
the objective."
r~·o ~·eeks ago, the court refused
to reviev,r a lower court decision in
\'iisconsin y,•hich held that under a union
or company pension plan women workers
could not be compelled to retire at
an earlier age than men.
In another decision today, the court
by a 4·3 vote upheld the right of the
federal government to cut back Social
Security disability benefits if the reci--
pient also was getting beyond a certain
limit in state workmen 's compensalion.
The women's rights case came to
the court from Idaho when the Stale
Supreme Court upheld th e con·
stitutionality of the probate law on Feb.
J 1, 1970. It was appealed by Mrs. Sally
M. Reed of Ada County.
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•
VOl. 64, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVE~E~ 22, j 97 f JEN CENTS
DAILY PILOT PMl1 "' llkh•nl K .... IW . 1~·
PLANE ENDS UP ON BACK IN HUNTINGTON BEACH SCHOOLYARD IN SATURDAY CRASH
Young Pilot, School Ctiildren 1t C1rniY1I Escape In jury in Incident Near Meadowlark Airport
Airplane )'lisses Kids
Student Pilot Crash Lands in Beacli Schooly ard
By RUDI NTEDZIELSKI
Of "'9 Dl llr P'llol lllH
A student pilot on his second solo
flight crash landed and flipped a small
plane in a Huntington Beach schoolyard
O\'er the weekend.
Neither the pilot nor pupils attending
a carnival on the f.1eadow View School
campus were injured when the Cessna
150 made its rorced landing on Saturday.
The pilot, 18-year-old Clive Owen Squir·
rel1 of Garden Grove, told Jll,lli~ officers
his engine died just as he was ap-
proaching Meadowlark Airport's main
runway around 3 p.m.
Witnesses said the small, single-engir.e
plane snagged telephone and powerllhes
ori its way down. They said ihe aircraft
B each Officials
To Get $3,300
For Conve ntion,
Five of the seven Huntington Beach
councilmen plus two staff mfmbers will
be flying to Hawaii this week to attend
the four-day National League of Cities
convention.
Expenses advanced by the city to
the contingent of seven total SJ,300.
·The convention. which will begin Satur-
day and end Dec. 2, will be held in
Honolulu.
City Clerk Paul Jones said this morning
he has made reservations for l\1ayor
George ~1cCracken and C.Ouncilmen Ted
Bartlett, Al Coen. Jack Green and l\1rs.
Norma Gibbs. Reservations also have
been made for Acting City Administrator
Brander Castle and Fire Chief Ray
Picard.
When expenses were approved for the
trip in July, the council authorized
"reasonable expenses." including a $500
advance, if required, for any councilmen
wishing to go.
Finance Director Ben Arguello con·
firmed today that all five councilmen
making the trip had been given $500
advRnces.
"Thev r,:lt be required to give an
lter":..ect expense account when they
~turn," Arguello said, "eith~r to show
whether they need to return any change
or whether they need more reim·
burseme nt."
Arguello said that Castle and Picard
had been &iven ex-pense advances of
$400 each.
Last year's league convention was held
in Atlanta, Ga . Only one councilman
attended.
Youth W 01md ed
In 'Quick Dra,v'
A teeQage San Clemente youth was
,. ... .,rted recovering today rrom bullet
·1s in the leg and foot suffered
the weekend in a quk:k draw
.J . p. .
dug into the Meadow View school
grounds, damag ing it's propeller, wing a~d tail section as it flipped over.
'·The pilot did a very nice and careful
job in setting the plane down, considering
what he had to work with," said airport
operator John Turner.
The elementary school. according to
Turner, is directly underneath the ap-
proach pattern. No similar indicents have
occurred for the past 10 years, according
to Turner, J •
Meadbw View Princlpat Mel HamiU
said about 150 persons were attending
the school's annual PTA carnival about
250 feet from where the plane crashland--
etl. • •
_."'hie gny gave us a real good scare.
Jf he hadn't hit those phone lines and
flipped he would have gone into the
playground equipment. It was fortunate
that he hit the telephone lines,'' said
Hatnill. At the momenl of impace two
youngsters were using the swing, ac·
cording to the principal.
The plane, O\vned by Bassee Flight
Service of lluntington Beach, is being
probed by authorities from the Long
Beach office of the Federal Aviation
Agency.
~·we·re still invesligatirig this. We will
get all the pertinent facts but the
ultimate cause of the crash will be
determined by the . National
Transportation Safety Board," an FAA
official said.
2 Bandits' Descri1ltion s
Differ i11 Jewel Robbery
Huntington Beach detectives today are
lrying to piece together clues in the
$25,000 robbery of a Huntington Center
jewelry store which took place Friday
morning.
According lo deteclives, the four store
employes who were present during the
robbery have given them difrerent
descriptions of the two bandits who made
off with set jewelry and watches in
th e morning hei st.
The two men are tentatively believed
to be Caucasians, about 35 years old.
Police think one may be of medium
height and build and the other may
be short and stocky.
The robbers made their escape in
a car belonging to store manager Buck
Roberts. Detective Sgt. Monty McKennon
said this morning he 'didn't know i!
the car had been located yet.
Preliminary reports indicate that
Roberts was in the stqre alone \\:hen
he was confronted by the two men,
armed with a two-inch, .38-caliber
revol ver.
Police have not been able to establish
Viet Wa r's End
Voted in Sto1w y
Bishops' Mee t
WASHINGTON (UPl J -Ameri ca's
Roman Catholic bishops. climaxing the ir
stormiest debate yet over the Vietnam ' War, called Friday for a •·speedy end''
to the fighting but rtfused to approve
a unilateral American withdrawal or
ceasefire.
The much watered resolution they
finally accepted said that the war was
no longer morally justi£ied.
"At this point in history it seems
clear to us that whatever good we hope
to achieve through continued inYolvemenl
how the men got into the store.
Roberts. who is a heart patient, told
the men he was feeling faint and they
gave him some medication he carried
in his Coat pockel.
\\'bile he "'as being forced to open
the safe, three other store employes
-Fred Lope.z. 1-loward Pollack and
Barbara Berkis -arrived for work
and were taken to the storage area
\'1 hcre they v;ere bound \Vith adhesive
tape.
Police claim Pollack wa s hit on the
back of the head, possibly with a gun,
while he was being tied up.
After the items had been taken out
of the sare, Roberts was also taken
to the back room and bound. As soon
as the bandits left the store, he told
police he wriggled. free and activated
an alarm.
in this-war is-now tweighed by th&------'::;;;-0,.,~.,.,11,.o""''•ft~
S. Viets Cross Line
Seek Enemy Sanctuaries in Cambodia
. ' .
SAIGON -Thousands' of South
Vietnamese s crossed into Cambodia
~n armored les today In the opening
phase or a major· new incursion aimed
at North• Vietname~ sanctuaries in the
neighborh;ig country and at relieving
Communist pressure on its capital.
Six battalions of South Vietnamese
airborne troops -·about 4,000 men -
made the crossing northwest of Saigon
near the Krek rubber ph1.ntation. Two
other crossings were being prepared
Reagan Says
Legislature
'Disgraceful '
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today called the 1971 Legislature
"disgraceful" and said California tax·
payers have not gotten their money's
worth Crom the record session.
The Republican Governor also said
!here are so me "legitimate complaints"
about legislative ger rymandering on
reapportionment, which along with a tax
program is the Jone remaining major
issue facing the lawmakers.
"I an1 opposed to gerrymandered
(reapportionment plans) whether th ey're .
Republican or Democratic," Reagan told
his first Capitol news conference since
Oct. 27.
The Democratic~ontrolled Legislature
has been in session sinct early January
and has broken all records for longevity,
spept AftProi:im{lltely $20 milHon 10 far
and is using up an estlma.ted 'll,000
a iday .
~ Asked whether be would support
legislation to set a time limit on session1,
Reagan delined to answer directly but
said "something must be do11.e because
J think this is disgraceful."
Reagan said "everything that.had been
done" during the session could have
been accomplished by early July .
.!..!.{-think there has been Jootdta"gging.
on the part of the leadership or the-
majority (Democratic) party," Reagan
sa id, adding "there isn't much we
(Republicans) can do."
The governor was particularly critical
or a senate-passed reapportion plan for
the upper house which splits Santa Clara
County into six districts. One district
stretches from Needles in the Mojav&
Desert to near Los Gatos, and another
meanders down from the Oregon border
to Morgari llill.
Reagan sa id Santa Clara County has
a "legitimate complaint" about the plan,
but declined to say whether he would
veto it.
The governor also touched on these
subjecl s:
BOOKS -He declared h Im s e If
"unalterably opposed" to any sale of
rare books al the University of California
lo obtain more operating funds. State
Finance Department auditors had iden·
tified sale or the books as a possible
\\'ay to raise money.
VD -Attempting to clear up what
he termed "confusion," the governor
said Ca lifornia parents do not need to
grant permissio11 for clas~s i~ venereal
disease to be taught their children. He
said parents merely have to be notified,
and then can withdraw their children
(Stt REAGAN, Pa1e %)
Blaze-Des troys
Vacant House;
Arson Probed
Huntington Beach po Ii c e are in·
vestigatlng the possibility of arson in
a fire which destroyed an aband01ed
house Sunday night .
Fountain Valley firemen also report~
a residential fire in their city early
Sunday morning, but that fire is not
listed as possible arson .
The Huntington Beach blaze broke out
al 8:30 p.m. in an empty house at
16401 Beach Blvd. Capt. Kettler Kelly
said a preliminarY. investigation showed
the fire started in two separate locations.
No cause o( the blaze has been detcrmin·
ed yet.
Estimated Joss in the fire was $3,000.
Kelly said capt Mlkt;, Itennessey suffered
Ii inor foot inftiry-while fighting the
tUrther so'Uth.
Thousands more troops massed along
Highway l where it crossed Into the
Parrot's Beak area of Cambodia which
juts into South Vietnam west of the
capital, 50 miles to the south of the
first crossing.
Preparations seen along · the toads by
co'rrespondents indicated that It would
be the biggest South Vietnamese in-
cursion into Cambodia since the Allied ·
drive of May, 1970.
Military sources said that a third force
was being organiiet.I in the Mekong Della
city of Chau Doc to operate from the
South Vietnamese base at Neak Luong
on the Mekong River in Cambodia.
~·
;--,..__ . ' \~ .•
Despite the initial border cro&1ln11
today, military sources indicated that
the big push has yet to start. TheY,
indicated that" D-Day will be Wednesday.
The current strength of the Republic
of Vietnam in the adjacent area of
jSee S. VIETS, Page %)
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Ul'I Ttl.,._le
SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY PAYS TRIBUTE AT BROTHER'S GRAVI
Annlvers•ry of A111ssln1tion of Pr11ld1nt John F. Kennedy
John J(ennedy Memorial
Held Near Dallas Site
DALLAS (UP I) -The tall, wiry haired
young man knelt next to the black granite
slab in the middle of the John F. Kennedy
~1emorial. From inside his heavy wool
windbreaker he pulled one Jong stem
red rose wrapped in wax paper to protect
it from the cold and rain that shrouded
the city today.
He unwrapped the rose and placed
it on top of the slab. He knelt there
silently for a minute, then stood up
with his bowed and backed away.
Eight years ago -Nov. 22, 1963 -
Lee Harvey Oswald perched on the sixth
rloor of the Texa!-School Book Depository
and fired three shots (rom a mail .order
riOe killing the 35th President of the
United States.
Two blocks from where the president
was slain, 200 persons gathered inside
the open tomb of the Kennedy Memorial
in a brief three·minute tribute to John
F. Kennedy.
The so.root square memorial was
designed by Phillip Johnson, a close
friend of the late president, and was
dedicated June 24, 1970. T o d a y ' s
memorial consisted or three sbort
prayers and a 4S.Sec<lnd speech by Mayor
Wes Wise.
"Let us declare today that we will
renew ourselves in the spirit of John
F. Kennedy and for the ideals he stood
for." said \Vise, himself a ·young, Ken·
~yesque type of politician. \
Around the inside of the memorial
huddled seven young Negro children who
held a piece o( canvas above their heads
to protect them from the rain, and
Bn elderly man in a white rain coat
who throughout the servke held his
Jm>~ felt" h.!t over his heart..:.
made of multicolored flowers at one
end of the granite slab. At the other
end a pot of yellow chrysanthemums
wilted from the cold.
Wise placed the wreath in its
designated spot and asked for a moment
of silence. As everyone bowed their
heads, a gust of wind blew in from
under the walls of the memorial, which
have a one foot opening at the bottom.
The wind picked up the rose and blew
it across the memorial floor.
A small card flapped from Its stem
and was caught in a puddle.
"We still remember and love you.
Mr. President," it read.
It was sigried, William, CeUa, Danny
and Sa ndra Katzel, Washington, D. C.
Orange Coaac
Weatller
Sunny skies and crisp (mid.al)
temperatures are forecast for
Tuesday, with overnight lows card.
ed between 37 and 47 degrees,
INSIDE TODAY
Columnist Erma Bombeck and
Bil Keane (Familt1 Circus ), two
of tile real "slars" in the DAILY
PILOT talent lineup, teamed. up
to produce tht book" "Jwt Wait
. Till You Havt Children of Your
Ow11:" A si.r·part serialization of
t%c~rpts from the book 11.arl.I
toda on Page 24 . ;
,.
01na1dHolstea ~art>er. 17, of 102
Sa nta 1ne2. suHertd the relatively minor
wounds Saturday afternoon whtn he and
a friend were pracUcing fhe frontier
art ~uth of Vista Bahia stadium,
destruction of human 1ife and of moral At the P e ak
values which it lnntct·s," the bishops • tire. Mayor Wise plac a circular wrea h •••llllt '" Cllt<klflt u, 1
...... .... ••• , .... Nt.. • ... Ortatt ,_,, ,.
A·fter the mishap the friend ran to
the nee by recreation area and called
police.
Barber was released after treatment
It South Coast Community Hospital .
said In a resolution adopted at the closing Jan P~ 17, is Fountain .Val-
session or their week-long semiann¥al ley High' School's 1971 Home·
meeting. coming Queen. Senior coed is
Adoption or the t'!solulion on Southeast daugh[er of Mr. and l\trs. Neil
Asia climaxed the stormiest debate ln O. Peek, 8982 La Stella, Foun·
..the American hierarchy's history of lain Valley. She was crowned
wre1UinJ with the war ln vtetn1m. Oct. 29. • -
--,
1'he Fountain Valley (ire broke out
al 6:30 1.m. at 18579 San Felipe SL
The home , wh ich is occupied by the
Fred McConnell!, auffered an estimated
41,300 damages in the !ire which started
Lu one of the. bedrOOms.
Firemen said no injuries were reported
from the fire:
Storn1 Laura Dying
MIAMI (UPIJ -The wandering days
of tropical depression Laura •ppeared
over today. Weather forec1ster1 reported
the former tropical storm breaking up
over Lbe mountllns of Central America.
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& O~LV PILOT
Paper Urges
,
•
]\'Iohilizillg
•
By Israel
t By United Press Jnlernallo1tal
An Israeli newspaper called today for
mobilization of the reserves after the
•·eekend .statement by Egyptian Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat that I here is ''no
alternative" to another 1'1iddle Ea st war.
The IsraeU Army scheduled a n.t·
tionwide air raid warning test for Tues-
day.
An taraeli military spokesman said
that 1he situation along the Suez Canal
was quiet. He added. however. that U? tO 'i0,000 Eg}'plian troops and 2,000 tank.'1
are there and that the fighting could
begin without adv~nce warning.
·Western intelligenCe sources in London
confirmed the Egyptian buildup along
the canal but noted that a crossiilg
would be "hazardous in the extreme"
as l <1 n g as• Israel retains mastery in
the air.
The Tel Aviv new:ipaptr Yedioth Aha-
ronoth' said in an edttorial that Sadat's
stateme11ts meant that "it is necessary
for a call·up" of reserves in Israel.
Israeli newspapers generally called on
the govemmenL and mUllary leadership
to make .clear to Egypt the dangers
of another round of fighti(g.
An Army spo'kesman said that the
nationwide air raid warning network
would be tested at 2 p.m. Tuesday (4
a:m. PST), the first test since a com·
memorative blast on Memorial Day six
months ago. The spokesman said the
test had nothing to do with Sadat's
speeches, but it served to ·Underscore
the mood of public apprehension in
ISrael.
~·The newspaper Davar said that the
developmtnls of the past few days lent
"urgency and gravity" to Prime Minister
Golda Meir's meeting with President
Nixon, scheduled far next month.
·Four African leader!: arrived in Cairo
Ofl a continuing mission to seek peace
in the area. They were Presidents
heopold Senghor of Senegal and Maj .
Gen. Yakubu Gowa n of Nigeria, Foreign
Minister Mario Cardoso of Zaire {the
~ormer Congo) and. State Minister
William Eteki of Cameroun.
Jn Beirut, travellers from Egypt said
~~ve was cancelled for the armed forces
apd they were on a state of standby ~:dat, in two speeches · to fronUine
&Oops along the Suez Canal, said "every
IKipe we used to have for a peace
siUlement is finished , and we have no
a)ternative but to fight to f'e§ain our
lflJld, our honor and our dignity.
.. The only hope for peace, he said,
itAild be for Israel to withdraw com·
ifelely fro m Arab lands -something
lsrael has steadfastly refused to do. .·
~ar Pools Get
F1·ee Green Light
" pn Bay Bridge
SACRAMENTO (UPI! The
Cflifomia Toll Bridge Authority is going
to let people in car pools cross the
San FranC\sco-Oakland Bay Bridge free .
The car poolers also wilt have exclusive
lanes 1.5 miles long so they can zip
through the toll pla7.a non-slop while
other conunuters are bumper-to-bumper,
stop-and·go.
These priviledges. offered only during
the rush hour. are part or a :J{kfay
test beginning Dec. 8 to see if enough
t;ijr pooJs will be formed to substantially
reduce the number of cars. ~At present, cars crossing the bridge
carry an average of only 1.2 passe ngers,
ihcluding the driver. Officials estimated
the car poolers would save 10 minutes
getting through lhe toll plaza.
To help people organize car pools,
the Toll Bridge Authority decided to
pass out lnformalion sheets to rush hour
travelers.
OUHCJI COAST
DAILY PILDT
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DAILY 'ILOT Sidi l"M le;
Devoted Motlie1·
"Button,'' an ll·year-oid cockapoo, nurses Labrador retriever puppies
\Vhose mother was hit and killed by a car shortly after their birth.
Button, who is 11 years old and had her last pups four years aio, be·
longs to Mrs. Rona1d E:hristensen, 17422 Waal Circle, Huntington
Beach.
Governor Bacl{s Agnew;
'Should Be on '72 Ticl{et'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Reagan
said tOday he would .gO personally to
President Nixon to argue to keep Spiro
Agnew on the 1972 Republican ticket
to sidetrack any move to replace Agnew
with Treasury Secretary John Connally.
"I think Ted Agnew has been a great
vice president, and I think Ted Agnew
should be on the ticket," the Republicn n
governor told a ·capitol nev"s conrerence.
Reagan said he recognizes the Presi-
dent "has a very large say in picking
his running mate," but added that did
not prohibit others rrom "lobbying and
lobbying hard" for their prereren~s.
From Page l
S. VIETS ..•
Cambodia where guerrilla sanctuaries
are located already stands at close to
a 13,000-man division.
Lt -o en. \Nguyen Van Minh, com-
mander of military Region IIl v.•ho is
directing the buildup, spent the day at
his rear area headquarters-at Bien Hoa,.
18 miles northeast of Saigon. ?i.tinh was
expected to arrive at his forward head-.
quarters at Tay Ninh, !Kl miles northwest
of Saigon and 27 miles south of the
Cambodian border, on Tuesday.
Though vehicles rolled across the
border, there was none of the heavy
U.S. air activity that always accompanies
a major allied push.
However, the Vietnamese themselves
staged an air raid Sunday on suspected
guerrilla concentrations near Chrum, ~o
miles inside Cambodia, and reported ldll·
ing 40 guerrillas.
UPI correspondent Kate Vi'ebb in
Phnom Penh reported activily '"'as
relatively quiet on Cambodian battlefields
this morning but Communists staged
a mortar attack at Bat Deng, a railroad
town 17 miles northwest of Phnom Penh.
No casualties 11·ere reported.
Over the v.·eekend, U.S. and Sou!h
Vietnamese warplanes staged bomb runs
in all four Indochina countries, including
two ·raids in North Vietnam.
The last American arlillery used to
shell North Vietnarn was ordered silenced
Sunday. The order meant the 535 nicn
who man the v.'eapons will be home
for Christmas.
Soup CQinpan y
Sa ys Bot1ilism
Cau se Corrected
CA?i.fDEN, N.J. fAP) -Campbell Soup
Company has told its stockholders It
had diS('(lvered and corrected the cause
of an outbreak of botulis1n bacteria in
a small quant ity of vegetable soup at
a Texas plant last sumn1er. It said
lhe incident caused a serious slum p
in business.
The discovery of what the romp11ny
termed a ''seemingly i 1n po ss i b J e' '
spoilage in the chicken vei;!elable and
\'ege tarian vegetable soup prorluced last
Ju,!y at-the Paris, Texas, plant resulted
in a massive rec a 11 of thousands or
cans in 16 states. Campbell estimated
the recall cost $5 mill ion.
No soup rea ched the consumer, and
no one becan1e ill.
The company said the ~poilage was
due to 8 combinttlon or fa ctors linked
to e new soup-making procc53 v.·hich
his since betn eliminated.
Reag an also derended Agnew's
criticism of Rep. Paul N. M.cCloskey
in a speech last week in which Agnew
indireclly compared !he Ca Ji Io r n J a
Republican's campaign against Nixon for
the presidency wilh Benedict Arnold.
ReaJ!:an said the Arnold comment came
"in a Series of oneliners" which Reagan
s<i id were winning big lailghs from a
Republican audience.
''I don't think there was anything in
bad taste about it,'; Reagan said, acnling
··1 laughed" at the remark.
Reagan also said he knew nothing ,
about an Oregon-based letter writing
campaign boosting him for the
Republican presidential nomination.
He said he instead is backing Nixon's
renomination and was coauthor with New
York Gbv. Nelson Rockefeller of a resolu-
tion adopted unariimously by RepubUcan
governors last week backing Nixon's
renomination.
f'rom Pqe l
REAGAN ...
from the classes if they desire. Reaga n
vetoed a bill by Assemblywoman fl.1arch
Fong · {D-Oakland), wflich would have
eliminated the notice requirement. She iS seeking a veto override.
Tax -The wealthy former actor jok-
ingly sa id that "after the clouts on
my head'' be took earlier this ye ar
upon disclosure he owed no state income
tax for 1970, he has decided to make
sure he pays a tax on this year's income."
Agnew -The governor said, "Yeah,
t laughed '' when Vice , President Spiro
T. Agnew last week declared that Rep.
Paul N. !<.'fcCloskey's "ravorite P.ainting''
is "'Benedict Arnold crossing the
Delaware .. , He labeled criticisms of
AgneY."s remark last week "nitpicking."
Heca ll -Reagan seemed unco ncerned
about the latest drive to recall him
fron1 office. saying such moves were
"$urt of like the swa\1011ls coming back
to Capistrano."
UC B erkeley Hit
B y Sex Bias Rap
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Nixon
Administration's chier civil rights official
Friday threatened legal sanctions against
the University of California at Berkeley
for alleged sex discrimination against
\ron1en.
J . Stanley Pottinger. ci\'il rights dirtt·
1or in the U.S. Department of llealth,
Education and \Velfare, said the Berkeley
campus 1s being in vestigated for
disrrin1 inaling against won1en en1p\oyes.
"A lot of pe<iple perceiv e of women·s
liberation as -bra burning and try to
laugh if off,'' Pottinger said. "It's not
tt1:it at all."
Pottinger told nev.·smen after ad-
dressing the Sacramento Press Club that
If Berkeley officials don't gr ant his in·
vestlgators access lo em p 1o y 111 en t
records, or if 1he sex discri1ninalion
charges are substantiated. he will recorn-
n1end sus pending federal contracts with
the campus. Pottinger said similar action
was taken two weeks ago against Colum-
bla Unlver3ity .
Catholi c Teachers
·Str ik e in Ne w York
ti -W.f tt~ 1'"'1, Calli M~
T.,.._ 171 4) '42-4JJ1
d..ww A"-"l"-t •41.J•TI
-Jn Dallas.-Dr-\Vlllls lrvio. hc.a.d of
a team of federal inspcetors who COii·
ducted a pl'Qbe at U1c plan!. S31d fnclor<i
('ited by Cnmpbell wrre ln\'O\\'ed in the
spollt1ge. hut added : "Out wr slill cannot
pinpoint the cause."' -
Nf;W \'O K UPI) -r.1ore than 600
unlonlzed lay 'achers s1ruck th lfy'"s
329 1tornan Coth-Olic s~hool.~ today for
htgher w3ges and set up picket lines
Ill 0).10Y or the.TI .
'?'he pa roc::hlBI $rhools rtmaintd open
\\'lth the help of secular staff ind
ltachers' 11ides. ~lowever. • federallon of
Ca!hollc icachrrs· President Barry F.
Jt.van snld he coibidertd the strike sue·
<'C!iSfUI.
j
'"This was our -first. nnd we arc
determined that U will be 01Jr l8SI.
experience ol !his kind ,'' Prcr.idt!nl \V.
B. Murrh.Y reported to lhc co1npany's
annual m~tlng,
Unification
'Eoj!S Seek
Court Bar
The Mlbattled foes of the Huntington
Beach Union High ~hool District'•
unlrtcation plan TUesday will ask a
Superior Court judge to kill the plan
by summary {·udgment.
Dr. Mlchae Brick, superintendent of
the Fountain Valley School District, said
school officials have filed verified af-
fidavits In support of such action.
The court will hear Dr. Br ick's claim
at 9 a.m.
Brick alleges the affidavits, verified
by a public accounting firm, prove that
a significant financfal dlSparity would
be created among school districts
participating In the unification procedutt.
Brick's legal claim, pressed by the
offi~ of the County Counsel, is directed
against lhe county CQDlmiltee.·on School
District Organization. -·
The 11-man committee has already
given Its· approval to the unification
plan. It would split tbe. high school
district into four new unified school
districts, each serving stu~ents from
kindergarten through high school.
Dependi.ng on the outcome of the court
action, the controversial plan will be
blocked or submitted to the state Board
of Education for ratification.
Should the state Board or Education
also approve the plan, it would be placed
before West Orange County vo.ters in
June of 1972.
Beach Shifts
Four Captains
For Experience
Four Huntington Beach police captains
ha ve been reassigned by Chief Earle
Robitaille in what he described as an
effort to keep management acquainted
with all phases of operation in the depart-
ment.
Capt. Michael Burkenfield has taken
over the command of the patrol division
and his post as head of the ad·
n1i11 istrative di vision has been taken by
Capt. Grover Payne, former chief or
detectives.
Capt. Arland Ussher has assumed com·
mand of the services division, leaving
the patrol division. Capt. Harold ·Mays
took over the detecti ve division, leaving
his former command in the services
division.
Chief Robitaille said the assignments
are for two years. When the tours are
completed, all the captains will ha ve
exper}ence in each of tbe department's
divisions, he noted,· · ' .
The chief said that other orficers and
patrolmen are .also shifted from time
to time so that eventually all personnel
are falnllilr wftb Varying .t):lhafe9 'er
police work.
Solon's Ex-aide
Rulecl Guilty
NE\V YORK (UPI ) -Robert T.
Carson. former administrative aide to
Sen. Hiram Fong (R·Hawaii ), was con·
vict ed Sat urday or bribery-conspiracy a11d
perjury in connection vt'ith an attempt
to use his connections to quash a stock
fraud indictment.
A federal district court jury of 10
men and two women convicted Carson
ol conspiracy to give and receive bribes
from a New York business consultant
v.•ho was under investigation ·by the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) in a stock fra ud case. Th_e ,con·
sultan!, 1\1 \chael Hellerman, is now on
lrial on stoc k fraud charges.
Carson also was convi cted of lying
lo a federal grand jury when he testified
he w8 s not acquainted with Hellerman
or: Edward Adams, an influence peddler·
v.•ho arranged for a bribe from Hellerman
lo Carson. Adams e!ready has pleaded
guilty.
Ul"I T.-...i.
Bosto11 Frie11d
Uls Angeles Jl.layor Sam Yorty holds up a 41,.2 po und lobster as he
pauses at Boston's Logan In ternational Airport <Jver the weekend.
The mayor is making his first trip to New Hampshire since announ~
ing his bid for the Democratic presidential ·nomination last week.
'Angel' Offers to Assist
Fund-shy Airpor~ Body
A helping hand has been ·offered to the
financially starved Orange County
Airport Land Use Commission by a Santa
Ana electronic parts m.anufaclurer and
private flyer.
Kennedy W. Case of 1018 N. Lincoln
Ave., said Friday that he was mailing a
fund·solicitalion letter lo prominent
businessmen thr6ughout the county
enlisting aid for the land use group which
has.been virtually orphaned by the Board
of Supervisors.
The supervisors cut the commission's
budget from a reque sted $62 ,000 to $500 in
July and that money has run out. Com-
mission members are doing the essential
mailing and oth!:!r office work of the
organizalion from their private offices.
The supervisors have recently said they
do not believe ihe land use agency is
necessary. that the County's Airport
Commission is adequate to handle the
field.
Case, who is chairman ol I.he Orange
County Chamber of Commer~ Task
Force on Airport Facilities, but acting on
his own in the campaijJl, disagrees.
In the ~tler he sfa tes ' tha\ 1that the
Airport Land Use Commission is the best
suited organization to help mit:iimize•tbe
720 flig h·way
Deaths See n
CHICAGO (AP) -Between 620
and 720 perso ns might be killed
on the nation's highwa ys over the
Jong Thanksgiving weekend. the
National Sa fety Council eslimates.
The 102-hour period covered by
the estimate beg i n s at 6 p.m.
Wednesday and ends at midnight
Sunda y.
Duriag the same period. 27.000
to 32,000 persons mighl be injured
in highway crashes, the council
said.
The council, wh ich makes no
counl of its own of fatalities and
injuries, said there were 651
fatalities duri ng the l 9 7 0
Thanksgiving holiday weekend. The
Assoc iated Pr.e~s counl for the
period \\'as 646. The highest
Thanksgiving weekend toll record-
ed by the AP was 764 in 1968.
conniet between airport users and
homeowners.
"Since our county fathers re(use to
help this worthwhile group financially it
is up to us lo dig into our own pockets to
keep it going," Case wrote. "You 8.Jld I
can help, say with a donation of $10 or
more."
He asks that the money be sent lo com-
mis~ion Chairman Don A. Mcinnis, '4105
Seashore Drive, Newport Beach, 92660.
Mcinnis, a Newport Beach city toun·
cilman, has endorsed the financial
solicitation, Case said.
The electronic manufacturer said he
hoped, "the supervisors will hear of this
campaign and then do their duty ..:. sup-
port the commission they created.11
H"!ltington Higll
FutJfe Slated
F.or . lJiscussion
~blic di~cussion on the future of th~
Huntington Beach High School tower
campus has been set for Tuesday night
by trustees of the Huntington Beach
Union High School District.
The meeting will be held at 7 30 p.m.
in the hig h school cafeleria, 1905 Main
SI.
Jack S. Roper, district superintenden t,
today invited anyone concerned with the
high school's future to attend the
workshop.
The architectural firm of Allen,
Kno\j,·\es and Miller v.·ill be on hand
to spell out details on various schemes
lo rehabilitate the 45-year-old campus
in compliance with the Field Act.
California la\v provides that all public
schools must be made earthquake·proof
by 1975. Although the high school has
escaped damage from n u mer o u s
quakes. it is not considered lo be earlh·
quake·safe under the law.
ln\•olved in the debate v.'ill be the
school"s r.tedi!erranean.sty!e tower, 1,400·
seat auditorium and adjacent classroom
wing.
It is expected that the architects wi!I
\Jn\'eil severa l proposals whereby some
portions of the landmark campus ca n
be reta ined without resorting to demoli-
lion.
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Mond1y, NOVtmbor 22. 1911 H DAILV PILOT 3
Connally Cites Meany's Personal ·-'Arrogance ~
-From Wire Services the labor movenient."
WASHlNGTON -Treas~ ~re:tary Meany denied today he or the labor
John B. Connally said toda_~ i>FIA:IO group were rode 14 Nixon at the_AFIA:IO
President George Meany's at l t tu de convention Frld13. (See Story, Page 5}
toward President Nixon P' r Id a y Meany, mean.,.hile, accused the Prul·
.. renected an arrogance, boorishness and dent of deliberately staging the allegedly
discourtesy tbat ill-becomes a leader rude treatment the chief e..a:ecutlve
ot the labor movement in the United · received.
5f.,Jtes." · • "The accusations of dlscourt.esy are
At ~ news conference, Connally declar-absolutely and completely untrue ~
ed. that "the comments I made go to Mr. unfair," Meany told the cging day's
Meany personally. They do not go to session of the conventlon. "1 think we
showed the respect that was due the
Pruident. We were courteous and there
WU JV> jeering, DO booing."
But the 77-year-old Meany uld NI.Ion's
address was "pure political propaganda."
He charged the President did not di.scuu
the one issue that was of greatest COD•
cern to the labor delegates -honoring
the labor contracts signed before and
during the wage·price 1 freeze .
CoMally charged this morning that
a 28.5 percent pay raise given Meany
by tbe union wu a "flagrant contempt"
of the economic program to hold down
bJg wages and price increaser.
Connally a1'o aaJd the Pay Boanl'o
approval of a 15 pertent pay hike for
soft coal mln¢rl: was very dlsappolntlng
and aa1d he hoped It would not set
a precedent for other wJge dectslops.
Connll),y, who also serves as cbalrman
of the. Cost bf Living Council, '141d a
news conference that be wu speaking
" • layman In attacklllf the Pay Board
ded.Jiqp Frktay and not u a top a:ovem-
ment oUiclal.
"I'm -very disappointed In the co a I
1ctloo," CoMally said. He added that
he hoped ft would not set a l>l'<Cedent
or Js viewed u a stan<htrd i lor olher
1V&ge decis1ons.
In the wake. of the Pay Board'• action,
the Price Commission met today t? look
at the 'other side o! tbi coln -a
request for 1 jump ln the price o.f
coal.
Connally a1'o 'announced today lhal
finance minister• ol the "Group of Ttn''
richest nations will meet in Rome Nov.
30, and added that he was "very hopelul
that progress can be made."
But Connally .said he doubted a rutig~
ment or the world's currencies could
be achieved in a aingle meeting. . .
Charges All-out Attacl{.
New Delhi CHINA
Kidnap-Rape Case .Teen Dies .·
Woman Names In Councy
Man as Attacker Stabbing
IN 0 I A
EAST
PAKl.S-TA N
Admits Air
Clash 011ly I
By Un.Heel Press InternatlouJ
A tearful. hesitant woman witness took
35 minutes to answer three questions
today in Orange County Superior Court
after picking out William Ferguson as
the man who kidnaped and raped her
three years ago in' Santa Ana.
The 31-year-old woman kept Judge
I ·~
I ! I I
I
f
' • i '
Ul'ITt l .......
C:app ha C:ourt
Cartoonist Al Capp faces a pre-
liminary hearing in Eau Claire,
Wis., today on three morals
charges filed last spring by a
married Eau Claire coed -
under some of the most strin·
gent courtroom precedures
ever laid down by a \Visconsin
judge.
Sl1otgun Blast
Ends Auto Spree
On Cypress Lawn
Police said it took a shotgun blast
to stop Dennis R. Hanson, 30, of
South Gate. when he atracked Cypress
police offi cers ·Nith his car Sunday after
tearing up a lav.·n with the vehicle.
Police said Hanson. was treated for
minor wounds at the Orange County
Medical Center and booked on suspicion
of assault wit h a deadly weapon.
He reportedly tried 'to ruri down two
Cypress ofUcers who attempted to stop
hint from tearing up a lawn at 9922
Walker St., by racing his car back
and forth on the grass.
· -Patrolmen Ramon Peterson and Jeff
Haas reported they avoided injury by
jumping clear when Hanson allegedly
aimed his car their way. Police did
not reveal which of \he officers fired
the shotgun which ended the lncldent.
Claude Owens and the jury waiting for
more than 10 minutes on one occasion
as she tried to recall the course
Ferguson's car' had taken after the 36-
year-old defendant allegedly forced her
into the vehicle at the Santa Ana bus
terminal.
Her testimony opened the seCQnd week
of the defendant's serond trial on kidnap
· and rape charges.
The Santa Aha man's 1968 conviction
was recently thrown out in a landmark
ruling by the California Supreme Court
with the finding that the prosecution
should have revealed the morals record
of a key witness in their case against
Ferguson.
That key witness was lbe woman's
husband and he has again testified in the
current trial that Ferguson was the
man who sexually assaulted his wife
and then forced him to participate in
sex acts with her.
Bandits Seize
Cash at G1mpoint
Two •armed bandits held up a La
Palma supermarket clerk early today
and escaped with an undisclosed amount
of cash, estimated by police at several
thousand dollars.
La Palma officers said the two men
dressed in business suits threatened an
unidentified clerk with a pistol in the
Shopping Bag, 4951 La Palma Ave. The
clerk was forced to open the store's
safe just arter the market opened for
business today.
Police said witnesses told them that
the holdup pair were last seen walking
rapidly west on La Palma Avenue.
Crasli Can't
Dela y Stork
DES MOINES, fowa (AP) -
A fiery three-car collision here Sun-
day wasn 't enough to stop a Des
Moines CQuple from keeping an
appointment with the stork.
John and Carole Grupp were in-
volved in the collisinn while en
route to a local hospital so Mrs.
Grupp could have a baby.
They crawled from the burning
wreckage of their car, left their
name and address with others ln-
volved in the wreck and flagged
down a passing motorist who rush-
ed them to the hospitaJ.
A daughter was born to the cou-
ple two hours later.
Burroughs Aide Confirms
'Phasing Out' at Viejo
By BARBARA KREIBICll added, while Burroughs 0 ff i cl a I I
01 '" D.111.,. '°''' si-*f determine the role lhe Mission Viejo An official of the Burroughs COrp. facility will play in futurt producUoo
In Detroit todzy confirmed that the com· plans.
pa.ny is in the process of phasing out , its production of magnet(c memory disk .Brady said f!ie co~pany s Westlake file~ at its Mission Viejo plant and · Yillage pla~t w1!l e<inhnue to make lhe:
that approximately a~ p r o d u c t I o n · memory d1Sk files , but another type
employes will be ciffected by the move. of disk product has been developed which
Confirtning lhe Friday report that a ~urro~f,hs can purcha~ from another
number of employes at the h11~slon Viejo fl.I'm. ,, Technology continues to change
facility had been sdvtsed the plant would on us, he said. ctase-p~uctton at the !nd-of the ~ar, A-ntw Burroughs facility recently
public rellllions director Dlc.k Brady said opened in Rancho Bernardo, a n .d
In Detroit he understood "most of the manufacturing a different computer com-
flrod uctlon empl oye:s'' would be affected. . ponent will DOt be affected, Brady said.
"As the resull of changing market The $1& million plant on Geronimo
requirements wfth regard to CQmputer Roa d in Mission Viejo was bull t in
mt mory subSyslems, we are in the pro-1969 and opened In December or that
ccss of phasing out . this production al year. It had been planned to have 1,500
~1Wion Viejo," he sai1d. employes but Brady aaid the production
Some administrative end engineeM11g staff never reached "mort than 150
emplo.yes will remain at the plant, Ile lo 200." · •
A teenage Anaheim girl was stabbed
to death early Saturday and her former
boyfriend has been jailed on murder
charges.
Police said Janet M. Heydenhal, i8,
of 2{)5 N. Western Ave., had just left
the Anaheim Elks Club building where
she had attended a dance when.Lawreno:e
E. Lindeboom, 9862 \'alley View st .•
Cypress, grabbed her and they engaged
in a heated conversation, according to
witnesses.
9AV Ol"=CMITIAeoMO
BfH8Al
0 D~CCA
8UftMA
U'I Nl'WI Mt'
Radio Pakistan charged today that'
India "has launched an all-out offensive
against East P@.klstan •• , wilhoyt.
forlt}al declaration of war." '
In New Delhi, a governmen't
spokesman denied &imilar Charges but·
said Indian planes drove off intrudlnf
Pakistani jets which crossed the border.' 1•
The radio Pakistan bro a d'cast
monitored In London said that one Indi&Jl1
• ' thrust came in the Jessore sector border·
Ing on India's West Bengal 1tate. :rt
~id that a second Indian attack cam",
m lhe Sylhet area, across East Pakistan
from Jessore, and in the area of t~
port of Chittagong. '· •
'!'he broadcast said that fighting wa~·
Lindeboom, a Cypre~ Junior College
student, climaxed the argument by
slashing the girl repeatedly with a large
knife, officers .alleged. She was rushed
to the Anaheim Memorial Hospital where
she died several hours later from st.ab
wounds in at least six vital organs.
PAKISTANIS ALLEGE ALL-OUT OFFENSIVE BY INDIAN TROOPS
R•dlo Broaclc•st Says East Pakistan Border Crossed, SoSM Dead
going on. ·
til New Delhi, government spokesmen
said that Indian jet fighters fired on'
four Pakistani Sabre jets which intruded.
into Indian territory from the Jessore
area of Pakistan, but denied as
"absolutely false" Pakistani r a d i o
charges that Indian tanks and the tn-'
fantry had entered East Pakistan lher:t
on Sunday. ·
Doctors administered 29 pints or blood,
donated by police and firemen throughout
Orange County, in a vain attempt to
save the girl's life.
The victim's father told police his
daughter and Lindeboom had gone steady
for about a year. "They broke up a
e<iuple of weeks ago, and now this,"
the grief stricken father said.
City Closes River Intake
In G.1·ipe Over 'IIot' Water "Absolutely false," Joint Defense
Secretary P. Krishnamurti of India s*1c;i:
of Pakistani radio reports which charge.\
that seven Indian tanks were destroyed>
and 90 Indian soldiers were kiUed jn'
fightlng In the Jessore area Sunday.
These were apparently charges~ o! • earlier afltck than that reported ti}'
Pakistani radio today.
Yorty Assails
Nqon Policies
' MANCHESTER, N.H. tuPll -Mayor
Sam Yorty of l.()s Angeles has criticized
the Nixon administratiOn•s economic
policies in his first visit to lhe state
as an announced candidate for the 1m
Democratic presidential nomination.
Yorty, in a one-day swing lhrough
the site of the nation's first presidential
primary March 7, told ' newsmen Phase
fl of the President's fiscal stabilizalion
program was no more than a "holding
operation until the 1972 elections."
"There has been no real effort to
explain any long term plan and many
are wondering if the economy will ever
really be healthy again after so much
political interference," Yorty said Satur·
day.
Plane Search Halted
HONG KONG (UPIJ -The rescue
coordination center early tonight called
off its fruitless search for the missing
China Air Lines (CAL) Caravelle jeUiner.
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI) -Min·
neapolls, which gets its water supply
from the Mississippi River, shut down
its water Intake fbr 10 hoUrs late Sunday
al)d early today to protest the discharge
of radioactive water from a nuclear
power station upstream.
The Northern States Power Co. reaCtor
at Monticello. Minn., 30 miles aWiy,
discharged I0,000 gallons of radioactive
water in the Mississippi on Friday. The
emptying of the three or four more
tanks of water, the first containing 9,300
gallons of water and about ~ microcuries
of radiation, began Sunday and was
to last a few days.
The Minnesota Public Health Depart-
ment ordered the city's intake shut down
from 4 p.m. Sunday until 2 a.m. PST
today as a precaution against the
radioactive discharge. The city faced
no shortage of water, however, because
it has more than 115 million gallons
in storage -enough for at least two
days.
The amount of radiation present was
not considered dangerous by the ~fln
nesota Pollution Control Agency or the
Minnesota Department of Health.
The power company said t h e
discharges probably would never be
repeated. Th~ releases were caused by
an oversupply of water during main-
tenance on the torus, a doughnut-shaped
Women Score Second
Victory in High Court
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Advocates of
equal rights for women won their aecond
victory of the new tenn in the Supreme
Court today.
A 7-0 vote in a compler Idaho probate:
case held that the "equal protection''
clause or the 14th Amendment bars states
from legally discriminating against
womc~ing them as administrators
or estiW
That was the same clause useJ by
the court to prohibit discrimination
against Negroes in the milestone civil
pient also was getting beyond a certain
limit in sta:te workmen's compensation.
The women's rights case came to
the court from Idaho when the State
Supreme Court upheld t h e con·
stltutlonallty of the probate law on Feb.
JI, 1970. It was appealed by Mrs. Sally
M. Reed of Ada County.
Fire Kills Six
Children, Sitter
rlghla cases of the 1950s and 1960s. F AJRBANKS, Alaska (UPI) - A young
Jn today's unanimous opinion, Chief mother and air children died Sunday
Justice Warren E. Burger said the con-in a trailer home blaze.
stitutional guarantee of "equal protection Patricia. Ann Galvan, 26, was baby of the laws'' denies to the states the PQWe.r to ·¢abllsh different classes or alt ling with three or her own , children
persons to be adtTiinistrator1 "on the al)d three children rrom a ~hborlng
basis. or criteria wholly unrelated to trailer when names destroyed t:l'le S-by·30
the objtetlve. •• --foot mobile hOme just norl.h ofTiifb&riU-
Two week& ago, the court refused JnttrnaUonal Airpart. The temperature
to re~ew a lower court. decision ln out.side: was five degrees .
Wisconsin which held that under a union Alaska state troopers said a
or company pension plan women workers preliminary Investigation indlca~ •
could not be compelled to rtUrt at heater-malfunction caused the blaze
an earlier 1ge than men. which killed ~1. Calvan and her
ln another decision t.oday. the court children, Chris, 5; Wesley, 2; and
by a 4-3 vote upheld the rJght or the Cherlyn I, and the children of Mr. ind
federal government to cut back Social Mrs. Dale Brewer, Dorothy, 9; Peggy
Sercurtty disability benefits il the reci· Louise, 8, and Dale Jr. 7.
chamber at the base of the reactor,
according to the CQmpany.
But Northern Sates Pt>"er alao aaid
it releases small amounts of radioactive
iodlne and cobalt on a regular basis.
Russell Hatling, public Information
director of the Minnesota Environmental
Control Citizens Association, disagreed.
He called the plant "a health hazard
to the drinking and the health and safety
of the people in the Twin Cities."
St. Paul, Minnesota's capital which
is adjacent to Minneapolis, shut its
Mississippi River intake gates earlier
and officials said they would not open
again until an all-clear sign is: given
from the Minnesota Public Health
Department.
Hatling threatened legal action against
Northern States Power.
"I Strongly suspect the next step for
MECCA may be a legal step," he said.
"There definitely will be a move now
to have that Monticello plant closed
down."
The pollution control agency is ap..
pealing to the Supreme Court for the
authority to regulate r a d i o a c t I v e
emissions in the state.
MECCA has not been in agreement
with even the state emiS!ion standards,
which are below those of the Atomic
Energy Commission.
Catholic Tea chers ·
Strike in New York
NEW YORK (_UPI) -More than 600
unionized lay teachers struck the city's
329 Roman catholic schools today for
higher wages and set up picket lines
at many of the.n.
The parochial schools remained open
with the help of secular staff and
teachers' aides. However, federation of
Cathnllc teachers President Barry F.
Ryan said he considered the strike suc-
cessful.
"I should reiterate that Indian trooDs
have strict orders not to cross frontiers.''
Krishnamurti said.
The radio Pakistan broad c a ~
r.1onitored in London today said that
preliminary estimates put the number
of Indian dead at 130, and that Pakistani
casualties were 1 killed and 40 wounded ..
It said 18 Indian tanks were damaged. .'
The radio charged that "the Eighth (In-
dian) Mountain Division and some tanks"
attacked in the Sylhet area early in u,.,
day but that heavily outnumbe~ Pakistani army troops checked the
vance. inflicting ~8 casualties at
cost of 11 dead and 16 wounded.
The radio said that two Indian brigades.
attacked in the Chittagong area but.
that Eastern Zone commander Lt. Gen.
A. B. Niazi visited the b.9.tUe area and
was told "the situation is well under
control."
"It is expected that the Indian armj
will open up more fronts on the East
Pakistan borders in the next 24 hours,'
the broadcast said .
Tension between the two countries hall
been building since Pakistan's govern:
ment tried to put down the Bengalt
autonomy movement in East Pakistan
by force last March. Refugees have
poured from the area into India ever
since. Guerrtlla fighting has been
reported in East Pakistan against the
West Pakistan Army.
\Vest and East Pakistan are separated
by l,000 miles or Indian territory and
Indian and Pakistani troops are massed
along the border in both areas.
Crash Kills Woman
Dorothy B. Clausen, 52, 0£ 11642 Yana
Drive, Garden Grove, was killed Sunday
afternoon when lhe car she was driving
went off the roadway and crashed into
a power pole in Stanton. The coroner's
?ffice said she died of chest injuries
mcurre~ in the crash on Cerritos Avenue,
west or Beach Boulevard.
Ted Thr~atens
Poll Sho ws Kenned y Backing
NEW YORK (UPI) - A Time magazine survey released Sunday tn-
dlcated that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (0-Mass), has considerable support u
a 1972 presidential candidate, with a chance !or 188 or lhe 270 electoral vol.es
needed for elect.Ion. The poll showed President Nixon two votes ~ ol 270.
-=tn an-1ntervlt)" l'elease<r-stmultanel>\l.S • 6iiffify said u:on wm be ....
hard to beat in 1972 because of his new China pallcy and ii the war ln Vietnam
~ end!: an_d Nixon 's Phase ti economic program in<:reases proeperlty.
Ttie incident at Olappaquiddick, in which young campaign worker :P.tary
Jo Kopechne died when Kennedy drove off a bridge, Is a major U1blllty in \be
SOuth. and Midwest, Time &1Jd, but not ln the northeast or in California.
Kennedy said Nixon has one weakness -leadership.
"Ther! ls no sense of where the country Is and where it is aolng,"
Kennedy said. "The basic -cata'r.st for leadership ls the Presldent and the
faUure of Nilon. ls in leadership. 1 • '
•
•
f DAILY 11LIIT
Butz Nomination Ol('d
\ I Senate · Pan·e-1, 6-6 .,
~ps
Legislature
Talks Turkey
By THOMAS MURPRINE
Of tflt O.llW l'li.t Stell
-SACRAMENTO CAL LING: The
California Legislature is in a rather·
large hurry, this week. They would like
to adjourn Wednesday • '° all the
lawmakers can get home for Thanksgiv-
ing'. In the rush, they have a couple
ol minor problems.
For one thing, lbere
matt.er of raising $500
baJf a billion dollars lf
put it that way.
is that small
million -or
you prefer to
-You see, the slate budget now stands
at about $8.8 billion, give or take $100.000
or so, and the expenses have outstripped
the income by &0me $310 million.
It's the same as the housewife's budget
dilemma, rotks, e:.:cept cash flow situa-
tion is on a much higher plane than
ateaks versus ground hamburger.
ANYWAY, WHAT our good state solons
hope to do is pass a withholding tax
measure by Wednesday so they can
split the place. You are familiar with
the withholding tax system from the
federal level. Thal'& when the govern·
ment takes its .cut off the top or your
paycheck before you ever see it.
Those Who jtl,l!lgle the state books figure
a California withflolding system, effective
Jan. t, would raise the $310 million
needed to balance the budget; another
$200 million or so for one-lime con-
truction needs, and a paltry $2.1 million
earmarked for business tax relief,
All this will probably mean another
increase in taxes. There ls only one
small silver lining to the tax withholding
c!oud.
RIGHT NOW, without the withholding
aystem, you have a klt ot Eastern swing·
ers to come to our region foc short-
term employment, draw hefty paychecks
in our land of opportunity. and then
Oee back East again without ever
coua:hing up so much as a buck for
Gov. Reagan's operation. The withholding
, system will catch them. California would
aet its tax cut off the top before they
1et away.
1 don't know if that's going to make
you any happier when you vJew 1bl!
deduction on the end of your pay stub
but at least it should assure you that
mort ptople are sharing your miseries.
While the state Senate 11 grappling
with all this high finance, the people
over on the Assembly side have their
own worries before getting a holiday
off.
I
• ..
Ul'I ftl#Mlt
Witataitag For11i
l\Irs. Roberl F. Kennedy participates in exhibition match for Wasbint·
ton ed~ation facility. Mrs. Kennedy teamed with Stan Smith, U.S.
singles champion, against Mrs. Elliot Ri~bardson, wife of HEW sec·
retary and Erik Van Dillen of the Davis Cup team;· Mrs. Kennedy and
Smith won.
British Discover Arms
In Convent, Clear Nuns
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP ) -
The British Army today absolved nun5
at a Roman Catholic convent wbere
arms y,·ere found of any complicity in
Secrecy Imposed
In Kent State
Disorder Trials
RA VENN A, 0 h i o (UPI) - A judge
ftlnrunning for Northern Ireland's guer-
rillas.
"There is no Question of anybody think·
ing that the nuns were concerned in
hoarding items o! military interest, 11 said
a 5pokesman at military headquarters.
•·we are sure the weapons were planted
there without the nuns' knowledge."
More than 100 armed troops, with
d-Ogs and metal detectors, searched the
20-acre grounds of the Convent ol the
Sacred Heart in Armagh on Sunday.
As the commandos worked, 31 nuru;
prayed inside the building, where troops
di~ not enter.
WASHINGTON CUP!) -The Sen1t.
Acriculture Committee appN~d today
by an u vote the nomination of Earl
L. Butz to bt new ACJ'lCultuie·Secret1ry.
' The narrowness of the v o t e
foresha~wed -an expected battle on the
Senate floor on oonfirmation of I.he
Purdue UrUvenity dtan, who has bten
1tron1Jy criticized by tome senators, and
farm groups as favoring corporate rather
than family farms.
The Agriculture Committee instructed
Butz to put his stocks in three ag:ri·
business farms into a blind trust and
then to have them sold wi"thin 90 days
to avoid any •pptaranct of conflict of
interest.
Sen. Robert Dole (R-Kan .), chairman
of the Repub!Jcan National Committee
and a member of the Agricutlure Com·
mittee, predicted after the group's closed
session that Butz would be confirmed
although he said opponents might muster
25 to 30 votes on the Senate floor .
The Agriculture Committee chairman,
Sen. Herman E. Talmadge CD-Ga.), voted
against Bolz in committee, and said
he could not predict the outcome on
the floor.
Sen. George D. Aiken (R-Vt.), said
he hoped the norniaation might be voted
on by the Senate as soon as Wednesday.
Talmadge said he did not know when
Senate leaders would schedule the vote.
Butz, who was an assistant secretary
during the Eisenhower Administration
While Ezra Taft Benson headed the
Agriculture Department, would succeed
Clifford M. Hardon who resigned to •
become an erecutive of Ralston Purina
Co.
In the committee vote, Buti was op--
posed by fot1r Democrats and {wo
Republicans includi ng the corpmittee's
ranking GOP member, Sen. Jack Miller
(ft...Iowa).
·Others besidell Miller and Tabnadge,
to vote against him were Democrats
Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota,
George S. McGovern, of South Dakota
and B. Everett Jordan, of North Carolina
and Republican Milton R. Young of North
Dakota.
Voting for Butz were Democrats Allen
J . Ellender of Louis iana , James o.
Eastland of Mississippi, Lawton Chiles
of Florida and James B. Allen ·of
Alabama, and Republicans Aiken, Dole
and Henry Bellmon of Oklahoma and
Carl Curtis of Nebraska.
Aiken. after the meetinf, said it was
essential that Butz be con irmed quick.ly
so he could take action to improve
sagging grain prices which have pro-
duced much farm belt grumbling
recently.
During hearings last week, Butz pro-
mised to seek speedy action to strengthen
grain prices which have betn depressed
by reC()rif crops. He voided commitment
to any 1lnile potenU1l •st1p, but men·
tioned a number or possiblllUes Including
government grain purchases.
Buti also testified he believed in max-
imum operating freedom for farmers
but felt government farm controls and
supports would be needed for the
foreseeable future to prevent overproduc·
lion and low prices.
The agri·business corporation atockl
which the committee dir1cttd Butz tG dls~e of are holdin1s ln RalJton Puriu,
Stok:tl.y-Van Camp, and International
Minerals and Chemicals Co.
Butz has· been a member of the boardJ
of difectors of all three firms . He hu
resigned the posts and testified th.I&
he served their boards to provide a
voice for farmers'& interesta ln the ~
porations.
Henderson Bolstered .
G:eneral Denies Getting
I
My Lai Massacre Report
FT. li.fEAD, Md. (AP) -Former Brig.
Gen. Ge:orge H. Young Jr. said today
he bad no report or atrocilie! Jn My
Lai when he ordered Col. Oran K.
Henderson to investigate the March 1968
assault.
Young, former assistant commander
of the America! Division, said the in-•
vestigation he ordered was only on the
basis of a report that a heUct1pter pilot
had a confrontation with ground troops.
The testimony was important to the
defense of Henderson, whO"'·is charged
specifically with failing "to investigate
allegations or reports of excessive killing
.of noncombatants." The order, the
government char.ges, came from Young.
Young directly contradicted earlier
testimony by Lt. Col. John Holladay,
who said that the general had been
told 75 or 100 unresisting civilians were
killed in My Lai :
"If Col. Holladay made that statement
caught in the crossfire," Yoong said.
"It was conveyed to me that a report
was made by a helicopter pilot," Young
testified. "It was that this pilot had
observed Army ground troops while
engaging the enemy with noncombatants
caught in the corssfire," Young said.
He said the report to him was that
the pilot landed and put some civilians
into a bunker and or cave to keep
them out of harm's way and then in-
formed "friendly elements of the action
taken."
Yoong said that he had heard the'
pilot then--warned the a d v a n c i n g
American soldiers that he would fire
on them il they harmed the civilians.
Young said the report was brought
to him eilher the afternoon of the opera-
tion or the following day by Holladay
and Maj. Frederik Watke, the com·
manders respectively of a helicopter bat·
talion and company.
One day later, Young said, he met
with the two officers, Henderson, ailcl
the late Lt. Col. Frank A. Barker, the
commander of the assault troops.
He said the meeting lasted only live
or 10 minutes. "l briefly informed COi.
Henderson of the report I received,"
Young said.
''I told Col. Henderson the division
commander _had directed an investi1atioft
be initiated immediately and that the
results were to be returned to him
as soon as possible.."
Within the next few days, Young said,
Henderson gave oral reports to the
division commander, Maj. Gen. Samuel
\V. Koster, and later submitted a written report.
Freighter Sinks
Off Denmark;
Cre·w Sought
<;QPENHAGEN (UPIJ - A Weal
German freighter with sii: men aboard
sank off the Danish coast today in one
of the worst snow storms in memoey
lashing Denmark and southern Sweden,
rescue officers reported.
The Danish Naval Command in Aarhll!
said the 358-ton Nickar of Duisburg went
down off G~enaa on Jutland urly today
afler sending distress signals.
Five ships in the area are searching
for the six crew members, t h e
spokesman said. He said there had been
no reports of the crew's being sighted.
TB£ ASSEMBLY people are supposed
to approve a plan for rejiggering
legl!lative districts for re-apportionment.
As bas been noted in this space before,
there is some matter of disagreement
on how it should be done. The Democrats
want it one way and the Republicans
want it another.
• today imposed a "gag rule" on all prln·
cipals in the trials of 25 persons indicted
in connection with lhe 1970 Kent State
University disorders whlch ended in the
killing of four students by National
Guardsmen.
The swoop came 24 hours after a
small cache of weapons was discovered
by chance buried on the convent grounds.
Troops carried out a fruitless search
Friday at another religious institution,
the Monastery of our Lady of Bethlehem
at Portglenone in County Antrim, the
home of a Cistercian brotherhood of
monks.
Smith, British Officials
The snow storm also caused a number
or !raffle deaths both in Denmark and
in Sweden .
Police said at .least l t people died
in Danish highway accidents. In .southern
Sweden, four traffic deaths w e re
reported.
AF. you might have guessed, the
Democratic plan favors the Democrats
and the Republican plan is disorganized.
The Demos have a line·jiggering system
all Yl'Orked out that would theoretically
b<:ut their Assembly margin from 44
to 38 to a more comfortable 46 to
36. The Republicans are less than en·
chanted with this notion.
Portage County Judge Edwin Jones
issued the order before Jury selection
began in the trial of the first defendant.
Jerry Rupe. 23, Ravenna. a non-student
who was charged with rioting, slashing
a fire rope and throwing rocks at
firemen.
Discuss Rhodesia's Status Almost all travel came to a 1tandstill
In Denmark and one ship called for
assistance off the Danish coast.
1bere have been some efforts at r.on·
ciliation . Afterwards, the. Democrats call·
td tbe Republicans ' ideas "preposterous''
and the GOP people charged the Demos
with ''railroading.''
Things are normal up in Sacramento,
you see.
They better start getting into the holi·
day &ipirit, however. or they may need
a lot of ~rtable TV sets on the floor
ol the legislature for those Thanksgiving
football games.
Tbe whole holiday could turn into a
llltkey.
Jones, who imposed a "gag rule'' last
year during a special grand jury In·
vestigation of the Kent State disorders
in !\-fay, 1970, ruled:
"All lawyers participating in these
lrials. their assistants, staff members
and -employes under their supervision
and control are forbidden to take part
in interviews for publicati on, and from
making extra-judicial statemenl.1 which
might divulge prejurlcial matter out of
public reocrd from the state of this
order and until such time as the court
shall vacate this order."
Jones extended the ''gag rule" to all
witnesses. prospecti ve and 1Selected
jurors and court employes.
That operation followed the arrest of
two monks from the monastery on
charges of assisti11g in the prison escape
of two guerrillas dressed as priests.
Roman Catholic churchmen, in a state-
ment released Sunday by William
Cardinal Conway, primate of all Ireland,
condemned both the cut-throat guerrilla
tactics and the repression methods of
Brilish troops.
lt cited "particularly cold-blooded
murders in recent weeks " and the "tra!I
of death and destruction" left by the
guerrillas in their effort to wrest
Northern Ireland from Protestant control
and unite it with the predominantly
Roman Catholic Irish republic.
At the same time. the bishops said
British soldiers must stop what they
called ''immoral and inhuman" in-
terrogation methods used on suspected
members of the Irish Republican Army.
S!LISBURY (UPI) -Rhodesia's hour
of decision moved nearer today. Premier
Ian Smith met nearly two hours with
British ntgoliators and then called a
cabinet meeting to consider terms for
ending the six-year dispute over
Rhode sia's uilateral declaration of
independence.
Observers believed that the country's
"'hile governn1ent faced crucial decisions
on British conditions for moving towards
greater participation in government for
the black majority.
A crowd of 300 stood patiently outsid~
Smith's office y,·hile he met with British
Fore1gn Secretary Sir Alec Douglas·
Home for an hour and 45 minutes. Sir
Alec emerged smiling and waved. before
driving off. Smith also had a grin for
onlookers. ~o·ld of Winter Sets In While the Rhodesian cabinet session
wa s being held, other members of the
negotiating teams would meet again,
conference sources said.
Observers said today's events resembl·
ed those of 1966, when Smith returned
from Gibraltar with British proposals
for peace to pla~ before his cabinet.
After an all-day meeting. the terms 6 Inches of Snow Blanket , Great Lakes Region
California
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KIDS . LOVE
UNCLE LEN
Saturdays in
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Another Gibraltar meeting in 1969,
aboard the warship Fearless, also ended
in deadlock . 4) Jt .31 ,. " " " ,. u .. " ... ...
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Sir Alec arri ved a week ago to make
what analysb said was a last British
bid to settle the dispute which began
1.u when Rhodesia's minority white govern-
·14 ment unilaterally declared independence
r Nov. 11. 1965.
.., As a condition for settlement, Britain
has said Rhodesia must agree to tht
U.S. Says Vielnam
Forces Now 184,000
J:I ,, f
SAIGON (APl -U.S. troop str<ngth
in Vietnam reached the lH,000....JDark
lod11y -nine days , before the Dec .
l deadline. set by President Nixon. " . . ..
M » u 4t
" " ....
" " u " ...
'' n " . .. .. ...
The U.S. Command 1'nnounced thin
18$,000 American servlctmen were atill
.>& in Vietnam as of l11st Thusday. Reduc·
.SJ Uona since t~n lowered the level to
184.000 and poss!bly a little less.
The command said the force was
reduced 3,300 during the wee.k ending
last Thunc!ay.
''five principlei," of which the main
one is that there be un1mpeded progress
toward majority rule.
There are five million blacks In the
country. about the siie of the st.ate
of California, and 280,000 whites.
The United Na.lions and its members
since December. 1966, have imposed
economic sanctions on Rhodesia. Last
week President Nixon signed legis lation
partly lifting the U.S. embargo in order
to imporl chrome ore. The U.N. Geiieral
Assembly passed a resolution ei:presslng
•·grave concern'" at the action.
"I \Yi\I have tb co far back in the
books to find a worse storm so early
in the winter season." said the duty
officer at the Danl.sb meteorological of-
fice.
The Danish Rescue Corps was deluged
Y.'it h calls from automobile drivers in
trouble. f..1any drivers, trapped by huge
snowdrifts, had to spend the night in
their cars. in private homes or in school1
\\•hich were opened as emergency hotels.
All airports, including Copenhagen '•
Kastrup Airport and Bulltofta Alrport
in Malmoe, shut down.
Most rerry routes from Scandinavia
to West Germany and Poland and from
Sweden to Denmark suspended tours.
Africa Adventurers
Lady Ex,plorers · Foiled
By Angry Hippopotami
ABIDJAN. Ivory Coast fUPI) -The
Komoe River i.1 largely unexplored, has
50 known rapids, tse·tse flie s and
crocOO.iles. None of lhis daunted 11 Swiss
ladies and a man who set out to explore
it fully from sOurce to the Atlan tic
Ocean three weeks ago in three motoriz-
ed rubber boats.
They forgot about tpe hlppapolami.
So today they were reported taking
back roads through the bush in an at·
tempt to arrive at their destination in
time and in triumph.
lt began late October w Ji e 1J
moustaChioed Henri Maurice Be.may. 47.
Who de.$Cribes himself as a "professiGnal
explorer," landed from Switzerland with
the ladies, aged 19 to 50.
They dee.lined to give their names but
said thty had paid $1 ,250 each for the
lir1l nearly 1ll·woman esploratlon trip
in Airica down the 600 miles o{ the
Komoe River !rom Upper Volta to thfl
ocean .
Bernay, dressed in bush Jacket and
lt0pard·Skln foulard , said, ''a river goes
only one wa y to the 5e.1" •nd led the
party up country lo join thf! ri\/e.r near
Its source.
Nothina was heard of them unttl this
weekend.
Say Kin N'da, 1 cameraman f(Om
the Ivory Coast film studio. struck north
in search of them. He found them Thurs-
day at Groumania, 375 miles from tNe
capital and way behind schedule.
On his return to Abidjan, he told
of their progress.
"They said hippos in Swiss zoos never
behave that bad," Say Kan explained.
"A few days after start they going
through Bouna game reserve, with first
boat pulling others, so not to make
noi~ .and frighten animals .. Alt okay
until first boat run over s1eepmg hippo.
"Hippo get mad_, woken up from sleep a"'n~ take big mouthful out of seeond
boat.1 Then he rise and with behind
overturn third boat, All women in river.
There is panic. All food. and CJ.tntraa
in Komoe RiveJ."
Did this stop I.he expedition~ Sa.id
S11,y Kan ; "They patch boat up after
10 dayi. 11nd take off. again. but hav1
nnl y one can fruit jukt to ea t. They quit
few days later .tnd get Land R o v e r IJcepJ _
"Now the)' put all in It and drift
down almost to sea and Ibey go make•
fant:y arriv1I as planned at doc)( of
Hot(!I Jvoi re in Abidjan. ,Bl!rna y saicl .
they tak e back rnad1 because he not
want press know of 11ccldt:nt with hippo.
l think he afr1id hlppc_Jtamaged."
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VOL 64, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES
The federal .government has fined
Blackie'a Boat Yard $16 -and evidently
will spare no expense to collect it.
"They've rented the board room at
the Newporter Inn for a hearing at
11:30 a.m. tomorrow.~· announced owne r-
operator .Blackie Gadarian this morning,
aayirig he's-been going around "inviting
all my friends to come for coffee and
watch."
He says he may need moral support.
"They're bringing an army of in-
r --··
spectors, lawyers and examiners," he
said.
Blackie said he offered to have the
gatherjng at his Newport Boulevard
boatyard, the scene of the alleged crime,
"to save everybody some time and ·
money, but they declined.
"I guess they want to makf'l a federal
case out or it," he quipped.
Gadarian said he wa.!I cited several
\!.'eeks ago because he didn't have a
ladder from the water to his dock. -•
"An Inspector cam e down and informed
me 1 was in violation," Gadarian said,
EDI TION N.Y. Steeb
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MO DAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1971 .TEN CENTS
Support • Ill
in the mail. 0 Tbey. found the section
of the code and learned l didn't need
"I asked him for what and he told
me he wasn't . sure because he didn't
bRve his manual with.him.
"He cited me ·anyway, saying, 'What
would happen if one or your men fell
off a boat into the wa ter? You don't
even give therh life preservers.'
• ladder on the dock, just in the vicinity. ~"Well, I've got' ladders all over the
boatyard," he said.
"l . told the !eUow my _ man , would ..
look awful silly standing there with a
life jacket on in four feet of water,"
Gadarian said.
Since that da y, says Gadarian, "I've
done nothing but try to settle this thin~."
He noted that a second citation came
He said he and 'the U.S. Department
of Labor's Octupational Safety and
Heiifth -AdiTiiiirsir8UOn--haVe --Geen cof··
responding regularly over the matter.
.. I'm going to have my exhibits -
all those letters -lacked on a four-by·
eight piece of plywood." Blackie said.
Gadarian say be can't understand why
'Federal' Case
the government Is going to all the trou-
ble.
"fl.iy wife 's turned into a legal
·Secretary," he moaned. .. i told them how they could put a
stop to this thing," he said.
"All it would take. is -a phone call
to say, 'We gj ve up.''" · A-check -With the~.-N.eWPol-ter . fnn
disclosed there must be oth~r things
on the department's calef11ar, they've
rented the room for all "'lfay Tuesday
-and Wednesday.
· The General Services Administration
made the arrangements, but a check
with the GSA 's Los Angeles office found
no one who knew anything about it.
A call to the department of~·
found an aide who was aware
Gadaria njie.a;_tina: .. ~J 1,ssjstant dU: _tpz:: _._
B. L. Tibbets said he. ha,d no lde.a
wlfat else may be going orr thi:>ugb:---
Tibbets said·the eiaminer might know,
but he had no way of knowing where
the examiner's office ia:.
"Maybe he's planning to use the room
Wednesday to recuperate," Blackie sai4.
I S. Viets Enter Cambodia ~~~~
,., .,.. .. ::-_ __
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SENr EDWARD KENNEDY-PAYS TRIBUTE AT BROTHER'S GRAVE
Annivers1ry of As sassination of President John--F; Kennedy
John l(ennedy Memorial
Held Near Dallas Site
DALLAS {UPI) -The tall, wiry haired
young man knelt next to the black granite
11Jab in the middle of the John F. Kennedy
Memorial. From inside his heavy wool
Windbreaker he pulled one long stem
red rose V.'rapped in wax paper lo protect
it from the cold and rain that shrouded
the city today.
He unwr11pped l~e rose and placed
it on top of the slab. I-le knelt there
silently for a minute , then stood up
with his bowed and backed away.
Eight years ago -Nov. 22, 1963 -
Lee Harvey Oswald perched on the sixth
floor of the Texas School Book Depository
and fired three shots from a mail order
rifle killi ng the 35th President of the
United States.
Two blocks from where the president
was slain, 200 persons gathered insi.de
the open tomb of the Kennedy .Memorial
,.
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REMEMBERED IN DALLAS
John f. Kt nntdy
in a brief three-minute tribute to John
F. Kennedy.
The SO-foot square memorial was
designed by Phillip Johnson, a close
friend or the late president. and was
dedicated June 24. 1970. Tod a y 's
memorial rensisted of three short
prayers and a 45-second speech by Mayor
Wes Wise.
"Let us declare today that we will
renew ourselves in the spirit or John
F. Kennedy and for the ideals he stood
for." said Wise. himseir a young, Ken -
nedyesque type of politician .
Around the inside of the memorial
huddled seven young Negro children who
held a piece of canvas above their heads
to proltet them from the rain, and
a .. n elderly man in a white rain coat
who throughout the service held his
brown felt ·hat over his heart.
Mayor Wise placed a circular wreath
made of mul ticolored nowers at one
end or the granite slab. At the other
end a pot of yellow chrysanthemums
wilted from the cold.
Wise placed the wreath in it11
designated spot and asked for a moment
of silence. A.! everrone bowed their
heads, a gust of wind blew in from
under the walls of the memorial, which
have a one foot opening at the bottOm.
The wil'ld picked up the rose and blew
it across th e memorial rloor.
A small card flapped from Its stem
and was caught In a puddle.
We still re ber and love you,
President," t re d.
was.,a · · , Celia , DaMy
'S11ntfra atze Was ngton, O. C.
Only 1 Fire Sparked
Orange C.OUnty escaped lhe tinder dry
nta-Ana Inds-conditions-of-the p11st
few days with only one serious fire,
County firemen controlled . a blaze
which burned over 25 acres and threaten-
td several homes Saturday in the Lemon
Heighls area north of Tustin.
Eleven engine unils fought the fire
et Lemon Heiaht.s Drive and Bent Tree
}Ane. ft was controlled in about an
hour. ..
Bold Thrust Ai1ned at Enemy Sanctuaries
SAIGON (UPI) -Thousa nds of South
Vietnamese troops crossed into Cambodia
in armored vehicles today in the opening
phase of a major new incursion aimed
at North Vietnamese sanctua ries in the
neighboring country and at relieving
Communist pressure on its capital.
Six battalions of South Vietnamese
airborne troo ps -about 4,000 men -.
made the crossing northwest of Saigon
near the Krek rubber plantation. Two
other crossings were being prepared
Police Hold
Bizarre Trio
In Burglaries
A trio claiming to be a Hollywood
stuntman, rock band drummer and enter-
tainment promoter have been. arrested
by Newport Beach police on burglary
~barges and are also being qu estioned
in connection with a string of burglaries.
Detectives returned early this morning
. from. Sunland, where a young woman
was picked up as a fourth suspect in
tbe case.
Booked on suspicion or burglary were :
-Robert J , Simons, 271 11ssertedly the
11tuntma11.
-Samuel R. Holly, 13, assertedly lh1
drummer.
-Ronald A. Keirn, 24, assertedly the
promoter.
-Cynthia Scbwartt, 2.1, gave no en·
lertai nment industry aff iliation, ac-
cording to investigators still probing the
ca,;e after a Jong night's duty.
Detective Charles Wilkinson said the
series of arrests was triggered at 7
p. m. Sunday, when neighbors in the
Harbor View Homes de v e Io pm en t
reported suspicious activity at 2607 Jslar.j
View Drive.
A trio of men reportedly seen in the
area had left by car when po\lce reached
the scene, but orficer David Scruggs
stopped Simons at MacArthur Boulevard
and Ford Road.
further south.
Thousands more troops massed along
Highway I where it crossed i•to the
Parrot's Beak area of Cambodia wh ich
juts into South Vietnam west of the
capital, 50 miles to the south of the
first crossing.
Military sources said that a third force
was being organizeJ in the Mekong Delta
city of Chau Doc to operate from the
South Vietnamese base at Nea k Luong
on the Mekong River in Cambodia.
Bad !Hmaday
Preparations 1een along the roads by
correspondents Indicated that it would
be the biggest South Vietnamese in-
cursion into Cambodia since the Allied
drive or May, 1970.
Despite the initi al border crossings
today. military sources indicated .that
the big push has yet to start. They
indicated that D-Day will be Wednesday.
The current strength of the Republic
of Vietnam in the adjacent area o[
Cambodia where guerrilla sanctuaries
DAILY l'ILOT Sti ll l'IMll• Information developed at this point
led Orricer Patrick o·Su\livan to slop
and arrest Keirns and Holly, whom he
spolted walking along a Corona de! Mar
street. <...._ ' ·
Wilkinso"'h,and Sgt. Art Campbell were
studying a Variety of suspected burglary
loot confisca ted from Simons' car
assertedly matching losses reported by
previous victims.
J ohn T. Ward awaits ambulance after two-car, rush-hour crash this
morning at Palisades Road and Campus Drive in Santa Ana Heights.
\Vard, 47, of 201l·B Charle St., Costa Mesa, and driver of second car,
Sheryl Lovett, 23, of 2133 Elden AVe., Costa Mesa, were taken to Costa
Mesa Memorial Hospital for treatment of injµries. Collision took place
about 8 a.m.
Value of the evidence seized Sunday
night has 1J1ot been estimated, but dette·
lives say it is not exorbitant.
"It's too soon to tell," Wilkinson said
when asked if police know how many
residential burglaries might be linked
to the Los Angeles area sus~ts.
Newport Cou11cilmen Face
He said it is believed they entered
at least two residences at this point
in the probe.
The residence at 2607 Island View
Drive showed fresh pry marks on the
door, \Vilkinson added.
'Routine' Agenda To11ight
Trash Men Get
'
lioliday Off
Wit.h the afternoon study session behind
them. Newport Be;ich councilmen will
be facing a relatively routine agenda
when they meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock
ln city hill'
The. council this afternoon was ex-
pected to debate high rise. Newport
Bay pollution and the need ror a new
There will be no refuse collection pol Ice· station.
In Newport Beach Thanksgiving Tooight councilmen will corntuct a .
Da,y. . ho 1 . k public hearing on the proposed Vacation Residents w se norma pie ll,P . -diy-fSThu1'Sday wlll .brserved--oL.10 eet o_ an Front sidewalk
on their ) next regular collection and sch~ule one on pro~sed off-street
day, Monday. parking regulations In residential areas.·
Jacob F. Mynderse. general Also before the council tonight:
services .. director, noted that -P)ans for construction of a 24-unlt, Thanksg1v1ng Day is one of three .
holidays refu&e cre.wman ttike esch three .. story condominium on the tile
year. The other two art Chriitmas , of the formtr Rtnduvous Balltoom in
• d N Y r' D , Balboa. n ew ea 11 ay.. -Publlc hearing on a Newport Helght&
\ J
• f
J
m a n ' 11 p t. r t I a lly-constructed en-
croachments into alley setbacks.
-Public hearing on proposed
assessments under the 1971 weed abate-
ment program administered by the fire
department.
-A proposed ordina nce establishing
speed limits on va rious streets ln Harbor
View Hills.
-Action establishing council review pf
planning commission zoning amendment
denials. -
-"Pnrposed financing of the relocation
of a public restroom Jn Bu(falo Hills
Park.
-Sale ~or city-<>wned property 01\
Balboa Boule.vard ao feet northwest or
32nd Streel.
-A request by Peter Mardesick for
•·curb cut at 438 Tustin Ave.
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are located already stands at close ~
a 131000.man division.
Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Mlnb, com.
mander of, military Region m who 11
dlrecting the buildup, 1pent the day at
~h.is rear Mea headquarters at Bien Hoa,
18 miles northeast of Saigon. Minh waa
expected to arrive at his forward head ..
quarters at Tay Ninh, 50 miles northwest
of Saigon and 27 miles south of the
{See S. VIE'l'S, Page I)
Banker Links
Ex-employe
To Swindle
A Newport National Bank vice pres!·
dent today JdenUfied a former tmploye
as the bank's representative i& an-auto
financilJg enterprise that allegedly Proved
to be fraudulent and cost the bank S75,000.
Vice President Don Stump went to
th~ witness . stand in Orange County
Superior Court as the prosecution's firs t
witness in its grand theft and forgery
case against former assistant managet
John Stuart Hamilton and two codefen·
dants.
Hamilton, 35, Rowland Heights. Robert
William Dunlap, 37, of 17099 Westport
Drive, Huntington Beach, and Ronald
Rossi, 35, La Mirada, are accused of
derrauding the bank in a 11windle that
allegedly counted heavily on Hamilton'•
role as the inside man.
Stump gave the jury and three defe11S1
lawyers details of the auto financing
role played by the bank as the trial
went into its second week before Judge
H. Walter Steiner.
All three defend ants are accused of
grand theft, forgery and conspiracy in
an Orange County Grand Jury in-
dictmen t.
Still at large and hunted by the FBI
is Frank Perry, 36, La Mirada.
It is all eged that the four men su~
milted to the Newport bank. through
Hamilton . auto 1ale Ci>ntracls which bore
the identification of nonexistent motorists
and were found to refer to the sales
of nonexistent cars.
Investigators claim the group bilked
the bank of $75,000 through at least
13 fraudulent applications before the
scheme ended with lheir arrests tut
January.
'
Oraage
1''e•t•er
Sunny skies and crisp (mid-60)
temperaturU are forecast for
Tuesday, with overnJght lows catd.
ed between 37 and 47 degrees.
m smE TODAY
Columnist Erma Bombtclc and
Bil Keane (l'amily Circus), two
of the reitl "stal'.,S .. in lhf DAlLY
PlWT mlt11c Lineup, teamed vp
to produr;e the book, "Jzut Wa it.
Tilt You Have Children of Your
Ow11." A siz·part srrialization of
excerpti from th4 Dook 1tart.s
today On Page 24.
••• ,., 4J
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-DA[lV RILOT N
Paper U1·ges
·Mobiliz i11 g
By l s1·ael
•
1 By Unllecl tress Inte rnational
~n Jsraeli newspaper called today for
mobilization or the re.se.r\'es after the
v;ukend statement by Egyptian Prest·
dent Anwar Sadat that there is •·no
allernative" to anotker Middle East war.
The Jsraeli Army scheduled a na·
tionwide air raid warning test for Tues-
day.
'An lsraeU milita7 spokesman said
that the situation along the ~z Canal
"-'IS quiet. He added. howt'ver, that up
IQ 70.000 Egyptian troops and Z.000 taitks
are there and that the fighting could
begin without-advance warning.
Western intelligence ~rces in London
confirmed the Egyptian buildup along
the canal but noted that a crossing
would .be "hazardous in the eztreme"
as I o n g as Israel retains mastery in
the air ..
The Tel Aviv newspa per Yediolh Aha-
r onoth said in an editorial that Sadat's
statements meanl that ''it is necessary
for a call-up" or reserves in Israel.
Israeli ne wspapers generally called on
the government and military leadership
to make clear to Egy pt the da ngers
of another round or fighting.
An Anny spokesman said that the
gationwide air raid ·warning network
would be tested at 2 p.n1. Tuesday (4
a.m. PST ), the first test since a com-
memorative blast on Memorial Day six
months ago. The spokesman said the
test had nothing to do with Sadat's
Jpeeches, but it served to underscore
lhe mood of public apprehension in
Israel.
· The newspaper Davar said that the
deve lopments of the past few days lent
''urgency and gravity" to Prime Minister
Golda Meir1,a ... meeling with President
Nixon, scheduled for nex t month.
. Fcur African leaders arrived in Cairo on a continuing. miss ion to !!leek peace
in the area. They were Presidents
Leopold Senghor of Senegal and Maj,
G~n. Yakubu Gowan of Nigeria. Foreign
Minister Marlo Ca rdoso of Zaire (the
former Congo) and State Minister
William Eteki o( Cameroun. 'i In Beirut. travellers from Egypt said
_eave was cancelled for the armed forces
J nd they were on a state of standby
ilert ..
· Sadat. in t'o'l'O speeches to frontline
f.roops along the Suez. Canal. said "every
hope we used to have for a peace
settlement is finished, and we have no
fiJternative but lo fight lo re§ain ou r
Jand, our honor 1oli our di1nity.' ·
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Nav y man Held
I "
On Dog Leash,
Resist Charges
A Newport Beach Navyman allegedly
violating tbe city's controversial leash
Jaw by walking his pet without a tether
was ja iled Friday aflernoor1, allegedly
because some dirly dog gave his name.
Alan Baron, 27. of 1037 W. fhlboa Blvd.,
was booked on suspicion or resisting ar.
rest a haU·block from his hon1e, instead
of merely receiving a citation.
Humane officer Joe Wilson said he
glopped the Treasure Island Naval Sta-
tion· auigned Baron at Jlth Street arid
Balboa Boulevard, but became suspicious
when given a different name.
Baron said he was really Timothy Dal·
mer nad was just walking Ba ron's dog
for him. so Wilson called for reinforce-
ments to determine who v.·as v.·ho and
what was what.
Patrolman Joseph Lambert arrived to
take custody of man and man's best
friend, while humane officers went to the
nearby apartment to check.
"Yeah. that's: Baron and his dog," one
neighbor remarked.
OD.NII COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Ai1•port La1ad
'
Mesa Annex Plan
'Gets Irvine OK
By TE RRY COVlLLE
01 lfl• OlllY ~It.I 11•11
1'he \I mayor of Costa Mesa today an-
nounced city plans to anne1t 228 acres
of rich Irvine industrial land next lo
the Orange County Airport.
Officials of the Irvine Company wrote
a letter to Mayor Rdbert Wilson Saturday
agreeing to the annexation.
The announcement marks the end of
Costa :P.1esa 's march to the 1irport begun
in 1964 with a series of sn1atler an·
nexations. The city has taken an area
1vhich was the subject of several an·
nexation battles with n e i g h b o r i n g
• Newport Beacb.
on industrial land on the wesl sldt
of the airport.
Santa Ana Heights and some other
sections of proper.ty in the Back Bay
region stlll have not annexed to either
city.
Most of the 228 acres is still un-
developed, but sire.els and other im·
provements have already been installed
on much of the property.
\Vilson said be expeclS the annexation
to speed up development or the industrial
land .
The Ir vine Company does 11ot -own
all of the 228 acres, but through lease
and sale agrttmenl3 it controls 90 per·
cent of the land for annexation purposes.
PLANE ENDS UP ON BACK IN HUNTINGTON BEACH SCHOOLYA RD IN SATURDAY CRASH
Young Pilot, School Children 1t C1rniv1I Esc.11 pe Injury in Incident Near Me1dowl.11rk Airport
• ~ayor Wilson said he expects the
land to become city territory by January
or February, assuming there is no bitcfi
v.•ith the county's Local Agency Forma·
tion Commission {UFCOJ.
The territory proposed for annexation
is bounded OJI the west by Red Hill Ave.-
nue (Costa Mesa city limi~). on the east
by the airport, on the north by the
San Diego Freeway and on the south
by Palisades Road.
E1ght industries; -covering about 14
percent of the land, .are currently in
aperation. The rest is vacant. Irvine's
master plan calls for light industrial
development,
Airplane Misses Kids Reagan Says
Legislature
'Disgraceful'
• Student Pilot Crash Lan<ls Ut B each Sc hooly ard
"When I first began working with
the Irvine Company on this in HIM,
they told us if our industrial zoning
met with their satisfaction they would
annex." Wilson said. "Now their promise
is fulfilled ."
By RUDI NIEDZTELSKI
or t11e D•llt ~1111 s1111
A student pilot on his second solo
flight crash landed and flipped a small
plane in a Huntington Beach schoolyard
over the weekend .
Neither the pilot nor pupils attending
a carnival on the Meadow View School
campus were injured when the Cessna
JSO made its forced landing on Saturday.
The pilot, 18-year-old Clive Owen Squir-
·reli ot Garden Grove, told police officers
his engine died just as he was a1>-
proaching Meadowlark Airporl's ma in
runway around 3 p.m.
Witnesses said the small , single-engir,e
plane snagged telephone and powcrline:oJ
or> !ts way down. They said the aircraft
dug into the r-.1eadow View school
grounds. damaging it's propeller, wing
and tail section as it flipped over.
"The pilot did a \·ery nice and careful
job.in setting the plane down, considering
v.·hat he had to \\'Ork v.•ith." said airport
operator John Turner.
The elementary school, according to
Turner, is directly underneath the a1>-
proach pattern. No similar indicents have
occurred for the past 10 years, according
lo Turner.
Meadow View Principal Mel llamill
said about 150 persons were attending
the school's annual PTA carnival abou t
250 feet from where the plane crashland·
ed.
"The guy gave us a real good scare.
T~ustees May Reject
Bleaclier~, Pool Bids
'
Bids for bleachers at Mission Viejo
High School and ·a swimming poo l at
University High.School will be considered ''~ po~;bl,~ "i"i~ by ,ll\• lrufties qf l~e Tiisun. Un;on li;gh Scb°i>Ol Dlslricl.
They meet at 7:30 o'clock tonighl at
the dislricl office, 1171 Laguna Road ,
Tustin ..
suPerintendent 'Willia m Zogg said the
lowest 'bid received for the University
·High pool was $184.670, submitted by
Hannan B. J. Gladd. Because the bi d
is nearly $30,000 over the budget
estimate, Zogg said he wil l recommc~d
that trustees send the pool out for new
bids.
The Gladd bid includes $19,870 to pro-
vide handball courts adjacent to the pool,
Car Pools Get
Free Gre_en Li ght
SACRAMENTO (UPI) T h e
California Toll Bridge Authorit y ls going
to let people in car pools cross the
San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge free.
The car poolers also v.·i!J have exclusive
lanes 1.5 miles long so they can zip
through the toll plaza nan·stop while
other comrnuters are bumper·to-bu1nper,
stop-ancl-go.
These priviledges, offered only during
the rus~ ~our, are part of a 30-day
lest beg.1nn1.ng Dec. 8 to see if enough
car pools will be formed to substantially
reduce the number of cars.
Trustees H ear
Joaquin Study
The evaluation phase o( a year·long
n!ganiiation sludy of the San ·Joaquin
Elementary School District will occupy
scho:ol board tfustees at a work-study
session called for 7:30 o'clock tonigh t
in the district board room. -
Dr. J. L. Glaspey of the West inghouse
research fir1n v.•ill go over-'11'te staff
projeJ=liOns for the district's next rive
years that re~ult from the $15,000 study
effort.
The bo::il'd also· v.•ti scheduled to1'inert
In cxcC"ut i\'e -pril'ate -ses.~ion at
'4 30 p.m. today, also at the district
office 14600 Sand Canyon .Ave., Irvine.
The closed session "''as to be 'lor
discussion of district•lalf matters.
Police Under Probe
llARRI SSURG, Pa. (UPI J -Tne Stale
Crime Con1miss1on and St~u~ Al!o rney
General J. Shane Creamer toda)' began
planning lor an inv(!S1\11alloo inl(J "harii:es
or police corruption In Phl1AdQlphia. The
1-h.iladelpi ia l]lquirl;r in Its Sunday cdl·
lion printed an editorial requesting a
SfJft investigJlion. and Gov. Milton J.
Shapp ordered it begun that sfternoon .
•
an llem that was estimated at $10,000.
The base pool bid was $164,800 compared
to an estimated cost cf $146,500, Zogg
~i~ l , The ·M14-'lon Viejo · bleacher project
attracted only lour bidders, Zogg noted.
The lowest was Russell Manufacturing
and Construc tion Cor:npa11y wi th a total
bid of $23,444.
Zogg reco_mmends this project be bid
again. since the bleachers will not be
needed unti l next rail and the district
has allocated only $19,000 for the football
fleld seating.
Of the total money allocated to the
project, $6,000 was a gift from the
Mission Viejo High School students.
Ne wport Girl
Satisfactory
Following Crash
A Newport Beach girl remains in
satisfactory condition today at South
Coast Community Hospital recovering
from injuries received Friday night in
a L~guna Beach trafric accident.
Spokesmen at the hospital said Jamie
Lynn Mills, 17, of 334 62nd St., sustained
a broken leg and ankle v.·hen lhe car
in \l'hich she was a passenger went
ou1 of control and rolled on Park Avenue..
The driver ot . the auto, Lynn r-.tarie
Sebek, 17, of 250 Lugonia St., Nev.·port
Beach, v.•as treated for cuts and bruises
follo wing the 10 p.m. misha p and releas-
ed.
Police said ~1iss Sebak apparently !ost
rontrnl or her s1nall car coming do1rn
lhe steep hill and the fast-moving ca r
strurk the curb, causing it to roll.
Frmn P11ge 1
S. VIETS ...
Cambodian border. on Tuesday.
Though vehicles rolled across the
border, there was none of the hea vy
U.S. air activity that always accompanies
u major allied push.
Ho"'e\'er, !he \'ietnamese themselves
staged an air raid Sunday on suspected
guerrilla concentrattons near Chfum, '6
1niles inside Cambodia, and reported k111·
ing 40 guerrillas.
UPI correspondent Kate \Vebb ln
Phno1n Penh reported activity was
relatively quiet on Gambodian battlefl1lds
!his morning -but Communists staged
a 1nortar auack at Bat Dc:ng. a railroad
tov.·n 17 miles northwest or Phnom Penh.
No casuallies were reported.
Over the weekend , U.S. i-nd South
\'ietnamese y,·arplaaeS staR;ed bomb runs•
in all four Indochina countries, including
tv.'O ra ids In North Vietnam.
The liist American 1irtillery used lo
!!hell North Vietnam was ordered silenced
S11nd11y. The orOer rneant the ~35 'men
\\'hO ITI!l;n th,e weapons WUl be home
for Christmas .
1r he hadn't hit those phone lines and
flipped he would have gone into the
playground equipment. It v.•as fortunate
lhat he hit the telephone lines," said
Hamill. Al the mome11t of impace two
youngsters were using the swing, ac-
cording to the principal.
The plane. owned by Bassee Flight
Service of Huntington Beach, is being
probed by authorities from the Long
Beach office: of the FederaJ Aviation
Agency,
"We're still Investigating this. We will
get all the pertinent facts but the
ultimate cause or the crash will Be
determine d by the National
Transportation Safely Board," an FAA
official said.
.... --·
DAILY "ILDT Siil! "h•t•
Leads Emploges
James Sinasek. an assistant
license supervisor, has been
elected president of the New·
port Beach City Employes As-
sociation. ~le succeeds traffic
engineering aide James Lar·
sen. Sinasek will serve a one-
year tern1.
Stonn Lau ra Dying
MIAM I (UPll -The wandering days
of tropical depression Laura appeared
over toda y. \Vealher forecasters reported
the fonner tropical storm breaking up
Wilson expects the land to have an
assessed value of $10 million to $12
million when it is fully developed.
"It's the kind of gift every city
manager wants. This industrial land win
be almost as valuable to us as South
Coast Plaza," \Vilson added.
Some opposition may be expressea
by the city of Santa Ana, \Vilson said.
But the mayor doesn 't feel th8t win
be much or a problem.
The Irvine Company letter agreeing
to the annexation was signed by James
Taylor, di~ector o[ general planning. In
it he said:
"It was agreed on by both the com pany
<Irvine) and the city that this property
logicall y falls within the sphere of hr
fluence of Costa Mesa. This agreement
\Vas indicated to the LAFC during hea r·
ings to de\er mine boundaries of the pro-
posed city of Irvine.''
"This annexation means a number of
things to us," Wilson explained. "Another
500 jflbs can be created in the city,
there eould be 40 to 50 industries and
it will be a solid tax base."
\Vilson said he expects the Irvine Com-
pany to request some pre-zoning before
the annexaLiolT l.s completed -possibly
allowing some small chunks of com·
mercial development.
The area is already served by the
Costa Mesa, County Water District a nd
the Costa Mesa Sanitary District.
The announcement caps an Interesting
history of annexation wars as both Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach eyed the rich
airport industrial lands .
Jn 1964, Costa r-.1esa annexed 61 acres
of Irvine ind ust ria l land near the airport.
In 1965, the city annex ed another 28
acres. In 1967 two annexations, one fo r
137 acres. the other for 84 acres. were
completed. Each annexation moved the
cily close r to the airport.
This is the largest annexation and
puts the city adjacent to the airport,
an important position if co u n I y
supervisors ever decide to let a city
annex the airport Itself.
"If there is a change on the county's
part, this v.·ould gi\·e us equal right
lo the airport." Wilson admits. ''\Ve
ha ve lo consi der the advantages and
disadvantages of it, but we 'll cross that
bridge if it comes."
Nev.·port Beach is on the other side
of the airport.
In 1968·69, the two cities attempted
a series of annexations in the Santa
Ana Heights area which created strained
feelings and several polltlcal battles.
The LAFC finally stepped in and set
Tustin :\venue in the so-called "Gaza
Strip" as the boundary, thus shutting
off Newport Beach access to the 228 acres
KING SIZE
ONE CARAT
ln Gents or Ladies
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CIAMOND l MOUNTING-
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today called the 1971 Legislature
"disgraceful'' and said California tu:·
payers have not gotten their money's
worth from the record session.
The Republican Governor also said
there are some "legitimate complaints"
about legislative gerrymandering on
reapportionment, wh ich along with a tax:
program is the lone remaining major
issue fac ing the lawmakers.
"I '-m opposed to gerryman dered
(reapportionment plans) whet her they 're
Re publican or Democratic," Reagan tOld
his first Capitol news conference since
Oct. 27.
The Democratic::co ntrolled Legislature
has been in session .since early January
and has broken all records for longevity ,
spent approximately $20 million so far
and is using up an estimated $11 ,000
a day.
Asked whether he would support
legislation to set a time limit on sessions,
Reagan delined to answer directly but
said "something must be done because
I think this is disgraceful." . '~ · Reagan said "everythin' that had been
done" during the session could have
been accotriplisbed by early July.
0 1 think there has beeil footdragging
on the part of the leadership o[ the
majority (Democratic) party," Reagail
said, adding "there isn't much we
(Republicans) can do."
The governor was particularly critical
of a senatei>assed reapportion plan for
the upper house which splits Santa Clara
County into six dis tricts. One district
stretches from Needles in the Mojave
Desert to near Los Gatos. and another
meanders down from the Oregon border
to Morgan Hill.
Reagfl_n said Santa Clara County has
a "!egiM'mate complaint'' about the plan.
but declined to say whether he would
veto it.
The iOVernor also touched on these
subjects:
BOOKS -He declared h I ms e I t
''unalterably opposed" to any sale of
rare books at the University of California
tn obtain more operating funds. State
Finance Department -auditors had iden·
tified sale of the books as a posslbie
way to raise money.
VD -Attempting to clear up what.
he termed "confusion ," the governor
sai d California parents do not need to
grant permissio" for classes in venereal
di sease to be tau ght their children. He
said parents merely have to be notified,
and then can withdraw thei r children
from the classes if they desire.
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• * ORANGE CO~NTY, CALIFORNIA voe 64, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, SO · PAGES., '
•
MONDAY, NOVEMBE~ 22, ·197 ( JEN CENTS
,. -, .
Mesa Annex Plan Ol('d ..
''
Irvine Officials Agree to A.irport Land Bid
• .,. __ t '·'·
SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY PAYS TRIBUTE AT BROTHER'S GRAVE
An nlver11 ry of Ass1ssi n1tion of President John F. Ke nnedy
John l(ennedy Memorial
Held Near Dallas Site
,
-DAWS (UPIJ -'\I>• tall, wiry,.haired
youi'iflnan kne lt nex t to the bli!.ck granite
1la'5 in the middle of the John F. Kennedy
Memorial. From inside his heavy wool
windbreake'r he pulled one long stem
red rose wrapped in wax paper to protect
it fro m the cold and rain that shrouded
the city today.
He unwra pped the rose and place<{
It 'on top of the slab. He knelt there
·silently for a minute, then stood up
wi1h.his head bowed and backed away.
Eight years ago -Nov. 22, 1963 -
Lee Harvey Oswald perched on the sixth
floor of the Texas School Book Depository
and fired three shots from a mail order
rifle ·killing the 3Sth President of the
United States.
Two blocks from "'here the president
w3l!I slain, 200 persons gathered inside
the open tomb of the Kennedy Memorial
in ·a brief three-minute tribute to John
F. Kennedy.
The 51}-foot square memorial was
designed by Phillip Johnson, a cl0se
friend of the late president, and was
dedicated -June 24, 1970. Tod a y 's
memorial consisted of three short
prayers and a 45-second speech by Mayor
Wes Wise..
':Let us declare today that we will
rentw ourselves in the spirit of John r: Kennedy and for the ideals he stood
for," said Wise, himseU a young, Ken·
nedyesque type of politician.
Around the inside of the memorial
huddltd seven young Negro children who
held a piece of canvas above their heads
to protect them from the rain, and
an elderly man in a white rain coat
\\'ho throughout the service held his
brown fell hat over his heart.
fl.fayor Wise placed a circular wreath
made of mu\tiC()iored flowers at one
end of tht granite slab. At the other
end a pot of yellow chrysanthemums
wilted from the cold.
Wise placed the wreath In its
REMEMBERED IN DALLAS
John F. Kennedy
designated spot and asked for a mom~nt
of silence. A• everyone bo'A!ed their
heads, a gust of ' wind blew in from
under the walls of the memorial . which-
have a one foot opening at the bottom.
The wind picked up the rose and blew
it across the memorial noor.
A small card flapped from its stem
and was caught in a pudd le.
"We still remember and love you,
Mr. President," It read.
It was ·1i1aed, Wiiiiam , c.eua, Danny
and Sandra Katul, Washington, D. C.
ln~Wake of Egypt Move
By TERRY COVD..LE
Of tti• ll•llY P'l .. 1 Sllli'
The mayor of Costa Mesa today an·
nounced city plans to annex 228 acres
of rich Irvine industrial land next to
the · Orange County Airport.
Officials of the Irvine Company wrote
a Jetter to l\'tayor Robert Wilson Saturda y
·agreeing to the annexation.
The announcement marks the end ol
Costa Mesa's march'to Uie airport begun
in 1964 with a series of smaUer an·
Reagan Says
Legislature
'Disgraceful'
SACRAl\1ENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today calle4 the 1971 Legislature
"disgraceful" and sa id Californ ia tax4
payers have not gotten their money's
worth from the record session.
The Republican Governor also said
th ere are some "legitima te complaints"
about legislative gerrymaildering on
reapportionment, which along with a tax
program is the lone remaining major
issue facing the lawmakers. '
"l am opposed to gerrymandered
(reapportionment plans) whether they're
Republican or Democratic," Reagan told ·
his first Capitol news conference since '
Oct. 27.
The Democratic-controlled Legislature
has been in sessioR since early January
and ha~ broken all records for lorlgevity, ,
spent 1pproximak~ "'*fAT1illiol\ :~ -
and is us· up an.....e11Umnted Jlt,000
a day. ,.....,,... • ·
Asked whether 1,be w'ould support
legislation to set a time limit on sessions,
Reagan delined to answer dirccUy but
said "something must be done becau.se
I think this is disgr..acetul."
Reaga n said "everything that had been
done" during the session could have
been accomplished' by early July.
"I think there has been rootdraggi~g
on the part or the leadership of the
majority (Democratic) party," Reagan
said, adding "there isri't much we
(Republicans) ca n do.''
· The governor was particularly critical
of a senate-passed reapportion plan for
the upper house which splits Santa Cl1_ra
County into 11ix districts. One district
stretches from Needles in the Mojavfl
Desert to near Los Gatos, and anOLher
IS.. REAGA~!I
R eaga1i Pens New
Auto Repair Law
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Legislation
cracking down on dishonest auto repair
firms was signed into law today by
Gov. Reagan.
The bill by Sen. Anthony Beilenson,
extends the jurisdiction of the Slate
Department of Consumer Repairs to
32.000 auto repair shops in Cali fornia.
It orders the deJ>8rtrr.ent to license
repair shops and gives it authority to
revoktWlae licenses of shops fou nd guilty
of dishonest or unethical practices. It
also allow! fir.es and up to six months
in jail for violation of the new law.
Reagan called the measure by the
Beverly Hills Demeera'· "The toughest
and most 1ignificant C()DSUmer protection
legislation ot the year in Cillfornia."
Paper Urges J~ws ~o Arms.
By United l'ress JnttmaUonal
An IsraeU newspaper called today for
moblliiatlon of the reserves after the
weekend statement by Egyptian Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat that t here is "no
alternative'' to another Mlddleo East war.
The Israeli Army schedultd a na-
tionwide air raid \\'aming test for Tues·
day. 'd An Israeli military spokesman sa1
that the situation along the Suez Canal
was quiet. He added, ho\\'ever, that up
to 70 000 Egyptian troops and 2,000 tankii
are ihere and that the fighting could
be:~n without 11dvance warning.
Weslun lntelHgcnce SOUl'Ctll in London
eonti.rlntd lht Egypti1n bulldup along
the canal but noted that a crossing
would be· ''haurdou• ln tht extrime"
as Ion 1 1s IaraeJ retains maste y in
the air.
The T~I Aviv newspapu Yedloth Ah•
ronot h said in an editorial that Sadat's
statements meant that "it is necessary
for a call -up" of -reserves in IJrael.
Israeli newspapers generally called on
the government and military leadership
to make clear to Egypt the danger•
of another round of fighting .
An Army spokesman \aid that the
nationwide air raid warning network
v.'00\d be tested at 2 p.m. Tuesday 14
a.m. PST), the first test sinct a com-
memorative blast on 1t1emorial Day Six
months ago. Tke sPokesman saiLth
test h11d nothing to do with Sadat'r
speeches, but il!erved to uhdcriJ;ure •
the mood of public apprehtn11on in
lsr11el.
The newii.paper DRvar said that the
de.velopment.I of the J)l5t few d1y1 lent
"urgency ind tr1vity11 to Prime Minister
Golda Meir'• meeting with Preaident
Nlxoo, oclleduted for .. 11 month. ...
Foor African leadf!rs arrlv~ in Cairo
on-a conilnuing mission to seek peact
in the Area. They: wete Pri!sidents
Leopold Senghor of~ Senegal and Maj.
Gen. Yakubu Gowan bf Nigeria, Foreign
Minister Mario Cardo.so of Zaire (the
former Congo) and State Minister
William Eteki ol Camerotpt:--
Jn Beirut, travellers from Egypt said
leave WI! cancelled for the armed forces
and they were on a state of standby
alert.
~1dat in two speeches to frontl ine troo~ along the Suez Cllnal, said "every
hope we \Jsed to have for 1 peace
settlement is finished , and we. have no
alternative obul to fight fo reK3in our
'land , our honor and our dignity.
The only hope for peace, M u id,
would be for lsr1el to withdraw com·
pletely from Arab lands --somet.hi.1\1
h:rael hU steadfastly retultd 'to do.
•
...1
nexations. The city has taken an area
which waii the subject of several an-
nexation battles with n e i g h b o r i n g
Newport Beach.
~1ayor Wilson said he expects "lhe
land to become city territory by January
or February, assuming there is no hitcfi
with the county's Local Agency Forma-
tioo Commission (LAFCO).
The territory proposed for annexation
Is bounded 0111 the west by Red Hill Ave-
nue (Costa Mesa-city limits), on the east
..... ~ -'
Bad Monday
by the airport, on the north by the
San Diego Freeway and on the south
by Palisades Road.
"When I first began working with
the Irvine Company on this In 1964,
they told us if our industrial zoning
met with their satisfaction they would
annex," 'Vilson said. "Now their promise
is fulfilled."
Wilson expects the land -to. hav.e An
assessed value of flO million to $12
million when il is fully developed.
DAILY ,ILOt lt•lf P'het•
Joh n T. Ward awa its ambulance after two-car, rush-hour crash this
morn ing al Palisades Road and Campus Drlve in Santa Ana Heights.
Ward , 47, or 2011·8 Charle St., Costa Mesa, and driver of seco nd car,
Sh.~ryl Lovett, 23, of 2133 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa, were taken to Costa
Mesa Memorial Hospital !or treatment of injuries. Collision took place
about 8 a.m.
' Car Theft Suspect Jailed
Afte1· Cold Mor11ing Swim
Dripping . and shivering, a teenager
was taken to a warm jall cell in Costa
Mesa early today, after a car thief
pursued by police crashed a vehicle
through one wooden fen ce, vaulted a
second on foot and finally fell into a
swimming pool.
Gary Lewis, 19, Of · 2030 S. 'Maple
Ave., Santa Ana, was booked on suspioiMI
of grand theft of in auto and misde·
mea,nor h,it and run.
Watch Commander Lt. George Lorton
1aid the drenched 8Uspect was shaking
so violtnlly in the 40-degree temperature
that when spread-eagle<;i on a police
trunk, his hands sounded like a fast
drum solo. ·-
P8trolman Jim Watson spotted a stole n
1965 sport sedan about 3:30 a.m .• after
residents at 979 Cheyenne St., and owner
Joseph Hudson, of Santti Ana_, called
lo report It was just stolen.
Police said Watson pursued it about
Banks, Stores
Plan to Close
Costa Mesa City Jfall , local banks
and most stores will be closed
Thursday, Thanksgiving D1;y.
The banks and stores will open
again on Friday, but city hall will
remain closed-both day!. • '
~uth Coast Plata will be closed Thanks:gi~ng. ~
There will ali;o be nn trash pick
ups on Thursday. Trash normally
picked up Thursday In Costa MeP
will be-picked up Friday, F:'rid!)'.11
trash colh!dlons will be made
Saturday.
_, .
•
two blocks, at which time the car ran
off the road, smashed a fence at 3054
Van Bureo, and 11kidded to a halt.
Computer Expert
' Pleads Innocent
To Secret Theft
OAKLAND (AP1 -A 29-year-old com·
puter expert pleaded innocent todAy tG
charges of grand theft and theft of
trade secrets from the computer memory
bank of a rival company.
Hugh Jeffrey Ward, employed by the
University Computing Co. of Palo Alto,
ent_ll£eQ._t}J,e..Jilca before Superior Court
Judge William J. lfayes.
Ward's attorney, Stanley Golde, waived
the 60 days for setting of a trial date
and Hayes announced he would set a
date Dec. 15.
Ward is accused or using a special
code and account number to obta in a
computer program worth $25,000 rrom,
the rival Information Systems De!ign,
Inc .. of Oakland.
The prosecution said W11rd lelephofled
ISO last Jan. 19 and attempted to "pirate
the program" without authorization.
ISO said ii discovered the alleged
thert when one or its customers received
sorrle information It didn't order -An<f
when TSD's uwn computer began spewing
data cards that couldn't be· accounted
for. ISO is a computer strvict com~ny
which &eUs comput'r time to other firnu.
4Poliee-armed wjth 1 search warr.}llt
sakt material found In Ward'• oUlce'
Feb. 1$ corresponded with lhe stroleo
pr1>gram •
" I
"lt'.s_ the _kind or gift ev:ery cHy
manager wants. This industrial land w.m:
be almost as valuable to us as South
Coast Plaza," Wilson added.
Some opposition may be expresM!ll
by the city of Santa Ana, WilsOn said..
But the mayor doesn't feel that will
be much of a problem.
The Irvine Company letter acreein&
lo the annexation was ·signed· by James
Taylor, director of general planninJ. In
(See ANNµ, Pa1e Z)
Viets Drive
lnto Cambodia
Against Reds
SAIGON (UPI) -Thousand> of South
Vietnamese troo1>3 crossed into Clmbodia
In armored vehicles today in the opening
phase of a major new incUr1lon aimed
at North Vietnam.ese sanctuarfe1 1n the
neighboring country and at relievlni
Communist pressure on its capital.
Six battalions of South Vietnamese
airborne troops -about 4,000. men -
made the crossing northwe'st of Sa.igGD
near the Krek rubber plantation. Two
other crossings were being prepared
further south.
Thousands more troops massed alon&
Highway I where it croesed b1to the
Parrot's Beak area of Cambodia which
juts into South Vietnam west of the
capital , 50 miles to the south of the
first crossing.
Military sources said that a third faroe
W3l!I being organized in the Mekona Delta
city of Chau Doc to operate from the
South Vietnamese base at __Neak Luon&
on the Mekong River in Cambodia.
Preparations seen alo~i Ule roads b1
correspondents Indicated .. that it would
be the biggest South 'Vietnamese fn.
cursion into Cambodia 11ince the-Allied
drive or Ma y, 1970.
Despite the in itial border crossing!ll
today, mili tary sources ind icated that
the big push has yet to start. They
indicated that D-Day will be Wednesday.
The Current strength of the Republic
of Vietnam in the adjacent area of
Cambodia where guerrllla sanctuaries
are located already stands at close to
a 13,000-man division.
Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Minh, com-
mandti!r of mi litary Region nt who ii
directing the buildup, spent the daf at
his rea r area }leadquarters at Bien Hoa,
18 miles northeast of Saigon. Minh waa
expected to arrive at bis forw•rd bead4
quarters at Tay Ninh, 50 miles northwest
of Saig()n and 27 miles south o( the
Cambodian border, on Tuesday. ·
Though vehicles rolled across tbe
border, there was none of the heavy
U.S. air activity that always accompanies
a major allied push.
However, the Vietnamese themselves
staged an air raid Sunday on suspected
guerrilla concentrations near Chrum. 40
miles inside Cambodia, and reported ktll·
ing 40 guerrillas.
UPI correspondent Kate Webb in
Phnom Penh reported activity was
relatively quiet on Cambodian battlefield•
this morning but Communists staged
a mortar attack at Bat Deng, a railroad
town 17 miles northwest of Phnom Penh.
No casualties were reported.
Over the weekend, U.S. and South
Vietnamese warplanes staged bomb runs
in 111 four Indochina countries, includlng
two raids In North Vietnam.
Oruae «:out '
Weatller .
Sunny skies and crisp (mld-60)
temperatures are forecast for
Tuesday, with overnight lows card-
ed between 37 and 47 degnet.
• INSIDE TODAY
Columnist Erma Bombeck and
Bit Kea11t (Family Circua), two
of tile real "stars " in iht DAILY.
PfLOT t;alent lineup, teamed up
to prod.uct the book, "Jiut Wait
Till Yo• Have Childre1l of Yowr
Own. "·A 1iz-part 1tri<Uization of
exce:rptl from tht book 1tarts
today °""Page 24.
..
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Wte_fflllr •
Wlilfl w"" • w_., Ntwt .. ,.
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' '
OAllV OllOT
Mesa Panel
Will Disc uss
City Future
A public hea ring on d o w n I o w n
redevelopment is thi central Issue
scheduled for tonight's Costa li.1rsa Plan·
nlng Co mmissio n meeting.
Commissioners will review a 47-page
plan for redeveloping the core of the
city. William Dunn, director of planning
ror th~ city, has recommended that the
city council establish itself as a
rede velopment 1genCy and start work
on the plan proposed by Los Angeles
cO~ls Wilsey and }la m.
PlaMing commissioners v.·ill decide if
they agree with Dunn's recommendation.
The public hearini is open to any
r;pea.kers who want to exprns an opinion
on the proposed project
The essence of downtov.'n redeYelop-
ment, aa expressed by \Yitsey and Ham.
is the realignment of Harbor Boulevard
to connect with 17th Street ind the
creation of parking plazas and a mall
atmosphere.
The project depends on completion
of the Newport Freeway through the
downtown area and clos ure of Newport
Boulevard to heavy beach traffic.
It would take 1bout JO-years and cost
about $8 millio n, according to Wilsey
and Ham. The city is not obligated
lo follow all or any specific part of
the consultants' plan. bul it is the only
guideline currently ava11able.
The C-Ommission meets at 7:30 p.m.
in city council chambers, 77 Fair Drive.
t 'rom Pu11e J
REAGAN ...
meanders down from the Oregon border
tt> Morgan Hill.
Reagan said Santa Clara County has
a "legitimate complaint'' about the plan,
but declined to sa y whether he would
veto it.
The governor also touched on these
1ubjects:
BOOKS -He declared hims e I f
"unalterably opposed" to any sale of
rare books at the University of California
to obtain more operating funds. State
Finance Department auditors had iden·
tified sale of the books as a possible
way to raise money.
VD -Attempting to clear up what
~ tenned "confusion," the governor
said California parents do not need to
grant permissiott for classes in venereal
disease to be taught their children. He
1aid parents merely have to be notified,
and then ca n withdraw their childreD
from the classes if they desire.
vetoed a bill by Assemblywoman March
Fong (D--Oakland). which would have
tlimlnattd the notice requirement. She
is seeking a veto override.
Tu -The wealthy former actor jok·
lngly said that "after the clouts on
my head" he took earlier thi1 year
upon disclosure he owed no state income
tall· for 1970, he has decided to make
1ure he pays a tax on this year's income.
Apew -The governor said, "Yeah.
I laughed" when Vice President Spiro
T. Agnew last week declared that Rep.
Paul N. McCloskey's "favorite painting''
ls "Benedict Arnold crossing th~
Delaware." He labeled criticisms of
Agnew 's remark last week "nitpicking."
Chamber to Hear
Jobless Law Talk
Tax consultant Aggie J ames will ex-
plain Californi a's unemployment laws
Dtt. 3 to Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce members and guests.
James is a supervisor v.·ith Reed
Roberts Associate.;, unemployment tax
consultants. She vi'ill explain ho w
employers can protect them s el v e !
against needless unemployment costs.
The consultant will speak al noon at
the Temple Ga rdens.Restaurant in Costa
Mesa during a luncheon s~sortd by
the chamber's industrial comm1ttee.
DAILY PILOT
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•
THIS IS HOW 'DOWNTOWN' COSTA MESA SHAPES UP TODAY
City Planners Take Up Proposal for Rejuvenation Tonight
\
'" ' ( ' . ,, () " ·~ \"'<" ' '
..
THIS IS DOWNTOWN OF FUTURE AS SEEN BY CONSULTANTS
Plan Would Take 10 Years and an Estimated $8 Million
Governor Backs Agnew;
'Sho1ild Be 011 "72 Ticket'
SACRAME!\'1'0 (AP) -Gov. Reagan
i;aid today he wpuld go personally to
President Nixon lo ar gue to keep Splro
Agnev.' on the 1972 Republican ticket
to sidetrack any move to replace Agnew
with Treasury Secretary John Connally.
''l think Ted Agne"' h11s been a gre11t
vice president . and I think Ted Agnew
should be on the ticket ."' lhe Republican
governor told a CApitol nev.·s conference.
Reagan said ht rtt0gnizes the Pre5I>
dent "has a very large say in picking
his running mate." but added that did
not prohibit other• from .. lobbying and
lobbying hard0
' for thtlr preferences.
Reagan also deftnded A g n e v.·' !
critic.ism of Rep. Paul N. ~!cCloskey
in a speech last week in 11.·hlch Agnew
indirectly compAred the C • l i f o r n ! a
Repubtlcan·s campaign 11galn't Ni xon for
the prpldency with ~entdlcl Arnold .
Rtagan 1aid the Arnold comment came
"in a !itrles of onellner5" which Rc11g&n
r:aid ~ere winning big laughs from· 111
Republican aud ience.
< ...
-
•·1 don 't think there was an ything tn
bad tastt about it," Reagan said , ad"IUng
"l laughed" et the rem11rk .
Reagan also said he knew nothing
about an Oregon-based lettir •writing
campaign boosting him for the
Republrcan presidential nomination.
He said he instead ts backing Nixon's
renomination and was coauthor \Yith New
\-
0C>rk Gov. Nelson Rockefeller or I resolu·
lion 111dopted unanim'owily by Republican
governors last week back.ins: Nli on's
renomination.
J ell yfi sh Sting Fatal-
BR!SBAN£. Au stralia (OPI) -A
young "·oma n died Sunday when she
"'AS 1tung bf a deadly jellyfl1h while
S\',.imming at ,1 beach near Tully, 1d11
mlle.1 northwest of here. The woman
-kllled by the tea was not 1dentUled
by 1;111me.
' Union Chief
To Address
85,000 Men
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -~alrlck
Gorman, president of the MeatC:utter!
and B~tchers Union, planned a little
telephone chat today with 85,000 packing
house workers in 40 cities.
Gorman'• conversation -about the
effects of Presi dent Nixon's wage con-
trols -may disrupt operations at major
me11t packing plants.
The union president said his call to
'"IOrkers gathered in unlon meeting balls
may even shut down some packing
plants, but said workers would be asked
to return to their jobs as soon as he
finished speaking. The activity is not
a strike, Gorman said.
The 'Meatcutters and Butchers l.l•ion
has a membership of about 550,000 but
only 85,000 are directly affec\ed by the
President's three-month wage -price
freeze. They failed to get a scheduled
$10 pay ra ise on Sept. &.
Gorman, who has been at odds for
years with AFL-C IO Presl~ent George
Meany over numerous issues, said 1.1eany
and the federation did not take a strong
enough stand in saying they would not
cooperate with the .decisions of Nixon 's
pay OOard. Gorman has advocated strike
action if scheduled wage increases are
not allowed to go into effect.
"They have a feelihg of resentment
and that there ought to be a strike ,''
Gorman said of the 15,000 workers af·
fected by the freeze.
However, he said his telephone talk
would not urge any of the union's
members to go out on strike.
The packing house workers 8.re paid
a basic wage of about $120 a week
and many of them ha ve scheduled raises
coming due in the next few months,
Gorman said.
200 Feared Dead
In Manila Boat
Sinking Sunday
MANILA (UPI ) -A boat carrying
about 200 passengers, most of them
students, sank in rough seas in the
central Philippines Sunday night, the
coast guard said today.
A spokesman sa id only one survivor
ha s been found.
The outrigger ~t·. named Beilhoven
ll was suspected to have been overloaded
and operating illegally, according to the
spokesman. He said the license: to operate
was withdrawn from the boat in April,
1971 , because of "failure to comply with
coast guard regulations."
Two coast guard patrol craft scoured
the wate rs sic miles off the northern
tip of Cebu Isla nd, located some 350
miles south of Ma nila, for possible
3urvivors .
The Beethoven sank in the area at
about 11 p.m. Sunday after encountering
turbulent seas sprawned by h!'a\'y rain~.
It was bound for Cebu from the adjoining
island of Leyte to the east.
Philippine Air Force planes and civilian
boats were reported helping in the search
operations.
31 Watches Stolen
They may be self·\l'indi.ng, shockproof
and water resistant, but they have no
built-in alarm system to sound off when
snatched by a thief.
Woolworth's variety store manager
Ste phen R. Ness called Costa Mesa pollce
lo the shop at 2302 HarOOr Blvd., Satur-
day to report that 31 Timex watches
worth $261 were missing.
--• t
DAILY •ILO'r N-M#
MAP INDICATES AREA COSTA MESA INTENDS TO ANNEX
221 Acres Betwun· Red Hiii Avenue 1nd County Airport
t 'roH1 PUflll 1
'ANNEX PLANS TOLD • ••
it he said:
"Jt was agreed on by both the company
/Irvine) and the city that this property
logically falls within the sphere of in-
nuence of Costa Mesa. This ap-eement
was indicated to the LAFC during hear·
ings to determine boundaries of the pr<r
txised city of Irvine."
"This annexation means a number of
things to us," Wilson expla lned. "Another
500 j<-bs can be created in the city,
there could be 40 to 50 industries and
it will be a solid tax base."
Wilson said he expects the Irvine Com·
pany to request some pre-zoning before
th~ annexation is completed -possibly
allowing some small chunks of co m-
mercial development.
The area is already served by the
Costa Mesa County Water District and
the Costa Mesa Sanitary District.
The aooouncement caps an interesting
history of annexation wars as both Cosla
Mesa and Newport Beach eyed the rich
airport industrial lands.
In 1964, Costa ~1esa annexed 61 acres
of Irv ine industrial land near the airport.
In 1965, the city an nexed. another 28
acres. In 1967 two annexations, one for
137 acres, the other for 84 acres, \\'ere
completed. Each annexation moved the
city closer to the airport.
This is the largest annexation and
puts the city adjacent · to the airport,
an Important positio n if c o u n t y
supervisors ever decide to let 1 city
an nex the airport itself.
"If there is a change on the county's
part, this would gi\'e us equal right
to the airport," Wiison admits. ''We
have to consider the advantages and
disadvantages of It, but we'll cross that
bridg e if it comes."
Newport Beach is on the other side
of the airport.
In 1968-69, the two cities altempted
a series of annexations in the Santa
Ana Heights area which created strained
feelings and several political battles.
The LAFC fin ally stepped in and set
Tusti n ... venue in the so-called ''Gaza
Strip" as the bounda ry , thus shutting
off NeJitxirt Beach access to the 228 acres
on industrial land on the we:!l side
Jlf the. airport.
Santa Ana }!eighls and some other
sections of property In the Back Bay
region still have not annexed to either
city.
Most of the 228 acres is still un-
developed, but streets and other im-
provements have already been installed
on much of the properly.
Wilson said he expects lhe ann exation
lo speed up development of the industrial
land.
The Irvine Company does not own
all of the 228 acres, bul through lease
and sale agreements it controls 90 per·
cent of the land for annexation purposes.
Eight industries, covering about IC
percent of the land, are. currently in
operation. The rest is vacant. Irvine '•
master plan calls for light industriaJ
development.
Nixon to Lead
Ike Memorial
Dedication Rite
\VASHI NGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon will participat; Saturday in dtdic1·
tion ceremonies for the Eisenhower
Memorial Hospital at Palm Desert, the
\\'bite House announced today .
Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. War:
ren said Nixon would be joined in the
dedication ceremonies by Gov. Ronald
Reagan , comedian Bob Hope and Mamie
Eisenhower, wid ow of former President
DWiiht D. ElsenhoWer for whom the
hospital w3'1· named.
Warren said Hoi>e donated the 80-acre
site on which the Eisenhower Medical
Center will be constructed.
The 140-bed hospital , cOllting $7.S million
raised through public donations, will be
the key unit of the center, which will
include research and teaching.
The hospital is schajuled to open in
mid-December. Construction of a physi·
cians' office building is under way.
There has been speculation that Nixon
will go to his ocean-front home at San
Clemente, this week and will return
so me time next v.•eek. Warren declined
to comment on those reports.
~'.lesa Ma iln1an Loses
Unifonu in Laundry
Through rain and snow and gloom
of night. the postman keeps his appointed
rounds, but Paul H. Fagelte Jr. may
be keeping his in civilian clothes today.
The Costa Mesa postman told police
Sunday that some thief raided the Jaun-
he was u·atching television in his apa:'t·
ment and stole his uniforms.
dry room at 2217 Harbor Blvd ., while
The loss was li sted at $75.
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DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -'tlWHO H-• frHwey,
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50 % over what you
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••
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•• ~·· ··--· ii--•.'
". .
Saddlehaek • Today'• .Fl••I
' ----------~
' vor. 64, NOJ 279, 3 SECTIONS, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI~ MONDAY, NOVE~BER 22, 1971' TEN CENTS
ant u
Full War Launehed1
. ' '
India, Pakistan
Clashes Heat Up
By United Press lntemational was _,told "the situation is well under
contrOI."
Burroughs
To Lay Off
E1nployes
.
By BARBARA KREmICH
Of "'9 D•ll1 1'1191 Stiff
Radio Pakistan charged today that
India "has launched an all-.out offen~ive
against East Pakistan • . • without
formal declaration of war."
"It is expected that the Indian army
will open up more fronts on the Easl-
Pakistan borders in the nert 24 hours,"
An official of the Burrough! Corp.
in Detroit today confirmed that the com4
pany is in the process of phasing out
its production of magnetic memory disk
files at its Mission Viejo plant and
that approximately 80 product i o a
empl oyes will be affec~ed by the move .
In New Delhi, a gover nm ent
spokesman denied similar charges but
said Indian planes drove off intruding
r3kiStl!lni jets whi"ch crossed the border.
The radio Pakistan broad ca s t
monitored in Londo·n said that one Indian
thrust came in the Jessore sector border~
ing on India's West Bengal state. It
said that a second Indian attack came
ii;i the Sylhet area, across East Pakistan
from Jessore, and in the area of the
port of Chittagong.
The broadcast said that fighting was
g~ng on.
In New Delhi , government spokesmen
said that Indian jct fighters fired on
four Pakistani Sabre jets which intruded
into Indian territory from the Jcssure
ar.ea of Pakistan, but denied as
"absolutely fal se" Pakistani rad i o
charges that Indian tanks and the in-
fanlry had entered East Pakililan there
on Sunday.
.. Absolutely false," J oint Defense
S,:cretary P. Krishna murti of India said
of Pakistani radio reports which charged
tl}at seven Indian tanks were destroyed
and 90 Indian SQ!diers w e T" e killed in
f~hting in the Jessore area Sunday.
These were apparently charges of an ;
earlier attack than that reported by
Pakistani radio today.
"I should reiterate that Indian. troops
tiave strict orders not to cross frontiers,"
Krisbnamurti said.
The radio 1'8.kistan b fo a d ca ·st
Uonitored in London today said that
·erellminary estimates put the nU.mbe~
of Indian dead at 130, and that Pak1stan1
Casualties were 7 killed and 40 wounded.
ft aaid UI Indian tanks were damaged .
The'radio charged that "the Eighth !In-
dian) Mountain Division and some tanks"
ittacked in the Sylhet area early in the
day but that heavily outnumbered
Pakistani army troops checked the ad-
vance. inflicting 58 casualties at the
cost of 11 dead and 16 wounded.
The radio said tha t two Indian brigades
ttlacked in the Chittagong area but
that Eastern Zone commander Lt. Gen. A: B. Niazi visited the battle area and
:Delay Ordered
In Murder Trial
.Of .Youth, 18
' A tw1>-inOnth delay was ordered today iii the Orange County Superior Court
murder trial of the youngest of rour men accUsed of involvement in the "de\•il
cult'' slaying of Mission Viejo teacher
Florence Nancy Brown.
Acting presiding Judge Willia m Murray
ordered Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney,
.18, to be returned to his courtroom
Jan. 17 for trial. The Oregon _youth
Is held in Orange County Jail.
Gibboiiey is identified as a member
of the gang of four men 8nd one woman
reiiponsible for the sadl.slic kill ing of
Mr!!. Brown and the hatchet death of
a ypu'ng service station attend11nt during
a 2i-hour period in June, 1970.
Mrs. Brown, 31 , of El Toro, w:is
-butchered in an lrvire orangegrove in
a· ritualistic sl aying ~id to have carried
deyjl worship ovc~ones. Gas station al·
ierxlant Jerry W;iyne Carlin had been
aX-ed to dealh the previous night in
the-restroom of his Santa Ana station.
the broadcast said.
Nixo11 to Help
Open Hospital
Na111ed for Ike -
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon will participate Saturday in ded ica-
tion ceremonies for the Eisenhower
Aiemorial llosgital at Pal m Desert, the
White !louse nnnounced today.
J)('puty J~ress Secretary Gerald L. War-
ren said Nixon v.·ould be joined in the
dcdicntion ceremonies by Cov. Ronald
n.engan. comedian Jlob Hope and Mamie
Eisenhower, widow of former Presid ent
llwight D. r::isenhower for whom the .
hospilnl wn s named: '
Warren said I-lope clonatl!d the 80-acre
site on which the Eisenhower A1edical
Center Will be constructed.
The.140-bed hospita_I, costing $7.5 m_illion
raised through public donations. will be
the key unit of the center, wh ic h will
include research and leaching.
The hospital is scheduled to open in
mid-December. Construction of a physi·
cians' office building is under way.
1'here ha s been speculation that Nixon
will go lo his ocean-front home al San
Clemente this week and will return -··~ome t lm'e next week. Warren ·declined
to comment on~thbse reports.
Bleacl1ers, Pool
To Be Studied
By 1'ustin Board
Bids for bleachers at Mission Viejo
High School and a swimming pool at
Un iversity High School will be considered
and possibly rejected hy the trustees
of the Tustin Union High School District.
They meet at 7:30 o'clock lonighl at
the district office, 117l Laguna Road,
Tu stin.
Superintendent .Willia m Zogg said the
lowest bid ret:eived for the University
High pool was $184 ,670, submitted by
Harman B. J. Gladd. Beca use the bid
i!1I nearly $30,000 over the budget
eslim.:ile, Zogg said he will recommend
that trustees send the pool out for new
bids.
The Gladd bid includes $19.870 to pro-
vide handball courts adjacent to the pnol,
.:in item that was estimated at $10,000.
The ba$C pool bid wa5 1164.800 compared
to an estimated cost of $146,500, Zogg
said .
The Mission Viejo bleacher project
attracted only four bidders, Zogii: noted.
_jl'he low est was Russell M11nuh1cturing
and Construction Compa"y with a toto1il
btd of $23,444 .
Zogg recommend!! this project be bid
again. llince . the bleachers will not be
needed u-nUI next fall and the district
has allocated only $19,000 for the football
field sealing. ~
Of the total money allocated to the
project, $6.000 was a gift from the
lilission Viejo High School students.
Gang leader Sle\'en Craig ll~rd . 21. a transient. h<is been committed lo
At.ascadero Slate 11ctspital . as in~ane. T ll
Rio Viaduct Death
A~hur Craig "Moo~·· llulse, 20. of O
. ...; .
Rises to 20 ,
· Ga en -Grove is serving a life. term
in 1ta e-prison.: . RIO DE JAfl/EIRO {UPf) -Morgue
Mtlanic Mae Oanlels. 31, of Santa -officials todaY-rcporled 20 ·
Ana,' Is serving twf) state pri~n terms Saturday·s collapse of the Paulo de Fron-
of one to fi ve years each-for her role• lin Viaduct. As. ll\any as.10 more dead
i the Brown-Carlin kil lings. She was were believed buried under the tons
H4f'cl'1 paramour and the gang's unof· of concrete.
rtc.J1f.tteasurer. · A 122-yarrl seclion nr the visiduct c01-
Hmnan HeOOrlck Taylor, 18, a· IS1p!;e"d"1!n motorisls 11nd pe<le.,lri11ns hur-
tranaJent, ls serving• llv~year prDba!IM rylng home from lunch. At least 22 term. He was the ch1er , prosecution vehicles were believed burled. A force
witnt.u in the. trip_ls o( Hurd and Hulst of more than MIO men was mobilized
anCI will bl uud agalDJI Gll>boney. to probe the debri1.
.
l
" r i'
~
DAILY I'll.OT 51111 Phelt
S111a Is Setti1ig 1n 'West
Lone fisherman silhouetted by sun seems a figure
of solitude in the cool afternoon. The sun was dip-
ping toward the horizon off the San Clemente pier
whe n photograph was taken. t'ishcrmcn generally
find in the winter months that there is more elbow
room·for casting and less likelihood of tangled li nes.
• • Couucil .to~Ey,e :,Ro·ad. Work
Capo Co1isiders Big -Del Obispo . Improvement Pact
San ·Juan Capislrano city councilmen
tonight Will consider the award of a
m;ijor contract for improvements along
·the--winding and dangerous stretches .of
Del Obispo Road.
The project. which will be jointly fund-
ed through the county's highway finan-
cin~ plan would cost $214.048 if the
contract goes to the low bidder, John
B. Ewles Inc. of Westminster.
The Orm submitted the lowest offer
from among 13 bidders for the job
calculated to transform Del Obispo into
a major arterial highway serving Dana
Harbor.
Work on the projeet wHI be completed
before ilarbor use expands next summer
season.
Other items coming before councilmen
Youth Wounded
In 'Quick D1·aw'
A teenage San Clemente youth was
reported recovering today from bullet
wounds in the leg and foot surfered
over the weekend in a quick draw
mishap. .
Donald Holstead Barber, 17, of 102
Santa lnez. suffered the relatively minor
wounds Saturday aflernoon When he and
·a friend were practicing the frontier
art south of Vlsla Bahia st'<1dlum.
After the mishap the Er!end ran to
lhe .nea ·by recreation area and called
police.
B&cber was released after treatment
at Soll th Coas~ ~Community Hospital.
at tonight's 7 o'clock meeting include:
-The second and final reading of
an ~rdinance setting rl!sidential zoning
for.: 210 1cre1 .of property' alnni Ortega
Highway. The council's initial Action
overrode objecUons from the planning
Dana Point
Project Wins
Citizen Approval
A major devek>pflll pll:inning to build a
70-acre subdivision in Dana Point haii;
S()Ught And won approval of the project
from the comm·unity 's new watchdog
homeowner's group.
Spokesmen for the Dana Point Citizens
for Action today gave hearty en·
dorsemenl to the Sm ythe Brothers
Construction Company of NewjXlrt Beach
for a_ major housing project. between Del
Obispo Road and Street Of the Golden
Lantern.
The 11ction group 's officers anrl leaders
In the firm met late last week to review
the proposals for the subdivision wh ich
will ha ve 6.2-units to the acre. That, said
AS$0Ciation President Jim Regelbrugge
would be well below Dana Point's
average density of 20 units to the acre.
The project as yet has to go lhrough
lhe routine county approvals, association
spokesmen said.
Thomas B. McCutchen , an officer in
the group, said the contact by the ('on -
struction firm waa gratifying.
.
Palms Away?
New Fight Over Trees Looming
commiss.ion and resJdents who objected
lo residential land use and burdening
of Ortega Highway with additionitl traf-
lic. One Jetter, written by Douglas P.
O'Grady, asks councilmen to reconsider
their action, and will be officially ac-
cepted by the council at tonight·1
meeting.
-A request front Edw11rd Just of Foun-
tain Valley, the chairman of the Mayor's
Selection Committee for Sao Juan 's share
of $768.70 to pay for legal expenses
incurred during the bitter bAllle over
membership oo lhe Local Agency f orma·
lion Commission. The amount is Identical
to sums paid by cities throughout the
county.
-Review of proposed specifications set
by parks and recreation commissioners
for a ma ster plan of Four Oaks and
Bonito parks. The council also will con-
sider plans for development of Serra
Park in the new Westport development.
Big Landscaping
Project Studied
For Dana Point
Slate Division of Highways 9nd County
Road Oepartmenl officials have begun a
cost study on a major landsca pe project
proposed by cilizens Or Dana Poinl after
the widening or Pacific Coast Highway.
Plans donated by the South Laguna
land scape1architeclural rirm oCLand and
Wood were presented to lhe government
officials lasl week by members of the
Dana Point Citizens for Act i o 11:
beautifucation committee.
The drawings suggest a planted divider
lhe length of the major highway and the
culling of tree wells al ong all si dewalks.
Undergrounding of all utilities also has
been urged by th e committee.
Road oHicials have promised lo draft a
cosl stu dy on lhe project which would in·
Confirming the Friday report that I
number of empla:ires al the Missjon VieX.
facility had been advised the plant-would
cease production at the end of the year,
public relations director Dick Brady said
In Detroit he understood "most of the
production employes" would be affected.
"As the result of changing market
requirements with regard to computer
memory subsystems, we are in ih"e pro-
cess of phasing out this production at
Mission Viejo," he said,
Some admini stralive and engineeriltl
employes will remain at the plant, he
added, while Burroughs of (I c I al s
determine the role the Mission Vieja
facility will play in future production
plans.
Brady said the company's Westlake
Village plant will continue to make the
memory disk files , but another type
of disk product has been developed which
Burroughs can purch11se from another ·
firm . "Technology continues to change
on us." he said.
A new Burroughs facility r~nUy
opened in Rancho . Bernardo, and
manufacturing a different computer com-
ponent will not be affected, Brady uid.
The $16 million plant on Geronimo
Retad In Miss ion Viejo was built in
11169 and opened in December of that
year. It had been plaMed to have 1.500
employe.s. but Brady aald the production
-staff never reached "more than 150
.to 200!'
South Viets Hit
Cambodia Reds
111 Tank Assault
SAIGON (UPI ) -Thousands of South
Vietnamese troop~ crossed Into Cambodia
in armored vehicles today in the operling:
phase of a major new incursion aimed
at North Vietnamese sanctuaries in the
neighboring country and at relie.vin&
Communist pressure on its capital.
Six battalions of 1South Vietnamese
airborne troops -about 4,000 me.a -
made the crossing northwest of Saigon
near lhe Krek rubber plantation. Two
other crossings were being prepared
fu rther soulh.
Thousands more lrOQp~ f!lJ.S~ along
Highway I where it crossed lJ!to the
Parrot's Beak area of Cambodia which
jut:i; into South Vietnam west of the
capital , 50 miles lo the south of the
first crossing.
MililAJ')' sources said that 11 third force
was being organized in the Mekong Delta
city of Chau Doc to operate from the
South Vietnamese base at Neak lA.iona
on the Mekong River in Cambodia.
Weather
Sunny skies and crisp (mid.SO)
temperatures are forecast for
Tuesday, with ovemighl lows card,.
ed between 37 and 47 degrees.
' INSIDE TODAY
Residents of the Capistrano Beach Pa\mas which is being relocateri to make volve the cuttitig away of th ick concrete
Palisades ha ve saved one batch ·of room for 11 freeway offramp system near in the middle of the highway and along Coluninis t Erma Bombtck.and
historic palm trees io l heir Camino de Esttella. sidewa lks. Bil Keont (J.'amil11 Cir(\WJ, two
neighborhoods, but now a new fight ls Earlier this year a similar number or S!Xlkesnien for the citizen's committee 01 tlie rent "stars" in the DAILY
loomi ng over the threat lo a stand or 22 palms which are a trademark in the said today they would present th.e plan to PILOT Ullent lineup, teamed up
more. Palisades were transpl anted at con· county supervisors for fundi'ng as soon as to produce the bonk, "Just Wa it
Because or the vast widening of the San 5iderable eii:pense to the city of San the cosl s ror Installation and main-Tilt You_lin vt Children of Your
Diego .Freeway and relocation of part of Clemente 11nd the County or Orange. lenance al'e determined. , Own." A .six·part serinlitatlon o/
Av.eJlida Las Paln1as, nearl~ two d<tten The t_ransplant , "".h,ile so1netlmes con-"Our or.aniiat_ion believes l~at ·~cause e:tcjjrpt.t from thfl' book 1larU
old palm!! now face Tn, wOOOman•n • roven111I. w-u.tK&enttaUy-succtS!{uJJrui_the road 1s designate a i;cen1c h1ghw.ay, toda11 on Paoe 24 .
The Capistrano Beach Community only a few or the towering ~alms sue-the coun y s oulOlfarffCipale n:-1ts--·•f• 11-Mtfll M;e
Association will lake Up the right lo have .--.-cumbed . , bcautincstion ," said beautiflclltion con\-· ~~::.~~:.Up ~ s::::.•t= ';:
the trees transplanted inStcad Of The latest stand of trees, however, is mitlce Chairman Thomas McCutchen. 'c.,,.k, -u ·s~Ml--,.f(IW 1t
destroyed. · not propo11Cci for tran~planl ing." "The: widening is no longer a local mat· ~'t:.~ku ~ :::_• Mi..-ttt :,.~
~!embers mst rec;ently lo chart plans l\_sSQCl11U9n President E. J:!· Reason tcr because o.f the adv~nt of D~na Point ~~~,;.: ,.,, 1: ~:;..·~~ ..,:::
for the _prot.est. whloh will be leveled 111id members or Ute group will Include H11rOOr. Jt 1s a faclllty enJOYed by 1 ,.,.,..,11111u111 «-•s w .. 1tit, •
against the County Road Department and suggestions Jor Are&K"" where t.ht ~palms thousands or persons and everyone should ~=:::.. .. : ::::,..~-:.~ n!
the Stale Division of Highwt1ys. could be transplanlM durina the ir share In the hlahwaj's lmprovement." be """ 1..1111.,, ti WtrW ,.... w
The t:reea Ue along a section o! Lu ~lon1"'Wl1h thertuthoritiea. added.
'
~ : • .! ' -• e •
I
.r
:r DAILY PILDr-St -M·-HN ·U.1'71
Comtttettii Scored
•
· onnally lS·sails
Meany's Attitude
Frum Wire Services
WASHINGTON -Trt.asury $ecretary
John 8 . Connally said today AFL-CIO
President George Meany's attitude
toward President Nlson F r i d a Y
•·reflected an arrog~nce, boorishness and
discourtesy thal ill·becomes a leader
cf the klbor movement in the United
States.'' ~ At a news conrertnce. Connally declar·
ed that "the comments I made go to Mr.
Meany personally. They do nol go to
the l1bor movement."
Meany denied today he or !he labor
group were rude to Nixon at the,AFL-ClO
convention Friday. (See Story, Page 5)
Paper Urges
M obihzation
By · Israelis
By United Preis Ioternallonal
An Isrieli newspaper called toda y for
mobilization of the reserves after the
weekend statement by Egyptian Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat that there is "no
alternative" to another Middle East war.
The lsraell Army sch~ul~ a na-
tionwide air raid warning test for 1'ue.s-
day.
An Israeli military spokesman said
that {he situation along the Suez Canal
was quiet. He added , however, tha t up
to 70,000 Egyptian troops and 2,000 tanks
are there and that the fighting could
begin without advance warning.
Western intellige[ICe sources in ·London
confirm~ the Egyptian buildup along
the canal but noted that a crossing
would be "hazardous in the extreme"
as Ion g as Israel retains mastery in
the air.
1'he Tel Aviv newspaper Yediolh Aha-
ronoth. said in an editorial that Sadat's
statements meant Lhat "it is necessary for a call-up" of reserves in Israel.
fsraeli newspapers generally called on
the government and military leadership
to make clea r to Egypt the dangers
of another round of fighting.
An Army spokesman said th.at the
nationwide air raid warning network
would be tested at 2 p.m. Tuesday { .f
a.m. PSf), the first test since a com-
memorative blast on Memorial Day six
months ago. The spokesman said the
test had nothing to do with Sadat 's
speech es. but it served to underscore
the mood of public ap prehension in
Israel. ·
The newspaper Davar said that 1he
developments of the past few day! lent
"urgency and gravity" to Prime Minister
Golda Meir's meeting with President
Nixon, scheduled for next month.
Four African leaders arrived in Cairo
on a continuing mission to seek peace
in the area . They "'ere Presidents
Leopold Senghor of Senegal and ~iaj.
Gen. Vakubu Gowan of Nigeria, Foreign
Minister Mario Cardoso of Zaire (the
former Congo I and State Minister
W!Uiam Eleki of Cameroun.
In Beirut, traveller! from Egypt said
leave was cancelled for the armed forces
and they ~·ere on a state of standby_
alert.
Sadat. in two speeches lo frontline
troops along the Suez Canal, said "every
hope we used to have for a peace
sttllement is fin ished. and we have no
alternative but to fight to regain our
land , our honor and our dignity."
The only hope for peace, he said,
would be for Israel to withdraw com·
pletely from Arab lands -something
Israel has steadfastly refused to do.
OlAM61 COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Meany, meaowhile, accused the Pres!·
dent of deliberately staging the allegedly
rude treatment the chief executive
received.
"The accusations of discourlesy .are
absolutely and completely untrue and
unfair." Meany told the closing day 's
session of the ronventlon. "I think we
showed the respect that was due the
President. We were courteous and there
was no jeering, no booitlg."
But the 77·year-old ~1eany said Nixon's
address was "pure political propaganda."
He charged the President did not discuss
the one issue that was of greatest con-
cern to the · labor deleg·ates -honoring
the labor contracts signed before and
during the wage-price freeze .
Coniially charged this morning that
a 28.5 percent pay raise given Meany
by the union was a "flagrant contempt"
of the economic program to hold down
big wages and price increases.
Connally also said the Pa y Board's
approval of a 15 percent pay hike for
soft coal miners was very di sappointing
and said he hoped it would not 5et
a preredent for other wage decisions.
Connally, who also serves as chairman
of the Cost of 'Living Council, told a
news conference that he was speaking
as a layman in attacking the Pllly Board
decision Friday and not as a top govern-
ment official.
•·1·m very disappoint~ in the co a I
action," Connally sa id. He added that
he hoped it would not set a precedent
or is viewed as a standard for other
~·age decisions.
In the wake of the Pay Board's action,
the Price Commission met today to look
at the other side of the coin -a
request for a jump In the price of
eoal.
Connally also announced today that
finance ministers ol the "G roup of Ten"
richest nations will meet in Rome Nov.
30, and added that he was "very hopeful
that progress can be made ."
But Connally said he doubted a realign-
ment of the world's currencies could
be achieved in a single meeting.
Women Score
Second Victory
In High Court
WASHINGTON (UPll -Ad vocates of
equal rights for women won their second
victory of the new term in the Supreme
Court today,
A 7.-0 vote in 1 complex Idaho probate
case held that the "equal protection"
clause of the 14th Amendment bars slates
from legally discrimihating against
women in naming them as administrators
of estates.
That was the same clause used by
the court to prohibit discrimination
against Negroes in the milestone civil
rights cases of the 1950s and 1960s.
In today's unanimous opinion, Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger said the con-
stitutional guarantee of .. equal protection
of the laws" denies to the !!ates the
power to establish different classes of
persons to be administrators "on 1he
basis of criteria wholly unrelated lo
the objective."
T~·o weeks ago, the court re(used
to review a lower court decision in
Wisconsin ~·hich held that under a union
or company pension plan women workers
could not be compelled to retire at
an earlier age than men.
In another decision today . the court
bv a 4-3 vote upheld the right of the f~eral government to cut back Soci11I
Security disa bility benefits if the reci·
pient also \\·as getting beyond a certain
limit in state workmen's compensation.
The women's righls case eame to
the court from Idaho when the State
Supreme Court upheld the con-
stitutionality of the probate law on Feb.
11, 1970 .. It v.•as appealed br Mrs. Sally
M. Reed of Ada County .
Police Unde1· Prohe ·
HARRISBURG. Pa. (t;PI ) -The State
Crime Commission and State Allor11ey
General J. Shane Creamer today began
planning for an investiga tion into charges
of police corruption In Philadelphia. The
fhiladelphia Inquirer in Its Sunday edi·
lion printed an editorl111' requesting a
state in11esligation, and Gov. ~1 llton J.
Shapp ordered it begun th11 t afternoon.
Cnpp in Co11rt
Cartoonist Al Capp faces ·a pre-
liminary hearing in Eau Claire,
Wis., today on three morals
charges filed last spring by a
married Eau Claire coed -
under some of the most strin-
gent courtroom precedures
ever laid down by a Wisco nsin
judge.
Meat Union
To Discuss
Disruptions
MIAMI BEACH (.UPI ) -fi.!!:iek
Gorman, president of the ~1eatcutter1
and Butchers Union, planned a little
telephone chat today with 85,000 packing
house workers in 4-0 cities.
Gorman's conversatio n -about the
effects of Preside nt Nixon's wage co~
lrols -may disrupt operations at major
meat packing plants.
The union president said his call lo
\vorkers gathered in union meeting halls
may even shut down some packing
plants, but said workers would be asked
to return to their jobs as soon a! he
finished speaking. The activity is not
a strike, Gorman said.
'l'h.e Meatcutters and Butchers U11 ion
has a membership of about 550,000 but
only 85.000 are directly affected by the
President's three-month wage -pri c e
freeze. They failed to get a scheduled
$10 pay raise on Sept. 6.
Gorman. who has· been at odds for
years with AFL-CIO President George
fo.1eany over numerous issues , said Meany
and the federation did not take a strorig
enough stand in saying they would not
cooperate with the decisions of 'Nixon's
pay boa rd. Gorman has advocated stri ke
action if scheduled wage increases are
not allowed to go into effect.
"They have a feeling of resentment
and that there ought to be a strike.''
Gorman sald of the 85,000 workers af·
rected by the freeze.
However, he said his telephone talk
would not urge any of the union 's
1nembers to go out on strike.
The packing house workers are paid
a basic wage of about $120 a week
and n1anv of th em have seheduled raises
coming due in the next few months,
Gorman said.
UC Berkeley Hit
By Sex Bias Rap
SACRAMENTO IU PI) -The Nixon
Administrapon 's chief civil ri~hts offi~ial
Friday threatened legal sanctions against
the University of California at Berkeley
for alleged sex discrimin11Uon aga lnst
women .
J. Stanley Pottinger, civil rights direc·
tor in the U.S. Department or Health,
Education and Welfare, said the Berkeley
can1pus is being investigated for
discriminating against women employes.
··A lot of people perceive of women's
liberation as bra buming and 1ry to
laugh it off," Pottinger said. "It's not
that at all."
Pollinger told newsmen after ad-
dressing lhe Sacramento Press Club that
if Berkeley officii.ls don't grant his in-
vestigators access to em p Io y men I
records, or if the sex discrimination
charges are substantiated, he will recom·
mend suspending federal con tracts with
the campus. Pottinger s11id sinlilar. action
was taken two weeks ago again3t Colum·
b)a Universi ty.
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Capo T1·ustees to Decide
Who Will Go ~o Dana High
Capistrano Unified School l>istrict
trustees tonlghl will dctenn1nr ~·ho ~·Il l
attend the ' new ·oana Hills High School
_1 _ __.,w~ilt~n~it QJ>tn~t~ye:ar.
The Issue ow>r attenda&P art•-'! and
whelher a st11lor cliss sll011ld be incliided
in the sludent body has dr1tv.'n the scorl!S
er youngsters to the bOard '-'I mctll?gs.
Some ~a ns had called for elintLnat~ol{
the senior 111:\!1 durrn~ the lh11..1gural
year ancl brini:cing eighth graders t:l
the new campus to case the crush of
p11pll11 in juninr hi~'h school.
Other llcms schcdu!ti! f(1r Ille Onar1rs
i .30 pm. mC'cllng In St"ra SchOfJI . -
1udltoriu m include 1ttr.mpts to sclve the
month~·old problem over the ·lick of
swimming pools for .Jehool athletic pro-
grams.
TrYM.~ts in recent months hive ~aid
lbout Sl.000 in re:nt tlell "'fTIOnth ror
lhl' aid Safi Clemente municipal pool.
But because or the rent amount
trustees h11vt chosen to ('('Jnsider lh('
amp Pcnd ltton' p;ool , instead.
All 1 long·ranGe solullon, the board
is e:xplorlng the form1t lon of a SJ)f'Clal
district with a tax rate addition to
financt constroollon or a new 11wlmmlna:
ponl ~'hich woUld be sui table for <"f>m· _
petith·,. swimmina events.
Reag~Says
Legis ature
·,
Disg1·acef ul
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today called the 1971 Legislature
"disgraceful " and said California tax·
payers. have not gotten their money's
worth from the record session.
1'he Republican Governor also said
there are some 'illegitimate complaints''
about legislative gtrrymandering on
ieapporlionment, which 1long with a tax
program is the lone rem1lning major
issue fa cing the lawmakers.
"I am opposed to gerrymandered
(reapportionment plans) whether they 're
Republican or Democratic," Reagan told
his first Capitol news conference since
Oct. 27.
The Democratic<0ntrolled Legislature
has been in session since early January
and has broken all records for longevity,
spent approximately $20 million so far
and is using up an estimated $11 ,000
a day.
Asked whether he would support
legisla tion to set a time limit on sessions,
Reagan delined to answer directly but
said "something must be done because
J think this is disg raceful."
Reagan said ''everythipg that llad been
done '' during the: session could have
been accomplished by early July.
"I think there has been footdragging
on the part of the leadership of the
majorily (Democratic) party," Reagan
said, adding "'there isn 't much we
tRepublicansJ can do."
The governor was particularly critic al
of a senate-pass~ reapportion plan for
the upper house which splits Santa Clara
County into six districts. One distri ct
stretches from Needles in the Mojav•
Dtsert to near Los Gatos. and another
meanders down from the Oregon border'
to Morgan Hill.
Reagan said Santa Clara County has
a "legillmale complaint " about the plan.
but declined to say whether he would
veto it.
The governor also touched on these
subjf'!cts:
BOOKS -He declared him 1 el f
"unalterably opposed" to any sale of
rare books at the University of California
to obtain mo(e opefpting funds. State
Finance Department(audi tors had iden-
tified sale of the books as a possible
way to raise money. .....l
VD -Attempting to clear up what
he termed "confusion," the governor
said California parents do nol need to
grant perml s.siOJI for classes in venereal
disease to be taught their children. He
said parents merely have to be notified.
and then can ~·ithdraw their children
fro m the classes if they desire. Reagan
vetoed a bill by Assemblywoman March
Fong ([).Oakland ), which would have
eliminated the notice requirement. She
is seeking I veto ovtirride,
Trustees Hear
Joaquii1 Study
The evaluation phase of a ~·long
organizalion study of the San Joaquin
Elementary School District will occupy
school board trustee! at 1 work·study
session called for 7:30 o'clock tonight
in the district board room.
Dr. J. L. Glaspey of the Westinghouse
research firm will go over. the staff
projections for the district 's nett fi ve
years that result from the $15.000 study
effort.
The board also was scheduled to meet
in execulh•e -private -session at
4:30 p.m. today .. also at the district
office 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., Irvine.
The closed session wa s to be for
discussio n of district staff matters.
Plaue Search Halted
HONG KONG (UPI I -'The rescue
coo rd ination center early tonight called
off its frultless sea rch for the missing
Chi na Air Lines (CAL) Caravelle jetliner.
·oNE CARAT
in Gents or Ladies
solitaire mounting
fine color &
cul
very brilli ant
. Boston Friend
Los Angeles Mayor Sa m Yorty holds up a 41h pound lobster as he
pauses at Boston 's Logan International . .o\irport over ~he weekend.
The mayor is making his first trip to New Ham~shi~e since announc·
ing his bid for the Democratic presidential nom1nat1on last week.
Tearf11l Wo1na11 Tells Tale
Of Rape Three Years -Ago
A tearful, hesitant woman witness took
35 minutes to answer three questions
today in Orange County Superio.r Court
after picking out William Ferguson as
the man who kidnaped and raped her
three years ago in Santa Ana.
The 31-year-old woman kept Judge
Claude Owens and the jur y waiting for
more< than 10 minutes on one occasion
as she tr ied to recall the course
Ferguson's car had taken after the :16-
year-old defendant allegedly forced her
into the vehicle al the Santa Ana bus
terminal.
Her testimony opened, the. second .v.·eek
of the defendant's second trial on kidnap
Solon's Ex-aide
Ruled Guilty •
In Bribe Trial
and rape charges.
The Santa Ana man 's 1!163 conviction
was reCently thrown out in a landmark
ruling by the California Supreme Court
with the finding that t~ prosecution
should have revealed the morals record
of a key witoess in their case agains t
Ferguson.
That key witness was the woman's
husband and he has again testified in the
current trial that Ferguson was the
ma n who sexually assaulted his wife
and then forced him to participate in
sex a els with her. .
McGovern Aide
To Speak Before
Coast De1nocrats
"~fcGovern for President" will be the
topic of a meeting of the South Coast
NEW YORK (U PI ! _ Robert T Democratic Peace Club at 7:30 p.m. · Saturday in the Laguna Beach home
Carson, former admin istrative aide 10 ol Fran Engelhardt, 1723 Thurston Drive.
Sen. Hiram Fong lR·H.awa ii), was con· Speaker will be Lorry Sherman of
victed Saturday of bribery-conspiracy and Palos Verdes, 1968 supporter of Eugene
perjury in connection with an attempt McCarth}'. now working for Senator
to use his connections to quash a stock George McGovern's candidacy.
fra ud indictme~l. . . . The program will be preceded by a
A federal district cou1 t . 1ury of IO potluck dinner. Cost will be $1 per person
metp. and two women convict~ Ca~son_ for-those bringing food, $2 for those
of conspiracy to give an~ receive bribes without food. Those planning to attend
from a New Yor~ hus1.nes~ consultathnt may call fotrs. Englehardt. 494-7776.
wh.o was under 1nvest1gallon b~ . e Nominations for new officers for the Securiti~s and Exchange Cominission club will be called for at the meeting,
(SEC) in ~ stock fraud C'ase .. The con-or may be filed in "''riting until Jan.
su1tant. Michael Hellerman, is now on JO with president Dick Frank 625
trial on stock fraud charg~s. . Glomstead Lane Laguna Beach. ' Carson also was convicted of lying '
to a federal grand jury when he testified
he \.\·as not acquainted with Hellerman
or Edward 19ilms. an influence peddler
who arranged1 oi-a bribe from Hellerman
to Carson. Adams already has pleaded
guilty.
There was never any finger of suspi-
cion pointed at Fong in th e case. The
senator v.•as unaware of Carson's actions
or involvement, it was brought out.
Carson was acquitted of two charges
in the four-count lndictement. He was
found innocent of twu charges that he
crossed state lines to facilitate 1he con-
spiracy.
The jury returned its verdict after
deliberating since late 'fhursday night.
73-unit l\fotel Opens
At Dana Harbor Site
Open house fest ivities over the weekend
marked the dedication of Dana Harbor's
largest building -a 73-unit motel on
two acres of property Rion.I!" the east
vacht basin.
· The Marina Inn, operated by Grea t
\\'estern Hotel Corp. of La Habra, soon
v•ilf be accon1 panic d hy a nearby shop·
ping complex. It includes fireplaces and
kitchens in nlany rooms, spokesmen said,
plus a large swimming pool and saun a.
> DbM RACITI SAYS:
All our diamonds &
jewelry · are guaran-
We hive 111 qualities and ti1e1 of Di1monds In stock re1dy for your insptc·
tion. ChooM from Gem quallt ies ,1t sensible prices. Or choose Di1monds 11
low at $1 .00 1 point. All 9u1r1nteed v1luia1.
teed to appraise at
50 % over what you
pay or your money
Dlemonll Center for Orange Co1111111
Find It H•r• Fint • 1002 Items to Choose From
COSTA MESA JEWELRY & LOAN
~·
Open !)(lilt.' "» to 8 _
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PHONE 646·7741 1838 NEWPORT ILV.D.
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complete~ refunded.
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•
_L~g!•••a· Beaeh ~
EDITION
Teday'• Fbu11
N.Y. Stoeu--
voe. 64, NO. 279, .3 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVE~BER 22, ·197 f TEN CENTS
• n Ia,
Another Canine Dies
,
Laguna Dog Poisonings Still Not Solved
A cult Hungarian puli owned by the
f:arl Hustwick family, 420 El Bosque,
Laguna Beach has become the fourlh
victim of a dog poisoner who has eluded
detectives for the p<1st two monlhs.
"Rags" -who had been with the
Hustwick family for the past nine years
7 died Friday morning in a local
Vetfrinarian's ofrice. "By the time we
cot Rags there it was too late," Hust wick
»id this mornlng. "It's a dirty shame."
Hustw ick saiOthe dog appeared to
be normal early Friday morning . "I
left for work about 8:30 and about a
half hour later I got a call from my
daughter. She told me so~ething terrible
bad happened to Rags."
"I rushed home and we took Rags
to the vet. but like I say, it was just
too late,'' Hustwick said. The
veterinarian, he said, confirmed that
the death was due to strychnine poison·
ing.
Rags' death followed three other
poisonings early in October. All of the
dogs Jived in the Catalina Street • El
Bosque area .
"It appears that the)' are related
because they all occurred in the same
Weekend Heists
In Laguna Beacl1
Under Study
Laguna Beach police are investigating
three weekend burglaries ln which more
than $900 in cash, jewelry and other
items were take n from residents.
Investigators said Helene Setlak, of
290 Beverly St, reported the loss of
SSOO in jewelry from her home. Police
'speculated that an unknown suspect
entered the Jocked residence by using
I key.
Rodney Jack }.nderson, of 696 S. Coast
Highway, told authorities that jewelry,
Wigs and a stereo, valued totally at
f,110, were taken from his hotel room.
Officers said entry was gained through
a small bathroom window.
Police said Richard Koelle, of l f89
Victory \Valk , reported the theft of $100
in cash from his residence by an
unknown suspect who forced open a
sliding window.
Cou11ty Chamber
'Chiefs to Meet
Chamber of Commerce managers and
presidents from throughout Orange Coun-
ty will meet in Laguna Beach Wednesday
to discuss common problems and pro-
jects. ~ith special emphasis on Federal
safety regulations for business and in·
dustry.
Laguna Beach Chamber president Roy
.MarcOm will host the 11 :30 a.n1. lun-
cheon meeting in the Towers restaurant.
The Chamber official:;, members of
the Federated Chambers of Commerce
of. Orange County. meet monthly to ex·
change ideas, support common interests
and disseminate information, M<1rcom
said.
Frank M. Reid, manager ··of the
Fullerton Chamber of Commerce. is
president of the countywlde organization.
area," commented Sgt. Neil Purcell of
the police department. No clues have
been found, he added.
Byrd Ryland, officer at the local office
of the SPCA, said a $100 reward is
being offered for jnformation leading
to the arrest of the dog poisoner. "So
far, though, we have had no in-
formation ," Ryland said.
Purcell pointed out that all dog poison~
Jngs should be reported to the police
department and the SPC A. Dog poisoning
is a misdemeanor offense, the sergeant
noted.
Burroughs Aide <;onfirn1s
'Phasi11g _Out' at Viejo
By BARBARA KRElBICH
01 ll>e DlllY l"li.I SllU
An official of the Burroughs Corp.
in Detroit today confirmed that the com·
pany is in the process of phasing out
its production of magnetic memory disk
files at its Mission Viejo plant and
that approximately 80 product i o n
employes will be affected by the move.
Conrirming the Friday report that a
number of employes at the Mission Viejo
facility had been advi sed the plant would
cease production at the end of the year.
public relations director Dick Brady said
in Detroit he understood "most of the
production employes" would be affected.
"As the result of changing market
requirements with regard to computer
memory subsystems, we are in •the pro-
cess of phasing out this production at
Mission Viejo." he said.
Some ~dministrative and engineeririg
employes will remaln at the plant, he
added, while Bu rroughs o £ f i c i a I s
determine the role the Mission Viejo
facility will play in future production
plans.
Brady said the company's Westlake
Village plant will continue to make the
memory disk files, but another type
of disk product has been developed which
Burroughs can purchase from another
firm. "Technology continues to change
on us," he said.
A new Burroughs racility recently
opened in Rancho Bernardo, a n d
manufacturing a diUerent computer com·
ponent will not be affected, Brady said.
Tbe $1_6 million plant on Gerol)imD
ll:oad in Mission ViejQ.< was built ' •in
1969 and opened in Deeember of thal
year. It had been plinned~to have 1,500
employes but ~rady said the production
staff never reached ''more than 150
to 200."
Large Force of Viets
l(nifes Into Cambodia
SAIGON (UP I) -Thousands or South
Vietnamese troops crossed into Cambodia
in armored vehicles today in the opening
phase of a major new incursion aimed
at North Vietnamese sanctuaries in the
ne1ghboring country and at relieving
Communist pressure on its capital.
Six battalions of South Vietnamese
airborne troops -about 4,000 men -
made the crossing northwest of Saigon
near the Krek rubber plantation. Two
other crossings were ..being prepared
further south.
Thou sands more troops massed along
Highway 1 where it crossed into 1he
Parrot's Beak area of Cambodia which
juts into South Vietnam west of the
capital, 50 miles to the south of the
first crossing.
Military sources sa id that <! third force
was being organized in the Mekong Della
city of Chau Doc to operate from the
South Vietnamese base at Neak Luong
on the Mekong River in Cambodia.
Preparations seen along the roads by
correspondents indicated that It would
be the biggest Sout h Vietnamese in·
cursion into Cambodia since the Allied
drive~ ~y, 1970.
Despite the 1n1 1a1· border crossings
today. military sources indicated that
the big push ha s y~t to start. They
indi cated that IJ..Day will be Weclnesda&
The current strength or the Republic
of Vietnam in the adjacent area of
Cambodia where guerrilla sanctuaries
are located already stands at close to
a 13,000-man division.
Patriot's Day
Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Minh, com-
mander of military Region Ill who is
directing the buildup, spent the day at
his rear area headquarters at Bien Hoa.
18 miles northeast of Saigon. Minh was
expected to arrive at his forward head·
quarters at Tay Ninh, 50 miles northwest
of Saigon and 27 miles south of the
Cambodian border, on Tuesday.
Ne \vport Girl
Satisfactory
F ollo\ving Crash
A Newport Beach girl reviains in
sati sfactor y condition today at 'South
Coast · Community Hos pital recovering
from injuries received Friday night in
a Laguna Beach traffic accident.
Spokesmen at the hospital said Jam ie
Lynn Mills. 17, of 334 62nd St.. sustained
a broken leg and ankle when th e car
in which she was a , passenger went
out of control and rolled on Park Avenue.
-Tile driVer of~tlie •auto, Lynn Mafie
Sebek, 17. of Z50 Lugonia St ., Newport
Beach, was treated for cuts and bruises
following the 10 p.m. mishap and releas·
ed.
Police said Miss Sebak apparently lost
control of her small car coming down
the sleep hill and the fast-moving car
struck the curb, causing It to roll.
-
' •
a ar?
Charges Flri
In Border
Incursions
By United Press International
Radio Pakistan charged today that
India "has launched an all-out offensive
against East Pakistan • • • without
formal declaration of war."
In New Delhi, a governm ent
spokesman denied similar charges but
said Indian planes drove off intruding
Pakistani jets which crossed the border,
FIRST CUSTOMER MUNCHES TASTY THURSTON CANOY
Tina Mitchell, Susan Wolcott, Mayor Richard Goldberg
The radio Pakistan b r o a d c a 1 t
monitored in lAlndon said that one Indian
thrust came in the Jessore &ector tKlrder4
ing on India's \Vest Bengal atate. Il
said that a second Indian attack came
in the Sylhet area, across East Pakistan
from Jessore, and in the area of the
port or Chittagong.
Sunta Letters
Now A'vailable
Parents, grandparents and
friendly aunts and uncles may ar-
range for the small fry on their
Chrislmas lists to receive a
persona l letter from Santa Claus
(lndlafl", lhat .f.sl lhro<i.<Ji Laiiµia ,
Federal'! speClal Chrislntis mall
service. ·
Appropriate letters and bright
Santa envelopes are available at
offices of the savings and loan
firm in Laguna Beach, San
Clemente and Laguna Niguel, along
with Christmas stamps.
Letters dropped in Christmas
ma ilboxes at one of the offices
by Dec. 14 will be forwarded via
the !own-of-Santa so the personal
message from Santa will have an
authentic postmark.
Nixon to Lead
Ike Memorial
Dedicatio1i Rite
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nix.on will participate Satu rday in dedica-
tion ceremonies for the Eisenhower
hrlemorial Hospital at Palm Deserl, the
White House announced today.
Deputy Pre1)s Secretary Gerald L. War-
ren said Ni'fo n would be joine<I ·in the
dedication ceremonies by Gov. Ronald
Reagan, comedian Bob Hope: and Mamie
Ei senhower, widow of former President
Dwighl D. Eise nhower for ,whom the
tiospital was named.
Warren said Hope donated the 86-acre
site on wh ich the Eisenhower Medical
Center will be const ructed.
The 140-bed hospital, costing $7.5 million
raised through public donations, will be:
the key unit o( the center. which will
Jnclude research and teaching.
The hospital i~ schedut~ to open in
mid-December. Construction of' 1. physi-
cians' office building Is under way.
There ha s been 11pcculation that Nixon
will go to his ocean-front home at San
Clemente, this week and will return
some time next week . Warren declined
to comment on those reports.
Thurston Scl1ool
Selling Goodies
,To Raise Funds
The broadcast-.. said that fighting was
going on.
In New Delhi, government spokesmen
said that Indian jet fighters fired on
four Pakistani Sabre jets which intruded
into Indian t.~rritory from the Jessore
area of Pakistan, but denied as
"absolutely false" Pakistani rad Io
charges that Indian tanks and the in·
Thurston Intermediate Sc·hool students fantry had entered East Pakistan tbete
hare begun their annual candy sening on Sunday.
campaign in La(1.1na Btacb to ralse b I I f I • · • mOney'!or student activities and projects. "A so ute Y a se, ' Joint Defense
Some 450 students will be setiing the Secretary P. Krishnamurti of India 11aid
altnond pand y (or $1 per can to com· of Pakistani radio reports which charged
munlty resldents until Nov. 30. that seve n Indian tanks were destroyed
• Students in 1970 raiiled $2,8® through and 90 lndian soldiers w e r ~ killed in
the candy sales and hope · to break the fighting in the Jessore area Sunday.
$3,000 mark this year, according to These were apparently charges of an
Spanish teacher Al Licon, who is in earlier attack than that reported by
charge of the project. Pakistani radio today.
The proceeds go toward school-related ;'J should reiterate that Ind ian troopa
charities,_academic_and._alhletic..awards.----have-st rict.orders.oot-to.cross-f rontier1,''
supplies netded for various activities Krishnamurti said.
and the annua l gift to the school by The radio· Pakistan broadcast
departing students. r.1onitored in lAlndon today said th1t
The youngster's first custorper for the preliminary estimates put the number
campaign was Mayor Richard Go ldberg, of Indian dead at 130, and that PakiStanl
who turned down offers of a free can casualties were 7 killed and 40 wounded.
from two youngsters and dug into his It said 18 Ind ian tanks were damaged.
wallet for a dollar. The radio charged that "the Eighth (In·
Eleanore Sjoholm
Last Rites Set
In Laguna Beacl1
Funeral servi ces will be held at I
p.m. Tuesday for Eleano~ A. Sjoholm.
a Laguna Beach r~sident who died Friday
at the Laguna NUrsing Home. She was
78.
The services will be conducted at
Pacific View Chapel in Corona de! Mar
and interment will follow at Pacific
View Memorial Park.
Miss Sjoholm, who lived 81 291 Cypress
Drive, is survived by two sisters,
Elizabeth Morton of Laguna Beach and
Mrs. Thomas Williams of San Juan
Capistrano and three brothers, G. E.
Sjoholm of Los Angeles, V. J. Sjoholm
of Montana and Eugene Morton of
Oakland.
Trmh Pickup
Men Take Break
On Thanksgiving
There will be no trash pickup in
Laguna Beach on Thanbgivl.ng day.
dian) Mountain Division and some taiks"
attacked in the Sylhet area early in the
day but that heavily outnumbered
Pak istani army troops checked the ad·
vance, inflicting 58 casualties at the
cost of 11 dead and 16 wounded.
The radio said that two Indian brigades
attacked in the Chittagong area bul
that Eastern Zone commander Lt. Gen.
-A. B. Niazi visited the battle area and
was told "the situation is well under
control."
"It is expected that the Indian anny
will open up more fronts on the East
Pakistan borders in the next 24 hours ,"
the broadcast said.
Tension between the two countries has
been building since Pakistan's govem·
ment tried to put down the Bengali
autonomy movement In East Pakistan
by force last March. Refu gees have
poured from the area into India e"ver
since. Guerrilla fighting has been
reported in East Pakistan against tM
West Pakistan Army. .
West and East Pakistan are separated
by 1,000 miles of Indian territory and
Indian and Pakistani troops are massed
along the border in both areas.
Oruge
Weather
Sunny skies and crisp (mid-60)
temperatures are forecast tor
Tuesday, with overnight lows card.
ed between 37 and 47 degree!.
UNICEF Yule
Card s on Sale
The Coastline Chapter of the United
Nations has opened Its annual sale of
Christmas cards to benefit the United
Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)
which aids underprivileged childreii in
120 countries throughout the, world.
New Unit to Head Parade
Streets nora!!y serviced with trash
pickup on Thur~ay's will be included
in Wednesday and Friday pickup
schedules as follows:
Wednesday pickup: lligh Drive, Lower
Cliff, Popar, Linden, 1-tarold , Lookout,
Cypress, Aster, Holly, Monterey,
l\tagnolia , Jasmine, La Vista , Manzahita,
Park. Goff Alley, Catalina, Through,
Third (400 block), Bent, Reed, Blumorit,
VirglhiA , HUledge. Mystic Way, Mystic
Lane, Mystic View, Vista Lane, Sooth
Coast Highway.
INSIJ)E TODAY
CoLumni.tt Erma Bombeck and
BiL Keane (Family Circus), tw o
of tl1e real ''stari" i1~ the DAILY
PILOT talent lineup, teamed up
to product the book, 1'Just Wait
Till You l~aVe Ch ildren of Yottr
Own." A siz·part serialization of
e:i:cerpt.s f rom tlie book .rtcrtt
todo11 on. Paae 24.
In Laguna Beach. UNICEF cards and
calendars' may be obtained from ~1rs.
Adele Tp!len, 1271 CU!t Drive, phone
4114-<320.
There are 19 new Christmas card
designs this year , SAYS Mrs. Ipsen, along
wit~ the colorful World Calendar, with
illustr•tlons by children from m.6ny
lands. '
Lagunans wishing to look over the
new coUectlon may call Mrs. Ipsen for
an •PPolntment to see lhe carda 1t ·
her home or theirs.
A new organi1.ation, the Laguna Beach
Patriots' Day Parade Association, has
been formed to take over planrWng for
the. sixth annual parade, scbedul~ to
march off at ll a.m. SaturdaYI Feb.
19.
For the past five years, the parade,
\\•hich started as 111 small community
event in 1967 and Ms grown t11 major
propartions in succeeding years~ has been
put on the Exchange Club and I.he Pa·
tie.nee Wright Chapter or the Daughters
of the Amerlcn Revolution .
• •
The sire of the event hil:l nece.'lsitated
making it an all-city event and at a
recent meeting of representatives of civic
and service organi1.ations, buslness peo..
pie and interested invididuals. it was
decided tn rorm the new association
to deal c1clusively with planning and
producing the parade,
A board of dlreclor11 wR s named, with
John Padach Jr. 8! parade chalm'IRn
and Invitations to participate have be@n
malled out to 500 Southern Callfornla
groups. •
Most peradea ol iimllar aize and scope
cost at Tea11t fl0,000 to produce, says
Padach, but with all parade helpers
in ~guna serving as volunteers,· ·the
ocafl event can be put on for about
$2.CMMI, which ·coverl'i the cost of trophiell,
qualified judging and · mailings.
"We need all the cooperation.111nd sup-.
pnrt we can get ,11 the chairman said.
'-'Those who wish lo contribute money
may send it to our treasurer, Don Ward,
627 S. Coast Highway, 111nd entry blanlt~ •
may be obtained by ulllng ?t1rs. Fr«!
Ross at 4:>4-8656."
l
Friday pickup: Ocean. f'oresl, SWond,
Ramona (lo Legion ), Clifr. Cedar Way,
Canyon Aerts, Bro11<1w11y, Woodll1nd ,
Loma Terrace, V Place. Third (300
bloeln. Mermaid, Skyline, .-tAnacapa,
Coronado, Caribbean , Bounty Way. Tahiti,
Corl!I, Samoa Way. Pacific', Pitcairn
Place, Llwil, Lewellyn, Arroy0 Drive,
North Coast HJstiway, 300 block.
•
.... lftl 4'
tPllKltlf\1 VI I ci.ulllt<ll 4to.Jt
etmle1 q c,.u ... 111 u
Dfftll NlllCM 11
OI..,... 11 ''""'" ""' . 111t.Plel11-1 """
"llltlk• •t1 W-Kf.. H
""" Llltlftl u
• .J -r-'t •
_,,, ....
N111N111 N1w1 ...
Orlft•t '°"'ft" If SJl¥11 ,trtw tf ,,..,, ,, ...
Site.It Mtr1tlh .. ,,
1'1l1Y111M ' .. "'""" ...... W11111tr I
Wllllt Wl.,PI ~
Wllfl'ltll'I ,.... P.S'
Wtr .. Htwt W
'• . ,
J•
SC
Com1neau Scored _
Connally As·sails
Meany's Attitude
From \\'Ire Str\•lces
WASHlNGTON -Treasury Secretary
John e . Connally said toda y AFt,.CIO
Prtsident George Meany's a I tit u de
toward President Nixon F r l d,a Y
•·reflecled an arrogance, boorishness and
discourtesy thaL ill·bec<>mes a leadlr
of lhe labor movement in the United
Stale!." · At a ne»1s ronference. Connally decla r-
ed that "fhe comments I made go to Mr.
t.feany personally. They do not go to
the labor movement. .. ~1eany denieP today he or the labor
group were rude to Nixon at the AFlrCIO
convention Friday. (See Story, P~ge 5)
Paper Vrges
Mobilization
By Israelis
By United Prtss International
An Israeli n1wspaper called today for
moblliiation of the reserves alter the
weekend statement by Egyptian Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat that there is "no
alternative" to another Middle East war.
The Israeli Army scheduled a na·
tionwide air raid warning test !or Tues·
day. .
An Israeli military spoke.'lman said
that the situation along the Suez Canal
was quiet. He added, however, that up
to 70,000 Egyptian troops and 2,000 tanks
are there and that the lighting could
begin without advance warning.
Western intelligence sources in London
confirmed the Egyptian buildup along
the canal but noted that a crossing
.. Would be "hazardous in the extreme"
as J o n g as Israe l retains mastery in
the air.
•The Tel Aviv newspaper Yed ioth Aha·
ronoth said in an editorial that Sadat's
st.atementJ meant that "it is necessary
fcir a call-up" of reserves in Israel.
Jsr.aeli newspapers generally called ~n
the• govunment and military leadership
to make clear to Egypt the dangers
of a•~ther round of fighting. An~· Army spokesriian sald that the
nationwide air raid warning network
would be tested at 2 p.m. Tuesday { t
a.m, ~Sf ), the first test sli:ice a co~·
memor.tive blast .on Memorial Day stx
months ago. The Si)ok!sman said the
test had· nothing to do wlth. Sadat's
speeches, but it served to underscore
the mood of public apprehension in
Israel. ~--~ The new;paper-Davar said that the
developments of the past few days lent
"urgency a~ gravily" to Prime l\1inister
Golda l\1eir's meeling with President
Nixon, scheduled ror ncitt month.
Four Afr icin leaders arrived in Cairo
on a continutrig mission to seek peace
in the area. They ~·ere Presidents
Leopold Senghor of Senegal and Maj.
Gen. Yakubu Gowan of Nigeria, Foreign
Minister Mario . Cardoso of Zaire (the
former Congo} and State Minister
William Eteki of ;Cameroun. .
In Beirut, trav,eller.s from Egypt said
leave was cancel~ for the armed forces
and they were OD a .state of standby
alert. ·
Sadat. in two speeches to frontline
troops along the Suez Canal. said "every
hope ~·e used to , have for a peace
settlement i!! finished. and v.·e have no
alternative but to ·fight lo rt.'~ain our
land, our honor and 'pur dignity.
The only hope for peace, he said,
would be for Israel!· to withdraw com·
pletely from Arab and s -something
Israel has steadfastly fefused to do.
OIAN•I ~OAST •
DAILY PILOT
OMai!GI C'O.\ST PUaLISHINO •(1)MJIAHY
lttb•rt N. W~14 '"'loll"" .,.. NMltW
J1c\ JI. C11rlty
Ykl l'r'ttlff11I enill G'""t l "'-.,....
1h111u• k11vll
l!ll!ff
1•01'1111 A. M•plii11
M..,lt~ £1110f
011lN H. l111 RicMri P, Nill
Ani\11111 MtMO;ftO £1"°'-
Let1H ...... 0ffk9
~12 F1r11t .Av111111
M1ffi11t •'"''": r.o. a.,l •••, t2•s1 S111 c i.1111 .. 1• Offlc1
Meany, meanwhile. accused the Prest·
dent of de1iberately staging the allegedly
rude treatment the chief executive
received .
"The accusations of discourtesy are
absolulely and completely untrue and
unfair," l\1eany told the closing da y's
session of the convention. ''I think we
sho~·ed the respect that was due the
President We v.•ere courteous and there
v.·as no jeering, no booing."
But the 77-year-0ld ~1eany said Nixon's
address v.·as ··pure political propaganda ."
l!t charged the President did not discuss
the one issue that was of greatest con·
cern to !'he labor delegates -honoring
the labor contracts signed before and
during the wage-price freeze.
Connally chargid this morning that
a 23.5 peretnt pay raise given Meany
by the union was a "flagrant contempt"
of the eeonomic 'program to hold down
big wages and price increases.
Connally also said the Pay Board's
approval of a 15 percent pay hike for
soft coal miners was very disappointing
and said he hoped it would not set
a precedent for other wage decisions.
Connally, who also serves as chairman
of the Cost of Liv ing Council. told a
news conference that he was speaking
as a layman In attacking the Pa y Board
decision Friday and not as a top govern·
me'nt official.
"I'm very disappointed in the co a I
action," Connally said. He added that
he hoped ii would not set a precedent
or is viewed as a standard for olhtr
wage decisions.
In the wake of the Pay Board's action,
the Price Commission met today to look
at the other side of the coin -a
request for a jump in the price ·Of
coal.
Connally also announced today that
finance ministers ol the "Group of Ten"
richest nations will meet in Rome Nov.
· 30, and added that he was "very hopeful
that progress can be made."
But Connally said he doubted a realign·
ment of the world's currencies could
be achieved in a single meeting.
Women Score
Second Victory
In High Court
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Advocates of
equal rights for women won their second
victory of the new term in the Supreme
C.Ourt today.
A 7--0 vote in a complex Idaho probate
case held that the "equal protection''
clause of the 14th Amendment bars states
from legally discriminating against
women in naming them as administrators
of estates.
That was the same clause used by
the court to prohibit discrimination
against Negroes in the milestone civil
rights cases of the 1950s and 1960s.
In today 's unanimous opinion. Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger said the con-
stitutional guarantee of "equal protection
of the laws" denies ' to the states the
power to establish different classes of
pE:tsQllS to ~ administrators .. on tht
basis of criteria wholly unrelated to
the objective."
Two weeks ago, the court refused
lo review a lower court declslon in
Wisconsin which held that under a union
or company pension plan women workers
could not be compelled to reti re at
an earlier age than men.
In another decision today. the court
by a 4-3 vote upheld the right of the
federal government to cut back Social
Securit}• disability benefits if the reel·
pient also was getting beyond a certain
limit in state work men 's compensation.
The women 's rights case ca me to
the court from Idaho when the State
Supreme Court upheld the con·
stitutionality of the probate law on Feb.
11, 1970. JI was appealed by Mrs. Sally
M. Reed of Ada County.
Police Under Probe
HARRISBURG. Pa, (UPI) -The Stale
Crime Commission and State Attor11ey
General J. Shane C~eamer today began
planning for an investigation into charges
of police col'nlplion in Philadelphia. The
fhiladelph ia Inquirer in its Sunday edi·
lion printed an editorial reques ting a
atate in vestigation. and Go v. Milton J.
Shapp ordered it begun thal aflernoon.
Capp i11 Court
Cartoonist Al Capp faces a pre-
liminary hearing in .Eau Claire,
Wis., tclday on three morals
charges filed last spring by a
married Eau Claire coed -....
under some of the most strin·
gent courtroom ·precedures
ever laid down by a Wisconsin
judge.
Meat Union
To Discuss
Disruptions
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Patrick
Gorman, president of the Meatcutters
and Butchers .. Union, planned a little
telephone chat today with 85,000 packing
house workers in 40 cities.
Gorman's conversation -about the
effects of President Nixon's wage con·
trols -may disrupt operations at major
meat packing plants.
The union president said his can to
\vorkers gathered in union meeting halls
may even shut down some packing
plants. but said workers would be asked
to return to the ir jobs a.s soon as he
finished speaking. The activity is not
a strike, Gorman said.
The Meatcutters and Butchers UJ11ion
has a membership of about 550,000 but
only 85.000 are directly affected by the
?resident's three-month w age· price
!rft!.?J. ·1'hey fa iled to get a scheduled
$10 pay raise on Sept. 6.
Gorman, who has been at odds for
years with Af'L.CIO President George
Meany over numerous issues, said Meany
and the federation did not take a strong
enough stand in saying they would not
cooperate with the decisions of Nixon's
pay board. Gorman has advocated strike
action if scheduled wage increases are
not allowed to go into effect
"They have a feeling of resentment
and that there ought to be a strike."
Corman said or the 85,000 worke rs af.
fected by the freeze.
However, he said his telephone talk
would not urge any of the union's
inembers lo go out on strike.
The packing house workers are paid
a basic wage or about $120 1 week
and many of them have scheduled raises
coming due in lhe next few months,
Gorman said.
UC B erkeley Hit
B y Sex Bias Rap
SACRAf.1E~'TO (UPI) -The Niron
Administration·s chief rivil rights official
Friday threatened legal sanctions against
the-University of California at Berkeley
for alleged sex discrimination against
women.
J. Stanley Pottinger, civil rights direc-
tor in the U.S. Department of Health,
Education and \VeHarl'. said the Berkeley
campus is being investigated Io r
discriminating against women employes.
"A lot or people perceive of wornen"s
liberation as bra burning and try to
laugh it off," Pottinger said. "It 's not
that at all."
Pottinger told newsmen after ad-
dressing the SacramenlO Press Club that
if Berkeley officials don 't grant his in·
vesUgators access to e.m plo'y tn en t
records, or if the sex discrimination
charges are substantiated, he will rerom·
mend suspending federal contracts wllh
the campus. Pottinger said similar action
was taken iwo weeks ago against Colum-
bi a University.
JOI N•tth ti C1mi111 R11 t, t 2672
Ot\tf omc ..
c.tl "''"' )JO """' •• ., .,,.., """"' ... f~: 3JU fl1-r1 l h l••lfll
tftflltl"'l'llfl •-.di: 11111 hK.11 Sowltv•rC ,.
Capo Trustees to Decide
Wl10 Will Go to Dana High
-
Cctpistrano Unified School District
trustees tonight will determine who will
attend lhe new Dana Hi lls High School
wt.en it opens late ~~I year: ·
'The i!Sue O\•er a~~n<!fnc~are11s and
v.•hether a senior cl !I shoul • Included
in lhe student body as dra ·n the sco re s
of youngsters to t ' board' rneclin.l{s. ·
Some plans hadlfc..alled f elln1inalln1t
Ute stn1or class dur ing lhe inausurl\I
)'ear and bringing eighth grade.rs lo
the new campus to c11se 1he crusfl flf.
pupils .. in junior high lichoaL -
Olher·ltem!I scheduled for tht hosrcrs
7·30 p.m. mreling In Serr:i Srhool
11udilorium include attempts lo solve the
months-old problem a.Ker the lack of
gwimming pools for •cf\001 athletic pro-
grams,
Trustees In recent months have paid
aboul SI .000 In rtnt e1ch month for
the old San Clemente municipal pool.
Bui t>tc1use of the rtnt emount
trustees have cho.~n to consider the
Cam p Pendleton pool, inste1d .
As a long-range soluUon, the board
Is explorinR the rormatlon of a speci•l
district with a tax.. rate addition to
fiiu1nct construction of 11 ntw swimming
pool which wo~ld be suitabl~ for COJTI·
f1CliUv1: iwimm1ng event!.
Reagan Says
Legislature
Disg1·acef ul
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today called the 1971 Legislature
''disgraceful " and said California tai:·
payers have not gotten their money's
worth from the record session.
The Republi can Governor also said
there are some "legitimate complaints"
about legislative gerrymandering on
reapportionment, which along with a tax
r.rogram is the lone remaining major
ssue fa cing the lawmakers.
•· 1 am opposed to gerrymandered
(reapportionment plans) wbet~r they 're
Republican or Democratic," Reag~ told
his first Capitol news conference since
Oct. 27.
The Democratic-controlled Legislature
has been in session sJnce early January
ind has broken all records for longevity,
spent approximately $20 million so far
and is using up an estimated $11 ,000
a day.
Asked whether he would support
legislation to se t a time limit on sessions,
Reagan delined to answer directly but
said "something must be done because
I think this Is disgraceful."
Reagan said "eVi!rything that had been
done'' during the session could have
been accomplished by early July.
"l think there has :been footdragging
on the part of the leadership of the
majority (Democratic) party," Reagan
said. adding ''there isn't much we
(Republicans) can do."
The governor was particularly critical
or a senate-passed reapportion plan for
the upper house which splits Santa Clara
County into six districts. One district
stretches from Needles in the Mojav•
Desert to near Los Gatos, and another
meanders down rrom the Oregon border
to Morgan Hill.
Reagan said Santa Oara County has
a "legitimate romplaint'' about the plan.
but declined to say whether he would
veto ii.
The governor also touched on these
subjects :
BOOKS -He declared h im 1 e I f
"unalternbly opposed" to any sale or
rare books at the University of California
to obtain more operating funds. State
Finance Department auditors had iden·
l\fied sale of the books as a possible
way to raise money.
VD -Attempting to clear up what
ht termed "contusion," the governor
said Calitornia parents do not need to
grant permissiOll ror classes in venereal
disease to be taught their children. He
said parents merely ha ve to be notified,
and then can withdraw their children
from the classes if they desire. Reagan
vetoed a bill by Assemblywoman March
Fong (0.0aklandl, which wouJd have
eliminated the notice requirement She
ia seeking a v~to override.
Tn1stees Hear
Joaquii1 Study
The evaluation phase of a year-long
organization study of the San Joaqu in
Elementary School District will occupy
school board trustees at a work-study
sessio n called for 7:30 o'clock tonight
in the district board room.
Dr. J . L. Glaspey of the Westinghouse
research firm will go over the staff
projections for the dislricl's ne:s:t five
years that result from the $15,000 study
effort.
The board also was scheduled to meet
in e.zecutive -private -session at
4:30 p.m. today, 11lso at the district
office 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., Irvine.
The closed !lession was to he for
discussion of district staff matters. I
Plane Se arch Halted
HONG KONG (UPI! -'fhe rescue
coordination center early tonight called
off its fruitles s search for the missing
China Air Lines (CAL) Caravelle jetliner.
Bo~ton Friend
Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty holds up a 41h pound lobster as he
pauses at Boston's Logan International Airport over the weekend.
The mayor is making his first trip to New Hampsh ire since announc·
ing his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination last week.
Tearful Woman Tells Tale
Of Rape Tl11·ee Years Ago
A tearful, hesitant woman witness took
35 minutes to answer three questions
today in Orange County Superior Court
after picking out \Villiam ·Ferguson as
the man who kidnaped and raped her
three years ago in Santa Ana.
The 31-year-old woman kept Judge
Claude Owens and the jury waiting for
more than 10 minutes on one occasion
as she tried to recall the course
Ferguson's car had taken af~r the 36·
year-old defendant allegedly forced her
into the vehicle at the Santa Ana bus
terminal.
Her testimony opened the second week
ol the defendant's second trial on kidnap
Solon's Ex-aide
Ruled Guilty •
In Bribe Trial
NEW YORK <UPI) - Robert T.
Carson, former administrative aide to
Sen. Hiram Fong (R·Hawaii), was con·
victecl Satu rday of bribe ry-conspiracy and
perjury in connection with an attempt
to use his connections lo quash a i;tock
fraud indictment.
A feder al district court jury of 10
men and two ~·omen convicted ·Carson
of conspiracy to give and receive. bribes
from a New York business consultant
\\'hO was under investigation by the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC ) in a stock fraud case. The con·
sultanl, Michael Hellerman, is now on
trial on stock fraud charges.
Carson also was convicted of lying
to a federal grand jury when he testified
he was not acquainted with }ie\lerman
or Edward Adams, an influence peddler
who arranged for a bribe from Hellerman
to Carson. Adams alread y has pleaded
guilty.
There was never an y finger of suspi·
cion pointed at Fong in the case. The
senator was unaware of Carson 's actions
or involvement, it was brought out.
Carson was acquitted of two charges
in the four-count indictemenl. He was
found innocent of two charges that he
crossed stale lines to facilitate the con-
spiracy.
The jury returned its verdict after
deliberating since late Thursday night.
and rape charges.
The Santa Ana man's 1968 conviction
was recently thrown out in a landmark
ruling by the California Supreme Court
with the finding that the prosecution
should have revealed the morals record
of a key witness in their case against
Ferguson.
That key witness was the woman's
husband and he has again teslilled in the
current trial that Ferguson was the
man who sexua lly assaulted his wife
and then forced him to participate in
sex acts with her.
McGovern Aide
'f o Speak Before
Coast De1nocratS
"McGovern for President" will be the
topic of a meeting of the South Coast
Democratic Peace Club at 7:3{1 y.m ..
Saturday in the Laguna Beach Jlome
of Fran Engelhardt, 1723 Thurston Drive.
Speaker will be Lorry Sherman of
Palos Verdes. 1968 supporter of Eugene
McCarthy, now workin g for Senator
George McGovern's candidacy.
The program will be preceded by A
potluck di nner. Cost will be Sl per person
for those bringing food. $2 for those
without food. Those planning to attend
may call Mrs, Englehardt, 494-7776.
Nom inations for new oHicers fo r the
club \Vil! be called fo r at the meeting,
or may be filed in writing until Jan.
10 v.·ith president Dick Frank, 625
Glomstead Lane, Laguna Beach.
73-unit Motel Open s
At Dana Harbor Site
Open house festivi ties over the weekend
marked the dedi cation of Dana }{arbor's
largest building -a 73-unit motel on,
two acres of property alone: the east
yacht basin.
The fl1arina Inn. operated by Great
\Vestern Hotel Corp. of La Hahra, soon
11·ill be accompanied by a nearby shop·
ping co1nplex. II includes fireplaces and
kitchens in many room s, spokesmen said,
plus a large s~·imming pool and sauna.
KING SIZE
' .
ONE CARAT
in Gent! or Ladie s
solitaire mountini
fine color &
cut
very brillian t
$499
DIAMOND & MOUNTIN Q.
W• have all qu1l ities and 1i1ts of Dia monds in stoc k re1dy for your lnspK·
tion. ChooM from Gtim quali!ies et sensi ble prices. Or choose Diamond• 11
low •• $1.00 a point. All 9u1r1ntffd v1luts.
Dl•monlf Center for Ora1111e Cou11t11
Find It Here Flnt • 1002 Items to Choose From
COSTA MESA .JEWELRY & LOAN
Open Daily 9 to 6
1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN. CCISTA MESA -1-n• H-r. -,.,.,,..,
DOM RACITI SAYS:
All O!tl' di.a111onds &
jewelry are guaran-
teed to appraise at
50 1& over what you
pay or your m o n e y
comolete~ refunded.
IE•
I
I
I
• •
-San -«;Jemente
Capisirano EDITION
"* . *l vot:. 64, NO. 279, 3 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES-
Fu11· War Launched~ .
India, Pakistan
Clashes ·Heat Up
·sy Unittd Pre&s International
Radio Pakistan charged today that
India "has launched an all-out offe nsive
against East Pakistan , . . withoul
formal declaration of war."
In New Delhi, a government
spokesman denied similar charges but
ta.id Indian planes drove off intruding
P!kistani jets which crOssed the border.
The radio Pakistan b r o a d c a s t
Monitored in Lond on said that one Indian
thrust came in the Jessore sector border·
ing on India's West Bengal .state. It
&aid that a second Indian attac~~ came
in the Sythet area, across East Pakistan
from Jessore, and in the area of the
port of C!litti:igong.
The broadca st said that fighting was
aoing on.
In New Delhi, governm~nt spokes.men
1aid that Indian jct fighters fired on
four Pakistani Sabre jets whi ch intruded
into Indian territory from the J essore
area of Pakistan, but denied as
"absolutely fal se" Pakistani radio
charges that Indian tanks and the in~
fantry )lp<r"entered East Pakistan there
on Sunday. \
"Absolutely fal se," Joint Defense
Secretary P. Krishnamurti of India said
o( Pakistani radio reports wh ich charged utat 11even Indian tanks were destroyed
.a{ld. 90 Indian soldiers we re killed in
fighting in the Jessore ·area Sunday.
These were apparently charges of an
earlier attack than that reported by
P&kistanl radio _today.
"I should reiterate that Indian troops
hay.t.J.ttii:.LO.rciers not to cross fr ontiers,"
Krishnamurti said . -
The radio Pakistan broad ca s t
r.1onitored in London today said that
preliminary <'Stimates put the numbet
of Indian dead at 130. and that Pakistani
casu11lties were 7 killed and 40 wo unded.
It said 18 Indian tanks were damaged.
The radio charged that "the Eighth (In·
dian) Mountain Division and some t.a nks"
attacked In the Sylhet area early in the
day but that heavily outnumbered
Pakistani army troops checked the ad-
vance, Inflicting 58 casualtieS<t.,at the
cost of 11 dead and 16 wound~
The radio said that two Ind ian brigades
attacked in the Chittagong area hut
that Eastern Zone commander Lt. Gen. A. B. Niazi visited the baltle area and
Delay Ordered
In Murder Trial
Of Youth, 18
was told "the situation is well under
control."
';It is expected that th e Indian army
will open up more fronts on the East
Pakistan borders in the nelt 24 hours,"
the broadcast said.
· Nixo11 to Help
Open Hospital
Nan1ed for llie
\\IASHI NGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon will participate Saturday in dedica·
lion ceremonies for othc Ei senhower
Memorial Hospital at Paln1 Desert, the
\Vhite House ann ounced today .
Deputy Press Secretar)l Gerald L. War-
ren said Nixon would be joined in the
dedication ceremonies by Gov. Ronald
Reagan, comedian Bob llope and Mamie
Eisenhower, v.'idow of former President
Dwight D. Ei~nhower ror whom the
hospital was named.
\Varren said llope dciiBted the 8().acre
site on which the Eisenhower Medical
Center will be constructed.
The 140-bed hospita.l, costing $7.5 m.i11ion
raised through public fOnahons, will be
the key unit of the cehler, which will
include research aqd teaching.
The hospital is scheduled to open in
mid-December. Construction of a physi·
cians' office building is under way.
There has been speculation that Nixo n
will go to his ocean-front home at San
Ciemeiite, 1llis Week nd will return
some time next week. Warren declined
to comment on those reports.
Bleachers, Pool
To Be Sthdied
By Tustin Board
Bids for bleachers at Miss ion Viejo
High School and a swimming pool at
University High School will be conside red
and possibly rejected by lhe trustees
of the Tustin Union High School District.
They meet at 7:30 o'clock toni ght at
the district office, 1171 Laguna Roat!,
Tustin.
ORANGE ~UNTY, ~LIFORNlA MONDAY; NOVEi:.tl~R 22, _L97 .
an
DAILY PILOT Slfll Pl!Glt
Suta Is Settitag Jn West
Lone fi sherman silhouetted by sun seems a figure
of solitude in the cool afternoon. The sun was dip-
ping toward the horizon off the San Clemente pier
~hen. phofog~aph was taken. Fishermen generally
find in the winter months that there is more elbow
room for casting and less likelihood of tangled lines.
Council to Eye ·Road Work
Capo Considers Big Del Obispo Improvement Pact
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen
tonight will consider the award of a
major contract for· improV!menl!l along
the winding and dangerous stretches· o(
Del Obispo Road.
The project. which will be jointly fund-
e-d through the county's highway finan·
cing plan would cost $21-4,048 if the
contract goes to the low bidder, John
B. Ewles Inc. of Westminster.
The firm submiUed the lowest offer
from among 13 bidders for the job
calculated to transrorm Del Obispo into
a major arterial highway serving Dana
Harbor.
Work on the project will be completed
before harbor use expands next summer
season .
Other items coming before councilmen
Youth Wounded
In 'Quick Draw'
A teenage San Clemente youth was
reported recovering today from bullet
wounds in the leg and foot suffered
over the weekend in a quick draw
mishap.
at tonight'! 7 o'clock meeting include:
-The second and final reading of
an ordinance 1etting residential. uining
for 210 acres of property along Ortega
Highway. The counclJ 's Initial action
overrode objectioria from the planning
Dana Point
Project Wins
Citizen Approval
A major developer planning to build a
70...acrt subdivisio n in Dana Point has
sought and won approval of the project
from the community's new watchdog
homeowner's group.
Spokesmen for the Dana Point Citizens
for Action toda y gave hearty en-
dorsement to the Smythe Brothers
Construction Company of Newport Beach
for a major housing project_between Del
Obispo Road and Street of tl)t Golden
Lantern.
commission and residents who objected
to residential land use and burdening
of OrJega Highway with additional traf-
fic~ One letter, written by Douglas P.
O'Grady, asks councilmen to reconsider
their action, and will be orficially ac-
cepted by the council 8t tonight's
meeting.
-A request from Edward Just of Faun·
lain Valley, the chairman of the Mayor's
Seleclion Co mmittee for Sa n Juan's share
of $768.70 to pay for legal expenses
incurred during the bitter battle over
membership on the Local Age ncy Forma·
tion Commission. The amount is Identical
to sums paid by cities throughout the
county.
"'-Review of proposed specifications M!t
by parks and recreation commiss ioners
for a master plan of Four Oaks and
Bonito parks. The council also will con-
sider plans for development of Serra
Park In the new Westport de velopment.
Big Landscaping
Project Studied
For Dana Point
Today's Final -r ...
N.1!. Steeb
JEN CENTS
u ·
Burroughs
To Lay Off ,
E111ployes
i
By BARBARA KREJBICR
Of t111 Diii~ Piiot Still
An official of lhe Burroughs: C.Orp.
in Detroit today confirmed that the com·
pany is in the process of phasing out
its production of magneti c memory disk
files at iL~ Missio n Viejo plant and
that approximately 80 production
em ployes wilt be affected by the move.
Confirming the Friday report that a
number of employes at the Mission Viejo
facility had been ad vised the plant would
cease production at the end of the year. 1
public relations directo r Dick Brady said
in-Detrail l!Lunderstood "moat of the
production employes" would he affected.
·~As the result of changing market
requirements with regard to computer
memory sub.."lystems, we are in the pro-
cess of phasi ng out this production at
1'¥1ission Viejo," he said.
Some administrative and engineering
employes will remain •at the plant, he
added , while Burroughs of r I c i al 11
determine the. role the Mission Viejo
facility will play in future producUoa
plans.
Brady said the CQmpany's Westlake
Village plant will CQntinue lo make tht
memory disk files, but another type
of disk product has been developed which
Burroughs can purchase from another
firm. ..Technology continues to change
on us," he said.
A new Burroughs facility recently
opene<I in Rancho Bernardo, a n d
manufacturing a different computer com-
ponent will not be affected, Brady &aid.
The $16 mill ion plant on Geronimo
Road in Mission Viejo waa built in
1969 and opened In December of that
year. It had been planned to have l,500
employes but Brady said the production
staff never reached "more than 150
to 200_."
South Viets Hit
Cambodia Reds
111 Tank Assault
SAIGON (UPI ) -Thousands of South
Vietnamese troops crossed Into Cambodia
in armored vehicles loday in the opening
phase of a major new incursion aimed
at North Vietnamese sanctuaries In the
neighboring country and at relieving
Communist pressure on its capital.
Six battalions of South Vietnamese ' air borne troo ps - about . 4,000 men -
made the crossing northwest of Saigon
near the Krek rubber plantation. Two
other crossings were being prepared
further south.
Thousands more troops massed along
Highway I where it crossed into the
Parrors Be:ik area of Cambodia which
juts into South Vietnam weal of the
capital. SO miles to the south of the
first crossing. A two-month delay was ordered toda y m· the Orange County Superior Court
murder trial of the youngest or four
men accused of involvement in the "devil
cull" slaying or· Mission Viejo teacher
Florence Nancy Brown.
Acting presiding Judge \Vi\liam l\.1urray
ardertd Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney.
18, to be returned to hls courtroom
Jan. 17 for trial. The Oregon youth
ls held In Orange County Jail.
Superintendent \Vi\liam Zogg said the
lowest bid received for the Uni versity
High pool was $184 ,670, submitted by
Harman B. J. Gladd . Because the bid
is nearly $30,000 over the budget
estimate, ZOgg said he will recommend
that trustees send the pool ou t ror new
bids.
The Gladd bid includes~Sl9,870 lo .pro·
vide handball courts adjacent to the poo l,
an item that was estim ated at SI 0.000.
The base pool hia was $164.800 compared
to an estimated cost of $146,500, Zogg
said.
Donald Halstead Barber, 17, or 102
S<\nla Inez. suffered the relatively minor
wounds Saturday afternoon when h.e and
a friend were practicing the frontier
art south of Vista Bahia stadium .
After the mishap the friend rai:i to
the nea ·by recreation area and called
The action group's officers and leaders
in the firm met late last week to review
the proposals for the subdivision which
will have 6.2-units to the acre. That, said
Association President Jim Regelbrugge
would be well below Dana Poinfs
1Verage density ol 20 units to the acre.
The project as yet has lo go through
the routine aiunty approvals, ·association
apokesmen said.
State Division of Highways and County
Road oe·partment officials have begun a
~ost study on a major landscape project
proposed by citizens of Dana Point after
the widening of Paci fjc Coast-Highway..____
Plans donated by the South Laguna
landscape architectural firm of Land and
Wood were presented to the government
officials last week by members of the
pana Point Citi1.CQ.1. for A c t i on
bea.ulifucation commitTee.
Military sources said that a third force
was being organized in the Mekong Delta
city of Chau Doc to operate from the
South Vietnamese base at Neak Luong
on the Mekong River in Cambodia.
Gibboney is identified as a member
of the gang of four men and one \Voman
responsible for the sadistic kill ing of
Mrs. Brown and the tfatchet death of
a young service station attendant during
a 24-hour period in June. 1970.
Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro, \vas
butchered in an Irvine orangegrove in
a ritualistic slaying said to have carried
devil worship overtones. G11s station at-
tendant Jerry Wa yne Carlin had been
aled to dea th the pre vious night in
the restroom of his Santa Ana station.
Galig leader Steven Craig H_urd. 21,
a tr11nsienl , has been committed lo
Atascadero Slate Hospital a.s insane.
Arthur Craig "t.loose" • Hulse. 20. of
Garden Grove is serving a life term
In slate prison: ~lelanie ~1ae Daniels. 31 . of Santa
Ana. Is serving two state prison-ierms
of one to five years each for her role
In the Brown-Carlin killings. She was
Hurd's paramour and the gang's unof·
!lciJ treasurer.
Herman Hendrick TA,)'lor, 13. a
transient 11 serving a five.year proba1ion
term. He was the chier prosec ution
wltnus In the trials or Hurd 11nd Hu.lse
and wW be used agains~ Gibboney.
·-
The ~1ission Viejo blea che r project
attracted only four bidders, Zoi:ti:t not~d.
The lowest was Russell Manuiacturing
and Constru clion Company with a tot al
bid of U.1.444.
police. •
Barber wa:o; released after treatment
at South Coast Community Hospital.
Palms
Thomas B. McC\ltchen, en officer · ii,
the group, said the contact· by the con-
strui::tion firm wa~ gratifying.
Away? Zogg recommends this project be hid
aj'.l:lin, since the bleachers will not he
needed until next rail and the distr ict
has allocated only $19,000 for the football
field sealing.
0( the total money allncalPd lo the
project'. $6,000 we.~ a girt from the
~1ission Viejo High School students.
Ne ·w Fight Over Trees Looming ·
Rio V.ia'd uc t Death
Residents of the Capistrano Beach
Palisades have saved one batch of
historic palm trees in t h e i r
neighborhoods, but now a new fight is
looming over the threat to e sta~d of 22
Toll ~·ses to 20 more. Because of the vast widening of the San
RIO DE' JA EIRO tUPI) -~1orgue Diego Freeway and relocation of part of
officials today reported 20 dead In Avenida Las Palmas, nearly twd-dozcn
Sarurday'n-ollapsr of ttH! P1u1lo de Fron-old PJllnts now race the .woodman'.s ax ..
tin Viaduct. As many as 10 more dead The Capistrano Beach Community
were believed burie,d under lhe tons Association v.·ill take up the fight to have
of concrete. '-· · ' the trees transplti.nted instead o f
A 122-y;w:d Sectien o( the' viaduct col-destroyed.
lapsed on motorists and pedestrians hur· Members met rccenUy to chart plans
rying home from lunch. At least 22 tor the protest which will be leveled
vehicles were believed burled. A force ·against the Cotlflty Road.Department and
or more ttian 500 men was moblll:r.ed the State DtviSion ot Highways.
to probe the debris. Tile tree1 Ut alona a aecUOn of Lu
Palmas which la being relocated to make
room for a freeway offramp 'l)'Stem near
Camino de Estrella.
Earlier lhis year a similar number of
palms which are a trademark in the
Pallsade11 were transplanted st con-
siderable expense lo the city of San
Clemente and the County of Orangt.
The transplant, while sometimes con-
trov_trsial~s essentially successful, and
only a few of the towerini palm1 SU •
cum bed.
1'he lalest stand or trees, however, 11
not propoM!d for translf1anUng.
• Asaoclatlon Preslde"ll E. D. ReaSOi'I
•aid membtr1 of Jhe group will include
1ug'ge•tion1 for ai'eas where the palm•
Could bt transplanted during their
dllcuastona wltb tht auo,trltie1 •..
•
•
The drawi ngs suggest a planted divider
the length of the major highway and the
cutting of tree wells along all sidewAlks.
Undergrounding of all utilities also has
been urged by lhe committee.
Road officials have promised to draft a
.cost stud y on the project which would in·
volve the r.utt ing away or thick concrete
In the middle of the highway and along
sidewalks.'
Spokesmen for the citizen's committee
said today they woµld present the plan to
county supervisors for fundin g as soon as
the cost s for installation and main·
lenance are determined. _
"Our orani1.ation believes that bccnu5e
the road is designate a scenic hig hway',
. the county 5hOUld particlp;ite in rts
beautification," hid beautification oom-
IJli tlee chairm11n Thomas McCutchen .
"The widen ing Is no longer a local mat·
ter because of the advent of Oin11 Point
Harbor. It is 1 facility enjoyed by
thousands of persons and everyone should
1hare in the highway'a lmprovement," he
added. " "' '
Weather
Sunny skies and crisp (mid-Ml
l<!mperatures a're forecast for
Tuesday. wi th overnight lows card..
ed between ~7 and ·47 degr~s.
INSIDE TODAY
Columnist Erma s 0mbeck and
Bil Keane (Faf!lity Circus ). two
of tlle real "sta rs" i11 the DA ILY
PILOT talent lineup, teamed up
to produce tile book, "Just \Vait
Till You Have Chlldre" of Your
Own." A stl'·part stria/izatio" of
excerpts fro m the book atarU
todny on Page 24 . -..... K1lit<1•l Ntwt 4'1
Ot "'f• C-IY 11 1,1_1, 1'«11r lt ,_,, ,, ...
ltlc-M•r\•lt 11-11 111ffili.ft .. T!ltllttt .....
Wtllfltf t Wl!lll Wltll ST
Wt111111't Newt U·U
Wfl'lf NIWI ...
I
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DAILY PllDt: __ _::SC:_ __ _::M::o""1~,~H::l'ltllllilr:::' ::·~·::2::02,::1~·
Cottattae,.u Scored
Connally Assai is
Mea~y's Attitude
From Wire Ser,•lces
\l.'ASHINGTON -Treasury Secretary
John B. Oinnally said toda y AFL·ClO
President Ge(lrge ri1eany'1 a t t i t u de
toward President Nixon F r i d a Y
•·reaected an arrogance. boorishness and
discourtesy that ill-t>ecomes a lead~r
or the labor movement ln the United
States." At a nev.·5 conference. Connally declar·
ed that "the commenls I made go lo J\1r.
1'1ean:J personally. They do not go to
the lab<ir move1nenl."
f\teany denied today he or the labor
group were rude to Nixon at the AFL-CIO
convention Frid~. (See Story, Page~)
Paper Urges
Mobilization
By,,!sraelis
By t)nlted Pre~s International
An l!raeli newspaper called today for
mobllizatlon of the reserves after the
weekend statement by Egyptian Presi-
dent Anwar Sadat that there is "no
allernative" to another Middle East war.
The Israeli Army scheduled a na·
tionwide air raid warning test for Tues·
day. .
An Israeli military spokesman said
that the situation along the Suez Canal
·was quiet. He added, however, that up
to 70,000 Egyptian troops and 2,000 \anks
are there and that the fighting could
begin withQUt advance warning.
Western intelligence sources in London
confirmed the Egyptian buildup along
the canal but noted that a crossing
would be "hazardous in the extreme"
as Ion g as Israel retains mastery in
the air.
The Tel Aviv newspaper Yedioth Aha-
ronoth said In an editorial that Sadat's
statemet11ls meant that "it Is necessary
for a call-up" o[ reserves in Israel.
Israeli newspapers generally called ~n
the government and miBtary leadership
to make clear to Egypt the dangers
'or another round of fighting.
Meanv. meanY:hile. accused the Pres!·
dent or.deliberately staging the allegedly
rude treatment t.he chief executi ve
rteeired.
"The accusations of discourtesy are
absolulely and completely untrue and
unfair," Meany told the closing day's
session of the convention. "l think we
showed the respect that was due the
President. \Ve were courteous and there
y,·as no jeering, no booing."
But the 77·year-old fl.ieany said Nixon'.!
address was···pure political propaganda."
He charged the President did not discuss
the one issue that v.·as of greatest .;:on·
cern to the labor delegate.! -honoring.
the labor contracts signed before and
during the wage-price freeze.
Conflal!y charged this tnorning that
a 28.5 percent pay raise given Meany
by the union was a ''flagrant contempt"
of the economic program to hold down
big wages and price increases.
Connally al so said the Pay Board's
approval of a 15 percent pay hike for
sofl coal miners wa.!I very disappointing
and said he hoped it would not set
a precedent for other wage declslort.!1.
Connally, who also serves as cha irman
of the Cost of Living Council, told a
news conference that he was speaking
as a layman in attacking the Pay Board
decision Friday and not a.!I a top govern·
ment official.
"I'm very disappointed in the coa l
actiC1n," Connally said. tie added that
he hoped it would not set a precedent
or is viewed as a standard for other
wage decisioM.
In the wake-of the Pay Board's action,
the Price Commission met today to look
at the other side of the coin -a
request for a jump In the price of
coal.
Connally also announced today that
finance ministers of the "Group of Ten"
richest nations will meet in Rome Nov.
30, and added that he was "very hopeful
that progress can be made."
But Connally said he doubted a realign-
ment of the world's currencies could
be aChieved in a single meeting.
Women Score
Second Victory
In Higl1 Court An A'rmy spokesman said that the
nationwide air raid warning network
would be tested at 2 p.m. Tuesday t4 WASHlNCTON (UPI ) -Advocates of
a.m. PSf), the first test since a com· equal rights for women won their second
memoritlve blast on Memorial Day six victory of the new term in the Supreme
months ago. The spokesman said the Court today.
test had nothing to do with Sadat's A 7.0 vote in a complex Idaho probate
speeches, but it served to und~rscore case held that the "equal protection"
the mood or public apprehension in clause of the 14th Amendment bars states
Israel. from legally discriminating against
The new spaper Davar said that the women in naming them as administrators
de velopments of the past few da~s . lent of estates.
"urgency and gravity" to Prime M1n.1ster That was the same clause used by
Golda ~feir's meeting with President the court to prohibit discrimination
Nixon. scheduled for next rnonlb . against Negroes in the milestone civil
Four African Je3ders arrived in Cairo rights cases of the 1950s and 1960s.
on a continuing mission to sttk pea~ Jn tOday's unanimous opinion. Chief
in the area. They y,·ere Presidents Justice Warren E. Burger said the con-
Leopold Senghor of Senegal and l-.iaj. stitutional guarantee of "equal protection
Gen. Yakubu Gov.•an of Nigeria, Foreign of the Jaws" denies to the states the
f.linister ~1ario Cardoso of Zaire (the power to establish different classes of
former Congo l and Stale Minister persons to be administrators "on the
William Eteki at Cameroon. -Qasis or criteria wholly unrelated to
In Beirut , travellers from Egypt said the objective."
leave was cancelled for the armed forces Ty,·o weeks ago, the court refused
and they were on a slate of standby to review a lower court decision in
alert. 'Visconsin which held that under a union Sadat , in two speeches to fronlline or company pension plan women workers
troops along the Suez Canal , said "every could not be compelled to .retire at
hope we used to have for a peace h settlement is finished , and we have no an earlier age t an men . tn another decision today, the court alternative but to fight to reRain our b1• a 4.3 vote upheld the right of the land. our honor and our dignity.'' The only hope for peace. he said, federlfl government to cut back Social
would be for Israel to withdraw com· Security disability benefits H the reci·
pletely from Arab land s _ somethin g pient also v.•as getting beyond a certain
Israel has steadfastly refused to do. limit in stale workmen's compensatio n.
OIAMc;,1 COAST
DAILY PILOT
OfWlG& CO.UT l'UlllSH1NI CIVAHY
J:eD•rt H. We1.J
l'r•illwnt •nd f'llblllltll'
J1tlr It. Curley Viet PmliHnt ,,,. ~r•l #..,,....
n.1111 11 Kt1Yll
.E•+tw
Tho..,,, A. *°4u•11"i••
MW>•t>lll E4•!0r
CJ11rlt1 H. l•o• Rith1rd P, N•ll
A11l11...r M..,., ... Eillll'l
L .. , .. IHc.a. 9f'lc•
21Z F11r111t A.,1nv11
M1i'fifl9 •ddr111: P.O. l ot 6&&, 926IZ
S.. Cl•-t• Office
The v.·omen's rights case came to
the court from Idaho when the Slate
Supreme Court upheld the con·
slitulionalily of the probate law on Feb.
11, 1970. 11 v.•as appea led by Mr s. Sally
M. Reed of Ada County.
Police Uncl er P robe
HARRISBURG . Pa. (UPI\ -The Slate
Crime Commission and Stale Attor .. ey
General J. Shane Creamer today began
planning for an investigation into charges
of police corruption in Philadelphia. The
fhiladelphia Inquirer in Its. Sunday edi·
tion printed an editorial requesting a
state investigation, and Gov. Milton J.
Sha pp ordered it begun. that ~flernoon.
Capp it1 Co11rl
Cartoonist Al Capp .races a pre-
liminary hearing )n Eau Claire,
\Vis., today oh three mQrals
charges filed last spring bY a
married Eau Claire coed -
under some of the most· strin·
gent courtroom precedures
ever laid down by a Wisconsin
judge.
Meat Union
To Discuss
Disruptions
f.11Al-.ll BEACH (UPI ) -Patrick
Corman , president of the Meatculter1
and Butchers Union, planned a little
telephone chat toda y with 15,000 packing
house workers in 40 cities.
Corman's conversation -about the
effects of President Nixon's wage con-
trols -may disrupt operations at major
meat packing planes.
The union president said his call to
\vorkers gathered in union meeting halls
may even shut down some packing
plants, but said workers would be asked
lo return to their jobs as soon as he
finished speaking. The activity is not
a strike. Corman said.
The Meatcutters and Butchers U11ion
has a membership of about 550,000 but
only 85,000 are dir ectly affected by the
President's three-month wage· pr Ice
freeze. They failed to get a scheduled
$10 pay raise on Sept . 6.
Gorman. who has been at odds for
years with AF'l.,CIO President George
Meany over numerous Issues. said 'Meany
and the federation did not take a strong
enough stand in saying they would not
cooperate with the deci sions of Nl1on'.!I
pa~,.t>oard. Corman has advocated strike
actio n if scheduled wage increases are
not allowed to go into effect.
"They have a feeling of resentment
and that there ought to be a strike."
Gorman said of the 85,000 workers af·
fected by the freeze. .
However, he said his telephone talk
would not urge any of the union 's
members to go out on strike.
The packing house workers are paid
a basic wage of about $120 a week
and many of then1 have scheduled raises
coming due in the next few months,
Gorman said .
UC Berkeley Hit
•
By Se x Bias Rap
SACRAMENTO fUPl) -The Nixo n
Ad1ninistralion·s chief ci\'il rights offici al
Friday threatened legal sanctions against
the University of California at Berkeley
for alleged sex discrimination against
women.
J. Stanley Pottinger. ci\'il rights direc-
tor in the U.S. Department of Health,
Education and \Ve\fare, said lhe Berkeley
campus is being investigated Io r
discriminating against women employes.
"A lot of people perceive of women'!
liberation as bra buming and try lo
laugh it off," Pollinger said. "It's not
that at all."
Pott inger told newsmen after ad·
dre ssing the Sacramento Press Club that
if Berkeley officials don't grant his in·
vesligators a~ss to em p Io y men t
records, or if the sex discrimination
charges are ~ubstantiated, he will recom·
mend suspending federal contracts wilh
the campus. Pottinger said similar action
was taken two weeks ago against Colum·
bia University.
aos H•rtll ll C•l'l'lino «••I, t267l
OtMt Offk• (mtl ~· ~ WHI llrt ~I
•-" IH<h: :Ull N_, -...i1vatf
tfi.mll ...... '""'\.!1111 ee.t11 •Olllfvlrf
Capo Tr11stees to Decide
-
Wl10 Will Go to Dana High
i::apistrano Unified School Dislrlct
trustet's tonight will determine who will
attend the--new Dana •Ulls Hi~h School
\\htn it opens l11te·nexl ~·ear.
'Tltc Issue ovtr 11tlenda nce areas and
wh~w:r a se:nlor class should be lncludl!d
In the student body h11s d111wn the scort:s
of youngsters to the hoard 's meetings.
Some plans had caned for e\in1in1th1g
the senior cl11ss du ring the Inaugural
yea r and bringing eigh\h 3raders to
tne new campus lo eise the crush of
pupils in junior hlgh !ichool.
Other lteriis schedulrd for the board'!
7 :30 pm. meetin~ in Serra School
'
1udHorium include attempts to solve the
months-old problem over the lack of
swimming pools for school 1thletic pro-
grams. Ttustees in rectnt months ha\'t paid
about Sl,000 in renl each month for
the-old San Clemente munici pal pool .
But because of !ht' rent amounl
trustees ha ve chosen to consider lht
Camp Pendleton pool, Instead. .
As a long·tange SQlulion; . the board
is exploring the formation of a special
dis tclct with 11 tax rate add~lon to
fln11nee constructJon of 11-ntw s11r1mmln,1
pool which ·would be 11uil11bte for com·
petiUve 1wimmln1 events. -.•
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R~ganSays
Legislature
Disg1~aceful
SACRAMENTO I UPI l -Gov . Ronald
Reagan today called the 1971 Legislature
''di!igraceful" and said California tax·
pa yers have not gotten their money's
worth from the record session.
The ijepublican Governor also said
there are some "legitimate complaints"
about legislative gerrymandering on
reapportionment, which along with a tax
program is the .lone remaining major
issue facing the lawmakers.
"I am opposed to gerrymandered
(rtapportioilment plans) whether they're
Rtpublicao or Democratic," Reagan told
his first Capitol news conference since
Oct. 27.
The Democratic-controlled Legislature
'has been In· session since early January
and has broken all records for longevity,
spent approximately $20 million so far
and ls using up an estqnated $11,000
a day.
Asked whether he would support
legisl atio n to set a time limit on sessions,
Reagan delined to answer directly but
said "something must be done because
J think this is disgraceful."
Reagan said "everything th1t bad been
done" during the session could have
been accomplished by early July.
"I think there has been footdragging
on the part of !he leadership or the
majority (Democratic) party," Reagan
said, adding "there isn't much v.·e
(Republicans) c&n do."
The governor was particularly critical
of a senate-passed reapportion plan for
the upper house which splits Santa Clara
County into six districts. One district
stretches from Needles in the Mojav•
Desert to near Los Gatos, and another
meanders down from the Oregon border
to Mor.gan Hill.
Reagan said Santa Clara County has
a "legitimate complaint" about the plan.
but declined to say whether he would
·veto lt. -
The governor also touched on these
subjects:
BOOKS -He declared hims e I f
''unalterably opposed" to any sale of
rare books at the University of California
to obtain more operating funds. State
Finance Department auditors bad iden·
tified sale of the books as a possible
way to raise money.
\ID -Attempting to clear up what
he termed "confusion," the governor
said California parents do not need to
grant permissio .. for classes in venerea l
disease lo be taught their children. He
said paren ts merely have to be notified.
and then can withdraw their children
from the classes If they desire. Reagan
vetoed 1 bill by A5semblywoman March
Fong 1D--Oakland l, which would have
eliminated the notice requirement. She
is seeki ng a veto override.
Trustees Hear
Joaquh1 Study
The evaluation phase of a year-long
organization study of the San Joaquin
Elementary School District will occupy
school board trustees at a work-study
session called for 7:30 o'clock tonight
in the district board room.
Dr. J. L. Glaspey of the Westinghouse
resear<'h firm will go over the staff
projections for the district's ne1t fi ve
yea rs that result from the $15.000 study
effort.
The board also was scheduled to meet
in executive -private -session at
4:30 p.m. today, also at the district
office 14600 Sand Canyon Ave., Irvine.
The closed sess ion was lo be for
discussion of district staff malters.
P la ne Se arch Hailed
HONG KONG /UPI 1 -The rescue
coordination center early tonight called
off its fruitle ss search for the missing
China Air Lines (CAL ) Caravelle jetliner,
UPt T1l1phtlt
Bostota Friend
Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty holds ·up a 41h: pound lobster as he
pauses at Boston's Logan International Airport over the weekend.
The mayor is making his first trip to New Hampshire since announc·
ing his bid for the Democratic presidential nomin atiof'\ last week.
Tearf11l Woma11 Tells Tale
Of R.ape Tl11·ee Years Ago
A tearful, hesitant woman witness took
35 minutes to answer three questions
today in Orange County Superior Court
after pick_in·g out \Villiam Ferguson as
the man who kidnaped and raped her
three years ago in Santa Ana .
The 31-year-old woman kept Judge
Claude Owens and the jury "'aiting for
more than 10 minutes on one occasio n
as she tried to recall the course
Ferguson's car had taken after the 36·
year-old defendant allegedly forced her
into the veh icle at the Santa Ana bus
terminal.
Her testimony opened the second week
of the defendant's second trial on kidnap
Solon's Ex-aicle
Rulecl Guilt y •
In Bribe Trial ·-
NEW YORK (UP ll - Robert T.
Carson. former administrative aide to
Sen. Hiram Fong (R·Hawa ii), was con·
victed Saturday of bribery-conspiracy and
perjury in connection with an attempt
to use his connections to quash a stock
fraud indictment.
A federal district court jury of 10
men and two women convicted Carson
of conspiracy to give and receive bribes
fr om a New York business consultant
y,•ho wa~ under investigation by the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC! in a stock fraud case. The con-
sultant, ?-.tichael Hellerman, is noy,· on
tria l on stock fraud charges.
Carson al so \1•as can1·icted of lying
to a federal grand jury v.·hen he testified
he was nol acquainted "'ith llellerma n
or Edward Adams. an influence peddler
who arranged for a bribe from Hellerma n
to Carson . Adams already has pleaded
guilty.
There was ne\'er any finger of suspi·
cion pointed at Fong in the case. The
senator was unaware of Carson's actions
or involveme nt. it was brought out.
Carson was acquitted of two charges
in l he four-counl indictement. He was
found innocent of two charges that he
crossed slate lines to facilitate the con-
spirat~'.
The jury returned its verd ict alter
deliberating since late Thursday night.
and rape charges.
The Santa Ana man·s 1968 conviction
was re~ently thrown out in a landmark
ruling by the California Supreme Court
with the finding that the prosecution
should ha\'e revealed the moral! record
of a key witness in their case against
Ferguson.
That key witness was the woman's
husband and he has again testified in the -
current trial that Ferguson was the ·
man who sexually assaulted his wife
and then forced him to P'!rticipate in
sex acts with her.
McG overn Aide
To Speak Before
Coast De1nocrats
"ll.1cGovern for President" y,•ill be the
topic of a meeting of the South Coast
Democratic Peace Club at 7:30 p.m.
saturday in the Laguna Beach home I
of Fran Engelhardt, 1723 Thurston Drive.'
Speaker will be Lorry Sherman of
Palos Verdes, 1008 supporter of Eugene
McCarthy, now working for Senator
George McGovern 's candidacy.
The program will be preceded by a
potluc_k dinner. Cost wjll be $1 per person·
for those bringing food , $2 for those
without food. Those planning to aUend
ma y call ~frs. Englehardt. 494-7776.
Nominations for new officers for the
club \\'ill be called for at the meeting,
or may be filed in y,•riting until Jan.
IO 11•ith . president Dick Frank, 625
G!on1stead Lane, Laguna Beach.
7~-u n it i\fo tel Opens
At Da n a l fa rbor Site
Open house festivities over the weekend
marked the ded ication of Dana Harbor's
Ja'rgest bullding -a 73-unit motel on
t1vo acres of property a!ong the east
yacht ba sin.
The Marina Inn, operated by Great
\Vestern Hotel Corp. of La Habra . soon
\l'i!l be acco n1pan ied by a nearby shop-
ping comple x. It includes fireplaces and.
ki1chens in many rooms. spokesmen said,
plus a large S\\·imming pool and sauna.
KING SIZE
ONE CARAT
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solitaire-mounting
fine color &
cut
very brilliant
$499
DIAMONO I MOUNTING-
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Find It , Here First • 1002 Items to Choose From
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I
• . . .
: .-
,.~~~9 ~~~.ee~•~i~l!~~~j Complete-New York St(!.Ck List
NEW YORK _ Manu!ac-gas barge in the United States
for Moran Towing Corp. at its
Houston Division in Texas.
The barge. which wUI have a
capacity or 32,000 barrels. will
cost more than $4 million.
turers Hanover Trust has
lowered lending rates by one-
halt percent on a discount
1 basis and one percent on an
1a\Wu~ ·basis on installments
loans up to $5,000 a n d
maturiUes up to 36 months.
The rate cuts involve
personal. automobile and fully
secured collateral loans.
e Gas Ba rge
NEW YORK -Tod d
Shipyards will build the firSt
e Pessimism
The wave of pessimism
noating over' Wall Street can't
last. says E. F. Hutton. It will
dissipate in the face or rising
earnings. declining interest
rates and slackening inflation,
the firm adds.
Pil.ot Pigskin
• PICKEROO
Co-Sponsored by
Looi~ at t he Ftat ure l&bCkW .50 H.rOllT .,. &•If ge 1.1t
A Los Angeles police detective tries out the 'Police Car of Tomorrow' which l:l'IClar '::~~
h 8u111P Df 2 comes loaded with enough law enforcement equipment to catc the eye of lk..tte•• ,.,.
police officers every\vhere. The car, a four-door sedan, \Vas developed by Fed· :~:.i·~~,,'
South Coast ?Jau era1 Sign and Signal .Corporation and has everything from baby diapers to an .~~c'r;ilJi" ~,
el ectronic co mputer for clocking speed of·other vehicles. 1'" ~ 11-~~~~--''--~~~~-'--'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·li'" :f~f.::1 .§/I
And The
DAILY PILOT
BE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT $10 SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Merchandise Ce,,ificate
For Each Winner
5 Winners Every Week
of Contest
BONUS PRIZE
Each Week's First !'lace Winner
GETS TWO FREE Pl$SES
to the Pasadena Bowl
from the
DAILY PILOT
Be a pigskin prophet. Play the Pilot Pickeroo game for
waekly prizes. Winners each week receive a $10 gift
certificate good as money at any South Coast Plaza
store or .business. Eech week's top winner will be in-
..-ited, along with a guest, to b11 honorad at the annua l
South Coast Plaza Football Players of tha Year Ban-
quet,
Watch for this player'.s form each week in the DAILY
PILOT Sports Section. Circle the team you -~hink will
win in each pairing in the list of 25 games and send in
the player's form entry bl.ank or a. reasonable facsimile.
Then watch the DAI LY PILOT sportJ pagas for each
week's list of fi..-e winners. '
RULES
I. S11tlmil. lht enlry bllnk btlOw Dr • re1s.n1br1 fl(Slmil~ tf 1' " t nl•r
I~• c•ntt11.
t. Slf!d ii to: ftlLOT 'IGSKIN ftlCkEROO CONTEST, jperf OtPlrlllKJll,
ft.O. Ill! 1.UO, Coll• Mttt, (.l. t2,H.
J. Onlr tnt 1ntry ptr perso11 t:ilch wttlr.
4. fnh"iff musl i.. d•llverl'd {by ITllil tr ifl pertonl r. l).llLY PILOT tllict by J p.m. Thurffay.
I. Soulll Co1st Pt1r1 and DAILY PILOT 1n1p~y1s tnf ttt.ir lmmtdllll
f1mlllt1 llOI tliliblt I• t11ltr.
6. TIE B.ll:EAKE.11: BLANK MUST IE FILLED IN OJI: fHTllY lj YOIO,
••••••••••••••••••••
•. ENTR Y B LANK • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Clrcle teo1M ya11 think will win this Wff•'1 9om1t
lhome teqm it second one llstedl
Rams vs Dallas
San Fran~isco vs NY Jets
Chargers vs Cincinnati
Atlanta vs Minnesota
Baltimore vs Oakland
Auburn vs Alabama
Cal State LB vs Texas El Paso
Clemson vs South Carolina
Georgia vs Georgia .Tech
Florida vs Miami I Fla . I
Mississippi vs Mississippi State
Navy vs Army
Pittsburgh vs Florida State
Nebraska vs Oklahoma
Tulane vs LSU
Vanderbilt vs Tennessee
TCU vs SMU
Texas vs Texas A&M
Utah vs Houston
Iowa State vs San ,Diego State
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •·· • • • • • • • • • Baylor vs Rice ·
• New Me xico State vs Colo. State • • • San Jose State vs UC Santa Barbara •
• Pran9e Coast vs Santa Rosa :
Westminister vs CdM • • • ti• lllEAICfll -Mf t11fff tt1 tllo ~1111 nvinlMr .r 111tlfttt tteM •
• flll afl U .. Mft lhl' ... •M'A .. '"'""'"""'""" ........... , •••••••• •
'Ca sh Flo w' Me thod
::trt\~b .,. terln11s . TWA R HIFds I. 6 eport i~rw~i ~ 8HehAr .60b BtltoPtl .50b 8tl1'tfl 1.20
Of A ccounting B est? On P rofits 11~~~?o·~ •ndht 1.60 i.ndl• •fl -uc. 1.60 Lo ki U -n 11fl.l0
NEW YORK (AP) -First
National City Bank suggests
families · who have trouble
making ends meet use the
"cash flow" accounting pro-
cedure practiced by America.'s
biggest corporations.
Basically, the cash f\01v
technique matches cash outgo
against income, indicaling how
much money the family needs
and how much spe ndi ng it
must postpone to keep expend·
itures under control and
achieve Jong.term financial
goals.
"The secret of cash flow is
that it doesn't try just to
match the cash you have to-
day with the expenses .you
have today," the New York
bank explains. "Rathe r it tries
to anticipate your expenses for
the whole year and compare
them with the money you'll
have corning in for the whole
Ye2¥."
The bank suggests the use of
live different work sheets.
The first is a list of the types
of income a family ha s coming
in. The second records a
family's fixed expenses, over
a year which the bank sug·
gests can be obtained. by
goin g through past checkbook
stub s. receipts. income tax
returns and other records that
might help the fami ly remem·
ber what is unavoidable ex.
penses were last year.
'l'he third sheet tells the
family ho\v much discret-
ionary income they have for
variable expenses or what
they have left after they have
su btracted fixed. e x p e n s e s
from income.
On the fourth worksheet the
bank suggests families record
how they want to spend this
discretionary income for things
such as vacations, clothing,
entertainment and medical ex-
A mutual fund friended
b lnYestoqteeldrg
capitol ""'""" lnoome, Whtie a Joclrc:I' In --" MCOndoly to .... """'"' coplkll oppeclalon. °"""" .. ______ ..., __ ., __ .. __ bo ____ _
•••••••••••
I """"'-"'°' °"""""' I I .,,_...,...,.' I I LooArooloLCA900t4 I I ~hone: oul '"•1602 I
I "9oMMtndmeo~on I
f'oclllc M!Alcll Md, he.
I -I I I I ......,. I ·--.-.-· •••••••••••
Phone
.6424321
For
penses. On the fifth worksheet.
variable expenses are sub--
tracted from discretionary in·
come.
Obviously. the bank notes, if
the discretionary income is
greater the family h2.s no
budgetary problems. Bul if
variable expenses are greater,
cuts are needed . 1'he system
allows families to make sure
money is ava ilable to co ver
unexpected emergencies and
to cover some of the extras of
llfe, the bank says.
o ng p ::::i.'1"" R:?:e'~~a·
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) l~111!!i,.1·~
-Trans World >. i r I i n e s R:rf,1t'C:'i: 11
reported \Vednesday a net pro-ftl~1t11~11 ."i:i'
fit of $7 .8 million for the first 111::~_: c~~~
10 months of 197l -an im· 11::..'.f~~-'Sb
provement of more than $40 R~~"t~,.
millio n since just a year ago. l~~""!~' .i&.s
TWA was in financial dif· eo1Ee11s '·l6 . , . l!os Ed pfll,11 ficulty at this time last year. :~·~11 lF
It lost $32.8 million during the ari'.'lissir.:i" 1 . BrlSI My 1.20 first 10 months of 1970 and 11r111Mv "'2
went on to Jose $63.5 million :~1~:.•1f!i:i:.
d , h lldWVH•lef ur1ng t e year. BrkwvG!s .10
Th , ! t £ ll~IYflVG 1.7l e company s wo op o • aw11Shr11 .10
I, . I t t Id I llwt1S""-1·50 1cers, 1n ac , o emp oyes 11ru11sw1t i'
in a letter, "we are in a real R~~ ~~ f.20
fight to survive." l~g:Mc1,:r 5
But Wednesday report In· l:r'i!:~ 1i1J10
dicated that a year o( work R~:.t"R i:,,~:,
and $30 million in cost reduc-R~~!-N~~1i.: crease your savings for the lions have paid off BurlNor ltf.Js
future," it continues. TWA 'S interim e ~ r n in gs=~~~~. ·i
"And more importantly by
analyzing your cash-flow, yo u
can uncover areas of expense
that might be cul to help you
make ends meet today and in-
'l'he bank says that one reixirt was buoyed by a $3.8 C•bor c 1c
mistake many families make million preliminary net profit C•dtnc•" in•
when budgeting is to try to for October. an improvement •1111111 M"" , , i•I F!11111I
0£ $16 million over the net loss :~l1>R.~1:~
redu ce fa mi 1 Y en-of $12.1 million for OctObtr, l:a:w-,n-.:
tertertainment and personal 1970. g~ /.~l' 111
allowances to such a low level It reported though its :~·~.~'b~
that no one sticks to them or revenues were up 6.8 ~nt :%~~:141 !t
that all the fun is taken out of for the fi rst 10 months of 1971, E:~Zoiitoj
operating expenses were up s.::;: r.''~l f~ everyday life. nl ! , ,. o y .3 percent. c:~~1,,'t., :.o "A reasonable amount of M h r th l u· c1rrGe 30!I . uc o e cos cu 1ng ,.,rw.r ·'°"'
pocket money for personal came thr ough eliminating §;t:~~ktiolJO
treats will help prevent the jobs. In the 12 months ending s.CI ~°91>
famil y from feeling they Aug. 31. TWA cut its payroll ~=~:i·'f by 4,579, or 11 percent. ~•nco 1n1 .» deserve those extravagant Jn ad d it i 0 n, many i:.u~L'f'1~-;t
splurges that can topple the uneconomic flights were cut l~~1UJ1s o11~-:
most carefully thought out ex· and the type of TWA jets l:~i;1 1'.20 pense plan," it says. standarized by airports. Ar· l:~f5'f~. ~ Not buying an expensive ls d to 11 1nT•1u1 .90 · t l Id k b. rangemen were ma e se erro C1> .10 win er coa cou ma e a ig 16 older jets which had been :~;:;:r .,;~
difference in a budget, it retired because they were not Fi1•11t~~'.oe"' notes, but cutting back one needed 11•c111rn r!IC movie a month or saving 25 · lledbJ'.l!P ,-------------1>!~:7ifr J~2 cents a day on lunch won't h•MM•11h 2 hel p that much. ~:~:. 2:Jr The bank v.'a rns th a t NEw YORac !A"I · Morld•v·• eomPlete llHneT•n .10 New Y~rk S!ock E•ch1n11e prices: MmNY , ...
because all budgets are a 5•1,, N•• i:::vJ..1!·'°:io family affair each person !fl111.> H1111 Lo w c•OM c111. c~s1>t11 1.D4 Clll E111 !ti should understand the problem -A-c111M11 sPP
drl 'blf h' ,,,., ChlMUSPpf an e~ respod_ns1 e or 1s :g€f~~" r:,'0'9 J 57\1; !f.i! 1r• :.:.·"' E~lf,';!~l JP
share 1n hol 1ng down ex· A'""'",' 1.:1 6,,• 11 4&,,~ .•• "6\~ -v. c11 .11:1 c1 Nw cm fV ...... ll'• 11'·'• -'? ChocF11H .20il penses. Acme Mkt 11> J ~_.,., ,c.i •IJ .k\'t + :i;, cnr11 cr111
And cash flow estimates ~~~1~1fs ·'fo11 !'! 1•,i~ 1~,.~ 1i,.. ~ U ~~~~11 "'::
should never be so r igid they :~.;i~, :ISti f 4J lJV. i1" -11 c11rom1 •' s , od h · Atr~1L1• l .'4 116 s1 .M J'!t-Jl't ffl•vttr '° can t accomm ate c anges 1n :"~aL1 t' 2 ,l '1~ ~r,,,, ~ :: ~ c~''fl,i;r i.;; • plans by the family or AR~·~•,n,0 26 18..., 18v, 11~. + •1. c1n11&111 1.» . Al~ Pr<XI .10b •r,", •8o.;, 4 '1t It\'• -\II Clnn GE 1,U emergencies. Alrco1nc .&Ori it'!,'· "."' 160. -•;. ClnO r."·~
"In fact pl2llning in advance :~,~~211i:.'1" is 3j''> 3~ :J .... + ~ 1clo/"'1F~~' 1,• ' th · t f • t Ala G111 .11t l 1 16"'• 16'• ,, ··-· g'" you e pie ure o )US Al••~a M'!" J.J 1 ,,.,:, ·· ···· ·""'
h t b k ·r Albl>rloC . 2 16 21 ''"• U Vt +. '4 IT o•S »C W ere you can cu ac I '°'IDi!rhns .:i& n 11,,, 11 '; 21\'t -~ Cl!llsSvc ,,20 'd A c•n Alurn 1 Ti \5\• lS'h jli~~ -4I Cl,ty Inv .)Cl necessary to prov1 e money AlcoStafld .XI ~'! 1v,~ tJ•• 1 .,, ..... c tv Inv wt
r h t d Akon Ltb .?6 I ~1~ IO"o ~ 1,1, Cltyjnv pt 81 or t e u n e x p e c e con-A1e~nc1rs .lllr 60 ?1'1t 10,,, XI'"' = 'It c11vr11 llf"Lll
t. ,, ., AllArnLI .7•P 91 11-. 11 n -lt. Clllrk Et 1..fll 1ngency, 1 says. All" CP ·m " 1ov. 1o 1c _ 11t c1art 011 «i AllM>Lud 1.4 10 !~l; 1"-''-li .. + \~ Ci.v Cllf 1 .IO All1111Lvd pf 17 Fi" '.!',,• >:. + \It CltvEll 7.2,
B a11ker Named
AllP!IPW !,,... -0 1•4 ' \Ii+ \~ C•v PUii "ll't1EIE .17f 9 $ U'r, U!Ao -~Claro• I• •111~ c~ 1.20 101 1~\lt 15'-lo """ -''" Clu•"Pe• .t'D .... Id Main ,1s 10 l5 34~} ;i..,, -v. Cl11el!P pf , ll'1"'1td ll~d. ~ 1 11v. \',,., 16 ...... CNA Fl"t .$4 A tdPd Dr J ,,(,; !!U -1'1o CNA Ill Al.lit :111~s!uJ.:o ~. ~~ ,~~ ,~~ ::,~ citl~.".S;~r,
A tCll .l'Oct 11j j,l'lt 1~·-lOt• = \.\ :• it't1a1•5166 A !rlo!A~I ./JO '!lo 711\ 7l\li -~ o1:w1 alllir ~lro:PflliTOD ,.;, ,ll,111 1J~ ll :j: \\ Oltcoln ,Cltb Am11IS~a l .llO '''"' ~ l olo P11 1 . ..0 AMeA .50 36 10 ,.,_ tli :.:_ . .\Ii O!ll p o/1.$0 Arner • 1.10 1, 19~ Ith 1t10 -•11 :li!~l'A~.t'
Am El pf7 60 :Ill ,•," ~ -ih _,_ j -· AmH~s .tt<i l'! 3111'1 ..., ll'4 + v; ....,., ......, •m,eH ot~$4 7 .,~ ll'h 14 . •• . glr\~ J'° ~~'f.1~1· . .': 1~l n~ ll'ii n1~ :i:·1~ olt ln~1 . .0 A!~kfr .»i >O~I J.!~ •'°>\\ 101.~ + l1 it 1· 1 :,:~~! 1i~ t7 ....... .u~ 3~ = ~ olu &!. 1.16 Arn9!!1aM .74 101 Jh\o J"Mo :II'" -11t ollt:ct .•2f Am C1n 7.,.-. lM lGl,I, lll :10 -1 ti 1.10 A C~n oil.TS I 7'1\'"t 2A"' 7A•~,:.:. :\!; ~ fl o/ll·.7~ ~mr~"U: 1.U' 11; ,1~ ,ru 1f.:, _ "" om1~1y .•o ... c~'" 1.?$ HO ,.,~ ....... ....... omlSi pf.90 Am 0151111 I 6 11~1 111.r,, 17\lt .:.: Iii" omw d 7.70 AD!1ll•I ·'°" 60 ,, •• tol.1~ ... n -I \' omw d WI
,t.m OuttVt•I ! ~ 1to fil . ~1 olf.4'1 ArN•YI DI.ti ,1t_-, ma l i-... pfl,tO AmE•Pw 1.10 216 ., '"' -•.to om tfl ..O All' F:•o foci 1.\"I ! ' '' -'tto omw OH;f ~~ ~;~o ,~t~ mz 1::t ll~ '•('t ..... omo ,°'J~~
., ~I ; ·l!"'° :.:.·ij, ::;;:, 1:1• ••• ••• ·, ".};JO, __ '',lil .·~. • A f~ftln\ '.$4 v1'1" lt>li l~~ tm ::. :: :'.'1,•1Uht 1 A GllllDll.to • 37" :J'V, '7'h-lol OMMI 1.11 • ~ri='1:~ l: ~ ... ~~ ~~-~··i. :'1'~111'f,IQ Am Hooo .~ 111 36 i<) Mj 14 -\oi Ofl clllOf S A M.-1e11 17 ,. 1tl4 • '"" -\t on cit 1.tt AMl"V"<t .$00 ,, 1ni.. !"" 1n .. . . . Ofl FtMM 1 A M~~1eoro 311 ]\" I •t ,,,~ . Ofl L••llPIO ... Ml!(!• 1 . .0 6' 2''• 24~ 741'\o -\1o (lf!Nl lG '·'! A Mt!C!•nlt 7 11 I' ti + 1" -Po-Am Mo10.. 1•4 1\~ 1 1 -... onPw 1111.IS "'"•tr.•t li·'° 'lf :ua ,." ,.~ -"' on;: "''~' ~~el~t' •;,. -'l !~•• , ~+• ~'-' ;; : :it :fl' tf~I~ =~~·~~(,; .,;; ·,;lt--,~~ l~ =-~ Mt ~·"111.ttl
• • City Zi•
• • • • • Weekender
,,,,.,~,, ,., '°' "'~ l'~ )1;1 -1 Oiiirc°' -~ Arn$Alt fo.711 l I~'., H1'1 JSj,i . i1l'Corp Arn ~!O"" tO l•l 1••• 1?•~ Mh -U o ol" ,
A SM ~fl.7' 11 llO'"' ,.b "°'~ -1' I 11 Pl! "''" 'ltrlt .S) ••21 "• 21· 'l'I -lt m;u~ . AT&T w1 )1t 71• 1 7 ... ., ~,.;vti:_, ,.111 l&t i.~ ,,,1 ,1!1 ,, ;.o~; nut'¥ : ,..,. ... . : Adve~sing
~·~~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~-~~~·~·~·~-~~~~~~~~~~~~!
G1£1ord Hunter has
been appointed assis·
tant -manager of Mis·
sion Bank's new office
in Laguna Beach. He
wlll also be in charge of
operations at the bank.
llunter re sides in Cal(
istrano Beach ~·i lh his
\VJfc Delores.
-~,,., "TA. T fl! ' •1#1 1•1• ~}~ y ' + l\ ~::: PN ~
.liWllWk .60 "]; l'1 11 11 ,. ... • ~Ofll fr• ... AW 11111 f ,S ttOO ,,,, ''• 1''• -1~ r.....i..., 0~1• ~r:::r:r .::. ~l 1;:: i:~: 1:;1 = ~ ~~"'tf:11 1:tt AMII I/IC" 1 11t 37°' J1'• l1V. -\' OOIHrln 1 • .fO
•
·-'
'31:.,_ ... , ....
-'..,,
. " ..
•
-OAIL V PILOT llJ
Scheduled---From Philh.arnionic Orchestras to~ Plays
(Contlffed frem· Pai~ 11)
" UCI, SUI D1-Sta!t, HUl'l'lbllldl Stall
el'd ~-.. llM.'.'
Tl>urldev, 0.:. JJ-UCI Va•l.ltv .,.., IMttla l'ad lk, at l\omt, t ,,,.,,.
VCI llt0$oh 11 Citrus J1111Lor Coll..,_,
W~. !)et. "-t!CI V..-1lfY "'· ,kfooO Hall, A 11 I II I I m CO&
\Ylllll_Ofl Crntwr, I 1.m.• UCI 1'1'9111 YI. Ca! Sl~lt L-8eiflCtl, •• ha<M, l :U p,m,
Tll!!r~dfy, 09(, 30-UCI '·V1r1!fy vl,
Clllc1to St1t1, 11 """"*· t 1 m.•
tUCI ll\ldtnh. Ir"-Oll>tf llUdl11t1 15
cttt1. R\11t1 11.M.
••Sf\lclt!lts f l, 9dulf1 tl.
l11Mnt
SllUl"tliY," Dtc. t-.UCI' In M1u1 Ncn•
v1rsl1Y· Event ti Cal Sti lt L-1-. •
S.tt;OUy Ind Sufllllv. • Ott. II i nd
1'-'JCI In C~rl1tmt1 llttt1tt1, San
DI-.
.1-.••
SAVE*3
• Monlll'f·WH~1v, Dec. 27·1'-UCt
l'ioll In Sw~ krln 51'11tlds. "'1tw-1 ••td'I.
Tl>ur.-n 11111 Ffi41y, '0.C, XI t!id
Jl-UCI Ill Grant S..r~1. NtwPGr~
811c11,
Lt!CTUllEI I.ND SEMINARS
WICIM>dl9, 0.C. 1-NEW 01•1!.C•
TIONS IN Tl!l.CHl!ll t!OUCATION. GeorH Gu1!1llClll, 111. cu I. v I
1t<rf11rY. M111 , Ctmmfl1lo.. "" Teach .. Preo1,Ullln 1rM1 Llc1n1!M1.
'Ea1•n1lon t4l•IH en "'IHIWI ln EOWC1!1011") \O) Pl\VllCll S(ltricll. T·
10. 11.m. Adml•1lon J.! •
A SUMMl.NG uP-LA U.L T I MA P.ir.LAlllll., J1c~ Hood Vt.,.,,n,
form•• 11l'i1t1nl sctrf!1rv, L•tln l.mtrlun att1lr1. U S. OIP1rtm111I of
Slt\e. (E,1pn1lon l•rle• on "Tiit
01111!" lwentv l.mo•ll;11 TO<NY.''1 111
1-lU"l•nllltl Hill. 1-10 pm. Adm!HIOll U.50.·
01111.NGE COU"TV T Ill El.TM ENT
FAC U ... 1TjE$, Wtllitm Dooley, llr~·
t
Cord,.uroy J·ackets for Boys
Regular '16.99
1or. ••v•rlY M•nor Al«itioU1m
PrMr.,.,1 Wiiiiam Btk••r. dlrKlot,
S....-1 (H1llW•f HoOM !or Minh
G~n wrrent, c!1~11 NV<holoel1I,
Mllrolll)lllln Slllt H 0 I p 11 I I
1lc-Uwn w1rd, 1/\d Swlvla 5Wft'11Y,
Bo•rd ot DJrepora Th• VII!•
CHtltwtr f.loue !or Wom111!. ILtll
ol E•t1111lon $t•lt1 on "Trt1tment ol
AicOllol Alltl't ... ! 10t PllV1l c11
klttK ... 7-101.rn. Adnllilltll '4.?$.0
ThurMl•Y, Cle. 2-SYMMETllY PAIN·
CIPLES IN PHYSICS, T, O. L,.,
Cnlumbl• U11!v•r1Hw •-sored DY
0..rtn .. nl of Ph~1lc1. 101 P.l\YllC1J
.sc~rice1, t p.m.
'THE MIDDLE CU.SS ANO lHE LAW,
• CoMIG D\11\Nl'I, l....,.f, Orlntt Cou11-
ly Ht rbor Mon!c/""I Court, Co1lt
M•••· fE1l1n1lon 11rltt on '0Thl
l.mlri(•n Mlddlt CltH:. h Thert I su ... 1 M•lorl!v?"! 111 Mum1nlr!11 Hill, ,.,;($ p.m: Adm•HIDn 115.•
Frld11'. O«. l-l.PPlll:OACHE$ TO AT·
TENllO", No rm an Wfll\btrtrr •
auoclll• pr(lln-of p1ythobiolotY.
l
UCI, -i.ortll b'I Df111rlmllll1 ol
P1yct\Ofllofo9Y, 160 Sltlnl)lut Htll, 4 ··"'·
l tGNl.L TRl.NSOUCTION ON THI!
MOLt'.CUU..111: i. E VE L , Max
O.lbrucl\i Jll'OltslOf" of bloiorr. C1(
Ttch, IPGnlOfftl b'f OIP1rlm•nt ol Dew'°""•"''' ind Ctll 11e1otv. UT S,_riltua Hill, 4 ,.m, • • Molld1~. DK. '-HOSPITAL TREAT· MEHT 'OF DIFFICULT OIA•ETEI,
Gr1111 Gw!no;p, d'lllf ol f11dOCrinolotY.
UCI, $110nlO•td. bl'· Ofllct ol (111-
llnuln1 Mldl(ll .Ed11tlllor1, Challm1n
~r1I HOIPll1!, Dr,•-· l!;lD-1 :lCI p,m.. ...
FLIGHT PHY'SIOlOGY Of' ,lvlNG
• FOXl!S -I. llROGllE» Rl!POlll:T,
Roter • C1rP1n.,..., CIPlrtmt111 ol
Blo!My, I an Ole.., Sl1!t, ..,...._,.o·
by . OIMr1mtnl ct f'-l1llon , 1rMI EnvlrOf!ITllfltjll l loloty. 167 Sltlnll1u1
Hall,' .......
. MOllLE HOME Pl.l!_KS, L-n 1.., 80991, 1'1<1.-r, TCIWlr 11t11tty Co.,
• Cotton corduroy wi_µi.sears
exclusive Tri-I.obeJ pile
collar and lining
• Machine washable
• Handsome Western rancher
style
1397
• Faslllon colors ... sizes 6 to 12
Boys' a11dS111t!ents' Dept.
Women's and
Girls' Cushiony
Soft Fuzzy
Slippers
47
•· •lxf:l 10 fit
women and 1irl1
These pliish and dainty slip-
pers feel cozy ""rm. Fleecy
uppers of shaggy acrylic
pile. Padded soles. Inatrrac-
tive col ors.
S4Jl.E '21\Ien's Work Oxfords
··Soft glove-leather uppers with
moc-<ee 1titching . Regular ~12.99
•N~prenecre~solesandbeels 1097 re11stgrease, 011 ,
• Men'ssizes in spice can •
SA.VE '2 Men's Work Shoes
•Neoprene crepe soles
and heels resistgease,oil
•Soft glovt -Jeather uppcn
with m oc-toc stitching
• J tl'S)5i'le tan; mcn"s sizes
R•gular$14.99 1297
S-'VE '2 Men's Work Boots
Regular $16.99 Neoprene crepe rubber sole
at1d heel steel &hank, nylo o.
Jock 1tirchin& on sole res ists
r1 •. a i'!'ke1 high. In s.pice ran. 1497,
• •
Sturdy neopre ne
rubber aolet.
' '
,
Mdtli, • !;'ll!t'I P1r1t 1!Wntrn.nt1, • Pm'*"· tl,,111 of E••-i.n 111r1n • Oii "C-clel •Nf •-tmt111
P......,,ln.''I 101 !'JIYsklt Sd1tnt•,
1 1-t:• •. m. Aoml~loll w.•
Tllftd1y, Oec. 7-Pl.TtEHT IN l.N
l!MOTfONAL ClllSlf, Phil .11111...nr, dl11lc1I lflllruttor, Ot!>irlmtnl' o!
PIYCM•lrv ~ Hllmll'I ..... vlor,
UCJ, -bY Oftlct Df CM-ll1111llli Midi I Ed11Ullon. Cha.mall G1~1I Hqil.PfllJ, Orlnflt, lt:lt-l:JO
.~.
Pi-fY,IOLOGY OF THE l"ULMONl.RY
CIRCULATION, A. Frlnklfn TYrfllr, , ••atft-Df rlCIJOloto'f, U 5 C, --ltd bt' Clplflmlnl o I llldlololllul Scllnta 1r<d A'11lon11
MMICll Proer•m. llMllolotY CM-
ll•itne• R_.,,, le(Ot'llil 11_., a u11c11111
lo. Or•ntt, County Mt-dlul Cfflt11r,
4:lCI ,1m.
Wt'Cll'lftdw; 04-t. A-CLASSROOM AC-
COUNT ABILITY IN ACTION, Jim
Mc:DOMld, .,..,rnttndlnt, Ftllbroak
Hltll SChOGI Dl$1rlet. IL11t of E1-
ttnllclll ... 111 on "IHUl5 In Ed\ICI·
l!Ol'l."I 101 """1k 1I $t1tne:tl, 1•10
p.m. Admlu lon U.•
Tl'>u<"tday, Dec. ,_A I USIHESSMAN'S
Vll!W, Johft 11111, 11r111ck11I, David
• 1 ..... lrla, CLall IOI EllltlUJoft Mtl11
on "Tha Am1•lc111 Mlcldlt Claoa: 11 · Th.r1 a • Siient Mlo lorllYl") 111
H1>mt11111K Htll. 1.f:.:I p . m ,
Adml»IOfl ~·. I
Frlcl1y, DK. li>-THE l'llOSPECTS
F 0 R A SUPE!RCONDUCTlNO
TECH NOLOGY, Dcwwold N.
LI'"'"'°'''' u" IVlrJI ,.., ol
P9""'"1v1nl1 •Ill! c.i T • c ti ,
--"' bY DtNrtme111 el P11yalc1. IOol Phyalc1I S.dl<ICH. J 11.m.
M011111v, DK. ll -Of'FICE MAN.\GE·
MENT 01' DIAIETl!S, W11l1y H.
Gttr, cllnlc11 1ult11nt,_ F1mllv
Mldkl.-Proer1m. UCI, -n.arld bY OfUce of Gon!l...;1119 M9dlc1I
Ed11C1lloll. Chum•" G I " I r I •
HMp1i.t, Or1ne1, 12:»1:» ,,m.
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MEDICINE, iltOlllMY WISll-. 111l1-l1nt cll11lc1I ,,,, ...... , U C' I ,
-HI by Oltlc1 ol Ccin1Jno;l11t
MICllCll Educlllon. C~111n1111 Ge111r1I
Holl'lltl, Or1nM, U;:ID-l :lCI p,m.
ULTl't.ASOUNO Cl.11011.C
011.GMOSl ICS, Gtol"N R, L_lcl,
1u t11111t ctlnk1I IH"Ofeuor ·61 rldlolot'f, lK Seti ·Dino. _, _ _.,
bY 0.PlflllWlll of ilt9'llOl09Y Ind
llHloll11 Mecllc:•I l"rc1r1m. A1cllolotY
Conferenc1 llOOfl"I. ll(Dnd Uoar.
llullcll111 10. OrlnH Cou11ty Mldlc11
Citntu, (:lQ p.m.
AIOENEllGETICS, 511nltY ICeltm•n, w .. 1 C1111t dirKtor. lllo-E,..rt eUt
ll'IUllUll . Cl.Ill ol E•lt l'la!On 11rl91 on
"$urvtv of "" !'kw Tlltta1ti11.") L«tura H•ll. 1·10 p.m. Adml11lo11
~.·
Frld1v, O.C. 11-1.LCOHOL AND
1111.tN MACR OMOl.ECULl.111:
METl.80LISM, Er11nt Hob 11,
1S10Clll1 "'°'""-OI p1y(lloblolo11v
1nd llum1n mor1>11ol09y, U C I ,
1...:ni.ored bv CtPlr!mtnt I I
PIYO>OblolotY. 1.0 $11lflf11U1 H1H, 4 •••
Moncltv, 0-.:. 2G -CHI LOH OO D
011.8E"TES, fdWttd J. TomlOYI(.
clinlct1 11roltllOI', DeJ11ttm1n1 nl
Ptdlatr!c1. UC I, 11>0111ored by 01.flct of C011ll""'!nt MH!Ul Eductllon.
Ch11>man G•nertl Hosl'll1I, Or1nH, U:»l;JO p.m.
TuffilaY, Otc:. 21-NEW TRENDS I"'
CI. II 0 I I. C ROENTGE;NOLOGY,
Hi•old D. S,_, 1dlund ln1tr~ctpr of
r•dlology, UCLI. CitnMr tor tn• Hellllt Scl'1>Cn; lllthard J. SIK~e10 111i111"r prOltH<lr ol r1alolotYo UCLI. Canter tor Ille HetUll $dffl(.n,
and Cll•rle1 T. Don", Pf'Clffl••it nr r.tOIO~"l\IV, U11lver~lty ol Cre11n11
Mtdltel Sclloal, N>on$0ted by O!Plrt•
Mt~! OI ll1dlolo11lc•I Sclenctl ~nd
Rf'lllonel Meclkll Pr09r1m. A1dlOl011t
Con!er~nce llown, MCClllCI floor.
Bul laln11 10, .Or•n11 CounlY Mldlclf
Center. 4:>0 pm. ·
•uc1 1tudtnt1. 11cuuv 1nc1 1t1U 11.21.
CUT'17.46
Sears 126 Easi-Load Camera
Was$34.95
Elecuic ere 126 camera. Just
drop in the Easi-Ioad cartridge,
aim and shoot. Fast F;2.8 lens.
Uses 4.~hot !Whcubes.
·1749
Camtrd D1p1.
A.1kA.bou1Soori
Con1'enie~
Cro~t Pla.1
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SAVE50c
Acrilan
Yarn
Regular Sl.59
•Machine washable,
dryable
"Garments knit of ac-
rilan keep thei r
shape and fi e
• 4 .oz . 4 ply pull
skeins in vibran t
colors.
SAVEs20
14-Ft. Rock-Solid
Gym Set
Regular $69.99
4999
•Full 7-ft. l ong gal-
vanized bed slide
•~-fade of 2-in. diameter
tubular steel
• Sturdy support of 8 legs
CUT'lOO
8-Ft. Championship
Pool Table
\Vas~399
• Moulded cushinns; .lami-
nated top rails
• Comes \\•ith cues, bills, tri·
angle, and chalk,
7·Ft. Holiday Pool Table_$99
(HRISTMAS SHOPPING HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 :30 A.M. TO 9 P.M ... SUNDAY I I A.M. TO 6 P.M. -FREE PARKING!
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OccldPer "' • Oct dP P1J 60 O<:cldP plJ 16 0 9<k'nCP 1\q OVGefl l>fl II O•uaE.<111 5• 0~!1 GE ! J• Olo.GE 1>•11 g·~GE pf t:1 k 1~u. t 2• 81 Cor11 M
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DAJLY PILOT J l~
Complete Closing Prices-Ainerican Stoel{ Exchange List
S•ltl 111
(h41 I Hl1h ltw Cl111 Cnt S1!11 nt
lha1 J Hlth Low Clon Chi S• t i 1141
(hdl I Hlth Low CLo1t (ht
•
S1ltl lltl
111111 ) Hit Lew CltM (M
11111 ...
01111.I HI• Ltw c-.. tsr.
Phone
6424321
For
Weekender
Advertising
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Stud11 Set
Batti~ W orki"rg
·on Saving W~t·e r
Toilets which use too much water for
flWlhin.g are the newest target of
Chairman of the Board of Supervisors
Robert Ballin.
. Battin has triggered a study by the
County BUiiding and Safety Department
of a proposed plumbing code change
which would JM;nnlt water closets with a
flushing capacity of less than four
gallons. He said there are such products
on the market today.
Battin says the pr9posal would sa ve 25
percent of the water now used and even·
tually cut sewer construction costs by the
·same percentage.
chief deputy engineer rot the Orange
County San itation Districts. He said t~e
average American fam ily of four uses 881
gallons of ~·ater a week just to flush their
toilets .
He argues that about one·lhird, or 293
gallons could be Conserved with any one
of several new water sav ing devices on
the market .
Lewis adds that such toilets, plus
newly-designed shower heads an~ water
faucets·could save from 110 to 125 gallons
per household per da y in the county.
He admits selling the ideas lo
developers and homeo~·ners will. be ~if·
ficult but suggests a money.saving and
ecology approach. .
• •
Novelist Balks
At Fillinr. Out
New Program Approvea
Censu~ Papers Liais o1i Co nimittee ina1ly E11ds-1fJ"Tnonth -Silence
\', I
~ LONDON {AP) -Novelisl Alan SllUtoe The liaison committee made up of programs run by U~ cities after sctiool.
was fined $t2 for refusing to complete hia Newport.Meu trustees .and ,councilmen Under the plan, ~sts of t~e pilot pr?"
1971 census form. '\ -gram will be shared on a 4.l).40..2<1 bastJ
"Anyone who couJd arford to pay the !rom both Newport Beach and Costa bet\\·een Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and
Jine but rilled in the form must-have the M~ ha.s ended an7Jl-~th sllenct. The the d_i!trlct, respectively.
soul of a slave,'' he told newsmen. body has okayed a pilot after-school smallv>'ood snid fhe school ,property will ·
· Sillitoe, author of ''Saturday Night and sports program, recommended a joint be offered to allow flag football . cross
1 Sunday Morning" and "'J'he Looellness o( Costa Mesa-district wareix>use be built country bnsketball ' and track p,,;grams
the Long Distonce Runner, .. gave hiJJ 1ge and ls c<>nsidering possible joint actions to be st'arted
as 101 on the fortQ last April. He is 43. on bike trails. The w 8 r; h 0 use recommendation,
Prosecutor Richard Flower told the In a report to the school district board echoed in an earlier pre.senta~ion to the
court Sillitoe also filled Jn the names of Tuesday night, liaisori member Donald board made by Superintendent John w.
his wife, poetess Ruth Fainlight, his two Smallwood, Nev.rport·Mesa trustee fron1 Nicoll, would possibly provide 1 facility
children and himself. but left the re st of Costa Mesa, Suggested the long-dormant at the district's Baker Street site in Costa the form blank. cOmmi ttee w..s assuming a new... -tho I ded 'II d t Id th leadershi'p role. Mesa that would be used by both the city Jue au r pea gu1 Yan o e and school district. court : "This Census form was an in-The sports program, deveioped in the
terrogation on paper. The information committee, would provide two school The school board will consider a final
seemed far in excess·of what oughl to be sites -Rea in Costa' Mesa aad Lincoln recommeodalion on lhe plan during its
The bike trails con11de~tf0n,
Smallwood said, resulted from 111Udenlo
teacher presentation made to the --,chool
board two weeks ago by 1 11-roup ot~bic.Y·
cle enthusiasts from Corona dtl \lit
High Schi>ol.
Smallwood carri'ed their data. rorw1nt
to the li alson committee which U in·
terested in coordinating planning ,tOr blke
trails that could serve' recrc,lional need!
and provide safe bike paths to 5Chools.
The Costa Mesa attorney reported that
considera\ion of a performing arts ffcili·
ty by the joint city.(listrlct committee
had produced no concllJiSive recOm·
mendalions. •
given." . in Newport Bea~h -for ,ricreational Dec. 14 meeling.
The census form asked such questions
as the number of cars each family had
and whe\her ii had a kitchen sink, a bath
or·a shower. Protests were widespread.
"I'm not sure the school district i! tht
prope r en tity to carry forward 1 the need
for ~ueh a facllitf," Smallwood said.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE tEN THE WARM & .COZY PLACE
The proposed code change would not
mean that homeowners all over the coun-
ty would Qave to rip out their: toilets, bul
BatUn said he wants lhe fOl!r·gallon re-
quirement written into the law as man·
datory later.
Lewis said the al'erage consumer does
not wao·m up to the mon~y·s3'ing angle Berg111an Weds Sixth
today because water rate structur~s e.n-
courage maximum use of water. It ts drf-STOCKHOLM AP) -Ing ma r
Saturdays in
The DAILY PILOT
To Shop
hutb Coast t>Jaza
Most toilets now in vogue use abou t 10
gallons of water according to Ray Lewis,
ferent in Europe he points out . where Bergman, Sweden's famous movie and
higher rates are impo.s~ed~~fo:r~i=nc:r:ea:sed:_•~t~ag~eJd~ir~e~ct:o~r,~h="~bee=•~m:ar:r:i•~d~f:or~th:•J:::::::::=~====tL=:::=~:~===========~====:~~~~~~:== waler usage. . _ sixth time. -
Thailand Premie r
Upholds Reputation
By The Associated Press
Premier Th a no m Kit·
tikachorn announced more
than a year ago that he was
tired of political buslle and
wanted to quit public life to
rest at his beach house.
The aanouncement seemed
appropriate for the mild .
elegant ,Thai leader. He had
built a reputation as a con-
ciliator, a smooth diplomat
whose trump is a talent for
patching political cracks.
Thanom's bold stroke
Wednesday dissolving parlia·
menl. suspending the con·
stitution and a s s u m i n g
absolute power -showed
Youngster
P erfects
Own Crime
~
NEW YORK (UPI ) -By
the Ume he was 6 years old,
George Santiago had perfected
his purse-snatching technique.
M his attorney described it.
he would stand between the
cars of a subway train and
grab a purse as the train sped
away from the station.
Last Nov. 30, at the Nevin
Street Station in Brooklyn,
Santiago reached out from the
moving train and grabbed a
young woman 's purse. Bul
Regina L. Graham. 2 0 ,
Brooklyn . v.•ould not let go.
Screaming and grappling to
keep her purse as the train
picked up speed. she stumbled
. and fell between the cars.
Although the conductor pull·
ed the emergency brake. the
train had crushed her legs and
pelvis. and Miss Graham died
of her injuries 10 days later.
Sant iago was arrested by
detecti ve Daniel Hattendorf. a
man who first had arrested
Santiago for purse-snatching
in the subway when he was
eight. This week. an all-male
jury in Brooklyn supreme
courl found Santi ago guilly of
murder in liliss Graham 's
death.
Before his ~rrest in li1 i~s
GrHhams' case. &1n\i;ig0 had
apent two years in custody for
purse·snatchinl'!.
He once told a state
ps,vchiatrisl. ''I roh and I rob
and I rob and I rob and the
next day I go out and rob
again."
Defense Atlorney ?\1 yron
Beldock pleaded in his sum·
maUon to the jury lh:it Sa n·
tlai:to should be found not
J?Uilly b.v reason of in sanity.
He said the youth's com·
pulsion to steal was inJ!ra ined
and beyond his power to con·
tml.
The judge or4l'red Sanli aJ!n
remanded to jail lo await
sentencing, for which he set no
date. ·
another side of the 60-year-old
field marshal. He can be
tough.
In fact, Thanom is no
stranger to military rule. An~
his experience with the Thai
legislature has been thorny
! rom the start.
Thanom first took over as
premier in 1958. He was the
protege of Field P.1arsha1 Sarit
Thanarat, a personal friend
who had just grasped power in
a military coup.
But within less than a year
fierce infighting between
pol itical fac tions tumbled his
government and Sarit had to
step back in with martial rule.
Thanom remained near the
center of power as Sarit 's
deputy. and when the field
marshal died five years later
he returned as premier.
Observers say Thanom's se·
cond round in the leader's
chair has been buttressed with
support from the 1 rm y.
Thanom continued the
military rule of his
predecessor until 1969, when a
consti tution was proclaimed
and parliament reinstituted.
Throughout his premiership
Thanom has been a firm ally
or the United States and an
enthusiastic backer of U.S.
policies in Indochina. He once
called the conflict in Vietnam
a strllggle ''between those
bent on expansionism and ex·
tension of domination, and
those who are not prer;iared to
submit."
Thanom, whose own country
has been troubled by in-
surgents in the north, believes
Communist China lies behind
persistent guerrilla b a n d s
throughout the region .
"A cessation of hostilities in
Indochina will not change that
policy." he told a n in·
lerviev.·er.
Backing up his wo rds .
Th anom dispatched a divis ion
of Thai soldiers to aid the
United States in South Viet-
nam \\'ith U.S. financial sup-
plrt.
Thanom 's relationship with
the army come~ naturally. lie
v.•as a stud ent at the P.lilitary
Academy at B:ingkok and rose
quickly lhrough the· military
ran ks to become commander
of the tst Ann}~ Corps near
Bangkok before en le r i n g
politics.
The premie. "'as born Aug.
II, 1911, the son of a civil i;cr·
\'ant in a country village. lie
still lives v.·ith rural ni odesty.
and not even hi s detractors
act'use hin1 of di~honesty.
Thanom enjoys doing l he
graceful Thai dance, th e
Ramwong, during his time
3\vay fr om poli!ics. lie sprnds
as much tin1e with his family
as his duties pern1it -often in
lhe beach house 70 miles fro1n
Ba ngkok.
"The kingdom of Thailnnd ls
one counlrv lh:i l has nevrr
lus t her freedom and in·
.todependrnce," he is fond of
lclling his listeners.
COMPLOE
THANKSGIVI NG
DINNER
ADULTS ...........•.......
CHILDRE~ .... .' ... '. .......
$3.95
$2.00
Also S.rving Our Rt{lular Menu
RESERVATIONS REQUESTED -
3901 E. Co111t Hwy.
CORONA DEL MAR
675-0900
•
· ·0ur new28o SE 4.5 costs
almost three times as much as the''average''car.
I
But we think there are 10,oooAmericans
who can appreciate the difference.
The average car buyer could be taken aback at
the price of our new Mercedes-Benz 280SE 4.5.
At over $10,000, it is not only \Veit abo,·e
average, it is some $2,500 more expensive than
the highest pl·iced domestic luxury srdan.
Whetllcr it's \vorth that difference to you
may be ans"•cred only by '''hat you expect of a
motorcar.
The 280SE 4.5 is a touring sedan in the best
European tradition.
,,.!>esigned to provide every mot oring com·
fort for a parry of five. And enginetrrd to cope
\\·itll driving situations 1h:it \'3ry from lhe de-
scending swirchb:icks of an Alpine pass to the
100 mph cruising speeds of an Autobahn.
A concept so different from th al guiding the
design of a domestic "luxury" car that Mercedes·
Benz engineers used the NUrburgring racing
circui1 as its final testing ground.
Its engine is unlike any built in America. An.
overhead-cam, fuel-injected 4.5 liter V-8.
T
I
It has no carburetor. Instead, a computer
monilors engine speed and lood, temperature
and altitude, then electronic:illy meters furl to
each cylinder. 11li! more precise method of fuel
drli\'ery provides high-speed touring capabili1y
\Vith the greatest possible efficiency.
The fully indepe ndent suspension was de-
signed for nils and bends, not just boulevards
and turnpikes. It's so rood,vorthy, Road& Trark
coruends 1hat "no domestic luxury sedan is even
in the same ballpark:' .
· And to match its performance abilities,
Mercedes-Benz engineers have equipped it with
four pou·er·assisted disc brakes, ventilated in
front to resist fading.
The result is an automobile that performs
\\•ith equal ~plombon the 174 curves of Nilrburg ..
ring, or the unwavering ribbon of a thruway.
And an automobile that is f urlhcr cndoy,·ed
wilh almost every comfort. Power brakes and
steering. Electric windows. N r conditioning and
tinted glass. Electrically heated rear.window: An
AM-FAi rcc:civcr. Even a central locking systent
that secures a11 four doors; the truak and ev~.
the gas port at 1he touch of a button.
In addiLion to the 280SE 4.5, Mercedes--
Bero: builds t\VO other V-8 touring sedans in simi-·
larly miniscule quanLilies.
The 280SEL 4.5 ;, ;dcntical 1othcSEcxccpt
that it is longer. Longer in the Mercedes-Benz
sense -an increase of four inches that is trans-:
lated directly into rear-sca t leg room.
The 300SEL 4.5 adds air suspension to the
.li~t or pc.rformancc.fe:nurcs u1i1vailablc On any
r domestic au1omobil~. L ·. ~ _
In iota!, these tllrcc hi~h·Jlerformancetour
ing sedans will account for less than one of evr:ri
400 cars sold in the United States this year.
.Jf you can accept a ·carr that ®
"diff crent;' take a thorough test drive.
Discove r the real differences in a car · ·
built to be the best-not the bc3t.. ·
Mercedes-Benz of North Am.erica
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• Ow JlO,~-~inl aedt.n at the Nurbu(gnng, where for twC':JQ'-fil'C days Mcrcedes·Bcru en11nccr1 tnlff it lib 11 heiD&c.r.
Jim Slemons Imp orts, Inc. i20 w. Wuncr Avenu•, Santa Ana, California 92707 Phone: 714-546-4114
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s DAIL V PJL01' :J
Good Old Brews Losing Heads as Years Pass'
WASHINGTON fUPJ) -Like nostalgic like most or the others that lost their
beer drinkers everywhere , federal an-heads since 1961.
tilrust investigators are wondering Also gone, among others. are been
whatev~r happened to some of the grand with such fascinating names a s
old braDds of brew that vanished during Griesedieck Brothers of SL Louis. Tad·
recent yea rs. caster of Worcester. ~1ass.. My Beer
In 1860, the year the Civil \Yar began. of Omaha, Neb .. Wee-Willy of 1.1arathon,
there were 1,2ti9 breweries in the United Wis., Old Shay of . Baltimore, IZ Horse
States. Today, there are one-fifteenUt of Rochester, N.Y., Silver Bar of Tampa,
as many. Fla., Mug of Cincinnati, Ohio and Kinpyo-
Since 1934, the number of brewing Masamune of Honolulu. '\
firms shrunk from 725 to 76. Civic pr ide failed to keep Butte Beer
It's all in the name of progress -of Butte, Mont., or Old Reading of
which was, incidentall y. a brand of beer Rei!ding, Pa., aUoat , and school spirit
that went off the market during the -wasn't strong enough to keep Harvard
past 10 years. Progress was quaffed Beer of Willimuseu. h1ass .. from tak·
in Oklahoma and Texas, a regional brand ing a spill. The U.S. Senate lives -
Justice Unit
Short on Top
Paid Women
WASHINGTON (UPll .-The Justice
Department has 41 ,742 employes who
earn $15,000 or more a year ; but only
243 of them are women.
The department turned up that stalistic
during a review of its female staff
prompted by Administration orders to
all government departments and agencies
to find more women for top jobs.
Three of the highest paid women in
the department work for FBI Director
J . Edgar Hoover, including Miss Helen
W. B~ndy, 7Q, who earns between $32,546
ahd $36,000 yearly as Hoover's executive
assistant.
Hoover, 76, earris $42.500 and his senior
staff of II assistant directors earn ap-
proximately $,16,000. The other two
women, described as H o o v e r ' s
administrative assistants, are Dorothy
Skillman and Edna r.t Holm es. They
and fi ve other women in the justice
departmenl are "grade 16·' in the govern-
ment pay scale, meaning they earn
between $28,129 and $35,633 a year.
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and most of its members aren't advent:
to an occasional drink -But Stnale Beer
of Washington, D.C. is Jong gone.
Meantime. the big national brands have
swallowed more and more of the market.
Americans quail about four billion
gallons of beer a year, an average
or 18.6 gaill®~ !or every man. woman
and child. According to Oppenheimer
& Co., an investment firm , Anheuser·
Busch (Budwieserl and Schiltz shared
about 20 percent of the market in 1965,
30 per cent in 1970 and may reach
40 percent by 1972.
"Over time, the -national brewers will
continue to grow larger whUe the weak
regional and local brewers will continue
'
-~
, ' ,,
...,.. ,
Two Headed Baby
,
on the path of decline and pass into
oblivion," 1aid Burham and Co., another
investment firm, in 11169. ,
U Is thlJ iund that bas caught tbe
attention of anUtruat enforcers al the
Federal Trade Commission. The com·
mission ls investigating allegations that
big brewers may be illegally muscling
small ones through "predatory pricing''
-the deliberate use of below-cost pricing
to force competitors into the rtd and
out of the market. 1
Pearl of Texas sued ]Jst summer,
charging that Anheuser·B.u$Ch and Schlitz
were conspiring with their distributors
to drive Pearl and other small sudsers
out of business lhroUgb ' ' i 11 e g a I
' ,,. ' l •
!
\
Ul'I TtlfP"'!f tloover will not permit women lo be
FBI agents because of the alleged danger
but is currently being sued by a woman
to relax that rule. And there al so are
no women U.S. marshals. But the Bureau
of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs
receritly swore in its first female
narcotics agent.
Pakistani housewife Noor Jehan, 35, '"'ho already
has given birth to five normal children, recently
gave birth to this two.headed male in Nazimabad
Hospital. The infant, reported behaving normally,
has a 'single heart and solitary cardiovascular sys-
tem for the entire body.
, The five women who ha.Ve the same
grade 16 status as Hoover's "office
assistants'' include Beatrice Rosenberg.
chief of the appellate section of the
crimina l division. whose name was
among those recently mentioned as possi·
ble nominees for the Supreme Court.
Others ar~ MargareJ, BraSJ, a senior
trill attorney in the antitutrst division;
Virginia McLaughlin, Warden 0£ the
Alderman, (W.·Ya .) federal women 's
penitentiary ; Joanne E. Clarke. deputy
warden of the Terminal Island federal
pen itentiary: and f.1 rs. ttfarge Curet,
deputy direetor of the southeastern
region of the community relations
service.
The Justice Deparimeni has 9,687
employes who are grade 12 and above.
Six Women
Break Jail,
Out in Cold
PLYt.10UTH, f...1ich. (UPI) -Six
female prisoners clad only in underwear
escaped from the Detroit House of Cor-
rection Sunday. and remained al large
today. •
Wa yne County Undersheriff Loren
Pitzman said he believed the escape
was well planned -including perhaps
a getaway car.
"If not, there are six pretty cold
gals out there." he said.
The si x women. all from De!roit. and
under age 24. were t~ansferred from
the \Vayne County Jail last month. while
the county fail undergoes court-ordered
renovation.
Pittman said the escape occurred early
Sunday after one of the women jimmied
the door Jock of her room and released
the others from their rooms. He said
the escapees sawed through thick .wire
screen in a window with a hacksaw
blade. apparenUy smuggled into th~
prison. and jumped 18 feet to the groun'd.
The women, a'A•aiting trial on -charges
ranging from murder to larceny. left
their civilian clothes in the prison and
:shed their prison smocks. which were
found by prison officials not king after
the escape.
They ...climbed a IO-foot barbed wire
fence and Oed. in chilly. 34-degree
temperatures.
Yorty Assails
•
Nixon Policies
t.1ANCHESTER. N.H. !UPI I -Mayor
Sam Yorty of Los Angeles has criticized
the Nixon administration's economic
policies ln his first visit to the state
as an announced candidate for the 1972
Democratic presidenlial nomination.
Yorty, in a one-day . swing through
the site of the nation's first presidential
primary P.1arch 7, told newsmen Phase n of the President's fiscal stabilization
program was no more than a "holding
operation until the t!rt': elections."
"There bas been no real effort to
t :(plaln any long tenn plan and many
are wondering if Jb.e e'conomy will ever
tealll be health)' again' ancr so much
polfffi:al inlerrertnct," Yorty said Satuf'o
day.
Crash Can't
Delay Stork
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)
A fiery three-car collision here Sun-
day wasn't enough to stop a Des
Moines couple from keeping an
appo intment with the stork.
John and Carole Grupp were in·
volved in th e collision white en
route to a local hospi tal so t.1rs.
Grupp could have a baby.
They crawled from the burning
wreckage of their car:, left their
name and address with others in-
volved in the wreck and flagged
down a passing motorist who rush-
ed them to the hospital.
A daughter was born to the cou.
pie two hours later.
Chamber Parley
Slated in _Laguna
LagWla Beach planning Commissioners
will continue their pefsual of the General
Plan in a 7:30 p.m. study session today,
examining the land U!ie and circulation
elements of the document.
After hearing a number of speakers
air their views on the queslion of con-
trolling future density by :zoning, the
commission deferred action on the land
use element at its last meeting, but
is expected to recommend a revised
text to the city council nt its Dec.
6 meeting, on the basis of tonighrs
discussion .
Also on the agenda for study arc
proposed guidelines for architectural
review throughout the city.
Split Reclamation U11it,
Advisory Body to Meet
tn a 4-3 split vote last week, directors
of the South East Regional Reclamation
Authority (SERRA) voted to meet with
members of the San Juan Basin Advisory
Commi ttee lo discuss the status of
ground waters in the area.
The meeting is also expected to shed
some light on where SERRA will stand in
terms of management or ground waters
whl'n an active program of water
reclamation is undertaken.
.. I don't see why SERRA shoul d be in-
lere sted in this." commented Angus
Smith. Dana Point Sanitary District
• representative to the authority. "\Ve
should be talking to the purveyors of the
waters in this area, if SERRA is going to
be reclaiming and sell ing water.''
Carl l<ymla, ti.1oulton Niguel \Valer
District representative. pointed out that
five of the seven SERRA members
furn ish water in addition to treating
sewage.
•·1 don't th ink we should shut the door
on ourselves in terms of taking an active
rol e in the use of reclaimed water in this
area," Kym!a stressed.
T. J . Meadows, San Juan Capistrano
public works directo r, said he agreed
with Smilh. "SERRA ha s no vested inter-
esl i11 ground water rights. I think we 're
getting away from what SERRA is su~
posed to be."
San Clemente representative Phil Peter
said SERRA should "closely watch" the
reclamation picture. "When you're look-
ing at rec lamation, those who are putting
it (sewage) in should see what 's coming
out."
Ray Wood side of the Santa Ana Mts.
Water District commented, "SERRA can
reclaim water, but it cannot manage lhe
groundwaters of this basin."
The discussion over SERRA's role in
managing ground water came during a
presentation of phase one of a Water
Reclamation Study, prepared by Don
Martinson of Lowry Engineering-Science.
Martinson recommended that SERRA
"act as a regional facility and make ef·
nuent available to some othir agency for
reuse. I think SERRA is the one agency
which should control the reclaimed water
in the basin."
A motion by Smith to take "no action
at this time" on the recommendation
passed 4-3. Later Kymla presented a m<r
lion asking for the meeting with the San
Juan committee. It passed. Smith,
h-teadows and Woodside voted against it.
Kymla recalled Wednesday that the
committee was created two years ago ·by
the county board of supervisors and the
state Department o( Water Resources to
explore the possibility of using San Juan
Basin water for consumption and
recharging underground basin waters
with reclaimet.: water. "The coramittee
has completed its report and it can be
done," Kymla said.
Kymla noted that an important factor
for Serra to consider is bringing water
from the northern part of the state to the
basin as opposed to using Colorado River
water.
Marines Extend 90 Days
"The stcte has several requirements
regarding the amount of total dissolved
solids allowed in water before it can be
put back in the ground." he said.
"Colorado River water has 750 parts per
million and after it goes through the
sewer treatment plants it has 1100 parts
per million." Water from the north has
between 300 and 500 parts per million, he
.!laid. and thus would be better suited to
"recharge" ground)Vaters after treat.
ment in sewer plants.
Two other recommendations in
Martin.son's report urged SERRA to seek
northern waters for the San Juan Area as
well as keeping a close watch on the
amount of dissolved solids in all sewer ef·
fluents. Blacl{ Sergeant's T«?ur
Some o~f.<fuly paper work by his white
comrades won last-minute reprieve from
discharge for a blacbMarine sergeant al
Camp Pendleton who needs three more
years in the corps to gel a ZO-year
pension.
The sergeant. Hilton L. !tart, 38, was
scheduled to be di.'K'.harged Saturday
after 17 yea rs in the Marines, two of
them in Vietnam.
Camp Pendleton authorities had no of-
ficial statement on the case. but a
spokesman said, "somewhere down the
line, one of Sgt. Hart's old commanders
apparently ttiought his performance was
so marginal that his re-enlistment was
not reCommend ed."
Hart, who won the base's ~1arine of the
Month award earlier this year. brought
the matter to the attention of an in-
vestigator for the Congressional Blaek
Caucas who wa5 here earUtr this week to
look into racial affairs at the camp.
ApparenUy the cooperation of Hart'J
white buddies turned the trick.
Master Sgt. Billy Churchman, first
sergeant of Hart's outfit, said he drafted
a special fitness report with lhe help of
Hart's CQmpany and battalion com-
manders.
The report was sent two weeks ago lo
~farine headquarters, Churchman said,
adding "Sgt. Hart is a fine Marine."
Hart. a native of Richmond , Va., Is an
Instructor specialiiing In rocket laun-
chers and namethrowers.
The papers arrived Friday extending
Jtart's enlistment 90 days in order for the
Enlisted Performance Board to re.view
his record and make its recommendation.
ifart, taking note of the help by his
buddies. ssid the first thing he tells his
recruits is that there is no color barrier
Ir. the service.
.rwe·re all the game in the Marine
Corps," he said.
Fire Kills Six
Children, Sitter
FAIRBANKS. Alaska fUPl ) - A young
mother and sii: childrtn died Sunday
in a trallet home blaze.
Patricia Ann Galvan. 26, was baby ~
sitting-with three or her own children
and three children from a neighboring
trailer when names destroyed the 8-by-30
foot mobile home Just north or Fairbanks
InternaHonal Airport. The temperature
outside was five degree.!!.
Alaska state• troopers said 1
preliminary Investigation indicated a
heater malfunction cauSecl the blaze
which killed Mrs. GaJ van and he,...
children. Chris, 5: Wesley. 2; and
Cherlyn I, and the children of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Brewer.., Dorothy, 9; Peggy
Louise, 8, and Dale Jr. 7.
m1rketinJ techniques" lncludlnc rebates
and below-cost sales.
Pearl , complaining It lost SS million
in profits, said lbe two industry' leaders
were seek!ng the "transformation of the
beer industry into an oligopoly,"
However, the FTC acknowledges that
most -perhaps all -or the changes
in suds $Bies are legal and ire similar
to. consolidation in other Industries, such
as auto manufacturing.
Local brewers used to enjoy a price
advantage ~ause Budweiser and Schlitz
were trucked in from St. Louis and
Milwaukee, respectivel y, incurring heavy
freight costs. Now Anheuser-Busch.
Schlitz and other industry leaders build
..
breweries arttund the cowitry, cutting
their freight while' maintaining the
marketing advantage of a more famout
name.
As a whole. the indu stry has difficulty ,
keeping Its head up in the face of ,
competition. On a per-capita basis, .
beers's percentage or total U.S. alcoholic .
beverage consumption has slid steadily
from 47.4 percent in 1950 to 40.4 percent .
in 1970. Gin, vodka. rum and wine have
picked up mos t of the slack.
Boiled down, the r e a s o n s ge•erally '
given are that Americans are sweating ·
le.9s and earning more. HQwever. the '
beer business oonlinues to grow about
4 percent a year. 1
Citv Closes River l11tal{e " .
In Gripe Over 'I-lot' Water .
MINNEAPOLIS, ?.tinn. (UPI) -li.fin·
neapolis, which gets its water supply
from the Mississippi River, shut down
Its water intake for 10 hours late Sunday
and early today to protest the discharge
of radioactive water from a nuclear
power station upstream.
The Northern Stales Power Co. reactor
at Monticello. ~1inn., 30 miles away,
discharged 10,000 gallons or radioactive
water in the li.1ississippi on Friday. The
emptying or the three or four more
tanks or water, the first containing 9,300
gallons of water and about 32 microcuries
of radiation, began Sunday and was
to last a few days.
The Minnesota Public Health ~rt
ment ordered the cily's intake shut down
from 4 p.m. Sunday Wllil 2 a.m. PST
today as a precaution against the
radioactive discharge. The city fa ced
no shortage of water, however, because
it has more than 115 million gallons
in storage -enough for at least two
days.
The amount of radiation present was
not considered dangerous by the Min·
nesota Pollution Control Agency or the·
Minnesota Department of Health.
The power C<lmpany said t h e
discharges probably would never be
repeated. The releases were caused by
an oversupply of water during main-
tenance on the torus. a doughnut-shaped
chamber at the base of the reactor,
according to the company.
B\lt Northern Sates Power also said
It releases small amounts or radioactive
iodine and cobalt on a regular basis.
Russell Halling, public information
director of the Minnesota Environmental
Control Citiztns Association, disagreed.
He called the plant "a health har.ard
to the drinking and the health and safety
of the people in the Twin Cities."
..
(
t _,., ...... -·--' --~ -::::._~--~"""~·•;y"\,
'--• -..... _,_ .. ...;k'-•••P"! •
St. Paul. r.1innesota's capital "''hich
is • adjacent to h-1inneapotis. shut its
Mississippi River intake gates earlier
and officials said !hey \Vould not open
again until an all-clear sign is givert
from the Minnesota Public Health
Department.
Halling threatened legal action against
Northern Stales Power.
"f strongly suspect the next step for
ti.fECCA may be a lefal step," he said.
"There definitely wil be a move now
to have that Mon ticello plant closed
down."
The pollution control agency is ap-
pealini:t to the Supreme Court for the
authority to regulate radioactive
emissions in the state.
li.1ECCA has not been in agreement :
with even the state emission standards,
Y:hich are below those of the Atomic
Energy Commission.
Schmitz Slates
Campaign Party
Rep. John Schmitz IR·Tu stin) will
launch his 1972 re-election ca mpaign Dec.
<I at a gathering of the Saddleback:
Valley Republican Club. ·
The kickoff party will begin at 7:30
p.m. at the Lake Forest Beach and ·
Tennis Club, 22921 Ridge Route Drive •
in El Toro. ._
Schriiitz. appointed to the Congressional '
seat in 1969, will be facing his second -
election for the post. He-will address •
the Republican group and answer ques~ •
tions for interested resident s.
The event is free and open to thtt
public.
I 42
I ~ .. --~-"'"'='"•.--•"""'""''"'I ... ..,••-'•.·-"..._._..._ .~ --...... . . -------. I
:........ -----~ Olio
. ............ ~
SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY PAYS TRIBUTE AT BROTHER'S GRAVE
• • ....Annlv1r11¥y ~f A11111in1tion of President John F. Kennedy r . '
Ted Threatens
Poll Shows K enned y B ac king
NEW YORK (UPI) -A Time magiizine survey released Sunday In-
dicated that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (O.Mass). has considerable support as
a 1972 presidential candidate, with a chance for 188 of the 270 electoral votes
needed for election. The poll showed Presldel'lt N~on l\\10 vot<!S shy of '770.
In an interview released si multaneously. Kenned y said Nixon will be
hard to beat in 1972 because of his new China policy and If the "·ar in Vietna m.
ends and Nixon's Phase ll economic progra m Increases prosperity.
The incident at Chappaquiddick, In which young campaign worker Mary
Jo Kope<:hne died when Kennedy drove off a bridgr, is a major li:1bility in tha
South and" Midwest, Time said, but not in the northrasl or in California.
Kennedy said Nixon has one weakness -leadership.
"There is no sense· or where the country Is and where It Is going," .
Kennedy 1aid. "The basic catalyst for leadership is the President. and Ult
failure ol Nixon ia ln leadership."
I ·
I
(
f DAIL V PILOT
\
\ •' I ~ps
Legislature
Talks Turkey
By THOMAS !'tfURPHlNE
Of n11 Defff l"Ji.1 Stefl
SACRAMENTO C A L LI N G , The
calilornia Legisl1ture is in a rather
large hurry this week. They would like
lo adjourn Wednesday so all the
lawmakers can get home for Thanksgiv~
ing. In the rush, they have a couple
of minor problems.
FOl" one thing, there is that small
matter of raising $500 million -or
half a billion dollars if you prefer to
put it that way.
You see, the state budget now stands
at about $6.8 bill ion, give or take $100,000
or so:and the expenses have outstripped
the income by soine PIO million.
It's the same as the housewife's budget
dilemmi, folks. except cash flow situa·
tion is on a much higher plane than
6leaks versus ground hamburger.
ANYWAY, WHAT our good stale solons
hope to do is pass a withholding tax
measUtt by Wednesday so they can
!iplit the pla~. You are familiar with
the withholding tax sylilem from the
federal level. That's when the govern-
ment takes its cut off the top of your
paycheck before you ever see it.
Those who ju~~le the slate books figure
a California wllhho!ding system . effective
Jan. I. would raise the $.110 million
neeQed to balance the budget : another
S200 million of so for one-time con-
truclion need s, and a paJlry $23 million
earmarked for business tax relief.
AJI th is will probably mean another
increase In taxes. There is only one
small silver lining to the tax withholding
cloud.
RIGHT NOW, without the withholding
system, you have a lot of Eastern swing-
ers to come to our region for short-
term employment, draw hefty paychecks
in our land of opportunity. and then
nee back East again Y.'\thout ever
coughing up so much as a buck for
Gov. Reagan·s operation. The withholding
system will catch them. California would
get its tax cut off the top before. they
get away.
I don't know if that's going to make
you any happie r when1 you view the
deduction on the rod o( your pay stub
but at least it should assure you that
moi-e people are sharing you r mise rie s.
While the siatt-Senate is grappling
wilh all this high finance, the people
ever on the Assembly side have their
own worries before getting a holiday
off.
THE ASSEMBLY people are supposed
to 1pprove a plan for rejiggering
legisl1tive districls for re-apportionment.
As has been noted in th is space befort.
there is some matter of disagreement
(Jn how it should be d(Jne. The Democrats
want it one way and the Republicans
want it another.
As you might have guessed, the
Democratic plan fa vors the Democrats
and the Republican plan is disorganize<!.
The Demos have a line-jiggering liystem
all v.wked out that would theoretically
boost their Assembly margin from 44
to 38 to a more comfortable 46 to
36. The Republicans are less than en·
chanted with this notion.
There have been some efforts al con·
citiaticn. Afterwards. the Democrats call-
ed the Republicans' ideas "preposterous"
and the GOP people charged the Demos
with "railroading."
Things are normal up in Sacramento,
you see.
They better slart gelling into the holi-·
day sipirit, however. or they may need
a lot ol portable TV sets on the floo r
of the legislature for those Thanksgiving
football games.
The whole holiday ct1uld turn into a
turkey.
Ul'I Ttl .... le
Winning Fo1•na ' Mrs. Robert F. Kennedy participates in exhibition match for Washing·
ton education facility. 1'.1rs. Kennedy teamed with Stan Smith, U.S.
si ngles champion, against ~1rs. Elliot Richardson, wife of HEW sec-
retary ahd Erik Van Dillen of the Davis Cup team. Mrs. Kennedy and
Smith \von.
British Discover Arms
In Convent, Clear Nuns
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -
The British Army today absolved nuns
at a Roman Catholic convent where
arms "'ere found of any complicity in . ..
Secrecy Imposed
In Kent State
Disorder Trials
Rt\VENNA. 0 hi o (UPI J -A judge
today imposed a "g:ig rule"' on all prin·
cipals in the trials of 25 persons indicted
in connection with the 1970 Kent State
Oniversity di sorders which ended in the
killing of four students by National
Guardsmen.
Portage County Judge Edwin Jones
issued the order before Jury selection
began in the trial of the first defendant,
Jerry Rupe. 23. Ravenna. a non·student
who was charged with rioting. &lashing
a fire rope and throwing rocks at
firemen.
Jooes. who imposed a "gag rule" last
year during a special grand jury in·
vestigation of the Kent Stale disorders
in f\1ay, 1970, ruled :
"All lawyers participating in these
trials, their assistants. staff members
and employes under their supervision
and control are forbidden to take part
in interviews for puhlication. and from
making extra-judicial 11tatemen!s which
might divulge prejuricial matter out of
public rcocrd from the state of thi11
order and unlit such time as the court
shall vacate this order."'
Jones extended the "gag rule" tn t1!1
witnesses. prospective and selected
jurors and court employes.
gunrunning for Northern Ireland's guer·
rillas.
"There is no question of anybody think·
ing that the nuns were concerned in
hoarding items of military interest," said
a spokesman at military headquarters.
"We are sure th~ weapons were planted
there without the nuns' knowledge."
t.1ore than 100 armed troops, wilh
dogs and metal detectors, searched the
20..acre grounds of the Convent or the
Sacred Heart in Armagh on Sunday.
As the commandos worked, 31 nuns
prayed inside the building, where troops
did not enter.
The swoop came 24 hours afler a
small cache -0! weapons was discovered
by chance bu ried on the convent grounds.
Troops carried out a fruitless. search
Friday at another religious institution,
the M-0nastery -0f our Lady of Bethlehem
at Portglenone in County Antrim. the
home of a Cistercian brotherhood of
monks.
That operation followed the arrest of
two m-0nks from the monastery on
charges of assistiag in the prison escape
of two guerrillas dressed as priests.
Rom~n Catholic churchmen, in a state·
ment released Sunday by William
Cardinal Conway, primate of all Ireland,
condemned both the cut-throat guerrilla
tactics and the repression methods of
British troops.
It cited "particularly cold-blooded
murders in recent weeks " and the "trail
of death and destruction" left by the
~uerrilla~ in their effort to . wrest
Northern Ireland from Protestant control
and unite it with the predominantly
Roman Catholic Irish republic.
At the same time . the bishops said
British soldiers must stop what they
ca lled ''immoral and inhuman'' in·
terrogalion methods used on suspected
members of the Irish Republican Army.
•
Butz Nomination Ol('d
By Senate Panel, 8-6
WASHINGTON !UPI) -The Senate
Agriculture Committ'e approved today
by 1n 8-6 vole the nomination of Earl
L. Butz to be new Agriculture Secretary.
The narrowne11s ot the v o t e
foreshadowed an e1pected battle on the
Senate floor on confirmation of the
Purdue University dean , who has been
strongly criticized by some senators and
farm groups as favoring corporate rather
lhan family farms.
The AgricuJture Committee irutructed
Butz to put his stocU in three airi·
business farm! into a blind trust and
then to have them gold within 90 days
to avoid any appearance of conflict of
interest.
Sen. Robert Dole (R·Kan.), chairman
-0f the Republican Nltional Committee
and a member of the Agricutlure Com·
mittee, predicted after the group's closed
&ession that Butz w-0uld be confirmed
although he said opponents might muster
~ to 30 votes on the Senate floor.
The Agriculture Committee chairman,
Sen. Herman E. Talmadge (D-Ga.), voted
against Butz in committee, and said
he could not predict the outcome on
the floor .
Sen. George D. Aileen (R-Vt.), said
he h-Oped. the nomi•ation might be voted
on by the Senate as soon as Wednesday.
Talmad1e said he did not know when
Senate leaders would schedule the vote.
Butz, who was an assistant secretary
during the Eisenhower Administration
while Ezra Taft Benson headed the
Agriculture Department. would succeed
Clifford M. Hardon who resigned to
become an executive of Ralston Purina
Co.
In the committee vote, Butz was op-
VOttd by four Democrats and two
Republicans i ncluding the committee's
ranking GOP member, Sen. Jack Miller
(R·lowa).
Otherl!I besides Miller and Talmadge,
ln vole against him were Democrats
Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota,
George S. McGovern. of South Dakota
and B. Everett Jordan, of North Carolina
and Republican Milton R. Young of North
Dakota.
Voting for Butz were Dem-0crats Allen
J. Ellender of Louisiana. James 0.
Eastland of Mississippi, Lawton Chiles
of Florida and James B. Allen of
Alabama, and Republicans Aiken, Dole
and Henry Bellmen of Oklahoma and
Carl Curtis of Nebraska .
Aiken. after the meeting, said it was
essential that Butz be confirm ed quickly
so he could take action lo improve
sagging grain prices which have pro-
duced much farm bell grumbling
recently.
During hearings last week. Butz prt>-
mised to seek speedy acti-0n to strengthen
grain prlce11 which have been depressed
by record crops. He v-0idecl commitment
to any single potential step, but meri-
lioned a number of possibilities including
government grain purchases.
Butz also testified he believed in max-
imum operating freedom for farmers
but felt g-0vernment farm controls and
supports would be needed for the
foreseeable future to prevent -0verproduc-
tion and low prices.
The agri-business corporation stock•
which the committee directed Butz to
dispose of are holdings In Ralston Purina,
Stokely•Van Camp, and Interpational
Minerals and Chemicals Co.
Butz has been a member of the board!
of directors of all three firms . He ha1
resigned the posts and testified that
he served tbeir boards to provide a
voice for farmers's interests in the cor-
porations.·
Hetulerson Bolstered
General Denies Getth1g
My Lai Massacre Report
FT. MEAD, Md . (AP) -Former Brig.
Gt n. George H. Young Jr. said today
he had n-0 report of atrocities in My
Lai when he ordered C-01. Oran K.
Henderson to investigate the March 1968
assault.
Young. former assistant commander
of the America! Division, said the in·
vesUgation he ordered was only on the
basis or a report that a helicopter pilot
had a confrontation with ground troops.
The testimony was important to the
defense of Henderson, who is charged
specifically with failing "to investigate
allegations or reports of excessive killing
of noncombatants." The order, the
government charges, came from Young.
Young directly contradicted earlier
testimony by Lt. Col. John Holladay,
who said that the general h11d been
told 75 or 100 unresisting civilians were
killed in My Lai.
"If Col. H-01laday made that statement
caught in the crossfire,'' Young said.
··1t was conveyed to me that a report
was made by a helicopter pilot," Young
testified. "It was that this pilot had
-ob&er.ved ... Army ground troops wh ile
engaging tht .. enemy with noncombatants
caught in the corssfire," Young said .
He said !he report lo him was that
the pilot landed and put some civilians
into a bunker and or cave to keep
them -0ut of harm 's way and then in-
formed "friendly elements of the action
taken ."
Young said that he had heard the
pilot then warned the advanc i n g
American soldiers that he would fire
on them if they harmed the civilians.
Young said !he report was brought
lo him ellher the arternoon -0f the opera·
lion or the following day by }lollada y
and Maj. Frederik Walke, the com-
manders respectively -0f a helicopter bat·
.--. talion and company.
One day later. Young said, he met
with the two officers, Henderson, and
the late Lt. Col. Frank A. Barker. the
commander or the assaulf troops.
He said the meeting lasted only five
or 10 minutes. "I briefly informed Col.
Henderson of the report I received.,"
Young said.
"I told Col. Henderson the division
commander had directed an investigalio n
be initiated immediately and that the
results were to be returned to him
as soon as possible."
Within the next few days, Young said,
Henderson gave oral reports to the
division commander, ~1aj. Gen. Samuel ·
\V. Koster, and later submitted a written
report.
Freighter Sinks
Off Denrnark;
Cre-iv Sought
COPENHAGEN jJ..:Pll -A West
German fre ighter with six men aboard
san k -0ff the Danish coast today in on9
of the worst sn-0w storms in memory
lashing Denmark and southern Sv.•eden,
rescue -Officers reported.
Ttie Danish Naval Con1mancl in Aa rhus
said the 358-ton Nickar of Duisburg went
down off Greriaa on Jutland early today
after sending distress signals.
Five ships in the area are searching
for the six ere\\' members. the
spokesman said. He said there hacl been
no reports of the crcw·s being sighted.
Smith,, British Officials
The snow storm also caused a number
of traffic deaths both in Denmark and
in Sweden.
Police said at least 11 people died
in Danish highway accidents. In southern
S\vrden, four traffic deaths v.• ere,
reported.
Discuss Rhodesia's Status Almost all travel came to a :-tandstill
In Denmark and one ship called for
assistance -0ff the Danish coast.
SALISBURY (UPI ) -Rhodesia 's hour
of decil!lion moved nearer toda y. Premier
Ian Smith met neiirly two hours with
British negotiators and then called a
cabinet meeting to consider terms for
ending the .!liX·year dispute o v e r
Rh-Odesia's uilateral declaration of
independence.
Observers believed that the country's
white government faced crucial decisions
on British condi tions f-0r moving towards
greater participation in government for
the black majority.
A crowd of 300 stood patiently outside
Smith's ortice while he met with British
Foreign Secretary Sir Alec Douglas·
Home for an hour and 45 minutes. Sir
Alec emerged smiling and waved before
driving off. Smith also had a grin for
onlookers.
"rive principles.". of which the main
one is that there be unimpeded progress
toward majority rule .
There are five million blacks in the
country. about the size of the state
of California, and 280.000 whites.
The United Nations and its members
since December. 1966, have imposed
ecol'l-Omic sancti-Ons on Rhodesia. Last
wee.k President Nixort'.signed legislation
partly lifting the U.S. embargo in order
to import chrome ore. The U.N. General
Assembly passed a resol ution expressing
"grave e-0ncern" at the action.
"I v.•ill have to go far back in !he
books to find a worse storm :-o early
in the 1vinter seaso n." said !he duty
officer at the Danish meteorological of·
fice.
The Danish Resc ue Corps was deluged
with calls from automob ile dri vers in
trouble. Many dr ivers. trapped by huge
soowdrirts. had to spend th e night in
their cars. in private homes -0r in schools
which were opened as emcr~ency hotels.
All airports, including Copenhagen'1
Kastrup Airport and Bulltofta Alrport
in Malmoe, shut down.
Most ferry routes fron1 Scandinavi11
to West Germany and Poland and fro m
Sweden to Denmark suspended tours.
Africa Adventurers
Cold of Winter Sets In While the Rhodesian cabinet sessi-0n
was being held. olher members of the
negotiating teams would meet again,
conference' sources said.
Lady Explorers Foiled
By Angry Hippopotami
6 Inches of Snow Blanket Great Lakes' Re'giQn
Observers said today's evenUi resembl·
ed those or 1966, when Smith returned
from Gibraltar with British proposals
for peace to plact before his cabinet.
After an all-day meeting. the terms
worked out a~rd the British warship California
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Another Gibraltar meeting in 1969.
aboard the warship Fearless, also ended
in deadlock. .... Jl .ll . " Sir Alec arrived a week ago to make
what analysts said was a last British
bid to settle the dispute which began
115 when Rhoclesla'i; minorit y white govern·
.u menl unilaterally declared independence
T Nov. II , 196~.
" " . " . " . " .. u " .. " " .. . " . " " ....
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" " " . JI 1'
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As a condition for settlement. Brltiln ·°' has said Rhodesia must agree to th•
U.S. Says Vietnam
Forces Now 184,000
SAIGON (AP l -U.S. lr<>Qp strengt_h
i,ri Vietnam reached the 184,000 mar\-~
today -nine daya bt!ore the Dec.
JJ tl' T I deadline scl by Presldi:nt Nixon.
" n . " H " 6S d
\ :11 2• n u
SS 1l u 11 .. " j l 11 .. ·~ •• .. • •
The U.S. command announced tha:l
185.000 American servicemen were still
.:it in Vietnam 11s or l•st Thusday, Reduc·
m !Ions since then lowtrtd the 1'evel tn
184.000 1nd poHibly a little ltss.
Tht ccmmancl said lht force was
reduced 3,300 durlna the week ending
la1L .Ihur.Jday. •
•
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast !UPI) -The
Komoe River is largely unexplored, hai;
SO known rapids, tse-tse flies and
crocodiles. None or this daunted 11 Swiss
ladies and a man who set out to l'xplore
ll fully from source to the Atlantic
Ocean three wecks"ago In three motorlz·
ed rubber boats.
They forgot about the hippopotami.
So today they were reported taking
back roads through the bush tn an at·
tempt to arrive tit their destination In
time and in triumph.
It began late OctobC'r w he 'n
moustachioed Henri '91aurl~ Rema,y. 47,
who describes himself as a "prtJ..fessklnal
explorer.'' landed frorn Switzerland with
the ladfe.s. agtd 19 to 50.
They decliMd lo give their namei; but
said they had paid $1.250 each for thf:
rtrst nearly "ll·woman 1xploration trip
in Africa down the 600 miles of the
Komoe Rlvtr from Upper Volt• to the
ocean .
Remey. dressed ·in bush jacktt end
leopard-skin fouh•rd. liald, ''11 rtver goes
only one w1y to the sea" and led the
party up country to join !hr river near
its source.
N('lthing was heard of them untll lhls
weekend. Saiy Kin N'da , 1 camcr11.mlln from
the Ivo ry Coast film studio. stru ck north
in search -0f thero . He found them Thur5-
day i:it Groumania. 375 miles from ttle
capital and Y.'ay behind schedule.
On his return to A bldjan, he told
of their progress.
''They said hippos in Swiss zoos never
behave that bad." Say Kan explained.
"A few days after stnrt they gnlng
through Bouna game reserve, with fir~t
b-0.at pulling ethers, so nnt to ma~e
noise and frighten animals. A!l okay
until first boat run over sleeping hippo.
"Hippo get mad . woken up from sletp
and take big mouthful out -0f secoD.rl
boat. Then he rise and with behldd
overturn third boat . All ~·omen In rtver.
There is panic. All food and earner._,
in Komoe River."
Did this ii:top lhe expedition~ SAXI
Say Man : ''The~ palch boat up aflor
10 days. and take off again. bul have
only nne can fruil Julee to ea t. TheY qWt
few days later and gel t...lncl R -0 v er ( jetpl,
"Now t~ey put 11111 in ii and drive-
down almost to seA 11nd !hey go make
fancy arrival as planned at dock of
H.olel tvoirc. In Abidjan. Rernav said
they take hack· roads bccau i;e ht n&t
"'ant press kno'v or acrldcnt wlth hlppo.
I think he afraid.hippc d11.maged::
•' • · 1
i
l
"
" I
I
' ,.
Girl, 1 o, SlaiI1;
Pleas Ignored
,. ROCHESTER. N.Y. (UPII -Police estimate 100 per-
sons saw IO.year-old Garmen Colon running naked dO\\'Tl
the highway pleading for help.
None of the motorist$ helped her and as or today verv
rew or lhe1n have volunteered information that could lead
to the capture of Ule young girl's killer.
•·we are getting a few tips and v:orking on the few
leads we have ," said Michael Cerrento, ~lonroe Cowity
chief of detectives.
Carmen's body was round Thursday in a field in the
nearby town or Riga .. The chlld. who was strangled, raped
and suffered a skull fracture. bad been missing for t11.·o
days after she went on an errand fo'r her grandmotht>r.
Poli~ estimate that at least JOO persons saw the girl
running along Interstate 490 about on~ hour after she was
last seen by her relatives,
Cerrento said a man and a woman told police they saw
a partially-clad child Jilting Carmen's description "waving ~
her hands frantically trying to 11.'ave down passing cars''
along the heavily traveled highway.
Authorities believe the girl was abducted and was at.-
l tempting to get away from her captor.
Carmen disappeared shortly after she went to a drug
store to have a prescription filled for her grandmother. A
motorist told police he saw a "small girl grabbed by the
arm and taken ·into a car apparently without a great
1 struggle.''
The search for Carmen ended Thursday when two boys ~ -
1 found her body in a heavily woodf4 area. Officials belie~
~ she may ·have been thrown from a 1noving vehicle.
Several civic groups and the city's t11·0 newspapers
are offe ring rewards totaling more than $4.000 for informs·
lion leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or
persons involved.
Ca1npaign Finance Vote
Showdown Seen Today
\YASHJNGTON (UPI!
Both parties predicted an ex-
tremely close and partisan
vote in today 's Sen ale
showdown on a plan to use
tax: fund s -rather lhan
private contributions -to
finance the election campaigns
of presidential candidates.
"The arms are twisted until
they are almost twisted off
on both sides," said Sen.
Russell B. :..Ong (IJ.La.), in
advance of the vote.
In a politically charged al·
mosphere. the Republicans
sought to switch a few
Southern Democrats. Only a
handful of convert s' would be
needed to defeat the plan.
~ In a lest vote on Thursday.
43 Republicans and three
Democrats voted against the
p I a n. Forty-nine Democrats
and no Republicans voted for
it.
Today's rollcall was to occur
some time after 5 p.m. EST.
The Democrats hoped to tie
the plan to President Nixon's
bill \\·hich, as amended by
the Senate. would cut business
and individual taxes by more
than $27 billion during lhe
next three years.
They think Nixon \\IOU!d
resist the temptation lo veto
the bill in view of the business
community's strong support
for the tax cuts and Nixon's
need to stimulate an economic
recovery to enhance his O\\'n
re-election prospects.
But the \\lhite House raised
the possibility of a veto. Clark
MacGregor. the President's
top assistant for dealing with
Congress. said during the
"'eekend Nixon "would have
to consider" vetoing I h e
legislation if it reaches him
with the campaign fund pro·
vision. And Senate G 0 P
Leader Hugh Scott o f
Pennsylvania said he would
veto the bill if he were in
Nixon's shoes.
Kennedy
Slaying
Obse rved
.WASHINGTON iAP) -On
this eighth anniver·sary of the
assassination . or President
John F. Kennedy his brother,
Sen. Edward M. Ketmedy,
stood in the cold brisk morn-
ing air today and pa id sile nt
tribute at his grave. arms
folded and head bowed.
Arriving alone at h is
brother's grave in Arlington
National Cemetery shortly
afler 7 a.m., EST, the senator
placed a si ngle white rose
before the Eternal Flame 2J.
the grave.
After a few moments. Ken-
nedy rhade Ule R o m a n
Catholic sign of the cross.
Then he walked a few steps
a\1'ay lo the grave of his other
assassinated brother, Robert.
•le knelt there for a moment,
placed a while rose bud on
the grave :arid then made the
sign ,of the cross.
Employes
Skip Hikes
DAYTON, Ohio <UPI) -
Five thousand union workers
at two local Frigidaire 31>'
pliance plants Sunday voted
to give up most of their pay
raises during the next two
years in order to keep the
company from moving al\•ay.
Each man wilt forego about
$18 per week in raises and
cost of living increases, under
terms of the modifications in
the union contract reached
afler five months of negotia-
tions.
The General ~lotors Dil'ision
refused to comment SundaY
nlghl. I n s t e a d , Frigidaire
scheduled a press conference
to announce the signing or
the agreement.
Seagram's
7Crown.
It fits right into
your world.
•
Mondar, Nowmbet 22, im DAILY PILOT IS
Close 4ide Reports Meany
Seeking Ouster by Nixon
M!A~U BEACH (AP) -A
close aide of AFlrClO Preai"
dent George Meany said today
the labor chieftain has set
a deliberate course designed
to force President Nixon to
kick him off the Pay Board
or junk federal wage controls
altogether.
''It will happen long before
next November's presidentlal
election," said the aide, who
declined to be quoted by
name.
1'-1eany is already committed
to trying to oust Nixon from
the White House nert year.
Asked it this meant Meany
\\'ill seek to ·•goad" Nixon
into throwing the three AFl.-
ClO meiTibers off th~ Pay
Board. the aide said flatly,
··Yes."
"Meany wants Nixon to kick'
him off the Pay Boord," said
another AFL-CIO source close
to labor's Pay Board strategy.
~1eany has accused the Nix·
on Administration of using the
five public and five industry
members to try to "goad''
the five labor members into
quitting the board which Nixon
creafedio impose nationwide
\\'age controls.
The fight, in which Meany
has already announced a
policy of noncooperation with
Pay Board decisio ns that labor
disagrees with. resumes toda y
when the board starts drafting
forms on which \\'age hikes
must be reported to the boaid.
"There's bound to be a fight
over that," the Meany aide
aaid.
Nixon told some 2,000 AFL-
CIO convention delegates last
Friday he would press his
Phase 2 wage-price control
program to the fullest whether
they cooperated or not.
Before Nixon left the hall,
f\.1eany gaveled the convention
to or~er and ,aid "We will
now proceed 1With Acl II.''
Nixon canceled plans to spend
tbe weekend in Florida and
flew back to Washington amid
reports he was angry over
his rectj>tion_ by the AFL-CIO
which tlle White House denied.
* * * * * * Coal Operators' Turn:
Request of 8.5% ·Seen
WASHINGTON \UPI) -
The 'goYerruntnt's economic
control machinery, under at-
tack for endorsing a 15 per·
cent pay blke for the nation's
90ft coal miners, today faced
tbe other side of the coin
-a reqUest for a jump in
the price of coal. .
While it was the Pay Board
'"hich okayed the pay in-
crease. the prier que stion
was lip to the Price Com-
missio n at its n1eeting today.
There w e r e unconfirn1ed
reports the Bituminous Coal
Oper:ilors Association was
after a 8.5 percent price hike.
The government's official
pri~e increase gUideline is 2.5
percent per year. The official
pay increase yardstick is 5.5
percent -a figure exceeded
almost three limes by the
coal miners 11•age settlement.
George H. Boldt. chairman
of the pay panel. ·came under
attack for the board's decision
in the miners wage case. Sen.
William Proxmire ( D· \\'is. l.
sa id the \\'age agreen1ent
"puts the whole stabilization
setup in the gravest possible
jeopardy" ,beause of t he
precedent ll set.
Boldt, in an appearance Sat·
lurday before a House-Senate
Economic Committee. denied
Proxmire's allegation .
althoUgh he said the wage
increase probably \\"as ex·
cessive. He also defended the.
board's ban against retroac·
tll'C paym6nt of wage in·
crea ses ~·hich fell due during
the 90-da y freeze. saying
anything less would be in-
equitable and unfair.
•
I
L
J.
RND
OF THE
VVEEK
Before you throw your next party
... Reed & Bprton's "Fiesta" Party Set.
The five piece group includes ·
bon bon scoop, lemon fork. cream
ladle, olive fork. and jellv server.
Handles are sculptured into five
different flower patterns.
$10.95 for the set.
HIDE-AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
Cll11111 Atc...,,h lnvtlld
Am.rclln I!~''"' ••~k.lr1'19rklrC a M11ltr c111....._ fMI
SLAVICK'S
Jr~·elcn Since 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH-644-1380
Open Mon. end Fri., 10 e.rn. to 9:30 p.m.
• r
c. Penney, Costa Mesa
•
"
'
..
Harbor Shoppin9 Center
End of Month
MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
Slt•rt g. lo1e •lff1'e S•lltl1, $388
1trlPft & prhth •• ch••M·
70 •Illy. Orie. SS.GO f• $7.tl NOW
WOMENS SCAll:YIS. 6 ONLY le · Hyl•11 sheen. Orlt. $1.25 HOW
DUSTIAS & SHIPTS. 21 ONLY '1" ld1r. 1tylft. O'lt. S4.ID·S6.00 HOW
STltnCH STllAP lllAS. 6 ONLY 99c 321 & J61. Orft. SJ.00 HOW
STJlnCH LACE PANTY GlllDLI! 66c JO 0 11ly. S111. &Mid. Otlf. SJ.00 HOW
BOYS SPORT SHIRTS
OLD FASHIONED IUTION DOWN
cell•n. '•"• '•int 11l•ltl1 & Solltl•. 5S 011ly NOW 57'
llTIIR SCAlYIS. t ONLY
Priet ~u•te1. Orlf. SJ.ii HOW
WOMINS PANTS & JIAHS
10 011ly. Orlt. SJ.ft to S6.00 NOW
•N1n1N• YAlN. 100~'• ORLON
7J .t.l•J. Orlt . tt~. HOW
H>LYl!ml fASHIOH fAIRICS
Dei ble kilt fM•· NOW
QUllN Sltl PlllCALI SHllTS
hc•r.r., C•l•ra. Otlt. $7.tt tlOW
UIC. ILANllT. DOUILI DUAL
1 at1ly 1-· Otlt. S2S.OO HOW
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
Le., SI•••· l1nal Cuff
M•tly S"lp..-LIMltetl 1l1n. 1' •Illy. Orlt. SI.GO HOW
nAlY POT HOLDEI MITS. lrltht
•ltcllel 11tlt1h. Ont. Sl.00 HOW
TOWIL INSIMIUS llDUCID
.IACQUAIDS Ii STllPIS
IA.TH, Orif. SI .JS HOW
NOW • HAND. Ol'ft. "fSt
WASH. OrJt. 6it HOW
99c
'1"
aac
'2" YD.
'4"
'12"
~1"
60c
30c
FAMOUS NAME WATCHES
S.ver•I TvP•• to Choo•• in
M.n's Womens.& Teen Styles
GROUP I G~OU, II
Orl1. to SIS.DO Orl9. ta SI0.95
Now $9.88~Now $7.98
ME N'S llTIEtt FASHION llLTS '1" 66 ollly. Otlg. SJ.SO ta 57.00 NOW
MEN'S WALK SHORTS . '••n ,test 99c S•llfi. 16 •nlf. Otlt. SJ.•t HOW
MIN'S rATCH ,QCltfT FLARE JEANS
5 only. White. Orlt. SS.ti HOW '177
MIN'S ANTIQUE TONI DllESS SHOE '8" P•ntracl .. 1e .Orlt .Sl O.tt
MIN'S STIRll:U, IOOT. Fulty
Leetltlr Ll11fll. Orl9. S26.00
HOW
HOW '23"
BITTER DRAPES CLEANUP
Lined & Unlined· Asst. F•brics
Colors & Finishes. Mostly
One Of A Kind.
1 011ty. llO"xS''°. Orig. S41 .00
1 0111ty. 96"x72''. Orl9 . Sl6.00
1 011ly. 76"xJ4". Orig. SJ0.00
2 ••Ir. 72"'x72". Ort9. SJ0.00
1 •"''t· 100''xl4'. Ort1. SJJ.00
1 ••l't· 100"154", Orlf. S26.00
2 011.,. SO"d4". OTlt. $12.00
1 ••l'f'. I0'"16J" Orl1. St.GO
only. SOxS4. Orlt: si.oo
srrc1AL DICOll:ATOI SHlm
P•1111 ''"t ,areola S2. tt Twin
HOW
HOW
HOW
HOW
HOW
NOW
HOW
Now'
HqW
'29"
'21"
'19"
'17"
'12"
'12"
'3"
'3"
'2"
'3" PULL
LADIES UNIFORMS
Polyester & D•cron·Nvlon Blends
Dress · Shift· Pint Sult• Styles.
OIOUP I
~It. Sii te Sll.GO
Now $7.44 "
GROUr II 0,1,. s1.oo •• s10.oo
Now $4.44
JC Penn ey
WOMENS SPORT PANTS
Jr. & Ml1sy Sites 111 J•a11 & $244
Ca1ual Type. S•llds & 'ctt111rn1.
21 •~ly. Orig. SS .00 I• SI.DO NOW
IOYS TIES-,ATilllN STRl,ES Jk. Re•tly ties. 11 e•ly. Orl9. Sl.00 NOW
IOYS IITTEJI IELTS, lfftlter 4~ Dreu. 99 onlf. Orlt. S1 .SO-S2.00 NOW
IOTS ACRYLIC KNIT SPT. SHIRT '1" Stripes & .. 11cl. Orlf. S2.tt. NOW
IOYS ASST. SPOAT SHl~cttten11 '1" & Miids. JO e•l'f. 01'19. $2.91-SJ.IO .HOW
MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
100% ORLON ACRYLIC STRl,ES $199
I• brl9ltt fall c•l•rs-Crew
or placket 11eck, Orl9. SJ.tt NOW
I OYS PENN ,RIST ,ANTS 4~ Toperod 199. JO oily. OTl9. Sl.44 NOW
IOYS CARDIGAN SWEATERS. '5" t only. Green. Orl9. S7.,I NOW
~lllLS IOXID JIWELRY sm 99c Mfftly lnltlal1. 20 only. Orft. SJ,OQ HOW
IAIY FllDING DISH 7c 1 oftly. OrllJ. tac. HOW
GIRLS SUEDE KICKlll IOOTS. '4" 1 •nly. lr•wn. Oti9, S8 .99. HOW
GIRLS IUCKLI STYLE SHOE s4u
Anthl" ltr•••· Orl9. S7.99. HOW
MEN'S SLACK CLEANUP
DAISS ' CASUAL PANTS -Str1l,ht $388
•t f11re 1..,. Pattet1111 & solhlt.
s1 ... 21 to J4. Orf1. S5.91·S7.tl NOW
'7" SUN•LOWll PRINT TWIN SPIU.D
Q1IOacl. J oily. Orf1. SI 1.00 NOW
PLASTIC IA.TH WINDOW CURTAINS
14 Hly. Orft. S4.tt. NOW
llH• Siii! SOLID COLOR SHlns
PHtl Pmt hrcele .Ork). Sl.tt NOW '7"
•
Use Your Penney
Chartie Card The values are here every d~y •
Shop Mon. th ru Sat.
9:30 AM to 9:15 PM
·,
>
..
,.
~--
'
I
I I
I
•• ..
---,• _:_\I t ' --· _(_
~ ·-·· . ~An -unhealthy Action
The Board or SUJJ:ervisors has turned dO\\'n a $1
million grant of gtate money "'hich \\'Ould have provided
badly-needed upgradi n~ for mPdical services for low
tn co.rne and in digen t farnilics served by Orange County
Med lca l Center.
It \V&A ano ther of the t·o n1plctcly IJ:1ffling perform·
ances by the (·clcbratcd "new 1najorily" or the board.
With cxpl::u1ations ranging fron\ unclear to inadr·
quate to outright unbelievable, Supervisors Robert Rat·
tin, Ralph Clark and f{onald Ca spers voted do"'" the
grant, despite the strongly favo!'able recon1n1cndations
of County 1-lospl tal J\d1ninistrator Hobert \Vhitc:
Despite the adn1ini~trator's ass urances thnl th e
~an t \\•as needed and that it rarrlC'd no "strings'' rrom
the slate or the UC'! n1cdical sc hool, Supervisors ('lark
and Bi'ttin professed to sec it as a "Trojan horse '' dt'a l
that \Vould in so1ne mysterious. unspecified \Vay cnsl
the county money in years to oon1e -or inhibit tounty
options to elinlinatc ·or scale do\vn the county hospital.
Caspers' explanation v,ras that his aide felt the lia·
biliUe~ outweighed the assets. \Vhat liabilities and as-
l!!ets and in what amoun ts \Vere not disclosed.
For the governing body or the stat~'s seco nd mos t
populous .cou oty to. de::tl so cavalierly with the health
care for a great number or citizens is shot·king.
,i\.~ a result of st rong ptolest from the Oran~e Coun·
ty r.·ledical .As sociation a11d others, the supervsiors may
reconsider-thei r action this \Veek.
They should certainly reconsider.
The c1uestion is, ho\V could they take such action
ln the rirst place wi th so little study and open discussion
on a malter involving so n1uch n1 oney and the welfare
of so many people·!
T he ans~re rs are as baffling and unsatisfying as
the "new majority's" perforn1ance record.
One important item in this puzzle is J1aul \Vhite,
Caspers' a i d e and the president of the ne1v Oran ge
County l·leallh Planning Council, and a close ally of Dr.
Loui s Cella , Batlin's key advisor and bi ggest financial
supporter.
\Vh ile has long fancied hin1self as the bi g powe r
and top authority on health service and hospital plan·
ning in Orange County. But his activities also have re·
suJted in friction between the committee and lhe med·
teal groups and the hospitals. Thi s has reduced the
effectiveness of the commi ttee.
'rhen \\'e have the 1>0orly-coneealed dislike for the
UCI medical s<:hool on the part of some supervisors and
other county oCCitials, and an1ong so me members of the
1nedical profession in the county.
'l'here has been concern in those <1uarters that the
1neri ical school may become th e dominant influence in
county medicine. Son1e ot this unh3ppiness apparently
has been based on ·honest differences o( opin ion on best
approaches to n1edic:il service and tcaclnng. A signifi·
cant amount apparently is purely 11 sq11a bble over rela·
live prestige.
1'hen \VC have those like _&;llin and son1e of his ad·
vi so rs \vho reel the county should divest itself of the
inadequate county hospital as a cont in uin~ problem that
could be better handled by others. 'fhere have been pro-
posals to try to ge t U(:J to take it over, or to contract fo'T
services to county patients by various community and
private ~ospitals around the co unty. •
The $1 million grant would. permit the county to
expand and 1 upgrade the hospital's badly overcrowded
outpatient clinics no\v .housed in a series of substandard
buildings. upgrade the respiratory intensive care unit,
install a co1nputerized medical inforn1ation system. re·
model a buildtng to house medical ,school faculty, and
1nake up sornc defi ci ts in the state's Medi C:aJ program
payments.
The outpatient clinic is recognized as the worst
element or the county's health ca re service, where over·
crO\\'ding has inevitably resulted in Jess than sa tisfa ctory
handling or patients. .
'rhe class ic irony or Battin's ne~ative vote is th;it
he likes to portray himself as the champion of the Jess
affluent. Yet it is the large conce ntration of low inCome
and mlnorily citizens in his Santa Ana area district th11t
are most adversely affected by the poor, crowded con·
ditions al the county out-patient clinic.
1'he three supervisors have an unhealthy vote on
their consciences.
MOW LON<i WILL PHA&E
TWO ~A$T?
Ut;TIL WE'RE. REAP'!'
fCR 1'\-11\~E THReE !
'.)
'Givi11g Out'
Isn't 'Getting
Through'
Far11a State Attitudes Toward Beata Earl B11t%
)
Does 8 mere dUfercrn:e in a word nlake
a difleren~ in B thing. in an attitude,.Jn'
a relationship? or course it docs. ll _"'e
use the wrong word for the right one,
then 'A'e imagine we are sa..vlng
aomething when we are saying somelhing
else.
Take the twn po11ul11r v>ords lr'lday. "in·
formation" and .. communication." They
are often used interchangeahly, but they
signify quite differ·
tnt thh1gs. Informa-
tion is 1tvlng oul ;
communic11tion is
1ettin1 thrpugh.
This is !he ba~ic
trouble wilh so-c811·
ed "commun ic111ion"
within and bet ween
large ,11;roups. In
mo~I cases. ii is
slmply inrormalion that is beinl! giveR
out. nol commuoicalion !hat is gett ing
through.
lttANY LARC.E cOmpanies, for in·
stance, privately deplore the lack of
'"C{lmmun ica lion'' they rn11y ha ve 11'ith
their emplnyes. Rul what they fondly im-
q ine is communication is reall y not - it
is just information . and only the kind of
inform111 ion the company w3nts the
em ployei; to have.
Qimmunication is al least lhe begin·
ning of a dialnit: inform a!ion i.o: a
mono\oJt. Communication is ::ilcrl for a
response: infnr m.iition shut s nff the
switch when the messaRt is ended . Mns l
of all. inrorm111 ion tcl11 "'hat; cnm·
munication explains ~·hy.
BUSINESS AND induslry. among other
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Somebod y seul bags of nuts lo
!\1artha ~lilcJ'lell's GOP \\'ome n·s
funrl-ra iser in Holly"·nod. J~n·t
that like sending coals lo l\'.ew-
castlf'~
-\I. R. A.
Thit t-•lurt rellecll rt1,.r1' vltw1, 1191
MC:tt»rll' lhott '' !ht n•w .. l•U. StlMI '°"' "I ~ffft It GIHm, Gui, DlltJ 1'1191,
institutions, expend tens of n1iltions year·
ly under the mistaken notion that they
arc t1J1nn1unicating \\'i\h their v;)ric>US
· P~li~s: '.)"hen, in nine i,:;1scs out of 10,
they are only processing inlon11atiu11 in a
\1·ay that is palatable lo !heir self·in1agc.
These publics, bcini: no fools, quite pro-
ptrly refuse . tq believe oftici;i l cnnl·
n1uniques. house organs, pt1blici!y htu1d -
out s. and all the l'l'.SL
Slrictly speaking, i: en u i 11 e con1-
1nunieation <:an . exist only be1ween
persons in wh;i\ Bu ber hns enllrd the I·
Thou rel;itlOnship: anything else i~ an 1-lt
relal iunship. "'here we arc n1\I spc;iking
In another 1)('rsnu, in \h{' fullness or his
unic1ucty crct1 tcd hunl:inity. hut to an
"object ," a "1nass," indeed, a "public."
BUT. EVEN ALLO\YI NG for this b;isic
ditlitully, there is no que stion but tha t in-
stitutions, otgnni1.atinns, t' or IJ o r a I e
bodies. can 11101·e lrorn !he inform;ition
end uf the spl'e\rurn t'luscr In the corn·
l\,unicat1 un end . They cnn dn this.
ho\\'C\'Cr, only hy s;~crifieing soine false
pride anti <ll'lini::: like persons who arc
fall ible. uncc1·t;1u1, s1uncti1ncs "'t'ung. a11d
\1'illin1: to lc;1rn fn1n1 rnlstakcs.
\\'hen \Vr 1nforn1, \IC ll':id fr rrrn
,1;!rength : "'hen we ctJlll!nunie11te, we lead
frnm weAkllrSS -,111rl it is preC'ISCly 1his
con[essinn of mnrlality th11t enga~es lhe
ears. hea<ls and hea rt s nr tho$e \\'e \1·an t
to enl ist as allies in a common rause.
4 Non-stop Gla1rior Tale
JeMie Jeromf' "·as lhe " Oe11utiful
American ii:irl whose font 11rp11rel'ltly fit
all the m<'lgir ~lipper!!. Shi' \\'on 11
hand50ll1e Enj!lish lnrd . firs! nf !hr~ ~lit·
tering marrill.if'~. '!Uile 11i;ide from many
amnurs. up to and includin~ H.R.H. The
Prince of Wales. later Edward Vll of
Enf!land.
A wom;in nr «reat f'nf'rgy. she re:
main~ beautiful. brill!anl. w i 11 y,
politicaUy and soci111ly 1of the Anii:ln Si:rx·
on Review). Probably the mosl important
woman of the Victorian ARC :iihe \v111 also
(almost intident~Uy1 the mother or thr.
greatest Englishman of his age. Winston
S. Churchill.
WE MET THE LADY ITIO!\t rt'CC111ly
(1ht h111 bten written Jbout often 1 ii\ the
fir~t vnlun1e of Rlllph Ci. ~·lartin·i;
rprlghtly biography published in 1969,
••Jennie : The Life of l..tldy lt3ndolph
Chun:hill. The Ron~antie · Y~1rs. 18&4·
t89S.'' Th111t wa s a rich. fvll book . bot. only
part or the story. The S('('()tld nrt. e\·t•n
more JntrlJ!:ulnJ! "nd 'A'rill<'» \\'ilh lhc
UJ'l'lt IJU!lo by an author Ctb\'iO\Jsly in
love with the \3dy hin1se1r. :io[){'ars no 1w
.111 "Jtnrtie..:. Tut Dranu1Uc Y~:irs. I~
1'21 ••
TIU ,irhb th«' de11th of Lord Han.
dolph fJf """I • 11tnd rat:inS: m:id !One of
tJx )fst «la• Dpperlrkt> rpiwdcs of Jt'n·
'llt'• tpa~ e1r-11 It locusr s 011 tht.
Litt V«tlritn YA-•1ii~n and Ylorld \Var t ~ • Jerlf'l1' 11th•'ll~~ Stll'?t
tJJdH W: "' <fllftM in 11nd out of thr.
.--111. W ~ • w-11kr. 11~ when,\.
fr.f-~t • :t M' prc~cnce 3nd
..,_ .., t ~ ,-•&a;e when he first ..........
T he Book111a11
()1'11Elt SUl'l'(lltTIN(i l'h:iraclrrs.
fron1 Ucrn:ird Sh;l\\' to her rri rnd QUt'{'n
i\ll'x andril· v..•)re ur her fonn "r roy:il
lover. bounce 111 :in1I ou1 , hut .'.lhY11ys ~11p-
1>0rtinf,! the i.lar. .Jennie of t'ourse.
rrprl'Sl'tl\cd the pri\'ill'r,ect. nuhlf' "'<I\' nf
li fe ;11 lhe Cl'l'St of llrit:i in·s ln11:iCri:1l
1itri11d . but tu)\ lhc it!lt' dt·ti. for L;'ldy
H:indolpl1 r•en1;1!ned nnt' 1\f !ht' busiest
blur·bloods 11f the cr:i. even in the
pre<':irious nrt>a ol rn1n:111e('.
·At 1he :lJ!C of r~1 ~h(' took :1 th irri hu.~·
)):ind. Colonl'I ~1nnta~u 1'11r(•h. 1·1insid1•rf'd
to hC' one of l::uro11e's h:111dsonlt'st 1nt'1L 11
Aloriously nlu~l nrhed lun1)cr ti1l11nial Of·
lice JX'rson , younr.rr th:in .lt'nnle '~ son
\\'\nston. •
Tiil~ 1~ A rion-tlop Jll:in1or \air.
1nrlieulou~ly rl'1'l':1rl·hNI -3 litllc loo
)llK'k·lllOl'kt'i.I 11l\h ltMftllhlt'"· but M;1 rt1n
Is tl l'tcnnined 10 d0<·l1111cnt cverv un!1kelv
Hdbil in a prigrn nl C\ (·n i111' rMSt
outr;t,1.!COU" Virtorian no\ elll>l would oot
ha\'C d:ired to pr\'"t'tll as fic·tion
~tarli11's :l\\'('·s!rurk !!('('Otld b on k
1nakl•S \hr niosl of th~ f:H'l .Tenn11''5 l~ttr
hfe "as <'Vt'n more Oly1npian than her
rarlil•r. The J:l3~S slip~r. h11We\·rr.
finAlly sh1111tcrrd Jl'nn'11' fell do1•.'n :i lli~hl
nr fll~1rs :.tt !ht 11.i;;r of 117. i\ lc2 lllll·
put~11nn folhl"'t'd. h('r hf11rr ~11\r nut II
\\'!S the end of an e a (Prentice·Htdl ; tJ-
lu~,, $8.95• .. . . --
•
, WlLLIA.11 HOGAN
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A Politically Hazardous Nomination
\\IASHINGTON -President Nixon has
n1ade CJ no more hAzardous political moYe
in his first term than the designation of
J)r11n Eat! Rutz nf Purdue Unive:rsity to
sUcl'r.cd Agriculture Secretary Clifford
M. Hardin.
This m~y seem as if it were a parochial
exaggeration.· taking
into ac c ount the
declining political
power of !he farm
bloc, and the pri-
. 111acy or such olhcr
issues as war and
rhe stale of the econ-
orny.
i\nyone wh.i al.~tl
lakes into j\Ccount
the very narrow poli tical di vision now
llrcv:1iling, and what can happen when
the election of a president is balanced on
the ra1.or's rdge, will at Onl'e sec th e
hazards inYolvcd .
''Oh, ht'll , not another professor," ex·
t'lai1ned all Iowa congress1nnn ~'hen ap·
praised thnt Nixon had picked the Purdue
dean to succeed Hardin, former chan·
ccl!or of the University of Nebraska. This
aOOul sum1ned up farm state t:Otl·
grcssional uppn sition lo the change al
agriculture.
THI:: REACTION TO BU17. was cnm·
poundPd by his rf'pulation as one of tht
architects of the policies of Ez.ra Tafl
Richard Wilson'
Benson. whit'h a<:hil'vl'd a nnlable degrre
or unpopulnrity in the Eisenhower ad-
mini strati11n.
'l'he root ea u.i;es of the h;i1.ard lie
decpt_·r !hau that. The late 1'hnmns E.
Dewey once lnld this repnrter tha t of all
the lnctors that 1nay, have eaust.'d his
dcfe;1t by Prrsidrnt ·rrun1:in -in 19~8, the
nio . .;;t crucial wa.~ l)e"·cy·~ ow n un-
d<·rvntu:ilitHt ol 1l r:'J"lll belt reaction
R~;l\llSI hlnl ill the Clusini.: Wetk.~ o( the
carnp:iign. As a cons.equenC'e of no t
rl•sponding to this re:iction (il had to do
with prit'l' support polit:ies I Dewey lost
Iowa, Illinois, Kansas. Minnesota. and
other statt's which he h3d expected to
carry. llow n1uch ol his loss of Ohio
miAhl h:iv~ :1 lso bt'en attributnble to the
!lame C'ause is more conjecturnl, but it is
not conjectural that l)ewey lost to
Tr u1n:in stall'., he h.1d carried againsl
Roosevelt four years e:1rlier.
The r:irn1 vote in 1111 lhosc stales was a
n1ort <.'Onsiderable factor 24 years aJ::o
than it will be in 1972. hut it is not In be
di~mi~scd in presidential elections which
can turn on 11 change of 50.000 votes one
w11y or the other.
NIXON HAS. IN EFFECT. put into the
balance Mid"•esl st;.ites which he w<1s able
to carry In two presiriential eleclions -
low11. Kansas. Indiana. Nebra~k11. Ohio.
\Visconsin.
Th e polilic;il .. feel" or the situation is
that unless But z, if co nfirmed by the
Senate. is able lo reverse farm price
deelinc s. Nixon will Ix in trouble in areas
"·here he wa s st ron;:-csl.
1'hrrc ha\·e long: t>t'cn signs of this
developing trouhlf'. ll:irtlin's ;ippo inln1rnt
i11 the first pla<'e was seen by sornc
powerrul hir1n intere~ls :is n1eret y an at-
tempt by Nixon to push farn1 problems
into the baekj,!round and forget abo ut
r them . ll:;1rdillo w;1 s liktd and in sonic
measure forgive n for d11i11i:::. 1)r nol doing,
what Nixo n wanted hinl to do and not do,
No su<:h spirit or forgiveness is
associatL'CI with Ocan Butz. F'arm leaders
condemR him as an agri -busincss apostle
lcadini,: the way to corporate takcnvcr of
the famil y sized 'furnl and a destruction
of traditional i\1ncrican values : •Or . they
hail hi1n as hard.headed 11nd practical in
favoring the adju stments farmers will
have lo make to survive.
C.:flNS IO EllJ/\(; THE f;•l.:l th;iL Butz, 1r
confirmed. will have onl y a few mon lhs
to do what he could not do all the while
he was advising Ezra Taft Benson. his
prospect1 of political success are not
brig ht
End of Baseball's 'Slavery'
To the surprise or alrilo.~t everyhod y in
!he jock trilde. the Supreme Court h111s
<11treed In review Curt F'Jood 'i; suil q11ei;-
lioning the legality of the reserve claui;e.
If .\'Oll like outrages. lhl' rP.~r,•e cit.II!!!
is a hor1ry What is it? Well, it's 11 fo r1n of
sla\'ery. Sl:ivery is supposed to be illegal
in 1his here countr.v.
In basrb;i ll il atn·i.
and never has bt>t'n.
The rc~cr\•e l'l:iuse.
\\•hich wa s written
11110 baseba ll play.
1ng eontr<icls when
~11't':lli!OOps were in
flnwer, binds a man
ahnost indissol ubly
10 1he club 1'.hich
fi rst si~ns hin1 . A baseball player i~ ;in
indrnturcd ser,•anl ; or, as former playp r
Flood pul it in his suit, "an involuntary
slt1vc."
Tll E 1'1.A \'ER IS owned by the cluh
un!il ii decides he i11 to be traded. sold or
l'("le:i.qcd. Unlike players in other pro
sports. 11 IJ:illpla ycr Is unable to e!itablish,
k1t tilonc nri.:uti:il(', a f:iir market value
fnr his se rvices. Like ;, sln\'e. he knows
wh:ll he is worth 1111 the d<1y th;1I he is
!tnltl.
\Vhile he i~ in h:i~b:ill n play'r c:i nnol
llt'i;!t)ti:ite with ;iootht>r e1nployer, he c1trr
nnt arr:111~e lo trade: hiluself, :.i nd he
1nusl "'ork \\'hrre Sin1011 l.e~ree s.tys he
rnust work , r•:irdlri;~ or whc1h1.·r he cnn
lll:tnd lhe plact or not. •
The rcservt' 1,.•J:iu~ hn s bten upheld by
!he Suprt1ne Coo11 !le\'ernl t in1('~. nio~t
rtrer1tly in 1922, when a majority opinion
"rillcn by ,Ju5til'1! Oliver Wendell Holn1eJ1
Jr. ruled th,11t baseball did not rftn\e
"''ilhin Ult purview of tilt anti-trust la"'''
B11 George ---
Dear GtnrJit :
Do you t1nswer per5nn,11I mAil"
BLONDIE
Lkilr· Biond i<':
T'hat depend~.
personal, ~lddo?
Blondie. How
Charles. McCabe
bec11use ii did. not enga i::e in lnlcrstate
commerce. 1'he plnyers 1noved from
stalt lo sta te in railroatl cars: bu t the
games. :.is such, \\'ere played within ooe
stale. Or that's what Holmes said.
THE 1111 SU,PREME Court has 11greed
In revie:w the reserYe ch1use btcause
base:bl'lll tOOay is 11nother bill\ gamr:. It is
doubtful if il could continue to exist
without heavy .subsldie.s from television
and r11di<I interest~. who ;ire most
dtcidedly in interstate commeree.
·'
Flood askf'd In be rn.-.de a "free a,!!Pnl"
-i.e .. a free man -immediately. with a
limlt on how lnn1: one team ca n control
him. and a specification lhal after a mRn
ha11 pl ayed in the major leagues a certain
number of yc1.1rs he can ve to a lrade in·
volvin~ him. His plcn will probably
prevail, lhi!'I time around .
You will ask. surely, how this legal
an11chronisn1 could h;i ve survived so Ion~.
how baseball can evade the restraints in1,
posed on any other large business in lh is
country.
You will ne\'er u nder~tand !hi.~ 1f )OU
do no! kno1o1t thr: curious place haseball
nccupiei; iR the miridle-ased AmcriCan
male p!iyche. The itame 1s not jusl as
American 11~ mnrher and blueberry pie. It
is more American.
P ainfiil but Necessary
flllnne11polil1 Tribune
Thr: Pl'ly Board says that wages can be
increased n1oder.11tely in the future -5.~
1>ereent i1 the standard. ltllhovgh there
rna)' bt excepli0t1$. Ll\hor le:idcrs i;a y
lh:il :tll previously nejlntiated incre:isc11
nlu.~I IX' pahl ~up to ft 1wrcent 'l'he Pay
Bonrtl ~:iy~ 1hat frl't'Zf' n11'11nt frttr.e. Pay
incre:ast~ lh:it would OlherwiSt' h:ive
l'l)mt due during lhe frte:1.e can·1 ~ p11 id
retm:i<·livcly, unrll'r the b o 11 r d 's
tlt-el.~it111~. any mort th:in i.tller, elln now
!<!" b:11·k and t'<lllel'I pritt in<'ren1 t nt s on ~ood.~ 111111 111•rv~i'i Still! t111r h1R !ht fr()eze.
1 ... 'lhflr .~ll)'ll lhal rt•lrOllClive wage in·
crt;'ll•<'ll ~houtd be: J)'tid.__
CllAl.l.•~NGF-'i ARE alrtady being
hearrt. "-'ho qun lifits for e1emptlons from
the ban on rtlro:u,1ive pay7 Won·11he r. ~
pe_rcenl slen1lard underm ine the whole
ldl!'a of meril incrcasts7 Aren 't labor
<.-ontrActs in efftt.1be:ln"g11brogatl!'d by the
Pay Bol!rd?
TheM: 111re lmport:int 11011 \·aiid que"·
114>nJ. Rut tht!y oujthl lo bf: asked withou1
lo@lng 1lght nf the main i1:rue1, wnich ire,
"'' bt.l~\1., tbeat : -•
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-THE NATION IS ~ufferin,I.! from
w11ge·drivcn , not dcmand·driven inrla!inn. ·
-Wha tever fi scal and monetary ac·
lions are taken to slimulate the economy
and reduce unemploymen t, restra int n1
inn11linn .... ·ill be in1possible without
re~trn.inl in wages.
-Voluntary wa~e rCl'l traint hasn·t
"'orkcd. Mnntlatory rr~lraints on prices
and illt'flmts Hre Ill<' 11ltcmatlvc. but lo
be both trftt.1ivMJnd fil ir. such rcstraiiits
nlu:n be appllcd uniromll)'.
-UNIFORAllTV J\IEANS thrit orcani1:·
rel l:lbior r;:11nnol he cxen1pted , rctmac·
live ly, fro1n lhe 90-day rrceze . It also
mean!! thnt wage levels in the future will
have to bf: lower 1hmn labor would like
and management would accept.
No one likes to sec 11 rt'ducUon In h\~
Rnliclpatt'd ear11lngs. But n c 11 r I y
eve ryone sh-0u ld '\\'t'lco n1e the chance to
slow lnrlALion. 11nd th11t is the whole
11urposc (If lhr nfw wa~e pnlicy. l.tke a
"vaeeinatlnn . the P11.y Board rltci5ions 11ore
11 llttle Plflllnful . but necessary l.o national
economic h.,llq.
It was the refll Nixon "'ho desi~naled
Butz. Thf' Pur:due expert is outstanding in
hi.~ fitld, if <:onlrovcrsi;i l. \Vithnut
politic<tl or hum;in cor1sidf'r::t!ions' be1ng
involved. Rutz m<1y co nceiv;:ihl.1• have lhc
only long-run ;inswcrs. This is the kind of
man Nixon likes. the man Nixnn lhi nk5
h<1s the right ans"'ers even if 1hey arc un·
popular. Nixon typically chooses hard
. solutions.
This docs not change the ta<'l tha t he
has made hin1 self vulnerable "'it h snme
or his.hard solutions I Cambod ia. the pace
or the Victnarn winddO\\'tl. l'{'\!enue shar·
ing, "'clfare refor1n J ;ind that is the ris k
he runs by bringing Butz back into the
picture.
THE FIHST THI NG BUTZ said, wit.h
Nixon looking on ap pr11vingly, was tha~
the pri ce nf c:orn is' too low. Nobody who
raises corn con1mcrcial!y would disagree
"'ith thaL
This statement is likely lei be the
1neasurc or Butz' success. anrl if corn
prices arc no higher nexl year. he is like·
I}' to be hooted ou t or the combclt "'hen
hr goes can1p;1igning for Nixnn next yea r,
H that hap1x:ns. 11fc spir it nf ·rom De"•ey
1nay whi sper. "I told ynu sn."
The quickness ~·ith "hir'1 Sen, Hubert
H. Humphrey and olhcr tllidwest
Democrals took ur this issue is sign
enough of how sensitive thty consider the
ma tter to be. ·
• Ill Sight?·
SUl'RE~·l l::: C.:OUllTS in the pa~l . just
like every olher organization in the coun·
try, \\'ere occupied by men who played
baseball "'hen they \\•ere kids. The gro1vn
American m11le. until rp1i1e rerrnl ly,
rnu!d not face the fact 1hat 11'\e game 1vas
tr·uly 'a bu,1;incss, and a prclly prcdRtnry
one at that. They left their nlrice~. 11 hich
\vcrc businesses. to spend an aflernonn at
the pal'k, in order 1o get aw11y from
busi ness. 8;1schall w:i.~n·1 as sacred as
the flag ; but it "as right u11 there. man.
Unlil quite recently. The male psyche
is no longer totally brsor1ed bv !he
per fect double pl:i~·. lhC' ar1istic huiit, the
proud l'CC'ital of 1he infield nv rul r. \\'e
have become ;i nation of l.>ii<h ·Conlact
boyi;. In basehall the only "a~· oiie pla~·er
t·t1 n le gally touch another is by tagging
hln1 "·ith a b<lll. This sort of sporl sa vs
nothing 10 the gu y whr~ glues himself 'to
!he box for the Monday nigh! pro football
Sillurnali;i of tile 1\·rck.
If ii is true, :ls ~·I r. ll0<1lcy sair\, that !h'
Supreme Cnurl r(l!lOws the Pl C'ct1on
returns. ii 11111st !}(' cquolly true !hat the
Justices ;ilso fnll nw 1h(' spnrts pilJ::C'S. No,
11 lnnks as though old Si mon Legree may
have lo gel son1t honest "'Ork.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
J(obcrt N. \V rt•d, 1'11blls/1cr
'fl1onr11., ,..~,.,,11il; F.<filor
.\ll11•rt l\1. Hairs
f;t/11.,rial l'uyc t:t11tor
Tl1ro cdllurl i•l 1~•~·· of lhro li;.\ly
l'll"l M....,k,. lu inlnrtn nnrl .~1 ln111 ·
li\tc t'l":\t11't'li: hy p1 r~. n1111i: th is
11•'\\"l'J~l1 J1:1··,,. "l•lli!"lli anr1 1:nm•
1111·n1 ·1ry •111 l"I'"·~ .. r !nt•·n·~t .11nrl 1>!i;::11111r1111"·· h) 1•r .. 1·icl 1111: 11 (.,rum r .. 1· lh•· !'\j>l"'~l··n pf 1111r rr11dror1'
"l •ini"n~. 1111'1 h> l'""••n11nc-the lin•·r~r 1i,.11 1.,.,lnu 11f lnf\•r1n"'1 ,,.,,_
l"I'\('!'~ llnd li{'OkfSmtn on lojllC:I
,,j thC' d11y.
~lon day, 10\'e n\bcr 22. 1971
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L. Jtl. Boyd
Begii1 ~y IGssing
Tl1en1 on the Ears
•·\Vbo does not love wine. "·omen and &Oil&
Remains a fool bis whole life long." .
. ~ften Quoted.
\Vho wrol~ the foregoing couplet? l\Iartin Luther. yau
say? So say the many. But thats wrong. It was a g'entle-.
man named Jotiann Heinrich Voss. f\'ot Luther. but Herr
Voss also said: "Forget you not. gentlemen, always begin
by ki ssing them on the ears."
'-IOST HOSTlLE football player on the field is the line-
ffiflD . !l-1ost skillful phys1cally is the wide re«iver. Such
is the mutual be.lief of six coaches
queried on the matter. T he y judged
quar•erbacks to be the least hostile,
offensive tackle the least adept phys..
ically. Incidentally, the coaches said
linebackers tended to be the most hos-
tile off the field , too:
FAST FACTS
l\1ustn'l fail to mention four out
of five of those wooden cigar store
Indians were squaws.
. SIR. TF you're not exactly 3.M
times as tall as your thigh bone is long, you're not a
perfect specimen. ,..
IT TAKES a newborn rabbit just six days to double
its \Yeight, the speedy little rascal.
\\rJIAT beer is you know, but do yOU' know what lager
beer is? Sprlng this question on the boys down at the cor-
ner. \Viii bet you a quarter on the side not one in 20 can
define •·1 ager.·• Looked it up. It's just beer stored for
some months before il"s sold, that's all.
QUERIES
Q. "Do eagles eat ducks'''
A. With relish. i\o, \Yilhout relish. But they eat them .
E.agles eat anything. Told you they ha\·e bad breath. didn 't
I? Just awful. Some say eagles nest on distant mountain-·
lops as a Sl'IC'iill courtes\·.
Q. ''WHAT'S !.he ratio of men to v.·omen amo~g news-
paper reporters?''
A. The gentlemen still outnumber the ladies by about
two lo ~ne in this dodge.
\\"ELL-l\1ATED
Call these couples well·mated : !. He snores and she's
hard of hearing. 2. He'd rat.her elay golf than eat and she
would rather play bridge than cook. 3. He's an excellent
impromptu speaker Md she's a superb extemporaneous
listener. That's all J can thin k of right now. ri.iust be
more, however.
IT HAS BEEN determined the ratio of overv.·eight
men -portly and corpulent -to overweight "'omen -
plump. pursy. plelhoric, buxom> stout. fat and obese -
is aboul two lo seven.
flr\0 TlllS hard to believe. but am told by a man
of science who should know that the rattlesnake is pn>
grammed to strike only at v.·hal's v.·arm . Is this true?
THAT LATIN \\'ORD "candidus·• meant glittering
white." Unblemished. Clean. Pure. It's where we got the
word "candidates" for our public office seekers. More
bitter observations coming up. \Vatch for same ..
Add.ress mail to L. J\1. Bo yd, P.O. Box 1875, New-
port Beach, Ca .. 92660.
Copyright 1971 L. lt-f. Boyd
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The loved ones.
Give Christmas
portraits of
you and your
child ren. . ._,,,,...,,.,-._....,..,.,,~
o ONE LARGE 8110 FOR THE FAMILY
o SIX WALLET-SIZE FOR GIFT·GIVING
A gift to be cherished this year, and for years lo
come. At a marvelous pricelor sueh
profession•I quality. Our photographers rank
among the most skllled In tf'letr profession
and can achieve the informal , natural look you
want. This offer app lies to any family
grouping up to. and including lour.
And 1emember. you can charge ii al Penneys.
JCPe11ney
' The values are here every day.
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KEW!.~!~,!.~ACH ·I ..... ~, .. ,,,,, HUNTINGTON BEACH
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DAil Y I'll.Of 7'
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I
Our blanket · sale
has complete coverage.
Electrics. Prints. Thermals.
• •Sale prices effective Sunday, November 21 through Saturday, November :rt.
Sale!,
Save 1:11 a yard.
Polyester
knits now
3.88yd.
Rog.4&9Jd.Full•
bodied knllssewllj)
beautifully for
drei!esoreporta-
wear. Wearabl&
In any oeason, eny
climate. Choose
from crepe textures.
i:>laln etilches,
Jacquard·paUemed
eurfaces. all In
faahlon colors. 68/IO"
\
Sale15~~
Rog.18.00. Forllghtwelghtwannth,
tJy lhlsall acrylic electric blanket
With 'supernap' finish. Nylon binding.
Machine washable In wa rm water.
Single control. U.L Listed.
Full, single co nlro1 17.00, reg. 20.00
Full, dual control 21.25, rog.:IJ.00
Queen, dual control 25.35, reg. 31.00
King, dual conlrol 34.SS, reg.41 .00
Sale4~~~
Reg. 5.99. Poly .. ter/rayon printed
blanketwilh nylon binding.
Machine washable In cool
water. Va~ety of colors and patterns.
Full s1Ze &.a8, rea. 7.99
JC Penney
The values are h~re every day.
Sale4!~·
Rog.5.99. Acrylic thermal blankat
gives llghtwelghtwannth for any
geason. Nylon binding. Machine
washable in lukewarm water •
Full slzeB.88, reg. 7.89
Queen size 7.88, reg.10.00
Klngslze9.88,rog.13.00
Shop from Sundoy_ noon at th• following stores:
NEWP.ORT BEACH , Fa1hion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH , Huntington Center, COSTA MESA, Harbor Center Like it , •• chortt Ill
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· f !)All Y PILOT Monday, NO¥tmbtf 22. 1971
Assembly Leader's Campaign -
Nudists
Get Honor
Southland Blazes
Leave Seve11 Dead
HHH-for-President Dr.ive .taunc-hed
EL· CAJON (AP) -
While 400,000 people look·
ed. on, the noat entered
by a nudist club won
sweepstakes honbrs in the
1971 Mother Goose parade.
LOS ANGELES (AP} -ching the drive "with the votes out or 7 million cast this point, established himself
Format Ion of. a Hubert senator'a knowledge and ap-in 1968. as the clearcut choice of
Hunlphrty·fOr·President drive pr'oval." Karabian said none or the Democrats in California or t'. I
On its float Sunday wa11
a _ crooked man, fully
clothed, walking a ~rook·
ed mile wllh an outslzed
cat chasing a moUJ!ie in a
circle.
By The Assoc1ated Press
Five children and two adults
were burned to death in three
Southern California fires over
the weekeM. authorities said.
California Division of Forestry
investigators said .
The cause of the fire in
tbe 467-foot former cruise ship
'"as unknown, authorities sa,id.
The La Janelle: has been
undergoing salvage opcra lions
sipce founclorln ln a_Bale ln
In California 1'U announced "My <>bjective Is to other candidates or potential nation ."
today by Walter Karabian, · demonstrate the support to candidates for the Democratic He said he bclleveS Sen.
majority leader of tht atate encourage him to run," he nomination has demonstrated Edward Kennedy when he
Assembly. said. he can win in 1972. says he wUl not be a can· The children all died when
flames swept through their
one-slory farmbous in lhe
Riverside County community
of Blythe. The parents, two
other children and a visiting
friend escaped in the predawn
darkness, authorities said,
April 1970. ---,,.--
Karabian 33 a Los Angeles , ''Once he makes the decision Of frontrunnirig Sen. Ed· didate.
attorney ~aid'._he will ·head to be a candidate! then we mund Muskie of Maine, Kara· Karabian's activities for
.. . ' ,, have . to evaluate 1ust which. ,Citizens for Humphrey to primaries he should enter. bian said, "I like him very Humphrey are importan t
The Swallows Sun Island
Club also won the top
prize last year. Two Children Dead;
• persuade th~. MI~ n es o ta parti.cularly whether he should much but I don't think he 's because of his influence with ~enator that here in the most enter the California primary." been able to put together what other slate lawmakers and :
important state, he has g~t Humphrey lost California to it takes to win in California because he has valuable fund·
In Hollywood, a 70-year-o\d
double amputee, D a v i d
Barnower, ~ied Sunday when
support and many of us in President Nixon by 224 000 and he certainly has not, at raising contacts.
California want him to run. 1 _:.:.:=::::_:_::::_:_.c:__:__:_' -'-------:--=-------..::..-------· •
2 Muslims flames engulfed hi s secood-
floor apartment. W i 11 a r d
Y ouug Sitter Held
Bums. 40, a resident of a SA!'fI:A CLARA. Ca I i r. room and board.
Shot Dead downto\vq Los Angeles .hotel, "(UPI) -Autopsies were plan-The bodies of the children
died Saturday when his bed d od · t · were found by two college was set afire, apparently by nc t ay on two sis ers, age
Karabian said he is laun-
Youth Shot
In 'Game'
I B
·g It r· e ·d 5 and fi. whose bodies \Vere students Saturday lying beside
n ay City. a c1 are e, 1r men sa1 · each other dressed in pajamas · Another fire broke out in found in a garbage bin behind and wrapped in bedsheets.
the former cruise ship La their apar!menl Saturday. Detectives said the sisters had LOS ANGELES <UPI) -
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ Jenelle which is beached on Police have n r rested apparenUy been strangled. Aaron Wiggens, 15, played
Two Black Muslim men were the coast near the Ventura Pamela Suzz::in \\';itkins. 19. • Russian Roulette for the first County community of Porl on two co~nts nf murder and Detective Capt. Stan Carey time Sunday night and the
gunned down in a narrow Hueneme, authorities sAid. one count of drug possession said the blonde suspect had gun's loaded cylinder spun
street in San Francisco's Sheriff's deputies identified in connection \.\'i\h the deat hs about 40 amphetamine tablets harmlessly. Even after a few
predominantly bla.::k Fillmore the dead children in the Blythe of Rinya and She 1 v y a in her pocket when arrested more spins nothing happened.
(. Lo ti.a All d 13 Alt d and booked in the Santa Cla ra but th 1 t tt pt had tr · District Sunday night, police ire as re ar . ; 'r1 ge e as a em ag1c 'd Arthur . 9; Nellie, 7: ~1a ry. 5. ~1iss \\'alkins. who arrived County Jail. resultJ. ,
aai · and Debra, 3. They were the in the S;in Francisco Bay Area The dead children's father, Wiggins, In critica1 condition
From cards found in their children of Edmond Allard from Southern California a Henry Aldr idge, is serving today, fought for hia life at
pockets, officers identified and his wife, Lillian. fc\I' \vpo];._5 a~n. \.\':!~ hired by time in Soledad State Prison California Ho.!pital after a .38-
them tentatively as Freddie The fire was apparentl y ~trs. Shirlrv Al<lr1dg" as a Jive-on an armed robbery con-caliber slug tore into his: akull
Lee Webb, 31, of Chicago. and
1
_ca_u_sed __ bY;__f_au_t.;ly __ "_'ir_in.;g_._i_n_ha_b.;>_·51_1_r_r _1_n_re_1_ur_n_f_or __ "_ic_li_on_. _________ •nd_•_u_·led __ th_•_•_t_her_•_id_•_. __ 1
Charles PhUlip Willis, 27, of
Richmond, Calif.
The slaylngs resembled a
,-
_Carpet tile sale.
The more you buy;
the more you save.
Save even more by Installing It yourselfl
,.... similar shooting in Oakland
last Sunday night when a man
burst into a housing project
R ~g . 29c A 9x 12' floor costs just
$25.00. Polyp ropyle ne olefi n
surface tiles cover any floor, Foam backing for walking comfort. Easy
to install. .. just place and press.
Durable. Choose from 10 colors.
apartment and shot Black
Muslim Ronnie Flamaugh, 24,
and an eight-year-old girl
Kimberley Mapp . No arrests
have been made In that case.
The conservatWely dressed
men were lying sprawled on
the narrow street when police
arrived, officers said.
Police said witnesses turned
in the alann after ::eeinR a
black man and woman flee,
the scene about 8:30 p.m.
Webb and Willis both were
shot in the head with .45 pistol
bullets, one of them fi ve
times, police said .
The cards in their pockets
Identified ~th as mcmbers-
of the Nation of Islam, police
said.
Solon Says
Aid Reform
L~1:!<!! ~fi ~
Sen. Anthony Beilenson says
the Reagan administration has
speeded up welfare reform
since he started a legislative
investigation of the program
which began Oct. 1.
As he went ·into today's
hearing of his special sub-
committee. -the third such
meeting so far -the Be.verly
Hills Democrat said "the
hearings have already had a
healthy effect."
At the first two hearings,
he pushed for faster action
on reform Jaw provisions for
family planning. job training
and day ·care for children of
working welfare mothers.
Tha tailored look
lits avary occasion
"ni• 1111trt .oohlstlc.tltl 10011: of •II
0Mfe-IJl1 .. ..-.u-.b_!ftd.11_ IL~1L
•bll IOf 11.,.11-« -1"' '"''· Yellow 1op, 1t11L blc:ll c.-... $81
HAUO• SHOl'PIHG crNni
~ HarMr llwd.
Coot• --· HUNTINGTON CENTER
leMh & 141n91r
HWtfffttttn .. ach
lt'1 .. I01-
•
wa·re hou-se
c ea rance!
Sa ve-up to 42°/o
Overst9c k and discontinued carpeting.
Hurry in! Quantities are limited.
· · N·o·w-a·~~. Yd.
Orlg. 5.99
'Nylshag' long wea ring nylon shag pile with permanent
twist to keep its springy texture. Tweeds 5 Colors.
Nows~~.Yd.
Orlg. 8.50
'South Seas' long, lush polyester pile keeps its resilience
and soft. luxurious touch. Tweeds. 5 Colors.
Now ·3~~.Yd.
Orig. 5.99
'Comet' famous DuPont 501• nylo n gives sturdy wear.
Multi-level loop pile hides footmarks. Solids and tweedL
11 Colors.
Now s~~.Yd.
Orig. 9.50
'Infinity' sculptured effect pile of Acr11an• acrylic, tip
sheared for interesting surlace. Solids. 10 Colors.
~}.;
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JCPenney
Shop from Su"doy noon at the followtn9 Stornr
Padding and e1pert In·
et1ll1tlon av1ll1bl• at
low Penner pftc•a. Iring
In your floor meaaura·
manta for • no-obllgl•
llon coll"'f oodmolo.
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For carpet e•f'.mat• call today: NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion l1!1nd. .
HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center. Buy it on Penneys Tim• Paym1nt Plan.
50Pa.
Reg . 59 c A 9x12' floo r costs Just
$54. Fashio nable i'lylon pile &hag.
Gel it wal l-t o-wall at budget
prices. Just place, press and walk
on 'em. Foam backing . 5 Tri-tone
colors.
58Pa.
Reg . 69c A 9x12' floor costs just
563. Nylon loop tweed tiles wittt
interlocking ed ges to hide seamL
Foam rubber backing for a cush· iony fee l. Self-adhesive tiles for
instant installation, Choose from 5
colors.
Sale prlc•• effective Sunday, November 21 through Wednesday,
November 24. ·
JCPenney
Ava ilable •+:
Shop fram Sunday Noon ot the follow lnq stordt
NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion liland
HUNTINGTON BEAC~. '~untington C1nter
Use Penneys time p~ment pl1,n.
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Monday, Novembe1 Z2, 1971 OAJLV Pilot 9
Floo-d Control Plan·s Per·il Homes •
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ot tli• O•llY 'llel ll1H
Which must go -2.MIO
homes, M bridges and sewer,
a:as apd water mains in
Orange County, or ~ homes
and 68 dairies in Riverside
County?
That is the question con·
fronting members of the Army
Corps of Engineers who are
studying four proposals lo
upgrade the nood control
system in Orange County.
Col. James Metalios, a
direct.or of engineering In the
C.Orps' Los Angeles office, ex·
plained that the choices for
improving the system· lie in
those two alternatives or a
combination of them. .
W,e estimated the cost of the
project -regardless of I he
form -to be about $400
million.
If the Riverside alterp<1live
is chosen, the Prado Dam will
be raised so that the lloodable
area behind it will be ex-
pandNI from-9.740 acres to
15.700 acres, displacing the
homes and dairies.
The other extreme is to
\\'iden the river channel from
AnRheim to the ocean and
raise the height of the levies.
This \1•ould cause the Joss of
the homes. and necessitate
relocation or the utility ma ins
and reconstruction of the
bridges.
But ~1elahos measured
Erosion Measure
. -\
these costs against lhe cos& ~f " tkit .)ftlalios cautioned that
floods . .. the statistical probability for
would have to be paid for by
lhe local districts.
He ~d Use county Board or
&iperviaors reeently passed 11
ruolution asking the corps oot
to efl)and the capacity of the
river chaMel beyond what the
ri,ght of way can currently
handle.
He estimated the maximum these flood11 dou not mun•
Oood, called a "Standard Pro-that they occur every 200
ject Flood," could cover , ye au or 15 yean. "It could
100.000 acres in Fountain happen nen week or nes;l year
Valley, Huntington B e a c h \ . as . e9sily as in 2064," he said
Costa 1'-1esa. Fu 11 er t on. of the Standard Project Flood.
Anaheim and Oran·ge~ That A· met tfug 1i11t wt'tk in
r\ood could cost $1.1 billion and ·Fountain Valley, attenc!~ by
unlotd lives. about 70 people, was held to
He said noocts of this si~e acquaint local residents with Innocent
have a staUstlcal rate of oc-_ the ctr.ps' plans. Perry Davis,
currence of about 200 years. pubHc 1ff1ira offl~ for the
The la st one to hi t the cou nty cOrps, said there will be , .,,._ Plea Filed
came in 1862. ' year waltlna: period before
In comparison, the floodi ng constrµction begins. J S
of 19fi9 in the region around . In that time, engineers will ll laying
Costa f\1esa , Huntington Beach hive to decide .,.. h I ch
and Fountain Valley was con-alternative or combinations of SANTA ANA -Navy
sidercd a 25-year flood. alternatives will be used. He Corpsman Juan Jose Molina of
noted thal some ol the the El Toro Marine Corps Air
decisions to be made involve Station has denied that he was
buJJdinJS lQcated on the river responsible for the slaying of
bank. an Anaheim widow. He has
"There's the 1 1 n It at Ion been ordered to face trial Jan.
disiriC t treatment plant in 5 in Orange County Superior
COAST MUSIC
invites you to attend
ALL STAR ORGAN CONCERT
featuring YAMAHA, THOMAS, & CONN ORGANS
Tuesday Evening, Nov. 30, at 8 p .m.
THE NEW PORTER INN !Monte Carlo Room)
1107 Jamboree Rd. I Near Coast Hway.l Ne wport Beach
About to purchase an organ fo r your home, but confused by the
many cla ims? Interested in ha ving your questions answered onc e
and for all by hearing 1hree of the finest organ lin es of today
demonstrated live by three top organists? Coast Music presents,
on ALl·STAR ORGAN SPECTACULAR feotudng RALPH WOLF for
Thomas Organs, TOM HAZEL TON for Conn O rgans, and TURLEY
HIGGINS fo~ Yamaha Organs.
Flood Plan Aids Beach.es
Fountain Valley, f o.r fr,.. Court. . .
stance," he said. "lf you wi-Judge Byron K~ McMillan
'den the .r·iver but ltave the 11ccepted the innocent plea of
plant there, you have to con-the 22·year-old defendant and
sider if it will be able to func-refused bail. Molina Will face
tion under tht watt')r pressure a pretrial hearing Dec. 17.
Admission will .be strictly bY tickef.'You may obtain yours now
by visiting the organ ~eportmenl of Coast Music, at 1839 New·
poft Blvd., Costa Mesa. There is no charge for tickets, b ut due to
the limited rH.t..mber of seats, it would be appreciated if adults
only attend th is event,
A proposal hy the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers to upgrade
the Orange County flood con·
trol system co~ld benefit the
erosion prone beaches in
Newport Beach.
Perry Da vis. spokesman for
the corps of enginrcrs said one
of four proposals under study
is to widen and grade the San·
ta Ana River Channel from
Anaheim to the ocean.
mouth. And by the natural
process of littoral transport,
the sand 1vould be \\'ashed nn
to the be?.~hes south of !he
river mouth."
Those beaches ha\'e been
eroded away several llmes in
recent years because there is
not en.,ugh sand being \\'ashed
oul of the ri ver, and the
natural wave action scours out
the beaches.
shore. that cou ld be generated by Molina was arrested four "The river channel south of .. water running in the river." d
A h · · n • D · ays after the killing Nov. I of na eim is very at, ' avJs. He uid•other ·questions sti ll Barbara Louise Smith. The
said, ''and so t~e sa nd drops to be coll!ldered center around woman 's nude mutilated botv
out there. Anei the 1969 flood land ·and construction coats. was found in the bedroom Or ...,.c had to dig out one million h 1 cubic ~·<1rds of material. If w~ "A c ange o 111 litUe as )5 her West Lynne street
I I ·percent,....in land coats, could apartment. were to en arge the channe , -11-mina•-an 8 1 tern 1 1_ 1 v • Off' the action of nature would be "' ui::-1cers said the 26-year-old
able to lake over what we'vi=.. altogether,..., he said. victim had been stran~led
been forccd./to do ourselves .in -navis ·a1so noted that all the with her nightgown and her
recent yeat's." relocation cost! are borne by body bore st11b wounds and
We think you will thoroughly enjoy this unusual approach in lhe
presenta tio n of comporotive organ features. Plan to be(t'herel
Admission by ticket only. Door Prizes
COAST MUS IC SERVICE
1839 Newpart Blvd,, Costa Mesa 642-2851
If this project "'ere un-
dertaken, he said. "the natural
sand in the river bed would
flow freely and v.·ould then
form a delta off the river
A series of cures hal'e been
sought for th is problem . Past
anti~rosion projects have con-
sisted of hauling sand from
upriver and dumping it off
Davis eii:plained the beach local agencies. All the work to bite marks. Her children. ages
erosion a!pecl of the project bt done on the gas. sewer and two and four, were playing in
wat•r m11'n•, for 1·nstan••, a nearby room after represenlath·es of thei----------·-------·-------------------------------------
corps 0£ engineers and the
Oran,:le County fo'\ood Control
District discussed the matter
recent!)' in Fountain Valley. Fair Chief Gets Rai se
Now that the pay freeze has
thaw ed, directors of the
Orange County Fair ha ve
acreed to a five percent \\'age
increase for General Manager
James Porterfie\r:I.
Porterfield's salary now
jumps from 5998 a month to
$1.043 a month, subject lo any
decisions by the national Pay
Board. T r '
The general manager took
over operation of the fa ir on
Nov. 1, 1970. He came to
Orange Counl-y from the
manager's post of the Nappa
County To"'n and Country
Fair,
All four proposals, which
range from raising the height
of the Prado D<im in RiV'erside
Couoty to the widening of the
ri~4E itself, will coot about
$4iyl million.
Davis said construction is
nOt likely to begin for another
ljl years while engineers study
the proposals and do the plan·
ning for the one they finally
select.
Custom draperies ~i
uncustomary price;s: .
Save up to 1 /3 .
i\f. ~ I
' /! " ' I
" I I
' J· ' '
Still i n t ime
for Ch ristmas.
~
~from open -.e caemenls,
1ntlque llllns, hOmespuns, •heers
. Ind m1ny more. All II tremendous
-JnOI. Regultr low Penney prlciS
on expert l1brielllon.
E
' ' •
f;
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Call collect (714).523-6511 for
our shop-at-home service, free.
JCPenney
at·home decorating
D1cor1te now. Use Penn eys time payment plan.
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Two great ways to _say
Merry Christmas: our
washer and dryer sal e .
ff yaa lire ta av• money, eave Sunday, too.•
Save 37.90 on the pair
(
Sale $199 Sale $163
R.;. 219.95. SIY• 20.tS.
ltenncre1te pro11r1mm•d w11her.
Six washing programs for all popular
f•brics including permanent press, soak
setting for heavily stained articles, 3
w1ter level selection, automatic liquid
bleach dispenser. White, coppertone,
avocado or h1rvest gold •••
col~r costs no more at JCPenney.
Reg. 179.95. Save 16.95.
Penncre11" 4-temperature gas
dryer. For all fabrics including fluff
dry for specia l articles. Signal sentry
so ~nds when cycle is completed.
. Porcelain enamel finish top and drum.
White, coppertone, avocado or harvest
gold ••• color costs no more at JCPenney.
JCPenney .
The values are here every day.
_ 5h•p fre111 .Sunday Naen At The Fallawin9 Stares:
• NEWPO~T BEAC H, Fashion lsl•nd. HUNTI NGTON BEACH, Huntington Center
Use f"enneys Time P1ym1nl Pl•n.
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Jt DAILY Pll'OT
..
For the
Dlssoltctions
Of Marriage
-1 , ..... ,...,, .
c ..... 11ttt. ~Lor•ll• JH11 •rod 11:-ld IL1kt
C1rr. J!idllll 4 • .not Thom .. J,
Vt\19111, O&M., IC., fnll A .... Anll ic.,,.11, Wiii!.,,., JClll 1nd EllHn lltrb1r1
K•1lt1kl !Krul, DornHw II. 1"11 TrG J.
O•tnl, ~11 JDHPll Irie! lortt11 TertM Mt~I, Htlrn f;, tnd Tllom11 M. S.
Ay1n, ltobert J1me1 1..0 V1le•l1 Gold, M1ri1'11 1.,.,., 1<1C11 Mof"IOfl S'"'uet
'(lllYl1'o C1rmtn 11'4 Thom11
lli.-1, MMll Glotll Ind D111lt l Ot'l'ton
Colo,-, J...,e1 J 11'11 Mtrlorlr 11. •mi. Jr~ RotM•1 c111r1 .. ,.., Vlrt rnr1
J • .,... •
0.11, L lndt._&M Ju~)!!: ~ .• Flwuor, ICtth«lnt 'v, t nd Allan M.
Git""' IUvo Ml.,tkl Ind Wtl!tr H .. Jr,
9\lllltt, kown EdlM -ltlcll••a Irvin
c-.... ~•Id e. -Su11n J. •r~11. s1e~ Glory t fld N.,><, Lff
'dl""ldl, Rutll K11111111n tnd J1me1
HlfVC'f'
Tlllbodt.u. AtMI Ctll>tf!noi 1nd Ernul
lto11tnd
$1lvlo. wuu,,., Thom11 incl JUI ..,""" Gr~ ... Hom11 LH Ind Jtmfl LH
Fori.1. S.1111•• ...,..~'"" 1'111 Arll'lur ....
l'llMI No•. I Wrl ... I. Cltlldlt N. •NI K.-111 JI;, 8vr111, Mio.HI J, tnd C1rrlt Tham11, lt1ch.trd M. Ind G-eL• Jt1n C/l_,,ln.. (h..,le1 ROIHrt I nd Ronm1rlt J.-lwlec, Elttnor 8. 1nd Jat.n E. Slowe, C>onl\I 1...a Don1ld E. GIU. M1urffft Ja Ann 1nd Llwrtntl V!l\Cenl
Fud~. Oe•cv Jo 1nd Cvrt11 L• Ao• Giffen, Edw1rd Rollind ind MlfllYn Roulll tnele, Mvrtlt A. 1nC1 Louie Rob9rt1. M1rc1ll1 Joy 1nd Roodv Riv eullock, J111 '"" C>olort• Jt•n 1111!\ey, Ar!t111 I. Ind Clydt A. Ktrn. M1Udt I'. 1no JOl'ln It, VUl1!1,.., Sltlfl M1rlorlt and Jt1111 ICttllne. Cit~ c. •nd Eth.Pl II. S!P;leln, Fon!tllt 11'16 V1lerl1n R. C-r. Frtnl< E. 1rod 81rb1r1 M. Browning, M1r111re1 1nd Allred C1lrn1, 011111 cnr11nne Mid SttVtn Cr1l11 111111. Gorllon Al1n Ind Lola M11 Bl1n!on. Robert E. Ind Nll'ICY L. BlrMY. su,111 L. Ind Ruutll R. I Zkc1, Peter J, 1nd Grice J. · Nld<tl, Ruin Luc.lit ""' M111rltct (, Al1nl1. JOl'lnny S. IM Ml•91ttl II. M1$0Mffmtr, Owillfll L. Ind BOC>Clettt
' llrlaft. (1rol Slit Ind John Dl•ld No"•· Wll1!1m L. Ind 81tbar1 Olmedo. Annft M1rl1 •nd J111n ,fin!onlo Roberl1. May L. 1nd Allen EOw1rO Htntt. BtttY J. Incl Cn1rltl A .. Jr.
Death l\'otires
aL,fiCKBUltN Ellhh H. 8!1ckbUN1, 113! BllllO<'d l111<1, Ntw110rl 8eai;I>. 01lt or de1111, November
71. 1'71 Sur.1•111 by hu5b~tlCI. How1ra: four Mllll· T!!(!!, C•P--HOW.,d Jr.-.... --'Elniif~-iiietbvrn1 • d1uent•r, La It
M.on1fl•kl; :it 11r1ndehlklren1 10 11••••· t•andch!ldrtn. Gr1ve1ldt 1trvk" will
be llekl Tu1M11v, II AM, Gr1!>dvlew M.,..o•l•I P1rk. Glencltle. Wt1!cllll Chapel Morf\11rv, 6'6-41111, OfrPCtor1. 8ROWl<t Grice I!. Brown. Ate JJ, ol J:t7 9111 Sr., Huntlntlon Btacl>. D<ile of ae11h,
NCllltmbff tl, 1'71. Survl11~ bY husbe!>d, J1mes; dau11l>leri. Htltn Sl1ttr, Hun·
11 .... ton tsetdl; Rultl Pe..11111. MlllwlY Cllv; son1, Cllfk 8rown, .lf!1htfm/ Mtlvi11 Brown, Wnlmln1t1r1 1ft1er1, Sltfll JtnMft Ind Donni Llldlow1 brol .... rs. DWIYM 1/ld L1~ert Ntllstn>
11 t•~!>dd'llldrHH 1 trut-trllllkl>lldrtn. Strvlcn, WPdnndey, 2 PM, (llurcf> of Jt1u1 Chrls!, Latl•r DIY S.ln!>, Hun· t!119t"" BtKh. lnlHmrnl, W~5tmlnt1Pt "'emorlt l P1•k. Smllnt Mortu1r,, OlrK-
'"''· DAVIDSON Normen Lff DIY•OIOll. 17171 Alll 51. HunUnflOll auch, Dole of tle1th, N011rmbf'r n. 1'11. SuNl•NI by brother1. Ern.,r D1viO""" 1nd John McG•••· StNlcn, lu•fd1y, J;JO PM, Pffli F1mltv Calonl1I FU(ltr•I HomP. DltAl"Ell s11111 DrAi:>t•. "''' n, of '611 M•111 St .• Hun!lntton BtAcll. 01!~ of dr1!h, Nov..,,bl'r ll, 1t71. Strvlct1 Ptrodlnt 1! Smlth1 MorlUffY, FERO,fi Gllllyce A, Ftrlle, IJ5n SulS<'l Ltnt, Newoort Btlc;h. DAit ot Oe1!11, Novombf!r
70. 1911. Survl•tO by l>ulbanll, ll:uc!oll>fl; ...... RIChArd H. FUOA. Co1M Mt1A; sl1t11r, Judith Rc.111!1, Alhtn1. Gl'Ortl1; tlv1 9ru•dCf>lldre~. MemorlAI Hrvlet1 Wtrt htkl IOOIY, Monll1v. P•Clllc View Cn1P1I, F1mll• s1111ll••h 1~<111 wlohln11 to m1~t m•morl1I CO!'!rlb!Jllon1, plt1•e conTrlb\Jlt lo Ito•• Memor 111 H01Dlt1I. P1cllk Vltw Mo•tu1rv. OlrtC!orl. G,fiR(IA
M~rt .n R. G1•cl1. All• 9tl, of 11tl
Sl"'~r AW . H~nlln1>!on .... ,... D .. le
ol d•llh. Novembl'r 10. \t11. Str•lctt oendlng 1! Smith! "'or•u•rY. H,fiYNfS Wllll1rn J H••nf!. •11t ... Of t(ll ,fil101m1 51 , Huntl.,,lon Bt1Ch. Oat•
of del!h, NOlltmbef 19. ltll Survl•od bY wilt. M(lf'nl: MO!Mr. Id• HIYnl!'-two son1, Dinn• •ncl 01 .. ld Hayne•; d1uthfer. OolOl'!I Fortu"I!; rtlttt 1!11 .. s, Albf11t H•mlllon, VlrQl1d1 Den• •nd Dorolt>y L1 M•r" lh••e qr•nO(l'lllllr•n. !te<.,icfl. !odlY. Mon<l~Y, 1 PM. Smit~1 Cl\IDtl. ln!Hmen!, Wt1lmin•l•r Memorial Park. Sm.th1 Morl1>1rv. O!•telort. SJOMOLM E!t1nort A. Sloholm, 7'11 (yprtn O•. L111un1 Be1c~. O•te o! 11~1111, November
1', ltll Sur.,;Ytd bv ""1tfl, f::ll1•bf!•h J. Morton, L19un. BNCll: Mr1. Thorn•• Wllllams. Sin Ju•n C1oi11t•no; lh•tt b•olhffl, G. e. SIOl>Dlm, LOI ,fif!Vfltl!
V J SI-Im, Grtll F1ll1, Monr1n1; Eu11ene Morion. 01kl1n<1; S•rvlcei, l""•· d1v. I f'M. P1cl!lc V!rw (h1otl, Inlet men!. Pt<lllc Vltw Mtm0tl1I P1rK. f'icl!lc Vl•w Mortul'>. O!rte1or1. SOMEllHOUIE Edmonll w. Somernou1e. Aot 61 or
J60 Br011dw1y , (0\11 MtlA. 01te ol dtt!h, Novembt, !I, 1911, Survlvlld bY wilt, M•I. MlrY Som•rhOuH ; t~••• 1on1. (;orv "l9don, Newoor1 Beach; G!lbtrl E. Rlgllon, Florld11 O.n11l1 C. ll:llld01'. NllW Yori!; two bro!ht"· C I' I Somtrh0111t. ~"''°"' JMn Somtrhou1t, S.oulveCI•; !1~1 tll!tfl, Mr, Jt1nn•t11 Sllcoll, 1/111 Nuvs: Mrs.. H•ltn 91eclimor• 1nd Mr1. Lucll!t Stl"""', bolh ot lle•••lv Hll!1; M•I. Pl>yllll l(lmbf'r, S1n PeCll'OI Mrll. Rowll1 Fri-. V•n Nuv" nlnt tt~ndd'llldrl!f>; -1rt1t·1r11111<hl10. Rf. oull!m MIH. T11111d1Y. t ,fiM, $1. JOa(l'l l"'• (tll\Olk (huref\ tnttrment, GO I d 5htl)lltrif Ct,.....ttrY. Biii Broaaw•r Morlv1rY. OlrPClors.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCUFF A10 RTUARY m E. lith St., Costa Mtsl
&IM888 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona de.I !\1ar OR 3.9450
Costa r.1,sa Ml 1-14%4 • BELL BROA DWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa M'sa
LI 1-3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Llguna Canyon J\d.
CH-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Ctmettry Afortu111
Chapel
isot Pacific Vltw Ortve
Newport BHch. Ca1Uonal1 mn• • PEEK FA~mv
COLONIAL FUNEl\AL
ROME
7sel Balsa Ave \
Wt.1ilmln1ltt ISHSrS • SMITHS' MORTUARY tn Maill 8t.
lluntlngton Beacll
13HS3t
•
MOllday, November 22, 1971 I
Record Housing ·Pian. Back Trio: Face Court
. . ... . .. ... , ... ' .
·~.,IH...llnkl A, •llO 1•1111 F. •1to11. Elltri L, Ind Eul "· l(ltlltld. l"'tldl Ifill Rol1nd
Coast l \nifing Count y to Stud y Batt{n: Prop0sal
MC!Crmlt. ROIHrl (, Ind Mltv J, ,.olrltr. P1tr1<f1 Otti11!1 llnd ROC*ln
lr.OltY Hlttl1nd. M1,lorlf .... •nd C>Dnald C. H1t,..r, L"'•ll'NI .Inn Ind P1ul G!lbtrt HIN't, l!rln arid Hulll'I R .
SANTA ANA -Supervisor are split ln their opinloris of HUD la now selecting .area! SANTA ANA_ Three m·en Frazier. 29, of 700 Joann St.,
Robert W. Battin 's proposal the authority • .About a third where the new program can Costa Mesa, Willard \Vayne
Hlcli1, Donlld Ind Vk-10tl1 I .
for an Orange County Housing favor such a move , 11 third op-be tested. He characterized 't accused of stabbing t w 0 Garrison, 31. of Anaheim and
Authority goes before-the J)i5Se -and the balanc~ are on . as similar to. t~e "rent siimp" NeWpo_r Beach bartenders Dennis L. Thomas, 25, o! 111ow". ,fijyln Le ll:oy 1nc1 Htltn Frint T••,•· K1t11r .. 11 111<1,,,.11 and Jo).n eomono board of supecvisors Wed· tbe fence. proposal advanced previously durin brawl pvcr closing Oakland.
nesday. In strong opposition is the by the real estate group. rs at the Little Heidelberg , The trio \1•ere arrested Sept. Shl!f11n. Jo.1111 Dolortl Ind hwlll Glibf!rl Arevala, (i1llrlel R1m0t1 1nd Tl>t<tll A special hearing on the Sant a Ana-Orange.Tustin !n support or the proposed .109. McF8dden Place. ha ve 23 shnrtly after a battle ~
program is sched uled for 10:30 Board : or Realto1s. That housing authority is the been ordered to face trial Dec. erupted at the bar. They round £lien Mc(Ulll'l"I. J, W. Ind R0e C1rolv11
Crook. llllY Alltn Ind M••v El1ln1 H1te1>. Bevtrlv L. 1rod Geort• s. H1l911,-IC1llw LoulS<' Ind Rlcf>1rd lllY Mot111l11, S1nOr1 Louise Ind Allmlcl
a.m. in the board's hearing organization ii pushlrig for its Citizens Direction F.i n d l n g •ect 21 Study ,Team on Low 13 in Orange County Superior bartender!! James !\f. Dugan,
room on the rifth floor of the ov.jl plan -the Experime·ntal Co'mm isslon, the 0 range · income Housin'g. Q>urt, 23, and James B. Vanderbie,
county Ad m i n Is t rat i v e Hous'ing Allowance Program. County Fair Housing COuntil, Santa AniJ is the only county Scheduled for trial on 28. prostrate from s ta b
Building, Sycamore Street and _According to assOCiatlon the county Human Relations <:ommunity with an adopted charges of assault with a wounds inflicted in th I. Mutn•f>I · Mtr1111h, M1•lorlt C. Ind Ohvtr Santa Ana Bouleva rd. President Caty1 S. Woods, Commission and the UC l·Proi· lo'Y ~st housing program. deadly weapon are Lee Allan skirmish. • Battin wit! urge the board to'l-'-'-.:_ _ _:_;._ ____ -..,,o-::c=--,.,=c-c==,,,,.-.:....._,..,.....::......:.....:.:::::=:..:.....c:c.:......:....._..::.:::;::.:..........:.:.,c.:....._:_.:......:....._::-~-~=c-o-:~=::--I'll.., Nov ' W!\trton. F&lrlene 11111 Ja,,.., fYlrtlt Sullfw1n, Lucfl• E. ind Wlllil"J J, Welson. Mu1ltl l. Incl £1 ROY M. Cti.nt. Ptllro E1t1in, llld Lucrecll 8•1dll11w. "OY (;-and °"""' LOl.llll Sl>lw, (l.lrict Mlfltfle Ind CIPtl)tlll
decl•re the need lor a county HAVE YOU VISITED '30222 CROWN-•VALLEY PARKWAY ANO fflL.LffURST IN LAGUNA NIGUEL Housing Authority, name OUR NEW STORE;
themselves as members of the ll'OUMTAIN VALL•V -1"'4 M._111 St. ,, Tolbert SANTA ANA -1 .. w. fdiftetr .... lrllfol SI.
authorl.ty, declare 1't lo be the ll'DUNTAIN VJ.LL•Y -11141 H•rMr •twi. 11111 £finttr WfiST"llHSTllt -6117 WfllmlllJltr •I Geldtll Wnl HUNTINGlON IEACM -9"1 Adtm1 11 lrCllll~lllrtf lfUNTINGrOH IEACH -ltt<:h I"" Edl11•1r HJJHTIHGlOH BEACH -W1r11tt 1nd Sprl ..... 11 ow111111. Jr. ll:lccl, Beverly Al'n •"" D1nltl Jolln,
•L fOllO -II Tl,. II llldlfilkl •U!f COSTA MESA -JJH Hlt!Mr llYd, If Wihflll St. policy of the county to • HUNT INGTON arACtt -llUI ltld p .... It .\ll&Rll COST.I MI'S.I -m I . 11111 SI ..
cooperate with the cities in . No Liquor •t the e1tminster, Villl•te Center, Se•ch B:lv~. "· Ovtrton, Cl\1tlet W ll'd 81rbr1 O. Puckt!t. Ljl'd1 1t1thrvn •ncl JDSloh
"~ Smltti, GlldYs F11¥t 111d Rid D. C1st1tl1rio, cnr1t1;1\1 z. '"" Guillermo Weir, Htltll M_ 11111 Elr!"ll , McGlnnl9, Llnd• A. 1nd M!ch1!I S Fr11lt<. Biiiie Jean lnll G!o•tt Grtlt Roberli. Lincl1 O. 1ne1 P1u1 F. B1ck1, BtUY J!ln ind R1Ymo11d ... ........ 'T ra•ell, Je111nle ICav erld O.vld W. l(rllfl, Lo!1 8. arid C1rl M•r• (1•ffr. Art~ur L. I nd C1rol J.. Gran!, 8onnlt 1rod Mkho.tl A Ctr!", Denio" 1nd J1cau!I"" S. Ve115trom. Carl E. lnll Jt~I• ,
Prrls/1, Mir• Fr•nc~s 1nd Jim LYon. SlllV V. lrod RICll1rd Ehltt , M1•t1rer Ell11bf!th 1nd RDf'lld .¥11rlln Htnsen, N1oml 11:, and Nlct.0111 T. Dunn, Tere11 L Ind G1rv "-· Snlrley J. 1na Cr!slnalltr R, H-ttl. Richard E. anll !lfloMI 811r1. Wllllan Incl Sus•n Sdtmll1, 11orr111 Fidel •nd Kartn RV!h Dutil, Ricn1rd C1rl arid Su11n Ann Sawl1, Pennv Eti11betn 1nd ll:1nd11l VPrn ' KtnnY, Jerome M. and ElhabeJI\ W.
>YKlntyr~. Mary L0tr1lne 1ne1 OOtll ld Llv1n$Stan Lant. lltl•• Jfll' and EOWtrO E.
1111110, S..llit arid Euom
Petr1ne~, Ja~ M And Ot••d C. EPC>tll'>tlmer, Ed..,1ra F. ano Ruth Je1n •
Grlvtle~, Cw11!f>\1 M. and Robe r1 l. JOl\fl. Pllt1!ia W. '"" AnOrtw V., Jr NltlO. Sh1ron '"" l••ll<>tt Eslr~d•. S1r1 ~rid Juan Pim Pall•ni, ,-\lvln E. lnll Mlldrf<I L. D••l•. 81r1>r1 M IMC~•"•' w' Jr. Oil!tY. Jo1t11h L. """ v .c~I J. Mc(~llOCll, Judilfl An~ •nd Gttlkl R ~u
Flllll Nov. u H1•aesty. Sn1rnn LO\lh,· ~o\d J~ck 8.
W1l~er, 01rllne J . 1nll JM11 W. Plllrd, Clea Rita lnll V!19ll JO!ln -c-
Irvil;le Ranch
A1mexation
Hearing Set
TUSTIN -The pro posed an-
nexation of 484 acres of Irvine
'Ranch land to Tustin has
become so big an is.sue that
the city council has scheduled
a public meeting on !he su b-
ject Dec. 6.
Tustin battled Santa Ana for
the right to take in the pro-
perty v.·hlch ls located between
the city and the f\.iarine Corps
Hel icopter Station. However,
since Local Agency Formation
Commission approval of the
Tustin bid last April, son1e
property owners and
busi ne ssmen have mounted an
opposition force.
Opponents say the 9,000 new
inhabitants the annex would
produce would be an un-
necessarv burden on th.e
school diStrict and could cause
an increase in taxes.
The Irvine Company has
revised \ts plans. lowl.'ring
resident ial density in the pro·
posed condominium
townhouses from 12 to 10 units
per acre.
Mesa Thief
Gets Term
eliminating housing problems
which now ex ist and direct the
county Planning Department
to prepare an application to
the federal Department of ,
Housing an·d Urban Develop.
ment tHUD) for funds.
The 25 cities in the · county
Hunting ton
Man Guilty
In Moles t
SANTA ANA -A Hun-
tington Beach rnan scheduled
to face trial on sex perversio n
charges stemming from alleg-
ed incidents with a neighbor's
child v.•ai\'ed trial and pleaded
guilly to lesser charges.
Orange Cou nty Su per i or
Court Judge Byron K .
f..1 cf..1 i!la n a~cepled the guilty
plea of William Francis
Cullen, 7602 Juliette Low
Drive, lo reduced allegations
of molestin·g a chlld ai1d plac-
ed the defendant on three
years pr'obation.
Cullen was arrested June 22
by Huntington Beach police
and booked on charges of
crimes against children and
sex perversion. It was alleged
that he encouraged the minor
child to participate in lewd
conduct.
VCI Se lling
Yule Cards
For Units
IRVINE -An origin;>J holi·
day and gree! ing card will be
sold by the Associated Stu-
dents at UCI Irvine.
Proceeds will be divided
equally between I.he Student
Fin;in.cial Aids and the Educa·
tional Opportunitie s
Programs.
The card . reaturing a dove
\l'ilh the seascape motif, wasl
designed by Bruce Richards of
San Bernardino. graduate stu-
dent in art. Sold in packets of
10 for Si.SO, the card will be
available wi th either a holida y
J.":rceting or the word ,
"Peace," or blank. Fifly per·
cent of the purchase price is
lax dedu clible.
The cards arc on s2le in the
ASUCI ticket oHice on the
First floo r of Gate way Com-
omns and at TUB, the Tern·
porary Union Building, located
adjacent to Hu manities Hall.
For Assault You're never
SANTA ANA -A Costa Id
Mesan v.•ho adn1itted being one too 0
of tv.·o men v.·ho burglarized
homes in Newport Beach a t h b
year ago has been """need 0 ear etter to six months to lire in stale
prison.
Orange Coun!y Superior Chicai;::o, 111.-A free offer of
Court Judge Byron I\ . P:pecial interest to those who
!\1cMUlan ordered that sen· hear but do not understand
tcnce for Charles Joseph "'ords has been snnounced by
Peurrung. 27, of 817 Presidio Del tone.Anon.operatingmodel
Dri ve. after the defendant of the smallC!lt Delt.one aid ever
pleaded guilty to burglary and made "Y.·ill be gh·en absolutely
asuult on a policeman. free to anyone answering this
Peurrung and Robert Glenn advertisement.
McClu re. 24, Long Bcarh. Try it to 11ee bow it is worn
'vere ari:ested No\'. 12, 1970. in the privacy of your own
by an officer who spatted homcwithoutcootorobligation
them emerging from the se· o( eny kind. lt'a youni Lo keep,
cond of two homes broken into !rec. It weighs less th.an a third
that night Bolh men sped of an ounce, and it's all at ear
from the scene in a red sports level, in one unit. No ·wires lead
car but quickly halted the from body to head.
vehicle v.•hen the officer fired These models are free, so we
a warning shot. suggest you write for yours
f..1cClure has been com· now. Again, we repeat, there ia
mitted to a rehabilitation nocost1 and certainly no oblira·
~nter as a narcotics addict. tion. Write to Dept. ~4. Bel·
Peurrung underwent a 90-day toneElectronicsCorp.,.C201 W.
diagnostic ..study be.fore being Victor ia, Chicago, Ill. 6064.6,
sentenced.
Denture Invention
for People with
''Uppers'' 1nd "Lowers"
Tbe ne:i~l 1h1n1 to l11vuir your
Q'fim tttlh it ,.-ble l'lfl.r -.·1th II
phu;tk ctum 1hkovery lh11t •du·
•llT hnld• bo1 h "Uf'lf!(r•" ~11d "Jowcn" as M-\'Cf be lOl'c. fJ'.IP'l •blf'.
I l'll• dit<COVffY called l'IXl'lUt: ... 1•
for dally hOl'l\8 UI~ tU.S. P ... t.
f3,003.988) a.nd ll baa_revotu .
lklniud dcnwrc wcsrins. F tXot>EST
form~ •" tl1,tie membrane lh•l
htll" abotlfb the 1hoc.k& or bil1ni;
.1111d chni rn11.
\\'i!h 1"1xor1'"'" m•n1 denture
'A<'!lfl'f~ m11yc:&I. tpuk. l11u1th. 'A'ith
IH tlC 'AOtf)' nf drntutc!!Comlnll IQO!le.
• One n1111ltr•t1on m•Y la't f11r
hours. l'!fnti.u-ca. that fit arc eMCn •
11•1 to hr1'Hh . Silt. your dentrtt
rr1ul•1 ly. li"t t~Ay-lo-nRflXOOt.ST
l:>tnture Adht1h a Cream. '
1995 Val! Cornwall
Electric Fondue -·"' $)4a1 $349 Valuef· Gourmet . ' .
English Cookies
l ·LB. $149
TIN Bluestone Enamel
IVz qt. pot wit~ se,ar1te bt1'.·
inf uriit With fully ldjustablt
cont1&I, inst1111e1;w & rKipes,
fondue forks. BDY one as 1
111! & one to trSe.
11sty cookits. mhticlle!,
••f1trs, jelly coom, sllor'I· Roasters $261
· breids, rais1~ and mart. fi!l!St
E~1li1~ q111llty. Pxb1ed ~
be.lutilut Mlique GoU Canst
For 12 TO 15·.LB. FOWL
~ Kwlil.-Get rtady for Thanlsgi1in1 with tltis &t!Y'to-cim roa-sier!
•
79c Chocolate .Covered
·~Cherries
-·-11it•llilf't11am·e1 fl)'.. lonrtattlnf wear. --
• JG--12 lb. Fow Sire Sl.69
'
~59~
Dflicioft wt.ole lrlanscltirlo
c.blnies ii rick aunt io1611lL
13-tz. kt.:.
OldFa1hi-ed
Chocolate Dreps
r Mrite rQ milk dlocl-3 9 c 'lite -ro115. lZ-GL b•&. ,
Delvxo Ru111 awd
Bra11dy Waldorf
l'rultCako
2·1b. tin. SPICiil 111:ipe 99c hill Df fruit and 1111tt.
tfojjdfy speciil!
5-Poctnd Tin •• , , •••••.••••• t2.l9
... '°"""'=··"'J., ..... PR"'1zli1"'w°'1 IN SPECIAL OCCASION
Pumpkin Pit Ice Cream·
HALF GALLON "• 12 -"""' ;.. 79 C ~ ch1llin1 Rocky Ro~d. l~n!5 CllOCO\lll Cltip. Cllerrf,
V•ill•. Chocollle AJl!!Olld.
69'
Whistling 3-Pc. Mixing
Tea Kettles Bowl Sets
2 Quart Size In Most Popular Sizes
$319 $)38
Sturdr wttistlns for 1 t111gh alld durable lea timt Clf ariytirne Mel1 mine' m1~1n1 JOU heell loboi!wlltr. bowls will! handsome Rtp!ICe ttrat old'IN linish. Buy now tor kettle • • • buy lor ~oti&ay !1¥1iu. Dis-shower gilts, loo! COYnt J'riced.
Special Sale of Quality Hal a Candles
Reg. 2 for 35c
Halo Candles
& Frailer
Ke-y
Bourbon
10.v ... 01d .
-16.Proef
Fifth Goll••
~388
Y••;.
Choice ,.
• 8 Inch Spir31 Size
• 10 Inch Taper Size
Light or Dark
RiCOfO
Rum .
fifth Gillon
$299
• !6-1& lb. F Oo111 Si1e S3.49
~ 18·211111. fowl Size $3.49
$298 & $39~ALUESI
Table Cloths
Vinyl
Loce $)98
.. • 54•72"Reclalr1v!ar
.•. :·::~:·;· .. .:;:.~.:., • Df72"Rourid
.:~.~;-.~·:'':.'~-.":.·:. lowily n 11ce table· f.~~~:.._:.-:·.4:,,_,'.:."-cloths, n ide1I for ... ''·>::@JI 1""'1 « imom11 f (-,... dinin&. ~~pet lik~ .:. clotb ••• Wtpes clean.
The J most popular pi@«S ol
stoneware cookware for
o~!ft lo ~t to ffeeier use.
:M1111nteed dettl'&ent and
di5hwisher sale.
$)39 Jifoam
Oven Cleaner
Make1 Short Work of
Oven Cleaning r -1
99c
Jifoani take~ the mess
and work wt 'of oven
tleanlng.
Reg. 35'
Reynolds
25-Ft. Wi:ap
. 410R93c
~ ' . ~·~:~ ~
Reg. as•
Reynolds
Brown in Ba
Reg. 98c
Roast Meat • Thermometer
St.Un less M«l 99c eaiy to clean!
Card of 6 Poultry Lacers ••• 29•,
12x16" Cookie Sheets •• , 49•
All in One Grater • , • • •• 39• '
Nee Action Peeler • • • • • 59•
E'coKnife Sharpener ••• $)19
12-Qt. SoulL Pot •. • • • . . • $329
3 Wooden Mixing Spoons •• 69•
Swing Away Can Opener •• $)99 .
Presto Whi 59•
• i"1>:LJM
l"elo•c St. Helene Cold Duck Wines of California or Brandy Champagne the World
FilthGulOI fifth Gallot11
$299 "" 99c CMlc.•
$)49 A tr;ly liM brl!ld~. A Mlt!ati!e UJl«:tlori PJicH lnwtr tN~ Olll' of tint wines 11 ft&llltr ;rice DI SJ •9 Prictd tYtl lowtr fteal ~Ylfilt. '°' • llmltt<I til!I or.11 tlltn ow ttfi"' !ow priet0!$t7 petl1ttll
-...
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.. . . ..
12-Minute Visit:
Lots of Preparing
By CHARLES H. LOOS
Of lft9 Dilly 'lltl S111f
• • •• • • • •
Holid~ .S~ason . ~ . . .
Mo{ld.JJ, Nowmber 22, 1971 DAJLV '!LOT JI •
.Mllfrtlq 17 Ill
latl Not All Jolly
'''Tl! the season to-be jolly.~· ~lmost Jttne years 1t ~g. the A season which Is happy tor attacks, she says. 1Wiiiiler_ month.
Also 'tis the season for more 11St two as head or emergencj so many can intensify some . "We are prepared Io r tverylhing from critical ac-iiii
heart attacks, ulcers, drug facilitits, 1ttribut,!' the people 's feeli11fS ot loneli~. anything," aaid'the nurse, who 'cldents to overdoses to-minor l..ong-hc*lng
overdoses and auicides than at phenomenon to the stress in-A season which emphastzell prai.sed 'lhe ward for being a home or indwtrial injuries FAS'TEETH9PowdlC
any other time of the year, ac-eluded Jn the aeaaon." gift.giving and visiting can self·contalned 24-hour unit. are hand.led. It • ..._._ ~:~·~~~
cording to otfl"cials at Hoag •She cannot pinpoint a 1190 emphasize 1 Jack of The ward has a day and Not wanting to disclose out-.=-the .1.
Memorial Hospital, Newport spec~c date when t~ In-money. evening s.taff of two to three iloomy ~Uday trends, Mrs, "' MllWIQ
Beach. crea,ff begins, but says, "We And then lhere are those registered -nurses, a ward Raab also mentioned the en-I;:=======::::::; An appreciable Increase in can lell When we start ¢ettlng who are happy, but . tend to secretary and an orderly and tire ward staff "has noticed
the nwnbcr of such cases aeen a d~ferent type of patient as overdo everything, Mrs. Raab a night staff or one rtgistered Lhat there is le& of a drug
at the wBfd Is "already cer· opposed to the summer one." says. ThJa Includes the large nurse and one orderly. problem among the youth In
tainly underway," said Evelyn Water accident& abound In numbers of visiting relatives, A doctor on Hoag's staff Is the last few years."
Raab, eff1ergency ward nurs-the summer, but when people many of them elderly· always on call in the hQspltal, "We still see cases of those
Ing supervisor,· who added, move indoors and holidays ap-Of the 158 cases the assigned to a 12-hour shift. In their 20's, but I think, the
"and won't drop off until after proach, says Mr!. Raab, emergency ward saw last The facility treats about school drug education pro.
Lieutenant General A1pha Bravo Charlie, commanding New Year's." despondency and depression weekend alone, an ap-1,500 patients a month In the gram Is reaching the younger
a:eneral, U.S. Army Air Defense Command, is coming 'to Ji :::::'::I'::'::· =Ra=•=b=·=w=ho=h='•::•:w~o=rk=ed==c.a=•:•:l'°:::':'::lt::l•=ln=. =====pr=0<:=i•:b:l•=n=um=be=r=w=•re=he=•=rt==w=in:t::er::::•:•d:::•:bo:u:t=2,=000==••::c:~=o=ne~s,:":•:b:•~•=•Y:•:·==============='=f
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
THE DAILY PILOT
visit the Lucas Valley NIKE Site.
For the troops inv9lved, his visit means dressing in
winter fatigues with military press in blouse, highly pol-
ished boots and brass, artillery red scarfs and waxed hel·
met liners with the battalion decals on the sides.
Personnel not involved are told to
·get lost. .
Specialist Four Echo is involved. His
function will be to open the .cat; dobr· for
the General when he arrives in the ad·
minislrative area.
''Does the General have a broken
arm, sir?" .
"We can't have the Generals car get·
ting dirty," replies Captain Golf, the bat-
tery commander. "Get a Pair of white
gloves.·•
gloves."
A call from brigade headquarters at F.ort·Hotel: The
General has just left. .
Captain Golf calculates out loud that the General 1s
25 minutes away. More, if he catches the red light at the
Fort Hotel tunnel. Specialist Four Echo suggests out loud
that the light will be green for the General.
Captain Golf and First Sergeant Routest~p le~ve for
the missile assembly building on the launching hill. The
General will begin his tour there.
Private First Class Indigo, a switchboard operator,
draws a pair of white gloves from the supply room and
is posted at the main gate to make sure the General's
driver finds the -way lo the assembly buildi!Jg. There is
only one way to get there and the General's driver was
out the day before checking and timing theroute.
Private First Class Indigo is chosen for duty at the
main gate because he is tall and has long arms. He is
given some last-minute instruction on how to direct traf-
fic and salute at the same time by Staff Sergeant Foxtrot
Staff Sergeant Foxtrot was once a military policeman and
knows about such things. • _ _
Private First Class Tango is posted at the rear window
of the orderly room to watch the curve in the road for the
entrance Of the General's car.
Private First Class Delta stands by the switchboard
ready lo call the assembly building on the commercial
telephone and the assembly gate guard on the field phone
the moment the General's car comes into view.
The battalion sergeant major calls: "Lemme talk to
Echo. Brigade just called. The Generaj has left there."
''Yes, sergeant, they've already called here.''
first Sergeant Routestep calls from the assembly
building: "Lemme talk to Echo; Any sign of them yet?''
"We'll call, sergeant, remember?"
"Okay. fine. Listen, the Old Man wants you to make
sure there's no one in the barracks. Take a walk through
and clear everybody out. There shouldn't be anyone_ in
there but a barracks orderly, but get him out, too. The
Old Man wants him out.''
At zero-minus-fifteen and counting comes a call from
lhe fire control area. From their vantage point on the
ridge !he men there have spotted Lieutenant General
Alpha Bravo Ch'arlie's car approaching from the south end
of town .. It is a black Buick with a three-star nag ffap-
ping on the front bumper. A sergeant first class drive~ it.
He is the General's orderly.
First Sergeant Routestep is on the phone aga in~
"Lemme talk to Echo. Send an NCO through the barrick.'!.
The Old Man wants an NCO to go through the barr!cks.
Send foxtrot through the barracks."
"But sergeant, I just went throµgh the barracks my·
self." . ~
"Never mind that. The Old Man wants an NCO to go
lhrough the barracks lo make sure all the toilet seal$, in
the latrines are up."
Jerry, the attendant at the gas station on the corner
calls. The General's party has turned onto the access road.
Priva,te First Class Tango screams something Jn Span.
ish from the back window, ·
The General is in the area. The brigade commander,
the group commander and the battalion command~t .are
\\•itti him. His car glides toward the assembly b~Hd1ng,
barel v mi~ing the Private First CIM.S Indigo w™:i JS wav~
ing frantically. The field phone rattles. The !lw1tchboard
ligh ts up.
Three and 11 ha\£ minutes later, a carry·all careens
Into the administrative area . It bears a breathless First
Scr,!!cant Routestep.
"Thcy·n be here an y second. He's not. wasting any
timr. Are you ready Echo?"
Specialist F'our Echo is ready. ~ady to play the game
of \\!ho can get the car door open first -the man inside,
or the man in the while 11loves.
1'he black sedan arrives in the admini strative area
:ind the man inside wins the game -partly by default
because Specialist. f our Echo doesn't have his heart 1.n
lhP game and partl y hecauSe the man inside doesn't wait
for the car to stop. The white gloves are ready for the
laundrv.
Thf General hurries through the barracks. makes 11:
rew remarks to the battery command~r. a.sks the fir~t
sergeRnl twb questions and leaves. Total time spent at
the Lucas Valley NIKE site : 12 minutes.
One full colonel, two lieutenant colllnels, one c~ptain
Rnd a first sergeant tensely salute the General as his car
slides past them.
Jn the orderly room . Specialist Four Echo hands the
.~oiled whlle J?:loves to the suppl)' clerk and thinks about
the question the old first sergeant used lo ask before he
retired: " ''What have you done today to reduce -the amount
or bull in the world?''
Bombeck'·s Excerpts
R·un Today in Pilot
From Its revelations to the
world of such teenage diseases
1111 "acute withdrawal", "prom
r11t•• ana "money deficiency"
lo Ill Insight Into parental
par anoia, Erm• Bombcck'.1
new book Is on its way.
For many DA ILY ..PILOT
readers the cha nce to read the
six serlallt:ed ch3pters or
''Just Walt Tiii You Have
Children of Your Own" wlll be
11 welcome opportunity to ate
Bom~k double.
The book is illustrated by
another DAILY PILOT
••star," BU Keane. His Family
Circus cartoons also have been
,:'._rerular1" in the DAlLY-
PILOT pages for some time.
Keane 's "1:1rtoons and
Bombeck's book excerpU a~
pr.ar ln the Women 's Section
for six consecutive days in the
DAILY PILOT beginning to·
doy.
, She has one other book to
her credit, "Al Wit'11 End,1' 11
compilation of S()me of her
'
I
I ' .
For the smokers of America
/who prefer low · tar
and nicotine c!garettes. I
Lighter in taste, low in tar.
Marlboro lighW14 mg: 'tar;' 1.1 mg. nicotine
av. per cigarona by FTC method
"
Some people prefer the taste
of .a low tar and nlcoUne clgarelle.
For them; we~ve·made new
Marlboro Lights. The same great
quality you get wllh famous
Marlboro Red-only Lights were
developed especially for those ·
who prefer the lighter tasle of a
low tar smoke. ·
•
f
j
Marlboro l LIGHTS
~ LOWERED TAR (;.NICOTIN£ ~!
-~-1 1 i •
Marlboro Ll-"ts-lhe new low tar clgareue from America's fastest-growing brand.
Erma's column h1t1 becn ·11
rcgulAr feature o( lhe DAILY
PJLOT Women's Section for
oome time. best newspaper columns. '--------------------.,.----------------------------------------
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,J DAILY l'ILOT
QUEENIJ! By Phil lnterl11ndi
"How do you do? I decided to say it with flowers!"
South Korean ROK
Troops Termed Best
HOI AN, South Vietnam
(UPI ) -The four small attack
boa~ powered by airplane
propellers, roostertails o f
spray hanging in their wakes,
1k.idded around the bend of the
river in formation and howled
toward the rice paddy.
The marines, rifles ready.
were out of the airboats and
charging through the water
even before the boats bounced
to a jarring stop on the mud
flat.
Fanning out quickJy into a
skinnllh line, they adyaDCed
smootlily through the area
hunti.n& communist troops,
aupplles or booby traps. The
lightning raid w a 1 straight
out of the manual: crisp, '1·
ficlent and of deadly design.
11Je assaults are carried oot
three times each day by part
of one of the toughest Ughting
urllts left in South Vietnam -
the Republic of Korea (ROK)
Marines. Most of the raids
come up empty but the ROK
2nd Marine Brigade has spent
years making their area
secure -and Intends" to keep
it that way until the:r pull out
of Vietnam, probably within
months.
The ROK Marine.! are con-
sidered by their allies to be
"squared-away troop!."
"Thty do everything I w.as.
taught about soldiering," said
a U.S. Army major .
And the men of the "blue
dragon" brigade look the part.
They are in excellent physical
shape, discipline is absolute,
cleanJiness is mandatory. A
company of marines standing
at attention in their SJ)'.'Cia!
green leopard-spotted· fatigues
makes one think of the rigid
formations photographed at
U.S. military acadtmies but
seldom seen these days in
American field units.
They were the first Korean
combat unit assigned to South
Vietnam. arriving in 1965.
Prime Pttinister Kim Jong Pil
announced last week the
marines would be in the first
10,000..man stand-down of that
country's 50,000 men in the
war zone.
Dubbed the ';Ghost Cat·
chers" during their Korean
war days. the marines had a
solid reputation when the
armistice was signed. For the
following years, the ma rines
participated in d e f e n s e
mea sures and s t r e S-5 e d
training.
"\Ve believe sweat spilled on
the training ground will pre-
vent blood beinJ:: spilled on the
battle ground/' said Brig.
Gen. Hur Hong, the brigade
commander.
"\Ve are trained in good
discipline at all times. If you
don 't ha\'e strict discipline. ·
you \\•ill not defeat com-
munism."
\Vhen the marines took over
their present station here in
1967 foUowing duty elsevt'here .
only 37 per cent of the area
was under government con-
trol. Today. Hur said. the area
is 98 percent secure.
Hur, carrying a polished
bamboo swagger stick and
wearing spit-shined boots with
Uppers instead of l a c e s .
epltamizes the.crisp troops\he
commands. At an inspection of
the headquarters company due
to be among t.tie first Koreans
sent home. the general e1·
amlned each man carefully .
He checked the shovel <Jf the
company aimmander as well
as the pack of a private in the
last rank .
The security of the aru is
dmonstrated by a safe and
easy jeep ride through several
Vietnamese villages to the in·
terior edge of t h e marine
operational area. The ·6th ROK
Marine Company holds an old
French cbservation JXlSl and
firebase atop the highest
mountain in the area. Security
is tight, and the isolated base
is spotlea.
In nearby Xuyen K i e u
village, where Pres Iden t
Nguyen Van Tieu was baptised
a Roman Catholic, <Jne of the
priests, Father Le Nhu Hao.
was concered about the area .
Jn a silent midnight strike last
month , 13 children wre kld-
naped by the Viet C.O.ng.
"\Ve want the ROKs to
stay." he said. "After the
rainy season, the VC will
come back for an easy attack
if the ROKs are not here ."
Security f<Jr the village is to
be handed over to a local Viet·
namese militia company when
the marines leave for home.
The ROK Marine pacifica-
tion program is considered a
success and the corps has got-
ten over an ugly incident at
barrier island near Da Nang
in which it \\'as reported that
many civilians were massacred
dur ing a clearing operation .
llur dismissed the reports as
''co mmynist propaganda"
issued because the marines
smashed a communist
stronghold there.
A habit of !he Sou th Koreans
!hat. has made many
Americans angry, how11vt1r1 II
the use of ba•t l!J(C~an;e
stores (PXl on 1)fPteti ~le,tH
installations in Vletl\Am. Th•
Americans clailt'\ lht SouUi
Koreans buy up t~ IOO(lk in
massive quantitlta tind iihip
them back for re~le in Korea .
DENTAL PLATES
• Bridgework . • Fillings
• X-Ray • Extractions
All ON
INSTANT CREDIT TERMS
All Credit H1ndlod By My Office! No
Bink or Finance Co. To Deal With
PENTOTHAL
UNION MEMBERS & SENIOR CITIZENS
WElCOME
DR. OAKES
267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA
PHONE 646-1882
No Appointment Necessary
Quick Plato Repairs Whila You Walt
Oft(N iAT. 'Tll. I ft,M,
' -• •
(
shop toni~ht and everynight
through fn'tlay, ~til 9:30 p.m~
~-1r ..
l?RE .-THA
. FASHION SAVINGS
40.00 pantcoats, good cl1:>ice
young signature coats 24 ' ·
•
2 2.00-60.00 special size te,hion5
women's d~sses 57
. -29.99 (
14.99-l'J,,, •
8.00-26.00 matemity l>Sh""'
maternity shop 105 · ·
36.0D-40.00 famous name<ln!SS group
40.00 holiday triacetate jet5ey5, prints
misses' dresses 96
56.00-60 .00 assorted fabrics eoits, 8-16
5.99-14,,, I
21.99 ;'
25,99
«.99
misses' and women's coats 27 .
100.00 suede jackets, brown, antelope 8-16 69.99 .,.
boulevard coats 103 .
32.00-46.00 polyester dresses 21.99-29;9'
50.00-60.00 2 Pc. import«! wool knlt,..its 39.99
lo\vn and travel 49
18.00-32 .00dresses,pantsuits, 1()-19 _ 12.99-19.99 ,
boulevard dresses 95
46.00-74.00 designer dress coHection 31.99-39.99' ·
miss forecast 119
34.00-42.00 long_,ingdn!SSeS lJ.9' •
even in& shop 97 _
26.00-34.00junior,~d.....,. 11.99-16."
junior dresses 94,121
16.0()-18.00misses'andhaWsl .. d,.,..
daytime dresses 61
1.99
60.00-1 oo.oo bettetd,.., collection 27.99-55.,,
forecast shop 20
Naturil double mink collared stoles, ca~
Fully let-out natural fe:rN!e mihk COits •·
maycofurYlonlt7
fur~ l1befeit 111$hii!iw'*1'119¥e/ .... ~ ....... bt
may ai does ra rirryMsof~~~
369.00
199.00
SPORTSWEAR ACCESSORIES'
1 5,()().16.00 blouses and stiirts, S.18
better blouses 39
5.99 famous make cotton jeans, 6-16
16.00-30.00 polyester coordin11"S,
active sportswear
14.00 polyester pants in 4~of5
\vomen's sportswear 85
16.00 washable acrylic cardigans, 36-42
sweaters 72
7.99 junior jeans in many colors, S.13
young signature sportswear 55
16.00 pu110versfrqm korea 36--40
junior knit sportswear 138
7.99
'·"
12.30
5.99
12.3.5
1;99 5.,, 3.0G-5.00 group of scarves, many styles
9.00 group of acrylic shawls, knit
fashion acc~sories 19·all 18stores
8.0G-11 .00-vinyl handbags in many style! 4.99
20.00-26.00 famous make fashion 1 .. ther bags 9.99
may co handbags 126
3.00·5.00 group of leather aCcessories
small leather goods 25
1.99-1.99
4.99-15.00 lined, unlined leather gloves
gloves 3 . ·
9.00-14.00 blouses, pant tDps, tunics
blouses 31
3.99
24.00-30.00 Hill & Dale dress shoe 15.'9
24.00-25.00 Kimel tradi1ional pumps. sandals 15.,,
forecast dress shoes 125
)5.00 zip front boot, softest suede
bi:tt,er casual shoes 129~al118 stores
1 ~,00-17.00 group of dress and casual shoes 9.'9
bQ1tlevard shoes.112
11.00-H.00 girls' g"nny boots 7.,,,,.99
~ng peoples shoes 70
IS.00-20.00dressanda...al shoes •.99
1i>.00-22.oo Red Cross* sh<>es 11.'9
Notconntaedwlth Amerial'I ite.f Cmss
moderate dress shoes 12
COSMETICS, TOILETRIES
'
1.75 Ryssian Leather cologne 1.00
cosmetici 100 •
11.99 H4,,,.,40tlectrichot°"."b • ,,9'
19. 99 Travtlilt Mark II cosmetiC m•rror 12.99
1.00 Ml•I ~Meer 1.99
1elletfits 136
YARDAGE
4.99-33.00 lmitltion lurclcdi, 54" yd. 2_,,.19.9'
f
-"
• S, ft!IU
foundations«
21.00 long robes, sizes P-S-M-L
17.00 short robes, sizes P·S..M-l
loun-53· -
16.99
• 12.99 •
& lor4.99
• 3.99
2.99
1.9'<2.99
1.99
1 .25 nylon tricot briefs, bikinis 6.~7.00 lace trimmed nylon slips
... 00 lace trimmed nylon half Slips
2.50-5.00 strelch nylon bm, bikinis
l .50.2.7-5 famed fancy bikinis
daytime lingerie 28
12.00 cotton flannel plaid bun!'Y sleeper$ 6.99
12.00 long gowns, sizes 7· 1.3 5.99 '°··
junior lingerie 132·
9.00 printm brushed nylon pajamas 7.49
••
.~·
8.00 printed brushed nylon long So"1>S 6.49
6.00-8.00 nylon gowns, S-M-L ' 3.9,.5.99
9.00-15.001ri-colornylon triccls'-3r 4A,.7.99 ...
22.00 fake leOpard print mini peignoir set . 9.99 J
sleepwear lingerie 10 . -=-c=-H~IL_D_R-EN-,-S-SA_V_l_N~G~S~-!
...,,...._;:;;;..:;.,=""'~;:...:-=---.... --,,..,,,,. '· 6.00 pre.teen turtleneck sweaters 3.99 '
8.99 girlsplaidskiriplus.sweater 6.99
pre-teen apparel 90, girls' sportswear 77
4.50-5.00 famous make sleepers
children's lingerie 1-6, 79
S.00 knit ha1and scari sets ·
airls' accessories 118
8.00-9.00easy-ca"' d ...... 3'6X
giris' dresses 56
2.00-9.00 boys', girls' playwear
6.90 hooded pile jackets, M-L-XL
infants wear 38
2.99-3.5, '
l.99
2.99
99c.4.99
4.99
MEN'S FASHION AND BOY'S
SAVINGS
2.00.2.50 .. ankle and OYer-caff hose
men's hosiery 127
8.00-15.00asst. leathefwallets
4.00 no-imn handkerchiefs, 13
men's acc;essories 80
18.00-28.00 famOus make shoes,
men'sshoes60 '• 4 5 .00-75.00 spor1scoa1s for men
men's sportswear 45
85.00Maybrooke1--pant suits
men'sclothing21
12.00 Macphergus knit dreSs shim
18.~30.00 kimonos
men's furnishings 6 ·
10.00.11.00 print and plain jeans
S 11-$ 18 lambs wool caniipno
men's sport furl'! ishings 84
6.00 crew and 'Wallace Beny'' shirts
mach ten furni shings 83
4.00-5.00 boys' spons shil1S, 8-20
boy's furnishings 23
18.00-25.00 boy's jackers, jr., lil'P· .
boy'sclothing..1 4
'9c·1.19
10.99
69.00
9.99
13,,9
4.99
7.99
3.99
1.99
NOTIONS, STATIONERY
2.oo stitionery, iibltc cov. bOx 1.19
6.0Q.3.00fa.shion luggage 3,gg..5,99
stationery 66
5.00 underbed chest 1.99
,,00 5 shelf linen chest 1.99
13.00 5-drawer c~st 6.99
notions 1
CAMERAS
19.95 Tasco600pow.rmicroscope kit 9.99
cameras37
FORTHEHOME
119.oo cane trim velVet accent Chairs
379.00 four styles of sofas
furniture 141
149.00 a:itique white fini sh bookcases
90.00 glass top cocktail table
furniture 144
77.00
299.00
95.00
55.00•
109.00-449.00 ~ining room piec.. 99.00-399.00
559.00 S-pc. Medile!Tanean dining"""" '19.00
tumrture 142
392.00 3-pc. Medi~n bedroom
fumrture 143-.-a.ll 18 stores
129.50 l-pc. patio bistro set
potio shop 146
:11n.oo
199.00 244.00 la.-Z·Boy41 traditional recliner
recliners 147
54.99 Simmons mattress orDox spring each 42.00
239.95 >pc. Sealy king size set · 175.00
sleep shop 145
11 .00 nylon pile shag carpet, sq yd. inst.
14.00 polyester pile $hag, sq. yd. inst.
floor coverings 32
7.99
8.99
50.00 Oriental-type-3x5' scatter rugs
65.006' round area rug.s, shli pile
are. rugs 137
16.00 20-pc.. Durand glassware set
8.50 Colony glassware
glassware 126
89.95 95-pc. china set, service for 12
china 126
8.99
6.99
59.95
m1y ee.. aeuth ~uat plete, Nn tl1•16 fwy. at llrlat1I, ceat1 m111; 546-9321
1hojt-4oythro111h frld1y 10 1.m. to 9:30p.m.,wturd1y10•.m. to 6 p.m.
1unday 11 a.m. 'Ill 6 p.m.
··~··
IE~!~ 9~MESTICS, LINENS ~ roi ta Jee ot s
lt0.00 61-"x82" or 70" round
45.00 62-"xl 08" or 62-"x102" ova I
, 50.00 62-"xl 22" or 62"x102" ova!
55.00 62"x122" oval
2.00 matching napkins
Surety fine tab lecloths . .
15.00-18.00 66x86 oblong or oval
18.00-21.00 66"x102" oblong or oval
21.00-25.00 66"x120'' oblong or oval
25.00 66"x140"
13 .00 66" round
1.25 match ing napkins
1.2.i; crinkle patent oval place mats
Fresh Daisy cotton terr; tcM'e ls
2.50 balh towel
1.60 hand rowel ,l
l!Ocwashclolh.
1.00 wash clolh
Bozo The Clown Sesame juven ile towels
2.50 bath towel
1.60 hand toy.•el
80c wash cloth
towels and linem 30
Burlington discontinued no-iron sheets
24.99
29.99
34.9'
37.99
1A9
-,,99
11.99
12.99
1'.'9
8.99
99c
79c
•
1A9
t.19
. 59c
~S9c
t.99
1.39
69c
7.00 !win flat or fitted bottom 3.'9
S.00 pr. standard pillow cases i pr. 3.39
S.50 pr. king size pillow cases pr. 339
Springmaid Prelude Marvelaireno-iron shee.tS ,.
4.00 twin top or fitted bottom ~ 2.99
2.00pillowcases ~ u..1.49
13.00 matching twin l!E<fspread$ . 10.9,
sheets and beddin~ 34 DRAPE~IE , cusToM FABRICS .
11.00-50.00 Perm a-Press* draperies 5.,,.29.99
20.00 printed Hollywood bed covers 9.99
1 5.00 ma1ch i1Jg set of 2 bolster covers 1.99
4.00-6.00 drape.y fabrics yd. 2.4,.23'
6.00upholsteryfabrics,solid~ texllm5 yd.13'
dl'3peries, slipcovers 11 )..upholstery fabric:! 11
HOUSEWARES
2. 95 slush mugs; choice of 5 colors
2.79 Rubbennaid dish drainers; 5 cofors
21ots.oo'
2.17
t.99 6.00 Melam ine dinnerware 4 pc. place settings
housewares 29
NEEDLEWORK, SPORTS:
8.00 1;t"xl7" decorator pillows 3.99
13.00 assorted leg lounger pillows 9.99
2.50-15.00 Christmas stitche.y 1.'J9.lt.99
24.9S'·extrc:i56 r. 19.99
art needlework 40 ~ ·
24. 99-14.99 poker tables, "~48~' .19.gg..29,99
sporting goods 50 •
19.99 Matchbox 5wi1<:1>-A-Track"'tt!WaY '1.99
29.99 Socc.er-Football game 19-99
toys 42 · ·
BUDC':ET STORE VALUES
3.99 misses' kn it to ps, many, S..M--L
misses' sportswear 800, •
12.99 misses' polyester pant5EIS, 1()-16
misses' dresses810
7. 99 women's str~ch nylon pant!, 32·38
women's sportswear 8~ 6
7.99 jr. patchwork suede skirts
jr. scene 801,829 .
22.99 classic peKoats, mis.ses' 8--1 6
coal.5828
7.99-10. 99 women's shoes, a.ssL
womens shoes 812
3.99-4.99wornen'ssl-r.>M-L
sleepwear821, loungewear81 S
1.69-3.99 women'svinyl belts
accessories 826
99c women's pantyhose, 3 shades
1.79 bandeau bras, A-8-C rups
59c white briefs, bikinis, 5-6-7
1 .6~ bo~' cotton flannel shi rts, 3-7
99c-1.09 girls' knee-h i 50x, +.14
children's 808
5.99-1 0.99 girls' dres9!!S, pant sef5
7.99-8.99 giris' bl;q.,,, :Hix, 7· 14
4.59 girls' denim jeans, *x ,..
5.59 girls' denim jeans, 7-15
giris' wear 824
12.99 boys' cotton corduroy poriw
boys' wea r 822 . · -
24.99 cotton corduroy spol"b:Oab
men's clothing 814
16.99 men's wann asual jackets
"men'ssportswear817
2.99 men's long sleeve dress shirts
m~'s furni shings 806
4.99 men's acrylic knit shirts
men's sportswear 805
29.99 6x9' oval braid rugs, reVef'S1ble
5. 99 antique satin drapes, 48x54"
2.29 ea. polyester flocked p•nels, 40x54"
13.50 if perf. king ne>-iron sheets
:14.99 look-of-vel~t twin, full spreads
domestics803, bedding 825
2.49 "Vibrations" pattem Nth towel 1
towels831
Z.99
8.9'
5.00
19.99
S.99
69c, :J.~.00
1.29
44c
99c
2-1.00
4.IJ()-9.00
S.oo-6.00
1·5.50
2-7.SO
10.99
17.99
t .99
2·7JIO
19.'J'I
3.99
1.59 •.9'
IS.99
MAVCO
I'
•• " '
•
•
. .
·-Drug Pr~_grain 4 • Sn~~ess -
Tutor Unit .
Opens Door
Pepperdine
Gets Grant
The P eppcrdine University
Sch Law.in Santa Ana
has been given a $25,000 gran
from the James Irvine Foun-
dation of Newport Beach to
buy librf'.ry books necessary to
meet roinimum standards of
the America n B;:ir Association.
The law school library had
about 11.~ volumes when it
received pro\' is ion a I ac·
creditation I.isl year. but
20,000 volumes are needed to
qu alify for full accreditation.
E'epperdine hopes to earn
ABA approval for the school
by next fall.
I
HUNTINGTON !EACH
FLORISTS.
loorclwollt Shopphit ~ ... ;.,
H11atl11Qt011' Harbour
846-0601 •
COSTA MESA .
FLORISTS
117 lroadl"oy
Casio Mfto
548-6071
BROADWAY
FLOWER SHOP '"'
COSTA MESA
"Ple11ing 'fOU j,
our p!e•Jure."
pro111pl doJly sorvlc:e
2750 Horbor ll•d.
546-1248
• ~~I ·
FLOWERS
~MORR!
16JO n•w MocArth~r 11,11. Ha,bar 'iiew Cefl~' e ••4·40•0
441 fa1t 17th St., Costa Mfta e S48·l484
Peppenoin ~ Univensity
ORANGE COUNTY RESIDENT CENTER
f 7802 Sky Park Blvd., Irvine Industrial Complex
·EVENING CLASSEs-BEGIN JAN .3
Buslne11, SocioJ~y, Psychology,
Pol ice Management.
•
EVENING GRADUATE CLASSES -
BEGIN FEB. 7
Educitl&n .
.A1.L COURSES MAY BE AP~LIED TO
D~GREES.
Advance Registration: Dec. 6, 7, 8.
Location: Bet;.• Newport and Stn Die90 Freew1ys,
juJt off MacArthur Blvd.
INFORMATION : 1714 1 546-391 I or ''"I Buokley,
1714 1 7l7-6551
Fully Ac.credited by the Weitern A11ocittion cf
Schocl1 ~nd Coll1911 '
~
·-
-·
,. o· A friend you haven't . ."
· seen for yecmi?
D A gal who
. m0'7ed <IWay_t
. ·o· A relative you · can't b<twith-on this
,Thanksgiviµg Day?
·-o-·:. .. ,·-
An associate irt
work. perhaps?
D Or !rlaybe a
sweetheart?
' .. -
D YourTh~vllighost? -
0Nire it ahead.)
D A friendship y~u
sh9"1d sfai17 ·
In the true spirit oLTh(]l)ksgiviI\g,
·isn't there someone you could thank?
This year. why not say it with the
Thanksgiver. A &pecial FTD
arrangement. Bright fall flowers
<!pd brilliqnl colors. attra~ively ar-
•'faDged: in·a:g.enuine Haeger Pottery
•
;.1onc11y, Novembu 22, 1971 DAILY Pll.8T JI •
UnventooGas. Heaters
'
Biggest Fire 'Hazard ..
Fire Chief Raymond Picard
today w a r n e d Huntington
Beach residents or unvented
ga!l heaters still being used in
&0me 1K>me,s.
"Each winter," said Picard,
"ramllies surfer aceidents.
destru ction and death because
they don 't take aer\g:usly the
danger of an unverited gas
heater."
The heaters, according to
Picard, lack A system of car·
rying e-0mbustion products to
aod busy areas where cl9thtnl
may be ignited. "J,
-1I\irn the heater oft at
bedtime ...
-Use only approved metal
(never rubber) connectors !or
~II gas heating lines. .
DeMURL FLORISTS
24l t New,.rt llwcl,
c •• , .......
6<4~7f
-3 Charged
In Pollution
the outside.
;,Ordinarily a heater givesl)==:=:;=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=i
NEWPORT FLORISTS ofr-heat, carbon dioxide and
water vapor. In a closed room,
however, tfle oxygen may be
used up which could result in 675-2293
the formation of dead I y Jlll Newpert ttwd.
monoxid e," Picard said. Newport a-ctr.
LOS ANGELES (UPl ) -The chief explained lhat1~=========i The, Southern Pacific Railro::id carbon monoxide is tasteless.Ir
and two other companies were odorless, colorless and a
cited for air pollution viola· killer.
Jions-by" ~trol officers. Last January. a law went in·
MACRES FLORISTS
490 S. ,Coest Hl1hwey
La1u11a leach
494-6511
The ·a1ieged violations were to effect requiring all new
uncovered in tlie ·eighth mas.oe unvented heaters to bear j
raid by Air Pollution Control labels branding them as health
District agents since April, hazards. Beginning in January t<;::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~=~
1970, acco:·•ling~to chief Robert )972, tM same law will ban Ir:
Cba_ss, the sale or resale of unvenlcd l
·Southern' Pacific was cited heaters.
·Wednesday for excessive He suggested that residents
smoke emissions from two of replace thei r unvented heaters I
its locomotives o p e r a t i n g before the winter season
along San Fernando·Road. begins. lf an unvented heater
Lunday Thagard Co. of must be used . the following
South Gate and Associated sa fety measures have been
Charter' Bus Co. were the suggested.
orher= alleged viola'tors. -Alwa}'S keep a window
The district now will seek operr to provide adequate ven-tilatioa.
PAUL'S
FLOWERS
Open 7 Day•
24--hr. phone 1ervice
2626 hit Cu1t Hlghw1y
'44-lltO
CORONA del MAR
• ·m i s d e meanor complaints -tw1ake sure the healer is
against the companies citecr-· placed awa~ from draperies ~~~~~~ AMERfCAN BEAUTY
FLORISTS
~ . .
17851 hocll llfd.
Hu11tl11tto11 leKlrl
842-6414
FLORIST
HOUIS
Mo11 .• f.at • • ••
Che.ck the Mo•t
Populor New
Column-Alive -• •
'Checking Up'
Hu)liSt~~! '"·:·~r'
Mojor Credit Cardi
.... , HARIO• ILVD. 546·5525 COSTA MESA
'
$J250*
footed bowt:1rs designed to make a
Thanksgiving table more beautifully
festive than eTer.
You can send the Thanksgiver
almost anywhere. but only by call·
ing or visiting your FTD Florist. Do it
now. Say thanks wilh the Thanksgiver.
,
' •
!. .,
,
DAltY PILOT
Ain't She Smeel:.'
?il arina High School co-
ed Stephanje .Blase has
been c h o se n Sweet-
heart for the current
school year by the Key
Club. The t7-year-old
s e n i or 'was also a
homecoming princes!
and is involved in a
varitty of student acti·
vi ties.
No Charge
For Using
New Unit
--t!V.J.hen you're trying to pre-
vent polluUon. you just don't
charge potential polluters for
the privilege of not polluting,"
said Fifth Dis trict Supervigor
Ronald W. Caspers last wetk.
"This would be like trying
lo stop Jitter along our high-
ways by installing coin-operat·
ed refuse bins.'' he continued.
'
The Supervisor was ex-
plaini ng that charges have
been dropped ror the u~ of
the vessel holding took pum!>'"
out station recently iMtalled
at the Harbor District head·
quarters, 1901 Bayside Drive,
Newport Beach.
Originally a charge or 50
cents was levied by the
district for use of the fa cility.
but it was determined that a
charge was not consistenL..with
efforts to prevent pollution of
the harbor, he said.
Caspers urged all boaters to
use lhe distri ct facility or
com m-e r c i a I lnstallalio ns
\\'here they exist
"Even if your boat does not
ha ve a holding tank," said the
supervisor. "Slop at the
Harbor District dock and use
the refuse bins. pick up a free
litter bag and u y hello to
fr iendly Kenny Sampson."
Caf~teria
Ope1is Vp
For Kids
''oungsters attending pre-
school classe~ al the United
Methodist Chur-::h in South
Laguna will now be able lo •at
lunch at the Aliso Elementary
School Cafeteria.
School rrustees ha\•e ap-
proved the proposal. \\'hich
\\·ill provide eating facilities
for about 25 children enrolled
in !he pre-school.
Rusi n e s s superi'ntrndent
ChRrles Hes11 !'!Rid the church
had 10 ohtain state permission
lo use the cRfe1eria h1cilitv.
hut th<i\ school rlistrict of-
ficiRls have no objecl.ions to
the plan.
Dr . Hess nl".l1ed Iha! the
cafeteria is nnt presently ~elf·
suJ>POrling because not enough
children buy their lunches al
the facility .
''If \\'e can !ncrea~e the
Ynlume 1.~1ithout increasinst the
labor cnsts." Hess told the
scMnl board. "we will do
beltf'r financially ."
Truslef' Norm11 n Brownt
''oiced cnncern that allowll'I&
Jl(ln·school children lo eat tn
the cafeteria may be 11etting a
prrcedent for~other groups to
seek use of the ealln1
facilitlt!I ,
However. Dr Hess said th1t
bec;iuse of volume needed to
make the c.:ifeteria self-sup-
porting. oth@r grnun., woula be
u•elcome. He noted . however.
that such •roups must hi ve
state approval before applying
to the school district.
Committee
Cites Valley
The cily of Fountain V11lley
has reteived an award ror the
•·ork d<'lnt In the community
to 8ld crippled persons.
The award, (lven to Coun-
cilman Georgt Scott Thursd11y
In Anaheim, w11s from the
G(ivernor's (pmmittee. for
Employment of the Han-
dlcoppe<I.
Sctit.t has lr.d the city's cam·
palgn to provide bf: I t er
facil ities such 1111 parklna lot
and building access for cri1)-
pled P<I""'"'·
. -
SIZZLERS Big "0 " Layout and ar.
Wide stripe for passing action, open
racing! By Mattel. Reg. 14.81 9.99
BIG WHEEL· the seat adjusts to fit 'lees 3-10. No--tip sblbility. Racin8
slicks. By MARX. Reg . 12.99 9.99
PLAY FAMILY SCHOOL by Fisher
f>rice.teal!her, magnetized alphabet,
numbe". Reg. 14.99 9.99
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RUMBLERS Mean Mountain ha s2
motorcycles that scramble up a two-
lane hilllo 1 lane. Reg.15.99 9.99
SWITCH·A·TRACK has 4 matchbox
cars, switches, lanes. 14' track. traff-
ic circle. By 19.99 Value 9.99
TOPPER'S KING DING robot with
Brain Pal that controls him and
ma kes him move. Reg. 12.99
I e
I
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CRAFTOOL Fabric Dyeing Kit. <r6-
ate designs qi silk and coarin with
th!t 21-piece set. Reg. 24.95 9.99
GEMSTONE ~IT· polish, finish,
mount rough stones into tie clasps,
earring<, jtwelry. Reg. 19.99 9.99.
TABLE, CHAIR set has 18"x24" t.a-
b!e with Tah iti pattern, and 2 colqr-
coordinated chai~ Value 12.~ 9.'9
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'!YO) SUPBt BANK CURVE f'IJlll'I
S"ccmblnes <Nef/urdet ,.clngwllll .
2 banked curves. Reg. 19.99 9 .99
'IYPEWR!TER-has alphabe~ numer-
als, punctuation. Takes regular rib-
bon, piper. Reg. 12.99 9.99
• ARTIST'S EASB. -2-<ided, 6 Jan of
paint, 8 felt markers, 1 O paint-by•
numbersMots. Value 12.99 9.99
··-K ·~. -
save-on toys: famous ones and favorite ones ·_to please eY.ery_girJ and boy ,\,
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SMAllV PANIS· by Topper liS1ens
ID ~uat!ons, -"'"''"' bl~k. Knows ltft ti.nd hem ri1ht res. 12.n '·"
toys -42
Ji' .. :·
••••• ... .
m1y co. seuth cu1t plata, 1an d l•go fwy. at bristol, costt mes1; 546-9321
1htp mtnalay thru fri d1y 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m,. 1atur~ay 10 a.m. tt 6 p.m.
1und1y noon 'tll 5 p.m.
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ticketron
,charge your
instant tickets
in out
credit offit.e.
Fer November:
"Je1u1 Chri1+
Sup•rster"
MAVCO
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Mond.11, NoVembtr 22, 1971 . DAILY '!LOT Jf
·Lanlling on Mars PrlcH lffectfve thf'U
'""''Nov. 30 Sit VE <tSO-! -"""-41
Seac BestSerle190·J -
Fill'er: lit
DAILY ,.LLOT 11111 ""''
so1nc l.in1c ago. Irvine Co1npany says il is clearing
land to ma.ke \Va y for {uture development to go
alo'ng "'ith its new Promontory Bay currently being
carved behind Beacon Bay. ·
• • .
Not Small Task
PACE CENTER, Houston space agency," Fieldflr said.
(AP1 -~any space experts ~lore likely, he said, man
beli!11e' it will still be two er will go to Mars In a stalrstep
three decades before man fashion, climbing upward on
lands on Mars, despite sue· the technology developed from
cessful probe!! ol tlJe red . less ambitious goals.
I t Current thoughts on a
Pane · mission to Mars call for a
"It's so far forward in the spaces.hip !he size of a bat-fuh.;~·e it tends to Jose a bit of tleship -al>out 400 feet long
credibility," said Dr. Dennis -to be assembled in earth
E. Fielder, a n1embcr or the M"bil. The main ship would in-
advanced planning team at the elude three nuclear engines that v.·ould drive the vessel ~fanned Spaceera(t Center. away fron the earth and set it
$pace experts have made a streaking· with steady pulsing
rough profile, based on thrusts tow\rd Mars.
current technology. of what a On board, .a crew of t2
h1ars mission would be like, v.1ould Jive in a set f -
but the schedule of such a regenerating e'= o log Jc a 1
voyage de~nds largely on the S)ostern. They would process
rs~C' or funding for the space waste water for reuse . Their
agency and the direction Of air v.·ou\d be cleansed ·and
the space prognun. breathed again and again.
Ul)der a crash program, Food n1ighl be grov.·n on
Call !it'ars
for FREE "·ater
analysis
R•J•lor $.279 '32!.9~
• Bi.: rapat·it'!-rorwaler with up to 90
hardness grains per gallon
• Exclus h·e lkycle main valve
• Salt Selector for economy
_ • Other models as low as $229,95
Ask About Sears Conve nient Cre dit Plans
•
l
Uown by the baysidc they are tearing down the Bt1y·
side Auto Center at entrance to Balboa Island. The
renter1 on Irvine Company land, \l'as bu !lt in 1956.
Former Villa Marina Restaurant on opposite corner
of Bayside Drive and ~iarine Avenue \Vas torn do\\'n
1 ~with unconstrained spen-. board. with plants helping to
ding." said Fielder. a n supply oxygen for the crew.
Americ<>-n could walk ther---::;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiilj·=---surface of ~1ars as early as
1982 to 1965.
Students Really 'Dig It'
By GEORGE LEIDAL
"It's a 'can-do' type of
ntiss ion by then, but there
"·ould be a lot of haz.ard," he
said.
A 1nore cnnsrrvali ve but
86 STORES BRIM-FULL
Of Christmas Goodies
Of th1 D•llr ,.11111 Jr.ff
Then in class, the two sides
get together and discuss the
Shovels as well as pencils issues. The "v.•ar" is replayed
and paper COnle jn handy for in the forrn Of a point systent
document very much like the sider\ng taking up to two units still rapid. approach v.•ou\d put ~ -utb (ioast 'Pia•• n1en on Mars in the late 1980s. cJU _.!":,_
original, others have improved l·Jp<;r~y:•~•;r :o:n~a~p~..,:·:no~p:•:ss~~b~uljth~is~w=ou~ld~s~ti~ll~'~'pen~a~l~ize~-~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~;~;~~~;;;~~~--on it, he noted , basis, Brown said. the other programs in the
Students at Te\\'inkle have ··-·-···---·-
( d ( · lh · 1 (or successes in debate or s u en s In e new soc1a their choice or taking the unil -
knowledge coups over the studies progran1 now in its se-other side.
cond year at '!'eWinkle h1iddle lnste:fd or telling: them al>out
School in Costa Mesa. the 1.1issouri Corn1lromise.
courses or the regular quarter
offerings. Parents may specify
if they prcfl'r to enroll their
child in the tradition.a!
courses, the pair said.
Parental discretion a I so
counts when a student is con-
Teachers Robert Brown and Brown said, \\'e n1eet lo draw
Christine McKinley recently up such a comprontise. Some
desc ribed to th.e Newport-classes have ended up wittt a
i'olesa school board the unusuali----------------------1
approach to teaching social
studies.
The presentation. one of a
monthl y series by Newport·
"r.1esa Education Association
members. showed how tradi-
tional subject matter has been
brnkwi down into smaller
units. Students choose rrom
four offerings each quarter,
completing e i g h t different
units v.•hile in seventh and
eighth grade,
The shovels. Brown ex-
plained. come into play near
the end of a unit on an-
thropol.ogy.
Afler four weeks of studying
elen1ents. CQmtnon to a 11
culturs. such a.i religion, cur-
rency and f:;od, Brown s.aid
the studenU break into tv.•o
groups. Each meets secrelly lo
make up a completely new
culture which may be-dated in
the past, present or futUre.
'"Then they create arlifacls
that would represent the
culture they invent." he said.
-The-"AflifactS" or the
mythical culture are then
buried on the school grounds
to be: dug up in typical
archeolo~ists' fashion hy the
students of the other group.
The point is for the other
group to figure out what kind
of culture they ha v e
' ' u n e 11 rt he d ' ' from the
TeWinkle ~ounds and explain
In the culture's orii;:inators
\1'h:i t they glean from the
artifacts.
The anthropology approach
is typic<il of the new look al
soci;il studies heing offered at
the school , the pa ir said.
Mrs. McKinl ey descrihed
her approach to economics
\1•hich includes havinl! students
-1nost for 1he fir st time -
figure out h<tw mu ch (nod
costs and budge t !or lighting,
rent r.'ld other paytnents made
b~; parents.
"Some of the food budl!c ts
ha ve been pretly ti11hl leavin,ll
only enough mone y for ham-
burf,Ieri; and milkshakes ," she
quipped.
Students ""hll have "a real
knO\\'!edge or the Civi l \\1ar."
Brn11'n said. result from the
ri\'alry·producinR div ision of
that class into stud ent!! who
are lermcd Northerners and
those v.·ho take the side of the
South.
Rather than memorize bat-
tles and the dates of im·
portance leading up tn the
"·ar. studenls "go back t,o ori~inal documents and study
only ne ~ide llf the issue."
act now! heautif ul
cl1ristmas portraits
at heautif ul values!
9
for just
12.95
S•y "Merry Christm•s" 365 d•ys of
the ye•r to nine people who •re spe-
ciol: three .Bx I 0 connoisseur por-
traits plus six charming wallet-size
of •ny two members of your f•mily.
Incidentally, we stress "connois#
seur" bec•use our photographer IS
•nother n•me for im•gain•tion.
it's at tl1e broad,vay
hu11ti1191011 0-h
pho11• lfl·JlJI, en.1111011 211
p<1rtr8il 1fudio, •• Iii floor
PHARMACY
WE QUOTE PRICES
,
ON THE PHONE
2100· E.:Ceast Highway, Corona del Mar, at Ferrileaf
I
I
'
Hunting for fun? It's here.
Andre Cold-Ouck. A·happy
blend of fine champagne
~nd sparkling burgundy.
With deep pink bubbles
to tickle your tongue
with a surprisingly
refreshing taste.
Serve Cold Duck
wl)en the flock gets
together. But make
It the best Cold
Duck. Make It
Andre Cold Duck I
,
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OAJLY PILOT Mond'1, N....,bt< 21, 1971
MARI NA 'S TOP BOY AND GIRL FOR OCTO~ER
Honored Are Cr aig Daniels i nd Diane Parke r -
Honor Roll Studen4
President P ace Marina
Diane Parker and Craig
Daniels. two senio rs al J\farina
Jligh School. have been chosen
ns Girl and Boy of the J\!onth
for Oc:tober.
Sidc,\·alk
Case llas
Overtones
A sa\ ings and loan associa-
lion has threatened to sue
J\cwport Beach if the City
C.:ouncil bar;s \'rhicular access
to the Ocean Front"sidcv.'alk in
Balboa.
Count·11rnen toni~hl arc
schcdu!rd to abandon a por-
tion of the \1a!k bct1.1·C('n "A"
Rnd "B'' ~.iocltS 111 trade for
:'lr'r t':ISCmt>nl behind SIX lots
f1ir U!>e ;1s a future alle~·.
·If rl1t 1·11v council docs in
f11"I 1 ato11r< close up and
;-.i:indun ... nd if in :;fl dong, \IC
a1 1: depri1ed of vehicular ac-
ce"s as <1 rcsull of said Rhan·
dunmcnt; \1'e will find it
necessary to ask the courts to
dt"lcrrnlnc the leg;ilily of lhis
11h<1ndon1ncn1. '' said r-.1 i kc
K·Jbcr. nrrsident ni l he
(}ntarJ(l S:i\'hig~ MfHJ 6o.<1n
A~; 1,ciatiun, \.\hich 01vns a lot
In the middle of the hlcx.:k.
The prr:iposcd cxrhnni:!e of 10
fl'cl 11! Ocran F!'n:1l for 12.5
ft•el hf'h1nd !he block. at the
'',\"' Slrl'CI end . is expected to
be cnuplC'<l 11 iih a ci ty otdin·
ancl' th.:it forb ",r!<; vehic ular at·-
cess to the 1va!l;.11·a\'
Public \\'orks ll 1 r c 1· Io r
.Joseph Dc1 l1n explained that
manv of the lnts trllnt1nr. on
lhe Ore:in Front tin not cxll'nd
l hrnugh In Ba lli<111 Bnu!r\'ard
Thr 1nueh-1h·batC'<I p I a n
11 nuld elnsr ulf \'l'l11c11\nr ac-
l'l'SS to );l'\1•ral lot~ 1n th(• 11111t-
1llf' of 1hc bl1irk. a! ll'ast until
!he t·il y :1tqturrs th r entire
ru:;ht-of·11•ny and t•an build the
:illrv.
Ti1rrc i~ 110 incl1e:it1on hn111
!'.non 1hl.' ('1ly niir\hl ;1cqnirc
!he c111ire ri g hl -n f .1v<1y
liecau~r somC' !Jl"OJK'rt~ 011•ners
11IC1ng the 14·lot block sl1!1 op·
po~t' lhc pla11.
··If :111 :1l!ey \1rrr pushffi
through 1n.1 propP!'l y. 1 would
k1);e lbc uicon1r froni the ren-
tal urut :i \the 1 car of n1y pro-
per!,." .IL•hn n. Sp:1 rhng. 92~
Ocean Front. told rounci lm cn
In a lrlll'r la~t v.t•rk.
There is at least one home
!hat projects into the proposed
allt>y right-0f-v.'a~·.
Sparling cited nnother point
or opposition.
"The proposed nlley \\'OUld
rorc\·er set the arre in which
1uy property is locat ed in 30
bv 80-foot lots." he said.
"·111is v.'OUld pre c I u de
nnyonc fron1 combining pro-
pt>rlil's from Balboa Boulevard
to 1 hr Ocean Front and
de1•eloping structures or any
sizt>," he said.
"I doubt U the proposed
:illev 11•ill help this area attain
Its highest and bcsl use ... he
said.
Other nearby residents have
exprMsed oppotution to the
narrowing of the sidewalk ,
ltsetr. De\'lin sa l:t.
"Some concern about the
nnrro11'init of the sidewalk in
Miss Parker has been on the
school's honor roll since her
freshman year. She is a
member or the California
Scholarship Federation and
has been active in student
government as member or the
Class Council and Council of
Student Representatives.
Some of A1iss Parker's other
activities incl ude the Pep
C!ub. American Field Service,
r.1edical Explorers Club, ten-
nis team and being head varsi-
ty yell leader.
Daniels, the senior class
president, also serves as vie~
president of the P..1 a r i n a
branch of the California
Scholarship Federatioo. He,
too, has been on the honor
roll since his freshman year.
In addition, his name has
.been on the roster of such
clubs as the Interact Service
Club. Ski Club. Pep Club,
Chess Club. BackP.Bcking Club,
and Boys Leag1.1e.
Fee Stalul
Reversed
By Rege nts
UC Irvine's student body
president Steve Chadima has
lost a round with the UC
Regents' finance committee
reversing last month's vic-
tory.
Despite student views on the
subject. the committee voted
last week to spend $3.2 million
from student fees on buildinal
rather than on scholarsblp1
and loans. as Cha d i ma,
representing student govern·
mcnt on all nine UC cam-
puses, had urged.
The decision v.•as due for
considera!ion by the full
board today.
In moving to use 111 '23
1nillion of student fee• ror
buildings. UC P re 1 l dent
Charles Hitch said th• 1t1te
has provided no money thl11
year for building ind that the
$3.2 million was nece11ary lo
n1ecl expanded enrollment by
30,000 ~tudents in the 19701 .
At the last meeting the
regents voted to 1pend $19
n111lion fro111 student fee.11 for
building purposes, but Hitch
said he was askilll for the ad-
ditional S3.2 million In 1plte of
lhe fact that "this ii one-of the
most difficult qu11llona of 1 priorities.''
T~e unil'ersity, he 11ld, ,
already has "gone 1 very, very
long way" to increa1e flnan·
clal aid lo student1 and 11ld
state and fed eral support for
such programs should be ln-
crl.'ased.
The Studen t Body
Presidents' Council had..ur11ed
that the $3.2 million should be
reserved lo help students.
\'oting for llitch'1 propo11l
were Edwin Pauley, Edward
\V. carter, Dean Wat It t n c ,
De\\ri1t Higgs and Hitch, while
it was opposed by WJlllam ·
Coblentz, William Forba, and
\\1illiam Roth.
~feet at OCC
front or the lots has bttn ex-Ninety three junlor college•
pressed by local residentJ." .he. from throughout California
said. explaining that tbe pro-••ill send teams to the Fall
posed action "'oold extend Championship Speech TOUml·
pri\•ate properly fh'e feet into ment Dec. 3-5 at Oran11 Coa1t
the existing 12-foot walk. College.
To sol\-e this problem . --o-=:-=-=-------
J)cl'llo said. th• city rould UN CLE LEN
~·Iden the \\'alk on the oc:ean
1>ide almosl to the niv. or IJ!llm Saturdays in ~:f: .~~-parallels the P'"'d The DAILY PILOT
. .
I
l/N·IROOK
HARDWARE 4'U1, I.UMBER
HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
BAtii'~$WAG
"Spotlight on Specl~l _Voluel"
' I globes with the lo ok of ha nd-cut crystal.
• Heavy 9 ass • Rich ca st brass
/
: .. ~ .
CHRISTMAS
'fittings for extr a
elegance .
• All hardware
is include d.'
REG . $14.99
SAVE $5.00
$999
TUES. & WED. ONLY I
GARAGE DOOR DECORATION
REG. $1A9
99'
TUii. & WID.
ONLYI
Hand Crafted
LADDER BACK
CHAIR
• All hardwo od with do uble woven
fibre seotl
• Ready to paint, 1taln or wax.
• 42" hi gh bock, 1 B" high seota-
you'll be silting In stylol
• Buy 1tv1ral for tht dining room, desk
chair, extra stating onywh•rtl
Regulation 50"x23~'·
'BUMPER POOL TABLE
•
11Fun & Excitement ~here Space Is Limited!';
""" 3/ ... ~,"wood pro" stay level bed. 11' W,ool blend cloth-high impact bumpers.
"Walnut cabinet & leg assembly.
"""leg levelers for easy odiusting, TUfS. & WED.
Made to sell for $129.99 ONLY!
SAVE
$50.00!
UMIRD
TD STOCK
ON HAND!
BUYNOW&PUT
IT AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS!
String of 25
OUTDOOR CHRl~T!MAS LITE SET
igllt The Way For Santa•"
•Includes: 25 standard C9~ b' lb , .
& odd-on connector. 4 u s •n assorted colors, clip fasteners
•If one stops glowing
the rest stay /it.
• Sofe-U.l. approved-
weotherprooff
REG. $2.99
WOW! $249
Comple te
TUES. & WED, ONLY J
Your Choice
FROM LIN-BROOK'S TOYLAND
Mottel Kiddies•
LUCKY LOCKETS
•Tiny 2 inch Kiddles11 lockets to deli.ght
your little girls.
•They can wear 'em , decorate a
room or take them out for play.
• 4 styl es-collect. them oil.
YOUR
CHOICE 49~.
Sells Elsewhere For 99c
RIG , $12.99
SAVI $1,001 BOYS CRAFTS KITS
1UES. & WID. ONLYI
ANAHEIM
''The Perfect Gift far a Boyl"
• Fun, educational, easy to do.
•Choose: printing set, metal craft,
flashlight kit, mold 'n co lor, wallet se t
or secret bank.
• For hours of fun & learning.
REG . 99c 69'
TUES. & WED. ONLY!
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
21 44 w. LINCOLN f* TAI•• •••t or ••001CHua1r1 '"°Nl"•·UOO
17200 s. I AOOKHUIST 1200 YAlllOS sovrlt 0' WAINUJ
PHONE 961·331 1
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frtonday t:cvt111b1r 22, 197c_l _______ DAILV PILOT Jf
~-..===..._,..,.
Coast 'Area Men in Service Around the w-or , .. '-.!~f.E~I:
U.S. Alt ForCe Airman First pro vide An1er1ca 's defense Robt.rt L. ~lann Jr,, \\'hO~e Carl A. \Vallcr. 20222 Sunshine I1oblnson, son or ~I r. and Mrs. Company C, 229lh Aviat ion completed eight v.•ceks of ad-l · I'.. , ·i;
Class Dt1n O. Miller. son of force v.•ilh early notification lo pa rents live flt 7882 Llbcl'ly, Orfve. Huntington Be a ch , Charles d, Robinson, 3fi200 B. B.iith1lion of the 1st Cavalry vanced ind ividua'. lrainil'ijt at ·'
Joseph J, Miller ol6601 Sulton tercontinental or sea-launched • Huntington Beach, recentl.v recently completed an eight-Ja:nison Road, Star · Route, Division's JD Brigade near the U.S. Army Armor Center,! :rt:. Fl. Knox, Ky, f" -A1·t., Westminster. is a missiles. 11•as assigned to the IOl i;t week cooking course al the •Ore , is servfn~ w1lh !ht 8~th Bien Hoa. ;
mt!:mber nf the !st Aerospace Airborne Division lAirmobileJ U.S. Army Tran1ng Center, enµincer battalion in \'1etna111 . --Army Private F'irst l'lass ~1 -,d.,t-ICF-
Control Squadron I n s id e Arn\v \Varrant OUicer ~tf-in V1etnan1 . Arn1nr Fl. Knox. K. He is an engineer "·lth the Army Private Patrirk t'. James M. Holman, son of t>.1r. t
Cheyenne Mounta in near die E. Bond, son of ?t1r. and Pvt. M.:inh is a rifleman in batl11hon's Cnmpiiny D. Dowd, son o! l.1 r. and Mnt. and Mrs. James O. Hnln1an, \
Colorado Springs, Colo., which ~\rs. Ed"·ard E. Bond , 309 Company 8. Isl Battalion of ~len in Service add 1 . ds His wife. La Verne. Ji1•es at t'rancls E. Dnwd, 9 4 5 I 7~2 Yukon Drive, llunlinglon 1 iJ l'!'!lt~~.l_!~
hali won the C hen n au I t ~1emphis, Huntin~toii Beach. the 011•1sion's 502nd Infantry. Army Seconrl Lieutenant 18152 Gleada St., Huntington Jasmine Avt!:., F' o u n ta i n Beach, recently completed an !-"
Memorial Trophy for 1971. recently wi:is assigned l.O the Albert L. \\'allal'e, son of Beach. \'alley, recently completed eighl·wcck whl!el v e bit! e
Airman Mil ler is a data IOl st Airborne . Div i s i u n Priva te U sUe C. K11berskl, Colonel and Mrs . A.L. \V~!Jl\cc -ei.itht \veeks of ad1:anccd in· 1nechRnic course at the U.S.
systems specialist in the !Al rmnbilef. lie is no1v serv-son of f\ir . and f\1rs. Owen i\l Jr .. 1920 Cnn11nndore Road, ~lil'hfll'I J. T:i~·lnr. son rf rih•!dU;\l trl\lnlng a:. an Armor Army Training Center, Jnfan·' ~-'4'"41-6
unique squitdron. "''hich ope.r. Ing Mar Phu Rai, Vietnam, as Kuberski , 16704 Lassen Drh·e, Ne11•pnrl Beach. recently com· ~!rs. Reil y 1.1. \Valslon, 6262 Rt cnnnalssanee Sp~ialist at try, f t. Ord.
ates ttlc North American Air ;i, pilnl in Troop C, 2nd Fnun!Ain \'alley. L~ a!!llignM tn pleted a nine·'A·eek nrdnan1·e Chernliee Dril'e, \Vei;tminstcr. !he U.S. Army Armor Center, ---?H.
Defense Command Sp a ce Squadron of the Division's 17th Ft. Ord, 11·here he is train1n.1t officer ba:-ic course at the U.S. rctcnlly 11·as promoted tn rt. Knox, Ky. ALi.'<lrding to src Zc;nHr-
fDefeknse 1cent1ec -k r1espo11 nsible 1 CaHv.alry:f K th' f'
9
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u1ndcr 1~he1d n)odc~n l'Olunlecr A1h·1ny
1
OAr~~adnce Cp'enter . and Arn1y Specialist Five in Viet· A , p-· -
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'd fl ripa, foc
1
'', ""," 1~ccru11;er1, : ~ ---1"----l-"'-~ or eep ng ra c o a man-IS \\'I e. a 1, 1ves at / , rn1y ie cxpcrunent. sc on, ,,.,r een r o \' 1 ~I g nHm . rnl) r11•a e a\'1 . year en 1s men op ion. \
made objects in space -and 11.lonte Carlo Circle. Ground, ~ld. Spec, Ta~lor rccehcd the Allen, son nf ~lrs. Rulh F. ~1nunljny is prese ntly in Fort t
monitors all Air Foret!: missile Army Private Timothy G. 1iro1no lion "'h1le assigned as a Allen. 16181 (ianges Lant, Ord. Cali fornia unde rgoing the ilfl•••lfiiiilm••••
attack warning networks to Priva te Firsl Class E\•era:, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Army Private l''rank D. helicopter n1echanic w i l h Hunling~on Beach, recently new ''VOLAR' Basic Training.
Striped Tops and
Solid Pants Sets
Sears Low Price
591
' ' : c;_
r-·
Striped Nylon Knit Tunics ·---
Feature s.elf be lts. In a cho ice ~ ... :.:.:.:·
of three scyles: V, mock or ;l·
turtleneck. Misses" sizes. "".1
Solid Color l\ylon Pauls
In favorite holiday colors to
team up with striped tops.
Stitched crease. Misses. sizes.
i "')
,
__Just like a woman to wait for a great selection
of coats and suits at terrific savings! Fur trims,
untrimmed scyles, pants coats ... all the popu-
lar styles to complement today's fashions. In
bright and dark colors. Misses' sizes.
Ask About Scars Convenient, Credit Plan s
·:··· .......... , ?"" !["· '
~ ..... i. ---....
. '
AlMAMtlA
., .... )11
CCUlPTOM
•1•-2s110 ~1•3711
COVl~A
GUMDAlf lOMG llA(M
24J·1DCM, 241-4111 4 IJ·Ol21
WOllA•Alll: ,,, ... oo. 111-4))0 .... 0.11
HOUTWOOO NOt tMt tflOf
•tt •Sf41 llJ•1lT2
I ~-
0
...
' I ' j
SAVE
*1.76
t i ~ar $1.69 Agilon• 1 PantyHose ...... _.,_,.
. j
• 1
I
1 '
! ,
! l I '
•
' I
J '
' ' i
t 4 GREAT. VALUES '.,
i_. From,,Hundre d• of h r m• On Sulr Durinl' This E1:en1 J l Pri r.e• Efft•cti\'C Lhru 'Vf'ilnl'~rl;i~·-,'fove111ber24 . · .,____.i.__,__.._.,t.._:.~.-·•~-,-.. ,--•~~·~A. ·-.,~~-·-·--·-·--.~ ........... ....,.._ __ ,., ~ .. .,.li
pairs for
PETITE
AVERAGE
TALL
Sheer stretch Agilon'" for
great fit and wear. Nude
heel and reinforced toe. Fa-
shion shades of Bare be ige,
Sun,.t,Moclia.J3uy several
at this low, low price.
Giftahle Birthstone Rings
F 01· Motl1ers and Grandmothers
' \ '~
l
OFF
Regular Low Prices!
t/ Sears
J Slone!, 11 1\t. ColrT 132
i=o r a 5peci al gift that she wil l treasure
throughout the year. give her a beauti·
ful stone ring this Christmas. Birth·
stones in 12 colors. Mounted in 10 Kc.
or l 4 K~ go ld rings (white or yellow
gold).
Jewelry e nlarged to show detail.
I
''· ''I
3 ~Innes, I°' Kt. Gold 128
3Stones,14 Kt. Goldl2 7 3 Ston es,14 Kt. Cold 12 9 3 Stones.14 Kt. Gold 836
, I \ · I '
:\ Slone~.14 Kt. Cold 128 3Sion es.,10 KL Cold t 30 3 S1oncs, IO Kt. Cold t~O
OllMCll POMONA SOll1H CGAST ftAlA VAUIY Satisfaction •31-2100 •l•·.tlll S•O·SlS) .,.., .••• ,. •••·»2• Guoro,,lt•cl PAIADIHA l•NfA n l .. lNGS , lMOU5a,Mo OAXI VllMOMT
111-J211,)Jt o421 1 t44•101 I ••7·•.t•t. Jl1·1 ll1 7Jf•ll 11 OtY01.1rMon•y
3Stones,14KLCold130
:1 !'tones, IOKL Cold t:18
•'
85100~. IO KL Cold 164
See this merchandise
on the TV premiere ,of
ROIGERS I WlMMEllTEtN'S t\,inUl~
<AMOGA P.UI
S•O.oMI
ll •o~t fH6llWDOD O\YM•tC I. SOTO PICO SANTA #.OMlCA lOlllNCf 8ack
WED., NOV. 24 ~
8-11 P.M. CHANNEL 7
44J.ltl1 .. •T1-2s21 ,.1.s2 11 tU.U, J.O&•UCXANDCO. fll·42H ..... ,,, J42.1J11
'
,
•
I,
•
'•
JI DAJLV PILOT
Bnive r-sit.......-of
Here la 1 caJend°ar ~enlll
scheduled 1t UC Irv In e
lbl'Oll(h O..:.m her:
MUllC
T'°"'..s.r' O.C. J -LOI ANGELES ,_HILHIJIMOHIC OllCHESTIA wl!ll
LIAtln Mlfllt CtrdJdlllt. ,_,_I'll ..., °''"'" CtM.111!¥ Ptilttw""'Cll'lk: Socill\I, Crtwtord Hell, l :lO 11 m. UCI
llu.ltntt. IK\lltv •I'll tlt ff "'It"!' ~ ~ ... ":~ v~::· S: b':: flu , Tlc-tll ll04 1v•ltabl1 n!9"1 ct/
P1rf0fm1nc1. "er 11\~r"'•'lolo <•II Ori,,.. C111111ly ~llll1rmonlc Sodtty,
O!O) ....i••ll.
Frlcl1v-SUnll1y, Otc. l-5-Ct<llllSTMAS
CHOltAL CONCERT &V u.,:wrJitv
Cll6rv1 UfllNr dlrecHM ti M1uf'ic1
A!llrd, 111«l11t POiio-ol mu1lc.
vm1 .. Conctrt Ha l~ t :Jet a,m. Oet. J '"° ,, J .... • '·"'· Oec • All,..IU!ofl I I.
5.i!Vf(MV, OK.,_ U NIVER SI l V
' OltCHESTllA 111•11(\ld b'I' Ptltf' ~
Oclft,lrd, 1uoc:lt !t arm~ ol ... usic. IH'•-lne "S,..,,111'10<'1• _,.,,.. tu11<111t" 111 k rl!er 111 cCt1Cer1 ~red br Ltl.l'.llint U11!lm1tld.
ylUttt Tlltlllrt, 7 "·'"· Y111,11fi•1.?S, . 1fi~'sJ~,~C:, llcket lnlermtllo!I ctll
((INCEllT Seoni.or'°lt lw •SUCI lttlur-lflt ~•11r1$1 GWH C.rU11, fol~ sl.._
Denny l!lrOOllJ Hid rad, l fOUll
l!tdtrt Ctt *'lll'd Htll. 1:.11 it.It\.
UC! 1rlldefllt llJO t"ll S), el1N'r1
U.50 1"11 U . TldltlJ "" WI.. al
.i.5U(I olllc' •Jld Tld.•••Otl out!PIJ.
Fr" r1frt11'1Mtnt1 II Ur I" t (Ji.
tt"'"ln loro.
TllUtMllY "'"" Fr}dOY , ~-t tnd 10-UNIVEllS!TY 0 I! (HES T I! A
dlre<:!ld hY P.i1r S Ode~•rd,
"'UOC.ltl• "'"'let-el .,.,uslc, ort,l.f'l\-
t!n1 "Sym111>01111 1<1r>1ttll-" Br
91rtle1. Vlllttt 1'-'tlrf, l ::IO pm,
Alltn1H ll'll'1 II.
s,o1ur<1~Y. Ott. 11-0ltGAlf COlrlCEl!T,
tll·lltcll Acl~eni '"" C11r!1tm11 11<0<
SAVE •3 .
•••"' 1r1tt11t~ br ,.1111'1 HUll\CWI,
•f"OltUOI' of mutlc, UCL.A, •1111 ""fl t!
llucltlll,, IPOl>$,,..!!ll by Stlll!OI 91 FIN
Arlt. CDl'ICll!'! H1N, l :Jll •.m,
/.
DRAMA
Frldtyl lld S1turd1y1, OK. 3, t, 10,
11, 11 tn<I It-DEATH 0~ A
SALESMAN pr1111l11cl OY lrYIM
Cornmu11ll'I Thf!•ttr. '" H11m11111J11
Hall, I '·"'· Sludellt1 11.!0, lrvlnt
c-m1111!tr fh<!altr me-mbt<1 IJ,
oltltr1 12,'°-Tld<lh ti .i-.
l'tLMI
W"C11'•!.1111v, [)'!( I-THE SEVl!.NTH
~EAL, t"9m1r l8•r9ml~ I 11 m,
~llOrl~orf'll by ASUCI. kltnct Lt<:lllfl
li~ll ... 11.m. UCI 1t!ldtll!S jO tl~h.
0111~r1 7$ c1n11.
Frld1v, Otc. J -THI! !IOV5 IN THI!
8.liNO, s_,.orfd b• A5UCI k!ell('.e
Li.;lur~ H11i. 1 .tna t:lll p,.,., UC!
1t\lde11t1 11, o•~trl Sl.50.
S•turn•v, DI!<. • -D I! II 5CHIM-
MELllE1TEll. ,...,.,,.,..f!d bv UC I
G1r ... 1n Club. 111 Hum1t1lll" Hi lt,
'
Li ttle Boys'
Charger J ackets
~1~" 997
Oxford cloth nrlon she!! jackets
'l\"ith acrylic-cotton pile lin ing. Rae·
ing stripes on sleeves. Co ncealed
hood zips into collar. Si zes 3 to 6X.
l11/a11t1' Drpt,
Little Girls' Nylon
Stre tch Se ts
287
..
•
'
at Irvine Outlines · E vents
1":10 •• Ill, AttmlHIOtl JCI tfflll.
WH"f§dfy, DK. 1-fHI PASSIONS
01" ,t,NlrlA, 1.,.m1r atrf!fll" 111""
I POf\llOl"t<I •v ASUCI, Stlenc:f. LK!Urt
Hiii, I ...... UCI lhlde"" 50 c1t1t1,
o!llerl 1.S unit.
Frld~v. Drt. 1e-c'oMIEOV NIGHT,
•-1.0rtd bY A5UCI. Stllr>Cfi LKtu•t
1'111t, 1:)0 ......
IUl'l'OllT OltOUl'S
S\IN11v. OK ~WINf. ANO CHEESE·
f,t,$TI NG l'AltTY 1a.uorld b¥ IKI p.,..., .. Or11.,l11!1llO' I I Kllolt r.1111•
Wflffll Rt¥1tl Hou11, 9CO W. Flrtt
!t .. Tu111n S.1 :)0 p.m. OonlllOll 11
ml11lmu"'.
~1¥, OK. ll-Ml!"t!TING, UCI !lie '
I !lom•ertoftl'S. UCI F•cully Club,
t :ltt ......
UC Olt ••oto ANO TV ICUCI, ctllllllll tldlo •!&tin<!. IN"ot0c11t.
l•orn I 1.m. lo 1 1.m. will! I v1rl11Y
of ...... ,.m. Crllltcl br KUCI 11111.
(FM to).
UCI ltn.n • .,_"'"" U(I, , .... _
11111 C°""""'llll'I', fWllir" CYfttlll1
JlllllMM, IUOC:lltl dt.,. nl ttude/111,
I nd 1'111\tr Sud ~......... CllTllllll
d>t1>l1!n. COMMU!t!l'I (tbltYlt!Dtl,
Cll1nn11 J, "th Tt>urN1v 11 • ,.111,
UC I ltf"OltT. C~11!Jy CAbltvl1I"",
Ch111"1'1 l. tKl'I T-IY l nG Tllltrt• dlY 11 l:Jt 1.m.
UCI SIOOllTS SceNE. w.,,., w.i-!n-l~rvltwlnt UCI CDICMt l nG ""°""'
-111N11t1e1, c,.,.,,.111111'1 C•l>!t¥l1!1111,
Clll11111I l. ffC.11 fllftllly 11 I 1.m.
5Clf:NCf. EDITOR, commt,.11..., en
curnn! dtYtl011m1nli In KIN lll lt
prolttl1 l!lroulfWl\lt werld. IOOt .. u ch
58111rd1r 11 l :ta., m. 11111 e1c11 Sun-
dlY II l :JCI 11111 •:lO J.m.
Tll~ UC l"'IM ll br1r!1; .-Ill -tf"\11
-Clll llooK1 durlnt ll>f wetlr, ef l1M •u1rttt 0,..11 11111 IM hoU.HY H•lod.
T~ .KM011l1 fM •~ u,.;.,,,..11v,
l lolo.ik1I ScltntH 11111 Pnyik:il SC)1nc11 Llbr1rl11 11111-1:
• •
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'
..
!1.1•11r111y, o.c. 11: I ,,,..,"'tkf,,11111,
SUllOIY, Ole. U: I '·'" ""'idlllll!I,
Mofld1v-Tllolt$11fr, o-. 13·1': I •·"'·· ""ldnllfll.
F"dtY• Dt(, 11: I t .m ... """'
Sllurctfy, O.C. It: 1..S '·'"·
Su"ll•v. DK. Jti c~ .
Mllllll•¥-Tll<lrld1V, Dec. »-U: ' t .m .. J
"·"'·
"·"'·
l'rldav, Dec.: 24. I 1 m.--.
S1•ur111r trMI Si.l"lll Y,' Cite. u .,Id it: tlosed,
Mondty•Thllrsd•Y· Dec.. 11401 f 1.,,.., .. 11.m,
Frlder, 01't 31 : I 1.m •llfl«I,
'-'11rd1v. J111. I: cloHd.
SU<ldt Y, J111. J: 2 11 "'··""141119111
lllORTS M~l'Cl•Y·fll11rid1v. Dl't. 71-lll: l~t.m • ..S •••Ullllll .......
' ' S Wld~1v, O«. 1-UCI Vt•llly II r dlV· und1v. 0-.:. l1·Jt.,.1: C U~lvfr111Y ot T•n11111~; UCI Frosh
Tht Kl!ldoult '"" Ille lol.tdlci l klanctt t i C1I Wtllt•11. ·
Lll>•f rv wlll M: Frld1v, ~-)-UCI Fros.ri v'
lll¥ertld1 •Jurolor Ctll19a, al "°""' J
~-"'· WM1111d1w-F•ldt ¥, O.C. 15·11: I 1.m ... '·"'· S!'"'"'"· Dec. II: ' t .m,•5 1.m.
Su.Mtv. Dae. It: <loitd.
SllurllaY, 0ec.. ~Cl Vtrtltv ti Wtsl
Vlroln!a U11h1tr1l1¥.
T ... io.1, 01c. 1-UCI V1,.1ty 11 Armv
Wl'llntsd~v. DI'<. 1-UCI V1rlltv 11
1e1.,,. Htll U11lv1r11tv1 UCI Froah vo.
W•t Lot "'""'n J11n1 .. Col.._., ti "°""· 1 ......
S.l11r•1v, OK . 11-UCI V1r11tw q,,
WM1!on Coll$, ii l\olT>f, I '"·"'• UCt Fro•ll ¥1, Cy..-.u Ju11lor
Co!1191, 11. llllmt, J:O "·':"·"
Tueid•v •nll WMn~MhV. Dec. 11 ....
n -uc1 1min•1•0<1~I T1111r11tv wltr1
(Set UCJ EVENTS, Pai&e. 111
TAKE THE
NEWS QUIZ
We D•re You ..•
Every Saturd•y
Cut 26% to 44o/o
1 -
I· • i -.
Big Girls'
P olyes ter
K n it pant set
Sean Low, 69 7
Lo"'· Price
Were $1.19 to $l.59Yd.
Perma Prest" dress fabrics
in dt!lightful prints and
solids. Sportswear fabric in
Yyi\·d colors and :z ippy
prints in ·easy care cotton.
~fachine ""'ashable.
)'ardagt Dept.
Ea.sy-care machine wash.lble. Sol-
id color pants have ela.uicized
"·aist, stitched "dov.'n crease.
Srriped tops have turtle neckline,
long sleeves. S-M-J....(2 ro 6X).
;
I I
\
7 GREAT VALUES ' 'i '·
Tops have horizontal
stri pes, shallow boac
neck.line. Pants in flare
leg styling. Perma-
prest. Gree n, red,
navy, or purple. Sizes
] 10 14.
•
11'/111111' 1111d C h1/dren J Dept.
. -,
. '·
SAVE33%
Women 's Natural
or Cpntour B ras
and Panty Girdles
Re~ultr
$4.50 2 for $6
Lacy cup ·bras wi1h n)'lon and
Lycra* spandex stretch fram e.
Adjw13ble 5traps.
$5.50 D Cup S1yle s __ 2 for 17
$8 Panry Girdle 5.99
$9 full figure Pan!)' Girdle 6, 99
Bra and Girdlt Dtpt.
From Hundred• of h ems on Sale D11rin11 tbu Great Event
Prjcee Effective tbru W~dneoday, Nov .....
, ' < -•
,.
-~ .,
I
' •
' ; ..
l
~
\
~ " ' ' \ \\
• .fak .4bouf
Sear• Canrenient
Credii Platu
Women's Long an d Short Shift Gowns
Sea rs Low,l:A>wPriee! 2 97
A fabulous array of silky·soft nylon tri cot in )ovely colors.
Beautiful trims, sheer overlays and feminine frills. Sizes $., M"
and L.
Lin~trie D.1p1,
G;r/J' D epc1rlment
SAVE 20% to 4 0%!
Handy :Featl1erlite Luggage
Rrgular
$12 to S32 960 t o 2560
Featherlite softside is the id eal luggage to give 'cause it
has "~ive_'' The grained vinyl covers hel p to give it shape
retention. Aluminum interlocking fra me gives added
strength; rhe chrome plated drawbolt locks give you no-
trouble closinp;. Giveable colors for men and women.
Not S hown:
$18 Cosmetic Case
14.40 .
J 20 Weekende r 112
$26 24-i n. Pullman
19,!;0
$29 1'wo Suitcr_2 I .i5
S \2 Three Suiter 25.hO
$10 Artach $16
$24 Underseat Ba.LS 18
$ ~1 Garment Bag ~J .25
$28 Suit Ba 121
$2.~ Ores~ Bitg._l 8 ,40
$21 SuicBa.g__l 7.60
L11y.ttgt Dtpt.
S hown:
Regular .$20
Companion Case
Regular $31, 27-io.
Pull man
Regular $12
Tote B•
:i '¥ ..
' ,
(;hro1m~ 1•l•t~d
dr1 .. ·tw.l1 l"el1.1
(.IO$"etc_tu~l7 .
llZ
4.80
9.60
..
See I hit fllttChandlse
on the TV premiere or
CHRISTMAS SHOP PING HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY q 30 A .M lO q P.M. . S UNDAY 11 AM TO 6 PM ~ FREE PARKING! iiiivt """'"."" COM"ON Ol!Ntllr lONO a1.1CM Sears ., ..... ,,,, •.>•-•s11, •.>J.J1•1 JtJ.100., 111.1111 111.0111
""""'"" (0"'*" NOUllllOO• NOllNt! ... ., ........ ,, .. ,,. ......... ,, •••·Jhl .... .,,,,
UHM4 ,Atlt rl JlllONfl + .. ouwoot Ol 'rMI!( l SOTO -· •• ,.,,11 •11.21t1 ,,,_,,,, 11.U.J,&OllUCl:AHOCO. -
I
•
o• att0f POMONA
t .>1·11M 111·1111
'.t.IAOtN,1 '"""'" " '"'"'s ••1-a111 , t•l ·4111 •••·1011
"'. I.Iliff• MONICA ,,, ... , .. JM·~.'ll
aoUTH CO.lit,,, ... , ... ¥Alllf
Jl0·3J)J 11.i.1111, •••• ,,,.
1"0UlaHI O••t Vl•JlllOlff
•• ,_.) ••• Jll•l Ill 7Jt·l f l I
fOtl.INCl
Jl2°IJ I I
\
Sotisfaction
G1.1o ronlttd
Or Yo1.1r Monty
_.lock
W!D., NOV. 24 fl
1·11 P.M. CHANHEl 1
,
-.. --.--.
• Mcnday, Novtm'ier 22, 1471 DAILY PILOT j
Scheduled-From--Pll1Jliarm~nic 6rchestras to· P~ays
1Co.otl,aqed from Page Ill
ucr. 1111 Ditti> St&11, Humt1111crr stt11
1"11 ChJi''"" com11111..,.••
f~u .. d~Y. Dec. J)-UCI ll•flltv VI,
SHiii• P1clllc, 1t """''' • 11,m.• UCI ffes/I 11 Ci1ru1 Junior Col~t.
Vvfl!n1Kd1y, OK. 7'-UCI llt•1Jty V\.
~-H11t. ""•he l m CM-
v111llen C"'ler, • 11.m,• UCt 1"r011! ~1. ~I $tttt L-lt6Q\, t i llemt,
5 d II"'·
'"""cr~v. Dec, 30-UCI ll1rtlty VI.
Cl!!clto 51111. 1! homt. • 11.m.•
'UCI 1!ull9flt1 lrff, otl'llr 1!ucllnt1 1J
''"'" 1011111 51.J.0.
•·sru1111111 u, 111u1t1 n .
S1Ulnt
Saturdav. OK. ol---UCI In Mtut Non-
VtrtllY !vtnt ti Cal STiit Leng
&t•t".
S1•urcr1v 1nd Sund1v, 091:. !I 11\d
1t -UCI in cnr111m11 Rtt11T1, St n
OiHO.
SAVE s3
Mo<ld1Y•WMM1111y, DK. 1'·1'-UCI 11ost h'I s .... ,..,.s.n., S111e1c11, M..-l>Ort
811<11.
l hurliliM' •fld Frld1y. Dec. 30 •nll
31-UCI In G~1nl Strl11. NIWPOrl
8e1c11.
LlCTllll,lS ANO ll!MINAllS
WICl11t1dtv, 01'(. I-NEW OlllEC•
T!ONS IN 1Elt.CHElll: l!OUCATION,
~ G<l1t1f1;:1<>, I• I cu 11 v t
&«•"trv. Stt11 Commlulen on Tl~Clll'r Pr101111lon tnll Llc1n1lnt. ~E•tentlon '"'~• 011 "lnun 11'1
Educ1llen") 101 Phv1lc1I Scltnte1, 1·
JG 11 m, Adm!nlon 5~. •
• SUMMING UP-lA ULT I M A
P.llAlllfA, JJC~ HODCI VI U ... 11.
fwmtr 11tl111nl IK•~•~ry, L1tfn
Ametlan 11111~. U 5 °'llt•t..,.nl of
S!~t.._ IE~tens!on M!rl•• on "The
01n1r ,TWIHl!Y Amerlc•i TOIHY."l. 161 HumAnl11ti Hiii, 1-10 lhcD. Aaml$$lotl Sl.50.• " "'-.
OllANGE COUNTY T iit EAT MEN T
FACILITIES, WIUl1m Ooolty. Cllrtc·
Cordilroy Jackets for Boys
Regular '16.9~
'.
tor, a-rlY MfillO• Akohoh1"" Pr.,Nm1 11'/l!ll•rn ••kke<, CllrKtor.
$-IOI'• IH1llw1v H..iM .... M9oill
GleM Wr'9111, cU111<1t PIVCl'IOIO!lh l,
..... tir_.il11~ 11111 H 0 -/I I I
1l(of>Oll•m w1re1, 11>11 Svlvl• SwetMY1 Bo.ird C'I Olr..:19ri Tiit Vlll1
0•111w1v HW$e 1 .. Wome11), ll.1•t
al Exten.ion "'""'on "Trtttmfl'll o!
Ak-1 "1111""'·"1 le. Ph Y 1 ! ~•I
kltocn, 1·10 p.m. AdmlHIOll $4.1J.'
Thurwt.v, O«. 1-IVMMETRV PllllN·
CtPlES IN PHYSICS, T, D, LH,
C"olumbl1 Unlv~r1llv 1PoMorf'd bV
Ot11<1rtm..,1 ol Pl!v1lc1. 101 P11w11c11 Scltnce1, 4 o.m.
THE MIOOl,E Cl.ASS AND THE LilW,
Oon1!d DunlM\, l<.o<ltt, 0••""' Coun.
ty 1-+torbor Muftld NI Coul'!, CM!t
Mn.. fExlt,.1lon 11rl11 on "TM
Amerlc111 Mlcldll Cltu:. h Th•r• t
5111111 Mtlorllv?") 111 Hum1nlt!t1
H1111 1·1:~ p,m, Admlililllll "·~
Frldff. DK. 3-APPROACHES TO AT.
TENTION, Norm t n Wtlnbtr .. r,
t 1SOCl1i. prolHtOr ol p1vdlebloloev,
UCI, _... 11'1 DtHrtmHll o1
~&IMY, 16' lllil'lllut Ht ll. I ··-SIGNAL Tlll•NSOIJC~ OU THE
MOLECUL•lll L E II l L • Mtx
Delbnk-. oroleuor of blolori, Ct f
Tech, IMl'llO!'td bY 0.0.rtmtnl ol Dev1~111 tl'd Cell l lolot"f'. 161
Slf:IMI UI H1ll, ~ 11.m. ·
~tv, ~-6-HOSPITAL TJIEAT·
MEftT OF DI FFtCULl" DIAIE-TlS,
~1111 Gwll'lllfl. Cllltl OI tnCIOC•lfttlolY,
UCI, --M bY Offlct el Con· tlnulnt MMlctl Edllelllon. ChtPl'n•n
Gen1r11 Ho1111!1l, 0..1....: U;'ll).1:JO 11.m.
FLIGHT PHYSIOLOGY OF FLYING
FOXES -A Pll:OOllESS ltl!POll:T,
A-r Ctl'PtftNI', DeNrlm111f ol 11111oev; s.;, ~ $t1tr. _ ..
Dv DiPlrlmimf ol Pc.11111lon 11111
EnYJronnwnl•I l loloey. 167 SttlllhlUI
Hill,~ p,m.
MOllll E HOME PARKS, Loe1n A.
II°"'' Plrlntr, Towtr ll"-•llY C1.,
• Cotton corduroy with Sears
exclusive Tri-Lobe! 11,ile
collar and lining ·t .:
•Machine v"as hable I
•Handsome \'I/ es tern rancher
style
1397
•Fashion colors .•. sizes 6to 12
Boys' and Students' Dept.
\Von1en's and
Girls' Cushio11y
Soft Fuzzy
Slippers
47
ai1;c1 to fit
•omen ind girl•
T hese plush and dainty slip-
pers feel cozy warm. Fleecy
uppers of shaggy acrylic
pile. Paddedsoles. lnattrac-
tive colors.
SAVE '2Men's Work Oxfords
•Solt glove-leather uppers with
moc-toe stitching Regular $12.99
• Ke~prenecreI'.'.e soles and heels 1 09 1 resist grease, 011
•~fen's sizes in spice tan
SA VE '2 l\len's Work Shoes
• Neoprene crepe soles
and heels reslsr grease, oi 1
•Soft slave-leather uppen
"A•ith moc-toe stitching
• Inspice tan;men"ssizes
Regular $14.99 1297
SAVE '2 Men's Work Boots
N eoprene crepe rubber sole
and heel steel shank, n;lon
lock stitching on sole resists
oil. 8 inches h igh. In spice lin.
Regular$16.99 1497
Sturdy neoprene
rubber 1olcs.
Mallolr. • HOIM Ptrk ln~Umtnla.
1"1 ........ (LUI .. Ed-len ..,.,..,.
•"' "(;-C\tl 11'111 l11val"""I p,_..1111."I 101 Phrslctl S.cltne11, 1·•=• ~.m. Actml•lol! u.•
TUMd•Y, Ole. 7-PATIENT IN AN
EMOTIONAL Cll:lllS, Phil Alt•tndrr,
cllnlc•I Instructor. DeiMlrtme111 ol P11ctol1trv 1nd Hum111 llllllt v!or,
UCL -l!d br Offkt ol Con·
Unuin. MHktl EOUC&llon. CIW11<'1111
Gt-t i lilll!'llt l, Ori1!9f, 12:Jt.1 :)0 .. ~ • PHYSIOl.OOY OF THE PULMONARY
CI RCULATIO N, A, Fr1n•l!n Tur111r,
prortnOI' ol rtlllolc>IY. u SC, ---cl bY D«o1rtm1nl o I 111.c11o1ot1c11 ktMCtt 11'111 lll!9lon1I Medlc11 Proer1m. 111.cliokMIY Can-
'-"-' ._. ... ..,,. 1i-. a1>1klll11
10, Ot111H Coun1Y· Mtdlctl Ctnltr.
1:30 '·"'· .
Wedne'ld1v, Die. t-ClASSll:OOM AC·
(:OUNTAlllllTY IN ACTION, Jim
McOontld, i.u.-erlnt..ncr.nt, F1llbrook
Hlt h School Ol1trld. Clt tl of E•·
•
ltMi..o. Mrlt!j 'e11 "IH<,.I In (due.I•
lion."\ 101 P11v1l~~I S(ll'flCtJ., 1·IO t.m. Actmlulon », •
Tllund1y, Dec. t-A IUS I Nl!S$~'5
VIEW, JOfln ll.u, 11r111ff<>t, Otv:.O
1nc:1uttrl11. (Ltll ol l!.•ien1lon utlt1 en "Tiit Amerlctn Mlcidl1 Cl111 : 11
, Tl!tre t $lle11I ~jorlly?"I t71
Hu~lhtl Ht!I, 7-t:d ,. • m , Admlu)lfl, u , •
frkt1v, DK. Ill-THE Plt05PECT5
F 0 It A SUPERCONOUC,l ING
TECHNOLOGY, DoMld N.
,ltlltft'1be•t, li"IYtr11 1v ol
P1rwnylv1nl1 incl Ctl l •~II ,
t1•0t'l1«H bY Ototrtmtnr ot Phv11c ..
JIM P'hyil<ll kltrK"tl, J l'JI",
MGn1111, Dtc, ll -OFFICE MANAGE·
MENT OF DIABETES. Wtskv H.
Gee~, c11<11c1t ,..,.i111111, ftmUy
MICllCllll Protrtm, UCI, "'°"IOrtd DY Otllct ol Contlnuln1 Mtdlcel
ECl~tllo!\. (l!IPmln G I n Ir I t
tl01Pll1!, or1n11, 12!30·1 :30 11.m.
Tvlld1v, Dec. l...._AOVICE 0 P
T It AV fl It 5 -PllOPHYL-4.CTte
INJECTIONS ANO (AR ll I E 0
"41!'01CIME1 ROlllllfV WollltMIW, t l.011·
!Inf clln1<1I proltHor, U C I , -'°'H bv 011~1 o1 CMll1111111t Mldlu1l !llu<lllon. Cll1Pm111 Gt,,.r1! Hoti•li.I, Or1119e, U :)0-1:)0 11.m.
UL TllASOUNO CAlltO IAC
OIAGN0511CS, G.orM Ill. L._1<1,
11thl1nl cllnktl 11rol1uor cl rHloloev, UC SAn OlffD, ~-fll
bv Dtro1rtm1111 ot lltcll°'"' •ncl Rnlontl M10lc1I P r09r1m, lllldlolo9Y
Ctnlt•u1c1 llllllrfl, 11<-floor,
llulldl"' 1~. Or.,,gt CoClnlv Mllll<ll
Ctnitr. 4;30 p.m.
lllOENERGETICS, S1t"l11 t<tltm•11,
W"I C.,.tl director, lllo.EnerHilt
l11ttltul1, Cl•ll of E•t~1Jor1 Wltl on
"Svrv•1 •' ~ Mtw Th. ... 1111$ "l LK!urt Hill, '·10 11.m. Allmlu lon
U."
Frldtv, Dte. 11-ALCOHOL AND II JI A IN MAC A O MOlECULAll
METAllOLl5M, £rne1t N obi t,
1110Cl1t1 1>•olHsor ot 11•vc11Dt>lol09y
cur•1·1.46
Ind ~\;Min lftO•.itolot11 1,1 C [, .....ucrra by D•11~•-t ' t f
PiVLIK!blolOllV. »0 SlllMY~ •Ht ll. • ••
MMd,eY. Dec 10-CH ILDHOO O
OIAlll!l'ES. EdWltd, J. Tonuovlc. cllnk tl prottuor. 0.1111'11n1~t of
Pl'Clfa!r1($, UCt, 1POMOred bV Ofllt1
ol Con!llllt!nt Mtdltll IEductllOft.
en'""''" Gfnerll H°"'1111, °''""' 1J;l0-1:lll pm.
• Tllttd.tY, Of(, ti-NEW Tlt!NDS IH
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H••old O. $110W. ICl!unct lnltr'iKIQf of
r.olol09y, UCLA C•nltr for 1'111
tt,111n ~dtnt111 Rlcn•1d J, 5tack•I,
111li!1n1 11rol•uor ol rtd!Q:loev.
UCL.I C~t~r tor 11!' He11!!1 Sc!IUICti.
'"" C1Wrl11 T. Oo!ll'r, orolf!.i:.r of rac1>0\;t11v. Ulllve1~11v 114 OrHc.11 Ntedlc1! Sdlool. _,_N b¥ DwtT1-
m~1 of lll•dloiotltt l Scltnlfl 1nd ~111on11 Ml!'Cllctt Proeram. lled1oloo¥
Conl"•nc• Aooiro, --llol!r. 11~11111.., 10. O••,.at County Medk .i
c~nltr, 4:36 p.m,
•uc 1 itudimtJ. 11cunw •ncl 1i.11 11,lL
•
(
Sears 126 Easi-Load Camera.
·1 .
J:lcctric eye l~G camera. Just
drop in the Easi-load cartridge,
aim and shoot. Fast F:2.8 lens.
Uses 4-shot flashcubes.
1749
Cam.tfa D1p1.
.41k A.bout S eari
Coni:enient
Crt!di' Plan"
;
-
SAVE50c
Acrilan
Yarn
llegular Sl.59
• J\fachi ne wa.ihable,
dry able
·•G ar ments knit of ac•
r ilan keep theit
shape and fi t
• 4 ·oz. 4 ply pull
skein s in vibrant
colors.
14-Ft. Rock-Solid
Gym Set
R egular 869.99
4999
•Fu ll 7 -ft. Jong gar--
vanizcd bed slide
•Made of 2-io. diameter
tubular steel
•Sturdy support of8.Jegs ·
CUT$100
8-Ft. Championship
Pool Table -·
·was S399
•Moulded cu5h.i.oas1.lami-
nated top rails
• Com es with cues, balls, tri·
angle, and chalk •
i-Fc. Holiday l~ool Tahle-S99
•
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 :30 A.M. TO 9 P.M ... SUNDAY 11 A.M. TO 6 P.M. -FREE PARKING!
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fillfllA t>•IW
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215·1 004, 244 .. 111
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Sears
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t&NIA MO,NtCA TOI I A NCI lack ~···•711 112.1111
•
·I
1
'
•
18 DAILY Pt LDT s Monday, Nottrribtt 22, iqn .....\.
Your ~oney_
' Truth in Ad Bid
Taken 011 by FfC
By SYLVIA PORTER tion forcing manufacturers to
How would you, t h e keep records to use in
American consumu. like to substantiating any advertised
see companies openly criticiz.. clairlis which "appear to be ing each other's products in
their ads and citing facts and based on objective or clinical
figures to demonstrate a com· evidence.'' or which ·'compare
petitor's product is defective the product's effectiveness or
or unsafe er overpriced -safety to that of other brands
thus glvi(lg you unprecedented er products." Commissioner
new ways in which to compare Myerson also has proposed a
products? regulation that would ban
"Why shouldn't a company theater, movie and book ads
say 'our competitor's product from u si ng out-of-context
is lousy and here's why?' " words and phrases in ads -if
said a top official -0f the Fed· the words distort the opinions
era! Trade Commission in a of the reviewer. For instance,
recent interview "The guy with an ad could not hawk a
the really superior product I} r o a d w a y s h o "" a !I
wouJd then be io.ble to make a "beautiful!" it the original
su perior case tor hiS wares il1· review merely noteQ the
ste~d of just singing jingles." "c0stumes were beauti!ul."
How would you, a P{lrent, Jn Bosion, the aggressive
like to see a ban on today's four-year-old "Action r 0 r Look at tlie Ji'uture
bard-sell TV ads on children's Children's Television" is urg·
--showS \\'hich are c I ear 1 y ing the FTC to ban all com· A Los Angeles police detective tries out the 'Po!ice Car of Tomorrow' which
designed to coax your kids into mercials on children's TV pro-comes loaded \Vith enough law enforcement equipment to catch the eye of
demanding that you buy a grams -including sales police officers everywhere. T~e car, a four-doo r ~edan , \Vas develo_ped by Fed·
specific product? pitches by the TV show hosts-era! Sign and Signal Corporation and bas everythin~ from baby diapers to an
How would you, an amateur on the grounds that small electronic computer for clocking speed of other vehicles.
do-it-yourselfer, like to see children simply do not have --"-'---'----'--------''-'------------------
warnings of safety hazards the judgment to cope with a
clearly spelled out in ads for, typical high-powered TV sales
say. power tools -just as campaign.
such warnings appear on pro-Certain nutritionists are pro-
duct labels? posing not only strict new con-
And how would you, an trols on all TV adverti sed
American woman, react to a nutritional claims a i m e d
regulation forbidding com-primatily at children but also
panies to advertise that such-a complete ban on ads stress·
and-such facial cream will ing sweetness -unless they
endow you \\'ith extraordinarv are accompanied by a warning
sex appeal or such-and-such on possible cavity formation .
frozen potato will win you th. Consumer protection agen-
··love of every member of your cies at all levels -Federal.
familv? state. local and private -are
In Washington. the ITC is singling out for sh arp
now embarked on the biggest criticism:
truth-in-ad vertisinj? campaign Food wrappers with pictures
in the. history ~f that agencv exaggerating the quality or
-or 1n U.S. history, for that quantity of the contents:
matter. AJ;nong other ord~rs. "Endorsements" by famous
the n'C 1~ now demandin.'!'. people and organizations, for
that adve~1sers be prepared instance the football league
to s~b.stant1at~ most of the ad· which adopts "Brand XYZ"
vert1s1ng claims they now fo a fee·
k • r ,
ma e. Ads 1o·1· t d And th e comm1ss1on s exp 1 1ng ypes an
moves toward a get-tou.e:h groups or people. most
advertising policy are only vulnerabl~ to fanflf~I lures
part or the storv. and outright ~eceptions -
In New York Ci t y . o_!de people, single people,
Consumer A f r a i r !I Com-sick people, bald people.
miss ioner Bess Myerson is The mounting and broaden-
pushing for a citywide regula-ing attack against the $21
Calllodh _____ .....,..,_ ., __ ._ __ .. ____ _
••••••••••• ·----· I 623 West sbdh Street I
I Loi Noeiea..CA wow I
I ~llfn•: UUJ •ll·IHJ I
,...__..,.,,.o~cn I I _.._....,, ...
I I I I
I I I .....,. I
I --bh..,,... I •••••••••••
billion a year advertising in·
dustry stems from two major
factors: your ri sing skep-
ticism about the relevance and
truthfulness of ads and the
e v e r-greater sophistication
and education of the ad·
vertising ind ustry's audience
in general, particularly the
American woman
A Harvard Business Re view
study publislied last summer
disclosed that only one. in
three b u s in ' s s executives
queried thoug h t ad-
vertisements presented a true
picture or the product; two in
fi ve believed "the public's
faith in advertising is at an
all-ti me lov.';'' mo re th::'.'l
seven out of JO of the execu·
tives felt "advertising needs
stronge r policing of its con-
tent" and nine out of IO felt
that advertisers "should be
forced to substantiate their
claims."
As for the ad industry's au·
dience, the well-known
Chicago advertising execUtive
Edward H. Weiss warns there
is a nationwide re volt against
the ''ludicrous and shameful
game of making a parody out
of the American woman.''
The crackdown is on.
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order for YourMlf or a Friend
Mey bt used on •nvelopes es retur?n ecldress.
1•bels, Alio very h•ncly •s identific•tion
labels for m•rking perion•I items suc h •s
b-oolts, records, photo1, etc. Lebtls stick on
fJll•ts end may be used for marlting home
canned fo<:cl items. All labels •re printed
-with stylish Vogue type on fjne qv•lity white,
gummed paper.
, --------------------, r fllltll:h~,cJlfNW1ail•llll ll.l1ltl f I .,.... r,._ U1M1 DI•., r.o. t u 1.Nt I I c.. ,,,_, Olil. nu• . , I
I I
I I
' t I I L-r--~~L~!_PRl~!.!tiG __ J
'Cash Flow' Method
Of Accounting Best?
NE\Y YORK (AP) -First
Na tional Ci ty Bank suggests
families who have trouble
making ends meet use the
.. cash flow" acCQunting pro-
cedure practiced by Americ2.'~
biggest corporations.
Basically, the cash flow
technique matches cash outgo
against income, indicating how
much money the famil y needs
and how much spending it
must postpone to keep expend·
itures under control and
achieve long-term financial
goals.
"The secret of cash now is
that it doesn't try just to
match the cash you have to-
day with the expenses you
have today," the New York
bank explains. "Rather it tries
to anticipate your expenses fo r
the whole year and com?are
them with the money you'll
have coming in for the whole
yuz."
The bank suggests the use or
five different wor k sheets.
The first is a list of tbe types
of income a family has coming
in. The second records a
family's fixed expenses. ove1·
a year which the ·bank sug·
gests can be obtained by
going through past checkbook
stubs. receipts. income tax
returns and other records that
might help the family remem-
ber what is unavoidable ex-
penses were last year.
The third sheet tells the
family ho1v much discret-
ionary income they ha ve for
variable expenses or what
they have left after they have
subtracted fixed e x p e n s e s
from income.
On the fourth worksheet the
bank suggests families record
how they want to spend thi s
discretionary in come for things
such as vacations, clothing,
entertainment and medicel ex-
''And more importantly by
analyzing your cash flow, you
can uncover areas of expense
that might be cut to help you
make ends meet today and in-
crease your savings for the
future ,,. it cont\nues .
The bank says that one
mistake many families make
when budgeting is to try to
r educe family en·
tertertainment and personal
allowances to such a low level
that no one sticks to them or
that all the fun is taken oul of
everyday life.
''A reasonable amount of
pocket money for personal
treats will help prevent the
family from feeling they
deserve those extravagant
splurges that can topple the.
most carefully thought out ex·
pense plan," it says.
Not buying an expensive
winter coat could make a big
difference in a budget. it
notes. but cutting back one
movie a month or saving 25
cents a day on lunch won 't
help that much.
The bank warns t h a t
because all budgets are a
family affair each person
should understand the problem
and feel responsible-for his
share i{I holding down ex·
penses.
And cash flow estimates
should never be so rigid they
can't accommodate changes in
plans by the family or
emergencies.
"In fact pl211ning in advanCf'
give you the picture of just
where vou can cu t back if necessa~y to provide monry
for the unexpected con-
tingency," it says.
penses. On the fifth worksheet. ... _-':!':'?.
variable expenses are sul>-
TWA Report
·on Profits
Looking Up
KANSAS CITY, Mo, IUPJ)
-Trans World Airlines
reported Wednesday a net prcr
fit of $7.8 million for the first
10 months of 1971 -an im-
provement of more than $40
million since just a year ago.
TWA was in financial dif·
ficulty at this time last year.
lt lost $32.8 million during the
first ID months of 1970 and
went on to lose $63,5 million
du ring the year.
The company's two top of-
ficers, in fact. told employes
in a letter. ".we are in a real
fight to survive.''
But Wednesday report in-
dicated that a year of work
and $30 million in cost reduc-
tiotis h'ave· paid off.
T\VA'S interim ea rnings
reporf was buoyed by a $3.8
million preliminary net profit
for October, an improvement
of $16 million over the net toss
of $12. l million for October,
1970.
It repo rted though i ls
revenues were up 6.8 percent
for the first 10 months of 1971,
operating expenses were up
ouly ..3 percent.
Much of the cost cutting
came t h r o u g h eliminating
jobs. In the 12 mon ths ending
Aug. 31, TWA cut its pa)Toll
by 4.579. or 11 percent.
In addition, many
uneconomic flights were cut
and the type of T\\!A jets
standarized by airports. Ar·
rangements were made to sell
16 older jets which had been
retired because they were not
needed.
~1 asteful capacity over four
major U.S. routes was further
pa red by a joint agreement
among T\VA. American and
United beginning Oct. J.
·:::-
tracted from discretionary in· w II
come. a Obviously. the bank notes, if •
the discretionary income is '
greater the family h?.~ no
Street Cl1atter',
·-budgetary problems. But if e Backlog fj Cor11pro1t1ise
variable expenses are greater. NEW YORK -The Circle
cuts are needed. The systen1 Industries group of Ne.1.ional
allows families to make sure Kinney Corp., a subsidiary of money is available to cover
unexpected emergencies and Kinney Services. said it has
to cover some of the extras of recently received over $40
life, the bank says. million in subcontracts for
If you arc an optimist you
\viii anticipate a compromise
solution to the international
currency crisis. such as the
emergency of n e w in·
ternation8J parities in the first
quarter. says Dean Witter.
This would go a long way to
dispel current gloom and sug-
gests that equities are now
ripe for accumulation.
Banker Name d
Gi(ford Jlvnter has
been appointed assis·
tant manager o( Mis·
sion Bank's ne.\v office
in Laguna Beach. He
wlll also be in charge of
operation~ at the banlr.
liunte.r resides in Cap-
istrano Beach \Vith hls
'''ife Delores~
"'ork in new residential hous-
ing projects.
Circle said it has a backlog
of committed projects of over
$150 million, compared \\'ilh
$J20 million a Y!ar ago.
e Fader Fas1.et1er
NEW YORK -Olin Corp.'s
Ra1nset Fastening Systems
division announced develop-
ment of an automatic powder·
actuated piston fa stening tool
capable or completing 20
fastenings a minute. Cost or
the new tool was not disclosed.
e Aircraft Bid
WASHINGTON -General
Dynamics Corp. has ·won a
$92.9 million addition 10 Its
contract for modifications of
F-111 military aircraft.
e lrratitu1al
Declh1e
The market's recent decline
has been irrational, says
Abraham and Co. Almost
everything that w o u I d
normally stimulate an uptrend
appears to be present or in
prospect, including recovering
business and corporate earn·
ings and a formal guaranty
against rising interest rates.
Investors l"lave lost sight or
are unwarrantably skeptical or
the longer-range purpose of
the President's economic plan.
• Confidence e IA>ng Terna Look Eventually Investor con·
Emotlonali!!m is running fidence wlll improve and
high now and It doesn't take businesses will increase their
much to send prices skidding, expansion plans. but the big
Alexa'nder J{amilton Institute question is "when," sa~s
says. However. this is a good Spear and StaU. The firm said
lime for long•term investors to It preters to await poslllve
pick up depressed quality ~igns of renewed confidence
stocks offering yields of five before advif ng a more ag·
percent or bctttr. gressive lnv~tment posture.
Finance
Briefs
e Loekheed
WASHINGTON -Finan-
cially plagued L o c k h e e d
Aircraft Corp. received five
pei'cent of the total $29.8
billion in defense contracts
during fiscal 1971, leading all
other companies for the third
consecutive year, the Pen-
tagon said Thursday.
Lockheed received $ 1 . 5 1
billion worth of contracts
while four more or the top 100
companies listed received con-
tracts of $1 billion or more
during the fiscal year. They
included General Dynamics,
Atnerican Telepbone &
Telegraph, Grumman a n d
General Electric.
e 1t1otels
SILVER SPRING, Md. -
.Quality Motels says it plans to
have seven motels with more ]
than ),500 rooms in operations
in the area of the New Disney
World in Orlando, Fla. by the
summer of 1973. Two al ready
are operating in Orlando and
franchises for five more near
the new Disney attraction
have been issued.
e Semico11dnctors
NEW YORK -Schweber
Electronics has ordered more
than $2 million worth of
s emicond u ctors from
Motorola, the largest such
order Motorola has received.
The order is split between in-
tegrated circuits and discrete
semiconductors.
e1,e11dl11g Rates
NEW YORK -Manufac-
turers Hanover Trust has
lowered lending rates by one·
half percent on a discount
basis and one percent on an
annual basis on installments
loans up to $5,000 a n d
maturities up to 36 months.
The rate cuts inv.ol v e
personal, automobile and fully
secured collateral Joans.
eGas Barge
NEW YORK -Todd
Shipyards will build the first
ocean-going liquefied natural
g!lS barge in the United States
for Moran Towing Corp. at its
Houston Division in Texas.
The barge. which will have a
capacity of 32,000 barrels, will
cost more than $4 million.
e Drillh1g
DALLAS -Petrol
lndustries Inc. has begun drill·
ing operations on three wells
in Ashtabula County. Ohio.
The Dallas and Beverly Hills,
firm will own a 25 percent
workin·g interest in each of the
three v.·ells with a small
number of individual partners.
eon Search
ST, LOUIS, l\lo. -Texas
Gas Exploration Ltd. will
participate in a $25 million,
five-year exploration program
for natural gas and oil
reserves in Ca nada's
northwest territories a n d
Yukon .
e Cop!l·riglots
FRAMINGHAM, Mass.
Dennison Manufacturing Co.
has obtained rights from
Horizons Research, Inc., of
Cleveland to manufacture, sell
and sublicense a new nonelec·
trostatic copying pr o c e s s
machines.
e Co111p11ter Ot1t
NEW YORK -Data
General Corp. has introduced
three new models of its Nova
Small computer, ranging in
price from $4,350 to $7 ,850.
They ar~complete miniature sy terns with pro--
grammer·s nsoJe j teletype
interface and hefnecessary
interconnect equipment.
e C11tosereen
NEW HYDE PARK. N.Y. -
Nuclear Research Associates,
Inc. has obtained an order for
a cytoscreener. a computer-
controlled optical scanning
svstem for use in screening
cervical cance r pap tests.
Proceeds of the initial pay·
ment for the advanced de vice
will be used to retire a loan
from Hycel. Inc. of Houston
and to regain 500,000 or the
company's stock with, were
pledged as security for this
loan.
e Cr eclit Bid
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Hospital Corp. ·of America has
obtained a new $35 million
revolving credit from a bank
group led by the First Na·
tional City Bank of New York.
-The agreement runs through
mid-1974 .
e Pesslt1ds111
The wave of pessimism
floating over Wall S(reet can't
laiit ... t_ays E. F. Hutton. tt wil'
dissipate in the face ol risini
earnings. declining interes
rates and slackening inOatlon
the firm adds.
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•I FACES
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RALPH C. DEANS
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Think You Don't
Know Them?
You probaby don 't recognize • single name or
face in this group and yet, if you're one of the 1
DAILY PILOT'S very well informed editorial page ·
readers, it is this tale nted team of writers which
helps you keep informed. They write the Editori-
al Research Reports. Though their own names
don't appear on the articles which are published
under the Edito rial Research Reports hea ding ,
these are the real pros -diggers who go after
all the baclround facts which put today's lop
issues into perspective -without thought of
seeking the fame that goes with the name when ·
yo.u're a national cOluninist.
They're Your
INFORMERS
. .
Yes1 they could be your "informers.'' It's fea es
like Editorial Research Reports which make e
DAILY PILOT much more than just the mo•I
important hometown newspaper available to
residents along the Orange Coast. The DAILY
PILOT i• the total package. It makes whatever ,
happens in the world "local news 11 and delivers
it daily right lo your home. Let this team of dedi· '
cated "informers" help you keep informed. Read
Editorial Research Reports on the editorial page :
-and all the other informative special features '*
in other parts of the·
. DAILY PILOT .
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With Early Christmas Goodies In I
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IThe DAILY PILOT !l ~-------~--........ ______________ J
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' 5. And ·there 's no secret about it, the Christmas shopping season is the
biggest sales period of the year for most retailers. Su P.P o·r t local
merchants now and you'll help them make enough profit fu keep
their prices reasonable all year long. (And prices will never be more
reasonable than they are now.)
This message presented as a Public Service on_ behalf of our friends and y ours,
the retail merchants of the Orange Coast Area, by the
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JJ OAILV •ILOT
Studfl Set •
Battin Working
On Saving Water
Toilets which use too much waler far
flushing are the newest target ·of
Chairman of the Board of Supervisors
Robert Ballin.
Ballin has triggered a study by the
County Building iind Safety Department
or a proposed plumbing code change
which v.·ould permit water closet! with a
flushing capacity o( less than four
gallons. He said there are such products
on lhe market today.
Battin says the -proposal "·ould save 25
percent of the water now used and even·
tually cut sewer construction cosl!I by the
same percentage.
The proposed code change woold not
mean that homeowners all over the coun-
ty would have to rip out their toilets, but
Battin said he wants the four-gallon re-
quirement written into the law as man-
datory later.
Most toilets now in vogue use about 10
gallons of water according to Ray Lewis,
chief deputy engineer £or the Orange
County Sanitation Districts. He sa id the
average American family of four uses 881
gallons of water a week just to flush their
toilet s.
He argues that about one-lhird, or 293
gallons could be conserved with any one
of several new waler saving devict:l on
the market.
Lewis adds that such toilets. plus
ney,•Jy.designed shower heads and waler
faucets could save from 110 to 125 gallons
per household per day in the county.
lie admits selling the ideas to
de\'eh;ipers and homeowners will be dif-
ficult but suggests: a money-saving and
ecology approach. .
Lewis said the average consumer does
not warm up tn the money-saving angle
today because water rate structures en-
courage maximum use of water. It is dif-
ferent in Europe he points out. where
hi gher rates are imposed for increased
water usage.
Thaila11d Premier
l
Upholds Reputation
~ ovelistlliilks
At Fillin R Out
Ce nsus Papers
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LONDON (AP) -Novelist Alan Sillitoe .
was fined $62 fOr refusing to complete his
J97l census form.
"Anyone who could aUord to pay the
fine but filled .in the form must have the
soul or {I slave,'' he told newsmen.·
Sillitoe. author of ''Saturday Night and
Sunday Morning'' and "The Loneliness of
the Long Distance Runner," gave ~is age
as 101 on the form last April. lie i!I 43.
Prosecutor Richard Flower told the
court SiUitoe also fille.d In the name s of
his wife, poetess Ruth Falnlight, his two
~hildren and himself, .bot lefl the rest of
the form blank.
The author pleaded guilty and told the
coort : "This census form was an In-
terrogation on paper. The infonnation
seemed far in excess of what ought to be
gi\•e.n."
The census form as~ed such questions
as the number of cars ea.ch famil y had
and ~·helher it had a kitchen sink, a bath
or a shower. Protests were widespread.
Bergm~n Weds Six th
STOCKHOLM AP) -Ingmar
Bergman, Sweden's famous ·movie and
stage director, haa been married for the
1ixth time.
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New rogram Approve-~-=--
Liaison. Co1n.1nittee Finall y Ends 18-rno nth Silence
The liaison com mittee made up of programs run by the cities after scliool. The bike \ritils cons i 'de rat Ion ~
Newport-Mes11 trustees and councilmen Under the pl an. cost, or the pil ot pro· Smallwood said. resulted from a student.-
from both Newport Beach and Costa gram will be shared oil a 40-40-20 basis teacher presentation made to the ic.hoo1
bet'A'ecn Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and board ty,·o wetks ago by a ~roup of blcy0
Mesa has en.ded an JS-month silence. The the district, respectively. cle enthusiasts f~m Coron11 del Mar
body ha' okayed a pilot 8fter-school Sn:iallwood said the school property "'ill High School. •
sports program, recommended 8 joint be orfcred to allow flag football, cross Smallwood carried their data forward
Costa Mesa-district wareho1Jse be built country, basketball and track progra1ns to the .liaison ·<Xlmmittee which is in-
and is considering possibfe joint actions to be started. terested in coordinating planning for bfke on bike trails. In a report to the school district board The warehouse recom1nendatlon. trails that C<luld serve recrc:ttional needs
Tuesday night, liaison member Donald echoed Jn an earlier prcscnta~ion tO the and provide safe bike paths lo schools.
Small~·ood, Newport-Mesa trustee from board malle by Superintendent John \V. The Costa Mesa altorney reported that
Costa Mesa, suggested the long-dormant Nicoll, would possibly prO\'ide a facility ·consideration of a performing arts faclll·
committee w:..s . assuming a new at the district's Baker Street site in Costa ty by the joint city.district commlttu
leadership role. Mesa that would be used by both the city had produced no conclusive reco~
The sports program, developed in the and school district. 1nendations.
committee, would provide two school The school board will consider a finaJ "I'm not sure the school district is the
sites -Rea in Costa Mesa and Lincoln . recommendation on the plan during its proper entity to carry forward the need
in Newport Beach -for recreational .Dec. 14 meeting. ,. for such a facility," Smallwood uld. 1;=r======~F~liiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
Saturdays in
Th e DAILY Pl~OT
THE WARM & COZY PLACE
To Shop
.5oufh (oast!Iaza
8)'.. The Assoc~ted Press
Premier Than om Kil-
tikachorn announced more
lhan a year ago that he was
tired of political bustle and
~·anted to quit public life to
rest at his beach house.
another side of the 00-year-old
field marshal. He can be
tough.
In fact , Thanom is no
stranger. to military rule. An~
his experience with the Thai
legislnture has been thorny
from the start.
Our new 28oSE 4.5 costs
almost three· times as much as thetaverage'car,
Thanom first took over as
premier in 1958. ~le was the
protege or Field Marshal Saril
Thanarat. a personal friend
y,•ho had just grasped power in
a military cou p.
The announcement seemed
appropririte for the mild,
elegant Thai leader. Ile had
built a reputation as a con-
ciliator. a smooth diplofTlal
~·hose trump is a talent for
patching political cracks.
Thanom's bold stro ke
\\'ednesday dissolving parlia-
ment. suspending the con-
6titulion and assuming
absolute power -sho~·ed
But within less th an a year
fierce infighti ng b e twe e n _
political factions tumbled hls
government and Sarit had to
stt>p baC'k in \Yith martial rule.
Thanom remained near the
center of power as Sarirs
deputy. and when the field
marshal died five years later
he returned as pre1nier. Yom1 gster
P erfects
Own Crime
NEW YORK (UPI! -By
the time he was 6 years old,
George Santiago had perfected
his purse-snatching technique.
As his attorney described it,
he would stand between I he
cars of a sullway lrain and
grab a purse as the trai n sped
ay,•ay from the station.
Last Nov. 30, at the Nevin
Slre<!t Station in Brooklyn,
Santiago reached out from the
mo~·ing train and grabbed a
young woman 's purse. But
Regina L. Graham. 2 O,
Brooklyn, ~·ould not let go.
Screaming and grappling to
keep her purse as the tr;iin
picked up speed. she stumbled
and fell between the cars.
Allhough the conductor pull-
ed the emcr~ency brake, the
train had crushed her legs and
pelvis. and t-.liss Graham died
of her injuries 10 days later .
Santiago "'as arrested by
detective Daniel ll<1ttcndorf. a
man who first ht1d arrested
Santiago for purse-snatching
in the subway when he \\'as
eiJ:(ht. This \VCCk. an all .male
jury in Brooklyn suprcine
court found Santiago j!uilty nf
murrlcr in Miss Graham's
death.
Before hi s ;irrest in ~liss
Grahams' ('ase. S;int i;igo h;id
:;penl 1"·0 years in custody fnr
purse-snatching.
He once told a s!rilc
psychiatrist. •·1 rob and I rob
and T rob and I rob and the
next day I go out ;1nd rob
ai;?ain ."
Defense Atlorney -P.lyron
Beldock pleaded in his sum-
n1ation lo lhe jury that San-
liai;::n should be found nnt
izuilly bv rt>ason of insanity.
He said the ''outh's co1n-pu1~ion lo steal \\·as in j:!rained
and beyond his w~·er t0.('011·
trnl .
The judge nrtlercd SanliaJ!n
remanded to jail to await
sentencing, for which he set no
date.
Observers say Thanom's se·
cond round in the leader's
chair has bet'n buttressed with
:;:upport from the a rm y .
Tbanom co·ntinued the
militarv rule of his
predecessoi until 1969. when a
constitution was proclaimed
and parliament reinstituted.
Throughout his premiership
Thanom has been a firm ally
of lhe United States and an
en1husin!!tic backer of U.S.
policies in Indochina. I le once
called the conflict in Vietnam
a struggle ''between those
bent on expansionism and ex-
tension of domination, and
those who are not prepared to
subn1it."
Thanom. whose own country
has been troubled by in-
surgents in the north, believes
Communist China lies behind
persistent ~uerrilla b a n d Ii
th roughout the region.
"A cessation of hostililies in
Indochina will not change that
policy,'' he told an in·
lervie~·er.
Backing up his y,· o r d s ,
Thanom dispatched a division
of Thai soldiers to aid the
United States in South Viet-
nam ~·ith U.S. fina ncial sup-
port .
Thano1n's relationship with
the army comes n<1tura!l y. Il e
\1·as a sludent al the t.1 ilitary
Ac<1dem y al Bangkok and ro!le
11uickly through the 1nilitary
ranks to become comn1and
of lhe Isl Arn1y Corps nc
Bangkok before e n t er · g
p<1li!ic.~.
'l'he pren1ie1 v.•as born Aug.
l l. 1911 , !ht' so n of a ci\'il sC'r·
v:1nt in <1 country village. lie
sti ll ll\·es \\'ilh rural n1odesty,
and not even his detractors
accuse hitn or dishone~ty.
Thanom enjoys doing I he
graceful Thai dance, the
Han1"·ong, during his tin1e
av.·ay from politics. lie spend~
as n1uch lirne with his family
as1his duties pern1il -often in
the bcarh house iO n1il cs from
l3an~kok .
..The kingdo m of Thailand Is
one cuun!r\' thil l haR never
ltist her frcedo1n and in·
dependence,'' he is fond of
telling his l istt>nen~.
COMPLETE ·-THANKSGIVING
DINNER
ADULTS ..••..•.........••.
CHILDREN ................ $3.95
$2.00
Alto S.rvin9 O"r Reg"l•r Men"
RESERVATIONS REQUESTED -
3901 E. Coast Hwy.
CORONA DEL MAil
675-0900
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~4lw or
But we think there are 10,000 Arneri~ans
who can appreciate the difference.
The average car buyer could be taken aback at
tht price of our nc\v Mercedes-Benz 280SE 4.5.
At over $10,000, it is not only \Veil above
average, ii is some $2,500 more expensi\'C than
the highest priced domestic Juxury std:1n.
\Vhcther it's \\'orlh that difference to ;·ou
may be anS\\'ered only by \\'hat you rxp«t of a
motor car.
'fhc 280SE 4.5 isa tourinr. sedan iil the best
European tradition.
l){'s.igned 10 provide every motoring com-
fort for a party of five. And engineered to cope
,,;m driving si tuations that \'ary from the de--
sccnding S\Vilchbacks of an Alpine J?3SS to the
100 mph cruising speeds of an Autobahn.
A concept so different from 1h:11 guiding the
design of a domcstic "luKury" car 1hal Mercedes--
Benz engineers used the Nilrburgring racing
circuit as its final testing ground.
Its engine is unlike any built in Amcrici. An
overhead-cam, fuel-injected 4.5 liter V-8.
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It has flo carburetor. Instead, a co1npu1cr
monitors engine speed 3nd lo:id, tcmpcrqturc
and altitude, then electronically meters fuel to
" each cylinder. This more precise method of fu el
delivery provides high-speed touring capability
\\•i1h the grc3test possi ble efficiency.
The fully indrpendent suspension "'as de-
signl"<l for ruts and bends, not just boulev:irds
:ind 1umpikes. It's so ro::r.d\\'onhy, /~ood& Trark
contends th:it "no domestic luxury sedan is even
in 1he s:i me ballpark."
, And 10 nutrh i1s perfonnance 3hilitics,
A1ercedes--Benz engineers have equipped it \Vith
four power·3Ssis1ed disc brakes, Yenlilated in
front to resist fading.
The result is an automobile th:it prrforms
'''ith equal aplomb on the 174 curves of NUrburg4
ring, or the unwavering ribbon of a thruway.
And an automobile that is f urthcr endowed
wilh ahnost every comfort. Power brakes and
steering. Electric windows. Air conditioning and
tinted glass. Electrically heated rear \\'indow. An
AM-FJ\1 receiver. Even a central locking system
that secures all four .doors; the 1runk and Cvcn
the gas port at the touch of a button.
In addition 10 the 280SE 4.5, Mercedes--:.
Ben7. builds t\vo other \T.S touring sedans in simi-
l:trly 1ninisculc qu:mtities.
The 280SEL 4. Sis identical to the SEcxccp[
1h:11 it is longer. Lon~cr in the A\erceclcs-Bcni
scn<;e-an increase of four inches that is trans-:
lated din.oetly into rea r-seal leg room.
'fhc 300SEL 4.5 adds air suspension to the
Jjst of performance fatures u03vaiJable·on any
domcslic·automobilc.
In total, these three hi~h-perform:ince lpur-
ing sedans \vill account for less th::in one of every
400 t-ars sold in the United States this year.
If you ca n accept a car that ®
"dinCrcnt;' take a thorough test drive.
Disco~·er Lhc real diffcrcnecs in a car
built lo be the best-not the best scUcr.
Mercedes-Benz·of North America
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[ool< at I flanks-giving
Thursday ·s well dressed turkey can go
mod with ripe clives or cranberries, be
lined with cracked wheat stuffing or
·&port the more traditional adornments of
.apple-raisin, celery-onion , chestnut or
cornbread.
~ Color contrast is new this yea .. and
black. nut-like flavor olives or crimson;
tart cranberries are the recommended
additions to dressing recipes. For a-flew
. venture, try baking the stuffing around.
the · bird IJ'! the pan drippings -
delightfully delicious.
CRAN-OLIVE TURKEY STUFFING
3 cups canned, pitted ripe olives
1 cup whole raw cranberries
1 cup butter or .margarine
1 cup chopped onion
1 cup chopped celery
_ 2 teaspoons sage
3 teaspoons poultry seasoning
2 teas~ seasoned salt
3 quarts toasted bread' crurribs
1 ·to f'h cups chicken broth
; 113 cup drippings from turkey. 't Halve the .plives. Rinse and pick over
1~ranberries. Melt butter. Add onion and
;,f;elery and cook until vegetables begin to
\often. Add sage, seasoning and salt. Add
tnix\ure to br~ad cubes and mix well.
Stir In olives and cranberries. Mix In
broth gfadually, using larger amount if
.;moist:~fing is preferi-ed. About 45
minutes before turkey is done, remove all
but 1/3 cup dri'ppings from pan. Spoon
stuffing around !he turkey in pan and
conl)nue cooking until turkey and stuffing
are done. Enough for a 12 to IS-pound
turkey.
CRANBERRY CORNBREAD STUFFING
1 cup butter or margarine
1 cup chopped onion
2 cups chopped celery
8 cups cubed lresb bread'
6 cups crumbled stale cornbread or
muffins
2 cups halved cranberries
J tablespoon salt
l tablespoon crumbled pouJtry season-
ing
,,_, pound smoked ham, finely . chopped
or CQai:sely ground. ,
2 c,ups turkey-giblet stock or chicken
broth .
In a 10.inch skillet, heat the butter: add
onion and celery and cook gently, stirring
often, until onion ls golden brown.
In large bowl, mix remaini,ng in-
gredients. Add onion-celery mixture, in-
cluding all the butter in the skillet, and
toss lightly. Pack stuffinjl' lightly into
body and neck cavities of a 15-pound
turkey. Close openings with small skew-
ers and white twine or heavy thread.
Roast by desired method.
CRACKED WHE.AT STUFFING
2 cups quick-cooking cracked wheat
3 lablespoons butter, margaJine or
salad oil
I cup chicken stock or water
l package (8 ounces) bre3d Stuffing
mix .
l package (8 ounces ) water chestnuts,•
drained and sliced
Saute the quick-1'.!ooking cracked wheat
in butter until lightly browned. Add
chicken stock or water, remove from
heat, cover and let stand until all liquid is
absorbed, about 10 minutes.
Prepare stuffing mix as directed on
package, using either chicken stock or li-
quid from cooking the giblets ; add butter
as directed on the package.
Combine the prepa red stuffing with the
cracked wheat mixtuTe and stir in the
water chestnuts. Enough for a 12 t.o 14-
pound turkey.
' ' 6men l. ' ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor • .. ,-~ .....
• MDl!d•Y· NO¥tmb•r u. 1'11 Ptgt Ii
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1 Mates Make Meal Mellow
:.'!'
~ Mellow. flavors join with mellow eo't6~
r ~. Nlr the side dishes that round out a
ll ! Thanksgiving menu that starts with tan·
f, talizing turkey and trimmings.
, The versatility ot sweet potatoes -one
· ot' tbe most nutritionally complete foods
iJ -comes to the lore in this simp le, yet
i_,,,..,sj?eC.ilil accompaniment. Th e fillin_I!" nf • :t baked sweet potatoes is scooped. mashed ,
1-., Jtf:rlted with almonds and returned lo the
~F 1"M!1s for a quick, second baking .
_.;. OT acorn squash can be halved to show
off ils naturally nuted-edge. steamed or
baked until tender and served with cream-
ed onions to·spoon into the center holes.
For a sweet nibble to end the restive
meal, try the pumpkin tartlets made "·ith
no-bake cheesecake mix . The petite por·
tions-m8ke a realistic finale to the feast
or may be served wilh coffee later In the
day.
2 tablespoons milk
1 teaspoon salt
'ls teaspoon pepper
1/3 cup toasted slivered almonds.
Wash and scrub sweet potatoes. Bake
in a 375 degree oven for 45 minutes lo l
hour, until tender. when tested with a
.fork. Cut Jengthwise slice from side of
sweet potatoe s.
Scoop out inside's, being careful to keep
skins intact, and mAsh in bowl with
butter. milk, salt and pepper. Stir in
almonds and spoon inlo sweet potat o
shells. Return to 375 degree oven and
heat for 12 to 15 minutes. Serve four.
1 cup C?nned pumpkin
1 tablespoon brown sugar
1r2 teaspoon cinnamon
~ teaspoon ginger
· 1Ai teaspoon ·nutmeg
Whipped cream .
Empty pa~ct of graham. cracker
crumbs into small bowl; add pecans, .but.
ter and' sugar. Mix well with fork. Press
eQual portions ioto bottom and up sides of
six 4-inch fluted metal tart pans; se t
aside.
.Combine J,Tiilk. pumpkin, brown sugar
and spices in small deep mixing bowl.
Add packet of cheese cake rilling; beat at
low speed with -rotary beater until blend-
P U 1\1 PK IN PECAN CHEESE-eel, then at medium speed 3 minutes.
TARTLETS Pour into crumb lined tart shells. Freeze
until firm.
1 package (II-ounce ) no-bake cheese Remove from tart pans while still
-ca\le mix froien : hold at refrige rat.or temperature
Stuf/.J Sw.,f Pola /oeJ
/Ja£.,/ Acorn S1uaJ /.
Peas with mu~l..roon1.i
C,,,,ilerr'I Sauce
Pumpkin Pec:a1i ..
Cf...,. :lart!.u
5TUFFED"11KKED SWEET POTATOES
4 sweet pOtatoes
JA ·cup finely c~f)ped pecans at least one hour before serving, Pipe"
l/3 cup melted butter generous swirl of whipped cream on each
3 tablespoons sugar tartlet and garnish with pecan. half, ii
1 cup milk ....desired.--. -3-tablespoons butter or -margarine -~ ..._ ...... ~1
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°24-DAllY PILOT ----
• A .· Case to ,.Challenge .Sherl0ck Holmes
(Exetrpttd from tflt book "JUST
IVAIT TILL YOU HAVE CHILDREN
OF' YOUR OWN!' Copyright (e) 1911
bt1 Erma ,Bombt:ckVand Bil Keane.
Published bu Doublt:cWtJ & Company.
l11c.J • ACUTE WITHDRAWAL
tn my mlnd, l always dreamt or the
day I would have teenagers.
Young boys wouJd pi{lch me ln the
swimming pool and exclaim, "Gee,
ma'am. I'm sbrry. I thoughJ you were
your sensuous daughter, Dale."
The entire family would gather around
the piano and sing songs from the King
Family album . And on Friday nights,
we'd have a family council meeting to
decide whal flavor of ice cream their
father, Ou.ie, would bring homi from the
ice-cream parlor. .
It never worked out that way. Our
teenagers withdrew to their bedrooms on
their 13th birthday and didn't show
themselves to us again until it was time
to gel married.
Hea~ knows, we tried to make con-
lact. One day whe.n l knew our ion Hal
was in his bedroom, I pounded on the
door and demanded , "Open up! J know
you are ln there staring at your navel."
The door opened a crack and I charged
Into my son's bedroom ·sl}outing, "Look,
Hal, I'm your mother. We. love yotL So
&es your father. We care about you. We
. haven't seen you in months.
"All we e:el!f a glimpse of the back of
your head as ton-slam the door, and a
blurred profile as the car whiu.es by.
'We're suppQsed to be communicating.
How do you think I feel when the TV set
fla shes on the message, ''IT'S ELEVEft O'CLOCK. DO YOU KNOW WHERE
YOUR CHILDREN ARE?' I can't even
remember who they are."
"I'm nm Hal," said the kid, peeling a
banana. "I'm Henry. Hal isn't home from
school yet."
Another time I thought I saw Hal race
for the bathroom and bolt the door .
came home and the rtfrigeratdr and the
hot water were gone."
A note came slowly under the door. It
read, "I'll sur~ly miss you. Yours very truly, Hartley."
Finally, my husban<I and I ll(llnd oul
the o~y way to see Hal was to watch him
play football. Aa we ihivered in the
stands, our eyes ta.Bt.rly aearcbed the
satln-eovered backslde1 on the bench •
Then, a pair or Camillar shoulders turned
and headed toward the lhowers.
"Hey, Hal," said hla father, grabbing
his arm. "Son or a IU(l. Re.member, me?
l'm Father."
"Falher who?" asked the boy.
"You 're Jcpking great, Hal. I
remember the last time I saw yau. You
were wearing lhat little &ult with the
duck on the pocket. Your mother tells me
you're going to be joining us when we
move."
"YQu have me confused, sir," said the
boy. "I'm not Hal, I'm Harry."
,; Aren't you the guy I saw poking
around our refrigerator the other night?
And didn't you go with us on our vacation
last year?"
We thought we saw Hal a few tlme.s
after that. Once when we were atte.nding
a movie and they announced that a car
bearing our license: number had left Its
parking light$ on, a rather thin boy raced
up the aisle, but we were never sure.
Another time' at a 1'~ather-son banquet,
someone noticed a resemblance between
my husband and a boy who hung on tho
phone all night mumbling, "Aw c'mon,
Wilma," but that was also indefinite.
One day In the mail I received 1
package of graduation pictures and a bill
lor $76. It was worth it. "Look, dear/' I
&aid to my husband, "it's Hal." Our eyes
misted as we looked at lhe clear-skinned
boy wilh the angular jaw . a~d the
sideburns that grew down to his JUgular
vein. It made spotting him at graduation
a snap.
"Sori of a gun," said his father, pun·
ching-him on the arm, "if you aren't a
chip off the old block, HeMy."
"Hartley," l corrected.
"Harry," said a mother at my elbow.
"Harold," interjected another voice.
"I'm Hal,'' said the boy graduate,
'I'll b• 1A :ar rooa.•
If we .spoke lo them in public, they
threatened to self-destruct within three
minutes. And only once a young boy grin·
ned at me. then apologized quickly wilh,
"Gee, sir, I'm sorry, I thought you were
Eric Sevareid."
"I know lhis Isn't the place to talk," I
shouted thro1:1gh the keyhole, "but I
thought yoii should know we're moving
next week. I'm sliding the new address
under the door and certainly hope you
can join us. I wouldn't hl!Ye brought it up,
but l thought you'd become anxious if you
"No, sir, that was Harold. Incidentally,
could you give me a lift to YoUr house!
I'm spending the night with Hal.''
straightening his shoulders and grlmac·
"Hal who?" we all asked in unison.
NEXT: HoW to Build a Teenager -If
You Want To.
Clubs Keep Pace
Despite Holidays
Thanksgiving holidays have
not slackened th~ce of
. some Orange Coast g ac·
tivities.
Br idge Club
Costa ~1esa Bridge Club is
staging a Nationwide Charity
Game at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov.
26, in the Costa M e s a
Woman's Clubhouse.
It will take pla ce con·
currently with an American
December
Date Set
Mr. and ~11"!. Robert E.
Randall of Huntington Beach f--_,._ ha.Y_e announced the engage-
ment oC their daughter. LiFlda
, Jean Randall to Robert Arch
Wisdom.
A December wedding is
being plaMed.
Miss Randall was grad uated
from Huntington Beach High
School and attended Golden
West College.
Her liance, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. H. Wisdom of Hun-
tington BE;ach, also is a
graduate or Huntington Beach
High. School and attended
California Stale College at
Long Beach. Presently he is
serving in the Coast Guard.
Contract Bridge League's Fall
National Tournament 1 n'
Phoenix,
A newcomer section is l:ieing'
organized for those who have
Jiu le or no experience in
du plicate contract b r i d g e •
John Killian can be called for
further information.
Class Reunion
\Vhiltie r High School class of
1961 is staging a JO-year reu·
nion Saturday, Nov. 27, in the
Western Uills Country Club,
Carbon Canyon.
Dinne r Meet
A dinner meeting is planned
for 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 23,
for members of the Orange
County Chapter, Nation a I
Association of Women in
ConstrucLion.
They will gather in the
Hya!t House Hotel, Anaheim
lo hear John L. Sharpe discuss
Enthusiasm, Attitude and
Complexity in the Construc-
tion Industry.
Las Clas
Las Olas Toastmistress Club
will not meel on the regularly
scheduled night of Nov. 24 but
will join the He Im s men
Toastmaster C I u b of Hun-
tington Beach at 6 p.m. Tues-
da.v, Nov. 23, in the Kings
Table.
v •
~
Recr.oifs, Signed Up
Reviewi,ni:: assign ments for members of the ne\v a~iary of the Fountain Val·
Jey Community Hospital are (left to right ) Mrs. Richard Wilhelm, president of
the Womeh1s Division of the Fountain Valley Cham ber of Commerce, Mrs.
George Wier and J\1rs. Michael Emtpin g. Orga nized by the Women's Division,
the voluhteer group will take charge of information and visitor control, operate
the gift shop and cart and establish a library.
Zontians Name Girls-of-the-month
four coeds from the Harbor
Area high schools have been
selected by the Zonia Club of
: Newport• I{arbor for GirJ-of-
t he -month lwnors for
t November.
The selfKltion .• is based on
leadership, cit i ze nsh i p,
1 &cholarship and school service.
Recipients and t h e i r
mothers were honored during
a Zonta dinner meeting which
also saluted the governor or
Districl IX. Zonta Interna-
tional.
At the end of the year. lhe
girls will select a Girl-of-the.
year for their school to receive
a scholarship.
CORONA DEL l\l.\R
Your Horoscope
·Libra: C~eative
Ju ices to Flow
TUESDAY lions.
NOVEMBER 23 SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-
By SYDNEY OM ARR Dec. 21 ): Perception i s
ARIES (March 21-April 191; keynote. Look beyond what
appears obvious. There is an Friendship is emphasized. You answer available. It will cast
bind a relationship. What you light on previously darkened
say, do in connection with areas. Pl1ces can play pro-
others becomes more mean-minent role. Accept.
ingful. Avoid making promises CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
you can't keep. Stick to the 19): You may be concerned
practical in affairs of heart. with getting money's worth.
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20): Key is to aim high. Don't
Ambitions are highlighted. dilute ambitions. Lunar cycle
You find out just what can be remains high; circumstances
accomplished. Aid rrom one in favor your efforts. Now is
position of authority is on time to ... 'COiiect, assemble
agenda. Spread In-facts.
fluence. Advertise. Be aware AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
of public relations. Get going. 18): New steps in new direc-
GEMINI (f\.1ay 21-June 20) :. lions -that is trend. Move
Good lunar aspect now coin-ahead; take Jn It i at iv e .
cides with how you com--Welcome challenge -you are
---muniCaleWilh those-at a now a wlnner1 Know it -act
distance. Key is to spread like you know It. Brighten sur-
your message. Do so in an in-roundings Move around -see
dependent, original manner. and be seen.
Create -don't follow set pat-PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
tern. What you do now is apt to be
CANCER (June 21-July 22): theatrical. That is, you attract
Follow through on hunch. A-p--attention. Even it role is
plies especially in connection behind scenes. your presence
with investments, marriage, is felt. Individual you once
partnerships. Be receptive to helped now is able to return
suggestions. But be sure you favor. Show gratitude ..
are dancing to what is IF TODAY IS YO U R
basically your own tune. Bl\rntDA Y you have great
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): amount of curiosity, could
Study Cancer message. Be write, report and com.
willing to change ways, but municale in unique manner.
adhere to principles. Check Your position in world is due
diet requirements. You have to be elevated. Ir :!lingle. mar-
tendency now to try doing too riage is not far away. You are
much at once. Don't scatter a square shooter and soon you
efforts. Con cent r a t e on will attract persons whose aim
ultimate goal. Is to help not hinder.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221'',f=========:;I Guard health: protect your.self
from character assassination
by ~workers, associates. Be
sure you're not misquoted. Be
ewar\. of details, apparent
rhinor matters. The~ Is a
loophole.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 22) o
Accent on relations with
children. Creative juices
flow. Give full play to self~x·
pression. Be ready for change
o( secenery. Gemini, Virgo. in·
dividuals could figure pro-
minenUy. Be flexible.
IS SANTA A
KNIT PICKER?
Ntt ru1ty. Hir'1 1111111• ctnetmed
t!lwl )'9\lr IPPfftl MI rlll• c1mln1
lltlld•V , .. _. •1"11 frtm ~II crmc11
,.i"1·.t1 ¥1-, .,.,., I c11111tm·m1d1,
k"lfftll ffrmll Wl11 t lVI JI~ Cll'fto
•lti. W1lllnc11M11t. Wt'N .... ,~ v•u
I~• ,,, ef knllllnt witl'lln mlnutu.
The
KNIT WIT SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)o
Basic spotlight is · on home,
security, how to get greateSt 1•11t11 C-•11 ••u value from assets. Taurus, Lowa11 MALL
Ubra persons now can aid. cn11 M-
DTERY
AIR STEP -8ERNAROO
-KIMEL EDWARDS
-GEAIElltC11 -
PF FLYERS -U.S. l(fOS
Danc:t w11r bV Denskln
(IJ)S1io Dll'ICI Shou
C.n'9Clln lllHI flff' Ctllklr"'
125 E. 17rt. St, c ... 111 ... 141·2771
BEARDED WOMEN
ARE OUT!!
DON1T IE EMBARRASSED,
t.ET US SHOW YOU HOW
E.\SY IT IS TO REMOVE:
EX~ESS HAIR WITH
~ODERN ELECTROt..YSIS 1
MEDICALLY APPROVEO
••.SAFE, FAST 1
GENTLE. CONSULT
WlTH OUR LICENSED
TECHNICIAN IN OUR
BEAUTY SALON.
ROBINSON'S
NEWPORT
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
Saturdays in
The DAILY PILOT ~fiss Ping Ho. dau ghter of
1'fr. and Mrs. E. C. llo of
Newport Beach. was named
homecoming queen this year
and is commissioner at large
and a membtr of the t'ditorial
board .
Ping Ho Kathy B•nson Stephanie Hubert
member for five years and business school. As a sophomor~ was a
has participated in the aqua She has been a cheerle'ader member or Am""etican 'Field
show for two and the modern for two years and hai. been ac· Service. and she has been in
dance show for one. She -Oas tive in student governmen t vocal music groups for three
been a member of GAA and and Pep Club all four years. years.
Know this and tOS:!I aside false su-•12 O.bbie ~S~1idiy~~iiiij~pr~W~·~·~I~mpr~o~v~e ~l~iv~m.~g~co~ndi~·j-~~~~::;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
She is vice president of
Modern ri.1usic 1'-1asters and a
member of California
Scholastic Federation and the
Senior 11onorary Society.
During her freshman year
she was a member of Student
Congress and Glrls' League
board and was a girl-of-the·
quarter. As a sophomore she
-: recevied the Mosonic award
for the outstanding ~irl. and
as a junlor was editor or the
Trident opinion page.
"
I
Miu Ho plans to attend a
fou,...ytar college and ma.for in
aoclal science with a minor In
music.
NEWPORT HARBOR
Miss Kathy Bens o n .
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. G. I...
Benson of Newport Beach,
plans to allend a four-year
college erxf is eona:ldering
several major s-home
economics, religions. Bible or
biology.
She 111 Girls' League prcsl·
dent and a student congrel!
alternate this year. and was
Girls' .League repreRCntali ve
is a freshman and sophomore.
She has been 11 dr\11 team
I he Ski. Spanish and Pep clubs ;;;;~;;;;~;;~;;;;;;;;;~1 for three years. .i
COSTA fltESA
Costa Mesa 1-ligh's represen-
tative to Girls' State this year,
flfiss Stephanie Hubert plans
to nttend California Slate
College at Lqng Beach and
mujor in microbiology with a
l·ar~r in medical research to
follow .
She is listed in "Who 's Who
An1ong Amer~ri lligh School
Students." is chairman of the
Educational Development
Council and "'as winner of 1he
E. I. ri.1oore award for the
oursianding sophomore girl.
~hss Huberl was freshman
representative to G i r I s '
League and ha~ been a
member of CSF'. Madr iga l
Singers and Concert Cholr for
tbret yea!'!.
ESTANCIA
NEEDLEPOINT CLASSES
Call now for information about our classes
start ing in January. Have fun making a sam-
pler of new stitches. Cos t of class incl~des
all materjals.
•• •• e
. NJ:j::DLEPDINT DESIGN ,
2•2t I . COAST HIGHWAY. COIONA DfL MAl-•44·7t04
Miss Debbie Sady. daughter
of r.tr . lfnd Mr!'. Ben Sady of
f'..ollla ~feY, plans to take a
standard .!iecrttatial course at
Orange Coasl College Lhen
ba'Ome 11 J,gal secretary aft@r
attending 11 legal sec.retarial l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I
•
IN HELENE CURTIS®
PERMANENTS
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
17.50
Permanent, Style
Set, 25.00 value
Cu,, Shampoo and
Let a brand ~ you wekome the
New Year wilh !his specially priced
permonent-plui.. Phone for your
appointment todoyl And ••• for that
perfect gift, remember our Beauty
Solon Gift Certific ates for manicures,
pedicures, permanents and Elizabeth
Arden foclols.
MON., ,.Rl. 10~00 l !ll f :lO: OTHfrt OAYS 10:00 TILL S:lO, t:I fASMION ISLAND, NEW,ORT CENTER PHONE •~4·2208
•
•
Newpo rt . -
M~. Novtrttbtt 22, 1971 ' '
Soc·ia·lites Singled Out
It takes a ce rtain
"something" family tree,
friendship, social debut -to
be invited t.o join Los Angeles'
prestigious Spinsters.
The Misses Carlotta Brant,
Mary Anne Green and Paula
Rogers of Newport Beach are
among this year'! 23 new
members, keeping the tradl·
tional roll of 60 in . the in·
vitational club for slngle
young women.
Carlotta has two cousins in
Spinsters, including i.he presi·
dent, Miss Victoria Brant.
Mary Anne ~nd Paula were
National Charity Le a g u e
debutantes in 1~ and have
known other Spinsters since
girlhood.
"Four of us were in the
same ,Brownie trQOp ," Paula
recalled.
Thoroughly busy with their
respective jobll:, the new
Spinsters are delighted with
the "purely social ... just for
fun" purpose of the organiza.
tion. The next major function
will be the Christ m as
Dansant, honori ng ex·
Spinsters who have married
within the past three years.
J\liss Rogers, who spent the
summer in .ltlll&ina. Spain,
teaches phys..-education at
a La Habra high school. She is
the daughter Of M:. and t>.1rs.
Paul M. Rogers and graduated
from Newpurt Harbor High
School and Un~versity cf
Southern Californla.
She ls tlle daughter of the late Uet.A where she earned her
lttr!i and Mn. John Bishop teaching credential.
Gretn. • rNeW m e m b e r s were
Mr. and Mrs. David W. Welcomed at • brunch In the
Brant are the parents ol lt11ss Beach Club by chapter of·
Brant who also graduated ficers who explained that
from Newport Harbor High Spinsters was founded ln 1928
School. She wat a ' yell leader and his ' been tht model for
while attending ·uCJ a_od similar but 'separate clubs in
belonged to Kappa Kappa San Francisco and Santa
Gamma and Bruin Belles at Barbara.
Student Project
School Playgrounds
More Tha n Sw ings
. \ ' • BERKELEY (UPll to Thousand Oak.s School by
Playgrounds have come a long business firms, Parents of the
way since the old d3ys cf just children have joined with the
B¥:ings and bars. thanks to students in building the play
educated ideas In design. . structures.
At Thousand Oaks Schoo l in The new central playground
Berkeley, recess time means is essentially two complex
small child~n exPloring new wooden towers (one is called · .. The Tower of a Thousand dlmensicns of play and learn-Rooms") inside a circle cf
ing in equipmen.t devised by vertical posts.
University of C a 11 f o r n I aJp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..JI
students.
A landsc~ architecture
class is transforming a corr
ventional blacktop playgrou.'ld
into a fantastic array of struc-
tures and spaces to challenge
and dellghl the children.
FOR SWIFT TERMITE
and PEST CONTROL
CALL
WITH
SALLIE
OAIL Y l'ILOT ;f$
THANKSGIVING
MONDAY
e days before a
tu ey s his Happy
T anksgiving h u n t i n c
grounds. it is recommended
that he be fed thret walnuts
a day and a glass of sherry.
His meat will be deliciously
tender and have a fine nutty
flavor ." So goes a receipt:
"Statesmen's DLshes and
lfow to Cook Them." 1890.
SELEC:r--GRO UP The Misses Carlotta Brant,
Paula Rogers and l\lary Anne Green (left to right) 1
are Ne\vport Beach's additions to the Los Angeles
Spinsters who have chosen new members to replace
tho se lost through matrimony.
Employed by a Corona -del
Mar real estate finn , Miss
Green graduated from Bishop
School in La Joi.la and majoffit
in art at Sacramento State.
The UC students also have
designed an outdoor nature
study area.
Lloyds
Today's Ccurmet mama
would flip with the pine nuts
in her giblet SC)aked bread
Chunks and save the sherry
to droozle over her instant
mi n ceme a t cookies.
Mincemeat consist.; or 15 In-
gredients beginning with
lean ground beef and win·
ding up with a quart oC
cider and brandy to taste.
You'll find it all together iJI
neat little one pint cartons,
spooned out of real oak bar-
rels in the Deli. The
coolties : a package of sug_ar
cookie mil. rolled in 4 inch
squ·ares doppled with a
teaspoon 0 r mincemeat.
Fold the corners in and
bake.
Sawdust Moun ts Over T epic
Most of the materials have
been do~ated and transported
Braids Boom
PICK A NUMBER
FROM I to 60
AND COME UP SMILING
The big excitement is the Pe ering
Around DEAR ANN LANDERS: Recently I ad -
n1itted defeat and turned my 28-year"ld
husband over to his l8-year-0ld girl
friend. For a while I was miserable and
bitter. Now I see things in a different
light. Enclosed is my thank-you letter to
her. She will probably lau gh it off, bu t it
might help some other woman who is fac·
ed "'il h the agony l just went through.
science and technology in planning and new Richard's Two in Braids are no longer just a LLOYD operating systems for the m, alntenance Harbor View. What do we good little girl's hairstyle. S C · d · and improvement of environmental PE T ONTROL o·to celebrate? Wt bundle With the new e ve n i n g 60 r sanitation. A sanitation engineer spends fashions, they look chic when ._.. ... .._~94_.411 up o our most 23-year· 1-=--' ' --l\1J SS f\lAR.IE \\lood of Costa
r-.lesa returned to the London
Study Center of Schiller
College after a six-day study
lour through Eni;lsnd's Lake
Dist rict and a portion of the
Scottish Highlands. The toUr is
a required part of her course.
anywhere from four to ;o years of his life wrapped and tied to form loop s. c ....... ,. 4•144H old famous
1
c u 11 n a r Y
in a university and should not be con· and geometric dt1igns. CMt• M---'41°5911 achievements and pass them
fused with a person who collects garbage.,-~~:"'.~.'.:.~~~-_c!!!!-~~~~~~~~~!!'11 on to you. Everybody loves
I am enclosing a brochure describing a a free saclt of groceries •• a husband, I tried to make our marriage
work . He didn't. study program which must be followed 1n ~ could contain anything from
order to obtain a doctorate in the fields of Ambrosia to Zwieback. 10 Dea r Friend:
A few months ago I hated you because
l was sure you ruined niy life; Now I
\Varit to thank you for liberating me from
hell. You have given me a second chance
al happiness. I need no longer rush home
from work to prepare sttpper -in case
he decided to come home. which he
usually didn't. I need no longer dread
going to a public place in the evening
with my sister. a co-worker er a friend.
for fear of running into you and my bus·
band , which happened too many times.
Now I can stop feeling guilty and inferior,
blaming myself for failing es a wife,
because I realize it was he who failed as
So thank you. dear friend . And good
luck with the bum . You're going to need
it. -OUTSVILLE AND GLAD
environmental engineering . -S.E.E., given away every Friday
P.E .. Ph.D. -TULANE UNIVERSITY thru December 3. 10 bags of
DEAR OUT: llere is your Freedom
Song. I'm sure you feel better for having
written it. I \l"onder bow many women
out there will think it was intended for
DEAR DR. S: I stand corrttted. WA' •d l1"ke vou to grapefruit. With the Texas
Several sanitation engine.era wrote to 1et . _ __ ~ . ·I -Ruby Reds making the
m• st•algbt. iAI,. I !ew 1arbo1• col-meet our staff of -i«ife-.ne-s1eepJng-·-o11----
f\1ARK E. Aldrich. son of
f\lr. and f\irs. E. C. Aldrich of
Ne\vport Beach. has been ac·
ccpted as a n1embi!r or the
University of Notre Dame
"'c!ec Club.
lectors wrote to say thanks.) !llmmer . . like eating sunshine on a dark morning.
Mark is. a freshman at Notre
Dame a~·Ai;~t· enrolled in the
Co1lcgc o. 's and Letters.
them? ·
DEAR ANN LANDERS : t>.fy wife called
my attention to your reply to ''Mr. From
Plumricld " in which you stated, with
reference to garbage collectors, "Today 's
title is 'Sanitation Engineer:"
Please be advised that ''Sanitation
Engineer" is a professional who utilizes
lf you have trouble getting along with
your parents ... if you can't get them to .
let you live your own life. send for Ann i
Landers' booklet, "Bugged by Parents?
How to Get More Freedom ." Send 50
cents in coin with your request and a
long, stamped, self-addressed env elope in
ca"re of the DAILY PILOT.
Vows Solemnized for Coast Couples
DUNCAN -HERNAN DEZ
John Duncan Jr. cla imed
Ber1h;" Herna ndez as his bride
rluring c:ercn1onics conduclcd
hy the. Rev. Rnnald Collot .· 111.
Sts. Simon and Jude Catholic
Church, Huntington Beach.
The ir parents arc J\·lr. and
J\·lrs. Joe Hernandez Or Jlun·
1i nglon Beach and '.\lr. anrl
J\lrs. John Dun can of
\\'estminster.
Bridal attendants \\'ere the
~lisses \'irg:1nia Hernandez.
Paula Luis. Nancv and Karen
Duncan . .Joan l·lartwick and
Eileen and Irene Garcia.
Robert Cla rk was best man
nnd ushers were A 1 fr e d
Garcia. Leo Hernandez. Dar-
rel Taylor and n i ch a rd
Cervantes. Greg Booth 1~·as
the ring bearer and Sonia tru-
Church. Ne"'port Beach.
Parents of the bridal couple
are ~tr. and ~·trs. A. E.
Ligthart of Ne"•port Beach
and ~1r. and ~1rs. Howard W.
Ross of Capistrano Beach.
\tiss Di2ne Ligtharl \\'as
mai d o[ honor and.
bridesmaids were t>.1rs. Donald
Fisher and Miss Cydney Mik·
kelson.
Attending as best man was
.lohn Ross and ushers \11ere
Boh Tripp and Allen Gardner.
The bride was graduated
from Newport Ji.arbor High
School and the California
Prafessional School.
Her husband is also a N~lHS
graduate.
They will reside in Santa
Ana .
jHlo, flow" g•d. SCHA NK-LENK E The bride IS a graduate of Fountain Valle~ High School .Joseph E. Schank Jr. claim-
and attends Goldf:'O \Vest ed Diane Jean Lenke as .. hi!'!
College. lier husband i!'= a bride during ceremonies read
graduate of Westminster 1-ligh in Christ Lutheran Church.
School and flO\V studies at Costa f\;1esa by the Rev. L. V.
California State College al Torno~·.
Fullerton. Parents of the couple are
The ne1vlvweds wtll reSide in Mr . and J\1rs. Robert H. LenkP
•funlington. Beach. · of Costa Mesa and Mr and l trs. Joseph E. Scha~k of
ROSS-LIGTHART Laguna Niguel.
Nancy Alice Ligthart and t.-1iss Lynn Wallace was
Allen Scott Ross exchange maid of honor and bridsemaids
1narriage vo11·s before the were Miss Jami Schank and
Rev. Charles H. Dierenficld in Miss .)'anice Lenke. 1
St. Andre1v's Presbyteria"n Terry Cross served as best
" I
MRS. DUNCAN
man and guests were seated
by John Schank and Richard
Lenke.
The bride is a graduate of
Estancia High School and her
husband attends -Saddleback
College.
They will reside in Hun -
tinglon Beach.
FISHE R-TOMKI NSON
Huntington Beach United
Methodist Church was the set.
ting for nuptials I i n k I n g
Elizabeth Ann Tomkinson and
William Baxter Fisher of Hun-
Ungl.On Beach.
MRS. ALLEN ROSS
The Rev. Charles Rose con-
ducted the \'Ow exchange for
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Philip K. Tomkinson of
Scottsdale and the son of l\1r.
and Mfs. W. B. Fisher of
Trenton, Tenn.
~1iss Susan Tomkinson wa~
maid of honor and l\1rs. Lee
Harrold was a bridesmaid.
Attending as best man was
John Sinnott and Kennth Doll
ushered.
The bride wa$ graduated
·from Phoenix College, and
with honors from Pacific
University where she was a!-
;;=====o;I
jewels by joseph
searches for iEiwels
c1,ven ''""'"'" ,.,..1.,. t.1 '"'"*''" ,,. cl'tft 11¥ wi. '* • Orm whcla. t-i.d~. ..pcr1111, .... .... .. rilr • _ .. "°' tllrtflll ... t•u-•• .. ,..
ll•tl rn..rt .. '''"·
SHEETS-·KING SIZE
Wt wm H oi.•.-4 '* tl•"'"'' .,...., ,_, tnll H\'\M rt11rlllt!t tllllr 111 ..
'''" C•~ Mr. J• .... ., Mr, l'etll II 1 .. -
South Cot1I Plett
l ti1iol ti the Sin 01190 Fwy,
C•11t1 M11t 5.o!O.t006
NO IRON PERCALE
FAMOUS MAKER
FLAT OR FlnEo
With 111•tchl~ c•MS ft SJ, t 7 • 1Nlr
Wltho11t M•tch1119 Pillow c -ss.t7
54.97 ..... ·-..... .,, ........
BED & BATH FASHION SHOP . .
OUTLET STORE
11591 Main St., Huntington Be1 ch
9'ifliM1ln at Beach~& Points C•ntel')
•
MRS. SCHANK
fillated with Alpha Phi Epsilon
sorority.
Her bridegroom was
graduate<! from the University
of Kentucky where he was a
member _of Pi Tau Sigma
Honorary and Sigma Phi
Epsilon farternil y.
They wlll make their home
In •1untington Beach.
SHAPE-
UP
Wt'll help you lost wetoht
and keep II Off IOI' oood
while yOU eal aH day k:lnO·
I JS-5$05
. \
beauty experts. 5 specialty p•oduc• tn1y1:
Pomegranate1, strawber·
N ti• ries, papayas, fresh pinea~ ow a pre ·•er pie. Bose pears, persim-mons, sugar cane. How holiday ha,irdo . special can we git. -I 20 Thanksgiving pies. You
l·s up to you.· don't have to .. 1 pum pkin -and -mince. What about-
G"-P-·
SUpeMW
Charlotte Stark
Alice Colthurat
Helen Mohriand
T eny Kennedy
Ro•Leitht
Fashion perms, Including
shampoo, cut, and ~t.
a.95 to 25.00
Fashion frosting: 18.00
Tint or color retouch : 8.50
JCPenney
buuty-
No lfPOll2l211at r901111ry. ~Ml
.
Ntwport leach Fa1hion lalanct
\ rhubarb, the Bakery's very
I most popular. or French
I Cherry or Boston Cream? 3
sets of Barbequed Ribs,
~ enough for 4 people. A reeJ
misnom_er. They are truJ y
loin ribs. There's a dif-
fertnce. Real meat. 10
barbeq ued chickens. Each
chicken before it's put on
the rolisseri~ has a teas.
poon of secret spices inside,
that only the Deli knows.
CUSTOM
HORS D'OEUVRES
.. a whole tray full. Have
you ever seen one in 111 Its
nibbling glory. Could have •
boat in the middle carved
out of a cucumber or a big
zucchini filled with a
mysterious dip. Did you
ever stuff an olive. The Deli
does. Prime ·steaks for 4.
Choice beef is about as tops
as you can come by. You 've
savored to II for year• with
taste happiness in every
nibble. wrapped and ready
in our show cases. But
prime ls one step topser.
Usually gobbled up by fine
hotels and ·gourmet steak
houses. but Richard's Is a
different market We gobble
louder to of(er it lo you.
Everybody adores 1
lobster, 4 people are going
to savor them for free.
Chateaubriand for 4. the
most solid gold plated
tasting beef roast you've
ever eaten.
Sign up books are In the
lobble1 of Harbor View and
Udo. Tiit drawinc•
alternate each Friday. Last
Friday, Lido. This F'rlday
Harbor View. These 60 food
1lft laveUes are given away
each Friday thru December
3 .
tsrftThtinksgl vt nr
wonderful. E v e r y ... d y
glows. 11'1 a real family
time of year. Why don't you
Invite somebody to lh1rt
with you and yours while
J.®. a:ive Thanks • • some
body "'ho doesn't have a
family.
Richard's' Marte.ts, the
People Stores, where we're
thankful for you. lh:ve 1
Happy Thanksgiving Day .
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AD l'Rl<;ES GOOD 7 DAYS.-NOV, 18-Z:--
. ,., ....
Pe@i1lc~ty Pmc{J1c~ ·
• • ' ' • •• • • ' : \> •
SAUTE WITH BROWN SUGAR ANO PINEAPPLE ANO
SERVE WITH HAM. RIPE, CHIQUITA BRAND
B~NANAS Lii, lO.~
FOR SAUCE, R,EP~H •.. MUFF,INS, FRESH CAPE COO
OCEAN SPRA Y . • ,
CUNBERRIES 1 ~!o 29.¢· ·
FOR OESSERtS . BA~IN<O :ANO JUST MUNC~;~~.l(.\
FANCY GRADE, NEW CROP \ ,
,
1•
M•XED NUTS LB. 39¢ .. '
' ~ / ··;',.... ~~··
EXTRA FANCY, SWEET ANO MELLOW, WASHINGTON
D'ANJQlt PEARS ~a'. )~1f. ..
FOR THE RELISH TRAY-OR SERVE THEM GLAZED
MAIS~BURN'S YOUNG· ANO TENDER
CARROTS 3 P1K~:: 29¢
(
RICHARD'S .I~ GIVING AW)<.Y
' ' • ' •
t . i I
PRIZES 'WEEKL V:
. ' ·• · incltiding "I . ,
, CHAT~lJBRIAND FOR 4 . • 'f ~ '"1. ~ .
. LOBSTER~.OOl>S~.fOR 4 ·
:. ~ i!FJt:iEif~A~(fbR ~ ' . . .... ,) . . , . . . ... , -"
TRAY · OF CUSTOM HORS' 0'0HWRES
•
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IO BARBEcUEO .CHJCKENS ·
3 BARBECUED SPARERIBS
Enou9h for 4 people.
l 20 THANi<~~Ylt=lG PIES
• I ~ I ~
5 SPECIALITY PRODUCE TRAYS ,
"' .. • v "·· r,.
·10 'BAGS i;~;.!>EFRUIT
8 BAGS RJLL GROGERIES
SIGN ·UP AT EITH.ER MARKET
NEXT DRAWING . • ,
NOVEMBER 26 . ,, . . . . ,
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:;~.TURKEY FIESTA? WELL. WE'RE . CEL l~'f\
·~YENTS_1'HE OPENING OF OUR MARVE l:JS
THANK,SGIVING WITH A FIESTA OF LlJS l-U
r;;::;.i. ·~EcIAL PRICES AND PRIZES.
-.... _,.
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, .• ' ' JVIrwLmcent,:JfeajM'
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NORBFS.T U.S.9.~,·,GRADE .A, F;ROZEN •. POP-UP ~IMER. Try an •pricot and v egtt•ble stuffin9 anti beste with apricot iui ce.
HEN ·TURKEYS ; l0.l
6 ,L; .. 43¢..LI. '.•,, ~ Ji)M$, 11
•
22
LB,
, . ~-
ZACKY FARMS-CALIFORNIA'S BEST-Grett stuffed with •t ustt• a11tJ appl••· lntiviclutlly boxe.I.
'frtsh HEN TURkEYS'10.1'~~· 59¢La. ·Fresh tOMS
' •• -J' . : • ~· . '
11·22. LB, . .
ZACKY FARMS FRESH CALIFORNIA GROWN '
ROASTING CHICKENS "•ur ltr1ntiy Into ctvlty and rult it with ginger
~ r ' _: . " . , . •
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RICHA'RO'S· OWN ; LIDO BRAND HAMSL-A THANKSGIVING S,ECIAL
WHOLE HAMS : G1rnl1h with Deli 'ln••pple ind Cherries
• •
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• " . SHANK · HALF HAM i 79~ •. 'BUTT HALF HAMS
G latt with Champagne and rn,trmelade . ' , •' '
BA R-M BONELESS, FULLY COOKED , RaAOY TO EAT
TAVERN . HAMS .~~~t.EAVG.·-1.39L1. Y2 or~ HAMS
Toast the holi day with champign1. Delicious 1lictd thinly with Melon. . .
TODD'S BACON AND COUNTRY HAMS AVAILABLE. TOO!
. ............. ~. -.. ... . ·---· -~ -. . I .
. Richard's 'Bul'k \SAUSAGE .· Perfect f~r .a lfU~ 1tuffi"1'
' ~: .. ·
....
(9apcfleliglt !}f eaJ~ . ' ". . ,•
ROULADES OF BEEF , 1.09 Ht. 1f2 Stuffed GAME HEN 59¢ ea.
i ender P,fiCtii of
0
l1an be•f ,: rolled eround Cornish Game Hen with our SJ!16tial dressi ng.
• •pooitl P"'10Y d""'"9· '\ : w~PI· C~rnish Game Men 79¢ ea.
PRIME Chateaubriand 3.98 lb, G ••d• A, ll •« mi•im"m weight.
. n. 1;,.,ryo" .!i." b"y-U.$.D.A, Mm~,. Long Island Ducklings 79¢ lb.
A kingly f1a1t flamed with Cogn ec. '· Serve with 1i1ut11d pot4lto1s, Cabernet.
MARi'NATED 6UCKLINGS · :91¢ IS. SWEETBREADS 98¢ lb.
~' t:!ilf-a lohtj lslen.d Duckl ing in a superb El19ent with rad cebP,19• salad and
, . oran91-1herry 1a~c1. • Pinot Noir.
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CHICKEN ,BALLOTINE 79f. ea.
8on1l111 chicken stuffed with wil~
rict i mushrooms-er 1p~lt11ut1 11'1d
rushroqfl!I.!
. A OEL\GHTFUL PRELUO~ JO THE TURKEY-SEAFOOD H~R 0'0,EUV~es:-
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SALADS OR TANGY SEAFOOD COCKTAILS
79¢LB.
.1.49Li
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Alaskan Kl~G ,cRAIS W.,.LI ! 1.19 LL Western OYSTERS . "oz; .. 98c .... , .
•
~ :~ , . C~ked ~e~i~"! S!HRltti.P .. , _3.97 ... . ,
I '.P.S. IF YOU HAVEN'T PLACED YOUR ORDER FOR FRESH TURKEYS, BE SURt TO '~ SEE DENNIS !oR BO~ AT e100 '6r ~OHN OR LUCIAN AT HARBOR VIEW! .• . ' ' '
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"'£.~-HARBORVIEW CENTER 1&60 ·Mac Arthur, Newpo rt Bea~h 673-2155 OPE N DAILY 9 -8, SUN . 9 -f;i
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~~TING TWO WONDERFUL
IJS HARBOR VIEW STORE AND
)·US HOLIDAY FOODS,
\ ' . ' ' " ' ..
"j '·. -"".
HAVE PLENTY PIPINCi HOT''WITH TURKEY-PILLSBURY,·.-··
Crescent Dinner Rolls · •.oz. "29¢
, ..
• .. ' ' THE SALAD MAKER ! PHILADELPHIA BRAND •' CREAM CH~SE I oz. 'S3~·_,::.
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PILLSBU RY BISCUITS ·
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Butterm ilk or Country Stylo • 01. 1(1¢
LAS HIERBAS EXOTIC
HERB FRENCH DRESSING
CASINO BRAND
NATURAL CHEESES
•
''" oz.
11 or.
RICHARD'S OWN-FOR PER~ECT PIES ..1 ·• . . ' BRANOIED MINCEMEAT . · "· . 3,.
ROY,+.L HAWAIIAN
MACADAMIA NUTS · • oz. .· .i.~•
" -i. •
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Birds Eye COOL WHIP ' oz. 49•
LIBBY 'S ORANGE JUICE -. . '
l<ern's· Sliced STRAWBERRIES
BUTLE R RECOMMENDS 9"
APPLE PIE
JOHNSTON 'S 9"
MINCE or PUMPKIN PIE
-Soro Leo Croissant Rolls
Soro Lee Butter Gem Rolls
' '
Chu n King EGGS ROLLS .
BIRDS EYE .
French ·Beons with Almonds ·
BIRDS EYE
ONIONS wit h Cream Souce
BIRDS EYE
CANDIED YAMS
• 01. 5 for .s;
11 oz. 4 for $1
1;19
.• 69•
•CT. ... 49¢
' CT. '39¢
• 1.1•11. •oz. Sfi ' ' .
• 01. J for $1-
• 01. 3 for $1
·12 oz. 4 for $1·
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. ' ' .· ' · groce{j WJ~erla1i,rJy --
Hills BRos: COFFEE ALL GRINDS " '
, '
I LI. 79•
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HILLS · BR.O~.~ CbFFEE' . • •• 1.57 HILLS BR.OS . COFFEE 1 "· 2.25 . ' '
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~UE>SEN ' FIR.ST· -QUALITY BU TIER. ~ • I , 1 ' • 1 r
M.J.B. Brown and Wild Rice Mix . . ' .
f.4 .J.8. WHITE ·.(ND WILD RICE MIX
' Nabisco AMERICAN HAR.VEST SNACK CR.ACKERS' ~·· ·~ r, . . . . '
S&W' Jumbo Pitted RIPE OLIVES . '
SUNSHINE HYO.ROX COOKIES Yummy Snacks! ·
Dolo Slic~d , Crushed or Chunk Pinoapplo
. '
SCHILLIN.~A .S.~EA)' :APOITIQN TO .STUFFING . . .
Freeze ' Dried: MUSHROOM SLICES . '
PET EVAPORATED MILK "'-... •'-. ,,~ _, ...
PET COFFEE CR.EAMER.
Ghiradelli Semi Sweet CHOCOLATE CHIPS
· Lau.ra Scudders Party Mix NUTS
WILSHIRE SWEET CUCUMBER CHIPS
1 l'OUNI 15¢
'oz. 59•
• 01. PACU•I 59¢
• 01.'. ' 47¢ .
l 'A OZ. 3 for $1
.. 01. ' 59¢
,..,,. ,. ~"' 11·01. 3 for $1
l /16 oz. 69•
TALL ••• 2 for 37 ¢
'' oz. 69¢
12 oz. 3 for $1
13-0Z. 69¢
12 oz.
· Co nad·a Dry ·Mixers " 01· · 2 for 59¢ "' ..... Canada Dry "Tonic 21 01. .._,,,
39¢
2tor 69¢
39¢ BETIY CR.OCKER. DATE BAR MIX .. 14 oz.
CONT->iOINA COOKBOOK ' SAUCES ALL YAr,Jn1a 11 oz. 4· for $1
" REYNOLD'S HEAVY DUTY ALUMINUt>A FOIL
CHIFFON DELUXE NAPKINS .. COUNT 3 for $1
biqyo~
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A HOLIDAY ENTERTAINING SPECIAL-SAVE 15·"/.·PER QUART ON QUARTS OF
RICHARl>'S BOUR.BON , SCOTCH, VODKA OR GIN!
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' ' PAR.KER. HOUSE ROLLS o ...
..
PUM~KIN PIE 9 INCM
Pumpkin Nut Loaf ·
69¢
1.69
1.19
Cranberry Muffins . 6 for 76¢
MINCEMEAT 'LA.YER ED WITH •UM~KIN AND
WHl .. ED CREAM TO .. ED
HAR.VEST PIE 2.49
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HAYE YOU BEEN TO OUR. .BEAUTI:
FUL NEW HAR.BOii. VIEW STORE?
H ''h' tf'd "r'. ' ere 1 ow o 1n us ........ .
I Not•: We •{• en NEW MacArihu,
Ont ll•ck E11t of OLD MacArthur l !--~-
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• ' -I~' JOAQUIN MILLI IOAD
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• COAST KIGlllAY
f ...
J
l
l •
~xcLur$fVefv bic/}J . . "'
c;plowef' ~l1ryJ
.. To send to your mother, ·t specie! friend -or
so.d. one to yourself for 1 Thenksgiving c•n•
t1rpi1c1!
"
This is • ch1rmin9 1rr1n9em1nt of n1tur1I
dried m1t1ri1h end frosh flowers.
s10, s12.so amfs1s.oo
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12.~ LIDO CENTE R 343~ Vi a.Lido, Newport Beach • 673-636o OPEN DAILY 9 -7, StJ N, 9 -6
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2 &--0Al\oY PILOT --jams, Jellies Spread-Ve§·et-a
-With-COior es
• S\\·eet potatoes, yam.s and Julee or i.., lemon
squa11h are among the obvious 3 tablespoons s n j pp eod
choices that rl'spqnd well to par1ley
awetl 11nd buttery alazl'~ that Scrape car r o la ; cut
combine the j11m or jl'lly or diagonally Into '~·inc;h !hic k
your choice with a little ' slices. Peel onions ;;ind cul a
melted butter and lemon juice. small cross 1n rnot Pnd of each
However. th is is just lhe lo help keep onions whole
beginning of many la.sty during cooking, Bring 1wtter
cqmbinalions. and salt lo a boil in sr1ucepan.
Other vegetable& lhat are Add carrots and onions.
especially good '\\'ilh th e Rettlrn to boil, then reduce
add Jtional fla voring of jams heat and, cook, co\'ered , for 10
l'!nd je ll ies include c<irrn ts, minutes or until tender. Drain
onions, red cabbitge and beets. "'P!l.
GLAZED C A R R 0 TS &: li-1elt butter and apricot
01'/IONS preserves in a skillet. S1 1r 1n
8 med ium·l'ilZe fresh carrots lemon juice. Add 1•eizct11b!es
12 small \\'h1le onions and stir gently O\'er lo\1' heal
I cup water until evenly glaied and heated.
12 ttaspot>n salt Sprinkle with parsle.)!. Makes 4
3 table!ipoons butter or to 6 servini;s..
margarine SWEET-SOU rt
!1 tablespoon~ apric ot RED CABBAGE
prtM.r\'e~ 1ari?e head red c;:ihbage
. -; -r~-,,..
( ·r· . ' . ,. ;. -
... tabout 2 Pounds)
1 cup ""'attr
2 tablespoons \'lneiar
11 teaspoon salt
14 cup chopped onion
3 tablespoons butter or
margarine
113 cup pineapple p~serves
l tablespoon lemon juice ·
Coarsely shred cabbagt,
discarding the core. Heat
water, vinegar nnd salt in a
saucepan untll boifinp:. Add
cabbage. Return to boil. then
reduce heat and coo k .
covered. for 10 minutes or
until tender-crisp.
Drain well. Sault onion in
bu lter until lendl'r. Stir in
pineapple preser1·-~lemon
j1Hct . Add cab!' I stir
RenUv over ln1 unt il
e1'enl.v glazed 1eated.
t.1ake~ 6 lo 8 servir.~s.
BEETS IN ORANGE
SAUCE
1 can ( t pl)Und l sliced er
diced beet.:
1 teaspoon cornst1rch
3 tablespoons 0 r • n a •
marmalade
l tablespoon vineaar
1 rablespoon butter ot'
margarine
Drzjn beets. reserving 1/3 ~
cup liquid. In m e d I u m 11
saucepan. gradually 1 I i r ·:
reserved beet liquid inta .:
cornstarch lo make a smooth ··
mixture . Add orana:e
marmalade and vinegar.
Cook over low heat. 1tirrint
constantly, until m i i: t u r e ·
lhickens and boill!, Add butter
and stir until melted . Add
bee ts i nd stir iently over lo• "
heat until evenly glaud and
heated. Makes 3 to 4 aervinis. · :~
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r -··~· ~-· 608 EAST BALBOA BLVD., BALBOA
REFRIGERATED DELIVERY SE•VICE: PHONE 673-1310
HAPPY THANKSGIVING TO ALL
CARROTS AND ONIONS GLAZED FOR SUBTLE TARTNESS Let us
Stuffed
cook
with
your BALBOA , MARKET FRESH TURKEY
Owens delicious dress ing and plenty
• • The finest obtainable
giblet gravy 1o . '
Kitchen Disasters Mold a Cook
• I
It takes ;i \'ery unusual
cooking teacher lo tell a
student : "The \\'8Y In learn ln
cook is to cook. ff your firsL
effort is 11 disaslcr, grea !!"
• and eleRant dishes, such as: creiun. barely whipper!. I
Roqucforl Moussl!:, Bananas 4. Let the mixture stand al
Vieux Carre and C re m e Fr!liche. roo m temperaturt for an hour
before ser,•in lil fdon't 1
ROQUl=:FORT MOUSSE Serve with drinks or as a refrigl'!ra te ii. or the chtese1
sepo:irate courst. with l'ial11d. \\'ill set ). preferably in 8 tall
the envy
HAMS
your dinner
Our Bar-8-Q ued
of make
of your gourme t guests.
can not be best ed for fl avor and tendernes·s, with Owens '
to baste with. Ju st give us a little advance notice and special
you r
ra1s1n sauce
will be order ready to just heat and serve. •
-CLO SED THUlt SDA Y, NOVEMIER 25th -'
I
t
I
Bu! tha!"s th e encourage-
ment Julie Dann cnbaum J!i vcs
her s1udcnts. The founder nf
two th riv ing rooking schools
in Ph iladelphia with the hl~h
·est enrollment of nonprnfcs-
sional11 in the country, fl1rs.
Danncnbaum still b c Ii e \' e-"
"\l'<ltrhin~ a IC'aC'hcr may
inspire you. hut lhe lesson
won't sink in until you try it
yourself "
follow a reeipe . c<in become a
compe renl cook, even a good
one ." Baser! on this conv iction,
she has synthesi?.ed the school
lesson s in fl new book .Ju lie
Oannenbaun ·~ C r f.' a ti \' e
Cookinjl School. published Oct.
20. Hl71 by McCall Books.
i\1 1SHAPS
Although the goal r or
1112 cups unslllted butter crock with a wooden spoon.
1
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1
, pounds Roquefort chee11e ..c~'.::l.:•k::•~•_:•~•::•:.rv:,:in'.'.!g!:s'... ----"""'""""""""""""""""""'"'""""'"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""'""""""'"'""""""'"'"'"""""""•l!!l•..,!Jil 3 t11blespoons coRnac 1"
Al~o unusual ior a c:oo~in~
t.eachPr is her cerlainty lh11t
"an\'one \\'ho can rear!. and
who. has the intelligence lo
Lively _Look
7063
Strif)'S ha ve lhe \1\ely look
she ln,·es fnr f,1111 out1n)!s.
Il\STAl';i C R 0 C HET .
Stripe·happ~ 1 est in shell
stH C'h. alternat1n,i: llprn rn\\'S,
top~ the shell ~111ch .~k iri lise
k.n1111n~ \\·nrsted. b1,I! hook.
Pa t. ifl61· 1;11.e!' 2-12 included .
SE\'E~T\'-f"l\'E Ci'~NTS for
each pallern -3dd 2;; cent!'
for e;irh pal!e;n lflt Air t.111 il
and Spec1.11I II .11 n d I i n g :
othPr1rJSe th1rd-cl;a.~5 del ivery
will !11k1> three weeks nr n1nr e.
5'nd In Allee Brook!'. the DAI -
LY P!LOT. 105 NrNlle:cr11ft
Dept . Rnx lli3. Olli rhel!<PA
Station. New York. ~. \'. !001 L
Prinl l\'Rmr , Allrire~,, Zip,
P1llt rn Nu1nbcr.
J\'EEOt.Ef R \~-r j72' ,\'e"·
Ht crorhel. knit.~ fnr rhr
upresE-h e. qrnf'rat1nn' &"·
Ing, embrn1dt'r~·. qui 11 !',
algha ns. frl'i' p :it t e r n s :
Cata log 5() cents.
New: "IMlanl Crm·hf't "
Book. Step-hy-slep pir1urts
te.1 ch \'OU how to crochPt in·
1t1nll1;! Plu1 newesl p:11tern11
11.
Complete lnsl.11nl (ilfl Bo11k
-more thitn 1ro g1!ts, 11
C~mptete Ahth11n· Ronk -$1
"II Jiff) Rug1 " Book. ~
centa, Book nf 12 Priu:
.\f&han1. SO cent!. •
everyone who eooks i s
del.icious food. ~l rs.
Dannenbaum stresses lh<it ;:in
occasional 1nishap can be a
learning experience: "''nu'\\
learn more from you r
1n1slakes than frnm your
successes." Recalling her first
-curdled -a!lempts "'ilh
Hollandaise Sa u c e , she
rxplains: "By the time I gnt it
ril!,hl. I'd le;irncd a lot about
working ""'ilh eggs. If you
want lo cook vou n1ustn 't be
intimidated hy 'a few failures."
Becau.~e her students .i:iet
the benefits or l\irs.
Dt1nnenb:ium's v a lit
expCrience-as -well as fief
early blunders. their success
qunt11 is high. Th e i r
enthu11iasm is maintained by
;ino1her :;:lightly off -beat
thl'<IT'f she propounds: "Dnn"t
bore ·yourself with s<>-called
be1inner rttipes when you
start tn cook.''
Her students pick up ::i:ll the
basic.~ of ClVlking \\' h i I e
learning to make interesting
Pastry
Enfolds
Apples
Similar tO the ipplt pastries
sold In ml!ny bakerie.1.
COVERED APPLE
PASTRIES
13, cups .tiffed flour
213 cup enrich!<! white com·
me;al
2 lahlesJl'll'ln!l :i;:ug11.r
ll tP.llSpoon Slllt
l ~ c11p { 111 one-quarter
pound slicks) butter or
margarine
2 ep;g yolks -
lfl cup ""'Iller
1 t11blespoon lemnn juice
Apple Filling. see below
Sifl togelher flour. cnrnm(l'al.
~Ul:i'lr fll'ld .~fi ll. Cut in butler
un!il p:irlicle.s are fin_!:
Comhine t'll.ll yolk~. "'llltr
Arid lrmon juice; add In dry
inJ[rt>dients: mix lightly unr il
ju~! comhined.
· Turn nut nn flourt>d pi'l~try
cloth: knrad -J[cnll y ll ft"
times: divide dou11h in h"H.
\\1ilh ll l'ilockinet-co\'trrd
flourtd rotlint;: pin roll out ont
half n( dough tn line botlnm n(
;i 13 by 9 by 2 inc h pan. Spoon
Applf' f illi na over <lou,Rh .
Roll nut remflini~ d,nu11:h fr>r
1np rn1st : place "'·er fillin~:
pnck surrace.
Bake in ii prrht:ttcd :t7!\·
rlc,Q"rcP. .,,.,.n 45 tn 00 minut es
Con' If d"'lrNI. top wtth ron·
fl'.c11ontr~· SUA?T fro~tJn~.
~t11kt..~ 12 ~ervinp.~.
Apple Fllllna~ Sifl to11:elher I
ctJ p suir11r. 2 l ~hles-pnon~ fll'lur.
1. lt>llspt')On salt, 1, ll'~Sp!)(ln
nulme~ find 1' • f PllSPOOn&.
cinr111mnn
~tir 1n R rup!> pa r('rl , corPrl
A'I~, &llted apples and ~ <lUfl
f<!llSlnlJ, •
I tablespoon finely chopped
parsley llf
14 lcasponn cayenne peprer
1 tablespoon veRt!llhle oil
Jn mixer, bf'al l>utler unlil
Ji,::h1 11nd creamy. Bit hy bit.
bc<1t in the Roquefnrl cheest .
and t'Onlinue btelinp; for ::i:t
le11st 10 minu tes. ·or until
mixture ill very, very fluffy.
Arid cognac. pllrllley, and
c11ycnne pepper and blend
well..
" Brush fl 5-eup loaf mold "'ith
oil <don't u~e loo much oil.
and De sure tn nil the corners l
and pour the .-.ofl mixture into
!hr mold . Pack ii do"'"· Chill
rnold In rcrriger11tor ror :i1
lcllsl 2 hours -overnight is
be:ltrr -sn fl;i vors blend .
The mousse ran be stored
for i:ever111 days in the
refri,llcrator . or it can be
frozen.
\\1hen rcad.v lo serve, run a
knife around edRtS nf pan and
unmold on a platter. Serve
\\'ilh r..telh;:i I n a st or
commercially m;ide W1'ler
buscuit~. ~lake.~ lfi servin1f.,_
BANANAS \'JEUX CARR E
Th1 5 is a Ne w Orle:::i:ns
SP4!rialty.
11 cu p buncr
fi biln11nas
Grated pet"! of 2 nran,!les
i., cup orlln,t:e juice
3 r::1blespoons lime juice
1, 1e11sponn cinnamon
1• cu p honey
l1:l cup lighr rum
Creme Pr11ichP. optional
i recipe rnllo"'~ i
fl.1el1 v. cu p of the hu11Pr in
an n1·cnpr0(1f dish !hat can be
t11ken tn the t::ihlP 111n ovAI 11u
gr,11tin tliliih iir; idt-al i.
Peel the han11niis. split them
lengthwise. itnd rnll tht httlves
in the mellrd buller. Ccat
well.
Oot with rem11inin11: i.4 cup or
bu1ter on the b11n11na hal ves.
sprinkle them "''ilh grAltd
oran11:e peel. or11nge 11nd lime
juicP. cinnamon and hont)'.
11nd b.-ke 1hem for 15 minute~
in a preheated 375 dtgree
0\'(':n.
Fl11me with rum h y
wArming rum in ll small pan
nncl i(l:nltfn~ 11nd sponnin11: the
n11ming sauce over I h e
bAnan11~ until the niimes die
down 11nd s('rve wit h !ht rum
sau C'e and ali::o. if de!lirPd. \l'ith
Creme F'ritiche,
CRE~1E fRAICHt;
Tht"re i~ nolhini in tnt
United Stale~ li kr thP ~'rench
Creme FrAiche, a n111ural1y
thick cream with a n,111·or all
ii~ (\\\'n. usu11tly served in a
crock v.•ith a wooden spoon.
Thlir; Is how lo mAke 1
pir;f'udo r rrmt-Fralche lo
~tr''' tithf'r "'ilh Banana~
Vieu:t !Arre or over berries.
~ ou™:e.~ cre11m chre.<.e
1~ cup cfitiry sour creaim
I cup heavy ere.am
1 Bring; all ln11:rtdlenl~ tn
fQOm lrmptr.11ture.
2. S<ifttn lhP creA~ chf'tse
and be11L ii with gour crtam.
us1 n' a whlslf or 11n l'ltclric
ml>:tr.
i l'"mbin! "'1th .hcrt1~·
Van de Kam p's.
RAKERY SPECIALS -~fo n.-Sun., Nov. 22-28
THE FIRST
NEW ENGLAND
THANKSGIVING
Nearlr half of the Plymouth
Colonisu did not survive the
dreadful winter of 1620.
After a bountiful han•est in
1621, the Governor dectted
Dec. 13 should be a day
of fcutiog-and prayer.
Joining in the prcpuatio~ for
the feast were 80 Indians, who
brought wild turkey• a.nd deer.
Many days were: spe:nt boiling,
baking and roasting foods. The
tables were: set outside, and
The Colonists t.nd the I11diam
prayed and (ca.seed toaethcr.
lt was our fim Thutlus-iTin.g.
""' .....,., ~.,ictM "'-~...,.
.i-,.,;.1 111~ ..... r1e-.. ~ " -.i ML 'IN M ,.,..,,,,, lebn ...
~~n~ :.u~:.~'.~ ......... 49'
Rnl lutttrmlnts
7 0&.. llCI. Prlce ........... ,49i
Van de Kamp's .,
B A K E l I s
. .
-,
For Your Thanksgiving Feast
Iced or Suga red
Cinnamon Rolls 39c
(Reg, 4'k) !'kg, of 8 , ... , •••.
Assorted
Fin&..Chqcolates'•. $1 69
(Aloo MJ'ilJ0o1\) 15 o~ ....... .
•
PUMPKIN
Apple or Mince Pie
(leg. 89c) Large 8·1flch ••
• .. .
t-. •
. • ·~. ' . ••
• ' •,
:-\ • ,• ~
\
\
!
I : •
"
' . '
GRADE "A" POUl.TIY . pl te variety of U .S.D .A. featuring t~ hne~t com !MA YfRESH LAM:L"
i.i.iiRKEYS U.S.D.A.
INSPECTED
VICTORY BRAND
YOUNG TOM ~:u.:::.37..~ =::~43!
MAYFRESK SELF-BASTlllCi PRIME,
YOUNG JR. -gt TEllDER,CiRADE A TURKEYS . TURKEYS :~. ... lb. YOUNG 10M5 "45' TURKEYS
youNG G .. ,. 59~b v·ouN'G'1t111s ,. 4 7' . DUCKS "II.' q 10 1 •lb1 .Sll~ll,t.SllNG ...... 0 •· ••••••••• ····-··
~
lb. GAMEGR>DE'"' & 9~. !!'!~~.~UNIOll~-" 49'
HENS ,.oz M'"·'"' ... FRESH POULTRY--~
WE HAVE THE FINEST SELECTION OF US 0 A
GRADE A FRESH-DRE SSED HEN ANO TOM
TURKEYS . WE AtSO HAVE All VARIETIES AND
SIZES OF STUFFED TURKEYS, SELF-BASTING
TURKEYS, GEESf ANO BONELESS TURKEY
ROASTS FOR YOUR HOLIDAY NEEDS.
!9P.!.~,!!!!~.!K.~!~. 3 7~.
HAMS
HOFFMAN BETTERMAID OR
WILSON CERTIFIED
S-LB CAM
~ILLSBURY BISCUITS.
tUTTfRMllK O• SWtEI MILK 8 01 . ... 6!49'
i '~~.!!,~~ CiE~~!HI s~~~DS """ "o' CUPS 33'
. tlllllAMON ROLLS
BALlARD9~0l IUllE 35'
' ' ' ' '
~!~!~~~~~~~~~!~~~~ ...... ~.14?
S!,~~~ND'!~-~~~·-········ ································· , ...... 59~.
RIB ROASTS
Wflt TRIMMED .
GROUND BEEF
fRESH fVll Of flAVOR
TOP SIRLOIN
80NElfSSWASIE FREE .
SALMON "'"' ""' ~~f5H '•OIEN
C.f NJE•(UI $ll(fS U.M lb
Ob 93c
~~i 59c PKGS.
db.
"s 1 s9
...... 89~.
FANCY COOK ID SHRIMP 'oz 79'
WESTERN OYSTER ,.,,, '" 79'
EASTERN OYSTER •o'"" 98'
PORK LINK SAUSAU
HOFFMAN SICINlESS ... ···········-······· 8 01. PKG. 29' CANADIAN BACON WllSON CHUNK s 109 BYl lPI CC CENTER CUI PlfCtSSl.2'..: wWliLE JR flAtr lb.
CORN WILSON BACON COUNTRY 59~ BACON CERTlfl[D 69'
~a . ttm151&'m!fWttm7 •; I I• •Nmml• I 72 ERM
MAY FRESH ROLLS
BROWN & SERVE 12 PK ................................................. .
HOLIDAY TABLE SPECIALS .!. •.• ,. VORINOFF 80-PR. BERWICK'S 80 PR.
1::, VODKA01GIN • ~~,c~~~\$& 99
' ,! HALF GAL. e
RIPE OLIVES >oz sou 3 ; S 1 l AR\Y (AllfOl!NI A 51UH SPANISH I' I',.... 1
Monday, Novtmber 22, 1971 , DAILY PILOT 29
SA VI 19c WITH THIS COUPON
COFFEE
FOi.GERS 1-... CAN
LIMIT 1 COUPON PER ~ L WITHTMISCOUPON . I 5
~DULT CUSTOMER ,.
~V. tB·NOV. 24
SAVE 9c WHEN YOU BUY 2
SUGAR
C&H POytDER OR IROWN
WITHTMt5C°'-"ON t 5 llMIT 1 COUPON PU 1-lb. "
ADULT CUSTOMER PKG " NOV. IB·NOV. 24 •
SAVE 27c WITH THIS COUPON LIMIT 1
CRISCO OIL
SALAD OIL 38 ot.
LIMIT 1 COUPON PER ~ WITH THIS COUPON I I
ADUlT CUSTOMER "
NOV. 18·NOV. 24 _
: YOU SA VIE l<k WITH THIS COUPON,
FLOUR
PILLSBURY S-lb. BAG
WITH THIS C0\!2Qfj
tlMIT I COtPON PE. . "
A.DUlT CUSTOMER " NOV. 1-8-NOV. 24
LIMIT I
CREAM CHEESE
PHILADELPHIA 8 OZ. PKG.
WITH THtS COUPON
UMIT 1 COUPON PER
ADULT CUSTOMER
NOV. IB . NOV. 24 29~
MAYFAIR ALUMINUM FOIL
HEAVY DUTY 18"x25' ............................................. . .......... 49<
PITTED RIPE OLIVES 3:,S 1
EARlY CALIF . MAMMOTH 6-0Z CANS DRY WT .............. '"...... t
~~~~~~ !~~N~~~~J~~E 14 " OZ .......................... · 4~ s 1
~~~.~!!~~!.~~.I~~.~~~~!.~'~····················· 49<
ICE CREAM
ARDEN FLAVOR FRESH
~IMPORTED SCOTCH :~;,:~''~'0" ""'c" 19,95
-IMPORTED SCOTCH :i'i:i.o"f'"'0~. """ '3. 99
CANADIAN OEW WHISKY ;;~.'cf!,~~ ""'GM 59. 95
CARA MIA RUM ~.?:~Ji:,"'.""' .. '"'" '2. 99
CALIFORNIA BRANOY :;>;:!,;;c•s•ON '"'" '3.69
Id ~;~~~;o:::~,:~ 49"
-B0,.1'0CT. . . .. ............ 29
, JELLO ULA TIM 2i 4 3' t All fLAVOl!S601 .. ~~~~J~~~~~~.~J::~i'.~~·-·-·-3~s1
~!t~75~
ARDEN EGG NOC 01 49'
ARDEN SOUR CREAM . "' 55'
ARDEN BUTTER ~:;;J.:;~f,~ lb. 81'
STRAIGHT BOURBON :~:t'o'i'ii''to'I~~ ....... """ '3. 99
BARTON'S a T.~f~~5~~MIU.\\801'R ............ f lHH 54.69
CALVERrs EXTRA !,:;~,';';;: "" ·~. -""" '4. 99
IPIN IO.~ FUU '/'llA.\'llS<;H /,\(; /J/1\.\EH
COLD DUCK or c!~~. S .. 89
CHAMPAGNE ',~~';;' •
CHA·TIEAU L-A lllNIE---FIFTH ~
PAULMASSOIHYW•U 11•• LOPIDIV"A"••••w .. u ..... BURGUNDY. CHA8l!S. lt0Sl •... ~HI llllRGUNOY CHMH IS,Cl.ARfl.ROSl Slli ..,..,
ALMADfl BU'"ll'°'·'""(. ,2,. IMP. LlllllAUMILCN 9"' Ml lll OCLAl!!l CHAllttS ~~lf Sit ~!G llll ORCllOC~. .. . .• ~Ht T'
DRY WlllS IOYAL o<CAMO• MATEUS IOSI $ 18 9 BURGUNDY. CHIBllS. RHltl(w£,~ S J 89
IMP PQllluGU(S(WINt ... N•"'"" ~TH ,. l!OS[ PIN!ICHA.llllSfUl lCAltON
STOCK UP ON BIG HALF GALLON SPECIALS
~'!,R~I},~~ !RO!~ERS BRAND~ .. ""; 0 ,,,0" S 1197
CUTTY SARK "" SJ 6 '1 KlSSlER'S IUND '"' S) 0" SC01CHB6P11.SAVl SI 7t ' 'llS aon SAVlllk . UIS
IWIATU "I '"'· S J 3' 9 IALLAITlll'S ,. "· S J 4" IMP OR'I SA\l SI 7ll 'l CAI SCO!Cll SAVI S 1 SI ,., 1, /,Al
UM<MATU VOD llA Siii i n• HIQI s9u 80 Ml SAY£ 4 l c "i C.! 0 . BOUllSON SAVl S0c ~-'"""""" '1 GA!
CAIAIMHMIST S)Mf lllM'l 17'5 1JQ'9 WH15'.l'l 80 Pll SAVl I 1 OD '4 CAI v · SAVl SI Oii •N •·-•-~ GAL.
10•;. DIS.COUNT ON CA$l PURCHA$fS, Ml)( 0t MATCH NATIONAL 8R4ND$
•
ONION SOUP ]"' 1 UPION"S 1 PK . .....•.. . ....•......... 7· ORAN'E JUICE TRmwm ......... .,,, 49, ~;~ .... 4111
~ f~D~~.~!.'.'.."-'.:~~ 15'
LEMONS 10' lARGE SIZE ......... ,,. l.l
SCHILLIN'S HASGiii'
::::.,.~z.N•O.,••H•"'~' 29
::".::' '".Ot.. ...... -..... 49'
1 GRAPEFRUIT
' . -FIRST-OF--
) THESEASON I NEWCROP
DESERT
GROWN
GRAPEFRUIT RED EMPEROR
GRAPES
' '
ADYERTISEDHKISIFFK'fl'if lMIUWID .. NOY. 2.t
175 EAST 17th STREET
COSTA MESA
-LB
CELLO
BA'
~~"~!!!!!},~.~,:.:~. 3 5 c
~!~~-1 .. ~-~ .. ~~.~.~~'~' 1 ()<
•
1
•
. .
DAILY PILOT MondtY, Novtmbef 22. 1971
' .
TURKEY OLIVE CURRY
Olives Perk Up
Extra Turkey
Turkey is the bird of the
Aeason.
But what to do with that bit or delicious white and dark
meat leftover from I he
holiday's repast?
\Vhcn it is tin1e for the left-
over turkey to a~:>.~, curry
a smooth sauce and accent it
wilh the meaty ripe olive
before combining with the
turkey pieces.
It will be delicious served
\Vith hot fluffy rice and spicy
chutney. Or for a no I h er
redreSll of the bird. combine
diced turkey with ripe olives
In a blue cheese flavored°
sauce. Serve this in warm pat·
ty shells for a quick supper
dish.
Thr California ripe olive is
one of today's most convenient
foods. Canned in nine different
sizes .and as unpitted, pitted_, ~!iced, or chopped, it is ready
.for use al a moment's notice
and y,·ill fit all recipe needs. Of
course, ripe olives are also
great for out-of-hand ealing,
too .
TURKEY OLIVE CURRY
I 2/:1 cups canned pitted
California ripe ol ives
. ~~ cup b4tler
l t3 cup chopped 11reen onion
1 cup sliced celery
·2 teaspoons curry po~·der
~Ii cup flour
1 I I0 1'2-0unce; can chicken
broth
"• cup waler
~ teaspoon salt
2 cups diced cooked turkev
Chop ripe olives coarseiY.
Melt butter. Add onion and
celery and cook u n t i I
vege~ables are soft !;>ut not
browned . Stir in curry powder
and flour and cook a·mtnute
longer. Add broth, water and
salt.
Cook. st~rring frequently,
until sauce boils and thickens.
Add turkey and ripe olives.
Cook until heated through .
Serve ~·ith hot cooked rice.
111akes 4 servings.
RIPE OLIVE C H EESED
TURKEY
l 2/3 , ~ups : ~~nneil pitted
CalifomLa tipe oliVes
3 .tablespoons · butter or
margarine·
3 lablesPoons flour · ·
1'2 teaspoOn salt
111 tc:1spoon peppei'
1 ~ teaspoon nutmeg
1 tup canned chicken broth
u.i cup hal~_ind haU
2 tablespoons crumbled blue
cheese
1 tablespoon sherry wine
2 cups diced cooked· turkey
: 2 ·tablespoons 'chopped pi-
miento · ·
F'roun patty shells.
Cut ripe olives into wedges.
Melt butter. Stir in flour :sall,
pepper. and nutmeg .
Gradually stir in chicken broth
and haU and half. Cook,· l!lir-
ring constantly, until . sauce
thickens.
Add blue cheese and sherry.
Stir in ripe olives, turkey, and
pimiento .. Heat lhoroughly.
Heat patty shells according to
package directions Serve
turkey mixture in patty shells.
1'1akes 6 servings.
Chain of Cranberry
Recipes Handed Down
111any recipes for traditional
treats with cranberries ha ve
been banded down from
g!neralion to generation.
Here, for your culinary col·
ltction a~e three recipes whi<'h
have proved delicious through
the years.
CRANBt.:RRY
FRUIT·NlIT BREAD
(Makes I 9x5·inch loaf1
2 cups sifted all-purpose.
:nour_
t cup sugar
t I.Ai teaspoons bsiking powder
1-t teaspoon b·aklng soda
1 tea:!lpoon salt
1 egg
:i, cup orange Juice
l lilblespoon grated orange
rind
;,,. cu p cooking oil
4 cup chopped nuls
2 cups rresh cranberries.
coarsely chopped
Preheat ovtn to 350 degrees
F. Silt flnur , sugar. baking
powder, baking soda aod SAit
together. Combine eg;. orange
Juice, oran~e rind and cooking
oil. Be.a\ well. Add egg mile·
ture to dry lngred1enl11 all at
onct.
Mix: only ·to da mpen .
Carietully fold in nul6 and
cranberriei. Spoon into greas·
ecl9x5:d-JnchJoaf pan. Bake iJ!
moderate oven 1 J50 degrees
F'.1 for about l hour, or until
crust is brown and loaf tests
done.
RemQve .. from pan. Cool.
Store over night for easy slic-
ing.
for individual ·1o~ves: fill 6
individual loaf pans . {about
4x2-inches) 2/3 full. BAke in
n1oder11te oven 1350 degrees
F:-1-for-25'10 :Jtminule!i . or un.
Iii loaves tesl done snd sre
well Jjrowned. Remove from
pans and cool.
l~rttinute Cranberry Sa uce
In a saucepan combine 4
cups (I po,und ) Ocean Spray
fre sh or frozen cr11nberrle:o:. 2
cups sugar itnd 2 cups \\'atrr.
Brin2 to 11 boil. stirring , un-
til sugar dissoh·es. Lower heal
and · CflO~ 5 minutes, or until
berries pop. Makes about 4
cups.
Craoberry OranJ?e Re:lisll
IUnconkedt
Grind I cups tl pound\
Octan Spray fresh or frozen
cranberries and 2 small seed-
ed orange~. skin and alt Stir
1n 1 ~2 cups sugar. Makes
about 3 cups. Serve as 1
relish with meat or poultrv.
or as 1 toppln& for cake or Ice
crem.
•
. . . .. .. • ••_:. . . . . ' . . . . ' . . . . .. ·: . ••
PILOT-ADVERTlSU ,j:'
·. For Thanksgivi~g
NO ONE can nttt~
El Rancho Festive Grocery Specials!
S & W Cranberry Sauce ........... 4 i $1
Thanksgiving is ih~ time '"'hen you'll '"ant to serve the best! \Vhole or strained • , . No. 300 ••• and a label you're proud t()>serve!
Birdseye Vegetables ................ 3 i $1
:t;rcnch Beans v:i th Almonds, Mixed Vegtt.ables v.·ith Onions, Onions in Cream Sauce, Broccoli Hollandaise, Rice Peas and Mushrooms or Glazed Beel.5!
I · C · 79c p· I . 3 ~ $1 ce . . ream . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1neapp e . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Royal Host •• , premium pack,,, half.gallon in round cartons! Dole's ••• Ko. 2 cans •• , Chunk, Crushed, Sliced or Tidbits , , , in syrup.
Mixed Nuts ............ 79c Butter ....................... Sic
?ifake the snack tray more inviting ••• Bell Brand, , • 13 oz. can. Grade "AA" quality .•• enjoy fr,eshness in DariGold quality [ 1 lb. ctn.
Spiced Crabapples ............. 43¢
So appropriate to the holiday ... S&\V', •• 14 oz.
Apple Rings . . . . . .. .. . . ...... 43¢
So colorful, so flavorful .•. and S&,\'!.,, 14 oz.
Spiced Pears .................... 49¢
Cinnamon red or minted -green~ .. S&\V .• 14 oz.
Spiced Peaches ................ 39¢
Griat company for turkey or ham : S& \\' •• 30 oz.
Cucumber Pickles .............. 49¢
S&\V.,. crisp slices in the 22 ounce jar'.
Ripe· Pitted Olives .............. 39'
S&W , •• Extra large size! ?\o. 300 can.
Rogers Petite Peas . . . .. .. . 41,, $1
Tiny, tender, and oh, so S\veet! Ko. 303
Kraft Mayonnaise .............. 59¢
liiake your salad something ~pecial : . , • Quart,,
Small Whole Yams ............ 39¢
S& \V ... s"•eet, smooth texture! .•. Xo. 303.
Imo Food Dressing ............ 33¢
Replaces sour cream! ••. 16 oz. c'n.
Avocado Dip ................. 59¢
Ca!aYo ••. tha\v and ser,·e ... 7 oz. ctn.
S& W Clams ...................... 39¢
?.I inced or Chopped ••• Ko. ~'.z Ca ns.
Cool Whip .............. ~ ....... 59¢
Spoon it o\·er de!'sert : ... Frozen, 9 oz.
Brandied Mince Meat ... -...... 69 ¢
S&\V ••. for a finer pie! ••. 28 oz. jar.
Ch erries Jubilee ................ 79 ¢
S&\V.,, for a festi,·e dessert '. ... 13 oz.
Miniature t·1ilrshma1Jows ..... 19c
Add glamor to rams: , •• Kraft ... 10 oz.
Holiday Pies .................... 89~ Yuban Coffee . .. .. . .. .. . .. .. 83~
Pumpkin, ~'lince, Apple • , . Harris ••• 44 oz. big! T'vo lb. can •• , $1.65 Three lb. can .• , $2.49
Super Holiday Produ ce!
Red Yams ............. 19~
S\\•ect golrien meat , •. so smooth llnd butter.v '. Serve baked or candied, do tted \\"ith sweet
miniature marshmallo~'S ! Picture pretty on the table, delightful to eat!
-cran erries ........ -29~
]\fake it Rn old fashioned hol iday! ... make A sauce, or R. pudding.,. or a string for color·
ful decoration! , •• 1 lb. package. Plump berries that '"ill cook so 'rell !
Pears .................. 4 lbs. s1 Potaf oes 10 LB. BAG 39e
S"·eet ~krt tetts •• , for the ho1iday fru it bo"·i! U.S. No. 1 Russets , , bake 'em for the holiday J
Red Radishes ..... 21M 19~
Bri'rht color ..• bri~ht !111\·or, too! Bunches. ' .
Romaine ................. 25¢
So colorful on salad plates ••• crisp leave.s f
Green Onions .... <. 21M 19'
Fla \for that enhances s:ilads ••. bunches.
. I
IHa ve a Happy Holiday! ·ARCADIA : Sun set "d Hun1m,:on 01 NM· PASADENA: r/li/; SOUTH PA SAD[t':,1
ill Rancho Center ) ., J.1'0 Wr:sl Colorildo Blvd , •1 Fre mont and H unl1 u~.. 1r
"
. ... .,. ... . . . . . ~ . . ....
"' . . . ' ' 1 Pll0l·4DYERTISEIL -' M~~J. · No~r' 22: i 971 .
I
• I • •' '• '
I
. . .t . . •
.America's greatest feast day! Serve El Rancho
'
,
I , ' Turkey!· ·
fl-tich r ,them for flavor! •
•
L
:EL RANCHO'S
GRADE "A"
•••••••••••••••••••••
•
l"ou'llnever find finer ~uality ! Selected from San Fernando flocks. "'here they're. il'0\\'11 to our specifications ••• and rushed to us to insure freshnesg I
•
EL RANCHO'S
GRADE "A"
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
The superior bird ••• with satisfaction a-uaranteed l Here's the one -you'll serYe "'ith pride ••• the quality you r family deserves for Thanksgiving!
F . . T NORBESl 35 c rozen oms .. ~~~~~:·~~. lb
Norbest ••• a name you know and trusf • , • and "•ith the Tender Timer, that tell.§. you '''hen it's done I
F H NORBEST 39c rozen ens .. G.~~~~:·~:·. lb
Tender Timer included "'ith every bird • 1 at a pt-ice you'd expect to pay for lesser quality ! Great value!
Roasting Chickens ..... 69~ Fresh Water Ducks .... 69~
Fresh ••. and big ! .•. 5 to 7 lb. a\·erage. So plump , •• -and so tasty and tender!
Fully cooked , •• heat and serYe f or a
nlain course that's sure to be just right !
Choose either Bar l\[ or Cure 81 •• ,
,,·hole or half .•• to offer the size that
guits your family's needs I
&AR·M OR HORMEL CURE 81
Cooked Shrimp ...... S2.891~ Pork . Sausage ............... 69~
Large size . , • perfect for a tasty sh.rimp cocktail I El Rancho's .•. old fashioned style ! Pure!
Sliced Bacon ................. 59~ Eastern Oysters .. FRESH!.. 51.09 It.
El Rancho's . , • ranch slyle thicker slices! For turkey dressing (Western, 10 o&. 99c)
King Crab Legs ......... ~1.99 ib. Extra Lean Grind ........... 89~
F ro m Alaskan crabs • , , for more goodness! Fresh al ways ••• lean, hearty beef!
For Feast FiXin 's!
Mrs. Cubbiso.n' s ~ressing 4.9~
.Nil purPQSe or q<>rn Bread ••. 13 oz. pkr. . . .
Chicken Broth ............. 19¢
s"'anson's ••• flavor your dressing! 13 oz.
Cocktail ·Tacos n •••••••••• 39¢
Rosa ri la •• frozen, h.eat and serve! 51;! oz.
Rice for S tufting ......... 69¢ ·
Uncle Ben 's,,• Long Grain & '''ild. 6 oz.
Heavy Duty Foil ........... 49¢
Reynolds Aluminum 25 !t. (75 ft. $1.49)
Turkey Lacer .............. 25'
Do it right , • , and so much easier_!
Glass Baster ................ 39'
Take fu ll advantage of flavorful juices!
Roasting Pans ............ 79:.
Disposable aluminum • , • choice of sizes.
Meat Thermometer .... $1.98
Stainless steel , , • don't guess, kno\v !
Delicatessen Specials!
so much value irl thfi of fefl Le3n ham, ful fy cooked .•. (\·jth that speclal flavor that tells you it's from
Rath ! (Paar or Pullman shaped •• , 3 lb. can ••• $3.~9} Have a wonderful dinner!
Goudas and Edams ......... , ............. 59¢ Fisherman's Wharf Dressing ........•. 39¢
Serve thin slices for appetizers , •• Kaukana Club .•• 7 oz. For tasty saladS! ••• 8 ••· (Blue .•• 45e Roqueforl, •• 5iie)
Lassco Shrimp Cocktail ................. 33~ Kaukana Cheese Crocks ............... '1.49
St.art the dinner·with these! .• , 4 oz. (Crab ••• 39cJ Natural cheese spread ••• for snacks, stuf!inrl 12 oz.
Holiday Spirits!
Paul Masson Wine ..... f!~.H ..•. s1.99 Canada Dry Mixers .. ~.~~-4 • ~1
Choose Club Soda or Ginger Ale-.:..--. both favorites t Emerald Dry ot ~ecastle , •• serve with ham or turkey!
Dry Sack ~herry ....... ~n." ...... $4.99
Serve a glass of aherry before the call to dinner!
Le Domaine Champagne 5THs2.97
Extra Ory. Champagne or Colorful Cold Due)< at thl& price I
Harvey's Scotch ..... ~1_LF~L .••• s11 .99 El Rancho Scotch ... , .. r.1".1! ....•. sS,79
Save $1.00 on this size ••• a brand you're glad to serve ! Bottled In Scotland !or quali ty control ! (Quorf ••• $6.19) .
i~ t.Jfect Mon .. T11c1 .. Wed., '' •:;, 2,. No srtles to dra[ers.-
9 t > 9. Closed. Tha.n kso i~·ino Day.
K-amchaJRa Vodka~---~~-~~ .... ~8.88
SaYe .ttc . , • on a brand that's earned it's reputation 1
Christiall Bros. Brandy ~1L s11r97
'Vhat a wo nderful \\•ay to brine the meal to a close r
'
::/i1J. HUNTtNGTDN. BEACH: . ni;r: NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Newpor1 01,; '""
. Warner atifAlgonquin 1Boardwall Ccnte.i •·.· 1555 Castblult Dr .[altblult Y•llaie Center • Have a Happy Holiday?j
•
.. -' .... ·. . Monii.,, NOllttllbet' 22, 1~71
TREE TOPPED FOR PLEASURE
Cake Sweeten.s
Christmas Rush
The holidays often become a
time of scurring around,
trying to get a lot done in very
little time .
If you are suddenly in need
of an appealing treat for your
child's school Christmas party
or a club meeting, why not try ·this' ·simple but del ighUul
Christmas Tree cake?
CHRISTMAS TREE
CAKE
1 package chocolate or white
cake mix
1 package (J cup I semi-
sweet chocolate morsels
-'ti cup sour cream
~~ teaspoon salt
2\i cups sifted
co nfectioDerS'.' sugar
Add i t i onal sifted
confectioners' sugar
Appetite Alert:
Prepare and. bake 'cake
according to p a c .k a g e
-directions, using a 13 x 9 x 2-
inch pan. CoQl lhCll:'°"1gi;llY. To
prepare frosting, melt' .aefnl.
sweet chocolate morsels over
bot . (not 'boiling) war.er.
Rtnlove fn:lm we.ter: blend
in 'sour cremt and salt.
Gradually beat' in
confectioners' sllgai-.... Frost
cake and let frosting Set.
TIP: For Christmu tree
design, cut a sheet or paper
the e>i:act siie of cake. Draw
tree. pattern as shown in
photo. Cut out 11tencil;
Carefully Jay on top of cake.
Sift confectioners' sugar over
openings in stencil. Carefully
lift stencil awa y.
:YIELD: 12 servings.
Count Calories
With Blessings
By BARBARA GIBBONS
If the Pilgrims had bee:n 'On
a diet there probably wouldn't
be any Thanksgiving Day.
A few slabs of turkey and a
plateful of celery slicks aren't
much to celebrate with; yet,
Uuit''s all most diet books tell
you to eat.
"You can enjoy Thanksgiv·
ing." they say. "Eat all the
-turk~-want! Just keep
away from the dark meat, the
skin, the dressing, the gravy,
the cranberry sauce, the
mashed potatoes, the creamed
onions, the appetizers, the
cider, the wine, the pumpkin,
apple and mincerqeat pie!"
Here's my Slim Gourmet
Guide to surviving Thanksgiv·
ing with S!ams Intact:
can also make a mperb stuff.
ing that never &eta soggy
from leftover protein or diet
bread . APPETIZERS -s o u p , celery stlcks, tomato juice, Be sure to add Iota of chop-. kl h · w_, ped celery and onlone:, plenty pie es, 5 nmp cocal.dil and all of fresh panlley and chopped•
the other little goodies set out up giblets _ the more you add before the meal are really "de-appetizers ... you know. So the less fattening it is! VEGETABLES -don't let don"t dispen'se_ with these the sheer size Of your turkey
festive holiday additions. If tempt you into short-cutting on there ever was a day to "ruin vegetables "since there's . so your dinner," this is it! much else to eat. anyway."
TURKEY -white-meat Mashed turnips, parsleyed
turkey ls only ba!f as fatten ing carrots, green beans and
as most cuts of beef, pork, mushrooms, squash -,these
lamb or ham, so eat hearty! are colorful additions-to ·a.holi.
Buy a "biggie" so you 'II have day table that can compete for
lots left over for low-calorie plate room with a. more fit·
lunches and diMers to come. telling rare.
But don ·t buy one of those THE "ET CETERAS,. -
turkey's that been larded cranberry · sau'ce is spec.
under the skin-with extra tacularly fattening so limit
vegetable fat -that's just yourself to a dab. unless you
what you don't need ? live where a. diet brand is
Our grandmothers made available.
marvelously moist and tender The kind of wine that goes
turkeys without any help Crom best with turkey, a crackly
meat packers armed with dry white wine like Chablis. is
--gTease gun ! ·Why-p:ay turkey only 60 calories a three-ounce
prices for vegelable fat? glass. Cider)11 even le&S, if you
GRAVV grease l.s can limit yourself to such a
tasteless, yet grease ls ·what tiny sip.
makes most gravies ofi.Jimits DESSERT -if you must
for calorie-counters. Drain the samp1e everything. you 1 re
meal juices from the pan and safer to have yoor deaert int-•
quick-chill In your freezer so mediaWy after diruter when
you can lift off the fat before Jirnitln'-YOW"aelf to a mini
thickening your gravy. portion won't attm like such a
Cornstarch is a more sacrifice.
c a I orie-conscious thickener LEFTOVERS -free z e
than nour because you need ev~rytbing; oot l1f sight. out of
less. Fat-free turkey gra vy mind! Or be a g!:neroo.s
can be as low as 20 calories. a hostess and bundle up all the
quarter-cup, while the same fattening exb'as into little
amount of greasy gra vy is ''Care Packages '' tor yOUl"
over too. · guests to take home. Aller all.
MASHED POTATOES -they al• al your boo,.,"' !J>ey
pre.pa~ with skim milk won't have any 1eftoveri ot
they're Jess than-50 calories a their own ~
haU-cup: it's the melted butter (Chocolate Chip OJokies,
or greasy gravy that packs on Hermits, Kisses, Butterscotch
t.he J)OUnd&I BIL a candied Slices -for these and otMr
sweet potato is close to 300 "de-calorlzed'' dellg~, ittnd"a
calories~ -· s t am p e d . self-admssea.
ORESSlNQ. -xes, you ran envelope and as ~ts to
make a lower-calorie aturfing RECIPES." 16 Iroquois Road,_
11ilnp\y by leaving out the et · "SLIM GOURMET COOKIE
Lra faL Packaged dry-dreselnc-RECIPES.-'' 16..lroquoia Road,
mixes al'e>tasy to use, but you Cranford. N.J, 07016) •
•
•
-·· ' .. . .. • •
I! D.il(Y lll.OT Mondi;<, N....,bft ?J, .!lli.
CANNED FOODS ... ,lll 2'n A 46 -0UHC( CAN ::I f
YUBAN COFFEE •••••. ·~;a9 •
llCiolJW , DU~ Of; llKltl-MATlC • • ' • • • ' r
tll STORES
CLOSED TMlllKS61~11{6 DA'f
tMURSDl'f, 110~. lS
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
YU BAN COFFEE ••••• '11: 2 .ss
Rl(il!l.U. Oii lllClll ~!IC
YUBAN ..••••• 1'1.1'~~~~~! 1.35
,,...CRANBERRY SAUCE . '~!24'
VEGETABLES •. 11:~rt.1 '.0M11~1~~4gc SAFEGUARD SOAP 11~~oi.1~~;t~'.:21 •
IUNOt wr ll.lNS wnH J.LMOHC~. MIKED VtGnuus IVORY SOAP L•UNO.T 12 WITI< (llollO. s,t.\10, llOCCOll Sl'IUI WITM HOlLIN[>,l,IU o o o • • • S'rOlW 1
~UC! l'tJ.S .l.llD ll(I WI!~ lllUWOOMS, suao um "''1111 IAlJ
OWICol Gt.Ill ot swtu ro1.uou w1r11 uoYoN wc..ui BIZ PRE·SOAK ~v "01 07
1lll ""D O• W~I. IXWI V'l!l Y ""' .... '""'" .
PET RITZ PIES .••••• .':~.l34 ' GAIN DETERGENT ••. ·~~l.41 00"" PIE FILLING ••. ~o.~1~~~~!37 ·
CY" CHERRIES ."~H~·~:"·:~t~S 34•
~PINEA'PPLE ••. ~ll:1 ~'J;t.;:!36 •
.,,u ""'N'l"'"'o•'u""'u11 ere CASCADE o.~w.u11«001•':-&7 '
DINNER FRIES •.. "."~ ;:>;:~~ 41 • -TIDE DETERGEiiT. · ~:::2.s9
QIUNI, ous~o Ol SLIClO SCALLOPS 0111,flllll. Ll!iCil!IOl 11 67 V -• • IOJ
• o • • • • • ll OZ JllCG •
,,...PRINCELLA YAMS . .",:;31 •
O"" ONIONS ······· !~1~'o°r~!31 ·
,,...3 BEAN SALAD •• ,,,.!!'Ji 33 •
_..LE SUEUR PEAS ••. .';:; 32 •
_..MUSHROOMS .. ~;.•;,~~32 •
'll'lll)IJ 01t •IC.ID
SHRIMP C011-fU!~IOUl~~N <lll089 '
• • • • • • • • • • & 01 PltG
BEEF STEA WS ~OIO~llllllTTl~iO 73' ft • o o o t CT.nOZ IJ.G
ENCHILADAS ••••• ".",~~f.:l 41 •
lllF, (14151 Cl QU(l((N
HAWAIIAN PUNCH .. ,,,,!!:39'
PACKAGED GOODS
STUFFIN BREAD .•.. 11·\•6v~r\~!i 27 '
ROLLS llAl'l'tllOAlll:OWM'Sil'I'[ 35 '
' • • • • • • • • • • 12Cl P~G
WlA, HIAYYDUTY44c RITZ CRACKERS ...... ~l:l1 45'
fl"'4 COOKIES ..•••• !-'~~o~:~ 41 '
Ml~IO CklMl! O• !llCi.lil '"'Aff~ 37-SQ. FT
IOll . . . .. .,..WHEATIES ....•• ,,1!'/i'i40 •
O""' PIE CRUST MIX n~~~~~~~ 26 '
,,...BEEF STEW '""-99• ,,...DATE BAR MIX ."."~?,1';J:47 '
• • • • loO OZO.M COCONUT l.l(fl'~Ajj(illFU.'l57•
CHUNK TUNA CHICl!ll Olh<l ~U 36• O"'"' •• ·~IDDlO l~Oll'I(~
tlGHTMUlc• ,OZO.M DEL MONTE PRUNES llU•fl!l39 o-oJMINCE MEAT •.•• 11:0~~59 • · 1:::~~ •
-DRESSINGS ru"''"'"'" 35 • ,,...RAISINS ....••• ""'" 33 •
.,--•••• ao11onu PANCA"E MIX .lLflTJlMl"'l 69 l ,OCXI 15\ANO 01. (.ll.UI~ O"'"' I\ • , • 6'0ll.l~ 1
~DRESSING wi~1011111.1.L 1£Mu1 .1.o 57• -r-•••• , .1.oz101nt _
LOG CABIN SYRUP ••• ,;::l 71 • CALO CAT FOOD .,,,,14 ,
PRESERVES ~"'""63 • ,,... · .. 0 " O'""'-•Slt....,.HUf·l101 JAii C>llO.ltl ' ~IDMlY OR OtlO:IH & UVI~
PET FOODS
,,... GRAPE JELLY •.. '."'i,'i',~:: 45 • ,,... PURR CAT FODD •. ~l!r:!l 3 •
PICWLES MllT J41111t0Slf•. l'0!.1!<11, SI ~DOG FOOD Vf'~"".t.l1011 c~o1~ n or'-It. •• o•"°oouc ?llOZJ.t.11 • v---•••••• 1s ,oz oM .., 1
.,..cHICIUN BROTH .• ,.·:::m:1a ·
o'-KRAFT TOPPING""'.".'f:J','~ 25 • FRESH PRODUCE
-,,. 8ANANAS
t' ,,...-"~ 101 PE11 Cf:HTC:H IOUITA
GlOllITTA 41 . ( 111:.lHD
MAlYUOl A > I THll'1Nl.ST 8 ILICIS I' ' ' ' ' 0 """' C " YO U C°"N 30-0UNQ CAN ' 1uv ,. .. • • . "')J. l ~:~:~ LI
MIXED NUTS .• ;.1.~R1-~~J~1~79 • '.. < • \J ~fi71~~
CORN Gl!!HGl.l~l(Rll~ll'l'll 23' · · · · · ~·~"""' """" RUSSET POTATOES
FROZEN FOODS
TACQUITOS ..••••. m:::;.~~71 '
CHEESE PIZZA ••••• ,.g,~;; 63'
FRIED CHICKEN . ~·:"'f,t,';:'J l.67
ONION RINGS ....• ~~,'~ 34•
CREAMED SPINACH • ~~'i.'.J 31 •
"' 10 ~~~~g 44• N0 .1 l.lO
HOLIDAY NUTS
NOW AV .. ILl l LI. t M OUI. ••OOUC I. Ol•l•f• ......... ., ... c•o• 0 ' I L .. 0 "0 1. •••llL·
MUT I , ~l l lll f l ... 1.10 "U TI , 01(.l"I•
.... L .. UTI . •lL ,, .. ,,T ou .. LnT .lT OU • LO ...
1111(0U"f ••«•.
DISCOUNT PRICED HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
I TGRAcTTi1 1 '' ~J\~\WBONDED S2WORl 9 RAZOR RAZOR ,_
~1l~~!.T.~J:~~IJ~~~ .. ~~.~.~.'.".:~~.~ .'::'.::::.::'.:'. 7 9 c
~~~J:~ .!~,A!~~~s~ ........ ~~'..'.'.~.'.''.'.'.~'..'.'.'.'.'.'. .... 69 c
NATURALLY FEMllllNE ULTRA BAN f~
Fem inin e kygiene J l 9 DEODORANT 99 C ;~
deodorant powder spr ay Regula r Unscent ed 9'.
3 OL 5-0Z c'AN ..!:.~
P.!~~,!~~.~.~-~~~.! ........... 49(
PEARL DROPS
TOOTH 123 POLISH
2.75 OL
PEPTO BISMOL
Mii. CUlllNSO~S 6 c CORN lll AO Ol
All PUlP'OSI
13-0UHCl
IOX . . . .
DAIRY PRODUCTS
EGG HOG ••.••••• ~o/t1:,~~47 1
LADY LIE BUTTER • ,,1~~TI~~~8l'
NUCOA ~OllMA•Go~lll! 33 • • • • • • • • • UOI0.~1011
ORANGE JUICE •• ~n..:~~,:~~71 "
REDDI WHIP •••••• i~7~58 '
SOUR CREAM ••••• no1't::,~ 51 .
ICE CREAM ....... ,(;l.t'tf:~65 "
MRS. SMITH'S PIES
MINCIMUT sg • 01 PUMPIUH A
44-0UNCI f
"'
BEVERAGE • SPIRITS
CHAMPAGNE ••• ""~~~~2.49
~fGUIU, ~Ill( OR {Ol~ DUCK
WINE 11AlVl51DAY Plll•C~Atllll 15
• • • • • • • • '1 GAllOH I OlfU o
MATEUS ROSE WINE . '.'.~:2.89
PAUL MASSON !~1~,~~:!o~~:l.99
VOD "A Ci-Ol011:•t ec"00'3 66 " ••••••• ou.u1 toinr ,
BOURBON •lll!IJC~Y.!61'1100'.'Y•s 11 • • UJC~f QU.lU IOTnl o
WHISKY •• ·86'''~~~~:0~~6.95
JIM BEAM •. k~~~~"~:g~S.39
BEEFEATERS GIN • 11119~':;~: 6.39
SCOTCH WHl\(l,GOlDI0\,80,~001 4 98
• o • • • o .QIJAll IOlnt o
GORDON'S GIN ••. un~~~i4 .69
J & B SCOTCH ..... :1;.:i,~~;j1~:7 .60
SCOTCH ll'Mlso:Y,(Hllff 86P11001 6 29 .... , .. 11n11 to1n1 •
KAMCHATKA ••. ~g:t~::~;a.aa
:r.: w oo,ui.; ;.r; :.YJ ;oo ill: ;.y;cr.;
~Von de Kamps
AN OUTSTANDING VARIITT
OF FRISH BAKERY GOODS
ANAHllM • l lG S.. St9'• CMlll' ""'-
.lHAHUM • 720 W. l• P•llM "''· Al USA • 27J I. , •• ,_ StTMI
IAlDWlll PAil • 1Jt40 ., .... llf•.
CAltOCiA rail • 111• M•1•n "''·
W. COVINA • l•tt.nol Sh.,,ill9 CIR.
OOWNIY • IJ20 fiu 11011• llY4.
GllDIN Gl:OVf -IJ07S liiclW SI.
GUNOAll . llJS W. Glt11111k1 lhd,
GLINOAll • 1000 Sci. C111tr1I Av1.
Hlt™LANO ,Alli.· llJ W. Avtlllilt 4S
HUNTINGTON llACll • •OJI Atl111t1 Al t.
lA Ml lADA • l1 M1'1dt $ht"llif C111,
ll ll.IWOOD • l1kwwoe4 Sh.,,111, Ct11.
1.AWNDlLI • 14411 S1. Ht"'h-II••· UNMOll • 10101 ,,.in. Al't .
lfllWOOO • 107 21 A11e11tic A••·
lQNG llACN • 61JS l. S,ril<1 51.
I. LOS AllGllU -J40J I. l•ttklp A•t.
MONIO'llA • 4J1 W, M1tlltll'lfUll O!ht
11\otlTlllUO • IJJ Mt. Wikt•
NO•WAUC • 1101' Ale11•1 11\oil..
o••NGI • 26'10 (. Ch1p111a11 ,,, ••
, .. SADINA .... I. via. Strttt
SAM,TINAIOIN '74t-1111lnt St.
(,SAN GAlllU • •JJ l. lt1 T11•1 11•L
SAN '1010 • 16)6 • 1Sth h.
1AMTA MONICA • 2627 U1u1ll ll•L
SOUTH Got.Tl • l211 flrt1!t11t th-•.
llOONOO llACM • 111J Art1tll 1"1L
JOHNSON I. J OHNSON JOHNSON & JOHNSON _ TOllot.NCl • 21JG '•dfk C111t Nwy, r TOllAJllCI • "'° "'11"4t lh•. BABY POWDER COTTON SWABS ~~:~'\,::~.:~:~ !~.'.-.11,1 "·
Sup.rlln. mo\itur•· ~ Oouble-tip $of et). swabs for WUTCHlSTll • 1101 llltc•lll '""' ' WUTMINSTll • 1J011 S,rlrlt•le St,
re1l1tanf baby powder 94 C ears, nose, etc, Non·steril 9• 9 9 c w1111n11. lJOJS 111111 f1 •••·
l4 OL TWIN TRAY WMITTill • 117$0 1. w•lttler 11-4.
WllMINGTOlf • ltt2 Nt. J.,tllill
• \ . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Monday, Nowrnbtr 22. 1971 s PILOT-AOVEOTISE~ I
•
Every Cut Is Discounted And Guaranteed With Our "Bond"
ljSDA FOOD
STAMPS GLADLY
.ACCEPTED
TURKEYS
lOOK POI THI USDA OIADE A SHllLD WHIN YOU
IUY A TUIKET. •. IT II YOUI GUAIANTEE Of THI
VllY flNEST .
TOMS
LAHCAlil'•ll: l ll:ANO
11·11 LI $
HENS
LANC:AliT l ll •ll:AMD
11-\JL•li
,.,Mn•lly Ml•ttetl fOf' tol' 111111U1r. SELF -BASTll& ,. ........... _ .. ,, '"'" "·' ·-· "' -1u . tofl<llo•, uflo•ly -.Ucl6utl
HARVEST DAY TURKEYS
-~!~~ 44' R ~!~~ 49c w 1t.11Llli LI w 11.n1..t s LI
SWIFT'S PREllUI YOUI&
BUTTERBALL TURKEYS
R!!!S 48' R ~!~~ 53c w 11-nL•li LI w 11.1)1..1$ LI
Every cul of our meal iii "BONDED".
Our bond is your money bock
gua rantee of cbmplete solisla c-
tion.
f,~,~~.~.~-'~T.~~s . 79•
COOKED SHRIMP 79< 1 01,ACl(AGE .................. .
~
ROUND STEAK
CINTIR CUT' 3 I O'IE-1'1 • c IO'IDED TO ...
DUAL ITY l l!EI'
• LB
GROUND
BEEF
:.~; 5ac
PltG 7 L8
l'AT COHTe'IT APPll:OX. 1J 'Ell:CEHT
A. Per'sion prin t sk irt,
solid bodice: acetate/
nyl on, ocrvlic: S·M-l.
T -BONE STEAK
TAILS Off
I D'IDllDTDI'
OUALll'l IElll'
CHUCK ROAST
ILADICUT53 I O'IDIO TOI' c
QUAl..11''1 lllt:I" _
· · LI
STANDING RIB ROAST LAllG!' ENO
IO'IOl!D TOI'
OUAl..IT'l llEF 88~
93 ~. CROSS RIB ROAST ""~~~~~.~~~~~,,··
~~~~W~l..~ON~~~o~~EI.. .:::~~~.:63c
LADY LEE BACOI 53•
ll..!CID·l La PKO .................... ..
Tast y Discount Priced Delicatessen Items!
~}.~,~~~J.!,~~!.s ... ,ti'.'.~~ 65, ~~,~~~"CHE.ESE·····"·""" 39 ,
CREAM CHEESE , NATURAL CHEESE ,
U.DTLI( ................. 10?,IG 37 flSMEl,.UT1'SLICl5 •..•••••• 60Z,IG 49
~.~~~11~IN~S ...... '""" 83, ~~~,R!~~~ .. ~~;,~:.~.~~~r'.~'.. 69 '
DRY SALAME CHUB 4, HAM GLAZE ,
GALLO ITALIAN ......... , •.. 13 OZ ~KG 1 SUGAI I. JPICl ............ 14 OZ J.ll 47
.. This sy mbol denotes
th ose items available
ONLY of DI SCO UNT CENTERS.
.!f?ONLY
IMITATION
B. Two <olor ocetote Chovosette, S-M-l. TREE
(AlS 1011 <•> s9a6
3 PC. PANT SET
' j i .
\
• 141 1ips
• Scotch pine type
. Disassembles
• lo>I> 1476 for years
ASSORTID DlSIGNI
GIFT BOXES 99<
I
\ E
\ L
< c
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.. \ . .
. i Y~\ \. I\ I .
ASSORTID
CHRISTMAS LAMPS 119 1-11'---H-,
E. Pull-on type pants of 100'~
polyester crepe; wide leg 1tyl• s7a1
in assorted colors. Sites 6-16.
MEN'S PAJAMAS s3 9'
WllAltlHG .lP,AlllL NOT AVAU,A•L• AT 5AHTA /llOHICA
\. iJ\ ~ .... ~.
ELECTRIC
XMAS FIREPLACE 199
16 1/2·1 NCH LONO
PLUSH STOCKll& 56 <
6 ROLL PACK 26" WIDE
FOIL SIFT WRAP 139
'~l~IL~l~N:Cl:::IJ~OO~~LD:l~N~C=o:ug:h~M~ed~;c:l~ne~.~·~·~··~·~··~·~··~·~··~·~·:3~0~L:.$~1:.1~1;.~~·=~:•:":'':':":":·:•n:4:0:'""":::~::·,::~ l lSTIRINI COUGH CONTltOL LOZINGIS 11 '1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. l •c • • • "OMr ,,1,1 Prt"cUU ,,11,, 1~1,1111111 OttM lrl'u 11 N·•ll•ctht 1r1m M11101r, ll1¥1m1tr 21~• -1'••1ttr, N1vtin11r 1111.
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5 PILOT ·ADVERTISER N Monday, Novembtr 22, l~J,
All Safeway Stores
CLOSED
Thanlcsgiwing Day Now. 25 . ..
Manor House YOUNG.GR DED 'A'
TURKEYS
USQA Grade 'A'
Prem iu m Quality
HENS TOMS
10 1014 lbs-l6 to22tbs.
l'I. 43 c AvrJ. Wt. lb.
Self-Basting
TURKEYS
• Safeway Premiu m
Quarity G'rade 'A' '
• Poppy Pre·S~asoned
Coo k in the Bag
16 to 22 lbs. lb
bg. Wt. Tom •
Beef Roast
0-Bone Shoulder-USDA Choice
. Lancasler ·Farms
Grade· 'A' Hens
10to14 lbs. Avg. Wt. 38'' Plump & Tender lb. .
Fresh: Turkeys ,~_;;.~;';,.4Sc
USDA Gm~ A Scifewov Premium QuoLity ll
Tom Turke , ... ., ..... , .... ,_ 49 YS Bvnerball • 1 tr22·1bL 1~ c
Hen Turkeys .~!!;:~~J,·1~W~'" 1L55'
Giant Tom Turkeys ~: ~·;~~ "39'
Boneless Roast '"1~'"'"""'' 10.89' Chuck Steak usoA<>0'""" 10.59' USDA Cho1c.e 8ttl $ f l~~oriul S!ode Cut
"'"' "'" anne ams : o~~~~~ S ~~i $459 Boneless Steak U'"s1o"A~'.~,',',~~ 10.99' C d H ' '
Beef Brisket i:.'l~;~~~;t;;, ,._98' Fully Cooked Ham '"11 '"'"'~"" 58' · ~'IOry-S1noited I•.
F B t • Drurn1tick • Thi;h5 • \\'ho't 69 • ryer reas s Lt9s (Botks ' Necks Ill. 1Q1•. c lamb Rtb Chops (sma1fr;.~'.'.':~1$1.69) 1._$)29
Gallo Salame Chubs ,,~';','. .. ~:t 98'~ Center l!ork Chops ~~;:::-~~ ,..98'
BEL·AIR
PIES
POTATO
CHIPS
Porty Pride-Twin Pock
•
IO Y2-oz.·
pkg.
'
LUCERNE
EGGNOG
·sooa
POP
Crogmont-Refreshing Flavor.
' • Quarts$
Plus
Deposir
IAPPLE CIDER
•STUFFING . MIX
or Juice
Town House
Mrs.
Wright's
~~11j •110
13 .... 1194
pk1. ~
INCE MEAT
OPITTED OLIVES
Borden's
None Sue.Ir l!-Ol.654 !IT
flllBBY PUMPKIN
@BLACK PEPPER
Crown Colony 4_0 ,. 39c
Pure Ground can
PRICES.
EFFECTIVE IN
UIS ANGELES
ANO ORANGE
COUNTIES
l•xcept Catalino)
Oberti
Lor9e 6·1!. "94
'Ill I.
Solid 29·0L " "4
Pock ca1 I.I.
s
Lancaster Fanns
Plump & Young ·
Toni Turkeys
16-22 lbs.
Weight Range lb.
Fresh Oysters ~=10 ".;n~
Jd_ealfor Sutffing Ho~dciy_ ou!try JIJ-.___.,.
Fryer-Roaster Turkeys ',:'..;:; ,._49•
Y D kl • "'°"'°"''' 59 oung uc 1ngs .,,., •~"" ,. •
Swih's ButterbaU .,J:.;':'!~:1::11 •. ,.57•
r
USDA Choice
Grade Beef
Flavorful And e Juicy Ideal For
Pon-Frying.
FULL CUT
BONE-IN lb.
FRESH BAKERY BUYS!
i Pumpkin Pie M.''.'.~;::1.-. ..JS'
8 Skylark Rolls -:5~7:'. 3 :\\\ $J
Ii Oatmeal Bread •:::~ 3 1~:;, $J
BIG CHRISTMAS ALBUMS
Bothin STEllEOe•d111iweol ;---· · -•· ~, SAFEWAY ~:.---, ~~;
•
SAVE ON FROZEN FOODS
fi Chopped Broccoli ~~-':•~20~
jl Bel-air Peas '0':-:1~; ~;~27' fl Strawberries ~.:; ~~59'
i ~~:rry Sauce "'"" 2 2 c
fi Cranberry Juice 79c
Oc.eon Sp111y 41·1L ktL
i
Canned Yams
3D-az. c11 31 C Highway (Lit or Who!e
Ice Cream
Cotillion Catering Quo\ity
Mrs. Wright's
BREAK AWAY BREAD
: ~~::: & 49 • Onioo 594 Wheat j • Chetse
• Mini loaves ' • Boton 2 ••• ' 2 .... ·-._
(Cinnamon ~ ,!:.:, 719c) L,
Pldc Up Vcurfrtt Nul(ltionol ....,..,..,,on Liit UGI
..
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Mondq, Novtmbtr 22, l CJ7l • DAILY PILOT ~ t:
· u.s.D.A.
-A
Dubuque Rib End
·Cuts Royal Buffet 69 Boneless And Cut From Meoty
Fully Cooked Ten der Porkers.
4-LB. DISCOUNT
CAN PRICED! lb.
DAIRY -DELICATESSEN SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS
Shady lane Butter ~':f·
8 Imperial Margarine
luceme Cream Cheese
~~ 81'
1-1• 4D' OiL
.... 37' ~kl·
8 Tartan Royal Scotch 'l~'· $4.,
8 Kavlana Vodka ·~~':r~;:• ::11 $7'' '
Canadian Hill Whiskey i~ "'$4"
i. ·: ..
Fancy
Quality
Cabanas
For Snack or
lunch Box! lb.
Grown
. '
lbs. ~:: {~ ~NAVEL OR;ANGES 41b~I I GRAPEFRUIT :~~y ab·!~· gr
~ A'RTICHOKE HEARTS •::· '94 j I Caro Mia ar Orlando I ~ i
BLOOMING Carnations 'C-:.' ""' 99' i
M MUMS Boston Fems .,,., •2" §
. ·. a!~U.., $ J 99 F h B "'"'"' ... 6 ! 6·1nch Pot .. ,h res ouquets '"'' 9' . ~ _.~~-9=:· ...... ~ _..~ • ... ™°~.y~111757gg''PP?f.i
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M.o.ndH. Novembef' 22, 1971 Mond11, November 22, 1971
Ba .chelor Kitche .n ·No Place 'for Tempura
ByJOHNABLINN evenly among 4 bowls. Put l'i; pounds raw jumbo I cup water water together, gradually atir Dip each shrimp in batter; Serve at once with dunking
NEW YORK-"Thls isn't a grated horseradish and ginger shrimp (about 24) l"'cup Oour in flour with chopsticlu. Do hold against edge of bowl, sauce3. Serves 4.
weU put.togelhtr kitchen," into 2 separate bowls. raw vegetables: grttn beans dash salt not overmil. allowing excess batter to runl Afterthoughts: Dashi i s
u id Gene Hackman, u he Each guests helps himself to (whole), carrots (cut in vegetable oil Batter should be lumpy in off. available in Oriental (ood
plugged in the coffee maker in f!S much horseradish and thin rounds), water Shell shrimp, leaving taU appearance . Fill deep Lower into hot oil, cook 2.J shopa or gourmet sections or
the kitchen of his rented East ginger as pleases the palate, tbestnuts (sliced). green fins attached to nesh, de-vein. Mlicepan (or deep fat fryer) mins. (or until golden brown), many supermarkets. Gene's
side apartment. Use as dunking sauce for pepper or eggplant, cut in Slit under.section of shrimp to ~ full with vegetable oil. Heat Repeat, using r e m a I n t n g Japanese speciaJty is not Tbe actor's 1 big guy_ he'a tempura . Julienne strips:. prevent curling. Wash shrimp; until it registers 370 degrees shrim p and vegetables. Drain unlike the Italian deei>fried
1018 good fact with a slightly For tb_•_•_•m_P:..."-'°-' _____ 1_·,_gg ________ P_r_epa_re_v_eg_e_ta_~l_es_._Be_a_t_eg_g_. _F_. _•_n_coo_k_tn_g_t_her_m_o_m_e_te_r._we_ll_o_n_ab_so_r_be_n_t pa_pe_r_. __ . _v_eg_e_ta_bl_es_. ________ G_•_•_•_H_a_c_km_•• __
mangled nose left over from
his high "'hop! football days -
and he looked out of place in
the tiny kitchenette. Remnllnls
of bachelor-type cooking were
arpund him : jars of peantlt
bu'tter, cheese and store-
bou&}:!t cookies oa the rounter.
"Fay (his wife, who with
their three. children had just
left for home in Beverly Hills)
got'that," he said, pointing to
a colorful herl:i poster tacked
on the door. "She wanted to
bright.en up the place. The
family "made-do" here while
Gene made a new·..fUck, "The
French Connection."
Recalling his years as a
counter man, he said, "New
Yorkers tend to order food -
even coffee -in a certain
way. At first I wouldn'l know
what they were saying to me."
He still remembers the
lingo: "Grade A's milk, of
course! Stretch, now that's a
good one, that's Pepsi or Coke.
A 'bum' is a chocolate malted.
"Sandwiches were the
worst. Like 'radio' is when you
order 1 toasted sandwich. Or
just toast is 'side down,' but If
it'a a toasted sandwich, it's
'radio down !' "
Food brought Gene and his
wile together, too. They met
during New York's biggest
Italian street fair, the annual
San Gennaro festiYal, and his
first taste of great Italian food
was from the street vendors.
Fay fattened him up on his
first visit to her house too.
"'First, they had lasagne. I'd
never had it before and loved
it. f Then came the chicken
cacciato re and so on . You've
never seen so much food!
"Fay's a grea t cook ,
spaghetti, lasagne, wonderful
1Wian dishes. Her sauces are
ao fat:iulous ," he said.
Gene likes to cook and is
willing to take a chance on
new dishes when t h e y
entertain. "I feel, 'Let them
try this thing. If they don't
like it, they can go to Chock
Full o' Nuts.' I've bad good
luck with steak Diane and
tempura and J fix both often.
"I Jike sashiml, too, but 1
find when I do it myself and
have to buy the fish and cut it
up, it becomes a chore (his
version is sauced with hot
DN.stard and soy sauce )."
The Hackrnans like t o
entertain informall y w it h
"everyone sitting where they
want to." Typical menu :
lasagne or spaghetti. roast
beef, huge Italian salads. fresh
fru it and an assortment of
cheese.
Home is California . "Ours is
a ranch-style house that we've
changed in many w a y s .
There's a large. whole new
kitchen built in the back with
a wonderful view of the valley
from three sides. It gives you
the feeling of being on a ship.
"There's an overhanging
roof that give s a nice sense of
shade and coolness. The wi:1\ls
are toa st color and the rest or
the k.itchen muted brown. The
floor is laid with big vinyl
squares with a Spanish motif.
1 like woods and a Spanish
feeling to things." he said.
GENE'S SHRIT.fP TET.IPURA
1 cup Dashi sauce (o r
bottled clam juice)
113 cup soy sauce
113 cup she rry (or sake)
pinch sugar
1 tablespoon grAnted fresh
white horseradi.c;h
I teaspoon fresh grated
ginger root
Mir together ell th,.
I ngredient s , except
horseradis h and ginger : divide
Fan Shaped
For Dessert
Dip wedges of fresh pears ln
Jemon juice and arrange in·a
fan shape on dessert plates.
Whip I ounces of cream
cheese until fluffy. Cheese
should be at room tern·
perature. Add 1'4 cup finely
diced candied ginger and a
dash of salt.
Heap cheese mixture. In
mound beside pear wedges.
Sem with crisp crackers and
coffee for dessert.
FPISll Crisp, Large Stalks 15 CRERY Each•
first DI 1111181•
ORLANDO
TANGHllNES ~ .• 25
Miid, SWHt
BROWN ONIONS ... .10
... ,fO
lb. .25
.... 25
lb, .25
Tops Removed
FRESH CARROTS
Eztra F•PCY Red V:el\let
YAMS
Northwest Rontt l e1uty
APPLES
Sweet, Juicy
BOSC PEARS
LJQUOR DEPARTMENT voou .. 6kiN~ f;hh 3.19
Choteau P•tite
R9g.-Pink-Co1d Duck
CHAMPAGNE
ltallan Swl11 or Gallo
VIN ROSE
Alrn ad1n·Burguncr,..ctiabR1
Mt. Nectar Rose
f;hh 1.89
\;-o•L f.79
Fl1tll I. 79
f.69 "" Ro1e-Burgundy·Chabll1
Christian BrotherSFJlth
Fltth f .69 Ch1b\11-Ro11-Burgundy
PAUL MASSON
Kent1.1Cky Squire Strei ght-Sn• 20c 3 99 Kentucky Bou!~OnFJtth •
/ UIU'-
1 TIMPOIAIY llDUCID Plla1
PLUS/BUY
MANUfAcrul8 lnew. ALLOWANCI
WI PAii M IAY•• Ofll to TOUI
' IAY-./
Prl ncell• ....... 44 YAMS
Jello ......... , .• 15 Pl,IDDINGS
SWEET PICKLES ..... 111 .59
Ralphs Welcomes
BAKERY DEPARTMENT3 iiiii~N-!t~• Pkg. of 12 • 5
·~·&9 Rolph• Mine•"'
PUMPKIN PIE
White or Wh••t ~
Sandwich or Spfll Top 1-lt. a.or. lotlf 33 RALPHS BREAD I
R1lph1 Ught I Dirk
Fruit Cake Loaf 1.... 1.59
Rtiph1 Holld1y
C()FfEE CAKE 111cb 155
R1lph1 ••ch .
Autumn Tea Cake • 79
15-0L pig,
Pfeffernuesse cookl .. .65
DEUCATESSEN DEPARTMENT
Bordin 1·tb. plfg.
Danish Margarine
Phlladelphla KRAFT 8..Qz.. pkg.
CREAM CHEESE
Ralphs Spiced Peach; Cr•nbeny
Surprise; Merry Mlncaineat
Holiday Salads · n-oz.
R1lph1 Holday S1l1d1 14·oz..
Cranberry Gelatin
Aaaort. Fl1vor1 {e•cepl Avoc:1do)
RALPHS DIPS .....
Edam or Gouda 7-oi:. p11g;
MAYBUD CHEESE
IMO Pint
•• 37
.36
,37
.49
• 37
,59
.29
Wlllon Al Meat
FRANKS
Ralph1
EGGNOG
Ralph1
NOG NOG
1·1>. pkg. .65
qt. .49
i; ,.~ .69
RALPHS GIB PREMIUM
ICE CREAM~., .• 79
PANTRY FILIIRS
Queen Anne Choe. Coveted .49 CHERRIES , ..... ptcg,
Golden Grtln-Wlld 17/1-or.pkg. ' RICE·A·RONI ,59
Hungry Jaclt 32-oi. pkg. .87 Instant Potatoes
. ,.
ow
There8 Ralp~s turkeys with the
pop-up timers.
Ralphs guarantees you satisfaction on any turkey you
select and you'll find all kinds to fit your budgeL
We know you probably cook turkey only three or four
times a year and we want to help you get spectacular results.
That's why Ralphs introduced the pop-up timer in all Ralpha
rand birds,
We also added the self.basting turkey because we know
you're going t.o h·ave your hands full with appetizers, dressing,
creamed onions. fruit salads, pumpkin pie and all the rest.
That's something to be thankful for.
A TURKEY for every budget!
for tht bud&et mindtd ' FROZEN GRADE A ~PREMIUM QUALITY
with POP-UP COOKING GAUGE
FROZEN -GR ADE A ROASTRITE CALIFORNIAN
TOMS TOMS HENS TOMS HE NS ~ U tonlk. II.I. ..... A¥1-JI lo 22 .k. A ... l1 .. J4 k A•J.lllo221bl.. A'1-lllo141b.
~ .. 29 ~31.36 .35'.40
SEE OUR COMPLETE SRECTION
HOLIDAY POULTRY ITEMS
Including:
RAIPHS FRESH TUllEYS
w;th POP UP COOKING GAUGE •
ALSO, DUCKS, GEESE, GAME HENS,
JR. TURKEYS, ROASTING CHICKENS,
SWIFT BUTTERBALL HEN TURKEYS
AND NEW RALPHS EXCLUSIVE
SAVORY BASTED TURKEYS
w;th POP UP COOKING GAUGE!
f.49 Armour's Bonele11-Cooked lb • Nug2!t Hams
Eattem -I oz. pkg.
Farmer John Links .24
Fenner John .55 SAUSAGE lb. Ron
1 b . Ron-Jimmy Dean .75 SAUSAGE
1 lb. Package .89 Oscar Mayer Links
1 lb. P1ckage-SOced ,79 JONES BACON
OCEAN SPUY CRANBERRY SAUCE (St~;·td,::: .22
FROZEN FOOD
Bridgford• .55 WHITE BREAD Pl§. of I
Deep Fries Reg. I 12..oL pkg. .29 Crinkle Cut Potatoes
Di ep Frlla kL pkg.
Shoestring Potatoes .29
SOUTHERN-GRADE A
mr'~~·=·:'".2a
EASTERN GRAIN-FED PORK
CENTER CUT RIB
PORK CHOPS 1~88
Meet Mt ater Beef -BONELESS
tb. f .09 CLOD ROAST
Loin End Cut .79 PORK CHOPS ...
CcKlnlry Style
SPARERIBS .69 lb.
California Grown-Gr1de A
FRYERS Whole 3 lbs. l Up tb. .35
Breeded-Froz1n
17\lr oz. Pkg. (1 0 Patt111)
VEAL PATTIES .93
Any Thlckne11-BONELESS f.29 HAM SLICES lb,
(Regular& Com Sreod)
CUBBISON'S POUL TRY 13-oz:. pkg,
DRESSING .44
FROZEN FOOD
Apple, Pum~ln. Mince .68 JOHNSTON PIES I-in.
Mi~~dGrVeAg';t'~bl;; a ~f;:!· ,·33
Freah Pact Gred• A (Chopped I leaf) f 8 SPINACH ,,.... ..... I
November llthru 24, 1971 .,,._,. .. """ ............. ,.. ...........
COUP0Q5NSP More than ju~t low prices
LO CA L
EDITORI ALS
The DAILY PILOT
Quite O~en
Fi ghts City Hall
RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 99Dl ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER STORE HOURS: 9-10 DAILY, 9-9 SUNDAY
17261 17th Sl , TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM ~
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• Mondar. No~tmbtr 22, l q11 DAILY PILOT S
What , Are Holidays Witnout ·Cookies, ·Roasted Cnestnuts?'.
DEAR NAN: When my hus.-
band and l were la Australia
we happeoed on a dellck>ug lit
lie French pastry s b o p .
Arnong other things, we
bough' what looktd like 1 5 or
' I.Deb cookie. Wl;len we got a
clo!'er look and taste It turned
out to be more o( a candy.
It was made with an all ' . chocolate chip 'ype or backin g
ctnd on the chocolate was a
mixture of what seemtd to be
slivered almi;inds, so~e cher-
ries. au mixed up in a
semlhardened buttery Caramt.I
sauce, I found something like
it at ooe of.our "deli's" but II
was just on the edges. Could
~·as just on the edges. Could
you possibly help me out? I
think they \\'ould m a k e
LET'S ASK
THE COOK
by
Nan Wiley
delicious Christmas gifts for
friends. MRS. 0. GRAVELY.
A1JNNEAPOLIS
They would indeed . So much
so that I have been featuring
them here for y~ars on a
specially prepared sheet for
the asking. They are Viennese
Florenlines, so r i c h a n d
elegant they certainly are not
the kind of Christmas cookie
you let the kids grab up by
handsful.
I really prefer the candied
orange peel used in the
original concoction -be it
cookie or candy -but I have
tried the candied cherries,
they make a very pretty item.
First, line al least two
cookie sheets with foil. The
batter spreads and It i! hard
to know just how much space
yo u will need. The foll makes
it easier to remove these
cookies than greaslne-and·
flouring the pans allhouali you
can do that too. No, the cream
is not whipped. That's the firil
thing everyone asks.
You will need % cup sugar,
1h cup whipping cream, 4
tablespoons butter (~2 stick), I
slightly beaten egg white, ~~
cup thinly sliced blanched
almonds, 5 to 6 table1poons
chopped candled orange · pee1
and l/t cup Sifted flour.
Put cream, butter, egg
white, nuts and peel in a
medium pan over low heat,
stirring constantly until the
mixture bubbles.
Cool to room temperature.
Stir in flour. The mixture will
be fairly thin. Drop by good
heaping teaspoonfuls, about 5
inches apart, onto foil lined
pans. Spread with back of
spoon to very thin rou nds.
They will spread stili more on
baking. Bake at 300 for 1()..12
minutes till edges are a rich.
lacy brown. Rest of cookie will
be very light brown, soft in the
center. Watch. these tl..okies
burn easily. Cool on wire
racks till loi l can be peeled
away easily, about 3 minutes.
When cold, turn cookies over
and frost with German sweet
chocolate me.lted in top of a
double boiler over hot, not
boiling, water. If you do
grease-and-flour pans. cool
cookies on pans a few minutes
to firm up enough to remove.
They are too soft to handle at
first.
Snap Up
Spiciness
The texture and flavor of
Utese cookies may remind you
of store.bought ginger snaps.
GIANT GINGER SNAPS
2 cups sifted flour
J teaspoon bakin11 toda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon gln1er
1/2 cup light mol•1se1
1/2 cup firmly paclletl dark
brown su11r
I large egg
On wax paper 1J!t toaether
flour , soda, 11lt and 1Jnpr. Jn
a medium 11ucepan he.at the
molasses and 1u1ar, stirring
until sugar dissolve• -do not
boil: cool; add •II and beat
well.
Gradually 1tlr In sUted dry
ingredient.I until blended. Chlll
dough for 3 houri. •
Work wilh \t ot th1 dOUlh al
a time, ketplna nmalnder
refrigerated. On • noured
pastry cloth, with a floured
stockinet<0vered f I o u r e d
rolling pin. roll out dough to
Vt·lnch thickness.
Cut out with a round 3-lnc:h
cookie cutter. Place 3 inche!
apart on greased c o o k i e
sheets.
Bake In a preheated 35G-
degret oven 12 to 15 minutes.
If they firm up too much
~fore you get them all off,
pop them back in the oven for
a few seconds. I found It
easier to loosen by lifting the
cookie edges gently with my
serrated grapefruit knife, then
sliding pancake turner under
to remove the rest of the way.
DEAR NAN: How dQ. you
roast chestnuts! 1\1 R S • ·
HENRY ROGINS, ROYAL
OAK, 1\11CH.
This question is a regular
visitor every holiday season.
Chestnuts are such a fun thing
lo do I think more families
"'ould try them if they just
CUBBISON'S
DRESSING
.
knew how to go about it.
One way is to prick the skins
of the chestnut:! with a fork
before putting them in the
oven or they will explode all
over the-place. Just recently a
reader confessed "I missed
just one in the last batch and
oh what a mess~"
Place the pierced chestnuts
on a cookie sheet or shallow
pan and roast in a 425 oven for
t:>-20 minutes. Our ancestors
did this on a pan over an open
fire but, until they learned lo
prick the skiri's, it was a pretty
hazardous pastime without a
bomb sh~lter, even Jf they did
lay bets on whose chestnut
might pop first.
What l like about as well Is
to make two crosscut gashes
on lhe flat sides of the nuts,
using a sharp P\inted knife.
Don't worry if thc'tlhell comes
off when you do this. The in·
ncr skin protects the kernel.
Then put the nuts In a skillet
over quick heat. dropping over
them about a teaspoonful of oil
or butter per pound. It doesn't
take 'much. Shake till they're
well coated, then place in a
S5tl oven until the shells come
off easily.
You must always do that
particular step when you plan
to use the cheatnuts pureed, at
for adding to turkey or wild
game stuffing. They should be
bolled until tender , w I t II
perhaps a little chOpped onions
or celery added to the water.
After that they are ready ti
mash.
~MON.,T-:..... r \
Turkeys
Ll.lll>~IW
TOI TURKEYS
1~~2 1 0 AVG. wr. ...
Hen Turkeys
•
lllSll ... IHIT & fffETAll.ISI
!A.M$..19!
CRUIEUlde& =~-11.-=:::::::::t::::-..6 7
!!!O.!l~ ..... 69:.
... ..... 6npls .-:. . 2f.
....,~~·· = 1:.111 Glrm Frm CallrJ "':.:" 111 ,_, w
ll
F•d.F.n ii Ttrie1Cln •-
015 TABLE IO ~-39~1~ 43! \
.. Ila
Smudters Strawberry Presetves 11.oz. .............. -@c
Smucbn Bladtbeny PrtservassntWS. tror. •••••. "8c
~ Smucbn Orange Marmalade n<it ................ ~"<
FRESH GROUND FLAVOR
Nescafe
GOLc&IOWN
Noodle-Roni
Perform Fobrk Ffnilfi ,_.. Ol *W• ._ ... " ... 411
Purina Variety Mono Col J'ood "' ... -. ..._ -· 19c
Oro Bubble Both i..az. ··-······•··-·-·-····-59c
laura Scudder MayeMefle..,. Ill. ··-----·· 59-:
i... Paimos Red ChiR Sa-..,. CAN ....... -.... :Jlc
Las Palmas Enchilada ScrUCI 10«.CAH ••••••••• , ••• T9c
Dinly Moore Jlfff Slew «>oL .......... -........ $1.19 ttorrner Spom ~:. ~ ti.or. CAN •••••••••••• 63c •
~~ .............. $102 == 45¢ ·~.'-«..
Halley's Beel SteW uct CIH --·-,,,----... 75c
Nolfty's letf Tornofes 1sol. wt .................... .35c
Smutken Apricot Preserves 12,.oz, .................. ..il()c
Smuclctri Cherry Preserves 12.oz.. : ••••••••••••••••• ..(2c
Wtth a wid~ 1nctal spatulo re. 10111 move to wire rack11 to cool . Adams Ave., at Brookhurst, Huntington Beach
Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach
5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach
Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro
21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
17950 Magnolia, Fountain Yaney .Store in a toghtly coverc<ltln 34081 box. Makes about 13.
'
I I_ J
I '
I .
r
,I
..
If DAILY PILOT Monday, NMmber 22, 1971
-. ------
WE WE~OME FOOD
STAMP SHOPPERS
111 AlfY LOI AN;f:US, lllVll SIO[,
C.: ~ ~llTY ALHA llTA
JLIJAl 015CQU!oj15
fVERT OAr
G&S •2 PJtCE ALUMl~UM ROASTING PAN
LARGE SIZE TEFLON 11 ROAST PAN
JI PAC%• STAtNLESS STtEL TURKEY LACERS
4~-0Z PX:G. FROZEN MRS. SMITH'S PUMPKIN PIE
/'":-
""" '"' """"" "ICE
111
2"
l 4T
• CAllFORNIA GROWN
•BASTES ITSELF INSIDE
& OUT WITH CORN O!L
FOk FlAVOR & TENDER·
HESS •ROASTS TENDER & MOIST
•TRUSSED WITH £.z
STUFF ClAMP FOR
CONVENIENCE
•COOKING ttiSRUCTIOHS
INCLUDED
DOUBLE DISCOUNTS MIAH DOUlll
·-~ '
SAVINGS AT ALP.HA llTA
DouW. 011(:..,.1111 al'9 alffro w'l'lnfi In oddifle11 to ou'
ret•lor \ow OM.uni prit ... Th•Y oN !Md• pouibl• .,
tlfllpotory ll"'rd!o• ello••-f,_ th• 1no1utfot'tllr9"
wltll thi• ol!tro ..... ~. po ... cl 011 to yo111
'.
AlrMA IETi\ DISCOUHT l'lllCE
'
~~ ---• ··---~ ---,,,----===============r--::~-----""-\'
MEDALLION or VICTORY BRAND •
YOUNG TOM
TURKEYS
USDA
INSPECTED
FRESH ·
FROZEN
IOIAl OISC()UNT5
fV(RY DAY
1V.-OZ. CONTAINER • GAP:LIC • fJ!tNCH ONION • BLUE CHEE$E
RLPHR BETA SHACK DIPS
IHPl!A BfTR •
ALl'M.I. aET,t, OISCOONT PRICE
WISCONSIN LONGHORN CHWE
AlPHR 1£TA MUENSTI!R CHEESE
3.oz. PACKAGE RLPHR BHR CREAM CHEESE
8..c2. PACXAGE
l D! "· 141
"'
c
~ 1-t.J. CON'T.A\Ntn ~ SOF·SPREAD IMPERIAL
l·LJ 'PA.CV.GE KRAM' WHIPPED MAllCARINE
(
COSTA MESA-241 I. 17th St.
HUNTINGTON 1£ACM-•04S AderM
HUNTINGTON llX'CH...:.11,11 N. Mai11 St.
fOUNTAIN ¥ALllY-IJ90 War11ar
LAGUNA HILLS-23541 Calla da la l11lle
111¥1Nf-11040 C11l•ar, U11l•an lty Pert.
SOUlM LAGUNA -30122 S. Coos' Hlt lrw•y
' .
\'
•·
'
Howard Does It -Afl:
By PHIL ROSS. A 6-0, 100-pound operative out of over his head and grabbed whal would've
Of ''" o.11J "1"' S!•H Oklahoma's Lang:ston University, H!m'a.r.d ~been a sure TD strike to SF's Gene
LOS ANGEI..ES -Rela1aUon has tied a club record (co-held by nine Washington three yeards deep in !he
assisted in making Rams' defensive back other indlv«iuals) Sunday by pluckin end zone. He Elilmed thL.tble.ve.c.y_ ou
-cene-+foward the alert-seeondary-player--three-intert:eptlon-s-out-of-ttlntf. to fhe~ams 32-yard st ripe as LA even·
he is today. Jn addition, the midget in LA 's secon-tually tooJ< the ball in on the ensuing
A good indication of Howard's alertness dary "-5-10 Jim Nettles -took a series with the capper being a 13-yard
v.·as en display last Sunday before the pickoff in from 29 yards out for the pitch from Roman Gabriel to Jack Snow.
largest c~owd (80,050) to witru:ss a Rams ' bost''~('Ohd touch~own with only 4-0 lloward ~lso hookCd .onto a pair of
contest 1n the c.Ollseum lh1s year as seconds to-·£o'bi. the first half. denected air attempts 1n the last two
the LA pros snuffed out San Francisco, But getliiig ~ to the qu iet, modest quarters of the hand s of Washington
17-6. Howard, his presence seemed ubiquitous and another SF wide receiver, Preston
It was the second conquest in two to say the least. Riley. He 'llOW leads LA with six in-
tries in 1971 for coach Tommy Prothro's The Oklahoman hijacked his initial terceptions.
Rams t6-3·ll over the 49ers (6-4) of areial from 49ers signal caller Johrt "Although it was just single cove.rage
Dick Nolan and it enabled LA lo lake Brodie with a spectacular grab and out of a zone defense on th~ first in-
over sqle 1 possession of th National subsequent runback on the second play terception," Howard told the DAILY
Conference \West of the Nation Football of _·~he second period. PILOT, \ "mostly Dave Elmendol1f
League. With his Fck tumed, Howard reac,hed and mystlf were in on double coverage
r. , I Lew boes
Sour, LA
Sl1ells .Bucl\:s
By GLENN WHITE
01 th• o_.ny -11-!tt ll•ll
JNGLE\YOOD -Incredible as lt may
seem to those who have followed the
sparkling basketball career of Lew Alcin-
dor /Kareem Jabbar. it was hL<; cracking
at the seams twice under tremendous
pressure which opened the door for LA
to·knock off the Milwaukee Bucks Sunday
night.
A sellout gathering of 17,505 jammed
the Forum to watch the struggle of
National Basketball Association powers
and the group was treated to (1) the
Lakers' club record tying I Ith straight
victory !2) the retirement of Elgin
Bo-.ylor's jersey No. 22 at halftime.
Although Alcindor/Jabbar, or whatever
you call him. canned 39 points, his
two bad spells spelled doom for
J\.1ilwaukee. which JIOW shares the best
record in the NBA with the Lakers
at 17·3 and wruch has now Jost two
in a row.
His second lapse was the m<>!t decisive
and most disastrous.
It came in the closing seven minute!
of the game with the Lakers nursing
a 98-94 lead.
•
. ,.---
•
Rams-~in
on Washington much of the game." (San Francisco has gone lhe \a5t seven
Having been picked up by the Rams quarters without a six-pointer).''
at the beginning of the present season In a t11ssle so vicious, Prothro dubbed
aft.ecthe fiew OrJea.nL.Sfilfil.s py_t him it, "the hardest hitting of any game
on waivers, the fourth-year veteran was which I've · ever watched ~the
happy to come to LA. -----'sidelines." Six Rams were shaken up.
He ooted, "I never once doubted my While none of the Injuries could be
own ability to play when J was in described as super-serious, the most con-
• New Orleans. But there were just nag-cern is for guard Joe Scibelli (pinched
ging little injuries and small things like neck nerve ) and defensive end Deae-0n
that which curtailed me. Jones (reasgravatlon of a strained arch).
"When I reported to the Rams camp. 5,,, Fr1"e11eo J ' o o-'
It be cam t an easy transition since Lei M11•111 o 1• 4t:rl • ;.~.
everything was so relaxed that I in ..-1.11 .;ow"' 11 1 turn learned to relax even more ." 11ru.11•1·v•rd•t• ~.-~ »-n,,• P•l1l"g y1r4-91 -Said first-year head man Prothro. "the "''"''" ~·ht• ' tJ
49ers moved the ball well up and down =~~~:' ' ,,.f~ ).~~
the field. Bul 0~1r defense did a fabulous ~o.imb1 .. 1o11 ,.! .~
job holding them rom a touch owfl An1r1C1111e1 -IO.O)O. r C f d Y1•ct1 PO"l!lrtd -,...
OPI TtltPMll
\
ShJuldn't
Ha;ve \rf ssed
Says .Hadl\
OAKLAND (AP) -John Hadl knew
all along the Oakland Raider s, highes t
6coring team In the National Foolball
League. "weren't going to play a lousy
ball game all day." • And they didn't, although Hadl's passes
gaYe them fits till the end in a 34-33
victory over the San Diego Chargers,
Sunday.
R;iiders' middle linebacker Dan Con·
nors earned the game ball from ap--
preciative teammates for his end zone
interception of Hadl pass with l :ll lcft .
The game.saving play came on a se·
cond down at the Raider5' four-yard
line.
"I made a mistake. There's no doubt
about it,'' the San Diego quarterback
said later, regretting th al he hadn 't
kept the ball or thrown it away.
The Bucks had the ball and they
worked it to Lew. He scored but was
called for an offensive foul and the
bucket was disallowed . Then Jerry West
rolled down the noor and scored to
make it 100-94.
WILT CHAMBERLAIN , LEW ALCINDOR WATCH AS HAPPY HAIRSTON , GREG SMITH FIGHT FOR BALL.
Three touchdown passes by Daryle
Lamoni ca also helped the Raider.~
survive their worst defensive day of
th e season and boost their record to
7-1-2. They remain half a game ahead
of Kansas City in the American Foothall Conferen~ West and face the Super
Bowl chan1pion Baltimore Colts here
next week.
Again Milwaukee went with Lew. Again
he blew it. this time being called for
traveling. And again West came down
the floor and scored to make it 102-94.
Undaunted, Milwaukee again c.111led on
its super star -No. 33. And again
Le\v could not respond. This time his
5hot was blocked by Wilt Chamberlain
(who had 26 rebounds).
The Lakers took over and J im
Mcl\.1illian scored to make it 104-94 with
5:11 to go. Jn two minutes No. 33 -
whatever his name is -had met his
Waterloo.
And !n add the coup de grace he
was called for traveling and missed
a free throw before the contest was
concluded.
His other blackout in productivity came
in the third period when the Lakers
were on top, 81-74. Lew missed a lay
up. was called rnr traveling and then
had a shot blocked by Chamberlain.
That streak enabled.cot1ch Bill Shannan's
winners to surge ahead by 10.
"We did just about everything we
could to contain him and 1 thought
we did pretty well." Shannan said later.
They go after their 12th in a row
\\'ednesday night v.·hen they entertain
the luckless Buffalo Braves (7-11 1.
MILWAUKEE LOS A,.GELES
Q, T Q, T
0."Cl•ldOe I S·J 21 H~ir"C" <i 1·1 t
&ml"' J l·• t ,,.,cMllllA" 11 I·! 15
JAbbAr J7 J.6 3' (n~m"-•l•in <i .J..• Tl
Allen S 2·2 11 Goadrlc~ n J.6 27
llOl!l!rllOn I 1·3 11 Wint I 6-7 12 Bloc~ I O..C 2 llobln,cn 1 O..C 1 McGloc~hn 1 2·2 • llllev I o..c 16
Te!Alt ..i U-21 \OJ Tc!~I, "' U-lS 112 Mllw1u~e• 21 3ll 2• 23 -HI.!
LC• ,t,ng,1e~ 27 11 32 21 -112
Falcons, Packers
On TV Tonight
ATLANTA tA.P ) -Bob Berry returns
.11l quarterback tonight when the Atlanta
Falcons. hopeful of gaining ground in
their division, battle Green Bay in a
nationally televised National Football
League gRme.
Berry, sidelined one month with a
pulled leg muscle after the greatest
start or his career, threw one touchdown
011 TV Totilg/tl
Chatnoe/. 7 al 6
pass in the second hair of Atlanta 's
last minute loss to lhe New York Giants
a \Veek Rgo.
The defeat left the Falcons l'li games
Jx>hind San Francisco in the NFC West.
Bart SI.arr. Green Bay's 37-year-old
all-pro quarlerback. was told Thursday
he could resume run practice and says
he would like to throw som' 11gainst
Atlan1a . 1-le has been oul all season
fnUowinJ! arm surgery.
"I s1ill doubt whether Bart will play." ~aid Coach Dan Devine. adding he's
uncertain whether he.II go with veteran
?,eke Bratkowski or rookie Scott Hunter.
Starr said his thought about playing
ma)' be "based mosllr on 'ager11e51 Jo get in. I'm just anxious to be more
-of •n lnte~al p!lrt or the club."
Berry threw for more than 300 yards
In two p&mes before hi! injury The
F11lcons then won lhree in a row under
Dtck Shiner, the much !rarled veteran
whn Injured his back against the Clanu
J.i~t "'eek.
Use of Drugs
Common Item -Karras Charges
DETROIT (AP) -Ex-Detroit Lion
star Alex Karras says that the use
of drugs is widespread in professional
football .
In a Story written for today's Free
Press. ,Karras said that former football
player Dave Meggsey was "mostly
right" when he alleged that many, if
not mo5t, professional football players
use drugs to increase their ability and
ignore injuries.
"I've taken shots. or novocaine in-
jections. and I've taken pep pills, and
so have a lot of other Lions and so
do players on almost any team you'd
·care to name:· Karras uid. "ll°s a
very common thing. Some players take
'em fpe.p pills) by the handful before
a ballgame."
Karras said pep pills were as common
as novocaine shots. which were taken
to "play over" injuries.
He recalled taking shots during much
of the 1964 season to ignore a groin
i~jury. and not sleeping "18 hours in
a whole week for weeks" because or
the pain after the shot wore off the
reinjured muscle.
While no one ever orders shots or
pills. Karras said. pressure from coaches
and teammates dri ve5 players to take
them so to perform when they are
hurt
Karras said the use of drugs wenl
"Is far back as I can rem~mber,''
and said he had "to laugh at the clubs
around the league who absolutely deny
that this sort of thing exists."
Karras played with the Lions from
1958 until his release this fall .
"All the teams deny the existence
of pills in their training rooms, too,
or they keep it hush-hush. It is stupid
to deny it because it is very prevalent
and absolutely true," Karras 5aid.
Lion team doctors Richard Thompson
and Edward Guise earlier this vear
denied the common use or pllls by Lion
pla yers. 1
At a ·conference rollowing lhe death
of Lion wide receiver Chuck Hughes
of a heart attack, they estimated dl!pens-
lng two pep pills In two years for
ordinary treatment. and said all medica·
lion had to be authorized by them.
• JOHNSON DEFEATS
JOHNS TO N IN GOLF
WILMINGTON , N.C. IAP) -''I'll pco-
bably break down and cry when I leave
here."
George Johnson. a 32-ye11r~ld from
Allanta was taJklng about his reaction
to his playorr victory over Ralph
Johnston Sunday In the A:r.a\ea Open
golf tournament.
"Sure, rm a little excited,.. said
Johnson. only the fourth blaCk Lo win
on the pro golC circuit.·
For Thursday Biggie
It's Already Jumping
On Oklahoma Campus
Four days to go before the biggest
college football game the nation ha s
had since 1966 when Michigan Slate
and Notre Dame played to a 10·10 tie
in a showdown for the national cha m-
pionship.
And things are poppin' in Norman,
Oklahoma v.•here it'll all take place
Thursday : the biggie between undefeated
powers Nebraska (No. I I and Oklahoma
(No. 2).
Already al the scene is John Yule,
former Corona del Mar High basketball
5lar who is furthering his cage career
at OU. And Yule conveys to thi s colun.n
a little bit of the atmosphere around
Norman .
But first he tells about something
•
e t•NN WltlTa
---____,,
WHITE
WASH -==------
which should surely serve to fire up
the Oklehoma Sooners. •
-The OU trainer has a little bottle
in the football team training room. It
was sent from Nebraska and is labeled
Cornhuskers Lotion. Accompanying it
was a letter on notebook paper which
says :
"After Thanksgiving the OU team will
want to use this lotion in full strength.
It's better to be from red Nebraska
than be a red, dead Sooner."
"Everyone is talking about the game."
Yule says. ''The •atmosphere is un-
believable. I've talked to guys who won't
even sleep the night before the game .
''They've already painted the athletes'
dorm with an 'OU No.L' and one of
the sororities cut out footballs and
painted tbem with 'Beat Nebraska.' and
'OU No. 1.'
"There are other signs all over cam-
pus . However, we had some racial pro-
blems here early lasl week -they
trierl to burn down a couple buildings .
"$(}, things have gotten a llllle tiglit.
Jn fact, there have been student guz.rds
stationed at the stadium all night to
protect it.
"Everyone is just sort of forgetting
M:hool. Some teachers are even calling
off classes.
"There's a pep rally :c;cheduled In
Oldahoma City Tuesday and two more
trrN~an on Wednesday. The coech~
and players will attend all three rallies.
"Tickets are really going for A big
price -SOO for end zone and $75 to
$100 elsewhere on the field."
any other time this season.
Yule says the frenzy of football en·
lhu siasm here really got rollin~ after
Oklahoma whipped USC. Then when the
Soone rs slaughtered Colorado. that really
swelled interest.
Now. Oklahoma is r.ited No. 2 in
the nation behind Nebraska a n d
Thursday'5 show tells it all -national
crown. Big Eight championship.
ll°s hard to imagine what the scene
will be like Thursday when all these
football crazy people cul loose with their
final burst of emotion al the 5tadium.
The Char~ers built a 24-10 halfti me
lead as Hadl tore the Oakland defense
apart by handing the ball to Mike Garrett
or throwing it to him on short passes.
But the Chargers, 4·6, lost Garrell
ror the second half after the running
back sprained an ankle.
Garrell rushed for '3 yards and c.iught
four passes for 81 ya rds before !eavlng ..
He scored once on an I l-yard run and
!Set HADL. Pa ge 381
S•" 0;"!10 10 !l O t -lJ O•~l111CJ J 1 U !O -l<i
01~. -FG, Bl-nd• J• SO -l'G. P1r!et H SO -Quot" 2 nm IP•rote ~le~1
SD -G•rrel! I! r11n (P•r!ee ~'c~I O•k, -C~inter 16 ~H fro"' L•mcnlt1 !Bl1nd4
kick)
SO -C.•tr•!t 11 llo'ln fro"' H•dT (P1r1e1 ~•ck!
o--· -C~e11er IJ ~II Ire"' t1mcnltl l Bl111C11
~lt~I
01k -B111•11•k f r~n (Bl1nd1 wltkl !'!•• -FG.. Bl•nfl• JI'.
01k. -She•m1n" PIH''""' L1mo11it1 <Bl1r'111
ltlc~ I
SO -Gi!lene U p.o~s l•cm Hodl fl't•I« kftkl
so -S•!ely, o--r~v1ttr 11ckled In ""' tone
Attli<lli111ee -J•,11111.
F '"' Mwn• ll11i!'&y1rd1
Paul1111 Yl•Cl•O•
Rehirn y1rd1!11
l'IHI~
P1111•• Fumbl•• 1t1.i
VtrCI• 11t11•ll11!d
Ch••;r' 1t1~1r1
J1·91. 1>110 J>l 1111! . " 20-lli-' I .. J& 0
""" J.SJ ' ' n »
Yule had dinner with one of lhe footbtlll
pla yers and the latter intticatcd that
the te11m has worked harder than at WOODY HAYES PROTESTS CALL IN 10·7 LOSS AT MICHIGAN.
OAJLY PILOT :SJ:
Laver Go'e~..-
For Richest
Pro Pr,;;!i';'ze;;;-----1---1
HOUSTON (AP) -Corona de!
Mar's Rod Laver and Aussie Ken
Rosewall, two of the old·timers
on the pro tennis tour, meet al
high noon in Dalla! Friday in a
showdown for' the richest prize in
pro tennis history -$50,000.
And even the loser will~be able
to leave town in style . He 'll gel
a check for $20,000.
Lave!', who has earned moii~
than $1 millinn siip he tu~ne~
pro in 19'2, defea\ed American r Arthur Ashe, 6-3, 1.fi,16-3, 6-3, Sun-
t day and Rosewall downed Tom
Okker of the Netherlands in
straight sets 6-3, 6-3, ~1 to earn
the finals berths in the World
Championship of Tennis play-offs.
Laver, 33, and Rosewall, ':rt ,
• couldn 't help but remember how
times\have changed in pro tennis.
''l can look back on the game
'with satisfaction now," Rosewall
said. "I was happy when I turned
pfo and I hoped I would do well.
"t never thought at that time
that the' pro 'game would af!lount
to much more than it .did then .
But years latet we felt ther.e !:!light
be some chance for the open game
because amateurs were getting
more and more under the table
. payments. l "I'm just happy to be able to
still play good tennis."
Rosewall and Laver certainly
won't be strangers when they meet.
Laver estimated the pair have mel
more than 100 limes in competition.
"We played each other about 15 , ~
limes the first year I turned pro,"
Laver said. ·
"If you look at the record, it
looks like an uphill fight for me.''
Rosewall said of his match with
Laver. "It "'ill really depend on
how I react lo Rod "s shots. ...,
"He's beaten. 1ne a lot and l
lh ink it's ahout time I turned th'e
tables on him ."
, "I think it "'ill partly depend
• on how he contend.~ wilh iny
serve,'' Laver said. "I think I've
started serving better."
Laver, \1ho has wnn $272,?17 on
the lour this year, recovered from
a second set lapse to defeat Ashe
for the 12th straight time. Ashe
played well at times. breakinli!:
Laver's service twice in "'inning
the second srL
Rosew.ill broke Okker's service
three times in the first set and
seven times in the match.
Commissioner
Sets Review
On Woody
ANN AllBOR, Mich. (AP) -\Vayne
Duke. recently appointed Big Ten com-
missioner, said in Chicago Sund.iy that
the conrerence "is reviewing the situa·
lion" regarding Ohio State football coach ,
Woody HAycs' temper explosion at
Saturday's game against Michigan.
However Duke, who was al the game,
said he would not comment further at
this time.
Meanwh ile in Columbus. Ohio. Haye!
\.\'Ould not comment -as was the case
immedialely after the game.
J\1ichigan, trailing 7·3. drove 72 yards
in II plays climaxed by a 21-yard
touchdown run by tailback Billy Taylor
\.\•ith 2:07 remaining. Ohio State was
trying a desperation final drive when
Hayes new off the handle.
He was moderately upset earlier in
the game over a couple officials calls,
but it wf!sn'l un1il U·M safety Tom
Darden intercepted a Don Lamka pass
to de.~troy that final bid that Hayes
exploded .
The interception came a! the Wolverine
34 with just O\'er a minute rC'maining.
Hayes ran onto the field prnlrsting that
interference should have been called
a11:ainst Darden , "'ho had outfough t
receiver Dick \Vakeficld for the ball.
Officials promr.tly ca 11 e d an
unsportsmanlike conduct penally against
the Buckeyes, while Hayes w.is eseorted
orr the field by his players, almost
fighti ng with one of them in his anger.
Moments later OSU was given anothe r
unsportsmanlike conduct penally for pil·
ing on while Micliigan was trying to
run out the clock with 50 seconds left.
That prompted Hayes, 21 -year OSU
coach, to go into R violent rage.
He grabbed the down marker and
tried lo break ii over his knee. Then
he threw ft on the field arid darted
towards the chain n1arkers, i;rahbing
them from sideline officials and tearing
al the hright orange streamers on them.
Hayes . continued to. boil on the
sidelines, screamjng incoherently. untU
the game was ended, then he refused
to 31low newsmen into tht dressinR room
or to come out for the tradltional po~l·
game in terview, Even Ohil} Gov. Joh n
J. GilligM had ti:i wall outside for I~
minulf's before ~il 111lowed less than
two minutes· in which lo offer his
condolences.
J\1ichigan rans -pllrt or the rCCi1rd
crowd of 104.000 -flled p11st lhe room
chanting, "Goodby Woody. 110QC!b)'."
Brown, llat'r,is Laudecl
SAN FRANCISCO 11\Pl -Senior run•
ning back~ .Jackie Brown of Stanford
and \Au H11rri~ of US(' h"'v' betn named
to ~hare orfen~ive pl11yer or the. wfek
honors in tht Pacifit-8 Conference .
,.
•
c .... .... • ....... 0-4• • ...--.... 1 ··+I · .~. " '' ..
' All-Sunset League Corona, Lions
Clash in CIF
Grid Pla yoffs
Lions, Tars Head
Grid Selections Two orange Col.It 1re1 football team•
collide in the first round of the ctr-
AAAA playoffs.
Champion WeStmlnster, r u n n e r u p
Western and third place Newport Harbor
dominate the official All-Sunset League
football team as selected by the DAILY
PILOT.
Coach Bill Boswell's circuit champions
placed 10 players on the elite list, headed
by quarterback Jeff Siemens, 'tho was
named ack of the year.
A.II-Sunset League
Finl Team Offense
Poi. Pl er, School Weight Cla~
SE Mad ks, Westminster . 180 J \ SE Clare i, Huntington 185 S
T Jenni gs, Westminster %25 Sr~
T Martinez, Anaheim 198 Sr·\
G Frankhouse, Westminster 210 Sr.
G McLain , Loar a ' 225 Sr.
C Schroeder, Westminster" 165 Sr.
8 Siemens, Westminster 184 Sr.
B Acosta, Western 190 Jr.
B Dapper, Western 165 Sr. ~ ~
8 Lappin, Loara 195 Sr,
F\nt Team Defense
E Truslow, West.em 195 Sr.
E Wyri ck. Sa nta Ana 185 Sr.
T Albritton. Newport 228 Sr.
T Holland , Westmi11ster 210 Sr.
MG Charlton. Western 185 Jr.
LB Swick, Newport 209 Jr.
LB Nafziger . Western 190 Sr.
B WhiUord , Newport 170 ·Sr.
B Young. Westminster 165 Sr .
B Amies. Newport 150 Sr.
B Ohanian. Anaheim 143 J r.
Lineman of the Year -Albritton, New-
port · Back of the Year -Siemens, West-
minster Coach of the Year - Bill Boswell, West· I • RIO HONDO'S DANNY LARA HAS JERSEY ST RE TCHED BY GOLDEN WEST 'S MIKE LADO. minsW Sttond Tea m Offense
I ~ ~ . :nstrat1ng
eason Ends
or Rustler s
By HOWARD L.. HANDY
01 ,~. 0 1111 l"llel 11111
Ray Shacklefo rd had a nolion lo step
I of character lollowing Golden \Vest
llege 's 14-13 Southern C a li fo r n i a
nference football Joss to Rio Hondo
turday night on the
Id.
Orange 9>a.st
i He had every right to be critical
If officials and to blame the loss on
~e men in striped shirts but thought
'tte r of the sit uation and re fused com·
ent with the game in the books.
Those who witnessed the action. saw
Jii m run to midfield after the final gun If d'iscuss the amount of time remalning.
•. Just one of the many things th at
!)ave made this season one of frustration,
<timing close and then fa lling short at
Uie final gun. l The loss leaves the Golden West se~on
feco rd at 3-~1 wit h !our of the l;ve
1t mes decided in the waning minutes.
~ For Rio Hondo. the victory catapulted
&le Roadrun ners into a three-way lie ~r fi rst place in the fi nal confe rence
standings .
" Rio Hondo v.·on the coin toss Sunday
i nd will face Santa Barbara this Satur-
da~· night in the first round of the
U.rRe school playoff s.
"They are a good team and they
101 a shot in the arm v.·hen they learnerl
that East Los Angele s was ahead ol
LA Cit y al halftime. 'Vie were leading,
13-7. at the lime." Shackleford said.
The season of frustration v.·as turned
Into one of re co rd -sha t l e rin g
pe rfor manees by Rustler freshman
quarterbac k Bill Cornelius.
, Goin~ into the game he had established
/ ti ve individual school records for single
jame marks in most yardage ~~54 1,
most passes attempted '~3 L most com-
Pletet! passes 123 1. most interceptions
(61 and most yards total offense i329\.
: Season ma rks added to the :.·oung
passer included passing yardage (1.837 1,
passing attempts !26.'i L completed passes
1
1321. touchdown passes I I 7 ! . in·
erce ptions !19! and lota1 oll:£rlse ~1.841 1.
1 Comclius hit r-.tonte Do.Jlliin~ on an
JI-yard scoring pass with I :26 left in
the lirsl qua rter and Ed Parker con-
f erted giving Golden \Vest a 7-0 lead.
• \Vith six minutes left in the second
Period. Co rnelius completed pa sses to
Miami Nearly Clinches It;
It's Midnight for 'Skins
Dallas and '~mi, with a p:iir of
clutch viclorie.l Sunday, have taken the
upp!r hand in the ir National Football
League. divisions.
Dallas' 13.0 win over the Washington
Redskins, lifted it inlo a half game
lead over the 'Skins in the National
Con£erence's Easte rn Division race.
"\\'e're still in the race ," vowed
Washin gton coach George Allen.
Cowboys ' quarterback Roger Stau bach
paced the \'ictory , running 29 yards for
the first score. The other six points
came on two field goals by Mike Clark.
At Miami, the host Dolphins used
a 20-yard fie ld goal by Garo Yepremian
to bea t Baltimore, 20-17 and lake a
!~%game lead in the AFC Ea~t.
The Dolphins (8-1-1) meel Baltimore
(7-3) in a rematch Dec. 11.
At Chicago the Delrolt Lions. sack-
ing the Chicago Bears' Bobby Dou1la ss
eight times for losses or 62 yards and
panicking him into throwing lour in-
terceptions, pulled off a 23-3 victory
in a mista ke-filled game.
At SI. Louis, P hi I ad e I p h i a took
a dvant iig e of four SI. Lou is
fumbles and four interceptions and Tom
Dempsty kicked three field goals to
Bowl Tiff Next
For Stanford ;
Others Finished
By TH E ASSOCIA TE D PRESS
Pacific 8 Conference play was wrapped
up Saturday wi1h a 14-0 victory by
Stanford over California, returning the
lndians lo the Rose Bowl.
Stanford will lace Michigan a l
Pasadena on Jan. I. hoping to matc h
24-14 victory over Ohio State in last
year's Rose Bow l.
Jn other Pacific 8 p\a v la st weekend.
UCL A lied crosstown ·rival Southern
California 7·7.
Tile favored Trojans were ahead 7--0
until a. blocked punt in the third quarter
set the Bruins up on the USC 30. Marv
Kendricks scored from the seven four
plays later.
That left UCLA 1-3-1 and Sout hern
Ca.I at 2-2-1 in Pac-8 pl ay for the season.
lead the Eagles lo a· 37-20 win over
the Cardinals.
At Oakland, the ho st Raiders. trailing
Sen Diego by 14 points at the half, rallied
for a 34-33 vic tory that was sa ved by
linebac ker Dan Conner s' end zone in-
terception of a John Hadl pass with
l : 11 remaining.
At Kansas City. Len Dawson $PQiled
new Denver head coach Jerry Smith's
debut Su nday by throwing l hr e e
touchdown passes that helped the Kansas
City Chiefs to an easy 23-10 over the
crippled and outmanned Broncos.
Al Cleveland, Leroy Kelly sco red two
touchdowns and ran for over 100 yards,
helping the Cleveland Browns to a 1:1-7
win over New England.
The viCtory kept Cleveland in a first
place tie with Pittsburgh in the AFC's
Central Division .. Both teams have 5-5
records.
At Pittsburgh, defensive back John
Rowser returned an interception 70 yards
for a touchdown after a pass on a
fake field goal and Preston Pearson
set up anoth er sco re with a 77-yard
kic koff return as Pittsburg h defeated
the New York Giants, 17-13.
At Buffalo, Bob Davis tossed two
touchdown passes and Bobby Howfield boole~ a pair of field goals as the
New York Jets defeated Buffalo, 20-7.
It wa s the Bills' 10th Josss of the NFL
season.
At Cin cinnati, Fred \Vill is scored !wice
in his first pro start and Virgil Carter
rifled two to uchdov.·n passes. powering
the Ci ncinnati Bengals to a 28-13 triumph
over the Houston Oilers.
HADL ...
(Continued from Pace 371
later on an 18-yard pass pla y.
The Chargers also Jost star rook ie
recei ver Billy Parks, probably for the
season. with a broken arrn in the first
ha lf.
Lamonica. who tossed 16 yards to Ray
Chester for a first half touchdo wn. hit
the big tight end on a 13-yard -scoring
play early in the third period. The
Raiders led 34-24 after Rod Sherman
pulled in a 32-yard touchdown pass with
6:49 \e(L
But the Cha rger s came back to make
it 34-3t , on a 15-yard pass from Had\
to \Va.I ker Gillette. and recovered an
onsidt kickoff to se t up the last threat.
SE
SE
T
T
0
G c
B
B
A
B
E
E
T
T
MG LB
LB
B
B
B
A
~wnini:: (20 yards 1 and Parktr t\91
put the ball on the Rio llondo four.
ck Rice went In for a serond touchdov.·n
'nd it was 13-0. The conversion try
\!.·as ruled wide right and ii was 13-0. ~ TM steady grind ing Rio Hondo ground
ame with Carl Zaby bursling through
or jouchdow ns on off tackle slanl $ of o 1nd 17 yards plus the kicking of
ete Weitm an gave the v.•in to the
Al Sea~tle. Washington's Sonny Six-
killtr ran 32 yards for the opening
to uchdown and passed 38 and 33 yards
to Tom Scott to set up two more 'TDs
as the Hu skies -hOw 3-3 h<!at
Washington State 28 -20, to give WSU
a 2-4 record .
The Husky defenders ~pt the C.Ougars'
talented tailback Bernard Jackson in
check thT-oughout the game to blunt
the W1shington State rush ing gam e •
wAteh wa s tops in the con!erenct.
The Raiders Jed 34-31 when Connors
made the big intercepti on. With 10
seconds to play, the Ra iders had fourth
down at their 14.
Coach John Madden. who explained.
''I didn'l want to give the ball back
to them :· ordered punter Jerr y
DtPoysler to kill time in the end zone
until time ran out. isitors.
O.,,._l $TATllTl(S
,IOI ltOWM ruoJol"Q
jljnt dO""" plU•nt
l fl!ifll doW1\I ~lltla
.1'0111 11r1t IHI...,,
' °"•rti r1t1111""'1 'fl •41• pis.ti ...
'(1 •6' lnl • I Ntl ~1'111 11111..i
l"Vlllll•-·•· l illl ..Ct • p-ll~l f'flrill Mnt lllef
,.illr.\llt•lllumtoi.t le1I I ktoi ,., 0 1111rMn
• Golft11 Wn t ' ' Ille HrlO • ' • I U~MINO
' .. \tell Wftl • ' '" • I'•·~·· ' • l lt • • • (&r ... •!Uo ' ' ... ' ' Tol1t1 " l it Htftff " I
•• " ' " " • ' ' " " " "' "' ' " " ,. "' ' " '" "' "' " " • o -U
' 0 -1'
!I. " m . • " " ' ,, • • . ..
" • .. .. " " "' I " .. ' "
Oregon Sta te edged Oregon, 30-2!1.
Wingback Biily Carlquist took 8 pitch.out
and ran six yards for the winning
touchdown with 1:40 remainlr1R Saturday.
This was lhe Beavers· eigh th straight
victory over the Ducks. Bolh teams
rin ished v.'ith an over-all 5-6 se ason
record .
Bowl Outlook
Mt it>t hWt' ~8Jtdtr>I IChol, DK. It · M1mel'll1 St•ll •·l
1/1. ~c.u tlllm••Oft, ul'lt!llC-·
Sii"' 91w! O.t . U · 1-• J •"· 1-l vi LSl.I 7-J.
Lll)erl~ R,owl Dec;, 10: Tf"l'"O"'• 1·1 V1 ltlff.1\en
unt~r>t..:t
Fl.-11 llwl, DK. 21: ~<llOtlt S!tl1 .. I Y1
F!v 1111 Sl1t1, l ·I,
l~l:;:,ei~to, r:i.r.· DK. 71~ l lC!>rl'IO"CI· Joi v1.
r.1tc~ llowl. Ott. ~: G~I• TKll, ._, "'· M ,,1111011, ~7.
Gl!o• lf~• °" Geo•ol1. f,
Mead, Santa Ana 180 Sr.
Rosales, Westminster 1160 Sr.
Brown , Anaheim 205 Sr.
~farris, Marina 203 Sr.
Sala:uir, Western 173 Sr.
Ratter, Huntington 195 Sr.
Ray Newport 200 Jr.
Molina , Santa Ana 180 So.
Pickford. Huntingto11 160 Sr.
Winkles, Westminster 175 Sr.
Horvath, Newport 147 Sr.
Second Team Defen se
Van De Merghel, Western 175 Sr.
Palmer. Anaheim 158 Sr.
Carlson. Western 225 Sr.
Miller. Newport 187 Sr.
Gunderson, Newport 145 Sr.
Lamb, Westm inster 180 Sr.
Dischner. Santa Ana 215 Jr.
Lacr. Marina 177 Sr.
~1ohna. Loara 175 Sr.
Hamilton. Newport 175 Sr.
Wilderman, Marina 152 Jr.
BILL BOSWELL
Co.ch of the Year
TERRY ALBRITTON
Lineman of th• Year
JEFF SIE MENS
Back of the Ye1r
Irvine Uague champion Corona dt1
Mar will meet Sunset Le11Ue tltli.st
Westminster Friday night at Oran&• ~
Coast College.
Second place team• St. Paul, Westens
and Arcadia made the 16-team ellmina•
lions, along with 11 &Ole champion& and
Qmst League ~hamps Santa Fe and
DomiQiUei. Western, the only other Ora nge County
eleven 1 in the AAA.A playoffs, drawl
a travel assignment with North Torrance.
The Garden Grove League elected to
send La Quintl and Santiago to tht
playoffs in AAA circles. La Quinta was for~d to forfeit eight victorie~, .including
six \league wins. but loop off1c11ls gave
the Aztecs the nod anyway.
La Quinta ho!ls Fullerton ind Santi110
Is at Pioneer in first round activity.
Other Orange O:>unty schools involved
in AAA actio n are Kennedy and El
Modena.
Edgewood ts 1t Kennedy and West
Covina travels to El Modena.
Sonora's qrange League champ~ play
host to Cantwell F(lday in AAA 1ct1on.
The pairings:
... ......
Bl1 lr 11 Bl•hOCI ,r.m11
51nl• Fl I I l ntmM• westml~ttr 11 (orOM 41t 1 Mtr
P1i.adot111 11 111111111'1111
Arctdll 11 t!.I ll~
5!. Ftl f'Kfl I I l utt!I
$!. l'tul II OOl!llf191/9!
Wtsltrll ti NOrtll TOrrt ntl . ...
~11111!11:1 I f l"lonter Edg~ 11 ltftlllld1
Crnpl I t H•WlhO<M
Hirt 11 8-IY Hiib
Wn l Covina II I I MOd-Nt -rry Pl rt: 11 lomflllC
8t11t1ew..-11 Upllnd
Fulllrton II u Ouln!I ..
1toy1t 011< 1~ T.ni,11 City L-• 11 "-"'""" \11tley \ C•niw.11 1t S-rl
P•lo Verd•" Hlmllt Scum P1~1d..i1 11 Mh'1•1t Ctntr•I II North •1u1r114141
Neff 11 St. ,John 8DIC.ll W1 lnut 11 (r..rTtr Olk • Rim et Wotllfll CMmfn..i1
St. Jo•l'Ph 11 Jll!I Mn•
P110 A:obln 11 1111\0p o.• Sln!t l"1ull II Morro 9t Y sm1n SdloMll
No1r1 O.in. (A:lv.) 1! LA h ,il1t
l~r>1ch1pl I~ H011U1111
Twin Plnn .i YucCI \11lllY
Jlo11rnond 11 NllldlfS
Ex-Grid Coach Dies
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -Dr . Garfield
W. Weede, 80, a W a I l e r Camp All·
American football player , co1ch and.
athletic director died Sunday in 1 Wichita
hospital.
Dr. Weede be c a me director ot
athletics and coach at Washburn Univer-
si , Topeka, Kan .. in 1905.
.AND SAVE!
BUY 1/2GAl.
NOW
.Sfi98
7
I l ''" l•••llM ~11n11twt " L '"I • 1t1i. " l"AfllNO
Oelflll WMI .. " (Ill'~•!!'" " " f lt HoMt
M•!ll'll W\ " I
• " " , . I ..
"' n ,,
~· .,~ ,. .... "' "'
Tile Stanford victory removed the slim
possibil ity Iha\ Cll would go to the
Rose Bowl. If the Bear!! had be1ten
the Indians and been frt.ed from pro-
balion through court decisions. they con·
ceivsh\y could have betn the Bowl team.
The lndi3ns lim ited C11l tn 38 net
yards on 37 rushes S11\urday. The Bears
!otalled only 123 yards on ortense. 'vith
~O comlnll on 11 \11e pass by Jay Crutt
from 1he l·yard line
1~,.,,., ao..,;. J•.,· I
S~•f t~wl. J8~. ! ••• ~j -.,, ... •
;
•
. . ' . .. .. . . ... • • • ....... •
Molld.u, Nowembtr 22. J.971 DAILY PILOT •
Tars' Miracle Comeback Football -
Standings
For Pros
Saddlehack Puts It Togethe~~
In 48~0 Romp Over Chaff eYi~ Too Much for Colonists By CRAIG SHEFF . Points with two minutes left In !he f~sl half. He h..i ~
ing romp1 of fl•e and • r°"
6y ROGER CARLSON It was indeed, a miracle
01 '~' ci111v 'II" 11111 comeback for the Sailors, who
You can be sure there y,•UI had appeared to have lost
be no complaints in the Lent Uleir last chance moments
family when reruns of old before on a fowth down in·
movies are· shown at home completion from the Anaheim
- especially the films deplc· 22,
ting Newport Harbor High's The Colonists took over with
Sailors in their 20-14 conquest 1: 15 left and a 14-13 ad-
of Anaheim in the 1971 Sunset vantage, but linebacker Jim
League football finale at La Swick and mates\ shut down
Palma Stadium. 1 three running plafll .
And chances are it 'II be a A punt Put th~ bai\ pn the
paS6 play t~at canle about 1 Newport 48 and \lhen Bukich
with 24 seconds remaininG turned it inside out with his
that. will get the ~ajor share 52-yard aerial to Whitford.
()f attention from ilor roach The victory gave Newport
Don Lent. a fi_nal 6-3 ftCOrd and each
Lent wasn't s re how of the ·Tars' three conquerors
recei ver Bill Whitford manag-{Corona del !\.tar. Western and
ed it Saturday night but the Westminster) are entered in
facts are the 5-8 senior was the upcoming CIF AAAA
all alone on the AnahE!im 15-playot!s.
yard line, gobbled up "The season was a mattfr
quarterback Steve Bukich's of inches for us," philosophiz-
pass and sped to the end zone ed Lent afterward, "but we
for the winning touchdown to think it was f,airly successful.
break the hearts of the "The biggest task facing us
Anaheim faithful, 20-J4. now is to find 10 replacements
in that starting defense t" he
added. ,
Lent also must come up
with a replacement for Grif
Amies. the 153-po und .senior
who continually came up with
the big play In 1971.
~s last touchdown 1effort
came on Anaheim's first punt
of the game.
Amies bobbled the ball
momentarily OQ.1the Newport
16. then took olf behind great bl~s rrom ' Whitford and
Ra y Hamilton. The latter
too out two would-be tacklers
and the Sailor standout rollfdi
84 yards for a touchdown. •
~like Byers added the PAT
and it was 7.0 with 2: 17 spent.
Anaheim tied it br:iefly y.•hen
Ron Anton tossed a pass lo
Howard Carson, and the Santa
Ana transfer sped 61 yards
fo1· the score .
But the Sailors came back
with an 85-yard. 15-play dr ive.
consumiiig 6:05 of playing
lime lo go back in front. Kevin
• ' Top QB Rettll'tlS
KEN MOATS
Ken Moats
Quits Post
By ROGER CARLSON
Of l~t D•llW l'llOI Siii!
Huntington--S~ch High foot-
ball coach j:;.en) Moats has
turned in his resignation after
coaching the Oilers for 10
years, the DAILY PILOT has
learned exclusively,
Moats. 41, told the DAILY
PILOT this noon. "It's a mat-
ter of not being able lo cope
with winning and I o s i n g
anymore.''
Moats' Oilers finished the
season with a 2-5-2 niark tied
for last in the Sunset League
with Santa Ana.
··Eve ry year I've been hap-
py . but this is the first year
I didn"t get the feelini:; of
accomplishment.
'"I've never felt winning or
losing was the moSt successful
thing. but this has been a
most disappointing s e a s o n
afler our fine start.
"I was sure 'we'd win at
least five games this year,
but "'e just couldn't gel it
done." said Moats.
The I iuntinglon m e n t o r
opined his best lea1ns in his
tenure were the 1966 Irvine
League championship team
and the '69 outfit lhat finished
second in·the Sunset circuit.
Eads Looks Al1ead
Af te1· 24-7 Lo ss
By PHIL ROSS
01 lllt DIUJ l'llel 51ffl
As he looks back Uj>On the
just concluded footllall season.
there's not much doubt that
head coach Tom Eads of the
San Clemente High Tritons
ha\ some bitter memories
dangling in his n1ind.
After all, his charges put
the clamps on a dismal cam-
paign last Saturday night with
a 24-7 setback against the
Villa Park Spartans al El
tilodena Higl1.
And San Clemente, a
preseason Crestview League
contender. ended up with a
2-7 overall record and 2-5 loop
mark ta th ird win . a 33 • 7
decision over Laguna Beach ,
had to be forfeited because
Polo Teams
In Action
Newport Harbor ~ 17-2) and
Corona del Mar (12-7) have 1 had a lock on the CIF water
\polo championship for the past
'six years and both have
qualified for the 1971 playoffs
as league champs.
Newport will host North
High of Ri verside ( I fl -4 1
Wednesday in the Orange
Coast College pool as the top
seeded team in the upper
bracket. Sprint is al 4: 15. Ir·
vine League ruhnerup Costa
Mesa r 10-0) is in the lower half
of the same bracket and will
trave\ 10 Et Segundo High (l5-2 \ Wednesday for a first
round game.
Ora ge Coast Ckrllege v.'ill be
the s~e of a doubleheader
\VedneSday afternoon. Corona
del Mar y.·ill meet Laguna
Beach at 3 o'clock and Nev.'-
port Harbor will • duel North
tligh of Riverside at 4: 1.l.
of an ineligible Triton player).
Al any rate. wh ile Eads
is doubtless nursing more than
his share of bad memories
as a result of the season now
1
past. he 's nevertheless able
to smile when thinking of the 1 future. I
One big rea son (literally
speaking \ is 6-3. 210-pound
junior Bill Kenney, who learn-
ed some valuable lessons -
both good and bad -in his
initial fling with the Triton
\'arsity this year.
A quarterback \Vho should
give 1 the San Clementeans
their first real experienced
hand in years at the QB spot
next tall, Kennev had I h e
good sprinkled ~;ilh the bad
again in the Villa Park scuf·
fi e.
Although experiencing fre-
quent troubles (like five in-
terceptions,. Kenney missed
equalling his best~ver .to.tat
passing yardage figu re by just
two yards. And he also flashed
occasional streaks of brillance
in completing 10 of 29 air
attempts for 146 yards while
also tallying the Tritons' Jone
touchdown on a four-yard run.
While it sometimes ap-
peared San Clemente was tak-
ing to the air to try and
narrow a lead which VIila
Park enjoyed throughOut,
Eads cla imed afterwards tha t
it was all planned that way.
He said. '"we were planning
on passing that much. It's
just that it always didn't work
out the way we \\·anted it
lo.
G.AME STATISTICS
"' " " ...
K!n""v • " " •4.0 M11aaon • " ' '·' J~rre11 " " " '·' 5~11••• ' • ' -1,0
No successor has been nam·
ed to the coaching post but
it's Moals' opinion that the
new coach ·will come out of
his coaching staff.
Newpo rt is defending cham-
pion in the CIF playoffs while
Corona fon the title two years
ago. Betpre that Corona won
in 1965 and 1966 while Newport
wa s the champion in 1967 and
1968.
Tct•l1 " ·~ ~ "'
~!oats recalled several of
his standouts that performed
under the Oiler City banner
in the past decade.
El Segundo. Costa ,,_1esa's
opponent. under coach Urho
Saari, has won more CIF titles
than any other school and was
the victor four of the fi ve
years preceding the Newport-
Ccrona domination.
llt 1Gol'ICltr LoPlccolo
HtoS!~r
jmolh.,.m1n !free ~hlu!O ' •ff Oltll
·~-lttld!npe• Ht1ter
iiet:•ln I!• er Tot1!1
Yl!le P'lr11 ' 'I " ' " " • '·' ' • • ••• ' " • l.•· ' ' • • •• l " • ,,.
' • H " "' ' ..,
l'AISING 11n c1emen11 .. K ... ,rr .m1 " " ' YH11 l'1rlt
'! " ' uo .m • ' • . ..
' • • 1~1:~ ' ' • " " ' ·~ .671
Current Los Angeles Rams
player Greg Wojcik. C<il's Rob
Purnell aod Kurt Clemens,
Hawaii's Roger Pa r km a n.
\Yashington's Tony Bonweu -----------------------
and the original one-two punch
()f Bill Autry and Joe Scott
(61-62 ) cropped up.
Also ~iike Bailey, \\'oody
Stewart, Augie Barrera and
the deceased Bill Jenkins.
THIS YEAR!
l..t ft Ml, ye1 MIKt
tMt U1l~M Gift
FOR HER
I
' I
GOLDEN STATE
rodeo finals
ONLYTIIE TO~TEN COMPETITORS in mh
of seven conte•t events from Golden State
Rodeo Co.'s . 60-plus rodeo season. NO
OTHER REGIONAL ROOEO FINALS b 11·
lowed b1 the professional Rodeo Cowboys
Association. $28,000 IN PRIZES!
SPECIAL AnRACTJONS: The ·~·1• of lhe
West". Famed Mad ison Square Garden
lightning C Ranch Square Dance on Ho rse·
batk. Louie Sil-a's 8 mammoth Clydesdale
draft horses.
llC::KCTS; $S.OO "'"' Sl.00, 16 rrs.' 1n1de1, Sl.00 discollfll On wit 11 Conwnlion Ctn\11
Titktt Office; W11tidr'1, Mutull 1114 liblrtJ
Aftl\Cies: Ol1n11 Counly So. C.lif. Binks. '•1,.~~rl;,.,~· r?-7'~~:=:. .. 1omi1nm: Jtaw. 26. I~"': l'ilo.. 27. 2 & I pm_;
Nov. 21, 2:30 pm. rOR \HfOllMATIOl'il CAI.Li
71f/'35,500().
!'Odee 1uoci9tn
~ CONVENTION ~ EIMCENTER
NOV. 26-27-28
•
Reeser tossed to \Vh ltford for
th~ touchdown rrom nlne
yards. out with 2:3S left In
the initial period.
Anaheim took the ;,;pper
hand late in the third quarter
on a 33-yard drive, li.llnlinaled
by Mike Salt's one-ya rd ru1,.
John Tupy and Russ Tucker
came up with crucial fumble
recoveries of Anaheim bobbles
and Warren Ray muscled his
way in recovering a Nev"port
fumble in a tense situation.
The defeat was coach Clare
VanHoorebeke 's fifth of the
'71 campaign, the most in his
21-year carcl!r as the Anaheim
boss.
F!rl! aown' '"'~'"' Fir!/ -n• "'1Hln' Firs <io'flln1 Hn.111111
Total Ji<sl downs Y1rd1 1Vshl"11
Y•rOs Plllln1 Yard\ IO•I
Net y1rd1 1110\lld Punl1/A~tr11e distinct Ptn1lli.,/Y1rd• penallud
F.,,...t>les/F..,mttln lo•t
Sct<1 bv OlllH't11"1
•• • . ' .. . • • " ' 125 7t 141 1J3 •I 11
'1S ltl 110 71'1'1
4161 111 ~
1/1 JI'
A~1!'\elm 1 Q 1 n I•
NfWPOtl ll Q 0 1'-10
Ree!er
ThomP•On S~•l• llu~l<h S• re~ To!~I•
'"' C1o on Shah..,n
.An!°"' Oh1niJn 01vi1 l O!llS
llukfdt ""'"'~' To11l1
Anion
I US HING )ltWlllH"I
"" '' r1 ••• I• ~l I 5 I I 11 • 1.1 6 9 A 0. I
' 11 19 "'·' ! • 1 0 ' 7 l:l 111 •I 2.)
'" AMIE•ICAH COHl'l•INCE W L T I'd. I'll. OP
..... ,.,.., • 1 ' .... , .. lll
e111lmor1J 1 3 o .100 m un
Ntw E"Vl•nf ' 6 0 .400 151 1H Ntw YOfll Jt'tl 0 I 0 ."1)1) IJ3 :!Q4i
lufftlO O 1D 0 .000 IJ.I Xlf
Cln1!111d
f>ltl1bu•9h Cliw:;lnAell
Houtton
CMlrtl Olvb10ll s s 0 . .500 1.U ,11
, S S 0 .SCIO 191 'MIJ
J J o .JOO in 111
I I l .Ill 1"' '143
W1tl•l'l' Dhl1lon
O.kllfld I 1· J .11S m IM
K•n1a1 CllV 1 2 1 .111 111 1J•
Stn DlfllO I I 0 .olOO 10J 13'0
De11v1r 1 1 1 .m 1.u 1~
N.ATIDH.AL CONl'EJteNCll 1a11ttn Division
I W L T PCT. P11 01'
Dilllt • I ' O .JW m l~S W•llllltll!Ofl I S I -"1 111 171
N v. Gi.nt• ' ' 0 AO in JJ'l Pllll~p1'111 3 6 1 ,J,ll J:lj ?21
SI. L0\111 l I 0 300 112 :!ll4i
Ct11lt1I Dlvl1len
MIMnO!t I ' 0 llOO U1 11 Delroil I l l '61 21' 111
Ctuc.,o 6 • O .600 15' Ill
C.rH n Btv J S I .l l} 119 111
W••lt<R Dlvlllen
L°" An9tl•< I ) 1 111 200 1Sl
Stn Fr1nc"(O I • O •.IOO 10./ 1,)1
Atltnte • • 1 .SOO lll 11S
Nt w Orle•n• l s 1 .ns 111 1l6
5Wndl~"I RtWlli
Minml II. 81t11m«1 14
1<11 .. ~11 Cl!v :it. Oenv•• 10
Clncinnll• JI, l-1ou1ton 1l Clevf!ancl 11, Nt w Entilolld 1
New York Jeh JD. 8Utftlo I
01kllfld :U. S.n OlellO ll
01111~ 11. w~1~r"111on o
Delrol! 28, Chlc•go i
MlnnM011 13, New Or11an• 10
PMlad11p11l1 JI. sr. Louis 10
Los Ang1ln II, S•n Fr1n,1~ '
f>lrl1burgll 11. New Yi>r~ G1111!1 I~
TOMlthl'I GlrTlt
Grnn liar 11 .Atlanta
TllWrffaJ'I G1mu
K1n111 Cl!V 11 Detroit
LOS Annlfi et 0.1111 Sundtr•i G1m11
A.lltn•a at Mln<W!toll
Bl!llniote 11 01kl1nd
Clrvellncl 11 t-loullon
0...vtr 1t Pll!tbut•~
New Englerld 11 Bult1lo
New Orlt1n1 VI, Grftfl lit• .,
Ml!w1ul<N"
SI l.Ou'I 11 N-Ycrk
San Ditto II Clnc1nAell
Sin Fr1ncl1<0 e1 Ntw Y0<k Jet1
Wt!llklgton 11 Pllllfdplphlt
MclfldlJ, Nov. 2'
(hie-•t Ml•mi, n11lonal ltl•v+!lon
D! tt.. °'"' •11•1 1111t in the third quarter -but
Saddlebac~ College football Hartman pullrd his first Of·
co11ch George Hartman wishes fenst and reserves played the
the 1971 season y.·as starting rest ()f the way.
this week. Offensively, r rt' sh m a n
The reason Is qu ile obvious qu11rterback Bob Dullc::h and ,
-the Gauchos looked their 1«>phoqK1re tailback: S t e v ~
best in the season finale Satur~ Divel Sparkled.
day. night at Mission Viejo Dulleh SC!>red on a one-yard
High in trouncing Chaffey. 48-, run and also had 41 and 10-
0. yard scoring tosses to another
"Oh yeah. l'd like to slart
the !)Cason right now." said
Hartman following the 'easy
romp. "but we're going right
to y.·ork on next season Mon-
d~Y-\\'e're really going alter
it next year.·•
And with the nucleus of the
71 squad returning next
se~son it's a good bet Iha!
Saddleback .~·ill be ,righl ln
the thick of lhe ~1ission
Conference picture.
But '71 v.·us nol a disap-
pointing season for 11artman
and Gaucho followers.
Although Saddleback did nol
win a conference title for the
nrst time in three season!>.
it did produce a 7-3 record
and most. in1portant pro-
gressed in every ga1ne.
"This was our best game
as a team.'' said Hartman.
.. The kids have really con1t
a long way. I'm real pro¢...
of the tremendous progriss ·
we've made. The coaching
staff and the kids produced
an outstanding effort."
Saturday night's S('()re pro-
bably could have been higher
-the Gauchos had their 48
freshman -Bobby lfaupert.
Dulich completed seven of 19
for 138 yards and ran fo
another 44.
Dlvel nad his best game
of the season, picking up 142
yards in 22 carries -all
0.AME STATISTICS
'" .. " givtl ,, "' ' ~l•~h " u " ( ,nn~vo l " • McNr.m1r1 ' • !>u1•vk • • " l1011nk~ ' " • Tot1h ~ ~· ~ Ctllfltr M1r,n1ll ' • ' Sc.llrOfdl'r ' " • Brtav l • " Wall°"' • ' R1mh f l ' ' ' Ve ltrelo " .. ' Q~~t'.11 • ' " ~ ·~ " PASSING llllllll•Hcll
" k ... .. OUllch " ' • '" ctiafltJ ""' " ' • ..
Olii"" • ' ' " 01111 " • ' "
yards. ~
And lhe Gaucho defetie~ also al its best, Umltln.g ~
fey to jli!t 124 oet y•r ~
,,vlth 57 or that comint ._
the final quarter.. ... ':,
HERBERT l. MILLER
TIRE CO . INC.
SILVERI OWN
BELTED
11 •
,,
• BFG's 1971 new car tire • Designed for
today's driving • Wide, "78" Profile
• Double-belted for stre ngth
AS LOW AS
--FEDERAL
EXCISE. TRADE-IN
SIZE TAX PRICE
878·14 S2.0B •zz.aa --21.sa--C78-1 4 2.15 -E7B-14 2.37 28.88 ---F78,t4 2,54 30.18 --G78-14 2.69 33.88 -H78-14 2.95 36.88 ----f78-15 2.62 30.88 ---G7B-15 2.80 33.88 -H78-15 3.01 37.88 --J78-t5 3.12 42.88 --l78-t5 3.27 43.88
Whitewalls slightly higher
" '
"
•' I •,
. '
THE NEW RADIAL T/A 10 POINT
BRAKE SPECIAL
ALIGNMENT SALE -lht stl'9el tire tough
enough to compel• against
special racing tires.
• ~~ltu• rtdill plJ tonstruc!XI~ • ( belll
el D1~1cor• 1110• to•d !tr 1dd1d
1!f1nflll 111d N111, • W·strlll wod1
111Uln 1111 wldtn •~J lf<lf1!.1nwt.111
• lt111ll in,.Y.l!J Jill •i11t-~111Ct
25,000 Miles
BFG Mechl.nlcs Win:
H•~e cnuckllole~ ce us~d your c•r to
dnl! t o 1hf l1tt or n1ht! II 1u. ~o".
probably netd your l•Onl wheel$
1li11ned." ,t,no now·1 1he lime to h9YI
ii dOflf. Bl!t lllSI ttfG'i h•Yin1 •n
elicnment w 11.
ONLY R19. $11.95
~· s546s .... Vel1t1
$6J.95
Fll.60-!S F.E.T. Sl .11
l. Replace linings 2. Turn all drums
3. Grind Unlngs to ma tch drums 4. Repackouttrfront wheel bearings
5. Bleed and refill
I ~$.77 We •lso servic• ALL
cars with •Ir-conditioning U.S. CARS
•
PERFORMA G.T.
• low, wide '70" series profile
• Polyester Cord-fiberglass Belt
construction • Styled for taday's
high.performance cars • Bold
Raised White letters
s24ss :::.
IJJ.15
E70-14 F.E.T. $1.SI
bni ke system
6. lnspectm1st1reyfi!Jder
7. New front grease Mais 8. Inspect wheel cyllnden: 9. Adjust parking br1k9
10. Road test
NOW ONLY
$ 88
COSTA MESA: ORANGE: WESTMINSTER:
JONES TIRE SERVICE
2049 Harbor Blvd.
(at Bay)
JONES TiRE SERVICE L J. umE BIG 0 TIRE
646-4421 540.4343
1100 No. Tustin Ave.
(across from new Post Office)
532-3383
7352 Westminster Ave.
193-5572
LIFESAVER
RADIAL
THE 40,00D MILE TIRE
• 8FG's bat pmtflltr titt • Midi
~lh Drn~ Rt)'Od Cord • Ollt
llfos~ strcnre:st. bat mi1Q&I tire
s34ss :.:::.
M),IJ
AR11·1! F.E.T. S1 .tS
Tiii LllU:!Me --lmftl
B FGoodrich
..
'· .. .
.. Dlll y PILOT
]oh.nson Captures
. Top Fuel Crow lJ,
ONTARIO Sometimes,
Hank Johnson will tell you.
It takes mort than a super·
po\Vered dragster to win a
;-;-r~e.
1 '1'he 29-year~ld driver from
M.Jrysville, Wash., Wi)n I cat.
and-mouse game wlt.b John
'Wiebe or Newton, Kan., ~n·
d1y to take the top fuel
eliminator title at the $2251000
Super-nationals at 0 n t a r I o
Motor Speedway.
overheated and Johnson won
easily.
"I loved it," said Johnson .
who pocketed SS.500 for his
first major title. He was
clock~ In ~.61 seconds and
218.« .p.b.
All ~ur professional cham-
pionships were decided by od·
dities. '
Jim Bucher of Cincinnati
was initially disqualified from
t~e gas eliminator finals for
starting too soon. But he was
later declared the win ner
when it was determined that
hi! opponent. Kenny Ellis of
Pico Rivera was driving a
car with too high a ratio of
horsepower lo weight. Bucher
earned $&,875.
. -' ..
JC, Prep
Football
Stand~gs
IOUTHIRN CAL CON,IRIHCI . ,lull
Wiebe, whose $100 ,000
c u stom-made all-aluminum
engine had set a course record
of 1.5.3 seconds for the quarter
mile In qualifying Saturday,
decided to make Johnson wait
before moving hill machine to
the starting line in the
eliminator finals.
• Larry Arnold of Memphis
had little competition in the
funny car finals, as his op-
ponent, Mike Snively of Riallo.
h a d mechanical problems.
Arnold's 1971 'CUda was timed
in 6.84 seconds and 212.76'
m.p.h.
••t LA ·: ~ IH Al'IQ•IH CC
lo Hondo ' j 'tt
" " ,r, "But Johnson just sat pa-
tiently while WI eb e's
supercharged engine got hot-
ter. lly the time the Kansan
decldtif .to move to , the
stirting line, his dragBter had
o!""' Weit 4 ~A H•r-1
,or111 o J :u Sal11r .. 1•1 Sc.11t
Rio HonCIO l:t:Golcll11 Wtal ll 'I'' LA ,., cc 10
. Crestview Crown
•• :-Won by Diahlos ·
M.iS!ion Viejo High wolf the
Q-estvlew League cross coun-
try championship but had to
settle for second place by a
matter of two points in the
league meet held Saturday at
UC Irvine while Laguna Bea.ch
placed seeond overaJI as well
u in the Orange, League meet
at the aa me site.
El Modena won t h e
Crestview meet Saturday with
31 points to 40 for Mission
Viejo when top Diab\o runner
Ed Radermacher ra n into
trouble in the varsity race
on a wet course. Radermacher
fell on the wet turf and Jost
out in a bid for the individual
title.
Larry Gerich of Foothill was
the individual race winner in
the Crestview finals in 9:55.
The league champion Is
figured on a combined scoring
basis including the league
championship finals as well
as the dual meets staged dur-
ing the reguJar season.
l H•rbor , CVJll"Ht 10
Ob.NOi LIA•UI CIJINI)
GARDIN o aoV• LI AGU•
(fl lNI) • L " ltl l\Cl'lo A .. mllDI • ' "' 5111!11• • ' •• flacltk• • ' ·~ GArden Grovt ' ' " !10•11 Gr1...t1 ' • • LM Aml~<IS ' • ..
Lt 01111111 • • '" Sa!urN 1'• SCfl'I lttl\Cllo Altml!OI ,,, Ptd!lct 2'
.. • ..
m
tt
" "' ~
Pro C·age , Hockey
..
...
EASTERN CON,ElllNCI
Allt nlk. Dlvltlff
Boston
Ptill1<1•lp!IJ1 N1w Yotk
llulft lo
YI l flCI. G• u , .ll2 t t .100 ,.,.,
' ' ,JXI ,.,.,
1 11 .l" ·~ Ctnlrtl Dlvl1iofl
!11lllmor1 I lf .U4
Clnc!nn1!1 6 I . .00 VJ
All1nt1 J 11 Jn ,
(l.Wl•nd ' u .l"l2 J~~
Wl5TliltN COH,IRINCI
MklVl'lll Dlvlti.R
MilVl'tllk~ 11 I ...
(Mc190 lJ J
D•Trol! t t
P!ID9111X 1 II
.104 l \'I .... ' ... 10
flaclllc DlvlJIOfl
l°' An~l@I 17 l ... -
GolOtn St•I• l1 1
S.1111• ll 1
Porlltnd l 14
Hou1ton • 11
.'61 l 'll ...
.116 n v.
.l.O ll'lt
,_ Sll~r•tY'I lltlwltl
N.._ York n~ 111111mor1 lU
De1roll !GS, llwttalo H
All1n11 1U, Pl>oonl• 10'!
C!IOCtllO IJJ, lloslon 106
Stlttle 19'. Por11,.111 100
GGIMn St11e 107, Mllw1u~r1 100
Only 11mt1 KlllfOulf'd
SWllOIY'I lttllllll
Botlon na, c11v111nd 105
LOl An1el" 112, MUwtullf't' \OJ
Sefltlt 111, PnlYd<!tpllll 111
HOllllDn ns. GolOtn St•1• " Tffn'> GlllMI
No 91mt• Kllech.llM T""'"''' G1m11 Mllwluktt 1! Dflroll
(lncJnn.,11 t t Nll'I' Votk
Porlll"° 11 (hltttO
All1nll 11 ft\ffl1lo
lla!Umor. II Cltvet•""
PnU10elpl\l1 11 Plloenl~
Only 11mu K!ltdult'll ...
1111 Olvhl911
• L "''· rc1nl11tk~ " ' .ni
Vlr1lnlt " ' .611
N1w York • • ....
P ln sDUr•h " " ....
FlorlOl1n1 ' " ·"' C1rollnt • " .m
WHI Olvl1IM
""" " ' ••• IMltnt • • ..
~pl\!• ' " ••
011111 ' " . •1'
Denver ' " .•12
S:11'11rUT't ll11u111
P•IUDUr"1 \!l, Memp!\11 !QI
ICtnluU.y 12G, C~rol1111 IOI
Denwr 117, Florldl1n1 '1
U1.., 103. 0.lltl "
0111¥ tlll'>U K!\MUI~ Swnt11r'1 ll11ull1
P'IOritlllM !Gl. Mtf'l..,I• N
••
' • • '" . ..
"" •
Collegiate Grid Scores
WllT
UCLA 7, UJC 1
s11nt&rd u , C11f!ot11ll o or~ Stitt :io. Oreoon 2'
w11!llntlon 11, We\Mntton Slot• 711
UC 511111 ll1r1>er1 11. 5ftnll Cl1•t 72
San Dltt0 Stilt M. Arlrone 10
Whl"lt r It, RldleP'Ml1 t
(•I Sitt• n ... ont llt1c!l1 o . HIWlt! ll
Ptc1Hc 11, l'rnno Slt!t n
Vt!tt't littt 11. Ctl 51111 (LA)
IAIT
"'"" SI. SJ, Plll1Cur1h II
Anteaters
Finish Third
SAN DIEGO -Coach Bo
Roberson 's first-tver UC
Irvine cross coontr7 team
closed oul the 1971 sea!.00
S.turday with a third place
finish In the All.C81ifornia
tournamenl •l UC San Diego.
Top -nruaber for th t
Anteater• was Curt Coughty
who placed 10th in 25:36. ·
All.Ci ! T'Wfllllni T 1m 1 I. v , 11 i. lie' ,1'if.~ ~j,".i• ,MM,
j .. Y• ~ 10.Ylt ll '~!XI ci\.f-H rte« h 1 ..... 1n : I ' 1 ~,,.,, ... '~" , ' . •·u '"" l'r.' $.,n O "''! <i: I 11, 11rl1 i!Jl!Mfl, •: I 1 , le;~ A fl. .11'1 Id JI ti• .0 1 'W, Wl'tllt ....... 11
S••tc111t )I, W•t1 v1r9lnl1 1'
Corr>ell •1, f'fllll U
D1r!"""11ft 33. Prine.ton 1
H•rv•rd JS, Ytlt U
BMton Collttt l!. M111o<nv1en1 o
Co111mCi1 U, Brown 6
Conn"'1i(111 7•. HolY Cron 11
ltlllftrt 11, Coltlt• 1'
ltmDle IJ, VlllfOOVI lJ
SOUTH
LSU 'll· Notrt D1m1 I
TtnntUff 21, klllhK~r '
N0t!h C1n;il1rlf 5t. 11, CN-mterl n
Nori!! Ctrolll'\& 31, Dlill• O
Vlr9lnl1 ?t, ,,,,.rvltnd '1
(\l td4!1 41. 01v101on 1
ktouts SI. H, M-!lls SI. "
\'tnderllll! 10, T1f!>ll1 I
$0 MIHll•IO-" 11. Ylr•l111t 1te!I •
1.lc!lmflnd II, Wllllt m .. Mtrv 1t
'°'-''~ CtrollNI U. W1kt f o<t$1 1
flot1dt SI. 4!, T11!11 11
MIOWllT
Mlc"iOell IO, Otole SI, 1 "''"'"'111fl Jll, Mldtlllll SI, 1
UU00!1 ll. lewl t
!flOltrlf .1l, "'"'dul )I
Ml-11111 n, Wl1Cen1ln 11
Cflot HO !J1 ...... fore' U
1-1 "· 5', Oli!a1*nt SI 0
1(1fOWll 1, M11-' 2
D1,1on 1', 11,,...u.., Cr"" H
Ml1ml Cor.Jol id, Ctoc:lnntll 1
Tole<kt 11, rcent 11. •
SOUTMWll'f
A"-'""'' U. TtXlt l~ t
SMU 711, 11111ot •
TCU l'o. '!let lt
Hou1!on ,,, Mll Mt ('!•I •
"O•lft T•Jt l SI l\, Wi(!lllt lt 10
Colortdo St, l•, Tt•tl Il l ol'111tl I
llOCltllS
Ut~~ 11, I.VU 15
u1~n 51 ''· 1d111tt " t.l•w Mt•l<O •t, W•"""'I"' U
A•llOlll llflt 4t, i.t~ .lfK Stilt 6
Mtndey's 0 1mt1
No 11mt1 '~Ulf'd
T•t"41J'I Gl mH
C1rollnt v1. Vl,tl11l1 t t H1mpton
D~•f< 11 D1lla1
Ur.~ II Pllbbur911 Only 11m1 KM<lultd
N..,. Yori
Mon1rtt l
Boston
Toron•o
0e11011
VlllCOUVH
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Mln11e10ll lJ • l l'f 61 S4
f'll11DUrgn • IJ , II J9 "
P!lll1dtllll!l1 1 I 4 U 41 JI
Calllornlt 6 12 J 1! II H
5r. Louis J 11 s U ff '1
lo• A11;tlH • 15 1 I a IJ llN~IJ" IUIUHI
Phllfflllllola l , Montr111 1, lit
Totonto S, Ct~lor11l1 1
MIMtlOtl 4, Ntw York 1
lle1ton 1, (Ilk••• 1
l °' Anttltl J, Dllrolt 1 ~I. LOUii I, 1'111lburtl'I I '
Only ''""' KlltoClwlld ,U ...... Y'I lt .. lh
N1w Yorlt 11, (1Hlor11l t I
Totonlt" •wt111t J
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Ml1111twh l, l'l'lll3dtleftl1 I. Ill
Only ttmH ld'leotultoCI
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''"""''''-ti Vtnc:ouvl!" LDI ....... 11. t i $1. Louis
Only 11m11 oc!lldulld
Vanguards
Face Biola
In Opener
Southern callfornia Qillege
of Costa Mesa will open the
1971 basketball sea.Min Tues-
day night with a new coach, a
new look and opposing a new
coach at Biola C',ol\ege in LA
Mirada. Tipoff in the varsity
game is at I with 1 jayvee
prelim at 6.
Lynn Taylor , assistant to
Paul Peak a year ago, has
taken over the relgns as head
mentor and will uUlite a full
court pressing defense with a
rotating three guard offense.
The two big 1men he is coun-
ting on a~ se nior letterman
John Gregg (6-6) and Cypress
College transfer Pat Quinn t6-
5).
Jerry Rinker. 1 'floor leader
a year ago, will be the swing
man In the backcourt·
frontcourt formation . Rinker is
1 six-footer and is a senior.
The other two st1rling spot.$
•re undetermined between
three or possibly four players.
Kip Hearron (M ). Greg
Jacobs 16-31 and Dick
Slverl!en <6-01 are all let-
termen Hearron i 11 ~
11nphomore and the other two
1rt senior1
The fourth man In con-
tention is John Curtl1, 1 team·
mate of Quinn at Cypress
COiiege 1 year ago.
New head coach of the Blol11
teAm 11 Howie l.yons. 11
former C I F championship
mentor 81 Miilikan High In
Long Beach.
... . . . . . . .
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the defec1ive shock ii.b-
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Sears, we will install
new shock abwrber with
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l{eavy Duty Shocks
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1952 to 1957 Chevrolet
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l1.00xl3 l 1J. 9:l 1.48
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E78-14/7.35xl4 31.95 .
23.96 2.37 F78-14 7.75x14 :n .% 28.4 6 2.54 .
F78-14/7.75xl4 33.9:) 25.46 2.54 G78·14 8.25x14 "40.95 30.7l 2.69 •
G78-14/8.25x l4 36.95 27.71 2.69 H78-14 8.55xl4 t:~3.9:l :!2.96 2.95
5.60xl5 29.95 22.46 l.60 G78-15 8.25xl5 4 1.95 :J l.46 2.80
G78-15/8.25xl5 37.95 2R.46 2.80 H78-15 8.55xl 5 44.95 33.?l 3.0l
H78-J 518.55x15 40.95 30.71 3.lM 78-15 8.85x 15 • 48.95 36.?l 3.12 .
L78-1 5/9.00
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Prices Effective Sun., Nov. 21st thru Tues., Nov. 23rd
For Panels and P ickups
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SIZE ---· 6.70~ J.i --~~::;
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6-Ply Rating 3 9 88
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NO
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In-.; !11.'i -12~ lh.'i
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<IZ 11,l!L V-PICOT r
Ahmansons Altered Opposition ~ Lice-rising Yachters
Of Pleasure Boa *" Flares !May Visit Both 'Round Island ' Races Eliminated ~
the San Clementt lsland race, It Ydll have a new course, • t Gel'ID3DY Sailors in Newport Harbor
Yach( Club's Ahmanson Series
of offshore races in 1m won 't
even catch a glimpse of the
backside of Catal,ina Island.
That wa s the word passed
today by George Y u I e •
chairman of the l 9 7 2
Ahmanson Series, who a~
nou.i>ced a drastically changed
format ror 1972.
The two round·th~island
races of the Ahmanson Series
will be eliminated. They are
Outboards
Not Proven
As Polluter
traditionally the first or the starting at the Santa Ana A 1pokesman (or the recrea-assume that lack of boating always been contradicted by.-
series, and Balboa Yacht River Jetty, rounding the Long tlonal boating industry has knowledge cauaes the most the accident reports that ahow Yacht owners who wish to
Club's "wrong way" Catalina Beach entrance buoy, thence told boating law officials he accidents, but they have the majority or operators in· travel to Klei, Germany, In
Island race which has always to Ship Rock and finishing was "astounded by tht recent volved: in~ accidents are
wourxl up the series. at the Emmy oil island. 1 changes of position" on the seasoned skippers," st 0 n e their own boats to view tht
Only two traditional races The sixth and final rac,, issue of licensing pleasure S W • d sail\ t 1972 yachting Olympics may
will be left in the series. They July 15, will be an entirely boat operators. trong · in. "¥aybe something new has do SQ..
are the Ship Rock and Hun-new feature over a modified Addressing the annual con-~ cropped up_. but we certainlr The only hitch u that they
tington Tidelands races. America's Cup course of 25 ference or the Nation a I Pus' hes Fleet haven't seen It/' he added. won't be able to watch the First race of the 1972 mlles. The race ls scheduled Association of Boating Law other factors cited aga inst
Ahmanson will be an entirely July 16. Actual course will USC Takes Administrators in T •mp a, licensing were : actua l competition from their
new feature on April 15 con· be announced. Fla., Ron Stone, gpvernment Of J • I. The high cost or ad· own craft.
sisting of two legs. It will Yule noted that most sailo rs relations director of the .UnWrS ministering a truly effecctive The Olympic committee has
start at Newport, round a are becoming jaded with the Carter Ford Boating Industry Association, licensing and testing program. assured yachlsmen that five
m a r k at the v.·est e n d of non·stop overnight r a c es pointed out that tM · ad· Fl . 2. The false sense of securi· Catalina Island and finish at around the islands ministrators themselves had • ying Junior sailors lrom ty a license would impart to yacht harbors with 600 berths
Emerald Cove. The fleet will especia lly si~ Los Angeles B F gone on record opposing l~e Western District had some a boat operator. ha ve been newly built or er.•
rendezvous at the Isthmus Yacht Club's Whilney Series 03 t ete licensing no less than five gusty going Saturday and Sun· 3. The undermining of cur· tended in the Kieler Forde.
that night and on the following is entirely made up of island times -most recentl y in 1970· day as 17 skippers competed rent boating safety programs These are to accommodate the
da y sail from E m e r a I d , races -including Jhe San, Ttte Carter Ford Perpetua,l Stone charged that the f~r the regional title in the such as those taught by the
arou1l4 Point Fermir'i and Clemente Island. symbolic of (he Pacific Coast licensing issue has flai-ed r Un It e d St ates pow er All r lh · th 19-anew because or . lhe U.S. IW'ean off Newport. flriish at the Emmy oil island. o e races in e '" 1 t 11 · y h 7 Squadrons and lhe Coast Ah n eroo eg1ate ac t Racing C 0 as t Gua~·, recent Fifteen t& 18-knot winds on The second race April 29 manson should be finished . iu 'Guard Au1.iliary.
expected armada of yachts
coming to the Olympics.
Durjng ttle Olympic h by midnight on any given day. Association team racing reversal of its previous stand Saturday ronributed to four yachting program,· however.
visitors w i 11 not be allowed There is no conclll!ive ;nki~ t~~a~~0~!~u1:~~~~ This would. place it in championship went to USC against licensing. breakdowns, including 0 n e ed·~~~:fon,isbu~ui~li~ul~~ti~
_evidence that outboard mot.ors also serves as a tuneup for somewhat the same category Sunday after the Trojans "The Coast Guard has often dlsmastlng, a broke.n haly2.rd watered down to accommodate r h
II t t d. th E d h' h as Balboa Yacht Club's 66 expressed serious reservations nd 1 bo t . Th h r to ollow t e regatta in their po u e wa ers, accor 1ng to e nsena a race w Jc Series which features da y-~efeated Ora~ge Coast CoJl~ge .. concerning the effectiveness of a a wo-a ramming. e undreds o thousands each own boats. Apart from 1 he
a spokesman for the boating starts a week later. races of approximately six 1n .a best five out of rune licensing. but in recent months ivinds dropped lo 8·12 knots year. Instead, compulsory, boats of compe titors and those
industry. The third race will be ):lours. series on .~ewport Harbor. has changed Its tune," Stone Sunday. mass education programs -
Speaking at the national another old favorite. the Hun· The new Ahmanson format The series, sailed ~ver two said. Northern California sailors inc luding even some home-carrying regatta officials,
conference of the National tington Tidelands. which takes will also result in the series weekends, was the 1naugu;at State officials _ those dominated: the series with the study courses -would have judges and press represen·
Association of State Boating the fleet from Newport, being completed at least two for t~ PI~YRA team racing charged with the day-to-day championship and runner-up to be instituted ," said Stone. tatives, the regatta area will
Law Admlnistrators, Matt J. around the Long Beach en-months ahead of the previous ¥1amp1onsh1p, . . . enforcement of boating laws goi ng to the. Island Sailing "And who would bother with be closed to all vessels except
Kaufman, executive director trance buoy and back, This schedule. The BYC Catalina Two of the TroJan sk1ppen _ have allowed that operator Glub of Foster City, Calif. the se quality courses ()l'\Ce the 14 official steamers for
of Boating Industry Associa· one is scheduled June IO. race is always in September were products of Newport licensing would sap funds The winner was Richard Gee he'd gotten his certificate the use of spectators. The
tion, said the industry has Also unchanged will be the after Labor Day. Y!lcht elubs and . all four of from other proven programs and second place went to Ken from some government stcarners have a d a i J y
begun a two-year project of Long Point & Return race Yule said the 1 9 7 2 the OCC hel msmen came 4p of boating safety. Orchard. 'diploma mill' " Stone asked. capacity of up to 4,000.
testing outboard motors scheduled June 16-17. This Is Ahnianson will be sailed ex· from local junior sailing pro-The basis for the NASBLA1--------------------------------
operating in real life con-another two-leg race with an i;.lusively under the Intema· grams. , position -and until recently,
ditions. ovemight rendezvous at tional Ocean Rule {IOR) Jack Jakosky was the cap-the Coast Guard's_ has been
Until the results of th8t Moonstone Cove and White's which is rapidly taking over !ain of the USC team .which that the analysis of boating
study a.re in. he said, any Landing. (rom the Cruising Club of 1nduded such .other skip~rs statistics doesn't point to
statements regarding outboard The Coast Channel race America (CCA) measurement as Peter \V1lson. Doug licensing as a cure, Stone said.
pollution must be based on June 24-25 is the fifth race. rule. Rastello and Steve Hathaway. "The licensing advocates .. questionable motives and 1--------------------------------'------'....:_:_::..::::_:::1
unsubstantiated estimates .
The Marine Exhaust
Research Council (ftfERC\ set
up to spearhead the project,
consists of the Outboard
Marine C o r p . , Kiekhaefer
Mercury aDd the Marine
division of Chrysler Corp.
BIA was elected to serve
a s a d m i nis!rative head·
~uarters. The study is being
financed in part by the
E n v i ronmental Protection
Agency.
• Jn simple layman's terms,
the MERC study is designed to: -
1. Determine what elements
. are contained in outboard ex.
hausts and in what quaniities.
2. What happens to these
elements when they get into
natural waterways.
3. What short and long ef·
feels do these elements have
OD .the water quality and the
organisms which live in these
'Waters.
The tests are being con·
ducted simultaneously in rold
as well as warm waters.
4 Coast Men
Start Top
Hobie Race
Four Newport Beach skip.
pers and one from Costa Mesa
are among the 200 qualifiers
who started competition today
in Tampa, Fla. for the Hobie
Cat-14 national championship.
The regatta co nt inu e s
through Nov. 28.
Local skippers inClude Craig
Barto, Ted Hendrickson . John
Ross-Duggan Jr. and Alfred
Egan. all of Newport Beach.
and Dick Beauchamp of Costa
h1esa.
The regatta is sponsored by
lhe Cost Catamaran Co ..
builders, of the s p e e d y
catamarans.
With winds of any con·
sequence. catamaran racing
-particularly Hobie Cat rac·
ing can be the fastest and
most exciting in the world
Also competin~ in the event
will be Hobie Alter. creator or the Hobie Cat, from San
Juan Capistrano. and Cappy
Sheeley. Honolulu winner of
last year's nationa[g held in
Hawaii.
Nordsko g
Gets Po,ve r
Boat Post
Bob Nordskog of VAn Nuys
has been elected president of
the Pacific Offshore Power
Boat Racing Association. He
succeeds Russ HUI of Seal
Beach.
Nordskog. ~. is noted ln
tlle power boat racing world
aa a hard competitor and a
major contributor to the ad·
• vancement of the sport.
He is a leading international
outboard and I n b o a r d
maralhon star as well 11
o!fsbore veter.an.
Six other officers and dir c·
tors of tht association will
take office at the organiza·
tion'• annual awards •l'Mt 1n·
stllllaUon banquet at the Cf.n·
tUrY.. Plaza Hotel Saturday
night. ' . ..._ '
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Re1ular ,_,..SALE PR,ICE f ed. Er. Sit• Price •• With Trldt Trade Netdtd Tu
A70.13 $50.10 $3!.40 $2.08
070-13 $52.85 $35.23 $2.03
070-14 $53.00 $3U3 $2.38
E70-14 $55.00 $38.66 $2.51
F70.14 $58.40 p!,13 $2.64
G70.14 $63.70 ' $42.46 $2.84
H70.14 $69.85 "Ml $3.05
E70-15 $56.05 $17JI $2.68
F70.15 $59.45 .. $31.113 $2.69 . G70-15 $64.95 $4UO $2.86
H70.15 $71.15 ... , $47;43 $3.11
SALE ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT
Re1ul•r
Sitt Price Will'I Tr•dt
E60-14 $64.75
F60-l4 $68.60
G60.14 $74.95
E60.15 $65.80
F60.15 $69.45
G60.15 $76.00
SALE PRICE •• Trad• Netd1ll
$43.17
'"5.73
"'· .. .
• $43.11 ' ..
$4IJO •
$50.•""'
fed. Ex.
TU
$1.75
$2.81
$2.93
$2.75
$2.81
$2.93
USE OUR RAI N CHECK PROGRAM
8ee•uH ol conllnu1d heavy dtrn1nd tor Goodyear ti~1. w1 ''"Y run out ol some 1i11s durl n1 this ofler, but w1 will bto l'l•PPY 10 Ord•r you• s1r1 tire •l 1111 1dv1rti!ed f!FIC• •nd Issue )'Oii e tlin cl'IK!o; tor lulur1 d•llvery of t/11 mertllarldise. ·
PRICED LOW TO MOVE FAST
4-PLY NYLON CORD "All-Weather Dz:" Tires
$12 '·""' bluhr1\!
IUlltllH f'\U' $1.11 fH lr.
lit 11'1<11" IUt
• c1~1n 1lde\\·1\I
11~,1~11. r1di1l
d1rl1 Ofl •h(H1lder
• \'rnir brkt Ure buy
in \1l price r1ngel
ON. 18 '''"'·""''·" $ ell. (J.·hl
LOW (Oependlftl M llre)
l ft. ~Id llr1
PRICI BLACKWALL TUB ELESS
"'1••t••n 1Mttfll.!11-l.lltll l .15114 1.1111•,
buy now at everyday low prices
GOODYEAR -THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS0 TIRES
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-----~---------------· : YOUNG 6. LANE . TIR·E CO.:
I , COSTA MESA LAGUNA TUSTIN
1596 Newpo~ Blvd. 482 O~ean Ave. 305 El Camino "Ital I
I 548-9383 . 494-6666 544-7610 I THEODORE ROB ~NS FORD . ,.,. HA ... 0~ ILVD, • COITA MIU • PHON E .. ; ... ,. I ·---------------------· "
1·588 buysa
wide profile 4 ply
nylon cord tire.
Penneys. At
If you like to save money, 1ave Sunday;too.•
Penneys Ground Gainer
1588
plus fed. ltx
•nd old tire
Bl1ckw11l tubeltll
Size Replt t •• · Fed. t11
C78·1:S 700-13 1.95
1788
plut fed. l•X
and old tire
Bl1ckw11J iub1l111
I lle .. eplt Clt Fed. Ullf
A78·15 · 560-15 1.74
20 88
plu1 fed. tax
and old tire
811cDo1H iu btl•••
Sitt F1epl1c91 ftc:I, taJt
E78·14 735·14 2.21 f78·14 775-14 2.33
23 88
plut fed. tax
and old tire
l lackw1ll tub1le11
Sit• Fl ep1t c•I Fed. bx
G78·f-4 825-14 2.SS
H78-1 4 855-14 2.74
G78-15 825·14 2.64
l-j]8·15 855·15 2.80
1-2-3 oil change and lube.
588 ·:·~ 3 day aervlce ~peclal (Mon.1 Tu1t.1 Wed. only)
Compare !he things we do:
Change oil (up to 5 qts. or Pcnocys hea~ duly
moloroil )
Install new oil Ii lier and lubric ate chassis.
Plus a free pit boss sare1 y check. •Most American ca re
•
JCPenney
Skop From Sunclty Noon •f fkt following Auto C•nl•rs~
NEWPORT BEACH, Ft1~i on lsl•nd .
HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Ce nter
Us• Penntys time p•ymtnt pltn,
• · .
.,
•
,
I • " ' .. ' • '
I \ ' •
TUMBLEWEEDS
'"'""'"e """ COULD Af'R)Q O
EXPENSlVE
lA$se5 &OUGMT
THESE.
ly Chester Gould
ONE \.OOK WMAT
A.I 'THEI R °'R' PRESClllPTION WE
RECO~OS. AHi>,. WAJTING
FOR?'
By Tom K. Ryan
WE. NW FACe.D Wm!
ANO'T\lOR CRl11CAL. SHORTAGE
OF oe.FUNCTe.E.S! AfJ'{
Sll6G!'S1lONS?
HOW AllOO'f PINOCHL!:f. •••
l'M GerflN" A ~!TIU SICK OF
HON1'YMOON llRIP&E:. 1, .• _....,_ Ii
tiiO, 'IOU WOULDN'T BUY ME A NEW ,
. WASHER ··NOW I 'M ILL f'(~JI STUCK, WITH MY HAVE
\.: ' WEEKS WASH! IT FIXED
":·· .,.~---..
IN A FEW
M!NWTES
c --T< ... ~ ...... _,.,. ·--· ~-· ,,.,,,_,,_
FIGMENTS
I THlNK 'IOU'O BETTE!!? KEEP KIT ~E.
FR:O¥.. SCJ100t.. Feit A COOPLE CF ~rs !
PLAIN JANE
,
ACROSS 5~ Small talk
58 Rulers with
1 Mobile stair oollmit'd
cast power
5 Crazy b2 At l!tSS -8olol
' lndi!ftrtnl Ill Glisteni ng
to tifr particle
14 Win11ll kt &4 Havin11 two
15 Competent sides
lb Otliverym1n '1 b6 Bakery
fixtd t DUfSt !"odl.ICl
17 Diamonds or b1 foremost
clubs : l words pos ition
19 Essential oil b8 Got up
20 HrrbattOl.lS b9 -··for news : 13 We ird : Var.
plant 2 words 18 Ptewee -:
21 Are a 70 This: Sp. Former Dodger
23 Jumper 71 Fema le hol y 22 Outer part of
25Salary people: Abbr. a wheel
increast 24 Caused a bt!I
2b Son o! Isaac DOW N lo sound
28 Mingles 27tAmfrican
)2 Autctmobile 1 Re lating to a state
leastr: 2 ramus 29 Clamp the
words 2 Place In a teelh !09t ther
37 Asian country row: V.v. 30 British Is les
)a The Great J Inte nse desire counlry
Emanc ipa\or 4 Thrive 31 Riwer of
l'l Pres iding 5 Gtrman a1 tic le Germany
officer's mallet b Border an 3Z --pie .. Frorn
41 lrish . 7 Aviator head lo lot:
Repub llc1n 8 Colorful 2 WOl'dS
A1my: Abbf. trcplcal fresh· 33 Biblical slll'I
4Z Vivacious : water fish )4 Rendrr 1IM
Dia!. • Cooks in 1 somethi119
45 OneJ1o1d ing certa in w1y wr itten
back in 10 GMne ot chnr 35 G.wden of
unc ertainty 11 Motorcar : Eden res ident
48 Sh1 li1 ln!Ofmal 3& Be rl•t<I on
50 lattrat~d 12 Whl !e SPOt Ol1 something
51 Meets the 1 horse's (0 Emblem cl
1rq11iremtnls tor ehr<1d Grrat BrJt1rn-
1 l ' • • •
• if 16
17 11 "
N
••
I 7l
u ,, ,, -
•• " '.i\I' .
" " " 35 :u ~ l7
" . "
•2 " .. • ,, ..
•• .. I '. "
l2 " ['2> •
" " ..
~
1 ~ " .. .. " .. " • -
I ..
1\mm
43 Strks rt llrf
_.4 Riwer of
Nevada
4b E~panse ol
land
47 Dters' horns •9-Lancelot
52 -Mounta in:
S. Africa ri ,..,
SJ Enc'osures
for certa in
farm animals
.55 Old Itali an
playing card
5b Remove ill
tract$ of
57 Harsh breath·
Ing s&Jnds
58 -Nlelsen of
Ult si~t
mCNi tS
59 Above
bO Ed!ble r()(ll·
stock
bl Narrow strip
of metal
li5 Femhllnt n1m1
" 11 " " -
J!tit:
" " ''
" ,,
" fi:
"
I
p
~. I
By Dale Hale
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
WITH O\IE~ 1-. WLLION IN STOLEN
'llOtl tAEAW TV
COMMfRC.1"L~!
[ PIAMOMPS, IT'S VE~ IMPORT ... MT
Tl-IAT we: GEf 'TI{EM INTO ll!E sr ... res
1-.S OU \C.KLV J.S POSSl &LE, MY. &OV!
SO WE MAYE S.UPDENLV 00 .. E IMTO
TWE MOVIE COMMERCl "l &USIME!6~
MISS PEACH
SAY, :r:ttA, I
FIUN DOWN TO
Tl-IE CO!lNEll:
AND GoT ME
A NEW
Pl!NCIL-...
PERKINS
I "°"T U~OER'
ST .. NP!
•50 WH!!N 'llU!.
TRAVEilltJK
t>We&Efl,
SALE.SM.l>.Ni
v.of<.EUPIN
IGl.00-
,.-
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
~1~~iz,. "~-r-r~tz. p,1.11' ~::;: \ 1\ I I ~. 1'j.\P
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
~--
By Chorles M. Schulz
.-------~ WEU.. IF l L/fRE TAAmO llEHIND
ENEM~ LINES Al<O 1Hf 1EMl'!IOO!r!<E
W.~11111?11/·llELOW-ZBIO I M161!! SA~ Ii 1A5TEO l'RETT~ 6000 ...
I !X){°T ~!'05E 111AT5 11EIJ.L~
MUCH Of A COOPLIMENf
YOU MUST
T/>d IAI
l'Oll A PUSMOVM!!
. ' • .. :t . • l
Ii . I
" . ·~ . . ' .
' ,,_,It :1
By Harold Le Doux
GET OW TME PMOtJE At.IP CALL
MER! AT LEAST, GIVE THE VOl!MG
L"PV THE: OPPORTU~ITV TO
REl=USE,, &UT I \VOUl P EXPECT
VOil TO &E MOST f'ERSllAS-11/E !
By Mel
i HAVi 'l'O
PUT"
wo«D·PICTUlll!S
IN Hfl( MINP,
veT ...
By John Miles
MondilJ, Nawmber 22, 1911
•
DAILY PILOT @
ly Al Capp_
By Charl.SJarsotti
By Ferd Johnson
. """"·" \.N;f .• ,. .. .,,
By Roger Bollen
THE GIRLS
I ' .
I
.. . ·
• I
-... . ;
• • • ~
! • • •
•
.. . ..... .. •
• • • • • • > ·~ ·-· • • . . . ' ' • • ., . . ... . . . . . -. . . . . . . . . .
OAJl. Y .PJLOT
Evening
-NC1vtMBER 22
l:UI 1J Ile Ht1. JtfrJ" Dunptrr
OMIC News Tom Snyder · D ~ Dlln'I bt tlM hlsin
D CD 00 m Nn Mlllli., Ni1ht
hltNll Gl'ffll Bly l'atklrs VI. fll ·
r.ons 1t Gra1n e.,, WiSt. 0 Wild Wiid Wfft m n. Flillldoft•s
GI I 0tu111 1r J11n11le
Oll ai1u11 Soulld• m Hod1lpodlf Ltd,. mm ..... 9 MIPtnJ lflt
1:30 0 Sttft Allltl SllM Guuts 111
Dorothy Umour, Frink Capra, and
Oscat PtleDOn.
l!l119J .... m Andy Criffrlll Sho• m 1111 Co1bJ Sllew
tD fl\ayinf th Cuit.11 m Wl!Mlariust
ID!Crttt Atm
Si) U. Tintilocer
1:00 fJ CIS News Walter C1onklta
D m Nit tftwi Jotin Chancellor
(l)Dn .... 0 wtlet'I MJ LIM?
Qj Arl•~.1·
m1 LM l.cy
GI I Ort•• ti Junnle
@ [nlflsll Spoken Ktrt
Er.I HIDry ti Mellc.t EE LI lllbv11 a Tiie Ylttinf1,11
7;JOl)SlM4 u, a/NI CllHr Toniaht'1
speci1l 1uest Is John Forsythe.
Monday, Howmber-22, l'i?l,
' ' ' J1.t...J!L..!itll ~inell~ J
htflbtlined 1ntia, ht m1t1ts 111
1echtry In hopn ol sc1rln1 hit IMo
1til&r1ln&.
Cl} Movie: ft) (2hf) Sllldow <h'ff
Elvmn" (dltlN) 'G&-4.ISlle Nitl·
sen, JemH Fr1nCi$tuS.
0 ' eD NBC Mol!d11 Movie: (C) ll
hr) ~ t11 Ro111111I" (dram•)
'71-Ric.hard Burton. John Co11ci»,
Wolfa:•nt Prtli1. C1pt1ln Alec fostu
(Burton) tell Germ111 soldiert think
he Is dead in order lo 1et Into lheir
World W11 11 prisoner·of.war camp
to lttd 1 revolt.
(I) Wild Witd Wtsl
0 CLIFF ROBERTSON in * "PT 109" ·COLOR!
0 Mond1r Movit: (C) (2hr) "PT
109" (dram1) '63--Cllff Rob!!rtson,
Tr Hardin, J1mei Gir&OIY, Robtrt
Cultl. Giant Wilij1ms, lew Gallo,
Errol .lohn, Mlthtet Pate. Durlnt
World W1r II, Lt (j.1.) John F. lltn-
nedy 11 stranded on 1 Pacific Island
with his crew titer lhei1 PT boat
w1s cut in IWll b1 1 J1panese de·
stroyer.
I@ Movit: (C) "A Summer Place'"
(dr1m1) '59-Rlchird fi1n, Dorothy
McGuire.
m!U Gata
a!) Rms ptr1 ·Ve1onic1
9:30 D (jJ Doris D11 M111:azinr 1Wri!H
Doris Martin becomes the key ligur•
In 1n intematlcnal incident whtn
silt is taken hostage in !he Midd!t
[astrin mon11chy of Kurd1m1n by
the reb.@!s, who threaten lo kil1 theif
lovely AQler{cln aptiwe unless 1111
oppressive king of Ku1d11nan 1bdi·
ca1es.
D l1rlt1 Wud Hews
@II T1tes I Thief ID (i}l Boot a,1t 0 Dr. Simon Loe•• "The Hero" Ors.
Locke ind Selle11 h1v1 lo becGtne 1mlt1ur detectNes to Slvt 1 Pl· 9:45 m Mantrap
l i1n1'1 lilt. 10:00 B (!)My Three Sons. Katie lands
(J) I DrN• If llwinlt ' a job sin1in1 in 1 small cofle1
0 Miiiion $ MOYl1: C21tl) "NM• house, but Steve and Uic!' Ch11!ry
Lei Mt Co" (dr1m1) '5] -Clark hive their doubts 1bout the man
G1ble,,Gen1 Tlerney. American news· she wot ks tor.
paper f.Ollespondtnt in Mo5COll 11 0 m Nnn
war's ind m1rrit1 • ballet d1DCer. @ Tct Tt" lht Tnrlh
liter he is ordered out of Russia D The Avenie1s
• and permission Is denied IOf" his @ Flrinf line
wlf1. In £nt11nd, he pl1ns Ills wilr"s ED Soul! The Pel'luaslons YOC1I
esape. 1roup ind '"M'Boom." 1 aroup ol
'
I
. '
OAIL Y l"ILOT Stiff l'llON
TENNIS, ANYONE ? -Ron Long is about to make
a "racket" on 1\1ary SulUvan's head in a scene from
the Costa f\tesa Civic Playhouse comedy, "Under
the Yun1 Yu1n 'l'ree.''
De1nocrats Map Plans
. On Television Special
!
~
1
By CYNTHIA LO\\'RV Rep. James O'Hara of
NE\V YORK Li\P ) -The Michigan. chairman of the
changing structure of the r reform commission, promised
Democratic party was outlined television viewers that there
Sunday in NBC's public affairs would be "few.er 1 ~ ~ 11
special. "The L o y 11 I Op· speeches," sharp hme hmita·
position." lions on nominating and secon·
Costa: ·Mesa Comedy
'Under the Yum Yum Tree'
-~ --l
Given Lackluster S.taging
,By TOM TITUS
Of tN Oaltr l'li.t Iliff
''Under the Yum Yum
Tree" is the sort of play that
should be sealed in a time
cap:,µle to be unearthed in
the year 2000 as an example
of the type of co med y
. prevalent in the 1950s -to
allow it into the light before
then seems questionable judg-
.ment. .
lt begins to appear, after
"UNDlill THE YUM YUM Tlllili,.
A com• <t v bY Law....c• ltom1l't,
cllr«leCI b-1<" P~I T1mllill!l'll, lecl!l'tkll cilreclor 01v!C1 Plt1m1n, •1~•leC1 bY
Loi' Wllscin. Ml Oecorlllol't t" Ollv .. Rlc~1 •. P•-1111 bV !"" COiii M61 Clvlo PllYl'IOYM FrfOiYI •nd Silll,.
0-Y1 ,,.,_,, OK. ~ II ,,,.. Comm1m1!1
Recr1111on Cel't!«, Ot•nN COU'llY F1lr-wov11C1•: Ca111 MHI. R1Hn1llorlS
_Ql·.P<O.
THI! CAST
Rollln WHso" . •.•. OtODl1 E1111Va 01v1.M1nnll'tl ,... .• Ron Lon~
HOtjl" •.. •• • .••••• •. RIV Scort
••-• •• • • • M.l>ry Sulllv1l't
the third lackluster production
in five ·years by an Orange
County com munity theater
group. that the basic weakness
lies with the script itself
rather than the interpretation
rendered it. Although the
treatment afforded Lawrence
Roman 's sticky little comedy
at the Costa Mesa Civic
~layhouse hardly lends itself/
to the polishing' of this dusty
little gem. • f
should come trippin.r smoothly
off his tongue often emerge
tangled and hesitant.
As-the virtuous young th ing
who's pushing her lur~. Deb-
bie Ensign displays some fine
potential but ne ver really
comes to grips with her
character. Starting much too
slowly and building gra-
dually, she eventually warms
up by the very funny seduction
attempt in the second act,
but the charm and empathy
feUow actors would do well
to emulate.
Much of the deficiency of
Costa Mesa's "Yum Yum
Tree" is mechani cal, and
would be easily remedied by
increased famil iarity with the
material and its exeeotlon.
The wea knesses In cbarac·
terization and, particularly, in
the script itself are another
matter.
One exceptionally bright
spot is the Costa Mesa set,
attractive and well decorated,
with credit for the latter going
to Olive Riches who furnished
the show while appearing in
"The Boy Friend " at the
Laguna Moulton · Playhouse.
Every inch of staging space
is utilized, as well as some
aisle area for entrances and
exits.
"Under the Yum Yum
Tree" will be preEented . for
two more weekends. Fridays
and Saturdays, at the Com-
munity Recreation Ce nter
auditorium on the Orange
County Fairground s, Costa
Mesa.
which should radiate from herli;;,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_;;;
perfonnance neve r reaches
the surface.
Ron Long is even more
disa ppointing as her romantic
roommate. Loµg b e c om e s
mired in a low monotone
which is difficult to hear and ,
sometimes, to understand . Ad-
diUonally, he is deficient in
the ability to apply the needed
''punch" to hi s punch lines .
He impresses only physically.
bearing a strong resemblance
JCPenney
COSTA MESA STORE
2300 HARBOR BLVD.
Speclal Holiday Store Hours
SUNDAY
12 to S p.m.
., .
(~ti ...... ..w: ... ..., ....... ·-T·~~o .. 00-
5TH GRIAT Wiil!
'
'lit llOYLE
T.R.BASKIN
W Otllf.t.IDIH l TIUCllOll
FUNNY HOW lOYl'.RS START AS •••
"friends" ~ 1"£CHNICOlOR'
Q•• 2ND OUTSTANDING COMlOY .......,,.., .............. "
.MCI l~r:"*..;1.:' Dm$
THE OUT-Gf·JOWllfJIS ~-·-·--~~ ..... ~--
t10l Ltt's M1k I Dul $ix dnrmmtl'l flncludin1 M11 Rlllth m Hoplt's H«tet 1nd voc1lis1 &bby Hebb), 1~est. ID Draptt -€D t1 Criad1 l ien Cri1d1
Three congressmen a n d ding speeches and elimination
three party workers discussed of "phony" demonstrations.
radical reforms planned for
the party's convention in
l\1ian1i next sun1mer. *
"Yum Yum" is fraught with
two inherent pitfalls -a
woefully dated premise and
great chuilks of deceptively
difficult dialogue which makes
credible characterization nex'
to impossible. Additionally, ii
arrives in a stale of im-
balance. for its four-character
cast consists of three straight
roles and one comic part, upon
which the success or failure
of the production must rest.
to a younger Rod Taylor. I':::::::::::::::::::::~
The best written role of the l~
play is that of the least active
character, the worldly wise
aunt, Irene. Mary Sullivan
functions deliciously ,in this
assignment, dripping with
sophistication and sarcasm
while achieving a level of
characterization that h e r
(}j) TM hkt ti a Lift a!) (I T o111illo fD Citrnfclltrt Tiie Van Nuys Air· _
port Is visited. Cunent s1r,1y rtgula· 10:15 m MOYie C11111
tions end devices are demonstn!ed. . . fE1 D.Rl-MI 10:30 fJ @ Arn11 Ni\1 l1lbot plays m LIW. "Pinky," boss )11mltton M1j0f"'s iel·
c:l MlptliP YaWu Show set sister, who descends on tht
ll1n1e comp•llJ and Immediately
1:00 II CIJ C11n ... 1 "D11io" Budd) l1unches a ru10"11tion c1mp1ign that
Talk concentrated on
changes instituted by a party
re form commission, especially
new convention rules designed
to result in a completely open
convention and g r c a t e r
representation for women,
rni norily groups and· young
pe::ip!e.
CBS broadcast the first in
a series of historical re·
enactments ca 11 e d "Ap-
pointment Wilh Destiny" on
Friday night. \Vit h all of
recorded history to draw upon,
the series premie red with
''The Last Da ys Of John Dill·
lnger," a midwestern badman
of the early l930S.
Pati Tambellin i..'s production
at the Civ ic Playhouse · nevef
really overcomes t h e s e
drawbacks. primarily because
her twO major characters lack
the ability to reap the max·
imum effect from their
portrayals. and second I y
because of an overall lack
of concentration whi ch trips
up even the lone comic
character of Hogan.
l :M
[bseo pltJS an old tr1llbl11er 1n~ envelopes th1 executive sui\1 1n
scout who sett out lo h"Kl dowr startling "11dea51 detof.
tile sleyer of a woman who hac O Bruin1 in Actio~
befri111ded him. 00 Mnit: "Callie ol Evil" (s,H1I
CJ lli m l1111ll· In B1oadw1f! '56-Yugonia ~1a~o. Stolt Brady.
Junes r.oco, 11 fUlsl, lllms llP ~ m New1 8111 johns
!uTfalo Bftl, I tlumsy pl1yboy •n~ €I) El Retr1to dt Doriln lifly
1 thln-skinntd c1ndid1tt tor 1over ®Merrie: (C) "RNet ol No Relurn"
; Mowlt: (C) (2!11) "Monster Z.rt" Robe1t Mitchum, Marilyn Monirn.
(horror) '66-Nlck Ad1m1. Godzilla 10:45 Cf) Ntwl
i nd th• llylnf moMltr Rodan, both ISf1bHshed in prrvlolls scit11te fan. 11:00 IJ ®}al lh ws
bsles, Join forc11 to b11tl1 Monster D ®'ID News
Ztro, In intruder from outer space 0 Mowie: "P11SGn ol Panamlnt" m Tnrtli If ConsequtMIS (wtslern) '41 -Charles Ru1gle.t, ID TIN Wl1Jinl1n Ellen 011w. tD lIJJ $pedll ef tfrt WHk "Str1·
winsky R1membef!d" 0pt1"1/ballel 0 @ Cf) Nnri
prestnl1tion ol Igor Stravinsky'! D MOYie: (CJ "Cr1cl in the Mino!"'
"Tht [mperw ind the Nlal!lin iale," (dr1m1) '60-0ison Wellrs, Juliet!•
1lon1 with 1 documenllry on the lilt G1eco.
ol tht late compowr ind Interviews m Tt Tell lht l1ulJI
with Mmt. Stnvlnsky ind conduc!OI @ M1ntnp
Ptler Herman Adler. ED Cltywatchtrs
€I) Yaenbi
a!) Nifll 11:15 CiD Movlt C1mt
11:30 8 (]) Mtrw Griffin
II \\':is 1nos1I~ r r a n k. in·
tel!igenl polit1cnl talk \Vith
camp;::gn. t y p e exhortations
kept at a 1n1nimurn .
N•td Ov•r
"l.MEIUCAN Wll 0 £RNESS"
Ct"ll'IUOUI F .. m
Between now and April the
se ries will have specials about
lhe abo rt ive plot . to
assassinate ltitler, \Vy at t
Earp's shootout at the O.K.
Corral. the crucif~ion and the
surrender of Ge~ Lee al Ap-
pomatox.. ·
This role, played for all its
physical worth by Ray Scott,
is the fulcrum of any pro-
duction of "Yum Yum ."
Scott's characterization is in-
geniously funny as he enacts
the lecherous landlord who
feels duty boqnd to deflower
his latest tenan t -the fac1
that she's livjng, platonically.
with her boy frien d
notwithstandlng. Unfortunate-
ly, his lengthy speeches whi ch
Opera Goes
At Center
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
shortage of funds has caused
the Music Center 0 p e r a
Association to· postpone in-
definitely the projected 1973-74
season at the Doro l hy
Cha ndler Pa vilion. ·
In a statement, the associa-
lion said if it went ahead with
the season, the deficit would
"fa r exceed available funds,
including funds allocated to
the opera association by the
Music Cente r Arts and Educa-
tion Fund ."
m LAUREN BACALL * SOLOS WITH DAVID
(3J Movie: (CJ "P•11noi1c" (mrs·
tery) '63 -Janette SCott, Oh~er
Rtfd.
HELD OVER
Better Th•n "Bullitt"
-D•lly News ID Dftld rmt Sllow Actrt!lo L1uren
Bacall 1uests.
® Movll: ''Ope11tio1 Picllit" John
Wll'l\t.
1:45 O Nn hd.C1m1 Shaw
fr! TIM hn.uad111
1:00 0 {]) Ht11's Lucy Gueit sl111in1
1s himselt. Din D1iley becomes
l ucy'1 employer. thtn, 1fle1 1ettin1
O @J Joh~llJ C11son
fJ Movlt: (Cl "The Fem1!1 lrJp"
(Suspense) '68-litll Lord, Sus1n
Sll1sbe1R. m Mo.le: (C) "He1~tn Can Wilt"
fr.omectf) '43 -Gene Tie1ney, Don
Ameche.
(i) Movit: "Impulse" (mystery) '58
--Arlh1.1r Kennedy. Constance Smith.
10:00 (!} (C) .. Gunpoint" (adventure) "66 Tuesday Audie Muriihr. Join Strley.
1:00 O {C) "to Hell With Htroe1" (dr•-DAYfiME MOVIES ma) '68-llod laylor, C\1ud11 C11·
din1le.
t :OO m "The Hippy Tlmt" (comedy) '52 m ''Tiit lldr W1ntl Mink" (com·
-th11les Boyff, M1rsh1 Hunt. edy) '52 -Ruth Husi.ey, Dennis
0 •· •·-• ( O'Keele. t :JO .. ll1aclli111 Ill' t .... -~ com· 2:00 m MMri.. Mi\1" Collcluslon (idvtn-
1dy) '41-.lotl McC111, Ulen Diew. lurt) •49 -01e~ Po11el1 [velrn
"Wiier. Tllm'1 Lift" (co'!'edy) '47 ll~yri. '
-Bob HO(ll!, Wilnam Bend1l. 3:00 (j) '1ht T11i11" Part I (d11m1) '65
O (C) "It H1ppentd It Jent~ -Burt Lancaster. Paul Scohe!d.
(ctimedy) '59 -Doris D1y, Jack lfQ) (C) "81!111 Hrmn" (biorr aphy)
Lemmon. '57-Roc• Hudson. M1rth1 H1r1,
•SO. COAST I Cosia r.:!sa 546-lfl l
• CIN[OQM[ 20 Ornn~e ~32 3328
"ll~D~V• •lf·I•·•\\
~•1 ·UOO >•~·tcJf•1.00·t" -., ,. .. , •. ,, .... n
Al10 Cartoon R
"THE PLUMB TREE"
Cont. Sun. Fro"1 2 p.m.
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
e NOW -INDS TUESDAY e
THE GAIAYl!ST FILM
OF ALL TIME!
"GONE WITH
THE WIND"
$ho...tl1M -1:00 p.fll .
"WATERllROS" ot 7:10
Clllll tfrie J90f'I lllOll Olflltoftdl99
ollffflt11,. fil111 -
"THE RED TENT" (G)
A lo11rt1.y to ttrie fop of the
wotlll -In color -StorrilllJ
S.011 Co1Hwry -Peter Fl11ch ·
Clouctia Cordiriole
Only Coast & Southern offers savers all three:
--• &% t~o to five year guaranteed certificates.
• Saturday Service. •The lnsi~ers Club •
Effective
Annual
Earnings
5.00°/o·5. l 3°/o Pa••!1n1,;.; No minimum.
5. 75°/o·5 .92°/o a .. n Vr H Cert1!1CIHI' $1,000 l.l1"i'Tium.
6.00o/o-6. 18o/o T •'tit! tCl f '.!'Vear Cerl•l1catc!. $5,000 M1nimun1
Up lo 90 days loss of 1nterf's! on amounts withdrawn
before ma:urity on all cerr d1cJte dCCounts.
The Insiders Club: A new \':ay to beat ir'lation. Its membership card
permits you to buy near~y everything you need from the finest closed·
dOOr shovJrooms al substantial sav1n8s-crppl1ances. lurn iture, stereo
eciu1pmen1. spo•tng gaotls. draperies and much, much more.
You can even buy cars at th('· fleet .. price and moblle homes and
motorcycles at suts1ant1al SCN•n&S. The Inside rs Club also prov ides
big drscounrs on tickets TO sporting.and enterta1rlment events ...
plus a wnole list ol lree services: sa !~ deoos1t boxe5, money orders.
travelers checks, notary services and the use of document
duplteting ~tttr>Menl.
Membership reciu1 re ment for savers-$2,500 minimum balance .
Coast borrower!. now rete1ve-associate memberst}ips erititl ing them
toa!t outside rt>ferral services. Ask about 1a1nlng at any COast oflice.
MAIN orncc: ,
9111 &. Hill. ~An1•ll$ • 623-13!>1
0111er ofllc11 Wit.SHIR[ Al GRAMMCRCT 1'1.ACC: 393J Wttlhlre Blvd .• LA.• 388-126!>
L.A. CIVIC CENT!lt:
2"CI & Bro1dw1y • 626-1102
HUNTINGTON IUiCH:
<:ii Huntl"rton Cllllor • 171'! 197-1047
•SANTA ANA LOAN SCll:VICE AGENCY:
1905 N. Mlo'I SI. • 01') ~47°9251
SANTA MONICA: 711 WU1hfre Blvd.• 393·01t•
01ily Houri -9 AM to 4 PM
SAN l'CORO:
IOll! & P1cil" • 131-23' I
WEST COVINA: " t:111!ot"d Sl>Oppin• Cl•.• 331-2201
PANORAMA CITY:
1616 V.t.11 N1111 BIVd. • 192-1l1 I
TARZANA:
117SI V1'1tur,1. Btwd. • l'S.a61'
LONG KACH: lr-d & Locu1t • 131·1411
CAST LOS ANGELCS: 1111 & So,o • 266-4!110
OIAMONO IAR: 321 Oi.t.m~ 81• Blvd.• {11'1 S9$·1S2S
Open S11lurd1y• -9 AM to 1 PM
•Not 01>'" S.t.1111"11111
' COAST ,
AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS .. . ' . " ' .
lif~,._, ...... 1a-.11M '-------------------------"----------------------""'l
~
Co1ttil111oll5 Todoy From Z:JO
Steve McQueen
In Bruce Brown's
"ON ANY SUNDAY"
. &EOR&E HAMILTON ~ ,_-~ SUE LYON.
~ .,.,,., ~~f,1'!!~
A stO<y of io.e.
Rimed by David lean Ryans ~
'Daughter
/"~ ;m,,,..,,,....
/~ -~~
\.B)-
~"""'""""' t .• ~ -...
~-s.A:ft~'
PLUS.JAMES GARNER:
IN "MARLOW" fGPI
""RYAN5. OAUGHTER" & "IW!l.Owr'
AlSOPlAYINGAT
EDWARDS C~EMA VIE.O
MtSmN VUl • 8JG.6990
(CINEMA WEST #2 (
.. ··-.................. . -·· e-••....,... • """ ..... "-· .. 7.9608 • """tt•OYO• OIM;.M Jome• Gorner O lou Gou~ll
Skin(G P)
Game
I
Pl US Michael York&
Elke Sommer I" CG)
1 ·Zeppeljn
..._ ll"o tf _,Uo+t 1T ,o... .... .. .... ,,
-"""' fTO HEID OVER· JRD WIEK
\l(ln~nn 1!.d91ave •Clove• llttd
" KE N RUSSELL'S FILM
THE DEVILS
--·-~ .... ·-Womrr llro5. A Kin..., l"i.urt Srn·M t
(XI
t~!~M~~I''! Al.a '1 TY' A "'ARANOUNT PICT\Nll ~<n SHIRlfY MaclAINE
-·--PETER OTOOLE
KATHARINE HEPBURN
~
lHE LION IN WINTER ~o;---tt . ~~
PlUS • 10 A AD. AW RD Iii
JCllARD BUl\TON
GENEVIEVE BUJOLIJ
~ 'l'lt(!!I_ ·--~ .£ If, ... ;;b'Z>v1
•
PILOT·AOV£RTIS£R
• LEGAL "NOTICE '
M1H1d1y, N0vtmbtr 22, 1971
"U:CAL NOTICE
P" 14\M
,ICTITIDUI ,I t/SINISI
-LIGAL NOTICE
NAM• STAT•lll\INT LEGAL NOTICE·
Tilt l0Uowln1 Mnon It dcilnt lM11!11H1 1'·14111
It: ~ARO"' C'-'AllL(I l"OIMAL WIEAll, 1------~~~-----" I P"ICTITIOUI lllllNlll " " " P·\4416 NAM• ITATIMINT 1'17 HttbO<' BIYcl .. Cnl• Meu, CtlU. l'ICTITIOUI IUllNl.$1 TM fallowlf'lll --II dOlne IM.fll-C111rle1 Mon!el Jorc1111, 1'21 Htrtior N~I I TATIMl•T 11:
Blvd. 'ot!t M111, C•llf. TM: !(lllowlnt perMlf! It dll"' bu1l11tH lll!:COltO WOltLO, n» HtrW
Thil bullMH 11 bllnt tonoll.lc1M by If\ ti: lloultvlNI, Cotll Mru .. C1lllM'l!ll
lnd!vlOutl. Urcl\l111, UUl v.., kirm111, lr<11M, MUSIC IAltN, INC., Uni 011fnltf
Cl\lrlu. M. Jorc11n ,.,.,., Stttet, S.nll A~, Cllllwni. ft10r5
Thll tlllerntnf l!htd W!l!I Ille '""""' Cllerl•• V..r•Ylln Sll'Hnl. I 11 Ttll• 1tul111111 ,, (~ "" I Cletlr. ol Oren" Countv on: No"""ber '-ltodiei!v 11.. C1nt1 I.Wu, c 1ntorni. w•t llon. 19'1, ly Wt lttr T. 1Cln1, DllllllY County t!Q1. MUSIC BAllM, INC.
CIMtr. Tllil ltullMH 11 H l(lt concluc:+td 11, 111 8•: H«btrl N. Si ndt!, ~ublllhtcl Or"'" C0t1I D1Hv Piiot, lftcll¥lclwl. ,r11111..,1
Nov,mblt I, IS, n. 7t, 1'11 3012·71 Chirl~• s. si.veni Thl1 1111tmant w11 lllM 11111111 tilt
Thll 1l1l"•'1enl fU-.l wlll! 1M C111111t\I CCIUl!TY Cltrlt al Orin .. Countr.
Cll!k 11 Or1-C.-ty 111 Nov. 11, 1t1l. NAllOLD •ASTON, ... tty.
I' lt_.ly J, Mffcl<I~. Ottl\oty C9UP!tv Oil Wlhlllre ... llwlrll, ktlM ~
Cietk. Lt.1 AltlllM. c1•1tor~LI .. 1. LEGAL NOTICE ' 1..· HOTICf TO CltEOITOltl
SU,ER.101 COURT 01" THI!
STATE 01" CALIFORNIA P'Oll
Ttlll COUNTY Of' OltANG• .; '°'': A·1'1J2f --------------I ~111\ed Or1nee CDltl O.hy "11ot, Mll-OC
flo, E111lt o1 CLARENCE WtltTMAN
folULCE. aJw known 11 Wli!TMAH
llULCE, 41.0 kriow" 1• W, HULCE, "0Kt&~41d. 'NO!lCE IS ,HEllEllY GIVEN to !ht
' 9ClllU:.1 or 1111 ~b0v1 nem..a decedenr
ttial 11! pfri.on1 hlvlnt clllnn IGOlns1 Ille
h ld ~t<fon1 1r1 re<iulrH to 1111 ll'letn. ...,jlJI '!ht MetSUJ'll vou~r$, In lht oHJCI ot Ir>! clerk of Thi 11><w1 t nUllllO cour!, or
,.., 111',,~I !httn, w!lll ltll MCt11¥1
,+.iudi\ri.. !o Ille underslttlfd 11 ~ ollkt
Of 1111 Arror.,.11, 8 roxon 1nd 8 roJ..,,, ~500 Cam"'" Orlv•. Sul!e Numg.r 5'0, :'Nf!Wl>Orf 811c;I\, C11llotnl1 f2!66(1, Which II 'ft,';, Pllce OI bUllMSt ol the uMtnltned In •II m111er1 ~r,.lnlnt to tilt t•lalt ol
Nlot'' 6":td•n1, wlthln lour monlh1 1!11r
ll'lt tlrzt 1>11b.lt•tlon o! 1MI no!lce.
• 01IH Nouemblr L lt)l, 1 ll.11111\d C, Hulet
Aclmlnl11r1ror ot the E•!•1•
ol· 11\e '"°"' ntmed dKIHltnl
fll'(l:ll;Oll In.I llrtJON,
4lOt Cll'IPUI Drlvt, Suitt Numb« $41,
Jtewp«t lle1c11, C11i1onii1 tt4U
Tfl: l)H) J.lt-1\0I
Aflorner• 1or Acl1n!nl1tr11tr
Publlohfcl Or1nve (Dl•I D1ilv Piiot,
Ncv•mlllr I, IS, 22, 2', 1911 31'.ll,·11
'
LEGAL NOTICE
...
NOTtC• TO ClllEOfTO•S
SUPE•IO• COURT OF TNIE
ST•TE OF C•LtFOllNI ... FOR
TtlE COUNTY OF OR•NGE
NC. A·l-
E1l11f cl JOHN 0. HILLS, Dect&secl.
NOTICE IS H!i:REllY GIVEN 1o tn1
Crl'l!l1crs cf !ht 1bav• ...,med OKedrnl
"tn•I t i! """cnt h1vln9 cl1lm1 •••1nJ1 lht
t 1id. ckcedenl 1rt ,..,ulrl'd lo Ult l!>tm,
'Y"'V' !he Mcen1rv voucne'rs, :n ll>t orllct to! }he citric or tne lbovt rntlllold court, or to prrvnl lhtm, wlln lhr nK!SH•Y
vou~rs, 10 1n1 und•.,htn~ 11 !he office
Of hl1 IJIOrMVI, HERBERT GALL &
J OHN u. GALL. sune olOO Ovl•11 l u!lcll,,,,
411 South OtlvJ SlrHI, Lo• An~tlts.
Clllf11tnl1 9001', which 11 tht pl41;t al
.tiuilMH of tnr unc1rr1l1ntd Jn 111 martefl
Jitrltlnlno lo !ht 151111 ol Stiel cltc..:1"11,
1 w 11n;n lour mon1n1 titer !lie f1r11
public1tlcm al 1nls notice. Otlfd NovrmWr 4, lt11
CHAii.LES E. SOPEll.
!•"<:Ulclf" al JM Wiii ,,.
OI !ht •bovr Nlll\ed clKIHltnl
]IERllEllT GALL & JOHN U. GALL
011 Se\llh OHVt StrHI, SuUt .... ";t..t An,1Jes, C~llfernl1 fltl4
.. '1'114: (l1Jl jll-ll'' ~1'1orn11t fir E•KUtor
" Publhh~cl Ortnff CO.ti OtllV PllOI,
J Ntv!l"flbtr I , IS, l 2, 7', lJll JOl).11
LEGAL NOTICE
.. ll11 '""° : '._ NOTICE TO CltEOITOIS
,·,,.s uPEllOI COURT OF THI
'• STATE 01" CALlf'ORNl.t.
FOR THE COUNTY OF OltAMG•
No . .l.·11MN
S Eit•!t ol JAMES OWIGHT HUTTER,
olDM:t&sO'd.
, NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN kl lho
llcr•cll!ori of me tbcvt namtd dP~O'dtnl
;th•1 111 ~noiu 111vlne cl1lm1 •111 lntl lht
l ald clKO'dtnl ••t ,...ulr.ci TO !Hr !hem. (w11tt !ht nKtn1rv VO\ICl\t•t. In !M oll!ct
cl l!>e elf•~ ol the 1-• tnliUN courl, .,,. ~o Pi"e~nl IMm, with lht l'ltCtsW...,.
.._vouChtrl, 10 !hf un<1•rsl9RPC! 11 Ille aU!ct --ot Mr •Horntv. llEN WAXMAN, UJll "'1~ntvr1 Boulevard. Sherm•n 01k1,
~!l!Orn•R 91"10), which 11 Th• p!ace al
i..'bu1in•ls ot Th~ vnc1~rs11inPc1 Jn all m11Jprs (),er!fl11lng to tt>e t •1&1t of 1ald decedent, ~1111'n rmir mon!hJ 8f!tr !he flrtl
l ublt(Mlon of lhh riotlct.
,1,..,01)9<1 Novembft 1', un.
> Sol LL Y CLACK
, "'clminl,rr11ri•
,:i • of tflt t•I•'" cl ti.. f' _. .. 11HW1 1>1f'nlll cl4ct<an1
l 9Ei'f' WAXMAN I( HUl Vtnl~r• ltultv1rG
' Sht""'" 01k1, C1lll11tnl1 '140)
f T1I: (JU) Hl-4100
L'EIOAL NOTl(I
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ftltt ttlt
followl"' llem1 of found .,. 1•vlcl prOMrlY
"'"'' bttn held bl' !ht "Olkt DIPt'rtrritnt
"' '"' CITY ol (Olll Mtl ... tor I pttlocl In ·~CfH al ninety 00) UVt;
OM brCf'n blltt, two bl~• blkn. two
vrten blkfl, -bll(lt blkt, lllt ..,Id
blkt.
1"0TICE IS FUlltrHEll GIVEN ltlt l !I no _,. -IFI Incl lfllVft hil
owMrllllo al lt>t praper1, wlrriln H""'
!I! 01" loijowl ... !tie pUblic.111111 of ltli1
Notice, file true ~ffo ai.111 w1l lft !ht
tlnc14'r, 11 1ntr1 bl-OM, or 111 11oe Citv of
C01t1 Me11, !ft Whldl CIH "" PrOl>l!rly .i.111 bt 'IOlll 11 PUblk 1uctlon II 1 tlm1
tr.cl cl1!t to ~ lnnounced.
DATED: ~ovembtr l'/, Un.
II;, Et NETi4 .
CHIEF 0" l'()LICE
P~blilnlHI Or1n1t Co-I! 01\lv Piiat,
Novtn1W n. JJll tlH-1!
LEGAL NOTICE
l'·lOOJ
FIC:TITIOUS •UllHISI NI.Ml! STATl!MINT
Tht 1o11...,.1nt 1>1r1on• ''' d11I"' bullll'!H IS: 4
GOLO CO.I.ST INVfSTO ll
COMPANY, *30 CtmPUI 0 r Iv I ,
Nll'lt"p0tl 81od1, C1Htornl1.
0-1.:r C!wltllt. DI £111 11cr1m1nto,
Atladtn1, Ctllfornl1.
Stephen E. LeldMr, 700 l lclo ''"' Orlvt No. 11, !"twflOrl at t t h •
C1lilotnl1, '26611.
O.vlcl It. Jthtll, 211•1 Ct lllt R«lt
Rood, L1pun1 Be•cl!. C1llforn!1 9UJ1.
Tlllt 11u1lnt'I It btl!lt concluCIM bV •
Gtn.t!r81 P1rln.t!rllllP.
51tllf',tn E. Ltldr1tr Tlllt 1111ernen1 fllrd wllh ~ Countv
Cltrk of 0r1._ County on N""tmblr n.
1' •ncl Orcttnbfr 6, 11 1'11 31:11-11
LEG~L NOTICE
NOTICE O' 5All In 1ccorcl•nu ,1111!1f1 ll>t provl1lon1 et ft!t
C1Ufoml1 Uniform Commtrtltl Code,
lnere bt!n1 clue •nd u._.11cr 1tM111 fot
whldl 1111 e.um Elldrlc Ce. 11 tntltlH to
• Hen 11 W1rt11ou.emen Jlft 1111 900!l1
h-ln1tttr oHstrlbtd t nd due notlu
h1v1.., bHfl elven 'llo "rllfl known to
clttm an lnltrnl> ll!tl'•I" incl lfW ttmt
tPKllled In IUdl\r.61kt tor '''"'.,,I el
wth Nvln1 aw.f, notlct IJ -ftly
l lV9" lhl l ll!tM llCiOdl w1tl 119 i,olcl ti
oulllk: •uetfon •l.-'2J 20tll Jt., Clf'I f1f
Newi>0rt 8ttdl, Cauiitv ol Or1n111, $1111
ot Ct!lforn11, on tP><i 4ffl d•v ol o.c..,.11er.
\tll, 11 10:0& t 'CIKk A.M.
Tl>e lollowfn1 1111 It • brltl clt lCrlpllon ol ll>t Prooertv to bt told :
MIK. Hou1eriolof ti-Jcifln Tiber,
117'.~.
Mite. Marlnt 1 ... 1-t, Jt""'
M111. SJ.sD.C».
0.ltcr 11 Nll'W'POrt·-.ecfl, ff-brr 17,
1t1! I
Wm. A. 81r111olom11 Jr.
Pub/llhed Or1nt1 Cotti 01/fv flllot,
November n, 1', 1t71 JIJ1·1l
LEGAL l/flCE ,_,
STAT•MllNT 01" WITNOl.AWAL ... ltONl
,AltTNl!RIHI, 0 .. lfllATINO !JMDll.
.. ICTITIOUI •UltH•IS #AMI
The to!lowlnt ""on 1111 "flllllclrt'llll 11
• H••!rtl P•''"" lrom "'' NrlMrlh!p
optr11lng unOtr "" llt1ltl11U1 butlntH
n1mt of Git.I.FICO TV,1!, lf1 W. 1111! 51 ..
COJI• Mrtt. c1111arnl1 n•21.
l111 !ldltioul bu1lntu ntmt 1t1l•me11t for lllt p1rtntrllllp w11 Ill.er on Ju1Y 11.
itn In "'" countv or Or1ntt.
Full N1mt Ind Addrfll ol !ht ""Jen Wllllclr1w!11t:
Oltnt A. 1 1.c!IM, fO ollpt rfl•ll lllrt, Al!1, u11n, M010.
$1~: o;,.,. 11.ci-
Publlthe<I .Or1ne• (NII Dtl!W P!\o!,'
~ovember n . 1' tncl Ot(tmber '· 1J, ltll Jlll-11 ,.t~~~:h::r ~~.:~:•!~~;~~ D•llY Piiot, ~ov .... b1r ''· 29 ,..., Dtctrnbtr ~-!3. LEGAL NOTICE
-, 11u• ~'71 JU1·1l 1-------:""-,,------
LEG AL NOTICE l"tCT1t1ous •UJIN•ss
N•ME STATlljl.l.HT •~ l"'OTIGE TO CRIOITOllS The tol1ow1,,, Pt•lffll• 1 rt clol~
SU,,ElllOlt COUllT OF THI! bu11'!1111 It:
STATE 01' ClLIFOINIA FOii THE ANCl+OI INN, U14 Nor'lh El THE COUl"'TY OF OllANGE Cimino ltt~I. Sen Cl ....... 11, C'1llt.
l"'t. A·lllU Howtrcl A. Mtllll "" IH!rlu S,
E1!1!e of HELEN DETERMAN Mean1, \JU Not!l111n1m 111: .. cl, Nl w-!
oeu.5ed. lte1c11, C1111.
HOT ICE 15 HEllEllY GIVEN to lhr llrvtn Holtm.1"' dol t1ftlt A11:1
•tclitort of rnt 1bav1 n•m~ crececlenl Avtnue. Newport llrtcll, Ct Uf .
., ... 1-.11 Pl•-hlVU'lll cl•ln'll 1teln1t IM .Thh butlnett II btlnt conAH:!lll ev ' ~cl-•"' ~·· ..... u!rlfll IC lilt tl'ltm. GUll fll P1rlnt[lfllllil '
I "ll,.!if.the ~~n1r1 voucllt•,, In tht ollke 8rv1n Hollm'" I of 'lf>e clerk of !flt tllOVt tfllil1tc! tour1, or ll!lt ltllamtnl 1111'11 w!lj! lht COISl'ltV 't"? prf•enl thtm. wl111 1111 ntteHirw Cltrl! DI Ore..,. Coun11 On: NO'I. 1, Hll. ~Q!trs, Tc !ht Uncltrlll ll'!d 11 i1t E311 By W1lltt T. ICfftl Dtbul~ CIUftty Clt rk.
11lh Street, Cost• Me••· C1llfornl•, which Publl1t.ed or_. Co1.i P•llY ,!..,.. 1 !he Pl•tt ol bu1l11t t1 of H•t undert!9ntd Novembfr I, IS. 2t 7', 1t11 JOU.11
n t!l '"'""" ~•l~lnlno lo 11\f ""'' ol 1i0 dtcl'den!, within !1>1ir mcnlh1 titer ~-fl'.11 PUbllc•ll<l'I of lro!1 nolk t.
D!lftd ND'ltmbfr I, lt1l
•; JOHN THOMAS CHltt,TENSEN
,.. E•fl:Ulot ol l~I Et1tll ol
I• t. 1111 1llovt n1med crec;iclt!n!
" UC l . HANN.I. Mlorflt1 11 LIW Mor LIW •vll•ln1
1t fell 1nn SlrHI
Gooll" Mtu, Ctllf$i"llll fU17 'T~· /1u1 S411-1tcr1 -11J•7U ~ilorJ111 ,.,. l1tcv1er
P!lbfl.nt'd Ortft91' (otll Ol!tv PIJet,
>!""PHI" •• u. ''· 'lt. Jtll ~ll·ll ... LEGAL NOTICE
SU,,EltlOI COURT OF THE
STATE OF CALll"Oll:NIA 1"0111
TH• COUl"'l Y OF OIUNGl
Nt. A·l'llU
OTICI OF HBllllNG oir 'ITITION
fOR fllOllTI oir WILL AJI O iroa LeTT£•S TESTAMENTARY• taOND
LEGAL NOTICE
.. 1'111 FICTITIOUS •usu1qs
HAMI ITATIMINT
Thr IOllDW!"' -Mn! t it dolnt
bu1lnt11 11:
LESCOUL1l: NURSES ltl&l!Tll:Y,
l11 H-1111 ll:f., Ne-1 .tkl!, Ct .
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lrttWport 8tfeh, Ct.
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WewPOrl littcfl, Ct. 1 Tfllt bul~tt If lltl"' ~ttl 1tv t
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P11bll-"" O<t n" Cotll CM!" "Itel, Wovtn'!blf 1, u . n. 1'. 1''1 JOu.n
LEGAL NOTICE
, WAIVEOI P'·l442t j
Et!11t ct SAM LEVIN, Dec11sed. ir1GTITIOUI aUSIN•S
ffOTIC.E IS HERl!IY G!VEN lh1t A1¥l11 NAMI IT.l.TIM•Nf
rvlfl 111~ lllmd tmeln • Htlli"" •or Tiit lolt..wl~ NNllll h do!M llu1int11
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PINCH YOUR
PENNIES
with a
PILOT
PENNY PINCHER
-
Classified Ad
3 LINES
2 TIMES
•
Any Item Priced
$50. or Less
(II more thin • .,. 11...,, !ht ctmblno<I tetol
c1nnot 1xc:HCll $50.)
642-5678
I~
'
WANT
TO
ClWI
UP·
OM
YOUR
CWll
FOR
FAST!
FAST!
ACTION!
CALL
DAILY
PILOT
CLASS·
IFlm
DEPT.
D
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I
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-1
--
6
4
2 -
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TIME· fOR ""."'"' .. l~I _ ...... I~ ;.I -~~" _ ....... ~,~~~LJ
QUICK CASH _Gone_ .. _, ___ G._ .. ,_., --
THROUGH A * * * * -JC' * .
DAILY ·PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
IBST·
·llYSI
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5
5
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.
TAYLOR CO. ..f'"arr,,..w-
FOR A VERY SPECIAL FA.MIL YI 2629 Harbor, CM.
A rare !ind! 5 Spacious bedrooms, family
I'OQm & 4 baths in this charming WestcliU
home. Beautiful 20' x 40' pool-+ Jacuzzi.
Immaculate. Immediate possession. ,79,900. SAVE$$$
OUTSTANDING
VALUES AT
POPULAR PRICES
. ''Our 26th Y 1•r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 Sin Jotlquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
Near Harbor High
WaJk to Wci:stclift ShopPing
Center. Choice 3'bedroom 2
bath home. Exira large
rooms -All electric buUt in
kitchen. -Sep&rate Iamily
room with lireplace
Spacio1.1& living room. W IW
carpets + drapes. , Only
$34. 750 EZ terms. 673-8550.
-0 THE REAL '°' ESTATERS
HOME ABILITY
PROBLEM SOLVED
A must att. 2 bedroom Mo-·
bile Home by water. S13,IXO.
TRI HARBOR
REALTORS
400 E. 17th C.1'f.
NITE OR DAY 646-3255
TRIPLEX-Jui! Li1to<I
Walk to storts •.. A·l, 2-2
bdnn. & 1·3 Bdrm. apts.
Bltns., CID ; lovely kitchens,
patios, sundcck. frplca., plus
laundry. By app't. only.
$49,500.
HOPE GERRIE RL TY.
833 Dover Or., N.B.
645-4400 645-3320
NEW LISTING
2 '"'"' M,.. Vm:le. • bedrooms, lamily room,
separate din""' ro om,
$43.9'0.
ROY J. WARD RLTRS.
646--0228
BAYFRONT APTS.
Vista Del. Lido. Pier & alip
available. From $31,500. Sell
or lease,
Georg• WJlll1mson
REALTOR
54U.570 645-1564
WANT to buy t BR home.
Any condition or behind
G1n1r1I
DAMN THE
DAMPNESS
Does your RkEUMATIZ 58.y
i1'1 lime to mo\·e inland'!'
Live near Major Shopping,
Anaheim Stadium and
DISNEYLAND. 4 bdrm, 2
bath, B/I gas kit. w/
ceramic Ule breakfast baT.
1''in.iilnce, ··ca rpets, ex,.
tensive and asJOrted !ruit
ttH. 15 x 24 covered patio,
fenced dog run. ASSUME
. 514 F.H.A. LOAR -Full
price only $29,950.
· Owner Desiierate
Foreclosure
Pending
Sacrificing this beautiful
4 bedroom home wl th 2
~rang•'"i·-1-1•r•• bath" 1amny -v Yl:tW room, huge covered en-
closed patio, built-in
PROPERTIES klleh<n. double .......
FonnerJy LaBorde R.E. brick fireplace, ereat
220 E. J7th St., C.M. Costa }.fesa area. only
CALL 646 0555 3 years old -Hurry.
• R<duood to $29,950 thb Evening Call ~8-3265 nl 546 ..,.,..,.iii;..iio;;;iiioiioi;;;;;oll weekend, o y!!!! -
U~IC>IJI: tiC>MfS
Real E.at9, m.eoo0
TERRACE VIEW
Dramatic vlew ol Newport
Harbor ftonl the jf':lty to the
!urning basin. 3 bedrooms,
huge separate family room
plus lntt'l'ior courtyard v"ittl
su.·imming pool, Call for ap-
po!n1111ent.
A UNIQUE EXCLUSrvE
Ul'ilCllJI: tiC>MfS
11 .. 1 E--.VMOOt 1~n £. Co11t Hwy.
QlrOM Del Mat, C114
8640.
Big Family Home
5 Bedrooms
$34,900
Beautifully kept home
in Mesa Ve r de sur-
rounded by a rarest ar
towering p i n e trees.
Huge master bedroom
suite with marble show•
er. Rambling 2.300 11q. ft.
of spacious family llv·
Ing, owner anxious. Of·
fering all terms -ex.
ceptionaJ value 546-8640 pymnts. Prlv, party .
894-<09<" 1 ............................. 11
The
DAILY· .
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading
Marketplace
TIME FOR-·
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY .PILOT
WINI AD
642-5678
High on a hill overlooking
Quartersa wed Cedar con·
1tructlon, beamed cell's., 4
bdrm&. -tropical pool & 2
car garage plus 4 carportll.
1175,000. Terms very llex.
Lot approx. 2/3 acre.
1175,DOQ. Tl:'rms very nex.
lb!e.
675-3000
BAY & BEACl-I
l{EAI,TY .~
BAYCREST LOT
CL 100
Le\.>el 80' x UO fee lot on
TRADEWINDS can build 2
story plans included.
VIEW OF UPPER BAY
Full price only $25,000 -
s1.1bmll.
'Grange Vista
PROPERTIES
Formerly LaBorde R.E.
220 E. 17th St., C.M.
CALL 6°'6·0555
Eveninas c.JI 64&$406
.YOU WAIT!
YOU LOSE!
Some ·smart buyed will steal
lhl• liJI;~ new 2 1tory 4 BR, 2
bath home spotleu con.
dition thruo1.1t Exi:-nslve
w/w cpts. CU1tom drapes.
Extra atze lot. Lovely
1and1JCapin.i. Sprinklers. It's
vacant & waiting at oo.ly
$57 ,950. Call 673-&50.
I
-0 THl; REA!, °' F:STATI::f-~S
$600 Total
Down
Pay normal closlni:
costJ: and move Into this
vacant 4 bedroom home
located in Costa Mesa.
Walking distanCI! to
schools -hack on m&r•
ket NOW, So e.ct fut!:
546-8640
Eastside Love~
$26,750
3 bedrooms, 2 bath.I -
comer lot -floor to
celling brick fireplace--
roomy built·in kitchen
-well kept -wtiat
else c1n we say -1ee
It -lt'1 nice!! 546-8640
Dirty Bargain
4 Bedroom
$25,950
Located ii) Norttl COit.a
Mesa. Thls home hu It
111, 2 b&thl, built-In
~="="""""°""'"""""'II kitchen. hardwood
PENDING noon, ,«!V '""•I•"'·
FORECLO.SURE '"•• "*""'-""'" ,, .. lined street. new c.tr·
OWntr wtll not retuse any peting -.. · n~ palnt-
re1tonabl.e offer on thll but priced to al!ll!! J46-PRIME MESA VERDE 8640
home. 3 luge bedrooms, 2
batht. all built·ins and 1700
sq. ft. o[ luicuriou.1 liv:ina
area. 2 huee firepla.oe1t
lara:e Jrrcrular lot. tePllfll•
.ervlce porch a,nd country
alie kltctlf!n. Aa:klrw $33,SOO,
or Submlt. Submit• ~bmlt.
Call 54»124 (Open Evtt.)
\o~th Coast 2629 Harbor, C.ll!.
"J
• • • • ' t
' ... ' . . .. . " .
'·
ff DAILY PU.01 PILOf·AOVERTISER 1:6
, 1 .
s:::;r~j~~~::t DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ,ADS
-I
Yo u Can Soll It,
· f1ind It, Trade It
Someone El l.l..Yi'ants • • .. ~ --·r11e Biggest Maik~tplace on the Orange Coasf-Dia 642=5678" for Fast Results With a Want Ad ',, n l
t ~
I _ .... l~I ---]~ [ l~ I ~I I~ I _ .....
General General
1-*--*--*·.-*--*--*-1 ~
HEIGHTS
BALBOA ISLAND
TRIPPPLE TREAT
FROM $32,SOO to $99,SOO
TAKE YOUR PICK
Deluxe Duplex
Custom built 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 fireplaces,
deep shag carpeting, kitchen with all the built·
ins, glass wall staircase PLUS . 2 bedroom
RENTAL UNIT. A real buy at ...... $99,500.
"Up The Down Staircase"
$26.950. Attractive 3 bclnn.
home on R-3 lot. Room for 2
more units. We have plans
a t our office. Call OO\\' while
you can!
6 UNITS
and room for 10 more! Ex·
cellent income on Eastside
Costa Mesa. Presently four
l-Dedrooms and tv:o
2 -bedrooms. Tremendous
buy at $69,500.
BEST BUY
General
BAYSIDE DRIVE WATERFRONTS
OCEAN & BAY V IEW
From 122 ft. lot, is the setUne: for this beau·
tiful 4 bdrm .. 4 bath home with its own pier
& slip. $250,000.
LINDA & HARBOR ISLAND VIEW
From \his lovely 4 bdrm., 4 bath home. On
a 59' lot, with pier '& float. Custom drap-
eries & paneling. $139,500. ' For complete information
On All Homes & ·Lots, Please Ca ll : .
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
l.1landers Bldg. at Linda Isle
341_81yslde Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
202$ W Balbaa 61l·J~6)
v
I
'
Charm-Comfort·VallJ3
AU in this spacious ron-
temPorary 3 bdrm. ,ho • 1 •
Formal dining r oo9l, ~:·
llreplac.-e F landKap1ng fhi! . _
requires 'iminin1al upke0C'~.
Only S35,'1SO.
i)redhi
J -• '
REALTY , . 1 , •
Univ. Park CcnlC'r, lrvi ric '.~ ·
Call Anylin1r,• 833~;-,-_ ... :
• I -jlt; '•
Laguna Beach '-, ;"""1.1-• ' ' . ---------1,. FAMILY HOME THE CIRCULAR STAIRWAY leads you up
the-stairs where you will find the living
room, dining room, kitchen, 1 bedroom, 1
bath, ALL CARPIITED. Downstairs, 3 bed·
In Orange County. 2-stOl')', 4.
bedroom, 2% bath home on
a huge. enclosed lot close to I 'G~en'"e'"r'"a'l'I'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'"""
everything, Don't miss this G eneral
What a lovely home. A former model it has
such nice things as an automatic sprinkler
system, enormous flagstone fireplace1and it's
just steps to the beautiful Pacific shores.
$24,499 is the price. 842-2535 or 847-6010.
An enclosed en1ry court
leads to this 2200 sq. ft 1• ·
home with formal livin~.4 :·
i:linif\i: rooms. B u i I t .:·r il
kitchen '''i1h dish"'ast\C!'r,
opens lo large fan1ily roon\
\\'ith wet bar & out ta
covered pnlio. Also -3
bdrm., 2\~ baths. fil"('pla~ ,
& low maintenance ya.rd. , •
rooms, 1 bath. Great idea? ........ $79,500. a t $33,250 and buy VA or I ;;;;;:;:;;:;:;:;;:;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;;:;~
Beach Cottage?
2 Bedroom, 1 bath, living room. fireplace.
FRONT PATIO. A DOLL HOUSE for only
................................ $32,500.
LOOKING FOR A VIEW
Of The Pacific?
This one has everything. Large living room,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen-family combin·
ation with built-ins, carpets &. drapes. Full
SPRINKLER SYSTEM. VA appraised. OWN·
ER ANXIOUS at ................ $37,500.
LOOKING FOR A GOOD DEAL?
2.4 Units
WE HA VE THEM in high demand rental
area. CLOSE to shopping, schools & recrea-
tion. Eighteen 2 bedroom. 1 'h: bath. six
2 bedrdom, I bath. Could be upgraded for
more income. DEAL A IV AY at .... $288,000.
•
~ J ••A110W.rn
REALTORS
644-7270
28 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
Gener•l
EASTBLUFF
BEST BUY
Wher. can )'OU get 4 bdrm. &
f&mily rm. wit!) mme view,
ln the best school area tor
$48, 7SO? Vacant & sparkling
clean. _......
Coldwell,Banker
~
833-0700 644-2430
THE EASY LIFE
No work, just relax! This
Dolores mode\ represents
one of the best values in th
BluUs. Walk to schools,
littlrs. tennis, & pools. 3
Bedrooms. 21,, baths. Entire
price $36,900. This is cer-
tainly a fa.st seller, so call
now. 546--2313
Mother-in-Law's
Hideaway
Gener•I
"SPANISH FIXERS"
BEACH -$25,500
J UST LISTED! Need some
elbow grease. 3 Bedrms, 2
Ba. Family rm. Beam ceil-
inp. Adobe tile roof. Only
2 yn. old. Neer the beach.
Low dn. Only $2'5,500. Bet·
ter hUITy. Call 1714> 962-5585 ,.
IORISI [ Ill.SO.\
"' P E A L.TOR S •
19131 Brookhurst A\•e.
Huntington Beach
HARD TO FIND
Ne\\·ly listed, this super
family homl! with 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, has that
hard to llnd separate family
room. plus an 18 x 22 ft.
li1aster SUite with fireplace.
bath, sewing and ~flice
area. There is also a laundry
room. a 50 ft. patio and voer
V.'ith firepil plus many other
great features. Bring the
family, $36 ,9 50 , Call
546-2313.
FHA.
4 BDRMS.
VIEW· POOL
One of the finest views in
Cameo Shores. Immaculate
3.000 sq. ft., shows like a
model home. \Varmth ex.
pressed thru,<iut \\'ith the
gl'llerous use of lovely
paneli ng & wall coverings.
Fireplace in living & family
carpeted & draped. Safety
fenced pool. 3 car garage.
No. 121. $95,500. Ca 11
6T:>-7225.
Home & Investment
Re•lty r?3f E. Coast Hwy., CdM
HELLO RENTERS!
\Vhy are you paying rent!
l..et'11 wake up to what's
happening today. \\'e have
hundreds or homes ready
for your inspection. VA and
FHA Terms, some with not
a red cent down. Let us find
!hat dream house you've
been wanting for your very
own. Call
Walker & Lee
Real ton
1790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams
5'r;MJ465 Open 'til 9 PM
WAIT •••• , ••••
'Til You See This!
\\'~m. cheerful, little 2 BR
home, lge back yard \v/
shade trees in both front &
rear. Zoned R-4. A steal at
$Zl.500. Get this! Only $1500
down.
mcna~k
REAL TY 642·8400
WOW!
You'll ht' delighted "'hen yoU
see this 5 bedrooms, pool
home featuring formal din·
ing area, separate n.1mpus
room, 3 posh bath areas &
~ important, separated
living quarttrs for Dear Old
?tfom. Full price Ul.000. All
Terms! 540-8555
SHERWellD REAL TY
18964 Brookhurst. F.V.
Only one like this 4 bedroom
home in Dean Gardens that
is available. Huge !\laster
Bedroom. v,•alk-in cloi;et &
balh \\'i1 h sunken sho\\'l"r
area. PriC'erl to sell at
$44.500. Oversized I o 1 ,
camper or trailer storage
enclosed: plumbing and ~P~RIV=A~CY=-&~SEC=~L~U~Sl~O~N~ 1 "'iring in for pool. For in-
Close in Spanish Hacienda. formation, call 646-71TI.
"Prize Winnin9
Home''
Special touches make this a
v.inner in ~ry '\'l'ly. Nt\.\'
dishv.·ashf"r. AM/FM in-
tercom to all rooms.
fire/burglar alanns 1 2
grown trees, ri<'h good deck·
ing patio and separate
children's play yard. Do
take a look at this prize!
Only '34.950. Call today.
~2313.
oTHEREAL
'""'ESTATERS ' •,• L •'','
THREE CAR
GARAGE
Plus 4 tpe.c10U1 bedrooms 2
lar&e baths, "kntt Mei>"
aha.g W/W ~Ing. wood
' gu burning firepla~.
fon:td a.Ir ht~!. and hug"
Perfect for entertaining.
Accents of lile Colorful
gardens, bug , free screened
patio. Many f:'Xtras like 2
FPl's & kingsized master
bedrooms.
NOW • , 547.500
CAPlSl'RANO VALLEY
REALTY
{O 'THEREAL
'{'-ESTATERS
' "''' '' l;'.loc "1'"1
G .I. REPO • 2 STORY
5 BR. • 2 BA.
Only 51.!!00 down fo assume
!his G! Rrpo in beaurifu1
Hunling1on Bench. Lovt'Jy 31501 Caminoa Capistrano
493-1124 QUl'l'n-sized . bedrooms,
tnodern kitchen. f<'rlC'ed
-~-yard, a real steal a1 S33.500 LJ to1a1.
Bluffs • Walker & Lee
Carmelita Model Rraltors
842-445;i
C·l
VACANT LOT
Enjoy carefree living ln this
3 bt'droom condominium
v.ifh romptt~ privacy. Th~
red liled patio adds to lhe
ft"eling or real Calilom ia al·
mosphere. Better by qui<'k J u!\I 515.!lOO for thrs jj It x
on this on! Priced a t only 1390 ft. con1mrrc1all} 1.oned
$46.000. CALL 6T:>-493(). \'ACant Jot. ExrrUent Co~la
I r.1es.'\ location r P 1 d y
S&CIJ. dcvelopmrnt. Call &i~71il,
=~"7'..-=..--="..,"='"c~ 1 for full lnformritkln. 30' 60' 90' LO S
Nt<tr lhC! C'AnMry. \Ve ha\'*
1he$C availablt -S30.000 to
S95.000. Coll for details.
GO GO GOLFERS
Macnab -Irvine
CHRISTMAS
IN EASTBLUFF
Enjoy the Holidays in your
very own sp.a.,cious 4 BR, 2
ba!h, panelled family room
home. EastbluU's largesl &
most popular 1-story, pric·
E.'d like a January sale at
S47,500. Owner will vacate
by Christmas! Call J ack
Hov.·ell 644--6200.
Macnab-Irvine
642·8235 644-6200
2 YEARS NEW
1 of '1esa V<'rde·s finest,
featuring 4 BR. 3 BA,
formal dining & a real fam.
room. Home is f:'XquisilP in
all respects with elegant
crpts, wall coverings &
landscaping. Just move in &
f'njoy living. Price only
$39.950. c.au
5-16-5880 {Open EVE'S)
Home And Income
If your looking for a large
3 BR-honle plus -charming
fltud io apt over rear garage
call now. Spacious Jjv room
firplc • Beam ceiling • Blt in
elec kit. dlsliwasher • 2
baths -hilll private patio •
convenient CdM loca!ion.
Only $63.500. Call 673-8550.
BROADMOOR
WITH VIEW!
NC\V listing -scarce 5 BR .•
Smith built home. Lge. liv·
ing rm., dining rm .. ocean
& harbor view. Realislically
priced at $72,CXXI.
CORBIN-
MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7662
ITS ASSUMABLE
Anyone can take over 6'N
GI loan . S\85. monrh\y in-
cludes taxrs & insurance.
Also offering new F'HA &
VA terms on this rall('h !'ilyle
3 bt>dmom & family room
ho1ne at only $26.500. Fea-
tures shake roof, built-ins &
brick fireplace. Quiet sn-eet
near schools. Hurry • Call
540-1151 IOpen Ev<'s.)
~ HERITAGE
' IW. b TITt:
Corona del M ar
3 BR, I~~ BA. large living
room \1•lth fireplace. Nic:e
size kitchrn \\'ith f'ating
area. Patio, alley acct'ss for
boat. \Valk !o shops &
b!'ach. R-2 Jot. Room for
anothl't" uni!.
Lachenmyer
Rcdltor
1860 Newport Blvd., C.t.-1.
Call 6~6-3928 Eves. 646-4067
"CLIFFHAVEN''
Nt11•port Hl'lah!~ 3 brdroom 2
balh home with bl'n.utjlul
pattos (coverecl & un·
rovered I Honie ttn1odfllcd 2
}Tl!. ago -Bt'aulilul nr11r1t!:11,
lin>plaC'f', forced Alr. n("'.v
cpl'-& vinyl floor oovrrlni;:~.
FHA IOl\n iJr; 8S!!Umsbl<' al
s~-;;.. Priced S 39,9~o .
&1s-.11n.
REDUCED $2,000
VACANT
DE'spe rate owner in St. Louis
must sell thiS modern
.rancho near Huntington
Harbor . Nee<;!s. a little
decorating but bring your
paint brush & ideas and
pocket thE! savings. 3
queen-sized BR's, 1%.·balhs,
large rumpu11 toom, fplc,
even a dish\\'asher Jor Mom.
]Q';O down. New price
$24.500.
Walker & Lee
Rea Hors
""'1754
ENJOY LIFE
Formal din. rm. Huge fam.
rm. Brkfst area. Gourn1e.t
kit. Sunken Jiv. rm. 3 BR.
Mstr. suite w/sunken tub.
2600 Sq. ft. Of luxury. $69,950
-GEMM1--
1s10 w. COe.st Hwy •• N.B.
REALTORS 6424623
* DOVER SHORES *
\-13) THE RE.AL
~ESTATERS
ELEGANT lhruoul Nothing Costa M&s• Huntington Beach
Only $43,500. CaU -~
comparable in thi1 2 & den. ---------
beaut home. f79,500. NO POOL + RUMPUS WALK TO BEACH 1190 Glenneyre St.
LEASEHOLD. It' A ex. ROOM Beautiful Spanii;h hacienda 49-i-9-173 549-0316 1~ qui.site. Open hse. dnlly --B ant Wleit Rltr. 675-2723; Piil~ ~ ~rooms. 2 ba!hs, only 2 ,Yt"ars old. !), mile * SElL OR LEASE *' 'i •
64Zssas earl AM or EVE. bu1l1·1~ kitchen, new shag from the beach. Large pa . 2200 Sq. ft, 3 BR. 21~ Ba. lg;
Y carpeting, 2 Ilreplaces. Ov-tio area plu!! room for pool. fam. rm., din. rm., !rpl. Cpt
BAYCREST, by owner, lge 3 er 600 sq. ft. rumpus mom Creatively decoratl'd. this & drapes. bltins. "'"' bar.
BR, 21,f. BA, «imp! redeC'. includrs W1'1 bar. No qualify-sharp home has built • in et<'. Immac. $47,950. r~un Newport Heiqhts $57,900. atay trade. 673-7784. ing, no loan lees _ just lake kitthC!'n. big !\panish flrt'· price. · '-.
Older 3 Bdrm home in "BET-B•lboa Island ove.r subjec1 10 existing GI place, and oversiled double '.\1ISSION REALTY 49-t--O'ill ;-· J
TER THAN NE\V" condition 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Loan. Chl·111~r \\Ill consider garage. Only $26,500 and on .
• •. new plumbing, eleclri· $1.000 down. I i\1~1EDIATE land you O\\'n. \Von'r last • Ei\tERALD BAY -C3harn.11ng
N 1 S OCCUPANCY C,11 contemp. 6 Br .. or . suites.
<al. k'.tch & bath ••model-OPEN SAT/SU • ~ · .. 000 • w lk & L w lk & L Gorgl~us vie\\'. $145. . <d. ~w "'""ting, d"P''· 312 GRAND CANAL a er ee a er ee LOVELY '''" lot • $ ... ooo. . ies & light fixt1;J.res. Vacant New home & a!)I. plua pier TED HUBERT & ASSOC.
& ready lo see anytime. $n9,'500 Real1ors Realtors 347t Vla Lido. 67~980.
Drive by 539 San Bernar· OPEN SUN. 1-5 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 2i90 llarbor Blvd. at Adams 4 B 3 ba 1 _, ,
d ino (off 15th St.) 201 NO. BAYFRONT ~5-9"191 Open 'Iii 9 PM ~65 Open 'ti! 9 Pt.I r,BI ~learn :1"· .......... $39~ r, ..
Newport Jus-t like owning 2 homes. 3 OWNER t.tOVtNG -li1ust HEAVE NL y ~~~er~ ~M.4;~iew! ,....... -•
BR., 3 ba!h luxury home sell delu:"te custom 2 BR HACIENDA!
at \\'ilh a charming ·sep. cot· plus den home on lcg. cor· Lido Isle
t 'th 2 txi'""'e f......Jc Prof!'ssional man's Utopia .1---------·I '' Fairview age WI , • ...,. •• •in • ncr lol. Shake roof. shag Elegantly rurnished &.· all BIG HOUSE .•.
811 I:. pelio.IA'1M45·000W.INTON <'rptng. & hug<> room~. Nr. ean be purchased ro 1no\·(' in ••• SMALL PRICE 646-8 Will Hnrbor Hi'"h off Irvine Ave. ·,
R I E I I ., !his <lrcani housr. Srller 4 S-R , 3 ha .. din. rm. Bouus : t.nyt'·me) ea Sae 646-AAll bkr. J · 4 ' 229 Marine Balboa Island '===~~~--~ eav1ng for overseas. bl'd· rn1 . ~e. lot. $61,500.
675-3331 O\VNER ILL It. must sell 5 rooms, 3 baths, sundcc:k for · l ~.
ho 0~.30-privacy. Totally immacu1· boc.um:lb awsoo .1.-Bu I LDE RS ""!''!"~"'!~'""~~"!"'I .separate n1l'S on ou,. J cal.U>tz =' I t 0 3 BR & !our 2 BR ate in & OUL Reduced lo R ~. -CLOSE-OUT DUPLEX FOR SALE By 0 · ne $4J.950 and you deal on 3416 Via Lido 675-t562 Owner. Steps to bay & 1NC0~1E $710. MONTH.
Only 4 remain. 3 and 4 b:lrm ...._ach. ?.1ake oller, Ph aft 6 Make offt r. 646-8811 BKR. !umilure, all or parl. ln-. , Spanish Style homes with "" specrion by app(lmtmenl 3 BR., family, 3~:i. ba~
2 baths. No down er buy-p.m. 540-2676. OWNER Jl('eds buyer !or this only. _ 100 fl. on nord .•.•• n4_9,500 _ t.
ers and niin. down FHA. B•lbo.t Peninsul• NEWPORT HEIGHTS va-larwin realty inc. J BR., 6 ba .. nC'\v, luxunou.t. c .
Priced from 530,650. Price 1,-=--,-":'"'.,_..,.....,...-cant home. Drive by 539 San 21562 Brookhurst, Hntgn Bch Pier & Slip .......• ~fg· ~ ~
includes landscape, sprink-3 BR .. ~n. 2 Ba .• trplc. Bernardino & call to set in-546-5411 a nytime LIDO REAL TY INC.. ,
lers and buyer choo5('8 col-P eninsula Pt. $59,500. sidf". 646-8811 Bkr. -~"-='"=~~==---::Ji7 Via Lido
DUPLEX 2 B $·3 500 $19,950 IS THE 1...,.....,!""""""""""""!!!!!!!j or on carpets. Close 10 So. r. ea. 67~1 ;.,,...., EASTSIDE ideal fa mi 1 y r:=
c oast Pla?.a and new ?tfarshaU Realty .-.<JYV L-3 BR 1,. BA 1 · PRICE Mesa Ver.ct• ~~-=---7---o--1 nume. . 4 •• am I 1 3 ~ schools. ~1odels open. Call College P•rk rm. Near sC'hools. quiet cul· for lh s very Jo\le Y ..... ~-· ,
W I k & L room, 2 bath home. The loan S.P1\CIOUS Rep~blic tri-le~. a e. r ee -· ... de-sac. All elec kit., frplc. is hi.....,•enough that you can in beaut. location. 4 BR, 3 '
LOOKS Ilk• n<w modcl. 3 $26.000. Ow~•. &J&.7966. "" assumt> with paymC'nts of BA. lge fam rm & llv l:lll
Realtors
27m Harbor Blvd. al Adams
545-0.16'5 Open 'til 9 Pi\1
l'HA ·VA TERMS
Sunken living room, all elec·
tric built·in kitchen. block
wall. heavy shake roof &
remenr drive are just some
of the quality features of
!his sparkling 3 bedroom,
family room home. Offering
all l~rms at $28.500. Call
BR. 2 BA. new cpts, drapes, $1000 TOTAL DOWN $160 ..... r 1non1h, \\'hich in· nice landscaping. $47,.5a(). ;· paint. lge yd. <hl'Jler, ' .--S.10-9S93. Easrslde 3 BR, nt>W cprs, ne\\' clud~ all. ~1odt"rn built-ins, 642-i164. "" ·
=--'--'-'-~~~-'·--1 paint. xtra lge lot. 540-7823 dee!? , pile carpets. also Newport Beach · · r
Corona del Mar Payts $210. 010. matcl'ring drapes. Double .,,,.
BY Q\\'NER: Coron a 2 BR, large gar. fel1C't'd yd. garage to boot! Call· 11RST OFFERING
Highlands 2 Story .f Br 2 close tu schools & i;hop· Wa'lker & Lee Eleganl e:1:cc:u1J.\'f' BayC"re .~
ba, ram. rm. Huge iot. ping. $16.000. 2i2 Costa HornC'. Beauriful custom ·
$62.500. Call 675-2652. 1'.lt'Sa St· 646-9136. Real1on1 pool. 3 BR + fam rm . 21A •·
NEW LISTING BY 0\\'Tlt"I" $25.500. 3 lge BR, Z79(11Tarbor Blvd. al Adams BA. Perfect for t'ntertafmng ,t
Co fort bl 2 bd ho 2 BA. plastrr, H/\V floors, 5-154165 Open 'Iii 9 Pi\f · 2000 sq f!. S£2.:i00. . ,, ,, :,
1,m1 be~L.,e !imal!~Z c:~ $101\I for eqty. 645-1622. Open House Nov. 21st •
u:; $189. P .l.T .I. MONTH 1707 Trane \Vinds, N1••r11 Reh .. .
Jot. F.A. heat. Frplc., bel'lm-3 BEDROO:\fS. 2 Bath. near 3 Bedroom, 3 yrars new. By owner &12-.,626 .. .
ed ceil's. l·Blk. to beach. Irvifl(' & 201h. $36.500. J.,iA loan. Beto\\: markcL 1436 Mariners Ori:\'.'li
/Open E"'sl Mini-vie\\' of ~an. Ottered Owner 642--7892 S2< 500 Q k I h $44 ~ ·. · ueens 1 c c ~ ' By 01v111'r. spacious 11.'t> •
I fMoR.GAN REAL TY COLLEGE Pk 3 BR. 2 BA. bl1-1n R/0. ~slnvshr.1 >b
1
A chff. 4 BR. 212 BA rrplr.
now,
5IO-ll51
I nzn IBITAGE new crpt, drps. huge yd. heat, crpt~, ,.rps. I OU e charming patio. Nrar sOOp .. ~ M IR'lift 673-6642 67S..6459 2395 Collrgl" DI'. 540-9593. garage, pallo, landscaped & pini:-.~. 8chools. Lovely
I.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1-C;;:os;;;t;;;a;;:M:;;:;:;e;;;s•:;;:;:;:;;:;:;:;;:;:;;;:;;;:; • BY O\VNER fenced. \Valk to schools. See fan1ily ho1nl.' in imn1acu1ate
!!!!!! • 4 BR. 23.~ ha . lo down !odBy. cond11ion, 5~~.000. ~'t
DO YOU EARN WOW! 59J Grand Ha\'E'n I' assumr ;,i~"'r lo.in o~I
$820 A MONTH? -=5""B'"R"".""B"'A'"R ..... H"'A"'R"'B°"O"'"'R Wdl carry '""· p,;,.,.pll
lF SO NEWPOEI RT 1 sly. very sh;irp $33.700. Bkr 962-4471 ( ::::.) 546-8103 o: Call 64:>-:ii40. ' .~
SEE TODAY H GHTS "'6-7739' ''"'"'· LI S.od• '""hold. 4 a.-. •·
East Bluff * 4 PLEX * bea~·h house. 532.500. · ~ SPECIAL! • W"""ends ooly. 'll2 R.,..,. 4 Bed-2 Bath 4 bedrooms plus addxl fam· BY O\\'nPr Ne\vporl Bch con· Ne\\· carpets. drapes. Built· Av!'. 6·12.-2178 0\\•11r1·.
ily room. Tota] !IJO SQ. ft. do. 3 BR. 2 BA. l level. 2 ins. 3 BR. -t\\'O ~BR & ~ne DUPLEX. l hlC'k lo beach:
No down to veterans. Beaut\. ol Uving 8,.8_. ~--to Har· n•tio!!, "' pool. Lowt'!l l BR VA appraisal applied • • · tu! well ·cared ·tor home. """"""' .,... · . \\'. !'\!'\\port. 3 Br. 2 Ba ca ' bor Hi""' School. Jt's the assoc. d11es. Only $32.950. for. Submit terms. Good 1 ~I 11 d · t ·· Professionally Jandsca..-1. 6 " I""•~ av·•·I. · uni · "I' cs. \Va r Pfltlo .. ., """ loweat .priced In the area al Will carry 2nd. 2411 Vista ..... '" .. I I I d r-' · lfoge bedrooms. Jncludl'S ~'lll 500 "-ho LEADERSHIP R.E. ee s1n1p I" an . '-"""': in. _,, . ~ .,.. hesitates. 1-logar. 644-5793. $6' ooo o cal'pl'ts & drapes. Electric TOO BAD', C'Om(", . J. • \\' n e r
garage door opener. Owners 1 • • Fountain Valley 842-4466 645-424j.
o"'11astMloaoonJy$25.9'°· 13> COATS DIRTY GERTIE I SELLING HU!Ty, Dial ,&
&1:;.rooo WALLACE Nf'eds GI hanrlyman "'ith lot~ YOUR HOME?
of family and no n10ney! Free _appraisal . \\'e h_uy Rea~onahle.Ow n •f". -REALTORS Ca11 IJf';, bedl'ftOms, J baths. 1 p I r!t.1. .._ ('(fU ties. ersona aH1'nt1on. f;.\6-8.Jf!S or 642-SIG5. ., -141-v.•iH1 li t11e \\'Ork. 0 n I y %; yn. CXpl'rlenre. ,)!
(Optn Evenings) $2'!1.500. Lon.I? escrow O.K. COLLINS & 'VATI'S WANTED .... ,
~~~"l:!',....,.,...., .... I Bily now, move in l9'i2! -REALTORS -Bren Harbor Vlt'w 4 or 5 Br -
FOR Sale ..:ily own11r, Ideal _A_'1~--;_1_S._>J_l_1.____ 962-5523 hom<'. Principal~. 642·6657 ~
l'ORl:Sl E OLSON
"' R£Al rO R <.
---.t:-2-4-,"'9-5""Q___ f11mlly home". 3 BR, 2 DA. Huntington Bea ch FOR Sale by ov.·ner -4 BR. 3 3 Br. 2 B.a. 40' lot. i\lusl s.e1!. '~ ~ Pla)TOOm. Family room & .~ MONEY?. lull baths, all schools close. ~.000. Lo do"·n. 673-7185.,' ,:·
dln'i an:'R. Brcakfnst bar 1.4 mi. 9/10 ~flit' from Newport Heights ;1 4 BEDROOMS w/bHns, wal\1'.'d lrplc, torll· beach, all momi; largr.1---------·I
pletely f('rw.'4>rl \\'I h I OC' k Yoo rlon•t need it to hP :ihle O...,.n house this \\'(>{lk11nd. SPECIALS Ltively 2 bath '1ome. f~hly II Lo 1 N ~" '" wa . 11 o tret'A. r VVT !I to mm·r into Thi~ 3 bedroom, 217\il Bushard, H.B. 962-8612 ria:inted lnsklt' & nu!. Nt'W & Cir!'• Club, p.11rk, l!brttry, 1~ beth all nlOdrrn hol'l'1('.
forrnlc11. like new plu11 tll r• !ihoppina ~ntllr & btis. A.!:kinp; i:2G.!Xl0 \\'Ith Cf 00 2 BR CONDO. by owner, lo'" ,I BDRJ\I. 2 RA. Bri~I\ ,I.•
pcling. l,erp;e built·in wllril· $31.000 tir1n. Pr~J1en1 IO!ln (k!\1'n tl.'rm~! r1 10 •. ~.'i·1 down paymcn1. cherry. Large lor, Near ro~• .. ·Wldc concretr drivt". T "'I ~·• -N-•·p1 •1 Ht •~ ~ ~ m•y bf' inf'N'alil'd. Q\vner SHERWeeo REALTY ~ ·;N•O or""~ ·111.i;i '" ' i; •••••• >NV .. O\N No down G.I.: low d<rNn ,._u, 4 BOil'! 2 B I ,. ' \\'ill lake 2ntl T.O. 5-iR-3681 18961 Bmokhu"''· r v. ' · '· am1 Y rm. olhPN! ~-1120 $ 9UICK $ 1.n Ne\\J)(lrt lits •••• $28,500 TARBELL TODA'i'S BARGAIN • \VJt,. EVERYTHING WE BUY HOMES l BOR:'ll. 2 BA. 3 g.aragH.. ·,
. -9JN BLVD. Assumf' 6~% UPGRADED! ~rR. KASABIAN ·~l?-!'004 Condominium \\'/~I. NM'-;
GI Loan. 2 br on lal"R" R4 FORMAL DINING KASABIAN por! Beach •·•·•·•· $31.tm lot. Room lor units. 10~1. ROOM! 3 DDR~f. 2'~ BA. Cliff Dr. l~\\'n. $22.950. FOUR ~fOO.. U:\wly, !'!Patioti~ 3 ~room. r-."t>11'port Ht11 ••.••.•• S.13,!':IOO OCEANFRONT
1 . mim:red w&tdrobH ln mas·
ttr bedroom. Only 10 min·
Ute& to the beach. end tell•
er w1ll pay polnls so ~ can bU;y nu or er NO
DOWN. FuJLPrfce o n I y
Q8,500. Call today. ~
PETE BARREIT
.. o.~~~tJY '
• 3 bedroom IOI'' malntrnanc:e • ... * * DUPLEX
Owner M1Xious & \\ill consil'I·
er ... 11 nNcrt an thi~ l l!ftd•
rotlm df'luxl" dupl1nr. Both
uni t~ ltt't' In mfnt condition
,, fully f'l1rnl~l'M'd. Full rir!ce
SSJ,50(), 5-~1.i
SHERW_eeD REAL TY
1R9&1 Brookhurst t•.v.
F.ft~UNITS -2M7i\1endoza. 01\>nt'r rransftrrt'd &: must REALt:STATE CALL '9\-'46•24 14
$62,.iOO. P 11. 11 I \Vttlbrook ffll! r.tany cxlra~! 91l:.!_ ~ ,,.
R"""'· 4114.f1'8. HAFFDA!. RE L TY $14,500 TO $19,950 ~
Walker & Lee
""''""' 2790 Harbor Blvd. •t Ada.mt
$415-9'91 Opt:n 'ti! 9 PM
DR.
HIWPORT IEACH 6
642·5200 .....
Turn utftl~ Items into quick
ca8h, caU &12.-5673
home. Plenry of time M
rinrti~ :.wr gamr. Only
521.:00,
Walker &.Lee
F1x~r upflf'r a 8R, 2 BA. $100
tolt l dOll•n, che'Apt'r than
nont at $205 per mo.
Roberti Real Ettllfl'
962.-S>ll
A good wanl ad 11 a rood
lnwstment
3_ BR, 2 fuU baths. Rcctntly R2-.f405 ~E\'f'S :. ~1·~1.ii ] k 2 Br. JfOUSES. YC''I U:1:f~. ~ '
p11\nl@d lnskle. and oul. m11ke 1h£'..-1ern\1, -Avau now. N~•,. Nt-•por1 Post ort~.
\'1/\Y epts.. drp111. Lal'Jt\'! Houw l-lunllng7 \Vll!Ch the DEAN RE:AL.TY ~16-i327 CJIAJt'llNG 3 BR tW\rnJ:
yArd. room ft1r !Jo.a l. Cotnc!:t OPEN HOU~il·; <'Olun1n. TOWNHOUSES bl':lm clng 1\/uS«I hrte~
Joi clo~t rn 8C:'liool~ In west. from S\6,000 to 521.000. Lo"'. irplc. !;1n1 rm., xtr~ lo:e Mtt•
all'le Crtt. $2!1.~. By Owner. Fast resuhs AN! just a phont! lo1v do"n Jll'l.l'nlt>nt. DEAN heaut. kE'fll yd hnlTlllC ~8-6449. cell •"-·lly • M2·5673 ! REAL TY 53(.ft;27. corld. CJ.s.·.o 61:...;i;:n 'J:'
"
t
I
'
-I • ., .,., .• ,,
MoMaJ, lklwrttrlber n. 1971
llNI lst•tt, -l[iJI I~ ._I ---r-i--__,-J~I --... -l~I ~ ___ , .. __ ;;;m;;; -.., .... I~ [ ~ ........ , ...... j~ [ "ff'""""'M••M I~ :· .... _,_"'_•'M·::J~
16' Ma;;"';; ... ;l.;,;;;;;;;;;iii;l~HtuMtiiiiiiiiiiiiUiiniilviiiiirn.iiiii;;. ;30;51 Hou ... Unfur n. 3Q5 Townhou1e Or:t:n .. m Apft. Furn. 360 1 1A~p;t;. ;U;n;lv;m;.--~~3'5~/A.;pt;.~U;n;fu;r;n;.•;;.;3;'5;1
-;v 9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APJS. Trust DMt 260 Cott• Mota ,Huntington Buch Huntlncton Buch Coil• MH•B -.-1-bo-.-p-.-n-ln-,u-lo--ICotla Mii•
I ' TJtu~.~:o~w~ New. Vacant -Custom 2 .. ~n •• tltc. blt:=dinb)R/O, f'A i:?,WNH, s,,E for l"!blnt 2 BR,. $245. NEW N"'E1"'.-.-,-.B-R-. --;;;~-.-.,,-.·.I _* __ T_O_W_N_H_O_U_S_E_*_
1M lncoma p._rty
4 ~·par••le buUdln~s.-Sliike--roots:--Private-• • n•-•tt0 • • •·ch., u"'• ~ ll"" _A ,_A 11"• • carpeli, · rara1e. "18 er 111er, tna. poo rr I y \ Calr 'tr:: .., " ~ .Qt! u.1..-t"',. ~·llf._ fiO J( JOO le~ lot. Mow in .fadl. $165 mo. (1) 892-7818. DELUXE 2 BR. 2 8.A. p C, s:iu:•1u~. l"llr 'I· l " 2 Bn. Shae ~pt, DLW, r;uus. No Stairl, A I 1 1tory bungalows. 2 FOR ale· 3 TD' kltal Spic, 2 br,. 2 M1 ba., Bl~ today. Sl!li. per mo, A5k. far. CARDEN APARTMENT Owner 675--16« Aft 6. 1,.Jf <'ltan ovtn, pa.tio.
b•rooms. Some have fireplaces. The type mount ss'.rr.o. 1 ~all. Di~ DSEANpac:. 3 br, 2 full bl .iB!tl l'!'ntal agen t. 2T!NBENTE DA~ OTOO w"NHoCUOSNE· 151 E . 21st St., C .M. Coron• det M•r 311 \I/·. \Vllll>I• if 5411·3609
of ll\IUdings tbal attract and hold gOOd ten-nl. UH™. _.--REALTY ,,,._,,,, Oi2-4471 " · -~~;646-::..;1:;:666::..,*""--I :-iii· iiiiiiiiii --II "ll~· Income $16,740 yr. $145,000. Excellent '°" MESA VERDE l BEDROOM S!llO/Mo. ,.,,. "'""'"· 11 FAIRWA 1 fihilnclng. home wlthln wallrini d is-3 BR. 2 BA, bia cul-de.sac Newport 8e•ch $30. Wlc . Up Apts.
-"Our 26th Yur" Jlie ) """to ochool•. F•mlU" horn•. 1111 bl!M, dlx ""'" $1S.$2lWk.Motel Rm• ~ ~:; VILLA APJS.
S ...,_,_... 1 v dy S26.J. Vacant. ~9153 days, *All F•cing Pool* $6 Night & Up ft,
WE LEY N. TAYLOR CO., RHlton ;i:· ,.::;:,; ~'..,n;' 5.lS-1222 ""· l BR .. 2~ i><., 2 "" '"'" SUNNY ACRES !!! !~ 2 & 3 BR's 1111 Sari Jo•«1uln HJll1 Ro•d 546-4141 4~B~R~.~2=BA~.-,,,-,,~n~i-,,.-.~H~,-,.-l 3 BR., 2 ba., 3 car ,;11ra~e MOTEL ON TEN' ACRES
t(_EWPOftT CENTER ~910 Howes Pumllhld JOO LEASE 3 Br .. , 2 Ba.., 5pa.c uv PvPrythlng & close to all. REALTOR 548-6966 Thl!I 11(1 ·worth 15 on ttnt. 1 A t" BR. Furn. 1 Untum. ~~::J~~!~· pool • lndiY, l~~\!~~~~~~~l~nd~U~lt~r~la~l~P~-~~r1y~~1~61~ B•lbo• lsl•nd nn. w/frplc. din rm., r11m $245 mo .. 842-3722. Townhouse, 2376 Npt Blvd .. , Cf\1 548-9755 Fireplaces I pr)v. patio&. Near Oranre c:a. Aitpon A: I, ]~ rm., pool-tablt .u. playrm., Irvine Furn. or Unfurn. 340 l BR. Furn. 2 lrg rlns{'ls, PooJ1 Tennla Contnt'I Bkf.Bt, UCL Adults only.
[ ......... fl! M-1 BLDG. $30,000 YRLY CUte futt1i 2 Br bouSf .. brick BBQ. 15.~l'.; Pool. $2» 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;; 1---------quec-n siie ttj priv. drt'u-900 Sea Lane, CdM 6M·26ll 20122 Santa Ana Av.. l~-iiiiji;j;;;;;;;-;;1 j t,%JO &q. ft. youna ind, bldg. w/bar, frplc. $190. Call $300. SCS.34<16 or Gt-6364.. 3 BR .. , 2 biuhJ:, rumished Lagune Beach in,i:: room, xtrs lrg roon11, lMacArthur nr Co.Mt Hwyl Mrr. Mi's. Joachim, Apt S-A
II Ii: oid ~--on ~00' x 1:20' days, ~706. ATTF;NTION OWNERS! Tunle Rock ......... 1340 MODERN de\uxp 2 srory, Adults only, no pets. SlSO/ P-RIVATE SQ 54G-6215
N•w!'t''. -Shor•s ·~~~ bocu!Jdta e:u s1tt-. B•llJ.Ni Penlnsul• We ti.ve ttntal customP.rs 3 BR, 2 ba., atriu1n , ... S325 view apt. 2 br, 1'~ ba. sun ni2o0. 35 F II NDECK BAY MEADOW APTS · """"" lo more. f""' HOMES, AP'J'S l CQN· 3 BR 2" •· f•m .,.,~ ' u erton, CM 2 BR., 2 balh.'1; upscail'! du· "·H-.11 1 .• " · W I N T I C ...,. · · ' 71 ....... •••• ... ~ deck, -blk to heh, shp,;. -· oc ... u ce1 ngi; pane ltlf
SPECJALISrS in home u.Ja ·, es •YR 'ito•Y er ~· H80M:J A ~l'~lnr ~Ir 4 DOS. call l'.»;AN REALTY, J BR, 2~ ba, fam .•.... S.'l.'lO Lse S250 Adults Rel Unb.lieYably Beautiful ~~;i. ,c:rrr,,'"'. Co~ipd,r:::!: pn ..• ·v patios, ~atton fa:
l:"rtntals. NP.wport Sltorea. •• rs r • w n pa • N' Renta'I Div .. 536-7521'.. 4 BR, 2~ ba, fam .... S.'150 ' . ' . VAL D' lSERE c-~ .. AJ•I•. ,1111 All d II "'"1290 21ll S& J · Hill Rd w I er U 111 e 11 • 494-9982 "-'U"" Beaut. lndscpg. 707•L Orcbld .... ' es. , .!l u 11• no pets. Caywood Realty .,..,... . n o.tqu1n s . . .!l • n , NEW l BR 2 B ho E 4 er:., 2"' tmchs, Jamlly room, . . Adults • no ""'''· F1 ... 11o ... -"' ,... • BR ~oM AS '"W =....:,_;_;.;_cc_:_ ____ I N-~-1 "••910 213·2..., ~,,., ' a. ust'. • ..... ~• R k ••~ D I U f 350 ,,... v "'~ S250 Per.month yearly '·~ ~ San <;lement• ~~a-• \..a'Jllr """1 • ....-....uv. Side C.M. Adults only. S195 '"l'l..Le oc ·····••· ....,., up exe1 n urn. everywhere. Stream & • · A; S\59/mo.
BY Chvner. 3 BR, 2 Ba. !'I.
view. 403 ":. Ave. San Ju&n.
$41.!m Temu. ~294.
S.nt• An• Heights _ .. ___ .._-
OWNER SAY$
"SELL"!!!
Sharp 3 bedroom en lute
lot. Assume 7%% VA loan.
Total paymts $186. month.
Price reduced to $25.500.
Call Ml\/ for details ..
FULLER REAL TY
MS-tl814 AnYtlme
RMI E1tatt. c;.,,.,,,
AcrHg• for s•I•
)~
150
BY Owner: 40 acrts level In
Anza Valley. Riverside
County. i--ree & clnr.will
trade all or part, Uicome
properly prtf'd. ( 71 4 )
546-8833 ask for Ann
SO acres TXKE OVER all or
part, mountain area, trees.
rolling hills, NO DOWN. S58
mo. 9fi8....0047.
SAN JUAN CAPISJ'RANO.
1,1:, 1 Ir 2 acre Estate lots.
Horses OK. Broker. 493-4714..
Ap•rtments for s•I• 152
EXCLUSIVE BAYFRONT
APTS Vista Del Lido. All
utils .. &. garage. P itt & slip
avail. Sell or lease by
owner . 673-8367.
Commercial
Property 151
9.7 NET Return, S36.000
below appraisal. Newport
!sea.ch commercial corn!'r
with 23 year lease.
Realnnomics. Bkr. 675-6700
Condeminlumt
for s•le 160
VACANT 3 bedroom 2'iii bath.
Freth A dean. Private pa·
tio, double gar~e. A si~al
at $27,:;otJ. Low down ta ex-
cf'llent IBA loan. Owner
Lots for S•le 1°70 Coron• dal M•r -mo. 13th mo. freP. Phone ah WE HAVE OTHERS \Vatt'rfall, 4~' pool Rec. Rm, .. , ,75-6050 0 JS;' W, Bay St, C.M.
5 or wknds 64&-8665 Co1t1 Mes• Sauna, ~Is 1-2 Bclrn1, J.Urn-- -· C:i.ll 6'16 0073
ZONED R-2, 446 Hamilton, Lf.lxury Beach Ho.me · · Unfurn. from SJJi ~EE IT: -l'''''""I Cl.,& . CM Ill 500 • ....,,,. do Use of dub 6 boat• 2 Br, garagt'. patio, crpts, 2 BR 1 1 a'.>00 Parsons. 642_8670. Park-Like Surrounding . . ' ' _,.,., wn. * * fi73-7ll5 * * drp11, stove: l retrig. Quiet • c ean, emp oyed mu!--e BAYPORT QUIET -DELUXE ~;~e~al~~i~i balance La11un1 Beach tropical settinit for adults die aged couple prPf'd. SPAC 1 Br~ pool~ • BA YVIE\1/ 1-2 & 3 BR AP'J'S
--·-···"· only. 1 blk lo shops: $160. Adult~. no pets, re as· !!hops. Adi!~. no pets. Sl !l.1 Announci ng the qu iet 01M-'1i11g l-f"\' patios 1r Hid Pools
Mount•ln, D.esert, OCEAN aide. view, steps to 646-1765 er 646-4430. "SINCE 1946.. 640-6142· 11111 prl. 1884 ~lonmvia. of Bayport Apls.. , , for Nr 1hop'g * Adu.Ill onl y
Resort 174 beat':h, 2 BR. 2 BA., Ire;. CHRISTMAS DINNER lst \V!stern Bank Bldg. 1 BR. frplc, bllarn$", patio, ~S-0336. Adults; And the sligh!ly l"ss Martinique Apts.
--------~ut. t~m. rm., wltrplc. In .YOUf 3 Br home. Crpc / Unive.rslty Park vo/'11'. uciJ incl $148. l adul!, Attract.-. Clean 2 BR. quiet oprnirq: of Bayview lrn ~..anla Ana A\'!'., CM
BIG BEAR LAKE View hv. nn w/frplc, drpf, palio, gar, stove, re-Days 133-0101 Nights tlO pl!ts .. 642-8520. lltd pool. F"urn-Unh1rn from Apis. lnr fam iHrs. Mgr, Apt 113 &46'55'.2
l!AVE A washtr/dry!r. d 1hw1 hr , frig. $215. ~l. 6-16-1246. 2~B~D~R~>~f.-g-,-r-,.-,-.-,-,,,.--,,-,~,·. I Sl40. AduJ1.~. &12-%2o Call (714) 6-14-5;)55
WHITE CHRI,STMAS Avail io July l. $325. TOWNHOUSE 3 Br, 2 Ba. Adul!11 only. $13.'l. FURN 2 Br. apt utfl pd. $170 2 BEDROOM-NEWLY WE~TBAY El~EN
in this CC7.)' cabin in the 4Sf.:4147. Pool. Kids • pet ok. Avail * UNfVERSITY PARK * 543-8835 11okdays aftrr 6 per n10 .. 2Zl7-B Maple Ave. DECORATED. N'Ell' l 0_, 2 B-dnn. ,.~,. woods Only $11 950 Euy h 2 BR + den N'pt Bch .. $315 548-59ll nu .._ s..ni " terms: Call &.' <n4) NewpOrt S.•c immed. $215/mo. P~. 3 BR. 2 ha l'nhouse •.. S32.' 1 Month FrM Rent · FIREPLACE. apartmenls w/pool.
536-1738 or wrt~: Spen!!!'r e WANTED 557-7648. 1 BR. & den, 1 ba ...... sr.-.o l BR. 2 Ba. S?15-548-1309 11 Br ~125 & S130. Lrg. Jd"11I GARAGE. $190. FROi\f Sl80. ADULTS
Real &tate, P .O. Box 2828, nitt family wants winter 2 BR, beam ceilings, frplc, 4 BR., 2~; baths ........ $3:JO D•n• Point or flchelor. Pool. Adlts * 548-5003 * 23U Elden A\"f'., C .. M,
B. "-k · ;e only. 1993 Church. :.48-96:U 64•5~. lg °"ar La e, Calif. rtntal, no pt"!!. 6424\7 erpl.!I, bltn range, VPry l BR. 2 ba. hompg .. $26(),,,25 SOUTH of highway sharp 2 .,. •ou
FOR RENT cabin In ~--='~---=~I clean, Child OK. Hurry for 2 BR .. 1 ~ ba. home ...... $275 DELUXE 2 BR, be'autiful * A\'L now-I & 2 BR. Furn. BR. ntw drps, cpt, Swedii:h • •
Wrightwood. Near Holiday HoUMS Unfurn. 305 this. S.l~ pe't' mo. 548--5970 (i. d h•1r vie11o" 16.10 sq. ft, 2 frplc!, Pool. Rec Rm. Gd . 10('. No trplc. ~It water . .sundC'ck. MEWL y DECORATED
Hill & Tab!~ ML Sleeps 1. Gener•I $115. Man-Wilf'. only. 2 BR, . . ." re I 'll"etb&r, 2 lge aundttk!. !iv. children or pe'ls. &16-5824. Jmmac. Private on rea ~ 12 Charming I BR. duplPX. new
Rent by v.·ieek er v.·ieekend. ~i•@i~~Giiiiil 1ar, fen yd, no pet.. 11th & rm It lge den, S2:15. ~7-1457. LOVELY LGE l BR. quif'I. of lo! over gara~es. SIS5 + carp, drapes&: paint. Lovely
545-7&45 · Santa Ana Av 54S-3530. REALTY Adutls. No pet~. Garage. $100. rir~1!. 675--0Ul. gardl'll 1 u r round i JI g 5 ,
FOR sale or trade 10 acres RENTAL FINDERS OUR executive 2 br, A d€'tl Univ. Puk Cent«.>r, Irvine Ap11tment5ror flent 1 ~1 24:'!2 J>:ldrn, &16-2768. SO. oJ 1he }lwy, 2 Br, l Ba, Mature adults only. Sl30.
Antelope Valley, nr Rosa· 4>1w.1-. con4 MllA home $350. mo call 557-4467 Call Anylinic, 8.13·0820 .... NE\VLY redtt-orated 2 Br., lrplt', lrg cov. palin, open )48--69£'0.
mond. Sll,000. 64~ aft Housea * Apti. i~'°=r_•~p~p~t.~~~~~~~ u!!l. included. Adults only daily 1-5 700 No. B Acacia,1 ----.H~A~C=tE=N~D~A~--1
6· * '4U111 * 3 Br walk to WestcHff & ..U L_•_e_u_•_•_B_•_oc_h ____
1
Apts. Furn. 360 ..!:50· &lfi-203!J. &14-.)Sjg_ HARBOR
SPRING Vall'""' Lake Lot. , ....... ~ chool $225 ~ ~--------e LARGE I BR ...$115 RE:AU'f. Unique 3 Rr. 2',~ ba , 2-H AVOCADO STREET ~J ,,,,. .. ~ s s . mo. OCEAN vu 11o·alk to bcb. :-ALSO 5 acres w/cabin in 551-4461 frplc, lx'Bmed ceiling, 2 br, Gener al • R00~1Y 2 Bil SJ.15 frpl , beam ccil. bl!ns. Blk to ~ult living . No pets
Apple Vall!y. M.7--0318. -FURi'llSHED-* 2 BR. 1989 No. A CharlP 1 bi. partially furn, 11o·asher. I iiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiii Arlh.'1. 642-2181. 673-0.j()7 brach .. $21!5. 673-57>'18. G uxrD _I h& 2 RR. Pnnr
Re•I Eat•t• W•ntecl 114 $80 Util's Pd. nic! bach at Sl45 mo. No do&s. 642-2259 S260. year1 lease. r.1ature 11 A 2 hr furn StS.i. 1 Br unfurn LRG 2 ~lory, 2 BR 2 BA den, ar~.;Q~1 1;1~shr64Paicl util.
heh w/car. Avail yrly. 646-7017. adulis. Call 52~3254 (7141 $1~0! util pd. Adul1s. no pel~. crpl~. drps & 2 car ~ar. · · · 6-J2!M
CASH ONLY after 6 pm. Bold New Concept s20 Ct'nlPr. 642..:ll48. $285/mn. ~4-3124 644-1040 SPAC 2 & 3 Br apt Sl·lO up. $100 UW"s Pd. L.aruna. Lr1 2 Br, 2 story. 1~-l ba a! ~~----.----Htd pool, play yd, cpt/drps, Foe your lot ln Newport er b&ch w/lolt I patio. 2 blka Fashion Island. S1% per mo. Laguna Hills Dana Point 2 Bf'droom, nel'.!y decorated, bltn~ patio K'd k ..
Co&ta Mesa, mll.!lt be zoned ~an, R"''· (213) 782-115&. FURNITURE RENTAL ~i~laCP, garagP, S 19 0 . 2206 CollPge .. No'. 5~ o 6.t:z-1035
for duplex or triplex • also J BR NE\\.';i.VORLD • 3 BR, 2 BA, * SINGLt:. 'IV-POOL. Pf'ts 548--.l003. 1994 Maple No. l '"'JSIJ. older ho th t ean be · ram rm. crpta, drps, · · I · ·1 k D N M <nr mea a -UNFURN_l~E&-FS, elec range & ovPn, cov. priv pano. poo pnvi · • f'.lon!h to Month 0 · A A ARINA INN. 2 BR cpt!I rirps bltru: .i;ar NE\VLY D tom down tor new construe-$90 t Br all util 1 ....i rtovt . 1 ~ ~ R Volltyball crt!. Bltn~. rtfr1g * 100., Pu,oh•·., Oprron :Wl II Const Hwy, D. PL ,,_;, ·, 'N· ,,;,, 11 9'./mo' ~ ECORATED tion. ' ti"· ' p&t\O, n ...... l•u, uttgtrs & "'fw crpt. $249/mo. " ~ " "" c · " , .. · a 2 BR \\•fgar. Displ-\\'lr pd refrlr. Avail now. Or. S235 635-6750 • Wid! Self'ction. Huntington Beach Incl ut ll 675-6737 c 11 h · WiU lease back until you CUI !!62-9521 or 968-6976 St 1 C 1 ' · a l'll·n I & 5, 636--1120.
find new home. State loca-Mini re.nch, 1 hr cottage near 4 BR. 2 BA, new cpts &. Ye· oors $12:rLRG ~100C"rn BR . 2 Br, bl!ns. frpl, 2 t•arpor1~. 1571 Orani::r Avf' "A" •.. $1 30
tion, lot aize, price 6: phone ocean, &arden I chickens. freshly p11int!d. Le11.s! S225. Lido Isle * 2-I Hour Df.livc-ry Cpls, drps. redec, nr orran. pool, nr. ocean. S200 up. 2:-.Ei6 Or1t11gr A\'e "D" ••• $135
number TI15. • MO. Call 545-3424 f0pPn Jl<.1MACULATE 4 BR. 2JR Chicago. !i 3 6 -I 5 O 6, Adll!<, no Jl('li<>. 673-4447. . ~IESA Verde 2 BR upper.
Act fast ·as our cash bud&el Eves! South Coasl Realtors. S:'iOO month Call PerrY Gil! -s47-:>Jti9 2 BR, l'IC'W crpt, rug, refr1g, bHn~. gar1tge-, nr shoppin.s:.
la llmi1ed to UI pll1'C:h.ues $135 2 Br .horn' wllrc !enc!d 3 BR, 2 BA with heated pool . 613-7071 675-2723 rJf 1' " ~ Laguna Beach $180, frplc, no pets • child. Adul 1~. no pets, s 14 5.
only. yd for children. Hurry. S2.ll month. 646-6697 or Bryant \\'it's! Rllr., N.B. ~ ~ --. . .......-.....-.-----· 433 Iris, 644-4340. 5'18-6.tJ7.
Write P.O. Box 1515, New-S'J'U DIO t th , All '•.-.==,.,,oo---=
B (2131 694-2983. Lido Sands • ap" nor enu. VIF:W! 3 Bdrn1 -2 Ba -Ex-'e LARGE ! BR. S125 port each. SlfiO E.sid!. Spacioua ~ br w/ -~~~~--~-~ t ----------· 1517 \V. 19th, C~l 548-34RI ul1l SlOO yr r o u n ri I
5 & f d d •• J BR HomP., fncd yrd, · · r cuth•e Dplx -Adults on y! • ROOI\tY 2 BR. Sl40 REAL TOR 1ar ence Y • 1 I""~ 3 BR .. 2 baths; unfurn. 27:-16 N. Mnin, SA ~1'17-0314 Rr.~pon.~lble adult on I y. S500 Mo. _ Afr. 615-4930. Ad!t5 ,,~2_2181. !?.' "~?
C h I li ,_ d crpts, rirps, b tna.. '1.J· y 1 Al •-h 4-1708 ~ '~~ as Of' your c enui • nee . cl' 11 837 "'l? ear y. 1r .. , nr . .,.,ac . ":r .
land or older home with R-2 Sl 70 3 Br home, trplc, ctovt , in s uf · -"" · ABBE Y REALTY 642-JSSO Balboa Island ~~~~~~~ Cost• Mis• J BH, 2 BA + drn, $200 .. 2
or R-3 mning, We have: retrig, crpl/drps, children/ EAS'fSJDE New 3 BR, 2 BA $!:25 ilTO .. UP: $40 \Ilk., Bach. l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I BR, 2 BA Sl6S. Bltn.'I, CID,
bullden waiting. quick es-pets OK. ff'~ yd. Sp11nlsh duPIPX Av11il Dec. Newport Beach \VINTER rental. 3 Br. 1 ba. Util pd. Color TV. Cr~ct'nt \\'/D hkup, PaHo. ~ar. 181·
crows. Call 642-4000 ask fGr BEACON RENTAL 1.1. Rt'fs. req. S23S .. 5414424. OCEANf"RONT 2 BR. Newly Step 10 !he Bny. S30il. in· Rny &h. 49·1-2508. 67a-4367. BRAND NEW JI Dt-1 Ma.r . .>18-8..?78
George Maschmeyer. Finders * 645-0111 2 BR P*tiO gar 11~ painl<'d. Drp'ri k crp\'d. eluding utilities. Newport Beach From $145. Dishw11shrr, i;hag • 2 BR 1 Ba., ,,,,,,·-, • · ·• "" \Vinion Rea.I Esla!E" 67:)....3331 ( lk · [ I ' '"' 4 BR exec home in N.B.. c l BR, Jrg rd, gar .. S3'.XI Call Anila, 673-6210. Jones e BRAND NEW e <'Ul'JM' ing, wa -Jn c 0~" s .. Rl!ns, CJD ~lesa Vprdt'. r .v., or Huntngtn. Wanted BKR/MANAGER 646-82'1fi Riiy ill{':., 2001 W. Balboa, '-''INTER rental, 1 Br. furn. f'ilrt't'd:;r 11",a'i ""Ira 111rs.?e rrii. avllll; .$l!i0. garage. now or aft Christmu .. Pvt, NB.. Elec. hltn~. $:.JOO Inc. ulil 2 BR, 2 RA apls '11'.1 di~h11r, rooms.. 111111 u game l"Of:lm, 557--8400 OmmUnl! 3 BR House in court, gar, =~~~-~~-~-'\Vinion Real Estate 675-JJ.11 hu_lie c!osrts, priv patio. hf'a!eri pool RBQ's, enrlO:<l·l°'=,,..,~·--~~~~-1
540·5080. fenced. 2 kids ok. E/sldt. BEACON Bay 2 Bdrm. 1 ba. hPlllPrl ponl, billiard rm, ja. f'rl gflr.1ge~· quiel surround-AYA!L Now -2 BR, 11,i BA
$100/mo. 64~. Frpl. Yearly lea se. S300 mo Balboa Peninsula cu~t.i ,'it. bhq's. ALL UTHr Jt1i:s ,!.. cl<>se 10 shop'ping. TOWNHSE. Blfns, eprts,
f\!r. Robinson !TIES PAID. Sre nl 20102 Aduh Jl\'ing no pcl~. 1Jrp~. pool. No pe t s . o~e E.1st Bluff DAVIS REALTY 6,12-7000 ~;.;;J~\l~~h~pi ·R~"-~::~ Bir('h ~!. lnr, 01·a11~e Cnun. EL CORDOVA APTS. 1n.';;'"-"c;;:~""·-,,--;;-;;--=,,-
will carry 2nd! I :~~~~~~~~~~ l•rwln re•lty, Inc.
21.162 Brookhurst. Hnlgn Bch If. J 546-~11 •nytime Finlnciel ..
Income Property 166 5 bedroom home will takt 2 e THE BLUFFS e 3 NEWPORT Shores homes Maid Serv ice. Pool. Ulil. ty Airpori, .Tu~t \\I. ol Pal-2077 Charle S1 . 642-4170 DELUXE 2 BR.. Bltns.
10 UNITS
EaltsiM Costa Mesa. great
ttntal atta. Seven 3-bed·
rooms apd thrtt 2-bedrooms.
Ati lf"Parate units with lots
tlf space. Shows a f11ntasl it':
return with int':Ome of Sl.400
peT mo. Submit on down or
tradt tl'I •
Walker & lee
R~altors
Z19G Harbor Bl vd. at Adami
545-9451 or 545-0465
Open 'ti! 9 Pil1
NEED 11 UNITS
IY TAX TIME?
Convenient East&idl" Costa
~fega location. 1 blk. trom
Npt .. Blvd. l·l Bd, 2·2 Bd &:
l·l Bd. The:o.e well maintain·
M units havt bUilt-lns & pa-
tiOfl 8 with Ii.replaces. Ex·
cel1t nt rtntal rt.cord a.lao
toad ttrma availablt .
Price $175.000
Jn~stment Div.
5'!-1600
·O TI II: Rf/\L '°' ESTATLRS
INNOVATIVE
INVESTMENTS
2 cupp_r dtluxe 4-pltxes In
C~a Ml!A. lnve11t in one or
both. floor to ceiling fire-
plact In 3 bedroom owner•
unit. Qose to evtrything ln-
d\Mlini beach. A s k i n I
$14.500. * CA.LL 847-8507 +
~ ~
7 HOUSES
on llrtt 115'X1>3' lot. Flvt
2 bedrooms I: two l l)N!room
unlta. Clo.e tn shopPfl\K.
Newr • vanncy. S815. mo.
income.
$79,500
PEARON REALTY &42-1771
Bu1ine11
Opportunity 200
Jamilieg or a bunch of sin-4 BR, 2~}, ba .. famil,y kitr.h. tor ren1. S27j to S.150. Pd. i~:i.rlf'.~ Rd). ?<!gr 5.'i7~l2 16. Nr11r Harbor & Hamil!on SL Rf'lrif. Drp1 w/w cpl. Priv.
glf'I lo shatt expenses. Kids Lee. priv. patio. Close by Cayl'.'oocl Rralty ~8-J29o e Call 67~140 e OCEANFRONT \V i n cf' r. DE LUXE bale. Gar. Lndry rm .
& pets O.K. pool, shopping, l!Chools. Va-Newport Shores BAYFRONT Pvt Bch. 1 hr. Vanous Loe. 1-:l-:J hr.r;, 962-41RO.
776-7330 Agent cant, clean & waiting. S375 A'irll• o·ly, -p, I,, APARTMENTS 1 '"'E •BR N
P h Cl EAN CLEAN CLEAN f...Jc, g11r, Sllt5 inrl ulil'~. " " "v A. C , ,. 1 . S . ......., · u C'Pl & p11.int. Distributors Needed FOR rent 3 bedroom _ tr mont . • ~ - -.. 'I'' 673-80S8 1r onu -,. rp c .r; • 3 w1m -0 .,,h, .. ,.._, ,1~ / 1 Bk C · ·-•\ Rd I I N \Vintrr/Yrly .. 673-5 ~76 , ' ' I p ~ '""' ~"" wpe L I mi I e d nu m be r (Ir availablt now, Carpel& _ ! ro tr ()-l')p inv1ll;"'1 4 rm .. , un ., year y. ew •1 m n~ no!.~ , HrRlrh Spa • SISO. t:A2-0g,j·lfMn
DISTRJBUTORSHIPS now drapes, yard. Pets and EASTBLUFF REAL TY cu.r;t. carp. Family only! fi73-67911· 928 E. Balboa e ON BAY ·r<r Lido. UNIQUE Tennis Cr1~ • Garne & Bil· ~ · ·
av11ilablP in your ana. Nf'W t'hildren O.K. Sl75. ~ 644-1133 Anytime ABBEY RF:ALTY &12-3.ll:iO Blvd. I BR w/ priv. patit"I. Sli p li11rd nnom. $200 l\fO. Jmmac. 3 BR. 21ti
R J YEARLY 1 br bf'auliJul cond avRil. U!il paid. Sl9:1/mo 1 BF.DROOM RA., erpl.~. drps. Avail. Multi-Million Dollar ad--ea tor. Huntington Beech San Clemente Yrarly .. 6i.l-6tl0 i·noi.f SI'.,. now. Coll ~j7_7-,68. · d Pudd. • F ·1 \\'11ter pd. 11dul!s, no pets -~· "" VPr1~e ing rui SHARP 4 Br I.'. tam. Qui~t ~ · MEDITERRANEAN Cups, 1 o Id t hr o ugh cul-dt'·sac. S2Z5. A viii 1211. 3 BR, 2 BA. e.Pt':l bit-In R/0, 3 9R, 2 BA, dsh\1hr .. 0-view, $150 .. 67J.....6244 673-8224 I Blk Tn Bch. Clean I hr. SI;;() I BR houSt', dt'll,
Aulomatic Merchandisers. N r Bkr ~ll5l FA ht. crpl.!I, 60xl00 fl. fenc· 11dul 1s on I y. $26.'i. mo. DELUXE 2 BR furn .. apt. 1~ Chilr!/pcor ok. \\'lnlf'r Sl.5..1. VILLAGE g11ragf', pnlio. yarrl. Share
If qualHled. you wil l be pro. 0 ee.. ' ed lot, dbl iar. lndscpd. Avail De c .. 1. 544-4294. blck 10 QCt"An 1, blck 10 bay mo. &16-4071 or 642-99.ij, pool. Adl1l!, Quiel. 646-.1764
vided with all equipmt'tll F"~Rh ~t -3-~~· 1 Vacant-{ll(lve in today/$22j Soulh Lagun• • * 67:}.73j7, 2 RR. 'i hlk from crt11.n 2-K>O ·~;~~rs,-~~~20 C.M. 6 UNITS
•-d 1_81;0"', 0_ ..... IJ'a\n. t , ara:e Yiuu, chi dren per mo .. Ask for l'l'nlal Agt. ~~---ulil pd. S17'5 nio 128 40lh " "" "" "" ..,.. 0 K 1160 u " ""''"" Corona d•I Mar RENTAL 01''FJCE AW.. ELECTRIC _, ,·-all ~ ••• , of th•'• · · · .,.~ 962-4471 LEASE lge, t':ltan, older Sr ~ 19~ UP-AIRS II~ .. "" " "''...,.., R"allor ho 2 B 2 B , 1 I ' . ""£· .m OPEN 10 AM TO fi P,\1' "'' ,,., highly lucrative busines5 ' LEASE WJ'l'H OPTION me. r, a, ul'!n, cp ! N H · h DOWN51AIRS II'",
FOR "· l ...... drnll. Priv. bch, ocean vu, BACHELOR apr, Ad Ult ewport e19 ts CALI. ".· ,.,.,,•It ! PM™. 100 selling). ·you must be n.o:nl u=room. 2 bath, $350. Month. 4 Bdrm., 2 fit(lry .,, 111 -* * * * "' ..
b il . 1325, •= 4764 '11"1'.lman. -l mo. CH LO rtliablt", have a good car u t-1ns • excellent con-wil h pool. $500. Do"·n. ··· ~··· · * * BA E R APT. Liclo 642·1 131
d.. . 28 -Condo. Furn. or • • 615--5.'l.'>!I • * I d El Pu1rto Mesa Apl1 , ~----.~=-I 11 00 4 hours a week spare 1t1on. & ne11hborhood. S 5. S38.000. Ka1el111.. 847-*J61.. I s an -\Va t tr fro n c . * * • * 1 · .-
11m!. and be able to mskf' Sharp!! 546-8660-Reallor. SIM MO.• 2 BR, 2 BA Unfurn. 325 2 BDRl\f apt, $210 .. Avail. Sl6:i/mo. Call 61J-38116. 1 Bedroom Apt1. Nu 1 & 2 BR fr $130
11.n immediate lnVf-'Strnenl o! 1-0R o-1 11'" l .... ..,~ Dec. 111!. Ju.~1 COnlplt'1Ccl, spacious pa-
""'" JJ. ~•oum, Townl\o'Js~. washer. dry<'r. Huntington &ll•ch * 67:\-1326 • RACllF:LOR apl, util pr!.. tim. f'ncl garRges, nr shop'g.
S2100.00 jsecuttdl. Send private area -won't last. reCrig. Var.11.nt 536-9153 $135. mo. $1 30 & Ufl Incl. u!llllies .. Also Adl1s only, no pets, 1!17n nam~. address and phone ~ -Realtor days, !l.16-1222 l'!\111!!. 1 BDRM C n n Ii n ~ n I 11. 1 • GUEST HOUSE S90 • ).1!"~2!H_·f ____ 1 furn. Pool f.t. Rf'Crf'lltion \V111/ar(' Sr.. 5411-0SO.t 646-2209
numbeT to: NP w po r I Corona •-1 Mar J BR 2 BA I•' I ... Townhou.q>. cornrr, $150 BRchrlor .. Qu if"I. Privatr. No ---.~'WANTED arra. Quiet E. nvimnml!n l. 100-IBR d~!-,, I •d.ulr, -n. t n!~mation1l •Distributing 99 • .; pane ni wns'"'"· IJl(). 962-51~• kitch. Util pd. 673--0j(]7, ' ,.., lrplc rrc Schls llhops ..., niCP famlly 11o·ant.'I wintrr Off slreel parking, No ChU· 1111okcr, . lv. rcfri<. drp•. Com"""Y. 3700 New p ort BRAND NEW "ARB OR • . · ·t ~-~--~~--= C t M d 1 ° .-· " A ii J l B Townhouse Unfurn. 335 os a •s• r1>nt11l. no pets. &12-66ii7 ren, no Pl' s.. No pt'I~. Dr.tp, RcJ. 954 'I''. Blvd.. NPwport Be a c h' VIEW HOME. 3 Bedroom, va · an. · Y owner. Al!lo Garage~ For Rent lith, 6~;,....3737
Calif., 92660, Dll!.pL No. 30A. f.amily room, 2 baths. Com·i ~"~'-~1-"'~'-·---~-~-General BACHELOR 11p1, full hnth. Newport Heights 1959-1961 t.~aple Ave. .-~~-~~---1 * New Lisllni * muniry pool, courts. etc. l BR Condo, 1~ BA. pools, S95/mo. Adult only, no pets. CLEAN 1 or 2 Br. Adlts. no Costa Ml'Sa 213R. apt. Crpt',; all rooms.
-MARINE RADIO-S395. ptr month. Broker. clubhous~. pstio, garage CLOSE ·10 oce11.n, ahoppin1. Call 64~20. 2 2 .,,.,...,,..,,,.,.,.,...~..,,.,. drp!I, bhn.,. rt'frl1. c11rporl,
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... ... h pC'ts, lg kit. S12""a-Sl50. 4 I VILLA CORDOVA lndry rm .. Iii'> mo ,_ mo. To BUY OR 644-7710. w storage, nr '"' .,.,ae · .schools, 4 Bdrm., 21., hA., 2 E l!Ih sr NB '4'l""! w
SELL A BUSINESS RUSTIC 3 be!!rOom 6: dell, 2 962--0986 a!t 5 pm. car encl. g11r. Lease, S~ a Any day ts tt>e BEST DAY lo . .,.. "" , e SUPER 2 BR • 64&41961 or 646--1246.
HOLLAND BUS. bath, bit-Ins, t 1 r ~ p I ace, J ,ll)Od.rwant ad is a good mo. 536-7090 Brk. l'Ui. an ad! D 0 n' 1 San Climent• Month to Month. $L70 BACHELOk. 5"f\arp, c\o~e to
SALES walk to town. Art· 67!>-4930. Investment Dime-A-Lint 64:Z...5678 delay .• call IOOay 642-5678. 2 BR, o11o·nr's apt, ('(}mpl !um, Gas lleat-G11s Cooking. OCC & UC!. $130. incl util'8
"The Broker with Empalhy" 2 BR, A.-/erp!I, lU'bq•I'::;:;::;:;;;;::=;;;::~:;~~~~==:::=========:· -=;·~·~·~~~-~-~ deluxe, nr bch. Prlv sunderk Ca!I Hot \Vtr, ALL INCL. & refrig. 557-7768.
ln'·o A CM -~ ,_, Id Ad II 2323 Elden Avt., Cl\f. DELU"E range Vt! .. , • • ditpl. Avail Nav 15th. <:all nury. shg cp!s rps.. u ll ·' 1 Br., gar. AvAfl.
645-4170 54G-0008 ~vi'. m..-2698. STAR GA:>7£"Dit~ ¥. I nn pl'tl!, uth pd, Sl!F.i. mo., l 7'=cc--""'--IXJ.12---~~1 IJtoc .. 1. Aduh~. no pct~. $135. R~EAT!ONAL · Ml< •,_-,-.,,-,.,------I .~ ~ '1t 11vail till July. 27i La P11.I· LIVE in man11ger 'll'llnlPd. 12 1.10 E. 21st. &l!Hi016. c.. ... n. equip. · 'Cost• Mes• -"''0-.---:•1 CLAY l.. POLLAN---r--,,,,,.--i le Sales Corp. High prolil. on1a, 4!f2-7006, 492-0902. furn 11ptll. Ren.lat $150 i~c-• STIJNNJNG Gard"n Apt-2
Pat .. pend. Proprieta ry item. 2 BEDROOM. 2 Ba th. 'ii-!~~~~~:;~! ~~ )f. Apt. Unfurn. 365 utll. S91l C'.J'('dlt lor nii~ Rr .. 2 B11. pan'] den, $13j.
Nffi:I operaUnr capital in carpetl, rlrapt1, buUt.iJ11, To drvelop mrssoge for Monday, dulll'S, A"1'°1re lor lcleanllng Likf' new. 64S.5530.
exchan.ge klr controllint near S.D. Freeway ' read d ............. ruTlber General apt s. ( u t t':oup e on y. -==~c-=~--~-1
stock, Ph. (714l M-4-1591. Harbor Blvd. acros• tM of;~:bt:fh;i~la • s ::::=========! &.'JS-7976 "ve~.. DF.;J.UXF: 2 BR, cpts, drp.11,
DI 'y ''.. $160 N lBR ~ad b1tns,i14a. EsrBL'D Int. ea tn ctrtt:I from a park. ru5 per 2 .,:~ 31 ~ :~e , IW , ;1 rm * 2 lath Call 644-1103
Busines1. NPwpor1 Beach monch, call aJttr .fi p.m. 3'1'11\f \...33s.11,,.. 63a.tw-4 POOLSIDE LI 1 i h lh·' 1 area. (21Jl 3.19-1576 altu fi 557-l'.JM. 4You'n J•AJfo,,. "'"" vu"1• room l wlt c!. o:ura LGf: 3 Br, 2 B11, nt:'W shat
!tbpect 3SMd 6Sn.. APARTME..NT ce ng It rpc . .:ieparRttt Cfll , $159/mo, freshly pain-
pm. CLEAN .3 BR. 2 Bath, frpte, ~~ ~~ 66~m 2311 Elden Ave., C.M. 111.undry ana. Ent':I patio. ted Nr.OCC.CRrports.57-6151
Money to LHn 240 blt-\ns. d1hwshr, cpta. lrr IH<M JIA ~X-645-5780 Swimmlnit po()! & chlldren't E/SIDE l Br, 2 Ba, bltr11
--------patio. Nr major ahopplns. '9Tho J9To 691.1r>c* playground. SlXI. C/O. gar, \YID, tfyrd: SA TILER sm. mo. leaM. Ca J l ;~~"" :~~ ~';,::'"..., llARBOR GREFNS Childrf'n ok. S100 .. &1&--41!M MTG CO ~9-178.1 alt 4:30 pm or 121'rhvhl 42Gef n h Beck B•y 546-4353
• • wknd~. 130.. 4Jt0f\f!ITM' 73,J~ ON I "I l 0 "('ABLES" V C'l'ORI $170 2 Br studio, 11.dj s~pa. 336 E. lmt S'l'REET 1• m:..,,.., '"• 7 T~ -.. , c..w. ,.r, ' • & "..!-AN" dcplcrpt. P.a09, car. Y.:-8301
CASH FOR TD'S t.Ge clecn ~Br., Nl!'W Cpta, I~~ ::::~. ~~~~ bl111.", cpt~. drps, pool. Lrt 2 BR\\'/ pn ,l!ar. AnrL,. 11.!t 5. 713 : ·SM.s:m ('(}I!. * 90'/, LOANS* rar. Privacy. Baby ok. No 111y •li.w, 77 ~ Sl70/rno. 673--36911. Cpt11, drll!, bUn,, sound· 2 B EDROOM ly
pet1. $140. 1&6 Pomona. 110... "''*' ?IOI B Ibo 1 I nd proof. rncd yrd w/ pn!ln • ' new 1'9 1'-'''llfl'll'1 nvoluoble • • s a Wtr pd, GArdencr nii1lnl. ttdtcoratPd, l l rtplace ,
lST T.D. LOAN fi)UICK CASH ~~ rft!~ :?Z YEAfil.·°"y,.....71..,.-.-:G'°'r-,-n°'tl Call b1wn 1 & s, 63&-41XJ. 1t11r11ge. St90. MA-500.1.
#DANA POINT Lowe:t~!'~~~e Co. r -~;.:::_ ~=-2~Z':.. CaNI, Little t1. Beeut, 2 fi67 Victorh' "C" ........ $15,; 2 BR I BA, nrw shag crp11,
-Ntw-Dtlux ....... OuplelL.._ 642,...?171_ 545-0611 THROUGH A 2•1M s.eo.. a•Otroc..N Or., 2 Ba., prl. patio. W,O 2437 Oran.lit' Ave "G" $155 dtm, bllln~. nr OCC, 1
$49,950. Servtns Hsrboe arta 21 yi-a. ~~ ~J"loff ti~. i'l-I0-90 +-utlls. l BR .. bf'am ce.H. !rplc, w/w, $139fl.fo. 5.37'61St
Re.1lty 642 ... fOS , , W h 11 e Elep1...·nta" l'Wtf'> DAILY PILOT :17~ 57 ,,.,......, 17,rlrdol PIKB \Vinton Rt11.I E1!llt 61$...1331 refrigfstovt . 1ar. $1M. 1 • \Vlt.sON GARDENS e w
~e trade.'/' Our Trader'•
Pa.radltt column it fnr your
!I line&, 5 day• fct .s hucka.
,,. 21 0o'I ~Net llMc"'f.,ny Ftl 1t)%t *2 B1drm·Flrep(.1ce* adWt. &t~. 12 UR. 1~ BA. Cpl/drp.t, 111nning your hOUH:! 1'Tn WANT AD "Gt ''~ 19Hot : fhem into "CASH" -R ll ,.. "' JOI...,..,,..... 6011 '90AM. ).fA.C.H CIU'Jielf'd. 211: 377-2140 LARGE 2 8r., iii bath. r.nel. f»'lio, $1-IO. 542-6811.
thtm thru O.lly p I to I ®Good @ Admw ()N!~~ ~::!: Sell lhfl Id Cluff Buy the l!Ud ~ Apt. f11m1ly {)/'J,Y. N(lllt'1 a bree1e .. Sf'll YoUf
Claiiitied . 64)..5671. 642•5678 llf'1'1' 1tuff pPl.L l1i31 125 Joann St. itnns with l"n"!C, ust DaUy
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4:J OAJCV"'PI LQT tl&r .. ~~2,~19~n~~~~~~~~~ • Mo~97~1 ~~~~·~1L~OT~-~·~·v~E~RT~l~SE~·~1~·~ l~I .. ~ ...... ~ .. , .. ~ .... ~ l ~~11[ ......... !!!!!!!!!! "'-I~ [ ~--l[t][ .__ _ ... _ ..... __,)~ .__! _~_J[j]1!~ .... ;; .. ;;~;;;I;;;@ [ ---J~[---1~ ~ ...... ;; ..... ;::,:i~ti1
Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apts., ~&f!!!llfc. .. R•en•IOt•llj--•JllB •p•,•,....,.-•1•,---•SJO• Lost SSS C-roctw .Ptumblnf • Holp W intod, M Ii ti 710
1-'-------Furn. or Unfum. 37o NEWPORT CENTER • __ _;;...... ___ _
Costt Mei• Newport S.ach SUDDENLY tln&J.t, llule, LOST toY ""111lt nWt ~. G&N•RAL PLUMBING REPAIR BOYS 10.1.r..; 1-------~_,.--1 ---------l _C,.;.01,;.t_•_Mc.;;;•.c••;.....--.,--GROUND FLOOR cui., f'duc:•tfod Ir like tQnq vi<:. Edinatt/Nt:~'h®f. F. CONTRACTOR No Job lott ••mall • ID de:llvu PlF'tll i. •. n.. SM e L!Kt A HO~tt:e PRl\'ACY, >.Inc IJ't'll, upr 2 -2,S00'.6.894' fUllyim""""''ed, • b~ kl V Re--' "'"'·-1 ff•-E B ~ a.t e ••• --e ut~ · A~tAZrN(; Adul· L 1vIn 1 "'V' '""'''• -~c l\J, • w., ....... .._., -·1 · rown ...... lt:r ~ Cl'mt:ntt, San Juan -PJ> Stat. 3 6R. 11_ h11 2 1lory, BR. 2 BA, Cl n. DI\\', ir r-I'rlme location klr t'Mnl tnaveli po' rt~ Ii BuUt H-Jo' ...._ 1 -~ C · ~ -•
1.. r ....... -,-""' .~l2!6 Beaut.11...2 Bft funi or unJ •'•n.;,._ , ... 01 ,, ... ~~•-ni ., LOST: 11/19/Tl Vk: Dahlia V""'-4'• or •~tt "· COLE PLUMBING trano..,.. ap1a a"" vi 1, ,.,,.,,i;: C'fl1~. ·Zl' f'i'l'l!, mon1y. • . ·-. , .. .., we: .., """'"-nu: m.-.n theft: •ny~.0 Call Hunt }lar'hour "'a.. 1'1e,
I k'I .. n... ... -.t pts. Self clean. ovt"ru.:, ........ ,,, 60c .,, --· "' · Cd~ 1m blk ft.ma]• poodle · _. ' 24 hr suviee 64¥'61 ~. • .• rnt'I'. rn. '"P.. ... ., ~·un PARK NEWPORT * .......... '"""'" '" \'t llOmt: ot the ame "D°Wt" ~·ant 6lJ..!rl03 (714 ) 846-1181. or main ofc. ' • ;u DAILY PILOl!I
rm Sl9:i. ~111-11-.2. APARTMENTS D/\\I 'In 2 Bri di,pls, ihag f00t. J rre1ts Ir .,,, !Or*lnc 1or f2\3) ~2-t#l. R•mod•I A R..,..ir :. l'pla, drP1. jal'UU.! I. uuna Wetley N . T•yl•r Co. tri,ndship~ Write. Clusilled PUPPY, ftma.le Samoyfd. -t92-«20 .-:-." .
Dana Polnt Bachclor,·l or:? Bedrooms, b11 ttts Hugr pool R II v · Brookh t •A.. QUALrrY am. cen·t ClONlr. S PECIALIZED ,Ho,.R• BUILD 2nd t ~Sell
d T ...... s-_,, M · . w·ood •• ors ad No . 2A3 DaUy Pilot. P.O. 1c: un1 • m.a. __ 0,.... ..... nco . 1 , ·• 2 B 2 n . d an ownnu ... ,...s. ,~ .. ,~, ·• err1mac s 2 ' J · ·1 R ~ 96" ~-" --..-• .,, n>alOnl')', con. R · C 1 · · BA · H v ·IA £ ~eln •• :\RGr. r., ""· 1n rm.. 1 >' ,110 A !\!! 111 .. an OllQUln H.i I! Rd. Box 1560, Colla M,aa, C.lif. ~·=·=·'-'"-·~-~--·----! c~te ~c. Oeiig"', pla.,, epa1r. arprn ry, pa.inuna:, sic . I -• • •
bl' I )~• "'''" , tenn s. rom • . ('r(I. 42'.'i f,11'rrimar. \\'ay. C.:'11. Nf'~.....,.. C•nl•r '" -10 ~~ 1..0·-ST·. ikinny -ay • bla•k el< Coll Di•k ''° ••22 Skin Carr. Call !V..U, or n, f'Jl ' ~ ··-· '1""· from .fashion li1La11d 111 Jam. ,...., .. V'tt-'l;:l' ""'""" •· • .. n.f1. Nht:s, Ken 64&-2042. · ... ' .,..._, • -1Y"
t1-11JC'f\ny, • m1. 10 n:;n1a ... _ & ,,_ J . . llills *2-8EDRo0M * DESK spa~ availa~le S50 Want to •et lnvolv·•? 1trlped lrma1t c.t, fte:a co\. R--r. 646-452.'t ~~;:I
'I 11-g 3 • 3 9 2 -uurc:e. """' oaqu1n , 8 • -MY Way qualily hom -•nt · • 11r,.,.11. ....... ' -· ' • P. ds f-1,A 644·1900 l '1 a To11o·nhou.w roneorpL mo. WW pnwide furniture Volunlttrl n~ 10 '#!'Orie Jar. Vic. Balboa Blvd. I ' ' CASHIERS: Car Wash,' PAM 537-.\li~. :.oa · 1 1 ;___ Btam cciling:i, rxlra lrg al S5 rno. Allsv.•f'ring Rrvlce 11o·ith erimuy age childun :tafh SL til-1!58. remod. Walls.\ Ct' ii I n1 ,l·.-T~.-G_u_y_Rool __ in_g_, _Oe_al_D_\. I: full time for C.M .. f~V. &
E--81-ff • NOW OPEN • hl'<lrm1. elK'l r 1tio. JTCl"l'l'I· availablr. 222 Forest Ave, in The Oce-an Vlrw School Doon. t'lc. No iob too •mall. rf!Cf · 1 do k L!l,guna areas. Exiw; ~q'd .
ast u BRA~D :-l"E\V I Br. $1.'i.j, 2 ll(ln rm, !lauoa halhs, tie. Laguna Beach. 494-9466 Dill. 2 Houra Ptr rliy, 5 LOST: Siamese kittt:" ·a~ M7..0036, 24 hr ans. Rrv. &1.>ir80, MS.~ own wor · Must be ove:r Ill. ~4.-4&60.
'NEWPORT BEACH Br Sl90. AU. UTIJ.ITJE.~ Adul1s. Our Sunday al1t'r· l ',~l=E°'D~IC=A~L'-',~,~il-,-'-0~,"'-01~1i-"-· d•Y• a ~·ttk. For informa· pmx. -4 mos old. tlea collar Atditioru * Remodrltnr . ~ V II G d A l'AJD. f>riv pallO, hi!li11.rr! noon B-B·Q'~ ,t, Frtt Art VI(. Pla~ntia .l Victoria. Gerwiek ' So Uc REPAIR, nco\tt:r any roof CHILD Cart: · 2 ~·~S:t:I 4 i a r•na a pis. rm, hf'arNl pt)()I \\/jacuzzi, l.C'i.~n.c inarnni:; !<Mil. A.u·-cond .. 10 room.s. 425 N. Tian call 147-2:)01 ext 233. 642-$25.. 67, ~t * n, ,..,.·,,,. problems. \\'enrda Roofing. It. s. Your home •• j;61t!l:i1ulf
f<llir hrdro'lrn~ 11o11h halr<1n· HARBOR GREENS r-:f'lo\port Bl\ld. UXI mon1h. SPIR.ITilAL READINGS ,,....,.,.. '"~ Fttt r!lt. 64>1691. Sehl OuiL s days, M4-1151
ire ah.,,f' !· ht-ln11', Grl'l1'1'll!!i huf!e: cl~Ot, det>p pile rar· '"'·:r.""' DAVI~ REALTY Ml-7000 Advice on all matten 2 MALE Gaman Shepherds, I EEiilect~:rrl~c0.•~1-'--"-"C.::-"l;.;=';-;~~!i:;;;:---I ~=:.:;~.:.:~:~:::-.;1
11,.1n.t! & f'JllJl"I aul't"lundtni: petin.i;:, lui;h !1u1d~cap!n.i:. iiiiiiiiii..i~·~·~ ....... iiiiiiiiiii 1 tan Ir 1 blk .l tan. Vit. 11=" '~.,,,,,,...,.... _____ S•wing/Att•r•iions
fnr r,.n1•h' \\ilh rhiirlN"n. ArtuI1s. Ynu :'llus1 ~"I! Thts • AIRPORT CENTER Daily 10AM·10PM Wallace An. IJ 19th St., ELECTRIOAN, littrwd --
<:"" ,-,J_ f'irrpl<ttl", "' I.. _,.,_·1_._12_16._______ L• Costa Apts. ad1.acen1 Alrportrr Hoiel. San Clrme:ntr , rt!pain. ~.' · AR ('\l.&torn fined. p,rsort.al
COAST,·.' •
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE DISTR\CT . . :-.:r<1r ('<"Jron.t rir!~r lhg'l 00('~ 20102 Birch St., NB. * BRAND NEW * DelU'le l. 2 ~ 3 room offj~ 312 N. El Camino Real c.~f. $25 Reward! 6*-3189. bonMd Small job1 rnaint' Eu.rope:an Dre'!ismalrlng
hiilh·ll"l kil(''i"n 11 pn J1.rJCM, ,.., BRAND NEW ,.., Lc>11orst rah·~. full sel'Vice!. 492-9136, 492-903-t Fashion advice:. 673-18~9. ,. ,,,.. r 1 A. 2 BR. hltn~. sv.·imml"l:' .,.,.,,..n ...... .,...,..., \\'kd I I~ Furnitu · ffi A\fl\,r)'; \\'.\Y 61.,_29~1 :!JH32 S;inla Ana A\e (i\r"~I pool. Ian.al. hii r·b--qu,. k £ar· .....,.. ""'or .......,.,).4C..., a,ya Dt'S....'"OVER DISCOVERY tNttuctiofl Tm 1----'-'------e Dres1m1king-Alterations e Haio: the: followl n(_ wtn·
Col1h1P!I, P.ankN" & Co. from S.A. Coun1ry Club! ill:<'. All ~ul lfi· $151! 10 $!i0. BAY VIEW OFFICES Find YOURSELF in Somf'OM ,........-SPECIAL! Avf. chair er Dtsi11:ned 10 1111it vou. in~i: ~.••· __ ,,_,_,_a::~~"''-"-'__ ~:>;u:1ou.11 :! BP. units. · ;. ,\r!ults, 00 peis. Dt!-lu.xe. Air Condi1ioned, C El,. ~------~ rocker stripped is_ Glulnt, Call Jo * ~46 TO\\.~HOL'.SE 2 RR, 1', ha .. •'IREPL.\CES. Pr!v pa1lo~. l>1 A"ocado. C.\f. 612·9i08 N'd('coraled. Lldo Area all now • No obllcalion brau polished. ~. Alter•tions -'42·5845
frplr, fl"lO~. $22:;. 81, Ami1;os lo.:i.rls of closl'l<;. Beaird Rt'alonomi<'!I Bkr. 67>-GiOO <?141 g:)5..f,8llj 1nJ1 387-3393 Schools &
\r;i,.. &\l-fl'10li. Pool A <I Its. :.tanager S\00. :'110VE IN Allo~·ance DESK space available $50 NATIONALY RECOGNIZED ..,structtons 575 Ga,·d.ning Neat. ac:eura.te, 20 years exp. 979-1~-~·~~~----PrP·&hl childri!n ~·,lc:ome mo. \Vill """"idt' furniture ALCOHOLICS A,..ny-·•· AL'S GARD--'G fil• Huntington Beach --.-: ... v. '"'"' LOOKING FOR A JOB """"""' .1-..;..-------1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; iSEACLlf·~· \1anor Apts-2 :-;-A.SSAU PAL~IS at S5 mo. AnS\\'trlng St'rvice Phone 542-7217 or write· for .Pf'denina A Im a 11 CER.At\llC tile nt:W ,t. . ON B'EACH! BP .. SI60 linf. SJ75 furn. 177 E. 22nd St. &t:!.-l&i5 available. 11875 Beach Blvd. P.O. Box l223, Costa ~trsa. WITH A FUTUR.E? ~198plng Mr'Vlcei, eaJ.I ri.>mod,I. Frer r i;t. Small fp~s. rlrps. bltn~. ·garb dlfpl. !'HADY EL~fS.POOL Huntington Beach. 642-4321 COUNS Nation11.l Auto Tune.up Train· _.. . Serving Newport, Job• ,, .• i-m•. ,...., •u2'. ELING I. info l or i C 1 1 i · CdM ..... v ".,..,.,..gt 1~2) Pl;i.cf'nt ia A\e, !\sk f urn. St t.:nlurn. I & 3 VF.RY ' nice sec:ond floor of· ng en rr I u ectJni: • , O>lta li-f,ta, Dover·1;.,-,-.,.'---C:-C-'-'-""--
11hout our d1srou11t, ;;.1~~"2. 2 BP.'! fmm Sil) t.:P llc:ei. l'iS77 Beac:h Bl\•d. abortion. va~tomy & adop. limited numbrr ol career Shott1, Westclitt. Tr•• S•rvice 2 BR L.flft1rn Fr. S~f'l /mo:i.
Furn,•t·;i:-,\\adahi"
Carpels-d r-• pe~-du,11 •1 ai,hrr
heall'd pool·~i'~lnas·l"nn1s
r!'C J")Om""'"r~n I 1r11s
p.a11nc-.11m;i:C' p;ir~.ng
~"W'J'1 S?Uarrf•.
1ion. ·ApCa.re, M2-4436. minded ~pie: to ht: trained PROFESS ....... _,.._..,... ______ _
DELL'XE 3 BP., 2 R,\, frplc:, Laguna Beach Ov.·ner f213l 394--0QJ;J Day.11. I ~~~~~~~~~~ on the latetl in automotive IONAL Gardener, GENERAL 1'rtt Serv. Yllrd
hl1.1ns r pl•. tfrp~ 1\r H"ai: 600 •q ft $90/mo lg] d•·•-.t•'••ou•·p.•m•t"-••. trr: work, prun ing , c:lean--up, hauling, •prinkler · · · · · 1 BP.. l"ewly rr.d&or::ited. 1 • • • [ I "'"Y" .. ,..,.., kl I
Hospital. S!;O. :\Io. Arlult!, b~ 10 Drach. n CE A:-; COSTA MESA 646-2130 LHt and round 1'1u . .-t hf' willinit to wtart
1
1'""• en, c ean up jobs.1 ;~"~'~'~'"~· "'~·~·~· ~..._....~~!~.~~
1 11,1 pe1s. ~~-43.~'i. . k ec1· an 1 cap In I, G'°rl'• \'IE\\'. $\j(I. 49&-1981. Business Rental 44l L------.J wor Imm iately ahtr 646-5893.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
G.\P.DE'.\' I};><', ~rnd JI'\' 2 Br ... training. • No exprrience I ![il]
lr.p!c'". Crpl. ~T\". drps. Pnc: Newport Beach OIOICE rentals: Ollices 4i: nee. AL'S Landscaping. Tr e r ('1 ... ynwlt ,. l
:.;ar. Sl60. 5-IS-96:t5 OAKWOOD GARDEN !ihop. Nominal r a I es. Found (frM ads) 550 a Daya or evenings nmovaJ. Yard rt:modeling.1L. ______ ..,;. f
2 Bdrm -21, Ba -\\'estrl1fl
ill OCEA:o;-A\'F. .. JI .ft I Ar•a -Arlults only • S1i5
1n11 5315.11~1 mo. A;::'. -(iih930.
0(~ "T>l'n 10 am-6 pm D:i.ly BR.\XD :'\E\\' ~ Br., 2 Ba.
\\'lLl.T.\ \1 \fAI.TF.RS CO. .<::tud~. i f'!oon; ID Or~n.
LARGE l BR Sl40 I S"lfl/m<J. Yr~r!y. 6:&-!'i.::::_
'~ \!o I \Jl~i ,,,. 1~F:\\'LY RF.DECOP.ATF.D I Pl • \(' 'I I .,\ , I' h ~
C"'l.lrl"f"n i.: ~n~I P"' v.r .. ...,: ,. f:~ art .. 1 , lk OCF.A. ·. ~·ruh· rlrrn~Cllrd ~I-.\ .\tr. S!."1/mn. '!"11.r•)· 61&-\lj.,')L
Af'11•.' t t•:I-: X. of .\1i<1.:~.~ oil f\.>:.JALt:FF luxury 2 Br.,
13":irh A!1d. · I :!'. Ba., hltn~. frp!c, 2 rar
i:i11·11r·a •• '.i."?~.!lo.f~ l!~r. poo!, rec: area.
XF.\\' . .::h;i~ tp!. 3 AP.. 2-p,,\, fil \.-i;10:1.
f!Rr, r h 1 Jr! r r· n Ir,. I •·on-9s1·~,_\0\'=r.~<TC1.=-,~,.-,.~,~R~P ..
.•:drrrtJ. I h!k ttJ ~·nrc<. Adull~ 'lnl;.', ·no rir!s. 1728
Sl f:',, Al~ti 2 p;r,. rur., $1f :,. Br·dtorrl I.n. 51~7i~l
7681 F.:! ... Apt A. 81~-'ij1j -5 Ci--t-'='---
or 8li~12. _I an emen e
BEACHWOOD APTS.
Nf'v.'port or l71h St Loca· CALL NOW Trash haulina:, klt cleanup.I••••••••••
Apa rtments !Ion. 6~2--0066. 5.fS-2516. FOUND Siamne cat , 1714) 558.1815 Rt:pair aprinklen. 673-1166. I' tRl";Of1 Llvinl? Jor Single &: ""--lai 1 1 ~ Job W•ntMI Female 702 \.la .... 1-"' '•Iulo" • • \VANTED • "'"""v r co or ma'• wea.r--E. 171h &., Sa.nla Ana EXP Japant:H Gardenr.r. '.-,,._
"" ~·u " Ing Y'llow jf'welt:d lrath'r Kno !\M-1·pon Ekac-h ~lini mum 7500' ~tail space. ATTENTION M<YrnERS! vt how, up.ket'p, plant
16th al Jl'\·ine C. Max. 828-3820 collar. Vil'lnity Penne:y's Bring your littlr ones to vi1it pe:st trimminc clean-up N~D HELP AT HOME?
Fashion lsla.nd. 644--0139. our IM?W pr~school. Staffed 951-3486, ' For Temporary Senriee:
6lWiCO t:1r 61'.!·~70 SHO\VR00'.\-1 mlg. & olfi<'f! f"ND : Jnjure-d whit~ mal' by ~nrialed trachen. e Wr Have Convalrscent
-VtSTA DEL MESA-iipace. Close in Laguna loc. poodl,, approx 2 Yr1 old, t.1oming or ailrrnoon RS· EXPER. Japanese Gardentr Aide:s • Nurses • House·
Apa rtments S95 10 Sil) mo. 4!J.1-4653. has ha r n f! s I, Betwn sions. 't'rt"e trimming, Ciean·up, kreprrs. Lav.•n Maint,nance. HO /U 1 k 2 Bl'.. Furn .&: Cnf. Dish· U!x*I RETAIL srore on E. Baycrest &: t• ran c I 1 c: 0 2070 Maple Av!.' .. Costa Mesa MEt.1AKERS PJOHN 64.6--0619 or S48-79:l8 v.<tsher . S1ovr & P.elrig • 17th Sc., C.M. A\·aii Jan 1st, on Jrvine. &124696 EDUCATIONAL
Sh.ig trpf'g.Lrg P.t'c c:enier, S300 per mo. 67Hll40. 'f'~O~U~N~o=~in.::;_N~'.~B=. ~.-,..--0-ne READINESS COMP L la1i,•n-gardE'l'ling For Pe:rmanent Service:
P.E::-;oT S1 ::ir1s Sl55 lndustri'al Rental 4,, 1 ....L.-• CENTRE se r v, l'l e a.n-up/m11 int. • \\'e Havr Companio~ Tustin & Mesa Oriv• -a.rJ:' gre:y shrr"""'ll• ""'tlh ,,.,,4~~~ Reas. Rates. Call Enid, • Hou!,keepers • PMl.cti.
liJ:hl brown lratht:r collar. ...,... ...,... 54()....35."i.1 N A * 545-4855 * :'>1·1 PROPERTY FOR RENT 673-l2&1.' EDUCATION · cal unes etc. t Monthly
Westcliff Rivi;,:;-2(lOO sq. ft. 700 $1:1. It. F Ch'ldbl th CCMPLETE lawn &: sardt:n-Rates, Cho ice Cos1a f..1esa Joc. on FND. litrle male puppy with or I r ing service. 1-IEALTII &:
~pa t'1ou~ 2 Bdrm. Bhns, ear· Paularino nr. Whit' Front. blur eye1 al\d a bobbed tall ClaMeS loc r.xpeclant Jim 548-0405.
Pf'l.!i rlrapes, hcatr.<I poof. Lllrger bldg has 440 3 phase vie Hamilton It Charle in part:nll. 644..()962
FA!l.IJLY CARE AGENCY
1805 No. Broadway,
LAWN Ma!nt. Hauling, new Santa Ana 547..fi681
lawm, clean-up, pruning.I~~!!!"'!!'""'""'""'!!!!!""'""
Fl'l'e Es!. Call ~6-7379. KSKPR.Comp. Capable, live.
:"r shop'g art'a. Adul!s. C . .\~k ,\bout frl'I' Rrnt rlrc. ror machine sOOp. .M. 646-9735. PIANO LESSONS
1800 \\'rslC"liH Dr. ~B Sm::i llC'r 11nit !Uitahle for LARGE Bro.,.,•n cal w/gold Your home. Cert. Teache.rz.
612·lWl g11ra1?P. upholstering, r tt. 'Yf'.!i. wh il e !lpo! 0 n J\.1r. Hall'lcock, &14·01~4
\\:.i!I lt'a:o:e or rrnl. you make stomach. Has fira collar. Reli•ble Gard•ning-in. drivt. ~n re~locatr. Ex·
?.faint. Yd Clea.nup. 646·1072 eel ttl. t or St"nKlr gent o.r
2 RP. 1J,.lu-.;r, nr heh, pr11
Rraf'rl nr11o· 1·2·': Bl~. 'i hai. p~1;'>, ')('ran \1.1, i:hai: r111~
'" AE.,Cll' Cr,t~, dm0• bl•.,, drr-. lndr'I' rn1. car, arlulr~
f1~·,~· ·~1:.-:i l6•h s·.. HS. f'l'i fl"I•, s1~0. mo. m 1..a. ~,1Jr 1 P.:tl'lrna 492.i(Jl)i. 4!12.S-f19. I ~ent•ls II ~ J
2 & ~ nr.·~. ~1 ;I) L·r. P:"1•11•, Santa Ana ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
1l'rms. Rr11s. prite<I & lm· 968-9.171.
mcrl ~'·ail . Call Rruce BEAUTIFUL \\'hilt> alter'd
CrE"er. agt. :140-4484, Evt:!. male, nou!letat. \Vhitr Cl'llla.r
646-AAl 1. vie. 19th It Pomona C.~I .
EXP H .. G lady, 831·6979 . a11o•1nan ardener. ·
Completr ~ardening ierv. RN, t\1aslt>rs dt'gree. sei'k.<;
Kam11.lani 64~676. !iullable posh. Allied, non
JYl'll, rh•ldrr11. :'llfH:.\ K.\I -;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~
1\pl•. lAA\J \lll1a 1-\:JL Ln, 1~ ;;'""'
blk E. 01 ""'"· '"' ''"'· CAN'T BE BEAT Dt.;PLEX l &.-2-BP. ;ipts.
~rw, d1'1 11'-<', prh·:irr. Cpl~. SI!\GLE sror.Y
lirp~. hlrn~. d.<h11·a~hrr•. Sou!h Sea Atmo•rhere:
$11.'i .. t· $Jij. 218 l~oo>.~1Jlr, 2 BR .• 2 BA11t
5.'\fi.7611 Carpet~ & d!'P'J
Rooms 400
BALBOA Island Bayrront:
room 11/halh, -pri,., en...
u·ant·r, k111•hrn J'! r i \'I 2 s
pos~1ble SH.>. n10 ;,.14-j68(],
f'1"f'• & rknrls 67'.'>-17'19.
e OIF:Z OP.0 AM'~. e Air Conditioned SLE~~Pl8G t•oom, priv. l'n·
g;n l J\1ln111,1. 1 2.J RP.'•. Pri1·a1e Patio,;
P I P I I H"AT''D POO ' 1ranc:r, priv loilf'I. SG..'i per 'lf\. r!\';'l!C I' O~C'I 1?;\r, r~ L .... \\'a~hrr rlr;.rr. 5.36-fll36 Plt'nty of Ja\\'n n1'l. Cost11 :\ll'sa. 645--0878.
2 BP., apartn1rnt on c111.r1r·. C11 rpon & S!nl'l!i'e LARGE Sunny Room. pvt ba ~ar. adjacent ra1·k \'1"v. !ilDDEZ" VILLAGE l.r. fll!r. r-:r. \\'11rncr & Beac:h
Scllrinl. 2 ~hilrJren 0 k 2~:00 South Salta Rl\'rl . $1~111k. M:l-4649.
For Lease Costa Mes• 646-8'17::.
1440 SQ. FT.
Tndu.11trial space nr Ne\\'por!·
Sa n Dirgo Jo~rwy. 29.10 GraCt'
Ln (So. ol Bakl'r, E. of
Jo-airview, % mi.) Reptt·
srntali\'e thl're from 9 lo 12
daily. 557-5:.llla or 879-4711 .
Rentals Wanted
BUILDER ~·ants to rent 2 or
3 Br. house in net'd of
r('pair, exl'h11.nge for parl
ren1. 612-7377.
MALF. BrAglr, 6 mOI. old ,
Jound Costa Me~a lligh
School, 11/16171. 546--0383.
GREY 4i: whitl' kil!en -vie.
Mission & Monterry, O:ista.
~1 Psa. a4().nJI.
FOUND car kry, vie. Pilot
ore. San Clrmf'nle.
492·4470
SMALL white Poodlt: fou nd
in apl'lrlmrnl, .Santa Ana.
54;,...1938 or ~0-9:i<12.
San!a Ana • 54S.t5D I CG7f:7N~T7L~f.~\'l-A~N7• -roo-m~fo-,-"-"' i;17.;:".'l7 11J1 4, FND: youn2 Irish Setler,
-W-ALK-TO~B=E~A.cC~H~I -in Cosla :\lf'sa. Collr2e Pirie a~•. 54~1347.
' nursing firld~ ron.11idt>T'f'd.
General Services \V iii f'f'localf'. Ulffir 613-9612. Accounting
-~-~----~· ACCOUNTING, Col'\Sulling, THINGS by MOO!Jr, LI . elttl., GOVERNES~ for c~ild, full
Yinanc:ial Pro j t <' 1 i on 1, plumb, fen«, tilt', inartns, charge. RC'hablr, dr1vf', non-
Bookkerping. Our/Your Of. rarprn1ry, paint e 1 c. 1mok"r. Excel ttf. 837-6979.
fice. 642-1534. 54>-cwrn. * \VANT DREAM JOB *
B•bysitting Hauling Regist'l"!'d Nurse, compan· ----------I·--...:'-------ion, unencumbt'red. 49fi..44il
COSTA MESA WANTED! Mt:~1y t re:t1 .Helj)W•ntad M&F710
PRE-SCHOOL yards & garag". rnoving & '
Sia re Liunsrd hauling, $7.50 per hr. +. Accounting Clerk
18th ,I Monrovia, % day + Anytime, (TNT L 11 \\' n Typing 50, l yr exper.
full day ses&ions. Planned M11 int.). 548-5863. Cail Lorraine
program. hot lunche1. Ages. HAULING, cleatl-up, loci) \\'ESTCLIFf'
2-6, hrs 6:30 AM • 6 PM. rnoves, rxp'd collefe BtU· PER.3)NN~L AGENCY
SKILLED -I
MAINTENANCE kAN
[n 11.rea of air ronriifionini.;
& he:11.tine: maintena,ntl' &
reriair. Salary ra~ 1S~
$904. Placemen! siommen·
IUflle with rxper,.
OFFSET PRESS OPR·
To work with 2 rolor offset
& direct imprt"Ssion' dupll·
c11ting equipment, prt-Para·
lion of ~ativi> .4-plates.
0pa.Q1Jrin~ & ma.'lki~. Sa].
11.ry ran~e S.597·Sm. Pl11.Cf'·
ttif'nl commen.suratr • with
expE'r. •
INTERMEDIATE
STENO CLERK·.
Pfrtmt" from 4PM·9PM Mlln-
daya thni Thursday. Will
operatr !he MTST. Salary
range $711-$329.
Appl.y
1370 Ad1ms Ave.
Cost• Mesa, C•lif.
Phone: 134-570.
Between 8am & 5pm MM·Fri
CLEANER, exp'ii perlOn
over 30 for 1nim11.l hospitili.
Call 9 lo 6, hton thni Fri.
Salary to S2.50 hr. 644-5460
Clerical
MTSC/SC O~g
Nf'11'J)Ol1 Beach finn ttl'tk~
exPf!rit>neM ~rrst1sc oper·
11.ror for p11.11 timr "vtnlnl?
\\"Ork. ~1usr be able: to mark
copy. Desire matuff, indi·
\•iduaJ l\'ilh ability. to \VOl'k
indept'ndl'ntly. •
Call 644-3215 ,
Ciericl'll
RUTH RY.A,N
AGENCY ,
SPECIALIZING 1
IN --
OITICE PERSONNEL
1793 Newpoti, Crista' Mrsa
646·4!r311 ...
17931 Beach Blvd., HB
847·9617
!.11\·r:Jy l, 2 ,r., 3 Rf(~. Crt~. 3 llr::ited Pools
97
!Hli
2
1i 41 S liiiiiiiiii'ii'ii"ii'ii'ii''ii'iiiiiiiiii'~'~~j 1_L_•_•_• _______ sss_ 1h·J'I~. bhn~. •f"J1r i;1;.i'1·,1. Ll'lr:r ('luhhouse elf'. BBQ Guest Home .
1
.
$20 wk.CO~IPARE~ 6424050 rlenL Lrg. truck Reas. J'.>43 Wn~c~~~r., N.B,
CH ILD Cart', my homf'. all 534-1846.
day or hrly. fo'tnced yarrl. ~TB=A~S~H-.~0~,-.,-,-,-c7J.-'°"_u_p-.''i Arch Wldr, St. $~.25 hr. CORK 'N CLEAVEI\:
WhiHie:r School dislrict. 19th d F A . Some tools. S!eady job . ov· Now hiring:
BEACHSL-UFF-Af>TS-Child Care Ccnt"r Costa Mesa 2 Lo!!t Dogs. one "·hite
Sp:ir. 2 Rr 2 P.:i . P11nl. P;i-Great nrw l 2 & 3 Brirms P•rs;onels 530 ff'male Samoyed, answers to
, Un. O '\\' "2~1 Fll1~.-"i2·jf>l l Fron1 Sl-lq PRI. r'l0n1 '"'Iii\ w/\o\·ins:: rrost y Ir. Apr ic nl
LGE 1 Br apt-:--r0.·1-::-:i;, SOUTH COAST f11r" for amhularory m"'lt' "1HY not !Urprise: her for cock-a-poo f'male:, ans~·rrs
VILLAS 0, r•moi• B•l•·--• d••1 Chri•lm••' '• "'''' o,·,. m~rrrrl rnuplr nr I .•1n;:!r ' ... "~ .. "U .. · .. kl Minnir, Euclid I Edinger
"'r!uli•. s1::r •. .l:\~-4,j l!l. UGl ~rac,\M hur BJ\'d. 612-!).l:l)'l or ~it0-2~J62 arr 6. mon<I rins::. Tirfany setting. 839-04.'lli.
---- ---S...fl...Rlf..'.'1 Vacation Rentals 415 RrraJI \'alui! $600. Asking 2 Bn. Ap!. Cl'lv>rt t:_ar, 1·p t!i,I ---------·-S2S7>. Surpri~e . (ma tching BLACK male c11.t. I yr. 1.oAL rlr'l~. rh 1lr!n·'l·/~"·:1ll r~r ok l'l nr,, 1'1 h::i rrpt<i, drp~. 1----·------11/16 be1 ~·een 9th St 10th SI. SJ )l'l/\ll') . .l:li-2'llO. hl!n<, fYl"I k ~uana SJ'l:;, CAAIN-A11: Bl'.ir l.itkr. J Rr. Llldy's & man's wf'flding B;ilboa . An Ii we r 1 to
________ ·,f/'l.fil'l!I riro:.. 2b::i ./\\a1l.hy "knrlnr11k. band.~. nPvPr worn · ''Kalukl a .'' R,v.·ard.
CLO.~f<. t11 f-lf·~th' :! r.1~. 4'11'--------J~r"rl"\r m11o· for Chr1~1mas. t·REI::! ~ Call :>16-::t710 aflt'r
drp" >:· ~1n1r. 11<• 11r :~. Ph. South Laguna r-;,.,,.,. Yrar~ 11r \\'inte r 6 pm & 11·f't>kt>ncl~. 673-251~1· 5~1>-1'.ll:!. fJ/'~'..\\; fr"nt, nr1\ly r!rr'flr~r-Sknnc;. &l1-l.'i1.I:. 1 ~.,~:c=u~n=1T=v~p=,-,~ilicc~N-•~rin-n-al LOST: 7 mos. "ld lri~h 5E'1·
Huntington Ha rbour "d, 'l hr, 2 ha. !;i1;un11 P.n~-Rentals tOShare 430 B11nk applir::ilinn liJPd Nov. tPr, male. S.'iO REWARD
Air lf\9.1()7:, 'lr ~t:\.Q.~1\!1 [----------1.i. 1971 10 rr1ocal r Thi' Younl? Daughler Distrau1ht. ~1 :/1. Rranrl 1111 2 l•r r•rpl• T 1· NF.1\T'OftT ;11tnrnr"I. \1111 J-:11.~1hlulf hranch 10 thP 67J.-O.i7>4.
0 1 •. 1., 1 ·11 · us 1n qi.:, r"r-rm, 1.1 ·," rr~'l!l ~ha rr horn!' 11o·/pool. \\'an! 2 Norlh\\f'!ll cornt.'r 'll Vi:ila LOST: 4 Yr. F,.male' Afghan
Lu ~12.'Z~.'ll, ~\2.r.111 , __ D_O_W_N_l_N_G_A,_P_T_S_ n\·rr ~:1 mA!ure hu~ine~~ r!rl Si>I & E.:isth!ufl Drh·t, Apricnl w/hlk ma Ji k.
Laguna BeM h NORTH CORNER: l)'P"~· $12:1 + l'Xr1f'n.~rs. Nr,1port Bl'ach, Orange Co .. fA l'ors lron1 lf'lt paw.
• C)CF./\l'\ \'If'\\'· 2'"'1' 111 hrh
1 & 2 Hr. s1~·. rri. r""'L 21i:.
S. c~t. 1111). S!i-:il2!J.
WILLIAMS & j;.r ... 1.i12 11 knfl~, nr l C11lil. 6'12-9757 or tWZ.0056.
ALL IANCE AA,i,...21111 a ~k f'lr r ir·kf'll. 1 w-=,.~U~h-,-Jp-y-ou-,.-,-,,-.. -,.-,.~,~8 DAILY Pnnr tor action! ~1~fl. Arh1!1, <h·rr l~ \\' /\~TF.D r mplt:1yrrl hf' P J jiij;ijjii;ii;i;;;;;;;i;iiiiiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiii!ii
l 'ri1wr ~ HR 2 RA. o•hit·k 10 share \l'l!h ~amf' * * * * * * ~)21'-f,il:;,
~----Lido Isle
!'t•t\:!lr dr1'k-F1rrpl11<·e h'lU~" )OUr<; or min" No
1."IO -"! frf't·P!Vl! ('h1ldrf'n. 121::1 ;,r12-26!lfl. ,-------------------
AOL I.TS Jllx ~ P.r, 1'; R;i., ~1nrl11rt"flf.('ntrl aor Nlnri
2 c:ir ~ar, h!111~. rr fr ~. ~r<·r·ta!! rr.'!'r! f.llO..i."11
I' I ; I " \ I 1 'la11.t;:<'r 16,ll'li All1::ifll'r fl .... ,. <lip .. I'. .ll'l---------
Shnr';. S.'.lj nn 1~" :i.11-:ror,, l Apts.,
6i ... :':'¥.i. Furn. or Unfurn. 370
fAP. + drn, l ·,h,1•f'<~. lrpl. /11111!1~ on!~. s~'Oll y,.,111y Corona del Mar
A"iSOC !/\TED RP.Oi-;1·r:s
\r1\:\ITEO Jrd ~irl 12;,..i;1 !o
~h!U'f' hou~r nr hrarh In H.B.
96)t...'179i S100 rno.
YOU:WG male 1r11rhr'r 1l"rd11
rnon1m11t" In ~h:tl'C' 2 Arm
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
h\ n,.C'ttn, 1·lQ~(' 10 sllfippini::, hOu~r nn Bal I ~. 67:\..R.\i7.
Mesa Verde 11('11 ly ,·rp!rl Ocr11n v1r''· LAD~·-,-",-' -_.h11rE" my · dollars ...,.._.. fi1:).-\j.~'l. z-~"Jl Sra\1P11o·, 11pl sp111·1ou~ hnml' 1\1111 ~lime". 2 BR, 2 BA. Bltni., CrpL<. 5
0 r' I G <1 1 ,.··:-,-;.,-;:o:-:-:c-----[~S~l;i·~°'~Pe;'~"~"~k~.~;216-<:.:;<~l6 rps. JC'u~. p 111 1·~.,.
f'hilrlrrn 01\, :-. 1 or 11 u r .I Costa Mt:sa Office Rental 440
f'nrfl')r'.,. i\1.~11 :'llo1i. i\~1 I 11!E F:XrrTI Nf; ~2nrl. S\.,,, \l;itrr rn11d. <.1111 1 PALM MESA APTS
~2'1~: 11 .,'11111" ---1 ~1l~'l"T~-:s TO :'\'\l'l'T. RCil.
f)F:LUXJ-: 2 f· 1 BR. 2 H11. " Fl 'R,-.:. 01~ l':"FU!t~.
f'Tlt:I ~nr ~t:..O. up. f:,.111111 L'nht-l1r1·.1hl;.· J;iri;:" nri1~. htii;c
0(1•. :iil'.l', ~111rt' /\1'('. p·1nl. J llc•ut.1.1, ('lfCt ),111n:<.
MS-10:11. ~h1i;: t'1l'1~. r!r~. ~11n11,
Newport Beach
WESTCLIFF
CAPRI
17!\\-17:-t~ \\'fto!rhlt J1r
Adult !.h·lru: ~f• rr1i;
Of'-ltt'f" I &' 2 JtJi, P.·••h.
C11fT'(lrt n1~h11oadl"'r.
f'Urn, Avr11J1tblC' fil2·fili I
r1" Arl1!11~. no J)('t~.
!'t-.:<:1.1:~ ........ rrnm S1.t'1
1 AEOR\I '"'" fMm $140
2 R~:nR\i ...... From $If.I)
'1'~11 re n:ht. !hf•) ·r,.. under·
pr!1·!'rl' J:"il \I<'~ Dr. J hlk~ l1'0n1 ;\'('\1j\Ort Blvrl.)
sw.>""
MEDICAL SUITE
~!r~;i Vrrdf' 11.rrn ""'llh
000 ~q , ft. indud1n1: :l
r -.;11mHlJZ rnnm, 11ursr'11
:<lllllon. \l·llltln;;:.. p1·1111!c
11rht'(' wuh 111 h111r
Hai•~ Int In Cambria Pin,.,
nrar Mnrt"f'l 811.y. Trad!' for
I'll on Color11do Ri\'er, near
Ha\'llllU lll"f'll. 0\\'ner
548.7965
i;:Ardrn It 11n1plf> !JoE1rk1111t I I.tis. rorwto·~. Vaiklkl &h. I
S.1..\1 lnc:htd1n(o! 11lilihrs ,t,,_ 2 BR., exch for r11mm'I,
iOOu,,1 . or apl~ .. Or. nr !-\an
Oi"stn Coun11c,. 614-6111
The ll""·in Co., RN.Ito~
~
, Pahn Sprinlfllc ril'hixt 8 11n· n1::111.rons i1• ~1 poo1. \\'anr tfl.!C nomr
01..X 2 BR, 2 BA. 11. hlf'k 111
b(litch. 1hll$: c:rplt, hltn<,
yr!y lie S21S mo. 67j...3l:lG
~INCE 191-1 or uni11t, Co3~t al'l'll. Only 1 WeSliB.AU 6 73-4400 "'°·""· $.ill.ooo "'· "•' -ELDEN -I ~~----...,,_ J, Arn,.,n, Rlir. <94·7'00
evts. DE~K i;pa;('t 11va1lablt $.'.iO
me, \\'.ill pro\rlrle fumllure
11.1 S.~ mo. An11\lf'r\ng gen·l~
A\'a!labtr. 305 No. EI
..C..mino Re.al, San
("lr mrl'tff'. •"12--4-120
'69 OOOGt: CORONF:T
Auln, pJ"· pl b, 11ttrro l•Pf:.
1..andau 1op for VW bua,
bus or-C"11.mfW"r..-
6l;.;253
& I\funrovia, &IS.239fi. ay~ tt'I eit. nytime .. ertime avail. Stable N.B. Day cook, Cook'a M!Ptr. Ir.
R 5-18-503t. co. Call Mr. Gotr, 557-6122, Busboy. Apply in peraon 428
ESPONSIBLE High School YARD, garagr, cleanups. Abigail Ahbol Personnel E. 11th St., C.t\f
girt wants babyillting or Rf'movr trees, dirl. ivy. Age/K'y, 230 \\'. \\'arne.r, I ~~~'!!"""'!'"'""""""'" housework, Npt Hgts area. Fill 5llnd backhoe. 847-2666 s · 209 s A COUNTER Ava il. all lPM. Cal Jannt: uite . · · girl pt/time days
&12..00n. Housacle•ning APT. Manaae:r. Mature cou· mature .... ·om11n only~ Apply
plr. 24 deluxe uni r 5 • in prr~n. Mrs. Swiu ;189.'>9
EXPERIENCED child carr
11o·ttkdays for childr'n 2-5
yrs. t·rnced yan.I. Lunches
includt'd. Just ort San Diego
Fwy nl'ar Brisrol. a.19-4038
VACATION Molhf'r \\'ill care
!or children in your home.
Reis. Own car. Exp.
645-0514.
SAFE dependable Chrt~lian
home:, xln't ref". Re:a~.
rat,.!I. Childnn 21/i yrs. &
up. Call to inp.!lec, 642--0421 .
LlC'D Day care, 7 am-5: 30
pm. Hot m'ab. Xlnt care.
HArborfBaker area.
546-15.19.
WA?\'T playmatt:s ovtr 2%.
Big yard, hot lunch and
TLC by E.!;lancill. 646-6201.
Cal'J)9nter
ADDIT .• ' Repair. cab,
tormica, mllrllle, nr tilt',
panrllng. Ant)q. Furn. -
rrpair Ir re.fin. 644-1598
EXP. ~modeli111, cabint:ts,
r!:pa ir1, maint. No job too
1m. Rea~. 6'1&--4224.
Carpet Service
DAYWORK. Grn. Cle.11ning. Wrslclill. No pool, children. r.tagnolia F.V. ,· :i'
Pl/Juli 1iml!'. C1re of 1ick. or pr ls. Call Pi no v e r, CUSTO:'lfER REl..lTIONS:
Rf'l. Transp. 5 4 3 -7 0 0 6 , 646-0228. All the . publ ic c:o~l'c' YQU c"'~'~-~'3JIJ=·=~~===~ Ac,;I ~I R~A7CT,;l~V~E~g-ir~I ~1-om-od~o'I [ 11o·anl. Litt typ1gin.i,..-lo.r )'our
DEDICATED CLEANING bikinis, l!ngrrle. Great pay ov.·n reports. Ont: ..... ,..ri>k.11 * \\'e Do Ev,rythfnR * for one: aJternoon a v.·ePk. vac:ation ev~ry 6 mn's,1 Jo'ine
24 hr. Call 673-4072 Stric:tly pri\•111e & for lun. Co. p11y1 rf't. Tu S1:xl.
MrY Cleaning Service {Corn1ider girl for full time Othf'r ff.~ Job5 1\\'11il
Ca.rpt>ts, Windoll'8, floor ~tc:. re c e p I i onis1/hostes~ in C11JI Jean Brov.·n, 5'-1()..6055
Rf'.11ii:l . & Commt'I. 548-4111 bt:autirul orlice). \\'rile lo Coa~1al Agency
classllied ad No. 284, Daily 2700 Harbor Bl al Adllm• Hous,c:leanlng By Day. O\l•n Tran~portation Pllot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa DANCING GO-GO
Call 836--0641 i\lesa, Cali!. 92626. GIRLS & BAR:M.AIDS ~-~--'--"'-''-'---AVON PRODUCTS is the QUEEN B8t
P•intlng & \\'Orld~ Jarge~t & most 1562 Ne\\•port Bh'd. G.~·I .
P•p•rhanglng respe:cted Cl'lsmetic: com-apply in pC'rson. tl6.ft!l.li
----------1 pany. AVON represenlal ive~ DENTAL asst.. pr~. 2l to J;; HANGMEN, aale1 k Jn~tl., 1 k d I f 1h· · h ' c:an a e a van age o t.~ 11·11 chai1'1'1irll!' exn. for Paper, \•lnyl, !lock, J)ll.int. Jo ' line. repu\at n in succeS!.lul Nt>wport Brach "'p-'cti"". Store cornrs 10 your door, '" ~r profitable bus:inessea o l lo.lust bt 1blr 10 \\~· .... , • Schwartz. 547-5846. ."I!' M th,ir own. Call now, !IOme t\·f'S. 64&-2~il.'v ~ * INTERIOR EXTERIOR '* ~7CM1. _...........__ DISTRIBUTE H'allh Ir
F.cology llor. p1/f1,1ll . tilllt'. Llc .. ins., ruaran~rd. Calll [----------
Harris, 642..(5.58. Exprrl AUDITOR Bob or Bill 64&-10i'J6. ,
airirBI 'prayin1. Strong Ca Iii. bast:d rorp. h111 I~====~~~~
PROF. Paintlhg ext/Int. Ac· un limJted opponunily lor D!SHWASHER, K l l(h"n
. coo~. ceillnas. a I r I e 11 rxrc, growth. To S16.0IXI. Helper, Maturf' liily, &p.
1pn1,ylrtJ. Rrf1. 847-1358. Call Rob Wlh;on. !14().605.i flsl Convale.~nt II~~ .. f,6\
Coastal Agency Crn!n-St. C.M. ~i. l'\o W11.~11n11; * WALLPAPER * When you ca.II "M11c"
5411·1444 646-ITII
27llO H11.rbor Bl 111 Adams DRIVER$
BAB\'SlTTER P /timt, ll a[tl'rnoon~ fl '°''k,
0\'rt 2:i. Ne11.t. frirrvll,v Ar tfl
,t!OOd hralth. No fipt'cill )IC'.
T'f'Q'd for pc-rlormln1 a.rt
school. CAii ~1-3.,2.i.
DrApery · Cl'l rpel 5"'1es
Expl'r. rierorator I y p ..
J:W"r~nr SI~ lrarls. Dr11 w
+ l'OMm. 4!'12-22:i4.
EXEC. SEC'Y to $700
Dynamic N.B. or~an1~.11 tlon
neeri?1, 1111r11ctivl' ya11ni:
lady 1"\'/poll.11h ,. t•\.lartflf!U
Onf' Glrt Offif'e
NEWPORT
P tr.onnel Agency • 38-1~ C.11mpuB Dr .. N.B.
IBrA.nch OltiC'f'I
Nnn11 \\'. Hollman ~fl~-
E.'<PERIENCED .soldrrrr~ 6
mo. ln l yr exp. Moh·n~
CommunicalloM, 29.l(I Co l-
l~ Avt., 1'1llrbor 1i Rak·
erl, c.~f. ~70i.
rrve !111 t~~~ml'n PTd 'G;1,;
lurn i~hrd ,~9 2 ·4 Q 4 ~
4,!l'2-.)20R.
We'll hrlp yr'ltl sell! ~
' " ,, .
' • • . . • ' •
.. .
' • .
" . .
• ' • ' '· '· ' '
.,
'
, .
• • tt l.l a PILOT-40Vt:RTISER Mond.-y, NOYtmbtr 11, 29n ': : ... ' _, . Mondlf. Howlftblr 22, 1971 D.titY PtlOf ~ i1.:~~ -~~~~~~~~~iITT I~~~~,~~-~-= ---L---r.111.~~ ~~~~ ~~,.A L........ l[Il) ~ l1Il11.__~ •;:.__L°""-" __ l!Ill [ '""'1~ !!Ill .__I _"""'_, .... ---'JLill 1 -I~ I ... _ ll§J I ......... ]~I ....... _ I~ .. -
'''l'!"'!"l!":":""'""'"'""-. • G•I Friday to $5sci Aik for Herman
,.1·fVariey ia her@! Public m»-.. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..
.-..-r. phont, books, It -steno. J. C. PENNEY CO •
., • Busy & interMting. Call Fashion Island
Mif;s Connlt, 5 5 7 -6 l 2 2, Has Openlrtg For
~j j\tliipil Abbot Personnel
· Agency, 230 W. Warner,
, r, Spite ~. S.A.
• G•n'I Ofc ' to $450
Lovely <1fes. In Irvine area.
Ptefer acco,unting·
J "'rop benefits. Call Miu San-
COFFEE SHOP
WAITRESSES
Xln"t ,,.,-orldng conds.
Outstanding Benefits
_ .. tr 'Prefer a ccounting ApPl.y In Person
•-.. ~ W.ck~nd A/R, phones. 24 Fashion Island, NB
NURSES, all 1hl1ts, Private
Duty. RN, LVN, Practical.
Rt!f's necess. lieicoulle
Nurses Re1 !1 try, 351
Hospital Rd, N.8. Call
642-9955 .any hr. lntervw
SA-SP, MJF.
--l n;,· beneJits. Call rtli.u San-·Equal Oppor. Employer
~-f'" • d'ra, SST-6122, Abigail Abbot
·• Personnel Agency, 230 W. LADIES. Our girls are mak-
-.,Warner, Suit~ m. S.A. Ing: S800. a mo. & morr. No
··ti uEtJERAL OFFICE: Brains exp. necess11ry, just a little
.;,1 &. charm with top skills ainbitlon. For perMinal ln·
_ ,wins th!s Cr!am puff posi-;tii•iiO'Vliiewiiiiiioii•liilii6ii\';.ii·iil226iiii,iiiiiiiii •4·~ .tion with AA co. $450.
NURSES Aides, ex p e r .
prefd. am .l pm shlft. Ba~
tist Conva1tstent Hosp., 'ii61
Center St, ·c .M. 548-5585.
PART dme, typln.{ I: lite
bkkpg req'd. Newport Floor
Covering, Inc: 3500 E. Cst .
Hwy, Corona de! Mlr .
• Call Helen Hayes, 54!Hi055 . ~,,,1-· · ~stal Agney
. , .2790 Harbor Bl at Ada.ms
HELP \Vanted Ft!:ma.le. Over
lg, .nite shift only. Apply in
J!@'rson, 4pm lo 6pm daily.
1~ Brookhurst, H .B. •''i""'"-=~~~~~~~-HELP I have a new ,_ . bU.5i~ in town & r nttd .. , · yoitr help. U a ground noor
.c opportunity oHl'red by a
n@"W company w/~w id~s
& financillJ opportunity for
1 14bove average interHts you
• You interrst me. For
. personal interview only call
"114/871)4782 Mon thru Fri,
• 10 am-2 pm -~·!-""'""'~~~~~-~:,, HOLIDAY
.:: .· MONEY
• ..,tffo,..-.-.
" • .;1
Part Time 6PM·10PM ,,
Reliable men in the surround-
ing Orange Co. atl'a needed.
No exper. necess. Earn up to
, $3,96 Per Hr . ,., .. . • , Ask for &!rv1ce Dept.
' 1714 ) 842-0667 "1 7,.,~~ ... '""'""""~~ HOME RE GISTRARS
HOasewives & colle ge
•&blde:nts. Pleuant morning
"llo'1-k. .i;tarting . salary $2.00 er\ plus bonus. Rapid ad-lriri~cement. Ex p . un-
LUHRS BOAT CO.
849 W. 18th St.
Costa Mes ..
N'f"< Expenen~
Engine Installers
& Boat Cerpenters
lmmecli11.te Openings
MAID. llve-in, over 35. Ex-
perlen~ only! 2 children.
644--0MO.
~tanufacturing
Pr'Ogressive manufacturing
company, xln't working con-"
dition1. Fringe benefits. 40
hour, 4 day 'W!!e.k « hours
pay has immediate openin,a:•
for
PRECISION
MACHINISTS
Also
STOCK HANDLER
Must be sble to physically
move ra1v material I: kttp
records. Apply Mon. thru
V.'ecl. at
STA-FAST INC.
926 So. Lyon St.
Santa Ana
Personnel
C·ounsellor Trainee
I! you are aggressive, en-
thu.siastic & "''ant to ,,.,'Ork
w/prople, we will train you
to maJte above ave. Income.
Call Lita WatBOn, 833-1700.
Denni• & Dennis Personnel
Agency, 2082 Michelson Dr ..
Irvin!!:
PBX RECEPTIONIST
Position open for a ttractive
~per. P8X Opr in H.B. ok .
Auto. type 320 di.al cord
board .. Xln"t W'Ork:ifll cond1.
Free binge benelit prorram
& competitive salary.
nedessary, ,,.,;u train. Call 10
AM to 12 Noon • 54.1-3325. I"'""""""""''""""""""" PLEASANT small office in
N.B. needs an exper. Oerk
MAN wants Cle&n-up &: Typist. Must be fast accur.
cw:todlan work. General typi~t on electric .i capable
La.borer. 542-Ei69f of working w In umber 1 .
Machine Bkkpr $500 up Perm. position. Xln't '-"'rk-
Xlnl N.B. ro. Stable &: long Ing cond1. Call betwn 10am
estab. LJ:ively new ates &: &-1 pm,·642-6667.
HOUSEKEEPERS fuU time
. , exper'd prel'd. Apply in
person. Huntington Beach
~ Convall!!lctnt Hospital, 18Sll
Florida, H.B.
': KEEPER, part time. equipment. Top bent"fits, PRE-school teachf.ot1, send
:....,. Spanish speaking pre!. Refs. Call r.tiss Lara, 557-6122,. resume m P.O. Box 1087
Call aft 8 pm. MO--OlS4. Abigail Abbot PersoMe'I Newport Bead\, Calif. Dept.
· ti01JSEKEEPER. Balboa J Agency, 230 W. Warner, N
·· Ada~-P'r wk. 3.-4 hrs. each -"'~'~"="'9='='·=·~·~---=====,---,--.,,,,,, '" PRODUCTION \11orket, non.
· ' day $2.50 per hr. own trans. MACHINISI' HELPER k mechanical assembly. Full
• , ~r~rences. required call ASSEMBLERS NEEDED time onl,y. 540-9495 9am·6Pm ~ 'Mn;. Davis wkdys 9 · 5 fl1ust be r!llable. Stable com. ->~ &4'.Z.:1626. mt'tcial firm. Christie Elec-Profe1slonal
ttlc Corp., 7120 Placentia, Clerical·-t .. du1trial ~ HOUSE\l1IFE 10 work in Ice
r, ~ 1tore 10:30am-5pm.
?t'foh.-Fri. ~92.36 to noon
~aft .Spm.
' ' • ' llii;iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii . ,.. ...
-I ' ·• . -i;;: -' ·•
-
J rt.G~
c .... I. e MANY JOBS e ALL AREAS
Ma il Girl $325 Cel-Paclflc Agency Action ' & variety. U:ively B c M
bl 7750 Harbor lvd., . . dg. & ofcs. c .ri.f. ar!a. 540-9010
Pr omo~·onal opportunity.
Top hen ·1~. Call Miss PROFESSIONAL fl hone
Dian~. 557-6 , Abigail Ab-sollciror -Dana Point, San
bot Personnel Agf'ncy, 230 Clemente, Capistrano area .
\"O. Warner, Suite 209, S.A. Work in your own home.
Best deal in area. Phone MEDICAL Receptionist 835-1465 be-tween 9:00 '1.m.
and noon.
REtAiL
SALES LADY
For Qu011ty Bokery
Apply In Penon To:
M"r. Anderson
SNACK SHOP
BAKERY
3444 E:: Coast Hwy.
Corona del Mar
Split Fee Position
'
*Sec'y/Escrow $550
F1iAIVA Ex~nce
Fee Positions
*S•IH/ t,litmt Trno
$650
on Job Training-Some Ex11
*Ma Int. Mech to $693
Repair Production Machinery
Free!Ftt Po$ilions
Hele"' Schiiffer
644-1981
. ' "fRi.iNE PERSONNEL
,. SERYICES •AGENCY
needed, bilingual. English
Spanish, good typing, 5 days
\>;eek. r.led ical exp req'd.
Salary open, contact Mrs.
Tillotson, 549-0386.
R. E. SALESMEN
How about growing with a Sec'y-Receptionist
br11.nd new off ice in a prime X1n:1 co. Gd Potential
" Free It: ftt POliUOns r.1ECHANICAL designer or
, technician to create hard·
,, .P(rime Ge-n'l Ofc S2.5() hr ""'are & ~ipment & pu.•h
_ _,,. ~retacy N.8 . 10 $475 project to completion. 1631
N'Ca 3100 Bkkpr 10 S500 _P.~I'_"_'_"_·,_, _c_.M_. ___ _
Girl Friday-Anaheim to $540 ~IECHANIC for foOd vendlnt:
WiiClerk $.125 machines. Exper. req'd.
.• ... C!'lairna Clerk $350 ~1on thru rri. Call 833-1611
-~·1 Ofc/Rtt'ep1. $433 ext 1197 betvm 8 &. ll am or ,, ltoSpm.
ad is a aood
location! Ltt'1 p t toge1Mr\ C&I LoJTalne
Call G I I e 1 · Kavanagh. WESTCLIF'F
979-1050. MAIN REALTY. PE1tsoNNEL AGENCY
688 Baker St. at Bristol, C.M. ~2 We1tclitf Dr., NB -· MS-mo RENTAL GAL
Large apt complex Santa Sl:CRE"I'}JtY, Vtl'llalile,· in
Ana, attrac individual for n~·. 1-glrl oWce. n r
full time posltion. Work airport. SIH · typinz, filin&,
commences Ott. lrt. Submit Pit, fliUf'et. Re 1 i a b I e ,
teSUmM to Clan\fia! ad # I"-=--·------286, Dllily Pilot. P. 0 . Box SECRETARY, t-xper.
1.5fi0, Costa ?.~e1a, Ca. 9~28. ryping. Fltime.
Heavy
Call ~-'...;..~~~~~ .;! 481 .E. 17th lat Ir.i ne) CM
642-1470 ....._, ,•• I _,
1 A good want
!rtvestment • Sell idle Items nowt 642--9990. KODAK Super 8 fnsta-matic
• . I
.,, ....
' ,. '.
,. ) .
. .-
'· '
: -; ...... \ . -,, ,, '
p
' '
j•_ 'I
0 l•o,tong• !.l!•rs cf th. -
e PRINT NUMltttO l!Tl!IS IN. I' r' ,. r r I ltiESE SQVAl[S • _ • _ _ •
SERVICE Station, full &. camm, ioom Wns. Like
part time. Exper sales & new 673-0448, 67~2723.
service pecsonnel. Apply ----'-"'--"""'-.:,;: __
lOam=-4 pm In petlOn ol\ly, Furnitur•
Mesa Verde Shell Strviee,
810
3131 Harbor Blvd, CM. 3 rr. ,old couch $.50
Matchinl love lf'al S25 SERVICE -SIA. Attendant, 25.25 La Salle~ C.l\1.
exper prtfd. Top pay. Full "'°=""'~~-'-'--'-& p/Hme-avail. Apply, QUEEN-size box 1pr1n1
Shell, 17th .l Jrv'lne. N.B. mattreu .1 frame ln good
SERVICE Sta. Attend ants.
FUJI A p/ttme. Apply In
person, D> W. Oout H'N)'.
NB.
rond. 64~5998.
FOR sale deak. dining aet.
bar 1tool1, odd tbl1, cedar
chest, def houH. 2.453
Orange Ave., Co1t11 Mesa,
SERVICE Station ti e l p Ap r. E.
wanted, exper. Full .1 'N"EAR'"'"'o-,-,-w-,-,-ot-ohg_"_'_"'_''
p/time. Apply 990 E. Cout 10fa .l love sta! will
Hwy. NB. 1epe,r1te. S1 c rl f l c e r ! !
645-1701. S!J\VTCE atab. F-u 11 er
8ru1h Customers: C.M. Up 1m="·o"1o"""E1i~h-t-co-,~,-,m-oor-a-cy
to $160 \11kly to atart. standil'lg la.mp. Marble base,
962-0416. 3 arms. functional, clean
lines, beaut la.mp. Pvt ply,
must Ht! Sl50, 637-19~.
EARLY AMF.:R.JCAN
COUOI
---Ii UN$CIAMBlE ABOVE llttltS
TO GET ANSWER 111 1.11 ..
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800
• c
l\1AYTAG IAS dryer, moll:el
806, l yr. old. perfect cond.
$150. oz:-bf:st offer. ~1.1'.l2.
NICE lo\-'ftell, n I! e d I
upholste.rin1:-. U). 920 w.
Ulth St. c.~t. -
MAN"S Diamond ~ii C + 2
aide 1tonH, hc!avy yt!low
f;"ld mounting. S 1 7 S.
540--3178.
I
* TORONADO * SKIS, Hart 7· compe,tlUon, AKC R.e&is. Poodles, silvtr. 3 Excellent condition
Hllrl 5' 11" melal aid. $50 ftm. 1 Mal•. SlOO. Depos. SBSo * 642·2471
ea . ~fen's Molltnr aid boots holds 'IU Ch r Is t ma• · STEAL our flipper
11 M S30. 673-5176. 6-12--0973 or 646-0142. $175. e 675-e0
WIN. ?i;JD 94.Jl/30 ICO?fl & ~ En~t11~ Sh,eep Dor PUP· Boats, Slips/Docks 910 aceeu., u~d oritt. Be~t of· PIH, 3 mos. Wormed, 16321 _ _,.,..,..._,,.,~o,...--,...--,
let Will cortslder 12 &•·in Anita, H.B. 1971 VE NTURE 24
trade, 968-9601. SHOW Schnauzer iTIIY & w/trailer. Loaded! Ra clng
v,1hltl!'. AKC Call GT>-2270 &ear ' Spillnaker. S300 &: Store. Rut•uram,
132
aJler &:~. T.O.P. S43-2BlS. Bu VARIOUS lel'l(thl al>d up to
FOR. u.le Comm! Gaa srove QUICK CASH ll ~I Beam. Nt. Pavilion
k hood (W•lt Juntar •C-67>-M25, (213) 967-1'5!.
622ClOL, 2 deep f&t ,,,..,,, THROUGH A 7'"24' Lldo Ponlo. Sl!IO. c.JI Comm! --sink, UprlJht 6~2792 betweea 9 a.m A .2
freeur, rou .... rmer. hot • P~t da.ys.
dat warmtt. Sl&lnlna •ttcl DAILY PILOT -40""·-~"tp"""Nt!WpO,.-.,.,rt-,H.,..ar~bor-I
10' counttr, lee ert'm .all or po-.'fr. $UO per mo
f""ier. 2 cigArttte mach_~ WANT AD 1'.'o chrg, ovthanc~-89ll0 ts, cash rtcJst•r, booths,
table•, ben chet, etc. Mab SLIPS for power boats 13' to
niter &II or put. <92-132hll. 642·5678 31'. "'>'•Id• vw.,., !00 E.
S .t ~lo)(f1. • '---------' Coll.it Hwy, N.B.
••
•
Monday, No¥tmbft' 22. 197l PILOT·AOVERTIStR H
1~1 1~--·--'-__,][i) ! "
l§JllL-___ ... -__,J~ l.__-_ ... _-__,.l§J I -·--' I~ ~I ~ ........... -l§l I · l§JI
C.mpo,., S.lo/Ront 920 T_r_ue_ks __ .._ __ m.._. ""'"· 1mpor1'1d ,,. X-. IZIJ--bi -· 1 ... ,.,,... ,,. -· u .... ---'----"°~ Uud .• ttO Autoo, UIOd
MERCURY
990 Autos, UMd
PONTIAC • Brand New, newt uttd
camper abell for S' truck
32" hi.all w/bubhlt p.u, ....,,..,,
Cycles, 81ke1,
Scooter•
HIGH!:ST QUALI T Y
BR.AND NEW 10 SPEED
R.4.CING BICYCLE.
WEIGHS 21 Iba. $225. TiflS
IS THE ABSOLUTE
LIGHTEST MACHINE
AVAILABLE UNDER $500.
Ca11 642-85M a lo s:
'70 SUZUKI 90, 8 1ean,
atreet/traU, lie. Lo ml.
$280. Call aft 5; ~-
• USE our Honda Christmas
Jay-away plan. Herb
Friedlander. 5 3 7-6 8 2 4,
89.1-7566.
2.10 GREEVES '66 Challeng·
er hfX. Outstanding cond.
Bes! otfu. 646-4631 aft 5 & -HONDA 45() '66, very clean,
rack, ban just o'hauled,
$450 or trade', 842-4372.
Boys Schwinn 3 speed
Stincray, like new, 1
year old;.y$40. 613-ZZiB
'67 KAW.ASAKI 250 SS l\1any
xtras. runs good. $22a or
best olfer. 64&-~7.
MAV'ERICI< Mini -motorC)'-
cle. 4. 1peed tran1. Excellent
cond. $160. 546-1879 aft. 6.
All day wknds.
* '69 Yamahll. 2i>cc Enduro.
Xln t cond. 3000 ml. ;525. or
best oiler. 546-Silll after 6
P.?.1. & wknds.
'70 HONDA CB-t50, xlnt
cond.. EiOOO miles. Best of·
fer. 642-0928.
250 cc -Suzuki -X6
Dirt or .r.treet
Call 646-1950 af!er 5.
GIRL.5 27" 5 spd bike, Brand
nu. Cost $120, Sell $90. Call
5'19-1296.
WANTED: .10 spd bike or
parts any condition. Pay
cash! 673-3340 or 54&-8369
SCHWINN 3-speed 'Tandem.
Like new. $75.00. 646-0191
after 5:30
'68 .BMW R~. Full dress,
immf,cultr.
64U'ro4 01' 4.94-3015
'71 HONDA SOM
Imm11c cond. 545-1318
Motor Homes 940
•n EL Dorado !\Uni-home,
sett-cont. sips 6, all pwr. 1 T
Dodge, ·..i:in1er r a I r 1 •
54&-9.513.
AUSTIN AMERICA MERCEDES BENZ
I ·.:.11;.;A;_U;_ST;_l;.N;_Arn...;.trl;;.;:,ca::. • .:b..;"'_k'-,,· i ·-;:N;;O:;:W:;-:O:;:N:;DiSP~lAY VOLKSWAGEN BUICK CHRYSLER
International Hantt:&ttt
RF.CREATION CENTER
ROY CARVER, Inc.
"'''· ... ooo mr., '"''°· """ 1972 350-SL Bill Yates Cood Solid Trtns '61 CHRYSLER '71 MERCURY Cok>ny Pk IO
'61 Le Sabrt 2 Ctr, 1425. NEWPORT CUSTOM PAU wag. Air. all pwr. tilt
'69 FIREBIRD
Hardtop Coupe. AulornadQ
Trans~ Pnwer St~
Ing, RDdi(I .t: Heater. (YPf'.
069) Current hlue bo9k
S2'l6S. $197.% lol&I down.'$?t
tolal monthJ.y. S21Ql.9ilsJJit
1otal cuh price includ111J
ta.x ,t: lir..'t'nse. 0cr11:rrrd p1y.
mcnt prie&ls $2520 lnclurtin.c
lflX, llcen~e k all carryln,t
charge11 for 36 montM .,n
pre spprovaJ or }'(lllr good
credil. ANNUAL PERCENT·
AG E RA'I"E 1R.112n...
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
JOOd. 968-3143 andl!.lll.Mlection ,Qt .MW ·1rg ~-54()..6940 ~ Hard1ap Coupe:. Auronu·t1r whl.-stereo & roof rack.
CADILLAC 'l'ran•mi.,lon, Po .. r '"•" ""'167'. BMW & pre~wned modt'ls &.1 fol·
loy.·1: '60 220-S • '62 100.
SL • '64 100 sedan • '61
2$0-S e '67 230-S e '67 200
~lesel • '68 2CXl diestl • '89
28(1..SL e '70 250-Z e '70
281).SE models al
tnr. Pow"""'"· n".,,.1-~M=U~S~T~A'"'N=G~,.----------1 Air, Nl!w Tires, fVT\)835) 2925 Harbor Blvd.
Calta hlesa ' 546-4444
'72 GMC ~ TON
CAl\tPER special, 351) V-8,
automatic, radio, heater,
r•~s. po1P.'er d~. brakfs.
auxiliary rear springs, wide
base tires, buy now befqrl!
~ price freete is taken off.
Stock No. 502684.
The truck people from
General Motorsl
$3395
MIKE McCARTHY
0
ROY CARVER, Inc.
292.5 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 546-4444
CORTINA
WIFE'S '67 Cortina, 4 dr
l'leluxe. atlck. t /h, sd tJ.tts,
S495. 6T~.
CAPRI
GMC WNCOl.N Mercury
Capri
\ · 1 owner. AM/FM radio
894-336/531 -2450 * 642--0451 *
Corner Beach & Mcfadden, l ---~===--
Wuuni"'1<r DATSUN
Auto Leasing 9'4
LEASING I
SAVE on immaculate pre-
driven vehicl~ '71 MAV·
ERICK ~ Dr. Auto., air,
P.S. R&H ~driven appx.
9.ooci mi, . $75 MO. ·24mo.
open end. '71 F-250 PICKUP
camper 1pec:. V8, a uto.,
P.S., Jong whl. base, pre-
driven appx, 6,00() mi, $S8
MO. 24 mo. open end. \VE
LEASE ALL POPULAR
1972 MAKES AT COro.fPETI-
TIVE RATES.
----------'70 240 'Z'
Local car fully equipped.
Like new! Under 17,000
miles. dlr. Will take trade or
tlnance pvt pty. (424BLO>
Call 494·6811 ah 1 pm
546-8136.
'67 DATSUN PICKUP
Strong heart! 4 spd. d!r. lo·
cal pickup ITYT140), Take
gmaJI down. Call aft 10 am
546-8736 or 494-6811.
NEW '72 P!Ch."UP
4 spd. dlr. dL"<. Bumper. Ra-
dio. l\1irrors. PL12U20. Take
2060 Harbor Blvd. limall down or trade. 4!M-681l
Cost11. Meu 642-0010 0'-f="='='=5!&.!==736~· ---=
Call ~111lcolm Reid !or
further detail1.
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
'70 DATSUN 2•10-Z, air cone! ..
Autos W~nted 968 Jo mi's. ~1ugt ~u. make o!·
WE ·PAY TOP fer. 830-8761.
CASH
tor u5e'd can & trucki, Jult
call Us fCI free estimates.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask for Sales Manqer
182ll Beach Blvd.
Hunliniton Beach
847-6087 10' g.3331
TOP DOLLAR
IN CASH
Paid for yoUr clean used car
pa.id for or noL
SANTA ANA DODGE
1401 N. Tustin
FERRARI
FERRARI
AlITHORIZED
SALES &: SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W, Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
FIAT
§011JD
135-3691 LARGE SELECTION, SEE
HOUSE OF JMPORTS
Sll.nta Ana Fwy at Beach
BJvd.. Buena Park. CJ)
~23·1250.
MG
MG
AW'HORlZED
SALES i SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
·~
Authorized Sales' 4 Strvioe
32852 Valle Rd.,
San J uan Capistrann
!37-48001•93-4511/499-2261
~ VOLKS BAHA rear end,
a:ates titts on re11r. rood
condition. '600.
'68 vw . new valvl!ll, brakes
& tires. low miles. Super
clean. $1100. 645-1982 •
557·3683.
'65 • VW Square back HiOOcc,
fac. reblt eni, 1unroo!, ra·
3100 W. O>aat HWJ. dial ply tires, orange w/blk
Newport Bead , vinyl top. Looks like new.
h1G. "For a better dea.1 ", S1050. AU maint. reeords. 645-4586 N"w or usl"d, Parl.B & J :007.-c====-~-
&ervice. Herb Friedlander, '63 KARMANN CHIA Convt.
$37-6824. Reblt '66 eng. New paint,
MGB '66, new transmission. tires, ere. Beautiful con-* 673-7294 * dition $700. 67>-3334.
-.-67~M-G=B,-w=·ire--w~,-,-,~,~,-. 1 '69 VW-Delux S u n d i a I
Perelli fadials, A.M'./FM Camper, AM{FM rad .. New
overdrive. dual exhaust, tires. Xl nt cone!, 557-0423 aft
$1250. 833--3058. 6 p.m.
PEUGEOT '68 YW CAMPER
1969 Cpe. Cle VIiie ""'"'"' •ru. book '"""·'·'11"'""M"u.,.ST_AN_c_2_o __ H_~_
F ' $95.77 Iota.I dowll. S66 total · r. a,u aetory a.It cond., full leath· monUlty. $18Sl,&5 [a the tolAI t~, Y·S, Auio Trans., ~·
er interior. tilt 4" ttlescopic cash price including tax It d10, Healt'r. Power St~rcng,
steering. stereo, door' locks. li~nse. Deferred payme:nl tWFB2621. $1299. Chick Jv.
All poWer extru, An excep-price ii $2l7fi lncludi"I tax enon, 1910 Harbor Blvd., ~~a.lilt. See 1
today. licenae &. all carrying charg:1_Coo,;"=M•'.,'",·===-=-e $3m e es ror 36 monltt, on pre •P. 1971 MUSTANGS
NABERS Cadillac prov .. of )'OW" .... '""'"· HERTZ CORP. . ANNUAL PERCENTAGE
AtmlORIZED DEALER RATE 19.18~. 221 W. Katella. Anaheim
""' HARBOR Bl., DAVE ROSS PONTIAC (7141 nMOso
CX>STA MESA USO Harbor Blvd., 1967 MUSTANG 390 ~nvi .
54().9100 Open Sunday Co&ta M~ over/H 't:,ngine, new tirf's.
'67 CADILLAC CONTINENTAL '"' bn-""'· "'"' "'""·
SEDAN DE VILLE • ·"64"<-'°"127==~-~-
Full P_ower, Factory A i r. '70 Cont Mark Ill 1968 MUSTA~G. Jo mileag(',
(ZW05811) Curn-nt blue book 3 ipeed, a1r cood. bf'}ow
$2510. nt6.74 tOtal down, $83 Leather. Full Power Equip. Blue Book Sll75 &16.-6J11
total montbly. ri4l.6.95 is the ment, Split Se11t,.. Both f9w· , . · ·
'tOtal .cl.&h prlee including er, Alr Conditioning, 69 MUSTANG, $200 + t~ke:
tax It license. Oe.terred pay-$5890 over pyments, Call anytime
menr price is $2988 including wknd.s I< aft 5 wkdys
tax, license It all carrying ·Newport National 646-3694
charges for 36 months on . ~~asing Co. ..~65~MU=sr=A_N_G~.-6-=,-,,-.,-R-/-H-.1
~ approval of your good DiVl!lOn of So. Call!. ntw paint (yellow) new
credit. ANNUAL PERCEN'r· 1st National B11-nk brakes good d ' $69"
AGE RATE J7.'86%. 2022 Bugine&s Cel\ter, lrvi~e 847-0S?5. con . a,
2480 llarbor Blvd.,
Cosra f\1rsa
'69 PONTIAC
GRAND PR IX
Hiirdtop Coupr. Full Powt.r,
factory air. IXSE4101 Cur-
rent blue book $3000. $121:J6
total do..i,.n. $83 iota.I month-
ly. S273I.9:> ls rhe·total cash
Price incfudin.. tax &: lie·
ense. Dcle!Ted payment
price is $34!Wi including la.x1 license & all carrying rhlU'E'.·
es for :Z.i mon!hs on pre 11.p.
proval of your J:OO<l credit.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE
RATE 17.22'="· -•
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
2-480 Harbol' Blvd., '65 Mugtang, air cond, stl'reo. . Costa ,.1,.~~
Good cond. $650. Ca 11
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 833-8620 ""'c~%"".;.:••. '60 CO"TINENTAL 675-<;!l'l. '69 PONTIAC
CAD~C, Gold co~v. AU fa ctory power accessor· \'66 MUSTANG $500 CATALINA
Premium cond. $ 2 8 J 0 . tes. 4 Door Hardtop. Cl.JiT. -Or Hiird top Coupe. V-8, Auf~
PEUGEOT
Demo Sale Now In
Progress I
Wee,kends only 642-2178, 4241 Bst Otr 64S.363l art 6 matic TransmiA-~ion, Powfor
Pop top, 4 spd. dlr. Fully owner. $278 . OLDSMOBILE Sfttrin~. Power Brakes,
camper equlpped, T11.ke old· 1967 Cpe. de Vi'Jle Factory Air. <VUF56J) Cur·
er foreign c:ar or sm11ll ---------1 rent blue bon~ $'!195. $197.!15
Sales, Service. Pa.n."
FRITZ WARREN'S
SPORT CAR CENTER
710 E. 1st., S.A. 547--0764
Open dailyS-9; closed Sllnday
PORSCHE
down. Can finance. 546-8736 Fact. air cond .. full pwr .. HIGHLAND MOTORS '69 OLDSMOBILE 1otat doY.•n. s10 total monlh·
or 494-68.iL CWJBOOiJ padded top, AM/FM, beau· 7145 Harbor Blvd. SUPREME CUTLASS Jy. $2101.95 is the total cuh
1963 VW Camper tirul le11ther interior, till k Costa Mesa 645-5404 Hardtop Coupe. Automatic, price includin.I:' tax &: lie"
;195. 673-4868 telescopic gteer., etc. An ex-1970 MARK ITI like new Pov.~r Steering, P ow e r ense. OcofC'rttrl payment
ceptional value! f389AGC) fully equlp'd, ki.:... mileage'. Brakes, Factory Afr Condi-price is $2320. including tp, * '69 VW Bug, Sunroof, e $2111 e flexible on price a--' •-nn•. tioning. (ZVD147J Current licrnse & a]\ carrying chatg·
M•g•, 1550 & tak• over "" "' bi"a book •~~ •~ 64 total f 36 NABER. S Cadillac Phone 546-1600 belore s p.m. .... ..........,, ~"'" ell; or monrhs on pre •P-pymnts or $1200 cash. down. $79 total monthly. proval of your gooc1 credil.
548-1626. AuntORlZEO DEALER CORYAIR $24{11.95 is the total cash ANNUAL PE'RCENTAGE
MUST sacrifice! '62 Porsche I ''°'ll'"""'KAR=~M~AN=N-=G~h=ia-.~v,-ry 2600 HARBOR BL., price induding ·tax & lie-RATF. 1s.gi-r.
356 S plus xtras. new eng & clean. Reblt engine. Call COSTA MESA . 'fll COUGAR: automat ic ense. Defem"d payment DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
clutch sys. Cherry red. Xlnt 96S-97011 or il4-<11$3. 540·9100 Open Sunday transmission, power brakes, ~rice jg $2844 including tax, 2480 Harbor Blyd.,
cond. 836-LHiO r ,.;-;=-;;cc--.c=-~ CAD '69 Eldora.do_ 31,000 power i;ter.ring, radio htr. license .t: a.II carrying charg. Costa Mesa
'71 VW Bus Sunrf, xtras mi's, orig. owner. All xtras. $1195. 644-5Ull. ' e11 for 36 month.& on pre ap-\VE Need Your Porsche and gaJore. Jn Warr. Xlnt. 1.lugt 1 proval o!.)'Our good credit. 'li:j LE MANS, air cond.,
will pay top dollar. Call Bill Sac. 830-4141. S4n;.m~ Loc~nd c~ Wkdys '62 CORVAIR Van recently ANNUAL PERCENTAGE huckets, !ull ooMole 1tcNr.1
or Chuck 530-0812. !--======--· w eves. reblt eng. Xlnt cond. $500. RATE 18.137n. lape. blck lthr, clean, rood
'66 PORSCHE 912. 5-spd. '60 VOU<SWAGEN S42-ll7S. S48-4809. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC rubbl!r $450. &14-76111.
eng. needs work $100. 1968 S d d V'll ,.o. Xlnt cond. Must sell. Make 962.~ • I • I e COUGAR ....,.,, Harbor Blvd.. '68 LE MANS
of!er. 830-8761. ·=-=°"""'=~--'-~-~ lract. alr Cond .. padded fop, _ Costa 1'1esit Hardtop Cou"". V-11. Auto-
ROVER
ROVER VS SALE
'70 ROVER 3500
New Demo. F'ully Equipped,
V.S. less than 6.~ miles,
list price $5799, 11.•ilJ sell !o:r
$3791. (342A I '70 ROVER 3500
'63 VW BUG, mecb sound, · ---,~ new _ battery, new tires & full leather lnterior, all pow-'67 COUGAR '66 TORONAOO, silver gray, matic. full power. air con·
rn'!w clutch. Make oUer. er, door locks, ..\M·FM, tilt Hardtop Coupe. Automatic Creampu!!, new eng, new ditionini::. M-1Al87) Cumnf
6~. 1' telescopic sfI., etc., etc. Transmission, Power Sleer· radials, pwr seats, lvindows Blue Book $1890. S86 lotal
<XVF160) ing, Power Brakes, Radio & etc, AM/Ft\1, climate con-down. $68 total monthly,
'64 VW Bug $400. Mags, e $2555 e Heater. (VCD553l Cum'n! lroJ. MUSI' SELL at once! $1681.95 ls the tolal l'il.!lh
headen. xln't inter & sway NABERS Cadillac Blue Book $1445. $55.62 total See al 100 Via Quito, Lido price irll'luding tax' & lie·
bar. Extras. 645-4379. down. $67 101at monlhly. Isis. {714) 675-1122. ('f1se. Dt-fctTed payment
'71 VW-113 Super Btttle AlTTHORIZED DEALER $L~.~ i~ !he total ca . .r.h TWO 1968 Olds Cutlags, 2 Dr. price is f20"4l including tu:,
Beautl!ul cond. _ $1900. ~~~~L., pnce 1ndtxl1ng tax & lie· hrdtp, p/s, auto trans., license k all carrying cha?"K·
Original 0¥.·ncr 64fi-8034 en~e .. Dere~ payment r/h, air col'Nl. Sl45CI. Ask for es for 30 months on pre ap-
Trailers, Travel Ml
HEAVY duty trailer. winch,
ramp, guitable for dune
buggy S200. 546-1879 aft 6,
au day wknds.
_WE_P_A_Y-=TOP=--oo-LI.All--1 B. J .
FOR TOP USED CARS SPORTSCAR CENTER
V·8, fully Equipped, Wllh all
extras, Factory Air..._&Uy
Bille Book wholesale $3200,
\Viii 11ell this \\'ttktnd for
only S3.'100 fY.'O to choose
from t071BZV\ 338CJPI,
FRITZ WARREN'S
CLEAN '65 VW, sunroof, 54().9100 Open Sunday ~nee lS $1608 incl~d!ng tax, Mr. Mark5 673-3130 9 .4 pmval of you good Cffilit.
'68 FLEETWOOD Brghm, license & all carrying charg· pm k"· ' • am ANNUAL PERCENTAGE
Runs xlnt. $150. As tor !Uiiy-lOActed. All xtra!, ertor 24 morrthiC-on pre 11.p: · w_=_ys. RATE-J~,----o
1966 13' Trave1 Trs i le r
wtcabover, be11.ut . cond.
545-1318
Auto Service, Parts 949
WHEEL Allgnme'rlt rack,
compl w/tumtab~t &:
special tools, snap-on model
WA 201 B. 548-9521.
[ ~ _·_~"-"'_"1_' ~11~]
Trucks 962
TRUCK SALE
'69 Chevrolet ;'& stake
""" SALE PRICE-$1995
'64 Chevrolet Pickup
Long \Vheel Base. L26103
SALE PRICE-$695
'69 GMC l/& Ton
Camper Special. Loaded.
692380
SALE PRICE-$2295
'65 Int. Travel•ll
V·8, overdrv., traller puller.
RIA9-16
SALE PRICE-$1295
CAMPER COMBO
New 111 C1mper (33614)
Stove, refri1er11or, side dtn·
et1e, In beautiful olive green
to match
1969 Ford ~-250
C&mper special <755M l auto-
matic, air. radM>, heater,
heavy duty equjpment. A
ttal l!rleal 111
$3995
MIKE McCARTHY
GMC
894-1336/S31 -2450
Comer &ad\ &: ~1cF•dden.
WntmiJlliter
U your car Ls extra clean,
Se--. Us t.nl.
BAUER BUICK
2.v. E. 17th St.
Cost& Mesa 548-7765
WE DESPERATELY
NEED
Clean used cars
FANTASTIC PRICES
Pa.Id ,for )'Out car, paid for
"' not. DEAN LEWIS
TOYOTA e VOLVO
1946 HARBOR BLVD.
Costa .Mesa 646-9303
L\IPORTS WANTED
Orange Counties
TOP$ BUYER
Bll..L MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
H. Beach. P~ 847-3555
WILL Buy ~ur car paid for
or not, Call Ralph Gordon
673--0900 -54~3031, 1970
Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa.
Autos, Imported 970 --CHICK IVERSON
IS HAVING A
SALE
Pre holiday inventory adJust·
ment. AU price& redu~ for
this oner. a year event.
EXA!'>IPLES '60 vw ........... $299
'62 VW Conv •..... $899
"ORIGINAL"
'65 VW Reblt. Bu~ $699
"Rebuilt Bug '
'67 VW Radio .. , .. $599
'71 vw .......... $1999
(Low Miles)
Fee. A ir, Radio.
'65 VW Bus ..... $109'
Many More Excellent V\\"s
To Choose From
S-19-3031 E:ict. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD,
COSTA MESA
Dislinctive
Sports Cars
2833 Harbor, C.M .. 540-4491
'69 FIAT 124 Cpe. Engine
complclely overhauled last
\1·eck. 100% guaranty.
YPS247. Chick Iverson. 1970
)~arbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
FTAT. ''For a better deal",
New or us~. Parts &:
service. Herb Friedlander,
537~24.
HILLMAN
'62 HILL.1dAN Super Minx 4
dr. SJ.ill. •
&J&.11471 !or det;uls
JAGUAR
BAUER BUICK
The Harbor Areas
Only Authorized
JAGUAR DEALER
Always has an excellent se·
Jcclion of both New & Used
Jagull.l'S.
SPORT CAR CENTER
710 E. 1st St., S.A. 547.07&1
Open daily 9-9: closed Sunday
SUNBEAM
~-------~ '62 ALPINE. 2 tops, radio,
,,A'"""~' .. ',,"-'-=":c",-,· =-c--c-c 11eather inter. Blk vinyl lop prov111t of your good credi1. '69 Olds Delt• aa DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
'65 VW Convertible, reblt over Maroon, Pvt. ply. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE ROYAL. Full power, YCR985 2480 Harbor Blvd .,
eng., new tires. brake1 "-$3195. 557-4972. RATE Zl.28'%. $2499 Crn:ta t\1esa
"'"'"· 1615. 54<>-2369. --~L~A~R~G~E~S=T---1 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC '67 PONTIAC
'67 SEDAN 315 VW "LJ~ SELECTION OF 2480 Harbor Boulevard, BONNEVILLE
FASTBACK" XL.NT COND. CADILLACS IN Costa r.tl!M Hardtop Coupe. Power &
SllOO. ORANGE COUNTY '67 COUGAR, xlnl cond., n!!w F11ctory A·ir. 1VCK614l Cur-
673·4899 .675-2440 ' tires & brakes. S 1 3 0 0 ; '68 OLDS C u I 1 a s s Con. rent Blue Book $1540. $.i.i.62
,63 BUG. very clean, new SALE~~E~SING 83G-5135 vertible. P/S, P/B, A1nt total do1-vn. $67 total monlh·
engine, $,j.j(). Arter 6 or AU RI ED DODGE cond, Best otter, Will de"a.I. ly. S1366.9;'J Is the total cash
weekend6, 645-4717. ·SERVICE· 9&2-2436 price including tax & Ile· Nabers CadiDac ---------1,.7.,, ,cc:-=,-,,.,._-,~== ense. D<orerred payment '67 VW Camper. Pop-!Op, ice 2600 HARBOR BL., 1969 DODGE SuPEr Van. uf. Sup. p/w, p/b, p/s, price is $1 608 Including tax,
roll b11r, taun11., new trans,
v.·lrt \\'hlg, 700ll mi., needs I=~-=~-~-~~
box, water, tape deck, xtra. COSI'A MESA Under warranty. Xlnt cond. a/~, stereo. Ex. rond. 7000 ·llcrnse & all carrying charg·
S19:i0 or M.2-7742. $1900 or best ol!C'r. 548-2935. mi 5' S3600. M&-6598. es I.or 24 mont"-on P'• •"· -,vw--,;;;;;;--;:;;;;;;;-r.;;;<l~"";:::-·~~00~~~°"'~""-"-Sund~~ ·~::.::~~;;:..=::~~1~1m.;;ot;1;;;-;;;;;;-;;;:;;;:--. ... ,,
'vork $200. 673-3877.
TRIUMPH '60 vw. Very clean, Good -FORD '64 Olds 98, xlnt, ~w tir!'s. 4 proval of your ,eood credil.
'69 EL DORADO, stereo. dr, air, all P"'r. runs like ANNUAL PERCEt-."TAGE ;;;;;;:; TRIUMPQ I· _'°_""_·.~'!"~'4-&-_J_798=*-=*--vinyl top. leather, lirt"m isr new. ;.;;:,o. S4&-l47l. RATE ?l.2!1%, , . paint. a..11 xtras, like new. '69-FORD CUSTOM .. 62 OLDS Cutlass V-6 Good DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
'68 VW BUG $4600. 673-6U&. 4 Door. ~an. Automanc cond. $200. 2~80 Harbor Bl\·d.,
Va STAG Clean & Xlnr 1971 El Dorado ~ansm1ssl0n, Pawer Stttr· Call !162-7562 Costa i\lesa
$10511. * 646-5938 1ng. 1261BEL1 Cun-ent r:"el ,,,,-,;;o:-===--~=
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! '66 vw Bus, deluxe w/sun fac:. atr rood .. 7800 miles. Book $1660. S39 tolal doy.•n. '68 Olds 442. Xlnt cone!. $1400 '59 RAMBLER WAGON NOW! roof. 110me camping equip. pa.dd~ top, 1111 leather & S5J tot al monthly. Sl051.!t5 is or best offer. 6r.:>-49S9
Excel cond. $1,150. 494-7473. 1apestry interior. !ull pwr. the rota! cash pri~ lnclud· before 8:30 A..\t.
HURRY & BEA1' TifE 10'/o equipn1ent, AM/FM radio, ing tax & li?r~. Defr~ '60 Olds, A/C, R/H. nev"
PRJCE INCREASE!: '69 VW Bus 9-pass. lo mi's. absolutely showroom fresh payment price. is $1272 1n· seat covers l.t trans. Runs
SPFORRITTZCWARARCREENNT'ESR Must sell. Make offer. inside k out. Must be seen cludln.g tax, hccnse & all good. Oean SlS5. £45-2TS8
830-8761. & driven 10 appreciate this carrying cho\rges for 2.11--~~~-.•=---
:\fechanic'g rlelglht.
{\\'XV302l
S47.50 •
710 E. 1st St., S.A. 547-0764 1970 vw B~. Xlnt cond. valul'. tSer. #526EAf) months on prt approval ol '64 F-85 $250.
"Specializing in Quality" Open daily 9-9: c!o!;ed Sunday Asking $2600. But 11.·ill deal e $7555 e your good CN'dit. ANNUAL * 958-5797 *
BAUER TR GT Ii '68 Custom paint. if int~rested . 837-3&10. NABERS Cadillac PERCEN'TAGE RATE
HIG HL AND MOTORS
21·1:. Harbor Bl\'d.
Costa ro,.Jesa &13-5404
Buick-Opel·J.aguar \\'i re wheel.~. Radio/hfI. '66 V\V Reblt eng., sunroof, Alll'HORIZED DEALER ci2.A~~· ROSS PONTIAC
234 E. 17th Sr.. imn1ac. in & out. recent runs \\'f'll , ~lust sell. Best 2600 HARBOR BL., 2.JllO Harbt'lr Blvd .,
CMta. t.1esa 548-7765 majcr tune up. Priced for orfer. &16-91 52 ll!t 6 pm. COSTA MESA Cosla MeAA
3.8 t.IARK JI J•m•ar Sedan. immed. 5a!e. Sl495. Firm. M0-9100 Open Sunday ...,y pvt ply. 494-2521 1960 •V\V Bus, xlnt running * '71 FORDS *
VE"ry sharp. '62 w i th I eoc-=''"7-~~-~,-cond. 1st $375. takes! CHEVROLET chrome wires, a \ r . co n d . '611 TR-3, m e c ha. n I ca 1 I y 642-9495 GALAXIES e MUSI' ANGS
Sll\·er \\'/re,d inter. Live it sound. Body rough. $200. -------TOr.INOS
up. drive & enjoy !his * 645-5848 * '66 Olds F85, SS50 or olfr * '71 CHEVY'S * HERTZ CORP•
classic be11iuty Sl.500. \Vant 1--~~-=--~--'64 VW, $700 or of!er, Call IMPALAS • CliEVELLES
PONTIAC
* $185 * '62 PONTlAC
83!1·1157
GTO 1966. xlnt engine, needs
little fixing. Gmt buy at
$800. 641-56,;6
Call 642-5671 Now!
'60 RAMBLER WAGON
Automatic, Rarltri, Heater.
rEEY:llill
S97.50
HIGHLAND MOTORS
2145 Harbor Bh·d.
'67 Jag. 420. TOYOTA 645-atl6 -both great!! CAMARO'S 22l W. Katelht, An11.helm
ROBINSON 612-7000 ,72 TOYOTA '70 Bu• & '66--5od1n HERTZ CORP. 1 =,....,17~1~41_n~MO~-'l0~-Aulo•, Used
'65 JAGUAR 3.SS * • 67~11109 * * 221 W. Katella, Anaheim 1966 Ford Van. R I H .
Costa :'-1es11 645-5404
990 Autos, Used 990
Classic, Fully Original '66 V\V Bug. Good Cornf., (714) 771-4(150 ~ir/cond. no gla~. good
Sl!m 6i;H236 aft 6 pm Large Selec:tion For deluxe radio, Xlnt runnina< ,57 01--c ,_ • tires, $850. 6 1 j. J 7 0 8 --. c." x a.p'"'"• PIP.'.". eves/wlmrls. J_ENSEN Immediate ~ m>. 54&-12ll .1,_ "'"' "'""· """"'I;;:--::-==-=---=-,..,.. Delivery! VOLVO 1895. '64 FALCON Coov1. '"'"
J ENSEN * !UJ..8036 * goorl com!. CHEAP!!! Call Big Savinos On =-=--=--~~-I aft 6 pm or wknds, &10-4792.
AUTilORIZED • _,72 VOLVO '66 Chov. lmP'I• '"· W•g. ·=-===~~~ SALES • SERVICE Ri maln1ng In very good conrl. Asking 66 COUNTRY &-<Ian, 390
'71 T OYOTAS Slt9S. &t2..fi03T al! 6. eng, Facl 111r, pslpb. food
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W. Coa.11 lhvy,
Newport Beach
LOTUS "
l • Lerg• Selection For ·n VAN v 8 rond. r11.ck, S720. 645-3864. 111'M ft11W.I . ·, auto, tape.1~~=~=~~==-WA WJut Immediate pa:nellng, lce·box. s2.900. ·ro FATRLANE 500 wagon
TOYOTA Deliv....., • 67'"'3.\.1 • "'"' "'''· ""·
-· 1 J954 CHEVY * * 64fi--04t4 * *
Big Savings On Not too bad~ Best offer! '6!1 LTD \\'agnn. 10 Pass .. 429
Rem•lnlng "• 64~336 • HP. Po\vr.r. gtrffi), 11lr:
'71 VOL VOS mint cond. $2600. 6i~l6t CHRYSLER
646-9303
1946 Harbor, Costa :-.ter.a
SANTA ANA
TOYOTA LINCOLN
'10 BUICK "'""· ""· ""· ~,.. $359& ll-, Cllnl"lt w~etls. Tff, Ai•. F-POwtr. 11'2 AFV !
'69 BUICK '"'"''· "'· "'· ""-'""· $2995 "'"•Ir. <~rGme W~Hll. (YltW NI)
'10 CHEV """'· '""' ,. VO, '•'·· $2996 1 :~.)f'.l., Ait. Tl~, UJO.
'69 CHRYSLER ~.~~ :0~:: ;"· e"69& 1>vc1111't1!11,, 1!•. ~
'68 CHRYSLER ;;]r~~r : • .'c:"'-~$~1~4=95=
< ...... 1111. !ZW"'· .• ,
LOTUS
AUTHORIZED
SALES l ~ERVJCE
·NEWPORT
l_f,1PORTS
Servi.ct dept. open 7:31) am
'Ii 9 pm hfonday thru Fri· ,.,_
All)eM Lewi.! \IJ VOLVO
'10 OLDS ··~·"· '""' "" -·-$ 1!167 C H RY S LE R . 9 I l it <MMI •• 1!9r•, 1111 & 111. wllHI, lew mllu .
paa&engf'r ~taUon w11.gon , 1961 LINCOLN Contln!!ntal, '10 DODGE v1ft .. &ubllit ''' •IMfk• $3295 A· ('(ll'l<fl . 1 XTG run! ~ look11 good. New " '"1•r1tr ,.,.,.., ,..ft•llltt·
646.9303 ir 'oning, e c. , tirts $200 64&-1711 "'· iui..,..,,. •1'•H. 8&4, $1499. Chick lvf'rson, · ·
l!H6 H11.rbor, Costa l\lrY 1970 Harbor Blvd., Cosla MAVERICK '70 FORD ~_:-"' w.':i. ~';;."::1~'• $3496
VOLVO, "For a better Mal", t.tes.a . ~~~~'""'' lf'1tn.
PHONE 540-2512 '50 Cht!\iy 1 ton truck y.•/furn
delivery body. Good tlrt:l,
good p.1lnt. com ple.t e
w/bows 4 tarpaulin $.195.
Martin Furniture, 1 I 6 5
Harbor Blvd. C.M. 54g..5131
Ct.EAN 1952 Chevy pickup.
Good ttnatne. rad I at or,
bniki!s, tllft ' batter)"
12'15. 96Mll9.
'Tl r.fGB road,ter • ·ng Aus·
tin Healey Sprite • '70 Fial
lporf3 l'llt'er e '69 Porr.chf' "3100 \V. Coa.r.t Hwy.
9L2 • ·71 TR•6 e '66 Tiger. I -=~'~"~""°-" Btach
(l'' W. \Varntfr, Sant.t Alli!.
'69 1'0Y<7rA, 4 Or. Sedan.
Auto Trans., rac1ory Air
Cond •. Radio, Heafrr. Sl-199.
Chick Jvenon, 1970 H.uflor
B!vd., Cos!a t\fcs;i .
Nrw 1:1r usM, P11rt1 & 9 PASS. \Vagon '!2, an extras '71) l\1AVERJCK ~uper ~ '&l VW "•• ree.111 lfltlM wit11 "" c1,.., ~t zni:
suvice. Ha'b Friedlander. S32S nr tnM lrw comp!ct Gra.l:tt>er. fnanual. lakt. o ~w.l .. ltllftr.-. ....,..,,._ • ·irQ
531"'824. 2&1 Lilac Ln. CM •~e ~-· pymt~. S73.28 or $1699 cash.
:.,,• • '~;~v \,~Rf"°°" MERCEDES BENZ
'61 FORD V-8. " TM-3 tptl
S450 or St.st offtr. 646-7387.
AuthOrired r.mz Dealer
(1) 523·725o
ALFA ROMEO
2246,.Elde'n. CM. ALF.A Romuo J.967 CTV
-------,--::,,..·I Sprint rou~. l 011.nr.r,
Into cub lb.rU a Dail¥ Pilot AM/FM radio, Lil mi's. ~ ad.IJ . 11695. 49-1-'2.17. -
9 r.'t n9c County·,
l.\rg~~t SC'IC'c l1011
Nf'.v /1. u,(·d
Mi>r(f'rl"~ R('111
Jim. Sle mons Im ps.
W <it ncr & M.1in St.
Sont.i Ana .. -....1 546-4114
=::-;=.---. .. 11 ;;-;.'""";.;,;;"-'·==_,-~~··1 "'""""'· '11 240Z '"'"'· ~ ........ "' $399& Autos, Uted 990 SHARP 1967 Chry. 300 56.000 "'"'·· • •-· 1>1rt ... 1
miles. Ne~s Rod Bearll\IS. MERCURY f~lllM 111 ' M, 1"'
M.B. TRADES .,, .. ofl<r. 54()..3058. 1971 MERCURY M Hm C5 1968 V\V e&m"'"'"• rtbuilt -·. '70 Cad ~n de. Vlllf'. mf. '61 CHRY"'ER N a c ...-.._,~ t11llic ~Id wt matehlng lltn· .-f{Wp0l1. STATION WAGONS WQJ< w/WMTlln"', new I Ire t, JQot '1-h "·~ Good 'J dau &: inler10r, luxury " .. ~ ' v.>•ft• HER._ COltl' clutch, brakes &: b&.ttf'f'Y, equlp'd. priced 10 M'll • AJ. Tr8rup. $:!CJO. 962-1235. I.&. • I llf.9600
VOLKSWAGEN
Tent k luAA•re rack. Bes! "° .69 Impala hrdlp~ t lr. fl"S Bea.--.,.--8JIP!-221 W....&tclla.._Anahdm. olltr. 41).1-1632-..... """ ........ • (714 ) n· •oso etr-, only Sl ~. tal<r fr11dr, reit &elecdon llVU! set the -
DArLY PILOT for action? Aut horlitd MB Ot11.ler DAtLY Pn.oT ClauWed 1-fOUSE Hllntlfll! Wa.tcb tha _c.n __ &1_2_-'6_1'_&_5"_vo_1 __ •.-~_1_1!_!23-_72\0 ____ "--------' OPEN HOUSE column.
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OR
Cotner lt t & H•rbo r
Santa Ana
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